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THE OMAHA DALY BEE. TWENTIETH YEAR, ‘ OMATA, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 'NUMBER 19 P ‘ = t £ N N N Y | #ia, and T wmember asiking him_ how thoy | toapassin this state where the peiple are | officers of this assembly hafe fuvited meto | woull have had Paul a pohibitionist, he | penttontrary was a %, \tionist by profes. ~[ T" [_' 'I T N N l M G ]:‘ hB ‘l‘h were getting along with local option down in | satisfied that simply beeause Omiha wantsto | come, Tam nore to tell this people whatl | Woull have had Pail to T v You | slon and amnister of 2 Rspel by occupa- b 0 RO (1 l"l " \ . It L o | Hurdcounty. “Well,” he says, “everything some high license money in orderto Bp | pajiove tobe the trth @ | am hersto de | € 2 olddrunkanl, dow't drink any more | tion. [Laughter) Z is wetting along well except me; my business o run her schools, the balince of the | 4 +h 1 beliote lo be wing, bt drick water and wvote Why, thoy say fur oneof their fsnearly busted” (Laughter] And I think | people do not propose'to be taxed to keop |BOWNC A ‘"wl h““ il“““"‘;" @ Ilnr pw?‘ihiil\in.“ In uuw‘ words | pl'np.mlinlNH\.‘fll!lul ha P Ysalons unde if & man wants u good argume 18t pr those &% criminals fn the -penitentinryin ntyone yea e lived fn tho | he would a0 tramformed that | high license produced il\ , and I can | ir' ol essn o 0 i Oontinuation of the Prohibition-High License ition the best fellow ho can go toon (od's | order to tontelbate. £ 168 popilALon. sriska for twenly yars bibleandmadea now one for his own pur- | proveto you, aid I sha o Tam done, | We Fe Adair's C‘“""““;“ Results in the y P green earth is asherlff ¢ cow and Laughter.] Yes, Omaha gets 203,000 a it grow fron 10,00te 122500, fnere: poseand put prohibition in it | that in tho state of Maii hive gt as Deathof a Little Boy. Discussion at Beatrice. Justice of the peice ughter,] year forthe privilege of allowing thesalon | o0 Sidly in its population anlee s Every where that the biblespoke about the | many people over sixteen § £ ago that They arethe groat 5 of the sa- | delers to sty there,md then youhavoto | 1 TORCH ot et 6lytlaeen tuact ety ottue | (7.0 Wit Lo ol aed by | ot writo asin alnost ' stato in —— - loon pe d nono of conrt ln the s in the pesitentiary by | Preset liquorlicens s ) o | mi s or handed ot by postles, tho | the union, and furthermore igh license " SAM SHALL GREETED WITH CHEERS, | yors prohit me in, beciuse, | taxes ooy vty oit ih ho couniy. |stato in this union @0l 500 por ent preatr | fact mmans tat B worid haveprobibitin | sateof Nerasiy thore 16 6 artofperent. | NO CWE T0 THE VICTIM'S 1DENTITYs EERS: | When you rin the sa keoper's business | Say, why don't you get Omihia her own pani- | thanany prolibitin st inthis union thit | instesd. Yes, I defy any man tocontrdictit | age of people winbloto reud afid write than in peinTy you rifn his. T pronl- | tentiaryl [Louglter,] Sho ought to have prohibition fors aiod of fifteen year. | fromthe bibly thatthedoctine of prohibis | wiy ohier statoin th entire wion, aud I'do = - 1 bition to come 1n, becase whenever you | one—an individual, consolidated, s yndicated : lavusc. | 1 B0 b W i (i|wni~nu‘l und \\M‘ni);l'\n 1s of thebi 1ot care where you go to find it [Any: | | Some Strange Circumst o8 Cone s Respon ith an Addres £ bringin probiibition and breakup the soon | Omalia penitentinry with Pelex” llex for live seen it incrofae in woalth and pros- Lisses, applause and lughter and eries of | Letme il yvou o fow thinges thal this doc SOt . AfCale > " ¢ Responds ‘:I" Lo Amf 8 Tall of| bui o Tusinoes, Why, Che Iawyed Jowes ob . [Grest taughtas] | perity atsuchn rapid rite asshould astonish }u-.x.m Twait stiply (o sty tamy frienls | neof pobibjion lns. fone Tor som of | 1ectid With the Aftule—The Stayer Generalities and Wity business—loses fo & b Itellyou, if you want one, whercyouean | tny man living in theprolibition statesof | whoseemto lwve disSented from my state- | thesestats, Lot me go backto the state of Gives Himself Up-A Drowne "ho rentleren says that thare are fifty.one | fiud oné, The state of lowa tised to have two | Maine, Vermont or New Hunpsiive. Why, | mentthatyoumay ook it upif you waut to. | Maine, the father of prohibition state Ing at Florence Goutitian. 1 Chis Stato that b prismers | paitentiaries when they had the whisky | thitk & noment. ‘{‘fi’um.{n.l\‘ squtto milesof | You ma ish your ropresenitives e | [ real tie olier iy ihat Genral Neal in the jails, T will guarauteeto you now, if | dealers in that state, but now they have oily | territory in the state ol yeaska malce it | the authiority if you wish. Thebiblois not W, in the city of New York male a HARD WORDS AGAINST HIGH LICENSE. | 1o i resd ovr his list, tht he-will find bt | one, and thoy hato_ alsoluisly o 8 peioti. | siiy-io tims aslirgsas tio atile of Rhodo | an WfatILIArbook Ardl Biuity rearly Koy | shoed L & prosiiton sy Lrviio, o that nea very one of those fifty-or n- | tiary for sale. laughter,) = at's o fiet. | Island, and ca of holling ten times as | what T an talkin it when I make that | madethe statenont that they had prohibi- The peace and quictof anotherwi [ ¢ ties are the ruril counties, run by the consei [ The governor at the list scisionof the legis- | many paople as the state of Masachusetts, | statement, [App! Y tion in the state of Maine thirty-fonr years, | Suybath was rudely broken in upon yestors Its Advocates Characterized as Red-Nosed | entious, honest, sober farmers this cou latire recgnmended to the ommittes on | andyet i it ontiues o @on i its preset Wihen o man stands on thisplatformunder- | und in each of the thirty-four yéars ot prohit R4¥ i 1' hickine Crgedy Cat wad o i ¢ i ry, who woing o vote for prohibition gislature that they enterinto negtiatins | rato - of prsperity Untl it shill be- |taking toshow methatmy statementis falso | bition they haisaved tothe peoplo §24,000,- [ G4Y noo by a shocking tragedy that was cne Emissaries of the Devil, this fall. [Great and long apolause] Tthink | with the national government to sell it for a [ como as thickly populatel asthe statoof | Iwint cosay to him right now and here T am [ 000, acted near the corner of Sixth and Bancrofs Saiad I can guaran te o you further that tho | governmentpurpse. And if you filles pro- | Massaclusetts, your stite of Nebraska will | ready to mswor itand meet it fom the 1ils |~ Wall, T wentond furned over some of the | strvets, as the result of which the body of @ countics of this state that fumish the most | pose tokeep theliquor trafficin this state, l;. 10,000,000 of peopie within her bor- |of tho mln]ln whene l‘l‘_\'”{l]!ll\-}‘.z .]-u.ll do | reconts h;l\mluul .;h\‘i\.unu \n|'ulllh|||h‘} lm'? boy scare in his teens lies at Heafoy & . | prisonersave the ones who have ot the most | why, you will need ancther prison p de ot wre who you are, “[Applause am | downin the stae of Maine, and L thought i et e o WL LGB GCR BB e T e R A T AL S T BRI ER A s B o \hers | When this stateof youes shall have become | not here i a ward tobe cried dova becuuso | Neal Do Rl told the thth about it 3t | TROLEY'S morguda loreibly mtilated and Proof of the pudding is'in chewing the bag | you could get one ready wade, [Laughtr.] | popilated asis Ttaly, you will have 1000000 | mendo not think as T do, but I am right here | woull be e of thewedlthiest stites in the | disigured corpse, and another vy, but a few sometimes, (Laughter. | 1f you want local option why don* yousay | 0f people wiithin youe state ; when it becomes | to represent what I believe and to tell this | union, but loand behold, from the time of | years his senfor,ls hold at the police station The geatleman says that all of thisis the | local option! The liguor dewlurs in Omaha | populated asis Austriayou willhavess,ol,- |audincewhal I think and whenever you | the linding on Plymouth rock down to the | toanswer to the aw ful charge of murder, How the People of the Older condition of the peopleof the state, and he | want liguorbecause Omaha cannot run with- | 0000f peplewithin your stites if it ever wantto disagree with me tho plaformis the | preset tine tho entire accamutation of the | jygt how the terrible affair lappened has | does not want now to run the saloons out for [ ot liquo I you ave built | comes asdensely populatedas England, you |placoto do it. [Applause state of Maine, acording -1 the assessed ety A States Have Repudinted fear he might distueb the beautiful equilib- | diferently frown the balance of the pople of | will have in the “state of Nebraska 35,000,000 I wantto cll the attention of this audience | valuationof property, is but 000,000 all | 1ot yel been determinod, as reliablo ¢ i l rium, And yet it stares you in the face, and | Nebraska: if the citizns of Omaha camot | 0f people—one-half the eutive prosent popu- [to one gmeral proposition. I must adnit | told, Neil Doy would have sivedall that in | COICORIng the oceurrence are very meagre. Prohibition. e knowsit: he dare nob deny it, For u “live and breathe and move, and have their | lation of the United States, Gofurther. If | thatso far wehave not got ver into the | justten years and it took that por little | Tho only witnesses were boys, and they at S it wanls of ten years of patient, faithful trial of | being,” and ran their finances mnd their mer- | you were to allt onchall acr of gromd | realdiscussion of (his question because, asit | statoof Miine' twocenturiesto accumulato | once hastencd home and apparently romaiied the high licerise scheme, originating it send: | cantilo business, and their transporiation in- | through thisstate asyblok fora dvellng | were, wo have leen skirmishing anundon | what Noil Dow saidd it wis swved in ten | foo without leaving sy clie s to. hote The great prolibition-high license debate | ingit outthrough the courtry, hesuys, with | torests, without swill butts in convenient | house and put in it one family offive pe the outskirts, Ttbogan it that way and I |year. Lot ussce what they luve, Ldinttty, Bl (s dlontlty of the moedired ns continued st the Beatrico chantauqua | o eclt, thit the pople Gwowhat th places, 1 think they onghtto have local option [ you would hive tevitory enoughin tii have ben obliged to follow “it, but | Thesugeestin isthrown ont that if we | identity. Evéh the identity of the murd Ehtniaiy aftaricon by Xtov, Sad Bmall ad | e id it enough to run their own conerns—peniten- | to acconmolate 186,000,000 of poplo—more |the —time is geiting pretty mnor | would make Nebraska a prohibition state [ boy is as yeta mystery, and about all that is b = % S8 e Tdeny that the Women's Christian Tem: | tiaries, paupers and all—and not tax then on | thin theentire Empire of Ching—more than |at hand when 1§ want to begin |even prolibitn Dickio would come over [ thus far known of the affair is the Hon. Juhn L. Webster of Omaha, Mr. Swill | perarce union ever endorsed any High Ii | the balinceof the people who want to stay | all of Eurpe, and hovw many tines the | to tll this peiple omethlngabout the facts | heveand huildn house. Why dont he go 0 | story fold by tho prisoner,who scknowiedged arrived on the grounds while Mr. Rosewater | cense talk, But, 1f it has been tried for the | soberand keop rid of these things that are | present population of the UitedStates touching the real question in_controversy, | Maine and build ahouse where they have | that hedid the ki, was speaking and was received with ap- gth of time thatit hys been in ‘Nebraski, | ncubus after iwcubus piled upon them by | I stand here after twenty yoars of resi- | which issimyly this, whether tie prople of | what you want—pnhibition! In 160 in tho | “Phescencof the ttagedy was noar the pliuse, At the dose of Mr, Iosewater’s ad- | L wint tosay this much forit; that high the saloons, dence in this stale watehine its grovth and | this stat arvejustifiedin - voting prohibition iino they had 628,00 peoplo. They [ grove, about two miles south of the conter of Atdss, Ol Daiids oatced Me. *nse, the principle of high hicense, the prac- 1 picked up Now York World | prosperity asa man who Ioves this state. It | into your conttititionas apolitical doctrine, |had prohibition then, Tn 1570 they still had | pho ity ona high bluff, about half a mile bk AR ouvieson Irocueet A ticeof high license, the promiseof ligh li- | and 1 loked to see how it _ was, | isgoodehough forme, I expectto live here. | nota religious doctrine, prohibition and they had but 645000, and in | ek from the viver. A ceording to the story Small to the vast audience, and again the ap- s nover got @ greater defeat,a more fic | and I sow that the peple of the| I would advise my friends why como lere | Whenyou jut it into your stite cnstitu- | 1890, the preseit yar, underthe wensus just | of the prismer, W. 1 Aduir, Le and his plause broke forth. tal stab anywherein Ame from friend | state of Towa—the poor, puperized, impover- | fron _abroad that if Neonska is wot- god | tionyoumakeit part of the site anstitu- | taken, thiy have Sinply got the sune 68,000 | Raie Brothor head beei out hunting, aed hid Hon, John L. Webster followed Mr, Small. | or foe, from prohibitionist, finatic or crank, | ished stateof Towa-—were paving 2 cents on | enough for thern is it s they should stay at | tion. 1tis o qustion of politics. Thatis yle, orin other words your state of Muine | just emergzed from tho grove when oy siw Whileho was 1ot greoted with the enthus- | than it got when the peoplo of the “state of | the $100 taxes. Twenty-five cents ontne §001 | home. (A pplause.] < what T want to talk about. And when Ibe- vour prohibition liw engrafted inyour | o decensed and two of his young come X by Ncbraska, after ten years of trid, after an | [say [ wunt to see how & fasm which marked the introduction of the 3 He Quotes Election Figures to Show Nebraska is getting | Therveis another very stonishing propsi- | ginto branchouton that subjectit isnotun- | constitution, with Neal Dow at the head and | Junions seated under u tree cnjovinge . fe | the | oy porience with it, marchedup to thedoors | along. She has so much monoy frone highs | tion when T look over this question. With | becoming that I should tellthis yast mudicnce | the father of i, tho state of Miine has beon LR o B S L ) reverend prohibitionist, he held the attention | of yonder capitolat Lincoln and said, **We | license, shehassuch an elegmt time, her [ your more than a milicn of poplein this |of people from the stute of Nebraskn what | as stignant inthe grosth of its population that inmediate neighborhood. The hunters of the audicnce until the elose of his addre avetiredof frand and intemperance, and_we sury isso full and overflowing, and they | Stite who have witnesed ils prosperity, who | the peojle of other states have thougelt of this | as that muddy steean thit ruus by your city. | supped to inquire wheve they had gotten Full stenographic reports of both speechies | Want a ciance to vote for probibition straight getting alng so nicely financially; 1| have gathered what you hwve - this' State, | saue subject where they have had itdebaled | 1o notmean any reflection on the water | i anc after o short. conyersation were Bdant it out” [Appluse.] want to see how much burden it las tiken | Who hive rned voar money here, who | andconsi you_ please,as | down here, either, hecause Miine uses poor | ahout to pass on, Adaie bad his o 0 frong g ls £l Aud they cocrcel alegisiature that was | off the people. AndI loked down toward | Taised = your — children here, ' luve | theRev. Sumiel Small would” inviteyou,to | water. Tapprehend the water they drinke in | ofhim holding it down at aem's eigth, and BAIC SR AL not in fivor of pohibition to subnit the | Nebruska ind I'sawthat shewas piying 65| wedded “your ~wives —hae, ' builled | thestatoof Pennsylvania wher hehias met | probibitin Mine nustbe ns dirly as that | fho firs thing ne lnew it wis dischigod, e questi [Avoice: “Thatsso.”] They ab- | centson the£100, That was ul. [Appluse| your lomes hee—has it coné to this, | with the people who are opposed to prohibi- | stream orelsethey would havo some kind of | tho Toud of No. § shot . takine efteet i 1he s solutely forced a crowd that was drilling | wnd laughter. | Thit this great state of oun dos notlovoit” | tion andwewafrid to get outand debatoit | prosperity and progress down there. Tho | head of oneof the thice boys who Wero site He Addresses t e from the | (i thosalon toputtho question out into | - Poor, impoverished, pauperized Tow, self well enoughto have & man stand within | with hin, question comes to you people with that kind | gy under the tee. > Standpoint of ibition. theopen air where the people could wet atit, | contson the $00! Great, splendid, hgh. | itsownborlers who has brains enogh an Lot mo tellyou thatin thestateof Pennsyl- | of areconl of theincrouso in population in | Aqair and his brother did not stop, but Ladics and gentlemen, my follow country- | andit isout heve now. By whose demand! | licensed Nebraska, (5 cents on the §1000_In | character enougzhto stand ip and talk forthis | vania they vited down prhibition withot | thestateof Mune, Lf thereis aman in this | geingthe boy fill over at once, pussed o, men of the stato of Nebrasky: Tam sorry | The gontleman cortainly will ot stnd up | other words, 20 worth of property in Ne. | fanaticl dodrineof prhibition;butyou lwve | thenecesityof my specdies on the other | audience that wants to stop the growth and | i "the two - companions of the ' murdcre d that the exigencies of travel kept me from | Dere and contend thatthe Jegishturcof the | braska is paying more taxes for the suppo toimport them from from ctherstatss, where | side. Withull the prohibition talkers they | popilation of the state of Nebraska and [ oo o od b tho terrible sight they had " ~ b el g state of Nebruska submitted the prohibition | of thestate than $5%0 worth of property they have been repudiated by the votes of | could importint thestateof Pennsylvania | bring her to astandstillthat man is willing | i) ess d, ran as fast as they possibly could being present with you this morning, though | gpendment at the demand of thethird party | paying in the state of Towa. . How s that for | thelr own poplel IApplnun-.; through a wholo campaigm they could not | to vote for prohibition. from the ‘sceno of tho tragedy, wnd did noy Tam satisfled that you suftevel nothing by | cruks. Certamlynot, We are too nsig- | highlicense? [Laughter:[ D't you tunk | Why, my frimd here from the stateof | convertthe people of that state to votein | ~Gooverto Vermont, mother of the pro- [ i until they were safe it home, my absence, but [ amgratified that Iwas | nificant, [Laughter.] So be it I repet | [am rightabout it if T siy ligh license is | Michigin talks to thiserand asif hehadfor | favor of thatpropsition. Theydiduot ueed | hibition states, where' they have statutory | Nl went, home and told his mother of able 1o reach you even as late in the day as | thit hecannot say that it was submitted at | nothing but a great big lic (Il) without any | gotton thatdown in thestate of Michigan | anyanswer, ¢ obibition. Down in that little state of | what had occurred, gnd was sent by ler to this and to be & participant on this mostau. | ©UF demnd aud to please and placato us. sense! [Apphause and great lughter. | only alittlewhilo agothey propseda poh Tusea little menorimdun, beausowhen T | Vernontthey had 315,00 peopleaway back | fha" palice station 't notify the. authoritios, ey & IS LG DEY ORL WIAA, TR 8 By whose demand was it subnitted? By I was talking to a man coming down bition amendment just as they propasing | state figuresto anaudience I wantto kuow | in 180, they ad 0,000 in 1870, 832000 i | o veached the station just s a telophiono spicious occasion: an occasion which, [am § ¢ho demand of the honest peopleof this state | trainhow 1 bad gotthat thing photog itin the state of Nebraska, I supposemy | that I state thom correetly and that I 1SS0and 132,00 in this year of our Lord | yossage was resived thoro, ssking thit the satisfled, is of great importance to everyone | who had teasted to the promises made by the | but 1 havenotgot any of the photo friend was the chalmanof the prhibition | them from authority, so that if any 1890 Ttdocsnot growa bit. RO L0 RERLT R YIS AL Bedie- ot the of you, or elso itcouldnothavedrawn so | frindsand projectors of it: who had given | heve, still I think Iein deseribe” it to you, | committee of that stats and wentallover | that I mikeon this subjectis contradicted b, o over to New Hampshire with statutory | {lurady. - Adair was placed under arest, and magnificent an audionee of the intelligenee | ita fairand honest and faithful trial, and | High license, my _contrymen, fron the in. | that stite tilking pobibiton ind trying to | anybody 1 shill e prepared to fur- | prolibitim, you have predscly the swmd | ofidy tlling his story of the affair i full, 1 christianity of the greit state of Ne. | Ml fomc it a friud consummunte fromits | vestigationthat I have béen able togiveit all | induce thai peple o t the doctrines tie proof to support of what I |staeof afiirs, excopt they liv \Wia" coiaULEaa tb/a0alls N e AR e EECHL R B0 head toits neels, and they suid that they | over this country, and especially in Ne. | whichhe istalkihg toyor people of my state | say. In the state of Conmecticut, one |in 1870, H6,000 10 150 and 346,000 in 18003 o, Pho patrol wagon was ab once sent out braska to this plice in this burning heat of | wwantedno more of it * | beaska, isnothing under God's sin but s | of Nebraska. Did e dogetor why is iv| of you ol New Englnd states with | i vords, letme tell you, popleof Ne- | pe” e timo 1t resched the. sec the summer. Tknow that you a 3 We wanted the plain question submitted | juvention of the devil, optained by the poli- | that hedidnot fol2 this sudiewce that when | itsmosihizily alvanced civilitio, with |braska, thereare the only three od prohibl- | s erowded with o otrions (hrong, swho ol interested when you are willing tocome and | of prohibition ox uo prohibition and the legis- udrun in the state as asort of a | the people of thestate OF Michizanvoteld on | itsgreat Yale college, and its highlycivilied Lates in tho enti union, and those | jowed cach other % | it listen to us ns wo stand hore and attempt to lature was forced to submit it and thes minting machine to grind out old buzzard [ that question they snowsed him and hispro- | people, with its long experience wRh the | three states lu«y not. grown in population | ot glook at the bleeding and mutilated ves . not 2o home *‘with their tails behind | dimes to liy ontheeyesof the dead tomake | hibition doctrines under foot by morethan | liguor lusiness, whenin 180 the poople pro- | from theimetheyadopted prohibition down | Fiing of the unfortunate vietin No ong debato the pros and cons of the proposition | hom» withont submitting it Hl.lushn nd | the corpse look respectable. [A voice: | five thousand majorityd - [Appluse, posed, as they did in thatstat, tovote pro- | to the prsentvoting lour. Now, rightin | guid identify thom, and they were placed. by @, Which has been submitted from this plat- | applanse.] They thought they hid bettevget | winaps it My other (ricud her who lails from the | hilitionintotlie onstitutin of the state, it | thefuceof thit fuct, cvery other statein | flo underiaiers wigon and. romoved (o ho | form. alittlotail and put it on them. [Laughter] | Wiy, tiey sud they ruinel Towa o ac | Stat of Georgia butwho has nowgoncout | wis beiten by avoteor a majoity of over | Now Eugland surnunding them, that did not | yowdio. 1 did nothave the honor and the pleasuro | A little —old hizh liconse amendment. | count'of prohibition. I passes Des Moines [ toliveamong the Momaeus in k{b;.h‘| gh- | twentyse v A\l}uu\im_ll ul'l:n:.\'u(vu:‘u popula lhv.-wl,n:‘[‘h]\l llh"“' inere :xlml in population ata Deputy Coroner Martin viewed the body, of hearing the speech in. full which has just | Lughter.] High licnso—and the zentle | yesterday and I saw that magnifient apitol | ter]. hd m.munwzg\mm_|u.- statehey | tin of the slate, or in ~oher wonls 1l woudcrful vl ofspeal, o | and T iade o rathor hasty oxamintion, 4 ' | man comes out inhis paper thismorning and | of theivs, which a few years ago was un. | call Atlanta—a beautiful city—a dty, mavk | were more than tviceas miny votes in il Now, in the faceor all that, Took what Ne- | '\ apparent that the vietim hud beon bu been concluded; but I got horo in time to wit- | suys that this debate is to furnisha mo finished, and _they did not have mouey in | You, oll patriots overwhse state apital the | stie Lt yer cist aginst proiibiton than | bratka did in the sune period of time. In 1870 | V08 0o from the muzde of the jrun ness some of the gentleman's approaches to. | comprehousive understanding of the great their treasury to finish it; that is,under | Stars and stripes havé wver floaled tothe | were cast inits favor. Wiil, perhaps that is [ wehad 122,000 people, in 1880 wehad 652,000, | 1t 10 shot had seattered but very litile be ward the main question, o, tiodid { question which is mow subwitied 1o thein- | theirliquor fepme, I passed there yester | presentday—even that * wi has wpudisted | worth something. Ldo not kiow whelher | or, in ollcr words, we grew at the rateof | .6 wtering the hoad of the deceicd, 1 10 HOT get wll - ‘way. [Apphuse]. T would -&mmcmr e poople of “INebrsky, asto h anct sav 10 With (ts sple ndid domic risTrg fna Qoctriue S ProT o1 M. o thetownoly any feiends o the other side will take a les- | abouti foir hundred por cent, From 1880 we | entip faco and forehead above tho low e Juw have been gratified if he could have reached | whether local option or high liconse shall | up'into the sunlight on that gorious Fourth | Alants and thestats of Georsa siloons ave | Son froni that ornot, Tome il mewns some- mmwuefm,mmn 1890, o 1 g ing open tie skuil and ale the point before they called “lime” on him. | provail or whetber prohibibition siall pre- | of July, a great monument tothe caltur, the | opem, and that within the lastthree mouths, | thing. It isthejudgmentof a great pwple | in other words ’ “Yet cont was % kA OUL, Laughter]. 1did et in in thne, however, | vail. enterprise and the true dignity of the plopl | 10 my persmal knowledsse, . upon this identieil political question, added tothe populition of thls state in these | ~1haith had, of eourse, been. st tancous, o hear him as e bronght forth the holy Son [~ Anditis on a false footing for the ques- | of the probibition state of Loy Yourlittl Wiy, weare told here i opmning thisdis- | Go down to Missachusetls with its great | ten years, when your little prohibitionstates | oo corner was unable to find hat thiee of of God and set Hini up asoncof tho copart: | tion, nosuch question is lerc today, andno | old cheeso boxof wi affalr here at Linoln is | cissio thit probibiton f§a gmerd lay of | lavyer andits greatdoctors and s minis- [ down inthateornor of the contientdid wob | e ghot, tho bilinco having gone eatively ners with the Hon. Péterller, McGooley, | such question is before the people of this | busted half in two now in ordor to actnit the | nturethat developes with the prog of | ters and its , its polloges and its | grow at ull. Now, that isbutone phaseof | it Se 4y G Maginnis & Co. [Langhter and applause].” | state. Why does he go and republish a | intelligence that you have packed into it trom | ¢viliztion, andthe more we are civiized [ schoots, its mamfactiring industeies and its | thequestion, [Atthis point there wer ¢ Thoinguost will b held ab the morgue ab Aud I wantright hiere, in the name of the | syopsis of the Slocumb law this morning ¢ | time to time. [Laughter and aplause.] I | and the greater advinee we have made in | grat ppulition, andyet in Massaclusettsin | fron theaudience calling for the condition of | 19 grlocit this morning Chyistiauity of the country, and of the | Does ho want to say that it istheSlocunb | wasup there the otber day and they haye | dviliztion thegreator beeomes the doctrine | 180 (now, mark only last fal) thege were s in ICansas. ¥ T eIt Gvering Arpettad, No® apostles, and the blood-washed throng who | law, when there is _nothing of that kinlin | acully got it bolted togettier to-keep it from | of prohibition and youfind wiped out thedoc- | cast for prohibition 8,000 vols as agiinst Somebody wants to add Kansas. I will | 000 ‘u"‘ halt: hrother h ARRl GG s are following in the footsteps of the meek | the'controversy ! Nota bitof it You want | faling down. | Laughter, | trinef personalliberly. Well iow, thatis an | 13,062 or it other words in thostaw of Mas- | give then a litlo o Kuisas, Letus godown | Goach the il brotherof Adair, who wa and humble Jesus, to protest against His | your Slocumb law with a high licenise arend- 1 wish that flh,,. time mow to spalk of | sstouishing statement forany sensible man | swchusctts ot ofu total vote onthe prohibi- | to Knnsms. You had prohibitio in Kansis | o (l"_"{ h“ll 3 "‘“ Hp Al et nane being draggzed fn s thedefenderof the | ment, and itis kueeliug it thoblock of exe- | other things, ut 1 woull like to til you ow | © mike fo_an auilone. ~An astonbhing | tim question of 316,00 there wis a_majuity | fivstin 18], ofored pobably in 1352 so tht | 1wl hold Mim as o witiess, He told Heuor tuafic in uny shape, manner or foru. | cution this minute, with the guillotine raised | prohibition don’t prohibit. 1 suppose you | statement. Wiy, T would like 1o tell my | of45,5 agiinstihe doctrino of prbibition. | mark yor, for the fist yew of thejresent | Reichlly the same sory as Adus and do ['Lremendous applause. abovel, assoonas that high licensoamend- | have beard of it. (Laugiter] I havye, | Worthy frimd that with the progwss of civ- | Ialldeda wille azo 1o the voto in the | cemus decado pwhibitionn dicd not interfore | Harel that nelther o nor his brother kucy Itis incredible to think that the man who | ment carries, to cut it off, and to put liquor | Fverywhere I go, us T told some of my fellow | ilization his cone persomal liberty, andwith | state of Michi tho e from which my | with Kunsas, apd yet the fact is that in the | e dead boy oreither of his companions. stauds fuir inhis fame before his fellow eiti- | into every county and community of this | citixns a fow weeks ago, I would | the progres of civiizaton hve we done | friend Prof. Dickie cine. We will now 2o | state of Kansis today they have got but 1,6 - vioIDE of OIDEND? zens und occupies the exalted position of an | state, whether the people wantit ornot;and | come across some judividual of that | #way withlawsthat restained man of his | toNew Hanpshive, where they have had | 441 people; inother words they lave just got SUICIDE: OR ACOLIDIEN alleged puvlic educator, would in this noon | Irevtt, there is no local oplion aboutit, | iind, and he would go Suwhee | personal liberty, statutory probibition longer than I have | 450000 more people in the state of Knnss | — % tide blaze of the nineteenth century h to | ther>isnolocal option high licenseaboutit, | vawhee, yawheo, yawhee. (Imitating beay. Gobackto oll Russia, if you please, go | lived in thestato of Nebrasks, and loiger | than you have got in the state of Nebrasks, | The Dead Body of Charles Strand speak of theSon of God, who came toecarth | it is a simple deviee of the devil foisted | {ng,| Iam not oneof n,,n_fim,,, of animals, | backto thetimeof Peter the Great, goback | than sy of these people have been leeturing | whilé in 1870 they had more than four times ound ina Florence Reservoir. o suve men from their sins, being the or through the legislature and put asan alter- | ayd’ thay is as near as I can get to it | © thetimeof Frederick the Greal, goback | from piblicplatformsyet, neverthelss, inthe [ your population. i Wi 16 filasit or taaldentalldrowninsl nater and the defender and the exemplax of | mtive and the devil overstopped himself, | (Langhter. ] And the doetrine of allis | 0 theearly history of Austia, go whers | prohibitionstateof Now Hampshin with its | | Tonlyhave left just four minutes of #ime, | gy Wi tho question that agitated the the breweries and distilleries, the dogger and the best thing that proibition ecver done | Prohibition ‘won't - prolibit"—praibit— | kings and emperds syayed thir poer | Swatr Blity, who writes boois in favor of | butl want toshow in that comectin tint | | W8 WIS b SUISEOR BAW Wil and damuable hell holes of ‘Amel in this state was the support. of such a thing | prohibit, |Laughter.] 1 have hard it untl | Theirhistry was me ontimed series of | pobibiion, Whois the great champion of | the staic of Kansas, asshown by the vote for | itizens of Floronco: yesterday morning and plause. | usthat, Itell you right now that isif. I am sick and tired of it clicts aginst the persmal liberty o | probibition throighoat the United Sttes, | president of the United States in 1581 and in | o coroner’s jury was finally empanelled to dos Itis true, as recorded in holy writ, tha Get suggestions enough from evi vhere Every timea felow brings it up at me now | subject. ~ As civilization advanced highly | yet inthat state after mere than twenty | 188, as comparel with Nebraska, and as | gidoit. The body of Charles Strand, night . Jesus took the oceasion of the mirriage feast, | and elsewhere, aud defeat prolibition in this | [ tell him it reminds me of the storyof the | cultured pooplecrosied the Athnticocean and [ years of exporieice of stututory prohibition | compared with Minnesotu, andlikewise tho | watqiman at the waterworleshad bees found ™ aceording to the eeremonials which then were | state, you will never carry the high license | Irishiman who went o @ hotd an) wi | tstablishel a repubiie, and with it astad- | the stite of New Hanpshire in 1850 defated | stito of Tows as compared with Nebraska | & SIS (16 WHETRIE B Aten Rala" in vogue upon earth, and in the Jewishhouse- | amendment. 1 tell you that vight now. We | prought a dish of hush, Foehad never seen | lished personal liberty and abandoned the hibition in its coustitution by a majority | and Mimesota, did not increase inpopula- | It reservor No, 5, aud the inquest was h hold where Ho was the guest, when the wine | will triumph on top of it. or we will die to- | j¢ beforeand he was cautions about trying it | doctiine that o man~ was subject to sorme , 19 vots. Go over to Oregon, @ newy | tio at one-lalf the pereentago of ierewse | to determine in what mannerhe had come to that had been prepaved for the feast hud | gether. [Applwse.] —The intelligent, or- | A fior - experinenting with it hecalled the | orderor pmalcode ot the dictatim of any [ stte whichhaslately started ot inthe west, | fomd in cither the state of Nebraskyor the | his death, failed — He took oceasion to turn to the wat: derly, and decent people of the stato of 'Ne- | (waiter and said: “Take that bick to the | man or setof men., . where they were comsidering this sime ques- | stite of Minuesots, and yetlowaand Kansis | Stmnd visited Omaha on the Fourth and of puritication that bad been provided, and, | brask are ot ging to volun tarily put them- | wantlemin that chawed it and toll hin Wiy, not long since it wasmy privilege to | tin, and inOrogon in 187 prohibition was | were both piobibition states and Mimesota | 05 B0 S0V S0 0 FREET ST bidding the servants todraw thence and bear | selvesin any such yoke as th You can’t | Bedad, that he can swallow it, forl won't do | Wander through some of the natiomal come- | defeated by 7,98 vote and Nebraska were both high license 8o 4 il . coleria) to the governor of tho plice what turted out | seare them or bulldo them away from prbi- | {£5" T Langhior. | i teries of this union, through the states of | Go downito the groat stats of Pemsyl | stites. Thore Is o fact, I give thatto | Was not under the influence to any gread to be wine when it canio into the hands of the | bition and sell them out, bodics, boots and | “Aud 501 tell himabout this thing that pro- | Tennesseoandof Georgia, where Iwalked to | vania In 50 when they votal on that ques- | you fron two d Tean give that to you | degree when he entered the englue room of governor, And_ o say thit theSon of God | breeches, to the distillories, and the brewer- | nibition won't probibit. I want to toll you | joe the litle timbstnes that mark thorest | tin there vore296,00 votes for_prohibition | Trom the record of the votecastat tho presi- | the pumping station at o late hour. Friday tured Himsolf into a distiller and ios, and the doggeric that I have been all over this country and I | e placesof thousiids upen thusands of | and 48,000 agaiust probbition, or in other | dentialclection. ©eangivethesame factsto | iyt About 2 o'clock that uight he tool & the first mivacle of creation in - the presence But that is not all. They have seen | haye seon prohibition in every shapethativ | your fellw sodiess wio died that their [ words 88,00 mijority aginstpronibition in | you fron a written letter signed by Judge | 5158 A went Into the cellarto zob. s it of the people He cameto - sage, and turned | through the drcam, aud they are repudiating | hascomeup; I have seen it os statutery | country mightlive ind —that persoal liberty | the canstititionof the great state of Penn- | Foster,a man whom [ persoully kiow, of | Cupand wentiuto the cellar to got some o thewaters of purification, ninety-six gallons, you good tidings of great oy’ | pyghibition, s wonstitutional prohibition,in | Should beachieved for four millions of people | sylvania. the highest charvacter and integrity, the fed- | for his That was the last, tine he into the waters of damuation, is o blasphemy | this afternoon, that the three weeks thab 1| communitics through the south and other | —thelastgrand result of advancing civibizn [ Go down to Texas, arowd whichmy friend | enl julge of the state of Kansis, who tells Saturduy morning his hag upon the Savior of the world, [Applause. | havespentin the westem portion of this | sectionsof the country; I have seen it where | ton. [Applause. | Rev. Small was going to build that groat pro. | preisely the same story and 4 great deal 1s found floating in rescrvoir No. vliv And Tsay it to the gentleman Jow, and to | state among those communities wherethe | thore is o license, I hive seon it with the Why, when you propse to set your foot | libition bar, sowe couldnot get to it except [ more toit. 1sat once divined that he had either sufs the people who back him, that he canuot | people are thinking and reading and studying | foue mile limitation, with the two milo linj. | tponihe propeitionof personal liberty asa | togo through the Gulf of Mexico. I suppose The fact is T want to tell my paople that ted or fullen into the water, prove from holy writor any other writ out- | this subject, the enthusiasm of the erowds | tagion ; 1 have seen all the forms that it isin, | thing of the past.and to warn out the ad- [ be lecureddown there. They voted there | when they tallke about the ineresse of wealth, Men wore set at work dragring the resers side of the saloon or the distillexy, that Jesus | that have gathered, with the consecration of | T want to say now, and say it with confidence | vance tideof civiliation, I tell you you are | for pobibitionin 185 and thiey snowed it | assomcbody did,in thestate of Iansas as | voir buttheir efforts wore unsuccessful une Clrist _ever mude any wine except | the women and with the devotion ofthe men, | in'its trath, us T expect 1o stand bofore the | putting forth the st doetrine that lads to | underby 91,357 majority. compared with the increase of wealthin the | til aboutd o'dock yosterday whien that = whicn was in the cup when | with the couvagoand the grit that is being | judgment barof God, that prolibition des | wnarhy and despotism it the United States, Go o Tamessee, through which he must | state of Nebraska that I will show these peo- y o su L in grappling the boly and it cawme to the goxernor. [Applause] | displiyed upon this subjecr, i community | pwhibit everywiere in this comtry where |1 would just as willingly see a man tample | travel before hecanget o his old state of [ ple when Iometo my next angument that ing it to the survace, ik rther believe with Milton that it was | aftercommunity, 1 stand here today und | there are honest men and conscientions. men | WPONthe stars and strips ab once asto tell corgin. They voted on pohibition down | the increasein wealth in the state of Ne The coroner's jury, consisting of JJ. Toylor, simply i case of “the conscious water blmsh- | say that the caise of pohibiion marks a|in charge of tho exccution of the luy. |me that he loves his countryand in thesame | therein 1857 aid they (defeated it by #,699 | braskais greater than that of any oth r Henry Plant, M, ing s it recognized its Lord.? And if He | highertidein Nebraska this far from clee- pplause. | B M| breath tells me that he wants tostanp out | votes, stute in theunion, and T do not care where 4 g the "¢ had deliberately provided the means of dam- | tion day than it has ever markel in any Prohibition is no failire anywhere except | the theory or the doctrine of personal liverty. How about West Virginia? ‘Why last fall | you hust tofind it betweenthe Atlantic and of accidental nation to the guests with whom He had as- | otherstate before they went tobattle. [AD- | in those places whero the oficars of e Jue | (Applause.) they defeated it there bya majority of 3,857 | Paciticoceans. Or in other words the prop- | &2 ¢ y was brought to the sembled, and destroyed the waters of puri- | plause, . aro oither o 8ot of pusilinimons puppios | A word o with referenco tooneor two | vot osition comies back tothis, and remember it Undemulce rket, ation, it would huve been s violation of the | Vs, you cantalk about prohibiton belng [ g o set of perjired scoundrel who | of the adanciz tioagls whichare smply, | Now, gooverto litle Rholo Tsand, that | uitil Monduy, aud I will_show you that in 5 believed that Strand attempted to dJewish law subjecting Hin to punishment | o hobdy for long hawred men and short haived | ayg © pet fit to bo oMceor for |1 Suppose the precrsory remark therstato wler had coustitutional | Nebraska, under your high licise law, you | eros the wall between the reservoirs and fell Himself, audis, I ropeat, an incrediblo thing. | womei to get upon and go around [laughter] | 5 pen full of hogs Laughte bate which is to folow hereafter, 1s advan e pronibition, The state of Rhode Island put | have had greater increasein poputation, you | into the water, which is twenty-five feet 1tis not only incredible, but it never hap- | but the old hobby has wrned into & war | Tf you think that you have wisdom, intell. | by Prof. Dickie on the docwineof prohi promibition in their constitution inls86, T'hey | have had greater incre in wealth, you | deep, and owing to the steep incline of the pened, and itls not to be soueht hereas a de- | horse. [Laughter.] Aud he is pawing up | geice and patriotism enough; if yoi thivc | Hon. Lsimply waut toansver asuggostion, | votedon itagain in 839, afterthre vears of | have had the least number of “people in your 1 cement wall was unable to got out oe ense of theold Willow Spring sewer gus | the carth, Aud that's what's the matter. | Loy areable to seloct oficers who have not | andIleaye myanswer tothegeneral proposi- | prohibition life, and when the ted on th penitentiary, in your poor houses, in yourin din_ahold, even if he managed to reach manufuctory down hero on the banks of the | That's what's causing the agitation in the | guly clear consciences and honest counte- | tionat such tine as he seos fit toadvance it. | question in 189 they snowed it under by | swne asylum, and a less numberof idots pro- | thewall. "T'he body was inthe water about Missouri river at Omana. [Laughterand ap- | camp, [Laughter.] That is the reason why butare thosewho will enforce the | Butso faras it s en suzgstedto this | 18,850 majrity prtionate 1o your population than they have v hours, and was badly swollen and dise plause.| those gentlermen ave willing to o back on | Jyy “wowillgo on advandng and then we | people that prohibition isa lay of ournature | I want o tellthe good people of this audi | lad intheirprohibition states about “which bd 4 Why, he says they were gathered arowid | the — adyi and counsel Lof their | wil'let these fellows find outwhetherwe | anda lawof our cviliztion he propssed to | mee of thostaie of Nebriskathat the jud they talk that the millenium is just bholding ased was thirty-five years of age tho tablo at the time of the last suppee awl (moro wary friends of Pémsylvanin will probibitor not. [Mrs, Gougar: ive | illustrateit. mentof all these stutes where they have de- | its Shudowy wings over them andunmarriod, He has two brothers living e tincarnated in o wine” |[Laughter.] | and otherstates, avho told them “Don't you | syomen froe suffrage and they will enforce Why, lie gave two or three illustrations of this question, where they have con- When I hear some of these prohibitionists | at Florence, andanother at some pointin Ihave recently been elected “president | go out and debate this question; don't vou | jyo 3 whit he said were restraints of our personal | sidered ths question, they have voted itdown | talk it makes methink that allwe will have | central Nebraska, Hehad resided av Flor- of a university ; [ think he ought to come aud | get up and talk about it [Appluse and | “'We men knbw how to ke the devil | liberty, but I want to tell thisaudinceil | s @ pernidous docriae destructive of the | t0do to reach the millonium 15 to write pro- | ence for three years, and boarded with the Toin. [Laughiter] Hegot vincarnatod in the | laugiter]. Yes, they told younot to do it, [ giirredup and the women kuow how to keep | Youlookat any illustration that he gave you, | welfire ad prosperity of those states. 1| hibition ona card, pin it to your coat tils, | family of Gus Andorson. wite.” [Laughter.] Well thatis too good | and if youdeliberately goand rushin whers | ho men stirred up. | Wo o going to ke | thatis it an illistratien of adoctineof | mademy dosing stitement in thedosing flap your wings and fly tohcaven. When I | Thé funeral will take place at2 o’clock to tobe lost. Novertheless, whatever He may | angels'fear to tread, why you must take the [ this work up until we get this “,i‘,u,..m,.,l‘ regulation, and dismetrdeally opposed to the | tencoof my rkjustmadein refereuce to | come to look over thehistory of this countey | day from the undertaking parlors of H. KK, have made at Cang, when He sat there on | consequences. (Laughter]. You arclike Josh Billings Kttle steer that, | dociine of prohibitions Why, my fricid | the vote of these respective states thatit was | politiclly, lookut it fromits setual growth | Burket, 113 North Sixteenth st that awful cceasion, presaging the gloom of | Now, 1know the thing is waxing hot, my | way tied to ustake; he sid henoticed him | $a¥3 thathe could nol build ahousein tie | voted down becausoin the judgment of the [ from statidtics are ofticial, | want tosay | ment at Forest Lay the fatal Friday when He lung upon the ac- | countrymen. The signs are in the sk tho | Daause he pawed tigit andloft but ke meven | cityof Omali four stories high —a frane | peopl it was desteueti the welfare and | to this people that the doetrine of prohibition : - - rsed troe, and when, gathering His be- | voice of the peopic In the air therois a | poticeq that he got any further away from | bullling. T wat to tell my friend | prosperity of the states. I think I am pre- | a3 it exists in this countiy is destructive of | UNION FPACEFIC MINE Loved discinles about Him, He iustituted that | burning of brush all around the horizon; the | the stake. If you want to havesome fun in | that wo do not puhibit tho - buildisg | paved to provethatpropsition. Understand | the welfaroand prosperity of every state that — il sacrament that | people are getting ready to sottle this que this state you Detter lave it now wiile the | Of louses in Omabn, bit we regulate it. 1t | whatl say, adoptsit, and if youadoptit in the state of | The Wyoming Maon Rel ) there was one dis- | tonand settleit right. Why, you are situ- | joint, debates are going on hore. We will have | 13 ot because we have! goi prohibition up | I donotmean totell this audience, and I | Nebruska it will” blight your prosperity as Under the Screening System ciple who was a traitor to bis Lord, and the | atedin the very heart of the' great prohibl: [ Tha fun nosw, or wo miy bo ltice the Irishang, | ther. We vite Prof, Dickie tocoms ther, advocating the docteine that the | bad as the grashoppers which tol away Lamaim, Wyo, July Be=[Spocial broad hus not died out yet, [Laughter and | tion territory of the country ; with the grand | \ho sy a steer in & fleld and ho thouzht it | Weinvite himto pit ups building. ALl we | use ofstimulants toan excessis a buefitto the | your crons within the memoryof the peopie | o Bon BN Boar Paci applanse. | old states of” the South aud ‘North Dakota 0 | \ould bo great fun to jump over the fence. | $a¥ to Prof. Dicklois will do with him | people. Thatis mot the proposition. It is | Who sit in this audic [Applause.) gram to Tne Bt ]—Bvery Unlon Padfio Their lineal descondants are still seeking | tho northward of you; with the grand old grab the little steer by the horns and rub his | justas we dowith luu&nhmn interest, that | not that, I amasmuchopposed to that as The president just announced to me that I | coal mine at Rock Springs is idle on account toscll His followery for less than thirty | stateof Iowa to theeastward; with Kansas | noe o tho dict. He thought, itso funny that | Which is bestfor the wdiam of the éntire | you are, Butthe real question is, when you | have but one mijutemorein this discussion, | of the refusal of tho ploces ot silver. But, when He st there oia | and the Indian territory to tho south; with i | by sat down and laughed qnd lughed abott | community, md we Wil regulate the thing. | actas o part. of the fanduneital liw of | and for tho purpose of using that one minte lut occasion, whatever Ho may havo done | impissable live of prairie dog holes bewween | o "Yyoll, then ho jumped over the fence, | [Applause. | yourstate the doctrine of prohibition what is | I can not eater upon the next topie in theline T fo e Wty oen( R (31 1o eanis BINER: 10 before that time, ou that solemn | youand the west —why, you are the best sit- | gi0lc the Steer by the horns and was throw g Now, my other fiiend hew from Utihgor |its genexil effect? Of coursein deciding that | of my argument aginst prohibition, but I| P3 b i 4§ i co: I the = praienco of the | hated people on the faleof the earth for pro- | gloar overSthe fonce, md it nety. brolee him | Georgia [ donot kiow where 10 lowte him | question you must take into consideration | will state it 1f time pernits me, hercafter, | been screened. The company has been pres tomiug passion and = death unon the | hibjtion and Ithink you are equally intelli | y tywo, Fo picked himself up ad siid, "Be- | todiy. [ hase notgot quiteused to lim yet. | the resulls which necessarily grow outof it. | Iwillreferthis audienceto the proof of the | pared for this emergency for several months and consecrated it holy | gent, equally cultured, equally regardful of | qid what a good thing it was Ihad my | Hesuggstad the thought that we could not | What aretheyt Just afewof them wer facts, I will prove to you that in the states | and claim that it will not mterfere with thel ud sald, “As oft as ye take ofit, do it | your family and your homes, wd for the [ jou2n'first. | Laughter. | Y | sayanytiingabout the Savior inthiscasebe- | nounced by iy friend in opening this discus. | where they have adoptéd probibition, that in | Awscondi contract, ws it terms provide fom remembrance of me,—from that day to uuh’lf‘ of your sons ind the comfort of your | “r'thuk you, ladies and gentlemen, for your | CBUSe We were linking him with the salon | sion. They assertthe proposition thit tho | one-lalf of them, they have more peoplopro- | such exigencies. T'he company declives that this wine hus becawn a consecrated thivg | daughten, and mindfalof their future and | giention,” § interest, I wantto sayto him that [am uot |saloms (I suppose they mean under high | portionateto their populstion selling liquor | it will not reswime operations —except under from the hands of the blessied Christ of the | of their fulfilling your hopes and the destiny i — here to advowte the siloon interst. license) filled our state with paupers. Well, | thanyou havein the state of Nebrasks or | the scroening system. The miners take the world, Aud now, when wo do partake of it, | that Gol has written for them, as well as HON., JOKN L. WEBSTER. Has ho nover found out yet any dif- [befoe L get done I will show | everlad. [Applause) those who are fuithful to bis words will par- i‘_u\lruoi,:hlm!.\llu' Dakotas, and lowa, and ference between prohiibition and the question | theso people, 1f the tiine ever Why, my fricads here, the Rev. Samuel tuke of it only inremembrance of Him, and | Kuosas, and I believe that you can just take A High License Argum 'nt Replete | of regulitinga sort of evil that cannot be | happens to be long cnough toget through | Small saidhe had got tived of hearing people = i Hiereby thoy do show forth Elis death, But, | this whole scope of country, carrying No- With Statistical Information wiped out ofexistnce! If e bas notlearied | with this discussion, that in states where you | tllc gboutthe question that probibition Tho Weather § at do you mean to tell me that thoe crowd that is | oraska in the lap of the prohibitionists of the e ¢ i thit distinetion Iwill give him time to think | have got prohibition you have got more peo- | not prohibit. Tdo mot « how tired he is, % b " 5 patronizing the high = licenso suloons of | grit west ud on the fourth dayof Novem. [ Flon Jobu L. Webster of Omhabeingin- | {0 il noxt Monday morming, but uitil | plo i your alms Bouses, proportioatato | I winb o tell lim thatbofors this debate| For Omaba and vicinity—Fair weather, pmata drink in remonbrunce of the Lordt | ber [ am sucisfiod sho will whoel graudly into | troduced by the charman, addressed the as- | tha T want o call his atteaion to the fict | your population, tan you hive got in (e | shailend, it this audienco wil give motho | For Nebrska und lowa-Fair, followed by plause and laughter. | lineand show a solid front from the Ca semblyas follows: that when he was talking aboit the wine | good and glorions state of Nebraska. timeand listento it, I will prove to hin by | showers; southerly winds; cooler, except Il me all those places that the gentleman | bonder to the lines of Texas for prohibition, Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: I | mircloat Cana tiat ii Rev. Sam Snall had Tuey say itfilis your y I will | the records which can not be answered that | eastern lowa; warmer, has by Implication eulogized a8 contributory | [ Applause]. o 44 been the > d have take e | tell these people s copied fron cial | prohibition fm Muine, Now Hampshire, Ver- | For South Dakota - Showers; variable 1 am bafore you today, not by auy solicitation | Pen there, he would have tsken up the | tellthese people of izures copied from ofticial | | Maine, Now Humpshir 3 1 the decency, good order and respoctability | And you gentlemen that love bars so well, KIaP8 JOU SRNIVIOL b 83 ¢ witer wd instead; of transforning it into | reports that they have mor peple in the | mont, Kuusas, lowaand the two Dakotas, | winds: colder Mo 1:ht of the great city of Omaha aro places of sac- | we will put a bar of pohibition across this | of my own, [ amnot here hired by anybody | oiie howeuld hate sid, “Witer is good penitentisries in proportion to the population | the oily placesyou ha on this continent, fimentary association? = [Laughter] Out | coutinent that you will have to wade thoGull | or by any society, I am not herw represeuting | enough for this feast, takethatand vote for | 1n Maine Vermont and New n..u.pm\w than | thatit bas never prohibited, aod | will show Steamship Areivals. with such bosh. L repeat, it is an insult to | of Mexico fo get wound. [Appluse]. | wy cliss or any interest except that which 1| prohibition." weover had in thestat of Nebraska, I will | you that more peoplo bave 'been licensed by | At Philadelphia—The Scandinavian and the pajosty of God wud itls & blaspiemy ou | But tney will never get around i, Tor they | poliave to be honest, 1am mot hero uide When Paul pat forth that litle sttement | shoy yoi furthernore, if you want to ke ow | the governmentof the Unitd States to sell [ g 50 : tho holy missionof the Son of God. (A voice: | dou't take water that casy. [Laughter and 4 X J ve | tolimothy, “Drink no logger water, hut | it, that while Rey, Samuel” Small talks about | hquor in the stateof Towa than wercever | France from Coaszow : “Amen. " | applause] N sic; you better get your | SWUArY from this society orany other, llm\'z; tako a litle wine for thy stomuch’s sake'® | the peopl (he Tendts { A a o [idaniad dl 4 f Ne k At New York-T'be Sorrento, from Name v 0 JEAY Dwar, o o y stonuch’s sk people in the penitontiary thiy stae, | licoumed 1 scllit i taostate of Nebruska, | | AL ¥ b ey Webaven sheriff downin Hurd, in Geor | crowd i marhingorder, Things areciniw | 0me o speak to this people bewse the | Koy, Suall would have chauged the bible, be | thatoneof the posous retinguowin it | [Applause] urg ; Lia Cretague, from Havre, miners to work under thescreening systom; that is, not to receive ground that the system will redico wages, while the railroad maintains the contrary,