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. = — — = —= — - e —— ~ — -~ - - == = — | AT NPT T 1 [rpe—— - R "V TWENTIETH YEAR. i OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 8 1800, by NUMBER 20, |4 =il | 1 - = = | \ TATDINC | in Towa, the ex-goveiaor of Towaor the edi- | of blather atoit the debt ridden farmes ire that tn the rueal districts tho Taw s | prosecution has been kept a profound secret | the thing was vot only a fe 5 and - | QIV A " . Igive you another. Governor Larrabee | now, but it talked about the debt ridden far- | Gtiesit Isopeniy anC Rl dgnored orcon= | an suppression during the present campaiy and s destroyed more pr 3 © y values than | alsosays: “itis safe to say that not one- | me: during the Pennsylvania campaien. ST e the demind. 1) 1 his heen the | However, ho will bo compelled to either | if the city had been struck ) | tenth and probably not one-twentieth of the | | 1 have another from that remaricible sheet, | iy sicgution in Towmslact e liw. wils' ens | ke o comect stutementor nfuso to, eithor | Now, how is it in Kansas ~ out bruveries? .. | tauor is consumed in the state now as was | Tug Owan Bt tor u the | weted. Oceasional of the clties will | of which would bo an adwission of guilt. | In the 'county of Atehi browery has , They Prove Beyond a Doubt that Prohibi- | consumed ive years ago.’ Tarrabeo says | 7th duy' of last Apeil Tur Ouviey Bt | ko oy poraey et enforcn el | Aboutone yearsgo it was pubiisiod it the | beon n Oporation witho of hindranco | Desdly Work of the Storm King at the yap that probably aot one-twenticth, and yet you | publishcd an unsigned letter from Ex Ut sueh oTOS e spisin i fna Jite | probibition papers of the: land, including | since the operation of - the In Leaven- ity r tion is a Failure, will find sorne on this platform bforetheday | Neb., which aimed to show that during two T o S LR SU BRVIUE ODRRI1YIOR ||| Vol ooy NaW, ity that In. Shavos sonniy, | worth i VAL, ol ] of. hoss 1:%'1\..11. W2t s e v]\““ tryi ‘- ] \',’,'” Lt ‘m‘.n‘ 1{\\". = of a2 license the m\u h.l.-l ]x,m‘ .--”\ Y et ,,,“,‘,(,m",,_,,, Alstiled spirita are | ISONSas, in oth o i Popeka, there | stopped. [Appl g T drinks more liquor today than she did before | greatly; busincss was paralyze rop: sed 18 @ beverage In 1ow Pl present | Were 1o eriminals for tria From January 1 to J 1, 9800, for five a8 @ § VESTERDAY'S DEBATE AT BEATRICE. | the passace of the prohibitory luw. | declined and industry was prosteated. The | fuw than ever havebeen orever would b une | “Ihe naked trath was that the old county | months, { Wsts for deaikeniess iu the | THE MOTHER ALSO SERIOUSLY INJURED, Atother, Hon. Mr. Humnyiieey, tho bresent | anonymous lettor elosed with thesa words: | ur aiicense system bt ‘on tho othier Tand | attorney was golig oat and the new county | eity of Leavenworth were 213, by theoficial - | governor o Kaisast” “Drohibition is neiter | “Out busi n andall depondent “an | thurels less Lilt lauge um equilly | atiorney was going in, The out-going at- | report of the public wart. Al now we come S b = farce nor a failure, he open s n isout- | county tra h peen solid for RA ry wors N torney glid not have the case docketed. | to Atc ) ) incip: PO S Dickie Confines Himself to Generalities and | lawed, the avocation of the barkeeper is gon ' Am of reputable g ‘it prohibition to lesson tive | LTher s the usual number pady for trial i the city of Atchison the police conrt i i LIRS LG SRS 5 ) S Since prohibition was enacted in the state it | propared s reply _and oviisof i e y i At the last term of court in 1850 there shows t uring the year 1880, 1,17 Lare Unitoolud—Traing Blown Frous Grow Mikreptesentations . - ; p vy i1sof fitemperanee ' nigri- | iretin | there wei w that during the yoar 1889, 1,17 Larvests 9 sreprese | has inereased in wealth, in population and in | up to moe , eiving b and has ratlon from the | eightynine criminal cases on the docket, | woere made, of which 378 were for drunken. the Treack Damages in | prosperity, and crimo s greatly dinin- | o the amonsinou ot Al 1 in T jd dhat 16 igs distrored mose oF (o | several of which reprosonted more than ond | niess and disturdunces Otlter Tewts, ishec MAHA BeE, and closing with this languase ¢ 1 invested 1 reyer and distitlories, | prisoner, making over one hundred prisoners Atchison has been just 1 savenworth i WHILE SMALL DODGES THE ISSUE. | Hon.J. J. Ingalls o States senator | “That the filse statements may be corrected | [Eret Lunghterl, riined, Lhoe industiies and Iy for trial. - OFf theso over forty wore | Ttlins beenn dead town, paraiyzed by pro - i from Kinsds, 1 am ood un attorney to | and the truth k 1 we, the dtizens of Ex- | | £ honcy sentto atherstutes forthe pure | s and at least two were murder cases. | hibition, Business is languishing, and al) juld res e i ully dsk you to publish ’'e s stop and impeach the testimony of my own | b witnesses or 1 might say something to | Rosewater and Webster Prove Their State- | him, but here is the testimony: | KKansas has abolished tho saloon; the | Junuary 1, 1850, thero haye been on the docket of the district o chiise of ntosieatls 0 | improvements aro at o standstill Ieounted [ Farao, 8, D, July T.~This city was vise "% s sny one in | twentyfive cmyty storo houses on Com- | fted this morni Smith, president Fix My predecessor [ by the severest wind storm i C. A Wullbrandt, general | has stated that vorl iance county, Kensas, and at st thirty- | mercial street, and saw but one builling L 3 . 10 W ) \ , o one builling in | aver known here, Tt began at 200 and e ; e : h C.A. Songster, coal and lum- | heen convertod—or rather, pe five have been sent to the penite Xl the course of construction, [ o L ST SV ments by Indisputable Authorities. open dram-shop is us extinetas the sile of LW allace, cashicr Excter National | Larrabeo said it—thats We have been told that prohibition doos hoity of St. Jos 0., has boo | tinued for alf an hour. Eary in the night 0 I s s Lar 1 [ that prohibition d Thety of St. Joscph, Mo, has been en- | P indulgences, A drunkard is a phenomenon, | bunies Sanford Williams, hax ¢ and iw- | been converted into vat 1 mot fnjire businoss. 1 will road the followinig ‘ Joying undue prosperity’ at the expense of | there wero some indications of rain, and - | s barkeeper has joined the crusaders and | plementss Jacob Pting, agricultuval imple- | theya 1 by the méu who | upon that subject fehison and wenworth, There ave six- | about midnight it commenced to thunder an A CONVINCING ARRAY OF STATISTICS. | the mound builders. The brewer andthe | ments.” | | for‘one will suy that I at least one “I'he following capitalists and prominent | !--v drug stores in Atehison county, and | ning. i distille i the bonded warchouses are | As arule when you find an anonymous | payty that weit from ¢ il Blufls and lo- | business men fu the state, after having al- | fourteon of theso aro in the city of Atchison, [ ™ agiiq it e Giak I‘vw\l\u '\\ to ‘m‘h“- mv‘l, B o \u”:n.'l\‘}lu;ul :.I-u.»r in Tur n“m\]nlu |‘ ‘r;.\ wher gl cated in Chattanooga 1 I8 run ; t ruined their home town of Topeka, have | Their reports of sales show all the way from | # & “‘l gl o ”""" i . 2 sonse Local | 028V very likely edits” e Oaua Bk, | there is some scoundrel af the bick of it that | ry thore, and the Council Bluf it for more congenial elimes and have | 2010 400 for por montl | from e south, bt sudden, Ao Incomparable High Liconso Lot al | Applaus kiows he is not telling the truth. [Applivse been. conye oY soughtmoro promising opportunities for in- | There ar lcos. on Commenrcial | shiftod to tho nothwest and fna vory «Iw\{ Option Law of Nebraska Shown o e mor v specific testimany, R. H The Omuha World-Herald tells us that the | 5 Lo @ T know. . [ Vs theie wealth: B. M. Dav strcet whero liquor is sold. On_ordinary | time was blowing a hurricane, Thrce eloos be the Only Means of Regu McClure, clerk of Osage county | taxes in Omaha last year were 001,000, and | od."] 1t pretty didlenlt | president bank of Topekn, gone to Chicago | duys, alond of beer is disiribuled on this | gpje light towes i Bl s Lt uo saloon in_the county, drinkoenness has | further than that, the said tax has there- | thing fo couvert abrewery, Isuppose, [Great | wise of the depression in business in | 1 on Satirday night four wigon 10 SHEEL WMWK vare: sooh BIown doily lation and Prohibition, been entirely done away with, the population | fore increased, says that paper, 3 per cent | Jaughter,) i 1» ok caused by prohubition; Dr. Malvane, | left ut dives along this stroet, | 1eving thecity in inky darkness that was 1]![ the ‘|"“m “"vfll”fm'; ~\||u-_”|‘m\lh|hnurn over the year before, Isit not time tocalla | 1 will read here: violent prohibitionist, wealthy, gone to Chi Chereis one butcher, who seils about two | relieved only by vivid flashes of lightuing, e began, busitiess s kept pace with the popu- | halt? I U6 Hothallaoa tHRUN s Il beds alintn: y: ox-Mayor Metsgar of Topeka, gone to | poundsof meata day, has a joint in the rear he frightened inhabitants were aronse Bratnicr, Nob., July 7.—[Special to T | lation’ and capital ean be had from the cast Ihave another: 1 rather like to quote | fshed oreriminal expens:s ' NG M0, S FARRORTAToHI MB RS, TR ot WG TS ot D WvaniD 1“.‘.1‘;.“,4,.,. from their sleep "“,\'r h’,\ \l\.‘||“~\yvnn:‘ v:.tu: Brr ]I the opinion of the oldust citizen of | Wilh greater ease and at about twothirds of | from Tur Ovaus Brr, —[Laughter] I want minal conyietions ar i conent'and brick businesspgoneto Denver, | the street thero is a lavge cave which is : i tho p ! 1.6 teatitital bity 6f Beatrico it nover batore | PLoIOCHIEE 1ate of intorest you tohearall this because the reporters re hefore the Law went int Colo., same ns o Ransis aveonie. | utilized ns tsaioon, Thete s u heex ganlen | *naows allover thocity, but outsido. thore the beautiful city of Beatrice it nove | M. F. Wood, treasurer of Montgomery | will vepring it: ML AR v R AT Topeka, over one five out of six | with shado trees and @ merry-go-ronnd. | WS nothing but darkness and tempest and gince its incorporation contained such a vast | county, Independence, Kay “The law is a “Peter Kuhlman wanted to start a saloon | JRC U Sreatly Ineroased. soulbiodof business men and clerks declare for resub- | It is said that two n loads of beerare | Bothing could be heard Wt the angry concourse of peoplens were gathered leve | great suceess. Thereds not one barrcl of | atNo. 117 Novth Ninth streel, next door to | il ey that oarjails i d penitentlarios nro | missi | disposed of there wlone. Down alongthe rail- | roar of the wind aud the crashing of flying 4 yosterd: 1 ¢ flocked in from neighbor- [ Whisky or one ke of beersold in the county | an evening paper. The busincss men in that | being cmptied is o delusic Wenever needed I'he old republican prohibition party held | rond tracks thero are dives where murderhas | qobris, By 4 o'clock people were hurrying %5 188 towAK fiild mate /Alsthnt; polits until the for ten of each sold before prohibition. nelghborhood protested, and the fuss came | butone penitentiory I this state, and whe convention June 10 fortho purpose of send- | been committed frequently, and, of course, | ¢ it dicl % t atan \tWoe B1RASE 6} A I want you to note the representative ¢ up when the protestants were given a hear- | We builtiwo more. o had one morethan was | e doiogzates to tho congressional convention | by reason of thew being o regulative re: | CVeRy ditection toascertain the amount ot hotel staurants and other places of sccom - | g ter fthese men. County clerks, county | ing, Every business man in the block, ex- | L '.”\'»“\-"”.\‘:::{-uul“r wag "““‘{“ o “‘-““"_”: at Bmporis June 24, next introdu a reso- | quirement by the police, the worst, class ofy| damage done. Some appalling sights wore modation for the visitors wero filled to over- | treasurers, judges and public men cept the owier of the building where' the | ¢(Hit "V Nigre Wives and el ldreng i ve heon fme | 1ution favoring prohibition and against the | men are dealing out the deadly poison soon met, the saddest being the deth of flowing and the late comers lad to putup | Charles M oy reasurer of Thomas | proposed saloon was to be located testified | poverisied by exorbitant fihes fnposed by | onginl packige business, Tho wild-cyed | Now 1 want to vead you some testimonials : [ seven ehildren of the late Captain Jaues with whatever they could get. At the lead- | county |1‘umm“m has been enforced as | the saloon would kill their trade. The li- | this Taw thuil ever were rained o thisstate | pronibition republicans tabled it prompily, | 0. H, Bentloy, semitor of the Twenty~ | MuCarthy, who died only & few week ing hotels crowds of hungry prohibitionists well as any other law in - the state, There is | couse was refused.” I am astonished that | by all the evils of intonperin omhine not daring to discuss the subject in open con- [ ninth district of Kansas, residing at Wichita, | 208 L o e 1 ¥ fos | mot @ saloon or drug store inthe county | this paragraph found its way into the col- | {Tanghter] und, throusiy BIC BICANS 10T | yention,”? suys: I have experionced nine years of | #80 The childin were at, home with and anti-prohibitionists patiently waited for | where liquor can be bought for dvinking pur- | unns of Tiz Ovia B Laughter | fumiicsliave ated and disgrieed | SN Oy while Mr. Thompson was fu_the ity | probibition in Kansas. 1t isa delusion snd a [ theie mother, and soughi safoty in a coal bin, & hours for an opportunity to refresh the inner poscs l:tm‘\ : hu ievo pr \hx‘ rim.j \s m“v[vvn and 11\‘\]\|;m~|- ] \Aml“l ke only account for | Vs "Fhio seate 19 (Ul of suchextromo | Of I‘n‘-m ka, he wentto work and passed up | snave, Ltincreasestaxes and cuts off en- | where they were all ernshed to - death, The man. Everybedin the hotels and restau- | 8way asingle capitalist an kiow that | iton the theory that Mr. Rosewater was out | hiardsihip that my pe Was constantly | and down the main strect of the city of tirely the natural immigration of & new stte. | mother was also serious fiehit ot ; ¢ weh money has been spent in the payment | that afternoon having his _photograph taken | co D et diEr e s clonatar oty || Helca s W6H this FGpoAL tior \ V' Kat o ' Y : i ke LR AR LB fate Wi GOt Anil tn KDY cives the | TUON MosE L _ 3 at afternoon s his pl ph talked mpelied to extend cmency €0 | peka with this pro, 12 A ballot hox was | Had Kansas never been adilicted with pro- |yt it W0 3 e o |‘.v cupiedand in inany eisos the | ofdobte that would have boen spent for | for <Bub. [Lau Renewed lauchter. | | 8ave wiiole fumnilies o U poor Bonse, and sented to every person, and eich business | hibition Wichita today would have 100000 [ thousht WAL Idotel it tionists ¢ ‘ v ; quor without proliibition ur people on't consume my time, On the lith [ ean do nothingless ollow In his foot- 18 asked to drop into that bo: st | people. Prohiibition ¢ S tho state of 1 other persons sustained slight iijurics, prohibitionists und tho autis found that fate | Jiguo hout hibition, Our people D. v ti « Liaan dp aoitiing1gen Al hiea in was askoed P into that box o ballot, [ people. Prohibition drains the state of rady | 0L ¥ b t slight had willed it that they should pass at st | would be poorer were it not for prohibition duy of last I ry Hon, Willtam Liarcabee, | JEIS e WO b Ko o i raetisly | Whother it was foror - against resubmission | eash. It has driven 100,00 people outof | Whe Northern —Pacilie through northe one night together in close proximity. . A, Beoman, treasurer of Os- | ex‘governor of Towi, in alengthy letter, uses | UG i dhie & oyt Ui 1 and we have here the afidavit of the man | Kansas and has lost several hundred thou- [ bound passen train was blown from Wiibiiree Fathering of people wers all vory Prolibition' s i clorious suc- | ths quice: UAs to the depreciation stup s et 10w W ot To- | who took that ballos, And he makes this | sand m immigration to the stite. It 5 a | treiand many of the passengers severoly d-natured isposed tc o the bo: is cuforced as well asany othe value of real estate, occasioned by prohi cover from in years. Very truly yours, certificate (reading) : greater curse to the state than hot winds or | : 5 - 7 good-natured and disposed to mako the best We have no saloonsor joints, The | bition, it is sheer nons No o e HOwA Ci BOIES. AP o F R ie, iAo nte taakie sl grasshappers. It fs only o question of time | Dut not duugervusly injured, T'he Northern of the situation. Quite & number found it | disappeavance of drankenness aid dvi knows best, ex-Governo Wbee While T was sitting on this platforma let- | Wi Kenny, bég duly sworn, deposesand | till Kansas vids hersclf of prohibition, In | Pacitic muchine shops and the freight depots necessary to slecp outside with the starry | for by wrage purposes is almost t ‘ ditor of 4 newspaper willing to sell its space | s handed to me this moring voluntar: | says: ¥ 5 my judgment no greater mity can hap- | of the Northern and Milwaukee roads were canopy of heaven as their only roof. In spite | isht tax rate has been decrea to public falsehoods concocted in Louisvile, ned by a banker from the town of | 1 waser d to tako the vote of Kunsas o fo Nebraska than to adopt. constitutional | demolished, Several churehes ware budly P AEVENL BLhon big attractions: in, the | etty. | oS¢t ata [Applause loud prolong | Logan, and T will_read it toyou, It is di- [ avenue, in 4 Kan, on the question of hibition. Prohibition has cost Sedsewick | S 7 i \ : T vBb ol S AGirrciiapy | ALY Pauperism has been decreased o, 1 believe, been sust [ rected from Logan divect to Beatrico: prouibition i rsibmission, ) Tvis. | county diving niie yoars of prhibition | YOS d and numerous other buildings were the great topie of conversation eve e, | We haye abetter class of people. Hundreds | as well as adjoining states whe | Toaax, Tn, Juiy 7, 180.~ton, E. Rosowntor, | Ot G el aud Hih diys of Junc, 180, 1 vis: i ¥ © orless dumaged. The total danage in in the lobbies of the hotels, on the st that uded to spend theiy moucy For liquor & isnot the rule. Money is now spe et Beltrides N r: Wil yon pur- | iigoron Kanss, avenie from the river to ateof Nebraska wishes to lose city was about 85,00, on the ground as the now celebrated pro- | now sober, honest and industrious i srios of life und for legitimate uses in- | 401 & suzgestion in resi of“pro- | Biehil street, with theexception ulation, to destoy her ir 1o . Pavi, Minn, July 7.—A correspor t ver 1 . W 5 1l \, troasurer of Marshall stead of being sp t the loc The hibitio 1 would Like e you ask the | [ dopot and one hard wire s Mo f 1 | of the Pic Pross tolog, phs as f " hibition versus high license debate W. H. Smith ] stead of being Sy at the saloon. The | gayperinen folks what fhey are 210 do f iz her present ety and £ ) let RENLLEIDE SO it e st dm oy hour yehicles of | €2UNty: “Our Cxporience with prohibition is | banking business of the statois & fuirbavom- | Wit o iard lighs" and “tomporanos | Sy stors and presentud tho ballot | adopt prohibition, Tl that pro- | A straight wind from tho northwess ] OF | that it drives out themen we do not want and | eter. pool rooms™ arter thef v prohibite | ooty ez i WS | Hibition s the moral side of the “question 1y | Struck Puiko at 20 il moning G v-l-m_\ seription were scen l\\. ndi ‘f ;,‘H,. in those we do want [Applause,] The mumber of banks in the stite has R1at0a 18 R AAGIos0 SO-0RT160 ! ind theiremployos and raquested thein 1 oIl humbug; prohibition means free whisky.” | damage was done the city I cleciio their way to the counds e this: Tts our worst citizens to v increased, and their capital rapidiy uls are is bud ts the open si- ssion. Tho hox w urely naiedond - light owers wero blown down 'l o long before the o announced -'w\'"'d ki and brings us their best people multiplied, 1 think more than balf the jails | K L AU GRS LR B (o, sened the sarme i tie Smal! and Webster. | blockey unroofed. Yorx's wi n, MeGill available | [APPE of the stato are entirely the present | lonling places whekg temperance, drinks uro | yrognce of Hor Crouch of Flor Bhio Rev, Stm Small followed Me. Rosowa: | & Co.s warchotises, thoopera house, the o for tho del ;.1 / .w;m i v .‘x.m.ml § Adamson, treasurer of Jackson | time, There are ninety crat ki O e R | LD R e G D of O, il “”‘, ',_ '_";', i l‘ ti ,".vl,‘xlx’ : :\ : | publican ofice, the Keony block, the battlss Spica fnithe Liagt couiity ur business interests are on one penitentiary than there wery o years | billinrd saloons or “piviors”’ where tempers | Mg 4 paRd of o SRR e i Rt s gt foseWi | eat o the' banie o th' Dakota, the As the debate proc cnormous n Cay is coming uninvited 0. Expenses in eriminal courts have de- | ance drinks are alone soll. As you can sco A Lo Allen, and the ballots were tuken | ter and very little oferenco to themain issue. | Chapin block, te Bxela ol, the Con= crowd inercased until oeredfully | Mon tu el t 11”.‘ way 10 the salc ased vory larely duviyg tho Tist few | the idea boier tin 1§ explus | D e couieri s Wobstor closed the moing devies with | tiiental block and the Manitobiv freight 7.000, Tho audience was much bet. | tills isemployed to feed, clotho” and educate | years” And all this from Governor Lama- [ ter] I will not botlier you wlth 1 e result is as o mastorly nt sustaining his sido of | house wero unroofed und the Milwaukeo 4 n Saturday, although | the children.’ bee, who S that the talk about the de- | Y OUrs, CHARLES 3 and three votestor rosubmise | 4o questio Bl lia T R depot was blown down, ter pehaved than on Saturday, although | “F GUETIEG 6o to read all the extract Pimhiaeprderiledinaliebilin s . Proprietor Login Bank, | ¢on s ndred and sivty for pr ho quastion. 1o sald he had hoard nothing | = g 'or syall houses wore mised and ale Prof. Davidson found it necessary to again | glong this line, but I wish to call you sheen ans Now, T want to say rizut here that so much tion. Only about twenty persons refused | from Me Dickie exc lis reading from & | ose overy plateglass window on Frong - remind them that interruptions could not bo | tion in passine to the tostimony thet co THIaDI0EUHe to tikernpiiha et iiam | (BEnbesd SIA ol B WOHLIRRN Faeseita) [ER OO B SRR Y VL R RIS o) little parnphlot pranarel to further gno side | strectand Browdway was broien permitted dariug the progress of the de- | s from unfriendly sources. Let me read a [ now, I desire to call yourattention to arve- | OF VAES G Bib ¥ ol o | 16y todcposit the ballobof their ehoice, ol political campiizn in Kansas, flo - ques I'he Jay Cooko liotel und Grand Pacitic at Eile letter from Sol “Miller, editc | mark nade by my friend, My, Rosewater,who | Stte, of Towa, vou nuch ro- ViR tioned tho valud of such testimonius, The | Moorehead were untoofed. The residence of ‘Ihio fireprossible Mes, Gougar could mo | Kuky Chiet, who was a volent, afirmed that in the btate of Nebrasia | Joiced to hear thit the t s gL | sworn t0 before me and subsisibed o | the lute Captain MeCarthiy, corner Fiith uid Mrs. Goug: v prohibition o says: “If wo b ¢ | there are 5l jails—or rather, he said, bl MRl Sl T 43} UL | presence this Hth diy of Jund ). 1800, every antiquated point at Mr. kie or | Ninth streets, was strack by the stormand Keep quict for two consecutive hours and had | e would not repeal the probibitory kv, It | counties —that have no ‘prisoners in fheir | that is u dedaptonall g | has beon - ooma o O T MECABE Notary Public. | Small made. Iu ono instanee a N demolishied, 3 to put i & word now and again, lias done great good. Even with the drink- | juils, Aud Mr. Rosewater is & very forgetful | EWice 4s much fnerease in bank capitalin tho 1o oome nite the operatioysl prolibi | | torruptedono of the high No. | pussenger trainon the Northorn Pas EECN e e ing that stil] exists wo can see the good ef- | manand ke doos not. ronember 10 tell you e G GINT I e A S, R et e e L SRR and wis discolad t4 lecen quich by Beor Dav. | clllc, golng wost, lind st ulled out of the et . i octs of prohibition.” At 0f Bhioaa s pountiee 85 ¥ v s beet @ stato of Towa. AsI | s » idson, whieh o did verv reluetantly, iy t at the Milwankee eross- PRROF. SAMUBL DICKIE. Dol alM Town: b dsmdcratlo. mombac [it rart ‘L’,',\fl."‘l‘l‘l‘"‘,“‘“‘.,'x,‘]' them, Wave N0 | oxpoct to talle on thd_ state of Iowamoro | = *Lawrence, Kan. is o colleg and church v RS nked ae o Milwaulc oroes- ofihbatata R cans s o] s ? i SHLOK: 8%t | fully, Lwill devote wyself to the state of | tow of 17,000 population, chiclly from PHE APTHRNOON 1508 o i ! f the staf Kunsas, a violent op- | remind you that Adams county, -with g nine couchies and sleepbrs, o party of [ ¥ He Makes Strong Claims and Pro- pyent of pronivition ab tho begianing says: | Hastiesas its cliel ciy, is et euthrely | Kmsa England. ~Prohibition has becn fostorl fo & Northwostern oflicials in a privite poses to Back Them Up. “ opposed p .1 tion and voted against the | without ajail. It has prisoners, but it boards l\lfu.“m‘bus(m??. r favdfed pronfbition,” with u jealous care l]u IM,L.‘u-m were ten | Rew, Smalt speaks His Ploce and i | ar wd Superintendent McCabe's car. A1l Fadies and Gentlomen—I dosive at th out- | amendment. Iudvocated resubmission. The | them outia the juils of surrounding counties, B o b otk o Bt anns BLERE Followed by Mr. Rosewater. of the couches and the tenderwere blown sct to call attention go ho criticism passed | ntierlt, however, is growing very dav. | Butler county, of great prominence in your | Pow, WM (R e, ol BECE IS | A0St DG S I RRESRETR, O (D | The debuto was resumed at 20'clock in the | from the track butno lives wore lost and no L i > the Dewn My sneorat, tho i, bt 1 toll | stite has nohl, Lit sends 1ts prisoness to | Question woald atteact the most desivable | are fully twenty plices whore liguors ar hagdeniis, ! ek J 016 Wis Aatally hurte The lights: Had teon upon a pointin my opening address in which | you it fixed s the luw of the Medes and | adjacent cowics. character of emig) At first this was | clandestinely sold,” Ex-Governor Charles | afternoon, Some question arose us to who N out, there wis 1o five nor steam, f e ] intondent MeCane and the condue settlod and Rev. Sam Smatl ascanded tho | b and portees acted very colly and rostrim. He d with ay calimod the fricitened pissugers, wio” wure S sent back to the eity inspecial cosches. Wars A L ‘““ ren G, Purdy, vieo puesic of tho Rock Island vailvoad, aud family, sceompiiod by 1 laid down the proposition that civilization the Persians. Hundre was marked by no one thing more clearly | lieved this law prove than by the transfer or concession of the per- | dud work more e good v AR R years of actual cx- | Robinson, the war governor of Iansas, an | should speak fiest. The matter was finally en who be. Jow. gentlem M voun ! attentss troe, but seven or ¢ t1d not now | ble um\ the most competent witnosses in the ;.,-«rm«,.‘.‘ ts themseclves when | stated I.-X‘x*”l_w.n:nm\wl he kuew th g e vote for an_open saloon foranythingunder | Maine, Kansas and Iowa, anc : sev the siloon supplemenwd by the uor was sold in from soventeen to twenty . sonal libertics of the individual that ke might | Y6 (0, W (Ret StoR For s ‘\.'1».'-53'}.'-.,‘3\‘"\".'\-"hl..[f?:fiu-(-‘"f.:,.ll have themn | joiit, which is the most dammblo form yt, | five places inLawronce, Tor, suid e, Lown | Wonits subsidonco ho wad enjoy something vicher and better—the civil T noticedin Tire Osaud Ber of Febru RS J-‘“‘l' {En et m\.“."l",,.wl assumed by the demon of intemperance, “Fhe | o large farm just near this city, Temploy a | with bis usual velemence. liberties of organized socioty. But I 24 0 paragraph that reass a8 follows: ““The | peohibition is profitablo and in no- plice has | by cosistent teuperance state officer in | number of mei; wnong thom 15 a i, o | He stated that he had bitherto paid tho | Colonel 1. S, Pompson and wife, " wero in rostrain tho expression of my surprise that | Sontimentof tho julges of tho courts of Towa | probibition depeocinted valies o Iifeiuged Sfibedy Finsns totiylle A\iomoy Conenl | eapitile (Glow, wiorh 1 daro noyseni bo Liw- |.nost attantion to Mr. Rosowater, but this | Pav but none were sevionsly 230 gontlomel gt A | on prohibition has undergonea radical change b0 siness interos hall afte « 1. Kellogg, / 16 res 0Ve BUROLAORES O Beb odoyy | ocarmoon he: wonld <o Mr, Webster the ared, Colonel Sapson. and 0 Were theso gontlemen so utterly failed to dis- | i\ yeurs, o change no less remarkable :L',‘,,‘,‘:,,.‘,\'f“l',( et tion Mool | efnor down wre” cousumers of ~intoxieating | June 19, I sent him to town with two loads of | dterioon he would malco Mr, Wobster tho | Infursl, REIGIC Theuipson ani wife wore Sup s g unguish between the personal liberty of the | {47 thit ve; red at tho ballot box last | ytterand confessed fuilure of high lic liquors, This isa fact, and can bo verified. | wheats itis now nears p.m. and Ihave not | goncral subject of his roferences. “Brother slightly hurt n'..‘»i'L'f was slightly cut, savage aud the eivil liberty of the cultivated | November. A majority of thejudges con- | and proveit by testimony s conclisive as | L€ Present governor aced himself and | found him yet, He isin some h Dickie and T did not import this question of neral FPassen gent C. 8. Teo of the citizen, Prohibition docs not intrench upon | cede that theenforcement of the law is im- | the wstimony presontod hero this morning. | Stite list sunmer while in Colorado and was | walld uk. He lasa family and is tot prohibition into Nebrasica, neither rthorn Pacifio railway has. the following g ek L) e nsteio e | possible and urge the substitution of higl Yy el 18- | advertised os & drunken bum in Coiol dependent on me for work to support them. | siderations of purity, home and pt b sl any man’s civil liber but prohibition, so | possible aid ur h ibstitution of high ! & ram from Jamestown, N. D ¥ R X h but. L s o R TN oLV G OE VB TR R D TR b L et About threo weeks aze that wonaer But I will beobliged to turn him out of doors | imported into Nebeaska by me.” B oD S B Rk T far us 1t does debar the drinking man from | (GO TR S GUE EECRICUTHRETR A0 | HON. EDWARD ROSEWATER. torney general of Kansas, who has on account of runi-holes inthe city of Las Fleelaborated on the MeNickle drcident in | gavcthe Dakota division B the practico of his former habits, is a per- | oo ks, much upon the proliibition question, and | reuce. When this mun finds oiie of theso | the list Neb s ) askn legislature, w fectly proper erein thut Wl altogether reasousblo ; s . - $ A ' the track at the Far of ST X The Operations of the Nebraska and | made a living out of it by lecturing in otler | places, and they are ot havd to find gentleman coneluded o betray his constitu i g and ‘an entirely defensible intrenchment Now, I wantto be respectful. T shall im- g | {5 2 R ¢ $9 b Hadehe ] ~ o 5 _ was blown at Maple One of 3 D A Al N RIAGLLS s o Iowa Laws Compared. states also, hired a plumber tolook aftersome | scems’ to bo afraid he muy not ret in cnts heeause of his boy's blue eyes. Flo then | e jatims TR S/As L moveait upon the wbstrict pevsonal liberty of the in- | peiteh o man's verucity, Newspay g ; trouble or leak in his house, and the plumber | anddvinks to drankeaness, © Yo the cleval at Daltymplo was moved oft aud vhat statement is Edward Ros devoted considerable fime to My, Wobster in “s, dividual that the self ater spoke as follo: ame individual may : 1 its foundation, ‘ihe_elovator at Kdnunds on h e b o ot haiv, : g struel two or the boxes of ale and beer lying | clubs toruin the boys and they are making | an effort o impeach his evidenco by Ao, Ll Bhvo s elIpLLE 8 calprgey f uttarly tulso in evory Jacticalan and L have | Mr. Ohairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: | i, his cellar, and prosently the wholo town | useof their opportunitics. I have not use | plain denials. The clorgy kuow thi o IamstoNn [ Sty amheLaeby I want toaddress myself this mornin ! 4 rpipgafior that State- | tamazes me that the gentleman who has | became aware of it This is whata great | forliquor; Lam a tetotlar, but I no use | the bible t 7 o Ly o dediils aches prohibition, He did not broed: slander Omaba and Nebraska, he only held aside the cuntain and showed the photograph the answering of ot o two questions. First, | Mentsaw daylight that Ananias turned over | does probibition prohibit? Now, this isa | iU his grave aud grew green with envy. [Ap- the main track at Buttsville, Have sent | working outfit to Furgo, It will take six lious to mals the track passable. T'he main scarcely touched the soil of Nebraska, who | many others are that advocate prohibition | for Kansas prohibition, 1t is a fer ] ; v 3 Hiiteen has scavcely boen here more than tiwo on one day and do their dvinking on the next | ing hy pocrits.’ question of fact, nota matter of theory, It [ plawsed : ! Sl e el ui il b The negroes and the least sel f-respecting | He denied slander ome of these public | | 1iAE aelis oL is to be mswered not by fulsely jugglng | We took great pains to get at the facts in | three days, undertakes to question the st It is said hers ngain_that prohibition has | young men patronize the joings, tho ‘hloads' | speakers and representatives of Nebras) 1008 QUAE Ga\0 O SEONLVI, with statistics, but by the prescutation of | the easo and sosert out from New York to | tistics that I prosentel hore on Suturday | absolutcly eliminatod the liguor business in | hive formed cliubs wher liquors of all kinds | “Ln all due wspect to Senator Padiock, wio e T the fruth and by receiving the testimony of | every oneof the judges in the state of Towa | about the jail inmates of the state of N the state of Kuusas. 1 senta man by |arekept. Each member ownsal nd groes | has re ented your state in Washington for bisti! * those persons most qualified to speak with | askiig the teuthfulness of this paragraph and |y G He tells you that thers are thict i NI 3 the name of Thompson, @ thoroughly | at will to the common stock, Hels entively | years, I say therv is no reflection in the cast | o W o authority. T am hero to afivm that if haman | giving thom a copy of thosame. Wo e | SHEE 00 08 YOGS BEER BTR sober, reliable man, out of theeity of Onwlia | withoutrestraint; his ruinds only & matter | which would indicate that, o hus set tho | Four Knights Killed and Six Injured e testimony is capable of proving anything it | ceived responses from twenty-four per: i A and ho spent three weelks in Kansas and gov | of time, Potomac on five, and yet Senator Puddock on the Winois Contra can be proved o the satisfaction of this jury | Out of ll:v('.\;-wf.( ~h>ulx' Judges of the dis striet | no juils. ‘lt‘th at wove trae, it s tho highest | hele If\. lastwoe havou great many of “A younger class of boys procurea flask of | permits to be sold in nis building in this city KANKAKER, 111, July 7.—An excursion train that prohibition does prohibit, The case is on u:nn_; allof nxl-u\_ m-‘ in \lmu 4‘;1 retaining | testimo: that hign license could get. | the reports that I propose to read now. whisky which they careyin their pockets. | the dumnable stuff thit makes drunkards.”? i BEoOATCarR (i T Covits cLoril o) trial. I am ot here to address you, but | probibition in lowa. [Applausc.] Of theens | Phere aro not thirty-five conntics n the state | “In many towns in Kausas the express | They meet . bafns and darlc alloys and | Mr. Rosowater, following Mr. Suall, said REARVINIL ORI mHAREVES | CIHLARERAOR simply to call the wituesses and le them | Hre number but ‘three lavor ropoal,and of | op ro,va, thab got along without o Thero | companies ave built additions to their wa drink it, and thus acquire an appetite for the “A” few ythoro appeared in this | the 1Minois Central at Mantero, 1L, this spealiin your hearing, :u‘ul I_v.x 1L lest in this tlmw‘ who haye chan 'I‘x_\ X enimen i || i istvdive counties: in - the stats of.| houses the express purpose of caring for | strong be Prohibition in Kansas 1s | country a g wturer from Great Britain, | mowning, Doctors have been sent from here case tho Hon. John A Murtin, ex-governor | theroseems tobe ouly one, u N A A tho stato of | 405y trde, aud have put on extra wagons | simply supplanting beer with whisky, the | whose™ therne was *Why Dot God Kill the | to the seenc of the accident. The train was of the state of Kunsas. Hear him: “iully | opposed but now sustaius probibition, [Ap- | Kansus that can show that thoy ave without | of g peculiarly low build in which these [ more portaole. Itis causing men to drink to | Devil?” and Ihave been almost comvelied 0 | the fonrth seetion of teain from Cairo, 111 nine-tenths of the drinking and drankenness | plause.] ) ajail. But the trath is that thera are by boverazes ave delivered at night to joints, | drankenness who were satistied with a glass | nsle ow days, why does he perit e B ] provilent in ICansas elzit voars o |1 wan€to aska sweond quastion: Toes pro- | six countios in thisstate thit have no fatl, | clubsaud privae lius A, R u el preachor £ W | Rk e Rl o SReERIEc, - UBTSHIR, 10 | hibition fujure businoss is said that pro- | 45 g one e s a i over “A brewery in Milwaukee ships three car 1@ proprictor of the Bldridge house, the he reverend gentleman was so scvercly | from tho southern pirb df ole on. e fa hat the population of the etate | hibition has mined fowa. On June 3, e, andonejgounty thic hoy a Jailhast moyeritind ) fap 0R R oty day, | best hotel Th Lawrence, a Mr, Cohn, runs an | scorod thit, th aulicuce was compelled to ap- | WaY to the conclavo to be hield in Milwaulea, 15 steadily inereasing: the number of crim- | there were t irty-seven savings banks, with [ o0 famate init. That is Baaner cou 1t was due in Chica willp oat Tthis morning, bud ch there until this ufters 000, T two. vears of | Wehave heard s0 much hero as to the | the increased to fifty sav- | Hon, ¢ with assets of SLTISH00. During riod state banks increased from iehity-one and their assots from e wouldamount tomore than what prohibitionists claim s the total con tovernor Larcab2 and his testi. sumption. in the state. to mony with regard to the operations of Anbeuscr-Busch bottling con prohibition in Towa; buat Governor u joint in lis house, presided over by his 1 alittle, His argument wis able and He sold to miaers, 1 negro sonvineing, and e was in turn followed by , W everybody, He wus and he by Mr, Webster, any | rested, convieted and séntenced to pay a f vl verdict of the public oy of £100 and imprisonment, but just us seon as 1ight is that Messes, Rosew alc inals condined in our penitentiary is steadily | total asscts of ‘ decreasing; many of our jails are empty, and | prohibition they h all show a marked falling off in the uy i P of prisoners confined the sun Some of you have heard of the gontl sixty-five Wably not re e tiine me | Miwavker, July 7.—General Carnahan commander of the uniformed Knights of Py thins, received o dispatch from: Mentano " Well, Twe ; AhLL o further, because it is not | sentence was passed his friends, prohibition ster are tho musters of the situatior from Maine, the gentloman who defeated 216,000 to 313,170,000, In other words, the | Larrabee, like Bén Butler, sees both | yecessivy ail {Laugnter.] Well, | ists, who o R \BMG daittun Rivation e \.(II\I‘.”‘J " of course, provail | M8, at ioon today, announcing thit four of Jobin i 185(—Mr. Blaine. In a specch last iwo_years, while prohibition bus been | ways at the samo \d he sees very | it simply to othet brewerics, and Iam | with Governor Humphry at Topeka, received | among the prohibs, bt 13 largely thesenti- | the knights wore killod and six injured in the 1 p eved in Farmington on Septomber I, v have hald an increase of | remarkably out of line when he looks at 10t goinis to advertise them, [Laughter.] It | @ pardon forhim, The poor negro, who was | ment among the fate-minded of this commun- | Wrek o the dilineis Central special train Mr. Blaine uses these words: *Maine for the g’ \ n increase in their [ ures, 1 hiave here the offieial publication by | costs money. [Renewed laughte his hircling, still languishes in jail be- | ity and of all who heard the siguuent contniniig the Bi reghnent tol LLOGlY ] }“’7‘"'“"\' jranvhL S "“-l““”l”‘ L ¥ 0 pro- | asgots of §800,000 [Applause. | . the sccretary of stato of the state of Iow he dr iness s prostituteaso that | cause forsooth Lis me vill not i - L A {eRikaYs T A Dhat hibitory i stato has derived greal overnor Luarrabee says further: *““More | representing minal statisti th good men are out and poor oues in. Some | fine which was not remitied THE WORLID'S FAIR. A0, July Cankake , special advantago from it 1 think the state is far | mortgay u liftéd in Towa last year | state, and the expense _incurred in prosecut- | ists sell over three gallons of the “Business is stagnant and wholo Tows o Ha ook : s o mioat serions wredk Ut tlo Tk richer and far better because of that luw | than have been placed, a fact which cannotbe | ing eriminals in cach of the several counties | tract or essence of Jamaica ginger, three | business plices can be found empty in daaw 3overnor Fifer O rice Pr nolLANbral e CRNBEIONON. AL LAIVREY than it would have been without it 1 | stated of any provious yearin the entire his- | for the last four yoars, ¥ S e oy 15 Al Govepnaw Fifer €hlls on Viee Dy yoars occurred at M nd T will show by | ounces a dose, "The dun; I be borno in mind that Law 010 this moeninethy wonder if these gentlemen will toll you that { tory of the state.” [ Applause]. them that the expens secuting erimi. | rol of aleobol and A barvel of whisky, or | rence is pointedto as a place where prohibi dent Bryan, 8 o'cdock, A spreald excursion tain of fours Mr. Blaine is an_untrustwoithy wituess in |~ The Topeka Capital, whose editor at the | nals in lowa have increased by more than | rather twenty-three ‘of alcohol to one of | tion isasuccess, It is natrally a qul Cnroaao,- July 7.—[Speciul Telogram to | teen curs, carrving 000 members of the this Important casc, outset wis unfricudly, on January 3, 1500° | §00,000 within th last two- years. The | whisky. Bayrumis 5 percentalcohol. The | town und the conditions are good for its suc- | Tis Brr. ] —Governor Fifer was o calleron | Knights of Pythias und ludios 1 the bieny Hon. Chavles Danforth of Augusta, M., | uses this language Cansas has a popula- | county of Polls, in which the governor | 3hles e to peorle of sHohitition proclivitics b in proportion to population. and. its | Viee President Bryan at the world's fair | Mol supreme lodgo at Milwaukee, was do- fudge of the supreme court of that state, says | tion today four times as great s it hadin | so long, in which Des Moines, the capitol eity | who cannot get i 038 o vlubs luss of cilizens taken iuto consideration |y kit S T radlod aba switoh whilo ontaring tna villagg e these words: I can very well remember the | 1570, The population of the state in 1550 was | is located, spent over 0,000 last_year in t B s, Climked out batween | Cheve 1 ns much Liguor. conaumed fn Lawe | hesdquarters this moraing, Ho will not tako | at 4 speod of thirty-five miles por nour, T'ho condition of the community in reward to | 0960065 today, 1,444,000, au increas uine | prosecution of state criminals, and #2,000 for | 12 m, and9 p.m. of the same day by an | rence as in_any cily in Kansas. I counted | Bis racationuntilaftor tho Il mooting | four Torwad cars kopt tho main track, and | temperance before and at_the time the pro- | years of a trific Over 30 per cont. Theas- | tho prosecution of police eourt offenses—over | original package man lin Topeka | D e ot s sy Aot HEOURIOE |l v the logislaiuro.on July The mational | the remainder of, the trin stood ugon the hibitory law was passed. Financial evils | Sessed valuation of all property in 1870 was | #¥,000 in one county—when the whole stato | press companics of Topeka carn dut s office on the sidewalk aud was told | commissionors’ headquartersin the Pullman [ Sidinz. When the train broke the chilr cag wore prophesied, but sofar s can bo per- | $95,600,000, and for 1850, $160,660,000, an_in- | of Nebraska spent only $167,000 for prosecut- | nonths of the year §2,00 per moi ire wagon loads of beor camo through | building i roady fo y | fceipled byiho Fast &l Toouls. contingeny ceived none of them have come to pass, 1tis | erelse in ten years of 76 per But from | ing cviminals, But I suppose thatan ex-gov- | (There are tivee of them, or & ress oftice.? [{RRSBE.GE HAL A F Y fOTOCCUPANCY | fupmed upon its side and Cthe occupants evidently true that more wholesome busiug 1580 to 155 it mounted up to 10,000, an | erior isno_botter than & governor, Isup. | month.) Supposing the express chir is Leavenworth, When 1 was | @ndnothing willbe donein the matterof ap- | numberinis fifty, were hurled with great vios is done now, and it is true that ta ro | increase in eight years under prohibition of se that the governor of Towa who hias been | represent 20 per cent of the cost of in Leavenworth in 188 it was also prohibi- | Pointing the stunding s for thirty | lence against thoside of the car, T'he sude , less under prohibition than they were for- | 120 per cout liuse mude the successor of Larrabes by the peopls | would have not far froin £40,000 spe | tion time. T were 150, and probably | days at least den stapptng of the traln provented o long ¢ merly L have here th stutement of Thomas | of lowa who resented the hypocrisy aud the | toxicating liquors, or about 81 each [ oons running wide open. There wa Colonel G socretary of thede- | 8t Of casuslties, I H,Crowdet of Wace, i Hon. Willisam Larrabee, ex-governor of | H. Beuton, audi N ki, and of Tim- | arrant knavery which these prohibitionists | for every man, woman and child in Topela, | noeffort mad ibition, At | L Y Y i | , aged twenty, was standing on the plate Towa, next takes the stand’ and testines as | othy McCarty, auditor of Kansas. 1want to | have sought to impose upon the people of | population about forty thousand, | that time, if I r the ity of | Parunent of animal indusiy, is lucorres- | form of oneof the cars and was killed, ‘The f (‘ follows: “Thousands of those who voted | give you the figures in 1530, The total valu- | their own state and states generally—I say |* Tobeknis full of clubhouces, whichinelnde | Leavenworth was quoted with ‘a populition | Hions leeated all o thirty agrioultural sta- | wounded passengers were all in the st Sty R against the constitutional amendment and | ation of Nebraska was £90,99,000, of Kausas | that his testimony ought, to be considered ds | among theiv members boys from fifteen years | of over 50,000, in 1557, By the election tions locutedall over the worldy it being his | Toufs car, “They are believed that such a luw would provea deaat | £100,570,0005 in 155, of Nebraska $182,763,000, | good as thatof Mr. Larrabee,and when [ prove | to gray haired men, Who are sup by | new ity ument they gob in somnc o [RRLBAN B0 KOGNTS Tiom o, I Yoseiiie Wirniasr I, Boiy lettor uro now convinced that it can boen- | of Kansas &350,515,000, that is an increane in | My, Larrabee to have faisifed the recond in g juses of lKansas City. Drinking to | rigid rsulations and thiy closed the g SxUibM ok orighin) work for-bua pxpostiion Miss Nvwue DooLey forced and demand ats rotention. Shoux | Kansas under prohibition of £200.2:4,00), and | rerard to eriminal courts, all Lis statements AThon: WAIRA) Tas SN o [ Bal a1l Intadta: and phitosta: [Anianse | Sux Cerded ts ouitvatag D WO of [ 4t Wi Dpiopn City, Des M Cedar Rapids and Ot- | an inerease in Nebraska under high license | fall to the ground, ) o ity peda T e AR LS SR i et e A ho prvss Ciermany, Prof. Law of Enuland and N Captain W, H. Suyousky, Central City, tumwa have banished the saloon und yetare | of §12,20,000, 1 cifference in favor of Kansas | Let me call your attention to last fall, when | moath township, this comnty [Staneecounty | | lation of Leavenworth is 20,55, a fa [(Roaduo=ail oo af ntiony roputougn on and among the most | 15 cities ‘of the | over Nebraska of §107,070,000. [Applause]. | Governor Larvaboe was delivering a_fecture | four young boys vanzing from twelve to fif- | of over 10,60 from the consus of 1380, [0 anbatElsu) b 10 tho aetuul statls | = Onamies Laxts, Shelbyvillo, 111 state. The benefits which have re 1 have earcfully gone over the tax fizures. | oran address lauding probibition in the town | teen years, eute urch during sewice | I want any pronibitionist t explain a | SASERAIOL B4 AR 0| k i The excursionists weie trnsferred to sult to the stato from | I want 0 read to you the report on the state | of Ottumwa, in which bhe, I suppose, was | recling drink and spewed all over the moe and show t { Lea Fret %Y, 08 cousin, | Ro 88, | g pielil train and sent on to their destination, the enforcement — of — this law | taxes for a nunber of years in thesetwo | electioncering; and while he was talking that | seats, cte., of course suppiied from Kunsas | has decreased » populist Worldng - UaRL e o iialee - sol - ] are far reiching ind Itis o well recog- | states. 1 besin with 1850 und give you first | prohibition was a great suceoss a wagon load | City. *The boys have cangit on.! tion of @ Bl fop b edtationgt featires 0F | Xynohing ‘Q@uiokly Toliows der. nized fact that crime is on the inereaso in the | Nebraskn and secondly Kansts raska | of hay stood within twenty yards of him full | A number of respectable Swedish yow Sho L ading ok 1 1t relatlon to wgeleultural ool | gy July 6.—Colondl Martinovios, United States, but Towa does not_contribute cents, Kansas 55 cents (1 Kunsas | of bottles of beer aud beer wis being dealt | men whom the prohibitionists had deriied or b At achdol - 19 AW Bia lony dulcs f the body guard of Pring : to that increase. While the number of con- | e 0’ 10 than Nebraska); 1881, Ne- | out to the crowd. That isa fact. 1 was in | ¢ 10f beer, took to more | v with the scerolary o ithe Wiicouson | £omman L I8 hady. (RUARG ;05 e i victs in the country at largo was in 1550 1 cont 15as 503 ebinska | Town ot the timb mysclf, | [Lonis and loud | key and ure today conirmed drinkrds, Tn coss { Denefit A nssociutlon ith 8 vlew, g baving | Nisiols, rulor f Monionegro and cautln .ob A 20 5,442, it wis in 1850 in the country at L conts, K 1883, Nebruska 75, Kan 1t Isuot ‘necessary for me to say | North Topeka the b Umen ohip in 26 Yrace, but to tho k08 fnt_ dlosg practionl dalry 0K e, was murdered in - tho marke | one' to’ M, but in Town it was one to 5,150, | sus 47; 155) D et ey | fIUphIALS o8ROk AARESAVIIE M0 10 ROY:] QORML ol SO et UKy | hivit. The best daivy machinery, Mr. Gor morn Uhemurderer was e o Thio jails of many counties are now ety ; 2 70, Kun' | [Lanshter.] And Mr. Larrabec was 1 is sore i s b . | Gon says, comes from” Swedon, Nowway wid b holsc v he heoD b X duriug 4 good portion of the year, and Wy | sasi0; Nebiiska s, Kurisa hraski sion of the reception of the Pan- | nisht drank b s embiyo club, About > 5| Mo HoNion. ox[ronsd. | M 1 0 the spot L number of conviets in our_penitentisvios has | Kavsas 34 Neoraska 63, Kansis 40, the last | WD congross, ANA mOn came over from | fliteon kegs por Wook 8 the wverage from the Qv | srtisfaction with tho progross thus far do- | S 2 { / been reduced from 750in Mared, 1883, to 604 | \wo being for 1. Grouping the'last five | Ottumwa o receive the Pan-Americins —eye th sile gt of the city have th yeloned inbin cepaxunon. A1 dow, B0y Hoete Hlinois Demoe in July, I8 It is the testimony | years ineacn state, we find an average r witnesses, that were prosent at that very Shanee county, Kansas, is called the ban t 1505 11 Biinks | 50 A A eany, WA I8 b ORI et Cniesao, July 7.—At today's me of tho judges of our courts thut | Of taxation upon the $10) assessed for state | time ¥ 1 ner nrakivicaon Ebe % i i B 7 i of the animal iud wit 5 criminal business has been vedueed from 50 | purposes to be as follows: In Nebrask “Now. here is a letter from ( »r Boic B e g o )1 1 bit in every coniy the demoeratic state excoutave committee 16 10 16 per cent. The poorer classes have -10 conts; in Kausas, 3% 6-10 conts, a tritle | DES MOINIS. T, J une 25, Issh— E, Roscwite libitiom-38 no ting 1 ] enforcy t - Hoteon ¢ 9 v fvom " com- | whas resolved that the democrat 1ld nomts better ~ fare, better clothing, bet- | more than one-half | Esg—Deur dir: The practieal operation ety TR e R parison with any othe nate t eseutatives in all doubtful dis} ter schooling sud better houses Tread again, from the Philadeiphia Press | prolibition in this state secins to luy acoord L B o 03 YRUAR. L 1 I I i trict " smpaigen, ‘Pho democruts 3 Browerles have been converted into oat | of May 10: ' *A Kansas company which [ 102 to the poiitical standpoint from which the | S5 6 'vha adopt £ tha Theat e y Signor Coxtl Gots it , g ot (Ag Pt / meal mills and canning factories and ave | hus megotiated #7,000,000 of touns since | GUestion s vieweds our republican friends - | 1 EAGRGORIEETLET TR RO B t'of Leay R i Cablegram 1o Tis 3 v 641 1o nominate i candie b oporated as such by thelr owners. 1857 bias forvclosed 16ss thun ote per ceut. of | uif 1615 success, the democrats thut It fs w | WER 18 PR, G Hmm b et s Yo fied by i R on oo pbartedre oted for at tho spocial election W Now Who kuows wore about this question | itsloaus. A solid fact Liko this 1s wor th tous | parties reach tie exact truth when thoy de- | the court keeords, The cost of criminal sobibition, wud” be 1014 me | iau cousul b G AR 5. MeDouald, resigued,