Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 9, 1890, Page 1

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HE OMAHA 'DaiLy BEE. TH YEAR OMAHA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY &, 1800. NUMBER 1. i q \ | it Workmen mave done the | community, And when the proacher s full: | one side as the julgmont of agreat people, | injured by maintiining high lice 1 ar | 3 \ \\ \ K AN T 4 4 \l ])]' B \ ll' ¢ 1 know that all the bay | handed you can stake your last dollar, my | andas an argument upon which the poople of | to the present minute I haver New Ha 8 i Y Al t A Al |\ \ {0 l} L. ) M) 40 | wind browers in Mily e wanted 1o | friends, that things are getting along in a | this state are to decide 8 great political ques- | man undertuke to answer that pre sd 1% nrohit ~ their subscription for the KK very good condition. [Applause.] We know | tion, When he had finisieéd reading from | shall have to go on myself Up here is Minnesot | Fean | s beeause the state of Ohio says no | how that for we have been there, The | those things, from ”ml m‘nn pamphlet from | prove last Saturday that i th with \ [ 4 =y | s por shall be pern thin the | state of Kansas alone in 1588 spent more | the statoof Kansas, he bigwn then reading | where you had prohibit wroater y 1 The Question o ilroac 0 bly Doe Arcuments Made by §mall and Webster at o khighte LALHS nd these | money in Young Men's Christian association | the nents and the declirations of a few | struck the prosperity of reate . Question of R“‘”"‘l Rates Ably Do S T 5 ther worl than the state of New York, and they | people from the state of Towa. For whatever | you their population to i 90, C It Al bated at Or Beatrice Monday Morning. I [ had it to spend. More children per capita | they are worth, accept them. when I stepped from latfor in Maine, e 1 of the weak and for are in the public schools, in the Sunday 1'want to say to these people that there is | prohibition friend, with 8 about 1 so i \nd w and_the orphan fr sch inthe state of Kansas thanmn any | another side to that g but in the | and honest intentions, for which I I Florida, \r | A TERRIFIC WIND STORM AT FAIRBURY SO £s 1imp w ] u other state in the union, aceording to the y course of haif an hour's discussion time is | said tome, “Mr, Webster, why d . v 1 ' S . A FEW PERSONALITIES INDULGED 1 the v of God ulation. Talk about your jui not permitted me to read tothis andience or | pire Maing, Vermont a ' | - - orders thr talk about the sc i the churches.about | recite to this andience the individual opinions | with Nebraska in the 2 y tting t ' the happy homes and the workshops, instead | of citizens of the state of Iown. [ want to | There may be other causes 1o o e th \ 3 ! o to | A Parmer Near Ponca Set Upon and The Reverend fam Lays Great Btress on I s y Jals to Imprison mon fn to this poople &l ‘: t question one ty of Nebraska, W i Terribly Boaten By Two Nelghe g " 1 yur friend goes along and tells more sl answer that boars with a greater it with gome of the sty o k b Towa's Election Figures, 5 ays i1 you had been ill for a long | power than all the fndividual declavations o vicinity, that surround A t bors- He ts Not Expected i L i 1 tiod o cortain remedy fora | that they conld read in the entive day from | mont and Now 'H hit b ! long o and it didn't eare the disease, | the rising to the woing down of the sun Ldo that, and that N L. REC 1S STATEMENTS, | t tting v y u keep on teying it! That is what1s | What is thatt Tt is the election which my | the same thing, ther 108N L FUTES Hl f building Omabt, | the matter with Nebraska now. She has | my friend it to belittle by a kind of an | was, after a moment's ¢ 1 F Nob fat 1 i the | been trying Rosewater's high license for ten | explanation, Hut lot me tell you as one who | probibition fris . . v AR L AR te 8 | t the ju my side | yearsand she has been getting beautifully | knows somethiag about the campa in the | satisfy thisaud p . A 1 Yo The Prohibitionist Breaks in feveral Times They ha A awvith it ps0, and she 18 going to quit trying of Towa, that the question in the | Maine, Vermout s Dowi and as my brother says hie hus shown you by is what is the matter with this agita- | campaign when Governor Boies was elocted | they would lose i ;. ¢ question was the statistic b « repeat i It hias not curcd the disease, ithas only | was a pure questign between prohibition 1 will u 1 Mai Tyt HRosHS A FOsT Paton Both i 1 i ted i, and they are goingto have | and high license. 1T was & question looking | going a little furth | y cand loeal, are Just and equitable 7 d * e old prohibition from one end of the | to the prosperity of the state. you, per . that t te 1 o producer and earrior MRS. GOUGAR ALSO INTERRUPTS. t the | s cory and they are going to get [ Mr. Smatl: I deny it mont at . 1 t crnaclo was erowded \ e vermin out of the and see wheth Tunderstand ho denies it. ¥le sits hereand | are alres ! I v ¢ %, ARG f ) e er cleanliness d not mean wealth, health, | says it is not tr 1 will admit the fact that | any I 1 t § more H 18 ™ \“ M 3 X fia fanca ] Btat Mid s n peace and pr it A ppla whenever an argament comes from the voic to t t 1 1 R Marg But When People in the Audience v Mr, Iosewater says that the people of Towa | of 4 great people that sits down and tion W Wws K B Began to inin the Debate, the AV T ited the arvant knavery of the pro. \ your doctrine, you will get up and deny low e Calls The ibitionists by turning Mv. Larrabeo out and | 1 quick us anybody else; b fenial . A that th Chairman Calls Them s & prott putting Mr sin. - Yes, [ kuow they have | proves nothing. What is the result? When | cont peoplo had no THE 1091 EAJUNCTION, Py to Oxder. p of a pret 2 een trying nake you believe that, but | they voted on the question iv tho state of | the friend that m b tid not judic cn up thore 1 that is all bos 1 hav( To that man Boiege 1.0 & te ket in favor | know the fact that fo Avgitioits 1 tHo Cuse of the e Ov 1, Sueh s @n e three v liere bef now fr state of Towa, | of high licen unst the other side, and | the of 1 RS e e g syst to rallroad Bel 5 Y \eand the Yar \ y my friend, and I want to call your attention | he received a majority of the votes of all the | Vermont at all and the AL Ly i e Y first. glance we 't bs # of in 1 to this iticant fact I'hat Mr, Boies of the v ) 1 ) greater | e to Live. Jate bogan this L who | people in the staie who voted at that election for t1 n goes e LA SRR G S SHRaERATE B end of | was clected governor last year, only got 224 | - Mr. Small—How about those that did not | otherstates of the trite ense I i b 4 . r thun the ordinary citizen. [La .| | votes more than sver Cleveland had the | votet Go a little furth A artof May t T8 1 8 good knowledge of a sy v can see 08 far though o millstone with | year before when Hardson beat him 30,000 | T hear my friend say further, as he sits in | population of 21 to the <q apids L tom of rates wo mus e \ ¢ g L Vit as anybody, and wh | Yotes, IHow is it that Boles, with the high | that chaiv beside me, that he wants moto tell | mont 8 and in New ITa its entiret As to interstate rates, the fisst b Aeymitating ol T Maine Yankce holdin 1oy i | license scheme, commended himself so highly | him about those that did uot sand [will | sachusetts, where you oitnpliTnG 18 4a sare THeen, o D (S us without letti [ o the peopls 'of Towa that he got 224 votes | tell him aboat those that did not vote fn the | shive hills rum al . S Bk b6 front: Tovd 1o Ohlssabit o t stock in it. They have 'k h more than Cleveland ! That was a big hoist, | state of Jowa, and why they did | ru 1 as in Maing s v | i i i the BMALL ANSWERS ROSEWATER vears, not. only ‘kept it and sttt Tow did he get elected? T will | not vot The statement s ° that | and Vermont, they 4 f il respect {6 notwithstanding the Iyow, You know that he grot elected gov- | Boies, wien ~ elected governor of the | of 1 people 3 \ > % Ot Raaa T in ool te The Argument ly Fore- auperisin viminali 3 because 83,010 republicans who voted | stato’ of Iowa, received but a small | milejor, in other w it biit s o sar ond nsidor the system in of interstate rates 1D eve noa Harrison in 1583 stayed at home and re- | number of votes more than Cloveland re- | Massachusetts, right dow i g s Ll y s de 1 then ) pr L what sed to vote for high license and because he | ceived in Towa in the eleetion in which he | thereure ten familic t > ndment A of (tnsportation s ¢ furni was the tool of the railroads and in | ran for president of the Uuited States. I,| mile to where there i ! t ing that tho ra 1 Pogara T tor ININONIS country i { their piy and ogainst the interosts | will tell you two facts: Bvery man who fs'( prohibition Maine. In \ A t e that the B, & M. ke cabin 1 v. | of the farmer. [Applau f you will | @ politician knows it, and my friend Small | borders on the westwan dissolve veent on its actual outlay, Ot question | poads e even o calp @ fow of theso follows in Nebraskawho | here, when he picks up that New York [ ple per square mile, to A man ti supported for | areiu the same pay—of the brewer, the sa- | almanac and carries it avounaas one of hi tate of Maine th I t s t \ il y Ohleago, Burlington & newspapers, sad yet you | loon and the railrad —and give the farmors o | documents, knows the same fact that, when | tall about. 1f ¢ : ! ) impeach his testimony hers on the ce, they will not only have prohibition, | 3 voting for the president of tho | 106 and M of prolibition Applause hey will have living rates for their corn. ates, you always poll more votes | why is mot thes o . | profitsare only half us much s G. Blune w - | [Applanse. ] than in any election held in any state of this | comoup in that Gol-fa o A 1 » stat C | St tiany e f tho average A My friendl says they were selling liquor | nation for the purpose of mercly electing a | Afte from the reduction of rate e p §0 bk {0 8 h Juick s you will [App! over in the state of Totva when he was over | governor. Douw't you know bt~ That gives | Hampshire, Lty ? 1 faine furnishes ‘Thomas there, openly by secret sale. | Applause.] | you anexplanation why there were not so | intelligent pe furns to the far dlarge profit, but tothe {6 e, stt cer of the house of representatives. The | They were openly violating the law by secret | many votes cast in the’ eleetion when Gov- | dropa hot | . any n his eIl e v hnslor . i st Maine furnishes a coupleof senators, | sales out of aload of hay, And he found the | ernor Boies was elected us thers were cast at | my fiiend says, have the Ss Pieuring on ouly part of therates a caso carry these ssrs, Fryeand Hale, who stand about as | hay, [Laughter) You know what kind of { the presidential election” in the state of | pokerand unders is ma wainst vallvoads, but considering ut in thi 1lin that angust body as th 1etors from | animalslive on hay Applause. | But he | Towa. down there to build u £ rates vand system the conclusion is frasp thoh whier wska, I think they have been heard of | was not looking for hay, ho was looking for | Mr. Smaii—There were mon warn in wintor? v As compared with Iown wites, fines upon a bl ! imns 0 hat s in reputable pluces | beer, he found it and you know what Not more than that cast in the last pre: Out in [llinois, half wi T ny denicd | thoseof 1 is are 3 a newspaper. It s cqua lause y p kind of animals live on beer, too, [Laugh- | dential election, g tineut, you Luve fifty-fiv tincons| understand their full cotting along first rate there [ ter] It reminds me of alittle anecdote, M. Small—More for Bofes, mile. in Indiana, the old 1 v 15 between sapply. The same remuark applies to ar 0 poken frow " Sy the ropublican te convention met [ When Iwas in Irclaud, going down to Blar- No, sir; more votes were cast ab the presi- | have fifty-five; and ¥ t 8 1. Nebraska's interstate rat ower Now, 1waut te p ther day they veaflemed theie adhesic ney Castle witha party of fric dential election in the state of lowa than | state of lowa ¥ 5 t; 5 E t than loww's. lowa rates, which aro : hibition and nominated theie dat asson the roud nipping i were ever cast in that state in aguber- | Pennsylvanin, 1O00F 16 Ness R tHIR NOUaslEn T4t Se S R ssonaiton || L tell you a more re than party si “Look at th | natorial election. If you have any dociments are mile. . y 1\ \ b drugs, clothes, wiiora ctal il ; et S On the ith day of Ju vescnt | r < The driversays: “Boss, | torefute me, produse them. I kuow what I e it 0 E v | b foes Ao GONBITNGIS) b 1o 1500 4 democrat t v now why the ass eats thistles?! He | am talkinga 3 v Hamshire ¢ r § t 8 Ate rate on corn i than mbled in U 7 SN0 S\Why, because he is an ass. Mr, Small—I will give yon the evidence. | populated, and it i we cullivated corn; lowa the fed the ri 3 Isaid, and [ repeat it right here now, that | no i lown ¥ t 3 fitEtion Appluuse], 5 L my friends do you know why Brother | there’ wore more cast o the dewmocratic want y wnsy ~ - ors of Towa roads afirm that 1 a resolution favoring t vater found that Because he is | ticket in the gubernatorial eloction than there | My proposition is that in « tat An Elevator Burned. deprived them of profit oi local ndment que oo of those kind of followss When X in- | were at the presidential eloction; that is, you talk \ibition you drive out the p i forxes, In, July 8 \ Y tos, I we cat down local rates in No- you i 5 « 5 1 i | quiring round, I willbat my bottom doilur, | votes more than Grover Cleveland himself | you drive out capitil, you dist your A dispat N wo entiarrass the roads t il s 1 ) iF [ was a betting man as Iused to be, that | had the year before, | manufacturing indu vou ‘that thoy arounablo to giy Vefmben . 4 s tme tell you when a thing | he could smell up through the corners and | Mr, Webster—That is a different’ proposi- | commercial industries, 1t you s rate on corl, Town desires a Vo desire | during forty years approves itsif to the con und the back alley snd up the rickety | tion from the one Tstated. Thatsustains me | it onany theory, Ihave a vight o draw HRla ViR e e Y0\ Tn A thte It oo desied | sciences, thie Christianity, the pateiotismand | steps. That is whero they huve to go to find | in my statement when [ dedaro the proposi- | condlusion — that - st by e LA AR AR BRRLABGL SR Ab Ry hred S selmilitl, B the ingeirity of those people of Maine until | itin fowa. He says that he read you some | tion thut move votes were cast in the prosi- | result of prolibition, hich s the d by her wise systen o iterstate Ndemltaries Ui vour sirzeds o | both the democratic and republican parties | statistics, statements or documents, what- | dentil election than wore ¢ or- | only discriminating _characteristic between ¥ T o HihioiA LA 1 don ve got tho sl in vour gi#ards 1 | ggnd up forit, itis a good thing for unybody or they were, But he said they send all | natorial election 1n any st those three states and the other states of the unagze will probavly be & 3 Jraska’s system is builling up lager ar: prohibitian prohivies in Knasns in nvest in. [ Applavse.] e money away from Kansas to fo Mr. Small —Never said that, o union. sured PR e s W e 1 AT I WOl th ARIboR L I'hey ey it has impoverished and ruined | places to buy liquor and are impove: And now he says “id mot_say that. Mr. Small-O, my. [Laughter.] - Witdn the last five years she hus led the deund that it shall, whether it probibits | Uh0se poot’ peoplo o but if it has 1 | and ruining $he people. Go down the streets | Backing out of that, ho suys another thing, | My friend 0, my,” as it that wer Bottles Are Original Packa worid in prosper R T AR LS 2 it Tow i thut supe e bt | want Mr. Rosewater ov anyl oy clse to stand | of Beatriccund look at the beor signs. Where | Ho says —that Boles regeived = 224 | anauswer. ., % VRS ¢l T | SRR L SraHis 1 el s RSk, Tt B e e et M | wp hero and toll us wiy itls that while poor \do they gat the boer they mia selling herel | more votes than Cisfuiad . yecctcad, |5 Me SHAI-WTlvE an auswer, ram to Tre Ber]—Judge Snerman held n | they are unavoidaoie, Taken us a whole, the fnsiste that it must do ip order to be of prac \aine 1ns been impoverisifed and ruined by [‘@here is Mr. Schiitz—#o_you know M. | In other words, that thedcmocratie candidits We will gon tittle farther: With the state E sl aerman el B | g gtem is admirable. tea utility, T he thiks we have got an aet | Prohibition and dragged down to the Wlitzt There is Mr, Pabst. Do you | for governor got nore votes thad the domo- | of Vermont, that increased its popula- | special term of court hiere today to hear in- | ™ [yis first address, M. Van Wyel: mado b oatslution i any part of tho country thut | Goors of the poor house, why is Kki\w Mr. Pabst? Thereis Aunheuser-Busch, | cratic candidate for president of the United | 4ion by one haif ¢ por cent from 1570 to | junct from Winne- | the following stat O o iieh the ooty ISt | stato of Muine nevertheless te I dotice you did not give away Mr | States. Thatisan entively different propo ), the average inercase of population per- | haro count HaGbkas B [ho question is whother. the rats, both L S o e s of dollurs worth of mdtte R Anhieuser-Busceh's little scheme for ¢ sition, certainly, I willadiuit that fact and s more than 20 per cent in ull the | g e, fi Rl Fedepra e MR PSS {1 tarstato, axe MialeR: thum they of iho KEternal One himse stern farms. [Applause. | Where did they | the law in Kausas, You closed at tho explafn why he gotit. e got that becausc states of the union, and down in | opiinnl pack i tibn wos not | should be. Under our prosent ra vicion appetite: i ot the money? Twill tell you where it plicer my boy. [Applause|. They m e people of lowa had learned under the y producing Kentucky it was 24 rinted, the judge ¢ that the bot- | braska farmers have been ARar B g ¢ woney —they got it by their v sob. | heve been sending a subpoena duces tecum | hibition law of that state thay the state w rowing ( aia it was 54per | gle not the case, was the originul packag ‘ aws, the railroad fix 1 distillers and buin ; d by putting their money down after you from Kansas, Did you notice how [ not making its march to prosperity with the : In the high hare Raiload mugnatts cou grand army'of red-n and legs of their socks Mr. Hosewater stopped as soon as he saw he | same growth that the other surrounding | license state of to which you A fervant Girls' Union, have grown rich had notrates becn to chiange process he is mista > he saloon, and they save cnough in was about to give away Anheuser-Busch? | states were making, and 50,000 republicans in | D ple belong, in this ¢ wheve they sk PoraD SR Ty i G Juld's carecr has been one of theft from the aro 10t nd voratinie anything of that ki s of prohibition to carry A Why, it is absclutely along the strvets of | the stateof Towa, whose consciences would ix plohibition to your constitution, | oR0R Iy o el crican people. His valued property . We kncw the materinl we have got s | millions of dollars’ worth of inor Jeatrice, and k you to testify if itis mot | not perrait them to vote for a democrat, sad | theincrease of percentage of papulation for | gram to Pie Be, | — € is on foot last census was more than the asscssod AR R0 el AT X BHE ke your high license farms in the we true, thot these saloons are hanging out the | not having a republican candidate thoy could | the same ten years W 67 per cont, und | for fc L Lere. AIL | valuation of Nebraska and Towa combined, el 1 loas0 nat D ATV A S IBRE Tk CEOE far Ik about what prolibition does for the | Sizns of forcign brewer werios of other | vote for without voting against their jude- | from 155 to 1850 it was more than 300 per | the hired elvlsof 1 re interested. | [Flisses|. T'he money made in Nebraska and will getliguor and go to the devil on' account 2, Look at lowa when she sdopted | states—right on their outer walls and show- | ment and against their ences on the 1H .n....x‘d wh cannot be poi ed out | Phe object is more s, lighter worlk, and | the northwestgoes into eastern citie 'he of liquor \ibition, She had a public debt outstanding, | i you the fact day by da the dollars | question of probibition, they stayed at howe | by my prohibition friends fn any other state | more liberty. produceris not growing richer; the wealth Now ibntetirotliora to. dacidd s thi W sivce she has had prohibition she has | of Workinzmen and of the poordebauched cit- | and did not vote at ull friend will | within the limits of the United States gov § b AT B oal b e Sl ionAR. e et E TRk (e 10 (6] haw AF rolad M every dollar of it off. . Mou had o mblie | 10ns of this town that are being poured into | read down the column on the other | erument. i A STRONG BOARD, raska farmers have been compelled to O il Tn God and coi b Hebt in Nubraski too when you adoptod high | the greasy tills of these places ave being sent | side of = that sune almamc, he | Hereis another fackabout your old pr iy B BaEHL hethaRe iraloaa ¥ tos Siv ceb i 50 & il sy whothor we aro willing for tho | license in this state, and you havu't paid u | 10 thebanks of Milwaukee, St. Louis and else- | will / find that = whon =~ they clect bition state of Mafue: In 1510 there v 1t Will Direct the Destinies of the Bap- | high that they could not sell itat a profit sake of o paltry old buzzard dollar to help | dollarof it [Applause.] That is what is [ Whereto pay fc rom $15,000,000 | & governor two years bofore, that the state | 5,5 manufacturing institutions in th sl Oniversioy “udgze Mason has maste the subject of e it " Lo el | Yhe matter with you, [Applause] towa is | t0 815,000,000 a vear go out of the state of Ne- | of Iowa had a républican majority, bt when | state, as toported by the census of the| 0 50 e voard of ai | railronds as woll us any man fn- tho United ourconsciences and our manhood and our | not only out of debt, but she has got mone braska, accordiig to_ the calculation, simply | Mr. Boies was elected by reason of the evil | Unit d States government for that ye: In 110460, July 1o board of directors of | Qg Clstinity behind cvery suloon in the stato | in her freasury to lend. You had better for the parpose of paying for the becr which | influences of prohibition, vherepublican party | 1550, in the same state of Maine, there were | the new Baptist univerity in this city, AL this_point a person from the audienco of Nebraska and commending it to our feliow | and borrow s, und the state of | 18 brought in here, and it does notcome back | in that state was siowed under anda domo- | about 4,451 - manufacturly industries hich John D, Rockafeller of Cleve. | avose, and stated that in 1574 Brag t NN Oithene fnd hiving to eavry 1ts defonse 0 the | Kensas husa public debt, and she has ve- | tither. These fellows have no interest hero. | crat was clected, beca s republicans bo- | Therefore, in ten years of prohibition in 0,000 and tho Baptist denoming. | Teported VanWyck worth $2,000, and_ in 1560, Judgment seat of Christ. [Applause.] | duced it since she has bad prohibition. They have most of their interest on wheels | lieved prohibition to be wrong and_were un- | Maine, you destroyed and wiped out 1,004 R ottt | 50,000, and ho asked he ex-senitor how o B e e B I e e b Il o Mnneagtn e adeptad. high. | #othey t [Applavse. | willing to go to the polls and voto for the ve- | manufucturing industrios, and [want tosay | U irien i s been |y o d aassed his wealth, VanWyek expliined women of this state are not willing following Nebraska, and hee gebt has — publican candidato and woeld. not_prostitute | to you that there was not one of thems a hey ave: 1. Nelson Blake, that he hnd husbandod tho monay loft Him by tounderwrite and endorse the saloon, the | increased every day since she adopted high WEESTER'S REPLY. thelr consciences to vote for the damocratic | biwety ot distillowy, sither, leutof the Buptist the Liis pareits, but had not tried to inake @ fors breweries und the distilleries of this state, | license. This 'Is where. the milk in the co = candldate for governor, “Thoseare tho trae | Mr Smul No, six; didu't have them. . | ical union; I B Hinckley, tho well known | buno raising steey ) [ Cheers. | and we had better ten times have the blu i comos i, He Defines High License Amid ¥ statistics of the politics of the state of Towa Lt oW pahiro you destroyed 101 manti” | railroud bullder; A, Mackloish,a member of | Ho then expluined thit 'his Wishiugton laws of Connectient buck inthis country | Youtalkubout your taxation and all that hotesult was whatl Yourdodirine of pro LEI QTERAIEON et ormony Yol the dry goods firm of Carson, Pirie. Seott d | PEOPErty was worth beiween forty und fifty than to have a further perpetuation of the t me give you afigurc ortwo. Take the Hon, John L. W S e ataliow hibition was repudinted by a majority vote of 06 manufacturing industries. 1 t he dry g i 1, Pivie, Seott & |y gisand dollars aud was mortgaged for red laws of the brewers and the distillers and | state of Nebraska, The weaith of this state on, John L, Webster spoke as follow the people of the state of Towa who voted at | you that in the st surrounding Vermor Co.; F. A, Smith, president of the Chicago 000, [Cheers. | thodevil. (Applause) 1will take tho bluo | which is ussossed for taxation amounts to | L:udies and Gentiomen: I supposo that Tum | that clection; und T proclaim it that that vote | Maine and New x”m"““m IYHSEREION had | 1y institute; €. W. Needham, @ promine Judge Mason says in 1887: Minnesota ones instead of the red ones every timo, .34 per cont of the whe th of tho | fully justified in the presumption that Tam | Which repudiated thiat senfimentof the people | hish Hecnso 4h T monshavemmrouiionli oty E L ell, the well kg and Daiota pay less frelight per mile than is The gentleman referred alsoto the Masonie | stite. You pay taxes on 3124 per cent of | speaking to a people that are assembled for of Iu.\\ is \\wnh more »] the _people of tho | that the numrl;.} ur \‘I\.I urh-lvu-lllll ::ml civil engiy ev. AL KL Parle paid in Nebraska. Nebraska rates caiot, bo rite of laying the cornerstone in the city of | every dollar's worth of property in the state | the state of Nebrasia than the individual opinion | in every onc of them instead of deereasing. pstor of e Centennial Baptist | defeaded. Tho rate from Lincoln to Ord Omaha the other day of the eity hall, - Well, | of Nebraska. Tn the state of Iowa they only F o of any ono man—I don't care wheve ho comes | Will give you a stateor two: In- Massachus- | choreh; 1 A RusE ok et | Tooks lke. hiehwavirohtitey Lo vallronds ftwus very approptiate thut thoy should | pay taxes on2s per cent, and yet their taxce fairly and honestly,and not for the mere pur- | from. 3 ek ¢ ts, for the sawe ten years, its institutions | jnown business man; J. W. Midgley, chair- | deal infurious blows to the commerce and stain. the ‘corer 5 ob thoe oty hall g | ¥ ha'dol 4 vours is Gy | pose of being entertained by amusing stov Mrs. Gougar—Mr, Webs! it is oneha increased in number 1140, In the stale of | yan of the Western Freight association prosperity of the state, und he endto the Omahia with v Ido not know of a eity : rposes. Luotive henever | because when the guestion comes of voting | 0T "“'l‘“‘]'l"\“»‘ ) “"‘“‘ P ”"‘"‘» v Ouly half | Wi *'_“;";“\'l-‘; 'l'ullhl\“‘. s .;'l"r”-“‘fl : '\]\'”\‘“1:\” yr 1 Goodnian, one of th propt ‘-m s of the | corporations them: "1\“ There will be 1o ) the country where wine ought to have cn \is 7ou | prohibition into the constitution of this state wople voted on that questio 3,038 3 avyland, 475; it 018, 1,052; Japtist paper, the Standard; 1. H. Kohlsaat back from the demand for a materin o fito tho proceaings AR 200,000 .m;‘.\!.-‘ N m‘:“-;‘.”f““{' e t tho e el Weostor—Mrs. Gougar will not be | Minnesota, 123 tud i whe little, as they | propy tor of f lavga bakory | Ferd W, Deck, | R Gasha. Bat.T reornize the: fact. that the 1ol retimis land thes ho ou come to exercise one of the most serious tuntil T tell this aidicnco that thut | say, state of ‘Nebragka, cursed with high | pesidont of the Auditorium associatior : Hon 3 s necessary to secure the seattering of the corn and the pouring of th 5,000 in the state of Iowa. You i privileges accorde an citizens represented —one-hall of the peoplo; | licnse, you inereased your manufacturing - | J N, Bailey, « istice of the Hlinois | 2 Mason has never repudiated wiho and. the g M B e 0000 1y off the peoplo i ths state g | When you come to put your ballot fntothe | thatis tosay, that tho women did not have @ | stitutions to the number of 735, [Appluuse, preme court; O. Walker, president ¢ i 1 board of transportation blical ires Masonic core- | curry i state government,and they only | box, it is not a matter of fun orof entertain- | Chance to voto on . [APPINSe Gnc Allow me, in conclusion, to say the Chicazo a v of scie mony 3 ¢ tones Wi S Rk i ooy i Voun il o ertain: | laughter.] * And 1 have a liitle statement to | ever ibition state that I have i Bowen, Detroit, b | which is a friend of the raitroad, afirms that that grand old 0 n A, | wot along theroon about 80 cents o head and | piece of paperwhether your state shall go on- | TAKe, that whenover the p oplo of the state | v ibit loctrine I o d it to be, | firm of D. M. I % B, I al, | today's rates are o high, The wd re- 1 recognize tha d by | it costs about 81.30 over here! 0, yes, | ward to prosp orWvhothor you want to | OF Iowa ever vote upon the question of giving | you destroy your manur ng industries in | a lawyer of this city W. IR, Harper of | ceatly afivmed that if the corn rate wis ot | hed suy anything about that. He “did | blast her forever.” What I have to say Mus. Gougar and the followers of the doc the state; by which I . o say youdrain { Yale; Martin A « bus reduced local rates would be, A reduction sime sanctity d with th not t vou why itis that yon farmers and | morningshall be intheline of the discussion trine that she teaches what she wants, i upon your ! L p and 55 1 fC 4 [ f10 per cent in corn rates o Ited, but the vl s ) Dani ped at th Atne rat After snme langunge of > God and | you mechanies ind you working men—mein- | avgued to this people on Saturday, and to | 1V 1o rog a:huidials tmee: worif ‘atote 0fthod yhere you iad hig wercased | live ic, the live stock being shippec 3 por cent higher than o anse in 1nois wod business prine quent Interruptions, purpose of considering this question £1,187,000 in thestate of lowa' How is it they 1 every s and bap- | you men wlo lave to ur | bring your minds back to the seriousnesy of | thn was prohibition. [Loud app.ause.] the manufacturing instifuti ! ns incrc L, S [ to Mr ion Laws afitmed that the rates 1 . 1 W vine at th [ ac to tho d 'of | the wroposition under consideration, and ap Now, I am talking, hope, to the citi- | number and, therefore, furnished savan : v of ( nighty God out of the sweat of Ito your b Wgnent by stater 15 0f the st sker, and I want \tto more men ; therefore paid out move | board, lomn Iroad rates us too bigh, Aud_ whe ? cerem itof the sweat of your . 1) by arguments aud by logic, i minute 1 atfentin to one | moncy and more wazes - | L wone). The governor and look at the i1 then wpent Hodid not tell you why it t 10 be wafted about as the du thought, be ot wit the move for your produc L FRANK HATTON. Suys t others acaling with the breweries g vics he si heve to pay more taxes on picked up from the streets by every live stal uoney in cir i - loons of O tate of Nebraska, vy in Nebraska than the sun 1 A ng and carried and o | grice the t tate the way ) which st ] and you know $ you know your n Towa hus to pay on £xK. 1o the soiling orinjury of a in 1|“'«‘t 4094 ALAGHIOD. b0 01 fac T, .y n of the sicred 1 you why you ov thit I listened to on Satu put 1 : st il e A t in her tion “of : o fivst fifteen or twenty minutes of | 0 it this morming: That wher, 1 ) | ¢ | Omioago, July I . m ¢ Appla when in Toi v wwent by Mr. Dickie this mornin ide of this state comes befove s | upo i hy | Tue Bue.)—Frank H ekelel uiembership on th o0 high. Governor Thayer ro- rie of bankruptey Ex-Assistant Postmaster General 1 s Murquetic ke as Visits Chicago, Wyck has taken the ments, but the themselves, 110 bim read something from a | | yourstate,or your metrop ity wster general, is in t with 1w s over in lowa. W { | wvhich had been issued in the state of | in the grreater the for it s are they over there in th vt | Kunsas duving a political contest in favor of Misons prohibition or against it. They were ex- | |Faintdemoustration.]” 1f you p " what t} s ! | | fracts from a pamphlet piblishéd upon one | this state, and love this state us L do, 1wou ide of the question; they were the ga like to haye you, when yourstate isslandered ings and the clippings from the littl | oryour efties lewed, in which would never let get into it one se | pliuding that 1o h from 1 man who blieved in high leense, | pardon, but to sit mutely by and theve appear ¥ azes the | simple quietude yud applause Miison eal aspivatio has b ry last speaker undert i slander I stat in O | s doetrine and cateh the , 1 have vii they have to t 1 bser t hi¢ follows have no legal name, Whi read 1 know what through 1 stated somne 1 for th A B, who (L answer | Charvies 1, Mander whom ne 1o this that o torest on 00 per 1000 per 1 of free and aceepted Masor 0 8 o \ v Beh & th wry M n i thi t it 10 i ! the state ) d \) v Y 1diem Lzedl today to ving same i wor LY i £ up to the | Ynants unon‘tha bbh e himself 4 je Muson by ing in . for prohibiti 8o the Ma of the business. |Laughter . e Lo tis not all, the Odd Pellows have d¢ ally cut off their luxuvies first and the | gatherings lik < it Al The Ancient Order of | preachers fecl it before auybedy else o 1y for @ pol benelited by prohibiti i 1 have them in my room w M but I have too much respect for an audi ion on lst hed and tl 1 of this kind to bring

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