Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 10, 1890, Page 1

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. = TWENTIETH YEAR : OMAHA, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1800, " NUMBER 22 ——————————————— - T DA T N A | butbefore the result had been anuounced, | the greatbody of the union, re-establish the | that line; that it wwont stand in law, | and crrythomhome with you, and T wantto | been outlined—as o police | | dren in your towns ind cities are educated 4 (l (| I | ond said integrity of tho union, spread its authority | it may doln n pal poli Aud soT say | say that while these gentloinen stood up here | hightsay that no gunpowder & with this licofse monaey, the money that L y n 1 represent two counties in thi s house and | sa all the land and give back to us | to you today, e men caniot bring before | toda and almost blackguarded my friend | inoureities, that no ery ¢ would have had to come from the taxpyors I bave promised them both that I would vote | the union of our fathers, undividel and in you a singl ntil f reasonable argument | Prof, Dickio because he said he had garbled [ in the town on the towands the education of your children s exe against sibmission, but this q is pre- | visible. You succeeded in d it. What | based upon constitutional law or based upon | his extractontof somebody's little old pan: | severo penilties. But | pnded to beanfify your dtics, towards pave you [turning to Mr firearns and powde 1 ing, towanls grading, to make them better | sented ina peculior forn. | h given fhis | are we here for today? I stand » us much expericnce that will jusiify you in \"}i*""l wint o say to Rev, fam Emall feores John L. Webster bjeet maeh § and | have communed | an advocate of liberty us any man who en- ning your back upen this proposition of | Webster] your wiole speech, whether you ther fustrament of d W bo | and largerand moro valuable, And whon you : with & higher and asked His guidance | listed under the flag and marched to the dbition and give your suffrus this | knew it ornot s alrealy been formnulated iibited so Lo a8 man is compelled to uso | inerease the valuo of eity property you ' ine in Ponderous Sentences, in this critical s and now, fricnds, it T | southin 1861, I stand here today appealing 1l mongrel thathas comaout of the | by the Hquor dealexs’ association of Louisvillo | these things; and T say that liquor must bo | creaso thoamount of stito taxes fron tha voto for stail disvegard t for the sime principles for which A and dranken legiluture of the | and has been sent all over this courtey, Thay st tho same. It must be manu: | ctiesand you fereise the valuo of the prope | Instruction ) tituonts you fought ¢ non natural f antry vith bigh license, "W e loos it | havegot sour fiots and figures justis youhave tured for nal purposes; it must bo | erty. N b1 have and that boy xals | Americaon the liquor t is prohibition nise you! hav@ here in fhis place s | ot them and sometivies alnost in yoar ufuct ¢ the purposeof nechanics: | Butindependont of all that: T find, for fne AND T",E AUDIENCE APPLAUDS HIM. |to 1 all o futher's love and | anyhow, and so would have b »u‘m this day ¥ of apaperin whichoncof yourfellow | words, and they lad 1 in the Dakota | and whe s manifa dured, it will } stanco, that, while Omuha in the last year e i teaderness, and as 1 ook into bis face I feel I | if ithad not been invaded by theselicenso | citizens stys that the taxation of the high | campign last ye laiso]~the samo | b very diffeult to say that _the | collected 87,00 fom the licenses grantéd to | owe him aduty higher than any ol aws, which are epedfic i their nature, nse does not_help tho famer in the state | old staff, the cary secrated hashof | men who make it shall not taste of it 10 saloons, tho cities and towns of Ne- He Deserts Prohibition Argument for a | thatis to=avo hin from theawful fat t yin their charwetor, liable to cl 3 Nebraska, Hesays: “‘In tho cities and | the brewers and the distillers putup inovigl I human uature was such that the mer pro- | brask, outsideof Omaha, had over £500,000 . | dr fe, aud God helping me, 1 changing legislatira or temper of | t saloons wrv licised the moncy | nal pckages and sent oit to orators_on nibition b te could sweop away vieo, | from the sim@source; and the connties cols Few Blows at Protection, | resolve if my vote cun give the 1 sentiment, und by license laws this | Is applicd to the support of the schoois, by mand. [Applu All that stuff. You why, | shionld certataly favorlaws to doaway | lectod over #73000 from the saloons located | & chane nish thosaloon from our . | territory has been wrenched from natural | oll the expenses of eriminal courts, pauver- | canngt be fooled nor bamboozled mor bull | with every speeios of vice and erimo, | outside of towns and villages, Out of tha let, come what may it shall bo freely given, | prohibition and glven over to_ the squatter | sm and insanity hive to be paid by tho doze byany such trideryas that. Yoi | Now Dun woin 1o show you wid quote | 219 twus thutare incomorated, [ find that 3 and my vote anl ask it sovereignty of the aloon in this country county, aud f 1 Ly upon the fairmer, ( know tha! the issy in this contestis the rora the most reliab ithoritios that the quite s numberof them havece ctod an o0« MR, ROSEWATER QUOTES STATISTICS. | TEE, G favor of the mesure’ [ Weare 1ot trying to lug in some New g | courss the city papers would uotsay o word | plainsquare issue of wihother theso siloons, | efectof ligior has been very much ehagicer- | cupation fax.** Thiy have been able to pup v land_invention that is on a parallel with | about that. If thecounty b all the | with their drunkemess, with their absorp | ated with rogard to the percentage of crime | that mouey into their city treasuries and rd ) the representative of | wooden s and basswood nutziegs ; we are | expensesof the trffie thenevery school in | tion of the money that eight to gointo he and insanity which it produces, shall read | maintain order, forthore would bo just as Haid Facts Which Controvert the Wild | th y ty In which we are. That was | not teyiug to put anything of u vaguery | the county should have its poportionof the | to make them happy and prosperous andcom: | anotein the returns that I reccived from the | muel danger of disorder thom whicther there ? . tative coning from themidst of | into the - rigid laws of this com- | saloon money” This fs from William | fortable; whetlier the muntiost of your sons | penitentiary at Bismavck: “There are two | was an opon saloon or s whisky joit ftatements of His Opponents, listening first to the blandish- | monwealth, but we ave tryi to | Willwd of ~ Gibbon, Neb, who seems | shallbe 'sold out for a price atthepublic | Women conlinedin tho penitent ead for Now, It us look at the stite of Towa. 1 e ments, 1o the appeals and arguments of the | recover the lost territory of purity, [0 be in o quandiey hins Ho ubles by the saloous of this state, [Ap | murder and one Janslaughter, ' Tdo not | want to show to you by statistics thit can politicius and s1ying thal e would not vote | owor and sobricty out of the lands of tid | wans tho more dided Lipso fiat alltie | plausc] suppose for oue mouen thatcither of them | Mot bo eontvovertal that in- the . for the submission of this question, but when | saloonistand give itbaclcto constitutional | Scheols in the country shall get some; but 5 Te TR committed the crime on aecount of intomper- | state of Tows there has been a gens fIE PREACHER CLOWN PRODDED. | ;i\ Fit"\ t homewith the arguments of | prohibition, whers it has belonged from the | the question comes” home you in No- MR. ROSEWATER'S OLOSING, anee, . oral disregitd —n total dmm:fm\, the wives i of themothers and of the hus- | beginning. | [Applanse raska, wien the city taxing the saloons gets R 1t is a favorite argument tosay that erimes | almost, of the prohibition laws, and therefore . bands and of the childien who were | The gentleman talks about prohibition L puts it into thir schools and | He Faenishes Some More Signifloant | are cuusedaltogethor by aleolof, A compu- | the thing has beenn fare, and the state hos Apt IMustrations and Convincing | boy given ver to the Mo- | ruining the state, and he produces a great ar- | persand erininalyouton you Figures on Prohibition in Lowa tation has boen made that out of 1,000 mur- | lost cormous smoints of maney, i ereit deal Toch . - Acutttietion of disnstor and | rayof firures here for you, tellir u that of teying and disposing of | Dhe Hon, Blwanl Rosewater spoke as fok | (0TS perpetrated, lavig out 150 avses un- | of mpulition, and no retwn.’ [Reading] damnation, Wat i standing there wderthe | Maine, New Hawpshiire and Sormiont—and | then, and o wuch 49 You feet Sut ot | owy; knowm, 9t wero causod by lov and lust; | VIhpoliw atihorities. of Cadur Rapids puy sl s fifieas dome of your eayitol wher the plealing eyes | heseerns to be particwlarly stuck on those | Isn’tit about time you ciimed w fair divvy S Al b 22 of them for money; 195 of them formalicd | no attention o the lguor sales; the sale is b iatle WA b LU of his little boy and t! 'nu\s\ls'lnu- of his | states —low they lhxw not gained in popula- | or else shit up thedranken factones ad the Mr. Prosident, ladies and gentlemen: A | and revenge; 3t of them out of polities and | practically free. There ave very neatly two of High License, falo: bofore hibi, #did ' have: cimmuned: | tion, Bow they ave tison Tilliod in tHAN thil making establishments and save your- | f€W years ago there appeared in this country | roliglon : 9 by religlon and _insanity : 113 by | hundred places in Cedar Rapids where liquor with @ higher power, and now If my votecan | ufactures, i ey have lost manu factu ring os tho unmecessaty burden of this taxa- | & BTt leturer £ Groat, Britain, and his | various other causes; 89 by intoxication—less | is sold in ono shape o another. Sover gite tothe people of Nebruska thv opportu, | establishinents, ete. [Laughter] Suppose | toni I weferit to yourowr: calm judgment. thene wis {\hy Don tGod Kill tlle Deil > | than 0 per cont of e total aumbor by fi- | packigo louscs avoruniing vide opon, Nono AT Al alvrs o e ssentod | iy to cast out the yum devil Tgive it," and | youadmit itis alltrue, Do you understand | Youhavegot comion sense aloug this line ve been he wo days and Thave | toxication of theso places pay any regular fine or license, e a v it Tike a man, and 1 dive you will | the diforene between s western community | and vou know the valaoof adollar as wellas | Slawst propounded the question, \Why Dacs | heroport of tho suporintendent of tha [ In 187 thece was anomiint fine of £0' o SIS DIRUWICS Liauiauqua (2ORAAy. aHaes nis decision on' November 4, and like tiis of Nebraska that is being filledup | anyone. I sayto you that every dollar you d Permit a Clown lo bo & I er!™ | insane asylum at Mount Pleasant, Ia., shows | month exicted, butat prosent they pay nothe noon by Rev. Sam Small and Edward Rose- | your little cf n loofing bolore youe by the people taking up the government land | get you dig out of the soll, and {Sone of 7t Laughter and applaute.] Why doss that out “of 490 patients, whose' symptoms | ing. In 889 tventy-four whisky cases wero wate The closing arguments of the great | in their pleadings for protection from this | making for themselves homesteads and habi- | dollirs that the Tuord €God - Almighty bless Lorl permn y 1uan fp desecrate the ¢ have been carefully diagnosed, the following | brought. to the county at & 652 ¢xponse, leavs prohibition-high license debate by Hon. John | fiend that has ruined so many homes, spo- | tations, who ave living very largely upon | because mes through honest toll: but | Wiathe wearsin tis udue of the mostsacral | s thoresult: g it with a burdensomo shortage L. Websterand Prof. Samuel Dickie will ap- | 1sted so many men, brought disaster, pau- | thut credit of theie churacters and of their | these doliars which aregathered and filehed of callings, by turning blackguard and slan- Disoases of women, § ! Dlac ) 903 sunstroke, 43 [ “The population of Cedar Rapids, la., in pear in tomorrow's issue of Tk By perismand eritne into somany of the lapp, honest i try and the promises and | outof the pockets of depravid men, put into dere, inthe presence ofa Chivistian audience | roligius oxitoment, 24; griof and loss of [ 1885 was 2,000, in 150 there are less than communities of this state, I belleve you, t prophecics of climate and sofl for the faty the saloon tilland seemnto be purificd the assemblel at Chautauqua? Wehave heard | friends, intenperance, 23; domestic | 18,00, Propaty and raits have depreciated 3 will commune swith o hizher powen, that ye o are living Joday,many of you from then are turned over to the public treasury | from theltev, Small's allusions to some of Us | trouble, 193 business anxioty, '145 disap- | 50’ por ceut. S LAST SPEECH. will listen to the calls of the monitor of God s iu the future, and you ave doir of the city to bo transmittel iuto education | thatare debating yith him that howould inti- | pointed affection, — male and 3 fenale—so | *The aitempt by the county authorities to proh pliced within, snd murch grandly up tothe | upon the accummulations of those people in | i rmu.-;m. .m«ll'l.uwhllv ‘fl\_ huve the ;::;W )\' :‘:‘V‘\\'r\nv .ll»\ lm: Cnn!lm making | n'..v ulvmu t men n.l\im.v more tonder mm(_nll the liquor trafic results ouly in in- 3 W Sty X ot lot box and forever lash these devils from | the eastern states. But he is taiking about | eurse of hell ou thom, and if thed be com- s of ouvseives, and swilling boer, wine | about disappointmmu in love than women; | crcased expense (o the county. In 1884 tha 1o Alllun-wl “lll.l‘ n.r.l \|(|u.‘ ke Ill'nu( b temitory of the state of Nebraska, [Ap: | th doercascin minu factures in Aing, for e | pensations i this world, morl as well | ndwhisky, ind'oing home drankc o oue | apinm habit, 5; over exertion, 13, nds of Lyl comnty wi sedat onand Rambles Genesally, | 0 stutice, but the gentleman docs ot stand up | as physical; if the etemial God has | fanilies, 1 ventire tosaynowin his pres Of intemporance among that number of In 1859 they lad gone down to $6:0, Ladies and Gentlemen:—1 desive on this Ihie gentlomen talk about personal liber here and tell you that in the east, in the state | 1ot gore back on kis worl, there will be a | @1ee, and I elallenge your attention, that Mr. | insane there is only 5 per cent, The hishest B my last appearance in this debate to thank | And he stood up here yesterday and at- [ of Maine, since prohibition was enacted, that | day of reckoning, these salons will take a | Smull his diunic more beer d number that [ hive noted’in the various x City, fia., thevo is o vory large you most cordially for your kind reception of | tempted to flaunt the blopdy shirt in your | the great dominating party of this conutry gageon yoursonsand you will have to | Me. Small-Say, yoistoh vight there T | retums isin the Minesota asylum, whero itis | number of ¢ saloons. 'ho © police Tsell, for your strict attention to the debate | £ae over my head because I came from the | has broken up the shipmanufacturing which | pay back for I every dillarsou got, and put [ Bever suid that. 1 sail Paul did 1ot tell | 14 por cent. Among the 165 ingarable insanc | and ety authovitis pay no attens St it 2 state of Georgia, I wantto say to you that | was once the lavgest industry in the state of | it in spolling books, and pay blood interest | Timothy to dot Gries of *Sit down,” | at Hastings, Nebruska, 130 are"temperate, 16 n to them. Sine Covinglon, and for the gencral courtesy which youhave | ho living for twenty-one sears in the state of | Maine, Y ou can go nowfrom Bangor to Ken- | with the gray haies that ae mingled with , hoots, ind great demonstration intcmperite and 19whose former habits were | burned tho number lns groatly showi. I eertainly appreciate it on my part, | Nebraska, secins to know more about the | nebunk andsee shipways empty and cabins | your sorrow s you go down to tie grave, Mr. Roscwate plysay that 1€ | unloy and I trust I shall 50 conduct myself in thiy | state houseof Georgla than I do, living mnder | desevted and the men who are the ship- [ .y friend says thew is no prohibitlon in | an oviginal paclkige should puss withia 2 | Hure isa statement as to the _proportion of | There are about two hundred pl discussion to the ondas to merit your kind. | it Shadow, and I have my wifeund childrén | wrigiits have gone from the coust of Miine le. What biblodid you teach when | ¥ouy shich dstame ofthe room in whith | Insano inlowa, Iunsas unl Nebraskn. In | City thatpays UnitedStates Licr A0ss dit @3 to receive your cordial support | Were now! Iwpudiate the fsinuation that | solely because the proteetive policy of (his vi Sunday schol! Laughterandap- | UBis gentleman mude lis headquar hé statoof Kansas there aro 1,277 insuno | liquors. Aot filty plices pry $0 & me iy i . ordial SUPPOIt |y, pronotloyal to the grand old stars and | country has been such as to drive American se.] I do mot wonder that you aban- | L shouldnot want to visk the original package | persons, o one to 1310 of the population. In |as tixes; but for all practical parp for my propositions before I finish, I desiro | Sipiy Appliuse, Of the Fourth ofJuly, | ship-building out of cristence and _give not ‘tho business and Woit to coming back sealed. the stateof fowa 1876, or one to 1,04 of the | saloons of Sioux City are wid ? #ls0 tosay that for the gentlemen who have | inthecity of <h . on Friday last, | only the building of our ships but the carry- [ law, If you had that sot of a biblethe 1will now divect myself to the subject im | population. In Nebraska 63), or oneto 1,018 | Siux Cityis the” only town in engagod In the debate on the other side | Goverior Gordom, wiio is the chief oxceutive | ing of our comeiore into forvign hauds, Just | Sooner yoi quit the better for your immortal | bwd. The pople of this state enacted pio- | of the popilation. So- that, for two indino > was, thint you miight say has e qsstaon St T omvertatn tho masy | of ourstats, u guitant, Christin . gentioman, We ire giving it to the browers and distil- | soul. [Laughter,] T am gid, sir, that you | biditiononce bofure, in tho yeur 185, and | peoplo in Nobraska, thers arevery nearly | creased I populition and fn wealth t tlon th ho Stosd before thousands of the blue and the | les. [Appliuse,] Letme tell the gentleman | quit. 1thank yoi forleaving the fild; but | &ftor three years it was repealel becwseno | fourin towa and thrée in Kansas, I' do not | prolibithn fist came, Bub this is chielly profound porsomal respect. I think that theso in thecityof Chattanooga and uttered | that ithe will te Hiem I want to smy this, that ever since the day | tttemptwasmadeto enforee it. In 187,a | aseribe that difference to prohibttion, but 1 | because Sioux City las o -fge tude in gentlemen have come before you with a [ sentiments of patviotism and of loy- | that isenviching foveirn carviers of our pro- | when God | callsd Moses fnto | comstitution — wis framed for ke |sinuly assert that Nebraska under high li- | nortiern Nebrask, and beeause Ouaha is sincere desire to put before you those things | alty and of devotion to the flag and | ducts and our fre these fowign |the top of Sinal and drew | Pewple of Nebraskn, and wilh it was submit- | cense can certainly make very favorable | entirely wut oft from thit section, The num- which have appealed to them as being consid- | e government that wero th equal | fellows who ‘are charging you farmers | around them both the curtains of l«;* an amendment sepa M-l)" with three | comparison with states that have tried pro- [ berof drug storesin Sioux Cityin 1857 was erations worthy of dotermining their position | O 81 Swoken anywhere ‘in this country, | more to cary your corn than you get forit in | majesty and mystery and dvopped from his | other auenduenty, prbibiting the silo and | hibition. | i i ARAIBLN SR Sui L O I Gl U v it positi Applanse 15 & watt toishy o700 toaty my. || thulopen: i . Tf they will give you a | own omipotent ‘esthe sucred writing of | manufacture of liguor. That question was Lot us tako the insane statistics of the [ these hold pormits and are in a very good ference to this great question. Iyield y of |condition financinlly, Sclling liquor, of Proofs of the Failure of Sum ptuary Populatin of Sioux City, about countrymen, that while that bloody war'was | clance, if they will give American men a | the ten commandments, God's law against | Proughtbefore tb Lhis state, thoe- | United Statos: Out of a total numbe 1o them the isht to entertain these views | being I was but one of these littlo | right o build ships and will protect them in | every form of evil, peonai or national, has | 0:shly debat n the lallols " yere | 01,00 in the Uuited Stales in 188, 65,025 | course, and toexpress them, 1t is theivright, and | boys myseif, ten years old when 1t begzan and | it, then I will tell you that all the way down | beenabsolute, unconditlonal and eternal pro- | comted the proposition to prohibit the mim- | were natives and 2,334 wer forcigners, The © dre the expenses of Woodbury tounty, they have showi the courage of their convie- | fourtern whenit ' ceased; but I suw it from | the coast of Maine the furnace fives will be | hibition, and you knowit. [Applause.] You | Ufictureandsaleof lijuor was siowed under | ratioof isane to {he population was 1,83 to county in wihich Sious City i5 loeated! O Ie T8 Thevo s thode Hore with o i the beginning to theend, I was in the teack | lighted anew, the shipways will be restored, | say that I would change thy bible in the in- | by@very lage najorily, while the constita- | cach 1,001,000, Tn KKansas it was 1,004 “or the vear 18y cou xpenses 4,850 PRI G A [0, SLOCCLENORS within Bean i} optes s lccoping my safety ahead and the hulls will brighten and glisten in the | terest of prohibition, aud ay because Paul | ton ftalf, by vason of miswpresentation | lows 1,66, and in Nebraska 995 out of | 18sh, 36,01 NS, & LR ST @ dayund month after month, | suulight as it beams upon the polished pne, | told Timothy to take a itlowine for his | @ud by the combinations mide by monopolies | 1LOM,000. So Nebraska stands very high in | 1855 $21200; and in I8 ¢ And conseeration to their work that reflects honor say to” you, my countryiien, that | and the masts will be set and the mill-wheels | stomach's suke iustead of siying “Now, you | aud bankers, wus defeted by about two or | that regird yetcourt exeases, Govern sy upon them whetherit does upon their cause lowr' that I became able to under- | will goaround and the sails will be wov olddrunkard, dov't yo take i, you drink | three hundred. Nowwe arc asked agaim to | Now, in regard to fi almshonses : | decreased 50 wonllerfully in the state of ornot. ‘They have done what very few in | stand the great issues which were inyolved | and the breath of God will fill theni as they | water.” I do notknow whether Paul was a | insert into the findamental liw of | In 1530 there w 204 paupers in the alms- | Lo, their position have everhad the temerity o i the great resulls which were achieved | waft them away over the seis to carry the | doctor or not, but yourname is not Paul, nox | this — state a = proposition —which, as | houses of the United & ,of which Kansas | Burlingtonhas 125 saloons positive byexery todo in their places, Aud for that ¢ men who warched out from the | corn and wheat and the produce of the h | are the peoplo of the siate of Nebraska named | ¥ou have alveady _ been fuformed, | hads5; Maine, 1,05; lowa, 1,165; Nebrasia, | excopt, tho money thoy pay to the {ein reason they arc entitled to our respect, and | iomes and from the furrows of this cou fields of Nebraska and the great northwest, | Timothy, [Appluse] 1t Pagl did tell [ bas been adopted in many states, | 113, And outof 5,608 prismers in the limeelawyers o let them aloie. © In theyare atitled toa faiv hearing. I trust | underthefiagof the union to keep the [Applause.] When the gentleman comes to | Timothy to use alittlewinefor his infirmitics [ @nd, with the excoption of Maite and Ve | onsof various tio Uulteut LG Dbl Al ST that we shall give it to them. As | tity of thatunion undividedand indivisible | tallc around facts of that kind he will find that | hedid ot tell him to ¢ tn Hornberger’s and | mont, wpealed gfter fair trial byall, that | Kuisas, in 189, Towa, 803; I JEEOR BIe R iGN oL g for myself 1 teat their - acgu- | forever, when I understood what they had | thereis a reckoning just ahead of him for | take a cocktail twoor three times hefore | Bave ever piacedit within their fundauent 105; Nebraska, & Maine had 200000 | ness, 251 [ 188, total arvests, 1,085 for ment with the respect which T think | secomplished, how they had stricien 4,000,000 [ him and this people, that the farmers of this | breakfust, and then take sone er llrs | 1aw. The guestio is not shall we by me | mor population in 1650 Dgurasks. dxhnicRineas A5 dhla b < otblllol to by is Tue to it and L desirc to doso to the end shackles from 4,000,000 of our brethren in | country, that the shipbuilders of this coun- | Swill before dinner, some of Scllitz’ beer be- | fell swoop stop the drankard factories, but | Now, as a matter of fact, we havoscarcely | Joln A, Mewer, dty derk, Now, 1 have paid a little move than due or | black, T thanked God for the day, and 1 have L thiad the meenanio arts and industyics of | fore supper and then go home a5 drunk and | & weable ta keep thie drankord factries | increased the inmtes of ow peuitontiary in | Davenport, 170 saloons, wide open da ordinary attention to my distinguished friend, | thanked Him in thepresenceof iypeople asI | this country that have been eround dowi un- | mean asa hog about Yor 10 o'clock at night, | clsed! T am ‘o€ “here reprsenting the | thelastlon years. Here s the table: In | night, under a_ popular ordinnee piiying the bonorable editor of Tix Osama Bre, in | do before you, and I thank Hini for the day | der this infornal system which has beenmalk- | [Applause. | drunkard mikers, Lam xot here wpresmt- | June, 180, inmates of prisons, in KKansas, | $140 per year Toport of police department| my two previous speeches. I am afraid my | whenhe give o this country Abraham Lin- | ing the rich richer and the noor peorer with | Taikabout the bible haying nothing about | ing thesaloon, or defending thewhisky shep: | 907, Deiug at the rate of 110 1,540; Town, 640, | total nunberof arrests, 1884, 7233 on account brother Webster may think I have neglected | coln, that typical American who with his im- | every sun neaily that has ™ risen over® you, | probubiiion it. The bible bes prohibition in | but Tan here defending the priicipls of high | or 1 to 3019; and Nebraslka, 825, or 1 to 3,153, | of drunkenness, 61. in 1559, totil num- him altogether [Applause]. Ido not care to | mortal hand, signed the emancipation procl: [Applause.) it from lid 10 lid against every form of eyil | liccuse as the most efective of two reme- Coraparing the years of 1880 and 1500 fc bor of arwests, 780; from intoxication, i ofigures are given. In Davenport the re- nt; the popnlas | conler says fcation” means a dead t that time ;and | drunle. Thisis cortifiod toby Frauk i I wantto ask him furthermorewhy | these fellows havo tous is because wi tht fact that thechildren of * this state mre | in proportionto the population there w ler city clerk. lowa City, in 1851, had a_populition of 8,0005 the number of saloous then wis justthe same [Laughter and applause), He | success of the American constitution and | Pennsylvania and the state of New York, [ suppose that the clergy of this country under. | resonwhy, Tlhe constitution of Nebraska Let uslook into penitentiaries and see the | four; in 1340 the pop i than 7000, ook ocesion also to slur at myself and | which is guuaunteed by the mighty powerthat | those magnificent and glorious high license [ stind the bible well emough to know their | Provides that all moicy received from fines | causes of crime. The number of conviets in | and thenumber Iy Aty Brother «Dickie as being imported orators | is interwoven with the forty three stars and | states manufactory after manufactory are | duty?! Hasnot every evangelical church in | and licenses of whatever deseriplion | the raska penitentiary is 388, They bad | There isno attempt to coitrol them; occa- from other states. [ aman oviginal pacicage | thivteen stripes of (hat glor] . in | pulling themselves up by the roots to-day y aluost from e end of it to the | shall be —pliced to the credit —of | them polled at Lincoln the other day and t sionallyoneis fined, while others are per- and have a constitutional right here [Ap- | favorof and to the extent of hundreds and hundreds year after mvention, | the sghool fund; no matter whether | is the state of facts: Total abstainers, 1123 | mitted to run on favoritism. ness aud with a boldness and with an evident have him goaway with the impr on that | mation and not only made every black man in I'would that Thad thetime totake the | and of the very appear: of evil. 1 say to | dies todo away withthe evils of intemper- | Nebraska, we have in 1830, | in 1590, 838 bis arguments have noeffect upon me. He | this country fiee, but made evéry white man | faets and figures andshow youwhy manufac- | you _that we stand today upon the sacred | ance. belug an increaseof 10) per seemed to think yesterday that he was in | freer from theday that he did theact, [Ap- | tureshave been refuced fin those eastern | word of God. One of the great objes Attention has been called by the speaker to | tion inc (171 per cent in doult as fo wlicre Ieame from, whether from | plause. | state b on Georgian or Utah, but I propose to show him | 1 believe in personal liberty. 1 believe in | itis that frome the state of Rhode Island and | got so nuch of the bible oy our si belng educated with blood mon I say | decrease of 86 per centin the before hie leaves here today that I am here | thatliberty which has heen sanctified by the | the state of Massachusetts and the state of | have ot so little, ughter Don’t you | that he probably doss not understand the | prisoners. plause]. 1" can go where I please under | withthe public peace, the public safe are going to the south and establishing thern- | synod, assémbly, ¢ i conference, | the license is fora hack, or a billiurd maolerate drinkers, 1853 intemperate, 140 Dubuque, Here isaletter from th ty the recent decision of the supreme cout | the |mbl\rrr 5. But fora man who is a | selves in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee and | world without end, repudiited not only the | theater or a saloon,or auy other busin able to read and write, 303; ablo toread but | clerk of Dabuque, directed officially to me: without wrator license, and he has not lawyer and who stands with fair fune before | other southern localities. [Applause.] Why | liquor traftle, butdeclivedeven that to license | No_ mutter whether & person is fined inkhe | unible (o write, 403 unableto read and write, | “Dearsiv: In reply to your of the lith rigght to stand up here and question miy v the "judiciary aud courts of this state, | is it that men from high license Boston the | itis asin against God aud & crime inst | policecourt for fighting on the streets, or . S0 that theassertion that ignorance is | inst., (that means thie 19th” of June-this is to stand upon this platform anddefeid this | for @ man "who has stood before the | otherday invested three millions of dollars | man? Don't youbelicve the Christian people { Whether heis there for putting abuawl of | thecause of crime falls to tho ground; in | dated the 23d,) would state that there are matter of prohibition befcre' the people of | supreme court and plead with honorable | in six dwys in Harriman,a_prohibition town | of this country krow mough about the | ashesin a back alley, the money isbounl to | fact, some of the smartest rascals unhun, 180 saloons In £his cit sent, all paying Nebraska, unless e proposes to change front | fervor the causes of his clients, and who tas | in the state of Tennessee; in Cardiff, in Fort | bible to know wlether the spirit of | boplaced to the crdit of tho school fund, | in prisou—some who can exccute a draft or | a license of $10) per your, le in two entirely, go back on the supreme court and | madeforhimself o reputation that this, my | Payne, in New Eugland, citics, all of them | Almighty God i 1z them hell-bent to. | And let mesay to you that this talk of blood | eheek, or forge the name of a man, or open a | equal installments, semi-aunually inadvance, stand where we stood soime months - | friend, has made in the state of Nebr withiu fifty miles of each other in the sunny | wards saloon or whether he is leading | moneyis all nonsense; itis fol “he | safe, ordoanything that any man of ingenuity 2s the saloons as places of pub- claring that the state alone was soverei to stand here tht Why doesn't he tell you something | them to the prohilitionand peace, sobric congress of the United States e | could do. the city marshall looks after the this matter and had a right to decide it for | of his fellow-citi 25 of pettifog- sut that! ~ Why doesn't he give yousome | and prsperity¢ You stand up here as a | courtof the United States, the president of here ave twocollege graduatesin prison n of the license; that is, all saloons herself. And he is too good a lawye ging with that phas sonal liberty,'is | factsand figures along the other side of this | preacher of righteousness knowing the bible | the United States,the armyof the United | atLincoln. Both were convicted of eriminal | not having the required licenseare prosecuted question the dictum of the supreme t. | unbecoming to him do not believe he | question? Well, he is not on that side, | from lid tolid and want to flank anybody | States and its navyareall paid with blood uults on women, One conviet,a forger, | by him Respeettully, John O'Counell, Le confessed himself that he was no origi would be guilty of. it ia any other place ex- | [Laughter.] No, my fellow countrymen, you | that s prohibitionis inthebible, Get up | money, forall mon: ed from revenues n college 4 short time. Four of the | clerk.” package, [Applause.] He has only been | ceptuponthe discussion. of this prohibition | cannot ol all“the disasters ‘that com. | and doit. ~[Applanse.] You will be a bigger | ellected from the manufacture and sale of | convicts are graduates of h scliools, and Now, hereis the certificate from the re- here twenty-one years, and the only differ- | issue, where pettifogging is anecessity in | merce, trade and manufactory is suffering in | phenomenon im this worla than Paul was in | liquorplaced inthe national treasury is paid | the evimes for which they are convicted | corder of the city of Dubuque, saying that enco between himand me in Nebraska is that | order to defend the saloon. [Applausol. ' He | this country to the question of prolibition, Bis. Prolibitim in the bible! What | out rgavdless of where it comes from, | are forgery, burglary and grand laveeny, his carpet bag isalittle older than mine, I | knows what personal libertyis, and he knows You talk about trusts and combines. Why, | puttering! And what is the diffevence, I want [ Of the 56 persons convicted of murder and do not bt hie has obtaiued a divine right | as well as ke knows his own honorable name | we yawp andjealloparound and paw theearti | -~ Andthenhe jumped onme and talked to | o know, wiether Mr. Iler's mmey | munslaighter only 14 were of intemperate | suloons for the yoar 180 in plces of publio to splutter over every fellow that comes into | that the prohibition of the liquor trafic does | and’ get_mad when anybody telks about | me about attemptingto throwslurs and slan- | that went to the Omaha Young Men's | hubits and ouly 4 were under the influcnce of | resort. And they have licensed them on the thestate to make o fow remarks upon this | notstrike anywhere in & thousand milesof | trusts. We talk about the sugar trust, the | ders upon the great state of Nebraska and | Christian sssoclation building was not ac- | liquor at the time of the commission of their rent of $100a year. That accounts for pertinent subject, personal liberty. The prohibition of the t octopus—sugar trust of the country, | the eity of Omaha. Idid not slanderthem. | ccptable just asmuch as sy money, ard my | crimes. The remaining 42 murderers wore of is 180 salons exist in atown My distinguished friend, the editor of |liguor traMicstrikes atthetraffic, itstrikes My can get & farmer on bis high horse Il | Inever made vthem that way. [Applause.] I | own vent in there just as well. [Applaise.] | temperte habits, Ouly 13 of the murderers | liko Dubuque; whiledown here in Lincoln, tho Owuia BEr, is not an original pack- | at the systemof commorce, and there is not | two minutes, whenever you mention sugar | just pulled the sheet off your damnable in- | Iwant to know, for instance, whetherif a | a1 non-professos of religion. Of the 42 | in @ city that has at least 20,000 age either, that is not original with Nebras- | a lawyer with a thimbleful of brains in | trustto him; but, doyou know you ean figure | iquities in Omaha aud let the sunlight in on | woman of ill-repute should step into oun of [ Persons sentemced for murderons assaults [ more populatim than Dubuque, thevo Jean, and if it hud not been for the fact that Ne- | America who ares to deny the | ot your sugar’ trust business? L ear | them. [Applause]. Talkabeut me slander | your millinery shopsto buy a bonunet, and the [ ouly S wereof intemperate habits, Of the | aw only thivty-seven licensed liquc braska is notso muchof an eriginal state | proposition that it is competent | the profits of the sugar trust were only | ing them. | slanderd themx because I tock | lady that las theshop should step into cherceh | remaining 34, with o single exception, all | dealews, of whon two are wholesalers, and at anyhowa good manyof you would notbe | for the congress o legisla- | £4,000,000, putting the legitimate and tho | their photograph, [Laughter] on next Sundayanddrop a haif dollar that | Were of temperate habits and mostly teeto- | least nine ave hotelmen. Thut is the dif- her You have cmigrated from other places | tureof the people in the exercise of their | illegitimate together. Putting your profits of Youmight as well say your photographer | she received from this scarlet woman into the | talers, Of the 87 burglivs only 6 were men | ference between high license and low license and como to this portion of the country to | sovereign power to rogulate the commerce. | the sugartrade together it was only | i slandered you because hiedoesnot make you | contribution kox—whether the minister will | of drinking habits, The remaining 81 wi in prohibition states, muke your homes and to build up for your- | Your very tariff lnws to-day are regulations | 000. When you take the wlolo profits us handsome as Awllo Belvidere when he | throw it out. and markit blood mor 1| all mon of temperate labits, There ur In the cty of Marshalltown the city sclves lubitations aud to gather around “your | of commerce, Your embargoes and prohibit- | by the sugar”trust, divide it among the peo- | takes your picture. (Laughterandapplause] | haveneverknown such ucase, They willac: | persous incarcerated for arson and none uso | yarshall in 1590 made 205 amests, of which fivesides your childven and teach thein in | ory tarifls against certain articles andcertain | ple of this country, with the consumption of | 1willdo my friemd the justice to say, how- | ccpt whatmoney they get, and thew is woth. | Luor as abeverage. There %5 fellows | 181 were for drunkeness, Property, rents honor and truth and sobriety and righteous- | people are vrohibitory tariffs, They are | sugar fifty-four pounds per capita, it is on ever, that e would look a good deal better | ing wrongabout it, provided that the money g sentences for eriminal assaults on | and business in Marvshalltown havedecreased ness which will malke for them manhood, wo- | exercises of the vight to control a trafic. So | 24 conts per man; that is, less than on than hie does if he wis on_the other side properly eontributed by people toward | Women. Only 2were of intemperate habits, | 50 porcentsinee 1555 Hundredsof peoplo manhool and futuve prosperity, and it has | with this matter, It is simply a question of | teenth ofa cent per day. I will toll you that | this question. [Applanse] K charily or beneyole; Thereis not a church [ Neither of these blawe Hquor for their down- | have left everything and sought their for- been your toll and your consecration, your | whether this trafic, whether this system of |a man drinking: four glusses of bece per | looking figure, ind the suioons “are mignty | buildiig in thecity of Omaha, and there is | fall. Of the 32 forgers, auly men who | tunes elsewhere, [t should bo remembered culture, your refinenient and your zeal for the | commerce, without' reference to indivi- [ month pays more to the whisky trust and | bappy in having a gentleman of so pleasinga | scarcely one in” any large eity in this | were sddicted to the use of liguor. Omneonly | that Marsballtown is well located, has alarge things which are good and trie and beautiful | dual who engagesin it, without referenceto | beer trust in the country than the man does | countenance for their champion, If they had | state that - las not been built with [ aseribes his fill to drink, alawyer, and he | countiy tributary to it, has stone and good that has made Ncb a toblossom us shehas | theindividual who is in favor of its being | to the sugar trust the whole year through, | got one of theirregular disciples topersonally | money gotten from men who have dealt | clims he was drunk when he forged the | warerpower, and beautiful location, Probi- and has given ber th and brought | continucd with all its passions and depraved | [Applause.] Yes, you talk about yoursugar | appear here you could have t ved him | in liqior, momey gotten from men who checls,- lition has falln like a blight on this, one of toher all this wonderful progress which it provides whether this system | trust. A man down here in Missourn 10 Belloe island, kicked Mrs. Gougar's triend | not believe as many of you do. And yhat i The classiflcation of the convicts in the fulvest and best towns in lowa, The these gentlomen have lauded from this plat- | of commorce is a system _which adds to the | other day publishea an advertiscmer the goddess of, and set him up thew, | thereabout this matterl Why hns n to thele religious faith isus follows: No pro- | populition today is only 8,060, form. And when you, after doing th public wealth and the public health and the | have got it right there in my paper, in'which | and we need not have put any clectrical | Lordprohibited outrizht the temptation of | fissedrelivion, 145 Catholic, 861 Methodist, | * Mayor Amei of Mushalltown pr waork's, after accomplishing theso works, g happiness, and upn that question | he said: ‘Auny man in this town Who takes | wiresto hum either. [Great applause. drink{ Why has Ho created the grape, #; Dunkard, iscopal, b; | that 0 w on_the amount of drunk bringiug Nebraska to this state of prosper- wus of statesmanship and of | two drams of liquor per day at 10 cents | Thegentlernan says I slandered the honor- | and allowed it to gow: and the corm, & t 5; Jowish, 13 Preshy 17} | mess will be much less on accointof the ity, whon you turn around and demand the slation and of judiciary and of clergy,and | per dram, if he will shut off on his | able senators from this state. I wantto s allowed itto grow! Wehave been arvated Army, 1; Christian, 8;Congrega: | openuess and freedom with which beer is right that the peoplehave to pass upon @ wd all women ‘who haveeyés in | liquor and deposit his rey with me | this, that as for thuse gentlomen [ hav withpassions and appetites, Shall mea be | tional 13 Universalist, 1; Adventist, sold, thus supy; 1z the polson (ereosole question of such profound jmportance s i heads 0 sco tho results of the liquor |in my store I will furnist him during the | doubt they areamong your most distinguished | considered sinuers aud outlaws, just bocause | United B 1; German Ieelormed, 13 | mixture) the bootleggers sold, which often they haveindulgedin a few glasses of wine | Refc o 15. Now, you havesomo e men so erazy that his ofiic adment, have gone o worl and licensdd 150 dealing with the liquor subject, you have get | tralic in any community has been unanimous | year 80 sacks of flour, 270 pounds of gran fellow eitlens anct | would not slander them 3 arightto deal with it on your own moti almost thalit isa tralie that ought tobe | lat ugar, 7 pounds of coffee and give him | It was simply a little by-play that [ putin | or beer? iusight into this branch. and after your own consciences and after | controlled, and if it s found an immutable 5 to go to the circus with when the trade | there, When I spoke of them this mor 1 will say right he and itmay shocke my S0 much has been said from time to time Farm propegty in the county in 15% was your own understanding of th zhis of men | ovilit ought to be abolished eternally from | is over. [Applaus: I didnot mean to slander them perso friend who has p such & higheulogy to | that intemperance is the chief cause of suf- | worth $3,419,4i, cty property in Marshall- and thowillof God, and this is the reason,as | this continent fApplause]. I say today that | Talk about trusts, there is mot a bigger, | but Iwantto say this, that when I spealsof | Abraham Lincoln, that, of the very™ few | ¢ide that T want {0 call your attention to | town, 81,419,585, In" 155 the favm property I snid yesterday afteémoon, why this question | theliquor tmfiicis such anevil. No~ priest | more infernal trust in all the world and out | public men and of their characters and ree- | people probably inthe United States that | that. The New York World almanae for the | was worth $3620,0, wud the city propevty dsbefaro the people of Ndbraska today. We | or publicist, no statesman or serverof the | of hell than this liquor trust thatis grabt s upon public questions 1 speak of it as I | ever did drinka gliss of beer with Abruhan | ¥ear 1500, taking the basis of life insurance | #1,263, Wid notimport it infrom any other state. | sacrament has ever been ableto change it | 300,000,000 a year out of the pockets of this speak of (&t and I say with | Lincoln, I am o [aint applause | It | repor kives the whole number of 1 want to talk to you about the rovernment Brother Dickie and 1 did not come here and om an unmittgated evil into a qualified pub- | people and giving them nothing back for it ernce to the senalors from this stale, | was on the day of the battleof Fredericks. | sileides of five years from 1852 to 1557, in- | licenses issued in low iptain Lathrop, stand yonder in the city of Lincoln demand- | lic blessing, and we huave recorded behind it, || but pauperism anda misery and crime aud | however honorable gentldmen they may be | burg Abraban Lincoln came into the office | cuded, as §226° "Of that number 630 com- | United States col iernal ing of the legislature of 1889 that it should | indicted in every court fromthe court of | taxation, You take the taxation on ae- [ in their personal charactepistics and habits, | of the war departmentona Suiday morning suicide on enccount of business | revenue for the northern dis- givo this question to the peopleof Nebraska, | conscicuce (o thd court of ‘high heaven fov | count of this liquor business in the city of | however muchyou may honor them, and 1 | in his slippers. The battle was very ficreo bles 3 385, love trouble 571, dissipatic wict of Towa, cmbracing forty-nine ut I want to say to you that it was the peo- | these crimes, its n s mnrders, and it | Omiha and what does it meau! It means | honor them with you £0r all that they are en- | and raging allthe day and Mr. Lincom - ; fear of punishment ; and one because she | counties, said that' at th inning of pro- le of Nebraslca themselves that did it, and | stands today the only criminalized form of | taking 250 saloons, charging them $,000 a | titled to, [want fo say that while Mr. Pad- | mained in theofiice all da, Vis ex d apimple on hernose. [Laughter] We | hibition thero were in his district 5,000 1 the discussion of that question these con- | commerce in this country, e Slocumb | yeae aplece in order to put taxation on the | dock has been *a senutor of these Unite: tremely anxious as to the result. Thivteen | oughtto have an amenduient to the constl- | licenses in foree, That number was reduced siderations of lomo and of peaco and of [ law todiy pits alabel of criminality on the | depraved appetites of the men who pitronize | States thore has been no reflection in the usand union soldiers laid down their lives | U that & woman shall notbe aflicted | o 3,00 in 1557 That the number has gradu- prosperity and -~ of sobriety and | back of the liquor trafie, and puts balls and | the saloous in order to reduce the taxes of the | eastto show that he haseverset the Potomae | in that shaghter pin. happencd to ko the | Vitha pimple on her nose—the pimple shall | ally inerased until it now exceeds 5,000, of Christianity; of the stamping | chains regulation to its heels, and you have | fellows who own the property and who ought | on fite with his brilliantstatesmanship. Not | onlymanon duty reccvin Qispitehes | hereafter be bunished from the *stat g out of pauperism, of the stoppage | to do it in er to keop it within | to pay taxes gn the property, It Is a direct | only that, butl will te of erime, of thelifting of the burdens of un- | avy possible curb whatever, and | rob: 1tis a tax on appetite and not a tax | seeli—you have seen many’ s man stagger oat | by side with Stanton and Captan Fox, | S¢1ves on aecount of disappointment, in love | packige men. The lnersuse has reached 1,000 necessary taxation fromthe hard bone and | wo siy that the pirate ' caught | on the privilege of sclling. I say today if |of the doors of yonder hotel with |aSsitantsecrearyof the navy, wateling the | then kil themselves on account of intemper- | since April, this year, If the ineraseisequal musclo Of this country were the considera- | chiined, curbed und labeled in the hold of | there is anythiug in the shape of law that | his soul set on fire wilh the damnable stuff |news from the battieield. = At neon Mr, | wnce. in the other halt of Towa there are fully 2,000 tious which mude these people of Nebraska | the ship it is easier and safer for thevoyagers | makes angels or men devils by looking upon | which Senator Paddock permits to be sold | Stanton sent out and got an ice pitcher full Let menowwcome to the main issue: Is | new lic s in Towa besides all those thab demaud - for thomseles tho right to settle | to land him_ overbgird at ouce and 1ot him | it, it is a high license law that taxes & maw's | there, [Great appliuse want to say that | of beer, and ho handed us some crackers, and | prohibition inthe statos in which It has | wersissued lust year, this question attho ballotbox withiout the in. | take care of Limsdf i the midst of the | appetite instend of taxing the property that |on the eve of the Lut naliomal election, where | the e was partaken of, by President Lin- | beentried @ failure or asuccesst Willit I want'to devotea little of my time to an- terveition of the legislature and the diguor | wighty deep. [Appliuse.} hehas not got. [Applause.] myself and wife were_domiciled at the Fifth | coln, Stanton, Fox, w'd I remembar Me. | better the condition of our people or willit | swering one question, and that is what hus lobby, and they forced it ther Perional libe Talk about going down Not only that, but 1do not believe it would | avenue hotel in New York city, on the stieet | Seward also was there, There wasno great | make it worset Wil it deive out thesaloon | been said neve in regavd to the state of No. I read to you from the lowa Statn Register | tothe south and wasting your strength suf- | hold good inany courtin this country. The | where those great processions passed through | crime inthat; for the Lord makes no crime | or elose the dive? Will it make free whisky | braska as compared with the state of Kansas that in the great fight for probibition in the | feringin the bivouac andon the battlefield, | high license men themselves do notdare to | Fifth avenueand Broadway auticipating the | of drinking liquor, but he do=s of [ in plce of regulating alicensed saloou! You | in the mutter of property. The facts are Nebraska Jogislature the same moral force | pining away under disease, under inhospi take this high license law bef he supreme | elecion onTuesday: I wantto say that whiles| drunkenness, justas He does of gluttony. In | have been told heve, and it has beon preached | these: In Nobraska the and noble fufiuences wore at work that were | blo skies, in thehospitals of the south, and in | court of the United States. The have. | they were sweeping throigh the streots | olden times gluttons were stoued wodeath, | from pulpit and platform, that the cit scon fn Lowa when the contest was going on | the prison pens, and suffering toreurcs whioh | They have submitiod. Thoy have gous aiong | thousands wpeh Ebousabds of them cryMig oat [ justihe same as drunkavds, The oher day | alone get the benefit of the 1 there. ¥ou will remember that the lowa | have mwae your names illustrious for your [ and paid anything you weuld exact of them | thelr warcries of the tvo partie 2 he telegraph anuouneed that a man had died | into (he school fund. Now, I deny that, I |in Lowa and i thostatoof Kansis it reproes Htate Register is - the groat leading organ of furinee fortitude and faith in' the | upto the point of starvation for their trde | oneof your senators siting at the table with ¢ ealing twenty-six s. Now, I do | clain in the first place that the cities of Ne- | sents from one-half to onedhivd, Now, you that stato published at the capital at Des | grand old goverment. 1 honor every one of | rather than go before a court. Tam told by | Thomas C. Plhtt, Willum I, Chanaler and H ot L e thut anyhdy would bo cra braska pay more than onc-hall ofall the | willall realize that when you make the as. Moiunes and edited in L by My Clarkson, | you forit. I love toseeninan stalwart and | some of the most competent lawyersin_ this | U. Payuter in my presence drinking stitut taxes Of Lhe stat 'he city of Omaha alone | sessment only yepresent one-half of the the prosent fivst assistant postmastor general | Stapding with te insignia on the lupel of his | country if this question was ever carricd be- | champaine while Jams G Blaine with his ? in ) piays one-tenth of the eutirestate taxes —over | property valud, the rato of faxatin must be of the United States. He says T or ou bis brast that he stood for | fore the suprme court of the United Stateson | stalwart form aul his manly countenanes | to sop the propagat hens, ‘The sane | §100,000 4 year, And the building up of your | correspondingly lower than when you assess “Phere was the same battle Tor the homeana | this cument, for its integrity and | the question of the constitutionality and sober head was qt the front window | reasoniu ald many things that | cities is a8 fipportant toyon as the b the fireside, the same fight forhelpless women | for all it repesents, but, my country- | hagh heense act in which it is se ,it [ bowing to the honorable plaudits of those | have ¢ tl slation. On the | up of thestate. Whatever conduces to the | on the £00 in Kansas is nolower thun 60 or and littlo ‘chil‘ven who could ot protect | wmen, [want toask you this question: When | would not stand. Because it 1 pe thousands of true ma who -passed albng | Fourth of an thiee (housand | prosperity of oue conduces to the prosperity | 75 conts per §100 . In Kansay themselves, called out all the ehivalry, the | you went down to the south t liberate those | character they would tax it 1,000 a year, | throngh the highyiys of New York, (Ap- | men and by ssibly some women, | of ull §100 worth of assessed true munhood; the pleadings of wives and | slaves, what was it youwent to do? You | while they would let u man doing #,000,000°| plausc]. That ywa the diferonce in record | were maim e killed indiffermt | Omaha has today $200,000,000 worthof prop- | £33, which m { conts. In mothers won many votes that would nothave | went down there because desparate men in | worth of business in the rds Jine do | that day between a Nobraska senator aud a | parts of the cour celeprat Would although it I not assessed perhaps 10 B E100 W ety would be been cast against the saloons. the pursuit of their own wmmbition had | business for $100a year, They say you can | semator from the por od impoverished probi- | anybody propose 1 probibit the maifaet that amonnt; but that £200,000,000 it about #1250 and the tas at wport of the flual vote in thehousogives | wrenched i pan o the territory from the in- | not make any such” distinction, beciuse the | bition state of Maie. [A b | sale of firecrackers and fireavins es property of the stateof Nobraska 1 hundred would be 81§ cents or incident of affceting interest that recalls | tegrity of the uniou; they had set up an es- | eonstitution requires thut taxation shall be my fellow country me; guipowder just 1 accidents have Ol pay over §3,000 & year in taxes inth it wne thing s Kunsas, As to Ne- very vividly some scenes in lowa bit o few | tablismentof theie own, und you went down | uniform and equal upon the same classof | this tosay, that if o waerat 1 t| happened! As a po 1—unad city of Omaha, and not less that §00 th ¥ L this state compures fuvorably Representative MeNicoll of Gage | to do what? Primarily your whole object | subjects, and when you come to talk ahout | bring these statisthes bofore you in sueh | Supreme court bas o e y dist | amiount is forst taxes, W bt wor. Kunsas hus a bonded i cowmerce belug @ divisable thing along | tangible form that you could take thew in | ly; all its loas upe | us prosper makes you prosper. If | 5 of $310,000, of which 85,000 1s s sician worked all night 1o save their Hves _ Wbl Thi=o was an inerease in the month of, May, yau what you have | from the battlefiell, and Lincoln steod sido | ¢t remains that more people kill them. | 1590, of G, all new men, prasumably ofiginal assessment repres 5 | sents from one-seventh to onetenth of the ney that s | actual market valuation of the property, and ling | on one-sixth or onetenth, Twenty-five cents tounly urose alter the vole bad been taken, | was torecoverthe lost tavitory, reunite it to

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