Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 11, 1890, Page 1

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3 THE OMAHA DaAiLy BEeEe | —— —— — ——— TWENTIETH YEAR. FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 11, 1 ‘ - N " N a1 vory eople o N S " . put 1o s (ONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS, shall pay a license to the government for the | I admit the ovil, [ admit 1t is & horeible thing | In Nebruska during the same year e had the commission, It wi s Yemembered that | (Bl | privilege of doing it. Why, it is regulation, | in Maine, if this table is true, Senator Blair | only 200 people in the ~penitentinry paoees this investigation wai == pursumt toa v ot prohibition, | in that table which is put in that book figures | in ‘other words, ome out of every 2860 resolution offered by | == Paddock in- | ¢ words, in prohibition Kansas, 18 one | O I e 1o Hob: Al quor. but falovs | T8¢ President Dicliues to Interfero in the | Stricting the conmissiy . | e » : Go a little further: The' thought was | it out that in the stateof lowa th Webster Oloses the Arguments in Favor of | 4 5o ut that becise gomewnere in the | saloon for evers 317 persons. Pratty good | where the ndwhether or | After a Long Debate the Senate Agrees to \ 4 s ) wot rates wer 0 =, Rlo for the High License. | bible, during the time of Moses, that certain | prohibition isn't it~ Yes, that is getting it | the good milleninm law which you preach, Elections Bill Legislation. tragsportation - of foo % Voduets fron | the Silver Bill - things were prohibit at thit was probi- | around pretty near every man's door isn't it? [ you had two men in the penitentiary to one Nebraskn wid Kansas S Whicago —and | —_— | bition, Let mesee justa minute about that | Down in New Hampshire there is one saloon | up here in hm“l‘*Q‘Il!ug‘lli'--n-uwlM-hm;k — the senboard Mr. ¢ Yulker, s ERFR sort of thing. We have in the bible a groat | for every 3i people, Over in Kansas they 30 it was m 1583, mark you : here is a chairman of the Titen Conimerw 3 ! BTRONG ANTI - PROHIBITION FACTS. | Sy, tnings swhict liheod s whong. | huvo done & jiitie better. ‘They have | statement that 1wantto rad to this peopla | [T WILL OPEN UP THE PUBLIC DOMAIN. | fiiliivay association el an entigaine | SENATOR MORGAN WAS WOUND UPy JuN— ‘ Among these is | 1y, lusciviousness,drunk- | only one saloon down there under prohibition | of tho state of Nobraska, where that same the jurisdiction_of the comi 1t inake enness, and u host of other evils,but nowhere, | to 877, They have not had prohibition quite | judge said that it Nebraska the estimate an order in tho absence of n ¢ intand in y 5 Mors Government Liquor Licenses | Itell you, Rev. Samuel Small, within the 1ids | solong as théy have had in Maine, I think ‘n(nl:mn"\ N“.f‘:'.“{‘g-‘ by '{'"l census just | Senator Paddock's Amendment to | theabsenco of an opportut g given | His TheesHour Speech Was in Vain< < ¢ | of the bible, do you find laid down any law | when they have had it as long as they had in | completed, and yet wo huve but one person hs ry ropr fora hearing, The other sic s " S0 U v 3 . Nebras ) 3 1 yohs b ths Sundey Appropriations Bill- v Senator Plamb Was Epleean Than in Nebraska | . 0ol declared that you sall o pro. | Maino thoy will hasve moro saloons. [n Matne | out ofevery 3100in the prison, vompared A L Ll B sented by Mr. Dausman o tehalf of the - gt Interruptions by | hibited to the extent of carrying on all theso | they have one saloon to for every 731 people; | with the state of Kunsas where they have Lambertson's Strong Argunent oard of trade of Chicago and G, M. Lam- matical ~Thirty<Nine Say Ye and Dickie. things outof which thoso e ne. You | in Towa they have onesaloon tocvery 337 | one outof 1000. The argiment thet 1 make 1he Speaker's Dry Remark. bertson, whoappeared it the request of Gov and TwontySix No, | are talking about the prohibition of the man. v Hampshire, they have oue saloon to | is thatin Nebraska under high liconso you ernor Thayer and on ochalf of tle firmers' ’ LY | ufacture ‘and the sale of liquor. I tell you | es people. | have less ooplSifin yuur nouiten- alliancoof the state of Nobraska, Tho stato — * | the man cannot lay his flnger upom the words | Now, good poople, let me talk to you a{ itentiaries, fewer people in your poor hous N Bkt T f Towa was represented by Messi, s ! (4 Below is glvena full stenographle report | where there is a prohibition against the man. | minute about Nehrasks. T have triod to hold | fewer in your insane asylims, fewor idiots, O e o ey | BEUsook a8ty S on L penE ot Suioh | AV INGON ALY 0. SIE Li8 891418 4R of the argument of Hon. John L. Webster at | ufacture of wine in the bible. Drur ness | up the banner of the state from this time 1| fewer saloon fewer liguor licenses than you OURTRENTH STREET, f board of transportation of that state, | Mr. Stewart offered o resoulution, which was Wasiixatoy, D, O, July 10 the Beatrice Chautaugua assombly Monday | 18 denounced, erime is denounced, just pre- | began this discussion, and I am veady to hold have in any prohibition state anywhere uid and the state of K s by Judge | agreed to, calling on the seer of the ine i R S o o kb | ciselyas the civil law of this state demounces | it up now s I wm ready to prove from prohibi- | the starsand suripes of this great republic, | An attempt has been made to secure the | Humphrey and exGovernor Authony. | terior for information as o the sdeetion of sffernoon, Thisis the ooncluding argiment | arimp, it 1 it unces | tion argaments that, notwithstanding all this | [Applause.] | ; fuflucnce of the prasident i support of the | Mr. Lamberison delivorod an agrument of | i o2 WOMAIOLES 0 U0 oty on the part of the high-license advocates. | forgoery, denounces theft, it wounces | howl about the benefits of prohibition there Another thing about high license. I tell | fojoral elections bill. Several republican | © an hour's length, very thomughly cov- | 188 BE o e 4 Prof. Dickie's closing argument will uppear | burgliry, and theso are simply punishments | are a less number of drinking places in the | you that high license s a regulator, reducing | (o oo cn e oo g oot dagine oo | ering the position assiméd by him at the | l0&ical survey. in tomorrow's issue of Tie Bee inflicted "upon the man who commits the | state of Nebraska under high licanse propor- | the number of saloons, aul 1 want to take | SCHHC R rnest in thelr desiro 10§y, qyping given by the commission at Lincoln, | Thesenate resumad the consideration of o | erime itself under process of rogulation tionate to the population than you ha | this likewise from the ofcial report of the | Pass that measure before the adjournment of | Neb, He produced a very important sevies | (he confernee report on the silver bill ad | WEBSTEIR'S LAST TALK | Let me illusirate the fact a little: We | your old prohibition stutes, ani T res commis of internal revenue of the Uni- | congress called at the white house yesterday | of statistics showing that the proposed 1o | ywag addressed by Mr. Morgan in opposition i | haveit put down in our statutes that the man | that same record which shows that in ted States; and my lr--'wmlc,.l-‘n; finc it on | and today to discuss the subjectaud endeavor | duction was reasonablo from the stantpoiuts | {18 RS g S SR S g ot | who steals property and is convicted of the | braska there is only one saloon to every 457 | want to look for it. The | vo'wonvinee o passage of the oloo- | Of the rates at present in operation, Ife | !0 therepurt. He expecied tolay wasto bl He Uses Government Rocords to De- | crimme, stil bo sent to the ponitentiary. IUIs | people. [Applause:] How do you liko that? | ase i liquor saloons and liquor licenses | ¥900n¥COIN it 0 pissago 0fho tlec- | gpyyad that the roads interestod weord now | (e erisis in thequestion ot eirreny o the fend High License, made a penitentiary crime—and why is lar lx 1 you with that number of saloons, one to | for retail dealers. From the year 1830 to the | tious bill was not only necessary tosecure & | cqprying corn at a seeret rateof rur below | people of the United States as much so, in for littie | year 1830, the decrease in Alabama was | free ballot and a fair countin the s in Avkinsas, & decrease of 3f7: in [ was good politics inths novth. , o decreaseof 220 in Georgia, 645} Yl fha sontiomen:. ke prosdcht ¥ committed! It s because the niun who | only 4% people, we are not hunting_ e tho e omant that T have. fortys | Steals my property has no right to it; he | original packages like they ave in Kansas and | 104 e on ot | Miteh liconew, | wants it for his own use. He misappropri- | lowa. [Applause.] Flor When this mecting opencd this afternoon that | 8tes it: he takes it from me without any | Another thing; ths enate, but | the proposed ratr to be put in. Several The presi- | members of the commission, at the conclusion 3 _ A 3 il i the confining of cointo the single gwld stands Flor y G dent i3 quoted as saying that o recoguized | Of Mr. Lamberson's argunent, askd him | M J X © d overnment_of the | in Kunsas, 507:in Kentucky, 671; in Mis- | ¢ %S00 8 R0 as that | to have it printed fordistribution. Senator | 8rd, 88 was the at of N8, He game president said, when he introduced the | ¢auivalent. We punish him, and because he | United States keeps a record of all the licen- 8143 in North €aroling, 624; in Ohio, S _.“ beperar % i Paddock was present at the hearng as anju- | did not know but that the effeed firat sheaker, that ho should haye forty-five | loved the money which he stole, have we any | ses which are issued by government for in your great state of Pennsylvania, | under consideration, but he w | rogard to the demoralization of silver and y : s mot suMci- | torested listener,as were also soverd meme [of the vote to be taken today (f Timiics 1o talk i favor of probibition. 1 | 1aw in the groat state of Ncbraska prohibit- | rotail saloonkespors, . They qualify them | Which defeated prohidition, o decrease of | ently fumiliar with the terms of the bil to | bers of congross from the state of Towa, should result, 1n the adojtion of tho confers {iitenat ta Him for te. forty-ave minniss i a man from having mouey under the head of retail | f of deaters, and | 7010. In the state ®f Teunosseo, whero | givo ithis unqualified endorsement. So'far WESTHLN ABSENTEES, enioe bILLY would roL: b Keaily Bk SRR 1 did not hear uny thing said about prohibition | . \hen a man commits the crime of forgery | that is the character of the mp. Any man | they defeated prohibion, under high licenso, | 4¢ he was able to judge from o casual | Theroare now in Washimeton bt fow 5 oA TieE S i e o it or the constitutional amendment, I heard u | he is sentenced to the penitentinwy. If he | who sells liquor without that stamp is lable | a decreaseof 1310, I could go on, butmy | Lo a0 =00 "0 Giieq toxt he thought | more than half of the members of the houe | NE Prospeet of silver winage inthe fituve God ddal said” about John L, Web 1 | fories a check upon the bank upon which I | to be arrested. If he has that stamp he is | time is short. The lieenso auty of the gov. i I . L | Of roprosentutives—perhaps 135 in all-andit | han the act of 1§73, The legislation of urnished this “original pickage” quite a | happen o have alittle deposit, docs the law | protected from arrest. Well, I have that re- | ernment of the United States, I don’tcare | it = was a littlo too complex. —and e 1 boon, he sald, an actof cold-blooded subject for diseussion. And I came pretty | :‘xtl;'\ll‘\‘“r“‘ll! the constitutional wmendment, | port issued by the commissioner of internal | what it is, it is not prohibition. It is where | yadicalin some of its provisions and that It had isimpossiblounder this state of affuirs for | 1873 ha v business to bo transs Amog the | assassination of tho silver dollay near 1o the conclusion that if 1 had not been ou shall not write cheeks for | revenue, and T want {o say to you | prohibition is defeited. some modifications would give it greater | abientees from the western states areMessts. | poon presidod b0 e hat > here My, Smail would not have had anything | fear thata man who is disposed to criminality | that it is the only authentic reportaccessible { M, Small -1t is lodal option, ; ; popularity In tho north and make it less of- | Flonderson,Hill, Lane, Springer and Lawlerof heen |.§ csld i ov "Ah« ame sciator to talk about for the last forty-five minutes | Will commit forgeryt We convict personsof | to auy man, determining the number of | Mr. Webster—It is where they defeated . o e TE o Bbe Tiiinots, B. Brown, T. M. Browne, Copper whose ““fine Ttalian hand” was tobe seen in of this de {Applause.] g counterfoit money, and for the cor- | licenses which ave sold by the government to | prohibition, and snowed you under, and you | fensive to the south. anuot bo L and O'Neitlof Indinus, Brower O-Donnell, | he conference billa bill “which was a total Now, Iwant tosay simply {0 this people of it, and because they love money, | retail liquor dealors througiout the United | know it i . . Just what modifications he suggested, but it | FEt 0 FERGRC THEREL GO S ek i, | departure from the actio of both the hoase thatthe original package decision that he | e prohibit the use and having of | States. Well, what does it stow ! Tt shows Mr, Small It is rmhhrl'wnl'.\' local option, | js known that he prefers the bill orizinally | jcolley and Turner of Kansis, Struble and | 084 the senate. — Mre, Mogan went on N talked about broke the backbone of prohibi- | yi 1 you, gentlemen, if you pro- | this: On page s of that record —and [ want { and you kuow it. 1t 8 localoption prohibi- | yopared by Mr. Rowell of Tllinols, swhich | Ferr of Towa, Fayos of Obio, Clark of Wis- | 10 Speak of the le tion all the tion in the state of lowa, in the state of | hibit the use and having of money by consti- | to tell these people where to find it, if they | tion in every state youl have mentioned but | (¢, " 016 an extension of the supervision | consin, Carterof Moniana, Gifford and Pick- | Important mitters bing now entirely Kansas, ind’ averywlioro. ol 1if this | tutional amendment or otherwise, aud you | think I am nottelling the trath about it—on | Penusylvania, [A Voico—Shut wp] 1| %7 2 i it lorof South Dakota, Hunshrough of Noph | controilod by confurenee conmittees whose Cansas, an here else; and his I SEHRLFUL gt S 5 & : yont do it system4o the pending measure, whichis a | lerof South Dakata, Haushrough of North | Guaqings were seeret,so that if th e Jittlo original package which sits at my left | coull not pay itout for services, your little | pazes 35 to 37 of that record will be founda | won'tdo it. " g mdo D iLGoa RGP AlATO A hA. Tobytsoid 6 | ] 0 hat if the corn W'shall keep runuing on, he shall break | oviginal package” from the state of Georgin | tablo which shows that in the year 186, | My, Webster—0, let him tall; he can't | combination of the Rowell and the Lodge | (yiorado. 5 4 mittee wore bribed o theextent of 100,600,000 the backbone of the state of Nebraska. |A | Would not be hereat ad, [Applause, ] which is the last eompleted year, mark you, | help it; don’t find ‘fawlt with him. [Laugh- | pills, going a sgood deal further than the one i et ek o senator would be permittal to find it out, voice: Yes, sir.] ' Mr. Swall-1 will come for nothing when- | there were issued to the state of Jowaunder | terj Iwant to remind my friend when he | and s Mr Allison remarked that th | ot quite %o fav us the latter. He i Do you know what an original pa 3 Py ey It is one of these little things that youhut up | WY, the thing is wrong i principle fr in @ great big bottle, with the cork in it sealed | beginning tocnd. I ask the peoy up, that you ship around the country as a | considerany suggestious which e Wis 10 prohibition constitution, under the same | made that statementthat in the prosent state | however, reported to bave positively de: \x(.;lz]‘\"’.-‘}v':.' ‘K:“:;'i;r"“!' .:‘:: }\hfl\~‘.[\".||:A|||“.\"~“n.a“n: necessary secrey about the conference cozm doctrine that you advocate, which you say | of Nebraska where we hav, ed pretty | clined to'interforo —in the legislation dnd to | fangeron loft IS ol COl's | mitties, " They were public committ does prohibit, 3,575 licenses as retail liquor | well, we have got local option, too. If itis | haye said that the consideration of the bill ay u 2 coustof Maine. Mr., Morgan replied tothat rerark by s ¢ be made | acalers. Very good, isu't il, for prohibition | s0 £ool in all these states as to accomplish | was a matier to be decided by the republican KB dil hat in this very disassion Mr Shermat Xage is? | ever you are up. th i sealed pickage, and when you want to know | bY those who follow me in this prohibition | Towa! Yes. ‘It is no wonder they have got | good results, it is good enough for w, here. sus and mnot by the exocutive - ; - . : had deelined o answer i question as to th i Din e iR e yoRAnS bo Al | o et vilon T i SR isbawAlL Jast | A0wn. Ehere. caal biloon ¢nevery 400 e A s wi v, educed the mumber of s oy S L, DESTRONED BY TUE FLAWES. | provedings of theconforéie conmi e oo ric nd P é16. corle and le o lasses | fortwo or three days after I go away, for rople, according to that. It proves what | loons up here. ¢ are getting 10 be 4 mol- s e T " 'R " ’ . the ground thatsuch proceedings were seeret, L) onibition. Muine waa | foar T shall huve converted somo of youF peo- Renar BRI s8101to be traa. =+ orataly virtiions peoplo loro, and it the peo. | | Thosundry civil appropriation bll which | A Disastrous Fire at Fort de France | Nt Shoman sail he . iover deiicd o hived this “little packige,” and shipped you | Pleand you want to get them back in the fold. Mr. Small —You fellows have got them and | ple outside would let ns alone we would gev | 1S 1 i“”“'f:y'l‘l "ll"‘l‘_'y:‘m_:‘m:::(_“'_"l‘{'“'" “\ ""‘ akes Thousands Homeless, the senate any information 48 to what took out to Nebraska (applause], and I suppose at | I that ereat prphibition camp-meeting, when | run away with them. along pretty well, " ti '“,”l‘m thias ‘,“[]‘;h,u.‘. Senitol Pad Pont or Sraiy, June 20~The deteils con- | place in the confercce. the rate of about K0 or £100 u day, and yon | they give their” llusteations about probibi- | Mr. Webster—Mr. Small must say werun | 1 will give another ilustration from M.\ tcipated In bhose dispathos, Sengtort Fadk | o500 the destruction June 23, of the town | Continuing, " Mt~ Morgan predicted ant you to probe them and see | aw see about s Blair's book to e can pull the covk for forty-five minutes and | bition, Ty net o of the let it run, [Laughter.| whether or not they are simple matters of | fought for fun, I reck Ay with them ox s ng like thiat. Wo n, and took them down | gerated st wh 1ts which these people make n oflers of the cone ort de £00,000 the appropriation for topographic | of e, in the French Land of surveys in varl 5 f tho Unlte st : recs came 10 realize what they But, ladics and gentlemen, I haye some- | regulation. south 1o prove that prolibition amounts to somo- | SWCYEYs invarious poctions of tho Uuited | Martiiique, have jut rechel here. Im- | haddone, they would fol like leivkine them thing ' more serious to talk about this after- Does 1v ever prohibit? Somcbodyin this | Mr Smull —Yes, yes. [Applause.] thing; and when they want to talk about -fl";:}':l L e el 0F the o hndrag [ mediately after the catstrophe Govemor | sclves over aten acre flold, The bitl would Boii thin to wasto my forty-five mintes in | dudionce was anxious on one or twoovcasions | M. Webstor Tt romiuds me of the fo. | prohibition they alyays commence to malcoa | sutn shall v cxpended west of the onehundred |- 440 of Murtinique sent an_appel foras- | monmeklize 1y, would make gold talking about and advertisiig my little friend, | to ask mo about the State of IKansas and the m.u".(!\h.\l Mr. Small mude about Maine. He | lemperanco specch, a8 ‘5\1“1‘{? o a ~‘;“";" Octob T like bim, I would like to cntortain him, I | State of lowa. At that time I could not say | said if it was not because vou had scoundvels | individual proposition,; Mr. Blair pa into | Detoter 1 el ML e diol e O el g et would like t .1ul\'u!r'|i~.!-lli|:‘. but 1 J.mnh.lll‘” i | anything aboit those two. proibition states, | in odice, wid they didn't enforcs the probivi: | Bis book a remarkabletable gotten i R e Rt winba il s el Bl b s here to tall atout a great su which ho | @5 1 did not have sufticient time. Iwant now | tion law, there would not be any drinking | insurance book, and found on page 107, ~He | FoVERURent forthe fscal ¥ear cudhe dute | been burned and that morothan five thous Beams g i s B N Tt | 10 eive you alittle tablo on thatsubject, and | down in ‘Maino at all Substantiully that; | Wans 40 give the rateior. ratio of deaths ont 1ot tho saloction of and! logation of reservoirs to you a little while, He giPtalk about man- | LWill commence with the state of Towa. | those arenot the words, but thutis th idea, | of every 1003 he has got tho people | for, the sclection af and lication of resetvoirs uficturing about two mifftes, afier I had | ¥ou had probibition, constitutional prohibi: | The officers were scoundrels and would wot | Who do ot drinic ab all, tho prohibitionists; | {00 WS 5 WRER (O PRORG s BU0 CoF shown this andience of intelligent people that | tion there beginning in 1331, and Wheu you havo had peohi- | he hus tho temporagos drinkors who only | Lo3ei™ 510 0000d) that, veservolr and canal b aa e o for thirty-fonr yeurs, wid you | tikea glass soclally and ha hus clssiiled tho | pealed, Trovided, that voservolr and can lied_ every dlection, you have put | intemperate follows, Well, here is the table; | Sites heretofore located or selected 8 theonly thing with which topay debtsor to buy property. The frinds of the smatar from Olio (after twelve months consider 1d | tion) bave fixed upon @ bill that would more persons were withouthomes and food. The | thomughly destroy silver forever than the lgislative council immediately voted §000 nee bill would. inaid of the sufferer, n spke for throe hours and On the morning of June 22, o the receipt | closed with anappeal tothe senators ot 1o of thonews of the fire at Fort doFrace, | allow the semator from Ol (Sherman) to +2, 1858, entitled ' act muking ap- | sistance to the governmentof Trinidad, assur- Th 1 had | enforce the d manufacturing in- | constitutional prohibition in the state of | biticnin M 1l re dustries in the three prohibition states of | fowa for a great many years »» to that | have coul i Bl W s “ | two steamers, with men _and pumpson board to again intosily - New England; and my friend here thoughtto | time. Well, they have down here in the city | it in your platform at every election, you | befare I give those whodie between the ages | [HRS ‘"("‘l, “‘F;""{‘M ,",",.““ Ted 1"_"‘ O | were sent from St Piore, and on their Mr. Call alo uargued agiinst the confos escape. miy argument, not by answer, but to | of New York a ‘newspaper; they call it the | have eleeted all your governots, all your ofi- | of sixty and ninety, I will say that youand I | st ICAei Gt GEHCAWIC BRORICSL DY R arriv Tort do France at’ about half past | ence report. talk about ship building, as if to tell'this au- | Veice; they ship it here to the state of cers, from the prohibition party=-has it come | Will bé lucky if weover get to tho first land- | TRES VUL S 10 LS KCBest of Lo T | one, the wiole seaboard was in flamn The Mr. Plumibspolke in its favor. Thecon for dience that 1,05 ship building institutions Ato couvert these people in favor of | to this, that prohibition oficers.elected by pro- Well, I havem bitter chance than you | Which practically withdraws from cutty the | i’ had destroyed everything wiih- | ence billwoull geive the contri as much had been driven out of the state of Muine! | prohibition und as against high litense, 1 | hibition people, have all turned ot to be such when I read this table, T will show it | & m'!“.‘ P e ot o ““,," in a spice of over ‘oe indred | moiey during the next year as free winage Why, great God, don't you kuow that they | Will turn to the paper cuited the Voice, under undrels s that? [Applause.] Do not This table says that of the people | SOUHINGS: e b in bR est be | yardsup to the river Madame, It could give. The bill isa loig step in the as not in i F v i Sats yond the Missouri river, and which law has H g { ! i 8 e S » ) never had but two ship building institutions | date of July 3, and find init a printed table | blame that on us high license people, because en sixty and ninety years old that die | YOuS i AT N until the woodworle of the president's ofice | ri direction. 1t is My I b’ beliof i the state of Miine in thitty yoars! Where | Showing the umount of liquor i el e power down th et of intemperance and by hard drinking thoere 2:,‘:,“%‘,‘,“"”“';5l;;‘;‘nptl‘l‘i’;"“‘;gs"lgfi partof far we lad caught fire that the pumps arrved ana | thatif the bill becomesalaw 8o nicely and did they go to? Driven out. Has he named | Sumed in the states of the union, except that I want to compare Iowa licenses a little bit | were 56,178, That is oy, 100,000 K0e! (L Py organized measures wereadopted tosavethe | easily will it workard so helpful will it be to you on¢! Why,no: but he throws out the | the man who got it up forgot to put in | with Nebraska: Ncbraskaand the territory | The modurats felloys. which ouly #: A DRY RRMARK, buildings, which, after hours of hard strug- | all the peopleof the United States thut the Yemark as if they had all gone down in the | Maine, but they got Towa in there, of the Dakotas in 189, before Dakota became | 1ef€out of the 100,000 albout 11,000 protibitory | By an oversight the flug on the side of the | gle, was accomnplished, nextstep will be freo coinge. He would southern states there as soon as the war was [ Mr. Dickie—It was published in Tue Beg. | a stute, were linked tozether in one, repre- | fellows. If that table ne it | capitol was run up to the masthead upon the | ~ Meanwhile tho cathedral was in flamesand | vote forthe confernce bill, regretting itis over. Have you got a ship bullding institu. | . Mr. Webster—Well, that is worse yet. My | senting the northern district, so that theve | proves this: That the men who drink “the | assembling of congress today, It causedcon- | was soon in ruins, The panic now becume | no better, glad it isno worsé tion in the stiteof Georgia? [want to tell | friend Dickie here asserts that™ it was | was kept but one record, and the whole nym- | most iive the longest. Of eourse I donot be- | siderable comment, and General Wheeler of | general. Women and children were scream- »r further debate d vote was then talke my friend that J kuow one thing to be true: | published in the interest of the hquor deal- | berof licenses for that same year, issued to | lieve that tables I thinkit isall nonsenso; but | Alabama,'whout one time commanded the | ing and ruininghither and thither, and fur- | @ ethe confernce agred to—yes | thank God for the personal liberty of the | € Has it come to this, that the only pro- [ what now coustitutes the two Dakotas aud | I think itis not a bit more nonsense than T | entire cavalry of the confederacy, ai nituro was being thrown out of windows into | nuys 26, as follows: north 3 we hage gone down mto some of those | hibition organ you have on God's green | the state of Nebraska all combined, amounged | hear coming from some prohibition orators | and ealled Spenker Reed's attention to it | the streetsuntilthey becime ulnost impass- | Yeas-Aldrich, Allen, Alliion, Blair, Cascy, states’ in the south after the war was over | earth has sold out to the liquor interestf | to 8.663; or,in other words, less than one | That statemeat is vouched for by the great | The speaker dryly replicd: *The chair is | able. At the list moment, when it wastoo | Cullom, Davis, Dawes, Dixon, Dolph, ki we have given you manufactories, we have | [Applause. | hundred more thun in the state of Towa alone, | 8¢ or from a prohibition State, Nev Hump- | very glad to learn that the gentleman from | late, dynamite was e A to arrest the | munds, Evarts, Farwell, Frye, Hawley, fven you industrles. wo have given you | —Mr. Dickie—You don't want to be re- | Wetookthe pains, know Poters, the | shire, printed in his book as authentic, aud | Alwbana now manifests an_interest in_ tho | progress of the fire. Tewrific explosions were | gins, Hiscock, Hoar, Tngalls, Jones [ Nivada!, anks, und incressed the high elvilization of | Sponsible for thatt collector of_internil rovente, who keeps the | yet in his foolishiess hie forgot the fact that | subjeet. The omission will be corrected.” heard and blocks of buillings were seen to | MeMillan, Manderson, Mitclell, Moody, Pt the people: but we did it after we ied taken | Mr. Webster—I am responsible the | records i Omaha, to ask him'forourconveni- | it proved th mperato people were - the STATUS OF THE CENSUS, full, killing some aud wounding many per- | tigrew, Piercy, Pltt, Plumb, Pow versonal liberty down there at the end of the | Statement that that paper published it, and | ence to seperate the territorics of Dakota | longlived fe lows uml‘l te! 3'4;\\.11 At is the Ttis very probable that in tho matter of | 500S. 3 Sanders, Sawyer, Sherman, Spooner, bayonet fiest. [Applause, | it is prohibition paper, and I have a | from the state of Nebraska, and we fnd that | cluss that I want o belong to, because I am | ponyiagion New York will be the most disap- At night the fire had_consuned every thing art, Stockeridge, Washbur, My lady friend who sits here on this plat- | right to accept itus proof that you endorsed | that thelicenses issued to Nebraska for 1849 | notin a hurey to go. [Laughter. g Pointed city 1n the union when the oficial 1o | botween the Ruo de Fosse and the séa,and | — form told me after the adjournment at noon | itus trae. wero less than eighteen hundred: or, in other | To give you another thought: I will not | FROREE QT B e Bt W e known, | between the savanua and River Madime, arbour, Bate, Blackburn, Call, that ihis Chautauqus sssembly had | Mr. Dickio—Yos, itis, words, less thun one-hulf of the liquor li- | refer to data nnd fizures because my time is | PRI EATRE (he count of Now York | A about 10 p. m., thehouses aithe bottom of | Carlisle, Cockrell, Coke, Colguitt, Danicl, granted her one lour after this Mr Webster—Then don't kick about itand | censes sold to the prohibition state of Tow too short, ‘Time keeps runing along, and | Wi’y aniched tomorrow morning or tomor. | 1he Rue du Government were attickedand | Faulkner, Gibson, Gorman, Hampt e talk * was over, and she proposed | try to get outofit. What did you publish it | [Applause.] judging from the look of admonition I got | 0™ Sdoon, and it is— generaly | 1Y by strenuous cfforts were the presby- | ris Jones of Avkansas, IKaua, McPhersn, touse 10 1n roosting Mr. Kosewnter and my. | in the liquor interest fort Now, [ waut to give you a little astonishing | from the president [ do not think I have more | ¥ o QHUSEREI | GG (e, JIS. EIEEAES | tory and gendarmerio saved. Had they fallen o, Pugh, Ransom, Reagn, Turpio, ? self, (Laughter.| (Mrs. Gougar—Justyou.) [ Mr. Dickie —We did not do so. record, because someof you people tell me | than five minutes. Iwaut that five minutes | GroCvery S Bk 0TS G0 Dy Yhe | the whole town must have been consumed. | Vanee, Vest, Voorheos, Walthall*-, Just myself, \Loughtor] (Mrs. Gougar Mr. Webster-—Let me tell you what the re- | that high license docs not fogulite or tend to | to make some gencral statemonts In answer | W G o Naw Yok placing the ropule | 1 Was right there thit the progress of the [ The fullowing pairs were mnowced: Halg t hohbies that these people flammies v Much obliged for advertising me.) Sho tells | sults are. That paper says that in 153 there | prohibit. The state of Towa in 1889 hud four | to some of the gre te stayed. and Gray, Chandler and Brown, Paddock and L 2 iy t tion of the metropolis at 1,700,000 was 1o less HALCR T s T A e now thitshe proposos to giva that hour | was sold of maltliquors in the state of Towa | times as many licenses for retail liquor deal- | put forth. These peogle tell us that in those | {01 0T S wettopolls at 1, 5000 was uo Less | Bippg gigit thenextmoming was pitifuland | Eustis, Teller and Borey, Wilson of lova solely tome. | | Laghtor.] I donot know that | 197,372 barrels. Andin thestate of Nebraska | ers as in the state of Alabama: twice s many | great United Stites tho consumption of | Wan, 2000 aboy i larrowing in the extrome. The savanna | and Wikon of Maryland. popalation will o ly to that, | for the samo y about_1,500,0%0. ~Chicazo and Philad r there we 1 shail have un oppertunity to v > sold but 84,50 as in the state of Michigs A in the | liquor has ineraased from about more was strewn with odds and ends, in the midst Adjourned, and 1 simply ask of this qudience that when | barrels of e, Put it down in gallons: | state of Colorado: nine times as many as in | four gallons — per capita to twelve | o'l hip and tuck for second pla of which wero camped the whole population Mus. Gougar speaks here foroue hourand | Thirty-one gallons 10 the barrel and here is | the state of Florida; twiceas many as inthe | in 1850, Now, s a general statement, | |oiation will bo in the neighborhood of | SUffering from hunger, thivst and cold, for House. Tousts Joh L. Wobstor, that you will liston | the table: There was sold in the state of | State of Georgias more than Minnesota: more | I have to admit therg s some sort of truth in 1,200,000, with a slight variation for the third | NeAr morning wiin led fulen, chilling tothe | Wasmxaox, July After prayer this to her kindly, and remémber 4180 when it i | Iowa in 188, under constitutional prohibition, | fhan Montana: four outh | that proposition; but 1 want to analyze it a | g 00 With o slig : 3 nes us many as Place, . Trookiyn domes. fourth awith some | bone thoseof the unfortunite peoplo who had morning the democritic pre ADme Was over that it s a woman's gracious privilege, | $11%,000 gallons of beer. In th fc ) license | Carolina; t as many as Tennessee: m little bit. If these people will look into the : v wil B0 e outti, With SomC | w0 other shelter thn that offered by the | MOmInE il AR (Laughtor state of Nebraska —and y than tho great state of Toxuss move than Vir. | Fecords they will fiud that it fsjust two gal- | (l0%ERtEIoN B Louls th withebth | froas, opmaitbyOuhylte slspp R iRt 02K ‘Angther word about this stato of | 1 »“man liston 10 this—only 24,000 | ginti; five times us many 45 Wost. Vicginia; | lons percapita. We have today leamed not, | Soo: Boston with 67,000, comes sixth, Bultl: | Tt 1oss 15 vory considerable, 1,00 honses | thit there wis no quorum present. This pub h Goorgin, from which was shipped this little | #ullons: ox, in othor words, in that Liitle pack- | and ohe and a haif times as many as Oregon, | 10 get quite so drunk, and we quit on whisky i and S Tl | having been destroyed. valued at 12,00,000 | @ stop to business for a shart tane, bt when Cincinnati will be original’ packago [ Laughtor], and I want to | age state of Towa, under pry Meinl records of | and have taken somcthing mode you | Dots not it appear from the to, like francs 4 M diss 3 e HEta (,100,00), and furniture valued at quor y are: e dilatory mo- Spoulk of 1t simply beciuso 1 seo that heand | dranlk 3,483,000 moke gallons of ber tadu the | the governmont of the United States | beer. ~ We only drank just hulf the amonntof | BHI'; | SESES 431t tuay upoour the motrol | 4000000 franes, maicing a total 1oss of | s B e this Ludy are 80 closély linked togethor. 1 | peopleof our state, [Applise]. that “in your high lictuso states | Whisky that wo did ten or twelve vears ago; | i3 of the Paciic ope s bund pressel B 35,000,000, Vhich | oot o oreve i > supposo it is a mutual understanding and a Let us take that same little bit of a table | there are "less suloons, according to | but wehavetaken more beer, and he - adds | G ifeant” town of Buffalo in New It is impossible at this moment to | Pers, which bad the effect of preventing any cumbiuation to 1ast me; ono speaks for pro- | and geb another thing out of it. I wantto | the offcial = report, than in " your | becrontoit, and computesit asif it were 80 | yiou ™ Bummlo's incrense in the last [ (eIl the number of victims. Twelve [ business, hibition and the other for woman suffrage, | see what thoy were doin in New Hampshiro | probivition states of Iowaand of Iansast 1| much whisky consumed. Any temperance | g Voars has beon phenomenal, aud it is | Podies have, however, boen xecovered, many | Mr. Enloeof Tanessoe wanted the jour and neither one of them ever speaks unless | At the same” tiu thoy link both subjects together, like a picco | lown there, ac of drgss cloth, But, d stato of G 1886, They brought [ put that before this people for the purpose of [ man knows that, any temperance proacher ording to that same table, | teiling you that hizh license isa bettcr reg- | knows thut; and if he'did not explain that to owny i thag great | 82960 barrels of beer; that is about a burrel | ulator than probibitioy: aul if you are a | youandtellyou that when he talks, he is win, with which Murs, Goi 10 the man, beciuse vou havd ouly a little | temperance man, as I bolfeve dve (speak- | Simply deceiving yoli or fooling you. Aundon from the stato of Indiana, would link the lit [ over 30,000 people down th Redueing it | ing to Rev. Small), “come out “of that camp, | that matter, I have heard so much said about tle packago—down from the state of Georai to gallons, you have 10,210,760 gallons of beer | come out on our side, and we will preach tem- | this great United States of ours going to hell that Governor Gordon that you talle ub sold in that little bit of a state of New Hamp- | perance where it will do some good,and don® | at & great rate, simply because of this liquor patriot that he is, talking to the confeder shive. While in the state of Nebraska, with | preach prohibition ahich ruins Some men, | trafiic, Iwant to tell this audicnee, and in that and_the federates together at that same four times the population of the state of New | but— [Loud applause compelled the speaker | J want to speak for Ameriea, that this great molly - wWal The samd Governor Gordon who, | Humpshive, tour times as big us New Hamp- | tostop.] nation of ours stands today the y f not the charred bvoud veeognition i oliers fear | pal cornetod, it being vowrdel tht on ully mutilated, Fifteen soldiers are receiv- [ o0 F > S ot A e ing attention at tho hospital, many of them | SClaIN vote he wis presentund not votiug, Tesilt of the consus, but it may be stated that | being seriously and ono it ls said fatally | He wasnot present during that voto. While the rite of nrenso in tho northom ang | wounded, Thenumber of civilians injured is | ingthotalle on this matter Mr. Rog Atlintie slopo states has been about, the same | Considerab A Arkansis ganed the floor aud made the western states have increased at an al. | J7ully three-quartors of the town s de- | § whidh he discussed in a s most fabulous rate. Of tho southern | Stroved and seveneighthsof the inhabitints | ;o0 of tho house, ote. st Tolus e oty tHO (SOUEM | oo “homaless, Tho various British Wes u hirdies atnion, s J oM | India Islands hay ballot and by 1o means improbable that it has out- stripped San Francisco, 1t is almost, too it drpetadl s ied with grantsof money | the matter ofa f L count, in the month of last April issued o commis. | Shire, we eonsumed but 2,620,070 gallons of | [must not forget the little state of Kansas | saperior of any other nation on the top of 1‘”",'“"“",‘”‘.‘{ ‘l‘,“‘.':;‘,’“‘(,,! AT ‘;l';“",,j’{\‘lll'l"l’\‘!_ their afflicted sister colony. hesaida fair count could not be obtiined in sion from his office as gove of the state of | beer.” Or. in_other words, in ,prohibi- | down here with its vetail liquor dealers in | God's foot-stool. — [Applause.] T tell this | o f 00t "o same. In. this conmection it TR this house, He then quoted from Georgia, uuder the state capitol that I | tion New Huampshi: fourth ~the | 1880, nnnbering L6M. T mustnot forget | sume people that overiu Italy they drinkcover | che mentioned thut 1t is very probable To Inspeet Am rican Cattle. and commented upon in_ an ironical mannee » talked about, appointing o man down there as | size of the state of Nebraska, they drank | New Hampsbive, Maine and Vermont with | two gallons per head of liquors where inthe | (03¢ angus will show that the rate of in- Wisiixgroy, July 10.~The depirtment of | Spoaker Reed’s article in the North Ameri- whipping master, whose duty it was to go | 7,680,782 more gallons of beer than did our | 2,200. And comparing them again to the | United States they drink oune. o over to | . 0 S o g crease among the blacks has fallen far be- | stato, at the sugzgestion of & hind the rate of increase of the whit Rusk, | can Review on the subject of contested e ' | tions. He conmendedto the other side ot the house the articlein the North Amerian Re- i view signed “X. M. € He wis told a lidy ing all American cattle | had writtenit, but it was siid the red author oty gement for the appoint ary inspectors for the out und «ip the women who were sent to | high lw'mh‘i'l- ple out here. JApplause,] I state of Nebr a we find only 1,500, 1 | England, and where you get twelve gallons the penitentiary convicts, And if they | want to tell you, fellow citizens of the state | want to tell you good prohibition people that | of nk yon have got thirty-three over | woi B0 O O (Fr A yiolated tho prison rules of the state of | of Nebraska thit you are livingin a vir- | you have beon misid fi this great doctrine of | thore. Go'to France, and when you havebut | SUICL Wil ko to disprove “may of Georgia, the whipplig master appointed by | tuous. weil behaved state, if you only knew | yours. You have listened tomen talk like | twelve gallons por head here you have twen- | o¢ % has effected an ary ment of three veter 3 f f uEss h ) the colord race, The cou- | Purpose of iuspec the great Governor Gordon inflicts the lashes | it Applanse.] ~If they trausferred some | this little origumal packuge who talks for | ty-three gallons per headoverthere. Go to | cus bupeau is now enumerating the | landing in it Britain, wis @ distinguished statesman from Maine, upoh their backs. If that is the leind of | of you good prohibition people of the state of | mone Laughter.] Who absorbs hi ideas | Germany, goto Austria, to France, to Italy, | potiins at the rate of one million a day. As The secretary said today that the westric: | who held a ligh and honorable position un= woman suffeage you wiaut (turning to Mes New Huampshire, or over in the state of | without knowing whetherthey are true or | #oanywhere without the boundaries of the matter of fact two millions a day ave being | 1ODs of the British government upon the ime | der the present administration. Gougar), and if Ke is thy man to defend it, | Maine, where thoy drink so much beer, you | not. [Applause. ¢ Unitod States, where men can live and where | ¢ointed. because on each day. beside the one | Portation of beef cattle from this country on | At the conclusion of his rermarks the joure you are welcome to him, [ Applause. would lose your identity in about tweuty-four [ Butmy Kunsas brother around here wants | commerca spreads its white s: all over | ynillion 'of new names counted the million | the groundless pleaof continued exposure 1o | nal was amended as suggested by Enloe. [Mr. Small-We are going to change all | hours. |App! a little more information, and I want to that when we get woman suffrage, | I want to give my friend over here the | itto him. [ want to tell him about the € 1 want to talk against probibition a little | benefit of anothor table. I want to say to | on Kuusas of yoyr while; that is the thing that T was brought | these same peoplo that Senator Biair, from | you it increased down here for, and I expect to go home with | the state of New Hampshire, wrote a book | proved to you it inereased the sales of be the world, and you will find that overy peo ple consume from tiies to three times ohibition 1 have told | the amount of liquor consumed in Americas the liquor traffic; I have | and yet they have brains in their heads, the, counted the pre jous day are recounted to | contagious cattle discases in the Unitel | M. Fithian and Mr. Williams of 11¥inols insure absolute accuracy. . 1t is believed that | States were unjustifiableand had lastedlong | then rose tohavethe joumal corrected, hut the populatiorof the United States will be | enough. He now proposed to prove to the | the temporary speaker, Mr, Burroughs, rec- about sixty million. On this basis it will | satisfaction of the British authorities that | ognized Mr Cannon, who moved the ap- have vast armies, they have statesmen and T no diseaso exists inthis country to warrant | provalof the journal and demanded the pre- ==~ the declarution and a cloar crascience that1 | giving the history of the temperance move: | nd I want to tell you it retards Lho prosper. | they have not yet goue 1o ruin. :2‘,’1»‘“‘;,‘,.].‘ffulyf.'(-‘:-‘m:‘ el OV LAl i i e B D0 TR E T i L ALl have at least talked about it a partof the | ment covering over six hundred pages, and | ity of the state aud drives out the popuiation 1f my friend went toOmzha togo the opera | was bogun more than two weeks ago it is | maiitained inspite of this evidence somo | orderel~10k to H8—the sp time sinee I have been down here, as much | put the same table in the book from which I | ‘In Kansas, I have got tle statement taken | house to hear a grand dpera, ho would prob- | yoicoafla to beliove that it will be con. | Other cause must by assigned for them, quorum, us theso people would let we. For the two | gather this statement and from which 1 can | from the retiras of the election of the presi- | ably hear it rendored by some compiny {Fom | ciuded about tho first of Seplomber, The e Mr. PMithian and Mr. Williams then spoke veriods of ‘[,m. which were allowed to this fn » precisely the sume computation, and Mr. | dent of the United States of he clectoral | wine drinking Ital f he looks fora piece | o yastion now suggestsitsell whether or not it Surveyors at Work, at some lengthabout an aror in weorvding 1 iscussion and which have already gone by, | Blairvouches for its correctness, He tells | vote castin 1384 compared to the electoral [ of fine art or sculpturehe would be apt to find .l be feasible for tho present congress to YivkTox, 8, D., July 10 special Tele- | their names, both stating that they werenot | we have been talking about everything, per- | you in that book that he had a statement | vote cast in 1858 T 1ind that the state of | some Frenchman who 'driuk twice ‘as much | gejormine the reapportionment. The out- | gram to Tiue Bre. |-A. semiofi oo | preserit durlug wil call 5 i baps, excopt the simplo question whether | prepared for his own use; he tells who pre- | Kansas increased in those four years bat 24 | wine inorder to makeit. If ho wgnted toget | Jogk iy that it will bo Qisinctly pos- | et co g gyl A senialicli apnunes: | Fyp, Cannon veplied that it made no differ- § prohibition probibits, pared ity got itat his solicitation, and of late | per cent. While the pood state 6f Nebraska, | &1 iron ship to sail over the dark seas, since | giulo and certainly desirable to - de ment of the intention of the Chicago & North- | bl T gh o ules could be evaded by @ man. 1 donotbelieve there is any sensible man | vears the Voico publishes the same thing; | in which you live, increasee under high | they have all fled from little Muine, the pro- [ 1hina the reapportioment at the | Western railway company to buill eighteen | giopping out of the housen second hefore his or woman herethat wants to vote prohibition | ind when 1 use that against them, they come | license m: thun twice the number; or in | hibition state. he would go and buy it from | byagent, session. Thore 18 every prospect, | Miles of road from Hartingten, Neb., toAten, | yyme was called and stepping wick after it ( into a constitution if you believe that itis | back and maie complaint against that paper | other words, as 5% per cent to gland, wh theg drinlk threo times as | P Gonzross will be i session unill aiter | OPPosite Yunkton o the Misiouri viver, was | wis called the rale amointed to nothing, { fioing to bon dead lottor when it s thoro and | i i€ it was published_in the liguor inte 21 per cent in Kansas. “Go to Towa, | much beer and whisky as wo do. History has | Suptomber 1 if the federai elections bill is | made here today. A party of suwesors is ab | e gtlenan lad heen presont aceording to [} s not going to do anybody any good, If y In that same bouk of Senator Blair's th and ~ we have the clectoral vote of corded the fact @id no man can intell | gugen up, and there is no vewson why the | WOTK between Vi and Randolph, Neb, | bis own showing and evenif ho wis not therg Are going to put it thero simply for the sake | wnother table that is very g 1834 compared to the electoral vote of 1888; | gently refute it, that in Austria, in France | joise committee on the census should not be | 0teusibly fo udividuals, Randolph | was a quorurnwithout lim, so e (Canion) of the idea, without accomplishing any re- | Mavk you, | am taking this fro ibl- | and the state of Towa in four years gained | and in Germany and England thereare great, | qetormining the reapportionment, This has | 5 08 the Union Pacific and the surveyors are | dig not sec what horm theve was in moving ] sult, then I want to tell you that you are trit- | ton side: [am not but s per cent in her electoral vote, while | brainy statesmen equal o any we have £ inl | bon sugeeqted as one roason wiy. the deme. | belioved to bein the employ of that réud. the previous question, Ever since the day g fng Wwith the great fundamental ustrument | nuapblet; 1 am not taking itout of any cir- | Nebraska gained 50 per cent. How 18 that¢ | America. There is Gladstone, in whisky and | bets Juffestod as one reason why, th deno- | R POREY beforo yestorday the rejublicins had heen by which your government is maintained. | cular; 1 ain not gathering it from any Kansas | Grew six times as fast as Towas while N beer drinking England: there is the ironman, | ydjournment, s it is manifestly to their dis Down Goesthe Beer, trying (o do business, This moming the witty I'tel) you prohivition is wrong in principle, | prohibition campaign nesota, with high liconse, grew twice as rap- | Bismark, in” beer drinking Germany ; there | gdtantage to lets reapportionment bill pass | Ciicaco, July 10,—A local paper saysa big | gintlonan from Aricaisas, My, Rogers, wst @ And wheu my frieud talks sbout prolibition | = My fiiend did say that in Dakota they had | idly as the state of Kansis and five times as | Was_the old historimn, Guizot, in the wine | Sy ihis session, 1t is panerulle conceded 1 fight is on among the browers of this clty. 1t | dn bour scolding the republicans, . 1t wis (b= beinga law of nature, I have listencd heve | an argument thut is protty near as good as | rapidly as the state of lowa. drinking France, and the great hovelist, Vic- | the inerease it populaiion bein & orielmally i | M1V RV 98 LAk T vious the democrats didn't want to | P for two days to bave some man tell me where | the one I made up he 1"Want t6 thank | | 1tell vou' that whatever you do for the | tor Hugo. When yod go for literatnre, for X Pol RREhasy lies hetween. the English syndicate, which 1 B 0 westera states, the increase in the repre sentation in cougress will ulso come u these states, and as Lh nostly republi he tinds prohibition in nature, or whe finds prohibition in the' bible AR hey did 1ot want the diplomatic aud cons RESLDIEW- | guiay bill considercd, It was evident that i id some of the smaller | Jogisltion was to behad the ropublican reps te | these people for their fntellizence in flnding | state of Nebraska, if you let these people | A, for poetr but Lum met | out so much truth, [Laughter.] The ouly | hem you in with prohibition all around you, | When you ste , for beautyand for civilization, outside thelines of the bor srs eries in the city, [ | has bought up a number of the la | with the very general declavation that had | thing I hud observed about it was that if that | and you plant prohibition in the state of Ne- | of the great republicof the United States and | o R e G0t e fayor- | browerics, and the result of the fizhtso far | rescutatives must bein their places and nus o mesning, they never tried to find it, and | little “original packaze” had known about | braska, that the tide of immigration, the tide | g0 beyond tho shydow of the stars and | . ".'.lf,;',,.‘f',ffI,'f_,‘,“‘f,'.',;“,'.;-,"”“ ot bub o da1or- | D aenthe dropping of . mrices from 8810 | LooRauves muit bosh Lie paaes snd D haveno evidence of the truth of the state- | that thing so loy id not try to answer a | of prosperity, the march of progress will go | Stripes, you have to goto acountry whero i coeidl il G £3.00 per barrel, Outside brewers ure ii- | ybsent on wecount of sickiess he hoped they ment. My friend Small in the lnsttalk he | thing that was not trae. clear around’ your borders, and you will bo | they drink three tines as much as you do, | , OENERALMOKKOW WILLBE CONSIDERED. | yyipting cuts, would speedily recovor mnd come back. 1t gave you came about as near giving an illus Mr. Small—There was nothing init. [Great | driven back just as the states of Kansas and | and they do not have any prohibition there. Today Mr. Dorsey called upon the presi - —o- - | )sent leave of the house he vation as_wnybody has since the discussion | laugliter and applause. ] Towa, aud Minnesota, Wisconsin and Wy- e (1A dent and urged the appoiutment of General An K ht- our Day, | they would return, ‘There wera opened, when he was appealing to the farm- | My, Webster—That's all right: the laugh | oming aud the Colorados will be loomiug up | They Have B. Se Morrow to the vacancy occasioned by the re. Wasiuxaroy, July 10, —Mr. Bliss, f | bills to be pussed. ‘Fucre were , ors of thisstate aminst railvoads, and rung | turos around, you know. So this fun can go | with prosperity, ‘waving the banner of the | |0 AEnYS Rl tirement of General Grierson. He pre d| he tico on labor, B * A R e L i with ita little about the tarift proposition, | on; the fun can't end until Small ad I leave | republic in the air so high that you prohibi. | LONPON, July 10.-[Special Cablogram to | a tabulated record of General Morrow us a | the commitico on Tubor, tody reported antitled tosit here, and the republicans i 8 11 that was 10 earry probibition ! | here, [Laughter,] tlon people cannot. get a ghmpse '0f the stars | TiE Bre.)—The - seaner Normanio, from | civilian and soldior. The president made no | favorably with amoadmentsthe bill consti. | 10t Giiithes Lot B, WE I epublicins Have you ever heardor tead of un nct of | Let me take another table here, There s | onit' [Applause.] | New York for H#mburg, passod Scilly this | Promises, but spoke very kindly and encour. | tullng tight hous o day's work for all | wiie o vitied toseats in spite of all the core congress which probibited the importation of | another table published in that same book, | = Let me tell you what Judge Foster said of | morning. Tha steamer Brittunule, - from | S¥IBELY 0f General Morrow, aud sail hewas | laborers employed by the government, mon scolds in_ the United Staws. [IRepubli conimerce into the United Statest 1 tell you | and vouched for by Seuator Blair, which 1% | Kansis—that” federal judge to whom I al | New York for 1 . conversant with bis splendid record and — i | can appl | Bo. What you vead in the great tari® laws | fouud on p T give the page so that | luded the other day—and it was put in print | NeW York for Liverpool, passed Iustuet this | would give it the consideration which it com Brakemen and Switchmen Strike, | “0 IREREE -0 enied 8 of the country was shnply a production, and | Mrs, Gougar may find it any time, [Laugh- | and over his own signature he authorized its | MOrBing: SIS wand Lovisviny, Ky, July 10.—About three | oviio st b prosent aud refuse to yote ! 1f you fmport's vcertain rticlo you should pay | ter.] Ou page 155 1s & tablé giving the num- | publication, He says that in 1555 the state | LAMBERTSON'S ARGUMENT. | hundred Loulsville & Nashville brakemen and | fn order to give the speaker (he vight o ver X 8 cortain veverue v itin'the fora: of @ | ber of suloons in the various states of the | of Kansas had a population of 1,268,562 and [ _ Wanta Million Yesterday o hearing was had beforethe | switchuen have gone on a strike here, Trf- | cord his nume. The geutlemun fom Hinois tavilt, - What was itt ~ Why, L tell you it vas | union in S:lt)p rtion to the number of inhabi- | had a prison population. mark you, produced, New Youk, July 10.—Kidder, Peabody & | interstate commerce commuission on the ques- | ficis blocked and about one hundred carsof | (Canion) had said the democrats did not shply @ regzulation fiaed vpon e | orta- | tants in these Bou et werchandive, Just e kind of 4 regu- ix ohidani of whether the proposed luction of | fruits and other perishable goods wve iu the | wantto consider the diplomatic and consuiap s, Now, look at good, old | Isuppose, us You good people say, by the usé | Co. have ordered £1,000,000 in gold for ship- |t 0 Maine & wiuute: Accordiug 10 | of Liguor, of 070, or, n Giber Words, Quo wr»l ot e BB went w Europe, | the comnmission for the trausportation of corn | yuds, 1 appropriaion UL, That bUL sppropriawd 3¢

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