Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 31, 1890, Page 11

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THE OMAHA BEBE--SUPPLEMRNT. e e T . e o . e 8. A e ——— e e e £ e P e e e e e - e o et e ] T T T AN | poit ot tme . " - he 18 il .prewching pohibition be| the Jows and had bem usd for thowas 1 wit | 3 th B \l th Bh(llj | |1 ita Justrosear { ‘M\nru AT ChAL e il . Mk | yeite mere b et ad for thousands y L 10me pammate ~ nifleas e It 30 Wi S eI Wl L \ : i ftas hrd s | aeain, ifter | wvrstling with ALl his | itevery orthodor debish bl fvery ma - V) JomAR Ktd 19 plonae fnd PIACHIO R, t Tat n rou \s casyas pssible | mighl and = mmin to ke sber anl evory woman at the table is provided | odenand wasit sibmitted! By Indiana, in Maie, o New Himpshire an With foir cups of wine nt the passover f Heat lits fate ‘ i . \ « very sty 4 prohibilory and bigh [ fost. You scom to think that t) ¥ 16 tis promisos malo by the full Repott of tho Pr 1-Tligh Li- | ! I o "t avey it e, Siom bohad | {10 serat 3! ol it Kt v WA, tho ety ¥ ity \ oot OF 101 tho Ik fivon ¢ Debate at Beatrice, t p . T I v less than an o dnheritd diseaso, he ist i flds A “.‘.”‘4:.: i that they and what from grac, mnpentd aid wsumed his As ot prolibit Mk work e fhat pro)it s o ) 1 honorhimefor that beeanss T honor ove ind vl e priviicge of t . man who scels to bea man - and uplife othoer dual for the benefltaf the Tsses . nto t dof panhod. Prolibitionists - od I \ ! individul._They say ir ind RETTY ' an r. What s ‘ . M s of Nebraska, on that! thn aed inevery church fn this land raska, v svethe idivilial teying to raiso 1 | 3 ndpoint or ibition, vand bring him to the path of virtue, the to lave us back i th and Gentlemen, N WL 1 fHEY CHEER THE ANTI-LCENSE MEN, | 1l ¢ ) o of . 3 vni thopathiof * Cliris Tho Asintle contrios n hichne Btalo of Nobrasks: [nms ficen i y " . r the ¢ dircotly with th s used and where the juny, n Vel Tl (HE CHAUTAUQUA GROUNDS THRONGED. 3ix T Attentively to the Opposin g Champions, He Addressos the Audicnee from the o t ate of tho linoof duina nof 400,000,000 1ive On rice t alo 18 to 1 forthe Advocatesof Liquor S v 3 o tublost Assuredly . p ot faloon Regulation | i v 1 nir o the sane . Siandigl y snte bolig sid Ly 4 0 of Noby t t 1 3 brastealins in et Ao WOrAn by the health of the individul is hei i | or lgl licinso her 0, pr S tion ageitat . viined - Grant it But whero hus the | A : ¢ wh prohibibition shall py (UESTION OF PUBLIC POLICY. _‘ it K probiii i i STionlit over - miscl Wa vo r w faon o fals foting fortne ques. man _ or X o dntrodiced w single Bl or sousht | i | fied, is0f great importan to cve L o sl question o today, nud na | — iy than tho icreas | " sivod tointroduce one, to prohibit the adultortion \ |\ K ' H uidor hig Ap: \ ntythowsand woren e of liquors, justis hewants o probioit and , o olse iteould gotlaved v I8 befor wid of e Prof.Dickie and SamSmall Argue the | | i Bl 4 Sof Chican diy inwant | shonld proibitthe introluction of dissed ontan audionce of the it o] e Why dos Be go and repblin' @ Case for Prohibiton, While Mr. : . el 8 o A ssolling their bolies, and noboly i | wcat tianity of the great b 508 10 Wl £0 By SHL 1b 1 1RO oo y : stuibly:iausciorle proulition erowd Faises s litle in And, ain, we s 0l by oir triond | Drasicste the pnce it s Dhes I it o . hat it s e S Rosewater and John L. Web- \ ! Wil b pdudng 1 sooks o save them from an un i it he were to build a house in Onahaand i e i e Tl e rfl‘llxl\\ Kkind ..; stor Uphold High License. Wit trilo contibuting | b ei s it 0 Sl ey sl das y your Soeunb Taw with a ligh license wimond : i trfle contributiig | plause and cris of “That's 100,00 cliecls, not in the lust (laughter i - et 5 P £ ity of ghnent Now L y today to Vh~"n this *ohe gots paid o or mob i another | 1 1908 W : " i , 1 s 13 O human add peoblem 1 prohibith ftor due t auggiter, o debite the pros 5 Fivory seat In the Beatrice Chautauqua 1 s nt 1 \ mult *of your popu- | gnd a fadrteil 1!' i it h t ; nx'Hfi that four e hiat m- | ool berni woccupied during the two days | o | o businoss thit et | i o rought al sty build Omala wi s s00n a8 ligh licenso amead which bas becu from this plat iy, to ad to put 1 (Tulyb aul 7) of tho gret debate o prohibh : i I on theecomwmic princ- |, ‘ s it docrea ve 1o take & moml i | form iy of this tion versis high license and fully sixthou R e 4 sand people lstened to it with raptattation The speders upholding prohibition wern tal - valies of 3 y DLy Haas tiot ut it, e j Uity of lquor comsumeds - has prohibiting him fron owning propery in | c y | dedmasederiae: hes it ompiied the ja Onalia, The permit ¥ i vegilation en Lt edlloly 3 R vales personal 5 | move, has px it of prison 1 W . S it h AELHLIO8 1 * ! stuplo _devico d Prof. Samuel Dickey Tichigran, chalrman N mnvaled per « t men on the ol nwly atd those who fr Juildi s Soild Mot LSt | it ‘s“‘l’;‘ ; ; Het 118 thit proti- and dens wher the worst | 5 1 Pasd L Omahia if ho did bost thing b on ever done prohibition pirty, and v Sam Small, I i ! A CRO A have $100.00, for the reson that @ fourstory re tate was th 't of such a thing whilo ¥ anl Rosewater, oditor of Tun o PTG p \solatea man frat question ongth, 1 N 3 " wooden house wouldnot be allwed under our 0 t efore they 'on hi th 1 tll yo W that igit. B, and John L. Webster arguodin favor of | \y D ¢ i uratteition to to cliracir YOEY IHAT BNy roguliions” Four story (o loises. ciay diter i o howeves bighlicense. The great majrity were rank | many of t enis i, | | incing L proposition Who |y Hegnd i per ; BT L S () I on prohibitionistsand several hundiea of them | about | y ere complote . nte Wioattims that po- Nibition Bans ut bl a8 com. i [ A g LR dodin " i u b S 1 § savasrry, and Ttrast that i 1 will stana prolibitt Peter Tor siys asis of thestat “brask, e UL e Lo Neadhiod lad beon iuported from Kniis and the sur- | Sty aud Tt b W 2 S ilot rohibit, bt Per fee | ) L o nitis veulition mis & Co. Appla of the nauionl exeeutive committee of the ! orfores with the ! topped himself, eviry wihe probibition in this wwill never eare I Liconse {nent. I toll yon that vight now, We ) ol or we will die to possible that prohibition wis in theascendant 3ut (staud s that, n a o achance toprove a t i pholling the rizht 3 2 b o ‘ R s O R L ol e Every inch of the platform was occupled ol sis0, bition does in e ey T s woll deinr, but Tam i 16 (e GBIl 8 e Toat ot e [ niz o volintarily pat them Eath spoaker wos given forly minutes | Vde the the complels pe 1 liquor_~deatess, through Nennska o uphold ler against the i 5 8 1 anysuch yolo asihat. —You ou'e ) o o 1 N e distance and ¥ " mainst Hi y il i citinn B their A0USE 8 ¥ and defuners who h all ove o ol 020 thom nwa 1 proli- fime and tho chairman, L. W. Davidson, L Ll B it precpla thnt el VAR Mars and_Jdupiter | W 68 G ANG stsllang : found it necesary several tnesto voprove i e ralibiton dics ot prhibil, butthey reied | eriag ASBRVIE S | oM incethan bo does | v shape, manner or forin, tilovies, ani the brefer tis iatdics foe! tinttating at i s e < 100010 s 0 i Uit pron bitn i Obio ; Sitiarnli Git ; - NGt Fan the mti-prohibitioulsts.(He cxho »n of the libor o | didnotlaves climce o p a disual fail- comingour genoral cussid lHe swes a it deal y away i e e L N KD \ i he dovs h el 0 els e befo AIS 1ellow ¢ treatall ihe debaters, 1o matter what thlr | Wdivilialdtizen that he moy y sor {vess. T Loud Iughter. 7 S L U ) i By g diod v through thodream, and they ars repidiatin J chierand better than il lib e E 3 from that lay 1th a€ HLERS: 9 nis Worll de ! it. *I brin » i s of great jo views, wilh furnos. a ' 3 N 0N 0HS it to sy wnd_comes fn contivet with the What hive X s b iy Etlin! bltarvhria et PROF. DICKIES OPLNIN : LS ! - ; il . : L2 LA MR B < L wl tern portion of 1l Seh ’ i ¥ Populationof 1 we ala T They have rand studying the crowds #1e Ontlines the Cass and illusteates i then is morsliquor in the | have mi: ’ opu lition of i they in th s Points s 3 ; vithan thee over was bofuv. | havemi | » t 3 g stite o Towa Stiin a0 . the man who wmote that, | i hat th A \ inals, have they int 1 s teiliont population or in the chairman, s s follows : isown doct : o Mz, ( nd \en; The | \ ic and was p ; insing: timoat my conmand {5 linited and 1 can N ¥ ! © uppor st y ity of el alm : LA S wasto noie of it. W e it sedi of thing ¢ : i J S ! ; ol g slmply outline thecase resevitg fora later | VDAt T waar, and : S Hirhadlcavos T ; R from competen wndhorto do “told by th : ] A voice: W this _stite ity -sove s Nebrasli is superior o every prohi fond the position of iibition of the | lift up their hunds in | T At higiiod bie i mhen . i drink tra sk usie wo proposs to th - 10 FEaIA Rl Tadtuxe of in twe n yearsto i ) Thor ro fower cuminals i et Shehazoon yBEolbIta diall cat and wiat they shll drin in_this statothat is | popila 1 uglter| and 3 of Nebraska, proportionate | is [ becwise the saloon, ¢ as tho ropre. | WAt ey shrllivear Wall, ot ot nually vight in theeity of | eveit deal mom © than half of tt b ory ion, than there are in the st Lol G 1o ¢ and work I creati the pr v )i the people He came to save, aud ¢ i in the the watersof purification, ninety-six rewon wh iito the waters of damnation, is a b tiose ¢ to go back on sentative of the w SAN08. 1o Some famer five miles ‘out of B paradi that moiel city, |touists lave donc jor it thestateof Maineor the stite power toadd 10 tho § Wit wap. | omesiutoyourcityon Monday mon appiatie ] that st repufibleabods whoad | 1 do not belice that half of then a. Thore are fewer drunkirdsin the o rosents 0 vastubsorbing power todestroy the | Onsults anattomey, Ho sags, 1[50 larse & percetage of ber pople are [have inerea the _ popultion of iiha, in proportion to e popitltic waealth of thenntion, | stanl hon todedurs | Mimal that died on Sunduy moming, Ly arnsted {any ste Lnuter. Tt me read from srdare in theeityof Portlmd, Me. Tioml HniSAvior 62 CHRFwIr B A Hilau t 1sel” of their and will produes [ we are through | &M he, ‘s there ythin Liquoris sold thereon Sunday, liquor is | theé Moline Reviewu dispatehof May 2, 1590, e are fewer i people in thestate And T say it to the gontl wary of Pennsylvania Pith: s Cston sl arory a8 | Sumds in‘my wiy of dresing that dis sold there onlezal holidays, liquor is sold to [ whil one of the prohinition lecurers hus | of Nebraskn, proportionate to the popuilatiou, denco— that o dvitk traftle in ehe | Mimalandusiigit for foud in myown fam- [ minors, liguor is sold v men in the habit of [ suid: *n thelocy tandi oh license ci than thereare i thestato of lowa, 1he fact Sbaitio2 ) Nebrasica, froti) the commencement | I the mun, wise in theaffules of the | bewming - intoxicited, Adulterated dritks | of Omaha’? (this a report of A lecture | is this: state of Tow has BRbIE T Roil h v siates, who told thew **Don't y prove from holy v t wd debite this dont vo | g | A ] side of thesaloon or the distillery, that e pand talk ubout it wse ind of the procensof nanufucturs. down. (o ghe | i lolls hix o, sir, butasafrind I | aresold-mark you, nita single defod whilch hud beat ddlivered in Moline bya lady [ ponlenowin e iusanc sy, Kansa bas | Sist e mado uny veile exeept | Lonsiter]. Yos, they ot o do it, point of finalconsumption, s never added | Wouldnotadvise youto doit, hut asa matter [ high licnse who will appear on this plat- | whom Iwill 1ot vone, who had lectured in | 1207 insane, tato of Nebraski | thut which was in t} cup when 3 iberat el 1in whera one dollar and never contribited one dime to | L 12W you hiavo ‘a perfect 'vight to doso.” { forn has ever undertiken the task of en- | Omitha three wee ks before and had ample | oty las 63, g slatistics are oficial | 5§ cane to the governor. DINEE 5 ist take the the aggrogatovalus of this grat conmen, | “But sid ho ~thore is more than Iean | fowing ligh license intha tty of Onana or | oD wingom berself fully in regard | 1 have the oridnal domments in my pos [ Trather beteve with Miltoy thi DIt " wealth, | Appiause] onsume; may I not dress jtandputiton |, the state of Nebraska. [Appliuse,) to whatshe was ulking wbnt, having as | session, and leters from the superintendonts | ginpiv o cise of 4 he conseion water b S e I am _awaro that thegentiemen upen the | WArket! > “No» says the lawver, “we lave L = sisted inthe Nebisia aner dnent campaign.] | of theasy and_Thavethem fron all pa ing asit recognized its Lord." d it He T are in thesky, the other sido of this dismssin way point fo | 4probiditory” statute in the state of Ne- EDWATRD ROSEWATER Swvere 200 of the 11 est appointed and most al: | of the ~wiion. There are in the state i s AR R e i et 2 wealthy brewers, 0 me who have growa | Vsl st the sdlingof dieasel mot. ol Juring siloons e hd ovor seon licemod it | of Tansas taly WS cowicts b the tswithwhom Ho had as | un horizon; the enomously, rich in the manymoture of stro ®siys the proposed seller, “l willad- & SRt $1,00 each. In o rearof ch was ahouse | penitentiary, thers are in the penitentiary o g aiid A oye it EvnLar B EEhiEl t eyt driak, and they may wadertako £odedus tha such; the purchaser sl buy it [ FIo Quotes Facts and Figures In Sup- | of ussiatim s & furtier attraction. | lowa foday (34 convicts and in the state of e e SR L T B e e argument thit boauss A 13 md. C have | With full knowldgeof the facts.”” “No,” the port of High License. These and oher dews of vice | Nebraska there are 358, [Applause.] That awsubjecting Him to punishment Varsilisartior R ibraiitbl grown wealthe in the drinls iy “Satraffio | liwyer tells him, “the knowledge ouent | Mhe Ton. Edward Rosewaterthenspokeas [WoM openly licensed, the women | isa fuct. uself, and is, I ropeat, an incredible thing, 1 territory of the eountry ; with the 15 Woutth producing, but theTos™ o froes | 0f the purchaste in no way mii yonof | g0 kecjing the pliices being allowed to vn open glve you another 1itilo bit of Infor | Itis not o edible, 'but it uever hap | old states of the South and North Da'. tonigiit and breaksiutoa bak of the city of | e olligation you have assuned, and you | "N "Eqiiont, and Indis and gentlemen: | BOUWE. The cty his by this means raised This gentleman tlkedso michabout | pened, 5t t0 be sought here asa de- northward of yous o Bealriceaud carrics away $100,00, if o es. | cunnot put disased meat upn, the muket | 1y inis ora of our civilimtion, on the ap. | S:000, which addx totie £70,0) fron the | emptying the juils and pariteitinris in | fnseof thoold Willow Springs sewer gas | Stite of Town tothe metwird 5 whlb's capes theofficers of tne law, may be wealthy | id sl iteven with the knowledgeand con- | [inch of the twanticth century, it will scem | S8100S, goes to ‘e suppdrt of whe free | prohibitionstats, They have enptid the | manufictory down hore on tho banks. of (i | and 1o Indin Gemitory tothe SOILN; WSl an for the bulance of his day, but the burglaris | sent of thopurch Bsenl strngelo thse who are well readand well | SCH®IS. — Omaba — with — its — mult: | yils of tows and Kansasnd of Muine, and if | Missouri river st Ouana. [Laughier and ap. | impassabloline of prairie dog hyes bet W not mgaed i@ woalth projucing business, | | Hewourpersmal iberties amhedsed amin. | 3ol that any man should appenr beloro | PLY of © vie wd crime, and | jou bdievo them the millenium s’ come. | piause 200 and the west—wlhy, you an: van be: The gaubler may accumulate money, but o that benutiful hose passing along | o iitelizent an sudinos as this and ke | unobseriance of Sundiy, came nearer re- | As a matter of fact, Isenta ltter to every Why, hesaystheywere gatherel around | uated people on the face of the earth for prors the gumbler prodiices to W Tié sue- | the green yonder, and T haveno doubt were | ¢ iSFETH T THCTRCR A9 TS B S | i iudingthe let ture Paris than | sherifin the state of Nebraska within the | the table atthetiméof the la pper and | hibition and I think you are equally intelli- cessful pickpocket mayacquire vast posses. | W€ getlenan in the cavriage behind him to | 3 5SS ROT R R more d wore air- | SRYCityshe hud evr sen in the country.’ | st ten d and | have ~the | became “iucarnated in wine! [Luughter.] | gent, equally cultured, equally rezardful of get some high lie vy wh ht vidinl, cor 1, sy tentiavy with Pefer ller for et lauzgh wher yc sions, but neither the bur the gambler | Put him tothe very top of his speed, there civilization has advanced. [Acvoice: **What s hername!”] What did | ussvers from eighty-eight countics, all but ,Lhave recently been elected president | o 1 and your homies, and forthe casts that 1 Tave weferred fo by way of . | Oma, which undar thelhiicene redme, | 08 ol piiitng “Why niwe robenad | o JVha shocated ver ilthero wero o wine." [Laughter.] W, that is too good | of thoir fulflling your Lopes and the desiiny b I cannotimagine what you are cheering for. thekeeper ¥ per month for the in- | methe wunties and I will name the nu resiring tho gloom of | Kausas, and I believe that you can just take Rotintrulicon fourth term intotho propog | 1 g0 te Mr. Ruscwater's eity indgo ot on | FHECH a0 LTl tenie i fatily o inmte in cach house, lowaand | will have theothers bolore tomor- | j,;qq iisciies shout Him, Holustituted that | great west, and on tho fourth day of Nove all tako tle money from tieir victins | SPeedandhbe would not g two blocks bif el ouam nolawire, terhas, tat | 1 uttaly utruo thal any sinele liquor | @8 injail than we have i tho wiole s ciple who was atraitor tohis Lord, and the [ bordert ¥ xis for prohibition. Tt e try the simplest sot of mental ex. | 0ther policenan would have thedriver by it ofthe preseit caibury, sean -obioxius. ( (7, o Wintion wilh disorderly hou e ging b dogrcal things for Nebraska | RG] sndyon gentiman thay 139605 8o voik tosell His f for loss than thirty | continent that andl say to this man, “Keop on, give | Wbyl At ] : : food or lodging_th offered o Mexico to get around “Lf ay porson shallturn Quaker, he shall | i Proxinity. We have alrcady an orderly, | with winebefore that tine, on” that sdema | don't wke audbetter for the change | Jou cinmob goout of your dwr md upand | ooy ofdeati” (Luught board of potice conmissioncr—and the board | comminywealth i bave | pro- ing "passion and - death upom the| orbiawe.] Noj rou wmadun, your money upm - the oo demand of 1 lilgher gwod, tie prser f orntiyto and from meoti e || R O D Fhocauweof " And you tol ld | Omala after pobibition prevails” md itgets i 1889 the Omiha polico made 8,149 arrds wnder prolibition vorld, Aud now, when we do partalceof it, | those 898 criminals in the ingin rourn is giving evidenceof alackof | fricnd, Mr Rowewater, that | can get his How would you 1ik b laws ingrafted | they “had soightsheltr, which le ever gone and made compliint to enfor thereby they doshow foith His death, 1 year tor the pri of ullo very smill sun-—$L,00 pery wd T iy wlin - and then T) siver o bone Lus above two shillings per | repite, 8 charged by thy defunters of Omaba, | was first invocduced ~in Omala membrnce of the Lordt fanily if you woull muke it 10 coatand brass’ buitons in asepuatedisti, s pleasedto call it, and the ministers of Ne W« own. Afyoumust_coutri salon- | theyare. “Ls this your b material s 1 ¢ fnstrunent exept drum or j Ofthatuumler 187 are saloms. The others | 1 joined themand attonded the minst calico and goin v iy« ¢ icld. Heloksthem g to | sellliquor is conccrned, Omaba has done ade it personully a ik up the back stais on ¥ n hi 8 Now, sir,” | Tmpris ) A - 5 vie prsideit of the Uuited Statos, vier ball; 1 mado. iinsta m a s v from his * place orty X wrsons wh X rough J Xist without some liguor being | the board. The other was eventually vilues i 3 | sunu 1 wwhot divilual | liquors existsin any city onthe face of the | jss2 is 0% the high e of every dr i s Ve o ark that I am anazed at | ever hada fist-c tel. But you hiss and vo hundred siloons, with & populitio ut fern oo s : 1501 pleasc 1 veh 1 the indivilial [ [t You the s Twasdown inMownt | wid, tnludng b you riin his Ause’ Yy oice wn that the Puri- | Wine was had and in which wine and rum tion state that has a better record for 1 S : ¢ st s o bear, but on tecount of the | ited Mot Vernan, [A voiee: “Tiues aro s, Wehave hul a great nor the pickpcket 1sengiged in a wealty | Wouldbe mne to him nay, but let him Itdoes seem t mo a jaradox inthe face | Seknowabout Puis moral nd what did | two, aud there are fifty-one counties in Ne | of a’univernity ;I think hoonght to come and | Safety of your sons and the comfort of your prodeiiy industry In every ono ol thes | lWKe that samo horse downto the city of | ot 408 phit B ki e e | sheknow about Onaha immorallyt brasks that have nota prisoner in jail. [Ap | jin. (Lawhter] He got “incarnated in the [ daushters, and mindful of theic future and P 'y o fagb ¢ th people P » lustration theparty takes tho money from | ATests oneoutof tenof al itspopulation the | 0 e e tuvs That their moesorg oy | 270 bad bouses in Umats, lionsed and pay- et < o i | tobebst. Neverthuess, whatover He may | that God has written for thom, a3 we his victin and gives 1o valuable thing s | YOAT wrounl. —[Apphuse acted intheearler part of th wtoath | D, as s SRS e oM e el ve int Ho sat thero on ( your neighbors the Dakotas, and To b L 3 4 = | century; of those in fict, who lave tiec J ne n low: . Now 1 W [subnit i to the Inteli. | 1thoushit you wouldtaks outyourhandier: | SEUITY Of osain fict, wio lve wied mates, the azerewae would amount to §7,00 | ber rin Hlowa prosnt the fatal Frids o E ¢ ik Boonithisl a6 | tLis SHiole) #0016 G EoUR Ry oRTI IRa N gentjudgment of this great audience, may 1 | (hiefsandweepover that thoight, But lot L o if there were only one keeper and one | A FROS0 DERJ NS ! cursed tree, and when, i His be | praskain the lapof the plibitionists of the e Y o4 FoLou6 it,and bive idopied tom of regulativ n e Apdgdiociad o et R e son tion and delaro that the burglar the | 10 buadstreels of that groving city and | |5l oniion md igh e, oo O | it she sws tho’ recolpn wore 0.0, | oW mornivg. In I wa nhoffton lessed and beautifil sicrament thay | ber T am satisficd she will whee erandly ganbler, the pick pekcet andthe saloonkeeper >d tho aninal at the very top of his which disproves the charge righton its face, | ties alreidy returned they ior 3 s come down the ages, there was ono dis- | line and st 964 L it Pulitans, who cane over’ from England, : A nd there are still fc it counties s a0 I natle At o some policeman, if he was ding his duty, Fefal bl & e | dealing estabiishment. in Omaha is permitted | #nd there are still fory. Yoy | broodhas ot died out yo [Laughter a {Appluuse ;',,{‘lt,.‘ rable thing: in xdurn. [Ap | vou13 have the horse by the biisand ap oot ould, in_the | o e duthiritios to have any connee | Iowato har from. Now they tell you they yob - (Laug and [ i 3 i 1 lnve here dconise compndivm of those 4 e ity Baes eome. with. thoir wares to | . I'heir lieal descendants are still secking | wowill puta be 083 this % o Ttn LG har e the coat eoliar and he would lug him u Tayouee | 0OXke Lo them® | thecontrary, the dief of police has for y s they Bave cone with bition fatross it D ot 83 & foas fos i et | e plicooce his porsm SRR O : >of thun: | igilly escluded all that class of business tho yrong market; tho wirosthat they a | lcesor sive len Ho sabthers of | G Ao hitho , i e b of the mblicgood | Quiker, Adimiteor olicr heretio. |intoa put ofthe dty where salons are not | pedddling L g tint oecas il may ave done | But tuey will mever et around rilicy your tail Saturday night, but re- LD 8 outingy o i1y an y e (hBLansy Tarshtexiand fuse to accept his goods and you wil 1 bewiser ir personal liberty is ab oice rstrained. | vq papished and not suflerod to Teturu, on | And what is more, evews complaintto the | moral, well behaved " and prosperous | occasin, in the prescica of the 1 o 8 N tho stre 1 s P . X i clowd in marchi 3 ings Isay tothis lady, who possiblyspends €200 | downthe stroats 1y, Why iy A o me shall ruin onthe S ppointed by the governorst Nebraska aud | hibiton insixty oddcities and towns in this and consccrated it to holy | ton pass in thisstate when the & year npon horwanlrobo, *Go right on, | GUStYOUr peron it must give way be- | i G A o B S snothing o do with Omara politics— | stato loday, anl I will beable to namothem | uses, ind sid, "As oft as ye take of it, o it | sytistied th dry ko r and the drossmaker, bug | Vot o me shall travel, cook vietu ke | the revieatim of the lictmse. pla We have astate of fictswith high | tiis wine has becomo a comsecrated thing | Ler torun her ods ad take sin v | 1 will o sme of tiese days down to| bols, sy it ‘hiir or shiave on the | aboit Omaha e thess: Durin 3 lieense thit cannotbe paralivled anywher | from the lindsof the blessed Christ of the | poplodo. not pronoso to be wise : that e wio gives it fora gentlenan tlivein [Appluse] and | = N yoinin shall k dren onthe | Of theseflo were person: fumished with tew- | My (riend here has said thewe isuot as thosewhoare faithiul tolis words will par: [ onler 'to contribute to its the bt and the baker aid | be on such excdlentteras with my | Subath day « porwry lidgings iuthe station house,where | man'of thebigh licmse advoates thay bas | tke of it oly in remembrancs of Him Laughter.] Yes, Omala gets practical wisdom;but 1o to this ot min B > for §100,00; 1 will | our coustitution! arnsts vidation ~ of state laws. | highlicense. Isay that [ one of those | do you mean totell me that the erowd that is s to stay there, and whospends what fora drinking mn isa f ying wears elothes trimmed with gold, | Insteadof 270 houses of assignation and il | mwen that did do When hij o | patronic license saloons of 4 tho c1 Rlsdnctha to this man, “You must eontibute to the i quantity of bui yard, shall b presented by the grad juors | thenuinber of sueh knovn 10 our police s | was resisted by tho saloonkecpers, by tho | [Applusean support of the salbonkeper an > baautiful worning seloct men shall lax tho offender on | thirty-six, aul vew'y wlof themare isolated | brewers and by the rum power, @i myfriend | “Iellme that the gor for ~ the saloon per to and hewills: No one shall read the common priyor ow there areas a natter of fact In the | braska ullendorsed The Wornan's Chris- rand res, 2 housc moresuperd than you can afordto < kb o YFOIE et * Itellhim | bok, keep Christmns or sot diays or play on | cityof Omala 245 liquor deaers at this time, | tian Temperance anion aidomed i, I ¥ T 3 play Kkecpors ability todress i Lassire bim itis. “Now," he siys, “will .7 arehotels, wholesile dulersand restanrants. | mecting in b, 1 volu 1 to in siliks and satins, whil s are ¢ you slow spocificationss | v . 3 far licensing ~a hotel to | the compliint azainst the sible fora saloonkee per to a5, “lsee you ud rist's ¢hurcl nothingmorethan has been done by the eity they said at that Lis dimer table ever -y > ) > of Washington, for a hotel is now owned by e i anmy witha bt of liverunder your i | eV e upon . s good, tir: "Ly s of s hume, na hekepta m so things,” I si 2 il a frame Now § ““Shamoon hm.” [A volee: | pamiling place a wle complint against n i ! A is ) Py t ns_ had to 1i a stame on hiin| In | iman by the £ Richard Curvry, and wons \ 3 " rothier or s jail a b nation orgreat city cana £ wo of those th nae wore rofused by wd prech ition would wow be injail. [ fumished forits guesist [ Hisses| granted. sqare trne they b d I t Laughter No fint cliss hotel without wines and But the high lcemse of 1881 and | preenca ae what the ¥ fore Fal 2 tars tripe: n brozade » theera | £1obo outside, possibly, of Constantinople, | of tolay. In 1551, when high license cas Plioy ar esandnot real ¥ wsof the Puritans. But right | andI doubt very ioh it Constantinopl into Nébraska, Omaba had 8 fraction m people i i the 1 ass i ity own real estate I caunot taters my predecossir thit prli- | make yorselves i wonly ridienlous when | 30 645, Today i ety e ime it in the 3 a as 1 will, talk v f e indivilual -thatitsinply | Vemonseven or eight years ago, the plice dealers, ition 1o o flamos and T Llicked up tho » to, ¥ run| s r0ss the horizon, so tospeak, of the | Which. was the home wnd residence of Geory Staure we have 1 bii \ lastdro] A cn would [ rizhtu nsta prhi bition that within stateand imposes paltios ujon those | Wishingon,and there I saw decauters in 3 Keepors’ >t have lost Ler actual value h lini n ¥ 10 frame build: e to dal or trafic in intoxicats. | Which rum was held, the big jugs inwhich ¥ iy man toname a ina probiibl rss might sufler ). 1 Is, s the; v 50 much opposed to bear bait- served by George Wishington to bis | aud order, anda botte cord for enfor s 0f the < A 1 itoninter with ( the > and pain that [ Tr sand giestsundto strangers who laws, than Omaha lus lad for the entire question pledsumn to t kerson, | chinged. | in enforcing high 2 beraus But this S n does And with equal mligmty, so to spalk, | Ho was préidens of the United | ficense was naturally the favorito thing w 10 create | t | man, | thse > who are now i States and prolably just as good s | the suloonkecp as an examplol w Hhwar th i E o st R e s or| any mm in this Louss” We lave here,it | cite you the difioronce between Omiahn . ) > ‘ AR R It takes a| this state o greal many ms, anewcivilzation, We lave arrived | uud “some of the ciies of tie i t i = i tal soureeof poverty. It mives 4 viow of [ them atleast, ar very mich put ot wh at astago of morals that areso exaltedandso | country that pass for molel dties, The city w o Now Yort World it is true, to a considersble | t they find anyboly enjoying a social glas £ood that even Goorge Washington ap- | of Clevelund, in the heart of the western 3 t oked to see how It was, on, but ke whois not profitatly : onfsa bad thing; [ wine. are very much put out when [ Pews % b a ¥ery common sinnor aud | serve, from which probably o ver > por- | i that ¢ nle Lo Al 1whose labor projuces nouse | lom creates o values; | they find ple having recreation. They | Very gat crimi I presume Abraham | contage of wy audicnes halls, & eity toat 5, 4 el B 9 J00P, TAU TIZRG, 10 is expending his energy r X absorbs vast val- | wiit to belike thoseold Puritans who cried | I-incoln would bave sppeired im the same | has ~ been the bome Garfidd | Proof or t udd ) © puying s task, ond were 1 | ues: prohibitin says thesalom corrupts the | *wll flesh isgrass, and all grassis hay,” who | light. and some of the ablest and best | sometimes expend-had ' that amount o, terrories the politiciaus, suborns wit- | torturel wonen and burnt them at the'stake, | And that God-man. Jesus Christ, came into | men this country has ever produced—the city | 1 dony t of money e million dollars in rearing sone | nesses, buys legislatures; sabon tea men oit because they differed | thisworld and he came eiting bread and | of Clevelind today, as ding thereport | perarce uu mound upon your wester ries, 1 what the best forces of modem ciyilizs them o their religious views | drinking wine, fermented wine, and not tis right here in my possession, has over | cense talk, g out the i s'to | tion would buili up; prbibition says, pllloried 'men for doing things | unfe d wing.' He came 'into this | [,600salomns with a popilation of450,00 th of | cchauics 1o | propases to say it here in Nebr a 0 t tolay would be cousiderd honors world and atlendod €ho wo foast at | 'Now what & marked diflore Yo Uit tosay t ran artifical wountain several thousaud | saloon must o [appuuse] and if s I am equally pained tosee that my pre Caua and thae partisijated with his apos- | tween Omala and Cleveland: Hore | eense,the pi 1 | feetin height » banishment of thesaloon theindividual | cessorbas the audacity, s to spek, to tles, They took wine-the wine of joy—the |is a city that has less than double the | tice of high 1 o e, Andl lwked down 1 might mceive revenue therefrom, pro- v shall suffersomo curtailment of his | flet upon amanwhohas savel moré indi- | same of joy that is drunk at every Jew- | population of Omala and nearly soven ti censonover gt ater d r saw thal shoivaspay wided the people would pay 5 or 10 or 20 cents | former rights,he must expectthis and receive | viduals from the degrdation of drunkenness | ish maxtinge and has been for three thous the number of saloms, And then Flart tl stab anywherein i o That was sll. [Ap forthe pr of ascending my artificial | it as the necssity of the cise and cicum- [ and the misery caused by intemperance, | years, and the other day when the g Conn, right in the heart of D ingt | or foo, from e mound, b I did not cntributeto the | stance—an inddent and not the objutive| frm the graat craving which car [ lodge’ of Misons came to Omalia tolay the | land, 'in the center of an inteliz thanit g when wellaréof my felow men, if Tdid not fur- | oint ris men ito dess of infuny | comer stoneof thecityhall thoy poured upon | enlightened people, and the capital Nebraska, aftor te pish innocent recreatio to the peoplo—but, | Tho object isthe supprssion of the siloon into jails than allthe prohibitionists that | that stowe co, ol and wine™the corn of | the state-thecapitd of the stite of Con- | expericnco wit on ¥, every one hundrith wan who | system becauso the saloon system iy the | hive ever rod on the soil of Nebraska. | plenty, the oil of peacoand the wine of foy. | necticut has 253 saloons today, five more | of yonder capit asceded my artificial mountain foll down and | enemy of the commor 1's best welfare, | [Applause.] And’ no Masnic comer stoue las | saloons than ti of Omuha, Tho popu- | ave’tired of frand broke alog, every five hundredthmanin lis | [Applase] Well, I heard aman the other | “That man perhap dil go through the | ever been laid or ever will | lation of Hartford, Coun., {5 53,000, agaiist | wanta chince to v beadlong tumble broke b an I ask, | day on th t toprohibition because [ agnies of the same craving, perhaps he did | be throwgh the gecrations that are to come ,00 for Onaba What' is the use in beiug | out.) [Applay basiny §1,000000, although g olog= | ie’said you camot ma plo good by law, | sufer and was arnsted down_in Bangor, | without the wine being plicedside by side | deluded And meit to f Liboring bis | and Twis sorely te ndthatself | Mo But why has not Mr Dick-| with thooil. Lo distressing pictures that were shown | not in fa that monay been proftably expendad’ aud | sumeman thatio © 1 dge ho | ie referred 0 mother man who has| Now the question simply arises, lave we [to you of tue suferiig wnd mis- | question. Lce; +* 5 v really coitributedto the finincial welfare of | was made goo lie flrst tine in [ publisied a book kuown as *Fifteen Years [ rewhed thal stage i the hisory of the |ery by reason of liquor we all admit. | solutely forced @ cr that was drilli thopeoplel And you tell mo no. sears by i din the cuteles of | inHell” and who is tow upheld bythepro- | world where men ar letter than | We kiow that mon have made beasts of | with thesaioon toputihe qu Aud so afirm fhat, while the brewers and aw and ol upin the Bagor jail | hibitioists of Nebrskal' (Mr. Mumby, | the law giver who gave the tm |[themselves, we know that men have | theopenuir wherethe peoy @istillers may giveemployanort t labor, A rising in theaisl): "My namo is Fracis [ conmandments from Mount Sinl and did | gone down to thelr g i md wo |anditisout k i 35 they produce a product destitute of ' xe lecture simewheretomorrow [ Murphy, and the statemient that Mr. Dickie | not indude the elcventh c : | know that hundreds of thousands' of pecple | Tlo gentlemy ofno power tomeetthe in- | nigh Not that it would not [ mide ibout me is sbsolutely false [Ap-| **Thou shaltnot drink ferment are impoverishied hereand contond bt th i ntsof the people, thit libor as atits fortune if we were tomake | pliuse, Are we any better tun Clrist who came | The question is, how will you relleye them, [stateof Nebraska submitted the | t i - the raw material is | po £ood uf; law, laudable though such an | refer to Luther Benson, who has by his | and at the last supper partook of wine, the | whatis tie best reme for promoting tem- | smendment at the demand of the thind pary e o grind out old Wterly and forever wasted from the staud | eforymight by but it b to makethe wadl: ) owa confession i hisown book declired that | passhalwine which wis usel in thosedaysby | perasce and sobricty? Suppose you |erauks. Cortainlynot. Wo wre too iusige | dimes Lo lay o thooyes of te dead

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