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) e e e e - WICH LICENSE 1Y NEBRASKA, ' #imer Deale Derived. The mber of I Their Location and sel Lign Revenue OffiCIAL FACTS AND FIGUF \i A Tiever Was Derived In 1880 of 50,818 feventy Bight Towns W in State Huve No Saloous. ured { 4 tneorporat It will 224 cities and t n. e responded. rone elght of thie without but refused te be s Bas been sk, T granted 11 to pay it ¢ 145 cities a o8 this year have ggregate | sald ar. or from stiting there had If your statisties par this your o this num 8,000 thirty-eig wking the for added nsed boards, d 1 in Omati in |5 1 Se talk Is not worth ay T want to ask you one ting population or 51 Yours f MoueL The comparative Towa, Kansas and Nebraska quoted In | the Beatrice wis aeeidenta dropped out of the type of the edition, ut appeared cor next editionas follows: N fotal number of this vear sib, vil ber by more than t to fifteen, so | it is safe to assert that the total num- | ber of licensed liquor dealers in Nebraska, | {neluding bresw di vs and wholesale | and rotadl dealers, does not exceed 850, The revenue derived from liguor dealers puder the high license systom for tiw year 1880 was §50,88, Of this amount J02 was collected in various towns and_cities occupation tux, anl $15,970 wa yarious countics for saloons located o {ncorporated towns, licensse v dealers ha h fr res from which no reports werease this fuiluresin number debate Iy morning in the wnber of failures in K 1580 ber of No. ot 11 Amount 5 censed realired | Number liquor (rom | 1580 dea 200 00 fuilures i Towa in 200 fallures in Bl number of failure ka for the fivst si present ye i debate It ha Nebras ane of lown Adans Alnsworth y $00 s in Kanws and manths of the cditorially alter the ir Nebra cus's’s0 | i £1i00 o published the day wowas | | | b | 0¥ | none woto o number of 1 failures in KKansus w [ \ Nehuaska in proportion o population, The ¢ truth s that the reword of Nebraska isin =1 : every respecetsuperior, During the past. six none months the number of fail Nebraska 3 ed 195, with liabilities amounting to none TiB000, In Kausas in the same time the L) number of failures was 152, with liabilities 1 8o N m i M52, (00, CHIA ing the cuormous sum of $L062,0 1 (0] > Nebraska's list of il incrcased 3 100 | four, compared with thenumber for the first 1 halfof 1389, the liabilities decreased. On the 9 1500 | other haud Kansas records an se of hlltd do | twenty-one in failires, and §1,250,000 in the ‘ gregate of liabilities, 3 The printed annual chicf of police, e s 3000 wne 8 board of five and for the y | veports during that as avey, the police com: wrending | 1 the total last nur number us were At Y ¥ iy should be d total of erix ar they were guilty of n ise than that of unknown to the police, That would reduce the actual number of legitimate arrests to 7 but no such reduction was even attempted or hinted t in the Beatrice debate. As amatter of factthenumberof arrests in Omaha is much lower thanthatin other cilies population. Enver had over 25 K d her sovial none evil poption is conputed by her chief $ of police atover1,500 asafainst less than 1 - | 250 known to the police as subsisting in S han : | Omaha i The voting population of Nebmska in Sons 1880 was 81,452 in 1853, The “"“3 present voting population of Nebraska is not less than 210,000, or two and a half o times larger than itwas in 1850, nons The number of saloons in N 1880 was over 700, and Omaha, with a population of 180, Ofticial reports from incorporated townsof this <tate total number of licensed liquo those towns and cities towns not vet hewd Clarks,l irmont,Gordon,Grecley Center, Strang and Unadilla. hese towns cannot possibly have more than 20 saloons, if they have that manj Itis thercfore manifgst thut Nebrasl todiy has less than $00 licensed saloo Seventy-eight towms and citic Nebraska have no licensed In other words, if the saloons in Ne- bruska had inereased in proportion to the inerease of voting population we hould now have one thousand ven ndred and fifty whereas through the restrictive opcration of loeal option and high liceuse lave barely eight hundred licensed saloons in the state. In 1880 we Tud one siloon for ono hundred and twentyfive or one to seven hundred In 1890 we two 8,140, Of arrested 'S and sted from ) i alliw ity r e v Rapias s i Cliy iy ¢ 4 Dhidron.. ... 5 *none * none nono susplcious me Ve none 1 rope sdu | the boing Onlnmh Cortin Covin, Qo pralg, WO 4\, 1,000 1500 i 1500 to 7,000 1,000 SEIk C ek Elnwood *Eiwood. 1SN Cniicotl g rhury . none slau in that number 0,045, hnd 3 out of 232 placethe dealers in The nine from are Ayr, of lorenee Calhioun Frankl none reneid : 1 ik 5 1 i 3 ullerton none niy none { A S ..o, none none vy iz }) none el *Grufton 500 ndd Istanid Fao Gresham, none noLe suloons, Easting Eluyes ( By H. il oo nter ingford } h saloons, we none uone about | and fifty of the population. and sixty-tw about one for hundred and seventy u 5 hundred 1 example W populatio one th of the every u Omaha fi ishes sted tYect of high lic the 1y 3 th more of of the 150, rtimes nons none 1o dealer vone none ars ago, and thati and a city 1 s browers who for tpuy he past year the ot A from 277 to 248 or 89 HER) licensed liquor lig eceding year, is that for CVITTZYZ, swer suit you? In that a will add that the int istrict of Nebraska incl South Dakota,and th present the he number of stanps ord 1 the stalled, 0co0e wo rnal 00 ports of stun ps sold r threo L none 1,860, and that inc uoue 2 in the state, (a vy Theonlyre can ba iuble 1 1 to the saloons those wo he npine als, and from all but | a village « in our pc ave CAMPAIGN — OF MENDACIIY SLANDER The prohibition cam will 1 me me tory vmpaign advocates 4 AND TPt e eyttt 1in Ne wrable in politic: of mendacity and » very outset the pro- nd prohibition resorted to the most >kless and | and | have ameless misrepresentation of facts slander of thelr opponents, hile procliming lh-‘mw'u~ devout \ristians they are rev everybody hat dares to differ with them and im. posing upon credulow followers the most brazen fulsehoods Every issue of e e g ) | ¢ « alone for 1889 was | had fromeity | < Ny “ ke telik the prohibit with libe pled impo thetsol has been teem nssailta wlo n pros: faby on 1 by unp have shown Vo falsifyi most audic wlopts In fal ous of the metceniry forgzing naros I'io cham nt ear 1 s been for nd francul of its 1 and g ol roconds, In tempts to contra by the elitor lict it the crimin wwand lowa ism bolstor the ju Ne than in N lo on the ¥ comparison criminals cater bris K. i s ec adiet fol v as and Nebraska b Both w startad 1are v vy thaally Nebraska's reforn school hos vhile in Kansas we laveonly 174 18 hud asmany nsNebraska in pre her population therewwould be 502 a0l rasks asan extmple, we lac f having our Wi nakos the of Kansns and botween nilo Kun vo reforn school t the sume the s 245 in- 1f ys aby \ plan, mat K m esse s are these oissing boyst On_ the farm, in the store and shop and in theschool, growing up to manheod without personal knowledge of whata saloon is.” Now whature the | The loard of trusteos of the charitable | institutions ot for 1888 the total of tys remining in the school on June 50, 1888, 08 tvo hundred and nineteen, and the board calls attentionto the fact thatowing to the want of room all in- corrigible buys are excluled. The prosent condition of the reform school is bridly reportedin the following letter: Nowrn Toreca, Kan, July 16, 180, — Dear Sir: Welave 190 boysin the reform school hre is 4 sepieato seliool for girs, and thore + probubly about thirty-six or thirty-cight girls in it, Our last legislaturegave us & small ap- proprintion for mauntenance and these who hitd becn cornmitted for incorvigibility were discharged, Respectfully yours, Du. J. F. Buok, Superintendent. The following lotler exhibits the con dition of the Nebraska reforn sehool: Keansey, Neb., July 10, 180).—Dear Sir Nunber of boys rewcivel duling past tive yours . . e 4 Nuuberof glrls wre st state Kansus gives number Kansas Nunberof edand pardmod, Nunberof iged and pardoned Total.... . 3 Nunberof boys in Nuuberof g Total Righest nunber In thne g We have meconnod ations for fivemom boys, vy respeetfully, JonN U, MALLiL1EU, Superin tend ent Marktheingeniouws imposture of the Wiile the girls in the Kausas reformatory are entirely omitted from the count, the eighty girls inthe Ne- braskareform school are representel as boys. Kar has discharged all herin- comigible boys, who constitute a very grout por 20 of the class usually ad- mitted into reform schools, and allows them to run at lurge. Neb takes in all the incor both mule and fomule, while Kansasonly admnits those convicted of crime. And yet Kansas has one hundred and ninety boys in her reform scthool as aguinstone hundred and seventy in N braska, The large citics usually furmish most of thewayward and eriminal classes of juveniles. The lirgest city in Kansas has notas much population as Lincoln, and buta little more than one-thirl of the population of Omaha, Nebraska takes care of and educatesall her bad boys and girls, while Kumsas lewves them to roam about and drift into the cesspools of vice until they have commiited somo felony that would place them behind prisonbars if they were of age. Where are those Kansas boys? Not onthe farm or in the workshop, but around thedives and jointsof Atchison, Lewvenworth and Anotherstei mplo of shu less mendacity is produced in the sune of the Vaie, unler the h. of “*Canards About Des Moines,” “Figu Showing That Prolibition llas Not In- ereaseld County Expenses.”’ Stories are bemg industriously through theliquor: press about the crease of court expenses in PPolk cointy this st owing to prohibition. I have inter auditor andam uble to lay Viewed the coun before the readers of the Toie some fizures which give the lio to this litest canurd of the ti-probibitionists. The followi figures of expases covering the first five months of the s 1559 and 150: Juil Expen MURATY .. 0o bruiry . Murch,, .. ... April.. May Tondsice s \prownt girls inuttendance sl prosent “ittendance al any Dot forty - Topa ng ex ne- numbe circulated 2t in §2,45 Grand jury expenses. ... $ 1,500 60 Court expenses inc ing sh 16,150 Total §20, ot from at i Now what vary much and that fhere has bem no inex penses, re the facts? The o Hon, Frank D. Jackson, s lces the f xhibit as regards the costs of erim- report of tary of st ro- low il prosecutions in Polk county for the Total expense of ths county of « prosecution, in- neys’ [ees, forty-t thou- six hundred and fifty dollars and Compare t] ing exhibit £ uwmmm nal clud hree =nd, e fiyures with the follow- nished by the sheriff of unty for 188) and the present yeu Or: Mors, Iseut r or Smpmt Ia, ror Pork Cor 5, 1500 T Ovana Bk wn July 5 (inanswer to whicl the enclosed is a Ty, Drs of to your letter of The courl costs ar uty auditor and the telegram e cost of eri r 0 to §160,000, capita, It court costs of Polk Towa, for x50, §2,641, of whidh § tice and poiice wurtcosts, Abov fncludesalary of three judges of d Criminal costs alone about §) Lition of county ahout 80,00 commitments for “June, 1500, 2 burglury 3, fulse preteuses 4, person 1, vidation of lic y 6, assiult and | Y 6, malicious hief 1, getting on and off irain in motion ), resisting oficer 1, 4 d weapous 3, gambling 2, secduction 1, intoxica Abouthalfof those urvesled for iu. taxication pay fines and aro not conmitted. C. C. Looaus, Steriff Polk Count These facts have been within reachof the prohibition pressand doubtless known to onelsand hirved swashbucklers wlo are infesting but hercafter, us l\Llolufuru they will persistently keep up their systomatio and babitual lying and wisreprescntation 18 o of co al Si tho are col- the ported Vebraska, ()'\l/\ll/\ B T would | report | STAGNATION IN KANSAS, Budnem Rutusd and People Moving Un Lway. wployed | sy, TunBee: 1was ju 1 paper ot n D, 1 tor of it your . ) ry of y 1 have y and can o all ited Ne with fri !, va, Pa st shown & opy th sk, and (0 @ v ot Joh wes of land. Linc ho 1 y frow ' man ccn to Ka vas mike ts. In additi X 1 1503 ho nt rs and tics, o also vepr on horo i Wt 1z them the tows in our 1t the s in Salina 1871 to 580 In 180 I was several farrs ar encimbored. Durin e ¥ glorions prohibition v have gradually gone number of ex rtifcial boom, until mortgage most aliof U my finehome, Now probibitionlsts will asik, whiat had prohibition to (o withthatl Why, just this: W1 » ion loes not pro- hibit the importation e of whisky and b for wehave had tiveoridnal packige houses and some thiety iy cor forty stationar, and portable joints in 5.1, it (0es prolivi immigration of people who wouid buy som of qur property ul “ome pri o1 ourembarrassed peoyple ¢ no,no monicd men, trmes, ¥ any one cle now ¢ to baikrupt stock of gool ¥y on us and sold out piy orignal paciage house i joint But instead of inmigtin ca mort loan and t t mn angious to loan his protocted n 10 per cont on noworse sc woild gladly loin the sime woney inthe eastat4to b per ce Even Johnstown, which was nearly wasiod out of existence, is re-building upin 4 4.1 5per ot money. Six weeksagol visitd my uative home Jolnstown, Pa..and whilethen 1 met o Saturday on Main_stroet ral farmers whom [lnew from b lool up. One asked mehow times were inlanses. T ans wered wehadhad rather bard timcs for several years, but that last yeir our crps were ex- cellent, and this ye our at couldn’t beexcdled, Com andother growing enps, as wellas fruit promised a gool yield. The man replied: *Ttellyon New Brasky is the plice o0 o thero is whore ' poingif T 1 gel wyprice for my farn here, Spanerlor went, out to Now Bravky in K ary and Jerry Mishler andone of the Kiper boys went out last fall, and th write th they are unommonly well plesed with the camtry, Iwouldn't move to Kanss or no other pronibition state nohow” ‘The three me avve pferred tolavesettiod sonewhere near West Pornt. Now leaving my frieds ou Main stvet Teontinied my K Aniv ing at the comer if 1 aud Clinton streets | saw a landsn tory pressed br marie trin 1 business block’ in course of I'hearchitect and contr of Salina, twenty his Willi vory ful ness ichi in comfc owning porty, un our s fihstand vears and o coossary to inclu oo was rchants, or vest. Somo be dumped in 10 tixes like the theYankea who_ was v ot 71 to irity than ho Jake N rasidence of v ood, vith Newt 1 met | brickmasons, ll<‘||')|,|ll, . A Anlerson, $3ectus Ross and son and Louls Scesd corpenters md D, W, Price and _J. Mallot [plasterers, and several other laborers, all of whom llave gone to Johnstown fromn Saliia this spring for want of employment in ordr to envn & living, A number of thosenanyd are men of families, Some have takenthen along others had towait uitil they earned emwoghmoney tosend for them. Inotice that & gwat many cities in tho country arenot satisied with tho census just taken, but 10 one hears mich complaint from cities 'in Kansag, Ul tOWIS wint no requnt for each recouy wiltMwow Toss fustead of an inerense in populathn=T kuow whereof 1 speak so faras my ovn town is concernedand wo have one of the bst and busiest towns in Kunsas, Tam engag:d ina business where 1 find out who isleaviiz and who comes, In buying andselling al kinds of new and old iiture and every hind of honsehold goods, Lam about thelast man people tradewith when they are aboutt leave,and Ican say truthfully, that in the twenty years I have lived here! there have rotbeei S0 many leay- ing and wanting to leave as thore Las beeu all thisspring and sunmer. 1t is true that the sme few comning in, but who are ere fromt Thoy ire principally from ewuntios in thewestorn part of the state coming her broke and loking for jobs. NowI wish 10 suy tothe people braskca in all sineerity thut it the bottom of i stutenents, but th and only too true. spolzen for the Licarly love o ner foremost ¢ six_ (uildren, rand John L of Ne. Jains me fraxm it tobave to muke the s an cld_facts Thave alwiys fought and good name of Kansas, astate Wl have always been amon sfenders where an ouportur offercd itself, but a st of hyeritical po eal, pulpit-pounding probibitin eranks hive the stute by thethroat and arve fast squeezing the 1ifo outof © ey have ad their way for ten years. Now is our tin to speak and . We nust strike fron the shoulder, istand pray the good, inteigent, Ierty- rople of Nebraskawilliot permit a 1ot of political probibition preaclirs to cursed luw on their fair statethat will surely < 1{wha Thavesniddoes notsuit the proibitimists I will, with jour permissioi, give them aother “Bug Tne.”” ~ Winuad R. Gis. cinl ety Cold Kacts Saviva, Kan., July 19.-To the Editor of Tus Bee: Your abledelenscof high leense should do muchto prevent yur state from having the incubus of prohilition fastened upon ler. The arguments arc unanswerable, prohibl s will aot listen to argu- re mot listened to arguments t the stern logicof facts 1s now the face. With a city hero rowing, we are lsing pop- Mern avo seliinz of ice tlicireffeds and lewing this local ity and thestato daily. If asked why they afe leaving, theie unlform reply s that they nat stand prohibition, Thy say seo no imucdiato Lopes that th the state will or can tirow e of intlerice ail that busivess s so dull and luborers soscaree that thoy see no pros pect for business or suceess i unything that thoy might under Thetaxes 1 citic off fanatici s andiows 11 this ity they reac about 6 per cent. D ths of ustrious and enterjrising Germuan ilition would leave this ciy ifthey could u the dollar for their pr sale is unlknovn at this 1ding goingup in this ¢ wving us fastas they can © that ramain have nothiig todo. Tue 3no prospect for businesin this secti of thestat, ‘The wheatcrop this yearis ono of the bestover hawested i this jurcof the state, The trouble is that probibitio ha fastened upon the state by politic influcice, and ono of the most poliiical rs that over 1is doing al ean do to pr t the people from having vote upon the question of resubmissior Any state is to be pitied 1 tion sted upon it through pa influen people the situn shibition It should be remembe who leave Kansas tadvocato probibition in Nebr aare not the hovored men of thi; state nor the utatives, They those who muk @ business of agitating what they believe to be reforn Muny of them belong to that class who haye succeeded in haviug co It by the people of cities in this which the pople am in may in yot debted and are yet taxc Support his classdo no labor, produ nothing and 2 less how bu men, farmers and liborers gotalons, so that schools and projects of moral reform are contribated to. These are cold truths and facts, Kansas today should show an increase of population for the last ten years of 150 per cent, while shio only shows, by the recent census, an- in crease of (6 percent, Tho state of Ncbraska $hows 166 per tent, en excess over Kausas of aroincreasing the neat littls tate re s not & b cchunics are | o carry at the d hat those s b St 100 per cont. Nebriska has had liberal Jaws, | Kansis s’ been rided by iutolsrance sud AN R A R — L DL T X A —————————wearees N SN | tanatictsm gool G It they | leavs ma Butl 1 nesy QULSTTONS AN SWERED, of Marysvitle, Kansis, aly on Erohibition. The Marstint e exy Duar le) fn 18801 in 18809 prolibition depreciated real 033 drunkonuoss than b sontiment fn your town for oragalnst Is there any noticeable difference place and the border of Nebraska in v drukenuess, Yours tuly, o evevieie, Kon, July 16— Brie Morell, Swiabury, Neb, Dear Yours of the 1th roctived.” 1 will wuswar thoquestions us best can Ourr population ar: for drun ke dugt than fornny ot Your que: ard to drinkenness at the prosout day ¢ the time before pro hibition I eanrot I have been liere only about seven years, But m what I nlearn, reliable men who have been loro sefore probiibition became o law, clim that annot sce any differen e, s to your question whether prohibition reciaied the value of real estate, Ithink it has to a grat extent Our busin men claim that they do less than onefourth ofthe business since probivition that they did before prolibition becamo a L. In regrard to thesen tinient In Marysvilloon the prohibi AW, the sentimentis stiong against prohibition, Ithink there than in the bord frive you iy r e th who it by the pi rethor “and & it by tho keg i, which would use with your aid to Monerr Ms s 9,000, Weo make more e and disorduly won 't offense, hey ¢ is more 4 15 of Nc asons for t whisky hiere 11 nothir t; or the I wi Intho inkenness and is soic & but vile Jeoplo witl club to- i to Nebraska and The consequence is thoy tbet > if webad d police rogulation. e town has not improved asm sinca hibition s itdid be e, which is very easily explaiied. Wederive no teyenie from liconses, und our taxes ¢ higher now thun th were befire Our county has 1 thev muc prohibition, to payto pr hilition lu torsof th othier state casoes doesn’t prohibit the | gz tived of prosecutin and having to keep themn in the thiee tosix montls and pag t cost of actic The worst « comes fromn Wo have o , for selling whisky onths, and likely to | hs more. Who pays all this expensel Noonebut the taxpayoer. Twill give you the number of bus houses in Marysville and tlso the sonti of thrw irths of the business in our town i rerard to pr Thece was u petition in eireula tine ago for resubmitiing the guestion tothe of thestate of K o filowit alistof members of the Marysville resub onclub, I will give you numesof busi- ness men o Uhe number of busines houses in Murysville is seventy-five John Tracy & Co., Con Weltm, F.B & Co., Alven Aranb & Gottlob Zie L. W. Libby, . J. Fdinkup, H, Breviton & Co., J. . Smith, H. B Weic meyer, Bemil Drham, Ang. Hohn, Charles v, kred Whits & Co., trell, Thomas MeCoy, 1 Mr. Barow, Willlam ell & Co., M. Wlisshrman, Willion Hor- J. W, Anderson, J. S, Migill, A. M. K. Julian, William Beclor, £, W. L Miler, H. G, Darguts, M . Joseph Grim, J. Brougiton, o Degan, . Wolf, J camon 13ros. J &, Cottx Daugherty, Fisher, 1o bert W Von Wald, O. I Paltson, John Thru, part Meall, Willison (0 Ihope | tave uns isfactorily. At least my questions are trienad you dorsed by most all our busiuc Respectiully you Juil_from oir Bowrd and itis, the boot the” southern in il from i Kecp hin six m. iness ionts men ibition ) some | tose, A, Co Jor Fary e Rebber, € \reh feoroe Thomson, A , Sher ¢ questions sat. answers to your ill find them en en, P Acn, Depity Marsil, S5 e A IKansas Drugglss To the Editor of Tug Brr.— Does probibi tion pohibitt” isa question frequent now-a-lays and upon its correct answer de. pends the actionof the people of next November. As the posi wswer that qu 3 and anti-prok aists s positively answerin the negative, I thought perhaps the experience and testimony of one who had a large personal knowledgeof the question at ssue mightbe useful; and vight bera lo me say thet prior to my tesidence in Kausas 1 was an ardemt prohibitionist —am still a tem. perance man; 0 sympathy for the sa loon keeperand none > drinkers as o class, but ready to aid anyone o bieak from the thralldomn “of his appetite whenever ho will signify his desire t Now, does prohibition prohibit? T say no First, becanse the law is not cufore it the veriest nonsen for anyoneto afiirmitl itis enforced as well a8’ the 1 theft, murder, elo. Any i fully ‘blind knows for bitnse true. Tu the case of theft the lo personal incination to dis the thi hu‘ theft, ked braslza ulsts most ive o o so. is aminst s not wil it is not that ng party er and pr ng knowledye der, for the same istrue o man tied indc to protect i perjuty cau been training the stato r is sonal i e w mien in- pe for Juirs that cnsed drugg he desires to purchise the s medieinal purpose, and L will state that Inever knew but one man to refuse make the afidavit, Another reason rjury st w Is that nobody's.” Swhat I8 every body s business is tion laws are not reason that in sc law Nebraska made, and who will Bu i will mot—it mizht i busi The s e with mechanices all ot must depend on the public for sup decent, self-respecting man | fean citizen fecls that such wor t work, S0 long as it docs not | Leem i -—-that he has eno i 0 to uttend to his own busine andafter all not many people really think itis sucha tervible evil for & man to buya driuk of | whisky orbeer, 8o the evil re wly for and those o till some terriblo cal the people are arousced 1 to enforee the I Onedruggistin conntey town in load of buer liquons in propartion. izeds he nad o d of less thin enforeed for 1o nsts not plain nitke s Wh a little town drugegist in the sawo year whisky; he lad no per een proscouted. Al the « cast of this the writer saw ©lu 1 fivo barrels of 1 has nover unty seat just t week two wagon loals of beer talen train, on the very d termof court was operied. Tho population of thetown was about eight hundred, and drug stores were somehow finding support; ueither of them had @ permit @or were any of thew evar prosecuted. Moes uob that Wil etimo from the 3y that tho usual ¥ 1o Iy aftor all} and | In No K sk have you, M vy v i Kansas dy justas hard, and A £00n 18 if s Prohil and puts it into the drug store es aschwol for thaesame the wor loonist will sell « tho average K found that the that black is whi withoutit. Str can be aired b how sickly so men arein Kan lan the v boor not hve freo whisky that A pint Storo 1y a N whi rjury 1 “over, | the whisk \s average drin > if he car wge that 5o HLOX ieani ts, Iy appar as and lov oll i« can ishuan could bis 1 prolit in toll sid min wife Just hon d trafie, and I will of whisky n vd's grive < saloon from the salon ud establish ¥ e ca ist, and iker will ot get o drink many disc undit’is stran ntly wble-bodi Which will you take next November? High lic theswarm of boc IKausus e jo) Enfor & Bek vpro presched by Rev pastor of the 1 thiscity, in whic torms the strict « of the Slocumb 1 Quced from the Congrregat dicnee list night, A I Sherrill “he Slocumb 1 forcngand Obey The text wa us not be we Itis the duty active interest i livoas a temperance tavely enli The Sloc this cn forcement closed This is t progress in the At (a' 1 e, half out @ li salons will be lay is asacr allto obey © the law must getrid of a bad | foree it The mended thatthey have proven theins Ihe th are only th toned 'y tuliate ther affuirs, when th well organized The preache at Trischhe especially dwelt the sal ingthewhole of ood would com midst, which we tion. Il ciw their fulin the educat a temperate life mber that atfected each friends, and ull § growth, - W ora 1 1 It must be con great, joiut disc tion were faith f Messrs, Sl an have been shown wrd Liis opponents e We 3 e really talk that would givet Mizh X have beon for the catse of Main Lwelve low s | for ever, Lot i wus free agent, work, form of theage, every church sho 0 suid th 1,021 inbabit 10 licenso « s an Ay - s the tlocun luices the A. F. Sh Congre N ho nforcement ¢ aw. The mal churh pon dress upon aw and . the ing 1. frony the Galatians, vy inwell doing. of n every « 1 that 18 1ot which s b law s being er 100 saloons he most his re e st of April ining will ¢ aud the ucel tot b disreccard for his u aw, i this locnkee pr e al out of t und ont. Th lves for ati advocated i . and d joints which SAs DRUGG st Liaw, lowing se illwhen hewas hurch of in strng f the report is repro colummps of Tue Bk of Juu had a Wisd good au Rev oot of of En 60: “Let reh oo, . fossil the gre totakean It should In the st re 1 be ac reed and by ve practicall swort hy step of Oue out of exist not more ontinue to > nuuber The niy ded and ceitizen hat - who e peoplt should this condition of abid saloon wen have been so nt o to 1 oon on & 4 tho imj n at12 oclock each Sunday. I out of t v attracting t the you n of thoir Christian the rson ¢ hould Large And 1ed that th onon the lly re 4 Dickie un a spirit of er worthy Wit r. Rosowa i ho has b and jeors, ster have them, a nvictions w f the fact \en respect - oodm e Rum s 8 run ants. wamed, VA0 ave temnyerance ported fer to the crime wdny last, and ance of closing night and dur {e thought tha he evils inour 80 much atten- ing men of this :d to asense of re becomi ¥irer Howamed pareits t be children toward s all should re movement tly or thrugh in’ furtiering its ion o \e repoits of the probibition ques I Tun B 1 their followers aimess and gen- of e emulation. 158 was mani ving s noted be: & evidenco of the wter is sincere on »oen even more who insulted Me clear) rcisons for dfew men even ould srs. Rose demon Lave been estion be g fora Jargeraudiencs ful att scense in Baltimore. has ut that the cller each, one | Mi [ THE PROPOSED AMENDMINTS Full Text Blate 0 Ameud the 1 to NORIALS AND JONT RESOLUTIONN Acts S ubmiltting latk " Buprene Jud; fug rohititton, Ticense viding e Five NiCEcis. Lte, "y | toof the 1l the titutiony A £l wtate tuent (@ hivie th il of il proe 1wl o= Wit the ore lorot Vollng 48 lgislituroof tho stue on 5 renral doction to ucwoding the tir 1y of Nove A. D, 1500, thoere sl yuited o tho elécors of tils state fop valor n an adient o the titution of stito in words s fols N The ma e, e and keepin for salo of jntosicating lignon nsn va' eragw are f hibitel in this stal and tho shull - provide b for of this pros And y it said eloction mt s electorsof this stato for tieir approval or rjection am amendinent 1o theconstitution of tho state im worls s follws: *Tho nunu ficture, sl andkeoping for sile of intoxicating liguor u tupe shall be liconsed and regulated b on the ball the proposed shull bo write or proposed rolii bitin 2 (ha sile of e or Yirainsg i tl by the Ner ) S Tt ot the this vi be sop uw Section 2. At such of each eledtor voting amendinent o the co ten ection, for itution, ted the wonls: ut t won tion, 1re, sale, und keepng for edamendiment tothe e o i ficta 1 fact NG il pr g for sule o 1ox 1l e o toxicating liquors as & shudllalso be written orprinted on th 1t 1o the constitution, the wonlss ir and keop xi £ the ¥ Lo proposel atie thiconstit that td saloof int a boviris this stal (:..Jb law,” or 1 I to (ho cons 15 INABUMCLIrSy ale of intoxicatin rsis o Loverge shull bo liconsod g gilated by lay 8 If either of the said proposed Lcmen ts shall be approved by a mnjorit | coustitute section twenty-soven' (27), of one (1) constitution of the stitey hill bavi mined with the govers ) d wdags excepled, the Latire being ion, the rovemor have ing fuiled toretum this bill to the logislutirg i's session, and having failed o til i ith s objcct i five(d djournment of the legislatur by hecomen lay s tay hand this 13th day of February Secretary of State R EIVE SUEME U DOE Toimend seetions two®, four () and five of article tionof the st of ‘Nebras Judicial Dopirts ety and providing for five ) Judges of the Sipreve court, and o repeal sl arlgiz n Beit rewolvod and enacted by the legislature of thestate of Nebraska: Section 1. Thatscetion two () of article { thie constitution of thestate of Nee be dedt s0 as to redd as follows supreme court shall consist o amajority of whom shall be 18 quortim or 1o proounis & dedis Itshall have origiual jurisdictiom in cases relating to reveue, Ll\ur.‘md]l WHICH the state shall be @ Jarty, i qno warranto, habeas corpus, and such aj pollate jurisdiction as may be provided by Law See. “That section four fi‘) of ariicle six (1), ofthe constitution of the stata Nebraska, be amended s0 i to read a8 six (6) braska, five (5 2, T fudyes, ry to for o 2, of follows Sec. 4. The judges of the supreme Ushall be elected by the dectars of the at larre and their termsof obice, ex- inaftor provided, shall ve for ® (5) years.” it Soction st amended state five (5) ion of th s048 to read of wneral el 1501, and aft at tothe cor wd three (3) Judges of wiom shall £ one (1) yo thr () term of weach general decti S| clected vt for thoter that the jud of 1501 10 re 10 rew coustd v infavor of pricted their office for © trm for which they y eected under the preseut That each person voti tment ] have written r ke proposed an relating Lo the o the con. iber of sup oved March 30, 1859, Ap Uh s stato, legisluture of the state ition of the state 0 w5 W read ws fob vy of thir per a court supreme courd five hume 1m, and the Liecive & £.000) pey 1l be paye 10 1o com of judzes od lury of cachsl r infa wh per <hall ballot the f 10 pr Ot [ of n and Sum Sl on Mossrs, Joln L s side of high b Tie Onama Leen pretty of Nobuska 10 argunent pa e will noy ¢ zentles u the u wen Mossrs, 1 upon 1y these tators was not only t 1ty made fa e statoncnts re M derson At make { e s heay state neut rathed S und Liack The € old Shoulder, Plainview lerald, I that Francis Murphy has don temperance th other man i | States, yot some of the Nebrask o eranks give lim the cold shouldq use hie refuses W dauce W Lels mauia, It iy