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& THE OMAHA BRR--SUPPLIRMENT. et e ——— " ——————————— - ——— — ————_—— s ——— S — e — e o e ——r e . War 1Y R SL |8 0 N N T " o - ‘ . i YIGH LICENSE TN NEBRASKA. § | L toer STAGNATION 1% KANSAS. | H Bustucss Rutied and Unomployed | It they « 2 hay yle Moving Lway | ‘n‘"‘ o Huvi e Butl g Was Derived In 1880 of i feventy light Tow s § ' o N, D, Tousy Stte Have No 1 , ; \ Baloous \ i v the 3 3 was QULNITONS ANSWERED, Marahal of Marvysvitle, Kansis, sl Iyon i tion, " on the malkes comparison botween the oriminals of Kansus and oreform sch g A for 1about tho same T Tands, | conduct in 18507 itally th I i Bt i yeoless deankennoss than ol ‘hes 245 i 8 i e prohibition | wve only 174, 1f i b Hus - probibition depreciated veal wka in propor- | ¢ B . ylwns | 0. 1s sontiment n your town for king Nebraska as an | fu g now countr * the lawi 5 lin bu i valios| M5 boys of having our | ' rn 1850 1 w 7.1 e any noticeable differcence owning o o\ ) soverl Tatms . ty, un. | Blice and the border of Nebraska in regatd to these missing boyst On the | enevmbered . D e (our | drunkenness, Yours tr 1, in the store and shop and iu the sehool, | ylorions proh , Shings e Mot | wing up to machood without personal | juve gradually ¢ | notwithstand Manysvruie, Kan., July 16.—vie Morell, | knowledge of what a saloon is," ing anumber of e rop vears and Swubur Neb.~Dear Sir: Yours of the [2th Now what ure the fuets? The bonrd of | big artificial b UL was socessary to | Teoived 1 willanswer Lo questions us best foh 1o T ? trustees of the stato churitablo [ MOvtElce mostu LAy Out population ta. 8,000, Wa moke more s v 8t E e slons | Institutions of Kansas for 1888 thad pro 1o do woatl Gt arrosts for drunkenness und disord ! increaso this | R wt had proh it Why, | Srests | 1 f ore tian to fifteen P ¢ e © of fuiluresin | £1Ve the total mumber of boys | just this: W i i doatsnotiyro | S El L e 0 e to assert that the totalnuy ¢ comparative number of failuresi SN IRINEE ey to | hibit the import ale of whisky and ourquestion in regard to drunkenness qor dealers ), | Towa, Kansis and Nebraska quoted fn | femuining in- the school ‘on Juno | o for wo have orivinal packago [ thebresnt day against the time before pro- s distillers ¢ | u 80, 1888, us two hundred and nincteen, | houses and somethicty orfurty stationary | Bibition I cantiot answer. I have been he 5 1ot eacee i \‘ DI b clUBE [V Do oL the tige and the board calls attention to the fact | and portable joiuts in" S, i ‘i"i prohibit ““‘H‘,""“"‘ It ";“",‘" “l,'l ”mfi 4 from lig dropped out of the Of the morning |, ywing I " ¢ immigration of people wio wo buy some | ean lear liable me 0 have T Nt b it rhin correctly n the | 1t owing tothe want of room all iu- | GfghETN OF 1S jrice of other, giving | Befove prohibition became alaw 1889 wir 4 ihis amount &%, next edition & corrigible boys are excluded. our emburrussed people dianciil raict, But | they cunnotsce any difforence, rohibitl was ol towus and cities a8 | (0 LI The prosent condition of the Kansas | 10, no monic n, 5, hory rv'mV:_ G e NG u\‘l;‘ywl, lt ther x"i e bR LS s nsedac by |+ asgtags, £2,00,200 00 | reform school {s briefly reported in the | Jilii St Stack of moocie iy b ihped dn | B to n preat extont. Our business men fmeorporated twss, ber of failires "l Towa i " Howing letter: on us and sold out ~pay in: notuxes like tho [ ¢lim that they do less than one-fourth of the No. oftl- Amount [ I8N , 2,010,762 00 owrn Toreka, Kan,, July 16, 1800, —Dear | original pacicage house o: joint business since probivition that they did before i 18 censed rollzel imber of failures in Nebras Sir: Weliave 19 boys in the reform school. Butinstead of immisration eame the Yankes | prohibition becamo a law, Nane oftown lauor fom | in 1580274 1 There i3 o separate school for givls, and thers | Morteage, loan and trist. min who wi In regardto the sentinient In Marysville on deaters. cns's ure probably about thirty-s1x or thirty-cight | tuxious to loan his y ed money at 75 to | the prohibition law, the sentimentis stiong L ol A L t Nebraskafor the fi < mouths of the | girls in it. 10 per cont on no worse security than ho [ against prohibition! 2 Qur lust legislature gave us & small ap- | Woult gladly loan tho s ney fu the [ Ithink there s more drunkenness b - - propriation for maintenance and those who | eastat4 to5 per e Even Jolinstown, | thun in the borders ¢ 1 1will Lt BEs on July 8 ~the duy afterthe | had becn committed for incorvigibility were | Which was nearly wasiiol out of existenco, Y roasons n Tn the ue—as follow discharged, Respectfully yours, s re-building upon 4 o105 per cent movey. | . Tits SsaR Dy, J. ¥, Buck, Superiutendent, Six weeks ago I visitol ny native home, zeTs, Wi nothing ! T ; 1 s failuves in K sis v ssthan fn | The following lettor "exhibits the con- | fohinstown, B othig 1 mat o L1ty el e peoplo will ] Asliord LSkl oninet 3 s i proportion to popylution, gue | dition of tho Nebraska reform school: | whom I lnew fre od up. One asked the ke, The consequence is they get shiand ..., none WG e Tecortor wiy MKa 18 i Keauney, Neb., July 10, 1800,—Dear Sir me how times we nsas, I answered | diunlk, which would not be the caso if we had ashinad I G . t superior During the past six | Number of boys received during past we had ha i or A none henu failires fn Nebraska | five years A Lt Bl 0 lealers for Beatrica debate was accidentally The number of failu n Kansas and it yewr was published editorially several | hieh lieense with zood police rogu n ; LT years, but that last y ps were ex- | Ourtown has notimproved as much since \ it bl L S L w seoee 10T Gollent, and this ye cat couldn't | prohibition as it did before, which is ve b P e e S AT ,‘"H A Total Tk | be excelled. Corn wing erops, iined, Wederive no revenue from niinber of fullurs was with_linbilitles | § e ot boys alkiiictkod dnd pardonod; 55 | o8 weil s frull pec {yield, 1 licen'ses, and our taxes are muc hier now o _ enormon e s e | Number of girls discharged and pardoned.. 42 | man vepiiod: 1 teil y srasky is the | than they were before prohibiti Our “I"': IR RSBt e x’w‘. st Total place to wo to—thereis where ' going if T | county has move costs to pay to prosceute SRR - th S A e Sk 1 R LU s | o ot my price for my farn her ake | the violators of prohibition law than all Half of 1530, the liabilities decresed, On the [ Nunberof Doy in attendinee at proséng i | an ot my 3ris) hor A o > & AR RS R aoalE &t Tntionas 6 | NULIBREGE @1la (1 L{baRI R R0 at present.. 80 | Spangler went out to New Brisky in n other state cases combine Prohubi e Y e b L L ary and Jerry Mishler und one of the Kiper | docsn't prohibit in the least, and peopie o b ‘” : -“ o, and ‘ A S WE Total 3 h boys went out last fall, and thoy ito that | getting tived of prosecuting the bootleggers agregate of liabilities g i uuniber T aticndinee” at in they ave uncommouly well plosed with the | und baving to keep them in the juil from Beikie . I'he printedannul report of W, e R country. T wouldn't move to iCansas or no { three 1o six months and pay their board and BT Seavey, chicf of polico, to the Omaha | Avemomm boys Vory mensettatiy ot & othor pronibition state wohow. Tho threo | est of action. Tho worst- of it is, tho boot JonN I MALLLLE, Supeiiitende men above referred to havesettlod somewhere generally comes fi s near West Por v leaving my friends | part of Nebra i ! : 0 on Main street I conti my k. Avriv- | Wymore, Neb., for sc whis! Broth i orts the total number of avrests | Powe. While the girls in the Kansas |ing at the corner Locust aud € had hin for six months, and P. 0k [ duving last year s 8110, Of | reformatory are entirely omitted from | streets I suw a hands story pressed | kecp him six months more. boardof fire and police comnissioners Lt y jail fro for the year onding Docerabor 81, 1549, | Mavk the ingenious imposture of “ < Selbrmiaitnen brick, Georgia 5 business | whis expense? No one but the taxpayer, Brokon 1oy . that number 1,006 were arrested | Uhe count, the eighty girlsin the Ne- | ploc’ in'¢ urso of | h Twill give TbGE oL by oH suspicious cliaradlars ana | Praskareform school are ropresented as | and contractor is Gaorg y rmerly | houses in Marysvil { ulso the sor boys. Kansas hus discharged all her in- | of Salina, Kan., whi esidence of | of threc-fourths the busir 5 bl L ay " twenty years, has left o >rgood, vrith | in our town wd to prc corrigible boys, \Hrm constitute a v his wifo and six (hi Next I met | Thece was u potition in eireutation s w | they were gullty of no oth er offense than | §reat porcentage of the class usually ad jusstion to th guilty it 5 3 rad Henry Lill, G, A. Aulers ctus RRoss and of the state of Kunsas. The joilowing 51 b e form s s, and allows ; 10 jollowing " | that of being” unknown to the police, [ Mitted into re chools, and all W5 | sonaud Louls Seesq o rs and D. W, | isa list of members of the Marysville rosi That would reduce the aetual mumber of | Y¢m 10 run at large. Nebraska | Bricoand . Mallot| phiter severul | mission club. Iwill give you names of bu akes n all the ineorvigibles, |other Taborcrs, all ol whom ne to | ness men only. i of olim| n i ) 7 S ‘hile | Johnstown frof Sailia this spring for want is seventy-five Gortlaud L S a0 1 reduction was even attempted or hinted both mule and female, _ while |0 e ployinent in orfer o onty. & livieg. A John Tracy ‘& Co., Con Welton, F. Broiten e i %0 | at inthe Beatice dobute. As s matter | Kansasonly admits those convicted of | number of those naned are men of fanilics, | & Con Alvos Armnb & Co. Crtlor ot 100 | o crime. And yot Kansas has one hundred | Somehave takon thon alone.athershadtowait | L. W. Libby, 1. 3. Folvikanp, i1 G0l 0 ; e, 5 Rinte as | ntil they earued ewough money w seud for | Breviton & Co., J. 12, & H. B, We 14 | is much lower than that in other eties and ninety boys in her reform school as | iy, neyer, Bemil Diaham, Ang. Hoim, Charles 700 B . rains > hundred and soventy in Ne- I notice that & gieat many cities in tu tzer, Jucob ( red W mo | of equal population. nver had over | 284inst one 3 £ 8 v citie N the litzer, Jucol I'red White & 100 qua i ind over | 0 The large citios usually furnish | ouniry are not satisied vith thoc s Just T. Rose, A. Cottrell, Thomas MeCoy, 1. N ken, 0 one hears much compl oln 'V, Jarlow, Villiar most of the wayward and eriminiu classes | ! Kt DUE 10WRE Wm0 Faconns Sl e et of juveniles, Tho largest city in Kansas | for each recoulfe wilt®mow Toss €ustead of an a V. Anderson, J. S, Migil M has not as much population Lincoln, |inerease in population =T know whercof | - Julian, Willlam Becker, B, W. i P £ + | speak so far as my ovn town is concerned and . L. Miller Dargatz, ' M. J and buta little more than one-third of | we have one of the b st and busiest towns in | D A J.A. Broughton, C. the population of Omaha. Nebraska | K . Tamengg dina business where [ John Degran, 1, Wolf, J. Lo: in, CAe St ucutos all her bad | findout who is leaviiwand who comes, In efferle, Scamon Bros., M. Sheficld, “‘_ s and_educatesall hor bad ||y ving-qnalsolling ail Tinds of. pore. nd old | Samik A. M. Judson, A' Flurer, Erust boys and girls, while Kansas leaves | furniture and every kind of ouschold goods, | Li V. R. Cottre aptain John Browr them to roam about and drift into | I amabout tolast i people trado witl 5 shert Farman, Cl ke = il they have | When they aroabout to leave, and I can say sher, Robert White, Georee Rebuer, Georaze khecasspoolafiot tyice suntilitheys havell fiainnill) heits i intaiyyoataiLinace | Vs Wia . oo coeat Thomson, A committed somo felony that would place | lived here! thero have not been o many leav- | Toltson, John Tinum, Willisn Barks, Sher them hehind prison barsif thoy wero of ind wanting toleato s thero Lias boo yart Mdull, Willison Chas, R et % bis spring and summer. It is true that 1pe 1lave answered your questions sat age. Where are "“"‘“ Kunsas boys? 0 aresome few comingin, but who are | isfactorily. Al least my answers to your Not onthe farm or in the workshop, but ey and where from¢ Thoy are principally | questions are troe,and vou will tind them on. around the dives and joints of Atehison, | [rom countiesin thewestern part of the state | dorsed by most all our business mon, N AT O * | coming here broke and looking for jobs, Respectiully ycu LI Avn AS QAR ABIEE I AR S ow Iwish to say to the people of Deputy Marsha Another steiking example of sheun ska iu all sincerity thit it pains me from 5 mendacity i produced in the same | the bottom of my heirt to have tomalke thes 2 Ty 5 © | statements, but they are facts, cold facls Mo the Tdite s Bre.-—"Daoe: um r*"'l-'l the ofce; \\I[HI the head of | andonly too true. I'have al “1,,‘)“,‘»‘»‘;,;”...‘ A l” ’:: i "7“‘,‘“,' 4 3 < | “*Canards About Des Moines,” *“Figures | spoken for the good name of KKansas, a s (R b RIS esvon I reuon L Center, Gresham, Strng and Showing That Prohibition Mas Not In. | L dearly love and have alway now-idays and upou its cor unswer de These towns cannot pos g o e 3 hier foremost defenders where anooportunity actionof the people of Nebraslka |n o 100! e creased County offered itself, but aset of hypocritical politi: ext November, As the probibitionlsts mos! than 20 suloons, if th i vies are bemg industriously clreulated | eal, pulpit-pounding probibition cranks hive | ohr oV ember. As the prolibitionlsts most A ! pos nswer that quescion 100 | It istherefore manify w 1 through the liquor press about the great in- | the state by the throat and ar P s avQuestan tal ¢ | toduy has less than 800 lico i crease of court expenses in Polk coun thelife out of her, They have and the anti-prohiliticnists as po yeat owing to prohibition, for ten_years - ) answer in the negative, I thought perh f | viewed the count v an able tolay | act, oo, Wemust strike from the shoulder, | experience and testimony of one Hurvand Nehaska bave no license aloons, | pefore the read of the Voice some fizures | I trust and pray the good, intelligent E € st i o y saloons in Ne- | ‘Wwhich give the lie to this lutest canurd of loving peopleof Nebraska will ot pe @ fess SEry T Lt 5 Lu otTier wor s, if llhl lponeiin anti-prohibitionists. The following are the | of poli tical probibition preachrsto. s lssue might be useful; and vight bLero lev me braska had inereased in proportion to | Geures of coxpenses covering tho frst five | cursed lw on thelr (ol statetia o y | ey that prior to my vesidenco in Kausas 1 the Increase of voting population we | months of the years 1859 and 1510: ruin it as it is fastruining Kinsas, 1f what | wasan ar bitiouist—am still & tom HATIRY T TE fonly, BEeTIL i I 0, | 1 have suid does not suit the probibidonists " pathy for the sa- Rt e Pakal Ll [ will, with your permission, givo them | loon keeper and noue for tne drinkers as o hundred and filty saloons, whereas aunother “Br line WilLiay R. Gels, but ready to aid auyonce o break from through the restrictive oporation of - - domn of his appetite whene :4!' he | local option 1nd h liccnse we have | 4 . s 2 ik Cold Facts 1 IS ek burdly eight hundred licensed saloons in | MA--ee- = || e e, Tulyalbeato the Billior of 1, becase the L 13 not unforecd. 1 13 thestite. In 1880 we had one siloon for 5 HE B Your abledefense of high license ariest nonsonso ft one toamivm that 1 jury expenses should do much to prevent yoar state from Court expenses inelu having the incubus of probivition fastenod 21, murder, ¢ : i gnon e ing shexifl's foes, cte., 1734010 16,130 17 | upon her, The arguments ar unanswerable, Ly blind knows for biu have one saloon . two hun Lianes g e )12 one i ) - operly should be deducted from SN total of eriminal arwsts, because 1jin Qolum1 e oo | legitimate arrests to 7,333, but no such busin fact the number of wrrests in Omaha sust yeaJJiR0 her social > lone = | ovil popion is computed by her chief L ARl BC ST b of police at over 1,500 asauinst less than Dillor e 250 known to the police assubsisting in Doniphiin RSt " none Ot e Tlo voling population of Nebrska in Elnwoud e R ione) 1880 was 87,452; in 1888, 202,632, The $Elwood Ao present voting population of Nebraska is Tk e * wo not less than 210,000, or two and a half Evi I times larger than it was in 1850, The numberof saloons in Neasks in 1880 was over 700, and of that number Omuaba, witha popnlation of 30,645, had 150, OfH 1 reports from 223 out of incorporated towns of this state place the totalnumber of Licensed v dealers in Ao those towns and cities at 797, Th o towns not vot henrd fro DS g0 | Clarks, Exeter, . none 0 2500 JangIBun: o Seventy-eight towns a Sl largze personal knowledgo of the question at T every one hundred and twentyfive | voters, or one to about seven hundired s but prohibitionists will not listen to a; In the ease of theft the | i ¥ ne S | personal inclination t ndsixty-two vot : : f facts1s now | the thief; so, a t one for eve Lousan ther beon i face, W a city here | the theft, for ving, we ing po ed and sevent : in expon > o0 facls vt of lon. Frank D, Jack Polk county todifler with them and in " | posing upon erdulous followers thie | tholr systomatio and 83 | ot bicen lsebools Every Lue of | wheroprescatation deiaie sud of W over H_.'.‘..uu' Doss wob Wb tal | Lubitual 1ylo, In Nebreaskan we 1 Kansas w you, Mr. o Ka jon ik wnd we ar apint o il a dey yaN and puts it into the dv 08 1 seho oy the sume the wor nist will s the average Kar that black is whit without it. St can be cured by 1 how sickly 8o g men are in Kansas e e . . —————————————————————————————————— otl vanK cannot an could bis | of w c T it prohibition pretend to ie from tho | honorablo 1 trafie, i 11 will te hisky sol ko @ mon K his wife '8 grave just on. he saloon N nature is Average i o whisky lie can, 5o will st and 1 have found that average drinker will swear 0 if he e pe that so ot mar ot a drink v discu xicauts, und it is stean apparently able-bodicd s and lowa, Which will you take next Novembert High aloons or o license dr rzors and A KANSAS DRUGGIST arm of boc cujoys. Enforce & Bk repro preached by IR pastor of the Pir terms the strict ¢ of the Slocumb 1 duced from Y Tie ¢ rat dienee last night - luces the f A. I, Sher Congregati (forcement The nns of I slocum low rill w £ repor e b lien he was A church of this city, in which ho advecated in strong prov N t s repro Lk of Junu mal church had a good au nupon the o A. I, Shervill's address upon P'he Slocumb Law and the Wisdow of foreing and Obey The text was { ing It tho ot of us not b weary in well doiny. tis the duty o every Taved active jutcrest in all that 1s good veas a fr gent, not a temperance worl, which is form of the aze, every ehurch should be ac tavely enlisted. I'hie Slocumb la this enforcement w Is bein 100 saloons i fos the closed. This is the most notewor history of our progross ho re legislate cnce. At the 1st of April half these remai out a 1 19 v law is asacred th all to obey and no to be commended trid of a bad 1 force it. The su mended that thoy have proven thei herc urc only th threatened 10 sta congratulate then faivs, when the well ofganized The preachier w at Tritsch especially dw the s: o ing the wholo of nin 1 the r will continue to tuke T lnced to twenty b disr for | | the taw must be enforeed w, i this e loonkeepors a ves Ty abiding citizen have at | wree out of t hat x ) to tale ar 1t should il. I the greatest re ed and by practicall thy step of tite, Oue of exist more 1 e, i > br nnber who 4 out. The people should isclves for this condition saloon men have been o 1t on to clock e: Sunday. zood would come out of t midst, which weio attracting 8o much aty tion. 'He suid that the young men of this d to asense of their dinger. He wamed parents children toward ciw ful in the educatic L ife. t h b on of their Christian he t o s, and ull shoul growth, Fora Lo 1 It must be conceded thut the ¢ great joint discussion on t tion weve faithfully report d Dickie and their followers lessres, S a ey peiut festations of the tween brackets fact that at least v spirit of f fort 0 the ¢ v last, and ance of closing he ovils in our s all prohi 1 in r worthy o mado for t and the a artial andi Mr. Rosew thi stion, and he has L honorable toward him with hisses water and Web, trated that there | the faith there i Lis oppon ter have shou ovement wrough aports of the bition ques Tie Bry ss and gen- ilation ause wus mani be- soen who it 1t are substantisl reasons fo n, an victions w - a few 11 h License in Baltim Ll o ww i N, Vhh n have bec ion he. 1. But vowe and onc B et | THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS Full Tost of ‘ to Auoud the MEMORIALS AND RESOLUTION® Acts Submitiing Prohit Begulation, Providing Bupreme Judges and iner tog Salacies Thercof, Lo, I text of the u the utlony v beverng: ot voting i sislature of tho state Tht at the goneral eloction to nothe Tuesday suceeoding tho e tay of November, A, D, 1500, thero shal ted 1o tho elictors of this state fop or rejection an amendment @ the noof this stito in words as fol The manufacture, sile and keopin for malo of futoxicating 1iquors s n bove erige ave forever prohibited o this stat and tho legislature shall provide by law for enforcoment of this pros vision.”” And there shall also nt said eloction be separately submitted fo the electors of this state for thelr approval or rejection ag cndinent to the constitution of the state i words as s YTho manufa al and keeping for sale of intoxicating liquor @ Loy erape shall be licensed aud regulated aw." m2 Atsuch election, on the ball b elector voting for the propose 1t to the constitution, shull bo writs ten or printed the word Sor proposed amendment to the constitution, prohibiting the or raineg id tamendiment to the constitution prol o manufucture, sule and keey toxieating lguors s a hovevag iTiere shallalso be written orprinted on th cndiment, to the constitution o and keeping fop suid | n that the ma rage stall bo liceused and ier of the said proposed stall beapproved by a majorit voting at suid election, then cotion twenty-seven . (27), of f the constitution of the state, ¢ remained with the govers ys Sundays excepted, the inge insession, the governor have d o return this bill 1o the utire ion, 4 1o tilo 4 tor (e ad) it fias therehy bocome a luw. Witness uiy hand this 13th day of February A D Issy, G. L. Laws corotary of State FOR FIVE SUPKEME JUDGES, tions two @), four (5, und five entitlod “Judicinl Depirte roviding for'five () § o court, and Lo repe N v ted by tho legislature st of Nebraska: - That section two (2) of articl thie constitution of the state of New be amended 80 as to read as follows . ‘I'he supreme court shall consist o udies, a majority of whom shall be "y to fOrm a (uortm or to pronounce decision.” Tt shall have origiual jurisdiction in cases relating to revenue, civil cases in Which the state shall be a Tarty, wans wy qno warranto, habeas corpus, and such g peilate jurisdiction as may be provided by law Sce. 2. “That section four (4) of artidle six (6), of the constitution of the state braska, be amended so asto rend a8 4 The fudges of the supreme court shall beelected by the electors of the state at large and their terms of ofice, ox- cept as hereir provided, shall ve for & peziod of fiv " See. 3, That seetion five (5) of article f tho constitution of tho stute of cuded 50 4s to read us fob “AL the first gencral eloction te is01, and T amendment to the constitus shiall b 1 threo (3) fudies of « of whom shall be ¥ one (i) year, one of threo (i) yearsy for the term = of ° five cach general election thores be elccted one judge of the v ihe ive (5) yoursy the § of the supreme s have not expived at the the genoral election of 1801 » hold their office for the res crm for which they were re d under the preséut coustd each person sin favor of v the proposed ame 1 March 50, 1889 ASE SALARIES OF JUDGES, ent te 1 L a0 Lo supreme Lo state 1) of o state w fob Ll { the o e oy 0 pape ? o Julges of