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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE,SUNDAY, SERTEMBER 2 -—— here by the pntleman to show the mumber | nosed fellows talking abont personal | had to go down to Pittsbure and experiment | ducive to the making of drunkards, pau drunkenness. Now [ want to tell youand \' C E X THE F[G[\RES [’ROVF IT of places in Philadiphiin as compred with | liberty, if they had theit dues fhey | and find afew thoussnebttiore, insaie people, iiots. and destruction of (he | ask YOU to answer mo the question whether | THE NE“‘ ASE ‘CEPTIU.\ 4 the numbew bofore. Hedidtn't tell you about | would perhaps be in the penitentinry instead Furthermore, my frind Rankin assumes | school interests, Idonot know any better | probibition s not the drunkerd-maker, 10- this. ltis moneyhe isiftew It isthe profit | of on thesteeet comers talking @bout per- | bere o tell this sudienemabat down in that | place to begin that subject for the purpose of in the business, not thathe eires forthetears | sonil Li berty oy stead of we people who advocate good govern- great state of Massachusetts, where the peo- proving to the peopie that to vote for the pro- | ment and decent, orderly soctety. [ Applagse. of the mothers and orphins. O, no, it isthe | The suprerne comrt of the Urited States, In | ple had 8 fale clection, yvhire the intelligence ibition amendmentis a sin andto adopt [t1s | Let me mike o lile™ further comparison. | The Judge Holds the Acoused Waived His ibition » ] ot | mon he can make t of the| keeping \ith an opiion rndered some sixty | and intelloct of that stdRd tame forth to cast | a state erime. (I seemy friend wants to take verin Massachnusetts, which is a neighbor- ; N . Prolibitin a Grater Drutkard-Make | nones Theconsquence is f they haveonly | yeurs ago when the condiions of the country | their balote—that Whon thit vote was | notest i | acomy hie doss, (Applause | ing state and whe s pedple ought to have o Right to Visit the Pinney Farm, Than the High-Liceused faloon, twelwehundred licensed saloons, s T under- | wer fardifferent from what they are now, | counted, prohibition 24 a doctrine was | and Laugnter] because [ am here belies i rinstinet, 1 find that the number of ar stood from the gentleman, | will gunrinte in keeping with that opinjon they held that nu‘wmlkun .~rl .\n\l(l:':’."'lu‘_pn}\vud to tell & ;h.nku hbn‘m man sets n-‘-x[n m’u soil of N hflu'in’h:“‘\\'vl;‘ %7 I uu; ;m-;«m: of g R s they hav nore than M) espeale-as; any man could transport from one stat to braska audience Al the peoplein | braska and pretends to tell me that my inter- | arrests for drunkenness only ; that tothe pop- VOICE FROM PROHBITION KANSAS, wes, (Rankin-6,000. Yo, 6,00, have T Intoxic A'mulliq'vm in the original | Massachusetts who votsdagainst prohibition | ests and welfare and tho interests of my | ulationjof 1,7%3,000, which was then the popu- | THE COURT DOCKET LOADED DOWN. " | e is Philsdelpiia nd investinated that | packageand culd wll then in the original | were saloon keepess, thgs and drurkards! | stateand the poople is to be. advanced by | Lation of the atate bl Macshehuost iy, wab o question and know mywif. Whilo the | package, and that there was nolaw to inter- | [A pplause » voting for prohibition, T want to tell him | person arrested for drunkenuess compared liave a lim nuber of | T e I O oo AOarns | oMy friend who first adrssad voutook oc- | that to advocate such o doctrine is o | with the population,as ono is to 0. 'Dear | Ie Will Be Impossible for the Foue Bx-fttory Oenenl Bradfurl Declans | lieF have M0 places where they haw 1o | it that tok the benefit of the personal liberty | casion to rvad from o sP@th whict T made at | sin and to sdapt it wotldl be & oo agaiist 3 me! Prohibition says that. 1 proved to you = | . i licenso at ull and whisky fssoldas free as | in this matter! Thesame menthat we had | Beatrice—which, as hesadmitted, contained | the state, [Applause.] 1 am with these | thatin the state of Maine, frm docutmonts Judges on the Bench to Clear the law is a Sucoes, water, T want tosay o you ihat vou wan't | praecutel and sent to the courty juil or had | an anument vipon the industeial | question— | peoplo a little like the boy was in the Sunday | just read, upon the authority of that great | it During the Coming regulate the s of intoxicating llquors as a E‘- n for toleave the state of Kansas me | which would strike with great force the | school when the teacher asked the row of temperance reformer, Dio Lewis, n the Term. beverage. Thereis noway to deil with the | back intour bovders and conaminated the | mind of the ordinary ohsarve g But ho wld | bors sitting along on the bench who could | state of Miine it was one to 37, o In other whisky seilerexcept t get him down and | morals of the communities with the selling of | the audience, after he had reada lengthy ex- | tell who was the strongest man, One of the | words, there wwere nearly twice as many people HIS APPEAL fOR HOME AND FIRESIDE. | Jameros tiim 3 mare toad b b o v g | a0rals packizes without hindrance. The | tract from that speech, that he could draw | boys answered up right quick, “John L. Sul- | ple arrestad in Maine for drunkenmness ororde 5 : prhap noohernan b thiscountry kas; 1| sane rednosel devils that had been prose- | from it facts which he thought 1 had | livan'" [Laughter.| *-No, mo,” said the |ing to tho population 8s were arrested for | In the Nealcase, the counsel for defendant tr- v [ have proscuted more siloon: [ cuted £rm four to ~i,( years, the same men ?nuu.fll -an unllmu\’:‘{m&v; Jr.”un{(-n( mln» m;.-n»ru Jn%w\ln was the fl{\-u‘n:q u;(nu." Al;;um(;;nnrfl inthe hmlw- )«nnl-- uyn,\l‘m_m served their bill of exceptions on the county itte 4 o in any other man in this whoie| cano back there and e going to enjoy | fute. The conclusion to be drawn from what | “O, weil," replied the boy, “T didn't kuow | cliusetts, upon its southern border. Down 1n | attormer iaot Sat. day, and on Monday tn He Bitterly Deounss the Morals of the | feepers couttry,ind | know from the ex- | their peronal libey by selling whisky to | I then stated, ¥ou were talking about foreigners. (Groat | the city b Omana. which oy Prohibition “‘mf,‘“:;1:,,““,'“.‘;:.‘\:\ oy ll:,.'.,l‘\"-',:' fou’ Pegle of Nebraska, perience I have haathereis nowaytodealwith | anybody who would call for the original My assertion there, In _brict, was that pro- | laughter. | friends always describe as the meanest and HAdod i 0y W6 Iatee d ¢ the intoxicating liquor seller éxcept to et | package, independent of the laws of this | hibition in the states of this union, where it The state of Maine was the first state to | most infernal city on God's footstool, except- | objections to the bill as proposed. 2 him down and stard on himwhere he can’t | state orany other state. It Is not liverty | it had been sought (M be enfor -\|T adopt prohibition, and is suitll to |lm”n.‘» m:m;l}hr X|\\'n ll'(l‘ three, ‘ufl‘l.lul car had ar- | The first three of these objectious were ' move 8 peg because ifyou give him @ninch | that they” seck 1o enjoy with other men in | either as o constitutional amend- | father of prohibition. General Neal Dow | restod for drankennoss—and 1will b fair to upon unimportant matters and the correct- JOHN L. WEBSTER'S MASTERLY ANSWER, lie will {Jl:vu toot every t'm‘fe common, but it is the liberty that they want [ ment or by statutory law—had done | livesdown ¥u that state and is the general | add to it, for being drunk and disonderly on | ul\.m NN,‘ were teadily madoe by consent of l’l.‘rlul); sou will injuirewhatls a spealk: | totake upon themsclves to poison the boys more to break down the commercial indus- | father of prohibition doetrin, a little while | the street, I will add that—for all causes at- | the attorneys for tne d ‘{‘"‘h‘“' but the easy. Youwill gointo a sioon: you want| andgirlsof the coning generation and ren- | triesin those states than any other cause; | ago he tried to run for mayor in his owd | trioutable to drunkenness was 2,010, or com- | - 3 2 e s He Closts the Fist Day of the Pro | beer and you spesk easy though that hole | derthem unft forthe position in this coun- | that the other states in the tain surrownds | irer ard Lo s | en. After theelection |pared to our population as but 1to 69, In | fourth objection had to be settled by Judge hilition Debare at Grand Dslamd | 0d itwmesin. Mo Liense is grasted by the | try thatthey mightoccupy, and all for the | ing themand elsewhere, where prohibition | was over he made a speech to the public and | other words, T want to toll my people here | Clarkson, tty orstateand no revenuels derived by the | few paliry dollars,and that is all the per- | did not prevail during the ten years from | charged the whole cause of his defeat to the | who slander the city ot Omahi, the pride of | ~ Yesterday morning Mr. Mahoney and Mr. ~—The Complete Argunents city, state or county, but it is a fact ul the | sonal Likerty thereis init. Ts that alll O, [ 1570to 189, were marching on in progres fact that the rum-sellers were in the majority | the people of this state, that in' that wicked Estelle nppeared before Judge Clarlson with Preented, e, ind [t has its deleterious effectupon | no thatis notall there isin it; there are a | increasing’ in population, increassing in | in the town and probibition could not carry. | city of Omaha there were o less number of 154 Y1 6F Svosbhlien ¢ Mt the rmorals and healthof thecomnunity just | few other things we cansay inresard to this | wealth, and increasing in manufacturing in- | (Apolause people arrested for drunkemuess than were | the bill of exceptions and presented the point the same as though it was licensed, subject. A great deal has been said by | dust And I then publicly—if not in Well, T took occasion the other day to pick | arvested jn your prohibition state of | raised by the fourth objection of Mr, Ma Butthey s; foll on; you re geiting | thegentleman whopreceded me about some | terms—invited criticism, and defied any man | up_another prohibition document cntitied, | Maine, We ' have down here another honey, which was this T Brr has publishel complete sten- | of the track.” Now,here is tho quustion | mitisters in Bostonand dsewhore that have | to disprove the truth of Wwhat I asserted, To. | ATistalees of B ohibition. T boughtit while | city in this state—our capital-and | mne’ goneral entry of the procoedings of Eraphic rportsof thespechesof Mr. A. C. | of revenue that comes hero into the city | prolaimed azinstthe theory of prohibition: | night, for the first time, have I found any | I was attending prohibition conveation at | named for the ma ¥ d )u«l-\i}'!;-m] of v\;.; L ecps an oficial record i 0 . 4 . 4 the court for May 15 shows that at the time ot B TbewL - | of Omaha where they have, [ be | they sayhighlicense isfar preferable. The | man, that dared to stand upon a public plat- | Lincoln. Iread it with a great deal of care | United Stites. whid i . — "“I’ T MWL L S Rt T e | e 1, 196500 patd | professcein the tnsitution where 1 was once | form, and tadertaks to. rofuls st hosn | —peoin: I had topay for it, because Tdid | of all persons arrested for drunkenness, and | the jury was directed to view the Pinney i of thi dabals on e proitiion 10ue 4 | oo s trepitiey sneh ysar (rr {ls Dirposd | & sadeat &1 he e W sioy thos diee d. And now what is the manner of there- | not belong to that t first | T find that in that city during the last year | farm, counsel for the defendant, in (Grad Islwd on Thursday evening, The | of schoolingthe boys and girls of the city of like pie. Andhe askedhim why he didn't [ futation! Why, my friend undertakes totell | things I read in it was that down in the s ate | the number of arvests were 701, which tom- | open court and In the presence ot followingare tho closing spoeches ofthe fist | Omata. They hoid thit out as an fuduce- [ like pie. Well, hedidn't like pie and that | you thatin the state of Pennsrivanin-hat | of Maine Avil 30, 1%, there wero 1L | pared to its popalatios of 25,000, was but1 0 | tho prisoner, statet to the . cours evening of the discusion, being the argu- | mentto thetax pajer. Yououghtto wote for | was all there was about it. Well, can't ou | her manufacturing industries, from 1570 to | censes issued by the government to ritail | 7S, or in other words, in th ' town of Lincoln that they waived the right of the prisoner to meits of ex-Atorney General Bradford of | Ngh license highlicense providesa revenue | give tneany reason why you don’t like pie? | 1350, were diminished something 11k s qors L0, id. lor_dealert In | there was but balf tlie drunkennces you have | thil the? alved the sight of the prisoner i > s ¥ 3 from whichyou can edicate your chiliren. [ ¥es, buthe wasn'tgoingto doit. But when | believe. Well, my friend fur said that | malt liquors 88, and a total of 1,135, That is | included in the state of Maine, including your | gl »1. i it sty [ECaias for pronibition andof Hou Jhn L } (¢ aoms’t et moything to elacats your 6hiL | beli. preaseq by {1 pr /asss (Or o’ e | Dobereh, volh my trend ¢ the pains, tu the | protty Kool when wo happen to have ouly | agricaltural and iamber districis in addition | In the proposed bil of exceptions, thers was wterof Omha for high lkense. “The | dren whichreduces the taxation just that| sonwhyhe didn‘tlike ple, he said he had city of Lincoln, to undertake to examine the | 850 saloons in the state of Nebraska. I read [ 1o your cities, in other the people living on | 5¢ A Ly ,"l}" e R s are poducel witiout sbridement | mich, Surosing e paid just whitever | never tited my. That s the way with these | Focords for the parpose of gproof to | alonga litle furthorin that. sume pamphlet | farms in prohibitin Maine, s well us thio | Fetorlers transeript of tho metion of 'tho fronthe wtesof Tir Bei's swnogmphers: | schooltax would be wsessed apinst that| ministers down in Massachusetts, They | show thatmy statement was incorreet and found that it stated thaton April 0, | people living in the cities which you have got | fRULY uttariey a p e B g el gl ey prn{x‘rl i ltmakes no particular diffrence | dou't Like it because they mever tasted it: | deceptive, I.et me see )wlu- far my fri 1“:’,\ it had inc ‘\51?1 w:nrmvlumlc lm llu lhehn:.v\ln’un'lvuhn.:,lnmv (’ number ‘u[ | Wah DG, ot Bk ‘“”‘;I it Rl wing any s PR " to thetaxpayer whetherit is for school pur- | they don't like it because they never stopped | undertook to investigate that g 3 prohibition times and _only in the | drunkards are twice What they are in the | Wi sent out, but o brinches 7 GEN. BRADFORD'S 4DD RES poses or \\l?\m itisfors thathe does nv‘.lpu' tostudy the benefits of prohibition; Hm_\ simply reaa far enough to find out that the®[ period of one year il ‘it reached | well governed city according to population “‘"\"_l:“‘ _'f"v part u]’ "h- Y' V;wi ”;'1‘* : 10 mich. tax daon't Like it because it futerferes with their | number of manufucturing iustitutions in |the number of 1,20. Well, when I come | [Applause ] i i e i S T The Kansas Attorney's Defense of | Whit he wants to dols tobringhis percen. | personal liberty. Pennsylvania, during the years 1570 to 1880, | to read over the population down in the state [ ~The timekeeper tells me there is but five s ", el el "“y-:»"l*':; Liegal Profaibition. fage down on his ixable projerty, andif the | An Irishman was being prosecuted for mur- [ had diministied in number—and there his | of Maine I find tha for ten ve s her popula- | minutes left for discussion, and in order that | {heir motion to modify Ltiornay obsdted bo General Bradford of Kansas followed Mr. | high licensosystem, wiich opens the siloon | derand four witnesses swore they saw him curiosity seetns to have come to a stop, and | tion has only increased 10,000, but in one year [ I may give my friends something to sleep He b ml-nm Bolip 18 2 D ATt o the bill of Rosowaterin the delate o Thursday even. | 81d other temptations béforva man, if that mitthe crime; saw bim with the knife | the search suddenly ended $tie Increased her retail dealersin liquor 125. | over, I want to call their attention to thecity | the transeript going in ns u par LRI gl ’ s ias atndeny toincrese the txatin for| stikingthe fital ‘blow; sawhim pierce the | ~ Let me tell you'my friend what he would | I figured it a little further and 1 found that | of Portiand. that. groat capital in the state gl gy el | ing, Hespokens folows the purposeof paying for the prosccutin of | boly ofthe victimand cuuse his death; saw | have leamed’ regarding his own state of | the populationof Maine necording. to the | of Maine where I find that, according to their R RRE S Sy e D D S VT Mr. Chairroan, T.adies and Gentlemen : It | individuals who commitcrime, for the pur. | theblood low; saw him pull the dagger from | Pennsylvania, had be read farther. Why, | census was 153,000 people. I computed that | official reports in 1853, that 1,435 persons | “‘l."‘ ‘l‘" 5 1) to objections Fettesd is krhaps unucessiry tht I should say 8 | mse of payig forthe rare and keepitg of | thoheartof the victim, and It seemed aa | Tigbt over i the Next. Commn s menld Yavg | eamsis s 1000 b represented one dealer | were arrested for drunkeuness out of a popu- bl dotei o e B g L worlin aplogybefore I proceed to make | the paupersin thecommuni if it 1 the| though everything was against the Irishman | found that from 1870 to 18% the manufactur- | in liquor to every 53 people in the state of | lation of 3,000, or one to every 23, [Laugh- “}*"rlnln. . ud - \( x‘r‘q\:v]nu‘.‘r.“.,” at Lo anything of an arument. List night at | tendenc T tolicresse the eyenditures | andthatne must hng. Thetime had been | ing industries of Pennsylvania had in- | Maine. Not bad for a probibition state, that | ter and applatse | Worse than. Dio- Lowis D0 TAUATAR Sre e o o aroenian, it 11 :Wo’clock T was alled out of bed tore- | of theconnty by rason of having high i | setfor the exccution and he says, *Ma creased its capital tothe amountof §15,000,000. | is, no. [Laughter.] I came out here to Ne- | putit. [Laughter.] I have got that from of. i ""l‘:""" . [1"(' l“;“; ““’ el giad o ”"‘: ceive some telegrams from here requesting | cense, why then [say what do yousay! Sup- | pluse your hon ay [sav a few words?" | [Applaus Had he reflected buta minute | braska and I rind that there are revenue li- [ ficial records. From the report of the in. | A et I‘,"" 2 ‘y"‘j ”“('!' bl ot my presance here today. |travied all night | mse if the city of Omata, where they have | **Very well, sir. youcan say whatever you re he would have found out that in the [ censes in our state to the numberof 1560, tor of prisons of the state of Ma ExbtIns: THE (RN Shald Shre Aoy andall diy, ariving here about 7:3), e %5 sabons and consequently 35,000 paid | desire tosas Hesays, “Aml to be hing, | prohibition state of Maine that the emtire | butlittle more than in the stateof Maine, or ady to read it to this audience if time | FXCePtions the l";*‘_“]"‘,!' ATved it Auh ot a bite of super and then o 0 the treasury,—supposing tt aml tobe putto death on the evidence of | amcunt of al invested in her manu- | butone to every 600 of our population. In | offers and the occasion requires it, [T et o Lol o “'“;t‘“ woty Ll place. I came expecti 1ies and g s they & , | these four s palpeens, when I can et twenty- [ facturing industries was but #9,000000, In | other words, my dear friends, i thestate | tle further. Look at the wicked city ou the | {he Prisoner to accompany the jury to the me, that this aisassion would beopentd y 7 made {wantio askyou. | fivemento say they didn't seeme doit!*! The [ other words, in that grand old state of Penn- | of Maine with Neal Dow at home and p lake b in 1553 had the same [ ROV W, the S ana e b by the gentlewen who chillenged ushere to | They toyou that becauseof high licen factis that where thereis one minister that [ sylvania, which repudiated your prohibition | bition for thirty years, you nave more dea i uani of 800,000, 18,000 ar- | 0 8 SOEERIL T WS hea made And e e discuss this p id that it wol of UOmahahas saved §2635, 0K declares against prohibition there were 250 | speeches and doctrines by voting down the | in r than'we have in the state of Ne- , or one toevery 33, | ° ’1‘,‘”' “""‘j‘_‘;‘i”"‘ titlec '1\1 bl thenbe dosed by uswhoare to respnd to sayto youth that declared in favor of it. The men, w amendment, increased her ma; ‘wuring in- | braska by a ¢ nce of §8 per capita. |[Ap- i which 15 supposed to be the | S50 88 it now stands will go to the supremo thelr chillenge. 1 find on arriviog here | will prove us we proceed with thisargunent, | and children and the decent people of Mass dustries in ten years to 20,000,000 more than | plause.] ~In that counectio ument is | hell-hole of at west, has at deal "'I‘l' recites not only the journal entry, but somcthingof achange inthe programne, s | Bocause of the fact thatthe; have high li.| chusetts were all for prolibition, but the | the entire amoint of capital invested in man- | not fair to my own state unless I mal of virtue o 1 with the town of Port- | 00 FIEteR ok O She Journal T WHAE thatihe discusion ksopentd by our side of | cnsein thecity of Omiha foday, I want to | thugs, sloon keepers, disrepitabls people, | ufacturing industrios dn. your prohibition | explanation, and that is this: Ther land in prohibition Maine, [ Applause. alio In the extonded statoment of ‘wiat themse ind prposel to be dosed by the | say toyou that that cityshaws a greater per- | brewersana distillors were all opposed to | state of Maine, [Applause. sued in our state 1,5 federal lice William H. Green,whowas the city marshal At the e e n i was b Sthorside, centage of crime ommitted than any other | | [ want to know which one Goa littie farther with it—that same rec- | liquor business, butof that uumber of Portland, in a report bearingdate March 1, Lo pan e iy, pus oonitesl Koy 1L say & fw words to you, gentlemen | city inthe cept thre, in proportion | will join. Will you join with the brewers [ ord—had my friend read a little further— | for saloons, and the remainder ave for other | 1590, down to the present year, mark you, Fedibaid et dladsades o lies, tonight, hoping thatby tomormw | to its populition, Thereis, 1ropeat, a greater | and salon leeparss, or will you join with the | would have told him that the product of the | institutions that handle liquor, principally | makes the followihg statement: eroated | R ey ax "“‘._‘”; N o the originil understinding that [ had wili amount OF crirae committed in the ity of | ministers, deacons, school téachers and the [ manufacturing industries of the state of | drug stores. Now,1 kuow that my friend | for drunkenness in 1882, in 1885, 1,088; | “l“ LR ““l;“. ,"jl“,' ‘,‘,‘” e S o acctled andthe discussion g0 onso faras | Omahsthanin any other, city in the union | decent peopleand be on the side of prohibi- ylyania, in that same ten years, in- | from Kansas over here will undertake tosay | in 1896, 1,1425 in 1857, 1,301; in 1588, 1,86, ‘)'l‘ “I" "“ 2478 ‘I,.’I'-j‘.\‘.. ESHESICEED 19 neerne but three, and when wecometo commpare it | tion? That is the question before you to- | creased $33,000,000, which was more than the | to me that down in Kansas and in the sta. and in 1889 arrests for drukenne ¥ Tt e 4 l"'.l}‘l'”“"l‘ Stition feroeiand trer of fact,believing asI doon | with othercities of like population in this | night. Thatis theway itis inour country: | agricultural productof your probibition state | of Maine these licenses only represent drug | mon drunks and for drunkennoss and dis. Dill ;'.:l i »"\-m ;"_lm“.“ “m'n '!‘I \]'”"_, » having had’ the experionce thit | euntry andsee fis dispragemet, you will | thit is the way 1t fo @ | of Maine. [Applause.| stores and they don’t represent saloons. | turbance, 1,20, 1. find by % | time and when 8o flled Wil oporate 14 aue. anl opportuiitics of oserving | then ste the forceof the argunentIammak-| they have prohibition. The décentpeople of | . Furthermore my friend would have found | What I want 1o my friend down there | the numbed ‘of arvests for drunic | UG and wheo so gied will operate to sus theworkings of prolibitin asl have had, ing. Whenyou have siloons you have in-| thestates where they bave prohibition, or | by reading farther that in the stateof Penn- | is upon this subject, thatthe law with refer- [ enness in the city of Portland com- }" "‘.I th j“‘_zl st "".‘_“‘[ “"_'_“' _“ Lothioide fearnotuny min in this ountry inthe creasel thesmount of crime, ard where you | probibitory legislation even, are on the side | s¥lvania, during the same te years, those | ence to the issuing of these revenue licenses | pared to its population according to | Whtil the further order ¢ ety cussion of prohibition. [Appliuse.| When | have increased theamount of crime, youhave | oflaw and order and propriety. O, but some | same manufacturing industries employed | is th;nfn)unrcn'quuwl t have alicense if | that table m: 1 to 16, while in Omaha A COURT DOCKET. rolibition Wwasadopled iithe state inwhich | increased the expenditure in prosecutang per- | onesays, why interfere with the fundanen. | 87,000 more people than. In 1570 1t e had you sell liquor, but you are mnot required to [ it was 1 to 68, in Lincoln, 1 to 7%, and in Chi- 5 s meide, it wis 4 question in my mind | sns charged withthe crimes, pasing attor- | tallaw of thestate! Why disturd this old | taken the trouple to. mstte alittle computa- | have a federal license if, as a druggist, you | cago, 1 to 33. Why, my des probibition | yon e Juages With ps/ABIS €0 08 whetheror notit would besuccessful. When | neys fees, feos of juries and witiesses and | document that has been handed down to us | tion—allowing five persons to a family—he | are simply compounding it with other | friends, the town of Portiand, in the state of our Judges Will Not be Able to Ctear prohibitin was finst propsedin Kansas, al- | keeping of the prisonersin juil, and where | byour forefathers, as the gertleman on the | would have found that the additional number | articles. ' Now, my dear sir, if you want | Maiue, according to the report of Green, city it Next Term. Lhouh & difelong tenpermce mam, I | you have increased the nunber of cowvicts | other side woud have us understnd? Did | of persous employed by the wanufacturing | to say itis drug stores only in Kansas, or [ marshal, and of the state prison inspector, is | The Septomber term of the district oourt stulied the situition well The old | you have increased thenumber of paupers to | thegentieman not stop to think that the con- | institutions alone added to the state of Penn- | drug stores only in Maine, I want to say to | the worst drunken hole that T have ever read | gpens Monday morning. thery of temperince work has always | keep at theexpense of your county, ’l!hefig- ditions of the west have changed, that the | sylvania during those tén years was equal to you, there are drug stores there sell- | of inthe United States. It was not more than There are 3 cases on the docket In uv mind been at fault, and the old crusade | ures will beshown youas we go iong. youug men ofthe New Englind states have | more than one-half the entire population of | ingliquor for drink. I do not care whether vo weeks ago, while traveling down towards b or 2,936 ure civil and 190 i g{.m.u intemnperance or the 1ntem pe use T'hefact of the businas isthis: The wle of | gone west, have taken Greeley's advice and | the prohibition stateof Maine, [Applause.] | you call them saloons or drug stos they | New England, I thought I would make it my | this number 2,236 are civil and 130 are erimi of ltoxiating liguors has always teen an | intoxicatingliquors tends t demoralin the | goue west'to grow up with the countey: the | - Go & litle. facther. By reading a little | are places where you sell liquor for drink. | business to inquire about the habits of peo- | nal cases, Qbiect, o faultinding, sofar is Tun en- | wpulince ad tenis tobreak the moralstam- | consequence s that we have in Kinsas, No- | farther you would have found 1o snother | Lat us o Htie fenber (iauor down in | pledown there, Tdid not gotoscein how [ Out of the2,021 cases which were on last cermed. The theoryupon which it was ea- | ina of the popleand tmake them iniffer. | brasim, the Dakotis and Coloradoa higher | column Ihat ‘the state: of Pennsylvania. | Maise how this thing has been increasing, places they sold grog or how many | term’s docket, but 463 were disposed of, leav- grafted aud themanner in which it was pur- | ent tothe fthe weak aud thelistrssed; | grde of intelligenc and s higher type of civ- | during the same ten years, had increased | and I get it from this same prohibition pam: | “speak-easy™ Loles they had, but I had gath. ing a total of 1,558 brough t over to this’ term. Suel, while 1did ereat goodin itsway, it | to muke tiem old md indifforent to the | ilistion than they have in’ Maschusotts | the amount. of mofsey which It paid | phlet. Back in 1384 they had 1046 such | ered togethier at Saratoea Springs, in the | Many of these casesure now eight or (o hasalways been a donbt inmy mindas toits | wantsof thepoor; I say it stultifies the bet- | todays: the very pick and choice of these otn. | for wages in manufacturing fustitutions | licenses : in 15% they had 1094, an increase of [ state of New York, representative men | years old, a continuance of them having ben ultinate success in stopping the intemperato | ter qualities of the men and women aud to| cational institutions have come to Kansasand 9.000. Why, my dear sir, the growth of | 45 in one year: in 15, 1145, anincrease of 41; | from Maine, New Hanapshire and Vermont, | obtained forone cause or anvther, year after pseof intoxicating lijuors, Thers hasalways | makethen, by reason of theassoriation that | Nebraska, have come west to grow up with | manufactiring Hetiiutions 1 thy stais of | in 185 thors wore 1200, or an increase of 125; | and when I had these men together I put | year. Do s wury Liny und ke this: Is thee | they sre bromgit i coutact with moro| the comtry; bave come west . whers | Ponnsylvania during thesame tes years that | 50 5 tene rolis oo o' ten people get a little | to them this question: as representative men | ° In view ot these facts, the four occupmits Saypraciar my gdo avy wih theinten- | apt 10 coumit orime ‘than s fough| they ow sy ny by and my. girl | youtalk about as & refutation tomy docus | older down thora o Meis, heople my friend | of the state of Maine, speaking to me as a | of the district bench start upon au utterly pente us of oxiating liquors? Is there | the sibon was away aid those wsocitions | shill have abetter opportunity than I had. | ments would have supported all the peopie, | Bradford says the virtue of that people has | Nebraska man who hus an occasion to debate | hopeless task in the matter of cloaring the ROy b prermt e e of Intodcatig | dia notexist. Andthatis tho reawn why sa- | K was indanger of these hell-ioles, that ves. | men, women and childwn, in Your Hrobibic | come out to our stats theold waubeobie s 'y | this question, tell me has drunkeuness in- | docket by the end of the present torm, Well liquors as & bererage! Now, that was sug- | lonsare not preferablein a community. tibule of the penitentiary, I was in danger of | tion stateof Maine, or all that'youhave got | leave seem to sink down to old age byin- | creased under prohibition or has prohibition | informed members of the bar assert that dou- - gested tomy mind becauseof the study that But oh, says the gentlemun on the part _of | those things, but my boyandmy girl shallnot | in New Hampshire and Vermoat combined. creasing the number of drinking saloons. | tended to decrease druukenmess and grog | ble the sumber of judges could not do such & 1 had made ofthe use of liquor, of its” effect | the whisicyoligarchy that has talked with | bein dangerof them: and this s one _of the | [Great applause.] (Applanse) General Neal Dow took occa- | shops in your state! Those three representa- | thing. Andit is this fact that serves s ao. upo thesysten, and my obsetvation of the | you tonight, persmal liberty—and heread a| triumpbs that willgo down the corridor of With limited time for making addresses | sion at anothertime in a letter written to the | tive men were from each state agreed with | other and unanew rable argument why tho result oflong ind continued useof it. These | fetterfromsomelearned gentlemn in the | tine asone of the grandeet triumpls of in-| andfor answering the argument which it | Lewiston Journal, under date of February | me in one common statement—that drunken. legislature should certainly give this district things presented themscves to me in that | east, a professor of some college, uvon per- | terityin this country. [Applause] When | may be necessary toanswer in order to make | 22, 1590, just a few months agoto refer to the | ness had increased and that prohibition was | new judges this coming winter. prictical way, nd Ibeliere thit all that the | wnalliverty, and he says he thinks it is| wohavegot through with the discission of | thisdiscussiona falr and. reasomanie one T | fact that to a1y Bot possession the district, | the causeof it. I said, how can that be!| Insovery greata number of cases as thi Deule of the state of Nebraska wint isto | dangerous (0 put this in the consiitatio and | thee poblems, when they become ss settied | cannot undertake at this me to goover snd. | coust Avohot Tor Wrigoossess n the state of | Their answer was that under the probibition | shown by the docket for this coming torm, it &uow thepractical resultof pronibition, and | geprive the people of their spersonal lierty, | asthe question of slavery is settlel today, | detail the history of the manufacturingin- | Maine, and that in that docket there were 49 | doctrine we tried to restrain the public sa- | is next to impossible tg give in the space i Iwhen thoy have leamed that fact, and when | [suppose he means tosay by that that by | Like Shermanon bis mareh o the sea, wewill | dustries of other states of this union ; but | rum cases, and that41 of that number had | loon, but as we have undertaken to restrain | hand anything like a réSume of even the most theides of Novembercome, there will go into | putting thatin the constitutim of yourstate | godown with Kansas in the lead and Ne- | whereas Pennsylvania was put forth to me | been continued. Well, it occurred to me that the public business, the people who want to | important. From timo to time us these case thebatlot boxes of this state the voice of the | we have therightto dictate what you shall| braska clos »behind, and toward the great | as an example wherein my previous argument | if in Waldo county, at one term of court 4% | carry on that busiaess carey it o in cret | have been filed Tur Bee has given whateve Peule which will say, “Awy with that | cat, drink wd wer. Ob, 0. The supreme | Atanticwe will gountiiwe have placed at | was unfuir asd. unjust. I think thc] beve people were indicted for selling liquor, how | placés, the liquor which they sell is bad, and | story they have contained and alwars t ‘Which contamivates, which destroys, which | courtof theUnited States bas said itis mo | the very top of the capitol at \\'.;‘mugz(m sufiiciently answered that and drawn from | many people must have been engaged in that | men get drank on half the quantity they | main facts. In a few weeks,as the cases coruptswhichhasall of the bul featiresand | disturbancoof @ man's personal liberty if | thewhite flagof probibition, the history of the state of Pennsylvania, to | business during the entireyear. Further, he | would of good liquor and it is inhabited and | come up for trial, they will, as Usualbe eyin none of (e good.” prohibitionis adopted by any state, That is And then. whed ive huve fiished at Wash- | which my friend adverts, such answer’ to | said if it were their (the legislatures) purpose | infested by boys, it has become disreputable | reforred to ot length. Now. \eu, ludies ind gtlemen, we bavo | ot the exict languageused by thecour, but | Engton, we will swing amund the great guif | suggestions that he nade that it sonds o | o provide a way to protect the grog shops | and the worst characters control the busiuess | It is learned that there is little or 1o doubt hadthistemperance, this mornl reform for | that is what it mans, cost and comearound to the Pacific, and | mitted that the detailed statementof facts | which were now in full swingin all our cities | and drag lown people to lives of drunkeness | whatever but that all the four judges will ba 100 yean in (i country; the goolwomen | “In other words theysaid i the Masschu. | with Oregon and Califomia and all the wost, | that T made were trus. aud. T he reproved | except Belfast, it would be a very simple | and destruction andit is beyond our control | in their place at the opening of court, Mot and the god men of this country have dis- | sotts beer case : ‘It 310t ouly in the scope | and we witl see the constitution of prohb them to be true, and I can make the as thing to do it. When General Neal Dow, | and by the prohibition laws we have | day cused itin all its varions phses. It is of thelegisitive power to provids, but it is | tion in the costitution of the United States. | tion thatin prohibition states of tne union | the father of prohibitiou, in a letter written | got, cannot. stop. it T found i that se necssary forne tosay here touight whatthe theirduty to provide for the charicterof the Thereis more todo. Thercare other prob- | thetime of progress was stayed, and in the ut last February tellsthe pubiic andthe | ment the reason for the bad eflect of the liguor i upm |morasandthe kepiugof the health of a | lems wecan consider in connection with this | states where prohibition did not prevail there | world that the” grog shops are in full | assertion. I then tra d up into the state | tor the buying, feeding and sale of cattle. the sytem; it is unmncessary for | community.” miter, There arcone reason after another [ wasan increased prosperity to which your | blast in all the cities of the state of | of Vermont and stoppec o of Bur- - - me to desribe the woe and wint Then, la andg geutlemen, wehave from | we can pile up, lineafterline, column after | prohibition states bear no compurison. I | Maine, except Belfast alone, why purity [ lington, a town nearly a c i, and a Dr. Birney eures catarch, Beo ldg, Which is caused by the futemperate use ofin- | the highestauthority in theland this declara. | column and voluzm aftervolume until there | want to add righ tnow, in that same line of s to have been ripening down in the | state for which the upon the ———— i toxicating liquors. Youall know that fact. | tion, that the sale of intox i ingliquors as a | areuntold pages giving the resuits, giving the | discussion, b brief statement with refer- | state of Maine, about ready to blossomas a 3 , and yet the town of OFF TO PLATTISMOUT Thee guitleno her to discus sl qu beverge is injurious to the worals and| experience and observation of men, and giv- | ence to the state of Nebras| ve | summer mses but when T Yea its history it ington, the oldest and one of the_largost = ion, they know what theeffectis tothe s healthof a communityand tendsto increase vald reasons why intoxicating liquors | live, and upon whose soil this discussion is | scems suddenly to have become a faded | cities in Vermont, has but 11,500 population Songres S 26! ten. Bit thatmatter cuts no figurewiththe | the puperism and crine. [ know whert | uld bs forever prohifbited 1 a beverage in | going om, daring the ten yeam foun 1 i | foe Applause and laughter.] But when . WhenT came to Grand Iiand it | The € pugrossional Ggnvantion to Mpot men whose cause they advocate here tonigt. | speak andif the salom tends to increase countr: 1% there has been such an increase in our | I went t look at the map of thestate' of | night T asked you, what is the population of There Next Tucaday Night. Notwiththen I will say, but with the me pauperismand crime, then who wants it in oW, then, it is for the people of Nebraska [ population, in our cor in ourproducts, | Maineto find where that same Waldo county | Grand Island; they told me 10,000, I said, The congressional convention of the First, Wwhise cause they advocate, the questionis | the community ! ¥ whichline you will fall upon; whether | in our industries—mere and manufa was located that had 40 people indicted at | hasit come to this, that under our good zov- | district will be held in Plattsmouth next hoy canthey makethe gratestprofit by the | "ButO, this pesonal liberty ! Whnen they villfall upon the side of probubition, | turing—which stands without a rival and | one term of court as rumsellers, t found that | ernment they can build o Grand Tsiand of ‘Tuesday evening, saleof intoxiatingliquor carlig not forthe | gt totaiking about this peronal lberty they | orwhether for the paltry sum realized from | without a peer in any other state within the [ same city of Belfast that Gencral Neal Dow | 10,000 people in about ten years equal in popu b Laghapd & s 8:15% teus andthe woe ansedby tho liquor they |are turiblytrespssedupon and tereiblysub. | high license in your communi ¥ you goon | entire republic. With such a recc s that | had referred to in his letter as being the only | lation and business enterprise to the old city The train will leave South Omaha at 0:15 sell butthe questionis how are they to get | dued,and all of their liberties, for whic L | down the corridons of time singing that dole- | these people come to us and say tous people | city in thestate where grogshops were not | in a state a century old tewn in prohi- | P.m. and tnis city at 6:45 p. m., arriving in Ihomouey—tie mat of it. The sdlenillic | iheirlorefihers fought, thy siy have been | fulsongthatyou shall sing when- you have | of thostute of Nebraska: Youad s to adopt | in full blast was the same Belfastin Waldo | hibition Vermont. |Applaused I want to | Plattsmouth at 7:25 o'clock. It will return Tvord Tus advinced the factthat: intoxicit- | taken from them; they talk tbout this being | pliced your boy in the last resing place | a new policy, you ought to amend your con- | county and 49 of its number were indicted at | show to the people of Nebraska when you | tothis city at or about midgight, Tt swill L ingliquis, or in oher words alcotol dis- | 3 frecand independent country and thenthey | where he hus mat o promature death beciry fuitution, vou ought to change your | onetermof court. [Greatapplause] Then | think over these figures by these comparisons | a free train aud ropublican - representativos tilled liquors, have a miclicinal quality that | falic abou t personal 1iberty * | ofthe negligence of youand your neighb habits. ~ But when these people come | I turned overas my friend did at Lincoln did | yvou can draw but one injerenc ey efeRliced by anyother liguid | “Supposing I wis going” down dong Main | in discussing and votiog upon this propost | to me snd appeal me to take up | theother day to ook at the census reports of | in the state of Nebraska underour system wo | cordially invited 1o avafl themselves of tha that has been discovered by melical science. | gtreetof your city, and L find & beatifil cor a course like that, I y ou first toshow me | the United Stater, and found that same town | are happy perous and we are grow- | opportunity and be in attendunce, Provistonis made for theuse of intoxicating | per lot; T siy tomyselfthisisa pretty g SR o where Nebraska and its people are tobe beae- | of Belfast had but 5,308 population, or the 40 | ing: we are developing: our state is grand Several ward clubs have already formally Yiquors for the purmse, which is given in the d this isa mice lot; I believal ARGUMENT, fitted by this change betcre in my hesitating e indicted at one term of court repre- | and they have not shown us any prohibition | & ted the invitation to be present sud wi amendment before you. this Lot: I pull outmy moneyand py for 5 % manner [ am prepared to accept it. sented one outof every 112 of the population | state in’which things are better than we | send large delegationsaccompanied by bands Wlience, ladies and genllemen, you willob- | tha lotandget 1t free of incy ce:tienl | The Prohibition Speaker's Allegations Before [ started from the city of Omaha to | of the city. [Laughter.] Well, itis about | have them here, On another oceasion when | In wa in which no organization ex- sere thit it isa practical movement; it 15 & | g and geta carpnterand | say, 'youn Refuted by Official Statistics. enter into this aiscussion L took the pains to | timeto godown there and establish a peni- | I can be permitted to talke further, T will | ists, republicans are invited” o form cliine ) moverment in the right ducction; it isa move- | the plins and spacifications for & threcstor Hon.J. L. Webster of Omaha followed | gather alittie bit of information which tome | tentiary right in that neighborhood. W« pursue this line of discussion and then I | and join in the gran p + § mment inthe interestof thehomeand fireside. | housoon this 1ot down hem, and he General Bradfordand cosed the Thursdas vers eresting and tellsa woaderful | thiuking that that might be alittie unfair to | want to show my friend from tho state of | Those desiring to g0 mas b ~.. Very well, ktus see. Ifyou have low the plans and specificationsand [ go down | ek et () cs: 7 | story, “Ivisited theoffices of the architects | 1t to take the town alone, T found the popula- | Kansas that in his state, notwithstanding | they are requested to notify Major J wense’in the wmounity is _dingerto | and buy thelumber and haul the lumber up | ©¥eningdebate. He spoke as follows of the city of Omaba and requestedof them | tion of Waldo county to' be 32,463, and your | the fact that as attorney general of that stat ruy, chairman of the congressional thoboys; ther is tut Tittle restriction put | g thislot, deposit it on the ground and rmy My FellowCitizens: This is the second i - y ! This to have prepared and delivered to me a state- | 4% indicted grog sellers represented on he devoted his time and nis energios to pro- | o committee, by 10 o'clock Monilay upn thesale of intwicatiog Ligorsand any- | pechuies commence to work on thebuild. | tine during this compaign that T have been ment of such plans and specifications of build- | of every 660 of the people eutire | hibiting the sale of liquor, that he bas got | morning. bady aul everyboly em sell 1t any plice | jng. The fre marshal comes along and says, | €alled upon to defend the state in which, T ings which had been prepared by themand | county, “farmers and all, men, women and | more grog shops today and move drunkar I'he del Jylerever thiplese. tis wid it tempts | What are you doing her? ‘Buillng 4| Liveandwhich I love aginstthe charges of | Lot ch were shelved aud the erection of the | childfen. Well, out here in Nebrask: > | and more men in the penitentiary two to one | Dboys. on they want to put arestric- | pouse! *Buliding s frme houseon thy fot! | Pople who cme fom other states and tell | 1. Hion upon thesile of intuxicating liguors in | es, sir.> "Youcan’tdo that.’ ‘Whatis the | 1show we should attend to the ship of bigh licene. “Why, they say | reascn, isn't this my bte Yes' ‘It it| plause.] nises the grde of the dealer in | py lunber! *Yes.? Didnt1 pay mymoney We have been told tonight that prohibition dutxicating liquors and malkes the place re- T i a spectable, clewrs outthe low down g ges, and reduces the number of places w intxicating lijuor is sold, and, therefore Auces the amoint consumed. The last pr sition is not true. It dies not roduce the anuntof liquors ansumed. Simply o ques- tion of bigh lense, It mdaces the nutmver of places where it s consumed, butdon’t re- due the amount. It 1y requires the gentlemman who w: Jalittle fartier Forit. It has perhaps cluncd out all the sa- 1oous onthis side of the stvet, and bo has to gooverto thoother, It has 'perbaps closed out the siloous in tiis part of the block, and hemay have to go over to another block, but he goes over and thesile of it is not re- stricted whenbe gits there: he can buy all he wants and pay the price to the dedermd The theory of high liceuse isthis: That it Jeremiah Denslom has sued Reynold, proof of that [ Crill & company for $,935.23 on a contr. . and that is | ofall the wards and county precinets, are sgates to the convention are as fol- : lows ings postponed onaccount of the im- | my friend from Kansas said there was more | than we have €Ot in the grand new state of C. A. Baldwin, Major B. r'uray, W. S pending danger that prokibition might carry | of crime than in any other city in the union, braski. 1n other words there sits on this | Cook, K. Rosewater, J. M. Counsmun, John In this stite. 1 kuew that there were a lirge | save two or three, I made andther little com. | platform the governor of the stato of lowa | Joukius, W. £ Bochol, WV, H. A loxando: - < 1 pumber of people living in the city of Omaha | putation. With "85 saloons to our state I | who will be here tomorrow to advocate the | W, 1. Guilex, D. H. Wheder (i W' for it! *Yos, butyou can’t buill a frame | isacureforall theevilsthatseem to inflict | ready to invest their money if ‘they under- | found #hat as but one to]. of our people, ctrine and I am prepared | Lininger, Vandervoort, D. H. Mercer, house here!’ “Why wt? ‘Beewse if humanity, and that down in the neighbo stood that prohibition wusld be defeated, but | and in that city of Omaba with 245 licenses, ties of his state there | J. L. We Frank Ransom, J. W, Lytle, builds frane house here you injure thoother | State south of us where our friend who has | were uawilling to investriheir money in such | (but my friend sald 963 —that 345 represents | are. mar et in cities of b drunkenness | J. B. Erion, Paul Hersh, William Coburn, improrements and property in” the leality | Just spoken soems to have labored 8o long | enterprises if they believed that prohibiuon | ing brewers and distillers, - as el do: | aoder arhionbn hoPs: wen in his peni- | F. M. Woolley, Henry Bolln, Daniel Mc- ind your neightor will haveto piy a grater | for theprohubition cause, tells us that pro- | was going to carry. Iduew also that there | ducting them, leaving 240.0r 235 saloon’ and | tontiaries than the o, faore wen grand state | Guekin, Joseph Kavan, John Rush, [ S. amount of insurance.’ hibition has done more to suppress the evils | were institutions in the castern states whose | I counted it 24, was to the popula- | of Nebraska. [Applause Hascall, Fred W.Gray, Morris Morrison, I gobomeandlgo down to mybarnand I| ofthe world than sy other thing and that | business it was to loanmoney who refusd to | tion of the city of Omaba. bab iy —_— M. F. Sears, A s, Chatl gy Rt my homse: heis amagnificent horse and | there was more crime in the city of Omaha | Joan money ou buildings to be constructed in | 530 of our population: or, in other words, my Dr. Birney cures catarrh, Bee | Wehrer, John C. W Henry Kelse, @n ot intild or 2:15 and 1 am mad and | Than any other city in tho union except three. | thestate of Nebraska-df prohibition was | fellow citizens of the state ot ski, po going to live some plemure some way, | Iwint now at ihe outstart to say o my | going tocarry;and | askod the rason wh there is less of groggery in the city of Omaha Must Register Again, Daniel O'Keeffe, T. L. 1 Dorn, M. O and 1 go down the strect with a friud from the state of Kansas that thecity | theuniform auswer wasthatif pr than thero is ln any town in%he state of | Mayor Cushing makes an urgent request | Maul, Ed. Loeder, Willlam R. Turucy, M, O, and 8 poicernan omes up and stops | ©f Omaha today hus less of crime in propor- | carried in the state of Ncbraska it woul Maine: even Belfast included. [Applause b bty i b » s Rickets, Omar Whitney, Albyn Frank, W. me. “Hollon. Hold on. You can’t drive | Lion toits population than thetown in which | duce the valueof propery and would reduce | Dio Lewis. who has bees rather one of the | thatevery voter bear in mind the vital fact | Topimor, Wilham 1. Marrow, Gus Lochie that horse through thisstreet at that nte of | Belives in his own state. [Applay 1| their revenue and I cannot tell what securit rlier futhers of good persuasive tempar- | thatall past trations are null and void | William Osborne, J. M. Glaszow, Loe H. speel #3 lue. " Lpull out tne money and | Wit tisay to you futhernore that the | webavefor the moneyoweloan, This tablo | ance doctines in the United States, whine'l | so far @s e coming election is eoucerned ley, Isaac Wilt, John A. MacMurpiy, M. I pay the fineandIstartacros the culvert at| Stite of N has less of erimein itand | of plans and specifications of build believe to be recognized by all good You must register again if you want | Roeder, John ' ltolfs, R. S. Berlin, Elijah 4 tremendous rate of speed, as | am pretty | 10ss of drankennessin it than any prohibition prepared for me, and Lam prepared to state | one worthy of respect, had b to vote at the next election 3 Dunn, G. 'W. Ambrose, R. D. Duncau, Chris madby thistime. “*Hold on, hold on, you| Stite under the American flag. from my data that suotplans and specifi assertion made many times that prohin - e Specht,d. W. Eller, C. L. Chaffee, J, I cantdriveacrossthis bride faster than a It shall be my purpose during the line of | tions of buildings, the exeation of which was | in the state of Maine AS 4 success, so he Dr. Birney, nose and throat, Bee bldg, | Bleck, J ri, W. Simeral, Jamos ;\',Nk-;’ Ao, and }xm‘.‘ outtheds and pay ““;‘nw'mu{m tn_‘-\um.sn; (;w im':. by the | delayed over the ws;ou in Omaha | said that on one occasion he went down there % AN . dagle) S| Walsh, H ., Willam Pevton, J, . him. I gohomeand put my horse o the | githering of evidence, which I deemun-|alone on account ,»of the da 10 make a visit, but was unable to find the cures the O 5 ehm, Mich N lindsay, R, S. redices the mumber of places where it i | barn und sint myselfap In ny e o | amwerinle hat i the probibition states of | of these people o forcing “lm saloons’ rauniig: open. bu st _l,“,mi, 1 s Diha, leomrss she Eon fatenc peam A Piper L8, Lindsar, B, Sold, butthe restritive qualitics of the bigh | builds grest high fence around my premises | this union there is more of dran kenness and | Lrtion upon us amounterdio the sumof &3 town of Augusta, permit me to use his lan- | . The North Nebraska Methoaist conference, | IV use B PR W o A e pther wnds, the prbibilory | and shut myselfin, and in two or thies days | drinkanl-making than therois in our state, | oog 1 b you for a mwment to think what | guage: “I oblained a recent report of the | i session” at- Wayne, has decided to meet | ool iy ity thit Co NaLaox Qualities of the high liceuse lav—arothe bei- | from that tine my hone die, and in a few | aul when my friend who sits down here be- | that means—5,950,000 invested in buildings in | state prison inspector of Maine from | next year at Omaha. The people of that de- | 1% outof 252 votes, | i eficial purt ofit, and thatis allthatis boe- | daysthervis @ Wrrible stench in the ueigrh. | Death me, told this audience that we were | that city in oue year would have furnished | which T learned that during the | nomination and of all other orthodox churches At the meoting of Eighth ward republicans, fcial. 3 borbiod, and a wiicenan wmes aloug aud | bore spaking for those who deait in liquor, | employment to's Vast number of people, and | year 17,508 persons had. teen eretadt oe | e e he wiil b “serimerorthodox of this | last night, the invitation to attend the cou Whatare the probibitive qualities OF the |says: -“Elere, you hav gots deid hose on| @l thit the salions were the drunkard- | would have furnished momey which would | the state for drunkenness. This was an | fact gressional conveution at attsmouth Tues high Licuse law that make it benoficial t Let | your prernises and you must take him away | makers,that I am here as a citizen of the | have enabled & vast number of laborers to | official report by prohibition oficers, When 4 s dav next was accepted motell you - Lookt the highlicense law of | or I will flao youti0.”" *“That is my horse | state of Nebrsica, prepared. to prove by un. vay grocery bills and to have clothed the | I rocollect that Maine contained w population | , Clark University of Worcester. Mass, has | “fa 5100 Wani repdblican club will attend thestate of Pennsylvania, what is it? It | vPnatdon't make any difirence, we can't | auswerbie ficts that the probibition party | wilows and orphans you talk about. That | of less than 70),000—a small forelgh. element | 105t received an interesting addition 1o its in a body the congressional con provides if they sell liguor on theseventh | bave s nuisance around here, Iwantto say | ©f the United States is making more drunk. £3,150,000 would have erected more buildings | in the large cities—devoted to agricult re | corps of instructors. Dr. Charies A, Strong tepublicans of the desiring to dayoi the we gmmnonly alled Sunday, | o youl would ratherhave two dead horses | @ns by its nefarious doctrines than toan you have got in one-half the towns they | and lumber, 17,508 arrests in one year for | Das been appointed docent in physiology, Dr. ticipate will leave v names wit They Lorleit thoir liense, and it provides if | o my prenises than to bave a salow the| We who belicve in the licnse rogulating | pons stdown 1n your state of Kansas. |Ap- cet drunkenness was simply appalling” 1 | $trong graduated from Rochester in 1534, and | b fansen, Twenty-fourth and Lake st they sellta incbriats or winon thelr licese | pext door. | A ppiatiac,] system. | Applause. ] g o or E. O, Cooper, 4 Paxton biock; telanhot : r i Why my friend who | plause. | But in a state where you voted dowe ce with Dio Lewis, my friends cannot | from Harvard in 1885, After that he studied is forfeited. Itis the probibitive qualities of Feronal liberty! Itwill permit & man to | list spoke from this platform to this audi- lrrumbl(lun an; 1'A ave a li -.»ni system \‘,u' point to & record in any state of the fi',,m“ for two years at the F pster Theological | g™ The club will meet Tuesday even [ Ehebighlicense Law that prevents the saleof | build s salon next to your residence. That | €ue made a refereuce tothestate of Penn- | haye got some kind of prosperity. (Laughter | where prohibition does not prevail with a | Sewinaty, and another year at the Berlin Twenty-fourth and ets, at 5:80 p. itin juchriates and ninon; if tie prouibilive | i what rsozil librty meaws, Bersonal | Syvaniato the effact that under its. lcense and applause P similar population, or I give you the liberty | University. He has also been instruetor in | p) and headed by the Sixih ward byad. Wil auilities of the high license prevents the | liberty under thelaws of this country means | System thereexisted in the city of Philadel Now, ny good people, I want to undertake | by a comparative population io produce such | Philosophy at Cornell. About year ago he proceed 1o the depot l(lsll(:‘lo Il;‘l;hruh-xs and minors, in the name of that o man shall hold property in sucha way phia, inadaition toits license saloons, thou- fora little while, consuming a portion of the | a horrible spectacie of drunkenness, as he | married a daughter of John D. Rockfe! et God pril bumled-uh)on utogciher and pre- | 45 notto injure the property of the com: | Sids of places which be caMed ‘speak easys,’ | time remaining to me, however, feeling de- | describes, exisung in your probibiyon state = r—apr——— Personal Hights League, wen! | m.zh::, tanybody atall. If you |munily or the Lealth and morls of your | [lsughter| and my friend right down here | termined that | shall not detain this audience | of Maine. [Applaose. Why, that 17,505 Pat Entee—I think you can make money Owing to the rebuilding of Germania hall i podice the amount of druukennes by re- | peighbor ; whevever you mse that property in | Solarged the number—not content = with | any longer thai I foel that your physical en | when compared 1o & population ' of 65,000, | Out of this invention. "Manufacturer—Don't i o t the league, Monday ying the nunber of salons, Why tot then | juch t way us £oreaies nuisanc of injur | Brother Biiades pua. “icment that bobad | durance will po-mit you to Femisin Under ny | COUMLINE LR, WomEh ANl Chidres was s | WAL it, SiF, 8t Bny price, Pt Buvee My | tho mass meoting of the league, Mouduy reduce the amunt of druikennoss by wiping | the health or maorats of your neighbor, then | been in Philadelphia. = (Rankin, ‘Yes, there | tiresome talk an | the oliness of theeveulng, | one to 37 of the whole number. Drop out t dear sir, nearly ail your competitors arc evening next, will be held at Garfield hall, Dot thae wihidle nunber of sabons! Thatls | it is not iniertering ik Sour prsonal L are 0,00 snd © kuow it] My triend’ below | 1o undertake 1o auswer in general torms i | women avd the priioe Rogk, Drop qut t fringing on it already. Manufacturer—Eh( | Howard stroet, between Fifteenth and Six- t ('.-;-‘y"w\l.fl’lfign. fi"l J-:J'Kfi‘?fi’uw ainte | . ':l u.y: rour prop!rlyl;“ nl:. you will | s a\m‘é :;k:k:f:u'h"fi-l::: I!(k‘-m X u u{ detailed urrangemeat the arguments.usually | out more than one-half of your population, | Give you §2,000 for it teenth streots, f Peamyivaiie; etinthe ore oo Sikte :3-_ r.- Wy w:-;{ 29 £y UM ko & Tigntn. Woh. ey ta made and reasserted tonight that the license | and it was more than one to 30 of the people - i John Matthieson, Lee Est John Ros S system, 4 we haveit iuthis country, is con- | living in the state of Maine arrested for strees | Dr. Birney cures catarri, Bee bl Dr. Biruey, nose and throat, Bee bldg.