Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 22, 1890, Page 3

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1890. 3 \ Towa Is of any advantage to you or will assist [ know it was stated thero that it would not | Governor Boles. Ihaxoiad better oppor- | during each term fs occupiod by eriminal | from1,000to 1,100 insane persons kept by | resubmitted it in Kansas) Simply bocause H GH v in forming your opinions asto your duty at | v kill the republican party, but would kill | tunities of knowing Wiaf is going on inthe | business, it would be fair tosay that one- | the different counties at home and not pro- | they dare notsubmic it. The fuct is it has A o | the next election, T am _plonsed” to give my | Sioux City to enforce prohibition in Sioux | state of Towa than Gewornor Boles has— | thinl of {he cost of juors and one-third of the | vided for in tho asylums of Iowa, so that in | becomoa political issuo, as Governor Tarrae testimony concerning it. I have hived in | € sry saloon in Sioux City was closed | whether I door notIleave it for others to | costof the salary of judgesis properly charge- | the stateof Towa there aro over 3,00)insane | bee says, and it is unfortunate that it has, iy lowa over thirty-seven years, The state was | for morethan two years and there isnot a | judge. abieto tho sumof criminal costs. The cost | people and supposing that lowa had double | The truth of the matter is that in Kansas admitted in | more prosperous city in the state than Sioux |~ Thavenot time toreply to this question, | of jurors for 1830 is, by the auditor's report, | thepopulation of Nebraska, which sho has | and Towa tho republicans have committed An Able and Logical Argnment by Hon, | it was customary to levy licenses upon most | City but I saw my friends han last evening use | $14,177.80, and onethird of this, #1,700 in | not, she would nsane instead | the party to prohibition and they are like trades and occupations, * 1 know in lowa at | Itiave perfect contempt for an enstern man | tho same argument thit they used at | round numbers and £2,50), thesuldry of one | of 5,000 at the ratio of Nebraskn so tht they | tho man who takes hold of the electrical Edward Rosewater, that time they levied license on retail liquor | that is not willing to loan his money in a pro- | Beatrice, that because t his 3 the number | judge, thus making §,200, may be added to | havomore than two insane persons in lowa | shocking machine—he can neither lot go_nor i dealers, and they charged merchants a licenso | hibition city and will loan it in a saloon tow of government permity fn " W Jowa had held | the remainderol the court costs after deduc to our one in this state in ratio to population, | hold on. Thoy would like to lot it go very for doing busin ing ordinary goods | oreven in a high license town, Sioux Ci fts own or frcreased, it proved that i : ki ‘ Igh y C i3 " hat | Ing the ol cust of the jurors fo tio distriot | anc I sy this with full knowlelgo that _ tho much, but they fear it would bo dotrimental , | and wares; they charged clock peddlersa | men can get all the money they want to bor. | prohibition did mot protibitin Iowa, and coutt, which leaves as a total cost of eriminal | different counties inour state have scarcely | toparty suc ho republicans of Ne. A SOLUTION OF THE LIQUOR QUESTION [ |’ makers, and charging o | row from eastern capitalists: they get all | want tosay this, that that is no argument | proccdureabout #5600, Of this sum &7,- [ any insano persons to take care of. The | braska have wisely fought shy of itand lefs But it soon became un = good for them, and they get all they | ment whatever, is 1o evilence whatever that is the cost of justico and police courts | statoof Nebraska has an insane institution | this matter to thedecision of " the people o popular in Jowa, Wehad aclass of settlers , I think, prohibition does 10t prohibit in lowa, be- | which, large as it s, is small as for ineurable msane at Hustings and has two | the state, They have not made iva cardinal Nebraska's Perfect System of Saloon Regu- | that brought good morals with themin the The 'same is truo of Dos Moines, After the | cause I believe there isnot 120 per cent of | with the like expense for the cu ¥ hospitals for insane, one at Norfollkk and one | prineiple of the party, as it never has bean lati 1 Restricti carly settloment of our state; wo were forta- | amendment was first adopted in the state of | the liquor consumed 1 lowa that there was | For the first sic months, as shown by the | at Lincoln, and thoso institutions aro ample | and nover ought to bo. It is no dootrine of ation and Restriction, 6 in that rospect, And I don't know | Towa Dos Molnes was o small city: it has | even cight years ago. Tknow a rallroadman | transeripts filed in the auditor's ofise and al- | for all the insane that mako applisation, | the republican —_— T you obsevved itor not, but I | doubled in the last ten years and almost | informs me that they donot haul a car load | lowed, ke | that in Towa, and in ovewy |!<ith¢-vl in the lnts five"yoars sinco the n{hn"-r\\'l\m';'llloy dlm Taul a train load, and | the ye overllowing and tho different counties wo | of Novomber is ovor that they have made a v ; in & new count it | adoption of prohibition. I know wo didn't | that they do mot bauln barrel of whisky [ Now, then, Iwantto call your attontion to | compelled to take care of them, And what | great blunder. vo to meet this issua PROHIBITON IN lOVA A FAILU i vy apt to bo gove have two blocks of pavement in Sioux City | where they formerly hauled acar load. this fact that in the county” of Polk, in the [ is true of lowa is equally true of Kansas, | on the 4th of November, and I feel very a greater or less extend by the tend when we adopted prohibition, and now I I notice Mr., Wi en statement in | state of lowa, the court expenses fortheyear [ 1 was in Leavenworth only last Mon- | confident that tho people of this state will not it by the early settlers think there is forty or fifty miles. Wehad a | his Beatrice speech: “Let mo tell you what | 1880 were 832,000, and the greater part of that | day, and 1 found that® they have | load thomselves down with o policy which The Law Opeulv Violated in All of the 1 know sunties in Towa which wero 10 railway with or six cars and | the r o, the papors show thit in 18%6 | enormous sum was for the fareleal attompt of | two — prvate asylums in the v of | has failed to benetit the peoplo of other % sottled by men of the highest moral standing, | twenty horses, and now we haveone of the [ were consumed inlowa malt liquors, 107,000 | trying to enforco prohibition that will not | Leavenworth, and that they are taking care | states, which has becen tried, and thorouchly Larger Giti and the marks can be seen there today; whilo | fine ctric railwaysin the whole country Mind_yout, that was in 1880, If he | prolibit, Thirty thousand dollars have been | of something like persons in those | tried, in the New England states, where — on the other hand some countics were settled | 4 n who has taken hold of the onsult, the Brewers' Hand-Book of this | saddled upon the taxpayers of that county | asylims indepnd of state 1 tainly it hada fair und impartial teial, and by @ different dlass of men, and it siowss | strect milway is o vank prohibitionist: ho | yeuw, “and T presume the Brewers Hind- | atrdy for the sint six months of this year | tutiors, and theve are fully two insune por. | which bs hid o su coss thoro, lus bt re- dlatinct class of people thete today. sald he would rather have the grass grow in [ Book will be good anthority with him | by the justices courts and audited and cred- | sous pro rata in thestate of Kansas to where | pealed in Rhode Island, repealed in Massa. SIGNIFICANT CRIMINAL STATISTICS. T say this 1 'll""m'mh' was distasteful | the city than to have prohibition repealed, Mr. Rosewater—laughter]-for the nanw justices who make a special busi- | there is one inthe state of Nebrasks, 1 do | chusetts, and will be vopealed in Vermont if — to the early settlers of Tows in 1847, and tho is no man more interested in veal | yea ginning list Aprl, he will find | ness of arvesting a bottle of beer for £ and | not know why it is, but from my examination | they got a chance, for Vermont, for the fivst legislature uuthorized the county commission- | estate in Sioux City than Mr. Doom. that the amount of t isumed in Towa | charging §10 or 15 for convicting a bottle of | of the vecords | am improssot with the fact | time in her history, elected sixty odd demo- The Utter Fallacy of the Statements | ers tosubmit the guestion to the voters of Nime e the most prominent cities and '] was only 80,00 barr In Nebraska this | beer. [Applause. | that in those states that have adopted pro- { eratic members o the legislaturo this ye Advocates Shown | Cach county whether to license theretail | will nam® the prohibition cities : Des Moines, | hund-book says that the peoyle of Nebrd Now, " then, in’ tie ¢ of Doug hibition and sought to mamtaia it thero s a eason that they ave tived of the pro witenbh bl d e fl o dealers or whether tonot license them, That | Sioux City, Cedar Rapids, Ottumwa, and the | consumed 1 I, 1f you fizure that | county that has a popul of ono hundved | higher por eent of jusanity than it the states | hibition s Now [ ve way to by the Records of Was the fiest step toward probibition in fown. | smaller cities, Kearney and Creston ' and oth- | upintogalions, asMr. Websterdid at Beatrice, | and fifty odd thousand ortwice thepopulation | that ave ranuing under high liceuse. [Ap- | other gontlomen ; g0 on with th ihe OBUIE Our code was adopted iu 1551, and the leg | ers. Name mé tte dull towns and i willname | orif you go a little furtherana figare it up | of Polk county, lows, and in which is | plase.] Tdonot kiow what tho reason is, 4 ' islatire that ac that code framed o stat- | you the cities that haye made the least pro- | into dvinks, Ifind it Shows like this: There ated Omaha, painted by prohibition ora- | whether there are more cranks there thin ute stating in express language that the peo: 55 i tho state in the last ten years, Theso | isa barrel of beer divided among 25 persons the wickedest city on earth, the last | there are heve or whether crankism, which pie of Towa would take no sharein the profits [ are the facts, in Towa during the years that would give | year court axpenses wi t X e border land of insanity, i The following avethe opening arguments ale of infoxicating liquors, TThat was 1 am restricted I believe here toabout forty- ; person in the state 3 3 . drinks of @ half- | and the police cour 2 q 1 over thoe line, [Applan 1 0 l M 1 f‘ t 2] of tha secondl day of the debate on the prohi ctor of the men and it wpo | fvomindtes T am a slow tatkoe anywag, | pint euch for the yERE, ok 1n obhiok Worls, 1t | Denses fi oux tity s thi year, | arothore, and thatis suflicie : o mana anutactun ers. bition issue atGraad Island, being those of fon at that time, It wasac and T cannot give you the information that | | wwould give him 11 pints during the year,or it | agiinst £0,00) f¢ £ of tho year inthe | ave simply tiying to find out whether - —a G e Lavrabee for prohibition and | Cratic measurc at th Tho demnerats | wisn I could, nor give you the in- | would give him for gliss of beer | city of Des' Moines [applause] and in tho | hibitiou hias bottered the condition of the Boots and A Cglieln bty hadcontrol of the legislature thatadopted | formation that T wish you to know. | each day, and the r the year ho | cointy of Lancaster and city of Lincoln, whether it has decrod [OOSR e s Hon, Edwi water of Tuer Ber for |y Haicure, continued until | If you . knew the * working of | would have to go thir: which hes about the same population as Des | w creased insanity, whether it KIRKENDALL, JONE o Wilgh Tooise: . 2! hes aro produced | 185 vassed by | prohibition in Towa asT know it, I believe | In Nebraska it s 27 piits fo thoyear. Tn. | Moines, their court espenses have been [ has decroased paupuwism, and [ivive not yet | holesale Manufacturers of Boots & Shoes without ab: y from the notes of Tue 5 re prohibiting the salo of | there is not s manamong you but what would | stead of having his drink only SS days | 3000 as compared to §2,000 for the county | found wany of the states of the wweit or in | 20t Gy ar Shoe Co., 110, 1104 and 1108 Biy's stnog " wineand beer, as well as strongliquors 3 this | vote for it. in the year—1 have made this computa- | of Polk. any of tho prohibition states of the east, for | ABentsfor Boston Rubbor Shoe Co., L1t sl e 1s snbitted o a vote of the poopleand car- | Hercis my friend Mr. Rosewater. Tad: | tion for every fourth person, taking it for| Let me call your attention to the factthat [ they are not numerot 1y Instance it | p— GOV, LAREABEES ARGUMENT. |viedby alands ity. hatwas tho | mire Mr, Rosewater in many respects and | granted that the womon and children do not [ notwithstanding Goveror Larrabee’s own | woild convince any rationl pecson willing to Trowers, ¢ state on the | have agreed w thi‘nwhiull_\‘ wpon, auestions | ke their drinc overy fourth 1 it ) o Givol 0 pgis= | Question of prohibition. the chara of public poli and 1am always glad to re have his drink 200 days in the year, So you | sincerity belicve he means well—I be- [ that they have effectodt the veforms that they % 8 i He Gives a History of Liguor Legis realittle better off in Nebraska [ lieve he'tricd his level bo rco prohi- [ claim o have wade. And so longas they Lager Beer Brewers, tor of the men that settled Iowa that located | his pap He is what we call” in thewesta | see they s there at an early da tastler” and T only regret that heis not | than in Tow bition inTows, and I believe really and sin- | caunot effect them, whiy do they want us to e M LRSS Ciovernor Larrabee of Jowa made the A until 1856 or 1858, You re- | righton this question, 1 have a toleration you theso figures to show you that | cerely considers ita factthat prohibition lias | change when we doing well enough aswe LA IRLL AL R Lt ol ing specch on Friday afternoon. He < Nebraska bill: that great | for him and a spirit of sympathy with nim nsiumption of Hiquor tus decrensed, and | decréased erime in Iowa, and that it has de- now! They talk of cmpty juils, We | S ——————————————3 e a5 follows i s v tated thepeopleot this | because I used to believe just as he believes | there is no man of ovdinary ability who can | creased insanity, that ithas done away with have got more empty jails than they have Cornice, : and you vemember the great | now when I kiew less than I do mow. | visit the state of lowa and know wlat is | thedvink trafic.’ He believes that, but Gov- tallc of the prosparons prople, We are A e g slavery ' question; it rather over- | [Laughter] going on, but what will azree with me. erior Lurrabee, 1ike o great many of the peo- | cettainly more paosperous thau they aro "AGLE CORNICI WORKS, | " 7 name > shadowed — the temperance question | When the amendment was first voted on | "I vegret that this thine ever ot into poli- | ple whoare infatuated with this “one iden, is we have boen told by “Goveror | Nanufacturers of Galvanized Iron Cornice Bowith y N rG the fora while, Tam sorry tosay that the polit- | in Towa L yoted neainstit. I didn't believo | ties, but I say 1 believe that prohibition will [ notin the habit of investizatinz and finding | L §that Dos: Molios fote 018 ‘G 18 | oriniaom ark a4 mbtatis dailiioe . S Miutists el ot L LR LS ety swhich T was a member of at the | it could bo_ enforced, I have changed my be repealed in Towa. I can give you | out for bimself whit theso facts ave. 1t iy v prosperous; and_tho other day T [ Wi samsnnd nabiess Wl o s L BEIE S, vyay SHEKAEERHI00R. JYVEla At adwhich I have been o momberof | mind from what knowledge I have learned e RTERY or farci I Sory- o IIeAstras D VRGALT baxit!| Rotoad dns thion Nas: Fork it [P Eron b e MR RO O is an unusual thing for me o ad-| (GO Voted to permit the sale of ale, | since. I know awise man changes his mind and morchants who voted against prohi- | those reporters to the state of lowazand I | ter from the mayor of ~Des Moines AR AL dress a small audience, it s wine and beer in_ that state. The saloons | as heinc >3 in knowledge and Ibeg my , just as I did, because they | to say right here, one of them was [ Mayor Cam y teokk it upon himself | aee pleasure whero the pevsous ave | nuaq utonceand continued togrow rapidly | friend M tor' R Nits eridiaa BLrong | dldat. bellave 1b: oonid b omlobaed. | th ‘cliy oiltor: of. Diral Baa and tho Rt e L HoRp willing to listen tomes itis apleasure forme | P00 ate until | suppose. there were | men as they are, I beg the Almighty to teach | and they aro now in favor of it, and I believe | other was the sporting editor of Tuy | the Beatrice debato that the cities of Towa, | Artists’ Material fodomy beat to nteriain e 1 ciine | 5ol saloons in thestate them to se¢ the right in this & if'it was voted on toduy it would have o ma. | Bie, and not two tramps, as they first | with one exception, and that is Sioux City, Mdtetle here by invitation of tho manager of this | ™G SCEIE G temperance ques- | T couldu't help thinking as Mr. Rosewater | jority of 70,000, and know the people of that [ charged. 1did not justify cither of them, if [ were ranning dowa and nad gone down, and 1610 Douglas Street, Onnha, $in piass o rddies jou ot KR A0 UoR v oo Nt : | was spenitin of Linooin Tast, everiing Tivith ' | snte anontss Swoll as onybody ia Ibs T meet | Shoy Popresentod tiomscivas is' reportars for | hiomado lils statemont ovor—lis owh Himo | e ey . i e [ank eosntas EHALV s war wce question was agi- | he would use the 2 an acquaintanee at every cross rond other papers. Bul in auy event they wero | thit ho did 1ot af asingle stor-zoon in Conl, Coke, Etc ey R AT s el e | et : the friends of temperancesaw the | rightand bo gover as I thank you, ladics and emon, and | sinply tl to find -~ out the - trath | the business portion of the cityof Des Moines [ sessonmeeeniee o e s T @ oons Sproading over Towa | Mr. Rosewator and his-friends will help the | have to apologiz o you bocuse 1 am ot a ande o whole trath; but tho - Voico | tint was now for rent. Well, I went overto | OMNAMA COAL, COKE AND LIME CO., i L nperanco people petitioned the | peoplo of this state towalk in_the pathsof | professional gentieman, and I wint you to | wanted to know why' I had sent out | Dos Moines and it was raining last Friday Jobbers of Hard and Soit Coal, cignexin any state of the union, T think | {4 the tempciancs, BEe Bet e abol. | Virtuo his name will bo honoved in tho future | dndarstand that [ have beon busy at worle on | the sporting editor of Tie Ber_and mot tho | Thad togo around with an umbmlla, and o FOERE 0 S0 SO R RO it question of nationality was settled Sev- | 5 hent of thesaloon. Iknowthousandsand [ and the children for generations to come will | my farm and my attention has been with aditor. Well, would anybody ex- | went only on the main streets, within ' few Cox. 18th and Dvg © exponse, Uit Lhls W4? | thousands of petitions were preseited in | have reason to rise up and call him blessed i from this question, and a year ago [ | pect-me to sond “to. the bistop of tho Metho- | blockes of tho postonice, and within resch of Cigarn. J the question of an amendment to | No, I know how strenuously propto adhere | could have made better uscof my time than | dist church over in Towa to find outhow many | the opera house, aud I oo down the num. | ss~goge T el . nstitution was voted upon | to their own _ beliefs, and_ afte having | T have, Y Siloons aro doing illegal business and b Va1 ol - the Al fMerent Rt BEAN, ARM: IRONG & 0O, MR DL \gislature and passed. 1t was voted on Tace desion they often adhere toit afier | p ot 0 e e, | MY oints And “spak easys? theroavet | foind tventy-thres b CCA LT onk Whoiesale Cigars T s e i and submitted to the people during [ their gonscience has been convinced it is | M. ROSE ) AU “ | TApplause.] T supposed Iwould have tosend | some of them very lavao sto W anon e bR e chousands of good lowa people scattered all 1882 and adopted by our people by a | wrong. There is where this question of pride someboly that knows how to 1 theso | them whole blocks, T went into cne of then G R L LR 1 i Mices and knows how to investizato their [ and theowner apparedvery anxions ind party and in Kansas _tho xoeaded §30,000 for the first half of | while theinstitutions of towa are full and | will discover this year bofore the fourth is rson_would | personal belief—and I ecredit him with great | give it a careful and candid consideration | sesaveseas i omy | ajority of 30,000, It was to take effect July | comes in and Isay T wish my friends would He Exposes the Failure of Prohibition ST oR ndsin Iowa to come 4 following lay aside that pride and go over in lowa and in Towa and Kansas, operations. And their repo s trae in | toget someboly torent his buildin £ testimony concerning this question to be pr Now my friends that spoke heve last even- | tallc with the best men wo havegot, I don M. Ro. LTI AU IR s concerning the closing of saloons in F ask him totakemy testimony. Hecan take | npp op other reason. One of my own child as Sirries 3 3 i oA ¥ t wid elsewhere where high license | the testimony of our state officers. SR e e ia 3 10500 AR oy Bl JE Lo et RO G lE been adopted, they spoke of tnum- | Wehaven's bat_one state ofiicer today but | desireto returnmy sincere thanks to Gov trestion that accountk So thas 1s all the T suloons closed at once. That was the | what favors prohibition. He was form ernor Larrabec for the courteous and gentle- apology I have tomalco for bei > today, 4 ) h JIo Tata than thore arein the stite of Ne. | honorable mayor of Des Moines, md 1 went | ~Fi-BATRICK-KOCHK DRY GOODS 60, : £ J oin lowa. When our amendment was | good repudlican, buthe left the re | manly mauner inwhith hehas presented bis | braska. - Thave the reports here of 97 of tho | over thore to his ofic to tell him that be was r BB D3 :“":Il"l':.' ‘I,:_‘"‘III:T fonorion ”:.“i' n’l”"‘l'l“l“, adopted the saloons all over the state closed | bed uw'l{u' s ot satisfied v 2 side of thiscase. Flois tho first prolibition | ®sherifts of Tova and in thoss countios | aprevricaton bt lnlullnm flh«lbh":l ¢ v Importers and Jobbers in Dry Goods, s mo; ol 00d and staple | 5y 6 and many of us supposed the great | tion and has been ¢off” r St o ever beard ot who has | there are 327 prisonersin jail and 548 per | plause, an give you the numbers of 1hose | gents' Furnishing G G IR B TIIREB i " : £ | ertion’ of thom would remin closed, but it | man who has attended during his lifetimo to | Crator that I have ev ‘v‘l‘ ol _“l“. .““.’ e e e e Jotises i rou wish: wovernor man than Nebraska. *Hereis a grand oppor- | FOAOT P56 V0o Lofore they bagan to | o strictly private business; he is oyer sixty | not used vittupution and abuse as the chiel | 5 grainst 388 persons in the penitentian I have not given theie counties, pe tunity to build up o graat and power | onn gin, and if you knew the truth of the |y and too old to change staple or argument and ‘certainly he isto be [ jy Neébraskn, and 137 inthe jails of Nebraski, | exactly, and Lwill repeat that so ful state. Xou o have malcrlal & ad- | e Tyontureto say you could go to these h T mistrust that two years i commended for that, (0F this isan issie that | In thestateof Kansas, where thoy boast so | sure Imakeno mistake, that in Kuns L Vitage ";:.l(m;‘"r'..:;;nbxl.‘l'x"in yesomo | statcs wheve they lave ligh e Liind wor's ehar will weaken s position on | js too graveand too fuportant tobe disposed | much about the enforcement of protibitory | of 103 counties all but cleven have 5 DEWEY & of the fin cople fr © orn state: 1 A oy al § > subject. You may take the testi v s 4 S rislation having reduced erime v have | 1 ixof these have n N 8 3 e in R of the ingst people rom all i ctstorn states | Sulos i to walls st as. they did ot that | the wiject Nou may tako tho tostinony of | o iy un ordinary campaign cantostby per. | Jislation lnving roduwced erbmg they have | und sheof tivso lave o, juls und, Wholesale Dealers in Furniture, s infaney yebs tho stato bas hardly mouded | *1yo nad tatal mrohibition on our stat- nd you can take their testi- | sonalabuse, slander and misvepresentation. | fi'th o county jaals, with 11_counties” not ve- | have prisoners in jail thers 5% prisoners Farnam Strect, Omata, Nebraska. its policy for the futur 0 i rong i Vi Vi v district judge: vill direct myself to some points the gov- rted, whic cir prison population to | now confined. Nebmska, in 8§ counties H ne ERICK. policy 1 ture, or o | utes apuinst the sale of strong liquor b our district judges, | T will dir points the gov- | ported, whici swell their prison popula I CHARLES SHIVERIC Why, when you consider that this state 15 | g “1595 (o the present time; there | ake the testimony of all of | ernor has made here, jud the fivstone 1 want | over 1,150 agai : And of | 5are without jails, 46 hav. y in juil,and Fumit % to exist from now toctornity, you can 860 | }44 not beena duy.sinco 13 that it was 3 wohave four superior judges, and you | 5ot "Ct See ot L E O Governor | the empty jails that weaave heard so much | the 37 counties that h in” juil 1 urniture, the importance of setting.out right. It| o "o soll strong drinke in the state of | may take the testimony of twoof these nien, | % 00 P ntton lo I this: Covorned | hout the stato of Towa have thirty-six, tho | ported 137 inmaes in jail, or about” there. is like fa young man setting out i | poln onlyforlogitimate purposes, which we |and the county attorneysin about the same | LAKKAD ys that inninety counties out of s state of | Theseare oficial and can b - — business. If the young man is born with | Loy there today. proportion all over the state. You will get | the ninety-ninein thistateof Iowa the pro- s only aby e nummber Now it Had beontsaid Hthat . 5 e healthy constitution observe - the | ®p4 " hese 5,000 saloons scattered all over | the sime statements from therm. libition laws hgro been just s iminal convictions in the state of lowain | properly hasnot depr VOrYIMNE || commmas s QL RIhy SR Ly o our state violited the law every day in the | I am surprised to find that T have only | ey cell forced | 1588 was 838, s in rosperous condition. Mr. MCCORD, BRADY & GO, R Aaa ur 'y dy ! ) e well or about @s well enforced y ; ; | ¢ GUOTERANE it wear, and I venture to say there was havdly a [ twelve minutes left. Tt is the first time, T | 1008 ) (OB 0 00 code of the | GovernorLarrabee fu ten months. Reisley, the builder of the becomw o wseful man and o uselul ctizen. | Saloon in our state for years but what sold | believe, tiat T ever talked on time, and I y d : Coi ] Well, the number in 188 was 1,108;_the | one of the leading citizens of De Lo Wholesale (-“"C'@“Iy g strong liquors, notwithstanding it was a vio- | don't know how much time I am using. state of Towa. [ehailengo his attention to | imbek sentenced to county jails wis i || o thiab 11885 the mround hore Ry .thand Leavenworth Stroets, Omaha, Nebrasks. OB Ei s KhC e Likes S iliouunael, nution iafiabn ey, s I never took a public document on the | the great mistake that he has made, and I | 1888 and J93in 18 y have been ten | louse stands now was offeved Lo a syndic = R Ao It ToTlon This ll,..,‘ ess ‘s(-m\ns Laldmnur.l\‘lze th Sm{:" (\? :L;i:,m:lm‘ibu “Ehut lllllt;l;!u';u,lllfnlt‘:n{l ‘}: want you to carefully pay attention towhatI | months, l;ullhul ‘:,n“"m \u‘\.\u in y ‘mnl'i‘_lifin D member, Lumber, Ete. z d g raged in it: the temptation is too gr make, but T find it necessary for me to do i i TRt ‘a over | was twelye months, [Applaus nere | busis of 25,000 for 132 square \ s oo It s just with nations and states as it s [ €08 T TE CIRECE™ 0 tRe business. | at the present time, Of course, [amuot | 433 1;‘('.',“ Bmpaitne ““‘l“’,"f;"“:' % | were sent to the pe R atia ot iorn o tnl| fomitla ecar ol ety ey ihaTiaD GV, DOTSIA dis with people. A state that follows the advico | Tilva iy from 100 por cont to 500 per cent | famillar with the situation in Nebraska, 1 | 4000 places or vesorts authorized to sell | oy and we will take the governor at | erty lcated on any two covers opposite the Dealers in Hardwood Lumber, of its wisest wen and women, astate that | S and the temptation is great for men [ simply know the working of prohibition in | intoxicating liquors underthe laws of the | pjg yyord—in ten months in 188, 106; in ) isas fiaea hotel as Yard 1310 N, 1ith §t.. Omaho. permits wisest men and women to dictate its | o aro unserupulous and they camot resist | Towa, and that is what [ desire to testify to | United States. Four thousand or move of | twelve months in 183,315, ~That "docs 'not | there is in Nebraslea, if not better, which | ==———y o3 imor ollE e diraito el i GOl ERAIAR. the temptation. toduy, and as I understund that Tam not o | thosepoople have taken out permits, and I | show that crimo ison the decreaso very | should have doubled in value under ordinary OHN A. IELD, That has been the cise with our nation in | 6\ unendment was decided unconstitu- | speak'this evening, that, the other gentlemen | ¢ o2t e of e B e s P Co | mueh, annot get a purchaser, M, Wholesale Lumber, Etc., Etc, the past. On theotherhand, @ state or o | gional by our supreme court and sct aside | ave to speals, I find it is necessary for meto | £ IOb LAy LT, (O3 Now, here I have alittle articlo that ap- ST OREIOn T onbRAI AL | nmesiies AL B PO aa st Smses nation thatadopts improper policies, or is'| o S Yaloons were running againus usual | askalittie indulgence of the committecin |menttax for their own health. I assume, | pcoped'in the Lincoln Call, which has been vear at $40,000 conditioned P rent tor M1iwhnk 0 B oment, and overned by ignorant men or carcless'wen or | a5 tho assembly adopted a statutory | orderto permit me to say that whether I | however, that 1000 of these may be charged | yecently conducted bya gentieman who is | on therepeal of the kaw, and now vou cannot Quiney White ] leadsirong men that. do not act wisely, you | Lovision, and it took effect on the Fourth of | speak ox don’t speak, I am under orders from | up to the original package,or may be charged | not a gen tieman. [Langhter.] And he calls at_any price. Rents have depreciatcd - = may rest assured disastor. will come sooner or ‘\gain o lavge portion of the sa- | your chairman, and make 1t a rule to always | up to druggists whodo @ very small Telail | my personalattention to the fact thathe lus | since 1885 at loast 3 per cent. CHAS, R. LEE, bl ROy aes va clrilixsion) Glways; oy 3 closod, satisfied that the law would be | obey order A bt G T e s T eraat W0 | opencd a ledger account with “high licenso nrad Youngermian, a citizen of Des Dealer in Hardwood Lumber, great questions to meet; there scems to b0 | anforeed, Our legislature failed toadoptthe [ I notice in the Beatrice discussion that | liduor business, and there still remains ersus whisky. Now, we will sce how hlgh | Moines, says that he ownedlot, 8, block 13, 4 e tomelliing. for overy age, every genaration | g v measures to scoure perfect enforce- | my friend Rosewater mado somo state- | people who sell liquor in deflance of the stat- | jicenso and régulated i stands original plat, on Fifth and Locust st Wood oarpyia andpargielfoo i Bl INGARORN NS hias a work to do. “You remember invead- | pongand it is not strange that they | ments that it 15 necessary for me to reply | utesin the9) countiesof Iowa. Now, I do | prohibitionand free wh ays that | southwest corner, since 1883, six stores | e BRI WL DOIREER ing the history of our mation at tho time | gig " o any new legislation of that kind | to, not only formy honor, but for that of the | not know muchabout the saloon business, | the whiskyledger hasopeied anaccount for | and — offices above, for which in FRED W. GREY, of the constitutional convention a few more | o never can expect to lave the legisltion | stato of Towa. Ihave mocopyof itat bome | ¢ "1 yumo that it a saloon man | 1899 for Lancaster county and on the | 1883 ho was_offered #5500, and it then Lumber, Lime, Cement, Etc., Etc. votes would have abolished slavery at the | juge wight the firsttime; we can not expect | andonly heard of it since I arrived in Ne- 5 . | bitside aro the following accounts: Court | rented for $3, vear; but now ho ) s , LG, LG, yery first organization of our goverament. | 3, get overything just a5 it should be; that ska " wnd have noverscen it before. He | cantot make more than ten sales in any one | il expenses, $838.61; paid attorne, s roporty for§3,80)a year, and all Corner 9th ana Douglas Stroets, Oriaha. The wisest statesmen of those times were In | 085 TR R Gr Togistation. We passed | says that Governor Larrabee, like Ben But- | day of the yearas thoyear runs, ne would | to defend criminals, $1,519.65; jail expen i Do aE ey favorof abolishing slavery, but it lacked a | guood law and made the saleof all kinds of [ ler, sees both waysat the same time and he | consider his business very poor. In other | 3. county attomey and deputy,£3,10); jortion. And here few votes. Thero wero s0 many otherthings | J0% illegal, but it was not until the 2id of | says it scoms very remarkable when he looks | wonls, the 3,000 liquor deaiers of tho stateof | Loor and poor farm, §.26L04; to waintain | this morning I have been handed o “pioce of to belooked at, itis no wonder that it did | jyno thav the assembly met and additioual | at. the figures T'have lere respecting the ave selling 30,00 drinks a day on_the | vty police, $18,000; fines and costs of court | information that I will read: ho Rentze- ¢ lack a few votes, But the evil was continued sasures were passed until we succeeded | criminal statisticsof the state and thoex- | av 00 and drinks. Now, | (he has added that, which has no place in | Hintz plang company at Des Moines, employ: lmponcrs and Jobbers in and continued until our day, and we know | igepably well in enforeing it. pense incarved inprosccuting criminals in 1 challenge theattention of Goveraor o), §7,47.50; total, $53,978.30, ing 100 skilled worlimen, has publishad its i S the expense, we know the loss that it ineurs | 7 {GusSwom into oftice in’ Janu 1886, | the county for thelast- four years, sh ; nd of every prohibitionist within | ' Now, he says from Blder Howe (it takesan | intention to fre b 208, 210 80d 212 South 11th stroet. after an ovil has grown to thedimensions | gq'atthat time I think there were' about | that the cxpense of prosecuting nas in " | my hearing, because this assertion has been | gldor to know more about. thes 's), One of tha principal reasons assignad by the | T thatslavery didin this country, ~We have | Givaniysaloons in the city of Des Moines, | Now, this is i reply to the statement I had | made upon therostrum and everywhere in | froin others he learns that fr > | Dropristors for tha cRaygo i thit thay Are Notions lewrned what it cost s millions of tne treasury | L o Ticense fee of §1,000a yoar; between | made that crime had decreased in fowa, I | thisstate, that the prohibition laws are s | cent of all the crine, pauperism, et Sharbio to duceliabuskilied Gorman Hano. | ~—3 - FOBINION NOTION GO and hundieds of thousands of lives and the | e “und seventy were running when 1| repeat it, Crime has decreased in lowa, and llenforced in probibition states as_other | gipect product of the saloon. He says, then, | malsers talive in Des Moines on account of Bra Dbl By bl deoh sacrificingof tho health and properties of | {i¥ “15' Das Moines, The stloons in | I called upon the judgesof our state in'a re- | eriminal laws, and Twant to know whether | horefore, i nt of this amowyt of the | prondvition, Wholesale Notions and Furnishing Goods, millions more tn sddition. in the large cities throughout the state were | cent communication to give me their opin- any criminal law was violated % 008 A .77, Then ho 1 Ui Gilbort stareh company, the lages! DA (EPr I remember well the contest that was | poaplyall runningas usual; the law had been | ions of the ckings of prohibition, and [ 30,000 * times each in the i3 days | “In bearing her proportion of expenses of | in thestate, wasburned in Des Moines ¢ Lol waged over the Kansas and Nebraska bill for | o forced in someof the rural districts. outof 44 judges, 41responded; 80 were in [of the ye whether there would | stateinstitutions in ratio to populition to | April. Before the fire the ownc Sion the o fon of this fair country which you The 2th of May, 1950, I issued a proclama- | favor of thelaw'; they suid it had reduced | notbe a revolution in thestate of Towa, orin | (hat of the state a debit will be taxed up to | I decided to move from lowa, LOLLE, XTI inhabit, and many of you gentleinen remem- | yion calling on the people of the state, calling | the criminal expenses and reduced crime: 6 | any other state in which crime should run ter county as follows: Reclaiming fornd it difeult 10 3 = © ber it, but what soems strange to t o th 8 L " 5 Lyt G ? . o & i i 2 o x 2, CONSOLIDATED TANK LINE CO., hi DLV WAL S VEAUR e 0! 10 | on the judges, sheriffs, county attorneys and | were non-committal, and5 were opposed to [ riotat such an unheard of rate. Just think ves. ; mamtaining the peni sell their goods to dealers in other states who e . TR I present tino is o look back and thinkc ol | gif iiereSted in law and good onier, o en- | thelaw. 1 have théir letters printed love, Supposo that, 50,000 thefts wero | (. g3.50: lomo for the Tricndless, 1505 | had declared a boycotagainst the. Wholesale Refined aud Lubricating 0ils, now that we found strong men delending | foree the law which was upon our statute | and if anyone desires tosee them he may do | c tted in Iowa every suppose 30000 | industrial home, §l,1¢6 reform school, “Congressman John H. Gear of Burlington, | Axie grease, etc., Omaha. A. H. Bishop, Manager. the cause of slayery at that time right here | pooes: so;L only wish I lad time to quote from should be " committed, 30000 | g4 690055 total, $10,6(6.65. Seventy-ive per | an ex-governor of Towa, has removed his lron on Nebraska scll, andall through the north: | “While T was in ofice, or until last January, | them. t on fire, 50,000 persons | goht of 'this added to the othér makes | rollng mills fzom Burlington, I, to Youngs. it seems incredible at the present time, and | | (hink tuere had been about 5,00 salons | Now, then, Mr. Rosewater is impeaching A Coula' you conceive | §10.453.77, which makes a total of 48,465 on | town, O. Luckof patro o account of we can hardly bolieve that we could fiud'zral- | gosed in the state. It wis fot an casy | my tetimony in this caso and o says, I | any such terrible liwlessness without abso- | {he debit 'side of the ledger. Lincoln gots | prohibition and trouble in gotting skilled men R PAPER CO ous udvocates of slavery in tho mnorth, but | 45k, Now I don't undertake to say the law | say thatit is testimony that_ought t obe con- | lute anarchy £38,000 from her liquor dealers’ licenso, Take | to invest in homes in Buvlington is assigned S ‘" such was the fuct, was casily enforced throughout the state, | sidered.” Hesays, “when I prove Larrabee | If suchu . 11 | tha crodit from the debit and the balanco is | a8 the cause. Wholesale Paper Dealers, When T fiist went into office people said to | to have falsified the records in regard to | people would all beup §10.403 against high license, Now, let ussece | “Ithinkl have demonstrated it and it is | cerry m nice stock of printing, wrapning and writing mes FYou huve got the prohibition law and | criminal courts, all his statements fall to the | insult to common intelligence for anybody to | how the prohibition and free whisky runs | not necessary to demonstrate further that in Daber. Bpecial atieution f1ven t card paper. why don’t you enforce it{’ They laughed | ground.” T will admit that. Ifhe proves rt that the law prohibiting the sale of versus high license and regulation. In Polis | the best city of Towa property values hitVe | es—e———————y county, lowa, whicl has not quite aslarge a [ decreased and rents have decreased. Farm AR ater spoko as follows: all essential pavtionlars, Itis also tvue that | fered me his three-story ani @ b M. E. SMITH & CO,, , Ladies and Gentlemen: 1 | inthe stateof lowa today the 1 i v ! Dry Goods, Furnisting Goods and Notions julls empty and a @ o prison- | 22100 aye uk 1 have ars in the county jail in the penitentia able to” pretty utradict tho Corner 11th and Howard Streets. productions necessary for the sustenance of Omaha, Nebraska. Itis so with all evils, Thero is a_dis- position on the part of many people to adhere 1o things as they exist. There are twoclasses of people, conservative and progressive; tho | g jne that [ falsified I am willing that everything I | liquor isenforced just the same asthe law conservative portion of @ community always | “'Phe leading members of the republican | said should fall tothe ground, Heré I have | against theft, agaiust perjur; like to let things remain es they are, as our A L. DEANE & CO. democratic friends used tosay at tho com- | yroqd s republican méasure. [am sorry to say [ meat he cansee the statistics that I have. | of DesMoines alono there are something likke £3,020.70; justices and’ police courts, | **How isthe state of Kansasl In every Goneral Agonta ror mencement of the was, *The constitution as | that our democratic friends, ov the leaders of | Hosays the expenses increased $200,000in a | seventy permits issted for the sale of liquor, 30; the poor and poor farm, | cityof Kansas without exception, all along ¢ ¢ it was, and the union as it is.” * Conservative | yhe democratic party, misled, and have ever | single year, and he quotes the eriminal sta- [ and that means at _least 700 violations cver the city police, $31,500, a total of | the line, there has beea a_terrilo ' deprecia- Halls" Safes, Wil frown ab anew fiea. On tho | yince, the vaul aud il6 of thab party in that | tisties of 'that state, and tho expemses | twenty-four hours or 21,000 per week. 'L | §143563.05 on the debt sideand not a dollar | tion of property values, In all the smaller 821 and 323 South 10U St.. Omaha. v "5‘-"5 progressive people are al- | ga¢ incurred in prosecuting criminals in the [ have here thereport of the city marshal of | on the credit side |applause]l. Not a single | towns, aswell as in the lirger ones, brick | se——————my ‘\\_r:. I-m‘y to Dbetter the con- The rankand file of any party in any state | last four years, and [ vill show | Des Moines, and while it very fully confirms | penny received from licences aud four times | blocks and stores stand ant and property Toys, Fic. ditln of = any community, if | g honest in their instincts and honest you_tme ine "expense tof prosecut- [ all the statements I have made that prohibi- | 4s much tax for criminal prosecution, T?olice | can be rented ata very greatly reduced py P e | m_\‘ gnxpmm.‘uuc is proposed, [ dow't care | j,"thefr motives and desire to promoto the | ingeriminalsin Towa fincreaséd more than | tion doesnot prohibit it does not show inany | exponses of Des Moines, $31,500; Li - | I'was in Topeka last Monday and Tuesday H. HARDY & CO,, hether it I & sugr palace, dectric lights | welfare. 1t is just so with the democratic [ 800,000in the last two years. sense of the word that the law is enforced or | g15,000. The county of Polk in thestate of [ and 1 made special inquiry. "It has been said Jobbers of {08 youe dly 0ra il milway ac o anges v in Towa, but the leaders misled them, | =~ In thelast two years of statistics tha even sought to be enforced. T intend to re | Jowais saddled with 8149503, and not a dol- | herethat the state of Kansas 15 prospexous T Dolls, Albums, Fancy Goods, maniictiring estabishment, vou Wil tind oy tanited nse the. leaders of tho ve: | have in lowa, for 189, the criminal expenses | view this record as we procced but I will | Joryovenue. 1 wouldlike to Sco whether free | and Mr. Bradford hus said to you last nizh) 0ys, , ALDUTIS, y Loods, Tt A S o adrocaia gl ke “Why don't you enforce the | were i),420, and the anount paid prosccut- | omit it for the present because Iwant to | whisky is better than rezulated whisky that Topeka 15 one of (e most prosperous of | House Furnisbing Govds, Chlldren's Carriages. ‘:’.h‘:‘":n‘n‘fl;‘n’\'n\..--:"’ ‘-uu to forward it; | Juyy ing attorneys was & in the year pre make the question whether prohibition does | mark you, I have not added any costs for the | cities. Twatked up and down the principal Farn b. While, o theshor hind, consorvativo peonle | wo vears rolled around and vou never [ ous the critminal expeinses wero &M424, and | probibita s peclaity tonigit state of lowa for thele mainténanco for the | thoroughfare of thatcity and I havein my == = e nob undortako st e gt 1t | noard that questiod asked. We did enforcs | the amount paid prosecuting ttomeys 853, | | Twant to ll ¥ ontlon, however, | home for the friendless, for their reform | pocket tho numbers of twenty-two store Water Supplies. B ke e 18 his 0if- | t, "1y overi counties in 90 of the siate of | BIS. Iwill say thut thestatistics of 153 are | to another branch, 'and thatis tothe court | senool orany other inst . I have simply | rooms for rent on Kansas avenue and there | == ~ e e community, dow't care Whether it is o sch lowa the law was reasonably enforceb,—just | foronly ten months in the year, soit shows | vecords. taken the récord of the sheviff of that county | were a number of store rooms occupigd that | U. 8. WIND ENGINE & PUMP CO, :h-mirl St gl mml‘{ lm“?‘ .mnl' about as weil as the ordinary law. In the | he was either ignorant of that fact orelse It has been stated hewe by Governor Larra- | and the record of that polic nd if 1 | havenot counted, because ik were tempo- Steam and Water Supplies Sbon this question. of temperante - P OF | counties of Dubuque, Scott, Muscatine, Lee | misreprosented it. T don't. believe he mis- | beethat I have made a_ misstatement at the | have not demenstrated pretty effectively that | rarily taken by parties during the stato far a SUpplies, B latovial wellare 13 nob sl peoplo noed and Pottawatamie the law was not well | represented it: I wouldsooner believe that | Beatrice debate concering the aggrogate prohibition is a very ensive luxury I want | “Kausas avenue s th priuci Halldsy wind miils, 018 and 20 Jones #b, Omalia make them jreat, ang ncellectun Pwoltars (g | eaforced. Whilo it might bo that in tho | some ono elso looked up the statistios and | penses of the cow 5 0f the state of lowa dur- | to leave the flelc o rovernor have | pal business stiet in Topeka and ST Asting Manaker: addition s mot sumiciont s boeauss with a1l tha | ¥ of Dubuque the saloons w running | that he them improperly. 1 say that | ing the past two yewrs. The statemenis that | hisown way. The governor says this is not | I inquived of o dreuggist who'e store was ———— = {ntallectial advantages, It you are ‘h‘;‘ ,M"_ and have been ever since—and in Daven. | the expenses decreased, and I will follow | [ made were copies from the repart of the | g question of material welfare, it is a ques- | located opposite the postoffice, which is re- Tron Works IR oral teahica wou e n)ub mwlm :lisl\nu‘u port it is the same—every saloon in Des | back for ten s and sce whether my | secretary of state, and'if they ave not correct | tjon of morais, and I'say so too, and if 1 can | garded the best corner in town, and i found | s e AR RO trauog plis Moines, the laegest city hsl the stato, W statement iau't correct: e ilon [wout fnto | I am cortainly not 1686 chargal with misrop- | not demoustrato aud will not demonstrato to- | thatthe highest routal thoro was 3,600 4 | PAXTON & VIERLING IKON WORKS, My friend " o closed. I used to offer $10 to any one who | office in ) the first, year tho expenses w resentation. have them both herve, T sup- zht when I get tothis question that prohi- | year. Inthe block adjoining, next toa g { § N ilding Wi lfll:\n“of:x‘x\x:"r‘:ulu‘:‘t\'l.x:t‘:x‘::f.‘}u::‘lr:‘f:\'.r',::‘»fi‘,'b,,':‘:": would point outa saloon and I never had to | $421,024; the year prior, $413,349; the year | pose the governor, 8s X understand it, does hi!LInn does not prohibit, :Iml (lu'l"hpA"u.u- r | banking house, a stora 1 o B \\mught and Cast lron Blllmlll}, \\Ufl( andI wilguote from 1.‘,‘.,‘:*,(,‘.'“,‘k o { v the 10 yet. When Mr, Rosewater sent | prior, 79,58, o not dispute what I' ‘quoted for 1889, and [ jmgorality bred, and more 1inmorality caused Engines, brass work, general foundry . machino andy s Tt o et o9 | his reportar'to Des Moines Ithink I gave him He makes the si tatement in regard to | what I quoted fov 1888 iy hero in this ook, | by the prohibition cities in the states of lowa ered for Further uown on 8 Risckaally wosk,. Offise and workn th ¥ iy mlm-ullgufhu s W u;\'- i; s the same proposition. the number of convictions in the state and I | that it was only for tewmon ths. and Kansas than the by the high license nue the twostory brick bulld- | TS ’ (i e A ““rsu‘.“‘., S The By the way, [wan tto call his attention to | will gve youthe number of couvictlons in [ Governor Larraboe--It was for ten months | system in the stute of Nebraska, then I will [ ingand both thestore and the upper stories MAHA SAFE & IRON WORK! country s @ natlon largeely our suceess to e | the fact that when he sends another reporter | tho state “for cach year, commencing with | insteadof twelve. yield up the field. are renting for month, Now, I want to o A BATE 5 characterand the work of the carly setiors | thoroto huve him tell tho trath. When that Vs sty : Mr. Rosewater—Thatis, that the footings | ¥ Now. we have been told that insanity and | know whethera great and prosperous city, | Manf'rs of Fire and Burglar Proof Safesy ) snglnd. owe largely our suc- | poporter came to me ho told me ho was o 1 1,470; in 1883, 1,877; in 1884 1 | for 1888 represented but ten months) hauperisn are materially decreased i - | the capital of the state, that can make 1o ©ess a8 anation to the principles of “the town rter for the New York Ty gy 30 5, 1,0 8T, oy (b Gt paupers! y o asod In pro- . e e O " Vaults, Jatl work, fron shutters and fire escnpom et e s i e e tion "o 1 | porter for the Now Yorlc Tribune and I gave 5, 1,440 0 1886, 106455 in 1887, 1,520 in |~ Govemor Larrabee —Yes, sir, - | hibitory states. The statistics of the asylums | better exhibit is veally as prosperous as the G- Audreen, prop'r. Cor. lith Snd Jackson Su. | abilit -lf;( Nemsic ta nives: ‘I;wmwhm 9 him the same information Iwould if he had | ten months of 188, 8325 twelve months of Mr. Rosewater—I quoted the figures | of the country do not support that view, I | cities of Nebraskat T asked a man here today Ikfiowh O o aze of told me he was from Omaha, I would never [ 1589, 1,108, just as they are given here, and | haye reports from every insancasylum super- | in Grand Island and was told that one of ey et oo fol ooy that the fuillre of | have withheld anything from mny repovter [ I regret Lhavenot time to go over theso | the xeport says for tho yers ~IS6-7| jntondent in Am but two, and I have ex- | your unimproved comer lots, 44 feet front, the southern confeloray wis largelyuc- | on this question, I'believe in polities as T do | statistios and show you the facts. As to tho | on the outside of the cover, and I'take it for | amined them carefully. They have all been | ha sold for £,000. I venture to say that i3 counted for by that diswegard of e town | in business—we cannot afford tobe auything | eippling of the city of Codar Rapids, which | granted that the reports are correct. golten out within the last sixly days, and 1| more than thrce times as much as any 44 feet mmiing, W6 have metLose loday to cetry. | huthooesh he stated had decrcased inpopulation from | ~ We will take, for instance, the finances of | find that out of every thousand peaplé in the | willsell for in Toneka or Des Moines, Nota T out this town mecting principle, tho prin- | "A man tiat will pervert statistics, that will | 21000 0 less thau 15,000, T wil say tho pov- | Polk county alone, I wis in' the city of Des | Ulited States abolt ouo. person i lusane. 0 Is for £100, wnd | Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings. ciple of the Puritan fathers, - 1cavenot what | maken falie statemont to the people, do- | ulationof Codar Rapidsin 1885 was 15,420, | Moiness week ago today, and Ihave tere a | hat §s the ratis, Now., in the o 3 t deal less. I was told in ll\l:‘":e \A:':Is:‘;::: g‘\;;ug.mm‘:‘l;m 'jl‘ll‘:: :“\\lll serves thelr scorn; he deserves their con- | and according 'to the last census | letter written by Mr. Loomis, the sheriff of | grate of lowa the ;mrl,.».nm.v.m'-.wu-.n over you could not sell any property st meekn .mm.‘.m,\.“m“{ AT 4000 o | temut £¥ te population was 17,997: in 188 | Polk county, concerning the expenses of run- | 1,400 persons in her insane asylums, while in | this time, We have demonstrated then that heople that mj‘m Lho aadislons of She oourt Now I wish tosay that the prohibitory law | it =~ was only 10,104, which shows | ning the ¢ in that county thestateof Nebraska there are something | 80 far as material welfare 1s e and R otr Soe g Ay Chattr | was enforced inlowa during my last ‘threo | that hels entirely mistaken as to that. 1| “DesMorses, I, Sept 12, 1500. —In 1iko 680, and T was disposed fo believe that [ material pr ty, tho T Stats lau‘uw“ congresses and rule the state legis- | years or two years of administration reason. | could point out a hundred mistakes, I think, | to your inquiry, I have to say that the cost of | statement until I went over to Des Moines | that have adopted prohibitiox UNION STOCK YARDS CO. S Lo, | ADIY well, with the exception of the o coun | WAt this man has made, - criminal prosécutions in this county of Polk | Jast week; butafter I had interviewed the | stand a comparison — with ON D& 00, o™ e so upan this temporance ques: u“l’nlz;l:‘v“i":""»‘;‘ MERS 8 2 b e Qiotes Govoruor Boles s sustaining aggregiod in 10 about $,000. "L total | shorit i i wed (lovernor Boles and | Now why should wechango? Why should we 0f South Omaha, Limited n L e K ho _city 0 Moine now n. Gove les is concerned, | court costs of Poll county,us per auditc other stute officers [ came to the conclusion | incorporate into our constitution & provision :",}:fifi|l;§’“;""!“;l;;"lmvy“ll:‘lvl'x:}:m;rll“l::"l; claimed fthas rofued business, It is tho | 1Wantto say this: Hels a pleasant gentle: | report, (and which I have right here with | that we havenot credited up o SROUIOR | Ahat the [oopiaof Tows will Peieal Lndonbt ” A 0 Te4son Why It sbould be yoted dows 1n | S5m0 argument I heard made here by Mr, | 1an, Indeed, and upon questions of general [ me), was §92,00.92, exclusive of the | ficioutly in the statoof lowa. I found that | edly, in my opinion, if they only get a fair FORLADIES ONLY-=DF. Loduc's adical Piily < hyepget v G 0 vored downin | Webster, and 1am ashamed to hear men of | 0r public policy wo gencrally agree, but upon | sularies of “threo “judges, #500. O | 44 insaio persons were kept upon tho Polk | © ' i i e ke e iAo Mancn .. Tl b | the wtrol \m}lllc; and nlbtlhyrlhnl‘lmfi il{‘x;‘- uestion r&) ;_xp'm‘bphiu wo do ot aud s | the above ~ amount - cversibing s | ‘county poor farm, and Governor Bojos tolls mo 1y did not they submit it in Towa i they ter Bisinve, We adojted’ prohbidon in Towe men have doubt i their minds or fear it wil | + Rosewater, I used to agree with | chargeable to a y criminal - precedure excent | that the superintendents of tne various insane | Were notafraid! Why didn't. they attempt Several years agosnd [f the experience of hurt business to close the saloous of the state, | him on that question when I knew less than [ | part of the jurors’ pay and part of judgs al | asylums, after making proper inquiries as to | it if they exp. o get 75,000 majority for We bave o living Ulustration at Sioux Cluy, I kuow at the preseut tlme. So, don't blame | uries. Inasmuch s’ the time of one court tho number of insaue, fud that there are | keepingup prohibition? Why baven't they t o against mur- | populaticn, by the way, as ~Lancaste values have also decreased in - many Sections S party bad a meeting, becauso it was consid- | therecord, and if Rosewater doubts my state- | deror against anyother crime. Inthecity [fhave; Court expenses, §0,577.83; grand | of To Sash, Doors. M. A. DISBROW & O Wholesalo manufacturers ol

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