Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 2, 1890, Page 9

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——— e PART TWO. THE OMAHA SunNDAY BEE. TWENTIETH YEAR. 'Morse Dry Goods Co.? MEN’S . NMISU R Mx \ SCOTCH GRAY morning we shall uin Scoteh Gray offer wear at 7o VMen"sflTuxcdn Ribied IZ\‘I)I‘IIH\']‘L\H872 On sale to-morrow, strictly all wool, formerly sold for $1.50; our price for to- morrow only u garment, Hor's Comel's Hair N Half 11““’8888 100 dozen pairs of our 50¢ quality fin Camel’s Hair Half Hose we offer to-mor yw at 33k n pair. Limit, half dozen pairs to each custome Send for our 128 page Illus- feg trated Catalogue Collars and L A-PLY 50]1(1 Linen Collar one AP Y oy Solid Linen cm't@]f)(‘ Newest and most fashionable shapes, equal to the best quaiity made. NS CLOTHING This department is fast coming to favor with our patrons. We show com- plete lines of noewest goods, honestly made and at reasonable prices. We vall your attention to our line of Boys and Childven’s Jersey Suits, Kilts and Reefers, which we will soll at lower prices than any can be found in the nty {fs. Knee Pants Monday, 50c, 75¢, 89c, HIGH LICENSE FACTS, Condensations From Debates of Messrs, Rosewater and Webster, STRONG ARGUMENTS ~ BOILED DOWN, The Burden of Official Evidence and Reports Against Prohibition. INSTRUCTIVE STATISTICS. PITHY ARD Growth of Anti and Prohibition Oities and States Compared, WHERE CRIME AND POVERTY ABOUND. Hund Reasons Why Prohibi- tion should Not be Engrafted on the Constitution of the State of Nebraska, eds of The following points have been condensed from the debates of Hon Rosewater and Hou. John L. Webster: Nebraska has less than 850 licensed liquor dealors, Kansas has two drinking places to Ne- braska's one. Prohibition was defeated in Michizan by a majority of 4,000, Tennessee voted majority of The amount collected for liquor licenses in Nebraska last year was §20,000, Rents in the city of Des Moines, Ta., depreciated 33 per cent sinee 1883, Prohibition would reduce the! salary of every school teacher in Omahaand Nebraska. * Hypocrisy flourishes under probibition; it nourishes lying, perjury and disrespect of all Jaws After three years of prohibition in Rhode Jsluud the obnoxious law wis snowed under by 18,350 majority, Ninety-one thousand fifty-seven major tion met in T “The liquor dealers of Towa sell on an avery 50,000 drinks of whisky a day indirect defi- auce of the statutes, Inasmuch as society viduais, why should ind way to society rightsi locumb law of Nebraska is recognized 3 minded men everywhere as the best possible foe of drunkenness The speak-casy is the offspring of prohibi- tion, nd does its work without the supervis- fon of any of those powers. In prohibition Vermont there were 100 per cent more saloons according 10 popula- o0 than in the state of Nebraska. Salaries paid town and country school teachers in Nebraska average considerably Above those paid in Towa and Kansas. down prohibition by a have three bundred and ¥ was the defeat prohibi- is composed of ind wl vights giv In probibitien Maine the population in ten increased ouly 11,000, but in one year ail liquor dealers Increased 125, Under the Slocumb law of Nebraska any Morse Dry Goods Co. LATIES SKTS 78¢: bargain of the son. Colors: Red and White, Pink and White and Black and White; full 80 inches long, and finished with gored band, 25 dozen at the special price of Ti¢ for this weck only. FANS FANS. We have just reccived our Holiday the largest assortment and most oice collection evershown in the west, Our assortment comprise Plain and Hand-painted Gauze Fans, in black, white and colors, Ostrich Feather Fans, pla‘n and hand- painted, black and colors, ebony, ivory, pear] and tortoise shell sticks, Black and Colored Satin Fans, plaia and Hand-painted, Mourning Fans, Misses' Fans, Novelty Fais. We invite your inspeotion of this varied and beantiful collection, ssamenteries 50C. have lot of Silk and Mohair Passamente which we have been selling for $1.00, $1.25 and $1./ 50 a yard ‘This week we offer choice of the lot Se a yard, The k l,'(-[mmn\‘m Passamenterics B This is m.mfiev lot of st mings that we sold at & $2.00 a yard. new u yard. \'ixit our New ish trim- $3.00 and We require the space for goods and nhu\\ sell them at $1.00 Morse Dry “Goods Co. town or county ean vote absolute prohibition as provided by the local option clause, In Massachusetts out of a total the prohibition question of 216,000 t 4 majority of 43,82 against prohibition. “Pemperance in all things is the foundation of every virtue,” but, the maxim does not in- fluence the conduct of prolibitionists., insane at Hast- temperate, The 19 were unknown, Justices in Towa makea special business of arvesting a bottle of beer fov &, aund charg. ing #10 to #15 for convicting a bottle of beer. “Three years ago Michigan voted again on a constitutional prohibitor ndment as against high license. Prohibition was knocked out. Vermont only increased one-half of one per cent under prohibition rule while no high 1 cense state inereased less than twenty per cent, "The bootleggers of prohibition states know no Sundays. Their vile adulterations are re- tailed on tue Sabbath as they are on other UETS “here are thousands of people in Iowa who sell whisky and beer. Do the people of the state pride themselves on its avmy of law- breakers! Prohibition as administered in the prohibi- tion states of the union absolutely and actu- ally produce more drunkards than the license stem. The greater part of Polk county, lowa, in tempt to enforce prohibit. Theve are in the prohibition state of Towa over 4,000 places or vesorts anthovized to sell intoxicating liguors under the laws of the United States. vote on was Among the 165 incurable ings 130 are temperate, 16 former habits of the otlier #02,000 was spent in 1880 iu the farcial at- prohibition which does not Within tho past vear there was an actual decrease of licensed liquor deaters in O from 237 to 248, or thirty-nine less than the preceding year. The capital of Conuecticut has a popula- tion of 33,000 and 250 sawous, Omaha has more than double her population with only five more saloons, Only two states fu the union have ever suf- 1 a decrcase in population—Maine and New Humpshire—and they arc prohibition states of long standing. High license woatinto offect in Nebraska in 1881, and closed up many dives. Lrrespou- sible men could not vase the license money and hence shut up shop. Tn June, conse 1588, the first month of high in Philadelphia, the number of ar: for drankenness was 1,470, as agaiust arvests the month preceding. The revels and earouses of the drunkards in Towa ave 1ot stopped at midnight. That stato does not rogulate the liquor trafle, It is free whisky cverywhere, The city of Des Moines has no money with which to clean its streets or repair its worn- outpavements, It is a striking example of 4 “‘prosperous” prohibition city. peaska had a population in 1870 of 000, in 1850 we had 450,000 and in 1560 000, During this vapid progress the prohibis tion states were at a standstill, Vermont, noother prohibition state, has not increased her population one name within the last twenty years, The census glves th theures lu 1570 and 1500 at 332,000, Since adopting a prohibitory law Kansas and lowa have not increased in population at oue-lalf the percentage of Nebraska or Min- OMAHA, SUNDAY Morse Dry Goods Co. | EIDERDOWN " FLANNELY, 65c. The best quality colors light, light and d garnet, black. made, width 88-in. medium and dark blue, vk pink, cardinal, wine and stoue, slate aud fawn, navy and Conntry orders solicited. P EMBROIDERED Flannels, We have alarge stock of embroidered flannels, made speeially for us by the celebrated “Kursheedt Manufacturing Company,” the best goods in the coun- try. Our prices range from 85¢t0$2.25 Confrt Calieo 5 Cents. MONDAY ONLY,2 CASES GOCD QUALITY, SOLD REGULARLY AT 8:C. TOMORROW, 56C A YARD. Gotton Batline 7 Cents. Many of our customers to get a share of the 25 bales off last Monday. Tomorrow we bules more, ut the same price, Send atalozue. for 128 were unable Send for our Ilustrafed Dl) Gmll~ Catalogue for fall and winter. , both of the latter being high liceuse seording to oMcial reports the great mass of criminals in N chusetts come from the poor, the ill-taught and the l-conditioned, and not from the drinking classes. So long as the people wlll not look upon the manufacture and sale of intoxicants as a crime according to natural laws, prohibition will not be respected nor enforced. Intelligence, a_ higher, purer move liberal culture, wider views and more knowledge of the world will have a greater tendency to di- minish drunkenness than will laws, In 1884 fourteen mc - and women in were convicted of tne erime of murd some of the murders the most inexcusable and cold blooded of any committed in the union. Tn Maine in 1886 there were licenses issued by the government to retail dealers of liquors 1,135, s against 50 in Nebraska, That is pretty good for prohibition Maine. Not a single New England state that has tried prohibition has grown a bit in' popala- tion, while every state surrounding them increased wonderfully in population, The num of saloons in Nebraska in 1880 was over seven hundred, and of that number Omaha, with a population of 30,645, has 150, Total increase in this state in ten years, 150, In 1870 Kausas had four times the popula- tion of Nebraska. A prohibitory law was passed in 1882 by Kansas, Today sas has only 430,000 more people than Ne- by There are no laws in Kansas or Towa to close their dvinking places on Sunday or at any specified hour of the night. They aro “wide open” at all hours of the day and uight. High license reduces the numoer of saloons and drjuking holes; prohibition multiplies them ten-fold, as the history of prohibition i Towa and Kansas fully substantiates this statement. In states where there is a prohibitory law they have gotmore people in the alms houses, proportionate to the population, than ther are in Nebraska, where a high license law is enforced In defense of the argument that saloons un- der high license produce illiteracy, Maine has got us many people over sixteen years of age that cannot write as almost any state in the union, The city of Cleveland has over 1,600 sa- loons and a population of 250,000, Omaha has a little more than balf that population, wkile Cleveland has seven times her number of saloons, Maine What good that has been gained n Kansas from the loss of the open saloon has been more than overbalanced by the harm that has resulted from the business of the bootlegger und club rooms, In many Towa and Kansas towns, where probibitory laws are supposed to diminish drunkenness, the sign of the beer seller and saloonist is seen displayed on the corner of wany private dwellings, ‘There was an increase of prisoners in the state of Maine of nearly 50 per cent during the nine years of probibition, while the pop- ulation of the state only increased 10 per cent during the same time, Omaha has grown 300 per cent wealth, population, railways, sewers and pavements than the older city of Topeka, Kus,, and has done it without the so-called beneficent aid of prohibition, faster in Court expenses of Lancaster county and city of Liucoln, Neb, for the year 1584, 30,000, s compared with Po_ Jcvunty, city MORNING, NOVEMBER Morse Dry Goods Co. LADIES' JERSEY WAISTS, $4. 50 Sy3r Ss3iavi IYM A i IS IES' JERSEY WAISTS, $4.50. rsey Waikts YOkt baek in dark nuvy Ladies' Vine Je ! and front, all with tucke sizes ohoice $1.50. Children’s Jerse Monduy we give choise of 25 dozen Children's Fine All'Wool Casl re dJerseys, Brown, nuvy, and curdinal. sizes6 to 16 yours, w.t o0e cach, well worth #1.25, Knitted Waist Ladies' s, $1.50 Each LADIFS KNITTED WAISTS, 81.50 EACH. *HOVE 0S°'T$ ‘SISIVM QILLINA SHIAVT Ludies and color sivabl cold w Ladies’ Stackinet Jackets, $ TWO STYLES, One like cut,tein- med With § rows of b other h down front and | hound v both are o all ool Knitted suituble for hbuse wi o wea ler. Pri n blaek nd also D in escessive Morse Dry Goods Co. of Des Moines, probibition state of Towa, about the same population, 62,000, John Bright of England and Governor An- drew of Massachusetts wore both of the opin- fon that drunkenness was ten, if not twenty, times greater wwenty years ago than now. They were observaut men of the world Every Des Moines man who visits Omaha bewails the loss to that city of the big dis- tillery and the blighted effects upon business and general prosperity that prohibition has entailed upon the ana citizens, Michigan had constitntional and statutory prohibition from 1853 Lo 1875, when it was re pealed. At that time there were 8,500 saloons in the state, and under license regulation the number in 180 had been redaced to 4,37, Nebraska has incrensed more rapidly under its present liquor license. system than any other state in the jRion, and 500 per cent greater than any pre nlbmun state that had prohibition for a perigd-ef fifteen years. In New Hamipshiveithere were 1,442 vacant farms which their oWnérs were compelled to abandon on account of prohibition and seek employment in the ‘manufacturing villages or great cities of the west. In 1880 Nebraska had-éne voters, or one to dbout seven hundred and fitty of the population, In 1800 we have one suloon to euery 262 voters, which is equal to about one for every 1,510 of the population. In the languagge of Hon John L. Webster, with the progress of glvilization has come personal liberty, Avith the progress of zation have we done away with laws that restrained man of his personal liberty. If Towa and Kansas should keep their prohibition laws in force for the next twenty years the census of 190 will not show an in- ease in population over that of 1500, heirs will be the history of Maine repeated. Wholesale liquor dealers claim that they sell much more liquor in Towa and Kansas now thau before prohibition laws were passed in those states, They sell poorer grades at larger profits than in high license Nebraska, Seventy-eight towns in Nebraska have pro- hibition under the local option provision of our high license law.; Fa these local com- munities public sentiment is adv to the saloons and prohibition!is therefore absoiute. In 1870 fhe state of Maine had a population of 648,000 In 1800, when the census was counted, they still had the original 648,000, And yet the prohibitiodists argue that prohi- bition will not stugnule the growth of u state, { ‘The supreme court of the United States has decided that no state make laws azainst the importation of Intbxicants nto another state. What folly thed for Nebraska to clos up her distilleries and breweries by coustitu- tional law. In 1885 a block of six above in Des Moines, T, rented for 5,200 a year and was . valued at 85,000, In 1888 the rental for the same property was only 5,800 and the owner cannct get a pur- chaser for it. The proud spirited youthof this country will not enter a saloon, but very many of them who are bibulously inelined will buy whisky at @ drug store. The drug store is the Towa saloon; the *vegistered pharmacist” is the bur kecper, Probibition weuld deprive the children of poor people of free toxt books and school supplies. There could be but one result— these children would be barred out and cheated of an education which would make good men and women of them. The product of the manufacturlng indus tries of the state of Pennsylvania—which re- loon for every sta with offices ) ~y 1890+ SIXTEEN PAGES Morse Dry Goods Co.‘Morse Dry Goods Co. DEPARTMENT, We shall shades, in -inch only $1.00 par yard. We pli 50 pieces. desirable silk-faced Plushes, 0 on_ sale Volvets, 19 inches lected colors, We quality under $1.35 SURAII SRS Monday morning we s pieces of GOOH SHAUE Surah Silks, suitable for sash curtains, faney work and drapes. Thebest value ever offered in Omaha. 59 pieces Colored wide; new und se- nnot replace this ibroider d Surahs B1.98. Very desirable this ¢ 1nches wide, bl caloved II:_:ux'l‘ EVENING WEAR. We desive to call your attention to our large and varied stock of French Mousseline,plain and embroideved, also to our extensive assortment of shades in Crepe de Chen Both of these are greatly used for evening wear at the present time, ason. Comes 20 k ground and assorted Morse Dr};wGoods Co. pudiated prohibition—was during the between 1870 and 1880, inereased £33,000,000, hwas more than the agricultural pro- duet of the prohibition state of Maine. years The census statistics show that Maine and Vermont have a higher nroportion of divorces to marriage U y other state, yet they have been prohibition states for years, and it is claimed that drinking causes domestic un happiness. The saloons of Omaha will be closed on clection day ont of respect and fear of the li- cense laws of the In the cities of lowa and Kansas the drinking places will be open on that day, as they are on all days of the week—uni ned by any Jaw, W went into effect in Pennsylvania in 1588 there were 14,559 sa loons in that state. The enforcement of the iaw cut this number down at one blow to 7,724—a little more than one-half. And ther has since been a steady reduction from yeur to year. A law forbidding the use—not the sale- of Dbeer or spirits has never been and never will be enacted by any stave in the union, If liguor can be sent into a state from ancther state, how then will a prohibitory law keep a drinking man from securing his favorite bey erage? Only moral education and training can fit aman to 50 live in this world as to vesist all the temptations of v Rob the youth of Nebraska of free school books by enacting prohiibition and you rob them of much that goes toward & proper moral education and teaining. The state of Peunsylvania, by repudiating prohibition doctrines and voting down the amendment, increased her manufactu dustries in ten years to £20,000,000 mo the entive amount of capital invested in man- ufacturing industries in the prohibition state of Main According to the official report of the com mittee of the Massachusetts legislature, under the five years of the license systom in that state there were 14,618 less arrests for drunkenness than there were during an equal period of time under prohibitign in the state of prohibition, Prohibition would raise the tax levy in Omaha and Douglas county to nearly 8 per cent, and at the same time depreciate the value of property #) per cent to 50 per cent in a fow years, Thus would our property own- ers be caught in the vice, their fortunes to ultimate ruin, ounding prohibition communities increased in manufacturing enterprises as fol lows usetts, 1,140; Wisconsin, 6613 33, Muryland, 975; Tllinois, Minnesota, 1,223; Nebraska, 733, All within a period of ten years, The revenue derived from liquor dealers under the high license systemn for the vear 1880 was €750,818. Of this amount 4,102 was collected in various towns and cities us occupation ta & was colleeted by various counties for saloons located outside of their incorporated towns, The danger of prohibition being enncted in Nebraska has caused a delay to the jnyest ment of §,950,000. The investment of this vust sum would furnish employment to & vast number of people and enable them to purchaseand pay for a ¢ amount of gro- ceries, dry goods and clothing, If an Omaha man whisky on Sunday he is obliged to cross the river into probibition Towa to get it. Towa is tk 5 of the rumseller; cuse to y ulate his busiu must have piarae no no Who inNe- HL\L (DY Special - Numbers. 16. ":I(‘D. Black Silk “v"”. 16-ineh ineh Black English Sevge, ot $1.25 I Black French Cumel's Hai Black Henrieltas, Henviettn at English Camel's Hair at We invit: your attention fo these five numbers heing exceptional valie. Ll (] White and colored horde 8«4 Lunch Clotis at %1.50, Regular pr 10-4 Lunch Cloths at Regular price $3 at $2.50, Rein 4 Lunch Cloths RINE Momie Towe 25 dozeu 0 inches, five rows of open work and knotted fringes, worth $1.50, at $1.00, IS GIAN” 1OV B3¢ will sell 50 dozen of our wels—a quality e of 6 for $1.00., Monday.we it Huek T Allof our 0, Bed Spr Morse Dry Goods Co. $10 and %12 Marseilles for one week at %6 each, 1 an_irresponsible saloon would have such a situation prev After thirty years of prohibition in \ Uere wero 403 insane persons in her asylums “This was in 1880 At that time in the Ne braska asylums there were but | man, ilhere! Prohibition would bring a worse condition of things to Omaha than is now found in Council Bluffs —saloons everywhere ranning wide open almost whotly without straint. Out of the 56 persons in the Lincoln pei tentiary convicted of murder only 14 were in temperate and only s were under the influ ence of liquor at the time the crimes were committed. One of the chief causes of habit of violating laws by creating artificial i levick Hitl, o noted English people of Towa and Kansas are just now experiencing the truth and wis dom of the learned géntleman s conclusions. Where the prevailing sentiment of the peo- ple is in favor of prohibition it can be tially enforced at enormous cost, as is evi denced by some towns in Kansas and Towa, Where the prevailing sentiment is against it, it canuot be enforced at any cost. It is cither a high-priced bauble or a complete failur The prohibition book states that three-fifth of all the idiotsin the N asylums were cither drunkards or the di ndants of drunkards, TIn 18580 Maine ha idiots, Did probibition then prohibit drinking? In New Hampshire they had 703 idiots; in Ver- mont 803; in Towa 2,814, and in nigh license Minnesota only 7 legal re crime is the A large number of people are ready and willing to invest their money in buildingsand otherimprovements when they are satisfied that prohibition is defeated. There are also people in the castern states i5 10 loan money who hay cent into Nebraska until that such is the ca The district and county court hraska show fifteen cases against saloon keepers and their bondsmien for violation of legal regulations whick hold forth redress to injured parentsof mmors and wives of drunk- ards, Without the powerful restraining in fluence of the saloonkeepers' bonds there would be hundreds of infractions of the law and no possibility of redvess. business it to put a ave satisfied vefused they dockets in During the year 1880 there were, according to the state prison inspection of Maine, 16,508 persons arvested for druukentess. Mal contained a population of than seven hundrea thousand people, with a small for- eign clement in large cities. ling number of ar hibition state for str less "This is an apal- sts for one year in i pro. ot drunkenness In Massachusetts, where the peopie had a fair election, and where the intelligence and inteliect of that state came forth to cast their bullots, prohibition as a doctrine was snowed under. Is it plausible to tell people of Neb A that all the people in Massachusetss who voted against prohibition were saloonkeepers, thugs and drunkavds? Prohibition in the states of this union, where it has been sought to be enforced either as a constitutional amendment or a statutory law—has done more to break down the commercial industry of those states than any other cause. The surrounaing states, where prohibation did not prevail during the ten years from 1570 to 1850 were increasing in population, prosperity and manufacturing in- dustries During the years between 18:0 and under the influence of high 1 been such an increas werce, products 1860 there has population, com aud industries cnse, both in the | PAGES 9 T0 16, ——————— e .} =t NUMBER 137, Mfiorflsg’ Dry 7(100(15 Co Notion epartm't Hooks and oyos, ear Hook and cye band 106 yi wd. h horn bones 10¢ dozen. Kinet dress shields, 10¢, pair Bone casing, King's bastin Srass pins Hair pins, Ladies™ belt hoso Whisk brooms 10¢ Tiger playing cavds 5e pack. Bicyclo pinying cards 1ie pack, Bicyele playing eards, per doz., Giltedge playing cards 3 Best muchine oil 5¢ bottla. Pozzoni’s medicated complexion pows der 35¢ box. Pears’ uncented soap 10¢ Cuticura soap 1ae a cako. Oukley’s lets"soan 12¢ceak@ Oakley'’s Florida water 39¢ bottle, West Tndia bay rum e a bottle, Household ammonia, pint bottle Tooth brushes, extra quality, 1 Powder pufls 10¢ euch, L 1he, N e piece, 10 yards thread, H00 yards, rted sizes, o Lo paeles nssorte SUpPOrte $1.50y pacic. Children’s bible story serics and ehity dren’s story hook serics, both profusely illustrated. strongly hound und hands some illuminated bourd covers, only 100 each. ‘lflb Cents 1,000 Little Foll hook series, well w goll them all Wool At We shall sell an ostea size and girls’ story book, with beautiful illustration ind luminated board covers choi Jend for our 128 pages all and Winter Catalogu Visit our New Silk D }\t.r illustrated th 25e. \We at 16e. story shall — Cents num stron g mercantile and manufacturing— in the state of Nebraska that it stunds withont a al and without a peer in any other state in the union, With such a record as that the prohibitionistd asle s to ehange to the disastrous policy g effect i Towa and Kunsas Followin he census of 1870 all prob states repealed theiwr prohibitory laws save Maine and New Huwpshive, and the gain iy population and the noticeable national deyels opment was, in the next decade, satisfetory toall save the twostates that ciung to prgd hibition. ibition It is & maximof political and socinl cconomy that, if we would become vich should be surrounded with wealthy neighl Pro hibiting plutoc uld do well to make some estim. nnual revennes t would be destroyed if the goal of their efforty was reached. The prison inspector of Maineis forced ta say from personal observation and experie that the greatest cause of erime in - that stat is the lack of good home influe That being the case prohibition cortainly does not improve the morals of towns, countics oy states, or promote good home influence, Said a Des Moines capitalist “Ourstreets are literally filthy; we ha diphtheria scattered over the aty; property groaning under their load of taxe we have plenty of free whisky, but no saloons and no revenuie from the hundreds of liquor dealers, Our streets necd cleaning fof sanitary " yesterday( asons, p It Betore the Chvand Island Insdependent Keop it before the people that theve a state in the umon with so fow conviets in prison as we have in tue license state of Nes braska. Keep it before the | prohibition state in uniou in which the percentage of illiteracy is %o low as in the lis cense state of ) s K, Keep it before the people that there is not & prohibition state in the union with so few liquor dealers inproportioi to the population as we have in Nebraska, Keep it before the people that there 15 nota prohibition state in the union that hus so few peovle in jail in prdportion to population ag we have here in Nebraska Kcep itbefore the people that there is not § prohibition state in the the wublic school facilities ar in propors tion to the population, as horein the licens@ state of Neoraska, Keep it before the people that there is not @ prohibition state in the union with so fow ine ates in its msane asylums as we have in thg 1se state of Nebras| cop it before the people that there is note probibition state in the union where the moral standard of the people is s0 high as right herg in the license state of Nebraska. Keep it before the people that there is not @ prohibition state in the union wher, mercial p > that there is not & union wher 80 good, the come 1speoity hus been so geeat for tha past ten years as right here in Nebra Keep it before th ople that there Is not g prohibition state in the unfon whers the ine” crease in population in the past ton years has heen anything like as tas here in the lie cense regulation state of Nebras These are fucts worthy of the prohibition controversy cavefully poudered over by every citi to do the right thing, accor bis best judgment doration in should be i who g 10 and is anxious - A fine collection of water colors on exe libition at Hogler & Whitmore's, 1519 Dodge st. - Dr.Blrney cures « rh, Bee Llig,

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