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‘ " » yetuated? porting probibition, and ite elerg (Advertivoment.) drunkards farm. All hatle Pro-fand a few Prohihitioniaty to y petuat : hibitioniat! All hail Maine! daeé thy an unholy and despicable alilance| They would have wm belleve that) are amainat It, At @ recent oor nly pro-|probibition Ie of divine orlain, and jenoe of the United Lut t Haht #o shin and enacted a law not polities or name te a reproach. Her hy-|hibiting the gale, but the manufac-|a Mibilcal Institution, 1 will not) conan Hey. Carl Kinefeldt. w nity of sovriny amelin to heaven! Merewtar|turing of intoxicating beverages|take the time to quate from the authorized to state the a th [ithe tald of blue upon our coun: | within the. at Goverr Vat«|Mble to disprove thelr hypothoats, | the Lutheran clorg a he tt ' u anner blanea out her me|teraon, with superb cour and| but will content myself with reel these wor ve t pu 9 an orator tw sanctit liaudable fidelity to bie pledges tolciting a story which Imattrituted hands the ¥ ‘ : do (he people of Maing tol-|the people who elected him, vetoed | Horatio Beymour It In t him | cause thetr priy ' to th erate \ Hition? 2) Me. | the bill, Dut hie veto wae overruled |that when he wae a te for|far as they mix p ‘ tlelane find in ft rich (and defeated by the spirit of hatred |wovernor of the tate ¢ York, | use of things t materia thelr political purposes | and lnpassioned prejudice in whieh | With prohibition for an le Lone | Kitts of God, e reH fi formed |intolorance may be p and ste It to perpetuate thelr | the dastardly monstroaity was con Wis ineatings wom rowe An ne r ' if the handwrith Tt on | cotved ° idiene ar hed bin whet nt of miew ' . uv Hand. ite downtall Wary And here we have only an infin understood the ible | " ule uf ws H p ' AL the last #tate eau iteamimnal fragment of t veoord, | respect to probibition, ar e t ' 1 fis 4 tion f vb 7 only a ecintilla of evidence whieh | of intextean k Mr « | t , #titutional prey m he multiptied and acournulated | (hat he had been a ety * r amier . i Glearly-detined ‘te o PHond imitation, and all leading | Mibje and that he wa 4 ' ' / : : failed by a masorit ‘iy [to the Inevitable finale=that pr iar with He teachings; that he | ne al with the F t “> Tho eonselenes of the p hibition t only does not prohibit, [remembered that after the ark had declaring — the je awakened, they have tived of the| bul te ersive of private and|landed a ¢ waters of Hood |onty te a sy ’ | inoubus, aod the early fute public morals, had ah hee rn ‘ r in their r tit Witness (te annihiliath A in FE ee Phere the saloon wae—gane, as band nted Alin pininty stuted that not excessive € And the unhe Jemorativating |And ratlonally regulated If the raloed m wine from | drinking or beverag A exportonce of Maine has been dupite|ple would have It so-—the blind ple |the mr nk of the w but any use, manufacture ted in Kan nd in every other| the epeak ea the Woot-legmer and land ‘ drunken erager hott tate where prohibition propa. | the Reductive club locker now are H tent ‘ ’ waled ite banetul inf os. 9, sale have bee at the the | ¢ emation mg The f ne le taken from the U.|honem@ and effect! eK n, and nk net t of Milwaukee Mayor’s Address sizisisit tie: auto lastritotelion hit it ts a ye u Cc Cc ~ x Citles, Department of Commerce and | man ingenulty could deviee haw suc of uM t Labor, table 85, pages J18-S82, to |eeeded them, |Testament wine and liqu mat Irunkenhens and drunk and din: | ye ayo the national congrew wae|the Haylour converted ' City nh ther at Dreamland Rink. heh adda ai fn il tees Ra Lai tion, in the principal cities of ican. | I) Feapect to the question of abolleh- land that he made « rk it wel therein ’ an ’ ‘ i ae ne the army caniean Thie same jand it wor pronounced by |iles a world of rath al SUmMmORtions r . * Kansas City, Kan, with a popuia-| sect of Irresponaible, trouble-breed-|the governor of the feart) he re. I wish to speak ax t prohibition and ¢ tlon of 67,418, had 1399 werkete or] ing Keneationaliate invaded the halla| membered that the Havior admitted jand in behut te Mr Ij isting One Arrest for every 60 of popula. {Of federal legislation and vitimately |that He drank wine; he remembers spenk as one who haw wy | teen = lop, Topeka, with a population of |succeeded In securing the ennct-|in fact, that wine and Hquore were tleed total abstinence, and 1 27,041, had Til arrests, of one to} ment of a law abolishing th an-|popular beverages in th f ays, influence ir r of that pr a levery 46 of populat and Wiehita, |teen. Army officers, those inveate A} but he sid n land always expects to a ijt with a population of 91,110. had 1.268] With muthority and eb ed with} man mention ¢ | have come, throug Twan.1t arrests, oF one to every 24 of popu-|the oblgetion of maintaining dix- lever celled for water, ani ty ye 1 say of : lation cipline, protested, but to no o |hell, where he ougt » tlon, and imate exper T read from an interview with Me | The canteen was doomed to go, and | for one drop at a tine Hee local 1 pr ition |¢ |W. 1 Mearns, one of the leading | went | ‘This te certate blunt way, al- [methods f 64 that we Imanufacturers and business men of| If the April number of the Army | most brutal way, of stating # tr Jaball not be prepare deal ov Topeka, publighed recently in the |@o4 Navy Life AM may belbut it te the truth just the same,|cesafully with the ar tr Ban Diewo (Oat) Unt found (wo moet valuable articles, |(or he referred to the rich man whe tien untll we ha t t Hinoe the blosing of the saloons In| One from the pen Edward Hanke |bexged of Lasarus « drop of water |tention from pr it Topeka, the conditions are most de- | mith, chaplain at Governor's isiand, |to quench his awful thir jit up. ty hae plorable, an they are in every other | #8 the other by Edwin Mmersen hin is complete eummary of ail |the nine men who drink their beer . . . . Jelty In the stato, * © © Ay you/the eminont author of army stories |that the Bible teacher, In the days |(omperately ae their neighbors pi id . Yr Jare aware, the saloons for many (40d of wide acquaintance with the [of the Old Testament the Lord voi. | drink thelr coffee and brand ther ® ’ liom of monthly tines tn lieu of the my friend king knowl |enrth by the pe of nts high priests, |is intemperate in hin drinking. And |%® 2 & javer Heenses The enforcement of may find much profit in alwhom Me chose for Hie monsengers| there ie just ae much justice | ti e easons or 1S the prohibitory law has been taken |Perueal of these articles, for they |and teachers. It seems to have been | branding every 4 wh be ‘ 1V out of the hands of the couhty atter- | ¢ riential truthe that may| His plan to punish tranemresnions 46 |eause one-half of mankind ir * ake ney and lh dd with the attorney [Hot be ignored if we are In search |(they were committed, to promulgate | temperate in their eating j x weneral ¢ * In Topeka we | of facts laws, many of prohibitory character Individual expreasions from eler fi 1 i OS] 10n how have 2 Joints that 1 know of] Chaplatn Amith and to vielt His wrath upon the vio- laymen of all denominations on both| If ° How many more there may be I can- There are two el f intem-|lators of those laws. But when (he | sides of the proposition might be | ™ - 5 not tell, but I Mnow they extet. Theag|Rerate people in the world--hard | Kavior came He t bt a new creed Hiected without number, but it|t joints are the most dis epula | drinkers and wron thinkers All |The ereed of le na ¢ fidence has been my end or te ' pis « known to man, located in 9 | thoughtful men have @ compasaion |the creed of me: 1 obligation and |ply show that many church I Jodly ety, © * © In Sattion tolfor beth class for the trouble |sponsitilities by which He ree nomioations, in dof being who will exereae thene are more than 20 clubs where |And sorrow which the hard drir nized the individualities of m ed on the aide of prohibition, are geous diene Ha Mr, Chairman, Ladies and Gentle: | negatives the theory of free moral |learp something of value from thelr |lquore are sold by the drink and [entails upon his family, and for th Jwarned him, cautioned him, admon-lopenly and emphatically agminat it. |UOn of those to whom % agency and which establishes men. | teachings: but It seome that in re- | where iy, ver an, young nen| Widespread trouble brought about |iabed him and advised him, aod hen But laying aside « oneidera ted, there prt att men bleh 1 apect to Ute mont Jous problem | have n ruined, for their habite|by the Intemperate words liete him to act for himeelf, account-|tlon of sentiment and coldly + wry $ If all of its people had evacuated | tors for my personal conduct which I too many are prone to listen to the | Were contracted Immediately under (ol Wrong thinkers, * * © You lable only at the final day for hin en rf jem from the debit y reputable am ? thie splendid city upon my arrival #0/ would regulate to conform to my | subtle voice of morbid sendin nt, |the eyes af respectable men. God | fan never legislate men into moral \*,, my ten or one any. Be satel | Siegel + bd point, there t# ar and reputable’. ‘ oi A desires and happi- |8%4. unconsciously thelr judgment| save the mark of reepectabijity! |ity. and thie whole question of tem-| These Prohibitioniate have consti: | other field of thought which is well uct Aarepy that I might have engaged in a tour) own tastes and 4 and go er attceed ts ie hie we aa Te ee Te te teue ween 14 pri Perance and prohibition is a moral |tuted thomecives the guardian of the | deserving of exploration. It te the | hs hould Puted Secon meatenans 406 wee) Rees and wale 2 may 4, OO And what of Maine and Kanaas,|ie filed with glee when men golauestion * © © The most com-|home, but what & home! The home| material wide, the side that deals| Thin, te feument against prohibition | with » jug op the bed and a ber-|with large doliars and small cents | Tet! structed, and been left to form an | alone, without trespassing upon the | the only states that Kept the faith? /astray he must be shouting with nt, ea ‘ ao | th ide ti ney have made \the wide t ithe ve whatlsights ef ethers To speak of olther is to provoke|joy and making @ continual yisit|/# that I€ does not prohibit, This has|rel in the eel t appe arice and | Pere estimate of their character by $4, ah i. ' it ff them only reproach and cos Kansas, where prohibition does |been the experience of the army, |themaciyes the protector f the fie those wonde ten-|'t thelr hands and heads and hearts) I do not ltke prohibition because tumety © rlahtthinking person |net prevall—except in the statute [48 experience which is valuable and |echool! The school that teaches hy- |tial engines that control tt siness |the voter have done, I would have encountered | je at direct variance with the t hes even respect for them or their | books | pertinent in nectlo be ortwy and deception, and pajomps # the world |,, Pele UD with ste people. for the t nd “ ou ‘ w ches hatred and efore we leap blind! th tons vulty in reaching a safe con- | princtples of our governmental inati- | People. for the avera ind, tn ite and What of the states of the |sause ur my i composed of in That teaches p bi yt e ie | p, Saereenr we seewes Itutiona in that It invades the natural | eptimates of value » integ- |#outh where prohibition, in Its virile | ae men taken from the work olry and intolerance that we know not of, rather thar 2 spentiale os clusion | . rity and consistency and h ty. | ye might be presumed to enjoy |! janeos, and the reeulte of eight n our Milwaukee ebate, Mr.|bear those we ha we may wel ond loafing, and rite Out there, upon those many bills, /and civil liberty of the Individual and neither of these is to be found | tus Kreatent renath lyeare test prove that the olition | Dickie, as the mouthpiece of hie per. Haten to the et! nail volee of cau-| by lewd by r | 4 con In the civic life of the biaotry: | Prohibit) bee e op of the teen--an abolition hich | ty, ae red that the Catholic chure and measure th s byi oe sweeping Valleys that di nd because 1 Will never consent « | ” ame operative tn " whi i" ors spre : 4" utifwl homes. | that the smallest frection ot that |Tidden commonwealthe, Nay. I am |Georgig on January 3 a year ago| moet with the overwhelming disap. | pnd eerie A pee eden gpm tet eee ia ioihice toate [piled vide them, are your bee | o Kencrous for bigotry may mean land Ih the first ye { its regime |Proval of not only the we *, but |in America without a single excep-| There t# nothing constructive in| Pied Beautiful homes; which, In the ex-|iberty shall be destroyed need- | sincerity; and to a t that the peo- | there were 1.364 places paying | thelr superior officers a moat| tion are on record againet the liquor |the polley of the prohibitioniat. On | cent collence of thelr architecture, #ur- | lesaly | Maine and ae are sine [the wovernment tax for the sale of |Whfortunate mistake traffic, Unqualifiedsy and wilifully he contrary, he advocates a de 1 r s ‘ @ prohidition because ie t Incomparable |intoxicants At fetal! than in the ‘On the other hand, regulations do | faire rine, which, if carried to its intended | th rounded by broad, sloping, well-kept} I do not like prohibition becau Ignorance, must” know | year linmediately preeedings Think |Teaulate The canteen, when happily If we may rely upon the word of |wequence, will strike @own public | wf niy Golier of @t. Louls, andl revenues, destroy great industries lawns, with thelr backgrounds of /it breeds hypocrisy and disrespect what is transpiring around them: | of Ht bittonist! Lay tbe ayeet |enforced, did meet the natural re | Mer r eelsiative enactment) 1 of ¢ 4d to ? c eo} ¥ q on quirements o 7 | , 1 di to dispute it, we have|and work « species of confiscation | ¥ elle | rich, early summer foliage and en-/for the laws of our try and to deny their ignorance te to | unction your souls tha€ fn pne | Q¥irements of the army and waa the will dare pecle nfiscation ntoxteante tp of flo wet ithe probibition bes Prove their dishonesty and that ie|year of your ' y [beet possible solution of the quee-|it that his holiness, Pope Plus Xj of property without any pretense |l*sred with thiev Mvened with the brightness of flow I do not like probibition b UNE | even wo than bigotry hotided 1464 ealene in “ool? ten . temporal head of the Roman Catholic |to compensate ite value jand murderers. form ore of every hue of color—there t#| its practical operation will result in Bigotry may not be criminal, but) What a gloriou ritage He then quotes liberally from the |church, not only does not favor but 0 ly would prohibition w | me * pla him in that ation of propertics | dishonesty can be nothing ¢ The city of Atlanta today hae 166 |Offlclal reports of department com- | opposes prohibition, and we all know [the defeat of revenue for t efiected the culture, refinement | ruthless confi no: treasury, but It we T know that the ft ren! lac “ . nd May | summon witnesses to give | licensed saloons, each paying an an.| meanders and trustees of soldiers’ | that all matters mporal gov- | © and aesthetic taste of a people who | acquired within the @ptrit and teatimony feapecting elvic, eocial| Mus! license fee of 4260 th. tatten | and concludes with thie state-lernment the pope ts @upreme and|from the treasuries of the cities of Pt subscribe to thig seek the beauties of Hife and impart | tity of the protection of the law and business conditions a* they | prohibition treasury Acmieed I tinal authority the country $64,600,000, which they |*™ 1 surprised, for, ie beauty to all things that enjoy thelr | without returning adequate compen- baye actual existence in Maine? | to sell beer” It is true and it) oT femard it as my privilege and] | Following Ie the declaration of |now derive from license fern |Rever known ian (0 aul on for the value of the property he record |# appaliingly diewust-|l= near beer in truth. Bo near duty to speak a word te ety,| Mer. Goller his brings tom am told that the elty of Beatle t Piven Hoe tes $08 8 one yeoper M. Nay. It smell to heaven with | the dictinetion lies only th the Wane [temperance and good living on the |the thought that his holiness, while | receives approximately $400,000 ae And this people is a God-foaring | destroyed nauseouanesa Nor le this the woret. pha iit part of both citizen and soldier, It|he belloves tn everything temperate, |annum from saloon leen hes people, For here and there, in gen-| Ido not ike probibition because tt T recently held two joint debates | situation, for every public Miciat | hae py ed impossible in the part | her no “ rib jot the pre | Prof Kamu A) PUT | waukee and the other erous numbers, we soo the epires and | would strike down revenue# ab steeples of cathedrals and chureh edl- | lutely needed for governn ympathy whatever with the oliey In enforced, either one example.” ne hibition question wit? f that fair city knows, must Know |t? lemi#late nen Into hablte of total | prohibition moveme He drinke | of two things must inevitably ensue, | UP @* & sample of aff A. Iekie, one at Mi-|If he possesses the intelligegoe to |abetinence, It te the part of wisdom |a glass of wine himself, and believes | upon the one hand the enforced eus- | And the dive saloon isp je them into the way of |that men should their own judg- | pension of public Improvements now | ‘Ste every piace where inten uld eat and | paid for from revenue derived from |8te sold at the Aud ailfy Wim public trust, Rhett the [tO pereu flees catching the glint of the sun-|poeée and without returning any |torium theatre in ¢ enn only a blind, « cloak to| (rue temperance ment in what ’ reflecting it over athwart | adequate consideration for the joas, | ShO**8 as the ere 1 and deception. aml you,| add t testimony of Mr. (What they should drink, and not | (hat source of @ substantia! increase | would Nike to ight and es ee deren | fa a 7 r **-Jtattve of the ma my prot on triewh—you wrveew In no oth army is|otber men de uch matters for|in the direct upon real and per- |! respect to the 4 the enow-clad peaks of the dista n treasure, in improvement of mor party In preparation for . 4 fostering and propa so common and Magrant| (hem. That is not the spirit of fr ture of prohibl vf mountaina, whieh in the base of|ais or in promoting the genera te I sought retiabie Information jgating the hypocrisy in the American army m, but of autocratic government interested, seriously in-| full knowledge net thal miles stand like sturdy sentinele | welfare rom the officials of the leading cit-{ Why, only inet Auguat, the pr tican recrult ja no more|In this country of boasted freedom the problem, for the eme court of the U + of the so-called ary stat this vice than the Ger- | especially. prohibition has no place. | manufacturers of intoxicating bev- |") # divided court, has hele to labor employed In that |@**truction Of property andj of the country heralded to the World | B1Ye® & siibeustied agsinst the horizon I regard this question as 4 great) to that end I addressed to them let-|the significantly Interesting fact |iman, th enchman, the English. | The pope i the spostic of all things | crages pa And here, oa erery hand, are your | economic question that appeals with | ters of tr eting the nom-/|that @ “blind pli bad been dis nh of Russian—perhaps not | in Foratic n, but not of prohibi- | industry §56.006,000 per year, and dj-|!t ut of ria of trade and great of- | potential urgency to the mater ber of arre for drunkenness and | covere the capitol buliding ef th te so much. The difference ts rectly and indirectly feed, clothe and on pee ve with thelr many testrtal ein ton oneat |for drunk and disorderly for the|state of Georgia’ In thoes aame| that the soldiers of other armies are| This ought to be conclusive of the | educate 0.000 persons dependent wlidin ‘a a the moral @ ear 1908. The United States com-|hatle whore unly a few shert monthe| het forced into total abstinence ertion of the relation which the/ upon that employment stories piled one above the ot of the nation and to the happiness |sus reports give ue authentic data | be the duleet te f the sentt ainat (heir will, while in barracks, |Catholic church sustains toward pro le now employed im other| until it and all Yhose other structur of our people, And surely you will | UPOn the subject, but the Inet pub- | mentalint the harrangue of t only to be allowed to misbehave hibition. To be sure, there are | fields of industrial endeavor te in j Court was not always |Mahed report was for the year 1) the challenge of the bigot |they like a# soon as they get be- |Catholios and Catholic clermymen | tei . for if this wplendid army of |™!nd. for jn a former sential to commercial setivit agree that any question of such deep land | desired t to Int dt de cE raponm d stung the leqisiative eo} yond the reach of their off In prelates who do Avor | workingmen now emp din the| the court failed 7 by them we know that you are NOt | significance ts deserving of being |to theae requests | received replies the virus of lnthlefanee are stead of temperance in the army we | prohibition ae 6 6they) may traffic are made to lowe that em-|>¥, & diviatyn Aine lagunrde Uy the highways of trade| considered and discussed and de- |e my letters, from which and Fe- hearts with passion and warped their| Dave teetotaliam while on duty and every disciple of that creed Ployment through the machinations|, 1 can neve ida tee terintead be alt the laweel.s lying upon whieh, I tabulated the| minds with prejudice! Let fall the |intemperance outside.” left to his own discretion In respect |of the prohibitiontete they cannot |the opinion that the J [feliewing Interesting and inatrwet- | banda from the ey: of Justice The real om behind tt all lew |to his attitude as it bears upon the |etarve and to live they must work, | Preperty by making Your many commodiour, well-jand common sense rather than by [ive atatieties, to which I reapeet-| th « Wimy see her own ashame het in the wickedness of question of probibition, but there are|and to find work they must enter |>usiness for which it A are not |loens, nor in the Inate profligacy|clergymen and prelates just as emt-| those other fields to displace men without compensation ao * 3 modern school houses, Of | passion and prejudice and senti ire aire th menite of my} ple o| ‘ ay bh I rit of conatit leate the In- ebtbition Crienda, least theme | oc att fall Governor Hoke [Of the Amertean soldier as such, The }nent, Just a» devout and just as able| who are now employed. spirit of our attractive design, indicate ment jot them whe are net oo completety | Me B eundidnte for renowmt | oidier ts ‘different trom the or. | who are out In the open In thelr op-| The farmer is interested because [Criminal malum im terest you have in educating your! This wave of sensationatiam and |bitnded by acute parti¢anship ax to|mation with a declaration for can. |dinary male citizen of the same age. | position to prohibition thie Industry creates a mighty de- | ture intoxicamia fiem that has been sweeping | make them immune from conviction ved prohibition as the basic plank | The cause of it all es in the short You possibly will reeall that a Iit-| mand for the products of the farm, | #0" for the conti youth and preparing them for thone | radi places of civie responsibility that) over the land ts like the blight of his Md ne lation by congress, atim-|tle lease than two y eagooneofthe|and last year paid the muntficent|'* the situati en. hot by men, which | moat beloved of the Catholle prel- | sum of $169,000.000 to the farmers |property for @ * [of the nation. An insignificant sum,| haul to that lelwhted lew jwla ed by re the figures for 1908, and letters here ubject to in- ubatantiate then tform, But prohihit ve him, and t will certainly fall to them in the | pestilence that rides posting on the te mt of fallicies he suffered listed man to go dry jales of America, Carding! Gtb' evolution that never ceases, winds leaving only desolation In ite Ratio of | Hating de , ant when he s\volcing bie heart thoughts, gave an|these Prohibitioniste say bricks, the Ii Your splendidiy paved and liber- | wake Tt is not new, nor ta it Pr No. Arresteto| Oklahoma, falr baby sleter of the bie freedom he goes forth like the | interview to publication in which he| You wifl remember those dark | of the other 0 Pop. |family. took prohibition with her| beast of the Apocalyper. raging with |saye: “Liquor will be sold here quite |days of 1907, when, without the | structure ally lighted streets and all of your) without precedent, for more than [Milwaukee 366 ttolif| constitution. She dared not op.|thiret and seeking what he may de-jas abundantly under rohivition | slightest warning, the country was|Pecullar lawf municipal Improvemen speak ja balf century ago, in the decade |Columbus, Ga. 36,000 ito S23] pese the constitutional provision | YOUr lawe as under well regulated license | stricken with the palsy of panic, /8"¥ other mutely but eloquently of your civic} from 1880 to 1460, 17 of the states Avaeuste, Ga $0,000 ite 13) an entirety Already she ° It is @ significent tact that the |The consequence will be that Hquor|Men met men with pallid faces and that the work ie ride and everywhere is manifest |of the Unt 4 Havannah, Ga. #0,000 ite 18 overed her destructive '} Prohthitionist would make every man| will be dispensed contrary to law |tense-drawn lips and haggerd eyes, |Completion the v be x @ Union were under prohibi- | Wiimi: 38,000 Lto 32) her legisiature has already attempt. | but himeelf a 1 abstainer Instead of being sold in accord with | fearful of the catastrophe that rear-|/aw reaches out the spirit of enterprise and push | tion, jouw : 2 fens Ito Bled to strangle the epirit and let.| But our fri n the enemy admit |the law Thea too, fhe elty would | ed f usly pea above the horison | you reat secure in hat spells suc- I ance: . . sat pre art lane * (boo Ite Teiter of the inhitition by enact that prohibitic joes net accomplish |be deprived of a lates revenue. nance he business of the n eo and progressivencss ( pe ansert It to be @ trulem that pro- | ongor Me. 26.000 lto isla state dlepeneery law which ine |its purposes, and claim that while| which \e se much needed for the | tion was practically suepended; the| business which te pert coos. hibition does not, never did and} Note 9 arrests for drunken- ad and righly held une they cannot prohibit in toto they [government of this community, [banks flew to scrip as a promising |the business for ‘And away beyond, where the land never will prohibit, uniess per-| nese in Portland in — short twelve-|tional by her supreme court ean reduce consumptt In bur n vhen a law ie fingrantly and ha-|expediency; the miner came out of }¢4 your capital, © s. hes its forehead boldly out to | chance divine power shall set th _ | month, an average o ht per day Alabama has Ingisiative prohibt The city of Worcester, M is | Ditually violated, it bri login the pit mouth, and, dropping hie| Which your f ; ca eth Dddsealan: thbesh, te lsriatis ot hamen et- lor one avery three hours of every | tion ProhtDt~| ary. the largest dry city in that |tion. Into contempt. It creates a|tools by the shaft, took the lone] Wholly valueless, a separate the wa tribe of human nature at con-lday and this in the boasted citadel) It was iny cateemed privilede tojstate, Under the law the expreas| spirit of deception and hypocrisy, |trail down the mountains or across | the furnaces have make @ site incomparable for the | flict between themaecives and trane-|of prohttition’s strength | vielt the citles of Mobile, Montgom. | compan ate required to make|and compels men to do Inel the desert; the wheels of industry |the wheels have special rpose, there you have/form them to something very dif Here ie an excerpt from a spectal | ery 1 Hirmingtam in Pebtu dally reports to the chief of police | and by stealth what they would o stopped, and hunger and want | busin a but that great exposition as 0| ferent from what th an dispatch from Bangor, Me. pub-|last. so that Iam qualified to peak of all intoxteants shipped Into Wor-|erwise do openly and above be peeked in through many a window | *Umptuary process E ulided f wha ney lished in the New York World of| "first handed” of conditions there. I have the certificate of the |All good men-—good citizens—are in| and then stalk in throwgh the} ment melts inte fitting monument to your gentu But to assert a fact will not eut-| T last. and t eapecially com-|1 charge the fact to be that Intoxt.|chiet of police showing the Importa-|faver of the virtue of temperance, | door ut away sows and there the peoples of the world | fice uniess we go further and sub 5 rs it ye Pronipitionter an a cating bey ram may bad for | * for, the month of tast Mirren fet age that the wera Re then, | drowning men eatch ern eee ae ; + : ae ainty morsel of truth he price in either of thoae cities, ae| from which ppeare that in that ne question not been | a! awe, wo drew upon tho treas- | which th will come and pay their tributes to | stantiate the fact by proofs that will “It Neal Dow could come back te|readily as in this beautiful city of |ene month re Were shipped into |mufficiently considered, You cannot |uries of England and France and|are insidiously ure. that clty and reported by the ex-|legi#iate men by clvil action into | Germany ve borrowed their #ur- | basic that genius and giory with you In|be accepted as sufficient by the |earth and drop Into the Queen City oa |the performance of good and right-| plus gold, and § 00,000—or there- the glorification that belongs only | popular mind, and so I propose to | Of the east he would be deeply T met the leading business men|pree# companies 189104 = i aie and shocked to see whatland manufacturers of the state of beer, 2.912 kege of beer, or 44 | cous deeds. If we are to improve the | abouls—we brought across the sea nee ol to the deserving. prove, by evidence indisputable, that |p mockery Ix being made of bie pet|men whose undaunte tenia allone of spiritous liquors, and this|tmorallty of our city and make our/and emptied into the channels of principle of And by these many signs | koow | my assertion is literally and uncon- For on every band, downtown, |the heart that plies the arteries om 126,000 people, Inc tudin women, | Citizens more temperate, let the vir-|trade and it stemmed the tid Thou shalt not! you for what you are and what you |trovertibly true. by tyr ate Ee the, Davita Melt Acre, In & t score the commercial and in gplieren ane the : hen 484,000 bot. | tue of temperance be ‘nay EB failure. BERL lnitiions was win anes i 4) > = a | the Ghetto of Ha street, along | dustrial life of the wtate of Alabama, | ties of beer. And in this manner|the churches. Above all, let it be e sum on that day it nes, and It sets have done and what you are doing) 1 said that 17 states were 1 Hroad, Main, Central, xchange, (and without. exception — ther esc{eonsumption Is reduced. What sa-| enforced in the family, that parents, | but $109,000,000 is a mere soap bub-|'ng in our veina. and I compliment you most heartily | prohibition. Of the original number | Hariow and Hammond streets—| pressed themaelves openly, defiantly | Un beth by word and example, may in-| ble, to be blown from the prohibi- Thou shalt not!" 1 for ¥ magnificent accomplish: | only two remain true to the heresy everywhere the saloon doors are |$) remonstrance againat acchreed With wudactty that t# startling | culeate ip their children the tem ea pipe as children play with their ers toddit snd? a again wide open and they are ‘set-| burden that has been laid upon |from It» boldness, the prohibitioniat | poral and #piritual blessings which | toys stiffens, his enc. ments and } congratulate our com-) The states of Maine and Kansat, |ting it out’ as fast as bartenders can |them Oe od ide legal gendiutets tha wuticeartl from a life of temperance| Forty per cent of the barley, 82 1-2| sets ond he persiste; Bu mon country that it has such ae you! All of the others tried it and) work. No lonwer the et services| One-half of the schools of Mobile n leaguint dertake to arro briety; and let them impr per cent of the rye, 87 per cent of |appesiing ‘please” is Baar fn the brawn and muscle and intel-|fatied and in final disgust aban-|Of spy and bottleholder, No morelare closed for lack of revenue due|gate to themselves all the yirtues cir children the terrible con-| the hops grown in this country are | form unbends, his eyeam the lose of leense feen. that belong to the human family quences of drunkenn bought and paid for by this mighty the dark and diemal hide, No + j yet, because he had the hardi- | industry smile cuts dimples the near beer and . Mgence and patrictiom of its cit doned the plan a impractical Birmingham, tha drinks in| A ap guds ale, magic city of |with them the man w 3 obip. All of the New Miand states | but the real malt, right from the|the south, had an experience |ériminal, the man who setia is arch-|hood to disagree with them and the| I was not educated in the probi-|he purses his sweet 3 But, much aa has been done in the | had prohibition; likewise New York | Wood, at @ nickel a draught and nojwhich te worth considering |eriminal, and the man who manu-|courage to speak, his Integrity was| bition achool of political economy,| maternal kiss of f 3 a demon, There te no | questioned and his motives were im-jand I write jetters of congratula- These are the att iging for anybody Nan There, as ewhere in the s#tate, | fi * jot only are the hundreds of aa~|the clouds of desolation hang over nole and Wie leona, hotel bare, ‘drug stores’ clubs,|ite wonderful p sibilities like « ' nnaylvania, Oble comparatively short years of your|and New Jersey, I municipal hetivity, It requires nel-| Michigan, Indiana. mn Hoare bad, and|pugned by thie same rabble of mal-|tion to myself that I was not, for T/ mature (hat come thelr purposes they always |contents w do not hesitate to de- | wae taught that whenever and| world and go out their prophet nor seer to foretell for|consin. In tho three states last |kitehen bare « dives of all eorte!pall. Not that Birmingham te not | che the very worst they can find,|stroy when they cannot convert wherever you strike down the de. | stave, and ft I 2 you a future so much greater that| names the courts held their prohi- | TURRINE from dawn (61 10 p. m and | prospere for little lese than fam-|and measure all others by ite im Cardinal Gibbons does not stand | mand for one bushel or one pound | ous truth that ket beyo Pca tituttonat. for one (Mitt: Put at some of them you canine OF penilience could affitet It ir- | pertections alone In the Catholle priesthood as|of any given proddct you shorten |m aws uncons onal, for One | get all you want at 1 hour.|reparably; but tts elvtc life I am here to proclaim that there|an opponent of the baneful doctripe|the market and lower the price in| We cannot affor the flame of the candice agalnet the | rean * another. Michigan had it| Within sight of the city hall and| warped and shrunk under the b lare 4 saloons with proprietors as lof prohibition; on the contrary, the tlonate degre liberty for the sal glare of the tungsten. This won-| from & to 1875 county jail ¢ place has lately|ing Influence of protibition. The | honorable and as respectable as may | Yast majority are with him, their rajiroads of the country are| We cannot afford te] Gettul, land-lookes, Geep-water har The Obie inhibition was never re- {begun ranning ale, jager and ‘hard|tale is beat told by one of ite Jocal|be found in any other branch of |declarations may be plied mountains | Interested, for raw materials now | step from the exall . 7 pened, but is #t!li in force even unto jetuff on an allenight schedule, and|newspapera The Hirmingham Heg-| business, which they will concede to| high, though it is not necessary, for | brought In and manufactured prod-| by our bor was planted here for a purpose | this day and with what result? Ohio | last Saturday at thie place which te/ieter, in ite teeue of ay 1 jast, | be em ntly decent the attitude of that church Is unt-|uets now shipped out all pay |#weet anth me and secking the final analysia by | has the most iniquitous system tn jgnowa as a lunch room, five half | says > Tam here to proclaim that drunk~|versally understood. | freight when the old if bell sea every avenue of logic At te the sub. |e whole wide country. The con-| barrels of ale were run off Within] “The conceivery of the prohifition | enness those who Imbibe| | destre, however, to read from an| Stand by the side of the great|notes of ite great 7 stitution does not prohibit manu- [a at throw he sheriff's office| movement pron d this oOButry|at al) is not the rule, but the ex-jinterview with Rey. Father T. J nacontinental lines and watch |ating around th Jj stantial cornerstone (0 your most) facture or sale, but probibite the | several other pl ning fullj[many things, * * Weill they [ception Ryan, of Pontiac, Mich ab lint long, sinuous traine following| The time has come hopeful destiny. By {t and through | Granting of licenses for relling. To | blast, and yet ain new year!have prohibition, but what eiseh-The am here to prociaim that it te |in the Detrott Free Pr Febru-|the tratl of steel across the burn-|affaire—the men tn Whee it the trade and products of the | C#CePe the constitution, to thwart |eame in not a sing iquor case } jall te fall to overflowing: parte | not the use of intoxicating bever-/ary 17, beoay it elucidates the |ing desert nd through the|in whose Intelligence a and defeat it, the lemisiature re-| been brought before the municipaljare #o congented that the Jadge em, but that It i the abuse of |question most comprehensively, and |Rtandeur of mountain scenery, to-|enterprine and pattle whole Orient, and of that vast do-| sorted to every species of « eomp-jeourt, * * & have not roor sit; ther@ da. not | that use whieh ts bad oapecially presents the Views of an| Ward the land of the setting sun; or) Uny of our future finds { you take a mental census, {Interested and impartial obeerver| by the side of the busy trunk Ines | place—the time han come present glory will appear only as | bitic main of vast resources, Alaska, will | tible expediency and every attempt Certain it ie that Hauer of alllroom enough to keep the ptihity's Pac eome in to you and the products] Wa" Tend ed abortive through the | kinds ie plentiful in Hangor today, important pap crime is @empant,|if you will, of all of your quaint-|upon the operations of the county |that travel past beautiful land-|4* these shall throw intervention of the supreme court. |and what surpriser ¢ rohibition-| murder ix on t inefease, Ab@ the |anceés, and then anawer, h many | I option law. In the Interview }ecapes and over laughing waters, | difference and awakes of your farms and your mines and) Today we find an anomalous condi- | lets ie that there @ not nearlylonly twe nehings the e gw havin all the number whom you know way ounty prohibition |ever eastward toward the horizon |letharay to take active your industries will go out to th tion of affairs in the Buckeye state [#0 many arrests f jrunkenness|had ain af have ee -the [have bec tof neif-control|law {# a palpable farce, and hae} from wi the sunbeams throw [battle for coni tiem and and this will be made the come We find a conetitutional prohibi- |now ae during the most strenuous| prohibition regime * * © Have/through the use of intoxicants? Isjonly served to Increase drunkenness | their kis to breaking day: and|i#m and justion Wi ha, tion of granting licetcees to ell and | enforcer t daye you protected a single Wimant|there one in 1007 Are there two?|in Oakland county, As the epiritual|morthward into the realm of the jee /to foreclose ourselves trading ground of nations. a county option law in force by There is no dispute, the nh be| Have you thrown und herany of |And if there are, in It of the es-|head of a church of over 1,000 mem-| King: and southward into the tem reculate decently and Seattle's » fa just rising above | which counties may decide whether | no dispute, about the reliability|that law-abiding — influenc you nce of our free Inatitutiona that|bers, I have been able to study the|perate warmth where the blooming | traffic which has Dees the horizon and at Its xenith it witi|{ntoxicante shall be sold at all, Of jand truthfulness of thisweport. On| promised? Have y aNPtiing | the OS oF 89 who Use the beverages | law thoroughly, and It Ie a fallure,|romes grace their Creilines in every |arainst, we cannot consent this county option scheme I will |the contrary, it may be substntlated except to mlenk and without harm to themselves or to|Many boys who would never think of| month of every year. And_ those | stit ) . the ap Silumine the earth speak later. In Obl person, |by every person who vi Main: nylct some tte blind tier forjothers, but with pleasure to th openly entering a saloon, now loiter |/numberless trains, laden with tha t ‘ I came to speak of “the other wide | reputable or disreputable, may en- | and who will take the time t 0K ing boowe?’ Have you ever mmided | selves, presumably, or they uld |around the #o-called blind pigs, They |foaming beverage, would bring of prohibition,” and to voice what|Saae in the business of welling in ound and ascertain what Is trans tried to raid those influéntial|not use it—le It right that they|have no difficulty in obtaining. all] peace to the heart and the r of fon in foxieant# without livense by paying | piri try? | should be denied that pleasurable |the Hquor they want, and, as a re-|health to the palltd cheek of even |public h use, condaety ectabl others of less courage are thinking, |ihe tax of $1.000 per year. and the} B end in doing this I realize that 1| proceeds of thin tax are divided be- | pateh from Portland, Me the state, the county and the lin the Chicago venting June merely becauee the one or twolault, drunkenness has greatly In-|the prohibittonist if he only dared jand | will losiat wpon making themselves | creased among young men,” to cost aside his prejudices and| Ww What a clubs, the Southern and ¢ 1 have another! A die No, you have not and will b it 90, llahed n ® 0 | t be have i | ped] In tt f April ju sae teet, will nem " cy awful record for reform! |obey the injunctions of the holy| And this cont rnal of {there were “ax 2 rs conn and this pute the capiin Birmingham, and there we e © ce ter opinions of challenge the coun 7 city, The state will not accept a|May 6 ia | not be more nearly in| That the Eplacopal clergy ia gen=|soriptures and “take n little for hia |the skirmish ting, tenemeam many good people who have been foe, but does accept # tax, | sheaf on the shock of Probibition | violent criminal deaths beatden, | e¢ with the spirit. of ouelerally opposed to prohibition ts ike. | #tomach's bigot are strongly traveling the elmcumference of a this fe the conslatency whiet Iniquities Nor ie this a The loss of re polleles If we treated the man whe |wine true, I cite the declaration of And so from this material view | with a wealth of tregeure, cirele that hae a very short diam ‘ ecterizen eve attempt to ac tecorder Wilbur Cc heldon, | » Heenm had to be made | debauches hin nif as « criminal) Mishop Webb of Milwauke which | polnt we may well afford to cnet reely by such the ra 4 who look upon the ques-|COmpliah by indirection what can-|of the munielpal court, believes t the last alternative was re-jand remove him from society by | la indicative of the sentiments of the |the line and take our bearings be ifacturent eter ani n pon the ques-| not be done directly the county of Cumberland should ©, hamely, the oceupation and| locking him Wp, a& We would other|clergymen of that denomination. | fore we start the engines lest and other tion through glasses smoked by| The frult of thie iniquity ie the lestablioh farms for drunkards and| business tax lorimina It he insists upon in- |The Mpiacopal clergy Is Inclined to|run upon tt cke which the squerading # prejudice. disreputable saloon, which caste ite | quit sending to Jal Under an ordinance now tn force |truding himself upon the society of | regard with lentency the saloon in| bibitiontet has planted tn the « in tact eats hose prajndices, in too many |PUBNt not only upon the ‘society | Shades of decency, Haten to this! Jin that city every business, ever others and making himeolf obnox-|all ite phases, so long a8 the saloon of industrial success, s for legtthm 3 . 3 |hut upon the traffic in general There are ut least 400 men andleupation and every profession, ox-|ious, why not hold him reaponsible|is not detrimental on the face to| Thereare three aren of pr ern We oer eet cam they took by Inheritance or| Every attempt to repe the con | wor said Mr, Wheldon, “who|cepting only mintaters of theegdapel, and punish him for his wrong public Interests and morals; I be-/hibition—atate wide — prohibition. tert ng cin 4 ruised to be fo | option, and | « haw met with | come before this court time and time! required to pay an county option and le ual license | While intoxicating beverages may | lieve that the general tendeney ¢ absorption, for too few have time or | #tituttonal provie away out in udy the problem | thé. determined, atubborn resinta again, Their appearance is period The grocer, the baker and can-|be termed luxurtes, yet who shail/the Episcopal clergy ts to favor,/the most dangerous, the most delus- | cams inclination to study the problem | of the Prohititioniat, who will not {ical One might be ab Polat |diestion Sagkers’ ‘all must pay trinuteleay that 1 may hot snday thove 1ux-| rather than to Oppose, tte well reg: live and the wost speslow wo,| Ari ‘One, full for themselves ahd hence they full to| compromiae even upon the basis | tell th on of the year by It. * * srohibittan urlew If I have the price, and do not] ulated saloon,’ so my humbi dament, te county | first night and nem? Aifferentiate between temperance |of decency and popular advantage, |* I have wugwented t thene Ih Tennoanoe they have prohibition | make that enjoyment harmful to my| Bishop Moreland of Cailfornia may joption, The scheme Ix now in force| Mextoan in camp and prohibition but, standing upon the letter of | firmed drunkards be treated in # by lewislative enactment i thie in| netghhore? [f one luxury may be| be quoted with profit when he saya: | by legistation in a number of atates, | his det the bond, heartioswly demands the | other way, A good farm could open defiance of the expressed will| prohibited, then why not all lux-|"Another false notion je that the}and effort is betng Industriousty | brollf I do ike prohibition heeeuse | pound of flesh [purchased by the county, There of the je You will remember |urlea be prohibited Laxurlew th labuse of wine pronibite the use of it, [made to extend It to other states t whene and wherever ita applica And thus, as a firet lesson | would wtablish oan inatitution jth tin the lat campaign Mr. Car-)viands, Luxuries bn dress, luxuries th | Apply thie argument to other things. [ TI cannot belleve that it Ie const! * © 1 belleve that hand k war a candida fe mina. | the adornment ef my house; luxuries | Many men use horses for gambling | tutional, TL eannot belleve that tt wee A on have the instructive expertonce A in| im tion has been attempted on Ivot the sovereign states of thia|this way, the number of donfirmed|tion to tho office of governor of jof alk deagriptions. And If thig eet | purposes, and thousands of men are| will be sustained by the courts of| Pe fallure has resulted. nation. States that reflect In emi- | drunkarde-——which It seems to me is}that state and upon a platform de« | m tell me whet I may not drink, | ruined by betting on the races, Shall | inet resort because It fe viclously | tr 1 do not Mke prohibition because | nent degree the Intelligence, the In-|increasing a)! the time--might be re-|claring in favor of state-wide prow} why may they sot tell me what T]we then abandon horses altogether | hostile to the spirit of oug consti-| tha it falla to remedy an Ml from which | temrity and the conaclence of this | duced rapidly hibition, Mer. Patterson wae his op-|ahall not Wear, or what religion|and tal to the bicycle? But many | tution. jat a nation. May we not profit by that] And there te Maine, where pro-|ponent upon « platform opposing) 4 #hall not practice, or how I shalljoverdo the wheel and suffer with| A republican form of government humanity suffers and because thore|egperience, or, childiike, may welhibition haw reigned triumphantly |prohtbition, and was nominated andleducate my children? — Why notlcurvature @f the spine and the bi-|means government by the people and| Ra in manifest a remedy which te in-|learn only by our own bitlor at-|for 67 years, In which two gen-|oelected upon that insue, Yot when|make them complete manors of my |oycle heart, Shall we then prohibit| government by the pe comparably better. tempte? jerations have come and gone, there|the legisiature ony a dia joivil nduct, and cenm of my the bicycle? Some mon are Injured|home rule for political divist In the ordinary affaire of Iife we|in pronibition Maine the drunk-|@runtied wing of the Democrate/acte? Why not crown them the ty-|by drinking coffee: must all the | County option can proceed 0: I do not like prohibition becau ok history and atudy its lesson d's farm ia to bo organized as aloft that body, consorting, with their|rants they would be and estabitah | world then give up ite morning cup?) the hypothesia tha the it in a species of paternaliam which at induatridusly, that we may |reformatory inatitution! Ail hall,|life-long enemies, the publicans,| the Hne of succession so that thelr] The Lutheran chureh ts nM sup-|the untt of goverdinent 1s can dismal i bed break untry ian ao sm and now of hypogeley Mie oan a sober Up poog al Bs means | clali