jjfjfjfSiSgigjgS IV fcti Why A Dry Red Cloud Again? llccatise the oxpcrlmnnt, bo fnr, liut irovutl satisfactory. ' Hocauso It hits not been fully tiled cut yet. There hns been s6mo boot leRlng, alitl there will be Mime during the next year. That Is to be expected. The saloon broiiKht with them somabrttl characters and It duvelopod others, Many of them have disappeared. The othoih will nNo disappear If the lry policy Is made permanent There has boon little attempt to en Jorce the law by prosecution of boot legger. Nor do the inajoilty of those who favor prohibition insist upon more prosecutions. Ve do not believe in the necessity of a ootintuut or expensive resort to the crliulual lawi, We take the chance of a small amount of illegal sales. The harm that results from the sales of the unlicensed vendors Is a negll ible matter compared with the harm that results from one licensed saloon. Indulgence in liquor is not made popular by the sneaks who sell it in violation of law. There Is little dan ger of our boys beln attracted to the fiairs of the boot lexers. There is little fear that new drunk urds will be made to increase the list of ttie victims of drink by the arts of the unlicensed seller, who must hide this tratllc from the eyes of the re--apectable element of the community. We have made whiskey selling iu 'Hied Cloud disreputable. We have discovered that there are some who are willing to be disreput able, and have their lank of regard for ht opinion of good people advertised' We have discovered that there are people in this city who regard im prisounieut in jail without concern or a sense of humiliation It is sad that we have such people in our midst. But there Is very little 'danger that they will make vice popular. It is only a matter of time when they will give up their unlawful oc cupation. When the better element of the city show them ho contempt with which they are regarded, their numbers will diminish. Two years wore of dry policy will make the ille gal sales of Honor of no consequence. At any rale the eity is doing noth ing to popularize vice. It Is not mak ing money from pandering to the drunkard maker. It Is not giving re spectability to the wrecker of homes, tlio destroyer of jnanhooil. . In 'twin yean,' we belfev that Mi man has bought liquor from n boot legger, whom the saloon had not pre viously debased. In two years we believe no young man has learned to drink from the un licensed sales of liquor. If there is a homu whose le.iouiees have been squandered by a drunken husband during the past two years, we have not heard of him. If there is a man of any sigultlciuice in tho city who now wastes any large part of his lime or money in drink, or association With the low and vicious, ww do not know his name. Gentlemen for whom the coiiimuiiltjr IV I L con siderable respect were often s-eeii in company with the licensed sullen of liquor, often seen iu their saloon They gave the saloon and the sale of liquor something of their respect ability. These men are never seen In aso. ciotlun with the boot-legger, are ucvcj loitering about his place of business Young men arc never looking wist fully into the windows of the criminal's secret places of business We do not ask a more rigid enforce ment of tho law We have no com plaint to make of the laxity of oill tints in enforcing the law iu the past. We are satisfied that any otllcials Mill do their duty when that duty is made clear aud manifest to them. We know the lack of funds iu the city tieaiurer for the discovery, pros ecution and punishment of crime. We ask but little help In this direction. What we do ask is that the city do nothing to give the saloon business legal sanction. Let liquor selllug con tinue to be a degrading, criminal oc cupation, to be pursued iu secret, by disreputable men only, aud it will die out of itself. We do not expect to prevent the drinkiug of liquor. There is perhaps half as much liquor drank iu this city as when we bad the saloon. Indivi duals have it shipped In for their owu consumption. We do not object to this. Those who ship in liquor for their own consum mation are the people we desire to protect. They are usually people who are competent to restralu their ap petite. Lets than half the liquor now drank or purchased in the city is provided by the violators of law. Tholr sales constitute but a small matter, as compared with thcsales of an open saloon. Tho saloon has eultlvated n tasto for drink in hiiudicds of people In the vicinity of lied Cloud. ,. Tho restoration of tho snfoon will intensify thU appetite for alehol, and add scores of Ix-ifiii tiers to the list of topers. The bool-leggi'f hai not made a drunkard or started a young man bn the donnvvard path. He hits provided tho former victim with an ouuMsslmi'tl bottle. lie hab never dated solicit or tempt the stibnr or the young. No man invites it ft lend to go to his den to pal take of n social glass. One saloon takes from the people for tuc consumption of liquor eight or ten thousand dollars a year, it must do that iu older to pay the license, bu the liquor and piy the big profits to the saloon keeper. We do not bells vo that amount of money, or anything like It has been spent for liquor In Heil Cloud In the past year It is iibsuul to suppone thnt a city or school district leiili.M.s any gain out of the license money. Kxtoring It fiotn the people tudltect ly by a license to tho saloon, Is the most expensive mode in which to col lect a tax. Fur every dollar that gets into the school fund or city treasury in this manner the real taxpayer has to pay one to live dollars iu addition. The merchant loses a per cent of his trade, a per cent of his collections. A man can't buy whiskey and calico with the same dollar. lie can't buy beer and sugar with the same chnuge. He can't maintain his credit with the merchant aud pay cash at the bar of the saloon. The saloon was never conducted in accordance with the law, The best saloou keeper was a con stant violator of the law. The worst a greater offense, and a far greater menace to the peace and morals of the city than all the illegal vendors com bined. Let us not go backward. The city is becoming temperate. The young meu are growing up clean and strong and free from the habits en gendered by the saloon. Let us not prepare pitfalls for them. The Great Destroyer Cari ! Tanks. Mrs. Eulalie Drain and children de sire to express their thanks to all the many friends for their many kindness es shown during the long illness and the death of tholr beloved husband and father. IV Wish To -l-Bn' U Extend An m a9m a tafiy viSfififGmP I Invitation To Spring Shoppers To Visit Our Store & This season we are showing splendid styles in Ladies' Cloaks Ladies' Dresses, Etc. These Lines Are Selected With Cmre And consideration as regards the demands of our .patrons, who demand the best to be had. Everything we show is good. If there are better gar ments on the market at the price, our years of experience fail to find it. We feel confident we are showing the very best when we offer our lines for your inspection. p Spring Dro99 Good, Wah Good; etc., Arm All Horo F. G. TURNURE 8 ReiClMi, v v w w m A SON I -I- Nebraska jj Till1 article Is a very brief digest of a speech made by Hhi. Itlchiiiotid P. Hoh,uin of Alabama iu the Utdted BttUcs ilousu of Ilcprceutatlte on Feb 'J, lllll. The. speech at the time made a profound impression on the tiu-mbei'.s of the House and is consider ed one of the best brief statements ever made on the whole Liquor quest ion. It. was during the Boer war that the lltitlsh government found that the average Riigllahmnu did not measure up to the standard of iccrul'lug and the nveinge soldier in the Held mani fested a low plane of vitality aud eu durance. Parliament was alarmed and instituted an invest luatloii It was found that the cause of this na tional degeneracy was alcoholic pjls- oiilng As a result the lltitlsh Govern ment pincardutl the streets of one bundled cities warning the people aud appealiug to them iu the name of the nation to desist from driukilig al coholic beverage The French nud (icrtuHii Governments nopu followed. In the summer of JO, I) an interna tional conference on alcoholism was hold In Loudon to which most of the great nations sent delegates. After a most thorough Investigation the re presentative medical leaders of tho continence diew up a report iu the (01 in of a statement deliuiug the na ture of alcohol as follows: "Exact laboratory, clinical and pathological research has demonstrated that alcohol is a protoplasmic poison, and Its use as a beverage is destructive and degen erating to the humau organism. Therefore Its me should be te tiicted and limited in the same way as any other poisonous drug". It is a well known fact that the white corpuscles iu the blood under ordinary conditions attack ami destroy the disease germs that seek lodgment In the body.. Al cohol, even1 when used iusmallqunnll tics paralyses these corpuscles utul renders them ineffective. It is no wonder the mortality statistics show, as they do, that a total abstainer has nearly twice the hold on life that the average drinker has and about thiee times the hold of heavy drinkers and those engaged in the liquor tratllo. Ttje comparative figures show the ap palling fact that alcohol is killing off as'ma'ny Americans every year ns all the wars of the world have klllod iu battles in 2,300 years. Iu the United States are about one million confirmed druukards of whom three bundled thousand die every year. Alcohol is the curse of the red man aud the black man. it has conquered some of the noblest white men. it is the evershad owing cause of crime, pauperism and Insanity. It blights the progeny of mail, lly scleutlllc tests it is estimated that tho wide use of alcoholic bever age' iu this country causes a loss of fully .M percent in the elliceney of the Nation's producers. Tho m-udncMon of wealth is at the rate of l.'JJ.OOO.OOO, 000 yearly; the loss due to lowered etllcleuoy is therefore fully 88,500,000, Ot'0", The economic loss of t hose cut off untimely is estimated at sri,t)00,0U0,030. Again it is estimated that the coit of providing for the added crime, pauper ism, Id'jcy and iusauity produced by alcohol in the United States and paid fotf'by direct taxation exceeds 82,000, 000,000. Adding to this our annual liquor bill of 82,000,000,000, we 11 nd the the total economic harden laid upon the Nation by King Alcohol is between sixteen and seventeen billions of doll ars, more than half of all the wealth produced by the nation. But alcohol is not only destroying the wealth of the nation but the nation's life is at stake. If the nation degenerates another will rise to take her place. This has been the history of the world tiuce national history began. America is the .hope of the world. The star of Empire hitherto has made its way westward. But there is no longer any westward. In America the star of Empire finishes the circle of the world. Here if anywhere we must develop a thoroughbred race of men. But how can this be done when the great de stroyer sin aes me famines down as fast as they rise. Last year on an average every saloon in the United States was the cause of the death of three men. This year aiso eacn saioon will kill three men. Each saloon in the United States has on an 'average 20 men made heavy drunkards who are mortally wounded. Eaob saloon, on an average has 100 men made regular drinkers who are seriously wounded. In the full light of the facta I can not look upon any saloon otherwise than as an assasslu, the most barbarous, atrocious pf assassins. The first duty assumed by any Government is the protection of its citizens. It Is incredible that the governments of the world should long continue In league with assassins. When the uature of alcohol Is better understood, uo community will longer tolerate these conditions. From the standpoint of the state there is but one decision: This great destroyer must himself be destroyed. The first means toward this end la to bring the facts about alcohol before the people. The average man is a rational being. If undegenerated, he shares with other creatures three ele mental attributes the Instinct of self preservation, the impulse to rise and aC l 7jmr TssfiBlsSx 1 XvTj ft tt s ft ft ft s ft ft ft ft AGENTS WANTED ! ft day Center, ft IMr ft ft ft ft ft ft S ft ft ft s ft Nebraska ft A few more live ones wanted to sell one of the foremost sellers in the world Four Models: $165.0 $200.oo $2l5.oo $250. AH fully equipped, nothing lacking, luggage carrier. Magneto and free engine Liberal Tmrma To Agmntm Jessup (Si Sanderson, Postponed! PLOWING! DEMONSTRATION On the C. J. Piatt Farm One Mile West of Town. UNTIL. Wed. and Thus., M 26 and 27 t - - pp. ii mm , I- An International Kerosene Tractor and Plowing Outfit will be used An Auto wilTlrowO"URS3"H O P for the demonstration every 20 minuets Whitaker & Buckles Red Cloud, : : : Nebraska. J KsPBhkHHv IBsBBBBBBBIVflLHaSaBVt (fHEflflBHflLflsBF Public Sale -OF- Horses & Mules At 1 o'clock pm., at the Starr Bros.. Sale Bsrn, Ued Cloud, Neb., Sat., Mar. 22, 1913 12 Farm Mares ages from 4 to 9 years, weight from 1000 to 1600 pounds. Moat of these mares are with foal and in good working condition 10 Geldings 4 to 9 years old 10 Mules 3 to 10 yrs. All broke Also, a few cheap horses Terms 10 months on bankable note. Col. Jake Ellinger, Auctioneer. Capt. Sid Floranoe, Clerk. STARR BROS. better himself, the instinct to protect his progeny. Therefore the average man can be cured by taking to him the truth that alcohol strikes at his life, stops, then reverses his evolution and blasts his progehy. The problem, therefore is to take the great vital truths to the vast multitudes of the people. Iu the broadest saose it is a problem of universal education. This work must be done in the home, in the school, in the church in fact, wherever the opportunity offers. Abraham Lilncolu, once remarked that the next great war would be a war against tho liquor power. That war Is now on, Organisation in this war as lu every othsr Isneoebsary in order to win. No nation hat yet kept this great destroy rinitrnldst and survived. Amer ica is not different from the nations or history. One or the othsr must per ish, It is war to the death and we line up on on or the other side. It is often said by the enemy that, "Prohibition does not prohibit". Let it be shown that it does prohibit to a marked degree, but let us realize that getting prohibition is but part of our war. The second part is its enforce ment. Prohibition can prohibit. To ssy that It cannot is nothing less than a boast that Democracy is a failure and that the Government is lost. We can all go forth to this battle with a a song on our hearts, each to do his full doty, knowing that whatever be tide, whether the heavens fall or the earth melt away, whether our, eyes see the final viotory or whether we die In the conflict, that, "The Lord of Hosts is with us", that, "The God of Jacob Is our refuge". f OR SAIE. I will sell at Auction on the streets of Red Oioud Saturday, March 12, a wagon load of Seed Potatoes. A.R'assik. iJ-iMj ."" ,. " &ig&,.. La. '. J " 1 tm ' .,. T. . i ..uWdhiUV. .j.;, ....' mJtk'lm''''-Uil'i.' . jrt.,J.t '' A. . i,J-. Y ",' ll I I I ml I II ld'.'JM J 4 UOlfcSx' 'm U-.1 '.'-at:. rifM i r. V ..1431 . .( t .Hji 1 1 JL . Af' iiQ.1,1 . Ui tAyt -. 4?-2h. .a.. '1tf iffl..,, ''fyf . wl V ' V m tUUtMUmtttmmi J: MAMiiMttiiiaKaHMWiaMaUEaMUMMMiMaMi HMMMkMAtaM- rinmMl . .- i7TU, ijltftrt, iti MkMtfeHitariAUttdiMaklUlikatiHIl :S. . Kit .""-"" - - " . 1 ,.!... 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