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Show THE PROVO HERALD. ADVERTISEMENT ' SlN::G:S::F::SiyrG:E:S: - ' . 1911 (COPYRIGHTED BY-- " fiBVIEW PRESS, PEORIA, ILL.) '. - ; ; ' unanh the Mtiortsvai'w-almoTOElTRlSfTEADER found to be trustworty than to folthe greatest possible personal liberty and freedom for he individual It is safer for the people generally to accept the phUosophy of those who havt been tried and inevitable finale of coercive laws low those who blindly lead us into pitfalls. The present widespread agitation- - of the liquor question has brought serious and in somecases disastrous results: The which Attempt to likJtht habits of jH men to cortform, with the tneones ot dreamers is a yAiMJKia. st u Tfr the beer ana wusxey ne iu ItVow, . an ttmnt whatever enness. but ever In a slgle instance lifted up his voice in condemnation of drinking. He commenced his public ministry by making wine, in consider able quanUty and of fine quality, and thia apparently only to add to the joy ous festivities of a wedding." want., wnat tney anair drink, in tne name or ops in- the country who favor prohittt r : uhmImw ban rmi trust them bition.: fact that these, places arel at the ballot box with the desUay of Nothing i more foolish, nothing) the' country ?i' Bishop Clark, of Rhode Island. more utterly at variance with sound operating la violation; of the law," "Prohibition has been disastrous to policy than to enact a law which, by Rt Rev. Thomas F. Lillia. jr,K Tnm.tWl1 anrmiinillna'l . WUUam. iTCS. tiyjiiui fiava V ni V only bv sane teaching can true temper-- 1 ance reform be eriectea," Rev. Dr Wm. Wasson, of LongT of the clergymea ot aay . "Four-fifth- s .v. the cause of temperance," u4lt(nna reaevaare opposed to prohibi: Kansas. a denomination " w" Leavenwerth, worker. Bishop "7 en-Temperance i a sane temthe communities, is incapable of Rev. Dr. D. J. Hartley, of tion, aJthough they favorare proven of Iowa. prohibition ha Very some-- 1 Organised First TsJSirarioe Reform j "AbMtut Bishop Perry, are following Instances Many people Such perance. forcemenL dismal failure, Little Kock, Ark. Impracticable; if sot tv. nmiiihitinB movement beeaase as "There is much drunkenness Just times Jireaented by aumptttary law byl and there is probably a much viola- - under prohibitory iaws as there ever 'Everyone knowr- - that there arc they have been misled by miaMpre--- w are apt to become dictatorial Uoa of the law which the sale of IntoxicaUng liquor is ia those, states where was before. Prohibition does not pro Der .nftinB and fraud. .. Ninety-fl- T many saloons' that, are perfectly, aa la there widespread prohibition1! pgnibitedunder have Uved in five states hibit I ple and UwndliigrnieTe-peothe au temperately.' .m U is weU to be humble. I know of in thoae atatea towhere wherelLJitterly failed." the enforce drink their bMtinpeaceiwith to present go elaoUiifcg: that caa saf e jou but merjy the enforcement of tSsuJuia of the existing Uwa for th regulation Charles D. Williams o: congenial companions, and where a Rev. Carl Eissfeldt, of Lutheran u ; remember that, and rememoer tioubr traffic. Prohibition is an Ideal Bishop law Orphaft Home.- drunkard is scarcely ever seen. Have ; Michigan. Ithat l am not finding faultwltb. any Its enthronement Jn this country iv.-."At the recent Lutheran conference as a minister any more right to in indeed be a great blessing if it "I do not believe that absolute pro- - Iterfere othermethod of aavlhxea. but of- - would bm with the business of such a oi . Wlsconsin,TlievilS.issf eldt was seenforced. However, it la only hlbiUoa ia "Our leoisUtora ra not "ieienxiy reach man's .appetite. could possible." place than a saloonkeeper would lected to state the stand of the Luthan Ideal, and for this reason. aooralaed otthe rihtful llmlt of their wbfle it is Well to undertake, to do ait dream', to disturb the peace of my con- eran clergy. He saiB: have to license and have is .better .high of Maine, oe--i ceruun Neeley ornce to is true rWe cannot Joia hands with the pro- their while at worship?" That gregation power. that legialatures can proper ponce regulation. there arewatavj things because their principle is hlbitioniats "The clubs are simply coteries of ciare ana niorc aot di tai lt B0 nse to try. Now,Rev. Jacob B. Meeker, of St wrong, insofar as they mix good use Hall of Vermont none of Uke and aftBishop men who call themselves clubs remember that Christ never went rirhts and duties and misuse of things that la them . Mn man has a natural r a maa with the city marshal, but "Prohibition drives underground the young, Louis, Ho. and get together and have their hot selves are gifts of God. We regard makto God.which seeks mischief cure, it of of I "The the p . greatest fallacy .rrrMiinn on the , with the grace as a wrong principle to prohibit in their, closets. I am sure that ties riKQL 111 SUWLUl "BO- i: . more deal the to with difficult 1a tme ing it that of the right of the this of the misuse of the use, w an account on this and in effect bad a of another, have equal rights majority. This cation has attained its ThJ, beIieve in going evil and impossible to regulate the these clubs men whovery never drank at greatness through ita recognition of manufacture and sale of' anything that or wr0ng. In tne states trade, as, for instance, in the quality that young from which thA law ougnt w lhead . m itself is not bad." T "7"' all previously have done so in the se the inalienable prohib-uoo- n of liquor sold." right of every man. If him. The Idea is quite unfounded that where laws have been passed as of the club, state crecy I a cail.it; entire from drinking beer he Rev, man they the of up sale stop liqiior the give of York. New hung into socletwe entering J, R. Freeman, Brown of Arkansas. that they would not be seen to drink has the right to stop me from drink Bishop v.,,v, eany. . n - u ..p.-.A nail any natural ngnt." yt- I . IfillAV I la ao n in weir ing coffee. "The saloon is here to stay, not "Generally speaking, I have also over a oar, nut tney ' Abraham it is tenacious of what-- it be? a crime to buy it and the majority this objection to the prohibitory club room." Rev. F. P. .Oklahoma lieves Keicher,. orciiiglegitimate rights, but to.,bfiJts of -form movementln any thenterest an Prohibition will work treat Injury havi:)iw;fo"Minettepl ; West Va. of a majority of our are Donohue, there because Bishop is Okla. of righteousness, that it attempt City. who demand its serviceresort to Duiidrapofi the Banff and people "One of my greatest surprises' were suecies oMntemperance within ltseir.i hose businegs it is tcenforce them, tcr tneenr w lyfanny that good- may "L .mosLarnestly protest against threatened prohibition legislation? the conditions prevailing in what I for it goes beyond the bounds of rea- fiave lot the sympathy of the common be 'accomplished. - I am : profoundly had hoped to prove a model prohibi convinced that the superstructure "Where all men have equal rights Milwau son lo, that It attempts to control a people." of which prohibitionists are seeking to Archbishop Messemer, tion state. Back in my town of Mi- guaranteed to them under the consti min's appetite by legisiaUon and in i0hn Qnincy Adarhs, Sixth PresU erect will Wis: kee, not stand. ilwaukee, a city of 360,000 inhabitants, tution, ft can never, be, hoped to enmi nr.hine that are J :i aeni oi uic vmw are 2,600 saloons and thirteen force ja law, which, on the plea that it there reform a nrohlblUon law strikes can "I do not believe thatwe e publle-goodoes not regard J.. L. Spaulding, of men t I must confess that in is a blow at the very pr.nclples on which "porget not. I pray you, the right of Archbishop by law. prohibition, according to breweries,-buof many millions of strictly the ifve residence months' new in more rights Tomi per8onai freedom.- - Belt government, is my your Peoria. our government was founaea. brings many observers, actually state I have seen more drunkenness moderate, drinkers." -tne rounaauon oi our political uu a speech in Illinois legislature. .... Is a law of human nature liquor than the open sale 01 intoxi and lawlessness than I ever "There in saw .in a is self tavern ran gov Lincoln by institutions, and it Senator George Sutherland eicessive pressure brought to cants under pol.ee supervision. Milwaukee in five years time." . lem. 111., where he sold liquor, wnue grnment alone that the taw oi tem- that beari a member of the n!inoli33ittiref Rev?? Father- Pres. """ r- r. anarh.h:ioaet:'eiftloandl tAiultsIn; other evnrahd iiOW wherw a delivered During speech by Sen Oklahoma. Catholic Total Abstinence - Socio ator are diminishing in Bishop statewide proaibitioB. In Salt I&ka Georre Sutherland Roger Q. ' Mills, Congressman ana rious Influences A "m'ni T ux temperance in America, there seems 'it T:il ties, America. City, November 5, 191, an Interruption "Honest people have taken it as an .mimor mm to be no sufficient reason for calling Horatio Seymour. came in tne roiio wing language: how freedom. It I have fin nmhtwH th J InsultlQ theitiAmerican manu-the to state the prohibit New York in "I oppose the adoption of prohlbi- upon Elected Governor of where a to broueht bition has point many in our local principle .... laws, and senator answered as follows: fnn4n vi an tat facture and saleof alcoholic liquors. L.liijnon- uecoHj llnlnAa or for mjr it iuiai.c b muuauoU. 1852' and 1862, three times a memoer The jess we bring the public Jnto 'our they have no respect for the law experience or increased haunts of free of government," principle lar oy a,r, eI?.nle; "?rse vice and increased difficuit4es for tem-- K oath, and there, iias peen of the "state legislature and candidate ? ,is ayouui iiuc auu privaterper8onaian domestic affairs an more much and Bicatiufi more abuse,, led ma uriu&iug is a works rtflBnia De. have to drinking Derancfl we shall for .president In 1868.- While Governor Daniel VoorheesT the American the freer and happier vice. - The horsethief does not try to of liquor than ever before." , of farce the. attemptingL by morality of New York he vetoed a pronioiuon Statesman. Haw. These are some pf the. jeasons defend himself by saying be hag a Cardinal James Gibbons of Baltic to steal, while on the other hand Mil Cardinal Edward. 'that Manning. urge me, as a total abstainer, to right there-Imore. . a very large proportion of men "T aw Tha holy 8erloturss and the his It to the subject and to the! In our my protest against placing , Ja4d Ifl OI : who will assert that they have a per . DrunkenneBS :ts Tiot --th JelTible 16 convTncf .ui friends of the measure to add the nnnii,irn. tery 0f the church are alike without nrhaVe a wuiuu law vuuauiuuuu ayyears to of the drunkard." me to be bad in morals and imprac fect right to drink as much as they myself that what we call total absti- drink, but please, and men who are not drinkers KllUO tail UUl UV.bAKM mvw tical in politics." y The nence Is essential to 'morality. will contend as strongly that they have Itory laws. They ire not consisted Bishop Brooks of Oklahoma. moderate and occasional use of alb al Rev. Dr. W. C. Helt, Evansville, a right to drink if they see fit ..You wiin sounu Pr.nu.p.c. can a re-- i the present .hour, where . condemned J "I am not strictly opposed to any to be not . coholic to is t.. va dem-eecan not legislate virtue or morality regulate Teligious liquors n sua imusibbb In- lOUUU OI Bireosm roaiat-iu- e into men any more than youcanlegis eountries like France . and Italy, one's using liquor. It la a matter oi Indiana, forms of worship, they to trusted not could be. whose people as a rule drink wine, no man's personal privilege. League. where late happiness into them-- " people ance where, they are des.gned to enfor themselves?" h.blt --serious harm results from the prac-- ' force obedience. The enort to supam by nature and education a "I Gov. William Spry, of Utah. -- J ntice. Eyen in Rome, even at the VatiMonsiegneur Harkins of Mass, teetotaler, and have been an ardent -r nrfiss intemperance by unusual and ... k KiMinwi nrnvea mat me loir.l W lilldlll OU9U9 nmnu,A-uvTcan, wine is not prohibited, and as we There is no question in my mind, or "I was here when the prohibitory and sincere advocate of prohibition. I .. nor of Massachusetts. know the papal doctors themselves islature is attempting to do that which bnwevAr. in the minda nf tba mmnL r ttoK and nave reacned the Dlace. state in thrs effect in laws were Holiness. It ia nn within ita nrovince to enact on. Then, uo wnger auow my which existed under " temperance snould be adopted, in prescribe has . .been enacted "Prohibition Ail exDerlence I long since came to understand know the evils . v .. r to in i era s.u sires bias again, my Judgment as to the: But I agree with the remarks of the i... no in license Holyoke them. Under ana re ; of tftmnfftnr.e like other vir- this state,, thorougniy tried, aside prin-the point that, putting there would be less" drinking but more uesi memoa oi aeaimg witb so impor- - senator when he says that it is tuee is not reduced by lawmaking, but pealed by its sponsors as a confessed clple, it was virtually.imp08slble to drunkenness." a toatter as the drink question, possible to legislate morality or sober- enforce a total abstinence law in aj by the Influence or eaucauon, inwnu-- i ' lviemous oi wora must be adapted toiness into any man. It must come from or in a state. The ity and religion."Richard Whately, of meet the present conditions. To at the heart out and not from the John Sherman, American States attempt, to enforce such a law must Archbishop l " in. I have' heard about sacrificing " - tmpt to force a law of any character r 7 r Dublin. Theodore Roosevelt Says:.", nun." consequently leaiLto one of the worst, the people against the.r protest the boy on the altar of the upon saloon. possl-Author and Scholar. things Illegality or hypocrisy; Th nnarf ettizem will demand Kb will ran in its purpose. Laws cannot Now, I do not know where the other Senate both." MtM bly be successfully .enforced without a man's boy Is, but my boy is home with erty for himself1, and as a tnatter'of , MnyTl" "As for thos"e who endeavor to en of Senate, and Secretary President his mother, where he should be And! sustaining public: sentiment" will others to it see that mainw.ll side on their pride he Henrv Ward Beecher. Noted Di- -, list. . scripture . . i by i .. ... of State. u w.saom.tot k-menuonau nr rwifu..'.UU6 in xae iue Hnu,a wine a mat. . receive the liberty which be thus rm,l, taming arounay?. Dim tne proper home vine. an not was intoxicating 'scriptures "The contest for ages has shown' "If claims as his own, Probably the best .. influence he will remain there unless gyman. " you say I ought not to drink I liquor, they must, either be themselves reason for be- test of true love of liberty in - any that the attempt to regufate the'appe- - may agree with' you, but if you say ;Very 'fS1"111 'Prohibition and wide ttej?Bejna.B throws really they silly4f open ignorant of people; cannotbesuccessful. I shall hot drink, 1 Will " drink" and believe An fiT1 V nf a inrtnnrotivo or must be r0 country Is the manner In wblclnnlnortlte .sooner r'0 pious fostering it, any community appreciates whatever 1 please, because that is my, fraud jn the hope of deluding-thiti are treated In that" country.' Not. The sim law is no law at all. There Is the unJudge F. M. Simdnton, of Tampa, right" pie Into what is right under false pre licensed, vice which feels Its tempoonly should there be eompl fionaa. And pious frauds almost al rary freedom and is prepared to make tenses. , , in matters of religion ana opinion, nui'p,d Bis hopfy "J, nave ways do more harm thangood tqjhe the. most of it. Is nrohibition in .J5.ce.new ppportunity Maine? "There neve wks in aii v ataf 10 ooserve"Tire ehtSTTfiiTnrSrih, ' ."Prohibition leads to. the formation MAN TO itikD HIS LIFE AS HEiEx-Go- v Malcolm. W. Patterson .ttoaTenn'eaiiefi' laws in' that adoDted .t. "The main effentu f anil of clubs wlch, cannot be controlled DBSIRES. PROVIDED S ONLY THATj , Gailor of Tennessee. where tried are poor liquor j In Chattanooga tne saloons lor the more demoralizing than of Tennessee. are and which prohibition . Bishop HBDOINGIN SO wine and beer are as large. pnees ror. it, an, increase ot.io-,?ai- wide wu.sKey, WRONO MIS NEIGHBOR." Wide dlf- - . "Prohibition is fundamonlally and satoonsA "Prohibition is impracticable ands ruaies in the lunatic asylums, poverty open as they are in tho , re-and of a hidden as ference of pinion in matters xt is violation profoundly wrong governmental productive Tampa, and the only apparent ditfer- for the farmers and a By stem of Bishop Johnson of Texas, shameful evils." , liglous polltiial and social belief musrpollcy. The only law the state could me saloons in Chatta and deliberate falsehoods on in bo' or to curtail last would the "t 6r intellect alike, exist if conscience th part of the .nhabintants and tran- - nooga pay no license." could properly be called fringe upon the rights of men engaged enact wtich arenotto be,stuatedULthexe istobe; prohibiflon law or tnat couid posi..- Bishop' Webb of Milwaukee. BITTER In the liquor traffic, for I believe that room for healthy growth. u aniu w u HATREDS BASED, INTERNECINE they have as. much right under the law f'l- believe that the general tendency :.wu ARE or the Episcopal clergy la, to favor Kev. Dr. iJransford, of New York preveni uw use oi i.quor wouia oe to sell liquor as I have-tpreach." ON DIFFERENCES, SUCH You can not dictate to a a e wnicn maKe wouia tne BE-"pse mawhat rather than oppose a well regulated SIGNS NOT EARNESTNESS OF oa w drink. for when mamf--WHICity. saloon." ".'" Bishop Grafton, of Wisconsin. LIEF, BUT OF THAT FANATICISM to youareundermlnlng you attempt ' the "To drink is no sln.w Jesus Christ most important WHETHER REUGIOUS OR: uf cannot agree with those whs DEMOCRATIC OR: Count Leo Tolstoi, Noted Author think the taking of wine in moderadrank. To keep a saloon is no sin, Ryan. Archbishop ot country--inIS ITSELF BUT and any policy which claims the name ' tion is wrong, because the process of and Philosopher. 4 of the ethics the ques "Regarding THE God's created MANIFESTATIONS OF of tne fermentation is univer- W. R Riddle, ni.DOMY BIGOTRY WHICH HAS Why should there be any prohlbi acts, and the Divine Master or : the tion, I am constrained to say that that deals with the Kansas BEEN THE CHIEF FACTOR INTHB tlon of the sale of .alcoholic drink? Chnstlan religion turned water into many false principles and not a little sal appetite of men for alcohol on the Fort Scott legislature, the r characterized fanaticism have to basis of the law. and order alone canOF SO Why. -- ahouldu DOWNFAUj of the "Kansas 'leaia-toturmovement I am in favor of total ab- not commend itself to the Intelligence """ TIONS." " yr in. 1879 roted for and desire for all wha stinence people "VIt decently r and not to excess? Bishop Hoffman of Philadelphia. need it I favdr high license and every and is therefore doomed to la!L bkionamendmrac.rTwo Thaddeus Stevens ' j cause one person makes a fool of "You can not legislate people into means consistent with tpue trtecfples - M. ; Savage. Revr passed before J. is the'next noteason why person . does not and due Statesman jself .iwu ui. uiisiaKe K SaiWAnlil Ka ilnna trnd r9 If nartnlA being good and prohibition respect for individual liberty as believe common " "I after talk the all, Con , ' Served F.ve Terma In National the be tendlngv of AmerJca aces wnicn ail of in state ' the witnessed Maine, - 'emme, T ; wholly Tvrong direction; in this mat- is anything but a closed state excep inn not believe fn" prohibition ant1 drink is false and m.sleading. Is there am 1 8noum ue giaa n ie.Bianen couiu (er" ;f to fleht anv snrh The11 n lands? Prepared In ' crime Mohammedan in . Rabbi Hersch of Chicago. name.'j ' ; bar intemperance, but I have seen ltj Wendell Holmes, Noted laws. Wltn the nasaao-- nt v.n . ' trieh and "tried in vain. '1 do not "The best safeguard against drunk- Bishop Potter, of New York." i en- - Rev. S. Parks Cadman, of Brook-Joyeshould be enness are is Author and Philosopher.,,, we iioerues lieve that sumptuary laws ever had that at whether .""r drlnk.ng "Our prhibitory laws, atak ' ' ' uieae jealously. ' : tyn. n. y. openly." them in operation on one day or put any effect to stop abuses in any coun-- . . "While temperance alt daya are as stupid as they are inadvocating "When you enact a law Intended to Congressman' Bartholdt, of Mis try. When 1 was a young man I was amonK our Deonle and all annroDriate effectual. nUnA, rf PArtlanH Most' of our methods for x... do more than.lt ought Jto do, it gener soun. in the State Legislature (Pennsylva' .11 v measureato promote it. I believe that dealing with the drink evil in our day In Aoinsr lea than .it ahtuld Maine. r If my Missour, .constituents nisi, and moved tha,tihe .sale pt Hq"or the adoptlon-- f the 'proposed amend-b- an tl fif neratiaiL areainted. w.thI alse-- J ask I do, -tp me to- y ote. for to fMy "eyes wiiri-eprohibition"! : I would prohibited in my district, and the mnt to the constitution prohibiting hoodt dishonored by essential unreauy sutute. Prohibition rather by veryTw obfuoSTn " motion was carried. .. I did, not find the sale of intoxicating liquors would and: discredited by. widespread and evils of "c.ttl ' ;ongress-- lf the hv vn.mr see America free f.rst and then have .iK. l mereoy maae unb ukunk- - not accomDlish its Intended buruoae. consistent failu,re," hn- use freedom 1 clttaens moral its for: that r'"urTa;A;n;hv ARD LESS. They would only drink, but would lead to the surreptitious use 0 uuieu ooast ot liberty "V. it, Mt3 U ... .nH rhiWrii th hvnocriav and ends. People can not be coerced into would mimhU .v ,u the more when they had the chance. 0f Inferior wines and liquors." US U Doane, of New York, . . Bishop "8taste ior ny law. liquor attention." arrested my There is no other way than by moral . -corruption, ;. v can framed law "No such be. , that ,Cuiut.u. ine sane man suasion for the reiormation of - the- United States Senator Vest Kretzman of Denver. - . . Austin, Texas. --- :. will not create popuTar excitement by Rev. Lvman Abbott, Author and world and the subjection of drunken-;-- ' is wrong for any society or the "I am opposed to prohibition.-1-am its alleged interference with Individual ncKS." y01 state to forBid the individual to make ovu.u.i on ui mj lire.-.- " i hovo o .opposed to It ori'urincipieSirirr pnvileges between classes, or win De "It was not the method of Jesus. He use of God's gifts in the r.jrht man- - feet r.ght to put prohibition mn puaed to lW4totw4thstandiiiL-thi8luf- 8 Samuel Gompers, Presiderrt-ofh- e trad in mi r nf tntlabBtlnpnrA an. yir W'lt, thp P'ble permits land . "r'-C"ut 110. on anybody elap American Federation of m aaT87nRM man wno aares n v,.v. cieties and did not Join tbem. He em- - sanctions we can not condemn.. The WTeglsTationT u oppose ravorsi' rvweij "Experience has shown the folly of intemperance and-i- s -- worklnir'JTthe' flc,als and violators of the law to pu phasized the distinction between His Bible permits the moderate ? use of ' rohibition wherever it has been tried, saloon Interest Archbishop Glennon. . .. 4 Methods and those of Johnthe Bap- - liquors, therefore we cannot condemn and that saloons can be regulated by people, their individual Judgment, and! iT. Z rtist that John came neither eating or such use. And the unjust use of force "It Is only . .oefrom the :Inaann man iVin law. There is not a city in Maine their .conscience, and their convfation Bishop.- rOX,. of ureen cay, Wis. drinking: the Son of Man came eating in this direction breeds hypocrites and removed. The san man """i where a stranger can not go and buy after disussion, as to their health and "I do noj think there are five bish- - and drinking, - He condemned drunk- - sneaks. , Never by prohibit on, but uiuw i.ui.Yo n irom .himself.--ri'- '"..T. ;5 R or-def- ty ?.u""Vr;r. bav-heelta- r ted r. !PO.,J!5Lr.: ;-- rBishop -- . . - reiri I .. I- -- Liflcom'iJW0,. be-cau- ae - -- - - -- ZTr r for-th- -- ; o 8a-lri- .i " iss Z..lJJtah,.- TConalty? ; r. athelie-jDioees- e, J v. . . . - . s . Ft - . "-"- IT .'- a .P0 L,,ta tun ,' .."'-.i- , - i M , . nrr, , ..: ar-tl...- .. vv Anti-Saloo- : . . for-His oe-m- ai .. im-ta- nt large-commun- - -- ity out-s.d- e 1 - - v.u;, wi-Du- - " ua Te 4 1 1 e ri.i. - O-NUTi -- al '. c semi-thieve- ry l"t . ueru : - I - CH, . Xl0a,. well-nig- h . 4'AsTa-member -- Justwhat-t-liker-provldea-t- e -uo , accompilsh-its-desireiLc- nd Srience thaAirm.r3.r' praclice--jfempejL- r- . 0rXee - . . er ' " Xfc-- - t" -- ui. e or n am-oppo- sed -- lo-5f- nrni.rt .J. -- . that-reaso- V-i RPaulE. .." i 1 -- V -. - Labr.;.!11 I .to.:.- ( , s THE EVIDENCE OF THE COMMITTEE . OF FIFTY, including President Eliot, nissioncr of of." Harvard : Labor; Hon. Charles J. BonaparterDr. Felix Adler, is against prohibition, as is 'also the P1 AFACTUERS-"- " Bishop Potter, of New York; Seth Low, President of Columbia r Hon." Carf oH TifWr evidence-oothers of the greatest men in this nation anoTabroadi?:"'r",";":-V- ' thousands AND 3U3INESS f lhttColn "r"" MN'sisSOfelAflON'pF (JTAH" 7 |