Right. 'ans Brothers. m pilots for 51.35 N! C333 Vchkks. m Rafts. ‘lig a... <32}..- .i-io: 53 @320 90. 2.9833“: [33:93: 5: we no... dial. incum,.ind I am we I'd Dock Skim Han. W65, Agent. a. .TQII.‘ v.n.¢- A. Own-- 3 .1.) i. Wmtwhflr 51'. rank “ï¬fty-a .IES. us a Postal zed. Salt, .- w-v~â€" v m “Wed ill"? in _ .‘wphone «MS. Fruit 'Ices, hum 304 um Am, otel ling! Stable. NZEN. Vial AV... Groceries M at m: and Pant! manila! "an“! d“)! 'E Sun. DELIVERED. Hygeia Water. .L WATER. Highland Park. t when to Thick! todoone anweu ‘ A. Bock!†1m soo- D. H. Emm- VISSCHER v.'§AiSIéS. of Lake Coilnfy. Foa- Dementia Governor. JOSEPHJ. HARRISJ! William-on County LAKE FOREST, Foe Seaman? of Sate. _ BENJAKIN J. RADFORD. of Woodfmd Co. _ For Tmm’Uaiversity of Illinois. ELLA S. STEWART. ofka County; CLARA A. HARTFOR 0.0! Grundy Couhty. JACOB E. BITTENGER. at Whimside Co. For attorney General. FRANK S. REGAN. of Winngmo County.- For Treasurer. HENRY C. TUNISON. of Mutant! . While th'qt excuse for not voting for what one knows to be right is never justiï¬able, it has far. less force this fall than ever before, . for everything points now to a ,vote for Prohibitions of not lea [than half a million and perhaps a million and whet: that number of votes shall be cast for it, it will hold the balance of power and the issue will be forced upon the pol- iticihns, of the two old parties. Tcmponiwe, Address. Last Sathrday evening at; the court house square, Hon. John H. Hill, of Chicago, an able and}! etc. qnent Prater, gave a very interest- ing s‘peech on the, paramount} issue of the campaign to a good sized crowd, composed chieflydf men who remained and gave strict attention throughout the speech which lasted abont'an hour and rapplauded heartily at ifs close. Only a few extrncts from the addljess cnn be given. tTHE ADDRESS. In reply to the stdtement that Prohibition is not the quesiion of the day the speaker said that he gsuutcmmumumg agreed with that. "It is not the question of the day but it is the question if the age. ' "The other issues are questions of, the day and of a day.. They are constantly changing and page- ing away until! it is ï¬nally ahd ‘lri’uniphantly settled by tbé com- plete overthrow of the legalized liquor trafï¬c. ' . i . inmmamuuuuau “Most good people acknowledge that the saloon is a great_ evil and that Prohibition is right, but Sag “Prohibition has no chance and to vote for it in simply to throw away one's vote." For Pie-Idiot. - JUHN G.WOOLE‘£.0HIIW. V r Fat Vice-Pedant. “any a urn-mum: anode 1.1m For Auditor of Public" Accounts. J AIRS A. STONE. ofSlnzmon County “Edna. than“ ever before it is the duty of every temperate and Christihn voter to vote for. Pro- bibi ' n and the destruction of the hquor traflic. The chief oh- aticles to Prohibition have been and are the four A’s, Appétite, Avarice, Ambition and ‘Apathy; the appetite of thgdrunknn‘i, the avarice of the saloon keeper, the ambition VOL VIII. PROHIBITION TICKET. Fol 60'9")â€. HIGHWOQD. " oi the politician, County. the apathy of the people and he , last named is the greatest .ldn most difï¬culty of all to ovens: 11's. ‘ In speaking of the various is we! preamted by the two old pa ies whose platforms contain a so- lutely no reference to the li1 ,1or .traï¬c, he said it would 1.1115 a very clever man- to decide w E11311 was the assailed “param Int issue.†His opinion was that of those named was the pawn: ant issue with the politicians but the most important issue with 1 em was “Who will get the oflic 1?" If we talk about imperialist?†ithe lesue what about the ab 111p tism which the liquor pong}; is striving for in our governnéj snt. . If we speak about trusts,§ rfhat 1about the most powerful ahd‘ fian- gerons of all the trusts thh liff;1wr trust? If we talk of pivoted; ion, what about protection to the 1;; mo- tity of our. homes, the man} and of our brothers and sons 11111 the honor of our sisters and dang tern. lagainst the attacks of the s: can land its companions in vice? Vho makes the drunkard? Thes' eon ,keeper Who makes the s 0011 keeper? The law. Who 11 dies the law? The legislator. Vho; helps to make the legislator? The ‘ deacon. Then .as the links 1'} the ehain which fastened togetheifg the :drunkard and the license- viting deacon are strong when}; the drunkard, as the Bible says, hall be cast into hell, the deacon will certainly have to go with aim. The only way of escape from;- «web ‘11 fate for any voter for ï¬t «nae, mo matter what his standing, 1 in lchurch or society may be,; :5 to ; break the link of the chain ; hich ibinds himto the legislator» who , favors license by refusing to vote ; :for him and by voting hencg orth ,ifor Prohibition. What sh ll it .proï¬t a man if he wins at very zelection and loses his own D( 1?†WW Winona-d flow sun I V01 9 There is not a true Am «frican ‘citizen but wiH claim the ‘p'asent American saloon to be at; evil. Now if it be an evil, what mold be done with it? To amawg.i that question let me. ask anothery: Are trusts an evil? Both partiqk, Re. pnblicun and Democrat, chili} they are. If so. what should btii'fdone with trusts? Both the ‘f1bove parties have adopted 3 pl: 1k in their platforms for the reg: ation of these evils. If they ex. ected to regulate any evil, how d they expéct to do so? By insei‘ 11g a plank' 1n their platforms,m_ mm: as- suredly. But there is no plank either 111 the Republican or Dem- ocrat platform. Whit kit 3 this mean? Bmplythe' conti mob of this monster of Veyi‘h}: £31m FORT SHERIDAN; hmHL‘AN ’ PARK. SUPPLEMENT TO Erican went evil. Iohld that FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, I900. Democratic party will weep over a billion-dollar congress, but does not shed a crooodile tent when lba‘galoon robs pedple of 31,200,- 000,000. The Republics}: puty will compass land, sea and even heaven itself to protect tbs wark- ingman’s‘ dinner pail, and yet have nbthiug to my while “the daloon robs him of his dinner. ~ One hundred thous 1nd boys may be destroyed but these plrties are silent. They take great cu‘e in protecting thlngs but not to pro. tect men. Votes were needed for Independence in 1776. for union in 1860; but they are needed to-l day for sobriety. for. men, and for 3 God.‘ Christian men go to the‘ poll's‘and cast a ballot with (one at th otd‘parties who have not {the will or disposition to say one :word against the saloon. and return singing, “One more day's workjfor Jesus.†‘ No! no! you have voted ‘for the promulgation ofba hundred thousand. drunknrds end; your in America, yon have mm! rm um which gives us a thousand delirium: eVery year, you haw voted for the blighting of homes, ‘for broken hearted mothers, cursed children. for the deeolution of our boys. for a river of mm, for a cloud of tears. for a boulevard of broken hearts, for a valley of dry bones. white with more than 8' million runnmade .sk'eletons. ' You say this is too strong an «causation. hut"«these things exist, and that by tho permission' of some one. Who? Not by the man who votes for sobï¬ety. men, and God; W. OITEOIAB. V For-“Prohibition Tale." The national committee of the Prohibition party has completed arrangements for its ‘ prohibition train,†which is to carry mai- dntee and oratore over the coun- try. Thetrain will leave Chicago: Wednesday morning, September 19, at8: 30 oclocka in. On the train will be John G. Wooley, Prohibition candidate for the Presidency; Henry B. Metcalf, candidate for Vice President; Samuel Di: hie, Volney B. Cush- ing_ of Bangor, Me. and Oliver W. Stewart of Chicago. chairman of the notional. committee. Most of, the speaking will be done by these leaders. Prominent work-1 era and leaders in diï¬â€˜erent states wiil aneompnny the train while it is in their territory. The train will pass through many town}; in Illinois, Iowa, Ne- brgska, North Dakota, South, Da- kota, _Minhesotn and Wisconsin. The trip willtake until Sunday, Bank 30, when the speakers will return to Chicago. , A second trip will begin day merging, Oct. 1, and will in RAVINIA. elude halts in the states of Indi- ana, Ohio, Kentucky, . Tennessee and Illinois, the Min returning to Chicago in time for a great evening meeting Tuesday, Oct. 9. Immediately after the close of the meeting a third trip of the special train will begin This will in clude halts in Michigan. Ohio Pennsylvania, New York. Mary land, New Jersey, Connecticut Rhode lsland, Massachusetts am: New Hampshire. â€"â€"Inter Ocean. A colloquy. In a drglm at our raking hour: we saw our friend: on the bench ll Manchester-tr â€tho-Son jolt beyond: Boston. There they at Mill; against a big storm- batten, valiant worn rock, when. lumen-o Illa Ibialded them from the slowly do clining sun. With noiseless «.9 I. drew near and overheard the folloq .ing colloquy: Oh, Fred. think what n mistake I 'made in leaving Highland Put to thin planes to undo loot prints on th and. When only hit Thnrndn they land the plenum. of that nplendi: reception given by In and It You with war n hundred chic guests. Think of it. I with we hi been at that reception. « Yea. Alice, that was more 0! edit appointment to you than to me, a it waa wholly a lady’a alair but all _I ahare your general regret at on leaving for the ana ahoreandth mountains, though I needed th rest and change. I had to get to enough away from the oflce not I be called back every dly or to. B: when I think of occasional Sunda dinnore- at Wallace Wakem's, thm delightful eveninp' at the lobaugl lin’c. that laat little gathering do- ‘at tho Child’a, that cloaing part 3 and dance. Saturday night after tt \ladiee tourney. and not lent. “I: sweet little dinner party of Norma Scbtt'a at the club house, I ccnfe to some longing to: the good ï¬n and good people of the Park._ But my dour you Cork“ ‘0 "'0' tiou that W Indium-t ‘wonde ful experiona I bid on “5‘ M" GLENCOE. who-form Dignond [Ah pi nic, in which comedy and tnpdy nearly‘ blended; and you did I: mention tho-o eveninga when I In on the Brown' I porch Ind III Inch lovely Iongl. True. my dear, but don’t you be the manic of the list“. 'ind' " the deep but of the In! You. Fad. but don’t m to be t y poetical. Yon know what Cicero. aome (that old tog, said. Poe naacitur, not It? Indeed,I do "on to :0th I something like that thin I waa freshman hoollop: .Buuhatdol .» make up lot Bitty Iowa“, ' Walling Wain. oar-llama 8w : orHarvey Mot W Hal ‘ or Holman Ponytho and all to n of cho good tolh. Why l M give all ah. cum I [II «n halfa day’- phiatm‘ he†lof'a good half WI ,vioit. via One 2..“ ,-â€"..â€"_ MW! e c. 2 Rev. E. B. Butto- will apenk in Wuukegan, Sunday flowing Sept. 16 on Where are we at? What dull we do). How that! we do it? } He I!!! ahospuk on ptohibi- honu Ruined. Macro 3mg Sept. 13. ll 8 unlock 5 Oh, in. down in woman-o ballets.†trunk. Mae here, the-unit down-admmbam hack for dinner, but a â€walk along I mHo repeat it, wan:- lovely ï¬ne" Ind those m month at Highland Park. The place use]! it so beautiful the my no weried. you newer weary of it. Our circle of friends were so churning. and youhedeomuoh pleasure and pro- ï¬t on the golf links. it in more then poniblo we made I mist-he in hu- ing there. _: Gemini] Fred. if you Month“ to“ contâ€"Ind by the way when in M lovely cont! . ‘ 3?... than (on we am. but 1 bopethoJudgowill-ondu amp] ‘0! the Km to we can tap in tough with lite than. ('l‘hoy- com tho TEMPERANGE ’ MEETING. Saturday Eve. Swt. 15 AT 8 O'CLOCK. GOLDBERG’S HALL ComeOutandl-IcatanOH GrandArmme. Ht. Button is organiser of the Prohibition Inmte Temperance Alliance ofOngon, Washington. Idaho, Manual, Utah and North Da- IIIIIASIOOI..D.OCC.J r. E. B. Sutton. National Gospel Evmgdifl. Will Owlobm mum name-am flaw.» our work an unch an reputation 0m WWM‘mz'M: Send Rum man NWI- - ‘ “new W INNETKA. N0 16 LAKESIDE