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About Eagle Valley news. (Richland, Or.) 191?-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1914)
Is it r43binl;ttb items. Tho. CuflJSrtaon family have moved down Tr.om the sag. M. nnd Mrs. foaoph Stick noy mndo a buotfwuo L:lp to Wcidor last wqoI. School starLd with iho attend Migo of Hovcntocn pupila. Mr. LaFranz bointf the La. her. Aino3 I'obinotto and Ora Jon n'nga were out going pnsaongcrs on S'llurdaya train, bound for Veiocr. Mrs. LaPran'., who hns been visiting her run A. I a Franz and liia wife has ruturncd to her home in Nesan, Ore A crowd pat here J at the Rob incite hoim Monday evening Club at he Uobinettc homo o t) Saturday eve in: laal woo large ly attended and aa a buccceo.? Mrs. Henry Helmick nnl Mrs. Knjo Jletler of Fort VVayno, Infl. tnothor nntj uunt f F.aplc Hel mfii huyo been visiting in IioLji nette. GJc,ndy,ij IjTawlhornQ who has. nvent jtho past tumtner with her? aunt Mrs, A. Pratt of Baker Val-, ley returned to her home in Rob inctte, m'lHODJST CHURCH ' Sunday' School lQ:Q0a. m., E. E. fjoimun upennlen.lol. the Preaching at 11:00 a. m. by the and liurprjsod Mr Uobircttc on fc'ie pastor, ibject, "The Lipuor jua birth ann'versary. Mrs, Duncan Frnscr and Miss Mary Fraaer of Baker ani Mrs. I. N. Sandara of HichlarnJ were visitors in t:wn recently. Question" -"V hat Doe3 Scripture Say About? It." Preaching 7:30 p. m. by the pas tor Subject, 4 T!u Church" Prayer -Meet n.; 7,30 p Ml. Wed- Mr. Thomas Benton who lia nc3'Jay pvenln j been away at the Hot Springs, H choir Uchcrea Thur day at 3:00 wun r.neumaiism nas resumed n m tvh r.n rifr innr his portion at the Coopers Barn, A party given by the Ladies JSyttRYfypY WELCOME Frunlc Hopkins, pastor. tat The best equipped Hotel in the Manhandle FOR SALE! li ALSO one UPRIGHT BRE WSTER PIANO, GOOD AS NEW Mrs. S. D. JONES KIC11LAND. riAKEIl COUNTY, OREGON ttUX2LSZSX3i DH1 pi 13 Am I My Brother's Keeper? Yes! You Are- Provided he is addicted to liquor 3 TO VOTE OREGON DRY: Y it-, VI IN SALEM Drunk enness lias decreased lu ratio of olx to one ainco the town went INSALEM Business la far hotter than when tho town wna wet, thrco loading mor chants ony. Paid AdvertUernsnt liy Committee of One Hundred 718 Morgan Uulluinc, Portlaud, Urefion MM llllllilll H m m STATEWIDE PROHIBITION MEANS r,FB? TflXFQ 1 mm mm m m m m m mm mv THEY'RE TOO BIG NOW! Vote 333 X NO Against Prohibition ; Jlegister before Thjursdgy, October 15 Voting qualifications: Six montfcs' tesldeace in, the state, 30 days In precinct ,-5 A' Pefeat of the proposed prohibition amendment will have no effect Upon the efficient home rule or local option statutes now in force, find each community will continue to deterfnijie its individual stand on the matter of granting licejisesj Bleeding Kansas Sti 11 Bleeds! A steady stream of money the life-blood of a state: 'pours from "model prohibition" Kansas, into License states! -i The Topeka State Journal, a supporter of Prohibition, on July 8, 1913, published the statement that approximately 1,500,000 QUARTS OF LIQUOR were legally shipped into the state of Kansas each year. Kansas got no revenue c Cher states qqZ ths money! Should we place Oregon near the bottom with Kansas? Prohibitionists like to Inllc about Kansas. They say it lias been do' lor 34 years and bus mudo a record. 7ai it? Kansnx Prohibition r ichatsent Carrie Nation on the warpath with her hatchet. It was in Topeka, Kant as, that Mrs. Nation opent d her home for the wives of mm who not drunk on Kansas Piohibi.ion liquor. Yet Prohibitionists tell us that ss the capital city of dry Kansas, Topvlcn is a model. Rev. Robert Gordon, pastor of tho Fiist Baptist Church, Topcki,. who has been a Prohibitionist nil Ills life, said fiom hlShiilplti "Thera are 140 joints in StyjcA.-s where intoxicating liifttpr jj sold." '0 prov.c It, ho went out and Wjitt a lcejr of beer, two caves Si bot tled beer, a suitcaso tall oLMlib hey, and all the sin and wlgchtf could carry. 77iaf is what the Prohiblliotilnfa themselves tell its about A'ahs.ia. Dry Kanras ranks 32nd in per capita ban!: resources. Dry Kansas ranks 13rd in pci cr.p:!a saving j hank dcpdsils. jb.j J'ansas luti more is:matc3 i:i her j;? Ijohj in propo. tion to population than 24 other states. Dry Kansas has a greater iro portion of juvenile delinquents than 26 other states. ( Dry Kansas has a greater pro portion of fcebZe-r.iUided then 31 other states. Dry Kansas has a greater pro portion of homicides annually than 22 other slates. , -i V if (I'isurcs from IT. S. CfniuVFcUcniI or utuur Government etetisties show that Drl) Kansas has the lowest Church enrollment of the North Central States. Only 28.4 per cent of her population fs en rolled as church membership. Wisconsin, a wet state in the North Central group, has a church roll of 44.3 per cent. Dry Kansas bays grrcat quantities of Bitters and Home Remedies. Government reports show these nostrums contain an average of 35 to 40 per cent alcohol. Analysis of a favorite "nerve tonic" showed two grains of opium and 75 per cent of grain alcohol to each fluid ounce. Tatent medicines are always popu lar in dry states; above is the reason. Do you, as a loyal Oregonian, want to ssc your state held up like this to the nation's scern? Records of County Clerks, Express Companies and Railroads in Kansas show that Krtnras consumes just as much lltiudr under Prohibition as it did when It lud legally licensed saloons. The state now gets no public revenue from this liquor. The "blind-pig" and the "boot-legger" have taken" the place of the regulated saloon and ply their illicit trade in alleys and tinder cover of darkness. Defeat of Prohibition will net char.go tho present Tasao Rule or JLocal Option Law sp . m yi & m k: t