Chapter | |
Preface | |
Ballot Box (Illustration.) | |
I. | My thirty years' intimate association with the brewers |
II. | Prohibition banishes crime |
III. | What is beer? |
IV. | Non-alcoholic beer is a mysterious compound of drugs |
V. | Beer is a habit forming drug |
VI. | Why beer is not a fit drink for the home |
VII. | Beer is not a temperance drink |
VIII. | The decreased alcoholic content of beer will increase drunkenness |
IX. | Brewers' grains are considered dangerous for cows milk |
X. | Brewers assault distillers to hide their own crimes |
XI. | Abolition of crime and vice would decrease the sale of beer |
XII. | Crime is planned in saloons |
XIII. | The beer traffic does not recognize the sanctity of the home |
XIV. | A vice complaint |
An every-day vice scene (Illustration) | |
XV. | Laws are openly violated |
XVI. | Another vice backed by brewers |
Cabarets and tango dance resorts | |
How a New York brewer advertises his cabaret resort | |
XVII. | Millions expended in corrupting elections |
United States Brewers' Association exposed | |
XVIII. | How Chicago Brewers have tried to prevent a "dry" vote |
XIX. | Brewers fear woman suffrage |
XX. | People resent government by the brewers |
PREFACE.
When it was found impossible to suppress my writings by attemptsto bribe me, men were hired to poison me. After the failure ofthis plot to dispose of me, I was subjected to almost unbelievableinsults, persecution, humiliat