| 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 |