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A PATERNAL i Mr. Jacob Beck, of Decatur, Ne- bresks, Ties evolved a movel schemo to reconstruct our system of govern- ment. In a printed proposal forward- ed to this paper Mr. Beck offers a prize of 300 to any peraon who will devise a political measure better adagted to accomplish the ends of government as formulated in the pre- amble to the nations] constitution than the plan which he has devised, or he will pay that sum to amy perzon who will demonstrate that his scherge would not be an improvement on the existing form of government in this country. The award is to made by twents-five jurors who fear God, love truth, and hate covetousners. After ten hotrs discussion of the merits of the echeme, parties desiring to compete for the prize are to present their scheme and tranemit a copy to Mr. Beck before July 4th, 1882, Mr. Beck ternal. Inorder that all Amcrican citizens shall have homes of their own, he proposcs that the national governmenit shall improve sl the public lands fit for farming aud parcel, them out in FOR VICEPEESH homesteads of euitable size. The CHESTER A. ARTHUR, natiousl government is also to em- of New York. bsrk in the land redistribution busi- ness by purchasing Jands of individ- vals and corporations and, compel Jand owners t sell a poriion of their large estates when it becomes ncces- sary. To carry out this piternal scheme the government shall issue an ade- quat> amount of legal tender paper currency, which shall bs refurded to her by homesteaders cn theee lands, who ehall be required to refond at leat one per cent. per annum on the cost of their homesteads until the gov- eroment is reimbursed for filting up the same. A failure to pay the annual installment due the government sball work a ferfeitare of the homesteader's claim, bui shall not debar him from taking one elsewhere when all dues on. the forfeited claim are paid up. These ‘HE DAILY BEE. B. ROSEWATER, EDITOR TO CORRESPONDENTS. o CounTey Famps we will always be plessed tohear frum, on all matters connected with ctops, country politicr, and oo suy subject whatever, of general Interest to the people of cur State. Apt tnformation conn=-ted with the elections, and relating to floods, accidents, will be gladly received. Al such communica- tions bowever, must be as brief as possible; a0 they mast in sl casen be Written on Gne sido of the ehet only. Wus Naus o Wimss, In full, must In_each and every case ancompany any communicaticn of what nature goever. This is nct intenced for publication, but for our own satisfaction xad s proct o goog falth. roumoaL. AExousCRMENTS of candidstes for Office—wheths er made by selt or friends, sud whether as no- tices or communications to the Editor, are ‘until nominations are made) simply personsl, nd will be charged for as advertisements. w0 ot desire contributions of a litorary or poetical character; and e will not undertake e or reserve the same in any cas ot Sur sl sy lrge 1o ‘more thau supply our Lrmited space. Al communications should be aodrcased to E. ROSEWATER, Editer. cheme is decidedly pa- NATIGNAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT: JAMES A. GARFIELD, eui GaxrfeLp never tonched a penny of Lis back pay Cosoness hss adjourned snd Val will be back in Nebraska rext week to yopair his fences—which are sadly out of order. TR A Ir sny mao dares tosllude to that ) rass band serenade T'l fine him §100 and send him to jail for ninety dayz. ~—P., 0. Hawee. G R Tae Chicago Times says “The Cincinnati dark horse,—for dark horse St will be, of courss, must peeds be a powerful goer. Up to date the Gar- field nag has never lost a race. We can easily explain it. When 1he president read Ballou's rerenade wpeech and foundnthat he didn’t want the office he concluded to withdraw hisname. Mr. Fofes lse't disposed to thrust an office on avybody. 1o pereon shall ever be permitted to own in his or her name at any one timo of life more than 160 acres of these lands. Mry Beck in his printed ~ciroular argues at considerable length in favor of what he deems a strictly original and entirely feasible scheme. Like al visionary discoverers of the coming millencum Mr. Beckissu enthusiast on hisscheme ss will be seen by the followivg extracts from his circular: Our city council was decidedly economical in counting the expense to e incarred for advertising for pro- posals for waterworks in the New York Herald, Chicago Times, Boston Post and Philadelphia Times to thirty dollars. We venture the prediction that it will coet nearly that sum to in- wert that advertisement in the New York Herald for one single issue, — Tae outcome at Cincinnati at this day is 88 problematic as was the out- come at Chicago ten days ago. Sam Tilden still holds the largest and most rolid block of delegates, but is very far short of the two-thirds requirsd for s pomination. It is troe thathe was in the same predicament last time +nd yet he managed to pull through. 1tis equally true, however, that the ©pposition to bis candidacy is more dif- fused throughout the party aud mocre decided in its character than it was four years ago. ~ The events of the 115t campaign deséroyed the confidence Folt by many democrats in bis available qualities. A candidats should be strong on thres points;—he should pay his campaign debts, he ¢hould make 1o bargais at the expense of his par- ty, and, if elected, or believed to be #o, he should show no weaknees in petting the office. On all these points Me. Tilden broke down; and in some parts of the country the opyosition to his nomination is intense. Should this vominstion fail, it is «Jaimed that he can dictate the can- didate. This is not certain. General Grant's friends eaid the same this year. Blaine's following thought a rouch of their power in 1876. But neither porty was relatively as strong a3 Mr. Tilden will be at Cincinnati. Under the two-thirds rule, the Grant en oculd have prevented the nomi- yation of any ene mot scceptablo to themselves. Andif Mr, Tilden's col- umn is as solid as that led by the re- publican triumvirs, he will have the An inflation of the currency, how- ever great it may bz, caunot work a public injury or bring about a reac- tion if every dollar that goes into cir- culation is preceded by a dollar’s worth of useful work in ftting up a home for some family that needs it. Hore is & tcheme to inflate the currency and at the same time inavgurate useful Jabor, furnish homes for those who need them, tlevelop the resources of the country, add billions to her tasa- ble property, and. sirengthen the sta- bility of her free institutions. Agri- culture being the base of all other 1n- dustries—the foundation of individual, state and national prosperity, security and happiness; o foster it 15 to foster every other logiti- wate calling among men. If the far- mer prospers so does the mechanic— if these two prosver so does the mer- chant; if these three prosper so do all other callings. If agriculturs guishee, everything languishes, Sti ulate the agricultural intere:ts and all interests arc stimulated. This scheme will inaugurate agricultural and rural life on the grandest scale ever pro posel. Put your screws under the foundation cf your house aud raise that up and up goes the whole houze. Agriculture is the foundation—under with the ecrews and let the great tem- ple of abundance, equality, justica, barmony, industry, protection, free- dom and peace go up. To help the poor to homes of their own as here proposed, would do more to help the poor and down-trodden of other lands than anything else we can do. They would naturally inquire why their rulers did not take steps to make them freeholders also. They would demand the same law tor them- selves—and thev would do this with an emphasis_that could not be disre- garded. Philosophers and ststesman bave all elong felt that something was wrong somewhere. They have roa- d that tho poor should own the soil they cultivate. But how to es- tablish them in the ownership has been the puzzling question. The question is here solved and in the joy homesteads shall bo transforable, but | © ganogand reckless disregard of the Jdaws of nature i excessive drink. No scheme ever devised by man can transfer such paupers into in- dustrious homesteaders. Men who will not work in cities will not work on farms, A Railcoad Cardidete. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Among the possible candidates of the demccracy at Cincinnatt we find frequent mention of the name of Jewett, of the Erie road, and stranger things bave happened than that he should be nominated. * It seems to be the established rule of conventions that the favorites should be beaten by a dark horse, and the two-thirds rule which provails in. the democratic con- ventions is more deadly to the favor- ites than the bare majorities which required in a republican convention. Couventions are organiz=d not for the purpose of nominating the strongest man, bt of defesting them, and the result is always the unexpected. After the Cingcinnati convention bas killed off the Bayards and Thurmaus and Tildens and Hendricks and Seymours, and got down among the Morrisons and Randalle and Palmers, it might casily happen that the ~stampede which means victory should band the nominativn over to Jewett, whoee sole distinction is that he has been a bril- liant and able manager of unsuccessful railroads. Tt woud cettaiuly be to the advan- tage of the country to have Jewett nominated, because his candidacy tost a question which will scon come up in one shape or another—the ques- tion as to which is the strcng government or the railroa Jewett's candidacy has, i the approval of the leading minds of his profession. The Pennsylvania people thiuk very highly of him, al- though he has managed & rival rosd, snd the same is true of Vanderbitt. Jay Gould. ions in Erie gave an op- portunity for the sabsequent display of Mr. Jewett’s abilityin repairing wrecks, would find in the. nomwation of Mr. Jewett cos on for the de- foat of Mr. Blaine, and we may be sure that the various Paciiic railroads would coniribute campaign funds for the election of a gentleman whose way of looking at the relations between the rallroads and the government so beautifully harmonizes with theirown. It would be very iuteresting to have the full strength of the railroads put forwerd in such a struggle, be- se then we should have su oppor- tunity of learning, under the most fa- vorable circumstancés, what the rail- road sirength amounts tu. Hereto- fore, in the contasts between the rail- road corporations and the popular governing bodies, we have scen only isolated and individual exertions of strength, olthough it ia to be moted that in every case the railroads have come out ahead. Thirteen years ago the _ Missou railroads tackled the Missouri legislature, and when the conflict is over, the railroad peo- ple had all the propersy and the peo- ple of the stste bad all the load to carry. Threo yearsago tte Hannibsl and Joo railroad, single-handed and unaided, bucked against the state, and the state farcd no better than a country bompkin in a bunko den. We do not need to recall the succass with which the Pacific railroad corporations first extracted from the treasury enough movey to build the roads, and then beat the national government on a plein question of paying interest on the debt which cre: the railroads. s e ., * The New York Central railroad re- presents $130,000,000 of investment, and §30,000,000 of anuual businees. The Pennsylvania rcad represauts 8150,000,000, and $40,000,000 of bu: ness; the Union and Central Pacific represent between them nearly $300,- 000,000. A mortgage was last week filed in St. Louis, on a single railroad, for $50,000,000. Encrmous ss arethese figures, they are but the beginning, or rather thefirst landiog-place inacourse of consolidation which is part of the desting of railroads. Our country very large, and the necessities of co petition compel the owners of railroad property to unite vast systems under onc management. The greater the mileage of our reilroads, the gr-ater the investment, the business and the influence, the smaller the number cf corporations, and in a very few years we will find the whole railroad property of this country under the'the manage- ment and control of a dozen or 50 of magnates, united in purpcse, inex- haustible in resources and not over- scrupulous in the use of them. An; one who stops to think of it cannot help thinking that the country i less danger from any third term move- ment than it is from the influence of railroad corporations. As the test has got to come, and es the sooner it comes the better, we should like to sce Jewelt nominated at Cincinnsti, if the dark horse is going to get it. Oregon Politically. San Francisco Chrovicle June 12. That the republican state ticket has triumphed in Oregon by from of my heart, I feel like shouting “Eureka.” Tobe wealthy is o poseess useful cr necessary things or the means of pur- chasing them. ~Wealth is the product of lubor. Any system of financial legislation that does not in some way promoto useful labor does not and cannot add to the real wealth of the country. Here is a scheme which in- augurates labor of the most useful kind and that too on the grandest e Adopt this policy and et the homeless poor who walk the earth seeking work choice of & candidate. In that case, Sam Randall will stand a fair chance, s ho has been, nextto Henry Wat- terson of Kentutky, Tilden's most faithful friend. Bayard is the choice of the young, hopeful and progressive elements of +he party; and they “will urge Gar- field's nomination as a reason for put- ting into the fiélda man equally ac- ceptable to the aggressive and re- formatory element, - Mr. Bayard 1o |0 finding none, come £o the front, not quite unworthy of the admiration | o, Uf, their hats and shous he excitee, though, o our thinking, it is somewhat exaggerated. The worst thing sgainst him is his record st the opening of the rebellion. General Hancock is the favorite of a Targe section of the Pennsylvania de- mocracy, snd would make s strong sandidate in every respect but one. His share in the military commission which hung Mrs. Surrat makes doubt- ful whether hiegan poll the fell Catholic e withoutwhich no democrat can be elocted president, In all probability the democracy will be compelled %6 choose s dark horse—some man upon whour all the elements of that party can barmonize. —— A Contrest. Albany lml-fl;-m@‘l) General Garfield’s entire _estate soales below $20,000. This is—cer- If tho cultivators of the acil are to be tenants and not frecholders the fewer the freeholders and the larger the estates the better; for it is easier for many tenant farmers to support one aristocratic family than to sup- port many. Mr. Beck, in the goodness of his heart, and exuberance over his mar- velous dizcovery of the philosopher's stone, evidently forgels that his ‘seheme involves a revolution in our system of government; that it would destroy what it has taken more than a century to build up. In the first place the proposed unlimited issue of rur currency would destroy our pa- t ional” credit at home and abroad, disturb all property values and ruin our commerce. In the next place the attempt o limit the acreage of each farmer would be impracticable and in violation of the fundsmental rights of property. Before poverty can be sbolished by Iaw you must enforce in- dustry and frugality by law, and make idlencss the greatest crime ogainst so- ciety. Wa I all the bummers and vagraots in the country were made, the owners of farms and houses to‘motrow. more than ono-half of them would ke on the tramp within less than'‘thirfy days. In a free country like ours, i g % E | géy 1200 to 1600 majority is now admitted. The Oregon democratic senators at Washington deceived themselves by an underestimate of the republican strength in Portland and an overesti- mateof their own in the counties east of the Cazcade mountsins. Portland isin the eounty of Multoomab, which is the heavy county of thestate andal- ways decidedly republican. But this year it surpassed all former efforts, both in the total vote and the republi- can majority. In 1876 the total vole for president was 3649, and Hayes' . majority 599 over all. This year the total vote is 4929 aud the republican majority 1169. The eastern counties, owing to republican accessions within the lest yearand a balf from the castern and wostern states, do_not appear to_have done #s well as usua! for the demo- craticticket; but if they had, Mult. nomah would still have made the state sure for a fair republicsn majority. That party has secured both branches of the legislature, the congcessman, all the judges cf the supreme court and every county officer in Multng- man. The victory is complete and overwhelming, and it mesns that Gar- field and Arthur will secure Oregon beyond a doubt next November. The record of Oregon, as state and ter- ritory, has been sound on the unior questionandincreasinglyrepublican. In 1851, as a a tercitory, it elected Gen. Jo. Laney “the hero of the Mexican war,” delegate to congress, by an ‘overvhelming majortty. He was kindly continued in that office until the territory became a state, and then eent to the senate. But in 1860, when “‘the hera of the Mexican” and.of the Rogue river war turned bis face south- ward agaiust the Union and accepted the nomination for vice president on the Breckinridge ticket, his Oregon admirers cast him ¢f, and Fe received but three thousand votes out of a totslof 12,410.- And theyhave patient- 1,:-]@.".‘1 bis close retirement to pri- vata lifagver since. Or-gon is a land of im'!l'l)g.m small farm:rs, the pa troeof - goed free ichools, and such commaunities 72 everywhere republiy «an'in polii suge line now in course of constrac- bood in cipher alley. where the avenues to wealth are open - — toall men who are willing to labor, = R RS tion from Marion, Ind., south is being RAILWAY NOTES. A fist train in Georgia runs ahout twenty miles an hour. ~ The accommo dation glides along about as fast a8 a man can walk. There are now 3,104 miles of rail- road in Kaneas, and they are assossed at §20,647,802. Tho actual value of theso roads exceeds one hundred mil- lion dollars. The Wabash road has let contracts for 200,000 ties and 1,000,000 feet of bridge timber, intending to place the middls division, bstween Fort Wayne and Dauville, in first-class shape. - In addition to their present equipment they have ordered ten new chair cars, 500 grain, and seven locomotives. The Flint and Pere Marquette rail- road ha completed s branch, known a8 the Round Lake branch, from Bat- ler jutction, fifteen miles east of Lud- ington, Mich., north to Webster, a distance of four miles. Surveys are boing made for an extension from Webster northwest twenty miles to the important lumber town of Manis- tee, Michigan. A curious car on the Boston and Albany railcoad is provided with va- rious devices for tsstiog speed, straine, obstructions, resistance snd other matters connected with the running of trains. to ingenious machinery, record the distance and time, the slips of the driving wheels on the rails, the exact elevation of the outside rail at_every curve, and many other points of valu- ble information in practical railroad- ng. A patent bas been granted to James R. Cox, of Auburn, N. Y., for run- ning railway coaches or carriag skates instead of wheels, and it is es- pecially designed for elevated roads. I the place of the ordinary whesls on tho ordinary rai i i ination a groove correspond and you have the princi- By this mcde all noise is obvi- Mr. Cox says, there will be lees friction, according to the opin- ion of the o'dest and ablest engineers, than on the journals of the wheels now in use. Five cars have just been complet:d for the Wabssh road by the Barney & Smith company, of Dayton. They are describad as high and roomy,fifty- four feet long,%and capable of seating sixty-four people, and a very desirable innovation and improvement—yith toilet accommodations, comprising marble siands and bowls, elegant baskets and trimmings of copper brorzs, the outside painting in one case, being done ia_“checolate, gol ., blue, pink and wine color.” “The others presenting different styles of richaess and coloring. The cest of thess cars is stated at $6000 each. An eugine that will pull a short train without flame, smoke grease or noise is precisely what is needed on elevated railways. .Such an evgine, Colonel Beaumont, an English © glish engineer, is reported to have i ventsd, Air is stored in a reservoir under a pressure of 1000 pounds to ihe square inch, and delivered thence, first into a small and then into larger cylinders, whence, after giving out its force, it passes into the outer air. An old difficulty, that compressed alr freezea the atmosphere, which con- denses on the joints of the engine, has been overcome; aud the engine can now haul a grozs load of twenty- two tons for eloven miles, or twelve to08 for twenty miles, with one charge of air. BLACK HILLS NUGGETS. The now road between Lead City and Pennington is now completed, and is a good one. Rockerville will be eupplied with water through the great Spring creck flume by the first of August. This_year tho Rapid valley pro- duces its first crop of domestic fruits —strawberrios, currants and goose- berriee. Ths Boulder ditch hydravlic com- pony started up on the 10th on the hill above Montana City, and it is said they everlastingly made the grasel fy. The late sterm when it struck False- bottom, about twelve mites from Dead- wood, was attended by violent hail snd it is feared much damege was done to wheat and oat crogs. A bed-rock tuonel consolidation enterprite is assuming shape that will probably throw into the shade all the placer mining entarprises yet set on foot in the Center Hills, _ Work on the Spearfish ditch is bo- ing prossed. It is calculated by the engineer in charge of the work that the ditch and flume will carry 500 miner's inches of water. The Sidney Stage company will very soon put a line of six-horse coaches on between Rapid City and Fort Pierre. This new route will connect with the Deadwood and Cus- ter lines. At loast three times the quantity of general merchandiao has been sold in Pennington county sinca the frst of last January as was eold for the cer- responding period last year. The government telegraph line is now completed through & Fort Sully and open for businces. The North. l!Eltlnl comg(uny will construct a line from Yankton to Sully, and have it in ranning order during the next four weeks. The new road of the Desdwood and Centennial Valley company, will be open for Jight teama by July 4, and for all vehicles by the irat of Angust wood to Crook will bs reduced from ten and one-quarter miles to six and seven-eighth miles, while all hills will bo avoided. The Castle Creek tuanel is being pushed ss rapidly as it can be done with the amount of room there is for men 1o work in. The tunnel lacks but about seventy-five feet to be com- pleted, and this distance includes the propose tapping it. Good reck has been discovered on the divide betwesn the head of Yel- low creek and the head of Bear Butte creek lately. Thisis in a direct line with the Homestake mines at Lead City, and it bas always been supposed thatsomething good would yet be found in that direction, from the fact found that was vety rich in gold. district miners ara all st work. The great drawback this season has been the scarcity of water, there being nene during the first part of the sca- son, but the late rains have giventhem an abundance, and while it holds out the mines will all be wcrked profit- ably. This mining district has far. nished nearly all the coarse gold that has been found in the Hills, and it is. the opinion of the wise ones that there 1s more of it. Recertly Deadwood had a water spout occasioned by the unusuai rise of Whitewood creek that filled the Bovlderditch to its utmost capacity. Thiriy-two feet of the flume gaveaway and several bundred miners inches of water came down the steep hill with a roar that startled everyoe in town. The side of the mounian was covered with looze boulders and with the flood pushed rapidly. The greaser majority they came rolling and tumbling with the naire of beavy thunder. Nogreat Asmena wea dana althonoh one house claims are yielding handsome retute by the pan process. Fi sliced all and then purchasers who, upon investigation, discovered bed rock full of crevices which at the top would scarcely admit a knife-blade, but which widened into Pockets two and three feet deep, which vast quant 7 sottled. The crevicea are opened :g blasting, and the sediment gath up and panned out. one half pan of dirt yielded over $18. Men are aversging day each, and overy indication goes to show that this virtually abandoned ground will yet yield more gold than has been taken from it. Hurrah for Garfield! Now, boys, The democrats’ pow-wor, boys, They might have had a chance to win, But now, thank Different pens, attached | g M The true need of the n: By this route the distance from Dead- | » width of ths creek at the point they | & that all ever tha range’ at the head cf | il be fermim b e Bear Bults creek, float rock has been | 2% of 8id txo bunired and In Bear gaclh and the Nigger Hill | ™ azd a1l bids. and address to the uadersigned, ay dirt down to bed rock, isposed of the ground. to into of gold have A short time sgo $10 and $50 per — A Boom for Gartleld. He is our man, and therefore, ‘We neither fear nor care for. Gainsthe folly of tind terner ! our part No danger of th’ infirmary. For Garfield is the man, boys,! To win. "Tis he that cauy boys, With him and right, we'll gain the fight And carry through our man, hoys. The democrats are badly scared, And shaking in their boots, now; Sitce one of those whom they most, foared Ts he who us best suits now. ad it been Grant they'd been elate, *T'would then have been their “inning;” They knew a “third-term candidate” Could stand no chance of winning! Their little game is blocked now, Not given to boust or vaunting; A soldier in the battle-field, A statesman in the senate; A firm republican, be'll yield No point, if truth is in it} For that is Garfield's way, boys; He'll fight, or speak, or pray, boys; For honest right till death he'd fight, And never and inch give way, boys! These three years past we've hada good, Pae, clean, administration; A chief who's shown he undersood, ion- Peace, order, rest—stability; Then let us all sgree 0, That these shall four years longer be— With Garfield they will be so! Such blesssngs, heaven sent, boys, well our ieartscontenty bo7. Peace, prosperous trade, the. lawa ed, ‘obey And Garfield President, boys. The Boston Shipping List says: The, mutket remains in the rame quict state previously noticed. Prioes aro gradually sottling down, snd each wazk for some weeks past has led to a lower basis, both here and in the in- torior. What is considered a compara- tively low price at the close may be lockad upon as a high price before an- other week has paesed; as this has been but a repatition of the market for the past ten weeks. The princi- pri business the paat week has been ia Kentucky combing; some lead- ing mills have bought quite freely at 36@37c, but 36@364c may be considered & quotation for de- sirable lots at the close. Missouri floaces havo besn selling at 350; and Georgia at 36@37c, but outside of this it would be difficult to give a reliable quotation for any grade -~ A lot of 30,- 000 1bs Michigan and Wisoonsin X sold at 423c, and from 42@43¢ may be considerod a nomimal price for good erage lots. A few small lots of Ohio X and XX have been sole at 45@48c, but not over 45@47c could be abtained although the bulk of the stock of XX is not offered at present. BABY PRIZES, $600. young, hat s Hop Bitters plainly in any language, between May 1, 1480, and July 4, veral and_ interesting offer, and. d_his wife should send twn 'cent 1 Am Al Played Out T a common complaint in bt weather. If you feel so, got package of Kidney Wort and take it, anl you will at once feel its tonic power. Tt keeps up the healthy ac- tion of the Kidneys, Bowels, and_Liver, and thus restores the natural life and strength to the bod; It is well known that a relationship ex- its betwoon plles, constipation, kilnoy diseascs and liver troubles. In Ki Wart wo have a remedy that acts on general eystem and rostores health by gen. tly aiding nature's interna process. ptI6ikw INVALIDS AND OTHERS SEEKIKG HEALTH, STRENGTH and ENERGY, WITHOUT THE USE OF DRUG: S, ARE RE- QUESTED TO SEND FOk THE ELECTRIC REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR- NAL, WHICH 1S PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTIOS. T TREATS upon HEALTH, HYGIENE, and Physi- T Gaitarerana ency tion for invalids and those. And the Bundred and explaized. vice. The subject of Elecwric Belts rersvs Sedh one_questions of *¥al i fance to suflering humanity, are duls \onsidered ed. lopeedia of YOUNC MEN *« Ard others who suffer from Norvons Debility, Lcas of Manty Vigor, Prewat B ko) Bhtoms chasegiancen of en and Pherical ture Exbocis- indiscretion, etc., are especially benefted by con sultug e Conteli Vigor, sad Bodily Buergy. ur addSean on postal cn nformaafion worth houskads w1l ‘Nadress the publisbare, and o it ECTRIC R-EVIKWQly«lihe;{n::uu,:u;"“l e PULVERMACHER GALVANIC CO., CINNATI, O COR. EIGHTH and VINE STS., CIN Theirheadsin chancery knockedniow, | health, ~ _cheertul They know the clan republican RS\ & B | T'o the standard a/l will flock, now. rfi’;,;‘ »-yy..""' m_Afl Oue stand-bearer, trisd and true, B e Livia. el A Vas never yet found wanting; 7o 2 ? ook ~yet modest, £00, v Chieapost, Parest and Best Fumily Mod- For DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundi Biilious Attacks, 8ICK HEADACH ession of um, Ete, ‘This unrivallod Southern Remed, 50t 10 &utam sngle' paie of any injurious mineral sul Purely Vegetabl contal which an_allwise countries where Liver Disease most will cwre all the Livr and done Debilty, Law Sp pearance of the skin and taken -7 Consum t others very fe Spirits, SOUR STOMACH, He Etc. E, Colic, s warranted MXRCURY, o o, but is les those Southern Roots and_Herbs, Providence has piaced In provail. 1Tt Diseases caused by Derangement of symptome atiend Pt th Liver, the few bu 5 largest organ fn the body, s generally the ‘seat of the dis ase, and if nof regulated suffering, wrctchedness death will ens: n tim 1 can re-ommend as an eficacious remedy for diseaso of theLiver, Heartburn and_Dyspepst Simmons’ Livr Regulator. Lewis 1625 Master Street, Amistant Post Philadelpn’a, ““We hav tested its virtues, yersonal know that for Dyspepsia, Hilliot Throbbing Headacbe, 18 is the best world . We have tried e remedies before Simmous’ Let: but the R Liver Regalator, none of them gave us more than tempor G. Wande: Master, and ‘medicine the forty other ‘ Iator not only relicved, bus "—Edltor Telagraph and Messengor, PHIUADELPHIA, PA. Price, §1.00 5id by all Druggista. septésodawly ATTENTION, BUILDERS AND CON TRACTORS. The f the cele Banks, ‘mear LOUISVILL] sbrated Kaolin E, NEB,, has now. rudiit the depot at Louisville, on the B.& to fill any order at reasonable ties » white front or prices. Par. ornamental brick willdo well to give us a call or send for sample. J.T. A, HOOVER, Prop., Locisville, Neb EXOELSIOR Machine Works, ODMAELA, NEE. J. F. Hammond, Prop.& The most thor Manager ted and complete state. Machine Shops and Foundry In the Gastings of evory deecipiion mamufaciared. Engines, Pumps and every class o machinery ‘made to ordor. Bpecial attention given to ';llnl Aum?-neis. Hang Bridge utting, ete. ers, ronms, Geer Plans for new Machinery, Meachanioal Draught. 10, Modea, ocs ently Siocuied 256 Harnev St.. Bet. 148 and 15th "UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Nel b. Flust class House, Good deals, Good Beds Atry Rooms, and’ kind and sccommodating treatment, Tw» eample rooms. Specia. attention paid to commercial travelers. 8. MILLER, Prop., b Schuyler, eb. NOTICE TO BIDDERS sals for Furnishing the City of Omaha, Ne- braska, with Water, for Fire Protection and Public Use. Sealed proposls in duplicats will o reccived by the undersigned at his office n the clty of lock, noon, on the D., 18%0, for farnishinz the cbraska, with water works for ‘years from the time of compl- tlon of through two hundred snd ffty fire 51 ants, of the character and of the locations mentioncd in ordinance No. 423, passed by the Nebraska, and on the 1ith day of June, rt of J. D. Cook, ent 3 ree_residence sureties i the sum of twenty-five thoarand dol ars con: ditioued in the event of the acceptance of such propesals or bids and_awandiog of the contract for such publicsupply and fire on to such bidder or bidders; for the faittful performance of tho terms and conditions of ordinance No. 23 a1d that the water to be furnished through all times when required duing said trm (u reagonable time being allow- ed for Tepairs in_cases of unavoidable sccidents) perform tho tests mentioned In ordinance No. {2, mnd give. the fire protection thereinman- Sxid proposols or bids shall specify the price Per hyarant per year for the sxid two hundred and fity hydrants during sail term; also the price per hydrant per year for intermediate bydrants placed upon the mains specified in the Feport of J. D. Cook (on fle in the office of the ipdrants upon new mai 5. Said proposals or bids ball be accompani a conditional s cceptance cf ordinance e Lhe event the contract for the public supply and & e R el The coutract for such pudlic supply and fi- protection wil bo swarded (0 the biwest pspon, bl bider or ldders, and the oy sonmrtol ihecity of Omana rescrves the rght to sy Eavelopes contaiing propossls should be mark- el “Proposals for furaiah ng the ¢ 43 of Omas ith water for fire protection and public use, City rtloftfial‘e'cu i ; Cle e Omaha, Netraskn, June 1208, 10807 7 NEW TIME TABLE or OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA OMNIBUS LINE. SUNDAYS EVERY TWO HOURS. = AKX Samte MEAT MAR . P. Block, 16th Frosh ol Salt Meats o all kinds le. Vogetabies elivesed o1 ny part of the cit 831 Nvah 10th & FRONTIER HOTEL, on reagonabl on. K KET, St. constant in seas Laramie, Wyoming. The miner's resort, good accommodations, large sample room, iituon iven el o3 reasonable. Bpecial ing mea. H. G HILLIARD, Proprictor. DR. A. S, PENDERY, CONSULTING PHYSICIAN, 1S PERMANENTLY LOCATED HIS MED- TCAL OFFICE, 493 Tenth Street, OMAHA, NEBRASKA, Offeriog his services in all departments of wmedicine and_surgery, both in ‘Ppractics, acuto and chronic diseases lted night and day, and will visit a'l parts of the city and county on receipt of letters lograms. a4 5 be_consul or tel eral aud Can ESTIMATE OF ANNUAL EXPENSES OF DOUCLAS G0.,FOR THE YEAR 1880. Court’s, Jurors' and Court on el City Tax and Gas. Iroad Bond Sinking Fund. County Road and County Office, Office: tions and Assessors Bridges........ o Rent, Hioc: ex- 8 20,000 v 16,000 .. 16,000 By Order of County Commissioners. JonN R. MANCHESTSR, County Clerk. By H.T. Leavis, Deputy. HALLS VEGETABLE SICILIAN This standard article is compounded with the care. Its effects 're as wonderful and ratisfactory as ever. It restores gray or faded hair to color. its youthtul 1t removes all itching and dandruff; and the sealp. by 1t ush becoises white and it restores the capillar glands to thelr m-\vkvr,'::m‘-mmzb:_lfi mess, and muking the hair sirong. As s dre tual or desirab) Dr. A. A, Hayes,State Aseay sayw o it: "I consider it the for its intended purposes.” BUCKINGHAM'S nothing has been found so effec- of Massacht Dest preparation “DYE, For the Whiskers. This slegant changs shs coiotof i, perd foms ‘ovher -undesiral relied on to gay_or any) shiade, to_brown ot black, st 1ble discretion. ll‘l’:fl", MANUPACTURED ¥ ‘being in one pre. ‘produces & o wash ®R. . MALTT ¢ 'OD., Machna ¥ THE OLDEST ESTABLISH! * IN NFBRASEA, CALDWELL, HAMILTONSCO, BA.N_EERS. TINNERS 8TOCK, SHEET “Business tranuscted same as that of an lncorupcramBmk. S Accounts kept in Currency or gubect to slght check tbont mofioe Gertiticates of deposlt issued pey- able in three, six and twelve months, {uterest, or on demand with- out intersst. Adyances mede to customers on ap- proed securities at ma-ket rates of interest. Buy and g _gold, bills of axchange government, State, County and one Draw Stght Drafts on England, Ire- 1ana, cotland, and a1l parts of BuFODS Sell Buropean Paseage Tickets. ["JLL'(GTIDNS PROMPTLY MADE. U. §. DEPOSITORY. aplé-tt Iron and Wood Fences, GUST, FRIES & CO., Prop’s., H J IL.EHE &O00., + . JOBBERS OF BANKING HOUSE|yspowARE, GUTLERY, NAILS, STAMPED AND JAPANNED WARE, IRON, TIN STOCK, ETC. 1317 & 1319 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAI A, NHBE. Positively no Goods Sold at Retail. OMAHA FENCE We Manufacture OFFICE RAILINGS AND OF PINE AND £ BOX CO. to Order FINE GOUNTERS WALINUT. Brackets and Mouldings, Improved Ice Boxes furnished on short notice. 1231 Harney St., Omaha, Neb. Fizst Narionar Bank OF OMAHA, Cor, Farnham and Thirteenth Sta, OLDEST BANKIHG ESTABLISHMENT N OMATA. WHOLESALE (SUCCK330RS TO KOUNTEK EROS., sTABLOAD I 1866 Organized rs s Notional Bank August 10, 1868 Oapital aad Profits Over $800,000 ‘Bpecially authorised by the Secretaty of Tressary to recolve Sul iptions to the U. 8. 4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS KEEP THE LARGEST osx. . . Davis, Asr's Coshler ‘This baak receives doposits without regasd 4o amomnte. Lasuos time cortificatos terest. Draws drafts on San and gloaof the Usited States, 3a0 Londoa, Dut Edinborgh and the princpal cted of the cont nent of Europe. ‘Solls paseage tickets for emigrants in the In- man line. _fi;ifiu ESTATE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL EsTATE AcENcy. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This agency doee nes. " Dosn not Carpetings| A1 Gf being gobbied ap by the aesmt Boggs and Hill, REAL ESTATE .BROKERS No. 250 Farnham Strest - NHBRASKA, Grand Osntral l_o_h_ Nebraska Land DAVIS & SNYDER, 1505 Farnham 8¢, Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carsfully selocted lsnd Easters Sobraska,for sl d‘“‘;":?‘"wg o improvod farms, and Oma . ¥. DAVIS, wrssTek [ RN & it <o ) .Bl;'n}on Reed & Co., REAL ESTATE AGENOY IN NEBRASKA. Foop a complete abstract of title to all Reall Ate in Omaha and Douglas County. mavitt THE ORIGINAL BRIGGS HOUSE I Oor. Randolph St. & bth Ave., CHICAGO, ILL. rRox Call, or Address 0ld Reliable OCGDEN HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Bluffs, Iowa METROPOLITAN IRA WILSON, - PROPRIETOR. The l-huvpol ltan ls s-nh::-uy located, snu. ol TenoTaChd Tog publs wih B 5 Comforiable and homeilke House. | marst NEW GROGERY ! 16th and Cuming Sts. ‘We propose supplying the people of North Omaha with CHOICE CROCERIES at mod- erate prices. Give us a call. 7. H. B ERGEN. 2#~Cash paid for Country Pro- duce. Goods delivered free to any part of the cit apl7-1m Ly OMAHA BEE SANTA CLAUS FOUND. Greatest Discovery of the Age. Wonacrful discoseriesinthe world bave beenmade Among other things whers Santa Claus stayed, Ghildren oft ask if he makes goods or not, It really he lives in & mountain of snow. Last year an excarsion miled clear to the Pole ‘And suddeny droppedingo what scemed ikehole Where wonder of wonderb they found & new laad, While fairy-like beings on each hand. Thers were mountaing At » ZOWER PIGURE than ot ‘any otber shos house in the citr, P. LANG'S, 236 FARNHAM 8T. __LADIES’ & GENTS, SHOES MADE TO ORDI & portect 8 guarsateed. Brices vy seaeon. Twas Ho leoked like the pictarev _eseo every day. ve up a team that looked very queer, m‘m.xwmflum. He rodo fn a shell of icgh, But he took them on bosrd and drove them away. Ho showed them all over his wondertul realm, ‘And factories for women and mén, Furriers wers wo o bats groat and hey mid s sl o 5 Gl Makor 108 them 8 onee, Ja0xs . Scorr. FOWLER & SCOTT, PATRONIZE HOME The Only Lithographing Establishment in Nebraska JEROME RACHEK. OGR LITHOGRAPHING COMPANY. Drafts, Ohecks, Letter Bill and Nute H Bonds, Certiflcates of Stock, Diplomas, eto., done in the best manner, and at Lowest Possible Prices. PAXTON-& GALLAGHER, - GROGERS! 1421 and 1423 Farnham, and 221 to 229 15th Sts. STOCK MAKE THE LOWEST PRICES. The Attention of Cash and Prompt Time Buyers Solicited. AGENTS FOR THE HAZARD POWDER COMP'Y and the Omaha Iron and Nail Co. GARPETINGS. Carpetings| J. B. DETWILER, Old Reliable Carpet House, 1406 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 16TH (ESTABLISHED IN 18868) Carpets, Oil-Cloths, Matting, Window-Shades, Lace Ourtains, MY STOCK IS THE LARGEST IN THE WEST. I Make a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LAGE GURTAINS And have a Full Line of Mats, Rugs, Stair Rods, Carpet- Lining Stair Pads, Crumb Clothes, Cornices, Cornice Poles, Lambrequins, Cords and Tassels; In fact Everything kept in a First-Olass Carpet House. Orders from abroad solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed Ete. John B. Detwiler, Carpet House, OMAHA. INDUSTRY Proprietor. APH| Oards, JNO. G. JACOBS, (Formerly of Gleh & Jacobe) UNDERTAKER Ko. 1417 Parobam St., Old Stand of Jacob Gl OEDERS BY TELEGRAPH SOLICITE