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\ . } y g B 1 4 THE DAILY BEE-~-OMAHA WGLDN I-SI-)A\Y, JULY 19, 1882 The-Omghé Bee. Pubtished every morning, except Sanday €he an.y Monay wmoming daily, TERMS BY MAIL — One Year..... £10.00 | Three Months, 83,00 Bit Months, 5.00 | One ' 1.00 MUE WREKLY BEE, publisked ev ty Wediesday. TERMS POST PAID:—~ One Yeat,, ...82,00 | Three Months., 50 ®is Vo ithe,... 1,00 One v . Awrricax News Cowpaxy, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the United States, OORRESPONDJN( 11 Communi. eations relating to News and Hditorial mat ehould be addressed to the Enrron or ors aE Brr, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Business fLotters and Remittancos should be ad. Aressed to THE OMAHA PopLisHiNG Co. pANy, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and FPost- Lffice Orders to be made payable to the ‘rder of the Company The BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. ®, ROSEWATER, Editor, " Republican State Convention. The republican electors of the state of Nebr reby called to send dele- tes fr ies to meet in Fate conv n Wednesday, September 2)th, A, D., 1882, at 7 o'cloc P. ., for the prirpose of placin nation caudidates for the following name: offices, v lientenant-governor, secretary of state itor, treasurer, attorney-g eral, commissioner of public lands and buildings, superintendent of publicinstruc- + on. And to transact such other business as may properly come before the convention, The several counties are entitled to ren- jesentatives in the state convention as ollows, based upon the vote cast for Isanc Powers, Jr., in 1881, for regent of the state university: Giving one ( ) delegate to_each one hundred and tity ) votes, and one delegate for the fraction of seventy.five 75) votes or over; also one delegate at larce for each oreanized county. saj04 || Counties. soyespaq s judapq 6| 9 e o 6 Buffalo 1 ‘nvm. 2l 1 Butler Knox,.... [ - [Lancaster 18 1 ’I.m in 4 Madison [ Merrick 7 17 Nance B 0 Custer ..., 1 Chase [ Dundy 4 [ 8 3 Dakota . F Frontior Furni B|Webster, BlYork...... 1l Tt is recommended First. That no proxies be admitted to the convention, except such as are held by persons residing in the counties from which the proxies are given. Second, T'hat no delegate shall represent an absent member of his delegation, unless he be clothed with authority from the county convention, or is in possession of proxies from regularly elected dolegates thereof. James W, Dawes, Chairman, JonN SteE LincoLy, Neb. 1882, Tue Republican is a little too pre- vious in sounding the loud timbril over the city printing. Don’t crow until you are out of the woods. AMERICAN sympathy generally with the ‘“‘under dog in the fight.” Our doctrine is America for Ameri- cans, native and adopted. We can’t hold that doctrine in the United States and ‘‘go back” on it in Egypt, there- fore our press is handling England with gloves off in thi tler. Tre effect of Senator Van Wyck's onslaught on the land survey frauds is seen in the way every bill for the regulation of land surveys has been challenged in the house. He made the vlllainy 8o plains that he who runs may read. No bill will now pass without proper safeguards againat fraud and limitations in the powers of the surveyors. Tue heavy rain and hail storms of this unprecedented season are begin- ning to tell on the general prosperily. The crops are drooping and the farm- ers are uneasy, Capital hesitates to invest and labor is drowned out. ‘I'he mud is ankle deep and the retail buy- ers are limited only to their necessary purchases. And now comes the over- lasting plaintiff, Mr. Vennor, who shakes his venerable headand weather- beaten locks and says that there will PASSES ARE BRIBE?®. The ncoredited mouthpiecs of the railroads in Nebraska takes issue with the Anti-monopoly league in its declaration that passes are bribes, and the tender of a pass should bo treated by law as the tender of a bribe. Ac- cording to the Republican, passes are given to public officers as a compli- meut and with no design to influence their conduct. We aro sssured that railroad managors do not for amo- ment presume that they are in the slightest degree able to influence leg- islation, control epinions or shape public affatrs by the distribution cof This is presuming that pub- lic men are without gratitude and railrond companies are benevolent so- cieties for the benefit of office hold- ers, As a fact are things of value donated solely for passes, matter of pasacs the purpuse of placing public officials under obligatiens to the railroads, and through a senso of this obligation to corruptly influence their conduct, Five Lot us cite a few tacts in point. years ago Mr, Corliss was clected commissioner of Douglas county, He was supported and elected by the citizons kecauso Jho Union Pacific op- | posed him. Commissioner Corliss re- sides about twenty miles from Omaha on the line of the Union Pacific road and in due time he was favored with pass by the railroad managers, Mr. Corliss Omaha from two to four times each week to attend the meetings of the county commissioners. He draws mileago from the county treasury five an annual comes to “| cents per mile, or two dollars for each round trip. The average income from this mileage is about &6 per week or over 8300 per year. That means that the railroad has made Mr. Corliss a ! | present of €300 per yoar. Mr, Corliss as an honorable and grateful man doubtless appreciates the favor that equals 81,500 in fivo years, and tho corporation that has favored him is favored in return. When the corporation is favored the tax payers have to foot the bill. Does any intel- ligent person doubt that this paes operates in the nature of a bribe and its tender should have been made a criminal offense! How do passes affect our law makers? The people pay to each member ten centa per mile to and from their places of residence to the capital. But the railroads gonerously supply them with passes not only from their places of residenco to the capital, but to the most distant points on their lines, in- cluding Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and,Montana. Theso passes are good for free travel during the whole year and they often include the member and his lady, which means his wife or some other woman. Many of the members are business men and coun- try merchants, to whom these passes are worth thousands of dollars. Do they influence their conduct as law- makers? Look at the statutes. Look at the records of Carns and Church Howe. Ask Mr. Shedd, speaker of the house, why he selected that pecu- liar railroad commitiee? Do passes influence the conduct of stute officers? Look at the assessments of railroad property by the state board of equali- zation, Is there any further proof needed to convince any intelligent and impartial observer that the system of passes is bribery carried on at whole- salo? It is the entering wedge whereby vulnerable men in public office are corruptly approached by the railroad managers, It is an established fact that nine out of ten officials who accept this species of bribe can be safely ap- proached with another corrupt propo- sition, and when once in the drag- net of the monopoly capper, few can withstand the more tempting bribes of these rascalities, But it has not surprised us to learn that Dorsey, Spencer and Kelloge, all ex-southern wenators of the immigran order, are implicated up to their eyes, and it will be marvelous if Ex-Senator John 1. Patterson of the same kidney is not gathered in before the close. Tn it not a little strange that every con- gressman yet involved in dis- closures has turned out to bea south- these ern carpet-bagger, as they were called, and that every one of them had been charged with dishonesty by the dem- ocrats of the states they had represent- ed in those days of good stealing in the nouth, THE PRECISE FACTS. The Omaha Herald is still harping upon those contested from South Carolina as the coming | outrago of the season, and specially inatancos the case of Smalls againat electlon casc Tillman, Now theso men are both specimens in their way. Tillman man in Edgefield county before the war, was convicted and fled to Texas, murdered a sale bribery and corruption in the state legislature and would have gone to the penitentiary but for the mag- nanimity and pereonal sacrifices of the then United States attorney. When the amnesty was arranged he was pardoned. He again ran for con- gress and the census shows his ma- jority without other proof. The claim that the negro votes the democratic ticket in the south is all [n bosh, else why the gerrymandering of black districts in each state. Sou‘h|[i here ought not to howl about the consequences of their own acts, For eight years of republi- can rule a carnival of public debauch- ery existed. The republicans robbed and plundered under Scott and Moses, and the democrats replied by Ku- Klux murder and Hamburg and El- lenton massacrcs. Tt was the general riot of murder versus robbery. In 1876 the democra's seiged the govern- ment and hunted down republicans for the misrule in stato; 2ounty and municipal affairs, They arrested them by wholesale, forced all in office to resign, and made state wit- nessea of the meanest and worst of them. Theso witnesses squealed pages, which inculpated nearly every fow and very honorable exceptions. no new man yentured to risk it. the United States courts. sido. convicting republicans try the test oath. tion, increased cost, may be anticipated as a rosult soon to follow the educational cffects In 1877 Smalls was convicted of whole. | of the Denver exposition. look for the profitable working of what has heretofore been non-paying quartz. that there will be a remarkable accele- ration in the growth of the industry wherever it now has a foothold, that new wought, has not passed, sufficiently to make a report of 1,000 republican who had evey had anything to do with public affairs, with a very The state judicial machinery was incon- fod hands, and experience showed that a trial and conviction was synony- THE DENVER EXPOsSITION. The national mining exposition will open at Denver two weeks hence. The magnitude of the undertaking, considering the narrow range of the exhibit, will equal anything of the kind that has ever_been attempted in this country. What Atlanta accom- plished for cotton, Denver proposes to attempt for the mining industries. The pick and shovel of 49 will be contrasted with the quartz crushers of '82. The shade of the rough “pocket” hunter of thirty years ago will be invited to look in upen the new methods which build tunnels into the bowels of mountains and wrest gold from the heart of the roak. Not only for Colorado, but for other of our far western states, is | mining ever to be the great industry. i'ne stimulus which it will receive from this exposition will tend to the greater prosperity of the whole coun- try bordering upon the wineral-filled back bone of the Rockies. A greatly output, produced at a less Wo may considered We may be sure and fields will earnestly be Though the day of the prospector it is waning. The miners of the future will be. capital. There are emboweled millions wait- ng to be drawn from the mountain Carolina democrats and their friends | sides, but millions are required to begin the work. How that labor can best be performed, with what saving over present methode, may be learned at Denyer in August, so far as the ex- perience of the miner and the ingenu- ity of the inventer shall be able to unite in informing those interested. As is indicated in the title, this ex- position is to be a national enterprise. Every state in the Union has been in- vited. The exposition building, which is not only substantial but is designed as a permanent structuce, 1s 500 feet long and 310 feot wide, and 18 ready for the recoption of exhibits. With her remarkable railroad facili- ties and her unsurpassed —for a city of her cluss—hotel accommodations, Denver is prepared for the reception and entertainment of the thousands of strangers who will become her visitora. ““The beautiful city” will be seen at her best during the early fall. A careful estimate of the actual cash invested in mining property dur- mous. None of the old republican lead- ers dared to take part in politics, and The republican party was virtually dead there under this judicial slaughter. Its mombers were justly and unjustly in exile or jail. On the other hand, thousands of cases for vi- olation of the federal election and revenue laws were on the dockets of The state was torn up by this war in the courts, and a desperate temper on the out- Finding that the state courts were invariably, while on account of the jury system and the late decisions of the supreme court at Washington convictions were impossible in the federal courts, the United States attornoy determined to This brought mat- ters to a crisis, and the state was con- vulsed from the mountains to the sea. It became a vital matter of public policy, necessary to the public peace and order, that something should be done to stop this revolutionary condi- The first move was the surren- which are always at the disposal of giant corporations. der of the distillers, in which the Uni- ted States attorney at one term took over 700 pleas of guilty, letting them Tue failure of congress to make the | go, under suspension of sentence and necessary appropriation to sustain the | the strictest pledges of good behavior. national board of healthis a measure| No man who ever fired on an offi- of doubtful economy. Small pox, | cer o offered violence was allowed to cholera and yellow fever are malignant plead or go free. Heo was tried, con- enemies of the public welfare and |yicted and sentenced, ought to bo met in some way. If a fow thousand of bogus pensions were cut away and a million or two taken from the survey and cleaning out of Then came the political amnesty in which all offenses on either stde grow- ing out of poliiics were under order of be an eager and a nipping frost in midst of the summer solstice, The fancy figures to which real estate has risen must come down under these in- fluences, and we ought either to pave our streets in good style at once or re tain Col. Smythe to seduce the clerk of the weather into a mule trade until he can serve injunction papers upon him, Wik we discuss the relations of the railroads to the public and the corrupting influence of passes upon public officers, we do not propose to be diverted into a personal controvesy with corporation editors. We do, however, brand as a downright lie the invendo of the Kepublican,that the editor of this paper has, at any time, sold or disposed of transportation that was not transferable to any per son for money or any other valuable thing, This charge had been made once before by the same libeler some years ago, and when challenged to substantiate it by naming the party to whom @& pass or non-transferable ticket was sold he failed to respond. There is one libel suit still pending against this person in our courts, and we do not propese to discommode him court discontinued, the democrats overy littlo ditoh that runs through a ( pyrdoning all their convicts and bind- ing the thirty years since 1849 places the total amount at $600,000,000. The stock capitalizations are more than double that figure. The labor account of actual legitimate miners since 1849 is estimated at §440,200,- accepted by Wilson, who was knocked down twenty-seven times, proves tho flimsy excuse of the glove. It was a regular prize fight under the protection cf the Jaw to gratify a morbid public taste, Wilson got some £0,000 for standing up before 20,000 peopie and showing how much hammering and suffering a strong man could live under for a quarter of an hour, This is the of these shows, and we 8 nuing U have them on a large scalo hereafter, and in presence of larger and more select audiences. — Tur beast are imprisoned for at least six months in the year is not likely to become very attractive to the iminl. far northwest where man and grant, There are lights and ehadows to every pictwee, and the shadows that creep the picture of the great northwest are suf- along reverss side cf the ficiont to obseure the lights, however brilliantly and ingeniously cast upon it. The great trouble is that the soil in the northern part of Minnesota, Dakota and Manitoba will produce only the single crop of wheat. There can be no such thing as a rotation of crops to refresh and regenerate the soil. Corn cannot be raised with suc- cees, and oats, rye and barley are cul- tivated with difticulty. Stock 1s out of the question, and manuring the land is therefore impossible. The season 18 too shert, nor while it lasts does the harvest come with that rapidity and abundance that will com- pensate the Russian farmer for the long severe winters, Rogpixsoy, of New York, runs the anti-English machine in Congrass. He has a monopoly of the British lion business in the housze. He spends most of his time in the Washington observatory, where he can bring the big telescope to bear at point blank range on Queen Vic., Gladstone, Sey- mour and all the other show people that exhibit the aforesaid animal round the world. Now and then he drawe a bead on tho minister and our nuvy and whenever he catches thom out late of nights or loafing round the sreets, he rushes down to the house and whoops them up with a double-barrelled resolution. The other day he caught the British lion by the tail and wrung it until the brute yelled and then hestuffed a ten- foot resolution down his throat that made him squirm. Now he resolutes again and declares that Gladstone has hired Lowell as his private secretary, and that Seymour has hired the wash- tubs that represent our navy at Alex- andria to do the dirty pawrol work of the British tyrant. Robinson has got an eye single to English interests and is going to keep it there, A Long Felt Want. Kearney Pres, Mr. D. C. Brooks, for years past 000. An examination of the records shows that over 100,000 prospects have been taken up in Colorado, and the necessary $100 worth of labor per- formed upon that number, to say nothing of about 100,000 more claims, upon which very little or no work has been done. Here 18 an expenditure of at least $10,000,000. Estimating that these 100,000 pros- pects, to which title has been acquired in Colorado, is one-third of the whole number in the United States, then $30,000,000 would represent their gross cost, The capital of the miners and prospectors, as indicated by the pocket money they bring into the country, the supplies they purchase and the mules and horses they all manage to acquire, will probably be amply represented by $50,000,000 for the past thirty years, Every mine of gold and silver in the west could probably be purchased for $400,000,- 000, were the owners obliged to re- alize, cial The intrinsic and commer- value of mining and milling machinery, reduction, smelting and amalgamating works is estimated at upwards of $300,000,000, on the basis that machinery and appliances which will produce §60,000,000, the actual production of the mills of 1880, are worth intrinsically four times the amount they will annually produce, or $300,000,000. It is a matter of record that the metal shipped during editor of the Omaha Republican, has gone to Europe with his wife, ona tour of pleasure and rest, and Fred Nye, the Republican’s spicy and able Washington correspondent, has been called to the chair editorial and has taken charge of its columns. Mr, Nye is a versatile writer and has abili- ty far above the average newspaper editor, and we congratulate the Union Pacific railway company upon having secured the services of so talented a gentleman to conduct their paper at the metropolis of Nebraska, We commend Mr. Nye and the Republi- can, to the rank and file of U.P. politicians in Central Nebraska and assure them that if they desire to keep thoroughly posted as to the wants and demands of that great corporation, they should at once subscribe for that paper. The intimate relations exist- ing between the managers of that road and Mr. Nye, renders it eminently fitting that he should be chosen as the political instructor of the voters of the siate. It may not be considered an act of impertinence, should we an- nounce for Mr. Nye and the U. P, road, that they will favor Mr, Valen- tine for congress, in this district; fur- ther than this we will divulge no secrets at this writing, lest we rob our young friend of the exquisite pleasure of defining his free and independent(?) position. New Experiments in Street Paving Chicago Tribune, There are somo interesting depart- ures in the way of paving experiments in this city, For a number of years the wooden-block pavement in some form or other monopolized the streets close congressional district, would be abundant means found to maintain our national board, We know that it is to some extent a sort of a national home for political doctors and a comfortable s'necure for some big medicine men of Washington, but theso defects might be pruned away and the republic be not left alone among the nations, as the only gov- ernment without a scientific body of physicians organized into an effective board for the protection of the na- tional health, Warsu's testimony, which the New York Herald publishes in an inter- view with him on the star route frauds, makes a home charge upon the immaculate W, P, Kellogg, late of Louisiana, It would not be difficult to understand that some of the gentiy who were foisted into public office in the south by the flood-tide of recon- struction might very well be caught 1n the business of public robbery, to which they had been accustomed there. It would astound us somewhat to find any staid senator like Anthony, of Rhode Island, or like there ing their government to entire immu- nity for the past years of unparalleled and monstrous corruption. Had the trials continued under the operation of the test oath, a great number of convictions would have been reached, but they would have amounted to nothing as that chal- lenge was declared unconstitutional, and for every democrat convicted twenty republicans would have gone to the state penitentiary and stayed there, attorney was jority of the votes. If republicans did steal in that state, they have been punished or par- doned and the veil has been drawn over a horrible past on either side, That ought to end it, and the majority should rule regardless of color er with another until that ono is settled. | Bayard, of Delaware, concerned in any | previous condition, half have been taken out, an industry, still in its infancy, the for English obstinacy. special feature about this exhibition Every personal and political interest of the United States nst this amnesty, but the public peace and welfare de- nded it. v 'his, once for all, is the key of the situation in that distracted state. If Gen, Smalle has been a couvict he has has also been pardoned, and the plain figures show that he has a clear ma- sustains this sort of display. one knows, that the gloves used are a mere covering for the hand and do the last thirty years exceeds $2,060,- 000,000. That is to soy, that for every dollar put into mines of gold and silver in the west, over two and & For such future can only be guessed at, Tue match between Sullivan and Wilson has ended in another victory There was a which made it the most dangerous to public morals of any of a like charac- ter ever before given in this country. There was no attempt at concealment nor desire to avoid publicity. On the contrary, the largest ampitheatre in New York was obtained, tickets were openly sold and order maintained by an officer of the police, and a body of two hundred men, In all respects, it was a close immitation of the gladia- torial exhibitions of ancient Rome without tho loss of life, Itshows how depraved ia the public sentiment that Every very little to arrest the force of the below. The fearful punishment so manfully of Chicago. This city was regarded as the home of the Nicolson pavement, No other pavement was contemplated, and it was laid equally on the heavily traveled streets and the byways. lx- perience has proved, however, that the wooden blocks are not equally well- suited to all classes of streets, Hence the experiments in now directions, A granite pavement is now in process of construction on Monroe street be- tween State and Wabash avenue, It is being laid upon a substantial foun- dation of broken stone covered with sand, and it looks as though it would endure forever, It will be frightfully noisy as compared wi'h the wooden blocks, but as it is laid in front of the Palmer House and the Chicago Club its toleration in this block will be good evidence that it will not be intol- erable elsewhere, It is the sort of pavement which must be adopted sooner or later for the streets given over to heavy and constant traffic. On thoroughfares like Wabashavenue, lined by residences but much traveled, the noise of stone is objectionable on one side, and on the other the prop- erty-owners cannot afford to renew the wooden-block pavements as often as is neceasary in order to provide a passable thoroughfare. The experi- ment of asphalt blocks is to be tried The contract has been let for laying this kind of pavement between Twenty-third and Thirty-fifth streets, and the work will be done this sum- mer, Itcan be kept as clean as a stone pavement and is not nearly so noisy, It costs twice as much for construction as the wooden pavement, and ehould last more than twico as long 1n good ccndition to be a desir- able investment. Its durability re- mains to be tested. St. Louis reports unfavorably in regard to that quality, but it is explained that the streets upon which it has been laid in St Louis are narrow and crowded thor- oughfares which sustain the bulk of | heavy trafic. On many of the cross streets of the city gravel pavements have been constructed recently, and it is hoped that, for light use, they will prove acceptable substitutes for the wooden blocks. events, the ation in the character of street pavements promises to give greater | satisfacfaction than the universal pres ence of the wooden block florded But there are two things ] all kinds of pavements: (1) They must be constructed honestly aud substan- tially, aud (2) they must be kept in repair constantly, Whatever else the city may or may not do in regard to the streets, simple justice to the prop- erty-owners who bear the cost of the street pavements demands that ar- rangements should be made for regn- lar inspection and repair of all pave- ments that have been recently con- structed, No test of relative merits will be complete without this condi- tion. The Pennsylvania Campalgn, New York Evening Post. The Pennsylvania independents have promptly declined to be caught in the trap set for them by Mr. Cam- eron. At the same timo they tried to deprive the stalwarts of the political capital the latter expected to make, out of an unconditional rejection of their proposition for reunion by submitting a counter proposition which has the merit of fairness and is put forth as an ultimatum, It is to the effect that both the stalwart and independent tickets shall be withdrawn, and that the several candidates are to “‘pledge themselves not to accept any subse- quent nomination by the proposed new convention.” This proposition has been signed by four of the inde- pendent candidates. It is known that Mr. Cameron has set his heart upon Mr. Beaver's nomination for the gov- ernorship, and that, it he confessed himself forced to abandon that, it would be a virtual abdication of his dictatorship, The prob- abilisy is, therefore, that Mr. Cameron will not accept any proposition involving General Beaver’s exclusion from the ticket. While the independonts are thus manwuvering for position in trying to throw the re- sponsibility for the rejection of rea- sonable peace overtures upon the stalwarts, it must be observed, that the mere withdrawal of the candidates on both sides, and the mere defeat of of Mr. Cameron’s effort to make Gen. Beaver governor of Pennsylvania, do not meet the programme of the inde- pendent movement. I thing were to end there, it would fall veryshort of the requirements of the times. Those requirements have been far more broadly and correctly appre- ciated by Mr. McMichael, the inde- pendent candidate for congressman-at- large, who refused to subscribe to the proposition signed by his fellow can- didates, and wrote a separate leiter, in which he defines his position and | purposes as follows: “I will not withdraw or retire unlers events hereafter gives assurance that the necessary reform in the civil service shall be adopted, assessments made upon oftice-holders returned and not hereafter exacted, boss, machine, and spoils methods forever abandoned, and all our public offices, from United States Senators to the most unimport- ant officials, shall be filled only by honest and capable men, who will rep- resent the people, and not attempt to dictate to or control them.” That is the spirit in which the Independent movement must be conducted if it is to yield any valuable and permanent y £ the whole|7 ¢ them for o us, J, McCallum Bros. Manuf’g Co., LYDIA E. PINKHAM'E VEGETABLE COMPOUND, Te n e tive Cure nd Wenknesss ion, plalnt 1o our beat female popul, A Medicine for Woman, Invented by a Woman, Prepared by & Woman. The Groatest Nedieal E# It revives the drooping spirits, invigorates and harmonizes the organic functions, es elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustro o the eye, and plants on the pale cheok of woman the fresl Foses of life's spring and early summer tine, 7~ Physicians Use It and Prescribe It Freely =g 1t removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach, ‘That feeling of ing pain, welght and backache, is alw: ntly cured by its use, For the cure of Kidncy Complalnts of either sex this Compound 1a unsurpasseds 00D PURTFIER ¢ Tumors from the gt o the kystein, of i8¢ ou aving 1t y Sineo the Dawn of Mintory, man woman or child. Toth the Compotnd and Blood Puriflcr are prepared at23and 235 Western Avenue, L Mass, Price of elther,81. Six bottles for §5. Sent by mail in tho form of pills, or of lozengzes, on recclpt of price, $1 per boy foreither. Mrs. Pinkham frecly answers all letters of inquiry, Enclose Sct. stamp. Scnd for pamphlet, out LYDIA F. PINRITAMY liousncsy No l/\m"{ should be wit’ LIVER PILLS, They euro constipati and torpidify of the liver, 25 cents per b AF-Sold by all Druggists. 68 [0} THE McCALLUM WAGON BOX HACKS. Can Be Handled By a Boy. The box necd never be taken off the wagon and all the skelled Grain and Grass Seed Is Sav It coats loss than the old stvlo eacks. Every tandard wagon is sold with our rack eomple « BUY NOWE WITHODT IT. Or buy the attachments a~ “apply them to your old wgon box. ~For ealo i ~Nebrassa by ud. Ok, Towa, 1, 10w, rin the west, Ask cular or sead direct Office, 24 West Lake Street, Chicago. may23-1w results for the cause of reform. It should not for a moment lose sight of the great objects for which the move- ment was undertaken, and to which the reunion of the party must be held entirely subordinate. "Iir, McMichael evidently understands the work he has in hand. *,*¢Little thanks are due to him who only gives away what is of no use to himself.” The thanks of inva- lids the world over are being showered oa the inventor of Kidney-Wort, for it is giving health to all, Kidney- Wort moves the bowels regularly, cleanses the blood, and radically cures kidney disease, gravel, piles, bilious headache and pains which are caused by disordered liver and kidneys. Thousands have been cured—why should you not try it. CONSTIPATION. No other diseaseis o prevalent in this %|country as Constipation, and 1o remedy has evor cqualled the celobrated KIDNEY- W . Whatever tho cause, however obstinato the cass, this remody will overcome it. PILES, s distrosing com. £ ® plaint s very apt to be Llcomplicated with constipation, Kids &l Wort strengthens the weakenod parts an 8lquickly cures all kinds of Piles even whe: | B|physicians and medicines have before fail @ed.” 3 Ifyouhave either of these troubles|S SE [Drugeiots seii* neys, Liver and Bowels. Nature's Spart and Bilious: Spa, Is duplc of TARRANTS every valual spriog. The grestest phy uounce that free gilt of Providence the D tent (f & known alteratives, and it fac simile fresh and flaming i+now placed within the rea-h of every lovalid ia the western world, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS 321-6m ANTI-MONOPOLY LEAGUE, Biank mempersnip roles for the anti-monpoly league, containing statement of principle mef cods of proccdure and instructions how to organ ¢, will besent on application to G. H. Gals, v ¥w 43iine sama w16 @ ©pecific for Indigestion ¢ the famous Seltzer 121t with a spoonful RIENT, Which contains ot of the Gen clans of Europe pr 0at JAGOB KAUFMAN, Office 802 16¢h 8¢, Cor, of Burt Dealer tn ALL KINDS OF WINES 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. RS = 2 They surpass all othier s for esy riding. style /N, and darability, They are for sale by all Leading Car- riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country. SPRINGS, GEARS & BODIES For sale by Henry Timken, Patentee and Builder of Fine Carriag s, 8';'.‘ LOUIS, -~ - IVEO. 1-6m Are acknowledged to he the best by all who have put them to a practical test, ADAPTED TO i:\HARD & SUFT COAL, COKE OR W))D, MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE cO0., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA,