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Seew T ¥ o « - dhague, Pohlahed avery morning, exoept Sanday Whe ony Mondey moming daty TERMS BY MAIL — Dne Voar.....810.00 | Three Months.$3.00 @ix Months. ©.00 | One . 1.00 THE WEEKLY BEE, published ev- ty Wednonday. TERMS POST PATD:~ One Yeosar,.....$2.00 | Three Months,, 50 ®ix Mcatha.... 1,00 |One § .. AxERICAN NEws CoupaY, Sole Agents or Newadealers in the ! nited States, OORRESPONDENCE—~AIl Communi. estions relating to News and Editorial mat- ers should bo addressed to the Enrros or e Brr, BUSINPSS LETTER8—AIl Busines Kotiors and Remittances shoald be ad- @ressed to THE OMARA PusLisning Cox- vaNY, OmAnA, Drafts, Checks and Post- office’ Orders to be mada payable to the wder of the Company The BEE PUBLISHING ©0., Preps. ©: ROSEWATER. Editor, Republican dtate Convention. The republican electors of the state of Nebraska are hereby called to send dele- gates from the several counties to meet in state convention at Omahaon Wednesday, September 2ith, A. 1., 1882, at 7 o'clock P. m., for the purpose of placing in nomi: nation candidates for the following named offices, viz: Governor, lieutenant.governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, attorney-gen- commissioner of publie lands and buildings, superintendent of public instruc- +on, And to trangnct such other business as may properly come before the convention, ’IYha several counties are entitled to ren- tesentatives 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 fifty (150) votes, and one delegate for the fraction of seventy-five 75) votes or over; also one delegate at 1arge for each organized county. §|g §|E Counties, | & | & | Countion. | & ] ol - Adams. o 1402 10{Jefforson 0907 7 0, 10} 0 o 2| 1 691 6 2510 18 Lincoln. 4 o{Madison .., [ 2 Merrick 7 3 9 1] 1 9 4 co 2 3{Platte. 6 4|Polk R | Red Wilow| 3 15 Richardson 1 l|‘\' line 13 4 2 1 ] 4 [ 4 9 4 b|Webster, 8 b{York 15 28 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 proxics are given. Second. That no delegate shall represent on absent member of his delegation, unless he be clothed with authority from the county convention, or is in possession of proxies {rom regularly elocted delegates thereof, James W, Dawes, Chairman, Jonx Sriey, Secrotary. ihe eampaign plan of the corpora- tion managers is beginning to develop They know the people opposed to the rule of monopolies are largely in the majority in Nebraska; hence they propose o overcome the people by dividing them. They propose to divert attention from the vital issue of the campaign by forcing to the tront side ipsues that will distract the peeplo andf give the] monopolles an enay victory., Eighteen months ago, when the legislature was in session, they resorted to the same tactics. They gave silent but active support to the woman's suffrage agitators, and brought about a desperate and excit ing struggle over prohibition and high license, which was kept up to the end of the session, and crowded back and shelved railroad legislation. Church Howe, the chief capper of the Union Pacifio, intro- duced the prohibition amendment, and Slocumb, a B. & M. attorney, be- came the champion of the high Ii- cense bill. While these two measures were pending, John M. Thurston and other railroad politicians kept up their trade and barter with Finch & Co. on one side and the distillers and brewers on the other until it became too late for any railroad legislation. The same programme is to be carried out in the present campaign with va. riations. Down at Lincoln the rail- road strikers are working up a prohi- bition boom. Up in Omaha Dr, Miller through the Union Pacific democratic organ is trying to rouse the liquor dealers, brewers and distillers into a counter attack. That cunning and crafty capper of the monopolies, J, Sterling Morton, was in Omaha not many days back setting the pins for the diversion for which prohibition in Towa has furnished the plausible pre- text. Thus the various forces of the railway monopolies are operating in conjunction to force side issues upon the people, while they are preparing to capture another lease of power for the next four years. But these cor- porate minions are not likely to suc- ceed. The people of this state will not be diverted by side iesues during the present campaign, They are resolved to deal with the railroad issue now. They propose to take the government of Nebraska out of the hands of the monopolies, and take chargo of it themselves. Tney insist that the railroads shall no longer be exompt from their share of taxation, They demand discrimina- tion and extortion shall be prohibited by law, and they know that they cannot secure such laws if they divide onany other issue, Whatever their individual views may be on woman’s sutirage, the liquor traffic or other questions, they do not propose at this time to allow themselves to be dis- tracted from the main iseue. When LixcoLy, Neb,, July 6, 1882, ! THE success of the new Iy lrogen g engine has infused new life into the Omaha Republican. That concern has a large supply of hydrogen gas in store In its editorial rooms. —— THE corporation editors have a good deal of advice to lavish upon the farmer’s alliance and anti-monopoly 1t is always safe in politios to discard the advice of your enemies. Tur house of representatives has virtually decided in favor of admitting COabell and Reed from Virginia and Maine and Smalls and Lee from South Carolina. That will end the warious contested elestion cases. Tue judge advocate general, Swaim, has decided that the proceedings of the Mason court martial were irregular and illegal. This, we suppoee, will liberate the old sergeant who is cov- ered with wounds received in the ser- vice of the country. Tue reason that the old soldier, who fought through the rebellion, or the poor native laborer or the hardy amigrant has to go hundreds of miles away for a homestead is bevause all the land not already pre-empted or homesteaded has been gobbled by the land grant monopolies. Tur government auditor of railroad accounts, Mr, Armstrong, is about to make his official tour of inspection of the land grant roads, and forthwith the railroad companies put at his disposal a special car, fully stocked with couks, porters and champagne— which he accepts, including his allow- ance for traveling expenses. Is this bribery, or what is it} VareNtine's clerk says that his patron saint, Vallentine, has a reputa- tion among his colleagues for frank- ness, manliness, bravery and ability, Valentine's Nobraska colleagues, Baunders and Van Wyck, have found him to be treacherous, untruthful, dishonest and destitute of every at- tribute of a manly man. Taz citizens ot Denver have been fighting the Union Pacific for years with all their might and main. Now the Union Pacific coms forward with @ donation of $10,000 toward the Denver exposition. Omaha has stood by the Union Pacific and treated that great corporation with princely libor- ality, but the oldest inhabitant does not remewber when the Union Pa- the main issue has been fought out, and the state redeemed from the mis- rule of imbeciles, jobbers and corpora- tion attorneys, it will be time enough to grapple with other questions, 1t will be safe for every Nebras- kan who desires to overthrow the domination of the monopolies to fight shy of all side issues. THERE is & certain opposition to the renomination of Judge Valentine, but it is not indigenous to his district. It springs from the febrile but active brain of that element of the republi- oan party which is least capable, least deserving and most contemptible.— Republican. Mr. Valentine's clerk has a good deal more time than we have to rum- mage in the dictionaries for high sounding words, We do not know whether those who refuse to indorse Val. for a third torm are indi- genous, heterogenous or homo- genous, There are a good many of them, however, to the square mile, and they are, perhaps, fully as capable, deserving and ro- spectable as the crowd of corporation henchmen and political barnacles for whom Val's clerk is a mouth piece, Could there be anything more con- temptible in this wide world than the miserable wretch who barters away his convictions and principles for place or pelff Could there be anything more infamous and debasing than the charlatau who hires out to a corporate monopoly to write rogues up and honest men down at their bidding? Any man with a spark of manhood in him would rather clean sewers or cart night soil than lend himself to such exocrable works, — It is now almost certain that this sossion of congress will last through the whole month, It has by no means been a barren session for cor- porations and jobbers, Among the many measures enacted during this long session there has on the whole been very little law making for the people. Nearly every important issue has been met with studied evasion or the ercation of a commission, Most of the time has been given to private cloims and hugo jobs. Millions upon millions have been recklessly squan- dered whilo tho country at large is ground down with taxation and clam.- ors for speedy relief. The temper of the members seems to Brow worse with the heat, Mr, Butterworth, of Ohio, in & dispute with Mr, Cox, of New York, managed to reach a depth of groseness which loaves all competi- cific ever subscribed even 5,000 hnu‘d any exhibition in Owmaha, tors out of sight, Aund yet the house, instead of expelling him, accepted & st - apoiogy; and it is alleged that his conduet will not in- jure him with his constituents If this is true, Butterworth repre- sents & constituency that is prinei- pally made up from the slums. Tt is becoming apparent that the national conatitution must be amended in many important particulars to relieve congress from much of its work and put astop to the fsystem of jobbery that is now so prevalent. We must relogate all private claims to the courts, stop omnibus legislation and empower the president to veto any single item in an appropriation bill which he deems contrary to the pub- lic interest. As itis now nearly all the appropriation bills are held back wuntil the last days of the session, and the most vil lainous jobs are attached to these appropriation bills, The president has no option. Ho must either ap- prove the bill just as it has passed with all its iniquities or cripple the government by vetoing bills that ap- propriate money to maintain the army and navy or the civil branches of the public service, The result is that the president is compelled to sanction the most gigantic robberies, and there is no remedy until omnibus lsgislation is forbidden by constitutional amend- ment, EXPEDITING PACIFIC MAILS Congress and the postoffice depart- ment are wreetling with the problem of expediting the Pacific mails, The problem is to shorten time between Washington and San Francisco one day. Now, if this is their honest object, there is already a route whereby the desired saving of time oan be effected without increasing the cost of mail carriage to the govern- ment. The time tables of the trunk lines between Washington and Omaha by the way of Chicago, as compared with the time table of the line be- tween Washington and Omaha by the way of the Ohio & Mississippi and Wabash system, shows a difference of twenty-four houis in favor of the lat- ter. 1Inother wores, without expe- diting the speed of any train or adding any traine to the existing system of transportation, the Washjngton, Baltimore and Philadel- phia mails can be Isid down at San Francisco by way of Cincinnati, St. Louis and Omaha in six days, whereas it takes seven days to transport the mails from Washington to San Fran- cisco by the trunk lines that center in Chicago. Those who handle the Pacific coast mails, as now transported, are well aware that it takes six hours longer to deliver these mails at the Missouri river by way of Chicago, than it does to lay them down at the same point by the way of Cincinnati and 8t Louis over the Wabash, The delay of six hours breaks the con- nection with the overland mail train and thus detains the mail eighteen hours at the Missouri river, while the other train by the way of the Wabash systom makes close connection, and therefore makes a round saving of twenty-four hours. On. the cther hand, the Pacific coast mail going east reaches Omaha at 3:30 p. m., lays at the Missouri river transfer Lwo hours, reaches Chi- cago the next afternoon, and is de- livered at Washington by no train earlier than after nine p. m. the next night, which is literally after delivery hours, and makes is no better than if it reached there the following morn- ing. By the Wabash system the mail from the Missouri river will reach Cincinnati in twenty-five hours, and is landed at Washington at one p. m. the following day, which gives ample time for its delivery in the city, and is » saving equivalent almost to eigh- teen hours or a business day. Itis a matter of fact also that the bulk of the overland mail originates at Washington, Philadelphia, Balti- more and Cincinnati, and could if the postmaster general would designate the proper route be landed at San Frazcisco twenty-four hours sooner that it is now, without expediting any mail, by simply put- ting the postal service on the line be- tween Omaha and St. Louis. But if the object of expediting or ‘‘star routing” for which such a clamor is made is slmply to increase the earn. ings of the trunk lines that run into Chicago, then, of course, the search after a fast mail train is undoubtedly legitimate. We take it, however, that congress has no such design, and that Postmaster General Howe simply de- sires to give the most efficient service that can be had for the least expendi- ture, In such & scheme localities must be left entirely out of the ques- tion, Whether Chicago derives great- er benefit or whether St. Louis gets an advantage is immaterial, so the ser- vice 18 performed by the most expeditious route for the money already appropriated. For our part we cannot comprehend why congress should appropriate vast sums in addition to the present ex- penditure, when, by an ordinary ex- ercise of business tact with the exist- ing service, the same results can be obtaived. While we know that the Wabash route or system belongs to Jay Gould, and this aper is not in- clined to further Gould’s interest, we arowilling thatJay Gounldshall havethe benefit of his route if it is the shortest THE “BOSS” FRAUD, The bill ineongress coconsolidate the Pacific roads has startled the country. The manner in which it was intro- duced, under the disguise and cover of another innocent measure, has ex- cited the public suspicion and opened the eyes of the people to the ceaseless ambition of the great railroad kings. Gould, Huntington & Co. want all they can get above and below here [N and want it about 4,000 miles long, from New York to Mexico, taking in the whole country from sea to sea on both sides of anywhere. Just stick a pin on this fact, to-wit: the government gives to the Texas Pacific 14,300,760 acres of land such as the Union Pacific sells at six dollars per mcre. Now the road through New Mexico, Arizona and California is 668 miles long, and, at a big estimate, will cost not more than $20,000 per mile, or 813,760,000, In other words, the government takes the lund which belongs to the people, and gives it to these million- aires to build a road, and then gives them the road and over 72,000,000 for doing the work. In the name of justice and right, where will this end? Why don’t the government build the road itselt and save the 872,000,000 to pay the debt and reduce the taxes, or why does congress not let the job out by contract to the best bidder? But to take land that actaally does not be- long to it and give it to men who are richer than kings already, to farnish them the means to build a rail- road and then pay them 872,. 000,000 for the work, when these same men would have been glad to build the road for the right of way and other privileges, as an investment of surplus cash which they had no use for, is simply public robbery. If mil- lionaires can go into congress and buy $85,000,000 worth of land, besides such a charter, with another little book like Ames, the irrepressible con- flict that Carl Schurz predicts in the dim future is much nearer than he ever dreamed of, A Will ot His Own, Senator Van Wyck has a will of his own, and we are pleased to note the fact that he has never been afraid to express his opinion upon any measure since his election to the United States senate,—Grand Island Independent. Looks Like Business, We learn that there is to be a con ference of the membors of the Anti- Monopolists and Farmers’ Alliance, of this Congressional district, at Norfolk, August 16th, This begins to look like businees, and will make old political ‘‘Hacks"” look sour.—Neligh Republi- can, An Imposition. H. C. Stryker had a horse shipped him from Iowa this week. Arriving at Council Bluffs the U, P. Co. refus. ed to receive him until Mr. Stryker had signed a paper, releasing them from all liabilities. As it could not be done here, Stryker boarded the morning train for Omaha, but swears that he will ride the horse down from Omaha and thus cheat the company out of the anticipated $20 for freight down to this station.—Rising Inde- pendent. A Conundrum 1 believe the Chronicle is not in the habit of publishing a puzzle depart- ment, but I would like to propound one conundrum: 1f it takes ‘‘our Val” and Fred Nye four months to convince the Interior department that Peter Schwenk is honest, how long will it take M. S. Bartlett and O. Selch to convince F. F. Rhyn, John Nelson and a host of others, who were oblig- ed to pay seven dollars for their cer- tificates when they proved up on their homesteads, of the same great central truth? Answers solicited from the West Point Republican and Norfolk Journal, —Madison Chronicle. They are Remembered. Hon., Church Howe, of Nemeha, Windham, of Cass, and Moore and Parry, of Otoe, stood fiemly with the rural and western counties in the late apportionment, without whom it would have been impossible to pass the bill, For their assistance they should be re- membered by our people.—Franklin Echo, Yeos, and they will be remembered by the people of the first district in a way they will not fancy.—Falls City Journal, And other greedy monopoly agents in the second district will be treated in like manner when the people put their little slip of paper in the ballot box,—Hampton Journal. NEBRASKA WEATHER. — Bulletin for June, 1882, The weather for June was warmand wet. The number of rainy days and the amount of rainfall were unusually large, RAINFALL, The average by sections was as fol- lows: southeast 4.73; northeast 8 southwest 3.74; northwest 3 71; ave age for entire state 5.29. TEMPERATURE. Average of all noon observations was 79, The mean temperature of the air was 71.89, The following are some of maximum and minnimum temperatures: Omaha, maximum 103 10; minimum 45,7; North Platte, 83,338, RELATIVE HUMIDITY, Max, © Min, Mean, Omaha 87 8 40 69 6 o1 0 8 De Soto., ... 98 b b6 WIND, Prevailing direction, from southeast. Miles traveled: Omaha, 0,747; North Platte, 7,100, Highest volocity per hour, at Omaha, 36 miles; at North Platte, 53, MISOELLANEOUS, WOn the 25th of Juno occurred a and if by its use the government can save money and improve the postal service, severe storm of about thirty minutes, with severe thunder and lightning aud heavy rain, At Sutton half the crops were destroyed by hail, but it extend- edonly over a limited area TABLATED REPORTS, Stations reporting temperature from three obrervations, - R Omaba |Alex," Pollak, 2,05 North Piatie..... |E. F. Bready B De8oo... Chas. Sel 7 7.8 Milfod. ..|B,J. Hooker. . ‘ Table Rock J' B, Pepoon 8.5 Pawnee Cit) of . Gowdy Childa, 8 ‘ 08| 363 70, | 6.46(10 servations: ng only noon ob- BTATIN reck. .. |M, K. Walker..| 6. ng Water.. (3. C. Cripp-n F. Griswold ete E. E. tenton Neb. City 1" B, Parales ...... |De. M, Clark 8 perior la o |NC rtarkey . Minden |Joe 1 Hull Beaver Croek....|% 8 Kearney. Marquett Cedar ¥end De Witt, 3 Brock . W. F. Wright Red Willow..... . |F, E. Bick. ORSSRVER (M. T.| R. [RD 1| fitty feet long. R. 8. Taomrson, Director, LIFE INSURANCE. Citizens of Red Cloud Pay for Policles but Receive None. Rep Croup, Neb,, July 19, To the Editor of Tho Bee: Daring the month of March a man giving the name of 8. W. Johnson, and representing himself as the agent of the Northwestern & Milwaukee in- surance company, put in an an ap- been gued by & Miss Lillian Browne who attended the tall, and was ejected on the ground that she was not a decent and re- spectable person. Lullie has_brought suit for 20,000, and says she wili be able to prove that she is & biight and shining light of respectability. As the Denver and Rio Grande pacsen- ger train from Leadville was passiog Car- Iyle, 18 rmiles from Pueblo, on- the 10th, it ran intoa large boulder on the track, throwing the engize and baggage car down )| an embankment into the Arkansas river, Fortunately these cars be ame detached or 7| the whole train would have been ditched and the result more disastzcus. As it was the engiveer, named Glenny, was killed CALIFORNIA From three to four thousand men are aged in the salmon fist ery along the Sacramento river and the adjacent bays, A boy at Bires Meadows the other day started to get a big haul of fish by stun- ¥| ning them with a dynamite cartridge, But the cartridge exploded before it 1.ft his hand, and his funeral followed. A land slide occurred last week abont a 7l mile begond Palieade, at a place where there is n small cut about two hundred and The earth from the monn. tain above ¢ completely filied the cut, making it necessary to dig the en- tire mass out beforetrains could pass, A Merced paper says that ex-Senator Sharon has purchsed large tracts of land in Merced county and will attempt the re. clamation of many thousand acres of swamp and overflowed land included in his purchsse, Sharon proposes to irrigate something over thirty thousand acres of land. George Ruoff, living at Plymouth, re- cently tried to raise a sick horse that had made its bed beside the house, After coaxing the animal some time, he tried to force it to rise, Instead of getting up the horee raised its foot and kicked Mr, Ruoff in the abdomen, from the effect of which he died in a few hours, Glenn’s wheatfields in Colusa county cover an area of twelve square miles, To protect his fields from wild geese he em. ploys forty men armed with repeatiog rifles, who patrol his acres avd send bul- lets after every flock of wild geese that ap- pears. In foggy weather when the guards cannot see the geese have the advantage pearance at Red Cloud, Neb. He|and do damage in provortion to its dura- tion, The cost of keeping the guards is said that he was from Lincoln, and $11,000 a year. had been in the employ of the com- pany for some time. He talked life IDAHO. Gov. Neil is making a tour through the insurance to the business men of Red | northern part of his domain. Cloud, and succeeded in making a few converts. In April he made another The territorial republicrn convention will convene at Boise City, August 22, Bellevue had a wholesale jail delivery visit to the town and took a number | on the 7th, but all the prisoners were soon of applications for policies. The policles were to be delivered within fifteen days. Some of the parties|i agreeing to take out policies, made the b first payment at once, while others || recaptured. Lake Pen d'Oreille, forty-five miles long and nine miles wide, raised eighteen inches n twenty-four hours recently, Nearly a half million railroad ties have at atove Hailey, and are piled along er bank ready to foat down for the he gave their notes for the amount, pay- | Oregon Shoit Line, ablein thirty days from date, that is fifteen days after the time set_for the | Capt. delivery of the policies. Johnson |f The Salmon river sn elter, owned by C. B. Rustin md otier Omaha barties, located at Kinnikinic, has been disposed of as many of these notes as | idle for a long time, but they expect to he was able, selling them to parties in |* the vicinity. He also paid expenses incurred by him while in the town with these notes, saying that he had |1 not received any money, and was a little short for the time being. completing his work he left the town tart up August 1st for a sixty days’ run, NEVADA. Ballionville had a foot race by lamp light last week. The Reno Journal says there are 2,600 After | goats within six miles of that town, The insane wards of the state have been SRR ) /A Werr & SevehAarta 7 LYDIA E. PINKHAM'E VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is n P For all those Palnfu #0 common to our best female population. A Medicine for Woman. Invented by a Woman, Prepared by a Woman. The Greatest Medieal Disearery Sinee tho Dawn of I £t revives the drooping spirits, invigorates harmonizes the organic functions, gives lasticity and firmness to tho step, restores the natural lustre to thy e, and plants on the pale eheck of woman the tresh roses of life’s spring and early summer time. £~ Physicians Use It and Prescribe It Froely.<og 1t removes fatntness, flatulency, destroys all eraving for stimulant, and relioves weakness of tho stomach, That fecling of bearing down, causing paln, weighy and backache, is always permanently cured by its usa, For the cure of Kidney Compl this Compound Vi 00D TFIE; o e o Cifumars Trum cng HBlood, and give tono and strength to the system, of mAD woman or child. Insiston having it. | Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are prepared At and 2% Wostorn Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, §L. Six bottlea for §5. Sent by madl in the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per boy and nothing has been heard from him | removed from Stockton, Cala., to Reno, at since that time. sonable period for the policies and not receiving any parties interested, wrote to the insurance com- pany regarding the matter |} b After waiting a _rea- | & cost of $1,800, There is a water war in Winnemucca setween the water company and the town authorities, in consequence of which the water has heen turned off from the court house, and the trees and grass on the lawn The company replied that they had |are wiskering for want of water. turned the matter over to Mr. Moffet, the state agent of Nebraska, and that is the last that has been heard of it. OREGON. Lee and Grahsm, two convicts confined in the Oregon penitertiary, made a break Parties have written to Johnson at | fir liberty on the 10th, They wers obsersel Lincoln but have received no reply. ) by the guard, wh As return envelopes were issued it is | No attention being dered them to ha't. id to the demand he plain that some one received the let- | fired at Graham, killing hiw. The other ters, as some of them have been re- turned. The notes, as many as were sold in the vicinity have been pre- was caught, The work on the middle chanvel of the Columbia river bar is progressing favorably and a depth of eighteen feet has been ob- sented and paid by the parties giving | tamed; and it is iatended to increass it to them, Altogether Johnson must have taken about $150 from the town of Red Cloud. 3 From the facts given, one of two The notes taken away by |twenty-four feet. Johnson have not been presented, | filled up., The south channel is UTAH. A new evening paper is to established at Salt Lake, One sheep owner in Utah has lost two things is certain, either Mr. Johnson | hundred lambs this spring by cagles carry. is doing business in a very careless and | ing them off . unbusinesslike manner, or elso he is & fraud of the worst character. The Denyer & Rio Grande road is now If he | building at the rate of two miles a day, is the authorized agent of an insurance | nd will close the gap between Denver and company let him come forward and deliver the policies or refund the money paid for them; or at least let Salt Lake in December. A twelve-month-old child of Mr., Wood- bury, of Salt Lake, dipped a ntick of candy in a can of concentrated lye, and him write and explain the the causeof | then’ ate of i, Immediately afterward the delay. He has had two months in | she was taken sick, and died in grea which to deliver the policies he prom- [ agony the following day. ised within 16 days. If Mr. Johnson is & fraud and a swindler, let the facts At Salt Lake, on the 10th, while a stranger named H, C, Kino was riding in a carriage in the lower part of the city, he be made public and have detectives | was halted by u robber, who shot hiw in put on his track. quiet and allowing swindlers and con fidence men to escape only to practice the same thing on other parties, nor should Tux Bee refrain from censur- 2 the breast, inflicting a dangerous wound, I take it that Tue BEEis not in|and wasthen relieved of o purse contain- favor of keeping such transactions | ivg $300. Never Give Up. If you are suffering with low and de- res sed spirits, loss of appetite, genera ebility, disordered blood, wenk constitn- ing agonts or companies that do busi. | tion, heduche, or any disease of a bilious ness in such a loose manner and |nature by all means procuroa bottle of and failed to fulfill promises, even if it is dune in a legitimate manner, Electric Bitters, see the rapid improvement that will follow; you will be inspired with strength and activity will return; pain and You will be surprised to new life; — OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS, misery will cease, and henceforth you will rejoice in the praiso of Electric bitters, Sold at fifty cents s bottle, by C. F, Good- COLORADO. man. St. Luke's, at Fort Collins, think of | = building a large church, _Abont August 20th, the Leadville mili- tia will go into encampment, Telephonic connection between Rico and Silverton is now an assured fact, Not a single case of sunstroke has thus far cccurred in Colorado this summer, Frank H, Crank, a Pacblo cripple, was robbed of 81,145 while asleep one night last week, A mining camp on the summit of Engi- ueer mountain rejoices in the appropriate nawe of Blue Blazes, Mr. 8, Greenway, living on the Divide, Bl Paso county, has raised this year 1,900 lambs from 2,200 ewes. The new masonio temple at Denver will be 50 by 100 feet in diwensions, with four s ories and & basement, 5. B. Stewart's tie boom of 45,000 rail- road ties will be banked at Laporte, An- other of 86,000 is expected., Daniel Harrington, a Leadvills miner, was killed on the 13th by a cave in the mine where he was at work, Two Central City hoodlums, indicted for ussault on a Chinaman, were tried on the 12th and will probably go to the pen, John Sullivan, at work in the chain gang at Gunnison, attacked & policeman with & shovel on the 13th and was shot dead by the officer, After being in existence about one year aud fuiling to defray expenses, the Pueblo street car company has pulled up its track and gone out of business, At Central City, on the 15th, Mr, Os: borne tried to (blow up_his dsughter and her husband, Stephen Hoskins, with giant bouse. ' Family difficulties. Ben Dunmiire, brother of the man who warried Mrs, Guitesu, lives in Leadville and has had bad luck ever since he went there—~a month ago. Three of bis chil- dren have died, oue by one, and to cap ths imax his house burned down on the 10th, involving a loss of $1,500, MOST POWERFUL! "KIDNEY-WORT] IS A SURE CURE for all diseases of the Kidneys and oL | V E R e 1t has specific action on this most important organ, enabliug it to throw off torpidity and inaction, stimulating tho healthy secretion ofthe Bile, and by keeping the bowels in froe condition, effucting its rogular dischargo, Malaria, [y suseoriog tom ® malaria, have thochi aro bilious, dyspeptic, or constipat 0 ney-Wort willsurely relieve & In this season to cleanso tho one should take & thorough 8S0OLD BY DRUCCISTS. [Wrought or Cast Iron | powder, but only took off coruer of their | EJRNMACES IN THE woRLD. MADE BY RICHARDSON,BOYNTON & CO CHICAGO, ILLS, body mew 1882 impr vemen's. More otical fed uas: Cost less to keepin rder; Use logs fuel; Will kiv¢ moye Leat Max Dickman, J, W. Williams and O, | 0 larger volume of pure air than sy V. Wilson, managers of the Knights of Pythias ball, recently held at Sahda, have uruace made Sold by PIERCEY & BRADFORD, Omaha, Neb, for cither, Mrs. Pinkham freely answersall letters of inquiry, Enclose Sct.stamp. Send for pamphlet. t LYDIA E. PINKTAM'Y pamily should be witha 1aVHAT AL TR Sonitipation: biiousnes and torpidity of the liver, cents per box. Aa-Sold by all Drugglists. 68 m FRAR 2 R THE MeCALLUM WAGON BOX RACKS. WEIGHT ONLY 100 LBS, § BOX. Can Be Hand!ed By a Boy. The box need never bo taken off the wagon and all the -helled Grain and Grass Seed Is fave 1t costsloss than the old styie standard wagou is sold with our . T BUY NONE wiTHOY Or buy the attachwents o~ n, your old wagon box. For sale i J. C. Cuank, Lincoln MANNING & [1kss, Onioha. Fiep “Eopx, Geond Isand. Havouerr & Giusny, Hastings, CHARLYS ¥oizobERK, Columbus, 8PANOGLE & FUNK, Rod Cloud. C. H. Craxs & L. W. Russru , Glonwood, 1owa. And every first clnss dealcr in the west, Ak them for descripiive circular or send direcs %0 us, J, MoCallum Bros. Manuf'g Co., Office, 24 West Lake Street, Chicago. may23-1w s comy 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. They surpass all others for easy ridin and durability, 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 8, 8T LOUIS, - - MO. J1-6m Are acknowledged to be the best by a'l who have put them to a practical test, ADAPTED 10 HARD & SUFT GOAL, COKE OR Wo0D. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE c0., SAINT LOUIS. Pierey & Bradford, SOLE AG NTS FOR OMAHA,