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1 | b 4 TR NATTV DET.LLAMATITA THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA WEDNESDAY, JULY %6, 1852 mrnd MNAV TIIrvaox .00 e The Omaha»Bee Vuh'ished every morning, except Sunday ® . .y Monlay worning Aaily, TaKMS BY MATL — 3 £10,00 | Three Monthe, 88, 0,00 | One LHE WRE&LY BEE, published ev- ey Wediasday. TERMS POST PAID:~ ear,. o | Om & o Averrcax News Company, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the ""nited States, CORRESPUNDENCE—AILl OCommuni. @eons relating to News and Editorial mat- s+ <hould he addressed to the EpiTor or Cnr “rr. BUSINKSS LETTERS—AIl Busines Ko ts1n and Remittances should be ad. weed to THR OmARA PusLmsHing Com- A OwmAnA. Drafta, Checks and Post- fice Orders to be made payable to the rdor of the Company’ The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props B ROSEWATER. Editor. Republioan 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 20th, A. D, 1882, at 7 o'clock b, m., for the purpose of placing in nomi. nation ca: didates for the following named offices, viz Governor, lientenant governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, attornev-gen- oral, commissioner of public linds and buildings, superiutendent of publicinstruc- on, And to transact such other business ns may properly come before the convention. 'lyhe reveral counties are entitled to ren- jesentatives in the state convention as 'ollows, based upon the vote cast for Isaac Powers, Jr., in 1881, for regent of the state aniversity: Giving one ( ) delegate to each one hundred snd tifty (150) votes, and one delegate for the fraction of seventy-five .00 100 ++$2,00 | Three Months., 50 1 — | vote, WOMAN SUFFRAGE. We have beon requested by several patrons who take an active interest in the woman suffrage agitation to pre- sent our viewa and the reasons why Tue Bee, which favors all important reforms, opposes woman's suffrage. We can do no better than reproduce the following editorial which appeared in our daily edition of February 21st. The right to vote is not inherent— like life and liberty—-but it is a priv- ilege conferred under certain condi- tions to which woman cannot conform, The first of these conditions isindivid- ual independence. Under ovr sys- tem of government the voter, in his primary capacity, is a sovereign whose action is controlled by his own will, A majority of women are depend- ent, and their political acts would not express their individual will. In Utah, where women have the right to the wives and daughters of Mormons vote the tickets which their husbands and fathers put in their hands. The woman who would vote contrary to the advice and wish of her husband anywhere would be the exception. because a womanly woman concurs with the man to whom she looks for counsel, advice and support. The right of voting carries with it cortain dutics to which women can- not fulfill. The right to vote carries with it the right to hold office and the duty to sit on juries, Women in their married state cannot discharge the duties of office when they are bearing or rearing children 75) votes or over; also (ne delegate at tarze for ench oreanized county. K = ilE g Counties. | & | & | Countien [ & Jefforson 7 9 Cuming. Custer Chase . Dundy ... Dakota .. Dawson. 3 e e afpolk .U Red Wilow Richardson, Saline.. Fillmore. Franklin, Frontier . Stanton Thayer. Valloy ... Washingt'n| Vayne 2| Wheoler. 98 Webster. York. T¢ is recommended: First, That no proxies be admitted to the convention, except such as are held by personn residing in the counties from which the proxies are given. Boound, That no delegate shall roprosent om abrent member of his delegation, unless the be clobh'd“wlth Iflfi;'l ty from th? ‘county convention, or n pos: jon of mxh-y- from regularly elected delegates Ehnnu{. Jaurs W, Dwa& an, " Jonx Steey, Secretary. LiNcoLN, Ni July'g 1882, Tug Herald has a lealer on the “dog days.” Dou'v get mad, doctor. VaresTiNg, Majors, Schwenek, Hawes and Alexander! Now who was Japhets father? EEEE————— Tue wheat orop in Tllinois and the tobacco crop in Virginia are abundant, The maiket promiscs to show a de- cline in consequer.ce, — Tae Ute lands in Colorado will soon be opened np under Belford's bill which has passed the house. They are said to contain rich mineral de- pusits. Tur season shows an unusual harvest of munder, robbery, rape and all the crimes in the catalogus. The devil seems to be on a regular jambo- ree. A sYNDIDATE of wealthy Eaglish- men is about to buy 400,000 acres of land in southern Minnesota, near the line of the Chicago, Mill vaukee & St, Paul railway, with the view of plant. ing a colony. Ir Arabi Pasha wants te securo sywpathy all he has to do is to adopt the Mahone policy with regard to the and women, whether married or sin- gle, are nearly at all times unfit for jury duty. Vory few respectable women would sit on juries with half a dozen or more men of all grades and conditions of life, even if they could endure be- ing locked up ir jury rooms for days and weeks. How many of the women that clamor for suffrage would have stood the ordeal of the Guiteau jury? The right to vote includes the abil- ity to support the verdict of the bal- lot box, If the voters that exerciee the privilege of electing our presi- dents were not able to sustain their decision by the power of arms in case of revolt or insurrection this govern- ment would fall to pieces. ‘Women being unable to defend or uphold the government by the power of arms cannot consistently control the cheice of those who must do the fighting. Women are barred from *| service in the army and navy by phy- sical disabilities, and being unable to share with mon the hardships of war, cannot justly demand a snrrender by men of the privilege of voting for men for measures that may plunge the country into war, Before men can consent to a change of the organic law of the land they have a right to demand some valid reasons, coupled with proof that the change will inorease the sum of human happiness. I¢ behooves the champions of woman suffrage to show that the proposed change of our or- ganic laws will give us better govern- ment or at least improve the condi- tion of woman, This they have ut- terly failed to do. They fail to show why the husbands, brothers, sons and fathers of women should nol be trust- ed with the conduct of the political af- fairsof the state. They fail to show what advantage the etate would derive from adding to its sum total of voters anew class that is no better morally, as a whole, than are thoir own fathers, husbands, brothers and sons. Until women can change the laws of nature and abolish the disabilities of their sex they should be content to leave to men the duties and responsibilitiee imposed by the right to vote, Mz, Trescorr writes a letter to Mr, Blaine in which he tells the American people, that it is ‘‘ne such thing” —that Mr. Blaine was opposed to the Cochet claim and only wanted the Landrean claim to have a fair hear- ing before the proper tribunal, He says that his mission was one, not ot interference nor bearing an armed threat; but of peace and as a sort of prologue to the projected peace con- Egyptian debt of $450,000,000let him scale it at 50 per cent on the dol- lar. Hox. A. H Sreruens has received the demo ratic nomination for gov- eroor of Florida—a good nomination, and eminently a proper one to make, — Leavenworth Times Aleck Stephens as governor of Florida is good, though it 18 hard to say where Aleck would turn up any time these seventy-five years, —_— Tag official report of the bombard- ment of Alexsndria which Arabi pub- lished to his army is & fine sawple of amatear lying and would compare fa- vorably with the best efforts of Eug. lish or American diplomacy. If he fights as hard as he lies, Bir Garnet Wolseley will have business on his hands, Exoraxp and France are abundant- ly able to protect the Suez canal and subdue Egypt, Arabi and Elmehadi included, whether Turkey lends them her sangtion or not; but the danger is as to the consent of the European powers and how far the Eastern trou- ble will disturb the balance of power in the West. Russia's headstrong pol- ioy is towards Conetantinople and will take no stock in any movement that may iaterrupt her hopes in that direc- ion, gress of the American republice. He wanced to save the antonomy of Pern and to insure a prosperous and peace- ful future to all the South American states under the protection of the American system, to bring all the American republics together to pro- vide for there future against the in- fluence or inteiference of Kucope. That was the burden of Mr, Blaine's instructions. em—— ONE of the seats in the United States senate from Georgia will soon be vacant. Stephens who has been the living ghost of American politics for half a century outlives all his peera and wheels his chair into the govern- ors office, while Hill, devoured by cancer, turns uneasily on his bed to watch the lengthening shadows on the wall. Tae Koglish statistics show that suicido is steadily on the increase, and that therc are ten times as many between the ages of forty-five and fifty-five as between ten and twenty years of age. 1his mode of departure is twice as popular with men as with wowmen, and the means generally used by them is the tight rope. If eternal order rules the system of creation, then the suicide commits the unpar- donable crime of breaking in upon it and if eternal justice asserts itself,— there must be no place for the self-mur- derer in the next world and he is con- demned to roam about loose until he can find some way of getting there oy the regular route. How he is going to get back and how can he stay where he is 7 His only solace must be plenty of ecmpany. JoUurNALISM is in its transition state from the style of cultivated senti- mentality to that of practical individ- uality, The high-toned period, with its classical collegiate finish and elab- orate parade of rhetoric, has given way to the plain, pithy sentence, in which the idea, however big, is ex- pressed in as few words as possible. Then the newspaper has become more or leas the mirror of public thought, with a strong reflection of the individ- uality of tho editor, while as to the detail of facts, it is tho brief reporter of the events of each day in which the teleyraph is the phonogrophy of the press, Life is too short in these stir- ring times for the philosophical treatise of the last cenlury, or even the clean cut argument of the ante-bellum days. The genius of the press, like Puck, has put its girdle about the earth in forty minutes and gathers in the news from every quarter. We can find no space to give more than the bare fact, leaving the circum- stances to the imagiuation of the reader. A competent daily journal in really the map of the whole busy world, formerly it was only the local oracle, now it covers the whole range of business and pleasure of science, literature, art, religion, poli- tics, the moral, physical, sscial and civil sphere of human life. Formerly, beforo electricity, steam and in a word science had subdued time and space, the newspaper was confined to its vicinage and there was room for a big speech, a studied lecture or ser- mon and a dashing sounding leader, but we have changed all that. Look down the editoral column and you see a couple of dozen sen‘ences, followed by a stick or two of pungent comment or sharp opinion in which the per- sonel of the editor is not disguised or at best thinly protected by the im- personel of the journal And yet the press grows in nnmber, power and wealth until another generation will compel some other change. GENERAL BEAUREGARD has been in- terviewed about his being ousted of the command of the Egyptian army by the influence of Consul Butler. Heo says that in 1866, while ir Lon- don, he was offered the command of the Roumanian army, now an inde- pendent kingdom of 5,000,000 souls, but he declined. He fur- ther says that he was also offered the command of the Egyptian army by the khedive in the same year in New York and rofused that also, as he did not wish to leave the peopla with whom he had fought. That again in 1870 the khedive offered him the full cemmand and the choice of his own mili-ary staff. He took time STAND FROM UNDER. We called public attention to that outrageous swindle in which the rail- road kings had induced congress to give Gould, Huntington & Co., or rather the Texas Pacific railroad com- pany public lands amounting to a free gift of §75,000,000. We denounced it as a public crime to rob the poor people of their homes in order to en- rich those who had made millions out of the people already. We maid that donbtless another ‘‘Ames’ little book” would show how it was done. And now comes Newall, who says that he has a book with the names of | three senators and thirty members of | the house who were bought to pass this land grant steal. He says that he has a list of witnesses to prove it, and that the swag, divided among the thioves, amounted to millions. The judiciary committce of tho house hes decided to investizate, and disclosures | more startling than the credit Mobi- lier rascality are promised There will be fun on the Potomac if these dark things are uncovered. AMONG the results of the Ku Klux and others disorders of the south was the negro exodus, which has located about 50,000 colored people in Kan- sas. The sufforings of these emigrants were sovere and exceptional, but they have generally been overcome and the people of the state are making every «ffort to educate them into a good grade of citizenship. had a perfect training in the school of physical labor, hardship and adver- sity, but his mental vision has been studiously obscured. His capacity for education has been fully tested, and Kansas will soon find an intelligent and reliable set of agricultural labor in these southern refugees. —— To vhe Farmers, From the Humbolt (Neb.) Farmers' Advocate, A giorious and bountiful harvesthas just been reaped. A great many of you who a few days ago were some- what depressed in spirits on the ac- count of the appearance of a failure, can now wich the abundauce of your realized. . And a splendid oats crop all harvesters. The prospects for corn highly flattering, and from present - ferent guise to deceive the people. tice and you will soon ascertain that about one-third of the passengers have free passes. pasees given? object in view. It is not because thuy are so liberal or like tho people so well, hearts thauk a divine providence that |ivfluence aud aid in cheating and your expectancy has been more than | swindling you. over the State is about ready for ~the [ market you can then go and ask the railroad companies or their tools what and all kinds of vegetables is 1ndecd | they intend to allow you for it. price ought to depend upon the de- dications we judge there will be plen- | mand respectable and honest. These men understand that they must use every means possible to crush out all the enemies of these combinations, It has become almost an impossibility to win a suit, be it ever mo meritorious, against the trailcoad companies or their friends on the account of their influence, their money and special favors granted or promised. Most likely if you succeed in obtaining a judgment the judge will immediately set it aside without any notice of a motion to set aside whatever, ta was done only a short time ugo and that at the dead hour of night. That they do have a certain number of tools to assist them in their chicanery and trickery is an established fact. If not why would twenty five or thirty at the time of the meeting of our district courts, to the neglect of their own private businees, congregate at our county seate. If you was to ask one of them to assist you in some honest employment ho would tell you he_had not the time Hence 1f he will do this for the rail- road companies, they must indeed pay bim most liborally.” 1f they cumnot beat their adversaries in any other way, they in conjunction with our various prosecuting attorneys, who are more tho attorneys for the railroad companies than the State, will trump up some false and malicious charge and have them arrested and fined, af- ter going through with a pretended trial, when probably tho decision of the judge has been made known to those railroad pimpa eight or ten hours before he had delivered it in court, and they during this time was out- heralding it over the county, telling the people that the law had been vin- dicated when in fact, to the shame and The negro hasq disgrace of a civilized country, it had simply been trampled under foot to satisfy the promptings of a desperate monopoly. A man, for his opposition to the railroad companies, their allies and other monopolists’ combinations in a a fow years more if this matter is not checked, will be arrested and finea for contempt of court. Such really is the intent at present, but under a dif- ‘Wheu riding on their lines take no- Now, for what are so many free They must have some Thoy are simply given for their After your grain is ready for the The Bt this, as you will readily tend to make their business appear|A. & N. division of the B. & M. In any ing business where competi- tion is allowed there is always plenty of competitors. Thav the business pays them an enormous profit is prov. en from the fact, that parties who commenced the business only a few years ago with not more than five hundred dollars, boast that to-day they are worth over a $100,000, and of course the railroad companies made a like amount in the same length of time. Now while you have been honestly laboring and toiling both early and late to keep that grim monster “‘want” from your doors, and some of you without hardly sufficient clothing to protect you from the storms’ blast, they have been amassing princely for- tunes, and are to-day reveling in lux- urios on the money which you ob. tained by hard toil and many priva- tions, In every town any size you will find three or more drug storee, dry goods stores, grocery stores, herd- ware stores, and in fact though profits are small and it takes a great num- ber of years to accumulate a few thousand dollars, there is a strong competition 1n every branch of the mercantile business. Why is it not so in the grain business in which they could muke a fortune in a few years’ That it is not so, is certainly sufficie: t proof that competition is not allowed. 1f in the approaching election the companies desire to use fifty ora hun- dred thousand dollars to secure ‘he election of some of their men, they simply charge yov a little more freight or charge that suffering family a little more for the coal they buy. During the winter to spare, thresher will ty for our own consumption and some | agcertain, if you have not already, Indeed it is very seldom that we have just reasons to complain. Should there be in our sectiona slight failure, our country with its vast re- sources, its varied climate and fertile soil, brings forth more than enough to sustain our population, and has a sur- plus for other nations that reveled in luxury while this beautiful land of ours was an untrodden wilderness, It will not be long before the hum of the be heard in our midst, and the golden grain will soon be ready for the market. result of hard toil and great exertion on your part, your granaries will bs well filled, and you ought to recive a fair remuniration for the same, Asa But will not be the case. Rather how many free passcs have the railroad compan- ies issued sincs last harvest, amount paid to bribe legislaturemen, United States, state, county and town officers, lawyers, juries, witnesscs, prosecuting attorneys, judges and pimps in every county, ciy, town, village and hawlet within this state, as well as many oth- er states. Whenever a man is very particular to uphold the railroad com- panies, if you will investigate you will find thst he is riding on free passes and perhaps has reaped many Sother favors for his influ- ence. That he is simply performing the service for which he has’ been em- ployed. Farmers, if there was a fair competition there would be three or this you cannot obtain, because you will be compelled to share largely with the railroad companies and their em- missaries. A great deal has been said about monopoly, and yet some of you to consider this last proposition, but before he maide up his mind it was withdrawo, aud he never gave himself any coucern about it. That is all he koows of tho matter, and is too vusy with his book to know any more. Tue New York Times denounces S.erctary Ohandler, of the navy de- pattment, for his outrageous conduct in issuing a circular requiring the age, term, state and soforth of every em- ploye under him, The object of the circular is simply to scara them into Jay Hubbell's voluntary contribution, and to pay up or leave, The argu- ment of the T'imes scoms reasona- ble, and shows clearly that this is the only possible significance and purpose of the circular, If so, it is certainly undignified and illegal. The Times calls the attention of the prestdent to it in these words: The circular from the head of the navy department practioally snggests to every employe who reciive it, that the wfluence by which he received his appointment may control his reten- tion in office, and the employes know only too well that that itfluence is conditioned on the prompt and gen- erous compliance with such demands as that of the congreesional commit. tee, The connection thus established between the responsible head of a great executive department and the action of the congressional committee is one of which, as we have already suggested, the president may very properly take notice, Tue Leavenworth Times is growing warm on the demand for public build- ings— a whack at the spoils as well as the other cities. It says editorially: ““The T'imes is not engaged in abus- ing United States Senators. We are anking them to give us public build- ings. We need them as friend The 1dea of needing public buildings ‘‘as friends” is refreshingly new. There is one thing that can he said for ‘‘public buildings” strictly as friends that does not characterize the friends we ordioarily have, They will stand by you as long as you stand by them, rain or shine, Tuosk Yankton county bonds stand in the way of Dakota's admission, There are other counties with a com- plement of fraudulent bonds that are troublesome also. A new way to get rich is to go west, organize a new county in & territory on a false peti- tion, issue half & million of bouds, sell them to third parties without notice, divide the swag, go on farther west and organize some more, may not know what it means. ‘It is the exclusive right to govern and con- trol a certain line of business at one or more places.” In order that you may be able to receive a just remuner- ation for your grain, there must be a fair competition. This canuot be so long as the right to buy and ship is controlled by amonopoly. We would uot have it understood that we are opposed to capital, and its logitimate use; but opposed to the combination of 1t for the purpose of curtailing the rights of the people, If capitul is rightli employed and distributed it is one of the most powerful and benifi cent of all agencies for the civilization and amelioration of mankind, Railroad corporations are created by law for the sole purpose of transpor- wation, But leaving their own legiti mate sphere, they have usurped rights and privileges which if not checked will soon destroy the freedom of the people. By discrimination between individuals they reward political fa- vors and claim for themselves the con- trol of priyate intorests. ln every department of our government, both state and national, the influences are more orless folt. They enter our po- litical conventions and seek to control the nominations, Should they fail in this, then they rely on buying them either before or after election, With such an amount of money and men under their control they can accom- lish most anything that they may de sire, Itis the aim of these corpora- tiors to destroy the influence of all persons who undertake to oppose them. In order to blacken their good names and characters they will circu- late false and malicious reports about them. And the more popular and in- fluential the man the more bitterly will they persecute him. Should you doubt it come out manfully and oppose them in their nefarious schemes, snd it will not be long, (should the people believe what these monopolists say), before they would think you was one of the biggest rascals in the country, To faoilitate and assist them in this work they have subsidized over two-thirds of the press of the country. They have invaded the sacred sanctum of many of our district courts. And should you seck any redress of griev- ances tians, they will heat you as they have their paid hirelings there to swear to whatever they may need. If they fail to swear you out of the courts or swamp you with their money, they will then appeal to yonr juages and give them a gentle re- inder of past favors, It 18 a very difficult matter to convince a judge so that he will decide against the rail- road companies, when he has his wokets full of free passes over their ines for himself and friends. By free passes, discriminating in freight rates and other favors, they have ivfluenced a certain nmumber in each town and county to represent snd wesist them, They prefer men who are deemed respeotable because their influence will be greater, and will also four grain buyers in every railroad town. Your mcrchants would then buy your wheat, mnot expecting to make very much on it, but to hold your trade and receive the profits of it in their stores. Whether their business engegos all their time or not, they wust be there, henco thoy would losé no time in competing for your grain, In every railroad town in the enst you will find plenty of grain buyers, Thero the raiiroad companies build and own their elevators, and hire a man to attend to them, who charges the buyers from u half cent to acent and o half per bushel for elova- ting. There as many as desire can buy grain without any discriminating in freight rates, Yes, but we fancy the raiiroad companies will tell you “‘that a8 many 28 desirecan buy here,” But this, we believe, you know is not true. They will not allow 1t. They will not ship any grain except 1t hasses through the elevators on their ines, and in order to comply with this you must sell to their agents who own the clevators, When Mayor Brannen, of Falls City, a few years ago desired to ship corn, the B. & M company informed him “‘that it must pass through their elevators at that place.,” He then #aid he would build an elevator, but they would not allow him to build it on their ground, and informed him “‘chat they did not want any more elevators built.” Now what objec- tion could they possibly have to Mr, Brannen building an elevator with his own money? The only reason that can be gi i that it would meke competition, the very thing they were seeking to avoid. Grain buyers ought to be the agents of the people; but in this state they are not. They are the agents of the railrosd companies. And there is no doubt but that the railroad companies recelve a certain per cent on all grain bought by these agents. season what untold suffering befalls the poor, the distressed widow and orphan children, how many cold and dreary days they paes without suffi- & NOTED RUT UNTITLED WOMAN, [From the Boston Globe) Meawrs, Eitors — The above isa good 1fkences of Mrs. Lydia E. Plak- ham, of Lynn, Mass., who above allother human befngs may be truthfally called the “Dear Friend of Woman," Assome of her correspondents love to call her, 8he 13 sealously devoted to her work, which fs the outcome of a lifostudy, and is obliged to keep six lady nssistants, to help her answer the large correspondence which daily pours in upon her, each bearing its special burden of sufTering 'y Gt release from it. Her Vegetable uad s a medicine for good and not evil purposes. 1 have personally investigated it and am satisfied of the truth of this. On acoount of fts proven merite, it fs recommended And prescribed by thebest physicians in the country, One aya: “It works like a charm and saves much pain, It will euro entirely the worst form of falling of the uterns, Lencorrhma, frregular and painful Menstruation, all Ovarfan T Inflammation and Uleeration, Floodings, ol ents and the con- sequent spinal weakness, and s especially adapted to the Change of Lifo.” 1t permentes portion of the system, and gives new life and vigor, It removes faintne destroys all craving for stimulants, and o noss of tho stomach, It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sloepleasness, Dopression and Indigostion, That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and_backache, is always ‘permanently cured by fts use. 1t will at all timos, and undar all eireumstances, act in harmony with the law that governs the female rystem, Tt costs only $1. per bottle or six for §5.,and is sold by druggists, Any advice required aa to special eases, and the names of many who have boen restored to perfoct Bealth by the use of the Vogetablo Compound, can b obtained by uddresdng Mrs. P, with stamp for reply, at her homo in Lynn, Mass. For Kid nt of efther acx this compound is cient fire to keep them warm on ac- count of the high price of coal. Coal that we ought to receive here for 4 a ton costs us $7. This difference is taken from the pockets of the toilini masses and given to a fow rich anc heartless monopolists. Passenger rates in the East are from a cent and a half to three cents per mile. Here they are from four to ten cents, and freight is more than double. Farmers, you are the ones that suffer most by this. They pay you less for your grain and stock and charge you more for your merchandise. If passenger and freight rates were putdown to what they should be, there would bea suflisient saving in one year to pay your taxes for eight or ten years. If this does not concern you I know not what would. You should thoroughly investigate this matter, you need for your grain and stock all it is worth, and ere long by a proper endeavor on your part, you will obtain 1t. Give those monopolist hirelings to know that you are acquainted with their nefarious schemes, and that you will not be swindled by them any longer; that you are determined to have your just dues. Watch them and 1t will not be long until you catch them endeavoring to swindle you. If you shut your eyes and liesupinely on your back and let them tie you hand and foot you ought to be slaves. We warn you that at ‘he present state ot progress, in ten years more their pow- er will be beyond your control, and yours would ther be Ireland’s fate. Had she taken warning in time she could have averted a great deal of her suffering. Act the part of prudence and take warning in time. See that tried and true men are nominated and elected to rep- resent you. And if you find one capering to the railroad companies spurn him with the utmost contempt 80 that others in the future may take warning and not follow in his foot- steps. You have some powerful and dangerous combinations with which to contend, and in order to bring them under subjection, it will be necessary for you to thoroughly organize against them, as organization isthe only means of giving force to your views, These monopolies have ‘grown to be such a giant of ovil, that either they or civil liberty must go down. There is no possibilily of av iding it. They are tho common robber of the peo- ple andby the people they must be put down, *¢*“Every truth has two sides look at both before committing your self to cicher.” Kidney-Wort chal- lenges the closest scrutiny of its in- gredients and 1ts grand results, It has nothing to fear from truth. Doc- tors may disagree as to the best meth- ods and remedies, for the cure of con- stipation and disordered liver and kid- neys. But those that have used Kid- ney-Wort, agree that it is by far the best medicine known. Its action is prompt, thorough and lasting, i KIDNEY-WORT] HE GREAT CURE FOR R-H-E-U-M-A-T-X-S-M As it is for all the painful discases of the KIONEYS, LIVER AKD BOWELS.| Tt cleanses the system of that causes the dreadful only the viotims of rheumatism can realize THOUSANDS OF CASES lof the ‘worst forms of this terrible discasel havo been quickly relieved, and in short| PERFECTLY CURED, PRICE $1, 1IQUID er DRY, 8OLD by DRUGGISTS,| 5 mail (€ Witkos, T SHDRO IR o7, Barlin KIDNEY-WORT i If not why do they so lulounlf guard and protect them, and not allow any eompelition. If you desirs you could not buy and ship grain at any station ou the B, & M. railroad. A little experience will teach you a lesson as it has others in the past, that you would long remember. You might pay the samo that their agents did, and 10 a short time you would break up and they would make plenty of money. They would charge you ex« i880, SHORT LIKE. 1880, KANSAS OITY, 3t Joe & Douneil Blnffs R LT e R tas ot Uirect Line $o 8T, LOULE A orbitant rates and swindle you in every conceivably way. The wrecks of other wen who have undertaken to com- pete with them and pave the way so that farmers could obtain what their grain and stock isreally werth are strewn by the wn})}-idu as & warning to others not to embark iu the same hazardous undertaking. It is a fact that certain parties own and control the exclusive right to buy and ship your grain and stock and not ouly these but the lum- ber, coal and lime at certain stations of the railroad. It is reported and not disputed that the lieutenant gov- ernor of this state has said right at quite a number of stations on the U, P. R. R. If this is a fact is it not ‘he Weat, sot, Omaha: Neb, ¥rom O A trains leave 55 . i, ¢ 4o chenge 0! cara between Omaha ond ¢4, 4OuiS, 80d i ano betwoen OMAHA £ 4 NEW YORK iy, 04, 'via Bi. Jo Tickaks for walo #h Wosk. O DAWE A Gin e A, probable that certain parties control this right at quite a number of the stazions on the A, & N, division cf the ons, Tics ob 3 1030 Parobam shiees wnsurpassed ndant testimonials show, “Mrs. Pinkham's Liver Pills," eays one writer, “are hebest in the world for the cure of Constipation, Billousness and Torpidity of the liver. Her Blood Purifler works wonders in its speeial line and bids fair o oqual the Compound in its popularity. All must respect her as an Angel of Mercy whose solo ambition i to do good to others. Philadelphia, Pa, ) Mrs A, M. D. THE McCALLUM WACGON BOX RACKS. = NTED =~ WARRAY o g Can Be Hand!ed By a Boy. Tho box need never be taken off the wagon and all the -helled Grain and Grass Seed Is Save 1t ostaloss thau tho old atvie cacks. Every standard wagon is sold with our rack comple ¢ BUY NOHE wITHOUT iT. Or buy the attachxents an apply thom to your old wagon box. For sale i Nebrasaa by J. C. CuAvk, L nvol zoDE, Grand Hagourrr & CHARLIS & OHEODEER, Columbus, BPANOGLE & FUNK, Ked Cloud. Red Oak, lowa, Tow . inthe wst, ar or send o them for to us, J. Holallum Bros. Hauuf’g Co., Office, 24 West Lake Stree’, Chil 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING YEHICLES NOW IN USE. They furpa s all other s for exsy riding. style and durabilicy, They are for sale by all Lewding Car- riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country. SPRINGS, GEAR3 & BODIES For salo by Henry Timken, Patentce anc Builder of Fine Carriag s, BT LOWIXsS, - - MO. i1-6m Are a:knowledzed to be the best by a'l who have put them to a practic:] test. ADAPTED 710 HARD & SUFT COAT, COKE GR WO0O0D. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE €0., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, W. J.DAVRNPORT, “Jeneral Agum, RS SOLE AGENTS FOIl OMAHA,