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{ 4 THE DAILY: BEE-~OMAHA SATURDAY, JULY 49, The Omaha Eee Vo1 ished evary morning, excent Sanday Ehe on.7 Mon ay worning Asily, TExMS BY MAIL One 3 v+ + 810,00 | Three Months . $3.00 Bix Alonths, 0,00 | One . 1.00 fHI WKEKLY BEE, publisked ev. ry Wednasday. TERMS POST PAID:~ e Year.. ...82.00 | ThreeMonths.. 50 gfl.\r':).. 1.00One + .. % Ayrnioas Nrws Coxpaxy, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the ""nited States. o0 ENCF—AlLl Communi. [ 130 slating to News snd Editorial mat- orm 11 e addressed to the EpIToR or Car ;\:KSS LETTERS—AIl Business BU et and Remittances should be ad- d:e to Tre OMARA Punuisiing Coum- yAxy. OMAMA, Drafts, Checks and Post- ffec ‘'rders to be made payable to the ydar i the Cowupany) The BEE PUBLISE.AG 00,, Props “, ROSEWATER. Editor " Rupublican stata Conven!ion. The republican electors of the state of Nebraskn are horeby called to send dele- Rates from the several counties to meet in state convention at Omal n Wednenday, September 2th, A. D, 1882, at 7 o'clock for the purpose of placing in nomi. p.m., 7 nation dates for the following named offices, v Governor, lientenant.governor, secretary of state, auditor, trensurer, attorney-gen- bral, commissioner of public linds and buildings, superintendent of public instruc- on, And to transact such other business as may properly come b fore the convention. The several counties are entitled to rep- eventatives in the state convention as ollows, baced upon the vote cast for Isanc Powers, Jr., in 1881, for regent of the state university: Giving one ( ) delegate to each one hundred +nd tity (150) votes, and one Aelegate for the fraction of seventy.five 75) votes or over; alto one delegate at 1arge for each oreanized county. ilE g Counties, | & |4 | Countion | & 3 H & - Adams.. .. 7 Antelope. ... 9 Boone .. 0 Buffalo 1 Butler. o Burt 14 Cass 4 [} 7 8 ) 5 1 [} 4 2 3 [ Dixon 4|Polk i 8 Dod §|Rod Wilow 10 K] 4 5 Hamilton, . Harla... Hire Holt.. Howard, . Hayes T 1% 18 recoru mende First, That no proxies be adwmitted to the convention, except such as are held by persons residing in the counties from which the proxies are given. Second. 'Chat no delegate shall represent on absent member of his d-legation, unleas be ba clothed with authority from the county convention, or is in possession of roxien from regulurly elected delegates {herenf Jauks W, Dawes, Chairman. Jonx STEEN, Secretary. TancoLy, Neh., July 6, 1882, CARDINAL red seems to be all the rage a: Chicago since the cable dis- pateh from London announced the se- lection of Archbishop Feehan into the oollogo of cardinals ONE of the new professors of the State university was recommended by Bayard Taylor, and the other by Gar- field. Who was the medium that offi cinted for the regonts in communica- ting with the apirit land. Tug Nebraskas consus frauds are de- veloping into a robust scandal,—St. Panl Pioneer Press, And this robust scandal, which makes every respectable Nebraskan blush for his state, never would have occurred had Nebraska been repre- sented in congress by a high minded honorable man, Oug Val, plumes himsolf on eleve. ting agricultur-. Val. is like the man who thought the lamp-post was get- ting very unsteady. Instead of agri- culture being elevated by Val.,, our jovial 1epresentative has often been elevated by the product of agriculture, Cora juice, rock and rye, and distil!- ed barley are powerful elevators, Gy, THAVER writes to the Oaceola Record that he will vote for woman suffcage, The geueral could never think of deserting the mothers who raised the babies to be kissed,—- 'e- publican, Tho gallant general is wasting his swectness on the desert air, Most of the women who clamor for suffrage have never had any babies to kiss, and are not likely to have any. ers thun Kansas, and 1t wou!d there- fore be emimently in acoord with the etorual fitness of things for Nobraska to i ve one of our national baukoers sent 1o the national seuate. It ouly remains for the national bankers to pool their issues, and agree upon their man, — BeckETARY OHANDLER seems bent upon waking a record for himself as the ygreat Awerican sea dog. He has vrdered the American monitors upon the high seas, although Admiral Pors ter who ought to know more about our navy than Mr, Ohaudler regards the experiment as very risky. The officors and men detailed for the mon- itors Montauck avd Nantucket order- ed ou a trial cruise, will not be much encouraged by the fate of the Duich 4 iron clad Adder, which lately went away to sea and never returned. This vessel e " 1! | church, 1 4 2 | look clads built by the Datch government for coast defense. Her armor was five and one-half inches in thickness, she carried two twelve ton gunsin her turret, had engines of four hun- dred horse power and a displacement of one thousand six hundred and fifty tons and a maximum speed of seven knots an hour. How the accident occurred will never be known, as all on board perished; but the Adder has been found cap- sized near Sheverongen, and it is sup- d was knoce ver in asquall, a8 was the British iron-clad Captain in the Bay of Biscay some years ago. The Montauk and Nantucket are sin- gle-turret vessels of about 500 tons displacement, and if they can stand an ordinary gale without being in im minent danger of following the Cap- tain and Adder to the bottom they will disappoin’ those who know them best. As Admiral Porter has declared that monitors cannot go to sea with- out b ng towed it is to be presumed that escorts will be provided for the pair, which will not only do the towing but be on hand to rescue the peoplo in event of storm. The value for active naval service of vessels that cannot be trusted alone out of sight of land may well be doubted, and as ex-Secretary Robeson professes the utmost faith in the seaworthy qualitics of the moni- tors he ought to take the proposed cruise and report his experience—if he ever gets back. The officers and men who are compelled to test the correc’'ness of his theories are not to be envied. But Mr, Chandler cares nothing about the lives of these men, Heo is bound to show that he knows more about monitors than Admiral Porter. In due time ho may discover that he is an excellent naval wrecker, Ir must be very gratifying for friends of the university to learn through the only religious paper in Omaha, that Prof. Grube, who has just heen elected to the chair of modern largaages in the Nebraska university, “belongs to the reformed Reform is necessary as Mr. Tilden had it in 1876, and a professor that belongs to the reformed church must be qualified to teach most any language from Sanscrit to Hottentot. OTHER LANDS THAN OUR All eyes are siill tumed toward Egypt. Up to the prescnt the out- is not very encournging for an early close of the war, or on the English call it the vebellion, So far the advantage is still with the rebels, under Arabi Bey, and they are gath- ering force from day to day. Eogland made a serious blunder in going to war before she wus ready, Had she waited a few wecks horarmy and navy could have made blow follow blow quick enough to have crushed Arabi a% short notice instead of giving him time to gather strongth and power for rosistance. By the time the British army of 20 090 are landed in Egypt ard properly put in motion they will able to dis- will perso Arabi's forces if he givo them a chance for fight in the wpen held. Egypt will, hower, bo a vory ditferent battle-ground from India, where thero are dense massea of pop ulation and whers supplics of food for an invading army can always be se- cured, With the lower Nilo basin under water, us it will bo in Auguse and September, the commissariat will present unusual difliculties, and the Koglish regiments will readily fall a prey to disease. If their foes wisely conciude to fight like the Arav or Moor rather than to mest them in the field where artillery will decide every battle, the campaign may bo indefi- nitely prolonged. But whatever may be the hazards and difliculties of the work which lies before England, the issue has been joined. Her forces are in motion; her honor is pledged; and she is bound to hght it out cont what it may. There is, however, another aspect to the 8o called Egyptian rovolt, As the sovereiyn of Erypt, the Turkish sul- tan, is bovnd 10 exert his power to re- store order, A cabinet council held at Constantinoplo has decided to com- backed by the European powers, to Egypt to put down the rebellion, Ironclads and (ransports ave already | the line of the Su was one of the ten second class ircn | couragement for his course from sec- tions of Barope that are jealous of the power of Great Britain and anxious to foree her into a costly contest, The parliamentary explanations which were made on Monday in Paris and London were explicit and satis- factory. The French government has virtually decided to allow England to act alone. It may reud a force of marines to protect tho line of the Suez canal, but its operations will be M. stated that the French marines would purely defensive, de Freycinet not tako any measures to secure the safoty of the Sweetwater canal from the Nile. This is the fresh water supply not only of Tsmailia but of Port Said, and if sy operations on . ca are to be cffective, they must include a com from the pleto defense of this chana Nile. It 18 probablo that the marines will bo kept on board of ship, and that the vote of for which the ministry asked bo applied almost exciusively to naval The premier may not understand the temper of the French people, but he apparently hasthe sup- port of tho legislature, He has chos the cautious but inglorious part of iu- action. The defeuce of the Saex canal by the marines will be nominal, but not effective, England is expected to do all the serious work. This resuli will be hailed with satisfaction in Lon- don, where the risks and embarrass- ments of a joint expedition are fully appreciated. For military as well as diplomatic roasons; one agent is better than two in work of thissort. The isolation of KFrance may not be credit- able to her government, but it isa substantial gain so far as Earopean in- terests aro concerned. credit has will exponditures, letter written by Arabi Pasha to Mr. Gladstono a few days before the bombardment of Alexandria is not tho sort of letter which would be written by an ignoraut military adven- toror. While Arabi professes a de- sire to romain friendly with Eagland and to “keep her road t» India,” he claims tho right to wage a defensive war in case it is forcud upon him, He assorts that if Bogland fires the first gun the Egyptians will be absolved from all troaty obligations toward her an assertion the truth of which no one can deny—and without boasiing of his ability (o fight the English suc- cessfully hs assures them that the Bzyptiens are determined to die for oouutry, The letter is in all ra- spects dignifizd and patriotic, and had it boen wristen by a Boer or an Af- ghan during Lord Beaconsfield’s rule Mr. Gladstouo would have found 1t a manly and noble document. Contrasted with Mr. Gladstone’s speech on Monday night, Arabi’s let- ter scoms all tho more creditable to its author. Mr. Gladstone defended the governmons from the charge of not havivg landad a force to sujpress disorder i. Alexandria immedistely after tho bowbardment of the city on tho gronud tius such ection “would have been grusily disloyal to the voice of Euarope aud the conference.” Ap- parently it was not disloyal to the voice of Earope and the conferenco to kuock Alexandria to pieces and set it ou fice with tha ahells of tho English floct, bat why it would have been dis- loyal to oxtinguish the fire avd to put a 8top to pillage and massacre is obvi- ous only o Mr. Gladstone, There is avidentiy a distinction botween bom- barding » city and protecting it from fire and riot, but, curiously enough, Mr, Gladstone holds that 1t is the bombardwent which is permissibleand the prolection which is grossly im- proper. Thomas Guardia, who has presided over the destinies of the republic of Costa Rica for nearly 12 years, died on the 7ch inst, His death has been been expected for some months, Thos, Guardia was, in many respects, a re- markable man, Ho had a strong wilt of his own, and since fortune first placed in his hands the reins of power he has ruled the country with a rod of iron. It may be remembered that he attained power by the celebrated rev- olution of April, 1870, Personally he was an igoorant, unlettered man, ply with the rcquest of Groat Britain, | whose ides, 80 far as society was con- that | cerned, was to present the greatest the sultan shall send a sufficient force display possible, He was uo politi- cian, and through his whole career in the republic gave no evidencs of his in motion, and alarge body of Mu-|gkill in that regard, except by a fow hommedan troops will soon bo on the | decrees, which will die with him, He Nennaska has more nationa! bauk. | Y to the seat of war. Tt remains to | had the crudest idsas of finance, and be seen, however, whether these Turkish troops will fight the rebellious Egyptians and Arabs, who are of their own faith and kindred, or whother they will go over to Arabi Bey in a body and join i a holy war of the Moslem against the infidel. Such a turn of affairs is by no means improbable. Arabi Bey has enacted an intense feeling of religious fanata- cism, and he is personally so popular among all Tarkish troops that it would not be a very difficult matter for him to create a stampede, or bring about & firo in the rear on the British forces, The discovery of secret correspon- deuce betweon the French agitators sod the Egyptian rebelswill natur- ally arouse a feeling of distrust Questionable. There is no doubt that Arabi Bey has received some en- plunged his country into an abyss of debt, from which it will not recover for many years, Ho wished to wssociate bis pame with sowe grest uational work and the idea of an inter-oceanic rail- road captivated his imagindtion, He commenced it, but began the work of grading and irack laying in the center of the country instead of on the shore. As may be supposed,isuch a railroad cost a fortune, aud two loco- motives, which were imported to be- gin the work, cost for land transpor- tation alone over $30,000 each, Such extravagance naturally brought with it a result which everybody expected The millions which the bondholders furnished were dissipated; spent with- betwm_m the Eaglish and the Freuch, | out reason or purpose, until nothing aud will make their effectual co-oper- | remained, But still Guardia clung to ation in the Egyptian campaign very | the ides of a rai'road, and for five years spent cvery cent of revenue he could divert to the purpose to the prolongation of the railroad. To-day Costa Rica is ruined in credit, and every resource is pledged in one way or another to the ideas of the late presdent, The millions Guardia spent have simply given the country a few miles of railroad, divided into three scetions, and which will never be of positive benefit until *hey are con- nected, | It is not unlikely that when Eng- | intlicts her protectorate Egypt, to which she strengthen the French alliance, over | will Iand socurs she will abrogiate thoee articles in the troaties made with eastern states, | techuically called capitulations by which it was provided that all _of- fennes committed by personaof any vationality shall be tried before the consul general «f that r . The e in Africa will be experience of Fra ention which will readily bo ta- There it was found England. vl to conviet anybody for any offense oven murder before his own consul, and surely Bugland would hardly suffor an Ezyptian, who mur- dered one of her subjects under her own protectorate to be tried by a na-. than in an tive consul or eisewhere English tribunal, The destruction of the ancient city of Smyrna by fire, and the burning of 1,400 houses and turning of 6,000 peo- ple out of doors is melancholy news. It was for centurics the most import- ant city of Central Asia, and the mart for the trade of the Levant, Itsan- nual imports amount to about fourteen millions of dollars, and its exports to twenty-three millions, The staple ex- ports consist of raisins, figs, opium, sponges, cotton, carpets, tobacco, and grain, while the chief imports are made up of velvets, silks, timber, nails, copper, rico coffee, sugar, pe- troleum, and various manufactured products. The city has a safo harbor, and the port, which is surrounded by a stone wall, is capable of giving ac- commodation to some threc thousand vessols, narrow and wretchedly paved, no im- provements having heen quite & century, The mostly built of wood, and rarely ex- ceed one and a half stories in hoeight, It has two railways, the Smyrna & Aden and the Smyrna & Lassaba, the one being cighty-one miles in length and the other a little one hundred miles, The etrects of Hmyrua are made for houses are iore than The inhabitants are mainly Orientals, and number somewheroe in the nigkborhood of one hundred and sixty five thousand, The anniversary of the death of the Prince Imperial afforded an occasion for even many who are not Bonapart- ists to attend the memorial mass out of sympathy at his tragic end, The oceasion waa also seized 10 re-start two Imperialist nowspapers that had suspended, owing to the bad times. The credo of the resurrectionists is, Prince Jerome's son as Napoleon V., surrounded with the legend of mon oncle, having in his veins the blood of the kings of Wurtemburg and Italy, with all thatis good in couservative democracy. tradiction, T: is on the Ocleanists, however, that the republicans are keoping an argus watch, and rightly 50, for of lute they are coming to the front, The Duc d’Anmale is accused of holding at Chantilly next to royal receptions, intended to sap tho trinity of liberty; equality and fraternity, The repubiicans ought to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest the lato dis- course of the home minister, who re- minded them that in their tactics of discussing and attacking individuals, examining men inctead of measures, thoy were ivjuring the repwhlic. Man is thus even a con- An Awmerican rebellion has broken out in China, The American consul at Bhanghi is reported as iu open arms against John Russell Young, the new American minister, and theve is much commotion smong American residents thereat. Shanghi, 1t will be remem- berod, was convulsed over a similar rebellion some yesrs ago, when an eminent Omaha statesman, Col, Fiye- Cent Myers, was consul at the same place, and George K. Seward hap- pened to be the American minister in China, New Zaaland is one of the best coal- ing stations of the English navy and merchantmen in that section of the world and is utterly unprotected. In case of a war breaking out butween Eugland and any foreign power, noth- ing would be easier than the seizure of this colony, although doubtless the ubiquitous Eoglish would be some- where in the neighborhood and make it warm £r any invador. countries in blood is likely to 1, ami- | cably rettled by arbitration Presi- dent Arthur has been invited to act a3 arbitrator between the would be belligerents, obtained, and will soon be shipped to Ireland to be used in support of the police authorities, This seems too atrocious to be true, though English tyranny has no lim The dispute about the bounar; lines between Mexico and Guatemsla which has threatened to deluge those Crounse for Congrese. Fremont Tribune, We place at the head ot our edit rial columns the name of Judgoe| 188,01 a8 the Tribune’s cindidate for congress from In the of nomi nation and election of the coming rep- resentative this paper has no ax to grind It owes nothing to any of the ants now seeking tho cffice and | cts uothing in the way or remu- | veration for its mupport, It places before the republican voters of the Third district a man whom we positively balicve will er representing the senti the people of this portion of hraska than any other now 1 th Judge Crounse 1s & wan who has a record that any statcsman may foel proud of. No connection with any land office, census, or any other variety of fraud, can be imputed to him, Ho has long been & resident of Nebraska and 18 thoroughly and completely in- formed on every measure pertaining to our past, present and _future develop- ment, He bas served one term in congresa as representative from this atate and it is but just to say that Ne- braska never had an abler man in the lower houee than Judge Crounse, He is at present revenue collector at Om- aha and is an efficient official. In pre- senting our candidate we do so with the conviction that he is decidedly the ablest and best man in the race and we commend him as one in every way worthy of the support of every true ond honest republican in Dodge county and North Nebraska. Spics forbids extended remarks, but we shall have much more to say here- after. Government Rellroad Uwnorship San Francisco Chronicle. Tn oll countriea where ays do most of the land transportation pubiic opinion tending strongly in the direction ol wovernment control and ownership. It has been statod in these columns that the colony of New South Wales has constructed and Iwags, The money the solony had ta burrow for this purpose constitutes the greatest pact of its debt. But this debt is no burden on the taxpayers, because the uet profits of operating the roads are devoted to the payment of the interest aud prin- cipal of the railway bonds. The coleny of New South Wales bad no difficulty in borrowing ull the money required for railway construction at 4 and 1} per cenr. Her entire railway sys tem realized a net profit of b} per cent in 1881; some of the roads as high as 8to 9 per cent. This b} per cent pays the interest on the ruilway debt and leaves a margin of more than one per cent to go toa sinking fund for the ultimate redemp- tion of the bonde. And yet, by the statement of the 9ontroller of rail- ways, the rates of transporta‘ion are reasonable, and incomparably more favorable to the public than the rates charged by railway corporationsin the Pacilic states and territories of Amer- ice. This shows that government proprietorship 13 better for the people than eorporation ownership and con- trol, The late Senator Thomas H. Ben- ton, of Missouri, if not the father of the idea of a transcontinental railway, did more than auy other public man towards its consummation. It was his constant thought that the road should be built, owned aud controlled by the government; and he pointed out as among the objections to corpo- ration ownership that such corpora- tion would in this become a power dangerous to the country and defiant of the goverament! Time has viodi- cated the enrire correctness of this view. The men who now control the Central und Union Pacific and their system also control the legislation of the states and the territories in which their roads lie,und manege congress as much as they plesse. They lsugh at railway commissions, boards for the equalization of taxes, and easily de- feat all measures for the correction of abuses in transportation charges. In spite of the law they shirk their just taxes and snap their fingers contempt uously in the face of the decizions of the courts. The railway corporations of this state alone are taxed on thirty millions lees than the actual value of their land and other properties, The single objection to Government proprietorship of the railways that is worthy a serious thought 18 this: that it might dargercusly enlarge the lmnum of the federal government and end to gross official corruption, have considered this objection with due gravity, and the conclusion reached is that it is not at all an over- powering one. Certainly it would multiply the aents and employes of We | #300. BARGAINS, xnr Lands. BEMIS FIFIRENTH ARD DOUGLAS 8IS., Beautitul building sites on Sherman avenue 10th strect) south of Povpleton's and J. J. Brown's r.sidenccs—tho tract belongirg to Sona- tor” Paddock for w0 'many year—being 853 foo: west frontage on the wvenue, by from 360 to 650 feet In depth, running castward to the Omaha & St, Paul K. R. Will scll in strips of 50 feet or more trontage on the avenuo with full depth to the railroad, will ecll the above o about any terms that p r may desire, To parties who will to build housea costing #1 d upwards will sell with- ut any payment down for one year, and b to 10 qual annual payments thereaftor at 7 per cent iterest, To parties whedo not Intend improv- will sell for cno-sixth down and ayments therealter at 7 per cent endof Farnum strect—will give any length of time requiredat 7 per cent interast, Als0 a splendi 1 10 acre block in_ Smith's addi- tion on_same iiberal ter ne foreg. ing. No. 805, Haif lo* on near 20th €100 No 904, Lo® on 18¢h strest near Panl, $1200. No 302, Lot 50x280 fect on 16th ssreot, near Nicholss. No 209, One quarter acre Dutton 500, 0 207, Two lots on Blondo ncar Ircne street, £300 each. Tvwo lots on Georzia near Michigan Burs street, near , Twelve choice restdence lots on Hamil- 8 ct in Shinn's addition, fine and eightly €0 o §500 cach, No 204, Beautiful half lot on St. Mary's av- enue, B0XI80 fect, near Bishop Clarkson's and “0th trect, $1000 No & i i lots on_Park avenue, 50x iway, $500 e 's addition an Avenuc uear Foppletou's, $3.0to 8150 cach. No 25, Cholce lotann Park avenue and strecb ar line on ruad to Park, $40) to $1000 cach ~0 285, Eleven lots ‘on Deca'ur and Irene , near Saunders street, 375 to 3450 cach, 82, Lot on 19th near Paul strect, §750. No 241, Lot 55x140 feet near St. Mary’s avenuc, an: 20th street, $1500. No 279, Lot on Decatar near Irene strect, $325. No 278, Four lots on Calawcll, near Saunders strect, 8600 cach, No 76, Loton Clinton street, near shot tower, No 275, Four lots on McLellan street, near Blondo, Kagan's addition, $225 exch, o274, Taroo lots near race course: make oftero, No 208, Beaut{fal cornor acre lot on Calitornia strect, opposite and adjoining Sacred Heart Con- vent grounds, $1000. No 260, 1,0t on Mason, near 15th stroct, $1,350 300 ous in ““Credic Foncier”and “Grand View' additions, just south-cast of U. P and B, & M. +ailroad i ‘epotu, ranging from £150 to $1000 each and on easy ternis, Beautiful Kesidence Lots at a bargain—very handy to shops +100 to 250 each, 5 per cent down nd 4 per cent Caul aud get plat and ull particu No 256, Full corner lot on Jones, Near 15th streot, $3,000. No 853, 4 wo lots on Center str. ing stroet, $900 for both or 8600 each. N Lot on Seward, near King street, t, near Cuii- 243, Halt loson Dodge, ncar 11h str'goo iour beautiful residence lots near ghtoi Coliego (or will scparate) §8,000, 0240, ''wo lots on Center, ncar Cuming strect, $400 ¢ oo iUk, Lat on Ldabo, near Gumng struot, 526 No 45, Boautitul corner acre 1ot on Cuming near Dutton street, near new Convent of Sucred teart, 81,600 No.'244, Lot on Farnam, ncar 18th etrost, 4,750, No 243, Lot 60 by 1 near St. Mary’s avenue, 8700, No2d1, Lot on Farnam, near 26th stroct, on Colege atreet, 1,000 N0 940, Lot 66 by 99 feet on South avenue, near Mason streot, $650. No 233, Corner lot on Burt, near 22d stroot, No 233, 120x132 foct o2 Harney, near 24th, streot (will cut it up)§2,400. No 234, Lot on bouglas streot, near 25th = +'N°232, Lob on Pior streot, near eward 0No 227, Two lots on Decatur, near Irene stree’, <ach: 0 123, Lot 143 by 441 feot on Shervian avo- nue (16th st.cet). nea Grace, §2,400, will di vide, No'2:0, Lot 23x6ret on 'Lodge, near 13th make au offer. No 2.7, Lot on 23rd near Clare, 8600. No 216, Lot on Hawilton near Kin No 240, Lot un ISth street, 200, 0907, Two lots on 16th. near Paclfic strest, $1,600, No 04, Beautitul resilcnce lot on Division street, noar Camiog, $600 No '19¢} Lots on 16t street, near #0600, No 194, Lots on Sauuders streot, ne.r Sew- ard 8000, No19i}, Two lots on 224, near Grace street, Pierce, No 1024, Two lots on 17th street, near white lead orks, 1,050, N 188} Ode barracks, $400. No 101, Lota o Farker, strect, noar lrene full block ten lots, near the No 183’ Two lots on Case, near 21st stroet (Kilt edgu), 6,00, the government, giving the political party in power a great advantage of the party out of power. But when- ever the party in power became cor- rupt and oppressive iuthe management of its trust, the party out would oppose the corruption and tyranuy, and the people would, from their groat inter- st 1 the watter, ivstantly dvmand a change of admiuisiration. We should The success of Arabi Bey's troopsin driving the Eaglish with consideravle loss from Ramleh scores the first vie- tory oa land for the Mohammedan. The effect of this success on the Egyp- tians will not easily be reckoned es- pecially as Arabi has declared a holy war under the standard of the prophet, which simply means that any Mus- sulman who dies on the field of battle will win eternal life at once in the garden of the Houris, and in the sev- enth heaven of Mohamet. The Dublin Freeman Journal charges that the government encour- agos the use of bloodhounds in huut. ing down those who commit agrarian outrages, and that a pack of trained dogs of that breed have already been have one-half the country constantly watching the other half to detect, ex- pose and punish wrong-doers. Under the exieting system of corporation ownership and control, we see the corporations corrupting all political bodies and defiant of all departments of government. Detection and ex- posure bring no punishment; hardly the blush of shame to the brazen faces of the tools employed by the corpora- tions to do thewr dirty work, Bright's Disease, Diabetes. Bewara of the stufl that preteunds to cure these diseases or other serious Kidney, Urinary or Liver Diseases, as as they ouly relieve for a time and makes you ten times worse afterwards, but rely solely on Hop Bitters, the only remedy that will surely and per- mauently cure you, It destroys end removes the cause of the disease so cflectually that it never returns. i No 180, Lot on Pier near Seward, 8650, Ah0 170, Lot on Pacilo strect, near 14th; make or, . No166, Six lots on Farnam, near 2ith st 2,400 L0 §2,550 cach, 4 s 210 163, Full block on 25th strreet, near race THE NMeCALLUM WAGON BOX RAGKS. WEIGHT ONLY 100 LBS’. o ANTED = = TFT. WAGON "YioE, BOX. Can fe Hand ed By a Boy. The box necd ne I'vl;y't (3} v‘v W the wagon nnd 1t cogtaless than the old eyl standard wagon ia old with our BUY HOG THIUT IT. Or buy the attachwents ar ‘ your old wagon box. Fur sl J. C. Cuavk, Linvoln, MAXNING & Tx88, On'nhn, Frev “gopk, Geand 18 and. Haooukrr & GREws, CHARL) 8 * GIHRODERR EPANOGLE S i ©. 11, CRaxy £ NE ¥ pp'y thon Nebraaia b L. W. B And avery first Ak hem for lirect to us. J. Moffallum Bros. Manuf'g Co., 0ffic ‘et La%e Stroe', Chil 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHIOLES NOW IN USE. They aro for sala by all Losding Car- riage Builders ai.d Dealers throughout the country. SPRINGS, GRAR{ & BODIZS For sale by Henry Timken, Patentce and Bullder of Fine Carriag s, ST LOULS, - - MO. j1m BAL CORSETS Every Corsot is warrantod satis- factory to its wearer in every way, or tho money will bo refunded by the person from whom it was bought. ‘The only Corset pronounced by our lendlnf physiclans not injurlous to tho wearer, and endorsed by ladics a3 the " most comfortable and'perfect Atting Corset ever naado, " PRICES, by Mal, Postage P Health Preserving, $1.60. Self-Adjusting, Abdominal (extra heavy) $2.00. Nursing, ) $2.00. #1.50. cverywheres Chicago, Il Are aknowledeed to be the best by a/l who have put them toa prat.c | test. ADAPTED TO H4KD & SUFT CDAL, COKE GR Wo0D. MANUFACTURED BY ourse, aud three lots Jn Gise's a2diti aundere and Cassius str 2,000, o0 oA Ot on 1sth el s, §2,000, toct, Gear whige lead 123x132 toet (2 near Popplcton's, §1,600, No 11, Thirty half acre lots in M lard & Cal- dwell » additions vu Sherwan avenue, Spring and 2arat ke streots, near the end of g eea streot car track, $850 to §1,500 each Nu 89, Lot on Chicazo, near 224 stacet, Noss, Lot on Calduw | -t vt lots) on 18th street, ar Saunders, No 80, Corner 10t wu vuasies, nes 2 ders street, §700. Gy ity oM Moy No 75, 6uxs2 foet on Pacitic, near Btb atreet 000, No€0, ighteen lots on 2Ist, 224, 234 and Sauders stecets, uoar Grace and Saun! e\ bridge, $500 cach Al S No 6, One fourth block (180x185 fect), nea the Convent of 1 oor Claire, on Hamilton stieet ©a he end of tne red street car track, §1 Lot No 5, on Marcy street, near 9 tl " BEMIS Rear Estare Acewgy 16th and Douglas Street, O A LA WNES. BUCK'S STOVE 60., 8 LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, ly Dyspepsia, Doctor," said a paticnt to Ly, What would you have?’ sa d the “the plaguc? indigestionis the © of coantl:s morial Check it €3rly With TAKKANT'S SELTZER APER'EST and o8- €APAIL OGS 161 LIVACH g Die ) wid 148 probable ©an equences, if neglectod SULL BY ALL DKUGGISTS Julzd-bm