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] { i { 1 THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA MONDAY, JULY 31, - Y ——— The Omaha Bee Published every morning, except Sunday #bo on.y Mon.tay worning daily, TIEKMS BY MAIL —~ One Yenr,.,..810.00 | Three Manthn..?.g Bix Montha. 0,00 | One IHE WEEKLY BEE, publisked ev- ry Wedueeday. TERMS POST PAID:— One Year,, Bix Mo atha,, .. 100 One .0 Asrricax News Coypany, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the CORRESPONDENCE—A!l Communi- 0 tions relating to News and Editorial mat- apn omld be addressed to the EpItor or Qas lire, NUSINESS LETTERS—AlN Business Yetters nand Remittances should be Aressed to I Omaua PupLisaiNg Com- PANY, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post. thoe Orders to be made payable to the vder of the Company| T BER PUBLISHING C0., Props ©, ROSEWATER. Editor. ~ Onvren Howe hasitell fixed. The district is unanimously for him to go to congrees, or the penitentiary. il ardidy GeN, Orook is badly wanted in Ari- zona, Even the Apache papooses cry for him, Jous M. THURSTON is very busy setting up the pins for both the repub- lican and democratic conventions in Douglas county. John is very pru- dent, he wants to be sure to control the nominations of both partiee. Heads I win, tails you lore, Tur Ninth congressional district of Towa appears on the eve of a revolt. Major Anderson’s purchase of his con- gressional nomination has thoroughly demoralizod the party and a whole- sale stampede is threatened unless he steps down. —_— THERE is a stampede among con- gressmen that throatens to leave the House without a quorum. A large number of eminent statesmen are rnshing home to mend their political fonces and no amount of patriotism can keep them in their seats, Tue president is beseiged by con- gressmen from the Mississippi valley who are alarmed at the threatened veto of the river and harbor bill. A shower of protests is also being received at the White House from boards of trade and merchants ex- changes in differont cities againat such aveto. It is likely the presi- dent will return the bill with a condi- tiona! signature, Our VAL is represcnted by the Washington reporters as very indig- nant over the conduct of his man Fri day Schwenck, and his friend Majors, in the forged census business. Val. is not so much indignant aboat their coaduct as heis about their being caught. He never was indignant over Schwenck’s swindling operations in the Norfolk land office 80 long as he kept out of the clutches of the de- tectives. AccorpING to the Republican there is nothing more abominable, detestable or corrupt in Nebraska than Tue Bee and its editor. Just previously before the person at the helm of the Republican started for Washington to become Valentine's clerk he offered his services to this monster of corruption and expressed a desirs to fill a position as sub-editor of TiE BEE, with (i prowise that he would ¢xpose the rottennees and ras- cality of the republican crew. His kind offor was respectfully declined and ths consclentious amatear re- turned like the dog to his own vomic, THE YELLOW PLAGUE, The yollow fover has made its ap- pearance at Matamoras, and the pec- ple on the Rio Grande are much alarmed. The Texan authoritics have taken the most vigorour preventive measures, The state troops have been ordered to guard the passes of the Rio Grande and a very rigid quaran- tine has been established on the rail- roads, New Orleans, Galveston, Charleston and Savannah have suf- fered from the ecourge nearly every year. The recent terrible visitation of Memphis proved that it was not confined to the sea coast. Scientific investigations which have been undertaken in the south con- cerning this disease have demonstrated that it is not ouly au imported but an indigenous poison. At thefirst touch of frost the germs descend into the warm sewers and tiuks of the ity and remain there in & torpid state until the hot summer sun has heated the air and decaying animal or vege- table substances, or other malarial influences have so corrupted the at- mosphere as to fit it for the active energies of these germs. For this reason we nctice that the plague sel- dom appears before the last of July and continues its work of destruction until the first frost. The existence of the scourge at Matamoras may naturally alarm the inhabitauts of the contiguous section, bu: the national board of health will probably check the spread of the dis ease by prompt and vigorous measures. The breaking out of the yellow feyer wmay arouse congress to make the sp- propristions which the vational board of health has asked for aud has failed to receive during the present season, 00 | Three Months,, 50 20 THE RIGHT TO GOVERN. 1t is too childish for any champion of woman's suffrage to claim that the right to vote is as inherent as life and liberty, * * * * Does any chnmsriun ot woman's suffrage contend that (he infant, male or fema'e, inherits the right to vote at its birth equaily with_the inherent right to life and liberty, - Tne DBer, No woman suffragist, so far as I know, has ever contended for any such tool thing. The inherent rights of children at birth depend upon nativi- ty and the system of government un- der which they areborn. A largepro- portion of children born into the world have not the right at birth and never attain to it in adolescence or old age. Such is the condition of human ity, male ana female, in China, Turkey, and governments of in Russia, in other monarchial ad-|the world and also of our own fe males at home. And now, since this pomt is settled, will you vouchsafe the iuformation whence comes your right to vote? How did you happen to grasp it and your sister not. Did yoa ever __Jask the female if she would consent to give it to you, or did she ever tell you to vote for her and by means of your vote to affect, abridge or destroy her rights of person or of property? As you proposo to withhold from the female this common right of citizonship, and as your question carries us back to rudimontal principles in_govern. ment, will you tell when and where, and how you get those rights of her that you propose to withhold? Who gave them to you and how long have you had them! Would not this be as good an oportunity as you will ever have to surrender them back to her? While you ponder these propositions will you be good enough to remember that ours is a government, not of mus- cle, but of brains, and ask yourself whether it is wise to exclude from the agencies of public +flairs one-half the brainiest and best of our citizenship. E. EsTABROOK. GeNerAL EstaBrook and other ad- vocates of woman sufirage labor un- der a delusion when they assert that ours is a government of brains and not of force. There is not a conntry on the face of the earth that floats a flag with any pretense to organized government that does not depend upon its ability to sustain 1t- self againat domestic violence and for- eign aggreasion by force of arms, In the language of Col. Bob Iugerscl', an 1illustrious pagan like Gen, Esta- brook, ‘‘a flag that will not defend its defenders and protect its protectors is no better than a rag.” Even the administration of civil government has to be backed by force. When our civil courts issue executions and attachments against property the process is served by sheriffs aud constables, not because of their brains, but because they can entorce their demands if need be by muscle and force of arms. Iuis the ability and obligation of the male citizen to sustain the Jaws and defend his coun- try by physical force as a police officer or soldier in any emergency that makes him a member of the body politic. In other words the ballot box goes hand in hand with the cartridge box, and those who cannoi wield the bullet have no right to the ballot, Gen. Estabrook asks who gave the male the rights which are withheld from women, Our answer is that suffrago is 1ot a right but a rivilege It is a pnvilege coupled with duties and obligations -which woman cannot assume or fulfill, owing to functional disabilities common to her sex When these dizabilities are re- moved, and woman can bear arms on land aud sea, do police duly, sit vpon jurios, and serve without intermigsion in any office during its term, they will bo entitled to share with man the priveligo of voting, This privilege of voting 1 not like lifo and liberty, a right conceded to all mankind by the written or unyritten law of the land, but on the contrary it is rogulated by the states, Moveover the fundamental principle of the sufirage is that the person who exercises this privilege shall bo a free agent, & sovereign un- tramelled in his political choice, Males under age and a great majority of women are dc- pendent on the will of parent and husband, Thier political choico would not bo the voice of a sovereign, and that uafits them for the sacred duties of the suffrage. The exclusion of the whole sex because the mass la- bor under disibilities that unfit them for the active dnties of citizenship is just as proper if not absolutely necessary as the con- trol by man of his household and fam- ily. When woman marries she takes & vow to honor aud obey her busband while he assumes Jthe obligation to protect and provide for her. This distinotion beginning almost with the first family has coutinued through all goverations and it will continue as long as men und women inhabit this world unless the physicel laws of na- ture are abolished Tug Valentine organs never cease quoting from the Juter Ocean in de- fonse of their patron saint, The Infer Ocean has been for many years a never failing well spring of praise for the political black sheep of Nebraska. The editor, Mr. Curtis, was clerk of the senate committee of territories when Mr, Hitchoock was chairman, and it has been his business ever since to whitewash every jobber and political fraud that trains with the U, P, brigade. It is perfectly natural that Ourtis comes to the rescue of Val- entine in the forged census business by putting all the blame on Majors, Alexander and Schwenck, But here in Nebraska, where our Val. is known to be the bosom friend of Schwenck and kindred spirits, the Inter Ocean whitewash is altogether too thin, Gere's L1 levance, B atrice Independent, The State Journal of Tuesday uses up a column in the vilification and slander of Senator Van Wyck, He is the one man whom the Journal has not been able to handle. The Lificoln postoftice sticks to Gere's crop and he can’t get it out. After fighting Van Wyck for U, 8. Senator, he demanded the Lincoln postoflice by way of pro pitiation, but the Senator did not pro- pitiate worth a cont, This is about the size of the grievance and the cause of the Journal’s animosity and dewn- right lying. If Van Wyck, with all the mean underhand opposition that is brought to bear against him does his duty to the people, he will be a great victor, Don't You Forget It. Falls City Journal, The Omaha Republican is very anx- ious to know whether Judge Gaslin is in Jim Laird’s district or not, We were not aware of the fact before that Jim was proprietor of a district, but if he is we suppose it must be the Second one as that 18 where he lives. We will relieve the Repuclican’s buning curiosity by informing it that Judge Gaslin lives in Harlan county. The Republican oughv to know what dia- trict that county is in, as it was the mouth-piece of the unholy alliance that divided the state in its present unjust and auti-republican manner. Its foolish and frantic appeals to the legislature to pass the Burns bill to provent the disaster of a democratic district can never be forgotten. Haying got the districts fixed to suit it, if the Republican does not want a democratic congress- man from the First district, it, or the combination to which it belongs, wants to be very careful who it nominates. Forfinstance how many counties in this district would support Church Howe or any other well known rail- road man, if their nomination was forced upon the people as the appor- tionment was? Possibly Pawnee, Johnson and Lancaster and possibly not. All of the other counties in the contingency named would be classed as doubtful. To return to Judge Gas- lin with whom we started out, Jim Laird will find out soon enough where his residence is. Attend the Caucuses. Nio' rara Pioncer, The people this year have the whole political machiunery in their own hands if they choose to take advantage of the clrcumstances. The caucuses of the various precinets will decide the whole matter if fairly managed, and that fair maunagement depends entirely upon the interest taken by the republican voters themselves, They cannot afford to al- low the machinery to go intothe hands of only a few men who make a busi- ness of runviog affairs entirely their own way. The enemy of the people would much rather prefer the old way of doing thinge, but it seems to us that in permitting the one-man power to dictate to them what they must do. Certainly the people have by this time learued the motives of most of the ofd wire-pullers, andhow they have abused the confidence entrusted to them. Looking at it in this light, it would seem that o new order of things 18 neceesary to insure a fair deal. Last fall the boiting of the regular conven- tion clearly illustrated what those men will do in order to gain what they are pleased to term “power and pres- tige.” They have no desire to work for the good of the peopls, but are ready to bury their interests entirely out of eight to lift up their own, If oneor tvo men are to dictate to a wholo people what must bo dono, throwing aside entirely their supreme will, tiien surely the caucus is a fail- ure bzcause the people choosa to make it 850, Kuox county is interested in three great matters this fall, and they are, first, the seleotion of a square- toed delegation for the new congres- sional district convention at Fremont; second, a delegation to the sena- torial ~ convention; and third, a delegmion to the repre- sontative convention. The first will to a great extent determine what kind of a man will represent the dis trict ably ar d for the best interest of the people in the lower house of con- gress, and the last two will decide as to the coming United States senator— whether Senator Saunders will be re- turned, or any good man who will rep- resent the people of the state, or simply that & faction or & powerful corporation detrimental to the poeple shall have Fuwur. 1t is therefore that wo earnestly urge the importance of each man doing his duty at the local caucuses and selecting such men as will baye independence suflicient to make a bold fight against packed con- ventions, The Pioneer has its pre- feronces, but thoee preferences are not of such a character that 1t can see 0o room for reasonable efforts and fair understanding, THETAX ROLL The Assessed Valuation of Property in the State The assessment roll of the state of Nebrasks as complied by the auditor of public acouats show: Total as- sessed valuation of all property in the etate, §98,687, 475, Total tax levied on the genersl fund, $437,874; sink- ing fund, $23 720; echool tund, $98,- H37; uviversity fund, £36,951, total tax on above funds, §597,080, The total assessed valuation of pro- perty in Douglas county 189, 356,659; railroad property amounts to $490,- 000; telegraph 87,641, Lancas- ters total is §5,196,611; railroad pro- perty, $707,712; telegraph, $704. Cass county’s total valuation is $3,- 06174 Otoe 013,365, Other counties make fair exhibits The total assessed value of railroad property in the state is $14,876 850; telegraph, $111,621. E——— Sale of & Railroad. National Assoclated Press. Omicaco, July 2 Springfield railroad, runn: Peoria and Pekin has been sold to C, R. Cummings, pres.dent of the Peoria, Decator & Evansville, Lake Erie & Western, and New York, Chicago & 8t Louis roads, for $509,000, the people have stood by long enough |- A LIVELY BLAZE. The Western Union Telegraph Office on Fire. The Department Called Out But Not Needed. About 7 o'clock a. m. Saturday afire broke out in the operating room of the Western Union telegraph com- pany, in the second story. It was dis- covered simuitaneously by several pat- ties in the streot, the blaze boing plainly visible through the front win- The cry of firo was raised and carried from mouth to mouth until 1t was heard at No. 3% house and the two hose companies and the Hooks turned out. No alarm was rung, however, and although the pipe was laid no water was thrown, as for once water was no good, and the telegraph boyssucceeded in convincing the firemen of that fact. The flames were soon quenched and the damage found to be slight beyond the temporary interruption of busi- ness, The fire originated at the switch board from which over one hundred wires are connected with the battery down stairs, The wires probably be- came crossed, and it being a wet day and the electricity in the air above av- erage, the heat melted the wires and ignated the switch board, the flames dow, leaping up and catching on the adjoining wood work, To have thrown _water on this electric fire would have been like put- ting o1l on an ordinary conflagration. The only way to check it was to cut off the connection with the battery and when this was done it was soon extinguished. 5 There was not a_single line left in working order, and it was nearly 11 o'clock before the office was again in working condition, . — ST. GEORGE'S SOCIETY. A Grand Picnic August 1st at Han- scom Park. The programme for the day, on the occasion of the forthcoming picnic of St. George’s society, is given below: At 9:30 a. m, extra cars will be in readiness at Fifteenth and Farnam streets, to take the people to the park. Immediately on arriving at the park the members of the St. George's so- ciety will repair to the platform, where cach will receive his badge. At 10:30 literary exercises will commence and be conducted in the following order. Solo and chorns— “Rule Brittania.” Oration—M. H. Carleton, president of the society. Quartette—Come Where the Lilies Bloom" - Misses Stevens, Mr, W, Stevens and Mr, Liemaine. Five minutes speeche:—Messrs. John- son, Lanyon, 'I'. Bonner and Taylor, Song —“The Guard Ship,” Mr, Ed. J. Hadrill, Five minute speeches—Messrs, Roth- well, J. Bonner, Dove and Liyesey. Song—Mrs, Parker, Essay—Mrs Jane Litey. Recitation—Frank Stockdale, Song—W. 0. Sauders, Fifteen minutes specch—W, J Broad- ent. Five minute speeches—Messrs, Balling- er, Midgeley and Powell, Duett —*“Two Merry Girls,” Ettie Bon- lie Stevens. Mrs, Hadrill, Mr. and Mrs, Johnson, Five minute speeches—Messrs, Darrell, Stockdale and St **Cousin Jedediah.” Recitation—Mr. Shephard, Song —Mr, Taylor. Reading—Mrs, Eayres, Instrumental piece—Frank Stockdale- Reading, Duett—"Larboard Watch,” Mr. Ste vens and Mrs, Barnacle, Five minute speeches—Messrs, Hadrill and Lounsburry, “God Save ~the Queen,’ and Spangled Banner,” Dinner will be announced at the close of the Jiterary exercises, and as it will bo a basket ™ pic-nic, everybody will dine in a manuer as suits him, or herself best, The amusements will begin after dinner. Among the games to be played are cricket, crcquet, lawn tennis, grase-hoop and others, Danc- ing will commence at 2 p. m. Try- ine's orchestra will furnish the music for the dancing. There will be swing- ing, foot racing, ete., for the children who desire such fun, By order of tha Committee, “Star e —— THE FARNAM SREET CHURCH The Adyantageous Site of the Chris- tlans' New Edifice, The Christian church of this city has purchased fifty feet more ground, which gives them a frontage on Farn- am of one hundred and five fest, by one hundred and thirty-two feet deep. They are now building a church on this lot 44x76 feet, two stories high, which will cost, when completed, from eight to ten thousand dollars. They expect, also, to erect a hand- some parsonage on the corner of their lot sometime during the fall.§ As this will be the only church on Farnam, the principal street of the city, and as it is centrally located, being only two blocks from the new court house, and ouly five blocks from the Paxton, it must be rogarded as a church site, gecond to nove 1n our city. It will, by comwon cousent, be known as the Farnam street church, The work on the church is being pushed forward as fast as possible, and the building will doubtess be en- closed by the first of September. . ———e— COMPLIMENTING ROOK. A Bazquet to be Tendered the De- parting Military Men, Sunday a banquet was given at the residence of Hon. Ezra Millard to General Crook, Colonel Royall, and Uaptains Bourke and Roberts, who are soon to leave for Arizona, to which department they are transfer- red. After the dinner an impromptu meeting of gentlemen was called in the parlors, and Hon. Ezra Millard to tender Gen, Crook a public ban- quett upon his departure for Arizona, A committee of eight upon invitation and general arrangements was ap- pointed on motion of Judge Wakeley. The committee consists of Hon Ezra Millard, Hon. E. Wakeley, Mr. Guy C. Barton, Mr. T. L. Kimball, Mayor Boyd, Dr. Miller, (ion, Manderson and Mr, H. Kountza, WEATHER SERVICE, The lowa Weather Prophet Predicts for August, Prof. Couch, the Jowa weather prophet, makes predictions in regard to the weather for the coming mouth as follows: August, 1882, will bring prevailing hot and dry weather for large areas, The periods to be notable for exhibi- tions of high degrees of energy will be near the the 8th, 12th, 14th, 23 and 30th. These will bring changes in the then existing weather. The more marked period will be near the 8th, and is liable to give a tropical hurricane to the seaboard states, with earthquakes ani volcanic activ- ity in tropical countries and fierce sun storms, The 15th may so change as to give a series of general rains. The 23d will result ina severe norther, but no damaging frosts, The weather in detail will be for the rain areas: 1. Hot, and falling barometer. 2. Clouds, with local rains and winds. 3. Clearing sky. 4, b, 6. Clear or fair. 7. Rapldly rising temperature. 8. Tropical hurricanes may strike the coast. 9. Hot, high winds and rain, 10. Cooler westerly winds with showers. 11. High winds and threateniug sky. 12, Hail and thunder storms, 13. Clouds and showers, 14. Hot and sultry. 15, Tempestuous storms. 16. Rains and winds, 18. Clouds and showers, 19. 20, 21, clear or fair. 22, Warm and threatening. 23. Polar wave with rains. 24. Cloudy and rainy, 25, Fair and cooler. 206. Clear or fair. 27. Warmer and threatening, 28. Hot, with thunder storms. 29. High winds and rains, 30. Cloudy and showery. 31, Clear and pleasant. E. J. Couvcn, July 24, 1882. can get as good results’ as the best practical dyer. Every dye waranted true to name and sample. PERSONAL. W. 8. Hazen, of Salt Lake, is in the city. Luke Voorhees, of Cheyenne, is in the city. H. Holcomb, of Schuyler, is at the Mil- ard, 2 T. 8. Clarkson, of Schuyler, is at the Millard, Hon. N. W. Wells, of Schuyler, is in the city. Chas. T. Gilmore, of Cheyenne, is at the Creighton. W.T. Lewon, of Kansas City, is at the Motropolitan’ Mrs. L. McMshon left for a visit in the east yesterday. Councilman Dunham returned from the west yesterday. J. P. Fairchild, of the Millard, A, Beers and wife, of Kansas City, are at the Withnell, E. E. Balbach was an east bound pas- senger yesterday. of St. Joe, is a gues Geo. E. Manley, of Wyoming, is » guest of the Creighton. John Hersam, of Dubuque, Towa, is at the Metropolitan, V7. H. Cromer, of Bath, Pa, is a guest of the Metropolitan. John G. Wolfe, of P! the Creighton last night. C. A. Browne, of Chicago, was a With- nell house guest last night. ladelphia, was at Ex-Gov. Pacheco, of ,Calilornia, was a west-bound passenger yesterday. E.C. Knowles, of Washington, D. C., was at the Withnell last night, Mrs, C. K. Coutavt returned fron a trip to Salt Lake City yesterday. M. Lougmire and W. H, Strcet, of Cole's circus, are at the Metropolitan, Fertinando Armellini and Vito Mazal- di, of Italy, are guests of the Metropo'i- tin, D, E. Thomas, R. J, Moore, and Miss Clara Sediin, of Lincoln, are at the Mil- lard, Capt. Marsh, of the Omaha o rse Ra way came in from the west last eve- niug, Hon, J, J, L, C, Jowett, was among the distinguished arrivals at the Millard last night, A W. A, Paxtonand son, returned from the east yesterday and registered at the Withnell, General George Crook, commander of the department of the Platte,left lastjevens ing for Maryland. F. W, Nabor, U, 8, navy and Mrs, M 8. Nabor, of California, were guests at the Withnell yester ‘ay. Bert Lewis, of the U. P, freight audi. tor's office, left list evening for Batavia, N. Y., on a visit to his mother. Oae of the famous Doekstetter brothers, of Haverly’s Mastadon Minstrels, was on east bound passenger on Sunday's train, Col, Stanton, paymaster of the departs ment of the Platte, and his clerk, Mr, H. W, Chace, came in from S.lt Lake last evening, John Cowie, Esq., t he popular manager of the Boston dry goods store, has returned from Lake Minnetonka feeling as happy as & mocking bird, Major Gustavus Stevenson left last evening for Clinton, Towa, from whence he will o to New York, the trip bemng one of recreation and pleasure. Gen, O, F. Manderson, managing direc- tor and J. H, Wilbur, cashier of the Omaha Savings bauk, left for Chicago last evening on business connected with that chosen chairmen, when it was agreed | institution, YOUNGERS' DEVOTED UNCLE- ‘Ihe Ola Man 8till Laboring Hard for the Pardon of the Outlaws, Special to St Paul Pioneer Prees, StiLuwater, Minn., July 28.—In conversation with Col. L. P. Younger, unele to the Younger brothers, who is again in the city, he informs the re- porter that in adition to the petition for the release of the boys, published in Wednesdy’s Pion- oar Pross, he left one with the gover- nor composed entirely of singers, some 200 or more, who had known the Younger family for many years, some as long as sixty-five or seventy years, and who know of no erime or misde- meanor that they ever committed, and unite heartily for the release of the boys on that account, The colon- ol lays great streas upon the hereto- fore unblemished name of Younger, of which he is 8o proud. With refer- ence to the TAKING OFF THE BOY'S WITH HIM to his home in Oregon, he says it is bis purpose to first clear up all old wcores against them by taking them to Towa upon a requisition of the gover- nor of that state, where they will answer to the charge of train robbery Inid at their door in that state, and froin there to Minnesota, and 1f there be anything charged there that can be proven, then they shall suffer the con- sequences, This, the colonel says, he will pursue until everything shall have been cleared up, and then, if they shall be free, will take them with him to Oregon, where they can settle down and become useful and honored citi- zens, like the remainder of the family. The colonel will leave the city, still hoping and working for the release of his nephews. £ SRR R Very Affecting. Washington Special, Louisiana people are apparently a good deal different from the inhabi- tants of any other state in the Union. It will be remembered that a man named Walsh has been giving out to the public during the last three weeks some verv astounding statements con- necting Senator Kellogg with the star route cases. The other night Senator Kellogg went into a newspaper office here and found Walsh seated by the side of a correspondent’s desk going over his testimony in court, Kellogg was not at all abashed at the sight of Walsh, nor was Walsh at _the sight of Kellogg said to him, “‘Hello, John; how are you?” John got up and the two shcok hands, and the two men retired to a corner where they en- gaged in a long and intimate conver- sation, and finally parted apparently upon the very best terms in the world, The Council Biuffs Committee. Natioual Associated Press. Cuicaco, July 20.--A committee of business men from Council Bluffs are in the city endeavoring to secure re- consideration of the order recently 1ssued by the Iowa trunk lines asso- ciation, in which freight rates to Council Blufs were made the same as to Omaha, The committee claim this is unjust as i- gives Omaha great ad- vantages. The trunk lines claim they are obliged to make equal rates in order to compete with such roads as have got into Omaha without cros- sing the bridge. st AN D e Come On, John. Natlonal Associated Press. Loxvox, July 29 —Sir John D. Coleridge has accepted the invitation by the American bar to visit the Uui- ted States next year, HE CREAT CURE FOR the painful discases of the 2IKIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS.|c E| Tt cloanses'tho system of the acrid poison| & Slthat causcs tho dreadful sufforing which| & lonly tho victims of rheumatism can realize.| o » PERFECTLY CURED, PRI $1. L1GUID or DRY, SOLD by DRUGGISTS, ) "bo seht by mail, ARDRON & CU, Burlington, Ve s MONITORGILSTOVE ONLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE STOILOVE IN THE W ORLD, Every housekeeper feels the want of something that will cook the daily food andavoid the excessiveheat, dust, litter and ashes of a coal or wood stove. THE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT, better, quicker and cheaper than anyothermeans, It isthe ONLY OIL STOVE made with the OIL RESERVOIR ELEVATED at the back of the stove, away from the heat; by which arrangement ABSOLUTE SAFETY is secured;as no gas can be generated, fully twenty per cent more heat is obtained, the wicks are pre- served twice as long, thus saving the trouble of cosetant trimming and the expense of new ones. EXAMINE THE MONITOR and you will buy no other, Manufactured only by Monitor Gil §tove 0o, Cleveland 0, Send for descriptive ciroular or cal on M. Rogers & Son, agents for Ne. braska THE KENDALL PLAITING MACHINE! AN DRESS-WARERS' COMPARION. 1t plaits roc 1--30f @ b ineh to width'in the coarsest folte or flaest ol ks 1t doos all kinds and styles of § Iaiting 1n uge. No lady that docs her own dress-making can afford to do_without laitlng 1s cover out of tasbion, i 4 toelt, For Machines, Clrcalars O Agent s tenns a.dress CONGAR & 00, Adacs Bt Uhicor ¢ THE McCALLUN WAGON BCX RACKS. WEIGHT ONLY 100 LBS, o, wfifl“r::j;; 4000557 155 Can Be Hand'ed By a Boy. The box need never Yo tyken off the wagon and Al the belled Grain and Giass bood 18 vave Tt costaloss than tho old style racks, Fvery standard wagon is sold with our rack compleie BUY NONE WITHGUT IT. Or buy the attachments an your old wagon box. For sale | J. C. CuAwK, Li MANNING & IT ppy them to Nebraska by , Onah, Frep “xopR, Geand 19 Haoouxrr CHARLYS SCiEoDRRR, Columbus, 8PAN0OLR & FUNK, Red Cloud, 1. ® & Co., Ked Oak, Towa, e, Glenwoo !, Tows 1t in the west. Ask lar or send direct very fest clas des them for descripuve cires to%s. J. McCallum Bros. Manuf'g Co., Office, 24 West Lake Stree , Chicago, may23-1w 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. They are for sale by all Leading Car- riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country. SPRINGS, GEARY & BODIES For sale by Henry Timken, Patentce and Builder of Fine Carriag s, ST LOUIS, - ~ MO. jLtm Are acknowledged to be the best by all who have pu! them to a practicsl test, ADAPTED TO HALD & SUFT GOAL, COKE OR WOOD. BUCK'S STOVE G0., SAINT LOUIS. Pierey & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA. HEAT YOUR HOUSES MOST POWERFUL! [Wrought or Cast Iron ) ["poop 30 120D 104) iFngvana FURNACES IN THE WORLD. MADE BY KICHARDSON,BOYNTON & CO CHICAGO, ILLS. Embody new 1882 impr viuen's, practical v ucs: Cost less to Uraer; Use loss fuels Will v\ mora et and a larer volume of pure adr tiin any furnace made. Sold by PIERCEY & BRADFORD, Owmaha, Neb, 2Udsm Mor., osp in +'Only Dyspepsia, Doctor, " said a paticnt to Abernethy. ou have™ sa d the 0o —*‘the plague Indige-tionis the countles morial « lscass. Check it OF § With TARRANT'S SKLTZER APERTEST & C3Pé 3L ouce 16+ Drewn - g oo aud Ats piob SULL BY ALL DHKUGGISTS. Jul2d-5m COLLEGE—Three courses; open to boih sexes AUCADLsr Classics] and the bost of train.oz for co'lege ¢ FERRY HALL-Semimary for Young Ladies. Unsurpassed in besnty aud heal hiufs ness of situation, and in ex o offered and thoronghuess of tra Lake Michigan. of sdvantages g _iven. Oa Yoar begius Septembor 13, 1882 Apply to PREST. GREGURY. Luke Forest, (. y48-s0utw