Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. 4 THE DAILY BEE-~-OMAHA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, The Orrla_ha Bee. Pob'ished every morning, except Snnday €ho on.y Monday saorning dally, TRRMS BY MAIL — One Tear.. ...810,00 | Three Months, §8.00 @ix Months, 0.00 | One .- 1.00 rHE WEE,KLY BEE, publisked ev. ry Wediosday. TERMS POST PAID:~ One Year. 00 | Three Months,. 50 Ix Moathi 1.00 [ One Awrnicax Nrws CoMPANTY, Sole Agents or Newndealers in the T'nited States. VALENTINE'S CHALLENGERS. The insolence of the corporation or- gans that are backing Valentine for a third term is simply unbounded. They challenge his opponents for positive proof that Valentine is an ally of the railway monopolies,. They deny that he hasjever betrayed the people and point to the fact that he has secured heavy appropriations for the agricul- tural bureau as proof that he caters to the farmers and does not play into the hands of the monopolies. of the supreme court, and ocriticising through their committees the two plans presented at the last session of congress. These plans, it will be re- membered, respectively contemplated a division of the court for the purpose of considering the different classes of cnses presented for adjudication, and the creation of appellate courts with final jurisdiction in casess involving property of less than £10,000. The cpposition to the last plan, which was that projosed in Benator David THE CRY OF STOP THIEF. The railroad organ of this olty, which, in its alarm over the almost certain defeat of congress in the Third district, has forgotten that any are to be chosen in the others, after its strikers have or- ganized a double-header in Knox, where its candidate was beaten in con- vention, and while preparing, as we are advised, others for Boone and some other counties, in order to hide the conspiracy, begins to charge others its candidate for|widow. Valentine had better kill off his ) L RESPUNDENCE—AIl Communi. | ¢ 1 . " it "g"m R P N i Hdisovia mat, | fo0! frieuds, They aro too inquisit 214 be addressed to the Eprron or | ive. They ask us to ransack the rec- ords when every page is full of dam- aging proofs, > For the benefit of Val's worshipp ors up in the Eikhorn valley we will cite Qaz e, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Businces Bettors and Remittances should bo_ad- dressed to THE Brr Ppsuisaive Com- pasy, OuanA, Dratts, Uhecks and Post- fice Orders to be made payable to the wder of the Company fhe BER PUBLISHING 00., Props. i ROSEWATER. Ed{ & chaper to silence forever those who clamor for positive proofs. Farly in January Senator Van Wyck introduced a bill ‘“‘to open to settle- ment and entry certain lands in Ne- braska withdrawn by executive order for military purposes.” The lands in The State Anti-Monopoly league | question were within the limits of the will meet at Hastings, September 22, | military reservation near the northern 1882, in connection with the State|boundary of the state. Quite & num- Farmera’ alliance, for the purpose of ber of citizens had taken up homes putting before the voters of the state [ within the limits of this resor- of Nebraska an independent stato|vation and made improvements anti-monopoly ticket. All anti-mo.|thereon ignorant of the fact that nopoly leagues are requested to call these lands had been. withdrawn and speotal meetings to elect delegates to reserved by the government. Senator attend the convention. Van Wyck's bill was intended to af- By orderof the executive commit- ford these settlers protection, while too. H. 0. OSTERHOUT. at the same time it granted to the Pros. State Anti-Monopoly League. Fremont & Eikhorn Valley railroad —_— the right of way across the reserva NEpRASKA is not a third term state. | tion, The bill passed the senate and Our Val had better pack his grip sack. | was sent to the house. Under the rules it should have been referred to Tie political fonces in Nebraska are | the military committee, but Valentine all barb wire. They admit of 10| caused it tv bereferred to Indian com straddling. mittee, where it would have remained buried had not his trickery been — Paruisn secured the U. P. dieec- accidently discovered. Valentine at- torship but failed to deliver that Burt| yompted 10 counterast the offort of 'l;lE ; ANTI-MONOPULY LEAGUE. OwstrAL Crry, August 14. To the Editor of The Bee, | Davis’ bill, which passed the senate | s the guilty parties. We apprehend at the last mession, was led|no one will be deceived by the cry. by Mr. Evarts, who contended that|The diatrict is decidedly against Mr. the creation of appelate courts was| Valentine's return, and unless a fair prohibited by the constitutional pro- | expression is defeated by trickery avd vision creating one supreme court, On | bulldozing, he has no show whatever. the final vote, however, Mr Evarts | The lecture on bolting read us, is and his minority of the committee |simply inspired by the dread that the were outvoted, and Judge Davis’|people are not in the humor and will measure endorsed. by the bar associa- | not submit to any forced nominations tion as best fitted to accomplish the | through packed orbought conventions, much needed relief of the supreme| While we will not, like the Republican, bench. How greatly that reliof is| which declared in advance of the con- needed may be judged whon it i%|vention in 1878 that it would not sup- known that the court is already three | port Mr. Orounse if nominated, say years behind in its docket and that the | we will not support nominees honestly cases are. constantly accumulating. | chosen, we do say the day for buying Under the Davis bill all questions|delegates at so much per head, and which do not involve constitutional or | holding up drunken ones in the in treaty questions, or patent rights, or|terest of a giant monopoly is gone, questions involving a money value of [and nominees put forward by such $10,000 or over, will be adjudicated | means will not be elected. If this be in the intermediate appellate courts. | bolting, make the most of it. The same plan has been tried in sev- = eral states with the uniform reeult of | TuEe next six wecks will be largely relieving the tribunals of last resort of | taken up with the political campaign a large smount of business® and en- | which has fairly opened in Nebraska. abliog judges to devote their time to|Both political parties have a great questions of pressing importance, | opportuniiy to consult the public in- Congress will take up the question at |terest by nominating honest, capable its next session, and in spite of the [and fearless men who will command factious opposition of the democratic|popular confidence and respect. No muinority the Davis bill ought to secure [ other men can be secare of an elec- a speedy passage. tion, There never has been a time in CACKLING OVER A SMALL |lines have set so loosely over the backs of Nebraska's voters, the history of the state when party ] county delegation. StrappLING candidates will have to take a back seat in the coming cam- paign. Records and outspoken senti- ment upon the questions at issue are what will count with voters. — Ex-Sexaror Dorsey says he won't resign his secrotaryship under fire. When this cruel war at Washington is over, it is hopad Mr, Dorsey will step down and out. His cheeky letter to General Garfield ought to be spun enough on the foot of the republican party to hasten his exit. Ir “Val” gets the nomination for congress, we will bet a good sized ap- ple that he will make s Hanlonian pull for the senatorial shore.—West Point Progress. We never heard that Frank Hanlon was pulling for the senatorial shore. It he does he will get there a good many strokos ahead of the West Point pension broker. BisMArck's opinion still carries more weight in Earopean politics thah that of all the other diplomatists com- bined, and hus decision that England’s superior stake in the regulations of the Suez canal fully justifies her assur- ing its safety has had much to do with the late harmonious sittings of the conference, “VAL's” organs have entered upon a campaign of pereonal abuse against all who oppose the re-nomination of their patron saint. It will take some- thing more than personal abuse to give Valentino that walk-a-way which his friends were chirping sbout so confidingly a few weeks ago. Just at presont it looks as if & good deal of fear was being concealed behind a very large amount of noise, Tiug state fair which will be held in Omaha next month promises to sur- pass every preceding exhibition of the state sgricultural society, County exhibits will bo s promiuent feature, With the magnificent crops which Ne- braska will harvest this year our farm- ers will be enabled to show the result of a good scil, a favorable climate and unsparing industry o the thous- ands of visitors who will flock to the exhibition at Omaha. Tue state department has called the attention of the British government to repeated complaints of American citizens that their mails are tampered with the other siae of the water. The Dublin authorities evidently think that O'Donovan Rosss, and his dynamite friends are using the mail bags to wage war against the English postal authonties, but this is no reason why the private correspond ence of American citizens should be subject to official surveillance. ——— Tue railroad swut mills have com- menced their attacks ou the editor of Tue Bee and are now endeavoring for the fiftieth time to convince their readers that he has horne, hoofs and tail with editorship as an incident only of his life and howse thievery, and burglarly a8 his regular professicn. This line of attack is supposed to be & conclusive answer to the specific charges of Tue Bee against the mon- opoly candidates. It reminds us of Senator Van Wyck by introducing a bill granting to tne railroad not only the right of way, but also the right to purchase 320 acres of the reservation at two dollarsand a half an acre, and making no provision whatever for a restoration to sottlement of any portion of this extensive res- erve, thus ignoring the claims of the settlers and the wants of the public. The house commi'tee amended Valentine's bill reducing the number of acres which ¢he rail- road was priviledged to purchase on the reservation to forty acres. Thus amended the bill reached the senate. In the senate committee 1t was fur- ther amended, so as to provide for the restoration of a portion of the reservation to the public domain, the right of way for the railroad with ample space for depots, switches, etc, but any right to purch ever forty acres was stricken out, while a section was added providing that those who had settled upon the reservation prior to Dec. 6, '8l, in ignorance of its being withdrawa from settlement should have priority of claim, if their claims wers filed within three months after the lands became subject to entry. Hero was'a bill fair for all partics; the railroad was socured right of way and ample room for depots, and the men who had made improvements on the reserved lands were not to lose what they had done in good faith, This did not suit Mr. Valentive, und ho insisted that all proteciion to these men should bs stricken out of the bill, and that the railroad only should enjoy the benefit of running where it pleased, and securing all the public land ft wanted and where it wanted, without regard to the rights of othcrs 8o the matters rested for several weeks, At the end of that time a change came over our ‘‘brilliant” congress- man, He no longer advocated the right ot way of the Fremont, E khorn Valley & Missouri railway, His mas- ters, the Union Pacific managers, had an eye 1in that direction. They wanted to go by way of the Calamus to a point very near Fort Niobrara, and thence to the Black Hills, and they directed that no further aid should be given to their rival, From that hour Valen. tine set his face against any and all bills of this class axd finally left the matter in the hands of another con- gressman, who was properly primed, to reject every compromise or offer made by the conference committee. Having strang'ed the bill Valentine hastened home to work up his third term boom. Manager Hall, of the Sioux OQity & Pacific, who has been making extensive proparations fir extendiog his road this season, has sudienly been compelled to call a halt. Valen tine has blocked his way aud unless he abandons the line and makes & costly and lengthy detour round the reservation he must qivz up the exten- sion of the road. Thus the people of the Elkhora fvalley have been cheated out of an important extension of the Bioux City & Pacifie road dur- ing the present year, because the owners of Valentine on Wall street have decreed through him that North- ern Nobraska mast be annexed to Artemue Ward's eouthern politician, | their dominion or go without a rail- who wrote: ‘““The undersigned way |*0al 8 fow years longer, have been s forger and a thief, but t YVl's challengers demand any more proof from the records, they our sister is not croes-eyed and does'nt | yhall have it promptly, wear & set of false teeth, What have the heel hounds of the Argus to an- swer to our reply !’ Tur American Bar association have been discussing measures for the relief EGU. The Republican with large type an- nouuces that Stanton coanty, the home of Charles Lamb, Lou Ley and Capt. E. 8. Butler, who makes loyalty to Valentine a condition upon which land office notices are given to printers, has chozen two delegates favorable to Mr. Valentine's renomination, This it ca/la Valentine’s boom. And what a big boom 1t is. The managers had nicely arranged that this boom should be started in Lincoln, Kuox and Stanton counties that could be counted on, if any. But what a dis- appointment, Kuox has chosen six delogates for Crounse, Lincoln has in structed her four for Mr. Taffe, while Fred runs about cackling over thix small egg of Stanton, which may turn out a bad one yet for his man, How fearfully this boasted ‘‘walk away’’ is fading. “THE FIGHT IS OVER,” 80 says the hired man of The Re publican, and so it would seem It the gods destroy whom they first make mad, Fred’s chances to be cntinued in his clerkship— §6 a day and no work to do—are about gone, Fred, the Funny, is anything but funny theso days. His good humor has de- puted aud he has taken to abusing the editor of this paper, Mr. Crounse and all who have interfered with the return of “‘our Vul.” We would sug- gest to this youtb, this pride of his parents, to restrain his passions. The role of the clown better becomes him than that of the angry boy. Then, again, the exhibition of 100 much wrath betrays the desperation of his cuse, Strike up a whisde Fred as you near the cemotery, Tue cable announces the death hy drowning of Prof. William Stanley Jovous, the distinguished politica) economist, Prof. Jevens was born in Liverpool in 1835, and received his academic education at University col lege, Loudon, For five years he held a government appointment at the Australian royal wint av Sydney, re wrning to Eneland by wsy of the United States, where he remained for several months studying our country and its resources. In 1864 Prof Jevous received the appointment of fellow of Univesity college and in 1806 was made professor of logic, mental and moral philosophy and Cobden lecturer on political econnmy in Owens college, Manches- ter, which positions he held at the time of his death. Professor Jevons was especially woll known as a riter on econowmical questions. His disous- sion of the mosc profound philosooki cal questions placed him in the front rank of modern thinkers, As an authority upon the currency, Prof, Jovons had few equals, His death will leave a gap in the ranks of En-. glish scientists which it will be hard to fill, It is charged against Valentine that he has secured a peusion for his beothur, and that he has also made that brother a postal clerk. Thi true, is enough A man who will get & pension for his own brother cannot be renominatcd; and amsn who would appoint his owo brother to a postal clerkship while one of E Rosewater's brothers was out of a job, doe know what it is to be pairiotic.— Re- wublican. This 18 & complete defense for swindling John Rush out of his home- stead, and procuring a back pension for twenty years disability for a man souid in every limb and sound enough to stand a rigid examination for life insurance. Tt is to be a campaign of candidates with avowed principles and not alone of parties, The producers of the state are determined no longer to play into the hands of the tools of the monopolies. They have made up their minds that their own interests as individuals which af- ter all are the interests of the state collectively will best be subserved by anpporting only such candidates for offices of representative trust as will ropresent their sentiments in some- thing more than in name. If both political parties nominate none but to the public approval, the state can- not suffer in any event. Other things being equal republicans will prefer to support republicans, and party suc- cees will be secured at the same time with the success of popular sentiment, Ir has now become a question whether the sultan will depose Arabi Bey or whether Arabi Bey will depose the sultan, A meeting of the Ulemas, or religious notubles of the Mohamme- dui faith has been called by the arch rebel at Cairo, with the request that tho sultan be deposed from the posi- tion as caliph, or head of tho church, and that the sheniff of Mecea be selected in hle place, This action, ii confirmed, can hardly help from ren dering still more critical the position of the porte. It will necessitate at once active measures agaiust Arabi, or elso a complete surrender of his pre tho prophet and commander of the fatthful throughout the Mohamwedan world by the sultan. GOVERNOR 81, JouN’s nomination in Kansas may prove of benefit in se- curing a thorough trial of prohibition. Iv willeoon be seen whether such legislation which never has been en- forced clsewhere can be enforced in Kausas. Had a covernor opposed to a probibirory policy heen placed in the executive chair, Kansas prohibi- tionists would certainly have attrib- uted ‘he failure of the law to a half- hearted enforcement If it fails now, no such excuse can be made, Mean- time Nubraska with her high licenze and local option law can safely await the outcome of the Kansas and Towa experiment. Tue Utah comuussion; which was created by the last congress with the double object of turnishing employ- ment for u fow ex-senators who were out of a job and of satisfying the pop- ular clamor for vhe regulation of the Mormons, is atout to start for Salt Lake to enter upon theirlabors. Just what the Utah commission is expeoted to accomplish no one scems to know i very definitely. They are to superin- tend the reorganization of the elec- toral machinery of the territory, with a view to disfranchising all practical polygamists and to draw §5,000 a year salary with great regularity, They will undoubtedly throw their whole soul in the latter part of the perform- ance. if PrrkR SCHWENCK is not unprovid. ed for afterall. His land office record barred him out of the internal reven- us service, and the bogus census swin- dle destroyed his chances forever to get any patronage in his own name. men whose names will commend them | n rogatives as the legitimate successor f | j |in the Selah case is that the pension was secured for a soldier's widow. But Mrs. Selah was not a soldier's Fraud on behalf of a sol- dier's widow is not one whit less fraud than if committed on behalf of a less worthy or deserving person. In this ©A8e A POOT excuse is worse than none. But how about the pension of Val brother? Angust 9th, 1852, Tn pursuance of a re-«lution ~dopted at & joint meeting of the State Alliance ecutive comm it eo and State Organizing committee, held at Lincoln on June 21, 1882, there will be held at Has ings, Neb,, on Wednesday, the 27th day of September, 1882, an_independant anti-monopoly state convention, for the purpose of placing in nomination candidates for the following named state offices, vii: Governor, Lientenin.-Governor, Sec. retary of State, Auditor, Treasurer, At torney General, Commis<ioner of Pablic Lands and Buildirgs. And for the trans- action of such other business as may prop- erly come before it. All men who believe with us that the question of monopoly is the leading i«sue of the day, are cordially invited to take part in the primaries and « ounty conven- ti ns which will bs held to send delepates to said convention, regardless of past party affi intions. 1t is urgently recommended that ind pendent candidates be place | in nom ti n i y ¢ unty in the state. Also, that jes be held early—in no case later than Saturday, S:ptember 16, and ¢ unty conventions not later than Wed. nesday, September 20. It is recommended that alteruates be elected. The following counties are entitled to representution in said convention as fol- lows: County. Delegates. Delegates, 1 Nucklls . Utoa ... Pawnee Fhelps . Pirrce. Red Willo LoRtenSusxBooszanmanwos Douglas . Richardson. Dundy. Fi more. Frankli 6 Saundere, Frontier. .. 3 Seward. Furn s Sioux. Thaye: Valle; Humilton Washington Sensoannned Harlan Wayne... Hayes. Webster Hitcheock. Wheeler How.rd . 5 York..... 1 Hole 4 Jefferson. .. 2 Total.... We require no justification for this ac- tion, It is demanded by the people. The strongest anti-mononoly s«ntiment per- vades the entire s'ate. Existing pclitical parties, suborinated to corporation and tmonopoly influence, refuse to voice the sentiment of the people, and it necessarily sevks expression through some other chan- el. We concede that parties are estential to our system of government ; that they form the only agencies through which public opinion can be crystalized ani tind effi- cient utterance through its enactment into law. But these agen.ies are only valuable while they rewain free and untrammeled, When they are seized by supreme and ma- lign irfluences, as are the varties of the day, and made the means «f estatlishing and perpetuating a system of plunder and spoil, by which the rich are growing rioher and the poor poorer, and_thro gh which political power ix to be indetinitely con. rinued in a single vicious lins of succe-sion, they bet«me unrepublican in f rm and op* pressive in character, and cease to embody the «spirations or represent the ever pro- gressive ideas of a fres people. The domi .ant party of the country was i i d hes been great in of its achievements. It came into being because the parties of that d.y tem- porized and dallied with the irrepressible ¢ uflict then i i A conflict just ng now, and the Aly it as they «allied with slav. ry then, and the relt” will b= In the face of a grest public n it was rew t political were unequal to t gencies of ty ties became only, ropes of he pennle—tne same people of pattiex, with the same instinets of me a-pirations - reformed sew leaders and upon uew issues, The intearity of our inatitutions is e davgered now as then; the rejublic is veriled now as then, ard the mate. terests of our peovle are threatesed as never before; and the old p rties, bound by the malign inflience which pervades them, are unable to apply the needed remedies. Will iresvonsitls power, uncompelled by law, relivquish its hold upon our wealth? Wili boundless aibition, with its tight- ening grasp upon an undeveloped e.upire, forego its fulfilment? Wl avaricious greed, with hoarded millions fir beyond the wmst sumptuous requirewents of the mo t sumptuous ages, ceane to hoard? or will they uivide itsspoil with its plundered vietim? No answer is needed. Human nature has been the same through all tis ter- nal vigilance is the price of liberty ” nd we have been for long slumbering and wuch enduring people, But the fight has begon Iu is to coutivus long, und the heaviest bettalions are to win. - The guer- den is—supre dcy in_this fair and beauti. fol lind. Shall the people rule? or shall their creatur s and servants bee me mas ters? These are th questions. God grant Hl\uy may be decided by and fur the peo- ple. Look! look at the beneficiaries of the people. Suike a north and south line through Chicago, and the donations of the peop e would build und_equip every m of radrad we-t of that line to the Pacific. And yet they cry m re! more! Loeir influ ervades aud stifles the polity al parties of the country They ¢ r.upt our judiciary and debauch our legislatures, They trade our offices for political power, and waintain their servile tools in all o ns of trost or profit. By + dvances in ratesjto suit their conve- nience they absorb the bounties God has bestowed upon us, Though the heuvens way smile with beneficent sunshine, the clouds lean down with refreshing showers, and the earth yi 1d teeming and bounteous harvests, prosperity is impossible to a veo- ple 8 «.verridden by incorparated aud irre- spousible power, They muke themselves partners in every business, By dircriminations they elevate or ruin individuals or places at will. By watered stocks they impose enor | mous unearned taxes upon the production ulll’hu country. . AL ut en . The un:avory story has hen nluuyufimel told. We nlnl»eur to-day f om those manacled and hopeless political | parties, and this sggressive, exacting and dowiucering corporate power to the will of the people. ‘Tais will is ascertainsble alone ut the ballot-box It is not expressed by primaries and county copyenions So that ‘‘ good proyider” Val fixed up | couventi s resulti: g therefrom, The final the Fort Peck tradership fora mother man, and Peter will divide the spoils, E—— Tag only suswer that Valentine's | Ereat issucs alove. clerk makes to the charge that his | refu master secured & fraudulent pension |*%¢ arbitrawent lies with the people, aud to their verict we humbly bow. We ask them now to elect our state officers and our next legi-lature upon these Tguore all claims but those of ment, character and ability, and to be divided and distracted by any ssues whatever. ‘We, and all the people of the state, may rest secure in the certainty that a legisla- tre and state officers elected upou the plan above indicated will be sound up n ail issnes of amoral or p. litical character, Tssu-d by crder of the state executive and state organizing conmittees. H. C. Blokiow, Chairman Executive Committe, J. I'vRROWS, Chairman Organizing Commiittee, Providential. Cincinnati Cemmercial It will be consoling to the prohibi- tionists that the price of hops has ad- vanced from 20 cents in April last to b5 cents retail now, with the prospect . | of reaching 75 cents before another crop comes in, The supply is pretty much exhausted, and there are no old stocks amounting to anything the world over. The crop in England 18 a total failure, and in Germany will be below the average. The only country on the globe where the crop will ex- ceed last year's is California. Hops have been hizher than now in times past. In 1876 German was sold as high as $1.50, and possibly they may reach that figure again, considering the short eupply and partiul failure. This may compel the brewers to advance the price of beer, and a higher price means a reducet consumption, Improving After Investigation, San Francls o Bailetin (1 d.) packed by c/iques and cabals, nor by state | | Blaine’s South American policy im- proves in the light of investigation, His iden that the South American re- publics should settle their differences without going to war was certainly a good one. A peace congress may not be practicable just now. But friendly arbitration is only another name for it, and many of these South American republics would gain immensely by re- ferring their differences to some friendly power. Free of Charge. Al persons suffering from Coughs, Colds, Astama, Bronchitis, Loss of V ice, orany affection of the Throat and Lungs, are re- quested to call at C. F. Goodman's _drug store and get a Trial Bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, free of charze, which” will convince them of its wonderful merits and show what a regular ollar-size bottls will . Call early. THE CITY'S CREDIT. Splendid Sale of Clty Bonds to East- ern Capltalists. Sowe time ago the city advertised for sealed proposals for the purchase of the second 850,000 of the issue of $100,000 of sewer bonds, series one, of the city of Omaha, Said bonde are dated September 1lst, 1881, and are due in twenty years from date; are in sums of $1000 each, and bear interest trom date at the rate of six per centum per annum, payable semi- annually, at the offica of Kountze Brothers, New York, upon coupons attached. Said bonds are issued un- der the charter power of said city, after election duly held authorizing their issue for the completion of sewers partly constructed, and for the corstruction of additional sewers. Bids in accordance with the above advertisement were opened at noon yosterday. The h ghest was from 1he Vermont Savings bauk, of Brattle- boro, Vt., and wes $1.13¢ or 13§ cents premium, The next hiznest bid was also from Brattleboro, §1 13 26 100. Other bids were 81.10} 81,10 and $1.12}. The lowest bid was &I 03} The remaining $50.000 of this issue sold last year at $1 05}, so that this 850,000 brings $4,062.50 more than the firat. A great deal of the credit for the sale of these bonds at 8o hich a figure is due the city treasurer, Mr. Trumat Buck, who 80 thoroughly advertised the sale. Instead of adveriising in the castern papers alone, he had small cir- culars printed which he personally forwersed to over 400 banking ano savings insiitutions, with the result given, The price paid is a high com piiment to the financial standirg of the city and its name and character smong eastern capitalists. Me. 7. Mar-h, Bank of T. writs Billicusness and dys A seetn, £ have grown up with uie; h been & sufferer tor years, I have trie { many rome- dies, but with 1ol wting 1e-ult until T used vour b URDOCK Proon Birrers They ve been tiuly a_ blessing to me, aid [ cannot speak too bighly of them.” Pric .00, d-lw nto, Ont. THE ¥oCALLOM WAGON BOX RACKS. WEIGHT ONLY 100 LBS, Can Be Handled By a Boy. The box need never be taken off the wagon and all tho shelled Grain and Grass Seed Is Save 1t contsless than the old stvie racks. Every stavdard wagon is sold with our rack comple.e BUY NONE WITHOUT IT. Or buy the attachments an your oid wagon box. For sl i pply them to Nebraska by ook, Grand Isiand. Haoaustr & GRuky, Hast ngs. CHARLYS SCiiRODRER, Columbus, 8PANOGLR & FUNK, Red Cloud, . H. CRANE & C0., Rod Oak, Towa, L. W. Russks , Glonwoo, lowa And overy first class dealor in the wost. Ask them for descriptive. circular oF sond direct us, J. McOallum Bros. Hanuf’g Oo., Office, 24 West Lake Street, Chicago, 100,000 e TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. They are for sale by all Leading Car- riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country. 3PRINGS, GEAR? & BODIES For salo by Henry Timken, Patentee and Builder of Fine Carriag s, ST LOUIS, - - MO. J1-6m o Are acknowledged to b the best by all who have put them to a prastic .l test, ADAPTED TO HAFD & SUFT GOAL, COKE GR WOOD. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE (0., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, 1HIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT Tte Republican Convention to be Held at Blatr. Oxana, August 11.—The district cen- tral committee for the Third judicial dis- trict met in this city, pursuant to call, at 7:30 p. m, Present, A, M. Chadwick, chairman, and W, I. Baker, mem' ers from Douglas county; Jesse T, Davis, member from Washin ton, and Williaw Sinder, proxy for A. K. Kennedy, member from’ Sarpy. On motion W, I Baker was elected soc- retary, On motion the place for holling the dis- trict convention for the Third j ial dis trict was fixed at Blair, in Wa hington c.unty, on Scptember 11.h, at 11 o'clock &, m, On motion the representation was de- cided to be on the basis of the representu- o | tion for the state convention viz: Douglas county, 18 d legates, Washington county, 9 deigates, Burt county, 8 d-legates, Sarpy couuty, 4 deleyates, 1t was reco mended that the delegates to the judicial district convention be elect- e/l at the cou: ty conventions called to elect delegates tothe district, congressional and stase conventions. W. I BAkkg, Secretary, — Short Breath. 0. Bortle, Manchester, N, Y., was troubled with astbm. for eleven years. Had been obliged tosit up sometimes ten or twelve nights in succession Found immediate relicf from THoMAS' Fgrcraio O1L, and is now entir-ly oured, 14d-lw — WanNteDp,—A good second-hand bicycle. Address box X, Central City, Neb 16-3¢ KIDNEY-WORT IS A SURE CURE for ali diseases of the Kidneys and e L | V E R 0 action on this most important organ, enabling it to throw off torpidity snd inactio: timulating the healthy secrction O ke plag tho bowels in free condition, ng its regular discharge, l 1fyou aresutluring from Malaria, et are hilious, dyspeptio, or constipated, Kid ney-Wort willsurely rellove & quickly oure. I this season to cloanse the Bystem, every one should take & thorough course of it. (41) SOLD BY DRUCGISTS. Price Samuel (. Davis & Co., DRY GOODS3 JOBBERS AT IMPORTERS Washington Ave.'and Fifth St., ST. LOUIS, MO. . — — (MPERiSHABL PERFUME, [urray & Larman’s LCRIDA WATER, Best fir TOILET, BATH and i ANDKFRCHIEF, e 1 FAST TLuki In EOIDK—E— take the (hicago & Worthwest- M wwaw. Trains leave Omaba 8.40 p. m. and 7:40 &, m, For full information call ou H. P. DUEHL, Tie- KIDNEY-WORT ket Agont. 14th sud Faroam sta_ J. BELL, U. P Rallway Depot of at JAMEST. CLAR Geaers Fn o - 1 | \