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| { 4 THE DAILY BEE- OMAHA MONDAY, IPTEMBER 11 fhe Omaha Bee Pobished every morning, except Sanday the on:y Monday morning daily, TEKMS BY MAIL — 10,00 | Three Months, 88,00 0,00 | Une . 1.00 THE WEEKLY BEE, published ov- ey Weduosday. TERMS POST PAID:— One Year, .00 | Three Monthe,, 50 Ix Moath Onef 2 AMERICANINEWSECoy PART, IS0l Agents ot Newsdenlers in the "'nited States, ONKRRESPONDENCE—AIl Communi. @ation relating to News and Editorial mat- should he addressed to the Epiton or Crz bre, LUSINESS LETTERS--All Business fe'ters and Remittances should be ad. trewed to Trr Dre PuBuisHing Coum. caxy, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post. fice Orders to be made payable to the rdor of the Company) f'he BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props __E/ROSEWATER. Editor. THE AN1I-MONOPOLY LEAGUE Crxtrar Crry, August 14, The State Anti-Monopoly leagne will meet at Hastings, September 27, 1842, in connection with the State Farmors' alliance, for the purposs ..11 putting before the voters of the state of Nebraska an independent stato anti-monopoly ticket. All anti-mo- nopoly leagues are requested to call spocial meetings to_elect delegates to attend the convention, By order of the executive com- mittee. H. O. Osreruour, Pes, State Anti-Monopoly League. THE REVOLT IN THE THIRD DISTRIOT. Nebraska republicans of the Third district are brought face to face with a formidable revolt within the party ranks, This revolt 18 not merely a forcible protest against the candidacy of E. K. Valentine, but an open declaration of war upon corporate bossism in Nebraska politics, Nearly four thousond republicans expressed decided disapproval of Valontine's conduct in congress at the olection of 1880, when he was a candidate for a wecond term, by scratching his name, That was in a national election year, whon party feeling ran high, and the vital issue of anti-monopoly was not as clearly defined as it is to-day. The attempt of the corporate monopolies to foist this man upon the people in defiance of popular sentiment for a third term by the corrupt use of party wmachinery, through packed primaries and bribed conventions, has made a breach within the party that grows wider every day. The railroad crgans donounco the nomination of M. K. Turner as irreg- ular, and insist that ne is not entitled to republican support. As a matter of faot the nomination of Valentine is equally irregular, He received only 01 votesin the convention that nominated him. Deducting from this the 27 votes of Buffalo, Holt, Knox and Lincoln counties, which were contested and to which he never was How unhappy those U. P. bosses feel because both Howe and Mitchell got left. TrERE is such a thing as nominating a man you don't want nominated,— C E. Vost, ANOTHER such a victory as nominat- ing Weaver wlll knock mo off the pay coll,—Thurston, B1x dollars a day from Uncle Sam asd €150 a month from the Union Pacific are not to be sneezed at.— Mike MEeANY is about the only dele- egate from Douglas county who came back from Nebraska City without a sore head. PrestoeNt Axraor's hand has had a rest from signing commissions but it hasn’t been much of a vacation for his digestive organs, Mz, Georar W. E. Donsky writes a lotter to explatn. Mr. Goorge W. E. Draey had no business to do any- thing that neods an explanation. Tar star route jury is still sleoping in the dark and feeding on & Tanner diet. The country expects they wil| give Dorsey a chance for a zebra suit, with steady employment in some penal inatitution. ‘Tue colored people of Omaha ought to bo satisfied by this timo that they have nothing to hope for from the bogus republioars who train under the loadership of Thurston. The lnst county convention should have opencd their eyes, Tr comes with gond grave from the follows who boltel tho re nomiuations in this city last order mien out of the party beciuso they don’t propose to support railroad nblican ing to candidates, Consistency thou art a jewel, PRESIDENT ARTHUR i3 instructed by the young man who supportod Horace Greeley to behead Collector Crounse because he supports M. K. Turner, who never voted anything but a re- publicsn ticket in his life, for con- gress, Tho president is in the habit of obeying orders from Greeley ro- formers, Tie railroad organs are slopping over about Church Howe's manly con- duct, which seems to have cousisted in throwing up the sponge when he was badly beaten in the convention, Church Howe knows when he is whipped, but where the manliness comes in for throwing up his hands 1s not apparent, Ronexr P, Porter, attache of the cen bureau, at $3,000 a year, and momber of the tariff commission at $10 a day and expenses, wants the fat position now held by Mr, Nimmo as chief of the bureau of statistics, Mr, Porter was once a Chioago reporter and further comment upon cheek is unneceesary. — Bax Francisco has three women ontitled, and there would only be 64 straight votes, or 10 less thana ma- jority of the delegates from the dis- trict. But regularity in conventions is a matter of very much less impor- tance than the question whether con- ventions, as elements in the party machinery, perform their duly. That duty is the voicing of party sen- timent. If they fail to accom- plish the result, however regular, they cannot jusily claim party sup- port. For thoe first time in the history of the republican party in our state, No- braska has folt tho wave calling for party reform which is beating so vio- lently against party machinery in a half a dozen eastern states whero re- publicanism has long been supreme. In Pennsylvania tho spectacle is pro- sented of un independent republican organization within tho party ranks with a full state and congression:1 ticket. 1t is a revolt against political boss- ism through the nomination of men who will represent somothing moro than tho wiches of the party ring mas- ter. In Nebraska the revolt is direct- ed against railroad bossism which has seized the party machinery to foist upon the people a notorious jobber and brass collared lackey. The revolting republicans of the third district appeal for party sup- port on tho ground of party traditions. They have faithiully followed repub. lican leaders in evory national and stato camprign. They still propose to adhere to the eardinal principles of tho republican party by supporting for congress, o lifo long republican whoso pest career is a pledge that he will faithfully represens the people and do juatics to the corpors ons. The republican revols against Val- entine is a detern pat of the niasse tyranny of a o ned effort on the to stamp out the rrupt ring acting in collusion with & gians monopoly, It is now an issue to be decided through the ballot box whether northern Ne. braska is a republican or a railroad distriot, whether the masses of the people have bocomo 8o corrupt and utterly debased as to send to congress, to work, however, and as a last desperate resort Thurston proposed to give Douglas county to Weaver for one ballot if Richardson would be given to Mitchell on the succeeding ballot. Thurston did not expect however, that Weaver had a chost of & show, but Usss county came over and gave Weaver the nomination and Thurston found himself checkmated at his own game. The glorions vie- tory was really an inglorious defeat. The proxy delegation from Douglas procured rogardless of expense proved a boomerang to Thuraton, NEBRASKA EXPOSITION. Tho Nebraska state fair, opens to-day in this cily, is already an assured success. Bounteous harvosts throughout our borders have united In forwarding every interest and have given an unusual impetus towards a generous and satisfactory exhibition, Our farmers have contributed liberal- ly from their barns and storehouses and have sent the choicest displays of their blooded stock from the pas- ture. In every respect the displays of Nebraska’s agricultural products will be a credit to our state. They will show to thousands of visitors that industry and a fertile soil can combine to transform even the “Great Ameri- oan Desert” into a blooming garder. How surprised our geographers of twenty-five years ago would be coula they drop in upon our state fair grounds and feast their eyes upon the products of our prairies, That brown atretch of map which many of our young men will remember on their school books representing a *‘trackless and desert waste” is to-day producing corn at the rate of fifty and wheat averaging twenty-three bushels to tho acre. On the spot where we used 'to read the old line “‘explored by Lewis & Clark,” mills and founderies, factories and packing houses, in a city of over 40,000 population, aro tarning out their products and aesisting in building the fortunes of a great state. All these products find a place in our exposition, which is intended to be an annual object lesson of the yearly advance of Nebraska in material pros- perity. But back ot every other industry must forever lie our agricultural possibilities, Ne- braska is a great agricultural state. Tue primaal source of its wealth lies in its soil, to be extracted and converted into other products by the industry and labors of our farmers. Our cities will grow as markets for our produce und overflow depots for the surround- ing country. Our manufacturing in- terests will advance just in proportion a8 the growth of the country creates a demand for their products. But cities and factories must owe their creation and maintenance to the farmer who in meeting a demand for his food products creates in turn a demand for labor in the city through the sale of articles which he exchanges for those which he raises at home, Oa this account our state fair is, after all, the farmers’ exhibition, It is largely dovoted to the sale of farm products und of articles which enter into their production. The shocks which of corn and the sheaves of golden wheat will be to hun and to others also hardly less interesting than the im- proved egricultural machinery which the western farmer demands in his work, The blooded stock from the pasturo, tho exhibits’ of home work, from the dairy, from the apiary, even the samples of our good wives, and the embroideries of their daughters— as a representative of the whole state, a man whose career makes him utterly unworthy of public con- fidence or respest. When face to faco with this irrepressible conflict there can be no doubt that the republicans of the Third district will assert their mankood and independence, They can neither be driven, frightened or bought, The cry of bulter has long ago lost its ter- ror for overy body excopt the broad- and-butter brigade, but even those who hold oftice and those who want office caunot be guilty of bolting where one candidate has as much regularity as the other. The time has come for the people to take the power from the hands of those men who have abused it —— THunsToN 5 generalship has again been exhibited with the usual result, This talented blunderer tried to nom- inate Hayward for supreme judge, and Gen, Cobb was chosen by the conven- tion, He nomivated Baldwin und lawyers and an old man who was on jury ina case in which one of them appeared, got up as she was about to begin her argument and asked the judge to chlroform him until she got through. He sald a talking woman reminded him of his dead wife, The national womau suffrage association ought at once to hold a session in San Francisco, ——— Wuat has become of Webster Sny- der's maguificent market house! Would it not be we!l for the owners of property around Jefferson square to put their heads together and organize acompany to erect a commodious warket house at & moderato cost or else get the city to build one by sub- mitting a proposition av the fall elec- tion, Savage was elected, He went into a grand combination with Church Howe, Dawes and Co., to elect Albinus Nance to the senate aad Gen, Van Wyck carried off the grand prize. Last year he conceived the idea to make General Dillworth supreme judge, and Maxwell had & walk away, Thurston's first choice for congress- wan from this district was Church Howe, but Mr, Kimball was afraid he could not be elected, and Thurston concocted & nominate Mitchell, of Oloe, whose services as scheme to chairman of the railroad committes had not been forgotten. To this end every proxy that could be brought in Douglas county was secured; the dissenting delogates were given tafly, aud an effort was made to consolidate the whole delegation on Mitohell, The scheme did not seem all will possess more thana local interest as evidence of the solid basis of Nebraska's prosperity. With glorious September weather, and an overflowing attendance, such as is promised, our state fair, as we said before, will be a grand success. And every resident of our state who can do 80 should not fail to unite in making it all that its most earnest promoters desire—the largest, the most compre- he and in every respect the best exhibition of the kind ever held in Nubraska, Tuk persistent liars that grind the crenks of the railroad organs at Omaha and Lincoln have telegraplied abroad and asserted at home that Valentine was nominated by acclama- tion, The truth is Valentine received 01 votes out of 134, and part of these were votes cast for absontees that were attending the regular convention, Twenty-seven of the 91 votes cast for Valentine were those of contestants not entitled to seats, and five dele- gates from Colfax county had stolen their way into Valentine's rump by declaring themselves electod by one- fourth of one vote. This is acclama- tion with a vengeance. Junae CrOUNSE is receiving the un. stinted abuse of the entire gang of brass-collared organ grinders. Upon him they vent their wrath in the most vindictive and malignant manner, To him they read lectures on republi- canism aud party loyalty, when their business is nothing more nor less than the subversion of all republican prin ciples to the basest of uses, We apprehend Judge Crounse will survive the ordeal. The people of Nebraska have more respect for the men who are abused and villified by the cor- poration hirelings tuan they have for the men that receive their praise. THE PAXTON HOIEL. Tue Bree congratulates Messrs, Kitchen Bros., and the citizens of Omaha upon the opening of the new and elogant hotel which is at once a credit to the liberality and taste of its builders and an ornament to our city. The erection of such a structure on the site of the old Grand Central must be a eource of gratification to those whose contributions and assist- ance made possible the building of the first metropolitan hotel which our city possessed. Without the Grand Central the Paxton would have been impossible. And all who have in. spected the Paxton agree that it is as great an advance over its predecessor as the Grand Central was over the old Herndon houee. It is not simply as an architectural ornament that the Paxton is we comed, Ge crous in size, ample in its accommodatione, convonicnt in its adaptibility to the uses for which it was erected, its interior hitings are on a seale commensurate with the growing commercial importance of cur city. The statomert may be made without fear of contradiction that no building of its size from New York to San Francisco exhibits greater tastein its construction, or more generous concessions to the wants and comforts of its guests at the expense of the proprietors. The Paxton is built for the puablic. Other hotels are too often constructed through a short-sighted policy for the pocketbooks of the pro- priotors. It is a credit to the good judgment of the Messrs. Kitchen that they have been able to see that a well satisfied public 18 in the end a better South Omaha at ten in the morning last Tuesday and asked him to give up his star, because “‘they” had seven councilmen pledged to confirm his succesaor, The council mot eatly Tucsday eve- ning and dispensed with the reading of the journal which usually takes up forty minutes. They then pushed the mayor’s police appointments through in hot haste. Leeder and O'Keefe arrived in the council room a few minutes later, but if the vsual course had been pursued in reading the journal they would have been inftime, as it was not yet eight An incident that happened just previously, when a policeman rnshed into Leedet's place of business o'clock. in search of another councilman with- oat saying a word to Lieder, shows that the mayor had an uncerstanding 0'Keefs in which Leeder and were not taken into account. NErR will be the trom the Third district. Two years ago Charles Wolfe alone and unsupportedjplaced himself before the republicans of Pennsylvania us an anti-boss candidate for state treasurer, He based his claim solely on the ground that Pennsylvania re- publicans wero tricked out of the cx- pression of their political sentiment by a corrupt machine which made and unmade candidates at pleasure, He offered himself as a repreeentative of that class who desiro to protest against this dangerous invasion of the rights of the people. Fifty thousand re- publican votes endorsed Wolfe's bold compaign for popular Hox. M, K Tuw next congressman paying patronage. And that patronage is certain to fol- low. First-class hotels always increase the demand for hotel accommodations. Omaha has heretofore had an unen- viable reputation in this respect. She need have it no longer. The enter- prise and liberality of the builders and owners of the Paxton, will without question be rewarded in a manner which will be equally satisfactory to themselves and profitable to the com- mercial interests of the city. Four years ago, when James W, Dawes was a candidate for governor, he also passed upon the credentials of delegates to the state convention, act- ing in his capacity as chairman of the state central committee. There wero a number of counties contested at that time but nobody regarded it as wrong for Dawes to handle the credentials. This year Dawes is a candidate again and will doubtless be allowed to do the same thing without question on the part of the monopoly roustabouts, But when Judge Crounse calls for credentials as a member of the con- gressional committee a fierce howl goes up from all railroad cappers about the unheard of outrsge of a man who is a candidate handling credentials. = > ACCORDING to the veracious Valen- tine organs only six delegates took pare in the convention that nominated Mr. Turner. Now, if that was true, why did the conventlon that nominated Valentine appoint a sgecial committee of three to wait upon the opposition dolegates, and why did the Valentine ramp take o recess for half an hour to wait the answer of the six bolters? Was there ever such a thing heard of before as a great con- gressional convention appointing a special delegation to wait upon a half a dozen ebsentees and holding their coavention for half an hour and wait- ing for them to come in? Does not this fact alone prove that there were more than & half a dozen rebellious delegates? Does it not show that the boasted regularity of Valentine's con- vention was not very well founded? Vau's six dollar_clek is throwing good deal of taffy away on Mr. Tur- ner. The issues between the oppon- sovereignty. This result was obtained without the formality of a nominating convention, without party organiza- tion, without party support and with no speaker in the canvas but himself, Mr. Turner has the backing of a large majority of the party and the support of leading newspapers and o score of able campaignors. Mr. Tarner can and ought to be elected. He is a sound republican. He has planted himself equarely on a platform which will meet with general approval and he appeals for support to every mem- ber of the party who desires to vital- ize republican principles, aud hopes to 820 this state redeemed from the thraldom of corporate monopolies, Witat a great outery those knavish stool pigeons of the U, P, make about the course of Judge Crounse in call- ing for credentials from delegates to the district convention, They do not and cannot assert that an attempt was made to disfranchise anybody or that any duly accredited delegate who pre- sented credentials would have been kept out of his seat. It has been common usage number of years at each state conven- tion for the chairman and wecretary to receive credentials and issue tickets of admission to delegates. Judge Crounse and Mr. Whitmoyer simply exercised the same privilege that has been and will be exercised by the state committee. What was there wrong about it? If Valentine had a clear majority of uncontested dele- gates he had the convention and had nothing to fear from the handling of credentials through the authorized of- ficers of the congressional mittee, But Valentine did not have a clear majority and he therefore bulldozed the delegates into refusing to comply with comm usege Wise Words Agalust Prohibition, o Tribine Prohibition must be regarded by the state, if treated intelligently, in the light of public order, practical en- forcement, government revenue and popular approval. 1If a majority of eople are willing to votea prohibition aw, but are not willing to furnish a standing army of policemen and con- stablos to enforce it upon single com- munities which are not in favor it, then it is not good policy; it is never ents and supporters of Mr, Valentine were squrely made. They are not merely personal, but they involve fixed principles, as radically opposed to each other as slavery and abolition, To the republicans of Nebraska the political despotism of the ralroad bosses is as obnoxious as were the bloodhounds and lash of the slave driver t the abolitioniste. Tue Republican is always enterpris- ing and original, It copied word for word the biograpical sketch of Judge Weaver, on Saturday, which ap- peared in Tue Bek the day previous. In copying, the Republican, with its usual accurscy, made a slight varia- tion from the original sketch as pub- lished in Tue Beg, by placing Mr, Weaver in the oftice of district attor- ney, an ofice he never held, instead of that of judge, which he now helds, — Dg. MiLer never allowsa chance to go by of stabbing councilmen who doare to do their own thinking and voting. He is especially down on O'Keefe and Leeder, because they re. fuse to be whipped into line § or bought up. Inarecent number of the Herald it is charged that when O'Keefe & Co. got through with Po- liceman O'Grady they dropped him. This leaves an O'Keefe and Leader had entered into e O'Grady dropped. of fact O'Keefe and con- fidence of the mayor. Marshal inference as if As & matter Leeder were not taken into the good policy to pass laws which are apt to be violated and defied with impu- nity, If prohibition laws are to be enforced only with the club and the rovolver, then it is not good policy to adopt them, for they threaten a dis- turbance of the peace and good order of the community, which is sure to be injurious to the material prosperity of the people. If prohibition retards the growth of a new state, it is bad policy. If it deprives ~the state of an important revenue from tho manufacture and sale of liquors with- oul stoppiug, and perhaps without even reducing the consumption there- of, itis bad policy, The release of revenue by the general government or by the local governwents which is raised from the manufacture and sale of liquor, wine and beer, necessarily i additional taxation upou the property and industry of tho people, Angell went to O'Grady’'s house in If the consumprion of liquor is to go on just the sime in a surreptitious and demoralizing way the people cer- tainly have no compensation for the new burden of taxation, but only submit to it in order that law and authority may be brought into con- tempt by humoring the prejudices of a portion of the community. When prolubition cannot be urged as a practical policy, promising practical results of real value to the people usscciated in government, it shonld not be urged at all. An lowa Congressional Contest, for a4 the district and is making an active canvass, The republicans are run- ning Maj. A. R. Anderson, and he, too, is working like a Trojan to secure election. There are a great many Germans in the district who have hitherto voted the republican ticket, but owing to the party action on the prohibition question they have de cided to cast their votes at the com- ing election for the demoeratic nomi- nees, 1 which event Mr. Anderson will find his road to success a rough one. —_— Virginia’s Sitting Buil. Washington Post. When Sitting Bull was in his prime he ie said to have been equal to the lifting of four scalps a day on the average. Mahone is reported to have scalped postmasters at the rate of thirty-six per better record than that of his great predecesaor. A Limit to Gould's Greed. Washington Post. Jay Gould has b uvht the Hanni- bal & St. Juseph railroad, and we un derstand he is now casting a longing eye on the Missouri river. 1If he attempts to buy that we will all have to turn out and drown him in it. In euch a case lynch law would bo- ad- missible. Billy mahone, New Vork Sun. Billy Mahone, 'tis yourseif is the boss — Och hone! Billy Mahone! Aud vours is the gain, whose ever the loas— Och hone! Billy Mahone! Yourself 'tis that marks The ways of the clerks, And not a dog barks Except in your tone, If one should rebel, Your fist he must swell— Och hone! Billy Mahone! STATH JOTTINGS, The dog poisoner is at work in Lincoln, be new Episcopal church at Kearney wilt be dedicated in a few weeks. West Point has four schools now, and is talking of another that is needed. A Dorchester man dag 104 potatoes out of one hill. They were Salv Lakee, The new jm! at Norfolk 1s fini-hed, and now waits for the first transgressor, ‘Wi, Morrall, of Holt county, will have about 1,000 bushels of turnips this season. The Harlsn county fair has heea post- pored from Se tember 20 until Octover 4, A large quantity of br.om corn has been grown in Dawson county, but there is no one in the neixhvorbood 1o buy it. ve Welch, ag:d thirteen, of Atkinson, county, fell from a load of hay on nd the wagon passed over his hip, breaking the joint, re from spontancous combustion de- veloped in the Union Pacific cora crib at Plum Creek on the ith, but it was extin- guished by the agent before any damage was done, A man at work in the ra Point, last week, captured a catfish by breaki thereby stunni. . At least, the West Point Republican tells this story. B. 'T. La Shell fell off a load of hay at Grafton on the 7th inst., and was impaled on a pitchfork which fell just ahead of him. One of the tines went through his abdomen, Charles Hagens, a boy of Indianola, was killed last week in trying to break a broncho, The animal reared and fell on hiw, crushing him o that he remained in a comatose condition for three days, then ying, A state band association was formed at Grand Island during the reunion, wich S, B, Camp, of the Geneva military 'band, as president, and W, H, Dodd, of the Hast. ings cornet band, as’ secretary, The ob- ject is for mutual benefit. There were twenty-two bands in attendance at the re- unton, A sad accident occurred last Monday about ten miles noriheast of this place, hy which a man by the naue of George Snell had one arm and one los broken, each in two places, and was terribl, bruised atont the body by being caught wi ling rot <f a thrashin which he was at work place, Dr. Wilcox and B, called and’ did hin all we tervice they could, but at Jast accounts he was still un. conscious and not expec:ed 6 live,—Har vard Journal, h the tumb- ine, with m Deines’ Oyler was hter of Mr, S, J, i u shot last week at ‘Thatcher while lying upon her sick bed, It appears that some parties in the stret were drunkand firing revolvers, when a bulle: entered the building where the lady wus lying, with an inf; scarce an hour old by her side The bu!. let took effect in her arm, causing a puin fut but not serious wou Ainsworth News, Mr. and Mrs. Bariett, of Uass county, parents of a pair of twin babirs aud who uad signitied their intention of exhibiting their preci us cherubs at our county fair, were u_fortunate enough to lose both from cholera infantum, One was buried on Thursday and the other cn Fridug, They were remarkably intere ting children about six montbs old and o much alike that the mother could ouly distiuguish them h{' the curl in the hair of ove. The afflicte]l family have the sympathy of the entire community,—Lincoln News, Tinst Sunday night, or rather Monday rnivg, & chap from Kansas named avd -~ Miss Fannie Thomas, daughter of W, Thow:s, were driven by Peter Fast in the direction of Kansas, Ariviug at Sutton in the gray light of the morning, they “put up” at the livery sta. le. After breakfast a license was pro. cured in e was porformed s otel, the the thoughts of ng couple revericd to “huie “und thither they turned the mothe: way. Mis. Thomas received the ne warried pair with open wns and sisted them in making their start, ton Journal, — ly e Hamp. 747 The most brilliant shades possi- ble, on all fabrics, are made by the Diamond Dyes. Unequalled for bril. lisncy and ducability; 10 conts — MADISON COUNTY MATIERS, Correspondence of On . Bec MapisoN, Neb., Scpiember 7, The county fair is being held at this place. Itisthe first one ever held in the county, and those having in charge its arrangements are justly proud of its success. There has been some very good racing, and there will be more this afternoon and to-morrow. The display 18 exceeding- ly good in the way of vegetable farm produce, live stock and all ki | of fancy and needle work. is Judging Mr. J. T. Baldwin, proprietor of|from the display of farm produce the Ogden house, Council Blutls, Towa, | yyoaic o unty must cont aud a prominent stock dealer in that | -ECEE FERTHY | TIGEE contain some seotion, was in the city yesterday nt of careful and it Mr. Baldwin says that ~politics wax |p¥iihi ©) SATERE e tudustrious werm in the Ninth congressional dic- | | ' al products i t boing doubled each ye The pres- trict of Towa, and that if the republi- b s A § ent fair is the oatgr the en- caua do not gusrd their interests close- | (18 18 KO ¢ P § ly they will lose the district. The L foe iy S SORMARNT, 3 ] ' | and speaks well for the county, 1t is democrats have mominated Mr. W. | {0 SRTR N iE contuty | It ta H. M. Pusey, promineut banker of ; v QRN Coungil Bluiis, who is very popular in be ropresented at the state fair next | week, a much | <[FOR THE PERM CONSTIPATION. ° E| No other diseass s 80 prevalent in this @ S loounitry as Constipation, aud no_remedy|@ o/hian ever cquailed the o od KIDN WORT as & cure. £[however obstinato t | will overcoma it. P——. nickly cures all X physicians and me H lod. £3°1f you havo either of these troublos| vt Are acknowledged to he ths best by all who have put them to a practical test. ADAPTED TO HARD & SUFT GOAL, COKE OR WOOD. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE GO., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA. D. M. WELTY, (Sucoessor to D.T. Mount.) Manutacturer and Dealer in Saddles, Harness, Whips, FANCY HORSE CLOTHING Robes, Dusters and %uri Goods Ped of ALL DESCRIPTIONS, Agent for Jas. R. Hill & Co.’s OEBELRER D CONCORD HARNE:S "‘The Best in The World,” 1212 E AN N AN S72°, Ordera Soltcited, OMAHA, NEB me 1y THE CITY STEAM LAUNDRY . makes a specialty of Collars & Cuffs{( AT THE KATE OF Three Cents Each. Work solicited from all over the country. The charges and return postage must ac- company the package, large clubs or agencios, a24-tf me Special rates to WILKINS & EVANS, SIDE SPRING ATTACHMENT—NOT PATENT A. J. SIMPSON LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORYamig——. 1400 and 1411 Dodge Streat, aug 7-me Gm Onana, Nes, Samuel (., Davis & Co., DRY GOODS JOBBERS AT IMPORTERS, Washington Ave. and Fifth St ST. Louis, Mo. ROWNFLL JES, Pupils who iua, cour-e will b orm'd rn langu and at th For