Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 23, 1882, Page 4

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4 THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA, THUR ONDENCE~AN Communi. ng to News and i CORRE: Letters and dressed to THE BER P Omana, Drafts, Checks anc boffic Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. ] foderal constitution, He was two years i]old when Genersl Washington was d be sddreesed to the Enrron [ buried at Mourt Vernon, and he fought in the ranks ot the voluuteers in the war of 1812, At his majority he owned & newspaper, and at 32 he becamo tho editor of The Albany Journal, which quickly aesumed o leadirg posttion among the great nows: pagers of that day, At 382 Thurlow Weed was a power among polit oiana y manager ha Hiafame a8 a par been » now Dorsey should pronounce | sieadily on the riso eince 1826, when in favor of civil service reform. They [the election of Da Witt Clinton an all do it since the election. RAILROAD wars in rates roge al around Omnha, but the U, P. bridge tolla are like the laws of the Medes and Persians, f Tuk solid south refuses to melt, It takes something more than boss rule to start the politieal circulation ina rock rooted bourbon. ANTI MONOPOLY {5 & healthy infant and weizhs more for a two years’ growth than any other political infant ever oradeled by the people. Nor a single greenbacker has been elected to the next congress. An ex- podition 1n search of Solon Chase’s steers ought at once to be organized. A virrie skirmishing in Hitchoock, Dandy and Phelps counties on the part of Mr. Morton's grand jury might result in the treeing of several lsryo political coons, It is worth the attempt, < Wirh seventy contests in the house of roprosentatives, the prospects of a good business for Washington hotel keepera has never been better. Con- gress pays the exponses of the con- testants, SeENcER bas turned up and gives a8 his excuse that he didn't know that he was was wanted. Oa general pri ciples, Spencer is not wanted either in his presont position or in any other office of trust in the country, JusT at present Valentine is'tco ex- hausted after his campaign in the Third distric: to pay much attention to his seuatorial boom, but it is al- most largs enough slready to be eeen by a powerful microscopa, BeN BuiLer atks for divine assis- tance in hia naw (flise. The general governor of New York was attributed largely to his effortn. From that date to the timo of hi retirement trom pulic life no man wielded 8o powerful an it fluence in party councils. Ho sccured the eleo- tion of William Henry Seward as gov ernor of Now York 1a 1g38-40 and William Henry Har rison to the presi- denoy in the samo yoar, and asssted groatly in clevating General Taylor to tho white house in 1848 Thurlow We:d was one of the original leaders of the old whig party in Now York state. With Ssward and Greeley he formoed a strong conli- tion known as the triumvirate which practically controlled the policy of the party and dictated its standard bearers, Bat while wielding an im mense Influence in shaping legislation and in the distribution of exccutive appointments he consistently declined to hold cffice himself. As the head of a powerful journal, moulding pub- lic opinion and securing measures of his own originating through men of his own political makiog, he rightly considered that his in- fluence was greater than it ever could bo had he been forced into an attitude of personal de- fense by participation in the strife for office. In 1862 he retired feom the editorial management of the Albany Journal, but for years afterwards con- tinued to contributo to ifa columns, To has been in failing health for alo months past, but his interest in public affairs never flagged. Only last week he - dictated a card ex- pressing his views upon the causes DAY NOVEMBER 234 .. commotion and two or threo daye|Jackson's policy was (hroughon later the court houce at Phelps Conter [\inged by personal prejudice Ia was destroyed by fire and with it the | M, returns and ballote. This wiped out [man of strong tenacity of pur the fraud and affords the winning|pose, but ignorant, narrow-mi party relief from possiblo investiga. |wnd tho tool of frienda, His violence tion, Temay bo thought that the fire | °f tempor mado him eusily played A upon by men of more ability than was only an incideut, bat it is one of himself, while the public gave him thoso incidents that always happen | credit for betng & model of strength Sumner’s view, he was a R Sikidd ke portrait of Jackeon ia sharply out- done. Such au tncident happened | EEEARE M NTRNC) N TP, he several years ago in most notable contribution of the year county, when the court [ to American political history, The house was destroyed by fire and the | closing paragraph 18 particularly good: trousurer, now editor of Valontine's |, Ho died June 8, 1845, He had had , J honors beyond anything gwhich hi West Poin Happ 1 | o 3 ™ i est Point organ, happened, 88 it|osm heart had ever coveted. His were, to be badly mixed in his ac-|successes had outrun his ambition. counis, There was no proof, of course, | He had held wore power than any who set the building on fire, but peo- other American had ever posscmsed 3 i He had been Idolized by tho great p]cnur'l. of course formed their own majority of his cm“n{ymen'hmd conelusions, had beon surfeited with adulation. Al the raports from the Ropublican | Ho had boen thwartedin hardly any- valley confirm ono fact and that ip|thing on which he had sot his heart that at no timo in tho history of No-| enomsies, "o had Teed b sse Clay hfuskn wu' there a3 much interference | defeated again, and to help to bring it with clactions by railroad men aa|about, He saw Calhoun retire in de- thore hus been during the late cam. |SPair and diegust. Ho :;"' tho Bank f . S in ruins, Biddie arraigned on a crim- o !“"Bnd‘;‘lunon‘ 1t theso outrages | ;5 charge, and thon dead, broken- are allowed to go unpl:xnlslled and un-|hearted. In his last years he joined rebuked, Nebraska will soon have a|she church, and on that occasion, un- worse reputation tha? Louisiana and |der the exhortations of his spiritual Bodit ‘Otkotiia adviser, ho protessed to forgive all bis i bt enemies in a body, It does not ap —— pear that he ever repented of any- As compared with the returns of | thing, ever thought that he had been former years the roturns of choPenn. | in the Wrong in anything, or ever for- sylvania election show eome remark- ’;;ld':ll""l enemy a8 a specified indi- able results, In 1880 the total vote SRR R e of the atato was 874,783, and in 1882 | PoLiricas Hustony or Recuxr Trues. the total vote is 745,803, a loms of| prapsisted from the German of ) Prof Wilhelm M; " 128,97 votes, Theso figures show | Tome B Pewe. Db Do Oy oy John P. Peter, Ph. D, One vol., that one voter in every eight failed to| 8mo., (8}x5¢ inchee), 697 pp.; in. excrcise the suffcoge on the Tthof| dexes;cioth. New York: Harper this month, T8 eombiasd. voia i Bflzm. Forsale by J. S. Caul- Beaver and Stewart is 83 372 short of IG“‘"M %, and Fattison " A presented for the first time in an ex- eos than that of Hancock. Small | gellent trauslation to American read- gains are made by the greenback la-|ers. A prefaratory note by Professor bor party and the prohibitionists on | White eays that for many years he their slim array of votes two years|hod sovght in vain fora work which ® e would give to thooghtful studentsa 8g0. Tho apathy which prevailed|yigw large, but concise, of the politi- throughout the campaign among the }oal history of continental Kurope in masses of the people is rovealed in fthe llgnc;fen!hmwnmri, and failed, P until Prokssor Mueller’s volume eamo ::""“9:)‘;," Throoghout the state |y rory yia notice. The book ix in- o ropublicans were disheartened by | deed a “Jizing history.” the division 1n the party. The small| T4 is divided into six periods and republican vote is not due to want of | the ‘‘development of each nation is Antelope Professor Mueller’s great work is and results cf the late election, which was as badly aggrestive as any of his earlier editorial utterances in the columns of his old Journal. Thurlow Weed has bcen bitterly crit- jeized for his political methods. Like all strong men he made many ene- mies. He was no saint but his theor- ies of political management were su- perior to thosd of his competitors. activity, for the repsblicaz managers | kapt distinst yet easily brought into worked with the energy of despair, relations with that of every other.” but they could not infuse thetr spirit '5:’,‘ ‘:;::e peo? °fm‘l§§f,;’,§":?3n,°°¥,f: into the mass of followers. ©n the |second period brings the history down part of the democrats the decline of | 0 3848, and treats of the consequences the vote is due to tha waut of a clear- [¢f the July revolution. As we come 3 3 & nearer our own times the perlods are ly defined issuo in the campaign. |shorter, the last three covering enly There was, in fact, ne issue bedween |five each. The American trans- the republicans and democrats in state | lator has brought the work down: to politics, and on the tariff both parties 1883 Professor Mueller's last edition tmpression is that Massachusetts is| gorory his advent the two men whohad | @eclared with equal tones for the ex- having Sppsarodiin 1875, Ebat ho . hy mora greatly in oeed of the Lord's help than General Butler. Benal-| ). o0 g0 Hamilton and Aaron Burr, | $i0n it is hard for political managers [of the kind has yet appeared which, given tone to New York politics wero ‘2 4 availed himself of an annual pubiica- isting tariff system. In such a situs- | tion edited by the author. No work where somethitg crooked has been |and determination. Mr. Sumner’s | i ~ HURLOW WEED, tive, were counted cut. The vote of LITERARY NOIES, torieal Records and Draver are up to OM e H 9 The O mah =3 Bee- The oldest j ist of the century | Phelps county vas canvassed Situar. TR their asual standard of excellence, Peblisbed svery momrafog. except, Som. | 414 the It cf that remrkable politi- day night followisyg tho elostion in the | ANBREw JacksoK 4 A Funue Max, POOKS RECEIVED, ¢ o i ! ay. The only Monday m-iniog dafly, ! trivmvirate for over thirty | bank at Phelps Oentor, None of the | gl 0\ ("0l i "pociul seisnce |y -ARTED Rost, o i ! UL . TERMS BY ;1_;.177-4 re m tulati citizens were presont exeapting a elork nlege. et Hough 8o, 81, Por e )')) 5.8 ¥ > . . RO | % One Year....810 0 | Thres Monthe made mmad s the republican candidate for the \ & Oo, 1882, - fa : Foasters and @rinders of Coffoes and Spices. Manufuctarers of Six Months, . 5.€0 | One Month. ... I 6 8:ale, pass enato, whose condust previons and| No man is better fitted than Pro- \otation . - pey S B LT REE. rebiiiid svvy | TV Nny, murtons Iy | after the eanves was suspicious. Be. |feagor Sumser to write tho history of | Child Life. By Lonise Olarke IMPERIAL BAKING POWDERI { i HE WEEKLY BEE, publihed every | in (1o full possossion of his men- | fora this mysterioua canvas it was | Goneral Jeckson's edministration. As| Pyrnelle. , #1. Harper ? g A ~ '] s Arothers 3 Caul [~ PERMS POST PATD— tal facaltien until tho Inst. For over [generally concoded that the snti. |our leading political coonomist, ho is| ~piothers. i N Clark’s Double Exiracts of One _Year......82.00 | Three Months. 50 [ fi'ty years Thurlow Weed has been a [ monopolists had been clected. When | peculiarly adapted to understand anc P! o Six Months.... 100 [ One Month.... 20 " 213 ki 4 Tue Taukive Leave An Iodian | 10 OneManth. . 90| oun "o the hour. His birth was [it was announced thas they were |to analyzo tho economioal imues with | *'y{oro by W. O Stoddard. 1 ol H i oA N A netin ™" | almost coioident with the birth of the | defeated there was considerable | which that administeation was flled | 870, €1 Harper Brothers. For ’ g H. @, CLARK & 00., Proprietors, 1403 Douglas Sirect, Omahs, Neb, FRIBD & CO. walo by J. 8. Caulfield, E.IEE, “HOW 'TWAS DONRB.” n Admirable Little Work Containing Intereating Information Just Now Greatly Soughu After. Maj. Pangborn, the well-known compiler of the B, & O. Red Book, which bas becomo the standard politi cal text-book of the country, is now ngaged with a large force of assistants in preparing & special edition of the Red bool, which promises to be quite a unique thing in political literature, A7 JEE O TaJED 1SN Tt is bs issned under tho taking title of “How 'Twas Done: The Political HARDWAR Revolution of 1882." Within the most atistically en |1108 and 1110 Harrey ¢ t., - COM A H! graved covers by the American Bank o compang will be embraced the official resulis of the elootion just held, and arranged so perfeotly and intelligently that the veriest awateur in such_otatistics_cannot fail to com- prehend them. The figures will be wiven on state ticket und on songrae- oy g™ sional ticket in separate tables, the 0 eha e‘ former by counties and_the latter by ' counties and districts. In both tables comparisons will be mado with the vote at the last preceding election in each state, the returns of which will be given in full, in order that the un- derstanding of the situation may be complete. In states where the con- gressional diatriots have bnenbvhmged since 1880, the districs will be shown - - 28 now conatituted, thus demonstrat- |3l5 aouclA& STREET" ing what the result would have been two years ago had the same distzicts composed the districts then as now. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, Independent, prohibition and green- back figares will be given in addition DEALERS IN KR i Siaht caiaty tHeateyr HIDES, FURS, WOGL. PELTS & TALLIW ench party will bo show., with mapr- COMAHA, NEB. ~ McMAHCN, ABERT & CO,, OMAHA, KEB. ittes, gains and losses, both years, to- 204 North Sixteenth st’ S 9 gether with total vote of county, con- gressional district and state, Statis- ticsl tables will aleo bo included in the book, showing unon a similar full and comprehensive scale the vote for president in 1876 and in 1880, I no publication of like character aro such clear and ezhaustive tabular statements attempted as in the B. & 0. Red Book, and the forthcoming special edition will eclipse any previ- ous ono in_extent d interesting charaster of informasion furnished, Incinded within the remarks accora- panying the returns will be the de- i tails of the changes im congressionul 2 i A 3 distriets, the congressmen-elect, and| % g the unsuccessful candidates in each 3 stato,as well as the members of ths 's OF next eongress complets, aud the chan- | [ o8l AS gesin that body as compared to tha| 2 4 NEB. |5 last congress. iluch sther data wil e bs given, and in the way of a thox S ough understanding of exactly “How "Twas Pone” it wouldi be difficult to 1magine a more interesding and relie- ble scurce of explanation than will bs this new edition of the B, & O. Red Book. Like its precesessor, 1t will be sen’ without any ccat whatever to. 100&s Farnam. St., Omaha. course, an advertisemant of the Balti- ;él I:th:l make application for it to g ‘ Feiesie VL, Hell & C & 0. R.'R., Baltimora, Md. > e maan J 00 more & Ohio railroad, bat it combies The Rad Book is, 83 a matter of WHOLESALE erest to the Druggists, ways foand moans to help himsell {7, w0y que to their inflaencethat office | #0 ereate a party spirit and rally voters under the most trying circumstances. hunting became the first object of the | to the polls when there aro no excit- politician. Mr, Weed when he en- |i2g issues to divide them. tered public life was 1n advance of S public sentiment, as he generally was Tae pilgrimage of patriots to. Lin- throughout his entlre career as a|0ln has already commenced, but majority. If it hadn't been for those |y p,0list, He believed in practical | Whose pole is long enough to Xknock B. & M gravel trains Mr, Laird politics, but men to him wero merely | 4own the political persimmons still would never have lisd an opportunity | ¢y, jngtruments to secure measures, | remains a conundrum. to reprosent tho cowboy [connties in | wpijg he held that office holders| Another Trial, Sharp and Saort. oongress, should be responsible to the dominant | B:ston Herald, - S A party, ho strove to exercise a decisivo | The ripublic-:r party A be:m: HAIRMAN HENDERSON, oOf @ re- . . is year by republicans—indepen ient publican congressional uol;:minee, re- porpenoh simply upon the adoption of republicans—who will not coase to be Mr Larp is & minotity congress- man, but he promises to act as the representative of the anti-monopoly oy a policy but upon the selection of independent, and who know what they |1y ¢‘Constitutional Prohibition” in 1362 . L S — > ports that a ::u)omy ot ‘h"":d of- the right agents to carry it out. He | want. Théypv-no@ be whipped into -{.n state. Gen. U. 8. Grant con- m::‘.:}:l?x:;‘(]llig:;?elwor ‘:"‘;0':]'(; "3;:—5 . ~ fize holdera ‘‘eame down handsome- |, o ooq ihoe his .ppointmail were | the ranks on either side. To secure | tributes ‘‘An Undeserved Stigma,” in D g ly.” They were liko Davy Crockett's coon which calied out, “‘Don't thoot, T'll come down.” : : their support, their reasomsble de- invariably honest and competont men, | ooia BN RA ot They are so in- A laboriously constructed clvil service | diznant now at the evils which drove reform could accomplish little more, | them out of the republican party that Personally Thurlow Weed was a man | they will not stand them inany other. Taz Bex is not s newspaper. 801ovg |y ooy of soirit aud presence of mind in standard, they will form a new party, like this, adds ali the charmn of a ro- mance to the philosophical, historical study. It is a beok both for students and for the general public and is- in- dispensable for &l who seek to make themwselves acquainted with the on- ward march of liberty in continental politics, The North Aserican Keview for De- cember is a number of unusual inter- est. It opens with a sympositm ou “‘The Health of American Women,” contrabuted by Dr. Dio Lawis, Eliza- beth €ady Stanton and James Read Chadwick, the shree treating it from diffapent points of view. Gov. B. R. Sherman, of Towa, discusses defensive- which he vigorously asserts the erron- eous character of the court-martial sentence against Gen. Fitz John Por- tor. Richard A. Proctor writes of “‘The Influemco of Food on Civiliza: ses ‘‘The Decline of Clerical Author- publis- with compsaratimely so litde ) about the road that t is far more veluable than nine-tenths of the § N publications of the character plesed , on sale. & typogeaphical standpeint issued in the United States, being always print- ed with exquisite taste on fine poper and bound 1n the Lest manner.. 1| certainly is worth tha little troubie oceasioned in writing for it, and it is hazarding nothing to predict that. the new special edition devoted te the election which has just taken place will be pre-eminently the text book of CMAHA, NEB. HIMEBAUGH. MERRIAM & CO,, Propriators, Wholesale Dealers in be well for all desizivyg a copy to.write at omes to Mr, Lord, as the edision will be sent out to those making ap- plication on the primeiple of fizat come first served. Eivelopes will be ad- IVIEM ‘IVTd ‘STV0 odne B & 0 Red eck s by beew 1130k and 803 Farnam 8t. Cor. !‘Sth/f"” . il 2 < 4 A dressed as applicadions come, in, 80 Tue Republican bas discovered that | ¢ 5 4o mitable energy, of great firm- 1f neither party comes wp to their|tion.” Prof. Fisher, of Yale, discus |there may bl: no delay in uailing whex the work iv received & the a8 the publio fuils to agree with the |, which will contain the cloments of |jvy,” holding that it has declined only | hinder. he face of difficultics, His mind was |life and growih. electi ds pe ted by parties | tion of Mr. Pattison, was defeated by ~furly soen the ar 15'0.~Jm=: -1 t u,.':f e i atranh Gk Bmdim s 4 stato board. here '.[1" abeu: 3,000 | who are w5 to ba in the employ of | overwhekaing m 1““1;"'.'..“532"‘;:"'3:" ard, and nesded | o " 0 dby H. B, Slaven \“ ALSO voies thrown away by ihe the railroads. By all o Ny e A ————————— o el ancisso, § sle in Omaha by W, = . - e e Bl by had Qeclined | gy xoads. By all odds the worst| -y oo oo arguing 8 coward | Harper's Monthly for Dscember|y ™ Whishoves and Kevvara Kiros., SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS N 4 m.P‘:u;l__‘ - ‘» 2 ltu;' g . "“ NSRges wore """l““"“l " into courage,” Baut even the cowerd | presents an iuwn;uug table of w]m & Co iy ¢ » ' v ’ X ' R o, . " | the Repa on the line of | may be brave after irying Kidney. [tents, Among the notable articles - — — A ST s i . i . i wush ‘sh.: , and if the board isia- e B lotter reosived last|Wort, that medicine of wonderful |ere: The Great Scaport of Weatera| o o FLOTA! s ORRISTIAN'S, Stair hallmgs, Baluste s, Window olived to do a little eeratehing fo ASH R & & S ! Republican we shall pot feel hort. Meantime every dey Tus Bee circu- lates its 3,000 copies in Omaha and more than 4 000 patrons of its morn- ing edition outeide of the city secure all the news published in either of its contempurarics at as an early an hour a8 they can be reacted by sny news- paper, ImyiaeaTION 8till contiunes'to pour into this country from Earope, Ae- cording to the bureau of statistics there arrived in the month of October in the customs districts of Baltimore, Boaton, New York, Philadelphia, De- troit, New Orleans and Sau Fraucisco 45,965 cwigrants, or in rourd pum- bers very ueatly fifty thousand, in- clear and prompt in action, jadgment in regard to the expediency failed. in this country, he was ioatrumental in training many of our stroogest ed- ley and gave to the young Tribuie the woight of his inflaence and the benefi of his criticism, The school of jour- nalism which he foundedand of which he was the leading light has perhaps declined in inflaexce s news gathering has laregly taken precedence of indi. vidual expression of editorial ¢ but Mr. Weed's efforts in benalf of a bold and aggreesive press will not His | have cne more trial in cougress—a | jtuall of mensures and candidates rarely|crysy and we shall see how they will | tributors being six of oar wost promi- For years the father of journalism | &re wize and virtuous enough to meet | J¢ ffarson, Mme. Modjeska, Lawrenco itors. He brought out Horace Gree- | batter will take The republicans | i, the temporal aspects and that spir- it is even greater than ever short and sharp one. After that the | The number closea with a sympostun responsibility will reet on the Demo- | on ‘‘Success on the Stage,” the con- treat the popular demand, If they | nent ackors, John McCullough, Joseph it, they may govern the country for | Barrett, Maggio Mitchell and Witiiam many years. ~ If they fail, their party | Warren, is doomed forever. Another and a place, The statement recently published e e thst nearly 000 mawmuscripts are re- Pennsyivania’sa New Governor, ceivbd every month by The Century Cincinnati Commercial, Mng\ugirfia and n; junior l?.fl:lmgue' Robert E. Pattison, governor-elect |St Nicholas, emphssizes what every of Penvsylvania, has enjoyed s phe- editor has had ficu;)rl'x to kuuw,_th'nt nomenaliy successful political career, | there » no laol ”, ‘;‘;-‘_'stalé‘l““‘ld Ho is not yet 32 years of age, His|and activity In the United States father was Rev. Dr. Robert H, Pat- | But outside a small clrcle of trained tison, of the Methodist church, who | Writers, tho literary aspirants have died in 1875. Robert E, Pattison|&® abundance of -:ru‘io u:xhly‘, which graduated with the highest honors shows itself in freshnese of thoueht from the Philadelphia High Sshool, |#vd ides, yet have notadequate power He then studied law for three yei of literary expression. However, an e Georyla's New Senator. Philade'phia Times. Alfred H. Colquitt, the new demo. ' cratic senator from Georgis, » not the cqual of Hill in brillianoy or intellec- {ua! breadth, dut he will make a more pplio With Gh— it 5. P C o - g practical agd wseinl senator. Ho in a Milly o Variotiss of Milling Wheat, wodified edition of Sionewall Jackson, | Western Trade [Supplied with Oats and Corn at Lowest Quotations, with He did the budk of the gieaching and prompb shipments, Write for prices 4 praying for his commawd between £ battles duriag the war, and was as. dogged a wor fiend as bk kson in the flame of conflicr, Ho x wolike Jack- ESTABLISHED IN 1868. son in thab he is far from u religionizs of the old blue stockiag Calvin typa D. H. McDANELD & CO,, He is a Mothodist lecul mininert,ia s ot ey oo wd HIOES TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, religions revivals sad political caw- OO ANID EURS, paigns at the same time without soil- | 904 Nonp 16th 8t., Masonic Blo Main House, 4, 48 and 52 Dear- oy Oy oy T i ing tho cloth or degradivg religion born avenws, Ohioago, Refer by permission to Hide and Ho ofwen preachas for the colored o Beloc by papmia churches in his siate, snd 5y ais 3 . cease to b felt for many years to| .oatice » five ves! euconraging sign of improviment, 1n|temps to alienste the eolor volers | mmemem—— gludipg alians vos intending to re-| o Cxor Gill biy dlear. sighted 3)..‘(;*‘9;‘7‘1 :-t.\:h?b 1rc(l",,',": ,;'.f,.”:fl the latter particular, is reported from | from his political fortunes has been 8 ’ Walp in this ouontey, AS fhisralo ol g0 morsed fnta wh the city of Philadelphia, In 1880 he | The Century cffios, whera it is said | marked failure. Hawill boa decided G— FAN ' |1 (5] | v l : Y the growth of Au from emigra tion alone would be half a million a| year, Turse is a bare g My, Charles H. Gere wiiil pull » very small kuot hole next Mord when the returns for the regent state usiver sre canvassed ty Mz, Gere, they may possibly pull tim | how Ds. Sadler, auti-monopoly o If they do it will be & very | date for the s narcow eecape and notbing to brag of. | 1 wer, candidate for fluat representa- | Giuretic. Try it. through. |state and national legial weld an icfluence long after their suthor ia forgot s Nebraska shoald virtuously resg Jities, lvery mail brings of outrageous ¥ | nighs from one of those connties show te senate, and Mr. was re-clected ccmptroller by o most | that the manuscripts olfored by un siguificant vote, notwithstanding tho | known writers Qurhg Ihe, past & fact that ha was most bitterly opposed | wonths show a marked advanct i by a faction of his own party, Had " it not been for this opposition he 5 in Philadelphia was 20,833, while|bad been accepted, & Mr. Pattison's wss 13,593, demoeratic city ticket, with the excep. ANl the | motive, that on reading 1k ber of the magizine the efficasy in all direses of tho liver and | France; Southern Oalifogais and idoeys. It is prepared in both dry [ Oameos of Colonial Osrflna; Miss nd liguid form and can always be re- | Woolson continues her interesiing licd on as_an effective cathartio snd |story “For the Mayor,” and the Ed- ly popular senator snd oxe of the mee: cficient members of that body, T &~Dresacs, cloaks, coats, stockings | AG 5 and all garments can be eolored sue- | 2 3 ly with the Dimmond 'Dyes, B b'e co) O SLAVEN'S YOSEMITE COLOGNE moan Yottt iy Carpenter’'s Materials, MANUFACTURERS OF PER SACK, SCHUYLER SNOWFLAKE $3 50. NUMBERS2, A VERY ¥INE FLOUR, 8 00 only, and Door Frames, Etc. First-class facilities for the Manufactare of all kinds of Mouldiugs, Maiviog and atching @ Specialt Orders from the ¢ou ey will be prom itor's Basy Opair, Literary avd His- ot HEIMROD & DORMAN'S, 238! | Sinasil tommu oas . A RIOYER, Ceapriaton,

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