' 4 fcbraclca Slliualtsci JOIINL. COLHAPP.EDITOR- BROWXVILLETHCIiSDAV.JlALCD, 22, 1SG5. Csnnty Union Convention. The Union Voters of this County are recommended to meet in their respective Precincts ca Thursday, the Mil daj of April, to select Delegates to attend a County Union Convention to assemble on Saturdcy. the Wi day of'ApiII, in Brownville, Neb., for the purpose o! choosing Five relegates to represent Nemata County in the Territorial Unisu Convention to be held in Platlrmouih m the lCik day cL April. Also, to nominate a Ticket to represent Nemaha county io the Legislature. The various Precincts are entitled to the following number of delegates in the County Convention ; . Browcville, - - Peru, Nemaha,. Glen Rock, Aspinwall, Benton. Bedford, Lafayette, Washington, Douglass, Total, 9 6 4 3 3 1 1 I o 32 By order cf the Union Central Corn rnittee. C. G. DORSEY, Ch'm. T. R. FiEiirn, Sec. UNION TERRITORIAL CONTENTION. The Uuion Voters of the Territory of Nebraska are recommended to assemble ot the county seats of their respective counties, on , Saturday, Slarcli 31st, 1SGG, at 2 o'clock, P. M.t and select the num. fcerof Delegates to which iheyareseve rally entitled (with an alternate for each Delegate) to meet in General Conven tion at Plattsmouth, on Thursday, April Mill. 18GC, for the purpose of nominating candidates to be supported at the election to be held on the second day of June next, for the following offices, to-wit : One member of Congress. Governor, Secretary of State Auditor, Treasurer, a Chief Justice and two Associate Justices of the Supreme Court. The different counties will be entitled in said Convention to the representation in if ated in the annexed table : Wc'urdsou, X'awLee. Pawnee, Johnson and Gage, Gage and Jones, Nemaha, Otoe, Cass, Cass, Lancaster, Saline & Seward 1 Johnson, I Lancaster, 1 Lancaster, Seward &, Saunders, 1 Saline, Butler, Lincoln &. Kearney 1 Sarpy, Sarpy and Dodge, Douglas, Djdge, Platte, Platte, Hall, Buffalo &. Merrick, Piatt, Monroe, Merrick, Buffalo, Kearney and Lincoln,' -Washington, "Washington, Burt and Cuming, Burt and Cuming, Dakota, Dakota, Dixon, Cedir andL'Eau- Qui Court. 2 Dixon,' Cedar Sc. L'Eau Qui Court 1 Total, 52 It is hoped thai the primary meetings ia the various counties will be generally attended, to the end that the choice of the Union voters cf the Territory may be fairly reflected in the Convention. By order of the Union Central Com mittee of the Territory of Nebraska. O.P.MASON, Chairman. Omaha, Neb., March 7, 1SG6. o 1 7 1 1 1 1 o 1 1 1 See the call for a Union County Con Tention. The Precinct meetings should be well attended, and all local prejudices eet aside ia the nomination cf the pri raarv dlesrates. The aim should be to tend the best representative men in the county to the Plattsmouth Convention men who have the will and the ability to claim and secure for Nemaha County all the deserves in the organization cf State. The Legislative Ticket is equally, if xjet mure, important. Men mist be nom inated who will do honor and benefit to their constituency, as well as to therasel res ; in i-hcrt, men who will ably and faithfully represent the great and grow irg interests cf Nemaha county. Let there te a ceceral turn out ! Th3 Neb. City News says cf itself. "The News is a candid journal." Hi-bt. The most kc-v-e-dayi are candid. nauseating pills As so much has been said by the oppo sition to Slate organization ia this Ter ritory comparing our situation with that cf Colorado, and suggesting that we would fare as she docs, 1st us see what grounds there ere for such assertions: On Monday, March 13th, the bill for admission of Colorado came up. Mr. Sumner's impartial suffrage amendment being the first question ; it was with drawn during the debate without a vote being taken on its adoption. Mr. Pomeroy, (Kansas.) favored the admission of Colorado. Sauisbury, (Del.) opposed it ca the ground of its small population. . Grimes, (Iowa,) opposed on account of the heavy tax he said it would .im pose on the people of Colorado. If he voted for Colorado to-day he would have to voted to admit Nebraska and Montana to-morrow. He said the enabling act was not repealed but expired by reason a refucal of the people to accept it at first. The question., was whether the Senate was prepared to sanction a rotten borough system which- would give: to 12,000 to 1-5,000 people aa equal power with New York in the. Senate. . Hendricks, (Ind.) did not oppose it on the question of suffrage, but did not believe the 15,000 people of Colorado should be entitled to the same right in the Senate as the 1,300,000 people of Indiana; also opposed because the ma jority of the people of Colorado for the Constitution wasonly455 ! . Lane, (Kansas,) said the . arguments of Mr. Hendricks aga inst the admission of Colorado were the same as urged against the admission of Kansas by Mr; Hunter, of Virginia and other Southern men. California and Florida were ad mitted without any enumeration of pop ulation. He said he. would vote for the admission cf Colorado, because the people had signified iheir willingness to bear the responsibilities of a State govern ment. Colorado had ai many people within her borders now as Kansas had, when every Republican Senator voted for the admission of Kansas. Wade, (Ohio,) he had reluctently re ported the pending' bill, when heliad first reported it, the Committee oa Ter ritories wexe informed that people were flocking to Colorado as they did to Cali fornia a few years ago, and that soon there would be a very larga papulation there. He would now oppose her ad mission. McDugal, (Cal.) said the lands of the West were being developed mere rapid ly than Sena-tors were aware of, and a Territory scon outgrows the requirements of a Territorial Government, and needed representation in Congress. He believ ed Colorado would be much .better off as a State than a Territory. Trumbull, (111.) said if this were a new question . he might oppose the ad mission of Colorado ; but inducements had been held out, an enabling act passed and the . people of Colorado invited to form a State Government. Fessenden, (Me.) said the people bad refused to form a State under the enabl ing act, but subsequently voted for ad mission as a State. " Trumbull, resuming, said the enabling act was still-in force notwithstanding the refusal to accept on one occasion. . The act had not been repealed.. As to popu Iation, he held that it was bad faith to reject Colorado on that ground, as her population was now as great as when her enabling act was framed. Sumner, (Mass.) said the population of Colorado had decreased since 186! In 1SG1 there were 10,000 and upwards of voters, in 1665 there were less than 6,000. : Doolittld, (Wis.) said he voted for the enabling act in the belief that there were at that li me from 40,000 to 50,000 in habitants; it would appear, however that there were bnt 25,000 people in the Territory whea the enabling act was passed, and the population had since been decreasing. Under these circumstances he believed it his duty to vote against admission. Cragin, (N. H.) believed that by the enabling act CoDgress was bound io re ceive Colorado. The question of popu lation was not discussed by the Commit tee on Territories. He believed there was now a populatioa of 40,000 in the Territory. He saw no reason now to re ject her which did not exist when the en abling act was passed. Itamsey, (Minn.) said that the failure of Congress to repeal the enabling act was a standing invitation to Colorado to form a State government ; and that on account of the position of Colorado so large a populatioa should not be demand ed a? of Territories nearer home. The vote wa?i then taken oa the pas sasre of the bill for the admission of Col orado as one of the States ia the Union, to a third reading, and resulted yeas 14, nays 21, and it is laid over for the time increasing, uril now she ha3 a popula tion of at liat 60,000. In this respect, then, there il a vast difference between the two, so palpable that it will be easy to convince the Sanate of it. The fear of imposing increased taxes may be applied to ColoraJo, and not to Nebraska, as the princ:ple source cf gain we get by becoming a State School Lands cannot be as available ia a rug ged, mountainous, mining country, as in as good an agricultural country as Ne braska is. The question of the enabling act dis cussed in the above is then the only one in which the situations are at all similar All who are in the least familiar with the form of Enabling Acts, must knowthatno date is specified by which time its pro visions must be accepted, and no date for its expiration. They are thus left open for the simple reason that if the Terri tory is thought capable cf assuming State government at the time of the passage of suca aaact. she must be at any time thereafter ; any other reasoning would imply, as a general rule, a decreasing population, while all know that the con trary is the general rule, to which Col orado is, perhaps the only exception known. Ou the 14tb, Senator Wilson. (Mass) urged a reconsideration of the vote by which the Senate refused to pass to a third reading the bill for the admission of Colorado, although he had voted again st it on" the 13th. ; We have more hope now for the ad mission of Colorado, and also Nebraska, than ever before. The "negro is out of the wood-pile," beyoud perad venture, and the Senate "h itself again," and not Charles Sumner, as many have supposed. Confident that our population and wealth is suffcieta for State, that the Constitution is-in every respect good, and of a large majority for Slate, we predict that the snows ni another winter will nevermore fall on Nebraska Terri tory!. ....... ed by National and State aid, it is not unfair to estimate the value cf taxable property in Kansas in 1S8-5. aa" double that of 1SG0, or SG2.65-5.790; Now, according to the above figures fiurnished by ihe opposition to Slaiz the tax of SI 16.000 on the population of Kansas 250 000 is about 21 cents per head; while the lax in Nebraska, last year S78.000on our population of 60.000, was SI 30 per head ; or SI 09 more than on a citizen of Kansas! This makes a tax in Kansas of 1 1 4 mill on the dollar ; and in Nebraska 6 mills were levied on the dollar lal year ! Jliid the people of Kansas are clearing up the dtlt of ihe State made by the large Slate. boun ty given io her volunteers during the rebel lion I As to the mean proposition of remain ing1 "dependant" upon the most generous and benevolent government the sun ever shone on, the oppos tion can have all its benefits; as also the aid cf ihjr tutelary Saint, so soleinuly invoked in the above "pertinent" paragraph!.- "Comparisons ar odious." is a true saying; and no di.-passionate' man can compare the flouncing nnd prosperous condition of Kaiisa.5, with the "beggar ly", and puny co dilion of Nebraska, without confessing that the odium rests upon us. :i ' ' ' Give U3 some more-figures, Morton, even if prepared" by -your 'friends, for they the figures I lie. We find in th News of the 17ih, a letter from Brownville. very de?criptive of the State ueeiing held in thii City ca the 12th. froti which we make the. fol lowing extract, which will be hugely ap preciated by aW wl o were at theiueeting, The time arrived ai.d f mnd n large audience. ;ti wailing Oliver (Hon. O P. Mason) delivered himself of the figures given him by the Territorial Au ditor and Coihappof h Advertiser (as tbey are brainy dogs-) proving to us that this, new Siate, by the bastard constitu tion of Kellog &. Co , can be run for S13 000 per year; ' this being so ridicu lous, ihai some of Perry's friends thought thai u looked rath'r small, t!m thing-of living in a S13.0OO Siate. but Maion says that figures tvon't lie Alter Olivrr relieved himself jf his burthero of fig ures, he was answered by Judse Crane n n rnodeat but leUincCT,, reiug'fre- quently interrupted by prolonged cheer invasion, raw recruits are being drilled constantly. , A muve is said to I e on foot in several ! SPECIAL NOT1C V.'orlbj iae A move is saia io i e on rooi m ; MAlES, wn arc - - .-.r,,., n . f the ' Southern States, to call Si i te ! J,"'!: inventions cf all loyal men irrespective I ;t u1' 'A nr. an J Kk o i i , -i r f bo' '! 1- . . . ,; ! STRANG !, BUT TUf-v; ot Conv of puny or color, to orgniZ' loyai Siato Governments and elect loyal delegate io Congress, whd shall at ence -pre.-ent themselves to Congress and ask for rec nitioti of themselves and their new State d'J Governments. h -Lit t thi-ir cu-t.M,T, t: ev wi.i im on ll)erc.,.t - -''' 1 r;n.t 1 , wi'b Si v-r Kx!. ;- u ' --' " e'.-ther vvi b Wh ,!e-.i: . Ciu-'i'i.r '" . fit fit i-'.rt ii ( Yr' t'.-u.sl, t.. -. : it-, :ii'l i.i 1 v .Mai c.-n hear n-:i.u i aLt 'gu r-.T ft turn si.j ,1 in ti.e in !e.--1-. . J. i )Uj., Xivtui i-u-.il bv !. All nvicri will j !c- :- liiH S- M. P. 1? 4 ir..!. ... . i . Tuiit-n t p ly li pi i' 'v;; -. rl iv 4ij t)C('Pniln-r I.M5 i e . Ttj-r.- i. n A--Dt b it w.i li !' : 'T.nrifl -.ftirn $1 . i '' ? :1 i ;n '.: - it n ; ear s i: n.etj io oe i j er- u ii. S 1 'r LtM K I. a V 3 f K. is r. Last Sunday night two horse were, stolen from citizens of this county, one from J. Q. A. Smith living on the bluff road between this place and Nemaha City, the other from Mr. Hawk, Jiving on the bame road. On Saturday night three horses were ing, which proved io Ferry that he had stolen irom near Nebraska Uity. sul lul lutJ wronguurcu,. ujere uei ... . ....... lahnut four oiti nfl.lv.o nnti.Qijia .i . iituaic uui ucaiu wi uic ay pi cucuciuu e . i .u: jt: -.t oi iu micTN, er ox unuicg any ot me provj lhe advailage3 of State, opene.l hordes. v. - Jhis low poi ho'ise battery. on the Ju tge. Too much vigilence cannot be exercis- in a personal tirade, peculiar only to ed bv ourfarmers in euardimr theimro. "on- retry, tor wnit-n he receiv The Congressional Committee on Public Lands have reported adversely to the proposition of equili2ition of biua ties by giving land warrants. Threare 60 000 bind warrants o'ltstandinj. cover ing G 331,660 acres ; Agricultural C-l- le;e Script outstanding 8 000 000 ;cres ; J the amount additional vhich will l ave to b issufd to ihe Souihern S ates. vvhn reconstructed' estimated at 1 500 000; they eMiniate to equalize bounnes wou'd 160 000 C00 acres. They aryue that if this amount inland warrants is thrown on the market the value of Itnd warrants would be so reduced as to make it next to no bounty at all ; speculators would buy litem up ai.d locate ihe besi lands with thein,'and virtually kill the Home stead Pre-emption law. They advise a money bounty. - Would it not be well for the anii-S'ate mua io study ihese figures, and reflect on how long it will be with Ag. Cul. Scripl at 60 cei.ts an acre bi-fure. all our lands are in the hands of fprculators and ihe land grants offered u? by Con ffress wi.l amount to nothing ! i W J ..-J US oeinor. The above indicates very plainly that the case of Colorado cannot be taken as a'criterion by which to judge of the ad missioa or rejection of Nebraska when she applies for admission. The highest estimate of her population spoken of dur ing the debate was 40,000, and a num ber of Senators speak positively of a de crease of near cne-half cf her popula tion sicca 1561 , when it was 25,000. Nebraska had in 1803 a populatioa of 2S.811, ted has been steadily inirurely perty. As the country is now situated no better field for thieving exists than Nebraska ; we have no place in which to secure thieves in the counties or at our Capitol, and" the only methods lhat can be adopted is either to have hired guards to watch them day and night, or to lynch them ; the first costs the county often ten time the worth of the property stolen, or nine times out of tenthe excape of the criminal; the second plan our civil authorities are bound to prevent if possible. Under these circumstances we can see nothing to better this state of affairs until Nebraska assumes State cov- ernment, and builds a Penitentiary, in which to punish crimiuals, and make them pay, in labor, the cost of their keep ing. Enough has already been wasted in guard fees in Nebraska to build a good Peuiteuiary. - Soon our County Court wilt meet, and as F. H. Aimden. Commissioner for this District, will soon move o it of ihe County. having already sold out his farm, aud is now in Missouri looking up a location another will have to be appointed. The appointing power consists of the County Clerk, the Prosecuting Attorney and th-? Probate Judge. We have heard of but one man as being the choxe of the peo pie and quite a number cf our ci'izens have expressed themselves decidedly in his favor and that is S. W. Kennedy.. To no other' man does rhe county stand so largely indebted for its present po-i lion financially and in public improve ments. We know he would be chosen if it were left to lhe people, and to reflect the wish cf the people is the duty of the 13 appointing power. The following, under the heading "per tinent" we find in the News of the 17th credited as an extract from a letter writ ten by M. W. Reynolds, who conducted that sheet the first time Morton was ed i isses instead of cheers." The corres-pond nt signs himself ''Open for Conviction ;" far murdering the Eng lish language, doubtless! "There beiug &coui jour eta h nve anti-Male men present ;" rather a small majority of the large crowd, alihough if four out of the five anti-Stale men preseniwere there, a four-fifths majority of .ihe anti-State men were present. lit r? ha ami- Sta:e figures for ye, "till yecau'i rest J" Again, re gardless I of ihe standing of Judge Cra.ne as a lawyer, he siyles his speech, "mod est ;" now, who would every employ a "modest" lawyer "tut west;" knowing Judjje Crane to be a man of firmness yes, he has even stood upon the top of the Aleghany Mountains and tolled his phort but pathetic narrative and not given to' bashfuluess, we deny the foul slander, and "send it rippling" back to its villainour author. Again, he says. Mason ropeued his low poi-house battery on the Judge ;" we can only judge of iis value by the gloriou.- execution n done. completely silencing the ol l-fahioned, smooth-bore bluudeibuss fired off against State, which, although "full of sound and fury," hurl nobody rhe News says ihe above letter was "written bv one of the most substantial farmers of Nemaha com ly ;" our a vice to hitn is : Leit 1 uannacy alone and go to "wit Idin the miiej pen," for therein li-s your pith io glory ! I3ut, ai le.st give your home paper a chance to pub- li.-h your brilliant fictions. Nota Beany Su.Ce. writing the above we have discovered who this "most sub stantial farmer of Nemaha county is: it flrtemus Ward's lost brother I We m i v c!a:m no reward irom nis relations lor this discovery. - We notice a call, published in the Ntws, for a Territorial Democratic Con vention, to meet ai Nebraska City, un the 19. h I of April; to take into considera tion questtonsof Territorial and Nation al importance. The question of Territorial impori ance!' doubtless is to keep the people of Nebraska "sponging" on ihe general Government for 31 000 annually, until fhty c-n control ihe S ate elec icn. Th' quesiiou of Nati.-n tl imp nanc-i" is to indicate by iheir action thai, a they am noi "feed at the j-ublic crip" ihej d sire to keep 'he Ternt.y hitched there long inucft on this Una or "paupers, ami we ihink she will sh v hr" indpaden and self-reliance in this' matter. ST. JOSKPI-I, MO. Importer and kolesale and Retail Dealer in Iron . STEEL and HSA?Y HABBT7AIIS. : n i., C rri.'t", " t V ii rk. A6RICULTUHAL I M PL EM KNTS. Springs Axes Axe'.. , S'.i.-t.-'s nn 1 Si-.i.:o?.Fil.i3 nn 1 lU--:, Chaiuji, Car.iiiaai T.ro Hl:i, Xtt4 Wa-iiei, X;iii-. 'll-r-t- i.aiN. H-rc t M Shoe.-, S.iw?, ere. etc. Catins and H c II OV7 T7arc, Smjar KmlAn diron?, Skilled and Liii Siew po'.- i-vn-. Fruit Uettles and S ft Irons. DlackVlUillLs' Tools Anvils. Su, nnd Dies. Be !..us.S!tJge ar.d IU:, Iha.' lacrs Viiei, l'ii;L-cr. f:.!.-!-, Krr-r-K ivs Tujirt- lr-n, Wrenches Ao. m ;4 ' , l Ox YoliO?, Axle nre-f. Ox chains U'o n .l ick?, Ox .ho- niiN, Shove! an J ri 's"!J jsj, iit. XT xx To a. diooltca zxn cl JZ1 on f-r7 ixx 51". 1,000 OKLIiJB 1 iVTJUD MOLINK TL,0'W$i Mf5 f 4 Icr putnti'-l. j r. I sim riiT to nny tot invon'? ; anl JIcCorniicIiN 32oivcrs and licajici-s, liallcrs !2orse Cora Planters Sulky Crn CultiviiHr.-, Uant t. ru I'.a'iu r, Ci-ra SLtllorj t'.-iy iviki;?, eLelje, Gtanclarcl Son Buying my goola direct rr m the niinurctu er, I oS'-ji- grett ia.lacoiueaU . TO WHOLESALE VV P.C11 ASERS AT Constable's Iron and Steel Warehouse ST. JOSEPH, MO. ' , 70 The Nebraska City Press his lately been very silent on th-. State ci ; whal it means we cannot 'ell. u iles. i? i rest prepar.iiory io 'irettirii; ov-r ihi fence." Miller' thunder holis w-' re J ing no danr-ige. and w aincrely regrf i that iliey are "played out." -- W - THE Mm. A man, supposed to be ihg notorious guerrilla Quantrill. was arrested in New York, on the 13ih. 6n Line, and elected to stiy at home from Congress : I others from Kansas where he commit Our State (Kansas) expenses amount ted. the Lawrence massacre have :den to $116,000 this year. What in the devil do you want of a Stale, when you have your expenses paid as a Territory and have not population enough to make a respectable county V tified him, and be will aoou be sent to Kansas for trial. A large number of whisky distillers have been recently arrested in New This isihe first instance where the York City on charge of defrauding gov- News has thown any figures in the State ernment of revenue and bribing gov- question, a td although borrowed, we are ernmeni officials. obliged by their publication. Let us see how they fell against State : According i the census of 1S60 the population of Nebraska was 2S.S41, that of Kansas, 107.206. The value of tax- able property in Nebraska, I860. $7,426, A Commission has been appointed to treat with ihe Lostile Indians on our western plains, to meet at Fort Laramie next June. The Commission consists of Hon. E. B. Taylor, Gen. H. II. Sibley and Col. McLoren. A '"talk" has al- LEGAL XQTICE. DnriJ II. M.urlii-k wHI take noli ; t.h ii' .Mry C. Miinrdiek aj eninpliiifint, Uitl ot ;h 1 1 - Ii ty nf March, A. D. IS.1, file her peiiliin in th..'Ju : f the Clerk rf the Di-tnct Curt if N-nnh i C , Nebra-kn P-rritor, :i;:iiit h. mm defei d.'Ut : tin-tiliji-ct nml pntycrof wli.ch petition is t u-o't-iiu a lcrtfliroruin4 the e nupliia tot fr iia ihele'-u J.mt ir -m ihe fcotuli of luuriin niy.ituT giving ti.e custody i.f her infant d.iulicer lotrie c in;luii;nt. on lhe ground 'hit th dt t.eml.inf. has Ii r n,re lb -in two years wili'ully abuiiioaed iul uticrU d.-'rt- d craijl iiuiut, and has rclu:cl and neglected to jirovnie si miin'n tnc s l""r h '.r. Defend mi isre'jui ed :oapmar and n.-wrr iml ttitin on tr tclru tau 7th d tjr of May, a.ii. iS-Ti. CRANK A THOMAS. Ati-'ya lor o ijiI tirun'. F Marth 2?d, 186, - m.2-,iii.jr. LEGAL JVOT1GE. 1'eW Ault will fke notii-e ihat Can line O. Ault a - inliinnt. fi ed H-itiin in l!h:i:ic-ry m the Ditrmt l oiur I' 'I e oun'y f Ht in h;i intlie T-rriUiry of Mebnitk, jjiinst him ns re.-jxnl nt. Th objict- and jfityer thereof is t ubtniu dei-roe divit cmjj her from the .ni l ieipndcHt fruits bon-iiot imtrim -ny,n I at-o ifinj ro her allimo Ly out nf thu nortti h it of the 8iuthe;ir.-t qu.iri. r of Secliuu iwd, iowiighi tour nori, i, ruig ; hi ret.-n cact. a luntcd in said county of Neuiaha. Smi-i I'e tr Ault U ruqui'cd tu answer on r oef .re May 7ih A.D. 1S0.-S. CKAB A 1HUMAS, Sol K-i t'-r for Coup! a inn nt. Brow nv! He, N'eb. March 1 . i.o2i) 4 ISirOTiTAXT uiiiiytfVTO LADIES. ) riiu FOll FEMALES, Are the only aiid tul fount u"'c-ine f-r Firtn-ile extnit. H i not tr Eo ith jour altli, a .d ue cheap and dangerou- incdi ine, wim-i irn gisls mny have bought, and wi!! ie ' tn nand f --u, bin i ig' ornt of iheir qualiti i. .1 a V imli.w'ii Mrrlio Piil'are m id in V v r opera t:ons . cone all irregu'aritia. .-i-id (Mtnlul in n-iruiii ..i: r m v nil obstruction'', whjthir from 1 i.t tho-wis". N tn tiden. wife or mother hnul I be witi o 4t tht-n . Try th m ueCMrd g t direct! n , anil we know toe result ill ra a deiref . Ak lor Mm. Winn low My.-ti fills lake n n o I er I'rice J2,0u fK?r box . or three boxes for 5 dl!ai. For s.ile by all dru.rit'. Peter K Blow. Oen . Agent, St.Lui. Jian.li 2-,d,13i;B no 26-1 y WANTED! Agent. Mala an 1 Fetra'e,ai $75 to per month, to wll t'i t- r-vtc.l , Common Seme Family Sew nj Machine . , PRICE S1S.OO Thin Marhine will on a, I kinUot woik qtia! to ih- hi:h priced Mai t.ine-, ! i the iily p a:i ;ii nd i-1 able Cheap Sewing Mho line intbowor d Addr'- SECOMC CO Chicago. M , or CI e veto n Principal Uffi -a. No. 2 Custom Home Iliv Ciica.' 10-25 1 fi.nn Notice or Co-p.irlner.ship. I3riwkyilLe Neb.. ) March. 13ih, 1S66 I have this hiy ad.ni ietj my br hr Lewis Hill, a- Pinner in my If mv. Fhe Cpatlijr!-hip will dalr from Mnr. h 1st. 166G The i'vle of ihe firm will tn Tiieo Hill & Co." 25 3i-i.dii THEO. HILL. 949, of Kansas, 31,327,895. Our popu. ready beea had, over the wires, with ation m 1665, was over double what it chiefs representing about 1000 warriors, was in IS60, or about 60.009 ; the popu- j who are all. anxious for peace. ation of Kansas in'1865, according1 to j Gold quoted in St. Louis cn the 14ih, the lowest estimates, was 250,000. The 30 to 31 cents premium. total value of taxable property in Ne- The Republican candidate for Gov- braska for 1565, was S13, 146,955. As ernor is elected by about 5.000 majority. : ? i ...l ii :j ti. : ..H blwin property iuurta5ca j.iupuruonaieiy muca onsiueracie ewnuieui sun icikus; Pir. ?gh5n2 tho Prejcriptioof FRSB.bj return ! aster where public improvement are be. in Canada, and troops are constantly kept . waii.wiii pieaw addw ? THE'GREATFrtMR wlii-h Mnguire's ITnir Bam bas scqui reJ in reftorir Ibe nafnrjj coior Kia U- ) UTiiWUmMlliPmiliy ciirtuion .-r itiH,air, H rrel y M tteiu.ig aiul Deaulifj In lr, his re.i.lert'j 'i ii ii r ' ei' ii' 'I Kf-il i lie ii.l ln i roiu pii k i.oii cl ize;i: Messrs. ilaguire: Welia'e ie ip.i y.or invalu.il le IlAllt HA l.H, nJ it hs re-to-ed the color and irowth i-l our liui io ur t iiit e kn''i: ii"ii a? d wj m Lee my reu.uiuuui H to the pnoiie. (Miei,; 1. A. KKNO'.M , I5rti,!ift ; W.M K B A ncoy It S- rotary mxl Li b rUn O'Fil l.m puiTt. h in: I'ifiiiiw; Jos B Mtl.ow, Vioef.es.j.Qt War llj ter K.iml C .minute. Prepared cnbj by J. U il a iI IRK, Cheiniu ami irn?i..u. iivest comer in.j au I OiiTeSfetts id Sold by all UrugguU Price SI 00 jer Dutlle. Diarrhea, Dysentery, Summer Complaint, &c. &c V FST HS !AMIAKV I ) EMISSION. K. 10 X 5th .Si. St .xil jg mi Messrs. J. 4 C: Mngu.ie Uru ij its :-;. enu-ii : 'iur Arn-.t the r.mnniuu hav istrjt,ttiei ur..... in.ilij Ami) joiir .x ci uo ..io Pi.ini. t.f ttiM euro of Hiar.iiei ui l)ein cry. nI thw rp-tr' -e-V-f to U exci-lleiit iiMUtie, tul it t uxi. w.ta w:i;, ,i i 4 U i k.v' H :hi r?.i; on'it f t. .-,. ,.' ."l , 4.U. Oi:.M.,N. Seirelarj ll'ettern Sanitary Commotio'.' WarReuek FisdokSt Louis louxty. Pjiesioet' )ffce. iO Sprcce St ) ' Si. I Mo , J.i ii ary 3 t l-t.j. iVrti J. i' C. Mi'ju re Vru;ghti : WHinei.l ,...r (V,,,, Ks r.ci t bt m e P: m- .nior.e nu- t ' tneoiuie-i.' ia .ii. . . it Ii the ui.i .-at t-v!oi-) it-s-.n. W't-uiiio-.it. iuavrec.muiiia , the ucm Liijn iifa Jit. mine in u.- ai u t.uo no u ttiii ol ijitd nies win rouii be m- re ex . n iv- iy tn ,wn MAGUIRER'S EXPECTORANT SYRUR"' The Gnat Hoard y jor Couhi Colds, At!i,i i. lltonchitas. Spitting of B-oo-l at.d JLL'VISEJSE OF TlltJ LLKYGs. Ifa-boc-n usK in- st :-tt:r-j.f.-i I y 8 ,! k. puat ohm i" lion- .!.; yicii.ny for niore lint. ttiii:i ti-a- ;i!id jo. n. uioni i ii v I... Iriive i. km it i. l e i..e in. m w- ti efii fen eJ;. i.-r Clt-i Coni.Iaiut evir ji.-c.-v. : til. It i i iitirr if;'c iii!r. hi ir.ni ue uhI i't. t i- mid "l -.ilfiT 'i rv it . t dlli'i l I - - - AL AG U L KE'S.A.LTIIi'ATIV K lLIXIOH. It ill Lure Stn-Jvlii Rheumatism Jn.Tafiu, (ju t, JJm: i it ami Siyhim.l jjjfu tions (Joit r. Stcrh iu m of the Joints Carw of t .e B ,ts, 'A prv ,.; r w Lntjtions HUdiiii Pi vip.-ei. E.-ifurgfoieutt of tin- (itn l I'.i,.;',.;:, ;..,.., rs. and alt fi.- ariin g J i o n Lupnrity of the Blood. l'riiV .2 fHT IJillllC. J.&C MA;r"-: o- ii-i-..i.l ! -taci-ii. S .le 'Pro irietor, S I o i-. . v ,ry ,rv 1 1 y ; .:.-;ti iu-,e Zjre-i.l.tr one of our Ami una for further tn ft r-i.,tu mjt Chills and Fever. Bilious and" Intermittent Fever, JLiumb Ague, etc etc M-AOUIi I AG UK M I 7ZTUTK. i i m ot.i.ot. .1 lv I i i in .t . II i ;) r n.i-ii v c u .io;.., .i..ui. .., ,.. I,, v m -l.iiriii-. It Una it. ii t:ii.r..-ij;M t-.-. t.i ... wxv to th-- !. -t f.,i.-r - r 1 1 i, .. . il Ii.i-uc-'c ii -I ia n'.i.i.hi. n ir H.-e'i it lair rt , a u n eri r -. tit it -,n ...i,.i i h t. r-r l n ' - n.tii.i,t t t ,-iir.- ii, . , .Mi-ii. !..i,i tn i . il'i, ' . b' . I... ... i j i .: i .. . i , t . ,. , . . ....... &-! . I 1 cn 1 j.i a u u !i.r . i l l:- ilil!4j:J ir , j n i-M t i mo. "IT?. r3 "rN -a r i i . t i i i i m m mima m m waiieiii'se NO. 22 THIIID STliECT, I wotiM rrsert futiv invite Ihe ai tetitloo of Farmer tf my lrirenil well sc Iiv te l tj-ik f Arirniioi I in p 1 e mx' :-. c.iisi liiB i t'rt of JUuline lluvk hland and Gang Plows. Sully Cultivators, Wheat Drill, Brown's and id her Corn Planters. Revolving and Sully Hay' Rake j Cider JUdl Cane Mil's. Fanning Mills, Johvstuis Union Washing Machines. Also stgrent for I'iltNaml C ase 'l In asliln- Machines Osage Orange Seed with directions for nlanting AND TRAINING Also Field and Garden Seed lor "salo at all Times Slig ) and Tyrone Iron, Steel and Heavy Hasdware To Wit.u I iiiTite the iteini ot or Blurk-ml'li'it mi I Pealern. My stock of BUeksnilcb's Tool i Urg rotiij, ele iKiibiiiu in pari of Anvils, Vises, Eellows, Rasps, Tuyere iron, Horse and L'ulo Shoes, &z Wagon and Hugjry Wood-work Of il.ejy Description. Down's Tliiinble Skeins, Falrbnxilis Scnlcs, Afjrnt. for Cf rover ami Baker $ Celebrated tietriny Alurhines. st.,.,,, . ,..h ,.5 ,TMt A. G MANsFlhliD. GKOVfibTEEN & CO, PIANO ro H T K AI A N U K A C T V It Elf XX-L0.33'TO.-5r ISTJZl'W 1rOII X. TO CONSUiMPTIVE- Th- atti u'i r . I t! : 1'i.liix- iiriil tin? Jrwle ii invited toi.ur New S ;ii 7 O F-rtc, hii ! i r villain- ;nnl j ur ry t tepe nri- nnriralietl hv nv i i I'-- t.. "ii n u ?ioi;aio it II th- in i!r uni r.v i-u .e:t Fun, h. (J rind action. Ilur;. IN o.i I. , r t F i : tt.r-. An- nn.l f:n-h iii.irniiii'i.r ! i i-- n n mli-r i t.i iirwr.n:il -n i- rr. i-.n ol i! r . J . H . i ro c: ' ' " h:td Drueti' ;il v xvi i'-ni c f i.vtr:!0 vt-nr in t h-i r ii.anui'ic'ure. i- futlv wi.ru hfi in rv j "tU : It.; " l,..r 0 ,r TIie"C'ovfhlrrn IMjiiio rrlc' irc irtl flic I;Jiirsl aunrIofnl oicr till olliii sat the Cclcki atcil orlUN I'air! rill The ndrerti.-er. having been restored to hftlth in a few week by a erj simple rem -dy, afti-r burin-' fnffered for 8ererl yeaw with a erers Imr Jec tioo.t)d that dread di.-'e;!?. C'cisu m jri r m anx ious to nuke known j0 bis feilow-iu Jj'era the mciitis of cure. To all who desire it. he will send a cj of tho prescription uod (free i;f rhiirje). with iho direc tion for prepann nn l u-ii the gime, whmh tbc will find a pure cure fi r Con-unip'ton, fan. a. Uron thitjj, Couih, CijU ,rnl ail To rout aod Lunx Af fection. The only obj;et of the aiveriir inst n- A;n.m V. . ;. kan.Rt tha uffl Ktu I nn4 Fpruaa miorni:iiion vnicn ne conceive u oe mvai- t, . j Ml t-T i1 ii!KI and K h.-ii.a evprv Knffrtrpr will trv hi rwni-r J' n-'" " ' " I r-. H..V.W..'IV " - " " w " J J " ady, as it will cost them nothing, and a tj proe a Vrr w r- ejl.il'i i- l 'i Mrnmi-nt- fn tu tlx- l -t n nker of !. nd. n, Y-tr, 'ii-nn n I'h'I ,',""'PUI j J llilor.J..!'toii and ' Voik: ;n I :lo , the Amtriciio ln-titsiti- lor Sue e5-lf jear- o ilvpr ined . from lotii of" whi.-h -:m h t-t'n nt our nri--rn-in. r.rtiri1'? l? the iotriHliK-l ion ol iuij.rovi ttojit- we o alii- a 'i!I tn T" yvrT.fX I m ti. r rf a nil h7 ',. ,rrc' largely, with utrii tl; c-:I. .-;tetn. art- rtnluil to. fftr ll.t'- ir.'tri;" r ' - f t j i-e hu h i I nil - nr-l i'iiui. riilCKS No . Scrrn O.'favo. rrtird rorner?. Io -e""! f lano ! $ i ! No. Seven " -tjivi-. r undo rrT. !'-si no' l hfi-vr m n! lir! N . Sco (! r.roiird corner. Hr-wwood fni.XIVylei. DESCRIITIVE Cll iny csrried forward with energy, assist, j in readioeis to rep$l an expected feniaa I Wiiliajsbirs1 ic? Co., New york. XL'I.AIIS SE.NT FUEE. "ALUtt .f- C. Am. 2 1 1 I H- - r-n