. THUT.SDAY, AUGUST ISih. 15C3. J. S. CHURCH, Editor. For President In 1668, G. GHAIIT. Fr Viee-Presldent, REPUBUOAIl' STATE TICKET. far Presidential Elector T. J. JIM .'M VETTE, of Cuss Co. . Z.r,(,'f.b'.4 J7A r f rjfKar.lsoa. J. F. WA ENEli, cf DahoU Co. Member of Co -vre-s JOIIX TAFFE, of Douglas Co.' ' For Governor DA VID E UTLEIZ, cf Tawnee Co. For Secretary of st. t e T. P. KEXNAED, of Washington. For Treasurer of suite JAMES SWEET, of Otoe County For Auditor of state JOHX U ILLFSriE. of TCemaha. District Attorney, lf;t Judicial p.-trio; O. B. IIEWETT, of lseni.ba Co. Republican Co. Convention. A Convention of the ItormMIenn party of Nemaha County vrlll Jx held nt the Court House In Urownvllle, at V o'clock i x. cu Saturday, the 2ih cf Scptcjnbcr, to nominate the following officers, to be vol vi for at the election on the Beoond Tuesday In October: One County Commissioner for 1st District, Four Representatives to the Legislature, One State Senator and IVlogates to the Senatorial District Con., snd to transact such other business as rn;?v be of Interest to the party. The 1U -publicans of each precinct are requested to hoii mef t Inrs4 their respective, places of holding el ecUo.ih, on Saturday the 2th day of August, ltsas, to elect delegafos to said County Conven tion. Tbe precincts are entitled to the following number of delegates : AspinwaU..............." Brown vllle 150 Iiayfayette .Ji bt. Deroln 5 Benton 2 DoucUsjj .. 3 Nemaha City., Washington ... r-itrd. ... nlUxk i i : u... Ev order of the Itemibllcan Central Com mittee. JOHN L. CALVsUN, Ch'n. A. J. RlTTEB, Sec. We notice a change In the pro pretorship of the Omaha Herald. It is now published by Messrs Rechard- con & Briggs, with D.Uiller as editor. The Herald ia a readable paper despite iU politics. i The M.E. Church bold a camp meet ing at Long's Bridge, iu this county, commencing Thursday evening, Au gust 20th, lasting over the following Bunday. A Free dinner is In course of preparation for the Sabbath for the entertainment of all in attendance. Mr. Price, of the Nebraska City Frcs8,vr&s recently assaulted and felled to the ground by a dastardly villain, known in that city under the official cognomen of "city marshall." The council are now looking for the author ity to warrant his removal from office. Messrs. Irish, Price & Co., are now iasulng a dally, neat in its mechanical appearance, solid and sound In its editorial matter, fresh in its news department. Such a paper should be, and no doubt is, well sustained by the enterprising people of Nebraska city. .'. The United Baptists of Isebraska meet in convention with the church in Vesta. Johnson county, on the 23rd r w day of August, for the purpose of or ranizing an association to be known as the "United Baptist Association of Nebraska." Public services will com mence at 11 o'clock, A. M. Sermon by Elder Freeman. There are farmers in the country anxious to know why it is that flour is selling at $6 per hundred, with wheat at Si per bushel. Three bushels of wheat will usually yield a hundred weight of flour after the toll is taken out, and we see no good reason why flour should exceed $3,50 $4, with wheat at its present market value. m t m Senator Tipton and Judge Hewett left Tuesday morning for Tecumseh and Beatrice, where they have been invited to speak before the Republican Clubs. The citizens of the western counties listen anxiously to all fair presentations of the issues involved in this campaign, and none command their confidence more eminently than do the two gentlemen above named. The good people in the vicinity of Glen Rock, held a preliminary meet ing at the Highland school house on last Saturday afternoon, for the pur pose of taking steps in the formation of a Grant and Colfax Club. 8. P. Majors, and Professor McKenzie, of Peru, and Judge Hewett and Jarvis S. Church, of Brownville, were present. The meeting was adjourned until Tuesday evening August ISth, to meet at the school house in Glen Rock. Let there be a general attendence. The pestiferous grasshopper is again on the wing, traveling and graizing upon cornfields and gardens in its inarch from the west toward the River. The drouth has been very severe in the Interior of the State ,'and the pros pect is that the grasshoppers will con sume all that has survived the dry weather. We hear that they strip whole fields of corn in a few hours and then "travel." The account of there dietructiveness in some localities are almost too incredible for belief. - The Council Blufis and St. Joseph Railroad is jiow finished, and trains run daily between those two points, connecting with trains to all points East. South and North. The mana- gcrs of this road, which is wholly within the States of Iowa and Missouri, have shown a commendable willing ness to respect the wishes and wants of Nebraska and her enterprises. Half-fair tickets have been granted to excursionists, to those wishing to at tend Conventions, . Grand Lodges, State Teachers'. Institutes and State Fairs, on this side of the river. Our citizens will remember these favors, and give the road the benefit of their good will and patronage. ' The Brownviil, Grant and Colfax lub accompanied by the Brass Band cf Brownville was in attendence at the formation cf a similar club at Nemaha City on lat Saturday evening. The Republican fires in old Nemaha are all tslow. Organization Is the order of the hour, and work the recognized duty cf each individual Republican. Ourolject i3 not so much to increa.se the lare majority cr ballanco in our favor a3 it is to m-enerate the Democ racy, and make this indisputably "the land of the free and the heme cf the brave." We have no truer people, or no more wide-awake Republicans in the countv than are to be found at Nemaha City: all see the necessity of r-orMant viiilance the price of liber ty in varcUrg of the shaft of an in- s'iducKsfoe, Vie notice a long article in the last Brcvrnville Democrat concerning th action of the II. E. Conference in the case of the Rev. A. Williams, which, ve think, tends to ruM:al the pub lic. The Conference, "in good filth, over one year crro, admitted Mr. Wil liams, then from the II. E. Church, South, into the Nebrr.a Conference as a circuit preacher, c;n J gave -him what is known as the Kulo Circuit, where he labored acceptably until the Peru Conference Session. It seems that Mr. Willian,beingcIo?e!y pressed by a few "-rliprfn'? Democrats, was 1BUic""lLii". uo ''bciiibiount io bear upon him ; did not think it would be published ; he was sorry he wrote it f said he was indiscreet in doing so, still he believed then, and does now, that what he wrote to be true. Mr. Miller, of Omaha, and Mr. Pres son, of Falls city, criticised his course severely for after condemning politics and political preachers, being found dabling in politics himself, and especi ally in so slimy and scurrilous a sheet as the Omaha Herald. The only point that the Conference insisted upon his acknowledging as wrong, was that he should not have come out publicly in a secular sheet to falsify the Confer ence Record. That the better way would have been, to have brought the whole matter before the next Confer ence and had the matter corrected. This point having been satisfactorily settled, it is our opinion that his rela tion with Conference as a circuit Lpreacher would have been continued nad not brotner Williams, nlmseir, in sisted upon the withdrawal of the mo tion, and asked" to be put upon the lo cal roll. Ills character was passed as good, and they but granted his own request, in placing hini where they did. Conference in no 6ense consid ered him in reference to his political opinions. The above are our recollec tions and impressions of the matter. We print this week, in fulh the Dem ocratic State Ticket. We see that Ne maha county is offered her choice be tween two of her citizens for State Au ditor, and between another two for District Attorney. For Auditor, tho Republicans offer us Mr. Gillespie, and the Democrats offer us Mr. Lett. Both are intelligent honest and able men. We should feel quite resigned to our fate, whatever it might be, had we no cause to fear greater injury to our country and her educational religious and political insti tutions, than would naturally result from the administration of Mr. Lett. He is a Christian and a gentleman, and hopes his party is not half so bad as it really is ; and we are glad to know that Mr. Gillespie is his peer in every thing that goes to make up a truly loyal man, and a trustworthy officer. For District Attorney, for the First Judicial District, the Democrats want E. W. Thomas, and the Republicans are bound to have Judge O. B. Hewett, both practicing and long resident at torneys.of Brownville ; both loyal, in telligent men, able and competent to fill the position to the entire satisfac-J tion of the people of the District. In conductingthis campaign, we hope not to say one word or blow one breath of suspicion against the private charac ter or the public standing of either of these gentlemen of the Democratic persuasion ; but as endorsers and ad vocates of the policy of non-reconstruc tion, repudiation and revolution, we expect to show that politically, they are unsound, untrustworthy, and una dapted to the wants and expectations of the present Immergencies. Mr. Gillespie has been Auditor for the past two years, and has proved himself to be a competent and capable officer, and his re-nomination was but an endorsement of his official acts. Judge Hewett was elected Prosecu ting Attorney of Nemaha county, in 18G2. as a Union man. This office he resigned on entering, as a private, the Second Nebraska Cavalry, in which he rose to be a commander. In the fall of 1SG7, he was elected over Mr. Thomas, as County Superintendent of Common Schools for Nemaha county, and this spring he was elected over Mr. Broady, as City Attorney for the city of Brownville, running largely ahead of his ticket. This is but a pre lude to the handsome majority the First Judicial District has in store for him in Obtober next. The following items we clip from the Rockport Journal: The foundation of the Methodist church is nearly completed. . After thatia done the work will progress rapidly. The regular Auirust term of county court begins in this place on Monday, 17th inst. Persons interested will take notice. . ' The Phelps City Eccord is the name ? Ee. 10 1x5 Published at I helps City, soon, by the Ilccord Printing Company. Republican Club, Brownrllle. The Republican Club of Brownville i3 doing valiant services in the cause of Republicanism. They are giving aid to the clubs In the eurrounding precincts, by sending out speakers and persons to form clubs. We are racing about $1200 to defray these expenses, wiih others' that may arise during the campaign. They have employed the bras3 band as an accompaniment. They hold, meetings at Republican Ileaa-quarters every Thursday even irtrv On lnt Thursday evening the , ; " ... : : - - d by Col. Furnas and . ' !. llaq . ; the former con t . ; ,.v ::; that the rebellion, vhkh resulted in destroying so many brave soldiers, cost so much money ot Its suppression, involving such enormous tax e.?, was the direct result f Democratic rule, up to ISoO. And that all the hardships which now are in Infliction, are chargeable upon the let.ding Democrats of tbe nation ; and ' hould they be successful, they, in ac cordance with the, expressed senti ments of F. P. Blair, would run the Government back into another revolu tion. The latter, as clearly and as for cibly, demonstrated the fact that the ebels of the South would gain in the iscendency of the . Democratic party, vhat they failed to accomplish by force )f arms. ' . ' ' I In conclusion, he said, "Show me he men who first fired upon Fort umpter, and I will show you men to lay that Wear the Seymour badge. : 'iow me the men that fired upon the unarmed Pennsylvania troops, in the 'streets of Baltimore! J Show me the men that starved and shot down the starving, half-naked, emaciated Union prisoners at Andersonville, at Libby, and at Belle Island! Show me the massacrers of Fort Pillow and New Or leans! Show.nie the unrepentent rebel, from the private to the Major General that led. the armies of the Southern Confederacy! Showfne its President, Vice President, and its Cab inet, and I will show you men, that without a single exception, now wear the Seymour-Blair badge." They were frequently cheered, and both speeches had a cood effect The Club will be addressed to-night by J. N. Reynolds, Esq. The Republicans of Nemaha city met in the hall on Saturday night last, and were called to order by elect ing J. P. Crother, Chairman, and James Hacker, Secretary. On motion, Mr. Barnes, James Hacker and George Fairbrother, were at)Dointed to draft a constitution for the formation of a Republican Club While the Committee were in consul tation. Col. R. W. Furnas addressed the Club upon the political issues o: the day. The Committee appointed to Draft a Constitution, reported the same, which wvs read, and on motion, was adopted.' On motion, J. P, Crother was -made permanent Chairman, and J. H.Barnes permanent Secretary. . J. H. Drain, for Vice President. On motion. Messrs. Barnes, Howe and H. T. Minick, were appointed Committee on Finance. On motion, the Chair appointed a Committee on General Arrangements The Club was then addressed at some length by De Forest Porter, of Brown" I ville, followed by Jarvis S Church On motion, the Club adjourned until next Monday evening, that being made the regular evening of meeting for the Club. J. P. Crother, Chairman J. C. Barnes, Secretary. At a meeting of the common council of Nebraska city a committee was appointed to take into consideration the matter of the city marsh all's unjust ifiable assault upon one of the proprie tors of the Press. The committee re ports as follows : .- - "Your committee does not deem it necessary to recite the voluminous testimony taken. A summing up shows that upon Tuesday evening Aucrust 4th. Mr. Shannon, City Mar shal, committed a premeditated and unjustifiable assault upon the person oi . 11. fnce, Jiq., assailing uira without warning, witn a weapon known commonly as a "slungsnot," and Innicnng a severe if not danger ous wound; and, in said act, commit ting a flagrant violation of law, as well as disregarding his most apparent duties as a peace oiiicer, And recomends the passage of the following resolution : Resolved, That the Common Council of Nebraska City cannot too severely censure the "Marshal of the City, for the wanton and unjustifiable attack, with an offensive weapon which he made premeditatedly upon a citizen: and for his gross failure, in several instances, to perform his manifest duties as the particular guardian of the peace of the city. Resolved, That Richard T. Shannon be hereby requested by the Common Uouncu or iNebraska City, to resign his office of City Marshal, and should lie isni to do so, the Mayor then to taKe sucn legal steps as may be nec essary to relieve the city government of the further retention of the said office by Mr. Shannon. Poppleton at Home. at the home of A. J. Poppleton, Dem ocratic candidate for Congress, pub- nsnesan article oevoted to nis record ana ciiaractenstics, wmcn we con dense, as it is too long to publish en ure in tnese columns, roppieton is a man of property, a good lawyer, but selfish and prescriptive. He never gives anything to public improve ments' if he expends a dollar it is with the certain prospect of getting two dollars in return. Wniie a pre tended warm friend of the adopted citizen, ne Degan nis political career as a violent, prescriptive Know Noth ing. He is an ultra partisan of the Vallandingham school, and expects to ride into office through the influence of the Union Pacific Railroad ,Jof which he i3 attorney. He is cold and aris tocratic and has no hold on the masses. He i3 not as strong In Omaha as his party, and will run behind his party, and will run behind his ticket. Be cause he was not nominated for Con gress four years ago he bolted and worked against the Democratic nom inee, Judge Kinney, of Nebraska City. This is the man the hard-working, hard-fisted Democrats of Nebraska are asked to vote for. An aristocat, who has no feeling in common with them, he cares not for them after geting their votes. Our German and Irish fellow-citizens are asked bv the Democrats to vote for a bitter Know Nothing, who would have srladlv withheld from them the choicest priv ilege of their citizenship. This is the Democratic nominee as he is. I without any Democratic gildidg. J The following is a letter from a gen tleman well posted in politics, although not a regular politician himself. Cxiicago, August 5th, 1SCS. Fkiexd Coxleg: Yours of the 1st is received, and I am glad to hear from you, and to know that our friend3 are wide awalve out there. I see no reason to doubt tho success of our ticket, all tbe signs are favorable ; much depends upon the result in Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania, at the October elections. Should we carry those States by re spectable majorities, the " Cops" will not expect to succeed at the Novem ber election. I do not know of a man who voted with us in '64, who will not vote for Grant ; and I do know of quite a number who were against U3 then,' who will be with us now. There is a general feeling, and . it is becoming more general every day, that we have had enough of war, and that we can not afford to hike the chances of Frank Blair's being President, and inaugura ting another war, and of repudiating ourdebts. All that is required to make Grant's election absolutely certain, is a reasonable effort on the part of his friends. Youre, truly, J. R. JCOfES. Tecumseh, Neb., V August 5th, 1868. Mr. Editor; On last evening our citizens had the pleasure of listening to the able speeches of Governor But ler and Professor Goldswaith. Al though but one day was given in which to announce the meeting, the house was crowded to its utmost capacity, while a large majority of the audience were assembled around the outside filling the windows and doors as eager listeners. - The Governor reviewed the hi of the Republican party, shop its place in the history of ou, was the most prominent of a;o :t V that has had control of public and that durinar the trying oiut-al of the rebellion it was equal -to the task of the preservation of the Union, and not only defeating the military power of the rebels, but also that of striking the shackles of bondage from four mil lions of human beings, and forever set ting at rest the vexed question ot sia verv. He also reviewed the present Plat form of the Democratic party, and the proceedings of the convention that formed it ; and showed how the artifi ces of political wire-workers, aided by monied monopolies, have thwarted the will of the party in the West, and so demoralized the convention as to per mit the unrepentent rebels of the bouth virtually to present again the issues of civil war, in determining the result of reconstruction. He then ably and logically presented the claims of the Republican party upon the citizens of Nebraska, m se curing the best interests of this young and growing State, and developing its boundless resources of wrealth and power. ' His entire speech was able, compact and logical, and such as to awaken the Republican party to renewed enorts to secure the proper settlement of the questions of the war, and as the means of accomplishing that end, to so work as to insure the success of Grant and Colfax. And we but utter the sent! ment of the entire audience on last evening, when we say that such closely reasoned and unimpassioned argu ments, are characteristic of Guberna torial qualifications, of which the Re publicans may well be proud. Professor Goldswaith. of Winconsin, devoted some time to a review of the work of reconstruction as being carried by the Republican party, and the re turn of the late Rebel States to their proper relations to the Government- showing the wisdom and justice of A those reconstruction measures wmcn require the exclusion of unrepentent rebels from this work, and entrusting it to loyal hands. He also offered some telling remarks in contrasting the characteristics of Grant and bey mour, greatly to the disparagement of the latter. Allow me to say that the whole meeting was characterized by the greatest enthusiasm, and has produced glorious results in encouraging the weak, confirming the feeble, and warn- incr the "untcrrined." jonnston county is all right. Respectfullyand Obedient, Yours, in the Right, Nard. Tlie War Candidate. The election of Francis P. Blair would he the approval by the people of his desire to turn our political canvass into a bloody war; to make party diff- erances of opinion tnesulncient reason for deadly personal enmity. It wonld be the adoption by the United States of a government by' assassination ana violence, instead of a government by law.. . J i Were he elected and successful in his plan, he would be above all law, the military dictator of the land, Were he elected and yet unsuccessful, still the attempt to carry out his views would cost the country more tnan tne former rebellion. There is no straining, no exaggera tion in this statement of Mr. Blair's, position. Here are his words : "We cannot, therefore, undo the radical plan of reconstruction by Con gressional action: the Senate will continue a bar to its repel. . Must we submit to it? How can it be over thrown? It can only be overthrown by the authority of the Executive. "There is but one way to ' restore the government and the Constitution, and that is for the President elect to peclare these acts null and void, com pel the army to undo its usurptions at the South, disperse the carpet-bag State governments, allow the white people to reorganize their own govern ments, and elect Senators and Repre sentatives." Whether the writer of this atrocious language knew what he was saying, is beside the question. Probably not: it is at least less disagreeable to suppose mat ne was in a state of even more than usual excitement at the time. than that the former soldier of free dom has become a deliberate traitor. liut he has not retracted the letter. and if elected, is pledged to carry it uuu evening j'ost. Our Railroad. Maj. H. Davis. President of the Mississippi & Missouri River Air line Kailroad. Visited Oninoir rm Monday last, and succeeded in having an ordinance passed bv theCMtv nnnn. cil, making the $100, 000 subscription to our road. On Monday next, he goes to Scotland county, to attend a railroad mass meeting, at Memphis, and to get the subscription of that county in proper shape. A a soon na this is accomplished, and a few pre liminary arrangements are made work will be commenced. We are also in formed that parties are selected and in readiness to sign contracts to fii the iron and rolling stock as fast as it is needed. This places the hnilnMno- of the road beyond a doubt, and we hope in less than a month to chronicle the fact that a large force are at work making a way for the iron horse. Toot ! toot ! ! toot ! ! ! Clear the track. Don't you hear the engine? There is astorvof a doctor who to settle in a village out West, and on the first night of hi3 arrival was sent for to attend a sick child. He looked at the little sufferer very attentively. ana men aenverea tins oracular opin- on : mis nyar babe's got tne small pox ; ana I ain't posted up to pustules. We must approach this case bv circu lar treatment. You give the little cuss this draught. That'll send him into fits. I'm a stunner on fits."- Seymour's PorularitJr Those who have an idea that Sey mour is immensely popular in -New York, and can carry that State when no other democrat would have the ghost of a chance, will do well to con sider the following facts: "In 1850 Seymour was defeated for Governor, and received 314,3oL votes; Church, on the same ticket for Lieu tenant Governor, received o.S,) votes ; Church over Seymour, 3,bo7. "In 1852 Seymour was elected uov ernor, and received 264,121 votes; Church elected on the same ticket, received 266,147 ; Church over . Sey mour, 2,026.' . ' " . . "In 1S54 Seymour commanded but 156,405 out of the nearly COO.OOO dem ocratic votes in the State, and his popularity, great a3 it was on account of hi3 voting the Maime, liquor law, could not secure his re-election, and he was defeated by Clark, the fusion candidate, by a few votes. " : "In 1SG2 beymour was elected Gov ernor by a vote of 306,649; Jones on the same ticket tor Lieutenant Gov ernor was elected by a vote of 306,705, and Skinner, Canal Commissioner, by 307,318. Jones over Seymour, 56; Skinner over Seymour, 667. In 1864 Seymour was defeated for Governor, and received 261,264 votes ; Jones, for Lieutenant Govenor, on the same ticket, .received 361,S43: Jones over Seymour, 585. Fen ton's (Repu blican) majority this year was 8,203." Half Fare nates for State Fair. The following letter from the As sitant Superintendent of the Council Bluffs and St. Joseph Railrood to C. II. ' Wa'kar, Esq., Secretary of the frK- t 3 L ird of Agriculture, gives" the : : fy i :y information that railroad ' - rously promised half fare to those attending the Nebraska Fair by way of that road : . C. B. and St Joe Railroad, :) bupenntendent's Office, Council Bluffs, Aug. 4th , '68. C. A. Walker, Esq., Neb. City: Dear Sir: Your letter of the 3rd Inst., is at hand. Will say in reply that all people who attend the "Fair,' on the "Line of our Road," we will carry them at one half our regular rates of fare. The above I trust wil be satisfactory. . Yours Respecfully, D. S. Richardson, Ass' t. Supt. . Bedford Precinct, V Aug. 11th, 1868. Club met pursuant to adjournment. On motion J. H. Tucker was chosen Secretary, pro tern. DeForrest Porter being present was called out and delivered a very spirited and enective speech. On motion adjourned to meet at the Shermon School House one week from to-night. ' C. TUCKER, Pres. H. Randal, Sec. Secret societies are of very ancient origin. Cain married the daughter of a Nod fellow, and it is even supposed that our first parents had a "lodge in tne wilderness." DIED In Brownville, Nebraska, August tu, ioo-, at the residence of her orother, ii. Atkinsou, Esq., Miss Husan L. Atkinsox, youngest uaugtiter oi tne late Samuel Atiin son, hq., formerly of V heeling, V a. Miss Atkinson was born In Wheeling, Va. January 8th 1811. After the death of her par enta Bhe made her home with her 6later In New York City. She completed her course of education at the seminary of Mr. Miloi Jew ett, Poughkeepsle, where she was a favorite with the Principal and her classmates Well educated, and of a kind, generous dis position, she naturally dreo herself many warm hearts, whose friendship caused her to look forward to years of earthly happiness. All the future seemed bright and Joyons Alas, for earthly hopes ! Her brilliant pros pects became clouded over by that terrible disease, consumption, which seize 1 upon her some two years ago. Hoping that this cli mate would be beneficial to her health, she came to Nebraska last Kay. Her disease, however, was too far advanced, and although better for a time, she soon grew worse and failed rapidly. After two years of intense pain she has found rest in Heaven. She leaves two sisters and two brothers, who with many other friends, mourn her loss though " not sorrowing as those who have no hope. For although she was not united to a christian church, yet In her last hours she gave evidences of true repentance and faith She expressed unfeigned regret that she had not devoted herself more zealously to the ser vice of Christ in her days of health and strength, and declared earnestly that it was a most unfavorable time to attend to the great business of preparation for eternity upon a sick and dying bed. While able she read constantly in her Bible and when nolonger able to read she was glad to hear others. She found also great delight In hearing sung hymns of faith and hope, Though life looked attractive, she was willing to die. She died with hope, trusting in God, saying, " this is a beautiful world, but I am going to a brighter; going to be with the an gels in heaven." "No shadows yonder! ' All light and song; Each day I wonder. And say how Ion 9 Shall time me sunder From that dear throng? No weeping yonder! , All fled away ; While here I wander Each weary day : . And sigh as I ponder, My long, long stay. - No partings yonder ! Time and space never Aeain shall sunder; B llearts cannot sever; Dearer and fonder Hands clasp forever." . J. T.B, Heal Estate For Sale By W. H. TIoovkr, Real-Estate Agent : Southwest sec. 11, town 5, range 14, 160 acres. Improved. Nortli west V sec 24, town 4 range 14, 100 acres. Dwelling House ana two lots m urown vule, Bt James McNaughton : Northeast liof sec 17 town 5 range 10: in jonnson county, 7 mixes irom recumsen. By Barret & Lett, Land Agents i 40.WO acres of improved and unimproved lana, ior saie on reasonaoie lerms,' . NORTH IIISSOURI RAILROAR LINE TO SAINT LOUIS ! TWO DAILY TRAINS. - Both Dally Trains of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroart from tho west make close connection at Macon City with the above Una o T-ri v i n cr i n Tahiti w nil rr,n n -t i n or A rectiy with all morning and afternoon trains out of St. lxmis ior . . New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Harrisburgh, Columbus, Cincinnati, Boston, . Baltimore, Pjttsburg, jjayton, Indianapolis, - Chieagof Louisville, Nashville And all Points East, North or South. The only direct and legitimate route from the West to St. XouIs and tne East. Time to the Eastern cities as QUICK as can be made by any route, with . LESS CHANGE! TiMrpts via the above line can be purchased at all Hannibal St. Joseph ticket offices in the west. . . ! Fair the same as by any other Route! Carton Bates, President. John P. Laird, Gen'l SupX g H7n wheeler. Gen'l TVt Ag't. Joseph Gambler, Gen'l Fr t Ag't. P. H. Early. Agent, St. Joseph, jILSnnii, General Western Agent. . The Elebraska Advertiser BEST AND LARGEST WEEKLY IN THE iaii4: tin i ck i be- 9. I .suc--eri-; all the palntirt: business to J. "K.Fretz. 1 lr-rmTfrUndsfor the liber- I fiiu-or.; Bt-.-ea on me. lor t!: r -t clev -1 y hope they Hill continue t l ces,or In I i slness, s Mr. nets ; n n i en""i pv.ir.er, competer.i to rf-rf-.r roz'c entr i-tel to him ii. a v - if manner,, atd ca reasona Ay r.-..Uct-u terms. . . All per-ens nowir. t'.c msel t i:: ...iie caoh ' Aed to rn--i wiil rleij. com? ar.'l fettle the August lh, 13ti LOUIS WALDIKli, The undersigned will continue H0USE,SIGN,CARMAGE( Gulldlng, Glazing, Iajrliangtng, fce. , Iio. 13 Uaia Street, . (One door east of Ilsnk & Holtzinger's Queens ware and Grocery store,) BROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA. JT. 3X. FRETZ. nll-tf JUST O AT IHK LADIES' B5HD ! JTorth East corner Main and Fourth Sis., A WELL SELECTED STOCK OF LADIES' articles sneh as Trt nomlnsr, Cilove, Tydles, Handkerchief , Zypiiru, &c. Particular attention raid to Stamping, Bradinj? ani BtirhlEir. of nil kinds. Algp would call your attention to the Whesler & Wilson S swing Machine for which I am the Agent. I feel safe In say ing that the Wheeler & WILson Sewins; Ma chines ars the best ever brought before the public. They are simple and durable ; easily kept in repair; werit nitiiont noise; sew with great rapl iity, makinar tne LockStUen. that will not ltip, and sews from the corses t to the finest article. ; Especial invitation to nil to come and see, and examine my str-!t and machines for themselves. . SlliS. 21. E. BAiiGIS. nSMy Brownville Chicago and North-Western E.W. Grand Consolidated Line! . Shortest and Mont Expeditious Route to all Points East and South ! Trains leavethe depot at Council Bluffs in connection with trains on the Council Bluil's and bt Joseph Railroad, ns follows: (Council UluiEs time) . Express at 1130 a.nx. except Sundays. Mail at 815 pm except Saturdays, arriving In Chicago at 1 p.m and 5 a.m, mak ing close connections with the Michigan Cen tral, Michigan Southern, Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago, Chicago and Great Eas tern, Chicago and Alton. Illinois Central, and all other Eastern and Southern Railroads, for Toledo, Cleveland, Detroit, Dunkirk, - Dunalo, - Sus. Rridge, ; Albany, Montreal, yneoec. Springfield, Worcester, Boston, New Yorlr, Pliiladclphia, Pittsburgh, ' Harrlsburgh, Baltimore, Washington, Wheeling, Columbus, Cincinnati, - Louisville, St. Louis, Cairo, , (." Memphis, Vicksburg, NEW' OrciELAJNS, Savin j Time and Securing Comfort and Sujety ! Baggage Checked Through to all principal points and . no extra charge for . transfer through Chicago. - Passengers have c-hoico' of Routes via Chi cago, enjoying all the modern improvements in use on nrsfc-ciass railways. Superior arranged sleeping cars on night trains. Passengers for any point East or South, to avail themselves of the many advantages offered by this company, should be particular to ask for, and see tnat their tickets read: Via Chicago & North-western E.W G. L. Dcnlap. Gen'l Sup't. J. P. HoRTOX.N.W.Pas'r Ag't.Chicago is. f . PATRICK, uen 1 iis r Agent. The Short All-Bail Line ' East To Chicago, Detroit, Toledo, St. Louis Lafayette, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Nashville, Cairo, Memphis, Columbus, "Wheeling. Ilarrisburg, Baltimore, Philadelphia, JNew lorK, Boston, FittsDurg, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, ex., &.C, Is the old reliable central route, the Hannibal &. St. Joseph R. R. Line. Take the Hannibal and St. Joe Railroad line of Missouri liiver Packets from lirownville to St. Joseplt where connections are made witn Two Daily Express Trains on tne llannloal ana st Joe Kauroai rnn through from St. Joseph to Q,uincy without cnange or cars, CONNECTING AT QUINCY With Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy, and Toledo do., V abash and Western Railroads, ior ou pom is t ast, iNoriu anu bourn. FOR ST. LOUIS, Close connections made a Macon with North Missouri Railroad for St. Louis, and at Han nibal with daily Missouri River Packet for St. Louis. Meals and State Rooms free. Leav ing every evening on arrival of trains from the west, and arriving in St. Louis next morning in season for business, and to con nect with Chicago. Alton and St. Louis, Terre Haute, Alton and St. Louis, and Ohio and Mississippi Railroads, for all points East, isorcn anu Boum. Hew Sleeping Cars ran on Night Trains. Buy your through tickets -via Hannibal and Josepn uauroau at tneir ticket omces in Omaha. Council Bluffs. Plattsmouth. Ne braska City, to St. Joseph, and on each Packet in tbe line, and enjoy the consciousness of having taken the short, cheap and quick rone ensi. P. B. Groat, oen'l Ticket Agent. H. H, Cocrtkioht. Gen'l Fr t Agent. C. W. Mead, General Superintendent. NORTHWESTERN Mutual Life Insurance Company GENERAL OFFICE, 116 Main Street, Milwaukee, Wis. .Sscts ' Membershi p..... Policies issue! 1Mi7... Bisks covered I7. ......3,500,000 10,000 ap,350,ooa This vigorous company now ranks among the twenty-live New York companies, third in number of members; Firm in amount of assets. . It i4 a Purely Mutual Company. That is, an association of policy holders, managed by men selected by themselves, for themselves. Each member is a full partner In the whole business, with liability limited to the amount actually invested. It thus adapts its plans to the benefit of its members, adopts all improvements and aims to De a Model Life Insurance Co. It was one of the first. to adopt the popular feature know in insurance circles as tne FORFEITINO FLAN, and now applies it to all the policies it issues. It Is the only company that adopts the full benefit of the note system without. doing a credit business or destroying the cash prlnci ule. ' Tolicv holders permitted to travel anywhere in tne L'lteu states ana Europe, out tisks m the far .South not sought. Few appreciate the advantage of its loca tion at the West, where money can safely be loaned at mgner rates tnan me iasw $1,000 LOANED FOR 50 YEARS, produces $18,420,15 At 8 per cent, compound interest produces ... 48,901,81 At io per cent compound interest produces..... a a ' '"' " " Dividens Ilnst be Larflje. Dividens made annually, to commence three years after date of policy, but to equal In number the years of insurance, and Distributed to Policy Holder Only. There betner no stockholders to absorb the surplus, or control the company for semsu purposes. , ,,,, LtSSTJilt rifcAIUt, rrwmcufc A. W. KELLGO, Secretary. KERBER SMITH, General Agent. I.T. MARIN. State Aeent for Iowa and Ne- orasica. omce, i tsrany et. jjaveuoi J. H, MADISON, Dit. Agt 42-8t Glenwood, Iovft. Proposals for Grain Hu3au a Hi i is Eessrtnsst cf feOae.l Chief Q'r Maiter's Offlce Omaha, '. Anz. 4. IritSi. ,Neb. ) fiAciivt n nT-?tMtj -with emarantee nnTb be received until 10 o'clock, A. x., on Thura- J ' ' , , ml Thirty Thorns and (CO,C0O) Uoaae" Oi oav Anirust i itn. i(i. ior me ueutw; , - x nVl I At Omaha. Nebraska, within forty days from tne date or contract IS Ma will be received for five thousand Full conditions of contract made known (VIA, K.ioKnla nnnoM, on application at this ofnee. WIL MYEiy. Brv't Brig. Gen. 43-2t Chief Qaarterma5tr. Thavs this fl.iv sold mv entira tat-' OlS'S fi- If U. COl'S DTSPKP3IA eras. . - CO-3'S DTSPsPsIA - C02'3 DXSPZt&lA CCR3. cce'S dtspspsIa rraa. COF'3 DTSFEPSTA CTTt. . -"V j CCS SDXSi'XPSIA Cr-3. . C03'3 DTSPKPSTA OTB: CO-I'S DYSPEPSIA CTTRB . cos's dtspbpsia eras. This world .rtoowned remedy fur tne unfailing .. cure ot . . DYSPEPSIA, latllscstion, Slcli. Storaacli, Sourness or Acltlityorsrom acli,i:isln?orFoo3, Fla tulency, Lassitude, . Weariness, Cil ; llousness, anil all dlsor- -r - , ders of Tlie Eioriacli . and Uoirels, It urged npoa tbe attention and trial of suffer an from Uili mofct horrible of ! I dmeases. Dpepsu sfcows its ravages la a thousand di5rf Dt forms, inch as Sick HeaJscbe, Heartburn, Depression, gen eral sens of uneasiness aod fseliog toat yoa are not well. Food distresses you. rises and sours on your stomach ; bratn Is bd ) skia at times U nn.hd and not; itm't set a; If you. could mint oc :ir about, and worst of all. Indigestion or Constipation, are nothing more of less ihao Dyspepsia. Thou sands" upon thousands suffer and die ibis way, and neither themselves nor. their physicians know what alls them, except that they are surely dying. Reader, we repeat it, this is all Dyspepsia. If you would have proof of our statement, if yon would save yourselves and children from an early grave ,if you would have beaUd and energy and strength, agaia we beg you to try one bottle of - - - COE'S DYSPEPSIA CUBE, Ton will see how soon It wil I dispel your bad f eel- lois and gloomy forebodings. . how soon rt wii: chase away any species of Dyspepsia. II uw soon it will give yen new life and vigor, and bow soon It will make weil man or woman of you .- For yonr own sake, for the sake of everybody suffering, we beg, we entieat you to try it. For Liver Complaint and DIN Ions Derangements, It is a Sovereign Remedy, while for Fever and Ague, and all those diseases which are generated In a mi asmatic climate, It is a certain preventative and cure. Mr, Lester Sexton, a wholesale mer chant of thirty years, in Milwaukee, one of the most reliable and careful men in Vie State, 8ay,Mnder date, MlLWAtlll, Wis., Jan. 24, 1968. jfessrs. C. 6. Clark, H. Co., New Haven, Ct. Both myself and wtfe have usef Coe'g Dyi-pepsia Cure, and it has proved PKRFECTIX sati factory as a remedy. I (have NO hesitation in saying tbai.we have received GEEAT BENEFIT from Its use -Very respectfully LiiTisa sextox. "A Great BleSSing." From Rev. L. F. WARD Avon, Lor- aine Co., O.J Hems. St&oks & AiXsTaONa,- Druggists, Cleveland, O. Gentlemen .'It gives m gTeat pleasure to slate that my wife has derived great benefit from tbe nse ot Coe's Dyspepsi Cure. Sbe has, been for a num ber of years greatly troubled with Dyppia. ac companied with violent paroxysms of constipation, which to prostrated ber that she was all the while, for months, unable to do anything She took, at yonr instance. Coe's Dyspepsia Cnre. and has de rived GREAT BENEFIT FROM IT, and is cow com paratively well. She regard this medicine as a great blessing. ... Truly yeurs, L.F WAKD. it Extreme Case" Cured. From Rev. ISAAC AIKEN, Alle gheny, Pa. Joiefh FlkmIxo, Crngglst, . 904 Market St., PitUborgh. Sir I fss rrtat plasnrt la stating tbst. after having saffered from Djpepia for aboat firtcea years, st soma periods eqco more than otbirs. I have beeo entirely tared by tbe use of Cos's Dys pepsia Cars. My frienda inow tbst or 1st years my case has been an extreme one. I bad great sif ferlDa from eating any kind of food aod on aa aver age wonld Tom it about ODh-tblrd of my meals, Ins soar indigestible mass, woen tee severe attacks wonld come, I wonld los all strength and be vtterly helpless. Some of tne attacks wonld se so severe that for days togeioer i wooia not retain anything on my stomach, sets a little dry toast anil tea. Tor vears I knew not vhat It was to isss flTsconssctivo hoars witooni invet paia. from ins lime I took tbs first dose of this medicine I ceased vomiting tradaally U soreness paseod away, and flesh and strength returned, and svsr sines I have been able to eat any kind or rooa set npna me laoie. aia months have now passed without any symptoms of the return of tbe disease. Mj case was ronsilered bv all, even physicians, so marvellous, that for a time it was feared it might be flctitlous I but I atn noWso well convinced, that I have been not merely relieved, bnt permanently cared, that 1 can con scientiously recommend Cos's Dyspepsia Oars to all victims of dyspepsia. ISAAC AIEXX, Lats Pastor of the Beavsr St. H. a Church, . Alleghany. Homo Testimony. Kzw Havkv, Ct., Jans 1, IS7. Messrs. C. O. Clabx 4. Co. Genlt: Being anxious, from the great bne(H derived, to assist In spreading tbs fame of Cos's Dyspepsia Cure, I won If" stats my case. Sums thing over a year ago, I fead a vloleut attack of Dl arrhcea, which lasted sight weeks, during which time I employed tbree p&ystcians, but without re lief, until I tried Cos's Jyppta Curs. Tbs first doss helped ms; I took tt three times a day far a week, and was entirely cared; and I believe to day tbat it saved my It f s. Being attacked in a s 1m- lar way this season, i iocs oos ooss. wnicn pal ae nl rlgtit. I would adviss every family to keep it on band really tr immediats nse, in case of gam mer or Bowel complaint. - , v. WCJIIf. - The above Mr. Dcnn is In oar smploy, and we can vouch for tbs absvv statement being true . Anxvui at cu. DYSPEPSIA CURE. . win vm.i..v. a i , .. . nmaiui lUTUIUli 11 III CMW M UUI- rnce. Dysentery, Colic, Simmer Ccmplaints, Grl- ,,u" uu lu oTsry oiaoraered conaiuon or we stomach. Sold by Drawls ts la dtv or eouatrr avsrrwhars at $1 psr botiis, or y application, ts -r , C G. Clark & Co., Sole Proprieeors, 2iew Haven, Ct. "U.lytwi. - UjusjiJ jilitt J L M .1 4. . .7 - . " - 1 ' Ac " - " i r... . .', cf Jarr.-- '. t i r- : ? ci Ib-s i SI of N- '.ri- ai ' wtthi'i s : i 1 a t nr. n . i. ; ' C'l - V . . tritCoiut cf i jiRrru.inni .onnir. ih In pa-. a"i 1 irlfr-it"rl noUSed that a r-iUon h-w ? !'"r"bT you aa above sue.!. That mi 1" AT avi 3ai LergiLoPwcnsteia hav-' is for inercn-tndise sol.i to wij anlr s.vid rcUtiontM.an.ievi.ienfe,! t,v tiirw nmm 1o.-r"ir Tint . . r. n . i . . V ' 1 -4 , " ; k.w uate urn a.'ora; rlue In one riv fur ih , 'rj""t -'- ,0J -,n1,rrT,wtive sums of dt-ltor to the onlt-r of ro,:UonerL In said petition tu i. owin? nrl of ba-i. reptcyarpalIged sninst ra. to-wit- i5 On the out of t! titrate of whf.rVarffioi vith Int-nt todefrT.cred;fe.m. T Aori. i-riii .1 i uu, ni.n uun ' "fir; i err ' r n i property to avoid it king SoM a j ar. of yonr pT-.pfrtv w.-ii tf defraud yonr cre-Jitrs. iu. i... r a -Vi chant, you have frau.inWitlv uI(ih msv mentofyour comnierctal paVr h ad not resumed payiit-nt there, f. ah of ead acts aliped to have teen eonimitted wlthia a pertcxl cf I--s than six months prior to ti in i said petition. Voa are required to arrar befon me at my office in .Lrownvtlle, ."naha mnvv Ne braska, on the id day of AuzmsI, 1 v.s ib'show car.se why the prayer of sa,id pftiri.m stuiil not be grated. S. 51. KICH, 4-2-St Rc;!vter In Bankruptey. . NOTICE. -Tlie BndPT!-nwl hm Wn 'ar potnted Administrator, &c. Jm ftw n,,n, of the . it of Vv'. ii. W. t'ot.u, Uewned; said esLa-j U suppobed to be nd-rnt. ' . J. Uajs)i,ixs ,- Aaminlsirator, iM bonu no. August 8rd, 1X . . .nJ-3t N OTICE r.ae.r..lIntchJn'.1 F. M. Towruf ley. An.Irew J. I.!1 and Thorn w I! U wan, non-restiienw ot tfnstatr.f Nehraka will take-not lee that Kinmor- Imh, th-j county of Nemaha, in the :rtate of Nebraska, did, on the 4th liay of August, V.D. lv file his petition In th Iistrht i imrt of sali Ne maha county and State of Nebraska, against the said line I'. UuMiuw. y. .vi. Towi4yj Andrew J. Bell and Thoms II. Viiwiill de fendants, setting forth that the said dt f.'nd ants gave a mortgage to one Juoob Colli ns. who as.sl.rned the same to Pmmor Lash th plaintUT herein, on the north e-.ist (it:art' r of section So, town 5, range II. in said cmntr of Nemaha, to secure the payment of two thou sand dollars, according to a eertai'u promis sory note, referred to in said mori:ie Therefore the sjtid Kue P. Hutetiios F Towns'.ey, Andrew J, B..;i anl Thomas H W Iswall are notiflod that they are required to appear and answer said pi t it ion accord I b to the statute in such cases made tnd provi i.'d. t, T x. KMMOR LASH, 5 By J. N. Rktnolds, his Att'y. A'Jgust -4th, lvS. BlJ-4t " TASTESTS SA L-Notlee U hereby given )L that pursuant toanorder of sale irinej by the Uistrict Court of NenmhaCmmrv Ne braska, and to me directed. iu ihe t-Hx of John S. Lemon and Isaiic X. Hoea, purtnori ' as Lemon. Ho-aA Co., vs Ltvi J.,4.u.u and John H. Croxton, I will, on Monday the 7ta diy of September, AA Iw, at oue o l.x k p.m., at the front door of Mi-Micrm" ILdL In the city of Lrownville, In said vuusy, taut belrg the place where the I,ist term of said court was held, ofH-r for sale At public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the following premises, to-wit: The north east quarter of the north west quarter, of section twenfy-ntx (liJ, and lot one yl of seet ion trenty-a ve U, except a tract of land uribei as follow.' commencing at the nvrtli east corner of said lot one (1), thence running south forty ro.1-, thence west forty roU.s, tuence nortlittiity thre rods, to the .Missouri r.vcr. thence down the river to the placeof beginninn. nmtaininz twelve and eighty-seven hundredth eaes. ail in townshlo four (4,) north of range sixn-en (H) eat. That part of lot ue to l o!d con taining thirty-seven and sixtv-thre hun dreth acres f.J7 and the whole amount to be sold being 77 K'Mi.n acres. CHAHl Ksd. r inSKY. M.ister tn Chancery. August 5th lSt'A 4o-,)t . XTOTirrc TO ALL 'IIO.M IT MAY COX- !c Court of Vt. CKKN. That the Tn; maha county has ai.p1nt."d the t.1.rdayof August. lS at the office of the Prmte Judste of Nemaha county, in lirownville, at ten o'clock, a.m., an th- tlm of henrinir the application of Jonas Crane to be appointed Administrator of the entafe of strnu,-i Crane decenwed. A. W. M( IH ;..N, 1 Prolxtte Jud'e. PUBLIC SALt OF SCHOOL LANDS. Notiee Is hereby tri ven, that hr virtue f an onler issued under the hand of the Ijind Com missioner of the state oi Vbnis!ta. and in pursuance of the Statute of kui h Mite, enti tled, An act to provide for the Kgitrv cf School Ijjnds, Ac, apprtvp't Jijd J, W:7, I. Jaxkj M. IIackek, 'oan:y Urk of the County of Nemaha, will. On the 14th day of September next, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, and con tinue till twelve o'clock, n.xm. ti thist Uar oiler for sale at my ofhif, in the Court Hon in Brownvil!, In said county, in lh onler advertised, at public auction, nnd nell to the highest bidder, but, at.iot less tiiv tub appraised valck, nor, in any case, for lewis than the minimum price of Sf VEM Ili.ak. per acre, the following descrUed piecH or parcels of land, situated in the County of Ne maha, and State of Nebraska, known- ar "School Land," belonging to to the aid state of Nebraska. In parcel of not excelling forty acres of prairie, or ten acres of t!raler lin.N. for the nse and benefit of the "School r und' of srld State of Nebrnski. snd that vn. h sale will be continued from d.y t.iay, irorn tne hours of ten o'clock In tlie fjrenn, to twelve o'clock noon, (Sunday excepted,, un til all such land; hIhiII 1 t.llerel, to-wit : Description I ? I "f2 5 7. All All All it, :w 3 14 11 3d W H VA H : I I , l All All All -All West half South east quarter All All All All TJ) ll S4 ItKI -") H Lots 6, 7, 8 & 9, w hf A se qr sw qr M All It All SM H 1J 3-2 i 5 8 All rlaxt half and north wewt or It South wet quarter South half It I, t, 3 ami swqrof ne Northeast quarter South went tmarter - '- North east quarter South east quarter South west quarter South east quarter South east qnarter 1 l'-O 3i I lm 11 1) Vl luU 1 li It II It 14 II TEKMS OF SILR. Cash In hand, or at th option of the pur chaser, ten per cent cash down on prairie, lands, and fifty per cent on other land, at the time of sale to be paid to. the County Treasurer, of said County, with a promissory note for the unpaid purchme moi.ev ri on or before the 1st dav of January, A. li. lv, with Interest ann laily, payable iu advance, at the rate of ten per cent per anuuui, up t the first day of January next alter the iia.i of soch note, and on the first d:iy of January thereafter, np to the first day of January. next succeelir., such payment, secured l.y 1 the endorsenrpntrrr fgaatur-, p.h Joint m:i- i kers. of two responsible freehoi.!e" of saiJ 1 County of Nemaha, orr all sums of Five Hun- dred lilarn or lew, and tie aldiMonal en dorser, or Joint maker, oflike reKp,r.s:()iiity f n 111 resKiencp, ior every aK!Uionsl snn of Five IIundrvl IIIars or fRx-tional usrt thereof, of said unpaid pun-has' nioriv, sr.d the exeeatlon by the purchaser purrhn.inr on crwl.t In durliate. onof which wiil r retained by the County Treasurer of j,i,J Connty for the useof the State, and the other io oe ueuvereti to tn purchaser, the contract of sale hereinafter mentioned. The purchaser paymj the fnil smonnt of the purchase money for tbe lands pir-haed at such sal", the Treasurer of said tonntvwU deliver a Iteeefpt ami a Duplicate iu-eipt containing a descriptlorr of the land sold, and an acknowledgement of the payment of th purchase money, and on presentation of either of which to the Land Commissioner ax any time after fifteen days from the date of such lit-celpt shall entitle the purchar to a, title, to said land, in fee simple from the said State, and the delivery of a deed on the sur render to such Commissioner of th other lt ceipt; and to purchasers, purcljaaingoa cred it, the said treasure wid execute in duDli cate, one of which shall be delivered to ths purchaser and the other retaine.1 for the nse of the State, after being signed by the pur chaser a contract of sale for the land pur- cnasea, conditionet tnat, npon th payment ' of the unpaid purchase money, and the icier- j est thereon according to the coadi jom f ! such note, the purch;i.-er shail be entuie.! to ' duplicate Receipts of payment an I purchase I for soch land; that no waste shall he era- 1 mitten npon tne land therein described, tnat no timber shall be cut thereon, except neces sary Are wood of the occupant of suer; land, and for Improvement thereon, and in cas default shall be made In the payment of th Interest or principal or any part thereof, or if any such conditions shall be brvk en that thea the lands therein described shall besarren ed by the purchaser, his heirs or a.;m with the Improvements thereon, to th estate, and said contract shall be void and of no etfect. Dated, Erowavill, Juta 2T'j JAlLLd 11. IlACTTrp., 13 CrfyCli, IN his Lrownvi.. u n i 13 r " " -70ncs IN ruNKr.rrTY t .v . IN trict Conn of tLe U aM TJi -Wtrtof Nebraska. In vJ iSrW a-:,. ; ;:ct!onof lankr- .", : a,' court on the Ut day of J ; 7 ft . , , I ';l 1 Amber and Juhui c. X-t ij J ' ' doin b;-in' un.ler t be Zi St lienr A Lowenstm in .k "V.l E.ai of Am- i