. jnyA'!''y"f: - I . - v a . M, ..,., , m-rmm ' .-,,. . , . L , , - ' ' .. . - . I THE ADVERTISER THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1SS0. KATIOliAL EEPUBLIOAir TICKET. For Fresldent of the United States. JAMES A. GARTIEU). of Ohio. For V'ce Fresldent of the United States. CHESTER A- ARTHUR, of New York. Call fbr Bepublican State Convention. The Republican electors of tho State of Ne braska are hereby called to send delegates from the several counties, to meet In State Convention at Lincoln, on Wednesday, the lut day of September, A. D. 1880. at 3 o'clock p. in., to place Ilnrnomlnatlon candidates for the following offices : Three Presidential Eleotors, and three al ternates. One memberkof CongrcSB. Governor. Lieutenant-Governor. Secretary of State. Auditor. Treasurer. Attorney General. Commissioner of Public Lands and Build ings. Superintendent of Public Instruction. And to transact such other business as may properly come before the convention. The several counties are entitled to repre sentation In. State Convention an follows. based npon the votes cast In each county for Hon. Amasa Cobb, for Judge of the Supreme Court, In 1S79. giving one delegato to each 150 votes, and one fo- the fraction of 75 votes. also one delegate at large for each o gaulzed county. Hrlr-i 7rtC' Qnmtie. Votes. fjatcSC!inintict. Tuff J. giitri. Adam ... .J.4T7 11 .letlerson.. 7 Antelope Boone-.... Duifnlo...... Uurt....... Butler Cass GVtlar Chej'cnne. . sr, a ... 45? 4 ... ? 7 ... ftVJ 5 . 72? (5 ...i,sr5 io 171 2 ... 2.V) 3 Johnson.... Kearney.... Keith Knox Lancaster.. Lincoln Madison Merrick Nemaha iNuckolls Nnnco........ Otoe .... Pawnee Phelps- Pierce . SK 7 ... 565 5 .. 31 1 . 481 4 2.752 10 .. 2.10 3 .. 4SS 4 731 6 .-.1.200 9 .. 418-4 . 12G 2 1,153 II ...l.ft-K 8 . ;i 3 . 1 .. 691 8 Clav. -.2.K5 19 Colfax -. 582 5 Turning . 5-12 5 Custer 83 2 Dnkotw. 279 3 Pawou..... 351 3 Dixon 37fi 4 Doden r 1.097 8 Pouglas 2.370 17 I Platte.. Polk M9 7 Fillmore I.2SS 10 Red Willow- 196 2 UIoliar,son.1.5I9 11 Saline 1,645 12 Sarpy .... 4TC 4 Saunders 1,298 10 Kranklirr 635 Frontlor 5S Furnas . 525 Gage ,I,2Z3 Ooxper 113 'Seward.. 667 Greeley Ha'.I XIamllton . Harlan Hitchcock. Howard . Holt.....-..... 1(T! 072 759 741 122 472 229 Sherman... .- 200 ... 152 ... 766 330 'Stanton..... , Thayer . I Valley I Washington. Wayne,.... 'Webber York ....... 1,167 . 97 .1.163 ,1,225 It Is recommended first, that no proxies be admitted to the Convention, except such as are held by persons residlajj In the coun ties from which the pr oxles arc given. Second, That no delegate shall represent an absent member of his delegation, unless he be clothed with authority from Mm Coun ty Convention, or Is In possession of proxies from regularly ected delegates. By order of tho Republican State Central Committee. JAMES W. DAWES-.Chalrni&n, JAMES DONNELLY. Secretary. Lincoln, Neb.. July 2Sth. 1SS0. Oall for a Republican District Convention. The Republican electors of the Second Ju dicial District of the State of Nebraska are hereby called to send delegates from tho sev eral counties In wild district, to meet In con vention at Lincoln on Tuesday, the.31st day of August. A. D.. 18S0,at7 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of placing In nomination a can didate for tbeoftlceof District Attorney, and t transact such further business as may ome before tho convention. The several ountles are entitled to representation In District Convention1 as follows based upon the vote cast In each county for Hon. Am.i iwiCobb for Judgo'.orthoSupretno Court In 1879 with the exception of Nemaha county: Cass County...-. . . 10 del. Otoe ' li Nemaha " . io Lancaster 19 By order of the Second Judicial District Central Committee. C. W. Seymouu, E. P. Holmes, Chairman. Secretary; The Democrats of Colorado have nominated John L. Haugh. for Gov ernor. The temperance-people of Main have nominated Hon. Joshua F. Osgood for Governor. Maud S. and St. Julien, the king and queen of the turf, each recently made a mile in 2dl?.i, on tho Rochester course. The colored citizens of Lincoln- have- organized a Garfield club. A colored state convention will be held at Oma ha,. 31st inst. To the surprise of the treasury offic ials there is large, and daily increasing, calls for silver from tha-west, both dol lars and fractional pieces. Mrs. Chisolm has written a letter making an eloquent and heartfelt plea for Garfield. The murderers of her husband, son and daughter are unani mously for Hancock. Said a Democrat from Central Xew Tork: "Had a vote-been- taken thirty days ago in my section Hancock would have been elected, but he is losing ev ery day, and 1 am going to vote for Garfield myself." m The greenback orators who went down to canvass Alabama, got their eyes opened.. Good enough. They found the condition worse than Repub licans have portrayed it. They found how the South is made solid. Thc State Journal says, two- broth ers. John and Andrew Young, while at work in? x well at Pactoryville;. Cass count', Monday last week, were over come with "weft damp" and. before they could be taken out, died. It seems that it is not believed at the census headquarters that the South ern States have gained a percent, of population double to-thatofthe North ern States; ascensus-returns show; and therefore another census has been or dered in South Carolina: m Shades IE Tardv, President of the- Colored Relief Board, St. Louis, has ad vices that lO-,000 negroes will emigrate from Mississippi and Louisiana within the next two months, aud will arrive here en route for Kansas and other Northern States. About forty per day for the past month, have been cared for here by the board and forwarded to va rious destinations. , . I I A few days ago one of the ward reg istrars of Omaha, appointed under the State law, lost his registration book. After the book had been gone a few days, the registrar in the meantime ad vertising for knowledge of its where abouts, it w;is traced to Edward Rose water, editor of the Bee, and he was, after some trouble, forced to give it up; whereupon he was arrested for steal ing the book and placed under bond to appear before the district court to be dealt with for the offense. The law fixes the penalty for the demeanor at not to exceed $300 fine or not more than three months in the county jail, or both fine and imprisonment. The registrar thinks Rosewater got into his office by crawling in through a window which could only be reached from the outside by climbingrup a lad der. Rosewater has by arbitrary and unprecedented measures placed him self at the head of the county central committee, and inaugurated a scheme of reistration for the Republican party of Douglas county which was especial ly offensive to a majority of the part', and they would not register their names nor submit to the arbitrary rules and doctrines of the obnoxious and hypocritical Rosewater. This he has at :i late day found out, so in back ing down from his law that required every Republican in the city to regis ter his own name, he concluded to try to obviate the difficulty by entering all the names on his list himself, but to be as quiet about his surrender as possi ble. Tin's, we presume is the reason he ventured upon the criminal course of stalling the registrar's book instead of the more manly way of borrowing it or asking permission of the ollicer to copy the names. "We would like to know what Rosewater would not do to accomplish his political purposes. The Democrats have much to say about Hancock placing the civil law above the military while he was the hero of the bulldozers by order of An dy Johnson. Rut the truth is he then and there acted contrary to this senti ment by removing officers elected un der the civil law. He simply with the power of the bayonetremoved Re publicans and put Democrats in their places. And how was this superior civil law doctrine carried out in Mrs. Surratt's case? Hancock could have got rid of the duty of executing that woman, in an honorable manner by obeying the writ of habeas corpus, that takes precedence over all other writs of the criminal law, and delivering up the wretched old woman to the civil authorities. But Hancock disobeyed the writ, preferring to hang the woman himself. The Freeman's Journal and Catholic Register, no longer ago than last March speaking of the probabili ties of Hancock's nomination, said: "That he did not heed the supposed law of the United States that the civil is always above the militarv." "The popular or civil objection to Gen. Han cock is not that he transmitted an or der from Secretary Stanton to Hart- ranft to hang an innocent woman, but that he disregarded the writ of writs.' "That writ was served on Gen. Han cock. Had he obeyed it he would in all probability have been President of the United States." Rut he disobeyed the writ, and in all probability will never be President of the United Slates. One day last wcekayoungman asked us if we had been a prisoner in Ander sonville. Upon answering in the affir mative, he said that his father, a mem ber of tho loth Iowa, died of starvation in that hell on earth, and that he could remember seeing his father but once, when homo upon a furlough, and but a child ; that his father was soon after capt tired and sent to Andersonville, to starve and die. "We told the young man that such as he made stalwart Republicans. "With an emphasis that evidenced his deep feeling, he made reply, that he would as soon vote for Jeff Davis sis for Hancock, or any man wlro would forget the past, and go over to the solid South which repented nothing, regretted nothing, but justified and defended such damnable treatment as was meted out at Andersonville. North Platte Nebraskiait. We have no doubt that that soldier is right in saying he would as soon vote for the arch traitor atonco as Hancock. .Jen. Davis would not make a worse President than Hancock. Either would simply serve the wishes of the rebels, and administer tlio government according to the Southern Democratic programme. It is not the figurehead that is put up to attract attention but tho long haired bowie knifed crowd that hoists the figurehead, thatdeserves attention. Or, what would be the diff erence if Davis or Hampton should oc cupy the chair or stand just behind it with Hancock in it? That's what's the matter. The Democratic papers, not one of them, that charge Garfield with wrong doing fn the Credit Mobiffer matter, have vet published Oakes Ames testi mony, and they dare not, as it would give the lie to their assertions and often repeated charges. Oakes Ames' testi mony does not convict Gen. Garfield of any wrong and. so the committee re ported. The Granger has been over and over again defied by us to publish Ames' testimony in full, with the full finding of the connutttee bearing upon the act and, intent of GarfieftT and oth ers, yet that unfair and dishonest sheet as persistently refuses to do so. All it has ever dared do was to publish ex tracts from tho report garbled to suit its groundless case. Inter Ocean: The States of the South, one by one, are paying their bonded debts by a wet sponge across the face of the ledger; They are all solid for Hancock and the party of repudi ation. In five vears past, 8277,000,000 of honest debts, due mostly to North ern and foreign capitalists, have thus been disposed of, and more introspect, The weird and ghostly Rev-Thomas "Weston Tipton can use more slang nhrases in a given time than any other pious tramp or political orator in the union. jseorasua t, uy x-ress. During September Senator Colliding will speak in Indiana, Ohio, and pro bably Pennsylvania. The Democratic State Convention of Connecticut, ISth inst., nominated James II. English for Governor. The Moline Review says: "Chairman Rarnuin is not showman Rarnum. lie has no show neither has his party." Nobody but Democrats believe that South Carolina, Alabama, Kentucky, &c, have advanced in population in the last ten years more rapidly than even Kansas or Xebraska, yet the Dem ocratic census takers have reported that it is a fact. According to the Republican, Rose water is a thief and the Omaha Herald is a thief, the Rejmblican being the par ty who in both instances hits detected the criminals. "We suppose this is on the principle that it takes a thief to catch a thief. Bee. It appears that the thief was caught all the same. The Xew York Times recently re ceived letters regarding the situation, from thirty-four of the fifty-eight counties of that State, from reliable gentlemen; and without an exception they report the prospects for Republi can success as most encouraging. All Republican elements are united. The soldiers are not going to vote for Han cock as the Democrats have hoped, and the Republicans are having accessions from tiie Democrats, independents, conservatives and greenback ers. There is hardly a doubt of Garfield and Ar thur sweeping the State by a very de cisive majority. Mr. G. AV. Kendall, of Omaha, was formerly a resident of McGregor, Iowa, and says the "old man recently arrested as Render, is not one of the founders of that town as he claimed, nor even a son of them. Mr. K. knows the where abouts of all those McGregors. -The Omaha Bee speaking of this matter says: Mr. Kendall is convinced that while this part of their story was false, the prisoners were really the genuine Ren ders, and that the reason they were not identified was that the ruin of the butchers of Cherryvale meant the ruin of two-thirds of the population of that vicinity, who were more or less bound up with the fate of the fiends and fear ed a confession from them before they could be executed. A very plausible theory. "Wo copy the following, from the Kansas Chief, because there are about ten ton of solid truth in it: It now transpires that Gen. Hancock's name is cabbaged, as well as some of his laurels. An investigation reveals the fact that his father was an illegiti mate son, and that his real name was Roberts. Hence, the Democratic can didate for President is Winlield Scott Roberts. Now, this is no disgrace to Gen. Hancock, and makes but little difference; but when we remember that Henry "Wilson was in the same lx, and that the Democratic papers twitted him as Jeremiah Colbaith, year in and year out, and even threw it af ter him in his grave, it is well enough to remind them that" their man Roberts has stolen the name of John Hancock, and even pretended to be a descendant of that patriarch; that he has attempt ed to steal the laurals of Gen. Meade; and that he is now bent upon stealing the Presidency from Garfield, by means of bulldozing and ballot-box stuffing. Yet, he is "superb!" It is now said, and we rely on the au thority, that the Union Pacific railroad company will have a direct east and west line over the old survey of the Brownville and Fort Kearney survey before snow flies. This looks as if Jay Gould meant business with his air line road from Quinc Illinois, to Chicago, which company was formed last week. The road was finished to within eighty five miles of Brownville, and the road bed is graded from Brownville to Te cumseh. This will be, when finished, the most direct line from Kearney to Chicago that could be gotten. It is al most an air line. Beatrice Courier. About the first of September a large force of construction hands will go to work to rush the road to a junction with the St. Louis and Council Bluffs road, at a point aboutfforty miles di rectly east of Brownville. That may be done before snow flies, but we fear there will be several snow flies ere it reaches the Missouri river. The indi cations are, however, more flattering than they have been for years that the completion of this line to Kearney or some other point west of us, is one of Jay Gould's ncxtjjontemplated enter prises. i i Mr. J. "W. Lytle, of family, and about 40 years of age, and a respectable man, suicided with shot gun at Omaha, 17th inst. He came from Pennsylvania with his family about a month ago. Eureka, Nevada, was again nearly all burned down on the 17th. Loss near $1,000,000. About a year ago the same district was burned over. At Bedford, Ind., on a recentSunday, at a Catholic church the priest refused to baptize the child of Emil Gausen, this enraged the latter and he cursed the priest; then the friends of the priest pitched into Gausen and proba bly injured him fatally. An account says he was stabbed ten times. Adelaide Neilson, the great vocalist, died suddenly in Paris last week. If AV. II. English should get to Wash ington for four years he would leave there with either a "tax title" or "a mortgage" upon everything that was lying around loose. Speaking of mort gages, English can always adopt the motto of the Knight Templars, "In Hoc Signo Yinces." Inter Ocean. "hi Hoc Signo'Vinces" In this sign, or under this standard thou shalt con quer. Hon. J. C. Watson is strongly urged by his many friends here as well as elsewhere m his judicial district, for renomination to the office of district attorney. He has filled the office with great ability and satisfaction-. We be lieve there will be-but little1 opposition to him and tho Republicans of'Iiis dis trict cannot make a better nomination. j State Journal. John I. Redick, although considered smart is certainly very fickle and un sound so far as principle is concerned. Refore the Chicago convention he was crazy for Grant's nomination, but when he went to the convention and saw Garfield from that moment he was a Garfield man, as he said in his remarks at the ratification meeting at Omaha. At that Meeting he said: I had the pleasure of attending the Chicago convention and seeing- and hearing some of the great men in this country Conkling, Frye, Rrooks', Hale and nearly all the great men of the Re publican party, and among them I heard James A. Garfield. And after I had heard him take the platform and show his fairness when that .question arose about the delegates from Virgin ia under the resolution of Conkling, from that time till now I have been a Garfield man. I regard our present nominee as the greatest luan of them all. If any one man showed him self greater than another, that man was Garfield. He showed ability and judg ment, honesty and firmness in every move that he made. He refused', to cast his vote in his own favor. I .be lieve he told the truth when he said he came not there for himself but for some one else. History says he is no torious for modestly keeping himself in the background. I came back here gentlemen from Chicago after having lost a million on Grant, Laughter but I am going to reimburse myselfon Garfield in November. It is not right to take a man who can carry one, two or three states, but one who can carpy as many states as are required for his election. You must not have a man who can carry New York, Pennsyl vania, Ohio or Maine alone, but a man that people everywhere will go for, and James A. Garfield is that man. Take Ohio aud ask yourself why it is im portant for that state to be carried. It is one of the doubtful states, and Mr. Garfield will carry it. He is popular in Ohio anil democrats concede the state to him. After the convention we had the congratulations of Grant men and Blaine men and men everywhere, and it is fair to presume that Garfield will cany New York and Pennsylva nia, and if he does that we feel sure that victory will be ours. Garfield bears the reputation of an hon est man. He made himself. It is said that ho received no education until after he was married and then his wife assisted him. He came out after he was twentv-ono and educated himself. He went to the war, worked himself up to a brigadiership, was elected to ..-, congress and then to the senate. I sav we have no man who can be put forth at a greater advantage than Garfield. I am satisfied with the action of the con vention and all the republicans ought to be. The convention, in their wisdom, have selected what they believed to be the best choice, and we can elect Garfield by as large a majori ty as we could have elected Grant. It is questionable if urn financial af fairs of the country could be better than they are. Greenbacks, silver, gold. National bank notes, silver-certificates are of equal value and interchangeable; and the quantity of money in circula tion seems to be ample for the demands of commerce, and all business demands in all parts of the country. For any party now to attempt any important change would be dangerous. This fi nancial system has been inaugurated and made successful under Republican administration and as the result of de clared Republican doctrine as opposed to declared Democratic doctrine. It was Republican brains that conceived the idea of resumption of specie pay ments at an early period and fixed a time for it to operate The Democrats, in their platform of 1S70, demanded a repeal of the law for resumption, thus going upon tho record as distinctly an tagonizing the theory aud the law. Hence Republican principle has given the country the best financial system ever conceived and the best money that ever circulated in this Nation. With a change of administration it is reasonable to believo would come a tampering with tiie currency question, aud then, as is usually the case when people j are not content to let well enough alone, the finances would be made worse instead of better. Gener al Garfield has explicitly stated to the country what he thinks about it, and that is that the country is in a splendid financial condition, and for continued confidence it should not be materially meddled with. What General Han cock's opinions and doctrines are no one knows. If he has any opinion re garding, greenbacks, silver, and Nation al banks, he carfully keeps them to himself. The probability is his ad visers will be expected by him to at tend to such business :is finances. General Hancock having already made his money ,"and received it in gold, be ing a millionaire, he is no doubt a hard money man believing in a single gold standard. But it is unnecessary for the people to take trouble about what Hancock may think or what he might do. They may do tho safe and sure thing without taking any chan ces. This can only be done by electing Garfield and Arthur, thus keeping the financial management in the hands of a itepuuucan administration. m i cm Tilden's Barrell. Mr. Morton chairman Nebraska Democratic State Central Committee, publishes a card in the Omaha Herald in which he says the Democratic Cen tral Committee wants no money as a campaign fund. This is accounted for when we remember that the party is Jiatist, and it may bo that is the style Morton proposes to conduct the cam paign. But as Morton and Miller have both recently been in New York, and the Herald itself announces that Sam- rn.i i t -i i i my liiuen nan drawn nis cnecK lor a cool one hundred thousand dollars, that some of ttiat bar'l is to be used in Nebraska. That high strung morali ty dodge wont begin to win too thin entirely Morton. m m The fatal feature in the Democratic situation is that, no matter what inav be inscribed on platforms, no matter what mass meeting resolutions may declare, no matter what eloquent speak ers may sty, no- matter how profuse promises may be put forth, the party is compelled to confront a dismal story of its incapacity,- treachery, neglect and broken pledges, in respect to all the important living questions of the day. A'. 1 . Jb ven i ng 1'ost. Bepublican and Democratic Economy. "Washington, Aug. 12. The Treas ury Department has published a state 'ment showing the amount of the an nual appropriations made by Congress for each fiscal year lrom 1S73 to 1SS1, inclusive, together with the coin value of such appropriations, computed upon the average prices of gold for each week in question. The amounts in coin value were as follows, in round number: For 1S7:J, Si:$4,000,000; 1S74, $153,000,000; 1S75, i:!7,000,000 ; 1S70, S 1211,000,000; for 1877, 115,000,000; for 1S7S,$0,000,000; for 1S7D, $171,000,000; forlSSO, $102,000,000; for 1SS1, $154, 000.000. The smallness of the sum for 1S7S was occasioned by the refusal of the Democrats to vote appropria tions for the support of the army and other pin poses. A comparison of the amounts appropriated in 1SS0 and 1S81 by the Democrats in the fullness of their power, with the amounts appro priated in 1873-4 by the Republicans, shows how little foundation there is for the assertion so often made by the Democrats, that they have been econo mical by reducing the appropriations. The appropriations made m the years 1S73-4-5 were in each case less Mian those madebv the Democrats in 1SS0-S1. The Democratic appropriations of 1SS0 exceed the Republican appropriations of 1873 by $28,000,000, those of 1S74 by $!),000,000, and those of 1875 by 25, 000,000. Tho Democratic apporpria tions of 18S1 exceed the Republican appropriations of 1S73 by $20,000,000, and those of 1S75 by $17000,000. The appropriations for rivers and harbors in 1873-1-5 averaged about ?t,000,000 per year. The average in the years 1S7!)", 18S0, and 1SS1 was a little short of $0,000,000. For the protection of the coast line and our great cities by forts and fortifications there was appro priated in 1S73-4-5, nearly $5,000,000. In 1870-S0-81 the sum appropriated for these purposes was only $1,100,000, or an average of less than $100,000 per vear. The statement furnishes niater- ial for many interesting comparisons. Silver Gertificai.es. A special from Washington to the Inter Oceansnys: There has been such a demand for bills recently from New York that inquiry has been made to the Treasury for silver certificates. Ac cording to law these certificates can only be issued in return for silver de posited, or may be paid out at tho op tion of the receiver. These parties now ask. however, whether the Secretary . , , - will issue them in return for gold coin It appears that this coin is a drag and inconvenience in the transaction of business, while in limited amounts silver certificates can be uad and are taken up readily in the ordinary chan nels of trade, even where silver dol lars cannot be made to circulate. They are issued m denominations of ten dol lars .only, and at but three places, AVasliington, San Francisco, anil New York. If, however, they are exchanged for gold coin, the trade will be final and absolute, though of course that would not hinder the certificates from finding their way back to the Treasury in the ordinary waj", only that the Sec retary could not simply lend certificates for the sake of holding gold, subject to recall again should it be desired to re turn the paper again to the Treasury, Such a process would involve the open ing of a new set of books, and, in time, might afford means of speculation to brokers at the expense of the govern ment in the fluctuation in the price, of bullion. It is a gratifying proof of the permanence and thoroughness of prac tical resumption, when the holders of gold offer to trade it for paper not a le gal tender. The colored people of Montgomery Ala., have issued the following call : Great dissatisfaction exists through out the whole country among the col ored people as to the way they were treated at the last election, where they cast as solid a Republican vote as ever before, being united, without any dis sension in their ranks; claiming that they csist at least as large a vote as in 1870, where the Republican majority in this county was 3,SS1. while it was changed this time to a Democratic ma jority of nearly 2,700, obtained by the most outrageous frauds, the use of "troops at the polls," the arbitrary throwing out of four beats with Republican majorities, etc. large We, the undersigned, a committee of a colonization society, which has been formed to devise ways and means to assist our colored friends all over this county to leave the country, if they can not get their rights, guaranteed to them by the constitution of this State and of the United States, call on you to assemble in mass meeting here, in the city of Montgomery, on the fourth Saturday in September, the 25th of aepiemoer, ac i:s m., ami to express in tones, not tube misunderstood, your de termination to insist on your rights, and if they are denied to you, to quiet ly leave, and seek homes in a land where they will be cheerfully guaran teed to every man, irrespective of his color or political opinions. We are satisfied, in our own mind, that the majority of the white people of this county, especially the planters, men who know that they cannot cul tivate their plantations successfully without colored labor, are opposed to those stupendous frauds alluded to above, and would be willing to give us our political and civil rights, but we are sorry to say that they are powerless, and have no control over the ring of unscrupulous politicians who run roughshod over this county. A last chance is given to them and to us, and that will be the next Presidential elec tion in November. We love Alabama, and we would like to stay and to die in the land where most of us were born, and where the graves of our ancestors lie; but, after we were made free men, we love our freedom and our rights more, and are determined, in the most peaceable way, to get them respected, and to be ourselves and our children free men for all time to come. Don't send delegates, but come one, come all, to the mass meeting, here in Montgom ery City, on the 25th of September, 18S0. Granny Tipton, renegade republican, who is just now engaged in preaching states rights to the good people of Ne braska, wsis at Crete last Tuesday night. We have been told by some democratic gentlemen who went from this place to hear him, that his -speech was a very flimsy affair. We know about what it was, as we have often heard it, and like our democratic friends, would pronounce it the pettish wail of a sorehead, in his dotage, who has in his own imagination been per sonally wronged by some member of the republican party, and for that reason changes his complexion, becoming a democrat. Mr. Tipton's speeches are a great help to the republican party. Friend cille Telegraph. JntlgeStull, of Brownville, is a candidate- for district attornev asrainst J. C. Watson of this citv. Judge Stull is J an able lawyer and a genial gentleman. 1 Nebraska City Fress. I AT.ABAFA. AGreenbacker's Experience. J. II. Randall, Greenback campaign orator, has written a letter relating his experiences in Alabama. He went to Kizer Hall, to a barbecue and joint discussion between Democrats aud Greenbackers. Of course he got the worst of it. He says of the first Dem ocratic orator: "In the course of his speech he said: -The Confederacy still exists, rav friends, and Jeff Davis, the best President and devoted to our interests, and if Hancock is elected, and we have no doubt he will be, you will be paid tor all property you have lost through Radical rule, and you must stand by "the great Democratic par ty, lor a SOlHiaoiUlI WUl give us rauii; control of the General Government, and we can redress all our wrongs.' His thirty-minute speech was almost entirely of this order. As soon as we report ed, it was decided that we speak in be half of the Greenback party one hour and fifteen minutes and that Mr. Tay lor, of Butler, reply to us in the samo time. We opened our case in a calm and pleasant appeal to everybody not to applaud but to give us close atten tion while we presented the lacts in relation to tho present situation, and we soon had engaged the serious and earnest attention of everybody on the ground within hearing of our vokv, when a man remarked, 'We don't want no d n Yankee to come here and ta'k to us: we had bettershut hiin up." Tii next thing was for a band from the neighboring town ofShubudato strike up, and the Committee of Arranage ment claim thev could not stop it, nor did not." He next went to Shubuda. and he describes his greeting :i$ follows:1 "There's the Greenbacker now d n him;" "Three cheers for Hancock ;"1 "G-d d-n Yankee Gieonbacker, he, ought to be killed;" "Let's give him hell," and some other phrases of like i character, ""ft e quietly passed on and said nothing, being followed part of the wav bv young men, yellii g at us as they baited fifty yards from our team. In about ten minutes a young man well diessed and perfectly sober, separated from a group, came up to us. and we had, as near as we can remem ber, the following conversation: M. B. D. (which means Mississippi bull dozer) Is your name Randall? Yes, sir. M. B. D. Are you Randall the great Greenback speaker? I exnect I am. M. B. D. I have quested to give you, a note T was re , Read it and give me your answer. Very well, sir. We "took the note, written on a leaf torn from a pocket memorandum, and read as follows: August 1, 1SS0. Dear Sir: We will give you and your paid thirty-five minutes to pick up your duds and git out of this town. Yours to death. Tin: Boys ok Shuisuda. "Do you mean to tell me that an American law-abiding citizen, on the way to attend to his business cannot stay in this town to take the first train of cars going South." M. B. D. We know you, and you can't stay. You must go to the next station. "Who gives this order?" M. B. 1), The boys of Shubuda. Your time is passing; you better get along, or you'll catch hell. Mr. Randall understood this as an indication that the people of Shubuda did not desire him to expound Green back theories in that neighborlod. A PAKTV OK HATE AND MAMCIi. Since the Alabama election the National View, a Greenback argan.has been pouring hot shot into the ranks of the shot-nun Democracy. The follow-1 ing is from that paper; "Accounts from Alabama come to us filled with evidences of the frauds prac ticed in the late election. The most shameless and open discrepancies exist between the ballots cast and those I counted. At Uuntsville an amount of suppression and intimidation equal to thai used in the worst days of recon struction were openly earned on. Com ment upon these things without more positive action does very little good. The party who condemn these outrage ous abuses, be they committed by who they may, has a hard work before it but it must be accomplished. The ex ecution of laws themselves must be such as to prevent similar action by any party. That party which parades a platform sonorously quoted by the man who voted to protect brute force in Congress, which declares for a free ballot, and leads its forces to such a victory as that gained in Alabama, is a party of hate, of malice, and the protector of the worst crime known to nations treacherous subversion of the people's will. Work against it. against it. Refuae its alliance, tiie honest men come out of it." k'ote Let A Straw. Terre Haute, Ind., Aug. lti. A spec ial election was held to-day in the Sixth Ward, which is of special interest. A Democratic Councilman having resign ed, David Philips, Republican, was elected by S2 majority over Ernest Bleemel, Democratic. Both parties contested the election vigorously, and brought out a full vote. The ward is inhabited mostly by railroad men and iron workers. The Republicans gain a majority of the Council, and the con trol of the city is transferred to them. The result is regarded of great impor tance. The greenback vote, which used to be strong in the ward, was distributed between the old parties. The Republicans are jubilant. g Indicted. Philadelphia, Pa.. Aug. i. Dr. John Bhchanan, of Eclectic College notoriety, has been indicted by the United States Grand Jury on thecharge of devising a scheme to defraud, and with using the mails for illegal pur poses. Dr. David Wright, one of Buch anan's graduates, gave a certificate of death from "coilary fantum." The Coroner's jury censure Wright as an unqualiGed physician. The Mark Lane Express" review of the crops reports that the wheat crop, which is being harvested in England, falls be low the expectations, the berrv being greatly damaged by mildew. The prob able earlv receipts of the new crops and heavy shipments from this coun try have oper.ited to restrict trade. Business has been confined to tlve de mand of immediate consumption, 'af fording small indications as to the pri ces that will rule. The imports into the United Kingdom for the weekend ing the 7th inst. were 1,720,420 cwt. wheat, besides 232,122 cwt. flour. In ter Ocean. m9 Washington, Aug. 16. Owing to the crop movements the demand for the standard silver dollar increases. The orders to-day were S3S.O0O the largest amount ordered in one day for more than a year. It was quite right that David Davis should address his letter announcing he was for Hancock to the Confeder ate spy at Washingtan. James E. Harvev is the party who communicat ed to the Charleston rebels in 1S01 the Cabinet secrets in regard to Fort Sum ter. Birds of a feather Hock together. New York Commercial Adcertiser. The Nebraska State Baptist Associa tion, which has been in session in our city for a day or two past, has conclud ed to locate the Nebraska Baptist Sem inary at Gibbon, Buffalo county, and appointed Rev. G. W. Reed, of Penn., as principal. Mr. Reed will enter upon the dischargo of his duties at once. State Journal. rhyslclnn freely prescribe tliC ntw fol Medicine. "Malt Blttors."becain more nourishing strcnRUienliiR hnd purifying tnau nil other forma ofinnlt or medicine, while free from the objection urged against malt liquors. CryforFitchcr'sCastoria. Thoyliko it because it is swoot; Mothora like Castorift "because it gives health to the child; and Physicians, because it contains no morphino or mineral. Gastoiia Is nature's romody for assimilating; 0xo food. It cures "Wind Colic, the raising of Sour Curd and Diarrhooa, allays revorishnoss and Kill Worms. Thus tho Child has health and tho Mother obtains rost. Pleas ant. Choap, and Reliable. e Tho most effectiTO Pain-relieving agenU for MAN and BEAST tho world has ever known. Over 1,000,000 Bottles sold last year! Tho reasons for this unprecedented popu larity, are evident: tho Centaur Idni ments arc made to deserve confidence ; they are absorbed into the structuroj they alts-ays euro and never disappoint. No person need longer suffer with PAIN in tho BACK, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints, for tho ULnimonts will suroly exterminate tho pain. Thoro is no Strain, Sprain, Cut, Scald, Burn, Bruise, Sting, Gall or Lameness to which Mankind or Dumb Brutes are subject, that does not respond to this Soothing balm. Tho Contaur not only roliovo pain, but they inclto healthy action, subdue inflammation, and euro, whothcr tho symptoms proceed from wounds of the flesh, or Neuralgia of the Nerves ; from contracted Cords or a scalded hand ; from a sprained ankle or a gashed foot; whether from disgusting PIMPI.ES on a LADY'S FACE or a strained joint on a Horso's Log. Tho Agony produced by a Uurn or Scald: mortification lrom Frost-bites;" Swell ings from Strains: tho tortures of Rheu matism; Crippled for lifo, by some neslectcd accident; a valuable horso or a Doctor's Bill may all be savod from Ono Bottle of Centaur Liniment. No Housekeeper, Farmer, Planter, Teamster, or Liverymnn. can afford to be without theso wonderful Linimonts. They can be procured in any part of the globo for 50 cts.and $1.00 a bottle. Trial bottlea 25 ets. NEMAHA CITY. New Cash Store, The people of Kemaha County will please tt k nollco that Id now In ISTemalia C i ty with n new and full itock of Groceries t& Qtteeiisware, JTfits and Cttps, Boots, Shoes, and Harness I propose to keep Everything the People WANT In the line above named, and to ell at low est Ilvluj? prices for ready pay. TITUS &, WILLIAMS. DEALERS XA" DRY GOODS, GROCERIES. RE A D YMADE CL O THING, NOTIONS, Etc., Etc., Etc. Nemaha Cfiy, Nebraska, Will sell goods ai cheap as Ruy house In Southeastern Nebrirska. T? C3. o, fcSU a BOOTS. SHOES. AND HARNESS Made and repaired as well as can bo done anywhere, and at short notice AXI VERY HEASOXABLE TEIOIS. 53 , LIVERY AND FEED SATBLE. Good buggies nnd horses, chnrges reas onable. Best of care taken of transient stock. .VJE.TI.IHJ CIT J'J2H. IQMM S MZJVXGS "Remaka City, Keb., 0E8ERAL FrlERCHAHDISE 3 jfj.mz.i- anocjiRijis L. CAXA'ED GOODS, COyFECTIOyS.Etc. Keep; a varied stock of everything tho peo ple want. Call and see blm. CHILDREN CENTAUR LINIMENTS GENTAl'R UNDENTS DAVID A. M0KT0N, Blacksmith, IVemaJia City, IVebrasJca. Machine repairing and horseshoeing a spe cialty. J 9. T Pr? vWa "isr2 I. S-.t , I A .!.ttJT J&&JL$ LEVI JOHNSON, PROPRIETOR, NEMAHA CITY NEB., Centrnlly located : Good faro. :nd notrou. Me apnrcd to make jtuenta comfortable Good barn for horses and Charges Reasonable. B. Bell Andritcs. L. J. Foster POSTER & ANDREWS, Physicians & Surgeons, N cm a Ira City, Scb. All calls promptly attended uightorday Dr. Andrew makes Chronic am! ynrjclcal Diseases of -women n .peoluIlT- Alio, .Medi cal and riurKlciiI Dceiwca of th eye. Hav ing hud peclnl training In nursery, nnd a itirtf tinil varied prartlcr In acute und chron ic diiwwpi. tatmirn. hone (llxei-o-..old ulcer", grnmilult-d Knre eyes, flhrold nnd ovarian lu iiinr.i. female waknev, nnd dli-jis of the ht-irt. timji-i, thro.it etc. Itf fi-rinci of oper ation? performed, nnd currn effected In rate pronounced lucurnMe. Fees renaonnMtt. PfaTHS V. if Ji 5 F 1 2 v-. o. c as s a it muiu CITY Louis tSt.ro7 !. First door .iiHith of tin- Iu:u'-r nrd. Cll and Ket asiuure mcul f-r O. ci-nii. A good stock of confections ' nrptiin hand. Mr. and Mrs. Btroble having t.i.l much experi ence ns rcstno'rflieitt?, nro well qunllned. to pirate their patrons. LEGALADVEKT.inESIENTS. iSTATKOKGEOItOKKMI'SON.DKCKAS ill eil. In tlit County Court of Nutnaha County. Nubraakii. Cottco 1 herehy given Hint September ISth. nnrt October 15th, I.hsi. swid Mny liHli, l.VU.at 10 o'clock ii. m.. of t-ui'lt day. t tho otlieo of Hie County Judge of Neninhn County. Ne hrn.skii, in Itrownvllle Nehrtwku, luivu been tled by the court n the HmoH and jdnco when and where all person vli tmvo claims and demand aiilnxt vxld ileceaneil can have the Mime osamlued. ndjtiMed nnd allowed, all rlnlm.i not presented nt tlio ut mentioned date will ! freer hnrfftti, by order of the court. JOHN N.HTl'IX. County Judge. Dated A p. 1, ISfcO 10r 1 Es ,'STATK OF 3XSK CI.AIItK rE- CKASED. In the County Cohrt of Se mnhu County. Nebraska. "otIc? Is hereby given that September 4lh IS.SO and March lUth l.Sl. : 10 oclovk A. JI of each djiy. at Hie office of the Count. Jtiitga of 2feinuhnCounty.3ivhrn.skii.in Hroivuvillo Nebraska. h:ivo been fixed t. the court as tho t:iii(ml pl.ico when nnd where all person who have claims nnd demands hhIjimI said di censed can have the same exai.ilm-d. ad justed and allowed, nil claims riot preieiited at the last incntlontd date will be forever burred, bv order of the court. Dated August Mi IStaO. JOIIX S.STUI.L, Swl County Judge ComaiisaionorsSnloofRoal Estat Notice i.s lieretijr .jlvcn tht by vlrtuoof nfl orderof wile lamed out of the District Cutirl of Nemnlia (Vuiity. Nebraska, mid us tl rected m referees nnd commi-Ml,ni rn In tbf Jiise hereafter met.tmne.' upon uli order ami bcrce rendert-lby the said cmrt lu ncertntu iction therein en ling wherein Hrynnl Cobb I.s plaintiff, and Martlin Flnly. Naney AllUnn, Clark f.bb. Wttlinmxiia Cobb l'lnkcey Cobb, flay CnWi, David Cobb. Ciithetluu King, Martli.i I'oniusr. Frnncls Cobb. Seymour Chh, Nmicv A. King, Williamson I:. V. Cbt. Newton C. Wnr ley. I.onisa Inmnu. Mnrthu MeUahn. F.llz- Nelson. Martha C. Kell and John A. Irwin, nru defendants. We will offer for Mile at pub lic nuctl-ii at the door of the Court llonxelfi Mrowiivilleln thesnld count v. on Friday thrf 10th day of Septemlier. A. I. iM.nt 1 o'clock In the afternoon of that day the following real estate In Nemaha Comity. Nebraska to-wit; S. W. 4.Sei 13. T . K. 1H. K. ItO acres. S. K. -.ee. !:. T. H. It. IS K. iflu acre. X. K. ". Sec, 1:5. T. . It. ill K. im acres. S. K. 1 ;. Sec. :t". T. '. It. l- K. Itiu acres. Lot 10, See. 15. '... it 14. K. 17 SMtH) acrm. Lot II. See. IS. T.5. It. 1 1. K. 42 WM00 acres. Terms of Mile; Onc-thml cash, one-third In ono year and one third In two yeam. Deferred payments to bokecuretl by mortgage on tho premises wllh Interest nt 10 per cent. pr annum, pnvnble i.nnunlly from dnte of salO Aujr. ii.lSdO. 1VIM.TAM H. IinOVF.lt, DWIDS'lNTUsrEKS, Keferee and CommiiMlonii. J. II. imOADY. Atl'y for ITir. bvrJ XGALKOTICE. Christian Kcnz. of the hli.te of Colorado will take notice thut Jonuthan Kdwnrila did on the lib day of August. A I. lKSt, Ule his petition In tho District Court of Xemnlirt County. Nebrn-ska, against thefnltl Clirisiiuu Itc:i7.. llhelmitoi U. : z. John lloluotn. A. L'ibel and II I) Tinker partners doing bust nefs ns I,alel A 1 inker. Atiii-tii)- Frank nnd George lUehus partners dlng htislnrs as Frank it Itlehus. defeiidniits setting forth Hint the n!d Christian Ktnz unit Will helm inn Jtenz gave n mortgage to one Lester M. IIn.ll which has been iisslgned to plalntirr on the N. W. '4 of Sc. No. J. Township I, in nh of itange M In iald Neiim in Oiusty. Nebraska, to secure tho payment of SluW.io wJth eertnln coupon Interest nites ttntreto attached ns describe! In said :n rtgage and that .since the giving of said mortgage t be other defendants elnlm to hnve acquired certain Judgment lien on Mild premises aud prajlii that tl;e rnlil Christian Hertz may pay ha Id imn with lntorest nt ten pur cent, prr annum payable Keml-nununlly from April 1 18-0. and Attorney's tt:v. or that said premises my be n!d to pay the same; and the said! Christian Kenz is notified that lie Is rcuulrud to appear and answer said petition on or b- lore mo yjiu nay orrteptem'.er. a. v. isw. JONATHAN KDWAItDS. T. L. 9CHICK. prtfTs ntty. 7wi No. 1-J75 1EGAI NOTICE. Annie Anderson widow of Josiah Ander Oii, deceased. William Andersen. Henriet ta Anderson, Lydln Parsons and Par sons her husband will tnke notice that John II. L&rhtner trustee and Charles G. Gonler benenclclary huve commenced netlon In the District Court of Nemaha C-nnty. Nebraska against them and tiled a petition therein. Theobjectnnd prayer of snid petition In iinld action la to ohtnln n decree of foreclosures Of a certain deed of tniKt executed by one Jo lnh Anderson nnd Prudence M. Anderat his wife lKth now deceased, to snid John U. Lltihtner trustee on the undivided hnlf In terest In North-west quarter of section II, town 5. rnnge 1.1 nnd certain town lots In the town of Hrownvllle. In Nemnha county. Ne braska, folly described In snid petition to which references N made to secure three cer tain promissory notes of said Joslnh Ander son to said plnlntifT Charles G. Gonter. on which there Is now due SH..t'V).'Jiwith Inter est nt eight per cent, per annum from Sep tember 18 1S79, and for ft snleof xald premlstn for the payment of th-sald sum due on nld notes, and for th reformation of snid deed of trust. Snid defendants nre required to an swer by the 1.1th dny of September, 18S0. Dated Aug. 2, ISiO, 7wl J. II. BKOADY. Atfy for Plaintiff. ESTATE OF JACOB DUSTIX DECEASED. In the county court of Nemahtv County. Nebraska. NoCice Is hereby given that Augnst 30th." IS", nnd March 3d lssi, at 10 o'clock A. M., of each day. at the ofllc of the County Judge of Nemahn Counfy. Nebraska, in Brown ville. Nebraska, have been fixed by the court as the times nnd plnce when and whero nil persons who hnve claims nnd demands against said deceased can havo the same ex amined, adjusted and allowed, nil claim not presented ,it tho Inst trentloned date will be forever barred, by order of the court. Dated July 21th 1SS0. 7w4 JOHN. S. STULL. County Judge. B. G. WHITTE&10RE, DEALER IN GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, SEWING MACHINES SEWI.Xa MACHINE REPAIRS A SPECIALTY, wlllpny the highest market price for scrap Iron and rags. Main St.. West Brownville. T ETTER HEADS, " m BILL HEAD Neatly printed at thlsofflce. Until. D maRiT mi i K f Tt2 B nil i nihzxxa. II Y i y 1 r 1