JLHE DAILY JBEEi OMAHA SATURDAY , JUNE 3 , 1882 The Omaha Bee Published every morning , except Sunday Cho only Monday morning dally , THUMB BY MAIL One Vear . 810.00 I Three MonUw$3.00 eiz Month ) . o.OO | One . . 1.00 rriK WEHKLY BBB , pnhllshedcT ry Wednesday. OffiHMS TOST PAIDi- OnoYrar . § 2.00 I ThrooMonUn. . K BltMeith * . , 1.00 1 One . . ! W AMERICAN NEWS COMPANT , 8 ' Agents or Newsdealers In the United S COHUESPUNDKNOE All CoramunI tlons relntinn to News find Editorial mat- era uliould be Addressed to the EDITOB or Tnr. liEK. BUSINKS3 LETTEHS-AH Brwlnew Letters and Remittances should bo nd drcfsod to THE OMAHA PonLlsillNO COM fAJtr , OUAIIA. Draft * , Check * nnd Post- office Orders to bo tnndo payable to the rder of the Company , The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , .Props . , E ROSEWATER , Editor. NOTICE TO NEWSDEALERS. The publisher * of TIIE UKE Imve made BrrnnRemcnts witfi the American Non Company to aupply New * D p ° lR in Illl nop , Iowa , Nohrftdka , Wyoming and Ulnh , All dealers w > o keep THE DAILY UKB on H tie ehonld hereafter luldrcsn their orders to the Manager American News Company , Omaha , Nob. No Btato paper has boon rash enough to suggest a third term for Cams. Mu. OAMEHON in beginning to ob uorvo some of the peculiarities of nb- ntract politics. POLITICAL machines run in defiance of honest party eontimont don't com mand quite aa much blind devotion as they have in the past. Don Cameron trill vouch for the truth of this nssor tion. Guinea can now return home , hid successor nt Ohcmnity having boon in.- stalled. The special providence which has protected Air. GrigRs in retaining Jiia position secins to liavo failed in getting in ito work. x THE Bopublicau "noils as a Ho" THE BEE'H comment on the Denver "Union depot troubles. The Republi can will have to fight it out in this case with the Denver Tribune , which is near .enough to the scat of war to know what is talking about. Qov. Kinmrooi ) is barred out of the tariff commission , according to Attorney General Drowsier , bccauto ho was formerly a member of the senate which passed the bill. His Iowa friends , who will not iako no for an answer , propoao to nominate and elect him to congress this fall over all competitors. TJIIJ call for the organization of a state anti-monopoly lenguo at a con vention to bo hold at Lincoln , 21st , contemplates the organization of local anti-monopoly leagues in the various towns and cities of the state. . The state league would , of neces sity , bo composed only of delegates duly elected by the local leagues The number of delegates elected by each local league is not fixed , but wo presume tlio convention frill admit all who present the proper credentials , The Anti-Monopoly League , unlike the Farmers' Alliance , admits all classes , professional mon , mechanics , laborer * , merchants , manufacturers and farmers. All who desire to chock the aggression of corporate monopo lies by legal means are expected to as sociate themselves together in every locality. A local league may be formed by five man if no greater number is toady to afllliato with the movement. Quito a number of nnti-mytiopoly leagues liavo already been organized , and wo presume that many more will bo organized within the next two weeks. SINCK the passage by the house of the bill creating a secretary of agri culture , Valentino's organs in the state hayo boon howling loudly the praises of the Nebraska congressman as the jchampion of a valuable and important measure. This scheme , whoso only object is to create a few soft and fat offices , was denounced by Tun BEK when it was reported from the com mittee on agriculture. There is no demand on the part of ouf farmers for a secretary of agriculture. The country is poorly enough served by the present bureau for the distribution of garden seeds and the encourage ment of the department of public printing , Niuo-touths of the agricul tural journals furnish more practical information for farmers in a single Issue than is contained in a dozen volumes of the reports sent out by Lo Duo and his successor. Every seed tore has on sale the "now and valu able'1 seeds which it costs the govern ment eighty thousand a year to propo ; gate , and which are distributed through congressmen to their constituents. The people are calling for greater economy in government and Jighjor taxation. They see no purpose in the creation of a department mont of agriculture with o cabinet ' olllcer at the head , and a score of clerks jat fho tail , which will be ub orjrodwiHally ; as well by the pros- ent'.oommuuioncr and bureau. The whole Bchoino is a raid on the treas ury department in the interest of political tramps , and bos received no encouragement from the farmers. THE U. P. HEAD TAX The Union Pacific organs , with democratic and republican labels como promptly tr > the front in defense of the hospital head tax. They wan to inako the public believe this is purely n benevolent arrangement , got ten up in the interests and by the re quest of the company's employes. Now if the employes of the railroac company desire to impose a head tn * on themselves for hospital purposes they have the right to do so , but the question is what right has the com pany to force them to contribute part of their earnings for the supper of the medical department , over which they liavo no control whatever Such exactions nro on a par with the forced contributions levied by Jesse James nnd his gang. Thcso gentle manly highway-men would order pas scngors and trainmen to hold up the ! hands , under penalty of death , while they wont through their pockets Thu benevolent managers of the U , P command the helpless employes o that giant corporation , to utind nut deliver , under penalty of loosing tliei livolyhood. If this hospital service is a voluntary offiir toward which th0 laborer at Sl.fiO a day has contribute ! as much as the general manager , who earns $20,000 n year , why shonlda' ' nil who pay have the enino voice in the management of the lUilrrny hos pitals. When a man hires a doctor ho in a1 liberty to discharge him if ho do en not suit him , nnd hire another , bu hero the company compels their cm ploycH to pay for drugs , hoapita nurses and surgeons , nnd they have no word to sny aa to who shall bo em ployed , or when or how , or whore. What is the consequence ? Da the surgeons nnd hospital nurses con sider that they nfo under obligations to the parties who make up their income como , or do they look to the railroad managers for their orders ? Wo nro told that citizens not em ployed and not injured by the road can only bo admitted in the hospitals on the payment of n dollar and u half n day , but citizens injured on the road who r.ro not employes will bo roatcd frco of charge. At whoso ex pense wo pray ? Why should the employes of the road pay for treatment of parties who are not employed , that maybe injured > y accidents on the road ? Why should the company ask their cm- iloycs to pay for their medical do- jartmont , which is mainly organized or the purpose of treating people who may have damage claims auainst ho company for injuries sustained en ho road ? Why shotild not the company payer or hospitals nt Omaha , Denver and Ogden , or wherever they sco lit to stabliuh them , out of its awn income uat as it pays for political attorneys and strikers who hang round the legis- aturcH and conventions ? It is all very well for the paid or ganists of the U. P. to chime in and endorse * this hospital head tax , but hey know aa well ns wo do that it is ixn unmitigated outrngo , It given the men no chauco whatever to conduct ho concern which is maintained with heir money. If they are so unlucky s to bo thrown into one of these hos- ntnls by nerious injuries which lisablo them for yoare or for lifo , ho nurses nnd surgeons , who are paid with their money , regard them selves us the company's employes , and if called into court to testify con cerning the condition of the injured party , they make as light of their in- urics as they possibly can , because it s the interest of the company to got oil'with the least amount of damage. The only mistake wo have made is in .ho estimate of the amount , It will aggregate § 00,000 to $70,000 a year , nstead of $30,000. , Wo nro not aware that othur roada have levied a lead tax , It does not innko the sys- om the loia objectionable. A cor- > oratiou like the Union Pacific , that divides over thirteen millions a year among its stockholders , can afford to > ay for its own hospital service , THE STATE UNIVERSITY. The regents of the State university rill hold their quarterly mooting within a few days , and their action rill , in a great mtasuro , determine ho fate of the institution , Although ho legislature , at its late session , haslet lot aeon fit to make an inquiry into ho management of the university , the > ooplo of this state are decidedly of ho opinion that a radical change must either bo made in the government and onduct of that institution , or the next egislaturo must bo instructed to have t closed , After ai. < existence of nearly tei years the , university , which was to lave been the pride of every No- > raskan , is literally a wreck , What ever may have boon the cause of the conflict within the faculty , 0110 fact is jotunt , and that is that the present toad of the institution lacks executive ability and that tolerance which in the very nature of things must bo exor cised toward all who may differ with > iin in his theological views. The people of Nebraska , comprising hose wi-.o believe and these who dis- joliovo , are all taxed toward main- aining the university , It is contrary .o the spirit of our government , contrary .o our atnto constitution , to have the university conducted on a sectarian basis. WJiilo it is expected that moral discipline will bo firmly maintained , the right to worship according to the dictates of one's conscience , or not to worship if ono is not inspired by faith must remain untrnmolled , The people contribute toward the maintenance of the university to educate their sons and daughters in every branch o learning except theology. That mm bo loft to sectarian colleges , bccauso each sect will insist that theirs is the only true system of theology , and al the others load to hades. The action of the regents nt their last meeting in ditpcnsing with the services of some oE the most compe tent professors ol the university , because - cause they could not harmonize with the chancellor on his orthodox thco- rice , has mot with decided disapprove nmong intelligent men of nil classes nnd nil creeds. If those mon are to bo replaced by n faculty that is in perfect accord with the chanccllor'i .religious dogmas , the university will ducencrntc into a sectarian college , and the people will demand thai further taxation for its support shall coaso. Already public confidence in the university is sadly weakened , and few people in this otato who place any value on n collegiate education will bo disposed to patronize the university unless it is thoroughly regenerated There can bo no half way work about it. Wo must cither have n university worthy of the name , or wo had bettor close the doom nnd stop the waste ol money , nnd the imposition that is practiced upon its patrons. Chancellor Pnirfiold hus outlived his usefulness in the university , and ho should bo inado to seek another Cold for his labors , whether the pro fessors that have been dismissed nro reinstated or not. Wo have shown no disposition in the past to join with these who made war upon him from personal motive , but wo are of the opinion that his re tention at the head of the university would deprive Nebraska of the bene fits which ita founders sought to con lot upon her people. As TUB time draws near for the opening of the political campaign the monopoly organs begin to exhibit symptoms of horror nt the interest tnkon by the farmers in politics. The liorror is likely to bo turned into dis may after the fall election. The farm ers of Nebraska were never so thor oughly alive to the necessity for pro- acting their interests against the ag gressions of corporate monopolies as they are at the present timo. That irotoction they sue can only bo soured - : ured through the caucus primary con- ontions. When railroads combine to : ontrol political parties as aids to heir schcmcg iigiinst the public in- crest , it is high time that combina- ions should bo made to checkmate , ho plans of unscrupulous tools of the monopolies. What reason is there ivhy the farmer ohouln not take as itrong an interest in politics as the merchant or professional man ? And , vhy ts it a crime in the eyes of the lorporation cditjra when farmora agi- ate Bonding men to the legislature md congress who ahull represent their riowsnnd vote for their interests. has already paid nearly $500,000 $ for pictures. If the old Jommodoro wore alive ho might re peat his famous opinion that "Bill lidn't amount to much. " OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. To students of European politics the Egyptian crisis presents an interesting problem second only to that of the revolution in the southeastern Aus- ; rian provinces. The interests con cerned are so diverse and the compli cations so involved that any unlang- ing of the snarl without open war teems diflioult if not impossible The rouble began with thu revolt of a lumber of Circassian olllcora againnt \rabi Boy , the rninmtor of war , nnd ho commutation of their inntonces by ho khedive stirred up the hornet's icat nnd precipitated the general up- iolng of the national party against ho khodive. The ministry , who bo- eng to the national party are in ao- jovd with Arabi Bey , straightway con- rened the notables and tried to secure n a legal fashion the disposition of LVofik. They tailed in this , but with .ho military entirely under their con- rol the national party may at any .imo resort to more direct measures. Fwcfik ts ut best a puppet in the hands Df the English and French con trollers-general , llo gives them no .rouble about the financial agreement of which they are the agents , handing over to them regularly one-half his revenues , and acting always as the faithful native ropsesontativo of the control which England and Franco iavo managed , by ways moro or less crooked , to fasten upon JUgypt. Towfik teems also to be satisfactory to ho Sultan , With such backers it would Boom that ho ought to be able to make short work of any upstart like \rabi Boy , who should venture to rouble him with his demands and his ichomea for putting Egypt under the control of ita own pooplo. But the Oiodive would bo in a bettor position o deal summarily with the rebellious latiouals if ho had one master instead ) f three. It is almost impossible for England , Franco and Turkey to agree ayon a common policy , The Sultan las strenuously protested against the sending of the allied fleet of iron-clad to Alexandria , and so great is hi jealousy of the dual European pro lectors of his tributary African state that it is extremely probable that the rumor of his secret connivance wit ! Arabi Boy , while openly upholdinj the Khedive , has n foundation in fact The despised Turk is tired of wearing the fetters his European friends , the great powers , have forget for him. If nny vesligo of the Sultan's soverignty remains now is n good time to exercise it by landing Turkish troops in Egypt. That is what Franco or .England would do in case n rebellion broke out in n state or province acknowledging their sever eignty. It ia to test his power to govern his own subjects in his own way that Abdul ilamid so strongly in- dials upon this course. Distasteful as any concession to the sultan would bo to the present liberal ministry , Eng land would bo glad to got out of the scrape by assenting to the use of the Turkish gendarmerie against the in surgents. Her own troops could never bo used for such a purpose without arousing n storm of indigna tion among the moat active supporters of the government. Arabi Boy is the nominal representative of the princi pie of self-government nnd the freeing of enslaved nationalities a principle which English liberals have earnestly contended should by applied in south eastern Europe. They cannot con < aiatontly take different ground in the case of northeastern Africa. Tho. interests of Franco forces a directly contrary forco. She is bound to oppose the landing of Turkish troops on Egytian soil , She has possessions in Africa still under the spiritual do main of the caliph , and she will not Imperil her own interests on the south coast of the Meditcrraneanby consent ing to any increase in the sultan's temporal authority at Cairo. The landing of Turkish troops near the Tunisian frontier will not tend to change her determination upon this point. A joint land dcmoustration ) y England and Franco is open to numerous grave objection ? , ono of which is the chnnco of serious Euro pean complications , for Csrmany , Austria and Italy are by no means dis- ntornstcd observers of what is going on at Alexandria and Cairo. So of ho three powers upon whom the chcdivo can call for support , no ono can act singly , and no two can act to gether with decision and thoroughness. Cho sending of iron-clads amounts to nothing. They are in.tho harbor , nnd ho difficulty they were sent to settle lappcns to bo a land affair. Meantime there is talk of a general European conference. The Egyptian roops nro demanding the deposition ) f the khedivc , and proclamation of .ho popular Prince llalin who repre- onts the party opposed to the Eng- ish and French protectorate as ruler. Arabi Bey's supreme power is holding ho unruly populace in check , and the combined fleet lies idle in the harbor of Alexandria. Dissensions in 'tho ' English liberal > arty continue , the linesbeing drawn on support of Mr. Forsterropresonting he whig , nnd Chamberlain , who is ho acknowledged mouthpiece of the radical element. The quarrel began n 1870 between Forster nnd Clinm- icrlain. Ton years ago , Forstor , whoso whig associations nro strong , was ono of the great men n the liberal > arty , while his present successful rival was only a helot of the party. a 1870 Gladstone was devising an oducatiou bill in which Chamberlain's constituents were deeply interested , lo represented to Forater in vain the needof , heeding the reclamations * of uch an important constituency as 3irmingham , but that gentleman ar- ogantly turned a deaf ear. Since hun Chamberlain has boon growing in > olitical importance , and could on a toll carry a larger vote with the liberal tarty than any man in it , save Glad- tone or John Bright. Forster was gro'atly opposed to Chani- > crlain's entrance into the cabi net in 1880 , but the strength behind ho young radical was too imposing to > o loft unheeded. Ho was made pros- dent of the board of trade , an office analogous in functions to our secretary of the treasury with a seat in the cabinet , ns in the case of John Bright , lia success , however , has been gall and wurmwood to the whigs , and some imo ago they black-balled his two irothora when put up for membership at the Reform club moro as an es- > ousal of Forstor'a course than because - cause there was any grudge against hoyouiiz men , Gladstone nnd liar- mgton both resented this , and brought about the recent motion tor admission > y committee , It would have been carried had the evil news from Dublin lot boon fresh in the public mind. As t is , the schism promises to break up the club , and perhaps the liberal party , Lord Salisbury , ni leader in part of ho tories , feels authorized to ask the voters to prepare for the emergency of an almost immediate election. What this moans it is hard to guess , fho term of the present parliament iloes not expire until 1887 , and there s no indication of any defection in ho liberal ranks that would justify iladstono's ordering a dissolution , 'ossibly , the 'gangrened somi-succea- or of Disraeli means to catch the liberals bathing nnd steal thcirclothos as Lord Derby didunder , his Hnuten ant's tutilago. The danger of a war between Ger many and Russia seems to bo avortc < for the present ; yet it is believed n Berlin that such a catastrophe migh at any moment arise from cither o the following causes : The arowth o the Russian empire , ahd the cense qtunt nrrogatico of the people ; the movement nmong its neighbors to recover cover lands taken by Germany , nnc Prince Bismarck's conviction that a llusso-German war is ns inevitable ns a Franco-Gorman ono after 18GG. It is also possible that the czar may bo- Hove n war with some foreign power to bo popular , nnd ns being thn bcsl moans of quietitii the nihilist troubles , lloumanin nnd Sweden nro increasing their military establishments , with a view to being ready when the time comes for the recovery of Bessarabia nnd Finland. Turkny is believed to have urged Germany to nttnck Rus sia , in the hope thnt see might recon quer Asia Minor , the Caucasus am' the Crimea. Tlio economy displayed by the Paris municipality is something remarkable - markablo ns compared -vith the pro fligacy of Am. ricnn supervisors. Thus , in Paris , the old paving stones , cut again , nro sold to private persons ; the old iron from the crinolines en- circloing the trees on "tho boulevards , old lamp-posts nnd broken lamps , castiron pipes , etc. , all are sold to tradesmen , and largo sums of money are gained from that. They are going , o soil the grass growing on the roscr voirs of'tho town nt Montrouzo , Bollo- ville. Monilmontant , and on the 'rounds of the manufactory of St. hfaur. Thanks to the mild weather .hero will , bo most probably three crops. This grass will bo sola for 10,000 francs to cattle-dealers , who iavo already applied for it. Two great persecutions blasted the jest future of Franco and Spain in ho sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Neither has ever recovered from the oss of skilled artificers and shrewd ncrchants expelled wljen Spain turned out Jew , Moor and Protestant and Franco expelled the Huguenot. By whatever theory of chance , or law , or > rovidential design men may inter- > rct history , it'has recorded the sure * mnishment of justice on thcso great crimes. Both countries at every na- ional crisis since have shown the ack of the virtue and the intellect hen cut off and sent abroad by perse cution. Russia is walking in the same path. In expelling the Hebrew under a ruthless persecution , it is cxtirpa- ; ing an essential element of its na- ional life. For the present , trade vill bo disturbed , mercantile opera- ioiiB checked , the distribution of her ruat crops prevented ; but this is the only a part. The future will have its own story of a national career , stunted -and wrecked by > orsecution akin to suicide , ana when , evolution cornea Russia , like Franco , vill have no balance wheel. Dlmdonce. Vi3 \ Whlpp'u , la Iltmo Sentinel. 'I'm afther uxiiV , Biddy doir , " And then ho Btopped a while , ? o fringe his words the merest mltu With something of a nmile V "mile that found its imaqo la a face of beauteoui mould , Vhoso liquid eyes woie peeping From a bordery of gold. 'I've ' como to nx ye , Biddy dear , If then he stopped again , AH if his heart had babbled o'er And overflowed his brain ; Us lipn were twitching nervously O'or what they had to tell , Aod timed their quiver * with the cyun , That gently rosy and fell , 'I've ' come' , and then he took her hands And held them In his IHVD , 'To ox" and then ho watched the buds That on her cheeks had blown , 'Mo purty dear" and tben he heard Tno thtobbing of her heart , 'hit told howlpvo had entered in Aud claimed its every part. 'Och ' ! don't bo tazin1 mo , " said she , With just the Mutest sigh ; 'I'm far from blolnd ; you've come , But that's thu reason why ? " To ax , ' ami once agAin the tongue Forbade Its sweets to tell To ax if Sirs. MiiUltran ] las any pigs to ael t" PEPPEJBMINT DROPS. No one need * to go f rn home this year to find a watering place. You can look for warm weather w heu he fly bepins to put on npec . [ Boston 3om , Bulletin. In a western mine there U thU notice : 'Don't fall down thia abaft , an there are men at work at the bottom it. " A white monkey with pink eyed has just arrhed in New York , ft mast make the ociety mashers nervous for their laurels. > oston Post. Wi'h good beefsteak at twenty.five cents n pound piople cuu almost forgive the ( ol owera of Moiea for falling down and wor hipping a golden call. The way the doctors go to work to got a billiard ball out of n man'i mouth is to ml bis jawe and pull out his front teeth. t is an operation requiring a great deal of latlenco and deep thinking , f Detroit Free V'BH. "You was never hitched into h.iruecs vith a balky mule , was ye ! " eaid the armer to a man who had come to usk his daughter's hand. "No , " responded the andidate , doubtfully. , "Well , then , don't act Jest as if yo was epilllu' for a chance , " was all the satisfaction he got. Inter- ) cean , Br'gg * hlrel a lively horse to take a lit- leexerclti. He got moro exercise than he wanted , and as ho limped to the side of the oad to rest hiimelf , A kind friend asked liui : "What did you come " 'own ' BO quick oit" "What did I u'ome down so quicker or ? Did you eeo anything iu the air fern n ? to hold on to ? " ha atkoJ , grimly , The Alta Californlan uayn ; "Boarding louse proprietors can do a ueblo work by nnounciug to their gucitx that after July , 188' ' , they will not let suites of rooms to tnyonewbo has his u ashing done by a Chinaman , " The t'ourth of July is an xcellent time to t egiu this noble work , t is the day wheu the Arncticau llig , reedom , equal rights , liberty of cpeecn , civil nod reltgiouR privilege' , and all tht tort of ntuff , Is thrown out to the people by whisky. I aspired orator * . [ i'ic yune. The police parade takes place to morrow We have always oppoted this nnnua parade. It Ii aba I thing. It pirnl7f * a great indn trv. For the better part of a day the pickpockets and burglar * nf the city are deprived of their natural prolte torn and allies , and left to wmk upon the unprofessional public without adequate assistance. 1'uck , A young medical student nt Bnwdoln cnl ego once nsked the late 1'rof. 1'arkfr Cleveland if there were nit feme more recent worku on nntt'nny than these ir the college library , ' 'Young man. " BJI ! the proftMor , measuring the entire mental c li'ire of the youthful scholar nt one v l ncc , ' 't ere have been very few Innes added to tlu human body during the laxt ten years. " HONEY FOR THE LADIES Gloves h yard long ore Imported to wear With dresses tbat have nhott sleeves. A dark rfd parasol for general wear , a white parasol for dress , and n black ono tor u o nro the popular choice. J'ulfed plastron * , with the puffs shirred horizontally , give ntylUh linleh tu drcsi corencec , hut pulled tleeves detract from the effect. Ornamental pins of briqht colors with round or nvnl heads nro used with much lispliiy in millinery , tupjcially for fusUn- Ing the long loops of great bows that vvould otlienviio 1U | > ungracefully , Square neckerchiefs of citl blue or pink niou.siellna do iotc , with scallops nnd vines wrought In rosebud or violet pat tern , nro worn with white muslin or with black droasei ) , and the tffeLt is very pretty. Superb mantles for church ntuHnr visit ing are made of black grenadine , with orocadad velvet fuurei of great i < lze , nnd silt hand-made Spanish lace for trim ming. Strips ol satin alternating with checked ilripcj are in great favor for the pleated lomiccs of walking dreeaca. The over dress is then made of the plain color of the Batin stripe , nnd may bo cither of satin or ohmere , Knglish hridcsmaldcB wear short frocks ofvnito _ English Bilk , with drapery of silk muslin festooned on the skirt. Hedge oss in straight wreaths trim tlio Gains- lorough bonnets of Knglish straw , nnd are vorn on the coisige. IVrsian cloths of mixed silk and wool , u dull , toft colors , oddly blended , nnd in characteristic designs of palm ; , crescents , hieldft and arabesques , are made tip into mantles and trimmed n 1th ruches ot sleek cliHiille , or of Chine .0 tilKs of all the colors of the stuffs , . Kithetic wlfo ( sobbing ) : "Dearest , I'll ea that your crave is kept green but none of those horrid bright greens , A lice olive gray green , with on old bronzed ombatonc. will look too awfully loiely for nything. " Ex. Some of the new hats nnd bonnets are s largo as parusols ; others no bigger than _ saucer , and others ettllnro of medium ize. The dig one ) nro intended for the licit re ; the small ones for wearin the aim. That's the way women always arrange it. Boston Post. "Yo > , " said u fresh nriiva ) from Bodie lie ether clay , "thu gal I in.iuitil up'on lie lode last uimith I * a petfeut U ) a ) crfect lady , Mr. i < ln'i' iuipii ] e 1'vo leurd hcrswci' u.il Imr.l m < > 'u twite thi pring.'V-Sau ! ' .iimi" . o C > i-t. A favorite culmination fin- : i young ady's costume is ecru t.hndilah cloth lor liu overdress , with a pleated ttkirc of in isiblo green satiu duchesse. The collar nd cuff j are of the rlar * green isatin cov- rcd with ecru embroidery , nnd there is a leatingof the embroidery at the foot ol lie ijreen skirt. Handsome imported walking suit * nrs o ark couhmera made over a flounced [ etti : oat of checked watered silk , with the ounces and c ishmero cut in slender EC il- op , or with siime muslin embroidery foi rimming. Terra cotta , heliotrope . > nc ' ibiu'd-egi ; blue coxtumea of this kind are n great favor. A womin who does all her own liou-e vork , attends to seven children , an I turn' , icr dresses half a dozen times to make > oth euds meet , umy bo n gnoci Christian , mt when a lady in a 81,000 carriage and iOO dress halts at'the door and asks her o Mibscriba to BOIIIO charitable obj-ct , she in hardlv bo expected to act uud talk like r.o.-1'hiladclphia News. The India pongeoi that are no lonser 10 f.ibhlouable chnico made tasteful , in- xpensivo and cool sum er dresses , when imply made , with a little emSruidery for rimming , and EOIIIC bowd of dark satin ribbon , cither bronze green or cardinal , o give a touch of color. It the einbrjide- y is a very open pattern the colored satin a nlao placed beneath it. The new uUlew for travelling are 3Cng- sh great-coats of a severe shape , fnllowia ? lie outlines of the figure as closely as u uirnss , without a pleat orfold in the back , nd with a siugle-breasled front buttoned mm the throat to the foot. Ths material s English checked cloth known as " uit- igs. " Similar co.its of velvet weie worn uring the winter by English women of ashion , I'Sctureintie and quaint styles of dress revall for children. Small boys are dre - d in little priuco suits of black velvet , vith wide c illar anil cuffs of embroidery , tnee-breechea , loni ? black eilk stocking nd purnprt ; their flowing hair is cropped liort ncrom the forehead , Little girls vear full-moon hats tbat frame their faces nd have a single great bow for trimming , 'hair dresses have gum ] ) ! ) , with shoulder ulFs , and hang nlainly f i om the should- rs , or the fullness In shirred m close about Two young ladies living near Krie , Pa , ore striving for the $20,000 beauty prize offered by Sir. ifarnum. They are sister/ , and have agreed to share aui share alike In the event of one being preferred to the other. The eldest sister is only seventeen and the youngest will not bo iittesn until the Oth of .Tune. The senior young lady is a teacher in the village Sunday school , and is said to be exceedingly devout and dignified. The mother , who is : i rigid Presbyterian , IH greatly opposed to the prnject , A Chicago woman traveling in the south made a good deal of fun , of some of the southern women who dig snuff , but when a party ot them on n car saw the Chicago girl ki > s a poodle dog on the riose , and they all turned pale nd put their heads ute of the windows for fresn air , the north ern cjlrl began to rt fleet that perhaps snuff was nearly ns cUuu as the average dog's nose. Any way. either u northern or boutbern mail , If bo wanted to kiss a woman , would take the nuff twice before ho would take a pecond-hand dog once. In England a wife has just been sold fern n glass of nle. This transaction U reported - ported from the town of Alfreton , in which for some time the husband in question bad shown jealousy at bin wife's apparent Ilk- ing for the son of the person In whose house they lodged. ] ! ut one night while the three persons were drinking together , the husband offered in give the young man his wife for a ghus of nle , ami the young man promptly accented the proposition , procured the glass of ale , and the woman , after icmoune her wedding riug , oblig ingly acknowledged that she was the property of the purchaser. In a hhor * time the couple disappeared from Alfre- ton , and some days afterward had not been uncovered. Never Give Up. If you ore suffering with low and do- iiredsed spirits , lobi ot appetite , general lebllity , ! uordercd blood , weak constitu tion , heidjche , or any disease of a bilious , iatur by all means procure a bottle of Mectrio Bittew , You will he surprised to ce the rapid improvement that will follow : rou will bo inspired with new life : 'trensth nnd activity will return } pain uud msery will cease , and henceforth you will Rejoice in the praise cf Electric Hitters , sold at fifty cents a * bottle , by 0. F. Good , nan. THE IcCALLUM WAGON WAGON BOX. Can Be Handled By a Boy. The box need ne > er to Ukcn oft the wajron and nil thothcllcil Grain and Grass Seed Is Saved 1 It oistslosi th\n HID oH tioacks. . ICvory standard At agon Is told with our rack complo.c. BUY NONE WITHOUT IT. Or liny the attachments a d applvthem to jourold watron box. For sale In Nebraska br J. ( ! . CLAVK. I. ncoln. MANMNO&mi't ' , Omaha. fr.ru'MIPK , ( IranJ Is anil. 11 VIIOUTT & Uinr.t , > lnU HIT * . ClURUK f CIIKOI1KKR , Colliillbm. Sr.\NontKft H'Mi , Hcd Cioud. C. II. GRANT. & Co. , lied 0 lt , lown. U W. IIVMKb , OlciHVOO * , IOW Ami overt-llrnt cla'9 ilo.i'tr 111 tlio wool. A lt them for dcicrlptUu circular or send direct tou . J , McOallum Bros ; laimf g Oo. , OiTlco , 24 Weit I.V e Street , Chicago. 11133 MPSHABLE "Murray & Lanman's Best for TOILET. BATH and I.AHDKERCHIEF. " Genius Rewarded ; OB , Tlio Story , of the Sowing Machine , A hnndeome llitlo pamphlet , blnn find iroli' ' cove nlth numerous ciira\ lags , will 1 > o GIVEET AWAY to any.kuult pere- culling tar It , at any branch or sub-offlco of The Singer Manufactimn ; ; Com pany , or will bo sent by mall , post paid , to my person living at a distance Irom our offices. Tlio Singer Manufacturing Co , , Principal Office , 34 Union Square , NEW YORK. IcblB tl w / f\Vt fTFI 'J1 ? ? ' ! GIL STQvS ATZO : v = rj iron i TUI : K-JS W. ' AD3GLU7ELY SAFE" ui. eiovi ; : s TJII : WOULD. f , . ry JSmiRckrrprr fiels ihc want oi . ih IIK 1'iat ' wi.l foul ; the < ! : iily fooil i ) I'voul - - ' - . Jiitir .1 ! a hcs of ! i cni | ( ifUM il Move * . IllO jiwiitor ( il ttivoiil do it , betier , [ iiicker nnd chc pi-r than l > y'i\ny \ other nrins : > . Jt JH the OZlly Oil StOVO made vith the oil reservoir olovatoi at tlio lack of the stove , away from the heat ; by vhich arrangement atsoluto BOfoty is cured ; as no gas can bo generated , fully ! 0 per cent more heat is obtained , the iricKs are preserved twice as long , thus laving the trouble of constant trimming ind the expense of new ones. Esamino ; ho Monitor nnd you will htiy no other. Mnnufi ) ( turrd only by the : r Monitor Oil Stove Co. , Cleveland , 0. Send for deF''ri"Mve circular or rid ) m M. Ilogera & Son , wolo agents for Nebraska. 3FJBCJEI Uebrash National BANK. OP OMAHA NEBEASKA ( No. 005. ) TREASURY DEPARTMENT. ) Ofllce ol CowkOLLEK or TIIK CDKRRKCT , y WAMIinorox , April 25th 1B32. ' I WIIKBUS , by satisfactory evidence presented 10 the unders Rnud , It fcas been mule to appear hat "TUB WEBUA4KA NATIONAL DANK OK . > UAIIA"in the c.ty ol Omaha , la the county ol Douglas , anil mate ol Nebraska , lias compiled rith nil the provisions of theitovliecl Statues of .bo United fatatci required to lie compiled with jefoie an auoclatloojliall be authorized ( o com- uentc the ImMncan oT Ilanlilair : Now , therefore. I , John Jay KnotComptroller 11 the Currtncy , do hereby certify that "The Nebraska National Bank ol Omaha , " In the city il Om fa , tntHe omntyol Douglas , and state > { h brw > ka , Is authorizid to commence the iiuluom ol Banking at ptovldod In Section Kilty too Hundred and Sixty-Nine ol the Revised Ututcsof the United State * , In t iUmony whereol witness my f ) bind and eal of office thU 26th BEAU } dayol April U82. L ) JOHN JAV KNOJC , Comptroller ol the Currency Theabote Bank Uuow prcparod to receive iiulQuu Itcommeuccs'wlih a fully pad up ap'.t&lof ' 2U,000.00 ) , ulthoinceisand dlieclow 1 lOllOWli , It. JOHNSON , r rsrotNT , ol Stecle , John- SOU & Co. . Wholesale ( Jroccn. i. K. TOUZALIN , Vib > i'AuwiurT , oTa B. &Q. It. IL , Boston. fV , HOUSE , ol W.V.MoiMnnd CoVholo. . bale BooU and Shoes. NO , S. COLLINS , ol O. II. & J S. Colllm , Wholesale Luathir and 8 ddlery. AUE3 II , Woolttonb , Counsellor anilAttorucy at Law. KWIS S. HEED , ol Byron Kevd & Co. , Real Kttate Deilem IKNltV W. YATES. Ctuhler , late Cashier ol tht Flrit National liank ot Omaha , And connected with the active uuni v- luciito ! that Bank tluce it * cr an-