THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA frHJPAY , AUGUST 4 The Omaha Be < rnbMshod every morning , except Snndi ha only Monday morning dally , TERMS IJTf MAIL One Yew 810.00 I Three Months , * ? , Bis Months. o.OO | One . . I. THE WEEKLY BEE , published t ry Wprh.eaday. TERMS POST 1'AIDi- One Ye r $2.00 I ThreeMonths. , QlxMcitba. . . . 1.001 One v AMERICAN NKWS COMPANT , Sole Agci or Newsdealers in the TTnltcd Slatca , CORUKSroNDKNOE All Commm tl > > 4 rclntini ! to New * nnd Editorial mi m 1iouH be nddrcneed to the EDITOR i BU31VK8S LETTERS All Btwlnt fiti * awl Kemlltanro * ( ihould bo n Aton it to TUB OMAHA PontwiiiNO Co : rAsr , OMAHA. Draftn , ChccltH and LV > ffice Orders to bo tn de payable to tl rdor ot tlio Cornvnnjl ThoBEEPUBLISHINBOO-.Propj - . Et RO3EWATEB. Editor. WJIAT Nebraska's crops need JU6 now is a little moro rain. A few wel distributed sun-strokes would net hur her crop of candidates. CUSTOM receipts incrcason $3,000 , 000 in .Inly. National extravaganct n foroifrn luxuries helps to fill the government coffers. TL.V etory buildings continue to be iho style in Now York. The olevatoi 1ms monopolized modern architecture nnd increased the value of land on which such gigantic structures can bo erected. WITH aix powers wrangling over the best policy to pursue and the porlo doing just about as ho pleases , Mr. Gladstone must wish that , like John Bright , ho was a non-combatant from principle. THE house of representatives has -paused a resolution to adjourn finally on Saturday. A number of congress men will do well to take a short vaca tion before putting in an appearance before their outraged constituents. THIIKE manufacturers of quinine , who employ less than 400 persons , nak for a restoration of * .ho duty on this drut' , increasing the price from 82 to 82.40 an ounce to fever stricken consumers. This would bo protection iwith a vengeance. "BEKATOU VN WYCK wan one of th sixteen senators who recorded his vote against passing Iho river and harbor job over the president's veto In the won'o of the Now York Herald , the Bcnator is generally found in excellent company. TIIKKE is a very general endorse ment of Iho administration by repub lican conventionn. But then a political - cal convention ot the majority which did not undone the administration in power would bo a very loncnomo apt-ctaolo. MUBOUKI sends congratulations to Page , of California , for his agccessful championship of the Jumbo river nnd harbor ttcal. This is a Page in con gressional hihtory which the gentle man may well wish at sonio future time to sco torn out. Snow mo the mnu you honor. I lemur by that symptom , hotter than any other , what you are youtnolf. Measured by Curlylo's standard the proxy editor of tlio JiVjniMiVaii , < vho worships und adores Doo. Schwenk's bonom friend Valentino is small enough to cruwl at ease through a knot hole. THK Now York Tlmef thinks that "Valentino's nppearanco for the defence in the otnv-touto trials and "his eolici- tudo to furnish the pioneers and set tlers from his state with the latest eastern nowit , cannot at all effect the guilt or innocence of the men who are indicted for combining to defraud the government by bigua expedition * , and the othur dnviccs known to thin do- pu-'monl ' of public plunder. " TUB 'board of trade excursion tu Montana loft yesterday on their way to the most promising of western ter ritories , A number of our loading merchants were in the party , and * it is hoped that the interchange of courte sies between Nebraska and Montana business men may result to the benefit of both lections. Omaha , wholesale trade in the territories shows a steady mid healthy development , which indi- ' caUs both the growth of that portion of our country and the increasing faciliiioa of this metropolis for moot- in ; * fie commercial demands of the west DIVISION of property as well as di- vUiou of labor tends to the general proipority. This is showing itself very clearly in the south where the old plantations with their thousando of acres uro giving place to email and well cultivated farms. Georgia has increased the number of her farms within the last ten years by ninety- oi ht per cent. , and now contains over 1ZJJ.OOO of agricultural holdings. The flame process is noted in a less degree in Virginia and Alabama the result in cucli case being hotter cultivation und larger crop. Western farmers learned long ago that one hundred acres well cultivated was better than two huti- with half crop ; , NARROW 1HE ISSUES. There is nothing hich the railro ttrikors fear so much as a ciinpal fought equally on the nnti-monopr isMie , biciueo thcro is no ground ' which they can battle to so little a vantaqe as the ground of the s promacy of the people over the cc porations which they have crente Every railroad political manager ni editorial organ grinder knows thattl rank and file of Nebraska voters both parties are largely nnti-monopol Every corporation attorney knot from experience that a politic candidate with monopoly conne tions will bo heavily handicappc in the coining campaign just as soon i the attention of voters is directed t his record. And every ofllcial or en ployo of the railroads whoso intcret demands the continuance of the proi out disgraceful monopoly rule in th state dreads above all things the corr biimlion of Nebraska producer on iquaro out and out anti-monopol ) latform , This is the reason why the monop ily attorneys and political wire puller , ro attempting to divert attention ti ido issues such as prohibition an < roman suffrage. It is an affcctiiij ight to see the sudden intercs rhich red nosed lawyers and notorioui rife abuaors are taking in thcso tw < ubjocts. The milk in the cocoanul i too plain to bo concealed by lout louthod professions of devotion tc nch tide shows which are of far Icsi lomonh than the main issuo. "Shall corporations rule Nobraakt nd roprcaont her citizens through loir attorneys on the floor of con ross and in the state governments ? ' hia Is the issue which is presented > the voters of both parties in the jrning campaign. It is an issue hofto determination will affect over } tizon of the state , of whatever pro- Bsion or calling. It will affect first : all our great producing class , who : o the bono und sinew of a great ag- cultural stixto and whoso labor in , xed to oxortiou in order to ly dividendo on the extravagantly utorod otock ot railroads built by the aoplo of this country. It will effect ifi ry merchant whoso profits on goods : o decreased arbitrarily by the heavy iriff imposed on the transportation of is stock in trado. Finally the dotor- lination of the great issue will effect rory consumorand buyer whcao dollar diminished in purchasing power just i proportion as the necessaries of life o increased in cost by liifh tariffs. The people of Nebraska must insist i confining the campaign to the sin- 0 issue of self-preservation. The in- igrity of our courts , the honesty ' our law makers , the value of our unicipnl governments as cxpononta 1 the popular will are in sorioua dan- ir. The question whether thU.is a gov- rnmont of the corporations , by the > rpori\tioiis and for the corporations in only bo settled nt the pulls. And can only bo settled definitely and rmlly whun the people of the conn- y arouse themselves thoroughly to 10 importance of the issue which is resented for their dociriion. PLCAHANT HIM. , Nob. , August 2. 0 the Kditur of Tin : KUK : Did the anti-monopoly league .it incoln in June attempt to pa&3 a jsohition denouncing free passes ? If 1 did you or did you not spoalc gainst the resolution ? I hoard lirough n dcle ate from Butler county liat you did speuk against the resolu- ion , Please answer thcso questions lirput-h the columns of THK DF.I : , and bligo A fiuiisouiiiKK. [ Heapoiiso by the Kdltor , ] Tlio anti-monopoly league adopted platform at the atato convention eld at Lincoln in Juno which cm- odiea among ether ro < iolutiona the allowing : Kcsolved , That wo donmnd the on- ctmont of a law that will make the LMidor of a railroad pass or free tr.um- orta'ion to any public olllcor a bribe unibhablo in tlio oamo man or us the tender of money r other articled of value. This resolution waa framed by the ditor of THE BEE as a member ot lie committee on resolutions , and in- L'rtcd in the platform at his requeue , t is absurd to charge the author ol Ilia resolution with speaking against „ The Butler county delegate ovi. ontly refers to the remarks made by ilitor of THE BEE in response to the holesalo attack JD the proas by one F the delegates , who charged the odi- > ra with bobg bought up by railroad ISSOf , THEHE are to bo no moro boxing lows in Now York. The police miniiesionors of Now York have do- dud that there shall bo no moio love fights there under police pro * iction. A glove fight , such as the nlllvaii-Wilson contest , is by no leans as a six-day walking match , Ivory workday evening thousands on lousands of poorly paid , over- orkod , half-fed shop girls drag lomselvos wearily along Now York troels to their homos a ad no thought i given them. Yet any one of thorn i a hundred times moro properly an bject for pity and commiseration imn is the defeated puguliot in a 3ft glove fight. When Wilson and ullivan mot not a drop of blood wa rawn and not a bruise was sue- lined by cither. The men wore cry tired at the end of the fourth jund , but not any moro so than hundred thousand worklngmon in furnaces end harvest fields were the same day. It is not from a sympathy for the men who stand and pummel each ether with r lowed hands that this style of exl bition should bo stopped. They h it. The real question is as to t effect of euch performances on t public morals. If bad , thcro shot ; bo an end of them. The fact that fight of any kind receives police pr tcction when the object is to sh < which of two men is the better brti can hardly bo other than deinoa.il ing. A refined public sentiment w not tolerate auch a prostitution powers. The Now York police cot nrneioncra have done wisely in dec ! ing as they havo. ROU1E METHODS Bob Ingcrsoll'a clients in the at route trials are as thoroughly disrup tabla set of scoundrels as ever a cemptcd to oscnpo tlio penalty of the Crimea , and the conduct of their di Fcnso , of which the smallest part hi been in open court , lion boon as di ; reputable as the perjuries for whic , hey stand indicted , and for whic , hey deserve full punishment of tli aw. With a full corps of nowspapc lirohngs in Washington and branchc n every important city the Bradj Doraey gang have persistently smu ( . ; lcd into respectable papers throug ho telegraph such matter as the honght would influence pub io Bontimont in their favo ir prejudice the country against th irosccution. No officer of the gov rnmont has escaped their scandalou nuondos. MoVoagh was hooted ou if court with throats , ridicule am nlumny. President Qarfiold wa landored while living , and his mo ives misconstrued when dead. Am iow the gang of scoundrels hav < urnod their doga on Attorney Qon ral Brnwstor and President Arthu nd are endeavoring to make tin ountry believe that the president i ppoaed to pushing the cases and Urn lia attornoy-gonoral is acting as hi [ > ol to shield friends of the adminis ration. Mr. Browstor is donouncoc a indifferent because a largo portiot f the labor of the prosecution hai aturally devolved upon assistant ounsol. The routine work of tin apartment of justice , with its vasi lachinery throughout the country , tc Inch the attorney general must give is puraonal supervision cannot stand ill while a ease is on trial in court , hat Mr. Bro water haa committed the ar route thieves into able hands , liilo himself retaining full Buporvis- in and authority , is aeon by the , ronp CMO presented by the govern- icnt. Thoovidoncowoa clear , straight- irward and concluaivo. Not a point rought out has been broken down by 10 defcnco. And nothing but a fixed iry and a further liberal use f money can save the scoundrel froir io penally of their crimes. Noithei irady's bras.i , nor Doraoy'a bravadc r IngOHoll's ' flippancy will avail for t lomont against an honest jury box. .nd even if juatico fails in the Wash' igton court the great jury of tlu .mcrictui people will render n vcrdici Inch while condemning the thiovci ill thoroughly acquit the government f cither iiuiotion or inefficiency ii 10 conduct of the present caacn. Tin : Herald is eminently correct it o estimate of the future growth ol lamlin , und its udvico to Omaha cap .iiliatn to construct solid and coinmo ioug buildings , modulled after mot' ' opolituti structures , is sound. Bui he Ihndd oxhibils its usual tondoncj o toadyism by lauding to the skiei ortain men of means , whom it ul rays delights to honor. In com nonaing the favored few it omiti thora who [ are equally meritorious 'his was conspicuous in ita sky craping about the enterprise of tin miuha National bank , while ignorinj he Nubruoka Nation bank , which ii ow erecting a bank building whicl rill surpass all others in mctropolitni loziinco and solidity. IT is always prudent to lock tin oor after the horse is stolen , Nov ( ml the river and harbor job ha assed ever the president's veto am ongrcaa 13 about to adjourn for the uason , it is decidedly in keeping wit ) lie eternal fitness of things that i csilutiou has boon introduced in tin ouso looking toward the adoption ol constitutional amendment that wil How Iho president to veto any singh ; em in an appropriation bill. Sucli n amendment to the national oonsti- iilion Miould have been enacted years 150 , but as long ns a majority of oui ruesmon uro interested in jobbery i U'poude on omnibus legislation , i ispio s for such a reform are DC.aedly slim. KEU-EH was unanimously ronom- iated in his district , and now Robe- m's enemies are wondering whether is fences are in auch thorough ro- lir. Tno Political Situation. Many thinns to incroaao our wealth id prosperity as a people have de- jloped aloiiK the highway of ctviliza. on , since the introduction of the inotuonth contuiy , and beyond a jubt , the greatest of those is the cilitioa given commerce by the intro- notion of railroads. The wealth of a ution is indicated by its commerce , id the commerce of a nation 1ms ul- ays boon , should and must of nccos- ty bo regulated and controlled by the government , for if this power delegatedor _ loft to individuals or c partitions it gives thorn the ptwoi unlimited taxation upon all p duction or commodities moved thorn ; hence it gives them I ability to arbitrarily gather to the solves all the per cunt of profit jus bo'onging to the labor and capital i Raged in producing every article commerce , with a power to onfoi unjuat taxation as uroat as that of I dungeon or guilotino. For it is true to-day , aa eighteen hundred yci ago , J'Thot all a man hath ho will gi for his life. Thus they may bind t people down to constant toil , cauai them to drag out n miserable cxi once , while they draw the wealth the people to themselves that this our condition to-day as a nation fully proven by the last incrcasi wealth of tho&u who have control our finance and commerce , while t pcoplo are wading to thtir arm-pits m irtgoges and other signs of indel ecincss. Therefore what wo need the devotees of industry , is a rotu to our landmarkfl , by compollii through our representatives , a govor nnuit control of those things so vit to the peoples interest , enforce a gron or improvement of our water-way the great natural highways of cor tnorco , atop the discrimination again them as practiced by railroad ? , cor pel thu latter to give individuala ar localities equal facilities and just rat for transportation , The only way ui dcr our form of government that tl corporations can retain this uaurpc power is by political corruption. There is a part of Washington's at dress which describes , as with pn photic vision , our situation to-da ; Ho says : "All combinations and ai jociations , under whatever plausib ! character , with the real design to coi krol , direct , counteract or awe tli regular deliberations and action of tli instituted authorities are destructiv M the fundamental principles of Uil 3rty , and of fatal tendency. HOT ) vcr , combinations and associatior nay now and then answer popuk inda They are likely , in the coure > f time and things , to become potoi mginoB by which cunning , ambitiot ind unprincipled men may bo enable 0 subvert the power of the peoph ind usurp to themselves the roina c ; ovornmont. " In view of a heao facts , who is so stupi 13 to deny that the real dcsig if corporations la to direct , contro Counteract or even awe the rogulo liberations and actions of the cor tituted authorities , when they BUI ound our legislative halls , both atat , nd national , with a host of lobby sts , composed of the unscrupulou alent of the atato and nation : t oarch out and attack every weak poin n the characters of the people's rej : eacntativcs , in order to corrupt an lecoivo them into a support of the ! ilo schemes. Have they not in a fe\ \ iiatancos openly threatened judgca u ho courts with their displeasure i hey decided against them , and one n bold , may it not happen many time 1 pocrot ? The combination of capital hai reatly served popular ends , and ii ur advancing civilization has becom necessity , and if the men contrail ng it wore honest , or oven wise , fo liemselvea , they might control ii uch a manner aa to have it continu 9 servo them and popntar ends. Bu ' they are ambitious and unprinci led they will not only use thei unning to absorb all our aub tanco. But in seeking and securinj ho power to do so they will deatro ; 11 personal freedom , corrupt th ieoplo and debase the nation b ; ulmg it with an army of bribe tak rs. Are they cunning , ambitious am inprinciplcd ) _ Yes ; they are the first in necking ti lido their real motives , managomen nd extortion from the people. The ; ro the second , in seeking to retain tin lower of unlimited taxation , will rhioh to ontlayo a nut-on. That the ; ro without principle ia fully prove ! ly their aota ; in their forcad combina ons to destroy competitions ; in thoi took gambling of every species ; ii heir dUcnmmations against per pus and places , to the doatruc ion of individual proper ! ; nd the advancement of thei iwn ; in their stock watering amerced orcod cxt irtioimto rates , by whicl hey have taken unjustly , from tin icoplo , enough money to build over ] niloof railroad in the 'in t ion ; in thei uiiny acts of uaurpatio'n , and thoi : ipon acknowledgment of having i undgotten ( by extortion from tin teoplu ) devoted to the vile purpose o orruptly nominating and electing ti illioial position men A ho will do thoi lidding. Fellow citizens of every party 1 If wo are going to permit this clan if men to run the parties , and througl ho panics the nation , then let us bi lor.slstont by tearing the dcclaratioi if independence from the high un < uinorod position given it by ou athers , wrap it in the b'ood ' atainoi mimer of freedom and cast it in tin lust with its offspring , the conatitu ion , where with thu blood of mar yrad freemen , they may be tmmplei mdor the feet of solfiah and unprin ipled mou and thus reveal to ou hildren the humiliating fact that the ; ro not the BOIIB and daughtoia o reomon , but a nation of serfs ; tha hey may prepare to win again by tin word that which their indifferent am owardly parents aurrondorod. If not , then lot us bo wise in time y laying upon the altar of libort ; very political , local and personal in orost , and make common cause ii riving every monopoly tool from posi ion in our parties , state and nutiona ovcnimuiita , Hid in our unorgamztM jiulition. The course proposed by the officer ; f the state alliance and anti-monop ly league , is beyond doubt the wisest iot all the anti-monopolists attend tin incuses of their respective partioi nd demand the nomination of mei f undoubted anti-inonoplist princip > s , coupled with integrity and abil y ; for the monopoly tricksters hen they fail to got thoii loico nominated , seek to foist a mai pen us , who , if elected , will bo ai ttlo in their way as possible. If in publican district they succeed by ickery and fraud in nominating unwho ia doubtfulthen call an anti- , onopoly convention , make a iiom- iiition , and all iinti-inouopolists , irre- ) eotivo of party , support that candi- ite ; und if a democrat io convention , L > thoeamo. With this as our avowed urposo , and when neceadary carried at to the letter , ( and ho who proves ilse to our trust consign him without fail to that politi and social contempt ho so richly i crve ) wo will then Boon teach 1 corporations and their Tile tools tl the people are yet masters of the s uation ; showing political aspirai that , in order to bo trusted by t people , they must first honor the ; solves by honoring the principles ihoir party and the people. Tnen I every member of the Alliance ai Anti-monopoly league , together wi all who now ace the now ejiitingoi threatened evils of monopoly rui hold mass meetings , talk over t ! situation , reason with ono anoth otid the people , and thus awaktn tl yet indifferent , showing the necosait and urging all to adopt the notion State Allurci and Anti Monopo League , and by a united effort , and determination that knows no defen resolve to restore popular rights , ar thus preserve our liberties , and BCCU : the future prosperity of our countr with present pirtiea if wo can , witi out them if wo must , S. V. HOUSE. All papers friendly to the C UHO < the people please copy. S.V. M. Those Indictments. Just about a year ngo a meinbpr ( the legislature of the state of No York rose in his scat and stated th ; ho had been given $2,000 to vote for railroad candidate for the Unite States senate ; that ho had taken tli money , had handed it to the spoakc and requested an investigation , The speaker corroborated the stall ment. An investigation was erderot a committee waa appointed whic prosecuted the work thoroughly unt they came across some facts whic promised to bo awkward for the part to which the majority belonged , who they turned the whole matter over t the grand jury of Albany count ] The grand jury made another invest gation ; the charges of bribery wet proven and ah indictment waa foun against Senator Lorin B. Sessions an one Edwards , a lobbyist. It wa given out at the time thn thcso indictments would vigorously pressed , but a yea haa paased away and they hav not been tried , and it ia now whispered pored in political circlea that harmon in the republican party demands thn there ahould bo no washing of dirt ; linen in public , that corporation inter eats in both parties object on genera principlea to stirring such things , am that there are enough prominent rail road men high in councils of the dem ocrata to prevent the rank and file o that organization kicking up any ro\ nbout it. Is thia true or not ? Get tain it fa that the "Now York Tri buno" and the "Now York World , slaiming to bo renpectivoly the londin republican and democratic nowapapor in this state , have boon wonderful ! unanimous in expressing the opinioi that Mr. Bradley , the member o isjembly who exposed the bribery was a very bad mnn , while Senate Sessions , who was indicted for th bribery , waa a Bpotlesa lamb. The power of monopoly influence ii existing political pirtiea ia shown b' ' ; ho fact that Hradley , the man whi Bxpoaed the bribery waa retired ti private life poihapa the best abuse < man in the atato , while Senator Sossiom ivho did the bribing , had the assur inco to stand aa a candidate for ro nomination , came near securing tin iriza and ia now prominently talljet } f aa the most available candidate fo : joncrosa for his district. Why all thia honor for an indictee jriber/ / Why thia hanging up of at ndictmont ? Echo anawora , Why Uut a voiy faint sub-echo , supposec ; o como from some communistic Anti Monopolist , answers , because it wai lone in the interest of corporations ind they have so corrupted the publii lonso of riKht and wrong that it wil itand anything now-a-daya. JUSTICE. A WOMAN'3 APPEAL. ? o the Kdltor olTim UFK : I hope you won't bo partial to Gee Satabrook and put hia piece in the pa ) cr and not minu. I should like t ( ay a few worda on the hated aubjeci > f woman suffrage. 1 don't thin ! my woman wishes to vote because alu hinka it would bo a pleasure or thai iny honor ia attached to it. Thej viali juatico , and as they don't gel hat by thoao who claim to bo ttioii > rottctora , you know the bw a not the aamo for the widow IB the widower , whether the womar ias children or not. You alto kno hat a lady doing the same work ir ho Boine hours does not get the oamc vngoa as men. Is that justice ? Ami n many waya the Itiwa are partial tc ho mala citizen. Now if women arc is helpless as you ray , why don' ! heir protcctora do juatico by them ind muko equal laws in every ro < ipect , sothpy would luvo no oiuso tc isk for billot. It they want nil the jower why don't they protect the voak nobly and manfully ? I am tlu notector of my child , but I won'l Ircas in ailk and clothe my innocent shild in rug ? , or feed it on the crumb ! vhilo I oat the dainties , merely 1)0' ) : auso I have the power ever it. No , [ would rather sulfur nnd let that lolplcss one luvo plenty. Women ire treated in law like inferior bo ngB , and I have often wonderod'hon hey could bo mothers to beings BC nuch superior to themselves. I have ifton noticed that the male child icarly always looks like its mother , vhilo the girla look like their father till it ia generally supposed that the ; irl is not equal in intellect or in an ) ithor way to her brother , The mor ay so and the law treats it so , Aa fur ua going to war is concerned vh'ii that time eoinea you will find ai tuny women reiidy to take npurnu tt ight for right , as you will find mon cady to stay at homo to take care ol ho children and work in the hoapi als of the wounded soldiers. As foi ho juries , the disabled women whc TO called on for jurors , can make the anio excuao the mon do , They can : now too much , or aomothing , us they ; onerally pick for know nothings. Ill wo ask ia justice , and how will wt nt it without the ballot ? LIZZIE A. SWEET. Mibtaices of Greontmckore. Many earnest , honest , patriotic men i the Greenback-Liber party wonder rhy it doea not go ahead faster. The hief reasons are : 1 , It waa unfortunate in its name , 2 , It was unfortunate in its date ho logic of good hnrvotts and COIIBO- uuiit prosperous times was againit it 3 , It akod for too much fiat money and the juryof public opin rendered an adverse verdict. If t had only asked that the power to pand or contract the currency taken from the bankn , by the govc ment issuing all currency whet coin or paper , and thus saving for I people the interest upon the circul ing medium now absorbed by banks , it might have been different 4. Tly lacked means , and hi been the prey of lobbyists and otl buyers of men , who , with money f nis tied by the ohl parties , have p tended to pay ita expenses. Tin mon have been promoted to lead ship , and at the critical time have 1 trayod the cause. Mon who do i work and hnvo no visible moans support , except alleged Wall atrc ventures , are not safe loaders for t people Aiiotliormtxlako has just been ma by the grcpnbackera of Now York adopting in ji modified form lion Giiorgo's land theoryjtheso may bo u deratood and appreciated a hutidr yours heno- , but they will sink a cause which attempta to carry them this timo. No new party can afford to ma mistakes , and especially such gra ones. A now party , to bo succoBafi must appeal to nil classes of peep No ono class can succeed alone , a consequently it must not auk me than tlio average public opinion w sustain. 1. It must have honest loadcra wi sorno means , and , while it is impos blc to keep out all who are vnnal selfish , they must not bo allowed control. 2. Until it gets strong enough go alone , it must join forcca wi ether organizations to elect the rig or defeat the wrong kind ot mon , R aulta are what the people want , ni they do not care through what par they are secured. The monopolia have , in comparatively few years , bui up the present system of class laws 1 thcso very tactics. The anti-monopoliata propose ' udopt these tactics and endeavor restore a just equilibrium. If a par throws oat of the movement , 701 ( veil ; but they do not care for at party or anjr man they are simp trying to avoid the mistakes of tl greenback-labor party and give tl ? uoplo results. JUSTICE. A. BOOMING TOWN , Progressive Points from Wooplr Water. : oirc8pondcnco ot TUB Bus. WEEI-INO WATKU , August 2. Tl republican central committee mi lore the 27th ultimo , and it was d : : dod to hold the county convontic iero ou Friday , the 1st of Soptembe ; Uho basis of representation was place ) n the vote for Isaac Powora , Jr. , 1 1881 , for regent of the State Univor , ty , giving ono delegate to every fi yen votes cast aa above , and ono i urge. On this representation the fo owing will be the result : Woepin iVater 1 , Tipton 7 , Greenwood 4 , Sa : Jreok C , Stone Greek 7 , Elmwood South Bend-5 , Center 7 , Louisville 7 Woca 5 , Mt. Pleasant 5 , Eight Mil 3rove 7 , Liberty 9 , Hock Bluffa 1C ? lattsmouth precinct 7 , First ward I Second ward 6 , Third ward G , Fourt vard 6 ; total , 129-1 Ono county con 'ontion will do all the business thi all. Candidate1) are already makin heir appearance , and quite a live ! imo ia anticipated before the election Weeping Water is to have anothe lowapaper by the first of Septombei 0 bo called The Eagle. Your corrc pendent is informed by the con ten : ilnted editor nnd publisher , % . C iVentworth , who by the way , ha omcthing of an aquiline im-ml organ ike those admired by ancient Romans hat the name itself haa a moaning , nd the paper will have and impar : novfledgo fearlessly without insolonc , nd will , with the dignity of the rep osontativo old bird , swoop round w iti nthusiaatic ecatacy and in Rublimit ud pathos will bound aloft with quid lerCi-ption like the celerity ot a rrow. On Randolph street one day laa rcok a young mjm while driing r. co onmrkct assumed the f unction uau ill ; onnoctod with the culinary depart iiont by boating and hammering tin loefateak before the poor creature WH illok. This mode of preparing ten or steak Juatico RuBsell decmei iither wicked and premature and ac ordingly fined the ill-natured follov ij and coata for cruelty to animals. Emery Epperson , a young man fron rinton , Iowa , in the employment o 1 W. Coglizer , waa taken sick abou wo weeks ago with eruptions am , iin in the right log. W. W. Higgs man who professes to cure all dis asea by rubbing , waa called in , bu ndor his treatment the young man row worse. Drs. Thomai and Uall roll were finally sent for , and they ftcr taking a careful diagnosis of tin isuuao , pronounced i ploginonoui rysipolas , and at that time .1 doubtfu iso. The young mnn Bubaequontl ; iod , la t Sund iy. Newt J. Palmer , a whilom stroe safer of this place , loft very suddenly few weeks ago between two suns Io ia not particularly wanted hero ut it ia unUuratood that parties an ? eking for him for obtaining good mdor false pretenses. That piebald mule and handsomt ielivory wagon just purchased by tin 'Hilton mills , to use a vornaculai ihraso of the period , takes the cake ? ho two John's connected with it ro uind * ono of colon and aomicolou. lion , Orlando Tcll't waa in the cit ; eetord.ty. B. A , Gibaon , Esq. , ha Udt returned ( rum rusticating ia St j. R. II. Tlaller , a prominent mer hant of Red Oak , Iowa , was hen ist week. Mr. Ilallor has in add ! ion to his store hero , ono in Avoca , nd ono in Greenwood , Nebraska 'hinks this the boss town. The Missouri Pacific base ball clul rent to Elmwood yesterday , am layod the Elmwood club. The garni teed 20 to 11 in favor of the M. P lub. The crppa in Cass county are stmplj rund , with the best prospects , VIUUTAS. [ omford'a Acid Phospliato fur Al > coliolUm. Dr. P. P. Gilmartln , Detroit , Mich. , iya ; "I have found it very aatisfac' ) ry in its effects , notably in the pros < ration attendant upon alcoholism , " augl-d w-lw I'M IcCALLUI WAGON FITS " + f CT i Can Be Handled By a Boy. rlio box nccJ never 1 > a UVn oil the WAJTOII and nil lln-lielloj Grain and Gra-js Is Save K costs leu tlnti the old * | ) lo mice , K\cry standard wagon Is mid with our t&ck comploio BUY HONE WITHOUT IT. Or buy the uttachmonU UP pplv tham to your old unRon box. Pot rait 1 tfchrai-ca h ) J. C. CLARK. Iitncoln. MANMSO& Hr.si , Omaha. Fnro S-'rDDR , Grand Island. HAOQLKTT &Gniif , Hastings. ClUiarH hciiKODRi'.n , Columbia. 8rANoat.it A ; FUNK , ltc < l Cloud , 0. II. CRAMR & Co. , Red Oak , Iowa. L.V. . UirssKti'Olcnwoo ) , Iowa And c\ cry llrst claw dealer In the west. Ask them for descriptive circular or Bond direct tons. J , MoOallum Bros. Mauuf'g Oo. , Office , 24 West LaUo Street , Chlcigo. _ may'23-lw 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW I K USE. They eurpa B nil other a for cisy rlJln < , style end durability. They are for sale by all Loading Car riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country. SPRINGS , GEAB1 & BODIES For Bala by Henry Timken , I Patentee and Builder of Fine Carrlatft s , SSM7 X.OTTXS , - - XKEO. ] l-0m \ Are acknowledged to be the best by all who have put theme o a praiticil test. ADAPTED 70 HiBDft SUIT COAL COKE OR WOOD. MANUFACTURED BY nt SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford , SOLE AGENTS FOU OMAHA. * Y2P w3 ? 2Ms3lW ivf'SafeSiS ! _ > . . > * - > l + . ri/rC Mr L" rc"i i Jn < 4 > * ti. MONITOR OILSTOVE Improvnd iov 18S2. THE BKST AND ) NLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE BTOILOVK IN THK WORLD. Every housekeeper fools the want of lomothing that will cook the daily pod and avoid the oxcoasivoheat , dust , itter and ashoa of a coal or wood stovo. DHE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT , bettor , quicker and cheaper ban any other moans. It is the ONLY ) IL STOVE made with the OIL lESERVOIll ELEVATED ut the > ack of the otove , nwayirom the heat ; > y which itrrangumei.t ABSOLUTE SAFE TY is secured ; as no gas can bo ; onoratod , fully twenty nor cent more mat is obtained , the wicks are pre- orvod twice as long , thus saving the rouble of constant trimming end the ixpeiuio of now ones , EXAMINE PUB MONITOR and you will buy no ither. UinuUcturcd only by the Monitor Oil Stove Co , OlovelandO , Send tor descriptive circular or call V in M. Rogers & Son , ageuta for No- iraaka OmhuttNob'V JALVAMZED IRON Cornices , &o , Manufactured BY SINHOLD 13th St. . 410. OmhuttNob'