2 gfre emicftifct gailij gagle: Wlsanzs&H$ ptuniiug, eplufo 22, 1886 5&MSS 9?inlfc M. M. MUKDOCK, Editor. WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPT. 22, 1886. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATB TICKET. Tor Associate Justice- , . ... V. M. VALES MSB, ... Franklin county. Tor Oovcrnor- JOHX A.KAKTIX. m Atchison county. Kor Lieutenant Governor A. P. KIDDLE, Ottawa county. Foe Secretary of State E.T2. ALLEX. MOONLIGHT'S KECOKD AND POSITION. Sedgwick county Fur State Treasurer-- ,. JAMES W. HAMILTON. Sumner county. For Auditor of Stato- .,. timothy McCarthy. Pawnee county. For Attorney General S. U. BRADFORD. Osage county. For Superintendent of Public Instruction J. II. LAWHEAD, Bourbon county. TOR CONGRESSMEN. First District nOK. E. X. MORRILL. Brown county. Second District nox. e. n. kuxstox, Allen county. Third District- nOK. 3. W. PERKISS, Xeosha county. Fourth District IIOX. THOMAS IIYAX, Shawnee county, lfth District IIOX. A. S. WILSOJf. Washington county. Sixth Dlstrictr- HOX.E. J. TURNER. Sheridan county. Seventh District IIOX. S. It. PETERS, Uar er county. JUDICIAL 18th DISTRICT. For Judge HON'. T. B. "WALL. Sedgwick County. COUNTY TICKET. For Probate Jurtse Ycr Clerk of District Court E. B. JEWETT. A. B. WRIGHT. For County At torney G. W. C. JOKES. For County Superintendent D. S. PENCE. For Commissioner Third District T. H. RANDALL. For licprcscntathe 82(1 District KODOLPH HATFIELD. For Rcprc&cntath c S3d District It. K. LAWRENCE. For RciircsentatUe Sltli District A. II. CARPENTER. As soon us Mr. Cleveland returns from his fishing excursion the work of removing offensive partisan? ill be prosecuted vig orously, it is reported. The Atchison, Topekti and Santa Fe is the first of Kansas railways to accept the grain rates fixed by the railroad commis sioners in their recommendation of August 10. It seems that all of Envoy Sedgwick's denials that he did not indulge too freely in Mexican mescal arc unavailing. The facts all show that he had a disgraceful Mexican jamboree, and that is all there is of it. The migratory birds are leaving for the south a month earlier than hist year, which it is .said, means an earlier winter. There is so much to be done yet this fall in south ern Kansas that we hope the birds, or the prophesy of them may be off. Xcal Dowe, the Maine third-party Prohi bitionist leader, was asked a few days ago If U-vrcic trtu; tilUt Ot. John hoI rofui1 in speak unless paid in advance. lie replied: "Yes; he did refuse to speak in Augusta because they coulun t raise any money; also in Bangor. The only two speakers of our party who get paid are Mr. at. .John and the Confederate colonel from Kentucky." There is a marked revival of speculative activity in the New York stock market. Bonds of all classes are active and strong. Government bonds advanced on purchases by the national banks. 3Ioney is easier though rates arc firm at between 5 aud G per cent. The eastern wool markets arc no less favorable for holders, the tendency of prices being upward. On some lines a rise of one-half cent a pound has been attained. An exchange suggests that it may not be generally known that there is a very simple aud inexpensive remedy for cuts and bruises on horses and cattle, at the com mand of every one. It is nothing more than to apply to the wound lime, fresh slacked, of the consistency of tliick cream, with a common paint brush. Cover the wound with it as quickly as possible, and repeat it daily, or oftener, if necessary. In a short time new ilesh will form and the wound heal with hardly a scar. Commenting on the woik of the anti-saloon Republican conference in Chicago, the Inter-Ocean says : "The convention may not become historic, as Senator Blair prophesied, but it will not be remembered uupleasmlly. It may not accomplish much good, but it will never be said of its members that they met as obstructionists or that tliey encouraged dissension. They were honest, earnest, fighting Repub licans, who desired to have their say in :i great moral issue, and who exercised their privilege to their own Mtisfaetion and credit." ANXmiKUIAlivY. The Newton Kansui, one of the oldest papers in southwest Kansas, appeared Sun day morning as a daily.au eight column dai ly. Our views of the.se daily paper ven tures in southern Kansas has been expicss ed so often that we will not repeat them now. The Ivans an is a very pretty, bright sheet, in size large enough for a city of twenty thousand, and without reference to our judgement, we wish Mr. Ashbaugh a success which shall reach his expectations. THE SANTA l'K'N NEW LINlIS. The Santa Fe is not only going to build from Xcw Kiowa southwest to Albuqurque but two hundred and twenty-five miles of the line is to be put in at once. This will carry it to the Canadian river country. It is proposed to make this line, w hich will go by the way of the Walnut valley, the through Pacific line. The Santa Fe is also running a survey northwest through the southern part of Chase comity and over the line which the 'Frisco people hrd marked out for an extension of their lin"" from Fredonia to Salina. Tho Santa Fe have also submitted propositions for a line from Grecnsburg, Kiowa county, to the southwest corner of Chirk county. This last line will be directly in the interest of Wichita. As for the extension from New Kiowa southwest, whose interest that will be in remains to be seen, but Wichita ought to and no doubt will gain very largely by it. An old Kansas Democrat mournfully re marked, a few days ago: "I heard Tom Moonlight make a speech, in 1808, that was the most violent and abuse tirade against the Democratic party and its leaders I ever listened to; and now they have nominated him for governor, and expect me to vote or him, Somehow the abusive speech rings In my cars. If lie was right then, the Democratic party ought to be eternally damned in this election, as well as in all others. If he slandered and lied about the Democratic party then, no Democrat ought to vote for him now." Old KansailS remember the time, not many years ago, when Moonlight was the most radical of Republicans. In 1863 he was the Republican candidate for secretary of state, and made speeches for the Repub lican ticket. Two of the planks in the Republican state plaform of 18G8, on which Col. Moonlight ran, and which he heartily endorsed at the convention, aud approved on the stump, were as follows: "Resolved, second, That the history of the Democratic party in Kansas, from its earliest attempt to force the system of hu man slavcrv upon a reluctant people, its systematic violation of the ballot, its per fidious apathy during the struggle for na tional existence, is a record of violence, cowardice and fraud. Its leaders and its principles are unchanged,and deserve alike the unqualified opposition of every citizen who believes in the supremacy of lav and the pcrpetuitv of free institutions. "Resolved," third, That the studied and persistent hostility of the Democratic party to the prosecution of the war for the pres ervation of the Union, its constant and ma lignant efforts in the North to perplex the Government and ' dishearten the people, aud its open and undisguised treason in the South, its position of uncompromising op position to every measure originated for the safety of the Nation : its nomination of candidates for President and Vice Presi dent (Seymour & Blair) who propose, if elected, to trample in the dust laws duly enacted, to disperse State Governments, constitutionally established, and undo the work of reconstruction with violence and blood, impel all friends of the Republic, with renewed energy, to rally in support of the Republican party, around which the hopes of the Nation clustered in its darkest hours." In the Democratic State Convention that year, as delegates, were Hon. Thomas P. Fenlon, Judge W. R. Wagstaff, Judge John Martin, S. C. Bephart, J. P. Taylor Isaac Sharp, A. G. Otis, B. P. Waggeuer, and many others equally well known. The Democratic candidate for Governor was George W. Glick ; for Congress, Gen, Charles W. Blair : for Secretary of State, Wilson Shannon, jr. ; for Associate Justice, D. R. Wagstaff ; and for Attorney Gen eral, Ross Burnes. These were the "lead ers" who, Colonel Moonlight then declared, deserved "alike the unqualified opposition of every citizen "who believes in the su premacy of the law and the perpetuity of free institutions," aud whose history and actions in Kansas constituted an unbroken "record of violence, cowardice and fraud." Colonel Moonlight made speeches, in all parts of Kansas, endorsing this platform, and he was elected Secretary of State by the Republicans, beating Wilson Shan non, jr. Tn Soptombor, 1870, Moonlight was a candidate, before the Republican stale con vention at Topeka, for congressman, re ceiving ten votes. Failing to receive this nomination, he became a candidate for re nomination as sectetary of state, but was beaten, receiving only thirteen votes out of one hundred and and seventy-six. Two years later, in 1872. he was an applicant for appointment as United States marshal. Failing to receive this appointment, he be came sour aud soic-headed. and drifted into the Democratic parly. This is the political history of the man the Democrats of Kansas are asked to vote for. Senator Ingalls made him a Democrat by refusing to have him appointed United States marshal, and he has ever since hated aud abused the Republican party and John J. Ingalls with about equal bitterness. Moonlight is, however, consistent in one thing. He is for fiee whiskey, all the time. He it was who forced Judge John Martin to decline the Democratic nomina tion for Governor, in 1882, by bulldozing the 'Democratic slate convention into adopt ing and nullification platform, on which Judge Martin refused to run. The Leaven worth platform of 18SG is his platform. It is not only against prohibition, but against any restraints or restrictions on the whisky traffic. It is against local option, against high license, and against anything except an unrestricted whisky traliic a license system permitting anybody to open a saloon who pays for the pri ilegc. This is the record and position of the man for whom the Democrats of Kansas. arc so used to "wincing under their own galling that they naturally think that every body else must be suffering also. The truth is the Democratic party is a party of bosses. Jackson is their patron saint ana uc was an ideal boss in every public relation of his life. Name us any state or any city in this country where the Democratic party is dominant and we will name a state or city which is ruled by "bossism" in its most offensive and dan gerous form, we don't care whether it's a Tammany in New York or the mere po litical cliques and rings of a South Carolina or a Mississippi. What the one is and has been costing New York for years and what others have cost the south we need not tell Republicans, for they know, and it is use less to tell Democrats for they won't heed, but the high handed corruption upon the one hand and the blasting effects of in trigue upon the others are disputed and de nied only by the Democratic party them selves, who no doubt would deny that the work of last Saturday in this city had all been practically prearranged. SARATOGA CELEBRATION. K. P. Rhoades, chief engineer and su perintendent of construction of the Kansas, Pratt & Western, will be the recipient .of much deserved praise today at Saratorga, which place will celebrate the completion of that road to that point. Wichita ex tends a friendly hand to the Saratogans, and to the people of Pratt county generally, congratulating them upon the auspicious occasion which binds them to the rest of the world with a line of steel. The King man silver cornet band and the Saratoga cornet band will furnish the music. A match game of base ball between King man and Saratoga will take place. A full and complete program. Excellent speak ers will be present, among whom are Gov. John A. Martin, Thomas Moonlight, Dem ocratic candidate for governor; Hon. Thos. George, Hon. S. R. Peters, "Tim" Mc- Cartyand hi3 "Pawnee Braves," Judge Clark and Judge Houk have been invited, and a number of them signified their inten tion of being present. REAL ESTATE! REAL ESTATE! -THE LATEST IS - GONE TO THE STATE ENCAMP3IENT. The 2nd regimeqt of the Kansas National Guards passed through this city yesterday to attend the state encampment at Ft. Riley. They had a special train composed of thirteen coaches on the M. K. & T. The companies were from various places in the state, the headquarters of the regiment being at Wichita. Colonel Woodcock was the commanding officer. The Emporia company, E, joined them here with Cap tain G. V. Meigs in command. Emporia Republican. AN HONOR TO THE STATE. From the Atchison Champion. The corner stone of the new Garfield University, at Wichita, will be laid with appropriate ceremonies October 8th. The handsome structure will be built of brick, with stone trimmings, at a cost of $100,000. It will include sixty rooms, including a chapel capable of seating 3,000 persons. This is the first institution of learning erected by the Christian church in Kansas, and it will be a credit to the denomination and an honor to the state. . i CAPITAL -:- HILL -:- ADDITION, Situated between Second street and Central avenue. There are only eight lots, containing about two and a naif acres each. This tract is as fine as any on the Hill just east of the city. For prices and terms call at my office. Vacant Lots in every part of the.city, and dont forget we can give you some fine bargains. BUSINESS -:- PROPERTY. We have three lots on "Water street. "We have twenty-five lots on Main street. We have several on Market street. We have twelve lots on Lawrence avenue. We have six lots on Topeka avenue. We have six lots on Emporia avenue and several on Fourth ave nue. These are all close to Douglas avenue, and if you wUnt a bar gain in Business Lots do not fail to see me and get prices. We have twelve lots on Douglas avenue. RESIDENCE -:- PROPERTY. In endless profusion in every part of the city. ACRE PROPERTY: We have a number of fine pieces of land in tracts of from five to forty acres. We have several of these tracts at such prices that a fine profit could be realized at once. FARMS AND STOCK . RANCHES Of every description all over Kansas. Ranches of from one thous and to three thousand acres fine land, and farms at from $10 per acre up. Come and see me and be convinced. STRANGERS .'. ALWAYS .'. WELCOME. Correspondence promptly attended to. Money invested ror non-residents when desired. Please remember that I have no other business but Real Estate. If you want Real Estate come and see me or write. MR, PRENTIS' REMARKS AT CHICAGO. The Chicago Times thus reports Mr. Noble L. Prcntis' remarks at the Chicago anti-saloon Republican caucus: He paid in Kansas they had a Republican party aud a Democratic party, which they kept like a sandbag in a gymnasium to thump. They also had a third party, a small one, which was spending its time abusing the Republican party, which p:issed a prohibition law for them just as they wanted iteven when the jails were so full of saloon keepers that their coat tails -were sticking out of the windows. There is really but one party in Kansas, and that is the Republican party. This party has made prohibition a success. The speaker then read a statement made by Governor Martion, the Republican govern or of Kansas, asserting that prohibition has worked a great reform in that state, and that those people who say the drug stores have been turned into saloons tell what they know to be untrue. In the banish ment of the saloon nineteen-t entieths of the drunkenness went with it, and the bale ful influences of the saloon as a loafing place also went along. The present gener ation of old drinkers may get liquor on the sly under the present law. but the rising generation is growing to detest liquor, and will not want nor get it. I lie youth are free from temptation. Nobody, added the speaker, need fear for Kansas. She is all right. He commend Kansas' example for the convention to follow. G. W. BARTHOLOMEW, Wicliita, Kansas. 01 1 WESTERN MORTGAGE AND TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $100,000. Farm Mortgages, Interest at Lowest Rates No Delays. ACT AS TRUSTEES FOR CORPORATIONS. CO PARTNERSIIirS, ESTATES AND INDIVIDUALS. INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS DAVID ROBISON. JR., Pkksidkst. Toledo, Ohio. JAMES J. ROBISON. SBorjWAur. OFFICE, 1271 DCA-IIT STRIErBKE. WHAT OTHERS SAT. ate expected to vole this jcir. a vaimy or HOUSES. Our readers could hardly have failed no ticing the cut and dried atmosphere which laid so heavily on the Sedgwick county Democratic convention last Saturday. In the principal convention there was not a single contest that could be called such. Everything was shoved through as per pro gram on schedule time. The candidates having all been previously determined up on by the bosses, each as his place was an nounced, was trotted out and trotted through .unanimously by acclamation and in great shape. Such harmony could out come of the cooked work of bosses. If the candidates were angels they would b re pudiated by the Republican party, if so foisted into their campaign. In reading over tho report of the doings of that con vention we find its entire proceedings al most wholly taken up with little unimport ant details and useless formalities. The real work for which such bodies arc sp posed to Ik called into existence, proved simply a rapid routine endorsement of what had all bjen, very eti'L-ntly, deter mined Ijcfore. In making up their central committee, also the, authoritv was vested in six or seven should have been the committee The Daily Globe of Emporia, in review ing the work done by the Republican con ventions in the different parts of the state, says the followiug of Sedgwick county: "The Republicans of Sedgwick county, which now has three members, had the good sense to select the two for le-clcction who represented that county last year, Hon. Rodolph Hatfield and R. E. Lawrence. The other is A. II. Carpenter, and if wc are not mistaken he is a prominent business man at Valley Center. Mr. Hatfield was one of the ablest speakers in the last house, aud both he and Mr. Lawrence were re garded as among the best and most indus trious members." Mr. Hatfield is certainly an orator of which the booming city of "Wichita may be justly proud. If we" are right in regard to Mr. Carpenter, this Sedg wick delegation will be a strong one. "N c may predict this, anyhow, because no peo ple so full of vim and "git up and go" as those in Scdwiek would send any other than one of their representative men." ROBISON BROS., BANKERS nil F W. SWAB, . (SUCCEIJbOR TO F. STACK51AN ) Merchant Tailor. Keeps on hand Fne Goods of the latest styles. The largest stock in the city. Satisfaction guaranteed. No trouble to show goods. Call and see me F. W. SWAB, 1st door N of County Building. F. NIEDEIlLANnrit, rrrKicI A. W. OLIVER. Ice Pnclitcnt. W. W. KIRKWOOI), Ijiml Kxnmlncr. 31. W. LEW. Trrjuturir J. C. RUTAN. hwlary t Mm and Coiint CORRESPONDENCE RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED. ROBISON BROS,, 127 MAIN ST- There seems so be a strange misunder standing in some of the envious portions of Kansas. Here is a Wichita paper declar ing thatjfvansas City is in a peck of trouble; that her north western road is a fizzle. Per haps the wish is father to the thought. To us it appears probable that the road will be a conspicuous success. As Mr. Newman Erb so brilliantly said to our esteemed con temporary, the Journal, "The road has not been" sold; the bonds have merely changed hands that's all." Kansas City Times. And is that all? THE EJECTIONS Or 1SM5. From tho Common ealtk. There is every rca5on to believe that the Republicans will carry the elections of all the leading northern states this -var. But for the separate prohibition vote the Re publican majorities ir. Maine, Mas.;aehu- c;ttc T'Trnvv.-iri?i Ohio NTirhinn rtu! , ,," ' ' 3 Z ,, and power lowa ouiu iv so sweeping as 10 pracucaiiy LilU-V w:ius. tickets in doubt that The Nicest Lots In the City are in HIBARGER'S -:-ADDITION, Eetween Park and Tenth Streets, west of Washington Avenue Kansas Loan and Investment Co. Capital, $100,000. Money Always on Hand to Loan on Farm and Oity Property Office in Wichita National Eank Building, Wichita, K&n. S. D. PALLBTT, -ItALKU IX- Prices Low and Terms Easy. BUNNELL a MOREHOUSE, Northern I Southern Pine Lumber, LATH, SHINGLES, SASH, DOORS AND BUNDS. OFFICE and WIIITF. VIST VAItfi ffrtt Eml of J)ou.clws Arctjp MIPUITA lAM yeluw run v vno actw- tiie ttrt. V V I U n 1 1 A, KA IN . A N N E S S (A New Town), the SOLE AGENTS. ZIMMERLY'S ADDITION. Now is the time to buy lots in this addition while they are cheap. ONE MILE SOUTH ON LAWRENCE AVE. Street cars and large brick School house in connection. For further in formation call at 6 1 1 S Market st. Located on the Leroy & Western Bailroad, an extension of Atchison, Topeka & Tanta Fe Bailroad, in Erie tovmship, Sedgwick county, Kansas, ovmed Joy the Ar kansas ValJey Tovra Company. PRICES LOW AND TEHMS EASY. TWELVE MILES FROM ANY Railroad Tovro, in a -well sattled and improved farming community, insuring good support; from the start. Call on or -write me at once and secure choice o lota G. A. HATFIELD, General Agent, Wichita, in. HOTGHKINS & WHEELER, Real Estate & Bxehange Brokers, SOLE AGENTS FOR ROSENTHAL'S ADDITION. Thia Addition is located in the north pnrt of tho city, botu-en Fairview and Arkansas Avenues and ia in the hifirhoet part of city. "Wq offer Special Inducomente for tha nzt 30 Cnyn. No. 201, S-E CORNER DOUGLAS AVENUE AND MARKET ST. loritv and power " a ou" lv; .vmif to mi i ii-i . uurv the Democratic psrtv in tli raea naly. A, hat Bm- with sspnrate prohibition mittec and which j the field there is no rea-on to u-nnlrl have boca in some character renre- . tue Republicans wih earry - i . . . ,- , i.. miAc a tail, or an .i: lcs u-v a l'ir majoniv. each of thes TSrt TVivnlo nt I scntative, wa? simply rawie a laii, or an ,;;- -1'"- rj,Vl"t 'I f UZ : ZZZ .auxiliary, to b2 used or not usJ, as tue of the ijepubiican party. The accident of i a oav caucu its defeat on the single issue ; of the presidency in 15S4. But the voters bosses miirht determine was for the be-t m toiiisLs of the rimr. Anv man who failed to see it so needs a guardian. Still this is the party whose organs go on talkiugabout bossism in the Republican party. They are satisfied with their unfortunate expert meat and will not repeat the error in 1SS3 Of this fact they will give a satisfactory as surance in the elections of 1S-S6. MONEY TO LOAN On Chattel Mortgages and City Property, IN SMALL OR URGE AMOUNTS. SHOUT TIME AT THE LOWEST KATES :Wichita BanMng Company and Farmers Banking Co., 116 WEST DOUGLAS AVENUE. Comanche, Comanche County, Kansas. A new city on the Cimmarron, at its junction vith 3if; Bluff and Cavalry creeks, offers more inducements to tho investor than any other new town plstted in E&nsas thi3 year. Oaly three rnilc3 from the great natural salt deposit; a line water power at the foot or Cavalry Valley, with its hundreds of fine farms, many under culti vation. A chance to get in now on the ground floor. Xo lots given away. Many briclc and frame buildings going up. Write for roll particulars to the COJIAKCME TOWN COMPANY, Xew Kiowa, Kamaae,