Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 1, 1874, Page 2

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OMAHA BEE e CIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. TO CORIESPOSDENTS. Wz Do o desire sny contributions whatever of & literary or poeticsl character ; g will not undertake to preserse, or to retarn besame, in sny case whatever. Our Sl 1s sufSiciently large to more than supply 0ur Imited space in that direction. ‘Exar Naxx oy Warrex, in full, must in each ‘and every case accompany anY commumica- tionof what natare sever. This is mot in- tended for publication, but for eur own stis- ‘ilntheflom'lngmfl.lof’fll- ]h-r vis for more than three years. In | 1870 he was appointed s | member the Omaha Police |in which capacity he has ser- ved faithfully” and energetically ever since. While other policemen have from time to time been ao- e of direlection of dt or im- t pages of man are now been a single charge or even & sus- in this of picion against Mr. Christopherson. His promotion from the ranks is deserved and the people will en- ern in our bonds and who are generally dorse it. faction and ss proof of 5007 “sith. Ouvs Covsrar Fmmsps we will always be ‘pleased to bear from, on all matters connected | with erops, country poiitics. and on any sub- yoct whatever of general interest 10 the peo- Ple of our State. Any information connect- ol with the election. and relating to floods, sccidents. etc., will be gladly received. AL such communmicstions, however, must be In the enforcemeni of law and order THE POLICE JUDGE is a very important functionary. The experience of the past fow years should convince our citizens supposed to_be able to take care of ‘themselves, but forgets the perturba-~ tion among the taxpayers at home, many of whom were then selling their corn at 15 cents per bushel ‘I:Zvident that his honor had never taken the hay-seed degree, to say nothing of the corn cob and other brief ‘s possible; and they must, in all cases, be written upon one side of the sheet ouly. roumcat. ALL AXNOUNCEMENTS of carfidates for office mede by self or friends, and wbether as poticesor communications 10 the Editor, are (uatil nominations are made) simply personal, and will be charged as 8d- that their Police Judge should be & acter, strict impartiality, and above all a good judge of human nature. ‘We believe Colonel R. W. Wilbur will fulfill these conditions. He is a All communicstions should be ‘sddressed to £ BOSEWATER, Editor and Publisber, Draw- o NOTICE. On and after October twenty-first, 1872, the ety circulation of the DaiLy Bxx s assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, 1o ‘whose order all sub- mwpfl-(mflla'fll-pyfl and by whom ail recelpts for subscriptions will »s countersigned.. E. ROSEWATER. Publisher, —_— e (CurrESCY inflation, free banking and all the other panaceas for cur- ing and preventing financial panics still hang fire in the U. &. Senate. ments have mot brought him into close contact with the popular sympathy withthem. He under- stands the principles of law while at the same time he has a enforce the ordinances, he has a culprits who cau be jreclaimed and those who are incorrigible. about four years. This is his first — venture on the political chess board, htingale Cohorts have made a brilliant campaigneat the How they will succeed on election day remains to be seen. 1t only takes seven votes to rescind that resignation. ——— SENATOR INGALLS' bill providing for the relief of settlers upon home- stead and pre-emption lands with- in the railroad land grant bounda- ries by refunding to them & portion of the purchase or entry fees, was veported adversely by the Senate Committee on Public lands. off with flying colors. — JaPAX Is likely to lose all the benefits of the participation in and obssrvation of her Comimissioners at the Vienna Exposition. Cable ad- vices from India announce the foundering at sea of tee steamer Journey. — OUR TICKET. open. The Convention of Repre- sentative Republicans entrusted with the delicate responsibility of placing in nomination the officers 10 be supported by their party in the impending campaign, has acquitted ftself of the taskx m A& gy creditable manner, They have placed before our citizens candidates whose character and qualifications bardly need an endorsement from the newspapers. The harmony that characterized the proceeding of the Convention, and the fact that the convention ‘was made up of some of the most prominent and respectable Republi- cans in tne City, are the best evi- dences that these candidatee de- serveand will receive the undivided support of our party. ‘We would invite the attention of our readers to the biographical sketchesof the candidates in anoth- nevermingled in politics before; but that ought not, and will not prevent him from being the next Treasurer of Omaha, our review of other candidates {o- morrow. —— TAXATION AND REVENUE. @enuine Estabrook Reviews Some Recent Decisions of our Courts. MrLLARD, March 18, 1874, To GENERAL ESTABROOKS: of the county to know more about er column, . What Omaha wants is | the late decision of Judge Lake in » good City Government, 'and we | Your suit with City Treasurer John- believe she will have it fif her citi- | 500, which the BuE says is & second gens endorse the Republican ticket. | trial, and that it was granted by Further comment]is deemed super- | the Supreme Court. We are not aware that it ever went to the Su- like to be informed in detail what is the decision of the Supreme Court party for the Municipal offices, ot tagiyers luybed.lvidedundutwom'm = o Executive and Legislative. The Executive Department Consists of the Mayor. Marshal, Police Judge, ‘Treasurer, Clerk, Street Commis- sfoner -and Eengineer, while the Legislative branch is composed of the members of the City Counciland Board of Education. In this sketch ‘we shall briefly review the anteced- ents, character and qualifica- " Yours most sufficient sence of discrimination to the difference between The Cononel has resided in Omaha and we anticipate that he will come Money isthe lever that moves the world, and the jman who handles the finances of a city ought to be and in presenting the name cf John Baumer for this position the Repub- John Baumer isa brother of the late Colonel Baumer of the Nebras- ks first. A watch-maker and jew- eler by trade, he possesses a thor- ough commercial education and unquestioned business qualifications. He has resided in this city for more that was conveying tbe Japanese | than seven years, and is actively Commissicn on their homeward | jdentified without commereial inter- ests and social organizations. He is & prominent member of the Fire Department, being Becretary of The municipal campaign is now | Engine Company number 1, and Treasurer of the Northwestern Fire- mans Association. Mr. Baumer has Want of tisae and space compells us to cut short. 'We shall complete Great anxiety is felt in this part | quent tions of the candidates for the Ex- ecutive offices. Legislative officials will receive our attention in our next issue. GENTLEMEN: Yours of the Sth Inst., reached me only yesterday, The newspa- per paragraph to which you refer is degrees of the order. balance of the opinion was by the plaintiff élte could be sold the chattels must be exhausted. His Honor concludes tie case in : “The tax is due ; and of its ‘we have nothing to plaintiff may save both his personal and real property by a just claim. I he refused to do this, it is of little concern to us 8 an equitable question, whether the Treasurer sell the real or per- collection The sonal property o whether he _throt- tle the plaintiff and force him to perform his duty to the govern- ment which protects both him and his l'ga ;ud,zment must be affirmed. Justice Lake concurs.” Opinions may dffer as may taste, but there are those who would re- gard the employed and spleen manifested by mouth- piece of our supreme tribunal as ex- ceedingly inappropriate and unbe- After the accession to the supreme bench of two new Judges anothe: case, Johnson vs H].h‘l:“w‘l'! taken and argued at_the anuary term, . Justice Maxwell delivered the of thecourt, on the 26th of mbeh'mt’d l:ven:ln; the judgment and of course over- - the case of Halenbeck vs. Hahn. The decision rests upon the law that the Treasurer must first exhaust the personal property. The bonds were held legal under the rulings of the Supreme Court of the United States made since these cases were ht, The case of vs. John- son arose under the law nllfing to the cities of the first glass and of course is Interesting to those living out of the city only as it exhibits the tendency of the times. John- son is City Treasurer and assuch seized my law library and office furniture, and my household furni- ture to ostensibly satisfy taxes due since 1859, ‘This property Was cart- ed to an auction room and advertis- ed for public sale. These facts were through the papers under head-lines. e property was 1o the highest bidder, bringing less than one-fifth of its value, Not content with this exhi- bition of me before the public he af- terward took eccasion in my ab- sence to seize two old horses, an old buggy and an old hack and hitching them all together behind an express wagon moved them to the head of Farnham street, thence in solemn procession down Farnham to Ninth street, thence back again to Thir- teenth, and thence to Harmon’s stable; there, after keeping them a week or more, hasgys he returned to where he found them. If he did 1t was with less eclat, and the fact wasnot the subjeet of public an- nouncement through the news- . Now, all this may have been in theline of official duty, and the circumstances may have instified a publio verdiot of “‘served him right”” asto me&.but ‘when it comes to be known dreds of persons as actually delin- t as myself—that most of these had personal property as I had— that he made no other lovy exo:st upon my —that he made noattempt_to levy any where else except at fi} mbe's, where the spirited of the house met him at the door and ‘persuaded” him to let things aloue—that ma: of these of the court below the first selzure, nor did wife, (pistol in hand) so that he little trouble in earning for himself title of “BRAVE E. J.,” and thus, having displayed me and my case as frightful example to warn others of the wrath to come, use. e defendant answered, setf Mgty Rt RAEAUY I antions this I demurred, and on demurrer t there were many hun- | a complete answer to your inquiry. These occurances have added noth- | ing to the consciousness that you and I feel in common with all good citizens, that it is our duty to pay all legitimate taxes tq carry on government. We may atill T think, that money extorted us to bepaidinto the coffers of ‘vate pegsons existing as is not such taxation. t doubtless bea calamity if were not paid, and I think imagine a greater calamity even this ; be upon us when the arrives if it ever our tribunals of justice shall deny to | the citizens theright to come before them and invoke their judgement as to whether the public agent, who is fonal Bank e Freet. The Oldest Estaniiiaon BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & %o., BANEKBRS. fhat constraining him to surrender his ‘substance for the public use, -is doing 50 according to the law, and where those appointed to administer the law, forgetting that they are simply the mouth-pieces through which the 1aw utters itself, shall take counsel of their caprices or prejudices, or of determination of rights between the citizens and the State. e NATURAL CURIOSITIES. The Philadelphia Zoological Gar- den opens next month. A talking rat has appeared in Al- exandria, Va. In other words, it can open it's trap. The bones of three of Barnum’s dromedaries have been presented to Yale College. The relics of the others go to the Smithsonian Insti- tute. A calf born in Ludlow, Vt., now no more, had two heads, two necks, two breasts, and six legs. If he bad lived, what an ornament to the barn-yard he would have been! A story of Cloopara's pearl has been surpassed. In Saugatuck, Conn., at & supper the other night, about 100 were found in the shell of & roasted oyster, all large and small, by the' cooking to which they had been subjeoted. Tsrael Blythe of Beatrice, found a live grasshopper on his place across the river, last week. A bald eagle, measuring 7 feet ches from tip to tip of wing, was led in Dakota- eounty last week. The French town of Issudun boasts of the most wonderful lusus nature of the age. It s a young girl, four- teen years old, whose body, from the waist downward, is double, and pre- sents two partsacting independent- 1y of each other. The two legs she uses for walking belong each to a different trunk, whilst & tglhm oneis quite insensible topain. She enjoys good health, P e A few days the Scotsman mentioned that a bible bound in ealf and bearing the name of William Sim,"” a Dundee man, and the date 1830, had been discovered in the stomach of a codfish. This fact was | remarkable enough, but still more extraordinary is another circum- stance connected with the affuir also reported by the Scotsman. The very same day on which the discov- ery was made known, the heirs: of the deceased Mr. Sim succeeded in obtaining a warrant in the outer house of the Court of Session (from the Lord Ordinary Mure) to uplift | several hundreds of pounds belong- ing to the said William Sim, who | was described in the legal proceed- ings as a sailor, a native of Bundee, who had gone to sea about 1834, and had not sinee been heard of. There can be little doubt that the Bible thus preserved in the codfish's stom- ach belonged to the lost W. Sim of Dundee. - A disgraceful piece of mischiefis reported from Berlin, where some idiot has, it seems, been amusing himself by poisoning a good many of the most valuable animals in the Zoological Gardens. His last vie- tims are six bears, two two black- panthers, two li and a x, all of which have died, wi e exception of the male and the female panther. y howerver, are not tE: only losses sus- tained. Within the last few weeks several valuable ¢arnivora have per- ished, and their death being attrib- uted {o feeding on the flesh of horses bly suffering from disease. e food given to the animals has since been carefully cooked, 80 that willful poisoning appears to be the only explanation of the recent deaths among them, The Directors of the Zoological Garden Company have offered a reward of 1,000 thalers for the apprehension of the miscreant. An_equine curiosity arrived In San Francisco last Tuesday in- the in the neighborhaod af the Balioon | River, Queensiand, when about two | years old. He is now about six E. ESTABROQK. | Basiness transacted same of an rated Accounts ‘lh ene subject to sight cheek any supposed public necessity, in the | 06’4 | customers i :rpmnd securities at market interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of | change, Government, State, C | and City Bonds. | | Draw Sight Drafis on Scotland, and gland, | lérelnfl. of OMAHA NATION. Douglas and Thirteenth Si OMAHA, NEB. FINANCIAL AGENT POR THE U2 STATES This Bank deals Exchangs, G ‘Bonds, Voucher, Gold Cota BULJ.ION AND GOLD DUBT, and seiss drafts and makes collections oa ‘parts of Europe. | Drafts drawn payable in Gold or Currency o8 | the Back of California, San Francisco, | TICKETS for saie w0 au pars of Europe via. . the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg American Packet Company. it xwos zows, ALYIX saTXD] -, o STATE SAVINGS- BANK. Capital, 3100,000. Authorized Caphal, $1,000,000. OlmBound fateres diawes Su samarred et Advantages OVER of Deposit. Certificates e o i B from date meat. The who.s drawn st sy e, T CHICAGO & NORTHWES'N RAILWAY. Chieago and the Eastl Only Direot Route Bai, Racime, o md Milwenke It Being the i-nutud Fisst Comoleted etuen oy PM;“A‘.'-HAMCHXCAGO. “onst provements have taken in S TR = e Tection he msy wish to go. Principe] Conncetions. AT MISSOURI VALLEY JUNCTION, Sioux C ty, Yankton ‘poiuts resched e [ON' Des Inln‘-.-nofllvllld lfl,l‘k, for via MSITORY | UNION MARKET R.A.ZARRIS, 887 Iifteenta Str Between Douglas and Dodge. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON vmaA. FISE, POULTRY, GAXE & VEGETABLE C. F. EAMANN, Basidence and office No. 555 16 h st., between Dodge st. and Capitol svenue. t Special attention paid to obstetrics and dis- | eases peculiar lo woraen and children. S9. Offics hours, 310 10a m., 1 to 4p.m., 6t05p. m. Residence 16th a0d Grace sta. 216 te | Ladies’ Furnishing Store TAILOR., 171 Cor. ¥arnham and Eleventh Sts. Al kinds of TAILORING, Cleaning and 7 peie done at reasonable rates. Afine lot RNISHING GOODS constastly oa na and sold chesp. As2it Ssurgioal Roomes L. VAN CAMP, fii D. Save Y Paper Rags! Patronize Home Industry WL IR Tangements to bulld PAPER MILL IN OMAHA, Desires to purchase several hundred tons of all Kinds at Exstern prices. €l very. Z< ofARLES & 5\ * ) Ly, D TS, OFFICE, ,0_4‘2;93 ‘f’lu' ST. BeL3th &Mt Ss, OMAFIA. 92 Oldest practicing Dentists in the city DR. A. S. BILLINGS, DENTIST, 284 Farnham St., Bet. 13th and 141k, up stairs. Toeth extracted withous - x. by was of Ni- S Uce open atall hour foat! ° DOUGLAS STREET 218 Just opened with & stock of Ladies’ Furaishing Goods, consisting of MADAME FOY’S CORSETS, THOMPSON GLOVE - FITTING _CHIL- DREN'S WAISTS, FRENCH CORSETS, a2d many others. Also Enbroidery, Bigiog, Laces. Trimmings, Disp- ‘pars, rabber bibs, and other fancy goods. PLEASEGIVEMEaCALL Omaha, Feb. 14. D. B. SHEN. fehldm1 LIGHT BRAMAS A SPECIALTY 1 EGGS for HATCHI NG ‘The subseriber keeps only this one variety. 10 6ll orders for eggs dur- ‘season in rotation, at " Trom bis mported and domes- fteed true to name. No gooas J. SCHOONMAKER & SON Eggs Carefally Packed nd Deliver- e ed at Express Office. 8% Young fowls for sale in the fall. S mrhsjwat JOHN W. NASH Douglas Street Omaha, Neb. ONMAIA OITY STOVE STORE. E. F. COOK. 857 14tk Bt, betwosn Donglas aad Dodge. e, s dasiee 'ooking and Heating stoves. | stamped, .u.uulq.‘.a' Freach Ware (3 2 Roaing, Gatte Work one snd warrante P 6. A. LENDQUEST, ant Tailor! PARNHAMN ST. Tenth atreet, koeps on band 3 ikt Fur nish PITTSBURG WHITE LEAD PITTSBURG, PA. Next to. G otImd HEaBlisheoa ™ 1885. ccds Manutiotarers of Biaiatly Pure $20 9 dsy. Agemts wanted ! Pl Gissses of workiog , young or old, make more us 'In Uhelr spare moments anyi ©. 1. BaLLOU. clse. Address & BALLUU. sine. movly TTLE DEALERS. Bogs, bref and matten owply flled. oymet 1x cazianto: 8 u W o White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge Patiy, Colors Dry and ia 0il. BLacK, Nebraska Charles Popper, WHOLESALE BUTCHER AND CATTLE BROKER, T LAKE CITY, ) - UTAR. NEW GOODS! 4 Ve stmiprLem, —u L McDonald, XE co-ner of 10th £ T FRUITS, 'ONFECTIONERY, WMO_Q ‘and CIGARS, Which by ol 23 low asthe lowest in the ey NEW_MEAT MARKET. SPAULDING & JOURDAN, 14tk 8¢, Bot. Fargham and Harney, mehlTms Oppesite Grand. Central. $T. LOUIS TOBACCO WORKS, | N Leggat, Hudson & Co., ‘Manuihetarers of every arsds ¢ Fine Cut Chewing 7 | AND SHOKING TOBACCO Mes. R B PALMER, Fashionable Dressand Cloak Maker, ‘Rooms, 262 Douglas St. near 15:h, (Up Staira.) | COLOR WORKS ‘No.ls'K A Our Speoial Brands: | PINE CUTS: --oll;ah | BEAUTY. INGLESICB. i ULLION. | arowlng and stock 1o order 0. AND COUNTBRS. & Byl of Ehow Ouse Ocaransly, onNend, i Shew Cate of Byury Disriptle o GENERAL WNESTERN AGENTS FOR THS PHILIP & BRO/S SBHOW OASES PRAOTICAL Manufaocturer WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS, JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Dealers Can Save TIME and FREZIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! fl";\}l; GOODS WARRANTED TO BE A8 REPRESENTED."&a - < BRADY & MoAUSLAND. ‘WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS I¥ | WHITE LEAD, COLORS | OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. 533 and 535 Fourteenth St., OMAHA. | Raw Furs Wanted! A. HUBERMANN, FUR MANUFACTURER AND BUYER OF RAW FURS! 1 & 513 THIRTEENTA 5¢, OMAHA, NEB. by I PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRI€ES, And Manufacture all Kinds of Skins inte Every Desirable Article. santste M. J. MocKELLIGON, @ mporter and Jobber of Foreign and Domestic Wines and Liquors, TOBAOCOS AND OIGaAaAnsS, No. 142 Farnham Street, - Omaha, Neh OLD KENTUOGKY WHISKIBZ 4 SPEOIALTY oy ST AGENT FOR THE BLDORADO. VINE COMPANY. CALIFORNIA a9 8 C. Assorr 3 canmsa, S. G. ABBOIT & OO0, Booksellers : Stationers 'DEALERS [N WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, aND WINDOW SHADES, . arnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for Scheol Books ased in Nohracka. CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES On the Line of the Union Pacific Railroad A Land Graat of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PARMING asd MINERAL Leads of America 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW POR SALE ! ‘There lands are in the central portion of the United States, en the ¢Ist degree of Nu.(h Lat- 1tude, the tral line of the Te -erienn . T L e S s e e o OWEAPER IN m-.fi-.fl;mgv-»-l--'nl-nl Tarket tham & |3 THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE a jumbling together of two classes, MONTANA. of any city is the Mayor and upon | those of Johnson vs. Hahan, and him rests the great responsibility of | Estabrook vs. Johnson. superintending all the other officers The first of these is one of several attached to the execative Depart- | cases t by farmers living in ment. Nomanin Omaha is more | the western part of the gounty, in fully qualified for this position than | 1870, to restrain the sale of their (Colonel Champion 8. Chase, and 10 | Jand for taxes levied in part to pay man il take greater pains to eon- | interest upon O. & 8. Weand O. & duct the affairs of his office with | N, W. Railroad lands. dignity and impartiality. The District Court of this county Thoroughly identified with the | refused the injunction, and one case material interest of Omaha, Colonel | —Hollenbeck vs. Hahn—was taken | Chase will ever be found in the | to the Supreme Court, where, at the @ILT EDGE, of a pure tip of his Iuterest o: SIX PBR CENT | COLONISTS asd ACTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Toa Yoard Grodit Lands st the sam A110ur Tohaesos Strictly Waranted. | orice to all CREDIT PURCEASERS. | A Deduetion TEN PE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. . nd” the Best Locitions for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitled to H - Hed X a Homestead Froe Xassos to y given that I will sit 2y S. W. corner of 11th and Chies* 'y, March 30, alvo Thursds: prii 24 and 34, for ihe rectiog the rogaiin U thn WILKINS, Registrar. and very compact, S 1 it fine lean legs, powerful foe: | X i s e, 3 oryicm asp savuswoox | arms ene and a olean, blood- | a4, concerning 3 . i Do ahalty bedad Died, foom | Son L s Cor. Second & Vine Streets, ‘whieh sparkles a lineof the U. P. B. R. < ing with tomper nd | o rse, vonted fhrongh toul: pinsipel Tsouie Do, docllity. His owners, Oat & Wit- | W H.STENNETT, MARYIN HUGHTTT, mart 1mo chell, paid s handsomie price for | ; [S°FAlEy ™" A8 ¢ o SPpYT T Grand Central Hotel. e B e B L him, but refused ll,m‘é?‘the colo- ket Ac't, Omabs. Gen'i Ag't Omabs. all Kinds on Hand Established in 185 0. ‘mehidyl ‘And cut tognder [rom Actual Measurement.J| Schneider & Burmester M Fittinga Specialty ith's Millinery Store, ST. SR - re of Xinnd with gew ‘maaps, pabiishel in ish, German, 3we BUETM T oY 5 SINGER Sewing Machine! KING OF THE SEWING MACHINE WORLD, As Preeminently a3 Gold Reigns in the Realms of Finance. |Leased on Monthly Iastallments | STYLES AND PRICES :—-Plain Machine, Nea Covi;vr 75.82; Ommmguil.‘llnh‘{ne, o ver, $90.00 ; Inelose " Cabinet, * $110.00. Send for Illusirated Circular! Fo% . D NARON: TRk, Send for new escriptive Pamphlet, 424 Daaiets, malled tree averywhere. | abvoees i Y Mamufacturers of foteet. i | CASTLE BROS, z ] e i 15 Be b L & i il i i 5 : ? E : i 3 BRNT D IoNES, -Amusn--m-u-n-‘ Lambrequins and Windaw Shades, CHRONOS, ENGRAVINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES. 1 g i E F £ P ] i g sanksof the Union army, and in'| of a private gentleman upon the theranksof hisparty. He be | topics Involved. the next Mayor of Omaba, if this | The esurt knows itself. pled 40| In thedischarge of his functionsas | Yoted 80 ¢ : i g i 2 irégn i £ £ -.wanz.x;‘. DN Fruits, - Confectionery, CIGARS AND TOBACCO. KH 5?'!-5 i 8. JACOBS - As.-':‘::‘-:--—u.fl: N. I D. SOLOMON, Zest India Coods, WEHOLESALH PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL OMAHA D NEBRASKA ¢ THAN LINBERT. | i

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