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4 'I‘IIE DAILY BEE: MONDAY NOVEMBFR 2‘ 'i'he Oma_ha Bee. Pablished ev!q morning, except Sun. a7, Th only Monday morniog dafly. TERMS BY Ml\l|.~~ One Year.. 3100) Three “nnthn ?'I 00 Six Months One Month. . CHE WEEKLY BEE, published every W Inceday. TERMS POST PATD— One Yenr.....$2.00 | Three Months. 50 Six Months. ... 1.00 | One Month..... AxenicaN Nxws Company, Sole Agents for Newsdealers in the United States, CORRESFONDENCE—AI Communl. atfons relating to News and Editorial .natters should be addressed to the Epiton or Tur Ber. BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Letters and Remittances should be nd dressed to TiE BER PUBLISHING COMPANY OmanA, Drafts, Ohecks and Postoffice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E ROSEWATER Editor. Jn Huppewy still has his eye on the senate, but he will find the Mich- igan Ferry pretty hard to oross. Lonrexszo Orounsk refused to sup- port the nomines of a railroad con- vention, thereforo off with his head, Tae oranks who turn the railroad organa are skirmishing around the po- litical barnyard ata lively rate, hop- ing to put salt on the tails of the anti- monopoly birds. Tae Republican compares Hascall with Jesus Christ. How much of that star route corruption fund did Issac leave at The Republican offico last winter! Iris said that two augurs never passed each other in the streets ot Rome without langhing. Hereafter when John M. Thurston, chief de. fonder, meets Jchn L. Webater, the chief prosecutor of the Nebraska star route thieves, they will not be able to pass each other without an audible smile over that $600 farce. e Successrun anti-monopoly oandi- dates now discover that the railroad organs did not mean s word of their abage about ‘‘renegade republigans’ during the late campaign. Every bolder of a vote for United States senator is now being smoared with loyal railrond taffy thick enough to cover all the soars of the canvass. OxE of the beauties of our popular system of government is that when- -ever the people sit down upon some political fraud by defeating him at the | d ballothox he turns up with strong back- ing as an applicant for appointment to & lucrative federal cfftce. This ex- plains why many leading republicans are 80 anxious to provide for Loran Olwrk throngh Uncle Sam, Som—— “Ir wou't do,” as Bob Ingersoll ‘would say, Too mavy republicans all over ihe Uaion protested sgainst cor- rupt party methods at tho late olec- tion for such an addie-headed bantam as edits The Omaha Republican to read them the riow act. The fifteen huudred thousand republicans who either declined to vote at ad or who voted with the oppozitlor, con get alorg a great deal better without the party than the party without their support. This is oleotion day gospel which none but & fool will deny. THE avnual banquec of the Omaha stenographers, draws attentin to its inoreasing demand in all quarters for exporienced shori-hand reporters and clerks, 8ix years ago only two stencgraphers were located in our city, Mr, John T. Bell, the present reporter of the district court, and Mr, Homer Stull, recently reporter for the Uaited Stales coarts. Taere aro now nearly thicty short-hand reporters in Omaha, of whom twenty are employed In the railroad < flizes of our city, and the domand always exceeds the sup- ply. Ten years auo a stonog- rapher outside of the aitachees of tho press was s rarity. Modern business activity has revolutionizad the slow methods of the past. The increaring use of the wails and tele- graph and the consotidation of smaller bustuess concerns into large establish- menta have called into existence hun. | democratio vote he dreds of clerks to whom & knowledge of shorlhand has brought steady snd well paid employment. Every groat corporation now counts ite ecores of phosographers, who enable heads of departments to trausact with ease in two or three hours ten times the amount of business which some years ago would have been cou- sldered a good day's work. And a profession which & few yoars ago was looked wupon as a species of legerdemain is to.day re. ocognized as a calling open to all who have the energy and perseverance to prosecute its coaseless practice to pro ficlency. The Nebraska stenographic sseociation which was organized less than three years ago is one of the pioneer sasociations in the country. Its efforte were largely instrumental THEADMINISTRATION TALKS With a single blow President Arthur has silenced forever the malicious slan- derers who have endeavored to smirch his reputation in connection with the star route prosocuions, The dismis- salof government officials, who have prostituted thelr positions tc assist the star route thieves, will fall like a thunder bolt on what Attornoy Gen- eral Browster calls “‘tho worst gang of organized scoundrels that ever existed sinoe the commencement of the gov- ernment.” Marshal Henry, whose entire sym- pathies have been with Brady, Dorsey & Oo., and who is charged with ir- regular and neglizent conduct in the sslection of the jury, steps down and out. Postmaster Aiken and his aseistant, who have used the power and inflaence of their positions to interfere with the prosecution, are ruthlessly bo- headed. M. D. Helm, the foul mouthed foreman of the Congressional Record, who controls one of the star route or- gans, which has been the vilest of all the dirty sheets in the pay of the thioves, is unceremoniously bounced and Georgo E. Spencer, our own Georgo, still rogretfully remembered in Nebraska, and who for months has been uslng his U, P, pars to escape tostifying in Washington, in promptly removed from his office of government director of the Union Pasific. We commend to every reader of Tuk Bee tho scathing letter of At- torney-General Brewater recommond- ing these removals, It is the utter- ance of an indignant and honest man who has found his efforts on behalf ot justico balked and thwarted at every stop by men in the employ of the gov- ernment which he was endeavoring to protect. *‘After serious and prolonged delib- eration over all the details of the onse,” says Mr. Browster, ‘‘my inves- tigations have satisfied me that the men who were Indicted were guilty men, and merited the extreme pun- ishment of the law. They had pro- jeoted under cover of official power, and under color of official authority, a systematio plan of deliberate robbery of the publio treasury; to carry out that plan they had laid their hands upon a fund dedicated by law to a great public servico --a service that is conspicuously one of the fruits and causes of our civilization, our socisl comfort, our commercial prosperity, our national growth, Mit- lions of that money they perverted to their own private gain and divided it for their own personal purposes. It was the condign act of an infamous conspiracy and deserves the sevorest punishment the law can inflict, Such men are traitors to social and official uty, and thoy are public enemies, whom the authority of the law tor Morton runs way ahead of his ticket receiving 28,600 votes while the democratic avorage was only 26,- 847, The predecessor of Dawes,Governor Nance, ran considerably ahead of his tlcket, receiving 55,237 votes, while Garfi :1d only received 54,979, On the other hand, Edward Rog- gen, the next mecretary of state, re- oceived a flattering but merited com- pliment in polling the largest vote, and nearly 1300 votes ahead of the head of his ticket, These stubborn figuren teach an important lesson that cannot fail to impress political leaders and parties in this state two years hence, They show that the republicans oan no longer rely upon tho irresisti- blo force of 27,000 majority. They demonstrate beyond a doubt thata non:ination by a repu blican atete con- vention is no longer equaivalent to an election. They Impress upon every intelligent man the stubborn fact that the failure of tho republican party to give practical response to the aati- monopoly sentiment will drive it from power two years hence, DIVIDING THE DISTRICTS One ot tho first questions which will come up before our next legisla- ture is that readjustment of our judi- mgult be exerted without hesitation or roluctance. The higher their past po- nition the greater their atn and sterner must be their punishment.” Where aro now the cowardly boasts of the star route orgaus that the ad- minlstration was yielding a half- hearted support to the prosecution? What has become of the insinuations that Mr. Browster was not over anxi- ous to socure the convickion of the defendants? The official axe at Washington has fallen, and the sound of the blow will strike terror to the hearts of every officlal who in the future dares to trust to political influence as a shield behind which to assist highwaymen and robbers in their raids on the public treasur: N ASK A comparison of the official returns of the late election with the vote of 1880 cannot fail to prove instructive. The voto of Nebraska for president in 1880 aggregates 87,855, of which Gar- field received 64,979, Hancook 28,623, and Weaver 3,853 votes. On the state ticket Governor Nance received 65,237 votes, and Tipton, his democratio opponent, 28,167 votes, whiloe Valen. tine, for congress, only polled 62,647 voles, The vote of Nebraska for state offisers in 1882 axgregatos 88,214, of whioh the republican average is 44,- 180, tho democratic average 20,847, and the anti-monopoly averaze 17,187, It will thas be seen vhat while the total vote of the state for 1882 is 809 above the aggregate of 1880, the re. publican vote has fallen off from b64,- 079 to 44,180 voter, s loss of 10,799 votes, or about 21 per cent, and the dropped from 28,- 523 to 26,847, « loss of 1,676 votcs, or vearly 6 per cont, These losses and the bulk of the greenback vote are represented in the anti-monopoly ag- grogate of 17,187 votes. The average republican vote polled, 44,180, is only 146 votes more than the average vote polled by the epposition, The most remarkable feature of the official returns is toat James W, Dawes, the republican candidate for goveraor upon whom no pereonal war was waged in any quarter ran way be- hind every candidate on his ticket ex- cept Loran Olark, ihe defeated can- didate for state treasurer.Jj The sverage republican vote includ. ing Clark wes 44,180, while Dawes only received 48,495, As compared with his colloagues Dawes ran 846 he- hind Kendall, land commissioner; 916 in securing the orgamization of the national associstion, and the influence and atar< i+ of its mewmbers is now re- coguized throughout the country. No profession » > wmuch as journalism ap- preciates the work of the stenographer, sud no profession imposes such tasks upou the expert phonographer. behind Wallichs, auditor; 964 behind Powers, attorney general; 1,026 be- hind Agee, lioutenant governor; 1,219 behind Jones, school superintendent, and “1,270 behind Roggen, secretary of state. Thisisa very bad showing for Mr, Dawes especially in view of the fact that his democratio competi- cial districts, This is & prossing de- mand for an increase in the number of district courts, which can only bo made by a reapportionment of coun- tien. Bix district judges ars unable to dispanse justice with dispatch and dispose of oivil business within reasonable time, Population has in- creased rapidly and litigation has kept pace with the increase of population, Oar district courts are so over- crowded with business that great in- justice is done to men and women charged with crime, and business in- tereals are put to unwarrantable de- lay and inconvenience in the settle- ment of dieputed cases. Every judge is overworked in attempiing to dis- pose of the old lumber with which the docketa are filled, In Douglas county the court is twn yoars behind the docket, which at the present term of court consisted of over 400 cazes. In Lancaster county we are informed that the stato of af- fairs is but little botter. The only rem- edy lies in an increase of the districts and the appointment of two or three additional judges to divide the work, Douglas county alone with her 50,000 peoplo furnishes enough litigation to engago the entire attention of the Douglas county court at every session and our ‘merchants and ocitizevs are complaining, and with good reason that the attempt to administer juatice fails, bocause the time of the court must be divided betwéen four counties when this county 1s already two years behind the dooket. A feeble attempt was made in the last iegis- lature to enter upon the work of re- distributing, but it failed. Another two years oughtnot to be permitted to elnpso before these necesary changes are made. ‘WHEN we admonished the new po- litical firm of Yost and Nye to sweep bafore their own door bofore they at tempt to dictate what should be the test of pariy loyalty they begin to rquirm, and deny their past record. Wo aro now assared that Mr. Yost did not turn traitor to his party in the days of Andy Johnson, and we are in- formed that his Fremont coparcener did not desert Grant and take up with the combination of democrats and Greeleyites in 1872, This would be very refreshing if it were only true, lv is a matter of record that Casper E. Yost held the offico of United States marshal of Nebraska under Andrew Johnson, and when that eminent turn-coat swung around the circlo with the constitu- tion in his coat tail his Nebraska mar- shal swung in with him and helped to organize a coalition party between the democrats and republioan renegados, that nominated J, Sterling Morton for governor at Piattsmouth in 1867, Soon after Andy Johnson stepped down and Goneral Grant had taken tho helm, the truly loyal Casper was bounced by the man from Appomatox, and from that time on for several years ho kept the political company of copperheads a good deal more o that of republicans, For verification of these hietoric truths see back files of The Omaha Republican, There is no publle record of the po- litical antics of the little upsquirt from Fremont, All that we kuow 1s that he was the son of his father and nephew of his uncle, The political firm of Nye, Colson & Co. was repated to be in the Greeley eamp in 1872, and the precocious youth holléred for Greeley, although not old enough to vote for him, There was no crime in this. Simply his political ears had not yet gone through the evaporating process, That was ten years ago when he was swoet sixteen. He has noi galned very much in wisdom although he has in years; but the smashed paues in his parental conservatory oughtto have taught him that it is not wise to throw stones in glass houses—uot even when the glass is two inches thick, — TuE Omaka star rodte cases, which have dragged along in the United States courts for over & year, were concluded Saturday by a virtual ac- quittal of the defendants. Itis true " | “Rixa that & nominal fine of §600 was im- posed upon Olary as the result of a suit whioh had cost the government $5,000, but Judge Dundy intimated that even that sam he feared was somewhat excessive. In this view he will probably have the sapport of the venal editors of Umaha, who were paid to suppress all comment on the oases during their pendency. If the trne history of the star route trials in Nobraska is ever written it will show up & record which will smirch the reputation of more than one mau who holds high his head in this commu- nity. — Tue Ropublican still insista that Collector Orounse must go. The only ground upon which Lorenzo Crounse deserves to be impeached and removed from offico is that he did not fight Valentine hard enough. A man has no business to koook a robber down with a stuffad club. ATTORNEY GENERAL BREWSTER may be tempted to a good deal of profan- ity when he reads the report of the outcome of the Nebraska star route “rials, and especially the sentence of the honorable courl. E—— NEW BOOKS. Cunrew Musr Nor Rine To Nigut,—By Hartwick Thorpe, Profueely illustrated by F. T, Merrill and E. H. Garre't, in full page and letter press drawings, en- graved by Andrew. Cleth, nm ilt, 8150, Lee & Shepard, Boston, For sale by W, T, S:aman, Few American ballads have taken a stronger hold upon the reading pub- lic than Mra, Rosa Hartwick Thorpe's “‘Curfew Must Not Ring To-night.” Itis one of tho few poetical pieces which, however much it may be criti- cised, still possesses that indefinable element of attraction which no lover of the emotional and pathetic can pos- sibly resiat, first saw the light in a local newapaper it has been copied and imitated far and wide, has been translated into soveral foreign langusges, has been set to music, and acted in charades. It has found a place in all recent col- lections of poetry and eong, and has become a leading number in the repertoires of most public readers. So remarkable and touching a ballad has now found a fitting garb, and it is not too much to aseert that the elegant volume, contgining this poem em- bowered in most exquisite illustra- tions, which Lee & Shepard have just published for their holiday trade, will not fail to satiefy the most critical, The poem is herein given complete, witha new stanza added by the author, and is a most perfect example of all that is excellent in the art onrmtmg The paper is of tho finest quality and heavily inid. Bul perhaps the most striking feature ot the volume is the tlluatrations, of which there are twenty-two, and many full page, Theee illustrations were designed by F. T. Merrill and E. H. Garrett, and engraved by Andrew. It would be difficult to say which of these illustra tions are the most capilvating, and, amid 80 much that is exquisite, one is tempted to confess that all are as fine as perfect art can make them. Tz WonpmsruL, Gy or Tokio: or, Fur. ther Adventures of the Jewett F'.mu and thelr Friend Otto Nambo. - By Hd. ward Greey, th une Imndr and sixty-nine illustcations. Iiluminated cover, $L75; cloth, black and gold, $2.60. Leo & Shepard, For sale by W, L, Seaman. ‘The interest arouscd lest seazon by the publication of Mr. Gresy‘- “Young Americans in Japan” will receive a frosh impulse this year by the appear- ance of a new volume'by the same author, entitled, “The Woaderful City of Tokio,” just isrued by Lee & Shepard. In‘the attractiveness of its matter and illustrations, it is even better than the earlier book, of which itis a companion as regards shape, sizs and extornal appearance. Mr. Greey was long a resident in Japan, and by personsl coutact with ali classes of its people was onabled to gain information ab firet hand, The illustrations, most of them by a Japu neee artist, are singularly unique and intensely graphic, and impart some- thing of anew life to the text. The book belongs to the highest order of juvenile literature, and hnpplly blends with tho pleasure that amount of profit which most parents are desirous of affording ambitious youth, Ovg Lirre ONgs: Illustrated stories and poems for little people. William T, Adams (Oliver Optie,) Editor, With thrce hundred and eighty allustrations. 1lluminated covers, $1 75: cloth, black 14, §2 Teo & Shepard, Bos. in that ita pages nre nrepmd for childran by writers and avtists of acknowledged ekill, who are thovouph- ly sympathy with ohildJite and up- preciate its needs, Every poem and story and piotura fn original and wade oxpresaly for the book, and there is a complete absenca of old cuts and old matter. In its wealth. of literary merits and the excellence of its cuts, it outatripa every other book, that has hitherto been gotten up for young people. Many of the illustrations are veritable works of art, while the storl aud ema sre not only pleysing as nncll:,ubut are algo rich in ioatructive matter, As & holidsy p,\lt for any boy or girl, “Our Liitle Ones” 18 incomparable, wnd the pleasure and instruction which its pages afford will continue throughout the entire year for ull children under their teens, Our, w:u) Brus,” By Alfred Tennyson, antly illustrated by Mlu uaphroy, In full-page sud letter ress drawings, Engraved by Andrew. mom full gilt, $1.60. For sale by W. Seaman. Perhaps the most familiar and oft- quoted stanzas in Tennyson's *‘In Me- moriam" are those beginning: “Ring oub wild bells, to the wild sky, The flying ud. the frosty lluhc; The year is dying in the nl Ring outy wild belle, and Lot pim die.” A happy thought pmmpud Lee & Bhopus. of ! out this favorite sol . - as a reminder of tmas-tide, in a new md.hpndy illustrated twm. suitable for tation, In the prep aration of the volume the same care aud attention have been exercised as were previously bestowed upon the Since the day when it B eneller yolume compcsing their series of household favorites. There are fifteen 1llustrations, all designed by Miss Humphrey, and engraved by Andrew. These designa not only ren- der-what is already attractive even more 80, but also serve to shed frosh light and impart new intercst to paes- agen which heretofore may have not been clear to the reader’s mind. Thia is the firat time that ‘l'ennyson’s de- lightful and a>ul stirring Ohristmaa song has been so impressively and touchingly interpreted. THE MAGASINES, Variety and freshness of illustra- tions and literary features are claimed for the Dacember Oenturs. John Marshall, the Great Chiel-Justice, is the subject of the frontispieco, which, with character sketches and many por- traits, belcngs to E. V, Smalley’s pa- per_on ‘‘The Supreme Court of the United States.” ‘‘My Adventures in Zoni” is Fravk H. Cashing’s paper on the remarkable tribe of Pueblo In- dians with which he has been living as an adopted child for two yeara or more, William Elliot Griflis exphmn **The Corean Origin of Japanese Art,” and brings to the aesistance of the text several striking reproductions of old Corean art. *‘The Taxidermal Art” is the subject of several beauti- ful engravings, nnd in the text Frank- lin H, North writos with freshness about taxidermists and the ourioue features of their art. A portrait of the late Dr. John Brown, a portrait of the mastiff Rab, and a pieture of the author's stady, nnd 80me pmusing groteagues by Dr. Brown illustrate a charming paper on *‘Rab’s Friend,” by Andrew Lang. Something between a slclyxmd o satiric e:say is Henry Jamoe, jr.'s “Point of View,” which has, as a study of American manners, even more intereat than ‘‘Daisy Mil- ler.” The purpose is, by a series of clever letters by Americans who have lived fn Europe, and by an educated Englishman and a French Academi- cian, to show the merits and defects of American lifo and character as they appear from the different points of these oritics. Nicroras: An Illustrated magazine for Young Folks, Conduated by Mar Mapes Dodge. For 1882, In two voi- umes, Crimson cloth gilt, square 8vo, pp 936, New York: The Century Com- pany. Every American child knows 8t. Nicholas, as it come to them month by month freighted tv the brim with the choicest of stories, piotures, poeme, jinglea—eversthing that ihe mdahuguhlu publishers can collect for the delight of their millions of young readers. These two handsome volumes, bound in tho familiar red and black covers, contain the numbers for the past year, Such a treasury of whole- some and instructive and entertaizing reading matter for the young can hardly be found'elsewhere, or so much of 1t ut 8o reasonable a price. Ideal Christmas hooks. BOOKS RECEIVED, Tk Joux Rover, by J. T, Trow- bridge. 1llustrated. Cloth, sLn Aui_Apgirr, by Oliver Optic. Tllustra- ted; §1.25." Lee & Shepard DrakE, THE Ska Kine or DEvow, by George Makepeace Towle. Tllustrated; $1.25, Lee & Shepard. THE YoUNG SILVER SEEKERS, by S. W. Cozzens, Cloth, $1.00, Leo & Shep: o THar Groriovs Sovc or Oup Cloth, §1.50. Lee & Shepard. PoruLak ScieNos Mormu.v for December, Lirrer’s LiviNe AGe No. 2005, OMAELA COFFEE AND SPIGE MILLS. Roasters and Grinders of Coffecs and £picee. Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDERI Clark’s Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC. H. G. OLARK & C0., Proprietors, 1403 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. LEB, FRIBD & CO. Y EX O I SA. B HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harney ' t., - OMAHA, NEB. MCMAI]CN ABERT & Co,, Wholesale - Druggists, 1315 DOUGLAS STREET, - - OMAHA, KEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOOL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth 8t., OMAHA, NEB. THE modern millionaire is superior to the caprices of the stock markets. His enormous wealth enables him to smile complacently at the dying ago- nies of the Wall street lambs. When the market is weak he purchases heav- ily and unloads on the rise which is eertain to follow. It is st the Goulds and Vanderbilts and Kesnes and Cam- macks who suffer from a break in the market., Itis the slender-pursed im- itators of tbese monopoly buzzirds who fall into the net, and reap the consequences of speculating against the kings cf Wall street. Cursed by the Most Bitter Quinine. pringfield Republican. Tho time has passed when demo- cratic victories send a shiver down the backbone ot the con.inent, stop the wheels of industry and dry up the springs, Some Moonshine of the Hour. AtlastaConstitution. ‘the-current talk in the eastern pa- pers gelative to tho dangers of electing a western or southern man to the speakership s all moonshine, ‘Where the Surprise Would He. Utica Herald, David Davis says ho would not be surprised if Logan were nominated in 1884 for presicent, But sbout H0,- 000,000 of people would be, Mr. Sen- ator, ouse. Irlshmen in the New York Jourzal. The next congrees will have a strong {nfusion of Irieh inte!leo ing of him pluck and ene; Among the Trish *¢ and 10 manor born” arer Palrick H. ¢ <liins, from Boatou, recent! den* of the land loague of the Uuited N ates, and a prominent iawyer; W. B Robinson, Brooklyn, the “*Richelict” of the New York Tribudo in ita early daye; Wil- linm McAdoo, Jersey City, slso alaw- yerand nationsl Irsiman; Johu F. Finerty, of Ohicago, whose praises are now being sounded in almost every journal> of the country; and Martin i'unm Cleveland, connected with sev- eral Trish xvrqanlmlionn. There aro slto a number of other congresswen of Irigh birth or blood, Ameng them are' O'Neil, Missouri; Cullen avd Murphy, Llinoie; Ferrall, Now Jersey, Wha succseds Rebeson, Boyle and Cur- tis, Pennsylvania; Regan, of Texas, hud(}lmpbell of Brooklyn. In the senate, Fair, of Novada, is a native of Baby’s Appeal. “What makes I cry and folks eay Iz naughty? Csuse stomach ache, snd sour in my wmounffy; Cause too, can't sleep, and worms bites ze belly; “Fever,” za say, feel like I was jelly, Guess your babies bries, Dick sud Vie toria, ‘When mamma's gone, aud don't have Cas- TUKLA. “You're right, they fairly yell,” There, Undle Oy; Oousin Frank have Casroais, bedon't cry. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLTSALE CLOTHIERS 1301 and IZ03 Farnam St. Cor. |13th QMAHA NEB‘ HIMEBAUGH MERRIAM & CO,, Proprietors, ‘Vholcsale Dcalers in Mills Supplied With Choice Varlemm of Mlllmu Wlmt Western Trode {Sppplied with Oats and Corn Lowest Quotations, with prompt chipments, Write for prices. S e oTTY PLAINING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter's WMaferials, ALSO SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window ”~ and Door Frames, Etc First-class tacilitice for tho Manufacture of all kindes ol Mouls maiching s Specialty, Orders from the eountry will be promy :tly execnted addressall cowmunications to A. MOYER, Proprietor, Painting and D. H. McDANELD & CO, HIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, W OOX. ‘“ 204 North 16th 8t., Masonic Block, Main House, 46, 48 and 62 Doar- born avenus, Chicago. Refer by permission to Bldo and Leather National Bank, Ohicago, AN L)