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4 The Omaha Bee. Published every morning, except Sun. ay. The enly Monday morning daily.fin) TERMS BY MAIL— One Year....810.00 | Three Months.$2.00 8ix Months.. 5.00 | One Month.... 1.00 “HE WEEXLY BEE, published every ‘We ineeday. TERMS POST PAID— One Year......$2.00 | Three Months, 50 Qix Months. ... 1.00 | One Month.... Axxricax News Compaxy, Sole Agents Newndealers in the United States,| CORRESPONDENCE -All Oommuni- iatfons relating to News snd Editorial oatters should be addressed to the Kprros or Tur Bee, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIll Busines Tetters and Remittances should be ad 4ressed to Trr Bek PUBLISHING COMPANY -JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor Tae demand for ‘‘Posts” Is very active in thejpolitical market. — 20| torested reside. On its face It seems| g question cannot, however, be Wicoins claim to be a prophet or the son of a prophet will presently be settled. Trr tempest in a teapot over the discovery that the board of public works {s abolished by repeal of the act of 1882 will presently subside, THE warm weather in the west has cleared the snow trom the ranges and visions of 30 per cent profit are again troubling our pauper cattle kings in thelr sleep. No wonder Pennsylvania is howling for protection against fore gn industry. Philadelphla reports four sets o trip- lets born during February and all of German nationality. GoverNor Dawes has made sev eral excellent judicial appointments, but some of his jadges have not calibre enough to pass mus. ter for a cross-roads justice of the peace, MivLiioxs against the muliitude have won in New York, bat popular indig- nation against the success of Jay Gould’s lobby at Albany promiscs to make itself felt in & manner which even the great stock jobber and secu- rity shaver cannot fail to understand, Tue annual meeting of the Union Paclfio directors was held on Wednes- day in New York, Notwithstanding the expenses of the leglslative sesslon the Lincoln lobby the directors were able to declare their usual quar- terly dividend of 11} per cent. . S— ‘WiscoNsix 8 production of lamber decreased twenty-five per ocent last year. The tariff on lumber, which congress refused to remove, is a pre- miom on forest destruction, which Is granted at a terrible cost to the present and future prosperity of the United States. — Maz. Bixier, of North Platte, whose harrangue in the Valentine convention at Fremont was too vulgar and in- decent for publication has been com- missioned by Governor Dawes as dis- trict attorney for the Tenth district, Virtoe has its own reward. Ir comes as natural for the editor of the Omaha Herald to defend monop- oly as for a duck to take to water, Governor Olevelands veto of five cent fares on the elevated rallroads is com- mended by Dr, Miller as & just pro- tection of Jay Gould's property, fifty per cent. of which s water, LoraN CLark has been a sad eyed man ever since the November snow fall. He was not only snowed under by the anti-monops, but his choloe for United States senator was oarried home on a shutter., At last Lotan's long face ia {lluminated by a smile, the Rovernor has appointed Loran's man Friday as distriot judge. Evex with the changes made by the new tarlff our annual surplus revenue which can be applied to decreasing the national debt will be something over $100,000,000. We have done our share of debt reduoction, What the country demand now {s tax reduc- tlon. The last congress has only driven the entering wedge. —— Tae Railway Review remarks that it is “a melancholy reflection that our law makers offer standing invitations to bribery.” The melancholy reflec- tlon s that our laws do not take the railroad bribe givers by the throat and shake theminto the penttentlary where they belong. There can be no bribe- ry without corruptionists, of which the monopoly managers and thelr paid attorneys are the leadlng and most successful lights. Ir Omahs happened to be an Incon- sequential country village she could afford to stand the open creeks in the norih and south sections of the town, As & large metropolls, with a growing populstion, every dictate of health, decency and regard for the appearance of the city demand that these noxious sud uely o) _sewers shall be con- wverted in ir:lunudnlu. Economy at the oxpense of life s the poorest kind of economy. THE DAILY. BEE~-OMAHA FRIDAY MARCH 9 . THE SUPREME COURT AND RE- | as also the duty on sllk, Both these PUDIATION. articles will be lowered 1n price The supreme court of the United (¢, gonsumers, The changes from States has declded that there Is 00|gpecific, so much a pound, to constitutional machinery for the en-|,q4 valorem dutles or s0o much forcement of claims agalnst a state. | o, tho value of the article, makes it This dacision which was rendered last | giianlt to compare the old and new gt spmm—m——n o, e DOUBILE AND SINGIILE ACOTING peachment of Andrew Johnson, Cul- POWER AND HAND lom I8 & man of ability likely to take a good place. Nabrasks is pretty o exchanging Saunders for any y parkling oyos, and resolve that he|not positively disroputable, but Color- will win such golden opinlons from the |ado and Minuesots wera differently Steam Pumps. Engine Trimm.ngs' govornment directors of hi situated, and their new officers rank as tion, Those inspiring words: ‘‘Great [the worst In the list. Teller's old [ kI¥ING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGE PIP _ STRAM service he has rendered his country,” filled by Bowen, while Win- PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. L4 week in the Virginia and Loulsiana(geriq, A falr estimate gives an will ring in his ears and revive his ollowed by Sabln,—men whose HALMUAV WI"D'MlLLs cHunc" AND SGHUOL GELLS repudiation cases has occasloned the averago reduction of alx per cent flagging energles whenever consclence onal and political characters are Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. by those whom it s thelr duty to watch and report upon. Many a young lad, glnnae into the battle of e dune, will read this euloglum with and one of the managers of the im: reparing to ife, to do or most widespread comment in the east, | throughont the list, This is still very pel tempts him to stray from the path of | sharply condemned u every hand. and espectally in Now York whero the | hjoh tariff protection, but it is six per B0 i : b £ 30088, The great losses In this section are, of majority of the partles directly In-f gont bettor than the old tarif. The rislog generation will naturally [ course, Davis and Windom, and it 18 want to emulate and better Mr. Dil- | plain that the Northwest as a whole lon’s career. The government direct- | will occupy a conalderably dimtnished 7 SPECIAL 7&0({‘10}_‘}_ '_i‘o X ly or lack of apace, fail to | place in the senate after this week. . Focotat the sxglita wiieh ienged || 2 "* | Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR their commendation. Their omission the report of & committee of congress| Thirteen thousand republicans re- [J in 1873 which lnvestigated the affairs | fused to vote the party ticket last year of the Unlon Paclfic road. in Nebraska because they belleved the The Inquiring hero-worshiper will | party leaders and bosses were not sin- ° can be made good by a brief glance at cere In their professions of reform. in that report In connection with a|When the opportunity presented it- wonderfal Invention called the Credit |self In the legislature to accomplish a shameful and deplorable fact regardoed as settled, As long as our that the sole barrlor agalnst re-|rovongeis over a hundred millions, pudiation by states of thelr| ;o0 than is necossary to pay all the financlal obligation ;rests in che credit expenses of the government, taxa- of the state itself and the honor of | yion 1y oppressive and ought not to its representatives, It looks like an|pe maintained. The revenue and invitation to dishonest stato leglslas | ¢arigr bl of the Forty-seventh tares to easy and safe repudiation, a8 | (ongress will do for a beginning. It it certainly is a warning to investors |y, , good begloning because it ac. to ute the greatest caution In dealing tually makes some reduction in the with commonwealth obligations, surplus revenuo. But it cannot be Still the grounds npon which the | considered a final settlement of the decision is based appear to be sound, | nestion, Prices are still too high The question is stated to have been | ,nq wages too low. If tbe over. purely one of technlcal {ntorpretation | gtimulation of industry has brought us of the constitation. The polnt ralsed | qooreased wages the removal of the In the Loulsiana case was whethor a | oxorbitant tariff must bring us lower mandamus could lesue to compel the state treasurer to apply the proceeds of certain speoific taxes to the payment of repudiated bonds. The opinion of | nomical education to know that a dol- the court is that the sapreme court|lar is sometimes only worth seventy- has no power under the constitution | five conts, At present prices of pro- to compel the officers of a state to per- | visions, compared with values of five form anact in violatlon of state en- years ago, that Is about 1ts parchasing actments. Under its ruling the|power, court may pass upon a state law o o 75 but it may not issue s mandamus to o Taz Pioneer Press throws some light state officer; It may pronunce a repudi- [ #pon Don Cameron's recent exhibition ating law unconstitational, but it can— | of himself in the senate in connection not command the state treasurer to|With General Van Wyck's attack npon pay the repudisted debt. Justloes|Mr. Brewster's cffico. It says: “To those who have a memory, his uncontrollable passion s explained by the fact that twenty yoars ago, when Simon Cameron was Lincoln's secre- tary of war, sad Van Wyck a con- gresaman from New York, the latter was active in denouncing a habit the old man had of awarding fat contracta for military supplies to his personal and political friends, History does repeat herself, even in small things.» e—— Recreant Party Leadere, Columbus Journal, first find Mr. Dillon's name mentioned It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind, One pound is equak to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oake in the fall and win- Mobilier. This was a kind of ‘‘calcu- | the reforms expected by the people in | ter, Instead of running down, will Increase in weight and be in good market- 1 " though of an entire- | passing some just law to remedy the n})le condition in the epring. 'pnxrymen a8 well as others who use it can tes- ly different kind from that planned by | evil complained of agalnst railroad | tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $26.00 per ton; no the mathematician Baggage. It would | monopolies, these same leaders and | charge for sacks. Address not work for anybody bat the Direc- | boses through the represe: .| o4-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, itles it was a wonderfal machine, |and thus justly judging them, we con- M. Hellman & Co. for the Drectors—or trustees. | clude that their professious and prom- They used to get together periodi- |1ses before election were not alncero. WHOLESALE clly, once a °woek of s, The Welove the republioun crafi and pro L T IE CLOTHIERS ) chairman would turn the crank, and gale to cling to her until shegoes down, the directors (trustees) would throw [but we shall take the liberty, as we 1301 and 1308 Farnam St. Cor. I3th OMAHA, NEB. into the hopper all the contracts, o the right, before she sinks, to McMAHON, ABERT & CO, f the stockholders | ted under professions and pi of the Union Pacific. It would not [give the rcqalred relief, failed to pass work for them except as they all hung | any bills having that object in view. together. But with all these pecullar- | They must be judged by thelr actlons, prices for the necessities of domestic consumption. The industrial classes of America have galned enough eco- trusts, bonds, stocks, leases, bills, ob- [ warn our brethren the leaders, bosses ligations of indebtedness, government | and captains of the craft in Nebraska land grants, etc., etc., an the ma- | of the danger ahead and we shall help chine would take them into its cavern- | avert it, if possible. The republican ous'depths, and In a trice have them | party must heed the public demand of all figured up and sorted out and de- | the people for reform in relation to livered out of the right spout. The|monopolies, and it is the party that faithfal machine never falled to turn |ought, without deception, inaugurate the assets over to the directors, |and brirg about the needed reform be- and labilities to the stockholders, |fore the party and itsleaders are wiped It has an almost hum: - Intelligence. | out of existence by the voice of public It figured out to » cent that it|sentiment. cost 24,500 to procure the passage of —— Field and Harlan alone dissent from this opinion, which they characterizs a8 an outrage upon justice, and a de- parture from all the precedente of the courts, The Pioncer Press in commenting on this important declsion says: ‘It s not unlikely that this clear, bald statement of a disgraceful principle: this frank confession of the impotence of the matlonal government to enforce common honesty upon the members of the federal union, may do more than| ‘‘THE present method of assess- suything else to hasten reme. |ment in Omaha is a farce, eaid a prom- dial amendment to the con.|inent banker,” of this city yeaterday. stitution- The declsions ro. | Every one who knows anything about the value of real estate know that our taxable valuation is at least $18,- 000,000. There is no euch thing as an equalization of values as the assess. ment s now conducted, and Omaha suffora serlously by the false position in which this low rating places her abroad. Five per cent sounds like a heavy tax rate, doesn’t 1t? And it Is hard to convince an eastern capltalist that this levy is made on a valuation of from one-seventh to one-tenth of the actual market price of property in Omaba.” Omaha bears the lightest burden of taxation of any oity of her size in the country, The trouble is that the shameful evasion of taxes by wealthy real estate owners throws an undue share of taxation upon tax-payers of moderate means. A falr assessment of property in this city would more than double our property valuation and at the present basis of our tax levy would decrease the rate of taxation to less than two per cent. ™ Regular Repentence. :::8:::. ‘}fmyt‘)::”!;”igfi?“fll’ tl:?::fi: Fort Douglass Letter to Pottsvills Chronicle, pany, and that the purpose of a gov- The regular army s a harbor ‘lor all 0 esa e ernment commissioner, who was sent | 80rts of people. The drum major of ont to inepect the road, cost $25,000. | the regimental baud fs a_graduate of D i t Hundreds of thousands of dollars wore | Harvard college. The firat sergeant spent by the directors to “‘factlitate” | Of one ot the companies was at one 315 DOUCLAS STREET - - 'OMAHA NEB. McNAMARA &DUNCAN. leglslation by congress, millions | time an iufluential business man of WHOLESALE DEALERS IN were takon from the government Philadelphia, but lost all he had and KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA and the stockholders, but the Credit |18 now solaieriny for $13 per month; Mobllier kept every account with me- | 1 #0 it goes. I could relate a hun- S ° resisted. The suprem Philadelpnia News. in Bond or Free. Also direct Importers of been got to “:,,:: (™ d:eh‘::::‘n?;: The band of wild, feroclous Sioux e po shanical accuracy, and alwaya gave dred Instances of bright and intellec- Laterests of the Union Paclficrequired. | Indlans who, as members of an un The company makes the government |lucky theatrical company, were fi.’ the Lhmt on the money stranded in this clty have received ’ ’ the operation of this little invention to Mr. Dillon and his associates, the committee of congress found after Gov Steyens’ Last Work. careful inquiry to have been $48,925,. | From an At'ants Speciak ¢ 328 34 in bonds, stocks, and cash. ‘Wednesday afternoon a petition for They bullt the road, as trustees, for pardon came up for his action, He 0,720,958 94, and charged their [ had examined it before. As he was stockholders 894,640,287 28 about to sign it Secretary?Slidell The fidelity of the ‘‘hero of our|‘‘Governor, perhaps we had better de- story” to his own interests has done | I8y this matter a tew days.” more, though this was his great| Mr. Stephons replied: ‘I know stroke. Under his management, the |Very well what I am dolvg,” and attempia of different state govern.|sizned the pardon. This was his last ments to make the Unlon Pacific pay |official act, taxes on its land, as the farmers have had to do, have been very successiully Lo, the Poor Indian. duce the need to narrow limits. The constitution already con- demns repudiation of a contract by a state as wrong, The casus omissus s the fallure to provide means to compel the undoing of the wrong. The only thing needed Is an article empowering the fedoral courts to proceed by man- damus, or by simple judgment, to en- foroe agalnst a state the payment of a debt due to cltizens. Of course, the difficulty in such & proceeding as this is the violence 1t does to the notion of s state a8 a soverelgn political body, but that notion suffered considerable violence twenty years ago, and the na- tion has survived it. —— TaE refusal of a republican ocon. gress to deal with the question of the forfelted rallroad land grants will throw the responsibility of righting this wrong upon the democratic party. The public will now be given, at the next sesslon, a chance to see what democratic professions of anti. monopoly mean, Half of thé arable lands of the United States not taken up by settlers are clalmed by great corporations ~ under government grants, with the oconditions of which they have never complied. Over 125,000,000 of acres of the debits to the stockholders and the | {08! men vho have good connections, credits to the trustees. The profits of | 82d Who have Zenlisted on acoount of family difficulties, failurer, etc, ernm. some postal orders, and returned to '::vm‘:;nt ::‘:' .&(: thelr former business of whitewashing " oopie pay double prics for all it fonoes in Seneca county, New York, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine for them. It spends its recelpts ::. dividends fio‘ its l\ookholdfi: and ':.n iy mOnu‘-h‘ :.dl'c' oluudr g 'mi"“'“' Sy purchase of conneotin 1 - ( } stond of applyiog om to'the liqulda: iy St B o o I - tlon of its $43,000,000 of debt to the | Watkins, Walton, Ind, Price 25 cents &| - PP A Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, government. Mr, Dillon and his as- | box. sociates have improved on the old g R Bottled and in Kegs. 314 & 216 8, 14TH STRREE, - - - (HAHA, NEB. democratio doctrine, and practice with A New Line for Omaha. omnrlm sucoess on the principle that | Special Dispatch to Tus Bas the less government we have, and the| CHicAGo, March 8.—For some time lees the government has, the better, | past it has been surmised by certain This is the story of the achleve. | rallway officlals here, that an import- FEURE i e gud Bn s ok sy e Yt 4 ANHEUSER-BUSGH overnment directors, should beZearefully pondered over by |the western trunk lines and especially young and ambitious, who hope to be |the roads leading from Chicago to 3 able some day to bn'n, big enough | Omaha, The real move, it is sald, s ) Map Brewmg trust to deserve similiar congratula- | being made by the Atchison, Topeka i %, tions, and Santa Fe. It seems the Atchison ‘We have shown the rising genera- | folks have long desired an entrance to : 3 s tion how to win the -flnlflufiu en. | Omaha, to enable them compete with Y S Assocla‘tlon’ comiums of a government director, | the Chicago lines for the California | : OMAHA can get along without a via- duct for che next two years, but she cannot at this tlme afford to dispense with the board of publlc works, If the bungling viaduct bill contains any proviso that can be construed into a the public domaln which years ago|repealof the act auchorizing the crea- should have reverted to the govern- | tlon of a board of public works, there ‘ment are held by glant monopolies|will be no trouble to show that the without the shadow of a legal right. |whole viaduct bill is a dead letter, Protected by & powerful lobby and|owing to varicus Irregularities which backed by a corrupted land office, these cormorants have succeeded in evading the consequences of their bold violatlon of charter conditions. They laugh defiance at every effort of the people’s representatives to make them disgorge thelr unlawfu! gaina, The declaration by congress of the for- felture of these grants Is imperatively demanded by the people. It was heard at the last session, but Speaker For the Rising Generation. Keifer and the corporation lobby on | chicago Tribune. the floor of the house succeeded in| In thelr recent investigation of the Unlon Paclfic the government direc- .:;:;m"h:.u’ kn‘dd:omm‘u° CONGTO8E | ¢ e found a llfilr-SIy hero among its now be asl w thelr his- | nanagers, With an exquisitive appro- torlo regard for popular rights, and | cistion of the modesty of his acquisi. thelr deadly enmity to defiant land | tive career and a burning desire that Now, for s moment, let them gazeon a | business, Atchison is the nearest 3 VIR N sad contrast. point thdllblllne l:.onnhe-, bu:d :.hs Chi- N ; T In 1864 Peter A. Day was chief en- |c8go and Northwestern ros greatly | A gineer of the Union P-’glfia, In that|loterested in any scheme where the S GELEBRATED capacity he estimated the cost of |Santa Ke people could turn all cattle building the road 100 west of Omaha |and graln traffic over to their line for 4 - . D at $30,00 a mile for 100 miles. The|Chicago and eastern shipments. The S S " EG & BUTTLED BEER directors et the contract to Hoxie for | officials of the Atchison are now in the v L $60,000 a mile. Mr. Dey at once|west engaged in this matter it is said. E : THIS EXCBLLENT BEER SPEAKS T <oy~ FOB TOSELE. reaigned his position, He sald: ‘I = — — do not approve of the contract made| The digestive organs weakened and Orders from any part of the Btate or the: Entire West will be promptly shipped: the supreme court would hold as fatal to its validity. SE——— WASHINGTON now boasts of a semi- temperance organization called the ‘‘Three-drinks-a-day society,” It s notloeable that it was not put into active operation until sfier the ad. journment of congreas, with Mr. Hoxle for building the first | Worn out by using cathartic medicines, 100 miles west of Omaha. My |reatored by uslog Brown's Iron Bitters. views of the Pacific railroad are perhaps peculiar. I look upon managers as trustees of the bounty of congri I neod mot expatlate 8. Louis, March 8,—The governor upon the sincerity of my course when has pardoned Clarenee Hite, a noted you refleot that I resign the best posi- member of the James gang, who All Our Goods are Made to the Stand: tlon in my profession which this g_‘“"od gullty to traln robbery in e our country has offered ta any man.” Cbl'llll'fi,, 1882, l'nd ;n unteneu:ln:o Guar antee, r twenty-five years imprisonment. o n-{‘e:‘:?v‘::l‘ .';u; {,::‘::;" bol:g mo’n ‘!".h issued on ltha r;oolrmen- G Eo RG E H EN N l N G, on of the penitentlary physicians. :‘.fi;:,"f?;::fu‘m.-""fi. oHo wat, 88 | Hite s in the last stages of consump- Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. est man, tan. Office Corner 18th and Harney Strests, Omaha, Neb, robbers, :«; ll:nl:nnu :!‘ W:h -:muld b.n:: Jumbe Getting u'::. sad Holeying || RSN THE GREAT GERMAN 1! REMEDY and imitation of his fellow men they | Bridgeport Standard. © pu— Tax new tariff bill I belng thor- | penned the following tribute to M::’ Jumbo, the blg elephant, is growing | | lMORGAN & CHAPMAN' oughly discussed in all the great trade| We cannot omit in this place a centers of the country, The verdict :;“:' .ln‘?n&wnl:‘ch‘l::flzo:nm 5 o 18 by no means unanimous as to its rendered the compaay and the govern- effeot upon the manufactaring pro- | ment. A believer In the sucoess of ducer or the purchasing consumer, :h.'; dh:m&onmthnnd one of its The onl, t lounders, he maintalned 7. Shiag that mesms corialn ln| AN T TR BREE aained it, and for seventcen years given 1t almost his entiro time and tha best of his abllities. For only two of these years has he recelved any compensa- tlon for bis services. If we have ever differed with him concerning any de- " tail of policy or management we have to receive a alight benefit. The |never doubted his sincerity of purpose abolitlon of the match and bank |or his earnest devotion to the best in- chock stamp tax will more directly | ‘¢feats of theroad. | ‘ ‘‘We cannot omit,” they say., 8o benefit the peoplo at Iarge to the ex-|sweet and groat Is the rare soul who tent of over §6,000,000 a year, which | has been developed beneath the shel- has heretofore come out of their|tering charters of the Union Paclfic that the tribute rose spontaneoualy, as i were, to thelr lips by the gentle Missouri Jastice Special Dispatch to Tus Bre. fat. His welght 1s now about seven toos, He seems to be satlafied with Peliorss s s this country, Bridgeport ozone agrees RHEUMATISM, OGER with him; in fact he wouldn't go back | | to the old sod if he could, He s very playful for one of his size, and will stick his trunk down into the pockets of all who come within reach with the freedom of an o'd mcqualntance, He Neuralgla, Solation, Lymbogn 1213 Farnam ' 8t.. Omaha, Neh. BACKACHE, that a large reduction has been made Io tte Internal revenue amounting probably to $40,000,000 a year. This comes chiefly off of tobacco, and bank- Ing capital and deposits, from which the public indirectly may be expected (Suscnmmers to A. Vogeler & pookets, In the tariff schedules sugar bears the largest reduction. The higher grades of sugar ought to fall after July first at least & cont a pound, which will be a saving to consumers of nearly $10,000,000 a year, The tax on raw wool has also been reduced, itkon almost everythiug, and iu spiwe SPRAINS, ] Springtield (Mass). Republioan, complete exoeg;(ur a successor to Rol- . s . : Stair Railings, Balusters, Window; ernment difectors, and the govern.|derson of Nebraska. This is a weak Nemoved oMt ounan &%, 10 109 0. g { 4 p of all lectures and sermons to the con- trary, will chew tubacoo like an old Sarsaems, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, The last of the sentorial dead-locks MANUFAOCTURXRS OF ended Thursday evening when the lins of New Hampshire, The other newgomers from the Northwest are 8, roads | list 'flofi exoeptions, There s one | wil open on March Ioth, a & of pattern and Door Fl‘ames, Etc. % ablo man in James K. Wilson, whowas | bonne'shnd hats, sibbens etc, ' Alo large addl | Firgt-clase facilitioe for the Manufacture of all kindes of Mouldings, Paiz tiag ERADACHS, TOOTHACHR, sinner, BURNS, SCALDS, | ) ] . Michigan leglslature elected Thomas | Ji v mfl‘ul.'mln i 0 a rp e n t e r s M a' t e r 1 a l s ‘ . ALSO | M. Ouallom of Nlinols, J. F. Wilson of A L tions to the (tock of bair goods. comprising all RBEMOWV.AX: compulsion of pure merit. The teeti-|1ows, D. M. Sabin of Minnesota, T, chalrman of the House judlolary ovm- | {U% 5040 Gl tho scasoh. The ooly electric | M » Specialty, Orders from the country will b Dnmztly executed e —— w0 Cra T T o New Senators from the Northwest, And sl :;.n‘-; Dedlly sebes W. Palmer, and the new senate is now MAE KEITH SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, mory s singere, It comes from goy- [ M. Bowen of Colorado and C. F, Man- X ! communioat! ns to MOYER, Fropely ment directors of the Pacific never forget that they are the repres- entatives of the people, and never sllow themselves to be ‘* mesmerise 1" mittee in the 38th and 39th congresses | light millinery store in O ’o‘