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The Omaha Bee. Published morning, exe San. ay. The enly Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL— s Three Months, $3.00 Months,, 5,00 | One Month.... 100 ¢HE WEEZLY BEE, published every ‘We inesday. TERMS POST PAID— 00 | Three Months, 50 Qetomtia: - *L00 | G Sontb.n: 0 AxER10AN Nxws Coupany, Sole Agents Newadealers in the United States, RRESPONDENCE: -All Communi. uggn- relating to News sad Editorial matters should be addressed to the Eprros or Tz Bez. BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Hetters and Remittances should dressed to THE Bxx PUBLISHING COMPANY JuaHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BER PUBLISHING 00., Props. E- ROSEWATER Editor E———————— 81, Louis has gone into spasms over the ‘‘greaser” president. —— Waere is General Jim Brisbin? Some big soldier is wanted as a gaard of the Yellowstone Park. Tre Brooklyn bridge has cost the slster citles £17,000,000. No one has yet been able to discover what the Unlon Paclfic bridge has cost the ofti- 2ons of Omaha and Council Bluffs, — SenaToR MANDERSON I8 sald to be earnestly in favor of transferring the Indian bureau to the war depariment. The senator evidently wants to estab compelled the/coercean lish an employment bureau for un- employed army offisers. Axorner disputed rallroad grant has been confirmed by the land office. Mr. Julian's remark that the mansge- mont by the railroads of the land de- partment s in reality an {llustration of the mansgement of the land de- partment by the rallroads, still holds good. TrERE seems to be no doubt that Gortschakoff was the viotim of polson. 8kobeleff was done to death in the wvery prime of life by a polsoned challce of wine, and even in extreme old age, 1t appears, the titled Russlan finds no ocertainty of dying a natural death. Tur great Nebrasks sunflower 1s delighted to learn that Mr. Joutant is tobe postmaster of Omaha. Less than, six weeks ago this political jumbo pawed the ground farlously at the mere mention that Tom Hall was to be deposed, So——— Wirnix sixty days the East river bridge will be completed and the peo- ple of New York and Brooklyn will have the satisfaction of using & wonder- fal structure on wnich they have ex- pended over seventeen millions of dol- “lare during the sixteen years through which it has been under prooess of construction. Foct passengers will be allowed to cross free, while single herses and vehicles will be charged ten cents and double teams twice that amount, The bridge will be lighted with 70 electrlo lamps and horse cars will run from the outakirts of Brook- 1yu to the city hall, New York. THE press of the country is unani- mous in denouncing the soquittal of Dakes, the Uniontown seducer and marderer. The trial was made a tra- vesity on justice, through a packed jury. Dakes, it will be remembered entered the house of a frlend, robbed it of its brightest treasure and after rousing the unhappy father to frenzy by two of the most brutally insulting letters ever written, deliberately shot him in his own room. Pablic indig- nation s aroused to a fever pitch against both the criminal and his jury box accomplices. The miscarriage of justice has given him his freedom when he ought to be in a felons oell f awalting the hangman's noose. It s auch fallures of our legal machinery in crimes like that committed by Dokes which justify in public opinion private vengeance upon men of whose goilt there s no doubt. No jury in Tar tidal wave of immigaation ls flooding every Amerioan seaport. ‘Well Informed rallway and steamship officlals predict that forelgn immigra- tlon into the United States will be lar- ger this season than during any year in our history. The exciting condl. tions in Karope all favor an exodus to this country. To the standing provo- oations of rigorous soclal conditions wand governmental oppression in Ire- land, the grinding taxation and oppressive exactions of mlli- tary service In German, are added exceptional hardships and disturbances—political, soclal, and materlal. The unrest and discontent in Ireland grows worse weekly, and the severe policy of repression finally forced upon the government will oper- ate to create a panle and drive from the islana every person who can get away, The flords In Germany, de- , stroying the fruits of the last and the st hope of future harvests will hasten the determination of many half or wholly rulned pessant farmers to seek thelr MURDER AND DYNAMITE |sive system of weather guessing with- The attempted sssaealnation of Liady | out very serlous loss, Florence Dixie following so closely upon the dynamite ¢xplosion at West- minister is the anawer of the Irish an.| Tho Ohicago T'ribune publishes an archists to the policy of the liberal [ exh reviow of the land grant party. A more suloldal course of pro- | empire illustrated by an accurate map ceedings so far as the Interest of Ire- |showing the proportion of territory land is concerned cannot be imagined. | donated to tubsidize American rall- As the Phoenix Park tragedies called [ roads. The vast area contalning about forth tke coerclon act, so these latest | 180,000,000 acres has been carved out bloodthirsty outrages will certainly be | of the national domain and transferred marked by a quick ocessstion of all|to corporate monopolies. The greater remedial logislation for Ireland om|part of this landed empire has been the part of the British parllament. | taken from the people of the United Ooncesslons In the face of the assassin- | States to whom it rightfally belongs atlon of defenseless men and feeble [ without anyjequivalent being returned women and the attempted destruction | For more than ten years Tur Brr of public property will never be|hss sought to arouse popular attention secured from any English party. | to the gigantic frauds of the land grant Every real frlend of Ireland must|system. Asfar back as 1873, the ed- admit that her cause has been re-|itor of this paper,{while chairman of tarded at every stage by foolhardy | the committee on platform in the re- men who pretend to belleve that re- [ publican state convention, reported form can be hastened by the methods [ back a plank dpmanding the taxation of oriminals and cat-throats, Parnell’s | of all raliroad lands. Four years ago, policy of peacefal resistance of sppeal | when the jug-handled fraud known to Irish patriotism and Eoglish justice | as the Platt U, P. test case was taken to the supreme court, pressed peasantry in three years of [ we called the attention of Becretary agratian agitation than all the Fenians | Schurzto the Imposture whereby a and Invincibles since the days of '49. | land grantof milllonsof acres, perfected The land league, under the able gen-|under the Pacific rallroad charter, eralship of such devoted patriots as|washeld as non-forfeltable becausethe Davitt and Biggar and Parnell, was a|Credit Mobiller had mortgaged it. great moral force whose Influence | Better late than never. At this late shock Westminster and resulted In|day the country, through the great the land act, under which 90,000 ten. [ metropolitan dallles, 15 finally awak- ants have already secured the benefits | enlng to the facts, and a halt is called of fair rent and long tenures. The| to the monstrous land robberies com- bratal murders of Lord Cavendish and | mitted with the connivance of the land Seoretary Burke, on the other hand, |office, and by the sanction of a lazy act, and these | supreme court, that confirms ocorrupt crowning outrages may ocertainly be|decislons of lower judges, who are depended upon to check for years to | notorlously corporate property. The coms any hopes of a home rule whose | Chicago T'ributic reaches the following dawning was already visible and toconclusions as to the remedies which the securing of which Mr. Gladstone [ the people may yet apply to compel had already pledged his efforts. * | these land robbers to disgorge the vast Irlsh agltators in America must be | domaln which they have either never held largely responsible for the com- | earned, or which they have forfeited mirsion of these crimes which are pre- | by violations of their charters: judiolog the entire ofvilizod world| 1. Grants of about 50,000,000 acres agaipat the cause of Ireland While s maystill berevoked by congress. Prom. 5 {nent among these 1s that of the Texas vast majority of Irish Americans do Paclfic, agaregating over 14,000,000 not spprove and even denounce such |acres, worth $25,000 000, This road outrages, the support and encourage- | has never been built. The corpora- ment of long distance fighters of the “t?“ to zh"h ffi“ grant was made has 0'Donavan Rossa stamp furnishes the | © ligated Ltself to another corporation not to bulld, so as to give this second sinews of war for those dastardly at-| corporation a monopoly. Large tracts tacks on persons and property, andre- | may be recovered from the Southern flects most disstrously upon every ef. | Pacific and the Atlantic & Pacific roads, which have fallen into the fort made for the amelloration of the(, a2 ¢ syndloates swollen with sufferings of the Irish peasantry. They | wealth obtained by the violation of all have paralyzed the land league move- | thelr dutles as trustees of the govern- ment, tled the hands of the English [ment's bounty and common earriers of the people. Immense tracts of vala- radicals and steengthened every| ) "iinber and plantation lands in enemy of Ireland throughout the| the south are olosed to the public be- world, cause held to t the pleasure of Mr. Egan may bosst that the aim of | corporations to whom they were 7 granted twenty-seven yeare ago, but the Irish revalutionlsta isto tire the which have never fulfilled the condi- English parliament out. It will be|tjons of the grants, The reserve woll if the cutthroats to whom he gives | power of public oplnion can force con. his secrot approval do not so[Rressto take up these millions of acres, if the public thinks it worth HEnjgavthe feleadaiol Ieelind aa'te while to call out its reserves, Assur- relegate that sufforing country to the| ediy, if the public does not look after ocondition in which she was placed be- o;:ngn-f congress will not look after fore any remedial legislation was ap- | the pablio, : plied to right, even partially, the| 2. FPublic linds which lie by the slde of the rallroad lands, and are wrongs Which have been heaped upon | ;ow ghut to the people because the her. Just at present the fool friends | railroads postpone the surveys, can be of Ireland are very busily engaged in|opened to settlement. As we ha strangling the blossoming hopes of | eXplained, the laws of congress make thelr " Af el the roads pay the cost of surveys. Akl e ) W LIRS, ™8| Hence the roads call for them only as and attacks on women who, like Lady | needed to sell their lands, and the Florence Dixie, dare oriticise Irish |bulk of their grants are to-day unsur- leaders from an Irlshwoman's stand- | veyed. Asthe public land cannot be s marked off uutil the rallroad polat, will complete the jub. Murder |4, " are defined, the practical and dynamite will never glve Ireland | gonsequence s, that, besides the her independence, 100,000,000 of forfeltable land — fnn'. bout 100,000,000 of adjolning ands are effectually, though not os- So of the iron and steel manuface fonyp)y wilhdnwn’ .lrnmagnblle o, THE LAND GRANTS inflaence, thickly naturally, are of widely differing oha acter, and the successful candidate ouce has a most difficult and embar- rassing work before rim in closing up ‘We have come to under. politician” to be a ma who can most skilfully adjust hi elf to conflicting opinion and who 80 hedge his direct pledges as to esca) traltor to ‘‘his his accounts. real filed. or the charge of bein, friends.’ popular service. This condition, enforced by the people, is destructive of the best It makes of the ‘‘statesman’’ a dodger, of the high ex- eontive a double-dealer, and of minor offiotal a trick is caloulat: of our are two of weakness of choosing public servants. The chief of these is traceable to very many of our most consclentious citl- zons. They makes the man, and they profess to be deeply concerned for the moral welfare free We begin at the wrong end when we go to work at our legislative bodles in behalf of genuine olvil service reform. Yet we would not disccurage the work there, for it to educate public opinion to a higher standard of political obli- gation, and to direct popular thought to the fact that all the primary obliga- tlons of good government rest abso- lutely upon the broad citizenshlp. ssoumed These consplcaous In of the people. of the issue. of. The wonder Is ambitios regarded as avatlable. work for him, office 1s holder rather teust for the promotion of the public welfare. It cannot be expected that there should be an; h sympathy with than sgree that s him aslonger pense of time or money uj part, Bat opular ) ?vhl:x desl there pathy with the man to * hold himself aloof from unwise and dangerous ledges, and who Is ambitious to keep Klmulf free of entangling alllances to the end that he may owe no_debt ex- oept to the public service. Men thus ambitlous are natarall: olal shoulders There elements work character They have their set opinlons, if not as to means at least as to measures, and before they lend thelr support to one or another of the con- testants for public place they must find him in professed harmony with their uppermost hobbles. They are generally caoght by the man most ready to promise. The other element of weakness {s traceable to those, very likely to be good workers in politics, who only consider the ‘‘spoils” feature oy They want Drw out of the campalgn—patronage ore or after the .lufion',” il‘hlll8 latter class cuts the largest figure in the public thought, but its numbers are insigni- ficant and weak in comparison with those of the class previously spoken that our civil service is as good as it is, and the only uglmntlon for It is that the average ublic sentiment, free of selfish warp- rngl, is wholesome, and that to it, after all, the public servant i3 com- pelled to answer. ficlaries of his wrong doing will desert him, and take refuge behind the cloak of private cltizenship, when the pub- lic sense takes up Men in public life know this, and those of any measarable success are conatantly fighting to keep themsslves out of the merciless clutches of the valtures of politics, permitted by pub- lic sentiment, largely through culpa- ble ignorance, to prey at will. From the very highest to the very lowest conditions of political society there is common assent that theman willing or to serve in publlc place must place himself at the head of hls own canvass. This is to say, in short, that the man who is unwilling to be, an cfiice, to Intrigue for it, to give hi tlme and money to gaining ft, subjecting himself to all the pulling and hauling of the trafficers in poli- tios, Is by universal consent not to be Lo a man say that he is not a candidate—there may be regrets, politely expressed, but forthwith no one among the poasibilities; every hand that was up for him drops at once. They say if a man will not work for himself he cannot expect others to It is & sorry state of things. It is the testimony of a wide recognition of the fallacy that the the property of the office- the sacred The very bene- the prosecution. degree of popular e man who simply wants an office thrust upon him by the strength of his friends without any ex- n his own ould reluctant in on, drawer for several hundr‘;d dollars, The Standard oll eomp finally in making a fav ln{, sucoeeded e contract with the railroad of which our friend was an officer, The day after it was 0.U arge amount in the Marine Nation: rigned he osid up his y put bank, and has had more money than the company ever since, orphan asylum. The treasurer’s position is one much ots his The supply dep-nmént is a gro source of private revenue, and pui they usually dona that to the charch or give it to an sought atter, and he always dividend regularly, whether the stock- holder doas or not. oonnected with the ma: always a great friend ¢ The negotiation of " tel falls to his lot, and he usually "patron. izes the bankers who may be on the He I8 intimately porary board, gives them plevty of security and 16 per cent. commisaio If the line should happen to be on the other side of the river, the man ager of the forries has a chance. He 1s usually a sallor-like individual, who drives about town in a baggy and over to 'Greenpoint or Brooklyn, etc, making contracts for putting old bot- toms {nto new boats and arranging other little jobs. Becretaries and passenger agents are usaally less greedy; or, at any rate, they get less, because these positions do not govern or control the oppor- tunity. They get points, however, on the business, and are taken 1nto the pool for a turn in stocks on the effect of the appointment of a receiver, or the declaration of a dividend, or some other little items of information. The auditor, of course, has his broker, and the broker his friends, and the broker gets points from the auditor and giyes them %o his friends, who get profits out of the informatlon, and divide with the auditer, and ro A nice, safe little game, without much riek. Nepotism in Rallway Offices. Indianspoils Journal, The most successfal managers at the present day are those who get ac qualnted with thelr abllity, and when- ever opportunity offers promote men who are deserving. Possibly no abuse in the rallway service has been more demoralizing and has resulted in greater Injury to tho companies than the stlll too common custom of pro- moting the ‘‘son or nephew of this or that officlal” over the head of an old, worthy and capable employe. The president of one of the most prosper- ous of Indianapolis roads can give the of every employe on his road, down to the section hands if such em. ploye has been tn the company’s ser- vice any length of time. mansger whose career has not been a specially brilliant one, once remarked that he had more men under his com- mand than Gen, Sherman, leas than a dozen of them, and those merely because chance threw me near them, Ihave wished often to find a man for certain work, and weuld have been glad to have taken a man from the ranks If I had known one capable for the position; but I did not, and the result has been that the son or nephew of this or that official would be given the place.” ness of this general manager to ac- quaint himself with his men, perso ally or through his subordinate of cers. There is not s department where there cannot be found men com- getent and deserving of promotion. 'he A general *‘I know It was the busi. paying of attention to this matter Blevators, Vertical travel, by means of passen- ger elevators, is rapidly increasing throughout the United States. The first one went into operation less that twenty five years ago, and tween 45,000 and 50,000 are in oon- has e the Pennsylvania road the model road of the world. now be- stant use, New York alone baving 15,- 000, It is estimated that for e new mile of rallway which Is structed, a passenger elevator is built, The travel on them s enormous. The eight elevators in the Equitable bulld- ing in New York carry up and down a daily average of 20,000 people, wh! several thousand per diem is not an torers who are dissatiafied with the|The remarks of Secretary Teller and rates of duty imposed by the new tariff | Land-Commissioner MoFarland on threaten to ralse the question of the jeot to our Washington corres- : ndent were by no means candid, It constitutlonality of the law on the|{ i ioloraple that the public lands ground that it originated in the sen-|should be thus locked up for the ac- ate, and not in the house. The|commodation of corporations, almost objection does not seem to be well |all of whom are in default to the gov- founded. There Is no reason to sup- ermmeat, The publlo now have in: 1 tlon of the ab Only the pose that the supreme court would go o:nm;n:: u?)n[ru.l :e:m"v'o 1t v,y behind the plaln facts of the record Bl Mllllun; of .;:r- hlvob.bun that a bill for ralsing revenue *origi- |stolen outright. ey can ro- nated” In the house; that 5:0 covered. When Attorney-General senate proposed amendments ‘‘as|thieves ho can take hold of the land- on other bills,” and that the|grant thieves, Senator Van Wyok house oconourred In them. This|#hould remind him of this. ia all that the constitution requires 4, The railroads should be made to pay tazes on their lands. Bya jug- and thisls what congress did. The|gigof not taking ont lom’:l '}l:!l only polnt upon which there is room |they obtaln by the help of the su- for argument is that of the right of | preme court all the advantages of actual ownership of 100,000,000 acres Eithlt::: pnlzlng . nm! taxes. The oglish aristooracy, as they are, changing the intentlon and meaning|pay taxes, though on the valuations of of measures as they come from the|1692. - But our landed arls pay senate and house., Several ftems In n::u atall. Eeh. ox'uturunuo the the tariff bill were ral lb"hl. con. | YArious members oongress hnu_ h ommities abore. the Sures untll next December to give their di If the people have of all precedent. The conference L"': l"h:‘:hh“a‘ they ';“:“"fh'.‘““h“" ot lost the power of em, ;"“‘.:m“h " ":'. ‘:lm, bill fol-| g wise an prompt exercise of this owed sult by Insertlng a three|power may be made to forestall man line olause opening two staff|of the evils with which the country departments to olvillans an amend. | threatened by corporate primogeni- ment which had never been suggested Yare, —_— when the bill was under consideration The True Civil Service Reform, in the senate andhouse. The duty of | The Pioueer Press, » conference committee Is to harmon- l‘l‘l”“'&r" M:d "10;0 Ay :e for ize conflicting amendments, not to in. | %'y, *er¥ice reform through the law " ot Washington, the fact remains that troduoo now logislation. This 1a the| the primary ‘trouble Is among the only objection that can be raised to ple themselves. The proposed the method by which the tariff bill | legislation now so largely cccupying was passed. And this objection the the attention of the representatives of supreme court will hardly be called to pass upon, for its real purpose the protection of congress against thelr constituents, Gexerar Harex has cat down the sigoal service as & measure of en- forced economy., A more sensible measure of economy would be the people; they are the only true source of healthfalness in our politics, By only open, except in seasons of un. Browster has convicted the star-route | 1Y the people at the national capital has There ought to be reform among the general consent elective offices are usual publio excitement, to men who making positive pl man, he is, and than upon what, to promise to be, shocked, Those who 1ot many years some time al and kept an 313, o an! 0. U, es concerning thelr course on questions still on trial at the bar of public opinion, as well as with reference to thelr influence in behalf of individuals intent upon the rofits of the public patronage. We snd that our public cficers are now, sgalnst nl; nhtlfg oolndti‘filt:lnl of a con- trary tendenoy, largely holdin, selves subject to the best pub! timent; and there can be no better guarantee than this that the larger liberty, for which we plead, in the pri- work of their creation is essen- tlally in the interest of the public ser- vice, and may safely be tended. The people the best service possibl cease the business of msking cholce between evila, They should offer their high trusts of public office to men they may judge best n‘:lp bl discharging them acoeptably—f llmlll(llmz e:-r to hrdm tlu‘:; outb:: the most ous and persistent begga: 1t follows, therefore, that the ch! oonalderation in the disposition of an office should be the character of the He should be judged for what for what he has been, rather t & vote, he may ngdonu wiven upon word of mouth s very extended upon character that is the growth of years, of which the life and the record of it are the attested testi- wmony, I8 not so likely to be serlous'y dismiss the latter to take up with the hope of the former have no right to complain if they meet betrayal. or v‘l‘oo px;avl- dent, too, has his opportunities. ° knew of one who u:’: to New York 4 in should get they should Lorporation Manipulators. The Wall Street Nows givea the fol- lowlog deseription of the rallroad officlals that are to be found in and around New York Oity: ageuts are an economical ¢! tlemen, who know how to 1is rate of $30,000 a year on & $10,000 salary. We have known them to build 875,000 houses at the same time. They generally say that It is good luck in outslde ventures, silver mines, stocks, or something of that sort, The general Freight ot gen- at the them- o sen- unusual number for large stores and hotels In our great clties. One of the weal early hour in the morning. men 1in Brooklyn 1s Mr. John J. Studwell, the president of the Oity bank. He lives in elegant style, though he never neg- lects his dutier as a bank president. His bank is one of the depositories tor finances of the Oity of Brooklyn, and when Tax Collector Tanner s making heavy collections the clerks of the City bank have to work till an One night not long ago, when the ‘‘boys” had to 1::5 quite late, Mr. Studwell prom- 1 he would treat them handsomely. The olerks opened thelr eyes with sar- prise, but waited anxiously for results. About midnight the president came inco the bank with something wrapped up in paper. He unfold f | great care and displayed a mince ““There, boys,” he sald, ‘‘there’s mince ple Mrs, Studwell made.” The olerks lcoked at one another in mute astonishment, They now en. tertaln fears that Mr. Studwell is likely to die of enlargement of the heart. Back to Power. Philadelpbia News. There is no help for it. of crorxery Is going up, and people who keep servants will have to go back to pewter, tin and cast iron, e s@ d it wlllh 8. \: s The price FOR PAIN. CURE RLeuma.tlsm,l?uulgla, Sciatica, Toothache, (INING MACHINERY, DOTUBEE A IS BRI G At - o — POWHR AND HAND P U NMES! 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIF STRAM JOLESALE AND RETAIL. BELTING, PACKING, A’ HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS Oor. Farnam and 10th 8treets Omaha, Neb. """ SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It 1s the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win- ter, instead of running down, will increase in welght and be in good market- able conditlon in the spring. Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes- tify to its merit ’l‘:y it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton; no. charge for sacks, Address o4-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1203 Farnam St. Cor. I13th OMAHA, NEB. ~ McMAHON, ABERT & CO, Wholesale Druggists, 815 DOUGCLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB, OMAHA, McNAMARA & DUNCAN. WHOLES ' LE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS! in Eond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine CIG- ARS. Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 8. 14TH SYRREY, - - - OMAHA, NEB. C. F. GOODMAN, - WEHOLESAXLE DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHES And Window Gilass. - - NEBRASKA G ATHE CITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Firet-olass facilitice for the Manufacture of all Hlduu!l(dflldh.\?flnfll‘u 8) . Orders from Dty Crien fom e omiy NI D oty el A M. OLAPIZ, Painter&PaperHanger SIGN WRITER & DEONRATOR WHOLESALE & RETAIL iWALL PAPER! Window Shades aud Curtains, 5| CORNICES OURTAIN POLES AND A FIXTURKES, Paiuts, Oils & Brushes, 107 South L4th Btreet OMAHA, . NEBRASKA WILLIAM SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, AND ROAD WAGONS, First-Olass Palnting and Trimming, Repairing Promptly Done, 1319 Harney, Oor, 14th, Omaha,