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=—- DOTURLE ANIY SN GHLE A COTEDC POWHR AND HAND B UM IETS ! Bteam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, RASS AND IRON FICTINGS FIP ESALE AND RETAIL. i THE DAILY BEE-~OMaHA MONDAY APRIL 2 [— — = - "'he Omaha Bee. THE OITY COUNCIL The oandidates for councilmen who Pablished every morning, cxoept Suo. are to be chosen to-morrow will be ay. The enly Monday morning daily, voted upon and elected at large. This e d ought to be generally understood. The system of letting cach ward name a oandidate in the party conventions was not contemplated by the framers of the city charter. In fact the very Omaha were assessed at one third ita value our clty would have a taxable valuation of over fifleen milllons, at the lowest estimate. o — Tux preeent election law makes the printing o clrcalating of bogus tlokets a misdemeanor punishable with fine or imprisonment. Every pollticlan PICK THE BEST MEN. The conventions have all been held and the nominations are befors the public. One day before the election our citizens are presented with a llst of candidates from which to make their selection of the men who are to govern Omaha for the ensulng two VHE WEEKLY BEE, published every years. The shortness of the oampaign single leoture, If they want instruc- tlons, it {s ten chances to one they can can secure it in book form as cheaply if not more economically, If they seok for amutements, other entertain- ments aff )rd greater atirac 1ons, These are a few of the reasons why the pop- ularity of lecturers is dying out, The lectures may not be any the less inter- TERMS BY MATL— ©ne Year....810.00 | Three Months.$8.00 00 TR, Bix Months.. 5,00 | One Month.... 1. A 0oL BELLS JINING MACHINERY, PELTIRG, IO ket PACFING, AT 7 HALLADAY WINS-MILLS CHURCH AND ¢ SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground 0Oil Cake. Tt i the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. We inesday. and the policy of affording as little [esting or brilliant or usefal, or the [object of the proviso which compels should paste this itom {n his hat and TERMS POST PATD— timo ae porsiblo for votors t> discuss | public any the less Intelligent. It has |their clection at large, or by the voto commit it to memory. Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. One Year.. .00 | Three Montha. ;‘8 the merits of thelr party candidates|bscomo simply a question where to[of all the wards, was to take the nom- — — 8ix Months. ... 1.00 | One Month.... AxzrioaN News Company, Sole Agents Newsdealers in the United States, CORRESPONDENCE -All Communi. istfons relating to News and Kditorial matters should L) addrossed to the Epiron or Trx Bk, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Getters and Remittances chould be nd Arensed to THE DEE PUBLISHING COMPARY JuAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of tzation of candidates for the council PHERSON aLITIHS, out of the kands of the ward caucus 9 and {o tnsure the elcction of a higher grade of men such as would prove ac- oeptablo to the entire clty. Every cltizen in to-morrow’s elec: tion will be entitled to vote for six counc!lmen, It ought to make no differ- once from what ward they have been throws opon them tho necessity of sorntinizing all the more carefally the varlous tickets presented. No demo- crat I8 bound to vote the straight tiokot to-morrow, And every Intelli- gent repablican 1s absolved from party allegiance through the bold manipula: tion of the party machinery, which sought to represa republican sentiment eecure the most for the money, and the lecture 1s crowded to the wall by outaide competition. President Arthur has five sisters and ove brother, Jers Black recently became a great grandfather. Wendell Phillips hopes "that the day will come when no man will smoke on the streete, J.R. Booth, an Ottawa lumberman, £300,000 from his business during ast yeor, THE REPUBLICAN TIOKET. The tlcket nomiuated by the re- publican conveation on Saturday is botter, taken all fn all, than might have been expected. In some re One pound is equal tho Company. through susp primarics and au elev- |speots It Is an lmprovement on the|nomivated. Thoon'y question that| pientenaut Powell, of the Ninth| tothreo pounds of corn, Stook fod with Ground Oil Oake in the fall and win- — LBttt demooratle nominations, notably in|can present itself In the choich of aix |cusalry, s the only extinfederato | tor, jnstead of ranning down, will fncrosse in weight and bo in good market- ¥ho BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props, | Indepsndencoin city eleotlons i | the oandidates for the councll and the | honest, intelligent and opablo men, | sopeer PO an ¢Hoer In the WRREASERIE ) ahl condition in the spring. ~Dairymen as well as othors who use it oan tes: always desirable. Under the present |school board, clrcumatances it is than de- | Brlefly, It may be sald that where sirable, It is absolately necessary, |tho democratio ticket is weak the tify to its morits, charge for sacks. o4-eod-me Try it and judge for yourselves, Price $25.00 per ton; no Address WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omsha, Neb. From the twelve or gfteen names pre- sonted six such men can be readily se- lected. Miss Sarah Brown, daughter of “/0 sa- watomie Brown,” has heen appointed to & poeition in the United States mint at San Francisco, E. ROSEWATER Editor more Par Hawgs says that Bolln will *‘pull him through.” Mr. Bolln is yet to be heard from. Our cltizons taken as a body care | republican ticket is strong, and where very little whether the next city offi |the democratic nominations ere cora are democrats or republicans, but | strong the republican candidates are they are each and all personally in- | weaker. terested that they shall be intelligent| Colonel Chase’'s nomination was a and honest men, and capable, cfficlent | foregone conclusion the moment that and trustworthy cfficials. There is | Judge Savage accopted as the demo- only one issue, and that is good gov-|cratlc candidate for the mayorality. ernment. And every party slate that | Ex-Mayor Ohase has three times been stands In the way of securing good [ honored with this cffize at the hands government must be broken on|of our citizens, and how well he has ] Taesday by the intelligent voters of |filled it is a matter of record. His Sou one mentlons Hipple Mitobell | .\, olt;. % 3 endorsement by the workingmen's of Oregon for postmaster general.| muy Bey urges upon its readers|convention will make him a hard man Oronin haa not yet come to the front. | o}, will vote In the coming election | to beat. to plok the best men regardless of| Mr. Henry Bolln, who received the AopitioNar evidence has boen dis-| iy From the varlous tickets se- | nominatlon tor clty treasarer, °°'°'°d,l°.'h“ star route trlals, Mrs. | o5t0q o list of officers, school board [is & grocer on Sixteenth street, B““':"'"‘ ‘Through One Admintstra: |\ gouncilmen can bo selected which [who has served one term ton" must have had some roference | will be a credit to our oity andunder|at Lincoln, in the leglslataro to Brewster's prosecution. whose caro the Interests of every|with satisfaction tohls friends. Mr. — citizen and the welfare of Omaha will | Bolln is an honest man and a good olt- Mike MBANEY ls a sower contract- | by asgured. Tho eleotion of oither | {zon, and while lacklng the experlence or, but his cortract to nomlinate alof the tickets entlre would|of Mr. Buck, the demooratic nominee, republioan ticket that ‘“‘could ‘be|py 4 public misfortune. Sov-| will make o good run for the treasur- elected from head to tall” is o blgger (gral of tho democratlo candidates | ership job than he expected. for the clty councll are totally unfitfor| Pat O, Hawes tarns up sgain as an e office, while there is just os much |aspiraut for Judge Beaeke's shoes, and TiousANDS of years ago an old phl- | room for improvement in othar parts | bears the republican endorsement s losopher sald thst th ponalty pald by | of the republican tioket. the regular party candidate for police the wise who neglested politios was to| There ought to ke some lively judgu.' M. Hawes will have up hill be ruled by the bad. This Is as true|goratching of tlokets to-morrow. Lt| work to make his calling and eleotion to-day in America as it was then In| every votor exeroiso the right of the|aure agalnst such a popularand effi- Athens. secret ballot by voling only for the|clent man as Judgy Bineke. Helis man of his own cholco, regardless of | maid to depend n the rest ONE of the best men nominated for party dictates, snd with thE intorests [ of the rnpn[l:liom n:il;k,t to p:;n the board of education on the repub | of tho elty alone in view. Ssratoh the | him through, but several of the rest of loan ticket fa R. 8. Hall. Mr. Hall| jamg of every jobber and bummor | the tioket will have all they can do to CoroNkL Crask is brushing up some ot his old serenade speeches for use on Taesday evening. —_— Tuere is room for congratulation over tte fact that both the candidates for mayor are honest men. —_— 18 one of the ablest members of our| 44 chronto office seeker from the | pullthemmelves into the young bar, and would do both himself | 15kt for counci'men, and replace it l:g.mu[gow gv.n:::l’ i A I‘::rd““ clty credlt on the school| yith that of » candidate whom you| The republican nominations for e would trust to pay your grooery or|schbool board are above the average and meat bill for you withcut having him | the same may be sald of the candi- ,, accompanied by a private deteo-|dates for councilmen. Taken alto- came ‘‘unsollolted” to the republican | ;o Fyundreds of thoussnds of dol- | gether the ticket shows the Influence candldate. When cilfzsns perslatin|, ;' 4o o be expended In the|of the nominations made by the dem- forelng office upon ourex-offic holders | ;o 4 4w, yoars anaer the supervision | ooratic convention and 1s & great im- against their wishes, a sonse of patrlo- | ¢ 1o o1ty gouncll. It is of the high- provement on the slate as originally tam compels ther to yleld as grace- | o0y yyportance that Omaha should |concosted by Chairman Mike Meaney fully as possible. have reputable and sober men in the|and his pals. There is no intelligent i s oouucil chamber as well as & mayor | republican, however, who will venture Tae nomination ot W. A. Oopeland | 3 ¢reasurer who are above suspiolon u,p....n .,h.n the nn‘tln ticket 2 be a8 & member of the board of education | o¢ vntrustworthiness. If there was elected, but 1t presents several men will oommend itself at once to our|gyer room for politioal Independence | who will undoubtedly secure the suf- d““n‘," Mr. Copeland Is & man of |, ygpieipal electlon there will be cp- frages of our oltizens in an election education, refinement and sound com« portunity for Its proper dlsplsy to-|to the clty councll and echool board. mon sense, Eo. ought to be eleoted | o\ iy Omaha, Piok thobest men, —_— by a rousing msjorlty. let party machinery, party loyalty and| ‘‘Goop-bye old man,” called out convention enthusiam, all of which are | Ool. Ohase to his frlend, Col. Judd, easily manutactured, go by the boards, | chamberlain to his Oannibalistic high- and select such officlals as Omaha need | ness, King Kalikaua, as he was leav- not be ashamed of and in whose hands | ing the Omaha depot several months our growth and developement as & |ago; ‘‘(Good-bye old man, when you olty will be assured. oome back I shall be mayor of Omaha.” S— >l Chase has not generally been i Tuxre !s o great deal of clap-trap In | oredited with the glft of second sight, the groans emitted from several of our | but any man who can predlot the re- Mz. Mugray has ben '“'m‘“”,d esteemed contemporarles about ‘‘the mltol’n convention two months in by the republican and workingmen's | 4o, 36100 of the leoture field,” The advance, especially when he is not at conventlon as counollman b 1a¥ge.q)00ure figld has been contracted by | the time a candldate, beats Laohlel’s Every one who knows Pat Murphy, |, o newspaper and the cheap press, | wizard and discounts Bignor Btz and hundreds who do not know him| 4 yng more general diffusion of lit-| Bat the Colonel did it that time, persovally, will vote forhim asa solld, | oy4ure, Omaha is no more behind — substantial and practioal man who will| 4}, g p her indifference to lecturers who got himself nom- makea good representative In the|,q jostures than any other large clty |inated as ocouncllman at large, olty council. of the country. The very fact that|ought to be beaten by as our people refuse to be inveigled into | Iarge a majority as he was two yesrs listening to long-winded essays, upon | ago for mayor, The man who was up subjects with which any one can more | tohis shoulders in the Holly jobis a oaslly make himself familiar, iv in it-|good man to keep at home when beat candidates who will ask for the |, ¢ 4vidence that Omahn is abreast of | Omaha is about to enter upon a serles support of voters in the coming eleo- | .14 1,0t behind the times, Thelyceum |of heavy public improvements, Isasc ton, Mr. Gibbon is & butiness man | ooy, re has had its day everywhere ex- | 8. Hascall may corhe out of his own of business methods, In addition, he | ooy yy the small cities. A leoturer is | ward with a good majority, bt every 1s a gontloman of educatlon, with| .o \;ieresting to the majority of |oltizon who desires honest and trust- soond and practioal views. He| o o from his personality. They |worthy men in the clty councll should ought to and will undoubtedly se-| . o yiitle for his views. At most they | be certaln that Hascall's name is not oure more than a party support at the | o 4ne opinions of a single individual, |on the list of councllmen which his polls to-morrow. who In nlne omses out of ten|tlcket contains, SEEE——— has no particular abillties beyond — 4 Tax nams of Isssc S Hasoal), | ipot of o mere compller of facts. No| Tas pumber of Uaion Paclfic em- — As USUAL, the nomination for mayor Brerweex Pat O, Hawes and Judge Beneke there s no room for discus- slon. Mr, O. Brannon Hawes will not be permitted to give up his luora- tive law practioe to resume a seat on the police bench, from which he was #0 gracefully removed two years ago. HascaLy, W. A. L. GissoN, who has been nominated for the school board on the democratio ticket, I8 one of the which will appear among the|,.o goes to the lecture platform in|ployes on the party tickets is unnec- oandidates for councilman at|.ogroh of startling discoveries or |essarlly large. A good deal of expense large, ought to be soratoched | yeighty and original theories. Our|would be ssved in the way of gas, by every intelligent ocitizen who has| Beechers and Ingersolls attract au-|fuel and room rent, if the corpora. the good of the city at heart. Who|dlences in the large oltles because | tion managers were allowed to make ever elen Is voted for, Hascall should | they are types of certaln classes and |up the slates for each party two days be cut. His record in the councll|leaders of lines of thought; becaute, | before the electlon. The nom nations when ho last served as right bower of | in short, they are noted men and|would be likely to give scarcely less the Holly sharks and jobbers, is|would be distinguished if they had [gencral satisfaction than those on enough to damn him forever as a can: | never entered the lecture field, | which our citizens will vote on Tues- dldate for public offize In Omaha, Archibald Forbes drow large houses | day. — not because his subject matter was ‘f'ux Republican falrly bubbles over | particularly brilliant or his style at- with enthuslasm over the republican |tractive, but because he was the great Ln“::.b"’::‘a:':::"" u:li]ondonnd nominees. Two years ago it never | war correspondent who had partiot- 0’.00“.“ -~ ‘:. ..u'k » Mr alluded to Col. Chase except as ‘‘a|pated in & half a dozen important g taket, wili nop bombastic plece of wind” and ‘‘fuss | campaigns and won a name for bril- and feathers,” and claimed that be de- | liant services In the peculiar field of pended upon the ‘‘lowest classes in|special effort which he made his the community” for his popularity. | owe. ‘When the press soatters abroad Bince Judge Savage's nomination It every day from filiy to one hundred has found & God in Iarsel, and his first | times tho amount of information con- name !s Champlon S, Ohase, Either | tained in a leoture, and brings 1t to Ool. Ohase's charscter and habits must have changed undergone » remarkable conversion. | expend fifty cents or a dollar tor s|himout to see the elephant, Mz, HARTIGAN, who has been nom- commend themselves to voters gener- ally who desire to elevate the callbre of members of the city councll. There are better men for the positions before our voters and they ought to be > e—— & Drar has reached Washington, but our door for five cents, the public hes- | as the congressional menagerie has ad- or the Republican has |itate » long time before they declde to journed, Minlster Foster can't take Tur Bee has so often prosentcd to its readers the groat importance at this tims, of securing a council above the averago of those which have serv- od Omaha in years past, that farther comment on the subject will be use- less, It rests with our voters to de- olde whether the mnext coun- oll shal be a mnest of job- bers and plunderers or whether it 1s to be composed of men who can be trusted to supervise the expenditure of large sums of money for public improvements and to let Leavy con- tracts for paving and sewering and otherwise developing Omaha to the best advantage and with the least expen Every taxpayer iz vitally interested in the result of to-morrow’s election of counclimen. The six men who will be selected will increase or lower onr city taxes for the next two years and elther forward or materially retard the growth and development of this commurity. This is the reason why the nomlinations ought to be carefally examined and both of tho party tickets generally scratched, KELLOGWS MISFORTUNE Willlam Pltt Kollogg, who haa finally been caught in the stsr route net, will receive no sympathy now that he has reached the end of his tether. Ouo of the ableat and moat unscrupulous of the adventurers who rushed to Louisiana at the close of the war, there was noact for plunder- ing and opproessing ita people in which he did not participate during the in- famous perlod in which that state was undergoing the process of reconstruc: tlon, He was malntained in the cffice of governor by the power of federal bayonets, and made senator six years by shameless frauds. He has never held an office in Louislana to which he was honsstly elected. The firat election which he can claim as valid was his election to congress last No- vember. As the usurplug governor of Loulsi. ana and the fraudulent ocoupant of a seat in the senate, Kellogg was of use to his party, and confidently claimed from it not only immunity, but un- flinching support. He received both with the effect of allenating from the republicans thousands of respectable republican voters south, and of Imbit- tering an entire state agalnst the re. publican party. Now that the repub licans are in a minorlty at Washington, Keollogg must look elsewhers forassiat- ance in his coming trial. There will be no partisan reasons for protecting him, such as existed when he presided over Loulsiana as its governor, and held a seat In the United States sonate by usurpation aad traud. Party spirlt cannot be Invoked with the same succoss in star route corrup- tlon and bribery as In behalf of the theft of a state government, or of a seat in the United States senate. The overthrow of republican influ- enoce in the south was due, more than to any one other cause, to the disrepu- table characters who filled the federal offices during the reconstruction pertod and plundered the people to fill thelr own pockets. The Kelloggs and MoEnerys In Louisiana, the Spencers in Alabama, Bullock In Georgls and Moses and Pat- terson in South OCarolina are the men who forced a wsolld south by . making the very name of Republicanism hatoful to her people. Where are these men now, Some are grasing cells in pen- tiaries, others like Spencer sre fagl- tives from justice, and last, but not least Wm. Pltt Kellogg, the fortunate statesmen and carpet-bagger falls into the hands of justice under an indiot- ngent for bribery. They were a aweet scented lot and their memory is likely to llve long after the cells of the pen {tentlary have forgotten that they oncs held them as inmates. Olay county is stirring up the sub. jeot of fraudulent essmonte, The Sutton Register says: *‘The annual farce of assessing at its cash (1) value will soon be under way. How a man oan take the oath which requires him to llst property at its actual cash value, and then deliberately sgree with the other sssessors who are In the same boat, to assess property at about one third of cash value, 1s & question that has never yet been answered satisfac- torlly. It would require more than » dextrous Roman cashist to reconclle the two attitudes.” It property in The cuts in Lady Florence Dixie's corset may have been wade sfter the manner of the cuts in Cadet Whita- Ker's eura, The Hon, John O, Knox, once justice of the supreme court of Penneylvania, and for many years a leading politiaian of the , haa gone to the asylum, hopelessly . The Hon, A. C. Matoon, of Oswego, claims to have been the first drummer who loft New York City, having started out in the employ of Lee, Bussing & Co., of New York, Jeremiah Curtis, s New York million. aire, is dead, He was the propr etor of many patent medfcines, and he once ran for governor of Maine on the prohibition ticket. Mr. Conkling is #aid to be the only man who ever made a speech before the United States aupreme coust clad in & business suit, On the occasion thus noted he was clad in dark gray, Custom requiree black and a frock coat. By the death of Sir George Jessel, master of the rolls, England loses the ableat judge ot the century, and perhaps the ablest jurist ever known in that country, He was the trst Jew h‘nldlnx any judicisl office in Great Brin. ain, Lord Granville recently apologized to Mr. Lowell for a short dinner notice to “‘the most. engaged man (a8 diner out) in England.” Mr, Lowell very neatly re- plied that *‘no notice could be too ehort which came to the most engaged from the most engaging man.” I* is & part of Madame Nilsson’s perfect art that her whole manner changes with the sl jecs of her singing. If it is some great oratorio aria that she is rendering. she rise to'the dignity of the theme and puts on her grand manper. IE it is a bal- 1ad, tho i simplicity its:1f. leton, the *'Farm Ballads” poet, is doceribed ns having “shrewd, good- uatured face, whose Yankee like boldness of ontline is further emphasized by a tuft i on his chin. His voice is full, agreeable, though not widzly s tonee, and bis manner unpre- tentious, and mace attractive by a certain awkward eass,” It takes four ladies of the bed-ohamber, @ ery oue of trem must be n pecrees, eight common ladies of the bed.chamber and twelve bed-chamber women to put Queen Victoria to bed. But it must ros be sup- posed that all take part in the preliminary yrocess., They just bang atound until she beco comfortable, and then, one by sent off by the queen on little errands, such as opening the stove doors, shutting off draughts, fastening forgotten windows, bringing the flower pots in, put- ting the cat out and attending to numer- ous other little things which & woman never thinko of until she gets under the covers, General Sherman is going next summer to the far weat for the laat time as the gen- eral of the army, and will be back 1n time to attend ths notable army meeting in Washington in October. He has always had a partial side for the western posts and the officers and soldiers of the frontisr, and he has long made it & practice to go to the farthest nosts once a year, to show *‘the boys” they are not forgotten, On this trip he will devote himself particularly to Montans, Oregon and Califoruia, Much of the distance will be made on horssback, and the general will always have a cavalry escort. @ will be acoompanied hy only two members of hisstsff, Colonels Tourtel- lotte and Bacon snd but two of his par- ticular friends will go as his guests, name- ly, Chief Jnstice Waite and Justice Grey, of the supreme cout They Were All Happy. Schuyler Sun. In a recent interview S iator Man- derson remarked that everybody was pleased with the late faderal appoint. ments in Nobraska. The senator didn’c half express it. The joy of Nebraska politicians over the appoint. ments was unbounded. Siunders was s0 dellrionsly happy over one of them that he was taken sick. Crounse falt more joyous if anything than he did when Valentine was nom- inated at Fremont. Yost felt so re lieved when he heard another fellow had been appointed collector that he telegraphed Nye to come home and let the president make the remajnder of the appolntments. And Loran Olark was well pleased, and Rosewater was a lamap of animated ecstacy. When the senator gets aronnd and ascer- talns just how exceedingly well satis- fied all the fellows are, he will want to be interviowed again and put it a littlo stronger. The Happy Democrats in Ohlo. Cinclanati Enquirer. In eleven years I have never seen the Ohlo Democracy more boneful, more united, more harmonious. There are no factions. There {s a good na- tured rivalry between Judge Hoadly Judge Geddes and Gen. Darbin Ward for Governor, but there is no blitter- ness. The feeling is that whoever 1s nowinated can be elected. GUACOE GEHMTH: GREAT AN RE! FOR PAILIN. CURES Rreumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Hea , Toothache, s Tigis, ogabioey, s, S AND ALL OTHER BODILY Boid by ""a?.:‘.‘%‘. m.u_-l-.n whers. Fifiy Ceate & w2 AR VR M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, i(1301 and 1308 Farnam St. Cor. I3th ___OMAHA, NEB. McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 815 DOUCLAS STREET - - O McNAMARA & DUNCAN. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN UCKY AND PEN W hiskieN! in Fond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine OICG ARS Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 914 & 216 § 147H STRREY. - C. F. GOODMAN, WEHOLESALE DRUGGIST" AND DEALER IN PAINTS, OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. OMAHA NEB OMAHA, FEB. CATH CITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Manufacture of all kindes of Mouldings, Pl rders from the country will b m'fl'."xlfi salng st First-claes facilitiee pecialf executed. communicati nsto (OYER, Proprie WILLIAM SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, AND ROAD WA ONS, First-Clags Painting and Trimming, 1319 Harney, Cor, 14th, Omaha, Repairing Promptly Done, CHERRY GROVE FARM. Froderic, Monros Co,, lowa. 0. E. MAYNE, Has constantly o of nfiun & large number Matohed Teams & Single Drivers Description of Horses and other nformae tHn sent by mall on application,