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AL DALLL DN WERUNESIJAY £ PRI, ax g 4 THE DAILY BEE-OMaHA THURSDAY APRIL 19 ——s ha B DOTBLE AND SINCGLE OCTENG The oma a bee. Mayor Chase's innagaral ls a solid, | Mr. Smith, just at present, seems to | dmonnt mataring each year from 1880 ' sdministration belonging to thelr own POWEHER AND HAND substantlal and business lke doca- | have the best of It. Ta hia Iatest edl. | ¢ 1900 are given in tabulr form, with | party ail sppointments to their re —— » Published every morning, except Sun. full explanations. The assessed valu- b nd distrlot | sy, The only Monday morning daily, ment. It Is fall of the old ring, and |torial he says that Mr. Haotlngs 18 |ation lu esch state, the amount of :Ec.ch“:: ::.lll'::le‘lr('(v‘s'h:n':n .“’:E:;‘: .:. : —_— promises well for the fature welfare of | ‘the poleost of American journalism;” |debt per cspits, and of Interest|ihe Ohristian religlon, or on the lnsti- 3 § TERMS BY{MAIL— Omaha under the new adminlstration. | that it Is ‘‘his apeclal miszlon in life °i’"5:h per '-'"]"';I‘ are g'"’ ; | tutlon of matrimony. And what Is to Bteam Pumps, Engme Trlmmlngs, vi 4 foia also the population, gross snd neu 1o xi O | S atoacn e 10 | The mager's iaugoral S 0")"" to pour out the verjcise of hisfoulness | 3bs and Mnking fond. of 100 large ;)}.‘livjr;um::nptgr; X;}'lf(voflllll‘,'.’l: 1:::,: CINING MACWINERY, BEUTING, HOSE, BUAM AXD INON FITTINGY FIF eriew with admitted abases | npon all who differ from his low|cftles. Other chapters and tables [ known as “‘conservative” with regard PACRING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 5,00 | One Month.... 100 toplos. Tt de LRI and handles them without gloves. | morality and reject his disroputable |show the sgmount of precious metals | o the time h d ¢ d f " s o ':'gzdv.v,l, /¥ BEE, published every The attention of the ocounctl Is firat | political code;” that he Is a pariia- mined, the growth of manafactaring ,;lng,,' and ,,:::’;':‘m .r:l,.onw‘,‘:,"é; l‘ALLADAY WIHD'M“.LS GHURCH Mm bCHQGn. \iflnl? - L ] THE MAYOR'S INAUGURAL | the New Yotk Commercial Advertiser. | each year from 1800 to 188), and the | sirtuslly the right to dictate to an serving. Uuaole SBam is rich, bat that 1 ¥ iaterests in the eeveral ntates for the | the prineiple that th TERMS POST PAID. ealled to the subject of publle im: ..'m.,..r, procurer and a plmp of po- || ¥ thiiy yaars, BIghesh wad loweed u:: 5:0:1‘7'5 :"d :h. ’Zmn:l- ’l):‘-:‘l::‘x:gnt.: Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Om&h;, Neb. / Qne fear......83.00 | Three Months. 50| provoments, eepeclally to the ne-|iisioal proscoutlon,” and ‘‘tho ribald | prices of zovernment bonds onch yeat [t the senators and re tesentatives - — = e e owpan. ficls Agenta | Coflty of tystomatlo {mprovement | calumnistor of tho metropolis.” Mr. | from 1501 to 1892, am-nat of na'ional | have bogan to eqeivooats about it and g e eiodon T e Garc Siaan ™ [of oue sroets and tho _exteoaion | Hastisgy cqaally msthetlo roply wil| 4 uoh yeue feom 1701 to 1852, and | weakly dany the old fnih C. F. GOODMAN. — of our dralnage and sewerago systems. | by eagerly awaited by tho western many other fsc's re/ating to the pablic SEm——— debt, The law of 1882, providing for The Nationa o W ELO X! A T OORRESPONDENCE -All Commun. | The mayor recommends that the busi- | parbarlans, whom he has frcquently fon of national g.,,,, ohém" Philadelphia Record. et N i sad Editorlsl | nosg portion of the elty shall first be mflh:r:.“d BV Yo Ly R pat In thorough order, and that the BUSINEES LETTERS—AI Busines [ improvements shall be continuouns, Eotters and Remittonces ehould be ae | This I8 sound advioo and will bo fol. 'k PuBL Aroened to B B e "and. Portofica [lowad by the coneil. As Colonel rdora to be made payable to the order of | Ghago woll says, ‘A bit of pavemont the Company. here and there, a crosswalk here and The BER PUBLISHING [m” PPIJIJB. there, a plece of eldewalk hers and there, are comparatively useloss.” E. ROSEWATER Editor. Mayor Chase plants himself on solid ground when dealing with the fmpor- tant subjeot of unequal taxa- tion, It was eminently proper that tho attention of the counctl should be officially directed to this matter. As theboard ot cqusli- T striking olgar makers have|,.,., ¢hey ar the final adjudicators forced the manufactarers to concede | o property valus for purpoees of tax- to their domand for an. advance of &y, * mh proteotion of our men of dollar a thousand, which Is less than & |, 4040 moans from undue taxation half of the tax reduction on ocigars|c ., apon the councll, and the oer- voted by the late congress. tainty that the assessora’ books will be ocarefally revised vill be one of the Taar little matter about the|,y,,n 0st inducementa to a falrer and nomlnee for clty attorney hasn't yet| ... qual assessment. been settled, butthereare half adozen | ppg ground taken by the mayor pettifogglog sbysters who would will- | 15, ¢ho subjects of gambling houses fogly sacrifice a lucrative justloe court | .4 houses of fll-fame 18 worthy of practice to atep in the brogans now |, . The suppression of the worst worn by Mr. Howe, of theso evils, and the striot supervis- Miss Kare Kane recelved three|lon of all, is urgently demanded, votes in Milwaukee at thelateelection | The mayor calls the attention of the for astosiate justlos of the supreme council to vhe lack of an official clty court of Wisconsin, The woman's ™8P t0 the need of further tmprove- tights party has mado a beglaning, ment in Hancom park, and the urgent and there seems to be plenty of room neo2esity for a city hall for the pre- forlt to grow {o Wisconsin politics, | #eFvation cf records, papers and vala. m— able document. We shail take ooea- ‘Tuz Texan meteorite proves to be |slon to discoss more in fall several one of Joe Mulhutton's southwestern | festures of tho messsge, It is an ex- lles. Malhutton is the same little | cellent document; 1t sounds like busi- joker who made a sale of the Mam- | ness and will be generally received as moth Oave to be traneported to Eng- |80 evidenos that the mayor's new land. He is eald to bs a near rela.|broom is reslly large enough and tion to Tom Ocheltree and a half |strong encugh to sweep out some of brother of Ell Perkins. the dirty corners in our olty govern- — ment and assure to us astrongand & Haxscom PaRk ought to be pat Inclear administration. thorough order. It will be used more — this summer by our clt/zens than ever A FOOLISH POLIOY. befora. As the only genuine park| There is a large overlap in the oity which Omaha has, it deserves better | spprop=iations for the present fisoal treatmont on the part of our olty|yesr. In other words the council has officials than it hes been recelviog. already expended nearly $30,000 more — than the tax levy and we have several Bo ran the tar route tiidls have|nonths yet to run before fonds will oost the government $622,000. Brews- | g yyy{lable from the new levy, There ter, the attorney general, knows the| . o reason to suppose, 80 far as we depth of the pccket of the ollent he is know, that the late city ceuncil m: ¥ any reokless expenditares of the citys’ AVDO TN ',h' he should be awin-|fopds The truth is that our tax dled by exorli:ant and useless lawyers' levy, with the striotest economy foes. has proved too small for the Mavor Ca, ppointments still | legitimate requirements of our city tiang fico and & good many applioants | government. Wi h the rajil growth for offion left the councll chamber on [of Omaha comes a nataral iscrense ia Taesday ning disgusted. It fs|her expens Th re more streets better that place cffise politiolana | to be 'ighted, proviled wih fire pro- should bs disgusted with the msyor | tection and kept ia repiir. The po'ics than that the people should be dis-|firce, which iy now too emall to guard appointed at unfit nominations, ife and property, has been alowly E— i isoreased. Ountiile (f these expenses Aco0RDING to the Balt Liake Tribune | and those ¢ ireotly resul: ing from them, there never was » time when so many | 1ha ,0r has been comparatively young girls were golng into polygamy | yothing, The policy of riiicg such s at presont. The members of the | gyl fund £or «i y purposes that an Edmuods commistion, who have drawn |, their salaries with unvarying regular- ity, bave evidently falled to make an {mpression upon the daughters of Zion. WO i1 to be the next i’y marshal? Marshal Angell will give $5 to any man who can carry Lim this triflog bit of loformation, — ap every year becomes necessary {s a penny wise and pound foolish plan. Those who work for Omaha ovght to be sure of getiiig thiic psy when the work is cempleted. o positively re- There is no resson why, at this stage fases to Do a oandidate for governor | uf our progress, city warrants should of Ohlo this year. He glves as his|be piddled tothe banks or diepored of reavon that the parly cannot afford to |8t lces to note shavers aud cent per lose » United Siatcs senator for the |centehsrks. Taenexttaxlevyshould sake of seouringa republican governor. be made after careful estimates of the John Sherman spesks one word for | D€oe!saTy cXpenees of the city for the the party and two for himself. He|ensuing fiscal year, and it ovght to be has never flmohed from his opinton [euffiziently large to cover all leglti- that & senatorlal bird in the hand is | mate contingenoies, 1f the oty coun- worth a good many governorships in | cll, sittivg as & board of (qualizaticn, the bush, do thelr duty in eecurivg a S— falr sssessment, we shall have Mz, Wixpo . has dropped his|a large enough taxable valuation to moheme f)r & new stock exohange, and | meet every necesalty on the basis of is devoting himself to bolldlng rail- | the yresent tax levy. The additionsl roads in Mexico. Hia rallway which | taxstion will fall only upon those s to be apart of a new trans.con- | who have succeeded in shirking tax- tlnental line, is called the Topolo- | ation in the past, not upen the major- bambo and Pacifio. It s to extend |ity of our citizena who have paid & from the harbor of Topolobambo, on | more than liberal proportion «f the the west coast of Mextoo, eastward to | entire city taxee, Dgle Pass, on the Rlo Grande. From| O course the question of ralsing that polnt connection can easily be|funds for meetlog cur corrent ex- made with lives fir Galveston, New | penses is reporate and spart from “Orlears, cr the South Atlantic coast, |the question of publio works, The ex-senator has taken the (flize of |Oar paving and curblog snd gut. prestdent of the company for four|tering, cur sewerogo and draln. yoars, and will draw hia salary infoge ars all provided for by stcck. The road has a subsidy of |epeclal sectlons of the charter which about $8,000 per mile for & branch ex- |levy most of the cost direotly upon tending southward slong the Mexican | property owoers. But every public charged with ‘‘ignorance of the amen. tbtes of journaliem.” TrAT unmitigated fraud and blath- errkite, the Rev. Joreph Cook, of Boston, who parades through the country as a oritic of sciexce and a bulwark of rel'glon, has been deliver- ing himeelf of another attack upon the press before the Chicego Congre- gationalists. 1t proved to be a rehash «f one of those performances which he calles ‘‘preludes” to his ‘*‘Bos- ton Moniasy Lectures,” and which, when originally delivered, re- ceived the follewing just lashing at the hands of the New York Natim: “He desorlbes himeelf as much troubled not only by the defiolences of the press, but by the low opinion en- tertalned of it by forelgn critics, Mr. Cook’s reports of what he hasseen and heard, either abroad or anywhere, are always to by recelved with cautlon; bat even if he has heard all he says he has heard in the way of ‘‘merciless sneers,” he ought to be the last per— son to reproduce {t. There is proba- bly no person professing to be eduoat- ed, who has brought so much discredit on the American mind within the last seven yea the Rev. Joseph Cook himself In the eyes of those forefgners whoso opinions about newepapers or any kind of literature are worth re- peating. His gross igacrance and in- aconracy on those matters of sclence with which he has undertaken to deal, have agsln and again been exposed by acientific men, 8o have his reports ot ojiaions of forcign philosophers and thinkers. There is, however, nothing discreditable to the couutry in the existence of & conepicaous blunderer of ttis kizd, What does damage it is the hiamph of Mr, Cook's remark- able talents as & sensatijnal preacher over all attempts to make bLis real character known to his audiences. His hall is jast as full, we beli:ve, as 1 was before he was found ou’, and there is no apparent diniau i)n i the number of those who tki.k he hss reconciled re i ion and rolenca. The better educated and more rational clergymen are as muoh ashamed of 1is performances as anybody, bat a la- mentably large number of them are glad to scoept Lis assistarce in keep- ing ally spirit of credulous wonder which they mistskenly, we are sure, : consider in some manner favorable to the growth and maintenance of gen: ulne religivus feeling. The sucoess of Mr. Oyok's sonorous platitudes in Boston, which passes in the eyes of foreigners for the most cul- tivated clty lo Amorica. has probably glven far more gratitication to the en- emion (f democ than any short. comings on the part of the Amerlean press, His books, his leotures and himself have farutshed to foreign oritics more materials for ‘‘merciless eneers” directed agsinst tho mental atandards of the community which produced him, and which cau listen to him, than even the worst American newspapers have ever done. A bad nuowapaper oan always be explained away by decrying the character of its readers, who are an Invisible and un. known body. But Mr. ook gathers his subscribers into a hall, where they can be fuspected. That they have a very respectable appearance and make certaln claims to ‘‘cultare” nobody can deny, and this is sli the cynical foreign eremy of our institn- tions aeks for. He then turns on us and says that when such people as these can take Cook for a prophet, and biar up under the revelatiovs which have been made «f his incom- peter oy, what hope osu thers be for our intellectus! futurc? * Why should there be “‘firat class dalliea” or week- lles In a ccmmunity, they can find mental food in Leotureship,” and which oa cullection of chiomoes for a sneer of this kivd off haud. To ex- plaln Mr. Cook would need a small volume, ee——— A Valusble Ma.ual For several years the Maverick National Baok, of Boston, has pub. lished, for distribu fon among i's patrons, an annual containing import. ant {nformation vpon financlal mst. ters. That for 1883 is & volome of one hundred aud twenty -lx pagev,and u fice epecimen of the printer's art, Tt contains facts in relation to the public indebtedneee, which are mnot to be readily obtained eleswhere. About orethird of the volume is devoted to matters pertaining to United States bonds, in which the Maverick bavk has been an exteuvsive dealer, An answer is glven to many qnestions ulng of gold certificates, eto., ls given in full, The book, which ls a very handy one for reference, may be had free of charge by sending t»the Maverick Na- tlna! bank, corner of Water and Coa- grona strects, Boaton, Mass Mr. Charles Docley Warner has contributed to the May Century what 1s said to be an ex'remely lively little paper on “‘The E.plish Volunteers daiing the Late lavasion,” balig an account of the recent descent upon Eogland by Amerloan novelists and their attempted repulslon by the heavy gans of the Britlsh prees. It is an additlonal contribution to the ourrent discusslon f the Americin nove!, —_— ‘We Oannot Serve 'wo Masters. Chicigo Tri Many considerations unite to clothe with unusual interes road case between th and the Illincls Oantral now on trial before the United S:ates supreme court. The decision of this case and that known as the San Mateo case, in- volviog the right of the state of O.ll- fornia to tex rallroad property, will reveal whether the firm foundation for the control of corporations laid by the supreme court In the long llne of Granger decielons s to be allowed to stand or to bs tsken down. Signifi cant chavges have been made in the personality of the supreme conrt rince those decisions were made. Those who understand the depth avd reach of the {ssue now pending between the people and the corporations In there oases will wait with an almost painful interest for the verdist of the ocourt of last resort, Who 18 sovereign, the State or the corporation, the creator or the crea ture? This Is the bare and simple qaestion, stripped of detail and ou— cumstance, now to be decided by Jus tanley Matthews and his assc- ol Did the sovereign State of Lilinois {n chartering this corporstion and giving it power to ‘‘establish’ and “‘oollect” ils rates of toll part irrevo- oably with the sovereign attribate of controliing the highways, or did it make a grant which was to be enforoed aud exercised under its dominion? In giving this franchise did the S ate give with it a part of its soveroluaty, or a right under its sovereigaty? Is sach oharter of this kiod a partition of the supreme power, ani does each corpo tion generated by the State become at once a 8 . itaelf, sovereign and independent, imperium in imperio, or does it remain, like other cltiz¢ns and oreatures, always subjec:? 1Is the part to which the control of the highway and the right ot taxation hss been del- egated greater than the whole whioh has beatowed this privilege? d final evi lenation by the state of 1's own power, the Illinots QOuntral may charge for the transper tatfon of the people of this atate and their property just sush rates as it choses. It is, according to the con. tention of its attorneys, supreme. It is oco-ordinate with the state; not subordinate. Its power of taxation is royal. What the state needs imm:- morlal law p:rmits it to take. What the corporation needs this argument means the corporation can take. Not the satety « f the people but the saticty of the corporation, 1s to be the ru- prems law, If these words, likethoss in law sft sotiog less important persons than corporatiol re to be construed acoording to history and veages, tien the corporation may charge on uch tolls as are reasonable and jaet, and the supreme power of the stale to limit its ocharges to such as are jist acud reasonable stands. Tats is the uub of the case, Tais very polnt was passed upon by Judgs Deady of the Uuited Suates cir- ouit court of Oregon in the case of Wella, Fargo & O, sgalust the Oce- gou Rallway & Nuvigation compauy. Che lawa ¢f Oiegon give this railway the right to *‘prescrive’ aud ‘‘collect’ its tolls, and tiorneys, like those of the I'liaols Contral, held that this was a contract between the state and the corporation, by which the latter was peipetually authoriz:d to fix s own charges, and that the atate could not enter the ground fenced in by this contract, Bat Jadge Dudy believes that the right to “'prescribe’’ tolls wae given so as to compel the corporation to fix and set down its rates before- haud, and not vary them with the his victims to r:newed fallures, to exclude them all; but friends, goes cut for a moment, oln does not hesltate. He carelesaly: ““Wao doled d ¢Me," replles Barocy Fors r at Imitation in any walk of lifs. From ths Poilideljh'a Eecord, epecifis and certalo. purposes. Faehtonable Weadings. Fiom Life Clarendon Jones will shortly lead non of the I'aien consul ‘Where Prayer Fails Obi ‘sgo Herald. walting for him to declare. Mr. E s left *'Den I bass,” quietly remarks Mr. Einstein, lhuu‘ug(bhlng & degree to three pounds of corn. Btook fed with Ground of cantlon and presslence worthy of ter, Instead of running down, will increase in weight and be in good market- Honest Deailrg With Advertisers. The San and Tae Record have set the example of aeallng fairly with ad- vertisers, by correctly informing them ll n & c from d-,‘ to day of the amount of pob ® e ma o. liolty which they sell to persons desir- ing to make use of it. By this means the business of adveriising is made The sdvertiser does not buy a chance, but a certainty The time will come when it will not bs conaldered a matter of aquare deal ing for a newspaper to refuse to glve , {oformation ss to the extent of its cir- culaticn, which le the wourate mew 11301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. I3th Poker is undoubtedly played fari- ously to-day in clroles where ten yenrs B 0go it was n'igmatized as an enemy «f soclety. But knowledge has not kept pace with desire, and therefore the expert amaases wealth, while Improba- ble narratives of strange sucocess spur AND DEALER IN ‘cording to the best attalnable u-A:‘l‘-. PAINTS’OILS V_ARNISHES mony, there never has been published yet & poker story whioh, if true, was good, or, if good, was true, On general principles it 18 best the| MAHA . lesson conveyed, for ¢xample, by the | s story of Me. Mores Kinstein Is too "lmbl‘u to be lost. Me. Einsteln, sltting in a card seance with five of his . 0. Growers of Live Stock and Others. returning, he fiods that his hard has been dealt, and, picklng it up, he And Window Glass. - NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO WE OALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR It is the best and cheapeat food for stock of nn{)slS.di l?:n:h pof:fid hflaqml &J o and win- able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes- tify to its merits, it and judge for yourselves. Price $26.00 per ton; no charge for sacks, Address o4-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb. WHOLESALE OMAHA, NEB. Mies Lula Gilfleury will be married R Friday m-roing, in Saint Sebastian charch. There will be eleven brides m:ids and eixteen ushers The name of the groom, at the request of the bride’s parents, has been withheld from publication. Miss Fiora En-:: KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WHOLES!LE DEALERS IN the altar Mr. Mavkal Pahdee Murrity, = WhiskieS! prayer won'tdo. 1t won't pay him his salary. The Tabernacle divine level headed. BERMAN Bl che, c RF eumatism, Neuralgia,Sciatica, in kond 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 STRRER. - - - OMAHA, NEB. . GCATH CITY PLANING MILLS. whims aud osprice of the mowent. He construes \gon words as merely a license from the state to and ool lect ruch tolls as are consistent with the duties of the common ocarrier to the publie. No other view than this of the re lations between the atate and the cor poration can stand, They are rover- oign and subject. One thing the sovereignty of the state cannot du: it cannot create another sovereigaty The suprems court msy decide this cuse sud the San Miteo case ir favor of the rollroads, as 1t decided the Dred Scott case in favor of the slave. holders. It may bold that the wan has no righta the cotporation is bound w0 respect. Bat no such deoleion will s'and, We canuot serve two mastere, VEGETABLE COMPOUND. regular and Puinful Menstrua Inflammation and Ulceration of tho Womb, Flooding, PRO« LAPSUS UTERI, &e. vos pain during labor and ¢ regular periods. elther sex, 1t 13 second 10 no remedy tha n Letore the publiej and for a!l d, OXNEYS it s the Greatest Remedy in the Worid Find Great Relicfin Its Use. YDIA E. PINKHAM'S Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAR. NESSES, Including Lencerrban, Ir. @ Pleasant (o th taste, eflicactons and tmmediaw its effect, Itisagreathelpin pregnancy, snd = PUYSICIASS USE IT AXD PRESCRIGE IT FREELY. @ Fom ALy WEAFNTSSES of tho generative organ: YEKIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Elther So¢ MANUFACTURXRS OF Carpenter's Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Firnt-olass tacilitics for the Manulacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Plining and matching a Speolalty, Orders from the country will b promptly executed. Sddronall communiaatt A. MOYER, Broprl A A. M. CLARK - Painter&Paper Hanger 816N WRITER & DRONBATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL Window Shades aud Onrtains, 3 8| COORNIOES OURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES, Painiy, Oils & Brushes, 1T Boats L4th Rtreet ] NEBRASK A R. E. COP8ON & CO, ooast, a8 well as for the maln Jine, [improvement at once inaugurates an :z&:::_‘?s':::l::fl;ll'xo:l::‘ll:;-y F;;:rlv.‘\!t‘; t‘z;“uc;;";;::?:?:u'é‘u‘::\:;l:rl::‘::x::x: FOPRIRTORA S Tt e v o o o, o httoe S beekmotaud | Tammlvoeions Foltion OMAHA BROOM WORKS, :?:“ :: ?:dn?;p‘:l::‘:::l‘;nc;o;t: $:vl:u:e n‘::::: n{ne: Eolenul:z, and ;'"’““.‘m"““"i““‘. number of bond. | New York Eieulg P“;'h AR 1 o, M $ DEA!-ERS IN 3 eoria st t, ad the harbor I ald o sewering will compel Iospeotion and | BOGSrS s steh sates, the namber of | ¥he BOCEIEH ULl ol e B | bk s i ot ocre @ dlee, W es, Twines and Broom Oorn. be the best on the Mexloan coast north | repairs. These must be met, and it of Acspuleo. The company will own | will be a very short sighted policy number of coupon bonds held in this heara the dootrines, whica during his country and in forelgn countriee, etc , whole life he regardid as the very celpt of price, §1 per box for either. Mrs, Pinky sciy answers all letters of inquiry, Enclose3q amp, Ben for pamphlet, Mention this Paper, FIFTEENTH AND PACIFIO £TRERTS t, A simik o6 in glven t foundation s of republioan ineii K e — —————— = cly site and a¢jsoent property cover: | whioh does not look shead and devise | S0t & simtiarspsce in glven o state | fonndstion atowas B feRl SRCRY | ey 3. remus i s oy (ko WILLIAM SNYDER, ing about twenty nine tquare miles. | means for this purpose, waln will {f 1t should —_—_— z:.hllt 'ulxln .lx:::'uu- of the| THEuntamed wost takes » back seat rich nl;- which have been worked |in pereonal journalism, and watches & for some years by Alexander R. Bhep- | very pretty fight now in progress be- herd, once known as ‘‘Boss” Shep- tween Mr. Smith, editor of the Phila- with th revolationary debt of the states, ocal Indebtedners at various periods s shown very fully, thebonded and floating debt, and the sinking fand of the several states belng given, The purposes for which the debt was restlets reformers, aud in fact by a great man, . patriotio citizavs. The idea that «flices should not be used for partisan purpcses, and that senators and representatives in con gress should not be beld entitled to #3-Sold by all Druzgists. &8 McOARTHY & BURKE, Undertakers, m | MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, AND ROAD WA ONS, crealad, the etes of Interot on ou | 'recogutlon” I the wey of pateon | 218 14TH BT, BET. FARNAM AND Firgt-lass Painting and Primming, RBepairing Promptly Dane. erd, of the Distelot of Columbls. |delphla Press, and Hugh Bastings, of | sianding debt, the amonnt oreated iu age, or rather that they should nethave 1319 Harney, Oor. 14tb, Omaba,