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4 THE OMAR A DAILY BEE~TUESDAY JUNE 12 1883, ;";ua Omaha Bee. ed every morning, exoept Sun. «nly Monday morning dafly. TERMS BY MAIL—~ 10.00 | Three Month: 5,00 | One Month.. 83,00 1.00 HE WREXKLY BEE, published every We ineaday . TERMS POST PAID— $2.00 | Throe Months., 1.00 | One Month. ... ews OoMPaNY, Sole Agents 50 2 KRICAN ‘.‘ch'-dn'.en in the United States.| CORRESPONDENCE -All Communl. oatfons relating to News and Editorial aattors should ixa addressed to the Eprron or Tux Br, BUSINESS LETTERS—All Business Betters and Remittances should be ad dressed to THr Bix PUBLISHING COMPANY JuanA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of she Company. The BEE PUBLISHING CO., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor Junce Duspy Is getting a good deal of free advertising, but it is scarcely of the kind he will relish. Tre groans from Boston and vicinity indicate that B:n Butler has not yet stopped treading on Bay State corns, Ir looks as If the rallroads are try- fog to force the land tax fssue to the front In Nobaaska, It will stay there. Ercury thousand dollars have been ralsed for the Parnell fund. Another letter from Rome will swell it to a cool quarter of & million, MaJor NickersoN has been order- ed under arrest but can’t be found. The dispatches fall to state whether the army poker rooms at Washington were searched. ——— SeveraL hundred coples of Mr. Poppleton’s argument in defense of tax shirking are belng sent from Unlon Pacific headqaarters to rallroad organs throughout the state, — THERE s great excltement on Wall street over the rumor that George Gould has run off with Lilllan Russell, the actress, Running off with other people’s property is a trait of the Gould famlly, — ‘WASHINGTON s getting op a base ball nine composed of members who have never held cffize, and bets are ten to one that Oklo is unrepre- sented. THERR is a current impreszion in Ohio that Jacge Hoadley will be the demooratic nominee for governor, ‘With Jadge Hoadley as his opponent, Mr, Foraker woald fiad his canvass up hill work. THERE I8 a great deal of smoke and very little fire in the Niobrara stage route muddle. Postmaster General Gresham know his business, and will exerolse a proper discretion In the per- formance of his duty, A #TOCKING factory at barned on Siturday. Roeports of the firo eingularly omit to mention a defi- clency in the amount «f hose as the caase of the failure of the department to extinguish the flames. Treunton —— Tue ncws from Moexico reminds one of the old times when the govern. ment was continually ‘“‘about to take active measures to put down the re- bellion.” General Orock seems to be in the same predicament with Juh's rebole. SEVERAL navy yards are to be closed ander orders from Secretary Chandler, The ferces in those that remain open will be increased as usual before elec- tions, so there Is no resson for the politiclans to declaim against naval service reform. NorreERN Dakota s happler than ever. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St, Paul rallroad will at once extend its James river division, and this will torce the Northwestern to follow sult. Moanwhile Yankton continues in the lulh,l and will not be comforted. Tae best oltizens of Kearney, ac- cording to Mr. Poppleton, called upon the Uuion Paclfic to aave Kearney from bankruptey. Mr. Poppleton's best citizens consisted of a political banker who claims to be a cousin of Jay Gould, John D. Seaman, a rebate and pass merchant, and ‘‘Judge” Sav- 1dge, who for years did the dirty polit- foal and legal work for the great monopoly {n Buffalo county. Now that the city councll has taken the matter of paving several cross sireets in thelr own hands we may look for an end to the bickering and croes pulllng which for weeks past have delayed the improvement of our olty. As we understand it, there are only two material able for paving in the busloess portion of Omaha— stone block and halt. Wo have now one street paved with the one and another under process of com- pletion with the other, Whichever the councll decides upon, they ought to be able to secure better terms from the contractore. A penny saved iu paving, as lo everythiog else, 1s & pen- py earned. Bat there ls nothing saved in paylog for materials that are not durable and which will not stand the test of time and traffic. THE UNTAXED LANDS: The storm of Indignation ralsed by Judge Dandy's injanctlon, perpetually restraining the commissioners of Buf- falo county from levylng or collecting taxes on more than 200 rquare miles of Unlen Pacific lands, has startled the raflroad officlals and called out a defense from the leading attorney of that corporation. Mr. Poppleton’s eolaborate legal argument In Sunda) Herald 1s directed to the establlsh- ment of one point, upon which there {s no fssue. That polnt s the uni- formity of the declstona of the United States supreme court In throe neparate cases, In which the court lald down the law that lands granted to corporations from the na- tional domaln cannot be taxed until titlo has passed absolutely from the government to the corporations, This wan especlally enunclated according to Mr. Poppleton in the Prescott and McShane cases, In the Platt case the queatton involved was simply whether the company had acquired title to their unsold lands, or whether such lands had revealed to the government and were subject to entry. No one will dispute that under the interprotation of the law as made by the supreme court on bogus cases and jog hendled hearings, the lands of the land grant roads cannot be taxed until the rallroads condescend to pay for the cost of surveys and take out thelr patents, Both the Prescott and Me- Shane oases were begun before the three-year limit after the acceptance of the road had explred, and while the lands were sull legally in the hands of the company and non-for- feltable. It was the plain Intention of the declsion In the McShane tax case that the company should be allowed the fall time glven by the act of congress for perfecting their titles, but not that the roads by refusing to pay the costs of survey should bo permitted indefinitely to postpone the time when a complete title passed from It to the government. In the Prescott case, which Mr. Poppleton dwells upon as the ground- work of his argument, the declsion that lands could not be taxed until the right to the title was complete was also influenced by the fact that several years yet remalned before, under the act of 1862, the lands could be declarad forfeltable because not disposed of. And the Platt oase, by Mr, Poppleton’s re- markable confesslon, was originated by the road, with one of its agents as plalntiff, and ocarried to the supreme court by rallroad assistance, and with rallroad attorneys on both sides. What wonder is it that the decislon which followed was in favor of the company? It is because the people of Nebraska know under what unfavorable ciroum- stances they have been heard at Wash- ington on the issues fnvolved that they are anxlous to reopen the cases and secure a falr rehearing on the facts as they exist and not as they have been twisted and dlstorted by corporation lawyere. Supreme courts are fallible, They have boen known to reverse their judgments where the original deols- fons have been shown to have been based on a mistaken conception of the facts, or on collusion between the coa- testing parties to sccure a favorable de) clslon for either plalntiff or defend- ant. That the true history of the conduct of the land grant companies in thelr relations to the people of the Unlted States, thelr reckless dls- regard of all law and equity and thelr shameless refusal to carry out the plaln intentlon of the aocts of congress which gave them a princely domain, may yet be brought before a full bench of the supreme court by attorneys who will present the clalms of the people In thelr true light, 1s what Mr, Poppleton's employers dread more than anything else. It s this fear which is responsible for his late brief, whose evident alm Isto frighten the people of Neobraska from endeavoring to regain redress through a reopening of the land tax cases, Bat Mr}. Poppleton does not satlafy himself with defending the dectsion of the supreme court, and applylng them to the {ssue ralsed by Judge Dundy's {njunction, He steps out of the path to eulogise the paternal care that the Unlon Paclfic has exerclsed over Ne- braska, and tells us that when Buffalo county was in sore disiress and ap. pealed to the Unlon Paclfio for asslst- ance, It was resoued from bankruptoy by the efforts of the cempany. Aund why should not a county be bankrupt in which nearly 260 equare miles of land, belonging to a wealthy corpora- tion, had pald no taxes for more than ter years, while its owners demwanded the protection of law and reaped the benefit of & governmont malutained by taxes lovied on the people, It Is the helght of cheerful impudence for Mr, Poppleton to boast of the asslstance given by the Unlon Paclfic to Buffalo county in collecilng ‘‘delinquent taxes,” when the corporatlon for which he pleads owned at the time 160,000 acres in the county, on which they have never pald a dollar, Mz, Poppleton's brief settles nothing, explalns nothing which has not been {ully discussed before, and urges no valld excuse for the lnlquitous tax sbirklng of the land grant roads which has become such an insupport- able burden for our people. But we promise tho learned attorney of the Unlon Pacific, whom as a private citizen we respect and as an able lawyor we admire, that his laborions effort will have one effsct which wan least Intended by the writer. It will place the fraue of corporate tax shirk- ing more forelbly before the people of Nebraska than it has ever been placed before. The story which {t tells of corporate Intrigue, the facts which It adduces of the magnitude of the evasion of taxes by the rallroads, and the sneers which it flings at men who, robbed of their rights and oppressed by a power which they themselves have braught Into belng, still dare, in spite of perverted justice, to challenge an investigation of thelr wrongs, will arouse the people throughout this state to rise as a unit In overthrowing the tyrants who are taxing them un- mercifully whilo ‘they refase them- selves to contribute tc the support of the government from which they claim and demand the protection guaranteed by the state to its citizens, INDUSTRIAL troubles have largely dled out in the east, but afeeling of nulleness still exists in the labor mar- ket. The country Is in a prosperous condition generally, the reports of ex- ports and imports are satisfactory, the amount of production is grest, and the ratlo of legitimate to speculative business 1s all that could be desired. Bat prices are falling, enterprisels checked, and a general feeling of dls- satisfaction oharacterizes both capital and labor. They are both In a mood for a collislon, It is impossible to ac- cept the existing relations of capltal snd lakor as a finallty. Soolety cannot afford s0 much friotlon as grows out of their repeated disagree- ments, The laboring classes see groat fortunes acoumulated in transportation trade snd manufacturing, while they get nothing but the means of pro- longing exlstence on a more or less comfortable level. The capltalist thinks he gets no more than his share, slocs he furnishes the stock of the buelness and claims that he takes all the rieks, Bat, in fact, he has a monopoly only of the more ordinary riska. The hard times that turn his work-people adrlft are a chlef part of the risks; and from these he offers no insurance. What s needed isa gen- eral arrangement, by which the sur- plus of profit, above alcertain percent- ago, shall be divided on a fixed ratio between the employer and his work- men, We know the difficulty of mak- ing this arrangement, but we ,expect tosee the time when no state will grant a charter which does not con- taln a provision to this effect. You have to go away from home to read the news. According to the Schuyler Sun Chauncey Wiltza Is the present conductor of the Omaha Re- publican. We fancy we see his ear marks {n the vigorous defense of Dan- dy's decislon on the Platte bogus land case. Chauncey says Platte entered on that U. P. land with the honest intention of making a home, The famous meanderer of the Platte river ls a good man to mbander over Bill Platte's jug-handled suit, but we ven. ture to say that you couldn’t glve Mr, Platte a farm to settlo on as & free gift, much lees at $2.50 an acre. TOWN TALK. “I believe I met the first stick of type ona Nebraska dally,” said Char- ley Goodrlch the other evening, as he settled his weight cautiounsly on a step under the front porch of the Paxton and bitcff a plece of straw with his|J store teeth, ‘‘That was in '61, when Oniaha was a small but lively town, and Cartls had jost founded the ‘Tel- egraph.’ Caris was a bralny, ener- gotlo fellow, who was killed in '63 by Quoantrell in Topeka. His father, General Cartls, of the army, dled in a stage coach between Council Bluffa and the Mississlppi. We used to run an edition of 400 printed on an old hand press and delivered by carrler iIn Omahaand Councll Bluffs, 200 in each olty. Oar report came from 8t. Joe on the old telegraph hne which ran up the west bank of the Missourl, and brought us a couple of hundreds words a day, generally at the last mament bofore our four col- umn, two page paper went to press, None ot the boys ever thought of reading telegraph proof. Half the time we couldc't have done se If we had wried. Plug operators and poor writers made the ‘‘copy” look so sick that our subscribers used to spell out the dispatohes with an accompaniment of swearing that made the alr hang blue over Omaha and Councll Blufts, Every once and awhile we unsed to throw ourselves on the headings, *‘Ar- rival of the Denver Coach,” *A Hundred Thousand Dollars o Treas- ure from the Land of Gold.” Those were the days when the Kountzes and Miliards sat behind thelr couuters welghing out gold dust and making snugsums from the discount, The paper didn't last long, but it was a cuccess while it lived and fully as enterprising in proportion to its slzo as some of its successors,” “‘There's a good deal of bosh In this talk that the new ordlnance regarding theatre licenses will oppress Me Boyd," eatd City Attorney Connell on Friday, ‘“‘The fact of the matter ls that Mr. Boyd called upon me several day 0, read the ordinance and ex- pressed himself as well satlsfied with it. Under the old ordinance he was Hall, suppotlng both to be licensed, | can't view it In those lamps, unlees It pays a nightly fee of €20, Inouly another Inside ring for the bene- other words, we make a tarlff in favor of home Industry, which accraes di- rectly to Mr. Boyd's benefit. Ho ad- mits that, sud 18 pecfect'y satisfied with the ordinance. Ail this fume ond fass has been exclted by a mare’s nest."” I met & Bart county man on Satur. day evening, who was a strong sup- porter of White in the last state con- ventlon, when that gentleman, after recelving the nomination for state treasurer, was 80 nestly countedjout by Gad Slaughter to save Loran Clarke's bacon, He spoke with a geod deal of feellng about Watson Parlsh's reap- polntment as governmont director of the Unton Paclfic. ‘It Is a sweot specimen of clvil service reform,” sald he, “‘and I am suprised at Man- derson’s endorsement of the man. It is notorious that Parish recsived his fiest appolntment os the result of & corrapt bargaln with Valentine to de- liver him the Bart county delegation hand and foot at the Fremont conven- tlon. Parrish was beaten by the re- pablicans in the convention but he af- terwards begged in and created enough of a diversion to dellver his property a8 agreed. This corrupt bargain and the unfitness of Parrish, who 1s a law- yer and knowa no more about rallroads than Jim Boyd does about opera bouffs, ought to have killed him poil- tieally,. Bat Manderson closes hia oyes and endorses any and all of Val's appolntments without regnd to ante- cedents or consequences.” “It would surprise you,” remarked Indlan Agent McGllouddy, ‘4f you could see how wondorfully fast the valley of the Minnacadusa in North- ern Nebraska s settling up., From Valentine west and north there is soarcely a foot of land that hasn't been claimed. Way back from the valley to the hills and over them, farms are belng cultivated in the black loomy soll that the exiension of the Sloux Clty road has brought Into the market. The land office at Valentine {s build- ing and in a few weeka wlll be In ope- ratlon, Affaira are very quiet at Pine Ridge. Wehave driven all the whites who made us trouble off the reserva- tlon and cincs then have had no signs of disturbance. Red Cloud comes to 8ee mo every day and Is as peaceable as a lamb. I have heard mnoth- Ing more of Pollock’s charges againat the honesty of my administra- tlon, There was some talk of my in diotment fbefore_ the United States Court and I wish they would try it. An sgent would have some chance there where he has none in the star chamber investigation of a cranky or dishonest inspector.” Governor Saunders, who is living at Kitchen Bros. excellent hotel, the Paxton, was met by the writer in the rotunds the other evening. ‘‘There's a good deal of acullduggery about this assessing baslness,” sald the men-— or. “Iwent up to the board of equalization on Thursday and called ihe attention of the commis- sloners to several very great inequall- tles In the assessment. I didn’t com- plaln that wy property was sed too high, but I did protest that it wasn't falr that other property should ba put down at such low figures, There stood before the commissioners one of the heavlest property owners in Omaha cursing and raving becanse his assessment had been ralsed above last year's figures. Any one who koows anything about the value of property knowa It was low enough. Bat I suppose he got what he was af- ter., Loud talk goes & good way sometimes where a quiet protest backed by figares counts for less. I quite agreo with you that the evasion of taxes o Omaha injures the clty greatly. On a basis of one-third, our property valuation ounght to be at least $1,000,000. Then to raise the same or a little greater revenue our tax lavy would be very little more than a half of what 1t {8 now. Wo need a reform right here, and a good business man on the board of county commisstoners would help it on,"” “Detwilorgota plum,” “‘butit was a much smaller one than he deserved,” laoghed a member of the last legisla- ture as he read the announcement of 's eppointment a8 one of the com- missioners to appralse the Omaha In- dfan reservation. Instead of getting the Omaha poatoffice, which the sena- tor thought he wouldn’t take, but wouldn'c risk tenderlng to him, he is given a job that will just about pay Imhoff's board bill &t the Commerclal, where ‘John worked like a beaver Y in- crease tI Manderson phalanx, Republacans as well as republios are ungrateful,” *“‘Apropos of the post- mastership, it Is reported that Tom Hali 1s bound to take advantage of olvil service reform and stick in the government building, Ia requesting Hall's removal Senator Manderson wasright, Tom has baen away half the time since his appolutment, rusti- oatlng in Montana and Idsho, and overseelug Charley’s tie contract, and the office, as John Furay says, s the worst run first class office west of the Missleslppl, Tom Hall went in originally on an agreement that he was to hold the cffice only two years, But when the two years were up he made anew bargaln that was sald to have pat $1,200 a year In the pocket of a person who had more Iufluence with the senator than any other man. That little arrangement put the hook in the old war governor's nose, which he couldn’t shake out, and when Hall fn- slsted on a second term he got it, Senator Manderson wanted to bounee him on April 1st, but Tom, who 18 a grent stickler for officlal etlquette, begeed to be allowed to remaln until tha end of the cfficlal year, and his re- quest was granted.” “‘Pete Shelby 1s r I told you last week,” said the red- nosed lounger on the Wabash corner, ‘‘and swears that Jim Creighton gave him and the U, P. away on his Col- orado stone paving job, which he has been trying to engineer with Horaco Newman's asslstance, Pete and Long Jim have bsen bosomjfriends on the half shell for years,youdon't know. Sort o' famlly connectlons, you see, but no love lost between them. However, our esteemed president of the board of public works had no hand in this little exposition of Snelby's zsal to get bus- llable for $100 annual license and $20 for each performance. Under the new he pays $200 a year onl{, and no company can act in Omaha in any other hall than Boyd's or Tarner inees for the U, P. at the expense of Omaha and to pave our streets with crumbling sandstone Instead of solid block or elastic asphalt. Peter says so Iunderstand, that the charge made agalost him fe one of dishonesty. 1 It Is H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMF ORTERS OF QUEENSWARE, China and Glass, 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST. CHARLES ST. St. Louis, Mo. fit of the road and its members.” Popular Kallacy Ooncerning Beef Ten A “‘Protessor” in New York Hera'd ““You will even hear some doctors talk about building up their patlents on beef tea. Now the fact is that there s In & bowl of beef tea bat lit. tle if any more natriment than there {8 in a glass of lemonade. How counld there be? We know that the prinel. pal constitnent parts of beef, besldes ita seventy-five per cent of water, are albumen and fat, Now, albumen congulates at 170 degrees Fahrenhelt, and at 212, the bolling point, 1t be- comes llke eggs hard bolled. As a eonsequence the albumen contalned in the meat becomes entangled In the moshes and is firmly held there, Of course, then the albumen does not find its way Into the beef tea. As for the fat, the only remaining strength- ening lugredient, that comes to the top and ls aiways carefully skimmed oft, for nothing {s more disgusting to a seneitive appetite than greasy beef tea. And yet they will eay that well made beef tea ls very palatable and seems to do gooa In many cases of weak and dlsordercd stomache; stim- alating, not nourishing. “'So it is and eo it doer. And yet beef ten Is not ncurlshing, however; and when we are slck and have no appetiiite we know that if we can get the stomach to retaln a cup of beef tea it will not be leng before the organ will call for something that is really substantial and noarishing,” —_— Hunareds of Whales. New York Herald, ‘I would swear that we saw, not a hundred, but hundreds - hundreds of whales—genuine sperm whales. It was the most extraordinary sight I ever beheld, Now, see here! I am not telling this for the eake of telling a big story, but becanee I belleve its publication may put some whalers on the track of maklog something hand- some. The facta are big enough in themselves, and need no enlargement from me.” : The speaker was Capt. Bradburg, of the brig Willlam Phipps, which ar- rived from Aux Cayes with a cargo of logwood—a weather-beaten old tar, who s known everywhere in New York nautfole circles, The rest of the crew corroborated his story,which is as follows: A fow days ago, when about elghty miles east by south of Cape Henry, the brig sighted a school of whales, As they forged slightly northward the number kept increas- ing until the water seemed falrly alive with the enormous creatures. For days tho brig had them in sight, many of them coming within gunshot of the vessel, and furnlehing a target for the captain's rifle, a species of sport which furnished him much ampsement and did no damage to the whales. There were litterally several hundred of the whales, which were of the sperm varie- tles. They wore tranquilly swimming around in a circle, and were apparent— ly looking tor a good feeding greund, Two days after the sperms had pessed out of sight the brig encountered quite 3 A Fun Lifle 0‘ the B(}Et Bf&nds Of a good-sized school of hump-back [}IG ARS AND MNUFAGTURED T[}BA[}[}U- whales, igents for BENWOOD BAILS AND LAFL:N & BAND POWDER 6 may 22-3m DRY GOODS SAM’L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Fifth Street, ~ FELKER, BAUDER & CO, COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND PRCDUCE DEALERS 1622 - Capitol Avenue, Omaha; Nebraska, ___Quotations sent on application. _Consignments solielted and remittances promptly made. SALEM FLOUR. This Flour is made at Salem, Richardeon county, Neb., in the combin roller and stone system. We give ExcLua1vE sale of our flour to oue firm {n place. We have opened a branch at 1618 Capltol avenue, Omaha. wiite tor Prices. \/A] ENTINE & RE ppY' Salem or O“r:‘l?m:nflab Address either STEELE, JJHNSON & C0., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBEBERS IN Flour, 8alt, Sugars, Canned Coods, anc All Grocers' Supplies. O —— Ohio and New Yori, New York San, The struggle between the democrats and republicans of Ohio for viciory in October will be eager, and perhaps desporate, for much will depend upon the result of the ponding contest. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS 1301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. 13t}- Irflaence upon the contest in New Ohio has genorally gone for the repun- licans, It has caet its vote for every ropublican candldate for president. But, notwithstanding, of lato yeara it has been regarded as a doubtful state, Ohlo atarted the tidal wave last Oc- tober by electing the democratic state ticket by a majorlty of 19,000, All the northern states which voted in November felt the tmpulee and wero carried along in its wake, The reealt of the Ohio election will not only be folt iu the presidential campaign, but it may exert a marked York this year. If Ohio should go OMAHA’ NEB. ‘for(;h;x gemr::n'.nybyka large msjority s A i n October, New York would be apt to p PERFEGTION HEATING AND BAKING follow In the same direction 1o No- 1s only attalnod by uslng vember with greater momentum, Bat suppose the republicans should happen to carry Ohlo, The New York 8toves and Rangss.' WITH democrats might then have thelr hands fall to savo their state ticket and the legislature, A Lunatic A ritting ¢f the German parllament a fow caya ago ended In sn extraordi- nary ecene. A stranger addressed the i hon‘;a fram ]tho gallery l:vl:g the WIBE BAUFZE' nlaUYEB DI]UBS. worde: 2ntlemen, your heads are l[xiot wor:h more than {nhb;ge stalks,” MlLTo” ROGERS & so"s © went on to say that in 1879 the Holy Ghost had appeared o him, and ik s commanded him to undertake the ccn- il version of parllament; that he would address the Emperor if his efforts re- mained useless, etc. Some of the officlals selzed the man at once, and took him away. It was found that he J' A' WAKEFIELD’ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEB IN bad escaped from a lunatic asylom, 'ITHE GREAT GERMAN meBEm- REMEDY Lath, Shingies, Pickets, FOR PAIN. |sAsH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDIRGS, LIME, CEMEN Relieves and oures .8 STUUETE, XU, ns lhll\ji‘elui{at\]:}:'r SETATE AGEN? FOR MILWAUREE CEMENT CONFANY 2 scistica, Lambago, | Near Unjon Pacific Devot. - OMAT2A, RER BACKACHE, ] meapacae rootEAVER, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, BWELLINGS, SPRAX ~C. F. GOODMAN, W EXOX-E5 A1 FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLR. ~DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN De Directions 18 11 PAINTS,QILSEVARNISHES ' And Window Glass. OMAHA - Sorenees, Outs, Braises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, 4. R, RISDON [}s‘r; | Insurance Agent NEBRASKA, ALEL. DATILIETSW, FEEETEI ez | BUGGIES, CARRIACES & SPRING WAGONS “l-"huh.ol Nowark N, My Repository s Constantly filled with a Seleot Btock, Best WORENM.ANS EXF GUARANTEAEERD. Office and Factory. 3. W, Cor. 1oun ana uapitol Avenue, w2 mbely) ard " 0ftos, Bovi's Ooors House, /