Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 11, 1882, Page 6

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P.T. VAYNE, Manager Counctl Bluffs Circulation, COUNCIL BLUKFS, IOWA COUNCIL BLUFFS. QUEER WORK, Office: Room Five, Everett's Block, et Broadway Young Stockdale Slips Out o H. W. TILTON, City Editor, tte Toils ot the L.aw Ve'y Easily MINOR MENTIONS | The L cht Guards had their dance last night | Investigation at Sunlight: A Case Which Will Bear a Little I'HE OMAHA D_Alyi SAT[’RBEI‘;; COUN shrimpled foliage, still clinging by its | look to the agricultural interest in all fragile, frost-brittled tendrils when it made to gloomily rustle as the polar t spirits, clothed in frosty frizz, flic through the barren groves that erst while were clad in 1some He had left his overcoat up-stairs, and was too drunk to go after it and too cold to do without it. No won der he shivered Officer Sterling’s star of the green night A CIL BLUFFS AND IOWA NEWS. its phases it would b vsl invest- meat they could make All great interests of the country, Y FEBRUARY 1), 182 | SUBSCRIPTION RATES. | By Carriet, - 20 Cents per Week. By Mail, - « - - . $10.00 per Year, W. W. SHERMAN, ~<MANUFACTURER OF FACTS WORTH KNOWING. “Good morning, Mr, the f ce, or bLa ¢ 1uterest, \JOHES. YOII seem in‘ et i k| JODES- | YOu seer, 1 ROAD, TRACK, COACH & LIVERY and legislation, that «the farmer is | morn|ng.” only used as a mcans reby these | interests grow into m th propor tions, when in fa agricnltural HARINESS ‘“Yes, | have b _en to I A — A gleamed in tho alleyway, and ‘the |industry s tho greweat, the ot the Fine Work a Specialty. {8 svaning o [ " hand of the law was laid upon the | important interest in any civilized Q e i v Towa wnd Wyoming Col handled onty | 1ie readers of Tk Brk will - young man, while a voico came from | land, an especi dly so in oars, an in % i, SHERMAN, Busineds Manager. by J. W. Rodefer, No. 2 Pearl $ it : it of a young e out oing train east this afternoon | g ) guge o is over the Chicago & Rock I land road. | ) i i | Tuesday night. Two youths raissd a disturbance at For Tl B " i the masquerade Thursday evening and | MO4N8 of & false oy, obtained en- were promptly jailed man named James F, proprietor, and secreted himself with arevolver under the bed, and there remamed until after Mrs. Mohn and o mien who have been | her child,had retired. She discovered working near the transfer depot are still | his presence, gave the alarm, and the abroud in the land, and seem to defy cap- | follow waa captured. He admitted ture, 5 that he was there to ‘‘make a raise,” Much fun and entertainment is prom- ised a' D haney's tonigh' by Smith's double Uncle Tom’s Cabin ¢ ny. The company gives a matinee also this after- noou. —The Turn Verein had alargely at- tended and evi ent'y eojoyable masquer- ade, Thursday evenine. varicty of ¢ many of th o —Justice Baird yesterday removed his oftice ton muite of roome, one stairway west of his old he dquarters, ~The confiden and was lodged in the police station. The following day Mr. Mohnappeared at the police station and narrated the details of the affair, and seemed anxi- ous to prosecute, A short time be- fore this he had been robbed of 880 aud a watch, and he expected that this youny 1man knew about this, a8 he bhad been boarding at the house right along. The young man denied that he had anything to do with the previous robbery, and doniod that he was a member of any gany, or had any Lelpers, He had a watch and aboui 20 in his possession, and claimed that his father, who lived in Muscatine, was financially able to help him out of his difficulty. It was —Ihe cune of Smith vi. Strong, in | decided to wait a little before filing an which the former souzht to recoier a | information, and give the boy's father bozrd bill, and the latter put n an offset | # chance to come here. A dollar of of dmiges for falee imprisomment, was | the young man’s money was taken for tolegraph purposes, and on Thursday ST '::.’il’;"17_l‘lqu;::; the father arrived. Recorder Burke 4 had the information ready to be signed, but Mr. Mohn did not appear =In the circuit court the case of Brandt | {o give his autograph. The father vs. Plumer, att r having used two days in | spent most of the day consulting with the trial wa« given to the jury Thursday [ Marshal Morse, and the upshot of the eyening. The jury remaied ont ull night | whole matter was the young man was and was closeted closdy until about 4 | discharged for want ot prosecution, o'clok yesterlay afternoon, when failing | and tuking the train with ~ his father to agree, they were dischurged, It is said wrried away to his home in- Muscan- they stocd eight o four in fuvor of giving i T ‘:..':fltty.“{ it fuvor of iving | g offort mado to keop the pross 4 from making mention of the attempt- ¢ portiaits of the pop- | ed robbery, und the ease with which ular songstress, Funnie Kelloge, appear in | the matter was quietly dropped, has many of the show wi e looked | led to many querries as to how it hap- upon with speciul interest by many of the | pens that a youny man thus caught, c'tizens who have known her since girl- | and making such confessions, could so hood, and who watched her successful ea- | quietly b turned loose. Some of recr with great pride; The portraits are | th08e conversant with the luu}m have buog with the announce vent that he 1 | resched the conclusion that a financial {0appear in Owiaha with the Gles Club of sottlement was made, by which the that city in » concert to be given on the | PrOfecution was dropped. It ix said SVehing ol Y08k L) that the landlord was silenced by he- 2:h, ing paid, partly by cash and partly by —At the uuw.qmmln of the turn-verin by note, enough to cover his loss by Thursday night Theodore Lund appeared | provious robberies, 8o that he did not quaintly masked, with o paper whisky | curc to appear against the young man. baud for a coat, a beer keg for a heud, and lvis also stated that one of the a bottle for a hat. Frank Crow of the | boaiders at the Creston house named “Blue-Jay” thought it would be fun to | Tiller, who had his room once robbea smash the rig, and with one blow dr ve | Of about 823, wanted the wmoun. i the bottle Ly ugh the mock keg, The|his loss figured into the settlement, simash caused several cuts inLund's scalp, and because of some failure to con- and the blood flowe froely, To Lund fdid | 1oty that ho blew the wholo muttor a0t weem much of a joks, and he strajght. | 272Y) ud was in consequenee ojected xR from the house, way swore out u warrant fur Crow's ar- [ 'peo,rder Burke on being question- vost for assault. o case is to come uP | ¢q yestorday suid that Mohn failed to before, Justice Abbott this afternoou for ( sign the information as he had prom » hearing. There was a wuies, 8 me being elegant, grotesque and comieal, A petition of property owners hs bee: sel iu circulation asking for the up of a atreet from Sixth to Eighih street, so as té connect with the strect eading to the ate tournament grounds, opening reached. —The lithograpl ised, and not putting in any appear- —Constable Fox was” pr tty badly out | #nce against the prisoner the youn of repair yesterday. In try ngto stop a nmtle was discharged for lack of prose- s ™ arties | CUtiOD. ; RuAuaEarerbasome) diynleily) PAEKSS! | G0 SN o on hbing yaskod!abons who hua been uttend ng the masquerade CErAa AR the night iefore, he gotw kiok which tore|| e matter, denied alllkuowledge of T R PR A oap, | 219 sottlement. He said he had not PUILY OO .8 44 2¢-08D: | woon the boy's father at all. He was One fellow hit hini over the head with a | formad by Marshul Morso that the chair inflicting & bump, and other blows fagher was here, and replied that if he caused other bruises. With the aid of } wanted anything of him he could call others he socured his men, though there | at 1he hotel, but saw nothing of him. was & lively clatter all the wav between | On being asked why he did not sign the hall aud the calaboose, in which two | the infn,rnnuinn, he eaid that the good sized parties waged war agaiast cach | boarder, Tiller,who had lost once $23, other, and blows were freely exchanged by | #aid he would go up to the station and all concerned, It is expected that w num- file an information against the young berot arres » will follox as the outgrowth | 8™ and he thought that would do of the me ee, just as well as for him to go. He de- Dhia Ot pended on Tiller to do this, and at — /e Citize , published at Tucson, Ari- | i e Tillor came back, saying he had 2 ua, containg a number of items of i. - t rest to thuse of this city who are inter- not done go, and there being no prose- cution appearing the young man had este in varivus wining enterprises there. | been let loose, Mohn said he was so It states that *‘news from the Tyndal dis- | mad at Tiller for thus neglecting to trict continues to be of a wost encouraging | do as he had promised that he kicked character, and roports progress in the con- | him out of the house. stiuction of & railway which will do away In further conversation Mr. Mahu with the isolated situation of affairs,” It |said that it would have done no good also states: *‘I'he Loura, Expert and Last | to prosecuto the boy and send him to At empt, owned and worked by a ccrpora- | Prison, a8 it would not bring him back tion of capitalists in Council Blufls, are w1l | the money which ho lost, and would showing up finely, and tho thiity ton water | 311y serve to disgrac the boy's fum, jacket smelter to be orected Ly them is | 13: If the PARere would only attend A1y Hex nastad <o U Miodoe AR SOt to llml_l own business, and not inter- AR - Regarding | fp, with his, b would like it much Arivaca it says, ‘“‘the unanimous voice is better. tht the prospect, of the camp were never | Ope thing is o rtain, the young better,” man slipped out easily from a serious —— page charge 8o easily, in fact, that it has PERSONAL. caused much talk and discuesion Ex-Sheriff Reed was in the city yester- | among the few observant ones, who day. naturally wonder whether young M. Schit, of Oshkosh, was here yes- | Stockdalo would huve thua slipped terday, looking over the west. through had he been some \nm_r un- TP Bt the Doloa Paol . | fortunate without money and without B pshire, the Union Pacific o'« | frionds. torney st Omaha, was here on legal busi- & AR el ness yesterday. By the Wayside. W. H, Harrison, Jr,, wholesale and re- The deviltries of the night had tail stationer at To'edo, Towa, wias greet- e vaa nearly ceased und the bibulous young e R W P TN 1 T who oxptfcwd to gratify his win- tending » quarterly meetig of the exeou- bition by dancing till broad daylight tive cou mittee of the Baptist association, with the feminine admiration of his the meeting being held at Des Moines, | puste diamond, reluctantly quit her He returned Thursday night, and repor » [ side and steered his betangled leges a8 a result of the mevting the granting of | into an alleyway. fivancial aid to several weak churches and the appoivtment of several missionaries, e w— The C,, B. & Q. in Towa is assessed s arms, The 3,564,993, the B., C. R. & N. 81, It was the hour when ho: est people think of the arms of Morpheus, and dishonest think of some other oy oné's the Creston house, on The young man, by trance to the room of Mux Molin, the | Lt member the narration of the capture under the blue coat, ““How to prevent | dustry that supports all crime! Surely not by placing blotches cares of the w find a tomb, administer needed sustenance to mau's higher nature. Far from it ! Tt s agood deal better to run him in.’ As the young man sat upon the edge | of the iron cot behind the bars he | meditated, “Alas! alas! genuine cul- [ ture is mocked in its own temple. Worse than he whose hand tendered a limp lily as life’s most sturdy em- blem, that confounded turnkey gives me a soup bone. A sturdy emblem, indeed! In the slow moving progress of the countless hosts of marching and sweltering humanity, what are Croesus and Cyrus but gnats upon | life’s wheel, tobe crushed as the sum- mer day rolls around. Sober sense is overwhelmed by the carnival of the cycles and the crush of unmolested crime, made epidemical by the inher- itance of the ages.” But nature’s sweet restorer, balmy sleep, bids the wear- ivd thinker drop the puzzling thought, and full by the wayside, until raised by the echoing reverberation of that ever dreaded, “Drunk again, eh!| Well, I'll let you off this time with $2 and costs.” temporary THE POLITICAL POT. It Has Commenced Simmering and a Few Names Bubble Up for Office. The approach of a city elections he- gins to cause those interested in polit- ical'and municipal matters to begin | talking over the men and places. It seems to be pretty well aettled that Dr. N, D. Lawrence will be the republican nominee for mayor. The democrats are talking of nominating W. C. James, and there is a prospect of the incumbent, Mayor Vaughan running as an independent. For city attorney, Jacob Simms, the late county attorney, is favorably prosent wmentioned by the republicans, while | ) the present attorney, G. A. Holmes, will probably secure the democratic nomination, For police justice, among the ro- publicans are named the present hold- er F. A Burke, George Carson, and W. S. Mayne. The democrats are talking of C. E. Stone and E. E. Aylesworth. There are a number ot persons mentioned in connection with the city marshal’s office. One is J.W. Morse the present incumbent, the present chief of police, H. H. Fields, K. W. Juckson, and Jo. Spaulding. For city engineer L. P. Judson, the present engineer, and Thomas Tosti- vel are named. ‘The present city weighmaster, H. G. Ohlinger is mentioned as his own suCCessor. The aldermanic race will be a mix- ed one and there will be many estries. The names of J. J. Brown and A. C. the democrats as aldermen at large. There are several now in the council who desire an endorsement by re olection, and many fresh candidatos are being talked over. The Dutles of Farmers in theMamtter of Legislation, Dunlap (In). Reporter Every great industry of this nation koeps at the seats of state and na- tional legislation, representatives, or lobbiests, independent of the lig reprosentatives elected by the people, to look after the interests of their ro- spective industries, to secure such euactments tnat will advance their in- terosts, and to prevent, if possible, the enactment of such laws that will work injury tothem. We said every great industry of the nation, but we will make a notable exception; the [ itural interest, an industry in which more than one half of the pop- ulation of the United States are en- gaged; an industry second in impor- tance to none in this country, and yet they keep no army at the seat of government, of the law making power, to enforce due and adequate legal protection, The banker, the railroad, the man ufacturing interest all watch with care their interest, as well as the citics and towns, to secury national or s tate appropristions for public buildings, ote, thereby securing a groater measure of prosperity for their city or town, 1f the farmers by some coucert of action, define such laws that are nec- essary to the interest and prosperity of their industry, and secure inde- pendent representatives, to remain at the seats of government during the sossions of the legislative bodies, whose duty it will be to urge the en actment of laws that will advance the interest they represent, the agricul- tural interest. All this costs money; 80 does it cost other industries who are so represented, but they make money by doing so, yet sometines very large sums are spent to carry through to success schemes for the advancement of the interests in which they are made, We know of a city, not a thousand [ | miles from here, that offered a lobby ist of national reputation a thousand dollars to compass about the national of perenmal slander upon those faith- | | ful religious teachers who, when the of Montgomery county, 66 years, serators aver thers, with out which they could not, orif at all would have but a sickly ¢xistence. Therefore, agriculture the greatest encouragement, men engaged in that see that thoe necessary secured lUWA ITEMS Burliugton is taking Herdics on the | half-shell. Weobste turns of & | population to be 2,300, Tom Green was knocked down and robbed in Sioux City last Wednesday. The highwaymen have been arrested. The Denison bulletin has been sued for 85,000 damages for getting the wrong Christian name in its report of a divorce suit, ora’s board of trade has taken steps toward ascertaining a« to the ex- istence of coal in d flerent purts in that vicinity. Greentield has a secret cociety whose initiatory ceremonics are snid to con- sist in hanging the candidate out of a bick window by the slack of his trousers and shooting apples off his head with a pistol, L. S Coftin, of Fort Dodge, the temy or airman of the recent state prohibitory convention, has written a letivr to the offect that the proposed protubitory amendment is not intenc- ed to prohibit the manufacture of al. cohol for export. Capt. J. K. Powers, who las been trying to get up an excursion to visit the buttle field of Shiloh next A pril— the anniversary of said battie— has notified by steamboat owners that they cannot furnish boats for the proposed trip. bren Avoca is not 5o badiy off for mana factories. It has two steam flouring mills that turn ot about 15,000,050 pounds of flour a year, as good a ma- chine aud repair shop as Towa can hoast of, a large creamery, two w and boggy manuf: a large rowery, and will seon have a soap factory The weightiest senator in the Towa | Joy hn G, Gillett, of Boone county, 112, he oldest senator is Alfred Hebard. the youngest, Mr. Gillett,” 36, The 197 24:25 poundsin weight, and years. The lightest representative 18 Charles. Aldrich, of lton conuty, 126 pounds, and the heaviest, M. H. Calking, of Jones county, 250. S, S. Rumbert, of Howard county, is the oldest man in the housc, 67 years, and Charles A: Bishop, of Black Hawk, the youngest, 27 years. Avemge weight of repre- sentatives, 170 19-100 pounds; aver age age, 43 11-26 yews. Toww schools are coming in for their share of the bills before the legisla- ture this season, One: of these is 8 | Graham are talked favorably of by | culled the “‘Picker bill.” It attempts to remove the necessity of re-exami- nation for the best of teach- ers and intends to raise the stand- ard of the profession. This bill has been submitted to the leading ed- ucators of the state and approved by them, Itcalls for the sppomtment of a state board of exaxiners, con- sisting of the siate superintend- ent, president of the state uni- versity, priveipal of the state vormal sehood and two persons appointed by the govemor, one of whom shall be a woman. In case this.| becomes & law, pubhc ¢xaminations. will be held by the board, ac which one of the members must be present. Two assistants may be sppointed by the boerd, both of whom must be well qualified teachers. COUNCIL BLUFFS SPECIAL NOTIGES. NOTICE. —Spocial adyortisements, such Lost, Found, To Loan, Fos Salo, To Rent, Wants, Boarding, cte., will be inserted in thit Wi at the low rate of TEN C LINE for the first inserti PER LI Leave ady [ col d FIVE t insertion, tisements at our office, Foom 6, Everctt's Block, Broadway, for each subsequ 10k RENT I‘ hou «ke.pitg, within tao biceks of postottice Enquire of D canchett ab 14 Pear] st 1t Three or four rooms for lights 1 or two sm 0. box 797, ¢ Likk ofdve Council 46-41, Conneil 1 uf Blufts, AN ) OF applp Fyerybody in Counci! Blufts ¢ Tin | Conta por wook, de e, Koom. 6, Evarett/s To tay 100 tons broom corn. or particuls address Councl) Bluffe Broow Factory, Council Blufls, Jowa. 656-20% FANTED - A fast-class braom tler. M&.. W A G Gotiant Tiute, toavn: 560- The Bee office, Coun Y0 BRICK- MAK FOR SALE—b avres o more of laad adjo'nisg the lerick- ' OFFICKE o boon fow rates to all casdern points, guaranteed, Orders filled by telophone. of U, A. Potter, siceessor to Potter & Palimer, should have and the urauit should 1 rotection 18 Jity rejoices ovor the re- te census, showing the slatura is D. M. Clark, of \\':.ymx,l county, 250 pounds, and the lightes , DOR SALE—OW papers 40¢ por hundred, s | - u 2748 wo | ARTISTIC POT TERY, Hanner & Hai e’ on Upper Broaiway. For i particulars apply to David Haines or ¢ Hanner's Rica Cut Glass, ! «b China, office at the Loard of Trade ro; Council Blufs. Sllver War in railroad [ — Unprecedented Every ticket From ono to ten dollars saved by purchasing tickets e » > """ | stars, which sang together at creation’s i""&fl’;v g"’ :’l(}‘&' ‘.%0“!‘!’ “‘;: ‘h\" (Il\" duwning, looked down upon the young | legislation to secure a certain result, B o 100,000, Mo Do & W, | man with something of a frown upon | which 1t was known if accomplished . 807,600, and she T, * | their brilliant faces, and their happy | would work to the interest of the city ah Fifth strect, four doors below thy post souncil Blufls, Towa. oet13-t1 ‘é“";"" "J b}'"‘l, Wabash '(‘]’v"'f'"’) n‘é‘" chorus hushed into a minor strain as | in question, but the lobbyist hooted | VY AN i ot bk st coo ol haper® M B 0 b assomncd at $1 4% | thir glewmiog raya pierced the be- | at thom for offoring only one thousand | oot 760, the 1. C. at 81,730,874, and the | Lhq0cd motives of the i young man | dollars. He said to the city, or the lying upon an ash-heap trying to | men interested, * (fiys me ten thousand throw up. The uuumrltlm carth was | dollars, with the privilege to draw fo¥ | o0 1o the tmmense success of the ¢ D 4 strange contrast with Byron’s snos- [ wore when the ten thousand was | Gelatine Bromide Instantansous Proce gt :-lnut‘wl;‘ver ml_‘ljv‘ is wln lh'; 10*3 flake, whiter than the mountain sleet | goue.” The money was raised, und | ot the Excelsior Gallery, Fittl) atreet, Gou astern, fourteen milea in length, and | y'er it left mother cloud. The young | the job successfully carried through. | yeryibe only assessod at 8800 per mile. The | follow was fearfully and wonderfully | If each farmer would allow hinself £o | 10 s 15 ot sloc e B 6o G 0, . & Q. and . |4 uaiok ; be tured {0 creato o fund to pay the | of Butine . & P., both valued at §$12,600. He shivered—shivered as does the ' espense of such represencatives, to|" #oim O, R L &P at §4,007,808 All the _other lines in the state are assessod at Notice. less-than $1,000,000 each. The low- a8 owing to the Pres J. BARKE, Proprietar 0. DENTISYTS, ————— ey rietor duesires those wishing 0 (all between the hours of # SUch Arrangoment iy necossary o WN. CHRISTOPHER, Meshanical Manager. |BOSTON TEA STORE, ) 124 South Main 8treet, - COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. and find anything and every- thing I want, OF FIRST QUALITY AND AT VERY LOW PRICES. I tell you, I can Suve Money My Harness are Manufactured trom A No. | Oak Tanned Leather. | Sell My Goods at Bed Rock Prices, Or- now out of my salary, and Live |ders from abrcad receive prompt attention. {:;:;-_(;luus too. It pays togo — “Whem‘did‘youmy 1cwa.;?" BOWMAN, ROHRER & CO., BUSTU“ ']EA [}[]MPY Storage and Commission FINE GROCERS. PURCFASING AGENTS A 3 AnJ Dealers in @1 kinds of Prodice, Prompt astention gives to all consignments: 18 C%%HN (‘\;E-L al‘nBUll?‘FPeailA 8. NOS. 22, 28 AND 26 PTARL STIHEET, COUNCIL BLURFS, IOWA. - WILL SUPPLY ON SHORT NOTICE— - Flowers, Greenhouse and: Vegetable Plarits Merchants, Cut In their season Orders promptly filled and delivere | to Express office Iree of charge. Send for- Catalogue, COUNCIL BLUEFES, ) s ra. H E . SEHEAMAIN, ——DEALER INv— PAPER, BOOKS - STATINERY, COUNCI:. BLUFFS, IOWA. STOVES, TIN WARE, J.¥. F'ULILER, SHEBTIRON WARM COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA, sar mrovawsy, - comen v | ByeD and Shipper of Grain and Provisions DON'T ¥A L TO SEE TIHE STCCR OF Orders solicited in Towa and Nebraska. REVERENCES.— First Nasional : Bank, Siewart Bros., Csuncil Bluts; William P. Yarve; & Cu., Culver & W. W. BUCHANAN TRent s e S WATCG AHOLESALE DEALERS N (Gasolinc Stove.) H. R. JONES, DEALER 1N P Hats, Cays, Straw Gaeds, sad Buck Gloves. B Sty CHICAGD PR:CtS DUPLICATED. RTIT IE s | CoOU n Cxx, BXATITES, s TOWREA... JEWELRE. oo e e . CO O, CLOZKS. s , REAL ESTATE AGENT, REPAIRIHG A SPECIALTY. Has For 3ale, Town Lots and & number ot W Office with W. S. Mav» 202 Broagway, COUNGIL SLUEFS, H. H.JUDSON, DRY GOUDS Faproved and Unimpswred, also Railroad Tands, il Jmproved Turms, both i Towa a-d Nebrask. , twer Savings Bank, - COUNC!L BLUPF BIXBY &a waon, PLUM:ERS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS Gas. Pixtures, Bath Tubs, Marhle Slabs, Brass: @oods, Iron and Lead Pipe, Fittings and 403 BROADW &Y, Pumps, Kspt in Stock. COUNCIL BLUFFS, No. 7 Fourth.St., COUNCIgBLUFFS. IOWA. 5 1 —gamoy a0 A G- B | ! IRuN meKs’ “f WE CASR”, THE LAGERST STOCK OB FANE MANUFACTUR BRS- O BOUTS g SHOES’ ENGINES, BOILERS, MIKING 1 Slippers, Etc,, AND GENERAL NACHINERY Office and Waks, Main Street, COUNCIL BJ UBFFS, Within One Hundred. and Fifty Miles of Couacil Bluffs. Al Mail Ozders Promptly Attended To and. Highly Appreciated. OUR PRICES ARE VERY LOW. . Call and See Our NEW SPRING STOCK, which |'has Begun to Auxrive, Z.'T. LINDSEY & C ., 412 BROADWAY, COUNCIL BLUFFS, oW1, And WEST SIDE SQUARE, CL ARINDA, 10WA Special Attention Is Once More Called to the Fact thay M. EXEFILILIMAN'S GO, —| Rank foremost in the West in Assortment and Prices of CLOTHING; FOR MEN'S, BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S YWHAR. IOWA, We give spciiliattontion $o Stamp: Mills, Smalting, Furnaces, HOISTERS AND GENERAL MILL MACHINERY, | HOUSH FRON GENERA L, REPAIR WORK willi vecelve prompt o tension, A geuoral s sontments. of Brass Goods, Belting, Piviwg, AND SUPPLIES FOR Foundry, Rig Irom, Coke, Gual CHAS. HEND4 (89 ) 8 delit MAUREER & URALG, 540 BROADWAY, 15U 1Fs, 10 VA, Drs. Woodbury & Son, h ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF coves | Eyppishing Goods W. 5. AMENT. JACOB 8198 AMENT & SIMS, Attornoys & Uounsellors-at-Law, COUNQIL BLUFFS, I0WA. KELLEY & M'CRACKEN, Marble and Granite,| = North Fifth 8t., Council Blufy carl & st Ave Hats and Caps We are prepared to meet tho demands of the trade in regard to Latest Styles aid Patterns, Fine Merchant Tailoring in Conneetion RESPECTFULLY, M. HELLMAN & CO, 1301-1303 Farnham and 300 to 312 13th Bt =

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