Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 15, 1882, Page 7

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- 7 — COUNCIL BLUFES ©. 0. 000X & CO. COMMISSION MERGHANTS, City Market, Couneil Bluffs, Towa, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, Geeral Agents for the Celebrated Millaot H. D. Rush & Co., Golden Kagle Flour, Leavenwosth, K Dee ill, Sioux Falls, Dakota, cil Blufts, fa. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STATIONERY AND PRINTER'S GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFFB—_ AIOWA; TITLE ABSTRAGT QFFIGE Lands and Lots Bou&ht and Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES. NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS - - - - - - IOWA 16 North Main Street. 3 WHOLESALE DEALER IN SHOE FINDINCS. Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip, Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al oo apportaining Lo theshoo brade. Go'ds sold as chewy as n the Fass. e GO TO MRS. :NORRIS' NEW MILLINERY STORE FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN’S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. - - - - - Gouucili Bluffs Ia. ‘That never require crimping, at Mrs. J. J. 's Hair Store, at pricos never befere touched by any other hair dealer. Also & full line of hes, etc., at groatly reduced prices. Also le, wilver and colored nots. Waves made from Indies’ own hair. Do not fail to call before purchasing . d a8 re| uted. MRS, J. J. GOOD, X s 29 Main stree., Council Bluffs, Iows, Bethesda |HAIR GOODS. BATHING HOUSE! WATEE;WAVES, ) Spri'ng, In Stock and M‘amufa.cfiur- Bor. Broadway aud Union Sts. ed to Order. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Waves Made From Your Own Hair, Piain, Medioatod, TOILET ARTICLES, Douch, Shower, Hot and Cold Fp e e ] All Goods Warranted as Detming eniliran v tisstion st patronses | vepresented, and Prices n“m]DJ‘IR. A. H Sruprey & Co., Guaranteed. br. swuter: Ttatment of oot aiiss|MIRS. D, A. BENEDICT, made & specialty. REMOVED without _the 337 W. Broadway, CANCERS imiescvimttiinst) oo 1 Blufhs; - - - Towa., AND OTHER Fith Scrotula, Liver Com: plaint, Dropsy, Rheuma- TUMO RS sism, Foverana sereur-| MRS, - E, J. HARDING, M. D., inl sores, Erysipolas, Salt Rhewum, Scald Hesd, Catarrh, wouk, inflamed and granulated Eyes, ~crofulous Ulcors and Fo- male Diseaso: of all 'kinds. Alio Kidney and Venerial discases. Howorrhoids or Piles cured ‘money refunded., All diseasos treated upon the principleot veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons o tho Knife, Electro Vapor or M=dicated Baths, furnished o tewho desire them, Hornia or Rupture radically cured hy the use the Elastic belt Truss and Plaster, which has superior in the worla, Feterence, Smith & Vapor, Electric, Plunge, a B Com- Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- CONSULTATION FREE H r elphia, Petna. CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs, B. Rice and F, C. Hiller, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia. LIVERY, Feeld and Sale Stables, 8 North First Street, Bouquet's old stand, Council Bluffs, Towa, WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Physicianand Surgeon. Mm:’nldo;:ldenu 616 Willow avenue, Coun- Ga'me W. K, SINTON, 36 Upper Broad DENTIST. |“jNo JAYFRAINEY, 14 Pearl Streot, Counoil Bluffs. s s . roane| UUSEICE O $hE Peace, rk guaranteed, b 314 BROADWAY, . P. HANCHETT, ; i g d Council Bluffs, - - PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.| W B, BAVES, Offico, No, 14 Pearl Street. Hous, 9 a. m. to 12, and2 p,m., 6 6 p, m. Residenco, 120 Bancroft street. Telephonic connection ' with Uans an ea s a B Central office, . Propriotor of ahetracts of Pottawattamio DR. AMELIA BURROUGHS, | biorreisr o shatroce ot pottamatsamie sireete, Council Bluffs, lows. OE X0 8 g JOHN STEINER, ‘M. D,, No. 617 First Avenue (Deutscher Arzt.) Hoursfrom 10 to 11 a,m., and 2 to 6 p. m, Merchants Restaurant Council Bluffs, Diseases of women and children _spocialty. J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets. Good accomuodations, good fare and cour: P. J. MONTGOMERY M. D., feous treatment. FrEE DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, S. E. MAXON, AROXE I T H O T, Office Cur, Broadway & Glenn Ave, | COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. The trestment of all diseases and pointul ;dif- ficulties peculiar to females a specislty. i he Star Bakery, HOWARD & ROBIE, 227 MAIN ST, Employ the best Bread Baker in the West; also & choico hand for Cakes and Ples. Bread delivered to all parts of the city. FRESH FiSH! and Poultry, B, DANEHY'S, Can always be found a Towa, Offico In Everett's block, Pearl treet. Resi] dence €28 Fourth street. Oflice hours from 9 to 28.m, 2t0480d 710 8 p. m, Councl klufls F. G. OLARK, PRACTICAL DENTIST, Pearl streot, opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest practitioners in Council Bluffs, Batis. Istaction guaranteed in all cases DR. F. P, BELLINGER, EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DR. CHARLES DEETKEN, Office over dru¢ store, 414 Broadwa, Bluffs, Iowa. Al discascs of the eye treatod under the most approved meth cures guaranteed, JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice fn all Stite and Urited Blates Courts. " Bpeaks German Langusge. Office over savings bank. COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, in connection with his law and eollection business buys and sells real estate. Persous wishing to buy or sell elty property call 4 his office, over Bushuell's book store, Pearl strect. EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 416Broadway, Council Bluffs, sel mortgages drawn and acknowl dged i « Iowa, Council I ear \d all GETTYSBURG REFOUGHT. A Novel Reunion of ,Veterans -Fed- eral and Confederate Officers, Face to Face on the Battle-Field, Determ- ne the Positions of Their Commands Some Pecullar Scenes and Inci- dente. Philadelphia Times, Gerryssure, Pa., June 7.—A sight the like of which is not noted in the world's history was seen here to-day, when representative Union and con federate officers walked arm-in-arm oyer the bat#e-field, pointing out positions of opposing forces on the ground of the great combat. The courtesies shown the southern offticers were 80 constant and so marked as to cause Gen. Forney, a member of con- gress from Alabama, to say that the warmth of the present greeting almost outdid that of nineteen years ago, when he lay so sorely wounded that he did not hear the historic cannonade that shook the hills and jarred the stony bottom of the Susquehanna, Gen, D. W, Aiken aud Gen. H. A. Herbert, both representatives in the national house, who led Alabama and South Carolina troops in assaults against Sickles, were prominent among the confederate officers. Gen, Sickles brought his one leg upon the field rather late, for he did not reach town until noon, at which time Maj. Gon. S, W, Crawford, who thinks so much of Little Round Top that he has bought a rocky acrea upon its crest, Maj. Gen, T. W. Egan and Col, G. E. Rundelph, chief of the Third corps artillery, arrived aleo. These veteraus had been preceded by many comrades, among whom were Gen. J. R. Brooke, U. 8. A., Representative Shalleberger, Col. J. B. Bachelder, government historian, Maj. Martin Maginnis, Gen, Ellis Spear, and num- erous regimental officers. All took part in the battle of the second day, and they represented many commanda along the famous Peach Orchard and Wheat Field lines, The battlefield wasat its beat. From the well-kept town which it skirts to the great green knob of Round Top its hills and hollows gave to the eye pleasing pictures without number, The clover field across which the topmost wave of the Rebellion rolled to break against the stone wall was carpeted with a new growth of the same herb- age; beyond were fair stretches of the green of graes and tree, and, whether looking to the right miles away toward the blue sky-line of South Mountain or to the left at che grayish sides of Little Round fop, grim, scraggy, and burdened with boulders, one saw enough to drive even the everyday pencil into poetry. All went well at the start. Col. Bachelder tapped the party to order at 8 o'clock in front of the town headquarters, carriazes were taken, and the line moved briskly out the Kmmettsburg road. At the firat halt, which was at the intersection of the pike with a by-road, it was evident that there was going to be a geod deal of fun. A disposition on the part of a half-dozen Generals or so to talk ail at once was developed. ““That looks lke the little white house,” one would say, and then would go on to tell how his command charged down to the house, but before he cou'd get into the midst of his expla- nation another would remind him that there were several ‘‘little white houses” roundabout, or a third would indicate his interest in some distant field, Thus it came that they fell into a mild sort of Babel. ‘‘This is won- derful,” remarked Col. Wallace, of the Maryland line, who once arrested Sen- ator Bayard, ‘“t is really wonderful to #ee these men, all of prominence in life, stand here nodding, argning, and gesticulating, as freely as though they were school boys, over a lot of green fields and something that occurred nearly nineteen years back.” It was easy enough to see, however, why it should be s0, for every one was elated with the bright spectacle, with the air that came in fine perfume over the clover, and most of all because he had a secret to pluck from the heart of the landscape. In the midst of the laugh- able clamor of tongues up got old Cal. Walker, of Mane, This hero of the Devil’s Den spoke with such precision of the formation of the first skirmish- line that he taught those about him the advantage of settling one thing at a time. Then General Herbert began to see more clearly, and Gen. Forney, untangling the skein of memory, solved this problem of his position, Trotting down the by-road the party reached the wooded crest of Seminary ;| Ridge, and following the crest came to the rough patches of timber where Wilcox's brigade was thought to have made its start. The interest of the southerners deepened, over Forney's massive features coming the smile of recognition as of an old-time friend, Their tongues were unlocsed and turned off incidents now remembered for the firat time since the battle, ‘‘Right heah,” said the Alabama congressman in the Gulf state tongue that seemed about as odd to Pennsyl- vanis ears as the down cast enuncia- tion of the Maine colonels present; “right heah by thie white oak Gen, Lee stood, and he began, sirs, scann ing the other follers with a long gl Capt. Walter Winn saye, ‘general, it's no uso for you to stay heah.,’ ‘Oh,’ says Gen, Lee, ‘I don’t think they'll shoot an innocent man.’ Just then a bullet comes co-blip, and I remember —yes, I recommember—-hit the tree just over his head.” This is one of hundred incidents just as interesting, few of which have found their way into print, told as the party stood at various poiuts upon the fieild, While some were humorous, as many were tragic. If sermons were not found in siones, trees, fencee, fields, and the little pools of spring water furnished the mussing link whereby suggestions came, Gen, Aiken was not particu- larly excited until he stumbled upon a black gum tree, the top half of which was missing, “‘Now,” he exclaimed, standing back, his eyes firing with the light of sudden and vivid recollection, ‘T am as certain as I live that I saw a man killed right there. He was an officer in Simms’ brigade, my support, and was laughing and chatting with my men. He sat down by the side of that tree, the picture of health and gallantry. Athe sat there a round shot from a Federal battery cut the trunk of ihe tree off, and though the shot never touched him, he was dead in a second. The concussion alone killed him.” By means of the tree Gen. Aiken knew the position of his troops and could point out the spot where Gen. Simms fell, swooning into the death sleep while hopefully tying a bandage about his wound. The Confederate position on that part of Lee's left was established in this way, a knoll suggesting this and a dell that, At every one of ‘hese points a small nhke,lduly numbered and registered, was driven, under Col, Bachelder's scruting. Indeed, the only woapons upon the field were the stake-driver's sledge-hammer and the Generals. Aiken, afire somewhat by his discoveries, led a battalion, armed with the latter, ever the ground of charge, first through a wheat.field, then between some rows of corn, and at last down & rooky bottom, where more stories of daring, of triumph, or of loss, were told. ‘It was upon one of these boulders,” said (ien. Brooke, not at all out of breath from the long trudge, ‘“that a bullet hit mo in the ankle;” and then he explained how his brigade came to get into such a tight placo, while Aiken listened with both ears, for he had faced Brooke there and may have sent the bullot that took the bite of flesh, Congressman Shallenberger, youthful in looks but grave in manner, also paid close at- tention, bocause he was with Zook when that gentleman was slain just on the hill a few hundred yards away. “‘We are paired for the house to.day, THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, JUNE 15 1882, allus w'ars a smilo am now sarvin' his #hird term in de state prison, ‘‘Let me say to you in summin’ up dat do man WK() #ins an’ knows it an’ wanta to do better am_sooner to be trosted dan de man who neber sins an' feels dat he am good 'nuff. If you tie to a man, let it ba to a man who feels dat he am weak an’ sinful. You will den have a pardner who am not a freak of Natur’. Let us now em- barrass ourselves wid de regular order of bizness.” 8. William Okochee, president of the “Ella Checker club,” of Ella, W, V., forwarded a communication, ask- ing if the Lime-Kiln club led to evil, “Dis club will be glad to 'filiate,” rosponded the president, ‘‘but as to checkers, I am not prepared to say. Checkers doan’ furnish do excftement but I kin say of it dat whar' one player 80ts on a soap-box an’ de oder on a bag o’ co'n, an’ do grocer isn't rushed wid trade, an’ it am a rainy boat players belong to de same church, Aiken,” he said, ‘‘and 1 begin to think we were paired on the 2d of July, '63.” This sally the party en- joged, unmindful that Shallengerger got a bit of lead in his leg on the hill in_question—a sort of companion bullet to a much worse ona that came later in the Wilderness. Just out a few rods nearor Round Top was the whirlpool of battle, the wheat-field of bloody chronicle, and into it the party moved, led by limp- ing participants in the slaughter. On that line, from the Devil's Don to the peach orchard just to the right, Longstreet, who said it was the best day’s battle ever fought in the world, buried 1,600 mor, and while he lost 6,000 all told Sickles counted 6,000 missing, Here Col. Charles B. Mer- rel), of Portland, Me., stepped to the front to show where his regiment stood jabbing at the enemy with bay- onets, with only a hip-high fence be- tween, and here Capt. G. B. Winslow, of New York, had a stake driven at the epot his battery did its work. The party remained in the wheat-fleld a good while. Bones may be under the turf, for ali one can learn, but the sheep grazing roundabout did not seem to know or care. Their bells tinkled and the veterans vapored until the sun, which had dried everything else up, ought to have gone behind a cloud for shame. Dock and such wild flowers as the mountain pink were seen on this now quite common- place elopa, while in the skir ing woods were the pinkest of the pink anemones and very lakely snakes. But rattlesnakes and the like, if anywhere, must have been in venom- ous multiplicity at the Devil's Den, whither the veterans now went. On the way Col. F. M. Cummins, of New York, Col. H, R. Stoughton, of Mas- sachusetts, and others marked out the lines. The former seemed to be too positive in the assertion that he stood ‘‘right there,” and though he bade fair to drill a hole in that particular stone with his. walking-stick there were expressions of doubt. How could a man tell to a hair's breadth where he had fought nineteen years before? All were mystified. ~ Col. Cummins, whose hair is as white as snow, was presred hard. How could it be! ““Well,” said the colonel, “‘you soe that hole between the rocks there; that's how I know, for as I stood here on the 2d of July, '63, I said to my- solf, says I: ‘Now, by the old Harry, Cummins, if it gets hot, hop like hell into that hole’” The crowd was con- vinced and convulsed in one kreath, So late was it getting that the wonder- ful rocks at Devel's Den were barely glanced at, and tho taking of Gen. Spear's valuable testimony with re- spect to the position of his Maine troops had to be pustponed for this time. The little valley of rocks was loft behind, and the march for Gettys- burg was made in quick time, —_— Brother Gardner’'s Latest Observa- tions, Detroit Free Press, The president ordered thirteen win- dows to be raised, the ice in the wa- ter-pail renewed, and all the dogs turned out of the room, and then said; “When you cum across a man who has no vices nor weaknesses, drap him as you would a hot 'tater. De Lawd intended man to be mo’ or less weak, wicked, an’ wretched. It was not de ideah to turn out a perfeck man, If it had been we should have had neither religion, preachers, nor de Bible, Airch would have bin Heaben, an’ dar would have bin no call to die. ‘‘Natur’ sometimes turns out a pus- son widout guile, just as she turns out one-eyed colts an' three-legzed calves. Such pussons soon become known as either fools or lunatics, It am agin natur's way to bringmen into dis worid wid an angel's wings already half grown, An’itam a leetle suspi- cious to find a too-good man, When you diskiver a human bein’ who isu’t lame somewhar'—who nebber de- ceives, cheats, lics, envies, covets— who goes about satisfied wid do weather, craps, an’ himseli—who won't bet, drink, go to de ecircus or look upon a hoss race, you have foun’ & man to let alono, He am too good, Natur' made him fur an angel and forgot to put him in Heaben, ““I like & man who has weaknesses an’ sins, Den I know he am a feller- mortal who was put on airth to be saved, I like & man who has had sickness, heartaches, an’' grevous trouble, Den I'm sartin of a man who has sympathy. 1 like & man who has bin foolish 'nuff to git drunk ana strong 'nuff to kick do tempasion ober a seven-rail fence. Den you know whar' to find him. He has been dar an' knows what a fool he was, T like aman who has bin a liar, an’ who hasn't entirely recovered from de in- jury.” Den I know how to trade hosses wid him, an’ I know what to believe when he tells me he tells me dat he has been fishin', “When a man tells me dat he has become 80 good dat he feels like bus- tin’, I go right home an’ pat an extra padlock on my kitchen doah. When & man shed tears ober de condishun of de far-off heathen, de heathen at howe had better be keerful how dey lend him wmoney. Do man whose conscience won't let him go to places of amusement has bin known to elope wid anoder man’s wife. De man who ocan't remember dat he eber used an oath or tole a lie has bin follered across de ocean an’ arrested fur robbin’ widders an’ orphans, De man who it am a good way to kill time." Not a Beverage: ‘‘They are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the highest degree, containing no poor whisky or poisonous drugs. They do not tear down an already debilitated system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hops, that is, more real hop strength, thao a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester solls them, and the physicians pre- scribo them.”—[Evening Express on ‘Hop Bitters. BUSINESS WAS BAD. Legitimate fnterprize Paralyzed by Civilization. Brooklyn Eagle, ““And how are things in the far west, now!” asked a Bro klyn man of a stranger he had picked up, and who had been living out in the territories. ‘“‘Bad,” replied the frontiersmen, ‘Things are not what they used to be. Why, sir, they try a man by jury now! Yes, sir! Catch a horse-thief and lock him upin a jail and give him just as fair a trial ‘as they do a man who murders a woman! Oh, the wholo country is broke up!” “You surprise me!’ replied the Brooklyn man, who was more sur- prised by the manner than the matter of the intelligence. “Fact! Where I live they've lynch- od only one man in four years, and that was for weariug a stand-up collar! And they don’t shoot any more! No, r! If two men have a rpw, they fight with their fists, and the sheriff soes fair play! 1 tell you this beastly civilization has ruined the frontier. They arrest even roal agents now! Think of that! TRoad agents! They used to elect them school trustees, and a stage driver is no more account dat a hoss raco does, an’ you can't lono | ChaSIng to ca'l money aa fast a8 you kin on poker,|antee satisfaction and warrant all work, day, an’| Gorner To the Consumers of Carriages & Buggiaé; I have a complete stock of all the Latist Styles of Carriages, Phaetons and Open and Top Buggies, Consisting of The Celebrated Brewster 8ide Bar, The Hawlin 8ide Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and The would afliste, and inquiring of Brothor| N6 Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaeton Gardner if he thonght checker-piaying | Old_Rel able Eliptic 8priog Buggies and Phaetons, Millhall and Spring. Also the They are 11 made of the best maleriale, and un- der my own supervision. I should be Plea.sed to h ave those desirous of pur- and examine my stock. I will guar- H. F. HATTENHAUER, Broadway an d Seventh Streets. COUNGIL BLUFFS, IA. DIRECTORY OF LEADIN G WESIcRN HOTELS HOTELS, PROPRIETORS TOWN! ARLINQTON, V. G. McINTIRE, Lincoln, N SBARATOGA HOTEL, J. 8. BTELLINIUS, Milford, .3 MARSH HOUSE, E. MANS, BROWNSVILLE Neb OOMMERCIAL HOTEL JOHN HANNAN, Btromeburg Ne HALL HOUSE, A W. HALL Loulsville CITY HOTEL, OHENEY & OLARK, Blal COMMERCIAL HOTE J. Q. MEAD, . GRAND CENTRAL €JSEYMOUR, Nebraska Oity, Neb MIBSOURI PACIFIO HGTEL, P. L. THORP, Weeping Water,Ne OCOMMERCIAL HOUSE A. O. OAARPER, Hardy, Neb, QREENWOOD HOUSE, W. MAYFIELD, Qreenwood, Nebr! QOMMERCIAL HOUSE, E. 8TOREY. Olarinda, lowa ENO'S HOTEL, E. L.ENO, Eremont, Neb' EXOHANGE HOTEL, ©. B. HACKNEY, Ashland, Neb * METROPOLITAN HOTEL, FRANK LOVELL, Atkinson, Neb, MORGAN HOUSE, E. L. GRUGS, Quide Rocd, Nab, BUMMIT HOUSE, BWAN & BECOKER, Oreston, la. HOUSTON HOUSE, GEO. CALPH, Exira, la, REYNOLDS HOUSE, .M. REYNOLDS, Atlantic, la, WALKER HOUBE, D. H. WALKER, Audubon, la. OCOMMERGCIAL HOTEL, 8. BURGESS, Neola, la. OITY HOTEL, DI A. WILLIAMS, Harlan, la, PARK HOUSE, MRS8. M, E. OUMMINGS, Corning, la. NEBRASKA HOTEL, J,'L. AVERY, 8tanton, MEROHANTS HOTEL COMMEROIAL HOTEL, U, W. BOULWARE, Burlington Junction, M Blanchard, la. PARKS HOTEL, F. M. PARK, Shenandoah, la, COMMERO AL HOTEL, HENRY WILLS, Dayld City, Neb BAGNELL HOUSE, OHAB. BAGNELL, College 8prings, COMMEROIAL HOUSE, WM. LUTTON Villlsca, Ia. JUDKINS HOUSE, FRANK WILKINBON, Malvern, la, BALL HOUSE, H. H, PERRY, Ida Grove, la COMMERCIAL HOUBE B, F. STEARNS, Odebolt, la WOOD8 HOUSE, JOHN ECKERT, Osceola, N DOUGLAB HOUSE, J. 8. DUNHAM, Olarks, N BEDFORD HOUSE J. T. GBEEN, Bedford la. ARLINGTON HOUSE, J. M. BLACK & 8ON, NORFOLK JUNOTION HOUSE A. T. POTTER, Marysville Mo Norfolk Junction Neb WINSLOW HOUSE Q. McOARTY, 8eward, Neb. AURORA HOUSE M. B. JONES, Auroar,Nev, OROZIER HOUBE 0. R. CROZ'ER, 8idney, Neb. AVOOA EATING HOUBE D. W. ROCKHOLD, Avoca la. CENTRAL HOUSE FOSTER HOUSE WHITNEY HOUSE, LOCKWOOD & SBHATTUCK, Red Oal Capt. JOHN FOSTER, Lewis, la. E. HAYMAKER, Grl old than a mayor isin Brooklyn! I tell you the frontier is dead?” “‘But how is busineas?' “Nothing doing at ai', You see they’ve got blue-ribbou lodges, and that knocked business galley west! Absolutely nothing doing, Merchants are starving ever since the temperance movement comtenced. I don’t know what the country is coming to!” “‘Don’t the temperance people do anything for a living?” “Nothing %o speak of. O, they have little shops and kind of trade among themselves to keep each other going, but legitimatoe business is bust- ed, L tell you! Why, sir, there hasn't over forty barrels +t whisky come into our town in two months! That shows you how business is. What do you think they had thero just Dhefore I left?” “I'm sure I don't know.” “A church festival! You won't be- lieve it; a church festival! Right in the heart of the town! The merchants got together and swore they would net go, and they stayed away. But that didn’t break it up! As sure as Isit here, those people went right along and had their festival! That shows how thinga are going. Then a friend of mine licked a deacon one day. Fined him cash for it, and he had to | K. N. pay?” ‘‘Any gambling there now?” “Gambling! gambling!! Well I should say not! There isn’t over eighty or a hundred gambling houses in the town, where it used to be the staple enterprise! Gambling! T tell you everything is dead. Why, they've | Nos. 684 and 686 Brosdway, Council Blufts, Tows. even got ten-cent pieces for change! Think of ten-cent pieces!” ‘‘How do you account for all this?" STOCK FULLY PAID nnR8mebm very reasonsblo. THE JELM GO MOUNTAIN 1.D STT 7 e Mining and Milling Company. $Working Capltalt - Oapital 8200 O TS Par Value of Sharcs, - - - - 380,000, e - - - - L0000 25,000, UP AND NON-ASSESSABLE Mines Located in BRAMEL MINING DISTRICT, OEEIOBRS: DR. 4. 1. THOMAS, Prosident, Cummins, Wyo WM E. wing, TILTON, Vice-Prosidgns, Cammins, Wyoming E. N, HARWOOD, Becretary, Cummins, Wyoming, A, G. LUNN, Tressurer, Cuminins, Wyomtin TRUSTEERS. Dr. J, 1. Thomas, Louls Miller W. B. Bramel. A. G. Dunn Harwood, Francly Leavens, Geo, H. Falos, Lewls Zolnian, Dr. J. C. Watkine, GEO. W. KENDALL, Authorlzed Agont for 8ale of 8800k Bav 449 Nwaha N, One of the best s cond-class Hotels in the upplied with the best the market af- wod rooms and first-class beds, Terms “The newspapers did it! would blow about the copntry and telt what a town they had,and now thay've gotit. We were doing well enough, but outsiders found it was a good place and in they came with their puritanical notions and knocked honest industry higher'n a stack of chips! I They (UNION AVENUE HOTEL. Mrs. C. Gerspacher & Son. FI 1( SFLLING, 817 Lower Broadway, T CLASS HOTEL AT REASONABLE TRANSIENTS ACCOMMODATED, KL FOL BALE, GOOD REABONS FOK was opposed 0 the papers and said they’d make trouble, but they let 'em go, aud where are wo now?" “Do you think of going back?" “What's the use! There's no trado at all. Evorybody's honost, and all | waking money farming, I've got a |#1.00 per day. SCANDINAVIAN HOTEL. N, Anderson, - - Proprietor, 752 Lower Broadway, Table supplied with the best the market af- ords. Term §3.60 and §4.00 per weok. Transient farm myself, a hundred and eighty acres, but that's no work for me, Legitimate enterprise is busted.” “Wan't to sell your farm?’ asked the Brooklyn man, cautiously. “Sell iv! worth $50,000, and I'd take $10,000 forit.” The Brooklyn man reflected a mo- ment, and then the trade was con- summated. Later on the deed was transferred, and the Brooklyn man went home to tell his wife, The frontiersman sent the following dispa “B Duprky, Hole in the Wall, Mountana: Jump the Norwegian's claim to-night. Have sold it to a sucker, and potted the clean-up. Buy Calamity Frazer's saloon for me on thirty days. Leave on the train to- night, Kicker Baey.” ometimes Montana business is bet- ter in Brooklyn than in Montana, and T'd give it away. It's|Soups, Meats, and Estables always on STARR & BUNCH, HOUSE, SIGN, ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, 8hop—Corner Broadway and Scott St If You Wish a Lunch Go to LOUIE DUQUETTE, hand. Five Cents per call, AND PAPER HANGING, A SPBOXALYTY. an able-bodied liar who doesn’t lietoo hard can do & country as much good as a whole territorial prees that over- does the matter. No Buch Word as Fall, “I have used your SpriNG BLossos for fiad it has done me a great deal of good, I recommend it to mr friends, “HENRY BERTOLETTI, “‘May 24tk . 96 Main St., Buffalo.” Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10c, jl3d1lw Confectione. Cigars and Tobacco. Fresh Dyspepsis, headache aud constipation,and Qysters and Ice Cream in Season. HUGHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN , Fruits,Nuts 12 MAIN 8T, Oouncil Bluffs, MRS, J. P. BILLUPS, PROPRIETOR OF RESTAUBANT & EATING HOTSE, 818 SBouth Main Street, Council B uffs, New house and newly fitted up in first class stylo Meals at all houra, Icv cream sod lomo- nado every evening, Fruits a: d confectioncries J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor, Office over First Naticnal Tiank, Countil Bluffs, . Will practice in the state and faderal 1o courly STEAM LAUNDRY, 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This laundry has just been opened for Busi- ness, and e now prapared to do law work of «l nd gusranteo satisfaction [t specialty wade of fine work, such as coliars, it 80 shirts, ctc. We want overybody to give us & trial. LARSON & ANDERSON. 1In golug East take the Chicago & Northwest- Traing leave Omaha 8:40 p. m. and V:40 8. m, 1tull fnformation call on 1, P. DUEY, Ticke ey Bopor o at JAMES T, CLARK, Do wiy or & 5 “azos, Ona 18170k NERVOUS DEBILITY, P it by g S A specific for Hysteris, Dizsiness, Con Nervous Hoadache, Mental Doprossion, Los Mewory, Spermatorrhaa, upotensy, Involuutary Fuulnelons, Promature Old x%-, caused by over- exortion, self-abuse, oF ovor-nd wl leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure recent casca. Ka-h box containg one mouth's treatmont, Oue dollar & box, or six boxes for Gve dollars; seub by mall propad on roceipt of rice. We fuarantoo eix boxes Lo cure any oase. Vil sach ofder Fecolyod by ua for uix boxes, o- compaufed with ve dollars, will sond the pur- chager our written oo to returu’ the money I Ahe treatment does nob eff ot & cure. C. . ¥ G , Druggis, Bolo, Wholamle gud requl Agent, Omaba, Neh,' Orders by wall ab etallsvrice. wiy ~ g S oS

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