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o o.oooxa CO. GUMMISSIUN MERGHANTS, City Market, Conneil Bluffs, Tows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, Geperal Agents for the Cclcbrated Milla ot ¥. D, Kush & Co., , and Queen Bee Mills, S lon, Lourcil Blufts, Ka amhitference, Smith & Cri tenden, U Golden Eagle Flour, L joux Falls, Dakota. H. E. SE_A_M_A.N WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STATIGNERY AND PRINTER'S GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFF3, IOWA. TITLE ABSTHAGT JOFEFICE Lands and Lot.s Bought a.nd Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES, NOTARIES. PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCER'E COUNCIL BLUFFS 10V/A., . ILBGINSCOIN 16 North Main Street. WHOLESALE DEALER IN SHOE FINDINCS. Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip. Sods appertaining ta the shoe trado Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al Go-ds sold a8 cheap as in the East GO "TO MRS. NORRIS' NEW MILLINERY STORE FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. - - Council Bluffs Ia. WATER W.A.VES That never require crimping, at Mrs. J, J. Good' witch 08’ 0 any other hair dealer. Also a full line of silver and colored nots ~ Waves made from | elsewhere. Al goods warranted as represented. ~ Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryant’s Spring, Cor. Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS Plain, Medicated, V-por, Elec'ric, Plunge, Douch, Shower, ot and Cold Baths. Com: petent’ n ale and female vurses and atien. always on hand, and the best of ca-c and att. tion given patrons. Spocial attention given children, Inyestigation aud patronage solicited DR. A. H Stuptev & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. rn atment of chronic discases [}AN{}LRS 8§33 without the blood or use of e lung discascs, rofuln, Liver AND OTHLR ,m” Dropey ks TUMO tism, Fevor and_ Mo inl sores, Head, Catarrh, we d Eyes, crofulots Ule of all ' kinds. Al Kidney and Venerial discases. Hemorrhoids or Piles cured ¢ refunded. All diseases treated upon the principle ot veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons or the knife, Eloctro Vapor or M-dicated Baths, furnishéd otewho desire them, Store, at prices nevor befere touched by c., at yreatly reduced prices. Also gold, A Baff, Do not fall o call before purchasing RS. J. J. GOOD, 29 Main stree., Council Blufts, lowa. HAIR GOODS. WATER WAVES In Stock and Manufactur- ed to Order. Waves Made From Your Own Hair. TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warranted as Represented, and FPrices Guaranteed. MRS. D. A BENEDICT, 337 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; - - - Iowa. MRS, E. J. HARDING, M. D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Hernia or Rupture radically cured by the use the Elastic belt Truss and Plaster, which has superior in the world, CONSULTATION FREE CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs. R. Rice and F. 0. Hiller, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ta. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bougquet's old stand, Council B'uffs, lowa, WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting | Physicianand Surgeon. Office and residenco 616 Willow avenue, Coun= cll Blufs, lowa, W. IZ. SINTON, DENTIST. 14 Pear] Street, Council Bluffs. First-class Extracting and filling o epecialty. work guaranteed, DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. No. 14 Pearl Street, Houas, 0 a. m, to Residence, 120 onnection with Ba Central offl DR. AMELIA BURROUGHS CYEENC R 617 First Avenue 10tolla,m., and2to 5 p, m. No. Hours from Merchants Restaurant J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streeis, Good o i fare and cour- teous tre S. E MAXON .A.ROBI'.[‘.HOT. Office over savings bank, COUI\(Ju BLUF REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, in connection with his law and - Iuvld collection businessbuys and sells real estate. Persons wishing to buy or ol city property call # his office, over Bushnell's book store, Pearl EDWIN J. ABBOTT, Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 416Broadway, Council Bluffs Doods and morkgages drawn and acknowl ged | Courts, ~ Bpeaks German Lao, Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Peana. Office Cor, Broadway & Glenn Ave, [¢] NCIL BLUFFS, I0WA. s and p eclsty. I he Star Bakery, HOWARD & ROBIE, 227 MAJN ST, The treatme mploy the best Broad Bakor in the West; also a choice hond for Cakes and Pies, Bread delivered o all parts of the city. FRESH FisH! Game and Poultry, B. DANEHY'S, 136 Upper Broadway. JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, W B. MAYES, Luans and Real Estate, strac's of Pottawattamie :rlnl Broadway and Main ffs, Towa. Can always Be found a Towa, il B JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Doutecher Arat.) EVERETT'S BLOCK, Bluffs, en and children a_spacialty. P, J. MONTGOMERY, M. D.. Free DispENsARY v u ROOM 5, Council wiseases of wor en ERY SATURDAY, Office in Ferett' dence ¢ block, fourth strect Pearl trect, Res) 2a. m, 2todand7 tokp. m, Co luffs neil F. C. GLARK, {PRACTICAL DENTIST. Pearl street, opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest practitioners in Councll Bluffs. Satis lsfaction guaraateed in all cases DR. F. P. BELLINGER, |[EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DR. CHARLES DRETKEN, Office over druz store, 414 Broadway, Council Bluffs, lowa. Al discascs of the eyo’snd car trested under JOHN LINDT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice in all Btate and United Btates gusge. THE DAILY BEE DIVERS DEVILTRY. Some of the Offenders and Offenses Which Came to Light Yes- terday. A swarthy fellow named Benjamin Dyson has been complained of for stealing $21.50 from Anna Dyson was hanging about house for several days, and disap- peared about the same time the money did, and as it was learned that he had attempted to get one bill changed, the but Pralor, Pralor's warrant was issued for him, he has not been found. Antone Wierhorn, a boy, was fined Aylesworth for throwing a one dollar by Judge assaulting a little girl by clod of dirt at her. Mrs, McElroy, who lately figuroa As & witness in a rather dirty case in- volving a m-n_hlnn named Ross, was yesterday before Justice Frainey to answer |.- a triplet of charges, ing out of some trouble with § family, who live near by, One charge was for assaulting the Smith boy and another for threatening to shoot Mra, Smith, and still another for disturb ing the peace. The cases were con tinued. Mrs, Patti, the sixteen-year old wife, who was also a witness in the Ross case, was also charged with dis- turbing the peace by ru a row near Smith’'s house. case was continued also. Complaint was entered yesterday in Otfice hours from 9 to | Justice Frainey's court inst Sam Williams for malicious trespass, 1t is claimed that Sam turned his hogs into Jim Coyle’s premises, and that he also helped himself to wood. WORDS FROM A WOMAN. Miss Francis E. Willard Pleads with the Men to Vote for Pro- hibition, There was a good sized audience at Dohany’s on Thursday night to listen to Miss Francis E. Willard, whose name has become & familiar one in connection with different phases of temperance work as well as by her ability in handling the pen, and the oratorical powers she has shown on the rostrum. Miss Willard is the author of “Nineteen Beautiful Years,” has occupied the position of pre- ceptress of the versity, been managing editor of The Chicago Post, and oceupied o her po- sitions of prominence and trust,which she has filled with acknowledged ability. There was, therefore, high expectation felt among her auditors— perhaps too high. At least she did not meet it fully. Her address was one of marked merit, taken from a literary standpoint, but it was by no means up to high standard which she has reached in some of her other efforts. Still it was an address above most of those which have been delivered on the tem- perance question. She took up the various points of Does prohibition prohibit, personal liberty, sumptuary Northwestern uni- laws, etc., the same as have been so frecly and fully handled of late, but dwelt but briefly on each, Her thoughts and views were stated clearly and couched in elegant diction, which at times touched upon the eloquemce which she has shown in her lectures upon other subjects. She was happy n her choice of illustra- tions, sprightiy in her anecdotes, and her address held well the attention of her hearers and called forith much en- thustasm. At the close of her ad- dress she was personally greeted by a number of old acquaintances, and many who desired to grasp the hand of 80 noble a woman. She left yes- terday for Sioux Uity, where she was announced to speak last evening NEOLA'S NEED She Wanted Reed But Did Not Get Him - Crops and Business Neora, Towa, June 22, 1882, To the Editor of Tur Bxk: Crops in this locality have been im- proving daily with the warm weather. and if the summer holds late and stays warm, we can look for at least a two- thirds corn crop. %0 busy plowing that our town has been rather quiet in the line of trade. S0 much the better, however, as it shows we have an industrious, ener- getic class of farmers. I have not seen more satisfaction over any turn in politics than is ex- hibited here over the fact that the delegates to Pottawattamie’s conven tion were instructed to support Judge The farmers are all J. R. Reed for congress, and chare is uwo doubt but that this county weuld give him a solid republican vote, and alsoa large num- ber of democratic votes, while Auder- son would not only lose all the demo- cratic votes, but also a great many republican votes, as I can name a nuim ber of republicans who will vote for a democrat in preference to Andorson. The reason of this is because Judge Rteed is widely known, not only in this eounty, but through the entire district as & man of excoedingly m..~ moral cheracter, whose intog ny absolutely unquestioned, and_ wioso ability is unsurpassed in the district, while Anderson is known to be the paid agent of the railrouds aund monopolies, a practical trickster who secks office that he may fatten upon the procceds, and therefore the sworn enemy of the farmer and the laborer, I but echo the sentiment of a large majority of the volers in this district when I say, *‘Give us Reed.” C. D. Dillin, H. Mendel and I) Harney circulated a subscription paper on the streets yesterday afternoon, and nearly §150 was donated by our generous citizens, which was forwarded to the Grinnell and Malcom sufferers last night, 5. A M IOWA CITY'S UNIVERSITY OUT- PUT, Correspondence of The Bee, Towa Ciry, June 20,—The seven- teenth annual commencement from the law department in the state university took place to-day. The class roll bears 156 names, out of l'hlch 131 receive the LL, B, degree. This is the largest class ever graduated from the law school of the university. ln conversation with different mem bers of the class, finds Chancellor of Bluffs, to be very popular, and re. garded as an efficient, erudite gentlo The chancellor began the prac Tue Bre chronicler Ross, Couneil men, tice ot law in Lewis, Iowa, and Lewis folks will be glad to hear of hls eus cess in conducting the law branch of the university. Orations wore dolivered by E. B. Howell, C. F. Kuehnel, J. L. Ken nedy, L. A. Stamwood, Coe L. Crawford, Daniel Fmery, L. O. Har ris, W, H. Norris, M. McClure, J. F, Clyde, members f the graduating closs, The commencement exorcises of the literary department will take place to morrow, The s niors number forty. Tho oity is full of strangors and presents theappo vof a groatgala day. Towa peoj proud of their prospective alumni, and the closing scenes of the collego year draw an im- mense number of them togethor, Hawkeve, C e —— IOWA ITEMS, The Grinnell college buildings will be rebuilt at once A stroei railway company has been organized at Centervillo, A Mothodist church, to cost about £1,200, will be built at Wall Lake this summer, Latter day eaints are going to build a §6,000 church at Lamont, Decatur county. Hon. Ezekiel Clark, of Towa City, has authorized the Grinnell rolief committee to draw upon him for $1,000. In Des Moines a man applied for public relief, basing his claim to charity on his Im\m-- the dropsy and four pairs of twins, At the celebration of the Fourth at Conterville, a purse of §25 is offered to the couple who will be married on the speaker's atand. It is rumored that the Rock Island Railroad company is about to bui mammoth five hundred room hot Colfax and surround it with a park. All notarial commissions expire Jnly 5, and no notary will have auth ity to ‘mako acknowledgements after that date unless recommiesioned. It is proposed in Marshalltown to donate the monoy raisod for a Fourth of July celebration to the Grinnell sufferers, and forego the pleasuro of a general jollification on that day. The most astonished young man in the ner hwest might have been seen in the office of the O'Brien county clerk of the courts the other day. He applied for @ marriage liconse, and nearly went crazy when he found that just twenty four hours before another fellow secured a license to wed the very woman he fondly thought was all his own. A SORT O BREVET DKVIL. Strange Power to Resist Fire Pos- sessed by a Maryland Negro. Wilnington News, Nathan Coker is of pure African lineage, black as ebony and of stalwart frame. He is now somewhere between 60 and 70 years of age, and has re- sided all his Jife in the lower part of Tuckahoe Neck, Md. He has no knowledge of buoks—can not even re- peat the alphabet-~but is much above mediocrity in pomnt of general intelli- gence and good, hard, cornfield com- mon sense a3 compared with his race. When quite young he conceived the idea of becoming fire-proof, and before he was 25 he was a veritable firo king, How he acquired the power to per- form the foats of placing his hands and arms in a vessel of boiling watcr and keeping them there for ten min- utes, licking a red-hot shovel, holding in his mouth molten ' load, and oven swallowing it, as well as many others more daring, without apparent injury, no one know, nor has he ever revealed the secret. In fact, it is doubtful if he can himself explain the mystery; but he can and does handle bars of iron glowing with white heat, eat glowing charcoal made from hickory or oak wood, walk barefooted on a red-hot bar of iron, sixteen feet long, with perfect coolness and deliberation. These facts are attested by many re- spectable witnesses, He used to de- light in frightening the ignorant and superstitious country people, to whom he was unknown, whenever he could find a crowd gathered around the stove in a village or country store, by stalking in, opening the stove door and running his hand down in the fire and deliberately taking a live coal in his fingers and coolly place it in his pipe and walk off. He was at one time on exhibition and his strange feats created consider- ablo excitement, but owing to his di like of notoriety and lack of educ tion he retired from the stage, His power of resisting the effects of fire is singular, and has never, so far as | know, been explained, theush he has | been examioed by a number of seien- ; tific men, Many of the colored peo. of the by the go to and fact not a few who had been taught crude theologians of fifty yea believe in & personal devil with horus, tail and cloven foot, whose kingdom was the bottomless pit and who oc sionally treated his refractory sub- | jects to doses of molten lead, firmly oved, and perhaps some of them stall believe, that Nathan was a sort of a brevet devil himself, The Money in tha World | Director Burchard, oi the United | States mint, estimates the world's productions of gold for the calendar year of 1831 at $107,000,000, and sil ver §57,000,000, The wlnumptlun of the world in | ornamentation, manufactures and arts is estimated for the same period at $76,000,000 gold and 35,000,000 in silver, The prix circulation in the countries of the world is estimated al I 1 at plac Gold, $3,221, 0(}0 000; full logal tender silver, 82,155,000,000; limited tenders, §423,000,000; total specie, £0,707,000; paper, $3,644,- 000,000, making the total circulation, mdudmk the amount in government securities and banks, and in active cir- culation, £9,403,000,000, ‘As there are about 1,600,000,000 of people in the world, it follows that if SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 188% have a gold eagle you have €3 more than your share. It is a great mis- take to suppose that the world owes any ono & living. That can be only got by hard toil of brain or hands, Confederate Clothes Mary W, Earlyin tte We &'s Tim e phia, Duting the war homoespun dresson wero a good deal used in Virginia country Indies for every day wear, and I have seen some of these drosses that looked really pretty and jaunty on fresh young «'t's. The dyes (as well a8 the cloth were a home pro duction, Tvy leaves set with alum, mado a pretty gray: sumac leaves and chinquapin bark made black; maple bark made a bright v , and peach bark made a green d The men ot the \nll(mlvrn\ those in the army,atleast, fared much better with respect to clothes than the women did, the government providing them with uniforms imported from abroad, through the blockade, O« too, a woman would get a pri shapo of a trunk or box of clothes smuggled through the block- ado, 1n which easo her toilot would be the envy and admiration of all her fomine fitonds, Persons who had friends or relatives in Baltimore, Phal- adelphia or other northern cities would sometimes bo favored with a box of “‘store clothes.” T remember such a box being sent from Philadel- phin to acquaintances of mine in Richmond, who becamo, in conse- quence, ‘‘the glua of fmlnon and the mould of form.” A plaid ribbon in this box was lent by turns to various friends, who looked on it as a rare and dainty ornament, something al- most equal to the ribbon of the Or der of the Garter. The writer wore it to an elegant entertainment in Richmond the last winter of the war. Meorchants as well as individuals would cccasionally receive goods through the blockade, but these were scarcely opened before their eager cus- tomers would seize on them and bu, them up, Prices roso almost as high as during the revolutionary war of 1776, The last winter of the war the thinnest, flimsiest silk rose above $100 a yard, Dresses that winter wero made with a basquo _and a full, plain skirt, or a flounced one, semi-long. Ball dresses of silk or other heavy material wero made after the memorial fishion of a Grecian waist, with a full, plain skirt, in a train_ behind, and 1 do not think any of the changes or caprices of fashton have improved upon the beauty 3 d simple elegance of this costume. Muslin dresses were flounced or puffed, and by dint of be- ing carefully darned and laundried were made to do good sorvico. On one accasion a young lady of my ac- quaintance appeared in a very dashing costume of pink silk brocade, the do- sign being so large and coarso as to cause a suspicion among her lady friends that she had improvised a ball costume out of an old brocatello cur- tain, and a sprightly young lady, on the spur of the moment, composed a parody on Moore’s “‘Origin of The Harp,” beginning thus: “‘Tis believed that this dress that I now waear for thee ‘Was a curtain of old---," But the rest is too full of personal- 1ties for repetition, Such transforma- ions and make-shifis were the order of the day during the war. Numer- ous articles ‘‘contrived by turns a double debt to pay,” like the piece of furniture described by Goldsmith, “lly night a bed, a chest of drawers by day.” A gontleman of my o quaintance had himseli a “swell” suit made out of gray blanket shawls, and a lady in our neighborhood had sn old piano cover dyed (it was colored bright purple by means of maple bark) and cut up into a suit for her little boy, who appearcd quitein royal style in his purple garmonts, A very prevalent fashion in con what was called Theso were gath- ered full on the shoulders beneath a band, and were generally made of bright colored flannel or silk, with a row of gilt buttous up the front and on shoulter straps. The Italinn hero Garibaldi, 1 may remark in this con- nection, was highly esteemed in the confederacy. Unfortunately, the fash- ions of those days called for volumi- nous garments and bonnets. Goroes wero not worn then, nor had it’ come into fashion to combine two materials in a costome, else wo might have com- bined the fragments of two dresses into one and thus have been some- what relieved of our straits and per- plexities, The bonnets and hats werao large; at one time the former were immense, prompting one to exclaim, “‘No more on this head!” Velvet bon- nets were mostly worn in winter, but in summer straw hats and drawn mus- lin hats (the latter very pretty and picturesque) were worn. Toward the lutter part of the war, hats made of pleated shucks were very much worn in country nerghborhoods, a trimming for the hat being also made of shucks, The gentlemen and little boys of the family had to resort to home-made hats for commom wear, and these hats od by tho awkwaik, inexperienced fingers of amateurs displayed many curious curves and grotegque indenta- tions that imparted a rakish air to even the staidest old gentleman or most mnocant little bo, s of Phila. now federate days was Garibaldi bodies = Feather flowers wero much in vogue then, not the fine, delicate, brilliant made of Brazilian feathers, but coarse ones made the feathers of our barnyurd fowls, while eider and lown were simulated by a trim- ming made of goose feathers, Trim mings were, of course, as scarce with 18 meterial to be trimmed, and oward the close of the war persons dressy if they could AWl us wuster a trimming of dress braid; a quilling of this at the bottom of an alpaca or worsted skirt, and three rows of it above, were considered a atylish trim- ming, Shoos were a great diffiulty with us. Many a belle had to encase Ler dainty feet'in clumsy, home-made shoes, and if the war had goneon much longer perhaps we might have oceasion to resort to the French sabot country cobbler m my neighborhood supplied the young ladies around him toward the close of the war with gaiters made of an old blue cloth coat, cut up and stiched with yellow silk, or wooden shoe, Proof Positive. We have the most positive and convine. ing proof that THoMBs' KoLECTRIO O1L is & the cash in coin and paper was equally divided every man, woman and child would have nearly 7. 8o when you most effectual specitic for bodily pain, In cawes of rh;umm'm and neuri - it !Ivu instant rel 7 I have a complsts stock Consisting of The Dexter Queen Buggy der my own supervision. I should be chasing to cal Corner Broadway WHOLESALE AND IOWA Office No, 34 Pearl Street, COUNCIL BLUFFS Corn, Oats, BROOM Parties Wishing to COUNCIX. One of the bess » cond-class Hotels In the Wost s the BROADWAY HOTEL. A. E BR®WN, Proprictor, Nos. 634 aud 636 Broadway, ouncil Blufls, Tows. Tablo supplicd with the best the market af- fords, Good rooms and first-class bods, Terms very rewson UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 Lower Broadway, Mrs. C. Gerspacher & Son. CLASS HOTEL AT REASONABLE NT8 ACCOMMODATED. GOOD REASONS FOIt TRANSIEN' FOR BALE SCANDINAVIAN HOTEL. N, Anderson, Proprietor, 782 Lower Broadway, Table supplied with (he best the market af- fordy. Tornus §3,00 and §1.00 per week, Transicnt .0 i Ynu Whh @ Lunch Go to LOUIE DUQUETTE, Meats, and ables always on Land,_Five Conts per call, "STARR & BUNCH, HOUEE, SIGN, AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, A BPBEOLAYLT Y . Shop—Corner Broadway and Scott St HUCHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts Houps, Cigars and Tchacco. Fresh Oysters and Ice Cream in Season. 12 MAIN ST, Oouncil Bluffs, To the Gonsumers of Gamages & Buggies. of all the Latast Styles of Carriages, Phaetons and Opea and Top Bugg es, Tre Celebrated Brewster 8ids Bar, The Hawlin 8ide Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and The Mullhalland Sprmg and Phaeton Also the 0ld Reliable Eliptic 8pring Bugoies and Phaetous. They are ¢1l made ot the best ma'erials, aad un- Pleased to have those desirous of pur- and examine my stock. I will guar- antee satisfaction and warrant all work. H. F. HATTENHAUER, and _COUNGIL BLUFFS, IA._ A.F. MEATYTNE & CO., (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) RETAIL Seventh Streets. DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG ALL GOALS! ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Yards Cor. Bighth Street and STEAM FACTORY Hleventh Avenue, Council Bluffs. MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, CORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND CHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. The Highest Market Price Paid for Rye, Barley L WD CORNI Sell Broom Corn Will Please Send Sample, DA INITEE - & (e BLURES. MRS, J. P. BILLUPS, PROPRIETOR OF BESTAUBANT & EATING HOUSE, 818 South Main Street, Council B uffs, New hous nd newly fitted up in first class style. Moals at all hours, Ico cream and lemo- nade every eveuing, Frults avd confectioneries® J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor, Office ovor First National Bank, Council Blufts, Tows. Will practice in the state and federal courty STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This laundry has just been opened for busi- ness, and we dro now propared to do laundry work of all kinds and gusrantee satisfaction. A spoclalty mado of fine work, such a4 collars, «uffy, fine shirts, cte. We want everybody to give us a trial, LARSON & ANDERSON. JOUN BTAELNK, O, President, Vice Pr W. B, Dssiing, 300, aud Troag, THE N/ BRASKA MANUFACTURING GO Lincoin, Neb MANUFACTURERS OF Oorn Planters, narrows, rarm Rollers, Sulk Hay Rakes, Bucket Elevating Wind mi &c. Wo are proj 'umll to do Job work and masaf Y, turiog for other parties. “Addios il ordors HEBNASKA MANUFAGTURING 00, Tanoous Wflntad—ngunu for the Life Times and oonisn 1y WA B JO580 Jamien the auly lit Dt B T hich will 1208 bo & ikoad And Thuckdor® Biory, Such s has boca and will bo publighed, but a (rue Life by w raon who 18 n possession of the -un ul aud dovoted wite. thao fictlor T ple Book. We-00d-AW -6