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THE DAILY T‘l< E COUNCIIL: BL.UXE'S T o.o. oouxa co. COMMISSION Kansas, and Quee P eference, Smith & Crittenden, Ugur STATIONERY AND W s Q@ Lands a.nd Lots MONEY COUNCIL BLUFFS - - WHOLESALE DEALER Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip, 00ds appertaining to tho shoe trade. GO MRS. NORRIS' NEW 105 South Main Street. W ATEIR That never require crimping, at Mr, J. J. Any other hair dealer. Also a full line silver and colored nets. Waves made from Iad All goods warranted as represcnted. elsewhere, Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryant’s Spring, Cor. Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, Vipor, Electric, Plunge, Douch, ' Shot Hot and 'Cold Baths. Come petent’ viale nd attendants always on h: cand atten- tion given patron: ion given_ to butninyg childron. —Tnyestigation aud patronsge eolicited DR. A, H Stuprey & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. Dr. Studley: Treatment of chronic diseases made a speci CANGERS: AND OTHER REMOVED without the drawing of blood or uso of e, Cures lung discases, Fits, Sorofula, Liver Com: plaint, Dropsy, Rheuma- TUMORS:im rand Mercar- ial sores, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Catarrh, weak, inflamed and granulated Eyes, Scrofulous Uleers and Fe- male Discase: of all ' kinds. Also Kidney and Venerial discascs. Hemorrhoids or Piles cured ‘money retunded. All diseases troated upon theprincipleot veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons or the Knife, Eloctro Vapor or Medicated Baths, «who desire them, Hernia or Rupture radically cured by the use the Elnstic belt Truss and Plaster, which has superior in the world. furnished CONSULTATION FREE. CALL ON OR ADDRESS Dre, R, Rice and F. C. Miller, COU‘\ CIL BLL ]"1‘ S Ia. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bouquet's old stand, Council B'uffs, Towa, WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physicianand Surgeon. Office and residonce 616 Willow avenue, Coun- Bluf oW o W. K. SINTON, DENTIST. 14 Pearl ftreet, Council Bluffs. Extracting and filling a specialty. work guaranteed, First-class DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, No. 14 Peat 2., and 2 p, Barcroft street. Central office, F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA. Office No, 5, Everett Block, Broad- way, over A, Lomul l(aatnuram Werchants Restaurant J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets. Good accommodations, good fare and cour- teous treatment. S. E. MAXON, AROKE X T HEH O T. reet. Houss, 0 a, m. to p, m. Residence, 120 Telephonic connoction ' with Office over savings bank, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - . . Iowa, REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, in connection with his law and eollectlon businessbuys and sells real estate. Persons wishing to buy or sell city property call »t his office, over Bushuell's book store, Pearl etreet. ! EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public, 416Broadway, Council Bluffs Deeds’ andmortgages drawn and acknowl cod god TI;LE ABbTRAGl TO LOAN AT Ln%‘ NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. MZRCHANTS, City Market, Coun el Bluffs, 1ows, WHOLESALE fLOUR HOUSE, Goneral Agents for the Celebrated Millso! g, D, Rush & Co., Mills, Sioux Falls, Dakota. ufts, Golden Ragle Flour, Leavenwoith H. B. SEAMAN, AND RETAIL PRINTER'S GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFF3, IOWA. OFFICE ht (;.nd Sold. RATES, Bou 10WA, H. LARSOIN, 16 North Main Street. IN SHOE FINDINCS. Onk and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al Gocds sold a9 cheap as in the East. TO MILLINERY STORE PATTERN BONNETS AND - Council Bluffs Ia. WATVES oods Hajr Storo, at prices nover betoro touched b itches, cte., at g Feduced pricos, <Al gold, D5 ot fal to call betoro purchuatng . J. GOOD, Coune Bluffs, lowa. own hair, HAR GOODS. WATER WAVES, In Steck and Manufactur- ed to Order. Waves Made From Your Own Hair. TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warranted as Represented, and Prices Guaranteed. MRS. D. A BENEDICT, 337 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; - - - Towa MBS, E. J. HARDING, M. D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Penns, Office Cur, Broadway & (lenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. The treatment of all diseases and pointul dif- ficulties peculiar to females a specialty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. Office over First National Bank, Council Bluffs Towa. Will practice in the stite and federal “FRESH FISH! Game and Poultry, B. DANEHY'S, 136 Upper Broadwiy JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, - - W. B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate, Proprietor of abstracts county. Office cor streots, Council Bluffs, JOHN STEINER, M. D., (Deutscher Arzt.) ROOM 5, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Council Bluffs, atsonsos of wouien and childron & _spocialty. P. J. MONTGOMERY, M. D.. Free DISPENSARY EVERY SATULDAY, Can always be found & Towa, of Pottawattamie of Broadway and Main ows. Office fn Everett's block, Pearl trect. Reel) dence 628 Fourth strect. Office hours from 9 to 2a.m,2todand7 08p.m, Council tlufls F. G. GLARK, {PRACTICAL DENTIST. Pearl opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest praztitioners in Council Blufls. Batls Ista DR, F. P. BELLINGER, EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DR, CHARLES DE usranteed in all cases Office over drug store, 414 Broadway, Council Bluffs, lows. Al discases of the ey and car treated under the wost approved wethod and il curcs guarante JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice in all State and Usited States Courte, * dpeaks German Language, POSTAI. MAIL SERVICE. A Clerk Who Can Locate Every Town in Twelve Ntates, Cineinnati Enquirer. In order to correctly “throw” a state the man so doing must know the location of every city, town, village, hamlet, railroad station and crossing in every county in that stace. He must be able to detect the second he sees it a letter that is misdirected. Misdirected letters are called ‘‘nixes.’ Accompanying each go of letters sent from the postoftice is a slip of pa per with the date stamped on it, and that number represents the clerk at the postoftice who put up the pack age. In case a nixe is found in a package of ietters, it is returned by the clerk of the car, who stamps the date on the nixe slip, writes thereon the ‘““misdi- rection” and signs his namo to it. Each nixe is charged against the clerk at the postoflice who permits it to go to the car, and at ths end of the month there is a grand hauling over the coals, If too many nixes are set opposite a man’s name in a given time he is relieved of the rosponsibility of his position, Last night thirty nixes were detected in one car, and one of these was an official letter written from the Cincinnati postoflice to a postmas- terin a town that doesn’t exist. It may bo reasonable to suppose thata man of ordinary intelligence could learn all of the little towns, ete., in one or two states, bnt when it comes to twelve states it would seem to be an impossibility, but Mr. McGin- nis, the man with the best memory m the mail service, can locate every town, railroad station or crossing in Illinois, Towa, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ne. braska, Dakota, Montana, Califoruia, Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia. Tho rapidity with which he works when throwing mail is astonishing. He picks up a handful of lettors, and before you imagined he had glanced at it to see where it 18 destined for he has read the town, county and state and chucked into the box where it be- longs in. So familiar is he with the location of the boxes he does not have to look up to seo where the place is the latter goes, but he gives it a flirt in the direction of the proposed re- ceptacle, and it alights in the right place, while he still has his eyes on the letters in his other hand., He throws mail matter as fast as a_person could count for say half a minute, but at the end of that time the counter would be left and MecGinnis would be going on. There were 120 different pouches on the car dur- the night for different roads and cities, and it was necessary that Mec- Ginnis should keep in his mind just exactly where each pouch was, what was in it, and when to lock it up. When throwing letters he was con- tinually being asked by others where this, that and the other town was, or where such and such a paper or lettor would go, and he auswered each ques- tion before it was well out of the inter- rogator's mouth, never stopping in his work for a second. Another thing that is required of the head cleak is to keep in his mind the precise whero- abouts of his train, because he must know how far he is from the next place where he must discharge a mal, and that mail must be ready in time, or there is trouble. Again, it is possible that some conmection having been missed a few hours previous to the arrival of say McGinnis’ train, he has to recetve all of that delayed mail, and distribute it 8o as to make the next best connec- tion possible. In order to do that ho must nt forget where he is, and so ho has such a multiplicity of things to think of at 8o nearly tho same time that it is almost beyond human com- prehension how he gets through with- out going daft. I never saw men work harder in my life than did the crew of that mail car last night, and ot it was not their heaviest run, uesday night is a yery heavy run on account of the weekly papers from Cincinnati. Although the clerks work nineteen or twenty hours a day when they do work, they receive pitiful sal- aneu. They earn five times what they Mr. McGinnis and his crew handled one hundred and sixty-one sacks of mail on their trip last night, We ran through a most violent rain storm, but McGinnis never lost himself, and could at all times tell just where we were by the motion of the car. He has been in the service for eight years, and is the oldest clerk in his division—that 1, in service, for he is a young man in years, I saw him do something that it is claimed no other man in the service can do, and that was to throw a state without having the boxes labelled, He had the state of Michigan to throw, and he threw it into the boxes used for the state of Kentucky. Thus, he had to improvise boxoes as he went along, and had to remember just where he had put over 1,000 letters, After the lotters are thrown into the boxes they are all taken out and tied up in buudles, and chucked into their respective pouches. Care must be ex- ercised not to throw a bundle into the wrong pouch, and it is a mystery how any one man can retain in his mem- ory which is and which isn't with so many to choose from, But Mr, Me- Ginnis can stand in any partof a car and throw a bundle to any other part without & 1riss and without looking. Jacob Martzolf, of Lancaster, iy says your SPRING BLOSSOM works for everything you recommend it; myself, wife and children have all used it, and you can't tind » healthier family iv New York State. Oct, 5, 1880, iull0-dlw BISHOP GILMOUR, Sketeh of the Well-Known Cleveland Prelate, Toledo Telegram. The recent decided staud which Bishop Gilmour, of this diocese, took against ihe ladies’ land league has at- tra the attentien of the whole country. Richard Gilmour, bishop of the diocese of Cleveland, was born of poor pnrunls in Glasgow, Scotland, September 28, 1824, and is therefors nearly fifty- n.xghv. years of age. His father,thena workingman of moderate means, immigrated to Awmerica when Richard was a mere child, and settled on & farm near Latrobe, Pa., where, vy industry and frugality, he a.as ssed a comfortable competence, giving his son a common-school education, He was an adherent of the Scotch Pres byterian church, and the bishop often remarks he was ulghtuen years old be fore he ever spoke with a Catholic, N, Young Gilmour, in company with the son of a neighbor named Wi rm‘y went to Philadelphia to continue his of which Father Rafferty was priest t practice on the organ, Young Wright used to accompany him, and the tw formed acquaintance with and finally a strong attachment for the prics They began attending service Father Rafforty’s church, and years later both embraced the Catho lic faith, When Richard Gilmour became a Catholic, he, with his colleague Wright, entered the Catholic ¢ at Amhertsburg, Md., with a view tw entering the ministry, and pur | sued a .five years' course. Hay. | ing completed his theological studies, Gilmour went to C: cinmati, whero, on August 30 1 when he was nearly 28 years old, he was ordained a priest by Arch bishop Purcell. Heat once entercd nto the active sorvice of the church, | and was sent to Portsmouth, O. e church there, under his administra- tion, grow from little more than a Catholic mission toa powerful socioty, with handsome buildings and pros- porous schools, His five yoars' service in Portamouth and Ironton convinced his superiors in the church of his fitness for a more important charge, and he was called to the pastorate of St. Patrick's church in Cincinnati, where for ten years he ministered to that tlock, His next field of labor was in Mt. St. Mary's college. While in Ambherst. burg as a student ho developed great aptitude in mathematics and Latin, and he was professor of those branches in Mt St. Mary's for eighteen months. Thenco he went to Dayton and assumed control of St. Joscph's church, where he was located for three and a half years. In 1872 he was ap- pointed bishop. The Cleveland Penny Press, in speaking of the Bishop, says: *“Heis an indwstrious man, rising at 6 a, m., and attending mass at tho ocathedral, which, however, is usually conducted by one of the three priests having in charge the cathedral parish, At 8 ho breakfasts, and devotes the forenoon to correspondence, aided by Father Houck, his private secretary; he inos at 12 o'clock, and the afternoon is usually spent in attending to aflairs pertaining to thechurch in various parts of the city. After a 6 o'clock tea ho devotes the evening until 10 o’clock to reading and study, occasionally ro ceiving a call. He 18 still a hard stu- dent, and a great lover of mathemat ics. Two years ago he was very sick from nervous prostration, and since then has been unable to tax himself so severely with work, Ho is simple and frugal 1n his habits, his apartments being as plain as those of the pricsts. He is austere in his bearing, and, when he has formed an opinion he be- lieves to be correct, is immovable from his position. A Happy Family. Pulled from the breast, squeez:d from the bottle, Stomachs will sour and milk urdle: Baby hail iujah il thatni, ht. Houschold bumping heads 1n awful fright. Don't deny, 'twas thus with Vietoria Night was hideous without Castoria, When colic lett, tor peaceful slumber, Al said their prayers and slept like thunder, A ROMANTIC SPOT. The Gravejof a Princess of the|Otoe Indians. Correspondence of Tu Ben. Rep Croun, Neb., July 11.—I have described for you in my last a country of suntlowers by the acre, of sand burs intermingled with the wild moss rose and the cactus, of the soft, velvety and, withal, ornamental buffalo grass, of owls ard ravens and wild cats tono end, of antelopes and Irish hares, and clear blue skies and brilliant suns, and I am now seated to describe for you—to give you an account of a visit which I have a short time since made to one of the most interesting graves I have visited for many a day in the past. This grave is singularly in- tervsting, not only because of its con- taining all that is mortal of a princess of the Otoe Tndians, but also from its high elevation above the republican river valley, fully five hundred feot, and overlooking one of the noblest of sceneries, I venture to say, west of Missouri, facts which show that at least some of the native races, like tho ancients wo read of in tho holy writ, loved not only to inhabit the moun- tains whilo living, but also as resting places for their dead. Having been told the story of the death and burial of this young Indian girl, whose life if known would, doubtless, prove not much less inter- esting than fthat of a Leonit nona_or a Pocahontas, I rest 1 could not enjoy until I stood on the sod of earth beneath which re- posed in peace her olay cold ushes— until T stood above hor grave, After an hour's brisk walk over three miles of valley and the better part of an- other hour's climbing over tier sfter tier of perpendicular hills or bluffi, 1 finally found myself, panting and breathless,on the green summit of the last range of hills, and within a few paces of the grave and the monument —for there is such—over it. My firat thought, however, at the moment of arrival, were not either of the grave or the monument; much as 1 longed to examine but turn both, to round and gaze on the won- drous panaroma of wild, natural beauty and grandeur which on every vide lay stretched out before me, There, for down beneath we, dancing and glistening in the fresh morning sun, flowed on the Republican river as 1t flowed for thousands of years, to- wards the greator Missouri; and there, immediately beyond, lay the valley which bears its name, strotch- | ing out eastward and westward for hundreds of miles—that valley over | which but a fow years since roamed herds of buffalo and elk, and over which reechoed from the surrounding bills the war whoop of the Iudians, but which now lay in all its primitive eolitude, clothed with small shrubs and grass, and many varieties of bril liant flowers ; and there, still further on, boundless as an inland sea, lay th high rolling uplaud country, the view unbroken by bush or tree, or aught else in nature, save, here and there, the scarcely discernable “‘dug-out,” or studies in an advanced school. (il-|was a view well worth a fow mour had learned to play on the pipo | hours’ hard toil to behold Nay, organ, and was wont to go atodd/it was, in truth, & sight times on weok days into the church |alike worthy of the pencil of an artist | river and | mountain was once acknowledged by *s0d house” of some pioneer “‘home- 5 1882 though no other ob ject of interest wero in quostion, it or the gaze of a king, or, better still; the spot on which I stood was not un worthy of being the last resting place on earth of the daughtor of one whose rightful sway over all that territory of valloy, and upland, and thousands of men created by the om | nipotent;Being who rules the universe | for noble purposes, but a trace of | whoso existence, thanks to the wise and human tion of our christian governmont, there is not left behind, save a amall remnant, doomed, sooner or later, to the same inexorablo fate of their fathers—extermination by famine and the sword. After gazing for a fow brief moments on the mag- ent scone beforo me, I turned to amine the grave, 1 hadlearned be fore setting out that it was long ago pillaged of all tho valuables it con- tained—the private property of the daconsed — by whito men. There was 1o sign, however, that the highmound of earth next mo had been disturbed. But on going round to the other side there was a holo large enough to ad- mit a man's body. Through this hole I examined the interior, It was about six feet deep, six fect long and four feot wide and roofed, there be ing, as I have said, a large mound of earth compactly piled on tho roof. The interior contained but tho bones of the deceased girl and a small skeleton saddle, The story I had heard was true, It was sacreligously robbed of the treasures it contsined, as the decensod's favorite riflo, her bow and arrows, her trinkets of all kinds, with many articles of orna- ment, worked by her own hands. 1 had also learned bofore sotting out that from the death of the princess tc the timo of the pillage of tho grave the entire Otoe tribe—all of it there was loft —assembled annually i the close neighborhood of the grave to commemorate her death, but ever since its dest ion they never again assembled on that beautiful hill nor feastod their eyos on its surrounding scenery, Heartbroken and disgustod at the new raco of men gradually gath- ering around them--men without re- spoct even for the dead—they selected for them several other hunt- ing grounds further east on the banks of tho Blue river. Whether or not they continued their laudablo habit of keeping the memory of their departed green in their souls, I have not able to ascortain, though | I have paid a visit to their present camping ground, partly for that pur pose, and had an intarview with thoir chief All I could learn from him was, as he understood but fow words of English, that she was ‘gone! gone!” But T eaw that the mention of her pame brought a tinge of sad- ness to his countenance, and that before uttoring the single gone, which ho solemnly repeated, ho turned towards the sun, which was at tho moment _setting in a rich glow of crimson between the western hills, as if that luminary was an object of his worship, and then becamo for a fow moments as silent as the grave, as if in communion with the departed spirits of his race. Tho monument is but a rude one, as become a wandering people, It consists of a stout codar post, firmily fixed in the ground, to which is at- tached, by strong nails, a smooth slab offtimber, on the side facing the grave, On this slab there was ono day an epitaph, but now, alas, fow of the words are romaining, having been cut away with the wood on which they were painted, doubtless as souvenirs by such wanderers as mysolf, who happened to venture up o far that rugged pathway, but who, perhaps, were ignorant of the vandalism they were committing. Among the miss- ing words is the givon name of the princess, the following being all that rewains for the interest of posterity: “Sacred to the memory of 5 The daughter of Medicine Horse,” At the head of theslab is a cross, which has not unnrul{ oscaped the hands of vandals, which, taken with the words, “Sacred to the momory of,” & form of expressien only Catho- lics use on the tombs of their de- parted, is proof that tho decensed girl was before hor death a convert to the Catholic faith—-that Catholic mission- aries had traversed theso regions in search of the Indian in his wigwam, long before American civilization had crossed the waters of the Missouri, T, 0. B, Millions Given Away. Millions of Bottlesof Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, huve been given sway as Triol Bottlés of the large si This enormouy outlay would be disastrous to the pro- prietors, wero it not for the rare merits od by this wonderful med; . Gooiman’s Drug § 1 Bottle free, and, try f 2T T RS ine. Cull I have a cnmpl'ts stock of all the Latsst Styles of Carriages, Phastons and Open and Top Bugg es, Consisting of The Celebrated Brewster Sids Bar, The Hamlin Side Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and Tte Mullhalland Spring. The Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaeton Alsy the 0ld Reliable Bliptic Spring Bugiies and Phaetons, They are :1l made ot ths best ma’ erials, aad un- der my own supervision. I should be pleased to have those desirous of pur- chasing to ca‘F:md examine my stock. I will guar- antes satisfaction and warrant all work, H. F. HATTENHAUER, Broadway and Seventh Streets, COUNCIL_BLUFFS; IA. A.EX. MLA Y NE .- co., (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL |OWA GOALSI ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, GEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Office No, 34 Pearl Street, Yards Oor. Eighth Street and Eloventh Avenus, Council Bluffa. Corner MAYNE. C. E. MAYNE. COUNGIL BLUFFS STEAM FAGTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, CORN MEAL, GCRAHAM FLOUR AND CHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. The Higbest Market Price Paid for Oats, A DD BROOM CORNI Corn, Rye, Barley Parties Wishing to B8ell Broom Corn Will Please BSend Sample, MAYINE & CO., COUNOCIY. T LUVES Ono of tho bos second-class Hotels fn tho | '+ MPIISERON, 1 Lo SAUGRET, A W BTRASTs BROADWAY HOTEL |CITIZENS BANK A E DROWN, pristor, Of Uouncil Bluffs. Now. 634 and “Table s 50 Broadway, Council Blufts, Iowa, Jled with tho hest tho market af- and first-clasy beds, Terms UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 Lower Broadway, Mrs. C. Gerspacher & Son. ' CLAES Al AT Organized under the lawe of the State of Iowa, Pald up capltal,. 8 75,000 Authorized capiial, +200,000 Dratts issued Interest paid on time depost on tho principal citi of the United Biates and I tte ntiol ven to collections 0 with prompt returus, DIRECTOLS, E.IL, Shugart, . J.T Hart, W, W. Wollae, J. W. Rodfer, LA ) A OIRETS EUROPEAN HOTEL, Corner South and Locust Streets, ST. LOUXIS MO., J. H.HURST. - =« (Prop. Rooms, 750, 81,00 and 81,60 Por I Day STEAM LAUNDRY 723 W. Broadway. 8parkling Bpecific [or Indigestion w9, tho water of tho famous Seltzor is duplicafel in & moment with & spoonful Sy of TARRANTS SKLTZER AP WIENT, Which contsing every valuablo cloment 0g. nounce that froc tent f a1 know fresh and fi y luval SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, DR. CLARKE No Gurel) ke No B, “Y EstaBLiuugy 1851 811 A’Lm.m-t 8t o8, Sporua e/ i, Tnpotncy (Box oal lucagacity), Fomals o rregulariles, tis, ot press 1abla of Belt-abise 0 {or CELEBKATED (EE CURED. An_ ologant Restaurant fs connected with this oo, whoro meal ot sorved atreasonabls prices peon day and night, Sioux Uity & Pacifie RAXLIROAT. THE BIOUX OITY ROUTR Runs a Solid Tratn 1hrough from Oouncil Bluffs to 8t, Paul Without Ghange Time, Only 17 Hours ACHPCH MILES THEZ SHORTES aou OOUNOIL BLUFF8 10 8T, PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH OR BISMAROK s0d all polnte tn Norihorn lows, Mionos ts and Dakota. This line 1 cquipped with 4o lmproved Westinghouso Automatic Alr-brake sud Mlile Fiattorsa Coulox and Buffor: aud tor BPRED, BAFETY AND COMFORT 1s unsurpassod, Pullman Palace Sleeplng Car through WITHOUT CHANGE between Kan ty aud B4 Faul, via Councll Bluffe and LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This inundry has Just boen opened for busi. noas, and we aro now prapared to do lsundry work of all kinds and guaras satistaction A spocialty mado of fine work, such 8 collars, (uffs, i shirts, etc, Wo want everybody to give us @ trial, IARHUN & ANDERSON, STARR & BUNCH, HOUSE, SIGN, AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GEAININB, A SPECOCLALIT R . Shop \d Soott St HUCHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN ROUTE Uulon Pactfic Traustor s Couns Corner Broadway and Scott St ¥ Rowon you get & Thro Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts | S i Cigars and Tobacco, Fresh i Ol RCFYS AND G0 BARRL Oysters and Ice Cream in | i e 0 Soeason, | 12 MAIN 8T, I G0 P. B. ROBINSON, Ass't Geu'l Pase. Ag'h,, Miesour! Valloy, W. E. DAVIS, South wesorn Agei't, place. You sec 3 larke 1s the only physl n the city who war: 1aubs CUrCH OF 1O Py diciies bout every: where, Hours, 5 4, M. 80 8 . M. dgwly worintendent. Gen' Pase, Agend Oouncil Bluffs. Counel Bludls fows