Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 20, 1882, Page 7

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| COMMISSION MERGHANTS, City Market, Conncil Bluffs, lows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, General Agents for the Celebrated Millso? H. D, ad Quicon Boo M Feterinice, Smith & Crittonden, Conncil fluf WHOLESAT STATICKERY AND Kush & Co., Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenworth I'a, Sioux Falls, Dakota. s, 1. AND RETAIL PRINTER'S GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFF2, IOWA. [ R e 3 Q1 o G®Tr TITLE AB X. . Lands and Lots M Y LOAD NOGTARIE BLIC LA RSOIN, n At X IR E & 0FFIGE 1}()u;:‘1]1t”afi'd Sold. AT LOW RATE \ND CONVEYANCERS. A 1OWA, 16 North Mein Street. HOLESALE DEALER Ready -fitted uf 006 Apperty wors, i calt wiin and Jip, Uhoe trate, Go 1d MRS, KORRIS' NEW FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. CHILDREN'S HAT 105 8outh Main &treet. - W AT EIED That never require erimping, at M any other hair dealer. Also full iy silver and colored nets ‘aves mude fre elsewhere. All goods warranted 6 representod. I SHOE FINDINGS. MILLINVRY STORE PATTERN BONNETS AND 'S A SPECIALTY. - - - - Qouuncil Bluffs Ia or befere touched by d prices. Also gold, > call before purchasing MRS, J. J GOOD, 29 Main streoy, Council Bluffs, lowa. ~ Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryont's 8pring, Cor, Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, V-por, Eloc Sho Hot and Cold I male rurses and ot ud tho beat of ea-e and . Specal attution given to Inyestigation aud patronage ric, Plunge, I bt children. eolicitea DR. A. H SrupLey & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. Dr. Studl, Treatwent of chrouic discases tade a speci 3 & CANGERS AND OTHER TUMORS:E Rheum, Scald Head, O and granulated Eyes, - crofu! male Discase- of all ’kinds ey Vezerial discases. Hesorenoids or Piles curod ‘money refunded, All diseases treated upon the principleof veget- #ble roform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons or the knife, Electro Vapor or M-dicatod Baths, furnished «who desire them, Herain or Ruptuco radically curcd by tho use the Elastic belt Truss and Plaster, which bas superior in the worla, MOVED without the wing of blood or use of e. Cures lung diseases, Liver Com- CONSULTATION FREE CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs, P. Rice and F. C. Miller, C )U!‘;CIL VI}LUFFSV, I"L LIVERY, Feed and Salg Stables, 18 North Fiist Street, Bouquet s old stand, Council B ufts, fowa. WILLAKD 2 W.D.STILLMAN,| Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physicianand Surgeon. Oftice and residence 615 Willow avenue, Coun- ol lufts, lowa. W. K, SINION, DENTIST. 14 Pear] Rtreet, Council Bluffs. First-class Extracting and filling & specialty. work guaranteed, DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN ARD SURGEON. Office, N 2, 8ud’2 p, Bafioroft st Central offic F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYBICIAN & SURGEON. COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA. ' Office No, 5, Everett Block, Broad- way, over A. Louic’s Restaurant. 4 Pearl Street. Howts, 9 a. m, to , 10 5 p, m. Resldence, 120 # Talephonic conuection ' with Merchants Restaumnt J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets, Good accomwodations, good fare and cour- teous treatmen " 8. E. MAXON, AR O X T E O W, Office over savings bank COUNCIL BLUFFS, -« Towa, " REAL ESTATE. connection with his law and W, C. James L ction b ud sclla real estate, Less buys ersons wishing to buy ox sell city property call bis office, over Bushnell's book utore, Pearl rect. EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 416Broadway, Council Bluffs. HAIR GOOUS. WATER "vy'AVEs, In Steck ajn?l Manufactur- ed to Order. Waves Made From Your Own Hair. TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warranuted as Represented, and Frice: Guaranteed. MRS. D. A. BENEDICT, 337 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; Iowa - MBS, B J. HARDING, M. D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNEGCOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Peana, Office Oor, Broadway & Glenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. Tho treatment of all discasos and painful dif- ficulties peculiar to females n specialty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. e over First National Bank, Council Bluffs, Will yractico in tao stito and federal FRESH FISH! Game and Poultry, B, DANEHY'S, 136 Upper Broadwiy JNO, JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Conneil Bluffs, - - W B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate, Proprictor of wbstracts of Pottawattamie county. Office corner of Broadway and Main stroots, Council Blufls, Towa. JOHN STEINER, M. D.; (Deutacher Arzt.) ROOM 5, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Council Bluffs, _ wisenses of womon and children &_spocialty. P. J. MONTGOMERY, M, D.. Frer DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, Can always be found & Towa. Offico In Fverett's block, Pearl trect, Resl) dence 028 Fourth street. Office hours frow 9 to 24, m, 2 todand 7 Council luft F. C. CLARK, |PRACT.CAL DENTIST. o8p.m, Pearl opposito the postofice. One of the oldest jrastitioners In Councll Blufls. Batle Istactlon gusranteod in all casos DR. F. P. BELLINGER, [EYE AND EAR SURGEON, | WITH DR, CHARLES DEETKEN. Office over dru ¢ store, 414 Broadway, Council Biufls, Al discases of the and car trestod under the most approved method and all anteod urcs gu ~ JOHN LIN! IATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice In allf State and United States Deeds”andmorigages drawn land acknowl dged Courts, - Spoaks German Langusge BEES AND WASPS. Live in Communities Like Men, Insects That London Pall Mall Gazotee, Thete are few departments of na- tural history more fascinating than that whick deals with the habits and instincts of tho sceial insecte, and Sir John Lubbock’s marvelously patient and minute experiments have placed him at the very head of all observers in this delightful field. Our versatile and accomplished naturalist, who seems to find spare corners of time for everything, has kept ta’ nests for years in his own house, and, as he domici s six-legged petsin glass- houses, ho has had them constantly under observation at all times of year—morning, noon aud ni To nts, accordingly, the larger part ot work is devoted. Sir ck begins his account with ummary of what was pre viously known on the subject of form ioan habis; and these 1utroductory chapters, enrichod as thoy are by many now facts and luminous evolu ti explanations, will probably prov most unsciontific roaders the pleasantest portion of the whole book. Ho touchoa lightly on the life-history of the individual ante, which live as he himself has shown in his own nests for at least meven yeuars, and gives a bricf account of their structure snd tes, which mig! s bean advan sly accompanied, in a popular escription Jike this, by some details the principal native genera and spe His «peculations on the ori gin of the sting and his account of the various modes 1 which ditforent ants fight are extremely intereating. So is the description of the American and Australian honey-ants—in which cer- tain gorged and bloated individuals are told cff to do duty as specialized living honey-jars on behalf of the commuuity—as well as the investiga- tions iuto the political economy of some exotic kinds, where division of labor has become organized in the very structure of the insects, and different castes are produced with dif- ferent heads and organs, peeuliarly adapted to the functions they will be called upon to perform, In such a stereotyped commoenwealth as this it is physically impossible for any up start individual to hold hims If above the station in life to which it has pleased the community to eall him The rclation of ants with various s and other insects have always od great attention; and on these subjects Sir John Lubbock has col- lected all the best previous observa- tions, which he corrects, confirms, or completes by later researches of his After pointing out the numer- ances by which plants guard in their flowers against the 15 of theiving ants, as own, depredati noted by Kerner and others, he goes on to describe such cases of alliances between trees and ant communitics as that romarhed by Mr. Belt in a Cen. tral American acacia, which produces nectar 1 glands on its leaflets 1n order to entice a small s ecies +f roaming ants—the latter in return protecting the tree from the ravages of their leaf- cutting congeners. Mr. Moseley has shown that certain tropical plants can- not grow at all unless infested by a colony of ants, and in other cases the insects are useful to their host by killing off caterpillars and similar de- structive enemies. Then there are the harvesting ants of Syria and India, as well as the still more curious agri- oultural ants of Texas, which clear a space of ground around their nest from all weeds, and devote it exclu- sively to the growth of a peculiar kind of grass known as ant-rice. But the relations between these insect commu- nities and other animals are even more interesting than their relati with the world of plants. Sir J Lubbock quotes graphic accounts both of the drivers and the blind foraging ants, which he supplants by his own saluable observations upon aphides. It has long been known that ants keep these small plant-lice as domestic ani- mals, milking them for the sake of their honey-dew, which the aphides express when carried by tho antennie of their masters, Our author, how- ever, hus discovered that the provi- dent little herdsmen actually carry tho oggs of the aphides into their nests, keop them there through the winter, and place them out in the spring on their proper food-plants. They also guard their cattle at times by building earthen cowsheds over their heads. Different species of ants keep diffor ent aphides—some underground and others on the surface; and Sir John suggests that to these differences of hubit their distinctive epecific colors may perhaps be due. He even fancies he detects in an inter- mediate species, preserved for us in amber, the common ancestor of one darker and one lighter modern kind. The ants also keep several other do- mestic animals, such as blind beetles, some of them, perhaps, as pets, but ethers apparently for the suko of their agreeable exudations, The numerous interesting facts on this subject, as al- 80 on the question of slavery among ants, cannot be set down here even in the briefest abstract; readers must get the book for themselves, and they will find it teeming with scientific marvels not unrclieved by characteristic touches of humor, from the first page to the last, 1In the matter of relative development Sir John Lubbock thinks he can tracedistinctions between more civilizad and less civilized communi- tie, answering respectively to the hunting, the pastoral, and the agricul- tural stages among mankind; while, as regards slavery, he poiats cut a pro- gressive degeneration from cerdain war like races, which seem but recent- ly to have acquired that bad habit, down to degraded creatures which have lost even the instinct of feeding themselves, andstill more abject kinds which have fallen to the condition of were parasites upon their former serfs ‘The most novel part of our author's own researches is that which relates to the intelligenco, the senso-perception, and the moral character of his little proteges. On the whole, formican ethics, at least as exhibited in prac- tice, appear to indicate a low collective hedonistic standard. The ants seldom ghow individual kindness to friend, though in this respec: there seem to be differences between one idiosynera- cy and other—good Samaritaus among the ants o8 well as priests and Levites, As a rule, the various members of a nest will behave decently well to their own fellow-citizens when injured or vhen drunk and iucapable. Their THE DAILY I%}i!}--~-TII!I{:SD1\\" JULY 20 1:82 | recognition of friends was severely tested, and resulted tn the discovery that they knew their own mesemates after a separation of nearly two years This recognition does not seem, how ever, to be due to individual «cquaint ance, nor to the use of a distinctive password; for fellow-citizens are recog. nized even if removed in the pupa stage, and brought up in an T nest, Sir John Lubbock also exporimented on their supposed faculty of intercom. sion that they seem to possoss som. thing approaching to language, As regards their seneos, they can d guish colors to some extent least, aud they show a curious dislike of vio. lot, though it is possible that these rays actively hurt them in some way unkaown her than prove y distasteful. 'ho researchies of the general intellect of ants are striking hardly any individualinitiative, thougi linps one could hardly expect t they would shine in the construct o bridges or somo of the other tas which their rigorous examiner them, Tho part of the work devoted to boes and wasps does not outirely r dound to the credit of th what overrated and essenti less 1nsects, Bees are indu doubt; but they turn out to be stupid at finding their way, reckless in tho indulgence of their insatiable appolite for honey, wholly devoid of moral re gard for the rights of othera, nud cal- lously indifforent to the fate of their own sisters by blood and hirth. They have no personal_affection for one an- other, and even their devotion to their queon has beon largely overestimated, But they can undoubtedly distinguish colors, and they show a great tasie for blue, which are good points as far as they go, since to them we mainly owe the existence of potals in flywors, Upon this_subject, and especially on their part in helping on the evolution of blue blossoms, the present vol- ume contains some curious and acute speculations, The famous tame wasp, which used to feed from her loarned owner’s hand, comes in for a fow words ot recugnition; and on the whole we are inclined to think better of her, morally and intellectuall than of her cousins, the bees. She came from the sunny south, and Sir Johi Lubbock tried to keep her alive through our English winter, but n. ture was too strong for him; she grew gradually nuwb and eold, and at last faded instantly away, through her sor- rowing master pathetically observes that her end appeared to him to be quite pumless. Sho now occupios a place 1n that Westminster of deserving insects, the British museum, ly heart Thankfally Acknowledged. DenvEg, Col., June 6, 1881, H. H WarNer & Co.: Sirs—I have been troubled with kidney com- plaint for four years. I am no well man, thanks to your Safe ney and Liver Cure, F. B. SEmpLE, julyl7dlw Clerk American House. Tron and Steel Bullein, A report just issued by the Silk association of America, summing up the statistics of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1882, shows that the manu- facture of #ilk goods has now attained the highest point in its history in the United States. The value of the goods made in the American factories in the year just ended was about $25,- 000,000. This industry is peculiarly subject to great fluctuations, In bad times it will fall off one-half in & sin- gle year. In good times it will ex- pand rapidly, even in the faco of high wages. During tho sunny season of business prosperity following the re- turn of specie payments it has grown year by year, and it has now reached 2 dovelopment of which those who are pushing its fortunes may well be proud, The American makers have tho satisfaction of knowing that they have now doubled the product of the very best year they ever had before the panic of 1873, The fact is the more gratifyfog because it is attended with the circumstance that the gain in the importation of foreign silk goods by foreign makers since the year last reforred to is almost nothing, and that the importations of many lines of goods i8 now being rapidly cut down, 1t is the opinion of prominent mem- bers of the Bilk association that Eu- rope can never compete with Asia in the production of raw silk. There appears to be one insuperable objeec- uon, the same which renders it so difficult to carry on the raising of raw silk in America as a regular industry, It is the cheapness and excellence of labor in Asia, Bancrott speaks of “‘the superiority of labor” and the “redundant population” required for the culture of silk, and these condi- tions exist nowhere as they do iu China and Japan, Even in Ttaly the silk-raisers cannot hold their own against two countries where wages aro twelve cents a day. Asia is 1herefore the sourcs of princpal supply. The raising of raw silk in the Uni- ted States has not reached the stature of a regular industry, An attempt was made by the census authorities to learn the exact amount of the material produced in one year, the silk trade being desirous of knowing the facts, It was found thet the expenses would exceed the value of theresult. Enough was learned, however, to show that the raising of raw silk in this country is still in a purely elementary stage, although its culture has been going on in & small way, here and there, for more than 160 years, Long before the revolution dresses wero made from Awerican raw silk, Mrs, Pivckney took to Burope with her from Charles- ton enough of the material which she had raised and spun herself to make throo dresses, ono for the Empress Dowager of Wales, one which was presented to Lord Chesterficld, and 1841, when it reached 30,000 pounds, There has lately been a revival of interest in ek cultureat Philadelphia, attended with the formation of a lit- tle society having the welfare of the idea at heart, The total product at present is about 1,000 pounds a year 10 Utah, about half that in Kansas, munication, and came to the conclu. | Up to the present time 1o process bee covered or practiced in th utstances of exact scientific metliod, wsilb st ekt ot L BRI wnd they go to col nce us that on the | 5 g el N A e b Bl R LA - rust. A procoss has, however, boen with small quantities in Pennaylvania, New California and a few othel A very amall re it is considered thatin 1 were | when there forma alone, planted silk raising.§ especially for No Humbogging the Amerioan Pooplo Youn eau't humbug the Ameri when they find a remedy that « we it and rec mmend it to their Just exactly the cace with Sprive I w which has become a household word all over the United States. Price 50 cents, tiial bottles 10 cents, julyi7diw IRON RUST PREVENTED, A Valuable Discovery in the Manne of Treating the Metal porfected in Bogland, that country, aud in many, and Belginm, w! come the ovil and madei s rust-proof, And curiously enough the system of treatmont requires the artificial rusting of the ivon beforo it can bo rendered rust-proof. The process is that known as the Bower- Barff process. It consists in artifi- cially creating a coati of magnetio oxide of iron on the surfaco of the iron. Magnetic oxido of iron, as is well known, in its nato stato is unaffocted by exposure to the atmosphere, That fact led t» a long series of experiments by Prof, Barff, 0i England, which wero not wholly succeasful,§ save in the treatment of wrought iron, as a uniform coating of the magnetic e could be ob- tained. His process consiated in the treatment of aron and steel in an ex- ternally heated chamber to an atmos- phore of superheated steam, Mr, George Bower and his son, Mr, A, 8. Bower, simpliied this method of treatment by using internally heated chambers or ovens and using air heatod to a high temperature in the place of steam, By a combination of the two processes there resulted the present one, which has been prosecuted in Europe for two years with the most completo success. The iron articles which it is demigned to mako rustlees are placed in a fire-brick chambor. Connected with the chamber is a sories of gas producers. Tho gas, ns produced, is' led along passuges and mixed with air in a highly heatod condition and consumed — the product being carbonic acd. This and a small quantity of free air onter tho cham ber and are partially deprived of their oxygen by their contact with the heated articles. The result is the proauction of a coating of magnetic oxide, incorporated with the surface of the iron. Over this thero is, however, a thin coating of the sesqui-oxide of iron, or rust. This process of oxidation occupies about a half hour, At its conclusion the air is shut off and carbonic oxide admitted to the chamber, the result being that the coating of rust is con- verted into a magnetic oxide. This deoxidizing process consumes a quar- ter of an hour, aud the repetition of the processes produces a coating of any desired thicknees. The reason why this process is so much superior is in use in .| Corner SRS To the Consumors of Carriages & Buggise, I have a couplata stock of all the Latss: Styles of Currisges, “hastons and Opea and Top Buggies, Consisting of The Uelebrated Brew.ter Sids Bar, The Hawlin Side Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and Tie Mullhalland Spring. The Dexter Queen Buggy and rhaeton. Alsy the Old ‘iclable tiliptic 8pring Bugyies and Phaetons. They are : 1l made o' ths best ma'erials, aad un- der my own supervision. I should be pleased to have thoss desirous of pur- chasing to ca'l and examine my stock. I will guar- antes satisfaction and warrant all work. H. 5. HATTENHAUER, Broadway and Seventh Streets. fl__SOUNGILNELUFFS. IA. LB BN DAY RIE S CO., (fuccessors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL [OWA GOALS! ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Offics No, 34 Pearl Street, Yards Cor, Eighth Street and Hleventh Avenus, Council Bluffa. P. T. MAYNE, C. E. MAYNE. COUNGIL BLUFFS STEAM FAGTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, CORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND GHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. The Highest to any process of galvanization, enam- eling, or any other plan yet devised lies in the fact that the coating is not a scale, but is virtually made a portion of the substance treated. A singular fact in connection with the process is that a portion of rusted iron can be thrust into & chamber, subjected to thoe treatment, and be at once " con- verted into a rustless bit of iron, Ifa chalk-mark be made on a bit of iron subjected to this treatmont, or if any of the sand from the foundry clings to the materfal, it makes no difference in the success of the oxidation, as the process goes on underncath these for- cign substances as effectunily s though the iron were perfectly cloan, After treatment in this way the iron comes from the chambers of .a French gray color with shades deepening to black. It can then be bronsed, gilded, or silvered, and paint applied will ro- main on it in the same way that it does on wood or stone without flaking off, as it does from iron that does not have the magnetic oxide coating., The discovery in pronounced by the iron men, engineers, and plumbers of the old world ag ono that wlil create a complete revolution in the iron busi- ness, as iron of all kinds for archi- toctural purposes, iron household utensils, gas, steam, end water pipes can bo thus treated, and all danger of one which she rotained for' her: 80 oy wauuli puwon calliog for it, ub oy bra self, Many coats and dressos were |25 $2oce o) The Binjur Munitackiriug vorn wade in Connecticut and elsewhere 1n | any persan living at & nee fiom 0us office; cplonial days from Awerican raw sk, g Vsl National flags were woven with it in gor Manafacturing Go., 1830. There have been a great many | Oftico, 1 Unton Bguar interesting experiments, and, not NE YORK mony years ago, there was much ex- citement in California in regard to the subiect, The largest product waain T R A S their failing of their designed pur- poses by reason of rust can bo re- moved. Tho process is soon to bo in- troduced into this cjuntry, and its adoption here would seem £0 b almost an absolute certainty, as several largo manufacturers in this aud other citien have applied to the English patentoes for the right to use the process. The process was brought to thiscountry by Prof, George W. Maynard, the métal- lurgical engineer, of this city, who has investigated the process in En- land, Millions Given Away, Milliony of Bottlesof Dr. King's New Discovery for Cousumption, Coughs and Colds, have been given away as Trial Bottles of the large This enormous outlay would be disustrous to the pro- prietors, were it ot for the rare merits possesed by this wonderful medicine, Call at O, ¥, Goodman's Drug Store, and got & Triul Bottle free, and try for yourself, nover fails to cure’ Market Price Paid for Corn, Oats, Rye, Barley. A NID BROOM CORNI Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Corn Will Please Send Sample, MAYNE & CO., COOUNCIL BLUOFES. Mrs. J. E. Metcalfe and Miss Belle Lewis 1dn of fancy goods, Fuch dkerchiots, both 1 sl sies will call and see o Laces, Fubroidorles, Ladios’ Undorwes linen; hoso of all Kinds, thread, pins, tock of goods ot 686 Broadway betore go Are now dealing in all of all descriptions, Also Hi noedles, cbe. Wo hope the ing elsowhere. METCALF BROS, ~——WHOLESALE DEALERS,, IN— Hats, Straw Goods, and Buck Gloves. CHICAGO PRICES DUPLIOATED, IOW.A._. COUNCIL. BLUEES - STARR & BUNCH, One of the best s cond-class Hotels in the West 1s the BROADWAY HOTEL. |HOUSE, SIGN, Nos. 634 !l.ll] 636 llrnmd:vn;,-l lll:.lll:‘i Blufts, lowa, AND Table supplied with the best the market af- [t Allll::.umu and first-class beds, Terms on"AME"TAL pAI"TEns- UNION AVENUE HOTEL. PAPER HANGING, 817 Lower Broadway, Mrs, C. Gerspacher & Son. KALSl]MININI} AND GRAINING, FIRST CLASS HOTEL AT KEASONABLE A SPHEOIALITY . Caps, PRICES, TRANSIENTE ACCOMMODATED. HOTEL FOR SBALE. GOOD KEASONS FOR | Shop—Corner B roadway and Scott 8t SELLING, (ening Rewardad Tho Story of ti Sewing Hachine, A handsome litelo pamphlot, bive sud gold sove with numeraus orgralugy, will be GIVEN AWAY EUROPEAN HOTEL,| Corner South and Locust Btreets ST. LOUIS MO., J. H.HURST. = = Frop. Rooms, 700, $1,00 aud$1,60 Per Day Au olegant Kestauraut ls onnected with this holise, whore weals are seryed s reasonab! peou day sod night, v price: W, W w STEAM LAUNDRY. HUGHES & TOWSLEE, 723 W. Broadway. DEALERS IN °* LARSON & ANDERSON, | Confectiongsy, Bruits,Nuts Proprietors, Cigars andfobacco, Fresh This laundry has fust boen opened for busi Oysters Ice Cream in oDty jonaes preaed 41 bt | 98 Lo work of all kinds and gusrantee satisfuction. A sposlelty mado of fino work, such as collars, , o ehirts, cte. Wo want cverybody (0 ivo us o trial. LARSON & ANDERSON, 12 MAIN 8T., Oouncil Bluffs, Vice Prox's , Sec. and Troas, THE NEBRASKA MANUFACTURING CO Lincoln, Neb. MANUFACTURERS A W, BTRERT, Cashicr. W't BANK Of Uouncell Bluffs, Organized under the lwws of the Btate of lowa. $ 76,000 . 200,000 ¥, L BUVGAR o-Frosh beid up capital Autacrizd capi sl OF s deposity, Drafts fwsued atoties of the Unitod Biates aud | Gorn Planters, Hrrrows, Farm Rollers ial atbintion iveu to collectious 1 ™ buiky Hay Kakes, Bucket sievatiog spondence with prompt roturns, Wiadmill , &0 wo a¥o prop: red &0 do Job work aud tac u'se Suring ‘oF othur pastie, A EIRASKA MANUPACTURING C0 NEBKAS! D Liucola, Neb, DIRKCTORN, dou, E.L Shugar!, ace, ' J. W, Rodfer, AW, Btrost, 3. Hait, 1A M L, Jyrace 1 g

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