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THE DAILY BEE-~TUESDAY, JULY 25 1882 1 — —— ] COUNCIIL. BLUEFES 0. 0. OO0 & OO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, City Market, Couneil Blufts, Tows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, Genoral Agenta for the Celebrated Millsof H. D. Rush & Co., Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenworth Kansas, and Queen Bee Mills, Sloux Falls, Dakota, Reterence, Smith & Crittenden, Uouncil Blufts, fa. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STATIONERY AND PRINTER'S GOODS, OQUNOIL BLUFFS IOWA. TITLE ABSTBAC] QEFIGE Lands and Lots Bou\%ht and Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES. NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS - - - 10WA: - H. LARSOIN, 16 North Main Street. WHOLESALE DEALER IN SHOE FINDINCS. Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip. Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al o0da appertaining _to th shoe trade. _Goods sold as cheap s in the East. GO TO MRS, NORRIS' NEW MILLINERY STORE FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 106 South Main Street. °°‘E‘ii},,,3,1!l£§j§; WATER WAVES That nevor require crimping, ak Mrs. J, J. Good's Hir Storo, at pricus never batoro touched by any other hair dealer. Also o full lino of switches, etc., at xreatly roduced prices. Also gold, silver and colored nets. - Waves made from Iadies’ own hair. Do not fail to vall before purchasing elsewhere, ALl goods warranted as represcnted. MRS, J. J. GOOD, Bethesda |HAIR COODS. BATHING HOUSE! WATER WAVES, At Bryant’s Spring, Cor. Breadway and Union Sts. In 8teck a:;:iiglnufactnr- COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, Vapor, Electric, Plunge, ed to Order. Douch, Shower, Hot and Cold Baths. Com- petent’ wale and female nurses and attondants always on hand, and tho best of cate and atten- tion given patrons. Special attention given to bathing children, Inyestigation aud patronage soifcited DR. A. H StupLey & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. Dr. Studley: Treatment of chronic diseases made a speci [}ERS drawing of blood or usc of knife, Cures lung diseases, ¥ "HER Fits, Scrofula, Liver Con AND OTHER 8 o0 Rheuma- T U M 0 n s tism, Fever mi;x-elfiln?r%‘;fi Rheum, Scald Head, veak, inflamed and granulated Eycs, N cors and Fe- male Diseasos of all 'kinds. Also Kidney and Venerial discases. Hemorrhoids or Piles cured ‘money refunded. Al diseases treated upon theprincipleof veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons or the Knife, Electro Vapor or Medicated Baths, furnished ewho desire them, Hoernla or Rupturo radically cured by the use the Elastic belt Truss and Piaster, which hes superior in the worla, ‘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 1 2 Ctoen MBS, E. J. HARDING, M. D.. REMOVED without the Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Penus, CONSULTATION FREE. CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs. B, Rice and F. C. Miller, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bouquet's old stand, Council Blufts, Iowa. WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence 616 Willow avenue, Coun- cl_Bluffs, lowa. W. K, SINTON, DENTIST. 14 Pearl Street, Ceuncil Bluffs. Extractingand filling o specialty, First-class work guaranteed, Office Cor, Broadway & Glenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. The treatment of all diseases and paintul dif- flcultics peculiar to females a specialty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. Office over First National Bank, Council Blufts Tow. Will practice in the state and federal courts FRESH FISH! Game and Poultry, B, DANEHY'S, 138 Upper Broadwiy JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 814 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, - - W. B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate, Proprietor of abstracts of Pottawattamic county. Offico corner of Brosdway and Main strecte, Council Blufts, Towa, JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Deutscher Arzt.) ROOM 5, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Council Blufs, wiseases of women and children & spocialty, P, J. HONTGOMERY, M, D., FRrEE DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, Can always be found a DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offico, No, 14 Pear] Stroot, Houas, 9 a. m. to 2,, an 1, to 6 p, m. Residence, 120 Bancroft street. Telephonic connection with Central F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA. Office No, 5, Everett Block, Broad- way, over A, Louie’s Restaurant, Merchants Restanrant J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets, Good accommodations, good fare and cour- teous treatment. S. E. MAXON, AROEKE X T EH O 'T. Towa, Office In Everett's block, Pearl treet, Resi) dence 628 Fourth stroet, Office hours from 9 to 2a.m,2to4and7 08p.m., Council bluffy F. C. CLARK, PRACTICAL DENTIST. opposite the postoffice Office over savings bank, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, In connectlon with his law and » Towa. | Ppearl One of rs In Council Blufls. Hatls the oldest prastith tataction guaran DR. F. P. BELLINGER, EYE AND EAR SURCEON, WITH DR. CHARLES DEETKEN, Office over drug store Bluffs, Iowa. Al d treated under cures guara: JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. = Will practice in alll State and United States | Gouta. " Bpoaks Geruan Language in all cases eollection business buys sclls real estate. Persons wishing to buy or sell city property call a4 his office, over Bushuell's book store, Pearl streot. EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice ot the Peace and Notary Public, 416Broadway, Council Bluffs. DoedsPjandmortgages drawn jand ackoowl dged ay, Council yo ' and ear tapproved method and all WOODBINE, |A. A Flourishing Town in Harri- son County. Abounding with English and Yankee Thrift Strength Correspondence of The Heo Woonsisg, Ia., July 15.—Wood- bine may be called another Mormon sottlement, because the first rosidents, Richard Musgrove and L. D. Butler, were of that belief, they being among the members of that faith who came weat from Illinois and Missouri; and Mr. Butler built a mill near the pres ent town in 1855, the first mill in Har: rison county, it is said, In 1866, the samo year of the completion of the railroad here, the town was platted by the ‘Blair Town Lot Company,” the company buying 1,200 acres of land for town purposes, and the town was incorporated two yearsafter. A post- office was established here eight years before the location of the town, the oftice being at Mr. Butler's mill. The people asked that the office be named Harrlson, but the postoffice depart- ment declined because there were other offices by that name in the state. The nama Woodbine was suggested by Mz:s. Butler, and was taken from the name of her cottage home in England when she wasa girl, Tradition brings to us also an incident in the naming of the postoftice at Modale, in the west part of this county on the Sioux City road. It is related that twenty-five years ago a petition was sent to Wash- ington by the citizens of that locality, asking for a postoftice, requesting that the name of Missouri Dale be given to it. But the name was written ‘‘Mo. Dale,” which the department inter- preted ‘“Modale,” and so ordered it. THE LOCATION 8 on the west bank of the Boyer, facing the railroad and the rising sun, and is 26 to 50 feet above the river and valley, on the ‘‘first bench.” The early town was located on the slope near the depot, but time, that ‘‘old settler,” has spread the city over nearly a square mile, and located the fine $5,000 brick school house.back in a showy and very delightful spot, where the elegant residences are fast surrounding it, and loceted the public square (or the place for it,) about a half mile from the station to the northward, The people are proud of their school and teacher, and that is one of the best signs of the prosperity of the place, and the reciprocal of that is when the aversge citizen and busi- ness man don’t know anything about the school or how it is managed, or certainly don’t know any good of it; with few exceptions this symptom is an index of terrible bad manage- ment somewhere, and that the bad managers have the majority. Situ- ated, as it is, about 38 miles from Council Bluffs, with Logan on the south and Dunlap on the north, it has about one hundred square miles of rich farming lands, well settled up, that Is tributary to this trading and shipping station, and it is doing a large business. The residences are, as a rule, of the better clause, costing from $800 to $2,5600. The eidewalks are well spread out and are in good condition, and the ever pres- ent shade trees are already a luxury to be enjoyed on every residence square. The numerous churches which are all of good finish, new resi- dences, and large trading houses and brick stores are fast filling up the vacant Jots on the principal streets, while the piles of lumber and the removal of the acres of corn cribs in the rear of the town, tell that the scores of new residences already put up this season, have made a new resi- dence town of the west side of the city and will soon double its number in that quarter, and adds to its 800 population, THE BURRCUNDING COUNTRY is building up, settling up and *‘‘keep- ing up” to the times, for this town may be spoken of as composed largely of New York state people, and within its farming element is a large per- centage of educated and professional men, We met here, HON, D, C, STANTON, of New York, a politician of some na- tional reputation, from New York, and son of Henry B, Stanton and Mrs, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mr, Stanton is spending a few weeks here on businessand visiting his brother, who is a heavy farmer some eight miles east of this city, Mr. Stanton will spend some time with his sister, Mra. Lawrence, in Council Bluffs be- fore his return,* THE WOOLEN MILL was built just north of the village in 1860, and in 1870 a good flouring mill was added to it; but the multi- plicity of dogs, or the scarcity of wool, have lefc the first idle, and” the present owners, Messrs, Dalley & Noyse, are about to convert. it into an elevator, The mammoth elovator that stood by the track near the de- pot, and formed the nucleus of the early town, burned down scveral years ago, but not until its enterpris- ing proprietor had been called to his long home, and in the place is a corn sheller, But this place is famous as a corn town, and it is claimed that it ships more corn for its size than any other town betwecn Chicago and the “Bluffs,” and the mill has been sending flour to Salt Lake and many other places in the far west, while stock is another special feature of its business, BRICK BUILDINGS are coming into fashion, and before many years all the principal trading houses will be of that quality unless some of the new stone material shall supercede the brick, It may be in teresting to the readers of Tur Ber to take some noticg of sume of the business firms, KIBLER BROS, & WINIER orner, in the , and do & ge are on the the trade :entre of all oral merchan- — | dise business, that is, of vast extent. Their store is a brick 28x100, and 16 feet high in the main salesroom, and their store roows and warchouses are scattered around town, and the plate glass in their front is Bx13, probably a8 large or larger than any glass front in the state of Iowa. The Kiblers and Winters were among the early settlors here, the former locating in 1854, and the latter in 1857, and it 1s to the junicr member of this firm, Mr. 8. 8. Winters and his accom. plished wife, that your correspondent would acknowledge himself indebted for an afternoon’s eutertainment cf an hour or two at their pleasant home, and for assistance in adding to the subscription list of Trr Bee. Their large brick, built four or five yeara ago, contains great variety of stock; and a jeweler has also located himself in the front window. W. D. CROMIE, for a long time the postmaster here, has been a number of years dealing out goods of all kinds from his “‘dou- ble headed" store where he has formed his goods into a “‘hollow square” and will not allow his lines to broken, although he has a half interest in the new hardware firm of T. L. CANFIELD & ©0., located in the same block, This firm have a large new building, and a fuil line of shelf and heavy hardware and tinshop, and will keep a full supply of farm implements, wagons, ete. And this now firm are business young men of large ideas and energy, and of the material that wakes up the life blood of the town. The other handware store, farther up the stroet, carries a full stock and does a good business, C. D, STEVENS, on tho west side of Main street, has the third large universal store. Ho is building a large brick addition and when complete, will have a twin store 45x00 feet on the ground floor, and carry a mammoth stock of dry goods, groceries, ete., including millinery goods, jeweiry and sewing machines, Mr. 8. came from the state of New York, a dozen years ago, and has made himself, like those mentioned above, very important factors of the town, H (. HARSHBERGER is a native of this county, and plants himsolf in the grocery business as steadily as a New England Yankee, having a large trade. GILKEY & DEPUTY just balow the priucipal corner, are located in the old building, fo:merly used by Johnson & Co. and do a gen- eral merchandise business, including a stock of drugs. Dr, C. M. Gilkey of this firm, has been in the practice of medicine for eight or ten years, more or less, and at present confineg himself to the store and oftice. There are two other drug stores side by side on the main street, one being a branch of the Wm. Giddings house at Logan, Mr. Giddings is just finishing a mag- nificent brick opposite the bank, and will soon move his stock and open up trade in these new quarters. On an- other corner opposite the large and beautiful two story Boyer Valley Bank, is the livery stable of J. S. McLain. This is_the pioneer livery stable, and Mr. McLain, who has been a re- sident of the county for fifteen or twenty years, takes great pride in the growth and prosperity of this young city, and will soon build a large addition, and increase his facilities for carrying the public. C. Y. BARBER is located on the fourth corner, at these crossings, being an addition from Dunlap, and within A month or two he has fitted up fine rooms and opened up a good restaurant, confec- tionery, and fruit stand, with the usual conveniences for catering to the wants of the public who have delicate tastes, or who get suddenly hungry, and he is building up business every day. A. W. BELDIN, for some time the genial host of the Woodbine House, has the boss meat- market. Having furnished his shop with all the conveniences for doing a good business, he proceeds to do that business, keeping good help, good stock and keeps the good custom, do- ing, at the same time, a profitable business in shipping live stock, THE HOTEL BUSINESS is not lacking for the enterprise to keep up two hotels, The old Wood- bine House has passed in to the hands of A, H. Clark, who has been chang- ing and fitting, until the house can ac- comodate quite a large number of hungry or tired travelers and the por- ter is always on hand to meet us at the train, John Weed, has the American House, well in hand and can get up as good a meal as though he had the largest sign or a free bus, for he knows how to keep a hotel. The Woodbine house hasa livery connected with the house. GEORGE MUSGRAVE, the successful editor of the Woodbine Twiner, one of the most widely circu- lated papers in the county, and a live paper, is a native of England, and bo- gan to be a printer in St. Louis when a boy, and afterwards was well known among the craft in Council Bluffs, having settled with his father in this county in an early day, Mr. M. was woll fitted to make this paper in the four years of its career an earnest and able town paper, and a reflex of the public mind, Woodbine is proud, of her trading houses, large trade, rich farming lands, that surround it on every side; its magnificent brick buildings, beauti- ful residences, good sidewalks, shady streets, and the enterprise of 50 many business men, and among others tho architect and builder, % R YEISLEY, who for years has been the chief de- signer, and builder of the city, and perhaps, we may say of sevegal coun- ties, begicning back to the days when the city was without foundation, and at present he has the contract for "the large bridge building for the county, and has been a resident for over a quarter of centu- ry. The city is growing, ils peopls uro liberal and progressive in their ideas, united in & common sympathy and business energy, keeping up overy enterprise ever began, except the woolen factory, which “for cause has long since taken its departure to that locality where the caprifolium periculymenum is said {0 osciliate itself, in concentric circles. Buckeye “Promptly and Entirely.” JurLerviig, Ind,, June 14, 1881, H., H, WarNer & Co.: Sirs—Your Bafe Kidney and Liver Cure relieved me promptly and entirely from severe diseases of the kidneys aud liver. jul2ddlw Juuus Bever, IOWA ITEMS, —— The best paying county office in the northwestern counties at this time is that of recorder, Small pox has Sroken out afrosh at Orange City, The Herald of the 20th reports several new cases, The “‘vots” of the late war of Jeffer son county, are making arrangements to hold a reunion at Fairfield in the Iatter part of September. The dispute as to thetitle to certain land for use of the state institute for feeble minded children has boen ad- justed and the stato gets the land. The available assets in the B. K. Allen cstato will be materially reduced if the claim of 600,000 of the Char tor Oak insurance company is allowad, a8 the master in chancery has decided. A man by the name of Ingram, liv ing oight miles northwest of Bedford, has been arrested for murdering his son, Ho is supposed to have at first starved and then beat him to death, Lightning struck the house of Geo. Halboth at Odebolt the other night, and knocked the castors out of the posts of a bedstead without hurting in ;l;::‘leut the persons sleeping in the Mrs. Fred LaFleur, of Atlantic ap- plied to the authorities for assistance, and it not being granted sho sought a rom in a deserted hcuss, and there alone and unattended gave birth to a child, Towa City has closed a contracl for the building of water worke, Work is to be begun in thirty days, and the works aro to be in order by January next. Over five miles of pipe are to be put down to start with, Willis S. DeLaire, arrested for com- plicity in the murder of R. W, Stubbs at Polk City some months since, hae proven himaself innocent of the charge and boen set free. The tragedy is more of a mystery than ever, The stewards of the LeMars jockey club have decided to hold a race meet- ing early in October, with only one race for thoroughbreds, and no re- striction as to riders, In all other races, members of the jockey club only will be permittod to ride, Pat Foeney, a Cedar Rapids old- timer, is in jail on the charge of biga- my. Ho loft a wife in Ireland when he came to this country many years ago, and married again without telling No. 2 that there ever was a No, 1. Clifford and Orrin Todd, aged 16 and 14 yoars rospectively, were rocont- ly drowned while in bathing at Wash- ington. The younger boy got beyond his depth, when the older one went to his rescue, and neither being able to awim both went down, Work has been begun on the Wis- consin, Towa and Nobraska railway near] Waterloo, Towa. Grading s also being done near Marshalltown, and as the two forces are working to- ward each other, it is confidently ex- pocted that cars will be running from Marshalltown to Waterloo before the end of the year. Over-eating is in one sense as productive of evil as intemperance indrinking, Avoid both, and keep the blood purified with Bukbock Broon Brrrks, and you will be rewarded with robust heaith and an invie- ored system. Price $100 Jy25-dlw A Sparrow Rxocution. The Holyoke (Mass.) Herald says a bird execution occurred in that city last week, the victim being one of a nest of sparrowson a butlding: ‘‘Some unusual confusion was firat observed in the nest, and after » while a spar- row returned from flight with a long fibre. Several of the birds seized it and were noticed to be winding it around something in considerable ex- citement. Soon a sparrow hopped upon the rim of the nest. Then oth- o8 surrounded the unlucky one and pushed him off. The bird swung down and hung a foot below the nest. The fibre had been wound around the bird’s neck by his comrades, The executed bird made no apparent effort to escape, but hung quietly and died.” A Friend in Need: Time over and again THoMAs' EcLEcTRIO O11, has proved a salutary friend to the distressed. As a reliable eurative for croup in children, sore throat and bron. chiJ affections, and as a positive external remedy for pain, it is o never-failing anti- dote, iy2h.dlw —_— Slavery as & Punishment for Crime, New York Bun, The recent sale of a negro into tem- porary slavery in Kentucky has sur- prised many persons, who were not aware or had forgotten hat the con- stitution of the United States dis- tinctly recognizes the lawfulness of slavery or involuntary servitude as a punishment for crime, “‘Neither slavery nor involuntary sorvitude, except as a punishment for crime, whoreof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist with- in the United States, or any place sub jeet to their jurisdiction,” So says the thirteenth amondment, There is nothing in the constitu- tional prohibition to prevent a state from making slavery tho penalty for very trivial offences. The fact that this has not been more generally at- tempted in the Southern states shows how the sentiments of the people have grown away from the old slave system, Besides, if a law was passed imposing alavery as a punishment on black cul- prite it would have to apply to white qulprits also; and the possibility of a negro owning a white slave would secn unpleasant to the ordinary legis- lator, Blavery to.day is maintained as a penalty for the non-payment of debt in one of the native states under Brit- ish protection on the Malay peninsula. The British ofticial resident at Perak actually signs warrants for the arrest of fugitive slaves whose only crime is that they have run away from a per- petual captivity incurred by the fail- ure to pay an amount which may not exceed §0, While, therefore, we still tolerate slavery as & punishment for crime in { the United States, we are not quite so brutal as at Britain, We do not permanently enslave poor debtors who are innocent of wrong, Frank Bardal, } Butlalo, says: *'I' ha e KING BLossox as a fawily medicine and have never come across anything to do so much good in o short time in casos of indiges To the Consumers of Carriages & Buggies I have a complete stock of all the Latast|Styles of Carriages, Phaetons and Open and Top Bugg:es, Consisting of The Celebrated Brewster 8ids Bar, The Hamlin Side Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and The Mullhalland Spring. The Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaeton, Also the Old Reliable Eliptic 8pring Buggies and Phaetons, They are ¢ll made of the best ma'erials, and un- der my own supervision. I should be pleased to have those desirous of pur- chasing to ca\f) and examine my stock. I will guar- antee satisfaction and warrant all work. H. F. HATTENHAUER, Broadway and Seventh Streets, _COUNGIL_BLUFFS, IA, (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL |OWA GOALS! ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Office No, 34 Pearl Street, Yards Oor. Eighth Btreet and Hleventh Avenue, Oouncil Bluffa. P. T. MAYNE, O. E. MAYNE COUNCIL BLUFFS STEAM FAGTORY MANUFACTURE Corner BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, GORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND CHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. . The Highest. Market Price Paid for Oats, A DD BROOM CORINI Corn, Rye, Barley Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Corn Will Please Send SBample, MAYNE & CO., COTUTNOIL. BLUFES. Mrs, J. B Metcalfe and Mrs. Bells Lewis w denling In all kinds of fancy goos, such as Laces, Embrolderles, Ladlos' Underwea ptions. Also Handkerchiuls, both In silk and linen, hoso of all Kinds, thread, pins, Wo hopo the Iaaics will call and eco our stock of goods at 636 Broadway before go METCALF BROS, ~——WHOLESALE DEALERS ), IN~— Caps, 8traw Goeds, and Buck Gloves, Hats, CHICAGO PRICES DUPLICATED, COUNOIX. BLUEES, TIOW A. RUDD'S LAUNDRY.| STARR & BUNCH, On Avenue B, No. 1902. HOUSE: SIGNI (NEAR BROADWAY.) AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, A SPHEOLALITY. Shop—Corner Brondway and Scott St Clothes gathered up and delivered promptly, Best of fatisfaction Guaranteed. Lost Cloth: s made good, NOBETTER LAUNDRY WEST OF CHICAGO. I. T RODD. STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This laundry hos Just been openod for busl. noss, and wo aro now prapared to do I indry vork of all kinds and guranteo satisfaction. A spocialty made of fino work, wuch o9 colisrs, Cuffs, filio shirts, eto. We want everyhody to give ua & trial, LARSON & ANDERSON, ). D KDMUNDEON, K. L SHUGAKT, A, W. BTREKT, Presidont Vice-Fres't, Cashier, CITIZENS BANK Of Uouncil Bluffs. Organized under the laws of the State of lowa, $ 76,010 0 HUCHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts Cigars and Tobacco. Fresh Oysters and Ice Cream in Season, 12 MAIN 8T, Oouncil Bluffs, One of the best second-class Hotels lu the West Iy tho BROADWAY HOTEL, A. E BR®WN, Proprictor, Now, 684 and 630 Broadway, Council Blufts, Iows, able supplied with the best the market at- Good rooms and first-class beds. Terms very re gn th prigaipal citia of tho United Buates and 817 Lower Broadway, Sriabiudands st oot oo | Mrs, C, Gerspacher & Son. pital. ., capital Paid up Authori and correspondence with prownpt returns, tion, dyspepsis and deravgement of the stomach; ' strougly recommend it,” Price 50 cents; trial bottles 10 cents, Jy2i-dlw DIRECTORS, FIRET CLASS HOTH’l“ AT R;iA“FONA“le dmund ), B, L, cart T8 PRI TRANSIENTS ACCO) (ODATE] W neon, ¥ Shugart, b art | “HOTEL POK BALE. ~GOOD REABONS KO A, W. Btreet, Jy7der ' | SELLING.