Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 17, 1882, Page 3

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WHOLESALE STATIONERY AND COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. H. H. SEAMAIN, P — AND RETAIL PRINTER'S GOODS, TITLE ABSTRAGT_OFFIGE Lands and Lots © Bought and Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES, NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS - - 10WA. HENRY BEECROFT, MAIN STREET LIVERY STABLE, OFFOSITE THE POSTO¥XFEICE. HEN ROGERS' OLD STAND, H® wi | continuo running bis city Jize 10 all parts of tho city. New atock cons antly recelved. . LOW CHARG' S GUARANTL Al orders promptly sttended D. M. CONNELL, Funeral Director No. 17, North Main Strest. - - and Undertaker. Council Bluffs Calls promptly answered at all hours, night or day, New hearso and London carriages diroct ¢rom the factory run in connection therewith. That nover require crimping, at Mra. J. J. Good's Halr Store, at prices never beforo touched by ny other bair dealer. Also a full lino of switches, cte. at greatly red es made from Indics’ own hair. Do not fail to silver and colored neta. sleewhere. All goods warranted a8 ropresented. 617 SOUT UNION BAKERY, MAIN STREET. pricos. Also gold, before purchasing 20 Matn stroos, Council Bluffs, Tows. THE BEST BREAD IN THE OITY. None but first-class Bakers employed. Bread, Cake, Pies, &o., delivered to any part of the city. Om Wagons run all day. ~ NEW MEAT MARKET. P. AYRES, Proprietor, No. 536, BROADWAY, (Palmer's Block, Between Gth and 7th streets. E. . TIGKNOR, PROPRIETOR. Our Motto:—8trict cleanliness, the best quality tvered to any partof the city. Comeand sec our of meats, aud lowest possible prices, Moats de- new shop., Bethesd BATHING HOUSE || Medicat At Bryant’s Spring, Oor. Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, Vopor, Flectric, Plunge, Douch,” Shower, ot and 'Cold Batha Com: potent’ malo and femalo rurses and stiendants alwaya on hand, and the bost of care aud atten- Mon given patrons. Special attention given to batning children. Inyestigation aud patronago sollcited. DR. A. H Stuprey & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. Treatment of chronlc diseases Dr. Studle; made o Bpech il REMOVED_without the h' drawing of blood or use of knite, Curos lung diseases, fula, Liver Com. AND OTHER 5‘:;.:’;’.‘,’.0;,, Ehouma. tism, Fever and Morcur- ia) sores, Erysipelas, Salt Scald Hexd, Oatarrh, woak, _inflamed and granulated Eyes, Scrofulons Ulcers and Fo- male Discase: of all ' kinds. Also Kidney and Venerlal disuases. Hemorrhoids or Piles cured money rofunded. All diseascs troated upon the principle of voget- lereform, without the use of mercurial pois- n8 or the Knito, Eloctro Vapor or M-dicated Baths, turnishod who desiro thom. Hernia or Rupture radically cured by the uso tho Elnstic belt Truse and Plaster, which has wuportor (n the worla, CONSULTATION FREE. CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs, R, Rice and F. C. Miller, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia, SINTON & WEST, DENTISTS. 14 Pearl Street, Council Bluffs. Extracting and filliog @ specialty, Firat-class work guaranteed, DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Oftios, No. 14 Poarl Stract. 2,a0d2p,m, to b p, m Bancroft strect. Tolophonic connection ' with Central office, J. M. PALMER, DEALER IN REAL ESTATE AND LOAN AGENT, COUNCIL BLUFFS, I0W W.D.STILLMAN,| Practitioner of Hemoopathy, consulting "hysicianand Surgeon, Otfico and rosidence 616 Willow avenue, Coun- Blufts, lowa, F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA, Oftice No. 6, Everett Block, Broad- way, over A, Louie's Restaurant. S. E. MAXON, AROE XTI B0 T. Ottice over vings bank OOUNCIL BLUFFS, - - - lowa REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, In connection with bis law and sollection businessbuys and sells real estate. Perwous wishing to buy or sell city property call ) bisottice, over Bushnell's book store, Pearl ehroet EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 416Broadway, Council Bluffs \MRS. E. J. DARDING, M. D., Electrician AND ‘GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Ponna. Office Cur, Broadway & Glenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. The trestment of all diseases and paintul dif- flculties peculiar to females a specialty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. Offico over First National Bank, Council Blufts, Towa. Will practice in the state and foderal courts JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 814 BROADWAY, Council Bloffs, - - W. B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate. Propriotor of abstracta of Pottawattamio county. Office corner of Droadway and Maln Towa, — | mtrests, Councl Bluffs Tows. JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Doutacher Arzt.) Cor. WASHINGTON AVE & 7th St. Council Bluffs, wAsoases of women and children & spaclalf P. J. MONTGOMERY, M. D.. FRrEg DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, “Offico in Everett's block, Pearl trect, Resi) dence 0£8 Fonrth strect. Office hours from 9 to 2a.m,2todand o8p.m. Council I luffy F. C. CLARK, PRACT(CAL DENTIST. Pearl opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest practitioners (n Council Bluffs. Satis. Istactlon nte | HUCHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN Con/ectionery, Fruits,Nuts Cigars and Tobacco. Fresh QOysters and Ice Cream in Season, 12 MAIN 8T, Oouncil Blutfa. nteed In STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway, LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This laundry has Just heen opened for bust. noss, and we are now pr-pared 1o do la indr; work of all kinds and gu o satisfaction. 4 speclalty wade of flne uch s collars, cufts, fine shirts, otc. t everybody & Kive us a trial. LARSON & ANDERSON We wi Council Bluffs, Ia, Established, - - 1868 Dealers 1o Forelgn aud Do stle Exchange and bome securities, JE"JE" &S | COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD - — TIME TABLE. CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND AND FACIPY Dopart Arrive Atlantic Ext .50 p m | Pacific ¥ a1 Exand Mail*. 925 a m | Ex and 15 p 1. Moines & 8 1 | Des Moines ac*.4:40 p m Depart Arrive Atlantic Ext.. 5:30 pm | Pacific Ex Mai_and Ex*. 920 4 m | Mail and Ex E 1 Neb & Ras By £ Depart Arri 15 m | Pacifle Bxj... 0058 m 020 & 11 | Mai and Ex* 615 p 550 i | Accom, (Mon.).1:46 p m KANSAS CTTY, £, JOK AND COUNCIL RLUPFS Depart Arrive Mail and Ex... 9:85 8 m | Express,. ... 650 p Ipross. 910 pm | Maiiand Ex.. 645 pw UNION PACIFIC Depart Arrive. Overland EX.1120 . m. | Overiand Ex o400 p. m. Lincoln EX..11:50 &, m. [ Denver Ex . &:0) a.m, Denver Fx . | Local BX.... 6:30 & m Local Ex m| ¢ Ex Emferant op om| ¢ Ex WAKASI, SF, LOUIS AND PACIFIC Drpart Arrive. Mail and Ex.. 8:45a m | Mail and Ex.. 4:30 pm Cannon Ball.. 4:5 p m | Cannon Baii’ 11:05 4 m KIOUX CITY AND FACIYIC Dopart Arrive. For Sioux City.740 & m | Frm Sjoux C'v.6:50 p m For Fort Niobrara. Frin Fort Niohrara, Neb v e 60 p m For St. Paul From S, Paul. 850 & m CIICAGO, MILWAUKKK AND KT, PAUL Dopart Mall and Ex..* Arriv 20 % m | Mail and Ex... 650 pm Council Blufts & Omaha Street R. R. Leavo Council Biufs, Leave Omaha. am, 108 m, |8 am, m, 10 & m, Tam, tm, 2 pm,3p|iiamipn E m, 4 p'm, 5w, 6pm. | m,4pm,6pm,6pm Strect cars run halt hourly to the Union Pacific Depot. O Sunday the cars begin their trips at 9 0'cloek a. m., and run regu ar.y during the day #t9, 11, 2 4, 5 and 6 o'clock, wud run to city time, copt Sundays, 1Except Saturdays. $Except PUEBLO'S PRIDE. Giant Industries in the Pitts- burgh of the West, A Steady and Substantial Growth in the Metro- polis of Southern Oolorado. The Hotel Boom. Correspondencoof the Bee. Sovru Puenro, Col., October 10. Though this has been called a dull year for Colorado, yet she has never before settled down to such hard, hon- est work as now. Instead of depend- ing on the sale of paper mines. she has gone into the business of develop- ing real ones, In no year in her his- tory has there bean opened such real bonanzas, Her leading cities also seom to fall in with the new order of things. No such booms as hitherto, but solid, substantial prosperity. Pueblo is moving to the front in her development of giant industries. Be- sides scores of solid business houses we note the completion of two impor- tant hotels—the ‘‘Grand” and the “Faries House.” The first is the most imposing structure in the whole city. It is massive in its proportions, Of the finest style of workmanship, with all the modern improvements, it can but give satisfaction to the more wealthy portion of the traveling pub- lic. Aside from the Windsor it fs probably the finest in the state. It haa not yet been opened. The Fariss house is on an altogether different plan. Itis abeut 40x80, a four-story building, right in the heart of the city. Two gentlemen of expe- rience, Kariss and Gibbs, are the owners and proprietors, The plan of the owners was to give the traveling public fair accommodations for reason- able rates, and to such their terms are $1.25 to £1 50 per day. One looking at these figures would say that it was impossible to do this in {an expensive city like ours, and that thero must be fraud somewhere, but this is not the case, The gentlemen do not propose to give §5 board for $1.60, but they will give good accommodations at rea- sonable rate. _Their house is new and well bullt, It has 50 rooms; these are carpeted and furnished with ex- cellent beds, The halls are all heavily carpeted to deaden the sound, The rooms are lighted with gas, and there is good venulation and gas cscapes. Each story has fire escapes also, The house has a fine bath room, and is supplied with an abundance of hot and cold water. The plumbing work throughort the whole, which is of an immense amount, is not excelled by any building in the west, and while the city may have pride in her grand hotel, costing nearly $200,000, she may aleo congratulate on the excel- Jent accommodations of her Fariss house, The smelter at this place, which be- fore had a capacity for reducing 125 tons of ore & day, has just doubled her facilities, and the works are illum- mated by electric lights, and the work of reduction is going on day and night, giving employment to an army of n{urntivau. Bat our steel and iron works are really the attraction of the place. The company has five millions of capital back of it, and they are launching out with commendable vigor. You go to Bessamer, which is almost & city by itself a mile out of town, and you will see massive build- ings and immense engines, and an army of about a thousand men, You start on one side with the blast fur- nace, which is turning out the pig iron, This material goes over to the next building, and is convertea into steel, and this is pushed on in its firey heat to the rolling mill, where it is drawn out into firey rails of steel, These are sawed off at proper lengths and straightened, Then they are loaded on the cars and go back past the blast furnace.* So in & lutle over twenty-four hours a carload of shapeless, worthless iron ore comes our fino shapély rails of steel, The works have a capacity of about two miles 8 day and the rails are pushed rapidly forward to the Utah extension to connect Salt Like ity with Pueblo; and by the way this will be probably without exception the most romantic route in the world, The C., B. & Q. will connect with the D. & R. G. at Donver; then passen- gers will come to Pueblo, thence up tho Arkansas river, through the wonderful Grand Canyon, then through a succession of wmountain THE DAILY BE scenery to Gunnison; then through Black Oanyon, one of the most awfal- ly grand on earth, thence down the western slope to Salt Lake City, to couneot with the Central Pacifio, The old route is one of monotony, but the new one will be thronged with ever shifting panoramas cf mighty granite walls, huge mountiins pieto ing the skies, wonderful vallics mead ows and forests, It will lexd through | rich mines and will throng: with un. | surpassed attractions. " Despland. By the unthinking, Bardock has been idored & weed, And its luxuriint ywih, unpleasant smell, o A% ren. der.d it, to those ‘'mot knowing its vie- | tues, nuisance, and yet tie root has long been acknowledged by savants as most perient and BLoon Birrers Price 81 1 purifier. k embody all its good quali Prohibition If the various advocates of prohibi- tion who have attempted to contro- vert the doctrine of personal liberty, contended for by The Pioneo . Press, had kept clearly in mnd what that dootrine is they would have raved themselves much useless trouble and us much valuable space. That doo- trine simly is that every mature in. dividual in civilized seciety isthe right- ful sovereign of his own body and soul, and that in all that deportment of his conduct which concerns him solf he ought, as a free moral agont, to be permitted to do as he ploases, with. ut interference from the state, so far and 8o long as his 80 doing does not directly injure others or injures them only by their free consent. This doctrine 18 not new and is nov an arbitrary dogma. It is as old as civilization, and is the foundation principle of all free institutione, Tts denial is the nega- tion of all liberty and means simp'y the unlimited despotisin of the jority, All -ttempts to controvert this principle in these columns have been by examples of governmental i, teferenco with private rights, which, for the mest part do not come under the principlo at all, or, if they do, are not legitimate exercises of tho power of the stato, and are only assumed to be 8o because in accord with the reigning opinion. The general stato- ment would sacrifice for answers to the two letters on the subject clse- where. In one the writer broadly as sumes that the state may properly in- terfere with private rights to any ex tent which the majority of voters deem necessary for the public good. There is hardly any part of human conduct or opiuion which does not in some way or dogreo affsot the public interests. So that if a supposed public good were a sufficient warrant of State in- terference the State would have & right to control almost sll n and opinious, More spe quirer” avers that whatever conduct 1 any way increases taxation, how- eyer indirectly, justifies the State in interfering to proteoct the taxpayers by prohibiting the conduct which has this indirect result, Lf this were so the State would clearly have the right to suppross idleness, extravagance and all the brood ot personal vices or fail- ings which send indirectly to produce poverty or crime. No one pretends that these are proper subjects of police regulation. Conseguently it is not true that whatever tends to increase taxation warrgnts the interfereunce of the State. Another writer thinks she has dis- covered a case of prohibition which is precisely parallel in relation to the principle in question with the pro- posed prohibiuion in the manufacture and sale of fermented liquors, ‘‘In regulating marriage,” she says, ‘‘we prohibit polygamy.” True; and in regulating the sale and use of alcoholic liqnors we prohibit selling liquor to minors or on Sundays, and we pro- hiblt drunkenness. All regulation implies that some things are prohib- ited. But this is a very different sort of prohibition from that which is the subject of discussion, If the state should entirely prohibit marriage or the legitima‘e intercouse of the sexes, the cass would then be pre- csely parallel with the pro- posed prohibition of all means of obtaining slcoholic liquors, But to regulate marriage or the sale of liquors is very different thing from prohibiting it- and the righi to do the one by no means implies the right to do the other. Ii the state should undertake to prohibit marriage in- stead of regulating it by contining one man to one wite it would not take the mass of men and women long to find out the radical difference hotween prohibiting all means by which @ na- tural desire may be gratifiol and regulating the mcans of gratification consistently with social order and morality, Having, we trust, made this distinetion cicar, it is not neces- sary to explain the varlous grounds why the state prohibits that intem- perance of matrimnony which is called polygamy. 1t s not true that the question how many wives a man may have concerns only himself or his plural wives, whose cousent is somewhat violently assumed. It vitally and directly con- cerns the children who are brought iuto the world hout their consent, and it vitally and dizcetly concerns the women of whom 1t may be sufely said that few would consent to enter a con- dition of fractional wifehood unlees under the influence of a supposed re- ligious duty, as is the case with the Mormons and Turks. The polyg- amous condition is & violation of the nataral right of the wifeto the undi vided affection of her husband, 1t is rot necessary to argue, after the mau- ner of the free lovers, whether this assumed mutual right of one wife and one husband to the undivided affve- tions of each other is or is not grounded upon natural interest— or is, or is not, & natural right Whether it is the offspring of instincy or religlon or of custim 1t has been the fundamental law and usage of civ- ilization since (ivd thundered from Mount Sapai the awful mandate, “Thou shalt not commit adultery,” and all the frame work of society is built upon the monogamous family. It thus holds the saine position in the category of assumed natural rights as the right to drink what one pleases. That it has the sanction of immemorial usage among all civilized nations, And again we remark that it is not for those who hold to a natural right which is buttressed upon immeriorial possession to prove that it 1s well E-~TUESDAY ol W s \ v OCTOBER 17 — — —_— —_— —— burden of proof rests on those who " How's the Baby? “How's the baby*" * His croup i« het ter this morning, thank you. We gave hm some of THomas' Kirerric O1 as ¥ou advised, doctor, ard shal give him W ELO LEIS.A L.E me more in «n hour or %0, Next day the doctor pr need the youngster cured An Arkansas Snake Story “‘Them certainly ts big ones,” said what I took for an Arkansas citizon, as Le looked at the sna show out at the fair A well-dressed, dignitiod, Jamos G Blaino stylo of a gentloman, who looked like he couldn’t tell anything but the truth, w standing by, aad hearing this expression of credulous admiration was tempted to observe “Why, my dear eir, theso snakes are mere mites in comparison with snakes that I have seen. You see I have been a great traveler in my time, and have visited countrios and islands in the sea that a great many peoplo have never heard of. In one ot theae islands they have snakos that are anakes, and T can tell you an adventure that I once had with a suske that turned my hair gray liko you see it now." By this time a little company atood around the great unknown, all eager to hear his experience. ‘It must have been an on-common adventure to turn a man’s hair gray. Now, pard, lot's hearabout it," put in the Arkans . ““Wall, inthat country they make it a business to hunt snakes with dogs, just like you hunt boars down in your country, Soon after I go there T was invited to join & party just going out on a hunt after a snako that was the terror to the country for miles He inhabited a kind of swamp and lived mostly on o8 in a side the fat cattle of the surrounding farmers—oh, yos, ho lived mostly on oxen- it took about ten for his din- ner. The dogs that they hunt snakes with in that sountry, are of a peculiar breed, Thoy call them by a strange name that means ‘goawers,” They can gnaw worse than rats, They have boen kuown to guaw trace chains in two in a fow muaten, Well, we had a pack of ubout forty of these dogs, and we were all well mounted on fine race horses for the hunt. YA fow hours' rido brought us to wherothe suakoe Jived, The dogs were turned looso all in a pack aud took straight to the marsh, but they soon came out with the snake after them, Now, T won't say how big he was—you can estimate thot when I tell you what happoned. Tho wholo pack —mark you, there wero tully forty of them— were swallowed in less than no time, The hunters were in full retreat and the snake hissed hideously behind us, “Ho was coming like lightning, but they eaid he covld not hold out long, and our horses were, as 1 told you, very fast aud of good hottow. He was about fifty yards behind and his tongue whipped the air with a sound likea cannon ball—like youused to hear in the army, you know. Now what do you suppose happened? My horse fell down and I was_caught under him. The snake stopped short and began on me and tho horae both, 80 a8 to take us down hun throat ensy. It was then that my hair must have turned gray.” ““Wall, that was enough to even make Goliar's hair turn gray—drot me if it don’t kinder work on my hair just to hear you tell it. How did you got away?" “‘Well the snake took the horse down first—you see ho was so ascared he couldn’t move and he was on top— had me by tho left leg fast.” ‘‘Now you don't mean to say, stranger, that that ar enake swallowed the hoss?” “‘Yes, sir, he took him right down and was fixing for me, when, when—" ““When what! I want you to talk quick!” exclaimed the rural gentle- man, all excitement and ears, “Why, whon the forty dogs com- menced to show their heads through his srdes and back. You see they had been gnawing away all the time—and then he carled =pand died right there on the spot. “I gov my horse out all right—1 mean the dogs gnawed him out, and the natives proncunced it the most exciting snnke hunt they had had for many 3 ears. “Seo here, my friond, 1 want you to come home with me—what's your name, anyhow? What was you, and—" But ere the Arkansan could get an answer, tho gray-bearded man had vanished in tho crowd, and was next seen paying for o year's subacription to this highly moral, edifying and conncientious journal, —Modern Argo REMEMBER THIS, Ti you are sick Hop Bitters will surely aid Nature i» making you wel when all elee fails, 1f you are ocostive or dyspeptic, or are suflering from any of the numer- ous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if you remain ill, for Hop Bitters aro a sovereign remedy in all such complaints, If you ave wasting away with any form of Kidney discase, stop tempting Death this moment, and turn for a cuare to Hop Bitters, If you aro sick with that terrible sicknass Nervousness, you will find a “Balm in Gilead” in the use of Hop Bitters, If you are a frequenter or & resi- dent of & miszmatic district, barricade your system azainst the scourge of all countries —malarial, epidemic, bilious, and intormittent fovers—by the use of Hop Bitters, It you have rough, pimple, or sal- low ekin, bad breath, pains and aches, and fosl miserable generally, Hop Bitters will give you fair skin, rich blood, aud sweetest breath, health and comfort, In short they cure all diseascs of the stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Neorves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease. Five Hundred dollars will be lminl for a cago they will not cure or help, That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister, mother or daughter, can be made the picture of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but a trifle, Will you let them suffer? OR. . J. CLARY Office 106 Upper Broadway, founded in abstract philosophy. The Council Bluffs, - - Iowa. BUYER AND SHIPPER OF EGCS. No. 519 South Main Street. COUNCIL BLUEFS, 10WA I Pay the Highest Market Price and Deduct No Commission. COUNCIL BLUFFS MANUFACTURING GO. . Mouldings, Scroll and Lattice Work, Wood Turn- ing, Re-Sawing, Planing and Matching, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Boxes, Ete. Manufacturers and Dealers in Improved Hawkeye Wind Mills and Pumps. J. J. Hathaway, Manager, Council Bluffs, Ia. Machinery will bo run exclusively for custom work on Thursd each week, Onders lloitod and satiataotion grstanteed, oAy sod Feiday of (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ZALL IOWA ~ GOALS CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Office No, 34 Pearl Street, Yards Oor. Highth Street and Hleventh Avenue, Oouncil Bluffa. P. T. MAYNE. 0. E. MAYNE COUNGIL BLUFFS STEAM FAGCTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, {CORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND GHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Constantly on Hand. Market Price Paid for Corn, Oati mIi{ye. Barley BROOM CORIN Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Oorn Will Please Send Bample, MAYNE & CO. COUNOIIL. BLUNES. The Higheat MRS. D. A. BENEDICT, THE LEADING DEALER IN EEAIXR G OOD =, 337 Broadwav, Council Bluffs, lowa, THEHUNTRESS TRACE BUCKLE This burl lo’} s been on the market for th LENJE THE WORLD £o preduce s buckle WE CHAL. laon purtoct ratisfuct s it he fol g | 0 taking the eracy out of the 1 ops; bth—It will not rmclloll selt: Oth—The 0 tug pulle mras it tho traco. TUNTiERS TRAC enwly adjusted, cannot get off iteelf, and will not. catch the reln or tall WHTFFLETRKE AND BREAST STHAP HOOK, for hem ’ 3 caunot be - ho tug will not unhook itse 1. - Manufactured by’ Plowing, drazgiug, ete., CZDUTTON, HUNTRESS & CO., Janesville, Witconsin. For salo by C. J. Bec kmun, Counell Bluffy; Sharp & & - J e cll Bluffe; Sharp & Son and 11, 8, Collls & Co., Omahs, and by ST. LOUIS HOUSE. Saloon and Restaurant, ADOLPH DOERFLINGER, Pioorietor, Choice Wines ard Cigars, Oysters i Lvery Style, 709 Lower Broad way. Oouncil Bluffs, lowa. STARR & BUNCH, | MAIN STREET HOUSE "SIGN. ) \VERY. FEED AND —AND- RYAMENTAL PAINTERS, SALE STABLE. PAPER HANGING, All Shippers and Travelers will find EALSOMINING AND GRAINING, good accommodation and reasonabl A SPFHOIALITY. charges, STREET. 8hop—Corner Broadway and Seott 8t OPPOSITE ORYSTAL MILL, - SOUTH Council Bluffs, - - . Iowa, Sullivan & Fitagerald, DEALERS IN Proprietors, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, "MAURER & ORAIG, Crockery, Glassware, ARTISTIC POTTERY, BOOTS, SHCES, ETC Also agents o tho fofiowing line of Sliver Ware &c., S8teamship Companies : 840 Broapway - COUNCIL BLUFFS, WA, Cuoard, Auckor, Gulou, American, and Stabe Steamship Companies. DEH AFTS For sale on the Royal Bank of Ireland aud Bank reland, Dublin. Those w o intend to send for tricnds to any part of Europo will flud it to thel aterest to call on CAKRIL I, the best in the world, cickeye fn HUNTRESS RATENT Docds and wortgages drawn an dged JACOB SIMS, 4 b Attornoy and Counsellor at Law, Sullivan & Fitzgerald, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA, AGENTS, Office Ulmuu), h:_tum;: suuu ‘\Tl':.: 848 Broadway, Qouncil Blaffs | Giig® M- Prctios In 8o wa e

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