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2% TITLE ABSTR wr Lands and Lo ) MONEY TO LOA NOTARIES PUBLIC AN COUNGIL BLUFFS - - ~ MRS.D. A UOTJ’NCII- BLUI‘I‘S 0Oh, meet me at the Store To got my Holiday Supplies, Where oft I bought befere. / BOSTON TEA I 168 Main Street. 6T _OFFIGE 1’3 ought and 8old. N AT LOW RATES. CONVEYANCERS. - IOWA. BENEDICT, THE LEADING DEALER IN E AT G OO IDES, 337 Broadwav, Counc Is the old Favorite and FPRINOIE.AXLLINE —FO! CHICAGO, PEORI 8T. LOUIS, | 'MILWAUKEE., DETROIT, NIAGARA FALLE, NEW YORK,BOSTON, And all Poluts East and@outh-East. THE LINE COMPRISES Noarly 4,000 miles. Solid Smooth Steel Track 1l connections aro made in_URION DEPOTS has_a Nati i Repatation as belng the reat Through Gar Line, and 1s unlvernlly onceded to bu the FINEST EQUIPPED Rati oad I the world for all ciases ot travel, ry it and you will find travellng ® lozary tnatond. of & discomor, Through Tickots via this Oeledrated Line for salo at all offics in the Wos, All {niormation ebout Rates o Fare, flluurfln. Osr Acocmmodations, Timo Tablos, &c., W choerfully glen by uppisining o T.J. POTTER, 44 Vico-Pros’t & Gon. Manager,Chicsge, PERCIVAL LOWELL, Gon, Passenger Agt. Ohlcago W. J, DAVENPORT, Gen, Agent, Coniicll Blufls. H. P, DUSLL, Ticket Agi. omahs mn10- ml v "HEAT YOUR HOUSES {"'poo 20 feoD 2031 iavEana MOST POWERFUL! [Wrought or Csst Iron.] FURNAGES,IN THE WORLD, RICHARDSON,BOYNTON & Q0 | CHICAGO, LiLS, Embody new 1882 Improvements, Mor, | ractionl foa'urcs; Cost less to kecp io mdur. Use losn fuel Wil give mope heat and a'larger valume of pure eir than any | turnace made 80ld by Picrey and Bradford, Omaha \ GOLD ROPE. Thelntrinsle merit and superior quality of onr Gold Rope Tobacco haa Induced othor mauntac: turers to put upon the market gooda slmilar t our brand In name aud style which are offoro and cold for losw mocey than tho genuino Gold | Rope. We caution the t ade and consnmer to see that our namo and trade mark ure apon each | lump. The only genuino and orliinal Gold Rope | Tobacco Is manufactured by { THE WILSON & MoNALLY TO BA(‘('O JOMPANY, i “OLD SURES AND | BLOOD OR SKIN DISEASES IN ANY STAGE, Disappear before the perfect nlterative and tonic effect of the greatest of all Blood ( Purifiers, It so completely roots out all rolmn from the blood and braces the deb- | litated system, that discases of thin nature | disapperr like chaff before the wind, 8. 8. 8, cured me of Scalp Sores, Sores in Nostrils and Ears, after everything known to the medical profession had failed, Three months have passed since I quit here i3 nosymptom of the | am permanently | uured, Itstands unrivaled for Blood Dis. eaces.” JNo, 8, TAGGART, Salamanca, N, ¥, “8, 5. 8. wtands without a peer, The will have toacknowledge it a ‘ d Diseases,” GaLLoway, Monroe, Ga, “About. four or five w L-k.« ago I was afflicted with a very aggravat hv,.e of BloodDisease, I commenced usng S 8, 8 and after taking the first hottle felt mush relieved that I bought five x and am glad to say, after using four of 4 that I sm entirely cured, freviously hi aving been under medical advice for ral months,” O, G. RarcL Richmoend, \'u. #After suffering from the wors: Blood lsence for more than two years, and have ing been treated by several eminent physi- cians, confined o my room and bed the greater part o he ime, my body covered with copper-colored sores from the size of a pea to that of & silver half-dollar, I was well nizh in despair, At last I commenced taking 5, S. 8 Ina short time I beg to improve in flesh, all the sores healed, 1 could l feel sud know that I was well, to S 8. 8 my P iy oy e a not taken & dose for over six months, anc am as free from sores or blemish as any one.” Lortie 1loss, Atlanta, Ga, “Improved after taking the first bottle of B. 8. 3 two weeks was able to come bome, finding the waters were no beneit,” J. W. R, Nowport, Ark, r science has not made known acom- bination equal to B, 8. 8, for ekin or blood diseases.” T, L. MASSENBURG, Ph, G., Macon, Ga, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS il Bluffs, Towa, COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD TIME TABLE. C111CAGO, ROCK ISLAND AND PACIFIO. De Atlantic E» Mail and Ex N. Y. Ex. UNION PACIVIC. Dopart. Arrive. Overland l X, ll.’w & m, | Overiand Ex,, 4:( 1:30 Denver Ex WABASH, BY. LOUIS AXD PACIFIC, rt. Arrive. 9: Mail and E Cannon Ball. CIICAGO, MILWAUKKN AXD 8. PAUL. Arrives Council Bluffs. Mail and Ex. Atlantic kx *Except Sundays, {Except Saturdays Mondays, i Daily. Council Blufts & Omaha Street R. R, Leaye Council Kluffs, Leave Omaha. 8am9am10am|8am9am 10am, 1Mam,im2pm3p|ilam ipm, 2pm,3p m,dpm,5pm,6pm. |mdpm,bpm,6pm Street cars run half hourly to the Union Pacific Dopot. Oa Suilny tho cars begin thelt trips at 9 o'clock a. m., and run regu'ariy during the day a9, 11, 2 4, 5 and 6 o'clock, and run to city time, ' DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSIGIAN AND SURGEON. Oftico, No. 14 Parl Strect. Houzs, 0 a. m. o 2, and 2 p, m,, p, m. Reoldence, 120 dancrofh_ strect. Tnlephanlu connection ' with Central offico, MBS, E. J. HARDING, M. D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathlc Institution, Phils: delphia, Penna, Office Cor, Broadway & Blenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFF3, IOWA. o treatiment of nll discases and peintal dif- ficulties poculiar to females a spoctalty. JACOB SIMS, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, OOUNCIL LLUFTS, IOWA, Broadway, betwesn Meln and Pea VUl practice 10 Btate and Fede BATH 7I£l‘§fiTU—TE, LADIES & GENTLEMEN, Corner Bryant Streect, One door north of Dohaney’s Opera House, where tho. Lumb y find re in the timely use of cit Thermo Electric = Hedicated Bath 1 desire aud hope for the patronage of physi cians who may wish for their patients this auxil fary, and will give any 8o directed every possible Pm, ides my wite, a competent lady, will attend . M. LOCKWOOD, Proprietor. MAURER & ORAIG, ARTISTIC POTTERY, Rich (Jut Glass, Fine French China, Stiver Ware &c., B840 Buoaoway COUNCIL l‘Ll'Pl’tI MRS, 8, J. HILTON, M, D., PHYSICIAN AKR SUfiGkfiH _ 222 Hrondwav. Conn ol 1B luff Sublivan & Fitzgerald, DEALERS IN GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, Orockery, Glassware, BOOTS, SHOES, ETC Also agents for the fofjowing linew of Bteamship Companies : Cunard, Auchor, Gulon, American, snd Btabe Steanmship Companies DR A E TS For sale on the Roysl Bank of Iroland and Bank f Ircland, Dublin, Those wr o inteud $o sead for friends to any part of Europe will find 1t to thel, uterest to call on Sullivan & Fitzgerald, AGENTS, 843 Broadway, Council Bluffs { IOWA 1’l‘l&M~ 3 phone, The fire slarm system has been put in at Atlantio, Sioux City wants to extend her corpor. ate limiu Breoklyn is thinking of erectivg & new packing houses, At last Des Moinex has decided to col- lect the dog tax. The Fort Dodge packing house com. menced business on Wednesday. The Cedar Rapld packing hous» received 5,000 less hogs this season than last, I'he new school house at Alty was de- stroved on Wednesday morning, Loss, £5,000 Holstein 12 soon to have her first drug store, snd is now after the lda county ocurt bouse, The Benton county supervisors have raised the wolf bouaty, the animals be- coming very thick. The manufacturing company of Danlap isnow thoroughly estabiished. It has a oapital of $100,000, The Maple Valley District Agricultural Society will pay all premiume and orders in fall witer January 1, The Clayton couvty apricultural society came out §2.5 ahead, and will hold a fair next September 18, 19 and 20, The Towa branch Jf the National Farm. ers’ alliance will hold its annual meeting in Des Moiuee, January 11th The Des Moines Kleotric Li ht Com- panv has been incorporated with ¢ capital of 820,000, Tho light will be put in, A government officis] is_at Sioux City looking up the matter of changing the channel of the river at that point. The machinery of the Atlantio distillery was et in motion on the 8th, It already coneumes 900 bushels of corn per day. A female shop lifter from Buffalo Grove, Buchanaa county, made a raid on the In- | dependence merchants last week, The town of Atlantic has organized a coal company d it pi poies to go down 800 feet unless coal is found nearer the surface, Two wmillions of fish eggs passed through Clinton on the 19th bound for Spirit Lake, and the state hatcherics at Ana. mosa. Aurella claims that a boom is getting ready to strike that town next spring in the ehape of extensive building by Illinois . | capitalists, In disinterring & coffin from a grave in Walaut recently, the sexton fouad thirty . | snakes clustering around the box in whici the coffin rested. Palo Altoand Emmett counties an ship- ping immense quantities of pressed hay vo Minneapolis and St. Paul, for which they Ret $12 per ton, The assersora of Ida county naro to moet January 1 to establish a uniform rate of assessment, the rate being unequal in the dilferent towa: Lips, Ogden is more than happy. A company reprecenting $100,000 has been organized there to sink a shaft for coal, which it is claimed can be easily dug. The We. tern Heating and Ventilating compary of Newton, with 25,00 capi- tal, and the Newton pl ng mill com- pany, with §35,000 capital, have incor- porated, The number of pensioners in Towa is 11,732, and the total amouut paid to this number last year, not including srrears, was 81,931,497, including arrears it was $3,081,714 ' There are now pending 11,550 applications, Oao of the wesnlthiest bankers in Des Moines refused to be assessed, claiming that everything he has is in government bonds. He afterwards paid 8500 to the city a8 a conscience fund, The squatters aleng the track of the Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern railroad at Cedar Falls have been steil. ing coal for ome time, The business was stopped on Thuraday by wholesale ar- rests, A disastrous railroad wreck occurred near Rled Oak on Friday last by a sollision between two freight trains. The Red Oak operator failed to hang out a signal for one of the trains to stop., Both en. gines were demolished, The train men all jumped, FROM THE SOUI'H SkAbS, . A Pweau of Praige About New Zealand and the New Zealanders. Mr. Raycraft, a San Francisco mer- chant, who rently returned from an extended tour in the South Seas, told a reporter of the St. Louis Post-Dis- vaten: *‘The town of Auckland, New Zoaland, looks more like an American town than anvthing else I ever saw at the antipodes. There is a bustle and an energy about it that reminds one of Chicago. They have good newe- papore, plenty of schools, and the peo- ple are all making money. OfF course, they do the great bulk of their trading with England, but we in 'Frisco are workiog to get a little more cf the pie. I think that New Zoaland is going to be one of the most progressive and fortunate colonics that Britain has yet Mt. Pleasant is to have the festival tele- planted. Thoy are practically inde- pendent and they can become theoreti- cally so whenever they wish. The island is getting the lion’s share of the emigration which is going into the Bouth Seas, an emigration which {s largely Engilsh and Xrish, There are not many Germans in the country and no Scandinavians at all. The people seem to make straight for the farming lands and stay there. The grazing is unequaled in the world, and the climate I8 wonderfal., The newly landed emigrants find work at once, end, on the whole, I do not believe there is & more happy or prosperous patch of land on God s footstool than New Zealand. ‘‘Have they no trouble with the na- tiver!"” “‘Not lately—the Mooris are rapid- ly disappearing, The New Z:zaland- ors_are taking the American plan in dealing with the savages and it works, Twenty yoears hence Now Zaaland will be the most prosperous and important land south of the equator.” POLITICAL ASSESSMENTS, The Henate Judiclary Committee's BilL, The judiclary committee’s bill to prohibit political assessments, report. ed by Edmunds to the senate, pro- vides: First—That no person in theservice of the government, whether logisia- tive, executive or judicial, shall, di- rectly or indireotly, solicit or receive, or be in any manner concerned in soliciting or receiving any assessment, subscription or contribution for any political purpose whatever, from any officer, olerk or employe of the United States or from wuy person receiving any salary or compensation from moneys derived from the treasury of the United States, Second-——That no person shall in any room or building occupied in the dis- charge of offictal duties by any offizer or employe of the United States men- tioned in this act, solicit or receive any contribution of wmoney or any THE DULY BFE-— THURSD kY other thing of value for ang political purposes whatever, Third —That no sach oflicor or em- ploye of the United States shall dis- o arge or promote or degrade or in any manoer change the ¢ licial rank or com- pousation of any othor officer or emn- ploye, or promise or threaten eo to do, by reason of any vote such officer or employe has given or withheld, or may purposo to give or withhold, at any politioal election, or for giving or withholding, or neglecting to make any contribution ot monay for any political purpose. Fourth—That no officer, clerk or o'her person in the service of the United States, shall give ty any per son in the service of the United States, or t6 any member of either house of congross, any mouey or other other valuable thing on acccunt of, or to be applied to the promotion of, any political object whatever Violation of any provision ¢f the act is made punishable by s fine not to excoed §6,000, or by imprisonment for a term not to excecd thirty years, or by both such fine and fwprison- went, in the discretion of the court. @ The bill, in conclusion, proposes to repoal section 6 of the act approved August 15, 1876, entitled “‘an not making appropriations for the legisla. tive, executive and judicial expenses of the government for tho year onding June 30, 1877, and for other pur- poses,” with a proviso, however, that this repeal shall not-affoct the prose- culion and punishment of any of- fonses committed against the saii seo- tion, Edison and Storage Battories. New York Tribune, Major Eator, the president of tho Edison Light company, was asked yeaterday what his company thought of the plan proposed by the Brush company to use storage batteries in connection with an arc-light current. “‘The public,” said Major Eaton, ‘‘do not distinguish between differont sys- tems of lighting. The Edison system was invented to supplant gas for do- mestio lighting, and was made abs lutely safe 80 as to be free from dan- ger in houses. For that purpose Mr. Edison adopted a low-pressure current and oarries it under ground. The Brush and other are light systems were developed for a different pur- poae, principally that of atreet light- ing. They uee currents of high pressure and carry them over aerial wires. It 1is now proposed to introduce these high- pressuro currents into houses to feed storage battories, This high-pressure ourrent usen by the arc lights and proposed to be used in houses for stor- age battories has a pressure of 2,000 volts, which means irstant death to any one who touches the wires. The Edison current has a prassure of only 100 volts, about one twentieth of the arc light and storage battery ourrent, and the Edison wires can be handled with entire sefety like wood, and give uo shock whatever. We believe that no current should be iutrcduced into a_ house which is strong enough to kill, and Mr., Edison has perfected his ~ system accordingly. We shall be sorry to see the death ourrent of = the arc light circuit used to supply storsga bat- teries in houses, becauee the dangor and deaths sure to follow will injure all systems of electric lighiing for do. mestic purposes, especially our own. The public will not discriminate- They donot know that electric cu rents differ in intensity and danger. So long as the death currents of the arc lights are used only for street lighting, the danger of death is limited to the workmen of the arc light com- pany and to flremen in caso of fires. But when this death cnrrent is car- ried into houses, although it be car- ried mo further than the storage bat- tery, aun element of danger and death appears which may lead to & wholesale, although unjust condemnation of all systems of domestic electric illumination, When- ever the death current is thus actually introduced into a house to feed stor- age batteries, we hopo the public will remember the distinetion between it and Mr. Edison’s current, which, like the other details of his system of lighting, has been perfected with an cspecial eyo to absolute safety., If the public will understand this dis- tinotton the Edison system will escape future censure for accldents and deaths caused, not by our safe current, DFCFMBFR 2 - 1U¢ only read the tickmg. I had no feara as to that either, as I had read all kinds of ‘olipped’ sending in tho west. Another thing that was in my favor but by the nigh-pressure current of another systom of lighting used in strects but not adapted to houses.” Edison’s Experience as a Tele- grapher. ““What wero the real facts of that Boston experience you had in fast re- ceiving a good many years ago?” Mr, Edison was asked yesterday. ‘Lot me see, that was in 1868, I had been working in Louisville, Ky., a ocouple of years, and went from there to Michigan, A friend named Adams got me a place in Boston, and 1 came over, arriving there about o’clock, and had to go to work at 5:30 o'clock. Although it was the middle of winter, 1 came into the office with a linen duster on, for I was very poor then, A fellow named Jack Wright, who knew me out west, thought to have some fun, so he posted the office and had New York put on an operator named Bagley, at the end of the line, with a specisl of 800 words to The Journal. He had had my end switched to a table about the mlddle of the room, near the manasger's desk, Not suspecting anything, I sat down and commenced taking it, Boon Bagley commenced ‘whoop 'em up,’ and, althol was accustomed to keep or eight words behind in copying, T thought best to close up, especially o8 he commenced to send some awful sticking stuff, making i's of his m's and coutracting his words, eending Yy, for instance, for ‘immediatoly,’ I having to write it out in full, Hap peuing to look up, I noticed fifteen or twenty oporstora griuning bebind me. Then T eaw it was & ‘put up job,’ and my blood got up end 1 determined I would not break. Operators in New York asked over other wires if I was gotting it, and would hardly believe the replies. When I thought he had reached the top of his epeech I open- ed my key and said: ‘Don't go to sleep; thake yourself and hurry through this! “The way I mansged it was this: T had practised all kinds of handwrit- ing, end found that by & kind of print hand I could write fifty-five words per minute, aud [ knew there was no man who could keep up that speed with a telegraph key, for I felt safe ifl could is that 1 am a littlo deaf, 8o that the hum of an office does not disturb me, and I gave my whole attention to the clicking of tho inatrament, ““Theroe is » little exporionce I had out in Indisnapolie that may interest you. I was very ambitious to recelve ‘press report,’ and usod to it up until the 2 p. m. ‘presy report,” listenin, boside the recelving operator, unti after awhile I could receive it very nicely, and then I wanted to receive press myself. Naturally, whon I had the real responsibility of taking it, I ‘bulled’ it bad at first, as they sent it at the rate of forty wordsa minute. I thought the matter over, and worked out & little plan to have the register indent some tin-foil as it came in, and then they had the boy turn it through another instrament, whioh ticked it off at the rate of about twenty-five words per minute, which' I read and wrote off very essily. The only trouble was that we got ‘30’ (good night) from the east about 2:30 a. m., while it was some time—an hour or more—later when we gavo the last wheet to the newspapers, They com- menced to growl after awhile, and our manager dropped in on us one morn- ing and discovered our little game in full blast, ‘‘By the way, there were several valuable inventions wrapped up in that office trick. Talking of the tin- foil rominds me of amnother Incident. There was o fast-sending tournament gotten up once, in which the judges were to be at St. Louls, and the fast sonders throughout the state were to send from their respective oftices to ho contral office in St, Louis. Now, although I have a repntation as a re- ceiver, I havo just the opposito repu- tation as a sender, and when I entered my name in the list to compete there was great ‘ha-haing’ over the wirew, We were given a chapter tn tho Bible to gend, and while other men were practicing eending 1, I worked out the chapter on the tin-foil, and fixed everything all ready to turn the crank at the rate ot fifty-five per minute, getting our boys to keep quiet about it. For some reason the contest never came off, and I did not havethe pleasure of carrying off the prize,” THE BAD AND WORTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medleine, and it is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest valuo. As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters was the purest, best and moat valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations sprung up and began to steal the noticos in which tho press and people of the country had expressed the merits of H, B., and in evory way trying to induce suf- foring invalids to use their stufl in- stead, expecting to muke monoy on tho credit and good name of H., B. Many others started nostrums put up in similer stylo to H, B., with vari- ously devised names in which the word “Hop” or “‘Hops’ were used in away to induce people to believe thu{ were the samo as Hop Bitters, All such pretended remedies or cures, no matter what their style or name ls, and espicially theee with the word “Hop" or *Hops” in their name or in any way connected with them or their name, are imitations or counterfeits, Bewaro of them, Touch none of them. Use nothlng but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of groen Hops on the white label, Trust nothing else, Druggists and dealers are warned against dealing In imita. tions or courterfoeits, FOUNDRY. WINTHERLICH BROS., Are now ready to contract for small castings of every description i MALLEABLE IRON, GRAY 1RON, And any ALLOY OF BRASS, Special attention is called to the fact that the metaly are mo'ted in ciuciuiKs which gives the very best castings, Burning Brands DISTILLERS, BREW PACK- 8, (l(u\lL and 'J()HA(,(,() ACTORIES, Ete., Ete., As wxll a8 Cattle Brands ARE NICELY EXECUTED Works: € Sixth strectand Eloventh aveuuo, O 1L BLUFFS, IUW A, "D. M. CONNE LL Funeral Director and Undertaker, , North Main 8t., Councll Bluffs Il hours, nigbt or w hearse and b ondon carringes direct the factory aro run it counection therewith, 1.0, BOMUNDRON, . L. BHUGART, President, Vico-Fros't CITIZENS BANK Of Gouncll Bluffs, Organized under tho laws of the Htate of Iowa Pald up capital, 76,000 Authorized capil 200,000 Interost pald on time doposits. Drafts lssued on the principal citios of the United Btates and Europe. Bpecial sttention given to collections sud correspondence with prompt returos, DIRROTORS, J.D. Edmundson, E.L.Shugert, J. T.Harb, WaW. Wallace, J. W. Kodfer, 1L A. Mlilsr Iyidu THE OTTAWA CYLINDER CORN SHELLER GEORGE F. GRAWFORD WEOLES A XLE BUYER AND SHIPPZR OF EGGS. No. 619 South Main Street. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA I pay the highest Market Prics and Deduct no Commiigsion. AE VA YNIE & CO. (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL JOWA GOALSI Ar.sSo CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Office No, 84 Pearl Street, Yards Oor, Elghth Btreet and Eleventh th_Avenue, Oouncil Bluffs. NEW STORE. New I’:‘roods. NEW YORK PRICES. For Dry Goods and Fancy Goods go to L. HARRIS, 734 Lower Broadway, SHORT LINE . ~OF THE— GRAY’S SBPECIFIC MEDICINE TRADE MARK Tho GrostTRJDE MARK English rem- ody. Anun. failing cure for Sominal Weoaknoas, Spormator- rhea, Impot- ency, and all Dlulnl follow ”lhl"lllll.-quunu of BFTER TAKING, 1f-Abuse; as Loss of Memory, Universal Lassl tude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Pre mature Old Age, and many other Disensos load $o Insanity or Consumption and » Prems .m#);l.;l ticulars in pamohlet, which all ‘particulars in our whle wo_desire to send free tv mall to .v';r’ one, &% The Bp-clnc Medicine s sold by all dnl.% , or #1 por pockage, or 0 packsges for Do sent froo by sl on Foor s of tho THEGRAY ‘lDlOlNl 00 " e rodt addrousing OCHIOCAGO, Milwaukee & St. Paul RATLWAY Is now running ita FAST EXPRESS TRAINS from OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS —~WITH— Pullman’s Magnificent Sleepers ~AND THE— Finest Dining Cars in the World. IF YOU ARE GOING EAST T0 CHICAGO' MILWAUKEE, Or to any point boyond; or IF YOU ARE COING NORTH druikonness use of opiumy, tobacea, o xroctior. gcla vy axr i, Bond 165 e HOF BITTHI DOCTOR STEINHART'S ESSENGCE OF LIFE. FOR OLD AND YOUNG, MALK AND FRMALR. It is sure, prompt and effoctual remeds for In- To digeation, Dyspepi, Intormittent Fevers, Wand of Appe Nervous Debility in all ita § ST. PAUL OR MINNEAPOLIS | Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Prost on, Weakness and general Loss of l'flhi!r It repal) nervous waste, rejuvenates the faded intellect, He e ey B e wurpris g tone and vigor to the exhausted or- ans, The experience of thousands proves it to o an_invaluable remedy. Price, $1.00a bottle, or uix for 85, For saloby all drujrgists, or sen secure from observation on receipt of price by Bw ufi-h-n, P. 0. Box 2460, S DOCTOR STE!NHAR’I"I | SUPPOSITORIES! The Great Popular Remedy for Pilos, Surecure for Blind, Bleeding & Itching Piles And all forms of Hemorrhoidal Tumors, Theae orvoutouns act directly upon the ooats of tho Blood Vensels, and by their astringen T e e making the coats of the vel it tho'r refilling, and hence a radi ire to follow their use. Price, 18 cents box. * For sale byl drugists, or sent b mail on receipt of price, by En _1lish Medios, hn.t“uu. 718 Olive St, 5t Lonis Take the BEST ROUTE, the Chicago, Milwaukee& 8t, PaulR'y Ticket office locatod st corner Farnam and Fourteenth strocts aud ut U. P, Dopot and at Millard Hotel, Omaha. £arsee Timo Table in another column, F. A. NAS eral Avent, G. 1, FOOTE, Ticket Agent, Omaha, 8.8, MERRILL, A. V. 1, CARPENTER, General Manager. oral Pass. Agont. J. 7. CLARK GEO, M, HEAFFORD, Goneral Bup't. Ass't Gen, Pass, Agent, 1408, OYPIONK. W, M. M, PUBEY, OFFICER & PUSEY, 120 DIEUEIVLES, Council Bluffs, Ia. Established, = - 1866 Dealera 0 Forcign fand) Domestio] Bxchange and home securitios, EDWIN J. ABBOTT. To Nervous Sufterers THE OREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. Dr, J, B Hin:rmcu’a Bpecific ica 0 3 O I € TN e Justice of the Peace and| ,,,, 0 K e i &) livpotaucy, aud el dlecascs resulblog {.Abuse, a8 Mental Anxlety, Logss k or B‘Ju. and Notary Public, L 416Broadway, Council Bluffs, I. l)()UGuAb +AROHITHOT, Oarpenter, Superintendent, &o, Al kinds of job work done. Old Buildings Reconstructed. ow bulldings erected. Plans and specifications turnlshed, Harnev 8t,. bet, 14th and 16th Ol ab ottice pooms, 8, Creighton Block umnhul