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W. A. CLARKE, ymaha lron Works RAILWAY, . TTH & ISTH STR ) v, MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN = WATER WHEELS. ROLLER MILLS, Mill. and Grain Elevaior Machinerv MILL FURNISHINGS Or ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Uelebrated Anchor Brand Dufour STHAM PUMPS STEAM WATER AND GAS PIPE. Superinender i Steam Engines, Boilers Bolting OClotk BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGE ARCHITECTURAL AND RIDG# TRCN. ODELL ROLLER HILL. Wo are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for 1+ erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Fiouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller System. 197 Especial attention given to furnishing Powder Placts for any pu pose, and estimates made for some General machinery repairs attendea Aadress RICHARD & CLAREE, Owaha,Neb promptly. & & g ! = & | e W. L. WRIGHT, Tmporter, Jobberand Menutacturer's Agent of CROCKERY, LAMPS, [ETC, 13th Street, Bet. Farnam and Harney. OMAHA, The Eleotrio Lamp 48 Candle Power GLASSWARE, NEBRASKA. Catalogues Furnished |, on applioation, y 1409 and 1411 Dodge St.,{ 10e1s3 THE LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY Omaha, Neh G up HALLET DAVIS AND GO'S PIANOS ITHE DAILN COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, MUNICIPAL MATTERS, I'he City Council Holds a Short Swoeet Session \ meeting « uneil held f the ¢ Wwas aftornoon at which Alderm Geise, Mynster, and Jamos wero present —Ald, Mynster reported th chased of Harry Bickinbioe two rollers yestorday Vaughan Mayor and \ Siedentopf, t he had pur for street work, paying two and one-half conts per pound, or £150 rollers, for the two On motion of Ald. James the was instructed to readvertise Sixth and Soventh avenues, Ald. Mynster moved the commiteo on sewerage remove the catch-baisina at cor ners of streets and provide stronger and botter ones. It was decided to do so and also to change the location of theso catch- baisins, making them nearer the carb- ing Notico was served on the council that the waterworks company had cut off sup- ply from city fountains during the win- ter. Notico was also served from Mitchell Vincent that he had arranged with Mr. Holbrook, of Missuri Valley, to draw moneys due him on his coutract, Hol- brook having advanced him money with which to do the work. The city engineer reported on cortain matters in regard to the Indian creek sower, or Fourteenth street ditch. He gave it as his opinion that the washing of banks would be confined to the bound- arios of the right of way as now defined, and that the direct route as now proposed would be most feasible. The report was filed, A potition of citizons was prosented asking that the police force bo incroased to twelve, Roforred to the police com- mittee. Notice was served of a suit commenced by J. W. Squires against the city and varions property owners, for special as- sessment certificates iesued Fobruary 1, 1884, amountlog to $1,450, for filling Third avenue from Union avenue to the creck, The council &djourned until next Mon- day evening. clerk for filling e Charles E. Taylor and wife celebrated their tin wedding last evening at their residence, No. Sixth Street. A jolly company of friends wore gathered there and a merry time was had. There were a large number of appropriate pres- ents, many of them useful, some orna- 6 mental, and some decidedly novel. Among the gifts was a tin cradle. ——— PERSONAL. Robert Huntington is reported as on the sick list, H. L, Miller left yostorday for a trip into Dakota, in the intercats of the roller skato he i reprosenting. Mrs. P, Daniels and Mrs. Russ, of Marion, Towa, are at the Ogden house as the guests of Mra. Mark Duryee, Wai, Altman, of Little Sioux, was in the city yosterday. He is one of the leading bus- iness men of that place. ? Mayor Vaughan loft last ovening for Fort Madison to attend a planting of & grove of Druids and to deliver the address, L. Mooney, wifeand children, of St. Joe, came up to attend the tin wedding of Mr, and Mrs, Charlos I, Taylor, last night. Attorney Sears has gone to Wahoo, Neb., but will return in time to look after hus chances for judge of the superior court. R. W. Clayton, who has become engaged in the lumber business in Omaha, yosterday moved over tho river, and will take up his vermanent residence there, Counoil Eluffs thus loses & valuable citizon and successful business man, Mr. Jobn B, Gray and his two daughters, Misses Dora and Lffie, are very sick. The yourg ladies aro in care of their brother-in law, A, B, Thornell, both being scarcely ablo to travel, Mr. Gray's condition is somewhat improved.—Haumburg Times, John Gilman is stopping at the Ogden house, Mr, Gilinan is publisher of the United States Farm Register at Worcester, Mass,, founder of Gilman City, Idaho, and ono of the most prominent railrond land agents in the Uuitod States. Ho owns a farm of 1,500 cres in Idaho and is now engaged in building ilroad from Hailey on the Oregon Short live to Gilman and the great bullion mining cunp, a short line of weven miles, el T Burglarizing Freight, Yesterday morning it was discovered that during the night a freight car in the yard of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway company had been broken open by thioves who had made away with several cases of merchandise. The quantity of goods taken and their bulk indicated that there must have been more than one thief, and they must have had some sort of a conveyance near at hand, BEE=-TUE and | DAY ] | promise slow improvement. 1 | that to encourage trade might worth while. Just think, you buy § 0,00( | ty, while France, for instance, 8 cof | fee 14 cents per pound. But Brazil im | poses & heavy duty on most of our im | ports, and your “dalance of trade " dwarfs before this notable absence of reciprocity, Brazil imports 1,000,000 barrels of your | flour, (worth there §10.75 & barrel.) your | kerosene, railway rolling stock, lumber |and lard. Sho wants more st For |examplo, sho aeka for your butter in the mark | Nearly all of the butter consume cities of the empire comes from 1 |and costa G0 cents 8 pound. She wants | your furniture, crockery, musical instru ments, woolens, cottons, andshocs, And as C. U, Andarews, an Amorlo man rosident at Rio, romarke, * grant these wants{” The oletin feandega do Io do Janeiro fairly such recognition for the people But why cannot Brazil support horself At o supertficial view it looks as though sho might do so, but really she cannot, Lmprimis, her agricalture ia of 1o radical account. The land lies so that it can scarcely bo plowed, and the universal im. plement for field work 18 tho hoe, a great heavy yrub hoe. When land is hoed ready for planting the farmor can not grow any small grains, potatoes and some of our bost vegetables. lustead, ho cultivates the mandioca, maize, rico and beans. The sugar plantations arc mostly in Pernambuco and San Paulo, but thy product is hardly more than 800 million vounde, Cotton is another staple, and sverages H0 million pounds a year as the product. Tobacco grows well in Bahia and other parts of the state, and whilo somo is exported, it is largely consnmed locally. Tho government, provincos and municipalities tax it heavily, All of these ocrops together arc not a tithe of the consequence of coftee and rubber, of which Brazil is juatly proud, and on which she depends for all of the self-support that she claims, Those two products are ahead of ali others on the continent, but the sad and sober fact is that half of the coffvo plan- tatlons aro mortgaged, and over 30 per cent of these are beyond redemption. Slaves cultivate the coffee, working fif- teen hours o days, and when the cstan- cieral is mortgaged, they are mortgaged with it. The Indians take charge of tho rubber industry, and if the negro tillage of coftee is wasteful, theattention to rub- ber production by the savages is much more 80. To meet the matter of coffee mortgago can bo pointed out the fact that millions of rubber trees have been de- stroyed by the excessive, ill-advised sys- tem of tapping. The bare fact is that these two, the country's only rich resources, are in the way of a serioua if not fatal declino. Is this because of the solution of the slavery problem ¢ The system of abolition there 18 very slow. The emancipation provided that all children born of slave mothers after September 28, 1871, shall be free on attaining the age of 21, This left the great mass of slaves in bondage; but some have been privately freed and some have died, so that there are only about a mil- lion of slaves in the empire at present. These are tenaciously held, and the thral- dom Is only relaxed against the 200,000 youth born slnce the emancipation. The slave Is lazy, of course. He will culti- vate perhaps 2,600 coffee trees or two acres of sugar cane, while the free work- ingman, who averages a wages of 41 cents a day, cultivates nearly or quite twico as much, 8o you see slavery governs all. Socially, the slave and freeman aro al- most cquals, They smoke and drink together, dance to the same musle, pitch quolts in the same game, mingle in communities, and subsist on the same mundicca, rice, beans and pork. The matter of food does not bother the slave, while the very least at which the freeman can live is 43 cents (a millreis) a day. The slave is not clothed very much by his owner, while the freeman’s garb is a black felt hat, blue cotton pants and a homespun shirt, with a woolen suit at entle 11d say | virtually & prominm on a wilde NOVEMBER 25, 1884 the ownera were and tax oy same of their red scotions; but no railways districts, and trade will agriculture What can be thea smile o1 pen not np done with such lands § small capital for coffeo, sugar or cattlo is €5,000, Much has been written of stock facts, ln tho first placo the horda’ pro priotor must have £5,000 to 815,000 at lonst, for a small herd will absorbed Into larger ones, and he should have a largo herd. IHis ranch must be in the Rio Grans de Sulregion, among jealous natives who content to bo in tho society of slaves or peons. Hiastock is cows, yearlings and bulls: and the current prices per head averngo but i to £13, one with the other. Means of transport are very in- ferior, and during tho weeks of the rainy sonson the eattlo cannot bo driven. Sales are most commanly made at tho camps, but frequently the breeder sends 200 to S00 animala from 1is herd to Pelotas for public sale. At Pelotas 500,000 eattlo aro slaughtered annually; and, to be caroful of tho truth, 1 might say that it is the saladeros (butcher) who makes moet out of the industry, There is no encouragement in the matter, and if one has the cattle-raising fover ho had botter 2o to Colorado or Moxico, 1 would like to give youa pic Brazilian farm lifo. Some months was five days on an Anajas cofioe planta- tion, The propriotor had owned 1t Dine years. He had bought it for 7,000 of your money, and had paid for it in cofive, grownu on land that in 1857 was a virgi® forcst. Last yoar's crop netted him 14,- 000 arrobas, and as we walked over his rich fields he told me that this year he should do better still. Ho does not de- pond altogether on coffes, but took mo into corn-fiolds equal in growth to those of linois, through tielde green with heavy growth, sud among fruit troes that mado glad my heart. The corn was planted, 80 ho told e, by slaves who ture of ago T wonld drop the kernels into holes in the soil made by their toce and covered by their heels. On the tablo were maby luxuries served on_plato, and partakon of by as intelligent o family as 1 over saw. Tho slaves wero at their lazy field work by day, and by the time of ovening they would gather on the lawn to hear the master road prayers, after which they would go happily to comfortable cabins, Thoe whole plantation life was one of prosperity aud primitive peaco, and in tho power of a swect christlan spirit. But sad to say, that plantation was an excoptionally good one. As a rule, though Brazil is nominally an agricultural country, tho agriculture of your acquaint- anco does not flourish there. But what of her citles? 1 will not say Newport of the empire. From Novem- ber to June the capital resident finds his home there. The city lies on three streams, in a valley, with shado-troes, groon terraces and macadamized stroots, making a fine town. Several confcal hills with ever-verdent, variegated trees crowning them, are 1 the city, and tho grounds about tho protty houses make a beautiful place. Not only is it the re- sort of the hot season, but being near home to wear to mass or on holidays. The slave is good for field work only, while the freeman can compete with the Portuguese as mechanical laborers at $1.50 to 2.70 a day. Naturally it the slave isa failure as a workman, the Indian of the Amazonas is much more 50, and consequently you have no diflicul- ty in coming to at the fact that the cofize and rubber industries donot tend to promise much in the way of advance. Brazil is not destined to improve through intestine efforts, but if the other com- mercial natlons will grant her an encour- agement of trade, she will be a state to honor. Possibly you ask how I, a resident in Peru, know this of Braz Though not on the ground, the Peruvian is but & few days from Para, or Rlo. Several steam ors navigate the Amazon. In ten days you are from Now York to Para and 1n twenty more you are at the foot of the Andes. If I wish to taste imperlal air, | embark at Iqutos or Tabatuiga, and enjoy for a fare of 230 a 2,000-mile ride to Para; or | can go by the Purus from Anajas for the same prico. The voyage is a grand pleasure, and it is on the wonderful and only Amazon. But I will not describe what others have better done; suflice that on the trip | can read from nature much of the glory of Brazil Peru can “‘get at” her imperial neighbor easily, but Bolivia cannot. Steam naviga’ tion from Para by the Amazon and Madeira is had to San Antonlo Falls, From there into Bolivia is the proposed route of the unfortunate Madeira and Rio, some business wen use it as & home. 1f you ever go to Brazil, by all me visit Potropolis. But the Brazili of an important future is Para. at the gatoway of the Amazon trade, it asks for and receives the prosperity of the north provinces. In two yenrs last past all of the principal strests have been paved with granite blocks and sewered. Sidewalks (something unusual in Brazil) have beon flagged and curbed. Covered wharves have been built. Ex- pensive waterworks have been lsid; hun- dreds of houses have been built, and to use the expression of Consul Prindle, “‘Para is literally gridironed with street railronds.” Six years ago there wero but two Amerlcan stores there. Now there aro as many Awmerican establishments as there English or French, and this leaven from the United States has so worked on the Portuguese nerves that it seemns rea- sonnble to believe that Para has a good deal to thank her northern neighbor for. Permit mo to suggest that if you put a little more Torula cerevisial, or vim, into that leaven you can leaven the whole Brazilian lump ! DiessinG, ready made, nutritious, ¢co- nomical, delicious, was ever offered, and it iy popular both at home and abroad. with his family ih Paris, e Gool Heslth and Long Life, duced o lation. Now land, can however, be bought for €240 an acro in tho fertile Eapirito Santo, San - Franciec vallay, Minos Gerals and other promising ratsing in Brazil, and_you may Jike somo - e bacome aim to control the business, and where he must livo in primitive eimplicity cn moat, mandiooa and mate, a word of Rio, but look at Petropolis, the | ~ R - Durkee's Connp Mear Savce & Satan Nothing equal to_ it wvariably Henry Villard is now living quietly e — e IN UMAHA T0 f they can ba acquired? you may ask, | cannot say. Taey are not adapted to coffeo culture, and if they were the L S 3 2 average German or other immigrant can Wb s W ¥ not afford to buy slaves or to Pay & free 2 ha Halt awil { 3 § man wagos. To toll the trath a man| ON® Of the Best and large tocks in the United Stater might not do a more h thing than to selent from. to go to Brazil. If he goes thero he| ” must have money. How muchi A[NQ STAL 10 GLIMB. RLEGANT °ASSENGER R EVATAT h Diploma of Honor, Medal of Merit, —AND— CERTIFICATE of DISTINCTION at the CENTENNIAL THESE INSTRUMENTS POSSESS THE HIGHEST EXCELLENGE ST Power, Richness and Svmpathstic Quality of Tone,. Elecrance and Durabilitv of Workmanshiy. Pronounced by the Artists and the Press, both at home and n Eurape, as the Sweetest Toned Piano Ever Made. MAX MEYER & BRO., LAms Lamps, Lamps. BiG DRIVE. AT HOMER’S. Oouecil Blaffa. SPECIAL NOTICES. NOTICE.—Spootal a vertisomonte, muo as Lost, Found, To Loan, For Salo, To Rent, Wants, Board. Ing, oto., will bo Indortod 1n thia column at tho low 1ato of TEN CENTS PER LINE for the frst Insortion and FIVE CENTS PHER LINE for oach subsequent n- ortlon. Toave advortisoments ab our offios, No. "C};/u, AND WOOD Gaorge Tiwnton, way, slls conl end wood at rensouablo prices, 2,000 1bs. for o ton, nnd 128 cuble for o cord, 'y him awas, Papor, Baoks Wl FPOR BALF OR RINT—Tho Orvie Pnckiug nouse and machinory, Incated In thi city. Capacity 160 hoys por day. Odell & Day. DOR SALR - Plano, 11 K. and Statlonary, Coune 3 Maln Etweot . ANTED—Evory body in Councll Bluffa to_ tako W'l'nnlllL Delivered by carrier st only twenty conta wook, (0); o F PTILISBINT, 200 Uppes Browlw to the Frant. study, rotecs and con aiuo, and soe for ourselvos what you ¢ Laimy pl quote you. a4 follows: 13108 e inted sugar (o, ..o 160 1m Cugar Sor 16 1y Whil ex € sngar £ r., APERS—For walo st Lux office, at 26 conts hundred g Bk ADMISBION o p watohos for ip Cadornin honey drijs, Syrup, waranted strictly pure por gl Soreham per il glish curranta 14 RAlI raont maple Gents 160—Ladios 10, R SKATES—~Gents 160 Tadics 10c 0 for, Admission Froe to Ladien orntng and Tues- ' day and Thumday - afor Use of 8k; 6 B1h yeliom pon 0. 1 white A w7 kit, Tobaoco, L por pound’ % accordag o qual A. P. SCHANCK, H, Ra.ilwa.y Timp Ta.rble.. COUNCIL BLUFFS. + MARTENS, Sl ty,tiom 150t0 700 Flonr—Wo sell tho col 490, pratod Patent Fancy per evorything usually kept ina Fiest Class nid warreat overyth'ag we tell. Gooda o any part of the eity. 1 also handle Glovos and Mittens, Dry goods and. Notions, Boots w1l Shoos, aud & gocd awsortiaent of Tinworo. Re [ tmombor; T will no3 only by not undersold on any iy The following aro tho thmes of the arrival and do , bt wi | well 20 por cent, below any Competition parture of trainy by oo 1 time, at th recinke g an ravies of D. local depots. Tratns lon opot e min credamt hariaing cver offe utos carlor and arrive to 3 OHIOAGO, BURLINGUN AND QUINOY. LuAVE. ukes are very Ught, with no. 2asiouablod and will Gell cheap far vhwu you woabthebe ol Bargains b = 7 | o aan obtai The two do not always go together, | b:86pm "',‘""";';““""" |ENDORBED BY FRANZ LISZT.) ll‘rl:‘l;:wfx no clue has been obtained to the 3:]::‘:;1’":!‘“;:!3[‘{l’ll‘].l’i':;l n.f((m:.h::l l[;:::';::;u:; but they ought to, for it 18 aad m“l;t‘;” Sdoam I_:m‘ iy :’:”"m. J. P F”_BE“T' . = e e g AL e seo an old gentleman or an aved lady | Zwpm A 909 Upper liveadway, " onnell Blafis ATAERSON PXANOS. """ —— |, WO s o ol o s sy BOSTON jMarch 1ut, 1861 EUERION PIANO 00 —Gmrmumuey—Your instrameats, Orend, Square and Upright, are reslly nobly nstrunaonte aad narivalied for beausy of oas and Ruish allew 1 10, congFatulsto Jou on your ser peourons. GUBTAVE RATTER, company are buried in that unhappy mis- adventure, Apropos, lot mo say that though I have ease, dobility, and misory. Much misery can he avoided by elderly people who koep up the propoer proportion of iron in 10:06 & m Bilb pm Rubber the Cofics and Two M - Stays—The of Thexe 1 nover been to the tomb of Henry Melgas | thir blood by taking Brown's Tron Bit. I, Shupm | m 9 AN EIMIBALL, OFGRAD | "t S Wi e i s e 85 B, T , United illan pleasure that Brazil follows the example | hegt and truest iron tonic in the world, ke Toed o] il \ RECOMMENDS ITSELF. Niarionsiand Diania: of Peru, and is opening hundreds of miles - : -m.u.u.if.IAL".'.“..”.“.;«M..u...., Glopm S — A BOLE AGENT, T of new road every year, It is hard to ppineirhin heee dog barbor she oA iocal depot only. © i A FH OSSP Hi 0 voise tue. oita, on ek D T thre, 2k Sho ot o, | FhARIcohin bt o dog babor | | vt it iome. | THE BRUNSWICK, BALKE, COL - Correxpondence of the Springfield epublican, | 1068 the payment of interest 1 ruilrond |y ywolis who afluct pugs or Skye ter- | 180 P Louy Fsbrom S8 R0 LENDER CGMPANL Lina, Poru, October, 1884 —You in | <3Pital Ialls, locomotives and coal are ( iory™regort daily to have their favorites | * {BUCCESSCRS TO THE J. M. B, & B. €0, 4008 8IMB, K. F: OADW 3L N. 8CHURZ Ay 4 OFR) S RONEE, g Al imported; but the government i b | [ ion T LY g §IMS & CADWELL, . . the United States should have & good [eral toward railroad enterpriscs, and Ll T AT ] opinion of Brazil, for that country is a|through the servicos of several American | )i ykre's Samn Dressivg & Coun | 9268m 1:06 % m -at. ueighbor that wust ot bo suubbed, and | vivil engineers, the country can boast of [ nryAx'S (o is mado from the freahst, | 140 pm s y , | one tha. has :\l;ury pleasant ;MHI“}WM nearly i.,mm miles of n[n:l‘:h!d’ nn]wnyi purest and choicest condiments obtain: | 1108 m 7.00 pm . orcourse with you. One-third of the | The railway servico is in tho hands of |Llye™ The S0 R paranint ; 8 OIS TPFS. OFFICE OVER AMERICAN EXPRESS. rY able. I usiog it, wasle, lahor, anxioty, H:00 p m S:80 A m COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA, §200,000,000 foreign commerce of Brazil | Brazilians, snd no inducements are held TR b T p 440 pm Ottios, Main Strset, Rooma” | and 2 Shugart & Mo | COUNCIL BLUFFS. TOWA |is with the United States, and of this, |forth 0 Amoricans, In fact, immigra. |* di8PROINtIONE A0 provonted, @iioa m i Maans Riowks Ol sentyen . HMin AR KoMy £00,000,000 18 of such staple exports a8 |tlon does not wet toward Drazil. The| Iu France the wale of propriotary medi- ATl | Tho moet extonsive masutackurers - S —— - - coftec and rubber, while 7,000,000 | 5iate exponds more than a million a year | cines ia only permitted after the formuls o SRNUL MR NAGKAN) =SAmr ] A OB, OFFICNE, 1 M. PUNEY represents your importe, you see | to promote immigration and support im- | has boen comnnuuicated to the Academy | 550 e . R . Rice M. D. |QOFFICER & PUSEY |t i i iea for you'to imgroyo on | ibeunts, bt - the - whils - masber |of Mo ¢ e b Gorsany tho salo of a ! | i ke the acquaintance on the basis of informa- | arriving during & year doos not | such articls is strictly prohtbited. TR . ox other tumors removed withou i t th Urog S0uLE ) ¥ wh ' DANCERS, &5iier drewing o tived [ BANKERS tion ab 48 thin ) oat Bouth Awetiown (n:nll-l “n,m,u,“ (-J’ wAag. - 10,000 worooptluan Exhinition John Hockstrasar Goneral Agont o Nehrask . empire erhaps you are a political | ure Portuguese, 10,000 are Italians, snd Broroopt by ixh ") Westorn lowa. / CHROKIC DISBASES otsiniss sssciuns, | couscs miazs v 1 |oconomist—a dicciglo of Prof. Verry of | most of the rent are Gopmns and S An iluminatod view of a dyspsptica} Py W 55, Bhorvaden [ O Weladon © Gver hirty yosrs practios] oxpertance Otios No. | Establishea - : 7856 | or sowe other American Adam Swith — |isrds, The Chinese refuse to go there, ach would b a frightful wight and a@adatiow EAlIATd and Pool Tables snd mawsis / Poarl trook, € ’ Doalera i Feorelgn sod omestlo Exchenge an | 884 YOU begin to say right here, *“I'nis is | and no other Americane like Brazil. I'ne endful warning, A view of the DENTIST, rocs i Oy Frrrng o) 8 pota balauco of trade by any means! ' | government will not douato lend to - wot- | intorior of & healthy stomach is not uu- : ¥ - - | 3. R, TATR. WARKEN WHITE, No, but the cxcess of imports is no proof | tlers, and this prodigality of land in the | pleasant, but, on the contrary, is very i T aTE & W ITH DR. C. C. ¥ .o ZE Dy |vfpoor trade. Remember that 1 great obstacle to the progress of the | interesting si Thero is nothing like Malsonlc' remple’ t har es B!e 4 " g e d . sl f;».* :;w Yroat ]:-:uu,u, 'il r x'mn- reial | c ,m.uvl T'he ,'nunl\ r part rllihn in cul- | bir s ln“n [} s l|u k,m-] WI‘M slomac l: Qouncll Rafls = e, ' 3 | ~ evelopments because of her unfavorable | tivated land in not, however, hold by the | healthy or to restore it whes demoralis AITORNEYS AT LAW.| DENTIST. Bt iy o o1 |t b by S, s 1 |y e o sen B G| gre B, J. Bilon . D LINCOLN, . Prootice lu State and Foderal Courte. | Her ten million peoplo are scattere | taxed, is uninhabited, uwudeveloped. | Shivers, Eilicott City, 'dd., says, **1 euf ' S AR, M Four gtory briok, just sreoled o O akiout, b Call romp ended to. ' T e n over & rogion wore than two thirds as | Yetif the owner solls an ell of it to au |fered from dyspepsia and general prostra i oy t th and 8.1 sirects, Fin pldhe ) 0} A asouible prined how the taii ol 0 16, Shugart's Building, 100 MAIN STREET, large us the United States and sre bur |immigrant, ho must pay atax of G par ln m. Brown's lror, Bitters improved me PP‘YSIGlAN & bURGEO"N’ X lpuum“ Yk, “.fif DOAKLEY, I CHOUNCIL BLUFFS JIOWA"'| SOUNCIL BLUFF3 - wani: tyde financial embarrassments that ot (n the purchwse money, ek "riq m the stars.” 8t%sy Coumelldly it Vooprial