Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
6 THE DAILY BEE--COUNCIL , 18856 BLUFFS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 e . THE DAILY BEE| CQOUNCIL BLUFFS, Tuesday Morning, Feb.24, BUBSCRIPTION RATES, Galvin and George Loucks, Col. Dalley and John Lindt are the attorneys for the plaintiff and Jacob Sims, K., for the defendant. v T ) Afine organ, half price, at Beard’s wall paper store, next to postoflice. —— The True Alternatives, ear | To the Editor of The Bee, fl'"lflil 7 Poarl Btrest, Near Broadway. ~ MINOB MENTION, MeDougal & Polsley have opened a meat market at 612 Broadway. John Dolin aud Wi, Scott were each fined yestorday for belng drunk, To-day is the thirty-first annlvereary of Rov. Father MoMenomy's prissthood. In the circult court yesterday the case of Forsythe va, Smith was belng trled. Ravival meetings continue at the Methodist church and with good succoss. A. J. Miller, late of Margville, has openced “‘an equal rights” barber shop at 610 Broadway. George Sexton and Ella Reichert were yesterday given permlit to wed. They are both from Neola. No one would hardly know from the way Council Bluffs carried Itself that George Washington ever had a birth-day. There promises to be a liyely attempt to get the new court honse—if one is voted—located near the Masonic Temple. John Thompion was the name given by one drunken fellow who was arrested for exposing his' person on Washington avenue yesterday. Work has commencad on the first floor of the new Masonic building, fitting it up for county offices. The move will be made new week, Editor Lorche still {s in the tolls, hav- Ing been unable yet to get bondemen. Thera Is little sympathy felt for him, bat much for his family. Let's see. Didn't the police commlit- tea start an investigation of the force some time ago? What has becoms of it, and what hay become of the committee? Orvlile Wheeler, who way shot by Jef- ferls, was in about the same condition yeeterday as on Sunday. He s quite low, but death is not immediately ex- pected, Capt. Seeley’s lecture In the Masonic hall this evening shall draw a crowd, and the rellef fand for the orphans and wid- ows of the brave veterans shall recelve a large amount of cash. A balf-hour after-meeting s now held ab the close of the Sunday afternoon meetings at the Y. M. C. A. These after- meotings are for young men ouly. At the one last Sunday one young man was converted. Tivg-a-ling. Drop the curtsin, The farce is over. The police Investigating committee have finished up in one act, and the small boys must clear the gallery 80 that the janltor can sweep outtle pea- nut shucka, Mr. Lawrence Kinnehan, who is at the St. Jeseph's hospi'al in Omaha, 1s rapidly recovering from the effects of the last amputation, and in a couple of weeks will return to this clty If no unfavorable symptoms tet in, The Council Bluffs carpet company is getting all to rights in its new quarters in Seaman’s old storc, The attent'on of BrE readera is called to the new adver- tlsement, and they are Invited to person- ally inspect the stock and interview the firm, Chlef Walters, of the fire department, now rejoices in the arrival of ten pound® of new and young democrasy, which he has named Cleveland Hendricks Walters, 1t that boy grows up to be a republican, it wlll be a sad take-off on the chrlsten- ing. Mras. Ewing, who lives in the eastern end of the city complains that she hay been fnsulted by a fellow named Win. Wagner, who persuaded her to go to Omaha with him, as his housckeeper, and to sell cff her things hera. She claims that after getting her to let him sell off lier household goods here, he skipped with the cash, A meeling of the board of trade is called for Wednesday night at Odell & Day's oftice. There s some very ln- portant business concerning the manu- facturlog Interests ¢f his clty, and every business man and property owner inter- ested in the growth of this clty should attend and glve the banefit of his advice and encouragement, The meeting Is called for 8 o'cleck sharp. Judge Aylesworth, who has a warm side for the boys, noticed cne little fellow llstening to the evidence In a trial yestor- dsy, and knowing that eome of the feati- mony would be unfit for so youthful ears, he said: “David, I wieh you would go down to your father's office for me; will youl" ‘‘Yer, sir.” “Well, Iwish you would te)l him that there is a case going on here that ls not fit foryou to hear, and that you are not coming back.” The boy hurrled offon the errand, befora he got it through his head what the full Im- port of the messaze was, In the soperior court yesterday the case of Eva Perrin against Dawson was on trlal, Kva claims that while Dawscn wasat her houss, which bears no savory name, he ot mad becaute she wouldn’t «rink with him, and slapped her, where- upon the hit back, and he then hit her with a beer glass, cutting her head and face badly, and caus'ng serijus injarles, ghe belng pregnant at the time. He offercd to confess judgment for $94, that being 1ha actoal amount of her doctor bills, ete., but she would not settls for that, A jury was therefore called, con- wis'iog of A. Schwerger, M. A. Moore, W, Robinsor, Gecrge Magwoo?, Wm 1 notice in the Nonpreil of {he 15th an editorlal article, which gives evidence of a deslre on the part of the editor to pose as an oracle on economle questions. He speaks of rasults as if they wera results in the most reckless manner as if anxlous to vindicate his claim to be a worthy suc- ocessor to the persen who used, two or three years ago, to do the foggy articles on social and polltical economy for John Chapman’s organ. His statement that ‘“‘the amount of carnings must naturally depend upon the prices of the product in open market” is all right except that it lacks the usual acknowledgement of quotation marks; and the same would apply to his remarks upon supply and demand; bat he uncon- sciously utters a terrible prophetic sentl- ment when he declares that, ‘‘in the end the law (of supply and demand) was sure to assert iteclf, always bringing disaster to thess who endeavored to impede Its natoral operations.” The man, or comblnation of men, who attempt, elther by direct or indirect methods, to Interfera between the de- mand and the supply of that demand in all matters where the demand fs legiti- mate, thereby constitutes himself or itaelf « public cnemy, and fs debarred from any equitable claim to the consid- eration cf his or its rights by soclety, and it Is the plain duty of legally consil- tuted authority to interfera to pravent, by all powers at its command, any sach attempt feom being brought to a success- ful culmination. When ths laborers of New York, Philadelphia and Boston ara clamoring for bread; and at the same time the farmors of:Nebraska and Iowa are burn- ing corn for fuel; or when the children of thess farmers arc lacking for clothing and ehoes while the stocks of that class of goods on the hands of eastern dealers uever were larger, It would soem that somebody had been tampering with the operation of the law of supply and demand. Whoever is to blame will suffer just as surcly as He who sald, ‘“‘Vengeance is Mine” has an exist- ence. Man iscreated In Ged's image; he is the favored creature of the Oreator who glves heed to the falling of a spar- row to the ground; under the dlvine plan, man is mads dependent on the land of the earth's surface for subsistenca which is & nacessity tohis mortal existence. Therefore, the first demand of man is land. I lay it down asa well known fact that there s land enough to supply the demand, yet how many men who desire to cultivate the land directly are denied access t9 it by men who bold possession of it under the law for specalatlve pur- poses only. We have In history many exam- ples of what punlehment men deal out to that class of obstructora of the operatlon of the law of supply and demand when their operations have reached thelr climax; but it s reserved for the world to cometo reveal the infinite degree of punishment reserved by & just God for those whose condact He has con- demned and forbidden in His law and denonnc:d by the mouths of His proph- ota and apostles. Under our present organization of so- clety and division of labor ia the various procasses of* production, together with and largely owing to the introduction of machinery {n both agrloulture and manu- fagtures the supply of all commoditles has vastly Increased both in quantity and variety; but it isevident that by the uni- versal law of compsnsating balances the demand has at all times been ;fully com- mensurate to the increased power and variety of production. Hera we come to the next great disturber of the proper ad- justment of supply and demand. The sdministratlon of the affaiva of production under corporate control be- came possible, and indeed was the best manner of managing such vast interests as those of manufacture become, and there has grown up a class of impersonal, irre- sponeible and consequently tyrannical entlties styled corporations, who have ar- rogated to themselves the authority to control the volume of demand by means of shortenlog the supply. This empiri- cal method has pravatled in every depart- ment of production, if wa except that of idiots and criminals. The issue of car- rency lias bsen cutrasted to a corporate monopo’y which makes moncy fcircs and dear whon it desires to saize proper- ty pledged to securs loans made when money had been made plenty and cheap 80 a8 to 1> used as an Instrument for the scqulsition of mortgages by the samo class who by shortening supply immoder- ately Increase tho demand. The menopoly of transportation has Dbeen given to another c'ass of corpora- ticns who bave not ecrapled ta protact themselves In levyirg enormous tolls upon the process of sugplying demand by the abolition of competition by mesns of the pooling system, or, In fact, enteriag into conspiracies to withdraw the supply of transportation in exchange of product a8 a means of increastng demand, The control of the mining intere:ts has drifted into the posseesion ef corporite monopolier, who have used the very same tactics of interfer.nce with the rame law: and the railroad, banking, manufacturing axd mining and cattle raising corpora- tions have joined hands with native and allen corporations of landlords to cause an artificlal scarcity of the prime factor in product:on In thie land, in order that they may take advant'goof a demand thus arbiirarily increased, This coustant Interference with the law of supply and demand adopted by corporate enemics of scciety as a settled line of policy has for its atm the accom- plishment of the robbery of the people, who an unorganizel mass or workers, lowered down by toil and distracted by falee itsues when exercislog the r'ght of suffrage submit, sometimes gracefully, sometimes after a conteat to the inevit- able cobsequences of an orgsnized well saministered tyatem of robbery. These perlodical round-ups cf the laboring classes, and these terrible reductions in wages, have thelr cavss fariher away than is spparent to ¢he wan who is be- trayed Into & temporary cessat’on of la bor. The evident de:ire of a larga class of liglslators iu this country Is to divide the piople of this country Into two clayses—lords and serfe. The corporation, uncontrolled by any law, except those of its own procuring through venlal legislatures, is a fit in- strument for bringing about such a classi- ficatlon of the cit!zims of the United States. The assumption by apologisis for this policy that the inexorable law of supply and demand is responsible for this whole- ssle reduction of sales and coneequent fa'ling oft In prices is a piecs of check which would do credit to a llghtning-rod peddler. 2 The key of the whols question ls in , the tampering with that law by means of legislation for the purpose of establishing priviledged classes and the manufactorar feels the effects firat, and he being able to protect his Interests by catting down wages, does s> or ehats up his shop or factory. . Let the people demand a restoration of the public lands by the rallway inicrest; stop the fencing up the land of the peo ple by cattle kings, end forbid the hold- ing of title by aliens and thus check one monopoly. Tax all lands heavily when they are held unproductive for specula- tive purposes and atop ancther oppres- slve featare of what is really robbery. Pass rallroad restriction lawa in all the states or what would be far befter, lot the government take charge of the trans- portation of frelght over four pounds welght through the postoftice as it aow does under that weight, and make pro- vision for the transpcriation of pasten- gers on the same syatem, Compensate the people for the disad- vantage imposed on them in the past by class legislation by asslsting settlers in good falth®o make & successful start on the publlc lands, certainly as easy a thing and asjlawful to do as the subsidizing of @ railroad, Do away with the national banks and lot the represantatives of the people de- termine the carrency for thelr use In ex- change. Provide for the safety of men engaged in mining and manufacturing pursults and through state beards of arbiteation fix the dlstribution of the product between labor and capital. Make claim for labor performed the first lien upon product. Check monopaly at all points and I ven- tare to say that theeditorof the Nooparell will " not trouble the public with such shallow pratt'e about matters he don’t dare to probe to the teat of the disease for fear of offending an advertising pat- ron and having to agpolcgize for it after- wards, On the conirary, let the presant atate of affairs continue; let the United States continne for a few short years to pursue the course they have followed during the past winter, and the children of the con- querors of Vicksburg, New Orleans, Ricemond and Appomattox will join hands with those of thelr father’s foes on those well-fought fields, and marching in Insurcection to Washington and New York, re-cnact the scenes ol Paris and Versallles in 03, These arc ‘“The Alternatives,” It has come to be a question, not entirely of wages, but of tho rights of man, The children of men are crylng for bread! Our land overdows with plenty and our children are freezing and starving. Our fathers conquered the wilderness and established a frco government for free men in a land where there s room enough and Jand enough fertile enough to answer gladly and smilingly to our de- mand with bountiful sapply, and we are fast learning why the supply is not forth- coming in response to our willing toil. Let the public robber beware when he hears, as we now hear, the cry of the mul- titude for bread, because soon the multi- tude will become ¢ mob; a revolt easily becomes a revolution and revolutionary mobs have queer appetites and never lack for measures of gratifying them. A PrACTICAL WORINGMAN, ———— Beckman & Co., 526 Maln street, will wash and oll your harness cheap now. e —— PERSONAL. J. C. Reagan Moines, has returned from Des Nate and John Phillips are on their way to Boaton, J. M, Adams starts for New Orleans to- morrow. F. W. Upham, %of Marshficld, Wis., was at the Ogden yesterday. A. W. Courson, of Cincinnati, left yester- day to work Nebraska. Otto Voegler started out on a week's trip yesterday to visit the harness trade, W. S. Amy is reported as crippled and con- fined at home by an injury to his knee cap. = J. F. Barke went to Hastings, Neb., Satur- day to work up Y. M, C. A, interests there, The family of Dr, McCrary, pastor of the Methodist church, are expected to arrive in a few days from Pennsylyania to take up their home hera, A. J. Baldwin, late of T. N, Bray’s store, goes with Smith’s dry goods house in Omaha on the 1st of March, Mr. Hollingsworth, late with T, N, Bray in this city and Omaha, left last evening for his home in Des Moines on a ten days’ trip, ———— Harmony Chapter No. 2560 E. C., will hold a special meeting this (Tuesday) afternoon at 3 o'clock, for the trinsac tion ¢f important business, at the resi- dence of Jao, Keller, A full attendance is requested. By orderof the W, M. e — “Dress Up." James Francy, the well known mer- chant tallor, has not only o far racovered from bis {llness as to be able to give his personal attention to business, but has got his new gcods in, 85 that now ls the time for his many customers to drop in on himand ‘‘drees up.” He certalnly has as larzc and varled stock of goods as can be found in this part of the world, and as to good fits and _excallent make everybody knows that Franey takes the lead. Put in your orders early. e fende i Real Estate Transters, The following is a list of real estate transfers filed yesterday in the recorder’s office of Pottawattomie county, Iowa, as farnished by A, J. Stephenson, abatrac- tor, real estate and loan agent, Council Bluffs, Iowa, February 23, 1885, Joho E. F. McGee to W, 8. Cooper; lot 3, block 2, Burns' add., 50, W. 8. Cooper to Charles Baughan; lot 3, block 2, lots 2, 3, 4 and b, block 3, lots 3, 4 and b, block b, lots 13 and 14, block RUBBERS A full stock of Mens’, Womens’, Boys’, Misses’ and Childrens’ New Jersey ARCTICS, now ready in any quantity to CHICAGO TERMS and We suit purchasers. DISCOUNTS every day in the year, also carry FULL lines of BOOTS and SANDALS of above named goods, includ- SMITH & TOLLER, AGTS, LEA Merchant 7 and Councin Bruers, —_— DING Tailors ! O Main St., Towa. A Complete Line of New Goods to Select From. KIEL SALE STABLES Koe, Horses and Mules constantly on band whic wo will sell In retall or carload lota. All Stock Warranted as Reoresented. Wholeiale ardretel] deaen ir Grain and Eslcd Hay. Prices sonable Satisfaction Guaranteed. IT POSITIVEL Dyspepsla, Nervonsne Headach, Lamo Bac ‘old €3 and #5; old stylo 8 each. CURES— Wasting Weakness, Paral COorner Fifth Ave, & Fourth St. CouncilBluffs, AGENTS WANTED. Drs. Judd & Smith’s New Improved Electric Belt. 810 BROADWAY, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA; 725 ELM ST., DALUAS, TEXAS; and FT. WAYNE, IND Kidnoy and Liver Complaint, Bright's Disoas., Rheumatiam t, and ull diseases réquiring inoreased motive powers. uraleia Aftections, Indigostion, Heart Disoass, Fita New tmproved e ing the nicest line of SPECIALTIES for fine retail trade made by ANY company. We have some Felt Boots to close out cheap. recommend them. Write for list on “Lumbermen,” Office, 412 COUNCIL BLUFFS, Z, T. LINDSEY & CO, Storehouse and Salesroom, 41 N. Main St. Broadway, IOWA. Jefferis' preventive and pensible in putild sore thriat sale only at the doctor's office, No. 2: Dyspeptic, whylive in misery and aie every case of indigestion and coustipation in & very o the cause ef all of ninety per cent disoased condition: outh Eighth s in despalr with cancer of the stomach? Dr. Thomas “MURDER MOST FOUL,” To Allow Anyone to Die of Diphtheria. URING the Inst flve vears there has not been a death trom diphtherla in any cave where Dr. Thomns sed. Ithas been the meavs of saving thousands of lives. Indis- | tan, the oounty so ant scarlet fever, changing it in 48 nours to the simple form. F' trect, Council Kluffe, Towa, Send for it; price §2. hort time. Best of references given. 5. or | K efferls cures Dy spepssia is Try a case of our COMMON SENSE ARCTIC for MEN, we FULLY W. P. AYLSWORTH, Brick buildings of any size raised or moved and satisfaction guaranteed, moved on LITTLE GIANT trucks, the best in the world, D RAISER. Frame hons W. P, AYLSWORTH, 1010 Ninth Street, Council Bluffs, H. H, FIELD, W. C. ESTE FIELD & ESTEP, UNDERTAKHERS No. 317 Broadway, Council Bluffs, Towa. Office Calls Attended Promptly, Day and Night, Particular attention given to Fmbalming e e e SPECIAL NOTICES. NOTICE.—Speoial a vertisements, suo As Loet, Found, To Loan, For Bale, To Rent, Wants, Board- Ing, eto., will bo inserted in this column at the low eate of TEN CENTS PER LINE for the first Insertion and FIVE CENTS PER LINE for each subsequent n. ertion. Leavo advertisomenta a4 our office, No. Poarl Street, near Broadwav WANTS, '\" \/ ANTED— Woman phstry mmeately ot the A student in dentalciiice, Must have weavs of svlf-snpport. Call on or address at No. 12 Peatl St. Council Blufls. 3 TANTED—A ood girl to ¢o general housework, Call at 109 Bancroft street. well im. v miles of and casy ALKER OR SALE—A rare chance to zct & fine, proved farm of 400 acres, within a Council Blufts, at & bargain. Low ps terms. BWAN & JFO% BALE—A good payine hotel property mith liyery stable, ia one of the best small towns in western Towa will sell with or without furniture, or will trads for a emall farm with stock ctc. SWAN & WALKER, OR SALE—Fighty acres uoimproved Jand in Unlon county, Towa, 3} miles south-cast of Af- or will trade for Nel SwaN & WAl a or s land K of good land a one and a half wiles from Council Biufi post office, at o bargain, SWAN & WALKER. F. H, Oncurr, I. M. TREYNOR, COUNCIL BLUFFS CARPET (0. SUCCESSORS TO Casady Orcutt & French S. T, FRENCH, 405 Broadway Council Biuffs} Carpets, Curtains, 20, lots 1 and 2, block 22, and lots 7 and 8, block 20, Burns' add., $1,000. W, Z Lloyd to Rachel Brown; ¢ 3 nwiladelswlandnw/ne | 27, and swlsw] 22 andndse} 2174 —38, £12,800 Herace Everett to H. Huelsdonk; s w lo e}, 33—76-42, 8600 A. Sobloph to August Hanson; lot 6, block 8, Minden, 900 John 8, Morgau to John Morgan; w ] ne}, 3476 $1,385, E. E. A Freiag to Fremont Beuja min; ne | 3 76—38, $350, 4 Total eales, $61,085. Before you buy a harness call on Beck- man & Co., 526 Main street. ~ MANDEMAKER & VAN, ARCHITEOTS, CONTRACTORS Window Shades, Mattings, Linoleums, 0il Cloths and Upholstery. Mail Orders Carefully Filled! COUNCIL BLUFFS CARPET Co. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR A. B. HOWE’S Corn Meal, Graham Flour, Hominy @round Fresh Every Day ! Ground Feed Always on Hand. AND BUILDERS |Milh corner of North Bixth and Mill Streets, No. 201 Upper Br.adway, Councll Blofis, COUNCIL, BLUFFS, COMMEROIAL, OOUNOIL BLUFFS MARERT, Wheat—No, 1 milling, 65 No, 2, No. 8, £0, Gorn—New, 25c. Oats—For local purposes, 23c. y—85 00@6 50 per ton; baled, B0@60, Rye—3bc. Oorn Moal—1 80 per 100 pounds, b0, 4.(0 per ton . Lard—Fairbank’s, wholesaling nt 95, Flour—City flour, 1 50@2 90, Brooms—2 95@8 00 per doz, LIVE BTOOK. Onttlo—Butcher cows 3 35@3 75, stoers, 3 75@4 00. Sheep—2 60@3 00, Hogs—4 00@1 25. PRODUCE AND FRUITS, ed chickens, Sc; dressed turkeys, ed ducks, 9¢; dressed goese, Sc, 18@20c. Egga—27 per_dozen, egetablos— Potatoos, 50@ 1 50 per bushel. Oranges—4 00 per box. Lemons—4 60@5 00 ver box 60; Wood—Good supply; prices at yards, 6 00@ Coal—Delivered, hard, 950 per ton; soft Butcher Poultry—Live chickens,[per doz. 300;idress- 10c; dress- Butter—Creamery, 26@250; choice country F 6% per bushel; choice cooking or J. L. DeBEVOISE, Ouion Ticket Agent No. 607 Broadway Councll Bluffs, Railway Time Table. Corrected to January 7, 1886, OOUNCIL BLUFFS, The following are the times of the arrival and de. parture of dralns by oentral standard time, at the local d Trains leave transfor depod #en min- ates earlier and arrive ton minutes Iater. OHICAGQ, BURLINGION AND QUINOT, Ohicago Express Faeh Mail, Accommodation, *A% local dopot only. ANEAS GITY, BT. JOR AND COUNGIL BLUPYS, Mafl snd Expross, 6:25 pm Pacific Expross, 665 pm OHIOAGO, MILWAUKR AND BT PAUL, BIvE am 00 p 10pm 06 8 m pross, 0:65 p m OHI0AG0, ROUK ISLAND AND PACIFIO, tlantio Express, Day Express *Des Moines Accommodation, *At local depot only. “WABASE, BT, LOUIS AND PACIFIC, Accommodat.on Louls Exprese Chicago Express *AY Transfor only 9EI0AGO Abd NORTHWNSTERN, Expross, Pacific Expross HOUX oY AXD rAGITG, 5 Expross, Doy Expross SUNION FACIPIC, Westorn Expross, Pacifio Expross, Lincoln Express, *A# Transfor only DUNMY TRAINS 10 OMAHA, ¢ ~7:20-8:30—9:80—10:80-11:40 & m. 1:80 30—6:30-6:%0~11: 6 p. m. Bundaye —9:30—11:40 & W 1:80~ 8:50—6:00— 0:8( 11:06 p. m. Amive 10 minutes before leaving time: From treus‘er only. 58 m 4 pm bpm 9:00 8 m 5 p m 10:66 & m v . 5:80 50 06 00 0 p. o 1, B J, Ellton M. Da PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, 152 W3¢ Broadway, Councll Blufla QOR SALE—In Harrison county, lowa, 320 acres grass land, all under fonce—a 200 acre farm with fine improvement3. all under cultivation except 20 ncres grass—8) acres good grass or pasture land, and several other tracts of from 40 to 160 acres of unimproved land. SWAN & WALKBE, [OR SALE—Lands improved aad unfmproved. B 1t youwanta tarm in western lows, Kanssa Nebraska or Dakota, let us hear from you. SWAN & WALKER. JOR SALE Alargo two story fraw ¢ dwelling, ten ruoms with all modern_im provements, well located and almost new. Price 5;300. $1,C00 cash balance lovg time SWAN & WALKER, WY/ ANTED—To correspond with any non-resident owner of property in Council Bluffs or Potta~ wattamic county, or any one wishing to buy or sell property in western lowa, Kansas or Nebraska, SwAN & WALKER, JEOR, SAUE—Alargo number of business and resi: dence lots In all parts of Council Bluffs. See 13 before you buy, Special bargain. SWAN & WALKER, JOHN NAGEL, SUCCRSSOR TO HastiNas ¢ NAGEL, Wholesale Produce And Convmission. No. 366 Holladzy St, DENVER, COL. Solicit Consignments and guar- hntee quick sales and prowpt re— turns. Give usa trial. References—Bradstreet’s or Guns Agencies; and First National Bank, Denver. mo8. orFionR) w. OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS. Councll Bluffs, . I Established 1856 Dealers {n Forelgn and Domestio Exobange and ‘Home Securitics, R. Rice M. D. CAHUEBS, oF other fumors remaved without the kalfe or drawing of bleed. CHRONIC DISEASES orat stnés sepectatiy. Over thirly years practioal experieat H 6, Poarl strooef, Gn)nnlcfl Blufl P 40 06 Ne o £a Consultafion free. Dr, W. H. Sherraden DENTIST, have several houses on o ntnow, SWAN & WALK] o neyr st for rent, OR 8ALE—Partios wishing to buy cheap lota to build on canbuy on n.onthly payments of from §2to £10. BWAN & WALKER OR REN [—We will rent you a lot to buld on with the prisilage to buy Ml you with on very iberal torme. BWAN & WALKER. 7ANTED—To corrcepond with sny one wishing goed location for glanning mill. sash, door and biind manufactory, we have bullding and machinery, well located, for sale, lease or trade; SWAN & WALKER, TOR_RENT - Large two etory frame bullding suft able for warehouse of BLOTAZC purposcs, near railroad depot. BwA 70K R " ]‘ suital I for smaall foundsy and Good boller, cogine, cupola, blower g oto., 1eady to put in motion BWAN WALKKE, , Lots and Land, A, J. First avenue. ORSALETlo1 B teprnson, b JOR BALE—A top-h first-Jass make and in ox :ollent condition. 'Or will trade for cheap Address #. M. Bee office, Council Blu7s. AND WOOD—George Heaton, 625 iroad . sells coal and wood at reasonablo prices 000 1b. for & ton, and 128 cublc for & cord, n. lot. Masonic Temple, Oouncl) Blufte « COUNCIL BLUFFS Bl Company ! Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Hard Soft ana Blossburg O A T, W. H. fIBLEY, Manuger. Offloo, 38 Main St. Iowa, Yard, on O, R. L P K. & Bt P, Railway. ANTED—Evory body o Councll Blufls $o_take TusBax, Deliverod by carrior ab ouly iwenty conts & wook. ()5, FAPERS—¥or saio a1 BN otice, ab 6 ooata )" s hundred JACOB SIMS, Attorney - at-Law, COUNCIL BLUFI 8, IOWA, Office, Main Strect, Room 8, Sbugart snd Eeno block. Wili practice’in 8.ate and Fedeial courts, . BCHURZ. Justice of the Peace. OFFICE OVER AMERIOAN EXPRESS COUNCIL BLUFFS. I0OWA ORDER YOUR Cob, Coal ¢ OF o . IONES P, 0. address, Lock Bok 1189, Council Bluffs, JOHN FOX, Deputy Sheriff and General Collection Agent,| Office with N, Sehurz, Justice of the Peace, € uncl) | 1 Eluffs, lows. REMOVED Schmitt & Harb ——THE~~ Wood PIPJLAR BARBERS Have removed trom under the Gpers House to WNO. 402 BROADWAY, They will continuc their CIGAR AND TOBACCO jusiness, sud invite all their old friends and the pub c tocalland seothem, The fuest cigars to L¥oco alwaye on hand,