Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Narrow Keo, s % Rocmmstmm, Juno 1, 1881 sttacked with the most Tntense and doathly pains in my back and Yoers ago 1 was “‘Extonding to the end of m; *‘Which made me dellrious! From agony!!! ‘It took three men to hold me on my “‘The Doctors trled In valn to relieve me, but to no purpose. Morphine and other opiates! ‘“Had no effect! ‘*After two months 1 was glven up to | “When my wife heard a nelghbor tell what Hop Bitters had done for her, she atoncogot and gave The firat dose eased my brain and seemed to go hunting through my system for the pain. ‘The second dose eased mo 8o much thit 1 T had not done for two montha pottles, T was well and at. work ny man could, fof over three w hard for my_ strength, and t h the most actite and pai my system that ever was led the doctors again, and after ral o on_crutches for life, as thee 'and told_ him my case, and b d him snd would cure me. I but he was so earnest 1 was induced they loft me a erip wile,';}'mhui been to throe t:m'zle. per_yi need to be sick at all if these bitters are il b . i - | front foot. It j - Br.saptriiice, Pacific or St. Paul, Minneapolls & Man- | tower on a prosperous city of nearly 10, nt foof anjoyed a real-estate dikesvatad; - ETIA thusky Wil but and ha oor invalld wife,Slster, Mother, “Cau be made the ploture of health! *‘With a few bottles of Hop Bitters! ““Will you let them suffer!|!!” Prosecute the Swindlors!!! 1f when you call for Hop Bitters (seo cluster of Hopa on the white labe gist hands out sny stuffcalled C, L Gorman Hop Bitters or with other “Hop” nams, refuse it and shun that druggist as you wouid a viper; and if he hastaken your money for the etuff, indict him for the fraud and sue | with characteristic western boast clalms that she will contala 100,000 people be- fore the year 1890.” * She has in this year of grace, 1883, alresdy reached that him for damages for the swindle, and we wil reward you liberally for tho ncn THE BEST THING OUT FOR ‘Washing & Bleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, BAvRs Lanor, Tivx and SoAr Amazixary, and gives salsatisfaction, No family rich or poor should | wealthy, Sold by all grocers, BEwARR of imitations well d saving compound and always bears the above sym- JAMES PYLE NEW YORK. 3, 3. WUPPHRMANN, SOLE AQERT, 1 BROADWAY, ¥, X, and provents mala- A PERFECT SHOE: OUR PRODUCTIONS REPRESENT THE PERFECTION OF SHOE-MAKING. IN THEM EVERY OBJECTION FOUND IN READY-MADE SHOES IS REMOVED. THE SUCCESS AT ONCE ATTAINED BY OUR GOODS WHEREVER INTRODUCED 18 OWING TO THE FACT THAT THEY ARE GLOVE-FITTING, ELEGANT IN STYLE AND FINISH, OF THE FINEST MATERIALS. AND WORKMANSHIP, AND MODERATE THE HORRORS OF BREAKING:IN ARE AVOIDED | THEY ARE COMFORTABLE FROM THE VERY FIRST. WE MAKE 15 S1ZES ! IN 14 WIDTHS ¢ AND 6 SHAFES OF TOES AND HEELS. Look for oxr Name on the Soles, J. & T. COUSINS, NEW YORK. H.W.WETHERELL, 185 and 17 Wabash Avenus, | pow cxmzcaco. | Hair Cioth and Wire Bustles, Hoop Skirts, Hair Cloth Skirts,” COLORED$112 iTE $100 18 free. All correspondel TON REMEDY 00. or DR. 1. T West l4th Street, NEW YORK, TALE OF TWO CITIES| y Yoeu aad | Fe Garden Region Conneoliog St. Pal and Winnipeg, and Winter, Wonderful Growth of the Northwest—Farmers and Farming, IN THE NORTHWEST, FROM ST, PAUL TO WINNIPRG, {toba rallroads to discover his miatake, During the winter all firat-class cars are provided with double windows and are so well heated that with the mercury 20 below zero the traveler 1s as comfortable as though seated in his own parlor, Bat while dlscussing the car service we heve reacbed and crossed the Missis- alppl river and are in the clty of Minne- apolls, a olty of flonr, lumber, and New England people. The writer visited Minneapolis four years ago and in writ- fog to an eastern friend etated that ‘“‘this city hss now 45,000 inhabitants, and figure, and the ten miles which origlnal ly separated St. Anthony Falls from St. Paul no longer extst, and the southern limit of Minnespolis joios the northern limit of St. Paul. Tho growth of theso two cities finds no _parallel in this coun- try of rapld upbuilding and half a mtl. lion people will doabtless dwell within before the closs of the their limits Ppresent century. trade of tho great northwest. g e course of some creek. flows “down” north, a land reaching |‘ringe of timber whioh marks the course from Breckenrldge, Minn., on the south | of the exiremely crooked Red river, The | hoatd of. to Winnipeg, Man, on the north, em-|distance from Fargo to Grand Forks by braclng over 150,000 square miles, nearly [ rail 1s 76 miles, while by river It Is nearly acre of which is tillable—probably [ 260 miles, which illusteates the tortuous or area of fertlle productive land |course of the stream. The banks of the than can be found together In any other | numerous stresms emptying Into the Red the | rlver are lined by a growth of elm, ash, oad, [ eottonwood and oak trees, which pleas- This ambitlous city of about 4,000 inhab- [ aatly breaks the monotony of the level Ifi:nu altuated on the east bank of the hndile‘npes. Tb’? Red rlv;r fll:l. In west. d river styles Itself the Key clty, while | ern Minnesota, flows south and westerl, h ) Furgo, Dak., on the west baok aspires to | o aboat fittymiles bofors making aa ., ‘'L thiok 1t is haonted. ~ At least all|One of he Best and Lar, be the metropolis of the far northwe: Thia is not really the far northwest, | Emptying as It does Into Iake Winnipeg, for amile post placed beside of the 8t. Paul Cor, of the Springfield Republican, | Northern Paciffs track within a fow rods | usually bresks up first near the source, 3 % of the Red river Informs us that Port- |ocoasionally oausing somo overflow in tho | ® #ide track. Tt had just been brought land, Or., s 1642 mliles dlstant, 8o we | upper or southern part of the valley. not qulte half way cross the contin. Olimatic Conditions of Summer At Moorhead we ocrot of the Oities | tracks of the Northern Paclfic rai “‘All aboard for Fergus Falls, Moor- head, Fargo, Grand Forks and Winni- peg.”” In response to this sonorous call | ent, which echoes through the union depot at | kots, Montan: ‘We have only to pass through D Idaho and Washington [and in the land where Sir John A, Mac- St. Paul, Minn., we gather up our re. |territorles toreach the Pacific ocean, but [donald presides by the grace of Queen spective grip-sacks and board the north- [these are mighty tracts of land wherein | Victorla and vox populi. Althoug bound train of the St Paul, Minneapo- | we ‘‘hear the tread of millions yet to[there many ‘‘Oanucks” in Minnesota and h lis & Mantoba rallroad for a trip across|be.” Moorhead and Fargo aro situated | Dakota, there are few Americana (living |Botel In Sacramento. = Somewhero In my crutches f the gtate of Minnesota and down the |at the gate-way to the rich section of [In Manitoba, and JEnglish typesjand famoos Red rlver y. And if an|country known as the Red river valley, |characterstics now begin to sppear and | t¥O tramps entered and closed the door. eastern man has an idea that the passen- ger equipment of these far northwestern | ment, pos e of thelr develop- | predomt s many of the modern con- | the boundary line brings us Into the clty slok for years, and has kept her and my | roads fs inferlor to that of his own sec- | venfenclos and equipments of an eastern | of Winnipeg, whice bas at present about No one knows how the deed was don children well and healthy with from two | {ion of country, he haa only to take first- | city ef 50,000 Innabitants. The Fargo | 25,001 inhabitants. In this clty proparty There 18 0o [ olass passage on elther the Northern |electrlc light shines down from its tall |#0ld three years ago as high as $2000 per 000 people and fts farther rays reach [boom with vengaenca. Speculation was acroea the two handsome iron bridges and [rife and the excitement ran high and alntly light the western sauburbs of | property went up with a rush beyond r have gotten |all reasonable bounds. Every buitding over the *boom” of 18812 and natarally | was crowded and the overflow lived in |™ there are some mourners who bewall the | tents which surrounded the clty asthough iy NG el demise of that Inflated perlod. Many of |an army was encamped roundabout. The the real-sstate speculators and those who | inevitable collapee came and the prospsc- camo attracted by the chance te make |tive millionsries now look seedy and are money without working for it, have gone | Willlng to saw wood for a living, Bul to seek pastures now, while those remaln. | the city is bound to recover from the de- ing are the onea whose faith In this sec- tion of country holds geod and who will reap when the next harvest comes. We are now in latitude 47 degrees north, on the ssme parallel as (Qaebsc and the northern part of Maine, and taking one consideration with another the climate of this section fine as any portion of the Unlted States The wlaters, to be sura, are two or threo weeks longer than in Massa- chuselts or New York and the mercury apt to get nearcr the bulb in the ther- mometor, bat these apparent drawbacks have thelr compensating features. sun shines brightly about 350 days every year, and its rays come down through a clear dry atmosphers with ozonlc proper- tles and which does not benumb one if the mercury 1s 30 or 40 degrees below It is undenlably a rather frigid climate which keeps the mercury below zero for thirty or more consecutive days and nights, as was the case duting the lions, This Increase in population and | winter of 1883 4. But the Inhabitants trade has of course made many men | prepare for this low range of temperature and where a fow years sluce | by unanimously clothing themselves in stood the red mans’ dirty tepee is now | furs; buffalo, wolf, beaver, otter, coon slgnoi to misiead. PRARLINE is the oNLY 8AFK Inbor | located the milllonalre’s mansien. Horace | and dogskin overcoats are generally worn Greeley’s advice to the young man was|and are a neceesity for anyone who has|nipeg justly boasts of the hospitality and certalnly worth heeding, provided the |any drlving to do over the frozen prai-|publicsplrit of its citizens, The south growth and prosperlty. Money la scarco now and the commerolal lifs alugglsh, Thero seems, however, to be enough the Queen’s hotel bar room_in the even- ing and the bar will be lined by a row o men, each with a glass In_ his hand; the A glance at the map will shcw the magnificont siretch of country tributary to these citles, through whose portals flow a large share of the The value of the buildings erected in St. Paul dur- Ing the year 1884 was nearly $18,000,- 000, exceeding Chicago by several mil- which will bo taken up by the next man and repeated all along the line with vary- ing Inflection and_tone, making a pecu- chaat of good fellowship and fealty to the drink too much Awmerlean whisky and sooner or later pay the sure penalty. Win- THE DAILY BEE-~-TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1885, B o e e .- e P —— [} THE FATAL CAR, in an unbroken level far as the eye osn |doesn’t require & large population to of timber marks | make a eity in Dakota. Hillsbsro and s land | Grafton, with about 600 and 1,500 inhab: | A Hauntea Oar That Puzzles the Boys whero a furrow oan be plowed for many |{tauts respectively, are Incorporated miles withont taking the plow ont of the( citi eround, a land through which a river|leaviag Fargo we are in sight of the and Cnts Up Roughly, . Durlng most of our journey slnoe qulet.” The above remarks were uttered b; friend. asked the person addressed. abrupt tarn toward the north pole. In the province of Manitoba, the ice At Neche we_cross the boundary line and are out of Uncle Sam’s jurlsdiction car has a strange history. No I A ride of 60 miles from but when the car was opensd at Sacr: pression and continue to be the metropo- Lis of this far northwestern country, the olnt of distribation f li Soctlon of country as large ne. Now g, |14 about §38 in his possession, while his land and tho Middlostatescombined. The | 3% companion did not have nlckel Qanadian Paslfio rilrend. now complated |{HA 000, T, oo Ca s Vo eyond the Rocky mountains, opens uj 7 DESs \ » maguificont stretoh of to-bo DEedative] ;gfi sceno of another mysterious afair, territory which will bo largely tributary | Thi8 Was about a year sgo at Kl Paso. to Winnlpeg and Insare it R L e peg T oy Dermanont f, .\ rers at that place thia car was boarded by half a dczen of them. = A quarrel en- sued over some trifling matter and one of loose change to cnable the average Mani- them was beaten 8o badly that he died be- toban to drink lot rage Mani- | foro medical aid could ba summoned.” Aol Wi el R e e P BT | Martin’s companion, who listened to the story with the closest attention, ‘“‘and I would not sleep in it for $100.” “All the train men say It {s,” confin ued Martin, “‘end the fact that it will of- 2 | ten move on a level track is an evidence that something is wrong.” “Do you aver hear any strange ncises llar rythmlo sound, & sort of bibalous | #round it?"” asked tho roporter. “I fancy sometimes I hear a moan or some indistinct mutterings, butit may be only Imaglaation,” replled the brakeman. “Tho englneer sald yesterdsy that ho heard a human volce In it, but on looking all around the car saw no one. The fact of the matter is, I do not have much to twenty years. He olalmed he acted in man standing at the head of the line will ralse his glass to his lips, at the same time glvlng vent to a prolonged ho-o, house of bourbon. Manitobans, as a rale, aforesald young man had built his shanty | rles. But few southern people have em. [ has won a repatation for generously en— whers (ho city of Minneapolis now | lgrated to this seotion, tho population |tertalning the strangor within ita borders, | 10 With the old thing, and T wish the stands. being malnly composed of those from the | but up here in the frozen north the duly [¢omPany would draw it off.” At this Our train has recrosted the river above | northern tier of states, from Canada and | accredited traveler will meet with a moat | POIDt in the conversation Martin's train pulled up from the new depotand he the fall fi Sweden, to wh 1d | cordial reception d h . e falls of St, Anthony, whose waters|from Norway and Sweden, to whom co! eption and handsome enter. boarded it and was soon engaged with the sre utilized by the blg flourlng mills | weather is nohardship. which have a dally capacity of over 26,- 000 barrels of flour, a yearly output of | Wwe resume our northwest journey down more than 8,000,000 barrels; enough Iif | the valley thsl air l; Xll;e unto thlft of t{lehfl!tarn“nr {fllnnaluuh flld!: through a minus the fragiance of frult | rich agricultural sectlon of the countr) R o ot Wa | thelcountarpartiot iEbat otk oabeas DO/BIG BOATS PAY ? are fairly in the heart of the No, 1 hard [eide. At Crookston, a thriving city of wheat belt of north Dakots, and in the | 4,000 inhabitants, we cross the Red Lake | They Burn Nearly Two Thousand It |river, and at thls polnt we are within a Five Hundred Tons ot Coal on is a fine sight to see a dozen self-binding | few miles of the {mmense forests of Every Voyage, harvesters at work, as they level the |northern Minnesots, which will afford an standing graln and leave behind the |inexhaustible supply of fuel for this sheaves, bolund ;udy' for .hckli:n“ or t:e gmirl: lmfl: thrxugh t‘i’fhhh ‘lwa have n the distance the smoke |been traveling. bout fifty miles north- | 5 & toam threshing machine [aast of Orooaston les Red lake, which |\reron aiie (0 5ome of the old-catal which separates in one day 2,000 bushels | we learn is the largest body of fresh of golden grain from the chaff, and piles | water in the United States, excepting, up a small mountaln of atraw to be burned | of course, the great lakes. the next day, for straw is a drug In the [river is navigable for light-draft steam- It will, doubtless, demand some day for the manul each barrel was placed In line, end to|sunny Ital; end, to reach from New York to San We pass through East Min- nesota (known In earller days as 'St. Anthony's falls) with its immense piles of lumber, and along the east bank of the river throvgh a pleasantly diversified country. At St Oloud, seventy-five miles from St. Paul, we part company with the ‘‘Father of waters,” and enter the pictaresque park region of Minnesota a region of beautiful lakes, woods, well- tilled farms and thrifty towns. Look sgaln at the map and see what a network of lakes this state contalns, and only the larger ones are shown. There s not room enough on an ordifary sized map to show the myriad smaller lakes and ponds whose waters eparkle throughont this sylvan land Jike dlamonds sot with emeralds. This park reglon covering the - | central and larger partof the state in- cludes within its limlts 7000 lakes, It is | cess flour by the blg Minneapolis mills. emphatlcally & sportsman paradise. To | There are however quite & number of the man who tramps six_or eight miles |mills in the Red river valley of from 75 to 300 barrels capacity, which turn out dczon or 80 two-ounce trout the experi- [an excellent quality of flour. Tais grade ence o rowing but a few rods on one of | of hard wheat brings the highest market these lakes and killlng twenty or thirty | price, and a barrel of flour produced vike, pickerel or black bass each welghing | therefrom will make about 15 per cent from One to eight pounds,comes as a lazy [more bread than flour mado from the luxury. Fishabound in all the waters,any | softer varleties of wheat, one, Including women and children, can |along catch them, and it requires but little pis- [to four elevatore, catorial skill for successful sport. That |buildings princo among game fish, the black bass, | elevator companles though the largest of course cannot slways be caught by an | farms usually have a warehouss of their unskilled angler, but other varleties are |own. plentifal and easlly caught. Were we |last season’s crop brought the lowest Franclsco. among the hills of New England after XOW BCTO! years ago in company with 8 New Hamp- | growlng crops, ellent wocds, hear the echoing answi coglon of Mionesota & dellghiful spot. Rod river valley, the land of No. I h whoat and rich prairies stretchivg awsy land Grafton, However it s not winter now, and as | clty of Winnipeg. and flowers and the odor of garlic. roglon of the bonanza wheat farms. wheat, a8 it 1s called, 1s nearly all ralsed north of the 4Gth parallel of latitude, and a large portlon of the 2,000,000 bushels raised 38 ground into patent pro- Wheat 1s cash at the elevaror but talnment so K h D D ORI e e TS S (6T 11,088 is consldered haunted by nearly Wo retus the Red rl APl Ahec river wallayion |- kel soan Tioval Manitoba rallroad. afford at present fall roducts, The sotl of the Red river val- | zoon'e Gargo, ey scoms enpecially adapted to whoat- | «Tako tho Etruris, for instance, the big | and this Is the princlpsl crop raised, be- | ;o Gunader, She crosses tho " tlantls causo 1t pays tho best, but thisds not |, 51y days and a half, bt she burns 350 necessarily a one-crop country, and each |4 . ¢ coal & day, or 2,275 tons In eix season witnesses more diversified farm- | gouy and a half, and of course must carry Ing, and especlally an Increase of stack- | ¢jagst 3,000 tons in her bunkers when ralsing. Not more than one-eighth of | 4o Joaves her dock, to be provided for tho tillableland Is yet under cultvation, | yooldonts, This leaves room for only and when Almsiodsy °’th“‘.° '°m'“§“’R 400 tons of cargo, and at the very low Amssaselmpdaio ylevlf i ;"‘;“ ‘mg prices for ocean freights which have pre- arvests, the valley of tho Red river of | ygfiod for a long time past there s very the north cannot fail to become one of | 1ii1q ‘margin for profit. tho richest ssotions in the United States. | «(Now: pompars a steamer like the Ger- H.J. L. | manic with the Etrurls, The Germanlo £ : makes the zun In soven dsys aud a hal, Sicx Heapaous,—Thousands = who|¢gpyn0 o dag longer than boats like the e —— small sum down | Hood & Co., Lowell, Maes. Sold by all good price therefor to meet 1f only a fair crop The dweller in the Red river valley t ferull howover, an exosptiooally fer: ; ary consumption, which ls promptly ar- rested and permanently cured by Dr. Dr, Jounx P. Waueerer, Hudeon, Pierce's ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery.”|N. Y., says: ‘‘Ihave glven it with de- (925 Sold by drugeis clded benefit In a case of innutrition of | People are begluniog to find out President HIl Wo aro traveling down the valley on ng st Winofpez, Man, At Barnesville we are out of this pie- in Treaill county; turerque region and strike the fawous | oiti | Grand Forks, in Grand Forks couuty,|8che, costivences, snd dyspepsla, an Y ) 1i parifies the blood. ST s $iatlon in Walsh county, An Important Arrest. loss of cargo made up in thls way?” The arrest of a suspicious character up- more {mportant is the arrest of a disesse | fast Loats do not pay. destroy a human life, cough,loss of appetite, general languor or | was 93, debility, pallid skin, and bodily aches and b om—— ns, announce the approach of palmon- o 43 ! DECIDED BENEFIT, o — the brain, from abuse of aleohol.” Mr, Labourchere hears from Berlin that it == - " uuvblful whether any member of the Real Estate Transfers. Victoria of Hohenzollern was invited to e —— Coughs and colds can be readlly con- |10 1885: —— Oharles Fran s reported as in | block 86, Centrsl sub——$200.00. C— 4, 9 74-42— §2,826,00, Bor ol dlaseass 02 ton Bidnayn, ad| P H Ll liver, Phyalciana proscribe Hant'a Rem: | part 0 74-4 Total sales: $6,200 00, $10,790.00, y. The medlcine that can search and root " New York THE GHEAPEST PLACE' IN OMAHA TO BUY ol wf Is AW DEWEY &STONES’ est Stocks in the United States To Belect From: NO S8TAIRS TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR ‘‘It’s the strangest thing that I ever R It often starts off en a perfeot- ly level track and we have to keep the N brake on all the time In order t> keep It Jack Martin, a brakeman on the San Pe. dra road, to & reporter of the Los Ange- *|les Express. Martin was addressing a ‘“What's the matter with the oar?” the boys say It fs, It may and it may not be; but It is certaln that the car often moves when no one la near it.” Tha car In question was an old one and stood on up from San Pedro, and had been emp- 7 e tied of six tons of Iron for the cable rail- road. Continulng, Martin said: *‘That s than three murders have boen committed in it. Three yeats ago it was brooght out from Boston loaded with fine furniture for a Nevada the door was broken open and They were anxlous to get to 'Frisco, and belng supplied with food and water they proposed to go through without change. mente the body of one of the tramps was 6.—Its p1 W ugly wound was found on his right alde, [world. 0 oo n ! Tho other tramp could not be found. The side-tracked at Sacramento three and wan thon loaded with flour Tt hna recelved In cash trom all sours 1t has returned to the peoplo, in cas Ita cash Assetson the 18t of January, 1885, latter place a coupls of railroad hands ac- cupled it one night, and during a game of cards one of them named John Dawey ¢ |stabbed his companion. He died in a fow moments. The trial was a long one and Dewey was sentenced to San Quentin for ) ;0 Cor.Tarnam and 1th StOver 1at Nat1, k, Omaha, N nelfdefence, When atrested, however, ho e e WHEN SOLICITED TO INSURE IN OTHER COMPANIES, Remember These Imoortant Facts CONCERNING The Hutual Life Insurance Company, OF NEW YORK. & 1—It & the OLDEST active Life Invurance Company In #hls country, ST t 2.~It lathe LARGEST Lifo Insuranc y by many milllons of dollars in tho world. cos, trom Fobruary, 1843, to January, 1886, £970,602,664,00, b, {rom February, 1843, to Jauuary, 1885, §31€,004,211,00. amount to more than 008 Hundred ad Three Millions of Dollars W. F. ALLEN, General Agent for Nobraska, Dakota, Co MERRILL & FERGUSON, Gen, Agts, for olorado, Wyoming and | Michigan, Tndiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Tows and Minnesota, Detroit, Michigan, M. ¥, ROHRER, Special Agent for Towa, Council Bluffs, Towa Consumption, Dyspepsia ana Wasting Diseascs: Positively Relieved and Natwre assistedin restoring ¥italpowers THIS WHISEEY SEOULi) BE FOUND ON THE SIDEBOARD OF EVERY FAMILY IT IS ABSOLUTELY PURE. ~ ENTIRELY FREE FROM FUSEL OIL.4 DO NOT BE DECEIVED.—Many Druggists and Grocers who do not have Dufly’s Pure Malt Whiskey in stoclk, attempt to palm off on customers, whiskey of theirown bottling, which being of an Inferior grade and adulterated, pays them a larger profit. ASK FOR DUFFY’S PURE MALT WHISKEY,' AND TAKE NO OTHER SOLD BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DRUCCISTS AND CROOERS.' Send us your address and we will mail book containing valuable information. Sample Quart Bottles sent to any address in the United States (East of the Rocky Mountains), securely packed én plain ase, Ewpress charges prepaid on receipt of L. 2, or Six Bottles sent for BSOS DUFFY_MALT WHISKEY CO., Baltinore, Md., U..S..A Selling Agents. Omaha, H.T. Clarke Drug Co. THOS. OFFICER . Officer & Pusev. BANKERS Councll Bluffs, Towa. Established, Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange nd Home Securif JACOB SIMS, Attorney - at-Law, COUNCIL BLUF18, IOWA. Office, Maln Street, Rooms 7 and 8, Shugart and Beno blook. Wil practice in Stateand tate courts. S.H. FILBERT, 209 Breadway, - - Council Bluff:, “The chlef reason why the European Dassenger steamship business has ceased lished companier,” eaid a shipping agent of long experiance to a Newl York Herald reporter, ‘‘is a very simple one. This The Red|ides of enormously largs and very fast 4 ships has been—well, no, you can’t ex- bosts fom Moorhead, Minn., to Winnl- | 3011y say run fnto the ground, spesking peg. Two linos of boats do considerabls | o' % [11(.] matters, can youi—has been frelghting business, and these, with the | vordone, Theso new, fast boats do not two linos of the St. Paul, Minnospolls & | 00" " ovor whl, becanse thelr ran- |2 Facllitl 1 g expenses are too high, and they use acllities for shipment of the valley's|g, much goal that 1t leaves very littlo 1 Boots and shoes at pri 18 pound) ex C sug 18 pounds granulate 18 pounds cosfectionary 20 bars whito Russian 5o 40 bars blue India soap, Kirks 42 bars Palma soap, Lautz Bro's o Bo-t Eoglish currants 14 ‘pounds. . 10 boxes genuive Lewis lye. . 52-pound cans | trawberries 5 §-pound cons} saches, in & 10 8-pound cans tomatovs.. 16 pounds Michigandrivd appl or hava suffered Intensely with slck head- Etruris. But sho consumes only 100 not not ticketed through we would stop | price ever pald for wheat in this section, |ache say that Hood's Sarsaparilla has i~ N over at Alexandrls, I:)sakll or As| by}: ?oo low furpnny margin of profit to the |cured them, One gentlemsn thus tons of coal a day, or 750 tons, the lake and anchor near the |average farmer who 1 shore just under the overhanging forest. | gling under a burden of mortgages on his | worlh its weleht ia gold.” Reader, if We cast our lines In these waters two [land, chattels nn%lf‘n ;ums cases on hl‘; y‘uunfieudmflemr -,i:h "alklh“;“h? o farmer Is tempted | glve Hood's Sarsaparilla a trial. t will . M *hire by and @ jolly fellow from **My | to buy expensive farm machinery becaus|do you_poritive good, Mado by C, I.|\u8capaclty of the twol I think the Maryland,” and readlly recall how the | he can get it by paylng prize for the blggest catch was secured |leaving the balance to draw 10 or 12 per | drugglsts. 100 doscs One Dollar, by the Granite state representative, who |cent interest, depending on a bountiful caught thirty-four pounds in two hours’ | harvest and fishing. And to fish euccessfully one | the obligation. need not keep perfectly still to the en- |yet have she: couragement of cramps and stiff jolnts, | farming tools, but can etand or sit and call out to the | the loss Is large each year of self-binders, , | seeders and other farm machinery. Time and pull io a big pickerel at the same |of course will correct this evil when the time. One can row hundreds of miles | farmer loarns by dear experlence to con- on these lakes and the connecting|duct bis farming operations in the same nd In all the waters will find | thrifty and provident manner as does Black, rock and silyer | his eastern brother. base, pickerel, plke, perch and cropples | is secured and the price drops to 50 or G0 are the most numerous and of these one |cents & bushel, wheat ra'slog for that oan catch enough te warrant telling|season does not pay and not only the mighty fish stories. And fishing is not | farmer but the merchants and business the ouly sport to be had, for in the fall | generally feel the stress of hard times. spring immense numbers of ducks and geese make a temporary home here | b in their migratlon to and from the south, | and easily tilled soll and if he'makes n: Geese, brant, mallarde, teal and other | money in wheat raising he can profitably varietles abound and are shot in large |turn hls attention to other produocts, numbers every season, the nar- | This Is belng done more and more every passes between the lakes afford- |year. Ing excellent cover for the hunter, |that stock can be profitably ralsed and In additlon to the facillties for shosting | soon this part of the country will not k snd fishing the climate Is unsurpaseed, | only be able to supply the home demand, the dsys belng genera!ly clear and bright | but will have cattle and hogs to export. and the pights always cool. To be sure, | The objection that the winters are long s | act s bridesmaid, and refused, there are some *‘muskeeters,” but these | offset by the fact that hay can be put up muuicnhl pests are no more troublesome | for from !‘.;)tu ]s.'lunltun reaideot Hl bere then In other lands. Each season |of the St. Peul, Minnespolis snd Man!-| quered by Red Star Cough Oare. Sure adds to the reputation of this park reglon | toba railroad has recently placed with | and hasrol Covg fell, part ne 3, 9 74-62—81,744.00, an attractive eummer t. The|the farmers along the line of his rosd a conventionalities of fashionable sootety |large number of imported, polled Angus do not obtaln here, but to those who are | bulis to improve the stock and promote |bad condition mentally, He years old, looking for restful recreation away from | the Interest in stock ralsing. i | the oares ate frivollties of oity life, where & man can wear a woolen shirt and go|the western or Dikota slde of Red river. with his pants tucked {n his boots with- | On the eastern or Minnesota side the St out exciting remark, will find the pack | Paul, Minoeapolls & Manitoba rallroad | ~the ! o dhat i x 0 Hant's Remedy cures billous head~ | (it viloure you FER OF CHARGE, “Thiss ekt d | remedy was discovered by & wissionar to South cased envelope RV, Jo: Flour, all brands 1 GOODS FOR CASH ONLY Lower Than Any Other House S. H. FILBERT, 209 Broadway, J. L. DeBEVUISK, Ouion Ticket Agent No. 607 Broadway Oounall Blafla. o) i Ope Kent against the Eirurivs 2,275, 'And in trag- |loved, writes: “Hood's Ssrsaparilia Is 505 ¢ 400 tons of oargo the White Star, stoamers osn carry 2,200 tons. Don't you seo the difference in the earn. limit of speed consistent with economy was reached In what have now become the slower boats, of which the Germanlo c S 1 'te—d 0 gl e is a type, although so far as I am con- omment is exoi in lngland by the|gerned, I don't see why they are not fast the farmers as | queen’s readiness to accapt Mr, Gladstone’s N ” In which to store their | resignation, She has never had the personal | €10Ugh for anybody. liking for him she felt for Di 1i. 80 for lack of such shelter RN 1018 208 2A0Fa0N, oarry more p “But vessels like the Eirarla oan engers, and s not the “Noj; they can carry a few more pas- on his general appearance, movements or | sengers, but they can’t get any higher companionship, without walting until he |rates for them, and the difference does has robbed a traveler, fired a house, or|not make up for the heavy Increase of murdered a fellew-man, is an {mportant | running expenses. Youcan put It down fanction of a shrewd detective, Even|for acertalnty that these new and very which, If not checked, will blight and| G\ Fope Dick, who died recently in En- | ot saiar sod an The frequent | gland,’ clung to his commission until he )3 WHI0AGO MDA NORTHWRSTERN, CHIOAWO AND BOOK I8LAND, CHICAGO, MILWAUKNN AND BY, PAUL, GHICAGO, BURLINGTON AND QUINOY, family will attend the wedding of | Thg following are the transfers of real ‘ Mail and Express | e s anid that the, Prin- | oyinto as recorded In the office of the |2 registrar, snd reported to the Brp by A.'J. Stephenson, for Thuredsy, Juse WABARE, BT. LOUIS AND PAOIAIO, Charles H. Wheeler to Eagene Stup. John Fosdick to Audrew Labell, lot 16, KANSAS CITY, BT, JON AXD OOUNGEL BLUYYS, Hoory Sare fo William Sasr, patt 5 3, WoUx OITY AND rAGIIG, Charles H, Wheeler to Henry Saar, Express for 8t Paul ew Lincoln Fas Oa &RV Overiand Exprees ©ARD,—To all who are suflering from errors DUMMY TRAINS T0 OMAHA, = 501 00— 4:00—4:66—5:65 OUNGIL BLUFFS ARPET _GOMPANY CARPETS, Curtains, Oil Cloths, Window Shades, Linoleums, Mattings, OPHOLSTERY (00D Rugs, Ete., Etc. Careful Attention Glven to Ou of Town Orders. Upholstery and Drapery Work a Specialty. Our stock 1s the ‘| Largest in the West and is being continually roplenished by all the lavest and choicest novelties, 405 Broadway Council Bufis THE RECENTLY IMPROVED REMINGTON STANDARD TYPE WRITER Railway Time Table, | z: the mghest Achicvement in Writing OOUNOIL BLUFFS, sl standard time, ab the B min Machines in the World, With culy 89 keys to loarn an operato, 1t printa 70 charactors s and smail letters punctustions, figures, signs aod Tractions. 1t 8 the siiaplost and wost rapid writiog - macbine mado a3 well a4t a0 most durable B2 Send for free illustrated pamphlet, Wyckoff, Secmnns & Benedict, Chicago, Tll., Sole Agents, 0, H, SHOLES, Agent for Western Io * R, RiceM. D, CANCERS, i g em CRRONL DL ez & Poarl sireed, Oouncll Blufla, o Cenniliition Lise In Coune Bluffs having & FIRE ESCAFPH, And all modera improvements, call bells, fire alarm blls, ete., s the ' CRESTON HOUSE Nos, 215, 217 and 219, Main Street. MAX MOHN, - PROPRIETOR