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. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, OCTOBER A17.. 1887, THE DAILY BEE. COUNCIL BLUFFS. OFFICE NO. 12, PEARL STREET. pies 25 Delivered b carster in any part of the city at "W . URINESS O) Munager, MINOR M N. Y. Plumbing Co. Reiter, tailor. Fall goods cheap. ‘Work on the patrol house is delayed until the water pipes are put in. ineil Bluffs fishing and hunt- club will meet at the Pacific house this evening. see combined ing machine. 105 Main street, The Jones case comes on_in triet court again to-day. for the defense have t xamined, The conerete floor will be put in the city jail to-day and the heavy Hugstones put in place us soon as the concrete is ready. The funeral of A. W. Lewis will take place this afternoon nt 2 o'clock, from the rooms of Ficld & Estesp, 14 North Main street. Seven weak mortals will appear before the bar this morning, to square up accounts, for orgies indulged in during the past forty-cight hours. Tickets for the Lozier entertainment at Magonic temple on Wednesd “ing can be purchased at Captain D. J. O'Neill's boot and shoe store on Broud- way. John Short, Chris Dalton, Morr! Stewart. M. A. Moran, Geo. Hunte E. Mitchell and others expect to repr sent this city at the union labor party convention to be held at Neola no Tuesday. DTwo sons of the late A. W. Lewis have arrived in the city—one from Stromsburg and the other from Ogallala, eb. The body of their father will not be taken from the city, but will be interred here to-day. Mr. W. M. Danner, of Des Moines, assistant state secretary of the Y. M. C. A.. was present at thee rooms of the association yesterday afternoon and had charge of the meeting. There was an attendance of about forty who listened with much interest to what Mr. Danner had to say. The Garner Lightweights crossed bats with a nine from the deaf and dumb institute Saturday afternoon on the in- stitute grounds. The visitors were torious by a score of e regular institute nine was not p or the result would probably ha different, as on a former occasion they ily defeated the Garners by a big writing desk Domestic office, the dis- witnesses The . Whittlesey, who is engaged in the postal service at the transfer, has been king an excellent record for himself, but he has incurved the wrath of some of his fellow democrats by his scent action in the Fourth ward ca; He at that time entered a li rotest agoinst the Troutman-Wa way of overriding all majori and was largely instrumental in having a second causus held, and a contest started in _the convention. Now is said that utman and V are bent on revenge, and haxve complained to the postal authorities that Whittlesey is violatiug the vil service rules. An inspector was sent here last week to examine into matters and ascertain how much of an offensive partisan Whittle- sey had become. It is rumored that the report will be against Whittlesey, i A el Where to Register. The board of registrars will be daily in session for five consecutive days, commencing October 18, and will re- main in session from 8 o'clock a. m. until 9 o'clock p. m. It will meet again on Wednesday of the weck preceding election, November 2. During the same hours the board of registration will meet at the following places, to wit: First ward, at John Hammer's office, No. 201 Eust Broadway; Second ward, at the auditor’s office in the city build- ing on Bryant street: Third ward, at J. L. Bigg's oftice, No. 203 South Main street; Fourth ward, fivst preeinet (con- * sisting of all that portion of the Fourth ward lying north of Ninth avenue), at No. 535 Broadway; Fourth ward, second precinet (consisting of all that portion of the Fourth ward lying south of Ninth avenue). at Kelley's hotel, No. 1212 South Main street. Alllegal voters are invited to present themselves for regis- tration within the time named. under the risk of being debarred the privilege of voting at the next election, e 1 Paragraphs, 11, Mills county's sheriff, hotel yesterday with his Persa D. A, Far) was at Kiel's family. - - Rochester Lamps at N, e rerty with Cooper & Main st. List your Judson, No. 1: —_————— One thousand head of one, t: threo-year-old steers for v credit to reliable parties, Enquire of A. J. Greenamayer, 623 Mynster st., telephone 211, e Money to loan. Cooper & Judson. e e Mind Healing. Rev. H. C. Waddell will class in Christian Mind aling on Monday at 10 a. m. at 28 Pearl street. Worthy indigent studeuts taught free. - organize a Every one making a cash pure 2B ceentsat T. D, King & Co's, store gets a chance in the annual drawing. Twenty elogant prizes. e of gar prize bl Bl bl Kitchen lamps, Hand lamps, N. Y. P. Co. e J. W. and E. L. Squire lend moncy. - el Wadsworth, Etnyre & Co., 236 Main street, make able abstracts of prop- erty in Pottawattamie county. e Lamps of all kinds, N. Y. P. P. Co. % Sl S The first wear is the best. Rent a brick house just completed of Odell Bros. —— Lave happy this winter by renting a new brick of Odell Bros. — Store and Saloon lamps, N. Y. P. Co. —_— Telephone 109, Odell Bros., for best new hrick house in city. . R Dr. J. T. Van Ness, physician and surgeon, office room 8, Opera house block, will attend professional calls day or night. Residence corner Eighth avenue und Fifteenth street, e Notice to Claim Property. The owners of certain restaurant property and tents, sent to Lincoln, Neb., during the state fair, by the team of M. E. Weatherbee, of Council | can have same by calling on ying charges; if not, same wi bt sud " L sold November 1, 1887, for said chargoes AL ' Pprlo; and library lamps; N. X, P, Co_. POINTS FROM THE PULPITS, A Showing of Some of the Teach- ings-of Christian Science. WILLIE MORSE STILL BALKY. He Refuses To Go T a Requisition - Presentation to the “Q" Keith- Where to Register, aha Without Christian Science. Western College hall was well filled yesterday afternoon by those who are int ted in the subject of Christian The occusion was the lecture Reve H. C. Wuaddell. Subject canstiguration.” In preface he said, “Chiristianity is the same in all ages. It is the same to the Chinese in China, the Hindoo in Hindoostan and the American in the state of lowa. Reve- lation will broaden with succeeding ages as we come to know more of God, nature and the laws which govern. All men have not the same gifts, Some have the gift of tongues, some the gift of healing, ete. All spivitual gifts sooner or later are reduced to a science, and they are practical and useful in proportion as they arve thus reduced. Music was at one time fragmentary and little understood, but as the speech of the spirit it is now u scientifically re- duced There are no inconsist- encies ‘hristiun system, The fact of the incarnation of Christ is fun- damental and need not be explained away. Faith is a gift and as God gives it to man so is it a power in every com- munity for the salvation of men from doubt and unbelief. Faith, as a gift, may be developed, but it is 4 gift never- theless, The writing of shorthand; casting three rows of figures, &c., are just us much speciul gifts. There may be someone in this audience who has the power, lying dormant, to work miracles. Some may have the power of prophesy—not clairvoyancy for that is witcheraft, but a for ling under div inspiration. 1 do not say that mind reading is necessarily bad, but it generally is. The only way to meet it is upon the plan of universal law, Just as eighteen hundred years ago it was t by the power of divinity, some he power of ‘tongues.’ If such developed no one need go to China to tell men about hell. They nced be taught more of God and his love.” The speaker then passed to the sub- ject proper, the transtiguration of Christ us given by Luke. What is transfigu- ration? How is it related to law? It is the duty of man to dedicate every hour of his life to God. This constant medi- tation, this condition of inception is transfiguration. The cross means noth- ing to us unless it is made a personal matter—a personal application. The divinity of Christ is proven by his humanity. The divin of man is the question for us to settle; There are two questions for us to settle. That Christ lived a perfectly natural life and that his life is simply & type of what our life should be. The doctrine of hell is taught in the bible, but it is a presentcontingent upon present conditions, Just so long as a man lives in e; ust so long he is in hell, but as soon as the error is gone, hell is gone also. Its eternity depends upon the continuance of this error. And when the soul is released from the contingents of error, vested in the fleshly life, then there is no hell. T al- ways pity & man who preaches hell fire, because he does not believe it. If he did believe it he would be perfectly mis- erable. When Christ passed up upon the mountain of transtiguration, He left the nine disciples at the bottom because they were not ready for such a revela- tion. The same facts are true to-day. Some men are more spiritual; others are more intellectuale Leaving the nine apostles below, He took the three and went up the peak of Hermon, the most beautiful spot to be conceived. Here He retired for the purpose of med- itation. He had not then a full concep- tion of His work, and His sufferings. As a child He had studied the prophecies concerning Himself, but here the dim- ness was dispelled and a full revelation was given Him,and this path was hence- forth illumined by the Father’s smile, This transfiguration teaches us the laws of human life, not only here, but throughout the universe. Prayer is & power to overcome the flesh. Christ is the same yesterday, to-day and forever, and if by prayer the spiritual can over- come the physical and dominate its conditions, which is amply ated in the transfi urntrnn of Christ, Moses and Elias, then the same thing can be accomplished to-day. We should endeavor to understand these things, Spiritual things are spiritually discovered, and they are discovered just in proportion as they are developed. The life beyond is but a continuance of the life here, and as we have men who are low and mean there is no rea- son why there should not be low and mean men there. We must investigate these things if we would be well i formed. That Christ was raised bodily from the dead we believe. That the immortal life is a continuance of this is equally true. Shall we know our friends there? Better ask: Do we know our friends here? There we shall recognize spir ually, not bodily, and many persons here do not know their friends or even their own husbands and wives. Spiritual dis- cernment and knowledge is the true‘ac- quaintanceship, and in proportion as we know these laws so shall our recognition and knowledge be hereafter. -~ “Living Letters." At the Congregational church yes- terday morning the postor, Rev. G, W. Crofts, preached a most interesting ser- mon, choosing the above as his topic, and his text being in Paul’s epistle to the Coriuthians, e are our epistle written in vur nearts, known and read of all men—written not with ink, not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the h He showed the force of these words as used to that flock with whom Paul had labored so long. .The apostle recognizing that the Christian principles hud taken possession of their lives, and that the seeds sown by him had grown into a goodly fruitage of right living, felt commendable pride in pointing to them as his letters of recom- mendation, His work, his character, could best be known by seeing those, among whom he had labored. Letters of introduction, or of recommendation, had their use in the world, but when one had established a reputation by demonstrating the worthiness of his real character, such letters were not needed among those thus knowing the facts, What would be thought of a father who wuum give to his son a writ- ten certificate that he loved him, that he felt a great interest in his welfare, und that he wished him well. All this \» kuown. - The old: soldiers, gather- ing ut their reunions to talk over the events of the thrilling war times, needed no letters of introduction. They had by a variety of mutual experiences, in camp and in_field, learned to know ench other, and upon their hearts were written letters which could never be effaced. It was the epistles of the heart that were rend and known of all men. It mattered little what was said about a man, in comparison with what men knew, in fact, concerning him. These epistles of the heart were what the world read, and by which the world judged the church. Christian princlrlcs {nn pired right living, right thinking, nnrl when a man was thus actually mak- ing his christianity a part of his life, and an element of growth, others knew it, and his letters of recommendation were written in the hearts of those with whom he came in persorial contact. The law used to be written on tables of stone, Then it was written on parch- ment, which came a little nearer the human life, but when Christ came, not to destroy. but to fulfill the law, it began to be written in the hearts of men. These w the living letters, which when read, convinced the world of the truth of christianity., The church would be powerless to answer the argu- ments of atheism if it was not able to point to its hospitals, its colleges, and its various methods for making the world happier and better. Infidelity could not answer these arguments. The preacher might give dry, uninteresting sermons. Theological statements might be above the understanding of many un- educated. The sermon which was in the loaf of bread given to the hungry man, the gospel put into a ton of coal sent to some freezing family, these were were never dry or uninteresting. These letters of life, written on the heart, could be d by the most illiterate. Christianity was life-giving, and the heart which had these living letters of love upon it, would always be easily and joyfully read by others, and would prove to the doubter the truth and value of the faith thus actuating the life. pizttier 4y Morse Balks. William Morse, who has been re- cently acquitted of the diamond steal- ing, isstill in the county jail. Morse was in custody in Omaha, on a charge of larceny, when the case against him here came up for trial. In order to re- lease his bondsmen on this side of the river, an arrangement was made by which he was allowed to come over here, he promising to return without a requisition, in case he should be ac- quitted here. Rothery, who was in- dicted with him, skipped out ufter being found guilty. The attorneys for the de- fense hope to secure a new trial for Rothery, in which case they want to have Rothery brought back, and want to have Mc used us a witness in his behalf. They fear that if Morse is taken buck to Omaha he may be out of their reach when they need him to help Rothery out. Morse seems willing to g0 back to Omaha, in accordance with his promise, but his attorneys not being willing, he’ proposes to abide by their y abered Him. les Keith, for a long time gen- eral agent of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy road here, but now located at St. Louis, arrived home last Saturday to spend Sunday with his family. Learning of his arrival, his former railroad associates perpetrated a genu- ine surprise on him Saturday night. They assembled at his residence and in a very happy manner paid their com- pliménts, accompanying them with an elegant silver tea and water service. It was a happy affair and a testimonial to the esteem in which he is held, not only by the Q" boys, but by the public at large, with whom he was so long as- sociated and who kunow so well the merits of the man. — A Big Nugget. The qualified affection which Austra- lia entertains for the Mongol immigra- tion will not be intensified by the fact that some Chinese gold-diggers at Har- greaves, in the Mugdee, have unearthed a nugget weighing 225 ounces. The Celestials, feeling that their good for- tune might possibly entail uncomfort- able consequences, kept their lucky find concealed, But, as the lump of metal was transmitted to the Sydney mint, the news soon leaked out, with the result that the district where such good fortune is possible has been inundated with ~ eager prospects. Two hundred and twenty-five ounces of gold, worth, say, according to its fine- ness, from £700 to £800, is, unquestiona~ bly, a comfortable day’s work, and in some far-away village in Shan-se or Kwantung is more than sufficient to se- cure a perpetual feast of rice and pork, ducks and samshoo, for the fortunate finder’s family. It is, however, extreme- ly unlikely that any such peaceful d’:-cnm will be g‘mrmmcd to take pos- session of the Chinaman’s mind. Like s0 many of his Caucasian brethren in similar circumstances, he will be fired with hope of some day lighting on anug- get twice as large, and of accumulating afortune socolossal that he may realize what is his highest nmbitiun—nmrryinfi an Irish girl in Sydney and being burie: like a mandarin in his native land. Consequently he will work as hard and live as sparingly, and bear contumely as meekly as of old, in the ever-fleeting trust that this fairy vision is te come true to-morrow—next week, next year, some time soon—and as likely as not will die without ever earning more than a scanty wage out of the glittering specks of his “pay dirt.” Happy, in- deed will he be if he does not Lmu all, and be dependent on the charity of his “Hong” for the joss papers to burn on his lonely grave. Evory gold- mining country is littered with the wrecks of dreams such as these. ey A Terrible Waterspout. Fresno, (Cal.) Independent: On Wednesday night'of last week a water: spout burst in the mountains near Walker's pass. A terrific flood rushed down the canyon toward Kern river. In the canyon a sheep man was camped with two horses and a wagon. The man, the horses and the wagon were all swept away. The body of the man was found two miles down the canyon a day or two after the flood. The bodies of the horses had lodged among rocks not fur from where the man had camped. There is a farm in the canyon known as Canebrake, and occupied by a widow. It was a very nice place before the flood, but is now ruined. Part of the house is swept away, and the rest was moved from its foundation. The whole would have gone but for some large willow trees growing close to the house. When the waters subsided mud to the depth of a foot or more was found on the floor of the part of the house that was left, Marks left by the flood in the canyon showed that the water must have been at least thirty feet deep in places. Parties who have been in that region twenty years or more say they never saw anything of the kind before. e There is a highway crossing over the New York Central road where €30 pho- ple have been killed in the lourteen years, because the company Waé 100 stingy to employ a watchman, MODJUESKA. She is Interviewed at St. Joe. “What is_your opinion of Donne I‘l,)"s Baconian theory?" asked a St. Joe Guazette reporter, “*Oh, Bacon never could have written Romeo and Juliet, nor Hamlet, nor any other Shakesperian ‘ylnys attributed to him,” she replied. = “It takes a poet to write such plays, and- Bacon was not a poet. It appears to me that Mr. Don- nelly and othe who ndvocate this theu{e' are trying toadvertise them- selves. Why, they have apparently dis- covered more about Shakespeare than even his enemies could. If Bacon had written these plays, would not Ben Johnson, who was Shakspeare’s greatest rival, have discovered the fact? Bacon may probably have assisted Shakspeare in laying the foundation,and forming the plot of some of the plays, but write them—never. This controversy minds me of the old sayin, easier for a fool to deny inan hour what & wise man can prove in a year.” ‘‘What do you think of American artists.” “Mary Anderson is the only American tragedienne on the stage to-day. She has the figure and voice, and above all, the heart and feeling. When she as- sumesa part she becomes thoroughly imbued with the spirit of the character, and is no longer Mary Anderson. I have never seen Margaret Mather, Iam sorry to say. Clara Morris is no doubt the greatest emotional actress, and Agnes Booth in high comedy is unsur- passed.” ";tht are your plans for next sca- ‘That I cannot say. We shall go to Europe next summer, and the count wants to take me off the stage, but I am 80 much in love with it that it will be a difficult matter for me to withdraw en- tirely.” ‘‘Have you any favorite role?” ‘*All my roles are favorites, but per- haps I like Shakspeare best. I1f I had my own way 1 \\'ou‘d play nothing but Shakspeare.” “‘Madame, I believe that Mrs. Cleve- land and yourself are great friends? Is she as charming as she is pictured?” “I think Mrs. Cleveland is much handsomer than her pictures, and is one of the most charming and graceful women I ever met. I called on her in the white house when I wasin Wash- ington, and was delightfully enter- tained. Your ladies will probably fall in love with her to-morrow.” s, A Troublesome Dog. Says the Indianapolis News: There is a dog on West Vermont street, a cross between a St. Bernard and a shepherd, a pup as big as a calf, that is accumu- lating more devilment to the square inch than it was thought possible for one of his breed. The family vote him an unmitigated pest twenty times a day, only to forgive him when he comes around in a deprecating sort of way.. His counterpart is in the typical mischiev- ous monkey, while his appetite is some- thing awful to contemplate. It is an appetite that rejects nothing, from stale mush to cold fried potatoes and raw to- matoes. The good wife spends half her time *‘tidying” up the yard, owing to the litter which he strews about. The other day he deliberately selected a pot of flowers from the stand, rolled it off the porch, scratched out the plants, which were choice, and then, with the pot elevated on his nose went stalking about as if he had accomplished a great thing. He will wait patiently for hours at a time for the coming of the paper- carrier, that he may seize the paper and chew it to pieces, and whenever there is an attempt by the domestic, who is gen- erally astir at that hour, to head him off, the “‘row” which they have enlists the sympathies of the entire neighbor- hood. e dearly delights in children, and the smaller the infant the gentler his gambols, but he doesn’t take kindly to tramps, apd the lamp-lighter, passing in the early evening, as well as in the morn- ing, is to him a source of constant irrita- tion. What he is not wanted to do he makes it a point to accomplish, and the trials and tribulations which have at- tended his ‘“‘raisin’” thus far have caused nem‘lfr every member of the household to look feeble. And still they keep him, although his offenses are flagrant beyond description. e e The Bison of the Plains. The Union Pacific commission during one of the noon adjournments whiled the hours away by indulging in story telling and sampling the quality of a few Henry Clay cigars. General John C. Fremont, the “path- finder,” having appeared upon the scene, he was called upon by David T. Little to relate a few of his carly rem- iniscences in the far west. The general, with a faraway look in his bright eyes, as if soliloquizing over the eventful past, quietly leaned back in his chair and said: **Well, gentlemen, the western country was, so _to speak, nothing but country when I first ex- plored its wilds. I first knew that coun- try in 1842. During that year I went from the north of the Missouri over to the great Pacific, and had quite an eventful experience. ‘We encountered many tribes of In- dians during our tramp, and although not having more than sixty men as es- cort bravely marched over plain and mountain in the prosecution of our work. We subsisted wholly on wild game, and relished it greatly. “No general,” said Commissary Littler, “‘as Governor Pattison has seen fit to look upon me as a modern Mun- chansen, simply because I had assured him that at one time I had seen a drove of buffalo numbering over 20,000 I will call upon you to corroborate my state- ment.” 0, 20,000 is not a large number,” re- sponded the famous pathfinder. *‘How many 0 have you seen at one time?” iovernor Pattison. *I have seen a drove of buffalo while traveling across the plains through which it took our party three days to pass. I suppose that there must have been 200,000 in the drove., You could see them as far as the eye could reach, yet to-day they are almost extinet.” el The Toronto Globe says the latest ad- vertising dodge is to strew about the sidewalks bogus purses from which bogus bills stick out, the idea being that thot the people who pick them up will have their attention drawn to the advertisements printed on them. ld FINE MILLINERY. NEW FALL STYLES OPEN, 1514 DOUGLAS STREET, - - - OMAHA. JOHN ¥, STONE. JACOB SIMMS STONE & SIMS, Attorneys at Law, Practice in the State and Federal Courts. Office, Rooms 7 and ¥ Shugsrt-Beno Block, Counctl Blufts, lowa, SPECIAL NOTICES. NOTICE. PRECTAL advertisements, such as Lost, Fonnd, 13 To Loan, For Sale. To Rent, Wants, Boarding, eta, will be inserted in this column at the low rate of TEN CENTS PER LINE for the first in- sertion and_ Five Cents Per Line for each subse- quent {nsertion. Leave advertisements at our office No. 12 Pear] Street, near Broadway, Coun- <l Blufts, Towa, TR WANTS. OR RENT—Housex and furnished rooms, J, R. Davidson, 8% Fifth avena, - o 7 OR SALE_Cholce stock of goods in conntry store. Fine opening for business worth 000, Address Stone & Sims, Co o neil Bluffs, ANTED-A good Mrs. J. Mueller, 722 W ANTED-A good cook. Mrs. Thomas Off- cer, 533 Willow avenue, Y0 EXCHANGE—For Counefl Bluffs or Omaha mpew & retall stock of boots and shoes, amount, 84,000, Call at store, No. 508 Broadway, or address R. Martin, Council Bluffs, Tow: TR SALE—Becondhand Columbia bicycle very cheap, B-inch, at Bee office. (ONEhundred_ thousand dollars to loan on Teal estate and chattels by F. J. Day, % Pearl st. UILDING lots and acre property for sale b; B Day, B0 Peari st 0 % ol AL Lt A ol SO R JFOR SALE OR TRADE—For Council Biuffs Rroperty, 4600 acres of lowa and Ne: braska land.' J. R. Rice, 110 Main st., Council Bluffs, o T, OR SALE—100 acres of choice land improved as follows: Small house aud s rods of t-wire fence, 20 acres of breaking, 11 trees in mrlnyAgmbwlnngl:lmllllldnn. ce . Terms easy. re A Wilson, Oxtord, Re, ) Address Charles H, OR BALE—My residence property corner th st and 6th ‘ave, Fine ¥room house, two lots, the corner one vacant. City water and sewerage, good barn, carriage house, etc. A bargain if taken soon. Apply on premises or at No. 14 Pearl st., Council Bluffs, 8. T. French. TWO Trotting - Stallions FOR SALE CHEAP! STANDARD, UNDER RULE 6. WADE CARY, Council Blufs. CROCKERY; LAMPS, GLASSWARE, And Fine Pottery. - —— PRICES VERY LOW. W. S, HOMER & (0., No. 23 Matn 8t., Council Blufts, Towa. Latest Novelties. In Amber, tor- toise shell, ete. rl for kitchen work, 1llow avenue, Hairornaments as well as the newestnovelties in hair goods. Hair goods Made to order Gillette, 29 Main Street, Council Bluffs, Out of town ‘work solicited, and all mail orders promplty attended to, E BARNETT, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, 416 Broadway, Council Bluffs, Refers to any bank or busines house in the city. Collections & speclalty. CRESTON HOUSE, Main Street, Council Bluffs. Only Hotel In the City with Fire Es- cape. Electric Call Bells. Accommodations First Class, Rates Always Reasonable, MAX MOHN, Proprietor. N. SCHURZ, Justice of the Peace Office Over American Express, No. 419 Broad- way, Council Bluffs, lowa. Star Stables and Mule Yards Broadway, Council Bluffs, Opp. Dumnmy Depot. Horses and mnules constantly on hand, for sale at retail or in car load lots. Orders promptly filled by contract on short notice. Stock sold on commission, Telephone 14, SCHLUTE! ‘Opposite Dummy Depot, OFFICER & PUSEY, BANKERS 30 Broodway, Council Bluffs, Towa. Established 1867, & BOLEY, ‘ouncil Bluffs, FINLEY BURKE, Attorney - at - Law. Becond Floor Brown Bullding, 115 PEHARL STRERT, COUNCIL BLUFFS, .+ « + .» IOWA. John Allen, Prop. Kntrances, 112 Main and 113 Pearl St. MEALS AT ALL HOURS| (Open trom 6a.m. to 10} . m. Council Blufts _lowa. — Hazard & Co Fole agents for Rotary ShuttleStandard| Sewing Machine For Nebraska & West:| Office, 106 Main 8t,Cot ol l||nln.r‘n-., A!omn wanted, Neumayer's Hofel Neumayer, Prop. $1.00 PER DAY, Street car connections 1 dopots. 1 stabie un Opp. C Cotnell Biufin, Tow Mrs. W. Restaurant, No.57 Broadway, Coun:| el Blufts, Tows. o't Faree | The Great Bargain SHOE STORE. | 1s at 100 Main Street, Council Blufts, Ta. 8. A, Pierce, Prop. B, Whitg New Store, Nes 110 Main st '§m« House Hiock, Council Biufs, Ta. “Toller & Egan, ‘Wholesale and retail (Grain, Flonr, Feed Baled hay.ete. “Agents) for Walnut Block Coall ¥ Main Bt. Council Bluffs, 401 FALL GOODS! New goods, beautiful goods, good valuq and cheap. Call and see them. ‘We have now in stock our new purchases in silks, dress goods, underwear, flannels, domestic, etc. Headquarters for UARPELS AND OIL CLOTHY ‘We have the largest selection and finest patterns of carpets in any city of the west. They comprise Axminsters Moquettes, Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels, 3-ply Ingrain, Matting, Ruggs, Efc. Etc. We shall be pleased to show our customess these new and choice fabrics. Do not forget the place, - HARKNESS BROS., 401 Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa. =A. RINK,= No. 201 Main Street, Council Bluffs,Jowa A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF FANCY & STAPLE GROCERIES Both Domestic and Foreign.. FINEST LANDAUS! Coaches and Hacks in the City. WILLIAM WELCH. OFFICES: No. 418 Broadway—The Manhattan, “Pelephione No. 1 No. 616 Main Street, Telephone No. 9. Ogden Boiler Works CARTER & SON, Prop’s. Manufacturerf of Al Kinds of STEAM BOILERS, AND SHEET IRON WORK. Orders by mail for repairs promptly attended to. Batisfaction guaranteed. 10th Avenue. Ad- dress Ogden Iron Works, Council Bluffs, Iowa. Real Estate Vacant Lots, Lands, City Res- idences and Farms. Acre Property in western part of the city. All selling cheap. R. P. OFFICER, Real Estate and Insurance Agent, Room §, over 0‘:.1— & Pusey's Buuk, (il s, Lows, Spot Cash! TROXELL BROS. Prices for Groceries THE LOWEST IN THE CITY. 'NO. 345 BROADWAY TELEPHONE NO. 29, CASH DOES IT. Powdered Sugar, 12 1bs. Best Cut Loat Sugar, 121bs..., Granulated Sugar, 14 1bs Confectionery A, 1434 1bs, Huron A,15 1bs............ Good Rio Coffee (roast), per 1b. Good Flour, per 50 1bs.. Riverside Flour, per bbl Riverside Flour, per sack Diamond Bluff Flour, per bbl. Diamond Bluff Flour, per sack. White Bear Soap, 2 1bs... m All other goods in same ratto of discoun! Give us a call and examine our prices, Satisaction guaranteed, LOOK FOR THE BIG SIGN D. H, McDANELD & CO., Hides, Tallow, Pelts, Wool and Furs. Highest Market Prices. Prompt Returns, and £2 Main Street,Councd! Bluffs,Jows,