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| | | e R SR THE DAILY BEE COUNCIL BLUFFS. PEARL STREET. Delfvered by carrier in Any Part Fwenty Cents Per Week H, W. TILTON TELEPHONES: Jiuetnes Orric No. & Enitor, N OFFICE. NO 12 of heCitya MINOR M N. Y. Plumbin Coaland wood Two Unio jumped the t yards. A marriage license was issued yester- day to S. W, Underwood and Mary Thomas, both of this county. The next term of the Avoea district court will convene on the 12th of Feb- ruary, with Judge Macy on the bench. BRAtL a meeting of the vestry of St Paul’s church yesterday afternoon it was finally decided 1o pt the i ion of Rev will be a m this afternoon at 4 o'clock to comple arrangements for the t zaar. All ladies intere 1 are cor- dially invited to attead. Anothe of varioloid was reported last evening Harrison street. the infant 1 of The parents are re The condition of who was injured by the cars while mak- ing a coupling in the Q" vards Sun- Jay, is not serious, as he escaped with o dislocation of the shoulder. In police court yesterday morning Sid Stringham pleaded guilty 1o being drunk and was fined $7.060. Two va- grants completed the grist, which was he lightest of any Monday morning some time. company. Mayne, 619 B'way. ic engines yesterday cks in the transfer Ber- Henry Anderson, tional church, of this presented at the council lling Rev. Dr. Duryea, , next Thursday afternoon and evening. Rev. Mr. Crofts and Rev. George Rice will attond. Handsome prizes will be awarded the best character mask, both lady and gentleman, appearing at the masquer- ade ball of the Germania socic wt Ma- gonic temple next Saturday eveniug. are now on exhibition ut Among the real estate transfers filed yesterday was one amounting to 6,250 for land between this city and Manawa. The purchaser was William B. Good- win, of New Yo Mr. Goodwin is another of the eastern capitaiists who are secking investments in Council Bluffs realty. “Jo, the Poor Indian,” was avictim at the police station last might, He was attired in the habiliments of civili tion, and had further followed the cus- is white brethren - by getti full. He then entéred a pas- senger coach in the Northwestern yards and frightened the car cleaners half out of their wits, Work was begun yesterday morning digging a trench to turn’ Mosquito creek from Lake Manawa to the south work is in charge of En- who has eight men at work. It will require about a weck to complete. There is about eight inches of frost to dig through, but there is no water below that to interfere. Manawa will be dammed and water flumed into it from the south luke. Tel. 147. Dr. Cleaver, 26 North Main. Remember Mande! the only place where you can buy furniture and stoy on weekly or monthly payments. and 825 Breadway All grades Imr(l r‘n'fl C. B. Fuel Co. == i All grades soft coal, C. B. Fuel Co. - real estate in all parts of Bargains in Cooper, 130 Main street. the city, W. ettt Houses and_lots to sell on monthly payments by I". G, Day, 39 Pearl street. e Pickled tripe and pigs’ feet at Tib- bitts’, 845 Broadway. S Dr. C. C. Hazen, dentist, Opera house block. ——— Personal Paragi R. O. Wells, who was v in this city last week, ha his home in St. Louis, Mr. and Mrs. Alle from their wedding trip & few days with her p Mrs. Joselyn. J. H. Hamilton, of Kearney, Neb., was in the city for a short time yeste day calling on his old frie Finley Burke. He left last evening for Lin- coln. Frank M. Pusey left last evenin hs. ing friends returned to have returned and are spend- nts, Mr. and and T. B. Baldwin for Denver. Mr. Baldwin will absent about three weeks, during which time he will visit several Colorado points, J. ¥. Loomis, of Shelby, was in the city yesterday, and left last evening for Lincoln, where he went to confer With the railrond officials, relative to the in- troduction of his patent windmill cush- jon along the line of the B. & M. rail- road. Colonel D. D. Bailey is recovering from the effects ef a fall sustained a few days ago while taking his customary morning ride. His horse fell across I right leg, badly bruising that limb, bones were broken, and the colonel \\)ll experience no serious results from the accident. - Notige the bonutiful finish lars, cuffs and shivts by Cascade Lauun- dry company. e Gas Is Cheap! And gas fixturesare cheaper at the N. Y. Plumbing Co., 114 Main st. A discount of thirty per cent from list price will be given for thirty days. A “Tailor’s” is the place to 637 Broadway. The London get your clothes made. our soiled Co. - Have our wagon call for clothes, Cascade Laundr; - Ww. S, Cooywr has cash on hand to loan on approved ecity property, No. 130 Main strect, e Houses and lots to sell on moanthly payments by I, J l)m SJ l earl st. Newcomers or purll-.s wishing to furnish homes will do well to call on A, J. Mandell, 323 and 825 Broadway. e - Money loaned on furmiture, pianos, diumunss' horses, buggies or anything of value at low ratesof interest, No pubwflti fair and honorable dealing. A, A, Clark & Co,, oftice cor, Broadway and Main, over American express. ey Bleigh bells, slods and skates at to close out. ODELL & BRYAN delm J. G. Tipton, real estate, 527 B’dway. B Lake Manawa, Two hundred feet of the flneut frout- ago on Luke Manawa for sale b; GEo, METCALY, 13 Feml [y 008t MAKING LIGHT ORDINANCES, The New Blectric Charters Declared Weak and Faulty. HINGEL STRANGELY DISAPPEARS. Lake-The Cases A Paved Drive to the Board of Health In Court — Other Bluffs Items. The Electrie Light Ordinances, The electric light ordinances rec passed by the council are quite sev eriticised,and it is alleged that the anything but favorable to the city. city solicitor prepared an ordinance covering the matter, but the council refused to pass it, Regarding the ordi- nance passed Judge Aylesworth has the following to say: “It seems to me that v go 1 long way to cover a very little There i% plenty of slush tafly, but the meat isn’t” there. o on to say that the company propos to do so-and-so, but there is not the slightest guaranty that they will do it. They may propose and keep proposing 1o tho aind o the chapter, and the city will be none the better off for it. Then the ordinance provides that in ¢ there is any dissatisfaction the whole shall be referred to a court which has not the slightest jurisdiction in the matter. At common law there must he eause for action in order to render a judgment asue so far as these o ro wiged, tho The city is company an- third. In case reed upon in the district ot 0110 party, the and those two a the third party is not sixty days, the judge of court is to ide it. Now, there is nothing in the ordi- nance that gives the eourt jurisdiction in this matter. In_ the Holmes ordi- dinance the court dia have jurisdiction. If & man becomes d isficd with the prices charged he can refuse to pay, and the company would have to sue to collee In that ease the amount would be determined in court, but that is far from the provisions of the or- dinance that compels the con- sumer to be the suing The only thing in the ordinance t! definite, and even that may be very in- is thut the company 1l BatoTa 1 the ble rates’ and what the compan poses’ to do would be j binding. The compan by nothing, still the ordinances were City Attorney washed his hands gave the council the legal side of it prepared an ordinance that he re- garded as being for the best interests of ¥, but the council saw fit to re- ject it and pass another. The aldermen scem to think that the ones passed cover the ground, and the city must submit m them. Money loaned at_L. B. Crafts & Co, loan office, on furniture, pianos, hor wagons, personal property of all kinds, and all other articles of value without removal. All business strietly coufi- dential. dly bound pages of he has He Holmes says of the matter. —— The Board of Health. The board of health held ashort meet- ing yesterday afternoon, at which were present Mayor Rohrer, Aldermen Met- calf, Waterman, Knepher and City Physician Seybert. The city p! stated that the two houses occupied h_\ the smallpox patients, near the trans- fer yards of the Union Paecific, must be destroyed to avoid all danger of conta- gion. The buildings have been fumi- gated and disinfected as much as pos- sible, but will have to be burned. The marshal and dlf physician were in- structed to consult with the city solic- itor and abate the nuisance according to law and destroy the buildings. The marshal was instructed to pur- chase ne furniture to replace that destro infecting the resi- dence of M . The-mars structed to arrest Dr. Cook for viola ing the quarantine laws. The board then adjourned, and as a committee of the whole, pro ied to Lower Broadway to inspect the prop- erty of Si Danforth and ascertain what damage the latter had sustained. Mr. Danforth’s claim is that the city he isiderable land from the rear al of his lots to allow of the widening of Indiun creek —— S. B. Wads \\url.h & Co. loan money. el Cases In Court, The morning session of the district court yesterday cupied in calling the law docket. The assignment was made for the whole term and included all of the law cases. Th will occupy the attention of the court for three weeks, beginning B signment for the fir 3028, 10011 the lrml of '.hu cnse of Thomas vs Siedentopf was resumed. During the afternoon the case was in- terrupted several times to allow mo- tions to be submitted. The will of Ben- jamin MeGinnis was admitted to pro- bate. 2 Wanted or Prohibition Toni A strictly tem- perance beverage. The best substitute or beer known, My “Happiness” has no equal. Send orders to L. M. Finkel- stein, Omeha, Neb., or Couneil Bluffs, —— at Sold At a P Allen 1 was arres ing, charged with obt: » false protenses. He was until tly proprietor of the “Rink” sta- , which he purchased of Mr., A. Pontius. He sold Pontius two span of mules, & wagon and harness for $560. A. B. Perkins went security for Pon- tius, and caused 1 s arrest, alle, that the mules were worthless. sent for the judge and gave the nec sary bonds for his appearance for tris He swore that he would make somdmd\ sweat for the indignity offered him, and left the station in anything but an enviable frame of mind, o —— A Mising Mau. Martin: Hingel, a workingman who has a family living opposite the North- western round house, has been missing since last Wednesday night, He was up town after some oil that night, and started home, carrying his can, and accompanied by Mr. E, Foedich, the cigarmaker. On reaching Mr. Foe- dich’s house, they parted, and Hingel started off in an opposite direction from that whbich he ought 10 have taxep to, Agents Beer and Nerve rminm, last even- ning money Mule 1'HE OMAHA DATLY BED: PUESD/ \\ him go home. Mr, Foedich called to but that he was going the wrong w he replied that he had been o the road long enough to know where he was going. sthing has been heard from him since, His family is natur- ally very anxious. can be assigned” for his disappearance. He had little, if any, money with him. It is fearved that he got vewildered and wandered off, and may have pe rished. The friends haye been carrying on a A petition will shortly be presented to the council to have Eighth street paved as far south as the city limits. The move 18 being pushed by several of the parties interested at Manawa, and there is an abundance of capital back of it. A boulevard is to be built connect- ing Omaha with the lake, ana will turn southeast at the east end of the bridge, running across diagonally to Manawa. It is desirod to continue Eighth to inter- seet this houlevard south of the city. If the city will pave ns far as the limits theso partics propose to build a fine gravel road from the end of the paving to the intersection with the boulevard, making & splondid drive from this eity to the lake, The mayor and several of the councilmen have been seen regard- ing the matter, and are very much in “favor of it. - - THE PALACE OF THE ELYSER. One of the Most Intercsting Historic Man-ions in Paris, It may be worth whiie to remember that now, when the Palace of the Tul- levies has definitely vanished from the face of the land, says a writer in the London Telegraph, the Elyseealthough its vecord is comparat modern, may be accounted the most interesting of the historic mansions of the French capital, On the score of antiquity the ruined ed contagious to the Cluny museum, and known as the Palais des Thermes, of takes the lead. These ruins date from the time of the emperor Julian the Apostate, who nar- vowly escaped being suffocated by the fumes of the charcoal brgziers usod to dry the walls of his new ace. Of the prodigious solidity of the structnre an idea may be formed from the fact that, late in the eighteenth centu an im- mense kitchen and Hower den w suspended over the roof of the great hall of the palace. which, notwith: ing the enormous superincum weight of the garden and the infilt tion of water, did not budge an inch in the way of disintegration. The Gallo- Roman palace, however, has been a ruin for more than hundred years: the Tuller 1s we have d, is foreve the Luxembou few faint memories of Marie de Medi and Anue of Austria, but it is ch remarkable as the seat of the nu'Mn of imperial and )nxhlu.m and olace of detention in of the gallant Marshal Ney, who, sub- soquent to his condemnation by the Court of Peers, was shot in the garden of the palace, the wall of the Boulevara de 1'Observatoire Pala- tially the history of the palais royal may be summed up by the mention that it has been two or three times stormed and pillaged by the mob, and that it has been turns the town sideuce galite” Orlean on Louis Phillippe, Y\lm to h ion to the throne, while during the second em- pire it was the luxurious home of Prince Napoleon. Otherwise the re- 'n of the palais royal springs in a or degree from itS restaurants and pretty impudent theater: its shops and its bygone gambling The history of the Elysce is, on the other hand, ¢ontinuous and con- sistently dramatic; it is of no remote date, but every page is full of the most course ]mu%n moving episodes. In the minority of Louis XV. tho site of the palace was orly a vast tract of waste ground abut- Uu"un the Champs Elysees, of which the youthful monarch, at the nstance of the regent, made a present toone of his court , Comte Devereu who built here in 1718 av the suburbs, and cha Y cotem- pora chroniclers as “deliciou So agrecuble, indeed, was the mansion found that it bought by Madame Pompadour, who nnexl it with equally dclicious pictures by her favorite painter and instruclor 1n paint- ing, Bouche She left the ) to her brother, the de Marigny, who sold it to Subfequently passed suceession of bank- ers and farme , until at length the properfy was purchased by the Duchesse be Bourbon-Condo. The rev- olution, howeve duch- esse fled, and t, \ acquired by an enter 5 quuulum named id to have made an e traordinarily good bargain by his chase. He bought the palace and grounds with paper assignats, which in 1793 were at about 1,000 per cent dis- count, and after utilizing it for some kind of Cremorne, leftit to his who sold the entire m for hard cash, and at a 'arge to Murat, who, on his elevation to tne throne of Naples, presented the elysee to his imperial brother-in-law, Napo- leon conceived a curiously strong and, as iv would seem, fatalistic affection for the pretty mansion in the Faubourg St. Honore. He wascompelled to make the Tulleries his Parisian headquarter but as an abode he never liked that stately pile. He was accustomed to say that it smelt of the blood shed on the 12th of August, and, moreoyer, it is well known that this man of the iron wil] and the unclouded mind had a supers tious dread of the **petit homme rouge” —the little fiend clad in erimson who was supposed 1o haunt the palace built by Philbert Delorme. The Kirst Napo- lcon made many and magnificent add tions to the clysee, and frequently re- sided thore for short periods. At his final ruin after Waterloo it was to the ely: that he vretired prior to his departure for Rochefort, 1t was at the elysce that he had his famous interview with the constitutionul publicist, Benjamin Con- stant, to whom, in coldly "despairing uccents, he *excluimed, *1 have known you too late,” The Elysee was destined not to lose its connection with the Bonaparte fam- ily, but ere it became again associated with the name of \]lul\un it had to undergo strange ides. In the same room in which Napoleon I. had signed his abdication the aides-de-camp of the duke of Wellington installed themselves in 1815, and the duke resid- ed for some weeks in the favorite palace of the warrior whom he had vanquished. The Duchesse de Bour- bon-Conde, however, returning with a host of huug-y uung ants 1o her native country, impetuously demanded her property. The government could not gainsay her rights; but the Elysee was required as a royal residence for the Due di Berry, and the duchess was with great dmkully persuaded to accept in exchange an hotel in the Rue de Var- ennes. The Duc de Berri and his con- sort lived at the Elysee for about four years; but in 1820 the duke was as- sagsinated ul & carnival ball at the rquis the crown, and it into the hands of a ————rac—— . ——n SIZES FROM ~25T0300 HORSE POWER. JANUARY 20 Espocially . Adapted tor ELECTRIC LIGHTING, Mills and Elgsators, AUTOMATIG GUT-OFF ENGINE. fications and estimates furnished for complete steam plants. Can show letters from users where fuel Economy is equal with Corliss Non-Condensing, auteed, Send for Catalogue. opera, and, the palace in the Faubourg St Honore became hateful to his young widow, she rdoning it to the state. Thenceforth, and after the fall of the Bourbons, until the revolution of 1848, ysee was used only as o house of all for foreign prine and pote i mporarily sojourning Queen Christina of Mehemet Al mong the note Slysee during the v lipe. 'The building was yaaptven fov other and more momentous uses. On the 10th of December. 1848, Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was elected deut of the Irench revublie, and o solemnly sw in lty to tha n republic that e was conducted to the palico of the Flysee, which wis to be In- official habitation. It was not considered expedient to Imlnu huniu the Tullevies, surcounded as that palace Sl with the reminiscences of mon- power, and _fec of deli- cacy prevented his installation at the Lugembourg, in which palace prison he had been continedin 1840, and wl he had been tr rmed insun tion aguinst t lived at the of Decembe: There he gave gor- geous banquets and receptions, there he plof with l\u blers, the ~Im||.. ‘\ml the et tobagH and his ik vod b elieat andlshonea) © that successful act of perjury, burglar sping and as- Sindtion, the prince president srged to become the Emperor leon 1L, and to make the Tulleries his dwelling. the coup d o fow weeks aft MAKE NOMISTAR 3 up your mine to buy Hood’s do not be induced to Hood’s cine, pos liar combination, bination peculine medi- ssing, by virtuve of its peeu- proportion and com- » powers \npwllm 10 any othe cle of the kind before lm people. From all affections avising from impure blood or low state .»r vlw system it is unequaled. Be sure to get Hood’s. ONE GIRL'S BRAVERY. At the Risk of Her Own Life She Saves a Drowning Man. John W. Purcell, of Cheshire. a 1l town ten miles from here, says North Adams dispatch to the Boston Globe. was saved from drowning late Wednesday afternoon by Miss Louise Helford. Miss Helford is but e*ghteen, small of statue, and looks two or three years younger. [Purcell was fishing near the house of Miss Helford’s step- father, when the ice broke, let- ting him into twenty feet of water. His outeries attracted the at- tention of Miss Helford and her brother, thirteen old. Pureell called to them saying he could not get out alive, and bade them take a good-by to his wife and children. The girl tore a board from the fence and approached him. At the risk of h own life she pushed the board near enough for him to reach, The boy cut the closeline from the poles and she cast it across the holein the Purcell ped the line pulled out, entirely ex- . by her and her brother. Pu cell wore & long overcoat and rubber boots, making itditticult for him to help himself. “Had Been Worried Eighteen Year: It should have read ‘*married,” but the proof-reader observed that it amounted to about the same thing, and s0 did not draw his blue pencil through the error. Unfortunately there was considerable truth in his observation, Thousands of husbands are constantly worried almost to despair by th health that afilicts thc often robs life of comfort and happines. There is but one safe and sure way to change all this for the bette ladies should use Dr. Pierce’s Preseription. —_— An American Planter For Russia, So famous have the South Carolina cotton planters become all over the world that they ave now in demand in foreign countri where cotton is ited. Some time ago the firm of Norton & Co., of New York, wrote to Salinas & Son, of Charleston nclull( of .ll m in Ru o go to lm‘sm to Salinas made arrangements with Jobn cott, of Mars H]m), Mavrion county, one of the most successful planters in the state, who will sail trom New York for Mos- cow. Thence he will go tothe Cau- casus, where his special business will be to superintend the natives in the culti- vation of cotton, which is planted there in large quantitie; He will also be sent to Central Asia to confer with planters and dealers in that section, ot d A grand flourish of trumpets oiten heralds the advent of an article which fails, when tried. . y the noise made 1n its be unussuming merits of Van D s flavoring Extracts derived from choice fruit, of standard purity, and elected over a quarter of a century ago to the chief pluce amung flavors,are too well known to need more than a'general reminder. Cheap com- petition of valueless articles heighten the popularity of th All grocers. Why Channcey 1sn't a Society Man. Philadelphia Hu.m'd: Philadelphi; “How’s this? 1 hear that Chaun Depew is not one of the select 400 in New York society,” New Yorkah—"Naw, ye know Chaun- cey has a vehwy vulgah habit of saying bwight things, ye know. It won’t do in 8'ciety, bajove, ye know; it won’t do.” ol L s L 1 have been cured of a bad case of rheuma tism by using one bottle of Salvation Oil,and 1 cheerfully recommend it as tne best lini ment ever made, Many CLARKE Maltby House Haltimo, Beware of counterfeits! See that you g the genwine Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup.” Pric 25 cents, B rali— A Curious Will, The will of a down-town resident, which has just been admitted to pro- bate, says the Philadelphia Ledger, contained the following verbatim direc- tions, in the testator’s own handwrit- ing, to his three sons, to whom he be- queathed certain real estate: ‘‘And now My Childer Mnhmr this Will I logked t9 the value of the Diferent Regulation, Durability E. C. HARRIS, Agent, No. 510 Pearl Street, Council Bluffs. Propertees the Frames being of little value unless they are kept constantly Repaired the Brick property will want very little vepnirs. During your lives And now Boys if you could think of any plan that could be made that would be satisfactory I will be willing to submit to it. if itisin any way reason- able but T will not have any person Dividing the property when I am De “PS. 1 would like tolive t all the Debts paid for the give me a great deal of trouble.” Ri.adies who valuc must use Pozioni’s a soft and beautiful THE COUNCIL BLUFFS INVESTMENT COMPANY MONEY for ed complexion it produces On hand of interest. Pine farms close to Bluffs toexchang for city property. Western land to property Big burgains in Broadway lot Fine business property 1o exchange for well improved faru Good stock of groce for ll'mll‘ city loans: lowest rates exchange fo s for sale, not nd lots on monthly ments dowi, to #4,000. p lots i Byans’, Wright's, Coch- 1d most all .\(h‘”\ll!\\ to city. e ¢ for sale from $100 10 $300 less than present worth, No. 10 Pearl St., Council Bluffs, SPF:CIAL NOTICES WANTS Small from ¥ _dissclution & 1 operating eloping i in Mills county, Tinton, day dissolved by muttiul consent hands this 190 day of Jauuary, A. OVES to rent at low rates, 2} and 523 troadvay, AU Muadel's, eany good farnitu tandel will give you Broudw “Dwelling I n SHED front room to 1 7 oth aveny JRORSAL nundr Horse ranc! d heud ot hor cilities frst o neit s st. ‘\Yll\l 18 1T 74 stock of Clothing, Boots % Hats and Caps, Gents' Fur- nishing Goods, Dry Goods. Invoice 10,000, What biave you'to oilers 161 Broadway, Council Diufls, In, L AND AND CASH to exchunge for mer dise, and merchandise for good lands, ardware. Address 8, Council Blufls. nished rooms; Apply at 15 N, ‘ \7 ANTED—To exchazge unemoumbered ANT—Fu nished room C. E. BELL. G. A. BERLIN BELL & BERLINGHOF, Avehiteets, Designers and Snpevintendsns of Constraction Mr. Berlinghof was seven Mende! ) designed many of the fing in Omaha and Council Bluffs, Plans_and Specifications Prepaved aud Estimales made on Applicaion, Studio, Rooin 2 Opera House Block CITY MEAT MARKET ! TO THE FRONT! UNTIL FUIRTHER NOTICE 1 WILL SELL BEEF, VEAL & PORK —OF MY OWS DRESSING—— |wa Cailie, Fed 07 lowa Con! And will meet any honest compotition on prices for Firsi-Class Meats, J. M. SCANLAN, 120 Broadway. - - Telephone 201, TRY OUR MUSH, Elsctric Trusses, Belts, Chest Pro- tectors, Etc, C, B. JUDD, Council Biafrs, la. A. F. CLATTERBUCK, REAL ESTATE BROKER, 419 BROADWAY, COUNCIL BLUFFS, PRIVATE DETECTIVE. all 1owa. Private watchien furnislied at any and thmes. Special attention given to collection of chat- tel mortgages and notes. Money o loan on good chattel security. Heferenco_ 4ny vauk, aiaraey, oF buginess B THE ORDER WAS POST NO BILLS! & YOUNKERMANM. No. \0O2L BROADWAY GNOCER\ES4, STATIONER Y. SO\ \Line of SCHOOL SUPPLIES S\\uvmu\?m’\ors Bath Rooms vrashed Throug q.\,//‘ G 9 N T\Q\QSH\tv. [Cheaper than theCheobest L7, n SMNSON Music € 239 BPdac’nu)/ 6‘/7‘Y STEAM % N Fiain O T‘:(tt%?‘n?\i‘?.‘ SEb HOW THEY OBEYED IT. On Saturday, February, 2d, the OSTON STORE Will begin 1ts career in Council Bluffs, We will make it both 1n stock and prices, a STORE FOR THE PEOPLE We will carry full lines of Black and Colored Silks, Satins, Black and Colored Dress Good, Ginghams, Sateens, Sheetings, Crashes Muslins, Table Linens, Calicos, Blankets, Com- *| forts, Hosiery, Underwear, Gloves, Cor- sets, Handkerchiefs, Laces Embroider- ies, Notlons ete. A complete department of Gent's Furnishing Goods. Cur store h-as been refitted and refurnished throughout, New Goods! New Goods? New Faces! New}irices! We have come to stay and will at all times give the peopleof Council Bluffs and Omaha the beneft of the Closest Eastern Markets, We will give bargains in everything we carry. In addition, we have the stock purchased of Harkness Bros., which we will close out at 50c on the dollar, ; Look out for the grand opening. Wait for it! Watch for it! It will pay you todo so! Buthermeham, Whitelw & (o, 401 Broadway, Council Bluffs. FOR SARLKEY An old established Boot and Shoe business in Council Bluffs. Towa. The Phillips stock of Boots and Shoes at 413 Broadway, is for sale and the store will be rented. Best stand and trade in city. Nearly thirty years in one lccation. Present stock from $12,000 to $15,000. For further particulars apply to G. D. Phillips, at the store, or to N. C. Phillins, one of the execu- tors of the J. M. Phillips estate. N. P. DODGE, Executor. WHYSHOULD YOU BUY A e o e e e e it HARDMAN PIANO? e R B B Bl A L e 1. It1s the most durable Piano wade. 2. It improves under use . It hus more volume of tone than any ot 4. 1t stands in tune longer t} It is the only 6. It is the only Piano with the new metal key . Itis unequalled in sction. 8 It all othe It is th ano with the new patent Liarp-stop, support amone the best people handsomest, 12iano niade, 10, And most important of all it is sold a L2T EICOILITIEST PRIOfi! et 't SO 28, A A S O AR R S 8 et ] 37,000 OF 'TEIEW AN NO, 103 MAIN STREET, THos. OPricen. W, 1. M. Pusey, OFFICER & PUSEY, BANKERS. r Main and Broadway, , TOWA elgn <ud domestic exchunge, wid {terest pald on tim de: D, H. McDANELD & CD,, Hides,Ta uw,Pglls,Wnnl & Furs, Highost magket b ™ ad &2 Main A, L0V Dealers in Collections mis Poalis, 0y SPANISHSPECIELO. Cjroulass i REMELY €O,y omfiu. i