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THE DAILY BEE COUNCIL BLUFFS. OFFIC ARL STREET. Lelivered by enrrier in Any Part Twenty Centy Per Weel B, W. TILTON T BreixEes Orric NiGaT Eniron, Ne gt heCitya MANAGEL, MINOK N. Y. P. Co. Gleason coal. Dexter, employment. C. 1B. Music Co., 533 B'way. Reiter, tailor, 810 Broadway. Evans' laundry, 724 Broadway. D. W. Ois, city and farm loans. The school board will hold a special meet img this evening to complete the unfinished work left over from the meeting Monday evening. ‘The motor company hias commenced the work of putting in the switches on (iraham avenue, and in a few days the e will be running into Fairmount park. All boys and @irls between the ages of eight and sixteen years old are requested to meet at the temperauce tent, corner of Beventh and Broadway, at 8 o'clock this afternoon. Constable Covalt s still on the war-path against the saloons, Constant raids are de- leting the stock of the budge dispensers, fut there is enough on hana to keep him busy for weeks to come. Special communlcation of E: No. 256, A. F. and A. M,, this ing, for examination and work in tne third degree. Visiting brethren cordiaily invited by order of the W. M. . A party of young ladies from Boone were in the city yesterday, and spent the day in Fairview park. They were the guests of Miss Hopkins, daughier of the superinten- dent of the Northwestern, A complaint was filed yesterday against E, Hunt for carrying concealed weapous, He was sod by Judge Aylesworth on his own recognizance. The case1s set for Thearing on the 27th inst, Owing 10 the non-arrival of Tudge Deemer ransacted i tho dis- trict court y ay. ourt will be on hand this morning, und the cases arraigned for yesterday will be heard to-day. The funeral of Lottie, the two-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. ool place yesterday mormng froin the once, just cast of tho city. ‘The remains were in- terred in Walnut Hill cergetery. Mrs. E. Burham is having her residence at No. 820 Stxth avenve remodeled and mod- ernized by the addition of all u cst im- provements and convenicncos. Whon dn. hed it will bo one of the finest residences ou the street. The case of Cora Bailey, charged with va- rancy, was tried yesterday afternoon, and sho was discharged. She had been paying the montuly finc imposcd by the authorities, but decided she would do 0 no longer, aud an investigation convinced the court’ that she was right. This hot weather is a bonanza for the bath house men at Manawa. T'he patronage is all that could be asked for, as the water is Jit erally alive with bathers all threugh the and evening. The roofed compartment ut Manawa beach s the central point of attrac- tion during the hot afternoons, Colonel Holt, who is conducting the tem- perance lectures in this city comes highly recommended by the temperance workers in other pluces which he has visited, the slurs of an evening paper 1 the contrury, notwith standing. He s drawing large audien and his worlk is meoting with good results Ed Martin was yesterday appointed to the city police force, and went on duty last even- ingon Main stre tty’” has been a member of the merchants police for the past three veurs, and is an efficient_ofticer. That he will do us faithful work for the city an has in his former position is a foregone con- clusion. Arrangements have been completed for the removal of the Western Union_ telegraph office to the Carrigg building, adjoining the new Eiseman block. Work has already been commenced putting the batteries in th lar. The company will occupy the front of the lower floor as an oftice, and instruments will be placed in the rear. change will be apprectated by the pubiio. Worlk ou the new Sapp block continues to attract a large number of idle spectutors to the coraer of Scott street und Lroadway, where they watch patiently hour after hour to sec the west portion of the Pacific house tumble into the excavation that has been mado for the new block. The cracks in the walls of the structure are daily widening, and new ones are appearing. ‘The floors and walls have becn strongly braced, and an of- fort will be made to hold them in place until the new west wall is completed. A List your property with A. A. Clark & Co. elsior lodge Splendid bargains at Marcus’ clothing store belore removal to new building. Important to tlemen. T have established an cing and cleaning works in this city and desire to c: attention of Jadies sad gentlemen of Owal aud Council Bluffs to the fact that I'b furnished my works with the latest improve machinery known to the trade, that I have had over sixtcen years' experience, and that T usc only the very best dyes and chem- icals. I clean and dye everything but fur goods. I call special attention to my new cleaning process by which the garment is not ripped and which restores the original lustre 1o the goods. Ladies' and gentlemen's sum- mer garments, such us flannels or silk, wade 0 look s good as new. Dresses, clothing, silks, shawls, laces and plumes d in su- perior manner. Motor fare allowed on all goods brougit to works, or wagon will call at residence. G. A. Schoedsack, Twin City Dye Works, Twenty-sixth and Broadway. Main oftice 113 South Sixteenth, Omana, - For Sale—Fine residencs terms. A. A, Clark & Co. —— Personal Paragraphs. Jncob Sims, Esq., is home from a visit to the lakes, Captain J. H. Clark is attending the sten- ographers’ convention at Des Moines. John Gleason left yesterday for Utah and ‘hldumlnu, and will bo absent until the holi- a, Colonel W. F. Sapp will leave in a few days for a months visit at his old nome in Ohao, Mrs. E. J. Ogdev, of Sioux City, is the guest of Mrs. John T. Oliver, on Park avenus Mr. and Mrs. H. W, Hazelton and dau have gono east” to spend B short vaca: with friends, W. J. Connor attended the convention of the Missouri Valley stonccutters, in Owaha, yesterday. Mr. N. P, Dodge and son Phil, left last evening for Clear Lake, for the rewainder of the summer. srs. Frank Holliday, Mrs. Steplien James and Mrs. Robert Huntington will leuve - morrow for Salt Lake. County Auditor Hendricks has returned from Des Moines, where ho uttended the meeting of the stato board of equalization. Miss M. Besten is the recipicnt of some fine specumens of Montana quartz, sent by hor brother, L. W. Basten, suverintendent of the Montana Union freight ofice at South Butie, Mont. A little son of Mr. Kirkland, the jeweler, was severely bitten yesterday by a monkey, the proporty of an Italian organ-grinder. The ownar, who gave his name as Jack Brantie, was locked up the charge of keeping & wvicious animal. The boy was bitten in sev- eral places, #d & physiciun was culled to at- tend him. Lo s ey Houses to rent. A. A. Clark & Co. ————— Why not cool offi The wmotor runs every half hour to Lake Manuwa, und steamboais make ten-minute trips 10 Manhattan beach. wll_right. The wmotor Hotel Manawa is all Man- right 5,700, easy Lake Manawa s trains are all right right. The steamboats are all right. hattan beach is all right, and it's all for you t0 Ko In swimming. - Beach, near hotel. Pri- ladies ard Baths at Manawa vate bathing aperiments for children. Carriages ln s troatweny A, A, Clark THE OMAHA DAILY BIf: FRIDAY IN AND ABOUT THE BLUFFS. Offcer Doyle Gotg Himself Into Ser- fous Trouble, ROUND UP OF THE SOILED DOVES. The Saloon Men Sour on Their Former Brethren — Where ths Motor Will Go—A Contradictory Bit of Law. An Utterly Incompetent Oficer, Between 12 and 1 o'clock yesterday morn- ing a resident of this city visited the police station on business. While there he claims to huve been grossly insuited by Oficer Doyle, and then rudely assaulted and thrown out of the building. The victim of this uncalled for attack yesterday waited upon Mayor Rohrer 0 ascertain by what right the assault was perpetrated, and how 1t happened that Doyle had taken a hand {n conductiog the affairs of tho city jail. The chief executive of the city volunteered the information that he was the head of the polico department and proposed to run itto suit himself, but did not state whether the men supposed to be in ks em- ploy were acting in compliance with his or- ders or not. He attempted to excuse the pa- troiman who nitted the assault by stat. ing that “the police station was his hon and ho was entitled to some rights there. ' The idea that the citizen was entitled to sowie rights in the city’'s public buildings seem ingly never occurred to him. The only sa faction that the lutter could from the mayor was the promise of an investigation. " —— Tor sule; two lots on_motor line between 24th and 25th strects b if taken 1n- mediately. A. A. C Steam and hot first-class piumbing. Work in both citics. * Jons Gite pruT, 518 Pearl street, Council Blufts. R ki Kelley & Youakerman sell Cl nd Sanborn coffees a sp St Another Electric Motor Theory. “I soo that pretty nearly everbody has a new theory to advance regarding the pro- vosed new motor line, and I suppose that I ought to have ons of my own,” said a well knows local capitalist yesterday. “I am of the opinion that tirs talkk of a new comnpany is outirely without foundation. My theory is that all moves that aro. being niade are those of the present company. They un- doubtedly desire a belt line, and the route them to a cortainty. und, and they wnany step in heir profits As far as ing, groceri don’t propose and take away a and submit meekly to the ch the Union Pucific wagon bridge 18 concerned, 1firmly velieve that it will be utilized for electric motor purposes, and that before very long. The present moter company would take it, even if they did not nced it, simply to kesp other vompanies out of the field, They will not leave such am invitin loophole as _that oven very long. —Omal is to be filled with a networkof electric lines, and it will be a very venient thing Ve connecting line ac Union Pucific bridge, as well as nt dway. “They now say thut the present c will branch from 1ts present line just this side of the water works pumping Station and run vert venue,thenes over the proposed new ronte through the southern vart of the city, but, mark wy words, the Union Pacific bridge will not got lost ' the shuflie,” e For lent—A very desirabie house in good Would be chicap at &0. If taken at once by good tenant, A. A Clark & Co, s O Council Bluffs Furniture company good goods ut low prices. 407 Broad way. for Have your old furniture upholstered, good asnew. R. Morgan, 732 Broudway, Have our wagon call for your soiled clothes. Cascade Laundry Co. et antd The New Prohibition Couverta, George Bolton, attorney for the recently developed prosecution against the saloon keepers, yesterday filed ad?itional papers in the district court against a half dozen wet grocerymen. The cases are to be heard in & fow duy Judge Deemor will nvestigate them during the present adjourned term of court. . Injunctions aro asked against all of the parties. Mr. Bolton stated yesterday that the prosecution was not yot ready to Qivulge anything with regard to _the cases, but promised somecthing day or two. If these cases are prosecuted for all there is in them, there will be un opportunity for the cx-saloon keepors to make good their ons of .tho past few months. Tuc al not de ire to close the saloons, but was sim- ply prosceuting the saloon men for “what Thero wits it.” They asserted that the could close the saloons in twenty-four hours if 80 disposed, and sca he idea of an, ay in court. If thev a 0w after the r maining budge dispensers as hard as the claim to be, it 1s fairto p ume that Coun Bluff will be solidly prohibition in a very few days. e For Sale—Lot adjoining railroad track in Bryant & C Price, $450 cash, A. A, Clark J. G. Tipton, real cstote, 527 Idway. e Dr. C. C. Hazen, dentist, Opera house block. SRR S. B. Wadsworth & Co. loan money. B What Puzzles a Lawyer's Brain. “We have some rather contradictory clauses in our statutes,” remarked s legal gentleman of tho city yesterday. “For in- stauce take the law regarding the carrying of concealed weapons. In one place it says that it shul: be unlawful for any person ex- cept oficers tw go armed in this mann ar, and in another it is made the duty of every person to make an arrest whenever they may see a person_engaged in any criminal transaction Now then, how is any m:an to reconcile tho two statements, According to one constru tion, every persoa permitted to carry a gun, being virtually w peace officer. It would make a njce question for a court to decide. On just that one question there is roow for a great deal of argument, and it shows how unsatisfactory the statutes oftentimes are, There is a great deal of talk heard of lawyers trying to find a place to quibble and distort tho law, but I tell you that it oftentimes keeps themn a great deal harder at work trying to reconcile matters that appear in black and white, Ayl Houscs for rent. A. A, Clurk & Co, City steam luondry, 84 Muin, tel. 141, - Notice the beauwful finish given col- lars, cuffs and shirts by Cuscade Laun- dry company. — he Day in Police Circtes. Tho demi-monde furnished & large portion of the business in police court yesterday. The cyprians seomed to be in for a day of it, and they had it. Aside from the cases in which they figured, there was very little for the court to investigate. J Ricburdson and J. D, Richardsou were bocked for dis turbing the peace, and wero each assessed $10.10. H. Hartsock, a fugitive from justice, had his caso continued, ae thers Was 0o one ou ole after it. frail fomales from Rotten Row were hauled in Wednosday evening by tho police, us their nses for the past month were in arrears. were odeufl, Ollie Williams, Cora A s Gron and Cora Baliey, and the '@ required to put up security for the necessary bofore they wore reieased. Daisy Burns charg of drunk and Jumes Hayes wus fined $14.60 for vagrancy snd sent out to work with th Northwestern 's add. some testimony Probstle, wio in the case agal is ocha d with k house of wssiguation on Upper I3roadway. ~Vernle Perry was found puilty of disturp- ing tho peace aud flued §10. Sbe was en- gaged in a fight with severay other Plerca street courtezans, and came out second best, As 8000 as her caso was disposed of she filed | an informagion sgainst Lillie Mills, alleging tho samé offensd, and the case against the latter will be tried {o-da, Baths at Manaw oh, near hotel. Pri vate bathing rooms for ladies and children. - watches iring at E. Fino jowelry oleaning and re and diamonds; Burhom’s. The Boston Store's Great Sale. The second day of the Boston store’ clearance sale opened vestorday with heavy trade, which grow steadily as the c advanced. Notwithstanding the intense heat the people poured in all day to take advantage of tho splendid obportunities afforded to get the great bargains. To-day the weather promises to be cooler and people can take moro pleasure in participating in the hot fight with prices now going on at the Boston store, There never were such bar gains offered the retail trade in Council Bluffs, P “— Money loaned at L. B, Craft’s & Co.’s o on furniture, pranos, horses, wagons, personal property of ail kinds, and all other articles of value, without removal. All business strictly confi- dential, H. Smith, drugs, medicines, paints, oils, 609 Maiu, near John Merken's. [ C. B. Trunk Factory moved to Chapman’s old stund. Largest trunk factory in west. sl i No Explosions When persons keep cool and use our “Sun Dial” gus stoves. Four holos, ronster und bakeoven. Costs 7 cents per hour when running full blust. New York Plumbing Co. A FAMOUS FIDDLER. Senor Sarasate Under Abb ing to America gemeni, iton Sarasate, has charmed the concert ntly, has ¥ 1o mike suys a London letter Vorld. £ sate was in fifteen v ago under Strakosch’s management, but wis not a pronounced suce that time. Tne famous fiddler do like London, and only stays her long enough to fill his concert engige ments, He lives in Paris and lov t. He has o d d of the sea, but Ab- bey's big terms and a desire to distic guish himself in a country where his curly efferts were not particularly suc- cessful, have induced him to sign a con- tract to cross the Atlantic. Surasate was born in Pamplana 1844, and began to saw the string the carly age of four and a hall His fadior, who was a band ma the Spanish army, placed him under the tutelage of anucl Robriguez, a Madrid music teacher, who gave him instruction until the boy was twelvi ars old. Then Queen Isubella, at- tracted by his precocious talent, caused him to bo sent to Paris, where e wa introduced to M. Aub the di- rector of the famous Conservatoir Ther Senor Sarasate suee o violinist tled has sine d. He fov= him, winning priz of the Parisians alike by melody which he lved from the rub- bing together of catgut and hovse-hatrs and he has ever since devoted his 1i to the cultivation of the g gifts which nature implanted in him, and to which his Queen and Countess of Mina gave the increase. His first appearance 1n London was at the Crystal Palace in 1861, but he made alongev visit in 1874, In that year he performed at the Philharmonic Con- certs, and appeared at the Musical Union, then in the zenith of its arf prestige. Since then Sarasate hus paid visits to this country, his con- certs resulting alike in artistic and finaneial suc 5 The character of Sarasate’s playing is of the highest order, and one which, in many respects, has not been approached any other living violinist. The bell- » beauty of tone, the faultless inton tion, and the technical power which e able him to deal easily with all known and unknown difflculti rtaining to the violin are qualitie ch combine to render him unique among violinists. FOOD FROM PRIME SOURCES. Why a Strictly Vegetable Diet is Better Than Animal Food. The food which is most enjoyed, a wr in Longman’s Maguzine, is the food we cuil bread and fruit. Tn my long wedical carcer, extending over’ forty years, I huve rarely known an instunce in which a child has not preferred fruit to animal food. I have been many times lled upon to treat children for stomachic disorders induced by press- ing upon them animal to the exclusion of fruirvdiet, and have seen the b sults occur from the practi ing to the use of fruit in the dietary. it without the leust prejudic n learned from simpl J that the most natursl diet for the young, after the natural milk diet, is fruit, and whole-meal bread, with milk and water for drink. The de for this same mode of sustenance is often continued into afte year: as if the resort to flesh were a forced and artificial feeding. which required long und persistent habit to establish as a permanency. us a part of the system of overy-duy life. How strongly this preference taste for fruit over animal ood prevails is shown by the simple fact of the retention of those foods in mouth. Fruit is retained to be tasted and relished. Animal food, to use a common phrase, is “bolted.” There is a natural desire to retain the deli fruit for full mastication; the such desire, oxceptin the trained gour- mand, for the retention of animal sub- stance. One further fact which I have observed--and that too often to discard it—as a fuct of great moment, is that when a person of mature yeuars has, fora time, given up voluntarily the use of an- fmal food in favor of vegetable, the sense of repugnance to animal food is soon so markedly developed that a return to it is overcome with the utmost diMiculty. Neither is this a mere fancy or fad preulise tosensitive men or over- sentimental women. I have been su prised to see it manifesied in men who are the @verse of sentimental, and who were, in fact, quite a med to ad- mit themselvos guilty of any such weak- ness, 1 huve heurd those who have gone ever from a pure vegetable diet speak of feeling low under the new sys- tew, and declare that they must needs give itup in consequence, but I have found oven these (without exception) declare that they infinitely perferred the simpler, purer, and, as it scemed to them, more natural food plucked from the prim: source of food, untainted by it piwsnnge through another animal body, ‘o The Outtielde 1a ng All the Fuan. Chicago ir spectator whose violin going public of London rec Signed a contract with Abb tour of Ame to the New York Awmerica about in e world wried all e d the hearts y the wonderful Tribune: I (looking at the game with much in- tereet)—I thought yousaid the Chicagos were not playing us well as usual this year. Her escort (absorbed in the game)— they haven’t got a tally in yet, and its the seventh innming. Fair spectator (tollowing with her s another sk per)—But—but it 100k to mo as if those three voung men the Chicago players keep down there near the fence tigfind the ball when it rolls in among thecarringe haviog about all the fun there is in this game, AFRENCH a‘sfimnnr«o WARD, Ay Afver Stealing & Million, He G :ta Only & Yopein Prison. A notable trial in P has just | {mprisoppent for &Iw\uh..-mm & thorough rastal, classed among the successful fin ne voar and a flug ¢ &}, now knowa for but not Tong ago most popular and nelars of the French capital, says a Papis correspondent of | the New “York' Sun. The charge gainst him w the embezzlement of 79,921 francs, 'r nearly $1,000,000, which had been intrusted to him by some 1,800 different people for invest- { ment, and which he had lost in specu-~ lations on the bourse and in reckless and extravagant living. Meyer was the son of tradespeople, his mother keeping a dry goods shop, but he aspired to other things, and, after gotting an education in the higher normal school, he became a tutor. H fought a whjle in the war with G many, and then turned his attention to journalism, writing for various Pari vapers. From this he went into finance, and, although without capital, managed to secure the place of secrewry in the Banque des Prets a 1'Indus- trie, with a salary of 815,000 a year. By the time that this institu- tion coilapsed Meyer had necumulated an indebtedness of $60,000, & fair start for n young man who began without eredit enough to get n week’s hoard on tick. Promptly upon the failuve of the bank he borrowed $10,000 more, and with that and his debts for cavital he founded the Scciete Mobiliere. He hired a certain Baron Chatelain to be the nominnl head of his concern and 1s- sued circulars promisin per cent above ordinary interest upon money in- trusted to him. Cash came in so rap- idly that he quickly moved from his first modest quarters to a fashionable business locality und established two newspapers, the Felaireur and the Kcho, which boomed his bank in discreet but enthusinstic style. More and more kept coming in, and as long as this kept up Meyer was able to meet all his obligations to old depositor: the cash received from the new ng, meantime, liberal toll for h o spent vastsums on women and rses, and was able to lose #5000 at ono sitting at baccarat. Ho wus deep in the swim of Paris fashionable life, with entre at all the clubs,and opportu- nities on all hands o rake in frosh v tims for his bank. His reckless specu- lation on the bourse made him as noto- rious in financ as well as in fashion- able circles, but he bore all his losses without a quiver, and his prosperity seemed on the inc . Oune day some one started a suit for breach of trust against him, and as soon as he heard of it, November 14, he fled. The Society Mobiliere bubble bursted in & moment. His bank a sham, no regular books had been kept, and from the memorand ind all that was he owed near! d about 6,000 of centimes in his 25 followed the financier through Guernsey, Liverpool, Man- chester, London,” Geneva and - Stras- burg, and finally ran_him down, thanks to one of his female friends, in La Hulpe, Belgium. Th was a long t in the Belgian courts hefore he extradited, but he had to go and nd trial. His tims included persons of all classes, with many women and a num- ber of priests. Mue. Archambault had given him $140,000; Mme. Lodmiral, o Persian houseowner, 3 as much; Christi aced in his i res of the nce, worth on, an_actress, ),000 to his liabilities; the Abbe Robert, incumbent of Mount St. el, put his loss at $11,000, Michel \ger, o former tutor of the y had let him have $34,000 worth of bonds. Victorin Joncieros, the composer, General Turr, M. Gerameng, the engineer, and scores of other persons well known in Paris, with ove of provincial no s, priests, doctors and farmers, were other vietims of the affair. Socompletely had many of these been hoodwinked by the clever and affable swindler that ‘they testified at his trial that they had no doubt of his honesty, and_believed that if he had been let alone he would have repaid them all their money with inter- est. The prisoner himself claimed that he had never meunt toswindle any one, and that even yet he would be able to w all he owed, Hetried to deny that 1e had lived extravagantly,and elaimed that he had resided continuously in his mother’s house. When letters from his mistresses and proofs that he had maintained separate establishments for some of them were produced he had nothing to say. The sensational feature of the trial wus the production, by counsel for the prisoner, of letters alleged to have been eived by Meyer in Belgium from the proprictors of . certain organ devoted to General Boulanger, in which money and _lib were offered him if he ould fabricate letters implicating in his financial transactions M. Rouvier, minister of finance, and M. Thevenet, minister of justice. The letters had no effcet on the jury, however, and a ver- dict of guilty ‘was promptly rendered. THE MANHATTAN BILLIARD HALL AND CIGAR STORE Sporting Headquarters, 418 BROADWAY, MALOAEY & D'BRIEN. NS g lNSU%AE'f\?.E'ESTATE RENTS HOUSES. Ag ent Ameriean’ ffiflding and Loan Associa- on. No. 30 Pearl st, UP-STAIRS. CHAS, O, ELWOOD, J. M. PALMER A THE CIOICEST LOT OF——— SUBURBAN & INTERIOR PROPERTY In the city. Gilt edged opportunitics to imme ate Investors and homeseexers, CAPT. HAYES' LIVERY First-cluss Detectiv turnouts, Not an old Special attention given to Tig in the i reduced rates for carriuges for funerals, & this purpos W s, Proprietor. 230 Broadway, No. 27 Main Street, l Over Jacquemin’s Jewelrystore | ended in the cofi¥§étion and sentence @ | ) DRY GOODS WILL MOVE NOW! Twenty article we sell. per cent discount on all sales from now until August 15. This 20 It includes Coats’ Spool Cotton, all kinds of per cent discount is on each and every domestics, every staple as well as fancy article in our house. Cautious and money saving buyers should not fail to attend this sale. Our store will be filled with customers, and we would advise early morning shopping. Store open from 7:30 a.m. until 8:30 p. m. Don’t fail to attend this great removal sale and secure your share of the bargains, at Henry PEOPLE’ Eiseman & Co.’s STORE, Council Bluffs, la SPECIAL NOTICES. Nob,, and Counc ' blue linen e velope containing siveral | s, amonz the dated ( It was signed | And was aizh & Coe, of Sloan, Ta, dorased for 81,247, dated Nov. 6, 1835, Tho pupe are valucless to but the owners. A suitul o paid for the return of oan, Lu. MOR EXCHANGI 1 Bluts fc in e: nenrly Hlock. “i.\.\'i‘ “A good man to do ahont the yard and take caro cow. J. W.Equ're, VW ANTED-Auents to sell our goods in Oma- ha; gool new and A sell at sight, Call toaay, at room 4, Arcade 1, O8IV JORNE family team for sate or trado for lot Inguire West Brokdway. FOR RES Main at., after July 1. W , 1) Pearl st. neral work )t horses and F or_trade for lot. Inquire 1322 Wost Broadway. ATE—Rought and solt and . " Spacial attention given o e ination of titles, W. C. James, No. 10 Pearl st Council Blufts, WA Electric Trusses, Balts, Chast Pro- tectors, Efc. Agents wanted. (: B. JUDD, PROY. WHI S PAYSIOLOGICAL ~ MANIKIN Adapted to the pubiic schools. The only complete thing of its kind in_existence and in- ‘nsible in the ~chool room. School bourds et el for the teachers ring the most perfe Address invited to exaiine this. INGER, ieneral Agent, 721 Willow Ave,, Council Bluffs, Towa, H.A.BAL The Most Modern Novelitis in PAPER HANGINGS. AND Artistic Decorations! PETER C. MILLER'S. GEORGE METCALF, REAL TE, No. 10 Pearl St. J. D. EDMUNDSON. £ L. Suuaanr, Pr Vice Pres Caak, R, FIANNAN, Cashier. CITIZEN’S STATE BANK OF COUNCIL BLUFFS, Dépositors 1%, il Hart, J. D, Hannan' pwict general banking Largest capital und surpluy cf any southwestern fowa. Intercat on time de shugart, bunk in 03iLs MONEY TO LOAN ON CHATTELS. Money loaned on furniture, piunos, dinmonds, horses, buggies or anything of value at low rates of inter No publicity: fair and honorable dealing. A. A. Clurk & Co., ofice cor. Broadway and Main, over American express. Tuos, O¥¥ICER W.H, M. PUse OFFICER & PUSEY, BANKERS. Corner Main and Broadway, COUNCIL BLUFDPS, I0WA, Dealers in forulgn wnd domestic exchi Colleetions asde abd interest paid on b de posita, W. H. CHAMBERLAIN. M. D iz P. J. MONTGOMERY 5uiticos s plomer COUNCIL, BLUFES AND Located cn Lake Manawa, the finest Watering Placeand Summe Rates $3 Per Day, | > ™ et s soiiciio. \ AssSldleVehr'marian. CEBHOSP ‘4 8 4“’1.6'.’. WHOLE SALE 20| R B o e A O ] tonly: Exclusiveiarpet Hoyso: -t I WRGHAT TV Towa e Special Bargains in all Depariments This Week, _ COUNCIL BLUFFS HOMEOPATHS. Surgeon. prescribed. St., und Zur and Throat aceurately Oflice corner Main Broadway. eon and Hompath. Room 6, Brown Ofice hours, 9 to 12, a. m., 2to 6and 7 to 8, p, m. HOTEL MANAWA REFITTED AND Newly Furnished S Ccnnected by Motor AL with OMAIHA Resort 1n the west, Beautiful Boating and Fishing. Unparalelled Bathing Beach, Cor= THE RUSSELL SIZES FROM 25 T0 300 Especially Adapted fer ELECTRIC LIGHTING, Mills and Elevators FF ENGINE Bpecifications and eatimates furnished for complete steam plants. Kegulation, Durabil " ‘an aEow le1ters (rouw Users where fuel econoiy 18 equal with Corliss Non-condansing. ” 8 18raateed. E. C. HARRIS, Agent, No. 510 Pearl Street, Ceurcil Blufls, Send for cutalogue,