Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 19, 1890, Page 6

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THE OMAHA BEE COUNOCIL BILT OFFICE: NO.12 PEARL Delivered by H. W.TILTON STREET. arricr In any part of the City MANAGER. TELEPHONES: Rreiswes ormicy, No. 4k 1GHT EDITOR, N MINOR MENTION, Y. P, Co. incil Bluffs The funeral o take pl the fam street. The postpon anum will be next Thursday evening gramme will be renc 3 About #:20 o'clock last evening the fire de- partment was called to the corner of Grae and Platner streets by an alarm frc . Lumber Co. d_musicale of the Royal Arc- held in the hall of the order An interesting pro he blaze was in a small playhou rof the old Lee property and no mate- rial dam was done, A quartette of young bloods were obsery 1ast evening comfortably settled in a Pea street stairway discussing at their leisu couple of bottles of beer and a flask of whisky. It should be understood that prohibition pro hibits in Council Bluffs, and the mayor's Sun day closing order is all woo u yard wide George Buckner, colore t himself int trouble last evening by assaulting S. Bastor also colored, at Mrs, Pralor’s place on lower Broadway. Buckner was taken to the station and locked up, Thi the first arrest made since Friday indicating the quictest avd Sunday in some thme H. B, Mitchell, who w a week ago for intoxicatio services of an attor proposes to sue the ment and will file an’ information Oficer Bolin, charging him with perjury, The officer swore that he was drunk and staggered, and Mitehell has seve who will testify to quite the reverse, S v refurnished, and new in- days, $3.00 cabinets for wrranted, midn most orde ssted and fined s secured the v, and states ty for false imprison- Schmidt's galle strun $2.50. Dr. 11 8. West, gant n crown and bridge 1f you wish 1o s Judd & Wells Co. Broadway. RAGRAPHS. Mrs. H. L 1n Kansas City wecks, D. A. Farrell left for the west afternoon to look after his Colorado interests, Deputy County Clerk T. H. nursing u Sprained wrist, the e & “header’ which he took from’ his day or two since. The wheel is for sule cheap, and the rider is alréady figuring ou a 1 is id will be ting relatives away about two yesterday mining Chambers ult of vide arrived in the city wedding trip. The 1t the home of the land, 0. The bride v sister of Mrs, many friends in this requently visited after o d last Tuesd its in Cl was formerly Miss R E. H. Camphel city wher J. C. Bixby, stean neer, W3 Life buildi block, Council Bluffs, Desirable dwellings, locate the city, for rent by . H. Broadway and Muin sti Manbattan sporting headq’vs, 418 B- in_ all parts of ieafe & Co., Tho way. and Lodge. w important one. among the local members of the Ancient Order of United Workinen, as the anunual session of the grand lodge will be held here on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. There will be about two hundred and fifty of the visiting workmen, as delegates have been appointed from nearly every town and city in the state. They will begin to arrive this evening, and will be met at the depots the recoption committec of the local lodge, who will escort them to the hotels and boarding houses where rooms have been engaged for them. Hughes' hall has been engage the pla of holding the mes howill be pr vate. A committee cen appointed to Jook after the enjoyement of the visitors, and v will bo shown about the city s mug ible. Tt is designed to take them to N , where ar weld one even- The guests will also be given a Tiage drive about the city. Inasmuch as the sitors will come from all parts of the state will be a capitalopportunity the varied advantages and at of the Bluffs, as well as to show the hospitality of her citizens. The visitors should be aceorded a rousing reception, and there is no doubt but that it will be forthcoming. 2 C. €. Cully, 328 Broadwa We will place on sale Monday morning and coutinue the sule as long us they last, an im porter’s line of sample silkc and 1is!e thread gloves and mitts, at prices that will ¢'ose them out in a hurry. 'You can have them ut 10 50, that are worth from T cont more, Also a fine line of sample fans at 1 10¢ up to de each. The ar cheap. Also a new stock beaded u cheaper than ever. Lot 1 8, worth £3.00, Lot 2 %270, worth & Lot 3 4, worth £1.00, Lot 45,63, worth £7.00. Something new in ladies' lace collars cuffs to match; very pretty and « received from’ the manufactur eant stock whito lace caps, overy one them a bavgain, 20¢, 3c, 40, 50 0§12, Ask t0 see them, L CuLny - Waterworks $16. N, Y. Plumbing Co, B Choice residence property centrally located for sale by E. H. Sk Co. it e Dilatory Bridge Work. T want to growl,” saida First ward citi- zea yestorday afternoon, “and I wish some of the uldermen were here to hear 1t's all because 50 many of the stry creok are ‘stopped up far out of our way to of the Indian paired at tho present way of getting across without going avound I like to seo them kept in repair, but it seems o me that the council is rather indifferent u to whether they are ever opened again to th public or not. “The Benton street bridge has heen completed for three weeks, and sine that time 1o work has been done toward *opening it to the public. approaches ar not in, but there is 1o way of getting a te across, A single plank been thrown across the gap for the Lemporary aceommo dation of ‘pedestrians, but that'is all, and there is no sign of any change, as the limber for theapproach s ot yet delivered on the round. Frank street,” Eighth street and second street are also blockaded on account of the bridge work, and I would like to seo the bridge committee get oun little livelier hustle until the work is completed.” - Important to Horsemen: Large line horse and turf goods, Probstle, 532 By, C. B e S. B Wadsworth & Co., 207 Pearl street, loan money for Lombard Investment company o Good paper hangersat Crockwell's, ——— A Union Baptist Meeting. The pastors of the various Baptist churches in this city quictly arvanged for a notable gothering to be held in the First hureh yesterday afternoon. No announce ments were made through the papers, and the information was conveyed to the members by pulpit announcements, This was in ac cordance with the purpose to have a union meeting of the Baptist churches of the city and tho desire to see how lurge an exclusive Baptist sudience could be gotten togothor aund how it would look. The plan succeeded admirably, apd at 3:50 yesterday afternoon the suditorium of the church was densely ' A Visiting This week will be Broadway have to go so get down town. Five bridges are being re nacked with | has ever | of the | church and concluded b; | city, and felt assu | bed that he | inst | 1 witnesses | 220 Main, | | the motor n lowing up the runaway s the | | dodge. Then he Baptist | THE widience as [ neatness and dispatch. The only fault to be | found with them is that there is ‘a well devel »d possibility that divorces that mature so fine looking a ssembled there In th pulpit were seated the pastors of | of b the six Baptist churches in Council | suddenly will ‘be very short lived. Colon Bluffs, and outside of Tne Bee representa- | Dailey succeeded in breaking th tive there was not an Ishmael ir: the building, | Saturday, when he filed his petition, took Rev. Mr. Aitchison of the Towa board of | default, and the decree was issued, all in the Baptist missions, who is now a resident here, | brief space of sixty minutes, The case was was chosen m of ceremonies, and in a | that of Mrs. Hattie D. Milliken vs 1. B. Mil brief opening address stated the objects of | liken and the ght on the meeting to be . Baptist love feast, an in- | grounds of cruel and inhuman tr ontand of Baptist enthusiasm for the | adultery, The defendant did not put in an pushing ahead with greater vigor the work | appearance, and the plaintiff took a default church in the city Al that then remained to do was for the Thickstun® offered the invoea- | plaintiff toy up and get her decree, The which the congregation joined in | plaintiff herself was put stand for the inging with great spirit the 8ist hymn. | purpose. The gist of her testimony was to The speaking was limited to short addresses | the effect, as she expre the pastors upon subjects selected for | stuck on 'a cowboy and got left.” the committee who arranged the | works at Swanson's music store, and no longer has any use for her ant husband vian The plaintiff, in her testimony showed that and he wis | she married the defendant in’ this city i minutes upn | Jur Iy after their m of the church in 1 Bluffs, de | for which resulted in M her home in this city She now Reichenbach of the Scandir irst speaker, Lupon to talk for ten s and Prospects and especially in Cou e o brief summary of the history of he giving some enter- \ing personal reminiscences of his ex- n connection with the work in this red that we could point to thé Baptist churches in Council Bluff in triumph and look forward to the future with high anticipations of brighter prospects than ever. Dr. Cooley was required to talk upon the subject, “Watchman, What of the Night, or the Outlook of the Baptist Churches in Coun- cil Bluffs,” He remarked that in speaking of the night it might be well to talk about the poverty of the chureh. There was one church In the vity in whose early histc corded that there was not a cow or a feath among its members. Poverty may be a blessing, and if it is the Baptist churches in Council Bluffs were blessed in a high de gree, for ibers are poor | con in this world's ministers and | connection with the case were not conducted all were like the lowly Master in this re- | as they should have been. It is alleged that spect. This was one of the discourage- | the petition was not filed until just before the ments, Another was the wickedness of the | default was obtained, and that the decree was city and the inapathy in ehurch affairs of the | therefore illegally granted. The clerk of the ally in_ the early days [ court stated that the petition was filed Satur- He'used to think that | day, at which time the filing fees were paid, but there has been a | bib there was no record of the case even when wein this respect. Another dis- | the case was on trial, and there was nothing couragement was the transitory character of | to show that sucha proceeding had been insti- the members of the church hére. He had | tuted. Inasmuch ps the statutes allow a cer- often felt since his ministry began that e | tain time for the filing of an answer in such was merely the head of a procession, Peo- S that there must have been ple come and go, and there was not twenty 1 accordance with lo members in the church today who were there nd talk of disbarment proceed- when he began his work here five years fore rife. Judge Deemer will But there are more encouragements than dis- [ look into the matter today aud see where the couragements. Therc was encouragement in | trouble lies. the belief of the divine mission of the church, and the fact that the great majority of the people in the city belong to the midd the class that holds the balance of power in the world and who constitute the majority of the membership, which stamps the Baptist church as the church of the masses, Rev. Thickstun spoke upon the mission of the chureh in the cit Rev. Harris of the Bethany church spoke on the duty of the Baptists to themselves. 4 i Rev. Jamuany, pastor of the colored church, Tt is surprising the great number of le "the most rkable address of the [ playing cards that arve used. One fac- He is a full-blooded negro, with a | {ory alone, in Ohio, turns out an average bright, shiney face, and detailed in a graphic X P T b manner his nee in establishing 1 el b o el church he GHEtgA avA ComprscaF onlya | as s SIRLeson g LN LRESITAN CADIL eight members. pully to the progr e euchre craze, Other short addresses were followed by [ and says that the Amevicans are the a general speaking meeting,participated in by | greatest people on ) lobe the membgrs present for amusements at - re- e porter of the Cincinnati Times-Star, who Boston Store This We visited the establishment, was told in Council Blufts, swer to numerous queries, about the Parasols, children’s pa s of manufacturing the cards: silk glor ~-\i.u “h of the proe st with us, cand but still T can tell and show you a great deal. The bristol cardboard for making the cards consists of two sheets glued to- gether by being passed between two im- covered in two minut mense rol rdboard must Bavgains in wash goods. Another case | then be dried, pr imd - pre- challies for Onr Se figur ) pared for further worl ardboard fonien b eneh Bl is prepaved in sheets enough to g lfod jec oraitor contain a whole ing car ne case of W ) b What's this? wspaper White goods bargains. _Checked and lace | man, as he saw a large l'«‘\'“l\'m:_: ma- striped white goods, Striped India mulls | chine turning out endless—or scemingly so—rolls of white paper, with one side (corded), also new effect in open work Our line of 10c white goodsin | yrinted the color of ously figured calic stripes and plain, . _Apron width white T A e R e and h:-uLnu-h--.l bor b, 170 6 : It's the l;".““. «:r px|x|t|)|<,,.||;t pipe :r ALl the new offects in white goods, in- | Which is to be pasted on the back o Cluding Spring Tide check, corded Sw cHetpRplayihacardn e Sielutadiiuet etemine st at 19¢, and 33c. as calico-printing is done. , or nearly Don't fail to $ee our'cmbroidered Swiss and [ all, eheap playing cards have acalico- cambric flouncing for mi colored back,~ This lenathy strip of LI T G ico-colored paper is subsequently cut B into sheets about three feet in length to Fomeriotiar W b aen correspond to the sheets of bristol” card- Council Bluffs, boards, Then came i fami Milliken returning to Matters dragged along in this munner for some time, but the breach was finally healed. Milliken agreed to be i ife and she returned to him, , but she dis- nd should be—that he had been inti- mate with another woman and that the re- sult of the intimacy was the birth of a child, i ne and he admitte Then followed sev abuse, and she re ‘The testimony of her and he Mus. 3 ¥, was In substance the same as that ¢ the defendant As soon as Judge Deemer heard the evi- dence he granted th rec, and restored to the petitioner her maiden name. And now s the statement that certain matters in t such was the case. rks of his mother. cked ozon e rous debility, poor memor pimples,cured by D mpies free at Kuhn & Co. , diffidence, Miles® 15th i . MAKING PLAYING CARDS. How the King, Queen, Jack and the Rest of Them are Produced. At the uts in Council Bluffs for the asol cover; pa dress gugham cards HIS TOUCH. plainly hardy ¢, which freed himself when the psized, continued his mad flight, and was caught near tho transfer. He was cut in several places, and the harness w torn to pieces. Young Bates y i, and will very short time. The gasoline stove 1s more dangerous than the unloaded gun, Save lifc using the C. B. Gas and El gus stove, vesting comfortably last ver from his fall in a otric Light Co. 'y 100 feet of gotolJ. D, - For dinner or board apply to Mrs 524 Sixth ave Kemp, One of the Fifth avenue motors into “Sometimes, See this glazed face on completely wrecked the vehicle, in which | @ fine art, too, as so muny colors ar SHiuta 1, becama frightened whon the | then sent to the cutting machines to be : h sorted, mensured and then passed tothe inge his motor the motorman dashel the terre every one of which must be punched but the bugzy struck a_heap of dirt near the | accurately, otherwise the margin of the the track fu frout of “the motor, which the [ 5 \Condertul process and the n Lis fall, but was otherwise uninjured and HEARTS BROKE AT wreek of it, and several of spectators stated over the b s.it was had a very nar- Strolling through the ‘l‘l]l’\'i'\«‘l‘»’-(‘lu‘ th ) = A AR RS | Wakeman, in the € Inter Ocean, told him he deserved for his fool- come to a stranger in Spuin, This was alveady of this class of men and some interest- Luis Mazzantini, The latter I have 1, is Francisco Sanchez (alias La- —- His handling of the wild and savage ot He now seldom appears, $10.000 being — He Had an Original Package. t pet with the Spanish nob.ity, bottles of beer in his avms, and requested the | fumous es doit, und the youth with his bottled, The last is rapidly becoming the first ceptacle for the third and last one, slid it up | tined for the priesthood by his parents, away the last bottle droppe etic, restless nature, and ran away from contents trickled in an amber ' stream toward wdered for several yeurs through tillery, who did not await their coming, b AT P e ants of the | heart broken by a sweet little peasunt remained to tell the stoj This is the first ment position in the postal department gladly printed, but would not sell. Soon Sootk house, Counen Blus: 81 8 dar. that he would become the most famous with us and'we will sectire you good, reliable | -~ Then he gave the Spanish people this & Co., Broadway and Main st., up stairs. EE R SR AR L Colonel D, B, Dailey has suddenly jumped espada, Francisco Sanchez, —— the various colors on Dr. H. Y. Bates’ about & o'clock last | the sheets of board? Well, it is e e D B ea antalbroth i often put on at one impression. fter motor car camo up, behind it and started | S into strips as wide as 3 playing card stanping s imalor (the Slholonman, da ‘punchers,” or machines which ‘punch’ Had the stre away horse | separately, great care being neces curbstone und was instantly turned bottom [ cards will not be true and they will pre- motor man managed to stop just before 1t | \pioh do it are almost human- Mr. Keliey escaped without injury. The that but for the fact. that this partly arrested | A Bull-Fighter who Played the Trou- Tow of cafes of Bureelo my hardly bo restrained from adminstering to [ MWakeman, i tho Chic i pam: nd dangerous trick in so_closcly fol- introduction to an ambitious and espadi, of this city ing facts concerning the greatest two known. Perhaps the most famous of all gartijo). He is probably the most dar- £00d hose recl froe with eve bulls of Jaraina is something marvel- 11 you paut the best Wall pape the price demanded and’ secured in A certain well known young man entered th, and was the warm personal proprictor to *Say, wrap these up, will yout” | Pastor, Jose Gomez, Hermosilla, Juan started for the sidewalk. He slipped a bttle S}nmhh orite. His life hus been full bis back under bis coat, which he tried to | Who were people of refinement and the sidewalk and _ was Shatte the university, the gutter. A couple of policemen heard the panish provinees, breaking many a gnominiowsly fled. ' Tho remnunta of' tho | heart broken | BEo! e ons) o instance that has been noticed in the Bluffs of at Madrid. But he deserted this. he sang in opera, but fame was too great L bull-fighter of Spain. Spain laughed at ienauts. Hents collected and special stten- | saying: “Not a king, but s tenor or e tleman, He has ulvendy amasséd wealth, into the frout rank as u divorce attorney, and Run Down by the Motor. printed on the cardboards?” evening near the corner of Tenth street and | NOW ready for printing. The printing is Mr, Kelley. The hor being printed the sheets ave dried and islong. These strips are carefully,as- down Fifth avenuo on a run. Instead of T ; the inee of the bell increas or cut.out tho sopurato cards, would soon have loft the wotor far behind, 'y in order thut the punching is done sidoup. Mo boy was thrown diveetly across | sent an uely appearance, The punehing struck him. T e was badly bruised by 4 2 any | their motion and dexte motor s the buggy and made u total the progress of the motor it would have run badour and Wrote Poen centlomen who witnessed the | gl O AHEREOY iited Bdgar 1) an i sovere thrashing, which they as the highest favor and honor that can vith such an outland- | qp almost famous bull-fighder, or T'his recalled personal reminiscences living espadas, Francisco Sanchez and adors, the espada primero of the ing, skilful bull-ighter that ever lived. hose purchased at Bixby's. 1o Crockwell's, 1 vance for each performance, He is a the Manhattan last evening, carrying threo | feiend of the late King Alfonso, Other I'he proprietor remarked that he could not [ Sunchez and Luis Mezzantini, into each hip pocket, and as there was 1o re- romance and adventure. He was des- button around him, As ho started to walk | Proper aspivation. He possessed a po- nto & thousand pieces, while the Joining a band of strolling musicians, crush, and made a break for the walking dis. Paiii REGTARISK BRI B Vottle and the odor' of the beer were all that 4 found him and secured hima govern- an_attempt to work the originul package wrote poems which were S a laggard. ‘Then he publicly announced ‘We want you to list your rental property | him, T alone gave him not tion given to care of property Sheafe [ ) jll.fighter only, can enslave Spain Divorce Record Broken. and is the only rival of the peerless way well luy claim to obtaluing them™ with | tions of the people of Spa OMAHA DAILY OF INTEREST 0 THE FARMERS record last | d it, that she “‘got | | not ori las are Rafael Molina, Angel | in the affec- | BEE MONDAY, A Strong Plea For the Neglected Merino Ql.u’p Imllutry THE DEHORNI‘!(} OF OATTLE. An English Paper Condemns the Practice as Needless and Cruel— The Profitable Holstein Cow— Salt for Animals. In Kansas, Nebraska and other pre- eminentl ultural states, agricul- tural pursuits naturally crowded out wool growing, the Iatter being o matter of only secondary consideration; the plough drove out the sheep, but the cause of a part pandonment of the business is the great grazing area of the west and improper care, and as o neg- lect to produce in the stud flocks of the east, size, strength, length of staple and vigor in the constitution of an animal inally too strong, such sheep as were fit subjects to “rough it” on tho boundless plains of the suys a writer in the American Wool Reporter. It is a tale oft told in Ohio and else- where, today, of how the **Vermonter” with o shrewdness chavacteristic only of a New England **Yanke: peddled his sheep through their domains, how with glib tongue they descanted on the merits of such s as “Rip Van Winkle,” “Wall Street,” **Banl and *“*Centen- nial,” of the heavy flecces of ‘tJason” (of “Golden Flecce” fame), of “*Magnet” and of “Wrinkley,” and traced readily their distinct blood lines and individu- ality, Many were the victims of sheep peddlers. Many there were who found out, alas! too that an excess of wrinkles and e were what they were breeding, und that they could not meet with sucli sheep, the requirements of the da We believe that alittle good judgment and faith in the business will bring the Merino sheep industry out all u;;hl in the near future. Let us say that no in- dustry artificial jed on can long Prosp We ot afford to ¢ bandon @ business which has cost so much watchful care, time and money to build up. waost, ng Cattle. The subj hornir cattle, y the London Lancet, is again attracting the attention of Scottish agriculturists, in consequence of the case now pending in the court of appeal in Edinbu The question as to whether or not this pro- ceeding is in a legal sense *“‘cruel,” and therefore punishable turns, it will be remembered on further question whether it is ne If cruelty be taken merely to imply the deliberate in- fliction of pain, there canbeno doubt that dishorning in toto, or, as we might say, from tip to base, is cruel. It must unquestionably cause pain at the time of the operation, with more ov less after suffering. In this respect any differ- ence between alternative mothods, as tipping, half-horning or total horning is simply one of degree. In every case the w has to traverse a sensifive skin- layer, either continuous with the horney covering, as at its base, or subjacent to it where it sheathes the supporting J and a central axis of highly sensitive bone, Suppuration, trivial “when the tip alone is divided, but increasing as theseat of section approaches the skull, inevitably follow In the course of the the y evidence was agreed erting that gr suffering was inflicted when a horn was divided at the middle, where pus mignht burrow in the jecting stump, than when the section nuses al the skull, through which its exit was more casy. Another argument in favor of the latter method was adduced by Professor Willinms when he referved to the possibility in this case of dividing the nerve of supply befor its distribution in the horn. inst these facts, however, might bo placed the close proximity of ‘the skull sinuses to the brain cavity, and the im- possibility, by seetion of the nerve abos mentioned, of controlling sensation in the communicating supply from oth sources. Pr i this trunk should the natural anwsthetic in 3 The process, however carried out, is e sentially Jl.\ln[\l] and discussions as to the relative severity of it - therefore, of nc moment In face of the fact t 1y districts where cattle are br mensure has been found to be necessary, while isolation or other painless means have sufliced for restraint of the more violent ani- we cannot but hold that dishorn- « i o needless, painful, and, therefove, eruel and illegal remedy. Profits in High Grade Cattle, ence is essential to success, Tf an utilize the experience of others we gain half a lifetime, rather than to learn it from personal expe Secretary Simms of the board of ‘agricultur shows that this is u pre b, and that the methods which, even twenty years ago, were productive of satisfuc- tory results, cannot be successfully ap- plied in these times, says the Western Agriculturist, That in the produc of beef, the old rule of numbers without regard to quality has been continued too long. While iid progress in the improvement of heef cattle has been made in certain localities, that the gen- eral advance in this direction within the last decade has not, in my judgment, come up to the demands of the times, or the veasonable expectations of our most progressive farmers and feeders, That native or unimproved animals are yet too common, and that their uncertain quality and irveguiar delivery in the markets stand as a constant menace to the general beef producing interests of the country, with no compensating ad- vantage to any ono—the consumer of in- forior beef éxcepted; and it costs no more per annum 1o fecd and carve for the grade than is required for the unim- proved animul, Kansas state rience Salt for Animals. Why do animals hecd salt Because animal fat is an epitome of mineral and vegetable matters, and salt is & medum between them—u cgmpound of these pounds in certain definite proportions, and grass and grains do not supply sufticient proportion to complete the ani- mal compound and are not therefore complete nutriments, says a writer in the Horse World. Horses fed on an excess of grain, in disproportion to most fibrous plants, will eat the ground with avidity when they can get at it, and it supplies in a measpre a corvector of vog etable ascidity, Salt being a chloride of sodium furnishes both chlorine und soda, the latter being a neutralizer of exces- sive ascldity, especially derived from grasses, pamipered horses should be pro- vided with the following ball, always within easy reach: First make a strong brine of rock salt with a tenth of mn petre in it then get a spit of pure clay and a half a gallon of fresh wood ashes, and of these make u mixture, with suffic ient water, and roll into a ball and dry Keep this in a till of the manger, cledn and always in reach of the pet animal, MAY 19, 1890. the g i ground in his native | wild. As I have said, the horse is an epitome of all that he will eat in health, and this is why they nourish and build up each function To Dispose of Fine Butter. Practical Farm When a dair, has achieved success in the man: ment of his business and makes excel- lent butter, the next ‘point is to find the most profitable disposal of it. Private customers will gladly pay o larger price than the stoves will “give for the butter, and itis not difficult to find such pur- chasers. One successful dairyman, who has a lu divele of customers in pri- vate families and_ gets from 50 cents to | cents per pound, manages in this w st ho sent samples to the best fami in his nearest village apd easily sold all his product at 10 cents per pound above the ordinary retail price and 15 cents above what the stores ¢ % package of five pounds he sent a folded circular laid on top of the butter to the effect that it made from sclected cows, fed on the best food and kept in clean, healthful stables, with every re- wrd all through the process to foet cleanliness, and that the quality is guar- anteed to be always the same. These cireulars found readers among friends of the customers, and very soon orders me in from a distance, Asthe business | increased customers weve sought in dis- tant places by advertisements in cireulating among persons who could af- | ford to pay good prices for the finest quality of butter. In this way the price of the butter was gradually’ advanced until it was fully satisfactor and the whole product disposed of to steady cus- tomers. Then the whole effort was given to keep the customers by giving them perfect satisfaction, The business soon brought opportunities for selling fresh eggs, pmll'l ¢, and well fed and nicely cured pork” and sausages. In a few years lh|~ person built up o busin that brought in $5,000 o year from the small beginning of ten cows only. mrn Early Chicks. Poultry Review: Without proper facil- ities it is almost useless to attempt to raise “broilers”successfully or profitably for the young chicks are brought out ut a time when they must be well provided for, but it ,and pays handsomely, too, to raise early spring chickens to those who have had experience in rais- ing chick for the ma Tho difficuity in procuring brood hens when they are most needed malkes it neces ||'y(() use incubators of some kind, but a poor incubator is <pense to any one. (We speak from ‘rience ‘ to which one is *we do not pretend to suy, for there are several which will do good work when run according to d rections, It is foolish to expect incubat- s to hateh every egg and run them- s without care It is not a very difficult or expensive matter to hateh out the chicks, but the trouble and work commences as soon as the chicks are hatched by properly ¢ ing for them. A good brooder and ar ficiul heat is absolutely necessary to su and a suitable room or building should be provided, which need not he 'y expensive As to food we have dropped the hard iled cgg system, unless occasionally fed mixed with other food it is sure to cause bowel trouble, Generally we feed chicks when they are about’ twenty-four hours old, wo place dry (pin head) oatmeal and luke- warm water before them, they wi as soon as they require it; when the, a few days old feed bread or er crumbs soaked in milk, or make of equal parts of corn and beef sc animal meal is excellent, add a little baking soda and pepper, bake the same as bread and feed the soft part to th chicks, and the crusts to the old he For a variety, give a little meat, pota- toes, rice cibbage, onions, kale or other green food. Keep the brooders at as even temper- ature as possible and let not more than fifty small chic run together to have them do well, or they will crowd, killing the wealker ones. Always clean the brooders and runs oneé a day if possible, to avoid their be- coming sour and filthy. Keep before them at all times good, clean, fresh water or milk, and a box of cracked corn, wheat, charcoal, ground bone, shells, meat, etc. Very young chicks have small crops, therefore they require feeding : four to six times aday, or hours; give them different food, ‘such_as boiled rice, and never feed more than up clean of soft food. Chicks treated in this manner will grow fast, and be ready for market at an curly date. cess, every two varictios of table scraps, they will eat Keeping Horses Clean. ional Stockman: Few owne of . » of the importance of keeping the skins of the animals clean, oprictors of valuable stock usually re- | qu their hostlers to keep the animals so well groomed that their coats will shine like a new dollar, and soclean that they would hardly soil a white handk chief. This is done to please the ey the owners usually being oblivious of | the fact that by pursuing this course they are using one of the best means to conserve the health and vigor of the ani- mals. The skin and lupgs ave the great purifiers of the blood. They are the me- diums through which ave expelled w materials of the blood, such as carbonic acid gas, water, etc., which, if suff to remain in the system bocom poisons, The skin nuturally dc as much of this work as the lw the former is not kept clean and its | pores become obstructed, upon the lungs devolyes so much more of the labor t perform as the ils to doj und if the lungs ave overworked the agimal | loses a portion of his power, speed and endurance. When a good portion of the pores of the skin are closed in a cold or fever, ov from filth, th ath is overladen with moisture, plainly prov- ing that the lun doing " double work; and when the lungs ave partly de- | wed, as in pevsons having pulmonary consumption and ompanying night sweuts, the skin then doing double labor, a8 the profuse perspivation indi- cates, These facts show the intimate lation existing between the skin and the lungs, and ev » the necessily, for the good of the animal, that the skin be kept clean and thus preserve o healthful equilibrium of action between these two important features of the animal omy. An anumal with a dirty hide can- not be at its best, Cleansing the skin is strengthening the lur - HAD HIS TONGU 5 a econ- T O | Yole A Texas Ranchman Who Will Have No Sense of Taste, > Watson, a Texas ranchman, New York the latter part of November with a consignment of polo | ponies from Grayson county. They were part of a purchase by s Gor don Bennett und Lord L. , and were to be shipped to England, says a New York special to the St. Louis Re- | public. Watson had cancer of th went to the charity hospit It was de cided to remove his tongue, lower palate 1d the lingual glands beneath v).wl tongue and afternoon of December 2 the operation was performed by D Kelly and Gillam, For several months p Watson took nourishment through a s ver tube inserted into his wsophagus j below the right car, He was unablg tongue. On the articulate atall fora month following the tion, and the first words he uttered were shouted at a troublesome eat in his His language was oper ward in the hospital. idiomatic and emphatic, There are no outward show that W, toless, His speech is hamy tdeal, his articulation being Ho will always spenk inarticulately. indi son s Swallowing solids isn v for him, as he has lost the pow food which the tongue give Watson was offic Indians at Washington a ago. He spe Priste Pawnee, Ute, hoe languages. Ho I'exas erate side dur Yesterday ho and propared knife without dozen the rebellion. flinching, The seat of the disorder w: posed and what w the sprpri surgeons to find the cnuse of chief was nothing but around which had collected scess. The pin had been sw traced 1d muscles of the could be clear mentary canal to the left firmly lodge Mr. Harris is now rapidl from the effects of the operatior chances are 100 to one in favor recove DEATH WAS IN THE An Estimable California Young Lady acrificed to Fashion. Miss Cyrena Alice Boyd, ged about nineteen y eside about four miles from W ounty, died today under civeumstances, says o Soc pateh to the San Francisco A few we visiting frionds in San while there conceived the ide her ears pierced, A lady vas performed. s Boyd that white silk be i ture, but it appe finally used contained some Miss Boyd returned to hor home in Yolo. . Within a few d: soreness about her eavs, but not regard the matter sequenc One day she and her tobe out in a shower and Miss 5 drenched to the skin, was she took cold. The effect of exposure to manifest itself in her swollen and sore. Then armed, upon her me to this city to secure m tention. Her ears swelled swelling extending to her finally one of her eyes pletely. horribly then it ‘was o yond the power of suvin tion of doctors was ordered, earthly power was availing and death came 1o her relief. Miss Boyd was about nineteen old,and & bright and attrs She was engaged to marr n of Fr SPECIAL COUNCIL BLUFFS. Blood-poisoning f ident that her VW LY pay rent when you ¢ e te .ul in case leay on lowing t A home worth §1 A homie we A home worth A howe worth A home worth # Other priced hor he san; above monthly p; pnts fnclud and interost. e oarticulurs eali address the Tudd & Well Council Blufrs, Ti. 00 At 305 b \tions to tongueless dofoc- ] somewhat | ft A The greatest loss to him s the loss of all sense of tasto and smell, y difficult task — - to gulp ] interpreter for the | yyr "8 uhve years [ WHIANINT ks or spoke the Comanche Shoshone and was one of ngers and fought on the confed- kissed his wifo good-bve himself for the surgeon’s and scareely moved as the doctors cut away his flesh, 8001 ©X- o of the Brondw all the mis- w common pin, i pussy lowed by Mr. Harris some years ago and its course through the ali- groin, where:it had becomo LK. young iady W HONE A Rai LY peeuliar umento dis- umine ago the young lady neiseo, and of having friend | with her when the operation upon her : particular to urge serted in the punc- s that the thr 1 coloving A day or so after the operation parents’ she experienced at first did as of much con- ster happened The result began at once father’s advice, rapidly, the fuce, was closed com- ysipelas set in and the girl suffered | > was be- | A consulta- but no to save her, years Ative givl, L well known 4 NOTICES nbuy a o £ your de torms. principal JOR RENT ~Nico front room, suitable for man and Scott house N. Main, Councll Blufrs. with Two good OR RENT 2 Pearl streot W. Bilger TOR SALE-My residenc on south side of B am, lghted by elect and v o rope enst of Co Blufrs, Blufts N, M, Puse on Pearl st ade for encuml Couneil bluis, The ell Blufrs, Ta. lots Aras | Wells Co,, Co the NOR SALE or Rent rden land o8, ! 1 1, Noble . Couneil Blufrs, J. D. EDMUNDEON, L b- i Vie il CHAS, R, ANNAN, Cashler, body OF COUNCIL BLU Paid Up Capital Surplus and Profits Liability to Depositors Dinectons—1, A, Miller Shugart, B, B, Hart, J. D, Edmundson R. Huun Ot general ness. 1L est capital and su bank in Southwestern lowi, THOS, OFFICER, W OFFICER & PUSEY, Corner Main and Broadway, Council Bluf! Dealers in fore lections made posits. was was 15t Avenue and 21sv Street. and Seroll Sawi of all kind KIha i oot 50 per 10: wdust' by the barrel tirst-cluss, ~ Telephone “YOUR PATRONA Jand 1 deliver Boyd wife or two men modern houses. 9 Willow aves heated Tot 100 by 1ge for fmproy rod Vi " Judd & roOms, cone t Kinnehan's booy SHUGART, -Pres, CitizensState Bank $150,000 Ak ing busi= 15 of any Interest on Timo Deposits BANIPEEGS, nd iuterest pald ou time lhc] e Mmphy MANUFACTURING CO., Sash, Doors and Blinds Al work to by SOLICITED.” CHRIS BC SEN Factory and Planing Mill. Best equ most cent 1 mode ed by sk Fion given to s 1l and nd trimmin, Gene: and | aspect ¥ streets, Council Bluffs, Teleplione Freckles, Hair Removed. Address, DR. W. L. CAPELL, Marcus Block, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA. F. M. ELLIS & CO,, B46 AND Rooms 4% Neb., and Counicil Bluils, e | MAXON- & BOURGEQLS, (s ; ARCHITROTS —)AND(— SUPERINTENDISN s Co. 606 Broudyw W ANTED-T0 trade my o house and lot in soine g dress Grocer, 505 East Broadway, Bluirs, Lu. SATURN, the Unton Driving returned to Premont g MAMBRINO BAbHAW (1759 Thes Will make the ubtil June Ist, ason of 150 whien will take his nl est thit nntil ‘tly sound and vigor rns—§100 ason with t promise e it the par YELLOW CABBACES 1281 East Pierc i MAIL ORDERS stoelk for town. Council AND NANSAMOMOND SWEE FINE INTERIOR DECORATIONS. Al lam Bloek, Rooni (2608.) Towa, \pinion two u ehes| igust 1st. Saturn Is o y yron ons for ' Neb ATBIGHE O CR: AND OTHER VEGETABLE PLANTS, FRUITS, ETC, Street PROMPTLY FILLED. WHY PAY HIGH PRICES — ) FOR(— - FURNITURE 1% made purse ot sult 0 hOW itly and PEOPLE'S A Wholesale INSTALLMENT MANDEL \, BEEBE that will not ban utify your home, dd IT HOUSE, in every 1ine You w heuply you can i & KLEIN, & COMPANY and Rewil Dealers 10 w0 Brondway, * FURNITURE. % udwe ‘\) aud .|.m-~ Dealers, send for Cutalog 4 ugd S0 Plesse Street, wwu &) SASH and DOOR hanles, il cone and build noand Mynste ] FACIAL BLEMISHEb Such as Pimples, Blotches, Black Superfiuous Broadway, TS, h Councll Blufrs, Room 610 N. Y. Life Building, Omaha, Neb. trom March 18§ POTATO PLANTS « Council Bluffs Ta, Gouncil Blufts, lows, = e Archltects N

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