Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 6, 1890, Page 6

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" THE OMAHA DAILY BEE‘:—MONDAY the only other one in the house at the time, hurried out for help, and soon returned with A physician was also summoned, but the young man was dead, it being appavent that heart discase had made the struggle but THE OMAHA BEE COUNGIL BLUFFS, OFFICE, NO. 12 PEARL ST. THE NEWS IN THE BLUFFS, An Unknown and Mysterions Burglar Cap- tured While Committing His Crime, have been t d of this month cllvered by Carrier inany part of the City. . W. TILTON, rs old on the mother had at Denpison visiting a doughter NO MORE SUNDAY MEAT TO BE SOLD. Busines Off Night Editor — e miNon m N. Y.P. Co, Council Bluffs Lumber Co.. eoal Work on the found way Methodist church has commenced Mrs. Mullis and Oliver is another sister and the one who was at ers Making it Hot for Cer- Deaters—Sudden Death of n — Brilliantly Wedded -News Notes. home when the death oc- n fireman and will spices of that association. Allen is a vetery buried under the a (Gleason is better prepared than ever to satisfy all who want first class drossmakir livrary building, Pea There isa fellow tehind the bar city Jail this morning who steacfastiy refuses name at all, Opposite the First Congregutional Rooms in the old his name, or Your Home, Why pay rent when you n will be devoted rdof health. lies and gentlemen up for the Sioux ¢ e will make the visit to Father Nugent quent pulpit o ture in St Francis X can build a home charge of burglary, he is ho will have a dificalt job to keep out of avy, for he was ¢ iing squarely in the act ational Building business in o'clock yeste of committing families with 3 s cost than the e same prope chureh yester- Nick O'Brien, Milt Sears, IPrank Hendricks and Jack White turning home, orner of Broadwa ront would boc more homes in process of construction. have fifty members ¢ Marshal Guanella is »s about a valuabl belonging to him which were stolen from a worth of the city. k Holst, who has been absent ays, returied lay morning. ¥ng a southern trip for nis health The funeral of suddenly yesterday, will oceur ying stock for an in- air of nhorses and Seventh street they about 28 per ¢ five times the profit of any posits, and it is absolut in all” towns interest, more than savings bank de- now contemplat n, who has serv who died so watched the ouncil Bluffs, fa. ) Brien and the oth- o . front of the store wh ers went to the rear. iter's chiscls 1y svered that the door 1, who was armed with which he hind a good deal of ¢ the store and surprised the fellow while at work on the he friends of without further weither yest cidedly slim attencd Signs. Losey & Jensen's, 11 Pear st. g on the ground ad been forced. Buy your lumber of The Judd & Wells Co., | Lake Manawa, but s found amusement and libe their Inhor there yeste Germans Ce Sr. Lovts, Mo., Oct day parade took plac spite the cold, d afternoon thirty —The great German noon and de- could draw his n Nick's pistol was leveled The long illness which the suff g one underwent so bravely, care and solicitude of husba men mirched him_ to the police station andt turned himover to the officers, od that heis a professional, that he is a thousand men participated. Each man carried an American flagand thera s many artistio flo fall of Donnroes e, call forth the t but there is a stron voung man who live. iderest fecling of sym representing the clien, the “sleeping beauty.” aso of political allegiance, Al position and pe: tiad a ‘part in the parade and a voice 1 followed it. The oficers sional crook watching two profes- onal sentiment this suspicion vefusal to tell he will stand nd serveout his apers found in his thened by his stubborn 10 the penitenti ¢ were witelie sl in getting an oppor 1y of the landing of the ants in Ameri today with a large pi that they did not sies first German tunity o do any possession the “Cle manner in which thebugelary was com mitted throws alittle lizht upon the myst de and speeches. The police catch during the first might last night consisted of foury: who were picked up in various parts of th ad an equal number of drunks men and boys in the city ock, who were abliged to spend the remainder of the nightin a place that was designed to sh Sunday Sc "The sunday school at the Jewish temple on Harney street was opencd yesterday for the summer vacation. unfavorable, eventy-five pupils present and the school wad organized. meeting of the_congregation on Mr, Katz was ap- to look up the vious in A. blocks further up the stre manner by the u the doors were Ttis thought the chisels found were stolen from the same car- Hurt's jowelry though the weather wi hold cighteen at the | patoih DU John Maher, Noyes, has alnost enti cts of his dangi care of Dr. Bellinger. Something of Interest naking preparations o1, 4 few pointers from the UNCIn BLUTES o fallline of furs, complete, and held yesterda pointed as 4 committe of building anew temple. rous wound under the Bostox Stonr just received our I feel ussured our S S USUAT, LOW ral's CousinSuicides, Wanamaker, er general, suicided in a hotel on is still at the hospital, from the painful effects of the same oftice Bbulldog revolver, y _muff, black, & 0, Woof seals, $3.00. Monkey, F3.50, $4.00 and 500, French seals, £2, $150 and §4, He left a note nothing to me any haa been drinking freel nner in which of a child was conducte: malignant diphtheri Children’s angor Three Hundred a from spinal meningitis. death and the fu The notices of the al publishedin the papers sche Zeitung lias received a that General Bardovis! were drowned during th in Russia by the collap confirmation was quite largely attended by friendts who were kept in ignorance of the real cause of death, By an unfortunate pers. annon Jdeath of A. T I T from diphith ted that the child died at3 o’clock on day afternoon, but it was happlly o m and duirng th were entertained of sympathizing 30 soldiers cent manocuvres e of a bridge. n's white coney in sets for ibe. r capes, §, $4.50, & and £.75. v, #1.50, %, 6 and $6 Monkey, seal trimuied, $15.00, Woofd seal, £11.00. AL, shawl collar, $13.00, roll collar, §12.00. beaver, $11,00. £1.00, $11.00, $11. voll collar, 30.00. PRINTS AND GINGTIANS, 5 light and mes dark fast, colored prints. large figured furniture prints, st the thing for com forters, ;cand 15¢ batting, free from knots and open out. in one slicet. Apron ginghims Dress ginghams misundarstanding the moriing the Sadiyesiordiy, Will Suspen the Cuban Tariff. The cabinet has decided to suspend the application of the new Cuban tariff penaing a roply to representat made to the United States government by the Spanish ministe Mabrin, Oct. 5.~ licd and great s ultimate re- unfavorable 3 opedand he wus consid- ered to be ina very dangerous condition, somebody is kicking about according to a \7 suid areal ostate Zither the reporter iew, which is ver the interviewed ludy was informea abovt rent rates in the city. are few vacant houses in the city, and none of the new tenement houses ar rental thad the investment justifies. Council Bluffs has cheaper tenement houses than any other ity in the 5 and §12.00. Nutural bea glies Mother-of-Pearl Workers ,—Thousands of mother-of- are camping in a for: Funds have “I motice that high rents in Conncil Bluff's, morning paper yest been started for their relief, P Catholics W Rowe, Oct. 5. is understood that the vatican has decidell toadvise all_Catholics to abstam from voting at the comiug elections atSe, 100 and 12! e, Something new in striped domets in light, medium and dark; also mixtures atl0c. Ask to see them. Armenia serge, 36 inches wide, at 12 ew styles in Repps ards for $1.00. dmpress plaids innew line of colors, 12}{e. ——— Killed by a Bursting Reservoir. the bursting of a reser- five persons were rent and bett Panis, Oct. 5.—F voir at Talonde today killed and thirty injured. ———— g of Holland Worse. A —A dispatch tothe Times from Brussels says the king of Hollind is suitable for w Miss Minuie Merkel entertained a number of her friends last Thursday afternoon at the home of her sister, Mes, W. W, Sherman, 517 The entertainment took the form of & high five party, and only young ludies were invited, oxclnded from pa Beventh strect, & | N, o Pears’ unscented, 1214c, Loxpox, Oct, Cap May, 20 Scented Glyeerine, 10¢, three for 2. the young men cipation in the feativities. S BREVITIE! fancy embossed Lirge cake of Vietor sam soap, at fie, six for eial - Wo car soap, also Fir's Bal- Louls Goldsmith was arrested yesferday for indulging 1n a fight. The members of the Telegraphers society held its regular Sunday afternoon meeting at 3 esterday. The meeting v the party was a most enjovatle one prize was tuken by Miss Mame DeVol, and captured by Miss ielen the following : full line of toilet arti- the booby prize wi f all kinds, hair brushes, Shephoerd, Th Misses Nellie Bowman, Mame Olin, Btevenson, Portefield, Store, 401, 403 and 405 Broadway, Council INGHAM, WHITELAW & CO. — PARAG RAPHS, eat Selling, Rundledt, Albright, VanOrden, Mergen, wood, Couch, 1DeHaven, Ofney, Keting, Wickham aod No Sunday ) An ordinahee Butts, Martin, J. C. Lorgan of Ohio is at the Millard, Joln A. Golden of O'Neil is at the Case; 'I. Henshaw of New York is at the Mur- markets open on Sunday between October 1 The law was enacted in b the demand of the butet selves, who desired o break up the pr vogue for years of keeping Fashionable Blmmons, § to made by Mrs, L., illes, #7 to $10. J. H. Mott of Denver was at the Cascy last that had been in open their markets on Sunday Intheir petition to the council ordinance was passed they argued that it was nota public necessit steam heating, sanitary en- tog, manltan oo James M. Woods of Rapid City is at the 043 Life buildin riam block, Council Blufts, M. L. Cook of Kearney is registered at the The best auc the state is I IT. Inman, Council Bluffs, Special attention to blooded stock sules, mercantile goods, Oftice 508 Broudway. and only operated | J. W. Haynerof Chicago is stopping at the branches of (. W. Scott of Wyoming is at the Mer- Prilliantly Wedded. J. E. Rogers of Chicago was at the Millard Richmond, Jr., with lis bride from her home at Boone, Ta. where the ceremony Thursday over home at No. 309 Eighth mondis a_civil enginecr, a graduate of Ann Arbor, Mich, anda young man of excellent nance was enforced for a while, but it gradu- ally become to be the butchers observed itand kept thei kets closed on Suuday has returned ey peor s toro nored, although M. M. Bussett of Peoria is registered at was performed last ey of Chicapo was at the Paxton They will make their during the winter There were noarrests forits viola- tion last winter and many of the butchers ap- pear to have forgotten it altogethe ason it seems that an agreement nd enforce it strictl Sunday in October and it T. Richards of Neligh is stopping at the J. M. Hutchins of Washington, D, C,, is at connected with the King ivon bridge and W. E. Crane of St. Joseph is in the city, at manufactuting comy who have an oftie Ol LIeralah o E. M. Steck of Pueblo, Colo,, is in the ci Ho is o son ] ¢ ) eilther forgot the existence of the ordinane clso wilfully vio- A. E. Auderson of Chicago wasat the Mur- of the butchers close were appointed committee tosee that all complied w They found 1 tho churen bells were chimin later the pro rrests were made bofore dinner: Leake, Scott Wilkins and is & daugnter of Mr. dent of the city band at Boone. swicty event and the wmong them a g oungcouple start on fourney undor’ with the heartiest well wishes, . W. Fuller of Galesburg, 11, is in was o brilliant of Lincoln is in the city,a e or four pl ruest at the M and an hour, | Euost at the A ¥ 2 Now York was at \ants last night, Miss Aunie D, Guild of street bas gon auspices and Half Howard Julius Lund, A complaint was also made against Rev. Henry Delong, but he Money at roly and realestate so wcityby B, H, Sheafo & Co Pemberton's Poetical Plea, Jumes Pomberton of We: ‘harged in the local police courtthe e day with having been drunk on 'h when the uhattan sporting headquarters, 418 butcher's stall in s grocery o 1 pper Broad- t ‘Wall paper atLosey & Jensen’s, 11 Pearl st nounds of stoak left ov News. Although a lawyer was appointed to represent him Pemberton and he did so with a good humor and an ingenuity that > marvel of the contended that he was not drunk time he was taken into custody, where- Lotey & Jensen paint houses, open on Suudays, but when a_couple of geni- tlemen called and wanted about that amount of steak for their Sabbath diun ingly opened his shop and let them have all that remained to prevent them woing hungry k from spoiling. want the steak as badly as they did the evi- dence that Henry had violated the ordinance, ay_went and filed a com* Hewill be arrested this Forrent—Furiished room. Mrs. 3. Ly man, 620 Willow ave. Fiue interior decorting Losoy & Jensen He Fixed Up the Shortage, Albert Johnson, the young man who was arvested Saturday night on the charge of em- bezzling $100 or $00 from his employer, I, M, B. Welker, succeeded in making good the shortuge and was released from the city jail shortly before midnight Saturday night. Mr, Welker clalms that the restitution was complete, and was made by & voluntary us- signuent by Johuson of personal property of sufticient value w cover the shortage. Saturday afternoon placed on all of his property by his employer, and the setuement wi surrender of the property by Johoson, nstituted will dropped and Johnson will be permitted to go away and commence life auew, aided by the kuowledge obtalned by a costly lesson that it does uot pay to do wirong, S constituted drunk so long as he was not incapable or he represented thatat the arrest he was quietly but de- Y “Your Honor,” continued Pemberton have formulated my theor which I beg your honor to hearand to lden Death, d very suddenly yes n this wise, Oda, Allen die moruing at the home of his He had made all ments for going to Sioux City morning to see the corn palace, and had even On pisiug early bo re- runk who from the floor Can rise and drink and ask for more; But he is drunk who prost Without the strength to ¢ This poetical the court so favorably dismissed, and it berton’s muse has what of & precedent attachment was Glen avenue, his arrange- purchased bis ticket. marked that he felt badly quently did, he took & lomon and was just presentation impressed that the case wi lie el that Pem- estabiished some- roan and fell backward suddenly gave & gr is young sister, who was outo the foor. A SPECTER-HAS THIS BEAT. Queor Taleof the Bupernatural from the City of the Kaw, FOLLOWED BY A GHOSTLY DOG. Ahout 10'clock in the Morning He Myeteriously Fades Away into A Maze Near o Big Elm Tree. “Dend Man's Beat™ was the gruesomo title that for many months clung to th portion of East Ninth street lying be- tween Woodland and Prospect avenues in this city, writes a Kansas City spondent of the Denver News, It is the most aristocratic portion of town, too, but nevertheless no policeman would voluntarlly do duty there, A somber hi tory of fatality clings tothe beat that in the pust few months has been intensitied with the glamour of superstition. The beat is haunted. Formerly not a man was ever assigned there but death or dis- aster overtook him, Junuary last, however, a series of ni manifesta- tions has given the locality anew name, and “Dead Man's Beat™ is now known as the place where the ghost walks. Every night, now, beginning at 8 o'clock and continuing until 1 in the morning, the phantom figure of a police- man clad in the h uniform of a win- try night, the high collar of his over- coat turned up about his ears, whether it he warm or ¢hilly, may be seen regu- lavly patroling up annd down thatstreet; and trotting along close at his heels is the spectral figure of a small dog. Up and down, up and down, ' with a blood- curdling regularity and a freezing still- ness the two phantoms pace the lonely and deserted street, At either end of the beat the pair turn with methodic preci- sion and pace the heat over again. Stend- ily the spirit patrol is ket up from 8 until 1, STOPS AT THE CORNER. At stated intervals, each half square, the speetral policeman pauses, stoops over and then his arm raises with up- lifted club and descends upon the edge of the curbstone: but like the phantom footstepsof the policeman himself, no sounds issue. Each half square is this motion of tapping gone through, but only an oppressive silence follows in- stead of the welcome sound of the lo- cust against the curb. The ear is strained in vain to hear a sound from cither of the ghostly pair. Allis si- lence—dead, chilling, unnatural, though such is the tension upon the nevves by the strange sight that one seems to hear the sound of theiv footsteps, the tap of the club, even the sound of their respir- _ation. Bach hour, at one or other of certain comers, the loneiy copper and the whost of the dog stops. while the former razes away in the darkness us if expect- ing to meet some one. They are “sche- dule points® where, in days gone by, the sergeant met the patrolman and ve- ceived the report for the hour. But no sergeant now appears, and after a few moments of hesitating expectancy, the noiseless figures of the paiv turp and re- sume their weary patrol, stepping off tho squares witha measured and mili- tary trend. Thus the long hours of the night pass,and 10o'clock draws near. There is a church tower not fae distant, and the bell m it strikes the hour with « distinetness that falls havshly on the ear, When the bell’s sonorous sound has cemsed the pair of spooks reach thesouthwest corner of Park avenue and Ninth street, and lesningagainst a huge elm the police- man shivers and draws his collar more closely about his neck while the little dog cowers at his heels, Time them by the watch! The figures of the spectral triin appear to fade away. Little by little they go, and thenjinallymerge into an indistict maze, and just a8 the min- ute hand points to theee minutes past 1 in the tall tower, they disappenr her and are not seen again until8 o’clock on the following evening when thenightly vigilof the two phantoms begins anew, as it has done since Janu- ary last, and will continue to do the policemen say, until the cowardly assas- sin of brave Officer Morgan is brought to justice. A FATED BEA'T, or many a long month prior to t ric night of January 1, thut fated b ut was under the ban of the polico as o Every man who had ever igned to duty upon it met withu it that it be- “tJonal been as signal misfortune, thus wa came known as *‘dead man’s beat. Denny Thomas was the first the strange fatalities that clustes about the neighborhood. It was about the time that the police department of Kansas City was re-organized on the metropolitan plap that Denny was put on duty there in the usual course of events, Three nights afterward he be- came ill, and a week later a sorrowful procession of his mates followed him toa. grave in Elmwood cemetery. Brave John O'Neil succeeded poor Thomas on the beat. One, night, fol- lowing a period of forty-eight hours of continued wakefulness, due to an_elect- ion, John fell asleep on duty and was canght snoring by the sergeant. He was summarily dismissed from thr force Juck Devinney took the beat. und one durk night, while making his rounds, stumbled into a coal hole that some man’s stupidity had left open. An hour later the sergeant, after a diligent search, came upon the death trap, into which he nearly fell himself. Flashing his luntern into the‘depths the sergeant saw the form of Devidhey stretched on the heap of coal belows Some time elapsed before the owner of the cellar could be awakened and fhe ambulance called, and when poor Devinne s finally reached he was ¢old and stiff in death, his neck having been brokon by the fall. TH FATALITI wth Ninth stroet patrol duty fras noticed. Through six successive ¢hunges in less than a ear did disaster relentlessly pursue policemansent to that fateful spot, an who hid’never been known to drink before was discha 1 for drunk- enness, although he pleaded in self-do- fense that the trying associations of the beat were enough to drive one to drink. Another man lost his position through incompetency, while still another met poor Denny ‘Thomus' fate—sickness und swiftly following death, sTmon Harris was the seventh man to take the beat, and two weeks after go- ing on duty there he was shot and wounded one night inan effort to arrest acouple of police disturbers, Though he nur\i\'vd{ns\\muul~ he was forever incapucitated for active duty, and he is 0w @ station house keepe After that there were no! more nssign- ments to the be The chief humanely refased to pass what seemed equivalent to a death sentance on his menand the beat thereafter went by lot John, Knowles got the first black bean and he at once re- | slgned frow the force, Pat Counors OCTOBER 6 to him through yoars he has rec You know his history well, and when ‘fov ntry, anold mén time the dreadful and after him the aborigines call the last thirty all ks descendants “Ebers, s of $3,000,000, which word was vod upward into Hebrews, a title with which we are not entirery unfamiliar at S0 the Hebrows were orig- | and in the his- | kable people we sce what groat blessings o roving nation may confer | upon the world, Now as the wholo pr ure will reside in the 1L, in an important sen ter aunounce my text hoodoo of the beat seemed its course, or itself tolittle detail will be nors covered the beat for to have run her to have transf ' askyo terrier of came to this cot as white as the present d wally only ** tory of that ren o Trmigvants, Amoriea did him men did you may do that say such things, My text has at ¢ they that feel such things in their hearts, i. o, the whole class of earnest beliovers. Does not this imply thatany man may enter this the rest of tho te fortunes were 2'legend of the pa SPECTRE DOG. But now to the dog Tug. appeared at the central ought that we are ass if ho chooso! “They seek there are thréo G used in the bible to denote sved here is p this means “fath 50 We come 1o the b He suddenly ition one day anth chapter and as you kuow “or they that came from no one knew, but as he was o vory clever dog and speedily amusing trick fourteenth 'verse things declave pl On the face of it this it as the oceasion of the apostle’s remark the had just been sp will see its beaving m thonght that all are really emi land toan heavenly and sin, and we freedoni of the life of faith aking of Abra- Wemust give up out into the wido and then heaven our Father's house, our enal Homeland especially those on night duty, liked to uecompany lonely vigils, But his popularity was He soon began to be looked George Whitney, u policeman to whom Tug WIS 500N Temov, Lyon was Tug s next master lost his place not long afte iling to pass the annual then transfe trikes us in the lifo of he chose to lea ) The first thing that short lived. Abraham is that s n hoodoo, blessed and et And now is the time to of Wellington young men at Eaton, wh cen a student and o to tho new west mpared to many of you who ¥ home lad béen most southern city of the and he safd this the Chaldees, t Mesopotimian district, and in 1 What he was as a stud I'he habits of his younge clung to him and followed him i clls of the natton and And even W Any respects rsian gulf at d 130 miles farther inland nd Ur was a seaport ¢ xamination, his allegianee to i followed him day ireless rounds of duty. One day Jones took adrop took much reduced to the ranks. The day thatJones’ chevrons were removed, Tug forsook him and at- ) sell to Jimmy Fitzgibhons, who was proverl -\ but too big-hes overtures of friendshin. that time extend than it does now after day on his o, his chiof ind rain and faith inthe halls Letus now in the conflicts and dea could boast shown tothe world many interestin e life of the ¢ ted to reject Tug's ¢ of them riclly edding Night, ornamented with artistic d Renwoon, Cala, Oct. sational and st night Louis twenty-two, marr abundant stores unned themselves in the old men vomarked when they of his brother office how faithfully the little dog fol- Their jesting proph- ladies prided themselves on and out on the which revealed the time of day. the then moder lowed him about. was only too true. seang into the Missouri river off asand-boat to save a drowning boy. The the officor diy dismal howling. Both man Jawns there w residence of her uncl party of friends was present and the King Urukh s e Was @ power! was on the throne, and liberal prince the work of nd boy wero her husband to compelled toreturn to Groner's roo to piss the remainder of the night lis house about 6 o'clock and was horrified twas not necessary to levy covered for weelss, ked and euffed off by ev ¢, as the embodiment of ill- After that Tug was : : or build public bulldings, He went back to Was 1o 0 to the next to appoint aud then they wereall ready for oper: As Nabuchadnezze wpture alot of slaves, askemisters over them, forsook the polic headquarters and went to station No. but even there his fate followed him, for a fow days afterward an over-turned lamp set five to the house and it wa sed and fled back to where for weeks he remao nd disconsol v Frank Morgan, the oflic arge of the station. This was the sit- Morgan suc **Dead man’s be: dently takon poison. No letter was loft uyd buiit tho hangl and Sepi built the py Urukh “ercet and temples by means of the geinding nd heart's blood of captives taken in Ur was alson literary pool and the London of an also the Flor libravies, and galleric however, that i for . had’ proved and that this was the ve Southwestern Commissiol DexveR, Colo., Oct If it was tho Hughes, for many years traffie manager of the Denver & Rio offered the comnis outhwestern IR of art, aud schiools of nomers gazed at s und hymus, eploits of the kingand the liberality their patrons, jewclers studied the taste of 2 ought designs which still astonish the world, and nobles s und made themselves nde road, has been sioneiship of the pocts wrote ep ceeded Connors on aram asking him to tako position came jowtly Huntington and was Nothing 15 yet known of Mr. Hughes' i tion in the matte dimmed by the long_period of immunity Connors had enjoyed. feasted on fat drunk on paln wine. as fast life, too received on Satur It was just before the holidays that Franis went on , vatroling tie beat gularly followed by his brother officers saw hed down, as it were, p of two jonahs, It was just the of a young man. was just such a city as younig prodigal i riotous livings. The wonderful thit should ever desire to leave this brilliant, fas- He sceems to hav devout disposition; loved' to commune cther he saw v s 80 highly 1 Colorado and has interests here thateven this will cause him to hesitate before accepting it Tug, and when Morgan, thus we v the double handi shook their he aguin predicted il 1o heed to the eron The night of January 1 a cold night, seemed at war, while a bitir and under the fierce gale plunged to waste his sub- A Cunning Cabby. L Copyright 1890 by James € cinating life. But Morgan gave rdon Bennett.) bies are so often fares that they come, by lon be expert phy one of these diseriminating jehus seized upon A passenger as a suspicious ch baving made the gentleman o pr shutting down the window, drove him off to e station, where he turned out to be a veteran convict His hansom served for the first tine as a thiet trap. 1 prefer not to i consequence, unprincipled Enough for us thit he summons to leave the gay life of the city, to £o_out from the of his father's house, to turn his bick upon teard the divi were blown from trees that were blown hither and thither. when once he drew his head well down into the mufiler; but in spite of his warm clothes the keen wind penetrated to his skin and chilled With bent hend, Tug 15, the ofticer pursued h Hour, rapping the pay had tasted of its comforts Engene Ficld's Bereavem L1890 by James Gordon. Bennrte.] He did not resery the first spasms of homesiakness cane upon addition to all this I would have you notice that his ehoice wasa volun- way. hour afte pecial to Tie B cagzo hus lost his oldest boy, a lud of He was twelve ye 1 T AT R alled and A braham wrapped his i great promise. Morgan made his had been at school at He died on Friday of acute peritonits, the sequel toa cold caught in London three weelks ago on a visit to his parents. overal time pany 1o £0 Wi wiis the wo! 4s the world's high- est example of @ life of faith. There have been many followers of Abraham his trusting walk " with recr is more inspiring than George an_ philosopher. port was to be made at 1 o'elock at the corner of Park avenue On that corer stands a huge elm tree, and Morgan leaned against it, seeking protection from the storm. probably standing at Frank’ s o wild night. flying dead leaves were rushing through the air, and the creaking of the swaying trees and the soughing of the through the telephone wi all around the rattle of s : combined to create a perfect wintry pan- demonium. and Ninth street. Spain Wants Rec —A rumor is current that auds to enter into Muller, the great Ger poor man himself he determined to take care of God's poor. He builtorphanage refuges, hospital or woman for a cent of money! the Spanish gove negotiations reciprocity concessions touching Cuban and OMAHA & COONGIL BLUFES DRIVING PARK. Fall Mecting, October 7to 10, 1890 $%,000 IN PURSE and he never asked SPECIAL NOTICES. COUNCIL BLUFFS. TANTED-A tinner, at once. In all the noise neithe; Morgan nor stealthily creeping up fromout the black shadows behind. Clos the midnight foe, until he stood directly behind Morgan, and_still the dog could erved himor he would huve Tho nssassin’s arm was uplifted and in the hand was held along knife that descended with force_into Morgan’s lightly turning to the left So powerful was the low that the sharp steel cut through ANTED-A first- Mary Gleason, 14 Pe 85 dressmaker and an Apply to Miss r and closer crept ~For sale cheap; full blood not have obse given a warn swift and res nd rent store i fixtures L, OUTOBER Y. POTTAWATT o | BLums, Jolinstor Trotting Riee PHURSDA K, OCTOBER 10, Patten, Ever spinal cord, so that death heen instantaneous. must have The murdered offi- cer fell suddenly @ iimp and inert mass, andin failing he crushed and kil for when found a few moments later the master, his white, woolly hair dyed erimson with Movgan's Both were dead and rapidly intense cold, -All Staltion Muin st., Council Bluils, Blufls, 10w Address all con one furnished o at J. R Davidson's, ¢ B L. SHUG AT, Vie R FIANN AN, Casbler, stiffening in 3D, BOMUNDSON. Dros. were they found by the ser the undertake gan’s watch h. utes past 1 o’clock, mar moment of h in business will sell stock of drugs wnd fixtures, all new wnd first clyss, at adiscount, It sold with ) ’s it wssishown that Mor- dstopped just three min- ing exuctly the s assassination, never learned who struclk the Morgan was not known to have hyd enemies, and the supposw tion was that he was taken for another policeman, Jim R, and who had incurred the deadly ed of a gang of young shooting one of their number. For several search was | but as no suc were finally abandoned. night following th ghosts of the murc the dog Tug were fir may still be y ng backward and forward through the lonely houvs, until 1 they fade and disappear at tho yme Restaurant for sulo st popular place in cowardly blow. % W Beoue. i or Rent—Garden houses, by J. R. Rice, 10 1Y pay rent wnen you e buy a howeon atne terms, and ase of your death eleave your famlly the home clear ontha following torms A honie worth # A homo worth Ahome worth 8 A home worth §10) A home worth 401 ited for the murderer, o812 Bor math attended it the efforts It was on the sion that the red policeman and Belts, Chest Protectors, Ete. \ DR, C. B. JUDD. 605 Broadway, Council Bluffs, Ta OFFICER BANKERS. Corner Main and Broad way. COUNCIL BLUFFS, 10WA. and domestio exchiunze pald on time TEND IS WANIED, above monthly. Juid & Wells 1o principal PUSEY, s Broadway, Council Riufts, Towi. Everyone who has on Cough Syrup invariably resorts to it again for colds. ete. “When vice prevails and impious mea bear Dealers I for Collections mado und interest When euts, sprains, bruises torment all the from care and hurt are se from pain t Salvation Oil, the standard lini- Uyhilw whi ho1ds 00 s WESTE Subject of Rev, W. J. mon Last Night. Tho subject of Rev. W. J. Harsha's sermon at the Fivst Presbyter was “Abraham and ful Men of Faith,” Harsha's Ser IOWA i i 7 MAIN STR Co's Jewelry Stre CITIZENS STATE BANK or Council PAID UP CAPITAL 5 SURPLUS AND PROFITS. .. ... LIABILITY TO DEPOSITORS The world owes more to emigrants than to r maoss, but the t 1 wish 1o talk to you “Council Bluffs, lowa' F. M. ELLIS & C0., ARCHITECTS And Building Superintendents. the subject of the who went down into Chaldea about six gener- am and did a great d and Rooms 244 and 240 Bluffs, [a Correspondenc INTEREST UN TIMc DEPOSITS,

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