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THE OMAHA BEE COUNCIL BLUFFS, NO. 12 PEARL ST Delivered by Carrier y part of the City. Comncil Bluffs Tamber Co., coal. ity council meets this evening. Acme club will ortain 0 socal this residence of Mrs. Simon Permit to wed was yesterlay given to Bybee and Cora B, Kobinson, both of buy cheapa fine team mules, togother ? shougd caliat Fred Davis' stableson Fourth street, L The lavdies of the Woman's Christian Tem- perance union will hold their regular meeting this afteroon at Ho'clock at thele rooms in interested in the Merriam block. work invited. The funeral of Horace Everett thisafternoon at § o'clock from ¢ b, neanbers of th ublic library sud the 08 0f incorpors 1 tion of the Oddiell 1l associntion were fi v b ean be meurred s $0,- pected that the Oddlellows will late erect a fine building. as received from Judge Bo Jing aunouncing th daughter Myrtie, agel ; ordny ufterionn at C from conges- of £10 each. The hichest amount of b on Sunday evening in answer to a telegram s 1lluess, was at lier bedside whenshe died and accomplished young lady, and her and friends ore heartbroken timely death. ‘Gis, ! Wwas having ot Of iS¢ Mmsolt. by when @ company of ! wnils mmarched inon him and fennerchor society p resontation spec [ ibibialatd the cine was also given by friends ain elegant sy chair. The mectingof the sof the Womens Christian Temp: afternoon at i o'c lc in their roomin the wn block. 1t will boof speciul interestio hould attend. n account of the state 104, whichshe attended i will bo afforded. sformation of the room effected by ds greatiy o0 4 it headquarters 1s been awarded an ex- Northwestern time finding army nunbering ren and sixty Charles 1. bray tensive grading contracton the D railroad, and is av the employmient for 4 small about five hundred and thirty Northwestern is building s double from Chicigo, and Mr. has a contract to grade twenty-two ~ new toad bed between 0 bon. Ty Ch ved his instructions us wd builder under sy J. Brown and Geu. G, M d tner 18 mo doubt that hewill get” throigh with bis present contract in good sh .Dodge, and tnere lecture at Corner book storeand Crockwell's. Aid the Broadway ats to ship a lot of 510 castern To 1 want column, Clas. T. Bray wi road laborers and teamste Bee his advertisement 1s the timo to order yours ledgers, ournals, ote., at Morehouse & Co., Council Owingto myloss by fire on October 27, 1 am compelled to ask all parties indebted to me to pay up aton e, J. SULLIVAN, Killed by a Gravel Train. nio, an Italin Killed by a gravel train on the Milwaulkee tenlay morning at 8 o’clock, or receiyed injuries at thathour from which he oelock in the aftexnoon, The accident occurred just east of the Mil- waukee yards near the Omahaand Council Blufls Chautauqua grounds, been in the employ of the company for some time, and was working yesterday with a lot of other laborers on a gravel train, The train was being switched after @ load of gravel Fiertinio was on a laborer, was Flertinio has pusted down the track by the engine reached the pointwhere at was desired to stop, und the Italin endeavored to set the wnaccountable manner his :d from tho brake wheel and le on the track infrontof th He endeavored to save himself and partly off tho track, when the whedls His ead and body wereon the outside of the rail, but the gravel car md the caboose pussed over his legs, in u horible manner from' the hips dowu- fell headlong mangling them He'was pieked up and taken to the com- pany's yard ofice ana 4 _telephone message sent for an_ambulance. it the St Bemard s surgeon, was summnoned. d that awputation of both sary, but the injured man the shock that the oper- ation could not be performed at once. Stim- administered,, mide to revive He was conveyed in examination show: legs would be nec was so prostrated erformance of tho operation, but kept sink- & gradually untils o’clock in the aftornoon, when death ended his sufferings. The body was taken to Lunkley & Porter's undertaking establishment and the 1t was decided to bold an inquestat 10 o'clock this morning. S0 far a3 could be leared Fiertinio had no this country except asecond cousin living in_Omaha, ‘Whose namo could ned, Howas inmurried and abot relatives in Tho Manhattan sporting leadquarters, 413 J.C. Blxby, stov gineer, 4 Gifo building, Omnaha; 200 Mar~ riamm block, Council Bluffs, ' i sanitary en- A freshinvoice of fuie oung men, just received at Model Cloth- cheviot suits for e v Honoring Horce Paul's church helda meeting yesterday afteroon for the purpose of taking proper action on the death of Hor- ace Everett. Resolutions were adopted ex- pressing the sorrow and regret of the oficers of the ehurchin which be bas been so long an active worker and member, and ordering the usual observances. T'he board of trustees of the public library, where he has built Lis most enduring mouu- ment, will meet this morning for the same Pe————— In the city counell touight similar resolu- tions will be presented and adopted. I'hiere are many expressious of sorrow and universally kind words for the dead man. He honor and integrity and never triad to shirk a respousibility or failed to meetan obligation s «ood s his bond, was o man of sterling His word was nd {f hopromisedto pay & man $10,000 at 3 o'clock on a certain day ho would be at the appointed place soveral min- utes i advance of the time. His punctuality and hutrad of cruelty were amoug the strong points of bis character. ——— The finest hotel in Counedl Bluffs today is —_—— Miss Grace Osbome will organize classes of the German language and litera- _Class work to begin November 5, “hér information enquire at € L'irst ave. 18U, OMAHA DVAILY BEK: WEKDNEKSDAY, N()V KMBER & s ve 0 oM DA LA N N NN lwn- mainly secured by improving lands e e avitn et e ant ma | GOOD - NEWS? FOR FARMERS. | M ok v mproving ead { THE SEWS IN THE BLUEES. Democrats Probably Elect Both the City and Oounty Tickets, his negro drollery — | ity of is diminishi Of Couneil Blulfs, PAID UP CAPITAL Ve e 10,000 SURPLUS AND PROFITS LABILITY TO DEPOSITORS Dirpcrons—T A, Miller, 2 O, Gloason, | Cllanman, Transaot general har ’ I’ CITIZENS STATE BANK - devoted rensed tion inc t.and while :t that our a8 wits b . Davis made constant tarzet for his | & From 1866 to 1886 the ar fun, and tormeuted bim continually, to the | 8oon to Be the Moat Prosperous Classin the | to our leading crops inc amusement of all except Fox himself, At cent, while our popu the depot, ¥ fox the train, @ com- Land, vinge this period 9 por pany of sh cemed much interested everything points to the n learning the history of the man in {rons, xfd 18 1% oo and one gentleman, who seemed to be the 4 Shuenrt, B, B, Hart, J D, Edmundson, Clir AN ITALIAN LABORER KILLED. BeAUTY o PoL1s oAl s Pl A 1| THE HARD TIMES ARE NEARLY OVER. s tho haste to possess Oklaloma, and ) s L EFARSRCL K s - D s oot Mlloronios, Swtile the il theefforts to reclaim by irrigation the Dmfgvm&cfimcmgsqfijxgom B RO O Wastbes foma, PrpLus Gt any ladies i o ri closer to satisfy mga it arid regions of the > e appears . 1 iz o Flertinfo Crushed by a Ml | {015 I L0 LU KaCROe b the crimi e S L v NO ODOR WHEN HEATED. ] INTEREST UN TIME DEPOSITS, wankee Gravel Train-Prisoncers which th ien had committed, This one | Director Collier of the New York Eie will not steadily inerease. e oy had committed forgery ; that one had stolen & % d ; ® Al EsNE Ut oert ol out mraduty 4 Taken to the Penitentiary horse and buggy: fnother had conmitted perimens Btation Says that the B e et Wi e, ob 65 teb bt 5 ALL COAL UNDER COVER, DRY AND CLEAN AT ALL TIMES —Minor Mention glary, and so on until Davis came to Fox, Agricultueal Millentum is :f"‘:”'”i"1:'['""h']‘“:""”’.‘l"':“l".‘;"‘1ly')"lll' - not t A AN AT ALL 115, an to tell in the plainest of English onige ’ ¢ ! and cotton. Tt s - - & N Wit o tind been mm; of. but tha ladies Now Close Upon Us, appears as o hazardous pradiction th OCARB O N (B D) AIJ (,)(). scattered in quick haste, and there further desire to satisfy their curisity On reaching the penitentia Davis was Wholasale and Rotail Dealors in AV O i AR Cxvaw | equal the supply of our agricultural pro- vecognized at once by MeGiee, thecolored man |, Pr Peter Collier, director of the New | it 0 8upL. 1 who is serving a fifteen veavs sentonce for [ York agricultural experiment s ion, Ay oF the o oy wi s the mase shooting another darkey at the Ogden house | in o recent addressat Ovid upo oty SR AL A S e SR ved o *"The A y 0 S0 ” & few years ago. = b - g aa _m.r the situation, and llml o words {-( Cuft Johuson, also colored, who twas sent Future of Agriculture in the United | Napoleon that ‘Agiculture isthe busis from here a fow years ago for murder, is said | States,” presented facts and opinions | and strength of all national prosperity, to beone of the Liardest working and best be- | which have a vital interest not only to | W ill be recognized as sober truth. haved prisoners in the peniten Ashort | o0 lturists, | v IaRG SAwaiting, then,ns 1 think we may,in time ago fire broke out in the shops, and Cuft [ Agriculiurists, but to everybody Who | wonijent hope the good tine so near ai was mainly instrumental in putting it out. | eats bread and meat, siys the New | jand, what, we may stop to inquire, are His action on this occasion bus ‘won for him | york Sun, Dr. Collier believes that | the duties of the hour und I would say much good feelng. Sheriff 0'Noill carefully avoids giving any | hard times for farmers are almostat an | fivst, study economy in production. Let publiity as 1o whea he proposes starting | end, and that soon they will bocomo tho ""'l"‘.".{f‘:“" ";‘? {";‘.“1""";'2* the away with prisoners, When a day is thus o800 LT probubilities which lie in this n pubilcly antiounced therearetoo many friends | MO8t Prosperous class in the land. He | 30,5 "4 talligont farmer. Two of our ther at the jail and depot to say their makes this broad prophecy: leadihg New York duirymen secure goodbys, and this is bothersome m:'l Lt “That agriculture of late years and at | practically the same averdge product in e oo Yand | Present has failed to bring tho pecuni- | butier from their herdsand their rosulls thoreis too much talk to suit theshexiff, | iary returns which it might all must ad- ln‘«l-'m-m'yli\- (]lni':;.;‘lllm-: [lllv nll‘\:ln-.u;u- r.--[ Hence he gencrally slips away quietly with | m y Mt P LT T 10 state. But one of them, ana often nothing is known among | o ';“‘ "" ut thoe prospeots for ““l f0- | hoso feods n ration costing 14 conts their friends about their departure until they | Ure of agriculture in this state and in | gaily per cow, the other, getting no bet- within five years and perhaps even sooner, the home demand may fully Awfully quiet, isn't (te? Yes, how is it in the other w “The sawe thing, Never saw It any more quict,” Toat the talk heard over and over at cach of the polling places, There was the usual numver of ticket wpeddlers, wagous With bunners, bands of music and all that, but during the day there were few crowds, httle loud talk and no disturbances serious enough to be so named. The votiug pro- gressed ratherslowly in most of the pre- nets, and the indications were against there nywhere near a full vote. ng been predicted that there would be many attempts to runin fraudulent votes, much vigilance was exercisel, A number of citizens had been sworn in as deputy United States marsbals, and the mayor had also put on an extra police force. These oMcials found little todo. 1In the sccend ward yes- terday afternoon one man was noticed, who innl (l.uwl 1I)|ln,'e, m;«l was again o li.uo ready | are safe in the penitentiary. his country are forbidding I do not be- | ter tesult, feeds hiscow a ration costing 0 cast another voto, using sorne absentee’s prmsasied- il A {eve, " i ing | exactly double, 28 cents per But nome. It was whispered in his ear that ks e LG iy DL Lk, 2 d 5 Experts and familics who have used the tea i tho lmparted Jupanose oa-pots sola by [ (IS PEER e L ISR 6 8 Lund brothers, pronounce it the best to be record us predieting that to the bes B T e B DL Drer obtained In thocity, It is direct from the | of my knowledge and bolief weare about | L1000 v day, asaving of neurly 86,000, custom house, frestly packed, hermetrically = ) | 000 & year. This is one of the practical sealed. The tea-pot alone vetails from $1 to | entering upon an ern of agricultural | problcms upon which your experiment / £, but you zeta pound of the best teaand | prosperity the like of which as a people | station is engaged andsome, highly beautified tea pot for §1. | we have never known, and which pros- ““But [ wish to say aword asto what - o — are going fast. 25 Main street. ) hie bad not better try it, and although at first he made a bluff deiial of his having voted before, he concluded to rotire, A few such Lduring the day, but the nt' watchers seemed to be in vreventing this kiud of work being done to uny extent T'he polls were kept openuntil 8 o'elock, thought optimistic, T wish to be placed | one centa duy savedupon the duiry cows N of this state m 1 a saving of over Wit pxcention of tho Fourth, and: £ perity 18 to b emanent. »! seems to me the wisest policy to pursue The above cut shows our new self-du i K eli v Rl v lore bRy, R RS B o - LA AL for the immediate future, We havescen | wagon, by which thise tons of oeal aeiopmping retail delivery f ary proclimatc J. G. Tipton, real estate, Broadway. In presenting the reasonsforhis opin- | i 045 fheve is HOvsE. DEMIBE it S ¥ can be unloaded in a minute being mado at ik ning of the polls, tho reoons. d OPIN" | that if thero is any over provuction and carried into the cellar or coal house if it is 20 feet aw No voting stoppe ock. At the polls kept N on, Dr, Collier deals with some signi- | must obviously be of those products | coal left in ' For boys' and children’s suits durably made and at lowest prices, call at the Modé Clothing Co. open after dark, there was a littlo bett portunity for ill thought that the cast. "This city and county being strongly demo- eratic the question of t vesult was one maiuly of ‘majority e accurate figures " the wagon. None scattered o ficant fyets grouped in an intevesting | which are exported, and they are very | clusively by us. 5 S SRS CHICH LS U ICUH AT He says: few in number; corn, wheat, meats, and CFIC ~ B AR (st Tot s seelcto Tearn the cause or | cotton constituting us T huve suid 92 por OFFICE,10 PEARL ST. Yard, 16th Ave & Fourth St of the present agricultural do cent of our exports. Onthe other hand, J, H, B, CLLARIK, Manager, COUNCIL BLLURERS, 1a v Ll L o 2l £ © | we import annually over $300,000,000 3 > % = o Lds pression, since obviously if it orthey | woprth ‘I,[ a \ 00, Yard, 310. ed oX= @ty voting, but it was any great number g An clegant line of Melton overcoats at re- duced rates at Model Clothing Co. Telephones: Oflice i sultural products, many of could not be obtairiel last night, and only Dr. Seybert. Res. Ogden house, Tel, 140, | can be removed the depression must | which may be, Iam sure, profita' 1y piro- shrewd guesses could be made, » g cease. Wefind upon investigation that | duced in thiscountry.for examyple T'ho polls « Naving osed without an exciting event spired duriug the entire day Only one st forillegal voting was made, and that was o colored man named Fred Stone. He wasarrested upon complaint of Democratic Challenger R N, Whittlesey at the Secoud ward. 1t was kuown thau he in- in this state of New York, at leasy | ind molasses, wool, hides, burl such dopression s not duo to | 4 horses theso ulone agg o diminution in the fertility of | gup fmported agricultural products, our lands, If we take the aver- | me it would seem wise to diminish by age yield of our leading farm crops, | littl the production of these produ Gents’ underwear in great variety at prices to suit all at Model Clothing Co., L. H Mossler, Mgr. gating T CTRE For L value, o 65 por cent of | MAGIC CURE fertis To A 7 —— Buy your coal and wood of C. B. Fuel Co., 37 Broadway. Telephone 1: DEBILITY, Wenkn Efoetsof Errors or ox Knlulx\ Noble MAN A 1 ! 8 X nioney “Whi 0 58 tocast a republican ticket and had —_——— corn, wheat, oats, potatoes, and hay for | Which arve in excess of our wants, and | refunded. troq hatshall Tdoon Chiristimas day d to qualify himself by stering at o ) sy THOULICE) i see 9 56 DI o $ashia uent, #1; full wourse, aled fro , Tmy gray goose should ran iw proper tlmo &nd ,,J(.,H.A,\,.,’ S BaOk The City Council. the past quarterof a century and divide dl““‘d:“"“li’:'::‘l]‘lff > those produets for which | {irvadion. Gook ite We don't expectonr n Fourteen members of the council were present ata brief session of that body lash night. A communication from Vice President Hol- combe, asking & permit for the Union Pacific railway company touse the sidevalk space on thesouth side of Jones strect east of Ninth, was veferred to the commtiee on viaducts and railways. A resolution was adopted giving the street railway company narrow the N Y ’ 1s the hom this period info those from 1862 to '70, [ [t ne montion only the 1871 to 79, and 1880 to ‘88, we find that | sugar and molasses, for which we theaverage acrenge yieldof these five | nually expend about$100,000,000. T hav crops, the aggregato value of which is | & sanple of sugar inmy possession repre 92 per cent of the total value of our |Sentngthe result of anextended o : ment with several hundred tons of ¢ leading farm _erops, had fallen ot but | wjjen [ have nodoubt ean bo produced 1.6 por cont during the sccond poriod | at an expense not. execeding oo cent o COUNBIL BLUFFS OWA from the average yield during the first | pound; and, within twenty-five miles of TR et e Sl e period; and the average yield of the | Where we now are was produced at u s made and interest puld on time third period was within 8-6 per cont of | great profita affidavit to swear in his vote and had to the polls tocast it, Whiltle: been infe city on the regist: O v had med that the darkey was in the urday and had been taken before s by Colonel Jones, but lad re- Ie was lockéd up in the a heariug toduy. 5 city was much smaller but 4 little The fivst ond, U358 thard, fourth, second sixth, Hrst precinct, St.Cluir Hotel, Cor. 13th and Dodgest | Dut weshallallow the fc aand Java e s bk 4 on Chirlstmas day: OFFICER & PUSEY, | Lnm Davis* 10 bushels of potate B1bs. host tea. The above zoods will getaway, and 1€ yon ofc plareany ot them you e we to particus © sime Corner Main and Broadway, e cash, and ure s i percent 3 u ample of syrup as good or IS WIHA'T YOU CAN DO FOR CASH: 104, curb liné on Thir mue, to give S g y Detter th ny s H lin tl Now lnted suzir fo « h Tho ballots. wore wenibly scratched, and | om for a double car track outside the | whatit was during the fivst; and this [y o0y IR BT B . xtraCsugie. oo Jutelh ther was fietlo prospect that the countin | dvesas, o5 | diminished yield is pertiups duo in g e 7 it of \Whta RUss AN 804 1o ‘Ao Dheta ehpa i s would becom | lays conmitte was granted further time to | Measure 0 loss eaveful cultivation RICH COLORED MEN, | ot ool vy s 50 Toiahine ol e prepare a roport on the daims of the street | which the low pricos of fann products R G vais finished on the head of the ticket in the fivst precinct of the fourth ward, It gave Reed 200, and Bowman 183, At miduight the indications were that Bowman would run abead of his ticket, but to what extent was merely matter of specula- tion. The chairman of the democratic county central committce was claiming bis election y 2,100 in the dist xamples of Ex-Slaves in the South Who Have Grown Wealthy. o ¥ It will probably be surprising to know On the other hand the averago ma thatin Galveston there is a colored man, Iket value of these five crops was, during | who is worth over $330,000, savs the the second period mentionad, only 75.6 | Chicago Tribune, IHis name is Sylves- sweeping contractor for September and October. The regular appropriation ordinance, amounting to $252,800.90, was passed and the council adjourned until Thursday evening. EE o PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. seemed in many ¢ did not justify. se8 to excuse, if they lms per pound . o 1o 150 I : 7 S IE A percentof what it was in the first, and tpl'.l!.!‘n(l. h\“l Imsvt; line lnunlr.iifln 1{u :}w Musbilrd rdines, pe feature of the day was the universal C._E. Babcock and daughter left yesterday | quring the thir sriod dr most desirable residence portion of e d Ji Sardines, por can AiCh{nE bE 0! W Grillaon demooratis ane | for Now: YOEk) to bo gona a el or amorass: | Ciring theithird ;peetod dropped to). an i adt Gt will most: siirprize| Ohii- Poited hiam, per can average of only 669 per centof what B re s, I S s sold 1o % pacpley his wife employs nothing | (OUNCIL BLUFES STEAM DYE WORKS but white servants. How did Sylvester during the first period. Iaview of this | get rich? Well, he gota start in poli- Allkinds of Dying and Cleaning ¢ great falling off in prices it appears to | tics, then ran a saloon and gambling | flighest Style of the Art, didate for district judge, and the substitution of the name of Wilter I Smith, the ropubli- can. At 4o'clock W. H. Ware, ' Smitl's op- ponent in Council Bluffs, conceded Smith' clection and ceased to nuke any further ef- M, B, Rosewater retured yesterday froma four weeks' visit with relatives in Cleveland, O, ——— DR, TALMAGE'S FIRST CIGAR. Deviled haw, per can .. wo oz hottle lemon extra tile vanilin oxtrs one intha | ¢ ad | | Lind St f allons gasoline 5 o for ¢ 21 De 5 W vears | Yabries miade to look as good as ne . fortcce [ L EoN me needless to scek further for enuses | house for colored mm‘flnh{;g Slen Joars, ,,1..."....l,‘\h..‘.u.,....x:’.:.»u\l red fu i’ ek on Ko E Ouly a few of the country precincts re- | Howit Tasted and How He Felt After | of the recent and present depression LA I I Specu- | the country. Sendfor price list. avis’ No. 10 persick i ported before midnight, Belknap townshi e > e i b | lated. He is shrewd and successful, C. A MACITAN. Prop., Dasvis, Biue . po 3 18 f ; Shu Rilnan tounatin Smoking it and I think no one can doubt that i rave Reed, 161; Bowma gain over the vote last Boies of 22, (i man, 92, republi side’ of Reed, 165, A net republican ar for Governor Reed, 1145 Bow- of 6. Kane, out- Bowman, 3. Kuox, Minden, Reed, 20; Bowman, 162, Reed. 9;' Bowman, 139, Pleasant, Reed, 25; Bowimnan, 106, For stout men’s clothing call at Modcl Clothing Co., L. H. Mossler, Mgr. . 9 X One of the most successfui and wealth- restoration of prices to something ap- | iest real estate men of Houston is a col- proximating what they were, a revival | ored man. His name is Milton Sterrett, in agriculture would speedily follow. I He owns a fine residence surrounded by immense grounds, all terraced off and | {o the shore. where ho died in & fow | et "o ¥ o b ither . g ! $o) & . whe an. Any grocer wishing tosellout, eall o cannot accept either the explanation planted in the finest flowers and shrub- | poments, This daring, hero sellou 1 on . ey deed W whollv of ‘over-production’ nor the con- | bery, and keeps o landscape gardener 1 | ghserved by o train full of passengers, ED. N, BROWN ’S. clusion that1t 15 long to continue. To | atténd it, ~He was a waiteron the hoats | i, from their position on_the bridge, 0. D % me it scoms that this over-production is | between Galveston and Houston ' before | yere unable to render help.” . D. relative rather than actual, that it fs | 0d during all the war, and made Fourth Street and Broadw e’ o thing he has in real estate deals during determined’rather by the ability to pur- Bluffs, [owa. the lnst twenty years. He owns several = 5 chase than by the actual needs of the | large plantations and isworth at least [ Otherwise, Dr. Talmage Says, the Fate orthwestern Depot, The time had come in our boyhood 1 which we thought demanded of us a ca- pacity vo smoke, writes Rev. T. De Witt Talmagein the Ladies’ Home Journal, The old people of the household could abide neither the sight nor the smell of the Virginia weed. When ministers came there, not by positive injunction but by @ sort of instinet as to what would be safest, they whied theiv pipes on Gold medal per X 150 Norton & Co y 140 Ly it lesis 1w 1e dashed anted is represented and 16 run with all possible specd, g o the pound. Welzh your goods aig ¢ into the water and pulled the dying man | G haecied by your Ll o aang Ear e BANISH T1HE NOVELS, Seo Gillett's v thoroughly understand T Masonic temple, Thursday Tand to — Corner book store and Crockiell's, the bucicstep, If the house could not | o umor, To takefor illustration o ur | $100,000. srircuanljaailGottiale BN I \ATTEND Te—— how little chance there was for adoles- | manufactures, certainly there is of these Then take Senator €. N, Buwrton, of Rev. T. Do Witt Talmage delivered in | Striotly to bus L Alendidmollo. BOSTON STORE, cent clgar-pufling. products of labor an énormous supply, | Fort Bend count When the war | New York the other night the first of a | bybim who holds to some mopiad syl CouniliBla "By somo rare good fortune which put | butdocs this in fuct surpassov as yet | closed and he was freed, he lived on | series on the holy land and surrounding WESTERN The cold weathe! sy approaching, Now | in our hands three cents, we found ac. | even. equal the reasonable desives or | plantation belonging to his mistress,| countries, The text was part of the | pe pie ar progressive, full of enordy, and mouey {8 tho timo to lay in ) Supply, - o | coss to o tobucco store, 'As the lid of | legitimate needs of our people? whose husband and two sons were killed, | {11 tv-socond vors : y s> of the 104th Psalm: making aclienies. They noed spe “He toucheth the hills and they smoke,*? | Pusiness The congregation were carried in IOW A faney to the scenes in - the museums ab | Lewts tn popular edueation. Jer pubtio ses ooy Nanles and at theentrance to the buried KA WOrK 107 Lor nereang frs city of Pompeii. **IFrom the pictures to HRNe 2 be seen on the walls in these mnseums.’” said the lecturer, **the City of Pomy ences fall term Sopt. 14t She seler's the was not fit to live, really practical for her Stndents. Normal B nd Penmanshiy courses. woil or, fully conduoeinl Stidents iy w time. Write for furthor particila oo, tralning fog bought an imumense stock of winter goods of every description long before the high tarift was spolsen of, and for cash, giving us every beneit, We give our customers the ful benelit of our purcliases, read the following low prices and judge for yourselves, but bet- ter still, call and compare our goods and prices with those of othier markets and the saving can plainly be seen. BIANKLTS, Wohave just ved another large in- voice of blankets, including white, scarlet, natural wool and sheeps gray, which will be laced on sule Monday moruiig at the folloy- ng low prices: Now, during the decade before the | leaving her alone in the world. She present century, from 1790 to 1890, the | had given him a good elementary educi annual per capita consumption of sugar | tion; he shrewd, By attention to in the United States was less than ten | business he soon acquired a good farm, pounds (9. In 1840t had increased | In a few years he added toit, and to only 15 . pounds. It doubled | bought in the plantationformerly owned during = the next 20 years, being | by his misty id had two othier large 81 in ‘1850, and during the past | oneson the Brazos in ten years more. 80 years it has again nearlydoubled, His old mistress being reduced to pov- since the present annual per capita con- | erty, he undertook to care for her. He sumption of sugar in this country is | said when he was elected to the state nearly or quite si pounds, Can any | senate that he owed all he was to her one’believe that with such arecord there | kindness, and that he felt it his duty to the long, narrow fragrant box opened, and for the first time we owned a cigar, our feelings of elation, manliness, super- jo-ity and anticipution can scarcely be imagined, save by those who have had the same sensation. Our first ride on horsehack, though we felloff before we got to the barn, and our first pair of new boots (real squealkers) we thought could never be surpassed in interest, but when we put the cigar to our lips and stuck the lucifer mateh to the end of the weed, and commenced to pull with an “Therefore God touched the hill at the back of that |-i|_\'] on ;I\u;;v11~L 4, in the year 79, and wiped the wickedest city on | 5 earth out of existence.” He argied that | Council Bluffs, lowa. science and revelition did not disagree 104 white blanket, 69¢ (special), energy that brought every facial muscle | 18 reason to question the general pros- | carefor her. And he sent her back to | ip regard to the anciont history of this 3 —Iustico of the Peace. Ofico o 10+ white blanket, $1.00, was 1.19. T At arort tanion oo satisfaction | perity of the country? ¥ her native state—Virginia—and regu- | world, “We will hold on to onr bibles o | No SCHUEZT{intie 0f the Reace, O oroy 10 wriia bianksh L7k e with this world was so great our tempta- | **A8 with sugav, so is it with many | larly remits to hor, and has dono so for | little longer,” hosaid. Al the brains | Browdway, Councii Rlufs, Towa. }:fl },‘i:"&‘f,c‘,’n"i,'i}.“'is.f’i“"‘x}""f & i tion was never to want to leave it. another article of consumption by our | fifteen years, $150 every month. He is [ of this country and of the world are com- i1y ooy 114 white h]mkl:-,“‘g'; A The cigar did not burn well; it re- | P8O ple. It .is estimated “that the per | popular with whites and blucks, dem ing out on the side of the bible. Wash- capita consumption of breadstuffs | crats and republicans, and studied inw amounts annually to an equivalent of | so that he could depend upon himselt to fully 8 busbels of grain, mainly | manage his immense plantation and wheat and corn, ‘making the fullest | ranch interests. Senator Burtonis worth bread ration of any nation in the world,’ | over $500,000, “'Glod employ oos for the de- | o ————— as the statistician of the Department of | Then Henry Black, the sheep and cat- | gpuction of cit teried by one | SPIKCTA L NOTICES. -— A : hiad i it o 0 | y one | (S]° LY / CES. Agriculture declares. Indeed it s | tle ranchman of Tom Green und Pacos | particular sin, Of the soven’ cities . proverbial that as a people we are al- | counties, is worth mnearly #300,000. Fe | \hich have been destroyed by voleani COUNCIL BLUFF3 most prodigal in our expenditures for | has madeit all inless than fifteen years. | action the sin was always the same. = e food supplies. But I wish to call atten- | Are these men southern negroes? Yes, | ifthe Russian, Prench and Am tion to the several points which to me | every oneof them. literature of o purticular appear to prove that we are upon But the largest plantation owner and | gopy i3 the eve of what I believe will prove the | the heaviest farm land tax pay 114 all wool blanlket, £.00, .75, which we guaranteo all wool, full siz, and best £.00 blanket in_the markets, California blankets in beautiful colored borders, heavs Welght and large size at §.50,89. 0)and 1200, 10-4 gray blanket £1.19, was #1.:31 104 gray blanket §1.45, was §1 114 gray blanket §1.75, was §2. - gray blanket §2.75, was § i all wool, extra large blanket $4.25, was 5.00. Wehandle afull line of Dr. Price’s sanl- tary, all wool blankets, which we can recon- mend to be made from pure natural wool, four different mixtures of natural quired an amount of suction that tasked our determination to the utmost. You see that our worldly means had limited us ton quality that cost only 3 cents. But we had been taught that nothing great was accomplished without effort, and 50 we pulled away. Indeed, we had heard our older brothers in their Latin essons suy, omnia vincet labor; which translated means, if you want to ake anything go, you must serateh for it. Vith theso sentiments, we passed down the village street and out toward on was u believer, G ever. Ruphael, [ thoven and Mozurt wstone s a | Sims &Sflunflc[s*""“""'y‘ at Law |'|.\pa » b Lic the s o dol, Hhydn, | tederal courts. Roonsih 4 and > i) were allbeliev- | Beno block, Council Blufts, low 11 12 demoral : not lanished from our new ¢ inthe [ stands and the ladies’ parlorsin this 2010 uiul bourd tion. Apply to Council i, Tow taral | ountry home, Our head aid not | golden ‘age of oip agriculture, rich county of Lemar was a light col- | country God will let loose some of the | VWANTED-A sirl. o Falens kravisdihie pragn LAY TR e e ;h"}‘s:‘:w‘:‘\}ewf’" 81, qhe ;muuiuuun.(v“lw country is | ored mulaito named Harvey, e died B e s chained up in :}«‘m.\.'.‘.f"' Jsdvor (it s§4.50, 114 blankets #, 124 | to rook from side to side, so that it was | Yery rapidly dicreasing; from 1800 to | a few weeks ugo and left a widow, who | the center of the carth by touching ‘the | “Xt=00h I Avenlg, A2 o blankets .75, Wealsoshow exira value in | uncertain to us which side of | 1870 it increascd 23 per cent., and from | will be able to pull through, probably, | hills about our citiecs. "There isalso a [ JPOR SALEor Trade—Large black Juck. <ixe :l-xt;l'ut”bl::xlfm:;ut u;;, all wool blankets | (he street we were on S0 we crossed | 1570 to 1850, 80 per cent.; so that, if the | as her husband left four large plant voleano in political life, as well as do- teen months old, A.Sehultor, si6-1s rouds 3, .00, $1.25, & aud 2 iy Sy i same increase is continued, as there ap- | tions, a fine stock farm, some eity prop- | mestic and social, and purifying is | Wa% CouncilBluis, Tova. Notwithstanding the comibination on com- | OV¥; Put found ourself on the samo side 1 ying N o St e AR _ | pears no reason to doubt, the present | ort Parisand a big bank account. | peeded or the voleano will burst “forth,” JANTED-A zood gir] to do zer houses fortables v own oue gools 10 per cent butz | 0 NS 0, R DT e s ware o | consus will show a populution of G320, | Besides this, he left hor o suug litrle in: YRR | W S e LR pogguoral house- 1o save you the same on all purchases. both 'sides at the samo time, and several | 000; but the ingrease of these living in | surance policy on hislife sor $18,000. English Farms Vacant. DOR RENT — Tho MoMahan (hrestorg Examine bargains at i5e, $1,$1.19,§1.5, | fast teams driving betwee We met | cities has been more rapid. There were e Anenormous number of farms have brick block, No, # 8, Mg L With elevicton #.50, 8.7 to #.75. Bostox ronr, - | another boy who usked us why we looked | i 1880 nearly 13 times s many people in © A Heroic southern Girl, pecome vacant this Michaelmus, and all | 4. V. Saulre. el : Fotheringlam, Whitelaw & Co., :0 pule, and we told him we id not look | the United Statos as in 1700, butover 86 | Judge James I, McTeer, a memberfof | over Englund it appears to be extremely | 0k REN of g Land Leaders and promoters of low prices, pale, but that he was pale himself, We | times as many.living in cities in 1850 af | tho bar of Virginia, and who happentd | probable thut lind owners will haye | 1esr Counell Blus witl g buiids - 401, 403 und 405 Broadway, Couneil Blutts, fa. | L%, 0 inder the bridge and began to | it 1890. 'The increase of population was | {0 be on the Louisville & Nashville train | them thrown upon their hands, asin | ¥giires. prseson A as ' from 1860 to 1870, 28 per cent.; of those | coming to New Orleans the other night, | most counties there are half a dozen living in citigs, 50 per cent.; the in- | furnishes the following to a corvespon- | vacant holdings for ry eligible crease of poptlation from 1770 to | dentfor the New York Times: applicant, says the London World, In A No. Lreferdnces; good Dookkecper. K 1880 was 0 per cent, but of | ] wasa passengertoday on the Lo Hampshire, Kent,Sussex, and other coun- live oftie. Cou noll Hiuirs. throse living in eities 40 per | yille& Nashville train, which was five | tics, where the principal land ownors OO BENT Gond five. rooy cent; from 1860 to 1850 the increase | hours late. Before reacthing thoe long | alvendy have thousands of acres unoceu- ot wuses diferent in population was 60 per cent, but of | bridge boyond Biloxi the engineer, | pled, the prospect is really very serious. those "‘1"{" in' cities, 123 per cent | running at full speed, observed a negro | It is nearly & Nearly one-fourth of all our people live | on the trestlework near thenorth end. | farmson an in cities, and since then the number has | The negro, obse vastly increased, and I think relatively | train and h reflect on the prospect of early deccase, and on the uncertainty of earthly ex- pectations. We had determined to smoke the cigar all up and thus get the worth of our money, but were obliged to throw three-fourths of it away, yet knew just where wo threw it in case we felt ttor the next day. The McKinley Bill Has not affected the prices at the People's installment house. Everything goes ut the sameold figures that have made our patrons gladt ul suinmer, defed compeiion a:id mado U possible to furnish @ house from top (o ot tom atlittle expense. Our specialties this weelwill bo the” Peninsular heating stoves, chieapost, neate i o Aol ek oouomiul stove In § ¥ Getting home the old people were the world, Mundel & Klein, 820 Br ) uadel & JMelo, 820 Browiway | 1 iened and demanded that we stato Dr A. H Gillettof Chautauqua fame will | what kept usso late and what was the WWANIED- By W married man, position i Store In country towni 12 yoirs' oxperls ’ [ ) r lots for sule on impossible to let arvable [ andlot £ ders stree cheip. J. It David for Jouse ternis, and oven good graz- Ol for aching | ing farms willonly find tenants at r d ving the apy 3 caring tho warning sig- | duced reutals, The Kent hop fams wre | W Complote sot of tinien (00m five lis licturo on Pulestines with stare | matter with us. Not feeling thut wa | 50- We sec, then, that sgriculturally | mls, turned wide and cling for | veporied to be diflicult to let even at half | 1,408 JPall stoct ot thnware i g al optic illustrations, at 7:30 p. m, Thursday, | were called to go into particulars, and | the consumers aro increasing far more | 4 moment to n telegraph pole. He then | the present vent - - November(, at Masonic Temple. The lecture g rupldly than the producers, left his place of safety and ran for the - *2, The number of farms in the United | pext pole, in his excitement forgetting Church vice by Tel States has nearly doubled (96 per cent | to jump to the water, a distance of per- | Church service is now supplied to the ,—i"'hlllvfll ill l'u\'l 19 elose out, . for hard maple house movl hone, Jacks, I D. Ay & Co, 020 3 t 0 t wishing to increase our parents’ ap- is under the uuspicos of tho M. M. A, and | 1° o the procoeds Wil bedevoted to the now N, | Prehension” that ve were TR e brooeds Witk be Gerored 10 out badly, we smmed up the case with ) o » 36 : whi AR oy Fdrg e i g (T ULES—For salo choap. & span of £ood e the statement that we felt miserable at | inCrease) from 1560 to 1880; while tho | haps fifteen feet. Despite thoengineer’s | public by telephone in Bivmingham, [ NULES I b #pon. of g0 Taken to the Pen. {he it of the stomach. We had muss | BYerage acreage in the farms hus dimin- | warning signals, he stopped; bowed his Fogland.. Trausmittors are seiupin | A pioring mules with haro Fomtn sreey ished during this samo period 33 per | head and the pilot of the engine crushed | the church, so that subscribors to the | neur Fifth wvenue, cent; both facts of very great signifi- | his skull and knocked him into the | telephone can hear the service and the | rrawo shuere tarms for snie near the oy o cance as evidence that the area of arable | water, where he floundered and strug- | sermon at their private residence, if de- bargain, W.A. & U030 Wald s land was diminishing relative to the in- | gled for some minutes. The water was | sired. At the end of the ch: — Sheviff O'Neil has returned from Fort | tard plasters administered and caveful Madison, whero he took five prisoners, sen- | Watching for several hours, when we fell tenced to terms in the penitentiary. They | 8slecp and forgot our disappointment woro: Wilson, oueyear; Grundy, elght :‘,'l‘:_‘ow'“;"';‘}g,“‘:g':w‘_‘,‘ oeing cbliged 10 | roue in the mumber of those who de- | two aud a hall feet decp, and five or kix | on thtop of the Lectern and the read: | R, SALE-Thestock and fxturos otu wolf O L anarma,ux Joacni Vo3, oo yeary, aid ) oioor . sire to engage in agriculture, big, stalwart negroes stood by and re- | ing desk of the pulpitthe small metallic | stock and rentstore wid Axtures: alw i oy g e gy Bk o any startling incl- —_——— *3. While the area in farms increased | fused to run in and try to save the wee- cased transmitters are placed, and they | &¥earold cols for salo. Inguice “of ¥ dents, Fox, who blubbered so freely on re- The Rate of Reading. 118 16th e s, from 1860 to 1880,82 percent the improved | fortunate man’s life. are 8o regulated that the sound is gath- | S0/t & for land in farms increased 75 per cent, *From a house near by a beautiful girl | ered in without Yequiring the voiceto | J{WOR SALE or Rent- showing thut increuse of tillable lands | of some eighteen summers was seen to | be directed eapecmll‘ ceiving his sentence, and who scemed to be Anaverage reader gets through 400 40 Dadly shaku by the thought watbe, s [ words a minute, £ ud arden land, wit ¥ to thew, mulfiun-, Ly J. I Rice, 102 Main st., Lousd