Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 18, 1882, Page 7, Image 7
THE DAILY BEE TUESDAY , JULY 18 1882 7 O. O. OOcaOK Ac CIO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS , Cltj- Market , Council niuffi , Iowa , ' * , , - - * - * * . FLOUR _ . - - .iijLixxjj\fUrt HOUSE. rr gasaay g 1- " - " - - - risr WIIOLKSALK AND STATIONERY AND PRINTER'S COODS , COUNCIL BLUFFS , IOWA. Tl JLE ABSTRACT 0 F FICE. J. "VST. * _ < a XT DC 1C 3E1 Ac C < 3 > . Lands and Lots Bought and Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES. , NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS - IOWA. ' _ _ _ _ IBL 'Xij IEiSOISr , 15 North Main Street , WHOLESALE DEALER EN SHOE FINDINGS. Bead-fitted uppcre , In calf skin and kip. Oik ami Hemlock bOLK LKATHEll , and al cods appertaining to the shoe tr tile , On d < sold as cheap M In the Kurt. PERIS' ' Biff IILLIKRY STORE FOll STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND OUILDUEN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. Council Bluffs Ia. That never require crimping , at Mrs. J , J. Good's Hair Store , at prlcia never bcfcro touched by any other hair dealer. Ale a lull line ot switches , utc. , at ( .really reduced prices. Also gold , slhcr and colored nets Waves inulo from hdlcs * own hair. Da not ( all to call before purchasing elsewhere. All gooda warranted as represented. MH3. J. J. GOOD , 29 MMn street. Council llluCfa , Ion a. limit ioi8ii At Bryant's Spring , Oor , Broadway and Union Sfcs. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain , Medicated , V'por , Electric , I'lungc , Douch , Shower , Hot and Cold llalus Com petent ii ale and Icinalo LUrrca and attendants always on hand , and ( ho bent of ra o and atten tion eh en patrons. .Special att ntlou given to battling children. estimation aud patronage eollcitodDK. . A. H SruoLEY & Co. , 100 Upper Broadway. Dr. StuJley : Triatmcnt of chronic diseases made a npiciilty. REMOVED without the OAUCIRS draw hit ; of hlood or uao of knife. Cures lunp didcasis , A\m . Fit3' Scrt'uU. L1 * or Uoln- i.i. I u i n i' iv. _ . ji'alnt , Dropsy , Ilheuma- T II M fl R S tlsm , Fever and Mcruir- I U III U II O , M 80reji Krjnipeias , Salt Khcuui , Scald Ho.id , C-Uatrh , wiuk. Inflamed and granulated Ej cs , crofulous Ulcurs and Ke- lualo OU > aso of all kinds. Alia Kidney and Vencrlal disuawa. Ilmnorrholda or Plica cured money refunded. All diseased treated upon thoprlnclp1eof\Crct- | ! ) lo reform , without the use of mercurial pols- ona or the.knifu. Electro Vapor or M'dlcatod Biths , furnished who deairo them. Hernia or Itupturo radically cured by the use tha Elastic belt Trutsa aud 1'laatcr , which has Jr ( U | > erlor In the world. CONSULTATION FREE- CALL ON OR ADDRES3 Drs , E , Eiceanfl P , D.Miller , COUNCIL BLUFFS , Ia. LIVERY , Peed and Sale Stables , 18 North First Street , Bouuuet a old Btiind , Council IliuQX lovva , WIL1.AKD SMITH. I'rop. W.D.STILLMAN , Practitioner of Homeopathy , consulting Physician and Surgeon , Orllce and residence 016 Willow avenue , Coun- cl Ulufl , Iowa. Iowa.W. W. K. SINTON , DENTISST. 14 Pearl Street , Council Bluffs. Extracting and filling a specUlty. First-class work guaranteed. DR. A. P. HANCHETT , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office , No. 14 Pearl Street , llouit , 0 a. m. to 2. , and 2 p. in. , to 6 p , m. Residence , 120 Bancroft street. Telephonic connection with Central otllce. F. T. SEYBERVM. D. , PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. COUNCIL BLUFFS , - - IA. Offlco No. C , Everett Block , Broad way , over A. Louie's Reatuuratit. lercknts Restaurant J. A. ROSS , Proprietor. Corner .Broadway and Fourth Strcetef. Good accommodations , good faro and cour teous treatment. S. E. MAXON , - * . DEC < 3 3BC X Ht JEI O T. Office over savings bank COUNCIL BLUFFS , . . - Iowa. REAL ESTATE. W , 0 , James , In connection with his law and collection builntsabua and eelli real estate. Persona wishing to buy pr ecll city property call at hia office , over UushueU'd book store , Pearl atreot. EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 4l5Broadway , CouncilBluffs Cetdi andmortgaKei drawn and acknowl ged WATER WAVES , In Stock and Manufactur ed to Order. \Vavoa Made From Your Own Hair. TOILET ARTICLES , All Goods Warranted as Represented , and Price a Guaranteed. MRS. D. A. BENEDICT , 337 W. Broadway , CouncilBluffs ; - - - Iowa _ MR8 , E , J , HARDINlCM , D , . Medical Electrician AND" GYGNEOOLOGIST. Graduate of Eloctropathic Institution , Phila delphia , Po a in. Office Cur , Broadway & Glenn Aye. COUNCIL BLUFFS , IOWA. The treatment of all diseases and pnlnful dlf- flcultlos peculiar to fomalca a specUlty. J. G. TIPTON , Attorney &Gounsellor , Office o\er First National IJink , Council DluOs. Iowa. Will practice In trio statn aud federal courts FRESH FISH ! Game and Poultry , Can always be found a D. DANEHY'fl , 130 Upper Broadway JNO.JAYFEAINEY , Justice of the Peace , 014 BROADWAY , Connoil Bluffs. - - Iowa. W B. MAYES , Loans and Eeal Estate , Proprietor ol abstracts ol Pottawattamle county. OIHco corner of Broadway and Main aireett , Council Bluffs , Io a. JOHN STEINER , M. D. , ( Doutscber Arzt. ) ROOM 5 , EVERETT'S BLOCK , Council Bluflu. i/lseasea of women and children a spoclalty. P , J , MONTGOMERY , M , D , FllEB DlHPENBAIlY EVE11Y SATDIIPAY. Office In Evcrett'i block , Pearl troet. llcsl ) donee 6 * 8 Fourth street. Office hours from 0 to 2 a. m , , Z to 4 and 7 oSp.m , Council luffs F. C. CLARK , PRACTICAL DENTIST. Pearl opposite the postofSce. One of th # oldest petitioners In Council lilutfs. Balls Ufactloa guaranteed In all cases DR. F. P. BELLINGER , EYE AND EAR SURGEON , WITH DU. CHARLKS DKCTKEN. Offlco o\tr dm ; store , 411 Iroaday ! , Council Itlulln , Iowa , Al dUca es of the eye and tar trotted under the ino t appro * ed method and all JOHN IINDT , ' ' ATTORHEY'-'AT-lAW , Will practice la all | BtiU and Ui.ltcd Htata * CourU. Speaki German NATUKAL HISTO.H7. Put Cp In Two-Pound Cans for Family Ueo. Detroit Free Prtsi. This is the lark. Take A good look at the picture , BO that you may recog nize the original when you walk out. "Is the lark an early bird ? " "Very oarly. lie li always out of bed by the time the first saloon is open. " "What are his chief virtues ? " "Ho hasn't any. " "Docs ho sinR ? " "Ho docs. Ho sings his best about midnight , and ho hns boon known to wake up policemen sleeping iu a stair way four blocks distant. " "Is ho i-.isJIy domesticated ? ' ' "Oh , yfs Ho will sometimes per mit himself to bo carried half a mile on a wheelbarrow , and it is very rare that ho ovinccH any timidity iu the presence of a largo Central station au dience. " "Wl'at is his chief valuol' "His right to vote , and hia readi ness to sell out to the highest bidder. " "Would it bo a sin to kill a lark ? " "It would bo against the law. Theru is no need to kill him , however. Hia lifo is short and full of cold and him- ; ; or and rags and insults and hard knocks , and nobody remembers whore lie is buried or cares what became of liis bones.Vo will now turn to the picture off "Ishoararobird ? " . "Ho is that. The species used to bo so plenty that ovary city had them by the score , but of Into years the fool- killer has got in his work jo well that only about a dozen mashers can non- bo found in the whole United Status. " "Ho has a sweet look. " "Certainly ; ho has stood before the glass for hours to practise on that look. When ho parts his hair in the Centre , waxes his little mustache and takes hia dear little cane in hand for a walk on the street , ho calculates that sweet look \ \ ill knock down every second end lady he meets. " "His plumage ia voryfino. " "Oh , yea. The masher always gets the best , because ho beats his tailor and leaves Ins wash-woman to sing for her money. " "Is ho a valuable bird ? " "His carcass is valued at from two to five cents par pound , according to the price of soap. " "Then the species will soon become extinct ? " "Yes ; in a few short years the masher will bo known on earth no more. The Smithsonian institute and two or three medical colleges will have sptcimona preserved iu alcohol and skeletons on exhibition , and old gray- headed men will have a dim recollec tion of having once seen the animals promenading the earth. " Druggist's Testimony. II. K. McCarthy , druggist , Ottawa , Out. , states Unit bo wax nfllicted witli chronic bronchitis for some jenru , and WAG cninplotfly cured by the USB of THOMAH * ELKCTUIO OIL. july7dlw The Yellow-Cart Craze. Now York Letter to Cincinnati Enquirer. .Tho fashionable girl now distin guishes hertelf by wearing a yellow cart. It might ba rnoro correct to say that the yellow cart wears the fash ionable girl , or that they wear each other. Anyhow she may bo aeon in great numbers in Central park , riding in a two-wheeled vehicle la consider able bodily anguish. The cart is a clumsy little box hung very low be tween wheels and usually attached tea a horse of ungainly gait. Every stop of the brute hoists and dips the box fore and aft , like a boat in a chopping sea. His slightest movement is felt by the girl. His regular Htrides make her constantly away forward and back ; when he switches oil'a fly with his tail aho is thrown nearly oil * her bal ance ; when ho suoezes aho is put into lively commotion ; when ho shies or stumbles she has to employ the skill of a circus rider to save herself from being thrown overboard. The four- wheeled vehicles formerly used wore comfortable. But what of that' Fashion aays we must use two wheels only ; and 1 suppose if fashion ordered us * to ride on u bicycle hitched to a horse's tail wo'd try to do it. I am bound to say that , under the exasper ating circumstances , most girls are able to do very well with a carl. A man in a cart I regarded as an object of pity. Ho was usually ashamed of his position to begin with , and showed it in his sheepish manner. Ho was in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred unable to adapt himself to the jerks of ( the vehicle , but tried to sit bolt upright , and failed miserably. Besides , ho felt that lie was an object of ridicule , along with the absurd ntylo in whi-h his fair companion handled the reins. She hold her arms outstretched , of course , us if her horse was going at 2:17 : instead of 7:20 : , and was constantly jerking at the bits to keep the animal up to his laborious trot , When you see a woman under take to throw a ball you have her at her worst ; but , with that exception , she is unBurpaesably bad at driving a horse It is a great compliment to my sex , therefore , whenlafh'rm that most of the women in the carts were bewitching - witching amid all their diflicultioa. Part of this effect was , no doubt , duo to the toilets. Fashion this year per mits the wearing while driving in the park of such gay costumes aa have tierotoforo been restricted to houses , [ awns and verandas. No HumbngciDB the American People Vou can't humbug the American people when they find a remedy tbat HuiU them ; .hey use It and recommend it to their 'ricirulrt. Just exactly the caxe with Sl'ltlNO Ih.cmoM which lias become a household word all over tbe United States , Price CO centH , trial bottles 10 contn. july7dlw Snoop on Smu.ll Farms. Many affirm that it is no longer profitable - fitablo to keep sheep on binall farms , especially wore the land la quite vain- ablo. They declare that small farm ers can not successfully compete in the production of wool with the men who iavo largo ranches on the great plains where land can bo obtained at u nomi nal price. So far as the production of wool is concerned it is apparent that hu persona who have large ranges poa- DOSS great advantages over mnall farm- era. Still email farmers can engage n aomo departments of ahoep hua- jandry with a good prospect of mak- ng money. The breeds of sheen that iroducu the finest mutton do best in qiito small Hocks , and at present I > rir.c0 thu production of mutton IB uucti moro profit able than thoproduc- tion of wool. To raise good mutton it is necessary to keep sheep where the supply of food ia abundant at all times and where a variety of food can bo obtained. Observations iu this country and in England shew thattho finest mutton is produced on farms devoted to the production of a variety of cropa and on which there arc suit able shelters in of ease stornn and se verely cold weather. The raining of merino bucks for selling to largo sheep owneis on the plains is another profit able branch of sheep husbandry for small farmers. The largo sheep owner * have little time and poor op- portunitio for brooding animals to im prove their stock , which is generally very poor at the start. They ordi narily commence withthonntivo sheep found in Mexico or the territories adjoining that country and cross them with merino bucks. They ilnd it moro profitable to buy these bucko than ( o raise them in the places where they are located. They can be bred to excellentadvAtitage by small farmers who have the time to devote to them , 'Ihoro is always a good market for them on the plains. Buokhn'u Armo-i Salve. The UKST SAIVK In tlio .vorld for iiot , Sorci , Ulcers , ! : alt Uhcnm , Vo e Son1' , Tettor , Chnjtpod ll.iiulo , Clill blnhis , Corim , and all nUlu eruptions , mi. ' positively curoaiilo ; . It U Kiurnnteo < t U uivo B tl fnctfou or money ruliuulcd rrlco , 3S ccuta per bur. Kur m'o by O. Y. Goodman Mormons tit the Circus. Larnmlo llooincranir. You may talk about gala days uiitl fun nil you cheese to , but you don't know much about it till you havosoon the circus in a Mormon town. The government of the United States has done a very good thing in appointing a commission to look into { ho Mor mon problem , but if a thorough in vestigation bo made , the result will show that the proper way to conquer the polygamistf ) ia , to go among them with a circus and fire a woman out of a cannon at them , Other means may temporarily succeed , but , thu only way to win the Mormons to a better lifo m to get them in n circus and fire the everlasting truth at them , whfle they sit on the narrow blue sn.itu under the hot canvas and watch the fearless woman with the pink tights , who falls oil her herso at a. salary of $3 for week and vermillion lemonade. When old Johullubinaon'a oi.ly and supremely isolated world renowned and universe-defying congress of pink-eyed ponies and measly nyomw struck Ogden , nobody neutnod to know how it happened , but the whole of northern Utah was ntlnmo with the pink sun bonnets and bcdtick panta loons of the 1 at tor-Day Saints. Long before daylight the bull teams and muo ! loads of polygamous fruit began to deluge the city till O den was one vast camping ground and the valley was musical with the neigh of the nu\v colt and the echo of the Mormon . The freckle-nosed spank. whito-oyed , - yearling and the two-year-old with the stonebruiao wore there. From the par-boiled infant whose noio was peel ed with his 100 mile ride , up to the loose jointed girl , whose feet spread out over the circus ground till they obscured the face of nature , all , all were there. The rod-faced progojiitor with a Seymour linen coat and wagon tar on his nose , led the van. Behind him came his most recent wife with a testimonial of her affection , wrapped in a red shawl. Then came the wife of ' 81 , bearing in her arms one of the April crop. Buck around the block extended the long procession of per spiring and duaty humanity , they drove into town iu every atylo of conveyance - voyanco known to modern mechan ism and took in the entire show , from the fat woman in the .side-show to the negro minstrel performance in the ring at the close of the circus. Filled with wonder and colio they turned their tear beditnmud oyoo toward the waning electric light and aaw the can vas lowered and the animals loaded on the train. Sadly and sorrowfully they loaded up the worn and weary cargo of humanity , and when the morning nun lib up the Wasatclt mountains they lit out. The immensity of thu undertaking may bo considered and understood when wo stop to think that lew of these Mormon patriarchs can loud their families into one lumber wagon. What then can they do ? The chil dren cannot bo loft at homo , for the mothers are determined to see the aronic display and mighty world-de fying phalanx of zoological glanders and acrobatic genius. There is no al ternative but to hitch up the time- honored bull team and trail wagons enough to hold the sacred outfit , Western people know that a freight ing outfit consists of a very largo wagon in the load , with ono , two or moro trailed after it , Homo of them hold a carload tr moro , and when jerked ever the road by a team of eight or ton pairs of untorrifled bulls , the old patriarch with a yellow fringe of coyote hair under hia throat is the general manager of moro snarling , squalling and perspiring humanity than anybody. The performance at Ogdoti WOH postponed thirty minutes for the ar rival of ono family alone that had been delayed by a hot box , The cir cus manager eatinmtes that ho runs the circus at an expense of $100 per hour , but when this family got there and ho figured up the price of admis sion he was ahead $35,23 , to say noth ing of peanuts and the minstrel shore receipts. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Found at Last- What everv mio should have , and never be without , is THOMAS' ULKOUUO On , , It is tlior n-li and Btfo iu iu elfectu , rirnduc- Ing tbe most woncoin uiiru * of riieuma. ti m , neuralgia , burnt ) , brtiUtH , and wounds of every kind , july7dlw Increasing tno Corn Crop. Chicago Times. Till within the past few years little anxiety lias been felt in any part of the country about the supply of corn. There was a goner ? . ! impression that it could bo raised with considerable pro- lit in nearly every Btato and territory. In moat of states enough wua raised to supply the local demand , In [ BOmo status it waH a leading crop , and it rt-uo thought that it profitable production could be greatly extended in others , where thu attention of farmers waa mainly devoted to the growing of cot ton , tobacco and small grains. There was scarcely any demand for it for ex portation , and its employment for making glucoao and starch was not known. It was used to a conaidora- ulo extent an food for human beings , and waa very generally employed for the fattening of hogs in sections whom it was extensively grown. It Waa rarely fed to othoi horses than those engaged in work on the farm , and waa still more rarely fed to cows. There was no froah beef or mutton sent abroad , and there wna only a limited demand for highly fattened - toned moat at homo. As a consequence quonco , sheep and steers were gener ally fattened on grass , with the aid of a few roots. Iu moat of the western states corn was a drug iu the markets. With poor fncilitiofl for transportation , comparatively little of it was sent to eastern cities. Corn was often so cluup and plenty that it waa burned for fuel. Farmers preferred to raise small grains for the market , for the rcnsona that their price wai higher and they would stand transportation bet ter. In parts of the country where corn waa very productive it waa gen erally thought that thu business of raising it wna greatly overdone. A short time has been Btitliciont to produce great changes in relation to corn. It is now employed to nmko starch aud glucose , aa well aa to make alcohol , whisky , highwinoa and vine gnr. Considerable quantities of it are c inverted into unit. In all the great dairy districts it is extensively em ployed for feeding milch cows. There taa great and groniua demand for fancy fattened beef and mutton for export and home consumption , To f.ittun steers and sheep as the market requires it is found necessary to feed corn in large quantities. Vast quan tities of it are now sent to almost every country in Europe this side of Russia for the same purpose. Ameri can corn ia used to food both bouf and daily cattle in Denmark. It in also used to food the coach and dray horse in most of the largo cities in Great Britain and Franco. JX\nv , while the uses for corn have increased and multiplied in a moat remarkable man ner , its cultivation baa neb ex tended to any considerable extent into new sections of the country , and has not greatly increased in goroign countries. Thu entire country from L'ugot Sound to the Gulf of California is opened up to settlement , but no corn is raised except in a very few favored localities. Dakota and Montana are fast being peopled with farmers , yet scarcely any corn is or can be pro duced there. Few of whnt are called the new elates and territories produce much corn. They are deficient in warmth or moisture , or in both. Corn was never a profitable crop to raise in the southern Htateaand , ua the soil be comes exhausted of itu fertility its pro duction becomes ntill moro dillicult. People have finally become convinced that the extent ol country adapted to the profitable production of corn is quito limited. It is embraced iu a strip of country about two hundred miles wide , and 'erminating about two hundred miles west of thu Missouri rivor. If the amount of corn raised in the country IB to bo largely increased it must be done by improved methods of cultivation in the places where it suc ceeds best. Much of the land in the western states that is capable of pro ducing the largest cropa oi corn is in no condition to do BO during seaeons as wet as the present one. It is cov ered with water in the early spring , and cannot bo plowed till it is too late to plant without incurring the danger of an early frost in the fall. By drain ing it with tiles it can be made to pro duce moro corn than any land in the country. It is naturally rich in both mineral and organic matter , and its only defect is its inability to part with moisture that accumulates during the winter and spring. The drains will not only carry on" this water , but will extend the growing season sev eral weeks. Experiments made in the count ifrt of this tttatu that are chitlly composed of Hat prairie show that the average yield of corn is increased ono-f mrth by putting down druin-tilo. The cultivation of the crop is albo render 'd moro uaay and the ordinary rinks are avoided in u grout measure. Improved methods of preparing thu soil , of putting in the need , and of cultivating the growing crop will do much toward increasing production. Generally the farmers of Pennsylvania , and others of the east ern stutea , produce moro corn to the acre than the furinera do in thu moat fertile of thu western fitato ? . They have a much poorer neil , but they prepare it bettor , pay more attention to manuring , and employ the hand- hoc in connection with the horse-cul tivator in working the fields. It is not only possible but practical to pro duce eighty bushels of corn to the acre on much of the land in the west where only forty is ordinarily har vested. TJmuldiilly Aoknowlodgod * DKNVKU , Col. , Juno 0 , 1881. U. 11 WAHNKH A ; Co , : Mrs I have boon troubled with kidney com plaint , lor four years. I am now a well man , thanks to your Safe Kid ney and Liver Curo.P. P. B , SliMI'LK , july7dlw Clerk American House. What Would bo Loft. AuitliiTox ) hUUiife' , Bald au Austin teacher to ono of his highest pupils ; "If your father gave you a basket of peuchea to divide between yourself and your little brother , and there were forty peaches in the basket , after you had taken your share what would bo left ? " "My little brother would bo left , for I'd take all the peaches , That's the kind of congressman I'm going to bo when I grow up. " oTiir Uivo Up. . If you uro euUVriiiK with low aud de. run nod BiiiritB , lots of appetite , genera ebility , dluorderud blood , wouk constltn- Hull , headache , or any disease of a blllou * nature , by all moanH procure a bottle of Klectrlo Bittern. You will bo wiriirlsud to tee the rapid Improvement that will follow ; you will bo Inspired with new life : Btrenxth and activity will return ; pain ami miiury will cease , and henceforth you will rujolce in tha prai u of Klcctriu Cittern. Hold ut fifty coutH iijhuttlu , byU , 1' ' , ( Joint- muu. FAST TIME I I'M Uku the ijMcago < y ortliwesir Tralm Ivato Omaha B.IQ p m. anil 7.40 a. in , For I Ilinl nuitl ) . cull on II. lMJUiiUli : > kit Kt nt. IHh and Hurnani U J. DKI.I , , U , I' , y Unjiut , or at J ASlhhiT. C't/AllK , ( Jenujal To the Consumers of Carriaes & I have a compMo stock of all the Lab33- ? . Styles of G images , Phaetons and Opei and Top Bugg eg , Consisting of Trie Celebrated Brawler SicU Bar , The Hatnlin Side Bar , The Whitney Side Bar , and The Mullhalland Spring , The Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaaton Also the Old Sol able iillipUc Spring Buggies and Phaetons. They are fcll male o' tha beat ma'erialp , aad un der my own supervision. I should be pleased to have thoas desirous of pur chasing to ca'l and examine my stock , I will guar antee satisfaction and warrant all work. H. F. HATTENHAUER , Corner Broadway and Seventh Streets. COUNCIL BLUFFS , IA. < * § b ( Successors to J , W. Rodefer ) WHOLESALE AND UETAIL D15ALERS IN LiGKAfMA , LEHIGH , BLOSSBURG AND ALL COALS ! CONNELLSVILLE COKE , CEMENT , LIME , PLASTER , ETC. Offlco No. 34 Pearl Street , Yards Oor. Eighth Street and Blfiventh Avenue , Oounoil Bluffo. P. T , MAYN15. 0. E. MAYNE. COUNCIL BLUFFS STEAM FACTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS , BROOM HANDLES , CORN MEAL , GRAHAM FLOUR AND FEED The Very Best of Brooms Constantly on Hand. The Highest Market Price Paid for Corn , Oats , Rye , Barley IBIROOIM : COZRHSTI Parties Wishing to Soil Broom Corn Will Please Send Sample. Sample.&c &c GO. , Irs , J , E , letealfe and Iiss Belle Lewis Are iiowiloallnirl'i all klndeof fancy Rooilii , such on lJi , . Kmbroldorloa , Ladles' Undcrwca of all diecrlptlonii. Also llaridkerthlulB , both In bilk and llnon. lioso of all Kinds , thread , pins , ncodlott , i to. Wo hopu the ladles will call aud neo our block of ) ; oods at 6SO Uroadway bcforo go 1" > K eldowhoru. METCALF BROS. , WIIOLESALI ! DEAI.E118 IN Hats , Caps , Straw Goods , and Buck Gloves. CHICAGO PRICES DUPLICATED. Onu of thu best B Lond-claas Ilotila In thn Wist Id the BROADWAY HOTEL , A. K BltaWN , Proprietor. Noa , 31 and 630 Broadway , ) ouncll llludaIow . Table uuppllcd with thn best the market af- ( orda. (1 , od rooms and flrst-clas beds. Terms very recwonablu , UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 Lower Broadway , Mrs. 0. Gerspacher & Son. KlllfiT CLASS I10TKN AT IlKAHONAIILK I'HIUKH. TUAHBIKNT8 ACCOMM01JATED. IIOTKL rOH BALE. OOOD llKABONa KOU SKLMNU , STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON , Proprietors. Tills lauudiy hu Just boon opined lor bun | . iiusn , and wu am naw prtpared to do la indry v ork of all kind * anil uutrantou Batlalactlon. A HiBcloltyrualo of Hue work , such as collan , lulfa , Une thlrU , etc Wo want everybody to Klvu uj a trial. LARSON fs ANDERSON. ) U KUXUMiaOl , K. I BIIUOAHT. A. W. KTKBBT , 1'rjtildciit. Vko-1'rtat. Cashlur , CITIZENS BANK Of Cotmcll Organlzid under the Ia s ol thu State o(7ona , 1'ald up uipltal . 9 Tfi.O'O AutuoiliiU capi al , . . . . 20U.UOO lutcrunt paid on tluia dcposltv. Drafts on thu prlnnpil u ties of luo UnltuJ Ulaten and Kuropu. poJul utUiitlou tUon to col'u.tloiu and korrvsp JiiUuiicu with | lompt ruturua. DIIIM'10118 , J. 1) . Kdmundum , n.UBhuifart , J , T. Harf , W. W. Wi lUtu , J W.Uodfw , l.A Miller , A. W. Btruet , JyTdU STARR & BUNCH , HOUSE , SIGN , AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING , KALWNINB AND GEAININQ , Shop Oornor B roadway and Scott 8t HUGHES & TOWSLEE , DEALERS IN - i Confectionery , FruitsNuts Cigars and Tobacco. Fresh oysters and Ice Cream in p Season. , 12 MAIN ST. , i Council Bluffs. JOL'N MABLllk , I'retldent , W , B. DvumiB , Sec. andTrcas. THE NJSBEASKA fflUFAOTUEINfi CO Lincoln , Neb. MANUFACTURERS OF Corn Pltintcta , Hrrrows.Parm Rollers riuiuy Hay UuUos , Buoiiet Kiovatluff WindininB , &o . u uro prop rod to do Job work and iuaiUac Audiiit u.l oraird NLlJUAblU MANUKACTUllINQ CO , Llncolu , Neb ,