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Sioux City Journal from Sioux City, Iowa • 3

Location:
Sioux City, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SIOUX CITY JOURNAL: MORNING-, SEPTEMBER 1887. NOIITITWESTEIIN ITEIS. IOWA. took of the case, but it is one that muss have occurred "now and then to tile fhtf-mate friends of the great criminal 'lawyer; A Coivent ion at the Car. Des Moines 2: In the discussion over the liquor plank in the convention yesterday a delegate roin Dela BUSINESS DIRECTORY.

attorneys. HI. BROWN, Attorney At Law, Davis Block." corner Fourth ana I'eari streets, bioax City, Iowa. Moiiey to Lioan at Lowest Ratea. iiealKstat Booght and ii 1 1 1 I AD.

TO LiaS our. Attorney at law. rrac-. tice In all onnrta in Iowa. Nobjraska and Dakota.

Offica Fonrth Street, bioax City, lo. jyjATT Mray Attorney atIvr, 8li Fourth 1 QBEET HUNTEK, Attorney at La. Office 11 over 415 Jtoarttt street. Bioax City. Io.

tt L. LOST, Atoraoy at Law. Commercial XX eolloctiuna promptly attended to. 615. 1 YOURaUSVWAKEFlELD, Attorney JLi City, Iowa.

in Ileal Jistato. 'i'axes paid lor non -residents. corresponaenoo olicited, Office OYer i 23 Pierce street. CoN.TAXT MlBKS. DATIDMOCXD.

FARM'S i 1 Of 80 Acres 'Each; at 8 to aU' 4 TVT ABK MOULD, 1 1V1 in Davie' block, i atreeta, bloox City, lov Iowa. 1 piler Price ostimatesthat the volumes will cost about $1. 50 a piece. I'- AV. H.

Phelps. 7of Sioux' Falls, his brother, Minieter Phelps, of England, and says Cleveland ought never to have appointed him. In Clark and Hamlin counties there will be a close vote on the local option question according to reports, with' a good.chance for prohibition to carry. The i Methodist conference- which meets fat- Aberdeen October" 19, will be composed of 112 ministerial and 112 lay It will represent 8,000 mem bers of that church. It is reported that the Duluth, Huron and Denver railroad be graded this fall from Benson to Watertown, paralleling the Manitoba and only about a mile distant from it.

Ex- Gov, Ordway denies that he has made a vast amount of money on Capital hill, Washington, but says he has plenty of money. He also keeps a close watch of Dakota affairs. A desperate fight is to be made the Black Hills to prevent the organization of a new-county to be called Meade from. Lawrenoe of which; Deadwood is the county seat. Sturgis is the prospective county seat of the proposed new county.

NEBRASKA. Pawnee City will vote on the waterworks proposition September 12. -r I The foundation for the Odd Fellpws building, at Norfolk, is, completed. The Pawnee county fair will be held at Pawnee City, September 20 to 23. The Second Adventists camp-meeting at Grand Island is largely attended, The Pawnee City devoted to prohibition, has been, sold and removed to Burehard.

Sarpy oounty democratic convention have issued a call for a convention at Papillion, October L- During a heavy storm Sunday morning the residence of C. F. Boyher, of was struck by lightning. The proposition to bond Norfolk for $15, 000 to secure additional publio improvements carried at the election. The question of voting bonds to build a new oourt house at Beaver City Work will be commenced at once.

'Something like robberyMs the expression Judge Mason Used in speaking of the? freight 1 rates of the Burlington and, Missouri in Nebraska. WW Of 1 60 Acres Each, Missouri: Riyer galley Laiidj (ih.e i ricKest lancl; fin the world) atlO. Will Pay fbE: Itself: in Attorneys at Law. Office. corner Ji'onrth and lJearf T.

P. MCBFKY. F. Mi FORT. Ti (TTTnPirv Attornera at Law.

Will practice In the ooarta of Iowa. Nebraska 1 aud In United butea conrut. -1 Omoe 2i 'oorthfttreet. O. IIKNDEiaON.

Attorney at Law and U. JL ti. Commiaeioner. Ctlioe 415 Fourth etroot, witn 8. U.

Marab, BionX City, iowa. WG. CLARK Fk Attorney at Law. 505 Dong- laa etreot, bioax City, Iowa. OVANT OSSA, Attorney at Law.

i block, corner Fourth and Foari aueeta, Bioax City, Iowa. A C. STRONG. Attorney at Law and City So- licitor. FrompC and careful attention fsirma to mil boaineea.

OEico 5Wi. Foortli street, tiioax City, Iowa. OHN BBENXAN, Lawyer, Sioux City. Iowa. EDWIN J.

BTASON. Attorney at Law," 322 Fourth atrcet, bioax Vty, lowa Entrance to offica first stairs west of First National Bank. JNO. Attorney at Law, over 517 Fourth street. AIlCIIITIiCTS.

I-' GO. BALDWIN. Arclntecf and nperintend- ent, oyer 413 Fourth street, Bioax city, Io. JW. MARTIN, Architectiioom 1, erioh block, Bionjt City.

lowa. I7 W. LOFT, Architect, Ilaaklnaon block, Bioax City, Iowa- i'romyt and carefol attention given to all work. Ii i i i i i' i i n' i BC. Architect.

Room, Richardson block. Fierce Acadeaiy ot Mnelo Block, Sioux City. CIEXT, LI31E, STUCCO, ETC. EOxt "WEAVERwholM-le cement, stucco, V7 lime, fir brick, drain tile, plastering bair, glue, etc. Write for prices.

Car lota a specialty, 1UJ aud 110 Jackson street, Bioax. City, Iowa, CIL ENGINEER AND STJKVEYOIt. GEO. OBERHOLTZER, BIS Pierce street. Careful -Mini attention paid to land and lotsnrveys.

Estimate made on earth work. pfcintinr. plastering and raaaoary. Additions anri Bnrveya for city grades and TlR. BIlfiERICir, Dentist, (fffaduate of the I 9 Pannavlvoni rVkllorrM rf i Wn ml -Hn rcrnw j'buaaeio uiUKieipniii.

crnoe, nrn stairway castor noiei from Lots bo Pierce Street, from 600 -'v Lots on xebraska i from 36oo to Lots on Jackson. Stre6t from 3800 to --i Lots in Lo well Addition71325d -fooe. Fourth street. Freeh gas on hand for ex- 3400. Sfcarlot fercris 'prevalent Vat 'Council -ri The matrimonial market -is-lively at -y ''fv Council Bluffs employs fifty-seven' teachers in its public schools.

i Council i Bluffs 1 is making it rather sultry for the outlawed saloon. The insurance men badly vanquished the printers at Burlingtonat- base ball Spencer defeated Storm; Lake at baise ball in a gme-at (ioux Bapids last vcok.f- The Presbyterian, church. at Davenport is undergoing- repairs casting- 3,000 -w It is again reporte'd that Bishop Perry will not acoept the bishopric of Nova Scotia. i The foundation of the new Methodist church at New London is ready for the superstructure. The Iowa Soldiers' Home "at Marshall town will bQ ready for.

occupancy in bout sixty days. 3 "A largd -hotel is being erocted at MaiCngo. Its mineral Vaters are attracting many people. Seventeen couples were married by Justice Kramer, of Davenport, during the month of August. i According to the signal service guage, 2.

01 inches of water fell at Davenport Saturday night in little over an hour. Seventeen deaths are reported in Keokuk; during August, 1837, against twenty-five for the same month in 18S0. The Episcopal church etEmmetsburg has secured llev: Mr. Walker, of South Carolina, to occupy its pulpit for a year. The fattest man and the smallest man in the world, both born in Iowa, will be on exhibition at the state fair at Des Moines.

The Democrat-Gazetto strongly'ad vocatesa city natatorium at Davenport. It thinfis'it would fill a long felt want in the city. A Jaw and order meeting was held at the opera-house at Council Bluffs Sun-! day in which nearly the churches joined. An, Indian and negro minstrel com-i blnation attracted several thousand people at Keokuk last week. The combination was noveL Burglars are doing a thriving business at Dea Moines.

They are in attendance at the Btate fair, but find time to1 make nocturnal visits; i The Emmetsburg Reporter says the A1 5 UKxige ana Les ivioines company contemplate building-a branch from Aysthire to Emmetsburg. Rev. F. O. Fannon, for several years pastor, of the Christian church, at Spencer, ha3 resigned accept a position as pastor of a large and influential church at Liberty, Mo.

A fireman tournament will be held at Red Oak September 13. Companies from Atlantioi -Griswold, Shenandoah, Creston, Villisca, Corning and other points will be present. -Deputy City 'Marshal Hubacher, of Muscatine, did last week. He was 30 ytarld and weighed 320 pounds. The rupture of a blood vessel in the head Was the cause of his death.

There is little doubt at Auburn but that the Tupper-Nate tragedy was a cold-blooded' murder, and the only extenuating circumstances; is that they were, Jtoth staggering Rev. Dr. Newman, who was expected 'to preach on the fair grounds at" Des Moines Sunday, was delayed at Custer, Montana, by a. terrible storm, hence the Sunday services did not occurr. Henry Lees, foreman of Field Bros.

stock farm, Cedar- Falls, was gored to death Saturday afternoon by a Holstein bull; which was being prepared for shipment ito -r the state fair at' Des Moines. 1 Two sections, of the cantilever are now being extended over the main span of the DubUque high bridge at the west end; -This is the most difficult part of- tne worK to do aone on tne orxdge, and it is now about accomplished. GeorgaD. Rand has sold a controlling interest in the Keokuk water-works to the American Water-works and Investment company of Pittsburg, Pa. a corporation with a capital stock of $5,000,000, and therefore' amply able to make any improvements and build extensions.

1 Frank Nejidly, of Dubuque, has entered suit for $4, 000 againsj; "Frank a tailor charging cruel trpatnent ot his 'son, who was an apprentice. The plaintiff avers that Faha- froze and starved the apprentice, causing him xo contract consumption from which he is about to die. l- a Faulkton had Saturday the heaviest rain of the season Spencer is one of the prosperous towns of McCpok county. -vvv! Large quantities of wheats are being marketed in "Brown county. Sixty acres of corn near Pierre will yield eighty bushels to the acre.

4 'Brown claims to have raised 3,500,000 bushels of wheat this year; The new tin mill building at Custer will require 30, 000 feet of lumber hi its construction. The earnings of the Northern Pacific for the month of August are $1, 256,100, an increase of 829, 742. 33. A bicycle tournament will take place at Parker the last day of the Turner county ausj September 16. Territorial Veterinarian Alloway is afr Richardson investigating the foot and mouth disease there among cattle.

The St. Paul Globe' interview wjth M. II. Day is to the effect that he is not opposing Cleveland' renomihation. The report is again revived that e'x-Gov.

Pierce is to be placed at the head of the state university at Grand Fori3. jGov. Church was not present at the sent a letter complimenting the soldiers. David ii. Yale, an old soldier at Plankinton, has been, granted a pension which, witV back; amounts to $1, 100.

Groton shipped last year -1, 00Q, 000 bushels of? whoat, and Expects to ship double that amount this year. There are six elovators there. The bid of S. T. Clover, of SiouxFalls, for print mg the compilation of the laws of the territory tho lowest.

Com I Tin. "Custer 3: 'Tin has been the-; all- absorbing topic of the 1 weeki Tin variegated and plain; high-, keyed and whispered; expressive of un-; limited confidence on the part of the masses, and Soubt upon the part of the few is everywhere heard. Tin stone, metalio tin, tin in the and tin in chancery, is discussed from court-house "square to the hay scales on lower Cus-. ter avenue. Tin- mounted terms, which would daze tenderfoot, 'indigestible to all but tho semi-scientific prospector, fall mdiscriminately upon the ear of the awe-stricken auditors, seem in momentary expectation of the welconvo cound of the tin horn proclaiming the long-looked for inauguration of the Cus-.

ter tin jubilee, a delectable era, when American tin shall become a fixed fact, in the minds of the masses from the uttermost parts of earth 'to the Black Hills mining" exchange; all of which, -and more, is being based upon the result of the new Tin mountain enterprise, which the Chronice hopes may be as brilliant as it'now seems promising. Dakou and Iowa Liand. Yankton Tribune, 1: A few years ago land in northwestern Iowa was. offered at $3 to $7 an acre, with sbut few sales at that. In a very few years ujlimproved land had gone up to l5 to 830 an acre," while improved land was much Dakota to-day is much in -the situation that Iowa was years but we believe that the increase in values will be even greater than it was in and those who can hold their, land for a few years will grow -Dakota this year gives the lie to her detractors, and comes, to the front with a bountiful harvest for the relief of the needy the east and south where the drouth has been, so severe and prolonged.

Its thousands of cures are, the best advertisements for 'Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Utiqa Observer: The birth of a son to George and Edith Kingdon Gould is probably put: down, in the diary of paternal grandfather as a new issue of preferred stock. Journal of Education: A Chance ao-" quaintance One made at a gaming-; 5 't Our fashionable ladies were talking a great deal last season about phant Grey. That -it was the color, handsomest tint, 4 best style, etc.

Now: they say," that for a cold the best cure is one bottle of Bull' Cough-Syrupand the ladies know. New Haven News: In gieat extremi- tiesA western man' gout, mi in II If you suspect any tendency to congestion in your kidneys and bladder you. can safely increase their activity -by using that genial tonic and neverfailing Temedy, Dr. J. H.

McLean' Liver and Kidney Balm. 1 Nashville American: The cream of should; be Tound in the pitcher. I Advice to Mothers. r. Mrs.

Winslow' Soothing" Syrup should always be used for children teething. It soothes the child softens, the gums, allays, all pains, vcures wind oolic, and is the best remedy for diar-. rheca. Twenty-five cents a bottle. "1 Pittsburg.Chronicle "DanieL" 'Xes, sire.

'How did the story start that I was going to visit Rhode i VfThere is a town in that state: called Watch Hill, sire." 'fWell, probably some one heard you. 'say you were going to watch HilL, mlm mmm sjBaBasaMssssai hbm BjBjsjt Hagan' Magnolia Balm is delicate, clean, cooling and delightful. Overcomes all heat. New York Sun: Brown Hello, Robinson, -what' your hurry? Robinson (out of. breath) Don detain me; I've just heard that my house BrownThat too bad.

I was going to ask you to have a drink, Robinson Well, I' 11 go you one, but we' 11 have to be quick about it. Ask your druggist for, Hagan'e Magnolia Balm, then say to old Sol' freckles and burns. New Haven A man "out west has made a barbed-wire frame for a- lately deceased mother-in-law's picturer-He says; he is a firm believer in the harmonies of art." Nothing has ever- yet been discovered for the complexion equal to Hagan' a Magnolia Balm. i New York, Tribune: Dear! How these labor troubles do Here's a Philadelphia paper preferring to 'the Striking blonds at Asbury Ladies, you cannot afford' to without Hagan' Magnolia Balm during1 the sunny season. Buffalo' Express: What a composite photograph the portraits of William J.

McG.rigle, Jaob S. Ives Utid Eugene Higgins would make. 'A ft Summer heat has no effect on', a face treated with-7 Hagan Magnolia, Balm. See if it doe's. -i L.

wlmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmm Boston Transcript: A western, editor shall we get our girls to read on scientific subjects? Why, mix them; up. with the fashion of Gentlemen: I have a little girl has'boen very sick with a cough and bowel I employed at different times two of our best phycians, and their efforts" proved of no success. -They told me that she could not live. I was advised by a neighbor to try Dr. Seth Arnold's Coiigh .1 did so, vrith very little faith, if any, but the result was marvellous.

My 'little- giri is to- day alive and jerf ectly. well. Please accept my thanks for the wonderful med-f icine which you have placed before the public. I wish everybcjdy knew: its value. Anderson, Bolivar, Physic is necessary at times for bill-iousncss, costiveness, etc.

Use Arnold' Billious Pills, 5c. ware oounty made the hair of the wholj assembly Btand upon end irt demanduig a better and more honest'1 plank than that of last year, he went before the people of Iowa charged with." being responsible for the murder of Haddock, because of our friendliness to the saloons. 1 Ho "utterod the words in a solemn, death-bed sort of a the whole convention grew white, and still at the indictment; -plainly showing consciousness guilt; When" he 'rallied a bit and said by-way of rallying 'the convention," "of course 'we were but -were charged with it as strongly as Uiough we were, and, lost heavily by reason of iti and we dd not want to" make' such a mistake again," the house 'emerged from its death like stillness and 'the great body of delegates, after peeking cautiously at one another, ventured to smile again. If a cloud passed over the surt at that instant and thrown through the window a shadow across the room, -u the conscience-striokon con venr tion would have taken it, for the ghost of i Haddock "and stampeded from the hall in a For haff a minuto it looked as though they were all ready to turn-state evidence and throw themselves on the mercy of the state. That delegate' blundered upon it and struck deeper" than-he knew.1".

The weak ones of the they know of the party' alliance i with the lawless and brutal elements of the should not thus babble in publio of the equal guilt of the party, with the saloons. The democrats know, that their contract with the saloon to protect it in its defiance of tholaws'of the state makes them, equally guilty with it in all its acts of violence and murder. -But they do not like to haye one of their number thus -jump up and thrust the bloody garment? of their.vic-, tlms before them in their state- conventions. That delegate will not be allowed in the state convention next 'Blaine and. the Homburg.

cable special, Shortly af terarrivmg here Bleind told one of his railroad, broker friends that" not care to meet the prince of JWales. Last evening he was 'the prince' 1 guest at. a private dinnerl -Marquis" Mayer, the Florentine tanker and. the princo's financial propj; was the thir4 member of the Blaine and the prince met at the spring early in the weeki Thoy both take the cup the, Same hoijf The following morning they met again and walked through the forest Tuesday night during the dancing reunion the prince entered with part of the royal Blaine add Wannaumker were conversing witli -sevdral American. ladies near the entrance arch.

Last summer the. prince- suffered a terrible fall on the mosaic floor, with Miss Winslow in his arms." Too -muoh "wine" for dinner was the verdkstrbut the prince has never-forgirenMissWinslowj' and she haif been cruelly 'but. ever he looked lorignsgb'-though de-' vofingly at tJie'Shinn'gllstenirig floor, and finally leaned Jgtunst5 the gilded arch. The ladies' of Ihe household; gathered rqund ami all the save Blaine retired. One of the titled ladies sat down beside Mr.

Blaine 1 and the'k blonde, beauty' and "attendant of the Princess' Christinerf and interested the prince 'for ten 'Mr. Blae kept up a rattling-conversational fire at his comnanionrshe nodding her head in Hevident approval everything ho ut-. tered. Presently" the ladies withdrew one by one till Mr. Blaine and the prince were left Mr.

Blaine arose and assisted4 the- prince to support the pillar. There the distin-guisl aed invalids i posedj and- 'talked for half an hour. The. stag i dinner of lastJ evening was the r- Trouble--Ahead. -Spirit "2r' Lands in Woodbury iuid Plymouth "v- counties, claimed by the Sioux City StPaul Railway company are eagerly bought by parties who hope to.

hold them' undo'r homestead or pre-emptionrights. the craze ior homesteads jWhere land has grown valuabloand the confu-1 sion springing from the about un-' earned railroad lands has lead to tho sot-, tlement of tracts the title of which has long 1 since been settled beyond appeal. i There is much misery, in store for these bettlers, even for those Avhose outlook seems the brightest. No man should ever build a home- upon land the title of which is in dispute. Whete did jthV settlor on lands in dispute ever have' a i better promise ifo.au tljie men who 'based- their -'hope's, the Des Moines river land claims? Ask these merL who have for twenty orttwenty-five vears lea'i a miserable' existence, -and hoping jrear, in and year out, what they think of such Many-will say their livee -have been-blighted with- good -title would have been chep'at any price to them compared with their experience.

Late decisions of the department seem to give hope to- the "teettler," but! the courts must pass' Upon the will be years before the matter is settled, judging from -the past the settler will finallyiind himself simply a Ouriiuivice is: let these disputed lands severely alone. The railway may seem. a mere shadow, but this shadow will haunt the settler and make life 'a burden to him. Uoast.1'-. Chicago Tribune: -Oneof," the boasts of the late O.

Sy Fowler, 'tho phrenologist, was that rioted orim-' inal lawj-er, W. Brian, on road to fame and fortune. O' a porter at a Peoria hoteO FQwler jjaw Jiim while at. that as a guest. He ftt of iis and.

was so- struok- with the it gave of a great earor that he urged him to abandon his. 'menial' 'occcpatioilr. and study O'Brien followed the advice. He was poor, but'v ho1-" struggletl hard, "overcame every, obstacle, and all the world knows- how Iib succeeded et last. Ho became a distinguished and miserable man.

Had he never metProf. Fowler he mjht have been alive to-day, a nappy, contented and usonil rTxrtef. ThLi wc3 not the view tho phrenolo'rist in Pierce County, 10 per acre. i Hay Crop, in. 5 Years Jt 1 Fire Clay, FOB Sioux City Pacific Dppot AND BUXATXi Wfhdow S'nMes School Supplies SIOUX CITY.

'ED'. F. CHEISTIZ. mmm i 1 Will sell the above described val uablb property on sraall cash payments. Baiaace on long: time at 8 cent, interest.

-AT EOE: CIALTI. Blank tmsurpass pee BOlicitc brs, Infe Housa Lij iswithou es of Tio conhectio. ent ibf an: ran. it I jy I HI1 tained the canvassing board in the Knox At mawr, ana xuoDrara oecomes the The republican county convention at Lincoln indorsed udge Mason and the board of transportation, and declared against the position of the Burlington and Missouri Prof. Blinedon, editor -of the Staata Zeitung, was arrested at Nebraska City for refusing to assist a publio officer when called upon.

Blinedon' friends are indignant, and think it was a soheme to injure him. Company. Ev N. N. G.

of arrived home from Lincoln Satuf dayr bringing with Ciem the governor' cup won at the competition drill at the state encampment. They were met at the depot by- the mayor, a band of music, and a large crowd of citizens, who gave them a decided ovation. MXNJfESOTA. The Adventists are holding fa meeting at Waseca. camp- The city council of has made all the arrangements for the special delivery system.

The state" teachers institute, held at Pipestone lastweek, is reported to have been the" best ever held in that city. Mrs. Henry, who eloped with the Methodist rmnister, arrived at Janes-1 viUe Friday night. It is reported that Seymour has likewise arrived. President Hill says the Duluth and Southern, will get all ready for grading this year and that the road will be ironed and completed next summer and regular trains running on it before falL The man Murray, of Minneapolis, who ox a hotel with Miss Hyi- Tester, denies that she 'jumped- from a window; fit but fell out while, sitting on the window silV he says.

The people of Minneapolis however generally believe her story, and several hundred dollars have been raised for her aid. The Home Newspaper, Grundy Center Argus: A lady writer "to a home newspaper says: The home newspaper, associated with i me in everything in my It has of my marriage, of the birth of my chil- dren, and the death of one of them. It has become a part of my family and my life, I' love it -'for this. What a tnbute to the newspaper as an institution. It is the monitor of the fireside, the history of the hearthstone; in fact a mirror of daily life.

It is for this the people love it. Init they find their joys, in it their sorrows, and both 'appear in the types as felt and shared almost us if the newspapers was a living thing. It joins in the songs of it finds A fellowship in its hopes and breathes a spirit of eonplation into its sorrows; thus it meets the world as life meets life, laughing, sympa- battling, advising living 'and acting with and for What a life, what -a mission, what a power 1 Such is a newspaper that' is true to the fireside, And is it any wonder that the lady wrote, I love it? A Family Hodge-Podge. Chicago' News: Joseph W. Savage, of Rahway, N.

J. recently married Susan C. Pike of Plainfield. The father, ex-Mayor Savage, was married three times; the bride twice. The latter first wife was the daughter of the present groom's father' daughter by tits nrs wife.

The son just married was born of the second marriage and became the'husband of daughter ofMr, Pike by his first marriage. Thus ex-Mayor Savage was Mr. Pike brother-in-law ex-Mayor Savage's daughter, by marrying Mr. became sister-in-law to her own father; young Joseph Savage, being the son of Mr. Pike's roister is his nephew; being the half-brother of Mr.

Pike's first wife; he is also his brother-in-law, and by his marriage last week to Mj; Pike' daughter became son-in-law; thus. Mr. Pike is unole and brother-in-law to his son-in-law, and the recent bride, Mrs. Joseph W. Savage, is cousin and niece to her husband, and conseqiently her own aunt.

'-r E. JIcBIIliliW President. XiKBIjLipGG, Supt. 0 VaiW UHKS ijting teeth without pain. EDFORD BR03 Dentists, BIoux City, Office la bohalein's blosk.

Hoars from 8 A. M. to 6 F.M. One ot the firm makes regular profes sional visits to au points contiguous to -bioax City. Correepondfnce invited.

WIGHTMiK Dentist. 1 OiBce south-5 t'J m. east corner Of Dourta and iJonglas streets Fresh (ran always hand for the extraction of teeth witKout pain. Twelve year's experience. 4uenoe desired.

'TT' A. LTON, mannfactorer of and dealer In XX guns, rifles, pistols and hunters' supplies, Machinist. Heavy-lathe work and engraving. Fearl street, between Fourth and Fif th. A.r.-r i JEAVEIiEK.

TULIU3FLECKENBTEIN. Watohmaker and Jeweler. Dealer in watches, clocks and silverware. Watch work and engraving neatly executed. Fourth Btreet np-etaira.

MILLiINEItY. MI3B A. K. BAWYER8, Wholesale and Retail Millinery and Fancy Goods. The latest novelties conatantly TCeived.

Corner Fourth and Parl on Fourth stroma or thronsh Ludlow Clark's. MU8IC olrpHvate" parties furnished. Harp fnll orchflatra as dosired. Call or ail. dress John Bassano, SM West Beventn street.

tV7 M. SANDERTeacher of Piano and On. 1 aan, and dealer in the Hazeiton piano. '3l Tenth street, corner rpHE UNION ORCHESTRA. First-class music ivtrf.

lurniBhtd tor an occasions. nausraction antecd. Any number ot pieces lurmsneu py v-esing or cau. on ni. x.

lieeu, at uyon as iy muEio store. WAGONMAKERS. INEEN Carriage and Wagon Jlanu- fsctnrers. Carriage and wagon material for Corner of Fourth and Water streets, Sioux Iowa. -J.

JOY. WKIGIIT Lttor ho ys at 'X a. -xtst 9 i sioux city, iowa. f7ill pri ffkotaT practice in coarts. ol Iowa, and Territory.

rf LAWBENCE BUIID, Uorneys Counselors at Law UOEVTOLOAN. Ui Fmrth Street, Academy of Muslo Blocki TAYLOR, HEALY SHERMAN, Will 1rRc.Hc ta th.t Rtto and Federal Courts- lwa. Nbraka and Dakota Territory. OtHce fv2 Fourth Street. TTTO iN EYWVT L.AAr, Real Estate Dealer and Negotiator" of Loans.

Fourth Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA j. LOTIIKOP, SJO BIOUXCITY, IOWA. Entrance to ollise, lirst stairs west of First' itional taak, Goal FIRE BRICK1 Office at Gas- Near: WHOICES HiE' Books, Stationery Wall Pajier; 1 OITRTH-ST. E. D.

ALLEN jPaintersV- FSEsaa PAtsnso, chainihq paihtjsq specullres. work dose uaky past cf the kghikwest. SIT Fburta Up Stairs. SlOuis; CITY, IOT7A. hat 1MU nil i Choiee Business and Besidence Lots.

The largest and cheapest List of acre prope -o; inside the city limits. A choice list of farm lands from $lu to $15 per acre. For eald by' McFAU'L i 1 0 CD.

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About Sioux City Journal Archive

Pages Available:
1,570,239
Years Available:
1864-2024