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Page 9 text:
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V--ex ... V H ..:.' -fwfr U, ... 1 Serene and beautiful, the Missouri presents another face to its admirers as it curves south from between the bluffs. Rivers, like people, have personalities. Big Muddy is a river of many conflicting moods, of whimsical notions, of irresolution and determination, of friendliness and hos- tility. ln the latter mood, it has left its banks to even a score with human bein try to meddle with its wanderings and confine it to a bed that it has no intention to lie in. gs who tb 199' ......... X his Q : Q Like a friend, the river can be a help or hindrance. The obstacle of water must be H spanned by railroad and vehicular bridges 5 4 to bind into a single productive metro- 4 ll ., ,. . politan area Council Bluffs and Omaha. i 1 . I 1-tw?-'HT ' m g ' 14 . l K . V I i Q - on:-.TM 1 ' ' ' 'D few-'-' 14 an fY6'6'Y ' i' ' ' ' B ' 9 9494 'V L :Mir ' ' ' .. ', -r--e....- . v- X ' ' v it v Q :Q 1 . r. lla BQ L A ' AH A .4 2 l l The Missouri, sometimes a menace, is more often a helper to the city. At the Narrows Pumping Station, it gives Council Bluffs its water supply, and by means of sanitary and storm sewers, it takes the wastes, purifies itself, and rolls alon t b the next town. g o e of service to . . Q K ' wg' . 41-fi 8 - . M - ,. , ,N A .J,.,., M .U ,:-. .4 . .gf- ,-.. 5
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Page 8 text:
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afffff- NX - f- 9 iii, . 1 ' it 'M 'Q', gf I lli ff' '02 ' Q ' 1 1 'QSSSSV' it Ekifif + '1 il 5 :malls dish af 'Wt z? SfW.1 S 949' s. 3-ms s . . Z rm-svn' . s ------- - - - -1 - - -i-'- f . kf,g'?', 0 Z Q 273 1 5.4, I 6 , YK.: Af: 1 , m , -N, 94' 4 V 5 Y 33 I I A 1 0 f-'P 0.3 a l- s A Q J I ' R 1 gl 'A 5: at 'swam lsr. Mew Sf. fm Y 2' 5 EL g g ,453 'QLXQ' Q . .. XX . 5 T fi- ' .I ,,- N., Ei fx, 45' '52 I g 161 .1 i Q4 .sr ft its 5 .f f5Q'Y. ff' fs 'Wil I fi an ihsuwfm, Fd El s. NNm9.'wMfWQQ ' 2 ' F! T 5Q35 OmrD1 ow -QD' so-250' MCC! 3- 25 'O msn Emu' 5C:so 3815 1. Qaia :ww 5035 mg... 7 QQQI1 IJ 00 :i-3 go-i-+ o gm CQ.3X 5.7.10 nm5 nfD,,,1 3 fp mang- 36.0 no-go' QCDs'4 3322522 Q-O1fDmOl- p S. zJ'1?v3 CDD.--O:-Q-v 32239-9,455 300140-2 Q-0--gg-hQ.8 33031: 2 --C aa Q 3333, +2033-K 32-525+ 0' gsffgmi W3 .7 35 OJ :2Z'U5f7 g. 5:25133 :w3'fDFCm T020-Q.:-4 O-nm ND' 8.n'f-3-Q'2'm 0 o 04m mo-2 mari., -. 1j52m2m 4 0-+--0' WEQQRBQ Tm. ..omo. -i :- an -h 2. UI -O- U7 -0' rn Q! 3 0' o OJ -Q' QI U U cn Q! 3 rn o. o 3 -I' J' cn 4- i 1, river in 1819, and from 1830 to 1858 trade mushroomed. Navigation tonnage reached its peak in 1880, before its elimina- tion in competition with the new railroad system. However, the Missouri River is once again an important carrier of trade, levees and the removal of sandbars facilitate naviga- tion as ,far north as Sioux City, Iowa. Along its banks lie some of the most productive lands 'in the United States. Enor- mous possibilities still exist in the Missouri River as a source of valuable hydroelectric power, besides water tor irrigation.
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Page 10 text:
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S, , :sg s it Y N .. , 'rx 311-if ' 0 ,5'v' if .1 'I-as A .Q-, so gg-fat. . . if '-1-jd.. .f i r v- , Sir 1' Qc.: . 'M .1 35 14-. ' 5 ,V .Ali- . A .M 1 QQ L L ft .1 ,' r LQBIQL 43,2 x- 2 f li Q li 2 . 16 , it '- if -fx ' . i i , .1 ' ' m A .' . 5 4 . r . 'ii H. 5 ,f , mi , 3 ,I , 1 5 4 1? Wil? it 3 X. y. E. E .1 2 . .f Q, A , it s J af me ,f 'H ,Jfsf L 1 + FFA' 1 tfm. . .. .51 8 - 's'4srrrtl'?5'ns,i Q r f . 2 ' t tj Q - fi . 5 Q5 if, 4' ' s i- .Q , 'Nl' -S W at an ig an we , ,-:,,, L .,,k.. , 1 ,g i 35 if , in arf its .aw 1 vp Til 'Q 3 ,Leg The Cit Born in the wilderness of the past, Council Bluffs has emerged as a metropolis in the richest agricultural section of the state. Her life story is a composition of memorable history. A council held with Indians by the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804 gave birth to her ultimate name. Trading posts, as early as 1823, established the city at this location. Among the first inhabitants were Mormon settlers, who, in 1845, started a village on the bluffs and called it Kanesville. ln 1853, an act passed by the General Assembly of lowa changed the name of this progressive town to Council Bluffs, and, in a short time, the first city govern- ment was formed. Six years later Abraham Lincoln visited Council Bluffs and selected it as the terminus of the Urrion Pacific Railroad. Perhaps Lincoln had hopes then that someday he would be the leader of the country and could help develop this area into a great in- dustrial and railway center. More abundant resources and opportunities are offered today than Lincoln could have foreseen, making this a city of active, progressive people. And Council Bluffs will continue to progress if her past history is any indication of her future.
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