jf 1 1 iui i 11111 pjn 5t ,w& s For the Journal. HAD WE HUT STOOD IX H18 STEAD. Line dedicated to . Where, w here, has the mantle of charity flown "When wc judge our neighbor or friend, While the wind or misfortune round him have blown. Kind words wo iu pity should lend. Obi where I the sunshine that beamed bright before From unclouded rald-summcr skies: And whore arc the friends bo trusted of yore That they vanish when sorrows arise? Great his temptations they never were ours And his band grew went inhls might; Should we have turned from the siren's dark bowers And accepted the cause that was right. Might we not have fallen to danger a prey Had wc but otood in bis stead? "When clouds that were golden passed into grav Should we from the tempter have fled? Uo waxen white lilies in peaceful array Nor roses wave over him now; Thro' darkness and cold he's groping bis way, While the thorn arc piercing his brow. 2?o sunny path opens with fragrance of toils the steep hillside alone; Thro' the soul-bur!ened storm and mid night that lowers, Hit crut bed heart is turning to stone. He looks with regret down the vista of time As he stands at the grave of the past, With memory (till singing her fault finding chime How long ahull this agony last? He sees the bright garden of Hope bloom ing fair, The threshold of happiness won; The hopes of his manhood are indwell ers there, But the goal of ambition Is run. Tho hemlock awaits him how dreaded the cup, The swift bolt has entered his soul; No friend of humanity raises him up While the dark waters over him roll. In tho near-lying 'future are eternity's years Beyond human wisdom or ken. Where no chain is broken, no sorrow or tears And angels are juster than men. Mrs. Mary B. Finch. Patron, Xebr. For the Journal. ITlarrlecI llfe. Of course, "The kindest and bappest pair. Will find occasion to forbear;" and it was n wic piece of advice, which, when Muthew Henry, the commentntor, was married, In9 fath er sent to the newly wedded pair: 'Love one another; pray oft together; and sec You never both together angry be: -If one speaks fire, the other with water come; Is one provoked? be the other soft or dumb." Goldsmith says, Still to ourselves in every place con signed. Our own felicity we make or find: With secret course which no loud storms annoy, Glides the smooth current of domestic joy." ' Campbell say?, Without our hopes, without our fears, Without the home that plighted love endears; Without the smiles from plighted beau ty won, i! what were man? a world without a sun." Rogere says, 'The world well tried the sweetest thing In life, Is the undoubted welcome of a wife." Thompson, speaking of the mar ried pair, says, What is the world to them. Its pomp, its pleasure, and its nonsense all?" "Whaley says, "Marriage is a pleas ing combination of two persons into one home, one purse, one heart, one flesh." Ttipper says, "If yon will be hap py in marriage, confide, love, be patient and faithful." Jeremy Taylor says, "Married life le more merry and more sad: it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys : it lies under more burdens, but it is supported by all the strength of lore and charity, aud those burdens are delightful." Luther said, "The greatest of earthly blessings is a pious and amiable wife." Franklin, in writing to a newly married friend, said, "I am glad you are married, and congratulate you most cordially upon it. You are now in the way of becoming a use ful citizen, and you have escaped the unnatural state of celibacy for life the fate of many here who never intended it, but who, having too long postponed the change of their coudiliou, find at length that it is too late to think of it, aud so lire all their lives in a situation that greatly lessens a man's value." Washington Irving say?, "A mar ried man falling into misfortune is more apt to retrieve his situation in the world than a single one, chiefly because his spirits are softened and relieved by domestic endearments, and self-respect kept alive by find ing that though all abroad be dark ness and humiliation, yet still there is a little world of lovo at homo of which he is monarch." J. W. Kirton says, ""We believe that it is not good either for mau or for woman to be alone. Old maids aud old bachelors may bo useful now and then, but give us a state of double blesscdnesR." Hall, wedded lovel by gracions heaven deslpn'd, At once the source and glory of man kind! Tis this can toil and grief and pain assuage. Secure our youth, and dignify our age." X. D. Howe. "I never can enjoy poetry when I'm cookin," said an old lady. "But when I step out to feed the hogs, and h'ist myself on the fence, and throw my soul into a few lines of 'Cap'n Jiuke,' it does seem as if this airth was made to live on after all !" Bnt Paul, how cau the Spirit be in us and we in the Spirit at the same time?" said the young man to & venerable darkey. "Oh ! dar's no puzzle 'bout dat. It's like dat po ker; I puts it in de fire, and de fir in d poker." tVliy Kone Farmer are Poor. The greatest ngent to produce poverty among farmers or any other class, is debt. Many farmers will get a deed of a small piece of land, enough to support themselves and families, and lay by a small annual income. But that is not sufficient. They run in debt for more laud, and become a slave to debt. They pay an interest on money borrowed, which will soon consume the little property they possess. They often pay higher than the ten per cent. Such proceedings engender a spirit of discontent, and they lose faith iu farming and try to sell their farms in order to get to town and enter into business. In nine cases out of ten, every farmer who is doing well, that goes to town, fails outright. Having no faith in farming or hav ing no breadth of understanding, they buy the poorest tools and meanest stock, and drive poor teams before poor wagons and agricultur al machinery. la the foil aud win ter they teed poorly, just feeding enough to get their live stock thro' the winter into spring. Then it takes all summer to put on that flesh that was lost in the winter by poor shelter and bad fond. They never put out fruit trees on their farms. They always sell their best lambs and cattle to drovers and keep the poorest oucs at home. They send their children to school but little, as too much learning is a dangerous thing. They do not take agricultural papers or believe in book farming. They never give their children a cent of spending money, as it makes them extrava gant and they become spendthrifts. In short, they arc tho most misera ble people iu the world, and would not keep money if they had it. Such farmers arc poor and will remain so to the end of their days, and most of their sons will follow the path of their sires. St. Louis Midland Farmer. Simple Icnsodn. Every boy on the farm should be learning while laboring. Agricultur al chemistry is considered by even scientific men to be a very abstruse science. Yet many of its simpler questions, but none the less import ant, can be easily solved by farm boys. We all know that it is im portant that sand, called silica by the chemist, should constitute apart of the soil of all farm lands. This furnishes but a small nutriment to plant life, yet it gives strength to the stalk or stem and hardens or gives firmness to the grain or seeds. So all grain farms should contain in the soil a due proportion of sand. The young or old man in buying a farm near home or In seeking one in a new country should know what kind of soil he is buying. He can not decide whether it contains lime, potash, phosphates, magnesia, sul phates or nitrates, but he can ascer tain if it contaiu clay, loam and silica. And how to do this is one of the simplest lessons in agricul tural chemistr'. Take a small vessel and put in a handful of a fair sample of the soil to be tested. Tut iu sufficient wa ter to make it a thin liquid. Stir, up thoroughly, so all the particles are dissolved. Add water until it is all liquid. Then pour the liquid into a tall, narrow glas3. Let it stand until it settles. In a short time the coarser sand will be in a stratum at the bottom of the glass, the fiuer sand next, then the heavier clay, and lastly the loam. Thus any one can see at once the quantity of these elements in the soil. And as simple as this lesson is, this is the way it is done by the most learned chemists to solve this ques tion. Iowa State lleyistcr. For many centuries, scientific men have been looking for the catas trophe that happened in Newton, Franklin county, Indiana, last Tues day. It is well-known that every day aud night, the remains of de stroyed worlds arc dropping down upon our planet. Sometimes they come in big lumpR, weighing a ton or two ; sometimes in little dornicke, no bigger than your fist, but mostly they fall in impalpable dust, and the deposits of ages made in this way arc constantly increasing to an ap preciable extent the weight and size of our globe. But hitherto there has been no recorded accident to a human being from these meteorites. But last Tuesday, oue, weighing twenty pounds, fell through the roof of the dwelling of Mr. Leouidas Grover, at the place above mention ed, crushed through upon him as he was sleeping in his bed, killed him, and passing through the bed and floor, buried itself five feet below the foundations of the house, in the earth. As such accidents generally occur in groups, we may soon expect to hear of other casualties from these wandering bodies that so frequently impinge on our atmosphere, strik ing fire as they go, and finally either resolving into dust and vapor from the heat, or coming down red hot aud half melted to the earth as meterric stones. Lincoln Journal. "There would be more houses in this town," said a native, "if it wasn't for one thing." "And what is that?" asked the tourist. "Ain't any more people," replied the na tive. And the tourist opened his note-book and remained absorbed iu thought. Aphorisms from Rot he. translated by c. c. s. The Protestant Church is the ser vant's form of Protestant Christian ity. Tho pure antithesis to Theocracy is found in the Chinese political system. Even in Israel facts have been shown, that piety in the eccle9iasti cal form must degenerate. In the eyes of the aristocratic classes Catholicism must commend itself as a roost useful religion. Most men fancy that there is no deep and inner Enthusiasm and Love except such as is fanatical and fan tastic. Plurality of religions. The rest of heathenism is the religion of na ture, the Hellenic religion is the .urnan religion. Very many, who only stand in a very loose relation to the Protestant Church, cleave with all earuestuess to Protestantism. Protestant Christianity is still in its early infancy. No wonder then, if it is still busy with its A.B. C's., and knows precious little. Mohammed is the first great his torical interposition of Divine prov idence against the absorption of Christianity in ecclesiasticism. The Reformation is so essentially tho one great deed of Germany, that it for a long time cost her the heart's blood of her existence as a nation. In reading Rothe's political apho risms, it must always be born in mind that he writes as a citizen of a monarchial German stale. c. c. s. While the State concedes to its Catholic subjects freedom of relig ion, it is always implied in this, that it can only do so with this limita tion, fhat it does not give up the essential character of a State. Are we then to believe that at the Reformation, the Lord Christ, who brought it about, did not have more comprehensive and far - reaching thoughts than Luther and Zwingle, through whom he brought it about? As soon as any one ceases to re gard the conventional forms of Pietism as the essential tokens of Christianity itself, his confidence in the exclusive or even pre-eminent Chrislianness of this begins to wa ver. The Reformers had in mind to go back to the original form of Christ ianity, that U, to one that had al ready had its day, the historical movement of the Reformation, on the other hand, aims at an entirely new form of Christianity. Because Christianity in the eccle siastical form must degenerate, on this account tho Lord Christ him self, so long as Christianity still retains the ecclesiastical form, al lows the other religions to subsist for the present alongside of it. Had the Reformation of the lGth century prevailed universally, it would have rendered the ecclesiasti cal form of Christianity eternal, and a breach of the Christian Church (upon which, however, everything depended at that epoch) would h-ive been avoided. In our day9 we need above all a new Paul, a new apostle of the Gen tiles, able to persuade unconscious Christians of Iheir Christianity, and by this means to persuade at the same time our Jeioish Christians of the unchristianness of t!eir legal, that is, conventional Christianity. If the Catholic Church (after hav ing for 500 years again and again submitted to the most thorough going mutations) can no longer change her form in the all-transforming course of history, she must make up her mind to suffer the nat ural and inevitable consequences of this. The more fauatical Ultramontan ism shows itself, the more is it in cumbent upon us Protestants to exercise the utmost equitableness in our judgment of Catholicism, in or der to maintain Christian fellowship with that large part of Catholic Christendom, which is yet free from fanaticism towards us. The relation of the state to the Catholic hierarchy will only be capable of being placed on the right footing when the collective national will shall have actually become tho controlling force in the Btate, i. e. when it shall, at some time hereaf ter, have a democratic constitution. Luther is a Prophet, which Zwin gle and Calvin (without, however, derogating from their dignity aud significance) are not. In Luther Christian history starts once again in a definitely new epoch as Church history. The Swiss Reformation soon allows itself to be also drawn into this direction ; the decisive agent for this being Calvin. The Lutheran Reformation, with all its weaknesses, has this great strength, that it is the specifically German Reformation, as Luther is the complete and genuine German. On this account the German Prot estant world always has even yet an instinctive drawing to Lutherism; and conspicuous as are the excel lences possessed by the Swiss Refor mation, it has nevertheless always remained foreign to the German population, excepting its western most extremities. "I am inclined to believe," said a fop to a lady who had refused fo sing, "you are fishing for compli ments." "Oh! no," replied she, "I never fish in fo shallow a stream ?" "That reckless and impudent per son by the name of Glover, who has eo little sense of the dignity of his position as a member of the House of Representatives, that he has scat tered mud from every puddle in Washington on every official with in his reach, seems to have met his match in Colonel Irish, the present Chief of the Engraving and Print ing Bureau. Colonel Iri6h has ta ken the trouble to analyzo Mr. Glover's broadside of charges, and the labor has not been lost, poor as Mr. Glover's reputation for accura cy was already. For instance,where Mr. Glover loudly declared that $130,000 had been wasted iu print ing bank-notes and securities in the last fiscal year, it is shown that tho whole amount expended wns only $827 more than the 6um which, ac cording to Mr. Glover, had been sqandered. It would probably puz zle even Mr. Glover, who thinks he could run the whole Government single handed if he had the chance, to print 2,300,000 perfect sheets of securities for $827. So, also, where Mr. Glover alleged that $200,000 had been wasted iu paying rents, Colonel Irish shows that no rents have been paid during the past fiscal year. If these statements do not convince Glover what maimer of fool he is, he must be given up as a hopeless case; and to this conclu sion, by tho way, Mr. Glover's con stituents have come already." The Medicine of Suuwliine. The world wants more sunshine in its disposition, in its business, in its charities, in its theology. For ten thousands of aches and irrita tions of men and women we com mend sunshine. It soothes better than morphine; it stimulates better than champagne; it is the best plaster lor a wound. The Good Samaritan poured out into the fallen traveler's gash more of this than of wiue and oil. Florence Nightingale used it on Crimean battlefields. Take it into all the alleys, on board all theships, by all the sick-beds; not a phial full, not a cupful, not a decanter full, but a soul full. It is good for spleen, liver complaint, for neuralgia, for rheumatism, for fail ign fortunes, for melancholy. We suspect that heaven itself is only more sunshine. A traveler going to bed, was sur prised to see a ghost, which, or who, in a sepulchral voice began : "I am the spirit of one who was foully murdered here." ''That's no busi ness of mine," said the traveler, turning over on his pillow. "Apply to the proper quarter. Good night." "When tempted to anger," says a writer, "breathe a prayer." Jes' so. When you happen to stub your toe, for instance, murmur, "Now I lame me." Don't put on airs in your new clothes. Remember the tailor is suffering. QQEc'SSS'U' STATE BANK, Ci::e::::3 1: Gcmri i Seel s:i Tenor t Ealit COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000 DIRKCYOhS: Leaxdeb Gerhard, Prcs-l. Geo. W. Hulst, Vice Pes' Juuus A Reed. Edward A. Gerp.akd. Abker Turner, Cashier. Bank of Deposit Discount and Exchange. Collections Promptl y 3Indc on nil Points. Pay Interest on Time Depos its. 274. UNIOI PACIFIC LAND OFFICE, SAMUEL C. SMITH Agent, ATTENDS TO ALL BUSINESS per tainining to a general Ileal Estate Agency and .Notnry Public. Have in structions and blanks furnished by United States Land Office for making final proof on Homesteads, thereby sav ing a trip to Grand Island. Have a large number ol farms, city lots and all lands belonging to U P. It. R. in Platte and adjoining counties for sale very cheap. Attend to contesting claims before U. S. Land office. OHce one Boor Went of Hammond Home, COLUMBUS, NEB. F. V. OTT, Clerk. Speaks German. F. SOHECK, Manufacturer and Dealer in CIGARS AND TOBACCO. ALL KINDS OF SMOKING ARTICLES. Store on Olive St., near the old Post-office Columbus Nebraska. 417-ly THE HOWE! Sewing Machine, Challenges Comparison, Distances Competition, Surpasses Ex pectation, Gives Univer sal Satisfaction. UNRIVALLED IN CONSTRUCTION, UNEQUALLED IN DURABILITY, UNSURPASSED IN APPEAR ANCE, UNEXCELLED IN ADJUSTMENT, UNAP- PHOACnED IN FINISn, UNPRECEDENTED IN OPERATION, UNQUESTIONED IN EXCEL- LENCE, UNDOUBTED IN SUPERIORITY, Undersold by None! UNDENIABLY THE BEST SEWING MACHINE KVKIl INVENTED. J. E. TASKER & BRO., Agents, Office with A. HENRY, OLIVE ST., : COLUMBUS, NEB. 45i.tt 3 O CO r. I? O 'r- si" 3 as H HH - "" - t a - O a o H C3 i an -a re 1 o o c Q o s a O ' a o t-1 hi O 3 O B in 4 e C?3 M o RJ o 03 730 03 o 3 FOR SALE. undcrfisned offers at privats snlc his farm two and a half miles north of the city consisting of C80 ACRES OF B,AIV1, fifty acres uudcr cultivation, and sixty acres of as good hay land as can be found, and under a "portion of it is a very excellent quality of brick clay. The improvements upon the place are a two-story concrete dwelling, 20x30 ft., a comfortable and convenient house; a wind-mill: a large, substantial shelter for stock; shed and yards lor hogs; corral for cattle; granary; tool house, etc., etc. Also 133 iip:ai op sheep, mostly ewes,besides horses, cows, Btcers, heifers, hogs, farming implements, &c. The location is a very excellent one for farming and stock raising near the city with easy and quick access to mar ket; a fifteen minutes' ride to the post office, the railroad depot, the telegraph office and chun-h. The site of the dwelling-house com mands as line a view as can be had of the country, for twenty miles in every direction, and the place would not be offered for sale except that my increas ing business in the city renders it desirable to give it my exclusive at tention. For further particulars call on or Aaddrcss M.K.TURNER, Columbus, Neb. SPEICE & NORTH, Genera Agents for the Sale of Real Estate. Union Pacific, and Midland Pacific R. R. Lands for sale at from ?3.00 to $10.00 per acre for cash, or on five or ten years time, in annual payments to suit pur chasers. We have also a large and choice lot of other lands, improved and unimproved, for sale at low price and on reasonable terms. Also business and residence lots in the city. We keep a complete abstract of title to all real es tate in Platte County. 633 COLUMBUS, NEB. HARNESS & SADDLES Daniel Faucette, Manufacturer and Dealer in Harness, Saiiles, Sriiles, and Collars, keeps constantly on band all kinds of whips, Saddlery Hardware, Curry combs, Brushes, Bridle Bits, Spurs, Cards. Harness made to order. Re pairing done on short notice. NEBRASKA. AVENUE, Columbus. 53.4. Book-keepers, Reporters, fST Operators, Teachers, GrcatHorcontile Colletre.Xeokuk .Iowa Q , ( "tJ 1879. THK ($jahxnbns fotmnil la conducted as a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Devoted to the best mutual inter ests of its readers and its publish ers. Published at Columbus.Plattc county, the centre of the agricul tural portion of Nebraska, it is read by hundreds of people east who are looking towards Nebraska as their future home. Its subscribers in Nebraska are the staunch, solid portion of the community, as is evidenced by the fact that the Journal has never contained a "dun" against them, and by the other fact that ADVERTISING In its columns always brings its reward. Business is business, and those who wish to reach the solid people of Central Nebraska will find the columns of the Jouunal a splendid medium. JOB WORK Of all kinds neatly and quickly done, at fair prices. This species of printing is nearly always want ed in a hurry, and, knowing this fact, wc have so provided for' it that we can furnish envelopes, let ter heads, bill beads, circulars, posters, etc., etc., on very short notice, and promptly on time as we promise. SUBSCRIPTION. 1 copy per annum " Six monthn .. 44 Three months, 52 00 . 100 . 50 Single copy sent to any address in the United States for 5 ots. M. K. TURNER & CO., Columbus, Nebraska. 1870. JOHN WIGGINS, WHOLESALE AND T A STOVES, IRON,' TINABE. Nails, Rope, Wagon Material, Glass, Paint, Etc., . 7. nr-wm ssca a ss evasmsjsj COK1F.R sSLKTENTII COLUMBUS, O. B. STILLMAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS, AVESTDOW GLASS, PERFUMERY, PATENT MEDICINES, ETC. Keeps on band all articles usually kept in a first-class Drug Store. Dealers in surrounding country will find it to their iaterest to purchase from him, as he can and will Rive BED'-ROCK TRICES. Prescriptions Carefullv ConiDOimded. Bff-A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF WALL P APER ALWAYS KEPT IN STOCK. 353 SAFES 1 The Celebrated Diebold, Norris & Go's I. ate Diebold & KlcnzZe,) Fire and Burglar Proof! HAVE THE BEST RECORD OF ALL. All leading Railroa i I Espress Companies and Bankers in Mortal m Item. Not One Lost in the Two Great Fires in Chicago; also preserved the contents in every instance, at Independence, Iowa: at Central City, Col.; at Oshkosh, Wis., and at all places have stood the test, without failure. All Sizes for Sale and 3Iade to Order. Old Safes taken in Exchange. roBHlr and Bank Work n Specialty. Prices nm lor a t0 J Good Work can be Made. D. 6. C0VENT, GENERAL AGENT, CHICAGO. WILL. B, 231 HAMMOND HOUSE Formerly Pacific House. This popular house has bean newly - Refitted and Furnished. Mnilo 3S CtS. Day Board per week, '?-iS Board and Lodginc, 5 and ?0. Good Livery and Feed Stable In con nection. SATISFA TION GUAEANTEED. JOHN HAMMOND, Proprietor. CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN The Great Trunk Line from tho West to Chicago and the ut. It is the oldest, shortest, mott direct, conrraient, eomforUblo and In ererj respect the best line joq can tike. It Is the greatest and grandest Raltoa; organization in tho United States. It owns or controls 2IOO MILES OF RAILWAY PUIXXAK HOTEL OARS are tub ales by It through between COUNCIL BLTJIT8 & CHICAGO I Ko other road runs Pullman Hotel Cars, or any other form of Hotel Cars, through, betweea the Missouri River and Chicago. BsnBGkXniHsMUcLEsBifl I BBH3BacKftKEMaBSBSaKLSBBH K2sKSasHtBlKlfiBlkafll HiKyflMflHvlflt? r PASSENGER3 OODta EAST should bear kimind that this Is the BEST ROUTE WCHICACO AND ALL POINTS EAST. Passengers by this route have choice of FIVE DIFFEKENT ROUTES and the adrantage or Elxht Dally Lines Palace Sleeping Cars from CHICAGO to PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, AND OTHER EASTERN POINTS. Insist that the Ticket Agent eellsyon tickets by the North-Western Road. Examine your Tickets, and refuse to bur If they do not read orerthU Road. All Amenta sell them and Check usual Baggage Free by this Line. Through Tickets via this Route to all Eastern Points can be procured at tho Central Pacific Rail road Ticket Office, foot of Market Street, and at t New Montgomery Street, San Francisco, and at H Coupon Ticket Offices of Central Faciae, Union Pacific, and all Western Railroads. New York Office, No. 415 Broadway. Boston Office. No. 5 State Street. Omaha Ofuce, 245 Fartf ham Street. San Francisco Office, 2 New Mont gomery Street. Chicago Ticket Offices : 62 Clark Street, under Sherman Ilouse ; 75 Canal, corner Madison Street ; Einzie Street Depot, corner West Kinzle and Canal Streets ; Wells Street Depot, corner Wells and Einzie Streets. For rates or Information not attainable from your borne ticket agents, apply to Marti w IIcoHrrT, W. II. STZ3fnrrr, Gtn'l Mazg'r, Cbictgo. Gen 'I Tat. Agt, Lhlcafor RETAIL DEALER IX IPWEE A OLIVK STRKETM, NEBRASKA. DALE, Agent, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA J. M. HONAHAN, Boots Shoes. First-Class Work and Good Mrial. STTull selection of eastern work al ways on hands. Repairing neatly and promptly done. Store opp. the Post-Office, on I3th St. 439-tf THE- Albion Mills. SAGKET & CK0UCH, Albion, Neb. The proprietors are practical miller, attend to the grinding themselves, and they DEFY COMPETITION Furnished with the latest improved marbinery, they are prepared to do all kind of CUSTOM m MERCSA1IT I ill RYE AND FEED GROUND EVERY DAY. CORN MEAL CONSTANTLY ON HAND. "We make scTera! brands of lour, Rut recommend to the trade our AL BION MILLS "STAE" BRAND, It Is superior article made from CHOICE SELECTED WHEAT. 3o.1 "YOU BET." A. W. LAWRENCE, AGENT FOR THE m S.wK is JJk "-usisrjp- :; WIND MILL,- Will hereafter be found TIIKEE DOORS SOUTH of the Post Office, where he keeps a full line of every style PUMP. PIPE, HOSE, And the Celebrated I X L FEED MILL. Ah he kccp a Pump House exclusively, he is al.lo to sell CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST. Pumps for any depth well. Pumps driven or repaired, and Rods cut. GIVE HIM A CALL i.D SATE X05ET. 3,'G BECKER & WELCH, PBOPEIETORS OF SHELL CREEK MILLS. MANUFACTURERS & WHOLE SALE DEALERS IN FLOUR AND MEAL. OFFICE, COLUMBUS, NED Dr. A. HEINTZ, DEALER IS IVIAEM, LIQUORS, Fine Soaps, Brushes, PERFUMERY, Etc., Etc., And all articles usually kept on hand by Druggists. Physicians Prescriptions Carefully Compounded. One door Hunt of Galley', ei Eleventh Street, COLUMBUS. : XEBRASICA NEW STORE XZfD- New Stock. A full, freh supply of groceries, STAPLE AND FANCY, Just opened, and for sale at low-down prices. 157" Olive Street, oppoalte Xho TttcrulI." james McAllister. We SCHITiZ, Manufacturer and Dealer in BOOTS AND SHOES! A complete swortmeat of Ladles sad Ckll drea's She kept on asad. All Work Warranted!! Oar Motto Good stock, excellent work and fair prices. Especial Attention paid to Bep&iric g. Cor. Ollre aad IStJt Mtm. Ji R