REPUBLICAN TICKET. State Forjudge of the Supremo Court, A3IASA COBB. For Regent of the University, 2d Dist., JOUN L. CARSON. For Regent of the University, 3d Dist., J. "V7. GANNETT. For District Judce, 4th District, GEORGE "VV. TOST. County. For Countv Jutlpe. S. F. MCALLISTER, For Sheriff, H. C. 31AGOON. For Clerk, For Treasurer, JOHN "VV. EARLY. For Coroner, DR.T. E. MITCHELL. Superintendent Public Instruction, CHARLES A. BRINDLEY. For Survevor, JOHN G. ROUTSON. For Commissioner. District No. 2, G. VT. SHAFFER. Kcpnolicun Platform. "Wc, the republicans of the state of Nebraska, again renew our pledges of fidelity to the principles of freedom and right, for which we havo ever contended ; and now in convention assembled, be it resolv ed: A NATION. First. Tho United States arc a nation and not simply a league of states. NO CONCESSIONS TO 11EHELS. Second. "We watch with appre hension the arrogance and treason able utterances of the rebel briga diers in congress as a threatening danger to this nation, mid further the republican party of Nebraska proclaim that we havo no conces sions to make to unrepentant rebels ; that we still adhere to the princi ples for which our brave soldiers fought. rn.EE nALLOT. Third. "We affain aflirin the prin ciple of freedom of the ballot and demand at the hands of the execu tive of this nation protection for the voters of the south, such as is ac corded to all political parties in the north. VOTE AS WE FOUGHT. Fourth. As the same issues are again being presented for decision at the ballot box for which our ar mies contended so long and faithful ly, with confidence wc call upon the soldiers to vote as they fought for the preservation of the life and pur ity the government. RETUKNINQ ritOSl'EIHTY. Fifth. "Wc welcome with much pleasure the signs of returning pros perity, as evinced by the increased activity of every department of in dustry, the general revival of man ufacturing interests, and the addi tional confidence exhibited in all departments of business. FINANCE. Sixth. We congratulate the coun try upon the special resumption of specie payment, ever pledging the support of the republicans of Ne braska to all efforts of the republi can party in the nation's councils to protect the credit of the nation and make its promises as good as gold. GOVERNMENT KCONOMV. Sevcuth. We demand at the hands of all republican officials the strict est economy in the admiuistration of all affairs ol the government, and we pledge ourselves as a party to a careful supervision of the expendi tures in all the departments of our state. GRANT. Eighth. We, as republicans of the 6tatc of Nebraska, welcome back to the shores of America the champion of our union the protector of our nation, and the hero of the war for the Union, General Ulysses S. Grant. Mrs, Ilcitmn. At seven years old, an age wheu most girls' ideas are limited to dolls, romps, and new frocks, Felicia's de light, in the bright Summer days, i was to climb up into an old apple i tree with a volume of Shakespeare ' in her hand, aud lose herself in a world of imagination, among the Jiosalinds, Imogens, and Beatrices. All that was strange, weird, and romantic had an irresistible fascina tion for her. G wry eh, as every re spectable old mansion should, had its spectre, and on moonlight nights the child, all trembling yet eager, would creep out into the long, dark avenue, fearing, yet hoping, to get a sight of the goblin. At other times, when she was suppose.il to be in bed, sho would rise, dress herself, and steal out of the house down to the sea-shore to listen to the moan ing of the waves, and to indulge in a twilight bath. Shc wssnerer scut to school ; her education was purclv desultory all tho world of poetry systematic studies, beyond French. English grammar,anil the rudiments of Latin, she wa6 wholly exempted. At seven 6he began to compose verses, aud at fourteeu a volume of these was published. A remarkable freak of lightniug I& recorded in a French newspaper. A farm-laborer, ruuniug for shelter, was suddenly thrown to the ground, the fork he carried on his shoulder beiug wrenohed from his grasp and carried through the air a distance of flftjr or sixty yards. The prongs were bent and twisted with well nigh mathematical accuracy into the shape of corkscrews, the steel being burnt, aud formed, on its exterior ssrfscc, iato small lamina which eautled a slightly sulphurous odor. The laborer escaped without injury. Tho decision of Judge Choatc last Saturday, dcuyiug another of Mr. Tildcn's countless technical objec tions, brings his famous income tax suit once again before the people. The history of this cause eclebre is remarkable both as exhibiting the charnctcr of the man and exposing what Mr. Field calls his "underhand methods of dealing." Last April the cause was ready for trial but was postponed in order to afford the defendent opportunity to present a bill of particulars. Mr. Tildcn In turn now asks the prosecution to exhibit their hand, and claims that a bill of particulars of the claim against him is necessary and mate rial for his defense. Judge Choate very promptly de nied this application, and reminds Mr. Tildcn of his professed readi ness to proceed with his case last April, calling attention to the incon sistency of his present position in claiming that a bill of particulars is necessary to enable him to make a defense. This suit was brought in 1S77. The defendent answered that he had paid his taxes assessed without any return of income with the penalties required in default of return. This was deemed insufficient. In every possible way Mr. Tildcn impeded the taking of testimony. Books containing material evidence for tho prosecution were spirited off by Mr. Tildcn's counscl,aiid now that he has failed to compel the govern ment to show its hand and reveal exactly how strong or weak a case it has before going into court, he will doubtless propose tome further objection evidently desiring any thing but a trial of the case on its merits notwithstanding his pretend ed zeal when the government was not prepared to proceed. In none of the controversies in which he has been so unfortunately engaged has the hero of "Cypher Alley" appear ed to a worse advantage. His great object is not to give tTia public an opportunity to acquit a man who llauuts so constantly in their faces his claims for the highest place wit'.iin the nation's gift, but rather to del'iy the suit until after the nom ination is made by the Democracy. If, in the face of his disreputable transactions, a blinded Democracy should hoist him on the people as a candidate, and he should gain the object of his ambition, the remarka ble sight would be presented to the world, a President of the United Stales defendant in a law suit bro't by the government of which he him self is tho head. Omaha lice. The boy stood on the back yard fence, whence all but him had Jlcd ; the flames which lit his father's barn shone just above the shed. One bunch of crackers in his hand, two others in his hat, with piteous ac cents loud he cried, "I never thought of that!" A bnuch of crackers to the tail of one small dog he'd tied ; the dog in anguish sought the barn aud 'mid its ruins died; the sparks flew wide and red and hot, they lit upon that brat ; they tired the crack ers in his hand aud eke those in his hat. Then came a burst of rattling sound the boy! Where was he gone? Ask of the winds that far around strewed bits of meat and bone, Snd scraps of clothes, and balls and lops, and nails and hooks, and yarn, the relics of the dreadful boy that burned his fat hoc s barn. Springfield Union. A boy born to a great fortune has just met with a sad fate. He was the oldest son of Mr. Trcffry, of Fowey, iu Cornwall, and jumping on a tram-wagon while in motion he fell from the grease-box. His legs were caught in the spokes of tho wheel and he was whirled round and fatally injured; indeed, he nev er regained consciousness aud died in an hour. He was twelve years old, aud would on attaining his majority have conic into possession of a large property which has for many years been held by the Trcff ry Trustees "for an heir who shall be born iu the name of Trcffry." The poor boy leaves two brothers, the cider of whom now stands in his place. As per agreement, wc received yesterday from the fruit farm of.cx Govcrnor Furnas, a sample lot of Nebraska grown figs, fresh from the trees in Nemaha County. The figs are not much to look at, resembling iu appearance very much, a fully decayed paw-paw; but they arc" decidedly toothsome, and wc must say wc have a mouth specially adapted to Nebraska grown figs. We are ready to believe now that the soil of Nebraska is capable of producing anything from big corn to figs, bananas, pine-apples, etc. The Governor will please accept our thanks, for the tig. Lincoln Jour nal.' According to the Chicago Tri bune, Schuyler Colfax is healthier, happier, and richer now thau he was when he was Vice-President of the United States. He works six months in the year as a lecturer, arranging his trips so that he may beat home Sundays with his family. During four years he has cleared f0,000at this business, and has been freo from worry and exactions of public life. His good fortune may well be envied by half the mem bers of Congress. Tho best way to condemn bad traits is by practicing good ones. Ifliml in Nature. - The rational look of the world is denied by no one. Eyes look as if they were made to see with. Ears look as if they were made to hear with. Legs look as if they were made to walk with. The nutritive apparatus looks as if it were made to keep the body in repair. The lungs look as if they were made to aerate the blood ; and the blood and blood-vessels look as if they were made with au eye to their actual function. And in general, science every-where assumes that nature is rational and that everything is adapted to everything else. We must remember that science is not merely observation ; but it is chiefly the conclusions from the observa tions. Science aims by the aid of reasoning to pass behind tho phe nomena and form some conception of the supersensible realities upon which appearances arc based. But it enters into this hidden world only by thought; and it implicitly as sumes, therefore, that the laws of thought are valid for all being. Science, then, is built upon the notion that the real is rational and intelligible; aud it aims to grasp tho rational system which is in things. If wc should assume that the real is irrational, and hence un intelligible, all our science would perish. What would become of astronomy if we assumed that the flying planet is not bound by the rational principles of mathematics? The atomic theory and the ether theory are no facts of observation, hut only rational inferences from phenomena; but if the real is not rational, of course these and all other scientific theories fall to the ground. AVc conclude, then, that there is mind back of nature which realizes iu nature its preconceived plans and purposes. Prof. Browne, in Sunday Afternoon. .o - ItSouriiers;i:il in White. At a large public funeral of a prominent citizen of Delhi a week ago last Sunday, the mourners were dressed in while, instead of the cus tomary black. This was done in approval of the wishes of the deceased, who, while living, strong ly opposed the inevitable heavy and expensive "mourning,' and request ed them to dress in simple white at the funeral, especially if they be leived him to have entered a hap pier world. Printers, as a class, says the Uoch estcr Democrat, arc innocent, unso phisticated men. "Do any of you gentlemen know anything about gambling?" asked the editor of the Oshkosh Christian Advocate of his compositors the other da-, and a cemetery stillness reigned through out the oillce. And then the crafty editor cried; "first ball 27," and six teen printi'is laid down their sticks and enquired how much there was in the pot. - .- It is well suggested by certain stalwart Republican newspapers that instead of closing up the Post office at Blackville, South Carolina, if tho Confederates persist in the practice of shooting the Post mas ters, the better way would be to take measures to protect the Post masters from the shooters. But this would probably he adjudged by the great Democratic party as an unwarau table interference. -. -.- Will somebody inform us how it is that the dog, the best, truest, most courageous and unselfish of man's friends, is used in various ex pressions as indicative of every thing that is bad? Au obstinate scoun drel is termed "dogged ;"' a lying scamp a 'hound," a coward a "cur," and a braiulcss idiot a "puppy." The road to ruin is called "going to the dogs." This is not fair to the dogs. - - - - A young midshipman went out to join his ship, commanded by a gallant officer, otherwise rather a don. He was met on deck by the captain, who said ;"WclI, youngster, so you've come to join us. I sup pose it's the old story the fool of the family, eh? Haw, haw!" To which the middy replied, in a squeaky voice : "Oh, uo,?it ; it's all changed since your day." A man with a rusty beard that ran down to a peak, and a rusty hat that ran up to a peak, boarded a western train the other day, took a scat near the stove, and fell into a gentle slumber. In a few minutes a brakeman opened a door and shout ed, "Queens!" The slumbering pas senger slightly shifted his position, and muttered, "The pot's yours; I stand in on jacks." o Womeu always claim to be anxious to have good husbands as possible, and yet wc never attend a wedding where the bride married the best man. Boston 1'ost. o Whatever we owe, it is our part to find wherowith to pay, and to do it without asking, too; for whether the creditor be good or bad, the debt 13 still the same. A contemporary lays down the rule that no woman should open conversation with a man on his politics, his religion or his wife. Dissipation is a swift and sure destroyer, and every young man who follows it is as the early flow er, exposed to untimely frost.- Thc chief art of learning is to attempt but little at a time. The widest excursions of the mind are made by short flights frequently repeated. This life is like a game of cards. Wo must play the hands dealt to us, and the credit is not so much in winning as in playing a poor hand well. A Yankee editor, in his financial article, says, "Money is close, but not close enough to reach." No woman, even the most intel lectual believes herself to be de cidedly homely. Happy people are those who do not want what they caunot.have. AT. O. Picayune. Of course women can keep a secret, but it takes a good many of them to do it. ThoJfodern Argus believes that one girl in the kitchen is worth two at the gate. The proverb, "Fair exchange is no robbery," didn't refer to church fairs. Human beings in Africa are said to be more afraid of gorillas than of lions. How to manage a wife Remain single. 0 0 V .r U1 r i I S CO 2 " cj v u . l-i F .j k, . 1. ,r - 5 2 r-i . .' E-5 e ". L j 2 -s . O hJ - "- . r .-s : ttrn . 5T , " O Z CO ss O r- co. w i s - . pn CO i I. 2 IT ' n a; iv b o . paci r i c LAND OFFICE, SAMUEL C. SMITH Agent, TTEXDS TO ALL UUSIXESS prr J. t:iiuiuinr to a general Ileal Estate Ai'iii'V and Notary Public. Have in stiui'tfons and blanks furnished by Tnited States Land Otfiee for making linal proof on Homesteads, thereby sav ing a trip to Grand IIaud. Have a" large number ot farms, eitv lots and all lands belonging to U 1. II. It. in Platte and adjoining eounties for sale very cheap. Attend to eontesting claims before U. S. Laud ollioe. (dice one Hour West of Hammond Ilnasc, COLUMBUS, NEB. E. C. IIol'KEXIskkgei:, Clerk, Speaks Herman $-i TiT0 ?cco A YEAR, or I M EI If' to $-2i a day in vour JLUJJ own locality. No risk. Women do" as well as men. Many made more than the amount stated abo"e. No one can fail to make inonev fat. Any one can do the work. You can make from HO ets. to $: an hour by devoting your evenings and spare time to the business. It costs nothing to try the bnsines. Nothing like it for tin' money making ever offered before, llusinoss pleaant and strictly honora ble. Reader, if you want to'know all about the best paying business before the public, send us your address and wc will send on full particulars and pri vate terms free; samples worth $" also free; you can then make up vour mind Tor vour-el f. A ddress GEORG E STI N SON & (:)., Poiland, Maine. 4Kl-y LAND FOR SALE. Eb'htv acres, in Sec. 12. iVrf T. 1T,R. 1 E.5mi. northeast S'rii- nf (VIiI.ii... Til w(.- tin. dcr the plow; (! acres ." yr. old trees- li Wllllilllll IU 41 1 V - .111- walnut and cottonwood or good size. Dwelling-house. lc2S feet, 1J4 stories high; good w.-ll; two granaries; 'ta bling, hog-yards, &c. Small fruits such as currant!", blackberries, tc. Conven ient to .chool liou-e and good outlet to roads. Price, $ 1, 33ft "Will sell farm ma chinery if desired. Address at Colum bus, Platte Co., Nebr. Martin IIoi.i.kiiin. I' A Bit ME BCS! 7E OF GOOD CHEER. Let not the i low prices of your products dis courage yon, but rather limit your ex penses to your resources. You can do so by stopping at the new home of your fellow farmer, where you can tind good accommodations cheap. For hay for team for one night and day, 2."i cts. A room furnished with a cook stove and bunks, in connection with the stable free. Those wishing can be accommo dated at the house of the undersigned at the following rates: Meals 23 cents; beds 10 cents. J. P. SENECAL, i mile cast of Gcrrard's Corral. COIiU 31 K U S Restaurant and Saloon! E.I). SIIEEHAN, Proprietor. jJGTWholcsalc and Retail Dealer in For eign "Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Dub lin Stout, Scotch and English Ales. Z3TKentucky Whiskies a Specialty. OYSTERS in their season, by the case can or dish. llth Street, South of Depot A GOOD FARM FOR SALE D lao acres orcoort land. 80 II. acres under cultivation, a - nnil linntp nni nnrt n hnlf story High, a good stock range, plenty ot water, and good hay land. Two miles cast of Columbus. Inquire at the Pioneer Baker. 473-Gm. Book-keepers, Reporters, Operators, Teachers, ttrsatXercantileOolleffe.XeolraUowa ' flrtiipHjH3iir"'X. W Pg&55 n fl W 5- 0 - o T -? m c c zz -. iraP Slw ! w - ' i -. " -" rt 1.- As:- spw msm i.'tii'fnt n END SPRINGS, PLATFORM SPRINGS, WHITNEY &.BRE WSTER SIDE SPRINGS. Light Pleasure and Bnsiness Wag ons of all Descriptions. We aro pleased to invite the attention of the public to the fact that we have just received a car load of "Wagons and Buggies of all descriptions, and that we arc the sole agents for the counties ol Platte, Butler, Boone, Madison, Merrick, Polk aud York, for the celebrated COETLAND WAGON COMP'Y, of Cortland, New York, and that we are otTering these wagons cheaper than any other wagon built of same material, style and iinish can be sold for in this county. jSTSend for Catalogue and Price-list. " iuoksk: & cai:v, 484-tf Columbus, Nebraska. TI-IIS SPACE IS RESERVED -KOK- H. P. COOI.IBGE, HARDWARE DEALER, NEP.RASKA AVENUE, LUERS&SCHKEIBER Blacksmith and Wagon Mabrr, AI.I. KINDS OK Repairing Done on Short Notice. tks n;":, '.:., Slide t: Crier. ALL WORK WARRANTED. They al.-o keep on hand Furst & Bradley Plows, SULKY PLOWS, CULTIVATORS, &C. Shop on Olive Street, opposite Tatter sall. COLFMRUS, NEB. EAGLE IV! ILLS, &ij ox SHELL CREEK, Near Mnttliis's Bridge. JOSEPH EUCHER, - Proprietor- 33B"TIip mill is complete in every par ticular for making the hot of Hour." "A Niu:irs i;iir hiKxiiKN'c" is the motto. I.u-x COLUMBUS DIIUCS STORE. A.W.DOLAND, (SUCCISSOU TO DOI.AXP i SMITH, ) , PATENT lllffi, Wall Paper, Toilet Articles, PAINTS AND OILS, etc., inc., i:tc. Best Of Goods And Low Prices, :o:- "VfK. SMITH will still be found at Ihe lVi. old stand, and will nnkc prescrip tions a specialty, as ItiTctnforc. 101-x NEBRASKA HOUSE, S. J. MARMOY, PropV. Nebraska Ave., South of Depot, COB.lL'.TSErC'S, IVIHZ5. A new house, newly furnished. Good accommodation. Hoard by day or week at reasonable rates. 0SrScl a First-C!:ix 'S'sil.Ie. Meals,... .2.") Cents. Lodgings.... 25 Cts SS-'Jtf CALIFORNIA WINES! 2ei isi White, $155 S$l. 75 A GALLON -AT- SAML. GASS'S, E!eTinth Street. you. Men, women, boys and girls make money faster at work for us than at any thing else. The work it light and pleas ant, and such as anyone can go right at. Those who are wise who sec this notice will hPiid us their addresses at once and sec for themselves. Costly Outfit and terms free. Now is the time. Those already at work are laying up large sums of money. Address TRUE Jc CO., Augusta, Maine. 481-y TAjVsdKxr.. - fliOAnA MONTH guaranteed. Nk ri II I $12 a day at home made bv UJtVVthc industrious. Capital not required: we will start 'YOU BET." A. W. LAWRENCE, AGENT FOIt THE JL rj WIND MILL, lie will hereafter be found on 13th street two doors west of Marshall Smith's where he keeps a full line of every style of PUMP. PIPE, HOSE, And the Celebrated I X L FEED MILL. As he keeps a Pump House cxclusi yel v, he is able to sell CHEAPER TJIA'X THE CHEAPEST. Pumps for any depth well. Pumps driven or repaired, and Rods cut. - GIVE 1HI A CALL AXft. SAVE 3I0XEY. .TiC mm a sum institute. " -: wzzsir" 2' gS32g Physicians aift Surgeons. C. 0. 1II2CE?., 2. D. U 2. C. ZZSIZZ, y. 3., cf Caih:. Consulting Physicians and Surgeons, For the treatment of all classes of Sur gery and deformities; acute and chronic disea-es, diseases of the eye aud ear, etc., etc., Columbus, Neb. SPE5CE & WORTH, (ii'iicral Agent.- fr the Sale of Real Estate. Union Pacific, and Midland Pacific R. R. Lands for -all- at from ?:!.0) to $10.00 per acre for ca-h, or on five or ten years lime, in annual payments to suit pur chasers. We have alo a large and choice lot of other lands, improved and unimproved, for sale at low price and on reasonable terms. AIo business and residence lot- in the city. Wc keep a complete abstractor title to all real es tate in Platte Countv. G:5T COX33IEti;s, A'F,R. J. O. ELLIOTT. AHKXT FOKTIIK STOVER WIND MILL $20 OSCILLATING FEED MILL, And All Kinds of Pump, AND PUMP MATERIALS! AIjsO Challenge Wind and Feed Jfills, Combined Sheller and Grinder, Jfalt Jfills. Horse Powers, Corn Shelters and Fanning Mills. Pumps Ilepniretl on Short Notice, Farmer", come and examine our mill. You will tind one erected on thepremiscs of Ihe Hammond Hou-e, in ;;ood running order. GUS.A. SCHROEDER, DKAr.Ei: ix HARDWARE, Stoves, Tiaware, PUMPS, PAINT, WIND MILLS AND WAfJONS. AXIJ A Vl'1.1. UXKOK Agricultural Implements. Goods sold cheap for cash. SIGN OF BIG AX, 11th STREET, COLUMBUS, XEHRASKA. 434-x. CITY MEAT MARKET, ox OI,IVE ST., OPPONITK irA.ll 3IO.M HOL'SE. Will keep on hand all kinds ol Fresh and Salt Meats, also Sausage, Poultry, Fresh Fish, etc., all In their season. Cash paid for Hides, Lard and Ba con. WILL.T. RICKEY. CENTRAL MT MM ox inii sTKEsrr. Dealer? in Frch and Salted Meats. &c. Town Lots, Wood, Hides, &c. J. RICKEY, Agent. . Columbus, June 1, 1S77. Jw-sv JOHN WIGGINS, WHOLESALE AND STOVES, IBOK, TIiWABE, Nails, Rope, Wagon Material, Glass, Paint, Etc., CORNER KI.1"VE.TII COLUMBUS, nzE The Celebrated Diebolcl. Norris & Co5s (3.:ilo SiIx;iI & QXicnzir.) Fire and Burglar Proof! HAVE THE BEST KECOKD OF xVLL. All leading Eailrod & Express Companies and hki intis Mwost be ika, Not One Let in the Two Great Fires in Chicago; ah pre-nrrvetl lb eH4Mt in every iu-tauce, at Independence, Iowa; at Central City, CeL; at O-hkosh, Wis., and at all places have stood, the tct, withHt (a(lr. All Sizes for Sale and Hade to Oriler. OM Safes taken in Exchange. County ami Hank Vr'orlc n iiooil Wiirlf D. S. COVENT, GENERAL AGENT, CHICAGO. WILL. B. DALE, Agent, 231 18TO. 1879. Tin: oIitii(bii.rJ glourml Is conduced as a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Devoted to the bet mutual intcr cst of its reader.-, and it ptiJdi-'h-ers. PiiblNbcd at ColniuIiti. Platte county, the centre of the agricul tural portion of Nebraska, it is read by hundred- of people eat who arc looking toward- Nebraska as their future home. It. ubscriberH iu Nebraska arc the staunch, solid portion of the community, .i i evidenced by the fact that the JoUKXAl. ha- never contained a "dun" again-t tiicni. and by the other fact that ADVERTISING In it1 columns always bring its reward. Uusine.-ji i busine.'?, and tho&e who wi-!i to reach the .-olid people of Central Nebraska will lind the column of the-Joukxai. a splendid medium. JOB WORK Of all kind. neatly and ((iiickly done, at fair prices. Thi .species of printing is nearly always want ed in a hurry, and, knowing this fact, wc have so provided for it that we cum furiihh envelopes, let ter head, bill heads, circulars, posters, etc., etc., on very short notice, and promptly on time as we promi.e. SUBSCRIPTION. I copy per annum. " Six montliH " Three months. $2 00 . I 00 r.n Single cojv sent to anv addrt-s-in the United State for5Hts. M. E. TTJKNER & CO., Columbus, Nebraska. STATE BAM, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. CA S7f CA PITA L, - $50,000 DIRKCTOllS: Leandei: Gei:i:ai:i, Pro.s. (iEO. W. IIulst, Vice Prej't. Julius A JIbeo. Edward A. Gkkkakd. A i:ei: Tiris.VEir, Cashier. Itaalx or Oepovir, I)!t:oiiiit ami Kxcliniipro. ColIectionxIroiiiilIy ."Xnl" on nil Point. I"ay iRtercxt on Time S)eio I. 274 RETAIL DEALER IN A.M OI.IVi: STREETS, NEBRASKA. Specially. X"ttt:c. -.it low ax can he Ulailc. ''OLUMIJUS, XEBUASKA CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN Tho Great Trunk Lino from the West to Chicago and tho East. It in the oldest, shortest, most direct, conrrnk!, comfortable and In every respect tho best Hfwjwi can take. It Is the greatest and crandMt HaHwi organization in tho United States. It ohm or controls 21 OO MILES OF RAILWAY TUIXMAN HOTEI. CAKS aro run alono by It through between COUNCIL BLTJITS & CHICAGO I No otberroad rncs Pnllman not el Car, or any other form of Hotel Cars, through, between tho Missouri Itiver and Chicago. PASSENGEltS OOI0 E.VST ehoald bear fa mind that this Is the BEST ROUTEroICHICACO AND ALL TOINTS EAST. Passengers by th' route have choice of riVE DII'KJiUENT KOCTKS and the adTantage of Klht Dally Llnei l'alace Slecplnc Car from CHICAGO to PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, AND OTHER EASTERN TOINTS. Insist that the Ticket Agent sells yoa ticket fcy the North-Western Road. Examine jeer Tkkets, aud refuse to bay if they do not read over thto Head. All Agents sell them and Checit usual Baggage Free b7 this Line. Through Tickets via this Roate to all Eastern Point can be procured at the Central I'acMe KaM roc 1 Ticket Office, foot of Market Street, ami at 2 New Nonfsomcry Street. San Kraneisro, ad at all ' onpon TViet Ofiices of Central I'aci&c, Uitien IeiCc, and all Western Railroads. New York Office. No. 415 Uroadway. Itnstsa Olflce. No. 5 State S trecu Omaha OfBee, 215 Kara ham S'rert. San Francisco Office. 2 New 3Iet MMitery street. Chicago Ticket Offices : G2 Cterk Street, under Sherman House : 76 Canal, cerMr JtadI.onS reet; Kinzie Street Depot, corner Wt Kiiizie ard C'jnal Streets ; Wetts btreet Depot, ' r.ier Wells and Kinzie Street?. K.r rates or Information not atlaiaabie free yo.tr home ticket ageBts, apply to Mnvik HroErrr, W. If. Stexmhtt. Ut-a'I Jltx'r. Calao. Ceal tVts. Ak'i. CMwecv mBmisT NEW STORE ANI- New Stock. A full, frch Hpjly f grri STAPLE AND FANCY, Just opened, and fwr al at tew-d u prices. 157" Olive Slnrl opposite Hie 'rattcrill." JAMES ArcALLISTEi:. $nrtA "WEEK in your own town. rfr-kand no capital risked. Yu JJ can give the btHlHes atrial without c.xpene. The bet opportunity ever offered for these will ing to work. You should try netbint; else until you cc for yourself what yeu can do at the business wc offer. No rn. to explain here. You can devote all vour time or only your spare time to the buiincs", and make great pay for every hour that you work. "Women make a ;much as men. Fend for special private terms ana particular., wmcn r inuu free- $" Ontlit free. Don't complain of hard times while vou have .such a chance. Address II.'lIA I.LETT .fe CO.. Portland, Maine. -lI-J Ti il TiTiMiii