' IIoHlioItl Cares New Yoik Weekly. If tbe vote of women could be takeu ou the question of housekeep ing, it would be a matter of great surprise to men to Icnrn the result. The business as it is conducted at present would be voted out of ex istence, or, failing in that, the voice of the majority would be for board ing. The work of the household Las increased greatly within a quar ter of a century, and the servant of the period is not an improvement upon the typical one of the past. The luxuries which one by one have come to women, the multitudinous things that are required to make homes attractive, and the modern houses which have their mountain ous stairs to weary weak back?, are all things which have combined to make housekeeping a drudgery. Time and strength are consumed while the routine work is being peformed, and the intelligent minds of American women rebel constant ly. What can be done V Breakup homes, and live in those modern caravansaries hotels? Xot so. The remedy lies in simplifying home life; in leaving out of houses the endless traps that are hard to keep clean, and harder still to make, and by putting in homes nothing too good for hard usage. "Women need to know so much that they do not know, and cannot while they worry and fret over lambrequins and pillow-shams, ti dies and llamburgtbordcrson cloth ing, that it is discouraging to try to light the matter atw-all. They are trying to do their )est, working early and late, saving here and spending there, judiciikisly as they hope, yet never realizing any bless ing for themselves or others. "What is a nice parlor or a fine dinner to a visitor if the hostess is a dull, worn ont person? The guest who is bid den to enjoy 6uch hospitality is cheated out of better company at home, and deserves an apology rath er than ofler thanks for such atten tions as arc extended. Housewives do not emancipate themselves from the thralldom put upon them by a variety of conditions. In the fir&t place, their homes arc not adapted to housekeeping. Men and not women plan houses, and the sole idea in view in building them is to get the largest number on the smallest pos sible space. Then women having inconveniences of this kind to start with make every effort to overcome them by furnishings. Fashion has to be consulted in this latter matter, and upholstered articles that get soiled and fade out are bought when the family puree cannot aflbrd it. Nice china or glass is purchased when ignorant or careless help will make quick work of it: aud the company rooms arc furnished as richly as possible, when in fact the social circle in which the family move is so limited that a sitting room would auswer evorj purpose. If cheap carpets, and stone-ware, and plain clothing should be fash ionable for all people, how soon the burdens would drop away from the shoulders of the majority of the housekeepers. How soon would tbe fault-finding and complaiuiug cease, and the dull women become intelligent, interested members of the family circle. Suppose the pillow-cases have no shams; it would be all the better for the home-life of homes. Shams should be unknown in them any way, and real pillow cases would give more satisfaction. Then sound common sense should save women from wasting time on ruffles and fallals that add nothing but wrinkles to all brows. House holds, as they arc now, seem to be run for the benefit of lookers-ou rather than the comfort of iumatcs, and the result is a generally dissat isfied army of housekeepers. It is not amazing that they arc dissatis fied, for that argues appreciation of uncongenial work, aud those who arc alive to the fact that their (asks hurt them in a spiritual sense have one hope of saviug themselves. Sim plify life; this is the way through which women may hope to rise to an estate wherein I hey will find themselves serene and patient, hon est aud true. It were worth all of life to live if the best half of human ity could be lifted out of drudgery of a domestic kind and placed where the home would bo what the Diriuc Tower designed it should be, a temple where 44 Sin and evils cuasc. And ouly rest and peace Conliuually are fouud." Mints to Poultry letter. The reason poultry killed at home though young, is not as tender as that bought at the market, is that the former is generally uot killed until wanted, and, when eaten, still rigid in death, while that bought at the poulterers has been killed at least hours more often days. Poul try ought to be killed several days before being eaten, dressed at once, and with a lew bits of charcoal iu it. hung in a cool place. .If poultry arc kept from food aud drink at least twelve hours before killing, the crop and intestines will be emptied and any superfluity of secretions ex hausted. The flesh will be juicy and the fat firm. If left three days without food or drink, though in good condition previously, the flesh will be dry aud tasteless and the fat tsoft; the gas from the crop and in testine" will taint the flesh, even though retained but a short time. Fancier's Journal. "I feel sure this bat's not broad enough in the brim, Aunt Jemima 1" "What doe it matter, child ! .Look M me! I put on anything!" Caution fit Eating;. 1. Of course, don't cat too much. The digestive fluids arc limited in quantity. All above enough is un digested, irritating ami weakening the system, and often causing par alysis of the brain by drawing on the nervous force more rapidly than it is generated. 2. Don't eat between meals. The stomach must rest, or it will soon er or later break down. Even the heart has to rest between the beats. 3. Don't eat a full meal when ex- hausted. The stomach is as weak as the rest of the body. 4 Don't take a lunch t noon, and cat heartily at night. The whole digestive system needs to share in the rest and recuperation of sleep. Besides, the tendency is to put a full meal into a weakened stomach. 5. Don't substitute stimulus for food like many women who do half a day'sjwork on strong coffee or tea. As well, in the case of a horse, substitute the whip for oafs. G. Don't have a daily monotony of dishes. Variety is necessary for reli&h, and rslish is necessary to good digestion. 7. Don't cat blindly. There can be nothing 1n the body-musclcs, membranes, bones, nerves, brain which, is not in our food. One ar ticle furnishes one or more elements, and another others. Wc could starve on fine flour. Some article?, do not nourish, but ouly warm. S. Eat according to the season one-third less in summer than in winter. In-the latter season, fat meat, sugar, and starch arc appro priate, as being heat-makers ; in the former, milk, vegetables, and every, variety of ripe fruit. 9. Eat with cheer. Cheer pro motes digestion ; care, fret and pas sion arrest it. Lively chat, racy anecdotes, and innocent gossip arc better than Ilalford sauce. Some I.ittlc Tiling ".earned by Experience. If your coal fire is low, throw on a tablcspoouful of salt, and it will help it very much. A little ginger put into sausage meat improves the flavor. In icing cakes, dip the knife fre quently into cold water. Iu boiling meat for soup, use cold water to extract the juices. If the meat is wanted for itself alone, plunge in boiliug water at once. You can get a bottle or barrel of oil offany carpet or woolen stuff by aplying buckwheat plentifully and faithfully. Never put water to such a grease spot, or liquid of any kind. Broil steak without salting. Salt draws the juices in cooking; it is desircable to keep these iu if possi ble. Cook over a hot fire, turning frequently, scaring on both sides. Place on a platter; salt and peprrer to taste. Beef having a tendency to be lough can be made very palatable by stewing gently for two hours, with pepper and salt, taking out about a pint of the liquor when half done, and letting the rest boil into the meat. Brown the meat in the pot. Alter taking up, make a gra vy of the pint of liquor saved. A small piece of charcoal in the pot with boiling cabbage removes the smell. Clean oil cloth with milk and wa ter; a brush or soap will ruin them. Tumblers lh.it have had milk in them should never be put iu hot water. A spoonful of stewed tomatoes in the gravy of cither roasted or fried meat is an improvement. The skin of a boiled c is the most efficacious remedy that can be -applied to a boil. Peel it carefully, wot aud apply it to the part affected. It will draw off the matter aud relieve the sore ness in a few hours. A laootl Liquid Manure. A Baltimore florist sends the Boston Journal of Chemistry the following formula for a liquid ma nure for flowers. The materials may be had at any blacksmith shop : Put one bushel of (he clippings from horses hoofs into a barrel, and fill it up with water. Let it stand for a week, when it is ready for use. Apply it with a watering pot. All bedding plants can be watered with this liq lid every day if they arc not pot-bouud. Repotted plants should be watered once a week until they have plenty of working roots to take up the manure. It will also be fouud escccllent for hard-wooded if used once or twice a week. Two or three weeks alter the plants have been watered with the manure the foliage generally chang es from a green to a golden yellow, moving from the stem dowu to the leaf, which, however, lasts only for a few weeks when it changes to a dark glossy green, riants under this watering grow very strong; the ilowcrs are very large and bright in color. Plants thus treat ed can be kept in very small .pots for a long time without being -t5w-plautcd. This is especially advan tageous to the market gardner, who can sell his plants in three or four inch pots, while he would have to shift (hem into five and six if he used ridh soil alone. Flowers wa tered with this liqnid manure will bring twenty-five per cent, more than otherwise; besides being iu small pots, they are lighter, can be packed closer and are eaier to be handled. Tlianksgirlagr Proclamation. The following proclamation was issued by the President to-day: 'At uo recurrence of the season which the devout habit of a religious people has made the occasion for giving thanks to Almighty God and humbly invoking His diviue favor, has the material prosperity enjoyed by our whole country been more manifold, or more universal. Dur ing the past year, also, unbroken peace with all foreign nations, the j general prevalence of domestic tran- quility,aud the supremacy and secu rity of the great institutions of civil and religions freedom have gladden ed the hearts of our people and con firmed their attachment to their Government, which the wisdom and courage of our ancestors so fitly framed, and the wisdom aud courage of their descendauts have so firmly maintained, to be the habitation of Libert- and Justice to successive generations. "Now, therefore, I, Rutherford B. Hayes, President of the United States, do appoint Thursday, the 27th day of November, instant, as a day of National Thanksgiving aud Prayer, aud I earnestly recommend that, withdrawing themselves from secular cares and labors, and that the people of the United States do meet together on that day in their respective places of worship, there to give thanks and praise to Al mighty God for His mercies, and to devoutly beseech their continuance. "In witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. 'Done at the city of "Washington, this 3d day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy-uinc, and of the Independence of the United States, the one hundred aud fourth." liUTHEitroitn B. Hayes. By the President: W.m. Eva uts. Secy of State. Good Cultivation Pajx. A good soil rarely fails, even in a poor season, of returning a paying income for the labor expended upon it in the cultivation of any crop adapted to it. The idea that the number of acres in crops indicates the farmer's income must be aban doned, and the number of bushels per acre must be looked for instead. There is certainly less profit in plow ing fifty acres, to raise one thousand bushels of grain, than in plowing but twenty-five to grow the same amount and trusting to good seasons for fair crops will not be thought of by the improved fanner. A rich well culti vated soil will usually make fair re turns in what we call had or unfa vorable seasons. What the farmer on a poor soil would call a good season seldom comes. English women arc the wisest and most sensible of their sex in the matter of dress. They have distinc tive costumes for different occasions, and for out-of-door adopt the plainest and most durable arti cles. They have secured something like indestructibility iu the hats they wear for traveling. They are made ofsergc, without any wire or net lining, the shape being given by running an clastic around the crown and thick piping" rnrds iu'the stirr ing of the brim. A hat made in this fashion can not be made to look any worse by any fury 'of the wind or weather than it docs when new. Exchange. Our customs aud habits are like the ruts in roads. The wheel9 of life settle into them and we jog along through the mire, becnuse it is to much trouble to get out of them. As it has been finely expressed: ''Principle is a passion for truth." And as an earlier and homelier writer hath il : "The truths we be lieve in arc the pillars of Our world. liuhcer. Practice does not always make perfect. Currau, when told by his physician that he seemed to cough with more difficulty, replied, "That is odd enough, for I have been practicing all night. "A distinguished teacher says: "To get into a boy's heart, you must get the boy-heart into you, then bring him up with you into the thoughts aud feelings of a man. The bitterest of all satirists, Tal- leyand, being told that a certain pub lic functionary was talking against him, exclaimed, "That surprises me. I have never done him a favor." "Isn't my photograph excellent?'' said a young wife to her husband. "Well, my dear," replied he, 'there's a little too much repose about the moulh for it to be natural." "Why will people 'put an enemy in their mouths to steal their brains away? " remaps lor revenge, in incluciur the enemy to hunt something that can't be found. for 'Doctor," said a gentleman his paslor, "how can I best train up my boy iu the way he should go?" "By going that way yourself," blandly replied tho pastor. low pleasant it is for a father to sit at his child's hoard 1 It is like the aged man reclining under the shadow of the oak which he has planted. Flattery resembles the picture of a suit armour in this respect, that it is calculated to yield delight, not to render any actual service. Demo philus. The readiest way to entangle the mind with false doctrine is first to entice the will lo wanton living. Hfcw Ideal or Marriage. It is indubitable that the girls idea of marriage has of late years greatly changed, and the change has been produced iu part by what she sees, and in part by what she reads. We entertain no doubt that the fe male novelists who have followed in the wake of the late George Laur ence have materially modified the ideal of suitable lover as entertained by many of their sex. "Onida," Miss Broughton, Miss Annie Thom as, and others have accustomed them to ferocious lovers. Everybody knows the sort of hero, half-Ajax, half-Paris, of their monotonous pages. Grown-up people may smile at such absurdities, but girls are very impressionable, and when once they have adopted such an ideal, it is not easy to expel it from their minds. The person hardly exists in real life ; the nearest approach to it being any or every unprincipled man who is prepared to make "fierce love'' to any fool he meets. Obviously this is not a condition of things favorable to marriage; for while it makes girls more prompt, indeed eager to flirt, it indisposes them to appreciate at tentions of a more delicate but more practical kind. So much for the change produced iu the ideals of women by what they sec. While silly novels tell them that a lover, to be worth anything, must rail against heaven and bite the grass with his teeth, the whole arrangements of society keep daily telling them that a husband is no good at all unless he has a great deal of money. During the last twenty years the practice of luxurious self-indulgence has crept on apace. Splendor and spending are slill the order of the day, and household vie with each other in the race of ostentation. Ex travagance, not economy, is the standard of domestic happiness at present in fashion. It is uot a girl's ideal, when she marries, that she should stay at home; but, ou the contrary, that she should leave it perpetually. In a word, if you gpt at the heart of a great many girls, you discover that their ideal of life is that it should he one continual "spree." There is nowhere any apology for despondeucy. Always there is" life while life lasts' which, rightly lived, implies a divine satisfaction. Tho rcau The blue sky is a distant reflec tion of the azure serenity that looks out from uhder a human brow. Thorcau. . "I really can't express my thanks,'' as the boy &aid to a school-master when he gave him a thrashing. What is it that tics two but only touches one ? A wedding ring. A mere question of lime "What o'clock is it? oH- aH 5! " i !-! e-- -J H I 2 mX a Q s a w5h o. SH v r 1 a r 1 j rnj - . . . ; o "5 w 2 T ? y.m'z tT r5 . o CD I r"v m r p w - .-t taw l ,. r i r s rr w r 1 r; iu cm tJ cs ; h- ri n - HZ '1 rKi A AV'EEK in vour own town, NTIpXand no capital risked. You DVcan give the business atrial without expense. The lu. opportunity ever ofl'ercil for thoe will ing to work. You should try nothing elc until you see for yourself what you can do at the businesswc oiler. No room to explain here. You can devote all j our time or ouly your spare tim." to the business, and make great pay for every hour that you work. "Women make a much as men. Send for special private terms and particulars, which we mail free. $." Outtit free. Don't complain of bard times while you have such a chance. Address II. ITALLETT & CO., Portland, 3Iainc. 48I-y FAItGKS! BE OK (500D CHEEK. Let not the low prices of your products dis courage you, but rather limit your ex penses to your resources. You can do o by stopping at the now home of your fellow farmer, where you can find good accommodations cheap. For hay for team for one night and day. 25 cts. A room furnished with a cook stove and bunks, in connection with the stable free. Those wishing can be accommo dated at the houe of the undersigned at the following rates: Meals 2 cents; beds 10 cents. J. K. SENECA L, J4 mile east of Gcrrard's Corral. "" coiiiJ ."i a; T Restaurant and Saloon! E. D. SHEEHAX, Proprietor. JSTWholcsale "ud Ketail Dealer in For eign "Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Dub lin Stout, Scotch and English Ales. $3TKentucky Whiskies a Specialty. OYSTERS in their scasou, by the eae can or dish. 11th Street, South of Depot CALIFORNIA WINES! Sei isi VTiits, 81.25sll.7S A GALLON -AT- SAML. GASS'S, EUTMith StrcM. - 1 n -s m z "1 E5- -: r ij 0 - Mr, 2 O w I E f 5 SB gg END SPRINGS, PLATFORM SPRINGS, WHITNEY ,fc BREWSTER SIDE SPRINGS. Light Pleasure and Business Wag ons of all Descriptions. We arc pleased to invite the attentio of the public to the fact that we have just received a car load of Wagons and Uuggies of all descriptions, and that we are tbe sole agents for the counties ot riatte, Rutler, Boone, Madison, Merrick, Polk and York, for the celebrated CORTLAND WAGON COMP'Y,' of Cortland, New York, and that we are offering 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. .1IOICSE & CAL, 434-tf Columbus, Nebraska. T1IIS SPACE IS RESERVED -FOtt- H. P. COOLIDGE, HARDWARE DEALER, NEUKASKA AVENl'E, COI.lJMItUK, M.UIt ASIi.A. LUERS&SCHBEIBER Blacksmiths and Wagon Uahrr. - AM. KINDS OF Repairing Done on Short Notice. Euesien, Tn::!, 2t:.. Uiis t: Crier. ALL WORK WARRANTED. They alo keep on hand Furst & Bradley Plows, SULKY PLOWS, CULTIVATORS, &C. Shop on Olive sail. Street, opposite Tatter COM'JlIirs, NEIL EAGLE MILLS, OX SHELL CREEK, Near Mnttlu's's Bridge. JOSEPH BUCHER, - Propriotor JSTTlie mill i complete in every par ticular for making the lest of Hour. 'A tqiiaiM Fair !mtiiiirf.-T is the motto. 4.V-x ii iv i o rs' i a c i v c LAND OFFICE, SAMUEL C. SMITH Agent, ATTENDS TO ALL BUSINESS per tainining to n general Ueal Estate Agency and, Notary Public. Have in structions and blanks furnished by United States Land Olliee 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 1. It. It. iu Platte and adjoining counties for sale very cheap. Attend to contesting claims before U.S. Land oflicc. OQIrp oiip Hoar Mist of Iliirmnonit llnuxr, COLUMBUS, NEB. E. C IIOCKKNHKItOKIl, Clerk, Speaks (lei man CITY MEAT MARKET, O N oa.ivz: st.. oibo.sitk ham. Will keep on hand all kinds ot Fresh and Salt Meats, also Sausage, Poultry, Fresh Fish, etc., all in their season. Cash paid for Hides, Lard and Ba. con. WILL.T. KICKLY. CENTRAL MT MARKET OTi aitli STREET. Dealers in Fre.li and Salted Jleat.s. ifcc. Town Lot", "Wood. Hides, &c. .1. UICKLV, Agent. Columbus, June 1. 1XT7. $300fkS t not renuir Til guaranteed. at home made by strioiiH. Capital required: we will start vou. Men, women, hoys and jrirl. make money faster at work for us than at any thing else. The work i light and pleas ant, and such as anyone can go rteht at. Those who arc wi.e who ee this notice will send us their addresses at once and see for theniselres. Costly Outtit and term free. Now is the time. Those already at work are laying up large sums of money. Address TRUE ,t CO., Augusta, Maine. 481-y A GOOD FARM FOR SALE 13G acres of good land, 80 ncrcH under cultivation, a good house one and a half story high, a good stock range, plcntv oi water, and good bay land. Two miles east of Columbus. Inquire at tbe rionerr Jlakcrr. AlUJim. -fe JOHN WIGGINS, Wholesale and Hetttil Dealer in HARDWARE, . sssssssssssssssssssssssssssss SSSSSsSXOVES,S3SSSS SSSSSbSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSbSijSSSS BON, TINWARE, NAILS. ROPE, Wagon Material GLASS, PAINT, ETC., ETC. Corner lltli aud Olive Sts. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. ii YOU BET. )) A. W. LAWRENCE, AGENT FOR THE & s3S- teVi sLflLk ta S WllJ- WIND MILL, He will hereafter be found on 13th street two doors west of Marshall Smith's where he keeps a full line of everv style of PUMP. PIPE, HOSE, And the Celebrated I X L FEED MILL. As i lie keens a rump House excliniyely, s able to sell CHEAPER THAN he is THE CHEAPEST. Pumps for any depth well. Pump driven or repaired, and Hods cut. (JIVE 1IIJ1 A CALL A.U SAVE 3!0.'EY. .r.c MEDICAL I mm INSTITUTE. 1T1TCS2I.L, a. 3. ileus ai m n Z. 3. MS2CE3. Ii. 2., 4 J. C. BKIISS, IT. 3., :f Cn:ha. Consulting Physicians and Surgeons, For the treatment of all elases of Sur gery and deformities; acute and chronic diseases, diseases of the eye and ear, etc., etc., 00102111)118, Neb $1500i TO ?CCOO A YEAR, or $" to $20 a day in your own localltr. No mk. Women do a. well as men. Many made more than the amount stated above. No one ean fail to make money fast. Any one can do the work. You can make from r0 cts. to $2 an hour by devoting your evenings and spare time to the business. It costs nothing to try the business. Nothing like it for the money making ever offered beforp. Business pleasant and strictly honora ble. Header, if you want to know all about the best paying business before the public, ifcnd us your address and we will send you full particulars and pri vate terras" free: samples worth $.') also free; you can then makeup vour mind for yourself. Address GEORGE STIN SON GO.. Porland, Maine. l-y rgpsr-" M SAFES I The Celebrated Diebold, Morris & Co's (Late IHcboId & liicnxlc,) Fire and Burglar Proof! HAVE THE BEST EECORD OP ALL. AH loading Railrod & Express Companies and Bank in the Northwest beta. 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 Oshkosb, WK, and at all places have stood the test, without failure. All Sizes foV Sale and jlade to Order. Old .Safes taken in Exchange. County and Bank Work a Specialty. Irlcc as Ior at Good Worlc can he .Hade. D. S. COVENT, GENERAL AGENT, CHICAGO. .WILL. B. DALE, Agent, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA 234 1870. 1879. THE HJoliui(tus ouiinil Is conducted as a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Devoted to the best mutual inter ests of its readers and its publish ers. Published at Columbu.PIatte county, the centre of the agricul tural portion ofNebraska.it is read by hundreds of people east who arc looking towards Nebraska as their fnture home. Its subscriber- in Nebraska are the staunch, solid portion of the community, as I evidenced by the fact that the Journal has never contained n "dun" against them, and by the other Tact that ADVERTISING In its columns always brings its reward. Business is busines-., and those who wish to reach the solid people of Central Nebraska will find the columns of the Journal 3 splendid medium. JOB WORK Of all kind-, neatly and quickly done, at fair prices. This species of printing is nearly always waut cd in a hurry, and, knowing this fact, we have so provided for it that we can furnish envelopes, let ter heads, bill head?, circulars, posters, etc., etc., on very short notice, and promptly 011 time as we promie. SUBSCRIPTION. 1 copy per annum jooo " Six months 1 on Three month. ,10 Single i-oi -flit l anv addre-a in the United States forft'ots. M. K. TUENEE & CO., Columbia, Nebraska. CO&.TJWCBtFS STATE BANK, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. CASH CAPITAL. - $60,000 DIRECTORS: Lkan'dkk Gekkaicd, Prcs'l. Geo. "V. Hoi.st, Vice Pres't. Jumus A Keku. Edward A. Gerhard. Akxeu Turner, Cashier. -o- SlaiiK oF icposit. dJlHt-oimt and Kxclinnee. ColIcutionM Promptly 3Iiid on nil Points. fiuy Sntereat on Time Dcpon-It-. 271 J. C. ELLIOTT, ACKNT FOR TIIK STOVER WIND MILL .Vil OSCILLATING FLED .MILL, And All Kinds of Pump, Axr PUMP MATERIALS! ALSO Ch'illenye Wind and Feed Mills, Combined Shelter and u nnder, JTall Mills, Horse Powers, Corn Shelters and Fanning Mills. I Pumps Repaired on Short Notice, ! Farmers, come and cXHinlne our mill. You will Undone erected on the premises of the Hammond House, in good running order. NEBRASKA HOUSE, S. J. MARMOY, Prop'r. Nebraska Ave., South of Depot, COl.VJ.lIBUS. SEB. A new house, newly furnished. Good accommodations. Board by day or week nt reasonable rates. J3ffe u FIrMt-CIafcsi Table. Meats,. ...25 Oents. Lodging. ...SS'Cts. 3S2f CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN Tho Great Trunk Lino from tho "West to Chicago and tho Kast. It is tbe oldest, shortest, most direct convenient, comfortablo and in every rrspect the best Myu can take. It Is tho grrattst and pr&ndeat HaHway organization In tno United States. It ovtn et controls 2100 MILES OF RAILWAY PULL3I.1N DOTEI. CARS aro run alon by It through between COUNCIL BLTJITS & CHICAGO I No other road rnna Pullman llotel Cars, or any other form of llotel Cars, through, between tho Missouri River and Chicago. PASSENGERS 001X0 EAST honld hear fcmlr.d that this Is the BEST ROUTEHelCHICAGO AND ALL POINTS EAST. Pasengera by th's route haTe choice of FIVE UIFFEKENT BOI7TK3 and the advantage of El-lit Dally Lines l'alaca Sleeping Car from CHICAGO to PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, AND OTHER EASTERN POINTS. In:t that tho Ticket Agent fells yon ticket by the Xorta-Western Road. Examine yoor Tfcket, ami refnse to buy If they do not read OYcrthfoKead. All Agents fell them and Cbeclc nscal Baggage Frt-e by this Line. Through Ticket via this Route to all Eastern Points can be procured at the Central I'acifle rtail TOfi Ticket Office, foot of Market Street, ami at I New 31onfeoruery fetrcet. San Frawiseo, aod at all oapon Ticket Offices of Central Pacific, Union Pacific, and all Western Railroads. New York Office, No. 415 Broadway. Boston 0c No. 6 State Street. Omaha OBce. 345 Farn ham Street. San Francisco Office. S New Mont gomery Street. Chicago Ticket Offices : S2 Clerk Mrret, nnder Sherman Flon-c ; 75 Canal, corner Mftdlon Street : Kiozle Street Depot, corner West Ki-.ii and Canal Streets ; Wells Street Depot, c.r.i- r Wells and Klnzle Streets. For rates or Information not atlniBaMe from your home tkket agent?, apply to M.1RTIV nrOHHT, W. II. STBJfNDtT, (teu'I.M.tc;'r.Cieo. Gn'l l"is. Agt, CMMSf GUS.A. SCHROEDER, hhalkk in HARDWARE, ,. Stoi'es, Tinware, PUMPS, PAINT, WIND MILL AND W A (IONS. AND A Ft'M. I.I.NKOK Agricultural Implements. Goods sold cheap for eah. sifix op p.h; ax, ii tii street, COLUMBUS, KKKRASKA. SPEICE & NORTH, General Agents fur tk Sl of Real Estate. Union r.i-iH, ! M!4IiihI l'aric R. R. Lauds for sate at from (8.M t$lt per .ire for ca'h, or hh Sve r tH yenrs time, in annual paymMts to stilt pur chasers. AVc hare 1 a Ittrjeo and choice lot of other land, improved and unimproved, for snl ot low rfo and on reasonable term. AIo oHiacj'S ami reflrfeiKe lt iH the iety. U'e kep a complete abstract of lli) to nil real tate In l'latt CotiHtr. ess ;oj.cj.iii5U.s. thus. . ,.. . --v-r-v rxxrm. &S06BB $BS T ira w - .-. NEW STOKE AND- New Stock, A full, freb supply of groer!e STAPLE AND FANCY, Just opened, and for sale at low-dov ii prices. JJJTOIlTe Street, opposite Ifae TnfferiII james McAllister. Book-keepers, Xeporcers, Teac&ers, Operators. OroatV orcaatlle ColIoce.Xaokak Jowa V - AO-