V n -f fc ' w ' i .- ,', 1 v "I J I p ' r I A &, lnwo fe i j. ' t' i i . 1 Mi . For the .Tom:S-t SETl'liXiyG. KY Ml'.i-. MAKY . FISCH. TIjc bleeping buds beneath their cover List the tapping rain-drops over; A purple mist float o'er the meadows At morning silda the midnight shadows. The chains that held the ice-bound river Like molten glabS in unlight quiver, And timid feet thro' woodlands patter, While noibv blackbirds, loudly chatter. On drifting winds that fall a-railing The solemn cranes are slowly sailing And honking ycesc vv ilh wavy motion Seek vet afar the uiyMi ocean. AVith'one accord and gleeful chiming The kill-decr pipe- to robin' rhyming, And lark's -weet trill and flitting swal lows Sound liquid notes from out the hollows. Gray rifted clouds the .sunbeams mend ing, Oh! waking earth in beauty blending, To emerald turns your russet mantle When tuneiul birds sing 'bove your lintel: "Awake!"' thev say, "we call you early, No need to fear the .March wind surlj, We've come .( far to love ami greet you Dear heart, we're overjoyed to meet vou." Yt'liut is Homeopathy'. TAUT V. Ilomeopttthy has now stood upon Ha merits for nearly three quarters of a century. It has passed the se verest ordeals of criticism, survived all its persecution, and marches on wards from victory to victory. Despised and rejected as a therapeu tic reform within the bounda of the Old School, which was all it ever pretended or wished to he, it has been obliged to erect itself into an independent system. The great reading-, thinking and progressive public does not share the opinions, the prejudices, Uie infatuations of Old School doctors with regard to Homeopathy. s "Witness the vast strides which .Homeopathy has made in the teeth of all opposition; its 0000 practi tioners in the U. S. alone, most of them graduates of the Old School ; its growing literature, its schools, hospitals, dispensaries and asylum?, and its lay-adherent? numbered by the million. Witness the couceded fact, that it is not the practice of the ignorant aud iucapablc, or of the fautastic aud hypochondriacal; but that it absorbs aud holds the lion's share of the 6troug-tniudcd, intelligent, trav eled and cultivated portion of so ciety, recognizes aud treats Homeo pathic physicians as honorable and enlightened men, aud benefactors to humanity. "Witness the effort made by scores of the most distinguished and aris tocratic men in England to have Homeopathy introduced into the army aud navy of their country. Witness the law in the State of New York, that applicants for li cense to practice medicine in that great State must be examined upon Homeopathy as well as upon Allo pathy, by the State Commissioners. "Witness the splendid banquet given by the Common Council of Boston to the members of the Amer ican Iustituto of Homeopathy a national organization containing more members than the American Medical Association; a banquet given on the very spot where, 12 years bcfore.Oliver Wendell Holmes facetiously predicted the speedy and utter extinction of Homeopathy ! Witness the great fair in Boston, given while the Mass.ichusoUs Med ical Association wa" expelling the Homeopathic members from its body; a fair which it look three of the-hrrgest halls in the city to hold, which was visited and patronized by the elite of the Old Bay State, and which realized one hundred thousand dollars for a Homeopathic hospital! Witness how the 2"cv York Oph thalmic hospital the largest and best endowed eye and ear hospital in America passed entirely from A llopalhic into Homeopathic hands! Witness the Legislature of Xew York appropriating one hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the estab lishment of a Homeopathic asylum. Witness the people of Michigan insisting, through their representa tives in the Legislature, that Home opathy should be taught in their State University, and as a result a Homeopathic department is now es tablished. There is also a Homeopathic de partment in the State University of Iowa. Witness how the Common Coun cil of St. Louis compelled Allopath ic professors to admit Homeopathic students to the hospital clinics on an equal fooling with their own. Witness how the State Hosjtilal of Pennsylvania, at Harrisburg, has lately passed entirely out of Old School into Homeopathic hands! Witness the iudiguaut remon strances of the people at the remov al of .a Homcopatic Commissioner of Pensions from office by his Allo pathic superior, on the sole ground, that bo was a Homeopathist; re monstrances so widespread and in Jluential that they induced the United Slates government to reverse that action! When the New Orleans Medical Association passed a law to expel any member who consulted, either in surgery or obstetrics, with a Homeopath, however well educated he might be, and paraded the reso lution in the city papers, pr.Uolmes, a Homeopath, asked one of the greatest lawyers what he thought or it "0," said he, ,(it is another iron hoop to keep the Old School tub Jrom falling to pieces r The blessings of Homeopathy are not the exclusive property of mau ; the brute has become the partaker -of tbis-p-eat gift of God to his crea tures. All curable diseases of our domestic auimalo yield as readily to the action of .Homeopathic agents, as do the diseases of mau. A large number of wotks have bceu pub lished on Veterinary Homeopathy, iucluding the treatment of all ani mals from the horse down to the chicken. It is a well known fact, that the largest horao stables In Xew York, &c, employ ouly Homeo pathic treatment for their valuable animals. J.G. Holland in Scribner's Month ly April, 1879, incidentally makes these remarks : " Homeopathy is a system pursued by many scientific, moral and intelligent men all over the country. It has been quite too commonly the custom in medical bodies of the Old School to treat this system as one of impudent, if not immoral quackery, and to arro gate to themselves the function5? of "regular" practice. The attitude of the "regular practice" toward Homeopathy ha3 been generally ab surdly arrogant and childish, for it so happen, that it has been the ed ucated aud the intelligent rather than the iguorant and stupid, who have given in their adhesion to the new system (Homeopathy), aud its practitioners have largely been re cruited from the ranks of the old practice. The day is gone by, when it was possible to whistle and hoot this system down, or to frown it down by assumed medical authority. It has won its right to live and its right to respectful recognition," &c. Evidently this greatest of literary men is a friend of Homeopathy. The private physician and medical adviser of Lord lieaconsfleld is a Homepath. The great Emerson declares a cer tain Homeopathic doctor to be "the greatest man he saw in EUrope ( !) the Bacon of the 19th century,whose mind has a very Atlantic roll of though"t !" Emerson evidently thinks well of Homeopathy. The Homeopathic doctor referred to by Emerson is James Johu Garth Wilkiuson, of London. Here is a paragraph from his "War, Cholera and the Ministry of Health :" "The dimensions of power arc not weighed by scales, or told oil' on graduated bottles, but reckoned by deeds alone. When I am called to an inflammation, I know that acon ite and belladonna in billionths of a drop are a vast healing power, be cause I have cured, and daily do cure, formidable inflammations in their outset by these means. I look upon my little bottles as giants as swords that shake great diseases to their marrows, and into their ashes, and rid the whole man of a foe life size. Away then with the bigness based on quantity, and which sits like a vulgar bully in the medical sltojis. Great cures determine the only greatness which sick men or their friends can recognize in medi cine: r "Mo Uncertain ftoiuul." We have stated our poreona pref erence lor Blaine as a president, but we bolieve now that Tildcn will surely be the candidato of the Dem ocrats, and the whole history of the last presidential campaign thunders in the cars of Republicans "nomi nate a candidate who will carry the country without a doubt." The electoral commission, aud the final count or 1S5 to 184, by which Hayes .topped into the White House, must not be repeated if the party cau prevent it. Let republicans lay aside mere personal preferences, anil unite on a good man, who will certainly win. Comt.mbos Journal, March 31, 18S0. Editor Journal: We think the above has the old republican ring. "Keep it before the people." We, too, have a personal preference for the Plumed Knight. But the ques tion of success is of far greater importance than mere personal con sideration. Xo matter who their candidate may be, no thought of fair play will enter into the calculation. Their cause is not susceptible of an honest defense. Since 1832 the de mocracy has not made one single move of a political character with out, at least attempting, fraud or violence. We want a caudidato who can, not only "carry the country without doubt," but one who will carry it with such unanimity and euthusiam as to terrify the bulldoz ers and tricksters, and compel, by force of public sentiment, some fair play and honesty. Xo more of 1876 in mine, if you please. We want, and the country needs, the majori ties and enthusiasm of 72. Not only so, we waut, (I want), a man who will take his scat if elected, despite their fraud or violeucc. There is no mistaking the fact that the emer gency calls for the "Silent Man." Xo other name can so thoroughly uuite the party or demoralize the enemy, the young scratchers, north ern Copperheads and southern Bourbons to the contrary notwith standing. Then let the Graut pha lanx move on with irresistible momentum. Let the Nebraska del egation be instructed to support Grant. Aud let the Chicago con vention nominate Grant for Presi dent and Blaine for Vice President, by acclamation, without a ballot, without dissent, grumbling or oppo sition. For, Grant will be nominat ed and elected ; therefore let there be unity, enthusiasm, determination and power sufficient to overawe the villainous tricksters and trafficers, and avert the threatened danger. And this I do uot advocate from any consideration of remuneration or reward for services Grant has rendered, but for the peace and dufety of the nation. Ha asktj no other .reward than that ho lias al ready received. The veneratiou and alTcctiou of his couutrymcu are tho greatest reward ho could receive. He asks no preferment. He never did. His first tovm iu tho prebideu cy was a sacrifice; and another term now, while it guarantees peace and prosperity to tho country, and safety to the party, endangers himself. Whenever the couutry needed him it called him, aud he responded, from 'Gl all through the trials, dan gers and vicissitudes of the country, up to the present, aud our confi dence was never misplaced. He will be called in 'SO; and he will respond; and the next four years will wind out what is left that is dangerous of the State-rights heresy, and human rights and justice will be firmly established in the United States. Vktebax. Those Hag. Ckestox, April 13th, 'SO. I wonder if the editor of the Jouk val has had any experience iu sav ing rags, because I have saved mine faithfully for four years, and that too in a house where there were a good many men to east off heavy clothing. Last spring I sent my 80 pounds of rags to Omaha, as that seemed the nearest market, having tried to sell both iu Columbus and Schuyler in vain, and received, after paying the freight, the magnificent sum of 30 cents for my trouble. Now I think it would take quite a life-time to pay for the Journal even, as in your last issue you said we could easily do. My neighbors burn their rags, as they can find no sale, but I felt as though I could not do that, having been brought up to save them, but I scarcely feel like attempting it again, unless a paper manufactory should be. established in Columbus. By the way, didn't yon promise to publish some answers to Miss Westcott's pertinent question relat ive to help for the negroes ? We are looking for them. Respectfully yours, " Economist. When a boy in the Buckeye State we used to carry the rag-bag to thp store at stated times, aud receive from Ij.j to 2'j cents a pouud for the commodity, which store-keepers were always glad to get. We have never sold a pound of rags in Ne braska, and we thiuk that very few people have, but, seeing that the price of paper was advaucing rap idly, we thought it would be advi sable to save the rags, aud that, either the increased price would justify the cost of shipment, or else the business of making paper would be so profitable that we should be fore long get a fair price at home. We purpose looking after this mat ter a little, on our own account as well as that of the public in general, and will report progress if any bo made. As to the other matter, we found, upon reading the communications, that the discussion took a turn out of the Journal's prescribed path, "in such case made aud provided." .linking:. Tho faster aud nToi-e. .gently a cow is milked, the greater ""wil bo the quantity given. Slow milkers!- ways gradually dry tip a cow, and for the reason that if tho milk be not drawn about aB fat as it is given down, it will be subsequently with held, and that withheld is as a mat ter of course what is known as the strippings in fact, the upper sur face of milk iu the udder. Many milkers draw the mill: with a strong downward pull, in fact with a jerk. This should never be allowed ; it ir ritates the cow, and often injures the bag. Fill the teat, and with a firm pressure of the last three fin gers empty it, drawing slightly on the teat and udder at the same lime; so proceed alternately with each hand until the milk supply is ex hausted. Many milkers get the habit of slow milking because steady, firm, quick milking tires tho wrists, until by practice the muscles get used to the work. Until this use conies naturally, the individual should only milk such a number as he can without sovcro cramping of the hands ; what is milked should be milked fast, increasing the number until at last there is no tircing what ever. Fivo minutes is about the limit that should be allowed for milking a cow. There is another thing well worthy of being remem bered. Cows should be milked as nearly a given hour morning and evening as possible, since undue dis tention of the udder is always injur ious. The small boy who can ride a three-wheeled velocipede in the hall aud beat a drum at tho 9ame time, has qualities calculated to make home happy when ho is not woll. A fond mother in Leadville speaks of her late son as having been born in Michigan, but raised in Colorado. The vigilance committee raised him. Miseries come unbidden and al ways stay too long, while joys must be sought for, and when found are apt to slip away unawares, The universe is but one great city, full of beloved ones, divine and human, by nature endeared to each other. Epictetus. Nearly 5,000 women and girls are employed about the coal mines of Great Britaiu. Injure not another's reputation or bnaiocsi. IVebrnsltu. Auother evidenco of tho richness of tho soil of Nebraska is found In tho fact of the number and great growth of the native grasses, which afford the very best pasturago from early spring until tho month of Xo vember. Those who havo investi gated the subject of the native grasses claim no fewer than one hundred aud fifty species. Among other varioties the blue-joint grows everywhere in tho State except on the low bottom lauds. In ordinary seasous, aud under favorable condi tions its growth is from two and a half to four feet, and often ou culti vated grounds it will grow to the height of seven and ten feet. On tho up-lands, blue-joint grow in groat abundance and is greatly relished by cattle. Buffalo grass now in the greatest quantity is found in the western half of the State. This, it is claimed, disappears before cultiva tion, but it is nature'? provision of food for grain-eating animals during winter, when the animals are com pelled to remain on the prairie, as it retains its nutriment all tho year round. Among feed grasses that grow abundantly in the State are several varieties of bunch grass ; and in the low lands a native blue-grass, and what is known as the spangle top, which makes an excellent qual ity of hay. It was a question among the first settlers of Nebraska whether fruit could be successfully grown in the State or not, but finding the wild fruits, such as plums, grapes, and gooseberries growing in abundance, it was thought that apple orchards might be cultivated with success. So reasouing, the earlier settlers in the eastern part of the State planted their orchards and their first plant ings failed, but they persevered and the result has been a complete suc cess. Nebraska fruits now compare favorably with the best produced in other states. Iu 1871 Nobraska had ou exhibition at Richmond, Va., one huudred and forty-six varieties ol apples, fifteen of peaches, thirteen of pears, one of plums, and one of grapes, and was awarded tho first premium for tho best collection of fruit among all the Stales. The fruits of Nebraska have been exhib ited at Boston, Chicago and at the International Exhibition in 187G, tho judges awarding prizes for eight varieties of pears, large, smooth aud well colored, and for two hundred and sitVrf.hree varieties of apples, the latte",. prize being for the unusu ally large lumber of finely grown varieties. Instead of orchards flour ishing only iu tLc eastern part of the State and near tho Missouri river, they do well away out on the prairie wherever nature's conditions of growing fruit are observed. Keep your mind from evil thoughts. Join hands only with the virtuous. QOS1ffSftS'C,S STATE BANK, "x:::i::c;3 tJ thrnri i SsoA sal Tstnr i Edit. COLtre&BUS, NEBRASKA. CASH CAPITA $50,000 DIRECTORS: Leander Gerhard, Pres'i. Geo. W. IlnxBT Vice PreJl. Julius A Reed. Edward A. Gkrrard. Abner Turner, Cashier. Hank of lepoHlt, UlNCount and Exrhange. Collectionn Promptly Made oh nil Points. Vny Imerexl on Time Depos it. 27 J WM. BECKEK, -)DKALER IX( GROCERIES, Grain, Produce, Etc. t NEW STORE, NEW GOODS. Goods delivered Free of Charge, anywhere in the city. Corner of 13th and Madison Sts. North of Foundry. 397 A GOOD FARM FOR SALE IBS acres of good land, 80 acres under cultivation, a Kood house one and a half story high, a good stock range, plenty ol water, and good hay land. Two miles east of .Columbus. Inquire at the Pioneer Bakery. 47S-6m -. Book -keepers, Reporter, f Jf Operator., Teacher, flbatrc atile Cocse,2M-ufIowa M Ms ai Fair Dili ffiJUWL JOHN WIGGINS, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in HARDWARE, 89SSSS'8S3S3RS.S5S3S3SSSS8Sd .ssssssgjf q "y JJ S ,3s33 S9S9SSSS9SbS3SSSS3SSSSsSSidd3 IRON, TINWARE, NAILS. ROPE, Wagon Material GLASS, PAINT, ETC., ETC. Corner. 11th and Olive Sts. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. "YOU BET." A. W. LAWRENCE, AGENT FOR THE a - 23- A f WINDMILL, He wall hereafter be found on Mih 3treet two doors west of Marwhall Smith's Where he keeps a lull line of every atiieol PUMjP. PIPE, HOSE, And the Celebrated I X L FEED MILL. I j Ashe keeps a Pump House exclusively, he is able to sell CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST. Pumps for anv depth well. Pumps driven or repaired, and Rods eut.j GIVE HIM A Ukl AXD SAVE MV'EV. .r.c A -A,TTPTTln A "XT MEDICAL & MML INSTITUTE. S. MITCHELL, . S. 0. T.HASTTIT.H.B 3. 5. E:E3, M. fl., - J. C. MSISI, II. .. ef Osiki, Consulting Physicians d Surgeons. For the treatment of all classes of Bur gery and deformities; acute and chronio diseases, diseases of the eye and ear, etc., etc., Columbus, Neb. TTEXRY OASM, Hanujacturer and dealer in Wooden and Metalic Burial Caskets All kind and sizes oTRobeN alHO has the sole rlKht to manufac ture and .sell the Smith's Hammock Reclining Chair. Cabinet Turning and Scroll work, Pic tutcs, Picture Frames and Mouldings, Looking-glass Plates, "Walnut Lumber, etc.; etc. COLUMBUS, EB. j9sS2. ?5?l!fJW " "" ' .5eeswSi. ?9)?X9k!wJH " & b u3 h!PuS gBlWFr lPVlPKln rvy l r flrE PfflCIS MOSS Br----------. !! WA60IS! END SPRINGS, PLATFOUM srKINUa, wurnnfY & bbe wstku SIDE SPRINGS. Light Pleasure and Business Wa ons of all Descriptions. VTe are pleased to invite the nttentio--of the public to the fact that we have jut received a car load of "Wagons and Busies of all descriptions, and that we are the Hole agents for the counties ol Platte, Uutler, Uoonc, Madison, Merrick, Polk and York, for the celebrated CORTLAND WAOOH COMP'Y, of Cortland, Now York, and that we are offering the.se wagons cheaper than any other wagon built of same material, style and tiuUu can be sold for la (bis county. OETSeud for Catalogue aud Price-list. ITIOKSF. A: AI., 4S4-tf Columbus, Nebraska. TITIS SPACE IS RESERVED -KOK- H. P. COOLIDGE, HARDWARE DEALER, NEBRASKA AVENUE, rOaMIMHi;, t .XEUKtSKA. LUERS&SCHREIBER Blacksmith i Wagon Malirs, ALL KINDS OK Repairing Done on Short Notice. BsSbii 2:si, X'.:., -ill t: Srlir. ALL WORK WARRANTED. EAGLE MILLS, . o. SHELL CREEK, Near Matthis's Bridge. JOSEPH BUCHER, - rgsritor ETTIip mill is complete In every par ticular for muling the best of flour. A Nquare lulr bHKlaeNn" Is the motto. 435-x IJ.KlOai PACIFIC LAND OFFICE, SAMUEL C. SMITH Agent, ATTENDS TO ALL BUSINESS per tuiniulng to a general Keal Estate Agency and Notary Public. Havs in stitution and blanks furnished by United State Land Ofllce for making tinal proof on Homesteads, thereby sav ing a trip to Grand Inland. Have a large number ot farms, city lots and all lands belonging to U P. E. R. in Platte and adjoining counties for sale very cheap. Attend to contesting claims before U. S. Land ortlcc. Ofii-e one Dear Weit of H--oi4 Moiw, COLUMBUS, NEB. E. C. Hockknberokr, Clerk, Speaks German CITY MEAT MARKET, ox OIJVF ST., OPPOSITE H AM MOIW HOUSE. Will keep on band all kinds ot Fresh and Salt bleats, also Sausage, Poultry, Fresh Fisb, etc., all In their season. Cash paid for Hides, Lard aad Ba con. WILL.T. BICKLY. CENTRAL MEAT MARKET OX lit- ST-tEET. Dealers in Fresh and Salted Heats. Ac. '.Town Lots, "Wood, Hides, c. J. RICKLY, Agent. Columbus, June 1, 1877. fh-i tffXry0 J00 A YEAR, or ST I HI N I5 t0 - dar in your Wl.UJJ own locality. " No risk. Women do as well as men. Many made more than the amount stated above. No one can fail to make monev fast. Anv one can do the work. You can make from SO 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 before. Business pleasant and strictly honora ble. Reader, if you want to know all about the best paying business before the public, send us your address and we will send you full particulars and pri vate terms free; samples worth 5 also free vou can then make up your mind for yourself. Address GEORGE STIN SON k 00., Porland, Maine. 481-y fh C f f A " MONTH guaranteed. U VI II 1 J12 a day at home made by tllOLM- the industrious. Capital YWVV not required; we will start rou Men. women, boys and girls make money Ser at vvo'rk for hi ithu i . .any thine else. The work i light and pleai ant and such as anyone can go right a? 'Those who are wise who see tils notice will send tbelr .ddreMM ft once and see for 'msalves. Costly nntflt and terms frae. Now Js me iime. 8SK alreadT-t work are laying un large sums of money. Address TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine. 481-y 3BB& a""6V - ?r m !flV0 DETROIT SAFE COMPANY. PV - -4Hf bJ B k!p c3iKvJ yt V y f f Q " WIL.f B. 506-x 18T0. 1880. THE jgoJmqhts $ourml I conducted aii a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Devoted'to the beat' mutual inter ait? of it readers and its publish ers. Published at CoIumbu-j.PIattp county, the centre or the agricul tural portion ofNebraska.it ircnd by hundred of people Htt vv hoar looking toward Nebrnhka ub their future home. Iu subscriber in Nebranka are the itaimrh, -olid portion of the community, as i eridenced by the fact that the JouH.Vir, ban never contained a "dun" against them, and by the other fact that ADVERTISING In itt column alwayn brings its' reward. Buines i Limine, and those who wish to roach the olid people of Central Nebraska nill Hud the columns of the. Jockxai. a splendid medium. JOB WORK Of kinds ueatly and quickly done, at fair prices. This specie's of printing is uearly always want ed in a hurry, and, knowing this fact, we have so provided for it that we cjh furninh envelopes, let ter headf, bill heads, circulars, posters, etc., etc., on very ihort uotice, and promptly on time a we promise. SUBSCRIPTION. 1 copy per annum $200 " Sir month l 00 " Three mouths, oo Single copy sent to anv address in the United States fr ct. M.'X.TUKNEE&OO., Columbus, Nebraska. This Space la Keaverved FOR GREISEN BROS., Boots and Shoes. iC TE CBtLBUH Hifft ! i 1. Now la tht time to subscribe for this EST ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE POR THK YOUNG. Its success has been continued ami un exampled. Mi it! .Mi for it! $he &ohtnbu&$jourml And THE NURSERY, both port-paid, one ytar. $3.10. If you wish THE NURSERY, bend ?1.M to John L. Shorey. 86 Brorafleld itreet. Boston. Mats. If you desire both, aend bv money order, ?8.10 to H. K. Turner A Co., Columbus, Neb. NEBRASKA HOUSE, I. J. MARMOT, lrop'r. Nebraska Ave., South of Depot, A new house, newly furnished. Good accommodations. Board by day or week at raasonablt rates. 2TSf- - Flrat-Cl-Mi Table. Meals,.. ..25 Cents. Ladings. ...25 Cts S8-2tf THE NEBRASKA FARMER. VfESSRS. McBRlDK DRUSE, pub ifJL Ushers of the Ntiroska Farmer, Lincoln, Neb., are making that paper a grand good thing for our country people, and are ably seconded by Ex-Governor Furnas, at the head of the Horticultural department, aad Geo. M. Hawley at the head or the Grange department. It ranks with any agricultural publication Ja the world. X ropy of the Farmer may be seen by calling at this office, or by sendlnz stamp to the publishers. The subscription price of the Farmerhzs been reduced to ?10, ami can be bad by ealllng at this office, as we are club bin, it and our paper both for one ytar at tb very low price of $3.00. $1.50 m m ESY DALE, Western Agent. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. CHICAGO I NORTH-WESTERN Rx-.v-rf f t The Gret Trunk Line from the West to Chicago aud the Kast. It I the oMeat, shorter, most direct, coarentont, comfortable aud In every respect the bet Ua ou can UVe It U tfid greatest and gnnrt IUtlwaj orgauizutloa tn tbts United States. It owni of control 2100 MILES OF RAILWAY rCLI.MAN' HOTEL. CAltt are ra -to hy It through betweea COUNCIL BLUFFS & CHICAGO! No other road runs Putlmia Hotel Cars, or taj other form of Iiotel Cars, through, between tha Missouri River aud Chicago. PASSENGERS GOINQ EAST should bear famlnd that this Is the BEST ROUTEfg:CH!CACO AND ALL POINTS EAST. PMen;era by this route have choice of FIV DIFFEKENT ROUTES and the advaaUze of Bight Daily Uno Palace SleepUc Cara from CHICAGO to PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, ASD OTHER EASTERN TOINTS. Insist that the Ticket Agent sells yos tickets by (he North-Western Road. Examine jocr Tickets, and refuse to buv if they do not read oyer this Kod. All Agents fell them and Check Mail Uaggage Free by this Line. Through Tickets via this Route to all Eastern Pointi can be procured at the Central Paci.c Rail road Ticket Office, foot of Market Street, and at I New Montgomery Street. Sm Francisco, and at all ( oupon Ticket Omces of Central Pacific, Union Pacific, and alt Western Railroads. Iev York Oflce, No. 415 Broadway. Botloa Office, No. 6 State Street- Omaha Office, 2t5 Parn ham S.reeL San Francco Office. 2 ew"ont .jomery Street. Chicago Ticket Oflce : Ci Clar Mreet, under Sherman House : 75 CanaL corner Madison S'reet ; Kinzle Street Depot, corner Weat Kinzlo ar.d Canal Street ; Wells Street Depot, corner Wells and Kliule Streets. For rates or Information sot attainable from jo'ir Loma UcLvt agents, apply to ' Mmiviv ncouiTT, W. n. STrNxrrr, oc-'l Mxoz'r.Uucigo Ge n'l l'i. At, Chicago.- NEW STORE! Hum Oils B (Successors to HENRY &. BRO.) All customers of the old firm are cor dially invited to continue their pat ronage, the same a4 heretofore; to gether with ai many now custo mers as wish to purchase Good G-oods For the Least Money. SPEICE & NORTH, General Agents for the Sale of Real Estate. Union Pacirlc, and 31idland Pacific R. It. Landi formal- -tfrom3.0Qto$ltU)O per acre Tor cash, or on five or ten years time. In annual paviiirnt to nit nnr. chafers. "We have aNo a large and choice lot of other lxnN, improved and unimproved, for nle :it low price and on reasonable term-. ANo business and rosidenco lots In the .-jlv. "v"e keep a complete abstractor title to all real es tate In I'latteCountv. 633 COLl'lIBUM. AEB. $66 A "WEEK in your own town, and no capital risked. You c:in give the business. a trial without exuense. The best opportunity ever offered for those will ing to work. You should try nothing else until you see for yourself v hat you -an no ai int ouines we oner. . room to explain here. You can devote all your time or only your epare time 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 particular, which we mall free. 3 Outfit free. Don't complain of bard times while you have suh a chance. Address HHALLETT & CO., Portland, Maine. 48t-y farmers: BE OK GOOD CHEER. Let not the low prices of your products dis courage you, 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 And 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 house of tho undersigned at the following rates: Xeals 25 cents; bods 10 cents. . J. B. SENECAL, Y. mile east of Gerrard's Corral BLfr)vL7u3rlH ifiervJrrB!iQM BBy tjj r T .HSiFgSJ V 1 IA r 1 i ft