The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, January 26, 1881, Image 4

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    Cleiinlincw in the Kitchen.
If such articles as are indispensa
ble in cooking the simplest meals
aie not kept ueatly.it will not be
long before the food prepared iu
tbem will tell the etory. Hut those
housekeepers who are coutent if
they order the meals, and feel no
obligations lo lend a helping hand
in the preparation, and make no ex
amination of the condition of their
kitchen closets alter the work of the
day is finished, will uot understand
where the evil originates. How iu
diguaut they would be should one
suggest the possibility that the ves
sels in which their food was pre
pared might be in a very untidy
state, or were needing some little
oversight and attention from the
mistress of the house.
How often one hears "What cau
be the reason that the bottom crust
of my bread tastes like rancid but
ter?" Examine for yourself, aud
you will see that the bread-pans are
buttered every time they are used,
but never washed after use; can you
wonder that the accumulation of
greasy particles, added day alter
day, never removed or cleaned off,
will, iu time, grow rancid. Why
should not the bottom crust taste ot
it? It is well if the taste does uot
pervade the loaf all through.
Just so with pie-plates. If the
stone china is used, the glazing sel
dom cracks, aud if they are carefully
washed and aired each time they are
tixed, aud once a week boiled in a
little lye-water, they can be kept
sweet till destroyed by accident or
carelessness. But it 6ct aside with
out careful washing aud drying,
nothing cau be more disagreeable.
How otleii, think you, is the molding-board
hung up unwashed after
molding bread or rolling pastry, and
the dough that adheres to it left to
dry, or sour and mold on it, and
then the next batch is kneaded on
this same unwashed board?
"Impossible! I saw it hanging up
in the store closet over the flour
barrel as I passed by, only this
morning, and it icas clean."
Please turn it over, madam, un
derside up, before you speak with
too much certainty. Aud how about
the bread-bowl, the rolling-pin, the
fluur-sieve? Sec if the last is not
thrown into the Sour-barrel with
bits of dough, from cook's hands,
sticking to it. If so, wheu the bar
rel of flour is about half used you
may dud that the remainder of the
dour has become suddenly sour. "A
little leaven leavens the whole lump,"
remember.
Then look at your saucepans, veg
etable boilers, gridirons, meatpane,
etc.
."What ails this steak? It tastes
as if the meat was tainted." Look
to the gridiron or frying-pan. The
butter aud fat that accumulate, day
after day, week after week, without
being thoroughly cleaned off, will
soon injure the flavor of anything
cooked on or in them. See the barf
of the gridiron and the 6ides of the
trying-pang aud sauce-pans, all seal
ed, incrusted, and rough with the
accumulation1!, never thoroughly
cleaned off, until Me bars and sides
are nearly double the original thick
ness. All irouware needs thorough clean
ing every time it is used, aud none
-more than a -gridiron The bars
should be kept perfectly clean and
smooth, aud buttered every time
they are used, if one desires a steak
cooked to perfection.
These arc but a few utensils be
longing to the kitchen over which
the mistress should never relax her
watch. But enough ! We now close
this confidential talk. Will it do any
good, aud convince our young
friends that the must watch over
their kitchen utensils, and thus teach
their servants that it will not be an
easy thing to deceive or hide care
lessness? Jrs. Henry Ward Jieech
er, in Domestic Monthly.
The Ho;; that are Infected
-with Triclslnre.
There have been so many instan
ces reported recently of deaths by
tri chime, the parasite that infests
pork, aud oftentimes the muscular
tissue of other animals, that a wide
spread feeling of distrust has arisen
iu regard to the use of pork. It has
been repeatedly demonstrated by
scientists that meat subjected to heat
sufficient to boil water will infalli
bly destroy the parasite. The fol
lowing card from the health com
missioner of Chicago ought to be
generally read :
Chicago, Dec. 11, 18S0. The un
fortunate case of trichinosis reported'
in the daily papers by Dr. Tomboc
ken should commend public atten
tion to the following facte, very
briefly stated :
1. The hog infected with trichina
has every appearance of vigorous
health. Xo examination of the liv
ing auiinal or of the carcass, aside
from microscopic examination of the
mu&cle, can detect the least evidence
of the disease. This statement is
made by Mr. H. A. Atwood, vice
president of the state microscopical
society, and Prof. W. T. Bellfield,
who made, at my request, an exam
ination of one hundred hogs found
at the ttock yards in the winter of
1878-79.
2. Since it is impossible to make
this microscopical examination of all
the hogs slaughtered iu Chicago,
other means should be taken to pre
vent the deplorable results above
referred to, and happily these means
are simple, clear and certain. It has
been satisfactorily shown by many
observers that a temperature far
below that of boiling water will
destroy these parasites. Fiedler as
serts that a heat approaching ICO
degrees Fahrenheit kills them. They
cau, therefore, never survive a thor
ough cooking of the flesh in which
they exist.
They are not found, so far as is
known, in the fatty tissue? of the
animal, but in the muscular fiber,
and this fiber, whether eaten as sau
sage or ham, if submitted to the
heat of boiling waterand thorough
ly cooked through aud through is
perfectly harmless so far as trichiua
are concerned.
Oscar DeWolf,
qui, of health.
otnea
OverExertd. X.
Long-contiuued exertion, without
proper intervals of rest, is followed
by a peculiar sensation of fatigue,
and often by tremor or cramp. Fa
tigue is due, in part, to the tailure
of contractile material, aud an ac
cumulation of waste-products, iu the
muscleB, but, in the main, to the ex
haustion ot the nerve centers that
supply stitnuleuts to contraction.
Both tremor and cramp are prob
ably caused by excessive muscular
irratibilily, the former being due to
short, irregular explosions of mus
cular force, the latter being a pro
longed contraction of the muscle.
When over-exertion is confined
to a small group ot muscles, these,
instead of becoming enlarged and
strengthened, as is the case wheu
exertion and rest are duly inter
changed, suffer chronic exhaustion,
which shows itself in a species ol
paralysis as in palsy, or cramp,
severally peculiar to writer?, tele
graphers, milkers, and men of var
ious trades whose work is mainly
with the hammer.
It is computed that the pen-blade
forger, if iudustrious and disposed
to do full work, delivers nearly 29,
000 accurate strokes a day, aud in
ten yearaover 8S,000,000, each stroke
involving expenditure of nerve
force, both in the nerves of the
brain which calculate the distance
and amount of force necessary, and
the nerves of the muscles eugaged
:n the act.
Another result of over-exertion is
irratibility of the heart, similarly
due to exhaustion of nerve foice.
The heart may become dilated, so
that valves one or more cease ful
ly to close the openings, or the valves
become thickened aud incapable
of ready and complete action. The
elastic tissues ot the great arteries
leading out of the heart may be
weakeued by over-distension, and
the walls may, during some strong
effort, so far gave way as to form a
pouch, or even to stretch out into a
fatal aneurism.
This irritability of heart gives rise
to palpitation, cardiac paiu, and
rapid pulse.
It is estimated that 38 per cent of
cases of this affliction among our
soldiers during the late war were
due to long aud rapid marches, or
other forms of over-exertion. Pro
fession pedestrians are proverbially
short - lived. Mouutaiu-climbers,
and persons who carry gymnastic or
athletic exercises to excess, and es
pecially, laborers whose work is
severe, and who also suffer from in
temperance, foul air and improper
diet, are peculiarly liable to heart
disease.
I. ore of Childreu.
Those who love children are uot
those who merely love the pleasure
they can gel from childreu ; those
love, not the childreu, but the pleas
ure, and the moment it 'ceases to be
pleasure, then farewell lo the chil
dren. Those who really love chil
dren love all about them the troub
ling aud the tensing they make, the
washiug and wipiug and worrying ;
they do uot tire with their fretting,
they are not disgusted with their
care, they are not made uervous by
their bawling; they take them in
their entirety. It never occurs to
them to say that these things are
disagreeable, for iu reality the
agreeable things, the loveliness, the
velvet cheeks, the exquisite mouth
with its little pearls, the perfect
eyes, the opening soul, the charming
intelligence, the constant sense of
the creation of a new human being
going on under the eyes, the recep
tivity for love, the thing for love, all
so tar over-balance anything that is
uot in accord with them as to put it
entirely out of sight and mind.
George Francis Train n
Looks To-day.
He
1 suppose that the figure of the
George Francis Traiu of years ago
lives in mature Boston memories.
It has grown to be a feature of my
morning walk to my office to look at
him, cuscouced at the window in the
comer of the reading-room of a
hostelry which I pass daily. His
feet are generally as high as his
head; he has a bouquet always in
his button-hole. And he is usually
absorbed iu the perusal of some
thing, either printed matter or man
uscript. He has certainly had an
exceptionally curious career in this
country, Australia, Chiua aud Eu
rope. I am not sure that passengers
on the overland route do not still
talk with bated breath, as they did
some years ago, of the homeward
voyage of "that extraordinary Am
ericau, you know," and the man who
established horse railways in Lon
don told me that the ghost of George
Francis Train rose before him in
every street. His achievements in
this country are matters of contem
poraneous history. Now he lives
on $10 per week, sits in Madison
Equare when the weather permits,
aud feeds the little birds. Ex.
j- 6
I'
V
lut lafe into Your Work.
A young man's interest and duty
both dictate that ho should make
himself indispensable to his em
ployer. A young man should make his
employer his friend by doing faith
fully and minutely all" that is en
trusted to him.
It is a great mistake to be over
nicely fastidious about work. Pitch
in readily, and your willingness will
be appreciated, while the " high
toned" young man, who quibbles
about what it is, and about what it
is not, his place to do, will get the
cold shoulder. There is a story that
George Washington once helped to
roll a log that one of his corporals
would uot handle, and the greatest
emperor of Russia worked as a
ship-wright in England, to learn the
business. That's just what you
waut to do. Be energetic, look and
act with alacrity, take an interest in
your employer's success, work as
though the business was your own,
and let your employer know he may
place absolute reliance on your
word and on your act : Be miudful ;
have your mind on your business;
because it is that which Is going to
help you, not those outside attrac
tions which some ot the "boys" are
thinking about. Take a pleasure in
work; do not go about in a listless,
formal manner, but with alacrity
and cheerfulness, and remember that
while working thus for others, you
are laying the foundation of your
own success in life.
Children Emeu Uy Vt'olrc.
It is certainly a little startling to
hear, at this advanced period iu the
history of European civilization, that
wolves are threatening large dis
tricts within hail of populous towns
on the northern shore of the gulf of
Finland. Such, however, appears
to be the fact, and men are now, as
iu the middle ages, sustaining a
mortal combat with the wild beasts
of the forest. A correspondent at
Hango states that eleven children
have, during two months, been car
ried oil' by those ferocious maraud
ers, stealing down from the neigh
boring woods to the very thresholds
of the peasants' houses. His chal
lenge to English lovers ot adveut
uroua sport is one that may be taken
up in earnest, the promise of ex
citement being more likely to tempt
keen sportsmen than the offer of a
reward which has been placed by
the Finnish authorities on the head
of every wolf killed or captured.
Two kinds of dogs are indicated by
our correspondent as most servicea
ble in wolf hunting. These are
sheep dogs and bull dogs the for
mer we suppose, to drive the game
and bring it into a circle, and the
latter to pull it down. Wolf skins
are handsome trophes, and if some
scores of English hearths should be
ornamented with such tokens of
manly sport, it will enhance the
value of these picturesque rugs to
know that every one means the re
moval from a suffering peasantry of
a cruel and deadly scourge. Lon
don Times.
Ilmv to Trent IVost-RlU'M.
If any part of the body gets frozen,
the very worst thing to do is to
apply heat directly. Keep away
from the fire. Use snow if you can
get It; if not, use the coldest possi
ble water. Last winter our little
boy of five years old froze his feet
while out coasting considerable dis
tance from the house. He cried all
the way home, aud the case seemed
pretty bad. I brought a big panful
of snow aud put his feet into it,
rubbing them with the snow. But
my hands could not stand the cold.
I was alarmed to t-ee him keep his
feet in the miow so long, but he
could not bear them out of it. It
was half an hour before he could
take them out and then the pain was
all gone, and when I wiped them
dry and rubbed them a little, he was
entirely comfortable, put ou his
stockiugs and shoes aud weut to
play. He never afterwards had any
trouble with his feet on account of
this freezing. His sister got her
feet extremely cold, and put them
at once to the fire. Her case at first
was not so bad as her brother's, but
the result was much worse. Her
feet were very tender all winter, and
she suffered from chilblains. Her
toes had a swollen purple look, aud
she had to take a larger size of shoes.
Every Family, without Excep
tion, In City, Village, and Country, will
lind it highly useful to constantly
read the American Agriculturist. It
abouuds in plain, practicable, relia
ble information, most valuable for
In-door as well as Out-door work
and comfort, and Its 800 to 1,000
Original Engravings in every vol
ume are both pleasing and instruct
ive. In this respect it is pre-eminent
and stands alone, and it should
have a place in every Household, no
matter how many other journals are
taken. Its Illustrated Department
for Youth and Childreu contains
much information as well as amuse
ment. Its Uurabug exposures are
invaluable to all classes. The cost
is very low, only $1.50 from now to
the end of 1881, or four copies for
$5. Single numbers, 15 cents. One
specimen, C cents. Take our advice
and subscribe now for volume 40
(1881). Orange Judd Company,
Publishers, 245 Broadway, New
York. Coi.uMBua Journal and Ag
riculturist one year, post-paid, $3.00.
The Ponca (Neb) Coal Company,
having struck four and one-half feet
of good coal at the depth of 57-l'.
feet, iu the northern part ot the
State, has made application for the
4,000 reward offered uuder the
laws of Nebraska to the first dUcov
erers of a vein of twonty-six inches
or more. Says the Northern Ne
braska Journal, of Pone, in this
connection :
The discovery of a bed of coal
here, considering the oiiuiUrity of
the formations above it with those
above the mines in Iowa and Ft.
Leavenworth, indicates that coal un
derlies Wpstern Iowa and the east
ern part of Nebraska. The layers
of rock and coal dip to the south
east. At Omaha they have an arte
sian well about 700 feet deep, yet
the prospect hole at Ponca struck
the formation found at tlie bottom
of the Omaha well at a depth ol
about oOO feet. Hence, if the Oma
ha well had beeu put down about
100 feet farther, it would have found
the same vein our eompauy struck.
Since the successful culmination
of the coal prospects here, our neigh
bors are many of them preparing to
test the matter in their localities.
At Yankton, O. T., work will soon
commence on an artesian or oil well,
coal hole, or whatever may bo
struck in going to the depth of 2,500
feet, if nothing interesting is found
above that. St. James will bore foi
coal, straight. The City Council ol
Sioux City contemplates an artesian
well, with coal accompaniment. The
laud owners near the Big Sioux mill,
five miles north of Elk Point, D. T.,
feel confident that they have coal,
but whether they will put $2,000 or
$3,000 in a hole to make sure of it, i
not known.
Outgrowing: One's Erlenl. ,
There are men and women in pub
lic life whose pathway is marked by
the "remains" of whilom friends
whom they have squeezed dry and
dropned, like so many suckod or
anges. In politics it is said of such
a man that he has kicked down, the
ladder by which he climbed. In
literary or other works of life the
human sponge often swells up with
the thought that he has "outgrown"
his humbler friends of other days.
In private life the self-conscious
soul contents itself with becoming
more and more the centre of its
little circumference, taking none
within its orbit who will not consent
to revolve around it and emit light
and warmth for its eujoyment.
There have been many and noble
definitions of what a friend is. Peo
ple of real individuality, strength
and sensitiveness doubtless have
fewer real friends than they are apt
to think, unless they have been cher
ishing unconsciously, low ideal0.
But whatever a friend may not be,
certainly that sweet and noble term
is unmerited by one who, however
generous in other directions, is sel
fish of himself. Golden Hide.
Part of a graveyard at Morehead,
Kentucky, was destroyed in build
ing a nil road, and indignant ghosts
from the disturbed coffius have taken
possession of the station house,
which stands on the spot. So say
the ticket agent and other employes
at least, and they have proved their
sincerity by resigning their posi
tions. A pateut medicine notice in many
of our exchanges is headed "an edi
tor's escape." We haven't read it,
but we are glad that he escaped. We
suspect, that while the man with the
bill was coming up stairs the editor
jumped out of the window and slid
down the raiu spout.
A school for teaching the blind to
tune pianos is iu successful opera
tion in Paris. An exhibition of the
skill of the pupils was recently giv
en at a piano factory, in the presence
of a number of the prominent mus
icians of that city.
Eating hetween meals is not so
unhealthy as drinkiug between
drinks.
The friendship of two womeu is
never anything but a plot against a
third.
Electricy moves 288,000 mile per
secoud.
The people of England venerate
old age.
There are 2,750 languages.
LAND, FARMS,
AND
P
AT THE
Union Pacfic Land Office,
On Long Time and low rate
of Interest.
All wishing to buy Rail Road Lands
or Improved Farms will And It to their
advantage to call at thp IT. P. Lund
Office before lookin elsewhere as I
make a specialty of buying and selling
lands ou commission; nil persons wish
ing to sell faruii or unimproved laud
will find it to their advantage to leave
their lands with me for sale, as my fa
cilities for atl'ecting sales are unsur
passed. I am prepared to make llnal
proof for all parties wishing to get a
patent for their homesteads.
S3THenry Cordes, Clerk, writes and
speaks German.
SAMUEL C. SMITH,
Agt. U. P. Land Department,
COLUMBUS, NEB.
joo-y
CITY PROPERTY
OR SALE
FREE BOOKS
To Subscribers.
:o:
Having made arrangements to club
tin; Journal with the Cincinnati Week
ly Commercial, We announce that we
will furnish the ColumhusJoukxaluihI
the Cincinnati Weekly Commercial, a
large, S-page, .'G.coliimn Family News.
paper, one year, for ?3.(xi and will jjlve
as a free prize to each yearly subscriber
under this dunning arrangement any
one hook he may select from the follow
ing famou- works postage paid and
free of cost the hooks being Harper's
Editions, beautifully printed on good
paper, in paper covers:
1. "Jane Kvre," the celebrated novel
which made Charlotte Bronte's fame.
2. "The Days of Pompeii," Bulwer's
historieal romance of universal popu
larity, the most fascinating of his pro
ductions. :;. "John Halifax-, Gentleman," MNs
Mulock's masterpiece; a Uory oCthe
sorrows and triumphs associated with
low birth and iron fortune.
-J. "The Pot humous Papers of the
Pickwick Club," the work that gave
h irles Pickens hit. celebrity; thetnost
humorous and always the mo-t popular
of his books.
,-. 'The History of a Crime." By Vic
tor Hugo. I he terrible narrative by
the great French poet, novelist and his,
torian of the Crime of Louis Napoleon
in strangling the liberties ofhis country.
it. "Henry Esmond." A novel. By
Win. W. Thicker.! the mot artistic,
popular and cu-iracteri-tic. of the works
of the wisest novelist of tin's time.
7. "Eothen " Bv Alexander William
Kinulike. One of the most charming
narratives ever written; full of pen
pictures of lire iu the East, including
admirable accounts of persou.il expe
rience in Egypt and the Holy Land.
S. "Journal of the Plague in London."
By Daniel Defoe,, author of "Robinson
Crusoe." The true history, by one of
the most distinguished writers iu our
language, of the mysterious and awful
visitation of the Plague to England.
9. "Poems of Wordsworth.7 Chosen
and edited by Matthew Arnold. The
most popular and select edition of the
works of one of England's greatest
poets, uhu-e writings owe their celeb
rity largely to the excellent understand
ing they display of the sentiment and
scenery of country life.
10. Three volumes ' English Men of
Letters" (iu one). 1. Robert Burns.
.. Oliver Goldsmith. 3. John Buuyan.
Of these volumes the lirt is by Princi
pal Shairp, the second by " William
Black, the brilliant novelist, aud the,
third by James A. Fronde, the distiu
guished historian. No more charming
book than these three marvelous biog
raphies make up has been issued in
modern times.
It will be-seen that these books com
prise a ide range and striking diversi
ty of the mot brilliant and plea-dim1
productions of modem authors includ
ing Novels, Travels, Poetry, Biograplr.
and History so that all tastes mv be
consulted and each subscriber will be
embarrassed only by the riches of the
varictv in selecting his favorite book
for a FREE PRIZE.
Mibscriptions payable in advance, and
the Free Prize Book must be ordered
at the time the papers are subscribed
for.
Free specimen copies of the Cincinna
ti Weekly Commercial may be obtained
by addressing M. HALdrK.in A-.Co., Pro
prietors Commercial, incinnati, Ohio,
and tree specimen copies of the J ova
N'.M. can be obtained by addressing .M.
K. TuKNtcit dt Co., Columbus, Nebr.,
Proprietors Columbus .Iouknil.
"YOU BET."
A. W. LAWRENCE,
AGENT FOR THE
a
-d
Cs4
WIND MILL,
He will hereafter be found on 13th
street two doors west of Marshall
.smith's where he keeps a full line ol
every style of
PUMP, PIPE, HOSE,
And the Celebrated
I X L FEED MILL.
As he keeps a Pump House exclusively,
he is able to sell CHEAPER THAN
THE CHEAPEST. Pumps for nnv
depth well. Pumps driven or repaired,
aud Rods cut.
(JIVE HIM CALL AND SAVE MONEY.
qtEtxsB.'crs
STATE BANK,
C::etE!C!3 to Omar! & Seel isi Tarcer 1 Hnlit.
COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA.
CASH CAPITAL, - $50,000
DIRECTORS:
Lkandkr Gerhard, Pres'l.
Geo. W. Hulst Vice Pres't.
Julius A Reed.
Edward A. Gerrard.
Ab.ver Turner, Cashier.
Rank of Deposit, Iicoun
and Exchange.
CollectloHMPromptly .lln1e on
all Point.
Pay Interest on Time Depos
it. 274
m
f&lt Li..
ANDERSON & ROEN,
BAISTKEKS,
ELEVENTH" iT.,
COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA.
JSTDeposits received, and interest paid
on time deposits.
TZSTPrompt attention given to collec
tions and proceeds remitted on day of
payment.
"$3" Passage tickets to or from European
points by best lines at lowest rates.
tSTDratts on principal points in Eu
rope. REFERENCES AND CORRESPONDENTS:
First National Bank, Dccorah, Iowa.
Allan .v. Co., Chicago.
Omaha National Rank, Omaha.
First National Bank, Chicago.
Kountze Bros., N. Y.
JOHN WIGGINS,
Wbolesale-.aud ReHU Dealer In
HARDWARE,
SSSSSSsSSSS3SSSSS3SSSsS8sSS
sssssxOVES,3
-JSdd.SS3b.S.ShSjjSi5SS-)SdSS33SSSS
IRON, T1WABE.
NAILS, ROP3S;i
Wagon Material
GLASS, PAINT, ETC., ETC.
Corner 11 (hand Olive Sfs.
COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA.
Th In Spare In Iteserred
FOR
GREISEN BROS.,
Boots and Shoes.
EAGLE MILLS,
..
ON
SHELL CREEK,
Near Matthis's Bridge.
JOSEPH BUCHER, - Proprietor
HSPThe mill is complete in every par
ticular for making the best of flour. "A
xquarr, fair unpin en" is the
motto. -to.-x .
SPEICE & NORTH,
General Agrnth for the Sale of
Real Estate.
Union Pacific, aud Midland Pacific
R. R. Lands for sale atfrom$3.00to$10.00
per acre for cash, or on five or ten year?
time, in annual payments to suit pur
chasers. We have also a large and
choice lot of other lands, improved and
unimproved, for ale at low price and
on reasonable terms. Also husinesi and
residence lot in the city. We keep a
complete ahstrart of title to all real es
tate in l'latte County.
633
COLUJIBUN, NEB.
TTBXKl' GAMS,
Manujacturer and dealer in
Wooden and Metalic Burial Caskets
All kinds and sizes ofltolieM. also
has the sole right to manufac
ture and sell the
Smith's Hammock Reclining Chair.
Cabinet Turning and Scroll work. Pic
Hues, Picture Frames and Mouldings,
Looking-glass Plates, Walnut Lumber,
etc., etc. COLUMBUS, NEB.
m . J'fJTT-rJlt
Five
2lae already
i wmtgv$m
PIP' &-? TJl
or Loins. STTus Wealness. ,ln "n .-VornthPruP '
iir'-ms wiifther eontr u-ted bv private disees or otherwise.
rKJ?AlI& If Su iS ...JIK tnjm Fem.Ue W.knr-V Leucorrhcea or uny
disease of the Kidnev.s, Bladder, ur t rmary Oralis, OL CA-N BK GLRr.D!
Without swallowing nauseous medicines by simply wearing
PROF. GFILMETTE'S FKEXCII KIDNEY PAD,
Which cure bv absorption. Ask your drupaln for PRoF (SITILMCTTE'S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD, and take no other. If he has not sot it, send :.Ou aud
you will receive the Pad by return mail.
TESTIMONIALS TROM THE PEOPLE.
.It'nfiK Hl'CHANax, Lawver, T iedo, O., says: "One of Prof. Ouilmette'i
French Kidnev Pads cured men lumbago in three weeks' time. 3Iy ease had
been given up'by the best Doe rs as incurable. During all this time I suil'ered
untold agonv and paid out Iaij,e sums of money.
Geouc.k Vkttkk. J. P.. Toledo, O., says: "I suffered for three years with
Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on crutches. I was en
tirely and permanently cured afterwearinsr Prof.Ouilmette'.s French Kidney Pad
four "weeks.
Sqcikk N. C. Scorr, Sylvania, O.. writes; 'I have been a preat sufferer for
1. year with Bright's Disease ot the Kidneys. For weeks at a time was unahla
to get out of bed; took barrels of medicine, but they gave me only temporary
relief. I wore two of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads six weeks, and I now know
I am entirely cured."
3IR9. Hkllen .Ikkomk, Toledo, O.. says: "For year.s I have been routined, a
great part of the time to my bed, With Leucorrba-a and female weakness. 1 wore
one of (tuilmettc's Kidney Pads and was cured in one month."
H. B. Gkkkn, Wholesale Grocer, Findlay.O., writes:"! suffered for 25 year
with lame back aud in three weeks was permanently cured by wearing one of
Prof. Guilinette's Kidney Pads."
B. F. Kkksmxg, I. P., Druggist, Loganport, Ind., when sending in an order
for Kidnev Pad-, writer: "I wore one of the tirt ones we had anil I received
more benefit from it than anything I ever used. In fact the Pads give better
genei-.l satisfaction than any "Kidney remedy wc eversidd."
Ray MioKMAhUt, Druggist!-, Hannibal, .Mo.: "We are working up a lively
trade in our Pads, :unt are hearing of good results from them every day."
PROF. (UIDIETTE'S FRENCH LIVER PAD."
Will positiiely cure Fever and Ague, Dumb Ague, Ague Cake, Billions Fever,
i.iiiudice. Dyspepsia, and all diseases of the Liver, stomach and Blood. Prica
$1 ."n bv mail. Send for Prof. Ouilmette's Treatise on the Kidnevs and Liver,
free bv"niait. Address FltK.'CII PAI CO., Toledo, Ohio.
XZT For sale by A. II EINTZ, Druggi-t. (. olumbus, Neb. 540-r
1870.
1880.
THK
oliwbns Jonnvdl
Is conducted as a
FAMILY NEWSPAPER,
Devoted to the best mutual inter
ests of its readers aud its publish
ers. Published at Columbus, Platte
county, the centre of the agricul
tural portion ofNebraska.it is read
by hundreds of people east whoaru
looking towards Nebraska as their
future home. Its subscribers iu
Nebraska are the staunch, solid
portion of the community, as is
evideuced by .the fact that the
Journal Iris never contained a
"dun" against them, and by the
other fact that
ADVERTISING
In its columns always brings its
reward. Business is business, aud
those who wish to reach the solid
people of Central Nebraska will
find the column of the Journal a
splendid medium.
JOB WORK
Of all kinds neatly and quickly
itone, at fair prices. This species
of printing is nearly always want
ed in a hurry, and, knowing this
fact, we have so provided for it
that we cm furnish envelopes, let
ter heads, bill heads, circulars,
posters, etc., etc., on very short
notice, and promptly on time as
we promise.
SUBSCRIPTION.
I copy per annum
" Six months
" Three mouths,
2 00
. l on
. 50
Single copy sent to nnv address
in the ITnited States for.1ct.
M.K. TURNER & CO.,
Columbus, Nebraska.
Dr. A. HEINTZ,
DKALKK IX
WI.M1N, I.Htl OKN,
Fine Soaps, Brushes,
PERFUMERY, Etc., Etc.,
And all articles usually kept ou hand b
Druggists.
Physicians Prescriptions Carefully
Compounded.
Eleventh street, near Foundry.
COLUMBUS. : NEBRASKA
MASS TBSCH1U HAM!
$1.50THEN(JRSERY$1.50
Now is the time to ubcrihe.
for this
BEST ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE
FOR THE YOUNG.
Its success has been continued and un
exampled. Eiiciins it ! Subscribe for it !
And THK NURSERY, both post-paid,
one vear. $3.10. If you wish Till
NURSERY, send $1.S0 to John L.
Shorey, ?fi Bromfield street, Boston,
Mas. If you desire both, send bv
money order, $.1.10 to M. K. Turner A
Co.. Columbus. Neb.
I'AK.TIEKN!
B1
E OF OOOD CHEER. Let not the
low prices of your products dit-
courage you. nut ratner limit your ex
penses to your resources. You can do
so by shopping at the new home of your
fello'w farmer, where you can find good
accommodations cheap. For bay foi
team for one night and day, 2.1 cts. A
room furnished with a cook stove am
bunks, in connection with the tablt
free. Those wishing can be accommo
dated at the house of the underslgnod
at the following rates: Meals 2T cents,
beds 10 cents. J. B. SENECAL,
yi mile east of Gerrard' a Corral
Hundred Dollars He-ward !
OVER A .MILLION OF
FRENCH KIDNEY PADS
been old in thi-country and in Frame:
ier one of whn-h h.i jiv n p rfect .satisfaction, aud
has performed cure ever;, time when used according
ti diieeliou. Ae now -ax to the afflicted and doubt.
Hijf ones that we wilt pat the above reward Tor a single
C'AE OF LAMK BACK
That the Pad falls U eurr. TLt oreat Remedr ill
piM I'lVEI.V :mt IT. K.U AN KNT.LTi cure Lhu zayo,
I iimr Hark ."rinlu-.t mrtl. Diabetes, Iropsy,l:nyht's
Jjtscatc oj llf Ati.yj. .continence and lletentionoj
the Urine, Inflammation of the Kidneys, Catarrh of the
Bladder, Iliyh Colored Lrine. J'ain in the Back, itids
GOING EAST
TAKE THE
No Changing Cars
)KROM(
OMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS, NEBRAS
KA CITY or PLATTSMOUTH
TO
CHICAGO,
Where direct connections are
.made with
Through Sleeping Cap LInest
TO
New York, Boston, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Washington,
And all Katorn Cities !
Tri72 MUOUT TirVlil
via PEORIA for
ludianapoliSjCiuciniiati, Louisville
AND ALL POINTS IN rilK
SOUTHEAST.
The !!( I.lHe for
ST. LOUIS,
Where Direct Connections are made in
the PNION DEPOT with Through
Sleupiug Car Lines for all Points
SOUTH.
o
The Shortest, Speediest and Most Com
fortable Route
via HANNIBAL to
Ft. SCOTT. DKNISOX, DALLAS
HOUSTIN, AUSTIN, SAN ANTO
NIO, GALVESTON,
And all Point in
TEXAS.
Pullman 1 -wheel Palace Sleeping
Cars, C, B. ,t Q. Palace Drawiug Room
Cars, with Hortou's Reclining Chairs.
No Extra Charge for Seats in Reclining
Chairs. The Famous C, R. A . Pulac
Dining Cars.
Fast time. Steel Rail Track and Supe
rior Equipment, combined with their
Great Through Car Arrangement, makes
this, above all other, the favorite Rout
to the
EAMT. SOUTH :r SOUTHEAST.
TRY IT. and vou will find TRAVEL
ING a LUXURY in.tead of a DISCOM
FORT. All intormation about Rates of Fire,
Sleeping Car Accommodations, and
Time Tables, will be cheerfully given
by applying to
JAMES R. WOOD.
:l Gen'l Passenger Ag't, CmcAfio.
J. C. ELLIOTT,
WILL SELL YOL
CHALLENGE
Wind Mills,
COMBINED
SHELLEKS
AND
GRINDERS
TKAIItlftrV.S
Cshbratsd Fores and Lift
PUMPS,
For Cash or on Tiraa.
i?PmHp8 repaired on short notice.
All work warranted.
Office: Olive St.,
COLUMBUS.
l HiMl
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