r I .. iHttEWMH Hi f ii .1: c j 4 n i ! i r t S it . h t i .: i ? 1 A I VI . I V 1 Fale Lights. Mock characters, like false lights, are worse than darkucs-. There are any number of skin-deep saints in the world lit all times ; and sheep's clothing and long robes are always in great demand in the market. In deed we all use cosmetics of the moral kind to remove freckles or wrinkles. To meet the respectable, smooth-shaved, decorous, venerable ornaments of society we sometimes see, you would not 6U8pect that any slanders could find birth against men so soft spoken, so frank and so confidential. But they do. Haven black and dead eyes, and drawn down corners of the mouth, aud an exceptional lie, don't always stand for godliness. Cucullas nonacit monachxnn The owl does not make the friar. That highly respectable board of direc tors, so hale, loud spoken, well fed, seem, every man of them, fit for prizes at an exhibition of commer cial moralities; still they arc in trouble about loans, contracts, or prospectuses. That manufacturer sings loud in his pew on Sundays, but makes thirty-five inches to the yard on Mondays : and that prosper ous shopkeeper has strangely dark windows ; and does that one believe his own pull's ? The millennium has not come yet, and can hardly be hoped fer, by appearances, at any very short date. Somehow, the bot tles do not show the same straw berries all the way down, in all cases; and jockeys sometimes forget to tell a horse's faults; and there have been books written on adulter ations aud tricks iu trade; aud men's words or writings are not always the unclouded expression of their thoughts. .And yet to meet men, how nearly perfect they seem; in their suavity, iunocence and senti ments. There are a good many Si berian crabs, and apples of Sodom, and huge pears that look like houoy aud eat like wood. We have our panics, aud thousand liquidations, and a hundred millions of railway 6tock unproductive, bankruptcy court revelations. The crop of knayes and half knaves is by no means extinct. There is a dark side to a good many things besides the moon ; and has not the sun its spots, not to speak of eclipses that happen pretty widely throughout the uni verse? Be you, young man, a contrast to all this. Character that is only a mask is beneath you, and mere con ventional goodness is a lie of the devil. Determine, from the first, to be transparent and truthful to God and your fellows, let Mepbistoclese say what he likes. It is better, after all, to liave the universe on your side than against you. Curses, like chickeuB, come home to roost; and so do falsities, if not outwardly, yet in your soul. I pray you don't offer a prophet's chamber in your con science to eatan. Life is sacred; keep it so. We are boru for a pur pose, and can serve it only as we serve God. Humanity is a whole, not a mere moo of generations, and has a destiny in which every one has a set part. The little moment of our being is great enough to live well in, and leave true work behind it. Play the mau, not the trickster. Evelyn saw men at Leghorn staking their liberty for life in mad gamb ling, and, having lost it, presently led off into slavery. He who has to do with a lie stakes his soul and loses in auy case. Character, pure aud noble, chimes in with tho eter nal harmonies; but falsehood is a hideous clangor, now and forever. What any life, however humble, can do is a secret with God; it may widen its influence through ages, or it may leave a trace seen only by the light of God's truth and laws, it is holy forever. The city of God elowly rises through tho ages, and every true life is a living stone in some of its palaces. You were made for. God, young man, from eternity, and no lie is born of Him, be it in trade or profession, iu act or in word. Iusincerilies arc marks on the devil's tally, and so are hyp ocrites and shams. Let your char acter be real, the shining warp aud woof of each day workiug out the part God has set you iu tho great loom of time. C. Qeikie, D. D. lomehlrkaeMv. Perhaps there is no sensation so die-heartening or so demoralizing to the mental and physical system as homesickness. It is not necessary that one should be in a foreign laud in order to experience the sensation. In fact, one may feel at home iu the Arabian desert, oc among the ruins of Baalbec. It is the uncongeuiality of the surronndiugs which predis poses us to the malady rather than removal from familiar scenes and faces. The disease has no respect for persons ; it more often seizes the idle than the busy. The king on the throne suffers, perhaps, from its qualms when he remembers the hal cyon days before the cares of state beleagured him ; the poor-house ten ant may feel a sickening yearning for the homo she has never known, which has never existed for her; the little child droops away from his mother; the withered crone has mo ments of unutterable pain when she recalls the hearth-stone where the embers have been ashes for half a century; the old are homesick for their youth, the days of their strength and their prime, when the 'world was all before them where to choose when success was not so as- sured, or failure not so certain the days when children hung about their kneet?, and daily anxieties euviroued them; homesick, perhaps, for the very worries which they have out grown, for the little trial9 which belonged to the hours of their ac tivity, for the hopes that time; has dispelled, for the caresses of dear dead hands, 'the Bound of a voice that is still.' To-day seems alien and sunless to the homesick heart which lives in the yesterdays. But if age is sometimes smitten, neither is youth exempt. The young sicken for what the future miy bring for the fame that is so long iu coming; for the recognition, the happiness, the romance, its promises. That louging,bafiled feeling which haunts us when some good that has been promised or paid is squandered or withheld is a form of the disease familiar to most of us, which comes to us upon some strain of music which the incense of the 'meanest flower that blows' may revive. Who has not been touched by it in re-visiting scenes that were ouce a part of our every-day look-outthe old homestead that has pacsed to stran gers, the orchard where we learned the sweetness of stolen fruit, the church where we repeated our lit tle prayers, the school-house where wo made acquaiutauce with fractions and the ferule, or the garden gate where we parted with our fiist lov er? It may be that the masculine mind is less susceptible than the feminine to this sentiment of home sickness. Man is oftener master of the situation. If his conditions dis please him, he has the power to re arrange them to give the kaleid oscope of life another turn; if the 'madding crowd' offends Him, he can pack his valise, and go ou a ranch, where 'the pound of the church-going bell the valleys and rocks never heard;' and if country life grows distasteful, be may seek his fortune abroad and medicine homesickness with the infinite variety of tho uni verse. Harper's Bazar. Study of I-higlioli literature. Tho thing we want to save for our children is the habit of intense, pa tient reading of tho world's few good books, or of the best that fall in the way of any particular child. Such books are still rare, aud- tho boy who has climbed a few of them need not tire his legs tramping through the vast realm? of foot-hills over looked from their summits. There is but one way now in which this can be accomplished. If a child, at a proper age, can be thoroughly in troduced to one real author, led through his books and brought into vital communion with the "hiding place of his power," he will not be tempted to fill himself with husks; but will go on making the acquaint ance of other books and authors of the same sort. It seems to us that a good ileal of the instruction in Eng lish literature fails at this point. A pupil is uot committing to memory a compendious history of English literature, even a weekly exorcise in repeating poetical "gems." On the contrary, this sort of instruction lays the foundation of that hop-skip-and-jump style of going through authors which leaves the mind of the reader flippaut, shallow and dry; trifling with the surface of culture, untouch ed by the influence of the noblest minds. It may be well to give a high-school or academical class a chart of English authorship, with a few light-houses and buoys indicat ing the great channels of thought that fertilize the different periods of English and Americau history. But this is properly the work of the histo ry class; and uothing is really done for the student in literature till some author of commending power is taken in hand and read thoroughly by teacher and class, till tho dullest soul in it comes to kuow, in some measure, the power of a great book. If but oue thing can be done, let it be this. Better givo your wholo school one session a week with your most accomplished teacher, in the thorough reading of one great au thor suitable for the class, than fill their minds with a senseless cata logue of authors and titles relieved by a few extracts; like a dull suit of linsy-wolsey illuminated by the ureary glimmer or an occasional brass button sewed upon the homely suit of melancholy gray. General Garfield said to a delega tion from Iudiaua that wanted a cabinet position for that State : I am under obligations to my district for sending me to the State Senate ; I am under obligations to the peo ple of my Congressional district for sending mo to Congress so often ; I am under obligations to the Stale of Ohio for electing me to represent them in the Senate of the United States ; and I am under obligations to the four million Republican voters of the United States for electing me to the Presidency. I have more ob ligations than I can pay. Gentle men, I am a bankrupt, with more obligations than assets. Boston Post: Americans are of a practical nature. When an Illinois farmer who had got rich waa visit ing Switzerland, they dilated to him of the beauty of the surrounding scenery. "Yes," he replied, "as scenery it's very good. But it strikes me the Lord has wasted a lot of space on scenery that might have been level and good farming land." Thoy wanted to lynch him! Make not thy friend too cheap to thee, nor thyself to thy friend. Ruiuubcc ol'au Advertisement. The Springfield (Mass.) corres pondent of the Boston Jlerald writes: A sewiug-girl in this city has had a romantic experience which is worth telliug. Several months ago a man at Dubuque, Iowa, ad vertised in an Eastern Massachusetts paper for a wife. Among a swarm of answers which he received were two from two girls in this city, who replied just for the fun of the thing. One of them represented herself as a young widow, and her lively ac count af herself and her circumstan ces was ve-y largely fictitious, espe cially that which told (very inci dentally, as if it was of no conse quence) of the snug sum of money left her by the dear departed. She never expected to hear of the matter again, but that was tho oue letter out of all the advertiser received which struck his fancy. Ho wrote to the supposed "widow" (who, in fact, had never been married, and who was then earning her living with her needle); photographs were exchanged; the letters grew more aud more affectionate, and the y ouug woman, realizing that the affair was no longer a joke, wrote to her new found admirer and told him frankly of her humble circumstauccs. Of course he admired her all the more, aud at last he came from Du buque to this city to claim her for his bride. Instead of tho sleek and intelligent-looking and manly indi vidual whom she had expected from his letter aud his photograph, what was her vexation to see a person of decidedly seedy appcarance,wearing an old slouch hat and appearing al together unattractive. Well, she refused him, and he, chiding her bitterly for so doing after all tho pains he had taken to win her, re turned alono to Iowa. I suppose he hadn't left tho house before she was sorry bucIi is the flexible character of female affection and it is cer tainly true that she was very sorry, indeed, before he had put a thou sand miles botween them. He wroto no more, but tho distressed yonng woman wrote, or got friends to write, to tho pastor of the church he attended and to various persons in Dubuque to find out what sort of a man this was something sho ought to have thought of in tho first place. The replies were uniformly compli mentary, and every one only in creased her regret that she, a poor sewing-girl, had refused a "good match." Never a word came from him, and at last she swallowed her pride, re opened the correspondence herself, and told him how she had misjudg ed him and how sorry she was that she had. Promptly came a manly reply, from which she discovered that when he visited her here he had intentionally made himself as unattractive as possible from a ro mantic notion that Bhe ought to take him for what he was, and not for what he wore. Of course they were married, and the poor sewing-girl has for her husband one of the lead ing citizens of Dubuque, and for her home one of the finest mansions in Dubuque. This true story ought to have a moral of the negative sort namely, that young girls are not to infer from it that it is safe for them to answer matrimonial advertise ments, for, where one case of this sort has, like this, a happy issue, there are ten which lead to unhappiness or something a good deal worse. Loudon Fogs. Fifty years ago, when we first be came acquaiuted with them, Lon don fogs were bad enough ; but they were on a comparatively limited scale. They have since attained marvelously grand dimensious and intensity, according to the increase of houses and population. What we ordinarily call London, but is more directly styled the metropolis, has spread and spread till it covers a space of about 120 square miles. In the winter months every house has a coal fire, some of them two, throe or four, and there are numerous manufactories and public works with furnaces and tall chimneys, all of which less or more emit quanti ties of smoke. This smoke mingles with what fog there happens to be, and produces a curious mixture, that is now only beginning to be rightly understood. Like every oth er mist, the fog w.hich rises and is wafted along the valley of the Thames is composed of small par ticles of water that ought properly to be dissipated by the buii's heat. Only one difficulty, is the sun able to uuderlake the duty. The smoke poured out from hundreds of thou sands of chimneys, does not merely mix with the-fog; it coats oach wat ery particle with a tarry, oily film, giving it an unnatural character, and preserving it, so to speak, from im mediate dispersion. A genuine Lon don fog, therefore, is something more than a fog. It is a prodigious Jarge volume of mist, held in a kind of turalldom by oleaginous, we, for convenience, take the readiest word to express a condition that would involve some chemical explanations which need not be gone into. Every one will understand that the smoke from the coal fires somewhat unites inextricably with the particles of mist, and keeps the whole thing hovering in a dense cloud over the metropolis. Not only so; the din gy cloud darkens and pollutes the air, fiills the streets, and to a certain extent the houses and lungs of the inhabitants. On such occasions the darkness, even at noon, is so great that dwellings aud places of bus iness have to be lit with gas as at night. As tho London gas is more remarkable for its volume thau its purity, it aids in deteriorating the atmosphere duriug fogs, already sufficiently tainted with the exhala tions of domestic sewage. At times it is as difficult to get a breath of fresh air as it is to procure a good drink of palatable water. ItralH Farming. Some people imagine that farming requires but little outlay of bruin power to make it successful. But as some one has truthfully said "Brains make tho best fertilizer a man can use." Take two men, one of them with half the physical strength of the other, tho weakor of the two will accomplish more than the other if ho exceeds the latter iu brain power. We have known largo, stout, healthy men, who were hard workers, and yet always on a "stern chase" with their work; they were al way's ii hot water, always poor, fiom th a simple fact that their bod ies were better than their brains. Such a man, if he is doing as simple workas picking up stones ou a hill side, will get his stoneboat on the upper side of a large boulder, and then by stress of mind aud muscle roll it ou tho drag, while the weak er, but wiser man, would place the boat on the lower side of the stone, unhitch his team, place the chain above it, and In a twinkling hayo it loaded, and save his own strength for some more important occasiou. Aud so it goes to the end of the chapter with the man who does not "think;'' and this law applies to indoor as well as outdoor work. If men and women would take time to plau their work they would secure better results than to hurry and scurry about without thought or system. We honestly believe that if every farmer would have a Ntudy and library, liko a "professional"' man, with a few good agricultural papers, and spend an hour or two each day in reading and planniug his work, he would secure better results thau to spent twico that amount of active labor on the farm. This is the time and tho hour for labor-saving inventions in every di rection, aud no farmer can entirely ignore this increased knowledge, and compete with those who have their eyes and oars open. Eastern Chronicle. - Too IVeat. Men can seldom be accused of being over neat; but the over-neat woman is to be found everywhere. She makes her husband exchange his boots for his slippers on the door-step. No matter how low the thermometer or barometer, the poor fellow must don" his boots on the porch. Is he wot? He must stay on the stoop until ho is done drip ping. Consumption? What is that, compared to a soiled carpet? The small boy, what a life he leads with such a mother! Followed about with a dust-pan aud brush, and a scolding voicethe hyper-neat wo man is always cross all of child hood's days, ho early ruus to a club room or a beer saloou where he can see a littlo rubbish and find the lux ury of dirt. The over-neat woman dislikes to entertain company. 'Guests are so dirty, you know." The parlor is kept dark aud unused from year to year. Tho carpets would fade and dust would gather. We once knew a woman who re fused to open her parlor door for weddiug of her daughter. "The streets are too dusty," she said. It is uothing to her that she makes other people uncomfortable. She will have her way, whatever tho consequences; and sometimes they are bitter enough. Wo have seen tho lives of good men embittered; we havo seen boye driven to ruin, aud girls imbued with such hatred of cleanliness that they became very slatterns by over-neat wives and mothers. The Irish ftewrf-lloy. Charles O'Connor, a distingiiiauoil New York lawyer, when eight years old was an office-boy ami newspa per carrier, and would often spend all Saturday night serving his route; It is said that ho never missed a subscriber. When seventeen years old be became an errand boy in a lawyer's office. He borrowed law books, took them home and read by the light, of a candle far into the night. Whon twenty-four he was admitted to the bar. His industry and perseverance have won him re nown. A boy will succeed who makes circumstances bond to him, rather than bend himself to circum stances. The editor of a Red Bank (N. J.) paper replies to an attack upon him in another Red Bank paper by say ing that "when an Idiot, pen, ink and paper get together, the result should uot be published." To grow wealth: Earn money fairly, spend less than you oarn, and hold on the difference. The first takes mnscle, tho second self-control, and the third brains. You should forgive many things in others, bnt nothing in yourself. WILLIAM RYAN, DEALER IN KENTUCKY WHISKIES Wines, Ales, Cigars and Tobacco. JSTSehilz's 3Iilwaukee Beer constant- lvnn hiinil ht Elk ve nth St., Columbus, Neb. CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION. C. II. VanWvok, U. S. Senator, Neb raska City. Alvin Saunders, U. S. Senator, Omaha r. J. Majoks, Rep.. Peru. E. K. Valkntink, Rep., West Point. STATE DIRECTORY: Aluinus Nanck. Governor, Lincoln. S. J. Alexander, Secretary or State. John Wallichs, Auditor, Lincolu. G. Al. Hartlett, Treasurer, Lincoln. C. .T. Dilwortli, Attorney-General. W. V. W. Jones, Supt. ruliliu ins true. C. J. Nones, Warden of Penitentiary. UILGould?'' f son Inspectors. J. O. Carter, Prison Physician. tl. P. Mathewson, Supt. Insane Asylum. JUDICIARY: 5. jiaxweii, liiuei tiuMiice, George I. LakeJ Ainasa Cobb. ' Associate Judges. FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTUICT. U. W. I'ost, Judge, York. M. B. Ueese, District Attorney, Wahoo. LAND OFFICERS: JI. B. Ilovie, Register, Grand Island. Win. Anyan, Receiver, Grand Island. COUNTY DIRECTORY: I. G. Iliggins, County Judge, fobn Stauiler, County Clerk. J. W. Early, Treasurer. Henj. Spielman, Sherift". R. L. Rosssitcr. Surveyor. John Wise. ) Al. Maher, V Joseph Rivet, J CountyCorainiasioners. Dr. A. Heintz. Coroner. J. E. Mnntcreir Supt. of Schools. U. R. Bailey, ) T .. ... Hyron Millett, Justices of thePeaee. liarles Wake, Constable. CITY DIRECTORY: J. R. .Meagher, Mayor. H. J. Hudson. Clerk. John F. Werinuth. Treasurer. Geo. G. Bowman, Polica Judge. L. J. Cramer, Engineer. councilmkx: 1st Ward John Riekly. G. A. Schroeder. '2d 'or Wm. Lamb. I. Gluek. 3J rnZ- J. Rasmussen. A. A. Smith. ColumbuN Pohi Office. pen on Sundays trom 11 a. m. to 12 m. and from -1:30 to C p. m. Business hours except Sunday (5 a. m. to 6 p. m. Eastern mails elose at 11 A. m. Western mails elose at 4:15 p.m. Mail leaves Columbus for Madison and Norfolk, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 7 a. m. Arrives at C p. m. 'or Monroe, Genoa, "Waterville and Al bion, daily exeept Sunday (J a.m. Ar rive, .amo, (5 p.m. For Postville, Farral, Oakdale and Newman's Grove, Mondays, Wednes days and Fridays, (J a.m. Arrive. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 0 p. m. For Shell Creek, Crcston and Stanton, on Mondays and Fridays at G a. m. Arrives Tuesdays and Saturdays, at ( P. M. For Alexis, Patron and David City, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, I p. m "Arrives at 12 si. For St. Anthony, Prairie Hill and St. Bernard. Fridays, J A. M. Arrives Saturdays, 3 p. si. U. P. Time Table. Eastward Sound. Emigrant, No.G, leaves at P.cc.ncr'l- A ' 0:2.1 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 2:1.5 p.m. 4:30 a.m. Freight", " 8, Freight, " 10, it Westward Hound. Freight, No. 5, leaves at 2:00 p.m. 4:27 p.m. 0:00 p.m. 1:30 a.m. Passeng'r, " 3, Freight, " 9, Emigrant. 7. ( t Every day except Saturday the three lines leading to Chicago connect with U P. trains at Omaha. On Saturdays there will be but one train a day, as hown by the following schedule: B.&M. TIME TABLE. Leaves Columbus, 8:20 a. m. 44 Hellwood 8:i0 David City, 9.15 Garrison :31 Ii II- ( (( tl II i tl Ulysses, 9:55 Staplehurst, 10:12 " Kpuviril in-.in Ruby 10:46 Milford 11:00 Pleasant Dale, 11:18 Emerald 11:37 ii .1 Ii ii Arrives at Lincoln 12:00 M. Leaves Lincoln at 12:50 p. M. and ar rives in Columbus 4:10 p. M. O., N. & B Bound north. Jackson.. 4:53 p.m. LostCreek5:30 u PI. Centre 5:57 44 IIumphreyG;51 " Madison ..7:40 " Mnnson . 8:28 " Norfolk.. 8:55 II. ROAD. Bound south. Norfolk ..0:30a.m. Munson 0:57 " Madison .7:45 4' Humphrey8:34 ,4 PL Centre 9:28 LostCreek 9:55 44 Jackson 10:30 The departure from Jackson will be governed by the arrival there of the U. P. express train. SOCIETY NOTICES. IQTCards under this heading will be inserted for $3 a year. G. A. R. Baker Post No. 9, Department of Nebraska, meets every second and fourth Tuesday evenings In ench month in Knights of Honor Hall, Co lumbus. John Hammond, P. C. D. D. Wadswoktii, Adj't. H. P. Bowkr, Searg. Maj. FARMERS, YOUR ATTENTION IS CALLED TO THE Grand Opening! OK ELLIOTT & LUERS' MAMMOTH IMPUMIT Hi (Morrissey & Klnck's old stand on Olive Street,) Where you find one of the largest and best stocks of Farming Implements kept in Columbus. We handle nothing but the best machin ery in the market, such as J.he following: Buckeye Harvesters BEAPEBS AND MOWERS, Tincon Baggies and Spring Wagons, FARM WAGONS, SULKY PLOWS. STIRRING PLOWS, HARROWS,- CULTIVTORS, CORN PLANTERS, SO 5 "' 2 as1"" s rH-.- :- sS -3 Hfe if to fn cot. "TH 9 si o a o-3 tg We guarantee all work. We are bound not to be undersold by any one in Central Nebraska. We pay the highest cash price for wheat aud all kinds of grain. ELLIOTT fc B.UEKff, 564-Gm Successors to J. C. Elliott. 'HZZZS JLLLm 3TT HFii JOHN WIGGINS, "Wholesale aud Retail Dealer in HARDWARE, SS3SSSSSSS3S8SS33333S3SSSS3S 833333 T O VE S ,SiSS93 333S3s3333s33Sb3b3Sb33333S33S IRON, TINWARE, NAILS, ROPE, Wagon Material GLASS, PAINT, ETC)., ETC. Corner 11th and Olive Sts. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. NORTH-EAST OR SOUTH-EAST VIA THE B.& M. R. R. This Road together with the C. B. & Q. Which is called Forms the most complete line between Nebraska points and all points East of Missouri River. Passengers taking this line cross the Mo. River at Plattsmouth tj over the Plattsmouth Steel Bridge, Which has lately been completed. Through Day Coaches. AND Pullman Sleeping Cars ARK ItUN TO Burlington, Peoria, Chicago and St. Louis, Where close connections are made in Union Depots for all points North,East and South. Trains by this route start in Nebraska and are therefore free from the various accidents which so frequently delay trains com ing through from the mountains, and passenge e are thu ure of m -.king good connections when they take the B. & M. route east. THROUGH TICKETS AT Lowest Rates in force in the State, as well as full and reliable information required, can be had upon applicat ou to B. & M. R. R. Agents at any of the principal sta tions, or to PERCEVAL LOWELL, General Ticket Agent, 5C0-y OMAHA, NEB. SOHMITZ BROS., COLUMBUS, NEBR., KEEP ON HANDS, Plows, Hareows, SEEDERS, Corn Planters, Cultivators AND ALL OTHER KINDS OF FARM I3IPLE3IENTS, OF THE BEST MAKES AND AT THE LOWEST PRICES. Be sure to see theit stock and learn their prices, before making your purchases. 565ma m m&swt Five feR We - -i A or Loins, Acrcoia Weakness, acd in faet all disorders of the Bladder and lriuary Organ- whether contracted hy private diseases or otherwise. L. .1II-:S, if jou are suffering troirtH"einaIe Weakness, Leucnrrbira, or .any disease of the Kidnevs, Bladder, or Urinary Organs, YOU CAN BE CUBED! Without swallowing nauseous medicines by .-.imply wearing PROF. GCILMETTE'S FKEXCEI KIDNEY PAD, Which cure, by absorption. Ask your druggist for PKOF. GUIL31ETTE'5 FIJEXCII KIDNEY PAD, aud take no other. If he has not got it, send V-lW nd you will receive the Pad by return mail. TESTIMONIALS FROM THE PEOPLE. Judok Buchanan, Lawyer, T edo, O., says: "One of Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pads cured meo i.uinbago in three weeks' time. 3Ir case had been gl veu up'by the bet Doc rs as incurable. Duriug all this time" I sutler: J untoltl agony and paid out large sums of money. Gkokok" VK-riKit. .1. P., Toledo, O., says: 4,I suffered for three years with Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on crutches. I wa.s en tirely and permanently cured after wearing Prof.Guilmette's French KIduey Pd four Week.-. 'Squikk X. C. Scott, Sylvania, 0., writes:4'! have been a great sufferer for IS years with Bright's Disease ot the Kidneys. For veek at a time was unable to get out of bed; took barrel-of inediciue, but they gae me only temporary relief. I wore two of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads sl. weeks, and 1 now kuow I am entirely cured." Mks. Hkllkn .Ikicomk, Toledo, O.. say-: "For years I have been confined s great part of the time to aiy bed, with Lelicorrbica and female weakness. 1 worn one of Guilmette's Kidney Pads anil was cured in one mouth." II. B. Gkkex, Wholesale Grocer, FindUy,0., write-: 4l suffered Tor'i'i ears with lame back and in three weeks was permanently cured bv wearing dne of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads." ' ' "aeo1 B. F. KKKbUNG, M. 1)., Druggist, Logansport, Ind., when sending in an order for Kidney Pad-, writes: M wore one of the lirst one- we had and I received more benefit from it than anything I ever used. In fact the Pads give better general s:iti-factioii than any Kiduev remedv we ever sold.' Ha ,y SiioksiaKi-k, Druggists, flanuibai, Mo.: "We are working up a lively trade iu j our Pads, anil are hearing of good re.Milts from them every day." PROF. tilMLMETTE'S 1870. 1881. TIIK (jjfcohwibtis journal Id conducted as a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Devoted to the best mutual inter est of its readers and its publih. ers. Published at Columhu. Platte county, the centre of the agricul tural portion ofNebrnska.it is read by hundreds of people east who are looking towards Nebraska as their future home. Its subscribers in Nebraska are the staunch, solid portion of the community, as is evidenced by the fact that the Journal has never contained a dun" against them, and by the other fact that ADVERTISING In its column always brings its reward. Business is business, and those who wish to reach the solid people of Central Nebraska will find the columns of the Journal a splendid medium. JOB WORK Of all kinds neatly and quickly done, at fair prices. This species of. printing is nearly always want ed in a hurry, and, knowing this fart, we have o provided for it that we can furnish envelopes, let ter heads, bill heads, circulars, post ers etc., etc., on very short notice, and promptly on time as we promise. SUBSCRIPTION. 1 copy per annum $2 00 ' Six months 1 00 4i Three months, fiO Single copy sent to any address in the United States for 5 cts. M. X. TURNEE & CO., Columbus, Nebraska. EAGLE MILLS, tt&0 ON SHELL CREEK, Near 31attliis's Bridge. JOSEPH BUCHER, - Proprietor STThe mill is complete in every par ticular for making the best of Hour. "A Nquarei Fair 1unIh ." la tin motto. in.'i-x TIi In Spare In ltcrvd KOK GREISEN BROS., Boots and Shoes. i i'ak.tikkm: W E OF GOOD CnEER. Letnotthe low prices of your nrodueis tlN- courage you. but rather limit your ex penses o your resources, iou can do so by stopping at the new home of your fellow farmer, where you can find good accommodations cheap. For bay foi team forjme night and day, i"icts. A room furnished with a cook stove and bunks, in connection with the stable free. Those wishing can be accommo C3 dated at the house of the undersftmeil z ;"""" "-- "ici so cents beds 10 ceats. J. B. SENECAL, K mile east of Gerrard'. Corra I at thk fAllAwtn .,... VfnMl.. ar . - - Y ill po-itively cure leer and Ague, Dumb Airue, Ague Cake, Bullous Fever Jaundice, Dspepia. and all rii-ca-es of the hi ver. Stomach aud Blood Prleu I i0 b mail. Scud for Prof. Guilmette's I'n-.itise on the Kiduet- and" Liver free by mail. Addre- IKOC1I IAI CO.. Toledo Ohio ' J2T For sale by A. HEINTZ, Druggist, Columbus, Neb. wVy Hnndred Dollars Reward OVER A MILLION OF FRENCH KIDNEY PADS ii:te already Vi n sold iu thi-country and in Fran re; ery one nf'which ha-given p. rfect natiafaetiuu, and has performed rtires every time when used affording (o direetimiK. AW now :i to llieatllieted and doubt ing one- that we will pay the alum reward for a single CASE OF LAME BACK That the Pad foils to cure. This Great Remedv ill POSITIVELY and PERMANENTLY cure Lumoago, Lame liurfct Sciatica, Urarel, Diabetes, Dropay,JJriyht'3 Disease qj me nmneys, lncintiiitrnce ana neiemionoj the Critic. Jnjtammation oj the Kidneys, Catarrh of the iiiadder. Utah Colored Urine, J'ain in the Back. Sidu FRENCH LIVER PAD, (GOING EAST TAKE THE No Changing Cars )FKOM( OMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS, NEBRAS KA CITY or PLATTSMOUTH TO CHICAGO, Where direct connections are made with Through Sleeping Car Lines ro Xew York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wasliingtoi, And all Eastern Cities ! TJIE HIIOItT LI1VK via PEORIA for Indianapolis,C'incinnati,LoHisrilIe AND ALL POINTS IN TUK SOUTHEAST. The Ilext Line for ST. LOUIS, Where Direct Connections are made in the UNION DEPOT with Through Sleeping Car Lines for all Points SOUTH. -o- The Shortest. Speediest and 3Iont Com fortable Kouto via HANNIBAL to Ft. SCOTT. DENISOX, DALLAS nOIISTIN, AUSTIN, SAN ANTO NIO, GALVESTON, And all Points in TEXAS. Pullman 1 G-wheel Palace Sleeplnsr Cars, C. Ii. A O. Palm. DrMulm lm .... .. x . :. . ,- Ing Fat time. Steel Hail Track and Supe rior Equipment, combined with their ureal lnrowin car Arrangement, make this, above all others, the favorite Route to the IMS I, SO Mil :r SOUTH K AWT. TRY IT. and vou will find TRAVEL ING a I.l'Xl'RV instead of a DISCOM FORT, owjt All information about Rates of Fare '.'M',,i.m .Car Accommodations, and 'I line rabies will be cheerfullv t?Iven eerfully given by applying to m, ,. JAHESR. WOOD, fcl Gen'I Passenger Ag't, Chicago. M4EE THE CHILDREN Him ! Now is the time to subscribe for this BEST ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE' FOR THE YOtJXG. Its success has been continued and un exampled. EiuaBwiir Snbscrilw for- it E he olnmhisomml And THE NURSERY, both post-pald MRShlfi. send Si .v t tu si.,,-..., w.' i "7.,-?.: . ". """" -. .Mass. If von lfira moner order n in t Co"JoluabwJxrt. ' wuu.vj, uu uruiuoem J " street, Boston, uoin, genu by vai-s, miu tiorion'M Kecliuiiu; Chairs. No hxtni Charge for Seats in I'eellniti Chairs. The Famous C, U. A Q. Palaci Diuini' Can. A I i --? T A 1, m.fnwr