The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, August 22, 1883, Image 2

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    THE JOURNAL.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1883.
Eepublican Judicial Convention.
The Bepublican electors of the Fourth
Judicial District of the state of Nebraska
are hereby called to send delegates to
meet in convention at the Court House in
Columbus, Nebraska, on Thursday, Sep
tember 20, 1883, at 7: 30 p. m., for the pur
pose of placing in nomination candidates
for the offices of Judge and Prosecuting
Attorney of said district and to transact
any other business deemed proper. The
several counties will be entitled to the
sameTepresentationas'in the Republican
State Convention, as follows:
Butler G
Nance z
Platte 5
Saunders 9
Colfax 4
Dodge
9
Vorrirl- 4
Total ".".""."" S9
By order of the Republican committee
of the Fourth Judicial District.
H. B. MILLARD, Chairman.
A. H. Neidig, Secretary.
Crops of Virginia are suffering for
-want of rain.
Neably 800 deaths from cholera in
Egypt on the 10th.
Ax exchange says Florida has seventy-one
newspapers.
Boston usee 100 gallons of water a
day to each inhabitant.
Twextv-xine deaths from yellow
fever at Havana last week.
Lord Chief Justice Colebidge
sailed for America last week.
Thbee men were run over and kill
ed by the cars near Pittsburg.
-A Ur to last Saturday 16,448 persons
had died from cholera in Egypt.
Fifteen "Western Union wires were
cut the other night at Pittsburg.
Penitentiary convictB at Laramie,
"Wy., turn out 90,000 brick a week.
C. E. Heath made a trip by bicycle
of eight miles in fifty-five minutes.
Seven colts were killed the other
day by lightning, near Harvard, Neb.
It is claimed that Ruizzarilla is in
Spain directing the risings in that
country.
It is stated that all gold and stock
wires in New York were cut the
other night.
A. fatal disease resembling chol
era is prevailing among hogs near
Beading, Pa.
Yellow feveb is raging in the city
of Yera Cruz and among the vessels
in the harbor.
Several sergeants who took part
in the revolt at Santo Domingo baye
been executed.
The American library association
has been holding its sixth annual ses
sion at Buffalo.
The English doctors claim the
scourge now epidemic in Egypt is not
Asiatic cholera.
Fifty-nine Western Union wires
cat at New York, the perpetrators
not apprehended.
It is stated that many members of
parliament will visit America during
the coming recess.
It is claimed that the republicans
in the recent elections in France
gained 100 seats.
Three tramps were burned to death
in an aid mill used for storing hay at
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
The council in Chicago have or
dered railroad companies to put op
gates at city crossings.
The Nile last week was rising very
fast and fears were entertained for
the crops in the vicinity.
Brown Bros. & Co., lumber deal
ers of Detroit, havo failed. Liabili
ties, $100,000; assets, $50,000.
Mrs. L. H. Plumb, of Streator, 111.,
baa been elected a member of the
board of trustees of Wueaton college.
Miss Gladly Frank, a very nice
young lady of Kansas City, left her
home in July and has not been heard
from.
The treasury department since the
first of the month has paid out nearly
a million of dollars on account of
pensions.
Miss E. E. Fish eh, of Delphi, Ind.,
has been appointed first assistant su
perintendent in the public schools of
Iowa City.
Three and a half per cent, bonds to
the amount of $100,000 have been
presented at the treasury department
for redemption.
The railroad lines running out of
Chicago have arranged to run trains
by printed time tables, in case their
operators go out.
The stock and crop reports from a
great number of localities throughout
this state show both in a very pros
perous condition.
The yield of wheat in France this
year will be 20,000,000 hectoliters
(about 1)6,000,000 bushels) less than
any year since 1872.
By the charity of Irish people
throughout the world, the people of
connty Donegal, Ireland, have passed
the crisis of distress.
Running Bird, an Indian, was
hanged at Talaqua, I. T., the other day
for the murder of Running Water. A
donble run, so to speak.
Srx prominent politicians of Louis
ville, y., were arrested the other
day for bribery at the election. The
political millenium is coming.
A cotton factory, two tobacco fac
tories and a tobacco warehouse were
burned the other day at Danville,
Va., causing a loss of $150,000.
Most of the deviltry done in Ger
many, England and Ireland is now
blamed on German-Americans, Irish
Americans and American-Americans.
Ix the recent elections thronghont
France for Councils-Generate seventy-one
districts returned Republi
cans and twenty-three Conservatives.
Nance county will send but one
delegate to the State Democratic Con
vention at Omaha, and he will have to
go without credentials. No one to
make them out.
Oxk hundred and fifty Western
Union wires were cut during two
Bights of lut week. The company
has employed detectives to ferret opt j
tfceofiwders.
The English sloop Photographer,
has been seized at Port Townsend,
W. T., charged with smuggling Chi
namen into the above territory from
British Columbia.
Mbs. Gladstone, whom Disraeli
once described as "the woman with
out a redeeming vice' devotes her
life to the suffering and the poor,who
are her special charge.
The Union Pacifies, of Omaha,,
played the Shamrocks the other day
on the Cincinnati grounds before
4,000 people. Shamrocks came out
ahead 39 to Union Pacifies 37.
Sax Fbaxgisco has made large
shipments of munitions of war lately
to Shanghai. It is estimated that $5,
000,000 worth of war materials have
gone over In the past eighteen months.
While parties were engaged in
digging a well on the Governor Dale
farm near Yates Center, Kan., they
struck a large vein of silver ore.
Specimens were found to be very rich.
The compositors on the Rock Is
land Union put on their coats and
left the ofiice without giving any rea
son for the act. Other printers have
been obtained and the paper issues as
usual.
Mbs. W. B. Allisox, of Dubuque,
la., wife of Senator Allison, drowned
herself the other night in the Missis
sippi river. The sad and unfortunate
act was brought about from mental
disease.
Commanders of German men-of-war
have been ordered to limit their
supplies of American pickled pork to
what only is necessary for the suste
nance of their crews during their
passage home.
T. G. Hunt, a New York merchant
who disappeared mysteriously June
last, has turned up in Elizabethtown,
Essex county. He has not been to
Europe, and says he does not know
where he has been.
Nothing has yet been heard of the
burglars who iobbed the U. P. depot
at Wahoo of about $300. This place
seems to be more unfortunate than
the average, this being the second
robbery in a few years.
Ix a fit of insanity caused by dis
ease, the invalid wife of Louis Law
rence Conrod, a well known Balti
more lawyer, shot her husband
sleeping by her Bide, through the
head, killing him Instantly.
The reyenue at the various custom
houses of the United States for July
last were $20,909,290, against $19,950,
637 the same month of 1882. This
Bbows an increase of $958,653 the first
month of the new tariff law.
Mbs. Axadibai Jothze, a Brahmin
of good social position, has embarked
at Calcutta, in company with several
missionary women for America, with
the purpose of entering the Philadel
phia women's medical college.
The mammoth Kimball hotel at
Atlanta, Ga., was consumed the other
morning by fire, without the loss of
life. The building cost $600,000, fur
niture $125,000. It is claimed by
some that the fire was incendiary.
English doctors have recently been
at Alexandria who have had expe
rience in India in the cholera epi
demic. They report the disease now
prevailing in Egypt as of a different
character from the Asiatic cholera.
Buffalo county, this state, will
appoint her delegates to state and
judicial conventions on the 1st day of
September. The central committee
decided that none but straight repub
licans be admitted to the convention.
The Chicago Herald thinks the
Mormon b will hold full sway so long
as "their fields are green, their har
vests plenteous and their women have
the ballot." As a scheme to break up
polygamy, -the Edmunds law is a dead
failure.
Mbs. Grace A. Oliver is one of
the most active literary women in
Boston, at present. Besides editing
the "Story of Theodore Parker," she
is engaged upon a volume of the
"Eminent Women's Series," for Rob
erts Brothers.
While thirteen men were being
hauled to the surface at the mine near
Red Ruth, Cornwall, Eng., the other
day, the rope attached to the car broke
and twelve of the men were precipi
tated to the bottom of the shaft and
instantly killed.
Bbyaxtsville, Ky., was the scene
of an election row in which two col
ored men were killed, two mortally
wounded, and two white men and a
black man seriously wounded. The
affair grew out of a white man selling
his vote to both parties.
The safe of C. Cusack, lumberman
of North Bend, was robbed the other
night of $100 in money, a watch, re
volver, &c. Three masked men bound
John Chirney who was sleeping in
the ofiice, and compelled him to open
the 6afe. They escaped.
A small tin box containing ex
plosive material was one day. last
week thrown into the Yornesinsby
palace St. Petersburg, from a carriage
which was being driven along the
thoroughfare. The box exploded
immediately. No arrests.
Marrying is done up in a legal and
spiritual way at Chicago. The other
day a young mau procured from the
county clerk two licenses to marry
the same party. Differing in faith,
the couple will be married by a Pro
testant and a Catholic clergyman.
Hailstoxes fell east of Lincoln,
Neb., one evening last week ten inches
in circumference. One composed of
small oneB frozen together struck a
farmer on the head, causing serious
injury. Where the storm was heavy
crops were leveled to the ground.
Mbs. Elizabeth A. Glouchesteb,
the richest colored woman in the
country, died the other- day in New
York. Her funeral was very expen
sive. She was worth half a million,
and was one of John Brown's finan
cial backers when he made his fatal
moFfi iato Virginia.
Max born of woman is of few days
and no teeth. And, indeed, it would
be money in his pocket sometimes if
he had less of either. As for his days,
he wasteth one-third of them, and as
for his teeth, he has convulsions when
he cuts them, and as the last one comes
through, lo, the dentist is twisting the
first one out, and the last end of that
man's jaw is worst than the first,
being full of porcelain and a roof
plate built to hold blackberry seeds.
Stone bruises line his pathway to
manhood ; his father boxes his ears at
home, and the big boys cuff him in
the play-ground and the teacher whips
him in the school-room. He buyeth
Northwestern at 110, when he hath
sold short at 96, and his neighbor
unloadetb upon him Iron Mountain at
63 5-8, and it straightway breaketh
down to 52 1-4. He riaeth early and
sitteth up late that he may fill his
barns and store-houses, and lo, his
children's lawyers divide the spoil
among themselves and say, "Ha, hal"
He growleth, and is sore distressed
because it rainetb, and he beateth
upon his breast and sayetb, "My crop
is lost I" because it raineth not. The
late rains blight his wheat and the
frost biteth his peaches. If it be so
that the Bun shineth, even among the
nineties, he sayetb, "Woe is me, for I
perish," and if the north-west wind
sighelh down in forty -two below
he crieth, "Would I were dead!" If
he wear sackcloth and blue jeans men
say, "He is a tramp," and if he goeth
forth shaven and clad in purple and
fine linen all the people cry, "Shoot
the dude !"
He carryeth insurance for twenty
fiye years, until he hath paid thrice
over for all his goods, and then he
letteth his policy lapse one day, and
that same night fire destroyeth his
store. He buildeth him a house in
Jersey, and his first born is devoured
by muequitoes; he pitcheth his tent in
New York, and tramps devour hia
substance. He raoveth to Kansas, and
a cyclone carryeth bis house away
over into Missouri, while a prairie
fire and ten million acres of grass
hoppers fight for his crop. He set-
tleth himself in Kentucky, and is shot
the next day by a gentleman, a colonel
and statesman, "because, sah, he re
sembles, sab, a man, sab, he did not
like, sah." Verily, there is no rest for
the sole of his foot, and if he had it to
do over again he would not bo bom
at all, for "the day of death is better
than the day of one's birth."
Robert J. Burdette.
Nebraska State Farmers' Alliance.
To the Subordinate Alliances of the State:
Melboy, Neb., July 27, '83.
Tho regular annual meeting of the
State Alliance will be held at Grand
Island, Neb., on Wednesday, Sept. 5.
at 10 o'clock, a. m.
The ratio of representation will be
one delegate for each Subordinate
Alliance, and one additional delegate
for each twenty-five members of such
Subordinate Alliance.
This will be a very important
meeting, and it is earnestly hoped that
every Alliance in the State will be
represented.
anti-monopoly state convention.
We are authorized by the chairman
ot the State Central Committee to an
nounce that the Auti-Monopoly State
Convention to place in nomination
one candidate for Supreme Judge, one
candidate for Regent of the Univer
sity, and one candidate for Regent of
the University to fill vacancy, will be
held at Grand Island on Thursday,
Sept. 6, the day following the meet
ing of the State Alliance. It is ex
pected that members of the Alliance
will see that the different counties are
represented at this convention.
The ratio of representation at this
convention for the counties will be
the same as at the Hastings Conven
tion last year. P. B. Reynolds,
Prest. State Alliance.
J. Bubbows, Sec'y.
Thibty-eight years ago Louis We
ber, a native of Wurtemberg, emi
grated to America and settled as a
farmer in Kentucky. Lately, having
amassed a competency, he started for
his native place, intending to visit his
sister, who was the only surviving
member of his family, and who had
not seen him since he left home in
his youth. He hoped to give her a
joyful surprise, and looked forward
with pleasant anticipation to the re
union. On arriving at bis native vil
lage he learned that his sister had
two days before been buried. The
news unmanned him. He was taken
sick, and a week after his sister's
death, was laid in a grave beside
hers. Ex.
Ax exchauge says the Southern ex
position, in Louisville, opened with
15,000 people present. A telegram
from that city says the city is one mass
of flaunting flags, both in the business
and residence portions, and pictures
of Lincoln, Garfield, Grant and Ar
thur greet the eye on every side.
That is right, we are now one people
known throughout the civilized world
as the United States of America and
there neyer should exist a distinction
in an invidious sense of North and
South. Gen. Ord used to say to the
rebel citizens who came to him for
protection for their gardens, &c, "a
little U. S. flag will cover alfc your
grounds."
The smoking car is, we believe,
one of the American inventions for
the convenience and comfort of
smoking travelers. It keeps away
disease and bad insects, and the old,
rickety and usually the dingy smok
ing car has the most jolly company
on the train, full of good cheer and
solid laughter. Managers of roads
will realize the necessity of immedi
ately renovating the old, dingy and
rickety smoking cars, so that their
real jolly and happy passengers may
enjoy their rides when they strike
their roads with their ten cent Ha
vanas. Better smoke than drink li
quor, but better aeither.
SEPTEMBER'S SURPRISES.
A Lireljr Fall in Passenger Bates, and Event in
Store which will Greatly Exceed
Expectations.
The busy note of preparation in
Baltimore for the coming Summer
Night's Carnival is heard on all sides,
and the city appears to be waking up
' as never before to the determination
to make this year's celebration cer
tainly the biggest event of the charac
ter ever conceived of in this or any
other country. The novel features
being steadily added to the already
most brilliant programme speaks
strongly of the striking talent pos
sessed among the good citizens who
spend day and night in planning and
execnting.
Tho city illuminations promise to
be upon a most extensive scale, and
almost altogether in the electric line.
Many buildings will be literally
ablaze with bright lights in all colors,
and it is proposed to demonstrate in
hitherto untried fields what can be
done with electricity.
The harbor display on the opening
night will be as unique as possible to
imagine, and a veritable fairy scene.
Every description of light will be
introduced, and the pyrotechnical
features novel and of great scope of
design. Baltimore, as the nearest
seaport to an enormous section of
country, will show her unsurpassed
harbor to the multitude after a fash
ion never before dreamed of. The
reception of Lord Baltimore on the
night in question, with all its attend
ant effects, will be something to re
member for years, and amply repay a
journey even across the continent.
Pageant night will also prove another
memorable occasion, tor never in
European or American cities has a
parade of such magnitude or of such
remarkable richness and novelty been
attempted. Last year's pageant was
conceded by New Orleans mystic ex
perts themselves, as well as those from
Mobile, Memphis, Galveston and St.
Louis, to have been beyond all com
parison the grandest pageant ever
witnessed in this country. If such
was the unanimous verdict last year
it would be difficult to measure the
limit of praise this year, as the pa
geant, now in its finishing stage, is
inestimably superior, larger, grander,
and in every way finer than that of
1882. It will require a regiment of
men and horses to put it upon the
street upward of thirteen hundred
men and two hundred and sixty odd
horses. Thirty thousand dollars
would not begin to cover the expense
of this one display. From this pros
pective visitors may glean some idea
of what is in store for them. Not
only will expectation during sojourn
in the city the second week in Sep
tember be more than realized, but
travel to and from will be looked
after with most painstaking care.
The Baltimore and Ohio, not con
tent with making the exceptionally
low rate of half fare, or one regular
fare for the round trip from' all sta
tions on its great system, but has
arranged a series of excursions which
will afford the greatest possible facil
ities for enjoyment. The visitor cau
not indeed find a single point to
criticise, for should he so choose be
need not have an hour unoccupied
during his entire week's pleasure
hunting. What with trips to Har
per's Ferry, to Old Point Comfort, to
Fortress Monroe, to Mount Vernou,
to Luray Caverns, to Washington,
and tho Oriole in Baltimore, the man
who could complain would eertainly
growl if he had the earth. The B. &
O. has, with characteristic enterprise,
issued an elegantly engraved pro
gramme, and which can be had for
the mere troublo of an application to
any of its representatives or at any of
its offices throughout the country.
The B. & O. excursions announced
for September afford opportunities
for pleasure-seeking unprecedented
of late years. With the solidity of
organization maintained by the pool
of the eastern lines and the rules of
maintaining rates so rigidly observ
ed, half fare for any event is a big
thing, and no telling when it will be
offered again. 1
S. B. Edmonston, of St. Louis, who
claims, with others interested, a large
portion of land embraced within the
limits of Washington City, including
South Washington and much of what
is now the Capitol grounds, is in that
city. This property was sold by Jas.
Greenleaf to the government in fee,
and Edmonston contends that Green
leafs interest was only a leasehold for
99 years, which is about to expire, and
that those who have purchased have
no fee simple title. Edmonston is
willing to settle and give a good deed
on the basis of $3,000,000 for all prop
erty involved.
The other night Grand Island was
visited by a very heavy rain storm.
Seven inches of water fell. The thun
der and lightning were fearful. Hen
ry Voss lost his barn, nine hundred
bushels of corn and other valuables,
set on fire by lightning. The Na
tional hotel was struck and consider
ably damaged. A bedstead in the
house was also struck, splintered and
knocked about the room, but the
young lady occupying it escaped with
out serious injury. It is reported
that grain in the shock and lying
down is considerably damaged.
A terrific hail storm last week
did immense damage in the locality
of Manning, Carroll County, Iowa, on
the C. M and St- P. railway, and
along the branches of the C and N.
W railway, commencing north of
Manning and working south into
Andubon county and along the edge
of Shelby several houses were blown
down, three or four people injured,
but not fatally. No heavier hail storm
was ever known in western Iowa.
Horses, cattle, aud property south of
Manning was killed.
The most severe storm ever known
in that section struck Dodge City,
Has., the other night. The velocity
of the wind was ninety miles an honr.
The 6torm was accompanied by the
grandest display of lightning ever
witnessed there, being one continuous
sheet of flame. The rain was also
very heavy. The water stood more
than a foot deep on Front street.
Hayti was in a very agitated con
dition last week and a resolution was
expected every hour in the city of
Port -Au-Prince. The government
is penniless and business at a stand
still. A battle was fonght the other
day before Jeremie, in which the
government troops were completely
defeated, and some of their generals
taken and executed. i
It is claimed by a Turkish editor
that Noah's ark lms been discovered
in a tolerably good statu of preserva
tion, aud pushing itself from a glacier
on Mt. Ararat. As far as the ark can
be examined iu its singular position,
it is said to correspond to the descrip
tion of Moses, and appears large
enough to hold mauy fowl3 of the air
and beasts ot the field. So far as we
can learn the story is not believed,
and until we receive intelligence
through a reliable source we lcel in
clined to reject the Turkish report.
The British are said to be severely
agitated over the opposition springing
up in this country, to their owning so
much land iu tbeUuited States. It is
well, we think, that such opposition
be made apparent. Alien ownership
of lands in our country is of no bene
fit, but rather a great disadvantage.
They are welcome to come here and
own land and be Americans, but we
don't need their ownership without
their personal presence. Hastings
Journal.
When T. C. Hunter, of Huntingtou,
Pa., saw a stone too large for him to
move on the railroad truck near his
home, and heard the roar of an ap
proaching passenger train, he went
crazy with excitement. He succeed
ed, however, in stopping tho train,
but with not a foot to spare. This
was three months ago. He lost his
mind through the act, and died a rav
ing maniac.
John Ryan, of Omaha, the other
day came home drunk and brutally
assaulted and whiped his aged mother
until she became helpless and speech
less. It may be that owing to the in
firmities consequent upou old age,
the whipping she has received will
result fatally. The young man has
been arrested and lodged in jail.
Geo. Habbis, of North Platte, was
found the other day about ten miles
out of town by the trackman of the
Union Pacific, in close proximity to
the track, in a state of unconscious
ness. Nothing positive is known how
be received the injury. Some think
he was ejected from the train, others
that he was drunk and fell ofl".
The recent reports from different
parts of the country that wires have
been cut and cable boxes destroyed
have a very suspicious appearance,
and it is almost impossible to prevent
suspicion attaching to members or
officers of the brotherhood even
should they be entirely innocent of
the charge or suspicion.
Last week Alfred Miller of Beat
rice, iNeb., proprietor of the city meat
market, was shot by Win. Ripple.
The wound in the abdomen is a seri
ous one, though probably not fatal.
Ripple had been paying his attentions
to a servant girl of Miller's, and Mil
ler had objected and ordered him
away from the house.
Another railroad between St. Louis
and Omaha is reported to be soon
built by Vanderbilt, who is now en
gaged iu perfecting the connection of
the Vanderbilt line3 with St. Louis
and the west, and in order to do this
they propose to build a new road from
St. Louis to Kansas City, thence to
Omaha.
The great soldiers' re-union to be
held at Hastings, Neb., Sept. 3d to
8th, from present indications will be
larger than ever before, aud nearly
or quite double that of former years.
The fare of railroads has greatly im
proved this year, for this occasion
being one cent and a half per mile.
Bradlaugii's friends to tho num
ber of thirty thousand assembled tho
other day in London to protest
against his exclusion from the house
of commons. Resolutions favoring
resistance by Bradlaugh were adopt
ed and sent to the Queen, Gladstone
aud the Speaker of the House.
Albert Henning, one of the Omaha
mail carriers, has mysteriously disap
peared. His absence revealed the
fact that he had suddenly skipped the
town, leaving behind him numerous
debts and a wife and children who
were dependent upon him for their
support.
fikai.. proof.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb..l
Aug. 14, 1883. T
NOTICE is hereby given that the following-named
settler has tiled notice
ot his intention to make final proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before C. A. Newman, Clerk
of the District Court, at Columbus, Neb.,
on September 27th, 1883. viz:
Sobestyan Cuba, for the N. E. of
N. E. Sec. 30, T'p 17, Range 3 west.
He names the following witnesses to
prove his continuous residence upon, and
cultivation of, said land, viz: Michael
Kustz and Joseph Rosno, of Woodburn,
Nebr., George Boroviak and Lawrence
Quiava, ot Columbus, Nebr.
17-G C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIXAL. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Xeb.,)
juiv i4tn, 1SS3.
Nl
OTICE is hereby given that the
following-named settler has tiled
notice of his intention to make hnal
proof in support of his claim, and that
said proof will be made before C. A.
Xewman, Clerk of the District Court, of
Platte county, at Columbus, Xebraska, on
September 17th, 1883, viz:
Anton Fangman, Homestead 8051, for
the X. i X". W. M Section 6, Township
19 north, Range 2 west. He names the
following witnesses to prove his continu
ous residence upon, and cultivation of,
12-0
C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FUVAE. PROOF.
U. S. Land Office, Grand Island, Neb.)
July -25th, 18S3. )
NOTICE is hereby given that the fol
lowing named settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make linal proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before C. A. Xewman, Clerk
of the District Court, at Columbus, Xeb.,
on September loth, 1883, viz:
Jacob It. Keith, Homestead Entry Xo.
10272, for the W. i S. W. K Section 28,
Township IU north, of Range 4 west. He
names the following witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon, and culti
vation of, said land, viz: John Xelson,
John Devine, Henry Guiles and John
Koop, St. Edwards P. O., JJoone Co., Xeb.
14-0 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
Fl AE. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb..)
Aug. 9th 1883. J
NOTICE is hereby given that the following-named
settler has filed notice
of his intention to make final proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before Clerk of District
Court, for Platte County, at Columbus,
Xebraska, on Thursdav, September 27th
1883, viz:
Peter KIpp, Additional Homestead No.
11507, for the X. H S. W. M Section 20,
Township 19Xorth, of Range 2 West. He
names the following witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon, and cul
tivation of, said land, viz: Joseph
Krings, Frank Fugar, Gerhard Grouen
thal and Jacob Labenz, all of Platte Cen
ter, Platte County. Neb.
ViS C. HOSTETTER, Register.
said land, viz: Solomon . Jlorgan, Will
iam Resler, Peter Xoonan,. James Xoonan,
of Humphrey, Platte Co., Xebr.
Columbus
KRAUSE, LUBKER & CO.
NEW GOODS!
BEST GOODS!
LOWEST PRICES!
-AT
KBAUSE, LUBKER & C0.'S,
)dkalers in(
HARDWARE!
STOVES,
TINWARE, CUTLERY,
AND A FULL LINE OF
FARM IMPLEMENTS,
Pomps and Wind Mill.
34-tf
CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE.
ATOTLCE IS HEREBY GIVEN that bv
J-i vVtuu of a chattel mortgage dated
June IMi, 183:!, an duly?,filed in tbe
office of lfc county eliirk oflatte county,
Nebraskn the 2Ut dav afJune, 1882,
and cxecuM by V. E Yanalttine to The
Sandwich guufncturhig Company to se
cure the pwinent ofljthe sun. or two
hundred andfmcitty-i:ht dollars, upon
which tln-re i-Vm tlmfttlie .sunVef three
hundred and tUWtn tlolfcrs and ferty-five
cents. Defaulttliaviug wen madejiu the
payment of .sd'1gm, tic re fore we will
sell the propfirty Wureiilj.describeA viz:
One four-iftle 1K-feeding Sawich
Adams powecorn Wellet, a
One mare celt, (twpiyeari old); i -
One red heifer, (twjearvold); y
Oie bull c If. (onejvaar obi); v&
0 Reinlrtrdt, liallanltfc Co. separator;
One3lu-hox.se inountedlVy'oodbury (pow
er, suidiseparator aad power subjecto a
mortgage, orifriTi.Offtat public auctieh at
the barn.of Oscar hi Bakerski the cKy of
Columbutln the county ofwatte, c the
o'clock p. ii of said.' day. TXl V
Dated JulrSBthJISsS. q
TllKSANDWICH.'MNL'FACrUKINQ-.0.,
3IortgMces,
MACFAKLAXD & COWDKRY, V
Att'vj. 14-4
NOTICE
To all whom it may concern:
The County Commissioner!) of Platte
county have declared the road on Section
line, commencing at the S. E. corner of
the S.AV.K Section 4, Towuship IS, Range
3 west, and running thence direct east on
Section line, and terminating at the S. E.
corner of Section .", Township 18, Range
2 west, pen.
All claims for damages caused by the
openiug of said road must be tiled in the
County Clerk's oflice on or before noon of
the 1st dav of October, 18S5.
JOHN' STAUFFER,
li-." Countr Clerk.
FIAB PROOF.
Land Oflice at Grand Island, Xcb.,)
Aug. 7th, 1SS3. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the following-named
settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make linal proof in
support of his claim, aud that said proof
will bemade before C. A. Newman, Clerk
of the District Court, at Columbus, Xeb.,
on September 20th, 1SS3, viz :
Daniel Macken, Homestead, No. 11091,
for the "V M N. E. i, Section 2, T. 18, It.
2 West. He names the following wit
nesses to prove his continuous residence
upon, and cultivation of, said land, viz:
R. L. Rossiter, John Hennessey, Ed.Per
kinson and David Carrig, jr., all of Platte
Center, Xeb.
KM) C. UOSTETTEU, Register.
FIXAE. PROOF.
Land Oflice at Grand Island, Xeb.,
Aug. 3d, 1883.
NOTICE is hereby given that the
following-named settler has tiled
notice of his intention to make final proof
in support of his claim, and that said
proof will be made before the Clerk or
Judge of District Court for Platte county,
at Columbus, Xeb., on the 14th, day of
September, 18S3, viz:
GustavHinman, Homestead Xo.CS87, for
the S. E. JcT, Section 20, Township 20 north.
Range 4 west. He names the following
witnesses to prove his continuous resN
dence upou, and cultivation of, said land,
priz: .loan uison, Mis Ulson, E. Olson,
reie liaison, an oi j.ooKinggiass, .eur.
13-6 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIKAE. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Xeb.,1
July 23d, 188:;. )
"NTOTICE is hereby given that the fol-
li lowing-named settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make final proof iu
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before C. A. Newman, Clerk
of the District Court, at Columbus, Ne
braska, on September 8th, 1883, viz:
James Trimble. Homestead Xo.7487, for
the W. K of N. VT.X, Sections, Township
18, Range 3 west. He names the follow
ing witnesses to prove his continuous
residence upon, and cultivation of, said
land, viz: Thomas Kane. Lewis Hedlund,
Thomas Hall and E. B. Hall, all of West
Hill, Xebr.
14-0 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIXAE. PROOF.
U. S. Land Office, Grand Island, Xeb.,)
July 10th, 1883. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the fol
low ing named settler has filed notice
of his intention to make final proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will bemade before the Clerk of the Dis
trict Court of Platte Co., at Columbus,
Xebraska, on Saturday, September 8th,
1S83, viz:
Samuel Freeman, Homestead Xo. 7100,
for the S. E. K of Section 14, Township
20 north, Range 4 west. He names the
following witnesses to prove his continu
ous residence upon, and cultivation of,
said land, viz: Clark Blecher, of Look
ingglass, Platte Co., Xebr.. Erik Eriksen,
John Jackson, and John Jackson, jr., of
Newman's Grove, Madison Co. Nebr.
12-0 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FOR SAJL7E A.T
and II, TDMfi'S Ml SM !
-AXD BY-
G. W. KIBBLER & JOHN HAMMOND,
Traveling Salesmen.
83TSoIe agency for all or Platte and
Nance counties, and the west half o
Colfax. 15-tf
bPHslssSWII
H)lijHHl
HI BSSSSSSksSSSSr BSSSSSSSSaSSSSSSa
IHBasssW IrBBlBHl 1 .hBH
KHBSSBSSSSlvBtBMriBSSSSSSSSSl
WM. BECKER,
DEALER IN AU. KINDS OK
STAPLE AND FAMILY
GROCERIES!
I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND
WELL SELECTED STOCK.
A
Teas, Coffees, Sugar, Syrups,
Dried and Canned Fruits,
and other Staples -a
Specialty.
GoodN Delivered Free to
part of Ike City.
aay
Cor. Thirteenth and K Streets, near
A.tkN. Depot.
ARETI
TOWER'S
FISH BRA3D SLICK08
JKX THE TIKT U.1T
WATEB PBOOF COATS.
TOWER'S
FISH BRAND SLICKERS
WILL N8T STICK or PEEL
TOWER'S
FISH BBAND KLICKIRS
ACK.NOW USED BY kTktir
HORSEMAN & FARMER
WHO ETIR CAT! TUM A TR1 L.
Nana C'dbIm without till traJa out
A. J. TOWER, Sole Mfr.
Boston, fflau.
' - J - i -
fL rhl PP ti
S t. J AM.v - .
M 'ml JX "A VJ W m ft .'V- -mT. XI.
?. X Vi
I ICm f Ti -,- .AmW u W ICI1
.-v v w o Ml
v3A erirvcoc rAv'
ViT'. JklUIVbnj fN AV
xva XTJD. OR . V Al
V.XW '-JV.
xx x. j SJ j
THE REVOLUTION
Dry Goods and Clothing Store
Has on hand a
Ready-made Clothing,
Dry Goods, Carpets,
Hats, Caps, Etc., Etc.,
At pes Hut were never M of before in CoIiIibs.
I bay my goods strictly for cash and will give my customers the
benefit, of it.
Give Me a call and covince yourself of the facts.
I. GLUCK.
Medical Dispensary!
Office and Parlors, Over the new Omaha National Bank, Thin
teenth between Farnam and Douglas Streets,
OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
A. S. FISHBLATT, M. D.,
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES OF
THE THROAT AND LUNGS, CATARRH KIDNEY
AND BLADDER, AND WELL AS ALL CHRONIC AND NER
VOUS DISEASES,.
DR. FISHBLATT
Has discovered the greatest cure in the world for weakness of the back and limbs,
involuntary discbarges, impoincy, general debility, nervousness, languor, confus
ion of ideas, palpitation fthe heart, timidity, trembling, dimness of sight or giddi
ness, diseases of the head, throat, nose or skin, affections of the liver, lungs, stom
ach or bowels those terrible disorders arising from solitary habits of youth, and
secret practices more fatal to the victims than the songs ot Syrens to the mariners of
Ulysses, blighting their most radiant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage
impossible.
Those that are sutTering from the evil practices, which destroy their mental aud
physical systems causing
NERVOUS DEBILITY,
the symptoms of which are a dull, distressed mind, which unfits them from perform
ing their business and social duties, makes happy marriage impossible, distresses
the action of the heart, causing flushes of heat, depression of spirits, evil forebod
ings, cowardice, fears, dreams, restless nights, dizziness, forgettulness, unnatural
discharges, pain in the back and hips, short breathing, melancholy, tire easily of
company and have preference to be alone, feeling as tired in the morning as when
retiring, seminal weakness, lost manhood, white bone deposit in the urine, nervous
ness, confusion of thought, trembling, watery and weak eyes, dyspepsia, constipa
tion, paleness, pain and weakness in the limbs, etc., should consult me immediately
and be restored to perfect health.
YOUNG MEN
Who have become victims of solitary vice, that dreadful and destructive habit
which annually sweeps to an untimely grave thousands of young men of exalted
talent and brilliant intellect who might otherwise entrance listening senators with
the thunders of their eloquence or wake to ecstacy the living lyre, may call with
full confidence.
MARRIAGE.
Married persons or young men contemplating marriage be aware of physical
weakness, loss of procreative power, impotency, or any other disqualification speed
ilv relieved. He who places himself under the care of Dr. Fishblatt may religiously
confide in his honor as a gentleman, and confidently rely upon his' skill as a
physician.
ORGANAL WEAKNESS
Immediately cured and full vigor restored. This distressing affliction which ren
ders life a burden and marriage impossible, is the penalty paid by the victim for
improper indulgence. Young people arc apt to commit excesses from not being
aware of the dreadful consequences that may ensue. Now who that understand
this subject will deny that procreation is lost sooner by those falling into improper
habits than by prudent? Resides being deprived of the pleasure of healthy off
springs, the most serious and destructive symptoms of both mind and body arise.
The system becomes deranged, the physical and mental functions weaken. Loss of
procreative powers, nervous irritability, dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, indi
gestion, constitutional debility, wasting of the frame, cough, consumption and death.
A CURE WARRANTED.
Persons ruined in health by unlearned pretenders who keep them trifling month
after month taking poisonous and injurious compounds, should apply immediately.
DR. FISnBLATT
Graduate of one of the most eminent colleges of the United States, has effected some
of the most astonishing cures that were ever known; many troubled with ringing in
the ears aud head when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at certain sounds,
with frequent blushing, attended sometimes with derangement of the mind were
cured immediately.
TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE.
Dr. F. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence
and solitary habits which ruin both mind and body, unfitting them for business,
study, society or marriage. ,,.,...
These are some of the sad, melancholy effects produced by the early habits of
youth, viz: Weakness of the back and limbs, pains in the head and dimness of
sight, loss or muscular power, palpitation of the heart, dyspepsia, nervous irritabil
ity, derangement of digestive functions, debility, consumption, etc.
Private Offices,over Omaha National Bank,Oraaha, Neb.
CONSULTATION FREE. Charges moderate and within the
need Saientific Medical Treatment. Those
win rpppive nromnt attention throucrh mall
1 pontage. Address Lock Box 34, Omaha, Neb.
oomingr!
CHEAP FUEL!
Whitebreast Coal $3.50
Rich Hill " 3.50
Canon City 7.00
TAYLOR, SCHUTTE& CO.
13-tr
JACOB SCHEAM,
)DKALKK IN(
DRY GOODS !
Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps,
Florae goods m notions.
LOW PKICES FOR CASH.
34-tt
mm?
TOWER'S
Fish Brand Slickers
W TUK niBDUT STORMS
WILL KEEP TOD DST.
TOWER'S
FISH BBA5D SLICKERS
we tho ealy Coat
ude with Wlrc-Fast-ed
Metallic Buttoas.
EVERY COAT WARRANTED.
For sale everywhere.
At Wholesale by all flrat
claaa Jubbera.
Om
splendid stook of
Proprietor.
reach or all who
who reside at a distance and cannot call,
by simply sending: their symptoms with
52
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A