The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, November 19, 1884, Image 2

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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19, 1884.
THANKSGIVING.
Tke President's PrecUutIem.
"Washington, Nov. 7. The presi
dent has issued the following procla
mation : The season is nigh when it
is the yearly wont of this people to
observe a day appointed for that
purpose by the president, as an espe
cial occasion for thanksgiving nnto
God. Now, therefore, in recognition
of this hallowed cnstom, I, Chester A.
Arthur, president of the United
States, do hereby designate as such
day of general thanksgiving, Thurs
day, the 27th of November, and I do
recommend that throughout the land
the people, ceasing from their accus
tomed occupations, do then keep the
holiday at their several homes and
their several places of worship, and
with heart and voice pay reverent
acknowledgment to the giver of all
good for the countless blessings
"Wherewith he haB blessed this nation.
THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION.
By
The Governor of tke State
of Nebraska.
The year now drawing to a close has
been freighted with blessings in abun
dant measure to the people of Nebraska.
The conditions that move the human
heart to thankfulness surround us upon
every hand. The glad hongs of peace and
plenty go up from the happy homes of a
prosperous and contented people. Thurs
day, the 27th day of November, has been
designated by the President of the
United States as a day of National
Thanksgiving, and in harmony therewith,
I, James W. Dawes. Governor of the
State of Nebraska, do hereby recommend
to the people of this State that the day so
appointed be observed as a day of
Thanksgiving and l'raycr to Almighty
God in humble acknowledgement of His
continued mercies. "Enter into his
gates with thanksgiving, and into his
courts with praise ; be thankful unto
him and bless hit name." Let the voice
of praise and thank-ottering be heard
from all at the hearthstone altar of
Home, and in the Sanctuary. If such
there be in your ruijlst, then from your
abundance relieve the wants and gladden
the hearts of the needy, and the suflering.
"So shall thy barns be tilled with plenty,
and thy presses shall burst out with
new wine."
Ix "Witness. Whereof, I
have hereunto set my hand
and caused to be affixed the
Great Seal of the State of Ne
braska. Done at Lincoln, this Fif
seal tecnth day of November, in
the year of our Lord One
Thousand Eight Hundred and
Eighty-Four; of this State the
Eighteenth, and of the Inde
pendence of the United States
the One Hundred and Ninth.
By the Governor,
James W. Dawes,
Edwakd P. Koggex, Scrctary of State.
A "rAixT mixe" has been discover
ed at Corinth, Me.
Ovek 3,000,000 trees were planted
in Great Britian in 18S3.
The Prince of "Wales is said to be
the Colonel of sixteen regiments.
Tex counties in Mississippi pro
hibit the sale of spirituous liquors.
Theke are 500 pieces in the $15,000
set of china used in the White House.
Ax icoberg over sis miles long was
recently seen oil' the Newfoundland
coast.
It is said that Ohio has more col
leges than auy other slate in the
Union.
California produces figs which
measure over cijjht inches iu circum
ference.
A clerk iu Indianapolis was ar
rested the other day for embezzling
one cent.
TnERE arc -1,500 compositors in
Paris whose pay is about 13 cents
an hour.
The cocoanut bug has appeared on
the island of Cuba, and threatens
the crop.
The New Orleans exposition opens
December 0. The main building is
completed.
Laird, of the Second Congressional
district, is re-elected by a majority of
4,000 votes.
Oxe English railway company will
hereafter print upon its tickets the
price thereof.
Queex Victoria is said to be now
enjoying better health than for
several years.
It is reported that Sitting Bull
advises young men to go "West and
"turn Injun.'
At a free water tauk in New
Ycrk over twelve hundred pounds of
ice is used daily.
Ox the 15th inRt., four hundred
cholera patients were reported in the
hospitals at Paris.
Forty thousand persons in Switzer
land arc employed iu the watch
makiDg industry.
Blaixe carried the city of Buffalo
by 1000 majority, and Cleveland's
own ward by 300.
A woman in Connecticut sent a
feather cushion to endow a chair at
Princetou college.
There are it is said 13S,0G5 Masonic
lodges in the world, with a member
ship of 14,100,513.
Exolish authorities are breaking
up the Salvation Army, which has
become a nuisance.
The United States mined $29,000,000
worth of gold this year and $48,000,
000 worth of silver.
Philadelphia, Pa., has seventy
public libraries, containing more
than 1,000,000 volumes.
It is stated that Cleveland has al
ready received 5,000 letters and tele
grams of congratulation.
G. "W. E. Dorset in this, the Third
Congressional district, will have a
majority exceeding 6,000.
TnE oyster exists from Halifax to
. Charleston, and the snapping turtle
from Canada to the equator.
One of the ushers at the White
House completed twenty years of
duty there one day last week.
The President has appointed Gov.
Schuyler Crosby, of Montana, First
Assistant Postmaster General.
What will be attempted next? A
paper chimney fifty feet high has re
cently been erected at Breslan.
Thk latest London style of slippers
arc made out of rat skins. It takes
four skins to make a pair of slipper.
Miss Lippincott, the daughter of
"Grace Greenwood," is to make her
operatic debut in Italy in December.
It is stated that before President
Arthur goes out of office, he will be
given a grand banfiet in New York
City. '
The proper tribunal at Paris has
'proclaimed an absolute dissolution of
the marriage of Patti and Marquis
Caux.
It is stated that a man has actually
been sent to prison in Nova Scotia
for three months for lyinjj in a horse
trade.
Clara Louise Kellogg astonishes
the belies of Birmingham, Conn., by
appearing on the street in calico
dresses.
Hexrt Moovax killed George Cun
ball the other day at Bedford, near
Cleveland, Ohio, in a dispute about a
load of hay.
Mrs. Pabnell, the mother of the
Irish agitator, is engaged in writing
an opera. It will have several Irish
scenes in it.
Miss Hattie A. Paul edits the
Memphis Scimelar. She is well edu
cated and a graduate from St. James
Hall, Bolivar.
Fire destroyed the other day
twenty-five houses in the business
part of GoldBboro, N. C, involving a
loss of $250,000.
The franchise bill iu the English
House of Commons was passed the
other day in committee of the whole
without amendment.
Twelve petrified clams were found
at a depth of 250 feet, a short time
ago, while a party were boring for
oil, at Purissima, Cal.
A West Virginia womau of thirty
five has eloped with her adoptod son,
aged twenty, to whom she had boon
a mother for ten years.
The third plenary of the Catholic
church in the United States opened
at Baltimore, Md., on the 9th with
impressive religions services.
It is claimed that the 49th congress
will stand, 18G democrats and 139
republicans, a democratic majority of
47, instead of 75, as at present.
The railroad commissioner amend
ment was defeated by a large major
ity in this state. The legislature can
wrestle with the subject again.
John Van Wert, of White Lake,
N. Y., was stung by a hornet at the
base of the brain, not long ago, and
since that time has been blind and
helpless.
Ix the English house of commons
the other day, Harrington, secretary
of war, moved an appropriation of
one million pounds for the Nile ex
pedition. J. A. Tompson, for many years a
citizen of Lincoln, Neb., left the other
day for parts unknown. Some be
lieve the cause is owing to financial
difficulties.
Only seven Jews have been taken
with the cholera iu France. The
Jewish diet is said to be the cause,
being regarded the most wholesome
in the world.
A dying cabman being asked by
the minister who came to console
him if he had ever been to church,
replied, "No, but I've druv lots of
folks there.'-"
TnE Glasgow Herald thinks that if
Americans would substitute oatmeal
for pics and hot cakes they would be
calmer, less speculative, loss bom
bastic and happier.
Philip Hexxessy, who was shot at
the polls in Cincinnati at the October
election, died on tbo 9th. His wife,
Mollie, shot herself through the heart
on the afternoon of the 10th.
It is claimed that Barney Gallagher,
who was clerk in the last Nevada
State Senate, and has held several
county cilices in Elkins, Nev., has
gone crazy from cigarette smoking.
The Woman's Journal says that
Mrs. Jennie E. Ford, of Kearney,
Neb., retires from the presidency of
the W. C. T. U., Nebraska, only be
cause her strength is not equal to the
duty.
Ax incendiary fire at Duluth, Minn.,
the other day destroyed two saw-mills
four dwellings, a store and other
buildings, beside 15,000.000 feet of
lumber. The total loss is placed at
$200,000.
From midnight to noon on the 12th
at Paris forty-seven deaths occurred
from cholera. On the same day two
soldiers were seized with cholera at
the Ely6es palace, and one died almost
instantly.
Mrs. Rinear, a sister of Gorman,
the murdered policeman at Cin
cinnati, became ill at the news of his
wounding and when told of his death,
6hc fell into a comatose state and
died in a few hours.
Mrs. Narcissa F. Bexnis, presi
dent of the Iowa State Suffrage So
ciety, and Mrs. Dickinson, of Indiana,
were among those present from other
states at the recent Buffalo Woman
Suffrage Convention.
The burning of the Blair Opera
House last week is supposed to be
the work of an incendiary. A min
strel troopc which had just closed a
performance lost their wardrobe and
most of their instruments.
There are only 40,000,000 of silver
dollars in circulation in the United
StateB, and there being about 50,000,
000 inhabitants, the chap that has no
dollars is puzzled to know why he
can't have a silver dollar, too.
Spaulding's iron and nail works,
in Jefferson county, Ohio, shut down
the other day for an indefinite period,
throwing at least 130 men out of em
ployment. The cause is accumula
tion of stock and small demand.
Soke fears are expressed in our
exchanges that the dreaded disease
cholera, will yet visit onr country.
We are not of the opinion that any
fears may be entertained of its coming
this late in the season and after heavy
froBts have visited the country.
Clerelmmtd Elected.
The official canvass in New York
will announce today a plurality there
for Cleveland of 1,100, about as
follows :
Grover Cleveland 563,105
James G. Blaine 561,999
John P.St John 25,171
B. F.Butler 16,902
Total vote 1467477
Plurality for Cleveland 1,106
All others over Cleveland.. 40,967
Of course this means the election of
Cleveland as president and Hendricks
as vice president for the next four
years.
Those who are republicans from
principle will now be none the less
ardent, none the less earnest and un
tiring in their advocacy of what they
regard as the fundamental principles
of good government.
The democratic party, we believe
and fear, will be dominated by the
solid south, without whose support
success was impossible; we think
that they will insist upon dictating
tho policy of Cleveland's administra
tion, as they haee of every preceding
democratic president. However,since
Stephen A. Douglas's manly stand in
bis party against the aggressive dom
ineering of the southern leaders, and
afterwards with republicans for the
Union, against those who would have
destroyed it, there is ground for
some hope that the extreme of southern-
despotism will not be reached,
and that tho more moderate counsels
of the better men of the northern
democracy will be listened to, if not
fully heeded.
The business of the republican par
ty, devoted only to the good of the
country, will be to withstand with
still greater earnestness, the assaults
of the solid south, made solid by in
timidation and fraud. The thorough
ly unscrupulous methods of that
oligarchy have almost gone out the
memory of this generation, because
of tho disappearance of the African
slave trade, the auction block and the
slave driver, but the spirit is not
dead, and recent reports from the
south show that the election of Cleve
land has but quickened it.
Republicans will do what they may
to assist such northern democrats in
congress as may advise the south to
"raise more hogs and less hell," and
push their advice to its logical result
in practice. And this they will do on
tho principle of doing good as they
have opportunity.
Further than this, good-republicans
will not be unmindful of the past his
tory and glorious achievements of the
party, and will confidently look for
ward to '88, to be returned to national
power. We have the satisfaction of
knowing that no party heretofore, in
the history of the country, has done
so much to develop national resources,
and place our business with the world
on a sound basis, and, under Blaine's
guidance, we felt assured that these
interests would have been enhanced
many fold, and cannot but think that
foreign powers largely worked our
defeat, as they evidently expect to
reap benefit by it.
The Republicans may well feel ex
ultation over the last campaign, un
excelled in all the annals of political
history, adding laurels to both candi
dates. Blaine, by his masterful letter
of acceptance, as well as by his numer
ous addresses during the canvass,
(against which there was absolutely
no objection from any quarter), evi
denced his mental strength and his
wonderful ability as a leader of men ;
he opened to view (under proper ad
ministrative control) the long vista of
tho future greatness of this country,
under protection to American indus
tries, and absolute freedom from for
eign influence prejudicial to our wel
fare.
It is a notable fact that the first
president elected by the republicans,
and the last one thus far were assassi
nated in the early days of their terms,
and so long as these martyrs to human
liberty and good government shall be
remembered, along with the great
captains of the war against the rebel
lion, and tho thousands of heroic and
patriotic citizens, who, under the lead
of republican administrations put
down tho rebellion, and, at the same
time, held England and France at bay,
just so long will the republican party
hold a warm place in the affections of
the American people.
Iebnuka State IlorticaltHral
Society.
Secretary's Office, Omaha, Oct.
27, 1884. Tho fruit year of 1884 is
closed and has given a return of small
fruits and grapes, summer, fall and
winter apples largely in excess both
in quantity and quality over any pre
vious year. The State Horticultural
Society earnestly requests every fruit
grower in the state to send at once an
account of both success and failure in
growing any and all kinds of fruit,
with suggestions in regard to kinds
most profitable to plant for home use
or market. The quantity of each
kind grown should be given, so that
an estimate can be made of the year's
crop. These reports are wanted for
the annual meeting to be held at Lin
coln in January, and for publication
at an early day, for the benefit of
those who intend to plant the coming
spring. For the advancement of this
important and growing interest the
state press are requested to please
copy. Address
J. T. Allan, Sec'y,
Omaha, Neb.
President Arthur has signed an
order dismissing from the service
Capt Geo. T. Olmstead, jr., who was
tried and convicted by court martial,
on charges of embezzlement while on
special duty in charge of military
telegraph in Arizona.
Ix the LaCrosse, Wis., lynching
case the coroner's jury returned a
verdict that the deceased was the
man that murdered Mr. Burton, and
that he came to his death by hanging
at the hands of parties, to the jnry
unkaown.
The climate of Asheville, North
Carolina, the year round is said to be
the most healthful of any region in
the United States, and persons known
to be troubled with pulmonary dis
ease, after breathing that soft, cool,
pure, healing air may become well
again, if there is any chance of a cure.
Persons afflicted with bad health
should always be in possession of
knowledge of a place and region of
country where, by a brief residence,
they may bo restored to vigrr. This
place we learn is western North Car
olina in the region of Asheville, a
place far 'enough south to ensure a
mild winter, while its great altitude
creates a cool, refreshing summer. It
is claimed by others that there is no
other place in America so favored, no
other place where the climate the en
tire year is so temperate and delight
ful, so invigorating and healthful.
A young man from Omaha name
could not be learned went out to
Millard tho other night to visit his
brother, who works for a farmer
named Allen. Tho young man ar
rived at tho farm house after the
family had retired for the night. He
rapped loudly on the door, and in
reply to Allen's query, "Who's there,
and what do you want," in sport he
replied that he wanted his money or
his life. Allen told him to go round
to the back door, and seized a shot
gun, opened the door and shot the
young man in the neck, inflicting
probably fatal wounds. Allen was
greatly shocked on learning who the
supposed robber was. If he lives he
will bo more careful in tho future,
about joking.
A respectable and prominent
democrat of Nebraska has expressed
the opinion that "Mr. Blaine will go
into well earned obscurity." This
democrat may yet live to see James
G. Blaine a United States senator and
President of the United States. True
and faithful republicans who love
their country and its flag and desire
the execution of its laws as well as its
general prosperity will use all proper
influence to have Mr. Blaine and Gen.
Logan placed in tho U. S. senate the
next coming four years, and after
wards elect them President and Vice
PreBident of the United States, which
can be readily done on the 4th of
November 1888.
Baroness Charlotte de Roths
child was a leading woman in her
day, and many of her clever repartees
hover about London drawing-rooms
still. When Mrs. Walpole declined
to meet Cardinal Wiseman at the
Baroness's table, because her princi
ple was never to "break bread with a
Romish priest," the Jewess cuttingly
responded, "You see, my dear, I am
not a Christian ; and so I can't be ex
pected to enter into such feelings."
Ex.
Ten tons of giant powder in Run
nel's magazine, near Toledo, O., was
exploded the other morning by the
detonation of a tub of nitro-glycerine,
which had been placed near a fire to
thaw. The explosion was heard sixty
miles away, and in the immediate
vicinity windows smashed, fences and
barns leveled and limbs torn from
trees. A spring wagon, containing
four persons, was thrown into a ditch.
The financial loss is placed at $10,000.
Chris, and Matz Schleger and
Frank Lawrence, all boys of Omaha,
started out on tho morning of the 9th
for a hunt. Before they got back
home and while walking along the
U. P. track west of the stock yards,
Chris, was using his gun as a walking
stick ; jamming the butt on the ground
as he walked along, the gun suddenly
went off and lodged the load in his
left eye entering his brain and in
stantly killing him.
Bex. F. Cobb, of Lincoln, Neb., has
been charged by Davenport Bros., for
whom Cobb was handling money as
agent, with embezzling $3,000. He
waivod an examination and was
bound over in the sum of $2,000 to
appear and answer. His brother-in-law
offered to go on his bond but
Cobb refused, saying that ho would
rather go to jail than stand the im
portunings of other creditors who are
badly left.
An employe of Forepaugh's circus,
while attempting the other day at
Waterbnry, Conn., to open a ventila
tor in tho tigers' cage, was seized by
the tigers and drawn into the cage.
Tho animals were finally beaten off
after they had mutilated him terribly.
The heat at Savannah, Ga., is said
to be so great that deck laborers are
unable to work at loading vessels.
Tuesday of last week one death oc
curred from sunstroke.
W. J. Nelson, recently of Lincoln,
Neb., defrauds his Lincoln creditors,
flees to Sioux City, is arrested and
commits suicide by shooting himself.
His supposed wife is held at Sioux
City, and will probably be able to
give some solution of the mystery, as
there was something behind the
crooked transactions at Lincoln, as
the man's property was sufficient to
pay all his debts and leave him a
handsome residue.
The democracy continue to praise
John B. Finch for the part he per
formed in the recent election of
Cleveland. Finch is a democrat, but
he seeks fame as a prohibitionist, and
he thinks he has been instrumental in
electing an issue, and that hereafter,
political parties with nations! aspira
tions will be compelled to couut upon
the prohibition party as a decisive
factor.
It is stated in recent London ad
vices that the Oregon Construction
Company has been awarded the con
tract for building, equipping and
keeping in repair for one year, a rail
road from the present terminus of
the Oregon & California road to meet
the California & Oregon at the state
line. The contract price is $2,000,000.
II AS IIS SAY.
And Straight to tho Point It Is. No
Exactions. No Extra Charge, aad
tke Fastest Time Ever Made.
"Limited" by Means Ex
cepted. Tho Baltimore and Ohio U still on
deck and more saucy than ever when
it comes to talking out. in meeting for
the interests of tho traveling public,
as against the exactiousof some other
and would-be rival lines. lis latest
shot into the camp of the iiih-priced
and lancy-tixings lino ia a. hoi oue,
and already -there is squirming and
twisting to get away from the inevi
table. But ihi:re is no use of kicking
against tho prodding, and the average
man now-a-days knows a thing or
two which all the cuuuingly con
structed advertisements ot those who
want the whole earth, aud then not
get enough, cannot blind him to tho
actual state of affairs. To pay eight
or ten dollars extra for the simple
riding ou a road that assumes all
there is in this life worth having is all
bosh, and no longer will the divi
dends of railroad company and sub
sidiary corporations alike swell at tho
expense of au over-confiding public.
The B. and O. has itself gone into tho
"limited" expreeB train business, and,
as is ever the rule with everything
done by the solid old corporatiou, the
people profit, and would-be rival lines
wince. On all the "limited" trains of
other routes a sum is exacted largely
in excess of the regular ticket rate,
and the passenger, whether it be hid
choice or uot, has to pay another ex
tra in the shape of slecpiug-car fare.
If he declines to accept the conditions
so arbitrarily exacted, he has perforce
to go on a slow train, a?, according to
tho latest principles of these autocratic
companies, fast time is only for lift
wealthy. On the B. aud O. the best
is ever deemed the honest duo ot all,
and the great American maxim that
every man is his own master to fol
low his own sweet will has ever been
the all-governing rule of its half-cou-tury
and more of existence. In other
words, there are no extra charges of
any character whatsoever on tho B.
and O., and, figuratively speaking, if
a man don't want hash, ho don't have
to take it. If he desires a sleeper, a
parlor car, there it is, and the rate for
.accommodations is only the regular
standard figure, not doubled up, as on
other lines, in the interest of an al
ready all-powerful and rich sleeping
car combination.
'the day coaches on the B. and O.
Limited are braud new, just out of
tbo shop, and perfectly appointed,
combining all the latest improve
ments. They, as all other cars on the
train, run through without change,
and all in the same unparalleled time.
Note the schedule. Chicago Limited
leaves that city at 5 :10 p. m., arriving
in Washington the next evening at
7:30, and Baltimore an hour later.
This certainly is flying, a twenty-five
hour run to the National Capital be
ing all any oue could ask. Aud it is
not done at a dangerous rate of speed
or in an anyway reckless mautior. On
the B. & O. they take no risks of this
sort, but when shortening up the time
merely take out all the minor stops,
and by long, steady runs cover a vast
extent of territory in a very short
space of time. Two other trains be
side the Chicago "Limited" leave the
Garden City, one at 8:10 in the morn
ing and the other at 11:10 at night.
From St. Louis the Limited leaves at
8 a. in., and from Cincinnati at 7 :30
p. m., reaching Washington next
afternoon at 2:30 and Baltimore at
3:35. There are other trains also from
St. Louis and Cincinnati, and East
bound the B. & O. fills the bill of pop
ular expectation to a T. West bound
it comes in again with a schedule
liable to mako the officials of other
lines take to their beds with a win
ter's sick headache. The Limited for
Chicago leaves Baltimore at 8 a. m.,
Washington at 9 a. m., and reaches
Chicago at 9:20 the following morn
ing, making a half-hour's faster time
than the much vaunted "Limited" of a
rival line, and on which tho excess
charge is no leas than $8 from Wash
ington more than on the B. & O. The
B. & O. Limited for Cincinnati and
St. Louis is another corker, leaving
Baltimore at noon, Washington at
1 -05 p. m., and arriving at Cincinnati
at 7 :10 a. m., four hours ahead, and
at St. Louis at 0:30 p. m., four and a
half hours ahead, of the so-called
"Limited" Express to theso cities on
the other route. Tho Pittsburg "Lim
ited" on tho B. & O. is an honr and a
half faster from Washington to that
city than any other would bo "Limit
ed," and so throughout the whole of
the B. & O's. matchless new schedule,
it ranks far above any ever gotton out
by other linos, no matter what their
boasts or assumption to combine in
themselves all the virtue, excellence
and enterprise this whole country
affords. Duriug tho past summer a
great amount of work has been done
all along the lines of tho Baltimore
and Ohio. The track has been
Btraightened, immenso quantities of
new and heavy steel rail put down,
and to-day the ride over Picturesq no
B. & O., with all its wondrons beau
tics of nature, its unsurpassed equip
ment, luxurious cars, its very models
of railway dining halls and dining
cars, and its proverbially polite and
attentive train men, is a journey the
equal of which, for all that goes to
please and satisfy, cannot be made on
any other line on the continent. 1
C. F. Adams, president of the U. P.
railway, has recently stated that he
expects to have by Jan. 1st, $1,500,000
net to apply to the floating debt, and
that from this time forward the plan
is to reduce the floating debt, and
that from this time forward the plan
is to reduce the floating debt steadily
and by every means possible until it
is extinguished.
Civil service examinations for the
department service at Washington
City, will be held at Des Moines, la.,
Dec. 1st, '84, and at Omaha, Neb., Dec.
3d, '84. These examinations will be
two grades, limited and "general."
The limited is for copyists at a salary
of $720 to $900 a year and the general
is for clerkships at a salary of $1,000
and upwards.
In the Union (W. Va.) section the
people, on account of an unusual
drought, have been compelled to nse
water from streams hitherto regarded
as impure. A disease in the nature of
flux has resulted, causing many deaths
particularly of children. Live stock
have died in large numbers, the loss
from this cause alone amounting to
$50,000.
At Lexington, Ky., on Nov. lltb,
in the presence of a very large gather
ing of citizens, where a placard was
posted on the grand stand, "No bet
ting allowed," Maud S. has now made
the fastest mile on record: Time,
quarter 32, half 1.-04, three-quarters
1:37, mile 2:09.
Recent newa from Madrid roporta
that the minister of foreign affairs
has announced tho conclusion of the
treaty of commerce between America
aud the Spanish West Indies. A few
important questions pertaining to
sugar and cereals are still open, but
they are not likely to interfere with
tho final adoption of the treaty.
Mr. Geo. Wm. Curtis thinks that
Cleveland will encounter a tremen
dous demand for a clean sweep, bat
he believes he will adhere to the re
form law aud not dismiss officers
arbitrarily for political reasons. Mr.
Curtis is uot yet even a "yearling
democrat," and may learn something
if he lives long enough.
The coal borers at Brownville, Neb'.'
struck a ten inch vein of coal at 90
feet; at 240 feet a fourteen inch vein ;
at 538 feet a six foot vein of faulty
coal, and at 821 foot a thirty inch vein.
Mr. Beverly thinks that at 240 feet
more they will get a paying vein, and
believes that coal oil would be found
at 1200 or 1300 feet.
It is stated that Fred Grant hopes
to make a frugal
living
by selling
roses this winter
florists, from the
to New York
green bouses in
Morristown, N. J., which ho erected
when ho thought ho was rich.
Nothing indicates a' man's character
better than struggling hard to make
an honest living.
Miss Lydia Bell is giving a series
of afternoon readings in Lincoln, Ne
braska. One selection of each read
ing is made by the audience. Discus
sions and questions are a feature of
the occaion, and it is intended to
make them a means of intellectual
improvement and stimulus as well as
entertainment.
Dr. G. JonNSON lately told the
British Medical Association of a pa
tient of bis, fifty-five years old, who
had lived upon milk diet for five
years. He took a gallon of milk a
day, but not a particle of any other
food. This treatment curod him of
Bright's disease.
A severe shock of earth-quake
visited a section of country near
Manchester, England, the other night
accompanied by a terrific explosion.
The shock threw down horses on the
streets at Clitheroe, Lancashire, and
caused great consternation and ex
citement. Mrs. Henrietta R. Shattuck will
edit a department in the Item, pub
lished at Ewing, Neb., by Clarence
Sclab. The department is called the
"Woman's Hour," and is intended for
a discussion of woman suffrage and a
review of all matters of interest to
women.
A report comes from Paris that
negotiations with a view to the settle-
n of difficulties between China aud
r- -tice are in progress in London be
tween the Marquis Tsen, the China
Embassador, and Earl Granville, the
English Secretary of State for foreign
affairs.
President Arthur accompanied
Miss Tillie Frelinghuysen to the
opening of the new opera house the
other evening. This is the cause of a
good deal of speculation among
Washington City society whether
Miss Tillie is to marry tho president.
Mrs. Ex-Gov. Nance, is under the
care of Dr. II. P. Mathewson at Lin
coln. This most excellent lady's
health has been quite poor for some
time past, and her many friends join
in the hope that she may soon regain
her health and return 'to her home.
An Iowa schoolmaster turned lover
and asked a pupil to marry him. She
replied that she would not marry
him if he were the best man on earth.
Then he resumed his functions as
pedagogue and thrashed her, and now
she sues for damages.
A storm on the lake at Chicago the
other morning blew away a small
shanty in which laborers lodged who
were employed in the construction of
a new water tunnel for the village of
Hyde Park south of the city, and ten
mon were drowned.
Walter Evans, Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, in his annual re
port to the Secretary of the Treasury,
shows receipts from all sources of
internal revenue taxation during the
fiscal year ending Juno 30, '84, ot
$121,590,039.
The British grain market last week
was reported "for foreign wheat drag
ging along with prices in favor of
buyers. The downward movement
continues, and it is impossible to pre
dict when and where it will stop."
Iowa was carried two years ago by
a prohibition vote of 30,000 majority ;
this year polled less votes for St.
John than Nebraska.
Weaver's majority in the First
congressional district with all the
combined opposition vote brought
against him is 7G9.
A WORD OF WARNING.
FARMERS, stock raisers, and all other
interested parties will do well to
remember that the "Western Horse and
Cattle Insurance Co." or Omaha is the
only company doing business in this state
that insures Horses, Mules and Cattle
against loss by theft, accidents, diseases,
or injury, (as also against loss by fire and
lightning). AH representations by agents
or ether Companies to the contrary not
withstanding. P. W. HENRICH. Special Ag't,
15-y Columbus, Neb.
FINAIj PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,)
Nov. 6th, 1884. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the following-named
settler has filed notice
or his intention to make final proor in
support or his claim, and that said proof
will be made before the Clerk or the Dis
trict Ourt or Platte county, at Colum
bus, Nebraska, on Friday, December
26th, 18S4, viz:
Wilhelm Streblow, Homestead No. 9233,
ror the N. W. , Section 18, Township 19,
north of Range 1 west. He names the
following witnesses to prove his continu
oi . residence upon, and cultivation of,
said land, viz: John F. Shure, Jacob
3Iunsbacb, Anton Rein, Charles Brandt,
all or Humphrey, Platte Co., Neb.
20-6 C. HOSTETTEK. Register.
ESTRAY P0VY.
Taken up by the undersigned at the
Columbus Packing House, Saturday,
Oct. 18tb, a
SORBEL PONY,
about three years old. Sam'i.. Cokv.
38-5
COLUMBUS
WM. BECKER,
DEALER in all kinds of
STAPLE AND FAMILY
GROCERIES!
KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND
WELL SELECTED STOCK.
Teas, Coffees, Sugar, Syrups,
Dried and Canned Fruits,
and other Staples a
Specialty.
deed lellverel Free (o
part ef the City.
aay
Cor. Thirteenth and K Streets, near
A. fc 2V. Depot.
THE REVOLUTION
Dry Goods and Clothing Store
Has on hand a splendid stock of
Ready -made Clothing,
Dry Goods, Carpets,:
Hats, Caps. Etc., Etc.,
At prices M were never ini of tin iii Colife
I bay my goods strictly for cash and will give my customers the
benefit, of it.
Give Me a call and convince yourself of the facts.
I. GIUCK.
FIXAl. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,)
Nov. 12, 1884.
f
NOTICE is hereby given that the fol-lowing-named
settler has tiled notice
or his intention to make final proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before Judge of District
Court, at Columbus. Neb., on the 27th
day of December, 1884, viz:
Johann Mutiny. Homestead No. 9390,
for the S. K, W. M, Section 0, Town
ship 19 north, of Itange 2 west. He names
tho following witnesses to prove his con
tinuous residence upon, and cultivation
of, said land, viz: W. Crosby. S. E.
ilorgan, Peter Noouan, James Noonau,
all of Platte Countv, Nebraska.
30-6 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIXAE. PROOF.
U. S. Land Office, Grand Island, Neb.)
Nov. 15th, 1SS4. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the fol
lowing named settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make liual proor in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before Judge of District
Court, at Columbus, Neb., ou the 27th
day of December, 1884, viz:
Franz J. Nusscn, Homestead No. 9310,
for the E. K, of ' '- K, Section 14,
Township 19 north, or Itange 1 east. He
names the following witnesses to prove
hia continuous residence upon, and cul
tivation of, said land, viz: 11. Backen
hus, II. "Wurdeman, II. Kersch, II. Asche,
all of Platte County, Neb.
30-0 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIXAL. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,)
Oct. 9th, 1884. J
NOTICE is hereby given mat ine ioi-lowing-named
settler ha tiled notice
of his intention to make final proor in
support of his claim, and that said proor
will be made before the Clerk or the Dis
trict Court or Platte county, at Colum
bus, Nebraska, on Saturday November
nd 1884 viz:
""Gerhard Strotmann, Homestead No.
8781, Tor the N. , orN. E. X, Section 28,
Township 20, north or Range 1 wost.
He names the following witnesses to
prove bis continuous residence upon,
and cultivation or, said land, viz:
Reinhard Wiehn, .loser Haschke, Louis
Wiegand, and August Wie and, all or
Humphrey, Platte Co., .New.
25-0 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FliWAE. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,)
Oct. 18th, 1884. j
Notice is herebv given that the following-named
settler'has filed notice or his
Intention to make final proor in support
or his claim, and that said proof will be
made before the Clerk of the District
Court, at Columbus, Nebr., on November
Jfltli. 1884. viz:
Charles Kaminski, Homestead No.
13390. for the N. lA, of N. W. Section
32, Township 19, Range 3 west. He
names the rollowing witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon, aud cul
tivation or, said land, viz:
Christiau Kessaw. Hnry Hurley,
.lamps Free and Thomas Bryaut, all of
West Hill Nebr.
26-6 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
F1XAL..PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,1
Oct. 10th 1884. 1
N(
OTICE Is hereby given that the fol
lowing-named settler uas niea nonce
of his intention to make final proof in
support of his claim, and that said proof
will be made before Clerk or the District
Court at Columbus, Neb., on Thursday,
Nov. 27th, 1884, viz:
Samuel Prang, Homestead No. 9130,
for the S. W. Ji, section 14. Township 20
north, or Ranee 1 west. He names the.
rollowing witnesses to prove his contin
uous residence upon, and cultivation or,
said land, viz: Gerd J. Kuper or Colum
bus, Platte Co., Neb., and Frederick
Fromholz. James L. Brown and William
B. Veasey of Humphrey, Platte Co., Neb.
23-C C. HOSTETTER, Register.
ilHAL PROOF.
Land Office, Grand Island, Neb.)
Oct. 11th, 1884. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the rol
lowing named settler has tiled notice
of his intention to make final proof in sup
port of bis claim, and that said proof will
be made before Clerk of District Court
at Columbus, Neb., on Nov. 20th, 1884, viz :
Heinrich Prang, Pre-emption No. 747,
for the N. K, . W. , Section 14, Town
ship 18, Range 1 east. He names the fol
lowing witnesses to prove his continuous
residence upon, and cultivation or, said
land, viz: Edwin Ahrens, Julius Hembd.
John Ahrens and Henry Sander, all or
Columbus, Platte Co., Neb.
25-6 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
FIXAL. PROOF.
Land Office at Grand Island, Neb.,)
Oct. 7th, 1881. f
NOTICE is hereby given that the
following-named settler has filed
notice of his intention to make final
proof in support or his claim, and that
said proor will be made before the Judge
or the District Court at Columbus, Ne
braska, on the 29th day or November,
1884, viz:
Joban Kersch, Homestead No. 9292, for
the W.KS.E. H, Section 22, Township 19
north, of Range 1 east. He names the
following witnesses to prove his contin
uous residence upon, and cultivation ot.
said land, viz: Henry Hercbenhan, John
Doersch, Henry iluller and Bird Ellis,
an or uoiumDus ir. v., riiuu uu,, ixeur. i
25-6 C. HOSTETTER, Register.
BOOMING!
CHEAP FUEL!
Whitebreast Lump Coal 5.00
Nut " 4.50
CaiiottCity " 7.00
Colorado Hard " 10.00
22TA GOOD SUPPLY.
TAYLOR, SCHDTTE& CO.
-J.i.tr
JACOB SCHKAM,
)DKALKR IX'X
DRY GOODS I
Boots & Shoes, Hals & Caps,
IWISBHG GOODS AND NOTIONS.
LOW PRICES FOR CASH.
::i-tt
CONDON & McKENZIE,
Cor. Olive and 13th Sis.,
Have alwavs
on hand
line or
a new and full
jGROCERIES,
Well Selected.
Dried and Canned Fruits of all kinds
ijuaranleed to be best quality.
DRY GOODS!
A well selected new stock which will bo
sold as eheap as the cheapest.
BOOTS AND SHOES,
NEW AND WELL SELECTED
STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM.
Flour at Prices to suit all Focksts !
23TI5UTTER, EGGS and POULTRV,
and all kinds of country produce taken
in trade or bought for cash at the highest
market prices. i-y
FREMONT NORMAL
AND
BUSINESS COLLEGE,
FREMONT, NEB.,
Prepares Young Men and Women
FOIt TEACHING. FOtt BUSI.NEV, LIFK,
FOU PUULIC UEADIXU AM) SI'KAKl.NC,
FOR ADMISSION TO COFJ.KOKS OU PKO
FKSSIONAL SCHOOLS,
To Enjoy and AdorziSoms and Social Life.
:Superior Instruction in:
MUSIC, DRAWING, & PAINTING.
THOROUGH TRAINING IN
Penmanship and ALL THE OTHER
COMMON BRANCHES, in Commercial
Correspondence and Book-keeping.
Samples or writing teachers' script sent
to inquirers.
The President or this College has had
OVER TWENTY YEARS' EXPER
IENCE in educational work, and has
thoroughly inspected and compared tho
construction, organization, methods, ar
rangements, and equipments or more
than one hundred Universities, Normal
bcnoois, anu business colleges.
FALL TERM (10 weeks) will begin
Oct. 21, 1884.
WINTER TERM (13 weeks) will begin
Dec SO, 1834.
SPRING TERM (12 weeks) will begin
April 13, 1885.
EXPENSES VERY LOW.
Families can purchase houses and lots
near the college on easy terms as to time
and interest. For particulars addresn
W. P. JONES,
Prest. of Normal and Business College,
Fremont, Neb. ll-4m
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