s i i r -7 THE JOURNAL. ISSUED KVKKY WEDNESDAY, .M. K' TUiWSTEll & CO., Proprietors and Publishers. J3" OFFICE, Eleventh St., upttairs n Journal Building. - tekmh: Peryear Six mouths Three months Single-copies 19 I COLUMBUS STATE BANK! COLUMBUS, HEB. CASH CAPITAL, - $75,000 OlKKCTOltS: LeaNDEK (lEIlllAUD, I'rcs'i. Geo. W. Ilui.sr, 7-c 7'iV-s7. Mil MUM A. I'KKI. K. II. IlKSIIY. J. K. Tamkku, ('usiiicr. -o- gM( if Iepoit, IMhcoiibi Colllo- lrmllj Jtside all Polai. Pay lBlnt n 'rime fp II. 27 HENRY LUERS, HKAI.1'11 IN WIND MILLS, AND PUMP, Buckeye Mower, combined, Self Binder, wire or twine. Pumps Repaired" on sliorl notice SSrOne door we-t of Heinlz's Drug Store, 11th Street, Columbia, Neb. HENRY G-ASS. UNDEKTAKEE ! COFFINS AND METALLIC CASES AND DKALKK IX Furniture. Chairs, Bedsteads. Bu reaus. Tables, Safes. Lounges. &c. Picture Frames and Mouldings. XSTIieiuiirinu of all kiml.tof l')holsten Uood .tf COLl'MM'S. NKIi. SUGAR CATHARTIC COATED f, CURE Hewkeho. Xauea, Dizzine?, ainl Drowsi ness. They stimulate the Stomach, Liver, and Bowels, to healthy action, assta diges tion, and Increaso the apjHttite. They oonibino cnthnrtic, diuretic, uiul tonlo properties of the greatest value, are a purely vegetahlo eompound, and may bo taken with perfect safety, cither lty ehil dren or adults. E. L. Thomas, Framing ham, Mas., writes: "For a number of years I was Bubject to violent Headaches, arising from a disordered condition of tho stomach and bowels. About a year ago I commenced the use of Ayer's Tilte, aud have not had a headache since. "VT. r. Hannah, Gonnlcy P. O., York Co., Out., writes : 4T hare used Ayer's Tills fot tho last thirty years, andean pafely say that I have never found their equal as a cathartic medicine. I am never without them in my house. C. D. Moore, Elgin, Ills, - writes : "Indigestion, Headache, and Loss of Appetite, liad so weakened and debili tated my system, that I was obliged to gi vo up work. After being under the doctor's care for two" weeks, without getting any relief, I bogan'-taking Ayer's Tills. My ppetite and strength returned, and I was soon enabled to resume my work, in per fect health.' Ayer's Pills, rniTAKED BY Dr. J. C Ayer & Co., Lowell, Has. gold by all Druggists. NO HUMBUG! But a Grrand Success. RP. BRIGHAM'S AUTOMATIC WA- terTrough for stock. lie refers to every man who has it in utc. Call on or leave'orders at George Yale', opposite Oehlricb's grocery. ti-Um iLYON&HEALY Stall A Monroe Sts..Chlcago. 1 HI Mni Tet-1 ay aJ-Irew Ibtsr AND CATALOCUE, I itm 13, SIM Vtr-v iltl tnnnjr I WSGIDnUt .MUt K-ajm. Ifll n'oupcu, EpMltu. Cap-Lan!-. c . Nu4. Drain MuW, Stk. mad - 'wm !.. . . . - . .. u nam. smary maa uuinu. ntfmMjmf frfcetfar Aamtmr Iliml iaCfeUleti rCkklawJllMk. k Tjy 7Tj" SeuQ lx cents for A P III I j Pj postage.and receive x- - XWXIJ-I. free acobtlyboxof goods which will help you to more money right away than anything else in this world. All, of either sex, succeed from flrat hour. The broad road to fortuae 7epeas before the workers, absolutely tare. At OBce address, Tu fc Co., AMUta, Malaa. MH' , vg I- fJI ine VOL. XVII.-N0.-9. .Tllracaleaus Encape. W. W. Reed, druggist, of Win chreter, Ind., writes: "One of my customer, Mrs. Louisa Pike, Bar tonia, Randolph couuty, Ind., waa a long sufferer with Consumption, and was given np to die by her physi cians. She heard of Dr. King's New Dieu-.oviTv for Consumption, and began buying it nf me. In six iuouUh' time tdio walked to this city, a distance of six liiiles, aud ia now so much improved she ban quit lining it. She- feels sho owes her lilo to it." I'YiM trjjil bottles at Dowty & Meit kemper's DrugJtoro. Lucai. option electiou were hciii the other day at many points in N.rth Cnroliim. The pro hibitionists carried the day at Raleigh by sixty majority, aud also at the following-, places: Concore, Osford, ICiugstoii, Henderson, Warrenton, Louiburg, Winston, Salem, Apex, neauford and Seaboard. The anti prohibilionistB carried the election at Charlotte, Durham, Franklin ton, lieasville, Holly Springs, Morehead, Aliville, (ialesboro, Littleton aud Statesville. Tho election was ou the question of license or no license for thefale of sp'ritous liquors and goes into effect at once where prohibition was carried. A shout lime ago, a triond of mine, a ranchman in Douglas couuty, suf fered (ciribly from cramp colic, and wiis nearly crazy when I stopped at bin ranch. 1 at once took out a bottle of Chamberlin's Colic, Cholera and DiarrliOM licuiedy, aud gave him two small doses, relieving bim almost iustautiy, and perhaps saving his life. It now forms one of his prin cipal stand-byp. It has saved me and my family much pain and suffering, iiiid I would not be without tliir jjreat Remedy for any consideration. O. S. McClain, Real Estate Agent, :J.0l Sixteenth St., Denver Colo. Sold by Dowty & Ileitkeuiper. News from Dublin states that riot ing continues in the Orange districts ot Motiagban. At Lurgan several militiamen were wounded, some bouses wrecked and several person-" ebot, somo being dangerously wound ed. One Tbos. Gallagher was shot and ha died. Troups wero ordered from Armogh to clear the streets. Almost all the constables were injur ed by stones and bricks. KfvT ire Up. If you aic snllciiug with low and depressed spirits, loss of appetite, general debility, liordcrvl blood, v.eak constitution, headache, or any 'i-ctise of a bilious nature, by all means procure a bottle ol Electric Cittern. You will be surprised" to see the .rapid improvement that will inlliiw; you will be inspired with now lie; strength and activity will return; pain and misery will cease, Bud henceforth you will rejoice in the praise of Electric Bitters. Sold at fifty cents a bottle by Dowty & Hcit kempcr. Nkws from Montreal states lint the works of tho North American Chun rompauy, at Tacholaga, were I urnud the other day, including the workshops, sheds building, plant ind appliances. The property des troyed i valued at $lf0,000. A nkw method of treating small pox with ether and opium, the ether being administered bypodcrmically and the opium by the mouth, has re cently bepn tried in Paris with" re markable riiccms, even in very severe cases Itu4-nenM Irnlrst Salic The It st Salve in the world for Cuts, Itruises, Sores, Uieen?, Salt Rheum. Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Llauds, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Dowty & Heit kemper. May 17-1 y The liostou & Albany Railroad has a circulating library of 2,000 volumes free to its employes. A most excel lent thing, and probably no equal in vestment of money' brings them s great a return. At her home, near Stugatuck, Mich., tho other day a girt of 12 lay down to take a nap, aud, notwith standing medical aid has been iuvok ed, she still slumbers, and breathes u at u rally. John W. Shearer died ou the train from Lob Augeles, en route to his home at Moutezama, Iowa, tbd other uight, between Plum Creek und Elm Creek. The Virginia organized militia contains'tbirty-iour white companies, nineteen colored, three batteries of artillery, and three troops of cavalry. At Comanche, Iowa, the other day saloonkeepers mobbed a witness in a liquor case, and threa tened to hang the prosecuting attorney. The Pennsylvania Railroad will not receive applications for employ ment from any man who is over lorty-five years of age. In a quarry near Youngs town, O , the other morning, a dynamite blast, which waa being rednlUd, exploded killing two men. Switzerland has a factory is which a very durable cloth is made out of a mixture of wool asd peat iiber. A NEW-FASHIONED GIRL. She'd a ftreat and varied knowlde, picked up at a female college, of quadratics, hydrostatics and pneumatics very vast". She was stuffed with erudition, as yon stuff a leather cushion, all the oiogics of tin colleges, and the knowledges of the past. She had studied the old lexicons of Peru vians and Mexlcans.their theology, an thropology and neology o'er and o'er. Sho knew all the forms and feature of the prehistoric creature s ichthyosaurus, pleslosaurus, megalonaurus and many more. She'd describe the ancient Tuscans, ana the Itasqncs and the Etruscans, their griddles and thulr kettles, aud the victuals that thev gnawed; She'd discuss, the learned charmer, the the otogv of Uraniuli, and the scandals of tho Vandals, and the sandals that they trod. She knew all the mighty giants and the mas ter minds of science, all the learning ttmt was turning In the burning mind of man. But she couldn't prepare a dinner for a gaunt and hungry sinner, or get np a decent flipper for her poor voracious papa, fur she never was constructed on the old domestic plan. Lyon Union. MILLFS MUSTANG. A Trying Beast, and Tot 'Twas He Who "Did It," It is not "sixty years since," although perhaps half that number of months may have passed, ono lovely April after noon a young man might have been seen to descend from one of those state ly brown-stone mansions which at that time adorned the lower part of Fifth avenue, and join the moving throng of promenaders. That young man was the present writer, Frederick Benthuy Ken Vandcrheydcn, and as I sauntered on, enjoying the pleasant air, and now and then acknowledging the greeting of a friend, or doffing my hat to some fair acquaintance, I felt what a pleasant thing life is to one who Is fortunate enough to be young and free, with good digestion, good spirits, a fair share of good looks, and a reasonable portion of this world's goods. But "With eiual pace Impartial Fate, Knocks at the palace and the cottage gate," and even then the lame goddess was on my track. Some hours later I retraced my steps an abject bondman, and as ut terly, and for the time hopelessly, mis erable as any one possessing all the above et ccteras could well be. The cause of this transformation well, that is what I am about to tell. Already I had reached Fifty-third street, and was turning to cross the other side of Fifth avenue. When I was joined by my friend Bob Van Rcnssclear Jones, who" proposed that I should go with him to look at a horse which he bad just purchased and installed at Dickefs Riding Acadcnij. Never hav ing eon the inside of that resort of New York's aspiring equestrians, I consent ed, und ail unknowing what awaited inc. I entered those imposing portals. In an amateur way I considered myself something of a juMe-of-a horse, but it was not easy to find much amiss with Bob's new acquisition. The animal was visited, examined, approved, the com fortable quarters and deft saddling ad mired, and then I must needs adjourn to the ring and sec the horse put through his paces. Bob was a very fair rider, and watching him make the ani mal eurvet and passage, I began to con sider whether it might not bo worth while to order a horse for myself, and take a turn with him in the park. While I stood thus idly leaning on tho barricade and debating pros and cons, there came a sharp ting, a door Hew open, impelled by. some invisible agency, h girlNh ligiir.e Hitted by me, and a sweet voice said: "Will you order my horse, Mr. Wahl?" I liked tho voice; each syllable fell distinct and clear and lingered pleas antly on the ear. 1 felt attracted by it, I knew not why, and us soon as I could do so without rudeness, I changed my position in order to get a look at the .speaker, and then it was all up with me. 1 ma' as well own it first us last that then aud there, upon the floor of Dick ers, I fell over head and ears in fovc with Milieent Tremaine. Let me try and picture her as I saw her then and so many times afterward. She was mall, with a pretty rounded figure, quick and darting in her motions as a bird or a squirrel, and had an arch way of glancing up from under her eyelashes that made you think of a roguish child. Her eyes dark and soft, yet shining, looked out from beneath a fringe of short curly hair that would never stay tucked awav under the prim little Derbv. but insisted on straying in soft little rings about her temples and tiny cars. No'wonder, for the cheek was so soft mid round aud dimpled that it was small blame to the curls if the liked to caress it. A dark gray habit lifting perfectly to the lithe figure, a Derby hat of the same color set jauntily a little back from the face, the neatest and glossiest of patent-leather boots, and a gold handled riding-whip completed the outfit. Miss Tremaine seemed quite uncon scious of tho presence of any one except her maid, to whom she occasionally ad dressed a few words as she stood half concealed behind a pillar waiting the arrival of her horse. Nor was it long before tho order: "Send in Miss Tre maine's Comet." was answered by the appearance of a chestnut pony whose 6hort, compact form and dark stripe down the back, as well as his erratic modes of advance, proclaimed the Tex as mustang. The pony, led by an unnecessarily food-looking groom, upon whom Miss rcraaine bestowed a smile that ought to have made him happy for twenty-four hours, approached the mounting-block. Miss Tremaine had already descended into the ring, and stood awaiting the master whose duty it was to aid her in mounting. I was already insanely jeal ous of the pleasant-faced, soft-voiced young German on whom this agreeable task devolved, and I began to consider whether the pony's vagaries would not justify me in offering some assistance. The next instant my neart came into my throat, when the pony, scarcely waiting for the rider to gain her seat, much less a stirrup, broke from the groom's de taining hand, reared perfectly straight, then, dropping to afi fours, executed a succession of bounds and plunges calculated, I should have thought, to shake not only the breath from a man's body, but the very flesh from his bones. Miss Tremaine seemed in' no wise disturbed by this eccentric conduct on the part of her pet, which, in truth, more be fitted a falling-star than a comet, but merely saying, in a tone of remon strance: "Now, Comet! now, Comet!' she soon reduced him to a reasonable decree of auiet She was nresentlv joined by a mie-looking elderly gentle-j COLUMBUS, NEB., WEDNESDAY. JUNE 23, 1886, man, presumably her father, from the likenes3, and together they left the school for the park. I had now no in ducement to linger, and soon quitted tho building as deeply in love as man could be with a girl whoso name I bare ly knew, and yet resold, as was ever knight of old, that there was tho one woman of the world for rac, I need not weary my readers with tho details of the steps I "took to obtain an introduction to Miss Tremaine. Moving on the samo social plane, the wonder was rather that wc had never met before In fact, there had been in past times some connection by marriage between our families, and a faint and far-away relationship actually existed a vantage-point of which, once discovered, I made great use, and which won me such favor in the eyes of Milicent's grandmother and guardian that before long I was allowcdthp privilege of some times accompanying the youug lady on her rides, a smart groom in belt and but tons doing propriety at the correct dis tance of forty yards behind. What more, you will say, could any lover ask? What, indeed, save that his inamorata should not love, own and ride a mustang pony. That (it will out) confounded mustang! How many times in the park have I paused to inwardly execrate the man who first took mustangs from the sphere where they were useful and perhaps honored, and brought them to the cities to be the bane of lovers! Milieent, I am aware, holds a different opinion, but the above speech comes from the depths of a bitter experience. Milieent doted upon the Comet, viewed his failings, which were many, with an indulgent eye, and magnified "his merits, which' were few indeed. Often have I choked at the words when, to please her, I exhausted myself in pralso of the Comet, and extolled his glossy coat, bright eyes, small cars, silky mane, slcudcr legs and tiny feet. Sho never -wearied of the theme, and would dilate by the hour upon the little wretch's perfections until I actually hated the sight of liira. In vain did "I purchase a bushel of carrots and a barrel of sugar with which to win the Comet's good will. He kicked at me in his stall, bit me when I fed him, and once actually butted me over when I undertook to hold him for a moment while the groom tightened a girth. Mili eent said he was only frightened at a rabbit which ran across the road, but I shall always bclicvo that he was actuated by malice prepense. Certainly no dragon ever guarded a captive damJel more carefully than the Comet guarded Milieent. Wlien, in the earnestness of conversation, I sought to lay my hand upon his smooth neck as an excuse for drawing closer to his rider, the Comet instantly swerving, would put half a dozen 3-ards between us. Or if, as the afternoon waned, I endeavored to keep the horses walking more and more slowly on the shady oridle-path, the Comet would hear an imaginary coyoto on his track, and putting down his head, would dash through the bushes and skim along the carriage-road in open day. Again and again, when tlw words that were to decide my fate trem bled on mv tongue, the Comet, suddeuly shying, has cannoned against me with a force that brought words of far difl'er cnt import to my lips. A woman's French heel jammed sharply against your knee can inflict considerable pain, and for the time effectually banishes sen timent, however bewitching to you the owner may be. All this time Milicent's patience with tho little caynse, the grace and case with which she sat him, her perfect readiness to resume any topic of conver sation, after the interludes of kicking, shying, and bolting with which the Comet was ever ready to diversify a ride, excited me continually to admira tion, and each day as it passed -saw me more in love and more determined to win her for mv wife. If you want to kown a woman well and test her as a life com panion, ride with her- day after day, week after week, month after month, "it is a critical test; and if she does not bore you then, you may safely put the ques tion; she will stand the fcirther ordeal. A month's companionship had showed me how fully Milieent could l)ear this test, and I only sought on opportunity; but how oiler your hand and heart to a woman when all you can see of her is a pair of laughing 6yes glancing archly at you from between the ears of a rearing pony? Still, as the proverb says: "Tout vicnl a qui sail altcndrc" and my day came at last. It was a misty, rainy morning, and we hail gone for a long ride out on the Kingsbriuge road. As we were re turning, the groom's horse cast a 6hoc, and he was obliged to stop at a blacksmith's. Mili eent proposed that instead of waiting, we should go round by what she called the river road, past tho West End Hotel, and let the groom meet us at the north entrance of tho park. We turned in ac cordingly, and finding the road in good condition, determined to run our horses for a few hundred yards. Up to this time the Comet had been behaving un usually well, and wo were about to pull up, when the pony, swerving sharply, rushed up a small embankment and stood rearing on the very edge, just vis ible through the trees and shrubs that covered its sloping sides. Another sec ond, before I could even check my horse, tho Comet sprang over tho edge, a drop of some ten feet, on to the road below. - Heaven forbid I should ever know such another moment! Nothing, it seemed, could save my darling; the mad brute must land on his head, roll over, and then The whole scene grew dark before me, when I heard a calm voice, Milicent's own, saying: "Didn't the Comet do that cleverly?-' Slowly the cloud passed from my eyes, and there beforo me sat Milieent on the Comet as quietly and as much at her ease as though nothing had disturbed her, though the pony shook and trembled in every limb. As she afterward de scribed the scene: "I gave the Comet plenty of rein while we were in the air, that he might see what ho had to do, sat well oack, and the moment he landed got his bead up; the clever little pet did the rest himself." Not then, however, did I hear this tale. In a second I was off my horse, snatched Milieent from her saddlo, and all the feeling 6o long repressed poured forth like a flood. There beneath the cloudy heavens I told her how I had loved her from the first moment that I saw her, and pleaded for a won, a sign, a look, even, of encouragement. Nor did I plead wholly in vain. In her own pretty way, amia smiles and blush es, Milieent gave me the pledge I sought, and promised some day to be mine. How long it was before a distant growl of thunder recalled us to earth I never knew, bat at length Milieent pushed mo gently away ana turned to look at the Comet, who all this tima had stood like a Iamb. It was wonderful, but beyond a few slight scratches, the nonv Md Jtutained no injury, tkoagh o Mar J I had he been to" 'turning over that the deepest scrape was on his sorehead. Oniv Milicent's coolness and, tho pony's agil ity had saved her. It will hardty.be oe liovcd, but beforo wo had reached Man hattanville tho irrepressible mustang was as lively as ever, and apparently more determined to allow mq no chance with Milieent. He ran for amile down St Nicholas avenue, rushed round the corner at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, and before Milieent' could pull him in had reached' the park, and was tearing down tho East drive., .Misguided Sony! ho did not know this-was his last ay of triumplu Beforo many days had passed Mr. Dickel was persuaded to aN ccpt him, together, with a considerable honorarium, in exchange for a good looking black thoroughbred of unexcep tionable manners, which still carries Mrs. Vanderheyden when it pleases her to display tho prettiest figure and most graceful seat in New York in the park, as of old. Here, kind readers, ends the tale of Milly's mustang, properly, in .the old fasuioned style, with, a" wedding. To those, however, who have any curiosity as to his after-fate, I would say that, nil far as I know, he still lives at Dickel's After a brief period, during which ho was on sale, and was very successful in teaching several young men what they did not Know about riding he became the property of my friend Schuyler Van Wart. Schuyler docs not caro how many traps he smashes in the course of a season; neither does the Comet; so they aro well matched. Milieent. who has just come in, says I am very ungrateful, and that if it had not bcen'for the Comet's freak I would never have had tho courage to propose to her, in fact, it was the mustang did it. Two years of married life have con vinced me that Mrs. Vanderhevdcn is seldom wrong. If, therefore, the caso stands thus, lean only confess my er ror, take back all the abuso I have heaped upon the Comet, and acknowl edge that I owe tho happiness of my life, the light of my home, to "Milly's Mustang." Harper's Bazar. ICELAND IN SUMMER. A Cool Spot For American Warm-Weather Tourists. Holiday-makers who arc at a loss wlwrc to go to insure a cool spot, may, perhaps, be tempted to try Icclaud. It is not necessarily cool there, notwith standing tho refreshing sound of the name, but it is a good deal less likely to be hot than Swiss or oven Scotch val leys, and there is a gQod deal more to see that would be fresh to the visitor. Nor is the island by auy means difficult to get at. The Danish royal mail steam ers make a monthly voyage from Conen-. nagen to rvevKjaviK, ami uvu oi mem run all round the island, as well as call ing on each voyage at Leith. There is also an Englisli line during the summer from Leith to Reykjavik. Iceland is by no means the diminutive country which people who do not look at large maps arc in danger of supposing it to be, when they read that the popu lation docs not exceed that of a thirdffateT English town. It is Siossible to travel from east to west in a lircct line for a greater distance than from London to Carlisle, so that the island is really of very respectable di mensions. Nor are the pcopl. rcmoto as Is their dwelling-place from the cen ters of sweetness and light, by any means an uncultured race. They have h:ul a parliament of their own the Al thingfor now nearly one tnousand years, and they are a great deal better instructed than European populations generally. The ordinary cockney tourist would hardly find himself at home among them; but an intelligent observer, inter ested in the study of nature and in the ways of isojated communities, might really do much worse during the sum mer months than braee himself ui lor the winter by a week or two in Iceland. Fishing and farming are the Icelander's principal pursuits, and fishing is more important, perhaps, than farming. There are practically no manufactures in the country, and trade is so little de veloped that up to last year the island did not even possess a bank, though the Althing was serious ly occupying itself with the establish ment of such an. institution. Some in teresting information on Icelandic fish erics is contained in the last report pre sented to Foreign Office by Mr. Consul Paterson. The Iceland fisherpian's I)est customers are not his comparative ly near tieighljors he has no neighbors at all but tiic Greenlanders, within six hundred miles but tlie Spaniards. A good deal of the fish caught goes to Copenhagen, hut more to apain, auu Spain gets the pick of the catches. Wheat-growing is no part of the Ice land fanner's industry. For that the climate is not warm enough. He breeds flocks and herds, and during his short summer is much concorned lor" the re sults of his hay harvest These, last year, were not satisfactory in the south ern part of the land, owing to the oc currence of wet weather late in the sum mer. A further reduction of live stock was the consequence of tho scarcity of fodder. In the north, however, the" hay crop was good, and the farming inter est there is fairly prosperous. N. W. Christian Adcoattc. THETELETOPOMETER. An Apparatus Adapted tor I-and-Surveylng and MlUtary Purposes. An ingenious instrument for ascer taining the distance of accessible and in accessible points fronirfie observer and from each other ha3 been invented by Dr. Luigi Cercbotani, a professor of the university of Verona. The apparatus consists mainly of a pair of telescopes mounted on a stand and fixed on a tripod for use. The telescopes are both brought to bear on the object, and a reading is then taken from a graduated scale onthe instrument, which, compared with a set of printed tables, gives the distance. By, this means the inventor obviates the necessity for the base-line, which has hitherto had to be laid down in these operations, and ho dis penses with all trigonometrical calcula tions. Distances can bsieasured be twoen far-off objects, ana by means of a sheet of paper fixed on a drawing board a rough plan of the country under meas- urcment can be sketched, in the same way the distances of ships at sea, or of moving objects on land, can be deter mined. The apparatus appears to be well adapted for land surveying, ant: particularly for military purposes. In fact, it is stated to have been already adopted in the German army in tlu latter connection, and it is about to be tried by the authorities of the British War Department A practical trial wa recently made with the instrument on the Thames embankment when iu varied usefulness waa demonstrated. St. Jannti Qattttt, . WW alii bH" laH IbH ! 1 alii aI IHt Ihi V 1 B National Bank! or 1 - COX.XJ1CBX78. Xf! has an Authorized Capital of $250,000, A Surplus Fund of - $15,000, And the largest Paid la Cnh dtp- 1 1st I of any ban iu this p:irt of the State. tSTDupnsils received and interest p.ud on time deposits. t3rDrafl on the principal cities in this country and Europe bought and mild,. ISCTCol lections and all other business giveu prompt and careful attontlou. SfOCKHOLDKKS. A. ANDERSON, Preft. S AM'L C. SM ITH, Vice fres't. O.T.KOEN, Cashier. J. 1 UECKEU. HE UMAX OEHLRICH, Q. SCHUTTE, W. A. MCALLISTER, .IONAS WELCH, JOHN W.KAHLV, I ANDERSON, . ANDERSON. ApriS-'MItf BUSIXESS CADS. D.T. Martyn, M. D. F. .1. Scum;, M. I. Drs. MABTTH ft SCHUG, U. 8. Examining Snrgcons, Local Surgeons. Union I'acitie, O., N. & It. 11. and It. M. R. It's. Consultation in German and English. Telephones at office and residences. JSTOtlice on Olive street, next to ltrod feuhrer's Jewelry Store. COLUMBUS, - NEBRASKA. 42-y W. HI. COBM'E.IUS, LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE. Upstairs Ernst building 11th street. O UULIVAN A BGEDKR, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office over First National Hank, Colum bus, Nebraska. SO-tf C. I. KVA.-4MM. ., PHYSICIAN AND SU11UEON. Etrotlico and rooms, t'luck building, 11th street. Telephone communication. H AMllVroa MKADE, .11. !., PHYSICIAN AND SUIIUEON, Platte Center, Nebraska. !l-y HR KMAN NAXl-'.VHTKirr, ULACKSMITII AND WAGON MAKER, i:Uh street, east of Aht'h barn. April 7, S;-tl )owi:m uoimi, PLATTE CENTER, NEB. Justuppiicd. Special attention givrn to commercial men. Has a good sam:ilc room. Sets the best table. (Jive it a trial and be convinced. .i)-:'.inn i on i:i,mii:., COUNTY SUIiVEYOK. JfiTl'jrties desiring Mirciiig dmic can iiddrchs me at Columbus N-l., ur call at my office hi Court House. fnuaiNj-v TOTICK TO TI-ACMKKS. W. B. Tedrow, Co. Supt. I will be at Humphrey the 'Jllh, I'latie i enter the tirstof May, and at iu ofli iu the Court House on the second of M:n. all for the examination of teachers .'Ki.tr HOMGEOPATHIST. Ckromio Diseases and Diseases or CTsildrea a Specialty. Groffice on Olive street, three d.iois north of Firht Nation! Rank. -J ly lyTcAL-LlSTEIC IIRON., A TTOBNEYS A T LA W, Office up-stairs in McAllister's build- l.?gi.!lth St w A McAllister, Notary Public. ' J. M. MACKAHLANO, B. K. COWDKRV, Attotaiy iad Hsttry rati e. Cellactsr. LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE OF M ACFARX.AND & COWDERY, CttlwnlHs, : : : Nebraska. JOHN U. IHGOINN. C. J. OAULOW, Collection Attor!y . HiaOIK GAKL0W, ATTOKNEYS-AT-LAW, Specialty made or Collections by C.J. Uarlow. !., Lp II. KUNl'IIK, llth St., opposite Lindell Hotel. Sells Harness, Saddles, Collars, Whips, Blankets, Curry Combs, Brushes, trunks, valises, buggy tops, cushions, carriage trimmings, &c at the lowest possible prices. Repairs promptly attended to. TAtiatl SALMOn, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Plans and estimates supplied for either frame or brick buildings. Good work guaranteed. Shop on 13th Street, near St. Paul Lumber Yard, Columbus, Ne braska. 52Cmo. pAnPBELL CO.. DKALKKS f X JRaors and Iron ! " a ...... ........... The highe-t market price paid lor rag amriron. Store in the Bubach buildin", OliveU Columbus. Neb. 15-tf JS. MUJIDOUK & SON, Carpenters and Contractors. Have had an extended experience, and will guarantee satisfaction in work. All kiads of repairing done on short notice. Our motto is, Good work and fair prices. Call and give us an oppor tuuityteestimateforyou. gyshop on 13th St., one door west of Friedbof ft Co's.sUre.CoIuabas.Nebr. .? A ' - t 1 1 WHOLE NO. 841, MEXICAN LIFE. Some of tha Epicurean Morsels Eajoyea by the Hidalgos. Tortillas is not only one of the great Mexican dishes, but one of the women's chief industries. In almost any street ' there can be seen women on their knees mashing com between smooth stones, making it into a batter and finally shap-. ing it into round. Hat cakes. Thoy spit on their hands to prevent the dough from sticking, and bake in a pan of hotgrcase, kept boiling by a few lumps of charcoal. Rich and noor buv and ; eat them, apparently-unmindful of tho way they are made. Hut it is a bread that Americans must be educated to. Many surprise the Mexicans by refus ing even a taste after they see the bak ers. There are some really beautiful girls among the low elass of people. Hair three-quarters the length of tho women and of wonderful thickness is common. It is often worn loose,- bnttmore fre quently in two long plaits. Wig-makers liiul no employment here. The men wear long, heavy bangs. There is but one thing that poor and rich indulge in with equal delight and jdeasure. That is cigarette-sniokiug. Those tottering with age down to the creeping babe, arc continually smok ing. No spot in Mexico is sacred from them; in churches, on the railway cars, on the streets, iu the theaters every where at e-to be seen men and women, of the elite, smoking. Tho Mexicans are unsurpassed, ser vants. Their thievery, which is a his toric complaint, must be con'lined to those in the suburbs, for those in houses could not be more honest. Their cleanliness is something overwhelming, when one recalls thcT tales that iiavu been told; of the lilth of the 'rreasers.' harry m the mornings, the streets, walks in the plaza and pavements aro swept as clean as any thing can -be, and that with brooms "not as good as those children play with in the States. Put an American domestic and a Mex ican sen-ant together, even with tho difference in the working implements, and the American will "get left" every time. But this cleanliness may be con fined somewhat to such work is sweep ing and scrubbing; it does not cer tainly exist in the preparation of food. The meat express does not by any means serve to make the meat more palatable. Generally an old mule or horse that has reached its second child hood serves for the express. A fonr iron rod, from which hooks project, is fastened on the back of the Iieast by means of straps. The meat is hung on these hooks, where it is exposed to the mud and dirt of the streets as well as the hair of the animal. Men with two large baskets, one in front, one behind, filled with the refuse of. meat, follow near by. If they wear trousers they have them rolled up high so tho blood from the dripping meat will not soil them but run down their bare legs and be absorbed in the sand. It is as serted that the poor do not allow this mixture in the basket to go to waste, but are as glad to get it as we are to get sirloin steak. ,Men with cages of fowls, baskets of eggs and bushels of roots and charcoal come from the mountain in droves of from twenty-live to fifty, carrying packs which average three hundred pounds. Pulque, which is sucked from tho mother plant into a man's mouth and thence ejected into a water jar, is brought to town in pigskins. The skins, are filled and then tied on to burros, or sometimes not frequently carried in wagons, the filled skin rolling from side to side. Never less than four filled skins are ever loaded on to a burro; oftener eight and ten. The burros are never harnessed, but go along in trains, which often number fifty. Mexican politeness extends even among the lowest classes. In all their dealings they are as polite as atlanciug master. The moment one is addressed off comes his poor, old ragged hat, and bareheaded he stands until you leave him. They are not only polite to other people, but. among tliemselves. One poor, ragged woman was trying to sell a broken knife and rusty lock at a pawnbroker's stand. "Will you buy?" she asked, plaintively. "No, Senorita, gracias" (I thank you), was the polite reply. Mexico Cor. Pittsburgh Dis patch. A GREAT TELESCOPE. Alvan Clark's Crowning Work Krliiglup the Moon Within a llumirrd Miles. The largest refracting telescope in the world is now in process of construc tion in the modest work-shop of the venerable Alvan Clark, the eminent telescope-maker, in Henry street, C'am bridgeport, Boston. The two disks of glass go to form the lens of the great Lick telescope which will be placed in the observatory on the peak of ML Hamilton, a bequest of the Califoruia millionaire, James Lick. These two circular glasses are valued at S'JG.OOO jaeb, and if destroyed thev could not be duplicated within the next six months for millions of dollars. The .iisks were cast in Paris, the order oeing given five years ago, but the fail ares were so numerous that they were not received by Messrs. Clark until last September' When finished the lens will be thirty-six inches in diame ter, six inches wider than the one they recently completed for the Russian Gov ernment. Since receiving the blocks last September, Mr. Clark and his sons have been constantly at work upon them, but they do not expect to have them completed much before fall. When completed the two lenses will weigh about 700 pounds. The work of polish ing the disks has reached that stage wlnSre the removal of a few grains more or less from the wrong place would ruin them. The only instru ment used is the hand smeared with rouge, a polishing substance finer than the finest emery. Some idea of the power of the instru ment may be gained from the state ment recently made by an astronomer, that gazing at the moon, 240,000 miles away, that orb by this telescope will be brought to within .less than ono hundred miles from the eye of the be holder. Mr. Clark is eighty-two years of age. He and his wife on March 25 celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of their wedding. He was born in Ash field, Mass., and brought up a farmer's boy, but bis self-taught skill gained him a situation as an engineer, at the age of twenty-two, in a Lowell calico mill. Ten years later he had become a minia ture painter in Boston, with a studio in Court street. All the time that he was painting these portraits he- was grind ing away at lenses for a pastime, and when the daguerreotype threatened the extinction of the portrait-painting pro fession he stepped into telescope mak mg. Chicago Inter Octm, AaTEBTMII lirBuslnasa aad prof aaioaalcaxaa of fivalineaor laas.par aaavm, Iva dollars. A. m t & For Uina adrtlamTiaata,aaplr at this office. , a3r Lag al advartlaaataau at atatata rates- 3"Tor transient advertlaiatvaaa rates on third page. K3TAU adTortlseatents pe.ya.Tsla monthly.- PERSONAL AND- UTtJUItY. About. 150.0rocoj-4as-- of Haw thorne's "Scarlet Letter"., hare, tfeea issued. The "House of MTaQGeUa" did not reach more than naif that num ber. " l A draped .shaft of Itallaa marble twenty-five ' feet' high is to bplaoed over tne graves ot ucnorai loomoe and his wife at Washington, Ga. It will bo made in Italy. . Horatio Seymour died on Abraham Lincoln's seventy-eighth- birthday, aaVi General Hancock died on tat aawgajsi second anniversary of-Samuel J.n den's birth. N. T. Sun. " Mrs. M. E. De Geer, of'8cott'City, Kan., has pre-empted land, foaftded several towns, built several hotels and established several paying newspapers in Kansas. Chicago Sun. ' Talcot Williams, managing editor of the Philadelphia Press, has a collec tion of biographies of notod persons ready to be nsed as obituaries on their demise, which is insured f6&rt3,00. N: r. Tribune. " ' -ii-- "With my own oyea.v said Dr. Theodore L. Ciiyler to some Yale sta dents, the other day, "I have seen Mr. Gladstone kneel by the side of a. com mon street-sweeper and pray for the salvation of his soul." The St. Louis Q lobe-Democrat 9yst "The recent death of 0. Gratz Brown carried off the last of the National can didates of 1872 Grant, Greely aad Wilson having gone before. Aad tile death of Horatio Seymour carried off the l:st of the candidates of 18S8, the others being Grant. Colfax and Blair." General Hancock was married in St. Louis in 18.")0 to Miss Almira Rus sell, of that city, who survives' hlin. Probably it was her full name tho dy ing man was trying to pronounce when hi! utterance broke into " "Allie," "Myra." as ivon in some of the re ports of his last moments. St. Louis Tost. Elder Thomas Parker Dudley, of Lexington, Ky., is said to be the old est Baptist minister in America. Ho is ninety-four years old, blind and very feeble. He began preaching in 1820, and has preached in Kentucky, Ten nessee. Ohio, Indiana. Illinois. Michi gan, Missouri, Kansas. Virgiuia, Dela ware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York. N. Y. Times. The richest woman in the world has lately been discovered. Donna Isitlora Cousino, of Chili, is the lucky individual. No one, not even horsclf, knows the exact amount of her wealth, which is derived, from land, oattle, mines, hoifco and ship property to any extent. In. addition to these' sources of income she owns the only coal mined in South America, from which she draws about 16,000 a month. It is stated that Donna Cousino is a "remarkabld business woman." HUMOROUS. Society's favorite flower tho dandy-lion. N. Y. Morning Journal. A "Young Lady Reader" wishes to know what will reaiovo greas spots from a silk dress. A pair of scissors. N. Y. Herald. "Mr. Jones, j-ou said you were Connected with the fine arts; do vntt mean that you arc a sculptor?" "No, sir, I don't sculp myself, but I furnish the stone to the man what uoes." Brooklyn Eagle. Little Beggar "Please give me a penny to buy a-Ioaf of bread." Old Party "But you can't buy a loaf of bread with one cent." Little Beggar "No, but I'm bnyingon tho installment plan." The Judge. An old man-of-war sailor, who had lost a leg in the service of his country, became a retailer of peanuts. He said he wa3 obliged to be a retailer, because having lost a leg, he could not be a whole sailor. The Judge. Sigk husband "Did the doctor say that I am to take all that medicine Wife "Yes, dear." Sick husband "Why, thero is enough in that bottle to kill a mule." Wife (anxiously) "Then you had better be very careful, John." N.' Y. World. "My son," said a stern fathor to a seven-yeaT-old hopeful "I must dis cipline you. Your teacher said you were the worst boy In the school." "Well, papa," was the reply, "only yesterday she said 1 was just like my father." Montreal Witness. A farmer demanded free admission to a show on the strength of being in the same business. "1 fail to see;" said the manager, "how you make that out." "Well, I'll tell you," responded the farmer. "I make my money by selling specked apples, and yoq make yours by selling spectators." He was admitted. Lowell Citizen. An album containing the photo graphs of twenty million stars Is being prepared by a French astronomer. W e believe that is about the number a man sees when he sits down in an inverted position on the icy sidewalk, but how the astronomer managed to got instan taneous photographs of them when in such an awkward position is difficult to understand. Norrintown Herald. Wife "I think, mother, we had better be starting for our shopping. By the way, John, what are the weath er probabilities?" John (reading from the paper) "Heavy rains, followed by snow, hail, sleet, blizzards, cyclones, tornadoes, simoons, hurricanes aud earthquakes." Wife "H'm. how pro vokjug! Shall we venture out, moth er?" Mother "Certainly. We are not made of sugar." Life. A certain divine, who had wan dered, in the course of his travels, be yond the conveniences of the railroad, was obliged to take to a horse. Being unaccustomed to riding he said to his host: "I hope you are not so unrcgen cratc in these parts that you would give me a horse who would throw a good Presbyterian minister?" "Wall, I duuno," was the reply. "Wc believe in spreadin' the Gospel!". Y. Indc pendeiit. Not a Hopeless Case. Mose Schaumburg had loaned Sam Bingtom aeven hundred dollars. As Mose had not seen Sam on, 'the streets of Austin for several days it oc curred to him to call at Sam's house aud find out how he was coming on. He did not see Sam, but Mrs. Biagtom was at home. She looked very sad, and had black rings around her eyes. "I am in great distress, Mr. Schaum berg." "Vat vash de matter?" "Mr. Bingtom has lost his mind and has been taken out into the country." "Did he leave dot money mit yon to pay dot note what comes due next week?" "Oh, ne, Mr. Schaumburg. he ianot crazv enough to do that. He has lot lost nis reasoning faculties eaafar, Texas Sijlings, TES