'- "K sjytfw - i. - .-3N I - li - " O I.-: tflumtms goimtal. Entered at tha Poat-oaaoB. Coluaabna. Keb.. second-class stall Blatter. ISSUED KTKET WEDXBSDAT ST M. K. TURlSrER & CO., Columbus, Neb. . tbsxs or subscbiptiov: 3nejemr.br mall, postage prepaid,..., $2.00 3ix months,..'. L xhree months,.... ................- Parable in Advance. IVSpecimen copies mailed free, on applica tion.. TO SUBSOUBERS. .When subscribers chance their place of resi dence titer should at once notify as by letter or pustu card, giving both their former and tlicit iinwnt pout-office, the first enables us to rwulily nod the name on oar mailing list, from which, being in type, we each week print, cithor 011 the wrapper or on the margin of your Jocbnal. Uie datu to which your subscription is paid or - counts! for. Remittance should be made either by money-order, registered letter or dmf t. payable to the order of M. K. TOBNKB & To. TO OOBHKSPOMDKNTS. All communications, to secure attention, must b) accompanied by the full name of the writer. We rw.TV6 the right to reject any awniivrsj.i. aud cannot agree to return the name. We .! r a oirreepondent in every school-district r I'latte county, one of good judgment, and re liable in every way. Write plainly, each item aeiuirately. Give as facts. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7, 1S88. Mb. West, go east. Mrs. Jons A. Looan Las sailed for Europe. Georoe Gordon, who last week had registered illegally, was sentenced to Sin?; Sinjr for two and one half years. At Jacksonville, Fla., on the :id inst, the board of health rejiorted thirty-six new cases of yellow fever, and two deaths. C. E. McCheax, United Stated con sular agent at Portsmouth, England, died at that place on the evening of the 2d. At Chicago on the 1st the Highland hall military academy, in the suburban town of Highland Park, burned at noon. Loss 330,000. A fire at Los Angeles, Cal., an the 30th ult, burned the Santa Monica de Iot, occupied as a storage warehouse. Loss $100,000. One day last week in the state quarries at Elliottsvillo, Ind., a large stone fell upon two men named Johnson and Akin killing them instantly. Burglars on the morning of the 3d at OldOrchard, Me., blow open the safe in tho iost office and stole cash and stamps amounting to 500. Last week ten cases of small pox were reported at Kaswick, a small village in the northern part of York county, Ont. The place has been quarantined. The president has issued a- proclama tion designating Thursday, November ' 29, 1888, as a day of thanksgiving and prayer throughout the United States. The schooner yacht Brumhilda, John J- PhelpB owner, sailed from the upper bay, New York, at daylight, on the 3d, bound for a voyage around the world. A woman named Caroline Gabriel, who recently landed in New York on a Bre men steamer and came on to Philadel phia, is now reported to have the small pox. An explosion of hot metal occurred at the Table iron works shortly liefore noon, at Ilttshurg, Pa., on the 1st inst., killing one man and seriously injuring two others. Tun yellow fever at Docatur, Ala., as reported on tho 1st for tho hist twenty four hours eight new cases, all those who have been exposed as nurses and attendants. Jons- II. Wilkins, clerk in the rail way mail service on the New York .t Pittsburg railway, was arrested last week in New York charged with an attempt to rille letters. On the nightot the 1st inst,at Greens burg. Pa- Amanda Montgomery and Gus Wineman were run down by a 4 freight train on the Southern railroad - while taking a stroll, and killed. A vous lady named Thompson, on the south side of Des Moines, committed snicidoon the night of the 4th inst, by shooting herself. No reason for the deed has been given to the public. A great society event occurred at Beatrice on the evening of the 30th, the marriage of Mr. O. Jansan Collman of Broken Bow, to Miss Harriett A. Pad dock; daughter of Senator Paddock. While four young men James Daves, Henry Gormley, Win. Sellen and Chas. Cogin were sailing in Dorchester bay, Mass., on the afternoon of the 4th, the lMMit capsized and the three first men tioned wore drowned. On the morning of the 3d inst., at 3:50 at Memphis. Tenn, an earthquake shock was felt. People sleeping in the upper stories of buildings were consider ably alarmed. The duration of the " shock was only a few seconds. Bill Short, a miner, shot and fatally wounded Mrs. Alma Barns, a widow, a few nights ago, at Litchfield, Kan. The shooting occurred at a dance, and was caused by tho refusal of the woman to allow Short to escort her home. Last week men at work in Silver King mine at Wakefield, Wis., blew out a quantity f rock which exports say " will assay the extraordinary sum of $8,000 a ton, and indications are favor able for an abundance more of the same kind. Terrible prairie fires were reported on the 2d inst, at Jackson, Minn. Henry Bay was burned so badly that he cannot live. A four weeks old baby, a sixteen years old girl named Mollie O'Connor, and a woman and her son, - name unknown, "were burned to death. Louis Bbubaker of Washington, Kas., while recovering from an attack of typhoid fever, called his mother to his room one day last week and cut her throat, killing her. He then made an ineffectual attempt to kill himself. He has been placed in jail and is now con sidered a raving maniac It was stated last week at Eagle Pass, Texas, that a wholesale system of freight robbery had been discovered on the Mexican" Central railroad, which has been carried on for the past two years. JTbe total loss to the company is estimat ed at $50,000. Three conductors, a fcrakeman and a former agent of the road are in jail, and twenty or thirty More employes of the road are likely to Jw arrested." Early Caltare is Illiaela. Mr. Oberly tells an amusing incident of his younger days. It was when he had been elected assembly -man in Illi nois. He was frightened, he says, when ' the time came for him to go to the Capi tol at Springfield, for he was conscious that he was not the possessor of a pol ished education. He feared that he would be paled by the flashing of bright intellects all around him. He took his seat on the first day in fear and tremb ling, but in five minutes he was put perfectly at ease and was made to think that perhaps he might be one of those who would "shine." This was what wrought the great change in his mind: "Mr. Speaker," said one assemblyman, "there are no ink in the inkstand." Young Oberly was amazed. "By gracious," ho thought, "is this tho kind of timber they send here?" Hope rose, when another assemblyman, since fa mous as "Long Jones," and known to all the good people of Illinois, rose, and, "Mr. Speaker," said he, "there are ink but it are froze in tne bottles. This was all young Oberly needed to put him perfectly at ease in the legisla ture. Chicago Herald. At a Hollowe'en frolic in Carlisle, Pa., where the students built a fire for a joke and the firemen attempted to extinguish it and a conflict ensued, both sides suffer,- coming out of the contest with cut and bruised heads and faces. Some of the wounds are quite serious. At Washington the Bame night as tho sis ters of the Academy of the Visitation were about to retire they were startled by the loud noise of an explosion, which rattled the window frames. Next day a long piece of iron pipe was found in the inclosed yard surrounding the buildings, by the school children, which . had leen bursted by an explosion. The affair was nothing more than a Hollowe'en joke. Would it not be a good thing to dispense with all these Hollowe'en, -useless jokes and abandon the custom entirely! A German named Fred Lehman, liv ing near Hnmliolt, Iowa, left his six months old baby in care of older children while he and his wife went to a political meeting. The child was left on the floor of the kitchen while the other children were out playing. A young shoat came in and attacked the child. Before its cries attracted the older children, the hog had eaten off tho fingers of the baby's right hand, a toe off each foot, one ear and part of another, and had horribly mutilated tho helpless infant. It was several hours more ljefore medical aid could be procured. But tho child will probably live. A committee representing the women employes of the Keystone manufacturing company of Philadelphia went to Oaki view the other evening and presented Mrs. Cleveland with a very handsome gold watch, the product solely of women artisans. Tho watch was made espe cially for Mrs. Cleveland. Mrs. Charles N. Thorpe made the presentation speech. . Mrs. Cleveland accepted the gift and made a happy and suitable acknowledgment to the committee. Who says the farmers are not manu factures? The idea is not new, but every barn in the land where animals are kept is a kind of manufactory. The animals are the mechanics; hay, oats, grain, roots and other food crops are the raw materials which are to be worked into salable products, requires a vast amount of labor, capital, skill, and good business management. Should not the fanner then be as fully protected as other manufacturers? (Prairie Farmer. A. Shaver, ex-county treasurer of Clark county., Mich., was put under ar rest last week on the charge of appro priating lietween $1,000 and 1,300 of county funds during his term of office in 1874. In that year he was found in his office one night bound and gagged,' and ho declared he had been robbed of of $4,000. His story was not generally believed, and the present arrest is the result of a subsequent investigation. What remains of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, has taken up winter quar ters at Gen. Beale's 6tock farm eight miles north of Washington city, and about one mile south of the Maryland Agricultural college. The farm is locat ed in a romantic place, and now filled with the king of the cowboys, Buck Taylor, cowboys, buffalo, horses, etc. A special was sent from Lake City, Col., on the 1st to Denver stating that all buildings including the immense hoisting works at Frank Hugh's mines, one of the most extensive in the district, burned that day. The loss will reach many thousand. The origin of the fire is unknown. The owners of the prop erty are residents of London, Eng. A cannon belonging to the Balbach battery at Newark, N. J., on the 2d inst, was prematurely discharged while the battery was returning from a democratic parade, and the charge struck Cornelius Richards, taking effect in one of his shoulders and his head. He was taken to the city hospital, where he died in a few hours. He leaves a wife and five children. Inspector Watts, of police headquar ters at Boston, armed with a pick-ax, shovel and diagram, started one day last week for Montreal. It is under stood that he went out in search of the pot which was secreted by "Old Joe" Fowle, and which is said to contain $8,000 in gold, the result of Fowle's va rious swindling operations in Boston. Br direction of the president, the sec retary of state on the 30th ult, informed Lord Sackville that for causes hereto fore made known to her majesty's gov ernment, his continuance in his official position in the United States is no longer acceptable to this government. Mrs. Cabbie Tdbner, a teacher in the Little- Bock university, committed sui cide one day last week by throwing herself into the Arkansas river. It is supposed that domestic trouble was the cause of her rash act. The eastbound passenger -train on the Iron Mountain road was stopped by train robbers one afternoon not long ago naar Newport, Ark. The passengers were robbed of- $200. No details given. NEBRASKA NOTES. ' They are boring for coal at Fairbury. The -Hardy Herald takes potatoes on subscription. It cost Charles Seuter 91,150 for se-1 during a Chase county girl. Arrangements have been completed i for the erection of a $50,000 sisters' con vent In Hastings. A Ulysses man cleared up $15,000 on the recent raise in wheat. The German American bank of Fre mont was organized the other evening. Scotia's saloonkeeper has been arrest ed for. selling liquor to minors and on Sunday. A party of Minden capitalists are pre paring to incorporate the long talked of canal company. A lady with a- revolver dispersed a gang of too enthusiastic politicians at Scotia the other night. It is reported that hog cholera is de stroying.the hogs rapidly in the south ern part of Otoe county. . N William Parker, a one legged soldier, broke his only leg by falling off a wagon at Burnett the other clay. At Arapahoe on the 4th Harry Bryan's sixteen months old boy died from eating bread with rat poison spread on it. A farmer named Davis, near Syracuse, lost several hnndred head of hogs by cholera and two horses by glanders re cently. The ladies of the charity club at Fre mont have commenced preliminary ar rangements for their annual charity ball, November 15th. The new bridge at Omaha is finished and during last week thousands of peo ple from Council Bluffs and Omaha crossed and crossed it. William Filbert, of Stratton, accident ally fed his hand into the gearing of a eano mill a short time since, ne sup ports but one hand now. The Lincoln paper mills began opera tions last Tuesday. They furnish em ployment for forty men and will turn ont eight tons of paper daily. Hon. James Ewing, present member of the legislature and candidate for re daction, died at his home in Wood --j River at 8:45 a. m. on the 31st ult. Henrv Champion, a Merrick county farmer, after having been engaged for nineteen years, has finally married Mrs. Annie Williams, of Mason connty.Hl. Tho first marriage in the new county of Grant was solemnized at Whitman last Wednesday, the high contracting parties being David Hilla and Miss Lnefender. A hunter near Fremont a short time since discovered a cottonwood which measured twenty-eight feet in circum ference, and it is said that is not much of a country for trees either. Tho dead body of the daughter of O. T. Barto, ex-treasurer of Dixon county, who wandered away from home Tues day morning while delirious, was found Thursday in a creek, drowned. Emma Kell, a domestic at the Arcade hotel, Lincoln, had her arms badly blis tered the other morning by a rag satu rated with oil, (with which she was cleaning a heated range) taking fire. Gamblers, gossipers, profane and ob scene conversationalists, non-church go ers and people full of petty meanness were denounced from the pulpits of the three Ulysses churches last Sunday. Ida A. Montgomery a sixteen years old girl of Wheeler county, died very suddenly the other day. As she finished on the piano she remarked that it was her farewell piece and in five minutes was dead. Mr. Bell began Tuesday morning to take down his engine house at the eleva tor. He will enlarge it and place the plant for the electric light in it, together with the engine which furnishes power for the elevator. David City Tribune. A prairie fire at Orapolis one day last week, resulted in destroying some valu able property. Several hay slacks and a number of fields of corn were consum ed. Most of tho property lost lielonged to Messrs. Vandevenner, Stnll & Fry, of Plattsmouth. A policeman of Norfolk is doing his best to train up the youths of that town in the way they should go. He has started on his task by taking all his lit tle friends to n show at the opera house the only requirements for admission be ing that they had clean faces and re mained off the streets at night. The last Schuyler Snn contained a quarter column of paragraphs concerning typhoid fever in Colfax county. Twenty six persons, besides two entire families are afflicted with the dread disease. Many of these cases are in and near Schuyler, some at Rogers, some near Clarkson, and Howells. A Schuyler doctor is tending one case in Saunders county. As Mr. and Mrs. Whitney were in the field last Wednesday husking corn on his farm, about seven miles east of Scotia, Mrs. Whitney, who was driving, fell back over tho seat on to the corn dead. Her death is supposed to have resulted from disease of the heart. Some two years ago she had an attack of paralysis of the heart but it was suppos ed had entirely recovered, and was ap parently as well as ever when she went into the field. The alarm of fire given at Crete on the evening of the 30th proved to be the dwelling-house of Mr. Page. It was dis covered by the neighbors and soon ex tinguished, but not until the walls and furniture were badly damaged. The origin of the fire is a great mystery, as the family were absent! Mrs. Page is in the east. The house was only occupied, at night and there had been no fife dur ing the day in the room where the .fire was discovered. . A shooting tragedy occurred in Hast ings on the evening of the 2d inst. Frank Fauster and David Crinkalbw, said to be gamblers and desperate men, met in the Southern saloon, where a few words passed, when both drew their revolvers, and commenced .shooting, eight shots were fired, three striking Fauster, kill ing him. instantly. Fauster lives in Red Cloud, and has a family. 'Crinkalow got away and has left the city. A brick mason, named Billy Glenn, who worked here on the new bricks on the north side of the square, and who was on almost a continual drunk while here, being landed in jail several times for the offence, was killed one day last week at Lincoln by the cars. We have been unable to learn the particulars, but there is no doubt that he was under the influence of liquor at the time. This scores one more victim for the dram shop. David City Tribune. Sam Wellbaam, a. section hand at Wamerville, met with an accident last Tuesday night, which although serious, may not prove fatal. WeUbaum and several .other faction men had been to J Norfolk on a hand car to procure mor- phine for a sick man, and when returning the hand car jumped the track near Wamerville, and Wellbaum was thrown, off, striking on his head. Concussion of the brain was the result Dr. Long, of this city was summoned, and attended to the injured man, but is unable at present to say how badly he is hurt . Madison Chronicle. John Stackhouse, a wealthy farmer near Emerson, was taken to Fremont a few days ago to be treated for hydro phobia. The family as a last resort sent him there to be treated with the famous madstone, which if applied to the wound is said to absorb the poison and thus avert' the horrible and inevitable death of the patient If it was not caused by a wound, or the wound is healed up tho patient is bled from a vein and the stono applied. There are only three such stones in the United States. The afflict ed man was securely shackled, hand and foot, and wore a base ball player's mask to prevent "him from inflicting injuries to himself and others. "Mr. Stackhouse is said to have contracted the dreadful mania from sausage he had partaken of. Stanton Democrat'. Mil. REED IN KNCLANIt. A Nebraska Earner's View from Abroad. Ed. Journal. Tho iuitortance of the political issue before the American peo ple to lie decided next month, has grown upon mo so much since I have been" in Europe, I cannot refrain from sending somo of my impressions. To uiy mind no such vital question has been before the people siuce slavery was set tled. No one supposes that free trade will at once bo adopted, if Mr. Cleve land .is elected, but the tide will be turned in that direction and it will be infinitely harder to oppose the tremend ous forces being brought to bear, both at home and abroad, to accomplish this end sooner or later. Let a decisive ma jority be given in favor of protection now, and our people can safely take up other questions of importance that are urgent ly pressing for attention. Could tho honest, fair-minded American voters see what I have seen these last few weeks, I would not fear for the result. I do not believe there is an unbiased man in America, who could go through tho streets of Leeds, look up at the windows of the rusty, dingy old factory buildings that are scattered all through that great city, hear the click of the shuttle from dawn till after dark, see the pale, tired looking faces of the operators as they make their way to their homes no, not homes to those little rooms on crowded streets where they eat their scanty meals and 6leep, and waken to go through the same tomorrow and next week and next year, and each year as long as life and strength continue, without tho re motest prospect of anything better, but fearing something worse, I say I do net believe there is a fair-minded American who, after seeing this, would cast his vote favoring a principle that must soon er, or later bring our American cloth weavers into the same terrible struggle for a mere existence the American me chanic with his present wages can only with strict economy and careful manage ment, secure for himself and family a reasonably comfortable, home, and lay a trifle by for a rainy day. Reduce these earnings by one-third or one-half and where will you leave him? Where yon find the European mechanic of today, and as sure as his product is put in competition with the European mechan ic's ho m list take the European mechan ic's wages, or find something else to do. Leeds is tho metropolis of the woolen manufacture in Great . Britain, but is only one of the hundreds of towns in the north of England all bristling with the stacks of factories. In passing through the country yon scarcely leave the outskirts of one city before yon see the black cloud of smoko hanging over another, and they are great cities so far as population goes to make great cities. Leeds, judging from area occupied, an American would think to lie a city of 50,000 or 75,000. Instead it has 309,000 population. Other cities looking to have 25,000 to 75,000 have 75,000 to 200,000. They are not cities in the bet ter sense of tho word. They are great factories, the men and women working in them being but parts of the ma chinery." Sheffield is an old town of much his torical interest It reaches back to Saxon and Roman times. Mary, Queen of Scots, spent 14 years of her imprison ment here. As early as the thirteenth century it was noted for the manufac ture of " whittles," as knives were called. In Queen Elizabeth's time a large num ber of iron workers from the Nether lands settled here, and from that time the place has been the foremost city for the manufacture of steel goods,especially cutlery. But I found " myself much interested in the men and women that live there now. I talked with the man ufacturers, and with the workmen. I went into their houses, and learned how, for generation after generation, the same families had worked at the same busi ness, expecting from it a bare subsist ence, unless some misfortune overtook them, then the parish had to take care of them. The manufacture of knives and other edged tools and silver plate ware which are the leading occupations here, call for skilled labor, and as a class the workmen are intelligent. But to see an intelligent looking man stand at his little anvil and form one particu lar piece, a knife blade, say, just that one special size and shape, one after an other all day long, and to think of him doing the same thing day after day the whole year through, to see him hurrying to turn off as many pieces as possible, and to know that even then he was only earning enough for the bare subsistence of himself and family, was inexpressably sad to me. Yet a large portion of the people of this city are doing just this, and Sheffield but represents the scores of similar manufacturing towns of Great Britain. Our American mechanic has a hard-time enough now, but there is hope and with reason that there may be bet ter things for him, or' at least for. his children, and that ray of hope makes an infinite difference between the two. But some of my Nebraska farmer friends may say, "What is all this to us? We are an agricultural people and only interested in getting our clothing and machinery aa cheap as possible." But it is something to us western farmers. If we have not sympathy with our fellow countrymen in the factories, a little honest consideration will show us that our pockets are interested. The notion has prevailed 'so long in this country that i God made two kinds of men, a small minority to enjoy the things of this world, a large majority to do their bid ding, that most take for granted it is true, and they submissively occupy the place assigned them. Not only are our working classes of different stuff but they create such an atmosphere of inde pendence, that the foreigner is affected by it at once. Before accepting the meagre wages received for European la bor many of our mechanics will come on to our western lands, where they can at least make a living. .What will be the result? Every man who leaves the fac tory aud goes on ' to a farm takes one family from the consuming class and adds it to the producing. Our farm products are not wanted abroad at what we would consider remunerative prices. When in Belfast I passed a large mill where they were unloading wheat and stopped to make some inquiries. "No," the proprietor said, "we are not using American wheat; we did at one timo but can buy the Russian cheaper now.". But a day or two ago I was passing a feed store here in London where a barrel of corn stood at the door. It looked like an old friend. (No com is raised in this country.) I stepted in and told the pro prietor I was pleased to see something from my own country again. He laugh ed, bill said, "that did not come from the States, but from India. We did use American corn but now we can buy tho India corn considerably less." The fact is when we come to deiend upon foreign markets for our products wo will come in conietiliou with cheap lalior thosame as the mechanic. More than 90 per cent of our grain is already marketed at home. By encouraging our American industries by a judicious tariff it will not be long before our own country will absorb -the remaining 10 percent If we take tho opposite course, we will increase our sur plus, which must lie disposed of abroad at a lower price. The manager of the well known firm of Joseph Rodgers & Sons of Sheffield had kindly shown me through their large establishment. I remarked that their goods wore well and favorably known in America. "No," says he, "the goods you have reference to are made by'a New York firm. We once had a largo trade there but of late years your tariff has kept us out, except for a few fine goods that you can not make." I said I sup posed thoy' were watching our present political contest with a good deal of in terest, then. "Yes," ho said, hesitating, ulmt ire know well enough you Ameri can. aiv not such fools as to adopt free trailed Free trade in our country would be thousands of dollars of advantage to his firm every year, but ho knew the dis advantage it would be to us, and had the candor to say so. While every thing that money and influence can do is being brought to bear by England to influence tho coming election in favor of Mr. Cleve land, should that result lie secured we would stand lower in the candid estima tion of the intelligent Englishmen who helped secure it, than if the republican party succeeds. I have written to too great length, but lam thoroughly interested in this matter I wish I could convey some idea of how it looks from this side to one who has only learned how much he cares for his own country and his own people by an enforced absence from them. J. H. Reed. I.ONDO.V, Enicland. HECOMiEtf'lONS OF AN OLD SETTLER. The Town Company Build a Hotel -The Cleve land Town Company Organized Survey tbeir Town Lots and Commence a Hotel The"l!ardTime"r 1857-The Three Print er Thomas Sarris and UN ial Fate The Flrxt Insane Person. BT 1KOOMAK. At and previous to the spring of 1857, the Elkhorn and Loup Fork Ferry Com pany maintained a ferry across the Loup Fork river, near the point where our late bridge was located. In the spring of that year the Town Company began the erection of a two story frame hotel, containing four rooms on the first floor and six on the second. It was complet ed and opened in the fall, Francis G. Becher being the first landlord, and his sisters the landladies, which building is now a part of the Grand Pa cific hotel. At this time speculation in town sites was running high, and the Cleveland Land Company was organized, and a body of land two and one-half miles west of the Columbus town site was claimed, surveyed and laid ont into a town site, and the ferry moved there. The erection of a hotel which should eclipse the one building at Colnmbus was commenced but the hard times of 1857 coming on during the summer the work was suspended and it never was completed, until it was moved to Co lumbus in 1868 by George Francis Train and is now known as the "Hammond House." The town project fell through, nipped by the untimely frost of the prairie, and the river at that place not being suitable for the purpose the ferry J was moved down again. There were here three Ohio printers, John Siebert, Henry Lindenberg of Columbus, Ohio, and Thomas Sarris of Cleveland. The two former soon returned east, enlisted when the war broke out, and at its close founded the house of M. C. Lilly & Co., Columbus, Ohio, dealers in society goods of which they are at present members. Thomas Sarris was a young man of good education and considerable ability, ami ambitious with all. At that time we were attached to Dodge county for rep resentative purposes in the territorial legislature, and Sarris was desirous of being the representative. Securing the support of Platte county, he started out to make a canvass of Dodge county, and the time passed on and he did not re turn. On investigation it was learned that he had been at Fontanelle, and the last time he was seen, he had left that place to walk across the country to Fremont "the 'rest is silence." The supposition is that in crossing the Raw Hide he got into deep water and was drowned, 11 so nis body was never re covered. Thus, disappeared a young man who might -have become one of our prominent citizens, identified with the progress of the country. At the commencement of the settle ment of this town the Columbus com pany set apart a number of lots, scatter ed through the plat two of them to be donated to persons who should build a house upon them, and that year a num ber of cabins were built upon these lots. A Swiss by the name of Greenfelder had put up a set of logs on one of them, and while the house was in an unfinished condition he became insane, and went home to his friends.' The probate, judge felt it his duty to care for the estate of the lunatic, aud therefore appointed a guardian for the estate, an inventory was taken, the property sold according to law, and fortunately brought enough to pay the fees of the. court and of the guardian. Judge Speice was the purchas er, and the logs were those that formed tho .walls of his old time residence. The Youth. Byron Millett, in a communication to the Journal, after very highly com mending (he graduates of the High School last spring, further, says: The work that has so well started and the foundation so well laid by the teach ers, ought not to lie left to itself to raise its suierstructure by its own unaided efforts. But a great responsibility de volves on every member of the commu nity, particularly on every parent- to carry ahead this good work, and give the young the opportunities to develop the highest possibilities of their manhood and womanhood. Those who lend their efforts in such good works deserve credit, and will have the satisfaction of feeling that they have not lived in vain. Pleas ant environments and 'good associations should surround the individual, so that it would be easy for him or her to do right, and difficult to do wrong. Among other things I might suggest that a city like Columbus ought to have at least one fine reading room and hall for literary exercises and social gatherings as often as once a week,, with music, singing, dec lamations, speaking, etc. There can lie no doubt that much good would lie ac complished to have such programmes rendered by local talent The mind and heart would thereby lie fed instead of becoming more or- less of a waste after quitting school. The young men who might attend such gatherings and take part in their exercises, generally sfieak isg would have something lietter to think of and aspire to, than to attend haunts of vice and travel the downward .road. Themistocles, tho Athenian statesman,- is recorded as having said that ho never learned how to tune a harp, or play upon a lute, but that ho could tell how to raise a small and in considerable village to glory and great ness. He did it, too. He showed his faith by his works. He demonstrated the fact that a country to be great mnst have men, which in any day and age means women as well, and how are you going to have them in the grandeur of their nobility and character unless you develop them. Tho material is with you. Will it be cultivated and fashioned? I am in hopes so. It is no mere sentiment that the creature environments make him what he is. It is according to na ture's decree from which there is no escajie. Illustrations might be given in definitely to illustrate these points, but I will forego giving any at this time, and close with this quotation: "Many a man if he had been sheltered "from childhood from tho bleak winds "of adversity and mild and entwining "gales had -played on his brow, would "have afforded an example of truth and "generosity and honor, who now from "the stress of temptation. has sunk "into meanness and lying and rohhery "and outrage." Winter Climates for Invalids. The elements which constitute a per fect winter climate are not all meteoro logical. While ideal weather is the pre dominating part of a perfect climate, yet the physical characteristics of certain lo calities often neutralize the effect of bine sky, balmy breezes, and equable temperature. A friable ash-like soil, which easily lends itself to fill the air with fine dust, the presence of low-lying swamp and morass tosend forth noisome exhalations and poison the otherwise pure air with geruiBof malaria or fever, are important elements in winter cli mate, but their description and limita tions belong rather to the domain of the chemist and physical geographer than to that of the meteorologist It is the me teorological phases with which this aricle must particularly deal. This line of research excludes, then, two important climatic essentials; the purity of the air and the relative dryness of tho soil--essentials which for any health-resort mnst lie chronicled by the local scientific and medical authorities. Other very imiiortant qualities are moderate warmth, small variability of temperature, wun less man tne aver age daily range, freedom from excessive phases of either absolute or relative hu midity, genial, gentle winds, frequent but not heavy showers of rain, and a large proportion of possible sunshine. In short, a moderately temjierate, fairly oViand sunny climate is the desidera tum, the difficulty of finding which in perfection has well lieen termed an idyl lic quest-(Gen. A. W. Greely, in Scrili ner's for Novemlier. Sheridan in thr tierwan Camp. On the afternoon of Auust 21st. I had the pleasure of dining wth the king. The dinner was a simple one, con sisting of soup, a joint, and two or three vegetables; the wines, ri ordinaire and Burgundy. There were a good many persons of high rank present, none of -whom spoke English, however, except Bismarck, who sat next tho king and acted as interpreter when his Majesty conversed with me. Little was said of the events taking place around us, but the king made many inquiries concern ing the war of the rebellion, particularly with reference to Grant's campaign at VicksburgiSUggested perhaps by the fact that there, and in the recent movements of the German army, had been applied many similar principles- of military science. "From Gravelotte to Sedan," by General Sheridan, in Scribner's for November. ADDITIONAL LOCAL. Nebovllle. That's all right, Byron, we think it is your "move now," only do not forget your old friends. Miss Mary Ericsen is visiting at her home near Lindsay over Sunday. Mr. Dan Jenni, one of our industrious and hard-working farmers, took a lay off and visited -mends in Madison county last week. Our literary meetings are quite largely attended,'and everybody seems to take an interest in it Mr. Leavy, our presi dent, is a very energetic young man who makes it an aim to make it both inter esting and instructive. Question for debate Nov. 10, is Resolved, that intem perance has caused more misery than war. Affirm, W. L. Leavy; deny,-Theo. Brugger. Henry Kersh has sold his entire corn crop' to Brugger Bros, and is having it husked and hauled away by several men and ERNST & -mvnupactuueusanddealersin- sWCZv HMT jbbbW 1bMbI bb. kkr-, a sHluKaWV t W'- v BBHr BBa a a BSBr tt 1 . 1 I VaTaViL9tt &rTn?uBH t""v,"'?!'7r '' .- BsasaBBBBBBBnsSft BBBBsaaj wv n- HBpBBHBBEjjaaajBBBjBj B ' - BBfBBBBBBBfM; C-J f CTBaaC. li ,y- - i..s fl BBBBBBBBBjBBpMKjBBBBBJFS-jA..-. SUPERB LAMP FILLER AND GOAL OIL CAN COMBINED; .... . . . j, . . ... w i ............ tri.iu.iiii-utr,.tnuuiurnnuuiiini:iieiiy.-rannotlMtxivllnl. ltenilxMliHrtli.c plosions. AlM.ll.lt.. tt.tf.af Lfftm,lf M-l " - V" "- " -..,. .. - - . - , - ..,. . L- -i. !... ..I.. small can E,r, can .uatW the vr best ti... sample can and tn-t irir? c bbbLC.bbIbHbbbBH vJHipBVB-BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBJ '""BbbibibhMbHbHbV'bbbbbE - aBBBBBBHBBBsSSjfHaaSPSBBSI tut k--;-..r- - SB BAKER PERF ECT STE EL U R B TOE. WIf yn "!' It yon KH 100 nxl- of fence f rum l' ..nun.lt of wire, u hi-h-ut other wil I iln.-; ERNST fe SCHWARZ. SPEICE & NORTH, General Agents for the sale of EJ-X- BSTAT Union Facile and Midland Pacific It. 1L Lands for sale at from $3.00 to $10.0(1 per acre for rant . or on fiTS or tea years time, in annual payment to unit pnrcluu-era. We have alm a Inre uuil clioiut lot of other lands, improved and UMmproted, for mile at low price and on reiumnahle (crinn. Aim bosinea and residence lots in the city. We keep a complete abstract of title to all real ittnte'-it Platte County. COLUMBUS. NEBRASKA. '" Last Thursday evening inite a num ber of young people met at the resilience of F. Mnrolf and took possession of his new built granary. Dancing and merry making of all kinds were kept up until late. Special thanks are due to Geo. V. Welman and Fred. Marolf. jr., for fur nishing music, also to A. lirugger and W. Westbrook for sullying tho more bashful youths with young ladies. Thank you, Imivs, one good treat fc worth another. n. t. I'nlrMtinr. Mr. Larson has a new wind mill. The aged mother of Jfr. Sven Nelson was buried two weeks ago. J. F. Abrnhamson has 1hiii. building a kitchen on the house of 4The Shoe maker." Oliver Guiles, K.sj., is fencing his quarter section of land near Mount Pleasant. J. C. Caldwell of Limluuy lin:l at. Palestine Friday. Mrs. W. -f. Irwin who has I Hen so dan gerously ill. w are most happy to say. is recovering very rapidly. Mr. AUktL Cldibert of Illinois, who recently owned a farm in this vicinity, has sold it to a Kev. Fayette Perry of Morgan Park, III. P. A. Eklundbrotlicr of Sven, is plas tering Peter Barr's hoiwe. Prof. Wilson of the Sweil iiniversity on the Lookinggla.H.s visited at Palestine on .Saturday last. A teacher has lieen engaged for the Palestine school for the winter. I hi not know his name or residence. Corn buskers are scarce. Dan-. The Xfftots of Novel Reading. The mischief of voracious novel read ing Is really much more like the mischief of dram drinking than appears at first sight. It tends to make all other literary nourishment intolerable, just as dram drinking tends to make all true food in tolerable, and to supersede food by drink. The voracious novel reader of today, as we have said, rejects Scott, because Scott's novels contain so mnch good food that it Is not mere story telling. The genuine novel reader detests what he calls tame stories, stories in which the interest is not exaggerated and piled up ten times as high as the interests of ordinary life. He wants always to be feeling a thrill of ex citement running through his nerves, al ways to be living in Imagination through the concentrated essence of the perils of a hundred adventurous lives. Instead of toiling calmly through the ordinary hopes and fears of one. No state of mind can be more unwhole some, because none is more calculated to divert the energies from the sort of quiet tasks to which they should be habitually applied, and to beep them stretched on the tenter hooks of expectation, waiting for a sort of strain which is never likely to occur, and if it did occur, would cer tainly not find a man's energies any tho better prepared for it for having been worn out previously with a long series of imaginary excitements. The habit of dram drinking, it is said, leads to fatty degeneration of the heart, i. c, excessive fattening round the heart, and weak action of the heart hi consequence. So, too, the habit of exciting novel reading leads to fatty degenera tion of the literary mind, L e., to an unhealthy and spasmodic action of the imagination, and a general weakening of the power, of entering thoroughly into the solid interests of real life. So far as we know, the only effective cure for this habit of literary dram drinking a cure not always forthcoming is amoral shock of some kind which exposes the hollo w ness of all these unreal interests, and makes them appear as artificial and melo dramatic as they actually are. That, however, is a cure which is an extremely painful one, almost cruel in its disillusion izing power. London Spectator. Taw Cure ef Peuasstle watasals, The family eat is regarded with far greater respect in England than America. Every householder in New York, when he packs oC for the summer, leaves the. eat to live in the- streets. The consequence is that during the hot weather the cats of the) Empire city cry aloud and shout; they wail in anguuh to the earless moon in Mans "mostaiusicall.mostBielancholie." They make night hideous for callous hsBTtnrt man, who Ignores their affection and rejects their companionship. Among BoauMsn to tne anuaai lovina MUftDjtweKaajaeaaf SCHWARZ, Hll latt... k.ll... It Hint. .- .,.n. .... .. ?. . . .. I. lauKr of ex- . . ' - . " . ".""PI'IIIKOI till uu - ., .fuK oruriinuliif i.I il .... II.-. H.-.- ..i.. ilhont it forAvtrtimi-HitHcoNt. ' work-tin iui un.l w..rn.tl t. vTort 'Cnti-K " . .'-".V ! ----,? in iiiiii ory uruh STOVES AND RANGES A I.WA YS r't IK y. t E A'l' & SCSfAIZS 4I--Jt but soilness ox Heart is quite compatible with strongness of mind. Whether tho Baroness Burdett-Coutts was cranky- or not as a connoisseur in husbandry she shows admirable judgment la tho caroof animals. And her care for them when they cease from age or malady to be ser viceable beasts of burden entitles her to Eublic homage. At Holly Lodge, her eautiful suburban homo at Oigbgate, sho keeps her worn ont horses, donkeys, cattle, dogs, cats and other pets in- well tended pastures' and stables until .-they die. And sho visits them with the re gularity of a doctor, sparing nothing that can give them comfort. - Others here and there do tho same. I have seen pedigree cattle with famous names and records, living in luxury to. a grand old ago, and I have also seen poor folks' broken down horses and pets kept in country quarters at an expenso they could but ill afford. "The merciful man. is merciful to his beast." What of New Yorkers and their cats? If they sneer at tho baro idea of imitating the example of those who have established a homo for cats in London, let., them do something 1'' better. For a. very small fee tho crtr . " doner who locks up house to go a-holiday S making can have his cat properly cared for until the family return. This is com mon humanity and common sense. If tbe wealthy New York hooaeowuer cannot afford to keep his cat all the vear round. I he should have it killed rather than crueiiy suDjeet to lae aorrors or now York street life. New York Cor. Globe Democrat. People efXew Bumswlch. Thoy are a splendid people here. There is a certain dignity about evary ono of them far mora striking than with any English In England. And what is better, they are truly kind hearted and polite. I used to know, a quarter of a century ago, some of those grand old Hudson Bay com pany's factors; and fino fellows they were brave, cultured, chivalrous, gentle and good, but with a roaring sort of way with them that suggested the entrancing Man itoban Indian summer with a lurkinn-. howling blizzard element beneath. These aro like them, lllmato has had to do with it; true culture of brain and brawn, more. They are near enough to the btates to be emulative; far enough from Eng land to abhor incivility. They and all New Brunswick folk are less pretentious than we; more toler ant than others of their nationality. In all that makes sociologic distinction, these people aro immeasurably better than Englishmen, and infinitely leas the time servers and snobs than somo Ameri cans. I should say they had got further away from tho England wo profess to condemn than many of us whose cheeks should flamo for our cockney apings; that they were, in moderation, level headed- .' ness, clean culture, and in tho freedom -. from feverish ambitions and vanities, far - in advance of most of our commumtlc that they possessed the best of Old World equipoise and conservatism, and of New World virility; and that if by any good fortune of diplomacy or war their country should becomo our country, wo would secaro a fine bit of possession and as admirable a class of people as are now within our farthest boundaries. Edgar L. Wakeman's Letter. A XoB-Traasfsrabto Railroad Ticket. A young railroad man of Atlanta has come to tho front with an invention la the way of a ticket that will bring him. fame and an enviable bank account. It Is slmplv this: The purchaser of an iron clad ticket is not to be required to write his name or make any formal declaration as to his intention in regard to the ticket. Nothing of the kind. The agent who sails the low rate round trip points his little camera at you while he gives you your change. It records the image of the) purchaser in an instant The agent pulls '-. out the slide, rubs his chemical sponge over tho sensitized paper and there you are. In the upper left hand corner of the ticket he pastes that picture, puts it ia under a stamp that embosses, the edges, and unless yon can find somebody that, looks enough like yon to risk the chance of a return on your image, the ticket will carry the original purchaser and nobody else. Atlanta Constitution. RlTers Which risk Desert. Close observers have aseertaai that rivers running through treeless) tracts of country are nearly, if not quite, .destitute of fish, and that fish will desert a etreami from which timber has been removed, although they previously swarmed there-", in. In the propagation of fish it is not enough to placo the fry in water; they must be provided with food, and the best means to do this is to nreserve the bar-. der trees and Insure a steady supply of ":-"- - -water and food by preserving the forester' wnrTirn ulnSiSBsujlyof-fhsi.1sJssrel. LV -"-. new forests are imTnr afrit emttoTkanssJ ranges, many a stream now nearly uurmg tne ary seasons will be m T ... -. ... . - wiin nan ana rooa zor tne nunv.--i i. . I IWSi JlOMSS I 1 1 till II l"'..'-'""'-! wnnaGaxrrai awy-"gyi.g nfusaar"'