Cotemfe Mumal: i: .JjF"W JVlf ' " - C I -J :,...,: V - 'r - ."T s: ijfc 4r .: -Vr VOL. XXIIL-NO. 6. COLTTMBTTS, NEB WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1892. WHOLE NO. 1,151. Ss--'- ,-t . --r- : I- v--. ,1 3 a - "'"- & i X J v-. ? r THE OLD RELIABLE Columbus - State - Bank ! (Oldest Bank in the State.) Pays Interest on Time Deposits AND Hakes Loans on Real Estate, issues siuht drafts ox Omaha, Chicago. New York aad all Foreign Countries. SELLS : STEAMSHIP : TICKETS. BOYS GOOD NOTES Ami Helps its Customers when tliey Need Help. OKKKXIS AMI IUUKCTOKS: LEAN DEB C.KUKAKl), Pres't. f R. II. HENRY, Vice PnVt. JOHN STAUFFER, CasMer. m.hruo;i'r. g.w. hulst. -OF- COLUMBUS, NEB., -HAS AN- AiillinriztMl Capital or 500,000 Vaiil in Capital - 00,000 OFFICERS: C. II. SHELDON. Pres't. 11. T. II. OIILHICH, Vice Pros. A. NEWMAN. Cashier, DANIEL SCIIHAM. Aas't Cash. STOCKHOLDERS:' C. II. Rhel.lon. .1. P. Decker, Herman P. H.Oehlrirh, Carl Kienke. Jonas Welch. W. A. McAllister, .1. Henry Wurdeman, II. M. Winslow, tieorpe W. Galley, S. ('. Grey, Frank Rorer, Arnold F. II. Oehlrich, Henry lioseke, Gerhard Loeke. S3H.ink of deposit; interest allowed on tim tlejiositfi; buy and soil exchange on United Slates and Europe, and buy and sell available securities. We shall be pleaded to receive jur business. We :eolicit your patronage. 23dec97 J. DTJSSELL, -DEILEH IK DUPLEX M lis, And all Kinds of Pumps. PUMPS REPAIRED OX SHORT NOTICE. Eleventh Street, one door west of HatielA-Co'd. 6jnneS3-y SUBSCRIBE NOW iok- THE COLUMBUS JOURML. THE AMERICAN' JIAUAZ1SE. . U'e Offr Ihttli fr ii 1V.U-, .if SI.'. The Journal is nrkuow'rtlRed to be the best ttewe and family puer in Matte county.and The American Magazine is the only high-class month ly magazine devoted entirely to American Litera ture, American Thought and Propret, and is the only decided exponent of American Institu tions. It is as good as any of the older maga zines, furnishing in a year over l.riOO pages of the choicest literature, written by the ablest Ameri "can authors. It is beautifully illustrated, and is rich with charming continued and short stones. So more appropriate present can be made than n year's subscription to Tho Axneri It will bu especially brilliant daring the year Tli vtvTrsa af JTrairw t. !a fc Art oml Tiia Amnri. CBU AOtUlUC AD -.U IV C UUC1 UUU1 iUl ft.VU. M..Z.,. 7c rv l"" " lu.t. -. al ml PATENTS Caveats and Trade Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. OUK OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE. We have no 6ub-agencies. all business direct, hence we can transact patent business in less time and at LESS COST than those remote from Washington. . ... Send model, drawing, or photo, with descrip tion. We advise if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A book, "How to Obtain Patents," with refer ences to actual clients in your state, county or town, sent free. Address Opposite Patent Office. Washington. D. C CCKVEE TO- The Journal for Job Work ?- - OF ALL KINDS. COMMERCIAL I THE WORLD GOES ON. I Lave stood by mouldering tombs, In the valley of decay, Where, like shadows of the night, Come the sorrows of the day. I have watched the cortege pass Up the dusty Tillage street, And I've listened to the trampling Of tho ghost-returning feet. I have heard tho lamentations Of a nation bowed in woo, And I've stood beside the dying, Watched the fitful ebb and flow Of the breath that struggled bravely On the portals of a sigh; But the world goes on as ever. Never matter who may die. Dead men do not blast the flowers, Stay the sun upon its way, For there's sunshine 'mong the willows In the valley of decay. Chicago Sun. THE BTJKGLAR. Til admit at the start that I made a great mistake when I attempted to burglarize the "fashionable" boarding house. As old a fox as I should have known better than to waste precious time and skill on such a forlorn and foolish en terprise. But I was taken in by the apparent wealth of the boarders and the outside grandeur of their hash milL Just as soon as I leave my present domicile which, though a common jail, sets a much better table than the aforesaid concern. I intend to sue the landlady for damages and I don' t ex pect to get a rent either from that busted crowd. It will only be done to save my temporary blasted reputation. Till then I shall take a grim pleas ure in perfecting my patent self-kicking machine which 1 now have under way. When it is finished I hope to interest a small but select audience on whom I can rely by showing them tho fino work it can do on fools, and 1' 11 be the first fool. Now that I have relieved my bot tled indignation somewhat I will tell my story, trusting to after exploits in my line of business to regain a proper respect for my hitherto unquestiona ble abilities. For some weeks I had piped a big boarding house in Now York's most stylish avenue. "l had watched with longing eyes the immense display of beautiful bo gus jewelry the boarders wore and heard with eager ears their high-toned conversation regarding their social po sitions and pecuniary resources and expenditures necessary to maintain them in thc 400." If, instead of piping that crib and its povorty-strickon. bragging inmates, I had piped the grocery man and tho tailor or servants I would not now bo a laughing stock for my pals nor filled with a tumultuous desire to test my self-kicker as soon as possible, hurt or no hurt In ways known only to my profes sion and which would bo dishonorable if not unbusinesslike to disclose I had secured a pass key of tho elegant imi tation mahogany front door of tho palatial hash mill. So at 2 a. m., on a beautiful dark night I found my self very quietly admiring the gorge ous stencil plate fresco on the hall wall by the rather unsatisfactory light of burning matches, for I knew it was against tho landlady's rules to use gas later than 10 p. m. I had another reason, also, but it is not necessary to mention it here. On the hat rack was a fine collection of overcoats and silk hats and, before going further, I selected a nice warm ulster to wear home, for tho weather outside was cold and stormy. I tried on several shiny tiles, but as none would fit tho police club bumps on my head I picked out a seal skin cap and laid it by the ulster at the foot of the stairs. Then I went through all the pockets of the other coats, but finding only cigarettes and toothpicks I gave it up for a bad job and started for the bed rooms upstairs. When I reached the second story hall I paused a bit to listen. All was deliciously still savo tho gnawing of a rat trying to escape from slow and sure starvation into the next hquse and the melodious melody of base and treble snores from the soundly sleeping boarders who, no doubt were dreaming of something to eat This music, so soothing to one in my position, camo through the open transoms over the doors which, of course, were securely locked and bolted from the inside. In the usual neat and easy way, known to those in my business. I was soon within tho front bed-chamber, occupied bv a Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Tocrat who. judging from their decorated night-caps and refined snor ing, were birds worth plucking. With a quiet chuckle over the wealth in prospect I commenced oper ations at tho dressing case and quick ly transferred its load of jewelry to my capacious pockets without disturb ing the loose hair pins and hair switches and other strango feminine appendages which were scattered about Tnen. careful not to spoil the dreams of the happy couple who were prac ticing a grand nasal duct together. I lifted the old centlenian's trousers from a chair and hauled oit his pocket book. How heavy and fat it felt as I opened it. A hundred dollars, at least seemed to be its size. But alas, all the bills it contained had "please re mit" written on them, as I sorrowfully saw by 'a burning match. Angry at the fraud played on ma I tried the other pockets for loose change and got just U.wenty cents, a penknife and a well-worn horse chest nut for my trouble. Then I tackled tho nabob's vest from which a solid looking watch chain dangled invitingly. But there was "no time here." Only a bunch of keys which I leit for the old codger to wear, and put on airs with, till his uBcle': had finished repairing and regulating bis brass, hunting-cased watch. To get square with tho old gentle mna for deceiving mo in such a mean manner. I laid the trousers in the bowl and poured the water from the pitcher ovc them. Then 1 slipped out to the hall and entered the other rooms, but beyond securing lots more of jewelry (all of which 1 afterward discovered to be bogus) I got nothing in the ' way of money." while I found cigarettes enough to kill all the boys in a school. Suddenly it flashed across my puz zled brain that it was Saturday night or. to be exact Sunday morning. That of course, accounted for the dead-broke appearance of tho board ers pockets, for tho sharp landlady had taken all their -weekly earnings, leaving each one just enough to pay car fare on Monday morning. Wondering why I hadn't thought of this before. I softly stolo "up the third story stairs to the room at the back end of the hall, whero landladies always sleep, and stood outside by the door hesitating ere I picked its lock. I knew it was a mighty ticklish thing for even a smarter burglar than I imagined myself to be to get the best of a boarding house mistress, or to catch such a weasel asleep. But finally and against my best judgment I determined to risk it and in a moment I had noiselessly forced my way into the room and to tho bu reau where I hoped to capturo all the money in the house. The gas was turned very low but it enabled me to see two bunches of ringlets which never failed to decorate thoir owner's stern features in day light and sundry other bric-a-brac which, under no circumstances, a man ought to mention. I also noticed that no snores what ever came from tho direction of the pillow on which reposed tho tireless head of the house, but though feeling uneasy in consequence, I hurriedly fumbled through tho bureau drawers expecting each instant to find what I was in search of. Alas. I didn't know that two never sleeping eyes were watching mo all the time till I felt a whacic from a poker on my thin skull, and then a pair of long, skinny arms around my neck while "max in my room" shrieked into my poor ears and aroused tho house. In such a frightful situation I was compelled to be ungallanl to a lady and pinch her hard till she let go. Then out of her room and down stairs to tho second floor hall still shrieking, "Man in tho house catch him!" In a moment the whole menagerie had broken loose and the uproar was terrific. Doors flew open all about mo and the hall quickly filled with pale faced boarders more scared, if possible, than I was. From below coming up the stairs was the back parlor boarder with a gun. which he carried so carelessly that I, fearing it might go ofT in the excitement turned about and darted into a bedroom which had just been vacated, trusting to hide there till chance favored my escape. Unable to get under tho bed owing to that space being utilized as a store room for tho entire worldy effects of its lato occupant I did the only thing left for me, which was to get into the bed, snatch off my cap and pull the covering up to my chin. There' I lay, trembling like a mouse and praying for good luck to assist me. Before I finished my first prayer I heard the shrill voice of the old vixen of a landlady screaming that she had seen me enter tho room and com manding her slaves to go In and capturo me. Then the door burst open and two big policemen with drawn clubs and revolvers walked in and very im politely bade mo "git out of that" With all the freezing dignity I could produoo and trying to look awfully surprised and keeping the blankets tight around my chin I in formed them I was the new boarder and ordered them out of my room. But they only grinned and aimed a crack at mo with their clubs whiclu if I hadn't ducked my head instantly be neath tho cotton blankets, might have settled me forover. The rest is soon told. I was hand cuffed, trotted to the station, and next day sent by rapid transit to the state hotel wherein I am now engaged in perfecting my patent self-Kicking ma chine which I intend to use on myself at the first opportunity. The jewelry so called which I had confiscated in the hash-mill, was returned to its rightful owners, but the loose change I had acquired not half enough to pay the expenses of my undertaking was grabbed by the landlady who truly made oath that it was her property and dared her timid boarders to say aught to tho contrary. Next time I try to rob boarders I'll run the hash-mill myself, but I guess once is enough for ma It pays much better to clean out a bank. Chicago Sun. A Ruined Potato Crop Near St. Louis. St. Loins, Ma, May 23. Great alarm is felt over the potato outlook. The big American bottom, comprising nearly all of the Madison -nd St. Clair counties, 111., is cone of the greatest potato fields in the Mississippi valley. It is inow completely inundated and not a potato will it produe. Its farm ers devote their time principally to raising potatoes and cabbage, and had there "been no flood the potato crop would have commenced moving about July 1, fifteen days later than usual, on account of the late season. Now there are no potatoes to move. Every hill of them is now under from six inches to ten feet of water and every potato will be rotted. The cabbage crop is also ruined. It is impossible to estimate the loss. State Militia Encampments. Spring field, I1L, May 23. The regi ments of-the Illinois National Guard have been ordered to report at camp Lincoln, Springfield, 'for their annual tour of inspection as follows: First Infantry and Battery D, July 9-15. Second Infantry, July 16-21. Third In fantry, July 23-29. Sixth Infantry and Battery A, Aug. 1-7. Fourth Infantry, Aug. 8-14. Fifth Infantry,- Aug. 15-21, Batteries A and D will devote their time to practical ins ruction and target practice with Gatling guns and will not bring their heavier guns into camp, Gift to the Captala of the Coaemaugh. Riga, Russia, May 23. On behalf of the municipal authorities the prefect of this city has presented to Capt Spencer of the American steamer Con emaugh," which brought to this city a cargo of flonr, grain and provisions for the relief of the famine sufferers, a handsome silver cup. Mr." Bornholdt, the American consul here, attended the Dresentatidn.ceremonies.' DROWN iTHE FENIANS: A BLOODY RIOT AT BELFAST, IRELAND. Orangemen and Catholics Encase la a Factional Fight Many People Injured Believed to be the Outcome of Salis bury's Speech on Ulster. Londox, May 23. The Orangemen of Ulster are evidently stirred up by Lord Salisbury's suggestion that Ulster would be justified in rebelling against Irish home rule. There are. signs of excitement in various parts of the pro vince and threats of violence are heard against the Catholic population. At Ilarland Wolff's yard, Belfast, to-day, where the majority of the workingmen are Protestants and members of Orange lodges, the Protestants ?ot into a heated argument with their Catholic and Nationalist fellow-workingmen on the subject of home rule. The Protes tants contended that home rule would be the ruin of Ireland, and that Ulster, where the people were prosperous and orderly, would be abandoned to such mercy as the Catholic majority in other provinces chose to deal out. The Na tionalists answered that home rule would be for the benefit of Ireland and that Ulster would be treated fairly. The discussion, which began with comparative calmness, became angry and then furious, and blows were ex changed. The Orangemen being in the majority had the best of the riot from the first. The Nationalist work ingmen were beaten and pounded with terrible severity. "Drown the Fenians'." cricdthe Orangtmen, as they seized several of the Nationalists and tried to throw them into the dock. The Na tionalists l-esisted desperately, but sev eral of them undoubtedly would have been drowned had not the foreman succeeded in restraining the murderous rage of the Orangemen. As it was the Nationalist workmen had to flee for their lives. The members of the Orange lodges in Belfast, Londonderry and other places are drilling nearly every night. They are armed, and it is stated upon well-qualified authority that the Orangemen have an armed force of not less than 40,000 men, which could be increased by ready recruit ing to nearly double the number. They are determined not to submit to home rule and will resist any authority should home rule be adopted, except the imperial "troops of Great Britain. The opposition to home rule in Ulster is much stronger than before the death of Mr. Parnell. The fact that Parnell himself was a Protestant was used as an argument why the religious question should be ignored in considering the adoption of home rule for Ireland. Since the death of Parnell the prominence of the Catho lic hierarchy in the home rule agita tion and the apparent submission of the home rule leaders to the dictates of the church have greatly offended the Ulster Protestants andjyery few of them are now willing to avow them selves as in favor of Irish self-government A Determined Suicide. Loxdox, May 2.'J. James Hood, a res. ident of Brooklyn, N. Y., .threw him self in front of a train near Paisley and was instantly killed. He was en route for Greenosk to visit his brother. IOWA CROP REPORT. Farm Work Almost Entirely Stopped by the Bad Weather. Dks Moines, Iowa, May 23. This week's Iowa weather crop bulletin says: Another cold and wet week with heavy rains and destructive floods deepens the gloom of the crop situa tion. The daily average tem perature was five degrees below normal, and on Friday snow flurries occurred in all parts of the State. The heaviest rainfall measure ments reported are as follows: Chero kee, 4. SO inches; Monona, 4. 10; Buena vesta, 3.9C: Palo Alfo, 3.9.r; Lyons, 3.92; Wright, 3.25: Adams, 3.18. There was less than two full days of sun shine, i Little planting or plowing was possible. Wheat and oats on uplands look fairly well; on all low laud grain crops are drowned out oi turning yellow. COUNTY SEAT WAR IN IOWA. Two Towns Quarreling About Which Shall Have the Court-Mouse. Ottl'XWA, Iowa, May 23. A lively county seat wir is now brewing in Lucas county. At a recent session of the board of supervisors the old court house was condemned and subsequent ly torn down. A petition to erect a new one had previously been defeated at the polls. A bitter feud existed be tween Chariton, the present county scat, and the rest of the county, and the farmers now purpose that if Chariton wants a court house she must build it Petitions have been started to locate the county scat at Russell and already several hundred signatures have been obtained. Mass-meetings are being held and the entire county turning out, and Chariton people are alarmed and understand that a terrible fight is upon them. Determined to Lynch Weems. Nashville, May 23 . Frank Weems, the negro of Chattanooga who assaulted a white woman and was sent to this city last night for safekeeping, is being eagerly sought to-night by a large mob, and if found will be lynched. Permission was given a committee to search the county jail last night, but the negro was not there. The city workhouse was next surrounded by the mob, and at 11 p. m. a riot alarm was sent out Should the mob make an attack on the vorkhouse a serious fight may ensue, as the police are out side armed with rifles. Corpse of a Juror Foaad. Dubuque, Iowa, May 23. Juryman John Steiner, Sr., disappeared April 2, and a floater found at Clinton Tuesday proves to be his body. A fractured skull and arm indicate foul play. Weekly Bank Statement. New York, May 23 The weekly bank statement shows the following changes: Reserve, increase, S3,783,S50; loans, decrease, SI, 107,001; specie, in crease, ,$2,006,000; legal tenders, in crease, $2,657,600; deposits, increase, $3,759,000; circulation, increase, $49,100. The .banks now hold f 19,535,871 ia ex- WtJHfl p$r at rule. OUR PRISON SYSTEM. A Writer In the Forasa Has Many Faults ta Find. These well-meaning gentlemen.witl: their theory that "he who is made comfortable in prison feels imprison ment more deeply than he who en dures severity," have brought us to a condition, where our jails are so im mensely overcrowded that the greater part of the prisoners must be abso lutely idle for want of space and work. They have a panacea which is called the "indeterminate sentence." This is the plan which, Mr. Spalding tells us, "fits thef sentence not to the crime, but to the character"; the character being determined, not by sworn evidence in open court at the time of arrest, as to the circum stances of the offence and the offender, but by the prisoner's obtaining "a cer tain number of good marks while in prison for conduct, industry, .and pro--ficieaejMn study." This is the' system which removes the bread-winner from his family for an indefinite period, while this teaj of character is being applied. We learn from the last report that "under it the misdemeanant tain, by his own accomplishment, be released from imprisonment in one-third the term for which he may be held; and he convicted of felony may, in like man ner, effect his release in one-fifth of his term." This is to say, a clever man guilty of homicide may effect his release in much less time than a less keen young man whose only fault is that he has on two or three occasions over-estimated the amount of stimulant which he could comfortably digest, - says William P. Anderson in the Forum. As the prison commissioners report that the worst criminals are the cleverest and best prisoners, and that this system dis charged a man who had served three terms in the State prisons of as many different States, with a shorter term than a drunkard who was "in no wise a person of criminal inclination," we are led to doubt its sovereign efficacy as an unfailing test of character. This prolonged withdrawl from all the in fluences of ambitious and better neigh bors is joined to the altogether vicious system of association with the worst of criminals. HE IS LUCKY, TOO. A Nephew or "Lucky" Baldwin Marries His Cousin. Charles W. Baldwin, a nephew of the famous "Lucky"' Baldwin, of San Fran cisco, knows a thing or two. Until a few days ago he was a clerk in his uncle's hotel. Now the great horse man is his father-in-law. When "Lucky" Baldwin learned that his pretty 17-year-old daughter was receiving more than ordinary at tention from her cousin he sent her to a seminary and told the matron to keep an eye on her. But her lover managed to communicate with hr. Her escape was planned and finally executed. The same day they took a tug from San Francisco and were- married outside of OEoitae biocwin. the water line, the law of the State prohibiting the marriage of girls of 17 without parental consent The bride is worth $10,000,000. IViio Invented the Steam Eusinet The Marquis of Worcester, while imprisoned in the tower of London in IGoG. invented and constructed a per fect steam engine and had it publicly oxhibitcd the same year at Yauxhall in successful operation. Thirty-four years later, in 1090. Denis Papin added the piston to the marquis' dis covery. In' 161)8 Captain Savory de vised and built a stoam engine differ ent in many details from those made by Worcester and Papin; and in 1705 Ncwcomb. Cawley and Savary con structed their celebrated atmospheric engine, which was complete in every detail The above array of historical facts notwithstanding. James Watt who was not born until sixty year? after these great men had given the steam engine to the world, enjoys the distinction of being the veritable in ventor, originator and author of the most useful contrivance of the presen day. Fulton, who lived and worked in tho early part of the present century, is given the credit of being the man whe demonstrated that steam could be ap plied to navigation; this. too. in face of the well-known historical fact that Do Gary propelled a vessel by steam in the harbor of Barcelona in 1543. Why does history make such mistakes? St Louis Republic. No Clocks in Liberia. Explorer Buttikoffersuys that a clock israrely seen in the farm houses of Liberia, and many of the town people have no time pieces. He adds that there are few civilized countries where a time piece can be dispensed with so conveniently. The sun rises at 6 a. m. and sets at 6 p. m. almost to the minute throughout the year, and at noon it is directly overhead. Many of the people become so expert in telling time by the sun that they are rarely more than a quarter of an hour in error. In place of alarm clocks they depend upon the crowirtr cock to arouse them in the morning. N Prehistoric Hatchets. A specimen of prehistoric hatchets of peculiar form was exhibited by M. Yillanova, of Piera, at the meeting of the French association. About 200 of them had been found at Llcho. They were simple emblems of images of a hatchet, made of a thin blade of metal, ornamented on both sides from one end t0 thfe ptfrer- and wfthont edcraa: ft? w Hf tHkMr fHT Vl W Pension the Soldiers. "Pension the Soldiers," ask you of me? 'Every one,"-I answer, true: "Not one would I pass by of the Soldiers brave who were the blue. Into battle's thickest carnage Onward marched they brave and strong'. Never heeding Death's dark slaughter, Through those four years, dark and long. Home and kindred all behind them. Even Life itself at stake! Sorrowing memories to remind them Of the sacrifice they make! Lives of hardship! life-blood gushing! Dark as dungeon oft their gloom! Into Death's dark portal rushing, E'en for Liberty to make room! "Right and Native Land," their watchword. Swift they sped, at Country's call. Pulled th' sword from out its scabbard. Ere they'd see their flagstaff falL Against Widows. Congressman Peel, of Arkansas, in troduced a little four line bill the other day, which if passed might properly come under the head of "class legisla tion," as it aims a direct blow at the war widow business. It provides that "pensions shall not be allowed the widows or children of soldiers in the war of the Rebellion unless marriage of said widow and "soldier, was solem nized prior to Jan. I., 1892." It is a fact that war widows have been very expensive wards of the gov ernment It is many years since the last revolutionary soldier succumbed to the inevitable, yet there are to-day twenty revolutionary widows drawing pensions. The oldest of these was not born until more than twenty years after the war of the revolution, but as a young woman, she became an old sol diers darling, co'mforting his declining years and inherited his country's grati tude. Of the war of 1812 there arc only 284 survivors on the pension rolls, and they are dropping of rapidly. But the widows of soldiers of this war drawing pensions number 7,500. On the pension rolls to-day there are 125,060 widows of soldiers of the civil war, and the list is growing larger every day. Some of these widows were born since the war closed. It is com puted that twenty-five years hence, possibly sooner, one-half of the pen sioners will be widows, and that fifty years hence, or at farthest in 1950, the United States government will be pay ing out millions of dollars yearly in pensions to soldiers' widows who were not born until after the war had ended in which their husbands had fought. It is to limit the number of these widows on the pension rolls that Mr. Peel, brave, bold man that he is, pro posed to legislate. . A. R. Notes. The Department of West Virginia, G. A. R., have established new posts at Shinston, Kingwood and Egypt, and the post at Berkeley Springs has been reorganized. The example set is a good one. Forward the work everywhere. The death of Col. George M. White, at New Haven, Conn, has cast a gloom over G. A. R. circles, for he was an earnest and helpful comrade, ever ready, at no matter what cost of per sonal comfort or labor, to give his time and talents to advance the interests of others. Surely he will be missed. Koltes Post 32, G. A. R., of New New York city, is making grand prep arations for the celebration of its 25th anniversary, June 21. The Post has secured accommodations at Reuter's hotel, Washington, D. C, for 250 men at the National Encampment. They will take Post band, 25 pieces, Sons of Veterans and Post drum corps. The first instance of a widow of a Confederate soldier receiving a pen sion from the National Government is reported. Mrs. Morris, of iVest Vir ginia, widow of Edward Morris, a Con federate soldier, married El mer Thomas, a Union soldier, and upon his demise some time since she applied for and was granted a pension under the Act of June 27, 1390 New Hampshire G. A. R. The twenty-fifth annual encamp ment of the G. A. R. department of New Hampshire, convened in Concord recently with a very large attendance of delegates. Col. E. B. Huse, of Enfield, depart ment commander, in speaking on the subject of pensions, said: "Why is it that some claims slide along easily and quickly, and in a few weeks are granted, while others, just as deserving, made as clearly, requiring no more testimony, are pigeoncd-holed? Letters of inquiry, once, twice and three times fail to receive a reply, the soldier suffers, lingers and dies. His family lives in poverty and distress. Comrades there is something wrong. If there is favoritism, it should be un masked; if there is negligence on the part of those having these matters in charge, they should be removed and more faithful servants put in their places. I trust this encampment will speok in no uncertain tones to 'the powers that be in these matters and demand that these things shall nc longer continue." Patriotic Move. A movement's on foot in theG. A. R. to erect a memorial in honor of the late Gen. Sherman. In reference to this Commander-in-Chief Palmer in a late order says: "He, of all the prceminetlr great commanders during the struggle for national unity, has, since the war, been superlatively one of us. At our camp fires and re-unions, department or national encampments, "Uncle Billy" was eTer a prominent and welcome figure. His efforts for the welfare and pleasure of the "boys," no matter how arduous or how great a drain upon his time, were always deemed a labor of love and duty to be fulfilled without abatement. No honors naid himbroad or at home ever. tended to weaken his love for, and solicitous interest in, those who "marched with him from Atlanta to the sea," or stood a bulwark between the Nation and its foes on bloody, hard-fought fields. The Naval Veterans. The Naval Veteran Association of Maryland had an interesting and largely attended muster in Grand Army hall in Baltimore the other evening, on which occasion a handsome stand of colors was presented by the Hon. F. C. Latrobe on behalf of the citizens of Baltimore. A street parade was made by the association, the Fourth Battal ion Infantry.Col. Howard, asescort,and visiting comrades and invited guests' in carriages. A ban quet provided at the Eutaw House was presided over by Col. W. S. Wells of New Haven, Conn., who de livered an interesting, eloquent and patriotic address. Other speakers were: Commodore F. B. Allen of Hart fort, Conn., C. H." Edwards of New York, Commodores Isaae Archer, James Teal and William Simmons of Philadel phia, Commodore W. O. Saville and Mayor Latrobe of Baltimore, and many others. The entertainment was of an interesting character, and re flects great credit upon the hospitality of the Baltimore veterans. Grand Feature. One of the most conspicuous bodies at the national encampment at Wash ington "".will be a battalion escort to Commander in Chief Palmer from the Grand Army posts of Albany, N. Y., consisting of 150 men. They will wear a specially designed uniform and badge. It has been suggested, and it certainly is a grand idea, that the old soldiers, who by reason of wounds or disease are compelled to go on tricycles or wheeled chairs, meet in Washington during the encampment and join in the parade. There arc hundreds of them, and it would undoubtedly be a most novel spectacle to see them a wheel brigade uniting with their more fortunate comrades in the march and grand review. The Youncest. R. B. Y. Reynolds, Orderly-Sergeant, Comoany H., Thirty-eighth Indiana, Jeffersonville. Ind., writes: "I shall have to assert my claim as being one of the youngest soldiers, who carried a musket from the beginning of my en listment. I was born April 25, 1847; enlisted Sept. 18, 1861, in Company H, Thirty-eighth Indiana; re-enlisted at Rossville, Ga., Dec. 1, 1863; was dis charged July 23, 1365, as Orderly-Sergeant, Company H, Thirty-eighth Indi ana, making three years, ten months and five days hard service. My regi ment saw the elephant on many a hard fought field, commencing at Perry ville, Oct. 8, 1862." ' Gen. Barn urn's Narrow Escape. At the battle of Malvern Hill the late Gen. Henry A. Barnum, port warden at New York, was hit with a bullet which passed entirely through the general's body. The wound never healed, and required dressing every day for thirty years. An autopsy revealed bits of bones in the wound, which were the cause of its not healing. The ball had crashed through the upper rim of the pelvis, breaking the ilium and barely missing the vital organs. Notable Event. In May next there will be a reunion of the G. A. R., on the Crater battle field in Prince George county, Va., near Pittsburg, when it is expected there will be at least 10,000 ex-Union soldiers present. Invitations will be sent to ex-Confederate soldiers in all the Southern States, and the plan is for an equal number of ex-Union and ex Confederates to occupy the same tent during the encampment Ex-Confederate Pensions. It may not be generally known in the North, that nearly all the Southern States have a pension roll of men who fought for the Confederacy, and their widows and orphans. This pension money is raised by taxation, and Union men, including Union soldiers living in the South, are taxed the same as those who sympathised with the rebellion to help pay the pensions to these ex-rebel soldiers. Plausible. Major D'Arlandcs, like many another French soldier, was tired of waiting for promotion and opportunities to dis tinguish himself. He seized an oppor tunity to enjoy a little excitement, and at the same time to remind Louis XVI. of his baffled ambitions. He made a balloon ascension, which at that time was thought to be a very risky affair. The king promptly re proved him for his rashness. "Your majesty will pardon me, I hope," said the officer, "but the fact isj the minister of war has made me so many promises in the air, that I went up to look for some of them." A Mammoth Oak. A giant oak, which was a king of the forest at the time William Penn bought the ground from the Indians, and which now rivals in size many of the enormous trees of California, stands alone in solemn grandeur on Old Pine road, about three miles above Fox Chase. This mammoth white oak is still sound and healthy, and measures twenty-seven feet in circumference or about six feet in diameter. The first branch which shoots out from the parent trunk measures nine feet six inches in circumference and extends out the enormous length of over seventy feet JJ Tradition says that it was beneath the branches of this giant oak that the In Hans held many of their councils of war, and of late years several camp meetings have been held under its shade, while the worshipers listened to eloquent .sermons from many eele oratea riivjKec Hysteria Babies: Do not say your baby is bad-tempered when it has attacks of loud crying, especially if the cries arc accompanied by stiffening of the limbs, tremblings, or the reverse, limpness and apparent loss of con-ciousncss. A doctor should be consulted and the child treated for h'i,teria- The Proper Way to Boll Starch.'-' Always mix starch irtcold water un til free from lumps; pour on boiling water, stirring well until of the proper consistency; boil ten minutes, add a little lard, butter or shavings of spermaceti or prepared gmm arable; tfcaB cool. -THE- First National Bank DIRECTORS! A. ANDERSON, Prea't. J. II. GALLEY, Vice Pree't. ' O.T.ROEN. Cashier. (I. ANDERSON, P. ANDERSON. JACOB UREISEN. HENRY RAOATZ, JOHN J. SULLIVAN. Statement of Condition at tat Clow of Business March 1, 1892. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts $20t.7Ul 44 U.S. Bond l.500 00 Hoid Estate, Furniture and Fixtures.. 19,310 'it Due from other kinks $ J7.4U3.XI " " U. S. Treasury W5.00 CaahouHaud 20.MB.tf7 59.615 05 $2W.41t71 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock paid in Surplus Fund Undivided profits Circulation Redihcoiints $ fiO.000 CO 30.000 00 2.1H4 93 1S.50O0O 5,6a) 40 187.1S1 3J $2W,41&71 gnsmess arJs. DEUTCHER ADVOKAT, OtKce over Columbus State Hauk, Columbus. Nebraska. -'JV A AI.HIIKT a ki:i:di:k, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OiKre over First National Bank, Columbus, Nehraxka. 50-tf ftjj( K. TURNER ft CO., Proprietor am! Publishers of the C3UMB;Z I0TJS1UL ii the IE3. F.UULY J0U21T1L, Both, HMit-jaid to any addreoo, for $2.00 a year, btrictly in advance. Family Jouuxal, $1.00 year. W. A. MCALLISTER. V. M. CORNELIUS. JT cAIJJNTKK dc COK.HKLIIIS ATTORNEYS AT LAW Columbus, Neb. E.T. ALLEN, M.D., Eye - and - Ear - Surgeon, Secretary Nebrahka State Board of Health, 309 Ramok Block. 03IAIIA, NTCD ntf E.CBOYD, M VNUVACTUKKU OF Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware ! Job-Work, Roofing and Gutter ing a Specialty. Shop on Nebraska Avenue, twit doors north of RaHinntwen's. .A. E. SEAJTCL,, PIIOI'IIIETOK OF TUE level St. Tonsorial Parlor. The Finest in The City. J3Th only shop on the South Side. Colum bus. Nebraska. SOcf-y L. C. VOSS, M. D., rlomiBopathic Physician AND -SURGEON. Office over iMwtt office. Spreialist in chronic (iihcases. Careful attention Kiven to Keueral practice. IMuovSm A STRAY LEAF! DIARY. THE JOURNAL OFFICE - KOIt- CAItDS. ENVELOPES, NOTE HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, DODtJERS, ETC. LOUIS SCHREIBEE. II All kinds of Repairiag dene oi Short Notice. Byggies, Wag ons, etc., aiaile to order, and all work (Jaar anteed. Also sell the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers. Reapers, Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders the best made. Shop on Olive Street, Columbus, Neb., four doors south of Borowiak'a. HENRY GASS. UNDERTAKER ! COFFINS AND METALLIC CASES JST Repairing of all kind of Ufjkol- stery uooatt. : Utt COLUMBUS, NEBBASKA. BlacKsffli monMfc . . ." 4