The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, January 09, 1895, Image 2

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    &olnmbns gftfnrual.
Entered at the Poat-ofioa, Cotanbaa, Nab.,
coad-claas mail matter.
TaaUBD KTSBT WTD5K9DAT EX
M. K. TURNER & CO.,
Columbua, Pfob.
TEXMS Or SCBSCBIFTIOR:
One year, by mail, postage prepaid $1.58
8ix months .75
Three months 0
Payable is Adranoe.
tTSpttimmD. oopiM mailed tree, on application
TO
Whan cubacrlbara ehamja their place of resi
dence they ahonld at onoe notify o by letter or
postal card, filing both their former and then
Dieaent poet-offioe, the first enables oa to readi !
find the name on our ""'H"n list, from which,
beins in type, we each week print, either on the
wrapper or on the marann of your Jotjbh al, tin
data to which roar subscription is paid or ac
counted for. Bemittances should be mad.
either by money-order, registered letter or draft
payable to the order of .
M. K. TUBITO 4 Co.
to oobusposschm.
All communications, to secure attention, ninp
a correspondent in eyery acnooi-aisinci "
I'Jatto county, one of good jadgment, and r..
liable in ererr way. Writ plainly, eacn iui
separately. UlTeaa
WEDNESDAY. JANUAKY 9. 18M.
Journal & Bee.
We give you The Columbus
Journal and the Omaha
Weekly Bee for 32 a year,
when paid in advance. Sub
scriptions may bepin at any
time, and now is the time
to begin with the two,
whether subscription to ei
ther has expired or not. . . .
Bee & Journal.
A new oil well has been opened at
Florence, Colorado.
The Ohio river at Cincinnati was ris
ing a foot an hour Monday morning.
The Pope has created John A. Creigh
ton of Omaha a count of the Holy Roman
Empire.
Pettigbew of South Dakota was
selected Monday as his own successor as
U. S. senator.
A remarkable anti-toxine cure of
diphtheria after two applications is re
ported from Bradford, Conn.
Governor-elect Holcomb's resigna
tion as Judge was dated Dec. 31, and II.
M. Sinclair of Buffalo county was ap
pointed as his successor.
The whole British Bquadron in Chinese
waters has been suddenly ordered to
proceed to Cheefoo from Chusan. New
developments are impending.
W. A. Gilmore, postmaster at Broken
Bow, is missing, and is said to be short
in his accounts 81,200 to $2,000. Some
of his friends still think that he has met
with foul play. He is aged HO, is a
bachelor and his salary Sl,700.
Even the Omaha Bee, while not ap
proving altogether of Thurston as a U.
S. senator, 6ays that he "may surprise
those who expect nothing but subser
viency to railroads and other corporate
monopolies."
John Thurston is a very able man, and,
so far as mental ability is concerned,
there is probably no man in Nebraska
who knows him but will concede that he
is competent to fill the place. The only
question that we have heard raised is,
Whether Mr. Thurston will be honest
with himself and the people.
He is an attorney, has had the educa
tion and the training of an attorney.
That he has been faithful to bis em
ployers seems to be beyond question, if
we are to judge by what he has done for
them, and what they have done for him
in return.
If Mr. Thurston has any fool friends
who imagine for a moment that he is
about to be selected with such remarka
ble unanimity as U. S. senator from
Nebraska because ho has been a railroad
attorney and liecause he is supposed to
favor legislation in favor of monopolies,
let them get rid of such notion.
John Thurston, employed to work for
a railroad company, is one thing. John
Thurston, called by the republicans of
Nebraska, to represent, not them alone,
but the great body of our citizens of all
political opinions, in their general inter
ests, is quito a different thing.
There is no serving of two masters,
and if in the guise of senator, Thurston
should really be some railroad company's
paid attorney, he would be acting the
part of a scoundrel, a shyster taking fees
from both plaintiff and defendant in the
same cause.
Thurston's success is due to his per
sonal qualifications and to his ardent
republican spirit, tested and approved in
many a campaign. To these ho owes his
political triumph in spite of his having
been in the business of a railroad
attorney.
He will be working for a master now
that asks of him that he give bis best
talents to the country's good, which is
but his reasonable service, and in doing
so he will find a richer reward than dol
lars and cents.
Pope's lines, with slight change, we
hope may fitly bo said of Senator Thurs
ton at the end of his term:
"Statesman, jet friend to truth! of soul sincere.
In action faithful, and in honor clear!
Who broke no promise, served no private ond.
Who gained no title, anil who lost no friend;
Ennobled by himself, by all approved,
Praised and honored by the friend he loed."
Wild and Wooly West.
Chicago Inter Ocean : "The Wild and
Woolly West" may be an expression re
garded as clever in New York, and yet
there are more men and women who have
been educated in New England and the
east living west of the Mississippi river
than are living in New York, and they
are spending more money on education
than the great Empire state and in all
New England.
The past generation included Ohio and
all west of New York and Pennsylvania
in the west. That would make the east
very insignificant today. But take even
the territory west of the Mississippi
river and lay upon the map of that sec
tion a map of the country east of the
great river and there will still be room
enough for the maps of Great Britain and
Ireland, Spain, Portugal. France, Bel
gium, the Netherlands, with Luxem
bourg, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark,
Norway, Sweden, Austria, Hungary,
Italy, Turkey, Greece and all the minor
states of Europe, Russia alone leing ex
cepted from the continent.
The we6t has for some years been
acknowledged the great food-producing
section, as it has within its boundaries
the greatest wheat state, the greatest
corn state, and the great plains on which
the cattle and sheep are fed that feed
not only the east but send meat to all
civilized countries. This is the contri
bution of the present generation in the
west to the world's living, but it is not
satisfied. It has reached out the hand
of engineering skill to tap the rivers and
make the arid plains and mountain val
leys produce the fruits and vegetables
of all the rest of the country, reclaimed
millions of acres from the sage-brush,
and formed a combination of sun, water
and soil that makes the farmer and fruit
grower of the east stand in mute wonder
as he 6ees and realizes the production
from such a combination.
The cast has so long regarded the west
as a combination of arid plains snd min
eral mountains that it has been slow to
recognize the real value of that great
section. Even Chicago, the great nerve
center, has not fully appreciated the full
extent of its pulse throbs, but tho west
is, in extent and resources, the greatest
empire on the face of the globe, and its
voice will one day be the most potent
not only in Washington but in till the
world.
Fifty-one saloon keepers of Omaha
have been notified not to open up until
licenses had been secured. Thirty-two
protests have been filed with the com
missioner against disorderly saloons and
some of these will probably be refused
licenses.
Pretty good for a democrat, the
Schuyler Herald: "Senator John M.
Thurston! It might have been worse.
Thurston has brains, and ho never yet
failed to do good service for his retainers.
John now belongs to the jeople. 'Hah
for Senator Thurston!"
Congressman Meiklejohn, member of
the house committee on pensions, has
this session called for tho status of more
than 100 pension cases and requested
that they be made special by reason of
the fact that the claimants reside in the
drouth stricken section. fPnllorton
News.
Douglas county casts more than one
tenth of the vote of the state of Nebraska
and pays more than a corresponding
share of the total taxes that go into the
state treasury, but when it comes to tho
distribution of legislative offices it seems
to lose its relative importance when com
pared with the remainder of tho state.
Omaha Bee.
According to the Fremont Tribune
the treasurer of Dodge county does not
obey the law governing the deposit of
county funds but pockets the interest
himself. The Dodge people should take
a lesson from Colfax and elect a treas
urer who lives up to the law. Our peo
ple get the benefit of this interest and it
is a neat little sum each year. Schuy
ler Sun.
Unit County Tragedy.
It seems that Barrett Scott, the de
faulting treasurer of Holt county, has
been kidnapped and murdered.
The first certainly happened him, and
the second most probably.
He was convicted on a charge of steal
ing $70,000 of Holt county's money, and
was sentenced to five years in the peni
tentiary. Ho appealed tho case and was out on
bail when kidnapped.
He had been into the country on a
visit, accompanied by his wife and
niece and a hired man, when on return
ing they were waylaid, by a party of
masked men, but instead of submitting,
the horses were whipped up to a run.
A volley from their assailants killed the
horses, shattered the carriage, and
slightly wounded Mr. Scott and the
young lady. The ladies were taken one
way and the men another. About mid
night the ladies returned to O'Neill and
two hours later the hired man walked in.
Since that time parties of searchers
havo been organized, and Monday's Bee
contains a detailed account of what
promises to be a solution of the mys
tery, the finding of the dead body in an
abandoned well 70 feet deep, with the
water in it 12 feet deep. Further ex
amination will doubtless develop into
the facts of the tragedy.
Holt county is in great excitement
over the affair, as she may well be, and,
notwithstanding tho fact of the great
loss of money to Holt county, the
cowardly murder is worse than the
theft, a double crime does not mend
matters a particle, and more lives will
doubtless be lost before the end is seen.
The World-Herald of Monday even
ing says that John Bradbury, Sam. Wal
ters and another man whose name the
authorities refuse to reveal, are sup
posed to be connected with the case.
The latter party has scars on his right
hand which were made by Miss Mc
Whorter while he was choking Scott in
the carriage.
Xow on Trial.
The meaning of the two elections as I
interpret them is that the mass of the
people are opposed alike to prohibitory
tariffs and to free trade, and that thev
demand a system of protection that will
be equally beneficial to labor nnd to
capital. They will not lie satisfied with
any system that permits a few privileged
manufacturers to control the entire
sugar production of the country, and
compels the people to pay millions into
their treasury, and at the same time
allows them without penalty to close
their works and throw thousands of
laborers out of employment whenever
they desire to raise the price of their
product and gamble in their watered
stocks.
Wo are now on trial in Kansas and in
the nation. We have a great opportunity
and we shall be judged with inexorable
justice. By economy of administration,
by wise, courageous and conservative
policies, we may commend ourselves to
public favor and our tenure of power
may be indefinitely prolonged. But if
we "prefer to perish by precedent rather
than 1 saved by innovation" our exalta
tion will be brief.
The issues of today nre well defined
and must be met with vigor. The ques
tion of protection is settled. Bimetallism
is at the front as the basis of a more
elastic, copious and stable circulating
medium. To this must be added the
establishment of justice in the relation
between employers and employed, and a
more equitable distribution of the bur
dens and lienefits of society.
The republican party is competent to
deal with these great, problems of the
present and the future, as it has success
fully met and solved the problems of the
past. It has a history. It has great ex
perience and trained leadership. It rep
resents the courage, the conscience, tho
convictions, the aspirations and the
brains of the American people. We shall
succeed because we have succeeded. Our
ultimate mission is to secure the indus
trial independence of a continental re
public John J. Ingalls.
A single county of Montana is about
as large as all the New England states
together save Maine. Cherry county,
Nebraska, is nearly as lWrge as New
Jersey, and one county in Arizona is
nearly as large as Vermont and New
Hampshire. One county in Wyoming
exceeds by 200 square miles the area of
Vermont, and any one of twenty far
western counties is almost double the
area of Delaware.
Ohio spends $13,000,000 a year for
education, and about all 6he has to show
for it is 150,000 republican majority and
Bill McKinley in tho governor's chair.
New York Mercury.
No; it has no Tammany, no Lexow
committee, no Governor with a white
wash brush. Its political bosses are in
the penitentiary or on the way there.
Poor old Ohio, who "spends S13,000,000
for education!" No wonder that grieves
the organ of Tammany. Inter Ocean.
The President glorifies the policy
which encourages imports. Everything
imported to take the place of something
we can produce in this country takes
that much from the labor of the country
and by that much impairs the national
wealth. The President and the politi
cians of his party are unable to appre
ciate this, bnt the people have come to
understand it, and their improved under
standing accounts for the landslide of
1894.-Wheeling,-W. Va., Intelligencer.
It costs one dollar a ton to transport
Rock Springs coal to Omaha. The cost
of mining and handling is less than a
dollar a ton. Yet the people of Nebraska
have for years been compelled to pay $7
a ton for it. When the Sheridan mines
were opened by the B. & M. road it was
hoped that-legitimate competition would
compel a redaction of prices at the hands
of the Union Pacific, bnt it has ended in
a vain hope. Four dollars a ton would
be a fair price for Wyoming coal laid
down in Omaha. Bee.
Some one has very truthfullv remark
ed that of all men, lawyers, in their study,
should bo accurate and comprehensive,
and their acquirements all but universal.
In a case in Pennsylvania the other day
n young lady had sued a railroad com
pany because that in walking over a
crossing at Norristown at 6:30 in tho
morning or Feb. 14. '03, the engine not
displaying a light, nor signaling with
whistle or bell, she had been injured,
and the question turned upon the exact
time thsit darkness gives place to dawn.
Several astronomers and other exnerts
testified, and matters of information not
generally known were brought out and
the young lady received a verdict of
$23,000 in her favor. With a less com
petent attorney to manage her case, the
proof would probably not have been even
thought of. Tho lawyer should not only
be well informed as to scientific facts,
bnt he should have the mathematician's
faculty of eliminating the less important
features of his problems, and looking at
the essential matter in controversy and
concentrating his attention on that.
Handy Andy.
Kansas City Journal: It may be that
Mr. Carnegio reduced wages in order
that ho may hereafter make armor plate
without blowholes. We do not believe
Mr. Carnegie is unscrupulous enough to
go on making blowhole armor when it
is no longer possible to market it.
Chicago Times: Tho Carnegio com
pany has cut down the wages of the men
who stood by it two years ago when their
fellows struck and helped Mr. Frick to
"smash the labor organizations." Now
they are grumbling. What in the world
did they suppose Carnegie and Frick
wanted to smash labor organizations for?
Chicago Herald: Andrew Carnegie's
attempt to intimidate Secretary Herbert
was less signal in success than his refu
sal peacefully to adjust his disputes at
Homestead. Secretary Herbert had no
favors to ask of, none to extend to, the
monopolist, and ho must soek in the
courts, if he wants it. navment for in.
ferior plates the secretary will not pav
fcr.
An extraordinary horseless carriage,
which is not electric, but propelled bv
steam, is an innovation in France. It is
built of tubes, which are incased in a
light frame-work, and therefore, not seen.
These tubes form the tank to supply the
water direct to the cylinders, for there is
no boiler. The water is conducted into
two little tubes with closed ends, over
oil-lighted wicks no larger than those of
a duplex lamp. These supply steam for
the cylinders sufficient to propel a car
riage for four persons at the rate of
fifteen miles an hour over level ground,
and three or four miles an hour up ordi
nary road grades. The wheels are fitted
with bicycle spokes, and have solid
rubber tires. A coachman sits in front
before a pair of upright handles not un
like those of a bicycle, with which he
steers. The first cost of these carriages
is about $1,000, bnt the kerosene wick is
a cheap horse, and costs uothiug to keep
and little to make go, j
A party of capitalists from Lincoln
and Chicago are looking over the rail
road situation in Wyoming. It seems
that the Burlington people have their
eye on the acquisition of the Oregon
Short Line. The Vanderbilta want an
outlet to the Pacific coast By extension
of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri
Valley road from Casper to Opal station
in Uinta count', a distance of about 400
miles a connection could be made, and a
preliminary survey has already been
made for a greater part of the distance.
This would give the Vanderbilts one of
the greatest trans-continental lines in
the cotintrv.
We Sweep the World.
It is an old saying that a "new broom
sweeps clean" bnt when we say "we
sweep the world" we mean that among
all the railways of the world none stands
higher in the estimation of the public, in
all especial points, than the Chicago,
.Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. It is the
only line west of Chicago which runs
electric-lighted, steam-heated and vesti
buled trains between Chicago, St. Paul
and Minneapolis, and between Chicago
and Omaha. Try it. F. A. Nash,
Gen'l. Agent, 1504 Farnam St, Omaha.
W. S. Howell,
Trav. Passenger and Freight Agt.
CoHnty Printing.
The Journal is one of the four news
papers of the county selected by the
present county board of supervisors to
publish for them.
One county board is not constituted
like another, always, party considera
tions vary, chairmen vary, members of
committees are not uniform in their
knowledge of affairs, and thus it hap
pens that what constitutes publishing
for the county varies along with the rest
of the variations.
Sometimes, at the first annual meeting
of the board in January, publishers are
requested to present bids for "such legal
notices as are required by law to be pub
lished in a newspaper of general circula
tion in the county," and this would in
clude supervisors' proceedings, road
notices, tax-list, the county treasurer's
semi-annual statements, the estimate of
expenses, the notice for supplies to be
furnished the county.
Sometimes publishers nre requested to
place bids for publishing such legal
notices required to be published in a
newspaper, ana which are "at the dis
posal of the board." And it has several
times been contended that the road
notices, the county treasurer's semi-annual
statements (and perhaps some oth
ers that we do not just recall), are not
"at the disposal of the supervisors," but
are "at tho disposal" of the officer in
charge, whoever he may be.
The past year four newspapers have
been publishing the supervisors' pro
ceedings, and the tax-list, The Columbus
Journal, the Columbus Telegram,-the
Columbus Wochenblatt and the Humph
rey Democrat, each being allowed one
third legal rate, making a cost to the
county of four-thirds of one full legal
rate.
The legal (or statute) rate for tho pro
ceedings is three and one-third cents a
line, which gives one and one-ninth cents
a line to each of the papers mentioned.
Tho statute rate for the delinquent tax
list is 20 cents for each description of
land and 10 for each town lot, and the
rate to each paper is six and two-third
cents for land, three and one-third for
town lots.
Outside of one item, we lelieve, The
Journal (though one of the contract
papers), has been given none of the
printing at the one-third rate except
supervisors' proceedings and tax-list.
The road notices, etc., have been placed
elsewhere, as not at the disposal of the
board, whether nt the one-third rate or
not we havo not ascertained, but we
most respectfully insist, not only as a
tax-payer but as a contract-publisher for
tho county, and a business manager of a
business institution, that the county,
which pays the bills, ought to have any
benefits there are in competition, and
that public work is not a private clutch.
official printing.
People who observe business matters
in a business way and give any further,
penetrating thought to it will have
noticed that almost all the legal notices
emanating from the county judge's office
are placed with the papers of the county
judge's particular brand of political
faith. We would infer from appearances
that Judge Ilensley is a democrat, which
of courso he has a right to be, but, vot
icithslaniling, never the less, parties in
interest, widows, orphans, debtors, who
have hard work to meet their obligations
and can't meet them, and must submit
to be sued, sometimes having little or
nothing left, and they, above all others,
should have the right graciously accord
ed to them of making tho best terms
they can, at the lowest rates they can.
We presume that Judge Ilensley would
say he didn't care a continental where
notices are printed, just so the work is
done right, and we propose to see to it,
so far as lies in our power, that at least
widows and orphans, especially of the
poor, shall have a cut rate, just as well
as the county or the city, and then let it
le understood that the party in interest,
those who pay the bills, themselves direct
where the publishing shall be done.
Certainly, an official (and those remarks
apply to the county sheriff as well as the
county judge and all the rest of them)
has no right to compel the tax-paying
public, or expense-paying heirs' or
orphans to pay the highest rate that can
be by law exacted, when a low rate can
be secured that will be just as effectual.
Now we do not understand and do not
say that these officials fix the fees, but,
let them alone, and let the matter go
through the channels fixed bv them.
nnd the bills will come in at the full
legal rate, 10c a lino for the first time
and 5c a line for each subsequent time,
with 25c for each affidavit attached.
Here is a sample of what a little com
petition does for the city, and if it is
good for a wealthy city like Columbus
(which makes no deduction for a pub
lisher's occupation tax or his other
taxes and makes him pay as mnch for
water as do other people which is all
right), why competition ought to be
good for the lowering of expenses to the
widowB and orphans of the poor. Last
year The Journal printed the ordi
nances and notices of the city for 3c a
line, and one of our force attended very
nearly every meeting of the council,
almost as certainly as did any member
of the council, took notes of tho pro
ceedings, wrote them up, after which the
men of the office set them up in typo and
they were published, all of which was
done without a cent of expense to the
city. This year, tho Telegram, on a
competitive bid with The Journal cut
away down to (if we remember rightly)
Vi cents a line. They do not, however,
make a rule of attending the council
meetings, and our (at present occasional)
reports of the proceedings are so satis
factory that they reproduce them with
out having the labor of attending the
meetings, and for the publishing of
which they, of course, like us last year,
get no pay except the satisfaction of
good done "virtue is its own reward"
surely, in this case.
The point we wish to emphasize is
that the public should not be allowed
to discriminate against any newspaper
or newspapers on a merely business
proposition; newspapers should not be
compelled by the pressure of unjust
conditions to discriminate in favor of
rich city or wealthy county, and against
poor widow's and needy orphans the
Telegram or The Journal (or any other
paper in the county) can well afford to
clip some from the regular, legal, max
imum rate, if some method can be de
vised whereby the printing for county
and city, through judge and sheriff and
treasurer, and county clerk and district
court clerk and superintendent of schools
can be fixed at living, reasonable rates.
Let the county supervisors (whose
office is one of honor rather than emolu
ment, whose bonds are largo and wages
comparatively small), start in with their
work the coming year on the principle
that they are the first conservators of the
county's welfare; that, as it is they who
must approve bills, and they who must
order warrants drawn for their pay, they
have the right of direction and contract.
Let other bill-payers work on the same
principle with all the county offices.
Let us make Nebraska's motto, "Equal
ity before the law," an honest maxim of
conduct not only for newspapers and
toward newspapers, but for everybody.
GROVER'S OWN PROFESSION.
-i
Bow His Policy of Destruction Hm In
creased the Business of the Lawyer.
It is fortunate for the "legal profes
sion that the president of the United
States is a lawyer, fie has taken good
care of his own kind since March, f89S.
The lawyers of New York have not for
gotten that the president took care of
their interests, and whenever a meeting
THROWN WHERE IT BELONGS.
Wheatland. Wyo.
There is no finer agricultural section
in all this broad western country than
can be found in the vicinitv of the beau
tiful little town of Wheatland. Wyom
ing, ninety-six miles north of Cheyenne.
Immense crops, never failing supply of
water, rich land, and great, agricultural
resources. Magnificent farms to be had
for little money. Beached via the Un
ion Pacific system. E. L. Lomax,
Gen'l Pass, and Ticket Agent. Omaha,
Nebr. 0jan-5t
OUS.G.BECHEK.
LEOPOLD JGGI.
Established 1870.
II. F.J. HOCKENBEKGEB
1.SIHHEKN8EN.
BECHER, JCGGI & CO.,
REAL - ESTATE - LOANS - INSURANCE,
And ISeal Estate.
COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA.
to JSHSSSS N FARMS Bt l0We9t "" f iQtereSt' n 8hort or ". I mant9
the most liberal in rise. Lomps adfnteH AnH ..TmtiV ..Vr.i "J .VlT. VlM- Unr rHrm IoIicie nt
Notary Public always in office.
Farm and city property for sale.
aiaae collections of foreign inheritances and sell stenmshio ticket
of Europe
to r.r.d from nllnmu
lan'91-tf
THE LAWYER 1892.
was called or a rally was necessary to
support some un-American act of Mr.
Cleveland's his brother lawyers rolled
up in good shape to shout approval or
sign petitions, even though they had to
"swallow perjury and lies." When
business was prosperous in 189i. people
had but little use for lawyers unless to
extend their business, enlarge their fac
tories or enter upon now undertaking;:.
Many lawyers had many idlo days in
1893. Hut it has been different in 1898
and 1894. Tho lawyers have been rush
ed with business. Failures, strikes,
STATEMEXT OF THE COXOITIOX OE
T1IE
Commercial - Bank
-1 Columbus, in the State of Nebraska.
at the elose of business
Deeember , M)i.
UESOCKCES.
Loans and Discounts $ iriO.Oftt M
Overdraft, secured and unswnred... 2,YM tKt
Due from National Hanks 11,210 7i
Hanking House, furniture and fix
tures 11.33rt (
t urrent expen.-cs ami lasts paid t.Oli US
Other real estate .vi -7
Chocks and other ra.-.h items 7.VS V
Hills of other lanl::i i,vj7 U)
Fractional paper currency, nickel-,
act! cents . i;j to
Sivcie 3,S ti.1
iA-ffil-t wider notes 2.UT.0 01)
12 Tajes
Every
A"oek.
Total .
...$li0,l2 !'7
IfWHSm ill
rSSRr
. .- -
Sstm
I.IU1II.ITIE.S.
("aiiititl Stock iaid in SiO.OOO CO
Undivided profits 12.1U7 ."i0
Individual deposiin buliject check 2.",7l'.l tSt
Demand certificate: of dcM)Mt 7,U'iO Srt
Time certificates of deposit T.4,711 SCi
Total $i'.s0,U: .r;
State ok Nkmuska, )
County of Watte, ) fcs:
I. Clark (iray. cashier of the ahove-nnmed
bank, do to!ecinly swear that above statement is
true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
... , Clark firtw. Carrier.
hul-.crih-d and sworn to lierore me this 5th
day of January, leftl.
V. M. CoRXKLirs,
., . . Notary I'ublic.
Jly commission expires February l lti-lt.
The Omaha
Weekly Bee
65 Cents Per Year.
The largest, brightest and best
Newspaper published in the west.
The Bee for 1895 will be a better paper than ever before.
Special Features
REPORT OF THE CONDITION
.foS.
THE LAWYER. 1804.
bankruptcies, mortgages, transfers
of
property, settlements, bills to collect
all theso things furnish good pickings
for the lawyers. They are tho result of
au un-American free trado policy that
ruins American enterprise and checks
American progress. The Democratic
president's policy lias brought forth
abundance for the lawyer. It is no won
der that the lawyer trots out with the
importer to do honor to free trado De
mocracy. False Prophet Again.
It is about time that the New York
Herald gave up its business as a proph-
er, ior a uigger 1001 propnet never
wasted printer's ink. We remember the
marvelous prosperity that was to follow
the repeal of the Sherman silver pur
chasing law, and we remember the mar
velous prosperity that didn't follow it.
Still later the settlement of the tarilT
question by Democracy was to work in
etautaneous miracles of abundance for
everybody, according to this fool proph
et. Yet soon after its pet bill to reduce
tho wages of American labor dowu to
tho French rate had become a law we
find the following headlines in tho un
reliable sheet:
WALL, STREET'S SETBACK.
a reaction in stocks follows the ekact-
siext of the new tariff law.
no instant revival in manrfacturino or
trade Circles reflected in
the monet market.
The Herald can hardly be called one
of "God's prophets of the beautiful,"
but rather of tho ridiculous.
or T:ir
Columbus State Bank,
ajv coLramus,
In the State of Nebraska, at the elose of
business, Deeember 2, .o;.
C3.C22. rrs.em.tor
iie fo.ra.ii.
Special subjects for Women.
Special subjects for Children.
Special subjects for the Farm ami the Farmer
One or more sjoou stories each ivrck for every
body in the family.
Reliable market reports.
Together with the News from all our the world
Ann an mr less man any other Weekly
the country.
paper in
Send (J."
) cent money order. oniv. nr.l.M- .. i,..i- .!.....
.... ' i ....... ... ..iiun iil.til
v,virj uiil.--. fi. Ti 1 t
., ..... ., . ..... -v, ij.nuii. u jkuu .xi-im suver or eiirroiiev
you send it at your own Vik. Address orders to . !
tor a
ivi.-ter it or
THE BEE PUBLISHING CO.,
Omnlia, INTeb.
M. C. CASSIN. jHIJGH HUGHES
PUOPBIETOK OF TUF.-
KKKOUIU-KS.
Loans unil discount
OvertlrtifN. ritiuviI :nul niiM-nral
Other htwlcs, bond., ami uiortKatjoa
Dut from Xntionnl Hanks
Ilankini; hoiifso, furniture nml fixture
("urront exnen-cs nnd taxes paid
('Infks ami other cii-th itemti
Ijillsof othor Hankr
Fractional iaiT mrrenpy, nic-keln,
ami vnt-.
Sipcii
:,2ir. 57
lfifl 69
Kfira 4.r.
ii.i'.n r3
l.ISS 27
-l 40
S,VM )
.") VI
Total,
...Sl'.C.i.V. W
Omaha Meal
Marks
Tan furnish you with
the BKST
Fresh and
Salt Meats..
I.II11L1TIKS.
Caiiital Mock imM in
UmlivMeil prolix
Individual depo.-itu Mihjoct to cheoli
IU-nuinri certificates of depo.it
Tinif rei tilicates f deposit
.$ &J.WO 00
7.W3 411
24.121 n)
. 18W 20
. 61,128 01
Total Jl'.ii 7rr Wi
SttkofNkbihsk, )
County of I'latie p:
I, M. HriiKKcr. cashier of the nltove-nauiml
hank, do Mdemnlj twear that the uboe btnte
inwit is true to the beat of my knowledge ami
,Ki' . ' .. . . M- HnCCJOFlL
hutiscrihed and Hworn to before me this .'.th
day of January, 1S'.".
11. I-'. J. IIOCKENBF.RRF.li.
Notary I'uIjIic.
Game and Fish in Season.
fiSylliKuest market prieeu paid for
Hides and Tallow.
THIRTEENTH ST.,
COLUMBUS, - - NEBRASKA.
airtf
I i
Luier.Lii, Miles, Doors,
LOUIS SCHREIBER,
STATEMENT
Of the runitilitm of the (olin.ihitx Lutul, Lmni
tnttl liitililhuj Ax.OK-uiti.ht f f.iluiul.n., AV-'''"'-ii,
.i the Slit ihiy ; lierehttirr, l!'i.
ASSETS.
JW If flf Km l!S (3 WNsT
JSIIlBfllTJtl rl mrm
IIMIlfcliK 'II a win
iMfllffSnU wB Ell
"Mil 1 1 J I lm mr
IMbBIBH.m7J 1 m I f 19 kI
Fimt inortratie loans Sfi'.iSOO 00
Iritis secured ,j Htock of this asso
ciation i.-.mo 00
Kxien!-eH and taxes paid 1.7t;- 7."i
Cas.li with treasurer r'ii 80
Bralli itiWartato
SELLS THE DEERINO
WINDOWS,
BUNDS, LIME, Ktr., ami
eterythinu: kept in the
LUMBER LINE.
South or r.
Nebraska.
R. R. Depot, Columhtio,
10may-ljr
SelfBiMer
9
Mower.
Tluri arp
Mrennth i
reach. "T
lrfect
needed.
when
be
Total .
LIABILITIES.
tock. Pi
Premiums paid
Interest received
Fines collected
Kutry and transfer fees.
.. $s7,W2 Ki
c.2ti ir.
13.07SI 70
l.lftl (Xt
7:?i so
S.S7..V2 i
Total
St te of Xkiih sk v. )
Platte Comity. '
I, Henry HockcnberKer, f-eeretarv of
machines, strom;
Kvery leter within wiv
Hilllllllt irt ti tut .rn.nl Tl.r.
binder has U-en reduced to a few simple piece
weiKliini! together only ItSO poutds. See the
Deerini; liefore ou buy another.
WURDEMAN BROS.,
Proprietor of tint
Shop on Olivo Street, Columbus, Nek,
four doors south of Rorowiak's.
2:5maytf
the
above named a.-fociation, do oolemnlr bvvear
that the foreKoing t-tatemeut of the condition of
said association, l.s true and correct to the best
of in j know ledge and lielief.
IIfkkv IIocKKNnnnnEn,
....... . Secretary.
bnln-criltvd and nwom to lefore me thisTith
day of January, WX.
Leopold JAEnni.
, , Notary I'ublic.
Approved:
1 1. A. Scott. )
f Directors.
Cotton-Seed
Meal
OOT.TrMBTTS
Planing - Mill
i
AT
I. A. Wiley,
I j. (1. ZlNSECKF.lt,
J'jnnRt
liKtJAIi xotici:.
In the District court Plat to county. Xehraeka
In the matter of the estate of Paul Pohl a
minor.
A CHANGE OF COAT.
The TJn-Americans.
The American people are the largest
coqsumers of goods in the world; con.
fleqnently ours is the best market, and
naturally other countries are anxious to
secure as much of our trade as possible.
Wo do not blame them for advocatinna
policy of free trade for the United
States. It is to their best interests to
do bo. Bnt we do blame the men, born
in this country and claiming to bo
American citizens and patriots, who can
with bold and barefaced assurances pro
claim that a policy which thev know
will benefit foreign countries must of
necessity be beneficial to our own coun
try. Such men may be American citi.
zens, but they are decidedlynot Ameri
can patriots.
Could Not Find One.
The next day after the Maine election
A Democrat was standing by tho road
side when ho saw a Republican friend
approaching. Expecting to be gibed, the
Democrat began nervously to poke with
the toe of his boot in the leaves by the
roadside.
"What are you looking for?" asked
the Republican. ' 'Another Democrat, '
was tne qmcic reply.
Canadian Lumber Coming.
Canadian lumber is daily moving
through Colebrook, N. H., to American
markets, and mills on this side of the
border are shut down. The American
workingmen are not benefited by free
lumber.
THh caue came on for hearing upon the peti
,. i Uon,of Emil "M' Knnrdian of the pfctateof
I aul Pohl, a minor, praying for license to eell
the southeast ouarter of Section tirnnt,- f i
OEHLRICH BROS.,
S1.35 per Hundred
Pounrls.
Township .thirty North. Range seventeen webt of
the nth Principal Meridian, and lot No. four in
block No, eight in the village of Newport Hock
... V.. I t. ...np. . '' ""V
.uuuij, .n-uiiinn.il, or u sunicient amount or the
said property to bring the sum of S3C0, for tho
payment of the debts of the said minor and for
the charges of managing his estate, there being
"': ;. "', riKiua r creuiiH Deionging to
said minor in tho hands of the baid guardian to
ij.i n,i;u ueuis nuu cuarge?.
It is therefore ordered that tho heirs and nest
of kin, and all persona interested in said estate
appear before ma at chambers in the ciy of
(olnmbus, Platte county, Nebraska, on the 3lt
day of .lannary, 15iJ, at ten o'clock a. m., to
show cause why a license thonhl not lie granted
to sftifj guardian to sell so much of the nliove
described real estato of said minor aa shall be
necessary to pay br.id debtc and charge-.
It is further ordered that n copy of thin order
to show cause be duIiHsIimI for fnnr clonic:....
weeks in the C OLCMBCs Journal (a nesiajK.T
of general circulation is eaid Platte conntv)
prior to the 31e,t day of January, 159."..
Dated this llth day of December. 1S91
.. . j.i.sulliVa.v
'-"ec-l Judge.
Best Thing for Milch Cows.
D.
T. Maktys, M. D. ( d. kvans, .
F. H.Oeeu, M. D.
MANUFACTURE
Sasli, Doors.
Kliiiils. 3If)iililiiijs,
Stair Work, Kt.
fcty-Keroll Sawing, Turning. IIi.ii.se Kiniahiug.
in fact planing mill work of all kinds. We art
prepared to do machine tcnairini;. nn.l iron
lathe work.
J ""Estimate made at once Tor jou on nny
. thing you wish in our line, laugtf
Dr. CLARK'S INSTITUTE
FOIl TIIK TIlKATtlKNT OF TIM:
Drink Habit .
Also Tobacco, Morphine and
other Narcotic Habits.
XPrivate treatment given if desired.
COLUMBUS,
I).
DOCTORS
MARTYN, EVANS & GEER,
CONSULTING
Physicians - and - Surgeons
ToHt. MarjV Hospital and St.
Francis Academy,
12ni.rtf
NEBRASKA
1'OR GOOD
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
CWXAT
"THE NEW
On Kleventh st
lor family trade a specialty,
2maytf
COLUMBUS,
NEBRASKA.
SALOON "
t. Imported and domestic winea
lea specialty.
LCCIISf WIEU A MCSStCLMAV
Cor. Kleventh and M St.
LKCAL NOTICE.
YTo Lorenzo Joseph, non-resident defendant:
OU nro hereby notified that on the 13th day
of December. ISM, Hannah Joseph filed a
Ktition against yon in the district court of
atte county. Nebraska, tho ohiwt ami nmrcmr
which nre to obtain a divorce from jon on the
ground that you have willfully abandoned the
plaintiff without good cause, for the term of two
jears last past. Also for alimony, attorney fees
and for tho custody of the children. Yon are
requested to answer said petition on or before
Monday, the ttli day of February. 1X
., , , HANNAH JOSEPH.
By MrALMSTEK .V Couxki-ics. Plaintiff.
Her Attornejs. -t-Dec-4
United States Examining SurgeonB, Assistant
Surgeons Union Pacific. O..N.& B.II.Kailwaj...
, TOaice "Pen night nnd day. Telephone No.
IV. Two blocks north Union Pacific Depot.
UNDERTAKING!
ALBERT & REEDER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Office oier Firct National Hank,
uiuiH!!lll
MARTY t ENGELMIN,
UKA LEttM ix
FRESH
AND SALT MEATS,
Eleventh Street, Columbua, Neb
COL-CMHPS,
Sugar Factory Wanted.
The board of trade in Washington has
pronounced in favor of encouraging
manufacturing establishments to locate
in the national capital.
31jantf
V. A. MrAf.f.iSTKU.
-VEIIRASKA.
V. M. t'OUNF.LIl'K.
iJcALLISTER & CORNELIUS.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
CAKltY ALL KINDS OF
Itiirial (ioods,
Do Embalming,
Conduct Funerals.
tar-Have the fineet Hearse in the county.
FRED. W. HERRICK,
wrtn?hAHt?:aa', Columbus, Neb.
17jan3m
NEW SHORT LINE
COLU1IBCS,
Sljantf
BBASKA.
NEW DEPARTURE.
I"AVK TONVLUDED TO ENTER INTO'
contract to nut out orchards, do all the I
work and have fall chare of the same from
luiccujuie years,! to ran all risks of losses.
TO
24oct3a
SEATTLE
JOHN TANNAHILL, 1 FRANCIS, Gen'l Pass'r Agent, OMAHA. NEB
V
i
t