xxr $ v. . 0? S5 i - -.- &V- r.r V, l , ! 1 fc I C0lunrbus gottmaL Taaoad-clna awf! Itw BY WZDITMOAT XT m:. k. turner & oo. Columbus, Neb. nmwmraintra: One year, br'mail, postage prepaid .. . . Biz months $L .75 .40 gataMi toAdrmacB. .. m HjiiMMiiiiiiiwiinnii fm " rr ttoa. TO WbsamfeKxOan c&aac tfcrfr plwot -sVacetfaeyafcoaldatOBce aotify u by letter o: portal card. ma both their former and Up- pBi the hitiit on our if "'"ft ' from wuicj., beima; in type, we each week print, either on t r wrapWoroatkauiia of yoor Jodkkal, th ate to which jour obecriptioa iijl r eonated for. Beauttanees bool 1 ""? User by os.rder, registered letter or draft tbtatotUortoof JLtT0BOTaACo. SO OOSUSrOHUBH X. All rma '-''"' to aocore ettantioa. ioof J accompanied by tne fall name of the writ-: We reserve the right to reject any mcauccr:! and cannot agree to return tLe same. o .- a correepoadeat in every ecbooUhriit -Platte eoaaty, oae of good lodgment, ati.i liable in every way. Write plain!;', eacu i" separately. QUeae fleet. WEDNESDAY. APBIL S..1BS5. Nebraskaxs are now known aa 'Tree Planters." The floral emblem of the state of Nebraska is the golden rod. Chicaoo is urging that measures be adopted to effectually take the police department out of politics. The czar of Russia has ordered 500, 000 rubles to4be devoted to a fund for the relief of newspapermen and authors. The Omaha Bee advocates the build ing of an electric tramway between Omaha and Fremont for carrying U. S. mail. The Omaha people who have moved to Chicago are about to start a club. There are many Nebraskans at the head of prominent bnsiness enterprises in Chicago. Miss Axsa. Dickinson was in the Unit ed States court at Philadelphia seeking damages amounting to $25,000. Four years ago she was sent to the Danville state insane asylum. C. M. Hansen, a car inspector, was Btruck by a switch engine in the North western yards at Clinton, Iowa, Satur day morning and instantly killed, hiB body being terribly mangled. Mrs. Mamie Miller, a young married woman living near Toddville, Iowa, was found by her husband Saturday morning hanging from a rafter in the kitchen. It is supposed she had become deranged over religion. Maggie Tiller of Chicago has been condemned to be hanged for the murder of Charles Miller. The condemned woman is colored and if the sentence iB carried out hers will bo the first execu tion of a woman that ever occurred in Chicago. Children of the Lincoln schools are preparing to commemorate the thirtieth anniversary of Lincoln's assassination April lth. A tree will be planted sym bolical of liberty and soil from overy state and territory in the union and from tho tombs of Washington and Lin coln is now lieing gat hered and will be sifted around the roots of tho tree. The senate and house passed the sugar and chicory bounty Friday not withstanding the governor's veto. Sixty votes were required in the honse, being three-fifths of all members, and twenty in the senate, whereas the bill received sixty-eight in the house and twenty-Bix in the senate. The five votes against it were cast by populists Bauer, Dale, Sprecher, Campbell and Stewart. On Good Friday next (April 12) the heavenly bodies which gravitate around the sun will be exactly in the same posi tion they occupied in the firmament the day Christ died on tho cross. It will be the first time such n thing has occurred since the great day, just 1862 years ago. That was the thirty-third year of the christian era which dates from the birth of Jesus Christ New York Record. Secretary Morton declares that the plow has been less improved than any other farm implement, and asks the 1000 students at the State University to invent a new plow. It does seem that something ought to be invented in the shape of a revolving digger that would go deeper and do more effective work in pulverising the soil than the plow does, and do it quicker than the plow a deep, fine seed bed. The days of corporal punishment in schools are past and the world is better for it. Such methods as that are brutal and inhuman and a disgrace to modern intelligence. The teacher who believes in such methods of punishment should not be permitted to teach. Slaves used to be beaten, but the idea of whipping children for breaking imaginary rules smacks to much of the brute order. Howells Journal. The first anniversary of the departure of Coxey's army was celebrated in Mas sillon, Ohio, March 26th. Carl Browne delivered an address recounting the story of his trials and triumphs. He said that only his intervention prevented his fol lowers from mobbing and hanging the newspaper correspondents in the heart of the AUeghenies. He was importuned to give up the grass walking enterprise by populist leaders, but refused. The French industry of icing milk, says the Baltimore Sun, is an original departure in tinned commodities. The milk is frozen and placed in block form in tins, and on the part of the purchaser requires to be melted previous to use Being hermetically sealed, the commqdis ty thus iced preserves its form until it is required, when a minute's exposure to the sun's rays or to the heat of the fire is all that is necessary to reduce it to a liquid condition. The Monthly Illustrator for April is a wonderful publication, especially inter esting to artists, but all can not help but be charmed with the pictures reproduced from the best artists. We quote from - some of the leading periodicals. "The handsomest magazine ever published." College Record. "The most artistic of magazines." Philadelphia Journal "Most lavishly illustrated magazine in mtence." Church Record. "Has no aaiiw N.Y. Advertiser. "A magazine waalworthperussL" Detroit Free Press. 1 Senatok Sloan made quite a speech in favor of naming Nebraska "The Tree Planters' State." The Nebraska Pioneer association, the State horticultural society, the State board of agriculture, the State dairymen's association, the State press association, and also the State lire stock and breeders' association had all endorsed the name and the sena tor closed by saying: "The name of a sister state was by legislative enactment pronounced 'Arkan saw.' Other states have in a like manner ndopted symbols suggestive of their ambitions and appar ent destinies. And why may not Ne braska by legislative authority, doff the undeserved stigmas of 'Coyote' and 'Bug Eater' and don the suggestive appella tion, Tree Planters, in line with the ambition of Nebraska husbandmen to replace the arid plains with alternate fields and groves, that the comfort of men may be assured by cooling the breezes of summer and tempering the rigor of winter's blast; that the rains of heaven may be reasonably controlled and the seasons of earth favorably modi fied. I trust that upon the roll call there will be no dissenting voice and thus baptize anew Nebraska with aname worthy her highest industrial hope and moving on to her manifest destiny shall recognize ns her best citizen the man who shall cause a tree to grow where only a blade of buffalo grass has thriven," Senator Mullin recently introduced in the senate of New York a bill prohib iting any. woman from appearing in tights or in any indecent costume at any place where male persons are assembled. An offense is deemed a misdemeanor and is punishable by imprisonment of not less than thirty days nor more than one year for each offense. Any person who procures any woman to so appear shall upon just conviction be punished by imprisonment of not less than three months nor more than a year, and upon each subsequent conviction shall be sen tenced to the state's prison for a term not less than two years nor more than five years, or to pay a line of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000. The posting of theatrical or other bills with indecent pictures is prohibited, as is also the publication of so-called high art pictures in any magazine, newspaper or other publication. Aug. C. Yocks sold his farm near Hos kins and went to Maryland with a view of purchasing land and remaining. He went to a point on the coast about 100 miles from Baltimore, near the mouth of the river which flows six hours one way and then reverses itself and flows Bix hours the other. Water could be obtain ed anywhere by sinking a barrel in the soil. The few soil tillers who exist there live mostly on clams and oysters, raising only enough corn for their own use. The only stock owned by a farmer consists of an ox or a mule, which is usually hitched to a two wheel cart when the native is compelled to move a quarter of a mile, as he is too lazy to walk even that short distance. The country and the people visited in that part of Maryland are two hundred years behind the times. Mr. Yocks arrived home yesterday and has made up his mind to purchase another farm and remain in Nebraska. Nor folk News. Gentlemen of the democracy, for your own sakes and tho sake of the country, give us a different set of men at the head of affairs. The southern brigadiers are not the kind of people to run this country. There is something greatly wrong with their way of doing business; they do not understand the country's needs, and t hoy wouldn't know how to manage for them any way. We have had enough foolish tinkering now with government matters, and it is high time that the country tnrn over a new loaf, and tnrn tho incapables out, clear out into the cold, cold air. where they will bo compelled to stay for the next generation. Let us have soma business sense again in the conduct of national matters. TnE interior department will no longer tolerate the illegal occupation of the lands of tho Omaha and Winnebago Indian reservations in Nebraska. The Flourney Live Stock and Real Estate Company and 160 parties who hold leases under it refused to abandon their claims when ordered. A bill has been filed by the United States attorney in Omaha asking for an injunction against all the lessees, together with 350 sub lessees nnder them, asking for an order restraining them from interfering with the Indian agent in the discharge of his duty toward the Indians. The few who are expected to resist will be promptly removed by force if necessary. Nerrafka has become quite a state for good horses goers. But such property is uncertain. D. B. Palmer, of Seward last Wednesday morning, lost a two-year old pacing colt, Hermes, as he was finish-j ing a half mile at about a 2:o0 gait, whei)... he staggered and fell dead upon the. track. A post-mortem showed the burst-" ing of a blood vessel in the brain. The. colt had shown a speed-equal to a in 2:08, ana gavV"every indication of making a two minute horse. The Re porter says he had repeatedly refused three thousand dollars for him. Missouri has made a start in the direction of pensioning school teachers. The legislature has just enacted a law authorizing the school board of St. Louis to retire male teachers at the expiration of thirty years' service and females at the expiration of twenty-five years' ser vice at half pay, provided the salaries do not exceed 8800 a year. The males get the worst of it as usual. But the law was passed at the instance of St Louis, which will at once proceed to put the pension system in effect. A man named Swanson at Clinton, Iowa, beheaded his 7-year-old son with a hatchet Friday night. The recent death of his wife and lack of work, it is believ ed, crazed him. As he cannot be found, it is believed by many that he has drowned himself. Several years ago he was for a short time an inmate of an insane asylum; latterly, though regarded as erratic, he was not considered dangerous. The Omaha Bee says that Congress man and Mrs. David Mercer left Thurs day evening in a private car for Califor nia. They will shortly sail for China, where they will remain for some time. The trip is taken for the benefit of Mrs. Mercer, her New York physician recom mending an ocean voyage as the only thing likely to benefit her health. THE ONE GREAT ISSUE FREE TRADE WAS LAID LOW IN LAST NOVEMBER'S ELECTION. Axw rTowTrytart Make the Car- ywacy Qaaetlea theSeapeseat Fries f FretecttoB. Mast Avoid Fallta lata the Trap Keep TJp Tariff Discaaatoa. The one great question at issue in the elections of last November was the tar iff, and the results of those elections marked the greatest victory in the his tory of protection. The echoes of that great victory have not ceased to rever berate, and yet already the tariff ques tion seems to have dropped out of the public mind. This is in a degree not unnatural, since no protective legislation is possi ble in the present congress. Bat there is great danger in letting the tariff drop so completely out of publio discussion. Free traders, who have seen the cause of free trade laid low in the recent elec tions, are only too glad to divert publio attention to some other question. It is well for protectionist leaders to be on their guard and not to be led away by the wiles of their eppouents. Free traders would gladly make a scapegoat of our currency system upon which to lay all the sins of their un American policy of free trade. This is but a repetition of the tactics which they pursued before the destructive Gor man bill was passed. The scapegoat then was the Sherman bilL To that they claimed was duo all the evils which bad overtaken the country since the elec tion of a free trade congress and a free trade administration. So successful were they that a special session of con gress was called for tho one purpose of repealing the Sherman law. The law was repealed, but distress and disaster were as widespread as ever. The people's eyes began to be opened to tho truo causo of the disaster which had come upou the country. The pas sage of tho Gorman bill finished the work of opening their oyes, and at the November elections the voters arose in their might to strike the deathblow to free trade. The free traders, defeated in a fair battle, now seek to weaken the effects of the great victory won by protection and are in full chase after another scape goat. This time the scapegoat is our whole currency system. To that ore laid all the evils, both new and old. This action on tho part of tho free traders is not surprising. The amazing thing is that some protectionist loaders have fol lowed the lead of their opponents, as they weronot beguiled into doing at the time of the repeal of the Sherman bill. At the speoial session of congress called to consider the repeal of that bill Senator Ledge offered a resolution to the effect that there ehonld be no tariff leg islation until 1895. To those who had accepted the clamor of the free traders as truth, and who laid the distress of 1893 to the Sherman bill, this resolu tion 6eemed irrelevant. But in that reso lution Senator Lodge had but voiced tho opinion of all protectionist leaders that tho disaster which had come upon the country was due solely to the threat of tariff reform which lay in the elec tion of tho present administration. It behooves protectionist leaders to be equally vigilant and outspoken now. The Difference. Tho Harrison administration met all calls for redemption of legal tenders, kept the gold reserve intact, paid off $148,000,000 of debt and had all the revenues it needed to pay the govern ment's way. But then it did not have tho Wilson-Gorman tariff for deficiency only. Now York Recorder. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher, whose eighty-second birthday will occur Aug. 16, has been obliged by financial strin gency to move from her comfortable little home at the corner of Hicks and Orange streets, Brooklyn, to a small flat in the Plymouth apartment house on Orange street. ADDITIONAL LOCAL. PERSONAL. Miss Kate Early was in Omaha last week. J. P. Hart was in Platte Center Tues day of last week. Mrs. J. S. Henrich is visiting friends at Platto Center. Miss Mary Lamb of Omaha is visiting friends in the city. Miss Jessie Swartsley is spending her vacation in Lincoln. Lee O'Donnell of St. Edward was in town Wednesday last. E. A. and F. H. Gerrard of Monroe were in the city Thursday. Miss Sarah Fitzpatriok went, down to Omaha Friday to visit several days. Mrs. Adolph Jaeggi has been confined to her room by sickness the past week. Miss Mnzotta Wheeler goes Thursday to Spencer, Nebraska, where she will teach school. Miss Mazie Elliott has returned from Kansas City, where sho has been visiting for some time. Mrs. M. Stonesifer and son Herman, go, to Humboldt, Nebr., this week to make that their future home. Will. Lehman returned Monday to xoncoln, where he is attending the State Jniversitv, after several days visit at M. K. TurloWOPghter Lida returned ThnredoyfrXpakdale, where the young lady had oeen visiting the past five months. Rev. Bross, State superintendent of the Congregational church, was in the city Monday. He is an uncle of Rev. Bross of the Methodist church. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Ryan, who have been living in Omaha the past year, are expected to return to Columbus soon, Mr. Ryan hnving been transferred by Union Pacific authorities. City Politics. Quite a number of people of all parties assembled at the Maennerchor hall Mon day evening in the interest of the Citi zens' ticket Mr. Griffen presided and the proceedings were good-natured in the main. Mr. Gray made the first and principal address of the evening, going over some what in detail matters of municipal government during the time he had been connected therewith, about six years. He didn't see why it was necessary that thore should be so much partisanship in the election of city officials; it would certainly be better for all concerned if matters, at all times, were decided on their merits, and not because of suppos ed party considerations. He instanced a contest on the city printing whore one method of deciding it was to allot it to the three English papers of the city at a one-third legal rate for each, but where it was given by a party vote to the Tele- 1 gram alone. He remembered the pres ent mayor (then councilman,) and the present county attorney, then also coun cilman, as favoring and. engineering through the partisan decision. Men elected to office, and nnder no obligation when in office to ask them selves any question except whether what was proposed was for the welfare of the public, would give the public better service. The speaker believed that the present mayor, had he been elected by influences aside from the court house ring, would have given us a reasonable city administration, but from the very first it was not to be so. The mayor appoints certain officials and those appointments ought to be confirmed by the council. The first appointment that camo was that of city attorney, and the council held their breath. After a while some one moved a confirmation, and it was made. Next came that of chief of police. After the announcement, the council was ns quiet as the grave; the silence became nuraensome, and was finally broken by the mn or himself sug gesting that if the oou-i : lid not wish to act upon it at once they could leave it for the next meeting, and it was done. The speaker then went into the particu lars of all that matter. How that, not withstanding the fact that Mr. Brandt's appointment as chief of police was never confirmed, he has exercised the functions of chief of police, under an appointment as special, Mayor Phillips thus violating the law which requires that appoint ments 6hall be made by the mayor by and with the advico and consent of the council. When the council failed to qualify, the mayor should have made another appointment, but he did not. He seemed to be under some ante-election obligations that he considered more binding on him to fill, than to appoint a man whom the council could with some conscientiousness vote to approve. Mr. Gray said he was not specially favorable to saloons, but when there was an occupation tax assessed against saloons, he did not believe in allowing some of them to escape, and compelling others to pay. We have some saloon keepers in the city who honestly en deavor to comply with tho terms of the law, in every particular, and they pay their license, havo always paid it, while some others have been allowed in one way and another, to run their bnsiness with a $250 advantage over those in the same line of business. This is not fair. If we don't like the law, let ns change it, but so long as we have it, let ns live by it and treat all alike. Ho had thought there was room for an honost, faithful effort to have the ordinances of the city enforced as they should be. He had as little use as any one, he said, for narrow, contradicted ways of looking at things. He insisted on the right of free opinion for himself, und freely accorded toothers. The manhood is the man. It is not so much what men say as what thoy do that counts. He then commended can didate Johnson, who was on the platform, as a man who attended strictly to uis own business, and who had the confi dence of his fellow-citizens. Also cen suring severely the action of officials of the express company in regard to bis candidacy and closed by saying that the contest he considered lay between John son, with all the considerations in his favor, and Phillips, with all the political strings he had to him a year ago. Shall it lx a question for the citizens of Co Inmbus to deride among themselves, a question of manhood, or must the honest citizens ask of political rings and cor porations whom they shall he permitted to place in oniee"; The office of mayor is no sinecure, it is a detriment, an injury to any man in his bnsiness, but when an express company Bays to a man, aa they have said to Mr. Johnson, if you do not step down, we will move you out, it is t:me for the public to take a hand, and see to it that the power of corporations to thus inter fere with the rights of citizeuship is curtailed, intimating that state legisla tion would be the wholesome way to reach them. Rev. De Geller was next to speak, and had not said but a few words when the lie was passed to him by Mr. Kilian (it seemed from statements made that Mr. Kilian had been attacking the preachers in tho Biene), and considerable interest was manifested for a little while, with loud cries of "Put him out," which were quieted by Mr. De Geller insisting on letting him alone and saying: 'I will speak as a gentleman, no matter what others may do." He, however, made no extended speech: reform, like charity, begins at home city, county, state and nation, and right here with our children is the place to begin our work. All citizens alike, whether native or foreign born, are interested in seeing that the laws of the conntry are upheld. Re ferring to the present movement for good government in the city of Colum bus, ho declared that it was not either a prohibition or a Know Nothing move ment. C. A. Brindley made a liberty speech, referring to the fighting qualities of the Greeks, the Romans, the Anglo-Saxons and our forefathers of the revolution and the veterans of the late war for the Union, and said it was just as necessary now that the people should defend themselves against the dastardly vil lains who undertook by foul means to defeat the welfare of the people. Mr. Chaplin said that since 1814 he had been a republican, and when asked what before that, ho told tho story about the boy's pups that had changed from democratic to republican, they had got their eyes open. James K. Polk opened the eyes of a good many democrats, and thoy have been getting a knowledge of national matters ever since. Mr. Johnson said if elected he would endeavor to qualify, and serve the people as best he could. Rev. Elliott told about going to Coun cil Bluffs and waiting upon the gentle men of the express company for which Mr. Johnson is working, and gave in brief their ultimatum, "ho can't run, or else he can't serve us." The idea con veyed was that it was a matter of busi ness on their part. They had been waited upon by parties from here. Mr. Spoerry, made several references to city government, stating among other things that tho same police we have now, under another mayor, would do all right; the police open or shut their eyes or wink, just as the mayor wishes them to, and are no better or no worse than the mayor is. There were a great many calls from certain parts of the audience for Kilian, and, although doubtless it was out of the line of the meeting to hare made any reference to Kilian's contest with the preachers, the presiding officer .thought it not out of place to give a few minutes, which Mr. Kilian occupied in telling the audience what he thought of the preach ers in politics, etc. Rev. Pulis showed considerable inter est in this phase of the proceedings. He is a small man, intellectual, wiry, incis ive, full of vim, and delivering his'thrusts straight out He referred to a person who had had much to say against preach ers taking part in public matters; said he had long ago learned that, having property, he was amenable to the laws of the land, paid taxes along with the rest of the people, and considered it an im pertinence in any man to suggest to him that because he was a preacher he was any the less a citizen, and entitled to all his rights as a citizen, just the same as anybody else. Who is this man? he wanted to know, and proceeded to say that he was an inscrutable providence. And do yon know what that is? Some thing you can't assign any reason for. He referred to Col. Tngersoll's saying once in regard to the Lord inflicting the cholera and Andrew Johnson upon this country at one and the same time, that it was like projecting n huge doubt serosa the sky of divine love, and for the hard times and this misfit administration and Kilian to lie put upon us at one time, seems unusually severe, or words to that effect If he was one of this man's near friends he would advise him to migrate; to the north pole, and to climb up to the top of the pole; sit down on its apex; sit there until he congealed to an icy and an enduring monument of sublime impudence. Tho political friends of Olaf John son, who has been supported for mayor by a very respectable number of citizens of Columbus, feel incensed over the in terference in his candidacy by the Pa cific Express Company, whose agent he is and has been at this place for some time. It is charged that when tho nom ination was first announced, a congrat ulatory letter was sent from headquar ters to Mr. Johnson, but that, afterwards, a delegation of business men, it is not known how many, went to the president of the company and demanded that Mr. Johnson be requested to withdraw from the campaign, under the threat, as we learn it, of the company's being boy cotted. Mr. Johnson did not withdraw from the campaign, and we suppose that developments will be awaited. In the meantime, however, it must be confessed that the men who calculated by this means to work defeat to the cause rep resented by Mr. Johnson, can feel assured that he will poll a larger vote than before. The American people like fair play in political matters, and there are at least a goodly ratio of adherents of parties of all names who would go out of their way to resent any interfer ence of this sort. It would not be at all surprising for a corporation like the express company to say that they would prefer that their employes would not accept office from anybody else, but to make fish of ono and flesh of another, and to succumb to every man in busi ness who may not ba suited in the poli tics of corporation employes is going quite a good deal too far. If it may be done in tho case of a non-partisan can didate, it may bo done in the case of a republican, and if it can be done in the case of a republican, there would be nothing to hinder that the democracy could have their just rights as free and independent American citizens inter fered with. Apply the same rule all around, and let it be a broad-gauge American rule, no narrow-minded, big oted, one-horse, picayune, disgraceful, pop gun politics. The Colurabni Summer Normal. era of this city have been planning a summer school for some time past and beingVenconraged by those wishing to attenuStuch a school they hare organized a Summer Normal. The faculty consists of Bix jachere: Belle M. MemUf-srincipal of thelligh school, has been elapted president; Mr. George Whaler, teacber of languages, nonres ident: I. H. Btttetl, principal of Oram mar school, secretary, and L. H, principal of First wrd, treasurer. he organization hasVakon steps advertise their school anclto lay all plans necessamr to conduct in tVs city n suc cessful Summer Normal.Hje school will open une 24 and continue for six weeks. ThV kindergarten andlphysical cnltnre department will be nmsr the management of Mrs. S. A. Brindley. j The Summer Normal will be open m all pupils of this citj from the 4th grade up. This will afforc an opportunity! for pupils backward any branch to Btrenfirtnen tneir weas points, xne students can pursue jult such studies as theyTTfaw think most profitable. Classes will be organized in all branches required for firstlgrade certificates. Many of the BubjectswiU be taught bt teachers specially prelared for their wok. Didac tics, Physical Culture, BotanyVShort hand and BoDWteeping, Comrlercial Arithmetic, LatinUnd KindergartAi will 1m subjects of spews! importance tb live teadheouwilling toNnakt profitable use of the bummer Norma. C. Stanley Brown will have cbargt of shorthand and typewriting. This school is fully organi&d, and, if encouraged or the people of Vie city, will surely be snCCessf ul. School Board. Board met at 4 o'clock Monday in regular session, President Henry in the chair, and members Galley, Lehman, Taylor and Turner present. Minutes of previous meeting were read and approved. The monthly report of Snp't Williams was read and placed on file. It shows an enrollment, since the beginning of the year, of 766; belonging the past month, 627; average daily attendance during the mosth, 579; visits of super intendent 59; of the board 11; others 53. The following bills were allowed and warrants ordered drawn in payment: Mrs. Bremer 8 3 00 A.Boettcher. 9 50 ErnBt & 8chwarz 75 15 C.A. Speice 11 15 Carl Kramer 4 25 Gin&Co 51 54 Goodyear Publishing Co 23 49 D. O. Heath & Co. 26 50 American Book Co 92 77 Secretary Taylor reported that $373.41 had been transferred from the city treas ury to the teachers fund; $460 from the county treasury to the teachers fond; and $200 from the county treasury to the general fund. The officers of the Columbus Summer Normal asked for and" received permis sion to use the High school building daring the term of their school. The superintendent was authorized to employ an elocutionist for the gradua ting classes, and otherwise make ar rangements for graduating exercises. Adjourned. Maay Yean Age. Twenty-four years ago, this week, the following were among things referred to in The Journal: Eben Pierce returned from the east last week, having purchased a largestock of spring goods. The Midland Pacific railroad will be completed to Lincoln within thirty days. The cars are now running to Palmyra, Otoe county. Married, March 29. at the residence of J. W. Early, by N. H. Barton, J. P., Lorenzo D. Clark to Miss Emma J. Shoots, both of Platte county. Tho families of Bonj. Reed and W. M. Snider, formerly of Cadiz, Ohio, lately of Illinois, arrived in town Friday. They will make good, reliable citizens of Nebraska. O. E. Stearns at tho Half-way honse 30 em n? meets, resolves himself into a comraitt of one, and passes a series of resolutions giving the name Stearns Prairie to that section of country. The Journal in those days relished jokes occasionally: "The drum major who ran away from Chickamauga, when roproached with cowardice, replied: I'd rather be called a coward all my life, than be a corpse fifteen minutes." The court of impeachment of Governor Butler granted a continuance of the case, for sixty days. If tho verdict shall finally be rendered, guilty, in accordance with the universal belief, the present distrust in senators will not grow into downright denunciation. Taylor & Smith are making special efforts to settlo up Boone county, com prising 600 square miles of rich valleys and rolling prairies. 15,000 acres has been selected by A. C. Staloy of South Bend, Indiana, for the settlement of a colony. The first company is to depart from this city on or about the 20th of this coming month. A Journal correspondent gives the Pawnee Indians at the school at Genoa great praise for the work they hare accomplished in their education, not only their learning in books, but the advance they have been making in the shops, on the farm, etc. The exhibition recently given was a systematic affair, every, every one responding faithfully to the call, all their pieces were of good selection, and their play entertaining. Real Rotate Transfer. Becher, Jreggi & Co., real estate agents report the following real estate transfers filed in tho office of the county clerk for the week ending March 30, 1895: Michael Kause to Jolm W. Maher, eli mU awK boU 6-20-2w wil $ 3130 00 Heirs of .John Held, dee'd, to Kichanl Ilelil. noli mi 21 and feetf e?i 13-13- lc, wd ICD Samo to Mai-gari'tlia Bchwarz & Mary Klnff.nwH 2S-lS.le.wd 1 CO Same to Henry Schwarz. lots 3 and 4, bl 115, lota 7 and S. I1 132. 5 and 6, hi 127, 5 and 6, Id 160, Columbus, wd.... 1 00 Vincent Weiser to Michael Weiaer, swi swU 17.V.'-lw, wrt ihvui (J W Routon to W A Way. lot S, I1 CI. Columbus, wd 12M 00 l.ntherll North to Margaret Lyons, lota 5 and 6, bl 101, Columbus, wd 500 CO Bernard Wilde to Fred Kohl, wK neU and BlA nw'4 and wU nwKi M-20-2w, Geo W Smith to W. It. Notestein, lot 5, bl 8. Smith's add to Columbus, wd... 125 00 Nine transfers, total ...$12,703 00 Fino job work done at The Journal office. To Chirasfl and te East. engers going east for business, will nathrtHJy gravitate to Chicago as the great commercial center. Passengers re-ruiting friends or relatives in the eastern states always desire to "take in" Chicago on route. All classes of passen gers will find that the "Short Line" of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Bail way, via Omaha and Council Bluffs, affords excellent facilities to reach their destinations in n manner that will lie sure to give the utmost satisfaction. A referenco to tho time tables will in dicate the route to be chosen, and, by asking any principal agent west of the Missouri river for a ticket over the Chicago, Council Bluffs & Omaha Short Line of tho Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, you will lie cheerfully furnished with the proper passport via Omaha and Chicago. Please note that all of the "Short Line" trains arrive in Chicago in ample time to connect with theexpresstrainsof all the great through car lines to the principal eastern cities. For additional particulars, time tables, mapB, etc., please call on or address F. A. Nash, General Agent, Omaha, Neb. HEMP SEED TO LOU ! I want to contract with farmers within hauling distance of Columbus to grow about a thousand acres of hemp. Will furnish seed and take pay out of crop grown. Have two kinds of seed; small est variety will produce ten to fifteen bushelsof seed and 1)4 to 1 tons straw per acre; other more straw and less seed. Hemp stands drouth better than any crop except alfalfa. Improves land almost as much as clover and can be grown twenty years in succession on same land. On good land plowed deep it made fair crop in 1894. For further information apply at my office at mill after 2 p. m. M. Jerome. Columbus, Jan. 24, 1895. 30-jan-3m The Jocbnal is prepared to do all manner of printing for you, on short notice, and at reasonable prices. No matter what you are needing, let us see what it is, and give yon figures for the work. We know we can please you. We are constantly adding to our material, and keep our plant up with the times. Those subscribers of The Journal who have paid in advance and are now receiving the Lincoln Semi-Weekly Journal as a premium, should notice when their subscription expires and act accordingly. w No Regret Ifwfru make the trip via the Chicago, Union Pacific & Northwestern liae. Fewest changes to Chicago and other eastern cities. Through vestibuled trains, composed of dining cars, fcltaiBfl second class sleepers and free redlining chair cars. e? For full information call on or ad dress J. B. Meagher, agent U. P. system. GUB.G. BECHER. LKOPOIiDJJEGGI. Established 1870. BECHER, JXGGI & CO., REAL - ESTATE - LOANS - INSURANCE, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. HONEY TO LOAN ON FARMS at lowest rates of interest, on short or loss time, ia amon&f a tO0l8EDBOTBACTERS OF TITLE to all real atoin Platteconnty. Represent THE LEADING INSURANCE COMPANIES of the World. Onr farm policies at the most liberal in oae. Losses adjusted, and promptly paid at this office. Notary Public always in office. Farm and city property for sale. .... . - .. Make collections of foreign inheritances and sell steamtrhip tickets to aad from all parts of Europe. taug'91-tf vM ry day is adding to our list of bers, but there is vet plentv of moro. We give yon now. Tire and the Lincoln Semt-weokly il, both, one year, when paid in ance, for ?si.w. subscription can n at any time. Now is the time to subscribe. The Lincoln Journal is issued Tuesdays and Fridays, and will give yon a mass of news that you cannot hope to equal anywhero for the money. Both for $2.00. Yoar Plain Dnty Istp make 1 ncago, Un linV Why! niake the trip to Chicago on tho Union Pacific Sc Northwestern ? Time tho quickest, solid vestibuled train, no change of coach at the Missouri river. Through first and second class sleepers and dining cars. For full information call on or address J. R. Meugher, agent U. P. system. To California in ti Tonrfct Slrf per. Burlington Routo's personnlly- conductea excursions to ino i'aciuc const are lust the thing for people of moderate means. Cheap respectable comfort a ble expeditious. From Omaha and Lin coln every Thursday. Through to Los Angeles and San Francisco without change. Experienced excursion mana gers and uniformed Pullman porters in charge. Second class tickets accepted. Cars are carpeted and upholstered and have spring seats and backs, mattresses, blankets, curtains, pillows, towels, etc. Only S5.00 for a double berth, wide enoush and bir enough for two. The route is over the ''Scenic Lino of tho World," through Denver, Salt Lake city and Sacramento. All tho wonderful canons and peaks of tho Rocky Moun tains are passed dnring tho day. If yqu are going west you should arrange to join ono of these excursions. They aro the best, the very best, across tho conti nent. Information and advertising mat ter on application to the lftcal agent or by addressing, J. Francis, Gen'l. Pass'r. Agent, Omaha, Nebr. l-Dee-.rmi Heary Wallace Ont of the Homestead. Henry Wallace, whoso namo is synon ymous with that of the Iown Homestead, j of which he has been editor for ten years, is no longer connected with that paper. Mr. Wallace has always been a strong .anti-monopolist in fact, the present Iowa railroad law is largely due to his efforts in the Homestead. His with drawal from the Homestead was tho culmination of trouble between him and the business manager on matters of edi torial policy, Mr. Wallace wishing the paper to continue to stand for nnti monopoly principles. Failing in this he has become editor of Wallace's Farm and Dairy, a semi monthly agricultural paper published at Ames, Iowa, at fifty cents per year. Mr. WTallace will bo glad to send free sample copies of his new paper to his old Homestead friends, or Tiny others, who will drop hint a postal card. We will send Wallace's Farm nnd D?iry and the Columbus Journal one year for $1.80, payable in advance. The Ucstle-s- Anierioan ee that tho solid ve3tibuled trains Chicago, Union Pacific fc North- lino distance all competitors with eai No change or delay at tho Missouri river. For full information call on'or ad drees J. R. Meagher, agent U. P. system. Starting with Oct. loth, 189J, Tiir. Columhus Journal subscription rates are 81.50 a year, if paid in advance, otherwise $2.00 a year. Settlements up to that date must bo made on the basis of the former rate. All premiums now advertised hold good. COLUMBUS MARKETS. 3POnrqnot!tionsof thsmarketareoItnined Tuesday afternoon, and aro correct and reliable at the time. OUAI,KrO. Whp.lt r.' Shelled Corn. Jti vUI O ! flour in SOU lb. lots ji! 00-39 00 PUODCCK. S'l VLva t VC. it CLK 0 Potatoes SWil 13 LIVESTOCK. Fat hogs i3S0f?4 2T. Fat cows $1 5062CO Ftsheep. $150621-5 Fat steers $a Oout 00 Feeder 2 5083 25 gnsiness Qotittt Advertisements nnder this head five cents a line each insertion. .SCHILTZ makes boots nnd shocritnthe t styles, and nnes only the very bent (that can be proenred in the market. .V-I-tf Cotton-Seed Meal at OEHLEICH Ml S&1.25 per Hundred 3?ounds. Best Thing for Milch Cows. NEW DEPARTURE. I HAVE CONCLUDED TO ENTER INTO contract to pnt ont orchards, do all tha work, and have fall charge of the same from three to five years, I tornn all risks of losses. UoctSm JOHN TANNAHILL. THE ART AMATEUR. Bt aad Largrat Practical Art Xaazlne. (The only Art Periodical awarded a Medal at the World's Fair.) Invaluable to all who wish to make their lirins by art or to make thoir homes beautiful. FAR fflfi wiUe?dtpany ne mentioning Dtionmjj 10c w fmi puuucauon a speci men copy, wun sapero coior plates (Tor copying or framing) and 8 supplemen tary pama of desicns (resnlar nrio. S5e). Or for we will dalo"PaitI fer Be- HeSTAIlUE BASIS, M I'atoa Square, 5. T. Ufrn-laiso siBMn fr J-'- ..uFy Johns aqv begi Airwgt ofthX nrnatnvn h. V. J. HOCKKKBERGE 1.8IBHEKN8EN. M. C. CASSIN, -PROpairroR of the- Omaha Meat Met Thresh, and Salt Meats. Game and Fish in Season. "Highest market Hides and Tallow. prices paid foY THIRTEENTH ST., COLUMBUS, - - NEBRASKA. 22nprtf LOUIS SCHREIBER, SELLS THE DEERING Tlieso aro perfect machines, strong where strength in needed. Every lever within eay reach. "To lo simple it to be irreat." The binilerhas been reduced to a few simple pieces wciphintr together only 180 pounds. See th( Deering liefore yon liny another. Shop on Olivo Street, Columbus, Neb., four doors south of Borowiak'a. 23maytf D.T. Martyx. M. D. C. 1). Evans. 31. U. F. II. Gkkr. 31. D. DOCTORS MARTYN, EVANS t 6EER, CONSULTING Physicians - and - Surgeins To St. Mary's Hospital and St. Francis Academy, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. United States Examining Surgeons, Assistant Surgeons Union 1'acific, O..N.& H. II. Itailwsys. "Office open night and day. Telephone No. 19. Two block north Union Pacific Depot. Dr. CLARK'S INSTITUTE ron TnK theatment of tue Drink Habit . Also Tobacco, Morphine and other Narcotic Habits. tST-Privnte treatment given if dtMired. COLUMBUS, - - NEBRASKA. ISaprtf UNDERTAKING ! CARRY ALL KINDS OF lSm-inl floods. Do Emlmlniiii":, Conduct Fimeruls. JS'-IIave the fineot Hearse in the connty. FRED. W. HERRICK, Cornu,Asvr?;an Columbus, Neb. 17Jan3m V. A. McAi.listfk. V. M. COHXELIU. JJJcALLISTER & CORNELIUS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. COLCMIU'H, NKRKASKA. atjantf A LBERT &. REEDER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office over First National Rank, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. Sljantf MARTY t ENGELNM, nraLERS ix FBSB AID SALT MEATS. Eleventh Street, Columbna, Neb W. L. Douclas S3 SHwElWMUCAKINC And otkar tpecUltlw for GentleaMa, Ladle. Bore sad Mines an tfc BcstlntbeWtrM. See descriptive advtttiM eat wkice eepMra la tele PPr. Tilt a Metltvta. Insist oa navlac W. L. DOUGLAS SB9K8. with aaa aad arte stamped oa bottos. Sold y G-RIFFEN & G-RAY. 18jan-5m NEW SHORT LINE TO SEATTLE J. FRANCIS, etui PttJ-rAiMt,0AliA, NEI, BlacRsmitD ana Wagon Maker Self-Binder i lower. .Kkr .iLLLLLw HBFj S &- Sfei ' "- ri-r