The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 12, 1905, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    '' Ws5,- VKA
ws
- w
BAM noUNI, MAIN LINK.
So. 12, rhtrwo HMriiil ''.!' n. in.
o. 4, Atlantic Kin ln in.
o. S, North I'lltttfl Lorsl 2:fJ l. in.
No. 10, tot Mall Hl.. in
No, S, Kfuturn Ktnim JtfJi i. hi
So, t.Uvrrlatiil Limited fnHui. in
o, M, Wal VMhM 3i h. in
WRIT lUICSII, MAIN LINK.
No. 5, California ntxIOrwon V.t .. :M)i in.
No. II, Colo. Hwrinl lu.lll a. in.
No. V, Kant Mall Il.ir.ii m.
No. l.dtrtrlanilLimltnl U 10 p m
No, I, Colonwlo Kir , H.V,i. in
Bo. 7, North I'lntle Local IliOOn. in.
o.tl, Loral Krwtiriit 7-oun.m.
MonroLI DUANOIt.
I)ilart
No, 2V, l'aMnr toni. m.
No. 77, Milml ilf n. in.
Arrln
No, Kl, I'wwiiKpr 12 !!. in
No. 7s, Mlnxl 7tlUi. in
ALIIION ASH HI'.M.IHNO IIIIANCII.
Innrt
No. SI, l'Muwunr , !!:2'i . in.
No.7v, Mliwl 7 ( n in.
ArrUs
No. 12, INtMADRrr .,... ,U:Vi. in.
No. M), Mllwl H-UUfti. til.
Norfolk tMimtoniM'r train ran drill)-.
No tmlna on Allilon nml HIiIIiik liranrh
Hl1DlU)r.
All main linn niwniT trnliiR dully.
W. II. IIIIAM, AOllt.
Time Taile
UOLUMIIUH, NBH.
Lincoln,
Omaha,
Chicago,
t. Joseph,
Kansas Cltjr,
t. Loula and all
polnta last and
Qoutb.
Danvar,
Balana,
Butte,
Bait Lake City,
Portland,
Ban Tranclaco
and all polnta
Weat.
THAINN DCrAllT.
No, 23 I'MMtnirnr, UIIrniriiit Hufiilny . 7:2 a. iii
No. 12 ArnoiiiiiiiMlntioii, ilnlly irit
HatunUr 4:10 o. in
TIIAINS AIOUVK.
No, '21 l'aaMir,iUlly mreiit Hominy. H:MI i, n
No. II Accommodation, dally tirtt
Monday 1-8(1 i. u
)JM-?"i???-s's"J
! The Journal !
:!: Nit Twt Spicialtltt 1
..,j.t.j.?..j.vj.;.v.t.5..j. ;
Tim iirnt i J
NEWS
t
v
J.
If you wnut all tlio news id' I lit
CITY. COUNTY,
STATE, WORLD
ytiu rnn liavo it delivered at
ytmr duor before hiiimt every
cveiiino;. ICvcryliixly is iulcrcM
l in tho War Nmwn. Wo pi
ul I tho iu'wh (if tho world liv tele
Kraph ami all thu uowh of llntto
ami surrounding counties by tel
ephone vry day. A major
it y of Columbus families arc
already on our list. The expense
is trilling. Fur 10 cents a week
you can't uH'ord to do without
it. (live your name to the ear
rier or telephone, the Journal
office.
r
Our Second Sccially is
PRINTING
We print everything in plain
and fancy Letterheads Imivc
lopes, ItUlheads Statements,
Posters, Tickets, Programs In
vitations, Cards, Catalogue, etc.
Also have a special style of
type, for Court Uriel's.
We print everything and do
it just a little better than any
body else.
Lot U Quote
You Price.
The Journal
DAILY AND WKKKLY
W9W4t't't1 -?"?? S f ?- f? f- ff !
KILLthi COUCH
"CURE thi LUNC8
,"" Dr. King's
New Discovery
mQ
rONSUMPTION
Prica
OUQHI and
50c $1.00
Free Trial.
JLOt
(surest and ttuicaest Curo for all
TXBOAT nd LUNG TROUB.
LIB, or MONXY BACK.
A. C Oho, A. M., LI II., Pre , Omaha.
Paor. A.J.Lottuv, 1'rliio. ,
fMtaw
$!iae
Kmlnrsml tiv First Nitt'l v
liaUk SUll liUKlltuss moil,
W.M0IO KnIITop lhsk, llnnlt Pixtnrm nnd
Co 'I'viKswrltera. htuilciilni'un work lorlxunl
Hcuif for (rca ctuloi:iiu, IhiuiuI lu ullU'iitor,
Uncut ever pubimhril by liiisliioss ColU'iio.
Bead It, uad )uu will utttud ILo N II. C,
V aT.dJ
nMJhaWtJ?
WON FROM DISASTER
SUCCESS AT TIMES FOLLOWS SEEM
ING ILL LUCK.
Ilotr ttir link ii IVtrolt-iiiii lliii,ll
Wire llUrotrrril H)lnK Srnl III
clom-il Cnir onn-'i (lolil Srrrrt.
Thr OrlMln of 'I'hilcil l'iiiir.
The lt:il;il iictMloiiui deposits, which
have yielded millions of pounds' worth
of Hue oil, ure situated In Itussluu fail
(asm. Years uo a number of cuttle wen;
placed on seeral tracts of land well
covered with herbal'. The animals,
however, refused to feed at Hist, liilt
later, In their hiinpT, they ate up the
Ki'iiss ravenously. All of them were
taken III, and a number died.
The cause of their death puxled the
owner for Nome time, lu the Ioiik run
he dlscowicd, with the asMlitniice of an
DiKllshmaii, that below the meadows
were rich oil springs which vuvseil the
grass to n poisoned with paralllu. Thu
loss of his cattle brought it fortune,
A summer or two back a sea wall on
the Suffolk coast was blown down dur
ing a strong gale, and when the tide
rose man) acres of low lying laud were
iIimmIciI by the sea. The fanners who
rented the laud weie lu despair, uuil In
order to huc their crops they started
draining the water oil'.
Two ilaH later the water sodden
meadows wero a sight wonderful to be
hold. Tliey were one thick carpet of
line tuackeiell A big school of the tUh
had swept In through the breach In tha
embankment and been carried to the
Holds by the Incoming sen.
Tlio farmers lilted scores of carts to
collect the mackerel, and within twenty-four
hours the llsli had been packed
Into boxes and were en route to lilt
llngsgate, where they wore sold for
our ftiOO.
Starving, III clad and bootless, Itobert
Hyams, it homeless Jew, wandered to
the top of a lonely hill on tho Yorkshire
moors. There was a strong gale blow
ing from the east, and to protect him
clf from tho cold blast be entered a
big stieil of wood and gorse on the sum
mit which wus used to store fodder for
the sheep.
Stepping through the door, which
opened to the eastward, lie was aston
ished to Unit Inside over sixty wild
ducks, half stunned, but (plucking vio
lently. He slummed the door to and
started catching the birds and wring
ing their necks.
The shed lay right lu the Might lines
of the myriads of wild ducks that come
to llritalu from the north, uud, Hying
low lu their hundreds, some of them
had entered the door of the shed, which
had been left open by the shepherds,
and stunned themselves on the rear
wall.
IlyatiLs nold the lucky haul for a sum
oxcotsllng 8, uud with this be was able
to clothe himself rcdpectably and thus
And employment.
Cln the beach which fringes the preci
pices below Tape Noino there Is now n
prosperous city peopled by 40,000 mill
ers, but at one time, and not so very
long ago, the spot was uninhabited.
The discovery of the gold lu the dis
trict and Its ultimate prosperity wait
entirely due to a seal.
Two American hunters bad wounded
tho strange creature, and It led them a
pretty dance across the Ice and Into
an unknown bay, where the seal was
killed after badly wounding one of tho
hunters.
lu Iti death struggles tho Heal Hung
up the ground, and the hunters, to their
agreeable surprise, found themselves
on a golden strand the richest one In
the world.
Tho death of a mule brought great
wealth to 1'rederlck llutler, a Kloti
(tlker, who took part In the memorable
'rush" to the gold Holds of Yukon. Ho
left his mule standing one day on n
plot of laud far away from tho
"claims," and another miner who had a
grudge against bis fellow digger shot
the animal In the neck with bit ro
volver.
The mule fell and In Its agony kick
ed up the ground with Its Inmfs. When
Its owner returned he found several
"nobbles" of strange weight and shape
lying around the dead animal. Ho
cleansed the supposed pebbles and they
proved to be nuggets of lrgln gold.
The iljlng mule had struck one of tho
richest elus lu Klondike.
A similar ease of gold being discov
ered by an animal occurted In Scotland
In I MM. A dog, badly wounded by a
nhot from a gamekeeper's gun, scratch
ed up s line gold on ground which was
afterward Known as the Huurobln gold
mines, near t.olsple Owr 'J0,00i)
worth of the precious metiil was wash
ed out of the mine by the owner of tho
fortune bringing deg.
Tho I'atorl silver mines In Spain
were also discovered by a wounded
dog, and It Is said that the famous dia
mond mines at Klmberley wero Hrst
roonlcd to a wide awake Hoer by a
sow which he had stmt.
tSolil to the alue of some hundreds
of pounds was dug out of a p irtlon of
tno ground belonging to a Mr Ireton o?
western t'uinberland. A fowl chased
Vy a boy threw up a nugget of gold
with Its claws as It lied from Its pur
suer. Subsequently It transpired that where
the bird had been was a dried up
ft renin and contained gold dust and
nmull nuggets lu large iiuantltles.
Kamsgate harbor was once Hooded
with a mighty shoal of mullet, nnd
when the dock gates wero opened to al
low a ship to pass Into the Inner basin
the list) follow-ill, ami the basin became
thick with them.
When tho tide went down the author
ities had tho dock sluices opened and
tho water drained off. Over twenty
fart loads of mullet of two pounds
tvclgbt and upward were taken awo
frftn the floor ef the bnsln, nnd theh
snte brought to the coffers of the Itams
(fate council nearly f.VX).
A piece of blue dropped by accident
Into a nt of pulp was responsible fot
the production of blue tinted rmpcr,
nnd to this slight disaster the fotiu
datloii of a great Industry ts to be
traced.
The wife of William Cast, a poor pa
per maker, dropped u blue bag Into out
of her husband's pulp vats, and as n
result the pulp assumed it blue tint.
Hast considered thu paper to be a
grave pecuniary loss, tiut when be sent
It up to London It found u ready mar
ket. Indeed, It became so popular that
Hast was asked to supply more. II
till I and eventually made n great for
tune out of his "blue bag" paper.
A chemist of Nuremberg was pour
ing out some aitiafoitls from a bottie
when a few drops fell upon a pair of
gold rimmed spectacles, which he had
recently purchased.
'That's a catastrophe," he called to
Ills wife. "I've upset some aipiafortl
on my new specs."
"lias It spoilt them?" was tfu reply.
"Well," said the chemist, "the glass
Is corroded where the Until totnhisl It."
Then an Idea struck him, mid, getting
a piece of window glass, he endeavored
to etch thereon, lie succeeded after
many falluies. Ity drawing designs on
the glass with varnish and applying
lupin fords l.e made them appear as on
a gray background. For many years
he kept bis secret close nnd made a
r.iiiall fortune out of his designed glass,
Feu rson'a Loudon Weekly.
THE PRICE OF TORTURE.
Klft-titernlh Crnturr I'nnUhmrnU
noil the Coats Thereof.
Among the monuments of stipcrstl
tlon which exist to this day, tho travel
er sees the "witch towers," the torture
chambers and the collections of Instru
ments of torture lu various towns on
the continent notably at Nuremberg,
Itatlsbon, Munich and The Hngtte. Hut
perhaps nothing brings the system
more vividly before us than the execu
tioner's tarlffH still preserved. Four of
these may be seen lu the library of Cor
nell university and among them espe
cially that Issued by the archbishop
elector of Cologne In 17ft7. On four
printed folio pages, It enumerates In
flftyllve paragraphs every sort of hid
eous cruelty which an executioner
could commit upon a prisoner, with the
sum allowed him for each, and for tho
Instruments therein required. Typical
examples from this tariff are the fol
lowing: Tlmlors. 1Mb.
1, Tor ttnrltiK nstiiuler with
four fiorH.'s (I 2I
2. Tor iiuurtcrliui 4
A. For lielii'inlliig ami InirnliiK .. 6 36
7. For Mnirislliin and Imiiiltig.. 4
8 For ln'Uilii tlio pllo of wood
nnd klnilllng 12
!. For InirnliiK nllvn 4
11. For bit'iiktriK a mini nllvn on
tho wheel 4
13. For srtttiiK tip tho whool with
tho body twisted In It 2 61
19. For cutting off a hand or sun
dry ftiiKiTB and for bchrud
Iiik altoKothor 3 K
:i. For burning with a hot Iron.. 1 it
it. For heliciutlng nml placing
the bead upon n I'lkn S 24
24. For bcht'itritiitf, (wIhIImk the
body In the wheel ami plm
It ik tho head upon a pike--nltotirther
M. For teailiitf u criminal beforn
his execution with re J hot
plnchcm i-uch tvarliiK of
tho Moth Ik
St, For nallliiff a tonuuo or hand
to tho kiiIIowh 1 24
42. For tho first Kriuln of torturo 1 2tl
41. For the second itradn of tor
ture. Including nutting tho
limbs uftrrwurd. with aulve
for same I H
and so on through fifty-five Items and
apecltlcatlons.- Andrew l Whlto In
Atlantic.
A Jupunene Teat.
In Japan It appears that one factor
entering Into the choice of a daughter
Inlaw is her skill lit raising silkworms.
There Is more to this than appears on
the surface of tlio stutsinent, for It
seems that tho thread spun by a Milk
worm Is regular and even In propor
tion, as the worm has boon regularly
and carefully ftnl. Tho prospective
mother lu law carefully and minutely
examines the garments of the aspiring
bride, Judging of her qtiallllcatlomi by
their condition.
Thr Man Who Never Klrka.
There are some people who through
slackness. Indifference or sheer terror
of their fellows g.t through life suffer
lug ninny unpleasant things without
protest. They dislike "fuss" or they
are too careless or happy go lucky to
assort themselves; hence they come off
badly over) w'Jiore. These are the men
who always get the uncooked chopa
ami the tough cuts off the Joint. Lon
don Saturday Itevlew.
An Altered Ceae.
Ascutu Have you seen uuythlug of
Jlggius luiely? Pot-tor Yes. I pre
scribed a trip to Kurope for him ouly
this morning. Ascuiu Indeed! llo'a
getting wealthy, Isn't he? Doctor
Well, I can remember when 1 used to
prescribe for him simply a dose of sv
dlum bromide for the same complaint
A I'ruilent MuvKeatlen.
"Many people have suffered em bar
rassuient because of their social aspira
tions. "
"Yes," answered Miss Cayenne. "Be
fore you Insist on Retting Into theawtm
you want to make quite sure you aro a
wlmmer."- Washington Star.
Inirirot Inn.
"Is your Miu Improving much wltft
the violin V"
"Oh, yes! We can now tell whether
tie's tuning or playing!"
He travels safe and not unpleasantly
who is guarded by poverty and guidad
by love. Blduey.
A WOMAN WITH A WILL.
Ifae War Jeaale Kartletf Davla Oae
Collected Her ftalarr.
Jessie Hurt left parts was a woman
sf Indomitable will nnd with n stock
of self conlldeuco born of a healthy
outdoor life. When not engaged In
theatrical life bur entire time was de
voted to outdoor pursuits. On her
ranch In California shu tamed and rode
bronchos, herded cattle and sheep nnd
ntteuded to her chickens with equal
facility. This combined to make her
a good business Woman and with thu
muscular activity to back It.
Mrs. Dnvle was once engaged to sing
In a vaudeville company lu New York
city. The malinger of the theater was
famous for his negligence In meeting
demands of performers whom he had
engaged, and, In fact, there were ugly
rumors about checks bearing his sig
nature being returned from the bank
with tho ominous words "No funds"
written ncross their faces.
At the conclusion of her week's en
gagement Mrs. I in vis received n check
for her salary, that was Saturday
night, nnd It was nn open secret to ev
erylsxly that she bad engaged passage
on a steamship leaving the following
Wednesday for I'urope, where she had
planned to take a 'long rest. The pro
prietor of tho llrondway hotel where
ho was stopping obllgl'igly cashed the
check. It was returned to him Tues
day afternoon an worthless. '
Mrs. Davis took back the repudiated
paper nnd smiled grimly. "I will make
It all right this evening," she said.
Armed with n stout cane she went to
the manager's olllce that evening, the
stick nerving as excuse for a limp due
to a "slight sprain," she announced.
The manager received her with evident
embarrassment and listened to the
story of the check told quietly and In
moderate language.
"It was a mistake on the part of his
bookkeeper," he explained. , The stupid
fellow should have known that the
manager's account lu that particular
bank bad been closed .nut loug ago.
Hut If Mrs. Davis would wait a few
minutes he would glvo her a check on
another bank which would be honoreJ
without fall.
But Mrs. Davis wan not accepting
checks. She was to leave for Loudon
the next morning nnd nothing but the
bard, cold cash would satisfy her. The
manager was obdurate and Mrs. Davis
politely Insistent. Then It developed
Into a wordy war, ,utyd Mrs. Davis
nroso with the cane luband. Ilnndllug
It like a foil, sho passed the fcrrulu
lightly through the glass door of the
manager's olllce. Another pass and
tho ferrule broke one of the window
panes. The clatter of glass brought a
half dozen employees to the spot. The
manager danced around as If on n hot
stove and hedged her to desist. Tho
aeaudal, he said, would ruin him. Uy
way of reply Mrs Dnvls punctured an
other window.
Ouo of the employees, who wan a
relative of the manager, rushed for
ward to dliuirm her. The cane circled
In the nlr, and the man retreated nurs
ing a big welt across the back of hi"
head.
Tho audience was Just entering the
theater nnd the crashing of glass
caused many to atop and conjecture the
cause. Mrs. Davis, smiling with the
utmost good nature, moved to the other
side of the office and gazed critically at
the glass of n large picture tho mana
ger's favorite possession.
"Stop!" he almost shouted. "You
shall have your money." A messeuget
waa dispatched to the bos offlco with
an order, tie returned In a few min
utes with a hugo roll of bills, which
Mrs. Davla carefully counted und stow
ed away. Then, bidding the manager
a smiling good night, she swept out of
tho office nnd to her hotel, where tho
bad check was redeemed and added to
her collection of souvenirs of her ex
periences on the stnge. Now York
Press.
The Flan of England.
"I nut amazed." writes an American
visitor, "at what seems to be a custom
In Euglaud of blowing loud trombone
blasts on tho human nose. In Hrst
claaa railway carriages, restaurants,
churches. In the atreet, one Is startled
by these sounds, generally explosive,
sometimes sustained. Old men, chll
dren and delicate ladles seem to bn
adepts at It. Is It a mark or a sound
of delicate breeding?" It Is merely an
Instance of tho national manners that
differ In spite of good communications
An American la startled nt tho trom
bono of the English nose. Hut the
Englishman always has n cold, and
Unit fact seta the note of tho national
manners. And as we travel wo find
many startling things. Wo note that
tho German makes strange uses of bis
knife at table. Benching tho summer
resorts of the Black sea wo flud the
neighboring lady bathing witliout a
bathing dress. It Is merely n matter of
latitude. The flag of England Is tho
handkerchief, nnd tho morning bugle Is
tho nose.-Iondon Chronicle.
nrldeajrooma lenored.
Bridegrooms aro usually considered
necessary to tho wedding festivities the
world over, about tho only land where
fhey are regarded as unnecessary be
ing Tolynesla. There the young man
who would a-wootng go turns tho mat
ter over to his parents and friends and
takes to the woods no difficult matter
In that part of the couutry. Tho fami
ly proceed to traffic with tho parents of
tho brldo elect, and after a more or less
extended palaver the arrangement are
brought to a satisfactory conclusion.
Then ensues a festal time, with feast
ing, spccchmaklng and other forms of
celebration until nt last tho nuptials
are announced and the groom makes
hla appearance among his friends, In
theory at least, sufficiently hungry for
human companionship to regard his
bride with mora than usual complacency.
Humphrev.
(From the Democrat.)
Miss Mary Dineen, who has been
visiting relatives and friends at Co
lumbal the past few weoks, returned
home last Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. P. E. MoKilllp and
son Gene went down to Cambridge
Monday evening to spend the Fourth
with Mr. McKiUtp'a mother and other
relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Swallow aro
paoklng their household effects this
week preparatory to moving to Em
poria, Kansas. They will leave Sun
day for their new home.
Mrs. Anton Fangman, accompanied
by her father-in-law, went to Couuoil
BlnfTs Wednesday where the lady will
submit to an operation by Dr. A. P.
Condon at Meroy hospital.
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Krauso return
ed to tholr home at Prlncevllte, lit.,
last Friday after a few dav visit nt
thii place with his brother VYalliu and
family and old-timo friends.
District 44 and Vicinity.
The school board mot Friday even
ing at the school house and Inbortd
until midnight in vain endeavor to
elect a teacher, after which they ad
journed to meet again in two weeks.
There seems to be a general com
plaint this spring from farmers, of
loss of ehlokens from tho ravages of
rats, weasels, stray tom-cats and vic
ious hogs; nearly every farm-honso re
ports the loss of from 100 to IIOO young
ohiokens.
Ktobard Adamy tluished cutting nn
80-aore Held of wheat Sunday. In
faot, harvest is now on. Itye is out,
wheat is all ready for the sickle, bar
ley ditto, anil early oats aro rltienlng
fast anil will got attention late in the
week. Tho wheat is of good quality.
Cnptalu Mtkie Uinoen went up to
Madison Friday to visit his brother
John ami see the uhw horse trader,
returning Sunday noon. Ho was
much pleased with the new prospec
tive trader.
The MiHses Edith nnd Aniiitdltrring
wnut to Chicago nbout the loth ultimo
Miss Edith retnunn just beforo the
Kourth, accompanied by n young gen
tlniunu cousin. Miss Annie went to
Naotua, III . to visit n family of uncles,
nuuts anil cousins, ami will probably
remnlu two weeks.
The writer raw n bucket of milk
fresh from the separator last Sunday,
with about two inches of foam on it,
standi us outside the door, when an
old Plvmoutb Hock rooster came
along ami stepped up for n draught.
He made three attempts, going lower
each time, before ho could get through
the foam. By the time ho finally got
down to tho milk nnd got n sip, he
was up to his neck in foam. After
vain attempts to scratch the while
caps olT with bis bind feet, ho evi
dently became convinced that it was
mowing, for ho put his head down
and hiked out for camp, never stop
ping until ho was sulcly inside the
coop.
Tho rain seems to have coased ami
good laborers nro much in demand.
We do not know of a singlo turkey
being raised In this immediate neigh
orhood. Why is this?
O. E. Jones of the Thurston bather
shop and Clyde Ward who has boon
with Fox & Brown will ojioii a now
barber shop Wednesday in tho Hebron
or bniltliug next door to the Home res
taurant. Uivo them a call. 2d
A Surprise Party.
A pleasant snrpriso imrty may te
given to your stomach and liver by
taking a metlioluo which will relieve
their pain aud discomfort, viz. Dr.
King's New Life pills. Thoy are a
most wnnderfnl remedy, atl'oraimr
snre relief nnd onre. for headache.
dl?eiues and oonstipatiou 2.r cents at
Obas. Dacks drug store.
Noticr.
Citizens aro hereby notified to trim
up their trees in compliance with the
ordinance which requires them to be
trimmed np nt least eight feet from
the ground. Untrimmed trees inter
fere with lighting the streets and are
a nuisance. BvOrderof City Council.
Forced to Starve.
B. F. Look of Concord Ky., says:
"For '20 years I suffered agonies with
a sore on my upper lip so painful some
times that I could not eat. After vain
ly trying everything else I enred it
with Bucklen's Arnica Salve." It's
great for burns cuts and wounds. At
Obas. Dacks drug store only ','."i cents.
Votice to Non-Resident Defendant
Mrs. Hose Farnam will tako notion
that on the ?tb day of June, l!H5,
William O'Brien, a justice of the
peace in and for the oity of Colum
bus, Platte county, Nebraska, issued
an order of attachment for tho sum or
130 in an actiou pending before him
wherein II. J, Arnold is plaintiff aud
Hose Farnam is defendant, and that
the following property has been at
tached under said order towit: One
folding bed, one dresser, one box of
household goods, one barrel of house
hold goods, ono stove and one chair.
Said causo is continued to the Hist
day of July, m, at nine o'clock a.m.
11. J. Arnold, plaintiff.
Dated July S, 1905. 3wkid
Leigh.
I From tho World)
Mr. nnd Mrs, Ftod Wendt and
children and Mr, Wendt 's father left
Wednesday noon for Okbthon n.
Miss Louire Mailer arrived home
from Columbus sntnrdav i u n visit to
her parents Mr ami Mrs.Ailnui Mailer.
John F. Keeham, rrnl MnelUr nmi
fatuity, Mrs Hoehe. Mr. Hubert nml
perhaps one or two others from the
Neliovllle in ighhorhnud went to Hot
Springs, S.D Monday for a few weeks
outing.
Henry Soli I, Jr ,the ten venr-old Kin
of Mr. and Mrs, Henry Sold beenme
111 of appendicitis Wedueilav nml
veatertlay Mr. Sohl and Dr. J. H
Lowery went to Oninita with tho boy
whore in nil probability Dr. A. P.
Condon will oporn'o n ti him today.
Kudnlph Schnefer, who has been nt
tending medical collrgo in Chicago,
Is spending n nnrt or his vnrntinn
with relatives in this part nfN'ohrntkn
Ho arrived in town yesterday nnnii
on a short visit to bis brother II, II.
and fntuilr.
John C. Asking wns in town Satur
day and reported n nmd dng in
his neighborhood. He nys that tho
vicious canine bit one of his neigh
bor's hogs nnd In 'dun tlinn the hog
went mad. He expressed a fear that
other dogs anil peihnps domestic mil
mals had been bitten. A mail dog is n
very dangerous thing in n neighbor
hood and great precaution should bn
tnken for tho extermination. .
Notice of Dissolution.
Notieo is hereby given Hint the
partnership heroforo existing botweeit
U. W. Weaver and H. O. Newman,
under the firm namo of Weaver iV
Newtnnn is hereby dissolved bv mu
tual consent. Wo desire that nil no
con ts due I ho firm bn settled on or
beforo August l."i.
II. O. Newninn
4tw L. W. Weaver
wm. DIETRICHS
Painting
Plain .mil ornamental P.ilnMuu nt .ill
Kinds. Ultu or fioitntril.
ind.Tvl Jit-J. nil, mm':1, m:ii.
R. W. HOBART
Attorney - at - Law
Olllce over Columbus State Hank.
Will Practice in all the Courta.
A. M. POST
ftttorneu : at : Law
Columbus. Nub.
DR. GHflS. tl. Pl.ftTZ
HOMEOPATH IC
PhllslGlan and Surgeon.
P.' O. Block : : Columbus
G. J. GARLOW
Lawyer
(Illicit liter ...
('iiIiiiiiIiiih Hlnto Hunk tlOltimhllS, lVnf.
T I). HT1HKH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
OIHt, Ollvn HI., fonrlli iloor ninth of KlraW
Nitlomtl Hunk.
COI.UMIllJH. NKIIIIAHKA.
BECHBR,
H0GKENBERGE.R
& CHAMBERS
Real Estate
Insurance
Loans
Choice list of Lands for salo.
We are nrcpnreri to supply tho
spring demand for dwellings
and lots. We have monov to
loan on real estate in .small or
large amounts for from 1 to 10
years.
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
GO
Oia u.e to", .iM',i',, .'". , S'hl
Tln bju olhrr ur.7Jl .. '" '""" Mi lu
sil..iM,KM,,,,,M-,A.
i
f
ft r,t w.m
Jfi!..V---Vt
fiOM.,