The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 29, 1907, Image 8

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    i 1
LOCATOR -W
MEAT Mi
-JS
GORREirOttDENOE
MANY
WITH LOST PARADMS.
r
BactaBe.1.
-, -
m
.
fj
iv-
v
a
Taesday of tak
EdBoe of
Oolumbuelai
township
Saturday.
Lows Wurdeman, who has bi
OB
the sick list kkaproTisg..
It k reported that the noma of John
Saafield k aaeraatiaed for small-pox.
Miss Ethel MooreofOsudurk visiting
her prat, Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Moore.
Femora oe the route mast have all
pleated yellow com, judging from the
wayitkeomiagup.
BamUVe.3.
D. A. Beeher wee outoa hk farat
Moaday.
Miss Grace Beneoo k visiting frieade
oaBoateSthkweek.
Cora k coming ap nicely, eoaie fielda
being ready to cultivate.
good evidence of spring. EdNew
auui abed his far overcoat.
Small grain aloog the route has made
a rapid growth since the rain.
The qmarantine for emall-pox was
raked on the home of A. Rupprecht
Moaday.
The family of Ferdinand Saalfield
were quarantined for emall-pox last
week, his daaghter Sarah being sick.
' There k a good attendance of dele
gates at the district ooavention being
held this week at the Shell Creek.
lamtonTe'4
Smith Hilliard marketed hog in Col
ambus Taesday.
The Jap boya had Smith Hilliard
planting com for them Taesday.
George Stracke, eldest son of Mr.
and Mra. Frank Stracke, and Mks Tres
ea Foeffel were married at the Catholic
chares, Taesday, May 28, at 9 p. m.
There was a wedding reception at the
home of the bride's pareats, about three
haadred invited guests being present.
t
Mrs. Thomas Lynch died Friday eve
ning at 5 p. ax. Last winter she suffer
ed from an attrek of grip aad pneumon
ia, bat recovered, and while her health
was not the best her death was quite
unexpected. The funeral was held
Taesday at the Catholic church in Platte
Ceaterand the burial was in St Joseph's
sWatejTa.6. -H.
L. (Hoott has painted his residence.
The school in the Thomts district
dosed Thursday. Miss Beebe Bryan,
the teacher, will remain at home for a
few weeks, and then go to Omaha to
speed the trammer.
Joe Nitsch k putting in a good grade
across Clear oreek, between LuHahn's
aad Frank Taohaaer's, and Otto Ernst
has been doing some good work on the
roads between the Loup and Platte
rivers.
.
The patrons on Route No. 6 believe
helping out the carrier when ever they
On the southeast corner of section
G Q IP
We are sole agents in Columbus for the
Trans-Mississippi Gold Medal Coffee and we
have the exclusive sale of this popular. brand
in this city. If you are not satisfied with the
coffee you are using, try this brand. Send .
in an order for a package and compare it
with what you are using. Our stock of Groc
eries is new and fresh.
H. r. GREINER
5 8
x 5 A New line Just r 5
BSBjSJ aSsmunsra nm SmfsssmCesBB VaP'
R The most modern in KhsJL mSr at
31 itastraeture and design. Vmri-iBSL 5
91 Eaehrpieoehasa certaia L9! IC
Si kdividaality of its own, mPJnPPsSPpS? IC
v? E aad this, coupled with V fgHlgf'jl 9
IE the fact that it k made H -Tu--).s5JbS-s- f ?. ap
C stroag aad durable make B So'jASSsf! 3
r 2 itthe more desirabte I cJJ&3JJF!&k fj
"jx . 2M taColumbue people, We M r?I3 5 "kll 15
C ' 5l Furniture end if you will n ff f f Alp.jfga -2
B- call we will show you NllSgV2B l 3
T& C thaBeweet things ia far- H(l ft atw
.. 3 uKare, We soaoityour ' fJM W U 5
amuM) w M3 m Smassl
? eBBBBi Sf BBBBSm
,f E iB has
If HEtiY 6ASS I
&-2- -SB - - ji , .
saSjT SBSSSI '- ' BBBBBSt r
my, mmmmmnnfmTmwjmmmfwmmmmmmmmmmmm .toi
iV i -
Half the addition
is now gone but
there are still left
some of the choic
est residence lots
s
&J&
r.
'"3
COLUMBUS
23 there were seven boxes, all oa posts,
bat this week August Fickel put ap a
wheel with theoxes oait, and now
the carrier has but one atop to make at
that oorner, as he can revolvo the wheel
and put the mail in each box as it is
turned around. Those who have boxes
on this comer are August Fickel, O. W.
Roberts, Wo. Vkrgutz, Frank Plage
man, Albert Seultz, a W.Skorupraad
Louis Jahn. A similar wheel has been
put upon the aorthwest oorner of sec
tion 23, the following having boxes at
that place. Christ VonEimera, Frank
8tachura, Barney Stechura, Fred Krueg
er and August Viergetz. . Such con
veniences as these are appreciated by
the carrier, as it means a saving in time
for him.
F IS IS
ELLIOTT. SPEICE &
Sole
TERRORS OF RUSSIAN WINTER.
It is
te Cold That All Human Activ
ity la Nearly Suspended.
"Wiater ia Russia," said a traveler.
Is a time of rest The only work pos
sible in the country la woedehoppimg,
aad since very few can gage In this
profitably the majority of the 'peas
ants spend the cold months beside
their stoves sleeping.
"When the first snow falls they heap
It up against their huts, and it helps
to keep them warm. In the towns
every street Is piled with mounds of
snow ten feet high, restricting the
fairway of traJac to half the usual
breadth of the road.
"" "Bonfires burn at an street corners,
round which the policemen on duty,
the errand boy and the casual loafer
stand thawing out frosen toes and try
lag to gain comfort in the cheery
sight of the blase. - In Moscow the
municipality has this year erected
hundreds of little hats warmed t to
fever heat with stoves. Between these
and the government drink monopoly
shops a great many worthy dtlsena,
who, but for that terrible wind, would
be seeking work tn a score of different
directions, hover to and fro. Vodka
Is consumed In astonishing quantities,
and It has the property of enabling the
generous drinker to withstand this icy
blast.for'hour after hour In fact, so
long as the stuff to procurable. But
there Is no credit In the government
drink monopoly shops, and when they
close the streets become strangely de
serted by all but the few well-to-do
who care to face the cold on business
or pleasure bent.
"The only garment that win keep
out frost aad wiad to the Siberian
dakha; ordiaary fur-lined coats with
huge collars embeddlag the' head
covered with well-wadded far cap, are
useful only for short drives; for any
thing over a few miles the dosha tola
dispensable. This to preferably rein
deer hide without aad some heavy,
dose fur within, aad to made large
enough to envelop the wearer with
clothes and ordinary fur coat, If need
be, as well.
It k astonishing what extremes
aad sudden changes the human frame
win accustom itself to. Ton sit in a
warm house at a temperature of
degrees one moment and the next you
are out in the street breathing wltn
exhilaration generous lungfuls of air
at 4t degrees below the opening of, the
first foor and the closing of the third
you always have at least three doors
to get in and oat of during a Russian
winter."
Tact
The right Mad of a wife never harps
upon her husband'a misdeeds, still less
does she remind him of his mkfor
tunes. No woman should marry a
man unless her love for him be of the
fiber which hopeth all things, belleveta
an things, and k not easily provoked,'
says Home Chat The right klaa ol
wife helpa a man when he faOs an en
courages him to try again. Instead of
railing at him for the stumble after M
to his feet
A Curicuc Fact.
T have had some very strange let
ters of latroaacUoa," said the caller.
"My friend." aaswer
"I don't rely too far oa
of that Had. A, man will
give yam a letter of latrodecttoa ee-
euaJHy kh
areata refuse te
rns new addition is located north of the city lim
its and will, within a few yean be one of the
choice leaidenoelocalitieBof Columbus. Lots in
addition will advance in price rapidly and as an
- investment they will bring good returns. During
the summer many new residences will he erected in
CJolumbus, and Phillip's addition will get a good big
share of them. '
We are selling these lots very reasonable and oh easy
terms, and for a home or a better investment there is
no better location in the city.
Phillip's Second Addition is only six blocks from
the new government post office and only seven
from the Thurston Hotel.
We would like to have you look
and let us make you prices.
Agents
Park Meat Market
Now open for business. Choice
outs of juicy steaks, tenderloin
andporkehops. Fish and gasae
fcseesoa. Ordera promptly filled
aad delivered to any part of the
dty. We will buy your poultry
and hides. Call and
.'
llugenaU
South aide Park Thirteenth SL
Columbus, Neb.
Both phones
The Snewshoe Rabbit.
Nature has tried many means of
saving her own from the snow death;
some, like the woodchuck, she puts to
sleep till the shows shall be over.
Others she teaches to store up food
and to hide so she deals with the
woodmouse. -To still others, aa the
moose, she furnishes stilts. The last
means she employs Is snow shoes.
This, the simplest most scientific, and
best to the equipment of the snow
shoe rabbit the Wabasso of Hiawatha
a woaderful creature, horn of a
snowdrift crossed with a little brown
hare.
The moose to like a wading bird of
the shore that has stilts and can wadej
well ior a space, out w. m -
the limit beyond which It Is no better
off than n land bird. But the snow
shoe to like the swimmer It skims
over the surface where It will, not
caring If there he one or 1,000 feet
of the element below it In this lies
Its-strength.
Wabasso has another name the
varying hare-becattse It varies la
color with the season; and the sea
sons la all Its proper country are of
two colors, brown for six months,
white for six. So all summer long,
from mid-April till mid-October, the
northern hare to a lfttle brown rab
bit Then cornea the snowy cold, the
brown coat to quickly shed; a new
white coat appears, the snowsboes
grow fuller and the little brown hare
has become a white hare, the snow
shoe hare of the woods. Everybody's
Magazine.
efSJSSJSj SSJ Wel
Donald, who was a fisher, started to
dress his owa fiyhooks. He was met
by a cronie one day, who said:
"I hear ye're begun to dress yer aia
hooka noo, Donald. Is that true?"
"It's a' that" answered Donald.
"An can yer put them up anything
eatend-Hker Inquired the cronie.
1 diana ken for that" replied Don-,
old, "but there wk a spider ran awa't
wl two'o them yesterday."
A eed Befi IiHiinf.
"My haaa," said Httk Elsie, k go
ing -to he an. admiral."
reeled the visitor., -a
a the naval academy. I
it '4
"Oh, ha hnen't'aet that far yet, but
he's had aa anchor tattooed oa hk
ark" CstaoMc Mandard and Times.
the addition over
CO.
NEBRASKA
Hunters in Church.
The hunt of Salat Hubert at Rallye
Chambly, France, the seat of Priace
Murat is especially laterestlag, owiag
to an ancient custom haviag been
revived and still kept up. Every year
there to a grand mass held at the
church, which to brilliantly illumin
ated for the occasion. The whlpBers
In and the whole hunting establish
ment, wearing the livery of the house,
which to red, with tricorne hats em
broidered with gold, ranged down the
nave. At the elevation of the host
the men -sound their horns aad the
priest solemnly blesses the hunt This
to quite a grand fete.
One can faintly imagine the pictur
esque tout ensemble of this scene, not
only the dogs, riders aad beautiful,
horses but the magnificent carriages,
with the most fashionably dressed la
dies, and' the chic impromptu lunches.
All very fascinating, accompanied with
the light-heartedness.of spirit aad sim
ple grace of the aristocratic French
woman. It to a sight that lingers long
in the memory, so instinct with charm
aad beauty to it Geatlewoi
His Classification.
"Oh, I don't intend to be scrupulous
about the way I get on." said the
young lawyer, who thought hlmaell
the greatest ever. "I frankly Intend
to rent out my head to aaybody whe
wants to make use of It" '.Then, It
von advertise it" replied ate cyalcal
friend, "they'll put you under the
heading of Empty Flats."
EnglanpSays
NO ALUM
InT
Lie
In England and France the Sale
of Alum Baking Powder is pro
hibited by law because of the in
jurious effects that follow its use.
The law in the District of
Columbia also prohibits Alum
in food.
You may live where as yet you have no protection against Alum
The only siire protection against Alum in your Bakin? Powder ts fo
Say plainly
ROYAL is made from
product - Aids digestJooadds to the hrilthtumest of food
Ftatftifl of Seat Has Aheaye Been On
of the raaslnaeki PavauHa ef
very once hi awhUe aa
theorist arises with the
meat that the Garden of Edem hi
last been located. The world k
corned more for the restHutka te the
of a large measure of the
aad happiness that k
with the lost paradise than R k wKh
the kxatloa of the place which k
woven into the majestic llnea of
MIKoa in hk pictures of the crea
tion aad the tragedy of the garden.
Nevertheless, the strength of human
interest to the facta of human origin
makes the location of the Garden of
Eden one of the fasdaatlag pursuits
of the agea. Aa there k no known
spot upon the face of the earth that
corresponds with the features attrib
uted to the location of Eden, and as,
even admitting the validity of the
Bishop Ussher chronology, there haa
ekpsed suMcIeat time for the utter
transformation of the physical as
pects of Eden aa described ia Geaesis.
the hunt for the actual Eden seems
hopeless.
The cradle of the race undoubtedly
Ilea somewhere In the east aad. ac
cepting the Indo-European theory of
race Identity of the Caucasian races,
it would seem as though the approx
imate birthplace of this branch of the
human family could be placed. Bat
ethnologkta are themselves astound
ed as they endeavor to track the path
of humaalty and to trace the breakup
of the race lato Its many branches,
through the evidence of language and
other enduring records. They are
nonplused and cannot arrive at a
common agreement excepting that,
after research has reached to the
farthest limit the borderland of civ
ilization appears to be brought little
nearer. '
Nevertheless there is no tradition
among the nations so entrandng as
that of Eden. Hardly a natloa of the
andent east but that retains the story
among ita folklore. But the tradition
haa traveled westward aad has spread
over the whole world. Evea the
Sandwich islanders, the people of the
Pamirs, and it k even said the Eski
mos, have traditions of Edea not dis
similar from the story of Genesis. The
records of the Aztecs disclose the
story of the serpeat delineated unmis
takably In the picture language of
that andent people. But while the
valley of Mexico has the credit of be
iag one of the spots Identified with
the location of Eden, on the other
hand the north pole to a candidate
for the honor, it being claimed that
Edea was wiped out by the advance
of the Ice sheet during the glacial
ages. South and Central America,
Mexico, the Sahara desert, the
jungles of the dark continent almost
every tropical country haa its de
feaders in this respect
The point of these claims usually
rests upon evidence of the existence
of a race earlier than any of which
history has knowledge. But as these
andent stocks are scattered through
out the globe, this appears to prove
nothing. But tradition, world-wide,
enshrines the Garden of Eden among
the beliefs of widely dissimilar peo
ples, and this fact Itself indicates the
early identity of the races of man
kind. The Mexican tradition, relating
as it does to tills continent, has es
pecial laterest This assumes there
was a race of human beings on this
continent many thousands of years
ago, and this Is to some extent con
finned by discoveries along the Pa
cific coast of South America. Traces
of a race and a civilization have been
discovered there, which go far back
of recorded time. It also seems that
hi some way or other there was land
connection between America and the
east This appears to be given some
plausibility by explorations of the
oceans. There are reasons for believ
ing that a continent which once stood
between this country and the east
sank into the sen and the fabled At
lantis was a part of It
in
c
ROYAL
Absolutely pure Cream of Tartar,- pure Grape
aft taalAA aM '
ibe very uses eueseT
Maes toaaliat out
-we:
SOU THA QUEEN
WAS DOLLY
IN THC
aha First Lady af The
Dolly Madkoa! Truly the
self k eae to conjure with.
Te
evea who forgets .nH the
battles and great geaersk
momentous events 'of hkesry. It
with persistence like the 1
fame of some old
Cora A. Moore hi Broadway. Mi
dimples and
eyea and nil the
that make
All this Dolly was. the
maiden from Fhlladskhk.
from the chrysalk of a
hood to the hrllhaat butterfiy
ence of a womanhood that found her.
the absolute queen of society, the arbi
ter of the positions of the day. the first
lady of the land!
Her pareats. who wereFrieads, haul
moved from Vlrgink to
for the advantages of
associations here afforded.
they called her Dorothea
to walk oa Chestnut street ke that
afternoon promenade which Chestnut
street still celebrates, and
fully watched the ladles of
their gay brocades and brsjht-eotored
silk stockings that peeped bsasath
their petticoats; far her heart dearly
loved all the sinful, pretty fineries that
her faith rebuked. At It aha mar
ried, aa her pareats wished, Jeaa
Todd, a staid aad proper Quaker, a
lawyer of Philadelphia. AtzSshewae
a widow, and then R was that she be
gan to develop as herself.
Aaron Burr had asked psrmlseiwn to
bring to call oa her one of the risk
statesmen of the day. aad all ia a fiat.
ter the gay young widow wrote a '
aa friead that the "great Httk
son k coming to see me thk
She got herself up ln.a mulberry satin
gown that set off to advantage the
pearly white and delicate rose tints
of her complexion, and when, fat her
mother's candle lighted parlor, she ex
tended a soft, dimpled hand te the un
impressive little man In a salt off
black, with ranted skirt aad stiver
shoe buckles, he was almost overcome
by the radiance of her beauty, the
toughing eyes of Irish Mae and the
saucy black curia that escapee? from
the demure cap of white tulle, ante
was the loveliest woman he had aver
met, and he went nt once about hk
wooing. . In a few months the rumor
of aa engagemeat was afioat la so
ciety. Martha Washington, with the
privilege of a family coaaection, made
bold to ask Mrs. Todd how matters
stood. Whea the widow Mwekgly
admitted the truth, she waa sisai ml
that It was all right aan that the match
should have the biesslag of
and Mrs. Washington.
There followed a splendid
The dun colored Quaker abode hi Fall
n delphla was not grand uough. and
so It was celebrated hi Virginia, at
Harewood. the home of the bride's
sister, and It waa a very dtffereet
scene from the first wsisisg that took
place ia the Frteada
Fair Division of
"Well, they are divorced."
"AnUcablyr
"Oh, yes. He got the dog aad
apt the rubber plant"
aunsaenewiii
i'
aM ether
aketesrffeaeadtryasMlnehaasl .
awmb hs season). l
S.E.MAJtTTCO.
-
sweetness, wrieee
coquetry aad husaheng
eharm aad wMehery
sessare Quaker
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