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About The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1904)
BfeMaflit tut. T VOLUME XL1X NEMAHA, NEBHASKA, FRIDAY, J LINE 24, 1904 NUMBER I Local 3STews See M T Hill for fire insurance. Elmer Brimble returned to Lincoln Monday. ' Sidney Lawhon went to Falls City Monday. The Advertiser this week starts on volume 10. P. E. Gaither is country tliia week. visiting in the Mrs. Nora Zwelbel went to Water loo, Nobr', last Friday. Warren Bouftleld of Auburn was a Nemaha visitor Tuesday. ' I have 100 acres of good pasture and will take cattle or horses at SI per month. F. L. Collin. 3 miles south of Nemaha. S. C. French ciimo over from Au burn Moilay afternoon with a tb e Huntington piano and put it in the opera house for the benefit of the Quartet Entertainers. ,C. E. Sanders will teach the Cham pion school trie coming year. A Hue 1 1 tie of silverware suitable for wedding presents at Reeling's. One nearly new Deere riding lister for sale". Enquire of E. L. Paris. Boru To Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Vans derslice, Tuesday morning, a line girl. Judge Broady of Lincoln was a Nes maha visitor Wednesday and Thurs day. llobt. E. Buoher went to Preston, N'ebr., Monday to work with the B. & M iron gang. Arthur Drain of Bed Cloud, Nebr. , visited friends in this vicinity several days this week. Born To Mr. and Mrs. John T. Webber. Thursday morning, Juno 213, liiO-l, a line girl. Mr. Epley of Lincoln was in Nema ha Wednesday and Thursday, collect ing data for the forthcoming history of Nebraska which was started by the late J, Sterling Morton. F. W. Sumuelson of Humboldt, one of the incorporators and for many years president of the First National bank of Auburn, has gone into bank ruptcy. Too much speculation. John S. Stevenson and John M Demareo of Auburn wero Nemaha visitors Thursday and gave us a social call. Stevenson denies that ho came down to attond tho negro minstrels. Mrs. C. W. Roberts arrived home last week after, a visit at Kansas City with liei son Clyde and at Eskridge, Kansas, with her brother, A. J. Skeen, and her mother. Her mother came home witli her. .1 ust uddcri a good supply of the celebrated JAPLAC This is tho now Furniture Roju venator and Floor Paint u All Sizes and Colors AT Hills DrugStore FOR SALE: My residence property in j Nemaha. "Will: sell at a bargain if sold at once. MRS. THEO. HILL W. V. Sanders is agent for novum jood reliable insurance companies! mutual and old line. Call on him for flro Insurance If you want lire insurance, either in old line or mutual companies, call on W. W. Sanders. Next Monday night is 'the annual school meeting, which will be held at the school house. Amaziah Johnson, deputy for the Koy.il Highlanders, was a Nemaha visitor Thursday. Dr. Keeling returned from St. Louis Monday afternoon. lie says he hud a good time at the fair. August Quiller and D. II. Clark shipped a car of hogs and cattle to Kansas City Monday night. A Brownville man drove down to Nemaha with a lot of new potatoes Thursday, but was greatly surprised to llnd that wo had potaooes to sell juat as nice as any raised anywhere. The Nemaha uardeners are not excelled anywhere. A.U. McCandless is having some chances made on his house. He has had the porch on the south enclosed making a nice room, and has had an other porch built on the south, and has also had one built on the west the fill length of the house. The children's day services at thu Methodist church Sunday night won! very interesting. The program, enti tied "Heirs of Tomorrow," was finely rendered. Many thanks are due Mrs Elmer E. Allen and Mrs. Earlo Gilbert for training the children. Tho house was crowded. N. B. Don't forgot Vvo write insurance Geo. Green and Geo. Kittoll came up from Oklahoma Wednesday moms tin with the body of Mrs. John J. Green. The Quartet Entertainers at tho ops era house hero June 20 were delighted with the Huntington piano, they said, because of its pure, clear, singing quul- ties. The Christian Sunday school laht Sunday elected tho following ofticors: Mrs. Belle Barker, Supt. Win Smiley, Ass't Supt x Eddlo Maxwell, Sec'y Maud Burns, Ass't Sec'y L A Lawhon, Trena Claud Maxwell, Librarian Ethol Shorwood, Ass't Lib'n Mayo Gaitlior, Organist F. Li. Woodward roturued home l'uosday after a trip to Denver and the western part of Nebraska. IIu saw Mr. anil Mrs. J . W. Monteith and J. M. Workman and family, who aro liv log in Chase county, and says thoy aro doing woll. Both have good prospectB for largo crops. Mr. Monteith Iuib :!20 acres of land, and has In 120 acres of corn and JJ0 acres of millet, and is doing all the work himself. Jim Workman has a lino quarter section witli a good orchard tho beBt in that section. Oalnod Forty Pounds In Thirty Days For Bevoral months our younger brother had boon troubled with indi bestlon. IIo itrlod sovoral remedies but got no bonollt from thoni. Wo purchased somo of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and ho commenced taking them. Insddo of thirty days ho had gained forty pounds in flesh. He is now fully recovered. Wo havo n good trado on the Tablets. Hollov Bros. oMorclmnts, Long Branch, Mo. For snlo by W W Keeling. Qr. W. Keeling, Nunmlia, Nubrnskn. Office in Keeling drug store. DR. Gr. M. ANDREWS Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women Stolla - - NobrnHltn John B. So'd of Auburn visited his sons, W. W. and J. II; Seid, from Saturday until Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Littrell went to Omaha Wednesday to visit Mrs. Litt rell's brother for a few days. Harry and Flossie Parker of Aus burn aro visiting their grandmother, Mrs. J. B, iierger, thiB week. Ed Sanders of London precinct lias been engaged to teach the Walnut Grove school the coming year, Miss Hazel Parker of Auburn visit ed her cousin, Miss Nellie Sanders, from Saturday until Wednesday, Mrs. D, A. Morton was some better the first of the week, but is feeling worse again . She is very weak. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Curttright, who have been visiting their son, Walter Curttright, returned home Sunday. The freight from the north now ruus through to Atchison again. For a while it has been stopplug at Falls Oi Wo had a heavy rainfall Friday night, two ond a half inches of rai falling. Tho bridgo in the west part of town was washed out. John Fars son's bouse was tlooded. Considerable corn was wastied out or covered up Monday nigut we had another rain, but not so hard here. Hon. Norris Brown, republican can didate for attorney general, has been secured as orator for tho old settlers' picnic which ss to be held at Nemaha August 25tli. Tnis means that the or atorial part of the program will bo superb, as Mr. Brown Is both a scholar and an orator. Granger. At a meeting of the members of tho cemetery association last Friday Elmer E. Allen was elected trustee to fill t'ie vacancy caused by the death of Seyi mour Howe. The board of trustees now consists of Poter Kerker, F. L. Woodward, John I. Dressier, W. W Sanders and Elmer E. Allen. Strawberries aro about all gone, but. wo are well supplied with cherries Every cherry tree seems to be loaded with the finest kind of fruit. Goose berries are also plentiful. "Papa's Hoy (Jo. gavu two gooi performances at tho opera house vVednesday and Thursday night There uas not much to tho playB pre seated except fun, but plenty of that T. J. Humbaugb roporta tho follow ing donations from the patrons o Kouto No. 1: Fred Hoover, two boxe of strawberries; Eugene Bonhotel, pail of cherries and lien Colerick a pail of cherries. John Watson brought us in a box oi strawberries last Saturday that surpass any wo have seen this year for size. All of them measure four and live inchos in circumference. His berries were very lino this year. Miss Dora Morton, one of tho suc cessful competitors in the Auburn Post's world's fair contest, had intend. ed going to St. Louis Monday, but on account of her mother's sickness was compelled to postpone her trip. Nemaha has had an abundance of shows this week. Monday night wo had the Quartette Entertainors Wednesday and Thursday nights "Pa pa's Boy Co.," and Thursday and Fri day nights Lacey's,- Negro Minstrols, the latter performance being in a tout. Chancollor Andrews of the state university will bo the orator of the day at Auburn on the 4th of July. The 30th infantry band from Ft. Crook will furnish music. There will also be plantation melodies by colored jubi lee singers, athletic events, and other attractions. The body of Mrs. John .. Green ar rived at IIowo Wednesday morning and was brought to the home of her siBter, Mrs. Mary Kittoll, near Nema ha, where the funeral was held Thurs day afternoon, and the body laid at rest in tho Nemaha cemetery. The following obituary notice has been handed us: Sarah Bennett, daughter of Lionel and Celia Bennett, was born at Foster, Rhode Island, about 70 years ago. In oarly life alio waB married to Benjas mlu Card, who died of consumption four years later. At the ago of twentyssix she became the wife of John Green, and removed with thini to Nebraska, moro than thirty years ago, living on a farm two and one-dialf miles northwest from Nemaha. In the fall of 1000. with tier huspand, adopted son and family, she loft Nebraska for Custer Co., Ok lahouia. While in Nebraska, typhoid fever undermined her naturally strong constitution, and tho breaking of an ahcetts on her lungs, followed by paral ysis, 'ended her lifo Juno 17, HUM Her remains wore forwarded to the home of her twin sister. Mrs. Mary Kittell, to be laid at rest in tho Noma ha cemetery. Mrs. Green was a plain, unassuming woman, a kind neighbor, a true friend. Many of her -Nebraska friends will long remember, witli gratitude and love, her kindly ministrations in times of sickness or trouble At tho great day of reckoning, may it bo said of her, "Slio hath done what she could." O. O. SNOW Auctioneer Fifteen years experience. TerniB and dates at The Adveitiser otlice. PET Ell K till ICE K. Dimlor In ZMZIE.A.TS! Highest market price paid for llidrs, Lard, Tallow, etc. IvNAPP & SON Proprietor of tin; Livery & Feed Stable NEIYIAHAJ NEBR, Good Dray in connection with Livery Satisfaction guaranteed. UNDERTAKER Wind .Hills and Jmnis 'tin ISooing muiUtilH'rhig Rev. J. W. Sapp will proach at the Christian church next Sunday at 11 a. in. and S p. m. and at Champion school house at V, p. m , Miss Grace Gipson pleased the auds lence at the Methodist church Sunday night by giving two 30I03 "Tho Holy City" and "Face to Face." Those desiring lessons in voice cuN turo please call on Mrs. Earlo Gilbert for prices, dates, etc. GraguGm'son. The people of Nemaha county can rejoice over the fact that our new court bouse is paid for, and tho fellows that opposed voting' bonds because wo would be voting an indebtedness on our children and grandchildren and great grandchildren have forgotten that they ever made any such prodicts ions. The entertainment given Monday night by tho Quartette Entertainers of Beatrice was tine. Hirdio 0. Miller is a fine elocutionist and was frequent ly encored. Miss Mabel Starn den lighted tho audience with her vocal boIos. Mispos Frona and Viola Clarke tho twin sisters, gave some excellent piano duets. Unfortunately, on ac count of rain lato in the evening and threatening storm, the audience was small. The quartette was deserving of a full house. Mrs. J. M. Sanders drove to Brown villo last Sunday to see her daughter-in-law, Mrs John G. Sanders, and her littlo grandson, jaiu G. Sanders, who came down from Aberdeen, South Das kota, a few days ago, to visit their pais onts and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Schantz. This week Tho Advertiser begins on volume fortysnine. Forty-eight years ago this month the first copy of The Advertiser was issued at Brownville, the material having been brought out from Tippecanoe, Ohio, by John Mc Flierson. K. W. Furnas, who ia yel living at Brownville, and who lias probably done moro for tho state than any other one man, was tho first editor. Tho Adverttser is the oldest paper of tho state of continuous publication. The present editor bought the paper in 1864. Every liousekeeperHhould know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron,' but becauso each package contains 10 oz. one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches aro put up in ?.( pound packages and tho price is uiu Biwiitj, iu uuiiitt. xnen aea n oos causo Defiance Starcli is froo from all 1 t i w injurious cnemicais, it your grocer tries to soil you a 12oz. package it is becauso he has a stock on hand which ho wishes to disposo of before he puts in Defiance. Ho knows that tho Do- nance aiarcn lias printed on every packuge In large letters and flgureB 10 ozs". Demand Deflanco and save much timo and money and tho annoys anco of the iron sticking. Deflanco never sticks. onr Patronage. Solicited A Thoughtful Man M M Austin of Winchester, hid., know what to do in the hour of need His wife hnd such an unusual case of stomach and liver trouble, physicians could not help her. Ho thought of and tried Dr King's Now Lifo pills( and she got relief at once and was fins' ally cured. . Only 25c at Keeling' in the PARIS BUILDING Shoe Repairing Harass Rtdu ring Hand Made Harness a Specialty WESLEY H. CLARK Doulur In Windmills and Pumps, TanksPipesetc. ALL WORK CUARANTEEC 'l'hone calls answered promptly, ''.'hone No 20 NEMAHA, NEim.