volumTe XL1X NEMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1905 NUMBEtt 32 r i J I) 6, X). I Xiooal News See M T Hill for Ore Inauranco. V. G. Maxwoll Is sick with the grip Dr. Bourne (Its glasses. So. Auburn. Dan Maxwell is another grip victim. Photo mountlnc card bourd for Balo at the Advertiser office ' Dr. Keeling was able to get down town Monday after several dayB Biek- ness. Ned Crother, whobas been In Iowa for soverat weeks, -returned home Monday. J. H. Linn of Lincoln has been visit ing Nemaha county' friends for the past two weeks. Anyway there Is one flne thing con nected with this weather it la akeeter less. Oranha News, W. W. Sanders and VV. W. Seld went to Peru Wednesday afternoon to attend Masonic lodge. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Knapp returned home Sunday after several days' visit at Humboldt and Sabetha, Kas. When we see the protracted senators inl wrancle in other state loclslatureB we can congratulate ourselves on vuu I Nebraska plau. Woodward & Allen Oiled house the flrat of the week. their ice They got Hue ice from the Missouri river, uleven inches thick. It is Mrs. D. E. Llttrell went to Peru Monday to help take care of her mother Mrs. Ourtis, who is very aick. She re turned home Thursday. i All persons indebted to mo are res quested to call add settle as I am great Andrew Aynes. For Sale. mk posts, rick. -Five hundred good burr Also stove wood by the F. L. Woodward. For Sale About 100 bushels of pota toes. Will exchange for wood, corn, chickens or money. W. W. LlEBHART. Foi SaleA good 40-acre farin, 23 acres in young orchard just beginning to bear; good 5 room house, well, eto. Price $2500. Good terms. Apply at this office. J. W. Haas, special rural route in spector who is rearranging tho rural service in this county, was in Nemaha Tuesday and went over route No. 2 with Carrier Maxwell. Congressman Burkett has resigned the office of congressman from the First district, to take effect March 4 1005, when he will take the oath of office as United States senator. Mrs. Rose Gilbert and Mrs. A. R. McCandless went to Omaha last Frls day to hear Melba. Of course tbey heartily enjoyed hearing this groat ar tist sing. They returned Saturday. Wood for sale. 100 cords good dry wood for sale, in timber or dolivered. J. M. Clark, Mrs. Joe Bunger received a letter last Saturday containing the sad news of the death of her brother, Frank Marr a resident of Al wood, Okla. Mr. Marr was a railroad employe and lost bis life as the result of an accident. One day last week Marshall Pryor left some sausage and spare ribs at tbe home of Rural Route Carrier Rum baugb, and Monday afternoon J. H. .Seld gave him some sausage. So Mr. Rumbftugh will live high for a fow days. For Sale Thoroughbred barred I'lvmnntlt Tl. 1 , ... I strain. 1'irsr come, flrst Served, If i you want uuuiul- ui u.rua come soon. O..U. JTAItlS. A T T . . I The Missouri Pacific railway bis given notlco that the train men will have tholr wages cut teu per cent after tho first of tho month. Tho train meu have given notlco that thoy will not stand tho reduction and It may mean trouble before the matter Ib settled. Fred Shannon, a Qreman on the B.& M. had his leg broken at Iloldrege Thursday evening of last week. In getting off his engine ha Bllpped and broke Ills log. Fred was for some time fireman on the Beatrice freight, but had been put on the pasBonger trains 97 and 08 from Beatrice to Holdrege. The Junior League In increasing in attendance rapidly. Last Sunday 44 were present. Great interest Is manl fosted In the lessons. The Juniors an now Btudying tho principal characters and events In Bible History before the birth of Christ, together with the geo graphy of that poriod. Everybody la mvltod. Mr. Hull of Alma, Nebr., was In Nemaha Friday working up interest In a farmers' institute for Nemaha Arraugements have been made for a session on Thursday, February 0. See program in another colnmn. It is hoped our farmers will take an interest In the institute, as it will undoubtedly be of great practical benetit to mem. ni 1 r P o T).a n nt-Au cinct, was arrested Saturday on a eor ious cbarae. It is allesed that be committed a criminal assault on Mln nie Kelthley, aged sixteen years, lie is eiehteen vears old. Gonover is locked up in the county jail and will have his urelimlnary hearin" in the county court a week from next Tuea day. Auburn Herald Dr. Gaither knows just bow cold the water in the Nemaha river was Tues day; He had been out to Wm. Mead's I and walked back, taklue a shortcut As he went to step on the ice to cross the Nemaha river bib feet slipped and down be went. Next to the bank the river was not frozen for a few inches and the doctors feet went under the ice and he got wet above the knees. He bad to walk about two miles before he got borne, but experienced no bad effects except that be was a little stiff the next day. Nemaha county will soon be noted for publications of different kinds. While wo have no dailies, we have some of the very best weeklies in the state. In addition to the usual local papers, we have the Beob& enter, a Ger man paper published at South Auburn. The Nemaha County Magazine a bright monthly, is published at South Auburn at the Herald office, and the same es tablishment also prints the Crozier, the official organ of the Episcopal church in Nebraska. Scarlet and Green, the monthly published by the Auburn high school, is also printed at the Herald office. The Nemaha County Teacher, edited by Supt. Carrington, is printed at the Republican office. Now the Peru Pointer publishers have started the Normal Journal, It Ib a very neat monthly and the publishers are deserv ing of credit for their enterprise. The following is tbe orocram for tbe Farmers' Institute to be hold at Nemas ba, Nebraska, Thursday, February 0, 1005. Discussion of Farm Topics. morning session 10 30 Teaching the Colt Its A B C's Mr. D. Ward King, Maltland, Mo. AFTERNOON SESSION 1 :30 Treatment of Animal Diseases Dr. A. T. Peters, Exper. Station. 230 Making Earth Roads Mr. King. EVENING SESSION. 7:30 The Experiment Station Dr. Peters. Other valuable addresses by local speakers. These meetings are held under the i auu luo xiouiaun rniuioia xuobibuia AnHntlnn. nnrl nrn frflfl tn all. Farmers, Come and Bring Your p.mlllBB. 5$ GttOurFrecBookFlrtt " You can't afford to buy a ranee until you know all about a Monarch. Ask us for the book; STATE WHEN you Intend tobuy,and we willBend also a net ot Measuring Spoons, postpaid. ADDRESS Malleable Iron Range Co, Beaver Dam, Wltconttn. account low quality. All sixes, different arrangements for city or country Arc as saving and satisfactory after Sold by Edwards & Elmer E. Alton has been living the strenuous life part of this week. Ho has been overseeing the (co cutting, getting up In tho morning shortly after four o'clock, and staying at the riverside most of the day. He says tho ice business is probably all right in the glad old cummer time but he pres fers being a banker during the winter Nemaha comity has several oddly named newspapers in the list of pub lications. The Nemaha Advertiser, Auburn Republican and Herald, Johns sou News and the Brock Bnlletin are common enough names, but the Aus burn Granger, the Beobachter of the same place, tbe Peru Pointer and the Brownville Letter are names seldom neen as headings for newsbapers. Misa Hazel Anderson, oldest daught er of Mr. and Mrs.S.K. Anderson of Auburn, died at'ber home last Saturs day, from typhoid fever. Miss Hazel van bright and loveable, just blooming uto womanhood. The love felt for tier was shown by the number or her young friend and schoolmates who ats tended the funeral services, which were held at the home Monday at 11 o'clock. A number of her Nerauba friends were present. Her bereaved parents have our sympathy in their sorrow. Are you a judge of beef cattlo? If so, you should read the article on "The Modern Type of Beef Animal," by Les' He Smith, of St. Cloud, Minn., in this week's Homestead. If not you should read It anyhow and set this able exs port's views. Mr. Smith pronounces four or flvo breeds equally good and names as such Shorthorns, Herefords, Aberdeen Angus and Galloways. He regards olimatio adaptation as import ant and insists on uniform laying on of flesh. Ho lays down all the points in judging beef cattle and also defects to be avoided. He regards easy feeding and quick maturing animals as best and warns against feeding too long. "Get tbe best breed," he says, "and breed right, feed right and prosperity will be yours." Such articles as these every week have made The Homestead tbe great farm journal of America. It should be in every farm home in Ne maha oountv. and it will not be tbe fault of the Advertiser if it Ib not. We shall be glad to order it for you. Grave Trouble Foresoen It needs but little foresight, to tell that when your stomach and liver are badly affected, grave trouble is ahead, unless you take the proper medicine for your disease, as Mrs John A. Young of Clay, N. Y.. did. Sho says: " I had neuralgia of tbo liver and stomach, my heart was weakened, and I could not eat, I was very bad for a long time, but in Electric Bitters, I found just what I needed, for they quickly reliev ed and oured me," Best medicine for weak women. Sold under guuranteo by W. W, Keeliua. drucclst. at 00c a bottle. ThtlSfoy S&tlsfoctoryNftiH?e C The question is not how low the cost of making can go, but how good Monarchs can be made, regardless of cost. Special work done by special men, and the larcrc number produced. for the surprisingly- price, considering homes, also for hotels and public Institutions. years of use ns nt the beginning. Bradford Lbr. Co. One of the peculiar coincidence connected with the suicido of Henry Moissnor, at Johnson, last week, was the fact that bo baught the shotgun with which he killed himself lrom Fritz Wilkeninp, who is connected with tbe Edwards & Bradford lumber yard at Graf. Last your Mr. Wllkenlng was locate ed at Nemaba, and while there ho sold a revolver to Davy Carroll, tho man that shot Ann Maxwell and then kill ed himself at Nemaha, nearly a year ago Carroll paid Mr. Wllkenlng 912.50 for tbe weapon. Last week at Graf, Henry Melssuer purchased a double'baraeled shotgun from the same party with tbo evident intent of killing his wife and children and then putting an end to himself, but failed in the first part of his program. Melssner "paid tbe same price for the weapon he purchased as did Carrol $12.50. Mr. Wilkening is not in the Qreurtn business, these being the only weupons be has sold in his life and that the two should be used for self destruction is quite unusual. The thing seems so uncanny to him that be has determined to never again sell a weapon of any kind to another as ho thinks his firearms are likely to be hoo dooed. Auburn Herald. Program for Y. P. 8. O. E. meeting at tbe Christian church, Sunday, Jan. 20, 1005, beginning at 0:80 p.m. Lesson Subject Heroes of Foreign Missions. What Tbey Teach Us. 2 Cor. 11:21 28. Bong. Prayer. Bible Drill Leader. Vocal Solo Choir Boy Miss Dora Clark. Reading Lesson Leader, Song. Paper Mr. Erank Dressier. Duet Miss Maye Gaither, Clifford Hendricks Bible References and Topics. Song. Missionary Stories. India Miss Stella Washburn. China Miss Maye Gaither, Song. Endeavor Benediction. All persons interested in 'Christian work come and bring your Bibles. Come prepared to take a part and we shall have a wide awake meeting. Miss Minnie May, Pres. Clifford Hindrigks, Sec. and Leader. Old papers for sale at this ofllce. Agonizing Burns are instantly relieved, and perfectly healed, by Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, C Rlvenbark, Jr., of Norfolk, Va., writes 'I burnt my knee dreadfully; that it blistered all over. Bucklen'a Arnica Salve stopped the pain, and healed it without a scar." Also heals all wounds and sores. 25o at W. W. Keeling, druggist Subscribe for your papers at this of lice. Local Teacher's Association, Nema- ha, Nebr., Saturday, Jan. 28, 1005, 10:30 a. m. Musio. Roll Call. Papor Geographic Inlluoncos in American History C. E. Sanders. Discussion Robert Higgins. Papor Busy Work. Indoor Gamos etc.. for Cold Days. Miss Graco Paris. Paper 'Tho RcoltatW Miss Em ma Riley. Discussion W. P. Barrett. Paper Relation of Patron to School MIsb Stolla Washburn. Discussion Clifford Hendricks. Intermission . 1 p. m. Music. Roll Call. Special Musio. Papor Composition and Language Work Mrs. Hoadley. Somo Suggestions Prof . G. N. Por ter, Professor of English at State Normal. Spelling First thousand words In Crabtree's Word Book. Patrons and all persons Interested in school work aro especially invited to be present. Bring a copy of this program with you. Co. Sui'T. Geo. D. Carrington Chairman. Clifford Hendricks, Secretary. NOTICE OF TAX SAUB To tho uolrB of A. Wnlroth and all othors Intorottod. Notlco Ib hernbv clvon that on tho 16th day of Juno, 1003, tho unclernlRned purohattcd at prlvnto tax Bale for delinquent taxes of year 1001 and all prior yearn lot ono I In block tlilrty-nino 39, Nomana uuy, rseurasKa, ana has Dnld all subscauont taxes. On or alter June 10th, 1006, tho undcrBlgnod will apply for nueea lorsucii property unless rouorap tlon 1h previously made according to law. Dated this 10th cay ol January. 1006. DR. G. M. ANDREWS Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women Stella - - Nebrtiftka C PETER KE&KER. t Dealer In MEATS IiprhoBt market prico paid fiafrfiides, Lard, Tallow, etc, STULL Ic HAWXIY ATTORNEYS' IiAW,5Itt!Al4 JESTATB, COLLECTION Offices ovor PoRtofHoe Building, at Frauk Neal's old stand, AUBURN, NEBRASKA KNAPP & SON Froprlctora of the Livery & Feed Stable K2KASA,fNIBR, Good Bray in connection with Liver? Satisfaction guarantied. JT. E. Crother in the PARIS BUILDING Shoe Repairing Harness Repairing Hand Made Harness a Specialty WESLEY H. CLARK Dealorjln Windmills and Pumps, Tanks, Pipes,retc. ALL WORK GUARANTEE? Phone calls answered promptly. NEitfAHA, NEBR.