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About The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1907)
8 t VOL. LI XO. 35 NEMAHA, NEBRASKA, FltlDAY, JAN. 25, 1907 flubicripHoH, tCl ymr Im fr Me llteflifet Calico Sale Just received, two car loads of fine soft coal. Edwards & Bradford Lbr. Co. s ONE WEEK ONLY I Begirming Saturday, Jan. 26, we will place on sale all Calicoes in stock at 4c i $ per yard. J 5 These Calicoes are all first grades ; Snot a second grade piece in uie 101. Fine patterns. uet your now. Come early. S S supply Ar $ NEMAHA, NEBRASKA EARLE GILBERT PHONB summer 29$ J Dr. Bourne fits glasses. So. Auburn Horse blankets at' Edwards & Bradford Lbr Co. Bicycle supplies at Reeling's. Bicycles repaired. For harness goods go to Ed wards & Bradford Lbr Co. 1847 Rogers Bros, silverware for sale by W. P. Keeling. "Dry wdod$2 per cord. Phon4 :93. Wm. Moore. Joe Bunger was visitor last Friday. a Nemaha Curtis L. Brown and Miss Grace Mumford, who have been visiting at SummerAeld, Kansas, returned home Wednesday morning. Miss Grace Peabody angel No 2 returned from Auburn last Saturday. The Advertiser and postoffice forces were especially glad to see her. Mrs. Dr. Matthews writes that the doctor has his office now ready for business at 303 Neville block, Omaha. She is stopping at the Drexel hotel. We have some post cards con- r 1 j taming nne views oi tno court house, Hon. Church Howe's home at Auburn, and the Peru coal mine, at the postoffice book store. Joe Bunger has bought what is Known as tne oia starry nouse, this side of Brownville, and will move it to Peru and transform it into a rooming house for stu dents. . Best photos in .Nebr., at Criley's. southeastern So Auburn. Buy your coal of Edwards & Bradford Lbr. Co. Two carloads .just in. I want a niill to saw native lumoer. I have a good covered cartor sale. Jno. S. Stull, Auburn, Nebr. I desire to correspond with .parties wanting to sell river bottom and bluff land, in large and small tracts. Give legal -numbers, description, lowest .price, etc. Address: John M. Livingston, Nebraska City, Nebr. We sell sewing machines, get our prices. Edwards & Brad ford Lbr Co, Uncle Samuel Christy of Brownville was visiting Nemaha friends Thursday. Verne Taylor was up from Shubert Tuesday afternoon and gave us a brief call. Miss Maud Kinton visited Au burn friends from Thursday unti Saturday of last week. Wm. E. Wolfe called in Mon day and paid a year's subscrip tion for The Advertiser. White Lily washing machine' run easy. For sale only by Ed wards & Bradford Lbr Co. Will Hacker has bills out for a public sale Feb. 4. He will leave for Dundv county. Nebr., about the first of March. To those that have good dogs, keep them at home, tor it is .my intention to shoot all dogs prowl ing around my sheep. G. F. Rider. FAREWELL Having sold my stock of General Mer chandise to Messrs. Harrington & Sons, I desire to return my sincere thanks to the people of Nemaha and vicinity for the pat ronage and kind treatment given me during the four years I have been in business here end to ask a continuance of the same to my . SATURDAY SPECIAL IN I RIBBONS i s We have gathered up all the short lengths of Kibbons and are going to give you some Kibbon Values $ that you don't often see. There are a great variety of i $ colors and lengths. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Allen went to Auburn Wednesday to attend the funeral of Joel Cul- well, a cousin of Mr. Allen's. They returned home Thursday afternoon. 4 ! t e f oi r uon c rorgei to see our nne onoes. we nandle the Selz line best on earth. 5 .$ JNO. W. RXTCHETSr Phone 20 NEMAHA, NEBR. $ The Auburn Telephone Co. completed their line from Nema ha fn Shnhprf. Satnrdav nicrhtand the comnariv has now made a rate of five cents between these two places. Thunder Storm There was considerable thunder and lightning last Friday night during the rain storm. This is something rather unusual here in winter time. Mr. Glenn Harger and Miss Wavie Thorn, both of Aspinwall precinct, were married Wednes day, Jan. 23, 1907, at Auburn. We extend hearty congratulations to the young people. Ferry at St. Deroin The Missouri river is open at St. Deroin and the ferry is pre pared to cross at any time. Good asfe ferry. Henry Lemon, Prop. All parties owing me are re quested to call and settle their accounts before Jan 1, as I need the moeey. W. H, Barker. Mrs. M. H. Taylor of Shubert was in Nemaha a few hours Tuesday afternoon, coming in on the afternoon train from Auburn, where she had been visiting her brother-in-law, J. W. Taylor, and going home on the freight. I successors. All persons holding checks will pleaso present at the store for redemption as soon as convenient. Parties owing me will please call and settle at once. Respectfully, J. H. Vanderslice Mrs. Jesse Ellisf -living 'rieaf Brownville, underwent a severe surgical operation last week, at Auburn. The operation was successful and the patient is get ting along nicely, She is a daugh ter of A. G. Warren of Nemaha. Rev. J. W. Sapp closed the meeting at Brownville Saturday night. Although the attendance was good ana consiaeraoie in terest manifested, there was only one addition to the church. The meetings continued about three weeks. G..N. Titus, Dan Maxwell, A. B. Paris, and a number of other farmers in that vicinity have been burning coal from the Peru mine this winter. The quality is good and gives satisfactory ser vice. They pay $3.50 per ton at the mine. Mrs. C. T. Minick and Masters Elliott and. Hubert came in from Dewitt last Friday and visited Mrs. Minick's mother-in-law and sister-in-law, Mrs. E. A. Minick and Mrs. E. E. Allen, and other relatives in this vicinity until Thursday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Hill, who were married at Lincoln Tuesday of last week, visited Mr. and Mrs. Elon E. Hill of Nemaha from Friday until Mon day. The bride is a daughter of W. H. Hill, former deputy sheriff of this county, now living at Lincoln. Still More Coal According to correspondence from Brownville, Wm. Gillespie has developed a coal mine on his place, a mile and a half southeast of that place. It is stated the new mine has as equally flatter- northwest and some ' ing prospects as the Honey Creek but it quieted down mine had at its beginning. Au- i burn Herald. John I. Dressier is building a wareroom fourteen feet square in the rear of the store room occupied by Jno. W. Ritcbey. This will be some relief to the congestion of goods in the main room. Rev. "W. H. Prescott, the evan gelist holding meetings at the Method fst church, went to Lin coln, Tuesday, going on the early morning freight, and returning to Nemaha on the freight Wed nesday evening. . Mrs. Pryor, .mother of Mar shall and Walter Pryor, died at her home in Brownville Saturday evening and was buried Monday. She was an old citizen and hisrhly respected by all her friends and acquaintances. The weather had all the ap pearance of a coming blizzard or a bad storm Saturday afternoon. It turned colder, the wind blew from the snow fell, but it without any storm after all. We have received from our friend T. A. Clark of St Paul, Nebr., a postcard picture of the U. P. motor car speed limit, sixty miles per hour. Standing in the door in the front end of the car ia Clarence M. Beard, son of John M. Beard, and nephew of Mrs. Ellen Howe. J. W. Wolfe has bought an other forty acres of good fanrf land, and now owns two hundred acres of elahdIjistwelc he completed the deal by which he becomes owner of forty acres of the Sperry farm, just across the road east of where Mr. Wolfe is living. He paid $3,000 for it. Mrs. Knapp Gets a Bad Fall Last Sunday afternoon Mrs. M. W. Knapp got a fall from which she is still suffering. Mr. and Mrs. Knapp drove down to J. H. Seid's and visited a few hours. As they were leaving Mrs. Knapp stepped into the back end of the sleigh. . The horse just then stepped forward and Mrs. Knapp was thrown backward on the frozen ground. She was considerably bruised , and jarred and was confined to her bed for a day or two. It is hoped there were no permanent injuries sustained. J. H. Vanderslice Sells Store Tuesday night a deal was com pleted whereby J. H. Vanderslice sold his stock of general mer chandise to Harrington & Sons of Crab Orchard. H. W. and R. E. Harrington, the two younger men of the firm, came in Tuesday afternoon and the trade was soon completed. It was affected through the agency of Frank Titus. R. E. Harring ton will move to Nemajia and have charge of the stock. This firm has a large stock of general t merchandise at Crab Orchard. , They are rustlers, good business, , men, and will be a benefit to the community, v f Mr. Vanderslice has not yjjfc; decided ,where he will go. He sells out on account of the health of himself and family, which.has been poor for some time. The Messrs. Harrington' re turned to Crab Orchard Wednes day. Mr. Vanderslice will be in charge of the store until next Monday.