mmmm VOL. Lll XO. 18 NEMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEPT. 20, 1907 NEW HTLIIVErtY We are ready for the rush. 75 Trimmed and Pattern Hats to select from. Prices Always the Lowest MRS. THKO, HILL Dr. Bourne fit3 glas333. So. Auburn Oil cake for sale by W. F. Keeling. F. E. Hoover started for Cor dell, Oklahoma, Tuesday. Mrs. H. E. Williams came up from Shubert Thursday morning. We have been having some hot, dry and dusty weather, with high winds. W. T. Russell went to Guide Rock, Nebr., Wednesday, to visit friends. Mrs. J. E. Lambert started for Oxford, Near., Monday, to visit relatives. B. H. Moore has sold lots of peaches at $1 per bushel. They were good ones. Miss Nora Aynes went to Brownville Saturday, returning Sunday evening. Mrs. J. W. Colerick and Orra -went to Graham, Mo., Saturday to visit relatives. W. S. Russell went to Nebraska City Thursday morning to take in the stock show. Mrs. W. H. Barker went to Shubert Monday evening, return ing Wednsday morning. E. D. Rogers of Auburn visit ed his son, L. D. Rogers, from Saturday until Monday. Ned Maxwell went to Lincoln the latter part of last week, re turning Monday evening. Let us figure your lumber bills and show you we can save you money. E. & B. Lbr. Co. C. H. Kindig started for South Dakota Tuesday, taking a number of prospective land buyers with him. Elntfr E. Allen has been out to his father's farm, at Bracken, the most of the week, helping cut up corn. Mrs. Maria Brown of Wash burn, Ills., arrived in Nemaha Tuesday afternoon on a visit to relatives. Mrs. Brown is a niece of John I. Dressier and Mrs. V. P. Peabody. We will have on display at the store of. Jno. W. Ritchey, Nemaha, Nebr., a fine display of Ready Trimmed Hats and Fall Millinery Wc invite ladies to come and see us ROBERTS & DYE 1 The hay makers have been hard at work recently. Aside from the wind the weather has been very favorable. Mrs. Lew Roach of Nebraska City visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Colerick, from Sat urday until Monday. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Williams started for Colorado Springs, Colorado, Thursday, where they will visit for a while. Mrs. C. P. Barker and her brother, A. C. G. Shockey, went to Peru Monday to visit relatives, returning Tuesday evening. Jno. W. Ritchey has had a barn 18x20 built on the proberty he recently bonght of Mrs. Alice A. Minick. Ralph did most of the work Mrs. E. S. McCandless of Thurman, Iowa, came to Nema ha Tuesday evening to visit her mother, returning, Wednesday morning. Miss Avis Carse went to Peru Tuesday morning to make preparations for attending the normal school. She returned in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. O'Harra started for their home at Brook lyn, Iowa, Monday, after several days visit with Nemaha relatives and friends. We would gently remind our delinquent subscribers that an editor occasionally needs money -and this is one of the occasions with this editor. T. J. Rumbaugh, who has had a hard siege with rheumatism, is able to be out again, though quite weak yet, and one leg does not work very good. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sapp, sr., Mrs. B. Stroble, Mrs. E. D. Berlin, Mrs. Will Smith and Mrs. Ackerman, all pf Brownville, were Nemaha visitors Wednes day. Charlie Smiley came up from Shubert Thursday morning. Charlie shows the effect of his siege with typhoid fevor,as he is very thin and pale and quite weak yet. Mrs. 0. L. Minick and Miss Vera drove in from AuburnThurs day and visited with Mrs. Elmer E. Allen for a few hours. Rev. G. W. Ayers expects to go to Lincoln next Tuesday to attend the annual conference. He will be gone about a week. The best and strongest fence is the American. Get our prices. A full stock on hand. E. & B. Lbr. Co. John M. Clark went to Omaha Monday and the next day bought two car loads of fme cattle for feeding, arriving in Nemaha with them Wednesday. John M. Clark got a car load of young hogs Thursday that were bought for him by his brother, J. H. Clark. They were shipped from Inavale, Neb. west of Red Cloud. The only difference between sewing machines, you pay $50 for and our E. & B. ball bearing is the price. Our price is less than one-half. E. & B. Lbr. Co. Misses Roberts & Dye had a better trade in millinery last Friday and Saturday then they anticipated. They will be in Nemaha again Saturday of this Week, at Jno. W. Ritchey' s store. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hundley of Chase county, Neb., who have been visiting Geo. R. Lindsey and family and Mrs. Ellen Flack, started for their home Saturday. Mrs. Hundley is a niece of Mrs. Lindsey. County Commissioner Conner gave us a pleasant call Thursday afternoon. He had been down to Aspinwall inspecting the stone abutment for the bridge at that place, being built by Alex Stoddard Mrs. Walter N, Farris, who has been her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Seabury, at Peru, for two weeks, -and taking treatment of Dr. Cap Graves, returned home Wednesday. She is f eel inga little better. i County Treasurer Dirks paid during the month of August the sum of $4,533.35 of refund taxes to the property owners of Brownville and London precincts who were erroneously taxed that amount. Auburn Republican. F. L. Woodward and Harry Hoover bought 140 head of cattle near Elk Creek a few days ago. Harry went out Monday and is driving them in with the help of several men. They will be turn ed in the Lockwood bend pasture. George Howell, one of the aged residents of Howe, who has been in poor health for some time, is kept at his home now by an affliction of the feet and his condition does not show much sign of improvement. Auburn Republican. Rev. J. W. Sapp made a mis take while turning off the lights at the Christian church, turning the wrong lever and blowing off the mantels. Other mantels were ordered but did not get here last week, so the church had to borrow a grsoline lamb from J. H. Vanderslice to use Sunday night. Stationery A fine line For School Tablets, Penholders, Pens, Pencils! Ink, Erasers, Pencil Boxes, Colored Crayons, etc., go to the Postoffice Bookstore i H. T. Minick went to Ne braska City Thursday morning and from there was going to Dunbar to visit his son, John Minick. Sam Barnes surprised his many old friends in Nemaha by step diug off the train Thursday morning. Sam has been farm ing in Smith county, Kansas, for several years. He says it is very dry there this year and the corn crop is almost a failure. T. J. Hall of St. Deroin gave us a pleasant call Tuesady. He went to Nebraska City that af ternoon to visit his daughter, Mrs. W. W. Stokes, and then was going on to Lincoln to see his wife, who is in the asylum. Mr. Hall is 57 years old and for 47 years has followed the plow every season a pretty good rac ord for hard work. At noon Sept. 18, 1907, in Auburn, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. David D. Schoonover and Miss Lulu Zeigler were united in marriage, Rev. E. H. Gould, pastor of the M. E. church at Brownville perform ing the ceremony. A few rela tives and friends were present to witness the ceremony. The young couple received some nice presents. B. H. Moore has sold about fifty bushels of peaches so far this season, and has a few more bushels that are not ripe. He sold them to neighbors at $1 per bushel, although he was offered $1.50 per bushel by shippers for all of them, but refused to take it, preferring to . sell to home people at a reasonable price, con sidering the scarcity of this de licious fruit. P: D. Ailor is teacher of the Larkin school, Miss Maude Hang er of Maple Grove, Miss Nida Hanks of Shockey, Miss Mabel Clover of the Burke school, Miss Ola Young of the school in the bottom northeast of Nemaha' Miss Dora Morton of Champion, Miss Lillie Newman of Hillsdale, Harry Vannest of Rosefield, C. F. Skinner of the McCandless school, and Ralph Lohr of St. Deroin, just received. Supplies Good Corn Cutting On Tuesday Von Farson, Hi Flock and Ernie Alexander did some fast corn cutting and shock ing for John M. Clark. They began work at 8o'cIock quitting at 11:30 for dinner. They began work again at 1:15 and quit for the day at 3 o'clock, thus putting in only five hours and fifteen minutes at work. During this time each one cut and shocked thirty shocks of corn sixteon hills square. They get 10 cents a shock, and thus made $3 apiece that day, and 57 cents an hour for the time they worked. The corn will make about forty bush els an acre. The Holiness Campmeeting The Holiness Church of Christ closed a ten days' campmeeting in the Nemaha park Sunday night. Four sessions were held each day, begining with 6 o'clock prayer meeting in the morning. The servises were fairly well attended and considerable inter est manifested, but no converts were made. Sunday night an eighteen-year-old daughter of Elder Shafer was in a transe or unconscious state from about 9 o'clock until nearly two in the morning. These people are un doubtedly in earnest and are do ing some good. Through their preaching people are reached that never attend churches. In addition to the preachers named in last week's paper, there were present Elders R. H. Tyrell, J. K. Lindsey and Geo. Kendall. W. H. Lemon of St. Deroin also attended the session. Rev. G. W. Ayers was present most of the time and assisted in the meetings, and Rev. J. W. Sapp was present when in town. Nemaha County Directory. The directories issued by the Auburn Republican and given as a premium by that paper are now ready. Subscribers in this vi cinity who are entitled to a copy can get it by calling at the post office. Every subscriber who is paid ahead for the Republican is entitled to one. New subscribers who pay one year in advance get the same premium. Subscriptions received at the postoffice.