Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, March 25, 1875, Image 4

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VALLE3 FIFJHOUTII.
BY B. Jl. TATiOn
I bvo fulteii.Tlymnuth, fallen i
gLles my great name in tbe dust.
And the work of nil a lifetime
Sacrificed to human lust.
In thine arms, old church enfold msf
Preea rae closer to thy breast;
For thy last and shattered Idol
Finds in theo, bis only refit.
Tnonghtho hearts that once enebrlned zno
Mourn in sorrow o'er ray gal It,
And tbe fame that once was mighty
May not ever be rebuilt,
I must perish 'mid the conflict
I must fljht them to the Iivt
As the frigate sinks in battle,
'Mid the flam and fire and blast.
And when men revile and, scorn me, -
Tell them how In days of yoro
I epoke for home and country
On a hostile, foreign shore.
And when slavery's dusky millions
Raised for help their fettered hands,
Plymouth pulpit shook and thundered
Till It burst their iron bands.
How I fought old Bible dogmas,
Taught men how to walk upright,
Preached to them a higher manhood.
Led them forth Into the light.
May those deeds plead for my errors
When this life shall be no more.
And tbe grand old Plymouth Hon
. Stands upon the shinlug sliore I
A BLOW FOE THE EIGHT.
m-iL:' , 8WS-.aJ
: I
TliejCImrch Besinsto!Opcn its Ejcs
W to the Impending Banger of
Democratic Ascendency.
Beturn to the Republican Fold or a
.Backsliding Clergyman.
Extract froni a, Samoa by the Rev.
Vl'lars, of the 31. E. Cliurcu, De
livered, at Montlcello, 111., from
tbe Text, XMbteount-tts Ex
nltetli a Nation"
There Is one question that should bo
the essence of every muti'a creed, of
every man's political platform, and
thatia: Is it right? JIa my creed
right? Is my plutforui right?
THE CONDITION OF OUR COUNTKY
at this time is thutof great peril. And
for our future admonition and safety
it is well for us to inquire: How came
it i?i thi8perilfZ.lt is clearly and ful
ly auswerahlo in the fableof him who
took compassion on the dyini; viper
by taking it in his bo-som and warm
injr it to life'again, and, when thus re
stored, shows its ingratitude hy sting
ing its benefactor. This is the em
bodiment of the whole history of our
present trouble. With a mistaken
charily for a bad.oause, a viper that
thrust Its sting at the life blood of our
nation, we, when the viper "whs dy
ing, warmed it Into life again and
found it a viper still.
God requires repentance before par
don ; we required none. God re
quires abandonment of sin; we re
quired none. God requires conform
ity to his government; we adminis
tered the oath as if the oath was the
conformity, when every act was in J
!'" nwu Lu.ii uitiu. uuu re
quires a recantation of sin, an open
avowal of its abandonment; we re
ceived tbe traitor with no disavowal
of his treaaoo and with the positive
assertion that ho still was an enemy
to his government and a friend to all
the inhumanities that were practiced
In the days of slavery. Not a single
act from that party of men is there
upon record of any disavowal of treas
on. The men whose shot and phell
used to ring around our ears when we
were fighting"them as the common
enemy of the country, are now in
Congress, and there their voices are
heard hotly oontesting for that treas
ou In the interest which they rebel
led ; and we are to blame for it, In ex
orcising a reach of charity unparal
leled In God himself in his dealiug
toward man, and unparalleled In thp
hlatory of good government. We
shall profit by the error.
A STRIKING FEATURE
in the ohaxacter of those who are cry
ing loudly against the government
and administration, is the hypocrisy
with whioh they cover up their deed
of error. We mean that all they do
is done In strict accordance with the
principle of -Satan reproving sin."
We ohallengo a single charge by them
against the men who saved this na
tion, of which they are not guilty
themselves. They are more guilty.
In a ten-fold degree, thau those
against whom they make the charge.
The fact Is, the men who are now
clamoring for the.thruat of the nation
to throttle it to death, are guilty of
all, and those brave men who bared
their bosoms to death, yet still live to
speak as well as fight for their coun
try's life, are guilty of but one crime,
and that a faithful attempt to subdue
treason and save the Union.
THEY II,E D "NOT GUIIVTY,"
and our verdict and the verdict of the
oivilizeil world Is, "not guilty " Tuke
the charge of military usurpation.
Who firt usurped this .power? Did
not traitor, in the interest of treas
on ? Men were drilled, armed, ami
equiped in defense of treason before
there was a call for the uatiou to take
up arms in self defense. Was not
such treasou a usurpation? -Yet men
wrote from the South that there wim
no armed resistance to the govern-
iucuv,jiisi,asraen are writing now;
but a four years' strife, that brought
Into requisition the utmost strength
of the nation, gave the falsehood to
suoh reports. Was not that army of
traitors a usurpation? When that
good and great mau, Abraham Lin
coln, called for 75,000 troops to put
down a Southern insurrection, it wn
met by a laugh from an armed horde
that bid defiance to that insignifieant
number. Do you not oall that horde
a usurpation? In the recent fray in
New Orleans, who was the first to
usurp the military? Was it not the
mob? And when law would call to
Us assistance the same power aud
justly, too did not that mob con
demn in others what it olaimed for a
virtue in itself? Verily, this is "Sa
tan reproving sin."
we have'the example
of a body of men calling on the Uni
ted States troops to suppress a legally
elected body of men. ami rpt th
Loops with cheers, bub iwher the
w
same power Is used to suppress i evo
lution aud uphold law, a great cry is
heard of usurpation. My opinion is
thut tho world has never witnessed ub
great a specimen of downright hy
pocrisy as was enacted then, and is
being enae'ed now, by traitors to ov
erthrow the best government tho sun
ever shone upon.
We BDoke of the moral bearinos of
the principles involved. Let me say
that the party, If it may be oulled
such, that is now clamoring for pow
er has no regard lor moral law. Ev
erything done is morally wrong and
in the iuteret of wrong. Tako the
present disgraceful action of those
men in the- Legialature of our own
Slate. What were their iirat attempt?
To introduce a bill for the repeal of
the aot creating normal schools. To
repeal an act giving colored children
the privileges of free schools. To ap
point a oommittee that would take
Into consideration the repeal of our
wholesome fcemperanoo law. Aim
thU la the policy of tho men who are
to hold, or want to hold, in their
hands the reins of this govorumont!
And what a trinity on whioh they
base their creed,
IGNORANCE, ".NIGGER," WHISKY.
Aotions speak louder than words.
'Fnmisuh5a-'pollcy,in4xonxjsuolifca
l - T-.JZ-II VI -11 ... IF "
3ri, uenvsruot'Mjj.
party, "Griodjfrlaord
tell you wo have oauso of alarm ; and
if, in my position, I oan perform the
two-fold duty of aervlug God aud my
country, I would lift my voloo with
ray utmost strengthen sounding the
alarm all over the laud.
I was disposed to favor the Reform
ers, Independents or 'Farmers'
Movement," or
WHATEVER IT MAY BE CALLED.
I thought them to be honest, though
clumsy in their movements. And I
thought, as thousands of others did
that there waa the place to inter our
political griefs aud find a balm for ev
ery political wound, a cordial for ev
ery political fear.
I 6ay I know tho ""farmer, and J
think 1 can suy 1 know tiu oonvio
tions of right. To-day. the farmer
of this country are, as a rule, the best
informed men of the country on the
great moral questions at Issue. Hi
toil of the day ended, he takes hi
book and paper, and he Is skilled ir.
the knowledge of the political and
religious principles at stake. No pol
icy warps his judgment; he looks at
every question and a-iks, 'Is it right?'
The farmer's boys and girls, all over
thiB country, are growing up with the
moral conviction that slavery is
wrong, that intemperance is wrong,
that ignorance is wrong, and with
that conviction is the next important
one as a resultant. That the party
th.tt legislates in the interest of op-pre-inn,
iuti'inpernnce, and ignor
ance Is guilty of the greatest wrong.
This lsb"iu't oonvlctlon-where the
people have the light of 'inspired truth
as a basis of faith and practice.
BELIEVING THAT THIS CONVICTION
would underlie and mold the moral
character of all their actions in this
movement, I deemed it a safe invest
ment to take stock in it. I did so. I
was sincere aud honest In It. I ex
peoted to vote for their Congressional
candidate, though I had never seen
him. When J moved to your town it
was my privilege to attend a meeting
where he was the speaker, und I sin
cerely looked for such utterances as
would confirm my faith and assure
my confidence that It was well fouud
ed and confirm me in my convictions
that the honest, time-honored farm
ers of this country would have one
strong advocate of those moral con
victions that I believe still dwell in
the minds of nine-tenths of the fann
ers of the country. I was mistaken.
It had been asserted, and it was not
there denied that a combination hail
been formed with that party that had
most openly avowed itself In tho in
terest of wrong. Honest farmer can
didates had shaken hands with the
party of intemperance. Then, In
"rising to explain his" hi position on
"civil rights." I saw that the candi
date had shaken hands with the old
slavery party, aud the recent attempt
at Springlieid shows that he shook
hands with the party of ignorance. I
was at fir.-t grieved, at last disgusted
The men wiio could get office in no
other way. u ho imposed themselves
upon the farmers, anil through their
votes now sit in our Legislature, ena
bled, by shaking hands, with a treas
nimble element in our Legislature, to
pass resolutions of centre that wil.
be a stinging di-grrce to the Slate a-
long as it bus a history, aud enabled
this body of men to strike the fir.st
blow at our educational system, the
first blow at ourexcellent temperanre
law, and the first blow in favor of re
enslavement of the race that by the
hlenning of heaven have been liberat
ed as God deigned, aud the firM blow
that presumed to blot out the execu
tive head of the nation and institute
instead a government based upon aud
patterned after pagan Rome! This
is progress with a vengeance, wheu
we are told that all this nation wants
is free whisky and beer, a ruin of
schools, a reign of ignorance, re-en-
xluvemeut of the colored man aud a
government based on heatheuism.
-Jr t
After I had heard the speech of the
mau I hud hoped to lie the strong ad
vocate of all that is right, I wa
thankful that I heard it just before
election day. I was soundly convert
ed back again to my old political
faith, and I say now, what I believe
to be tho honest conviction of uiue-
tenths of tbe people of this country
farmers, merchants, mechauics, doc
tors, lawyers, aud all that, with all
its imperfections aud shortcomings,
wliica are not to be compared with
the downright criminality of the oth
er party, the party and the element of
power that saved this Union from dis
memberment at the hand of treasou
is the one, and only oue, to which we
can possibly look to save It still, and
the only one that will be the only
friend of moral reform. I will trust Lneed
tuts statement to me mgs
HONEST CONVICTION OF TH E PEOPLE.
From this on I will expect Ies im
perfection In It. and greater endeav
ors to preserve unsullied the rights,
life, peace, prosperity and morality of
the natlou. We can trunt It. Wo
have trusted it. It has fulfilled its
pledges and the wishes of the people,
and will do It again.
To those who fell In the error that I
did, I must appeal. Think as I have
thought. Look at this as I have. Let
it strike you as it struck me, that the
element into whoso hands you have
fallen, and to whose Interests you did
not at first design to work, that ele
ment never known to rectify a wrong,
gives no assurance that it will rectify
yours. That body of men who never
repented of a sin, of slavery, of in
temperance, of ignorance, aud of
treat-on. but threatens to repeat them,
is not the element to lead you in the
paths of righteousness or peace.
Perhaps the most perfect form of se
rene contentment known upon the
planet is that developed by theTodas,
a people who inhabit the plateau of
the Nilghlri Hills. They live in
small communities of from twenty to
thirty persons. Their life is purely
pastoral, and their sole dependence is
u ppnthe. buffalo. They do not prao
tice:agrldiltueat all, simply cultivate
thelrries'whlch. are held to besa
ored, aud keep the buffalo and cat as
tame animals. They neither fight
with their neighbors nor among
themselves. Two men'Iu every vill
age do the dairy work ; the rest noth
ing. Having no politics to diecuss,
tho elder "toads", sit on a rail fence
under a tree all day and brood; the
young brandies probably stand on
their heuds, or follow after the other
toadies. They are a fine-looking race
and having more m -n than women,
the creed of Briglinm Young is rever
sed, and oue woman has many husbands.
A Former writing from Southern Il
linois to the St. Louis Globe, 9ays:
The farmers have it very strongly
impressed upon them just now that
Jtraw is good for something more
than to make uusightly piles, to rot
in tho course of years, In the fields
whore it grew. Cattle and horses
have eaten it (if they could get it)
this winter, and have done remarka
bly well on It. A fanner of more than
ordinary Intelligence and enterprise,
told me he salted his straw as he
stacked it, and his stock had eaten It
greedily. It has enabled him to save
his hay (very short crop) for Use In
the spring, aud he thinks the teach
ings of necessity in this one item, in
years to come, will bring back to him
all he has lost in the last year.
The Kansas Farmer gives the ex
perience of a good farmer who hail
tried feeding hogs on wheat as well as
corn. He said when wheat was cheap
he found it profitable to feed his hogs
ou it. He took 100 hogs and put fifty
in 'pens and fed corn, and fifty and
fed wheat, with the following result.
The fifty with corn made eleven
pounds per bushel, the fifty with
wheat made seventeeu pounds of good
solid pork per bushel of wheat. The
wheat was ground like meal, boiling
water poured over It, and chen let
stand forty-two hours.
FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS.
00501TCTB&BT TOM. It. EDniGHT,
To whom all communications designed for publication in this column
' should be.addressed. "
Boys, Wake Up.
Boys, wake up ! Don't sit dreaming as though the
world was just made to sleep in. Don't imagine that
somebody is going to clothe and feed you, while you
do nothing but read love stories. Have more ambition
than to part your hair in the middle, carry a cane, wear
fine boots, and flourish a" cigar. Don't, one boy of
you, belittle yourselves by using tobacco in any form.
It will make you filthy, create an appetite for liquor,
and make you old and nervous.
Wake up ! Step out boldly into new paths that
other boys are too indolent to try. In doing this you
may not be like Ned, who uses oaths ; or Fred, who
plays cards j or Tom, who says his parents don't know
anything.
Do something ! Shovel coal, run of errands, or,
indeed, anything that's right, rather than lounge on
hotel steps, or hang around saloons. If you would
rather tell a little falsehood, or smoke, or drink, than
bee seen in plain clothes and coarse boots, and at work,
you are just nobody. Truth, temperance and good
deeds, make men clothes have nothing to do with it.
If the lads with whom you associate, talk sneeringly of
their mothers'and sis'ters, avoid them as you would a
deadly poison.
J Young Folks' Gem.
Pig-Pen Peter.
"
A grove of ten acres of white aBU,
thinned to six feet apart each way,
containing about 12,000 tree's, will av
erage at twelve years of age, on good
prairie ?oil. about'elght inches in di
ameter. The previous thinnings will
pay for cultivating to this time. Ten
feet of the butt of each tree will be
worth for mechanical purposes forty
cents, uud the remaining tops ten
cents each, making for the 12.000
butts, S4.S0O; and for tho tops of the
-ame, $1,200. Total, $0,000 for the
profit of ten acres in twelve years.
A gentleman in Burlington, Vt.,
of an investigating turn of mind, a
week or two ago determined to "try
it" again with the rats which infest
ed his house, lie purchased a supply
of "coal-tar" at the gas-works, and
placed btnall quantities of it in the
rat holes in his cellar and elsewhere
in their runways. The rats bedaubed
themselves, became disgusted with
the manner of their eutertoinment.
and speedily left the premises, and
have not been seen or heard from
-duce.
Up in Jefferson, county, a man
ninety-six years old, still holds the
office of postmaster. Most men at his
advanced age would think it was
about time to reform.
Some one speaks up and advise"
Ohio to consolidate her twenty col
leges, and make one at which a young
man nan at least receive a high school
education.
At Tndianapolis" a member of tbe
Legislature is about to cast a gloom
over the entire community. His bill
for the suppression of cock-fighting i.-
nearly ready.
-
An exchange says: "The season fiir
sleighing gitl and slaying hogs is at
hand." That's so. But there is a
difference; the girls like it, and the
hogs don't.
The Texas Medical College won't
pay but three dollars a piece for sub
jects, and it isn't so much of an ob
ject to kill a man now.
CHAPTER I.
Pie-pen Peter," as the boys called him, was the
son of a worthless man, who kept him at home from
school to help in earning the living of himself and
wife. But the boy had a noble spirit, which neither
poverty and hard work at home, nor scorn abroad could
quench. His ambition was to be a carpenter when he
-rew to be a man, and he was always making bread
boards for the neighbors, and bird-houses for the boys.
A man for whom Peter sometimes worked, once
promised him a pig if he could make a pen to hold it.
Peter was only twelve years old then, but with the
rubbish lying about his poor home, he made a cottage
with a mock window and'a real door, with board chim
neys, and" a weather-cock on it, for the new little pig.
It was as pretty as a toy !
This pen made such a stir in the village that Peter
was asked by several of the boys to help in making
the like for them, and little pigs in clean white cotta
ges bacame the golden dreams of the little fellows of
that town, and the inventor was dignified with the
name of "Pig-pen Peter."
One night, when Peter was about fourteen years
old, the stove pipe in black Peggy's little hut became
red hot, and set the hut on fire. The poor old crea
ture had barely kept out of the poor house by hard
work for three years ; and now there was no other
place for her to go to, poor soul !
After the house was burned the boys found her sit
ting on a great stone near by the ruins, weeping bit
terly. -
"I wish I could go down into the graveand be" 'long
of my own folks when I was a mind ter ! My" house
is all gone, and my feather bed, and my patch-work
quilt, and my new cap, and my cups and saucers, and
my looking-glass, and my cheers and table, and and
all my elegant things, and I'm lef poor in my old age.
What shall I do ? What shall I do ?"
The bovs tried to comfort her, and more than one
of them did what his father had forgotten to do asked
her to go home and sleep at his house that night.
But sleep was the last thing Peggy thought of then ;
and there she sat rocking herself to and fro, and talk
ing, and weeping, for dread of the poor-house had long
been her greatest trial.
"Peggy," said one of the boys, "if I were a man,
I'd build you a house, and you shouldn't go to the poor
house while I lived."
"I wish you was a man, then," cried Peggy. "When
I has troubles, common times, I can pray ; but 'taint
no use now. If I has rheumatiz, I prays do Lor', and
He drives it off; and if I's hungry, I prays, and He
sends me a day's wasbin'. But my house is burnt up,
and can't be made up out of the ashes no vay !"
"I don't believe but I can make a house almost as
good as Peggy's," said Peter Dale.
"Could you plant it strong, Peter, so 'twouldn't blow
over with Peggy in it ?" asked one of the boys.
"I could try, and I will try if jou'll go and help me
get things old boards, and windows, and nails ; and
you can help me, too."
And such a flutter as there was among the boys of
that town ! Some of them were so enthusiastic in the
work that they were caught slipping off boards from
the fences, and windows from their hen-houses. But
the parents were about as much interested as the boys,
and there was no necessity of their taking things off"
slily for the work.
As there was some doubt aboufPetcr's ability to la
the foundation, a carpenter of the place told the boys
to dig a cellar and wall it in, and that he would show
them how to lay the beams. All this they did with
Peter as their "boss ;" for the carpenter said no man
ought to give any help there except by advice ; that it
ought to be a bov's house.
Well, the foundation was laid, and the walls began
to rise. Peggy, who had found shelter near by, spent
most of her time on the big rock directing; the work
thus : "Bovs. look mifrhtv sharo dat de floors is strono-.
o j i - o:
State Banks Nebraska.
CAPITA!, $100,000.
Transact a General Banlclns Bnslne-. and rnal:e conectjon' on r11 poInU
throughout the West, and all parti of .urop.
EXCHANGE O.N EUROPE.
Dra our 0-vn Drafts ca Znglaai, Irebaa, Fraace, Genaaav, &c.
INTEREST ALLOWKU
OXTIirECERTIVICATKS OF DEPOSIT. BV SEEf"5PI:Cr"
OISCOUNT NOTES AXD TIME BILLS Ot hi.l-a.VAUt.
Exchange bought and olilon New York, and ull the principal Eastern and
Southern cities or th IJnltwl Btatea.
HJOHAHDS & SMITH,
DEALERS IN
HARDWARE, TINWARE,
oiTTii A T tmut mumTwni
AGS
f9 y T 7
bUlii
Ujliiii
Uillcci-H mid Director.
L. HOADLEY. R.V.JIUIR. , u rrnnVFi
W. W. HACKNEY. J. O. 1EUSER. W. M. H JU Crt,
C.M.KAOFF.MAN. U.C. LETT. l Ufl ft fll FY
WIT. II IIOOVEH, J. FITSGKRALD, L. IIUH UUC I ,
T.J. MORGAN. TIIEO.HILL, O r GATES.
W.H. 3ICOBEERY. n uwli'J
Prest.
Y.Prest.
Cashier.
rT3&S83?3ka?
13. F.
SOUBEB,
Manufacturer and Deater in
kHARNESS.SADDLESAVHIPS
COX,IiAES BRIDLES.
ZIXK PADS, imi'SHES, BLANKETS,
Kobe?, &c,
BROWNVIIiliS, NEBRASKA.
MFLEIII
AND TARSS MACHUfERlT OF AZ,Ii KTSiTDS,
FOR THE SEA.S02ST OF 1875.
UrVf
OLD RELIABLE" HEAT MARKET.
JiODY &
Bit OT II Bit, '
Good, sweet, fresh MeM always on hand,
and satisfaction guarantied to customers.
BROWimLLS
MAEBLE VOEES,
C IT. t TILES jTJEIIMIART;
Manufacturer and Dealer in
Foreign Domestic S
MARBLE,
'Trg'"&''&. tt i
;t.vxNiSiizi2mnr ti
Monuments, Tombstones, lgf-U. 1
TABLE TOPS, &c. r
bjiowxvile, veb. fpSM IIMli,
VKKkLiWSfZZrtrja
-&5S
rftPllil
i vMJm&zr.
2XS" All ordea promptly filled aud
satisfaction guaranteed.
SPECIAIi DESIGNS fc&Wffls&
T 7tfc-"rZa"
jt uisiaji&u. -CAhZ
3JT. X. COIVrvTEIi, Ti-r-liugr Ajrciit.
joun cmnnocir.
CRADIJOCK
V. K. CKADDOCK.
fc r O IV,
V' kiS"
Q-TJN" SVEITEES !
BREECir-LOADINO SHOT GUNS.
RIFLES, CARBIXES, AJ.lUiMTIO.V, SPOJiTIXG.GOOlJS
Guns niudi to order, and Repairing neatly done.
IVo. 11 MiilK Street, 33i-oivnval2e, eb.
s
-ruriiEit.
v,llw - ,x
-l
J
fc
JOB PRINTER
V
,
A
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n.Ms,
jc&
"
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3S3Li-i
TTTlTTOfT TTfliFilTIT
m?r
pjuoiro y i
PROPRIETOR.
m n
WIT
Feed atahjpin coiinrpf.oii wlMi tli Hihim? Stace office for all points,
Ent. Ve-t..N'irUi mill South. Omnibuses to con met with all trains. Sam
pin Room ou iir-t floor.
L. A. BERGMAX2T, fffHi A
Manufacturer ot Fine Hcia SQ C3S3t23 35sy
And Dealer in Chewing and Smoking Tobacco.
41, 3I;iiu Street.
BROTi-NYILJLii:, W 2 I5XJ1 ASHA.
A ui . . . ..
. ( , , ;!
Kp .n
Z " KM. S!
f
1 li T BAa U.
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN"
?,
r- . t--. -- -r -r . t i
To our old customers and generous patrons
we will say that we are yet in the business,
and are now better than ever prepared to sell
you all lands of farm machinery at greatly
reduced prices.
Our stock is full in every department, and
anything that is needful for farmers' use Trill
be purchased this season at a low price from
EICHAEDS & SMITH.
We have on hand for
spring trade the fa
mous Garden City
Plows and Cultiva
tors, and do not hesi
tate in stating that
they are the best in the market. We war
rant them to scour in any soil, and s;ive all
the benefit of the CASH DISCO UNT.
Eeni ember we are agents for the Low, Ad
ams & French Harvester, which took the
premium over all the harvesters in the mar
ket at the State fair at Omaha in the fall of
1874. It carries 3 binders ; has no canvass to
rot out, no belts to fly off; can cut and bind
12 acres as easy as other common harvest
ers can 7. Always buy the best; Ihey are
the cheapest in the end. For sale by Eich
ards & Smith.
Farmers, put in
your wiieaL wiui a mmtmip
T)ril nr "Rrnn1 rifict r?s-7ffi5iifiT
-r.... -rj. -t-. -t - . . - -v ... - ii,i. uva lPiaj
.1 nr
ea
A
3,
&
w
S
SADDLES, BRIDLES, COLLARS, WHIPS, ROBES,
Blankets, Brushes, Fly Nets. :r.
" Repairing done on liort notice. The celebrated Vacuum Oil Blacking
for preserving Harness. Boots, blioe. Ac. ulwaj son hand.
&l Main St., BISOIV.WSILI.-C, WEB.
-?"n?"
V
iLj
m.
DEALER IS
Groceries, Provisions
irfim:
,u.
SAii
Eo. 30 Slain Sircct,
iJROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA.
E JV5Ki- 77. """
'
K22e3&
"3C533
hdm FASHIOiNABLE
t-rav:r. ; isS!
$:
3uw : w?sv,v i
vgm&
.TaSCKW. JIADE TO ORIH-'U VITC imi-itc r-vin.vnn
jjgvij."-. uii.ii3uu,iiiajitiu.
29 Main Street,
SEl-n-OXVSLILS., NEBRASKA.
mmfr B00T AND SHOE MAKER.
CUSTOM WORK
MADE TO ORIII-'n vitc mviw
3SF-2T
FfiRT
i it
"Tho rude forefjithera of the haru
let"' are unknown in Utah, butyou oc
casionally timl four rude mothers in a
family.
The Philadelphia Chess Club is dis
tributing bread to the poor. The
moat sensible "move" they ever
made.
An Iowa town ha made-its streets
so I shant go down plump into de cellar some day ! Be d
sure de ceilin'b high enough for me to stan' straight up
under, 'cause it would be mighty oncomfortable for to
go scrouchin' about all dc time. AnJbesureou
make a pantry, 'cause Miss Dea, Jones has promised
me six new cups and saucers, and plates, and I must
have a place to put 'em in. You needn't make no
garret, 'cause I haint got nothin' to tuck away in it.
Look out ye don't leave no holes in de rufe, like de ole
house had ; and be sure ye make a strong hole for de
stove pipe, so it won't burn dis house down !"
When the little house was nearly completed. Peppv
jumped on the floor to make sure it was strong, and
stretched herself up to her greatest height, to prove
that she wouldn't have to go "scrouchin' round and
hurtin' her rheumatizv back."
Concluded next tccek.
C
"Kt-
"K? II I
sbKSK. m?4EttVkjL .':jI -I
aaK??Ks? f-rwas-t.- i
BRQWHVI-LIL-S
IlaBofL;
COHPASY.
at
JTavInsa rirt rlwn tmrr
Ferry, and ownJncandcnn
trolinK the Transfer IJne
from
BrownTilJe fo Ph-lp.
wo are prepared to render
entire catistuninn in tlip
transer of Frficiit ami
Pa.pneers. We run a reg
ular line or
BUSSES
to all trains. AllordercleO
t R. II. Ticket oflice win
receive prompt attention.
chine in putting in MllnW
40 acres. Call and sTr?m
get the Buckeye Force Feed Drill, which
took the first premium at the State Fair at
Omaha. For sale by RICHARDS
BEITS. ..-,.
HicTiaias& Smith have thargest stock
of Hardware, Tinware, and Wagon TTood
Work, in this market.
Plows, Cultivators, Seed Drills, Broad Cast
Seeders, Stalk Cutters, Corn Shellers and
Harrows, all first-class goods and warranted
to do good work. Call at the old "Ecgula
tor." Garden Barrows, Eoad Scrapers, Eriede
man's Patent Harrows, and Double Shovel
Plows, for sale by Eichards & Smith.
Princeton Stalk Cut
ters, and Eriedenian's
Patent Self-Cleaning
Harrows, at prices
within the reach of
MITE.
rsiifi.
w in.i ii ciiivijaji vii-in
vator combined ; the most convenient im
plement of the kind ; can be changed from
a riding to a walking cultivator in a second.
For sale by Eichards & Smith.
Union Com Planters, Climax Corn Plan
ters, Yandiver Planters, Hand Planters ; all
the best and at the lowest figures, by Eich
ards & Smith.
We wish to call the attention of the form
ing community to the fact that we have and
shall keep a full line of the celebrated Gang
Plows, which we can sell at lower nrices than
any house in Nemaha county. For price
call on Eichards & Smith
Call on liicnAKDS and
Smith for all kinds of
Farm Implements. They
all, for sale by RICEANDS & &
Garden CJitv IJifHno- on I Woll-inv
j V.AXi
are tlie only dealers who
ELEPHANT LIVERY, FEED m SALE
Generosity during life i& a verv different thino- from
one hundred feet wide, so that there generosity in the hour of death. One proceeds from
do uo crowding at the lynch genuine liberality and benevolence, the other from pride
or fear.
Corner First and Atlap uc sta. VVM
E.i fe V- -eK-.Sdr. A S;j
--- ---SisikiiiS-'-s---
STABLES.
BEm BOQJEJiS, . . . PMQP&IETOJ&
be had 8
have a full line. They sell
all kinds, from hnA
corn planter to a thresh
ing; machine, and at hattm-
prices and on better terms than can
elsewhere.
A car load of the famous Ball and Sag
Wagons will be received in a few days by
Eichards & Smith.
Who keeps machine repairs ? No ofher
firm in the county but Eichards & Smith-
Farmers who intend purchasing imp15'
ments with the cash shall have a discoid
by calling on Eichards & mith.