Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1881)
IH iniujiumE ESTABLISHED 1S56. I Oldest Pap or in tho St.ito.J BROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, NOV, 24, 1881. VOL, 26, NO. 23. aiwiuui.'xit:ii-i3MiyM..MauiAijrgayt'rwi.UJWjMuiiMtij BUSINESS CARDS. J II. r H O A I) V , Attorney nt 0unltr nl IjRWi JJrownvlMe.Neb T S. S T U L L . O. ATTOllSKVS AT IiAW. Onicoof CoiiMtyJudtfe, Hrownvlllo. Nebrnnkn. A s. no r, . A DAY, A.. IMiyalclan, Surgeon. Obstetrlctnu. Uradunted In 1851. Located in llrownvllle MM. 0ince,41 MaIh itreot, Hrownvlllo, Neb. jwTa r h s c) N , iiliAUKtmri'Il AND HOUSK SIKIKll Workdono to order uiiiHatlAfnetloiiKtiarnntPeil KlMHtrool. between Mnlii and Atlantic. Hrown vllln.Nob. S. A. OnnoiiN, Notary Puliltc. O.W. Tayi.ou. OH1IOI&IV & TAYLOR, Attorneys and Gounsollons at Law, Brownvillo, Nobraska. IyiACTICK In the State and Federal courts, Special attention hIvom to collections and sales of real estate. p A T C li r X K , -pj- IMSIIIONAIII.K ffn. Hi! KOOT AM) SIIOK MAKEIt CUSTOM WORK miuloto order, nnil Ills ftlwny KUiinintped. HepnlrltiK neatly mill iriiniilly dour Mlinp. No.'.!; Mala street. Ilrowiivlllp.Non. n M. BAILEY, SHUM'Klt AND UKAI.KIl IN LIVE STOCK KRO U'XVILT.K, XJCI1UASKA. Farmers, please call midgut prices; I waul to hniiiUo your stock, oniuc First National M ink. DIARLATT Ai l&IXGS,' UKAI.i:U8 IN Genera! Merchandise Dry (loods, (Irocorles, Keady Mudo flntliliiK. Hoots, Hhoe. lints, Caps iiml u nmiernl As sortment of Diuks and I'atent Medicines. &. Highest prliies paid for butter iiml ASI'INWAI.Ii, NKHUASICA. ESTABLISHED IN 18i6. OLDEST RealEstaleHgency TIV IVJCKlA-SICA.. William H. Hoover. Does a Ktiiiornl Uoal Kstnti) Business. Hells Lands on CoiniiilHslon, examines Title, nmkes Deeds, Mortnacs, nnd all Instru ments pertaining to tno tnuihfor of Ueul ICs- ttP. IlllHil Oompleto Abstract of Titles to nil Hal Estate In Nemaha County. XX O. lovel, DKAM3H IN Family Groceries. Always on Hand Flour, Teas and Coffee, Willi ii full line of Canned Goods & Confectionery. Also, tho very best Cigars and Tobaccos. ttn. Two Dnorn Knst of I'ostollleo, Urown vlllo, Nubrarlca, AIITJI0UI7!i:i U TIIK I'. S. (iOVKUNJU'M First National Bank ) F BROWNVILLl;: Paifl-up Capital, $(),000 tuthovistid " 500,000 t pnnr auk'ivo transact a General Banking Busines. I1UY AND HKLL COIN & OUKRENOY DRAFTS 11 all thr principal cities ftli United States and Europe MONEY LOAN En 0 ajiproTed security only. Time Drafu rtluroinit pd, nuJl Hpftclal ucommdatlons Krantil to deponlt th. Danlersln OOYHRMMI5NT BOKDS, STA'I E, COUNTY & CITY SECURITIES DEPOSITS KbMiTA parableoiulsmaad.and INTUSUBTal owo.ui ;iBiuckriincniu4 01 nupoiu, i)iiuooTfonu.-vri.TTnti, n. m. luiur. u.a'i Mnlr. rranlc E. Joknim, halker Utiy Tv'm. Pralther. i ,HN li. OAUSOy, K.x. I)AVlB01r.Caklor. Prliat .. UcMAVQHteK.Asil.Cailiitr. ' NEMAHA CITY. .X. 13. ItXQXGM, LIVERY AND FEED STABLE. Good bunnies nnil liorson, cliar;pi reus oimble. Hestjof euro tiikon of transient ntook X. J. !iT BOOTS, SHOES, AND HARNESS. Mudo nnil repaired as well us emi bo domi miywliere, on short notice, nnd VEi V It E A SON A Ii L E TEH MS. Cfctfey Hotels LEVI JOHNSON, PROPRIETOR. NEMAHA CITY NEB., Centrally located ; (loud turo. nnd mitron lit Hpnii'it to iimltu Kiioiits eoiiiloiliiblp. (lood ijiirn for liorHCHiind Ch f trues li canon a bio. ATTENTION, FARMERS! For your Afjrli'iiltuiiil IiupleiiiiinlH, kIo DAVID A. MORTON, Kami mid Knrinu WnirtiiN, SuSlcy 1'lown Mtlrrlnic i'lo-.VM, Cum i'liinipri, IInrrow KeiiptTK, Mowers, C'll'tlViitnrM, diru nlielltTH ulul the Hikh Toiilleless I'lllllVlltor. JOHN 8. MINICK, eener Merchandise. Womaha City, Nob. B. BELL ANDREWS, IB. D., Physician Surfeon, Noiimlw City. Nolirnslcu. Caffa til the Count t'ji Promptly Attend ed, d-aj or n't ij lit. SPISCIAfj ATTKNTION' lvon to surijloii dlheiiHL'.i of wotneii and surgical diseases of the eye. C'M'allentH from ahrond emi be furnished with pluiisaiit rooms mid mscoiuuiodiitions. CMHMauuu jyrvwti'wctEsi j y 'i'vr.w,v . - h uiB x& ib Kasan 12 n Opjiosit Luinlicr Vartl, Main st. G-OOD BIGS AT REASONABLE RATES. Special Acconinioilations for Commercial Men, -AND- Driver Furnished when desired. Horses boarded by tbe day or week, and Tanners' lea ins fed and cared for at fair rates. E. LOOMIS, BROWNVILLE, NEBR. lias removed bis shop to tbeold Hank A Ariultacu building, opposlto O'l'elt's livery slahlo. S- Hepalilim ncatlj and promptly done. Give ti 1 111 11 trial Jacob Marohn, atrownvillc. VcliraNltn. MERCHANT TAILOR, nnd dealerln . PintRuKllili.Finiirli, Srotrh nnd Funrjr Clotlis VostluifN, lite, IHr. I AIMCffi"1" ' "'M' ""! l.uorrbM ELAUItla irtuM Alk.i.r WkiiM, ik.ull moJ (l, iii 1 Irf. UnrrlD'HaMphletdUuitratM It l'lU4)l,Un..KriptK tn nu..y, ... it.wi.r u, ip. pll.ttitn Tkt p.HI,l i. iimlli I. i.r li.r Tn drfi. iat. h.Jllh, ttioj ik.r..(kiT .r.mc.l Ir.aln.a. Hindi. it.a. ... HARRIS RCUEPTY 00.. ST 10UI3. MO. TV WANTKD i 4 ikMu jU.C.0 H f.r cb Ki-l ttiA'f L:, M. Uuk, M. PSWfcrTMpwBK Boot&Snoemaxer NEBRASKA ADVERTISER Austin, Toxas, oloctiul 11 Uopublioan Mayor. The Missouri River ImproveinenL eonvention moots at St. .losopli, "Jiitli and :10th iust. I'inolibaok pops to tho surface again. I To had an intorviow with tlie Presi dent the other day. IMsniarol. is desperate tostriko some thing that's popular, ilo now advo cates minority r"piesontation. . w .Judge Met Vary liasjmpointed I'.lmor S. IVanh clerk of llioT United States Circuit Court, ico Watson It. Smith, doooasod. The fact that the fooling in far of annexation to the United Slates is rap idly incroasingiu Canada, oM-ites much concern over the water. It is only u question of time. Inter On an. An unfinished report of the census of tho United States shows tlie popula tion to be f0.l.-."i,7s:l. This statement shows Ohio to have Il."i.lll more peo ple than New York, and KIT, 170 more than Pennsylvania. An Indiana paper nominates Yoor hoes for President in 1SS-I. That gentle man recently declared in favor of a protective tariff. His occupancy of a prominent plauk in ilie Republican platform is a little late, and cioates the suspicion that it is a bid. A Sunday School teacher was ex plaining to his class about the penalty inflicted on the serpent for tlie hand ho played in tlin gaiden, when a curious little boy wanted to know how tho serpent "walked aforo tint." The answer is not recorded so far as heard from. (iOv. St. .John, in answer to an in quiry regarding the alleged decrease in population in Kansas 011 account of the prohibitory law, says: "The only place where there has been a decrease of population is the penitentiary, whore morn are si.xiy-M.x icss now man more wore six months ago." 1 i.w m wn M The wife of Fred. Heysclilag, the Xobriisk-i City brewer, suicided by taking chloroform, lsth inst. The 1'ri v.v says tho deceased lady h, id been subject to attacks of insanity, at which times she made attempts upon her life, and was only pieventeil l) tho watch fulness of friends. She was -17 years old. She was a sister, we believe, to the "Deuf-ors of this place, and Rook Port. Mo. Miss Katie K. Johnson, of Plaits mouth, has brought suit, for bieach of promise of m.iiriuge, against Prank J. Maddanor of Kansas City, formerly of the firm of Madd.tner & Merman, Plattsmouth. The young lady alledges that her heart, reputation, etc., has boon torn, lacerated, etc., to the tune of about ten thousand dollais' worth. 12(1. Maxwell, the outlaw, of whose capture near (J rand Island, wo gave a brief account last week, when he arriv ed at his destination in Wisconsin, was taken by a mob of citiens. whose vigi lance and laws he had so long evaded and dolled, and hanged unceremonioii ly to the Iiml) of a tree, until dead. Hi brother and companion in crime lias not yet been captured. Mrs. Lucy I). PH., widow of the well remembered "Jim," publishes a card, suggested by late assaults on Jay (iould's charily. She says she personal ly knows Mr. Could to be a man whose hand is open to the. deserving needy. Such wo understand Mr. ( iould's repu tation to bo amongst those who know him best; but that he docs not herald his alms-giving from the house top. The amount of cotton goods manu factured in tlie United states this year is larger than over before, and tho time will come when the mills of this coun tiy will absorb tho entire product, and our manufacturers will send tho mau ufaotuiod article instead of tho raw pro duct abroad. Rut this can never be done without a protective tariff. The Northern cotton mills have in creased their consumption from .',.)., dl 1 bales last year to :i 1 1,-180 bales this year, an advance of I." per cent.; but the greatest inereaso was in the South, wheie lij.OOO bales were used this year to il&.ooo last year. Inter Ch-eun, ua.ua.jji mi i m umiia,njujijmnn.M. A Eoyal Qontloman, Is the title of another book from the graphic pen of Judge Toiirgoo, the famous author of "A Pool's Krrand." It is to bo sold by subscription. In point of romantic interest, "A Itojul lieiiUeman" Is undoubtedly the strongest m Judge Tourgee's novels, for the threads of love, mystery, adven ture, crime, and war, and the play and interplay of personal forces and pas sions, form tho whole warp and woof of the tale. Of political discussion there is little or none. And jet the underlying causes of tlie state of mind v. hicli brougiit on the war, so persis tently and with wonderful audacity striven to secure to the Southern Whites in tho political Hold what they lost on the Held of battlo--thoso things are made so simple and clear by the development of character and plot, that we wonder wo had not known It all before. Certainly it is a book that no educat ed or intelligent man or woman can afford to leave unread. It gives with wonderful power the very color and air of tlial sweet Southern land; the bright and sunny pictures of planta tion life; the pleasant relations of white and black ; tho generous, impul sive, wayward character of the "young Southern blood;" the quaint, queer, and yet unmistakably accurate por traits of the Poor White, tlie old Law yer, tlie antique County Clerk, the other local personages; the growth of the little quadroon darkey into the hcaulitul woman; the quirk blast of coming battle; rapid pen-pictures of war and hospital scenes, with actual incidents in which Abraham Lincoln, Sumner, and other men of nolo llgured during that grand period innumerable elements beside, go to help form this brilliant and instructive piciuie of 1111 era in our country's life thai has now passed away forever. It is tho strongest presentation of tho blighting effect of Slavery upon the master race that has over been penned. And it i-akes its place among Judge Tourgee's striking historical pictures as a worthy peer of tho best of them, destined to hold his name in remem brance forever. The book is brilliantly illustrated. Price S2.00. Wheie there is no agent for tho work, it will be sent, post-paid, on receipt of price. As it is to bo sold by subscription only, Rook Agents had better make a note of It. Por-particulars address Weston Mulliert, :t''K State Street. Chicago, III. Con. Arthur has appointed Judge Folger because ho was the original choice of Crant and Coukliug, and leave tho public to infer that Con. Arthur will bo very apt to adopt many lecoinmendations which wore prompt ly rejected by Con. Carlleld. -New York sit 11. The above is a fair specimen of how tho great papers cieato false impress ions and mislead public feeling. The truth is that Judio Folger was the "original choice" of President Carlield for a position in the c'ibinot. (Jorrcs pondoneo now published settles that fact. Judge Folger being a great law yer, and a go'od man, was tendered the position of Attorney Ceneral by Presi dent Carlield, and docl.iud it. Ho may, or may not have been the "original choice of Crant and Conkling." Tlie Sun does not know whether ho was or not, and the statement made that ho was is not made by such papers as the Sun with other intention than to slur (Irani and Conkling and poison the minds of its uiiti-Crant-nnd-Conkling readers against President Arthur. It is a fact, however, that Crant, Conk ling, and Folger are all stalwarts and intimate friends, and Judge Folger, doubtless, while he was Carliold's "original choice" found no opposition from Crant and Conkling. Work is progressing quite satisfacto ry on the Nebraska extension of the Missouri Puoille. The distance from Atchison to Pappillion, where il strikes tho Union Pueillo, is l-Kl miles. The grading from Puppillhm lo Miawalha, Kansas, a distance of 1 00 miles, is com pleted' with Hie exception of eight miles in Otoe county, which last section has just been begun. Tracklaying from Fails City to Hiawatha will lie com menced in a few days. The yard tracks at Falls City are already laid. Omaha Tilcirum. Tlie Inter Ocean strikes the Dos Moines liiitstir from its list of ex changes, with the anathema of pirate and thief. That is hard on tho Heits ter, as it will greatly reduco its chances for solid editorials and ablo special tel egrams. The Inter Omtu says, if Medill of the Chicago Tribune had the power to kill off all the statesmen whom ho has accused of dishonesty, thero would bo nobody loft but himself and 0. Schurz. Soino Romarks About nn Egregious Ass. KniToit AnvKuriMKit: Now that Hie election is over, the inisccgonation editor of tlie U runner handsomely doll's tho sheep-skin from his recreant limbs and exhibits a profusion of wolf's claws and teeth and boldly assumes the nrch-air which naturally belongs to one or the tribe when ho has made more than a usually successful raid on some farmer's hen roost. As much as to say to every Republican, there's ' mischief and confusion in your party; big I and the little people did it, and "I respectfully ask Church Howe if he has learned who swept old Nemaha;" Booming to assume that tho main pur pose of the whole election was to de cide the question of superiority be tween the editor of tlie ilramer and Church Howe. Hoar him: "Tho Uran !)ir will light tho people's battles to tho Dost of its ability," only asking in re turn, I suppose, that the aforesaid peo ple will tall down and worship this self-constituted general, who thus vol unteers to load them to victory. in proof of this pioni'iioss'lio goes on to state that either "tlie Republican papeis, tlie leaders (and wo suppose tho paily) wore equally obnoxious to the people, or else the Uran;er has more inlltionce than those four papers com bined." () yes, says the (frtiiiier, we and the dear people have come up through great political tribulations and sorrow, and by tho powerful arm of the editor of the Urunier, have snatched vlctorv froindefo.it. Yet, he says that "the victory was not so complete as I wish ed, but it w ill do fjr the presont.7 How kind of this would-be parly loader, who thus oncouragis and stimulates his imaginary followers by saying to them, that ou haven't come up to the wisdom of my counsels nod did as complete a job as I could wish, but see ing it, is the best you could do, I will have lo put up with it for the present. Patting ouch one on tlie head, he wish es them, in future, to come up to tho help ol their lord against tlie mightv, and calls attention to (lie hosts that he has "licked," by staling that the Re publican candidates, supported by four papers and a fully organized parlv, wore in tho Hold, and exclaims, With what foi cos did we oppose them? Merely a few candidate's names and the war-like editor of the Oranier, without any reinforcements in sight, thus funking another plain case an'iK. modern instance of David and Coliuh., Thereupon the bold warrior imliiidi. os his military harness ami proceeds to glorify and sanctify himself before his people tlie moro fully to gather them under his wings, as it wore. lie says in a I'athorlv way, "What the (Jrunier did in 1 he campaign is befoio tho peo ple, and what our opposing papers did is also before the same tribunal. With tho verdict (wo suppose the editor of the (runier was foreman of the jurv) thus far rendered, we are well pleased, and have no fears that It will lie re versed or sol aside." Now, Rro. M0010, with all your bolt ing, ticket scalping Democratical pio elivilios. does it n where occur to you that you may boa tiille egotistical in tills matter. Isn't it possible that you have mistaken Hie rear of what ydd'are pleased to view as tlie people's forces for the head of their columns, and that while you are making powerful exer tions to catch up with the haid icar, you have from the violence of vour efforts been led to imagine that 'you were loading tho van? Isn't theio a mistake somewhere? Did it nowr strike you that perhaps in tlie oyos of the dear people you may not llguro witli all the significance and glory that you do in your own? That possibly you may be in tlie same pre dicament that the gnat was in tho fable, who, when he lit on the ox's horn one summer day, said with a groat buzz. "My dear fellow, pray excuse tho lib erty I take. If I am too heavy, onlv say so, anil I will light on thai tree yonder." "Stay or go, it makes no matter to mo," leplied the ox. "Had it not boon for your buzz, I should not have know that you wore I here." "Pltl'IMCNTIA." Assistant Postmastor-Ceneral Hat ton has decided that publishers of mat ter admitted to the nmils as second class may print upon the side of a postal card intended foi communica tions, bills, receipts and orders for sub scriptions to thuir publication or publi cations, and may also print tlie address of such publisher upon the address side of the card and enclose the same in tho second-class matter. The Methodist Episcopal Missionary confuionco, hold in Now York, SLH inst., voted $2,000 to Nobraska; to northwestern Iowa, $2,000; Xuvada, $2,000; southwest Kansas, $r,iiOo Wisconsin, $2,2.10; and Houthwestern Illinois, :I,000; for niiscellai.uoiis busi ness, $IH,ooo. Total amount appropri ated, $1580,482. 1 - Tho Atlantic flouring mills, at Den ver, burned 1 1th inst. i , ii I J