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i f H ,v "I !M(I I I nrf ml 0 u. ESTAJQLISHJUUianO. 1 01dct Paper ia the State. BUSINESS CARDS. I r 11. J "'111' I.I i Attonr Cotmaalor at l.w, Tl " a IV ' . .. -. " uiunuiiiiciuiu r S. STULL, J, ATTOHWRVB AT IAW. Offlcof County Judge, Drownvine, NebraUa. 1 S. II O h JL. A U A. X , A.. Physle 8ng, Obotatrletan. Orsfluatedln 1111. Located In nrownYlIle Ml. nfflcMl Malnsirsat.BroiTnvllla.Wab. . A W. " T W.OIBSON, Bli'AOKBMITH ARD MORHK 8IIOKH Workdone to order and satisfaction guaranteed rinHlroet, between Main And AtUnllo, Brown rllle. Neb. 1. A. OflnoBN, notary ruunc, u. yt . IAILUB, 08DORIV A. TAYLOR, Attornoys and Counsellors at Law, Brownvulo, Wobraaka. PRACTICE In tho Stnto and Federal coarts, HnoclM attention given tocollootlonsand ialss of roal stato. AT 0 LIN 13, PAHIIIONAHIiK HOOT AND SHOE MAKER COHTOJf WORK made to order, and flti si war xusrsntecd. Repairing naatly and promptly done Mhop, No. 27 Main direct. Urownvllle.Neb. llVm. Reaves, DEALER IK Corn. Hay & Wood. ad Door Mast of Dea'a, pHOWNVILLE, NED. HlRhost price. In U cash, paid for poultry. Glvo tilm n cnll. D M. BAILEY, snirrKK and dealeji in LIVE stock: J1RO WNVILLK. NEBRASKA . Farmers, please call and got prices; I want i handle your atook. Omce First National Bunk. ESTABLISHED IN 1856. oldest !o;l EstateAgency IN NEBRASKA. William H.Hoover. Does a general Roal Estate Hnslnoss. Sells Unds on Commission, examines Titles, makes Deods, Mortgages, and all instru ments pertnlnlng to tho transfer of Real Ba tata. Has a ' Complete Abstraot of Titles la all Ual Estate In Nomaua County. O. 3P. Iovel9 DEALER IN Family Groceries. Always on Hand Flour, Teas and Coffee, With a full lino of Canned Goods & Confectionery. Also, tho very best Cigars and Tobaccos. a. Two Doors East of Postofllco, Tllle, Nehrarka. Rrown- VUTHOKIZKU UY TIIK U. H. GOVERNMENT First National Bank O F BBOWNVILLE Paid-up Capital, $50,000 500,000 luthorixed ft is rrturAitiujTO transact a General Banking Brines. IIUY ANB SELL OOIN & CURRENCY DRAFTS n nil the principal cities of the United States and Europe MONEY LOANED '- approved Hocurlty only. Time Drana dlacount l.HiHlnpeoliilnecoinnvKlntlonAlcrftntwltoilepoalt '1. Healers In OOVKRNMKNT BONDS, STATE, COUNTY & CITY SECURITIES DEPOSITS Ui'colvfil payabloondomand nnn INTKRKSTal owed on tlmiicurtlfluatos ufdcposlt. OrUKCTORH.-Win.TTnen, B. M. Ralley. M.A Ilaudloy, Frank K. Johnsun, Mitlier Jloadley Win, FraUlior. joirx h. CAKSOA, I) VVISON. Cashier. President '".VAlUIITON.Asst.Caslilor. NEMAHA CITY. J. B. REES" UVERY AND FEED STABLE. Good boggles nnd horsos, otiarxes ran onable. Dentlof oaro tnkon of transient atook J . I. rO tC3f BOOTS, SHOES, AND HARNESS. Mado nnd repnlrod m well ru can be dona anywhoro, on iihort notloe, and VERY REASONABLE TERMS. Ur Hotel, LEVI JOHNSON, PROPRIETOR. NEMAHA CITY NEB., Uontrnlly located; Good dire, mid notroti- mi) BDAred to make a mist Good barn for horses and area 10 inuica truest comrortali n. Charges Jteasoniible. ATTENTION, FARMERS! For your Agricultural Implements, goto DAVID A. MORTON, Farm and 8prlnir Wagons, Sulky Plows Btlrrlng Plows, Corn I'liintfrs, Harrows Reapers, Mowera, Cultivators, Corn .Shelters and the Hobs Tongueluss Cultivator. JOHNS. MINICK, General Merchandise. Nemaha City, Nob. B.BELL ANDREWS. M..D., Physician 8f Surfeon, NomoJua City, Nebraska. Calls in the Country Promptly Attend ed, day or night. SPECIAL ATTENTION given to surgloa diseases of women and surgical diseases of the eye. 3,i'aueuts rrom nurona ami ne rurniHiiuo with pleasant rooms and aocoinmodatlons. LIVERY I W. E. O'PELT, Opposit Lumber Yard, Main St. GOOD BIOS REASONABLE RATES. Special Accommodations for Commercial Men, AND Driver Furinshed when desired. Horses boarded by tlie day or week, and Farmers' teams fed and cared for at fair rates. B. F. SA UDER, Manufnfttircr and Dealor In IIJLfclVH j rr , i yjJJj J &m ' . WliipH, I-anlicM, uurry voihhs, RniNlioM, i:tc, i:tc. UISPAIRln A SPECIALTY. Aeut for tho Celrbrated CarrUffe Topi. Ky City .'.''Ik'IMI - ' log AMm. gL BROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, DEC. 29, 1881. NEBRASKA ADVERTISER Tho intiRic of Heoclior'a cluirch last year cost $6.70. It's a wonder ttic whole jury ian't sick. Inter Octan. J. F. Simpson, of Detroit hta been found guilty, In tho Hrat tlogreo, of tho murder of his wlfo. Secretary MoVeagh nnd P. M. Oon. James have lnien routed by tho star routers. They retreated from tho flold in the midst of the fight. That's all right so far an tho country is concern ed, for two hotter men have their places. . The new town of Carson, located in Nemaha county, and named after John L. Carson, the banker of Brownvillo, has boon platted and lots put on tho market. If wo are not mistaken Ne maha county is getting hor full quota of now towns, and all of thorn to be tho future county awl. Nebraska City Newt. Tho prospective town is at tho cross ing of tho M. P. and It. V. railroads. A little Ohio girl, making a contri bution to the Gartleld monument fund, addressed a quaint letter to "Mr. Com mittee," in which she said: "I am a little girl 7 years old, and I llvo live miles from Iliram, our dear Prosinoul's former home. Now, my undo Oscar, living in Cloveland, said I could not spell hippopotamus. Ho bet mo a dollar. I won tho bet. It Is tho first dollar I over earned, and I would like you to ploaso accept this as a token of lovo to our beloved President (larfleld." A man named Georgo Traverse, at Wavorly, Nebraska, made a desperate assault on tho person of his wife a few days ago, with a knife, indicting several sovero wounds about her hoad, arms and breast, and doubtless would havo killed her there and ihon had not hor screams brought immediate assist ance. She will prabably recover. Be fore the enraged man could bo disarm ed, believing he had fatally stabbed his wife, ho drew his knife across his own neck, but did not quite touch tho spot. Ho is now in jail at L'uicrthw Ex-Senator Paddock is reported as saying that ho wrote a letter to Presi dent Arthur declining to be assistant secretnry of tho treasury, and impart ing the information to tho president that Socrotary Folgor should bo permit ted to solect his assistant from amongst his acquaintances. Most men would want until a position was tendered them before declining. Pad. didn't wait to put the president to that trouble; and doubtless the president is under a thousand obligations to him for his advice. If tho ex-Sei.ator is chuck full of auything it is a weak, harmless sort of egotism. i m m Judge Horace Gray, Chiof Justice of tho Supreme Court of Massachusetts, has been nominated by tho president to fill tho vacancy on tho V. S. Supreme Bench occasioned by tho death of Justice Nathan Clifford. He is tho second Massachusetts Chiof Justice that has been called to tho Supreme Bench of tho United States. Tho former was Judge Story. Judge Gray is 55 years old, aristocratic and (1 feot 4 inches in height, and somewhat re sembles Charles Sumner. In tho days of Free Soilism he was ono of them, and wan a delegate to tho first Free Soil convention of Massachusetts. IS Inter Octan: Secretary Blaine's re marks upon tho inter-oceanic canal seem to havo caused considerable com motion among the European statesmen, and it is not remarkable that tho jour nals of Great Hritian and Europe dissent most emphatically from the position Mr. Blaine takes. Whon our foreign policy was shaped by Mr. Ev arts that gentleman allowo-.l nothing to bo done that would injure tho inter ests of his professional clients, and it so happened that be was more thought ful of the welfare of tho Panama Hail road Company than of the dignity of tho government. The contrast be tween tho utterances of Mr. IUvarts and Mr. Hlaino on the same subject is therefore very striking, and the vigor ous language used by tho latter com mands the respect of our rivals over tint water, while Hie vacillating and conciliatory policy ol Mr. Evarts merrly gave evidence of American timjdity that did not exist. Tho Lon don" Tiling roeogni7.es the strength of Mr. Blaine's position, and, while it very naturally objects to it, says, by way of admission, that "Mr. lilaine's case, however, is stronger in somo ways than he wmturos to make it, as tho time mut arrive when tho weak Cen tral American countries will bo ab sorbed bv tho lnited Statu", and tho coast lino' will oxlond to tho full limits that Blaine fancifully indicate." Tho State Journal in an Horn on woman suffrage, seriously advances this curious Idoa: It believes it is tho loundon duty of overy voter in Nobraska to cast his vote upon this question just an his wife, if ho has one, instructs him to cast it. If ho has no wifo let him consult his mother, or his best sister, or his fa vorite sweetheart, or his daughter. Voting thus, wo shall have a full, fair and conclusive decision of tho question when tho bullous arc counted. Our botter-lmlf Instructs us to voto just aa wo please. That's right. We Intended to do that whon wo asked for instructions. We enquired of her If she would voto if she had the right to. Sho answorcd that she had never taken any interest in the shffrngo questson ; that she did not think she would rush to the polls on every occasion, but that occasionally there was n qucation or principlu involved in tho result of elec tions upon which sho would vote from a sense of duty, if the privilege wero accorded her. We think this lady's ideas about voting are about tho same as a great many others, in fact a ma jority of women, who uro not "woman rights" stalwarts. We do not know what proportion of the women of Ne braska "want to vote," and we do not want to know, as tho condition of a principle. Wo do know, howovor, some estimable women who want tho right to vote, and wo proposo to give it to them. We also know many moro just as good and Intelligent whose desires on the subject wo do not know. Wo pro pose to remove the obstructions in their way to tho polls, and then leavo thorn, precisely as thoir husbands are, f reo to vote or not. Wo do not doubt that many good women do not care about the matter, and realty think they would not voto if they could, but once give them the privilege, and they would doubtless vote, if not at evory olectlon, surely when it should be greatly to thoir interest to do so. Prosont Condition of th School. State Normal Tho year now closlinr has noon ono of tho most prosperous in tho history of tho institution. Tho catalogue shows an attendance of '274' students, all preparing to teach. Of these, forty wero graduated Inst Commencement Day, six in tho Higher and thirty-four in the Elementary Course, representing in all twonty counties in too state. This is but little more than an avorago of tho numbers graduated annually for tho last five years, but in the meantimo the school has risen to ujlilghor plane In point of well-directed effort, and a marked improvement is manifest in the general culture, moral tone, and pro fessional enthusiasm of all its students. Tho principle of self-government has been so fully developed on tho part of tho students that to common observa tion tho school appears to bo self-regulative. A large majority of tho stu dents have not been absent from chap ol exercles nor missed a recitation during the fall term, and this has been truo of many of them for the whole scholastic year. Of the whole number of students in attendance this year, 1f7 are young ladies, and 117 young gentle men. 2(10 of them are from Nobraska, and 14 of them are from other states. They represent .18 counties and 4 states. Their average ago is a little over 20 years. The next term begins the 4th of January, 1882. a- pa - Tho law is very blind in Nobraska as well as in othfr states, when tho money power is invoked, but Judge Lynch rarely makes a mistake. JHair liejmh llvnn. The Blah Republican gives itself completely away in its Jnst sentence. Olivq and his associates wero tho very same "Judge Lynch" that Is the admi ration of our northern contemporary. The two men killed Olive's-brother, a deputy sheriff who went to arrest them on a warrant for cattle stealing, and his friends lynched them in the usual way by taking them out of tho hands of tho shoriff and his posse by force. Let us havo no moro praise of Judge Lvnch in Nebraska. Wo have had enough and to sparo of his mlirderous proceedings. Stale Journal. The Journtd is right. "Judge Lynch ranly makes a mistake," says tho Re publican, thus admitting thai Judge Lynch does make mistakes sometimes, and cruelly puts to death innocent men. Is it an affectation, or worse, in tho Chicago Tribune i speak, as it Imbltu- niiov does, oi i 'resident Arthur, us "Acting President Arthur?" New YnrliUnqihir. TJie Chicago Tribune has an "inspir ation" of that kind, 'or worse." its favorite adjective to General Arthur's predecessor wero "tho dishonest, wood- I pulp Garfield." Ancr Ocean, VOL. 26, NO. 28! ' The Washington monumont com mission will aak Congress gor $200,000 to complete the work. A telegram says, Ben. Lynch, a worthless rcaidont of Putnam County was killed by his step-sons, Win. and Levi Young. Thoy bent his brains out with clubs, Tho health otllcers of Chicago havo taken steps to compel every man woman and child who ban not boon vaccinated, to have it done at once. This is dono to chock the alarming spread of smallpox. Ono would think there is plenty of smallpox in this country without im porting rnore. A ship last week landed at New York with 1,11.1 passengers, ovor 1,000 being immigrants with that dreaded disease amongst them. Tho family of .J. A. Ingrahnm, a miner, of Mt. Union, Ph., was hurled into eternity in tho following manner; Boforo going to work, Ingruhum placed a can of dynamite on his cook-stovo to dry. The package exploded with dreadful force, tearing tho building to pieces and killing Ingrahnm, his wifo, ami their four Children. -''li i New Words. The now Edition of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, numbering 1028 quarto pages, contains nearly ooonow words or now meanings of old ones. These words rnngo over tho fields of science, medicine, inven tion, discovery, research, etc., depart ments which lit this age are constantly yielding fresh ideas, requiring now words to express them. That they havo not been hastily com piled is evidenced by the accuracy of and careful study given to their ety mology and definitions. Tho intelligent reader, or any reader who would be intelligent, will find this feature of tho dictionary unite in dispensable, Godey's Lady's Jlook for January is full of good things. A beautiful steel plate, illustrating the escape of the Countess Isabella from tho castle of Schonwaldt, its told by Sir Walter Scott in "Quontin Durward ;" a double page design for a window curtain, in colors; the usual rich illustrations of f dress for ladles, embracing the very latest fashions; a comploto novel by Ino Churchill, entitled "Mock Jewels ;" and a goodly collection of shorter stories and miscellaneous original matter. Wo would suggest to tltoso who do not take it, that the Lady's Book would mako a handsomo holiday present to your friend. Any of our readers can bo supplied promptly, by leaving their orders at this ofilco. Wo will furnish our own paper and tho Lady's Hook for the low price of 8.1.15 per annum. As this issue begins tho current year, now is a good tlmo to Hond in your subscription. Tho publi cation ofilco is 100(1 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. m i am There are somo newspapers and somo nersonss severely criticising . Judge Cox for permitting Guitoau to talk so much, and so abusive. To have restrained him otmof two things would have to have been done to try him . without Ids presence in court or had him sit there week after week with a gag in his mouth. Even had such a course as either of thoso been accord 'ng to law and precedent, nnd been adopted, there would doubtless Imve been more general dissatisfaction than thoro is with tho ono pursued. Tho people now road tho proceedings, of tiie trial (dosoly, and whatever may bo tho result, they know more of tho assassin, and are bettor prepared to form opin ions to suit themselves, than if ho had been gagged or kept ill jail. And his demeanor, and eccentric way of con ducting himself before the jury wijl help tho jury to arrive at a truer esti mate of his mental condition and a verdict. His ravings insults, and dis gusting manners from day to day, are considered by the Judge, the attorneys, and the witnesses, in connection with the source from which tliov emanate and do not permit their dignity and good sense to be insulted by him. When tho Judge shall have delivered his charge to the jury, which we doubt not will cover all legitimate explana tions, tho little narrow mind of such papers as tho Now York Tribune will bo exposed to a clearer light. The UnionHo"tcl Is growing in public favor. Com mercial men are learning that at tho I'nion is the best place to stop fur good faro and cordial accommodations. The increasing custom and demand for first-class- tare, has mttdo it necessary for the Vnion to take an un irrndo stop. 'It has recently been refurnished and. otherwise improved. Best table, best beds, best everything, and only tf'-'.OO a day. Tho best and most convenient sample room in the city is now con nected with tlie house. - Berkshire hogs, high bred for sale by Stevenson & Cross . f i r