History of Richardson County, Nebraska : its people, industries and institutions . - of a judge pro-nouncing a death sentence upon a culprit, said. Yes. the preacher is right, sohe is; sitting together i)uts bad notions in your heads, it does, so it does. At the same meeting, one night, while a number of penitents werearound the altar, and the minister was putting forth his best licks. David Holtdrove u]) with a highly respectable lady in his buggy, and took his stand nearthe .dtar, so as to hear and see distinctly without alighting. During theservice the minister saw some laughing, which he d
History of Richardson County, Nebraska : its people, industries and institutions . - of a judge pro-nouncing a death sentence upon a culprit, said. Yes. the preacher is right, sohe is; sitting together i)uts bad notions in your heads, it does, so it does. At the same meeting, one night, while a number of penitents werearound the altar, and the minister was putting forth his best licks. David Holtdrove u]) with a highly respectable lady in his buggy, and took his stand nearthe .dtar, so as to hear and see distinctly without alighting. During theservice the minister saw some laughing, which he doubtless interpreted asscoffing, and became somewhat indignant, and with his finger pointed to thecouple in the buggy, made some strong remarks, which Mr. Holt construedas ill-timed, whereupon he dismounted from the buggy and started for Ihe. JOHN H. BURBANK. RICHARDSON COUNTY. NEBRASKA. 64I offender, who, anticipating the object of Davids approach, fled for the brush,and managed, by the aid of brush and darkness, to evade his pursuer untiltired out, when he withdrew. In the meantime Uncle Isaac dismissed themeeting for the evening. Holt declined a private apology to the lady, whomhe deemed highly insulted, and the minister was the next day required tomake a public apology or sacrifice his scalp. He chose the first alternative,and was permitted to continue his revival unmolested. INCIDENTS CONNECTED WITH THE BATTLE OF PADONIA. By Jerome Wilte, Sr. In June, 1861, William Buchanan had his headquarters in a tent nearthe Harkendorff place, north of Falls City. I lived west of Falls City, untilthe middle of August, and then moved to Rulo precinct. Several horses haddisappeared from different places that were owned by Union men, and it wasevident that the cause of the Union had not been advanced by it. The peopleof the surroundi
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