"iVve HEMIINGFORD HERALD HEMINGFORD, NEBRASKA, DECEMBER i, 1910 Ladies' Furnishings Our line of Fall Hats is very complete. The latest styles fitted by experienced milliners. And the prices are very low. One-third off on all trimmed hats. New stock of Ladies1, Misses' and Children's Coats. Our Fall Suits are un surpassed in quality and style. A very complete stock of Ladies' and Children's Furnishing Goods, Dry Goods and Notions is at your service. You can save money by buying at this store. Our expenses are low and we sell on a small profit. S'vmmows. HEMINGFORD Will Cronley who has been upeneli t(r a few day with Mr. and Mr. Frank Olds at hiidnm. returned homo Tues nay on 44. Mr. and Mrs. li-k Ken Mr came up from Alliance on 4.'1 Wednesday la spend Thanksgiving with Mrs. Ken m i -'s parent. Mr. and Mrs. Mat Mean tnont. I!cv. ltenUmin Kuhler, wife and chil dren, who spent a few days the first of the week with Mrs. Kuhler brother, Dr. Mc Euen, returned to their home in (Jordan Wednesday on 43. Dr. McHuen and wife and Kev. Kuhler and wife took supper at the home of John Armstrong Tuesday. Mr. Chandler came in from Curlv Tues day, going out Wednesday, Mrs. Waliace going out to spend Thanksgiving with her daughter, Mrs. Walter Weddle. Mr. jaraes Hauler antoed up from Alli ance Tuesda", going to the ranch. Mrs. Hesaie Hart let t came over from Chadron, going out to Fenner's ranch for a short visit. Everett Clayton, who has been attend ing school at Alliance, came up on 43 last Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving with his sister, Mrs, Wm. Cony, returning on 44 Sunday. Kev. Cox was a passenger to Keno Thursday on 44. James Evans came up from Alliance on 43 and returned on 44 Thursday, Col. Fosket went to Chadron for a few days Wednesday. Miss Mary Iodence returned from her visit to Chadron Wednesday. Mrs. Frank Kwing and children and Willie Carter spent Thanksgiving with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ueorge Car ter. Tina Iverson came in on 13 Wednesday from Denver, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. George I.oer left for Kan sas City the first of the week. They will visit in Illinois and Indiana before return ing. Harold Olds, who has been in town at his fathers for a few days, re turned to his home Thursday. Mr. Olds is gaining as fast as could be expected. Miss Sadie Hacker came up from Berea Thursday on 43 for a few days' visit with her sister, Miss Jessie Hacker, who is teaching in the Jensen District. Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Fenner took Thanksgiving dinner with Mr. Fenner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Fenner, near Dunlap. Miss Alice Fotmesil visited with her sis ter. Mrs i: S Wildy, the latter part of the week M. F. I). Spranklin returned home from Sheridan, Wyo. , Saturday on 44. W. A. Kandall came in from Sioux county Saturday, bringing in some dressed bogs. Bertha Koland went to Alliance Thurs day on 44 for a few days' visit with her sis ter, Mrs. James Evans, returning home Saturday. Mrs. George Andre was a passenger to Alliance Saturday on 44. was packet to its utmost capacity . T here was hardly standing- room The program was appropriate to the occa sion and the .tipper disappeared almost ns fast as it was placed on the tallies Wc did not learn how much was taken in at the door, but think it was satis factory. HOPE Miss Vira Horn and Miss Marie McHwee spent Monday night at Miss Vira s home. Mr George Severson was down in the Canyon one day this week. Mr Amos Mowry is working on the ditch for G. W. Horn. Mrs. Arthur Hubbell and Mr. dohn Duerr were Minatare visitors Monday. Mr. Hoy Denton passed through Mope on his way to Minatare Tuesday . A merry surprise party was given last Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Horn in honor of their son Burt's sixteenth birthday. A number of our young folks were present and spent the evening with music, games and danc ing At midnight supper was served. At three o'clock a. m. they all departed for their homes wishing Bert many happy re turns of the day. 1 hose present were: Misses Elsie Horn, Helen Beeson, Vira Horn. Nora Cogar, Sadie Horn, Nettie Crismond, lva Horn Edna Horn; Messrs. Everett Horn, Joe Beeson. Willie Davis, Hen Nicola, Earnest Thompson, Wilford Cogar, John Crismond, Boston Neek, Bert Horn and Amos Mowry. BELMONT We have been asleep for the last two weeks and have just woke up and found it cold enough to freeze mud turtles. Miss Lula and Opha Lemons, who are attending school at Alliance, came home to spend Thanksgiving. Fred Ellsworth, one of our promising young men, won the prize by taking four young ladies to the Thanksgiving dinner. Abbott Brothers have just received an other car load of lumber. Mrs. Hamaker has gone to Hot Springs to visit her children. Miss Cecil Hack was thrown out of a wagon last Thursday night and dislocated her arm, but is improving nicely. James Fhelps returned home on 44 from Valentine, where he has been visiting for the last ten days. Mrs. Hiery went to Crawford Saturday on 4), returning home Sunday. Miss I'earl Fvans and brcther George were in town Saturday. Fred Ellsworth took a load of hogs to Crawford Saturday for James Phelps. The dance at Phillips was a grand suc cess. One hundred people attended. Mrs. Diehl and Andrew are going to the Sunny South for the latter s health. Mrs. Abbott and daughter visited Mrs. Lee Gregory Saturday. Our school is doing nicely this winter with Miss Clark and Miss Blessing as teachers. Christmas free af Fairview fn Front of the Palace Livery Stable 700 can nearly always see a rig getting read- to start out. We will send one any distance, for any purpose, at any time. We answer all calls promptly and will be glad to serve yon in any way in which a rig is required. H. P. COURSEY. Prop. phone va Mr. and Mrs. Eggert, of spent Thanksgiving with Mr. Frank Hlack. RENO Marsland, and Mrs A. M. WARREN Chiropractor Chiropractic is the science of restor ing health without medicine or surgery. We remove the cause of the disease by adjusting the spinal column. What ever your afflictions, there is hope for you in chiropractic adjustments- Call at my office for examination and conn ael, Free. Office in Opera House Block, rooms 2 aud 3. 47 tf-254 Miss Dennis, the Keno school teach er , went to Lakeside last Saturday on 44 to attend the taffy pull at her sister's that night. There were 18 people pres ent and all reported a tine time. Mrs. Fanny Switzer. Charles Castle and Gladys Hier all went to Alliance Sanday on 43. Mr. Strong', Mr. Nelson and Mr. Leistritz have all been putting down new wells closer to their houses. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hier gave a Thanksgiving dinner to nine guests, and there being three in the family just made an even dozen. They all enjoyed the feast immensely, after which they all went to Reno to the oyster supper. W. 0, Siminson was lcokintf after his ranch interests three miles west of Keno last week. Wonder what makes Charles Castle go to Alliance every Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lea Stergeon and May Mapps were shoppiug in Alliance last Saturday. The Nelson family took dinner at John Strong's Thanksgiving: also Mrs. Kop Strong and Miss Delia Strong. Miss Gladys Heir came down from Alliance on 44 Thursday to spend Thanksgiving at home and to take part in the program in the school house at Reno. Jesse Nelson helped Mr. Strong butcher last Tuesday. Len Boyer butchered a beef Friday, and Henry Hier butchered one Satur day. Miss Gladys Hier returned to Alliance Sunday to attend School. Little Tena Nelson was on the sick list last week but is better now. Johu and Fred Leistritz are baling hay for Mr Fryer south of Lakeside. C. E. McFall had quite a family gathering at his place Thanksgiving. We hear that the scholars at the Nel son school are soon to lose their teach er. Charles Clough finished dipping all of his cattle Tuesday. He dipped 1,001 in all. P J. Sturgeon and family and Mr. Mapps and family took dinner at Lea Sturgeon's Thauksgiving. Frank McFall butchered a beef the day before Thanksgiving. Lula Nelson visited over Sunday ith Tot Morgan The festival at Reno school house was well attended. M the school house There will be a Christinas tree at Fairview church this year, and an in teresting program will he rendered. A committe on program was appointed at the Sunday school last Sunday. It has not been definitely decided what evening the entertainment will be given, but notice thereof will be pub lished in The Herald in ample time. Hemingford House STEELE & RAY, Props. Rates, $2 per day Newly remodeled through out. The best of table serv ice. Clean rooms. Special attention to transients. DOCTORS Searles I Searles U years In Lincoln Vecialists IN Cbroolc and Nervous Diseases of Meo aud Women SUN AND BLOOD DISEASES bail Stooes I Piles rsmoved without an Deration. All dls- CM of the Now, Throat. Lungs. Stom ach. Bowels. LJver, Rheumatism. Stric ture. Vsrlocele. Kidney and Bladder. All Diseases and Disorders ol Men All Examinations and Consultations FREE, Charges Low, Quick Cures. Call or write for booklet. P. O. Box U4. Office hours to 11:10; 1 to 4; night 7 to f Dr s, Searles & Searles, Jn0cola SNL. New Fresh Typewriter Rib bons and Carbon Paper for sale at the Herald office. Type writers for rent and sale. Phone 340 The Biggest Department Store in Box Butte County Four big departments and every one of them filled full of bargains for careful buyers. We invite you to inspect our immmense stock. We can show you how that by buying in large quantities we save you money. Furniture Department The special per cent discount sale will be continued another week. It is a big success. See the goods and note the prices. We need the room. Queensw are Department This new department has just been opened with a complete line of new queensware. See tne new Japanese ware. It's selling fast. Complete line of dinner sets. Clothing Department We can fit you from head to foot. Clothing for men, women and children. All wool suits from io to $20. Grocery Department By buying in big quantities and in quick sales we have a good, fresh stock always on hand at the lowest prices. Best grade of flour is $1.65. Special discount on lots of ten sacks. Anything you want for sale at this store, vour money back. Satisfaction guaranteed or ROCKEY SON HEMINGFORD NEBRASKA 1 CONDENSED NEWS J 1 XXXAJ Jk Aj, t s . The whole of Manchuria is officially declared to be infected with the bu bonic plague. A monument to General James Ed ward Ogelthorpe, founder of Colony of Georgia, was unveiled at Savannah. Colonel Moses C. Wetmore of St Louis died as the result of injuries suffered when run down by a wagon. The government has filed suit in New York asking for the dissolution of the American Sugar Reflining com pany, the so called sugar trust. For three days a coast storm has been sweeping the New England shore line with wind velocities averaging nearly a mile a. minute. Maude E. GlaviB, wife of Louis R. Glavis, former chief of the field di vision of the general land office in Seattle, obtained a divorce. Twelve workmen were injured, four seriously, when a Baltimore and Ohio freight ran into and wrecked an inter urban electric car at South Chicago. The Tennessee supreme court held as constitutional the act of the Ten nessee legislature of 1909 prohibiting the manufacture of whisky in Tennea see. The new Pennsylvania station in New York was formally declared open at one minute past midnight and the first train rolled under the river one minute later. Ten million dollars' worth of dam age is done annually in the United States by ground squirrels, according to a bulletin issued by the department of agric ulture. TllMttS M. Reid of Houston, Miss., a civil engineer, was killed in Mexico City by a policeman, who sought to avenge the burning of Anton Rod riguez in Texas. Samuel T. Withers, aged fifty-five, second vice president of the First Na tional bank, committed suicide in a hospital at Lynchburg, Va., by shoot ing himself through the head. Milwaukee's first municipal dance was a decided success. Juneau hall, in which it was given, proved too small and Kilbourne hall, adjoining, was thrown open to accommodate the crowd. Tim Hurst, the well known umpire, it seriously HI In New York with blood poisoning, which developed from a sharp blow by a foul tip which struck him on the ankle several weeks ago. The victim of the mysterious mur der at Aberdeen, S. D , Sept. 3, has been identified as Edmund Casey, a farmer, whose family, consisting of a widow and six children, reside near Strool, S. D. " '"qaSBPMta. mm . . nemingtord s New More EVERYTHING IN Drugs, Sundries, Paints and Oils THOMPSONS PHAPVtArv S A. M. THOMPSON, Propr. Successors to Boyd's Drug Store HEMINGFORD, - - NEBRASKA Cold Weather m ans STO VES I handle the "KING BEE" heater. It's a fuel saver and its capacity of holding fire is astonishing. The prices are reasonable. See them. I have in stock a complete line of the latest models of ranges. Stove boards and stove oilcloth, all kinds of Builders' Hardware C. A. SHIN DLER Hemingford, Nebr. DO IT NOW Subscribe for THIS PAPER Central Lumber Co. Building material, Piles, Posts hehinoford, and Coal Nebraska