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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1896)
LOUP CITY, SHERMAN COUNTY, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1*90,_NUMBER 20 i* Northwestern i 'PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT I'lll. COUNTY SKAT. , uko. t-. Editor and Publisher. TENNIS SI 60 par Tsar. II Paid in Adranes ■star* i at tba lump City I'natofllre for Sal* ■liaaion through Iti malla at ■«-. sd •laaa mattar, Bepublican Ticket National For Preiddast. £5. wh McKinley, <.r Ohio For Vlce l'roNident. GARRETT A HOBART, of N. J. ■V I State Governor «!• H. M'COLt utenant <lovernor. .ORLANDO TEFFT etarv «f State JOKL A. PIPKK Itor .1’. O. HKDLUND Merer .('• K. • ASKV They -General A S, CHURCHILL , ui Pah Inst II It COKHKTT ^——pilur Inner .H. C. RUI8ELL Supreme Judur KOIiKItT HYAN Supreme Judge M. P. KINKAJI) Regain W. n WHITMOKK ELECTORS. At Larue J K. Houtz, l.anoaaler At Larue F. J. Badllek. Saline FfraEpiutrlet A J Burnham. Nemaha SUteoud District A (' Fester Douglas Third Dim!, ! Sul liruper Kijkj Fourth Iilstri. t , A. Derby Seward fjttDIst.iri .1 l. Mrl'beeley Kearney Math Dl-m, r M I. Fries*. Valley CONGRESSIONAL fMctb Dl ,1 r.rl A E CADY C^>r|^'Ibe ttepublleen claotors of tbo IS sena ,al t’lstfl** of the »tata of Nebraska ere , ' Ar requested to »eud delegates from the fS'^fpfiMties comprising tbe same, to meet In alllTantlon la tbe town of llavenna on Taesosy. the ltth lay of September, I-HC at 1o'elo< k p m fur tbe purpose of placing 1JI nomination u candidate fur Senator from said district Buffalo couiily Is entitled to In de.cgut«» and Sherman aounty to 5 delegates, HkNur 0. ABPkkws, Cfcalrman Sen, Can’t. Com 4,- %Frery Hay the dum-o-pops are Springing aomathing new and it | Mpeara that much of their newa is s made up out of nothing. The idlest 'i i was a story going about town to %/', the effect that F. (}. Hauler, of Kear ' ney liad gone over to the silver , trowd ant) was going to lake the Stump for Bryan. The report is proven to he false by a letter written r by F. (J. Hamer, addressed to and | published in the State Journal de ithlaiing himself ready to go out and fight for the republican tieket. | Wonder what will come next. W The Tunes Independent in am lost K every issue charges the republican W papers with calling the farmers a let of “fools’ etc. 1 he»e charges are only made to mislead anti mis inform the people and create prej uciee with the voters. The fact is that if you will notice the i papers carefully you will iind sneh statements only in the populists sheets. They try to make it appear ascoming from republisan paper, hut never give the author or even use • (notation murks. Before the cam paign is over editor Brown will tint! out ttiat resorting to such folly is ao argument and dos'nt have nuv weight The people are getting on to his curves. -mm So far ns we can learn nothing has been done by the republican county yftcntral committee or its chairman in regard to calling a county coo veutioti. Now the senatorial con vention meets at Kavanna September Hi, and Sherman county should tend a delegation to that eouvvtition But as the central committee has not even been sailed together it would imm-iu that a cenveutiou held before the dale of the senatorial tonteuUou wood be poorly adveit.se. However, H should be done, and •acb member of the central com I uiiuee should at once make a call in ' time for public notice uest weak. file uatioasl som in tiles f. *r the i |Mi|«urntie ticket ho ••our a hat , i looked Hr tan and be is «o«(Mdb'd ■>' undergo the MMMdttantion of Mhia attauging eh ins plan* obish had Sh^Beeou arranged sad auaauaead for ■ two wrshs or mote MnuUii of |t,. Ih» ualioaat Committee are eon i*ia • I in*- lit«an ha* baee u k ug L mV*o mash «ad it it tbought that »uai I;. to sl'vsdy »*id bs* lion* t) at y v I; J(a- -•• iMim Itiaii gs»d *a 1 iher to* Kbt .a*< -iit ie • | * a •lalaaieal to Butt Inert* f t sprla. Hit ■Pffc' a “Chairman Jones has been of tbe mi mu mind ever since Mr. Bryan made tbe trip from Salem to Lin coln on tbe reur platform of an ae comrnodation train, and he went to Lineoln eoon alter for the express purpose of advising him not to talk so much. The speeches between Lincoln and Pittsburg wore against bis judgemeat. SHd since Mr. Bryan' arrival here Mr. Jonea has not only hue his own opinion confirmed by members of the national committee but bus received numbers of tele grams from democratic leaders in the country 01. the subject. Mr. Bradley B. Smalley is a wise and an experienced politician, and baa taken part in many campaigns. He summed up the sentiment of all who had been offering advise to Chairman Jones when he said “cork him.” Tbe “regulars,” as the old time democrats are called, object to the serio eoinio campaign that ie being conducted by Mr. St. Johu and his amateure associates in the Bartholdi building. They insist that such rad icals as Mary Lease be instuatly re called from the atump or sent out to the mountains aud prairies. This eratic woman has been making speecue* uerc uuuer me uusuces ui Mr. St. John who is not only paying her expenses and hiring the hails in which she appears but has occupied the same platform and introduced her when she has made eeme of her characteristic harangues. Two even ing before Mr. Bryan’e speech ap peared at Cooper Institute, with Mr. St. John and a local leader of the socialist party, and entertained a large audience for two hours with an eloquent but sensational address, in which in the same breath she advo coted Bryan’s election and demand ed the repudiation of the public debt and the conflstication of the property of the plutocrats. The regulars insist that such sentiments are attributed to Bryan and the par ty at large, and are doing a great deal of injury. They want Mrs. Lease snrpressed and object to Mr. St. John interfering in the manage ment of the campaign.—Chicago Record. One of the numerous mistate rnents of Mr. Bryan in his New York address read as follows: “Railroad rates litre not been re duced to keep pace with falling prices. Tile farmer has this found it more and more difieult to live.” We suppose that he dates this back to the year one, of the populis tic oalauder, to-wit: the “crime of ’73.” Well in '72 the charges on a bushel of wheat from Chicago to New York by rail were cents. In H5 the charges had gradually (alien to the figure of 12.17 cent*. In’72 the chargee by lake ami rail routea were 28 cents tier bushel and in VO l*y Hie same route 0.06 cent*. Uy lake and eanal routes the charge* in 7i' ware £4.47 cnota and in ’05 4.11 (Junta. The transportation charge* all over the eonnlry have been lowered iu proportion nud the proportion of the fall ia a* ever) cue will acknowledge greater than the proportion of the fail of the market pro1* wf wheat. Slate Joarual When Ihci* i* an over auppiy of cation, com or oata, it iwcomea cheap, and why not with ailver Juet eo when there i* an over cup plf ef Working man, they meet work cheap. If eotifldeuc* wae teelmed there would he more faclorie* o|iei ated. more day* work to In done, more demand for lal*»r, and that mean* Imttei wage* aad tietlef tune* lienee It t» the duly of every milieu who iheeirea more of ptueperily, to vet* for McKinley end pitti»*iio«t •no hang him up with n osipro that i* boiling i.ver with pios, • in n i lea* It w II at wave ie»toi« > on t lean* Monet will et anew > «u net *t It* hiding pi*, e. fle<»i>* eel •tart np again nud proepwntt will •m aura A rOINTKB rou BARMKHs 1 remember one instance that bears particularly upon Ibis <|U#siIob that came to me today as I sat here, and that was this: My father came from the New England states upon this prairie in 1837. tic told me ibis Instance osce: That after sow ing a crop of wheat by hand, cut ting it with the eradle, binding it with the rake, and threshing it wilk the hall upon the Moor, he put it upon a wagon and drove it to this city of Milwaukee, ninoty-sik miles away, and sold it here for 40 cent* a bushel. This was in the fit's and silver was then $1.30 cents an ounce. Now tell the silver ineu to explain to you how it was that in the early 60s wheat was 40 cents a bushel and silver $1.30 an ounce if the price of silyer slway* carries with it the price of wheat: And when he heme and haws, say to him: “It ie not only confined to wheat hut that othei eommoditiee you yoke up with silver, eottoe; end tell him that for the four years end ing ie 18tfi cotton in the city of New York averaged only 1 cent* a poend, aud that for the four year* ending in 1804 the came class aver aged 8 cents a pound. Tell liisn to explain that to you. That waewhen we had free coinage aud silver wa* then $1.30 an ounce. He cannot ex plain it. That one illustration roy friends utteily distroys the whole silver heresy. Congressmen Fowler of New Jsrsy. The American farmer could not u»il in fannda. even if tbev had no tariff on American egg*. There »re only * few large eillea there, and they are near to the < a nadian cheap farms. The half-a dozen small markets in Canada have a total population only one quarter as large as that of the city of New York. A few eleuti»:i districts ia the city of Chisago offer a better market for American eggs tnau the whole of Canada. V'et Canada im pose* a duty of 5 cent* a dozen cn our egga, while we impose a duty of only three cents a dozen on heregge If the McKinley law had been let alone, the American farmer in 1HU6 0 would be supplying nearly every egg in the American market. The farmer* wife would have felt encouraged to increase her stoek of poultry, on whieh she depends for pin money to clothe beraelf and her ohildreN. When the McKinley law was repealed and the tariff on eggs reduoed from b to ;< cents a dozen, importation increased 1,00,000 dozen 1U one year, »u price of $125,000. Unless the Amer ican farmer can see It to bis inter est to vote for McKinley aud the restoration of » proper duty oil eggs the Canadian and other foreign I'm in ere will soeu again ship us 10,000,000 dozen a year and the price of denies tic eggs will continue to decline, as it has done tor the Inst two ycnra. —Kx. HitiS Coi ns lit lions The magicl eian's wand is not more peisai than l>r. Humphrey's Specific "77" fer sold* Fur sale by nil druggists Don't moke the mistake ef thinking yee can t afford to attend the wi gtate Feir. The truth is yen eau't ef ford to stay away. It unto au difference what your busineM i«, your knowledge of It Will 1*0 i lie reaped by what you we in tiruaha, Aug. 27 Sept A And the low rale* and •peciet train service niter eel by the MKLINtiTON Kit CTO lushes the matter wf l**‘t lug Out she a Very cheep •iid easy affair r-miNE» ***% S • 21 ? •&" Hf I •*«*«**• V'Ntt wH, 9 Vltll Vr eSstlff^AtiW* ^ Wi4 I W#A kW 4h%*« eNtlRff FAIRBANKS, MORSC * CO., 'tIOt Foment It Omths, heh. MUST TAKK 111* MKDIOINK. fliyan Inrrul l» Nay lia or Nay In iha r<>|iallila. ? t (,’l^cago., Aug. iilir The Tribune print* tbe following speoial from Lewston, Mo,: “Mr. Bryan will be formally noti fied of bin nomination by tbe popu list party. The conspiracy to dodge the populiat nomination will not W"i'k. Wo refute to be uaae as a doormat for Mr. Bryau to walk on. we will notify bin of his nomination Uh'* both Watson and be will have to answer. If Bryan does aot ac cept wo have the powar to pull kirn down and fill the vacancy. ' * uia was naid Sunday by L. S, Bateman, populist candidate for governor of Maine, and eecrerary of the notification committee of the St. Lon it Convention. Mr. Bateman further eaid: • lit sent hie striker* to St- Louis -Senator Jeaea and others end fairly begged us for the nomination. Now lie things ha can injure ue. VVe will show him whether be eari or not. Iluteuiau said there would be a •conation for the eouutry in this thing. ‘■Senator Allen of Nebraska,” lie Raid, “has been playing into tbe bauds of the democrats in tbi* noli tuition matter, but be is only one of Hie forty-four members of the committee. The chairmen, J. W. Bowler of Minnesota, ia in uomplete sympathy with me. I have addree ud a letter to eaek member of the committee, and there ia ho shade* of a doubt that a majority will in sist ou Bryan being formally notified I cannot say yet when and where the notification will take plus*, hut I will giva these laeta out before long. I intend to make things lively in tha near futures This statement may ha accepted as populist law and gospel i.c far as they can be laid down by any one man in relation to tha noti fication of Bryan. Wo tlnak we can raly on the son inittee to relent this in.sult to onr party with an almost unanimous voice in apite of the efforts of thoae who are trying to sell oat tbe party. I mean to do my heat and to does Mr. Howler to make Bryan answer fairly yea or no. The democratic managers have tried to play polities with Mr. Ba teman before, and every time we have locked horns i have come out a winner. I «hall not rest until 1 have seen Bryan notified." Regarding Sewall, bis neighbor, Mr. Bateman says: ■‘We beg to remind our dumeera tis friends that suiting of the ears of a jackass and pinning a few feathers on hia tail does cot make him a cana ry bird.” Mr. Bateman thinks Sewall ought to get out and say nothing. “But Mr. Sewell," aaid he, “never lets go of anything ha gats hold of. If either slauda a show for alaatiou it is Tout Watson. If not Wataon it will I will ha Itohert. The populists of -,- - Hu is the ideal aandiilale of the I plutocrat He ought to have I man i on the republican ticket. Here a l>r«taetiouiet nud he doe ul kuow *uy wore a Ivon t ailver aa an ecouoiU' ia enlvjeet tkeu nn Iudiau lie wee ' put upaiutply ae n eop to the plulo ! oratie vote, and evan (he popov-rata lisa t awailow kiw. The very fa*» i of hia nomination ahowa the hollow ; n«*ea of and hypoerae) of lht» dewo [I'leliC campaign They put up hr ran to hag Ike pepoiiet vole, Inti they van t deliver It) pet aaal of lha pnpuliit vote# tu loug aa Hewell ia the ticket ’’ Again ba ea t a If Wllliaa J, Hi van U going to •land for a bank praaident and tioat manager, aa egatnet Ton Waleon b will wake up after the November eot-Vloa with hie etown of Iftwtaa 1 *1*11 on bta bond " II ataman, ainve hi* ramie from ib» Mi, I,nut* mwvaaium, hat been bailed ae Ike paity a keavieel man j in the aaal lie ia tiedtlevl by every pupoiial |n H*,«t wtlh being rtetnm i«Mv for the toiMiag 4<»en of Mewell a«4 Ike ivWllivlKa of Vt eteon aad h<< w.ovl U law among ibam D. C. DOE. A. P. GULLEY, Vice President. Cashier. FIRST BANK OF LOUP CITY. General Banking Business Transacted. Capital Steak, ISO .000. Loana oa improved farm* at KIVI par oaot. Beat Company aad ban Mm to bo had tatba won. OommmMHChemical Baltawal Bank, Now York CHy, B. Yd Omaha national Baa*. Omaha. N at—rha W. J. FISHER, OKO. E. BENHCHOTER, Attorney and Notary Public. Publisher Lour City NorthwmraRN FISHER & BENSCHOTER, RIME ESTATE diUEJVTS. LOUP CITY, - - NEBRASKA. Town Lot*, Wild, Cultivated and Irrigated Landa for Sale Doctor Henderson 102 i 104 W. 0!h St., KAISAS CITY, W. The Old fUUakh Doctor. A At prior Grad*At *• Modtoime. Oidotl In Age andLongut Locatod. i OVER 37 YEARS OP SPECIAL PRACTICI. Authorized by the State to treat 0HH0HI6, IlllOUt mi IdtllAL outAU». Cures guaranteed or money refer,ded. Ail ■wlMse* furnl,hod ready for as*. No mercury or lajartoas auAlateaa a«ed. No detention from work. I’atlente at a dlatenae tree tad by mall and express. Medicine*Rent arerywhere, tree fromgaasorbrsalf ago. Charge* low. Over 80,000 eat,ee curad. Age amd eeaertaauoars Important. Read little book, then state yoar case. Band for opinion and tonne. Consultation free and confldenMal.poHMialtr or by letter Seminal Weakness & Sexual Debility, (T*#rM«f„rrA«* and hnfiotmuy) causedby youthfulfolliesandasossse*.prodaola*nerroae aass.loasee, pimplasandblotcbaeon tbn taco, ruidies of blood to Ute bead, pel as la tbe baek, eonfaaod idea, and forge tlulneaa. ba*bfuluo*s,aven*lon to society, losaof seicualpewar, loa* of manhood, Ac., curad for life. loan stop ull night losses, restore lost sexes) power, re store aervo and brain power.enlarge and strengthen weak parts and make yoa *t for marrtaga. ■ dypnillS, itefortnaandatueoacurud for Ufo. Ulood Poisoning, Skin Ittaeaena, Uloora, Swelling!, Boree. Gonorrbma and Glwit, and aUbraa of Private Lilsaaaoa Sdllvely cured or money refunded ook SESSWfiSSnJTlS: criptlon of above lUant-n the effects and euru.aeuJed In plain wrapper hirfle insuunpe. Hoad tide little book and anewemueetloua. oinciure fSTSSm^iSm. Kienomound. No pain,no axpoaare. Be-■ tlont can use tha treatment at how. m Rheumatism BEJ£?tuoi£f I ASUKBCUItK. The greatest dtsoerery la I tneanialaof modloiuo. Oae dMe glraat»| llof; a few doses remora terar aad sale tal joints-m iirolriafcw dera. BeadetaeaaneatM of ciwt'. with Hiaiup for clroalar. MMBpjaaMBiiil I Free Museum of Anatomy t huuaaoda o^curtosftiea. nS I I Ufa-llketDodalaaiid wax A(mreadeaplr Imprints the mli»d;~a school of lortrae- m tlon—a aannoa without wurde. H. 0.—/ haul $600 dt/ioiHod In (As dunk, mkhk / m Uiuforftlt for atoss Awaa Met f autnot tort. W Wanted—An Idea Z&SSS Protect four tdaea: thee may lirluu you wealth write JfillN WEDliKKltUKN ft CO.. Patent Altor liar a, Waalilufttoa, l). 0.. for their $i.*» ortw offer and Ual of Mro hundred lureutlona wauled. L. MAHCT. * DENTIST* ' ufllliA li Bead and Matey Htoeh Knal •Ida Pahlie eeuare l.aup City. Nab W J. KISH b K AltDriity-at-Lnui. AND NOTKY l‘l HI.IC. Will |)eit*Dii iu ForeclosureCa*cs AU*U DO A (IKNKKAl. KKAl. KSTATR SC'SIX K*> ofkaa in * .atBeaitaaa handle* UH I* cm. * • ♦ NtMUABA -—-— 'I' IMM 1 rbor .* EXPRESS *■»* GENERAL DELIVERY LINK All Btyaee *« Pietpal utdait praanptir all ended w »|» • M IQHTIM'J ALK. ‘ LAWYKK. j osst i Slum Lit ui cmmui Hum A UMf Pebtte Pbaefibfke bad Pipe ante* Ml dPlb •bB iwm<B • <>«»• tip piblt BA kb WWiW, • • tit > ISA. TH* MILD POWER OUHJKS. HUMPHREYS’ Ur. Naaphrapa' IfMlIa ata »«t«ilitXWialU attd oaiafaUy prepared Katuedlaa. aaad lap yarn la private praoUaa and (or over Map paanUp ■ha people with euttre aaaaaaa. Uaaap AM "peaKJe a apaatal awe (or *e dtaaaaa Ithii sTecTfToT MUMPHRBVt* WITCH HAZIL OIL i .._ aw