Lioaal Daws. Joseph Cording is able to he on the street again. Miss Abbie Conger returned to Oma ha Friday. Draper Bros, of the west side were in the city Saturday. James Rentfrow of Austin, was one of our pleasant callers Monday. Miss Mattie Taylor came home last Saturday to pay a visit to her folks. Prof Stephenson, principal of schools at Rockville was in the city Saturday. Frank Cook of Bristol twp. was do ing business at the county scat Monday. Ed Draper plastered the uew addi tion to T. M. Reeds dwelling this week. Mr. Tuesdall of Dead wood, S.D.. was a pleasant caller at this office Mon day. The man with the snake den is one of tha attractions at the tournament this week. W. T Draper of the west side came over Wednesday and attended I. O, O. F lodge that sight. Lew Haller Is carrying his thumb in a lemon these days. He says it feels and looks like a felon. Mr. and Mrs WillCordlng of Grand Island, are visiting relatives and friends In this vleinity this week. Several knife-rack men took out a license to ply their game in town even ings during the tournament Seymore Gilleas left Monday for his home In New York state, after 18 months sojourning in Nebraska, Mrs. Wm. Cramer left Monday morn ing for a trip to her old home in New York state where she will visit several weeks Are you needing any thing in the furniture line? If so call at T. M- Reed’s A.P. Culley shipped in another car of winter seed wheat this week. The old fox knows this is a winter wheat ae ison. See Keystone Lumber Co. for yonr supply of Rock Springs, Canon City, Hanna and Maitland Coal. G C. Bowman of our town, took the money in every race he pat his little mare in at Broken Bow, last week. He has a fiver. Anton Topolskl of Schaupp Siding, one of Sherman county's progressive and thrifty farmers, was at the county seat Saturday. A baby boy was born to Mr and Mrs. Fred Jen» of Oak Creek, Wednesday of this week. Fred is the happiest man in the county. Joseph M. Russel of Washington twp. proved up on bis homestead last Mon day. Mr. Russell has been quite sick with tonsilitls for some days. J. I. Depew’s brick blacksmith and wagon shop is presenting a progressive appearance. It looks like a brick block going up for a wholesale house. The Rev. 0. F. Graves will preach at 10:110 a. m., In the Presbyterian ball, and at Austin and Rockville, at the usu al hour, next Sabbath, Oct. Cth. All are cordially invited A never failing cure for cuts, burns, scalds, ulcers, wounds and sores is De Witt's Witch Hazel S&lye. A most soothing and healing remedy for all skin affections. Cdendahi Bros. Rev. Madely returned home Tuesday evening after a three weeks vacation. Mr. Madely h»9 been suffering with a severe attack of hay fever but is some what better. B. W. Purscll, Kintersvllle, Pa., sayf be suffered 25 years with piles arni could obtain no relief until DeWitt’i Witch Hazel Salve effected a permanent cure, Counterfeits are worthless. Odendahl Broa. The Junior League entertainment given at the M. £. church Tueada\ evening, under the directions of Misi Hattie Hayhurst, was a grand succesi in every particular. Henry Braydon, Harris, N.C. says ‘ I took medicine 20 years for asthrm but one bottle of One Minute Cougt Cure did me more good than any tblnf else during that time. Best Cough Cure —Odendahl Bros. Two new brick farm houses will sooi lie erected just above town on the lant known as the Hogue and Nlghtingab quarters. This land with others ad joining It has lately been purchased bj eastern parties who will Improve It. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm applied t< a cut, bruise, burn, scald or like injurj will instantly allay the pain and wi] heal the parts in less time than any othe treatm°nt. Unless the injury Is verj severe it will not leave a scar. Paii Balm also cures rheumatism, sprains swellings and lameness. For sale bj Odendahl Bros John Hayes was fined 85 00 and cos amounting In all to 812 25, last Mondaj morning, after laying in jail over Sun day night, for getting full and threat ening to carve some parties in the sa loon It is not necessary to commenl on this matter further than to say thai John is too poor a man to be mulctec in this manner, neither can his chlldrer afford it, nor neither will It continue. John should not be given drink for ll •4i him wild. \V. II Conger is doing business In Lincoln this week A. W. Throckmorton ot Divide, was at the hub Tuesday. Hon E. Munn of Hazard, was in the city Tuesday night. Ar.dy dray of the south side was in the city Monday evening having his broken cycle repaired. Frank Dennis and Clint Outhouse have dissolved partnership in the livery busi ness, Mr Dennis retiring. Cull“y shipped in another car of winter wheat this week. The old fox knows this is a winter wheat season. 0. L. Drake arrived in the city from Gu'naey, Wyo. Wednesday. Mr. Drake will attend the tournament He looks as if Wyoming agreed with him. If you want Ice for the tour nament, call on J. W. Conger. T M- Reed sells sewing ma chines and a general line of furniture Call anti see the best thing out for harvesting your corn; the McCor mic. For sale by T. M. Reed. The lame, the halt and the blind weie in attendance at the tournament this week. Tbia has no reference to tbe • blind tiger." W. N. Sherman was brought to town Tuesday morning suffering from pleu risy. He soon found relief under tbe skillful treatment of Dr. Jones. Mrs. Fred Ingersoll wbo has been bere visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Snyder, left for her home at North Platte, Monday. The editor of the Litcbtleld Monitor, was in the city Monday, but on account of a press of business was prohibited from seeing the inside of our office. Ashley Conger went to Rockville Sunday to take charge of ihe Woodmen drill team to prepare them for the tournament. Ashley is all right for a drill master. Don't forget to attend the Junior League entertainment next Tuesday night at the M. E. church Don’t wait until you become chronic ally constipated but take DeWitt’s Lit tle Early Risers now and then. They will keep your liver and bowels in good order. Easy to take. Safe pills.—Oden dahl Bros. Fred Odendahl is the happiest man in town. He 19 elevated considerable above tbe other drayman as the seat of bis beautiful new wagon lifts Fred pretty high. She's a dandy. A letter from W. T. Gibson and D. L. Adamson indicates that since they have got better acquainted with their sur roundings in Cheyenne, they are tblnk iug of permanently locating there When you want a pleasant physic try the new remedy, Chamberlain's Sto mach and Liver Tablets. They are easy to take and pleasant In effect. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at Oden dahl Bros. N. B Thompson was in the city Saturday canvassing for the book known as the “Three Tragidies,” the assassination of Lincoln, Garfleld and McKinley. He is meeting with good success. J. M. Taylor and sons, Harry and Will, came over from Olean, and apent Sunday with their folks. While return ing Monday morning the team which Harry was driving went into a kicking match and when It was ended he had no buggy. Henry A. VVilgon and ye junior edit or drove to Rockville Saturday night and started the Woodmen team of that place In their drill work. Rockville has one of the best camps in the state. They are just finishing their beautiful new hall, which is 34x00 and the boys are justly proud of it. Have you a sense of fullness In the region of your stomach after eating? If so you will be benefited by u°ing Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tab : lets. They also cure belching and sour stomach. Th°y regulate the bowels too, Price, 25 cents. Sold by Odendah! Bros. October 1st was the Sixty-seventh I birthday of Grandma Waite who is . living with her son Wilbur in this city and her relatives and friends planned a very pleasant surprise for her. 8Le was induced to go calling in the after , noon and during her absence a number of her old acquaintance and friends met I her home. She was then sent for, . a sumpteous supper was served ami a good social time followed. A. P. Gulley has Just received the third car of winter wheat seed and like the rest it is going like hot cakea. This is an Idication that tlie farmers of this county are going to sow more winter wheat than ever before and we . beiieve It to be a move in the right direction Spring wheat in ibis part of the country, has for several years past, proven a failure, both on account of drouth and chinch bugs, while the winter wheat crop is generally made before drouth and hot winds can do much damage or the ravenous chinch bugs get lu their work of dUtruction. DIED, Samuel Hancock, died at hi* home in this city last Saturday, September 28, 1901, at 4:20 p. m , after a lingering ill* neaa ot several years. Mr. Hancock was born In Cook county, Tenn , on August 13, 1820. and was at the time of tits death, 73 years 1 month aad 13 days old. He had been married three times and was the father of 15 children Three to his tirst wife all of which went early to their graves with thoir mother Op the 28, day of September 1855, he led hit second bride, Miss Rachel Day huff, to the altar, and after 3-4 years of com panionship with her, she to departed this life on the 26th day of Feburary, 1889, at their farm 3 miles below Loup City. To this union 12 children were born, two, James and Mablon, died in infancy, while Josie died in the early spring of’97. The other nine are liv ing and are in different and remote parts of the country except William, who lives near the old homestead and who was a constant visitor at bis fathers bedside and tenderly closed the death ilimmed eyes wnen uie end came, un the 12th day of February 1S95, he was married to Mrs. Margaret Bitters of Hamilton county, Nebr., who has zeal ously watched his every care during bis long sickness. No more devoted wife ever wedded mortal man. Her charge has been one that few are called upon to experience, yet uncomplaining ly she watched him through the differ ent stages of his sickness, and showed by her constant and kind attention, that she reaped great pleasure from ministering to hts increasing wants, as lie neared the valle,' of death. “Uncle Sam,” as we were want to call him, was a kind and lovable man, and a pat riot in the truest sense of the woid On (he 2G’.b of August, 1802, he shouldered his musket and offered his life to the fortunes of war that the flag that he loved might be unsullied, and when he was mustered out, In June 1805. he boie home with him a commission as Second Lieutenant, signed by Indiana's gallant war governor, O. P. Morton, and earned by heroic deeds on the Held of battle. Of late years, tears would well up iH the old patriots eyes when he gbzed upon the starry banner and it was his winding sheet as his old com rads of the G A If. tenderly bore him to bis soldier grave, andj dropped a tear, as his spirit answered to the roll call in heaven. This world is better tor “Uncle Sam having lived and “We’ll And him and know him Among the good and true. We ll know him up In heaven In that faded coat of blue.” He was one of the Orst settlers in Sherman county, there being but 13 families in the county when he landed in 1873, and Aiedon a homestead south of town. He was laid to rest in Ever green cemetery, Sunday Sept. 29th In the afternoon, Rev. L. D. Weyand preaching the funeral sermon from First Coiinthians, 15,55. CARD. We desire to extend our heartfelt and sincere thanks to the many kind and considerate friends who so willingly assisted us through the loug sickness and death of our beloved husband and father. Mrs. Mabqrkt Hancock, Wii.uam Hancock, May Bitters. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. This is to certify that we have this day dissolved the partne rship carried on between us in the livery business in Loup City, Neb. Mr. Outbouse will collect all bill and pay all obligations. Dated this lit day of October, 1901. Frank Dennis C C Outhouse For sai.e.—Lots 8 and 9, block 22, Loup City- For reference inquire of Mrs Jennie C- Bolt, Pleasanton, Neb. -♦ - A Vimoui Piliji'holugUt. M. Th. Ribot, professor of experi mental psychology at the College de France, the founder of the “Revue Phllosophique,” and the teacher of an entire generation of students and pro fessors not only In France but all over the world, will retire on a pension at the beginning of November. Cruahad Itoneath Shakeaperaan Ideal. What I feel is that the poetic drama has for two centuries and more, been crushed beneath the weight of the Shakespearean ideal, says Stephen Phillips in the Critic. Poets have tried to write like Shakespeare, and critics have urged them on, not recognizing that, though his matter was for all time, his form,his technique wasfor his own age, and no other. It needed Shakespeare, and no lesser man, to in fuse any permanent vitality into the measureless complications of the Shaekspearean drama. I often think that the art of the Elizabethans was typical of the Anglo-Saxon genius, as described by Imrd Rosebery—the ge nius for "muddling through somehow.” Shakespeare breathed upon chaos, and chaos quivered into Immortal life. Hut even his great contemporaries seldom or never performed the same miracle; and all subsequent attempts to imitate It have ended In disaster. Or am I wrong? Can you name a play on the Shakespearean model, written since the restoration, that has any real life in It? We were asked several times l.ist week, who our friend was that resem bled McKinley so much. The honor b dongs to Mr. J, M. Eads, the A. O. U. W., deputy who was here at that time. / \ “Coated" J] with stale eggs, glue / and other things are / not fit to drink. 7 Lion Coffee [ is pure, uncoated I coffee fresh, strong, i well flavored. I f The K«altxl package in I Suren uniform QU&litj I v L . and freshness. Tal0e and 1.00. Trial bottle at Odendahl Bros.’ drug store. Working Day anil Might. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. These pills change weak ness into strength, listlessness Into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful In building up tbe health. Only ‘l">c per box. Sold by Odendahi Bros. - ♦ • ♦ Cured of Clironir fllarrlinra After Thirty Tear* of Suffering “1 suffered for thirty years with di arrhoea and thought I was past being cured,” says John 8. Hawley, French Camp. Miss. “ I had spent so much time and money and suffered so much that I bad given up all hopes of recov ery. I was so feeble from the effects of tbe diarrhoea that I could do no kind of labor, could not even travel, but by ac cident 1 was permitted to find a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy, and after taking sev eral bottles I am entirely cured of that trouble. I am so pleased with the re -u’t that I am anxious that it b<* in reach of all who suffer a** l have.” Foi 1 sale by Odendahl Bros. A. S- MAIN. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON LOUP CITY, • N1 BKASKA. OFFICK.-Oie d(Or «e-t of Odendahl'a Drug Store The Loup City Athletic Racing and Gunning Club, will hold their first event Oct 3*4-o 1901, at which time the following prizes will be award ed. Racing - - - $300 Base Ball - - - 1(X) Shooting 80 Woodmen Team Drill - 25 and other cash prizes for ath letic events. All moneys guaranteed to be paid as soon as won. Sid Darling. 1012 Howard st. Port Huron, Mieta. writes: “ I have tried many pills and laxatives but DeWitt's r.lttle Early Kisers are far the best pills l have ever used." They never gripe. —Odcndahl Bros. Geo. W, Lane, I’ewaino, Mich., writes: ‘ Your Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Is the best remedy for Indigestion and sto mach trouble th it I ever used. For • years 1 suffered from dyspepsia, at times compelling mo to stay in bed and causing me unto! • agony. I am com pletely cured by Kodol Dyspepsia Core, in recommeuding it to friends who suf fer from indigestion I always offer to pay for it if it fails. Thus far I ha\e never paid.’’—Odendahl Bros. A Shocking Calamity. ‘•Lately befell a railroad laborer," writes Dr. A. Kellett, of Williford, Ark. “His foot "as badly crushed, but Buck liu's Arnica Salve quickly cured him. It's simply wonderful tor Burns, Boils, I’iles and all skin eruptions. It's the world's champion healer. Cure guar anteed. 25c. Sold by Odendahl Bros. Last week I went about, Full of trouble and of doubt. Now I'm smiling and d nice with delight I tiad Hocky Mountain Tea last, night Ask your druggist. ADAM SCIIAUPP. WILL PAY THE Highest Price For All Kinds of Grain and Hay. A FULL LINE OF Hard and Soft Coal at lowest prices FEED GHINDER IN ELEVATOR. You Can Save Money If You Buy Your Clothing of the i We’ve 2 Catalogs, One for Wen-One for Women One postal card will bring both books. ... ‘nr*"———————■——mmmmmm—————■—■—— Don’t Be Fooledi Take the genuine, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Made only by Madiion Medi cine Co., Madison, Wis. It keeps you well. Our trade mark cut on each package. Price, 35 cents. Never sold In bulk. Accept no substi tute. Aak your druggist. W J. FISHER, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Will Defend In Foreclosure Case*. ALSO DO A General Real Estate Business. Offloo In Northwester* Building, LOPy CITY, - - NKUKAUfC^. R. J. NIGHTINGALE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUP OI'I'T, i i ME Solil by T. II. KI.HNKK, I.onpClfy, Neb WANTED—SEVERAL PEB-fONS OF CHARACTER and good reputation in each state (one in tins county required) lo rep. resent and advertise old established vital, thy business liouse of solid financial stand. Ing. Salary fis.im weekly with expenses additional, all payable in cush each Wed nesday direct from head ntHces, llorse and carriage furnished when accessary. Refer ences, Enclose self addressed stamped en velope. Manager, 310 Caxton Building, Chicago. sepliaow TIME TABLE. * LOUP CITY, NKBH. Lincoln, Denver, Omaha, Helena, Chicago, Butte, St. Joseph, Salt Lake City. Kansas City, Portland, St. Louis, . San Francisco, anil ail points end all points Kast and South. West. Tit A INS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS. UOlNU KAST No 52 Passenger. H:0!>a m No. GO Freight.12.50 n. m UOINli WEST No M f’ttssonger.. 4:3*2 n.m No. 59 Freight.IShaoa. in. Sleeping dinner and reclining cliatr ear* (seals free) on through trains. Tickets sold iitol li.i 'gMge checked to any pom! In the r mtnd states or Canada. For Intormnlion, maps, time tattles and tickets call on or write to R |, Arthui Agcni. Or J. FUANOJw, Uen'I. Passenger Agent, (iiiiniia, Ni hraska, U. P. RAILWAY. No. KH leave* daily except Sunday (pass enger). s no a in * No ss leaves Monday, Wednesday ami Friday, (mixed) |.\20 p m. No Ho leaves Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, (mlxed) 2:55 p. in No H7 arrives dally except Sunday (mixed |». in. No 15 in rlvea dally except Sunday (pass enger) 7.35 p m. r ipass First class service and close connect Ions east, west and hiiuiIi W. 1), OLIVTOH.