The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 15, 1907, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Loup City Northwestern
VOLUME XXIV. LOUP CITY. NEBRASKA. THURSDAY. AUGUST 15. 1007. NUMBER 40
Professional Cards
A. P. CULLEY,
Mtorney & Conaselor-at-Law
(Office: Kikst National Bank)
Loup City, Jfebr.
ROBT. P. S TARR
Attorney-at-Law,
LOB? cm, NEBRASKA.
AARON WALL
Lawy er
Practices in all Courts
Loup City, Neb.
R. J. NIGHTINGALE
Attorney md fauielcMUiw
LQUF BITY. NEB
<lt. H. MATHEW,
Attorney-at-Law,
And Bonded Abstractor,
Loup City, Nebraska
* ■ O. E. LONGA C RE
PHYSICIAN M SURGEON
Office, Over New Bank.
TELEPHONE CALL, NO. ;i9
A. J. KEARNS
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone, 30. Office at Ke*i<!ence
Lnup City, - Nebraska
S. A. ALLEN.
ntWTiST
I,our CITY, - - NEB.
Office up stairs in the new State
Hank )iiiililinsr.
w. l' marcy.
DENTIST,
LOUP CITY, NEB
OFFICE: East Side Public Smnue
Phone, 10 on 36
.w. //. .i'ie.+d
' Bonded Abstracter
Loup City, - Nebraska.
Ouly set of Abstract books in county
Try the
F* F- F- Dray
F. F. Foster, Prop.
Office; Foster’s Barber Shop
t L. A. BANGS
The Drayman
Phone 7 on 60
Asks Your Patronage
FOR A
Pleasant Evenir g
Call on Pratt at South Side
Pool ai Billiarfl Parlors
Fixtures New and Up-to-Date
S- A- PRATT. - Proprietor
Cleoria Items.
The Auroraites say our little burg
is far ahead of their town and also
highly compliment us on the park.
Burt Foss, brother of S. Foss, with
his daughter and niece and a Mr.
Layinaster arrived overland Sunday
from Aurora to spend a few days and
jfare quite taken w ith our country!
A brother of Mrs. McLaughlin ar
rived Saturday evening and she is ex
pecting tier fattier and mother soon.
A Mr. Nordln gave a bible magic
lantern exercise at Cleoria Sunday
night.
At last account Mr. Barence’s baby
was at the point of death.
Born, Wednesday morning, a line
baby boy at O. G. Hunt's.
Messrs. Barnes, S. Foss and families
and their friends from Aurora spent
Tuesday picnicking on the river.
The surprise on Mrs. Barnes was
recalled on account of threshing.
Mrs. Chas. Guiiford and Mrs. C.
McLaughlin were in Loup Wednesday.
Quite a tine rain in our vicinity
Tuesday evening.
The chickens are nearly ripe in our
locality but we give you town jades
fair warning not to show up or we'll
give you chicken hot.
A sister of Chas. Johnson from Lin
coln is here for a month’s visit.
Rev. Mrs. Zike preached her last
sermon last Sunday. She has quit
the work and goes to her home in
1* Iowa.
Mary Culbertson of Aurora visited
over Sunday with Mrs. John Warrick.
Andv and Geo. Gray and families of
Rockville township visited at Chas.
Sickles’ over last Sunday.
Amos Hunt of Arcadia visited ovei
Sunday with his brother, O. G. Hunt.
Terry Hunt is able to get around
some with the aid of his Ctutch.
We hear Mrs. Bone missed the train
at Arcadia and her better half had
to drive over and bring her home.
A neat surprise was given Miss
Lena Zwink last Saturday night.
Mis. Zartman returned to Aurora
Monday, thence to her home at Omaha.
THE NORTHWESTERN
T ERMS*1.00 PEB TEAR. IP PAID IN A DVANC1
Entered at the Loup City Posuifflce for tr&ns
mission through the mails as second
class matter.
Office’Phone, - - - 6 on 108
Residence ’Phone, - 2 on 108
J. W. BURLEIGH. Ed. and Pub.
Candidates’ Cards.
SUPERINTENDENT of schools.
I hereby announce that I am a can
didate for the nomination of County
Superintendent of Public Instruction
of Sherman county, subject to the
decision of the republican party -at
the primary election to be held on
September 3rd, 1907. M. II. Mead.
I hereby announce myself as a
candidate for the nomination of
County Superintendent of Public In
struction, subject to the action of
the People’s Independent Party pri
maries, of Sherman county, Nebraska.
• R. I). Hendrickson,
I hereby announce that I am a
candidate for the nomination of
County Superintendent of Public in
struction. subject to the action of
the People's Independent Party at
the primary election to be held on
September 3rd. 1907.
L. H. Currier.
I hereby announce that I am a can
didate for the nomination of County
Superintendent of Public Instruction
of Sherman County, subject to the de
cision of the Peoples' Independent
party at the primary election to be
held on September 3rd, 1907.
J. F. Nicoson.
COUNTY TREASURER.
I hereby announce myself as a can
didate for the office of County Treas
urer of Sherman county, subject to
the will of the Republican voters at
the primary election to be held on
the 3rd dav of September, 1907.
I). C. Grow.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for nomination to the office of
Treasurer of Sherman county, subject
to the will of the People's Independ
ent party at the primary election to
be held on Tuesday, the .ird day of
September, 11*07. it. M. Hiddleson.
COUNTY JUDGE.
1 hereby announce myself as a can
didate for nomination to the office of
County J ud*je, subject to the will of
the People's Indepennent party voters
of Sherman county at the primary
election to be held on the 3rd of Sep
tember, 1907. .J. A. Angieh.
COUNTY CLERK.
I hereby announce my candidacy
for the office of County Clerk of Sher
man county, subject to the will of the
Republican voters at the primary
election to be held on the 3rd day of
September. 1907. Thos. R. Lay.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for nomination to the office of
County Clerk of Sherman county,
subject to the will of the People’s
Independent and Democratic parties
at the primary election to be held on
the 3rd of Sep-tember, 1907.
C. F. Beushausen.
SHERIFF.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for nomination to the office of
sheriff of Sherman county, subject to
the decision of the Republican party
at the primary election to be held oh
September 3rd, 1907.
' L. A. Williams.
COUNTY ASSESSOR.
1 hereby announce my candidacy
for the nomination of County Asses
sor, subject to the will of the Repub
lican voters at the primary election
to be held Sept. 3rd, 1907.
L.W. Callen.
1 hereby announce my candidacy
for the nomination of County Asses
sor. subject to the will of the Repub
lican voters at the primary election
to be held Sept. 3rd, 1907.
Lewis jsechtuold.
In the State Journal of the 9th
instant, Judge Roscoe Pound, than
whom no more al»le nor honest jurist
ever lived within the coniines of the
state, in an exhaustive reply to the
charges against Judge Sedgwick and
his connection with the Bartley ease,
answers fully and completely all the
charges alleged against Sedgwick, and
leaves that gentleman absolved from
all blame, and shows he followed the
correct interpretation of the law as
lie understood it. The Northwestern,
‘in full belief of the correctness of
Judge Pound’s explanation, and
knowledge of that gentleman's ability
and undoubted honesty of opinion, can
lieartilv and gladly endorse the candi
dacy of J udge Sedgwick for a second
term to the supreme bench, while ,iot
abating one jot in its esteem and !>e
lief in the ability, integrity and
probity of Judge Reese as a jurist,
and a willingness to heartily support
I him, should he be favored at the
primaries.
Over the entire United States there
is at present one of the most gigantic
labor strikes 'ever in the country.
All union telegraphers of the Western
Union and Postal telegraph com
panies ars»out and also the Associated
Press operators, while all railroad
telegraphers are refusing to handle
anything but railroad vfork. Locally,
the operators at Loup City are re
fusing all Western Union work and
messages handed in for transmission
are courteously refused on account of
existing conditions. The daily news
papers are full of the strike news and
warn their readers that their tele
graphic news will be very much
abbreviated till the settlement of the
strike trouble, while their corres
pondents are ordered to transmit all
news by long distance telephone or by
mail. It looks at this bird’s eye dis
tance that the great telegranliic
systems will have to give in to'the
operators before many days.
. y . * _ • a-V. _ ’ .i '
The friends of J udges Sedgwick and
Reese are showing very poor political
judgment in their articles from week
to week in a showing of the merits
and demerits of these two able jurists.
The denunciations and inuendoes
hurled by either side will furnish
abundantammunition for the common
enemy during the campaign, and is
bitterly to be condemned. Judges
Sedgwick and Reese are both able
jurists and either gentleman would
prove worthy the judicial ermine
and honors sought. If this is the
kind of warfare brought to the front
as a result of the new primary law.
we would better go back to the old,
time-honored conventions.
The new primary law may be a
very wise measure, but in one
essential point at least there is a
feeling that it is faulty. For in
stance. any person having a five
dollar bill to spare can announce him
self a candidate for a county office
and have his name placed upon a pri
mary efection ticket no matter what
his political antecedents, or whether
he is competent, honorable or desir
able in any particular. If he is the
only one announced for the said office,
the party rank and file are compelled
to vote for him, or at least only able
to register a half vote against him by
failing to put a cross in the square
opposite his name, no blank line be
ing provided in which to write any
choice of the voter and leaving the
alternative of bolting that much of
the ticket when it comes to the
regular election, or wishing to vote a
straight ticket compelled to vote for
the obnoxious candidate. This is
simply making a law to herd the
party rank and file like so many cattle
or compel them to scratch their
ticket.
The honorable Charles B. Anderson
of Crete, Neb., has been selected by
his many friends of this state to be a
candidate for Regent at the primary
election to be held on the 3rd day of
September next. “Charley" as he is
generally called, is by no means a
stranger in this part of the state and
particularly in the Loup valleys. Mr.
Anderson was born on a farm near
Albion. Orleans county, N. Y., June
30th. 1865, and afterwards graduated
from one of the high class education
al institutions of which the Empire
state is so famous. But his gaze soon
became lixed on the great west. Un
aided and alone he started out to
make himself a part and parcel of
this, the far-off land of his boyish
dreams. He found his way to Saline
county and settled on the Big Blue
river, near PeWitt, where he found
employment in a bank. His admira
tion for Nebraska became unbounded
and lie invested his every cent in in
vestments within this state. From
poverty he lias made his wav by dint
of honest effort and rigid self denial
to a place at the head of several of
the strongest banking institutions of
Nebraska! It is but a very short
time since some of the leading capital
ists of Omaha sought his service in
the management of one of the banks
at that place, but this seemed not to
to the liking of Mr. Anderson and
he severed his connections with Omaha
and went into the management of the
Crete state bank and of the Crete
Investment Co., a concern of almost
unlimited capital. This was not
quite far enough West for our friend,
and he went to Ord and there became
vice president Of the Ord State Bank.
Although still living at Crete, he has
made several investments in proper
ties in the Loup valleys and is one of
the staunchest friends that this sec
tion of the state ever had. He is all
for the West, all for Nebraska and
for her splendid citizenship and her
matchless institutions. And if lie is
elected a Regent, as he certainly will
be, he will be found to be broad
enough to reach over the entire state
and honest and brave enough to do
right at all times.
Board of Supervisors.
Loup City, Nebraska, Aug. 6, 1907.
County Board of Supervisors met
this day in regular session as per
adjournment of July 9th.
Present, D C Grow.J chairman;
A Garstka, H Claussen. W O Brown,
Chris Nielson, F R Wyman and John
Boecking and C F Beusliausen, clerk.
The minutes of the previous meet
ing were read and approved.
The Ford petition, asking tliat a
road be vacated running across the
north half of Section 29-16-15, same
after being fully discussed was
ordered vacated.
The Ford consent petition asking
that a road be established running
across the northeast corner of the
northeast quarter of section 29-16-15,
same was granted by the board as
petitioned for.
The Coley consent petition praying
for the establishment of a road one
mile in length between sections 34
and 27, Township 15, Range 16, was
granted and ordered established.
In the matter of the double tax
ation of Paul Chilewski, wherein
cattle were assessed to said Chilewski
in Loup City township in 1906, and
the showing made that the cattle
were assessed in AslitOn township,
the board sustains the allowing made
by said Chilewski, and ordered said
tax paid under protest returned.
The official bond of W H Barnes,
road overseer in District No. 26 was
approved by the board.
The board next considered the
proposition of supplying lumber to
the county for bridge purposes. A B
Outhouse appeared personally before
the board and made the proposition
that he would furnish lumber to the
county at wholesale prices plus eight
per cent and agreed to store said
lumber and check out same upon
order of any member of the county
board. The above proposition was ac
cepted by the board.
A cement walk 320 feet in length
and 10 feet wide was ordered built
along the south side of the court yard
square, and clerk ordered to advertise
(for bids.
The salary of the deputy county
treasurer was fixed at 8700 per year
to be paid out of the fees of said
office.
The bridge petition of Ts P Morten
sen et al asking that a bridge be built
along the south side of southeast
quarter of section 33-13-15 on county
line between Buffalo and Sherman
counties, was referred to the bridge
committee. '
A motion was made and carried
that each supervisor build and repair
the bridges in their township.
The county board submitted the
following proposition to the voters at
the next general election, to authorize
the county board to malfe a special
10-mill levy for the years 1908. 1909
and 1910 to pay off the bonded in
debtedness of the comity, and clerk
was authorized to cause same to be
advertised according to law.
The reduction made by the board
on the salary of Frank Polski for
assessing Ashton township, was left
as previously allowed.
Peter Lorenz appeared before the
board and asked that a bridge be
built across Deer creek, in Rockville
township, was referred to the bridge
committee.
On motion the following claims
were allowed and clerk ordered to
draw warrants for same:
GENERAL FUND
M H Mead. 8275 Do
R H Mathew. 5 75
Hammond Printing Co. 37 50
W H Rettenmayer. +87 50
Albert Anderstrom. 3 75
C W Gibson. 1 50
A S Main. 0 25
Charles Mills. 1 0o
T E Gilbert. 1 00
E A Brown. 1 00
S X Sweetland.. . 1 (to
L E Dickinson. 1 75
Hammond & Stephens. 3 15
A S Main. 12 00
J W Burleigh. 1 00
JE Gilbert.,.. 100
John Tucker. 1 00
L A Tucker. 1 00
State Journal Co. 29 (to
L A Williams. 91 6~>
E A Brown. 1M
D C Grow. (j 00
John Boecking. 4 40
F R Wyman. 5 50
Henning Claussen. 4 -:o
A Garstka. 4 i
W O Brown. 3 00
Chris Nielson. 4 4<
HOAD FUND
E B Corning.$ f 00
J B Draper. 3 00
C H French. 3 00
E B Corning. 14 95
L A Williams, sheriff. 6 25
JW Burleigh.:. 12 00
Jacob Albers. 3 30
F R Wyman. 7 60
BKIDUE FUND
J P Leininger Lmbr Co.$ 7 85
Rufe Wagner. 1 00
A Garstka . 3 25
On motion the board adjourned to
September 10, 1907.
C. F. Beushausen,
County Clerk.
Loup City, Nebraska. Aug. fi, 1907.
County Hoard of Equalization met
this day as per adjournment of June
13. Present D C Grow, chairman:
A Garstka. W O Brown, H Claussen,
Chris Nielson, F It Wyman and John
Boecking. C J Peters, county assessor,
and C F Beushausen, clerk.
The valuation oj the county as re
turned by the State Board of Equal
ization is $1.7lb,779.
The State Board of Equalization
raised horses, cattle and mules in
Sherman county 10 per cent.
The following levy was made by
the county board for county purposes:
General Fund.4J-4 mills
Bridge Fund.2% mills
Road Fund. % mill
Bond Fund.4 mills
Interest Bond .2H mills
On motion the clerk was ordered to
run on all legal levies certified to the
clerk’s office fo^ State, County,
School. Township and Village pur
poses.
On motion board adjourned sine die.
C. F. Beushausen,
County Clerk.
SPECIAL
LOW RATES
*
©1 K on TO COLORADO and RETURN
Every day to September 30. 1007
©O 1 OK To OGDEN or SALT LAKE CITY and RET URN
l»OU Every day to September 30, 2007
©KK7 OK TO YELLOWSTONE PARK and RETURN
including rail and stage, every day to September 30, 1907
©Cl 7K TO PORTLAND. TACOMA, SEATTLE, SAN FRAN
° CISCO, LOS ANGELES or SAN DIEGO and return. Daily
to September 15, 1907.
©7«L CIRCUIT TOUR via SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES
t an(j PORTLAND. Daily to September 15, 1007.
©faO QK TO YELLOWSTONE PARK and RETURN.
SjJO-C.OtJ Including rail, stage and hotels in Park for Regular tour,
every day to September 12, 1907.
©Cl TV TO SACRAMENTO and RETURN.
August 28-20-30• 1007. "
Also very low round-trip rates daily to Sept. 15, 1907, to many other
California, Oregon. Washington, Montana. Idaho
and British Columbia points.
TTlsTIOliT PACIFIC
Inquire of
G. W. COLLIRIEST
Q
>
r1
>
as
e
GO
H
H
H
«
II
LUMBER
Posts, Shingles, Lime and Cement
Hard and Soft Coal Always on Hand.
Agents for Sherwin-Williams Prepared Paints
REMNANT SALE
- - o nr - -
pibbons, Laces, Gipghapis
Epibfoideries, Calicoes,
Lawps, Etc.,
This Week
At Prices to Suit the Trade.
Men’s Kockford Hose, per pair only - 5C
Few Sapiple Articles:
Four Cans of Cremo Corn for 25c
Four Pounds Japanese Rice 25c
Seven Bars Swift's Pride Soap 25c
3-Crown Raisins, per pound 10c
Same Low Prices on All Goods.
✓
*
Phope, 2 op 103
E. G. Taylor, J. S. Pedler, C. C. Carlson.
President. » Tice President. Cashier
I
9
* ✓
■ ♦ ’
-DIRECTORS
W: R. Mellor, J. W. Long, S. N. Sweetland
LOUP CITY STATE BANK
*
LOUP CITY, NEBRASKA.
%
Capital Stock, - - $25,000.00
Individual Liability, $250,000.00
f __
High Grade Orgap
Manufactured by the
in
At Factory Pricey
Delivered in your town.
You pay $5 Gash
apd-$1 pef Week
50 Per Cent Off|on Retail Prices
Ask for Catalogue and Prices of the Factory Distributors,
and Organ House.