The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, December 02, 1909, Image 4

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    Professional Cards';
R. J. NIGHTINGALE
Attorney and Counselcr-it^Law
_ LOUP CITY. NEB
ROBT.P.STARR
Attorney-at-Law.
LOUP CITY. IIEBRSSKS.
AARON WALL
Lawyer
Practices in all Courts
Loup City, Neb.
R. H. MATHEW,
Attorney-at-law,
And Bonded Abstractor,
Loup City, Nebraska
O. E. LONGACRE
PHYSICIAN aid SDRGEON
Office, Over New Bank.
TELEPHONE CALL, NO. 39
A. J. KEARNS
PHYSICIAN AND SDRGEON
Phone, 30. Office at Residence
Two Doors East of Telephone Central
Lnnp Clip, - Nebraska
ROBERT P. STARR
(Successor to M. H. Mead)
Bonded Abstracter
Loup City, - Nebraska.
Ouly set of Abstract books in county
S. A. ALLEN,
DEJYTIST,
LOUP CITY, - • NEB.
Office up stairs in the new State
Bank buildin?.
W. L. MARCY,
IMflif,
LOUP 0ITY, NEB
OFFICE: East Side Public Sauaie
Phone, 10 on 36
I Cure Nerve-Vital Debility, Weak
ness, Drains, Rupture, Stricture,
Varicocele, Blood Poison, Private
Skin and Chronic Diseases of Men
X UU UUt USX U LU
come to me first if you
, believe others can cure
you. Should they fail,
don't give up. It is
better to come late
than not at all. Re
^ member, that curing
|R> diseases after all oth
ml ers have failed has
~jf [been my specialty for
years. If you cannot
I_ xjjc pcrMJUiUi.v,
write symptoms that trouble you most. A
vast majority of cases can be cured by my
system of home treatment, which is the most
successful system ever devised. I make no
charge for private counsel and give to each
patient a legal contract in writing, backed
by abundant capital, to hold for the promise
Physicians having stubborn cases to treat
are cordially invitedEMfm|E]y cured of all
to consult with me. ™ vJITIElv womb and
bladder diseaser, ulcerations, menstrual
irouble, etc. Confidential. Private home in
the suburbs, before and during confinement.
Motherly care and best attention guaran
teed. Good homes found for babies.
CDCri POSITIVELY FREE!
* No charge whatever to any
man, woman or child living in LOUP CITY
or vicinity, suffering from any CHRONIC
DISEASE, a *10.00 X-RAY EXAMINA
TION. Come and let me look inside of you
absolutely free of charge.
Dr Rirh specialist, grand
TvlwlT, ISLAND, NEB. Office op
posite City Hall, 103 Vf.- Second Street.
Poland China and Shorthorns
I have some extra heavy-boned,
lengthy, fine Poland China Boars
now ready for service, and a few
high grade Shorthorn Bulls for sale at
Wild Rose Stock Farm
Onemile east of totfn.
’Phone, 2 on 12.
__L. N. SMITH.
Well Boring
Eclipse Windmills
I now wish to thank the people of Sherman
county and vicinity for their paironage the
past year aud want them to continue the ensu
ing year. I am now putting down wells at
prices to please every one. If iu need of a well
or Eclipse Windmill call on
G. B. HAINES,
Phone. 5on 12. LOUP CITY. NEB.
Mice of Hearing on Petition for OrfeTif
Distnonlioo offiesidne or Estate.
State of Nebraskal
v ss
Sherman County f The State of Nebraska
To the next of kin and all persons interested in
the estate of Alfred Schmaljohn, deceased
late of said county
Notice is hereby given that on November
Iflth. 1909, a petition was Bled in tne county
court of said county, for an order of dls
tribution of the residue of the estate of
Alfred Schmalljohn. deceased, late of said
county, and that the same was set for
hearing Saturday, the 4th day of December
1909, at 1 o'clock in. the afternoon at the office
of J. S. Pedler, County Judge of said county in
Loup City in said county, at which time and
place all persons Interested in said estate may
appear and be heard concerning said appoint
ment.
Given under my hand and the seal of said
court this Iflth day of November. 1909.
(SEAL) J. S. Pedler. County Judge
TLast pub. Dec. 2]
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
State df Nebraska. 1
Sherman County ) The State of Nebraska
In County Court within and for Sherman coun
ty, Neb.. November 12th. 1909.
In the matter of the estate of Elizabeth
Scott, deceased.
To the Creditors of said estate:
You are hereby notiBed that I will sit at the
county court room in Loup City, in said coun
ty, on the 10th day of June. 1910, at 9 o’clock
in the forenoon, to receive'and examine all
claims against said estate, with a view to
their adjustment and allowance. The time
limited for the presentation of claims against
said estate is the 10th day of June. A. D. 1910.
and the time limited for payment of debts is
one' year from s*id 10th day of June. 1910.
Witness my hand and the seal of said county
court this 12th day at November. 1909.
[seal] J. S. Peuleh. County Judge.
Last pub. Dec 9
THE NORTHWESTERN
TERMS:—§1.00 PER TEAR. IP PAID IN ADVAWCl
Entered at the Loup 01 ty Postofflce for tranb
mission through the mails as second
w class matter.
Office ’Phone, - - - 6 on 108
Residence ’Phone. - 2 on 108
J. W. BURLEIGH. Ed. and Pnb.
The prohibition constitutional
amendment in Alabama was beaten
in the state election Monday by a
vote nearing the 20,000 mark. It was
one of the hottest contested fights in
the history of the state.
Bob Burdette describes the auto
mobile as ‘:a large iron and rubber
contrivance for transforming gasoline
into speed, luxury, excitement and
obituaries. It consists of a handsome
leather upholstered carriage body
mounted on agizzard full of machine
ry, suffering from various ailmenos.
It is the speediest and most stylish
form of transportation known. It
can transport seven people to the
police station, the bankruptcy court
or the golden gates in less timedian
any other known method.”—Ex.
The fact that down in the horrible
St. Paul mine, in Illinois, there lies,
among bodies of men, likewise the
bodies of children who were unlaw
fully employed—employed in plain
violation of the child labor laws —
adds to the calamity of the situation.
For the owners of the mines there is
thus not only the loss of property,
but the loss of the name of good citi
zenship; for they must have known
that they were not privileged to em
ploy the tifteen-year-old boys whose
mothers are now losing their rational
powers out of grief and horror. It is
apparent that the campaign against
child labor must be waged more re
lentlessly and more continuously.—
Grand Island Independent.
When you walked into your local
meat market and laid down a dime
for a few thin slices of bacon, which
shrunk to nothingness in the family
frying pan. you suspected that some
other party must be making money
on hogs. And it transpires that you
made a good guess. It used to be
figured that the farmer who expected
to break even on feeding 50 cent corn
must get 5 cents a pound for his hogs
This 10 to 1 ration has been changing
to the very decided advantage of the
farmer. Some one with a taste for
figures has found that with alfalfa
for use as feed during the growing
period, pork can be produced at a
cost of but 3V2 cents per pound, even
when corn is high in price. With
hogs'bringing better than 87 per hun
dred on our home markets it doesn't
take much figuring to find that the
farmers of Nebraska are not likely to
be objects of charity right awav.—
Nebraska State Capital.
District court convened here Tues
day morning with Business Judge
Hostetler presiding. Court Reporter
Ilermanson was absent, owing to a
serious operation .which confines him
in the Hospital, but his place was oc
cupied by Court Reporter Cook.
Judge Hostetleropened court prompt
ly at 9 o’clock in the morning and
proceeded with the cases before him
like the business cyclone that he is,
and had the attorneys jumping side
ways to keep-up with his whirlwind
procedure. Case after case was
brought up and hastily acted upon,
giving no time for delay, except
where needed witnesses or parties
interested could not be forthcoming
when cases were called. For the fi rst
year In the history of court procedure
here in the past number of years
there was no jury session and neces
sarily such few jury cases as were on
the docket had to be carried over to
the next court, but all other cases
not requiring jury were rapidly dis
posed of and court was able to get
through with the matters in hand
and adjourned the same evening.
“I shall cheerfully aid you in your
proposed temperance movement in
the army,” promise^ General Fred
erick D. Grant in command of the
Department of the Lakes, in a letter
addressed to the Rev. Wilbur Crafts
of Washington, superintendent of the
international reform bureau. An in
vitation recently was sent to General
Grant by Dr. Crafts inviting him to
address a meeting to be held on Dec.
12 next to inuagurate a movement
looking to the establishment of a
total abstinence association in the
United States army and navy. In his
communication just received General
Grant expressed regret at his in
ability to tie present, but declares,
according to Dr. Crafts, that he is
‘‘cordially in favor of the proposi
tion.” Dr. Crafts said that he pro
posed to establish an association simi
lar to the one which has flourished so
well in the British army for a score
of years, with British generals as its
officers.
The Craalia Bee points to a fault
of the stage which has no doubt pres
enter! itself to many theatre goers.
“The stage,” it says, “has become so
bold in its modern tendencies, that
the profanity, bordering on blas
phemy .is not to be marveled
at considering the tendencies of the
times. Profanity on the stage is a
reflection of profanity in public. . . .
In the present generation there is too
ooramonly heard on every street, in
the cars and public corridors, a con
stant stream of language much coars*
er and much more profane than exists
in any of the classic early English
literature, which, under the old order
was not admiteed to the fireside cir
cle. The indecencies of speech heard
in public places, in all cities through
out the country, particularly from
youthful lips, is one of the most
flagrant evils of the age.” The criti
cism is a timely one. There is prob
ably not a city in this state in which
the tendency objected to has not been
noticeable. Even officers of the law
have been careless in the matter.
What can be done to remedy it?
Yellow Evangelism
Hit by Preacher
Lincoln Minister Shoots the
Sensational Evangelist Full
of Hot Stuff
From tbe Evening News.
The methods of some of the modern
evangeligts were scathingly' referred
to by Rev. C. IT. Yatman in an ad
dress on “Present Day Problems for
the Preacher,” delivered before the
city ministerial association. Yatman
has been doing evangelistic work in
Lincoln for some weeks.
“In evangelism,” he said, “there
has come the spectacular, displacing
the spiritual. Crowds and cards
count far more than converts. The
worst form of lying is about the
number of conversions. Parades,
newspaper notoriety, sale of hymn
books, singing senseless songs and
making rude jokes, together with an
unmistakable greed for gold, that is
pure graft, have all brought the gos
pel into disrepute with thinking
people and the masses.
“Methods in revival meetings, that
savor of vaudeville, tricks that make
a self-respecting man blush for shame,
Scripture truth twisted until its
meaning is made to tit a fool are all
prevalant now, and it is the duty of
ministers called of God, to both deny
and denounce the whole lot.”
In opening Mr. Yatman, speaking
from Psalm xi, “if the foundations Ixs
destroyed what can the righteous do':’”
said that preachers, who are just like
other people, need the same tonic;
hence he “brought some sunlight
mixed with dynamite.” The problem
as he stated it, is:
“Alas!! The aim of the present
day church is more ethical and social
rather than devotional aud spiritual,
hence loss of power.
“She seeks to ‘reform’ men, rather
than ‘regenerate’ them.
“Emphasis is laid on ‘doing some
thing’ more than on ‘being something’
“Her vision is first ‘Outward’ and
not ‘Upward.’ The law of Pentecost
is broken.
“It is not ‘be ye holy’ but ‘be ye
happy.’
‘The emphasis of church life is to
hear a man preach, instead of wor
ship, praise and prayer, with truth
he needs in message.
“It’s ‘pay’ instead of ‘pray,’ gold
counts more than God.
“The penuriousness of the people
to their pastor, and their unfair criti
cism and expectation of him in get
ting crowds and money, weaken his
ministry and defeat his purpose,
i “The church is sociological rather
than theological. There can be no
genuine revivals apart from sound
doctrine. Neither strong Christian
character, in church or nation.
“Evolution by education, is the
watchword, above revolution by sal
vation—what is the use of saying to
the devil “be good.” You need to
tell him ‘begone.’
“Sanctity has given way to socia
bility. Many churches are successful
clubs, hardly that. God’s house is
not a soup kitchen or concert hall.
“The evangelist who can make
them laugh is wanted above one who
will make them weep for their sins
and truly repent.
“The ‘Fatherhood of God’ in re
demption, and ‘Brotherhood of Man’
in Christ, is lost in the whirl of uni
versal ism.
" ± ne unripe tninKinganu unproven
declarations of so-called scientists,
have been accepted as truth, when
riper scholarship will prove them ab
solutely false. This is the history of
the past two decades. Evolution is
not a proven theory. Both Darwin
and Huxley are discredited in the
higher universities of today. Con
structive criticism is good, destruo
tive criticism is devilish.
“The ‘divineness of Jesus’ supplants
his dietyship and he is ‘example and
teacher’ more than ‘Messiah and Sa
vior.’ Hs is no more the ‘only begot
ten son of God,’ but one of many like
the other children of Joseph and Mary
Luke, who was a doctor, was deceived
when he wrote his gospel, so they say.
“The Bible is symbolic, and not his
toric and unauthorative: it came by
men like other books, instead of by
the Holy Ghost, in inspiration.
“Hell is but a metaphor and its
fires have been almost extinguished,
when penalty for broken law, is an,
eternal truth and fact.
“Worldliness, like a flood, has swept
through the church and left it anemic
in some cities quite dead. Pagan
Christianity is worse than heathen
idolatry.
“National problems, like tapital
and labor, civic righteousness and
sins, must be solved by gospel prin
ciples and power, or they never will be.
“Secular education, without moral
standards, has brought upon us a
teeming mass of youth who run wild
after pleasure and stop not at sin, of
ten in its worst form. This Christian
nation has wickedly allowed the Bible
to be taken from the public schools.
Chicago began that work, Jand she
reaped the bombs.
“The saloon, with its accursed sow
ing of ‘wild oats’ will make us go on
for fifty years yet, reaping its deadly
harvest, should the last one be wiped
out this day. And the last one should
be wiped out from America within a
decade. It will not be much longer
than that, when this prophesy will
be history, if the church will do her
duty.”
These solutions for the problems
of the present day preacher were sug
gested:
“Remember the Triune God lives
and rules and reigns. His purposes
and plans in the ultimate, never fail!
Get from Him, His word, His spirit,
your convictions of His immense and
His power and then work with both,
bo the accomplishment of the task
allotted you.
“Go in great for expository preach
ing. It will get you a hearing, it will
bring results, and magnify your work
among the people.
“See that your preaching is ‘objec
tive and not ‘subjective,’ the one gets
converts, the other seldom or never
Joes.
“Know God intimately; be filled
with Him; live holy lives and put in
indefatigable toil daily. Do nob be
afraid to let the spirit lead you. He
may take you out of ruts, which will
be a glorious thing. Dr. Wayland
well said: ‘Propriety is the grave of
power.’
“Stick to the three essentials that
are apostolic and historic. 1. The
word of God. 2. The blood of Christ.
1. The Holy Ghost. All these will
lead you to give the people what they
need instead os what they want.
“Get all the wisdom you can from
every source, both in heaven and on
earth, and use good sense, for he that
winneth souls is wise. John Bunyan
who wrote the book next to the Bible,
‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ was a Baptist,
but he never baptized his pilgrim,
for had'he done so, it would have
killed his work. It is a great thing
to know what to leave out and when
to quit.
“Be of large faith, and know by
experience, that prevailing -prayer
prevails.”
Farmers’ Institute
Dec. loth and 16th. Miss Gertrude
Rowen speaks to the ladies about
Cooks and Cookings with cooking
demonstration at Farmers’ Institute
at 1;30 o’clock, Dec. loth. For in
formation apply to L. N. Smith, Sec.
Austin News
Thanksgiving is past and everybody
had a good time as far as we know.
W. Fulliton, wife and daughter,
Miss Clara, and Mrs. Effa Cady spent
Thanksgiving with G. D. Lewis at
Boelus.
Mrs. Emma Haak went to York
Saturday to be treated by Dr. Plumb,
the specialist, for the injury she re
ceived some time since in a runaway.
W. Fulliton went with her, returning
Monday evening,
Wiggle Creek
Corn picking is very much delayed
on account of the rainy weather.
Henry Goodwin and family, Henry
Reed and family, John Peugh and
famiiv took dinner with Nick Dad
dow on Thanksgiving.
Willis Brodock’s, Joseph Daddow’s
and their two sons, Ira and Ernest,
and their families and Mabel Slawson
took Thanksgiving dinner at Clarence
Burt’s.
Ira Ti,mson and wife of Sargent
spent ThanksgiVing at F. G. Casteel’s.
Elmer Koch has commenced to work
for John Peugh.
Pres Bell had a sale Dec. 2nd. We
are sorry to lose Pres, as he is a good
neighbor.
There was a party at John Peugh’s
Thanksgiving evening and a very en
joyable time is reported.
Quite a few horses in this vicinity
have the pink eye.
There was a good attendance at
literary last Friday evening, but the
program was short, for it had been a
month since they met and the par
ticipants forgot they were to take
part. A good time is expected Friday
evening, Dec. 10th.
The M.- E. church will have an en
entertainment Christmas Eve.
Loup City is going to have a touch
of high life—a scandal suit. For
shame, a nice enterprising town like
Loup City having a libel suit. This
is a great deal like two men pulling
on a cow, one on the horns and one
on the tail and the lawyers doing the
milking.
Joe O’Bryan, the engineer on the
U. P., had a serious grudge against
Joe Murphy, the conductor, and took
his spite out on the unsuspecting
conductor in a; very severe manner.
When the train stopped at the B. &
M. crossing Friday morning O’Bryan,
who was taking a lay-off, was there
with a box containing two big fat
turkeys labeled for the conductor.
You ought to see how mad Murphy
was. Hearing how Murphy was tak
ing the matter O’Bryan took the
train early Saturday morning bound
for Kentucky, where he will remain
till Murphy has eaten the turkeys.—
Ord Quiz.
This story was told by a preacher:
A man died and went to the Bad
Place, where he took on a pompous
and overbearing manner. Finally
the devil approached him, and said:
“Who are you, anyway? You act as
though you owned this place.” “I
do own,it,” replied the man. “My
wife gave it to me before I died.”—
Going the Rounds.
250 Good Stories
The Youth’s Companion abounds in
stirring stories of adventure and hero
ism. One may describe an escape
from accidental peril, another a
strange encounter with wild creatures
—man or beast.
Many of these stories are true as
to facts, and only disguised as to
names and places. A score or more
of such stories will be published dur
ing 1910 in addition to nearly 200
others—250 good stories in all, and no
two alike. And this is not counting
the serial stories which it is believed
will be considered by old Companion
readers as the best The Companion
has ever published.
Every new subscriber will find it of
specialad vantage to send at once the
H.75 for the new 1910 Volume. Not
only does he get the beautiful “Vene
tian” Calendar for 1910, lithographed
in thirteen colors and gold, but all
the issues of The Companion for the
remaining weeks of 1909, from the
time the subscription is received.
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION,
Companion Building, Eoston, Mass.
New subscriptions at this office
Along R. R. No. 2.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lindgren helped
J. P. Hansen and family do justice
to a line Thanksgiving drnner at
their home.
P. R. Bell had the corn shellers at
his home Saturday.
Jas. McBeth had a very sick horse
from alfalfa Monday morning.
Bruner is putting in a well for L.
Gee and will also put one in for
Romeo Conger.
Ray Rentfrow says that husking
corn is a slow way of getting money
the way the weather has been the
past three weeks.
Jack Pageler and sisters ate Thanks
giving dinner at the home of Ashley
T. Conger.
Hans Obermiller put waterworks to
his house from the windmill Satur
day.
J. Plambeck built a smokehouse
the past week.
Get all your money orders of your
carrier, as it helps your route.
Miss Lettie Peugli spent Thanks
giving at her home.
Kuhl Bros, have bought a new corn
sheller and went to Loup City Sunday
after it.
Art Lindgren marketed 40 head of
hogs at Loup City Monday.
Joe Smalley took some of the most
beautiful snow scenes after the big
snow storm that you ever saw. They
are worth goiDg to see.
Vern Alleman took home a four
horse load of lumber last Friday.
Fritz Bichel ^nd family moved into
their new home the past week. The
house, barn and outbuildings are hard
to beat on any farm.
John Olson was hauling corn to
J. E. Roush Saturday.
Sam Daddow is busy these days re
pairing the house on his farm, .just
north of Fred Daddow's.
Ed Radcliffe has the contract for
building Romeo Conger’s new house.
Wm. Rowe has the contract for the
frame work on Loren Gee’s new house.
Jim Bone has been painting his
house the past week.
TT'.rJ 4. I U
social in the Douglas district last
Friday' evening. There must be some
attraction on Route 1 for Edtar.
Chas. Schwaderer, Paul Heizner.
Henry Reed and J. P. Hansen each
gave carrier a Thanksgiving presene.
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. McBeth and fami
ly ate Thanksgiving dinner at the
home of Carl Squires.
Will Rettenmayer has the contract
for building Yern Alleman’s new
addition.
Another span of the new steel bridge
is completed. There is still two more
spans to finish.
All patrons after 12 o’clock in each
day will have one hour better time
on their mail from now on.
Have a postcard shower on vour
friends as they are ail the go now.
Find out the date of their birthday
and everyone send a card.
Tom McFadden lost two head of
cattle with cornstalk disease.
Clarence Burt has lost two head of
cattle with the cornstalk disease the
past week.
Chris. Zwink shipped a load of hogs
to Omaha Monday. He also bought
several wagon laads of Biemond to
put in his feed lot.
U. B. Craven’s mother is sick this
week.
Miss May Bone is attending college
at York this winter.
Max Leschinsky’s sale took place
Monday and it is reported that every
thing sold well.
Frank Blaschke has built a house
and barn on the place he bought of
Mrs. John Hawk and has the same
about ready for occupancy.
Fred Johnson sold some hogs to
Y- L. Wescott and delivered them
Monday.
wny non t several townsnips go in
together and buy an engine to grade
their roads with? Webster township
purchased an extra heavy grader last
spring so an engine could be used as
power instead of horses, but carrier
has failed to see it attached to an
engine all summer. The best piece
of road work on route 1 last year was
done with an engine attached to a
light grader, but which was too light
for an engine, and when the front
grader wheel dropped into a hole
letting the point of the grader in so
deep that it broke the crook neck
castings on the grader, which proved
that it was too ligtli, so Webster
township ordered one extra heavy last
spring. Milo Gilbert was road over
seer at the time this work was done
and had hold of the levers of the
machine and Zwink Bros, were run
ning the engine. Ask them what
they think about it? You can do
three miles a day with an engine and
grader where you can only do one
mile a day with horses. In the morn
ing you have to wait on some one who
is one-half or an hour late and then
all the horses don’t pull even and the
next day you probably have several
new teams, and before you get them
used to pulling together there will be
another new team on the job that
won’t pull the hat off your head.
With an engine you need only three
men and with one pull of the lever
everything is working smoothly and
at the top of the hill there is no tired
horses either. In the hot summer
days where the sweat rolls off the
horses and you have to stop to give
them their breath, an engine would
work right •along, even better when
it is hottest. It is one of the hardest
jobs to get the farmers to work on
the roads, and road work generally
has to be put off until the farmer can
get his work caught up. With an
engine you don’t have to wait on any
one and in this way the same roads
can be gone over twice with an engine
and one day left, in which all the by
roads could be worked. Roads worked
in June and July are worth twice as
A 5A Plush Robes^
■. These splendid Robes add
to the pleasure / of driving.
They are w:irm and comfort
able. 1 They absolutely do not
shed, g The patterns are hand
some and the colors pleasing.
^ Ask for a 5A Plush RobeJ
-f We Sell Thea *
HAYHURST-GALLAWAY
, HARDWARE COMPANY
FENCE POSTS
We have a good stock of lumber and all
kinds of building material on hand.
A carefully assorted stock of Fence Posts
ranging in price from 12c to 200
No trouble to figure your bills and show
our stock.
LEININGER LUMBER. C0„ Loup City, Neb.
National Corn
Exposition
Omaha, Neb.
DEGEJVIBEP 6-18,1909
Its object is to teach men how to raise the highest
grade products with which to supply the markets of
the world, and to teach women and girls how to re
duce the cost of living.
The most important subjects to be discussed are: Country
Life, Soil Culture, Hay and Forage, Dry Farming. Irrigation.
Good Roads, Oats, Wheat, CORN CULTURE and Domestic
Science.
The Famott* Me/.ican National Band
will be a great; attraction
For further information call on your Local Agent
Union Pacific
“The Safe Road to Travel”
TT T^l TTM F that our screens came down and given a coat of
A A J-O AAITICj paint and stored away.
ATTTTW^ TIOT T A RS spent for storm sash will save that
J-vv XJyJXj U rV LVCJ many or more dollars on your ooal
in a single winter— ..
Aorpr'A'p ivff TinOli will ^ *ound very useful. If you do not
OAV/ftHl DWUJV not, care t0 make the expense of a door
BUY 15c WORTH SJftKlK Storm Door
. out of your Screen Door .
You will And Storm Doors, Storm Windows or the Paper at the
KEYSTONE LUJVIBEP GO.
Louf) City, Aahton, Rockville, Schaupps, and Arcadia, Neb.
A Good Stock of Coal on hand at Loup City Ashton. Rockville and Austin
much as roads worked late in the fall
and after the first year you could
shape up all the roads in a township
in a short time, as you accomplish
twice as much on the road after it is
once put in shape, and each fall the
roads would only need shaping up. A
good road to a town is a big tiling for
the farmer as well as the town. After
the first two years one man with a
road drag and three horses could keep
the roads in shape without a grader.
Jim Burnett had his men filling in
a bad hole in front of the mill last
Friday. One of the best pieces of
road work on this route is from the
mill to the U. P. tracks. It pays to
make the road higher in the center.
Following is the program given in
connection with the box social in the
Douglas district last Friday evening:
pboobah
Thanksgiving Song.School
Thanksgiving Drill — Twelve Pupils
Song—‘‘Everyone You Meet Has
Trouble,”. Hilda Fross and Harold
Hendrickson.
Dialogue—“At the Photographers”
.Young People
Song—“In the House of Too Much
Trouble”_Iva Fross and Bessie
Hendrickson.
Dialogue—“The Sailor Boy's Re
turn”.Four Bo; ■
Recitation.Burnette Pinckney
Thanksgiving Song.Young People
Recitation..Aleen Focht
Literary Paper.Teacher
Song. Velva and Cora Fross
Dialogue—“An Evening at the
Sampsons,”.Yoting People
Tne highest box was purchased by
Frank Wheeler for $3 and belonged to
Mae Mcllravy. The proceeds of the
social was $46.95, which is certainly
the best box social ever held in the
country, and there is no telling how
high the sales would have reached if
there had been more boxes. The
crowd was so large you just had to
elbow your way along and every box
put u p went like a house afire, and
the boys from Loup City were not
slow bidders. It was estimated that
80 people were in attendance. Supt.
Hendrickson has a way of running the
boxes up that is hard to understand
and has quite a reputation for selling
lunches. Miss Lula Lee and pupils
deserve a lot of credit for the way in
which the program was carried out.
The proceeds will perhaps go toward
the purchase of an organ for the
school.
ROAD NOTICE
(Yarney Road)
To whom it may concern:
The commissioner appointed to
view and locate a road commencing
at the northeast corner of Section
thirty-two (32), in Township fourteen
(14), Range fifteen (15), west of the
6th p. m. and extending south on the
section lines to the southeast corner
of Section five (5) in Township thir
teen (13), Range fifteen (15), west of
the 6th p m has reported in favor of
the establishment thereof and all
claims for damages or objections
thereto must be tiled in the office of
county clerk of Sherman county.
Nebraska, on or before noon of the
20th day of January, A. D. 1910, or
said road Will be established without
reference thereto.
Dated this 8th day of November,
A. D. 1909. C. F. Beushausen.
County Clerk.
(Last pub. Dec. 9)
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
State of Nebraska, •
vss.
Sherman county, » Tbe State of Nebraska
In County Court within and for Sherman
county, Nebraska. November 33. 1909. in tbe
matter of the estate of Michael S. Talfe
deceased:
To tbe Creditors of said Estate:
You are hereby notified, that I will nit at the
county court room in Loup City, in said coun
ty, on tbe 30th day of June, 1910, at ten o'clock
in tbe forenoon, to receive and examine all
claims against said estate, with a view to
their adjustment and allowance. Tbe time
limited for tbe presentation of claims against
said estate is tbe 20th day of June A D„ mio
and tbe time limited for payment ot debts la
one year from tbe 20th day of June. 1910.
Witness my hand and the Seal of said Coun
ty Court, this 22d day of November, 1909
l8*Ai.] J. S. Pedlkr, County Judge
(Last pub. Deo. 18)