Professions. Cards KABT.P. 8 TASK Attorney-at-law. LOUP CITY. NSBRSSKS. NIGHTINGALE & SON LOUP CITY. NEB It H. MATHEW, Attorney-at-law, And Bonded Abstractor, Loup City, Nebraska AARON WALL Lawyer I’radices in all Courts l>*up (5tv, Neb. ROBERT H. MATHEW Mu.. to tt. P. Starr) Bonded Abstracter 1/iCT (’ITT. NOtAIU. Out . kuI Abainu t Hooka in county !). K. LONG AC RE PHYSICIAN aid SURGEON Office. Over New Bank TELEPHONE CALL, NO. 39 aTJ. KEARNS PHYSICIAN AND SOWN T baan K..1 T« .irytice < vpiral Loup City - Nebraska A. S. MAIN PHYSICIAN aid SURGEON Loup City, Nebr. Oflfe* at UMdmv. Telephone < hnnection S. A. ALLEN. BBJVT1NT, LOCr 'TTY - - NEB. CMfc-r up stair- .n tlu ne* State Batik ktiUier. w L MARCY. DENTIST, LOUP CITY, NEB urn* K East ~:de Public Suunie. Phoor 141 un » EARL KEELER Prompt Dray Work PH4JNE tonic Or Lumber Yanl* and Taylor'* Ele tabor Sati*faction guaranteed C. E. Thornton The Drayman Attend* all urder* promptly and -areful t I’huae either lumber yard or Tay mr » eiet atcr Let Us Book Your Sales HALE $l PACELER Auctioneers Satisfaction Guaranteed 2 on 20. Loup City. Nob ITW tsar t/ kaJd.tr a new Ytm at If < ssatdn.'aMt Tit asaT o/ patatfta^ If >aw peasant Urt ejl , MounJ City Bara Paints H m vary Jdria. |; Clarapt-r. Uahitr mad better than j] way barn rwst made V -dr> ; c heajaer II even W> tbe Ian. nwa that: cur bend II ft J Cc rttt, rant rWet . tL50 I] “YOU can apply n” j j Swanson & Lof holn I H»»e a few choke Poland Cliini A own. tor sale at Karmen.’ Price* Length ana boo* the kind to raise. WILD ROSE STOCK FARM Phone 2 on 12 Mile East of Town L N. SMITH. Laup City. Nab Fifteen High Class Duroc Jersey Boan I am no* offering the ctioke hoar at tanners' prims, Haedelers Oiok> Goods. So lo..Sire heads nr herd. Mj pig* are growth? and read: ID ship Write me. farm two tnIJei west from Ashton Depot. ED. BAEDELEB ASHTON SUk. ■' " ■■■ ■ ■■■- wau THE NORTHWESTERN I - •CRMS —II 00 PER TEAR. IP PAID IB ADTAHCi Catered u the l.oup CUT Postnfflee for traos mlsstoB throucb the malls aa second elaas matter. Office Phone, - 6 on 21 Residence, - - Sonjl l W. IH RLKIGH. Kd. and Pub It is reported the apple crop will fall toti per cent below the average this year. With but one county to hear from officially. Hamer wins out over Dean for supreme judge by 3,178. The supreme court holds that a saloon license is not taxable, there being no property rights attached to it. Kavenna is making arrangements ; for an electric lighting plant. Loup city is also talking the matter up, and hopes are entertained that we will have one in the spring. Latest returns from the state elec tion show that every republican can didate on the state ticket was elected although at one time it looked as if l»ean liad beaten Hamer. However ; Hamer comes out with between 3.000 and 4.000 to the good. The state implement dealers' con vention is in session in Omaha this • week. The Bee of Wednesday morn ing contained a group picture of the •(fleers, among which is the good I looking face of T. M. Keea, one of the directors, of this city. ===== The frigid wave that struck this section last Saturday and Sunday I tier got it* friged lingers on the i effete east and resulted in the death of numbers of people and the loss of hundreds and thousands of dollars' worth of property It was a holy • terror as it passed on eastward. The Omaha and Lincoln dallies of ast week contained group pictures of the debating teams of the State I diversity, which go up against the debating teams of Minnesota and Wisconsin, among whom we reconize the handsome frontispiece of Clifford Uein. with short history of each de bater following. Supt. .las. O'Connell was defeated fur county superintendent in Jeffer son county at tin* late election by a majority of .V»7. I*rof. O'Connell was up against a hard proposition, as the [county is republican by as many as ’ he was defeated and he was also run ning against the present superinten I dent for re-election. Late election returns from over the ••tate show that Hamer, the low man on the republican ticket, will come out with between 3.000 and 4,000 majority over Bean. the high man on the democrat ticket. Hall over Har man. for railway commisioner will I>ead the majorities probably with some ten thousand and over. Who has heard from Bryan since the elec tion. It is rattier early or late, or a little •if time for tornadoes, but one swept through southern Wisconsin the first of the week, laying to w aste a strip of country ahio is to tiie good, while Woodrow Wilson falls down, the returns in < Hdo show ing democratic tendencies while New Jersey gives Wilson a black eye politically by elevating the republican vote. All this is very gratifying to Champ Clark who stalks around with a prominent presidential grin on his smooth-shaven face. Mayor "Jim” Dahl man thinks Pres ident Taft and Judson Harmon will be tiie next nominees for the pres idency. “Harmon seems to me,” said tiie mayor, “to be the man the the democrats ought to focus their attention on. for he's the only one who lias a chance of winning the nomination in my opinion. There's a do abt about President Taft’s nom ination." Mayor “Jim” does not class the "peerless leader” as one in tiie van of democratic Drogress.—Bee. Sure Enough Socialist A recent copy oi the Zephyrhills 1 Fla.) Colonist, recently started there by Geo. H. Gibson, formerly publish ing the Standard Gauge in this city, proves conclusively that Mr. Gibson is heart and soul a socialist, as we in sisted upon, when he was here claim ing to be a republican. Following is 1 a clipping from ids paper of last week which shows how the wind blows po litically through his caput covering: We understand that the Democrats of tills vicinity are taking steps to or ganize a progressive Democrtic party ■ on the lines laid down in Bryan’s Com moner. It is a step in in the right direction and one which will stir the , pie eaters to a sense of their duty, if ► the progressive will see to it that the old corrupt stand patter is not allowed to run the new movement. The - people have but one cause, and should know no Democracy or Repuplicanism The attempt we are Informed, is to establish the Initiative and Recall. ' This is purely a Socialist measure, but who cares, brother voter. Social ism will give you your rights, and you need them—tied. • "*'VV "v.. \ ^ ADVICE OF HORACE FLETCHER Apostle of Careful Mastication Calls Attention to the Great Importance of Dentistry. In regard to dentistry as Important In nutrition, my attention was called to the importance of the subject by an incident that happened about six or seven years ago. I was in Venice at the time and there arrived there a family from Australia, among them a very beautiful young woman, who was in the pink of condition, with the Brit ish pink cheeks, thoroughly active, thoroughly athletic. I was told that only about six or eight months be fore that time she bad been in a hope lessly Invalid condition in Australia. They had been living In a remote part, where there was very little opportu nity to have good dentistry performed, and Inasmuch as they were expecting to leave Australia, they had been put ting off for a long time the repair work that they knew ought to be done, leaving it for a better opportunity when they came to America. Mean time the young lady was in a misera ble condition of indigestion and dys pepsia. When they arrived in Amer ica and put themselves under the care of a competent dentist it was but a abort time before the young lady be gan to Improve, and with the com pletion of the repair work and the ability that she then had, to properly masticate food, her health was entire ly restored and it was almost like_ a miracle. ; Recently my attention nas oeen called to the fact that there Is a great (movement on foot now in various parts of this country towards employ ing dentistry in the mouths of school children, it having been found that forty per cent or perhaps more of the school children in the public schools are not in a condition to cither enjoy or to properly masticate their food. .The proposition has been made in Bos ton, and perhaps elsewhere in the country, to the boards of education to have regular examinations made and repair work done at the cost of the -government in order to lay a proper foundation for the health of the chil dren. I may say In the way of ex planation that I do not represent the school of medicine or of dentistry, simply the school of the study of na ture. During the fifteen years of my Btudy of the subject I have persistent ly put aside all of the dicta of the text books and have tried to put my self in close communication with na ture herself; and It has been a source of great gratification to notice how quickly nature has responded to that sort of inquiry. No sooner had I be gun to study the development of taste than I began to receive a Joy of eat ing, a pleasure of taste Itself, that I did not know existed. I thought I en joyed food, that I was a gourmet, but I did not know what it was to really enjoy food, and the Interesting part of It was that Instead of looking for in creased enjoyment in more compli cated mixtures, I found the whole in clination of appetite In the direction .of the simpler foods. HORACE FLETCHER. ■(Copyright, Western Newspaper Union.) AMALGAM FILLING MUCH USED Tendency of the Alloy to 8hrlnh While Becoming Hard Has Been Overoomo. Whan the science and art of dent was in its infancy some 60 years the filling in general use was gold, and at that time there were very few dentists capable of doing good work. In those days the dentist had very few instruments to work with, and most of those were fashioned by his own hand. The majority of the opera tions on the teeth were by men who were selftaught, or who had gained their knowledge in the office of a man who was self-taught Tet even in that day there were some who, through ne cessity, became expert with the crude Instruments. One day there appeared in the city pf New York some dentists lately ar rived from Paris, who were intro ducing a new filling material. The old conservative dentist looked with dis favor upon the new material, and re fused to use it However, it gradually came to be used more and more, until all were forced to acknowledge its value. Today there are probably more amalgam flllingB Inserted than all oth ers combined. Amalgam, or, aa it la sometimes call ed, silver filling. Is made by taking an alloy of silver and tin and cutting Into filings and Bhavlngs. These shavings are afterwards thoroughly kneaded with mercury, so as to form a plastic mass, which, Inserted Into a cavity of a tooth, becomes, in time, very hard. The combination of these metals makes a close union that the fluids of the mouth cannot disintegrate, al though, in time, the filling may show pome discoloration. For this reason, it is commonly used in the back teeth, where it cannot be seen. Within the paat ten years there has been a great Improvement in dental alloys. This has been brought about by exhaustive tests, both inside the month and out. The difficulty that had been experienced up to this time waa the tendency of the filling material to shrink while it was getting hard, so that there waa a space between the filling and the margin of the cavity. It became a delight for the microbes In the saliva to enter that space, and then decay would start In again. Modem manufacturers now produce an alloy In which there is no shrink age whatever. Some so combine the metals In the alloy that there is a alight expansion, 1-20,000 of an Inch. (Copyright, Western Newspaper Union.) The speed boy slackens up when the habit begins to ride HIM. Really Hard Luck. P ;:r men were sympathizing with other at an uptown hotel, accord : • the New York Sun. They were •’ t ’oyees pretty well up on the staff list -nd two of them were assistant managers. They had lndorsed*checks for acquaintances that they supposed were all right, and. according to the rule, had to make good. Tm worse stuck than any of you," said the chief engineer. "The check I got stuck on was for 1114 and the man who signed it la In iall - j Postal Savings Bank The postal savings bank for Loup City was established here last week Tuesday, which was overlooked last week, in the stress of election mat ters. However, there wasnoadoover the establishing of the postal savings department in our postoffice, possibly from the fact that our banks are per fectly satisfactory to our people and no especial interest was taken in the incorporation of the same here J. W. Conger was the first depositor and the only one up to this date, so far as we can learn, although according to the law the postmaster is not al lowed to give any information as to who deposits or as to the amounts, etc., and our information is obtained from other sources. At Lincoln, Omaha, Nebraska City and many other places where the savings banks have beep opened, long Hnesof people have been in waiting at the hour and caused quite an interest in the mat ter. There. are several interesting facts in connection with the incor poration of the postal savings bank, of general interest. For instance, no person under 7 years of age can de osit: no person can open an account for another: married woman can open an account without interference from her husband: not over S100 can be de posited within one month, nor have a total balance to his or her credit in excess of $500, exclusive of accumu lated interest: no deposit of less than $1 is received, although postal savings stamps may be purchased up to $1, and when reaching that amount maj be deposited as a whole: interest at the rate of 2 per cent per annum is allowed but no interest on any money remaining on deposit less than a year deposits may be withdrawn in whole or in part at any time. In fact the department furnishes all necessary information in circulars, which can be obtained at the postoffice on ap plication. It is interesting, whether you are a prospective depositor or not. Bead it up. and you will know all about it. . — - ■■ ■ m Rooster Hard to Kill. A Buff Orpington roostwr, missing for three weeks, was found wedged in the wooden foundation of a haystack, at Stanford. Kent, England. The bird was as thin as a lath, but now is crow ing as lustily as ever. It was twenty days without food Lesion of Chivalry. The lesson of chivalry, quite as im portant In the !ad as In his father, in different degrees of course, may be taught In little attentions to mother and younger sister—helping about the house, making provisions which will save mother many steps during his absence r.nd escorting sister to and from school. Occupation for Women. Two women, mavbe more, occupy novel positions In the business world In New York These women are etn ployed by a number of wholesale dress roods and millinerv houses to enter , f'ln women buyers f-nni out of town Vfc'v i "certain the visitors at dle.ne in ’he ihea’er. and make the sojourn rr~' stay in New York pleasant. The fN'onse- of course, is charged to the 1 ouses employing them The Individ es< ebarpes of these wnn»a entertain ns tisual’v are about one-fourth of the total expense Come Out and Witness THE COMEDY-DRAMA “The Only Way” At the Opera House Wednesday, Nov. 22nd Coursing Meet Three Days of Dog Racing Grand Island, Neb., Nov. 21-3 — - ".I_ - - . .. J-. 1 _ i Two Big Stakes—All Ages and Consolation $1,500 in Purses Winning Grey Hounds, from the M&tion&l Meetings Held at Friend and Sutr ton. Will Be Here to Race GREATEST SPORT ON EARTH This promises to be one of the greatest coursing events of the year. The grounds are conceded by competent judges to be ideal for interesting races. No expense has been spared to make the First Annual Meet of the Grand Island Coursing Club a successful entertainment. / Admission, 50 Cents. Grand Stand Free Grand Island Coursing Club EMIL WOLBACH, President CEO. R. GUENTHER. See.-Treas. For Further Particulars, Address the Secretary Travel in Comfort : * S The Union Pacific is balasted with Sherman gravel, which makes a prac tically dustless roadbed. It has fewer curves and lower grades than any other trans-continental line—is laid out in long, easy tangents. You are free from jolts, jars and dust Union Pacific Standard Road of the West Protected by Electric Block Signals Excellent Dining Cars on al trains I I ImiIUII I KPuTi For literature and information relative to fares, routes, etc., call on or address G. W. Collipriest, Agent. I—————i i ■ w—mm II ALL WOOL HAND TAILORED K tFroa oil painting of the WulceEeld Tower, Tower of London. The 4 Kinchbantn models shown (reading from left to right) are the Strand and * j the " Ynngfelo” Wales. j TT YE deal in A.S. Kirsch- I YY baum & Co. Clothes for these reasons: Because Kirschbaum Clothes are the clothes sold by progressive merchants everywhere. And, more particularly, because the Kirschbaum standard of quality, t tailoring, finish and style squares with our ideas ^ of what we want to offer our most particular b customers. § There is never any question about the fabric. fj A suit or an overcoat with the Kirschbaum Cherry tj Tree Brand label is as surely “All-Wool ” as the I coat on a sheep’s back. 1 ; Kirschbaum tailoring is hand tailoring—shape | and style are needle molded into the cloth by hand | and will stay, insuring permanent good looks. I Prices, $15. $18. $20, $22, $25. I The Kirschbaum Special $18 “True Blue," Heavy Weight I Serge Suits are band-tailored, fast-color,“top-style" clothes— * a new suit for any that fades. ri GUS LOREpTZ Range or Heater T. M. Reed 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 250 No trouble to figure your bills and show our stock. LEININGER LUMBER. CO., Loud City Neb Mr hat a Splendid Picture youth, health and beauty make. It is too bad they cannot last forever. Mfe Like to Take Photographs of young people, and judging by the samples we have, young people ^ like to have- us do it. Come and learn the reason. Then probably rou will decide to have us photograph you. EDGAR DRAPER, Photographer.