The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 31, 1912, Image 4

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    (M PJLM
i>l,i\ fiV li Y '.PjTlf/ D
' I-.. ;r m thod of soliciting your business. We never
r< >r' t exaggerations of any form in our advertising.
\\ - ! good g-»odr only, charge fair prices only, and
« k the trade >f th« se men who appreciate good values
and considerate treatment.
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«»■_.. a,ka» ,„u l<i(Mrtt.a trial *r lia»e no fr*r about keeping
fmm mm m prri aacail rg*t«airr
>9CCOSOOQCCeOCCOOCOSOS<
s Our new fall goods are GREAT, Y ou lould see them. ^
aOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOC
THE HUB CLOTHING STORE
Viener & Krelstein
THE HEM THEATER
We are showing license pictures, Come and
see them they are good.
( har._ <f Program every Tuesday Thursday and Saturday
Don't miss any of these pictures.
his is va\> an entertaining and instructive show
jLm O. LEE
S. A. Pratt
Billiard and Pool Parlors
Fin 't Brands of Cigars, with such leaders
as Denbvs. Havana Sticks, B. B's., and other
choice smokes. Your patronage appreciated
First Door. West of First National Bank
Loup City, Nebraska,
/Try Arthurs For/
£ Your Winter Un-1
£ derwear. £
£ Bring the family and let us £
£ lit them out for the winter.
£ We also have a nice line of
J Blankets.
£ Come while the line is com
J plele.
At ARTHUR S STORE
KEYSTONE LUMBER CO.
October Rate Specialties
Low One Way RateS to Pacific Coast. *
are in effect only until October Kith. $30 to California, Oregon
Washington, and *X> to i'tali and portions of Montana and Idaho. Re
nerve hearths early.
Tourist Rates South
1 »*- - a «in tar U>uri-t and homeseekers' rates to southern localitie:
t.iit- !*-<» announced. The soutli is growing in its attractions fo
n irtiiem people A sk for some of the attractive literature, descrip
ti*e of soUtera resorts, hotels and tours. 1 .
Through TouristsSleepers To California via Sants
Fe Route
< mmenring November iitto. fram Omaha every Tuesday night at 11:31
j no personally condor ted Uirougii conducted tourists sleeptrs* wil
*- run V 1> ' Angeles via Denver thence Santa Fe direct line—Grant
< any on Route. These sleepers may be taken from Omaha early Tues
day night from Lincoln at midnight or leaving Denver IVeduesda;
e'-ningat ~ 4,'. p. m.
Winter Tourists Rates To California are daily in e«ec
1 ree .> rat .re. California Excursions. Pacific Coast Tours, Soutlieri
'J ours leaflet. Have your tleket read-Burlington.Yob will thei
: i. * '.he broadest choice of diverse routes to and from the coast.
J. A. Danielson Ticket Agent
L. W.Wakely,
General Passinger Agent, Omaha, Neb
THE NORTHWESTERS
Entered at the Loup City Postofflce for trans
mission through the mails as second
class matter.
Office Phone, - 6 on 21
Residence, - - 3 on 21
4. W. BURLEIGH. Editor and Pub
REPUBLICAN TICKET
National
For Presidents
WILLIAM II. TAFT
For Vice President,
JAMES A. SHERMAN
For Presidential Electors,
C. F. REAVIS
VAC. BURESH
O. A. ABBOTT
GEORGE I). SMITH
W, H. KILPATRICK
DANIEL B. JENCKES
WESLEY T. WILCOX
ALFRED C. KENNEDY
Congressional
For United States Senator.
GEORGE W. NORRIS
For Congress—titli District,
MOSES P. KI'NKAID
State
For Governor,
CHESTER II. ALDRICH
For Lieutenant Governor.
S. R. McKELVIE _
For Secretary of State, *
ADDISON WAIT
For Attorney General,
GRANT C. MARTIN
For State Treasurer.
WALTER A. GEORGE
For Auditor of Puhlic Accounts,
W. B.: HOWARD
For Supt. of Public Instruction.
J AMES E. DELZELL
For Com.'Public Lands and Buildings.
FRED BECKMAN
For Railwav Commissioner.
H.-G. TAYLOR
Legislative
For State Senator,
ROBERT P. STARR
For Representative,
GEORGE W. WOLFE
County
For Countv Attorney.
‘ J. S. PEDLER
For Countv Assessor,
W. T. OWENS
Just Before Election
Next week Tuesday will be election
day. The longest political campaign
in the history of our country will then
have come to an end. Whatever may
be the" result. it.is the bounden duty
of every A merican citizen to go to
the polls and vote for the men and
measures he endorses. Then what
ever may result he has performed his
duty.
The Northwestern believes that the
election of Taft and the retention of
the republican party in power is for
the best interest of our country, and
its columns have been used to that
end. In this a large percentage of
our readers have differed with us. and
just as honestly, no doubt. It is too
late now to argue further. By the
time this reaches many of our sub
scribers they will have registered
their opinion and will have to abide
by the result. What that may be no
one can predict, nor even hazard a
guess correctly, on the heads of the
ckets. It may be- Taft: w e hope so.
may be Wilson or Roosevelt: we as
inestly hope-mot.
< *n the state, ticket, the result
Jabout as complex, as between the
wo candidates for governor. On the
ace. with the progressives endorsing
the republican ticket, it would seem
to be easy sailing for Aldrich, but the
ghost of DahLman, the penitentiary
trouble and.the split in the state re
publican convention make guess work
of the final attitude of the Taft men,
the Liahlman democraeyr and the
prison reform people, with the natu
ral loss of the democratic vote
he .received two years ago. With
the balance of. tlie republican state
ticket.however, there is very little
auestpbO.- It wiil very likely pull
'tUrptlgif with safe majorities.
The-Sematmrial fight is also a bad
mixture. If we were to judge from
what we hear. J udge Norris w ill have
to content, himself with what he can
get of the bull moose vote, a large
part of which will go to Slialleberger,
while the Taft men. with no undying
) loye for what they .term ‘grandstand
playing.’- are a silent number to be
i reckoned with.
Coming down to the county situa
tion, there is found a grave uncer
tainty on representative. The bull
moose convention, with its unfair
treatment of George W. Wolfe, and
nomination of R. L. Arthur, hurt Mr.
Wolfe’s chances, which up to that
time were 3 to 1 in his favor. It is
yet, however, a good bet he will win
out, and we trust he will. On county
attorney, J. S. Pedler has the nom
ination of all the parties save the
> progressive, which put up W. J. Fish
er. . Laying all prejudices aside and
■ taking everything in sight into con
sideration Uncle Joe is the favorite
[ by.a two to one vote. On county as
sessor, we. have another three cor
nered tight on which there is little, if
| any politics involved and we leave any
I hazard of results to ottieis.
The following story originated in
Kansas,but has been published all over
the country: “An old gentleman was
* trying to cross a street and stopped
1 short to allow a big touring car to
1 pass. J ust before it reached him a
motorcyie dashed around the corner
and bowled him over. As be arose
brushed off the dust, he was heard to
remark: ‘Now, who’d ’a’ thought
that thing bad a colt?’ ”
Senatorial Hoax
The Journal sees in many exchanges
the announcement of the candidacy
of one Ferguson of Custer county,
who is running by petition for United
States senator. This is one of the
hugest jokes of the campaign.
The pictures that Ferguson is using
may be of himself as he appeared
twenty or thirty years ago. The man
has an ambition for office and has run
for every thing imaginable and never
yet gone far enough to get the sup
port of a single neighbor. He is a
poor renter, if we are rightly informed,
near Broken Bow and his whole crop
this year will not begin to pay the
advertising bill that he would con
tract with the newspapers. Fergu
son’s candidacy is a joke, a veritable
hoax.—Ord Journal.
Voters, Read This
County Clerk Dieterichs received
the following instructions in regard
to voting on the five constitutional
amendments which it would be well
for every voter to read for their edifi
cation in regard to same:
“The election boards in each voting
precinct in your county should be in
structed to count all straight votes
of each political party FOR the five
constitutional amendments. You will
note on my certificate of nomination
that all parties voting at the primary
held April 19th. endorsed the same by
a majority vote, and that the Pro
gressive party endorsed them at their
state convention held September 5th,
1912. The courts have held that
w here an amendment is thus endorsed
it becomes a party measure and in
effect is the same as nomination or
endorsement ol a candidate. Where
a cross is not made in the party circle
at the top of the ballot, voters must
indicate their vote FOR or AG AINST
an amendment by placing a cross in
the square at the right of each of the
amendments. It is important that
elections boards be so informed that
the votes on the amendments may be
properly canvassed. Newspapers will
aid in giving this information pub
licity.”
County School Notes
By Sapt. L. H. Currier
At this season of the year we turn
naturally to the subject of school
work, for how important it is that be
tween the home and the school there
should exist cordial and sympathetic
relations: as a rule the children’s
progress at school is regulated by the
home attitude toward the school.
If the parents are indifferent, chil
dren also are indifferent: if parents
are interested in school work, a new
impulse is given to the child's inter
est. Parents should strive to under
stand the teacher and hold her at the
highest standard: no teacher can do
justice to herself and pupils if she Is
made an object of constant and severe
criticism: expressions of disap
proval should never be made in the
presence of therchildren: antagonism
between home and school destroys the
value of the school to the children.
Some methods pursued in the dis
trict school are far from being perfect,
but even in the last few years they
have been greatly improved, And the
tendency has been to render school
work easy and interesting for chil
dren.
The progressive teacher will not
allow pupils to find the school room
and the dull lessons tedious;, every- \
thing is designed to please the child's;
fancy and to secure attention. The
memory is not so much taxed, as
children are encouraged to think, to
reason, to observe, and the general
information existing among the
school children prove that the modern
methods are far better than the old,
stern discipline. Yet in some in
stances there is great danger of pro
longing babyhood beyond the time
when children should be interested
in earnest study. Parents should
strive to begin right and at the right
time, the discipline of the mental
faculties: for children very early learn
to be indolent or industrious. “To
save children from all exertion and
to help them over difficulties,” is
practiced by some parents to such an
extent that it is injurious to the
children. They become “leaners”
not "lifters"; it is also the general
opinion among parents that the
children are overworked in the school
room: this only appears so. The over
worked child is the exception, not
the rule.
Upon investigation we find where
one child is overworked there are
twenty who are not accomplishing
what they should acocmplish: where
one needs holding back, the others
■t need pushing forward.
Between work and play a strong
! dividing line should be drawn: chil
; dren should not dawdle over a lesson
! two hours that can by close applica
tion be learned in half an hour: it
takes away tire taste for either the
lesson or play.
The given lesson should be prepared
in the shortest time possible, then
when play time comes they will re
bound quickly, throw off thought of
! study and enter heartily into the
j sport, without being haunted by a
! half-learned lesson.
To sit at home and find fault with
| the teacher's method of conducting
the school shows that we are either
stupid or careless; neither should we
! accept conditions which mitigate
: against the growth of the child
! Parents are not so busy that they
cannot find time to visit the school
and manifest an interest in the edu
( cation of their children: if the teacher
1 is unworthy of her work, remove the
' child from under her infl uence, but if
allowed to remain, parents are in duty
bound to acknowledge the teacher's
fitness and give her hearty co-opera
1 tion and support. There should be
1 enthusiasm going on every where in
district school work. Parents should
consider themselves a committee
j whose duty is to do all possible for
the great cause of education.
FORM OF BALLOT
GENERAL ELECTION 1912
To Vote a Straight Ticket Make a Cross
Within Your Party Circle!
REPUBLICAN. .O
DEMOCRAT. .O
PEOPLES INDEPENDENT... .O
SOCIALIST. O
|PROHIBITION .... O
i’ X/ '
PROGRESSIVE.V Xy
To vote for ROOSE\ ELT and JOHNSON, be sure to
make your cross in the Progressive ring as above. That
counts one vote for each of the eight Progressive Roosevelt
and Johnson Electors, for the five amendments to the con
stitution, and for every Progressive party candidate on
the ticket. Louis Rein,
Chairman County Committee Progressive Party.
Advert icemen t
PROGRESSIVE TICKET
National
For President,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
For Vice President,
HIRAM W. JOHNSON
For Presidential Electors,
W. J. BROATCH
ALLEN JOHNSbN
GEORGE S. FLORY
DR. W. O. HENRY
A. R. DAVIS
A. V. PEASE
VY E. THORNE
O. G. SMITH.
Congressional
Fpr United States Senator,
GEORGE W. NORRIS
For Congress—6tl» District,
FRANK L. ARMSTRONG
State
For Governor,
CHESTER H. ALDRICH
For Lieutenant Governor,
S. R. McKELVIE
For Secretary of State.
ADDISON WAIT
For Attorney General,
GRANT C. MARTIN
For State Treasurer,
WALTER A. GEORGE
For Auditor of Public Accounts.
W. B. HOWARD
For Supt. of Public Instruction,
JAMES E. DELZELL
For Com. Public Lands and Buildings.
FRED BECKMAN
For Railway Commissioner,
H. G. TAYLOR
Legislative
For State Senator.
For Representative,
R. L. ARTHUR
County _
For County Attorney,
W. J. FISHER
For Countv Assessor,
L. W. CALLEN
Order of Hearing on Petition for
Appointment of Administrator
or Administratrix
m Count, Court.
In the matter of the estate of Minnie S.
Alleman. deceased.
On reading and filing the petition of Clark
L. Alleman. praying that Administration of
said estate may be granted to Clark L. Alleman
as Administrator.
Ordered, that November 9th A. D. :912. at 10
o’clock a. m.. be assigned for hearing said pe
tition. when all persons interested in said
matter may appear at a County Court to be
held in and for said county, and show cause
why the prayer |of petitione- should not be
granted; and that notice of the pendency of
said petition and the hearing thereof be given
to all persons interested in said matter by
publishing a copy of this order fn the Loup
City No-tliwestern a weekly newspaper print
ed in said county threesuecessive weeks, prior
to said day of hearing.
Dated October 19. 1912.
E. A. Smith.
[seal] County J udge.
Last pub Nov. 7.
Notice to Creditors
^m°L^ka: -- 1° the count, Court
In the matter of the estate of Ferdinand
Psota. deceased.
To the creditors of said estate :
You are hereby notified. That I will sit at
the county court room in Loup City, in said
county, on the 3rd day of May. 1913, to receive
and examine all claims against said estate,
witii a view to their adjustment and allowance
The time limited for the presentation of claims
against said estate is the 3rd day of May. A.D.
1913. and the time limited for payment of debts
is one year from said 3rd day of May. 1913.
Witness my hand and the seal of said county
court, this 7th day of October. 1912.
E. A. SMITH.
[seal] County Judge.
(Last pub. Oct. 31.)
Sheriff's Sale.
Notice is hereby given that by vir
tue of an order of sale to me directed
from tiie District Court of Sherman
county. Nebraska, upon a decree of
foreclosure rendered in said court on
the 3rd day of September. 1912, where
in John W. Bellmore was plaintiff',
and Minnie A. Elliott Bellmore. et al.
were defendants: I have levied upon
1 the following described real estate,
[ to-wit: The south one-hundred and
! twenty (120) acres of the northwest
| quarter of section twenty-four (24),
j township fifteen (15) north range six
teen (10), west of the oth principal
meridian, situated in said Sherman
county and state of Nebraska, and 1
will, on the 12th day of November,
1912. at 2 o'clock p. m., of said day, at
the south door of the court house, in
Loup City, Sherman county, Nebraska,
offer for sale and sell said above de
scribed real estate at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash to
satisfy the amount of $004.65 with in
terest at 10 per cent from the 3rd
day of September, 1912, and $17.70
costs of the above action, and accru
ing costs, which amount was adjudged
to be due to the plaintiff above named
from the defendants.Minnie A. Elliott
Bellmore. et al. above named, and to
be a lien upon the above described
premises.
Dated at Loup City. Nebraska, this
9th day of October, 1912.
L. A.Williams.
Sheriff of Sherman County, Neb.
Clements Bros., Attorneys.
(Last pub. Nov. 7)
Kirschbaum
I Clothes $x5 $1° and $15
1 - - -
A
Guaranteed
Overcoat
at a Popular Price
We sell guaran- j
teed overcoats
$15—and at $20
and $25.
Guaranteed all
wool and hand
tailored. And cut T
from double-shrunk
fabrics.
Your overcoat must
take the weather as it
comes—and all wool is
important, hand tailor
ing is important, and
thorough shrinking is
very important.
You will find just the
style you want, with all
of these vital qualities,
in our line of Kirschbaum Clothes, $15, $20 and
$25.
Your assurance of perfect satisfaction on a
money-back basis, is the Guaranty of the maker.
At Lorenti The Clothier
.ewaSii (ideal fountain Pen ■
,is .SafetyPen j
L cow it
l3 ^p.:.upsi iedown.ngfct sideup.orendwajrs
t Sj loss it mb vc_r tmik - It is sealed ink ti^ht
•h CANNOT SPILL 1
91 — ■"== —■■' 3
II SffijS tsrse -Vest pocket size Ar Vacation travels or heme use =
i J
For Sale at you’- J- welry Store
_Lou Schwaner
What You Gain
by being a regular depositor with the Loup
City State Bank:
Your funds are kept in absolute security.
Payment by check provides indisputable re
receipts in the form of returned can
celed checks. Payment by check saves
many a long trip; saves trouble of mak
ing change and taking receipts.
Being a depositor with us, acquaints us with
eaeh other and lays the foundation for
accommodation, when you want to piece
out your resources with a loan.
Every courtesy and facility is rendered the
small as well as the large depositor. Don’t
wait until you can begin with a large deposit
LOUP CITY STATE BANK
Capital and Surplus, $47,500.00
J.S. Pedler. President C. C. Carlsen, Cashier
Jehn W. Long, Vice President. % w. J, Root Assistant Cashie