80,000 Ex a _ Co your utmost. Long Terms of Subscription Count the Fastest. ______ . YAA/FI I Now Is the Time Your VV tSubscriptions Count ELECTRIC LIGHTER ELECTRIC STARTER the MOSt. I place JS© Limit ©n Your (dorh SIbile this Off6R Is in force i Large Extra Vote Offer Now In Force For every e!ab of Subscriptions amounting to $25.00 turned in between «iov. 26th and December 2, inclusive we will give 86,690 Extra Votes Subscriptions to count on this offer may be of any kind but the long term ones count up the fastest. This is time when your subscriptions count Big so get all you can and go the limit. Kow is the time to do the big work. t Che Big Vote Offer in , force Otfs week. Go Hfter It. Only Three Weeks Left-Kew hustle after those long term subscriptions and be a Winner Phone Blue‘>1 Address all Communications to Phone Blue 21 _Contest -anager Northwestern_ 2 Deposits in this bank have the additional security of the De- 'i If positors Guarantee Fund of the State of Nebraska. JJ ! GOLD SEEKING | 6 Gold seeking, in the hills, along the old | • trail of adventure, has no lure for most 2 I people. The gold seeking trail of today ^ | is much better, more certain of reward. « | It leads along lines of economic enter- f | prise—the saving and careful invest- I I ment of small sums, and it ends in in- ? I dependent plenty. 2 | Our bank account plan is a practical $ 1 safe and helpful one for those who wish S | to travel this trail to independent plenty - | Come in and let us show you how its | | use will help you. j | - | [ Loup City State Bank \ |, Loop City, Nebraska. | gfWepaySper ccntinterest or^time deposits | J. G. Pageler AUCTIONEER xLoup City, — Nebraska All Auctioneering business attended to promptly. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Give me a trial. I [iliMbES When in f Need of | COAL j or first-class | Xium/ber) of all dimensions,! i w e also nave a car ot uo&e. | We also have a good line of Fence posts, range* I ing in price from ten to fifty centa. * Phone Red 29 and yon will receive prompt attention j LEININGER LUMBER COMPANY I ; THE NORTHWESTERN j Entered at fee Loup City Post'll tor -an s mission through the mails as second claas | matter. | Office Phone. Red 133. Residence, - Black 138 | J. \V. BURLEIGH.Editor and Pub. J. R GARDINER Manager i-—— - I Will Be Republican | Stampede in 1916 | Two years from now voters | will be tumbling over themselves | to vote the republican ticket. The | touch of hard times, which has j hit the east, will be on us before | that time. Then look out for a | republican landslide. The east, jj which has been going democratic | and progressive, has swung back } into the republican line. New ) York state is republican by 300. | 000, Cannon is reelected to the f house, from which he was. sum } marily kicked two years ago, Pen ) rose has carried Pensylvania, £ Cummins of Iowa is reelected and ^ so on down the line. Nebraska ) will be all right again when an | other chance comes around. A Gigantic Power Plant — AbouLfifteen prominent Grand Island business men made a trip to the Loup river near the town of Boelus to inspect the work that is being done on the big electric power project, when completed by November next will deliver into Grand Island between three and four thousand horse power of electJtjcity, \fhich, will be sold at i a povv'er rate of half that now paid by users of steam, according to I the Lincoln Daily Star. A part of the canal, which is to be three miles long has already been dug and a big dredge will be on the ground during the present week. The big dam 2,100 feet long across the river will not be built until next spring. A fter go ing over the work at the head of the canal, the party drove along the proposed course of the canal, some three miles distance, where it again empties into the Loup. Here is a sheer drop of thirty six. feet into the river and nearby is the site for the power house. From this point to Grand Island is twenty-seven miles and the transmission line will be built into that city in the early spring. The whole project is being financed by eastern capital, Mr. Sunny of Chicago, being one of the princi pal stockholders in1 the Imdertak ing. $otor Car Factory in Action Seen Here Packed to the point of standing room and after great crowds have been turned away, the Opera House was the scene of a com plete automobile factory in action Thursday night. The complete process of build* ing the famous Maxwell “25” from raw material to the finished car was shown and explained. Beginning at the steel mills, showing the preparation of raw stock, the testing in the chemical laboratories, then the foundry and forge shoos, and the machining of the parts were shown in detail. Possibly one of the most inter esting features is the final assem bly of the car and the different road testing put into practice by this Company. At no time did the interest of the audience wane and the pic tures were cleverly explained byi j an expert from the factory, who was thoroughly familiar with the subject and proved to be an interesting speaker. By illustrating and explaining the operations and manufacture it is easily seen how some of the industries of the United States have risen to the point where it is possible to give quality, refinement and finish at low cost. As an attraction, a travelogue feature was added which took up one thousand feet of film. California in all her beauty and splendor, the virgin forests of the Cascades in Washington and Ore gon, and the now famous drive of “Wild Bill” Turner in his Max well “25” where he broke the world’s record, were shown. Tiie Maxwell Agents through out the country have entertained in a similiar way a short time ago but the new features in the films as shown here Thursday night have certainly added to a great degree to the educational value of tills work. I What the Country Cousin Did A city man recently visited his “country cousin.” The man from the city wishing to explain the joy of metropolitan life, said: We have certainly been having fun the last few days. Thursday wc autoed to the country club and golfed until dark, then trollied back to own and danced until morning.” The country cousin not to be stumped in the least, so began telling some of the simple life: “We have had pretty good times here, too. One day we bug gied out to Uucle Ned’s and went out to the back lot, where we baseballed all that afternoon. In the evening we sneaked up into attic and pokered until morning.” A sturdy old farmer who was listening, not to be outdone, took up the conversation at this point and said: “I was having some fun about that time myself, I muled to the com field and gee hawed until sundown then I suppered till dark, piped until 9 o’clock, after which I bedsteaded until the clock lived, after which I breakfasted until it was time to go muling again.” Onde Tom’s Cabin Coming The teachers in the schools, the preachers in their pulpits, the press and in fact every right minded citizen endorses and en courages the attendance to see Uncle Tom’s cabin. Nothing is more discouraging however, than to see the false and cut versions as given by many so-called Uncle Tom’s Cabin Companies who do not even try to give a satisfactory performance. For nearly a quar ter of a century the Terry’s Big Uncle Tom’s Cabin Company has been the monarch of them all. This company uses the G. L. Aiken version which is acknow leged to be the only true repre sentation of the author’s story. This version is not used by other companies on amount of scenery required and the large cast. This company carries the best actors, Cuban bloodhounds, and every thing necessary to give a worthy presentation at Harriet Boer her i Stowe’s wonderful story of slav ery days. At the Opera house Saturday, November 28. Telegram Case Decision Rendered The case of the Telegram Co. vs. Anto M. Weidner was decided in district court at Columbus last week in favor of the plaintiff. The case was a suit for $2.35 due the plaintiff on subscription. Defend ant had subscribed for the Col umbus Telegram. When the year was up, the publisher continued to send the paper, as was their custom and as is the custom of most country papers. The defend ant Weidner continued to re ceive the paper for a year and seven months, then refused it. He was immediately sent a statement of account and refused to pay. Suit was started and won by the plaintiff. Defendant appealed to the dislrict court and the matter has dragged along for three years, finally being settled in flavor of the plaintiff, and the defendant will have to pay the $2.35 sub scription and a lot of costs. There has been a belief, which is erron eous, that newspaper subscriptions cannot be collected. If a man con tinues to take the paper he will have to pay if the neeessary legal steps are taken and he is good for the amount. Will SaveFifty Per Cent of Lives A preparation which, it is said, will stop almost instantly the flow of blood from a wound, has been invented by Prof. Theodore Koch er of Berne, who was awarded the Nobel prize of surgery in 1912. and his assistant, Dr. A. Fonce. The new preparation is called eoagulen. It is in the form of a powder and is dissolved in water before being applied to a wound. The discoverers of eoagulen have made a gift of their invention to the armies in the field and have, sent large quantities of the powder to the surgical headquarters of both the German and French armies. The discovery is regarded by medical men here as likely tosa\e the lives of thousands of soldier-, since it can be applied by untrai:i ed hands so that the wounded man himself or his comrade might u-e the solution. Who will be the winner of that beautiful 1915 Maxwell Touring car? Will it be you or one of your more ambitious friends? TAKE NOTICE ! _ 4 COPYRIGHT BY CO. V PRICK » *Z