|The^ Home Christmas Stiire I Henry M. Eisner _L___Reliable Jeweler I We Have Given Our Stock EspeciarAYnTioVanYHa^Ever^lYyY^F^ Very Lowest Possible Prices yth,ng Complete and at the Watches %, ^ % f Our Watch Stock is especially complete both in Ladies’ and Gents’. Come _ in and get our prices. >_ Chains for Men Everything new and up to date, such as Simmons G.L.P., and other well known makes. No limit on Guarantee China and Dinnerware We have a nice line of hand painted china which is always appreciated as a gift. Our dinnerware is complete both in plain and decorated ware % Rings Never were such values offered at such low prices. Quality absolutely guaranteed. Neckwear For the Ladies, Laveliers,Lockets,Chains and everything that is new and up-to-date. Come in and be convinced MHsical Instruments Harmonicas, Violins, Harps, Mandolins, and Pianos. Cut Glass Be sure and see our complete line of Cut Glass. Prices the lowest. Bracelets Both narrow, wide, square and round for small or large Ladies’. Complete line to make your choice from. For Men and Boys \ Cuff buttons, Tie Clasps and Pins, Coat Chains, The newest in belts, Safety Razors, Military sets, Brushes, Sterling silver pocket knives. Silverware We carry such makes as 1847 Rogers, Wallace, Community, Alvin. Be sure to let us show you the new Yourx* silverware, never blackens, can be sharpened and is absolutely guaranteed a life time Your Money Bade on Any Purchase Not Satisfactory. Remember We Compete With Any Mail Order House. Bring in Your Catalogue and Be Convinced. . . .i_ Scott Liked Work-Pro—. Scott, who was poet, novelist, law yer, too, would have been greatest of all as Journalist. Listen to this from his Journal for February 15, 1826: "Yesterday I did not write a line of •Woodstock.' Partly, I was a little out of spirits . . . Partly. I wanted to —lit for some new ideas. . . . Partly, I was a little too far beyond the press. 1 cannot pull well in long traces, when the draught la too far behind me. 1 love to have the press thumping, clat tering and banging in my rear; it cre ates the necessity which almost makes me work best. Needs must when the devil drives. . . . There is the very spirit of Journalism; and that devil. Surely, is the printer's devil!” One Thing Grouch Can Do. “A grouch,” observes the Jamestown Optimist, “adds to the happiness of i others only by keeping away from them.”—Kansas City Star. i • * wOrder df Hearing and Notice of Probate of Will. In the County Court of Sherman County, Nebraska. State of Nebraska, i ss Sherman County. ( To the heirs, legatees, devisees and uj ail persons interested in the es tate of Jacob F. Bock, deceased: On reading the petition of Ida D. Bock praying that the instrument filed in this court on the 4th day of December, 1914, and purporting to be last will and testament of the said deceased, maybe proved and allowed; and recorded as the last will and testament of Jacob F. Bock, deceased: that said instrument be admitted to probate, and the administration of said estate be granted to C. C. Carl sen, as executor. It is hereby order ed that you and all persons interested in said matter, may, and do appear at the county court to be held in and for said county on the 26th of December, I1 a D. 1914, at lOo'clock a. m., to show cause, if any there be. why the prayer of the petitioner should not be grant ed and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing there of be given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order in the Loup City, North pMapabem. a weekly newspaper printed in said countv, three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. v Witness mv hand, and seal of said court, this 7th day of December, A. D. 1914. E. A. Smith. (h-alI County Judge Last pub. Dec. 31. Notice to Creditors I of Nebraska, ) nan County, l In the County Court, e Matter of the Estate of J uli Waite, deceased, le creditors of said estate: u are hereby notified that I will t, the county court room in Loup in said coanty, on the 31st day fcrch 1915, at 10 o’clock a. m.and 6th, day of July 1915, jcelve and examine all claims «t said estate, with a view to adjustment and allowance, time limited for the presentation aims said estate is the is ooeyear from the 24th day of Nov my hand and the seal of "county court, this 7th day of emberJ1914 E. A. Smith, [meai.] County Judge. . _i Unde Toni’s Cabin Comments Some little time since, an Unde Tom's Cabin Co. played in the opera house here and the thing was so bum that the Northwestern was too pen paralyzed over it to grasp the situation. The same company visited Clay Center, this state, last week and the Sun emerged from pen paralysis suffi cient to say of the Terry outfit: “They cut out one death scene that used to be good for a few tears; they had a fat Ophelia; Uncle Tom couldn’t sing “There’s a Land of Spirits Bright,” and the most heineous offense of all, they didn’t give us that grand old $10,000 transformation scene, whereas we used to see the gates of paradise swing open and in the melting glow of two bits worth of red fire see little Eva do her aerial stunt. A Tom show with these omissions is akin to a Hamlet pre sentation, without the melancholy Dane. And the bun spoke not of the lack of fierce bloodhounds, only one poor lustreless old dog being on the job and he forgot to show himself in the parade or in the chase of the wabbling Eliza, who “fled'’ across the stage from wing to wing in her perilous jour ney over the “icewhile the fight between Haley, Lawyer Marks and the poor hound on the one side, and the Quaker and Harris on the other, from opposite sides of the stage, with lack of rocky, mountaineous stage settings, was too utterly painful to witness. The Sun also forgot to mention that the “sun-kissed, bright haired” little Eva wore an abund ance of “raven-colored caput cov ering” and t hat Topsy was so poor in action and in dialect that it gave the audience severe pain. The Sun forgot to mention, also, that Lagree thought he was play ing to an audience in some dis tant town and nearly split the ear-drums of those present with his Krupp gun lines. And while the Sun was about it, it might have noticed that Haley and La gree character doubling was too much for the actor who seemed to think he was playing both char acters at one time, but the paper is forgiven for its sins of omis sion, when it says: “There was not an actor in the whole combi nation, and, to one familiar with with U. T. C. companies, this was just as it should be, for one only goes to see Uncle Tom nowadays in order to have childhood recol lections revived." Reed-Crockett A quiet but pretty wedding was solemnized last evening at the home of the bride when Hattie L. Reed and Eli Crockett were united in marriage Rev. Warren of the Methodist Episcopal church offici ating. Only the immediate relatives and a few others were present at the marriage which occured just as the six o'clock bells were chim ing. Following the ceremony at the house the wedding party went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ainslie Davis where dinner was served and the evening spent in social converse. Both parties are well and favor ably known here and need little introduction. During the two years Mrs. Crockett has resided here she has created a wide ac quaintance as proprietor of the Electric theatre and every man, woman and child knows and ad mires her for her kind and courte ous manner. Mr. Crockett has been a resident of Greeley for many years, and practically all his life has been spent here with the exception of the time he was in the lumber business at Belfast and merchandising at Horace. Mrs. Crockett states that she will continue in active manage ment of the Electric while Mr. Crockett, at least for the present, will oversee the work of the dray line. Later he may enter into an other line of business, but as yet has not fully decided. This paper feels confident the heartiest, best wishes of all is ex tended to them—Greeley Lender Independent, Dec. 10. Clever Deception. Men who craned their necks and bun tied against each other to get a look at the girl on exhibition in one of the store windows were given the laugh by women in the crowd. The flutter ing of the girl’s parasol, and the blow ing of her dress convinced the men that they were looking at a “living model,” and It was not until they had gazed at it for some time that they discovered they had been fooled. By arrangements of fans the breeze gen tly blew' the gown worn by the wax figure, and also her parasol. Her hair was blown about her face In a most bewitching fashion and more than one man exclaimed, “Isn’t she a peach! ” and discovered his error when the women in the crowd snickered.— Worcester Post Barney Oldfield Breaks World’s Non Stop Road Race Record in a Maxwell WES — « ' i 1 GEORGB Wo B. ATKJK*. Yier-mWIBOfT .VfOERE BROOKS. vtCMMSBl R^jEiy^AT WODWARD AVEII OCTROITt III CM* == los angeleo Calif not 2twi4 MR. WALTER E. FLANDERS, PRE8I0ENY MAXWELL MOTOR COMPANY, INCORPORATED DETROIT MICH. IN ALL MY EXPERIENCE IN THE RACING GAME, NEVER HAVE 9 HAD A8 8ATIGFACT0fllV A MOUNT AS THE MAXWELL NIWBER •f4* WHICH I DROVE IN THE CORONA ROAD RACf THANKSGIVING OAY WITH PRACTICALLY NO PREPARATION IN A CAR WITH WHICH I WAD ABSOLUTELY UNFAMILIAR. I WENT THE ENTIRE 301 MILE8 WITHOUT A SINGLE STOP, THEREBY ESTABLISHING A NEW VgRLD'S NONE 8T0P ROAD RACE RECORD AND finishing in Second “LACE, the Maxwell can 8CHAYE0 in PERFECT SHAPE, RAN COOL AND SMOOTH THROUGH THE ENTIRE RACE AND HAD PLEHTY OF SPEED Vow PNV RACE. I HAD IT HOPED THAT OS MILES PER_HOUR. WOULD WIN THE RACE, THAI WAS THE REASON I AVERAGED ONLY 85-SMILES. CAR I DROVE WAS THE MOOT CONSISTENT PERFORMER IN THE RACE. TIRES SHOWED PRACTICALLY NO WEAR* U6ED S3 GALLONS OF GASOLINE - 3 GALLONS OF OIL, NO WATER. barney oloficlo. _ 518PM, Barney Oldfield has driven dozens of different makes of racing cars. His unqualified endorse ment of the Maxwell Racer he drove in the Corona Race—speaks for itself. SEE THE NEW 1915 MAXWELL AT JOHN BLASKA, Agent Loup City, Nebraska.