r I ''O hold “its place in the sun,” is the avowed purpose of a great nation’s conflict. To hold “its plaee in the sun,” is the object of every business in the great fight for industrial and commercial supremacy. To be able to hold “its place in the sun,”is the supreme test of an asphalt roof. It is the sun, not rain or snow, that plays havoc with a roof. If it can resist the drying out process of the sun beating down upon it, day after day, the rain or snow will not affect it except to wash it clean and keep it sanitary. Certain-teed 4 Roofing h- takes ‘‘its place in the sun” and holds it longer than other similar roofing, because it is made of the very best quality roofing felt, thoroughly saturated with the correct blend of soft asphalts, 3$d coated with a blend cf harder asphalts. This outer coating keeps the inner saturation soft, and prevents the drying out process so destructive to the ordinary roof. The blend of asphalts used by ‘‘The General* is the result cf long experience. It produces a roofing more pliable than those which have less saturation, and which are, therefore, harder and drier. At each of the General’s big mills, expert chemists are constantly employed to refine, test and blend the asphalts used; also to experi ment forp ssibie improvements. Their constant endeavor .s t^. male the beet roofing still better. The quality o: CERTAIN-TEED is such that it is guaranteed for 5,10 or 15 years, according to thickness (1, 2 or 3 ply). Experience proves that it lasts joe ,-er. Behind this guarantee is the responsibility of the world’s largest manufac turer cf roofings and building papers. The General make* one third of Ameri ca's supply of as phalt roll roofing. His facilities arc unequal ed, and he is able to produce the highest quality roofing at the lowest manufactur ing cost. CERTAIN-TEED is made in rolls; also in slate covered shin gles.There isatype of CERTAIN-TEED for every kind of buUdirv, with flat or pitched roofs, from the largest sky-scrap er to the smallest residence or out building. CERTAIN-TEED is so:’ by responsible dealers all over tbe world, at reasonable prices. Investigate it belore you decide on any type of root. General Roofing Manufacturing Company World s Lcrgeci Manufacturer of Roofing: and Building Paper* Htrv ' - ■- CUcuco FhiUcsichia Si. Lotus Boat on Cleveland ritt'AC;,;. ire -oil _ £<12: Francisco Laa Afiocx-r. Miiwaukae Cincinnati f*rw C ns MiBa. npoJii Se«ttk* ienrvsae City lodionopoMa - Lichncn.i D&s Moin«; r-ou/ton Durath London Sydney i'ciijriarhu:lwo. i» n< ; llooHne Manufacture Co. I BRING YOUR GRAIN I I TO THE 1 Loup City Mill & Light Co. ! Furnishes all the light and povrer and also makes the best of Hour. Handled bv ail Merchants. % BUY FLOUR THAT IS MADE IN LOUP CITY HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF Hard and Soft Coal I TAYLOR’S ELEVATOR LOUP CITY, NEBRASKA » j SCHMOLLER & MUELLER I Quality Pianos and Player Pianos Now offered and sold direct from I Factory to Home. NY ONE intending, to purchase a Piano or Player Piano within the next year should not fail to take advantage of our special proposition to first buyers in your community, for it means a round saving of at least $100 to you. Schmoller & Moeller Instruments are Mechanically Correct and contain a sweet mellow rich tone—a quality that lingers in the memory in vivid contrast to instruments ordinarily sold on the Special Sales Plan. Our 57 years of continued success in the piano business gives you the advantage of our experience and our 25 year guarantee, backed by our eutire Capital and Resources of over $1,000,000.00, affords you absolute protection. We deliver our instruments free to your home and arrange terms to suit your convenience, 3 to 5 years to pay. Beautiful new designs in GRANDS, UPRIGHTS and PLAYERS. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER PIANO CO. Largest Retailers cf Pianos in the World. F 165 1311-13 Farnam St., - OMAHA, NEBR. Mail Thia Coupon To-day ior Catalog, and Information of our Free Trial Offer in your NAME..-.— ADDRESS....... CULTIVATION OF MUSHROOMS. This information is told plainly in a special illustrated article which is printed in this issue of The North western. Perhaps the knowledge hlping you arn some extra money. Read it. anyway. We think it is well worth while. Read The Northwestern every week HEADWORK IN THE SHADE. When the scorching sun of summer days sends us scampering for the shade we think only of the comfort that is to greet us when we reach the goal. Our brains relax, our minds become drowsy, and the hours pass into his torv without anything of value being accomplished. And that is where we fail to grasp one of our golden opportunities— where opportunity passes us by with out a beckoning hand from us. We reach the shade and it feels good, and our thoughts refuse to wander into other and more profitable j fields. We are killing time, and time ! once dead is never revived. The relaxation we need and should , have, but the hours spent in the ; shade might be turned to good ad vantage by devoting at least a portion I of the time to the working out of some of the many complex problems of ltusi ness that present themselves in fhe journey of life. When we are at work our minds should be centered wholly upon that work if it is to be successfully accom plished. There is no room for other ' thought or action. But while in the shade in the sum mer time there is abundant opportu- i nitv for devising ways and means of putting the coming hours to more profitable use. He who wastes his time squander' the greatest substance of life, but the man who devotes his idle moments to planning for the busy ones to come is like unto the honey bee that hoards his substance against the day when there is none to be found. Hunt the shade on the scorching days, but think while you rest. The results will more than compensate for the effort. WHAT DO WE GET? According to a press dispatch from Washington congress, the state gov ernments. counties and townships will spend $250,000,000 a year for the next five years on the improvement and maintenance of the roads of the country. That statement in itself is of absorbing interest to every citizen 01 these United States. But a question of still more vita! in terest to us locally and personally id. “How much do we get?” The people of our community of course can decide what we ourselves are to expend in good roads, but when it comes to the expenditure by the federal and state governments we are ! much of the opinion that the early bird will get the biggest worm. In other and plainer words the fed eral government allots a certain S amount of money to each state for im proving its roads. Then comes the question of where and how that money is to be spent. We do not know just what policy i will be pursued in this state, but we do know that it will be clearly to our interest to get out in force and hustle for a good slice of this amount for road improvement in our own terri tory. The Lord knows we need road im provement. but He will not aid us in the getting if we are not alive to our own opportunities. Everybody hereabouts wants good I roads and is quite willing to profit - personally from their construction. ; But how many, think you. are willing to devote the necessary time and en ergy to securing the allotment to | which which we are entitled? How much do we get? Or. better still, do we get anything? FALSE PROPHETS. Several years ago acumbersome con trivance on two wheels made its ap pearance and created a furore of ridi cule. laughter and Jeers. It was the bicycle. It was called a rich man’s toy and a mollycoddle's plaything and a short life was predicted. But the prophets were at fault, the bicycle be came the greatest craze of its day, and now is in general use as a practi cal necessity for people who find it necessary to cover ground hurriedly and yet can not afford the .more ex pensive means. A few years later another ugly looking monster puffed and snorted and rattled its way into public notice, leaving in its wake a streak of smoke and foul smelling odors. It was the automobile, and it, too. was greeted with wild shouts and grimaces of ridi cule. The wise and the unwise both predicted its failure as a practical ve hicle of motive power. Yet the mil lions in use today testify to the false ness of the greatest of our prophets A few weeks ago there appeared ir. one of our Atlantic coast ports a great , and powerful merchant submarine. !t came from Germany and had nosed its way beneath the surface into neutral waters despite the watchfulness of the tvarships of the allies. Another furore was created and the news papers were filled with accounts of the wonderful craft that had made its way across the Atlantic with a cargo of goods. Again the prophets see failure ahead, but there are those believe the Deutschland to be but the harbinger of a great fleet of under w-ater craft capable of conducting commercial relations with other conn tries irrespective of blockades or enemy ships of war. These few instances but illustrate | the fact that the ingenuity of man is yet in its infancy, that the surface of scientific discovery has scarcely been scratched, and that our children and our children's children will look back upon 1916 as we think of the dark ages, when the mind of man was sleeping in its cradle of lethargy. TEACHERS’ EXAMINATION. The State Superintendent has called a special examination for Saturday. August 19, one day only. Only county certificate subjects will be offered. No reading circle examination. All forenoon subjects will be given Satur day’ forenoon, and all afternoon sub jects will be given Saturday afternoon. L. H. CURRIER. County Superintendent. That fellow who dropped in the other day from the north pole can probably give us an accurate descrip tion of the fires of hell. LIVESTOCK PRICES AT SOUTH OJIAKA Cattle Karkel Steady to Lcv.xr; Heavy Receipts BOSS FR0H¥l5c LOWER Lambs Still On the Decline. Packers Fill Orders at 15,225c Reductions. Steady Trade for Sheep. Killers Able to Get Only a Few—Good Ewes Bring $6.55. Feeders Steady to Strong—More Than One Load at $16.00. Union Stock Yards, South Omaha, Nebr., August 15, 1916.—The week opened with the heaviest cattle run since January. Tr.ere were 428 cars, or about 11,000 head. Com fed cattle made up a small proportion of Mon day's receipts, and the quality of the limited offerings was only fair. Dressed beef men apparently wanted the natives, however, and anything at all desirable went at about ttie same figures as last week. Very good med ium and heavy cattle sold around $9.65f39.75, and common to fair 1,000 to 1.250-pound beeves brought $8,752 9.;!5. Quotations on cattle: Good to choice yearlings, $0.75# 10.15; fair to good yearlings, $8.75@9.50; common to fair yearlings, $6.50# 8.50; good :o choice beeves. $9.65@10.05; fair to good teoves. $9.00#'9.60; common to fair beeves. $7.75@8.75; good to choice heifers. $6.75@7.50; good to choice cows, $6.50# 7.25; fair to good cows, $6.00#6.40; canners and cut ters. $4.00# 5.75; veal calves, $9/>0# 11.00; bologna bulls, $5.75@6.15; beef bulls, $G.00@7.25. Just an ordinary run of hogs show ed up for Monday, arrivals being es timated at 101 cars, or 6,700 head Shippers took about the same propor tion of the offerings as they did on most days last week at about 10c low er prices. A good share of the hog sold at a spread of $0.45#9.65, with the top as high as $10.10. Monday’s receipts of sheep and lambs were not overly heavy, some 50 cars, or about 13.500 head belli reported in. The packers bought a few odd loads of lambs in good sea son at prices that were not consider ed more than 10# 15c lower, however, on the bulk of the offerings they bid a quarter or more lower right from ’he start The bulk of the good iambs brought $10.60, and with the fair to decent kinds on down to $10.35. There was very few old sheep ofiered and they brought steady figures. A couple of bunches of ewes brought as high as $6.55. Quotations on sheep and lambs: Lambs, good to choice, $10.35# 10.60; lambs, fair to good, $10.00# 10.35; lambs, feeders, $9.25 @10.00: yearlings, good to choice, $7.00# 7.25; yearlings, fair to good. $6.50#7.00; yearlings, feeders, $6.50@7.50; weth ers, fair to choice, $6.25#7.00; ewes, good to choice, $6,351(6.75; ewes, fair to good, $5.75#'6.35; ewes, plain to culls, $4.00# 5.75; ewes, feeders, $4.50 #6.10; ewes, breeders, all ages, $6.25 # 9.00. ENGINE TROUBLE. Engine trouble can be traced to one or more of the following reasons. a;> cording to the Department of Agri culture Engineering of the College of Agriculture: Poor compression, caused by a leaky spark plug, leaky valve cap, leaky valve, leaks past the piston, \ tappet arms adjusted too closely, sticky valve stem, and broken valve ; spring or valve. Poor ignition, caused by a broken spark plug, points on spark plug too close or far apart, poor batteries, poor, insulation, poor contact points, and 1 weak magnets on magneto. Poor carburetion. caused by water ! in the gasoline, carburetor out of ad j justment, leaky manifold, clogging of i gasoline pipe, and carburetor too cold. j Overheated motor, caused by poor compression, carbon, too late igni tion. and poor water circulation. C-OODiDOOOOjX DECRYING INTERFERENCE, g WE INTERFERED IN MEX- £ j ICO EXASPERATINGLY. Y The dealings of the Adminis- g ■ tration with Mexico constitute a p confused chapter of blunders, g i VVe have not helped Mexico. She g lies prostrate, impoverished, famlne-6tricken, overwhelmed with the woes and outrages of internecine strife, the helpless victim of a condition of anarchy which the course of the Admin istration only served to promote. For ourselves, we have wit nessed the murder of our citi zens and the destruction of their property. We have made ene mies. not friends. Instead of commanding respect and de serving good will by sincerity, firmness, and consistency, we provoked misapprehension and deep resentment In the light of the conduct of the Admin- Y istration no one could under- p stand its professions. Decrying g interference, we Interfered most g exasperatingly. We have not Y even kept out of actual con- o filet, and the soli of Mexico is g stained with the blood of our y soldiers. We have resorted to physical invasion, only to retire without gaining the professed object. It Is a record which cannot be examined without a profound sense of humiliation.— Prom Mr. Hughes’ speech of acceptance. . _ ria^aeB3£8SCfiO£8Q8X8^ Sunshine is healthy, but the shady spot of a tree is darned comfortable on a hot day. There’s a lot of good sound horse sense in this town, but we’d like to see it galloping around at a livelier E. P. DAILY FURNITURE CO. Sells for less and pays the freight Liggett & Platt Spiral Spring These springs are the products of two of the largest exclusive bed spring factories in the world. Guaranteed for life at a price within the reach of all. j We also have a complete line of brass and steel beds, steel couches and cots. Come in and inspect our rugs and linoleums. We carry a complete line of all grades. Get our special prices on porch and lawn furniture. E. F. DAILY FURNITURE CO. Your money’s worth or your money hack How Much Is Now Left of the Bal timore Platform? The President had boldly signed the Pork River and Harbor bill, and his facile pen Is dripping with ink eager to attach itself to a Pork Public Buildings bill. The friendliest apologists of the President's part in the profligate waste of money wrung from the peo ple by oppressive taxation have noth ing better to say for him than that it Is hardly fair to expect & man to say "I forbid!” in this Presidential year when he is a candidate. The foregoing words describing the profligate waste of the people’s money with Executive approvad are taken without change from a plank of the platform on which Woodrow Wilson was elected in 1912: "We denounce the profligate waste at money wrung from the people b> oppressive taxation through the lavish appropriations of recent Re publican Congresses, which have kept taxes high and reduced the purchasing power of the people’s toiL We demand a return to that simplicity and economy which be fits a democratic government.” How much is now left of the prin eiples declared and the promises reg istered at Baltimore as inducements to citizens to vote for Wilson. Possibly it is because he and his party have been such reckless, such wholesale repudlators of the pledges of 1912 that few people remember or care to remember what pledges were made in his behalf about forty days ago at St. Louis.—New York Sun. o ADEQUATE NATIONAL DEFENSE DEMANDED We demand adequate national defense: adequate protection on both our Western and Eastern .. coasts. We demand thorough- £ ness and efficiency In both arms of the service. It seems to be plain that our regular army is too small. We are too great a country to require of our citi zens who are engaged in peace ful vocations the sort of mili tary service to which they are now called. As well Insist that our citizens In this metropolis be summoned to put out fires and police the streets. We do not count it Inconsistent with our liberties, or with our demo cratic idea’s, to have an ade quate police force. With a pop ulation of nearly one hundred millions we need to be surer of ourselves than sto become alarmed at the prospect of hav tng a regular army which can reasonably protect our border and perform such other military serviee as may be required, i-i the absence of a grave emcr gency. I believe, further, that there should be not only a rea sonable increase in the regular army, but that the first citizen reserve subject to call should be enlisted as a Federal army and trained under Federal au thority. — From Mr. Hughes’ speech of acceptance. Death is not worrying us, but to be forgotten after doatn induces us to Business and professional Guide 1 J. E. SCOTT Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director With Daily Furniture Co. Loup City, - . . Nebraska C. E. SWEETLAND Plumber & Electrician For good, clean and neat work Satisfaction Guaranteed Come and Get My Prices 0. S. MASON Plumbing and Heating. Tinwork. Loup City, . . . Nebraska WALTER THORNTON Dray and Transfer Call Lumber Yards or Taylor’s Elevator Phone Brown 43 J. E. Bowman, M. D. Carrie L. Bowman, M. D. BOWMAN & BOWMAN Physicians and Surgeons °hone 114 LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA S. A. ALLEN Dentist Office Upstairs in the New State Bank Building LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA W. L. MARCY Dentist Office: East Side Public Square Phone Brown 116 LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA E. T. BEUSHAUSEN Licensed Embalmer Funeral Director Former Governor Hanlv of Indiana has been placed by the prohibitionists among the notables who have been notified of their notability. He sur vived the shock. “Most people act natural while asdeep,” avers an ‘exchange. Includ Counting chickens before they are hatched is a pleasant pastime, pro vided they do not croak in the pip ping. We are frank to admit that dead men tell no tales, but a lot of tales are told about them after they are