The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, December 28, 1916, Image 8

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    NOT1.' if at its best and is the one best choice as
• winter vacation resort.
Von whose work keeps you from taking a
aonmer vacation will find in California ideal sum
mer erudition* all winter long.
I'ian your trip now and be sure to travel via
Union Pacific System
Flat daily train* to California—less than three days to
Mti the trip
Ait ' r Jttonture or :nfotma.tiot> that trill save you money
am yvttr < aifotx.a trip Address W. S Uaaiuger, C P. A..
Cwpahi. Ne*i, or apply to
Union Pacific Agent
There is a Location for You Along the C., B. & Q.
STRIKE WHERE THE IROR IS HOT
Homesteads
Deeded Lands
Industrial Opportunities
Await You at Points Along Our Lines
Wyoaiig, Western Nebraska, Northeastern
Colorado and Southern Montana
The b ?:.•-••»<!. the v vernm.-t irrigated farm, the gig grain
Mu. the dairy < eaters along oar Lines West are to me intimately
I -a# put you m t>> ai h with opportunities in any of these
localities
Write TODAY f.*r itv * ll:g H m Basin.” "Shoshone Project.” “Free
Cwtfiiaiin Land.” "North Platte Valley." "Southwestern
Nebraska'. "Colorado" folders, sent free on request.
& B. HOWARD, lmm g'ation Agent. C. B. & Q. R. R. Co.,
1004 Farnam Street. Omaha. Nebraska.
Say, How is
Your Light?
Winter is here. Try !
the Electric Lights and
you will use no other
We now have our new plant running. Also have an
experienced electrician and want a chance to figure
on WIRING YOUR HOUSE. We sell the celebrated
WESTINGHOUSE MADZA LAMPS. We sell wash
ing machines. We sell the Alamo Farm Lighting plants
Loup City Mill & Light
Company
I THE TRUTH ABOUT PILES I
1 Read this Ord Man’s Letter
Ord. Neb . He- IS. 1*1«.
Dr Kwh.
Grand Iriand. Neb
Dear Doctor:
I bare takes your
|*ie treatment and m reer
wei! aattsbec and pleased
that I bare been able to ob
tain a cure without an opera
Don It Ciena me a pent deal
of ptaaanrc to send you tb*
letter for the bene!-! of many
others I know are suffering
a* 1 did My advice to them >»
to take roar treatment I
recommend you meet heir.,
ly lor the rood you have dot e
me. and will be clad to an*
wer may inquiry made of
E. L JOHNSON.
Ord. Neb.
Ed Johnson is a well known stock
buver. has lived in Ord for many
years, therefor his letter should co?t
rince you of the truth of my claims.
1 positively guarantee to cure your
piles without cutting, either of chloro
form. The dangerous complications
arising from surgical operations are
several, and are frequently unavoid
able Some operations are necessary,
but a surgical operation for piles—
NEVER.
"'by endanger your life, when there
is an easier and safer way to obtain
the same and even a better result.
Stay on your feet, tend to vour busi
ne-s. and work while being cured.
I>r. Rich. Specialist. Grand Island.
Neb. piles and rupture cured without
an operation. Chronic diseases of
men and women. Skin and blood
diseases. Examination and consulta
tion free.
Oi-ice over Clayton's Drug Store.
Office Phone 303. Res. Phone 212. Ap
pointments made by phone or letter.
DOCTOR RICH
Grand Island, Nebraska
XMJ THE HORTH WESTERN AD SEE VICK—IT PATS
HAZARD NEWS.
O. J. Walthers went to Grand Island
last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. .MiGriff were Ravenna
callers. Friday.
Lew Hennis and son. Joe. were Ra
venna callers. Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Cronon went to
Graflid Island Christmas.
M. P. Peck returned home from
Grand Island Sunday evening.
R. E. Gilmore of York, was a busi- J
ness caller in Hazard .Friday.
Ray Ward has returned from Mason
and will stay here for the present.
Mrs. Aaron Smith and daughter, j
Hazel, were Ravenna callers. Satur- j
day.
James Erazim is spendng the ho!i-1
days with home folks. He lives in
Ravenna.
Miss Alta Shottenkirk went to
W oc d River to spend the holidays with
relatives.
Mrs. L. Reed a*nd two children went
to Cairo. Saturday, and returned on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Beyers went to York on
Saturday, to spend the holidays with
friends and relatives.
Miss Hazel Windfield went to York.
Saturday, to spend the holidays with
her parents and friends.
Jake Ernst came home from Lin
coln Saturday night where he has
been working for several months.
Mrs. John Benson started Friday for
Osceola. Iowa, to visit with her par
ents and relatives during the holidays.
Bennie Dillon was here Sunday and
Monday visiting Joe Hennis and
friends. He returned home to York
A UCOUd) .
Edwin Larson and Andrew' Anderson
returned home last Thursday from
' ork. to spend the holidavs with home
folks.
-Mr. and Mrs Myers Benson and
children, John Olson and Harry
Thompson, were shopping in Ravenna.
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Reyter of Hastings
returned home Christmas Day. They
visited Mrs. Reyter’s parents for a
few days.
George Brent went to York Sunday
to visit with his folks and spend
Chrstmas with them returning home
Tuesday morning.
Rev. Langseth went to Grand Island
last Saturday and on Sunday morning
he preached at St. Libory, returning
home Sunday evening.
Rev. Langseth went to Broken Bow
Christmas. From there he will go to
Hemmingford, where he is engaged
in pastoral work.
Ed and Carl Jacobson. Lewis Rob
ertson and Arthur Holdt went to
Mason City on 3it. Christmas to visit
friends and relatives.
Charles Hall started Friday for
Stockton. Kansas, to visit his mother
and relatives. Mr. Hall has not seen
his mother for eighteen years.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Reynolds of
Cairo are visiting Mr. Reynolds’ par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. Rube Reynolds.
They arrived Sunday evening.
Mrs. Jacob Benson, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Cronson. Alvena and Arthur
Peters and Mary Erazim, were callers
in Grand Island, last Wednesday.
A. Russell returned to Ravenna, on
Thursday, after checking up some busi
ness here for Mr. Stapleton, who has
charge of the lumber yards at the
present time.
Lewis Lade received some minor
injuries while shelling corn for Mike
Walsh. Dr. Johnson was called and he
is getting along fine and went to work
the next day.
C. W. Trumble left for Lincoln
Tuesday night where he will look for
a place and his family will move there
soon. He will probably be away three
months.
Mrs. Fuller, the postmistress has
been under the weather for severhl
days with la grippe. Dr. Johnson has
been waiting on her and she is much
improved.
Church Notes
There were seventy-five attended
Sunday School. After the lesson, the
treat was given to the scholars.
1 u* -t> 'as a Christmas tree at the
Lutheran Sweetwater church Christ
mas eve. Also an entertainment was
given.
At 7:30 Sunday night the Sunday
School scholars gave an entertain
ment to a packed house. Rev. Troy
and wife of Litchfield were present.
Rev. Troy delivered an oration on the
story of Christmas. The program was
very entertaining throughout and
was appreciated by all. t
LITCHFIELD EVENTS.
Virgil Weller went east on 40 Satur
! day.
Dr. C. E. Paul ate Christmas dinner
! with W. J. Heapy.
Carl Halbeisen shipped a car of hogs
, to Omaha on Thursday.
Hane Lang and wife were passen
| gers to Ravenna on 40 Sunday.
Prussie Harris is confined to her
bed with la grippe the last week.
Fred Robinson left on 43 Christmas
i for Omaha where he has a position.
Gavlan Ward came in on 43 Sunday
morning to spend Christmas with his
parents.
Mrs. John Duncan and son were
passengers to Grand Island on 40
Saturday.
John Vian shipped a load of good
fat steers to the South Omaha market
on Thursday.
H. Burtner of Clear Creek sold a
Pooled Durham bull to James Phillips
of Anselmo.
Robert Fisher and Bister. Miss
Jessie Fisher returned to Lincoln on
44 Christmas night.
The old lady Roberts left on 40
Tuesday morning for Ord to visit
relatives and friends.
Paul Heisner and wife came in on
39 Tuesday' to see Mrs. Wm. Boeck
ing who is quite sick.
Jack Rightenour and family ate
: Christmas dinner with Eld Clancy and
wife. Jack was able to walk borne.
• U ■
I
«NO OTHER LIKE IT.
NO OTHER AS GOOD.
Purchase the “ NEW HOME **^ and you will have
a life asset at the price you pay. The elimination of
repair expense by superior workmanship and best
Quality of material insures life-long service at mini*
mum cost. Insist on haring the “NEW HOME**.
WARRANTED FOR ALL TIME.
Known the world over for superior sewing Qualities.
Not sold under any other name.
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO^RANSE.MASS.
FOB BALK nr
E. P. DAILY FURNITURE CO.
Irvin Kenyon came up on 43, Wed
nesday morning to spend a eonple of
weeks with his people an^ friends.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Jenkins returned
to Lincoln after spending Xmas with
Mrs. Jenkin’s parents, the Fishers.
James Gill, George Dicherson and
Calvin Lewis were passengers to Ra
venna on 40. Wednesday returning on
39.
Miss McKenzie was a passenger
east on 40 Sunday morning for Lin
coln to spend her vacation with
friends.
Mrs. Verge Weller and Mrs. John
Haller were passengers to Grand is
land on 40. Thursday returning on 39
in the evening.
Mrs: Ray Musselman was a passen
ger east on 40. Thursday morning to
spend the holidays with her parents
at Greeley Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pace were
passengers on 40. Sunday morning to
spend Christmas with relatives and
friends at Kearney.
Adam Kebortz and family were pas
sengers to Bradshaw on 40 Sunday
to spend the holiday's with Mrs.
Kebortz's parents.
Mrs. Guy Pearce and son left on 40
Friday morning for Osceola, to spend
the holidays and take a two weeks
visit with her folks.
Albert Boeeking and wife were
passengers on 40. Sunday morning
to spend Xmas with Mrs Boecking's
parents at Kearney.
Irwin Kenvon returned to Lincoln
on Tuesday morning after spending
the holidays with his parents and
brothers and sisters.
Mrs. Ben Spelts was a passenger
on 40 Saturday morning. Her destina
tion was Gibbon and Kearney for the
holidays. Benn will batch.
C. E. Aehenbach shipped a car of
hogs to South Omaha on Christmas
Day and Charles Givens shipped one
of cattle and one of hogs.
C. E. Aehenbach shipped a car of
hogs to South Omaha on Tuesday.
Carl Givens a car of hogs and Carl
Halbeison a load of cattle.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Potter motored
out to Fred Richmond's on Christmas
day and enjoyed the bounteous re
past put up by Mrs. Richmond.
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Alexander of
Kearney are spending their Christmas
holidays with Mrs. Alexander’s par
ents, the Stewart’s east of town.
Everett Morse was quite badly in
jured on Sunday morning by a
stationary gas engine falling on him.
It was thought his leg was broken.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Easterbrook
were passengers east on 40. Wednes
day morning to spend the holidays
with friends and relatives at Hebron,
Nebr.
V
Mrs. Ellen Rightenour received a
telephone message Christmas day in
forming her of the death of her
cousin, a sou of Wm. Baily who lived
at Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Easterbrook and
family were pass»»g“rs
Saturday morning w>( old home
in Thayer county tcHSwfend an Eas
terbrook reunion.
Dr. and Mrs. Rumery of Mason City
and Luther Rumery and wife came
down on Sunday to eat dinner with
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Rumery on *0
Sunday returning on 39.
Ed Burton and wife of Kearnev.
brother-in-law of P. Brundige and
Bransom Ingolds, of Elsie, qhase
county visited the Brundiges last week
returning home on 40. Saturday.
On Friday afternoon. Dec. 2, quite
a number of the patrons of school
District No. 64 were highly enter-1
tained by Miss Florence Stewart and I
her pupils in a Christmas program.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Whitmore and I
H. W> Whitmore were in town on I
Wednesday morning to meet their
daughters who came up from their
school at Lincoln to spend the holi
days at home.
Mrs. Jessie Friend, daughter of Geo.
Kenyon, a trained nurse, who after
taking care of Mrs. Kohl's child and j
spending Xmas with. her parents. |
brothers and sisters left on 40 for
Omaha Tuesday morning.
George and Loe Claypool. children
of Bert Claypool. who used to live
south of town but now living some
where in Minn., who have been visit
ing with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kentzeler.
a few days returned east on 40 Friday
morning.
E. J. Clark received a telegram on
I - <.« pmTMftisUK«OMtry'»{>n>«t*ritr I
■ t»f t>crt«ct>«c rc«r Mn-.wv ■
I JERRY A. MATHEWS *«•«« , I
Closing Out Sale Now in
its Last Days
Hurry, and secure some of the wonderful bar
gains we are now offering. Everything to be
closed out regardless of former price—its the
sale of sales—come soon or you will be too late.
PIZER & CO.
-1
Monday that his father-in-law had
died. Mrs. Clark and her brother
Call Wills, and Mrs. Wills left on 4fl
for Bradshaw on Christmas morning
Mr. Clark will go tomorrow to attend
the funeral.
We had an old fashioned country
dinner (Family Style) at the Litcn
field hotel on Christmas day. Alfred
Flint furnished the plum pudding thai
was sent to him by his daughter, Mrs
A. G. Bower, of Kearney. The sauce
was appropriate and the chicken fine
and the time Par Excellent.
Three brothers of Frank Hartman
came over after his remains. They
left for Amherst on Thursday after
noon. Henry Arnett hauled the body
Our undertaker C. H. Potter cleaned
up the parts and bound them together
as well as could be done and placed
them in a casket . It was all that
could be done.
Mr. ana Airs. Arthur Hughes were
passengers to Lincoln on 40. Tuesday
morning to visit Mr. and Mrs. Dr
Plumer and attend the wedding oi
their neice, Alice Shaw, who lived
here with her mother, Mrs. Charles
Hobson. After her mother’s death she
was taken care of by her guardian. Dr
Plumer.
The remnants of Frank Hartman's
l odyT. who was run over by 44 goins
east on Monday evening was brought
up from Hazard on Wednesday morn
ing by Dr. Rydberg and Charier Pot
ter. A number of us old neighb -s o<
his are satisfied without a doubt after
careful inspection that it was Frau'
Hartman. although he was chopped
all to pieces. His clothes and his eve
that he shot out and the bullet scat
are plainly visible.
MUST BE CORRECTED.
It is necessary for the good of the
country that the republican party con
t'nue to exist. There are many issues
which the republican party, if brave
enough, can take a hand in settling,
if there had been' free voting even
among the white men of the south
President Wilson would not have been
re-elected. No law prevents a white
man from voting the republican ticket
in the south, but public opinion re
strains him. The old rebel cause has
considerable to do with the south as a
voting proposition. But under present
conditions there is no more freedom
of ballot in the south than there was
in Poland.
President Wilson started in the
present campaign with the solid south
assured. He Had 120 electoral votes. It
was scarcely necessary to count the
ballots from the south. Nobody has
been reading the returns from the
solid south. In the face of this sup
porters of the president have been
glorifying him as a new discovery in
high power manhood.
This country has continued this in
justice for over 50 years.
You can make a campaign in Pa
j kota or Nebraska or in Montana or
! Kansas, but you cannot make a cam
| paign in the old south, in the confed
j erate states as they were. One of two
: things ought to be done. These south
ern states ought to be deprived of a
large number of electoral votes. They
have disfranchised the negro by one
process or another, yet the negro is
counted as a voter and a man in the
distribution of members of congress
and members of the electoral college.
I The south ought not to have the ben
! efit of the negro in making up their
| representation in congress or else
they cught not have power to disfran
chise him.
The entire civilized world knows of
these (nnditions and knows that the
' American people have not had the
courage to straighten the matter out
by doin'- justice.
if •.he south disfranchise the negro
I the south ought to bear the conse
quences of his loss in representation.
Every injustice which is tolerated
and not settled as soon as it is dis
covered becomes a danger to the re
public.—Pes Moines, la.. Capital.
If foodstuffs keep on soaring we will
soon be calling it the high cost of
starving.
NOTICE: Taken up on Dec. 7. 1916.
a red pig weighing about 40 lbs. Owner
- :■
may have same by calling for it, ami
paying for this ad, and the keeping
of same.
Mrs. Sarah Bennett
R. F. D. Xo. 3 Arcadia, X4bk
Phone Xo. 9221. ' 7
SCRAWNY CALVES.
What makes a calf scrawny—on: its
feed? Germs—parasites—in the intes
ines. Why not free them of this 4
trouble? If you will give the calf some
B. A. Thomas Stock Remedy in its
feed, within a week you will see it
brighten up and in four or five weeks
you won't know the calf. Costs you but
a few cents and we will refund that if
t doesn’t do as we say.—J. J. Slomin
ski. Loup City.
mmsmm
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