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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1917)
I When is a Bov not a Boy? \\ hen he becomes too big for Boys Suits. Then he need> one of our Y oung Men’s Suits—Suits especially designed \ and made for these big lads. Suits cut along slim, trim, lines, youthful yet manly. Betted back Coats, and snug fitting trousers—patterns in harmony with youth Is $10 to $20. Shirts, Underwear, Socks, Belts, and Hats for these fastidious young fe|- ' lows at LOFHOLM’S . . rr_ - . . - —... — I Farmers Muiuai Insurance Company of Neb. Nothing Succeeds Like Success r* — 1 »uriu _r tin* I~t 13 Years Losa«s Paid Insurance ,iu Written Utrinfi Year Force l*»-4 •• $ • • 12 $ 48.713.1S2.00 53.876,807.00 19* 4 a ; • 45.73.; *3 62.347.830.00 1*»7 . - O — 71.1 • 3.16 72.292,382.00 19**» I2.79I.82*. Irt. sn.Hj ”4 79.101,283.00 ISM Mi.268.816.00 1*1# 1.3 3*1.71 . 347.4.; 100.666.941.00 1 : • '*3 "45 04 110.914.198.00 1912 14 *.3.. 41». ]| 3 42*1 3 120.859,462 00 1>1 1 * .' • • 7 "<* 214,522 *1 133.130,514.00 1*14 li> 2.7 *< 1 "9.2*9.6! 143.755.454.00 1*1 - >3*4.. j 1.1.49 14 157.201.497.00 1*1* 950.759 128.6:; 1.79 170,485,794.00 W. G. TUCKER, Local Agent .. ... I SCENE FROM “// May be Your Daughter’ At the Opera House Saturday Evening DEER CREEK NUGGETS. Joe Lubash lost a valuable horse last . Friday night. Henry Bydalek lias been working for Thos Lubash. Farmers have been sowing more 1 oats the past week. Our mail carrier drove his Ford on route one last Tliuisday. Ed. Bydalek will enter the Kear ney normal next September. Paul Maiefski of Ashton, is work ing for Joe Stobbe this summer. School in Dist. 66 will close Friday and a picnic will be held Saturday. Lizzie Weiss has been in St. Paul on business matters the past few days. Stanley Nowicki bought a load of ] hay from J. W. Peters last Thursday. Ignatc Haremza is getting interested in autos. He expects to buy one in the future. We undersdant there was a barn ! dance at the Helimer Bros, place last I Saturday. Thed Smedra of near Rockville, has ! been in Ashton on business the past ! few days. Joe Maiefski and sister autoed to Farwell one day last week to visit with relatives. Miss Emma Rasmussen of Rockville has been visiting her sister. Mrs. An drew Bonczynski. The Misses Thressa and Clara No wicki spent Sunday afternoon with Miss Rose Bvdalek. Adam Peters went to Schaupps last Friday on important busness return ing home Saturday. Farmers have started to plant corn here this week. They will try to raise a bumper crop this year. Grandma W^iserski, who has been quite sick suffering from a broken limb, is slowly recovering. A birthday party was given at the Martin Bvdalek home last Sunday in honor of Alfonso’s -Tilth birthday. A few dance lovers attended the barn dance given at the Geo. Woten place est of Rockville last Sunday. We understand that Joe Maschka will attend the St. Paul normal and business college next September. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sundstrom visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Hehnke of Rockville, last Sunday. Andrew Bonczynski has been busy the past week hauling lumber from Rockville for his house which he will erect. F. J. Maciejewski shipped a load of hogs to Omaha last Wednesday with the farmers shipping association of Ashton. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hann, who have been visiting with Mrs. Lorence Pet ers. returned home in Grand Island last week. Monday a few of our farmers were in town to celebrate the last wet day. We hope it never shall come back to wet again. Last Friday when we awoke we found mother earth all covered with snow. It looks like we might have snow all summer. American flags are floating all over Deer Creek, on buildings, posts, cars, etc. It is a good sign that all here are American citizens. Miss Clara Peters returned to her home in Grand Island, after visiting here with her mother. Mrs. Lawrence Peters, for several days. Spring wheat on the Creek is in fine shape and getting fine and green and will make a bumper if we get enough rain and warm weather. Thos. Polski accompanied by Ignatc Haremza. autoed up the Loup river last Sunday to fish. They returned in the evening but never got a bite. Hard luck. The Deer Creek baseball team have organized a good team for this year and expect to start out in a week or to and challenge any team. Who will be the first? Ben Jasnok brought his Ford from Ashton this week after having it re paired from the wreck last week. We hope next time he will be watching | for the cars. Frank Smedra has been in Grand Island visiting with his wife who is in the hospital there taking medical treatments, and reports her as get ting along nicely and will be home in a short while. The State of Nebraska went bone dry last Monday at 8 q’clock p. m. Hundreds of saloons were closed and it will bring more comfort, cheer, joy and gladness to thousands of homes and we hope that it never will come ; back. ANDERSON VACATION. Io all Whom it May Concern: — The Commissioner appointed to va ' < ate a road commencing at the quar ter stake on the east side of section ‘“0-13-15 and running thence west to the center stake of said section, and the last 26 feet of the road running north from the above described cen ter stake to the quarter stake on the ! north side of above described section and terminating there has reported in ' favor of the vacation thereof, and all ' laims for damages must be filed in the office of the County Clerk on or before noon of the 16th dav of July A. D. 1917. (SEAL) L. B. POLSKI. County Clerk. SCHOOL ENTERTAINMENT. The girls gymnasium class and the boys’ and girls’ choruses of the high school will give an entertainment on Friday evening. May 11. at the high school auditorium. The nature of the entertainment will be. the singing of songs, and gymnastic exercises that the pupils have had during the school year. Show your interest and loyalty by being present. No admission will be charged. Get Rid of Your Rheumatism. Now is the time to get rid of your rheumatism. You will find Chamber lain’s Liniment a great Help. The re lief which it affords is alone worth many times its cost. A small ad in The Northwestern is cheap when you think of the result. LIVESTOCK PRICES ! AT SOUTH OMAHA ...— Heavy Cattle Recslp s; Market 10-15C Lower HOGS STEADHO 10c LOWER Very Light Supply of Lambs—Five Loads, or 1,260, Make Up Entire Supply. Market Goes Way Up— Few Lambs Here Sell Fully 25@50c Higher—Mexicans Bring $17.25; Others $16.90@17.C0. Union Stock Yards, South Omaha, Nebraska, May 1st, 1917.—The week opened out with a tolerably liberal run of cuttle, some 325 loads, about 3,00 head. Receipts were heavier here than dealers expected, and the same was true at other points, while reports from outside markets were uniformly bearish. The quality of the cattle was better than recently, but the wet weather detracted from the appearance tiie came ana al though both local packers anil shii> pers seemed to want the heavy beeves these suffered fully as much as the lighter grades, and it was a rather sluggish and unevenly lower market. Business linally settled down to n\>out an average 10® 15c de cline all around. Quotations on cattle: Good to choice beeves, $11.50@13.00; fair to good beeves. $10.75® 11.50; common to fair beeves, $9.50@10.7;>; good to choice heifers, $0.25@10X5; good to choice cows. $S.50@10.n0; fair to good cows. SS.00@X50; canners anil cutters, $5.50@7.75: veal calves, $9.00@ 12.50; beef bulls, $S.00@9.5O. About the lightest run of hogs that has been here on the opening day of the week for almost two months was on hand Monday, arrivals counting 72 loads or about 5.300 head. Shippers bought quite a few hogs that were ful ly steady to if anything a little strong er. while packers’ early offers were 10@15c lower, hut when they linally bought their hogs it was at figures that were not over 5@10c lower, while some of the mixed stuff was just about steady. A fairly good clearance had been made by 10 o'clock. Most of the offerings sold at $15.10®lo.45, while a top of $15.05 was paid on choice heavies. There was hardly enough lambs on offer Monday to make market, but what were here sold at fully 2:>@.>,'c higher prices. The even money mark was reached and then beaten, sales of Mexicans including a load each at $10.90 and $17.00, while two cars sold as high as $17.25. being a new record tor the yards. The only other stuff that was on offer was a car of clipped lambs and brought $13.80. There was nothing here in the line of old sheep. Quotations on sheep and lambs: Lambs, Mexican. $10.5o@17.25; lambs, fed western. $10.25® 10X5; lambs, fresh shorn. $12.75® 1 4.1IK); yearlings, good to choice. SI 5.75® 14.50; yearlings, fair to good. $13.00® 13.75; wethers, fair to choice. $12.50® 13.5o: ewes, good in choice.. $12.75® 13.25; ewes, fair to good. §11-75® Iff": ewes, plain to culls, $6.00® 11.50. GROWING HOGS. For a hog to be profitable he must he kept growing from birth to market ing age. He cannot be profitable un less he is healthy. He can always be in a profit-producing condition if he is fed B. A. Thomas’ Hog Powder. We positively tell you that this remedy prevents cholera, removes worms and cures thumps. If the powder does not make good, we will.—J. J. Slominski, Loup City. Neb. Classified Advertising FOR SALE. FOR SALE: — M Y EIGHT ROOM" house and six lots. Also six lots in cherry and plum trees. A tract of 4!i acres of land and other tract of 3 Vi acres all in alfalfa and fenced chicken tight.—Alfred Anderson. HOMESTEAD OR FARM LANDS. OREGON & CALIFORNIA RAILROAD Co., Grant Lands. Title to same re vested in United States by act of con gress dated June 9, 1916. Two million i three hundred thousand acres to be opened for settlement and sale. Power ; Site, Timber and Agricultural Lands, j Containing some of the best land left j in United States. Now is the oppor- ! tune time. Large sectional map and ! description of soil, climate, rainfall, : elevations, etc. Postpaid one dollar. Grant Lands Locating Co., Box 610. Portland, Oregon. 6-13 NO OTHER LIKE IT. NO OTHER A8 GOOD. Purchase the ” NEW HOME” and you will have a life asset at the price you pay. The eliniination of repair expense by superior workmanship and best quality of material insures life-lonj: service at nuni fflum cost. Insist on having 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 CMMNGE.MASS. FOR SALK IV E. P. DAILY, FURNITURE CO. NEBRASKA PATENTS. Official list of letters patent of in vention issued from the United States Patent Office at Washington, D. C., to inhabitants of Nebraska for the week ending April 28, 1917, as reported through the office of Sturgess & Sturgess, Registered Patent Attor neys, Suite 330 Bee Bldg. Omaha. Ne braska. Harvey Adams, Long Pine, curtain and shade hangers. Albert W. Jacobs, Yutan, tractor. Carl Labs, Amlierst, lister. Harold D. Morton, Mitchell, Poison label. Albert N. Eaton. Omaha, stock-wat ering device. Marion F. Foste^ Sutton, ship-sav ing device. Austin H. Matthews, Rulo, Dental implement. John H. Siert, Benson, laundry-ma chine. Joseph A. Hodam, Lincoln, spring tire. Clarence M. Hartman, Crofton. hose coupling. ADVERTISING MARINE SERVICE. 1 New York. May 2.—By combining appeals for enlistment in the U. S. Marine Corps with their commercial advertising, the American Tobacco Company, through the Hawley Adver tising Company, of this city, is the pioneer in devoting part of its con tract advertising space to patriotic appeals, as devoted at a recent lur. cheon of the Bureau of Advertising of the American Newspaper Publish ers’ Association at the Waldorf As toria. In a huge advertising campaign just launched for “U. S. Marine” to bacco. three-quarters of the contract space is devoted to an appeal for men to join the Marine Corps and bo "First to Fight.” DANGERS OF A COLD. Loup City People Will do Well to Heed Them. Many bad cases of kidney trouble result from a cold or chill.. Congested kidneys fall behind in filtering the poi son-laden blood and backache, head ache. dizziness and disordered kidney action follow. Don’t neglect a cold. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills at the first sign of kidney trouble. Follow this Loup City resident’s example: Mrs. Mary Lofholm. Lopp City, says: ■’I had been having some trouble from my kidneys and occasional at tacks of backache. Every little cold I caught seemed to settle on my kid neys and make me worse. Two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills, which I rot at Swanson’s Drug Store, ended the trouble and I haven't been bothered since." Price 50 cents at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—got Doan's Kidney Pills—the same ths Mrs. Lofholm had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. IS PATRIOTISM INHERITED? Following in the footsteps of his il lustrious ancestor. Francis Deuber, a direct descendant or Francis Scott Key, the author of “The Star Spangled Banner,” is now serving his country in the arm of our national defense which will be "First to Fight"—the marine corps. Private Deuber's mo ther is a great granddaughter of the author of our national anthem, on the maternal side. Deuber's resemblance to his renowned ancestor is said to be so noticeable that many of those who I have seen the original Francis Scott ; Key picture have commented upon the I remarkable likeness. Proper Food for Weak Stomachs. The proper food for one man be all wrong for another. Every one should i adopt a diet suited to liis age and oc cupation. Those who have weak stom achs need to be especially careful and should eat slowly and masticate their food thoroughly. It is also important that they keep their bowels regular. When they become constipated or when they feel dull and stupid after eating, they should take Chamberlain's Tablets to strengliten the stomach and move the bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. LOUP CITY MARKETS. Furnished by F. M. Henry. Corrected every Thursday morning. ■ Butterfat, per lb. 30c Eggs per doz.].28c j Hens, per lb.19c FOR SALE. Brick house and barn and six lots in northwest part of Loup City. Inquire at Northwestern office or write O. S. Beach, 1304 So. 11th Omaha, Neb 20tf Subscribe for The Northwestern. Business and professional Guide j ROBT. P. STARR % Attorney at Law LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA R. H. MATHEW Attorney at Law And Bonded Abstractor LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA AARON WALL Lawyer Practices In All Courts LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA LAMONT L. STEPHENS Lawyer First National Bank Building LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA ROBERT H. MATHEW Bonded Abstracter Only Set of Abstract Books In County LOUP CITY - - - - NEBRASKA 0. E. LONGACRE Physician and Surgeon OFFICE, OVER NEW BANK Telephone Call No. 39 A. J. KEARNS Physician and Surgeon — Phone 3C—Office at Residence Two Doors East of Telepone Central LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA A. S. MAIN ! Physician and Surgeon LO'-r CITY .... NEBRASKA ’ OS;iu.e dt Resid* - e I Tciepone Connection JACOB J SLOMINSKI Wants Your Cream, Poultry, and Eirtys Always Top Prices and a Square Deal. Loup City, Neb. Phone 89 W. L. MARCY Dentist Office: East Side Public Square Phone Brown 116 LOUP CITY .... NEBRASKA E. T. BEUSHAUSEN Licensed Emlmlnier Funeral Director t EVERY FARMER A PATRIOT jr t |VIANIFEST your patriotism by increasing the jSj ■EVA crop yield of your land, whether farm or . garden. Attend the lectures that will be given by the crop experts and practical famers ^ accompanying the Farm Preparedness Special at the meeting piaces in and adjacent to 1 LOUP CITY | i Thursday, May 10 h 6:15 P. M. TO 6:03 A. M. V Lectures and demonstrations by government and 4^ state authorities on ^ j Increased crop produc- “Co-Operation” fe \ tion Home Economics 4 Pork production Domestic Science - . Dairying Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs A Live Stock Raising Gardening 7 ^ The silo and ensilage Canning Sweet clover and alfalfa Poultry Raising |f Diversified farming Sanitation and Stock S T Community Clubs diseases 4 It is to the interest of every farmer, stockman, ^ merchant, housewife, boy and girl to attend the S i- meetings conducted for their benefit and learn 4 the gospel of “Farm Preparedness.” -i ^ Union Pacific System ^ tZIZyl V" *y V' s^. Over 150 Prizes at the 1916 National Dairy Show Were Won by Users of United States Cream Separators A “United States” user captures more prizes than any other one exhibitor SH??0THEF’ PainesY,n!c’0hio- took a larger number of prizes than am other one exhibitor of cattle, winning 30 prizes Among other big winners who use the United States Cream Separator are: MOUNT HERMON SCHOOL Mt. Hernion, Mass., made a splen did showing, capturing in all 22 prizes with their record breaking Molsteins. n n Pres- American Bell Telephone Co., Lyndonville.Yt., winner of 15 prizes on Brown Swiss’ JEAN DULUTH FARM, Inc., Duluth. Minn., winner of Maple rarm Cup, and 16 other prizes. C. B. STEVENS, St. Johnsbury, Vt., 7 prizes on Ayrshires. WENDOVER FARM, Bemards ville, N. J., 16 prizes on Guernseys and Ayrshires. J-. PRENTISS & SON, Alstead, N. H„ 4 prizes on Holsteins. GEO. F. GREGORY, Dummers ton, vt., a prize winner on Hoi steins. And Many More let us shSl you tS?tel^of-aU ae^&pSaTors0 ^ J. J. Slominski, Loup City, Neb.