Patronise the Home Creamery 11 ho makes it possible for you to get the top price for your cream, poultry and Eggs. Ravenna Creamery Co. Loup City The Test of Time Has proved that Goodyear tubes and casings are the VERY BEST on the market. Fresh Stock Just Received At the Independent Garage. A complete line of Goodyear tubes and casings always on hand. First Class Repairing INDEPENDENT GARAGE? R. O. Reed, Prop. Ak-Sar-Ben Fall Jubilee OMAHA SEPT. 26 to OCT. 6, 1917 RATIONAL SWINE EXHIBIT, SOUTH SIDE, OCTOBER 3rd TO 10th ELECTRICAL PARAEE WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 3rd Special train will leave Omaha 11:45 P. M. operating via South Omaha, making all stops between Omaha and Columbus. AFTERNOON PARADE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4th Special train will leave Omaha at 5:15 P. M. for Grand Island making all stops Fremont, and West. Extra coaches will also be provided in No. 23. AKSARBEN’S BIG MILITARY FIREWORKS SPECTACLE, THURSDAY EVENING, ROURKE’S PARK Extra equipment will be provided on regular trains into Omaha. Oct. 3d and 4th. Special trains and extra equipment will be provided only in case the government does not requisition equip ment for special troop movement. UNION PACIFIC PROVIDES SPLENDID TRAIN SERVICE INTO OMA HA FOR ACCOMMODATION OF AK SAR-BEN VISI TORS. ORDER OF HEARING AND NOTICE OF PROBATE OF WILL. Ji the County Court of Sherman Coun ty, Nebraska. Stale of Nebraska. County of Sher man. as. To the heirs, legatees, devisees, cred i:.»rs and to all persons interested in toe estate of William T. Gibson, de < eased: On reading the petition of Mary and J--ii4ie Callaway praying that the in strument filed in this court on the 11th ■ lay of September 1917, and purport-i g to be the last will and testament j of the said deceased, may be proved and allowed, and recorded as the last «ill and testament of William T. Gib •- '0. deceased; that said instrument !>■• admitted to probate, and the ad ministration of said estate be granted in Mary Gilson as executrix, applica tion for hearing forthwith, denied and it is hereby ordered that you. and ail persons interested in said matter may. and do appear at the County Court to be held in and for said county, • n the 5th day of October, A. D., 1917 at ten o’clo k A. J!. to show cause, if any there be why the petitioner should not be granted, and that notice of the jiendency of said petition and that the bearing thereof lie given to all persons interested in said matter by publish ins » copy of this order in the Loup City North western a weekly neswpa per printed in said county, for three ■weeks prior to said day of hearing. Witness my hand and seal .of said court this 11th day of September, A. I>. 1917. (SEAL) E. A SMITH, ;:*e3 County Judge. WANTED—A man to work on the farm—S J lossi. Phone 274-13. EXPERIENCE THE BEST TEACHER It is generally admitted that exper ience Is the beslf teacher, but should we not make use of the experience of others as well as our own? The ex perience of a thousand persons is more to be depended upon than that of one individual Many thousands of persons have used Chamberlain'^ Cough Rem edy for coughs and colds with the-best results, which shows it to be a thor oughlv reliable preparation for those diseases. Try it. It li"prompt alpl ef ficient and pleasant to take. OPERA HOUSE Program SATURDAY, SEPT. 29. William Fox presents Theda Bara in, “The Vixen" Portraying the wiles of a fascinating woman. Written by Mary Murillo. TUESDAY, OCT. 2. Frank Powell presents Marjori Rambeau in, "The Mirror” Produced by Frank Powell. THURSDAY, OCT. 4. Baby Marie Osborne in "Sun Shine and Gcjd” X Jj A Pathe play in 5 parts. Some show YOUR WIFE CAN USE IT. If you are away from home and one of your horses takes the colic your wife can treat him if she has Farris’ Colic Remedy in the house. It is easy to use. Just drop it on the horse's tongue and In thirty minutes he is relieved. Get it today. You may need it tomorrow*.— J. J. Slominski Loup Ctiy, Neb. * Subscribe for The Northwestern. HAZARD NEWS (Crowded out last week* Andrew Anderson was a passenger to Ravenna last .Monday. Will Dclamotte shipped a car of live | stock to Omaha Sunday. J. W. Wallace was a Hazard visitor last Tuesday A. G. Hermau from over near Am lierst brought his son August ard wife aud little boys over to take the train for Milburn, Neb. Mrs. Shipley was a passenger to Ra veuna Tuesday. Mrs John Jennie was a passengei to Ravenna Tuesday. E. H. Robinson was a passenger to Ravenna Tuesday. Ester Patchin was a passenger to Callaway Tuesday evening. Emma Lade went to Ravenna Wed nesday. Matt Robertson came in from Omaha Thursday evemng Mrs. Will Ptterson and Mrs. Spence burg and daughter Clara autoed to Ra venna Thursday. Joe Hennis came up from Ravenna Friday eveniug. Mrs. James Reed and daughter Pran ces came up from Ravenna Friday ev tiling. Miss Buela Zink came in on 'he- train Friday evening. O. J. Mathers sold Herman LLhthill a Ford Friday. Fred Capelain sold Albert Cunning ham a Ford Wednesday. Mrs. Spruceburg and daughter Clara went to Ravenna Saturday. Mrs. Louie Olson went to Ravenna Saturday Miss Gladys Green came down from Mason Saturday morning. Miss Emma Lade and M ss Elsie Lade were passengers to Ravenna on Saturday. Walter Cadwalder is spending a few days with his mother, Mrs. Chas Boldt. Fred Fuller has just about got one silo finished and has another one to build. Chas. Boldt is doing the work. John Andrews ami Carl Olson went up west on a hunting trip last night on 39. Jim Criffieid from Poole was a Haz ard visitor Sunday. SCRATCHES FROM DIST. 9 Ben Nelson's and Carlos Landon's were Loup City visitors, Saturday. Leon Fowler and family are visit ing at the B. F. Tiffany home this week. Oscar Olsen’s had company, Sunday They entertained and served dinner to nineteen. Willis Larson left Monday morning for Kansas City, where he will go to school. We wish him success. There were quite a few out to Sun day school and church last Sunday Miss Leatherman's class had the larg : est attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Briscol of Los Angeles, Calif., visited at the home of J}en Nelson a couple of days last week. They are cousins. All the pupils of District 9, took part in the school parade excepting three. All of the pupils and patrons of the District ate dinner together and all re ported a grand time. (Crowded out last week) Pearl Seevy was a visitor at school Tuesday. Miss Lizzie says she is al ways glad to have visitors. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Kee and family took supper with Mrs. Rachel Piatt Sunday evening Mr. Seery and family and Mr Hodg son and wife came up from Cairo on Monday staying a few days at Tiffany. From there they went on to Bur well. Mr. and Mrs Willis Holcombe visit ed over Sunday with Mrs. Holcombe's sister, Mrs. Rachel Piatt. Carl Landon is a new owner of a Ford. Good for him. Mr. Tiffany and..family and Floyd Fowler went to Dannebrog to attend Leon Fowler's sgle. Leon is going tc Texas. • Mr. and Mrs. Hapky and |on visited at George Leatherman’s Sunday. Mr. Tiffany has bought a new drill The scholars of M. G. B- appointed Misses Thelma and Glallys as* news writers for District 9, antfall the pupils are .to act as reporters. Rev. Beggs will be with us again Sunday, the 23rd, at 3:30 p. m. Mr Beggs has not bjep with us for oer a Garry This Pen UpsideDown ■ • •* —if you want to. Yes. in any pact*' toon, any pocket. Boys: carry the Parker Jack Knife Pep in your trouser* pocke; along' with your keys. Girls: carry it in the jacket of your white blouse. \i: * , Play football with it/—basketball tennis, hokey. It’s on the job the minute you want to write, with our leaving a pinhead spot of ink afiy- ' where it has been carried. Write? Just imagine a pen of that melts to ink as you slide it across paper. That’s the way i t wri tes. *><*12.51 up. Get one on trial. Jake it back any tome within 10 days if you're not tickled to death j1,1 tre dealer to re* fund. If your dealer doesn’t carry rarkers, write us for catalog today. PARKER PEN COMPANY Janesville, Wis. PARKER Jack Knife Safety FOUNTAIN PEN M>, 14 Silver taunted tjjoo O. L SWANSON DRUGGIST month as he went to Omaha for a vaca tion. Everyone is welcomed a* the Mixed Grove Sunday school and church Sunday school at 2:30 and church at 3:30. Miss Leatherman gives all the pa trons of the district a cordial invitation to visit the school. She says “If you have any fancy work or hand sewinr to do bring it #rl&t along with you and work while vod visit.” We assure ; you it won't disturb us in the least This part of the country was visited j with a fine rain Monday night During the second week in Octobei the country will be able to correctly gauge the patriotism of its women Every woman in the country is asked to register, during that week, for whatever services she feels she can render her country in this greatest i crisis of its history. We have been used to boasting of the splendid loyalty o< ! our women, and we have always had J whereof of boast. Thus far in the pres ; ent conflict their response to the calls i made on them has been spontaneous and most gratifying But greater de j mands yet will be made. Their work is in no sense inferior to that of the man. although it may differ very ma terially from it in the element of thrill. They will be called on to take up and bear woman’s age old burden—patient endurance and helpful ministration. That their response will be even more enthusiastic than it has ever been, there are none who doubt. Effecto auto paint and “61" floor varnish are sold at Swanson's. PEOPLE SPEAK WELL OF CHAM BERLAIN'S TABLETS. “I have b'ien selling Chamberlain's Tablets for about two years and heard such good reports from my customers that I concluded to give them a trial myself, and can say that I do not believe there is another preparation of the kind equal to them,” writes G. A. McBride, Headford, Ont. If you are troubled with indigestion or con stipation give them a trial. They will do you good. Daily sells for less. LiVESTOCKPRICES AT SOUTH OMAHA Heaviest Run ot Cattle on Rec ord; Market 15-25c Lover HOGS IN Ml ADVANCE Receipts of Sheep and Lambs Liberal, About S5,000 Head—Fat Lambs Slow and Lower—Aged Muttons About Steady—Feeder Lambs in Broad Demand, Tops $18.25. Union Stock Yards, Sooth Omaha, JTeb., Sept. 25.—The week opens out with the heaviest receipts of cattle In the history of the market. There were 24,000 fresh cattle here, nearly all western rangers, and both packers and feeder buyers started bidding 15@25c lower than last week. Cows and heif ers suffered fully as much as fat cat tle and it was a slow, unevenly lower, all day market. Quotations on cattle: Prime heavy beeves, S 15.50® 17.00; good to choice beeves, $13.50® 15.00; fair to good beeves, $12.25® 13.25; common to fair beeves, $9.00® 12.00; good to choice yearlings, $14.00® 16.50; fair to good yearlings, $12.00@13.00; common to fair yearlings, $7.00@11.00; prime heavy grass beeves. $12.00® 14.50^ good to choice gntss beeves, $10.50® 11.50; fair to good grass steers, $9.25 @10.25; common to fair grass steers, $7.50@9.25; good to choice heifers, $S.50@9.50; good to choice cows. $8.00 @9.00; fair to good cows. $6.75@7.75; canners and cutters, $5.50® 6.50; veal calves, $8.75® 12.75; beef bulls. $7.00 @8.75; bologna bulls, $5.5O@7.00; prime feeding steers. $10.00@14.50; good to choice feeders, $S.75@10.00; fair to good feeders. 87.50@8.50; good to choice Stockers, S.8.00@9.00; fair to good stockers, $7.25® 8.ou; common to fair grades, $6.00®7.50; stock heifers, $6.50@8.00; stock cows, $6.00@7.50; Stock calves. $6.50@9.50. nog* sen tuqsguc Higher. Receipts of hogs were only moder ate for a Monday, about 2.700 head, and with a . vigorous demand from both local packers and shippers the trade was active as far as it went, with prices'ground 1rt®20c higher than Saturday. Tops brought $18.75 and the huUb of the trading was at $18.10® 1S.Q0T Sheep and Lambs Lower. There wip a big Monday’s run of sheep and 4 a mbs today. 35,000 head, and prices were lower all along the line. Aged "stock did not show much decline, but fat lambs as well as the feeder grades were slow sellers at de clines of 15@25c. Fat lambs brought $17.50 and feeder lambs $18.25. Quotations on sheep and lambs S Lambs, fair to choice. $17.00® 17.75; lambs, feeders. S16.25@18.25; lambs, culls, S12.00@16.00; yearlings, fair to choice, $12.50513.50; yearlings, feed ers. ■$12.00@13.75; wethers, fair to choice, $12.00® 13.00; ewes, fair to choice. $10.00® 11.25; ewes, culls and feeders. $S.OO@n.O0: ewes, breeders, all ages. $11.50® 18.00. When Wisdom Cornea. Of course, age la wise—but the wit dom comes of looking backward. PUBLIC SALE. I will offer for sale at public auction 9 miles west and 2 miles south of Loup City and 6 miles north and IVa miles east of Litchfield, Neb., on Thursday, Octcber 4. Commencing at 12 o’clock noon .the following property to-wit: 13 Head of Horses Including team of brown geldings Q tti? crvousj ft M ECONOMY PARSIMONY • '< H ■ « > ,# *' This Fall make your every purchase tell true. Domot confuse parsimony economy—consider fTiow goodr‘ not ‘how cherip —buy clothes that will last and not look .t hi* worse for wear; clothes that wdll not compel additional purchases before the season s end— that is economy. Guide yourself accordingly in^i everything you buy. 1 To attain this end. men find aKTK Mauc by SlHOliSE ow liROTlillliS, Inc.. Baltimore Mb. the logical choice. We show them in styles for everv build. ;J£L .Wz GUS LORENTZ Mr. Fanner! Are you going to rent again next year a nd take a chance on losing arfbtner crop. Before you rent again it will pay you to make a trip with me to Deuel county ami look over what we have to offer for sale. Wouldn’t you .just a little bit rather farm a level piece of ground of your own than a hill farm of somebody else’s. Your ten year-old son can drive a four-horse team hitched to most any kind of , a farm implement on level land. Can he do it where you now live? Wouldn’t it fc>e more like living if you could farm level land, had straight corn rows, square fields of grain and hay, and had good hard, leevl roads over which to haul your farm pro ducts ? Our wheat this year made from 25 up to as high as 50 bushel per acre, oats'from 30 to HO bushel per acre and we never had better prospects for a big crop of coni than at present. y You can always hear all kinds of tales about any country, no matter how good or how poor, but we want you to come and see our country for yourself, and see what others are doing. You can do the same if you have a little money and a little back bone to go with it. If you have failed to see the motion pictures of Deuel county scenes that w»•• shown this week at the Daddow opera house you have missed a great treat. We make a trip to Deuel county every week from Loup City. Will you join us on the next trip? • Call on or phone me at the Frederick Hotel. F. H. GIBSON CO.J REPRESENTING NISPEL CHAPPELL, NEBRASKA ' A I three yeiirs old, weight 1150 each, brown m, ire four year^'. old, weight 1100; black horse, comiitg three years old; four coming two-Jfear olds, e«8< five coming yearlings, A- ,1 •v '• ^ » 26 Head of Cattle .. - j Consisting of five milch cows to .Be; fvesh before spring, one cow with calf at side, four coming three-year old heifers, nine coming two-year olds, coming two-yea." Old grade bull and six spring calvea. 27 Head of Shoats Farm Machinery, Etc. Including 4-wheel Moline riding lis | ter, John Deere 2-row do-devil, Mo [ line corn planter, low wheel wagon i running gear, two-seated top carriage and John Deere top buggy good as • new. Free Lunch at Noon. Terms of Sale. All sums of $10 and under, cash. Over that amount a credit of 8 months time will be given on approved notes bearing 10 per cent interest from date. No ' iropertv to be removed from prem isea until settled for. E. A. SHIPLEY, Owner. COL, CEO. SLOTE, Auct. W. F. MASON, Clerk. P. O. jReed for repairing. .fe. Cooper’s Flour Feed Store Located in the old opera house building. We hav old wheat flour. ? J Bran, shorts, rye flour, rye grahaiw, corn mem-—corn = chop, barley, ground barley, oyster,^ hell and chmi shell. E Our prices are reasonable and anteed or money refunded. Call and see us when in C. C LOUP CITY lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllllllllllllllllllililiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiuiiiiiiiiimiimrr For Sale—One Maxwell 1916 Tour ing car in good condition.—Independ ent Garage. This is the time ycfe tau ing for. List your farm now H. Williams. ■/