The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191?, September 09, 1904, Image 2

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falls City Tribune ! !
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BY TRIBUNE PUBLISHING co.
FALLS CITY . , NEBRASKA
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Love Is the greatest thing , In the
world , but It has Its Lll'Ilwbr.cls when
the loved ono pawns your jewels !
without notifying you III advunce.
Marie Drclsler , the actress , hat
adopted one of those "Incuhntor 1m
hlell j" ; und her press agent will now
have something substantial to work
on.
The new Rolland flying machine
costs but l ' $10. Glad to see these little
mf7lern conveniences gradually get
tlllg down to within $9.99 of their
actual vnluc.
A suit agaInst Armour for $1,200" ; I I
000 Is sold to bo a friendly netlon. ' 1'heI
average mnll would tnlo Il UII unfriendly '
friendly , to say the least , to ue sued
for 11 million.
An irreverent contemporary de
scribes society as "moving along to'
ward Saratoga. " Those poker chip !
and "Saratoga chips" wlll scion be
i moving along alao.
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"J'ho birth of the czar's son III expect
ed to weaken the influence of Pohyed
onostlJUI1' 1'hut will mean HOlllethlng
worth while If the boy never does any
thing ohio of Impol'tance.
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Croesua , the multi-millionaire of antiquity
tlqulty , Is said by scholars never tC
have l(1ughed. Probably made the pee
plo "Io.ugh out of the other side 01
their mouths , " though.
1'ho young Russian Alexis has nl-
readY been made an honorary colonel
but this will naturally cause his royal
mother less anxiety about hIm than
If ho were serving In the nav ' .
News that f\ citizen of Rochestm
. has died at the age of 101 lacks com
9Iotenes. ! The public does not know
whether his length of years was duE
! o tobacco and alcohol 01' to austl
nence.
Once a boyhooU friend visited Ros ,
toe ConllIng when a law student
Meeting a suporclllous reception when
he asked , "Studying to ' me a lawyer
Roscoe ! ? " ho retorted , "You ought tl1
study to ho a supreme court justice ! "
lie meant for a sneer , hut ' lRt's the
way every law student ought to study
No one can blame Europeans for
believing ' that all Americans are rleh.
A Boston woman left 1\ quart of dia
mends In a London hotel and wired
{ back to the proprietor to "l\Cep them
until I come over again next summer. "
A writer In the New York Hemlll
vigorously champions the cause of the
oyster , maintaining that he was never :
. responsible for a single case of typhoid .
phold feYl'r. This Is especially kind
In vIew of time fact that the oyster has
'llwuYI : shown : great hesitation about
speaking for himself.
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It Is all very well for RUll'ard Kip.
ling ( to write poems In praise of the
man who "docs things , " but It ought
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< to ho remembered that he who "docs
things" not Infrequentl as a cense
quenco. "docs time. "
One difficulty with Gov. Warfield's
4tllgestioml that girls should not marry
until they have arrived at the age or
'W , on the ground that they ought to
know nwn better , lies In the fact that
\1 man and woman do not really get
acquainted with each other until they
have been married for some time.
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Wo judge that minstrel shows arc
to bo unusually numerous this rail.
_ At least n. man who has been travel.
, trig all over New York state says that , .
the chestnut crop this year wHl bo
the biggest ever known.
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Method of Cultivation.
What Is time best method of cultivating .
vatlng the orchard 1 There Is no best
method , so long as the orchard Is I cul
tlvated. The chief Idea Is to cultivate .
vato to keep down weeds and to leeep
l the moisture from escaping from the
soil In times when the rainfall Is so
light that moisture needs to be con-
served. Clean cultivation Is the best
for time orchard as well as for other
crops } , but clean culture Is not a moth
ell but a result. Whether the cultivation -
vatlon shall be done once a week or
once a month must depend on so
many things that each man must
adapt his method of cultivation to
what ho believes his orchard noelle.
There are some fundamental princl-
Ides only that need to bo understood.
There Is no one method that Is 'best
for all locations , but what Is best for
one orchard would be destructive to
allothel' Take an orchard on the hills
where the soil Is of such texture that
It would easily wash away if disturbed -
turbed often , and It la evident that
cultivation can only bo given at certain -
tuln times of year and that the ground
must then ue covered wIth a crop to
hold the soil In place. On the same
kind of a hill , however , the soil may
bo of a clay so firm and retentive that
cultivation o.t any time durIng the
growing season would not result In
the soil washing. The method of cultivation .
tlvatlon Is a problem that Is worth
being worked out by every orchardIst ,
but there Is little advice that will be
of value to him except advice of a
general nature.
Save Money With Good Plants.
The planter should- always remember .
bel' that It costs exactly the same In
labor to cultivate and care for 0. good
plant as a poor one. In the buying
of trees , vines and plants generally
the comparative cost should cut no
figure. One strawberry plant may
cost f\ cent while another one may
cost only onofourth of a cent. In
the light of the production of a good
or bad variety how much docs a cent
count Time same Is true In the
buying of treos. A good & varIety
should be secured , and It Is never
necessary to pay a fancy price for
any of the good standard varIeties.
But frequently poorer varIeties , being'
In larger abundance In the hanlls of
the nurserymen , can bo bought cheaper -
or than the standard varIety. The
fruit In a single season may be worth
a dollar more on the good tree than
on the poor one and that will more
than equal the difference in cost. The
chief concern of the tree planter
should be to got a tree that will bear
au abundance of the right kind of
Crult. Saving a few cents per tree
may prove disastrous In the end. . .
Preparing for the Hot Bed.
Every farmer should have a hotbell.
Start this In the fall by digging a halo
three feet deep and six feet square
and nil with coarse manuro. A frame
size of hole fifteen Inches above the
surface on the north side and six
Inches less on the south should be
lrovhled. Fill this hole In the spring
with fresh hot horse manure and thoroughly .
oughly tramp as filled , being careful
to keep level. Four inches of surface
dirt , consisting of leaf mold or ordinary .
nary loam mixed with sand and well
rotted fine manure should be secured
In the fall and kept from freezing.
Thoroughly wet down the manure before .
fore applying the surface dlrt.-J. L"
1Iartwell.
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Time cause of pear blight has now
been discovered and the method by
which It Is carried from one tree to
another. This makes It possible to
find a preventive , for the blight spore
has Its limitations and its seasons at
t1ovelopment.
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Mrs. Elizabeth H. Thompson ,
of Lillydale , N.Y. , Grand Worthy
Wise Templar , and Member of
W.C.T.U. , tells how she recov-
ered by the use of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
DEAlt Mns. PINIUrAMI am one
of the many of your grateful friends
who have been cured through the use
of Lydia E. inkham's Vegetable
Compound , and who can to.d'j'
thank you for the fine health I enjoy.
When I was thirty.five years old , I
suffered severe backache and frequent
bearing.down pains ; in fact , I laid
womb trouble I was very anxious to
get well , antI reading of the cures your
Compound hall made , I decided to try
it. I took only she botUcsbut it built tnO
up and cured me entirely tny troublcs.
" My family and relatives 'wcro
naturally as gratified ns I was. : My
niece had heart trouble and nervous
prostration , and was considered incur-
nble. She took your Vegetable Compound .
pound and it cured her in a short time ,
and she became well and strong , and
her home to her great joy and her 1ms.
band's delight vas blessed with a baby.
I know of a number of others who
have been cured of different kinds of
female trouble , and am satisfied that
your Compound is the best medicine
for sick vomen.-Mns. EUZADETU H.
Tn01tIPBoN. Box 105 , Li1lydale , N.Y.-
$5000 forfeit If original of about IU" "QfjJn
, lIIulnnlluVInot blIroduolld.
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.m.aci- ; ' _ : : ; . ' ' ; ; ; ; . . as ps . . _ ' ' : - - ' 3 : i. : : : " - ' : - ' : ; ; M1Y , , : 1' . , J " " . . , _ .
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"From the cradle to the baby chaIr" " 'r
HAVE YOU A BABY ?
II so , you ought to have a
PHOENIX'
WALKING , CHAIR
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. .HyI
( pATEtiTaD )
"AN IDEAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR. "
OUR PHOENIX : Walking Chair
holds the child securely , ' preventing .
venting those painful falls and
bumps which are frequent when
baby learns to wo.lk.
'BETTER THAN A. NURSE. "
The chair is provided with a. removable -
movable , itanitaty cloth Reatwhloh A
supports the weight of the child
and prevents bow.legs and spinal
troubles ; it also has a table attachment .
mont which enables baby to find
amusement In its toys , etc. , with. ' '
out any attention. : 1
liAs indispensable as a cradlo. "
It iB BO constructed that it pre.
vents soiled clothes , sickness from
drafts and floor germs , and is
recommended by physicians and
endorsed by both mother and baby.
Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should bo without one.
Call at your furniture dealer
and ask to see one.
I"iUF..CTtJRED ONLY liT
PHOENIX CHAIR CO.
SHEBOVG\N. \ WIS.
Can only be had of your furniture deal.r. 1
Great Reduction in Rates via
ABASH RAILROAD
Home visitors excursions sold every Tuesday In September and October
11th. Half rare ( plus $1.00) for the round trip to nil points In Indiana ,
points In Ohio and Kentucky.
$8.50 St. Louis and return , sold Tuesdays and Thursdays , also September
31'd , 4th and 11th.
$13,80 St. Louis and return , sold dall ) " . I
$31.26 Baltimore and return , sold September lth ! and 10th.
$27.1 Buffalo , NIagara Falls or Toronto and return , sold dally. r-
S21. O Detroit and return , sold dally. I
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$20,00 Chicago and return ( one way via Ht. Louis ) , sold daily . "
Long limIt and stop over allowed at St. Louis on ALL tickets. -
Schedule of our Fast traIns.
Read down. . Rend up.
7:46 a. in. ! 6:30 : p. m. Lv. Omaha An' 9:00 : P. m.18:20 : n. m.
8:00 : a. m. 1J:45 : p. m. Lv. Council Bluffs Arr. 8:45 : p. m. 8:00 : a. m. , ) o. .
7:35 p. m.17:00 : a. m. Arr.Vorld's Fair Station I..v. 9:1 : a. m. \ 7:46 : p. m. ' "
7:50 p . m.\7:15 \ a. m. Art St. Louis I..v. 9:00 : a. m. 7:30 : p. m.
These trains run dally. Compare this time with other Hnes.
The Wabash lands all passengers Ilt and checks baggage / to Its own
station at main entrance of World's fair h'1'ounds. Think what this means ;
quick time , extra car fare saved , and a delightful trip , and you are not all
tired out before entering the Exposition 'rounlls
An Agents can route you via the 'Va bas ! ! n. n. For beautiful World's
Fair folder and all Information address ,
HARRY E. MOORES ,
G. A. P. D. , 'Wab H. n. , Omaha , Neb.
W. L. DOUGLAS I
, . ' . UNION MADE $3.50 & $3 SHOES MEN a
' , , : \ \ \ $5.00 AND $4.00 CUSTOM BENCH WORK IN ALL
' \ ' p . THE HIGH GRADE LEATHeRS.
, _ , i $2.50 POLICE , THREE SOLES. $2.50 AND
. , ' - . . , ; * r.l ! ; $2.00 WORKINGMEN'S , BEST IN THE WORLD. .
i -t R. : ; j l $2.50 , $2.00 AND $1.7 Boys , FOR
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J I DRESS AND SCHOOL WEAR.
" Y. r. Douglas makes aril Bells mora mN1'
93.50 ullll11i3.00 ! sluwsthnn any other mUllu. _
I racturer III the worltl. 'l'ho reason they are "
' ? the { , rcut,6t sellers ! e . they are made ot the lien
ti leathers , hold their shape , fit better , wear longer ,
\ maid l1u\'o moro value than any other Sl100S.
W. I , . Douglas guarantees their value by stamp-
. . ' IUR pia 111\11I0 1\1II11)rlco 011 the bottou Look for
; . , It - take 110 8111)611tllto. Sold by sloe dealeu
o'cryw11oro.o'ast Color Eyelets used exelusirc1y.
"AS COOD AS $7.00 SHOES. "
j "Heretofore r have been wearing $7.00
i + ' ' f " 6hoo $ . r purchased a pair of W. L. Dougiaa
ij / $ : J.o5" shoos , which r have worn everyday for
- four month They are 60 satisfactory I do not
intend to return to the more expensive 6hoes. "
WM. CR/n"1\.NOWLES , Asst. City Solicitor , Phlla. '
Breckton Leads the Men' Shoe Fashions of the W r/II.
. tarauKID W. J. . hoIi das : uses Corona ( 'olhkln in Send for Catalog gluing full In-
- lab hiss * 30 ahol'lI. Corona ( 'oil h conceded I structfotu how to order by mall.
to bo the UUClt Patent Leather JUado. W L. Douglas , 1JrocktoD , UaU Z