THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , JUNE 30 , 1905 , Base Ball Games On Thursday and Friday of last week the Kails City colts were in Sterling playing base ball. ball.On On Thursday the game was 2 to 0 in favor of Palls City. The feature of the game was Ruegge's pitching , he struck out sixteen men and not one took a walk. Friday Sterling had a trifle the better of Kails City , thi score being 3 to I in favor of Sterling. Hcncock pitched good ball al lowing but two hits. On June 25th and 5f > th Wy- morc and Kails City played ball at Poteets park in this city. JUN 25 , 1003. V Total . ' 15 ( i 7 ; i The scoreby Innings Is as follows : Wymoro 0 0000 0 0 ! ! 0 2 Falls City 0 1 . ' ! 0 2 0 0 0-0 Struck out by Stone u by Kuuggo 8 Uaso on balls oil' Stone -I ulT Itacggo 1. Hits on" of Stone 7 oil lluuggo 0. JUNK 'J ( > , 100,1. FALLS CITY / Sours , If mid p 5 Foster , lib Poteot , c ! Foohllngar , ss. . . Gllnos , Ib anil p. . . . Ruuggor ( anil Ib. . Cornell,2b Jonesof.l lloncock , p anil rf Total Ill ) It 7 U WYMOUK All U II K Walsh , BS r > 2 a 1 Fox , Ib ! U t Gooiloll , If -1 2 Dookoll , 2b -1 0 McKocn , Ib o 0 Stone , of -I 0 Swartrf -I Ryan , c - Weaver , p - Total IIS U or Score by Innings Is " 3 follows. Wymoro .0 a 0 0 tl 0 2 0 -11 Falls City.0 o 0 0 2 0 0 j 0-1 Bases on balls olT Weaver a ; olT llea- eocklolT ; Gllnesloll ; Sears 1. Struck out by Weaver 8 ; Heaeoek 1 ; Gllnes and Sears 2. lilts oil'of Wymoro' and Falls City U. NOTl-S. The Wymore team is a goo ( one. Linn GHncs umpired both tin games at Sterling. Clarence Heck accompauiei the boys to Sterling last week. The usual number of rooter attended both games played here Walter Jones of Tobias playc center field for the Falls Cit team. On Monday Heacock , Glint and Sears all took a turn s pitching. An unusually large crowd wi nesscd the games both Sunda and Momli Jon , be head I Monday bi . ; PRESS NOTES. C a n d i d a t c I'ollard stands squarel } ' upon the Falls City plat form and his campaign is likely to make that platform a potent factor in state politics. Beatrice Kxprcss. Let us be thankful that no Lewis and Clark stamps have ap peared yet. Humboldt Leader. The Chicago strike , the Equit able row and the poor we shall have with us always , so it seems. St. Joseph Gazette. The pass question is an issue in state politics that an aspiring politician will find difficulty in ( lodging. Fairbury News. The Fulls City Tribune comes out this week under the manage ment of Sharts& May. May the paper prosper and wax rich is the wish of hundreds of its friends.-- Vcrdon Vedette. An Atchison man is preparing to set up in business a worthless young man his daughter is cry ing for. He knows better , but he began buying her everything she cried for when she was little and can't get over the habit. Atchison Globe. The First District Case. The republicans of the First district should take warning in time. Their danger lies in the very size of the natural republican majority in the district. ft will tend to lull them into listlesenesB , to atrophy party organi/ation , to stay at home on election day when it is their duty to go to the polls. The opposition is planning a systematic eH'ort to get its vote out to the polls , while hoping that the republicans will not bo equally active. The opposition is trying to caich anil muster on the quiet every voter possible on personal gonmlH , on local IBBUCS and pro- jndiccH , Mut if they wore to suc ceed by these devices , then they will represent the result as a part isan victory. In this aspect the election is very important. The republicans Imve put n re publican candidate in the field us was their right and duty. They have no right to fail to support him through over-confidence or indifference , through appeals on personal or local grounds , or even because they do not agree with any or many of the personal views of the candidate himself ; if there should bo any disagreement. Wo do not know whether wo agree with Mr. Pollard on the question of woman sutl'rage , on the ques tion of a hog law in short , on ! hundredM of local or academic C questions at to which republicans , 11 the same as members of the other 1 C great parties , do and may well differ among' themselves or as to which his action as a republican congressman will practically have nothing or little to do. But we understand Mr. Pollard has been selected as their party - representative by the republicans of this district because they are ( not democrats , populists , fusionists ' or any thii-5 else but republicans on national uestions. They want this district represented in the mttioimr eoiiess ; because they believe < \n i utional r e p u b- liciin principle lake pride in the historyfnn > traditions and great names iud \ehievements of the repnblioai pa. y , and believe that it should be maintained in rs strength and power , in preference c. to the democratic paity. The re c.cd publicans should bup | ort Mr. Pol tv hnfd loyally b Qnufi" . 51 elected , he lyill not enter tnfe a mu i-rahe can- cus-or ccuneila , ma * be in Washington cs : ington and elsi-vMic j TjWing and at conspiring to h art tlk . republican party because igf&fiEV th > 're will itay be recorded ttlonf vfuh "wpubli- ay can measures nntl pi ; 5JC8' | > If "Mr. Pollard | n cl" * uy wilier by purpose he would nit sentativo of the re iv In common with o b .ml wo assume that hie ets eentinUy republican , Vnhd or- broadcasts he isenh\ vys lican support and teL _ L \ 1 * * ed every man the democratic party organized , o : rgnuiz d EVERY BODY WILL BE T FALLS CITY , NEBRASKA , JULY 24-29 , INCLUSIVE Because the greatest and best entertainment ever offered to this community will be here. PARKER AMUSEMENT AND CARNIVAL CO. - THE LARGEST BIGGEST AND CLEANEST - in the business. A WHIRL WIND OF CLEAN ATTRACTIONS = AND EXCELLENT FREE AHUSEMENtS = t . This week of amusement is offered you by / - THG FAbbS CITV USINGSS MGjN - - _ _ _ _ _ _ Keep the date under your hat 24 TO 29 INCbUSIVEby , L CREEPING HORNED THINGS. Lizards , Bugs ojid Snakes in Nevada All Hftvo Horns , Declares a Lido. Resident. "Everything that creeps has horns down in Nevada , " says J. , II. Price of Lida , Nevada , in the PortlandOregonian. "The lizards , bugs and snakes all have horns We have a species of the rattle snake down in Nevada which 1 do not believe is found in any othei part of the United States. II never grows to be more than a foot long , and is very slender. "It has a small horn on the toj of its head andonerattleattached to the end of its tail. A bite from this small reptile nearly always results in death. UH venom is said to be even more poisonous than that of the common rattle snake. You take one of these common prairie snakes and you have a chance to escape , as they will never attack you unless an gered. Hesides they give you ilenty of time to get away , as their rattle can be dittinctl\ leard quite a ways oil' . "Hut not so with the small rat tlesnake we have down there. 11 nan goes within three or fourfcei of that reptile it will at lack him. It will sound the alarm with its rattle , but it is so small that it is rarely heard. Our rattler can spring at least three times its length , so you can see that you have to be very careful when wan tiering about in the sagebrush. "Just before 1 came to Portland 1 was in Cioldtields and Tonopah. There is no doubt but that lots of people have died recently ill that mining district , but 1 bclietfe that fatal disease they talk tf < f much about is nothiug less fhrfu pueu- monia. I have know * pvrso'us to take down j fc JHI 'uinonja in that < jiuni _ _ _ l JVjy , sjx ' " * " * monia. Then if ( lie system is in bad condition death nearly a Jways results. Of conise there may be an unknown disease down there , but I believe it is straight pneu monia intensified by the peculiar climate conditions. You see it is intensely hot during the daytime , and at night it becomes very cold. These extremes do the work , in my opinion. "Nevertheless. I would not ad vise anyone to go into that section of the country at present unless they have friends there. If a man takes down sick it is hard to find anyone to take care of him. He- sides work is hard to obtain now in these mining camps. There are lots of good properties down there , but development is being retarded by inadequate transpor tation facilities. There are sev eral railroad projects under con templation , and I think all these camps will be connected with the outside world within a vear or t wo. " A Royal Romp. The Herman emperor and em press can unbend on occasion. A ISerlin paper prints a letter from a member of the crew of the im perial yacht Ilohenxolleru de scribing the Easter day ramp .of Emperor William and tYfc m press. After the sailors eeived their Easter eggs au < l- er presents they were nil low while their maje anges in the cabin and places around the deck ors then returned mul ttun the oranges. "You/hay Zott all but two , " said ; & { length , , and thf-H JV < IH hunt. Final ! } saw tbeempei put his hitnvl Ijto an orange , ange was parasol Arrival of Uncanny "Bus * Gives ? lace a Foreign' city , " wrljep a Correspondent , conglomerate , cosmopolitan town can hardly be found on the crust of this earth , and this is just now ac centuated by the presence of ft horde of uncanny-looking 'rus kics' arrived from Port Arthur. Such a motley crowd as they are ! The men wear boots , the boys wear boots , and from the way some of the women walk they might be wearing boots , too , foi all 1 know. The soldiers look un kempt , dirty , such a thing as n 'shave' seems to be unknown to them , and to further the effect of a stubby beard and to make them look still uncannier , they wear high , black sheepskin cups. About H.OOO of them are in town , and more are arriving daily. The ho tels are overcrowded with Kns sians ; other refugees are lodged in warehouses , in barracks , and if drunken brawls on the streets continue some will be lodged in jail. The way some of these licers' wives dress and come t table is , to put it mildly , disa/1'1 ' pointing. In loose dressing ets , house gowns , with stea > Plu > rugs around their shoulders , hair done up in such fushionf , vo' ' cannot tell whether it was ( l ° I1 ( up or not , eating with knpvos and this in a first-class liotel- verily , it is surprising ; iuP ° l' ° S ( when one considers thut ° us sinn under the rank of en > tuin i admitted. r > "While tire men are r > tall ) the women are sh ) l't. of lint-nosed type , of indifferent cai riage and it is hard F ° pick out _ good-loplcing one ujpiong their general impression these vu make is certuw ly not fllvm $ > le.jTheir _ . . . e in town is ( TCriable godsend , for shopkeei " tl\f Vvily " Thinese make th jtfie 0 ] > pol Lunity. I ai fori that an 'rf $ ) .and chea ' b * * died dow ( neatly bo ? r devils n s b the h fitingin Is cheaj "The 1BU8 ( SUanghl lay I apprt-oximatcly 400,000 , of which S ' OOV or thereabouts are foreign- O'rs : The streets are models of fiat streets should be several > am rollers beingkeptgoingday d night. A fine prison and qnar- s for the Sikhs ( the Indian po- emen ) , an electric light plan ! d other improvements go to ow that the people's money is ent for the people. The munici il council gives public account of Expenditures. And there are no pfclitieal 'pulls' to divert money i its intended purposes. " FAR AWAY FROM HOME Native Asks Doctor How He Manages to Stand Awful Strain of Cir cumstances. Dr. James Strong , president of he American Institute of Social Service , in the New York Trib une recently told this story of a Phila'delphian who was traveling in an extremely isolated district of the Alleghany mountains. In going over the rough mountain roads something about the har 1 ness of his team became broken , lie was near a little hut on the mountain side and went , there to obtain tools to make repairs. The old lady who came to the door seemed very glad to see him , per o haps due to the fact that hardly once a month did a stranger come that way. "And where may you be from ? " V | .she asked , pleasantly. 10 "Pin from Philadelphia , " said r the traveler. a i "And where may Philadelphia n. be ? " she questioned. n.r Oh , Philadelphia is fully 301) ) ra miles from here , " he said. rP "Oh , me , 1500 miles ! And how P- can you bear to live so far awa.y ? " 1C 1Cm m Falls City is beating all comers. In a double game with Highland , 'Pn the town was beaten 4 to 3 and 10 n td 4 respectively. June 11 Falls it- City wiped out Hamlin at the rate IB IBm of IS to 6. But for a small town , ik Hamlin hns quite .a fast little team. Hiawatha World. of Dr. R. P.R < &ertsdentist be over King's Pharmacy.