The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191?, June 30, 1905, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , JUNE 30 , 1905.
i f r 9 t
I FALLSCITYNEBRASKA
*
+ 4TH OF JULY
f * -SOMETHING DOING' '
.JUSTTTHE SORT fQF DOIN'S THAT SUITS YOU
f HH HH
' * H
*
IBanUQSonccrt. , . , . . 9a.m. !
i
'Target Shooting at FFrank's i
{ park 9 to ii |
'BattiSCConcert 11 to 12 : ,
! * After 8 < d'dlock High Carraval will reign su- * |
! | H preme. All itfhe imps erf ttiheCffirhhrral Gang will be J
$ 'here. Loosen up , join tbhe tthroiig and have a J
r | 'g od time. Fell your jndgh ors .about it , Ster- J
1 ] . UfMg band aiiad base iballl iteasn will be here , H
r * > _ _ . "I W
iH CELEBRATE
H *
$ Y-
* : mKR H *
* *
*
4 4
HSMALL'-H&IMDS WELL GLDMED
( Points \Which , It 3s : BoaKteciSan }
tPrancisco Women . xr.el
_ A11
. San.Francisco is the -greatest
vglove town < ui earth , jwiyllje.glGve
Jealer-s of ilie city an the OJiL-un-
icle. 'There sire moi-K gloves .sold
here "in , proportion to the ouoinlmr
of inhabitant than an. aoj'O.thU' '
city ton recowJ. Theiv * sire more
expensive glows sold Jiere to ithe
class'fcf ' wonieznwho do their * hqp
Ipingiuthe reta'dl house * in fhe city
( than .fc.'iere aretelsowhere. Than1
.are inni'O perishable HgM-eolojieQ
, aul ( light-weight gloves worn < on
ithe stvuets in the daytime in San
.Francisco than there am in any
luthcr Annerican icities. Finally ,
-.according to the jdnve dealers , lhf >
lluinds which the.tf .glovers corw
, IUK ; , on ithe average notTeealih'
and more shapely titan
.handH of the awnige easlenj
woiutui.
Tl average six.es worn in San
Frairejsca'und so ordered in largo
( HianjjUets tfrom eastern sources ,
are the 5A , and ( i. 'Klie sixe of
the average .San Francisco wom-
are the 5 % , .5 § and 0. TJie size of
tween the t\vo numbers last
quoted.
The biggest -sales of gloves in
Hie east are in jthe sixes from ( i to
li . The large lines of ismall
r sixes ordered by their Sau Francis
co branches are a constant fcource
of surprise to tin-.eastern houses ,
who must be told again and again
that big consignments of the
larger sizes will not be sold.
Women of all degrees of wealf h
are equally particular about their
hands. Shop girls of San Fran-
i co earning ? fi or ? 8 a week ,
upend ? l.fiO or $ U every month erse
so for a pair of gloves , concern
ing the quality and lit of which
they are quite as particular as
'Ik is the wife of the prosperous busi
ness or professional man. It is a
tradition and a habit among San
Francisco weir n of all classes to
appear on the streets well gloved
and well shod. They may have
to rob Peter to pay Paul , but the
fact remains that these , two ad
juncts of the toilet are consistent
ly as correct as possible.
In addition to the evident care
bestowed upjm the hands there is
B&itd 'Concert ' . 2 p. m. H
SBaise 'BaiH ' < at Polmet's park _ 2:30 ]
iR-aces ( n "Stone Street . 5 p. m.
Supper .
IBand Concert . 7 p. TO.
a mosl iibTgiTIfieinit naliiKrtl reatv > n
for then1 lieautiy . The climate , of
San Fra-wciHco . .is .perfrnl forftJie
development < ofr his great eharjn.
the pretty hanil It teswfl .and
moist raitlier than dry and free
from the harsh wind coKl nvinds
which cradv.andfihap theJiandflin
spite of-ciiaiu. ' [ Che weather condi
( ions live -Jiiost ifavorabJe , to ithe
preserVcttJNMi < ufi : > firm , sof.t , white
skin. The pexHititent wearing ref
gloves in the 'ujion air .has a
marked eflieut iu seconding Ithe
climate for 1he Itoeauty wf .the
hands. It gyrolcttt-s-thein fi mlln1
tan which lliickeiw the skinfiom ; !
the freckle'Whhjji disfignne ill ,
from thv'duKt and gritwhitih
[ .force thvinsc-lres Pinto ( he pores
aind roughen t.'heliinger tips
Idletriment f
Even niiionK lln- children .are
gloves universally worn , for ; t.hf I
pretty and well kt'irt.hand haslbe-
idosne a trailitiow w.Hlbiour women ,
and its dev > loiicaiian ] ) ( theyour i- |
or generation 5 * ' .matter * .f
course.
lt .OF A DREAtfl SHORT.
tcxsons .Often Speat tX
Viaions , But HoIJnchxations
Not Leng-thy ,
unusual toheiur.onesay .
that he has been dreaming about
somethiui ? .all night , whea possi
bly his dmun occitjiied onlj'ii very
short time. 3Iany attempl * ? have
been made vto measure the time
occupied in n dream , and r < ? tcyrds
apjiear from fjine to time in .the
papers , showing that often eab !
orae ( ones occupy but a few tec
onds. The following incident 5s Ii
lold by a gentlemaiiwlio vouchee 's '
for its accuracy :
He was engaged one afternoon
with a clerk in verifying some long
columns of figures that had been a
copied from one book to au <
other. The numbers , representing - *
ing amounts in dollars and cents , '
ures. The clerk would read , for1
instance : "Fourteeiitffme forty-
two , twelve , " snaking tuq amount
of " ? _ 14,142.12 _ , ajul f the gljnflpraan . .
would
cate that the
Page after
as
uttered , o/ll" has'our
the "checMhis office
, : rt vas wi.1
he ooiaJd3t > ' ] ( ; I i eyen-oen. ] )
Finally fileeptevercanie him , anfl
ho divmnwd llii-amefl ( < f an old
horse he had litoin acinistoiiied l
drive:25 ( : > or3UhwjM'sag i. He coulfl
nut ' retsill ; Tiyf f > ( ' ! ialiiiicilont'Con
neciedl ' vJll ; tlic deam except .the .
Joi-ality | and sthe 'distiuot ' sight'of
' the h < ir e , ssmu1 < c f the 'buggy ito
wliii'h he luid ( ftriven 'liiiu. 11
awk > e KTiddt'iil.ynd . : , an a 'number
was i-oded calidflr Ghuck. " lit'
[ .was et > nsci aK 'f3iav5ngslept anfl
l of linving di'euined , ami said i < n
' the ' -lerk : -'Charlie , IHhave been
asleep. FIoiv nnriiy-of'those num
hers Iiarc I laJHHdO. ? " "Xone'ht1
I replied. "Yiou '
Jia\ve'clieclo'd ' every
Close queKUonrng devel-
ojied the fwl it hat of tins figures
n-JU 12 htbiiQ Jitaind itlw four-
; 1 > f < ? n iind the iwt ! vtihut.had slept
: suj' < l dreanu'd td-tiring tlieithne.ou- .
in rap5dJy mttei'ing ' I he
\ \ vrds "one forJT-itvw.a. " J.lea.ried ,
Iby reading oiluer acumbera , to
Uie tiimvanfl Lliialuj it
not have bttu m/oiii > , tiian
.halfa hfcoml.
Jher Ktory JKtold < fa'man
xi\wjto > hat before his fijte inji.drowky
A draught. , 3)low.in
room , set a large photo
graph i the Jiiantel ; lo swaying.
A len er vase was iu jYonl ofit , ,
a ml tJi < j man remembers wonder
ing , in a jnood of whiinHJeal indif
ference , 'Whether
the piclire
would blow forward and send ilie
vase to thottoor.
Finally a { just of wind did top
ple the picture , and it struck ijj
vase. The man remembers hav
ing ] been curiously relieved in hi *
state of drowsiness ( hat at last
the "old thing was going to fall
and be done with it. "
Presently he was in the midst of
complicated business transac
tion in a western city , miles away.
All the details of a new and un
heard-of ' scheme were coming
forth from his lips , and a board of
directors was listening. The
scheme pospered. He moved his
bought came be-
Ifc
toppling bol'o'-c he fell asleep , to
fail five feel and break.
Pnst the Lawless Age.
1'olice .lustice You
say you
are a college graduate and yet
here I find you charged with
drunkenness , disoulorly conduct ,
assault , inciting riot and resisting
an officer. A college graduate , in
5- deed ! What have you to say ?
Prisoner Xothiug , your honor
except ( hat I hud forgotten ( hat
1 wasn't still iu college. Clove-
land Leader.
* IN THE GARDENS OF ITALY
*
The Follnfo of the Ccdrxr , Cypress nnd
Orixngo Are Freely Inter-
mingled.
Perhaps nothing about Italian
gardens strikes us so wonderful
as ( he arbor walks or pergolas ,
where nature seems so absolutely
docile ( o the hand of man. The
dcsiie is , says the Philadelphia
Ledger , to make a dense shade
a retreat where one can shut out
* the hot sun , and to create this
trees of a great many dill'erent
sorts have been planted close to
gether , and their branches so
closely interwoven that they form
a complete trellis on the twosides
arid above , so that cedar , cypress ,
orange and lemon trees mingle
their foliage , all seeming to
bt lighted up by the pale
golden globes of the fruit.
With us the merest twigs
ofswell trees would be sup
pjsod to have a stubborn imlivid
iality , rendering it impossible to
{ rain . ( hem ( o take ( he place of
vinos. In Italy for centuries
i'very thing has been done to ere
ate -a grateful shade at noon
where one can rest or sleep and
* leave lh world ntside to the ci
t cadas that , when thousands of
Them take voice together at once ,
make a rafhi > r K < > thiig ! suund.
Along the terj-Jioes of ( he Villa
Carhida. on .the Lake of ( Jomo.
these covvreil arbor walks lead
into j'ov ' .s of ilexes , and ( hero un
til past midsummer , out of the HI
lenrf and ( olness , ( he nightin
gales sing imt only all night , but
all dav , ioiig.
In ppltf ohe ( lavish beauty of
the laud , thf impression that re
mains : iH < T summer ( ravel in It
aly is of : th < 1 inhabitants living
very clone in nature , almost sub
ordinal ting her operations to ( heir
own needs- Nature is so pruned ,
HO tended , her least oH'ort so
tjires etl into the service of man.
The plumy cypresses , it is true ,
have nothing ( o do but stand sen
tinel by the belvidere ( emacesjso
with ( he ilexes. Hut ( he poplars
are trimmed ( o ( he llagpolcs for
the sake uf maggots , and every
leaf of the mulberry trees , across
which ( he vines ( ling their festoons
teens and garlands , is destined to
feed ( he silkworms , and as soon as
the maggots art- ready to ea ( , the
peafians ( with huge bags mount
t'hetrees nnd isl rip each branch of
its foliage. The olive orchards
that make a sihvr mist on the hillsides -
sides are busy i > erfeeing ( ( heir
ajseful harves ( .
Wherever a ledge of rock of
i's an Kalian
peasant makes a
garden , carrying up ( he soil
sometimes in/o / almost inacces (
sible , places. Hut there he will
plimt leeks , herbs , salad and
beards , 'besides a patch of wheat. (
the lacHor not for the half loaf of ci
bread it might make , bu ( to fur ciw
nish straw fo plait hats in winter.
Nature is no niggard. The lit Jy.
tie red poppies blossom out of ve
every cranny and chink and mala 1m
a blaze of color in the most unex to
pected pine * ' * . Oleanders have a
way of tossing their tufts of rosy so
blossoms along the white walls ; self
I.engal roses , clove pinks , carnay >
tioms and larkspurs whcr-
grow whcrpic
ver they can be tended and a lit- ( in
tie rill of ivater is directed ( o their ( m
use ; but ( he summer of Italy is of HI'JJ
great hent , and after the great
gush of ( lowers in spring the cai
vaunted Italian gardens remain mil
dry intersections of graveled
paths with clipped hedges , ( lights up
of steps , urns and statues. Noth- and
ing can be dearer
to
artstic taste , rian.
but for the real-joy of gardening any
nothing can be equal to what the '
poet Gray called "
having "a garden drift
of your own , where you plant and j mo
transplant and are dirty and
amused. "
"
Inane. ( |
.T C pcoilc $10 manage to live He d
tffeyt ever Fi ' "k' into hot wa-
est
" littf I do
with the
en-
three
V Wo Tribune.
lea
* ,
GREEN BLUEFISr SAYS SIGN.
'
Wlilch Menus Not DluollBh Green in
Color , But Freshly Caught Arc
Now in Mixrkot nt Now York.
"Green bluefish , " read a sign
outside of a flshmarket , but that ,
( he marketman said , did not mean
a new speoiett of bluefish , of a
green color ; i ( meant simply new
ly caught bluefish , not bluefish
from cold storage , says the New
York Hun.
"Formerly , " ( he market matt
i continued , "we had bluefish in
their season only that is , their
season hereabouts ; but this sea
son . was gradually extended aa
the fishermen went further and
further away for the fish , and then
when cold storage came into general -
oral operation bluefish wore put
into ( lie freezers , and with thin
help we came to have bluefish at
all seasons , in fact the year
around.
"Illuellsh smacks now fit out
with a month's provisions and go
far south to get ( he bluefish , as
they start on their annual migra
tion from southern to northern
waters in the spring , and they
follow them south again in the
fall , and so extend the season for
green fish.
"Fine and splendid and able a
fish as the hlucfish it , it does not
live long out of water , and so it
cannot be brought here alive iu
welhi in the smacks as i.s , for in
stance , the codfish. The bluefish'
ermen that go out from here car
ry , along with ample provisions ,
tons of ice in their holds , with
which to pieserve the fish caught.
"When a bluefish smack is do
ing business , , with its men out in
dories all around the vessel , fish
ing businesa , with its men out in
caught are dressed as BOOH as
they are brought aboard and
packed away in chopped ice. A
vessel fishing from anywhere be
low Ilatteras to as far north an
the Cape of Delaware would take
her casks into Norfolk , the most
convenient and quickly accessible
port , from where the fish , packed
in ice in barrels , would be shipped
to Ne\v York by rail. IJluetlHh
caught north of the Delaware
rapes could be brought here in the
vessel.
"The fish as caught are not
packed away in the smack's hold
indiscriminately , but they are
Horled in si/.es and weights , so
( hat when ( he smack comes into
port her skipper knows , for his
own information , if he is going to
dispose of her cargo , or for the
information of his owner or consignee -
signee , exactly what he has got
aboard , and so his cargo can be ,
< lispos Ml of promptly and intolli-
gendy without overhauling and
unnecessary handling.
"There are green bluefish in the
market right now , as in fact ( here
have been for some little time. "
CONSIDERATION DIDN'T GO
Bank Teller in Endeavoring to Be Po
lite Hits Sungnnd Lapses
to Old-Tiino Gnit.
Such a dainty and dignified lit tie
old lady was .she , says ( he Philadel
phia Press , ami so different in
every way from ( hose who go to
Chestnut
street
banks ( o have
checks cashed , that the
teller felt ( hat he could paying
ho general
phraseology of /
-
cial |
institluions when dealing
with her. She
approached the
grated window almost ( iuiorous-
. and , taking the check from a
very old-fashioned reticule which
hung about her waist prosontod'it If
the teller.
It called for
a large amount .and
somehow : he could not bring him
to utter the brusque "IIow'll
have it "
? she was
so much .1
picture of the olden days , of fl'o.se
times when phrases were gently "Y
turned , when "lady" had a real hoi
significance.
.
agj
In J trying ( o be formal he be wii
came merely stilted , and mur of
mured : "Denomination , plei.se ? " and
The prim little old lady looked bet
in a pu//Jed fashion , smiled
then said : "Why , Presbyte lacy.
. I didn't know that made air
: difference in banks. " be
The ] teller had , after all , to dai
into the language of t lie com of
monplace. slei
fully
Fleeting Fame. have
"Who is that gentleman left pie
iiite alone in the corner ? " ami
"That's form
Spangle , the author.
is passe He wrote the great dra
book of the ne <
year , more than
raoathi . " bed
ago. Town Top and
v
- *
MASAI TELL OF CREATION.
Close Rcscmblnnco to Old Testament
Nnrrntivc Story Hnnded
Down for Ages ,
Gapt. Morkor , a Gorman officer ,
who has spent some ton years in
Gorman East Africa , has written
a very interesting ethnographical
monograph on the Masai natives ,
in which he describes not only the
manners and eiiutoms of that race ,
but also their language and tra
ditions. According to Capl.Mor-
leer , the Masai have had handed
down to ( hem a story of the first
creation of the world and the hu
man race which boars a remark
able resemblance to that con
tained in the Old Testament. Thy
iMiiHiii relate that :
In the beginning the earth was
a barren , dry desert , in which
there lived a dragon. Then God
came down from Heaven , fought
against the dragon and van
quished it. There where God slow
( ho beast and poured out its
blood there arose a Paradise , lux
urianl with the richest vogot.it
lion. ( The native word for this
paradise is "korio. " ) Then God
created by His word sun , moon ,
stars , plants and auimalsand last
of all ho made the first human
couple to aYisc.
Hereupon follows a description
of how God commanded the
couple in question to abstain from
eating the fruit of a certain tree ,
and how on His one day paying a
visit , as was his custom , to Para
dise , He found I hem guiltily try
ing to hide from Him. It was the
serpent here , too , who was at
fault , and the woman who had
succumbed to its temptation to
eat the fruit. The serpent , ac
cording to the Masai tradition ,
had three heads , and was pun
ished by flnil hy lieiitjjeoiauiUUlIed
to live forever in the "holes of the
earth. "
The two human beings were
then driven out of the Garden of
Paradise by the "morning star1
Which \\'as ordered to stand at * 'j |
gate to keep it. Then the lrdmrm
race grow in number , ani 0"nWlj0
gtos are recorded
jf ,
those in the ,
; moom , ( ) nn(1 ,
the first miirderwas committed ,
'
when a 'Hood was caused to ap
j pear. I Instead of Noah a good old
I' man named Tiiinhainof
was bill ,
den build a "wooden chest" and'
betake ' himself into it with his be
longings ' and animals of
kind. From the ark too every
, , as in the
Ilible story , Tnmbano ( sent out
a
dove ' , but besides ( he dove ho also
dispatched a viiKuro
( o find out
how ( ho fiood was looking. At
the conclusion of the fiood a four
fold rainbow
appeared as proof
of the cessation of ( Sod's ire ,
The Jacob's
ladder also plays a
part in ( ho .Masai tradition
, but
is
used for
a purpose
very differ
ent from ( hat in the Old Testa
ment , being a means
whereby dot ]
climbs down from Heaven to visit
( lie
human
nice on eardi , Men
tion is also made of ( he native tra
dition of the deception of ( he first
born , and of ( he law of circum
cision , ( ho latter being
sent
through Marumi , the Moses of the
Masai. Moreover the
, Masai toll
of the giving out from a moun
tain top of the Tea Command-
mentis , among which ni-c special
commands not to have more godd
than one , not to kill and not to
commit adultery.
HEALTHY SLEEP NECESSARY
You Desire Sound Slumber leave
Thnt Window Open Night Air
Produces Vigor.
"Most people nowadays realize
the Kmportaneo of ventilalion , "
remarked a sanitary authority.
"Yet , " he continued , "I have
hoard well educated
people argue
against the opening of bedroom
windows at night , first , because
thejinhealthiness of night air ,
, secondly , because they slept
better with their windows closed.
"Hoth arguments involve a fal
. In the first place , the night
- is not unhealthy ; it may even
healthier than the air of the
daytime , because of the absence
smoke and dust. As to ( heir
sleeping better , well , I will cheer
admit that their sleep may
been more sound , for the sim
reason that the excessive
amount of carbonic acid would
a sort of poisonous sleeping
draught. But sound sleep is not
necoasarUy healthj' > and close
bedrooms make for consumption
poor