THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , APRIL 20 , 1906 Cl The Falls City Roller Mills Does a general milling business , and manufactures the following brands of flour c * SUNFLOWER MAtiNOLlA CROWN Cl The above brands arc gunrantccd to be of the highest pos 01D sible quality. We also manufacture all mill products and 5 conduct a general 5Cl Grain , Live Stock and Coal Business and solicit a share of your patronage Cl a Clo P. S. Heacock & Son , Falls City , Neb. "W-K-v * * * * * X Now is the time to buy one of f i those FINE TOP BUGGIES of $ i Werner , Mosiman & Co. . | , * . Remember have the largest and best lines to select from , and we have some bargains to offer in the vehicle line. We also curry the largest and best line of Farm Implements west of the Missouri river , and we can save you money ii you will come and inspect our goods. We carry a big stock of Windmills , Pnmpsj Tanks , Pipe and Pipe fittings and can save you money in this line. Remember the thunder storms are on hand mid you ought to have the W. 0. Sehims pure soft copper cable Lightning Rod on your building. The only Rod you can etcheaper insurance on. Weare agents for same. Don't forget place. Yours for business . ' . 'kI I Werner , Mosiman & Co. IA I x. * * * * * * * . > x * * * * * * * -x The Great Paper of the Great West The Kansas Citv Sar Everywhere recogui'/.ed ns the strongest and most reliable newspaper in the most prosperous region of the United States. , Wherein It Leads. ItS Unexcelled NeWSServiCe embraces the continuous report of the Associated Prehs , with dispatches every hour : the general and special service of the New York Herald : the Hearst transcontinental leased wire service and special correspondence from THE STAR'S own representatives in Washington , D. C : Jefferson City , Mo ; Topelca , Ks. , and Guthrie , Ok. , in addition to the large grist of news that comes daily from several hundred other alert representatives. Its Market Reports and Comments have HD authoritative value that causes them to be telegraphed to allparti ; of the United States the moment THE STAR comes from the press. No western man even indirectly interested In the value of food products , stocks and securities can afford to be without THE STAR'S daily record ot prke ; < and conditions. : ; ItS Special Features include The Chaperon' * column , in which are answered questions pertaining to beauty aids and social custom ! ) and affairs , a department for inquln rs on other subjects and a wide range of miscellaneous articles throwing side light * upon the world's most in teresting people and events these in addition to a vigorous editorial page , absolutely independent politically , and a Sunday Issue that U full of live special matter and luman interest. 13 Papers Each week for 10 cents The Kansas City Star was the first and is still the only newspaper to deliver n complete morning paper , THE KAN SAS CITY TIMES , to its subscribers without increase in the Bubaeription price. Registered ArberdeeiY-Angus Cattle FOR SALE 50 Registered Arberdeen-Angus cows and heifers. These cattle are all under six years of age. Matured cows weigh 1500 pounds and over. All of breeding age are good regular breeders , some have calves at foot , others are soon due to calf. Also bulls. Prices range from # 50.00 up. Gravity is on the Burlington route , in Taylor county , Iowa , 75 miles south-east of Omaha. Also a good well Improved farm of 240 acres , i4 miles from Gravity , for sale. Jas. Chambers , Box 129. Gravity , Iowa. ANNOUNCEMENT Having secured the oxciu- > sive agency in Falls City for Sycamore Springs Mineral < \Valer , we are prepared to & furnish customers with the $ the same. Price GO cents per < | five gallon cask. Call phone * ISO or phone 3l > . f PRANK GIST I C.T. RE AVIS Jr. FRUlfTS The freshest and juciest of Oranges , Strawberries , Pine apples , Bananas , Lemons and Apples Fresh Candy Every day in the week. Choicest , best and cheapest in town Falls City Candy Kitchen DR. O. H. KENT Graduate American School of Osteopathy , Kirkavllle , Mo. Examination and Consultation Free Hours : 0 to 12'n in ; " 1 to 4 p in Ofllco at residence , ijtone street , second block nortli of court house. FAUS Oiry - NHBIUSKA Dr. A. E. Wolfe OSTEOPATH Treats successfully without DRUGS , nil curable diseases. Oflice over Lyford's store. Oflice I'lionc 2 > > 7 KctUtcncc I'lioneJH FALLS CITY NEBRASKA I C. H. flARlON ยง AUCTIONEER , Sales conducted in scientific and busi nesslike manner C. H. MARION Palls City , Nebraska SHIP rOUU LIVE STOCK TO CLAY ROBINSON & CO. Stool : Vurds , Kansas City. Mo. Export Salesmen , Cattle , Hogs , Sheep. Careful and Intelligent yard boys. Perfect office methods. Correct market information furnished. Houses at Kiinsas City. Omaha BlouxClty , Denser. St. Joseph 8t , I'anl , Chicago , Buffalo Pneumonia , ii Robbed of id Terrors Buy Foley's Honey and Tar. It stops the racking cough and heals and strengthens the lungs. If taken in time it will prevent an attack of pneu monia. Refuse substitutes. For sale at Moore's PhiirinHcy. For Sale. One good trusty , single driver at seventy-five dollars. J. W. CKOOK. Chronic Bronchitis Cured. 'For ten years I had chronic bron- chlsis so bad nt times I could not apeak above a whisper , ' ' writes Mr. Joseph Coffman , of Montmorenc , ind. "I tried all remedies available , but with nosuccesa. Fortunately my employer - ployer sujjgeiited that I try Foley'e Honey and Tar. Its effect was almost miraculous , and I am now cured of the disease , On my recommendation many people hare used Foley's Honey and Tar , and always with satisfaction. " For sale at Moore's Pharmacy. FOUND Two weeks ago today a stray horse , branded. Owner may have same by proving pro perty , paying for feed and for this notice. CHAKUK WHINKKT. A Chattanooga. Druggist's Statement. Robt. J. Miller , ProprieUr of the Read House Drug Store of Chatta nooga , Tcnn. , writes : "There Is more merit in Foloy'b Honey and Tar than in any other cough syrup. Thu culls I for it multiply wonderfully and we bell more of it than all otuer cough syrups J combined. " For tale at Moore's Plmr- umcv. NOW AND THEN. One often hears the statement made that the young man of today has not the same chance his father had when young , Land is more valuable , the good things are taken up , there is nothing left for the generation just arrived. This is all foil , de-roll. The young man of today has the best chance of any young tu a n since Adam , if Atlnm ever was a young man. Opportunity is of no particular time or locality. Opportunity is nothing more or less than a condition placed within the view of the man who can see. The failure in life is not a man who has never had an opportunity , it is a man who failed to recog nize opportunity when they met , It is an old saying that "Opportunity knocks once at each man's door. " Nothing of the kind. The saying doesn't begin to tell the truth. In the year ol our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Six , oppor tunity is playing an anvil chorus on the door ol every young man who is worth his salt. The trouble is that the young man is deaf or lax.y or airaid , or vacil- ating. The world is searching for the man who does things. Opportunity never misses the man who does the right thing without being told. Failure never finds the man who does a thing a little better than his competitor. If you have some thing to do in lite , get at vit. Persistently , thoroughly get at it. Don't be satisfied if you have done it well , do it better than the other fellow. * "But suppose some one to whom nature was more kind in the creation should by superior ability and training beat me in the struggle ? " asks the hesitat ing young man. What of it ? You have tried , haven't you ? You have had the advantage of your labor. You are a bigger , better and wiser man than you were before you tried. You have learned the mistakes , you are better equipped for the next struggle. Get at it. Time is passing. Spent time is the only expenditure you can never earn back. When it is gone it is gone forever. Do you think that an nnw.io ever accom plished anything worth while has ever regretted the effort , the labor its accomplishment required ? Your advantages have been meager , you say. You are not an educated man. Do you know wherein lies the sole value of education ? It is nothing more than teaching a man how to work. Time was , ages ago , when man was edu cated by his work ; then our schools and universities began to attempt the education of man for his work , but the real prac tical test of life has demon strated that many successful men have been educated for their work AT THEIR WORK. Do you know that the course of the Palls City high school gives a young man a better education than could be obtained at Har vard university in its youth ? Do you know that a graduate of the Palls City high school has a better education , so f a r as schools are concerned , than hud George Washington , Daniel Webster or Abraham Lincoln ? If you have work to do , get at it. Stay at it. If you do , op portunity will get you by thJ scruff and you will have achiev ed success. * Are you a farmer ? Study your problems. Farm better than the other fellow. Take good agricultural papers. Learn from the experience ol other men. Do you know that some farmers get 75 bushels of corn per acre while their neighbors are satisfied with 35 and 40 bushels ? They have learned the value of crop rotation to restore the fertility of the soil. And by the way , we are going to have something to say in this column relating to soil and fertilization before very long. We have been studying it as a sort of a relaxation for nearly a year , and have come to the con tusion that it is a big question , ; tml one about which the farmer should know more. Uut to re turn to the 75 bushels per acre nan. He tests his seed corn in the spring before planting. He plants only the corn which stood h e test. Consequently , he plants corn of tested fertility. [ Ie has his seed bed properly prepared so as to conserve noisturc. His land has been preserved by crop rotation until ts fertility has reached the imit. He getn 75 bushels . to : he acre and his10 bushel neighbor calls him lucky. Not a bit of it. He has only recog nized opportunity when he met it. * Take Senator Bailey of Texas 'or an instance. The writer icard Bailey and t h e late Thomas Reed have a contro- fersy in the lower house of Congress in 1807. Reed de- troyed , annihilated him. I thought Bailey an upstart and le was. Reed was a powerful nan mentally , one of the great est men America ever produced. Too great to be understood in lis time. Bailey was a lawyer n a little high grass Texas town just south of the Indian Territory line. He had amln- .ions and was a worker. He was one of the young fellows that wanted to do things. He A'ent to congress. He worked , good Lord how he worked. He developed until his people sent lim to the United Slates senate. The other day the rate bill was being debated in the senate ind Senator Knox , admittedly one of the greatest lawyers in ( Vmerica , spoke against the con stitutionality of the bill as re- > orted from the house. The argument of Senator Knox was sent to every member of the American Bar association as one of the greatest constitu- :5onal : arguments ever delivered n the senate chamber. Last week Bailey , the upstart , the young lawyer Irom a high grass own , had the nerve to answer ; he great corporation lawyer rom Pittsburg. What Reed did to Bailey in the hearing of the writer , Bailey did to Knox's argument last weeic. It was ; he development of nine years of constant labor. Today , be. cause of his courage , his ability , lis labor , his recognition of opportunity when they met , Bailey , next to Bryan , stands : ue best chance of being the democratic candidate for Presi dent in 1908. 5. : * Of course , if you succeed you must fight for the privilege. There are any number of men who will speak unkindly of j'ou. They will say you are overated , that you are lucky , and will use every effort that lies in them to stop your progress and to ruin your life. But an enemy is one of the greatest blessings of life. A man without an enemy isn't of much service to himself or anyone else. An enemy keeps you keye > l up. He compels you to do your best. Here is a piece of poetry that gives my meaning better than I can express it : MY PUIKND. THE B.VKMY Since your fierce hate has to befriended me , shall oppoao you , watchful to the end Since t'wae your covert blade , sloth might not nee , Madu vigilant this brea-t I must de fend Keep , still , my swoid from rust and slumber free. And since on blow itnd parry souls de pend , Call no soft truce to break my ttronpth , but be , In endless opposition , still in } friend. * And if you light and lose , what then ? Well , you have lought , haven't you ? You have taken it all as a part of a day's work , and you are stronger and better and more useful because you have struggled. You can never lose the value of your labor. You may not have ac complished what you set out to do , but if you have been persist ent , have overcome discourage- ncnt , have filled your little space in the world where men abor and men live , you Iiaye jcen a success. You have an swered the , purpose for which you were created. I would ather go out of the world tired than bored. I believe I would sleep better. And then , you enow , when the account is made up , AM\ you stand for final judg- ncnt , "God will not look you over for medals , degrees and liplomas , but lor scars. " Southern Sunshine. ft Rule , Neb. , April , 9 , ' 00 Falls City Tribune : In t h c Falls City Journal of March 30th , saw a warning of C. Apel , also i letter of Rev. A. J. Vogelein , warning the people not to go to Alabama , for instance ; Mr. Vog elein tells of a family of his con gregation that moved to Alabama who are 'not ' doing well. As Mr. Apel is a member of our congre gation and this.is written mostly 0 warn our people , therefore 1 would like to say a few words ibottt Alabama. In the first ) lacc I would say that neither of hese two men , Mr. Apcl or Mr. Vogelein were ever in Alabama , ind neither of them know any- hing about the south , except what they have read or heard about from other people. I would lever say a word about these varnings if I were the only man hat is called "foolish , foolish icople. " What I write about Alabama I can prove and have seen myself , jocause I didn't buy a cat in a > ay when I bought land in Ala bama , because I was there three imcs and have inquired and in vestigated nearly everything that could give me information about he land and examined it care fully , the soil with a spade all over and so did all the rest of the nen that bought land there. If tfr. Apel a n d Mr. Vogelein think all the men , like C. F. Obcrst , A. B. Becker and sons , Chas. Hilgenfeld , Rev. A. Koeh- er , Win. Deckingcr , Peter Bolz , etc. , are fools , then they are jadly mistaken , because these gentlemen are some of the best 'anners ot Richardson county. That a family from Vogelein's congregation'-do ' not do well in Alabama mrfy ; be true , because Alabama haS'tnuch poor land and > eople from- Chicago that never lad a plow-six or hoc in their lands and don't know anything about fanning. ' No wonder such people don't .make a success of anything , r Even where I bought land and the soil is good , 1 know a few families from Chicago cage that don't make much. One of them came there without any money and they have no team except a pony. Another family lias no horse at all. How can such people make a success of farming I would like to know. Mr. Boh and wife like it well at Alabama and both are well and satisfied. If the Falls City Journal will warn the people about Alabama it had better get information from some men that know something about that state or from someone that has at least seen a , part of it. But to let Baldwin county , Alabama , have justice I would like to write a few articles in The Tribune in the near future about what Baldwin county can produce and especially about cattle raising , so that the Journal don't need to warn the people any more. I would like to write in The Trib une about that matter because it is the best and biggest paper in the county. The head line of the Journal says : "The largest circulation of any paper in Rich ardson county1 but no one will believe it. Yours very respect fully. HUK.MAN KoiWUSK. Advertise in The Tribune. Largest circulation In Richardson county.