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About The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191? | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1908)
THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , MARCH 13 , 1908 atrtiMtffHfi rmr.'wrc iwrw * * : ! Confidence when eating , that your food $ a of highest : wholesomeness 'that It has nothing * in it that can injure o.v distress you makes the repast doubly comfortable and. satisfactory * This supreme confidence you have when the food is raised with The only baking powder made with Royal Grape Cream of Tartar There can be no comforting confi dence when eating alum , baking pow der food. Chemists say thac more or less of the alum powder in unchanged alum or alum salts remains in the food * 5Ban32BHBH3Haas sm * After Lost Races To Graduates. The Tribune this wed : received a beautiful sample line of gradu ating cards , which we will be pleased lo show to all interested. It is only a short 'time until the class of 1908 will bo before the foot lights and you will want to tell your friends about it in the proper way , which ia by a neat and beautiful invitation , and which we can furnish at a moder ate cost. Come in and scce our line and get our prices. .Tickling or dry concha will quickly 1 o O-B o n when using Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. And It Is so thor oughly harmless , that , Dr. Sheep tulle mothers to use nothing else oven with very young babies. The wholesome green leaves and tender sterna ot a lung healing mountainous shrub fur nish the curative properties to Dr. Shoo jt's Cough Cure. It calms the cough ami heals the sensitive bronl- chlal membranes. N o opium , no chloroform , nothing harsh used to In jure or suppress. Demand Dr. Shoop's. Take no other. Sold by all dealers. A largo assortment of Campbell's Stains and Floor Finishes have just been received by Morsnmn Drug Co. These Stains are unequalled for statnt Ing and varnishing furniture and In- talor woodwork. The floor llnlsh Is very durable and suitable for all doors. Ask for color card. A Life At Stake Your life may bo at stake when you notice any sign of kidney or bladder trouble as Height's disease and diabetes start with a slight Irregularity that could bo quickly cured by Foloy's Kid ney Remedy. Commence taking It tit the first sign of danger. Kcrr's Phar macy. Only $2.00 A Year. During the one week of March 23 to 28 , inclusive , the Lincoln Daily News will accept $2 from mail subscribers for a whole year to April 1 , 1909 , the regular price being S3. This cut in price is made pos sible by taking traveling solici tors from the road and doing business with the readers direct , giving them the savings in salaries , railroad fares , hotel bills , etc. The News is a regular $3 paper , but by this method you can save $1. This will be a great year in Nebraska and you will want a daily paper. One that's not alraid to say right out what it thinks. No office holders or office seekers arc interested in this paper. It's run on the square deal plan , under no obligation to political bosses. Aren't you in terested in the fight that is being made in Nebraska for every body's good ? If you are , send in your $2 and get this live paper all through the campaign and through the next legislature. Keep tab on what is being done. The people will never get what's their rightful due until they go after it. The News will always be found helping you to get what's fair. Remember the bargain week March 23 to 28. The price will 1 be $3 after that week and it's a good bargain at even that higher price. MB A Notice to Farmers We have a Full Line of Buggies , Carriages and Miller Wagons , also a Full Line of St. Joe Implements and a Full Line of Racine-Sattley Imple ments. Prices are the Lowest CALL and inspect these goods be fore buying elsewhere , and we also handle FIVE Different grades of TU bsos from the three home mills , Falls City , Preston and White Cloud. McCUMBER & GLAZE Preston , : : : : Nebraska. Bishop Left Thousands for Nebraska. Public bequests of more th.in $80,000 arc contained in the will of the lute lit. Rev. George \Vorthiiitftoii , Episcopal bishop of Nebraska , who died in France and whose will has been presented - ed for probate at PHlslield , Mass. The estate is estimated to be worth $150,000 and is to go to the widow of the testator for use during her lifetime. Upon the death of Mrs. Worthington numerous bequests are to be distributed. They include the following : Piye hundred dollars each to the Olarkson memorial hospital , Omaha ; Brownell hall. Omaha ; the diocesan fund lor the dis abled clergy , and the widows and orphans ot clerpymen in the diocese of Nebraska ; Ilobart college , Geneva , N. Y. , the general theological seminary , New York and $15,000 to the domestic and foreign mission , ary society of the Protestant Episcopal church ol the United States. Ten thousand dollars is to be set aside as the Bishop Worthington - ington fund , to be administered by the trustees of the cathedral chapter of the board of associ ations of the diocese of Nebras ka , the income to be used for diocesan missions. The diocese of Nebraska is given $4,500 for the purpose of increasing the Episcopal fund. As residuary legatee the will names the fund for disabled clergy , widows and orphans of clergymen in the diocese of [ Nebraska and the scholarship fund of Brownell hall , Omaha. Ex. The Nation's Supreme Asset. A nation's supreme asset is in the children. The child is not only the father of the man but also the father of the nation that is to be. The people who have the largest care for the child , make the most generous provision for its welfare , for its development , both as to body mind and heart , are neces sarily making for themselves the largest provision for their own effective and successful * tuture , and are laying the firm est foundations on which to build with the "gold , silver and precious stones" that shall give splendor and glory to the structure that is to be. England today Is an example of what industrialism will al ways do to its own civilization when unchecked and unbridled by the restraint oi wholesome legislation for the child. The physical decadence of modern England , which is no mere fear of an excessively critical and tearful modernism , but a pain- ful fact , a fact that discounts all that modern England aims to do for herself or for the world ; it is all the fruit , and the neme sis too , of the cruel greed and shortsightedness of industrial England. She was before us in the industrial world two gener ations or more , and the English cotton weaver , woolen weaver , silk weaver , carpet weaver , the English iron and steel worker , the potter and the miner , work ed for the world. And what did England do , what has she done until very recent days ? She has Hung her child into her own cruel , grinding industrial world for three generations without education , without physical fitness , underfed , unwholesomely - wholesomely housed , pinched , dwarfed , stunted , anaemic , and this child has produced after his kind. And we today are facing just this danger of robbing the child by the pushing , crowding greed of our growing industrialism. Industrialism holds the child cheap and always will. There A Narrow Escape Many people have u narrow cscauo from pneumonia and consumption as a result of a cold that bangs on. Folcy's Honey anil Tar" cures coughs and colds no matter how deep seated and pre vents pneumonia and consumption. Refuse substitutes. Kerr's Pharmacy. is no soul in it. It lias the spirit ) of the Egyptian task masters and would make the modern child make brick with out straw. A child sent to the real busi ness of life denied these will fail to accomplish its destiny , and will turn on the civilization that BO robs it , and will become its nemesis. Opened To Settlement. The Shoshone irrigation enterprise in the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming on which the Uni ted States government is spending - ing $ ' 1,000,000 is being rapidly completed. What is known as the Corbett Tunnel , 17,000 feet long , has just been completed and through it , what is known as the Gar land Government canal will supply water this spring to I-- , 000 acres of public land. This land is open to homestead entry under the usual rules modified by the provisions of the Recla mation Act. Continuous resi dence is required and practic ally nothing is charged for the land , the government merely charging the settler his prorata share of the cost to the govern , ment of the irrigation works. In this particular project this amounts to $15 an acre , and the settler is expected to pay * -1.50 an acre per yenr and has ten years in which to pay the full amount. These terms are very favorable especially when it is remembered that no interest is charged by the government on the deferred payments. The government has prepared plats showing the location and size of each of the farm units , any one of which the settler may select. This land is located along the Shoshone river in the heart of the Big Horn Basin , which lies between the Big Horn mountains on the east and the nuiin range of the Rockies on the west , with connecting mountain - ain ranges north and south. The situation is well sheltered , the climate is line and the soil as rich as any in America , and produces abundant crops of oats , barley , wheat , potatoes , sugar beets , alfalfa and garden truck. Water is plentiful and pure and there is plenty of timber and coal. Anyone who is thinking of settling in a new region will do well to investigate this splen did opportunity. High Priced Fiddle. Five hundred cold plunks for a fiddle ! This was the price paid Mon day for a violin owned by D , L. Brush , an Auburn man. The purchaser was John T. Cox , the cashier of the Bank of Howe. There are people who will be of the opinion that there never was a violin made worth the amount and yet , the wise ones who know the facts realize that Mr. Cox had got a bargain. The instrument that he pur chased is a rare one there being but few of the make in the United States , or in the world for that matter. It was a Jacob Greiner , made 273 years ago , erin in 1710 by one of the master violin makers of that time. What the real value of this instrument may be is a hard matter to determine , but any virtuoso in the land who learns of the fact will realize that Mr. Cox got the violin at bargain counter values even ii he did giye $500 for it. § 100 paid by Dr. Sheep for any re cent case of grippe or cold that a 25c box of Preventlcs will not break. How is this for an oiler ? The Doctor's su preme confidence in these little Candy Cold Cure Tablets Proventlcs Is cer tainly complete. It's a S100 against 25e pretty big odds. And Preventlcs , remember , contain n o quinine , no laxative , nothing harsh nor sickening. Pneumonia would never appear if colds wore always broken. Safe and sure for feverish children. 48 Preventlcs 2Sc. Sold by all dealers. fo rv ? * ttf * rfa r/ $ $ rvj t $ * fv ? 5 * $ fj & f Chess. M. Wilson j fr calls your attention to his lines of Dinnerware. 10 ' frfr fr Stock Patterns to select from , Sold by the Set or | frfr Piece. A complete line of Fancy China in Havilancl , fi fr Bavarian , Austrian and German Chinas. See llm J New Intagleo Glass , the finest decorated Glassware 5 ever shown in the city.We also have a complete J ilt stock of Groceries , Fruits and Vegetables. $ iltfr GARDEN SEEDS and ONION SETS. Jj EARLY OHIO SEED POTATOES at CSias. M. Wilson's | fj * i t'i * p fff ) V i * ft * * * # $ * * g * * § < * $ t The Falls City Roller Mills | O a Docs a general milling' business , and manufactures the 8o following brands of flour 8o o SUNFLOWER MAGNOLIA CROWN C3O The above brands are gunrantecd to be of the highest pos § sible quality. We also manufacture all mill products and conduct a general § Grain , Live Stock and Coal Business and solicit a share of your patronage P. S. Heacock & Son , Falls City , Neb. ! ectric Entire change of program every Mon day , Wednesday and Friday , Open Every Night at 7 p. m. ADMISSION Adults - - - lOc Children under i2 - - 5c We solicit the patronage of the people of Falls City and vicinity , especially La dies and Children. No picture exhibited in this show that can offend the most refined. & WALLER , A F@w Timely Suggestions ! j | ! A fewof the many things that YOU arc apt to be = 35 wanting this Spring always ready for Inspection E J SI Stewart Horse-Clipping Machines on hand at Ss : all times. = S ! = Also agents for Sure Hatch Incubators. = 5 Both of the above articles you will need soon. = 3 Leave your order NOW. iE : See that new line of Stewart Rosewood Enafnel:3 ! ware in our south window. 13 g = Agency for those celebrated Majestic Ranges. 3 r ? A full line of Pittsburg Electric Weld Woven - = Wire Fencing on hand. sf Lowe Brothers' Paints and Varnishes. ffS J. C. TANNER j I Ours Are "Dependable" Goods FALLS CITY , NEB. 13 SHOULD INVESTSGATE We are particularly anxious that you in vestigate the character of our service , to the end that you may become a permanent patron. frfr Comparative Statement of Resources 4 § frfr February sSth , 1903 $18,418.40 frfr February 27th , T9 < H 19,466.64 * frfr February sSth , 19 ° 5 29,642.70 | , frfr February sSth , ! 9o6 30,179.49 < $ frfr February 8th , J9Q7 36,279.80 & frfr February 2Sth , 1908 54,414.16 frfr fr FARMERS STATE frfr BANK PRESTONNEBRASKA * Operating Under State Inspection and Control.