Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1908)
Do Yon Know This fact? That you can have decayed and useless teeth extract wi.li no mure of pain than the prick < a pin cau-es at our dental parlors. I’s e*»s dentistry as near as such a thin- - possible is per formed here, whether it >e tilling or ex tracting. Our surgical dentistry is a marvel and a boor to tne nervous or timid who comes to DR. YUTZY’S I BERT WIMJLE. 1 jy s Assistant Falls City, Nebraska HandDecorated C lina! See the \vear==a full case in the south win dow at CHAS. M. WILSON’S The Falls City Roller Mills Does a general milling business, and manufactures the following brands of flour SUNFLOWER MAGNOLIA CROWN The above brands are guaranteed to be of the '..idlest pos sible quality. We also manufacture all mill p .ets and conduct a general Grain, Live Stock and Coal Business and solicit a share of your patronage P. S. Heacock & Son Falls City, Nebr. PRESTON 0RA1N and LUMBER CO. When you have Grain or Hogs to market do not forget that we pay the top price and give you honest weights. ALWAYS GET OUR PRICE H When you need anything in **** Lumber or Builders' Material call on us—we can furnish you anything in this line as cheap as the same grade can be had elsewhere. ALWAYS TRADE AT HOME AND SAVE MONEY PRESTON GRAIN AND LUME3ER CO. h hasjWargest circulating fine evgacs&ia'a base burner! rs ' ■< and tkis, with the new r Side "flue heating surface maKes it the STRONGEST HEATER for amount 1/ of fuelled EVER PRODUCED rfeA/ekv ROUND OAK BAS E BURNER./j worth 1 in vest/goting The New Round Oak Base Burner The greatest heater for amount of fuel con sumed ever known in this type of stove. It is a decided improve ment in base burner construction and com bines new and advanced features in flue build ing and control of the fire, owing to tine workmanship. J. C. TANNER Falls City, Neb. LEEDS LIQUOR EMPORIUM All Popular Brands of Wet Goods with an experienced mixer at your service. Foreign and Domestic Cigars. L. E. LEED, Proprietor FALLS CITY NEBRASKA Hoke Smith Was Here Hoke Smith ot Georgia spoke to a crowded room in the court house Tuesday evening. He is the gentleman who was Secretary of the Interior under Cleveland and who was instu ment.il in cutting down the pen sions of the old soldiers and the passage of the Wilson bill. He is governor of Georgia and at the primaries for a second nomination hist month lie was repudiated by Ins own party. He stated that he came here at the solicitation of W. J. Bry an. He would not dare to make the speech in a labor center that lie made here. His argu ment on tariff upholds what the republicans have claimed ami what the democrats have denied as to the meaning of their plat form. The republicans advo cate a revision of the tariff up on a protective basis. The democrats deny that llit* plank in their platform demands a re vision upon a revenue basis only, but Mr. Smith openly ad vocated such a theory. He de manded that we should buy where we can buy the cheapest, irrespective of country. We well know that certain goods sell in foreign countries cheaper than here for the reas on tnat labor is cheaper there than here and we turther well know that if -uch a policy should be pursued by this country our shops would be either closed or the wages of the employees would be reduced to a par with European labor. Therefore the market for the products of the farm would be either destroyed or impaired and the farmer would be a great sufferer in the end. His argument upon tariff was out and out free trade, and re member he comes asthe spokes man of Bryan. All we have to do is to re member the times under Cleve land when we had democratic free trade in order to realize the effect of free trade upon agri culture. His argument upon injunction was ridiculous. It was this ‘•When Taft was a judge upon the bench he enjoined men.” There he left it. He did not say why they were enjoined nor what from. If a judge would enjoin a gang from murder ascording to Hoke Smith he would be doing wrongs It was a little amusing to us Nebraskans who know Bryan so well to hear Smith upon publi cation of campaign contribution. That isa subject which Bryan orates on with terrific vehem ence away from home,but around here he is usually very quiet about it. We remember very well about Tom Allen and Jim Dahlmen re ceiving $15,000 from the worst gamblers in New York to help elect Berge lor Governor of Ne braska. We have a law in Nebraska requiring every person who re ceives funds for campaign pur poses to report it to a proper officer. No report lias ever been ; made ot that $15,000. Tom Allen is Bryan's brother- j in-law and .Jim Dahlman, the! gentleman who was led out of a \ convention in Sioux ('it)’, Iowa. | for drunkeness is now making speeches for Bryan in Illinois j Upon bank guarantee, the gentleman is surely crude. To illustrate, we have three banks j in Falls City. These banks are absolutely sate. They loan; their money to our home people I and their notes are good. No panic, no crisis could injure; them. A deposit in either of j them is absolutely safe. They: could be no safer if you would j pile guarantees upon them sky high, for they are absolutely safe now. But if our banks have to guarantee the deposits of the gambler’s banks in Wall street, of the banks down in Georgia where the loans are made to darkies upon old mules and plows, of the banks out in the west where old wagons and liar ness are put up .is securities, I don't you see tiiat is would weaken our banks instead of strengthening them. The same condition holds good in many other sections and the result would be that the banks in .1 good stable country would have to become liable for the banks in a poor barren country. All in ail. the speech of Hoke Smith when boiled down amounts to nothing. All we have to say is, just compare the progress, the growth, the pros perity which has come under republican administrations with conditions under democratic ad ministrations and then take your choice. APPEAL TO PUMPMNOLCCIGTi. The growth of a real, genuine, old-fashioned, like-mother-used-to make pumpkin pit* is a gradually expanding poem; it must be just so, from Alpha to Omega, otherwise it fails of its mission, and should never have been born. To enter here into technical discussion anent tin* can and circumstance marking the hon orable progress of the pumpkin from seed to pie is manifestly impossible. To such general suggestions ns (be Commoner makes we give hearty as sent, and cordially refer every doubting Thomas to that interesting publication for further detail. It is merely our purpose now to empha size at this season of pumpkin plant ing—now when the glorious Octo ber pie is the tiniest mite of a thing in embryo—to all pumpkinologists (be duty upon them to plant, plant, plant with care, plant for the palate of the connoisseur—if a true pump kinologist can ever guess what that is! As the twig is bent, so the tree will incline; and ns the pumpkin is properly started on its conquering career, so will its finish be marked by surpassing delight. GODS OF HINDUSTAN. India is a land of idols. It is es timated that there arc 333,000.000 gods in Hindustan. The three great and specially venerated deities are Brahma, Vishnu and Siva—the Hin du Trimurti or trinity. Brahma stands first, unapproachable. There are only three temples in all India erected in Ids honor; he is merely invoked as chief of the Trimurti, but is not made the object of actual worship, ns lie is not supposed to take any interest in mundane affairs. He is fhe creator, the giver of all gifts and of all blessings, and con trols the destinies of men, vet at the same time is completely indiffer ent to them. Pain Weakens Headache, rheumatism, neuralgia, or pains of any nature weaken the sys tem—they are a strain up on the nerves. Almost instant relief can be ob tained by taking l)r. Miles Anti-Pain Pills, and with out any had after-effects. Take one on first indica tion of an attack—it will ward it off. They are a pleasant little tablet, sold by druggists everywhere, 25 doses 25 cents; never sold in bulk. “I was subject to constant head aches for a period of four years. At times I was almost unfitted for the work in which 1 am engaged, that of station agent. Through the advice of a friend 1 tried Dr. Miles’ Anti Tain Tills, and the result has been that I have entirely eradicated iny system of those continuous headaches that follow a continual mental strain. They have done for me all that Is claimed for them.” O. 7 . RUSSKLT,. Agt. C. & N. \\\ Ry.. Battle Creek, la. “I have used Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills for a year now for neuralgia and find there Is nothing like them. They surely have been a blessing to me.” MRS. M. .7. HAMILTON. Uppe» Alton. Ills. Your druggist sells D- Miles’ Anti Pain Pills, and we authorize him to return the price of first package (only) if it fails to benefit you. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind ■ ffi.l , ■ -Sj] ■M Absol utely k Pure Insures delicious, Jd> ful food for every home, every day. 1 he only baking powder made !fom Royal Grape Cream of 7 ariar— made from grapes. Safeguards your food against alum and phosphate of lime—harsh mineral acids which are used in cheaply made powders. HABIT OF READING IN BED Usually Bad Practice Condoned by One Writer, But Only Under Certain Conditions. Heading in bed, like must luxuries, can be overdone, in fact there seems to be only one excuse for (bis fas cinating way of ending the day. Cer tain people find that their worries accumulate in their brains after bed time; their nerves are at high ten sion and their minds are actively at work trying to solve problems that should be left behind in the city, savs a writer in The Family Doctor. Going to bed with the brain in such n state means that with nothing to distract the thoughts, hearing nothing and seeing nothing in the darkness, imagination lias full sway and hours of wakefulness may be the result. Such a man, we think, will find half an hour's reading in bed a great, help. With careful attention paid to the quality and position of the light so that without flickering it shines over the shoulder and directly on to the page the much maligned habit of reading in bed has sometimes a very beneficial elTect. on a tired and over wakeful brain FOR THE SLEEPLESS. During the evening do not read or sleep or indulge in exciting talk or disc ussion. Before retiring take a moderate walk of 15 or JO min utes. Some people are kept awake by the food in the intestines. The habit of getting relief may be es tablished for tin* evening instead of the morning with good results. A tepid bath with gentle rubbing will draw the blood from the brain to the surface of the body. If troubled by susceptibility to slight noises during the night, put a wad of cotton bat ting in the ears. This deadens the sounds. NOW THE SARGENT NECK. The reign of the Gibson girl is declared to be over. The latest de mand is for the “Sargent neck.” The ultra fashionable woman of to-day must be long ami attenuated and must have the aforesaid neck. The discovery has been made that the wonderful air of high bred dis tinction which Mr. Sargent is able to impart to his portraits is due largely to the treatment of the neck. In bis paintings women have long, slender necks, which carry the head in regal poise. TENT AND UNIFORM. A California inventor has devised an interesting shelter tent, the can vas covering of which can he divided into sections and worn as a garment or uniform during the day, says Frank II. Cotsehe in Popular Mechanics. -Adapted for the use of troops, hunters and campers in gen eral. the uniform, or poncho, as it is called, somewhat resembles the uniforms sometimes worn by the sailors of oriental countries. ERRORS IN HIS GAME. “It is very easy to say the wrong thing,” remarked the moralist. “That is very true,” answered Senator Sorghum. “I suppose, even cautious as you are, that you regret some of your ut terances. ” “Yes. On several occasions I have said ‘I raise you’ when I ought to have said ‘I pass.' " Crazy Hats. There are some signs of hard times that no man with properly function ing optic nerves can overlook. Scores of milliners have obviously been com pelled by adversity to discharge all their high salaried designers of art hats and employ in their stead mad men frantically eager to reproduce de mentia Americana in headgear. Perfectly pure,unquestionably v:hole some. A pure food factor ante dating all pure food laws, indispensable for raising finest cake, biscuit and pastry. No Alum. No Lime Phosphates Be on guard against alur 1 in your food, Prof. Johnson of Yale College says he “regards the introduction of alum into baking powders as most dangerous to health.” Read the label. Buy only where Cream ol Tartar is named.