The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191?, May 21, 1909, Image 6

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    MARKET LETTER
From Our Regular Kansas City
Stock Yard Correspondent
Kansas City Stin k 5 aids, May
17, lftQO, The cattle run last vu t k
was up to recent weeks, and sellera
were well pleased, the uarket c!< fl
ing with a net gain of 10 I" -0
cents on all kinds. Supply today
.» l.i,000 head here, hut tin- in
cludes 4tK)0 head of stock < attle
rnroute from tin* South to the
Northwest, leaving ll;0o0 on the
market. The strong market re
entiy Iihh encouraged feeders lo
hold on, ami receipts last wei k
contained n smaller percentage of
steers selling below $0 than usual.
Buyers tried todisci iminate against
heavy steers last week, but the de
mand was too great, and they were
not able to change prices for the
worse at any time. Conditions
a. -' much better than a month ago,
and the consumptive demand for
meats continued to expand last
week. 'Pop steers here today sold
at $6 80, as compared with top < f
$6.00 on different days last week,
and the steer market is called stea
dy to 1(1 lower loday, bulk of
steers, $5.85 to $6.05, cows and
heifers steady today, best cows
worth $5.75, and top heifers $6.50,
calves a quarter higher than n
week ago, top veals $7.25, hulls
$3.75 to $5.25. Stockers and feed
ers have been quiet without much
change in prices, market steady to
day. A few half fat steers are go
ing to the country at $5.60 to
$5.80, hulk of feeders $5 to $5 60,
stockers $1 to $5.10.
The hog run last week was 70,
cKX) head here, a decrease of 30,
000 head as compared with same
week a year ago. The market ad
vanced 10 cents during the week,
put prices are 5 to 10 lower today,
supply 13,000 head. The bear
feature today is a run at Chicago
ten thousand head greater than
estimates for today. Gener d con
ditions are favorable to the trade,
dr maud for all kinds of meats hea
vy. stimulated by the fact that
pork iH cheaper relatively than
either beef or mutton. Heavier
receipts later this month and in
•June may cause some losses in the
hog market, but no serious dam
age can be clone to prices until
grass cattle and sheep come freely,
the only thing that can cheapen
these classes of live stock. Top
bogs here today $7. Id, hulk of
sales $6.‘,H) to $7.30.
Sheep and lambs touched the
high point last Monday, since
when they have been slipping a
little, spring lambs oil' 50 cents,
goats 50 to 75 cents lower. Hun
is 13,000 today* Top fed lambs
$0 today, yearlings worth up to
$6,75, wethers $6.75, ewes $6.20,
spring lambs $7.50 to$0.00. Large
numbers of goats from the South
w<st have been received here late,
ly, fat ones worth $1 to $1 (id,
brushers $3.25 to $3,75, range
muttons from Texas and Arizona
$5 to $6,25.
Announcement Party
Miss Nellie Hart entertained
Saturday afternoon at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. l’erry
Hart, near Reserve. The decora
tions were jn lavender and white,
the same color scheme being used
iu the refreshments. Lavender
heart ice cream was served and at
each guests place was a boquet of
Sweet Williams tied with lavendar
ribbon. In each boquet was a
tiny heart with the names Nelle
Hart and Dr. Harry Burchard, of
Kalis City, June 7, PJ09, This
was Miss Hart's plan of announc
ing her marriage to Mr. Burchard,
which will take place June 7. A
little white satin bag containing
rice was given each guest with
these words, “Preserve this rice
with care to throw upon a happy
pair." About twenty guests were
present.— Hiawatha Daily World.
Referee's Sale
The Leslie laud that was adver
tised to be sold at sheriff’s sale
Monday afternoon was sold and A.
R. Scott acted as referee. Sixty
acres were sold to Fred Meyer at
$101 per acre and Schultz pur
chased the remaining seventy-nine
acres, paying$95 per acre for it.
HER METHOD OF REASONING
Little One Used Sound Logic in As
certaining Just How Old
Mamma Was.
Lillie Frieda is a liright miss
who comes to her conclusion* on
linos of what to her small mind
seem >tiiit and logical reasoning. So
one shopping day. with more specu
lation m her eve than her mother
noticed, she inquired, "What kind of
a waist did you ask that lady for,
mamma?”
"I asked her for a 38 waist," an
swered thi1 mother.
When they got home, Frieda, with
the air of a discoverer, pranced
gaily up to her grandmother. “I've
found out how old mamma is," she
announced; “she’s 38.”
“How did you find it out?”
queried the grandmother.
“Because she bought a 38 waist.
She buys me ten-year-old dresses,
so if she buys 38 waists for herself,
she must be 38 years old,” con
cluded Miss Frieda triumphantly.
“EQUINOCTIAL STORM."
\ search of the weather records
will reveal the fact that the day
which marks the separation of the
seasons and on which the sun
"souths” exactly at noon is more
likely than not to he dear and beau
tiful, hut with the latitude that the
amateur weather prophets of the
[last always allowed themselves for
safety’s sake, any storm occurring
within several days before or after
the time of equal day and night has
been held to he either an early or a
belated coming of the inevitable
“line” storm. A very little thought
on the area of the habited portions
of the earth and the known causes
of storms should convince those who
are willing to he convinced that the
“equinoctial” is a superstition and a
myth.
TURKEY DOOMED
A regenerated Turkey is going to
take hack all her old possessions in
cluding Herzegovina and Bosnia, so
the Austrians would better come in
out of the wet and give them up in
time.
It is a splendid dream, worthy of
a Turk of the days when the banner
of the prophet swept to victory on a
thousand fields of battle. But dead
empires are not revivilied. l>ism
tegration, not conquest, is the doom
of the land of the sultan. V V.
l’rcss.
TRIP NOT ALL WASTED.
“I’ve walked many miles to see
you, sir," began (be tramp, “be
cause people told me you was very
kind to poor chaps like me.”
“Indeed?" said the genial, white
haired old man. “Are you going
back the same way?"
“Yes, sir."
“Ab. Well, just contradict that
rumor as vou go, will you? (lood
morning. Stray Stories.
A FAVORED FOWL.
“I lias been told.” said Miss
M iatni Brown, “dat de parrot is one
of de longes’ lived birds dat is."
“l)e statement," replied Mr. Eras
mus l’iuklev, “is strictly ornitho
logical.”
“I wonder why 1”
“I ’specks dat one reason why de
parrot lives so long is dat he ain’
good to cat."
TIMELY ENTERPRISE.
“The political situation is devel
oping a considerable amount of
acrimony," remarked the observer.
“Yes,” answered the candidate.
“It's a good thing we had all those
photographs taken early in the cam
paign when we were still able to look
pleasant."
DRIVEN TO IT.
“Let principle take the place of
inspiration,” thundered one worker
for the uplift.
“Wouldn’t do for me at all,” de
clared the press humorist. “When 1
haven’t an idea for a joke, I have
to steal.”—Exchange.
HEADING HIM OFF.
“That was a pretty tall story the
last speaker at the meeting was tell
ing.”
“Perhaps that was why the chair
man cut him short.”
ADHERING TO FACTS.
“I met Jim Jones tho other day,
and he told me that just now he was
living high.”
“So he is. Jim’s a motonnan on
the elevated road.”
JUST THE REGULATION MEAL
Cowboys in the Early Days Evident
ly Arose with Healthy
Appetites.
T. B. Sweet, n Topeka capitalist,
stopped at Abilene m tlie early day
at die best hotel m the city. He
asked for his breakfast. The wall
ers took no special notice of his ap
pearance, or at least did not guess
that his appetite was different from
the average patron’s.
“(five me some eggs." said Sweet,
and waited.
In a little while the waitress came
back. In a bowl she had a full
dozen eggs, all hard boiled.
Sweet gasped and ate what lie
could, protesting that she had
brought him too many and that he
didn’t just know how hard boiled
eggs would strike him for his first
meal of the day.
“Why, that’s a regular cowboy’s
breakfast,” responded the waitress.
—Kansas City Journal.
NO NEED TO SWIM.
j j
Amateur Yachtsman—How is It that
you have been on the water all your
life and yet you cannot swim?
Boy—Don't ever 'ave to swim. I
know how to sail a boat without get
ting capsized.
HER BLUSHES HIDDEN.
Alfred (i. Vanderbilt, at the Long
Branch horse show, said of the
sheath skirt:
“You know those thick double
veils, similar to a Turkish woman’s,
that they have been wearing in New
port this summer? Well, they .say
in Newport that the other day an
extremely pretty girl appeared in a
very daring sheath skirt.
“Her father took her to task
about it.
“‘Don’t you think,* lie said, ‘that
the skirt you wore this afternoon is
most immodest ?'
“ ‘But, papa.’ said she, ‘I wear
one of those thick double veils with
it.’”
HOT WEATHER CLOTHING.
According to a Spanish physician,
white clothing is unsuitable for use
under a blazing tropical sun. lie
declares that people should wear red
colored clothing to keep cool. The
disturbance of the nerves of the
spinal column hv excessive actinic
rays reacts upon the stomach, he
says, upsetting digestion as well as
| causing sunstroke. The remedy is
a non-netinie covering for the skin,
and a rial lining for wearing apparel
t and helmet gives instant relief to the
I troubles from a torrid suu and en*
j aides a workman to stand exposure
with comfort.
WILLING TO OBLIGE.
‘‘When you feels any tomptatimi
coinin’ along,” saitl the friend and
adviser, “you inns’ say, ‘Get thee be
llin’ me, Satan.’ ”
“Da’s what 1 done said,” an
swered Mr. Krasins l’inkley, “an’
den I 'magines I hyulis Santan an
swer me back, ‘Da's all right. We’s
both gwi ne de same way nohow an’
it don’ make no diiT’unce to mo
which leads de puheession.”
SOMEWHAT ANNOYED.
“What sort of a time did you
have while you were abroad?”
“Not very satisfactory,” answered
Mr. Cumrow "1 saw a great many
historical curiosities, but I kind of
resented having the waiters and cab
drivers put on airs over me because
they could speak French, the same as
mother aud the girls.”
NOT SO FOOLISH.
“Yes,” said Phamliman, “may
daughter is to be married next
month to Count Brokaw.”
“Ah!” remarked the friend,
“everything's settled, eh?”
“No, sir-ree! You don't catch
pje paying in advauee.”
Weak
Heart Action
There are certain nerves
that control the action
of the heart. When they
become weak, the heart !
action is impaired. {Short
breath, pain around heart,
choking sensation, palpi
tation, fluttering, feeble
or rapid pulse, and other
distressing symptoms fol
low. Dr. Miles Heart Cure
is a medicine especially
adapted to the needs of
these nerves and the mus
cular structure of the
heart itself. It is a
strengthening tonic that
brings speedy relief.
Try it.
“For years I suffered with what I
thought was stomach trouble, when
the doctors told me I had heart
trouble. 1 bad tried many remedies,
when the Dr. Miles’ almanac came
Into my hands, and I concluded to
try Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. 1 have
taken three bottles, and now I am
not suffering at all. I am cured and
this medicine did It. I write this In
tho hope that it will attract the at
tention of others w ho suffer as I did.”
MRS. D. BARRON,
804 Main St., Covington, Ky.
Your druggist sells Dr. Miles' Heart
Cure, and we authorize him to return
price of first bottle (only) If it fails
to benefit you.
Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
If you desire a clear complexion take
Foley’s Orino Laxative for constipa
tion and liver trouble as it will stimu
late these organs and thoroughly
cleanse your system, which is what ev
eryone needs in the spring in order to
feel well. Kerr's Pharmacy.
Special Master's Sale
IN THE clltri IT COUKT OF THE UNITED
HTATE8, FOH THE DI8TKKT OF NE
HKA8KA.
Julia P. Warren, complainant.
VH.
James W. Hosford,et al-,defendants in Chancery.
FORECLOSURE «>!• MoRTOAUK
Public notice in hereby given that in pursuance
and by virtue of decrees entered in the above
cause on the 25th day of November, 1903, and
\pril H, 1909, I, (Jeo. H. Thiiintnel, Special Master
in Chuncery of the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Nebraska, will, on the
21th day of May. 1909, at tin* hour of 11:30 o’clock
in th»* forenoon of said day at the west front door
of the Hichardson County court house building
in the city <»f Falls City, Hichardson County,
State ami District of Nelmiska, sell at public
auction for cash the following dc*scril>ed proper
ty, towit: Lot No. four (4) in block No.sixth);
lots No nine, ten, eleven and t welve 9,10,11 and
12 in block No thirty (.30) and lot No. fourteen
<14* iu block N'o. forty-three 13 in KuIn proper,
in the County of Hiehardson, State of Nebraska.
( i Ko. II. Tltl'MMKL,
Special Master in Chancery.
Smyth »V Smith, Solicitors for ('omplainunt.
| First publication Apr. 23 r»tsJ
Notice
Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an exe
cution issued out of the district court, of Rich
ardson County, Nebraska, and to me directed, on
a judgment obtained by O. 1*. McKesson, plain
tiIT. against I'red H -Hoffman, Fred Olierst, F.
Hoffman and N. HofTinan, obtained before John
(iagnon, Judge of the County Court of Rich
ardson County. Nebraska, and trauscripted from
that court to the district court, 1 " ill on the 19th
(lay of June at the hour of l o’clock p. m. on
said day offer for sale to the highest bidder for
cash, the following describ'd real estate, to-wit:
•Ml of a certain piece of land described as fol
lows, to-wit, commencing at a certain point six
teen (lft) rods west of a certain point twenty (20)
rods north of the southeast corner of the south
west quarter s. w. l.i) of section No. ten 10)
Township No one (I) Range No. Sixteen (lft).
thence west one hundred and twenty-five (12.Y
feet, thence north nine i9t rods, thence east one
hundred and twenty-live 1.126 feet, thence south
nine (9) rods to point of beginning. Said pro
l>erty was levied upon by me under said execu
tion, and seized as the propertj of K. Hoffman,
one of the defendants in said judgment Said
sale will take place in front of the west door of
t he court house in Falls City. Richardson Coun
ty. Nebraska, mi thedaj and year above stated.
The terms of sale cash.
\V. T. Fknton, Sheriff.
RkwisA Hewis, Attorneys,
19-f>t
iSy®K#X* •i^AX4XS>' • -\*v
1C. H. MARION !
: AUCTIONEER, i
1 Sales conducted in 2
scientific and busi- 2
nesslike manner 2
C. H. MARION I
, Falls City, Nebraska I
I Best Bargain
I in reading matter that your
■ money can buy is your local pa
1 per. It keeps you posted on the
I doings of the community.
I This Paper
I will tell you the things you want
I to know in an entertaining way;
I will give you all the news of the
I community; its every visit will
I prove a pleasure; it gives more
I than full value for the price
I asked for it.
V ■ A
Seasonable Suggestions
To be Found Here:
Lowe Bros.’ Paint
Pittsburgh Electrically Welded Fencing
Fishing Tackle and Sporting Goods
Alaska and White Frost Refrigerators
Call Our Tinner Before the Spring Rains
J. C. TANNER
Falls City Nebraska
Plumbing :"vr.,T:r: Hardware
On<? 5est 5dnk
We refer, of course, to this oue, and knowing the superior facil
ities we have to offer, we unhesitatingly make the statement that
every man, woman and child in this community who has anything
to do with money should have an account with us. Certainly a
modest statement, you say, and we agree with you because we know
of no legitimate argument against it. Let us analyze a little a1 d
see where we are. No better set of officers and directors could be
assembled than are in charge of this bank’s affairs. All men of
highest standing, all financially re-ponsible, all men whose word
and bond possess equal value. Nothing which could be offered you
in any financial institution in America is lacking here, because dol
lar for dollar no bank anywhere is any safer than ours. We solicit
business on merit only, and can offer you value received every' time.
If you have not already done so we ask you to establish re’ations
with this Dank at once and we are very sure that they will be long
continued.
The Farmers’ State 5ank
PRESTON, NEBRASKA
YOU WILL SHARE OUR PRIDE
in dental work if you have need of our
services and avail yourself of our skill,
experience and facilities. We don't do
half way work—it’s all or nothing with
us, as many people know to their own
great gratification. Note, please, that
we make no charge for expert examin
ation.
DR. YUTZY
BERT VVINDLE. I). I). S., Assistant
Falls City, Nebraska
Try The Tribune for Job Work!
Magnetic Healing
Miss Lizzie Reitland, a gradu-;
ate of the Weltmer School of
Magnetic Healing, of Nevada,
Mo. 1 am prepared to treat dis
eases of all kinds. Phone 27’>
Located at Mrs. Burris' residence
south of the convent. 4t
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EDGAR R. MATHERS
DENTIST
Phones: Nos. 177, 217
Sam’l. Wahl Building
Ft P». FtOBI'irtTS
IDEINTTST
Office over Kerr’s Pharmacy
Office Phone 260 Residence Phone 271
_
John Wietse
ATTORNEY
Practice in Various Courts.
Collections Attended To.
Notary Public. FALLS CITY
DR. C. N. ALLISON
DRNTIST
Phone 248 Over Richardson County
Bank.
FALLS CITY, NEBRASKA
South Bound
Tr. 104 — St. Louis Mail and Ex
press .1:23 p. m.
Tr. 106—Kansas City Exp., 3:41 a. ir.. ,
Tr. 132 x—K.C.local leaves..7:30 a. tr..
Tr. 138 x Falls City arrives 0:00 p. n.
x Daily except Sunday
North Bound
Tr. 103—Nebraska Mail and Ex
press.1:52 p. tn.
Tr. 105—Omaha Express.. . .2:23 a. m.
Tr. 137 x Omaha local leaves 0:15 am.
Tr. 131 x—Falls City local ar
rives.8:45 p.m,
x- Daily exeent Sunday
Local Frt. Trains Carrying Passengers
North Bound
Tr. 192x—To Atchison.11:10 a. tr..
South Bound
Tr. 191x — To Auburn.1:23 p rr..
J. B. VARNER. Agent
Burlington Route
West Bound
No. 13—Denver Exp.1:56 a. m.
No. 15—Denver Exp. (Local).1:43 p. m.
No- 43—Portland Exp...10:17 p. m.
No. 41—Portland Exp.2:26 p. in.
No. 121—Lincoln Loc. via Ne
braska City.5:00 a. m.
East Bound
No, 14—St. J., K. C. & St. L. .7:41 a. m.
No. 44—St. J., K. C. o: St. L-.
(Local).11:02 a. m.
No. Hi—St. .T., K. C. & St. L. .4:30 p. m.
No. 42 St. J., K. C. A St. L. .7:00 p. m.
No 122—From Lincoln, via
Nebraska City. 8:45 p. m.
E. G. Whitford, Agent.