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About The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191? | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1910)
--> Henry C. Smith LANDS & LOANS M——,M—- - BO you USE THIS PRODUCT ? INTERESTING TALK ABOUT THE CULTURE OF OLIVES The Process of Manufacturing Olive Oil. the Different Grades, the Uses It is Put To Ollv«» Oil is of very ancient us«* | It was used for medicine and anoint ing In the dawn of early history and its use as a food antedates the Christ ian » ra 10veil the cultivation of the olive tree is so far in the past that it is difficult to t*'ii when ii began. The Olive tree grows from fifteen to twenty-five feet high but is kept trimmed by the ciilturist. Tho leaves are evergreen and the wood of the tree is very hard. II is not very prolific, not more Ilian ten per cent of the flowers producing fruit It flourishes in all countries bordering on the Mediterranean and has been transplanted to Australia and Onlifor nia. There are more Ilian thirty varieties ami the oil varies with the variety, the climate, (lie season, and more especially with tin care, cul ture and harvesting (ireen olives are prepared for tho (able, and urea familiar delicacy. Ripe olives are pre-parcel in the same way and are highly esteemed by many Tin- oil is obtained from the- ripe; Iruit by expre-saiou and the finest oils come from Southern France*, j the city of Nice being the* principal! export point The* principal reason, why French oils are finer iliitni others is that the* French ciilturist j gives his trees hi tler care. picks! ally, and almost entirely by hand The Italian oil ranks next. It is i|i|ite as nutritious as tin French oil, grade for grade, hut is not as delicate. The ('ulllornia oils are] very niueh like the Italian, slightly inferior, I think, although they com mand uhoul-iUW* tuihlM prffi in this country. The various grades of < >li\ «• Oil depends upon tile •midilinh ol the fruit, .'till upon the method used. The in"d is ealleii “Virgin Oil” or by the French ''Premier.” It Is obtained from choice, band-picked fruit, subjected only to i>ht pressure. It is literally “I’remier," or the first oil to flow from the press, the pressure not bo ng sufficient to force out the ranker portions. This "Virgin or Premier” ■ il is the finest obtainable. The second grade is obtained by adding to the residuum in the press, other fruit not selected as carefully and subjecting to extreme pressure. This oil is good, but is ranker than the "Virgin” oil for which it is oft en substituted A still tower grade may be made in the same way if there should he mud defective or damaged fruit. A very low grade oil is obtained b\ boiling 111" refuse from the presses and' sk mining off the oil that rises to! (lie surtacr. And a very rank oil. j fit only for technical purposes isj made by fermenting tin- refus* and again subjecting it to very heavy' pressure. Olive oil is a nutritious, fat proditc-l ins food. It is very easily assimilat ed and the fine oils rarely disagree1 with even a delicate stomach. A! though out of tii" oldest of rudiments,1 many people do not know the food value of this product Medicinally. Olive Oil is used as a laxative for infants, to increase the production id fat n adults, and j In consumption as a substitute for Cod Liver oil. which however, it does not equal It also lias considerable action on the liver, increasing the flow of the bill- and is very beneficial in the treatment of gall stones and billiary caleulii. Constant us • of qlive oil lmpro\ es the complexion anir makes the skin soft and smooth. Small doses are of CHESTER A. BRINK PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Consultations Diseases of Women and Children Chronic Diseases X-ltay it.l'l Kieetrical Treatments, calls answ ■si aia’lit nr day in c i tj or country, punurc Office 439 PHONES Residence 4 ? I Office Over Falls City State Bank little value Generous and continued use is necessary to obtain results. More than three-fourths of all the oil consumed is used as a table delicacy for salads and in cooking. In oil producing countries it takes the place of fat and butter There is always a heavy demand for high grade Olive oil and the con sumption increases constantly. The low grade oils should not be list'd internally. They are rank and dis order digestion. Like other food products, Olive oil has advanced in price. A very ab rupt advance occurred after the earth quake at Messina, because large quantities of stored oil were de stroyed Our importations of Olive oil front France and Italy are enormous, part ly because California furnishes bul a comparatively small amount hut. largely because of the better quality of the Kuropoan oils Did while most of our oils come from France and Italy nearly all our olives come from Cadiz. Spain. They are ospeci ally cultivated in that locality and the product we receive is known ns the Queen Olive. These are large, fine fruit. The same provinces pro duce a small olive known as the Manzanillo. This variety is mostly consumed at home, few being ex ported, A MORSMAN. M. D. MORSMAN DRUC CO. Wanted- District manager with headquarters at Falls City. A grand opportunity for the right man. Ad dress in confidence. Kite I’. (’, box 1 New Vork City. THE COMERS AND COERS HAPPENINGS OF INTEREST TO YOU AND ME What Your Friends and Their Friends Have Been Doing the Past Week. —Eat Sowle's Candy. —Dr. Wilson, Wahl's building. Send in your order tor straw berry plants to Slmanton & I’cuee. Charles McGuire and wife of Ham lin, Kas , spent Saturday in this etly. W. It Easley of Lincoln visited with his sister, Mrs. A. G Wanner over Sunday. G. W, Ballinger left, for Tarkio, Mo., last Saturday, where they will make their home. Saturday Miss Lola lleineinan had for her guest, her eousin, Miss Meta lleineinan, of Verdon. Otto Werner of this city was op erated on for appendicitis in Omaha Monday. Ilis father, Martin Werner, is with him. At last reports he is doing nicely. —Ladies. Save Mcney! Make finest of perfumes at home for one fifth what you are now paying. Ton guaranteed recipes for f>0c. Home Supply Co , Princeton, Indiana. Tlie boys who played “ghost." so effectively Saturday night north of tovyn, cun thank their lucky stars that their victim was a generous hearted fellow and let them off easy. “Skin Deep’" I is said that “beauty is only skin deep. That’s sut licient. I’roperly gowned and adorned womankind is satisfied with this depth of facial beauty. In the wa\ ol adornments useful and necessary adornments we are showing the very choicest designs in hat Pins Belt Buckles Gold Lockets Fancy Purses Back Combs Barrettes Mesh Bags Toilet Articles The prices are fair and reasonable not “cheap,’’but Hist right. Our show window doesn't tell halt the story so many pretty and useful things necessary lor My Lady's toilet that are not in the window. |But they are here, subject to your approval. DAVIES & OWENS JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS FALLS CITY, NEBRASKA k Philip Shouso had a message from Congressman McGuire, stating that : the House passed a special hill rais ing his pension to twenty-four dol ' lars a month, As the old soldiers grow f ■older, such action is in order. Mr and Mrs. Eisenminger of j Sabetha were business visitors here tin- latter part of the week. Mrs. Eisenminger is a cousin of Mrs. Carrie Paxton file township assessors met with Count) Assessor Judd Tuesday to fix tin' rate schedule on standard items of taxable property. —Pont forget to visit the Home Shoe Store for bargains in shoes when in Kails City. 14-tf —We have some fresh Red Seal flour in now. Come and get a sack. —C. A. Heck. Most of tin1 wheat fields in this section are being prepared for a corn crop. Inez Waclitel came down from Fe rn Friday to spend Faster with her parents. —Ladies' two piece light weight underwear 25 cents per suit at Ricks. —Young’s Pantorlum cleans and messes ladies skirts. 44-tf John Lichty returned Tuesday from his trip to the east. —Strawberry plants are ready.- Si manton & Fence. 13-tf Mrs. Brebeck came clown from Shubert Saturday and remained over Sunday at home. Jacob Greenwald of Kansas City spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Judith Greenwald. Buy a ticket at the Lyric theater Friday evening, April 8, and help es tablish a "kid" playground at the Chautauqua. The Sister Society of the Brethren church are holding a busy session with Mrs. M. ,1. Schaible north of town this afternoon. Falls City can easily stand for several experiments at street pav ing. Why not hitch on another joint and hit the crossing one point farth er south? Uncle Sam Arnold walked down town Tuesday afternoon for the first time in many months. He has been suffering from paralysis for the last few years. Samuel Liehty and family have en joyed the first visit from their grand son. Ransom Liehty, wife and little son came down from Lincoln Sat urday and returned Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zoeller, and Mr. and Mrs. John Morris of Preston; Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Liehty, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shaffer and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Liclity of Silver Creek attended a business meeting at the Brethren church Tuesday evening. WAITER WHO GAVE AWAY TIPS Divided Money Received with Pianist Who Had Played Accompaniment to His Singing. Some out of town visitors were tak ing in an Kighth avenue cafe. The orchestra was excellent, the pianist especially, but first one waiter and then another, to their surprise, would quit waiting and sing. One sang so well that he w'as en cored again and again. That is, quar ters were thrown at him from all sides of the room. Half dollars sometimes. They fell in the sawdust about his feet. He kept right on singing, mov ing toward the raining quarters, how ever, and pushing them nearer to him, so that he presently stood in an inter esting little circle of quarters and half dollars, the pianist playing his very best at his accompaniment, ringing in extra touches, playing beautifully, in | deed. "How accommodating the accom panist is." commented a visitor. "Wait, and you'll see why,” said a New Yorker who was with them. Just (hen. tiie rain of money ceasing, the waiter quit singing, stooped, gath ered up the money, divided it In half, and gave half to the pianist before lie resumed bis work of wailing on the guests. ' That's tiie iirst waiter I ever saw give away bis tips,” the visitor said.— New York Post. WONDERS OF THE ANTARCTIC Member of Expedition Impressed with the Fascination of That Remarkable Land. Dr. Lionville, who is with the Char cot expedition, in a letter to Paris, says; •The Antarctic region is quite up to its reputation. I understand how one can be fascinated with these weird landscapes, where everything that nature shows is strange and un accustomed. "The animals are prodigiously cu rious, and Dm formation of the moun tains and glaciers very unexpected. It is unfortunate that we cannot spend ten days at this place, ‘Deception,’ so inaptly named. The penguins are most interested in my work. When I turn I over pieces of rock on the shores they J come up to watch what I am doing, draw closer and closer, elbow each other to see better, peck the places where 1 am digging and eiyl up by hustling me. 1 had to speak very plain ly to one this morning, and he walked away limping." Poets of National Greatness. Victor Hugo once said in his lord ly, generalizing way, that it was Shakespeare who prevented England Horn being only another Carthage; and it is indeed true that hut for our great poets we should not hold the place we hold in the opinion of Eu rope. Because of them we do not wince when we are described as a na tion of shopkeepers, for they prove that we, like the Florentines and Vene tians, are something more than that. M. Bourget lias expressed the general wonder of cultivated foreigners that the English nation, which seems so matter of fact, and even dull, should have produced two poets compared with whose works all other poetry seems to he prose; and these poets are the very two who are to he honored to day in Rome. It is certainly a fact that more than any other nation we produce men of genius who vary ex tremely from our normal type, and we never have produced more wonderful I poets than Shelley and Keats.—Lon ; don Times. j Stockholm "the Paris of the North." Mr. Edward 1). Winslow, who was re | eently appoined American consul gen | eral in Stockholm, has arrived in Ber ! lin from America and will proceed in J a few days to assume his post. He I speaks of the rapidly growing itnpor I lance of the city of Stockholm as a j center for tourists, and specially for j Americans, who are more and more numerous every year. The influx is expected to be greater than ever this summer, in view of the exposition | which is to be He!cl in Stockholm. "Some Americans already know the at tractions of Stockholm,” said Mr. Winslow, "but more of them should know, for Stockholm is really the Paris of the north ' -From a Berlin Let ter to the New York Herald's Paris Edition. Different. It was the bachelor girl who stood j at the door when the woman opened it. “i thought,” she said, ‘ that you j didn't allow your neighbors to put i i their milk bottles In the hall. The last time I was here you were raising i Cain about it. And here 1 had to walk through a forest of them to get i to your door. What change has come | over the spirit of your dream?” The woman took her by the hand and drew her into the flat. 1 "Talk a little lower, please.” she implored. "Those milk bottles don’t belong to my neighbors. They be long to me.” I Accident Statistics. One man in every twenty meet* with an accident yearly. WANTED! 5 Carload, 100 Head Horses and Mules I WILL BE AT, RAIN OR SHINE Palls City, Monday, April 4th AT CHAPMAN S FEED STABLE I will be there for the purpose of buping Horses and Mules from 3 year-olds up, that are broke. I want three car loads of good-shaped Chunks, and single or matched pairs of Southerners from 900 to 1.2*0 pounds—(they may be branded but must be gentle and broke). I will also buy agd, blmishd, havy or windy gldings or mars that ar in good markt condition, (but no plug mills). I also want on car of tasty wagon or xprss horss or mars, from 1,200 pounds up to 1,400 pounds. SPECIAL I have contracted for the year 1910. with a New York Teaming con ci rii. one of the largest in the Unites! States, to supply them with all their horses, direct from the country and 1 will pay more than any other buyer for Morses or Mares that will go in this order. They must he as follows: Nothing under four years old. from that to !); must be double broke; need not be fat but must be the rugged, draft) kind, with plenty of bone; they should weigh from 1.400 pounds up. Lead iu this kind and get the top price I have no agents or partners, and personally do all my own buying. Anyone using my name, or claiming to be buying for me, will be prose cuted to the full extent of the law. J. B. McGINN " The most extensive individual buyer in the world. Western head quarters and feeding stables, Union Stock Yards, South Om3ha, Neb. HOLD YOUR STOCK FOR OWENS. He AlwaVs Pays More than Other Buvers HORSES MARES and MULES Lat and broke to work—from 4 to 8 years old. Bring in your stock and get the highest market price, at Falls City, Sat., April 2 J. W. OWENS Most Extensive Dealer in United States. YOU CAN T FAIL IN BAKING WHEN YOU USE Gold Coin Flour Every quality that a good flour should have is to be found in Gold Coin. It Hin HIT r/ flmo i p 's *n nutritious properties and is B*t*‘'*'*'» KAlloflo. also absolutely pure milled flour from the finest Kansas hard winter wheat 48 Us. i •JSHMPL. 1 Ask Your Grocer C -i> For It!