THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE Consolidations Falls City Tribune, Humboldt Enterprise, Rulo Record.' Crocker's Educational Journal and Dawson Outlook, Entered as second-class matter at Falls City. Nebraska, post office. Janu ary 12. ll*04, under the Act of Congress on March 3,1879. -| Published every Friday at Falls City, Nebraska, by The Tribune Publishing Company W. H. WYLER, Editor and Manager. One year__-.$1.50 Sis months...75 Three months.40 TELEPHONE 226. THE SALOON OR THE BOYS AND GIRLS WHICH ? There is wrapped up in our young people all the possibilities of the fu ture. The achievements of the next generation lie latent within them. It is our privilege to make them what they will be, and in so doing to de termine the course of history far beyond our own time. MR. MOREHEAD. While, Mr. Morehead lias been regularly nominated, and is le gally entitled to a running chance there are reasons why In* shoul withdraw. I’awnee county help ed elect a Richardson county man two years ago, and simple courtesy reipiires that we in lii< h ardsou county return the favor this year. We can only sin w our littleness by rushing our candi date to the front in the face of the fact that it is not our turn and that Pawnee Imd two good men out. Jiielmrdson cannot af ford to he boorish, even now. * * * GOOD ROADS MEET. M. W. Curtis, representing the m*w method of road improvement by the application of oil, will be in Falls City Friday night. Sep tember '1. A meeting is called at the j*ourt house to discuss road improvements and appoint a com mittee to look into the experi ments now being made with this new process of crude oil macad am at Lincoln, Kansas City and other places. Mr. Curtis has been invited to come here by the Com* mereial club and Automobile club. All interested in the road im provement should turn out and hear Mr. Curtis and help start a good roads movement in Richard son county. The Brewery Our Real Enemy “Our real enemy is the gigan tic capital laid down in brewery and distillery. Many of the pre judices in favor of drinking arises from the fact that this al cohol capital controls directly,al most the entire press and pre vents the truth from getting to the people. It carries on a sys tematic seduction. One sees great beer plates spring up like mush rooms. lighted with elec) rie lights attracting the crowd by orcli estras, singing, dancing, theatri cals, acrobats, jugglers. One thinks of all the cafes ehantuntas around in our city suburbs plae ed advantageously to draw in men. “And this seduction is carried on not merely in the free time of the evening. No. it pursues; the workmen from morning to j night, even into his workshop.! Buttled beer is sent to home, to factories, to dockyards. Every, moment the laborer is exposed! to temptation. How can lie hold1 out? And after he has swallow this filthy drug for some months he becomes its slave and is ex ploited without mercy. The .share holders in brewers- these are the criminals, It is they who inis lead, who systematically poison whole people, who ruin them and their children's children. “The cruelties which a great, modern brewery commit are with-j out parallel in the world’s history; Formerly men were made slaves] hut they kept their health. Men have been murdered by thousands, hut the children remained s-uind.j Now they reduce men to slavery | ami kill them at the same time.j They make away with children, and grandchildren. They assis sinate men slowly. They torture them to death. “What shall we dot We must show our indignation at the in t'inatc folly of those who drink this vile beer which turns them into idiots, tumbles them into the gravy, .of their offspring makes degenerates slowly rotting alive. ' And we must organize all classes in society. We must set agoing a powerful movement against tin* brewery.” Prof. Von Hunge, of Basle. Kurope’s brent Physiological < 'hemist. Rural Routes and Roads. The rural route has now been extended over a large part of the United States, andf would lie ex tended still farther if the roads were kept in any passable condi tion. The government has now taken a hand and laid down a law that if there are to be rural routes there must lie good rural roads. The fourth assistant postmaster general has sent out the following to postmasters in certain states. “You are directed to inform yourselves with reference to the condition of roads and bridges on the rural routes out of your of fice, and if you find that they require improvement you shall present the matter in the strong est and most positive way to the patrons and road officials, in forming them that improvement must lie made as soon as practi cable. If, after a reasonable time has elapsed, the improve ments have not been made or started, you will report the fact to this office,in order that action may lie taken looking to the dis continuance of the service. “The department is not imme diately concerned in elaborate road improvement, hut in the in terest of the best service to the j largest, number of patrons, it 'must insis* upon roads being kept iin good repairs, tbe In k of wliieb | is usually due to improper drain luge and unsuitable grading and surface work, wliieb can lie easily I and cheaply accomplished by I timely work and tbe regular use I of tile split log drag or similar I device. ’ One gratifying feature of this .order is that the government is ..agnizing the utility of the | drag. It does not particularly jeare wind kind of roads there i are, provided they are good roads. It is therefore up to the farmers |along rural routes to make their roads passable as far as possible. If the farmers along any route will see to it that the roads are ‘properly drained, properly eul verted and bridged, and, furl her. that they are gone over with the I drag after every rain, there will die no difficulty. We nor glad that Fuele Sain J has issued this order. It is the least that he could require: eith er a good rural road or else no 1 rural route. We do not know of anything that will tend to settle I the road question more promptly I than this order, and we hope it will la* enforced. Farmers would quit quibbling about the minor details of using the drag it they j".ere brought to see clearly that j the route will bo abandoned un j less the drag is used. There is i really not so much trouble about ; bridges and culverts as there is J about getting the farmers to use I the drag. Wallace Farmer. Theodore Roosevelt s western i .our is the sensation of the hour. 1*1 very where he is being received i with ovations that leaves no question as to his popularity with tile masses, and especially with his old •friends, the western plainsmen. His utterances are short and to the point touching the live issues, and hitting them S|m ire. His cowboy friends have already launched a 1912 boom. I i ho Gubernatorial controversy is still up in the air. It is prov ing a ease of the jokers getting badly joked. Mayor Jim is get ting bigger every day. lie re fuses to quit. And the demo crats wonder what to do with him. lie is in dead earnest, has the hacking of everything had in Nebraska and much outside of the state. Never was a party so enmeshed in their own folbr. He is a veritable NY uesis. Who will 1 [predict the end? The rain will be welcomed to* the long suffering patrons of our city water supply. It will at the least dilute the mixture being served since the mayor's return from his summer v; at ion. a season we enjoyed excellent water service. But were back i again to tin* <>li| slnslv. One is tempted to believe that there is a deliberate effort to drive the people out of silver necessity to seek relief in the saloons and joints. How long, a long suffer ing public will tolerate this tiling,; is a question awaiting answer. SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY. An Excellent Corps of Teachers Have Been Hired. Everything is in readiness for tiie proper opening of school next Monday. The buildings have] been thoroughly overhauled, walla and woodwork cleaned, floors scrubbed and oiled, and the build ings thoroughly fumigated. On account of considerable contag eon in the schools last year, ev-j cry precaution is living taken to eliminate chances for disease. A plan for the closer inspection of the health of pupils is being work ed out. The question of venti lation has received considerable attention at the hands of the hoard and superintendent during the summer. An engineer has inspected the buildings, hut it is the opinion of experts that little can he done with the present plants. The only solution is the substitution of modern heating and ventilat ing systems for the present anti quated ones. The hoard have al so investigated drinking foun tains. Two have been installed at the f'entral building for trial. It is Hie intention to abandon i the unsanitary public drinking cup as soon as a satisfactory fountain is obtained. A very important step in ad vance and one in harmony with educational progress, is the in troduction of Manual Training and Domestic Science. This work will lie offered to seventh and eighth grade pupils and as an elective in the high school. The following is the corps of teachers for next year: High School. K. K. Hus! Principal ami Phy sical Sciences. Kdith C. Kidds History and Civics; A. It. Cniversity of Ne braska. Perle M. Baltics Knglish; A. M. Cniversity of Iowa, Iowa City. Fred M. Haves Herman, Karth Sciences, Normal Training; A. B. I diversity of Nebraska. Kfale Brown Latin and Do mestic Science; A. B. and BSc, Cniversity of Missouri, Kansas City. .Mathematics and Ala Du al Training. Grades in High School Grace Thayer 7th and 8th. Pe ru Normal graduate, Ashland, Nebraska. < 'hire Gagnon -nth and (itii. Floy Grinstead :!<1 and 4th. Central Building. Frances Lookahill — Principal and Sth grade. Kva I). Scott— 7th grade. Lottie Putnam litli grade. Myrtle Yoeam- nth grade: Pe ru Normal graduate. Jessie Lang. Pniversity Place— 1th grade; graduate Nebraska Wesleyan Normal Department. Ramona Wilcox .'Id grade. Myrtelle Powers 2nd grade. (•race Saylor 1st grade. Minnie McDonald — Kinder garten. Goldie M. Yoeam Nth and 6th grades, Zion Annex. Harlan Building. Susan ({elding — Kindergar ten and lirst grade. Florence Xeitzel — Miss Gril ling s assistant. Fdna Brown — 2nd and {{<1 grades. KLizahcth Walter—Music and Drawing; Chicago Art Institute and American Conservatory of Music, Chicago Heights. S. II. Wood — Superintendent. I’m. P. am! P. Kd. Drake I’niver sity. High school registration will begin Friday afternoon. I' reshmen and Sophomores —! 1 :.‘I0 to .1:00. Juniors and Seniors :{.0o to 4:00. ZOOOCOOOOOOOO 000 O 0 O ^ DO IT NOW 0 o Settle up all arrears ancl o o get the Tribune free from o o now until January 1 1911. o o ‘ o 000 0 0 0 0 000000000 W. C. T. U. The hoys of America for hares, the saloon for hounds, the govern tuent. hacked hv Christian voters, for gentlemen. In God's name where is the chance for our boy to escape?—John G. Woolley. Getting The Boy Started Right, j Tin* most important job of the man on tin* farm is to get the hoy twelve or fifteen years of age started right. If the hoy gets! started right, he will not need i much else. Jf he is started all] wrong, you are apt to lose him from tin* farm altogether, to your] own sorrow and very likely to his. Your whole future may hinge on whether you get that hoy started rigid or not. Ordinarily lie is started to work in some sort of way; for the farm work naturally develops habits of industry, as it certainly does those of economy. Therefore, if there is any work in the hoy at all and lie does not start right, it is your fault and not his. Not withstanding that boys are usual ly considered lazy, they really like to work, provided you hitch them up right. If you give the hoy the poorest plow on the place and the worst team, and put him at the hardest jobs, lie is not likely to be very much in love with farming. lie will not be start ed right. The most important thing in starting the boy right on the fan is to get his head right; in other words, to get him interested in the work he is expected to do. in terest is what transforms drudg ery into something like pleasure, and if his work is uninteresting, you need not expect the hoy to lie very much in love with it. One of the best ways to inter est the boy is to subscribe for a good farm paper; or better still, j get him to subscribe for it him self. lb* will then like his fath or—read .it to get his money out of it. This, if the paper is worth I the reading, will get him interest-1 ed in farm work and show him the philosophy of it, or if that is! too big a word, the underlyingi principle, or if that is still too! hig, the reason for doing it. Ini other words, it will set him to thinking along farm lines. It'will also help amazingly if you will give him a financial in terest in the results. A hoy will learn to feed pigs much more rap idly. and what is better, will loam to do it milch more intelligently, if there is one pig in the hunch that belongs to him when they are marketed. He will learn thft mean job of teaching the calf how to drink out of a bucket, if he is guaranteed a share in the price of the calf when it is sold. You know how it is yourself. You do not take much interest in farm work unless you expect to make something out of it. You do not work just for the fun of the thing; do you? You work for the profit there is in it. Well, the bo^ is much like yourself in this. He thinks along the same lines, feels along the same lines, is moved by the same motives; for he is your hoy. The slave does not have much interest in his work, nor does the hoy who is told to do things and never told the rea son why. As your boy grows older, con sult with him about the operation of the farm. Talk over with him on Saturday what you think you will do the next week and how you had better do it. His sugges tions may not he worth much to you directly, but the 1‘aet that he gives you the suggestions is worth a great deal both to him and to you. It' lie proposes to do things in a way that you know to he wrong, don’t make tun of him, but tell him why it is wrong, l’ut him as far as is safe on his own responsibility and do not find any fault with him if he fails. You have failed and made mis takes many a time, and you know it, So don’t expect your own flesh and blood to be infallible in judgment, when you yourself know from your own experience know you are very fallible. It is not always ah easy matter to start the hoy right, and yet it can he done; and we think it can he done to the best advantage along the lines we have above suggest ed. You say, how about the girl? Well, her mother knows more about that than you do or than we do. Her mother is likely to need her help more than you need the help of the boys, and this is a good thing for the girl anyhow. We have never believ ed that there was as much danger of the girls on the farm going wrong as there is of the bqys. At any rate we do not feel nearly so competent to advise. About all we can say is: See thaat she has a clean, pleasant, well venti lated room, eats good, nourish ing food, is out of doors all that is possible, walks straight, obeys her father and mother and w ins the confidence of her brother, and of course learn to do all sorts of household work and cooking.— Wallace Parmer. Public Sale! S will sell at public auction at the farm described below, on 1910, at 2 o’clock p. m., the following real estate: Southwest Quarter Sec-. 7 Town 8, Range 18 Situated in Richardson County, Neb, The above land is located 1 mils northwest of Rulo, Neb., and contains the following buildings and im= provements: One 7-room dwelling, in good condition; one 3=room dwelling; good barn, 40x50; good corn crib; scales and windmill; 2 wells of splendid water. The land lays good and all good black loam soil. Is one mile from churches and schools and one mile from the B. & M. depot and grain elevator. TERMS OF SALE One-third cash. Some time on balance. My reasons for selling are due to the fact that I have purchased land in Colorado and moved on the same. H:“AI)' John J. Majerus $50,000,000 Less. It is reported that enough lum ber was destroyed by the forest fires in the northwest to build homes for 1.000,000 people. The loss is estimated at $50,000,000. Digestion and Assimilation. It is not the quantity of food tak en but the amount digested and assim ilated that gises strength and vi tality to the system. Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets invigor ate the stomach and liver and enable them to perforin their functions nat urally. For sale by all druggists. ‘ I have a World- of confidence in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for I have used it with perfect success,” writes Mrs. M. I. Basford, Poolville, Md. For sale by all druggists. £SbSA GARNIVAL PARADES THE GIG JOLLY CARNIVAL EVERT DAT Teller wsM, Oct. •, CftRHIVAt FIREWORKS fi’ednescjy K gfit, Oct. 5 ELECTRICAL PARADE Thursday Aftarnocn, Oct. 6 MILITARY PARADE Frltfay night, Oct. 1 CORONATION BALL Grand Military Maneuvers Every Day by U. S. Regular Troops. REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS. SHOW YOURSELF A GOOD TIRIE-YCU’LL HAVE LOTS OF HELP