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About The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1911)
The County in General The “Doings” of Our Country Friends and Neighbors. RULO. I* Thomas of Du Hols spent last **>■ v •> j jiU nan nfs north of this *.>»>■ Milton Zimmerman anil wife visited i with relatives at Hollandbnrg, Kan..1 Ibet week A!tit Gilbert spent Thursday of last wyek in St Joju'ph brant Orninb was a Kails City visi tor onv day last week James Goolsby moved his family to r*r«M City last Tuesday. batn Adams of Missouri was a Kulo visitor last Monday. Mr Parthnn of Kansas was a Kulo business visitor Tuesday. Jehu Dunn of Missouri was a Kulo visitor the first of the week T E Kulp of Wymote was a Kulo business visitor, Monday forenoon. Mr Herbert of Broken Bow is help >m Mr. Frick In liis jewelry shop. Dr J. E. Wilson from White Cloud, several days in Kulo last week. ^ain Goolsby of Missouri was a Ruin Visitor the first of the week. Floyd and Vere True were business visitors to Atchison last Saturday. Newton llosfotd was a Kansas City visitor a few days lust week. Fmmn Dniinekcr went to St. Joseph for a visit with relatives, Tuesday. ftr. Shepherd and son Harry made a trip to Missouri, Saturday evening. George Gilbert of Table Rock came iRaturdny evening to attend his broth er's funeral. Mr* Max Young and son, Frank, of Kansas are visiting relatives in tills city this week. Sam and Exxing Ward spent it few days in St Joseph the latter pari of lilM week. Mi' and Mrs. Panghurn returned Saturday from an extended slay in Kansas City. Mis Lee Myers of Vermilion, S. Dakota, was ••ailed here by the death of her father. Jeff Gilbert. Charlie Maze visited xvith friends in Rulo a few days the last of the week Fred Steward spent a couple of days with home folks at Sparks, Kan cas, last xveek. Clyde Dariah and wife attended the funeral of Miss Cora Plumb, In Falls City last week I'nele Joe Frederic and Sarah Gal Jmcan xvore unitid in marriage at t o’elo k on Jan. nth, Pll I. John Thllliges of Effingham. Kan «.ts visited xxitti relatives in this vi »fuft> last xveek The band boys gaxe a dance at Flow fords' hall one night last week, w lih-h was xx ell attended Jonithan Ratekin of Falls City at tend'd the fttneial of Mr. Gilbert, here Sunday afternoon. Mr Portion of Reserv* lias bought t'i S* m Rrnnk properly and expects t mow his family to town soon. Marry Shephi id .tnd wife and Miss Anna Mahan spent several days of list seek with friends at St. Joe Mr Ford and family left, Saturday night for the western part of Nebras ka. tv here hi' ha.; a claim. Ruth White returned recently to ter koine at Kockport, Mo., after a Vwrr weeks visit with relatives In this city. Frank Bingham and family returned Frtdar from Missouri where they were railed by the death of Mrs. H's *i<a her. The funeral of John Frederic, who was said to have been killed by a train in Missouri, was held at the 4’atholic church Sunday at 3 o'clock. A.'birthday surprise party was giv **w wn Miss Opal Mays. Thursday sight. of iast week. Dancing was in tulged in, and a general good time Id reported. A new class for nun was organ ised at the M. E. Sunday school, taught by the Pastor; it is hoped this class will be a power for good. The Teachers Association was atten ded by a large and enthusiastic crowd of spectators as well as teach ers. But the sight seeing which had been planned was limited on ac count of the cold and sleet which made travel almost impossible, how e\«r we hope to have the meeting again when the weather is more fa Torable. (Veil Kanaly, his sifter, Mamie, and Grace Cronin left Monday night for Auburn to attend the funeral of Misr Mamie Ryan, whose death was caused by an operation to remove a growth from her throat. Nellie Schaf fer will have charge of Miss Kanaly's room during her absence, and Chris tine Sickle will teach for Miss Mam ie. BARADA. Preaching at the Evangelical chute next Sunday morning. .1. A. Martin and wife were in the city on last Tuesday. The grippe hasfastened Itself upon this entire community, scarcely a family escaping. Mrs. Conrad Gerdes was very ill the tore part of the week. Miss Ethel Dunn Is among the num ber who have been confined to bed with grippe. Esther Laukemper is quite sick with bronchitis. Tom Noah’s small daughter Edna wtis quite sick from drinkink coal oil on Wednesday, lust. (’has. Gaston and Marry Mosena of i Shubert spent several days of last week in Manilla plumbing for .1 A. Martin It. F. Drldge-tnan hits opened a rt'staunmt, bakery and confectionery store in the Sailor’s building on the corner of Main and First Street. The W. O. W. initiated a couple of new members on Saturday evening, after which Sovereign Wnmsley treat ed the lodge to supper. A drill team has been organized with Mr. Andrews its captain, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cully of Silver Creek attended services at the Evan gelical church on Sunday. Mrs. Cul I ly is working in the Interests of the | Motile Department of the S. S. Mr and Mrs. .1. A. Stephenson of I i Shubert were over the tirut of last week bringing with them Mr. Stephen soii'u sister Anna of Liberty. Nehr. who remained for a visit with her father. | The community was greatly shockc j to hear of the death of Mrs. (’has. i Noyes, Saturday She was a sufferer from tuberculosis. She leaves to , mourn her untimely death, her hits ; hand, two children and many relatives j and friends. The funeral was i undue ted front the Evangelical church at llarada by lte\. Tim Vice on Sunday The remains were laid to rest in the ! Harris cemetery. We extend s.vmpa I tlij to the sorrowing ones. Ohio Tom Mears spent several days in Missouri. John Lundy spent last Sunday in Falls City. IF .1 PrU Hard was in l.iucoln the first of the week. Otto Uuogge was tlie guest of John Hutchinson. Sunday. Norman Fate was guest of F. M. Shaffer, and family, Sunday. Wilma Shaffer was the Riiest of Merle Fields, Sunday, Horn to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mein Mrs. N. Peck was given a handker chief shower on her birthday, heit, January 12 twin girl babies. F. S. Fichty was in Kansas City last week visiting Mrs. Yellton. Daisy Peck is visiting in Morrill. Kansas, the guest of her brother. Ora Crook of Salem visited with Pearl Fields. Saturday night ami Sun day. Misses Maud and Myrtle Yoeam of Falls City were guests of K. M. Kim tnel and wife Sunday. Rev. F. A. Hazlett of Ashland was in this vicinity last week working in the interest of the Ashland college. Perry Shaffer and family and Mrs. N. Peck and son Clarence spent last Friday at the home of Earl Shaffer and family. Fast Friday, t»eo. Prichard loaded 1 a car with his belongings and started i for his new home near Abilene Kans. His wife and children will leave in a ! '• w days. SHUBERT. Mrs. J. C. Shulenberg who has been a victim of grippe for several days is s'owly recovering. V in. Harris was putting up ice the it -t of the week. (Iran, urn Lewis is now quite ill at i"t i .rue here. .Mis. Charles Wilson spent a few .iays here last week with friends. t.d Uronson of near Verdon was .1 business visitor here, Thursday. Grandma Shubcrt was a guest 01 ,we\. Murray and wife, Thursday. iioy and Raymond Shaffer visited i jail in the past week with relatives. J loss Kill Ion and wife spent last .k at Syracuse visiting the hitters sbii i and family. Win. Martin and wife are now re joicing over the arrival of a little dOU. Mrs. Thompson and daughter of Smith county are here visiting relatives. Messrs. Walt Lewis, Oscar i’ond, Leon Shubert were to Kansas City last week. Mr and Mrs. .). C. Shulenberg, Chas. Shulenberg and wife and little son Oral were the guests of friends at Stella, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. A. L, Wiles returned home Wednesday evening from Glen wood, Iowa where they went to at tend the marriage of their son Ray to Miss Edith Dean of that place. A very pretty but quiet wedding took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. II. Dean of Glenwood, Iowa, last, Tuesday, January 10, 1011 at high noon, when their daughter Miss Edith became the wifi' of Ray Wiles of this city. The ceremony was per formed by Rev. I’almerson in the pres ! once of the near relatives and close friends of the bride and groom. Fol lowing the ceremony a delicious din ner was served. Doth the bride and groom are known for their sterling qualities and take with them the well wishes of all who know them. STELLA. Mrs. Henry Curtis is quite sick. Mr. Yates moved to Dawson last week. Alfred Elehert from Peru is visiting bis brother and wife. Wesley Shaffer and wife of Y’erdon spent, Monday in Stella v isiting. Mrs Bessie Hapgood is slowly recovering from a serious illness, Arthur Pole is moving from the Kroli farm to the Holland place. E. A. Kroli expects to move soon from town to bis fathers farm. Elmer Pugh and family spent Sun day at the home of .1. M. Goodloe. Mrs. E, Wheeler visited most of last, week in Omaha with Mrs. A. L. Adams. Miss Florence Wheeler visited rel atives and friends in Lincoln last week. Mrs. Z. Pixley left last week for Omaha to look for a location for a new home. Mrs. Bessie llasket of Auburn visited with Mrs. Pritts a few days last week. Mrs, Alvina Rudy returned Monday from Shubert where she had been nursing Mrs. Murphy. Geo. Slocum after a two weeks ser ious illness with an abscess of the tongue, was able to be in town Thurs day. A. .1. Baldwin spent Sunday at lion* with his family. He is now travel ing for an adjusting company of Om aha. Word reached here, Sunday that Miss .Mamie Ryan a former Stella girl, but now of Auburn, bad died at a hospital in Omaha. Mrs. Angeline Raper is again help ing at the Keefer restaurant. Mr. Keefer is able to he down stairs and help with the work. The Woodman lodge held public installation Thursday evening and after the services they gave an oys ter supper to their families. About 100 guests were present. F. G. Wixon sold his barber shop last Thursday to Mr. Seoville of Ne maha. Mr. Seoville moved here Fri day and is now occupying Mrs. Hay’s house on Kim Street. The Methodists are holding revival meetings since Wednesday of last week. Sunday evening Elder Sapp of the Christian church supplied the pulpit and addressed a very large au dience. Room and Board for two gentlemen in private family. Convenient loca tion. Call at Tribune office or Phone 226. HOUSE FOB FELINES Latest Luxury Is Boarding Place for Stylish Cats. Buffalo Woman Makes Specialty of Caring for Handsome Persian and Short-Haired Angoras —A Beautiful Animal. Buffalo, N. Y.—Greenhouses for eats are the latest thing in winter quar- ! ters supplied by the mistress of the »ats' boarding house on Hoyt street, i who believes in furnishing her board ers with a sun parlor as well as with( ^sleeping and eating apartments. '.Heavy builder's paper and tar paper line the rear wall and part of the roof of this new winter runway, but I the remainder is glass, secured from a florist, who has retired from busi ness. Thoso interested in improving the coats of their prize Angoras, should see these fourteen good-tem pered cats frisking around in the al-! most wintry sunshine, their fur grow ing thicker and liner and glossier every day. Whenever the wind blows too nip |Plngly, every cat retreats to the shel ter of the house, which has been freshly lined with builder's paper, and has piles of straw to burrow in. Ev ery cat in the establishment is a itianusome rerstan except me iour short-haired cats, who have traveled from the ends of the earth, and who will leave the boarding house to re isume their (ravels shortly. Although the Angoras are a lordly [lot, and come to the boarding house loaded down with prejudices about what they should eat and how warm ;un atmosphere they should he allowed to breathe, gradually the little lady of the house discourages these views until the kittens come to enjoy plain food and blasts of fresh air. Just at present she is working hard with a small Angora and her two kittens. They were very feeble on arrival, their eyes closed with hard colds and their bodies limp with weakness. Heauty, the mother cat, has had abou^ $60 spent upon her for doctor bills, and all three cats have to he fed goats' milk from a medicine dropper. The milk costs thirty cents per pint. Although the three kittens have been at the house only a month, they have grown Immensely ,and have such ,'high spirits that the other Persians are beginning to wonder if they have not some low-bred, short-haired blood’ ;in their furry bodies. “Taking care of such a lot of valu ables," said the woman of the house, 1 "is a great responsibility. A few weeks ago one of my most distin guished boarders undertook to walk out alone, through a door which I had left open Just for a minute. Well, he didn't come back. I spent a lot of money advertising, and did every thing to find that cat. At last a woman who sometimes works here saw a cat which looked like Smoke In a neighboring house, and we went nfter him aud brought him home in triumph." One of the most beautiful cats in the house is Cinders, whose velvety coat shows all the colors of tbe less brilliant leaves. When the air 1b not too chilly, Cinders loves to squirm among the leaves which fall from the (tree* into the open runway, and to dash out when another cat ambles by, unconscious of his presence. I GERMAN HAS A TALKING DOG Animal Asks for Cakes When Hungry and Alarms Servant When It Enters Kitchen. Berlin.—The German public has lately been regaled with tale* of the increased accomplishments of Don. a talking dog Fov five .years Don, who is the prop erty of Herr Ebers. a gamekeeper of the royal hunting preserves of Kol blt2-L>etxUnger, near Hamburg, has been noted for hts powers of speech. He began to learn at the age of 6 months, and now has a useful, If lim ited, vocebulary. When the puppy Don was standing by hla master's side at dinner time eae day Herr Ebers said, "You want something, do you?” To every one's amanement Don replied In a deep, bat clear tone. "Haben, haben!” (“Want, want!”) The gamekeeper at once started to develop the dog's talent In reply to "What Is your name?” he learnt to say "Don.” and to "WTiat’s the mat ter?" he answers "Hunger. He came to say "Kuchen" (cakes) with parti cular distinctness When cakes are in view he repeats. "Kutchen. haben, haben!” any number of times and If hts ple« is unanswered he adds "Hunger!” with a long drawn empha sis on the last syllable. Those who hear the dog talk for the first time are often half-frightened so uncanny Is the impression. One day lion wandered Into the kitchen of a working woman who was slicing sausages. He exclaimed, “Don—hun ger want!" The housewife, after n moment's stupefaction, dashed from the room In a fright, leaving the sau sages for lion. Need Not Be Old Maid. New York. —Miss Anna Caldwell, author of "The Nest Egg," a play por traying an old maid, said no woman need he an old maid In New York, be ■ause there are so many freak men here that she can marry at least one of them. Whole Sale Oil START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT And buy your Oil and Gas oiine of an Independent Oil Company. We are agents for the Chanute Refining Co of Chanute, Kansas. They have large storage tanks here, and aim to keep a good supply on hand at all times. We have our office in our warehouse near the mill. You can get us there during the day. We will be pleas= ed to serve you. We know we can please you. GIVE US A TRIAL. Yours for business. Chanute Refining Co. Phone 396 HECK &. WAMSLEY, Agents. i COLD WINDS AND POOR TEETH j are always at enmity with each other. Like water and oil, they wont “mix.” WE DOCTOR POOR TEETH. and often make them most as good as new. Keep your teeth in and do not have them pulled out. Bring them to us to be fixed. WE CROWN, FILL OR BRIDGE TEETH PERFECTLY. Dr. Yutzy, Dr. C. E. Heffner, Falls City, Nebraska 'cadMVMMtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmammmmmmam vhmmhhbmhmmmumumhmmbi TAKE YOL'R HOME PAPER FIRST THEN SUBSCRIBE FOR The Kansas City Star and Times The Star and Times, reporting the full twenty-four hours’ news each day in thirteen issues of the paper each week, are furnished to regular subscribers at the rate of 10 cents | per week. As newspapers, The Star and The Times have no rivals, j No other publisher furnishes his readers with the full day and night Associated Press reports, as does the Star and Times. This should recommend the papers especially to the pregressive merchant and farmer. I deliver both the Star and Times to the subscriber’s door promptly on arrival of trains. Give me a trial. RICHARD WYLER, Distributor Should you want Tho Star by mail send 10c per week. $5.20 a year. \ Address The Kansas City Star. |U| p* AT Lresh meat of all kinds may be * had of Mack & Nixon, either at the Market in Barada or at the Mack farm. Good Beef, 8c and 9c per pound. Pork dressed I Ic. Will deliver if not too far out. Mack & Nixon, Barada, Nebr. 1 Neglected wounds produce old sores and these in time develop ulcers which eat away the vitality. Ballard’s Snow Liniment Is a Healing Remedy for AH Ailments of the Flesh of Man and Oeast. The speed with which this splendid liniment heals up a bad wound or sore has surprised and pleased those who were accus tomed to the slower and uncertain effect of less powerful reme dies. It mendst the lacerated flesh so quickly that there is but little time lost from work. In relieving rheumatic pains, neural gia, sciatica, it lias done and is doing a wonderful work. Many chronic victims of these diseases have found to their great satis faction that it cures an attack in a fraction of the time required by the ordinary treatment. It is equally effective in the flesh ailments of animals. Owners of blooded stock value it highly for two reasons: It heals sores and wounds quickly, and leaves no disfiguring scars. This remedy Is needed in every home. If its great power and efficacy was generally known, no family would be without It. Price 25c, 50c and SI.00 per Bottle. JAMES F. BALLARD PROPRIETOR ST. LOUIS, MO. Stephen* Eye Salre I* u safe find speedy remedy Amo Rtcowtt«wBtpB~