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The Valley Falls New Era from Valley Falls, Kansas • Page 6

Location:
Valley Falls, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

E. G. Jenkins and Roy Stallons made a business trip to Kansas City last week. Time Table Corrected to August 13. 1911 FARM LOANS No.

503 No. 531 Missouri Pacific Railway No. 504 632 Daily Mail Ace Dally and Ex. Ex. Sundaj Daily MaO, Daily ExJ and Ex.

Sunday 7 25 Kansas City 9 53 10 10 AM AM AM A AM A 11 A A A A A 11 45 9 20 PM 9 03 PM 847 8 27 8 10 5 45 3 37 3 22 3 08 2 49 2 32 10 SO 45 PM 1 00 PM Danavant Falls. 7 35 PM! North Cedar. 10 50 11 05 No. 108 I No. 105 4 No.

107 No. 120 Freight No. 106 i i Mail and Ex A. h. Mail and Ex Mail Ex, Mail Ex "Uc'ess ripple croers mak spraying a part of their business their apple cr5ps will be reduced to almost nothing," said C.

C. Whiteside, an apple buyer from Louisville, Kentucky, who has shipped seventeen car loads from Rushvilie this fall. Sixteen jears ago Mr. Whiteside bought apples from Missouri farmers and shipped them to Louisville. But apple craps then were a great deal different than now.

The cause of it? Tin Louisville man says that as the country is being cleared of timber the killing insects must have a place to feed, and apple trees furnish good feed for them. Within the past ten or fifteen years apple crops have grown less certain each succeeding year until the old fashioned yield is almost a thing of the past. Did you hear of the spray being in general use twenty years ago? Can you recall frequent small crops? We think not Atchison Globe. Mr. and Mrs.

E. L. Raines took an automobile trip to Topeka one day last week. Tom McGuire shipped a car "of cattle to Kansas City Tuesday night of last week. Dr.

Frink made a business trip to Linwood Wednesday and Thursday of last Garrett Trant and Arthur Haynes were Lawrence visitors Wednesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. H. C.

Raines visited relatives and friends in Pleasant Valley last week. Jerry Cavanaugh will soon leave Texas and return to Kansas and make Perry his home. 12 30 10 10 A 10 10 PM A A A A A A Mi 5 00 Mi 5 28 Mi 5 38 i 5 58 6 11 Mi 6 19 Mi 7 00 7 15 7 41 7 50 8 09 8 20 8 27 9 05 Rock Valley Falls. Nichols Nortonville Atchison 1 15 1 40 2 20 2 45 3 20 4 30 9 44 AM 9 44 SI 9 35 AM 9 35 PM 9 13 AM 9 15 PM 9 00 AM 9 02 PM 8 53 AM 8 55 PM 8 10 AM 8 15 PM 6 Including Commission We are prepared to make choice farm loans at 6 net to you. Principal and interest payable here.

Option granted to pay any amount' at any interest payment. Don't make a renewal or loan before you investigate our proposition. PM A No. 102 Mixed Leaveu worth Topeka Rail way. No.

101 Mixed A A A A 7 20 810 8 35 905 9 40 Ozawkie Leavenworth 7 40 710 6 SO 6 00 PM 5 25 4 00 A A 1100 Miss, Dorothy Malone and Miss No. 119 Passenger No. 191 Mixed Union Pacific No. 121 Passenger No. 122 Passe ager No.

192 Mixed No. 120 Passenger Myrtle Knapp visited Mrs. W. E. Dake in Topeka last week.

8 20 A Ml Leavenworth 1 00 The Waller boy who had- his foot HO REAS01 FOR IT i fiif" 3 AM; Winchester. 5 40 6 45 6 55 7 10 7 22 5 55 4 41 4 27 4 10 3 52 A 10 30 AM 8 58 AM 8 42 AN 8 29 AM 8 14 AM shot off in Lawrence last week is a 10 40 Mi 9 45 9 20 Mi 8 55 x- 40. 45 AM! Mill 30 10 05 A Valley Falls. Mill 55 PM10 20 Halfmoun" grandson of John Gaines of Perry. Citizens When Jefferson County Show the Way.

Ed Mc'iuire, the butchert will do Leavenworth Topeka and U. P. trains do not run on Sunday. HARMAN FARM AGENCY, Valley Falls, Kansas. his own butchering and not buy from the packing houses.

A good move on his part 3 Mrs. Archie Sample, who was killed 232 last week near Ozawkie by being thrown from a run away buggy, was in ion Pacific well known in Perry. Mr. and Mrs. E.

L. Raines and jfann anb Stoch TMotes- daughters attended the Meistersinger's Male Quartet in Lecompton Thursday Only Line Operating Thro' Sleepers Missouri River to Pacific Coast evening of last week. ffcto Dfartznent bnlonga to ovr farmer friends and wm would tfaaak thwa to fsrafsh from Oieir mtcts.1 localities-buildmsm. ftaies real staU. extra, crop mtmymXa or bad and good yields bi Kv stock ia faet what you ax Interested kMwm of another part of th county your neighbor is interested in learning from your feaahty-feVand fai to editor of tfau paper.

via JLiame oactc comes on suddenly ana is extremely painful. It is caused by There can be no just reason why any reader of this will continue to suffer the tortures of an aching back, the annoyance of urinary disorders, the dangers of serious kidney ills when relief is so near at hand and the most positive proof given that these ills can be cured. Read what an Oskaloosa citizen Robert L. Austin, Oskaloosa, says: "About three years ago I began to suffer from lumbago There was a dull, heavy pain across the small of my back and in my kidneys and soreness and lameness across my hips. It was all I could do to get around and stooping or lifting greatly aggravated my trouble.

I was obliged to arise several times at night to void the kidney secretions and I also noticed that they contained sediment I doctored and tried everything that was brought to my atten rwvvwvvvvwi rheumatism of the muscles. Quick re iief is afforded by applying Chamber Iain's Liniment. Sold by all dealers. W. J.

Grist of the French Creek the cholera germ, and the fact that Stud, will likely ship a lot of his colts there are so many dogs in the state to El Paso to be sold next month. adds to the danger of contagion. Ben Schneider, one of the prosper- Joe Schneider, the Poland China ous farmers of Norton township, re-' hog breeder of Norton township, who Bloomfield Notes cently added three heifers and a bull advertises a big sale at his farm next i Well, we still exist even if you don hear from us often. of the Holstein variety to his herd at Thursday, has had a lot of experience an expense of an even thousand dol- in this line, and believes that the best we are loosing ror tne return lars. Ben believes that it pays to hog for the farmer is a cross between Denver and Salt Lake WITHOUT CHANGE Personally Conducted Tourist Sleepers Relieving you of Every Care THREE FAST TRAINS DAILY Automatic Block Signals Insure Safety LIBRARY CARS-OBSERVATION CARS Electric Lighted Trains Union Pacific, in a class by itself See Union Pacific Agent for full Particulars.

Ed Smith this week. The Young People's business meet ing will be held at Ed Launer's Thursday night. tion, but nothing did me as much good as Doan's Kidney Pills, procured at the Gold Mortar Pharmacy. They benefited me at once and after I had finished the contents of three boxes, I Miss Rose Launer who has been working at Eugene Barnes' has return was in good health." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 the Big Type and the Smooth type of the Poland China.

Joe has a big mail order sale on his hogs and has never yet had a dissatisfied customer in fact his guarantee covers about everything. He thinks he has some of the best pigs he ever raised in the offering for this sale, and it would be well for as many as possible of our farmer readers to be at the sale and see what scientific breeding will accomplish. A. M. Hannah of the No.

10 neighborhood was on the Kansas City market the latter part of last week where he purchased thirty head of Aberdeen cents. Foster-Milburn Buffalo raise the best. Dave Grayson says he husked out his poorest field of corn and that it yielded sixteen bushels per acre and was very wormy. Mr. Grayion says that his other fields will yield better and that he puts his average at about twenty-two bushels.

John Ramsey of west of Dunavant was on the Kansas City market recently and purchased forty head of stockers for which he paid an average of $4.40 the price ranging from $4.10 to $4.50 according to quality. Mr. Ramsey says he will rough them through the winter and grass them next summer for fall feeding. New York, sole agents for the United ed home again. Ed Hagen raised a hundred bushel of late potatoes off of Less than an acre of ground.

Miss Nora Ratz of Coal Creek is visiting her cousins, Mrs. Haesler and Mrs Ed Launer this week. States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. i IC 'L Z3 Bloomfield school is doing fine with Warren Mowery as teacher.

He has I Angus stockers that averaged about 500 pounds, paying $5 for them. The an enrollment of about thirty-seven scholars. The members of the church have built a cement platform and pointed Cement Shingles Sand Posts Poles bunch was unloaded at Oskaloosa Friday night. Mr. Hannah said that they were part of a bunch of fifty that were brought to market from Missouri and that they were the smoothest bunch of stockers he had seen for Prof.

Dyche says that he has made a study of natural history all his life, but he has never been able to find any sort of a reason why a dog will wallow all around in a decaying carcass. This practice is the most prolific method of spreading hog cholera, and The Farmers Institute. The Farmers' Institute season is on again and as usual Kansas farmers are planning a lot of meetings. In this state the -Agricultural College directs the farmers' institutes and suggests subjects for the program, usually in line with the doctrine and policy of the College. In this way the institute is a sort of elementary agricultural school and in Kansas the institutes are always attended by the most progressive farmers of the community.

The state has now nearly 350 organizations, with a membership of nearly 14,000 farmers. The Farmers' Institutes in Kansas are not only elementary schools, but they are in a up the foundation at St. Paul Chapel. It has made quite an improvement. The Bloomfield Grange is waking up again since the cool weather.

The lecturer Floyd Miller always has something to interest audience. Come join us. sometime. Mr. Hannah said that he had just finished husking a fourteen acre field of corn which averaged twenty-seven bushels per acre.

Every 1 i i i i UMBER joau was weignea, so mere was no Too late for last week. guessing about the yield. Mr. Han nah said this was the poorest field of corn he had. is the reason many farmers will not permit a dog on their farms.

n. B. Walters, the Effingham Poland China breeder, who had a sale advertised for Wednesday, has called off the sale because of cholera which broke out among his stock hogs. Cholera is playing havoc with hogs around Effingham. Foster brothers, who live on the Sutter land next to Effingham, have only two left out of 120.

They sold about twenty but the rest died. There is a discussion as to Foy Weishaar has been putting in the summer improving the farm owned by himself and W. B. Ford, south of Oskaloosa. A barn costing close to a thousand dollars has been erected; about four hundred rods of forty- Lime Lath Glass Paint Oil Prices Right Quality Right, wutnner me irouoie is cnoiera or eignt incnes woven wire fence has been erected; a new crib has been built and a horse lot is in course of construction.

This lot will ho aunt. way, business conferences of the best farmers of the community to find out the best ways of doing things. The Agricultural College helps by dating the meetings and sending two speakers to assist with the program. There will be a farmers' institue meetim? at Valley Falls on Monday, November t. A good program" has been prepared and a profitable meeting is expected.

The speakers for the Agricultural College will he Mr. C. V. Holsinger who will talk on orcharding and gardening, and Mr. G.

W. Conn who will talk on farm dairying. Thtsi very important subjects for this p-rt of the State. Loc.tl speakers have various other subjec.s on r.e pr. gram and the meeting wil; bfin pn.mptly at 10 o'clock.

Every farmer is urged to bring some samples of corn, apples and potatoes for the exhibit. In many towns in Kansas all stores and business houses close for tLo entire Ltiernoou when the Farmers' Institue is being held. Croup is most prevalent during the MELL LEGLER SON Valley Falls Kansas pneumonia, some claiming it is the latter disease. Many farmers are vac clnating their hogs. Joe Mercer, the state live stock commissioner, says that while the straight hog cholera serum will act as a preventive only a few weeks, yet there is a way by using the serum with a portion of infected cholera blood, to render the bo perfectly immune from the cholera for all time.

Any hog raiser interested who will write Mr. Mercer will bo icformed on the subject fully. Mr. Mercer is of the opinion that the past season has been especially favorable to the growth of Remember the Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. Everybody welcomed.

We believe that winter will soon be here, for Jack Frost has visited our vegetation. Grandma Allen has gone to visit her daughter, Mrs Bell Dickey in Oklahoma. The Y. P. C.

W. at St. Paul was well attended Sunday night. We're out on business for the King. Come juin us.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harris and family were visiting relatives aud friends but have returned to their home in Western Kans is. Mr. and Mrs.

Adolph Ilaeslergave a big dinner Sunday in honor of her sister, Miss Florence Leu of Valley Falls. Those present were, Mrs. Leu, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fowble and family, Arnold Ott, Thos Laird of Valley Falls, Mr.

and Mrs. Edward Launer and family and Mr.William Way. The Bloomfield Grange held last Friday evening was a very interesting meeting. Floyd Miller gave one of his beautifully framed hand painted pictures to the one having the best essay on the Grange. There were some very good and interesting essays read.

Of which the judges decided on Miss Rose Launer's essay for the winner. Come join us. ten rods square and is made by trect-ing a stone wall about five feet high, all laid in cement. On the north side it will be six feet high and a hog house will he erected there. A large cattle shed has been planned and work will start on this within a short time.

Forty acres of the 240 is in timber and this is being cleared up. It is the intention of the owners to erect a modern farm house as soon as they can get to the work. This will Hive mem one or me best imnrrivprl farms near Oskaloosa. Attend to the Little Things They need it all right. You can find lots of little things about the place that need attending to right now.

Maybe a few shingles for the roof, a bit of well curbing, some new strips for the corn crib, a better tool and machine shed, and a dozen and one other odd jobs that should be looked after at once. Or, maybe you're figuring on building. All right. Then let us figure on your lumber bill. The chances are that we can save you money, whether it is one board or a carload.

DELAWARE LUMBER COMPANY Telephone No- 115 Valley Falls, Kansas dry cold weather of the early winter months. Parents of voun? r.hilrl should be prepared for it. All that is needed is a bottle of Chamberlain's cougn Remedy. Many mothers are never without it in their homes and it has never disappointed them. Sold by all dealers.

DR. 0. R. PRESTON 1 Perry Pickups Too late for last week. A large globe has been added to the school apparatus.

PHYSICIAN AIID SURGEON Attention given to the of Glasses FEN MILES FOR A CENT WHEN YOU WANT YOUR BUILDING Completed on Time, in the best possible manner at the most reasonable price, make your contract with W. M. DUNC ANSON, Contractor and Builder. Only Complete Wood Working Machine Shop in the county. Valley Falls, Kansas.

Thos. Lee was in Kansas City part From one-tenth to one-tifth cents npr mil mwra I or last week on business. A new flag 7x10 was unfurled from Kansas Rock Creek tne cost of operating a HAR LEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE THE SILENT GREY FELLOW This machine is always ready for a hurry-up trip or a pleasure run. Will do the road work of three horses. No expense when idle.

We would like to tell you more about the greatest sport in tho world. Come in and see us. CASTOR I A ror Infants and Children. the kind You Have Always Bought the school house last Friday. Hummer, the nursery man went to Lecompton after hay Monday.

The prospects are good for Perry to put in an electric lighting plant. W. J. Cronin of the Mirror made a trip to Lecompton and Lawrence. John Shortall has recovered from a severe attack of malarial fever.

S. A. HOENSHELL, AGENT. Our Bargain Column Brings Results. Try it, One Cent a word.

Bears the VALLEY FALLS, KANSAS.

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About The Valley Falls New Era Archive

Pages Available:
14,237
Years Available:
1875-1916