mtt'" lunrn y .y- w n "upr r, y S"W TV-, lRCH 12, 1909 The Commoner. 15 -l.- "'-'!?' extent that the managers sent a map ut to look over the prospect and flthat agent was paralyzed with aston ishment at what he saw. He hasten ed back and reported, and in a few weeks thousands of settlers were col electing bones and hauling them to railroad points. These bones were tricked up along the sidetracks await ing carp for shipment east, and these "ricks were astonishingly large. Perhaps the very last shipment of bones from a' Nebraska point was made from Wallace as late as 1887. 'Wallace is on the "high line" of the Burlington from Holdrege, Neb., b through Julesburg, Colo., to Denver. f, The "high line" tapped the last re ft maining portion of Nebraska that had f? not been scoured for bones, and of tnis section Wallace was the natural shipping point. In the fall of 1887 the writer went through Wallace, and it was then and there he saw a rick of bones that amazed him, but which was,, according to an "old set tler," just "nothin' compared t' what we have had when there was plenty o' bones in- this section." But still it was "some bones," for all that. This rick was about fifty feet wide at the base and twenty feet high at the apex, and the writer, whose leg measurement is thirty-two inches took just 228 long steps in walking from one end to the other. "O, 1 guess we'vd shipped seven or eight hundred carloads o' them infernal bones out o' here," said the station agent when queried on the subject. "I'm mighty glad that we've seen about the last of them. It makes profitable freight, I suppose, but, don't you know, the sight o' so many glistening bones, re flecting the rays o' the moon on a clear night, is too darned ghastly to suit me." "I .should think they would bo rather nasty to handle sort o' smelly -and all -that-sort of thing." "Not a. bit of it," replied the sta tion agent. "So far as cleanliness is concerned they are. the cleanest kind o' freight. And there isn't a bit of odor about them. Why, those bones have been bleaching in the sun and washing clean in the rains for years on end. They were picked clean by coyotes before the'flesh on 'em had grown cold and all the meat a coy ote leaves on a bone wouldn't smell a bit. No, sir; it isn't the odor, nor it isn't the uncleanliness that sets me against 'em, fdr they haven't a bit of either it's just the ghaBtliness of the whole thing. ,Ugh! It makes my flesh creep just to talk about them, let alone handling them." "Has the work of collecting them, been profitable to the settlers?" "I guess it has they have hauled 'em in here for twenty and thirty miles around, just like they would corn, if they had any corn to haul. I believe the price has ranged ifrom ,$3.50 to $6 a ton the lower price being paid when bones were plenty and near at hand, and the higher price as the bones grew scarce and the haul long. While the men folks are at work breaking sod. or culti vating their crops, the women folks and the kids are collecting the bones. On Saturday the wagon Is filled full o' bones and the family perches on top and drives to town. The bones are weighed just like grain, and the buyer pays by check. I guess the wives of these settlers don't call it 'pin money.' I wouldn't I'd call it 'bone money.' " "What will the railroad haul out when the bone industry is dead?" "O, as the bones get scarcer the corn gets more plentiful, so I reckon the road, will have a return haul, all right." During tho time mentioned above unpolished buffalo horns could have been bought by the thousands of pairs at from five to ten cents per pair. Today they would bring from two to three dollars per pair pol ished, or half that amount unpolish ed.. But there are no moro buffalo bones upon the plains of Nebraska and Kansas. They have fertilized the enfeebled soil of the less fertile east, and this is the only good, so far as any one knows, that grew out of the cruel and useless slaughter of these noble beasts during the de cade between 1870 and 1880. NOTHING IN A NAME President Nicholas Brown, for whom Brown University was named, was fond of quizzing small boys. One day while walking in the streets of Providence, he came upon a little fellow who attracted his notice. "How do you do, my boy?" Bald the president. "What is your name?" "My name Is Harry, sir," replied the child. "Harry, is it?" returned President Brown. "And did you know the evil one is often called Old Harry?" "Why, no, sir," answered the boy. "I thought he was called Old Nick." San Francisco Star. A PROTEST Papa was about to apply the strap. "Father," said Willie firmly, "unless that instrument has been properly sterilized I desire to protest. This gave the old man a pause. "Moreover," continued Willie, "the germs that might be released by the violent Impact of leather upon a porous textile fabric, but lately ex posed td the dust of the streets, would be apt to affect you deleterl ously." As the strap fell from a nerveless hand Willie sloped. San Francisco Star. ECONOMY A refreshing example of true de mocracy is shown In Indiana, where Governor Marshall, whom the dem ocrats elected last November, has "set down" on a proposition to erect a $160,000 executive mansion. Gov ernor Marshall declares that a house costing $12,000 to $20,000 is plenty good enough for him, and more In keeping with the gubernatorial sal ary. If we had more Marshalls in Washington there would bo less gilt and glitter, and better government, in the national capitol. Liberal Enterprise. WEARY She What do you want? He A pennorth 0' pudden. She Plain or plum? He Plain. She Hot or cold? - He Hot. She Have it 'ere, or take it wiy yer? He 'Ere. She Fork or fingers? He (wearily) O blow yer pudden! Gimme 'am! The Bystander. THE NEED OF STRENGTH I long to reach the 'heights sublime To taste the sweetness of success; I pray to have the strength to climb, To claim the joy of worthiness; But if I may not play a' part Such as the greatly gifted can, Lord, let me have the strength of heart To bear my burden like a man. I long to be among the few Whom sorrow ever passes by. To share the blessings given to The ones for whom proud banners fly; But if I must pursue my way Among the ones that humbly strive Lord, let me have- the strength, I pray, To bravely keep- my hopes alive. S. E. Kiser In Chicago Record-Herald. Other Cream Separators Merely Discarded or Aban doned De Laval Inventions It Is interesting and instructive to know that nearly, If not quite, every cream separator that tias ever been made, and certainly all that are boing made at this time, are merely copies or imitations of somo typo of construc tion originally invented or developed by tho Do Laval Company, and either not used by it because of something1 moro practical or elso discarded and abandoned in tho course of Do Laval progress and utilization of later im provements. As earlier patents have expired some of their features have one after an other been taken up by different imitators, so that at all times, as is tho case today, every cream separator made In tho United States or olsowhoro in the world, utilizes somo typo of construction originally owned and de veloped by the Do Laval Company, though some of them have never been commercially used by the De Laval Company because of their Inferiority to other types of construction used by it. All, cream separator inventions by others have been of Immaterial details or variations, upon which patents have been taken, if at all, moro for tho sake of the name than by reason of any real value or usefulness attaching to them. But tho De Laval Company has always been forging ahead, with Its many years of experience and the best of experts and mechanics the whole world affords in Its employ, so that before any expiring patent might permit tho use of any feature of construction by imitators tho Do Laval Company had already gone so much beyond that typo of construction that it was then old and out-of-dato in tho modern De Laval machines. The first practical continuous flow centrifugal Cream Separator was tho invention of Dr. Gustaf de Laval in 1878, tho American patent application being filed July 31, 1879, and Issuing as Letters Patent No. 247,804 Octo ber 4, 1881. This was the original Cream Separator of the "Hollow" or empty bowl type and it has been followed front year to year by tho various steps of cream separator improvement and "development, all'De Laval made or owned inventions, the American patent applications being filed and letters patent issued as follows: The original hand Cream Separator of tho "Bevel Gear" typo; application filed October 2, 1886, issuing as Letters Patent No. 350,990 February 1, 1887. The original hand Cream Separator of tho "Spur Gear" type; application filed January 17, 1887, issuing as Letters Patent No. 368,328 August 16, 1887. The original Steam Turbine-driven Cream Separator; application filed December 8, 1886, issuing as Letters Patent No. 379,690, March 20, 1888. The original ."Tubular" shaped "hollow" bowl Cream Separator; applica tion, filed April 19, 1886, issuing as Letters Patent No. 372,788 November 8, 1887. The original "Disc" bowl Cream Separator; application filed May 12, 1890, issuing as Letters Patent No. 432,719 July 22, 1890. The original vertical "Blade" Cream Separator bowl, covered likewise by application filed May 12, 1890, issuing as Letters Patent No. 432,719 July 22, 1890. The original "Bottom Feed" Cream Separator bowl; application filed July 24, 1889, issuing as' Letters Patent No. 445,066 January 20, 1891. The original series of "Star" or "Pineapple Cone" shaped cylinders Cream Separator bowl; application filed August 24, 1893, Issuing as Letters Patent No. 521,722 June 19, 1894. The original "Curved" or "Converging Disc" typo of Cream Separator bowl; application filed January 18, 1905, issuing as Letters Patent No. 892,999 July 14, 1908. The original "Split-Wing" Tubular Shaft Cream Separator bowl; appli cation filed April 29, 1898, issuing as Letters Patent No. 640,358 January 2, 1900 which Invention, with a number of later improvements, Is the typo of bowl construction used in the De Laval machines of today, still covered by protecting patents which prevent its appropriation by would-be competitors. The patents thus enumerated are but a few of the more important of the more than 500 original CreamSeparator patents owned, controlled and developed by the De Laval Company during its thirty years of creation and development of the Cream Separator industry throughout the world. They are recited because they show in the most illustrative and conclusive manner possible De Laval originality and leadership from 1878 to the present day. In addition to these patent-protected features, the De Laval machines have within two years been mechanically re-deslghed and re-constructed in every part, from top to bottom, so that the now 1908-1909 line of De Laval machines are today, even more than at any past period, fully ten years in advance of any other cream separator made. These are the Rock-of-Gibraltar-Hke facts against which the mere "word claims" of would-be competitors fade away like the mists of night before the rays of the morning sun. The De Laval Separator Co. 42 E. Macisom Street CHICAGO 1213 & 1215 Filoebt St. PHILADELPHIA DnUMM & SACftAuEHTO Sts. SAN FRANCISCO General Offices: 165-167 Broadway, NEW YORK 173-177 William Street MONTREAL 14 &. 16 Princcu Street WINNIPEG 107 Finer Stiieet PORTLAND, OREG. H