The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 30, 1893, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -~---—
| Belgrave Mystery.
' BY A. Cl’KTIH YORKR.
''ML • x .—... . —
•’# • CHAPTKU V.
' * Ho »nd She.
On the night of this same day. Sir
. Keith and Lady Dunham (so let us
•till call her) stood facing each other
’ i In the hitter's dre-sing room.
f . Denham was leaning against the
mantelpiece pale and silent, a kind of
,/ stunned hopolossnoss in face and attl
, tude. It was in his voice, toa as af
ter a long silence he said heavily:
1 "You wanted to see me, Olive?"
y" "Yea Keith." was the almost in
audible answer. as she moved slowly
toward him. "I-—wanted you.”
iSinco the night of the murder sho
«had not spoken to him: indeed she
had seemed to shun him with a strange
feverish persistence. Dut to-nii/ht
she had sent to ask lilm to como to
her; and now that ho hsd como sho
ft;, felt a vnguo undelined fear of lilm.
It was so long sinco thoro hud boon
,?• anything but bittor words nnd looks
and scornful rccr.minations between
them. And now-- .
hut as their eyci met she saw that
hla were full of almost passionate sad*
L ness; Hnd her own eyes titled with
burning tears.
••Are wo to bo friends, Olivo?" he
.y. said unitoadily. As ho spoko bo held
fi/ out his hand and drew her gently
1toward him.
With a low sobbing cry she laid her
head down on his breast; and his arms
olasped her closely.
This was their reconciliation.
After a lung silence Denham bent
his bead over hers, and for the first
time in many months he kissed her
lips. She clung to him. sobbing wild
iy. for a long time while he vainly
tried to soothe her.
$Rg*_ ivutui. Hiio moaneu. "i am
not know—I did not know—I swear
,;!» It Hay that you believe rao. Say it
•—or I shall go njnd!" ,5j
Ho clasped her closer and touched
her hair with his lips.
•■My dear.” he murmured agitated
ly. • you do not need to u?k me to be
lieve you. How should you know, my
poor darlingP’’
’j j ••-'ay that I am your wife stllL ” she
. : orled deliriously. "Say that they can't
■‘j take me away from you. I um your
wile—not his, but yours! I have been
' your wife for six long years. Say I
am your wife still:"
She felt his arms tighten around
j"' her ns he muttered passionately:
"My lova you shall be! You are
my wife now, in the sight of God.
By to-mo.row you shall be my wife
; before all the world. I have already
arranged nil that"
•■You have forgiven me then, for
all my cruel, bitter words "of the last
' few months?" she said, pushing her
hair feverishly off her forehead, as
she withdrew herself from hIs arms.
' "Dear, " he answered, sadly. "I
was as much to blumo as you. ’ I was
; madly . oalous und almost heartbroken
at the thought that though we were
Jf bound together, my wife did not love
me—but another."
"And now that wo are no longer
V bound together." she said, lifting her
; eyes to his with a strange intensity in
< ^ the> depths • I want you to know,
Kellh. that 1 lovo you—that I love
you so well that i—” she broke off
trembling violently.
| "Dltvtt do you mean that?" he
t Mid passionately, catching her to his
' hoa t again.
"1 mean it—yes.” she answered,
ijj. Her voice sounded hoarse and broken;
• her eyes were glittering strangely; a
bright flush burned on her usually
? pale cheeks.
DeuH&m looked at her anxiously.
v,i 'Olive" he. said. In a distressed
velcq, my darling, all this terrible
'■ anxiety and horror have been too
i, muoh for yon. Your bands are burn
tag, nod you are trembling all over.
1 will go now. You must be worn
■', 'OOt.,vi " ; ‘
• "Ho—no. * she,, whlsporod.. pressing
- . her hand* to her forehead. "I am
’ well—-quite woi(." Then she said.
; with tin almost agonized anxiety In
* " her voice: "Keith, Witt they say our
■ boy Is—willthey say he is—" she
broke off her breath ooming short
and quick.! dor-! ' it..
U 1 ennntn. with a half gtoan. laid his
f; head down on his arm on the mantel -
piece.
’Kush, for heaven's sake," he mut
and her
••Will
voice tvas
they—can
fe'T
urea.
• 'Answer me. ’
almost a wall,
they?"
He made a silent gesture or assent.
-What—now? ’ she panted, letting
her (lagers dose with* unconscious
force upon his arm. - Now that he
Is dead?—now that you say I shall be
your wife? After all. wilt our boy be
nameless and d sgraeed?"
, Denham seeing how terribly ex
cited and distressed she waa took her
hands in his and said In a voice that
shook slightly:
••My poor Oliva what can I say to
you? I can make you my wife but. I
cannot—cannot—" He stopped and
hid his face in his hands. '
Olive stood quite still for a moment
or two, then she took hold of his arm
and pulled his hands down from his
face ' 1 *;‘ .
•d don't believe it!" she said, in a
strange hard voice "You ore say
ing it to try ma“ Tneu as hU eyes
met hers she let her hands fall to her
aides with a- low. inarticulate moan.
**Ah! no it is true " she whispered,
•d know by your face that it is true!
Come with me. ” she added, after a
minute .taking his band in hers and
moving toward the door.' "Come!”
He looked .down at her with his
brown eyes full of an indnito eorapas
“sion. 5* /V. 4 .v..;
■ PpoilihlldTT’* ho said, soothingly.
Jywfcu .arc o .Cited and overstrung.
Heat here quietly, and I will send
Feline to you."
f But she only repeated feverishly.
••Come!" *
, He folded a wrap orer he. dressing
, j =v
1*. ■■■'
..V?Sa's
iM
- >.v
gown; and together. band In hand,
they went up to the numerics.
Denham dismissed the nurse with a
wave of his hand: uni the father and
mother, with a blttor pa'n at tbolr
hearts, stood silently beside thd bed
where their idolized boy lay sleeping,
his rosy Ups hnlf parted, showing the
tiny teeth within. Olive was pale
and tearless; almost mechanically she
stooped, and covered up the chubby
l'ttle arm Hung out on the coverlet
Denham, far more agitated than she,
stood biting his lips nervously. Sud*
donly the child stirred in his sleep;
opened h's great dark eyes with a
drowsy smile, then closed them again.
With nn inarticulate exclamation
Denham dung hirnsolflnto n chair,and
hid his face.
Olive looked at him for a fow mo
menta her lips quivering painfully;
then she bent over him. fnd silontly
onc.rcled his neck with her urms. He
turned toward her with a passionate,
despairing gesture almost as a child
might and leaned his hea^ against
her breast
“Oil, Olivo! this has almost broken
my heart" he muttered, alter a long
siirnca “It is a terrible blow."
Ay. it was a terrible blow—to his
prido as well as.to his heart He was
tho last of n proud old race; and the
knowledge that his little son—the
only child they had over had—could
never inhorlt his lather’s name, and
title, and estatos. was Inconceivably
hitler to him. gxMp
Olive did not answor; and they re
mained thus, silont and heart-broken,
lor a long, long time, while a stray
moonbeam, struggling with the faint
gaslight stole in and lighted up their
boy's face with an unearthly rad ance.
CHAPTER VI.
• For Her Sake!"
Late that night, Fellse Devorne was
walking rapidly up and down her
own room; hor lips pressed tightly
together, hor • hands clasping and
unclasping themselves feverishly.
"It shall never be!'' she muttered
(it last "Xo—never! And yet I
dare not—I dura not!—Ah! what a
mlserablo coward I am!" She stop
ped suidcnly and pressed her hands
to her heart with a sharp, agonized
-ry. An nw.'ul expression of physical
pain contracted her face; lier lips
jrow pinched and almost black. For
a long time she sat with her head
resting against the back of her chair,
hardly daring to move. : i
At last sho drew a long breath, and 1
sat up.
"Ah!—that was terrible." she
jaspod. Then she rose nnd began to
pace uncertainly about the room
again.
"My mistress’’ she whispered.—
"my dearly-loved mistress—they
iliall never aocusn you. If I thought
it would be so I would not hesitate.
But—there Is another way!"
She stopped, hor eyes dilating, and
full of an almost fierce Intensity.
••Sacre " came slowly from between
her pale lips—"I will do It. You
shall be happy, my adored one. You
shall not suffer for the crime of which
you are innocent. You shall not en
ter Into another bondage. There
shall be no sorrow for you any more!"
* * * * # *
■ On the following forenoon, in the
presence of a few old and valued
friend* Sir Keith made Olive once
more his wife. *
It%eomcd a strange unreal cere
mony. The bridegroom was deathly
pale, nnd looked almost passionately
relieved when it was all over. The
bride was like a marble statue. She
shivered at her husband's kiss; but
when they were alone uga n she threw
herself Into his arms In a fit of wild,
terrified sobbing.
".Vly wife my wire—be comforted.”
he murmured unsteadily.
But she clung to him hysterically.
■ -Keith, Keith, don't let them take
me away from you?" she cried, her
voice rising almost to a shriek. "A
terrible haunting fear is upon me—
my head seems bursting. Save me
Keith—my husband — save me!"
Thore was such an awful terror In her
eyes that Denham felt seriously
alarmed, fearing, poor fellow, that
the terrible strain of the past few
days had unsettled her reason. He
soothed her as best she could, and
When she was calmer, made her rest
in an oasy chair, placed a cushion,
behind her head, and persuaded her
to drink the wine he brought her.
Then he rang for Fellse.
But Felise had gone out some time
aga the man who answered the sum
mons said, and had not yet returned.
••***'*
some nours later sir Keith Lenham
was arrested in bia oivn study, on sus
picion of the murder of Edgar Vors
choyle.
-There is some mistake, my men. •’
he said regarding the officers of the
law in haughty amazement ->It is
utterly”—
• You must remember, sir.” said
one of the men civilly enough, "that
any statements you make now will be
used against you. We have a oab
waiting, and it would be u pity to
make any disturbance’1 —
At that moment the door opened
and Lady Denham entered. With a
sudden quick intuition of something
wrong, she glanced quickly from her
husband s pale and indignant 'face to
the stolid countenances of the two
strange men who stood confronting
him. •
••Something is the matter.” she
said, in a voico that bore no resem
blance to her own. "What is it?’’
Denham turned toward her with a
harsh laugh.
"I am arrested for murder. Olive—
the murder of Edgar Verschoyle!’1
tier lace blanched suddenly; she
swayed, and would have ^fallen, had
hot her hushpnd sprang forward and
caught her in his urau. ,
••Olive. Oli.e,” he said' hastily,
‘do not fear, my darling; it is only
some stupid mistake, which can bo_
which must be cleared up at once.
Why. Oliva I shall be with you lo a
few hours.''
•• . ' , -* /* ' , 4 .
But she drew herself out of hll
arms aud looked up at him witu eyss
full of a shrinking: incredulous hor
ror: her lips moved, but no sound came
from them. Something in her expfag
slon chilled Denham’s heart with a
vague, nameless fear.
•■Oliva” be said hoarsely, "why do
you look like that? Surely I need
not tell you that I am innocent? My
wife!" he went on almost Imploringly,
•■you do not—yon cannot believe me
I guilty of this thingP"
For a sudden, overwhelming sick
ening sense of the presumptive evi
dence against him flashed across his
consciencenesa. and made his heart
stand still.
But with a wild, gasping cry. Olive
flung up her arms and fell senseless
on his breast
Ho carried her to a sofa. and.
kneeling down, bent over her with
broken, passionate words He bad
forgotten that they were not alone.
He had forgotten everything but his
wife.
"Leave her to me. Sir.Keith.” said
the voice of Felise at his ear. "I will
see to my mistress.”
■•Take care, of her.” he muttered
agitatedly, as he rose to his feet • -Do
not let her imagine that—there is
anything serious in this business-”
His voice faltered} then he drew him.
self up with a haughty gestura and
said quietly to the men. "I am ready!"
sgaftt, chapter vil
Tightening Coils
London society was almost wild
with oxcltement and curiosity. Th e
opinions regarding Sir Keith's inno
cence were many and conflicting. His
own friends scolTed at the idea of his
guilt to be sure; but there was not
wanting those who saw the whole
chain of evidence ‘as clear as print"
[TO BE CONTINUED. ]
CRUBLTY TO CHILDREN.
■ ■
xiornoi© practices Kesortod to In Order
to Attract the Generous*
We may thank the framers of the
act fur the prevention of cruelty to
children that they have placed an
effectual check upon those who in
this country were wont to abuse the
Infirmities of - children for begging
purposes says the London Lancet.
Thq miserable show infant cannot
now be exposed in our streets without
entailing serious risk upon the ex
hibitor in the event of detection.
Anything like a wholesale manufacture
of, human objects of pity could not
fail to draw down upon the per
petrators a penalty severe enough to
prohibit its continuance. We
have not indeed, in this fact any
occasion for boastfulness. Our as
sumption of preventive powers in the
matter is far too recent even to en
courage such an attitude. We cannot
however, be wrong in mentioning the
circumstance by way of suggestion to
authorities elsewhere who have still
to witness but apparently without
power to punish, the monstrous prac
tice in question. Taka by way of
illustration, the frequent exhibition
at French fairs of those ar
tificially produced cripples known
as culs de jatta the term implying a
shriveled condition of both legs de
liberately induced in childhood by
means of ligatures which interfere
with the c’rculation in the l.mbs.
The cripple farmer pays the parents
of his victim, usually a delicate child
to begin with, a few centimes daily,
and keeps his miserable charge as a
means of lining his own pocket with
the coppers of the compassionate. It
is a proof of the extraordinary ignor
ances credulity and heartlessness of
the Spanish peasantry, to whom these
wretohed creatures belong, that they
should be allowed because born weak
thus to suffer at the hands of impos
tors under the sorry pretense that
only so can they make a living. It is
evidently high time for preventive ac
tion on the part of the Spanish and
French governments and no circum
stance could provide a fuller justifica
tion for the introduction by either
authority of a children's act which
would deal effectively with instances
of such tyrann'ous cruelty. '
^ ’ <*?.. ”‘l, TTT
' 'Xi IWlwnto Voduz Ulan.
"Tell me, my daughter." said Mr.
Munn. with some anxiety in his man*
ner, as he led his only child to a seat
in the parlor, "wasn't young Mr.
Gasket here last n(ght?” "Yea papa.
| Why do you ask?" Did you and he
have a quarrel?" "No papa—not a
quarrel exactly. But tell me! Has
| anything happened to him?’* "Did he
or did he not propose marriage to
you?" • Yea he did. papa ” replied
the ^glrl, now thoroughly alarmed.
"Do tell me if anything has happened
to him. Has he committed sal—”
••What was your reply, daughter?
Did you aocept him?” "Not papa
Has his body been discoT—" -Did
you give him any encouragement
whatever?” "No sir. Did he shoot
himself, or—” "You rejected him
finally and Irrevocably, did yon?"
"Yea papa and he said he'd go and
do something desperate hut I didn’t
think he’d make away with himself.
Oh. papa isn't it awful?" -Yea it’s
awful. I suspeoted that you had re
jected him when I heard what he had
done to-day.”' "Oh. papa do you
think I shall be arrested for it?”
•Oh. dear. no. You didn't have to
marry him just because he asked you.”
"But tell me what has he done, papa?”
"He's gone to work.”—Detroit gree
Press.
This Is Odd.
Two locomotives built bn the same
plan, exactly alike and of similar ma
terial. will have different rates of
speed and drawing power. The dif
ference in speed in twin engines has
been known to reach fiftoen miles an
hour. ' ,
-w . —if
He Was Equal to It.
He—"I wish that I could say things
as sweet as the sort strains or that
waits." She—"Well you seem to
| have no difficulty in saying things as
j soft as the sweet strains of the waltz.'*
' —Brooklyn Life. , > *
-T, . y.
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
MANY ACRES, FEW HANDS.
SLtM POCKETBOOKS.
Don't Undertake Morn Than Ton Can Do
—Making and Applying Kan urn la the
TlnUr — EanUapo In tha Ground—
Dairy Mo ten and Honnnhold Ralpn.
‘ . Mixed Farming.
Take a ride with me and I will
show you corn fields that have
scarcely been cultivated at all, and
where the drills are solid rows of
grass and weeds, says T. B. Terry in
Practical Farmer. I will show you
potatoes cared for, or rather not
cared for, in about the same way.
Yes, 1 will show you fields where they
are so stripped by bugs and over
grown with weeds, and the cultiva
tion between the drills so noglected,
that you can scarcely see a potato
leaf. And this shall not be cn
some shiftless farmer’s place, an
exceptional case, but on farms
managed by good farmers, in some
cases our best fanners. Theyr 'are
not lazy or shiftless. They under
take to do too much, that is all,. and
something must suffer. I could aiot
take tjieir plaoes and do any hotter,
perhaps not as well. The troublous
not in the men, but in the system
they are following. We have had a
dry season, which of course, is fav
orable for taking care -of crops, and
doing the haying and harvesting,
and still, while they have been se
curing hay and grain, corn and pota
toes have suffered severely. In some
cases they will not pay for the labor
put on them and the use of the land.
They will be grown at a loss. Years
ago I did just this waiy myself, but
seeing it was not business-like I
gradually worked out of it. and
undertook to do less and less
until there was little enough to do,
so we could usually do about
our oesi ana make everything
we did, pay. The above named
farmers are making a little money,
doing pretty well, but they might do
better. As little as we undertake to
do, we sometimes get caught One
day our wheat was all cut and
dry enough to get in; there were
six acres of potatoes that should
have been cultivated at once, the
rest were too large. But it might
come on catehing weather and the
wheat would then be damaged, and
so it must go in the barn. Tbis
took three days, and then my son
did not feel well, and there was other
jobs that must be done, and those
potatoes were neglected for some
time. It did not rain, but was hot
and dry. If we had tended to the
potatoes we should have been quite a
few dollars ahead, but we were afraid
to risk leaving the wheat out. But
there is very little loss of this kind
on our farm, not that we are any
smarter than others, but simply that
we do not undertake to do any more
things than we are quite sure we can
handle.
Friends, let me urge you to work
in this same direction. There is less
worry and more profit. I can take
you to farms to-day, where the owner
has triod to grow corn and potatoes.
If he had put out but the one crop,
and no more acres of it, and put all
the labor on it that has been spread
over the two, it would show a fine
profit and be something to be proud
of. Now there is no profit in either
orop, and if thfty are near the road,
the farmer withes they were back
out of sight, and ho never would in
vite any friends to go and see them
either. Would that all could throw
aside all inherited notions, that were
sound once, but behind the times
now, and run their /arms on sound
business principles, as far as circum
stances will permit them to do so.
Manors la Winter.
An it will be an exceptionable case
when the land will be so rich that no
manure is necessary, all reasonable
care should be taken to secure all
that is possible. On the majority of
farms winter is by far the best sea
son for making manure; and general
ly, there is more time to haul out
and properly apply. But in order to,
secure the best results it -is -very im
portant that the preparation be made
in advance. One important matter
in doing this is to have feeding
places where the stock can be fed
pnd the manure accumulated in. one
or more places. A supply of bedding
is also essential, so as to absorb and
retain the liquid soiling, and at the
same time help to keep the stock
clean and comfortable. With all
classes of stock it is very important
in maintaining the best health and
thrift to do this, at the same time
avoiding using too much, as this adds
to the cost of handling without an
increase in value.
•One of the best ways of applying
manure is on plowed land intended
-for spring crops. By applying on
the surface during the winter, the
notion of the rain and the melting
snow will tend to caA-y the more val
uable portions into the soil, while
the necessary preparation of the soil
in the spring, the cultivating and
harrowing that will need to be given
to properly fit it for the feed, will be
sufficient to thoroughly incorporate
the manure Into the soil.
One of the best plans of manage
ment i«t to use what bedding is
needed to keep the stock clean, and
then as it accumulate^ both in the
stables, sheds or feeding lots, load
directly into the wagon, haul to the
field, and scatter where it is needed.
This avoids all unnecessary hand
ling, and is an item in getting the
work done at the lowest cost. An
other thing should also be remem
bered. that it pays better in the end
to manure thoroughly, than to scat
ter over too large a surface. With a
little planning of the work, nearly
or quite all of the manure made dur
ing the winter can'be hauled out and
applied upon tho laod# to benefit the
next season’s crop, and generally
will give better results than to apply
on unplowed- land and plow under ?
while there will be much less loss ol
the valuable pastures. In applying
the manure, should distribute as
evenly as possible, gauging the
quantity largely by the needs of the
soil, remembering that there is little
danger of applying too much._
Journal of Agriculture.
Ensilage In the UrouniL
The building of silos preventt
many farmers and small dairymen
from ensilaging green crops. It is
well enough, perhaps, to have a
good, substantial silo, if one can
build it just as well as not, and
where lumber is plenty it does not
cost very much to build a practical
silo. But when the ensilaging of
green crops vva3 first begun the silo
was simply a holo in the ground, and
where the drainage is good'that Is as
good a way as any. My silo is of
that kind. I have dug a hole with
slanting sides on a little raise of the
ground, and I fill this with my corn,
with whole, corn, stalks, heaping
them up above tho ground and covep
| ing first with straw and then with
earth. The plan is similar to that
of preserving roots in the pit. My
ensilage is always gcod, as good as
anybody’s can be.—Farmers Voice.
Datlrjr Noted.
A creamery should not be started
until 300 cows are guaranteed.
No matter what breed the cow is,
she requires good Care to produce
profitable results.
It is a good plan to keep a good
milking cow in the dairy as long as
she is a good milker.
The wise dairyman provides soil
ing crops to patch out the dry pas
tures during tho summer time.
No calf should be raised for dairy
purposes from a cow of weak consti
tution or one with organic disease.
The best dairymen practice the
best economy in^ feeding when they
feed all the cow will eat up clean and
no more.' - ;
Bulky food should always be fed
with concentrated food, to avoid
possiblo discomfort and injury from •
the latter.
me cream snouia De set as soon
as possible after milking. It will
not separate rapidly when subjected
to jarring and shaking.
It is poor economy to turn a herd
of cows into a large pasture and al
low them to roam about all day, when
all they get is exercise.
The milk tester and the separator
are important factors in dairying.
The milk tester in the near future
will be a sine qua non in dairying.
Cows should be trained so that
they will let any kind of person
milk them, but they tlo better when
the same person milks them each
time.
Uncleanliness in milking, not cool
.ing the milk quickly after milking,
bad fodder, bad air in stables and
disease in cows are causes of tainted
milk.
In order to got the fat all out of
the butter the churn should not be
filled too full.' It is necessary to
have room in the churn to give the
cream concussion.
It costs less to feed and care for
one cow than it does for two, there
fore every farmer who is keeping two
cows and getting really but what one
should produce is losing money.
Household Helps.
To keep ice in the sickroom over
' night set the pitcher in a newspaper,
gather up the ends, twist them tight,
and snap on a rubber band.
Covers for veups and glasses used
in a sick room can be made of card
board and covered with a crochet
cover of either white silk, wool or
cotton, as preferred, a small loop
being put in the middle of the top to
lift it by.
u celery were eaten freely, suffer
ers from rheumatism would be com
paratively few. It is a mistaken idea
that cold and damp produce the
disease—they simply develop it.
Acid blood is the primary and sustain
ing cause. If celery is eaten largely,
an alkaline blood is the result, and
where this exists there can be
neither rheumatism nor gout. It
should be eaten cooked.
Carrot pudding is said by those
who have eaten it to be very nice.
Boil and mash fine six ounces of car
rot, add six ounces of suot chopped
fine, half a pound of currants, two
large tablespoonfuls of sugar, hall a
nutmeg, a salt spoon of salt and three
large tablespoonfuls of flour. Mix
I all these ingredients thoroughly, put
| them in a greased pot and boil the
pudding for three hours. This re
ceipt is from a correspondent who
has tried it
A home way to repair garden hose
when you are at a distance from the
supply shop: Tako two ounces or
more of naphtha, into which drop as
much shellac as it will absorb till
of the consistency of thin gum. Cut
some bandages of canvas or thick
leather, spread the composition on
; one side of them, bind tightly round
the hose and fasten firmly with twine.
The hose must be kept dry before the
plasters are applied. Keep the ce
ment in a glass-stoppered bottle.
The floor of the kitchen and dining'
room should be brushed after every
meal, the sideboard rearranged, and
the table prepared for the coming
meaL This is an important matter
when the housekeeper attends per
sonally to the dining room. The re
ceptacles for sugar, salt, the various
table sauces, eta, the glasses, silver,
napkins and cutlery mav be placed
ready for use, and the table prepared
ready for the water, bread, etc., and
I then covered with a clean cloth large
■ enough to protect it entirely Jrgm
dust and disarrangement *
. The l»tert reported w * 1
Iwni* to a deviiT imen&E""*"* J
^b,# »^ow t£0w>|
by uiostregeneratl^ °'»l
settle «Cto
and to overcome somonlTlv® '^pT I
which detract from the vaf *•**«•* I
principle. The diff!a“?..Ta>.e of thM
Principle The* dMty;ft
thrown upward is met bv
upper part of the lamp of eteW.®* lh*
mental glass instead of harin-^ 0n,»
lie dome, as to ordinarilv thf* ■•tol
good illumination u tyh„hec?se- A
without the loss of any down-^Ltai"*A
—two streams of hot «ir "Wanl light
the burners, one CingheZT^^
of the regenerator, which ®'iD»
iron, the other being warm** £*»«
imsaage through the lamp casing «»
other point dealt with, in thu„ A>
tion, is the deposit of earbon°nstrile'
«bi.u“«r. which is usual with such?° tlu!
this is practically reduced *mPs; ,
first by the small amoUnt of a "°hlhin^
per hour and the t*>rWMbur.De<i
per hour and the" perfept‘“aDUr,ned I
tion obtained and the wxt by the^
ducts of combustion being erofttedT0
the lamp laterally instead o?bein„ 0m
jected upward toward the ceiling
arrangement has the merit Thl»
* A New Concrete.
*^.S?fCeSSful *PP^cation has been
made, it appears, of the newly “Te^
road concrete, some time ago
in the papers of Germany, and its ^
falness in various directions setmlt
be assured. Curious enough S to
and planing mill chips, eftherof^T
mon or fatjey woods, and which IT
mi Vefore use ^ desired an
mi-ed with cheese-or rather, casein
calcined magnesian limestoni-giv'~
ine, silicate of soda, and a little li£
oil, and this combination of substance
l8*>r:ed hJ hydraulic pressure^
moulds where it is allowed suffic e
time to harden. When dry, the eon
position is strong and solid, and can h
sawed, planed, polished and varnishec
Among its various proposed uses a,
ornamental panels and wall surf.i,
coverings, etc,
A lie always has a dagger in its hand, i
matter how well meaning it may loot
Second-Hand Burin
Body Type
For Sale Cheap.
We have one thousand pounds of brevier
body type in good condition,made of eitr.
metal by Barnhart Bros. & Splndler
manufacturers of the famous suoerlav
copper-mixed type. We win sell it i,
fonts nf 100 pounds or more, to be deliv
ered as soon as wo get on our new, at tbs
low price of
26 Gents s Pound.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,
U West Jackson 8t.,
CHICAGO, ILL,
GOOD CHANCE!
Odell HO Typewriter for 110, if cash with or
der Is received before Nor. 1st, 1803. The
famous Odell Typewriter is used by Lawyers,
Ministers, Doctors, Merchants, Editors and
Government Officers, because of its clean
print, aimpllolty ana manifold copies No
teacher required. It will do your work In one
hour's practice. Order now and take advant
age of this exceptionally
. IG00D CHANCEll
FRANK ROHM,
t W. Jackaon St., Chioa*o>
A
Publishersi
Arc you gumslu
issue a Holiday
-edition? Do you
intend to use a Hoi*
iday Supplement?
Have you seen our .
samples? Write
us.
Wsstern Newipaptr Union.
600-011 So. iah St., OMAHA, NEB.
ENGINE
PeCond Hand, 25 Hors*.
Will be sold at a great Bar- .
8,“n- Wrii! C. AKIN,
,511 8o. 12th St, Omuha, Neb.
OMAHA BUSINESS HOOSK.
fhhaba
Works w m v |
He pairs for 4*,
lit 1>00»I— Bt..
different stn»«
OMAHA,
HIITri O TIL* FLOORS and VESTIBUUS
MANTELS
ilLLifiERY
WHOLESALEI AND BETAII*
sl. ilr —-»
1514 lWUglaaSw**^
■WIN
CITY
Batter, Bags and Poultry.
Hobt I urrls. Commission
chant 1»M Harney St.. Oinaaa.
DYE WORKS
Council Bluffs. la*
4 1521 FarnsmSa*
Qmphs. Neb.
URS
Aulatiautfh Fur Co..
Omaha. Ladles’and Gents t ^
a rw.. r -evll.rM Mnits. e C- A'*
if$TFRS, aaPBSftjST
HOODS. Write for »Ticw- .
PLATT COMPAJSV.Oma^IWfc
Omaha. Ladtesannueiu® »
4 Coats, collars. Muffs,etc.
1 our own manufacture. Nanit /tuo'W
per and you will get a per cent _
z. t.
49 Mg
W*Send for catalog of
KIMBALL ORGANS
PT" Agent* Wanted- .
'A. HOSPE, Jf