The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 01, 1894, Image 6

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    IS;
LIGHT.
Lord, send ns Thy light,
Not only ta the darkest night.
But in the shadowy, dim twilight.
Wherein my strained and aching sight
Can scarce distinguish wrong from right-* -
Then send Thy light.
Teach me to rrav.
Not on y in the morning gray,
Or when the moonbeam's silver ray
Falls on me—but at high noon to-day
When pleasure beckons mo away,
Teach mo to pray.
- London Spectator.
SCARLET FORTUNE. ,
1IY H. HERMAN.
CHAPTER V—Continued.
They loitered along until tlioy
reached Clarldge’s hotel. Thoro Lord
Clevo took leave of Mr. Quenthclm.
There was, of course, the earl’s town
house, in Berkeley Squaro, whore
Horbert might have stopped, but the
place had been shut up since the
death of its provious owner, and the
Hon. Miss Chauncoy, Herbert’s old
est lister, who had looked upon her
self as the head of the family, did
not think the place fit to receive its
present ownor, without somo tidying j
and brushing up. Tho young man
had, therefore, taken up his tempor
ary quarters at Claridgo’s, glad by
this means to escape tho host of in
quisitivo callors, who kept the
knocker and bell at Horkoley Squaro
in continual movement.
Lucy was sitting at the window of
tho private sitting room, which Lord
Clove hod engaged for her separate
use, when Herbert entered. Her
budding girlish beauty had expanded
and blossomed into a womanly loveli
ness which could not fail to be re
marKable. Charming, truthful nature
was writ all over that beautoous face
’—Cod’s fairest image as He had
creatod it. The deep eyes wore elo
quent with tenderness ano truth; tho
downy dimpled cheekB, redolent with
graceful delicacy. There was just a
little ponsive sadness hovering over
it all, but faintly perceptible at in
tervals, when tho big eyes were not
attracted by another gaze, and which
seemed to come out in splt.o of Itself.
The, lithe and round figure was
draped in the‘simplest of gowns
—homely, grayish woollen stuff,
summer though It was, and
tho young lady had the courage to
despise the absurd edict of fashion,
which in those days imposed, upon
the fair sex the ordeal of wearing
crinolines.
uum viovu MttU lulu xur.
1 thelm, Lucy had lived with the
young man whose life she had Baved
on the prairios all these years, and
the earl had spoken the absolute
truth when he had said that they
had lived together as brother and
sister.
Her father and oousin had ren
dered her no further assistance than
carrying the wounded man to a tem
porary place of shelter, in a tumble
down and disused trapper's hut, on
the further side of an incline on the
opposite side of the gulch, and on a
spur of the mountains, totally dis
tinct from that on which both Mao
lane's and Ashland's cabins were
situated. By these means, and by
Lucy’s silence, thoy wore sure of
obtaining, at least, sufficient breath
ing time to secure a largo amount of
gold, and to be able to tly East,
before the avenging arm of the rough
border law could reach them. Not
very far from the broken down-trap
per’s hut lived, in solitary retire
ment, an old Sioux half-breed, named
Makasapa, who, like everybody else
in that country, would have died to
help Lucy. The old man spoke
barely any English at all, although
his father had been a rough and
ready Scotch trapper, who, somehow
or other, years and years before, had
spent a few hunting seasons among
the Dakotahs, and had disappeared
without the least further enquiry
\ about the fate of his wife and child.
But Lucy wa% fully conversant with
most of the Indian dialects of the
surrounding tribes, and had no diffi
culty in obtaining the old, half
breed’s skilled assistance in tho dress
. ing of Herbert’s wounds, and also in
securing bis secrecy on tho subjeot.
Weeks passed thus, and the girl
barely left her charge for a moment.
When the wounds began to heal, and
tho dickering life became stronger,
when consciousness returned and tho
danger of accusation grow more
threatening, the Maolanes paid hur
ried visits to tho hut, with ghastly
pale faces, enquiiing about the pa
tient’s condition, and with hard-set
teeth vowing that they would finish
their job if the wounded man’s
otiuuuu (JUUiU IlUb CJU OO"
taincd. They had struck a groat lode
of gold in the meanwhile, and had
stored away a big pile of the precious
metal ready for sudden flight Again
and again Lucy stood determinedly
in front of the man, who already
owed her his life; over and over again
she dared and defied her savage rel
atives. She went even so far as to
order them out of the hut at the
pistol's mouth. 'Little by little, the
Maclanes came to accept the danger
of the situation, and to prepare for
all eventualities.
They had buried Dick Ashland in
an out-of-the-way spot, where no
body would have thought to look for
him. They removed all traces of
bloodshed from the gulch bottom,
and burned their own gore-stained
i clothes Thu3 they entertained the
_ hope, by desperate impudence, to be
able to brazen the matter out. until
they could retire and disappear in tho
great thriving East
Great was their amazement, and
equally great their relief, when Her
bert, on recovering, recognized
neither of them, nor Lucy; when he
seemed to wake, as from a dream, in
.which all the reminiscence of tha
bloody fray was swallowed up; when
in fact, all memory of that terrible
night and of all persons and places,
seemed to be gone from the young
man's mind. They looked at one an
other in grim and half-frightened
stare, as if the roliof which had
burst upon them was too sure to bo
real. But the hours and the days
drow on, ana Iiorbort’s condition re
mained tho same. In fact, at that
time, loss of memory was absolute;
acts of the morning were obliterated
bjj the events of tho afternoon, and
tho poor young follow could not carry
his recollection from one day to the
next. This surprising dispersal of
thoir fears changed tho plans of the
Maclanes, and they urgod Lucy to re
turn to the parental cabin, and to
! share the immenso and newly-found
wealth. But the girl was Arm. She'
would not again live with her guilty
fathorand cousin. She would rather
die a hundred times, than touch a
red speck of their blood-stained gold.
She would leavo her rblatlvos to ex
plain tho circumstances as best they
might, but she would move far away
from them and devote her life to the
caro and recovery of the man whom
they had so dastardly assailed and
injured. She gathorod up her be
longings, and those bequeathed to
her by her dead mother, and having i
pursundodMakasapa to join his for- j
tunes to hers, tho two set out with
their now fairly recovering patient,
to the prairies north of tho South
Platte, where Makasapa soon found
them a homo with some friendly
Sioux. •
As Herbert becamo stronger, his
membry ot actual occurrences im
proved and he was able to remember
events of the days and weeks as they
swept by, but tho past, even as near
as his residence and recovery in the
mountains, was gone. To all his
questions concerning himself, both
Lucy and Makasapa gave evasive
answers, and, as the enquiries fa
tigued him, and seemed to distress
the girl, ho did not continue them.
As his health and strongth returned
it brought back his impulsive, hot
hearted disposition, and, as was only
natural under the circumstances, ho
fell head over ears in love with the
beautiful girl who was so good to
him. But Lucy knew how to tame
her admiror into ta$it submission,
and Herbertat last resigned himself
into living with her as a brother
would with a dearly beloved sister.
She loved him with the purest de
votion a woman’s heart is capable of,
and just because her love was so
pure, she, the daughter of an assas
sin, resolutely refused inseparably to
link her name with that of an honest
man. She would be his loving friend,
his tender sister, his dog if need be;
but she would never have her hus
band awa<co one day to the fact that
the wife whom he nurtured was the
daughter of tho man who had mur
dered his friend, and who ■ had at
tempted to murder him.
During all this while Lucy held no
communication whatever with her
father and cousin, and the latter,
whether it were from indifference or
fear, sought none with her. There
fore, when the Maclane's mot Lord J
Olevo in Hyde park they were thun
derstruck to find themselves face to
faoe with their former victim, and
they were absolutely unaware that
Lucy was in London also.
When the cute New Yor,c enquiry
agent finally tracked Herbert to his
moving prairie home, and established
his identity beyond chance of con
tfadiction, the young man felt sorely
nonplussed about his future action as
the bearer of a great and ancient
title. He felt no desire to live in a
oity, and in addition to that, Lucy at
first declined to aceompucy him to
England. Lord Cleve had' to exer
cise all his powers of persuasion to
induce her to quit the Now World
for tho Old. Even then she would
accept but trifling sums for the pur
chase of such indisponsables in the
shape of gowns and bonnets as the
difference botwoen prairie and town
life necessitated. She would have
none of the “forfarows.” as she
termed them, which tho oily persua
sion of the clerk in the big Chicago
dry goods store attempted to press
upon her, but chose the simplest and
homeliest of materials. The Yankee
crinoline, with its elaborate arrange
ments of a hundred silk-covered, pli
able springs, sot her in an absolute
roar, and made her oxclaim, ‘‘I reck
on I ain't a dancin’ bear. When I
am I’ll buy myself a cage—not
afore."
a£iu3 ii came vnat, cm that early
Bummer evening when she rose to
meet Lord Cleve, she was dressed in
more simple fashion than any of the
maids who waited upon hor and yet
in a manner which none the less set
o3 her dazzling beauty.
“You are not a bit like the London
girls,” he said, "and I wouldn’t have
you change for the world. You
couldn’t be better than as you are—
not to my liking—if you tried ever
so.”
Her face dimpled swoetly and her
eyes glistened as they frankly met
his gaze.
“1 guess.” she Bald, “that’s jest
because yew’re used to me, an’ be
cause thar ain’t been time yet fur
any o’ the p.ondon girls to hop around
yew. But it’ll come, as sure as rasp
berries don't grow on pine trees."
“What will come?” ho asked, play
fully.
She walked away from him ana
commenced drumming on the window
panes, looking at the crowd below.
“The young woman will come,”
she said, “that’ll want to marry
yew. That’s sartm sure.”
Having delivered herself of that
startling phrase, she commenced to
whistle “Yankee Doodle" with a
vervo and vigor which to an English
car would have sounded an amazing
anomaly.
The earl stood for a moment or
two in the center of the room, and
undecidedly followed Miss Lucy’s
movements.1 Then he stepped to the
window, and bending his face in an
unsuccessful attempt to gaze into
her eyes, he asked:
? f- - “ .. t- -«; ”
i
“What has put that idea (nto your
head?"
She slipped away from him and
seated herself in the big velvet-cov
ered arm-chair which stood near.
! “Nothin’.” she exclaimed. “I guess
it’s nothin’."
Her mite of a foot was beating a
march on the carpet, and her eyes
were drooped as if she were search
ing for some object hidden there,
when his encounter with the Mac
lanes, that aftornoon, crossed Lord
C'levo’s mind. His misfortune had
caused him to acquire a habit of
dashing from one subject to another,
as ho always dreaded to forget what
ho did not elucidate, when the occa
sion presented itself.
“By the way, Lucy,” ho asked,
“have you any relatives of tho name
Maclann?”
There was such a frightened-fawn
look in thobe big blue eyes, and a
startled expression crept over the
beautiful face.
"I’ve got a father an’ a cousin,”
she roplied. “Why do yew ask?”
“Is your cousin’s name David Mac
quiry.
lho trifling' shadow deepened on
the girl’s features.
“I guess that’s it,” she replied.
••Why do yew ask?”
“And is your father a tall gentle
man.” he persisted, “with a big scar
on his face?”
“That’s him, most likely,” she
answered, rising, “But why do yew
askP”
“Two gentlemen ran across me in
the park,” he replied, “and I was
told they were Mr. David Maclane
and his uncle. They are very rich, I
am informed, and young Maclane is
engaged to be married to Lady
Evelyne Wynter.”
khe had listened in a pale silence.
Then she shook herself together,
and, with a barely audible laugh,
she said in a tone of perfect com
monplace—
“Dad and Davo in London! I never
reckoned on that”
“Do you know,” continued Lord
Clevo, “that I fancy your father and
your cousin must have met me be
fore—under disagreeable circum
stances I should say—for when they
saw me they turned as white as
ghosts. You are not ill, my dear?"
he added, seeing the color fade from
her cheeks.
The frightened-fawn look was
again in those big eyes, more tremu
lous than before, but it was gone in
a flash, and she burst into a peal of
silvery laughter.
“Of course I ain’t sick.” she re
plied. “but it’s that stifling in this
place that a Greaser couldn’t stand
it. I want a whiff of fresh air.”
Horbert rushed to the window and
opened it wide.
“What does it all mean?” he said
t.Q himself. “What does it mean?"
CHAPTER VI.
Miss Lucy set her little wits to
work the moment she had recovered
her wonted Belf-possession, to ex
tract by a process of insinuatory
wheedling, and a pleasing deceptive
pressure of enquiry, from Lord
Clcve all he had learned about her
cousin, her father, and Lady Evelyne.
She had no trouble in eliciting from
the young man that he hud once
been engaged to Lady Evelyne Wyn
ter,and thereby started Herbert upon
the idea that he must needs, in his
usual slap-dash manner, write a let
ter of apology to the lady who had
once upon a time consented to be his
wife The thought was no sooner
born than it was acted upon, and
young Cleve sat down at the old
fashioned mahogady bureau to pen
his apology, while Lucy stood be
hind his chair looking over him.
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
Destroying Hank or England Note*.
With the bank of England the de
struction of its notes takes place
about once a week, and at 7 p. m. It
used to be done in the daytime, but
made such a smell that the neighbor
ing stockbrokers petitioned the gov
ernors to do it in the evening. The
notes are previously cancelled by
punching a hole through.the amount,
in llgures, and tearing off the signa
ture of the chief cashier. The notes
are burned in a closed furnace, and
the only agency employed is shav
ings and bundles of wood. They
used to be burned in a cage, the re
sult of which was that once a week
the city was darkened with burned
fragments of notes. For future pur
poses of reference, the notes are left
for five yoars before being burned.
The number of notes coming into
the bank of England every day is
about 50,090, and 350,000 are de
stroyed every week or something
like 18,000,000 every year. The
stock of paid notes for five years is
about 77,745,000 in number, and they
fill 13,400 boxes which, if placed
side by side, would reach two and
one-third miles. If the notes were
placed in a pile they would reach to
a height of five and two-thirds miles;
or, if joined end to end, would form
a ribbon .12,455 miles long.
Expected Him.
Young Yardlie—I understand that
there is a vacancy in your establish
ment, sir, and I have come to apply
for the. position.
Senior Partner, dryly—I have been
expecting you.”
“Expecting me?”
“Yea I heard you ask one of the
clerks if it was true that our Satur
day half-holidays were to bo continued
a month longer."
Whig* Were Teamster*.
Whigs wore originally teamsters
in Scotland, who used the term whig
gam to encourage their horses. Op
ponents of the government in the res-1
toration period were derided as
favoring the Scotch covenantors, and '
hence were called whiggama, after
wards whiga.
THE FARM AND HOME.
THE SYMPTOMS OF TUBERCU
tu. LOSIS IN COWS.
Daugerona Prevalence of the Dlnnt
and Measarea fur lta Eradication—
Artlohokea for lloga — Farm Kotee and
Uoma Hints.
Tnbarculoala in Coirs.
The most common disease of cows
is that known as tuberculosis, more
commonly recognized by the popular
term, consumption. This common
name is given to this disease from
the fact that the various vital organs
implicated are gradually consumed
by a germ that lives at the expense
of the tissue, and changes it into a
degraded, cheesy, dead matter, which,
being gathered into small or larger
knots or tubercles, gives reason for
the scientific name of the disease
tuberculosis.
It is a common belief that this dis
ease affects only the lungs of an ani
mal or a person. The truth is quite
otherwise. It may invade any part
of the body; the lungs, or their
serous covering, the pleurae, by
which not only the lungs but the
whole cavity of the chest is covered,
and which is a frequent seat of dis
ease; the membrane supporting the
bowels, (the mesentery), the coats
of the bowels, the throat, the spleen,
the liver, the pancreas, the kidneys,
the ovaries, sometimes the muscles,
and frequently the soft ends of the
bones. In female animals the mam
mary glands, the udder, as it is com
monly known—is a frequent seat of
the disease.
Cattle are more subject to this dis
ease than other animals, writes
Henry Stuart in Colman’s Rural
World. .Sheep and swine are the
next in order of subjection, and
fowls follow after these, but these
last mentioned rarely suffer except
from infection by swullowing the
ejected matter from the patients of
hospitals of persons diseased in pri
vate houses that has been thrown
out where the fowls can pick it up.
The use of the milk of tuberculosed
cows, especially when the udder or
the ovaries are the seat of the dis
ease, has been the most effective
means of communication. ■ And it
has been observed with the utmost
interest by statisticians ‘ and physi
cians that the deaths of infants by
consumption have been greatly in
creased since the more general adop
tion of cow’s milk for their food.
There are some cows that seem to
have a natural predisposition to tu
berculosis. This is due, doubtless,
to inherited conditions, by which
these peculiar features have been
caused, such as the long legs, the
narrow chest, the thin, long neck,
narrow forehead, and the semi-trans
lucent ears, with a sil*cy softness of
the hair and thinness of tho skin, all
of these denoting weakness of consti
tution. And with these there is a
copious flow of milk, thin and bluish
in -.color and poor in fats. Such an
animal having any local inflammation
set up from whatever cause becomes
the easy subject of attack and the
ready victim to the best. This nat
ural predisposition may be set in ac
tion by various causes that are com
mon to dairies either not well man
aged or carried on under a method by
which the cows are over-stimulated
by high feeding to procure increased
product. The system gives way un
der either condition, and the disease
attacks the herd in the most insid
ious manner. Thus the high-bred
cows, bred too closely, so that a weak
aoastitution is inherited, as well as
the town slop fed herds, in their
wretched, noisome stables, fall vic
tims to tho disease.
The first symptoms of the disease
are easily apparent. Indeed, some
of the worst cases have occurred in
dairies where the owner could
scarcely be convinced of the truth of
the announcement of the veterinarian,
until tho post-mortem examination,
by which the diseased organs were
plainly corroborative of tho diagnosis.
The sick animals may be in tho high
est condition, as easily as in tho
lowest, Tho symptoms vary as the
seat of the disease may. the cough
and the peculiar mawkish odor "of
the breath, quite . different from the
healthy respiration, and the dis
turbed breathing, discloso the fact
that the lungs are effected. The
profuse diarrhea, with general
ceedingly bright eyes, dryness of the
nose, and apparent fever and rapid
pulse, indieato that the bowels are
the seat of the disorder. When the
throat is aliccted the glands are
enlarged, and the dry cough slight,
and seldom noticed, except by the
watchful attendant, afTord the testi
mony to the fact. The unnatural
desire for the company of the
male indicates the disease to be
in the ovaries, in which
case the milk glands usually are in
volved and the milk is wholly unfit
for use. Sometimes the disease ap
pears as swellings of the joints and
lameness. But in all cases the ad
vance of the disease is accompanied
by the most conspicuous manifesta
tion of approaching death. The
eyes lose their brilliance, and sink in
their sockets; the cheeks fall in; the
nose is quite dry and pinched in at
the nostrils; the breath is hurried,
and every inspiration produces heav
ing of the flanks and distress; the
body moves with the action of the
lungs, and the carcass becomes thin
and hidebound. The hair stands on
end, and the skin is scurty. There
is a discharge of whitish matter
from the nose, and the breath is
fetid. All these symptoms increase
in virulence, and daily the animal
becomes weaker. This is often the
case in herds that are still milking
freely, as the system fails faster
than does this function. But tho
milk is so thin and blue and watery
as to excite suspicion by any one
having any special habit of noticing
differences of this kind.
There is no use in treatment, as
the animal is worthless for any pur
pose. Its progeny will inherit tbe
disease, its flesh is not fit for food,
the milk is poison, its very breath
and discharge from the nostrils will
communicate the disease to other
animals, and if it could be saved the
usefulness of it is quite destroyed
for the future. The only thing to bo
done is to avert the disease by time
ly precautions. No animal exhibit
ing any of tho predisposing charac
teristics should be used for breeding,
and the elegant, slender, deer-like
form is to be discarded for the more
robust, if not so handsome, animal
whose healthfulnoss is apparent
No doubt, the fortunately now dis
carded habit of choosing breeding
animals for color or .figure has had
much to do with the present prev
alence of this disease among
the Jerseys, who seem to
he almost the sole victims
to this veritable pestilence. The ef
fective measures taken by the agri
cultural department for the mitiga
tion and eradication of the old-time
decimating disease, pleuro-pneu
monia, have been crowned by re
markable success, and the same
measures to eradicate this equally
destructive disease might be applied,
doubtless with the same invaluable
result. And this well deserves the
greater attention on account of (he
imminence of the infection among
unguarded persons, and especially
the helpless infants whose lives are
destroyed by the use of the infected
food. It is a fact well known to and
authoritatively declared by experts
that the death rate among these
helpless infants has been trebled
since the introduction of the widely
used but deadly milk bottle. The
entire immunity of these infants may
be secured by general use of the
sterilizing apparatus recommended
by the United States department of
agriculture. This simple precaution
for safety should be in use in every
household.
Artichokes for Hogs.
I would like to give my brother
farmers a few items of my experience
with artichokes. I have grown the
white Jerusalem artiehoke for three
years and would not try to run my
farm without them. Last summer
when the crops were cut short by the
drought and everything drying up,
my artichokes were green and thrifty
and continued to grow until frost.
They are a large tuberous rooted
vegetable which are just coming into
favor for stock feed, and for
nogs are excellent as the crop
is so easily handled. In the
fall when the stalks are dry the hogs
can be turned to fatten and finish
up with a little corn. The tubers
that remain in the ground will come
up the next spring and produce the
next crop without any more planting
or cultivating. No amount of freez
ing in the ground injures them, and
I alwavs leave an acre or two for
spring use. Here I turn my hogs to
fatten for spring market and finish
them with a little corn. Plowed out.
and pitted in the fall, they are ex
cellent to feed cows, calves and colts
during the winter. Six bushels will
plant ah acre, and one acre in good
soil will yield from eight hundred to
one thousand bushels. Plant any'
time in April.
Farm Note*.
W rap the butter for sale in parch
ment paper.
Agriculture and horticulture
Bhould be taught in the country
schools.
Guess work and half-way’methods
will not be found profitable in horti
culture.
Scald the butter print, then put it
into cold water, and the butter will
not stick to it.
A writer thinks a good way to
make the straw stack benefit the cow
is to put some of it under her.
A progressive farmer is not afraid
to try now methods and new things.
If the new is better than the old he
adopts it.
Potation of crops not only aids in
maintaining or increasing fertility,
but it helps to rid the ground of in
sect. pests.
Study the question of combatting
the insect enemies of tho orchard,
and be ready to prevent their in
jurious work.
It is claimed that a hen while in
her prime, if properly eared for, will
produce throe times her weight in
eggs annually.
lSoiue Hints.
Lemon juice and salt will remoTe
ordinary iron rust.
Don't shut the lids of pots, boilers
and saucepans when putting them
away. It retains the odors of cookery.
Never put your stovepipes away
without rubbing them thoroughly
'^Dh linseed oil or something similar.
This will prevent an accumulation of
rust.
To remove tar. rub in greaso (lard
is as good as anything) until the
spot seems pretty well loosened,
and then wash in plenty of hot water
and soap
To keep the lips in good condition
one should never go out into the air
without having a little vaseline rub
bed on them. It need not bo enough
to show, but can be enough to keep
the cold from affecting them. In ad
dition do not kiss every chance ac
quaintance you meet.
Veil, to be just right, should bo
of pinkish-white flesh, with clear,
white fat. If there* are no recepta
cles for the dressing, which is the
life of roast veal, the skin may be
successfully separated from tho flesh
hero and there, making pockets for
*he dressing, but if you use the only
proper pieces for roasting there will
he no trouble about finding place *.
Friends Surprised at th»
Wonderful Improvemem
P»ma. EverySpringa”^eff7 .W
or more, my health has h««n „ Ior 8 x year>
trouble and general debility that°at
was a burden. I would become so toe8|llt8
Emaciated and Weak and Pau
Oat my friends thought I would not ,
I could do scarcely any work at an » °"f'
Me down every 4 mlnTte, " “d ^
worse In January, losing my flesh an?£Jf °s
tired. I thought I would ^ H„“ s Sa ”gS°
r^a and t am happy to sayYa^n h^X
--.Hi., ~ »»y 1 am In better health
Hood secures
than I have been for a number of years
friAnde rom.inb a—_. * «...
Eeon a number of years u
friends remark to me: • Why how well "
I tell them It is Hood’s sLapa I ta tZ t
done the wort r “ tlut “»
done Ute work. I would haveTuTuffeZ T
manity give this medicine a trial and be* con
•vlnced. This statement is True u u,, . .
«er.” Mbs. Jbitwib Decree, Watseka, 111/
H«°d’» Pills cure liver Ills, cZSiZT
biliousness, Jaundice, sick headache. Indigestion.’
i nter ou^honan of the Dept,
of Agriculture wished it put up
toeut and grind feed for the
•tock on exhibition and urged
other Windmill Co.'e to put
up outfits. They would not,
and hied to prevent us They
bad •regular organiiation
for fighting ua, held meet
ings, and appointed commit*
teee and for weeks occupi
ed a areat deal of their m
In this model outfit no
horizontal shaft was used.
W« belted direct to other
machiues from tho pulley,
which is always a part of
Ihe Aermotor Grinder, thus
greatly economizing in fi*S[
cost, in power, and in
•pace. It cut feed as rapidly
IS two men could get it to the
own umo and that <
theWorld'a Fair Offl
oiala trying to pre- ,
vont ua from erect- B
ing on*, and our f
outfit was actual- _
ly torn down and I
wreaked one even- -
ing after dark, he- '
for* it waa complet
ed, by parties wbo
DolIed*it over with a
0 bushels un hour.
A great many out
n'Asa ]2-fi. Ue«rJd
Aermotor on a 40 ft.
tee I tower, put up
kickers to see us, and in 1
his presence, the Pres. of
the Aermotor Co. offered *
to pay freight, or express*
age ou Geared outfits v
that any other tvind
than Aermotors on ex
hibition wore experi
known that the 12 ft.
A or mo tor would do
■tore work than any
Ift-ft. wooden wheel..
As it was, the outfit
here represented was 1
the only power mill
put up for public
use, and it nerer got
out of order in the *“
slightest particular, j
though operated by H
unfamiliar hands'. I
If hmyiny tools *-j
ar* used in rid go I
mmi mast earn
be brought
ind in a G5 milt wind one
ould hardly feel tli« Urn
hake. The feet of the Steel
Tower rested upon two 4x4
timbers laid on the roof.
Through these feet and
timbers long bolts passed
through the roof and were
secured down in the4x4
braces which pass from
each foot of the tower to
where they were secure
ly bolted to the 10x10
mast, 34 ft. long, which
extended from the petit
of the roof to the floor,
so that the entire weight
of the tower was trans
mitted through the mut
to the floor. This shows
how a high steel lower
can ho put on a light
frame struct ure. In this
case the wheel was far
enough shove the build
ings to ha unaffected by
the eddies and cur
rents caused Ly them.
The shaft in the Tower
is supported by Steel
Kods and Braces.
IVhg buy a Horn
rower with which
to apply horse pow
er when for tin
same money you ran
get « Geared Aer•
li, MODEL POWER OUTFIT AT WORLDS FAIR. E&
Th» third advertisement in this series will show a Steel Cir
ealar Raw and Frame, fur farm and sawyers use, H '*
Perfect Tiilo Si»w, with Perfect 8afcly Guards, ami «w» with
eery much les3 power thmi ordinary bun saws and Ijm » ■*“"
saw. This 840 Saw nml Fran* will be glren for SIS and
copies of this advertisement, (»bleh !» ho. 2 1m the , “ J;
Mnt immediately after th* appearanrein this paper of ttieha*
adv., (No. 3,) but only one sow will be furnished to any’on P
son. Fbr the extra four copies call on neighboring subsc. ‘
t» this paper, or induce others to subscribe, because we
accent these advertisements unless taken from P»fc's"'a',, ‘
regular subscribers whose names and addresses must a ■
together with the date of the paper from which they are t r •
Our Irrication Pump may bo substituted for iheba«. ti.uer
f.o.b. Chicago.
Where we can, we s
ef these advertisements i
have any thought of using a winumni un» .'=■** •""r..re(j
Once, stating what yon will need, whether Pumping
and if possible wo'will make you a liberal ris|f, IS
The Aermotor Co. proposes to distribute * fiauir|,t«r
FRIZES for the best essays written by the wife, s°» ^
<pf . tom, or «>er of. windmilb mmnK j
“WHY 8IIOn.Il I VSE AN AEKBOTOB I” l»r
competition an«l amounts and numbers or prizes s
.. - or tons branches-»*
cin.iv ritv. lows, Min
n. wo shall Bake liberal >° “Tfjpt S
temenls in part payment for \N indmiU*. - J ^
lit of using a windmill this year J<* •
ttastarsto the Aer motor Co., Chicago, o. --
Fra&cisco, Kansas City, Lincoln, Neb., Sioux titj, *
neapolis, Buffalo, or 05 Park Place. New York itj • jw,|.*fter*
Pumping and Geared same price. All Steel.. allI ®aJnJns|„pPeil to
Completion, delivered free on ears at Chicago a
any one. anywhere, at the following prices: j «e
8-ft. 923. 12-ft. $50. 10-ft. Siz°*
WALTER BAKER & 00.
COCOA a
j, Highest Awards
g (finals >nd Diploma)
World's Columbian
Exposition.
On the following
namely:
IREAKF1ST COCOA.
•REBUS Mo- 1 « OCOUra
IERBAS SWEET (HOCOLATE.
ASIELA CHOCOLATE,
COCOA BITTER,
__ .. _.lla nf mEtfTiAl',
•*«*celU»nl flavor.
fonneven cuo.po8«lw«.
SOLO BY CROCER8 CVEBYWHEB**
WALTER BAKER & CO., OORCHESTER. WA^.
$ 12 TO $35 -a ?r»sS
PER WEEK SS&K
mry. A few rtrancles in town* am] lcep.
and women at srm»l eha ranter wiUBncl ..|Mr»
tlooal opportunity for profitable employ™*;?- „ ^
bourn mav be used to P'Kxl ailvantn- • . y*.
IOHNSGM ft CO., 11th and Main Sta, Klobmono,
^VOBH WIGHT ~egaJ^
^CVBIBw tur»*‘tbc**l |vrfsf<
■ /djourmen1- pnujnteil
B jpli'ur* N«"‘ m»
-riVv.isSf
■g-£?*«*«*