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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1894)
, , — DISGUISES. 'C *. All wear disguises in life's gama . The true men lurk within; A sago mnv masquerade and claim *C\-y\ To be a harlequin A eynfr's snoer may servo to hide A tender heart of gold. As In the sea warm currents glide Beneath a surface cold. Full many men who to the eye In virtue’s garb appear. Are sepulchers in which there lie But hones and durlcnoss drear. They say that when from death wo walce We ll know as wo are known. Each from his face the mask will take And the true self bo shown. —Inter Ocean. SCARLET FORTUNE. nV H. HICKMAN. CHAPTER VI—Continued. 4,Tho carl of Clevo prosonts his compliments to Lady Evelyne Wyn tor.” ho wrote, "and desires to ex plain a circumstance which,. he is afraid, must have surprised J.ady Kvelyno. Lord Clove is ufllicfe^d with loss of memory, tho result of some wounds in tho head. It was, thoro foro his misfortune, and not his fault, if ho did not recognize Lady Evelyne Wyntor this afternoon. Ho hopes that this apology will bo his excuso, and that Lady Kvelyno Wyn ter will believe that Lord Clove could not possibly have actod towards hor in any spirit of discourtesy.” “It’s jest a bit soapy, ain’t it?” Miss Lucy exclaimed, when tho young gentloman had dotted all his "i’s” and crossed all his "t’s,” "an’ it s a little smeary like maple sugar, when yew get too much of it on yewr spoon. I guess she's a honsum young woman. Waal, it ain’t no matter.” With that she danced away, apparently unburdened by thnughtfulnoas or care. That was all outward show, how ever; all nervous determination not to show to the man sho loved how much she loypd him. If it had been possible for a prying eye to pene trate into Lucy’s chamber that night, it would huvo found her walking up and down the softly-carpeted lloor liko a caged panthor. Her bosom heaved, she wrung her tiny hands with a nervous grip and big tears worj flowing down her cheeks. At last sho flung herself on her knees by the bedsido, and buried her head on the' coverlet, whilst the soft masses of her hair fell like <u glossy shower around her. Sho sobbed, and 'sobbed and sobbed, as if her heart would break. On a sudden, she jumped up in a •silent fury, both against herself and 4 the fortune which oppressed her. Sho gnashed her white toeth and i tore at her hair. ' "God!” she cried, "don’t try me too severely. I’m only a woman .aftor all, and it’ll soon be more thun J can bear. What have I done, how Shave I sinned, to deserve it all?” The paroxysm of her grief pros trated hor, and she gradually sank ’ on her knees, and thence on tho # floor, where her lissome figure lay exteuded, white and oold as tho gar - inents which sparsoly covered her, while hor babbling lips murmured: "What have I done? What have I ■done? What have I done? What have I done?" Even,the squalid ugliness of Lon don architecture could not rob a summer morning, of its early roseate beauty, and Lucy could see the first •oftly blushing light of day. creep ing from across the housetops, through the aperture betweon her Curtains, ere she recovered her wonted composure. She wont into her dressing room and sponged her *olf with cold water. The touch of the refreshing olement seemed to bring back vigor of mind and elas ticity of body, and the previously * mentioned prying intrudor had he •seen Miss Luoy only at that moraont ■would have deomed her the most hardened of cynics. ;,v ••Waal, it's jest another slice o’ my luck, I s’pose,” she -said as she eplashod and Uung the water about her in all directions; “an’ what •cay’nt be cured’s got to bo endured. I've gone that fur, an’ I’ll jest see it •ouit, I reckon.” Five minutes afterward, her hoad Testing on hor sun-bronzed arm, and ihor bosom moving in as tranquil a sleep as a child might enjoy, Lucy’s mind was at rest The first few days of Lord Cleve’s sojourn in Loudon passed swiftly amidst the stress of tho ordinary oc cupations of a gentleman of fortune / who has just entered into possession ■toe consulted. Interviews had to be granted to bailiffs, stewards and ten- i anttradesmen’s bills, left unpaid' ■by the previous bearer of the -title, ! .had to bo checked and, settled; and | •amid the hurry and scurry of all this | matter-of-fact occupation. Lord Cleve found but little time to abandon him ' ■' self to the round of gaieties tempt- | vV ingly baited for him by llelgravian | .society. much less to fo.low the reg- j lular giddy whirl of fashion’s daily ! rites. He would breakfast with I « .Lucy, and then pass hours and hours i .with those who had business with j ■ him, and a hasty luncheon ! wou’d be succeeded by further ! •work. He could barely snatch \ ■so much of the daily sunshine as to ! i'[- take Lucy for an afternoon ride in i /the Row. The fashionable eques- ! drian promenade had seen few such j horsewomen as that daughter of the ' Rockies. She sat on her horse as if | she had been born on it, and once ■when her mount, frightened be .yond measure by such a trifle as a flaring silk parasol poked into its dace by a silly woman, plunged and reared, and wheeled as if it would never recover its equanimity. Lucy seemed so little ruffled by its capers that the by-standers raised a ringing cheer. People began to wonder, and society began to enquire^ who was £he lovely girl in • that quaint no " — :'<*■■ r,.- V. ' ■_ j ' "i ■ , ‘ . * ' • fashion habit who so often accom panied Lord Ciovo. In the meantime, Lord Clevo had endeavored to learn from Lucy, why sho had hold no communication, and wishod to hold no communication, with her father and cousin. Her re ply was simple enough. She said that sho hated her cousin, and that sho had hud u deadly quarrol with her father, and had vowed never to live with them again. In answer to more pressing enquiries, she turned up her big bluo eyes at him and looked into his eyes with such a tender pleading, that he had not tbo eourago to porslst. •‘Don't ask more,” sho begged, and ho who was so dooply indebted to her was happy to look into the face that bore such a heavenly stamp of truth, and, by one deep gaze, to silonoo tho promptings of curiosity. On tho other hand, the Maclanes, Gooriro and I)av.iH. cinnmnd tn no trouble to reopen intercourse with Lucy. When tho girl had llrst dis appeared from tho hut in tho moun tains, they explained Lucy’s absence by tho statement that she had gone off with a young man, Heaven only know whither, and that Dick Ash land had gone away with the pair. Lucy's many admirers came to tho conclusion that the girl whom they had thought unconquerable had, after all, turned out a woman like the rest of tho prairie wenches, and had fallen a prey to the insinuating speeches of a handsome young stranger. From that moment, the interest in her welfare disappeared. Dave made an imposing pretense of a broken heart, but Goorgc brazenly assorted that his daughter, having left the parentul roof without his authority, might lie on the bed she had mado for hersolf, for all he oarod. The result of this lino of conduct was that but little enquiry was mado after the fate of the sup posed fugitives. Hie Maclanes had been wise enough in their generation to allow a sufficient stretch of tlmo—more than a year, in fact—to elapse before proclaiming their discovery to the world. In the meantime, they had taken all tho necessary steps to secure to thomselves the safe and undisputed possession of the land that thus teemed with wealth. The red-handed Fortune smiled, and, by her guilty leer, Lucy was, and re mained forgotten. Nearly three weeks had passed since Lord Cleve’s arrival in London, and he had not, for a second time, set eyes on Lady Evelyne Wynter or the Maclunos. Ho had taken part in none of society’s ceremonials, until, one afternoon, in company with Mr. Quenthelm, he strolled into the Royal horticultural society’s grounds at South Konsington,where a charity fete was being held. The lovely gardens were ablaze \uith the choicest bloom and green, and filled by a fashionable throng. Delicate, high born ladios hawked trinkets and trifles, whilst others had, for the nonce, transformed themselves into stall-tenders and barmaids. Lord Cleve and Mr. Quenthelm sauntered up and down the broad walks, stopping here and there to purchase or to chat, for, although the young earl knew' few persons, his companion had some measure of acquaintance with most. Quito a buzz of excitement followed their footsteps, as everybody wanted to have a look at tho young nobleman, whose romantic career, and perhaps, also his bachelor condition, made him so very interesting. Eye-glasses were raised, and opera-glasses were pointed with but slight ceremony, and Horbert, to escape, if possible, from the well-bred rudeness Which dogged him, walked leisurely with his companion towards a more secluded part of the grounds. He thus managed to free himself from tho starors who mobbed him, and was about to ex press to his companion his satisfaction at the result, when ho heard himself addressed by name. “Lord Cleve. won’t you buy some thing from me?’’ He turned and found that the speaker was no less a person than Lady Evelyne Wynter. "! “Do buy something. Lord Cleve,’’ the lady chatted on, exhibiting a basket with a heterogenous profusion of oddities and uselessnesses. “It is for a charity, you know—a hospital— most deserving.” With that the young lady dipped into her assortment of wares, and produced a hand-emproidered cigar case. ••Only five pounds, Lord Cleve, and it’s such a deserving' charity. I know you won’t refuse me. ” Lord Cleve naturally neither could nor did refuse. He counted out the five sovereigns, and as he did so he looked into my lady’s languidly smiling eyes. They were big, and they were blue, and although they were neither as big nor as blue as Lucy’s. Lord Cleve thought them very beautiful. Lady Evelyne was not as pretty as Lucv—that she could not possibly be—but Lord Cleve thought she was as handsome a young woman—next to Lucy—as he had soon in his life. As he placed the coins on the young lady’s extended palm, his finger tips barely touched the soft and velvety hand, and whether.it were from unison of feel ing. or just for the fun of the thing, both Lady Evelyne and Herbert smiled. The young lady had no difficulty in admitting that the young earl was a handsome example of distinguished manhood, and harmony of sentiment between the pair was quickly so far established that they began to chat, apparently in fun, of their, as they called it, past and forgotten engage ment. The engagement was not so far for gotten, however, by the young ladj at any rate, that she did not open all her batteries of witchery to rekindle in the younjj earl’s heart the kindly memory which he had so unfortu nately lost “For shame,” Mrs. (Jrundy will say. “that brazen young woman is engaged to Mr. David Mac lane,” and Mrs. Grundy is per fectly right It was wrong. The young lady herself stated that fact to Lord Cleve, with a sly glance at him and another at Mr. Quenthelm. and a faint pretense of wishing to leave. Lord Clove, however, foufid Lady Evelyne’s society charming, and the young lady, on her side, had forgot ten all about her self-imposed duties as a vendor on behalf of charity. She thought the young man had much improved by his long residence abroad, and his manner towards her simply delightful In the result, the conversation degenerated into a not too harmless flirtation, which was kept within bounds by the opportune presence of Mr. Quenthelm. As it was, they became so interested by each other's converse that they did iiwu nunuu mo upprua.cn oi l^aay Gwendalo, who, accompanied by Messrs. George and David Mactane, stopped for some seconds in front ot the little group without either of the three being aware of her presence. Lady Gwcndale acted as a cautious general; she noither appeared to ap prove nor to rebuke; she did not even evince astonishment. She was, nev ertheless, just a trifle afraid that a word might escape from her daugh ter’s lips which could be miscon strued by Mr. Alaclane, and there fore ended the slight temporary em barrassment by saying— “My dear, Mr. Maclane has been looking for you all over the gar dens.” Then, seeing that the young earl rose and bowed, she held out her hand. “Lord Cleve,” she said,in her blandest tones, “you must allow me to introduce myself, for I am aware that you have most likely forgotten me. I am Lady Gwendale, and your mother was one of my earliest and dearest friends.” The yoUng man, taken aback by her ladyship’s suddon apparition,and even more by the presence of the two Americans, whose cold gaze seemed to penetrate him like some thing uncanny or inexplicably loath some—he knew not why—stammered a few incoherent words. The mo ment afterwards he chided himself for his seemingly unreasonable dis like to the Maclanes. “Now that you know me,” con tinued Lady Gwendale, in her bright est mood, “you must allow me to in troduce to you my future son-in-law, Mr. David Maclane.” At these words Lord Cleve discov ered a new, and to him reasonable, excuse for disliking the young West erner. He was shortly to marry Lady Evelyne Wynter. and, strange as it may seem, the young earl sud denly considered this a personal in jury. David Maclane, in return, looked at the young Englishman as if he could have poisoned him. “I have an idea.” said Lord Cleve to Mr. Quenthelm, as they were walking back, “quite a confused idea, but still an idea, that I have met these men before. I wish Lucy were not so reticent on the subject. The pity is that the more I try to think the less my brain will lend it self to the work, and I generally break down hopelessly in any at tempt of the kind. ” "Why don’t you go and see Sir William Cuthbortson?” .suggested Mr. Quenthelm. “He is the great specialist in cases of this sort, and some of the cures he has made are nothing short of marvelous.” “I don’t think there is much chance for me,” Herbert answered. “My injuries, I am afraid, are per manent. ” “It cannot possibly do harm to try,” the lawyer replied. “It is surely worth while.” , “I will take your advice.” ex claimed Herbert, with a hot and sudden determination in his eyes. “I’ll go and call upon Sir William Cuthbertson to-morrow.” [TO BE CONTINUED.] Origin of Cloture Kule. This word closure, about which we are hearing so much, came into legis lative use in the British house of commons in 1887, and is applied to a rule which cuts off debate and pre vents further discussion or motion by the minority, bringing the question to a direct and conclusive vote. The French word cloture is often em ployed to express the same thing. It is really an emphatic and decisive way of saying: “Como, we have talked enough about this matter; we must decide now." From lilbrMt Standpoint*. “And this is the state penitentiary, is it?" inquired the stranger who was strolling about the environs o» Joliet “It’s a pretty, fine piece of architecture.” “It depends a good deal on how you are looking at it,” replied the man spoken to, winking slyly at the bystanders. “Ah, yes, I suppose it does,” re joined the Btranger. “How does it look on the inside?”—Chicago Inter Ocean. Encouraging an Author. Manuscript Reader—Here is a manuscript from some writer I never heard of. Great Magazine Editor—Well, no use discouraging the poor fellow. Kick it arorind the floor, so it will look a* if it had been carefully read, and send it back. Ironclad* of the Brit I* hi Nutt. In 1866 an experimental cruise oi all the ironclads In the British navy, thirty in number, was made during very rough weather, to ascertain how they would behave during a storm; result deemed successful. THEv FARM AND HOME. DEVELOPMENT OP THE AMER ICAN MERINO. Keep Them and Improve Them—Valua ble Facta About Fertilizers—Granular Butter—Soft-Shelled Eggs—Farm Notei and Home Hints. Thought* on the Merino. At the annual meeting of the New fork state merino sheep breeders’ association, the president, S. B. lusk, made, among otburs, the foi lswing remarks: I have little apprehension that the American Merino will be aban doned by those who have heretofore stayed by them in times of depres sion, and know their value—a sheep that has constantly improved with us in our climate, and with our manage ment from its first introduction, now well nigh one hundred years. And they will also find new friends. The com ing generation will want a sheep that does not require foreign importations to keep up to say nothing of making an improvement If the inhabitants of the United States ever become ■onsumors of mutton to anything like the extent that it is consumed in England, I believe a mutton sheep will be evolved from the American Merino that will be adapted to the wants of the country; and as it is already acclimated will be susceptible of any needed improvement And that all of the so-called mutton breeds have so far failed to do. ‘ But that which concerns us most is what to do with the American Merino as we find them to-day? What in my judgment we should do is to keep them and improve them, and in looking about us for chances for improvement, it will be well to first look and see that we have made no mistakes. Some breeders years ago raised the question as to the good or bad effect of our public shearings as they have been managed. The announcement goes out that a certain sheep sheared a given number of pounds of wool, and the carcass weighed so much. And that is about all there is of it. unless one is there to see for himself. I was present at a shearing, where a ram so inferior that no good breeder Would think of using him, sheared (not of wool but of stuff that grew on him with a little wool to hold it to gether.) more pounds than any other ram shorn at that annual shearing. And this worthless ram was proclaimed the heaviest shearer at the New York state American Merino sheep' shearing, and he was not worth a two dollar note. This, of course, was an extreme case; but in looking for im provement in the future, it may be well to see if some of us have not grown more fleece than the sheep can well carry, although perhaps of good quality and only about the nec essary amount of oil to lubricate such a fleece. A ram weighing 150 pounds, fleece off, and shearing 80 pounds, carries before being shorn one pound of fleece to five pounds of carcass. Is not that about all he can well carry and be used for breeding purposes, and keep up his constitu tion? 1 have known rams to shear forty pounds, and weigh little more than 100 pounds with fleece off_ about one pound of fleece to two pounds of carcass. But I have never known such a sheep to live iso be an old sheep. Perhaps, under existing circumstances, it may be well to improve the carcass, in crease the size, and not pay quite so much attention to piling on the wool. I think no one will disagree with me in the importance of looking after the quality. One word more and I am done. Not even the American Merino can improve if neglected. If compelled to fall back upon their constitution to sustain themselves, they will sure ly deteriorate. Our lamented friend and associate, the Hon. E. Townsend. ■ once bought some of our favorite sheep, and got a well written pedi gree from a successful breeder. At the bottom, written in a bold hand, were these words: “Care is the secret of success.” He at the time was scarcely out of his teens; but 1 e often said that it was the most valuable pedigree he ever received. If the business is dull don’t neglect the flock. Caro for it well, breed it in accord with your best judgment, and the American Merino, the best sheep in the known world, will in the future, as in the past, respond to any reasonable draft the breeder may make upon tho flock. Granular Batter. How n.any boys and girls on the farm have had an old apron tied around their waists and been told to ••chum until the butter will hold up the dasher?” Such instructions are fatal to good butter. In the first place, says Homestead, the dash churn is ten years behind the times and ought to be thrown out of every farm house, even if no more butter is made than to supply the family table. The box or barrel churn is cheap and it is so much more con venient and so much better butter can be made with it that there should be no hesitation in discarding the old dash churn in its favor. But, no matter what kind of a churn is used, never churn until the butter is gathered in chunks large enough to hold up the dasher. There are sev eral reasons why this should not be done. One ot them is that the grain U destroyed. Good butter has a fine distinct grain and when broken shows a distinct fracture like cast iron. If this grain is destroyed by over-churning or over-working, the butter' becomes a greasy mixture, like lard, and has a- greasy taste. Again it is necessary that the butter I milk be well washed out or the but I ter will become strong and ranoid in i short time. This cannot be done when the butter is churned into lumps, so in the latter case the grain, flavor and keeping quality are all injured. ' The churn should always be stopped when the butter is in the form of small granules, ranging in size from a red clover seed to a grain of wheat; then the butter milk can be well washed out and the grain will be uninjured if the working is proper ly done. There is no reason why the farmer should not make just as fine butter as anyone, providing he will take the trouble to do it right. Fertilizers. There are certain facts concerning the three valuable ingredients of plant food—nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash—which should be under stood by all farmers who expect to succeed with fertilizers: Nitrogen is the most costly ele ment of plant food and losses from fertilizers are often due to extrava gant and injudicious use of nitrogen. Expenses for nitrogen may be re duced by practicing green manuring; that is, by planting clover, peas or vetches, which have the property of absorbing nitrogen from the air. Green manuring pays best on light soils, but is of no benefit on peaty soils. Phosphoric acid and potash, though present in nearly all soils, are for the most part Insoluble, and therefore in unavailable condition. Small quantities of these mineral plant foods are annually dissolved by soil water and plant acids, but not enough to supply the plant roots sufficiently with nourishment. For this reason, phosphoric acid and potash must be added to soil if a full crop is desired. Nitrogen must be applied during' the growing season at the time when needed by the plants, and it is well to apply it as a top dressing. Nitro gen is apt to leach out with the soil l water. Phosphoric acid and potash are best applied some weeks before planting a crop and should be plowed under. There is little danger of leaching from these mineral fertil izera Kainit is the proper form of potash for sandy soils, as it makes them more compact; for stiff soils muriate and sulphate of potash are best. Potash is especially valuable tot fruits, tobacco, potatoes and vegeta bles of all kinda Sandy and lime stone soils nearly always need potash. Clay soils sometimes contain sufficient potash and again they do not; this should be ascertained by experiments. —• Colman’s Rural World. Egg. With Soft Shelia Hens that have plenty of exercise and free access to the ground or to deposits of gravel will not lay soft eggs. Such hens are not only too fat, but their digestion has been im paired by a life of inactivity. If we keep them on starvation diet we do not necessarily help their digestion. The best course with hens that lay soft egg shells is to kill them for the tabla They are always fat and ready to kill. If allowed to live such fowls will get in the habit of eating their eggs, and this habit soon af fects the entire flock. Keep fowls at work for what grain they get and they will find material for egg shells of sufficient hardness. The hard shelled eggs produce the most \ igor ons chicks, though they may some times need help, to break their Bhells.—American Cultivator. Farm Notes. Do not manure against the roots in planting. oime and wood ashes make a good fertilizer for old orchards. Newly planted grapevines should be allowed to grow only one shoot. The best pruning is that whicn rarely if ever calls for the removal of a large branch. The fruit of old trees is usually richer and more highly flavored than that from young ones. If properly stored, *seed of cucum bers and squash two or three years old are better than fresh ones Sheep allowed to remain out in the cold storms become unthrifty, and it is claimed a rotten fleece is the re sult. It is better to save a pound o f flesh than to produce it Or, in other words, it is a losing game to neglect stock and let them lose flesh. Resolve to dispense with scrub stock as soon as practicable and keep nothing but the best Feeding out the crops to scrub stock will make and keep any imn poor. Home Hints. Muslin, ginghams, and calicoeo should be starched with starch in which a piece of aluui as big as a hickory nut has been dissolved. A small bottle of camphor or a little alum and water will aid in dry ing up pimples that have been tam pered with. Oven doors should not be slam med nor any jarring noise made when cake and bread are cooking. Heaviness is almost invariably the result of jarring. Tea is much better when brewed in a pot that has been heated thorough ly than in a cold one. A cup of boil ing water used to rinse the pot is the best method of heating it. Once a month the wicks of lamps should be removed and the burners unscrewed and boiled in a little wa ter in which common soda has been dissolved. This will remove the coating of grease and dust which forms on the brass. When it is required to use chrbolio acid as a disinfectant it should be mixed with boiling water. This promptly overcomes the usual an tagonism between the acid and the water, and converts them into a permanent solution, which will keep for weeks. .. 11« rWkgSl Only a Scar Remains *cro,ul*mooa Puma „ "®0d * ®ar*aparlHa. Lowen> Mass-; It Is with pleasure that I send « concerning what Hood’s Sarsaparm^™'31 lor my daughter, it Is a wonderd ^?°n* and I cannot recommend It too highly .who la fourteen years old, has been ^ Afflicted With Scrofula ever since she was one year old Fnr she has had a running sore on ? 6 years face. We tried every remedv s l^e °f her nothing did her an^g^d uXtif r^n^^* sshfeattSsa Hood s^14 Cures “ ,CUrfd herof dy»PePsla- She ha7been Mo, and It h£ conquered the runuing sTe/6" Only a Scar Remaining M a trace of the dreadful disease. Previous tn taking the medicine her eyesight was afpAnt h but now she can see perfectly in affecJ«d with Hood’s Sarsaparilla we havp^ n^01!^011 Ve(mtable Pills, an® them a™ Mabia Griffin, Xenia, Illinois - , Hood’s Pills cure nausea, sick headset? Indigestion, blUousness. Sold by all druggist Ber.ua. of th. high speed .t which Circular Saw, «or. power la wuterl io frictmn than ie uKd in uwinif wS •*Skr- “• &*■»• ect ouK',? In th. Aeruotor Saw Frame, the only Stint s,» r„ ever nude, this dilBcult. is absolutely and wh" Ir bee.ue.Tllk BkiKIhGS FOB Tint SHAFT AKS. .intrau >T w Tilt kbits of "lire orSirslw Th.eteeltubinj .ndb.bbitt me then alitted so as to take un wear snth n holt, ft. fr... b .11 .leal, see, rl,l,l?,dXuJ Ess isstrissrys _i.lt* •?“* Jr*K* wl,'ch c,rri« the wood to he tend uid Wan a SSjSif lj*l?e^«r“ i* h“ »*«>»l»*rd to keep* pole off from the fly wheel and yet does net cause it to NMeat very much of an angle to the saw. The use of a loo lb. SOinch fly wheel and 26 inch saw makes this easily possible. It 11 therefore, a very desirable Tole Saw, making it easy to cut «p *ny Jong material quickly and aafely. Another feature of Sine* offer this very superior saw frame with s26 ine). superior taw at* much less price than any cheap imperfect wooden frame can be bought for, we are sure that the rnen'li of the Aar motor will appreciate the fact that we have attain been doing the public a great service and have distinguished ourselves in redesigning an old article and putting it iatu*a infinitely improved shape. For a saw of similar size and quality, and ordinary wooden frame, you would be charged too. If> wake tins all-st-A fi ame and thin superior sato at $40, AKD GIVE l'OV A CHAXf B 111 WET IT AT tl5, for the benefit of our Geared Aerwo^ir. We have sold an enormous number of Power Aermotor •ntftts with which saws are used, and a poor saw that runs hard detracts from their usefulness and their reputation. If we fur nish a very superior saw at a very low price, many geared out fits will be bought to drive them. Wherever one Geared Aer motor goes, others are sure to follow. When we take a well known article, redesign it, and put it in a shape very superior to anything that has appeared before. it widens and enlarges our reputation for doing well etervth.ng to which we put our hands, and this is the thing that has in the past brought so mnch business to our factory, and which m the fnture, we have no doaht, will bring, practically, all tha business in our line. It is this reputation that we are daily working for. We believe that this Aermotor Steel Paw Frame and Saw will confirm and enhance the fame which we have gu:ii*-1 in the manufacture of Steel Windmills and Steel Tow"t\ hence, for the purpose of scattering them so tnat cveryb^iy may know that a good thing can be had for a small price nr. f>> rKK THIS HTEKI, SAW AND FRAME FOR |15 CASH A5I> riVKt'OFIXS OF AUVKKTIKEIKM' So . « of this series as per conditions stated in Ho. 2. In our next advertisement, he. ■*. we shall talk of galvanizing, and make an offer that will bed Wivcnal interest. This is ado. Xo. 9. Ati:Muioi( vO. “COLCHESTER” Spading Booi For *urmei-s,Mintt-Husul* a:•■ ^ othem. The outer or tap noie,,*teu<ik r? the whole leugthof the»wn { '“Pi the heel, protecting tho shank i > ditching, digging. »e. t>»»» o»eMi THE CREAT SALE OF TROTTING BRED HORSES. At Union Stock Yard* Horse "arK SOUTH OMAHA. NKB' MARCH 20, «1,22, 23, 24. 89^^ 57(1 bend of tbe finest Standard Bred n >j b,„. «lU offered In tho west. Now is >t‘V|W1 jur Send fur catalogue to YV. N. Bai-cot*. ora K. K. Short. Man ger. South fm-di- - TKKKM anti (tier for backs. Ask jour bttrne » linc.iU them. H.W. COOPKK. Mfr ■ “— - MOLINE UMAHA BOMS. HOUSSS. SUTTER RS?£2«S^^pniJ r Fresh Mutter. - BATltk BHOS Can tilt a. _ ss= lest 11.00 a. Zoi? LEED At CA8ET. propnetonu Hotel Dellone lest 11.00 a day house In tho s| 000?A»M££Hra^',': i*”' iu* free Kale or Exchange. 1 (^a ■K.KQEKt 821 s*o. l«tu ***• RIISlSK nUuULUl vhyalstana' ./^‘‘lUl'Karrasi" •dera solicited. Aloe APrufolrtCu ... Ship or wf^ 1 ROBLiUffi **“ Establlsl>*;,l^l1.1 UUHarne)