OFFICIAL OUGHT KEBItASKA 7 TT W E LI' ANCE STATE FARIIERS' ALLIANCE, J 1 I I i $1.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. ii 4 sr Y I! I) B A. ii (I 0 ) . 1 -1. j ( y ,1 H ir I VOL.L Editorial Notes and Clippings. THIS TIME ITIS YOU. Y-our Bubscription has expired, and utilee ro jewed within the ""TT JT next fifteen ways, -r satisfactory ar ." ranjyementt jnwe with the editor, your name will be remold from XT our books and the paper discontin i ued. We trwst you will feel it your duty to send ub yoT flubecrip tion and contiwue with w. Should-Jt H-thisparajrraph be marked with a blue crois it means vocr. In making one millionaire we make ten thousand paupers. They are made out of the blood and tears of men. Can we afford these lux uries? The government loans money to the rich for nothing-and refuses to loan it to the poor at a good rate of interest. Have the o. p. organs got brains enough to see this? - God made the earth and gave it to all men. Yet a comparatively few have siezed upon it, and made laws so that their brothers cannot get to it, unless they pay them rent. The crrf at coke striae is ended with a victory for the men, with an ad vance of 12 ' per cent. This was bioogbt about by a conference of la bor leader, which Ia9ted all da?, with three large coke firms. Try ibis? on some unsuspecting friend. There was a carpenter who made a cupboard door ; it proved too big. He cut it and un fortunate'y he cut it too little. He thereupoe cut it again and made it go beautifully. Hew was this ? To break down the barriers of ig- norance, educate; to secure solidari ty, co-operate; to spread the gospel of humanity, agitate; and, as a pre liminary step toward the accom plishment of all these things, organ ize. , A speculator never produces a sin gle thing. He is a man that lives and accumulates the earnings of oth ers. He is a leech mucking the earn ings of the farmer or labor as the, leech sucks the blood of its victims. The land -speculator is one of the most .damnable of the whole lot. He plunders them all. - . The New JYorkTimesJ publishes;, the names -of a cluster of million aires sixty-three in number, living in New York City between Dobbs Ferry and Tarrytown, a distance of only six miles. If it is true that for every millionaire we have 10,000 pauper, then those sixty-three persons have forced on society 630,000 souls that nrast be either fed by charity or ar rested as vagrants. The iiKttcations now point to the fact the State Fair this ?ear will be more attractive than ever, as the managers - have been untiring in their efforts to excel all former exhibitions. As it is the last year of the term of five years for which the fair was Jlet to Lincoln, our city will see to it that it is both profitable and attractive. The trades display is now assured and will be an immense affair. Everything in con nection with the fair will be on a grander scale than ever. ' Do we not meet people every week s who are constantly borrowing trouble and making mountains out of mole hills? It is not so much work that kills and breaks down people, as it is worry, fretting and borrowing trouble. Why not let the' future take care of itself and wisely improve the present? By doing so we can avoid many wrinkles and gray hairs, and keep younger and brighter. The bad will all com'.1 soon enough. Let us patiently wait for the good. Farmers Voice. It is a fact worth thinking about in all its bearings that over 22000, 000 acres of the soil of these United States are owned by citizens of European countries. Ihis vast acreage owned by the aliens is equal to nine States of the size of Mas sachusetts. The alien English landlords in Ireland, who are prop erly charged with responsibility for nine-tenths of the miseries and op pressions endured by the Irish people, do not own half as many acres as alien Europeans own in this country. It is time Congress did something decisive in the way of legislating the large alien land syn dicate off American soil. Job Printing For Alliances. We are prepared to do any and all kinds of printing tor Alliances. Letter and note heads, envelopes, cards, by-laws, circulars, handbills etc. Send in your urutira ana we will do the work at pri ces as reasonable as it can be done. ON THE WING. The Alliance Editor At Large AmMg the Water Melons ami Green Cam off Adams Connty. The Condition of the Fanners The Progress!- the Farmers' Alliance The Burial of Congressman Laird at listings not iu Ac- , wrdance With His Last Known Request. Other Items of Sotc, Etc. A recent trip through this county (Adams) found a wilderness of ripen ing corn fields on all sides, and the country dotted f as far as the eye could see, with stacks of, grain and straw piles marking the path of the. thresher. The outlook for the corn crop .is simply prodigious. Wheat, ; oats, and flax, etc., afaout the aver age crop. Potatoes and " garden truck afflicted with that chronic complaint over-production," and are a drug on the market. One thing sore, good dame Nature is bound to see to it that her Adams county children shall not starve. Wherever I went I was met with thequestion, -What are we .going to do? We have good crops, every thing in abundance, but to sell it all at present prices will not even, pay interest, to say nothing of principal. The merchants, too, are now begin ning to feel the heavy hand that has so long been holding the farmer in its iron grip, reaching out alter them, and are beginning to shut down on credit. If we undertake to pay the interest on our indebtedness our entire crop won't do it, and what then are we to live on?" These are the serious questions that are now confronting the farmer, and, like the ghost of some iiend from beyond the great gulf, is haunting and torment ing him day and night, making life midst the bounteous blessings of na ture, one of blight and sorrow. One farmer, in whose breast there still lin gered a faint glimmer of hope, raid., "Maybe if there should be a failure of crops so;ne other place in a year or so, it might bring relief."' All, my tsfxiend , I said, suppose tha t failure -should be here. Things are all sadly wrong when some must die that oth ers may live. The Sub-Alliances of the county will meet at Juniata the jist insi., and organize a County Alliance. At this meeting measures will be adopt ed for a thorough organization of the county. The field is ripening all that is needed is the reapers- I think it would be a good plan for the State Alliance to commission all good men an a county, organizers, and give them unlimited jurisdiction, no mat ter if some counties could furnish a dozen such men. The more the better. The burial of Congressman Laird at Hastings was not at all in accord ance with the wishes of his Juniata friends, or his last known request. Mr. Laird is the last of his family, who all lie buried in a lot which he had spared no time and expense in fixing up in the Juniata cemetery. During his last visit to the graves of the family, about two or three months ago, he again repeated his ott expressed request that there is where he wished to lie when he too should have passed from off the great stage of life. That there should be any dispute or question about the matter arise was a thought never en tertained by his friends in Juniata. Imagine their surprise and chagrin when the people of Hastings ignored them and went ahead with the burial ceremonies and buried Mr. Laird at Hastings, with a true sense ot pro priety the people of Juniata silently bore this piece of effrontery on the part of Hastings, but the wound is deep and cannot heal in a day. I find The Alliance well received wherever I go and all anxious to help push it along. A visit to the home of Mr. S. M. Davis found that staunch old veteran of equal rights thoroughly in the harness and pulling hard. After a good old-fashioned Pennsylvania Dutch dinner prepared by Mrs. Davis who is certainly no amateur in the art we, in company with Mr. Davis, visited the brethren of the Shiloh Alliance, and, without an exception, they all added their names to the long roll of The Alli ance and bid us a hearty God speed in the work. The next day after our visit with the brethren of Shiloh Alliance we LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, 77EDNESDAY, "took in" the picnic and the larger part of the grub of Liberty Sunday School, held at the grove on the farm of Bro. L B. Rants. Here we met President J. B, Brown, J. M. Robin son, Francis Phillips and other veter ans of the Liberty Alliance and put in the day in good social chat. The ladies of liberty have a knack of preparing good things for special oc casions of this kind that is hard to duplicate, we thought to ourself . as we sat -down upon the grass and pre pared for tke onslaught. What they thought of us we can only conjecture. However, our conscience is clear- we -did our best to stem the rising tide of "overproduction. Bro s A. Whitmore and Wm. Eberline, hearing we were at large, also looked us up and added their names toThE Alli ance's roll of honor. Yes, am having a most enjoyable time among the trienas ot Adams county and am in no haste to leave their hospitality. A. THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE. rUnder this head we solicit short articles from the people upon any and all subjects or interest, we cannot unaertaite to ue re sponsible however for any matter appearing under this head the desiirn beinir to allow :the greatest freedom to writers whereby they can discuss, ana thus take an interest In the great questions of the day which are so materially affectiner the people. Write plain but never mind, your spelling, grammar, or anything or that sort, we ll attend to that. Kign what you choose to your articles, but send us your name always. 1 Venan&o, Neb., Aug. 24. The following resolutions wase passed at a recent meeting of the Perkins Co. Farmers' Alliance: Whereas, lhe homesteaders are most in number ot any order of citi zens in the western counties of the state, and be their patronage to a great extent support the western newspapers of their respective coun ties, and Whereas,-it having come to our notice that certain newspapers are charging the exorbitant price . of 10 for publishing final proof notices, which heretofore has been done for $5. Therefore, be it Resolved, That we, the members of Pioneer Alliance No. 590, of Har rison precinct, Perkins county, Neb., do hereby denounce, and refuse to support any papers that charge more than ; for publishing such notices. By Order of Alliance. Big Springs, Ned., Aug. 22. Ed itor. Alliance: I hereby send you a few lines. If yoaa have room for it it in the columns of your paper, if not, there is room in your waste bask et I suppose. There has been something the mat ter with our government, our farmers, our laborers, and our finances for good while, and it is about time that some of these matters were looked into and examined a little to find out whither we are drifting. If money power, monopoly and trusts are go mg to continue to oppress tne ma majority of farmers and laborers of this country there is certainly a dis- a ease lingering m the system ot our government. Business is dull, farm ers' homes are sold out under the hammer, the laborer is working for i miserable pittance, if they are em ployed at all. In some places they are even starving. A few hope that things will change when it takes notion some day, and that it is of no use to have an Alliance. , But there it is that you are mistaken. Our only hope is in organizing and seeing that we get such men to represent our homes and our interest in the legisla ture and congress, who will work for the.interests ot the many as well as they know" how regardless of poli tics. Some one may ask, how can we ever freeze these giant trusts out o existence who controls so many hun dred minions ot dollarsi it it an evil that ought to be dealt with only one way. Give the old world cnance to compete with our own manufacturers by taking the duty off all necessaries of life for a short time and every trust would vanish. It '"'""mm' j would not injure our farmers nor workingmen a particle, as our manu facturers are able to compete with the world in most things, and wil never allow any foreign article to be sold in our country as they can easily undersell anybody. By taking the tariff off from all the necessaries o life it would simply make cheap goods and the trusts could not con trol the market any longer. Put high tariff duty on all luxury such as silk, diamonds, jewelry, and such ar tides not needed only by the rich. I teel sure that we would see good times if tariff trzs reduced, giving, us cheap goods which will give us a greater sale, and a greater sale gives a a greater production; a greater pro duction gives us a greater demand or laborers, sf:d no one need lay idle nor starve, and the consequence will be that gcod times are coming. The next thtnjp; is, let our govern ment issue mopey direct 10 the peo ple and make away with the national banks, and ?f6 tax all unimproved land equal with the improved and thus make the j speculator dispose of his millions of! acres of land or put it j . to some use. Also town lots the same way. Itjlooks well to see some have the courage to show how your assessors in Lincoln shirk their duty and saddle the! burden on the poor and let the rich go without paying their share of the taxes. Wishing your paper success I will close my already long letter. eter F. Petersen. Mr. Editor:- lI would like to en list your paper in a cause which has much the largest bottom of any one industry in the land, and yet it is pushed aside as of little consequence -the great American cereal corn is to have no show in the Paris Expo sition., $25,000 appropriated to show its machinery, its fabrics and other manufacturing interests and its great commercial advertisement, but not one cent to ( bring to the notice and interest of the people of and other foreign countries France in the use and value as-a food for r both man all prod- and animal of the king of ucts, American corn. When 000 of the appropriation was $25,- asked ovens for the purpose of putting up and other appliances for cooking, distributing and instructing how to prepare that best of all products for food, American corn, it. was refused, and for the want: of this knowledge in foreign country to open up the way for its commercial value as hu man Jbod, the farmers are compelled to burn this great American king for fuel or feed it to stock: It was the National Farmers' Alli ance that tormulated and demanded a department" of Agriculture -withra portfolio as a cabinet officer. Now, as one man let us demand that the cabinet officer do something besides talk partisan politics. It will be re membered that the iron willed Jack son when a boy, and all through life, lived largely upon corn, and that the great Lincoln laid the foundation of that physical strength which in after years carried that mighty brain so clear, honest and true, was built of North Carolina corn and finished .1 rf -wit wun corn irom Illinois, and it can not be denied as a philological fact, that if we as a people would consume less roller mill flour, and more corn meal from youth up, we would avoid that terrible and national calamity, dyspepsia and indigestion and all its cosenquences doctor bills, despon dency and suicide in many cases traceable direct. Let us as producers demand a proper share of that appro priation for the instruction of the French people of the Exposition at Paris of the various uses and shapes for food of the great American prod uct, corn. Now, Mr. Editor, will you help to blow this horn until its value is known everywhere. , Allen Root. Cambridge, Neb., Aug., 24. Editor Alliance: I wonder if it ever came to the mind of your readers what nice things vested rights and the rights and the rights of property are? During the war the government used its vested right to sieze poor men and stand them up before rebel musket ry to catch rebel bullets, to save the life of the nation. The poor fellow had no vested rights to stay at home to save his own life and protect his wife and children. But, when the govern ment called for the rich mens dollars to save the nations lile Uncle Sam was told "dollars have vested rights, .nd jou cannot draft them, but, if you will give us 24 per cent per annum for their use during the war, ,we will call them from their hiding places for you for we feel patriotic any way." Uncle Sam knew no remedy. Vested prop erty rights must be respected and pro tected if the nation dies in consequence. So Uncle Sam walked away muttering: "We might as well die at the hands of one band of traitors as another!" So the yellow boys the representatives of the nations wealth slunk away and hid, and were not seen again in public for 18 years. They only came out then to pilfer,deceive and rob the people,and this has been carried on till nearly all AUG. 28, 1889. the agricultural land of the country is under mortgage. Two years ago this fall the deeded land of this (Furnas) county was nine teen twentieths or 95 per cent under mortgage less four quarter sections and the conditions are now nearly the same. Farm products are so low that one-third of the average crop will not pay the taxes, insurance and mortgage interest. A farm .worth $1,500 is mortgaged for $500 giving the money loaner one third interest in the farm snouia more money contraction come upon us and the farm depreciate in value one-third, would the shylocks Republican aristocracy is a hideous $500 be lessened in value? Oh no, the monster. It has stolen the crimson law of vested property rights says he tide as it flowed . from the dying sol has one-half interest in the farm now. dier's heart as he gave up his life to Should contraction of money continue pUrchase for the black man political and land values still decrease with all libertyj and forge(1 it in chaing of gojd. other things, and the farmer in conse- n interest to bind that soldier's wife quence not be able to pay up, the law anfl bahes in fins,nr?ai siavprv. it hn of property says shylock may bid in f Ho farm nf. mnrtcmtrn salA fnr vvbat. Va the farm at mortgage sale for what he pleases to give, and take judgement ior enougu more to meet ms aemanas and pay costs. Now Shylock has it all and demands still more. But where iDto oblivion, the father to a vagabond are the farmers vested rights. He iife, the sons to prison and the daugh worked for years to make the home, ters to prostitution. It has invaded but it is gone. What then becomes of the temples of God and torn from his vested rights. Oh they were vested their holy altars- the emblems of peace, m the moonshine, and when the sun love and charity, and supplanted upon went down on his HIS home, the moon them the skull and cross bones ot us shiue went with it and he is thrown and iracy It sits enthroned in .x itu juuseiuciiL. on his back. The poor can beg. C. J. Mecham. Mr. Editor: Just received through the kindness of Tiije Alliance a copy of the proceedings of the. National Al liance held at Des Moines, Iowa. It is gratifying to a Nebraskan to see by the report that Allen Root, Nebraska's practical farmer and old wheel horse greenbacker, made the most compre hensive and practical speech in the convention. Next comes J. Burrows also an old Nebraskan. Thirdly comes II. L. Loucks, of Dakota. Fourth and last, and to no purpose but confusion and evasion, comes Gov. Larrabee, and some literary gentlemen from Iowa. Gov. Larrabee has condescended to meet with the farmers of the country hpfniisp. thev arp. nrfranizinfr for sfilf preservation. If they did not move to . help themselves he would not notice them. He tells them that they are or - ganizing, they are a fine intelligent pcwpic, kiici.ii liicjt aic oviviicicu it guvu deal and have not sense enough to or - o4 ganize efficiently, but they can mun their racket and some political party will probably help them. He tells them that if they did have sense enough to organize efficiently it would create war and revolution, and it is a good thing they are fools and they cheer him. He tells them that he is sorry about railroad stocks being wat ered, and he is sorry because President . Adams is sorry. President Adams was made president of the U. P. road expressly for the purpose of selling bliss, and its highest conception of watered stocks to the poor idiots "down . mortality is, peaceful, plentious, virtu east," they would so much rather buy ; ous, happy homes, and entire liberty. watered stocks of Adams than any one else, he was a brother in the church. Now Adams is sorry the stocks are watered. Larrabee, is sorry. The fools in Iowa are sorry. They are all a sorry lot of knaves and fools. Gen. James B. Weaver spent five years of his early manhood in fighting bloody battles fcSr the preservation of a people's government. When the war was over Genl Weaver turned aside from the emoluments and pleasures that awaited his able and gifted life in the service of republican corruption, and chose privation, hardship and toil in the interests of a common country, as he warned the people of Iowa of im pending danger that now coils its cold and slimy fold around their homes and family as the serpent folds its victim in its coils. A quarter of a century has passed, and Gen. Weaver, aged and weary, peniless and toil worn, re tires to a pauper's home in Oklahoma, a monument of admonition to ajl pa triots who are foolish enough to love and serve their country warning them that as far as the people of Iowa are concerned Christ indeed did die in vain. As Christ died to redeem hu manity so Weaver spent his life's la bor for the people of Iowa, and they turn from him as deyils turn from holy water and rush like hogs into the maltrom of their destruction. Does Larrabee tell the people that the republican party by class legisla tion stole their commercial blood from its circulation in the channels of trade and commerce where it was an essen tial part of their body politic as their arterial blood of their body physical, that it put a mortgage on every man's farm in the shape of a bonded debt, that said party created a monied aris tocracy to loan that commercial blood so stolen back to the people to pay in terest on said mortgage. "That in con sequence of such class legislation re publican aristocracy destroyed the property of the farmer to one . half its val ue, while the debt remained undi minished, that the continuous working 1U1U1SUCU, Lllclli L1KJ tUUMUUVUJ vVllVlUg of this system causes a continuous de - pieciation of property while iaterest and debt are even on the increase? Oh no! That is republicanism, and Larra bee is a republican. He tells the peo ple of Iowa that their farms have de preciated in value $100,000,000, their cattle $15,000,000, but he does not tell them that interest and money debts do not depreciate. He does not tell them that republican aristocracy is the vip er that is gnawing at their hearts. II tells them that they are slave, incapa ble of organizing for self government, but that probably their ao something for them. masters will sloien the vine and fig tree of peace J .. . .. ...I iowly and planted in their , place the coldi dark? darnned shadows of want and DOVertv. It has driven thft mot her the legislative, and judgment hall. Peace and plenty, home and happiness, love virtue and morality perish be neath its influence as Heavens sweet est flowers perish in the flame of hell. And where is the remedy? Gov. Lar rabee tells you you are a lot of dis- , gruntled pups following along behind your master's cart whining your dis content, and if you whine loud enough your master will probably do some- . thing for you. Yes, your master will do something for you; he will empty his slop bucket on ycu, that is what he will do for you. Oh, ye degenerated pups of men that were once brave and free, have you sipped at the pap of .liberty so long that you turn your . bloated frame from the mother that gave you birth, to seeK a tyrant s power? Republican supermacy means repub lican aristocracy. Republican aris- tocracy meana our I mionno 1 cm '7 tlii vice president's Impearialism" planted upon the ashes ! of this public. In the great changes ! that work a coming revolution fittest' may "survive," but it will not 1 be republican aristocracy. "The, fit- ' test surviver" in that case will be a "surviver" that is "fit." But notwithstanding the fools m Iowa, we do not believe Vice-President Morton's . "Imperialism" will usurp the republic Affinity seeking affinity produces life, and that subtle element which we may define as spirit, seeks affinity in a nobler and better pphere. It has borne mankind from a low and humble origin, and it still bears him onward and upward toward perfect 1 Let us survice. L. Stkiibins. Sidney, 111., Aug 22. Editor Alliance: I have received three copies of your paper. Thanks quite readable. I read Mr. Burrows' speech read it also in the Farmers Voice. I think that Mr. Burrows un derstands the situation. In the first part he makes some complaints that I think he is justifiable in. If The Al liance will allow me space I will in few words give cause and remedy for each of several troubles that Mr. Burrows speaks of. t First, quoting him by the paragraph, he says, "More frequent failures." That is caused by banks of issue and con traction. A remedy: v Full legal tender paper declaratory money, is sued by the government in volume that it would loan far no more than three per cent, then the borrower could have a profit as well as the loaner. Mr. Burrows continues, "Idle labor all oyer the country, with a corresponding increase of tramps." That is caused not only by dear and scarce money, but by too much for eign immigration' and too much im ported goods that we ought to pro duce at home to give employment to labor. Dear and scarce money leads us to desire cheap free trade goods, but before we get our wages we wish there was a little protection for labor. A remedy: Tax, restrict, or shut off foreign immigration. Mr. B. says, "A million idle men competing for work at starvation wages." That is caused in part, of course, by the scarcity of money to pay with, but the greatest cause is, too many sur plus laborers coming from the old country. And another branch ot the cause is, too much money goes for imported goodtf of the kind that 1 . lshuld be produced in the United NO.ll. States. Remedy: Shut, off toreign labor and adjust the tariff so as to make it pay to produce at home all that our facilities will allow, and thqs give employment to the "mil lion tramps. Mr. B. says, "The con tinued shrinkage of values." The man that ts born in the year 1SS9, if he should live until 9999, will notlivc long enough to see the end of "shrink ing values if money is still controlled by national banks, banks of issue. It is to the banker's interest to have it so. They will occasionally let up a little turn the screw back, as it were to encourage people to go in debt borrow their money then back goes the screw c-l-i-c-k. Why should 60,000,000 people be kept in bondage to 3,000 bankers individual responsibility instead of the whole peoples responsibility through their 1 J representatives in its prerogative; to Congress reclaim issue the money I and "declare the value thereof ac cording to their sworn duty. It seems superfluous to state the remedy for our financial trouble any plainer than I have. Why don't all the mortgaged assessed farmers and la borers rally and sec to their interest,, ignore all old party lines and vote to gether 4,000,000 strong, and elect a Congress of honest men and turn the rascals out that will honor the U. S. Supreme Courts' decision that was rendered March 3, '44 "the strong point in this constitution is that the government prerogative be restored, that bankers may not con tract and retire their money if they hide away their, money the interest stops Congress should determine, the volume. The scat of the disease is the money power ot the world. We all know its character, and should build upon the authority of all the people, a structure that will give the greatest good to the greatest num ber. , W. T. Elduedge, THE HAMILTON COUNTY ALLIANCE Aurora, Aug. 23. This city was taken possession of today by the members of the Farmers' Alliance About five hundred members of the organization in this -county came, bright and early this morning, and made the largest parade our streets have seen in many a day. Few here had any idea of their strength, and were surprised at the fine showing made this morning. tIt is thought that the Alliance will take u Iiand in politics this fall, and possibly put a ticket in the field. If this is done the outcome will be hard to predict, as the republicans and democrats have tickets out and the fight will be hotly contested. This afternoon J. Burrows, president of the National lliance, addressed the farmers in the court house square, and, judging from the vociferous applause given him, gave great satisfaction. Alto gether it was a gala day . for Aurora. 1). M. N. . ALLIANCE MEETING. The Alliances of Adaui rounty arc requested to niet at 'Juniata, Aug. 31 for the imrpoee of. organiz ing a County Alliance. It in very essential that this rueetinc be well attended. Ljt every farmer in the county attend if poaaihlo. A. O. Tompkins, Oreanizer. NOTICE EXECUTIVE BOAItl). A meeting of the Executive Com mittee of the Nebraska State Farm ers' Alliance will be held at the office of The Alliance, in Lincoln, on Tuesday, Sept. 10, 1889, at 1 p. nu By order of J. Burrows, Chm. J. M. TnoiirsoN, Sec. Coal For The Alliance. August and September is the Iest time to figure on the winter's coal sup ply. We quote the following prices: Pittsburg, Kansas, good article soft coal, $1.65 per ton. Mulberry, $1.7 per ton. In lots of 12 tons or over f . o. b, at mines. Orders slwd be sent to the state - agent right away statin? number of cars wanted , and time of shipment. Need not be paid for until received at your station. The Alliances desiring groceries at jobbers rates should send money with the order. To meet the objection of not knowing how much to remit we will commence your list at the begin ning and fill it entire, or until tho money is exhausted. In orderinir lumber, make out bill stating kind and quality, price of same bill in your home market, so that in case wecoul not save you money we would not 111 your order. We quote good 3 in. wagons at $51, 31 inch, $53, 3J inch $54. Address all orders to Allen. Root, State Agent, Omaha, Neb. it ft!