V NO HOPS FOR IT. Senator Poyuter Grws tis Omaha Bee few Poysters" on tfcs "Patn to Salvation." Albios, Keb.", Jane 1. To the editor of the In your editorial, "The Path to Salyatioc," you claim that the repun , "lican party most either reconvene the legislature to enact a maximum freight ; law or force the state board of trans portatioa to do its duty. In the event of the party failing to do one or the other, the party, you claim, will have poured u po n it th e v ials of wrat h of the farmers of the state, and while yon do not say so, the inference may be drawn that a greater cyclone than the one last year will strike it. In my opinion neither of the reme dies you propose wm avert tne impend ing hiortu. Certainly to reconvene the legislature will not but rather add to its fury. The people are fully apprised 01 the combinations auring tne winter. and would very justly resent the need less expense of calling an extra session to accomplish that which tnose combi nations defeated. It would be exceed ingly plain that the arty leaders were trying to play the fanners for suckers, and that too at heavy expense. Then besides that the records show that not a single republican senator voted for i maximum freight bill when the oppor tunitv was eivcn to pass such a law. Have we any reason to think they would vote differently in extra session? An extra session would only afford an other demonstration f the utter lack of sympathy of the managers of the party with tne mass of producers in the state. The failure of a maximum freight law falls with eaual force upon the republi can and democratic parties. Upon the democratic for Its governor's veto, upon the republican for Its senator? voting to curtain that veto. Upon the other proposition of com veiling the board of transportation to do its duty it seems to me you would as well talk cl compelling tne roads tnemse to do their duty. "Can the Etbioi change bisskin, or the leopard his spots?" van men owned ana controlled by tne corporations do anything except in the interests of their masters? The only salvation for the republican party is a continuation of its combina tion with the democratic party. By the union of their forces the two have a lighting show of success this fall. The republican leaders are smarter than the democrats as was clearly shown in the last combine during the past winter, as the republicans secured the chestnuts and the democrats the blister. They may succeed as well again. The success of republican principles inthis state would be the utter defeat and disintegration of party as it now exists in Nebraska. The republican party claims to be the party of the people. As now dominated in Nebraska it represents nothing but cor porate greed. The people are awa ke to the situation, consequently makesnirts, such as an extra session of the legisla ture, or attempts to Induce the servants of the corporations to become the friends of the people, win avail nothing. The Bee s warnings to the party man agers in times past have been unheeded. 1 he republican ship is stranded upon the quicksands of unfulfilled platform pledges. If she can be towed into the dry dock and the barnacles scraped off. and then effect a change of masters, f-he may again ride tne billows or tne pout ical seas, cut without that she is a worthless hulk not of value enough to try to save w . A. .foynter. The Alliance and the G. A. R. . Farm Field and Stockman. ' So class of our citizens were. more patriotic than the farmers when the na Lion's life was threatened. Iney gave their sons, they volunteered in the ranks, young and middle-aged all that the regulations of enlistment would admit. Those who were barred out of the army by age Or from any other cause, were as patriotic as any class of our citizens in supplying the sinews or war. in deed the war could not have been carri ed on to a successful issue had not the agricultural resources of the entire country been brought into full play to provide necessary rations and forage. The report from one of the Kansas local Alliances, therefore, of a resolu tion hostile to the G. A. K. does not eeem probable. Of all the states Kan sas has been the most friendly to the G. A. R. It was settled largely by the soldiers, as its lands were ready for oc cupancy at the elo.se of the war. The report that any Kansas - Alliance de nounced the pensioning of worthy vet erans and condemned the G. A. K. be cause of its advocacy of proper pensions is pronounced false by Senator Peffer and others. We must believe the sena tor is correct and the report a slander. The Party's Purpose is Good. HoiSTOx, Txx May. 24. To sup pose that the Cincinnati conference was opposed to prohibition because it re jected the plank that prohibitionists tried to place in its platform would be a grave error. Quite to the contrary is true. More than three fourths of its delegates aro prohibitionists, many of theiu eminent as such. The window or folly of their action must appear fur ther on in their campaign. Certainly there would be more hone for prohibi tion if the country hould fall into the hands of a new and progressive party, whose leaileri a is well known, are op posed to the traflin In human blood and ouls. K. M. HomiKKV. Gen Sitpt. National Colored Farmers' AllUuce. A Little too Corrupt. Ralph Waldo tarrtca. "All cur political disaster grows, log ically, out of attempts In the att to do without justice, at the sluklrg of some t srt of our home conies of defects in the foundations. One iblug Is pialu; A certain personal virtue is ewrntUI to freedom; and tt begins to I doubtful whether our corruption In this country bu buI gout a little over the hMy tnsri. that when ratvwl weha!l te fuiied made up of a uiJrU ot r k W Mtt a-rr The divine knuftl tiffs hu tst-kwd out ot u. and td not knew aouKh to be frte, ' What is Mny 4kirtt (!uli.r. "it I the stamp last nukes th tr.cn. sr. and ct the tctil at mlUk U w rompfswd Th are tWaaUtr ua lord wcrd. II tried to pay his M l at a WlBft hack nuatr rt-eet-tywiib a gold MMrtl(i). Th .l t wmMumnI ' H it l ail tiitt." id Ut Nl r-1. I' p-'ivl tfi'iJ UI tt r 4 fim ih U wrfiwd It votl Hum tnd Ike 111 pJM-l If V !i liivif. In trub.' I Hat th .-tsM.tftt not UgS r iMttsUy It. It la nip last Ik WMMvf . If th tf?Mt km wr "fUl n:,rt pwb!!f4 iaMt. rrtts r ami are !, I. r f !d sit J .;t i us msj" as U a gra- Talk About Justice! Journal, liUIs Co., la. The hardest blow yet struck the much Taunted (by republicans) tin plate clause of the McKiuley tariff act, which goes into effect July 1st. next, was given by Hon. David A- Wells, who says that the Standard Oil monopoly will thereby be benefited to the extent of 1100.- 000 a year in draw backs on the tin nsed m export packages. Mr. Wells savsthat entire was served oa Mr. Mc Kin ley and hi republican associates by the Standard Uil people that unless their interests were taken care ot by the insertion of a provision allowing a draw back on imported tin-plate used in the exportation of domestic products thev would defeat the bill lne pro vision was inserted, and tinder It this wealthy monopoly will get itc tin-plate for about S3 per box, while all oral nary consumers will have to pay about o per box. West and South. Prvt. Polk in Pro-reeilve Farmer, Raiturb, N.C The people of the south and west bare been engaged for thirty years past in hating one another with great bitter ness. This hating has been most irra tional. It is true now, and has been for the past thirty years, that the inter ests of the south and west are the same. Both these sections are agricultural, and they beth will remain agricultural. The natural friends and political associ ates of the south are the people of the west. Whatever is against one section is against the other, and whatever helps one section will help the other. Thee obvious facts are just beginning to be perceived over the mountains of pas sion and prejudice that have been piled up between those sections. And when these facts shall come to be fully seen by the people of these seetlons, woe be to those who use their political power for the purposes of burdening those sections. "Good were it for these men if they bad not been born." Houses to rent or sell on monthly Eaymenu by J. blevenson with J. U. IcMnrtry, corner of Eleventh and M. MISS HILDA'S BOMANCE. Miss Hilda Smith sat on the porch of her own ncflt cottage, screened from the sun and the observation of passersby. The luxuriant vine of American ivy that, showing here aifd there u scarlet leaf, or cluster of pur ple berries, ran riot ov r both porch and house. A sweet -faced, thrifty old maid of 45 or 46 years of age, was Miss Hilda, with soft, gray hair that would have broken into light waves and crinkles above her brow, if it could have es caped the clutches of cento and pins at the back of her shapely head, to which it was drawn so tightly as to suggest the denunded, odoriferous vegetable to which irreverent young sters sometimes compared it. Mixs Hilda's eyes were still bright, and her complexion soft and clear, and, as sheat busily plying her Unit ing needless on this crisp September morning, there was a faint flush on her unusually pale cheek not unlike the first faint color on the leaves of the maple tree in the lane beside her cottage. Miss Hilda was alone in the world; nephews and nieces in a distant city called her aunt. Sheknewof theirex- istence and they of hcr's, but that was all. , : . s She had been romantic in her youth what woman has not she had en tertained high notions then of court ship, and love and marriaco. She smiled crimly to herself over that girl isti weakness now. ?he was thinking of it this morning thinking how but for those same ro mantic notions she had entertained ".hose brief, bright guests of a happy season, she might have been a happy wife, perhaps a mother, instead of the lonely, desolate old maid that she was. For. twenty-five years ago, on just such a sunny September morning, she had been sitting in the same place on the porch, and John Fletcher wtio had courted her m a slow, m-itter ol fact way for half a year cane up the narrow path between the fio rer beds, and calmly asked her to be his wife. And Hilda had raised her eyes for a (moment from her knitting and as calmly answered "Xo." It was not that she did not love him, but it was nil so unromuutic, so different from what she had expected. f-he had hod other oners since then, all more or less calm and dignified and biMsitiess-like, but she had loved John Fletcher. Perhaps the long years she had remained nincle proved how strongly she could love as a girl; but sho was a middle-need woman now. John had renamed single, too. They lived in the same little village still, and had been good friemU all their lives senwible middle-aged peo ple that they were. .ow Joini was going to leave tne village. He was going to a fur coun try from which there is no return. Only yesterday she had met the solemn, grim, gloomy mnii, who was l.irtd to are for the ru-k man. and in answer to her fnetiillv liKimne h hml told lur that John FlcUher could not live i we k. Jidtn's life hr.d Ihhii a aurrrM finan cially, but when his health failed, knowing that h was aSiuont alone in the wrld, and with the irofm-ts ofa long iUne b-firt hint, h hud givxi hi nil ti a nrphe and hi fitnutv, t i'ti!atiiig only that tluv lifUid rare hr l int dniitij his lifetime, mid t). 4 itm! f.it id tl;ot ho diot oftlir t;iHh had falUn uHn him. Kr ls tal Ut til aiui h-i1wmi i : avi'k h a in tlm ny, and tint fuct W4 Hot hidden fronil.lM, Mm ll.idit t thii knu of hint s (he 4 tin r kmt.iw. Dot 'i' h tl. hue a Birl. hut :tti tl tend, r, ii itittret('l pay d a oitan. Th tn ! ( j ai I rtik in njiOn hrf IttnlilatUMi. "A feul liii.kin,! I.tx-ie that," tald One, "Vs," rtriud the i)r, ,,0!J M. I iiU II. In lvf. ilitf rt'i l,.r IAi, ami at'.l j r ju t hi j ih tin r " i ! in alii h tit d rw id l ri, a tl.ry (4i4 bit u it I l n; t- Stlfihet sit 4 ?k Ht hi M II . U i!niis i'f-ij hr air, it u u tii"4 an-l ! iiiot l i'l.!i l.-itud vl tl a ?i'itjif;t -Utd V.vld. ' Witw ,u.ii S oi,!d hoi xmtid mt I Al!y, ! t.in;'.t, or Wd? I'mUtwr. il-t f at4 U, .!! ddu- THE FA KM EMS' ALLIANCE, LIXCOJ.N, NEB. I hI fn" Hilda1. 'XL 'flie-wbnuw. I touch and dude. el why John's name bad occiirrt-d to her just then; and then an idea pop ped into her head with such sudden ness tliat she dropped a whole He- full of stitches, and sat still, iiiK-on-soiousof the fact, with the knitting needle poised in her hand while she considered. " 'A quiet place to die in, " she muttered to herself. "Yes, I'll do it, whv shouldn't I?" To think, with Mifs Hilda wastoact. Half an hour later she stood by the bvd.side ol John Fletcher. Hilda 'a heart was full of pity,, but she might have faltered in her purpose, even ;hen, but that the sight of the close, untidy room, the tumbled, com fortless bed, and t he wan face on the phlow that brightened at bur ap proach, nerved her to proceed. "John," she Riid, "I am a woman of few words. Twenty-five years ago Sou asked me to marry you, and I re used. I give you now theopportunity to retaliate. I came here to-day to ask von to marry me!" Jolm Fletcher looked his surprise. ''Do vouknow, MiHsllilda," he said, 'that I am a dying man?" "Yes," replied Hilda, bluntly, ''I've been to the doctor. If you wasn't, I wouldn't bo here on such an errand." She drew a chair to the bedside, and sat down facing him. "Yon have nothing to lose in this bargain," she siiid; "your property is already disposed of. If you consent, it will be but a change from this home to mine, and thero you can at least die in ieace. Yon will be well cared for, during the little time you have to live, and will not be begrudged every mouthful you eat, as all the village knows you are here." "But you?" he asked, ns he paused, "why do you care to take all this trouble" 'When yon aredend," she interrupt ed, "I shall be a widow. If yon knew how I hated to be spoken of always as Old Maid Smith" and Mix Hilda fairly hissed the obnoxious tit la through her teeth "you would not wonder that I am willinz to resort to extreme measures to rid myself of that hated name." The gain will be all mine, Hilda," be said. 'That is my own lookout." she re plied; "but I do not think it will. You ,ecnnent, then?" "Ye," hw answered, "I consent." Miss llildn arose at once. "I will make the necessary arrangements," she said, "and we can be married this afternoon." There was a quiet wedding in the invalid's room, with ti.e doctor and his wife and one or two friends for wit nesses, two or three hours later. The despondent, mor6se nurse that had cared for the sick man was dis charged, and a genial, sunny-tempered man engaged to till his place. With his help the invalid was removed to his new home, where the two were install ed in Hilda's bestroom.through whose wide windows the breeze bore.night and day, the odors, of clove carnation nature's finest stimulant-mingled with sweetbrinr and mignonette; and Hilda ransacked her wondrous store-room and garden to furnish dainty dishes to tempt the failing appetite of the sick man, and grew almost young again in the unaccustomed delight of having someone beside herself to think and work for. The doctor's wife, who had hut re cently made her acquaintance, felt great interest in the bright, outspoken little woman, and very quietly began to lead her into more becoming attire. "Do not wear those somber colors in the sick-room, Mrs. Fletcher," said this pretty plotter on one occasion, "unrelieved black has such a depress ing effect on an invalid. Get some thing soft, as to material and color; something that will fall in graceful folds. Stiff, harsh lines are so rasp ing to nerves weakened by illness, you know." And Hilda promised to follow the suggestion, - wondering innocently, meanwhile, why she had not thought of it herself. One day the doctor's wife claimed the privilege of massing Hilda's beau tiful hair in little puffs and waves over her forehead, "just to see how it would look," she pleaded, and made her conversation so entertainingwhen it was done that Hilda forgot all about it until she went into the in valid's room to take the place of the nurse, as usual, while he took his daily airing. "flow young you look, Hilda," said John; "it is your hair" Hilda put her hand up with a flush of shame, as if she had been de tected in some fault. ".Mrs. Wairen did it," she snid. "I meant to take it down" trying in vain to smooth out the puffs. John drew her hands down; she was sitting by his bedside. "Don't," he said "it is as pretty as it wns in the old days; how I loved it! You promised to obey me, Hiida, and I forbid you to wear it any other ivny. Remember it is .the first time I have tried to exert my authority," Hiida, remembering that, could not Sut obey. Ko, step by step, all uncon sciously to herself, she went back to ward youth. Two months went by, and there had been no funeral from the vino-covered cottage. Then one d,y John called Hilda to his heilside. There was a strnnge look on his luce. The doctor had lwcn with hint. "Hilda," he said, his voice nlight!y tremulous in spite of evident tthirt to control it, "Hilda, my ioor girl, the doctor anva" "What.' she snid in sudden fright, inking on lr knres by hi bed id, "You are not going, not going, on!" ".No," h replied, "l ut would J Oll care rry inn, h, dear, if 1 shouldn t.if 1 couldn't die? ' WouUlyimV'miUI Hilda. "I'd U' ha i iier than I ever was be fore," It rrp.ietl. "lint Vihi wtuitrdlo be a widow, Hilda, hut itouM you do U I fci.ou.. get fte.l." i 01 thank !. rp't I, i .ft!y, loi kimj at him with a uddm tvitdem m lur )r. J'l n dte l.tr f.i.e dtwi to his and k.'-d htr. ' 'thnt I ft ill jr t ','," ha saUI. A id ! did tAMUf W i t)iitii, f rst Listener to ianny Ltnd'a t Jr,ny l.il. I '-to UMithr tiitttt tj fthuh s!, taak't f.t (, all th ;Sl tnef ,i Urn lp.. J rt.tl j t stwahohtt in K'h ai d at Mm y4t .f fut tvr-td Mr miuit l , fcpMM Ul pit ikli. Itul tU ktvs oj f a I', tin- a NiUitttry fi.I.u vl... ti li.i l i ju tt tw.l l r attitiuii i iiin .ild I n iiitnl. nUtsjj lb irrt. Tl.sj I rt iit.r I tr u i 4 ti, li,il W to ft hi. It site tu j ft In it '; ! t t k l t.r.-.'f I 1 ! ftlvti, sii.t if 1 . the inrii.n'.ti'.iui t( f . ti!iii! 0,t iv'il tl ! tl Nr Uu 1 1 TOUCH AND DUDE. A Vary Rash Bum Cats Put Into an Involuntary Slsep. Probably one of the most surprised bullies that ever attempted to make of a man now nurses a black eye and a broken nose down on the South Side, where he lives. lie was stand ing in the doorway of a Grand avenue store a few nights since, talking with another tough man, and leering at every man and woman that chanced to pass that way, when tinder the electrie light which bids the weary wayfarer welcome in front of the I'lankington house he saw what he was pleased to cull a dude coming is their direction, smoking a cigar. "D'ye see t her dude comin,' XibsyT" he said to his companion. "Yes, an I tink it's a dirty shame dat he is spoilingdat nice cigar when he is only lit to smoko cigarettes." "Dat's a fact, my boy, an I'm blamed if I intend to stand it. See?" "What you going to do about k?" "Just watch me, en' if I don't have dat cigar inside of a minute, den I'll eat me hat, tiat's all. As theyouiig man drew near, the bully stepped front the door, and ap proaching the unsuspecting pedes trinn, said: "Say, me lad, let me take your ci gar, will you?" The young man, thinking that the fellow desired a light, knocked the ashes off his weed, and handed it to the stranger, who, with a smile, placed it between his teeth. "What do you mean by that?' asked the astonished young fellow as he saw the use his cignr had been put to. "Oh! dat's all right bub," said the tough man; "disis a pleasant way dut I have when time hangs heavily on my hands. Hun on home now or your mother will be worried, see?" "Yes, I think that I see," replied the young man, as he stepped up in front of the loafer, "but, strange as it may seem, my mother is not in the habit of getting worried, and there is no occasion of my shortening my stay with you. JJesides, I too have a pleasant littlo way ot my own to pass away the time when the same hangs heavily upon my hands. It is some thing like this" In another moment the bully was stretched out onthesidewalkwith one eye closed, and when he arose a blow on the bridge of bis nose once more laid him out. The young man whom he had sized up as a dude turned out to be one of tne crack boxers in tlw gymnasium, and two blows of his scientific fist had been sufficient to put the tough to sleep. Ex. The Child's Left Hand. Why do not mothers seek to culti vate all of their little one's capabili ties and facilities? Why, for instance, do you teach the child to skillfully use the right hand, and ignore such possibilities for his left? Why do you mourn if the child be naturally "left- handed" and seek to cripple his free use of the unruly member? One would almost suspect it was in the nature of a crime to be ambidextrous, so persistently are children admonished to "Take the needle in your other hand, dear!" "Why will that boy drive nails with that hammer in his left hand?" One constantly hears such lament from the lips f mothers and teachers. Left-handed? And whv not? Either-handed, rather, as would always result from equal attention to the muscular use of both hands Jn the earlier stages of learninq to write, children are apt to complain of their hand "getting tired," from the cramped attitude of the fingers; all this would be obviated by alternate use of the left hand. I know a man who has only his left hand to use, and it is wonderful what dextrous use he puts if to; carpentering, the prunin; of his large orchards; in fact, all the multifarious employments of the farm are accomplished with speed and precision. 'It is only the left-handed greeting that one notices in our neigh borly intercourse, and even that does not, after a few times, seem either odd or unusual. From tho Ladies Home Journal. ' ' interest in Widows. A pleasing proof of the general in terest in widows has just been furnibhed by the republication in London and Scotland of Police Sergeant Oliver Tims's opinion in the matter which were communicated originally to a Sun reporter. The student policeman then remarked that history was full of evidence of the personal worth of widows, and declared the fact thot ( hailes II, Frederick the Great, Lord Nelson, Napoleon, llixrneli and Iteorue Wnhinc.ton had nmrried widows proved nhko tluirown n.t ii!eiu-M nnd the fhtiiiinhlc character of widows generally. The notion pleased the English and S-otclt eliton, nnd they at -oik proceeded to lay ln-fore their KiiliM-riliersthe eloquent eulogies and conviiii inc! argument of the servant. It isn't cdtut that what a New York polii cmansays finds its way into print ncrohs th oeenn, nnd HerceantTiius it delisjIitiHl by tliecircuniNtniic. He modestly snys, liowever, that it wan not no inn. li what be said that I'Niitiht the Ilritidh editor, or the fact that lie nit it, "but th peremiiul, ti;ttrtt thatbliiiiiHt)ftidowft lor all tiU4nkil." N?w Vork f-.m. Amuainy Advert. somenta. It in'bt tint ! altfv 'b' safe to otl h hr frtiiue (if the ?;!; v. iiii advert iwiiint, tut they ar re jrintrd I, ere fur what thy :e or!h: VANTH-. frdy ymiut nun tu IiM.k attir a l,ur t H.e .!.tt.t.. t Jriltl)l, I'l'U H.M.Y' A piano by a UdyeVmt to trv the tlnni.rl in cmk tit ftllh lvel k. T'i Lin- A o'M.' m V port ton '.tit., nrf mht ruiir ai d an t i (I litiliil .'"T A im.i! lady's tit'.bi'h a. l..t ivory )mn4 l-"l,i -rk b's . and a .. t . I"i ii 'd t a 'iiti aii iiiiitU (f talt tk! o ni r m rri v i.w t.iv yi tm lir.;nr v U iv tvii onw bt fieafi ijr , t Jon ft.Jl t.vt vouaH l(;)ltl. WAXTI ''DWvmn la ' (h toiwt H,llHtU1 VlttlMVN k IH.. A,4.te. I v, t fMitt tslis . t js aid )tt ttt t tt -'rfttr' Ink, Til UHSUaS ,jJITXE r ;'' ''' y, k-ifl Lad and see me, vui lor welcome. FARMERS Dehorn Calves WITH- Every bottle warranted to Dehorn One Hundred calves three weeks old or un der without Injury to the calves. Agents; Wanted In every county SINGLE BOTTLE SENT PRE-PAID on raccipt of price where there is no agent. HATCH BROS. 40-8m Gordon. Neb. State agents and Wyoming. for Kansas, Nebraska It Will Prevent Hog Cholera. THE Western Stock Food Is the rrMtett tfiscoverr of ta at f or KoriM, CiA Sheep, Xigsttl Pmltry. It is a' natural remedy and prervntatir t all 4llMM Of th blood SDd Stf MttV OWUM, ItactafrMlfontba llr and sldotyi; toodt and Ms ur trrvonuuvtof Hvf lk(rs. 1 lit., IHlfc DI (IB, boiM M Me. Sba. ud St M MM tlvly. Maoufaoturcd onlf hf WBSTUXK STOOK FOOD OOHFAKT, llooatflold, Iowa. Tbs lewa Stssas 7e4 Cooker. Th mott praottoal, mart conveoieDt, nott eonoml c!, inS In etery wr ib BEST glEJtll FEED COOK EK MADE. A fiance at the cooftruotlao of It li fftcuirb to conrliica ant rn t bat It ta far fupetlor 10 iny mner, ret atcnp- tlve circulars and prices apply to Martis Steak Feed Caocca Co., Omaha, Neb. 3Rif J. LI. ROBINSON KENESAW, ADAMS CO., NEB. n Breeder and ibfp- Jter of recorded to and China bog. Choke breedl Bf atock for ale. 1 WritM fur vanta. tpnntwi Mention Alliasce. FOR SALE, One Short Bern Bull and one Holateln Bull, both regiitered. A few choice Will aell cbeap. Call on or address, c u nrnniu as-tf w, ir. rennin, Collaare Farm, - - Llnooln. Nab. Greenwood Horse Co., ADVERTISE LORD LAMBERT AS FOLL0W8: The Cr premlom Hafkner and flnt pirral- um Coavb but. any y or t-rfttl at Nrb. State KHir In Iwu iu LORD 1.AMBKKT. owned bf Grrt-nwooo Horae Co. Wilt wake the HMuton of lrfl at Laiinullna tiarn m Ortiiwol. Neb. Tfrma 1.11 te inaure. Crrpondeoue solieiied. tam C. l.CCKTBA.8eo. a 1. J. TB fTTT Maaaf 1 Rubber S ls Stencils, Baggt THOBP & Co., MasafactuteH of Stamp,'' Seatt Badges and BaggagtChtcks v't Krr iMertpllea. tatabllahad t4A tt s. Ilia n t.tNixiLN. Men PENSION Till: tl U'.lt lit mix l A LAVS, toldictt 0uM Sires lts Wir m Entlllad In leur.l a.doaa and parcDt in w tt. irtid- M wbtao k.ii iln.t ruin effwtacf anur ri. a at Mu udttl. If tl ia jtmr n aini i! M ami !.. .t-t!. t.t.m.-i,i".. u,.ff;,a.r JAMES TANNER i,f I'atKHJb. '-ir W a.hlaiu. 11. NEBRASKA HEMP BINDER TWINE Mar.tatu4 f tba fREMOlT HEMP AND TWINE CO,, 41 Out t f rui sra a tU ttrtnt t l Sfttwka, Every Farmer in Ktbrat.a Should l'lMtTine, It ! aa4 wl'l i'fi m il t niT .;. out t at a!.tvlr. $ft ur tuttip It lit Htt v' h ! Mtsaat v I MUUv, a4 tt l ftt f ff ef tftisa s l U evsHin'ott tbara V U rfr a t f i-. r ( (rt4rt iu tt U wi,trt uh fiwtii fivwa bir fc'f k..ii t Uv.r frftiH. V tsiil U$ 44 ta I t rt.t ' MtMu . iU i.t . I rl'.iwr t t lu t! i?ut ltB.kbt, C. ff . -1 fcnrrrrTHV I 5 1, 1891. af" , t IMPOETCK Of SHIRE AND HACKNEY HORSES. THE LARGEST IMPORTER IN THE WEST. ! Stock Companies can Purchase Horses Absolutely on their own time. Every hrre imported reginered. aid guaranteed a sure foal getter. I bny the beat and do not handle culls. Nor do I have a partner to sit In the corner and grin and take half the prehts. I give icy customers the benefit of small profits and first etas stock. THE BEST CLASS BUYERS BUY FROM MY ESTABLISHMENT. Xo horses peddled. Dont run a lottery, nor drop a nickel in the slot and see what 4ti O. O. HEFNER. Importer, Lincoln, Nebraska. t(pHURCH Howe & on WALNUT GROVE STOCK FARM r HOWE, --Standard red TrOttlUg StOCk. of the Stallions, CIIITTHORN, . BARTON C, 44-SM STANDARD BHD MAKES AND STALUCNS ECU SALE. DECOflhll k ana 5 ...I Klcdmlili lifn tho pamttrod f lib Mai waa alt a 1 f 'Wiouirtteiihallnaof dn.tt iallfunir 1 hat t-eeCr ft) l llitKurU fill IBB IlieiWUlUUI inSWJll 'nnnK imiiati; " 1 rAtiifMfkAMttintzi , i U halfia weKrbt, eoaa yon htf tio f -tbt, anil a mnri u' V .1 earrf UihaaToraj! or rJl fia, xtij. Ujm ItTtiraje Pi aetiitcauiaiUkSftaaai. 1 tl Kill Run a Peas In a Lighter Wind Tau Any Cihr KN C"l Cl bra TJS Uu:::Ltsuu:raLC3nci,3a2ti.ta.cr. POLTBRENE - ECLIPSE STDDIOS. We have opened a new Studio at 12M O afreet, npMalrt aodwlll he pleated to hare tba clttwna of Linmln call and riaalne our work, wemakea apeclaltv of AHIsTOTVPHSa new pfecess of t'botoaraphr. and call youf pectal attention to the fine reeulta weareoblaJa. ,nL. 'i' v7 doren Brat Cabinet we wtli preaeot cuatomera wtcb fttBne life aic portrauil This otter witf bold good but a abort time 10 Introduce our work, ao avail yourielvaa of this rat opportunity. fctf ECUPSE srtJDlOi. Uooolo. KebnakaT Ha4sM el l.'u ajuancui are eoauntDsX to Iiae-tla Tmvilt DB. H.K. KE1M4 N, SDHOEON DEKTIBT. S500a FULL SET OF TEfTII FOR 85JJ0, Tsfthsitrsetsd wit boat pala. No ehaloTsnai ae raai m etae. CJ All tilings at low ratea. ROOMS 4, DO AND OO DUIHl Cliir. LESTDELL 1 1 ALiUNCK HEAIMJUAHTKUS. CORNER 13TH AND II 0T0., LINCOLN, IIHIJ, lire Wck 1 lrtm rplt4 bufk'.sBf . Uttfas et, ittt atl but w. lown k.t-(. l-uaty m fwm Jut iitflutt4, irg Kr co.amtitr wm msklm UUwimU 'l. tl A. 1, tl MV I.U A KNI, ?Wn. ELITE STUDIO. Tfce fates! tn"jtd (Iiki l1tctoft,k GsHery w the tfule. Al Work ta th feeel IniiH, 4tttfattteaGtMiittfd, etf. NEBRASKA. THORN PRINCB, Afo CLURB, Warn foi CTALMut. 8T0GL IVkiduill uTt.s.k tuvuu. tlmnre, . &'-.C00PBU, Af nU for tha CEIEII1HI mm cc KILLS. Pumps of arsir deserts tlfin from tba old aiyla pluorer, araod and chttln pubipti tne istest .a r'e and double aettaf farce pumps. DIALERS IS . fittings, Tanks. Rubber Hom AiDtn He DOITALD Brass, Brass Lined and Iron Cilinders. At price t ault th puiS chafer. Cor. 9ttifi.ll St., Lincoln, : : Neb. HOTEL. li!!I!!!!!!iH;iiii!iii a li i nth et. r T. W. TOW.N5SND, rrtleise. ft t. -r r"" - '