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About The farmers' alliance. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1889-1892 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1891)
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. A FARMER'S SOUND ADVtOfi TO HIS BRETHREN, .; blrt Work ta I Keeey Day In Uie Year PulrerlM th Soil The Work HoeeeThe Milking UmI .d Uinta. Opportenlte In Farmlof. Th c68 factor of success in any branch of business is constant employ, meut It is mora profitable to wear out machinery in lucrative employ ment than to leave it stand idle and rust out When you make a survey of the farms and tho owners in a lo cality, and see the amount of work waiting to be done, and then notice the number of days idled away by their owners, it is no great wonder that men are finding farming poor pay. You don't find a thriving merchant sitting out in the field of a farmer whittling a stump and complaining to bis neighbor of dull times, and re suming this occupation the bxt day, and week, p.nd month, until the farmer has made thut field yield him a hand some profit On the other hand you will find every section and locality has iU population of furmors who make it their business to put in just as many days at the village store as they possi bly can, and many of these farmers complain of scarcity of money, while they leuvo hundreds of dollars beneath the surface of their fields every year. Jt is truly astonishing how little in terest many farmers manifest in their own prosperity. Good farms well fenced and out of dubt are left to many, but daily loafing at the village store while the busy nionliant thrive! soon finds the farm run down, the fence rows brushy, and owners hopelessly swamped with debts. The thrifty merchant or banker who stays at his business every day becomes the landlord arid the once "well-fixed farmer" be comes the tenant. I have seen men with two or three grown boys living on farms from KO to 100 acres have no employment half the time. Their boys work by the day, and the father whittles store boxes and smokes cigars, whim they could all he making money at home. Although living on a small farm, says a farmer writing to the National fttockman and Farmer, I find that I could keep from two to three hands busy all the time could I get them, and some seasons we could employ a dozen with profit. Hummer and winter I never saw the day when 1 hod nothing to do, and the more I get done the more I have to do tho next season. Sly wife says we hire the whole community in summer to have something to hire them to work at in winter. And it is virtually so. And not many days go by without we have help. Hut every year has shown us some profit; and success has only been attained through close application of bead and hunds, and a fair arrange ment of the hired work done. In making money on the farm don't go by spurts like a wet weather spring, but hustle along all the year. Have something of many varieties to dis pose of. Have everything done at the projier time. When once you have a crop raised secure it in the best possi ble manner, no matter what the ex pense. If your good wife cannot get through with her work, hire enough help so she can. Don't sit around and wait for better times, but get to work and better tho times, and when better times come you will find yourself far ahead of your grumbling neighbor,' who has lost his money by not grasp ing opportunity that were as fair us yours. Whey Far 1'ig: Trot. W. A. Henry, of tho Wiscon sin experiment station, gives the fol lowing summary of four experiments to determine the feeding value of wheyi 1. We are not successful in main taining pigs on whey alone. 2. Tigs fed on cornmeal and shorts, with water, required 52 pounds of the mixture for 100 pounds of gain. 8. When whey was added to tho cornmeal and shorts mixture, it pro duced a marked saving in the amount of grain required for good gains. This was true for mixtures varying from 2 pounds of whey to 1 pound of grain, up to 10 pounds of whey to 1 of grain. 4. It was found when using whey as a partial substitute for grain, that 760 pound of whey effected a saving 100 pounds of the cornmeal and shorts mixture. fi. Using these figures, if cornmeal and shorts are valued at (10 per ton, then whey Is worth 8 cents per 100 pounds; at (15 per ton for tho corn meal and shorts, wboy would be worth 10 cents per 100 pounds. 6. Shorts, pea meal and oil moiil, or like feeds, should bo mixed with whey for growing animals. Some corn may he fed at all times, the pro portion increasing as the animal up-prom-bus maturity Coleman Kural World. Tli, liruii'i Aeeouiit. It is a duty the farmer owes to him Suit and to his family to keep his ac count systematically, and to properly record all contracts, verbal or written, that no room may be loft for trouble some disputes and that his lin.!o may always bo "lu order," so that when the summon come his executor will have no dlitU'tilty lu adjusting his affair, and making a final i uU'iimnt of the estate says ilia Country (ifiitlemnn. Moreover, it the wifu hn kept, m faithful rwocd of receipts and fipcnd Mures lor butler poultry, gro. reria, dry gixnL, U, she will not flint it nHt,ry to rait In stranger tit act as tuiitittiLtrnlttr. llr snow. h'd of butl'.io i iiuuntt iiiii.t will rittli hrr M aditiluUter tu-r ia af fair Urn saving to hur!f ami hr ilttUirvii the fruit il msiiy year toll, Wlmt Uy or girl will nl be the more j rmli nt a, in hi or uituu. a'ur wUliijT a tr fid drill In ktjUir wiU? til h nt ilr it the M'tue Uutiv of l'f U'ttor tHjulp-4 t b't) 8fctWi Uf rm ririHiim8tm Nd fdt'tti t t. U.-hI wRU It a.t u,utj lr ilviiw ,f iM. 5a Kliil t u reveW a tx twr ! ''! that (hi sMUty t tli !, 1 1 l s t U' et for M,f lam li.uUifvfet m.a fcaaUfefe e r Pol' imav Us frwr4 bl la ieiiM b.ru; ti. .i . .j .i lliiivr or f nana U ol UtHi l bt, A i .l tl is lH !. t'Jf eatkj in It iMuil ;nl l tra -tt( It levee dm!. kvi H-U.nrf it lu m tt THE f ta asiHfliftrwl YWi nn Upa ni atv ln,lia over the top of barrel tnen press the bead into p!ae with a barrel header or lever, and tighten up the hoops. Place the barrels so filled in the cellar and you will have green feed for youtg fowls in winter and early spring. This is worth trying. A Mellow StiiL Many farmers have not informed themselves on the full value of a fine ly pulverized soil for hoed crops, m compared with a surface of clods. It would be well worth while for them to try a few experiments. An intelligent farmer who cultivates his corn once a week from the time it is up till it is higher than the back of the horse which works tho cultivator, estimates the gain at 22 per cent, as the result of this work, the soil being dry enough. It is important that the operation be repeated many times, as the results vary under changing conditions and circumstances. ' One of our experi ment stations tried cultivating corn often, and gave an unfavorable report. It was found that the weather was un usually wet for some weeks while the cultivation was continued, and the tread of the horse and the weight of cultivator pressed the earth and made the soil more compact than before. Another used the plow, and it went so doep as to tear up a portion of the roots. It Is well for farmers to see what they are doing. The soli or the clods should be dry enough to crumble to powder, instead of being worked into plastic masses, to bake hard when dry weather comes. Much depends on the kind of implement used, especially with an adhesive soil made up largely of clods end lumps. The old square harrow with square teeth, aids some what in reducing tho cloddy soil through which it puxses, bi:t its work in this way is imperfect. A leading object in the operation of the smooth ing harrow, is to cut downwards and chop up and grind up the clods. Other harrows, like the spring-tooth, tear up tho earth from a' greater depth instead of cutting down, but have less action on clods. The owner should examine and decide what kind of an implement is needed and act accordingly. And if by a fow limited and measured experi ments, he can ascertain what tool, what treatment aid what condition of the weather he should use with the best results, the information he thus ob tains from experience may many times repay his care and lubor. Country Gentleman. The Work Hor.ll. The horse is about the most neg lected domestic animal, says tho Na tional Stockmun,, wo have on the farm. I have known farmers to say that it was a waste of time to clean a horse. They would scrape the manure off them and work them all the time. Ten minutes each morning spent in cleaning a horse will make him look a great deal better, and as if some one owned him. This winter grain is bringing a fuir price and a great many men think they can't afford to feed the horseS grain, and think they are econ omizing to keep the grain and sell it for a good price. Now I can't see where they are economizing, for their stock will be skin poor all the time and it costs more money fo keep a horso poor than it docs to keep them fat. I think it is cheaper t feed up and get horses fat before . spring work commences, and then they can do more work on less , feed and a great deal easier. One great mistake is not keeping horses warm enough in cold stables, where the snow blows on them, with very little bedding under the in. Why do such men's horses look hard and they complain it costs so much to keep their horse? If they would fix their stables, use more bedding for their horses and good warm blankets on them, and a little more feed, I think their horses would look 50 per cent better. A warm stable and a good blanket will save grain, and the horses will have mote "get up" to them. I think a good feed for horses that is cheap is to use more oil-meal oil-meal, corn-meal and bran mixed, equal parts, that is pound for pound, as follows: 100 pounds oil meal $1.40 10J pounds corn meal, wortb 1.36 10J pounds bran, worth l.li) UT5 A mixture of this kind will furnish feed for two horses about three weeks, and they will thrive on it Every owner of a horse should dis continue the use of blind bridles, and there would be fewer skitt'.sh horses, The Mllkini moot. Don't disturb the milk after it Is set for cream ruining. It aUo tiwan lest labor than if pans or crock are used. And inoro cream raised unless ereat paiua I taken with the ps:ti or cro.'U. "Cairn" means dep can set lu tank of ice water or cold well or spring water. Htrsiu tbs milk into the can, pan or crock s aoou after it com J from the cow as M'.iUe. If you Uli to baotrn the cream raising add Mima cold water to tli uttlk a skii a it I ktrnlued into lb ran. You ran put In from 10 to M) per rtit aad lb ouly HI effort it lll have will b to tliin tbs .kiuiuwd milk Hint for the ItuHa.holJ. To five creaiu bad tu Iw dip it ta ivvnk I'. Nutbiiig mad with Mttnr, rysstil milk biiuld rvat'b tb Uiititig Kiul, The ntulswM ta l um (or gltiavrttread U frailly titiprovd by luij f.rl bulled, tUu kiumi4 It b I4 tt.t !! I may m euml by ' lin ruiMii ttt flutter vt tuljlur t.i lb sffihi.-a tlmli. l:)iltt sad fur wl sway well lrlukM UI U.tas sad dn up air ligbt ittll aetrr l iruMt4 nit axttb la evver )nia wf pi.v,..n' ry one or too tat ieaituMttlul t ut g.Jetr ItM mitnl llh ure but, rl a rreatu it I Mkl lu (IVe aWot lu.iullla relief. I'klUJteit (MkM ibuuld ta a liM a4 ttt a tlle. SKb Hiulue w4 ket lu ibe i.m, ur t.ttmt m Hutu j aul r4 vsl 4auaf. bul sad rt 1 vuV., I A f)v .aa t trU4 title ! s4 . ( nn.tul h lii Ull l tilth ,ud lu altkla ! b i.r lu uf lb !;, i. j Ika telle ar, H. Ifee .ab4. IU llt..f,b' j I l the fl ttb m.i. Salr Cute j lb U St HSt lie US Ma - I t ika Sik beta I f u lt ) Kel lak lt taU f4l 11 aad a.b a laUmf r at l ff t. ! mm ai l let ai4le snimi-ui, I Ik 11 bwM be ut ttt hi l ) u. 1 1. 1. 1 ILiuAUid 1 L. u l. .... ,J ... Ike ke . b tot ub lb West, aa! Ik rft itit t4 V .. FARMERS' ALLIANCE, LINCOLN, XEB., 10 MAKE A GARDEN SPOT. A CARDINAL WILL TRY TO DO IT IN SAHARA. Tli FamoiH . MlMioaarj ef Ik Creat Deaert Will diva HI rrivata lor tune Aad All Hie Energies to th Taak. Cardinal Lavigerlo, the famous mis (lonary of the Sahara, is pushing for ward bis remarkable enterprise of ."O deeming the great desart He aims not only to civilize the roving tribes oi savages but to make whet Is now a pnrchoJ region a productive and hub itublo land. The old man in his home at ftlskra, talks confidently of success, lie has Organized an aggrossive army of volunteers for peaceful conquest known as the brothers of the Sahara. Seventeen hundred Frenchmen, most of them of the educated class, respond ed to his call. They will bo trained by him for thoir novel and arduous duties and equipped as fully as an an nual income of 100,000 will ullow. The bulk of this money comes from private sources, the Ftvnch government giving only $1,000. Tho cardinal say of tho present condition of the Sahara that it is a dead waste, inhabited only by tribes who live by rapine. The Saharans make the rieh Koudun their prey, says the Cincinnati Times. They gather in hordes and raid the country, commit ting a thousand atrocities, and return with droves of slaves, whom they sell In Morocco or Tripoli, whence the cap tives are sold into Kgypt and all ever the Turkish empire. These man-bun-ters in the Koudun, the cardinal says, can best to stopped by fertilizing the Sahara by restoring tho fruitfulnoss which it once enjoyed, and of which the traces are how found. lie holds that there is plenty of water in tho dessert but the wells have been left t: choke up and the oases to fall out t f cultivation. "Water everywhere," he asserts. "Once brlr.g it to the sur face, and life will reappear where we have known nothing but sterility. Then the wandering nomands will become rooted to the land. They will derive from husbandry that substance which to-duy they can only find fn murder and pil loge.n It is the cardinal's convic tion that trained men inured to the climate can penetrate the Sahara and in a few years accomplish a marvelous development of productiveness and of civilization. At the beginning the Brothers of the Sahara will reclaim a waste track near UUkra bought by the cardinal under which water has been reached. They will harden them selves to the climate, devote them selves to gardening, study the Sah&ran and Soudanese dialects, and be trained inarms for defense. Their. clothing will bo the tunic of the Tuaregs and the wide trousers fastened above the ankle. They will wear veils to ward of the sand-storms. Their food will be dutes and hard biscuit In summer they will work at night and sleep dur ing the day. At the end of fifteen months they will be sent into the heart of the desert In sections, establishing themselves at points where there is water. Thus thrown upon their own resources they will found agricultural communities. Mission aries and doctors will bo sent with each detachment. Tho Satmran tribe will be welcomed ns brethren in these communities, their ailments treated, and the possibilities and advantages of ugriculture impressed upon them. The old cardinal's confidence in his ability to carry out the great project evident ly shared by thousands of hia country men, challenges tho attention of the world. This prelate 03ms to bo a man of notable personality and force of character. By one who" recently visited him within the four bare walls of his apartment at Biskra he is de scribed us an importing figure, with lustrous eyes, fine, serious features and a whito beard flowing to the breast His conversation is both brilliant and profound,, and bis mind now wholly wrapped up in tha grand antl-slavery-pro-civilization crusade. The Art of Kelvins. Tho useful art of sewing has ocen known from a very remote period, as is shown by the fact that bone needles have been found among tho oldest re mains of the Swiss lake-dwellings nnd in the caves of Franca nnd Great Brit ain, which were frequented by man during the reindeer age. Some of these early needles were perforated in the middle, which was the thickest part and others were pierced ut the larger end. A French cavorn has yielded needles much superior to those of the ancient Gauls, and tlo to tho ivory needles of tho modern Esquimaux spe cial skill having been applied to the boring of the eyes, which mut have been done with a fine f.lnt drill. The Swiss lake-dwellers used linen thread or bark fibre for sowing, and mnde gar ments from woven fabrics of linen and bark&as well as from the skins of ani mals. The cave people employed a thread made from split tendons, and perhaps string of gut; and suggested the probability that tlisy performed some more delicate work thun the sew. log of skins. Haw lbs I'arrel kavid the Kltlrn, A parro. tr;d kitten whkh livid In (he aaiue hte were prrat frleri 1. and umh) to play together of leu. One di.y they were plnyit g tou. U" when t?ie kitten aimed a bhtw at th purr t that kntK'ki'4 lu-r c!T hir pnh Into a Mg tub full uf water thttt si'Hxl cioo by, but the (-) il tli blow aimiu li thttt puy wm lu t'-ii ri 1 with it '.i t t the luU Ulh rrwtturei we .t undr, ImI the parrot mm r lua'. to the o tv.uit Uraiitg t,th w.e t;Vw the el t?f tho lut w ith tho tillier h t i I lr playuiu'n, lifted It out of tl.a l-.iK and !)t II to ttui tl'mr with a Hivu t.iat !ttxk a lut uf Water I't.t ut It aln. The tMid tilth1 Kb nil I'll t it. .1 ttt ttmt w n i(u.ti tr l,i t'.ei kllivq would r $rd l ee f -i.ti $ itit.ii. Al ail t,a f . t.t b r K-etget fir a bU lu u .' it ta bo oat lf l!te r.a b of snj y ' Mill Lie) , Vlli,'tO ISt.l! "Vo .."i" I4 l!l'l Asijl't iMti Hli SfH9 t ike tuuir ami itttiSi ! .vise," Wttal tbt U.I ' Why, tbi h im t M.Ik " . IH 9l Ml t,vultfV' litt'1' said Amy, ba, " 4 it ltW a .n it ONLY A SAUSAGE. Tit Popnlar Edible of Rome. Now the Free Latch Adjanrt. S'.ntd tho days of Ancient Rome sau sage has beea a popular edible. When tho Goths, and Visl-goths. and Vandals, and other tribes from thi north swept down on the abnormal civilization of the great empire, sausage maintained its hold through the turbulent middlo ages, and the famous ausagcs of Lu cania were supplanted by a variety of imitations. Tho Lucanlun sausages wat mae'e of fresh pork and bacon, chopped fine, with nuts of the stone-pine, and fla vored with cumin-seed, pepper, bay leaves, various pot-herbs and ti e sauce called garunu- In spite of a a occa sional death or two from Indulgence in tho sedmtive comhiuutioti sausage will live, and many times the Ungc-r it lives the. more alive it got. Bologna sausage is still otw of the national emblems of sunny i'oly, and the smoked sausages of Geruany are almost as famous as lugcr be r. A person can easily study tfcarncter and a man's business at the ttne timo if he will stand close by a fieo-lunch counter any morning between the hours of 10 and 1!J o'clock, and wat.-h the way tho different habitue take their nius.i;'e, says the Milwaukee Sentinel. Tho firit one who come along orders a beer in an apolegctlcal tone, Vh row ing down a nickel at the sumo time, and then wanders toward the sausage plate r.s though he ha1 just seen them for the first time. lie hesitates a min ute and then as his nerve braces up he starts in and takes a slice from every plate In tho row. You wouldn't have to be told he wai one of that leisure class known as fiends. Tho next man who comes in is bare headed and in his shirt sleeve. He walks rapidly past the bar, holds up one finger to the gentleman with the white apron as he pue), takes a slice or two off the first plate within reach, walks bock ana drinks his beer be tween mouthful of sausage, throws down his nickel and departs. Nine chances to ono he is in business for himself, and money-making is bis chief end in life. Another man, or a party of men, come in. They leisurely quaff their beer, and. having half consumed it, stroll over to the lunch counter, and, after an inspection of the different varieties of sauvuge, select a slice to thiir fancy and walk back and finish thoir beverage. The chanc?s ore the same that they are lawyers or persons of leisurely habits when .out of tho o.tlee. ....... When a men comes in and takes his beer oyer to the lunch counter and picks out a piece pf sausage after a critical inspection' of every plate, put him down for a person who works on a salary in som store, A Great Benefaction. Netf York city is making a deter mined move to ettablirth cheap lodging houses for women, and seems likely to succeed. House.) not managed on a philanthropic but on a purely business basis are to be established throughout the metropolis. For from 15 to 80 cents a woman can secure in one of those houses a decent and private lodging for the nlgbt, and can get her breakfast for 10 cents in the morning. If well carriei out this will be one of the grandest . of benefactions. The want of decent surroundings drives more women to crime than any other cause. - He Would Be Fool. A Philadelphia surgeon says that by three strokes of the lancet he could paralyze the nerves acted on to make a man get mad, und thereafter any ono could pull his note, cuff bis cars and spit on his boots, and he would simply smile a soft, bland smile. Prompt N'elKhbore. A tornado at Trenton. Ga., carried off the roof of a house, leaving a sick man in bis bod. unharmed but shelter lest. The neighbors at once built a temporary shelter over him. Nobody (area. t A wearily wan little face, A feeble, forlorn little sinilo, Poor faltering feet, That must pace their beat For many aad many a mile A lamp that luridly flares. In tbe wide city's wbiil Just a nameksi girl, Noldy cares 1 A dewilate, death stricken room, A pillow pusiifd up to tb wall. A flicker tbat sbow A face in repot;, Fllence, and tbat is all. Have Juiit on tbe wot-begone cheek Tbat look which ucb raptuess wears, Tbat libt on tbe brow Ah, who shall y now, "Nobody rarest" RARE AND READABLE. After a Beaver county, Pa , man bad burned a log he found la tbe ai.be a lump of silver wortb Iu Cowley county Kan., latt werk, out of twi tity farms Suld by tb be riff seven. teen of them were mort;agi for awr tbaa ttiey were worth and abandoned. Tb "scboul 'hi!t!ren of New York city have det tared luiavoroftba golden rod over tb roes for Ibe italo flower by 1 V 4 ft u majority to a t tal vote of UI,.VJ Wllle Mi.. TUHUm. of Ktttfla I'oitit, Ml' b , foudltug a Jit ilg, lnr rat be came t overcome by ialiuy tbat It lrn u i.a tb holy sad erly l it her iu Ibe aim, A icilM'in Iwinte a a M,t aad an emut b.n ta M'luelt.tUj rata, but fl.e J'l.l !e or'td ttt .it lUnd -ii. Tb 'bun una ir..lii btid'eud lb veovl .,i4 btr it t.iii Into . I .it ti.iloly a butt, lb link uf 1 it I l.u.d la tl eta ii . .le- li'ar lu ei al. It lakia ell tbe al' i l I t 4 ..d ar t a La Be fiotu tt ter irnta lb r. .', t! ,le u I lt du Ibe m o tbm, aad i. . I lb,- k 4ie wi'.b i MKltbt I a; ii I, i f lt.. ini..i 'I.imw n!ir and aa h. hii to le b r tjn'jj,,- rt.i asd itst.tiiif tin iw Ik l-etl b'-iil..l :eiM ate lt,.e t ! ISe t.tb al t f Ike kbaiul r fl iN Ike t ..!. at wf tb tHa' aa I t a vr'.f ft A tvl tt-o tbi "' it Itiiti4 , ! tar i b II lt ti.tt!t it t'.ol 1 1 .Nea V-'i. kl I t 4. t.. by ft Til aVAl;s mitt i''.t.' f.l.VM III VV'!'I A i f f a. cue tl lt ... mvmm e ; a, tiU.I t )" ttvirri. tt ., il I !..,- t . a vi k,W tl 4-1 ,1 t-,i t.4 il i ir b ). m, . t'l it fc- . tat .(i.r k-4 lk . id bv .tt,. t Si .TtNt si.f ' Ibe k . t Ik l':. l In I t it tM S'J I f"-ie 1 1 li t tbt li,t Atl t.t t! t- lb. ut It .tot. 11 !' tti'4 IS Mt'itb italttaii tii til'' I m !; . THURSDAY JULY 23, THE PERKINS WIND MIL 10 DDL'ST A FACT THEPEHKINS I tho Mchteat Raanlof Wtad MU1 auw Matte. BUY IT! TRY IT I After 1 year of tuere la th msocssv rcreof W ind Mills, e have late r made a complete cbanee loourn.111, ail rati being bunt at roofer and better pmaortlnned and a elf lubricant buahln piaoed In all boxe to eavti tb ourcbMer from cambln' hih tow. er tool lit, Tb time prtnelT! of (elfrov trntnir retained, if ery part of the Mill, rub ly WARRANTED, and U run witbout ma. In a none. Tbe reputation rained by tb Perkins Mi: In tba past kastuduced acme unaorupulous person to Imitate tb mill and even to lak our name and apply It to an Inferior mill B not deceived, none genuine unlet tiamped MOeiow, We manufaotur tMitfe pumpltif and reared mill, tank pump eto., and cn eral Wind Mill (upplle. 1m1 A (em want. d. end for rata crue and price. 41-ut fKKHlXS, WOtU MILL, AX CO.. MtebawaSa, lad. Mention Farmers' Aluahcr. DARBER k FOWLER, nrents for th Mteodard I'erkln Mil. I'arcrupuloui pari let are clalmlns to bandi the Standard Ferkl- but bay only an imi tation of tb Peril mill, fee Uarber Pi.wier. til, North W t, I lucoln. Neb. American Live Stock COMMISSION CO. Room H Exchacr bulldlcr. IS CO-OPERATIVE AND BELLS Alliance '-. Stock. CONSIGN TO ALLEN ROOT, 15tf Care of A. L. S. CO., SOUTH. OMAHA. - NEBRASKA. It Will Prevent Hog Cholera. THB Western Stock Food Is Ut -rtt Iseovsr f tb at for Ksrtsi, bltti, Sfeitp. Hep mi Piaitty. II Is s natural rMMdr sad prTenttl of J!! !sssss cf tb i'.ooi azi i!;i:!!rs crssss, tcu freely on tb llr and kidney; (and to ton p tb wbol aulmul ytm and I s suit, rBtaUof Hog tkicra. I lb., IHIb aod lit. boxe at Me, Iba. aad IM rwpe tlly. Manufactured only by wsanuur stock voodooxtavt, BloomBald, Iowa. th Iowa It Cooker. Tb most prertfcal. mort ccnvenlmt, moat econom! cel. red In every war tho UEtT bit AH FEED COOK EH MAIiK. A flaoo at tb tf ntructlf n of It It sourb to tnnrtuce any Din bat It U tar (uperloi to nr otber. Ferdetcrin. tlv circular and prices apply to Mantis Steam Fecd Coomb Co., Omaha. Neb. MU J. XX. ROBINSON KENESAW, ADAMbf CO., NEB. Breeder and ship per of record Vo land China bog". Luoiee Dreem ni dock for sle, I Write for want. Mention ALU a slr. V. J. TBOBP 00.. Masttfastarsri of Rubber Sumpt, Seal Stescili, Budget uA Baggage Checks ft Rvr liescrlstlen. ErtsblH bed ISM fttk Sf r tlMfVI.N. Win omotbinf Nw. A NcMit to Many , Useful to AIL Smith'! diagTam to parliamentary rules, showing the relation of any mo tion to every other motion, and answer ing at a glance over 000 questions in parliamentary practice; together with a Itey containing concise hints and direc tions for conducting the business of de liberative assemblies. A work designed for students, teach ers, professional men, all who may be called upon to preside over business meetings, all who ever have occasion to take part in business proceedings, and all who may wish to inform themselves on tbe important subject of parliamen tary rules. The subject is here pre sented under an entirely new arrang ment, by which a great amount of in formation is presented to tbe eye at once, in a marvelously condensed form. By an ingeniously devised system of di verging and converging lines, all the rules applying to any given motion, and all the motions coming under any given rule are presented at one view, facilitating immensely the acquisition of a general knowledge of this subject, and furnishing to a chairman Instant information on any point upon which doubts may arise. It is to the study of parliamentary practice what n map is to the study of geography. Hear in mind that every member of a deliberative assembly should under stand parliamentary rules as well as tbe chairman, to avoid tbe mortification of moving out of order. Size of diagsam, 12) by 6 Inohet printed on bond paper. A key la ap pended to the diagram, containing full explanations, hints, anil dlrectious tor conducting deliberative proceedings, printed on fine calendered paper, with ornamental colored border. Tbe whole put up In neat muslin covers, embosssed in jet and gold, convenient and durable for pocket use. Price, by mall, post paid, I 60. The above book and Fa tat t as' AlUaMCI one year. ... IN, A 'litre, Aixukcb Pea. Co., W 41 Lincoln. Neks li;htitl.i Eiput.l Mitlcil C)rrof!!oi Ciptsti I Riltrsii Mcjepclf Eipotill Ttxtttei ail Tariff (iptttll ri:jCi,!!il imnil Tli Trttttr.es Prist (iisitlf Ctajtrtt Cm Ktpa,!tc llFCSCQt ktcvcrtsody read, read, read 00S BEPCBLicil L'OllRCBT, Sy VtSlkR VOl.UO, ANOMIroaMi( st T Till UOISTROUS tCWIT OF THE fiCflt vxDiftwmor uw. aV,Tk I nib 4l tun)'! fa ltd l ika 41, eii lu I lb 4 iiJ aINW ltd l ika 41, ok ett eef U -! - I 4H a. . sT" ! Sll t VaUkes k r4 kaevkwaa Meaankf.' I" . hi aili si.tii ai a M m l'iie4 Slave u tl l 14 !.. eoaStlMW !. t lai'4 u . tilt - WnM1 ( 1 C J an s , ii ik r e ai iWK itM ' J beauaa. a f btneaal rttHtqa f4.aT AU4- ef yiirCbTftNTe. a wtti u Aw eee f A la boot f i 1891. (pHURCH piOWE & ON WALNUT GROVE STOCK FARM " wet. mttmi. gtandard Bred Trotting StOCk. Home of Ihe Stallions, CTIITTIIORN, BARTON C, THORN PRINCB, 44-sm MoCLURE. STANDARD BRED MARES AND STALLIONS fCR SALE. Wurt n Cirtuxu, DEC0RAU end mt thetin,kn N T 1 1 I S a ieeemeriiidi;ri rl Derfertrf rtn AXC tVe cf3 cur tttt mv. mi In ht If the wetht. nrwti 70c ha'.f thf 1 rrtgbt. Ktifi ar.rch let xpflT tow rr to SirrrUibainpcrcr.s t f ria put, V.U. UXJ luvt-.-t lu art sal nU tlte WiXaU op.iciao. Motleailcsiilar. VIII Run a Pump h i Lighter WM Tku Any Other Wind Kill Ca bt POMERENE - Ut 7 ;pi CAPITAL NATIONAL miNK. LINCOLN, - CAPITAL, : : : C, W. MOSHEB, President. U.J.WALSH, Yiee-FreMenr. ..r . A. C. OUTCALT. Cashier. J. VV. MAXWELL, Assistant Cashier. DIKECTOE8. W. W. HOLMES. B. C. PHILLIPS. ACCOL'STS is, -. LINDELL HOTEL. 7 C2 OS ALLIANCE HEADQUARTERS. CORNER 13TH ANDU DT0., LINCOLN, XTOB, Tbrre bitK-k ftoro Cap! ml building. town kitl KUht y ar lovui lui cvmpWted, la.'itn(iii lart wniiiwliiee rMiiti, making 1J r co mt i tu ta all if ELITE STUDIO. T finest grvKir.t! (lotl rrH tofnsjh CHlttf id the Kutf. All Wok U ftnttt fifitth. iMtufuttcaGiurantefd. iithstreel. teif. T. W. TOWNSEXD, t.tkto. ecim mm. T .d e 1S'l IW . )- .! f t7.? iiit tl lit... ta : i4MtKtil i . r ' " Htwt tf ... fl rkiivk.4 elH,! f..e .w ! ana . kl t"' lit . . ika ! ' twtnel IU i.r i , .- tMl lk U il ' vf '. - it anl trlvil.t l' l liUt I, Jv-. t.n . .Vn. OTCCL IVlHDDILL OTCCL TOVCn. pse'erf!! Bttre ajxipioje to at all carta ol lit dlrertl orer wtndmillillltetkepaBiprodwuli aqaal aaa at alf paru thv.f n,km t.iellre c T Arcft to ufllna la knt dlrerOr 01 ewri i .i ment arer t.iellre wflninHi lid i:nioi inuici uMctnt ."-1 toll Tirsoearngr II t"f AMD MAJil. .Tlat fest c!ll to ilc fte r;rk cf kj 811 fct d .& - .OOOPBR, Afnt for the CElElimt Win uTD MILLS. PEr.:::s lllj, Pump of every Seeciip. tioo from tbe old style plunger, wood and cbsla pumps t th latt io n sod doubt acting fore pump. DSALCal n ' fittings, Tnkt. Rubber Hole ASOTHI Uc D0I7ALD Brass, Brass Lined tni Iron Cilindarg. At prices to salt tke pur chaser. Gar. .a ft I ft, Llncsl.i, : : f.'ii. - NEBRASKA : : : : $300,000. ' ' . , I). E. THOMSPON. C.W. MOSHER. E. P. HAMEK. C. E. YATES. A. 1'. S. STUART. SOLICITED. II I.lnrola'e ewet, peat! and bl up- A. L. IU Ki Vr.lt WJX. rtttfr.