THE FAKMEKS' ALLIANCE. LINCOLN, NEB., TJIUKSDAY , AUdUST II), 1891. Watted Honest Jud je. Omaha, Neb , Aog. 3. 1691 Emtor Alliance: In your discus eion of a nonpartisan judiciary' tbiog very nearly impossible so long as you use human beincs for iadzes, ftr bias and educational prejudices go with him upon the bench, it appears to be the accepted opinion that the material to f make a good jadge mast be a lawyer. Let u see if this opinion is correct. Now, the lawyers as a class are narrow minded, technical and conceited. Their whole line of business, training and study is to scheme and out wit an oppo nent, to contuse the court, to cheat jus tice, either in deence or prosecution, and when he enters the profession his oath com pells him to do this, that is to do the best he can for his client. Now, all of this Is in direct opposition to the formation of a mind of broad and libe ral views, clear relation of thinsr and a just jucemcnt. so it is clear mat a lawvtr whoe whole education is built upon schemes, technicalities and cro chets of the law is no more lit for a judge than hell is for a powder house. J he student of history will learn that it was the mis carriage of justice in avoid ing to carry out the provisions of the Justinian code, so he will learn that it, was the villainous rulings and vicious f decisions of that judicial tyrant Jeffery, which finally resulted in tne murder of his king, Charles 1st. There has not been a broad, liberal and evenly balanced mind upon the supreme bench since Jonn Marshall. They have all been technical lawyers, and frequently more law than justice. A noted case built up by an unoroken line of dsci i ms culmina'.el in the Lr d Scott decis on, when the whole fabric tumbled; for it violated the con science of every honest man every principle of the Declaration of Inde pendence, every line of the constitution when it said that freedom was sectional and slavery was national. There it stands lo-d 13 ; it is the la e, a man iment 0" ju cicial lolly that 110 mau desires to ue fend and later carrying with their de cisions criety and injittic. lb.8 Minnesota ware-house aud tue origi nal package aecUions which defeat the whole purpose and intent of the legis la urif. la their Eorninutions for judges the independents should select men who have some sense of honor and justice out side of the technicalities of the bar lawyer. Alien Root. The Tiuth About the Calamus Meeting, Obi, Neb., Aug. 3, 1891. ' TO THE IXEEt'EKDEXT TkESS OK Ne bbaska: Having been made one of the subjects of a malignantly false and wan.only libelous campaign lie which was given great publicity throughout the state while I was from home and out of the county, and at a time when I was paying no attention to the news papers, as my time and thoughts were fully occupied as an instructor in a teachers institute, I now will avail myst'lf of my first opportunity to be heard. I was at Calmus on July 4th, 1891. I was on the ground at an early hour, and remained there till three or four .o'clock. There was no mutilated nig used or had on that occasion. The as sertion that the stars had been cut out of an American flag is wholly false. The Ord Quiz first published that infamous falsenood. There was no talk of a declaration. The things being con demned are fabrications of the basest kind, planned and executed with malice aforethought and slanderous intent. I was the first speaker and no man ever heard a disloyal utterance fall from my lips. ' My salutation was: "Ladies and gentlemen, lovers of liberty ant the flag, I am glad to meet, glad to greet so many, met to celebrate the aniversary of American independence." I used much of my time to demonstrate that the Declaration of Independence was the grandest and greatest bill of rights that was ever made the motto of a free - and liberty lovinjj people, and that that was why we were met to celebrate why the ten times ten thousand other celebrations were being held at that moment in our beloved land. I said "They are met upon the niountaiu top and in the valley, in the crowded cities aud in the suburban villas, on the hill and in the vale, everywhere where a knot of Americans can gather they are met to celebrate, and the cause of these gatherings is the Declaration of Inde pendence. It is the foundation princi ple, the chief corner stone upon which ' our republic has been erected and must . be maintained." In short the exer cises openc d with patriotic music fol lowed by f n excellent reading of the Declaration ef Independence, which was iisLcutsu iu vvjiu gictuei ijuiei uuu closer attention than usual. And then came my talk much of which was de voted to trying to impress upon all the . fact that the Daclaration of Independ ence was the grand, safe, taultless r ...... , . t K ... : . i : u past present and future, and now I am published as uttering treasonable sen timents. The manufacturers of these base slanders and libelous falsehoods -that have no foundation fact, no reas onable pretext for their existence, would mutilate a flag, desecrate a church or crucify Christ afresh, if by so doing they mignt add one titrr 01 ' strength to the power to crush out from . the people the love of liberty, and thus the more effectually serve the corpo rate , plutocrats whose servants and r slaves they are. They are shameles, conscienceless lying conspirators, who . wear the livery of heaven to serve the devil in. To my comrades of the G. A. R. I would sav: No treasonable 1 nought ever had lodgment in my mind, none ever lingered upon my lips or received the sanction of utterance from me. I lay no blame at your dor for the hard things you have said of me. I know your hearts are true and loyal to the flag and comrades. You have been de ceived by lying comparators whose false reports have slandered me and de- ceived the very elect amoDg you. I notice that senator Koomz speaks guardedly, saying "if it be true as re ported." But I take exception to the utterance of Judge Reese of Broken Bow. He aserts falsely wnen he says I sought or wanted Senator Taylor's place. And when he savs, "I don't think much of Taylor.but as between the two the people chose wisely," he gives an : . : . - . . tt - luuicauuu vi ins lasies. ne preiers a man whose reputation is infamous, to ah old soldier of whom he knows noth ing. His fidelity to the G. A. R. is thus set forth by his voluntary utterances. The truth is, these- vile falsehoods were gotten up in this vicinity for ma licious partisan purposes, and the con spirators would blacken the reputation of uny old soldier, no matter what his service to his country and the flag, no matter how true and devoted to the principles of the Declaration of Inde pendence and to the requirements of the constitution if thereby they might nerve their masters better "Wbo steals my purse 6teals trah, buths whoriiches irom me my good came takes that which not enriches him and makes me poor indeed." D. McCaix. THE FARM AND HOME. DISCUSSION CONCERNING CLOVER AS A MANURE. tllll Clover Without Mao are Maintain Ihm FrrtUltr or the Soil Silos for I'oor Mm Poaltry and .Farm Kotee. Clover as a Maa ere. Tho ' opinion U very peneral among observing farmers that clover obtains a large portion of its .sustenance or material for its growth from some other source than the soil, or through its roots. . -: The opinions of a large number of persons is entitled to great respect but opinions are not evidence. The in habitants of whole continent may be lieve in the gross superstitions and abominable ceremonies of heathenism, but that does not make their beliefs true. As stated in a previous paper, Sir J. B. Lawes, ono of the most care ful and scientific investigators in the world, after many experiments extend ing through a large number of years, decided that he was unable to prove that clover obtained a particle of its nitrogen from the atmosphere. No other learned man that I ever beard of has been able to prove it, says a writer in the National Stockman and Farmer. Mr. Waldo F. Brown, who has been a tireless reader of agricultural litera ture, in answer to the question, Where does clover get all its fertility? replied, I neither know nor care; it gets it." It is easy for us when pressed for tho reason for the faith that is in us to say "I know it, because I know it." If clover has the power to capture and appropriate fertility from the at mosphere, then why will it not grow in pure sand, if supplied with suf ficient water. If 'you say it needs some other ingredients for growth be sides nitrogen, the answer is that all these, except nitrogen, have been sup plied in the propor proportions and still it would not grow. , Clover is a good trap tc catch nitrogen, but Its traps are set deep down in the eurth where the boys set their traps for wood chucks. If there is pone to be found there it will thrive no belter than wheat or corn. If clover would grow luxuriuntly on poor land, then it would answer in the place of manure, then indeed it wonld be "tho philosopher's stone;" but this it will not do. Hale, who is on old authority on English agriculture, says: "It is a bad and ignorant practice to sow clover on poor ground, for it will never come to good." He does not take much stock in the popular notion that clover leaves catch and devour the free nitro gen Coating in the passing wind, and store it up in its stems and roots to furnish food for succeeding crops. He says: "A crop of clover improves the ground by sheltering the superficial part and drawing its nourishment from some depth. Prof.. Wm. Frear, of Pennsylvania State College, says: "Contrary to a general supposition, wo have no evi dence that any plants are able to fake nitrogen, except in very inconsiderable quantity, direct from the atmosphere;" and that "wherever agrioulture h been practiced without the addition to the soil Of fertilizing materials from V'ithoutJhe,J'mit3 of the farm, fertility in epite of the moat thorough tillage has slowly but not less certainly di minished, uutil the land no longer yielded a profitableterop." In regard to maintaining the fertil ity of the fartn, Thomas J. Edge, secretary ot the Pcnnsylvuna board of agriculture, in his report for 1888, which may be considered as the com bined and concentrated knowledge and understanding of the whole board, says: "We may by tho growing of deep rooted plants to be turned under obtain from the sub-soil this reserve of plant food; or we may by the use of lime render soluble and available the inert mineral matter already in our soil; or we may by the purchase and feeding of grain transfer the fer tility of other farms to our own; or by the purchase of commercial fer tilizers we may accomplish the same result in a more direct way. No hint of raiding the heavens and stealing fertility from the summer clouds. Mr. T. Greiner, in his book "How to Mako the Garden Pay," published by Wm. Henry Maule, Philadelphia1, has this motto: 'Of nothing, nothing comes, " and in his chapter on manure says: "Manure, good manure, and plenty of it, is the corner stone of suc cessful market gardening;1' and he might also have added of successful farming. ' ' How to Draw Na!U and Fplkes. When a nail or spike has been driven into a live tree or into timber after a year or more the fibers of the wood will have contracted so tightly about the metal that it will be exceed ingly difficult to withdraw the iron. But strike a nail or spike a sharp blow with a hammer and dive it in a trifle so as to b.'eak the wood fibers around the metal and a nail can be withdrawn with only a little force. Iron gste- hinges are frequently driven into a living tree. When one is cot in pos session of a large and strong claw-bar bore a hole close to the hinge on the under side, and the hinge can be easily crowded down into the hole and with drawn. When a large nail has been driven head and all beyond the surface of the timber bore a hole close to the nail and with a nail-set crowd the nail into the hole. When nails have be come rusty they will usually broak in two, leaving a portion of the iron in the timber. But strike a rusty nail a sharp blow and ono can sometimes withdraw it with his fingers. In tear ing down an old building, if it is desirable to take off the boards cr casings without splitting them, place a nail-set on the head of each nail and with a hammer start it inward about an eighth of an inch. One blow will break the hold of the nail so that most of the nails will come out when the boards are driven off. Agriculturist Tanning Sheep Skins Make a stron 2 lather with hot water, and let it stanJ tiU cold; wash fresh skin in it; carefully squeeze out all dirt from wool; wash in cold water till soap is all out; dissolve one pound each of salt and alum in two gallons of hot water; put skin into a tub with sufficient water to cover It; let it soak for twelve hours; then take out and hang so the wool may dry. When well drained stretch carefully on a board to dry generally; stretch several ilmes while drying; before quite dry, sprinkle on the flesh side ono ounce each of pulverized alum and saltpeter, rubbing it well; try If tho wool 1 firm on skin; if cot lot it remain a day or two; thee rub again with alum; fold the f.eb side together and hnng la the chade for two or three day, turning each day until quite dry; scrape flesh side with a dull knife und nib well with pumice or rotten stone. You can then t:se some of the aniline dyes sold everywhere, and have a variety of bright-hued ruga that will be both pretty and serviceable. Breeder and Sportsman. Silos fur fear Sirs. The silo is pre-eminently the thing for the poor man, notwithstanding the fact that many writers claim ensilage cannot be pat up without great expen diture of money for silo and machin ery. Farm and Homo has repeatedly given plans for cheaply building eiloa, That ensilage can bo put in whole to keep perfectly and feed out econmical ly has been abundantly proved true by dozens of good farmers in this country and Europe. With no need of buying machinery or hirir.sr- or waiting for extry help or expense of costly silo, every fa mer who keeps a do;en head of stock ought to store and feed ensil age. In making a pit for wholo ensil age one little Improvement is sug gested that will lighten tho labor of tilling if it be a deep one. To hoist whole corn over the top and lower it to the bottom is a needless waste of timo and strength. One should bo able ta take it direct from the wagoa on a level to where it is to be packed, there to place it at once heads and points to avoid further handling. To make this possible a door must be loft in the wail of the silo from the top to the bottom, the same as in an ice house. This door should be toward the stock that are to be fed. If the silo extend through the upper floor it will be found convenient to drive the loads there after the lifting becomes too high from the lower floor. If the silo should not connect with the floor, a door from the ground on tho outsldo may extend to the top of the silo. To close these doorways securely against the ingress oi air, the ensiluge must press them against the jambs. Its downward motion in settling will make it undesirable to hlngo them in placo and thoy should be attached in sections 2 ft high by means of hooks and sta ples. Inch-and-a-half lumber is bott for this purpose and should be nailed together with wire nails in such a man ner that it 'will break joints. When filling the silo put tho first sectional door in plice with moist builders pa per between it and the door jamb. The hooks and staples must not hold it from the lloor, nor the one above it from resting upon it to exclude air. With bevelel-or grooved edges and the bottom of each section made to lap over the top of the one next below, tight points may be made. In feeding the ensilage the door may be opened from tho top all the way to the bottom as ftwt as exhausted. If more than one silo be used, the first emptied may be filled with ice if care be taken to provido proper drainage. Whole en silage is eaten as rapidly an 3 as entire ly by all stock as is the cut fodder and no extra wealth or help is required t? provide It u,,t-J,.. ' Hie Klglit Cow. It is almost an rxiom that it will pay far better to keep a cow thj).t makes three hundred pounds of butter per year and have her die at the ago of twelve, than to keep a one hundred and fifty pound cow and sell her to the butcher at the .age of six. The one has paid her own way and a profit be sides, the other has cost the man un fortunate enongh to own her money every day of her life. Farm Kotej. Whether rotted or not the amount of plant food in the manure is the same. The sheep bite closer than cattle and hence will often thrive in a pasture where cattle are starving. Keep the shoulders clean; have the col lars well filled and the draft properly ad justed, and tho horses shoulders will not be galled. , Climate, soil, blood and brains are the cornor stones on which have been built all great breeds, whether of sheep, cattle, horses or men. If oats are to be fed out to stock on the farm, it is adding to the expense to thresh them. They make a better and more wholesome feed to run through a cutting box, while there is little or no waste. Among the Poultry. The demand for good poultry is on the increase. Bilk handkerchiefs should be quite dry before ironing. Poultry must have plenty of green food if they thrive well. Guineas like stale bread moistened with sweet skim milk and curd. A good, steady scratching hen is apt to be a good, steady layer. Lack of system is a fruitful source of failure in poultry raising. Ducks are enormous eaters. They not only eat all day, but often feed by moon light. A hen with a brood of turkeys should bo housed every night until they are a month old. Sulphur in the food is a good remedy for lice because it tends to make the skiu moist and oily. Pullets that are hatched in May and June, if well fed and sheltered, will lay during the winter. One of the best ways of feeding bones is to break them up into small pieces and put them where the fowls can help them selves. ' Hounrholct Hint. If indelible ink gets spilled on a garment saturate the spot with iodine 'and then washed out with ammonia. A pound of sulphur burnt in a tightly closed room will destroy every living thing in it, from moths and bed bugs to possible disease germs. Spinach Juice colors a white sauce pret tily, and when poured over hard-boiled eggs, sliced and laid evenly on the platter, is a tempting dish. A new and delicious dainty is prepared by taking a stone either from dates or prunes and substituting a bit of the kerne? of an English walnut. If a little corn starch is put in the salt for the table it will keep it from lumping, and the pretty little shakers will not have so hard a scolding in damp weather. Lemon juice will whiten frosting, cran berry or strawberry juice will color it pink, and the grated rind of an orange strained through a cloth will color it yel low. Put camphor gum with your new silver ware and it will never tarnish as long as the gum is there. Never wash silver in soapsuds, as that gives it a white appear ance. It Is just as necessary to keep salt from absorbing bad odors as cream. A sack of the best salt standing where there is a smell ot any objectionable odor will absorb the flavor . - PUGSLEY'S -:- e A n wm save eigniy-nve way. . PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. m ' 4 ' " 1 . : nrT7 1 . 1 ' " 'HOME. SWEET HOME." An Oreaalon When John Howard Pajrna Sang the Sou lndsr Compulsion. I wag once acquainted with a Swede who had been adopted by the " Osage Indians, says a writer in the Detroit Free Press. He was a friend of John lioss, the celebrated chief of the Cher okee, and gave his name In tho Cher okee language it was written J, Q. & J. Q., pronounced Koh-weh-a-koh-weh, und moans swamp sparrow. His brothor, Lewis Ko?s, was named Te-tah-te, which means spoon. My In formant was himself called by the Cl jrokee?s Te-kaw-wha-lees-ky, whit.h siccifies "The man who writes ordeis for flour." John Howard Payne, the author cf "Home, Sweet Home," was a warm, personal friend of John Ross. At tho time the Cherokces were removed from their homes In Georgia to thoir pres. ent homo west of tho Mississippi rivor, Payne was spending a few week) ia Georgia with Koss. who was occupying a miserable cabin, having be?n forci bly ejected from his former home. A number of prominent Cherokeej were In prison, and that portion of Georgia In which the tribe was located was scoured by armed squads of the Georgia militia, who had orders to arrest all who refused to leave the country. While Ross and Payno were seated beforo tho fire-in the hut tho door wai suddenly burst open and six or eight militia men sprang into the room. Ross' wife was seated on a trunlj; 593; taining many valuable papers and a small amount of money, and at the un expected Intrusion she spraug up and screamed wildly. Ross spoko to her in the Cherokee language, telling her to be seated, as she would save the contents of the trunk. She sat down again and the intruders told Koss that he and Payno were under arrest and must prepare to accompany the squad to Milledgnville. where thev were to be imprisoned. The soldiers lost no time in taking their prisoners away. Ross was permitted to ride his own horse, while Payno Was mounted on one led by a soldier. As tho little party left the hovel rain began falling and con tinued until every man was drenched thoroughly. Towards midnight Payne's escort in order to keep himself awake, began humming ."Home, home, sweet sweet home," when Payne remarked: 'Little did I expect to hear that song under such circumstances and at such a time. Do you know the au thor?" "No," said the soldier, "do you?" "Yes," answered Payne, "I com posed it." "The devil you did! You can tell '.hat to 6omo other fellow but not to me. .Look here, you made that song, you say; if vu did and I know you didn't you can say it all without stop ping. Jt has something about pleasures and palaces. Now pitch in, and reel it off, and if you can't I'll bounce you from your horse and lead you instead of it" The threat was answered by Payne, who repeated the song In a low, sub dued tone, and then sanglt making the old woods ring with the tender melody and pathos of the words. It touched the heart of the rough soldier. who was not only captivated but con vinced, and who said that the com poser of such a song should never go to prison if he could help it And when tho party reached Milledgevillo they were, after a preliminary exam ination, discharged, much to their sur prise. Payne insisted that it was be cause the leader of the squad had been under the magnetic influence of Ross' conversation, and Ross insisted that they had been saved from insult and imprisonment by the power of "Home, Sweet Home," sung as only those who can feel can sing it lhe friendship txisted between Rosa and Payne until the grave closed over the mortal remains of tho latter. What We Have ome ao. A curious advertisement in a New York paper suggests that there is no rc6t for the weary in a land where thrnse minutes from th,e station may be taken ns a national motto. The ad vertisement gives the attractions: " l t sale A single grave in Greenwood cemetery; three minutes' walk fron? tho entrance." An Offered Remedy. Chollie They do sav now that the fellows nowadays use so much tobacco that the girls awe actually surpassing them -in stwength. Fawncy! Chappie I cawn t see any way to wemedy such a state of things unless we can get the deah cweatures into the habit of smokinc hidiananolla Journal. It Simply meanders. Mrs. Cumso "The Schuylkill runs through Philadelphia, doesn't it?" Cumso "Nothing runs through Phila delphia, my dear. The Schuylkill Xvutnders sleepily through tie town.r New York Coutinout .... PATENT - : - REVERSIBLE -:-ROAD-:- GRADER. a a m a a per cent or making roacs tne oia MASON FRUIT JARS! O. O. HEFNER State Agent has Mason's Fruit Jars by the case. $ doz. quarts in case. (5 " J gallons in case. $1.2") ami $1.50 per dozen. J. W. Hartley, Agt USE UNION SOAP ! 1SKT HIK TI1K HOUSEHOLD. Gives atlifictlon ta all kinds of water, and It Mads Jm Nehkapk by the 7tf W A PAGE SOAP CO , OMAHA. ELI HEADACHE CURE Will Stop Your HeidacM IN 15 MINUTES. Highly recommended by thnce who have used ttirm. Sold by a!! druggists or tent by mall for SSoeuti. lf rEEMM'SiBMCi', COR 14th and O STS LINCOLN, : : NEB. JIM'S 0 HOtKL ALLIANCE MIADQUASTHS. Xatat 1 par lay. IpMlal rates sy tat weefcj Corner 15th lodlicksoo Struts, D Oae loekfreanetorlU. MU K JEmnNQS, Proper, D QMAHA, XTCCX3- A BETTER DAY i BY J. A. EDCERTON, Consisting of thirteen Poems Suitable for Recitations. Every Alliance should have a copy. Price in leather 25c. Paper 20c. 46 f Address this office. npREEs and plants! Aral auertaeotef Forest and Fruit Trees, Pleate, Tlaes, Be., af Mart (eft foru far Kekpiska. pedal arlee to Alllaoee I l art Kerf, teoieties. pais rer noe an m Mfta lea a, SeifeOa, Nee. Utf k 4. ' , W. HmiMi, Prep! rleter. Market end Office 1218 0 St , Lincoln, Neb. We pay the blirhest market pi ice for Hops. Cattle. Ca!ves nd Sheep, and it'll at Living Prices. We Handle Nothing but Eome Dressed Meat. All persons having fat butcher Btock are requested to (five us a call. Our mono Is to "Live and Let Live." A Square deal and correct weight, ltf BKENNAJf SHAFKK BROS., Propr'a. J. GL.1E Gu SO. 1630 O Street. First Class Horse Shoeing. I guarantee to stop all Interfering. Par ticular attention given to lame, and stumbl ing horse. Every description of blacksmlthing- and repairing. ' - Plow Work a Specialty. Give me your patronage. Batlsfactloc uaraated, 4-'tf Mortgage Sale. Kotice is hereby iriven that by virtue cf a chattel mortirage, dated Oct. 2, ltW, and duly tiled In tne office of the County Clerk of Lan caster County. Nebraska, on the 2utb day of Oct, M and executed by Carolina M. Linob and O. A. Llndk to Lylia K. Koirers, to secure the par men t of the sum of (1 k CO acd upon which there Is now duq the rum ot fl37 74; default baring- been male in the pay ment ot tatd turn, and no suit rr other pro ceedings at law having been Inotituted to re cover aaid debt or any part thereof, therrore t will aeli the property therein described vlr: Tne undivided one-naif interest in Livery and reed barn, (kion as the Checkered tarn) blacksmith rhop and sheds situated on lot (Done, block iHi) thirty, that is to lay on lots located on N. K. corner of block 30 in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county. Nebraska, at public auction at the above described place in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster eoun ty, Netrafka.cn the 12th day of A up., lxttl. Wm. B. P.mci, Asslnee. A. It. Beach. 6-it Notice of Sale. In the mutter of ke application of ijiicy noppe ana nepry tioppe. iruar-jiant ot the minor iieirt of tbe estate of August Hcppe. -deceated, lor license to sell rtl estate. Notice is hereby riven that In pursuanceof an order ef A. w. Held Judtreot the District Court of Lancaster County, made on tke Irith day of July. A.I). )MI, for tho sue of tue real estate hereinafter described, there will b sold at tne east door of the County Court bouse of Lancaster County. Nebraska, on the 8th day of Auiusl, A. I). 11, at It) o'clock a. in., at public vendue totheblibest bidder for caah, the following: described real estate, to wit: Low (T seven and i) eiaht In block eifbteen In South Lincoln. Lancaster County, Nebraska, cald (-a If will remain open one boor. Dated this lib day cfJuiy. Ml. Lcct Hurra and Hk.nkt Hoppc, 8 Uuardiani. NEBRASKA MEAT CO I I impor ENGLISH SHIRE AND LINCOLN, : : the coming horse of their class. A I will give present buyers especially low prices.' You can buy on your own terms. ' ,; I IMPORT MY OWN HORSES DIRECT and can and will sell you good animals for less money than non descrint dealers, loblters nn l TwddW. . 1 EVERY HORSE GUARANTEED A sure breeder and pedigreed. No grades handled, ' VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME! Come and see me and a 42tf , I WILL SAVE YOU MONEY' My first importation for 1891 just received and I have some grand animals. ; . O. 0. HEFNER. i i" Leopold barr, Jeweler. The farmers of Lancaster county are cordial ly invited to call on me in my new quarters. a n a a a i i inn i. m ni.inni.- uunin showing them my handsome line of jewelry. watches, clocks, etc., which I offer to members of the Alliance at discount rates. All kinds of repairing at low rates. Respectfully, r nrr t.vm a tvt WHOLESALE -, LUMBER -. AND GOAL Special Rates to Farmers' Alliance in Car Lots. ' " M Rooms 17 and 18 Montgomery BPk. Write for Prices- r)nA'114l n 4 XT Of T innnln WaK I. M.R4YMOKD, .( Lewis Gregory, President. Vice-Pres. AMERICAN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK." ft . ....' -; - y-'- " Lincoln, - - Nebraska. CAPITAL, $200,000. LIABILITY OF STOCK HOLDERS $430,000. DIRECTORS.' I. M. Ratmokd Lewis GRialEr. S. H. Bcrnham. T. W. Lowibi. W. H. McCbubt. ' C. H. Morrill. . A.J. Sawyer, Interest Paid on Time Deposits. nrp rim . Wherever this machine has been tested by competent judg es it has surpassed in every particular in doior work where other machines tVJed. Send for cirtulara. ' LIXC01NR0ADM:ERI.F'6C&,' 6tf v Lincoln. M h. teh or HACKNEY HORSES, : NEBRASKA. I have on haiul larce, stylish. w es ' heavy Toned fcmres with plenty of tjuaiuy ami hciiou, nurses wuicn have demonstrated their superiority in the show yards. HACKNEYS. My Hackneys are large, showy, handsome animals, good individuals, heavy bone and fine action, in fact In order to make room for w m 11 a i m i win i.M.Kn ii hmniith ity LeoTDOld. Barr. S. H. Buknham, " D. (J. Wing, Cashier. Ass'tCash.