0 THE FARMERS' ALLIANCE, LINCOLN NEB. THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 189L f "i i 3 i V World's Fair Notes. Siam baa decided to make an exhibit t Chicago, which shall eclipse the one made at the Taris exposition, where it carried off the honors in the oriental section. Michigan will construct its building wholl of Michigan material, and will send it to Chicago insertions. Welshmen will hold an eisteddfod in Chicago at some time during the expo sition, dispensation permitting them to do so having been granted by the na tional association, which met recently .at Swansea, Wales. It has been decided to have the Ma chinery annex an annex in fact instead of being an isolated structure as at first planned. The annex will adjoin Machin ery hall on the west. The entire struc ture will thus measure 500 by 1,400 feet, and be second in size o jly to the Man ufactures' building, the dimensions of which are 788 by 1,688 feet. With its galleries the latter building will have forty acres of floor space. The first cotton gin, made by Eli Whitney, will be exhibited at the expo sition by the New Orleans Machinery company, which will also make an ex tensive exhibit of cotton g;ns, sugar mills and other machinery. Among the exhioits from Southern California will be a model constructed to illustrate irrigation. A committee (has already been cbosen to prepare it. A genius at Muhlenberg, Pa., has completed a marvelous clock for exhi bition at the fair. Around the dial is a railway track, on which a miniature locomotive makes t he round every five minutes. It requires a magnifying glass to eee the delicate machinery. The oil cups at the journals are se small that nothing larger than ft hair can be in serted. There i a headlight and a bell, flag-holders on the pilot, whistle and everything connected with a locomotive. It has a link motion under the engine to reverse it. The weight of the loco motive if, H pounds and it has been named "The Gem." The owner of a brownstone quarry in Wisconsin has offered to the state com mission for exhibit at the fair, a solid monolith, larger than Cleopatra's nee dle in New York city. The obelisk, when completed, will weigh 400 tons and be the largest mass of brownstone ever quarried. ' drs. Potter Palmer has called upon nen sculptors to send designs in the form of miniature models of the sculp-' ture work for the women's building. The designs must be delivered to Mrs. Palmer's office before Nov. 15 next. One is a group of figures in high relief, to fill the pediment over the main en trance forty-live feet long at the base line and seven feet in the center. The second design of groups of statuary stands Iree auove the attic cornice, rest ing on the base, five feet long, three feet deep and two feet high, sixty feet from the ground. These groups consist of a central winged figure, standing about ten feet high to the tip of the wiugs.and supported by smaller sitting figures. The composition should be typical of womim and woman's work In history. Each design submitted must be accom panied by an estimate of cost, with full sized plaster models, delivered at Jack son pack, and the authoress of the de sign accepted will receive the contract tor the execution ot these lull-sized models. A magnificent microscope has just been completed by the Munich Poeller Physical and Optical institute for the g -eat Chicago Exposition, at a cost of $8,750. It possesses a magnifying power of 11,000 diameters. As might be expected, electricity plays an impor tant part in the working of this gigantic instrument, which, after inspection by American citizens, is expected to give an impetus to the Munich mart for sci entific apparatus. The electricity fur nishes aul regulates the source of light, which pi iced in tho focus of a parabolic aluminum reflector reaches an intensity ot li.UUU candle power, lhe electricity also provides the means ot an ingenious automatic mechanism for the centering of the quadruple condensers and ilium' inating the lenses. There is an arrange ment for the exact control of the lis tanceof the carbon point. The most important novel feature is the cooling macnine, wnicn is indispensable on ac count of the extreme heat, 1-43 calories per second, generated by the intense il luminating arrangement. A machine regulated by a Helmhotz electric cer trifugal regulator provides the several microscopic and polariscopic systems of the apparatus with a tine spray of fluid carbonic acid, which immediately after its release from the copper vessel in which it is held UDder a pressure of 23 atmospheres, becomes converted into p aseous matter so intensely cold that only .0007 gramme of carbouic acid per second is required to give the result. The magnifying power of the apparatus with ordinary objectives, as has been stated, is about 11,000 diameters, but with the ofl immersion it can be in creased to 10,000. Volves in the Fold. To the Independents of Kearney County: It is a fact that there is a well defined plan to betray independents in o the hands of the old court house ring, and thereby kill the , people's movement. The modus operandi is to take or coax the nominee into some corner and there en deavor to discourage him by making him belie? i that he has no chance of election, thut many of the independents are opposed t) him, and that such an independent precinct is talking up an other mai for the place, and that it re- quirus great shrewdness and a master mmd with a large influence to couater act it, (and they alone possess such;) lut by consenting to be bled and saying nothing during the campaign, that all perhaps would perhaps be well. The independent candidates that have un held our banner and refuse to make any compromise have to go through this hellish ordeal at the hands of men from whom we expected better things. This is the way men of the people's choice are encouraged. I hope that none of our men on the ticket will get weak kneed. We have those traitors spotted, - and the banner will be kept floating in the breeze until victory crowns it in November. Therefore be on the look out for those areh traitors, and we ask the hearty co-operat'.on of all classes of honorable men to establish justice to ourselves and our posterity. Yours, ! P. ll. Diuscoix, Ch'r'm County Central Com. We want you to ask your grocer for German and insist upon having it. It is the best made. For sale by all first class stores, Gehman Yeast Co., 0 Omaha, Neb. Second hand bo oks. All kinds bought, sold, or exchanged. Lincoln Hook Ex- c! anga, ll'J north 13th St. 13 4t THE REVOLUTION IS ON. Farmart Coming With tha Light ot Battle la Their Face. The Chicago Express contains the following editorial: The revolution is on. The hour has struck. 'The judgement is set and the books opened. " The time of the dividing the sheep from the goats, or rather the sheep from the wolves (what harm have the poor goats done?) has come. The fire shall try every man's work of what sort it is. The wood, hay and stubble inferior material shall be burnt up. The plain people of the United States (at least such as are not already the whipped curs of Eastern slaveholders), have determined that something must be done. They find themselves devoured, root and bransh by a pestiferous horde of noxious insects, individually weak, but strong in numbers and breeding rapidly. "Hear this ye old men, and give ear all ye inhabitants! the land! Hath this been in your day, or even in the days of your fathers? Tell ye your children of it and let your chil dren tell their children, and their chil dren another generation! That which the palmer -worm hath left hath the locust eaten; and that which the lo cust hath left hath the caterpillar eaten!" Do the people desire to have it so? No. There is a gathering again of all the clans of freemen. They are not led by beardless boyish enthusiasts, but by middle-aged men "with the light of battle in their faces." Men wfto aforetime "mounted the immi nent deadly breach" and looked down muzzles of all sorts, from rifles to rifled cannon. Men not to be scared by the shouts of the pampered predatory classes, glutted v.-ith plunder and mad for more. Men with the courage of their opinions, and ready to do and dare all things for the right for truth and justice home and fatherland. Men who have read history, and know that when a nation has arrived at such a pass as ours has reached, liberty and justice are not to be re gained by any boy's play. Men who have read of Lycurgus, Solon, Leonidas, Brutus, The Gracchi, Tell, Winkleried, Cromwell The French Revolution, Washington and John Brown. Men whom the French Revolution has shown that unless oppression is stopped before it grows enormous, the remedies then needed are almost as terrible as the disease. Men who see that already in this countrv, the Black Death of monopoly is so wide-spread, so fastened en the body politic, that only by such severe measures as a graduated property tax, Government land loans and Government control of means of transportation and commu nication can its ravages be stopped. The situation is so alarming that we must disabuse ourselves of the idea that any remedy however slow, will suffice. The hand that attempts to crush the Canada thistle, our pluto cratic oligarchy, must clutch swiftly and have an iron grasp. The strong richEnglish anarchs have got practi cally beyond the idea of forceful re pression of the poor and needy. They let them assemble by hundreds of thousands in Trafalgar Square, and even plunder a few shops before they open their Gatling guns. Dynamite fills them with despair. But our New York oligarchic anarchs are still cock-a-whoop with the idea that they are masters of the situ ation. Their thousand millionaires are secure in the idea that all their pet regiments of soldiers have now got castles built for them, with four-foot walls, bastions, bomb-proofs, loop holes for artillery and musketry. They tickle themselves with the idea that under the pretence of making ele gant parks thoy have turned Fort Green Park, Brooklyn, Morningside Park in New York, and other such re sorts into fortifications, from which they can sweep the neighboring plains with artillery. Then they have the "finest police in the world" an immense army of jan issaries, paid just four times what the London police get. But what signifies all that; the ballot and not the bullet Is what they have to fear. Much of their fancied security comes from their being deceived by their lying news papers into thinking that they are not thieves; and that the sympathies of all "the best people" of the world are with them. They will soon have a rude awaken ing from this dream of peaceful spoli ation. That most dynamical of dyna mites, the ballot will soon be buzzing about their ears like the cinders of Vesuvius around . luxurious, sinful PompeL "The Farmers are Cominsr!" THE ALLIANCE. The Independent New Britain, Conn. : The government now loans its money to the national banks at one per cent. Why kick when the farm er wants to pay 2 per cent and give gilt edge security? The Oregon Alliance Herald: The most dreaded class of people at the present time are the very rich and the very pcor. The former because they will become pompous and tyrannical, while the latter become desperate through want for themselves and fam ilies. The People's Paper: The Weekly Union, Butler, Mo., published the re vised list of . Missouri reform papers. These make a formidable array. Of the whole force there are but two or three which are not solid upon the re form platform. The good crop year is here, but the people are not sliding back into the old parties as the false prophets have said they would do. The Kansas Commoner: This ij the time of the year that you can see the averages politician of the old school, wendine his way over the hills and through the corn fields and taking the early morning trains out to our neigh boring towns. Informing the dear peo pie that they want this office or that olEce. some of them going so far as to write to certain Alliance men that they would come to their school house to.speak, provided they would come out to hear them, why of course the Alliance boys will go and hear them, for no doubt they will make good Al iance speeches just now, but the Al liance men will keep on sawing wood. and when convention day comes round thev will let the offico hunt the man. SOME SUGGESTIONS. Daw Willis? All Eaaatka Ara ta Tall w:i tt Wa Should Do. Reader, did it never occur as singu lar to ycu and excite your wonder to see how earnestly an enemy of the Al liance tells what the order starid out to do, explains what he is willing it should be, and prophecies what alarm ing disasters will follow unless it does what outsiders insist it shall do? Of course you hap. writes Sunbeam in the Weekly Toiler. He is hero, there and everywhere. Did the thought ever cross your mind that he was a money-lender, or one who got his sup port directly or indirectly from the money-lender? It Is not strange that he should insist so strongly that the Alliance did not start out to be a polit cal party? Of course he does this without believing this is a free coun try and that a body has a right to go into politics if it wants to. Ho. like many members of the order, has not read and remembered that part of the official declaration of the purposes of the Alliance which says that the order will make demands of every political party for needed reforms, and that if its demands aro not granted it will choose the candidates and fill the of fices. Selah! Ho is quite willing that the farmer should organize a society to study out the problem of how to make two stalks of wheat grow where onco grew one, while he studies a plan of how to buy both at a less price than one once sold for. What is this man up to? Ho is looking after his own interests, and the farmer had better keep a sharp lookout for his. He lends the farmer some assistance if he is well paid for it gets very friendly and confidential coddles him while making the crop, all the while telling him how truly he thinks the laborer ought to have his rights and how much he would like to see him rich and pros perous, and then when the harvest is over he wishes to say which is each one's share. Ah, there! lhe farmer sees that after he has run down the eame this king of men interferes and takes the lion's share, leaving nothing for the hungry farmer but the horns, hoofs and hair, and if he protests and claims the right to decide what shall be a share, the old "boss" roars at him the question: "Do you want to bust up the party?" What! Shall the self-anointed turn up the nose, curl the lip and affect to look down on you with contempt be cause you dare to take a hand in your own country's government? By the eternal it Is time you whet your toma hawks and scalp the head of every one of such who sticks it up for office, for they have certainly ground their scalp- ing-tnives to raise your hair whenever they are able to do it I his you should never forgot Farmers, open your eyes! Do not think because these men have been trained to be glibber of speech than you that they have bettor minds and principles any more than you would believe a sleek and well-groomed horse is stronger and faster than one uncur ried. And remember that whenever one of these men corners you and makes you apologize for or repudiate the sub- treasury, that when you turn your back he smiles significantly and says: "Here is one more fellow I lead with his nose between my forefinger and thumb." Let that thought be in del Holy Impressed -upon your memory. You should stick up for your order, for it is sticking up for you. Surely you are not expecting Wall street or any of its pets to do it? Never fail to mark out and hold In contempt those who disgrace the form of man and like a big yellow dog perfer to fawn and lie at the feet of those Judases, who have other answer to make to the de mands of the Alliance than to jeer at the whiskers of our leaders. So did the impious at the beard of our Savior. They siap you in the face and declare they will kick you out of the party. Have your mild manners and protests increased their respect for you? No. Now mark you, if you want people to respect you, you must make them doit Tho battle is on. Prove you are no skulkers. Draw your swords and prick those bladders of gas. Don't be afraid to accept the sub-treasury, for it is cominsr as certain as death and taxes; the old bosses are secretly patching up a substitute, and we will finally have it from them by force or from the Alliance by favor. We OTmt Be Aggressive. We must be aggressive. Let us move forward, not backward. If we assume the defensive, we will be driven out of the fight We have been asking re dress for our grievances tor years, but now we demand it and it must come. Instead of sending petitions to con gress, we propose to send men, brave and true, who know what our interests are, and how to guard and protect them. The people are in earnest and something must be done. They have grown weary under the yoke of op pression, and they now demand econ omic reform, Thev believe that the laborer is worthy of his hire;" that be deserves something more than mere subsistence when he toils late and early, year in and year out They have been led of late years to seriously doubt whether tfiorc is enough virtue and patriotism left among the con trolling classes to perpetuate our free institutions. Alliance Echo. The Fear of Paternalism. Those who express so much horror of the paternalism involved in the proposition of government ownership of the means of transportation and communication, have no fears of the centralization of power in the hands of a few irresponsible men resulting from corporate control of the same franchis es, and the absorption of more than one half of the aggregate wealth of Lhe entire country by less than 50, 000 , eople. Which is more dangerous to American liberty, this latter paternal ism or the paternulism of a'.l the peo- nlo. Tor"V(i flv"''. ; Almost the Sauie state ot Affairs KxUt- ed There Yean Ago. Almost the same state of affairs reigned in Switzerland fifty years ago that we have at present in the United States. The usurer and the party in power worked hand in hand. Their object was to usurp ty the k-gal mode of usury, the control of tho farms of the country, and they had almost suc ceeded, when the people arose en mase and said at the polls of 1816: "No, further! This is a country of free men and free we intend to remain." When grayhaired men that had sup ported tho G. O. Fj all their lives stcjp- ped out of the ranks and enlisted la the liberal party. Patriots were elect ed to hold the government reigns in their strong, willing hands. They devised a plan by which the mort gages on the farms could be lifted. A government bank was established. But where to get the money to loan to the people? Staemplel the great leader, found a way out of the diffi culty. The people alone have the power to create money. They en trusted us as their representatives to use this power for the welfare of the country. W e have no gold nor silver, but we'll find s substitute. And thus the government bank notes were is sued. Now, the Shylocks saw their danger ; the? perceived if this plan was successfully put in operation their power was gone forever. By every means this newly created money . was fought But the people at large said. This currency shall be a legal tender for all debts, be they private or pub lic" And how did they circulate these newly -born children of necessity? As said above, the new party passed a bill by which a government bank was to be established. And in this bank the government notes were deposited for circulation. To tills institution the owners of land could come, and after proving that their holdings were not mortgaged for more than half their actual value, receive a loan thereon. And if the land was mortgaged for less than half of its actual value, the gov ernment bank would buy the mort gage, and then make a new. contract with the mortgagee. The Shylocks that owned the mortgages would not accept these strips of paper stamped with the government seaL , However, when they were given to understand that they must take It or nothing, they very gladly acoepted It. On what condition did the farmers secure a loan from the government? The mortgage was issued on thirty years time, at 3 J per cent interest the borrower to pay one-thirtieth of the principal back annually. National Economist More Moner Wanted. From one of those profoundly wise reports which eastern mercantile agen cies send out legularly every week we select tho following specimen chunk: With business in many lines dis appointingly dull tho feeling of confi dence,' nevertheless distinctly in creases 'that the country will be able to sell such vast quantities of grain abroad and to draw so heavily upon foreign supplies of capital that all home industries will be greatly stimu lated. Monetary difficulties are still in . the future, for though at some southern points markets are tight, supplies at western centers are ade quate for legitimate business and mere speculation gets less help than usual." Business is "disappointingly dull!" yet still confidence increases. In short times are hard and mer chants are on the verge of bankruptoy but they are still whistling to keep their courage up. But here is the Item which im pressed us most forcibly: "The country will be able to soil such vast quantities of grain abroad and to draw so heavily upon foreign supplies of capital that all home in dustries will be greatly stimulated." - In other words, to tell the ; exact truth, by robbing ourselves of breaJ stuffs, which are sadly needed at home for even Ingalls says that 15, 000, 000 people in the United States are in a state of starvation from one years end to the other we can get capital (mon ey) enough to use ' so that our indus tries will be greatly stimulated." It is money, then, that we want? So says every sensible man in the United States. Then, instead of robbing ourselves of bread stuffs to exchange for foreign 'capital" why not let the government issue a few hundred million dollars of greenbacks? asks the Sentinel. The farmers would be glad to get them. Merchants would gladly aoeept them. Workingmen would gladly accept them. Only Shylock, who demands a gold contract in his bond and mortgage would object to them. Tbe War to Do II What lions are in the way as soon as the people prepare to do anything for their emancipation. See the lions that spring up to stop government ownership of all means of transporta tion. "The granting of it would make the government own all the steam rail roads and electric lines in the country, and steamers and sailing vessels of all sorts. Such ownership and control would include land traffic and trans-, portation by lake and river, and the coasting as well as foreign trade, ferry boats, stages, and omnibuses. " Why didn't the fellow include all the skiffs and bicycles and baby wagons? Wo the people would control such portion only of transportation as we were pleased to, not lucludlng vessels running to foreign ports, at present. Government could get the money to Buy the railroads very handily by a graduted property tax on the multi millionaire. Percy Daniels of Kansas figures up two billion dollars the first yea as the return from a reasonable tax of that sort, SentineL Itlan Or Honey. It looks as if the prime Issue in pol itics in this country will sooner or later be "man or money." Thon choose which you will serve. If you believe In Alliance principles you can not vote for the money power or for the candidates of parties that uphold it. Industrial people must stand on thoir own ground and be true to their own interests. The money power will need no prorantinz in this respect It will look out and take care of itsolf. Industrialists must do the same if they would protect themselves and survive the capitalistic depleting pro cess now going on. The National View. A Potent Influence. The laws of every country have pro ceeded from the Interests of the legls lator, the demands of the hour, or to ' meet the exigencies of ignorance or 1 superstition. The interest of the leg ' islator has been the most potent Influ ence' in every country; for that rea ! son the interests of every vocation and , business should be represented in every legislature, in the ratio that the ; interest of each bears to the aggregate. It Will Prevent Hog Cholera. THE Western Stock Food Is tks (Tea Mat taoorary ef the aire for Horui, Cattle, Stop. Hop mi Poultry. f It Is a aatural remedr an' prerentetlTe ot SImmm ( the blood and eleeetWe orf aas, t sot freely oo the liver and kidneys; tend to tons ae the whole animal trite oa and M a sure arat enUUre ef Hoc Cholera. 1 lb., SHIh ad ilk. bom at Me, 0e. aad 91M reeaee tlrelj. Manufactured only br WISTSBH -TOOK FOGp OOXPAVT, Bloomfleld, Iowa. Istherstitnated loss to the Farmers la tbe Unite-J States from RAVAGES ITAfl fWfllH OF I1UU MIULMIA. Allot which can be tared by the purchase of Dr. D. L Snediker's Book on Hog Cholera. Tt tall, mil tho rAVSK h in4 han f tells you now to PREVENT anil CD KB tbe disease, botli in Hops and Poultry. It foils how to set eirtrs to raise Hullet or Cockreli. If any purchaser of thii book doe not feel they have Bad value received, we will refund their money. We refer you ta the editor of. this paper and four Banks In Emporia. Stamps not taken. Address. ut.u.L.iiiKt.it, Prlre, an. OO. Kmpurla, Kan. Haaff's Horn KILLER. t . - u ft fax f I Who Invented and art of dt'hornlnir their cattle? Answer, H.H.UiFF. ! it any wonder then that he has the only afe and sura medicine to stop hora growth on calves. 6eud a stamp for a thousand tes timonials In Us favor. It makes no sore head and is always sure. Prioe. T60U per bottle post paid, aud enough for 75 es Ives. II Ailerons. II. 11. HAAIP, Vhlcas-o. 111. Oxford and Hampshire Down Rams for Sale. K( ME '-.RAISED AND IMPORTED. Write for particulars to . BANKS WILSON, 13-lm CKKSTON. IOWA. H. M. GITTINGS, DISCO, ILL., TREKDEK of Aberdeen- jLAngrus cattle 01 ine Keillnr-Watson sorts: com- foeed of Prinoess. Favor le. Mayflower. Kinoohtrr Baronew. eta. Choice rounir bulls ready for service for sale at prices within the reach of all persons wanting a "dehorner." Write or come aud see me. Mention this paper. 11-U The Iowa Steam Feed Cooker. Tbe most praotioal, most convenient, most eoonomi cal, and in everyway the BEST STEAM FEED COOK EK MADE. A glanoe at tbe construotlen of it Is enouirh to eonvinoe an man that it is far superior to any other. For descrip tive circulars and prices apply to Mamtih STEAM Fkbd Cooker Co.. Omaha, eb. SOtf J. M. ROBINSON KENESAW, ADAMS CO., NEB. Breeder and shin ier ot recorded Po- and China boirs. Choice breeding itoo ror saie. Write for wants. Mention Allianoi. GREENWOOD HERD or ENGLISH BERKSHIRES, S. T.JAMES, Prop'r, Greenwood, Neb. Pip for season's trale sired by Proud Duke WNil, the winner of the Silver Medal riven by the Berkshire Association for the bent B. Sig raised in Iowa in Also winner ef the weepstakes Prize in class tha same vear. Alfo pifrs sired by i,nmpion Aune anai, ne by Diamond Duko satM. he bv Gentry's old noted LonKf el low HoirlOKE. Pl of elf-er sex for sale Write lor what you want. Sat isfaction guaranteed. . s-.lin Mention the alliance when vou write. Sjnan YorkshicfCi W.S.COLE 4. SON Mason city, low. OOMCBPOHOENCE OlKtTtO. GOLD FINDER. THOROUCHBRED LARGE ENGLISH BERKSHIRES. Stiflt for sale (either f ex) tbe iret of foil choice males, f rontf ons of equal meri t. Res families represented; prices riffht. Mention alliance wjon writing. H. 8. Williamson, iieaver uuy, neo. W1UUT 6R0TE HERD. 200 POLAND CHINA HOGS. Our plsr crop this season is the best we have ever raised. Wo have fifty splendid boars of March and April farrow, with plenty 01 Done and (rood quality, and about sixty (flits out of first class sows and got by such boars as Way Up 4Hl (8) and King Rival. We are now I ooklng; orders. Onr Herd Is built up of the choicest blood and will bear inspection. Come and see us or write at once. BRANSON & BUFF, 12 2m Wavetly, Nebraska. Farm t l-H milts Southwest of Waverly. GTHE BEST Coryea Caponizing Sets Best and cheapest on the market. Sold by. C D. CURYEA, Htf Greenwood, Neb. Carter & Bailey, Commission Merchants, 125 101829 Hotih 16th St., Unco!.. Nil. DEALERS IN Butter, eggi, cheese, patatoei. poultry haj, grain and live stock. Farm Produce i Specialty. M Eefsrence: First National Bank. "STEEL WONDER" FENCE MACHINE. Runs eas'iy weaves rapia'y. The best steel tn.iehlne made. , w h o 1 1) s ale prices where we have no trenls. r relirbt raid Airt's wanted. Send 1 for circular to the Mention tbis paiur. uoshen r enoe fl.to Oeshen, Ind 1 1 1I J 5L 7 ALLIANCE STATE BUSINESS AGENCY. STATE AGENT'S OFFERS FOR THIS WEEK: Roller Mill Flour per 100 lbs. tl 50 California dried Peaches per lb I 12r Snow Flake " ' " 2 00 " Prunes " 10 20,000 lbs Pic Nic 2 20 Breakfast Coffee " Jl 10,000 " Minn. Patent Lily Gloss Starch " 7 best in the city " " " 8 80 Elastic " -10 Bran " " ' , 60 Pepper "18 Shorts ' " S3 Cinnamon, Cloves, Mustard Car Glidden painted aad Cream Tarter per lb. 25 hog and cattle wire " " " . 3 85 Baking Powder 5 to 4 Sets. Staples 81c per lb. Finest 3 lb cans Tomatoes per doz. 1 CC Granulated sugar " " " 5 00 " " Sweet corn " 1 CO Spreckles C " " " " 4 00 " " Bl'k berr's " 1 75 Extra C " " " ' 4 75 " " Cat grapes " 1 75 Fine uncoldred Japan Tea per lb. 25 " " Pie Peaches ' 1 60 Corn Chop " " " 50 " " Table " " 1 75 Finest Imported 45 " " G. G. plums " 175 Silver Rice, a new article ' ' Succotash " 1 25 very nice ' 5 " " Salmon " 1' 60 Flake Wheat " 4 Rockford one-half Hose " 75 " Oats 8 very best " " 110 Michigan Dried Apples " 6 The best Sewing Machine in the State T) Fillers' AltliBCI at f io.oo. or tio.co at factory. A good one at 15.00. Fully warranted. Our inside prices are for members of Alliances only. Write us for any thing you eat, wear or use. . W. HARTLEY, State Agent Cash to accompany all orders. 4-it Lincoln, NebJ 0. 0. HEFNER, IMPORTER ENGLISH SHIRE AND LINCOLN, : : the coming horse of their class. A URGE INPOHTATION I will give present buyers especially low prices, on your own terms. I IMPORT MY OWN HORSES DIRECT and can and will sell you good animals for less money than non descript dealers, jobbers and peddlers. EVERY HORSE GUARANTEED A sura bryeder and pedigreed. No grade? handled. VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME. Come and see me and 2tf I WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. My first importation for 1891 just received and I have some grand animals. O.O.HEFNER. THE PERKINS BOSS HUSKERS AND HAND PROTECTORS. Cut shows atyle A. THE BEST HUSKER IN THE WORLD. Manufactured by the H. H. PERKINS MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Kewanee, Illinois. F. W. HELLWIC. Lincoln. Special Agent The Lightning Hay Press. A. H. SNYDER, STATE 807, 809 NORTH I6TH ST. We Handle Bale Ties, Coil Wire Always Kept on Hand. flay arid Grair. f4apded ip Gar tots. ' ACME" HAY STACKER AND SWEEP RAKES. Tn.hlP.1 man and OUr JttaKCS, Knthles 1 man and $aw " 2 to, li put ,. x lay lta&es . up 20 tons ot ana hay a day 1 1 l ElT, " -n .E- iS-si'laa7W i I LI JU. AT1 .C .VTITB FOR POSTSR. CHt."!, FCLl PARTICULARS. koorlal rrire for lntrodaotlen. Addreas, 3 Earnest Street- OF HACKNEY HORSES, : NEBRASKA. I have on hand large, stylish, heavy boned Shires with plenty of quality and action, horses which 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 You can bay W also make t y 1 es B and A . Pins are forte e d from steel, strapped with best grade of soft tough leather. Are perfectly asy and adjustable to any hand. Covered with four patents. Guaranteed to be 12tf AGENT, OMAHA, NEB. and a Full Line of Repairs 614m UUAH.AIMXin' eF"ul l" ""J""'" , . tv... A.i Hiiat uiwio,-! sauira v, ; . I . A .aVah An AM manure as Bpnujr wuin ira 40,000 DUJjD 1 U 1 HIS UCjOM. r njixi..' in tne lanti. I Gathers hr J CT.KAN froiw AW u a had. ACME HARVESTER CO- Pekln, Illinois.