THE FARMERS' ALLIANCE, lilNCOhN, NEB.. THURSDAY MAK. 10, 1H92. i FQfi AND ABOUT FARMING. JNSTRUCTrVE MATTERS FOR IN DUSTRIOUS FARMERS. Beginnlnsj With BaesScab f Po tatoes and Rocta Hena or Pu!ieta for Laylng?--To . Tall Good Seada from Bad. Beginning- With Bees. TUere iswonderlul difference betweeu the horM-y yields of different localities; one mnn may report: "I never had a greater crop;" while another will say: 'My bees have done scarcely any thing." There are localities! wherecomb honey cannot le profitably produced, and others where it will not pay to rim for xtrated honey; in most cases A judicious combination gives best re sult. Comb-honey is largely sold by Us r.ppea ranee; therefore choose a lo cation where honey plants are such as to produce the finest and best honey. If possible, locate near larje alfalfa fi4da; or whta-e the mountain sides are covered with the different species of aa.ee, or in places where California lilac abounds. An apiary should be located in a valley, so as to give the beesaprenter range of night, ihe awarraiut! tendency is more or less governed by position of the apiary. If well shaded, and aJou some river bottom swarming , vin 1m controlled very easily. -If in a ' mountain or foothill country, you will have abundance of swarms, and tiie main difficulty in locations like this is to keep them from swarnimg too much. To get stocked up with bees better go to some successful be keeper up with the times, and pur chase from him three or four colonies in movable frame ' hives. It is best not to start with too many, but learn as yoii go.) . The debated question. "Which bees to start with?" is of little mo ment to a beginner; After you find out your location, theHi try the different races until you find one that suits you.- Some races of bees do well in one location soma in another. After getting your beea home and on their permanent stands, read some good book on beekeeping and suscribe for one or more good papers. I tbrnk a bee journal of more impor-tance-than a bee book, because the journal is constantly presenting the new and valuable discoveries made by ttie most progressive apiarists ot theday. Bee culture could only be learned by stifdy and practice. . Learn : the principles from fhe books and pa pers, then practically apply them; visit some successful apiarist. One visit will sometimes be worth a good many dollars to a beginner. After yqu are started well study your mar ket; try and build up a good home market. Sell nothing but a good ar ticle, thoroughly well ripened, and in a neat, attractive shape. Try find have all your honey first class. Iloney should be lelt in the h'i.ves until thor oughly evaporated and all sealed up. Do nob extract-before it is all capped. Try and use a one-sized frame throughout Uio apiary; two or more sized frames are a great bother. Pa cific Kura) Press. Scab of Potatoes and Roots.-. Extended experience with the scab (eads the Nortgi Dakota Experiment Station to the fallowing interesting conclusions: Scabby "seed" tubers under ordinary cireu instances produce a deceased crop. 2. Seed potatoes free from scab upon soil free from the disease will produce healthy potatoes. 3. The disease germs can remain in the ground from one crop to another. But not the least interesting is the demonstrated fact that by soaking the seed in certain chemicals before planting an undiseased crop can be grown from the scabbiest potatoes, provided the soil be free from the scab germs. The point is to kill the ad hering germs and not retard the growth of the tuber, and for this the treatment recommended is with corrosive ' sublimate Mercuric bi chloride. In the first place the seed to be treated should be thoroughly washed in a vat of running water or iu a tub by frequently ' changing the water. Only the fairest of potatoes should be retained. For the treatment obtain a barrel and place in it 13 gals.. of water. Dis solve 2 ozs. of the sublimate in 2 gals, of warm water, add this to the barrel and stir for a tune. Into this solu tion place the washed potatoes for an hour and a half. The liquid can be used-for further potatoes. After the treatment the tubers can be cut and planted in the usual manner. The siibstanceemployed is a strong poison and great eare needs to be taken in its use. A similar scab is found on beete f various sorts and as it is urObablT the same, it is unwise to raise potatoes on the same land suc cessively u thej are senboy ana it fol lows that beets should not follow - siudiby potatoes. It is probable' that othej root crops are infested with the fungous disease, and likewise it is to be expected that other preventatives will be foand effective. Dr. Byron D. Haleted. Contrast of Collars. A cellar built with too little expense U generally costly adjunct as long a it lasts. The walls are often not thick enough or properly mortared to make them durable and frost-proof. A mere breaking of joints without us ing mortar in the middle of the wall will not hold it firmly together. A poorly built cellar, while it lasts, in curs a necessity for banking every au tumn, when a quantity of manure or straw is placed between the house aud an unsightly fence surrounding it. The following spuing this must be drawn away and a. general scraping given to the ground it occupied. Pro viding a harbor for rats and mice and the killing of all the grass near the house are among the exterior effects. The contents of the allr are liable to freeze in very cold weather unless a lire be kept burning, which incurs ex pense,' bother and danger. The modern cellar waT! is built about 2 ' ft. thick and mortared throughout above a lme ,4ft. from the bottom. The top is extended to the floor above, against which it is snugly pointed. No banking outside and no stove or frost inside. .Windows double-pane, well puttied and fitted remove the necessity of a candle on entering. It is Important' to give Uie ground surrounding the house a good grade atid provideeave'roughx for the hotiea. also the earth in contact with the wall may become saturated with water, admitting frost mora readily than a merely ntoit soil and inore ing the liability to heave the wall in ward. A cement lloor that may be readily cleaned with nion or fciooru: and that excludes vermin is a we!-; come improvement. Uie destruction in a single year oi iruits, potatoes anu vegetables by rats and meadow-moles would go far toward meeting the ex pense of a floor to exclude them. Clark M. Drake. To Te!! Geod Seeds From Bad, The Germantown Talegraph gives a test for the vitality of seeds which we do not remember having seen in print before. Corn is taken as the sample, but the fact are true of ail grains. All seeds may be divided in to three parts, the germ, the body and the 6kin. The germ is the part which contains the life principle the part which sprouts, and is therefore the Hie of the seed and of the future plant. Ou the vigor and "perfection of the germ or chit depends the value of the seed. The body is the reserve fund of the germ, which supports the embryo sprouts, both top and bottom, or stem and root, until the root is ad vanced enough to feed upon the soil. During this process the body is gen erally absorbed entirely to support the plant. The skin of a seed is mere ly for protection; it protects the inter ior from undue moister and minor enemies. ' The germ is of amber color, about the consistency of old cheese, and cuts under a knife exactly like cheese.- The body is harder, ol vari ous colors, and much less susceptible to attacks of water or. insects'. These are the characteristics of well-ripened seed, and are invariable. If the seed is caught by frost before becoming ripe, the chit crumbles to a fine pow der and becomes dead. So the test of good seed, sure to grow, is the cheesy character of tke germ; a very simple tiling, easily tested with a sharp knife, and infallible. Hans or Pullets for Laying? Whether to retain the old hens or to hatch early pullets is ona of the un settled questions in keeping poultry, says Poultry Yard. The fact is both the old hens and pullets may be pre ferred, according to circumstances. That the pullets seem to excel the hens at times is true, but the matured hen is better for breeding purposes than the pullet. The hen, after she begiHs to lay," will often grow fat and remain so on a very small quantity of food. It is difficult to reduce a fat hen except by actual starvation, es pecially with some breeds, and this is the difficulty, though unknown to some, that induces them, to discard her for the pullet, as the pullot from doing double duty of laying and grow ing, does not fatten so readily. The chicks from eggs produced by liens are nearly always stronger and more vig orous than those produced by pullets, and the hen lays a larger egg than the pullet. The claim that the tien will not lay as many eggs the second arid third years as the first is not true. The hen simply fattens more readily as blie enters her second year and be comes aged. If fed judiciously, &he should cost less than the pullets and lay more eggs, as well as retain her vigor till she is five or six years old. Western IUirul. Worms at the Root of a Rosa. The small white worms that infest potted plants and eat the roots are the young of a 'smatl black fly that breeds iD manure or rich soil. The flies may be been about the roots on the surface of the soil, and are most easily ' destroyed by pouring strong tobacco water on the earth. There is no need to repot the plants if this remedy is applied. It may be needed more than once, and any flies seen should be caught and killed. The flies, or rather the grubs, are general ly brought in the manure. Another remedy is to dip the pot completely under water at a heat of 100 deg. or as hot as the tinier can 'be : teept iu . it. for a second. Thia will drive out or kill all Einds of worms, and especial ly earth worms, which are often in jurious to plants growing in pots. It is advisable when choosing the soil for such plants to sift it and examine it carefully for these pests, and see that it is tree fi ora them. The first indication of the presence of these pest is the yellowness of the leaves aiid their dropping from the stems. Short Rows, It is estimated from very reliable sources that this season Virginia had 100,000 acres of land devoted to tobacco culture.- Eggs from a filthy and vile-smelling hen house can not be really fit to eat. The quality of eggs is afftcted both by. the food and surroundings of the hens. A correspondent says tha t in sav ing seed corn there are five joints to look at: length of ear, lepth of graiu, 'sniHllnes of cob, wtill fitted ends, and a good place to kei;p it. The Country .Gentleman says an Albany county fanner placed on each bale of hay shipped, tlm information that it was grown on gravelly loam and was fret? from dust and chaff with name and address, and for this got f 1.50 above tho market price. There are some ways, at least, in which more protection would help the farmer. If he would protect hiscattle from cold, storms and winds, his poultry from vermin and his tools and machines from sun and rai-n, it would increase his income aud reduce bis expenses. When cuttings are being rooted by amateurs in small tin or earthen ves sels, placed m sunny windows, the process can be forwarded by painting the receptacle black. The color ab sorbs the heat and imparts it to the sand or earth, thus lacilitating the starting of the roots. . Do not allow the sneep to lie out long in rain or snow. ' When t tie lleece gets filled with either, it takes a long time to dry out and a great deal of animal heat to dry it out. and this heat requires extra feed to keep up. A heavy lleece thoroughly saturated with water is a heavy load for (he ani mal to carry about. THE NICARAGUA CANAL. Tha l-reakleat ut th. Coltfet-aia AltUaai a Ik Bjtjvet. To tha Farmers' Alliance of the state of California. Greeting: It seems to ma that tha time has arrived when I should araln speak to the members of this great Brotherhood -, throughout the 1'acitic coast and warn them against the schemes of certain j parties to attempt to force congress to guaraoteo the bonds of the Nicaragua canal schema Some time ago there was organized la San Francisco what U kuuWu So tu TftuiC Association." It purported to have been organized for the purpose of obtaining some relief from the robbery practiced up on the producers of this coast by the graspia- railroad monopolies entering this state from the Kast, and so far as it worked . on this line, it bad our hearty support But thU association had no more than fairly organized, when it was switched off upon the Nicaragua canal scheme and they appointed a committee to inquire into the matter, and said committee re ported favorable to the bonds bning Issued by the government, and their report was adopted by the association, thus changing the object and Intent of the association from one to give u-t re lief from the pirate railroad corpora tions, to an institution to boom tho Nicaragua canal and they now threat en to inflict upon us a petition for that purpose. Don't sign any such peti tion! We have placed ourselves on high ground upon this question, and we mean to stand there until we get re lief. .. In tho letter to tho chamber of commerce, 1 used this ' language: "About the end of President - Ar thur's term,he entered into a treaty with Nicaragua to guarantee the protection of the canal, but bo fore the treaty win ratified, Cleveland was inaucurutcd aud he promptly withdrew it Warner Miller .and others came before con gress for a charter, pledging1 thenv selves that the government would not be asked for any assistance to build it The charter was granted upon these, terms, which I believe they bad no more authority to giant, without an agreement to defend the territorial in tegrity of the states whero such in terests lie, than they' had to grant a charter to build a railroad from Faris to Berlin. They are now willing to take the government into partnership upon the same old terms what it should furnish tho moans aud the cor poration should pockot the profits. Congress, also- chartered a, "construc tion company" to build a canal. Thw, I suppose, is a kind of a "Credit Mobilior" or "Contract and Finance company. which you have probably1 heard about before, chartered for the purpose of dividing the profits among throe or four of tho principal stock holders. But Miller and others say there is no risk to run by the govern ment . If this bo so, let them put up their private means, of which they have sullicient to build the canal without any aid from the gov ernment. But -suppose $100,000,000 would not comploto the work, tho they would no doubt ask tho govern ment to take a second lien, as in the Pacific railroads and the monoy givon them by tho government would bo used to corrupt the members of con gress as in the former case, and the courts would step in and declare the corporation did not owe the govern ment anything until the bonds wore duo, and in tho end I fear the United States would have to pay the bonds and interest, as in tho Pacific rail roads." In my messages to the state Alliance I used this language, . ' -I placed the .Alliance on the highest grounds in the Nicaragua canal letter to the ckambcr of commerce, viz: That the people of this nation had voted thoir last subidy to great cor porations for the purpose of controlling commerce, or hatching out a new brood of millionaires. That if the gov ernmentdesires to invest $100,000,000 in tho enterprise it must own the canal and run it in tho interests of the people." In my letter to the Bankers' Magazine Sept 15th, lfjtfl. I used this language. 'The people of this great country have voted their last subsidy "' to build up monopolies who oppress taein with the very gifts so generously bestowed. We, believe hereafter when the people furnish the means for the construction of these great public highway thoy should own and control them, and run them in the interests of the people. Wc have already built all tho great pubh highways to the Pacific Coast, and paid for thorn by taxation, and they are now used to oppress tho very people who made the donation, and nro pressing us to the wall with their thieving rates of fares and freighU and while we subsidize the steamships with thousands of dollars every year, they enter into combinations to rob the producers. The Pacific Mail, after receiving subsilios from the govern ment, receives bribes from Huntington & Co. of $700,000 a year to keap up freights and fares by sea. This amounfc . ia addition to the -subsidies, we pay every year in the enhanced price of freights. This canal would be a great benolit to the Pacific if two things were done, and only a curse without them. The ownership of the caual by tho people and tho abol.tiou of tho tariff restrictions on the p:rls of the Pacific states. If these two things are not dono it will make Vic toria the large seaport of tin Pacific coast and enrich tho British empire tit our'expense, and tho great inerchaifs and manufacturers of San Francisco can have the privilege of laying Iwelc and gottinsr rich otf each other b trading jack-knives. No! you may depend upon it, that tho Farmer.' Alliance will never assist, in buil Jin;.' up any more private corporations to oppress them. If it can be built upon the conditions indicated, the Fai-m.-r' Alliance will give it their hearty u; port" From these quotations from public letters and documents it is tils"-" ' be seen where we stand. We don't intend to go into partnership with any more privote corporations to build up the groat public highways of com merce. Especially when wo ' furnish all tho money, and the private corpor ations get all the turkey. Now I say to this canal committee, don't make the mistake of ignoring tho modest wishes of the people. Tbey do not ask the confiscation of the ill-gotten gains of any corporation, but we do demand a fair deal in the I future, and we intend to have it; and ! wo are on the skirmish Hue now, and will not porrait the enemy to intrench themselves behind additional bulwarks in the shapo o'Xicaragua canal bonds, MiRio Caknon, State President Ventura, CaL tl orknn Jlnl S9r. Pis. t'eb. 5. Price a rising rapidly at a mult ot tb new tariff but. Pork and mutton have advanced 3 cants par pound. Italian and Patch rbee have risen 100 per cent- and foreign aoap S00 per cent. The extra cort to workmen for necessities of life is estimated at t franc daily J Yes dispatch. There, now you have It from the Associated Press itself. Thnt dispatch must have slipped through by acci dent for the Associated Press care fully suppresses all such items. But the facts are there all the same. Is it possible that there is a working man in Kansas or the United States that is too blind to see that a tariff takes tho money out of bis own pockot or stom ach? The average laboring man in Topeka pays about $100, a year for tariff. -the mechanic twice that and the fellow whose family expenses are $1. 200 a year puts up about $.!00. The average amount per family ot live in the United States, is :'00. During the campaign of 188 the writer of this asked for ' a quarter's worth ot sugar, in the store of Green & Kale o the North fcldo by snying: Please givo mo 13 cents worth of sugar and 12 cents worth of . tariff. " The form of the request brought on a discussion. To show tho absurdity ot our position Mr. Green demanded: Do you mean to say that but for the tariff -1 could soil you '20 pounds of sugur for -a dollar instead of 12 P" We answered, "Yes, sir. that is just what I say." . He turned from us in disgust too full of contempt to utter another word, ' Last Saturday as Sam Uindmnn was tying us up a quarter's worth of sugar he , remarked: There is just one pound more of ' su gar for twenty -five - cents than you could have got a year ago for fifty. To which we .replied: .'-Yes, but there are still fools in Topeka who will vote for a tariff. . We bustled out lively, for Sam is a good Republi can and will shut bis eyes 'and "vote er strait" evon If It takes the hair off the fellow that cats the sugar. : Tho man who advocate; a tariff is a knave or a fool. The man who . votes a ariff on himself is a fool any . way. Alliance Tribune. , California Fanners AlllanecfJ Many of those who laughed at the Associa ted Press accounts of the convention of the Farmers' Alliance nt . Indiana polls, and were In high gloo' when they heard that the Alliance bad split and lh:it it would fast go to piyeos oftor the con ventioiv which they" be lieved wa9 a failure, are now wearing faces as long and as serious looking as u undertaker at n , funeral whon they learn the truth through the reform press. Thoy bogiu'to rcalizd now that the conven tion was a grand success instead of a failure and that the split, which they thought would break up tho Alliance, did not amount to anything exoopt In purifying the ranks of the Allianco by weeding out tho undosirablo material that had found It way into the or ganiaution. It worries the enemies of the Alliance considerable to think now that they are learning the truth that instead of the Alliance going to pieces it is increasing in member ship and gaining. a stronger foot hold every day. They know thnt the success of the Alliance means death to monopoly and a speedy ending of the unjust revenue that are now oeing derived from the honest labor of the farmer, mechanic and laborer. So it is not to be wondered at that thoso leeches of humanity who are enemies of the Alliance, go about wearing a a long and serious looking face, for they have n good cause to look wor SPECIAL SALE OF ONE HUNDRED CLEVELAND BAY AND SHIRE STALLIONS- All Young, Sound, Vigorous, Fully acclimated, and of highest quality and breeding. Vuttt APRIL 1ST next I will offer special ln uoemente in prices to cloe ont all bit stallions three years old and upwards. They consist of my ewn breeding or those I have Imported young. ud grown ap and dereloped on my own farms without pampering or crowding In anyway. Send fir new illustrated catalogue. WILL ALSO SELL FIFTY HEAD OF CHOICE HOLSTIN FRESISIAN CATTLE AT VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICES. GEO. E. BROWN, : : : : Aurora, Illinois. Aurora is WT miles West of Chicago on the C, B. & Q. an C. A W. W. Railway. 83-8m E.BENNETT&SON, i't LEEDS IMPORTING CO. ; '..''t!' ' f 'jZL "ONLY THE BEST OF STOCK IMPORTED Our an'm's are all ynn. sound a"d Special inducements to ALLIANCE 7 FIRST PRIZES 6 SE :0NI PRIZES at Slux Pa'is 8 ate Fair. sg. SIXTY PRIZES IN ALL. , K. GOODESOUGH, P.es a- Jen. Ma r. . F.COOPEil, 8cy. -Treasurer. 87 m ADRIAN, NOBLES CO., MINNESOTA 1 1 urroBTtas asd aartccas or HORSES. Priis Winntrs at '91. IK upon a vwit to our bara you do a' t find our hoiaea itrktly first elans in ever r- tlcuiar. we will pa? Uie expeneee of the trip. Evi7 hone guaranteed a nrat-cloMa fool rt ter. wtli rire purvhooert a liberal term at anjr Other Brm ia Uie bueiuesa. Rml JPEG GGHUkS, YTJTAITt XvTiLLB. IMPORTER An . BREEDER . FERCREROI HORSES. NO CULLS, None but superior animals to make selections from. PRICES LOWEB THAN THE LOWEST When aualitf la eoiuldared. 40 SELECT ANIMALS 10 ALL GUARANTEED 41) To BMke a choice from. . Come and be oonvtnoed that t meaa basl Beos. Long time, small profits and food hoiaer mar be expected. U-Sm JAMES SCHULZ, J. M. ROBINSON ; KENESAW, ADAMS CO., NEB. 'i ' n Breeder and ship- Iierof recorded to and China hogs. Choice breed! ni took for Sale. write for wants. Mention ALUAaca. THE BOSS SPRAYER A new and complete spraying- outfit for orchard ani"vlneyrd me. Also Invaluable for (aniens and all kind! ef vegetables. Write for information about the destruc tion of the apple worm. Cunoullo and blight. 1M4 South 26th St. CUIITIS Hubbill. 37 U LIbooIoq, Nek. Mention this paper. Tha Iowa Steam Feed . Cooker. The molt 'practical, atoll convenient, moat eoonoml oal, and in everyway the BEST STEAM FHKDCOOK KK MADE. A glance at tho construction of it if eaoufh to - oonvtnee any man that It is far superior to anv other. For descriD- tlve circulars and prices applr to Ma.htih a Morrissy Mf'g Co . . Omaha, eb. Mtf r I FUR HAS mrsft&'m-mA CO. HERD LARGE ENGLISH BERKSHIRES. H.J5 WILLIAMSON, Prop., . BKAVER CI1Y, NEBRASKA. , Thirty choice pigs of April farrow left, also feur litters of June farrow, lnduoements to parties starting herds. Orders booked for sows bred for spring farrow.- Block A No.-li Prices tight' Mention tho Ai-MAMd. Ml CORNISH INDIA GAMES ...V "A UNSURPASSED AS ' MARKET AND FARM FOWLS. . Bggi $2. 00 per 13. 316N.U2dSt. S4-3m RnH fnr efrmtlftl h. P. HA KRIS, - . , Lincoln, Neb. CHEW and SMOKE untaie NATURAL LEAF TOBACCO YOK liOW PRT'KH WRITR TO MEBIWETHKR A Mrlwlll, Tm 3 111 TOPEKA, KAN. Tlie Leading Western I Importers of? CLYDESDALE, PERCHERON AND COACH HORSES. Also Registered Here ford Cattle. 800 MtatlloBt and Mores on hand for immediate shipment. Send for 180 pagellllustrated catalogue, . 1 ' Visitors always weloome. 84-8m ' J tWStablrs Cor. West th and Lin , " from ail depots and hotel run willtln if loss tbna twe blocks of alBee. E. BENNETT & SON. IMPORTERS. 100 BLACK 100 PERCHERONS, SHIRES 1 FRENCH COACH STALLIONS AND MARES ALSO- .Standard Bred Stallions and Mares. i . , .i rosn sioca aiwnys on oauu. free from defeots. Correspondence solicited. CLUBS. V-u wi i save uaey bv conterlng FRANK JAMS, Importer arid Breeder sVh - fa i n r,...-... 1B .r.-.-- I lams' Horses were " In It " t the great HIS I'LYDES, SHIRES Were Winners of. 5X lams is the ONLY Importer in Nebnuk that ' - isui ana toe rankest tmponar oi . September 1891. Grey Horses $300 00 Less Than Solid Colors. Ills Percheron mare won Grand Swseeitahn prize at Kansas state fair in I8U1 tyre? the great Paris Winner "Rosa Banhuer," and 1st prue at a en. state fair, lama CiiaranfPM to show vou the largest collection of first-etas Me Flash Draft Horses of the various breeds, of 3 to years old 1800 to 8300 weigh; and or cheaper than any live imporw or pay Bpeoial Prloea CCnn SsTcd by fcaylsf of I.ra.:. Hdus t want tba aartii and St tsassi. far ftsSX. (jond raannteea every bono reoorrtedoo4' terms. FKAIf K IAMS, WKITK IAMS, st Paul. Neb Is on the B. M. and 0. P.Rr. BU Paul. Nebraska. I English Shire Stallions and Mares. To Intending purchasers of this breed i stock rrom yoarung np, as mere tain we west. . Thoroughly Acclimated. Last Shipment 1ES3. - 1 ; 1 1 Their breeding is from the best strains of prise winning blood in Kngland coupled with superior individual merit. - My imported mares are superior to any in the west; they are all safely In foal. . . All My Stock Guaranteed; And all Recorded , And Imported If van want a Hacknev Stallion. I have and see what I have gat, and if I cannot will pay your expenses, Prices as low as L. BANKS One of the most Reliable and best of Horses in One Mill Frea Depot, CRESTON, IOWA. A large assortment of Porch trons, English Shire, DelKian. Kngllsh Hoekney, French Ooaeh and Htundard Bred. I have the largest assortment of European Breeds of any man Id America. I handle none but recorded stock. All my horses are properly exercloed and fed on oool nutritious food, avoiding all pampering, and undnr no circumstance do I foed warm or hot food, whloh 1 think, are the main reasons why my horses have always boon suooessful breeders Come and visit aiy estibllshtnent I am always glad to show my stock. W ben arriving at Cresto , visitors will please telephone to Crest City Form and 1 will drlva to tor them, , - - . , A few Draft Mares for Sale. Longtime to responsible parties- , EVERY HORSE GUARANTEED A BREEDER AND MUST BE AS REPRESENTED! ; WESTERN HEADQUABTEBS BISTO-T-jISH: SHIRE HORSES AN UNBROKEN RECORD 1890. Lincoln, Topeka and on nri.-ses in 1800. inolndlniif three srrand Sweepstakes aver all breeds. Seven prizes at Nebraska State fair 1801. Seven prices at Topeka, iaclnding grasd Sweepstakes over all breeds in 1881. ' The Rest Stud in the West. Intending purchasers will do well to visit us and inspect nor stock:. Prises reasonable. Terms to suit. Every horse , JOSEPH WATSON & Co , Importers, 17m. LltmtnJtil Gfill311 x orjtsmr uoacn, ueigiau, j!ngiisn , diutb. We have a! war on Jiand a rood assortment named breeds. We meet aii competition and guarantee satisfaction ia ail deals. Our priocs are moderate and flofses Excellent s We airo lonir time and the most Hneral guarantee of any nrm in A inert oa. All horses must be as represented or we will nit allow the purchasers to keep them. 38 Write for particulars. Address, W. J WROUGHTON CAMBRIDGE, FURNAS COUNTY, The Record Breaking. Stud. HACKNEY HORSES. W. M. FIELD BROTHER, Importers and Breeders, Gcdar FHs, Iowa. OUR SHOW RING RECORD AT STATE FAIRS IN 1890 AND 'iSgi: 167 Premiym ; mostly flr,u.) SMver Medils; 21 Seepsskis; 14 D!p!craas and the 1,000 SILVER CUP offered by tho English Breeders of Shire Horses. The Largest and Finest Stud of English Horses in America. 49 Stale Fair Winners on Hand Now. Remember, will sol be Undersold. Stallions and Mares, Each) Breed, All Ages, For Sale. FAVORABLE TERMS TO RESPONSIBLE BUYERS. Special Terms to the Alliances. 100 BLACK 100 PERGEIIROriS, FRENCH, CLYDES&SIIIRES, Kansas and Nebraska state fairs f !. AKD FEStHEROKS Prizes Mostly lsts. . Imported his Partheraxs Iran Fraaes In uiyaes in imu. iaey amvea : All Blacks the best Individual merit and Royal brsedJaa. at Alliance Prices and Terms,. your rare to see taem. to AllianooOo's. WM. BURGESS. BlneMeyMM Grots), Tleba b.ir.npopTIip 4p I can shew thesa as good alolofyoang oy nyseir. - as good as was ever impoited. ' Come show you as good stock as any man the lowest. 17-mfl WILSON, . known Importer and Breeder America. J INSPECTION ALWAYS INVITED. NEVER BEFORE EQUALED, Kansas City State Fairs. 1891." guaranteed as represented. Beatnoei ITetsreuslca W. J. WROUCHTON & CO., IMPORTERS Or - of the above & CO.,i NEB. AND- Rnanh nifiYfilann Ravs J J v