"7' THE FA KM E 118 ALLIANCE, LINCOLN, NEB., THURSDAY MAR. 21, 1892. I I i j Y THE FAKMEU'S COLUMN. VALUABLE SUCOETIONS ABOUT FARM WORK. How to Male an Asparagus Bad Plowing Exprttnnt Fod 1ns Straw to Cattlo Other Valuablo In formation. How to Mate an A a para cu a Bad. What timt used to b made over the preparation of an asparagus bed, to be sure! Deep and laborious trenching and cartloads of manure, involving great amount of heavy toil and large expense, were deemed essential to success in raising the suc culent vegetable. But, most of this was entirely unnecessary, results as satisfactory being obtained at a little of the expense and very much less la bor. It is true, however, that the land for an asparagus bed cannot be too rich. It must also be free from stag nant water, dry and warm. If at all inclined to be wet, it should be tile drained in fact, it would be well to underdrain in any case. If it is desired to have an asparagus bed quickly, plants should be purchas ed, not more than a year old, if they can be obtained, as vkjorous, well grown plants of that age are as Rood as those of two years growth, and less apt to be stunted. ,. Bat thosenwho have, an asparagus bed already growing, and want to plant another,, can afford to wait a year .and., raise plants of 'their own.. Asparagus seed should be sown in rich, mellow earth early in the spring, in rows about fifteen inches apart. They should be an inch apart in the rows, and covered about an inch Tbe first season's care consists sim ply in keeping the soil mellow and free from weeds. The following epringthe plants should be set out in the per manent bed prepared far them. It is some trouble, of course, to tftise one's own plants, and causes the delay of a year if one baa not a bed already. But it is the best way, pro vided proper care is taken of them, to get plants, because they will usually be better than those obtained in the market; and besides they can remain undisturbed in their original bed until the time arrives for trans . planting. . .. - One of the most important points to be observed in setting out the plants is to give them plenty of elbow room. They will give better crops and provide them earlier in the sea son than if closely crowded. As these suggestions are for farmers, with whom saving of.space is of less conse quence than saving of time and la bor, we would advise making the rows not less than four feet apart and set ting the plants two and a half to three feet apart in the rows, so as to admit f cultivation with a horse hoe both ways. With so much space in which to grow, the roots, if strOug at the be ginning, will make a vigorous growin. It is not now considered essential, not, indeed, advisable, to ' set the plants as deep as was formerly rec ommended. , Three or four inches is deep enough. Mark off the rows ; at . the , distance in dicated above with' a 1 common ( corn marker, and set theplants where the lines cross, carefully spreadinc out the roots and "firming"? the soil aboye j them. As the plants are to remain a long time, it is worth while to do the job thoroughly and well. Asparagus is a ; wholesome and agreeable' vegetable, and every farm should have a bed ol it for home con sumption. But, grown in the practi cal way above described, it may be made a source of considerable profit, lor large, tender asparagus shoots command a good price in the market. The best quality is always sure of a quick sale at a handsome figure. Plowing- Experiments. This is one of the practical questions which must be determined by each farmer for himself, or by one enter prising farmer for his neighborhood, when the same conditions exist ' over the same locality. One i former, i whose ; experience i we noted some years ago, seemed to throw absolute discredit on the the ory that deep plowing is best, espec ially in a dry season. He prepared half an acre with great care, manur ing heavily and subsoiling to the depth of sixteen inches. After harrowing thoroughly, he thought the tract was in the best possible shape for giving a fine crop. Another contiguous half acre, which he had not time to pre pare in the same way, was equally well manured, but plowed only two inches deep and given an extra har rowing. Both tracts were planted to corn, which came up well, And for. the first month there was no apparent differ ence between" them. Then a severe drought began, and by the close of Jijly the shallow-plowed part was far ahead of the -other.- August - was dry, and at the end of the month the deeply-plowed tract was suffering bad ly, the leaves becoming yellow nearly up to tha ears, while the other half acre suffered but little. It grew rap idly, and made the best crop of corn on the place or in the neighbor hood. The surface soil in this case was a light loam, quite rolling with a yel low clay sub-soil thirty feet deep, jointed and well adapted for drain ing. On the other hand, an Illinois farmer gives it as his experience that deep plowing is the condition of suc cess with him. A neighbor who Slows not deeper than three and a alf or four inches for corn, gets from ton to thirty bushels per acre, on land of the same quality as his own. He, on the contrary, plows from six to seven and a half inches, and realizes from Cftv-three or four to over sixty bushels to the acre. . . . These illustrations show the neces- sity of careful experimenting on the Eart of every farmer to determine for imself such questions of method. He cannot depend upon the conclusions of some experiment station a hun- Jred or a thousand miles away, as we avs frequently pointed out, although we most not be understood as dispar- aging in any degree the work of those generally useful institutions. The farmer who goes on. year after Tsar, working nis tana in the same rut, resting satiffied with an aver age of eighteen or twenty bushels of corn pr acre, when, by a change of method, he ran, with little, if any, additional labor or expense, secure h:ty or sixty bushels, is doing a very foolish thins, because, if heonly wants so much corn, he ran get it from a smaller area, and with actually Irss labor than by old-fashioned methods. As a ru.e, we believe that deep plow ing will yield the best results, year ia and year out, especially l-n com bined with a thorough system of under-draining. Such exceptions as the one above noted serve mainly to "prove the rule." But let every farm er test the matter for himself, and thus determine whether his soil is one of the exceptions. Feeding Straw to Cattle. The philosophers tell us that a good sized cow must eat 110 pounds of straw a day to support life and as a cow cannot chew up and ruminate this amount of straw it is easily seen why cows are always in such thin flesh when compelled to live on a straw stack. Indeed it is about as much as cows can do to retain their flesh in cold weather on a feed of all the first-class hay they can eat. This, however, is not saying that straw has not its uses in feeding. The feeding value of straw will depend upon the kind of straw and the condition in which it was cut. We never thought much of oat or rye straw for feeding purposes but wheat and barley straw make an excellent ration when rut short say in inch lengths .mode , wet and mixed with corn meal and bran. This of course is the ration for cows in milk, and straw in such a ration . is just about as good as ordinary hay, especially the straw of barley that has to be cut green to prevent the grain from shattering out. If it was not for the barbs on this straw that make it disagreeable to handle and sometimes dangerous to the eyes of the cows, we would just as liuf have it as the ordinary quality of hay. Success Depends Things, Upon Little Success in honey producing always depends on an infinite number of little successes. If we can imagine that our apiary of 100 colonies represents a great factory of 100 hands, every one of them being perfectly drilled and equipped, and capable of performing a certain amount of work, we can see how ibis when one. to. three or; more colonies become demoralized, right at the beginning of a honey-flow. The aggregate business 'suffers in, propor tion to the small failures, if we pre pare an apiary of 100 colonies of the best strain for the honey harvest, we will have to manage them with more than ordinary skill, if more than 15 per cent of them do not waste their time and opportunities, sulking in great clusters on the front of the hive, or by indulging in excessive swarming, or refusing to stay anywhere -long enough to settle down to business. Perhaps no apiary can be managed at times so enectuaiiy as to wnoiiy prevent loss from the causes I have named, but by the proper knowledge of the nature and habits of bees, this loss can be reduced. G. H. Kirkpat rick, in the Indiana Farmer. Dairying In Denmark. Is it true that the Danes have trebled the yield of milk in that coun try in tnree years witn the same num ber of cows. . To be modest in our as sertions, we simply do not believe it. They have, however, dose wonders in this direction, but that is not saying that they have performed miracles, which they would be doing to treble the yield in three years with the same cows. How low down they were in the scale when they began to improve we have no means ot knowing, but to make an increase of one hundred per cent, annually for three years is sim ply impossible. The tact probably is that While there has been a consider able increase in the amount of butter made, it probably has not been more than a third or a half more than or iginally, but the quality has been im proved so as to make it sell for per haps three times .what it originally did. 'What the "three times" figures really mean, in ' all probabilities, is that Denmark now exports three times as much butter in value as it did three years ago, or just before the improvement began. The whole world is indebted to that little country for the light she helped to throw upon the science of butter making. American Dairyman. About Salting Butter, Salting butter in the churn is one of the unsolved problems. Lots of peo ple say they do it and tell how they do it but others say they can not do it that way and get enough salt into the butter to suit customers. It is generally conceded that salting in the churn is always very . light salting, from one-fourth to a half ounce of salt to the pound of butter even though an ounce and a half is put in at the start. Then again how about the second working? Do you do it or not and if not how do you keep the butter from becoming mottled? These are the points that trouble t hose who sueceed to their own satisfaction. Some people do succeed to their own satisfaction but not to the satisfac tion of others. So far, for instance, as the amount of salt that can be got into granular butter the limit seems to be one-half ounce, as that is all the brine will hold that is depended upon for carrying the salt. That amount is not always enough. A Practical Suggestion. A correspondent to Practical Farm er says: Few farmers know that a fine crop of rutabagas can be grown on the potatoe patch. The old way is to sow strap leaf turnips; but 1 think one bushel of rutabagas worth four of turnips. On a half acre of po tatoe ground, after lost hoeing, I sowed two ounces seed of Purple Top Swede, ana when 'digging the potatoes, j was caretui to noe the dire our around the roots. It did not taki four hours longer in digging the hall acre. I have taken from the pater 100 bushels of fine potatoes, and 75 bushels rutabagas. This is better than raising a lot of watery turnips. THE ALLIANCE. The Alliance Leader: Member ship la aa Alliance due not entitle one to benefits any more than church membership entitles him to a seat la heaven unless there be earnest effort alonz the lines indicated by those or ganizations. --Work out your own salvation" is an appropriate motto la both caaea Men who do not expect cows to back up to them to bo milked sometimes indulge In set'ere criiiciam on the Alliance because it bos not ful filled all their expectations ln regard to purchasing good, when they hare never made so much aa a practical suggestion toward organizing this de partment of our work. Kemember we are banded together to mutually counsel, encourage and help in all that is of true benefit to the toiling masse The Advance Journal: It has been a long while since there has been such a cry of 'bard times" in this country. It is a case of wap around." a case of barter on all hands. Money has ceased to fill its functions as a circulating medium for the reason that there is none to circulate. Where has it all gone ia the perplexing ques tion and a question that nearly every one you meet has a different answer la The farmers of the country are not the only ones who feel the pres sure but it reaches into all the walks of life and men who were never known to bo 'short" before are unable to meet the demands upon them. But of all classes no doubt the small mer. chants throughout the country are In the greatest strait and the outlook is most gloomy for many of them. The farmer is not the only one who should bo urging a change ia the financial policy of our government. - The Alabama Mirreri There seems to be a general desire to abandon farming and to engage In other pur suits. ' A great many have been forced by aecessity to make the change and to seek employment of some kind at stipulated wages. What the result will be to them and to their families is yet uncertain. There are many however who should bold firm, and reduce their operations as nearly as possible to a cash basis, dispensing with all hired help, and cultirating only a few acres the first year, to im prove and Increase as their means will justify. . Almost any family can make a good living on ten acres of ground by planting a succession of crops. It will never do to abandon the farm for the town or village at such a time as the present The true plan is to take in the sails and make everything at home. Tire present storm will soon be over, and those who remain upon the farms and redouble their efforts will have no cause to regret their decision. The Lawrenceville Herald, Pa.! What is the needP The classes are opposed to the masses; capital is in control; the few are governing the many! Every reading and thinking man ought to know that the legisla tion of this country for the past twen ty .five years has been almost entirely in favor of certain favored classes, and against the masses. Tke farmer, the merchant and the artisan classes have been powerless to stay the flood of legislative enactments which in ef fect has been to bind them as in an iron yoke. How are the people to take possession of their own? How are they to regain their rights ? In the first place, they must learn to un derstand the condition of the country and its needs. They must have opin ions of their own and be able to de fend them. They must know what they want, and tbey should also know how to get It Every voter should know the industrial condition of bis own country and of the leading nations of the world. He should study the relations ef the people to each other, both home and abroad. He should study the relations of capi tal to labor; the effects of reducing the volume of money, and the effects of dear and cheap money upon the producer, the merchant and laboring man. He should study legislation in all its branches, until he knows what laws will be beneficial to the people and what will be ' injurious to . their interests.- These are all questions of great moment and should be studied carefully" by everybody who is inter ested in free government It gives us men whose sole purpose ia life is either money-getting or pleas ure; it gives us hard, hypocritical, smooth, smiling knaves, who can without a twinge' of conscience, rob widows and orphans; it gives us weak, indolent, corrupt young men, devoid of a single noble impulse, who, as parasites, Invest social life in their insatiate love of ease and bodily pleas ure; it gives us rogues and gamblers, men who trade and live upon the ne cessities of the poor and weak; it gives us in all our large cities armies of fallen women, from whom every ves tige of purity has departed, and who eell themselves body and soul to min ister to the depraved appetites of men; it gives us a still larger army of wo men who live in dens called rooms, and who live on the dregs of life, and into whose existence a ray of the sun light of hope or happiness never en ters. These are the sewing women of the great cities. It gives us little children with deformed minds and bodies, chained to the task of feed ing and tending the iron mecha nism of trade. It gives us, in one word, poverty, that reaches from one part of the civilization to the other, and has outworked itself in these terrible loathsome forms of social life. For there is more deadly poverty than that which Gen. Booth in his "Darkest Days of England." describes. It is the poverty ef the soul, from which all that is great and good and noble and heroio have do parted; ot a life barren of right re sults. And this is what the nine teenth century, with all its inventions, scientific discoveries and intellectual progress has given us. The poverty, suffering and physical and moral degradation of the people are the wit nesses, the visible expression of the doeper and blacker poverty of soul that nearly everywhere exists. It is time that the angel of discon tent stirred the stagnant waters of social life; It is time that the John the Baptist of a new social order preached In the wilderness of human affairs that there is something higher, some thing nobler than money-getting, eat ing and drinking, and their train of A taeUa T Fart, The miners and poor people of Tea newwe are being taxed several thou sand dollars per week for the past few mooths and probably for the ensuing few years to keep a large force of mi litia is the field to protect the ueo of convicts la the coal mines of that statA for non-residHOts and foreign millionaire mino owners. If these coal mines were rigbtiuXy the private property of the men claiming to own them the miners hare no just causa for complaint as the Irish tenant has none if the land of Ireland justly bo longs to the non-resident landlord But if the coal mines of Tennessee were not created for the exclusive benefit of Vanderbilta, Depew and their foreign partners, but are the natural and rightful heritage of the people of Tennessee, the miners who object to being starved to further en rich foreign nabobs are right in morala oven If wrong in law. The problem which now confronts the state of Tennessee must in the near future be met and solved by the other states also. Had the coal mines of Tennessee remained as they once were, and still should be the property of all the people living in that state, no such con II let could possibly ariso. Where any one free to mine coal by paying a specified royalty or rent to the people of the state (the state treasury) as under the system of tax ation advocated by Henry George and his lol lowers, the income from the mines would relievo the people of all other taxation for state purposes, and yet the free miner would make higher wages than now. whilo the consumer would get his coal .cheaper. Every one living in the state of Tennessee would be largely the gainer by such a system and only the non-resident na bobs would' be the losers. All that is necessary to change from the present serf system to one of liberty and jus tice is for tho state to tax coal mines to their full rental value. Are the people of Tennessee too ignorant or too corrupt to do this? Exchange. Veiling for Hold. United States Senator Stewart says: "The New York newspapers are the abject slaves and creatures of the money power which' is exercised through the bankers who control gold. There are a dozen banks in New York which shape tbe politics of the New York newspapers and which have heretofore dominated the finances of the country. These banks have European partners whose interest is that all debts contracted with these banks should be paid in the dearest money. postiblo When the big banker yells for gold the little banks yell for gold. Word is passed to their cus tomers, the merchants, to yell, for gold, and they respond. If the news papers fall to join in the chorus, the merchant shuts off his advertising and the newspaper is done for. There never was more abject , slavery, although it is indirect and impercept ible. , EGGS FOR SALE, Orders for eggs now booked for hatching from the famous Barred Plymouth Rock AND S. C. White Leghorns $1.60 per 13, (2.80 per 20. Stock for sal after October 1.1888. 89tf E. S. Jennings, Box 1008, Lincoln, Neb. EGGS FOR HATCHING FROM S. C. White Leghorns and Barred Plym outh Rocks. Took first premium at last State Fair on above varieties of fowls. Brae fS.OO per M from prizewinners only. ' SMITH BROS.. Kit! Lincoln, Neb. SPECIAL SALE OF ONE HUNDRED CLEVELAND BAY AND SIIIRE STALLIONS All Young, Sound, Vigorous, Fully acclimated, tnd ol highest quality and breeding. Until APRIL 1ST next I will offer special lafuoements In prloes to oloso out all my stallion; three years old and upwards. Tbey consist of my ewn breeding or those I have Imported young, and grown ap and developed on ray own farms without pampering or crowding In anyway. Send for now illustrated catalogue. WILL ALSO SELL FIFTY HEAD OF CHOICE HOLSTIN FRESISIAN CATTLE AT VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICES. GEO. E. BROWN, : : : : Aurora, Illinois. Aurora is 137 miles West of Chicago on the C, a Q. and C. W. W. Railways. 8Mm E. BEN N ETT&SOIM, fV : The -7' X III) n' w h " 7 7.. p LEEDS IMPORTING CO. ONLY THE BEST OF STOCK IMPORTED. Our animals are all .young, sound and free from defects. Correspondence solloitod. Special Inducements to ALLIANCE CLUBS, l eu wiu lave meney br conforing witn us ie o-e ouying. 7 FIRST PRIZES, 6 8EC0NB PRIZES at B)qh Fa'ls State Fair. IMMlr SIXTY PRIZES IN ALL. B. GOODENOCO H, Piej. an Can. Man'gr. B. COOPER, 8eoy..TreaMirer. 87-2m ' ADRIAN, NOBLES CO., MINNESOTA. III nrroarxa axd sassesas or HOR8K3- Prize Wisaen si '91. IP upa a Ti.lt to our bars yon do a-1 f nd enr borM .trU-tly flrat elM la ever? par ticular, we will pav lb zpos of the trip. Krr horse guaranteed a flrtt-claxa f -ml set tar. Win sir purchasers as liberal term! as any ether Brut la the buaineM. Kmt UKRU STOKV. Hut la r. Nb. YUTANj NEE IMPORTER ASD BREEDER or PEEC1EB0I HORSBS. NO CULLS, None but superior animals to make elections from. PRICES LOWEB THAN THE LOWEST When sua! It 7 is coatldered. 40 SELECT ANIMALS I ft ALL GUARANTEED 411 To Bake a oholoi from. Come and be eonvtnoed that I mean busi ness. Loom time, snail profits and rood horses mar be ex peoted. 14 m JAMES SCHULZ, J. M. ROBINSON KENESAW. AD AMU CO., NEB. Breeder and ship. per of recorded to Iand Chlua hog. Cboloe breed! m took for sale. write for wants. Mention Aluamob. THE BOSS SPRAYER A new and complete spraylur outfit for orchard and vineyard use. Arto Invaluable for (ardent and all kinds ef vegetables. Write for Information about the deetruo tlon of tbe apple worm. Cuneullo and blight, 1561 South goth St. Ciihtis Hdhbklu 7 4t Linoolon, Nob, Mention this paper. The Xowa team Teed Cooker. Tbe most practloal, most convenient, most eoouoml cal, and In every war the BEST BTKAM FKKDOOOK EH MADS. A glance at the eoustruotlen of It it enough to eonvtaee any man that It Is far superior ' Mf mi; vuivr, jarunvrip- tive otroulars and prloes apply to Magna Morrissy Mf'g Ce Omaha, eb. 8tf CJ FURNAS Co HERD BIG BERKS. Beaver City, - Neb. Thnrourhbred exclusively. All - ages. Either sex. Sews bred, Stock guaranteed as represented. Prloes right. Mantion this paper. H. 8. Williamson, Prop r. M C0BNISH INDIA GAMES , UNSUKPASSKD AS MARKET AND FARM FOWLS. Eggs 1 00 per 13. Send for circular. 814 N. aid St. L.P. HAttKIS, M-Sro Lincoln, Neb. CHEW ud SMOKE utuea NATURAL LEAF TOBACCO for t.nw rwcrjn wmrie to snnraniER -o.. im-i.iiie, Tma, otrau All UWi rtwitr ibuatwwlWr. M tersj jm fear, m4 M SB HlUtriWI OtUaJsf-M M Tb mrus w.H risT0U7sirsisr U IMraM. AMIWUaaM VlAStfU TOPEKA, KAN. Leading Western Umportera or Vnni nn.r ..nine CLYDESDALE, PERCHERON AND COACH HORSES. Also Registered Here ford Cattle. 200 Stallion, and Hares oa band for immediate shipment. 1 TITHMS TO STTIT PURCHASERS. Wt Send for 180 page 11 Hut' rated catalogue. visitors always welcome. iM-iim , A''' coin streets. Street and electno cars S57V,ww'''i from all depots and hotels ran within less than twe blocks of flice, E. BENNETT &80N. IMPOHTEH8. BLACK 100 PERCHERONS, SHIRES 1 FRENCH COACH STALLIONS AND MARES a. ALSO? Standard Bred Stallions and Mares. Fresh stock always on hand. , FRANK IAMS, : Importer apd Dredr lams' Horses wcr "nlt"t the (rreat HIS t'LTDES, SHIRES Were Winners of 51 Ianu is the ONLY Importer In Nebrask that . 18U1 ana tbe unrest importer of September 1881. Grey Horses $300 00 Less Than Solid Colors. His Pereheron mare won Craad Swtefttakss prize at Kansas state fair in 1881 om ue great parts winner " Rota Bonhiwr," and 1st prize at Neb. state lair, lama Cuaranteea !te show too the largest oolleetloB of first class Ma Flasks Draft Horses of the various breeds, ot a to s years oid-iooo to 2o weigh; and cBnyn man nuj u?e uupimr or pay Special Prloes Rflfl Bared br buyinr of lams. He does aat want the earth and It ftaoed. for Strati, flood ruarnte-rirr or recorded -rood terms. VMAKK lAJts. n m i n. ion, ft. raui..Neo ieoa me B. f Blue val English Shire Stallions and Mares. To Intending purchasers of this breed mock irum yearuag up, as Thoroughly Acclimated. Their breeding is from the best strains of prise winning blood in England oonpled with superior individual merit. Mj imported mares are superior to any in tha west; they are all safely in foal. , 4 (, . . . All My Stock Guaranteed; And all Recorded And Imported If ren want a Hackney Stallion. I have ana see wnat i nave get, ana u i cannei will pay your expenses. Prices as low as L. BANKS One of the most Reliable and beat of Horses in Oil Mill Frai Depot, CRESTON, IOWA. A larse assortment of Peroherons, Bngllia ' Bhlre, Belvlan. English Haeknnr, Prunoa . Coach and Standard Bred. I nave the lanrest assortment of Huropean Breeds of an? man . in America. I handle none but reoorded stock. All my horses are properly exorcised and fed on oool nutritious food, sroldlofr all pampering;, and under no olroumstanoes do I feed warm or hot food, which 1 think, are the main reasons why mr harses have always been successful breeders Come and visit my estibtiihtnoni I aa always glad to show my stock. WbenarrlvlnratCrestoa, visitors will please telephone to Crest City Farm and 1 will drive in for them. A few Draft Mares for tale. Longtime to responsible parties EVERY HORSE GUARANTEED A BREEDER AND MUST BE AS REPRESENTED! ' INSPECTION ALWAYS INVITED WESTERN HEADQUABTEBS ' ENGLISH SHIRE HORSES - AN UNBROKEN RECORD NEVER BEFORE EQUALED, : . at " J .,: Z . 1890. Lincoln, Topeka and Kansas City State Fairs.. IS3I. 9fl Drlzcs In 1890. including three grand Sweepstakes vr all broods. Seven Srizes at Nebraska State fair 1891. Seven prises at Topeka, Including grand weepstakos over aU breeds in 1801. . . . ; The Best Stud in the 7 est. . . . . Intandtnir onrchasers will do well to visit us and inspect our stock, l'riees reasonable. Terms to salt. Every horse JOSEPH WATSON & Co , Importers. i7-6m. Beatrice Netoraslceu S W. J. WROUCHTON & CO.. f . : IMPORTERS Oa ...., . . ,; Yorkshire Coach, Belgian, English Shire, V Clydesdale and Pereheron Stallions., y We have always on hand a rood assortment of the above named breeds. " m ail -onrapBtitlon and guarantee satisfaction In all deals. Our price are moderate and florses Excellent We give Ions; time and the most liberal guarantee, of any. firm la America. All horses must be as represented er we will net allow the purchasers to keep them. 38 Writs for particulars. Address. . . W. J WBOTJGHTON & CO., CAMBRIDGE, FURNAS COUNTY. NEB. . The Record Breaking Stud. ; . AND HACKNEY HORSES. W. M. FIELD & BROTHER, Importers and Breeders, Cedar Falls lowau OUR SHOW RING RECORD AT STATE PAIRS IN 1890 AND iSgi: IS7 Prewar; (mosfty nrts. 6 silver and the 7,000 SILVER VUF onerta ny tne ung-uin nreeaen 01 onire noreee. The Largest and Finest Stud of English Horses in America. 49 Stale Fair Winners en Hand Now. Remember, ws wlH net be Undersold. Stallions and Mares, Each Breed, All Ages, For Salo. ' FAVORABLE TERMS TO RESPONSIBLE BUYERS. Special Terms to the AWances 1100 BLACK 100 PERCEIIB, FltEKCIi DRAFT, CLYDES&SIIIRES. Kansas and Nebraska state fairs f 11. AXD PEBUfEBOXS Prizes ZIostly lsta. Imported his Psrcaereas Ire Fraaee la Clyde in 1891. They arrived All Clacks the best Individual arlt asd Rsval srsadlaa. at Alliance Prices and Terms, jvur lars w m wm. - .!-. -. - to AllianoeOo'8. V M and u. P.ar. at. Paul Nebraska. vm, BURGESS. li I can show them as good alotofyoug were is in toe west. Last Shipment 1SS0. by Myself. at ttood aa was ever imported. Come snow you as gooa stoea as any ma the lowest. ..-.- ... 17-oit i WILSON, known Importer and Breeder America. Cltl guaranteed as represented. Medals; 21 Sweeps'alos; 14 Dlploxu German U, Hid 637s,