i 4 t U M 0 vintttnvaL & TMt drpcrtricnt nfthe A'l-ertUer ix under the E-Vortii. C'tnrre of i-t li. H". FUJiSA.S Prexidenl Sebrasjia State Agricultural So- From the Pralrlc Farmer. APPLES AXD THEIR USES. The apple is pre-eminently the fruit of history; it was innocently involv ed in tiie firt trans-iresion and fur nished to Solomon the beautiful smjle which likened words fitly ppokeo to "apple of gold in pitchers of silver." The Trojan war wa- remotely due to the award of a golden appb to the loveliness of Aphrodite, ami the guarded apple3 in the. irarden of the Hesperide were f o desired that to ob tain them wafe one of the twelve la bors af Hercule-. Pliny speaks of twenty-twn va.rietleM then known to the Romans, and now we have almost tkS many hundred. The f impleat way of cooking apples Is to bake them, putting a little water In the pan to prevent burning. They ore much Improved if some sugar and bits of butter are al?o added. Anoth er mode is to pare and punch out the cores wih an apple corer; fill each hole with sugar and ome slips of lem on peel or a few drops of essence of lemon, pour in two or three table rpoonfuh of water and bake. When done take them out rh whole as possi ble, and when cold pour over rich sweetened cream. No dnh of pre served fruit equate the delicious fla Tor of apples prepared in this way. TO MAKE APPLE JEI.LY. Quarter the apples, removing the stems and blossom ends (the seedsand skin add to the flavor ; Cover with water and stew till sofc. Turn the whole into a flannel bag and set it in a colander to drain. By shifting the hag occasionally or nlightly pressing it the juice will run more freely. Measure the juice into a tin can, boil and skim till no more scum rises, then add one pound of white sugar to ev ery pint of liquor. If cooked enough the jelly will begin to form a soon as the puguar I dissolved, if not it mnj be a few days before it H firm. The pecret of making the finest jelly Is to sufficiently boil the juice of whatever fruit is ued before the t-ugar te added, for if done afterward the jelly will be dark and gummy. The pulp in the bag can now be turned Into the colan der and rubbed through to separate the skins and seeds, then sweetened till agreeable to the tate, and spiced if you like. This will bo APPLE MARMALADE. A solid jelly like substance, which Is very nice to eat with meats partic ularly if left rather sour. Jelly and marmalade are made from Siberian Crabs in precisely the same way. As apple jelly has only a delicate tate of Its qwii, It may be made Into pineap ple, strawberry raspberry, &c, tc, by simply adding to it the epsence of these fruits before it is put in cup3 or jars. TO PRESERVE APPLES. Pare and quarter medium sized fruits, and if they cook readily sprinkle them well with sugar and let them lay over night to toughen ; if naturally slow to cook this will be un necessary. Make a rich sirup of white flUgar and putting in as many quar ters as the pan will hold without crowding, simmer a short time, being careful to remove before they break in Eieces. Add fresh apples till all have eeu partially cooked, returning those previously taken out of the sirup, till all are tender, when apples and sirup are put together. Strain the latter If any particles of fruit arc in it. Sea eon with a few lemons sliced, from which all seeds should be removed, a3 they will give a bitter taste. APPLE CUSTARD. Take a pint of stewed apple made perfectly smooth, cooled and sweeten ed, one pint of milk and four eggs well beaten, mix, grate nutmeg over the top and bake twenty minutes or half an hour, according to the depth of the dish. APPLE DCMPLIN'GS, famous In song and story, are easily made by rolling out common bread dough about half an inch thick into which shot ten! ng has previously been kneeded. Having prepared and punched the corea from medium sized apples, set one on the douch. fill the holes with sugar, flavor with essence or peel of lemon, and out out a piece of dough large enough to draw up round the apple and pinch together over it. Butter a plate, put on as many as it will hokl and set in a steamer to cook an hour or more, ac cording to the size of the dumplings. Eat with sweatsned cream or any pudding sauce. If preferred, soda biscuit dough can be used instead of raised crust. APPLE SHORTCAKE, a dish always welcome to the tea table ; the crust of soda buiscult, (one quart of flour, two level teaspoonsful of cream of tartar and one of soda, thoroughly mixed by being passed through a sieve, a pinch of salt and butter or lard the size of an egg well rubbed Into the whole, with enough weet milk to wet a9 soft as can be rolled.) Divide the dough and roll each piece as large as the plate which is to receivo it, Bpread one with but ter, laying the other upon it, this will make the cake separate easily after it is baked. It Is finished with a thick layer of stewed, sweetened and fla vored apple between the crusts. Eat with any kind of sirup or cream. APPLE PIE3 are nicer when filled with raw sliced apples ; then baked and the upper crust removed, while the apple with in is mixed, sweetened, buttered if you like, and flavored with nutmeg, when the crust is again replaced. This must not be attempted with ap- Eles that are at all tough, or you will e inclined to doubt that it is the best way to make pies. APPLE FRITTERS. Ouo-half pint of sour milk, the same of cream, or one pint of sour milk, with one tablespoonful of melt ed butter, a pinch of salt and a tea spoonful of eoda. Put in enough flour to make it as stifT as can be stirred with a spoon, adding sliced apples. Jrry in hot lard like doughnuts. First dip the spoon in the boiling grease be fore taking out the spoonful of batter which makes each fritter, otherwise the dough will stick to the spoon. Eat with sugar or any kind of syrup. of course maple is the best. These fritters are delicious without the apple. FOR APPLE BUTTER. Boil away new cider one-half, then, a few at a time, drop in apples pared and quartered, adding more when the previous ones are cooked, soft. Stew Blowly and with great care, as it is difficult to prevent tho thickening mass from scorching. When neirly done add ground cinnamon and cloves to suit the taste. Allow one and a half bushels of prepared applet for one barrel of cider before it is boiled. If the cider is from sweet apples, use eourones to thicken with, and vice -versa, but I have eaten delicious ap ple butter where no regard had been paid to this rule. An iron kettle must not be U6ed as it will blaoken and otherwise injure the contents. CIDER APPLE SAUCE. Boll down sweet cider till one fourth its original quantity, pare and core sweet apples and boil in rhe cider till tender. TO PICKLE APPLES. Make a liouor of one ouart vlnpnmp oat pound of brown Bugar, two table- spoonful of allspice, two do. of cloves, three do. of ciuuamon ; boll, let itcool and drop in small apples. If tough they should be boiled or steamed enough to be tender, but not to break the skin. DRIED APPLES may be preserved from worms by ty ing them closely In paper bags with a few sassafras chips. An apple stuck entirely full of whole cloves will puzzle your friends to eil what it is, both by "its singular appearance and delightful fragrance, it will k-ep unchanged for years. Nothing will reduce inflammation of the eyes sooner than applications of stewed apple. V hc found a free use of apple very beneficial in the prevailing epi zootic, our "Billy" can te-tif. He ha learned to search our pocket- with his velvet lips for his "do-e" of apple4 and lonf sugar, the only medicine lie has had and which gives its own re commend in his wild autics riuce hi- recovery. I have deienpd only to give recipes of every day utility, gathered from the experience of my own and other household". For elaborate prepara tions of the apple I would refer you to the library of cook books, in which th 'ix on my shelves are by no means deficient. Flora Tremaixe. oct: Island Co., IU. AGRICULTURAL ITEMS. Provisions are ru earce in Coren that the natives willingly pay two slaves for a bushel of grain. St. Louis figures f-how a larce re duction in the receipts of grain at that city for the pa-tyear. A Kentucky farmer uses dead bats, which lie uef out of the caves there, to feitilize hi farm. The corn crop of McLean Co., Til., for the la-v season, Is estimated at up ward of 10,000.000 bushels. John D Gillett shipped from Elk I art, IU..flast week eighty-one steers averaging over 2,000 pound. Jephtha Palmer, of Scott Co . Tnwi rai--d the past season 593 bushels of c rn on teven acres of laud. Texas contains now forty agricn1 tural societies, nearly all of which were organized during the last two year?. The Alvarado, Cal., beet sugar fac tory, daily uses sixty toiis of beets. Six thousand tons will be used this reason. A hoc wo slaughtered recently In Adams, Houghton Co., Mich., which, when dressed, turned the scales atS72 pounds. An Eaton Rapids, Mich , farmer shot fourteen wild turkejs In a day .vithout going a hundred yards from his house. It is surpri-ing to oh-erve the quan titv of breudtufP which reach port In the United Sute by transit through Canada. The Baraboo, Wis., Ecpnblic says that D. D Lee sold a Durham calf, not quite ten months old, weighing 724 pounds. The champion corn husker of Van Buren Co., Mich., is S. F. Butler, of Antwerp, who husked 214 bushels of corn In three days. Mrs. Dr. Bartlett, of Kingston. X H., raised 9.000 pounds of popcorn upon two acres worth four cents a pound, or $3G0. Some unknown villain near Daven port, Iowa, entered a field, quite re cently, and with knives butchered two three-year-old colts. Corn is a legal tender in the drink ing saloons of Chetopa, Kan. A bu-h-el of corn for a 4riuk of whisky is the rate of exchange. A Baraboo man has shipped since September last, about 400.000 hoop poles, netting those who have cut them about $6,000. The annual meetingof theSaginaw, Co., Mich., agr. cultural society shown that their business the past year amounted to about $3,500. Shucks for matrass making in Mem phis, are ordered from Indiana wast ed in Tennesee. Mississippi, Arkan sas and Louisiana so says the &ouih crn Farmer. Nelson Stendman, of Ronald, Ionia Co.. Mich., a farmer sixty-three years of age, plowed during the past season one hundred acres of land with one yoke of cattle. A Charleston, S. C, circular, esti mates the rice crop of the South to be as follows: North Carolina, 600 caskn; South Carolina, 45,000 Georgia, 10, 000, and Louisiana, 19,500. The wheat crop of 1S72 is larger in Indiana, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa than in 1S71 ; very nearly as large in Illinois ; ieduced in Miohlgan and greatly declined in Missouri aud Kansas. Peanut culture Is pronounoed a suc cess in Michigan since Robert Scott, of Gross Lake, has marketed his crop of twelve bushels, the first raised in the State. They sold at eight cents a pound. Thero has been a large increase of potatoes in Illinois last season over the previous, one ; a small advance in Iowa Minnesota, Michigan and Indi ana, and a decrease In Wisconsin, Kansas and Missouri. To eacourage immigration la Ten nessee it is proposed that the State procure from 2-50,000 to 600.000 acres of land, which shall be subdivided into sections of sixty acres each, and every alternate section given in fee to bona fide settlers. It is believed the wheat which Cal ifornia will send abroad the present year will exceed in value that of the gold which the State will produce du ring the same period. The wheat crop will bring 'he State from 000.000 to $30,000,000. ,- The cultivation of the white poppy for the production of opium, is said to be meeting with marked success in Tennessee. The plants are large and more vigorous, and the capsules from two to ten times as large as those from the imported, seed. The prica of cattle in Umatilla. Or egon, has recently been materially re duced, owing to importations of Tex as ctttle. One man has 6,000 head in the county and a large band on the way, which will winter In Utah aud come on through in the spring. A farmer near Dubuque. Iowa, named Kelly, while handling bits from the mouths of diseased horses, got some mucus on a bruised finger. The poison rapidly spread, resulting in the amputation of his arm. It is thoucht that he will lose his life. The San Francisco Bulletin thinks that in a very few year the Pacific coast will raise more than 100.000.000 bushels of surplus wheat per annum, and ays that, besides this, the gold and silver product of the coast, esti mated at $6.5,000,000 annually, will feink into insignificance. An old gentleman living near Brim field, III., argues that if the farmers of Illinois, Iowa and Indiana would enter into a combination to burn one ;..f iT .rn Cr?9- for ueI' they I could sell the remaining half for as ' m.uch as the whole would now hrinc He ha3 five thousand bushels ou hand. The peelers of onions in Bedford shire. Eng., where this crop is raised l3 the acre, and prepared for pickling In eighteen-gallon casks, find that when the onions are peeled under water the eye Is not effected, or only slightly so ; and thus one fertile source of tears may be said to ba dried up fbrrror. r HAUGHTY BY AIOTJ E, GARY "Wben theblzzy bees begin to buzz. And thecown all go to graw. We generally calculate ICtf time To plant our garden &a.ts. Horticulture is the twin brother of agriculture, w that it is difficult to determine which is either. I call that sentence a gramatical right-angle-triangle. Horticulture means gardening and gardening means more than any other word of the same size in the eng ish language. Uarueuing is several thousand years old, aud will make a man who work-, at it a short time feel that he is sever al thousand years older. Gardening among the ancients was carried on to a great extent, and I -hnuld think would be preferable to gardening among the angle worm aud insects; for if the ancients were too numerous they could be easily killed with clubs, but dutji weapons, havo no affect upon the bugs that haunt a country garden. There id quite a difference between a whole sale and retail wardens One live jin the suburbs and has its acres in the country ; the other lives ii the town and has its achers in the back. Houses rent higher that have garden spots. I have always found the rent high enough, but have Leerd-cour-aged frequently hunting for the de sirable garden spots. With what I know about the business, I do not think there N a spot on earth that could be made desirable to me for a garden. Many people plant their gardens seeds In the spring; others plant them in the ground. I have tried both ways with very feeble results I think about the best way is to plant them in the 'old of the moon" and then your are not disappointed if your crop is not all moon-bin1. A- a general thing people expect too much from their gardens; they over estimate their capacity. I have known persons to make a garden with the expectation of depending almost entirely upon it to supply their table, but they were young mar ried peoble, ju-it commencing hou-e keeping, and greener than the "a-" they expect to rai-e. It would be a bare, naked, baldheaded table that depended on any garden I ever made for supplies. The best gardeners are those men whoareengaged in business duringthe day, and work in their garden night and m rning. After paying three dollars to get a spot of earth spaded, about the ize of twotable cl Uh.s, they under take to manage the rest them selves. They get an assortment of seeds that are sent out every spring aud have been wandering up and down the earth for the past fifteen years, until every germ of life has been jolted out of their seedy bodies, and then sew and watch, and plant and wait, and when the time for ear ly vegetables comes around they go and buy them, like everybody else thathasany. Experience "has taught me that gardeus are poor invest ments. They nevor pay us for our fuss, Our labor, care, or trouble, Thestutris seldom worth a cuss, And ulwayts coats u- double. A few soft ouggestions to the young gardner may not be out of place in this column ; if they are, the editor can put them in some other column The first thing to be done after spad ing up their back lot is to get up lot of back. The best are the spiral twisted, rubber-lined, boneless hacks (Goodyear's patent). If you have no hot-house, sow your early seeds about house cleaning time you will find most any house hot enough at that season. The soil for gardens should consist mostly of ground mixed with compost. The composts shouid beset four feet each wa3 and at the second hoeing leave only four posts in the hill. The sround for beds should be pul verized tine ;vs it makes them easier to he on ; if you have not the facili- 1 ties for doing thi- you can take them to any reliable druggi-t and have them pulverized. Cucumber require a rich soil ; the seeds should be plant ed in hills, and half a dollar in each hill to enrich the soil. Potatoes also require a wealthy soil, but not a- rich as cucumbers; twenty-five cents in each hill will make potatoes Mifti cientlj' rich. Care should be taken not to get any dirt in the eyes of the potatoes, as it makes thera waters. In bushing peas 11111113 Use a tooth brush, but a whitewa-h brush is pre ferable. Beets irrow on aii3' soil ; the the earl3 peaiis are the most prolific and should be planted ver3 deep. Do not be discouraged if 3011 have to plant over a second o? even a third time. This is what is called a suc cession of crops. Rotary crops mean that the crops are sown in rows. You will find one of the benefits derived from gardening (and about the only in the discipline. They tench us to know -what wo can do Uetter after we try It ; And they teach us that when we want gnr den pass To go to the grocery and buy It. Potatoe bugsshould lie hand-picked Cabbage head- should be combed ev ery morning, and the hair kept clo-e-13 trimmed. To kill cucumber bugs saturate the hill with kerosene oil This stunts the plants, but everlast iugl3 kills the bugs. After 3our seed are all planted, 3ou can ask your neighbors if they will please let their hens run in 3our garden ; most any neighbor will do it, and it keeps the ground scratched up and mellow. The end. Fat Contributor's Saturday JS'tffht. Little Tilings The preciausness of little things was never more beautiful express ed than In the following morceau b3 B. F. Taylor: Little martin boxes of homes are generalH the most happ and cos-; little villages are nearer to being at oms of a shattered paradise than an thing we know of; and little hopes the less disappointments. Little words are the sweetest to here; little charities fl3 the furthest and sta3 longest on the wind; little lakes are the stillest, little hearts the fullest, and little farms best tilled Little books the most read, aud little songs the most loved. And when nature would make aii3thing especi al rare and beautiful, she makes it little, little pearls., little diamonds, little dews. Ever3bod calls that little that the3 love best on earth. We once heard a good sort of a man speak of his little wife, and we fancied that she must be a perfect little bijou of a wife. We saw her. and she we ghed 210. we were surprised. But then it was no liokp- the mnn tnnonl if TJa nnnU put his wife in his heart and have room for other things beside: and what was she but precious and what wa3.she hut little? Multum in Parvo much in little is the great beaut3 of all we love best hope for most, and remember the longest. "Mr. Speaker," said a member of the Jamaica Legislature, discussinc a bni fnr tlie regulation of the timber trade." "I know these timber mer- chants to be most egregious rascals, as I was in the timber line m3self twelve 3'ears." Twahundread and fifv men are now employed on the New York Post-Office building. It will soon be read3 for its Mansard roof. m Nine hundred and sefent million pounds of tobacco are annually con sumed in tb.9 world. RECOLLECTIONS OF. CULTURE. WHOLESALE AND $ 5'1 ft- jR i-a $&$ 'ivy ' yf DEJLJEJ-rSS 3 jSlIEI.'JF' - 'MS' DRY 0L2. CLOTHS, Having determined to reduce our stock of Dry Goods, Notions, fec. and having on hand a very large and extensive stock, we will commence on Monday, the loth of November, and will sell our en tire stock at such prices as will insure a speedy sale. Our only object is to get mon ey, therefore we will sell for cash only. To secure great bargains, call early, with the cash, and be as tonished at the low prices. HUTKUMBISIO THE LOWEST PRICES, G-IEO. DAUG-HEIT '5rT, PBOPHIETOK UlfcTIOILsr HOTEL 88 Sc 90 3VEuA.I3Sr STKEET, BBOWlsTYILLB ESTERS RS-25K3 5fe E33fc x 111 Ullll dill r ill 1M1I b l) II m U M No. 70 Main Street, Largest Stock in the Market, Great Inducements Offered. THE BOTTOM PRICE 03V AL AIJiTI LE SOLO. 4 lv nrraii ! Hurrah. ! Now is tbe time to get 3our We liaejust received a full and complete stock of PES,rWARE BIRD CAGES, ra AXZ CARRIAGE TIMBER I A FULL AXD GENERAL LINE OP iiinnuiinr nt, persons desirous of purchasing will SHEBOIEN-w- EXAMINING ourf I fit STOCK BE FORE riHCHUIUSc REMEMBER "IE PLACE. Sign of the RedStove and Plow. No. 74, McPlierson Block. TISDEL & RICHARI S. DIYOBCES. ABSOLUTE Divorcer legally obtained in differ ent states. Lesal everywhere desertion cenernl misconduct. Ac sufficient cause no pub licity required no charce until divorce jrranted f dvfee free Call on or address JOHN J. -flLTOX, Counselor at Law, 9m3 :so. 150 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY. ft t. C'OA rrS"j! rfltiirintij! Jinc!"-ifwrrklnri. -J I J C-'J r!.of"""Ki,jonjoroil.mairanrTCotwTi 1 v jA fnr u in t-tir ip- amatntM or all the time than at .3 ?LujJ BargainS'9 rMCERIES HARDWARE. DRY GOODS. lxlJjZdIWsi3' ,,-,,-,J-,J-,.,-u-,., , wwow-..--sys - m 'yilm ie . n , Hr. s g RETAIL IIV - 'S'1 - , CU!D Ml v&? Fia irL,J Brownville, Nebraska. J. G. RVSSELL, Dealer In wines; uquors & cigars WHOLES VLB AXD RETAIL. ha3 43 Mln Strctx a ".T'?.r"UC7"TaT7-TT.-r.-rr! Tvt i frl -- - ,-t m. BROW2JVILLE . . AUD TRANSFER - """s -&SW. ?3& li t : - : u nf-svi ""r r--7 : . f a wi M -SS- nl Wsf Er wgti IR BS J$SZ&&r Js2 mSa 4 jffi JkA JM S 2 cn I BILL! ABB 53 S3iSirt-5-,:i "-! 1 I -1 - - a &T -I.-. i' fJ(T . sl JM &h?RBir$ COMPANY ! HAVING e, first class Steam Ferry Boat, and control, through purchase, of the Transfer business, we are now better than eier betore pre pared to render entire satisfaction in the transfer of fielgat and passengers. Bronnxllle Ferry and Transfer Co. March 26th. luTZ. 2t-tf JOB PRINTING, OF AIX KINDS, Neatly and Promptly Executed. AT.TEP3 OFFK. fc iSlfc 3 r7 cc - . Z I j a trnr jj -53 -. MED1.CA .IllllJr.J I.W.1L.LJJ.VJ IHvl:1im;l IVo leraon can take tlie-to Hitter acconl ns 10 directions, and remain long unwell, provided Itieir bones are not deitro-ed by mineral poison or other mean-t, and tui organs wasted beyond tho boint of repair. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, ITeadacnc, Tain "n the shoulder.-?, CoiipUs, Tightness of the Chest, iizzlnesa. Sour Eructations of the Stomach, IJad Tasto in, tho Month, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of Mic Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs. Pain in the repion of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painfoj symptoms, are the off-springs of Dyspepsia. One iottle will prove a better guarantee of Ita mertu than a lengthy advertisement. For Femnle Complaints, In young or old, Married or single, at the dawn of wornauhood, or the turn of life, tlicae Tonic Bitters display so '.pcided an Influence that Improvement is soon ,-crceptibIe. For Inflnroiuntnry nnil Chronic Ilheti-mntl-tn ami Gout, Bilious. Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers. Diseases of the Blood, Lav er, Kid neys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseased are caused bv Vitiated Blood. Theynie a qentle Purjcatlve as well ns a Tonic, posseting the merit of acting as a powerful agent In relieving Congestion or IcCam matioa of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and la Bilious Di-eae. For Skin Diseases. Eruption"-. Tetter, Salt Ilhenra, Blotches. Spots Pimple. Pustule, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms. Scald-Head, Sore Eyes. F.ryaipelas. Itch, Scurf. Decolorations of the Skin. Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up ami earned out f the gyattm in a ehort time by the use of these 'ltters. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vivehi; Brr--EK-3 iUi moil wonderful Invigorant that cer usuined the sinking sworn. I. H. licDO.AI7D t CO. 'druggists and Gen. Agis., San Francisco, Cal., A jr. of Waihmgtoa an I Charlton Sk., X.Y. i-OLD B ALL I'KI (.GIST-s . DEALERS. liOTTERI S --i--' 0't r m I v '.tl m m 5 NTERPRISE lit, only Reliable Gift Disubution In the Cou .t Ift Oisibution In the Cou 60,000 00 IN VALUABLE OIFTS to be distributed In L. D WI2STE-S 139th REGULAR XOTHLY GiftEaterprise 1o be drawn Jlonday, February 17, 1S73, TWO CKAXD CAPITALS OF $5,000 EACH in GREENBACKS ! 2 Prizes, $1,000 fiffiREEIHNS 5 ?n-c: 10 Pr.j One Horse and BuKJ". wIth ilver-mo ited ar- iifsi. worth One Fine-toneti Rasewood Piano worth W). Teul-arailx sewing Machiiitn worth jl eac i i e liold Wulcliei and CtiHia- worth s. ( each. Five Gold American Iluntlni; Wvtches. worth 1123 e.icb. Ten Ladles' Gold IIuntinj-"et-he worth 7each Gold and silver Lever Hunting Vaiches.(in all ; nuriii iroin f m io;hj eacn AVliole Xismber Gift, (,00. Tlcketk Limited to GO, 000. Agents wanted to sell tickets, to whom liberal Pre miums w 111 Ui paid. SINGLE TICKET&Jl. 6 TICK t7TJ.-. 12 TICK ETS? $10. 25 TICKETS fj. Circulars containing a full list of prizes, a des cription of the manner of drawing and. other In formation in reference to the Distribution, will be enttoai one ordering them. All letters mustb addressed to la. D. SINE, Box 8G. Cincinnati, Ohio. Office. 1 01 V. 3th St. 2-ly For 173. Willi relaii;irlced Descriptive Catalogue of Seeds, VOW READY, and will be mailed FREE to all - applicants. WholenIe prices of all kinds of Seeds furnished to Dealers. Address. PLANT feKEI) CO.. 9n2 bf LOCIb.MO XEAT1IER & nriTinn GU3X DLLilnb TISDSJ, & RICHARDS. PATENT WEATHER X Te est for excluding Xfl K TVIND, DUST, OR RAIN, -HI r from under doors. j For sale by fj-j t Swan fc Bro. A FULL LIXE OP POCKET A.iVr TABLE CHTLEBT OF TIIE BEST QUALITY For sale by i7& a Tisdel & Richards UO" REMOVAL TILDEL & RIG1 HA EDS Have removed their stock of Hardware from the rgom for merly occupied bv Bhellenberg:er to the lock, opposite City Drug Store. AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. The AULTMAN & TAYLOR X - c ' x s ? I "L C be" f 2 O i mm Z W sta c5 1 ii Kiss - c u -" s. H ' s W -esc w 2 H "5 c. h . s ,4 c 2 n o c 0 5 i - A If " s 2 - 5 5 t -- -" ; lh A4 3 - - Zi ? 7 -- -i ? I r; - - v- r -- ! o x S m x o M - s i m Z '" ' ' Thresher "AULTMAN & TAYLOR" Threshing Machine WITH 8 AND 10 U0RSE Mounted and Down Powen. kadi nr tu irxu. row AULTMAN & TAYLOR 2P'fJ CO, Mi4naIIald, Oliio. Tho brilliant auceest ef that Inprcvt Grain-Siring, Ttme-Sanny and Monrj-Earnxng yhruhxng EitaUiihmcnli t unparalleled in Vie annalt f lUrm JfMjiineiy. Largely increased earningi art reported by Threihermen toho have purchased A. great taring of grain by Farmer who hate employed Three years introduced and proven Fully Es tablished Ab erprrimentIn use in 400 Cbuntie in 18 Stater by 1700 purchasers Endorsed by forty thousand farmers icho hate employed them Graln Savlng Matchless "separating" principle They shake thegram out of the straw Jib Beaters, Pickers, Saddles or Endless JpronsJt'o clogging or "wrap ping" in Flax or Ket Straw -Or erblast" Tan Sites Aare oter eleven square feet of surface Many kinds of "Work Great "capacity" in Wheat, Bye, Oats, Barley, Buckwheat, Peas, Beans, Millet, Hungarian, eicCnapproachablc in FlaxVnri aled in Wet Straw and Cram Unsurpassed in Timothy Tlme-Savln- A'o btUrings to dean fp .No detention from wet straw, high winds, putter ing, clogging or bad weather Quickly set and moved SltsxplycotkMtnictKd-EasHymanaged-BemarJe' My Ughtdraft Very durable Cheaply kept in order only about o:rt-rAL7 as many Belts, G'ar Wheels Boxes, Journals, Shafts and Pulleys to clog, wear out, add to draft, or to keep in repair aj in Endless Apron Machines More conveniences and Xrss to annoy AH the latest improvements JIoney-Maltlng Easter threshing Lets detention Choice of jobs Extra Prices for work Farmers wait for wexkt and month Elegant Finely Finished Salable. Xzx-treartla-Ate t Call on the undersigned, (or send your nam end post ojfice, address), and g't a Factory Prlca List and Descriptive Pamphlet ffree) con taining 60 illustrations and letters from hundreds of purchasers. Complete Threshing Es tablishments,' as well as Uorse-Foirera alone," and Separators "alone." FOR SALE BY o ii c tx s "3 x x x W x" b X s z r o ? x it s c s r c c F. A. TISDEL, JR., & CO. Can aiidwil sell yon all kinds of Implements cheaper than, any other house in Nebraska. "We sell the STTJDEBAKER AXD WHITE TFATEE wd VAGONS, AND BUGGIES OP ALL EINDS, If you want anything, come and ask for it WE KEEP othi"g but first class goods, and T3B ALL K?S OOD9 TO BB AS BEOOMMEX JH Bros., Breitmeyer I 'jl1 rn ' 0 0 of the Period. tHJ "- r I b h P CD H i ft GUABA2t 4 DE.