OCR Text |
Show LIVBSTOGK BREEZY HORSE TALK. Uncle Dudley Buy a through ticket tick-et to St. Paul, Nebraska, walk right in to "Frank lam's" Horse Office and say Hello 1 He will meet you with a kind word, a hearty hand shake, you will have a $1,000 smile on and a "Peaches and Cream" stallion stal-lion or marc when you depart. Papa and Uncle John, don't he "side tracked" track-ed" by any "hammer knocker." lams is "awful strong" on first-class imported horses. You won't get "stung" by buying, horses of lams, the "square deal" horseman. lams' "word of honor" that a stallion or marc is a "top-nochcr" makes it so. lams saved stallion buyers a "quarter-million dollars" in 1908. Ikcy, buzz around lams' "town of barns" filled to the roof with "widc-as-a-wagon" drafters and high acting poachers. lams 1ms a "feeling" for you. He will "be a cousin to you" and a "little bit more" in buying horses of him. If lams says so, it's so that is worth $1,000 to you, in buying an imported stallion. Dear old dad. 1909 is our "lucky year." Not in 50 years, has there been such' "gold mine" years as today, for the breeding of first-class horses. Stockmen Stock-men you have bams full of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs, and gtain galore, all bringing big prices. You can all "dig down" in your "old sock" and pull out a "roll of the mazuma." "Ikcy Boys," take "my tip" put your "real money" into an imported stallion and four marcs of lams, the "square deal" horseman. They will make you 40 per cent on the investment. The stallion will make you $1,000 annually in service fees. The "panic" had no effect on big draft and coach horses. The demand de-mand is larger than the supply, and will be for twenty years. Drtift, gelding and coach horses sell readily at $200 to $600 each. Farmers, "get into lams' band wagon," breed big drafters and coachers. All railroads lead to Frank lams' "Stallion and Marc Emporium." He is the largest individual owner, importer and breeder breed-er in U. S. Send him an order for a stallion and two mares, you will buy better hores for the mon$y than you would select yourself He is selling "Peaches and crcanu" stallions stal-lions at "special panic prices" saving buyers $1,000 on a "top-notchcr. He guarantees to show you the "best bunch" of big, sound young "imported "im-ported stallions" and marcs owned by one man in U. S. and horses you will wish to buy, or pay $500 for your trouble to see them. lams' "town of barns" arc filled to the roof with new, fresh importation of 170 Pcrchcron, Belgian and Coach stallions stal-lions and marcs, 2 to 6 years old, weight 1700 to 2500 pounds; 90 per cent blacks, 60 per cent ton horses, all branded and registered. lams' imported stallions and marcs are "business propositions" that "jar the cherries" on a "wide-awake" "horseman's "horse-man's hat." lams' "Peaches and 1 Cream" "black boys" arc "cyc-open-ers" and "best stallions ever." They arc "diamonds" sold at "56 cents on the dollar." Winners of Eighty prizes andl medals .at Paris, Brussels, , Oldenburg, St. Joe, Illinois, and Nebraska Neb-raska State Fairs, (over) some Iowa, M Wisconsin, Minnesota and Missouri w state winners, (over) Illinois and In- w tcrnational Champions. "Sit up and take noti.ee." lams sells "show horses" that will take the mortgage off the farm and a "little bit more." For twenty-seven years lams has "bumped the heads" of stallion "ped-lcrs" "ped-lcrs" with better and larger stal- 1 lions, forcing the importer and breed- cr with inferior stallions and marcs M to sell on the "auction block" as I the last resort. And, Mr. Ikey, no 1 first-class stallions or maVcs arc ever I sold by "pedlcrs" or on the "auction I block." lams guarantees to sell you I a 'better stallion t $900 to $1400, I (few higher) than arc sold to Farm- crs' Stock Companies at $2500 to $5000. If you do not -find this so, I you can have the $500 lams hangs J up. Tarns has reduced the prices on "show horses" $100 to $500 each. I "It's not because your eyes arc blue" jfl that lams tells you in his "ads" of money he will save you. He wants H your business, that's why he adver- 9 tiscs. He wants you to smile on him H with a visit. He will make the H "wheels of business" go round. lams JH can placie $1500 Insurance on his fl stallions. He is an "easy man" to M do business with, and his horses arc M so good tliey sell themselves You flfl 6uy; "Why can lams sell better stallions stal-lions at half the price of others?" Tains buys and sells ?vcry stallion himself at his home barns. He buys 'Stallions by "special trainload," 200 at a time. He spdaks the languages, & "saving 30 per cent. lams is not in the "stallion trust," saving you $300. He pays no "slick salesman" $1000 to sell you a fourth-rate stallion. H gets busy himself and sells more stallions' than any ten men in U. S He docs not hire 50 horse salesmen, he sells every stallion himself. He has no two to ten partners to share profits with. Pic pays spot cash for his stallions, owns his farms, houses, barns, stocks and stallions. He sells stallions by "hot advertising," and having the "goods" to make every 1 statement good. lams sells stallions "so gooo?' that they do not need a "slick pcdlcr" or the "auction block" I to sell them. lams will save you $1000 or more in middle-men's profits. pro-fits. All lams' "show horses" and "pets" arc for sale. None reserved. You won't get away from lams with money or bankable notes. lie has his "selling clothes" on daily. Write for lams' 1909 Horse Catalog and "eye-opener." Fifty per cent of lams' ''high class" j "business stallions" and state prize winners sell at $900 to $1400. Twcn- , ty per cent a little higher. Imported j marcs, the best in the land, "lams' kind" sell at $600 to $iooo, the kind that bring colts that at six months of age sell at $300 to $500 each. Big, fancy, high-stepping, coach stallions, '$1000 to $1500 for choice. Atony state prize winners. Special prices made at my barns only, on one or a "bunch of horses." lams' guarantee is backed by one-half one-half million dollars. Our illustration is "lams' Trio of Models." First prize winning black Pcrchcron Stallion at Ncbr. State Fair, also first prize at St. Joe, Mo. Also first prize winning Belgian at Ncbr. State Fair, and first prize three year old German Coach stallion. These arc only models of 170 imported im-ported stallions and marcs owned by Frank lams, St. Paul, Nebraska. lams is a "mascott" to alt stallion buyers. |