THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT AprE28.1800. 4m END EIGHT DOL.t.AFtS your tizft (I; careful of your, measurements). If you want a round cornered coat, say Fend suit 2stj. 1-iM. If you want a square cornered coat fay No. 1225, and we'll send you by fir.it express the Let uit of clothes you ever put on for the money. It is ALL WOOL, finely tailored and correct in ftyle. If you would rather have a -ample of it we'll mail it to you for the asking. If you have one of our catalogue look on page 9 and examine the little Faraple we have put there for your convenience. Why not try us once. You know the tory we have so often told you your monev back if vou're not satisfied. Omaiia, Neb. Mention the Nebraska Independent When Writing ears th itct cabin hor . ' A Ka a th ckf were takea o3 the cen thy tr chalcd to tLe hug weight js it kwer iic. TL t"o boy wre toon fat friecd and rty e-ai-. TLe cokred boy va trrjed TdL Tt-y carried wtter &&d food to tii ick ce mad ala to the KirU. f jc tLe ea;tio would tot allow :r or ele o ecter the calIa. Ot douU 'in? th c;e tLej Mtiled into tLe C3. ettirtly rjtie-i, were like u f eri-35, az.J hd V be uneLtuced end tiVr-r. drrn into tLe Lc!i of tLe kia. Ted wa B9tie4 with cktLe br tLe cat-is boy, woo di iced itb Lisa. After tsV1zz tLe cape tLey umizx fousd a wars ciiaate . the saeo were brwLt up ar.d put is cLiR aain. ilarij c-r cvsmirjif a di-tact fjwck ii use m-a. iie captain ia uiified. Hurrii.y. h-.f dre-e-d, be ca. to the fvre-iu.t with Li iarjre ; reran Lour he waeLd tLe dit- ar.t ;ck. He vrdered ali tail to be ktxetrLed :d the hip teered a Ar.l to ; th is crser V -Uz.i Lh tail breeze. Tbe trs boj' mer is their pl&r boue j ir. tLe . n .! :L- -r.:p bjt otKiIi L-ar al! tLat n. aid ar.d s-ee ererr oore- it was! cer.t f the ere-, b t li.tf It be w.th C 'II .e i.&krd -re that 5 the - t.-c t a f-:.i't .v . t, ro hrr.'tf&l or Cir r.r -was thosLt of tLe as well as in some of the other islanus. t rr ' et&r:t wt o jrrfit. h h fl :..lr i.r!i-h cmi-erj Gen. Schwan. chief of starf to Gen e i ''. vu i Vj y. S(-n -ral Oti has become so disgusted with a put? t.4 Krkf tt. to i-ue f-vm ' the whole business, tnat one day he her -i J ar.-i a f-arLfjos fjall wa cent t ,r :. t:. ..-r ;a-. iz. irvr:! o: , - r e . tLe t-hip. A part is! mm 0rit-3 tu trie eaiL tie ri;2wav i c-rs the :'K.e n- fr ..a tiie vtSi-t rre rr-c-teti tt-i tL- b-.-k tun with the b:j mjsf attarLed wer pushed I ward Manila. Otis himself is coming oerb.arl. Tive rirl were br;ctt ojt home and the whole campaign is an t;ed to a weight a s.4 eerted the ea rue uiter. miserable failure worse even fte. -Where L the by, aid tLe ca?- i than the iiritish campaign of subjuga tssz. fir iLU tirue a "..ut eea : tion in South Africa. - lowered sA aa KrrIiL ofLrer at on Li way ?o the urrer,.ifei L:p. Td ; The truth aVut the matter is that Lad lrame-d er.ri:h Kr.-ib to krxw j wta r--ar.t. ard a: r.-e jarred i Mrjvisley and Joe Chamberlain are not rrerr-ari ar.d wra towerd ti.e Ilcjr-'.h tsrnitg oat as expected either In the Lf b.at ar.i p.rk-i up. 'Philippines or South Africa. The TLe cfT.-er- tf the Kr..L cr-ui-er ar-1 sooner the sober minded people of both reted XL" t'ULrrT" tA the lae t-Lip. pat nations drive their governments from th-s is irpr- ar.d t laoej tLetusc chirre s power and take charge of things them cf a f-ew et c llf agiis-h oScer atd selves the better it will be for the tailed ay for ledvCi. (world. After tLe triai .- ar.d Ted were! et to 15"? Ir. a few day they! Ktcy letters have been printed, writ- -rum iMftowea VICTOR Incubator Ctt (Jkii ca . i.t".iLi IOCrOE J. L. McKEE, Otv l'Aock, Ctrr. lltb and K Sts., LJXCX)LXf NEB. Oia of tLe 43t sii'I mot reliabld I'hyTacians .f the Uri-opian rys teta of tiixgnoit. 3i-aj-ei of the iru-ma! orpins, i dialr treating tie mot severe cSirooic ca. and by his ruo-f-.-Iul method li&s grained il-A COCLda." of tJs cruJjiic S l'j ( naii),j a. asd you rjn Live nfjottarj rsefiirie y-t'-ut yon. wiuj a iarnp-1 tiTXi of vor:r iiNea--; cLarr?s mod erite. Over thirty -5 re jirtvt-kal . ex j-nex. yeara .HYPNOTISM. iittl t.A.' Jet e..'.i -f t!.rr; 12 . sua j ii L't c ( ri - ii..- ft a bjr tbt . i i! t "a ."'"r L.rv illv tjfr itfj "r.r 4 vr- 'A 4Wt trv-a .-... jn . V.i. ? U. Hayden 1029 OST. Photographer 0-r j ric- are ri-ht; cwsr wr2 the besL l'JCI O rtreet Oier Fatnoua. Li&ro'n. SEED POTATOES 50c. per for cLoiee -fti of excellent Y&ritrtxe-t-arlyand late. Dt tenptioa frf. " 0. U. WHITFOBD J shipped a cabin boys cn a South Amer ican trader. Sykes was offered four hundred dollars for Ted, but they sailed together for Y? until Sykes became es plain and Ted first mate. Ted was the only evidence that con victed the slate ship. News of the Week The news from the Philippines this week has been the most astonishing received since the war first broke out tere. One cablegram begins "TLe week has been the blcodiest of the war. In one fight, it is reported that 378 Filipinos were killed and 12 Seers and 244 men captured. Reports from other fights run the Filipino loss tip to l.OvO. In this first fight nine Americans were killed and sixteen wounded. The only way to account for ! the desparity in the losses Is that te Mlipiaoi are poorly armed, and the native losses are without doubt greatly exagerated - Besiis the killed 'and wounded re ported in tnis cablegram (Jen. Otis tends another exceedingly Ion? list j ienrer than has been received for some vu - vt rvip.ro eems tn k vhtintr i . :r . . - . - everywt - re ail over tne isianc oi L.uzon j packed up ms tilings, walked out and k - rzxi a ca&iegram io Aicivimey asKing -it. . . e- e t r - . aa. ah. a f. i i a a. X. aa ill t u T nn a . i sznal! towns are' "being 'abandoned for want of trocps to garrison them and the forces are being slowly drawn to- thee wars of conquest inaugurated by j IBEAUTY, II CONQUEROR BELLAVITA Arasnie Baasty Tablets and Pills. A per ttniT mh4 raratitMd uetDeiit for all tkin diordrs. I el9ef the blom o! youth to tad ed facet. J j tiers' trrtBDat i aa day' C1, by meil. i f r riretxler. Addrs. iXIT ftf IMCAL CO. CUstM ft Jadm Su Cikr fiold by iiarley Drug Co., Cor. O and-11. Str., Lincolrj, Nebr. ..SUPPLIES SHIPPED PROMPTLY. CATALOG FREE. DEES WAX WANTED. 13 Barred pljsoalb Reck Eggs, $ I ! TRESTEB SUPPLY GO.i Dft. D. LINCOLII, KEBR. ..CANCERS AND TUMORS.. ( arrd at IIme. THe only Painlea Perm rat Crr sf-peauur to inteUience. En djreed by a ttocaii'l phyiiciaas. tend 6e staarpe tor il!utrete4 book. Reference of rertcJ.llGiblt. iJattle Creek. Neb.; F. H. Tr bride. Neh-: Mr. U- 11 B brock, NeUrb- Nex lr. Jo- IS. llarria. Kem fxsr C:cr'i.r.atL. Ohio. MroiKo this pa. per. ii with ua. SEED CORN We have won four-fifths of the first prize at the Nebraska state fair for the j -t sixteen years. We showeii the sen festiocal corn at the lBXH Iowa state fair, but could Dot compete as they did not cpen to other states. - For price list and. cast les address M. IL SMITH & SONS De Soto, Nebraska. The Old Stand ATCOKNEKOP . ' nth and, P- Streets LINCOLN , Is where yxm set a good meal for IOC . Stune Old Price. Bee ten by privates In the" army In the Philippines, during the last few days that throw. a flood of light on the situ ation over there. It appears that Gen. Pilar, who has been reported killed a dozen times is still at the head of quite a force In the Interior of Luzon. It is the testimony of every priyate who has written nome that there is not one friend to the Americans among the whole population. They will play amigo," when it is to their interest, but they hate us with aa increasing hatred every one of them. Every man , of common sense, whether he ever saw a work on strat egy or tactics or not, can sit down and make a pretty fair .calculation of what It is going to cost in men and money to hold in subjection 10,000,000 peo ple seven thousand miles from home, every one of wnom is hostile. There Is no use trying to disguise the facts In the case. There they are and every man wco wants to know them can have Indisputable evidence of them. Seven teen large transports are constantly plowing the w'ave3 of the Pacific carry ing supplies to our troops in those Islands. Besides the cargoes, which run up into the millions, they cost on an average of nearly a $1,000 a day to navigate them. Besides that, there are the 60,000 soldiers and . uieir officers to pay. After a year of this work, we find the whole country ex cept some few garrisoned towns, still in the possession of the enemy. No wonder that Koosevelt told President Jordan that he wished that we were rid of this Philippine business. This i-nllippine situation is just what the Independent has continued to assert fjir more than a year that it would be. It did not take any pro phetic skill or any great amount of reasoning to come to such a conclusion. Any man not driven crazy with the sight' of gold lace and the hope of shoulder straps could see it. The mad ness of the administration leaders at Washington is Incomprehensible. - Not only have they been willing to abandon every principle that this nation held dear, but reason itself. They have started on a career and though they must begin to see that it only leads to destruction, they press blindly on. Constitutions, platforms, pledges, are all brushed aside as if they were only dead flies. In South Africa the British have not made their promised advance at this writing. ne Boer farmer warriors are scattered all over tne country in me rear oi ix)ra Kooerts army ana ne seems to have all that he wants to do to preserve his lines of communica tions. There has been some fighting which has resulted in favor of the Boers and Mafeking and the British force on tne line of Basutoland is still besieged. une or we tnings mat nappenea aur- v 1. a t"c wca. sum uunu ui tweive Dig steei mins. mis tnrew thousands Ol men out of work and there is no prospect of their starting up in the near future. Nails, barbed and smooth wire and all kindred pro ducts have been reduced enormously In nrice. This cuts the country store- keepers who have just got and paid for their seasons supply tothe very quick. Some of them will doubtless be hunt ing a bankrupt court in the near fu ture. Nails were cut $1.00 a keg, wire $1.00 a hundred. Through the efforts of Mr. F. H. Barnes, the painstaking and hustling city passenger & gent of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific, the people of Lincoln and other towns on that road in this locality will have a most excellent train service both east and west. Two trains have been added that make it pos sible for business houses in Lincoln to send out travelling men to various towns on that road, to make several stations and return the same day. The people along the route have also beeE provided for by making the service such that they can visit Lincoln, do their trading and return to their homes the same day, thus bringing the advantages of the great stores and the capital city within eay reach of several thousand more people than in the past. The people will profit as a result of Mr. Barnes' energy. This shows the beauties of the trust system, it Is a game of the same sort that the bankers have been play ing on the people for the last twenty fire years. The trust ran the price away, up out of all reason, sold enough goods to supply the market for a year, made a big dividend, played tne market for a fall in stock and then shut down their mills. That left the lambs of Wall street holding the sack and the retail dealers all over tne country with a years supply on hand that they will have to sell at a much lower figure than what the goods cost them. Six months from now, these dealers will not be talking so much about McKin ley prosperity as tney have during the last few. During the week the British press have jumper onto the Generals in South Africa rough shod. Buller, Methuen, Warren. Gatacre and the whole crowd are pronounced by Lord Roberts and the London editors to te incompetent. One of the editors asks if they are all discharged, where they are going to get any more? Perhaps if they leave them in command, after four or five years, they will learn how to avoid Boer traps. The state supreme court of Michigan, in a suit against the Wabash railway by State Railroad Commissioner Ash borne, has decided that carrying bag gage, express and mail is legally a part of the earn.ng power of passenger trains and that on the company's re ports of earnings, made to tne commis sioner for the year 1898, it must re duce its passenger fares from 3. cents to 2V2 cent3 per mile in Michigan. The sliding scale law which passed the leg islature in 1891 provides that the com pensation of railroads for transport ing passengers, the earnings of whose passenger trains were over 1 2,000 and less than $3,000 per mile, should be 2 cents per mile. Put Them to Thinking Those who a few months ago de nounced, the allegations against Mc Kinley as partisan misrepresentation and refused to look or reason or listen are to-day wondering ow they could have been so blind that they did not penetrate the disguise of unction and sacrosanctitude until the . man was "caught in the act! before tneir very eyes. In the strong light of Porto Rican perfidy they are seeing at last the truth about Algerism, Eaganism, Sons of Somebodies, embalmed beef, pest camps, the ; Philippines proclama tion, the betrayal of civil-service re form pledges, the appointments of the offscourings of the slums to high Fed eral office, the ; Standard Oil Bank scandal, the ship-subsidys scandal all that amazing composite of "conscience "without courage and courage without conscience" called McKinleyism. -( The point of view is everything, j Porto Rico has suddenly put the Re j publican thinking voters at the proper point of view. -. Y. world. WATCHES FOR EVERYBODY Guaranteed Ti me-K per Iree as a Prem ium for New Subscribers - With the object and for the pur pose of putting the Independent into every populist home in Ne braska and adjoining states, and into the hands of thousands of con scientious but doubtful voters we have made arrangements to give a GUARANTEED WATCH to every man, woman,-or child who will as sist in increasing the circulation. The watch is a nickel plated, stem wind and stem set, complete in every particular, guaranteed for one year. It is a watch that re tails at all jewelry stores at from six to seven dollars. We can make the liberal offer we do only because (in connection with another pub lisher) we have bought them in lots of i coo watches at a time. We could get a cheaper watch than the one we offer, but we prefer to give A GOOD ONE OR NONE. To make a long story short, it is a splendid watch, neat in appearance, a perfect time keeper, satisfactory in every particular, guaranteed one year. . TERMS. KO. 1. For sale, each - $2.00 Ko. 2. The watch des cribed and the Inde pendent iyear to a new subscriber - - 2.50 !Xo. 3. To all subscribers on the list at present (who pay up all ar rearages) we will send the watch and the Independent for another year for - - 2.25 N. B. This is a special offer to present read ers of the paper to encourage payment .of back accounts and renewals and cannot be taken ad vantage of by those who- are not already on the list- .v.- . r Xo. 4. The watch free as a premium,, for 2. CAMPAIGN SUB- ? . SCRlPTIONSat 35 cents each r - - - 4.20 Xo. 5. -To those who can not get as many as twelve campaign sub scriptions , we will send the watch for 5 campaign, subscrip tions at. -35 . cents. . each, $1.75, and an additional .-$1.25 in cash - ... 3.00 We believe that, we have placed this elegant premium within the reach of everyone. There will be much of interest during the com ing campaign. No one will regret the payment of so small a sum as 35 cents for the Independent from now until November 6. It will contain a vast amount of informa tion that cannot be obtained in any other paper. It is the most fear less champion of the rights of the people to be found in the west. It is first in the fight for "equal rights to all and special privileges to none." Why not take advantage of this liberal offer to secure a valu able premium for yourself or your boy and help to increase the circu lation and influence of such an ex cellent paper as the Independent? Utbraska Independent, Lincoln, I2br On To Sioux Falls The First Convention to Nominate he Next President Will be Attended by Enormous Crowds Sioux Falls, with characteristic west ern confidence, undismayed by the mag nitude of the job, is rushing forward the - preparations for the populist na tional convention. -Hotels will not be gin to accommodate the crowd ex pected, but private houses will receive the overflow. Stakes are now being driven for the big circus tent in which the convention will be held. No hall in the city would be adequate. M. L. Fox, secretary of the local com mittee, says that they are making prep arations for 15,000 people. There were 1,400 delegates, and it is assured that every state and territory will be rep resented. There are only Uiree good ized hotels in the town, and the larg est hall seats 600 persons. The only thing to do therefore was to appeal to the people, and these, without re gard to political aSSliations, have agreed to tnrow open their private homes, in which they will not only lodge delegates and visitors, but will feed them. Several citizens who have had their homes closed and are board ing will open their houses for the big popullstic occasion. The hotel men here have agreed to charge nothing more than, regular rates, but there is sure to be consid erable crowding in rooms. At the pri vate homes charges will, be made in accordance -with the character of the accommodations." For a shelter for the convention a mammoth "hall-shaped tent" has been ordered, v It will be set on Suramit street, between 9th and 10th streets,torthe very heart of the residence district. A sergeant-at-arms of the national committee will be sent there next week by dI mian Butler to keep an ere on the preparations. The interior of the tent will be ar ranged with a view to proper acoustic properties. The stage will be in the center, or near it, and the delegates will be seated in quartets, for the fold ing canvass benches will each hold four-men. -"- The spectators will be perched on seats of the circus order and Secretary Fox says there will De room, for ah and a man, woman or child may slt ness the proceedings at an average ad mittance of but 20 cents. Tickets goo, for ten admissions will be sold for $2. Funds to the amount of $10,500 have been raised by Sioux Falls business men for the needs of the convention. Of this S 1,000 will be spent for brass bands and for the purchase of 2,000! extra cots. The railroads, of which there are the Illinois Central, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, the Northwest ern, Burlington, Cedar Rapids & North ern and the Great Northern, gave $1,800, and this will, probably be raised to $3,000. The national commit tee will have 5,G00 tickets and the local committee will have the others for sale. Prominent democrats from different sections of the country have already booked rooms, among" them Willis J. Abbot of the national democratic press bureau. The Nebraska, Minnesota and Colorado delegations have booked head quarters at the Cataract house, where Secretary Edgerton has reserved four rooms tor neaa quarters ana oraerea them artistically decorated. There will be sessions of the conven- tion during the four days of the week, but there will be no nomination until Saturday night Senator Marion Butler has engaged fa suit of rooms for himself and wife. "Cyclone" Davis is coming up here on a special train loaded with noisy Tex ans. "Cyclone" proposes to cut a wide swath from the Red river to the Sioux. Gov. Poynter of Nebraska has secured quarters. So has C. D. Jenal of Bloom field, Neb. R. E. Dowdal of South Da kota and J. E. Welling of South Da kota. At the head of the local committee managing the convention arrange ments is Mayor B. H. Lien. Associated with him- in the arrangements are Mark Budge, John T. Cogan, Porter P. Peck, T. W. Sexton, George Schlosser and M. L. Fox. Jordan cn Politics Dr. David Starr Jordan, president of Leland Stanford University, Califor nia, was at the Barnett hotel Friday night after his lecture. He was for two hours the center of a group of eager listeners and discussed current politics. "Politics," he said "is the business of the people and it is the duty ot us all to know what our government is aoing and to talk about it. War is al ways deplorable as it destroys not our inferior men, but our best men. We, and not the Filipinos, are the responsi ble parties of thiswar. If we had given to those people a definite state ment of our intention towara them and had our intention been honorable, the war would have died out. Our at titude has held tne Filipinos together. They have an assurance that they will never have self government again if they lose it now. "Have you any sympathy for the idea of territorial expansion? asiced a prominent city superintendent. "In deed, I am really an expansionist in principle, but that has nothing to 0.0 with this question. 1 am not an lm oerialist. I would not bold lands as provinces or subjected territories, and that speaks for a great majority of the Americans. "Do you think Bryan would or could proceed differently if ne were presi dent?" "Yes. He would have declared our intention at the very beginning to give them self government and representa tion as soon as order is restored. And every man who would not give them reDresentation in our, government is an imperialist and not an expansion 1st. Bryan I think is a man of fair but not great intellect, of very strong convictions and is too honest and too brave to be corrupted or frightened from them. He is a good, safe, all around man. I did not vote for him In 1896 but I will now." "What do you think of Beveridge's speech?" "The weaxness of Beveridge's speech is that he tries to make the point that congress has control of our possessions. Ships, ports, arms, stores, crops are possessions, but we dare not consider men as property and foist upon them a government they despise." "Is "It Bryan's or McKinley's views that are gaining among the people?" "After all this talk do you ask what I think? Let me quote you Roosevelt on thati He said to me last week. 'Jordan, I wish to God we were out of the Philippines and had them off our hands, and many republicans are thinking the same. I am free to quote Roosevelt because I consiuer him in many respects one of the greatest men in the republican party." "How do you size up IcKinley?" "Let me quote you Roosevelt again. He said: "McKiniey has about as much backbone as a toy chocolate man that you see on the confectioner's stand; he is dreadful disappointment." "What do you think of President Schurman's report on the Philip pines?" . . "Schiirman is a good man, but he is essentially an aristocrat. and an aristo crat can not make a government for e masses." The -two prominent republicans hit McKiniey awiully hard, but they speak the sentiments of hundreds of thou sands of the true republicans who are honest enough to speak "their senti ments and speak them loud so as to be beard all over the land from the At lantic to the Pacific in tones of thunder Jasper County Democrat, Ind. The Iowa populists last week selected a delegation, headed by Gen. James B. Weaver, to the Sioux Falls convention, and instructed it for Bryan for president. The Omaha and St. Louis platforms were Teamrmed ana tne recent issues covered in a statesmanlike way.:. if 0o!3tl)Sts CottOH 13 e gwat month for the sale of wash cotton dress iirCSS 6s ac we a18 prepared to make it an unusually CTeat flOftffci monh. this year. Hundreds . of prices; many thousands of goods aidTrioVtf cy4rd of old or carried ever goods ; in the-r lot Great variety choicest styles obtainable and excellent values are the three great attractions of our wash dress goods stock. eCbrdecUlawns5r7fc 9, 10 and 12c a Organdie finished lawns 10 and 15c a yard. - American dimities 12ic and 15c a yard Dress ginghams 10, 12, 15 and 18c a yard. " Crepons 15 and 18c a yard. Percales 10 and 12 ic a yard. ' Best Irish dimities 25c a yard. Crash suitings 124, 15, 18, 20 and 25c a yard. Black sateens 8, 10, 12f,15, 20 and 25c a yard.-; - - t. : - - If you call at our -wash dress roods department we will show you a stock so large and an assortment so complete that you are almost certain to find ex actly what yoa want. Come and see for yourself. White We have called your attention j. to white cotton dress goods DfCSS several times recently but its u impuruiat suujeci ana we IrnOIQ exPct to keep at it for many. UWUU3. months to come. The fact is as we have remarked before, this is to be a white goods season and we want tne people who are thinking of buying white dress goods to know that we have what they, want Whether you prefer plain or fancy white goods we can please you. , We invite you to call at our white goods department. ', 1 niL.LER'& FOR , ... SEED I ioc Per Acre.... 90 J)ay Imported Leaning, per bushel. 75c 90 Day Pride of North, per bushel .... ..75c 90 Day Iowa Gold Mine, per bushel 75c 100 Day Golden Beauty, per bushel . 75c 100 Day Nebraska White- Prize, per bushel .V. ... 80c IT PAYS TO PUT IN GOOD SEED CORN SEND FOR CATALOGUE GRISWOLD SEED CO., loth and N St Catalogues- - Free .1 Our new Spring Catalogue of 68 pages is now ready for distribution. It is the most complete Catalogue of Housefurnishing Goods pub lished in Nebraska. We have 3o,ooo to give away It illustrates Furniture, Carpets, Refrigerators, and Hardware, We .-wv - w - frigerators. Carpenters Tools, Builders Hardware, Baby Carriages ana ijmce jjesics. - J5Y We want your mail orders and will promise you they will receive prompt and careful attention. ' . b - v and beyond 100 miles allow the us a trial order. - RUDGE & GUENZEL CO., 55? Cnua-o-K. T7n I. r--Ja fV m "Ssmwi:: -Second-Hand Store We have -bargains - for you most everyf ciay; in furniture, iron bedsteads, stoves, ranges, gasoline stbves,window shades, carpets, queensware,glassware, tinware and granite iron ware. 1 325 0 Strest, Liaccla, Ksb. in 'ft iUii.ii . 0&l31iiSt; SflfillflCr n'v ew years ago Isdj .s who wore corsets at all hd Cflrcpf C wear tho heavy kind t' ie year round for the simi le reason that good summer corsets we re not made. Now. they are made and go d qualities" are made to sell at very 1 v prices. In low priced summer net c r sets we are selling three special lines i t 25c, 50c and 59c each. , . . .. We invite you to compare these wiih summer corsets sold elsewhere at f rem 10 to 25 cents higher prices. . . ' See them in our corset department. BEFORE YOU BUY SUMMER HAT VISIT OUR MILLINERY DEPARTMT We guarantee to show you the. very you the very latest styles and to give lowest prices. - IN OUR CLOAK AND SUIT DEPARTMENT LADIES SUITS Ladies1 ; Spring Jacket Ladies' Spring Capes Ladies1 Dress Skirts ' Ladies' Shirt Waists Ladies' Mackintoshes Ladies' Petticoats Lincoln, Nebraska. P. o. Box a 15C3. Lincoln, Neb. 13 Draperies, Queensware, Stoves, issue Soecial Pfiinrl1A t?.. - . va v vu ira ; . .a- " " iicpajr ireigni j.uu mnes freight for the first 100 miles.. Send f I I I ' Lincoln, Nebraska. J. 17. rjitcliell Go. Are prepared to fill all orders in papering, painting, Tint ing, Frescoing, Picture Fram-, ing, and Room Moulding, Tel. 237. 1335 0 St. LIXCOLX, XEB. EP1 SL 0k. IS- WW MV j