r THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT June 12, 1902 MANY ORDERS FOR CARDS Readers of The Independent Will Push the Sale of Liberty Building Subscription Cards at Conventions " EVERY DELEGATE SHOULD SUBSCRIBE As the Official Representative of His Party it is His Duty to Keep Himself Informed In Political Affairs : TO RESEED THE RANGES Move of Railroads For the Good of Western Plains. In the history of The Independent the readers of the paper have never ehown more loyalty or interest in help ing to increase the circulation than at the present time. Every mail brings encouraging letters and many large orders for Liberty Building sub .Ecription cards. During this week and next the county conventions will b3 held to name delegates to the state convention which meets at Grand Isl and, June 24. In many or the coun ties the nominations for county offi cers will be made at the same time. The Independent hopes to have one or more of it3 readers at each conven tion taking orders for Liberty Build- - ing subscriptions. The man who is sent as a delegate to the county con vention or as a delegate to the state convention becomes the official repre sentative of his party in the same manner that a member of congress is the official representative of the people of his district. As the official representative of his party every dele gate is under obligations to acquaint himself with all matters pertaining ta political affairs in order that he may act at all times for the best interests of his party. In many cases delegates regard their duties and obligations to the party too lightly. They frequent ly look upon their selection as dele gates as only a personal compliment and forget the duties belonging to the 4 position. It is a personal compliment to be sent as the official representative of the party, but there is also an im plied contract on the part of the dele gate when he accepts the position that he will do all things necessary for the proper discharge of his duties. The first and most important should be to thoroughly acquaint himself with political conditions to enable him to act intelligently upon every question that arises. He cannot do that bettar than to subscribe for and read Tno Independent regularly. It is every where recognized as. the leading peo ple's party paper in the state or United States. It investigates with great care every matter of political importance and publishes the results of the In vestigation without fear or favor. No delegate can properly discharge his duties without reading it. When he returns from the convention his neigh bors, both political friends and re publicans as well, have a right to sup pose that he knows something about political issues. They can properly ask him for information. How can he furnish it unless he reads The In dependent? Readers of The Indepen dent should present the matter to ev ery delegate who is not a subscriber and insist upon his "giving them an order for his subscription. A people's party man who does not read The In dependent is about as capable and val uable in a campaign as a soldier wita out a rifle or ammunition. It is the most essential part : of his fighting equipment. : - : ' Orders received for cards during the past week were as follows: Previously acknowledged 4211 To state committee .2500 Christian Jiissel Havana, Neb. .... 5 H. N. Lynn, Weston, Neb 10 Eliza Sowards, Ashland, Neo 5 J. H. Cronk, Ord, Neb ...25 L. D. Sturdevant, Cedar Rapids, Neb. 5 Harry Brown, Georgetown, Neb 20 Elias S. Gilbert, Weeping Water, Neb 5 A. Shufelt, Ashburn? Mo.. 5 I E. Burkey,. Giltner, Neb........ 6 H. Pickering, Atlanta, Neb 5 It. W. Van Alstine, Neb. ity, Neb.. 15 G. W. Brammer, Rockville, Neb.... b J. B. Hagelbarger, Fullerton, Neb.. 15 I. N. Allen,. Oak, Neb..... ...5 W. C. Nickles, Swanton, Neb b S. L. Conger, Inman, Neb 10 Elmer K.ingstrom, Bertrand, Neb.. 15 Conner Shotwell, Cambridge, Neb. 5 E. M. Harrison, Big Springs, Neb.. 5 W. C. Emery, Albion, Neb ...20 W. Winslow, Elm Creek, (Neb...... 5 Stuart G. Halle, Clearwater, Neb... 25 Peter Dahlsteri, . Bartlett, Neb. . .10 X. H. Bedford, Meek, Neb........ 10 A. Shipman, Ainsworth, Neb. . . .. .. 5 G. W. Parnell, Benkelman, Neb... .10 J. M. Vaughan, Huntley,. Neb. .... . 5 S. P. Johnson, Wakefield, Neb.... 5 Otto A. Patswold, El Reno, Okla.. 5 J. M. Jamison, Valparaiso, Neb.... 5 E. E. Berry, Fairbury, Neb 5 Aug. .Hohneke, Hoskins, Neb...... 5 A. P. Freeman, Ragan, Neb. 5 Walter Shetler, Litchfield, Neb 5 T. C. Cash, Cozad, Neb.. i E. S. Dickerson, Abbott, Neb ...... 5 D..H. Goodrich, Geneva, Ne?r 15 Geo. Peake, Humboldt, Neb. RR4. . C Jas. B. Barnes, Loretto, Neb 5 C. H. Gorton, Gloversville, N. Y... 5 F. M. Chase, Charlotte Center, N.Y. 5 Ed F. Clark, Mars, Neb 5 Marvin .Warren, Fairbury, NeUi... 5 S. G. Haile, Clearwater, Neb.;. ....10 Total ,. 7051 ' ' 1 THE INDEPEWdLt OSt. jj roposed Liberty Building .A Home For The Independent. Two Stories 25x142 Being Erected From the Sale of Liberty Subscription Cards by the Readers of The Independent For many years the greatest need of The Independent has been a per manent location a home of its own. Once secured, expenses can be re duced and the paper made a greater power for good and more valuable and interesting to its readers. To build this home The Independent has asked the co-operation of its readers in the sale of 10,000 subscription cards. The cards are printed on regular U. S. postals and are put up in blocks of Immigration during the past montn at New York has broken all previous records, the arrivals numbering over 83,500. This compares with a former high record of 73,000, which was es tablished in the same month of 1893, . when that number of immigrants landed at Ellis island. Then, however, they came largely from Ireland and northern Europe; now 70 per cent f them come from Italy,' Austria, Hun gary and Russia. It is stated by one of the Immigration commissioners that at least 53 per cent of those now coming are undesirable, because nav ing no trade or regular vocation. night End the War The last word the Filipinos have heard direct from a president of the United States was that which McKln ley sent them three years and a naif ago, giving them the choice between "benevolent assimilation 'and exter minationthe proclamation which General Otis edited with a judicious five. Each card is good for a year's subscription. For the five cards (five yearly subscriptions to be sent to five different persons) the charge is $3.00, 60 cents for each card. The regular subscription price of The Independent is $1.00 per year, and for single sub scriptions it does not accept less tnan that. It is only because funds are needed for the construction of Liberty Building that the .unparalleled offer of five yearly subscriptions for only $3.00 is made. . blue pencil, but which got out by ac cident in its original ferocity and tnus brought on the war. President Roose velt might now proclaim ultimate in dependence and thus end the war that his predecessor began. Boston Post. The democratic party is making great advances. The time was' wnen what the democratic newspapers said, the rank and file indorsed, but it Is so no longer. The rank and file, like the populists, begin to have opinions of their own and they take measures to make them count in party policies. Several of the leading democratic newspapers in Tennessee are the rank est imperialists in the land, but when the democratic convention of that state met the rank and file passed a ringing resolution denouncing imper ialism in all its forms. Those "lead ing organs" it turned out did not lead at all. The rank and file showed in a very decisive way that they intended to do the leading themselves. ; MATTES OF VAST IMPOETAUOE. Plan to Be Tried I to Sow Three Tiiovsana Acres to Different GrMni to See Which la the Moat Suitable. Proposed to Begin the Work Earlr Next Spriugr. It has Just been given out by railroads with headquarters in Omaha, Neb., that a plan Is now on foot which contem plates the ultimate reseeding of all the western ranges, says the St. Louis Post Dispatch. The preliminary portion of the scheme, itself a work of great mag nitude, Involves extensive experiment ing with the cultivation of different range grass seeds with a view to deter mining those best suited to the purpose. This proposition is one of great sig nificance and many ramifications. Should it be carried to a successful is sue the ranges of Utah, Nebraska, Wy oming, Montana. Nevada and . Idaho will be vastly affected. If the proper grass plant can be found, the different railroads interested in these states will go to great expense to further the plant. The railroads expect the government to help promote "the scheme as soon as they show the matter to be practical. The different states to be benefited will also be asked to contribute a share of the general expense incurred in carry ing the plans to maturity. The men who are at the head of the plans declare the scheme for reseeding the ranges to be 6f, more importance to the country than irrigation, because the former will if carried out be far more extensive in its scope and in the bene fits resulting from its adoption. The territory which can be benefited by ir rigation Is limited because of the inabil ity to secure more than a certain amount of water from certain streams. The territory to be benefited by reseed ing is only limited by the extent of the ranges of the west. The entire plan is said to be so well mapped out that the actual working out of the first step will begin with tha early spring. R.- C. Judson, Industrial agent of the Oregon Railway and Nav igation company, is said to be slated for the experimental part which will be first attempted. lie is now in charge of the experimental farm of his road at Walla Walla, Wash., and is already making careful preliminary tests along the line suggested. Western ranges have been very much impoverished and Injured by over crowding of herds in the past few years. Sheep particularly have been the cause of the trouble, as they are very destructive to grasses. What they do not dig out with their sharp teeth they punch in with their equally sharp hoofs, and if bunched beyond a reason able limit they can entirely destroy all growth except the sage grass. As a result of the deterioration of the range in many places It now requires two and three time as manyacres to provide for a given number of cattle as formerly. The railroads expect by reseeding to so improve these ranges that they will provide for a larger num ber than originally. For the conduct of the experimental part of the work the following plan has been determined upon. A spot contain ing some 3.000 acres will be fenced off In some centrally located range. This will be divided into thirty plots for the trying out of as many different grasses. The central idea will be to find some grass which will be permanent, luxu riant and hardy. Seeds from all over the world will be used, and many from Africa and South America have al ready been received.' When the correct grass is found, the government and states will be call ed upon to actively co-operate with the railroads to reseed the plains. The gov ernment will be asked to make a large appropriation for the purchase and sowing of the seed throughout the range country and the state will be asked to provide for state lands every where.. All of this will mean an enormous work, but each passing year renders it more imperative. The greatest part of the work will be the protection of that part of the country reseeded until the new grass has sufficient start to maintain itself. This is a vast prol lem, and the government will be called upon to bring its authority to bear in the matter. - Saved by Her Poodle. . Miss Margaret Tolle of Litchfield. III., was the guest of Miss Birdie Kll patrick of St. Louis on Christmas day. She took a walk with her poodle dog and fell into an eighteen foot well. She was bruised and too weak to even call for help. Her faithful little dog ran back to the Kilpatrlck house and began whining and grabbing with his teeth at the clothing of Miss Kilpat rick and her brothers and sisters, says the New York World. They finally un derstood that the dog wished them to follow him. They found Miss Tolle unconscious in the well. Her Injuries are serious, and she certainly would have perished but for her dog's sagac ity.'' Guarding- the Pyramids. Pierpont Morgan is coming to Cairo shortly, and he Is not coming for his health, says the Cairo Sphinx. The army of occupation will repulse any attempt to remove the pyramids and sphinx, and the dogs of the Abbasslyeh fox hunt are being trained as sleuth hounds to track Mr. Morgan's secret agents. . .-' AMERICANIZING" ENGLAND. Influence ' of American Women . om ' - ' British Social Customs. . But it Is not only in the realm of the shopkeeper that Americans have be come popular, says Earl Mayo in the January Forum. They have been tak en up, with equal or even greater en thusiasm by the highest ranks of soci ety. There is no doubt that their popu larity has been due in great measure to the influence Of those American wo men who have married Into the ranks of the clever, titled or wealthy, who form the most important elements of British high society. The grace, the brightness ,and ".: the adaptability of these women have made them im mensely popular, and the British, having- found them fair types of their countrywomen and countrymen, have extended an equally cordial welcome to the latter. At every house party held in England last summer, at every London dinner and on every yachting expedition Americans were much In evidence. There have been many signs also to show American influence on English social customs. For one thing- it may be seen in the decay or one may say more properly perhaps the relaxation of the stiff' necked chaperon system. Until quite recently it was unusual to find in England a formal gathering at which fashionable young women were allowed to attend unaccompanied "by chaperons. During the last season, however there were many such af fairs Organized by fashionable young people and under the direction of ia single young matron, as is' very gener ally the custom in this country. There is a very noticeable tendency in Eng land to allow young people much more freedom of social intercourse than for merly. ' It cannot be said either that the change is at all unpopular with the young people themselves or that It seems likely to have any other effect than to develop in the English girl the self reliance that is so prominent a characteristic of her American cousin and to make young men and women understand each other better than un der the older and more formal system. Another effect of American example Is to be found in the growing popular ity of hotel and restaurant life abroad. Until the American "Invasion" it was almost an unheard of thing for a fam ily to take dinner in a public restau rant when their own house was availa ble for. the purpose. And as for enter taining . friends in such a place, that was looked upon as altogether too outre to be attempted. Now, however, all this is changed, and it is not un usual for a London host and hostess to call upon the resources of a fashiona ble hotel of restaurant In giving enter tainments beyond the limits of ordina ry house accommodation. A significant sign of the trend in this direction is to be found in the rapid multiplication of fine hotels -that is going on in London at the present time. These hotels themselves,- by the way, are becoming rap Idly Americanized. Amerfcan methods of - organization,- and management, American dishes and American drinks are coming more and more into vogue, and it is easy 'enough to find half a dozen hotels in London which are in all essential respects exactly like those of New York. " A USE: FOR COAL ASHES. Discovery' That Fireproof Mortar Can Be Made Therefrom. George F. Averill, living at Arverne, N. Y., says that he has discovered a means of using the waste coaj ash cin ders that will make the hitherto use less material of great commercial val ue. The use which Mr. Averill has found for these coal ashes is in a new kind of fireproof mortar, 90 per cent of which is made up of coal ashes and the rest double hydraulic cement, says the Brooklyn Eagle. ; Mr, Averill has had tests made under, the supervision of the department of buildings in Manhattan which show that the insulating proper ties of a block constructed according to Mr. Averill's specifications are very great. In fact, Mr. Averill says that with over 1,700 degrees F. hardly any perceptible heat could be felt by the hand on the other side of the block. Matches which had been laid on the block were not Ignited, and some white pine and oak splinters showed no signs of charring. A thermometer on the up per side of the block during the whole time of the test registered only 116 de grees. - Mr. Averill also proposes to make a fireproof concrete from the waste ashes which can be used in ceilings and can be made into blocks, f or partitions! It has been estimated that the amount of waste of coal ashes in Manhattan and Brooklyn aggregates 6,000,000 cubic yards yearly, the greater portion of which Is now dumped into the ocean. Telephones on Dining' Tables. There is a new quick lunch telephone In Chicago, and the city has the honor through the Chicago Telephone compa ny of being the first in the world to provide diners with telephones while they eat, says the Chicago Record-Herald.. The - broker, financier or mer chant now eats his lunch placidly cer tain that his place of business can call him up and he talk back to it without leaving . his table. Three cafes of the city are already using the system, and it promises to be installed in all popu lar eating places within a short time. All the.dining table now needs is a stenographer and typewriter to make man absolutely happy. Latest Souvenir Caps. Quite new, not more than a month old, are the aluminium cups, souvenirs of the Spanish-American war. They have on the outside a large portrait of President -McKInley, a smaller single portrait of Captain Hobson and groups of officers, Lee, Shafter, Miles, Samp son, Schley and Dewey. ! :-- "- " - - The Lodge Bill There is a difference in the provi sions of the Philippine bill that has been prepared in the house and the Philippine bill that has just passed the senate. The Chicago Record-Herald describes the difference a3 follows:. "The" house bill, which is much the more liberal of the two, would set up a partially, representative and popular form of government. It provides for a legislature of two branches, of which the Philippines commission would constitute one and an elective assem bly the other, the suffrage to be re stricted by certain education and prop erty qualifications. The senate bill would leave the commission unhamp ered as it is now. The house bill pro vides that the legislature shall send two delegates to Washington. The senate bill contains no such provi sion. The house bill practically incor porates our own bill of rights with the exception of the right of trial by jury and the right to bear arms. It also adds the declaration that residents of the Philippines owing allegiance to the United States shall enjoy the same protection as citizens of the United States from injury by foreign govern ments and from injury in foreign coun tries. These provisions are omitted from the senate bill. Furthermore, aside , from these differences as re gards personal rights and privileges there, is a very decided difference on the question of money and the cur rency. The house bill provides for a gold standard like our own, for the coinage of a Filipino peso which shall contain silver to the value of about 40 cents in gold, and for a subsidiary coinage. The silver coins would be Issued by the government and the seignorage would be used to maintain parity of the peso with fifty cents gold. The senate bill provides on the con trary for the free coinage of a Fili pino dollar, and has no provision for the establishment of the gold stand ard." It is announced that the Hon. Mich ael Herbert will succeed the late Lord Pauncefote as British ambassador, and Senor de Ojeda will succeed the Duke de Arcos as Spanish minister. On June 4 the anti-anarchy bill was debated in the house. The discussion was confined almost entirely to the legal and constitutional phases of the question, Mr. Jenkins of Wisconsin expressing the opinion that congress should make it a crime to kill, or at tempt to kill the president, without limitation of qualification. On June 3 the senate passed the Lodge Philippine government bill by a vote of 48 to 30. Three republicans, Hoar of Massachusetts, Mason of Il linois, and Wellington of Maryland, voted against the measure, and one democrat, Mr'. McLaurin of South Carolina, voted for it. The debate on the measure has been in progress seven weeks and two days. This bill approves the action of the president in creating the Philippine commission and the offices of the civil governor and vice governor of the islands, and authorizes the governor and. vice governor to exercise the pow ers of government as directed by ex ecutive orders. Future appointments of. the governor or vice governor shall be made by the president, with the advice and consent of the senate. "The bill of rights" of the United States constitution are applied to the Philippine islands with the exception of the right to bear arms and the right to a trial by jury. The supreme court and other courts of the islands shall exercise jurisdiction as hereto fore applied by the Philippine com mission and justices of the supreme court shall be applied by the president and the senate, the others by the civil governor and the commission. The action of the president of the United States in levying and collect ing the taxes is approved. All the inhabitants of the Philip pine islands are deemed to be citizens of the Philippine islands' and entitled to the protection of the United States. When the insurrection in the islands shall have been subdued a careful cen sus of the islands shall be taken and after such census the governor of the islands shall make a full report to the president and make recommendation! as to future government. Meantime the Philippine commis sion is authorized to establish munici pal and provincial governments with popular representative government, so far and as fast as the communities are capable and are fit for the same, the Philippine commission being au thorized to determine the qualifica tions of the electors. The president is authorized to reg ulate the commercial intercourse with the archipelago in the interest of the general welfare. The government of the Philippines is authorized to provide for the needs of commerce by improving harbors and navigable waters, providing ware houses, lighthouses, signal stations, etc. All land in the Philippines is placed under the control of the Philippine commission for the benefit of the in habitants of the islands, except such as may be needed for the United States. The government of the Philippines may make rules and regulations for the disposition of the public lands and the regulations shall not go into effect until approved by the president and congress, provided that a single home stead entry shall not exceed forty acres and also provided that no such land shall be leased, let or demised to any corporation until a law regulat ing the disposition of the public lands shall be enacted. No corporation shall be authorized to engage In agriculture" unless pro vision shall have been made therefor. The bill provides ati length ' how claims, loth agricultural and mineral, shall be located and the Philippine commission is authorized to establish a mining bureau. The government of the Philippines is authorized to ac quire and convey title to real and per sonal property and to acquire real es tate for, public uses by the right of eminent domain. The Philippipes commfission is au thorized to acquire the friar lands and is empowered to issue bonds to pay for them. These lands, once acquired, shall be , a part of the domain of the United States and may be disposed of as such. " Upon the supreme court of the Unit ed States Is conferred the right to re view the decisions of the supreme court of the Philippines. Municipalities are authorized to Is sue bonds for municipal improvements with the consent of the president and congress, the entire Indebtedness of any municipality not to exceed 5 per cent of the assessed valuation of the property. It is provided that the bonds shall be gold bonds and shall be free from any taxation. A sinking f ucd for the payment of the bonds and In terest thereon must be provided by the municipality issuing them. The city of Manila is authorized to incur in debtedness in gold bonds to an amount not exceeding $4,000,000 to pay for n sewer system and water supply. The government of the Philippines !? authorized to grant franchises and concessions, including the right of eminent domain for the construction of works of public utility, provided that no" private property shall be taken without just compensation, that no franchise shall be granted to any cor poration that shall not be subject to review by congress; and that all lands granted shall revert at the expiration of the concession to the governments by which they were made. . No corporation shall be authorized to conduct the business of buying and selling real estate and the amount of real estate which shall be held by any corporation shall be determined by congress. A mint is to be established in Manila .and coins authorized may be coined at the mint, the coinage laws of the United State-- being ex tended to the islands. The Philippine government is authorized to coin a silver dollar containing 416 grains of standard silver to be a coin of the Philippine islands, the denomination of the coin to be expressed in English, Filipino and Chinese characters. Sil ver brought to the Manila mint shall be coined for the benefit of the deposi tor, the mint charge being 1 cent for each dollar coined. The same coin may be made at the mint in San Fran cisco upon the request of the Philip pine government with the approval of the secretary of the treasury, provid ed that such deposits at the San Fran cisco mint shall be confined to silver produced in the United Slates. Sub sidiary coins of silver also may be coined at the Manila mint under re striction similar to those regulating the coinage of the dollar. The dollar shall be legal tender in the Philippines for public and private debts, except where otherwise stip ulated. Silver certificates, may be is sued for deposits of F.iliplno dollars iu sums of $20 or more. Other minor subsidiary coins are provided for. The bill also contains the division of insular affairs of the war depart ment, the chief of which shall be the rank of a colonel of the United States army. SOME EXCHANGE INTERVIEWS. . After a while, perhaps, the peo ple of this country will begin to ask, Is the whole archipelago worth the powder that is required to conquer and assimilate it? Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Herald. " The esteemed Age-Herald is mis taken. The people already know that the archipelago is not worth the price they are paying, but a lot of smooth TT Searles & Searles, SPECIALISTS on TloCuro ALL Private Diseases and Disorders HOME TREATMENT BY MAIL. Examination and Consultation FREE. -Charges Low. Main Office: Richards Block. Only Flo Pay ALL a Weakntf $ , Impotent m-kA , NF-O 2 NriMliro ft filflO Cursdit ham ty b-- uiiiuiuiu jh uiuut uiciDoa wunnutpair. cutting. Consultation Free. Treatment by m . Call, or address with stamp, I rtain Office: Drs. Searles & Searles I 1? LINCOLN,NEBRASKA gentlemen are making a profit out ' it and the public is footing the Ml As long as the people consent to pj the price the gentlemen who are ho: I lng' the concessions and making t; profit will strenuously endeavor keep up the work of conquering an benevolently assimilating. The republicans intend to watt on democrats before they Issue their campaign literature. It looks like their old-time nerve was gonr. When you find a man who never expresses an opinion until you do yours, put him down as either a time-server or a hypocrit. Jack sonville (Fla.) Times-Union aaa Citizen. Our esteemed Florida contemporar is mistaken. Republican campais; literature Is already prepared. It cor eists in liberal use of the words "tra tor," "copperhead," "little American, "duty," "destiny," "benevolent as similation," etc. Few, words sufflceth to a wise mar Friendship is the most sacred of ai' moral bonds. Gratitude preserves old frk-ndsfcH and procures new. Grieving for misfortunes is addin j gall to wormwood. Great vices, as well as great virtu?, make men famous. Great talkers are like leaky pitch ers, everything runs out of them. Guests that come by daylight ar best received. Gossipping and lying go together. Good words and no deeds are rush-; and reeds. Good preachers give fruits and no, flowers. Good nature without prudence, i foolishness. Good laws often proceeds from ta i manners. Good deeds remain, all things el.; perish. Golden dreams makes men av.uk hungry. WEAK MENIs your health worn a 2-cent stamp? If so, then write us at once, enclosing a 2-cent stamp, for our absolutely free offer. We U send absolutely free our Perfectioa Electric Belt, the most unique au t perfect Electric Appliance in the mar ket for the cure of nervous and sexual diseases. This offer l& made In good faith for the purpose of introduelmr and advertising our methods of treat ing all chronic diseases. DON'T allow this opportunity to es cape you of regaining the health ard vigor vhich have been sapped away. We also make a specialty of curins: rheumatism, liver, kidney, varicocele, hydrocele, skin and bladder diseases PROVIDENCE MEDICAL INSTI TUTE, 59 Dearborn St.. Chicago. III. Lincoln's Progressive Store Lincoln, Neb. Catalogue Mailed Free to OuNMown Patrons 8 Specials for Mail Order Customers Always Great Hosiery and Under wear Values Here Women's Richelieu Ribbed Hose, Mercerized lisle thread, fast black, regular 35c per pair. ....25o Women's lisle thread, fancy top, black boot, drop stitch hose, 50c values, 3 pairs for .$1 OO Women's fast black lace effect hose, in pretty pat terns, fast colors, regular 20c values, 1 pairs 25c Children's fast black ribbed, seamless hose, double heels and toes, all sizes, worth 12 Jc. . . . . -8ic Women's lisle thread, low neck, sleeveless vests, fancy lace effects, also plain, regular 35c qual ity, each 25c fU' Women's low neck sleeveless vests in domestic i2j lisles, splendid values 17c each, 3 for 50c Women's gauze pants, knee lengths, 25c values 17c pair, 3 for. 50o Women's gauze pants, lace trimmed, come in half bleached and white, pair. -25o Orders for these specials mufet be received be- tore June JiDtn. ureters 01 z ana over de livered free of all charge. ytnmim' mm J Whact is ZeTLoleuLnn? A very sensible question on a common sense, very practical farmyard article. Its purpose is to shield the domestic animals from the ravages of insects which prey upon them, and to destroy disease germs. In short it is The Greatest Bisiivf ecta.ivt Known. For scab, ticks, grab, mneeots in ehep, for lice on poultry nd mil farm stock, for stomach and Intestinal worms, and as a house disinfectant, Zertolevim Has rvo equal Government Experi ment Stations have tested it and recommend it highly. The recent International Live Stock Show at Chicago did the same. There's but one voice, everybody commends it who knows its virtue. One gallon makes 100 gallons when mixed with water. Sample gal. $1.50, express prepaid. Larger quantities at reduced price. Send for fro booklets"Piggie's Troubles," "Veterinary Advisor'etc T i:.: sTVi bo u-avtea street, Detroit. nicr.. ana