The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, April 23, 1909, Page 14, Image 14

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The Commoner.
VOLUME 9, NUMBER It
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COMBINATION BARGAINS
To Iionoll t
pnpcr.-, The Coi
Km render, ivlio ilcwlrc o nlcc oilier mngnInoK mid neffii.
......,...,... itnu nmin fiff uiii-niiiniifM iviicrsliy llicy cnn outma
licrlodlcnhi llicy ileNlrc nt greatly reduced rnlcn In connect Ion tilth ilia
("oiiimonrr. 'I'lio followlnir coitihlntidonn will lie of nMlntnncc In (select
ing ii profitable lino of refilling for the coining yenr. Ilntcri for pnpcr
not given below furnlNlied upon tippllcntlon. .loin the tlioiisnnd of
otlicr Commoner rcntlcrM who tnko iiilviintiigc of our nuliMcrlptlou offers
mid Neeiirc nnothcr ncwHpnper nt r light cxpenue.
CLASS A.
Pub. Price.
Tho Amorlcan, Nashville, Tenn., Dom., Wk...$ ,60
American Swineherd, Chicago, 111., Agr. Ilvo
Stock, Mo A 50
Agricultural Epltomlst, Spencer, Ind., Agr.,
Monthly 25
Hoys World, Elgin, III., Juvenile, Wk 50
Com. Appeal, MemphlB, Tenn., Agr., W 50
Farm ProgreHH, St. Louis, Mo., Agr., Scm-Mo. .25
Farm, Stock & Homo, Minneapolis, Minn., Agr.,
Semi-monthly 50
Farm & Fireside, Springfield, Ohio, Agr.,
Semi-monthly 35
Lomo & Farm, Louisville, Ky Agr., Seml-Mo. .50
Tho Industrious Hen, Knoxvlllo, Tenn., Poul
try, Mo 50
Missouri Valley Farmor, Topeka, Kans., Agr.,
Monthly 25
Nobraska Dalrymnn, Lincoln, Nob., Mo .50
Modern Prlscllla, BosjWn, Mass., Fancy-Work,
Monthly . . . .-wr-fT. 50
Nat. Farmor & Stock Grower, St. Louis, Mo.,
Agr. and Stock, Mo 50
Nat. Homo Journal, St. Loul3, Mo., Household,
Monthly 50
Chattanooga Weekly News and Farm Journal .50
Pcoplo's Popular Mo., Dcs Moines, la., House
hold. Monthly 25
Pralrlo Farmer, Chicago, 111., Farming, Semi
monthly 35
Reliable Poultry Journal, Qulncy, 111., Poultry,
linn ilw pa
Southern Agriculturist',' Nashville,' Tenn.',' Agr'
Soml-monthlv ' no.
Southern Fruit Grower, Chattanooga, Tonn.,
Agr. and Horti.. Monf.hiv ka
Up-to-Dato Farming, Indianapolis, Ind., Agr.,
Scml-mont hlv nn
Viok's Magazlno, Chicago, 111., Floriculture',
mummy GO
The ,
Commoner
AND ANY ONE IN
CLASS A
$1.00
The
Commoner
AND ANY TWO
IN CLASS A
$1.35
CLASS H. - Pub. Price.
I Atlanta Constitution, Atlanta, Ga Democratic,
n-Yuuuijr ?1.00
lira American Boy, Detroit, Mich., Literary.
Monthly ; ' 1(
00
L,ourler-Journal, Louisville, Ivy., Dom., Wl:.. 1.00
l&fe'v Cincinnati. Ohio, Dom.. Wk.' 1.00
iJLJio Fruit Grower. St. Joe, Mo.. Farm. Mo 1.00
I Democrat, Johnstown, Pa., Wkly l.oo
Tho Housekeonor. Mlnnonnnila i.nVi" "' if ,'
hold. Monthly : " ' ..-
SrW011?0' c'iicap$. i.. AgrVMo'.: :..:: loo
Tho, Vegetarian Co. Hygienic. Chicago. 111..
Monthly . 100
Michigan Farmer, Detroit. Mich.. .Anrr'.'wir .' ' 7K
.Nebraslca Farmer, Lincoln. Nob.. Apr. wic ' i nn
, umo Farmer. ClfwninMfi niiin a wi, ZZ
SUtS1CnX;ntlUlvator' Atlanta, Ca.,bAgr.; Semll "
Unlt, W.l.l .. ir. '" l.U
T.oT?rllrJ f ri. -Tr,.i.I '-ir ' ' ' ' '. 1.
;vHV w3 l1; uuliy magazine ; . i oo
Wlndlos Gatllng Gun. Ghlcatro. tii n ' i,uu
1.00
Mn,v"nB uun' '"caeo. 111.. Reform,
WorrJ:Y.0.rkA .Sk ,Louls. Mo., Sclentmc and
......., mu Liny 1()
The
Commoner
AND ANY ONE IN
CLASS II
$1.35
The
Commoner
AND ANY TWO
IN CLASS U
$1.85
THE COMMONER ami any One in Class A with
any one in uinss i$
&1.fi0
THE COMMONER and any One in Class A with db o -i r
any Two in Class B. ; 1 0
THE COMMONER and any Two in Class A with !Ay
any One in Class B $1.85
MISCELLANEOUS.
Llterar
x Laterarv
ifo:
Publishers
Price.
Mo $1.00
M 1.00
American Magazine. Now YorV nuv
American Motherhood, Cooporstown, N.
xno Arona, rrenton. jn. ,j.. Llterarv. Mn
Tho Black Cat, Boston. Mass., Short Stories, Mo
Breeder's Gazette, Chicago, III., Agr. & Stock Wir""
Cosmopolitan, Now York City! Literary! Mo "
Country Gentleman, Albany. N.. 1., Agr Wk
Tho Democrat, Johnstown, Pa., Democratic wir
Tho Delineator, New York City. Fashion Mo
Tho Etude. Philadelphia, Pa., Muslca MoT? '. '. '.
Farmers Voico, Evanston. 111., Agr.. Soml-monthiv"
F old A, Rtfonm "Maw Vni-1, n ,. p 'L?i ."" montniy. . . ,
ttT.;.i.LiJ " "r'i PJ'urtmg, iuo
i. i. . UBl'""K' oiJiwiKueiu, iia ss
jLii-iwui vuiLuro. Passaic, in. ,i
2.50
1.00
2.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.50
1.00
1.50
1.00
Homo Herald, Chicago,
Housolinld 1.Y
TT lii. m -.w.v., luu,
Hoard's Dairyman, Ft. Atkinson. W s., Dal r vine wi'f' Hn
Homo I-Torald. flhlrnipn Tn ttb-IJ .t'l lUVy,nff WlC. . 1,00
-..mimH, wit 2 00
00
00
50
00
00
Metropolitan Magazine. Now York, Literary. ' Mo I'ln
- - - - . ritW
In each enso lvhcrc the
'
i-iouaion t'ost. l-iouston. Toxi
Live Stock Journal... .,7 :...;: -w w'tt'WCCK- -
Technical World, Now York, Monthly
Tho Independent, New York, Current EvontV wTr I'
McCalls Magazine. Now Vnrir t?di.i!: ' YV 'il S.
'k, Literary, L
Our Price
with Tho
Commoner.
1.
1.00
2.S0
J. 55
2.00
1.50
1.80
1.25
1.75
1.75
1.20
1.SO
1.50
1.50
1.50
2.05
1.G0
1.25
1.85
2.20
8.25
1.15
1.00
mn,. i m. lmitnam
iri'Viiim uprnrA itnA . ...
ar only permitted to accept new MubHcrliilloni w- u,OI,caiIon we
PcrloiltenlN may be neiit to rtinvi!.f . J V ForeIK Postage extra
tfrleium may wfoli to join uitl, COy0 In Hon.l u irHHCH lf eIreiT. YiS
7nbHerlntlonn nre for one yenrnffi If nir? bSiiwI th C4?1,"binntIon- AU
bcr unleHS otherivlHe directed. -, uiiin nitu the current nam.
r r w.in, .,-.
Address all
Orders to
THE COMMONER LINn
tssr Y.umi
i ..nrrmrrtryrmjmr.rr,, ,,
coin,
ebraskj
they havo always been. Again on
tho came principle the senate com
mittee has increased the rates on
spirits and wines 15 per cent
throughout, which, It is estimated,
will yield an additional revenue of
$3,000,000, most of which will come
from the Increased duty on cham
pagne. In the cotton schedule there has
been an extension of tho specific
rates to cover a class of fancy goods
and novelties vhich are covered in
the existing law by ad valorem rates.
Tho resulting ad valorem rates have
not been increased.
The average rates in the cotton
schodule, other than the- rates on
fancies and novelties, remain the
same. There is one exception to this
statement and that is 'the reduction
from the house bill on fashioned
hosiery, where the committee has
recommended the restoration' of the
rates of tho existing law. The com
mittee contemplates a still further
substitution of' specific for ad va
lorem rates in other paragraphs of
tho bill.
Raw flax has been restored by the
senate committee to the dutiable list,
otherwise the schedule remains sub
stantially as it comes from the
house.
The senate committee has re
stored the rates in the wool sched
ule to the rates of the present law.
In silks the senate committee has
adopted a new schedule, replacing ad
valorem with specific rates in all
cases where it was possible to do so,
showing a slight average reduction
from the equivalent ad valorem.
Tho senate committee has not yet
decided what rates it will recom
mend in regard to the wood pulp and
the articles dependent upon it. It
has also left open for further action
the question of the duties on coal
and hides.
It would be impossible in a brief
statement to review all the articles
under the heading of sundries. The
changes from the house bill in the
main are of minor importance. The
senate committee has made reduc
tions of 15 per cent on an average
in the specific duties on hats and bon
nets, which the house had raised in
some instances above the Dingley
rates. The senate committee has
also struck out the house paragraph
in regard to gloves and has restored
the rates in the existing law.
The senate committee has also
added to the sundries of the dutiable
list foreign built yachts owned by
American citizens, which seemed to
the committee a luxury which might
fairly pay a duty of 35 per cent.
The free list, as reported by the
senate committee, in the main re
mains as it is in the existing law.
There is one change, however, in the
free list which is of great general
interest, and that is the provision in
regard to the free art. The house
wisely made paintings and sculptures
more than twenty years old free, and
me senate committee has added to
these works of art generally includ
ing artistic antiquities more than 100
years old.
The senate committee has taken
no action as yet upon the maximum
provisions or the administrative sec
tions of the bill. It proposes to re
port its amendments to these most
Important features of the act at a
later date. It has adopted this course
because It has seemed to the senate
committee of the highest importance
to secure immediate action upon the
tariff and it felt confident that time
could be saved by reporting the sec
tion Imnnnlnrr rliitiocs f?n- j n. .
.. a vlv,0 ma,,, uuu lnQ
maximum and minimum and admin-
b istrauve ieauires later.
where they have been for so many
years. It is a slap in the face ot
the South Americans, with whom wo
are trying to enlarge our trade. It
will benefit the farmer by adding five
to eight per cent to the price of his
children's shoes.
It will yield a' profit to the butcher
(beef trust) only, the last man that
needs it. The movement is injudi
cious from beginning to end in
every form and phase.
Please stop it before it sees light.
Such movements as this for protec
tion will protect the republican party
only into speedy retirement.
Very hastily,
JAMES G BLAINE.
JAMES G. BLAINE'S ADVICE
Washington, April 10, 1890.
Dear Mr. McKinley: It is a great mis
take to take hides from the free list,
"BY THEIR FRUITS"
The Philadelphia Record prints tho
following letter from- Ryerson W.
Jennings:
"The Record does well to call at
tention to the circular of Marshall
Field & Co., protesting against tho
advance of duties on hosiery and
gloves. The increases on these two
lines are outrageous and shameful,
and are in full accord with the wool
schedules. But what did Marshal
Field & Co. expect? They advocat
ed and worked for Mr. Taft's elec
tion. They knew, judging from past
performances of the republican party,
that it has never kept faith with its
pre-election promises. The demo
cratic party stood pledged for an In
stant revision of the tariff downward,
and it had a candidate who had never
gone back on his written or spoken
word. If he had been elected with a
working majority in congress, Mar
shall Field & Co. or any one else out
side of a few "infant" industries
would not have had any cause for
complaint. A tariff bill would have
been before the house not filled with
secrets, or dodgers, that even its au
thor can not or will not explain."
A Companion
A delightful little traveling com
panion, Indispensable to many who
travel, are the "Llttlo Comforters"
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills, by their
soothing influence upon tho nerves of
tho brain and stomach, they prevent
dizziness, sick stomach and headache
car sickness.
Dr. Miles'
Anti-Pain Pills
cure all kinds of pain quick and sure,
are perfectly harmless and do not af
fect you in any way, except to sootho
the nerves and euro pain. For real
comfort never enter upon a journey
without first securing a package of
those "Littlo Comforters."
n1 ,am .Pissed to recommend Dr.
Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. They not only
cure a chronic headache, but slnco, If
my head shows a disposition to acho,
one tablet stops it. I give hundreds of
tnem to sufferers on trains, and derivo
much satisfaction from tho relief they
afford. M. H. CHARTUS, Traveling
Salesman, St. Louis, Mo.
Tho first bottle will benefit, if not,
tho druggist will return your money.
-J5 doses, 25 cents. Never sold In bulk.
$M$critw$' .HMertlsittfl Dcpu
t,iJ0Uua,n "l111'? money and build up a
nice llttlo business of your own by
using this department to place your
proposition before Tho Commoner's big
FTC..01 readers. If you have anything
to buy or sell it will pay you to use
this department at all times.
G0iii?n A ?,?A P: 1G0 AGE FARM.
inr.nt?i"did buildings, trees, water and
location; send for circular and descrip
tion; owner resided on place thirty
S"'0 or write, as this will ap-
F;?LSAIjEL closbd carriage.
oc ouPo Pattern; handsomely finished
rwL, st ciass condition. Addrosa
Dept. 3, Caro Commoner.
TS?1?0 POULTRY Al
eggs. Write for circular. Harry
Hiiro Atnh an trn ""'
-nd
M.
?-.T
?.i.
, .... uv., xxiwioan.
El
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