x? v w v v aaaaAAAM?!,W,.A ?rWfv. rv'V r-rrrvwJw $The ARMSTRONG CLOTESMG COMPANY jjjj j g 1 " e S etc Are now offering, what is probably the .. . N . greatest inducement to buy ever offered in JUlllUUXJA. X illO XIX vL ILlsJXLwJJL U XXX UJLXts XVX 111 WX Q g a massive IP TO : ML nnd fivfirv artinle of fiirnishiners is the same hi The ticket means f more, to the men of Lincoln and Vicinity, c than we can say. Each ticket speaks of f more than sacrifice, greater than bargain, f and it stands for the best. as you sea it here. Ml V 5 2 DIVIDED IN $30, $27.50 and 25 Suits $15.90 m603&ds $11.90 $16.50, $15 and M $13.50 Suits $Oo yJI $12.50, $10 and $8.75 Suits 1221-1227 O Street. Lincoln, Nebraska. GREAT LOTS P etc' ft 3 fu $5.90 CAN RAISE PRICES AT WILL Extraordinary Provisions of the Tariff Law to Protect Sugar Trust Housewives have no doubt noticed at this fruit preserving season that sugar is much dearer than it was a year ago. Then it was 4 to 5 cents nound. now it is 6 or 6 cents. No Hispase has struck the sugar cane and just as much, if not more, sugar i heine Droduced, but tne roDDer who control the sugar trust ur. a mnnnnniv and so they advanced uac -4v""i . the priced twenty per cent. There Is iffQpan nf about. 2V. cents a pound between the price of raw sugar and the refined and the cost of refining is less than cent a pound, so it is easy to figure the enormous pront that the trust makes on the 2,579, 642 tons or an average of seventyne pounds for every man, woman and child that are consumed oy tne peo ple of the United States. If the comDlicated tariff sugar schedule was simplified and reduced by even what is known as the "dif ferential duty," leaving the regular duty of about one cent a pouna to be collected, the price of sugar would be considerably reduced, and if sugar was free it would sell for 2 cents a pound. But as the country is run ning deeper in debt and as there is a large deficit in receipts over the ex nfmditures in the treasury, it will be impossible to abolish all the tariff tax on sugar, as the money is needed to run the government. The duty on sugar varies according to its degree of purity; 100 degree sugarthat is re fined, such as the granulated sugar generally used, pays 1.95 cents a pound, while 75 degree sugar, that is raw brown sugar, pays .95 cents v a pound and .035 of a cent is added for each additional degree of purity, the duty on 100 degree sugar is therefore 1.825 cents. But as 100 degree is pure sugar, that is refined, the. law says the duty on it shall be 1.95 cents or one-eighth of a cent a pound more than the equivalent duty on sufficient raw to make one pound of refined sugar. This one-eighth of a cent is the "differential." It is the amount per pound the refiners can collect from consumers over and above the amount of duty which the refiners have to pay on the raw sugar. There is also protection hidden in the granulated scale of duties on raw sugar, which probably increases ' the "differential" to one-fourth of a cent a pound or about $13,000,000 a year which is the special protection the trust enjoys and which you all have to help pay besides the regular tariff tax. This protection prevents importa tion of refined sugar and allows the trust to advance the price at its own sweet will. . To stop this extortion from the American people the tariff must be so adjusted that if the trust advances the price beyond a reason able difference between raw and re fined sugar foreign . refiners will export their sugar here and compete with the trust -