iIIF, OMAfIA DAJLY TlU KsDAV. M.U.CH IS. V.nv. Proof That i Charcoal Will Absorb Impurities Many IIp .rt Not "l"nin lioiirl" Hut Th?y like to be Shown. A (simple Vrl KffMfunl Trt ' ' for I'fiarroai. frequently popl ljk lo know if an ar ticle will Art all I. l Is !,mv1 of II. and w agree with the pnpt for It I perfectly right thl they should know. Th F. A PtuarC Co.' has gnn to considerable ex pen0' perfect .(m pimple method hy which It be rnhvinrtngly prnvrn that their chsrtosf fxillenge possessed nil the medicinal qiisllLle clslmd of tliem. and herein print ntmirfe yet effective pijc-f. Take anything winch emits mi vbnuxlous cd.ir and place H In aorne convenient place, any in a. ' box or something that c b easily cereretl. Then pulverise auffU'ient of Stuart a Charcoal Lozenges to complete ly cover the decaying or odloiia matter. Care must be taken that the pulverized Charcoal completely envelops whatever the odor la coming from. It will be Immediately noticed that there will he no odor; the charcoal will absorb positively all the odor and should you make the teat with a piece of meat or something that decays rapidly complete disintegration will take place without the slightest traces of an odor noticeable. Thia la proof positive that Stuart a Char coal lVixenges will eliminate odors ami In sure the UBer a clean, sweet breath. While the general Improvement in the health and action of the atnmach and bowela will be sufficient to convince the most skeptic. Stuart's Charcoal Ixzenges are for sale everywhere, 25 cents a bux, guaranteed to contain nothing but young willow wood charcoal and pure honey; sample sent free upon request. Addresa F. A. Stuart Crj . 34 Stuart Bldg.. Marshall, Mich. the leather is full of life. so is the style. so is the man who wears 'em. Spring "Low Cuts" to be sure! 75 lively styles. a half dozen snappy leath ers. ' Regent Shoe Co. 205 Sooth 15th St. How About the MOST MEN", whn they order gar metiti, tbtnk first of price, (ben . style add tit, aud they leave quality to the last, or don't consider it seriously at all. It isn't the best war to buy clothes or anything else for that matter. But candidly, isn't that about the way most men buy clothes? The truth is, there never was a time when the quality of the material in your garments was so Important as it is today. In a peculiar sense it Involves and includes all the other points vyle, fit, tailoring, price. The best of the Spring and Summer Icsigns are here tn a variety enough o satisfy the most exacting. r,iostrsS8 US12. Sells $25 ti $53 -TAILOR WILLIAM JKKHEMS' bO.NH, SUtMl South 15th bt. Wipe it off your otherwise good lookimgiztx put on that good health smile that CAS CARETS will give you as a result from the curt of Constipation -or a torpid liver. It's so easy do it you'll see. CASCARGTS !Oc a bos tot a week's treatmsal, aU drurgUu. Blcsest se'lsr In Ue world. aliUea ! a smiis, HERE IS RELIEF FOR WOMEN U uu kT sttna In tas tack. I'rlntry, BUuaer r KiSncr Tiuukl. ui irii, slauanl Ksrk rll Iroat Woswn's 111, try ktotksr Uni'l Al'tTHAUAK LEAF. ' II la a ar.. rn.bl rwu sur. and rliav alt Fwnal WMfcOM. ln 4u4iaa tmtaiumatioa ana aiuarauoas. mmbc; Oiar's SuMralisa Lt ta aots br U'ugsials or aval or Bail lor U it Bampla aani rKkK. A44raa, Tk Molfcar Orar Is . M Rsr. N. Y- John Fred Dehm ftErCB&IOAW CAMDEDATa f 'OB f CGuncilmao 10!ti Ward Tew rn tar m ts aau u4 la k Quality? Sickly Smile NEW TARIFF BILL IN HOUSE Forty to Fifty Million! Added to Got eminent Rrrenae. INHERITANCE TAX INCLUDED lea.are I alrnd - by rain Mnn Provides far Limited Free Trade; In Tsbarrn awd aarar with Pklllaalaea. (Continued from First Pase.i A ep.l-)l agent to conduct investigations to secure tlie effh lent enforcement of the Kiherltarii e lax Is piovlded 'for at a salary of H.nrO a var. V New Drawback Provision. One of the most significant features of the Payne Ml! is the new di aw bark pro vision. It extends this privilege so that an American manufacturer reed not use the material which he has Imported in order to secure tha refund of tho dutiea which he has paid on his material. If he uea materials produced In this country in equal amount with the material which he lie imported he will be entitled to the drawback benefits provided the domestic materials are of equal productive manu facturing capacity and value. The legal deduction of 1 per cent on the drawback l provided, but the exportation upon which the main facturer propose to tolled the drawback must be made within three yeara of the Importation of the foreign material used or checked against. The secretary of the treasury Is authorized to prescribe the regulations under which the drawback Is paid. The privileges of the drawback section are applied to materials used In the construction and equipment Of vesselH built for a foreign government or for foreign trade. Fetroleum la retained on the free list and the countervailing duty provision is retained. Wlille coffee is retained on the free list, it is with the provision that a duty equal to any export duty, tax or charge that shall be levied by any country from which It is Imported shall be collected on the coffee Imported from that country. In order to prevent the confusion which attended the enforcement of the Dlnsley bill on the day which It became a law the Tayne law la not to take effect until the day after It is enacted. NEW TARIFF M F.AM RE REVIEWED statement by Representative Tayne ahovrlna? Principal Caaagrt, WASHINGTON, March 17. Representa tive Sereno Payne, chairman of the ways and means committee. In Introducing the tariff bill, gave out the following state ment : "One problem that confronted the com mittee) was the question of revenue, i The) buBiress of all commercial nations ha been depressed for nearly two yeara, and thus has affected our c mmerce and greatly reduced our revenue, to that we have a large deficit, but the revenues under the present law are improving from month to month, as business conditions are becoming beter. "The last normal year of imports was the fiscsJ year ending June 30, 1906; 1907 was an unusually prosperous year, and the revenues from customs exceeded those, of XV by 132,000.000. The committee have therefore taken the year 1406 as the basis to form their estimate of tha revenue producing qualities of the new bill Should the next fiscal year prove prosperous and tha normal conditions of 1H0 return, on ac count of the large tncrei.se in population, the revenue for 1M wculd snow a con siderable Increase over the estimates of the commute. Isaac of Panama Rands. "With a return to arything like normal conditions during th. iixt fiscal jear. It Is safe to predict that the detlcit would be entirely wiped out; but In case It Is not, the bill provides for the Issue of Panama, canal bonds to telmburse the treasury for the 140.000,000 paid out tn the original purchase of the canal. This would more than make up any probable defic iency. There Is also re-ensctrd the pro vision for the Issue of eertlflcatee to run one year to replenish the treasury, raising the amount from tlOo.OOO.ftiO to JiMVOOO.OOO, an amount sufficient, to provide at any time against two or three years of de pressed business conditions." The statement gives the -rate In the present Je.w, the Plngley tariff, and shaws the changes that the Tayne bill proposes. The abstract of the bill c-oatinues: . "The committee have transferred tome articles from the fiee Hat totne dutiable, and have Increased duties on tit hers for tha ao!e purpose of Increasing i the revenue. Most of then articles of- which duties have been Increased are luxuries, which have been . increased aa follows:, Datr On Lsisrtti. "Perfumeries and toilet articles, some to SO per centum ad valorem; fancy soap from IS to JO cents per pound: chicory root, raw, not dried, from 1 cent to -'i cents per pound; roasted, from tS cents to 6 cents per pound. "Cocoa, crude, transferred from the free list to the dutiable, at 4 cents per pound: prepared and manufactured, Increased ! cents on each classification except that valued above $6 cents per pound, which re mains the same. Ten per centum ad val orem is also added to the duties assessed on that valued between 16 and M rents per pound; powdered cocoa, from ( cents to cents per pound. Cocoa butter, from 31 cents to l rents per pound; dandelion root and articles used aa a substitute for coffee. 2 cents to 4 cents per pound. "Spices, which are now largely on tha free list, are assessed an average duty of SO per centum ad valorem. Feathers are Increased from IS per centum to 30 per cen tum ad valorem, and dressed or colored feathers receive an ineiease of 10 per cen turn. Furs, dressed on the skin, are as sessed 274 per centum ad valorem. Protection Dntles Increased. 'Duties on the following articles have been increased because the committee found that there was not sufficient protec- (EMkllaewl ltTi) Aa lahalaUstl for Whooptnq-Cough, Croup, Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Diphtheria. Craanisne In sa to AstkenstWs. Ooaa II sot Ma awes aSacU' ts krastka ta s isaiadf (or Smam ( Ik sjaalklag oifaaa Uiss W ItU tk raawSy Isls Iks aieaucSI I f.,.1... njn, kia tse sir. las iilad towsiy ssturrUs, Is siw4 saw U li""j aultse VI Ut Mry brasUi. (ir.s arsUis4 ss liaaala! Iiaakaiaai Is kf InasiasbW k inakara tUt asll cklldrss. Tor unuua tnrost tnafa la nsthmc hMter man l'rilaa sstlaavais TWsi IsMsia. nni ga in fossae lor asskpl bo U. AU. DKuaaiars. hmmA salsl ioa As sartauat Ssskan. f aas-Trssslsnn Can 1S rMM lnat, 1 " v""- tlnn und'r the present law," continued Mr. Iano. "Coal tar or .colors, now bearing a rtuly of St per centum to per ten: urn ad val orem; sine In ore, now brought In at y per centum ad valorem, to I cent per pound for the xlnr contents contained therein. "I'eas. split pean. from 1 cents lo 45 cents per bushel; figs, from 2 cents to 2 cents per pound: "lemons, from 1 cent to l's cents per round; pineapples, from $7 per thousand to M per thousand." Increases In the cotton schedule are: "An additional duly of 1 cent per yard on mercerised fabrics ta . new process of manufacture Invented mnce the. present law was enacted). "Also a small additional duty on lappe'.s. There ia also an Increased duty on stock ings fsahloned and shaped wholly or in part nn knitting machines." Cbanges la Paper ftrbealnle. Changes In the paper schedule, which in clude those recommended by the special committee on wood pulp and print paper Investigation, are: "Surface-coaled papers, coveted with metal, from S cents and 20 per centum to 6 cents and W) per centum ad valorem; other surface-coated paper from Jt cents per pound and 10 per centum ad valorem to 6 cents per pound. "Lithographic prints, from ti cents pet pound to S centa; cardboard, from 20 cents to X cents per pound; other paper, 'M cents to 'St cents per pound, with small Increases on various sizes of other paper; litho graphic cigar labels, from 30 cents per pound to 30 cents per pound; printed In colors lees than eight, from 30 cents to M cents per pound; more than eight, from 30 cents to J7 centa per pound; printed In metal leaf, from 60 centa per pound to 5:'H cents per pound; paper hangings, from VS percentum ad valorem; paper not specially provided for, from 26 percentum to 35 per centum ad valorem. "Plain paper envelopes, from 30 percen tum to 30 percentum ad valorem. "Tha recommendations of the select com mittee) were to permit the free entry of mech-anlcally ground wood pulp from any country not imposing export duty and to reduce printing paper valued at not above 21, cents per pound, from 3-10 to 1-10 of 1 cent per pound; valued not above cents pound, from 4-10 to 2-10 of 1 per cent per pound." Most Changes Hedactlona. The reductions In duty are much mote numerous titan the increases. in the schedule on chemk'als, oils and paint they are: "Boracic acid, borax from t cents to 3 cents per pound; reductions of 2 centa per pound are made on gallic and tartaric acids, borate of lime. Reductions of 50 per cent are made '.n the duty on salicylic acid, chloroform, fruit ethers, oils or es sences, peppermint oil; whiting and perls white, dry: bichromate and chromate of potash and santonin." Other material reductions made In the chemical schedule are: "Borate of lime and t.ther borate ma terial ia reduced from 4 centa to 1 cents per pound and from S cents to 1 cent per pound, acoordir.g to the percentage of anhydrous boracic acid contained. Sulphuric ethers are reduced to I cents per pound, spirits of nitrous ether to 20 cents per pound. "Iodoform, from $1 to 7 cents per pound Flaxaeed, linseed and poppy seed oil, re duced to 15 centa per gallon. "Varnishes, reduced from 35 to 35 per cent ad valorem, and spirit varnishes from 11.33 per gallon and 36 per cent to 26 per cent sul valorem. Compounds of Lead. "lead. acetate' of. white, from 3't cents to 2T cents per pound; brown, gray or yellow, from cents to 14 cents per pound; nitrate of, from 2H cents to IV, ctnta per pound; litharge, from 2 centa to 24 cents per pound. "Potash, chlorate of, from i certs to 2 certs per pound. "Plasters, healing, etc., from 3Ti per cent to 25 per cent ad valorem. "Hydrate of, or caustic soda, from i cent to H cent per pound; nitrate of soda, from 2H centa to I cer.ta per pound; hypo sulphite of soda, from 4 cent per pound to 30 per cent sd valcrtm. "Sulphate of soda, or salt cake, or niter cake, from fl.2F pr ton to $1. "Sponges and manufactures of, from 40 per cent to 30 per cent ad valorem. "Strychnia, or strychnine, from 60 cents to 15 cents per ounce. "Sulphur, refined or sublimed, or flow ers of, from IS per ton to fi per ton. "Vanillin, from ) cents per ounce to 15 cents per ounce " Articles In this schedule placed on the free list are: Sulphate of Ammonia, copperas, licorice, and cottonseed oil and croton oil. Earths and Earthwnrc. Continuing, the statement gives the fol lowing Important reductions In the other schodules; "Schedule on earths and earthenware," "Fira brick and other brick If glased and enameled from 45 per centum to per centum ad valorem. "Plaster rock or gypsum, crude, from 60 cents to 40 centa per ton; tf ground or cal cined, from 32.26 to 11.76 per ton. "'Unpolished, cylinder, crown and com mon window glass sbove 34x36 inches sauare, reduced W of 1 cent per pound on all sixes; cylinder and crown glass; above 24x30 and not exceeding 24x60 Inches square, reduced from 16 cents to 12 cents per square foot sixes above that from cents to 15 cents per square foot. "Onyx In block, from $1.50 per cubic foot to $1 per cubic foot. Cast polished plat alsss silvered, exceeding 24 x30 Inchea, 36 cents per square foot, which is a reduction on most alses from 38 cents to 26 cents per quara foot. "Mosaic cubes of marble onyx atone, not exceeding two cubic Inches in slit; if loose from 1 cent per pound to H cent and same ad valorem if attached to paper or other material from 30 centa to 10 cents and ad valorem. "Freestone, aud other building or mono, mental stone, except marble and onyx, un manufactured, from 13 cents to oents per cubic foot. Mica, cut or trimmed, from 12 cents per pound and 20 percentum ad valorem; unmanufactured, from f centa per pound and 20 percentum ad valorem, and mica cut or trimmed, from 12 cents per pound and K percentum ad valorem, all to 30 percentum ad valorem; mica plates or ! built up mica 36 percentum ad valorem. On marble, aawed or dressed, the reduc tion is about oue-slxth and the additional duty "If rubbed In whole or in part," is re ducej from t cents to 2 cents per square foot. Metal Mrhedale. "Iron ore and basic slag, from 4o cents per ton to the free list. 'Pig iron KcntleOe ana Bpiegeteiarn, Irom 4 per ton to 32. . "Scrap iron and si. 'el, from $1 yr ton to M tents per ton. "Hsr iron from s-W of I' tent to 4-10 of 1 cent per ton. "Hound iron, less than scveu-sixtvenlhs of one Inch In diameter, from 3-10 of 1 cent to -10 of 1 cent per pound, "ailabs. blooms, loops or other forms less finished than bars from 6-W of 1 cent to 4-10 of 1 cent per pound. "Charcoal iron, from 12 to in per ton "Beams, girders, jolsis. angles, etc., from H of 1 cent tti W of 1 cent tier pound. "Anchor", from 1V rente pr pfmn.i to I cent. 'Iron ami te(. fmgint. fiom :" per centum to per centum sd valorem. ' Hoop, band, or scrool Iron and steel, not thinner than No. 10 wire gauge, frmn 6-10 of 1 cent to 3-10 of 1 cent per pound: thinner than No. 10 ard not thinner than No. 20. from )0 of 1 cent to 4-10 of 1 cent per pound; thinner than No. 20. from 1-10 to S-10 of I cent per pound. Steel bamls or strips, untempered. suitable for making band saws, from 3 cents per pound to I1 cents; If tempered. cents per pound and per centum ad valorem to 3 cents per pound and 20 per centum ad valorem. "Cotton ties, from 6-10 of 1 cent per pound to 3-10 of 1 cent. teel Halls Rednred. "Railway bars and steel rails, from 7-30 of 1 cent per pound to 7-40, railway fiah plates, from 4-10 of 1 cent per pound to 2-10 of 1 cent. "Iron steel sheets, valued at 3 cenis per pound or less, thinner than No. 10 and not thinner than No. 20. wire gauge, from 7-10 to 6-10 of 1 cent per pound; not tbinner than No. 15, from 3-10 to 6-10 of I cent: not thinner than No. 32. from 1 1-10 cents to 3-10 cents; thinner than No. SJ. from 1 2-10 to 9-10 of 1 cent; corrugated or crimped from 1 1-10 cents to 8-10 of one cent per pound. "Sheets, polished, planished or glanced, from t cents to 1 cents per pound; If pickled or cleaned. 2-10 of 1 cent per pound In addition. "Tin plates, from 14 cents to 3 2-10 cents per pound. Iron or Sleel W Ire. "Round Iron or steel wire, not smaller than No. 13 wire gauge, from l1. centa per pound to 1 cent: not smaller than No. X, from 14 cents to 1' ceits per pound; smaller than No. IS, from 2 cents lo 1V cents per pound. "That all the foregoing, valued at more than 4 cents per pound shall pay not less than 40 per cent ad valorem. "Steel bands or rods, cold rolled, cold drawn, or ccld hammered, or polished, from H cent per pound In addition to the above rate, to i cent per pound; on strips, plates or sheets of Iron or steel, other than polished, where cold rolled, and so forth, from 1 cent per pound, in addi tion to the rates on plates, to 5-10 cent per pound. "Bolts, with or without threads or nuts, from 1'4 cents to 1'4 cents per pound. "Cast Iron pipe, from 4-10 cent to cent per pound. "Cast hollow ware, coated, glazed or tinm-d, from 2 centa to 1'4 cents per pound. , "Chains, not less than three-fourths of an Inch In diameter, from 1 cents to ' cent pew pound; not less than three eighths of an inch In diameter, from li certs to 14 cents; not Itw tran five-six-teentha, from 14 to 14 cer.ts. Bit no chains will pay lees than 46 per cent ad valorem. Iron or Meet Boiler Tube. "Lap welded, butt welded, seamed or J'inted Iron or ateel boiler tubes, if not leas than three-eights of an Inch In dia-' meter, from 3 cents to 1 cent per pound; rot less than one-fourth inch, from 2 cents to 1 cents per pound; if less than one fourth Inch, 2 cents per pound; welded cylindrical furnaces, from 2H wnts per pound to 2 rents per pound; all other Iron or aleeJ tubes, from 35 per cent to 30 per cent ad valorem. "Table, butchering, carving, and so forth, knives, with pearl, shell or Ivory handled, from IS centa each to 14 centa each; handles or deer horn, from 13 centa each to 10 cents each: w4th handles of hard rubber, bone, celluloid, on so forth, from 6 cents each to 4 cents each;- with other handles from 14 cents aacb to 1 cent each, with the same) ad valorem addition of 16 per centum; provided that none of the above shall pay at a less rate than 40 percentum ad valorem, instead of 46 In the present law. Filea were reduced from specific rates, the equivalent of 60 percentum to 40 per centum ad valorem. alla Are Reduced. 'Cut nails, spikes, from six-tenths of 1 cent to five tenths of 1 cent per pound. Horseshoe nails and hob nails, from 2'4 cents to 14 cents per pound. 'Wire nails, not lighter than number sixteen wlra gauge from one-half of 1 cent to one-fourth of 1 cent per pound; lighter than number sixteen, from 1 cent to one half of 1 cant per pound. Spikes, nets, washers and horee. mule. or ox shoes, from 1 cent to one-half of 1 cent per pound. "Cut tacks, not exceeding sixteen ounces to the thousand, from 14 cents to five- Ighths of 1 cent per 1.000; exceeding six teen ounces, from 1H cents to three-fourths of 1 cent per pound. "Steel plates engraved, and so forth, from 35 percentum to 20 percentum ad valorem. "Rivets, from 2 cents to 1'4 cents per pound. "Crosscut saws, from 6 rents to 5 cents per foot; mill saws, from V cents per linear foot to 3 centa pr linear foot; pit and drag saws, from 8 cents per Ilnesr foot to 8 cents per linear foot; circular saws, from 26 per cent ad valorem to 20 per cent ad valorem; ateel band saws, from 10 cents per pound to 5 cents per pound, and 30 per cent ad valorem re maining; all other saws reduced from 30 per cent to 26 per cent ad valorem. Screws and Rnllroad Wheels. "Screws, more than two Inches In lengtr. from 4 cents to P cents per pound; over, one Inch and not more than two Inches, from cents to 4 cents, per pound; over one-half Inch and not over one inch, from 8V4 conts to 6 cents per pound: one-half Inch and less, from 12 cents to I cents per pound. ' "Wheels, for rsllwsy purposes, or parts t hereof , from 14 cents to Pi cents per pound; Ingots, blooms or blanks for the same, from Ife cents to H cent per pound. Aluminum, tn crude form, from 8 cents to 7 cents per pound; in plates, from 13 cents to 11' cents per pound. Hooks and eyes, from RV, to 4 cents per pound, retaining the additional 15 per cen', ad valorem. "Lead bearing ore. on the lead contents therein, froro li cents to 1 cent per pound. "Lead droas bullion, base bullion, and lead in pigs, from 2'4 cents to 1H cents per pound; In sheets, pipes, shot, from 2'4 cents to 14 cents per pound. "Ztno. In blocks or pigs, from lVi cents to 1 cent per pound; in sheets, from 2 cents to l' cents per pound. Cash ntters and Type Setters. "Cssli registers, electrical apparatus and machinery. Jute manufacturing machinery, linotype and all typesetting machines, ma chine tools, printing presses, sewing ma chines, typewriters, and all steam engines. I from 45 per cent to SO per cent ad valorem; ' embroidery machines and lace making ma chines, the same rate, with a proviso that they may be Impirted free until July 1, 111. Steel ingots, cogged ingots, blooms and Do Children INced Alcohol? Ask your doctor how often he prescribes an alcoholic stimulant for children. He will probably say, "Very, very rarely." Ask him how often he prescribes a tonic for them. He will probably answer. Very, very frequently. non-alcoholic Sarsapanlla as a s'ais. value. 1 at 1 cent per pcinii.l or Iras, from tiiiee-tentha of 1 cent per p.vmd or less, from three-tenths of 1 lent per pound to e en-fort el h. end nn the niher vsl uatlims the reduction are tine-tenth of a cent per pound, with the exception of thneo valued sbove 7 cents and not above 10 cents, upon which the duty temalns the same, and upon those valued above 30 cents per pound, upon which the duty Is mmln 1.1 percentum ad valorem." chedalo foe I nnaKer. Lumber Schedule: "Timber, from 1 cent per cubic font to t-k cent per cubic foot. "Pawed hoards, planks of white wood, sycamore and ba wtnd. from 81 per l.ft0 to so cents per 1.0"0. "All other sawed lumber from 32 lo $1. "If further advanced and manufactured, the sam,e reduction from the present law. "Paving posts, railroad ties, telephone poles, etc., from 20 percentum to 10 per centum sd valorem. "Clapboards, front $1..V per l.onri to 31 per If mo. "Kindling wood transferred to the free list. "Laths, from 35 cents per 1.000 pieces to 20 cents per 1.000 pieces. "Fence poets, from 10 percentum to the free list.- Products of Farm. Agricultural products: "Barley, from 30 cents per bushel to 15 cents. "Barley malt, from 46 cents to 35 cents. "Cabbages, from 3 to 2 cents each. Bacon and hams, from 6 cents per pound to 4 cents. "Fresh meat, from 2 cents to 14 nents per pound. "Lard, from 3 rents to 14 cents. "Tallow, from three-fourths of 1 cent per pound to free list. "Wool grease, from one-half of 1 cent to one-fourth of 1 cent. "Dextrin, burnt starch, etc., from 2 cents to 14 cents per pound. "Peas, green, from 40 cents per bushel to 30 cents per bushel. "All starch except potato starch, from 14 cents to 1 cent per pound. "Sugar, refined. Is reduced from 1.95 cents to 1.91 cents per pound." Flax and Hemp chedole. Flax, hemp and Jute: "Flax straw, dressed, to the free list. "Cables and cordage, reduced from 1 cent lo 4 of 1 cent per pound. "Threads, not finer than five lea or number, reduced from 30 cents to 10 cents per pound, with 4 instead of V of 1 rent per pound advance.wlth each lea In num ber In excess of five. "Single yarns, not finer than eight leas, reduced from 7 centa to ft cents per pound "Flax gill nettings, from 26 to 20 per cent. "Carpets, mats and so forth, from 6 cents per square yard and 'So per cent ad valorem to 4 cents per square yard and 30 per cent ad valorem when valued not above 15 centa per square yard; If valued above 15 cents, from 10 cents per square yard and 85 per cent ad valorem to 8 cents per square yard and SO per cent ad valorem. "Hydraulic hose, from 20 cents per pound to 15 cents per pound. "Oilcloth, including linoleum above nine feet In width, from 20 cents per square yard and 20 per cent ad valorem to 12 cents per square yard and 16 per cent ad valorem. "Shirts, oollars and cuffs of cotton, from 45 cents per doien and 15 per cent ad val orem to 35 cents per dosen and 10 per cent ad valorem." Redaction In Wool. Wool schedule: "Wool of the third class, known as car pet wool, from a duty of 4 cents per pound on such wool worth 12 cents or less, and a duty of 7 cents per pound upon wool ex ceeding 12 cents In value, to a duty of 8 cents per pound on such wool valued at not more than 10 cents per pound; and If valued at more than 10 cents per pound, and not more than IS cents per pound, 3 cents per pound and In addition thereto 4 of 1 cent per pound for each cent per pound of additional value exceeding 10 cents If valued at more than 16 cents, 7 cents per pound. "Top waste and roving waste, from 30 cents to 28 cents per pound; Blubbing waste and garnetted waste from 30 cents per pound to 20 cents per pound. "Shoddy fipm 26 centa to 30 cents per pound; noils and all other wastes from 20 cents to 18 cents per pound. "Woolen Tugs, mungo and flocks, from 10 cents per pound to S cents per pound. "Tope, from 30 cents per pound and 50 per oent ad valorem when valued at not mtrre than 40 centa per pound, and 44 cents per pound and 60 per cent ad valorem when valued aiove 40 cents and not above 70 cents to the duty Imposed on scoured wool, and 6 cents In addition." Coal and K plosive. Sundries schedule: "Bituminous coal und coke, from any country admitting American coal free, from 67 cents por ton for coal and 20 per cent ad vadorem for coke, to free list. "Gunpowder, valued at 20 centa and less per pound, from 4 cents per pound lo 2 cents; valued over 20 cents per pound, from 6 cents per pound to 4 cents. "Cartridges, from 25 to 30 per cent all val orem; blasting capo, from an equivalent to valorem; mine and blasting fuxe, from 36 valorem; mine and biasing fuse, from 35 per cent to 26 per cent ad valorem. "Hides of cattle from 15 per centum ad valorem to free list. Band and sole leather, from 20 per centum ad valorem to 5 per centum ad valorem. Cpper leather, calf skins, chamois skins, kangaroo, sheep and 'goat aklns, and other leather not provided for, from 30 per centum to 15 per centum ad valorem. Patent leather, weighing not over ten pounds per dozen skins, from 3u cents per pound and 2 per centum ad valorem, weighing over ten pounds and not over twenty-five pounds per dosen, from 30 cents per pound and 10 per centum ad valorem; eight. ig over twenty-five pounds from 20 cents ler dozen and 2o cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem, all to' 20 per centum ad valorem; pianoforte leather, from 'Jo per centum ad valorem to 20 per centum ai valorem; boola and shoes, from 25 per centum ad valorem to 15 per cent- im ad valorem; shoe Uces from 50 cents Sr gross and 20 per centlin ad valorem lo 15 per centum ad valorem; leather cut Into shoe uppers, etc., from 35 V 30 per centum ad valorem; all other manufactures of leather from 36 per centum ad valorem to So per centum ad valorem. Agricultural Implements. "Agricultural implement, plows, from 20 per centum ad vslorem to 16 per centum ad valorem, and further provision ip free list from any country admitting American agricultural machinery free. "Work of art, Including ralntings and statuary, more than 20 year old, from 30 per centum to free list. Articles Slightly 4 hanged. "The articles mentioned In the remaining paragraphs sre rated, substantially, at the same duty aa under the present law. "The duties on women's and children's gloves, not over fourtwa Inches In length, are increased on 'schmaschen glace' cf men asK mm aoout yyers tonic tor the young. JO SierOs. t ow.M kta Special Sale "M7 H- f VWu .Mail orders filled. High Grade Handloom Silks, one of the colors on sale at a yard Sol IVrcale. most beautiful designs for evening wear 5c Irish Poplin, fine as silk ...' Finest Mercerized Pongees 3c Pongee i"o Pongea ihc mm If V'j -J V"V Four Rousing Specials In Our High Grade Linen Department Thursday 11 cents for large size hemmed huck towels, plain, white and colored borders, worth 19c, Thursday, each lit? 50 cents for heavy, double twisted thread bath Mints. rWu iHtgo si:.e, worth $1.00. Thursday, eaeh ; 50 98 cents for hemstitched table cloths, good size, end lull bli tii hcd worth $1.50, Thursday, each..'. 9S 79 cents for heavy crochet bed spreads, hemmed with pronounced pat terns, full size, worth $1.25, Thursday, eaeh 70 Extra Specials for Thursday In Our Famous From 0:30 to 10 A. M. One case of Hope Muslin, genuine article, (no Just aa good), worth 10c yd., 10 yards limit, yd.. .5 For All Day 25c poplin .... 15 2 5c Scotch Zephyr Cloth 12! 19c Silk Messallnea, at 12W 19c Silk Dotted Mulls 12 Ht? 19c bleached towels, els, at 13 19c unbleached tow- at 12H? 15c bleached towels, at lOO 2oc pongee ...15 don ! forget TRY HAYDEIl'S FIRST n sheep origin, 'glace' other than of sheep origin: 'with exterior grain surface re moved,' and 'kid or other leather than of sheep skin.' The rate applied to these gloves Is 14 per dosen pair and 3a cents In addition per doeeo pair for each Inch over fourteen.' Some further Increases under various schedules sre: 4Cat polished plate gla.s. Increased from 8 cents to 10 rents per square foot on sizes r.ot exceeding sixteen hy twenty-four square inches, and on those above that and not exceeding twenty-four hy thirty Inches, from 30 cents to 3'4 cents per square foot; all above that, cnts per square foot, which Is a reduction of nearly all of these larger sizes. "Keene's cement or other cement hi which gypsum Is the component material of chief value, from 30 per centum to 33 per centum ad valorem. Aaphavltam Slightly Chaageri. "Asphaltum and bitun en, not refined or otherwise advanced in condition from naturaj slate, to .15 of 1 cent per pound on bitumen contents therein. "Fluorspar, crude, from 10 per rent ad valorem to 80 rents per ton; crushed or otherwise manufactured, from 10 per cent a1 valorem tt- S1.7S per ton. "Pins, with ortamental heads, with a new classification, Including those set with precious stores, pearls or corals, from 40 to B0 per cent ad valorem. "Watch movements, with more than seven jewels, from 36 cents each and 2" per' cent ad valorwn to 70 cents e:tch; if more than seven Jewels and not mure tlinn eleven, from 50 cents each and 25 per cent ad valorem to tl.K each; more tlinn eleven Jewels and not inure than fifteen, from C6 cents each and 26 per cent ad valorvm to Sl.&o each; having more than seventr i Jewels, the rates of duty remain li e cine "Watch casis and parts of watche and clocks, the duty remains the san'e The Spread Use it instead of as i the flavor ana be benefited tQlJX) is a sweet with a is si m . as, S ' ml cssslsf is cs4r-Miif rit Cars PTstlarts leflnlag Csspaay New Yarn tr' -Cim.X m WM I I jtZ jV . T'irj'' Tine Cook Says Spring Suits HAYDEi7s TMC aSLtAutg STOt Over 1,.'!00 now Sirin.ir Suits surplus !-tiK'k of two of tlit most di'pi'inlaMti manufac turers of men's suits in the fount ry, louirht for cash at far below aetual worth on sale beginning Thursday, in two big lots iflN.OO Suits. $ J0.no Suits. , $..r0 Suits. $10.00 Suits . 1LV)0 Suits . $1.J.00 Suits . Nothing to etjual tlu-se values ever before offered at this t a . i $8.90 season. ion t niiv llieiii. Satisfaction guaranteed. Wash Goods finest silk wool fabrics for 1'.m)M: all 500 IIIOH HHAIiK WIHM. DUKSS tiooMS Priestley's Nf Ulrti ks on kmI now. All grade Mack, from d..lii to tit CO All the new colored wool ilt-ens jrooda now on sale, from yonl Mc to $." Sen our new lac tun ulna now In all . tin) in w pt mg at les Domestic Roem From 2 to 2: SO 1. One ease of 6ic Apron Indigo blue, fast colors, limit, at, yard M. (hecUs, 10 yds. 2oc Doited t I loc Ualiate Swisses, 12. lOt : 12 4c Orandi e '71 e'.o ales not at i Km- Percale i Tin otlicr i advertised "Chromic add and l.ictl.- it. Id. from .1 cents to Z cents per pound. "Tannic acid or tannin f:um .Vi . . nt t 33 cents per pound " ew Method of ValNafion. One of the most ImportHnt tf the nils, cellaneous provisions' of ;he hill is that providing for the niflhod of sluution, which Mr. Payne expln'ns a follows: "Tho bill adds a t ew parng-aph to sec tion 11 of the customs aUnduistrnlh e ad. which provide! for the appraisement .f fronds Imported by consignment and not by sale where there is no naikcl price at th plate of origin of the goods. After i rnactln the present provisions to nccei. tain tiie value, ttir bill adds UiU psi i Kiap'i: "The Hiti.al market vulue oi wholes-al prt.-o aic des!gnei ly law on uny Imported merchandise which Is ccrnlgned for sal in the I nltod Rlatea, pr whit ; is not actually sold and frrely offered for snle In usual wholesale quantities In the open market of the country of exportation to all purchaaerr, alia II not In i t,y rasa b appraised at. Ices than the wholesale ptice at which such or Mil liar Imported mer chandise Is actually. i.l.: ami freely of fered f r sale In iiij I wholt-i-alc qtiaril ties In the I'nltrd Hirti-.s in tin- open mar ket to al purchaser. luo Allowance by Uodurt'oi, bclm; mcdv fur estimated duliei thereon, cost of Iracppuriation, inauratue and other necessary expenses from the place of shipment to the. place of delivery, unil a reasonable commission, not exceed ing 10 per cent, If any of the same has been paid." , "It will be seen that this provision i only applied lo consigned goods aurt not In those actually sold for importation.'4 The following explanation of the form of t lie bill was made by Mr. Payne: "The new tariff bill la a minimum and H'ontlnued on IOlevenlli Page ) Great for "Bread other sweets; you'll eniov a a tf) by its purity. food value. so. r s rsssttt .Ajsu'w't !''' if r. in 3 nt i Gooch's Desl Flour is the Best She Ever Used AT ALL GOOD GROCERS TEV IT :