THE SAFE WAY TO DUY PAINT. Properly owners will savo n deal of troublo and expense In keeping their Inilldlncs properly painted, If they know how to protect themselves ngnliiBt misrepresentation and adul teration In paint materials.. There's ono suro and safe guide to n 'pure anil thoroughly dcpondablo White Lead that'8 the "Dutch Hoy, Painter" trado mark which the NitUo'ftil l,ehd Com pany. the largest makers of, genuine White I.endf. plaqoion overy1- packngo of their product. This -:on(yiny sends n simple nnd ufiro, Uttlc"biitfJL for test ing white lend,' nhtf a valuable paint book, free, to all who wrltcv for It. Their address Is Woudbrldgd Mdg., New Yoil; City. . . '.' PLANT TRAMP BY INSTINCT. California Cactuo Blows Around tho Desert for Months. Cmimw anionR vegetable growths nnd one which Is seldom seen of men Is the i outlets cactus of the California desert, says the Technical World. This plant, a round, compact growth, rolls about tho love! Iloor of the des ert for some eight or nine months of the year, tossed hither and yon by "the winds which blow' with fierceness over all of California's trniid plat dur ing thofco months. At (he coming of the rains, or rather the cloudbursts, which sweep Hie desert in Its springtime, this cac tus takes root wherever It happens to have been dropped by the last wind of which it was tho plaything and Im mediately begins to put out nil around it small shoots, which In turn become cacti, exactly llko the parent plant These young growths Increase In size lapldly, sucking the niolsturo both from the parent plant and from the stinoundlug earth. The loots do not penetrate the soil deeply, but spread often over n circle, whoso radius Is not less than ton feet. Theso roots, too, aro small, but practically Innumerable, and they get every bit of moisture and plant food to be had In tho territory they cover. EYESIGHT WAS IN DANGER From Terrible Eczema Baby's Head a Mass of Itching Rash and Sores Disease Cured by Cutlcura. "Our little girl was two months old when she got n rash on her face and within five days her face and head were all ono sore. Wc used different remedies but It got worse instead of (better and we thought she would turn (blind and that her oars would fall off. fiho suffered terribly, and would scratch until the blood enme. This went on until she was five months old, (then I had her under our family doc tor's care, but she continued to grow worse. He said It was eczema. When ho was seven months old I Btarted ,to use the Cutlcura Remedies nnd In two months our baby was n different girl. You could not see a sign of a soro and she was as fair as a new born baby. She has not had n sign of the eczema since. Mrs. II. P. Dudkc, 'LeSucur, Minn., Apr. 15 and May 1!, '07." A Revised Version. A poet who hns been known to tell the truth recounts this story of his .little daughter: Hor mother overheard her expound ing the origin of the s-ox to her family of dolls. "You see. children," sho said, "Adam was a man all alone and was very lonely, so Clod put him to bleep, took his brnlns out and made a nice lady of them." Illustrated Hits. How's This? W offi-r Oni Iliitnlrnl Dollars Itrvcnrrt for any fw nt Caturrli that mniiut be cunil by Hall lOtarrli Cure. r J. rm:xi:v A co . Toinio. o. Wp, trip until ntlKnol, iuni knimn 1 J Clirncy for the last 15 jean), nnd Ih'IIom Mm ixTlcctly turn, orahlt- In nil iMixIrisK trauxjittliun mid nnunrlally !blc to rarr out nnj ol.lU'n lions imilp liy liU linn. NAUIISU, KlSSAN A. M AIUIS. W ImlcKile DruculMii. Toledo. O. Hikll'a Cntinli Cure In taktn inli-rnnll . nctlnis 3lrTtly uiHin the IiIihkI and niuiuiw mirtairx n( tho fjntim. .'liktliiionlilM win frw. ItIcp Tl lints per bottlr. Sold by nil ImiBttMn Take II all's l'amlly I'll: (or ronstliullon. Considerate. Borem Sho wasn't at homo when I called, so I left my enrd Miss Peppre Yes, she was telling Ime she considered it so thoughtful of you. Uorem To leave my card? Miss Pcpprey No; to call when sho wasn't at homo. With a smooth Iron and Deflnnco Starch, you can launder jour shirt waist Just as well at home ns tho Bteani laundry can; It will have tho proper stiffness nnd finish, there will bo less wear and tear of the goods, and It will bo a positive- pleasuro to uso a Starch hint does not Btlck to tho Iron. Where It Pinches. "They say that abroad the are suf fering from tho lack of Aiueilcan touilsts." "Yes, It cuts off profitable expedi tions after tho golden lleece." Haiti moro American. Important to Wlothorn. Examlno cnrefully ovory bottlo of CASTOHIA n safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and teo that It Hears the (Signature of( fuz w. In Uso For Over iW Years. Tho Kind Yoy Ilnvo Always nought Of Most Benefit. Tho fault which humbles us Is of more uso than u good action which puffs us up with prldo. Uovco. Lew in' Single Hinder strniglit .1o rinnr Hindu nf ri"Ii, mellow tohiceo. Your de.il cr or J.L'v.is' Factory, 1'coiia, 111. . Theio Is no rest for tho man who la puisuqd by bill collectors and a guilty conscience. S' M Sf V 7 . VZ yyrujtte. DON'T SELL THE DAIRY HEIFERS-RAISE THEM Uso a Good Slro nnd Improve tho Standard of You? Herd By Wllber J. Frascr, Chief in Dairy Hus bandry, Illinois University. Many dairymen are not raising their heifer calves; Instead the herd Is re plenished by buying cows. Four pro fessional cow buyers sold about 7,000 cows In tho vicinity of Klgin. 111., alone, last yenr; besides this many cows were shipped In by tho dairy men themselves. On many dairy farms tho heifer calves, good, bad nnd Indifferent, go for veal. Where this Is done It means there Is no provi sion for perpetuating tho dairy herd or tho bent cows In It. The dnlrynian from whom tho Illi nois station bought cow No, 1 with n A 3hrewd Young Financier's Clever Heifers at from Two three years' record of 105 pounds of butter fat per year, was making no ef fort to perpetuate her superior quali ties but was selling her calves at $2.50 each. This is certainly n ruinous prac tlco to the dairy business. Tho cow buyer cannot get enough renlly good cows to supply his pur chasers, as but few of the best cows aro for sale. Tho dairyman himself must ralso tho heifer calves of his best cows and not depend on any body's offerings to replenish his herd. He has tho breeding stock, tho feed cheap feed and the equipment. Calf raising Is n nntural part of his busi ness. It is absurd to suppose that as a rule ho can buy as good cows as ho can raise. Tho reasons are plain. Ho needs to retnin but few calves each yenr and can sell tho less-promising ones. Ho knows tho paromtago of tho calves and need save nono but those from high-producing mothers. It Is far easier to sell inferior stock (to tho butcher) than to buy cows that aro oxcellont producers. A pioniinent dairyman of tho state Bays of his grade herd: "The heifers wo raise from our best cows nro bet ter milk producers with their first calves than aro tho average innturo cows wo can buy." Several of our most progressive dairymen have said practically the same thing. Yet In the faco of all this, hundreds of dairymen mako no effort to save their best heifer calves, and they think they have a reason. They say lr7fc.OsTgir?lry,fcJr7 The Bull Is One-Half of the Herd. It takes too much milk. This question was carefully Investigated with 48 ealvoH by tho Illinois experiment sta tion. Twelve calves at a time were tested at Tour different times. It was found they could bo successfully raised on 150 pounds of whole milk and 100 pounds of sklmmllk. This milk was fed at the rate of ten pounds por day until the calves were r,0 days old, when it was gradually lessened ono pound per day for ten days ami then no more was fed. No substitutes for milk wore used. Only oidlnnry grains which tho farmer produces, and u good quality of legume hay were fed, showing that tho dairyman can ralso r. calf In this way with almost no ox ha trouble. Several of these calves aro now cows In milk and good pro ducers, Indicating that they wore not injured by this method of raising. The sale aluo of tho milk fed these calves was as follows: mo n, whult! milk ifi ti p..r ion i.5o 4'jO lb. hUIiii mill; Q $u so per 100 l.'O .tiro And these pi Ices of milk aro liberal, especially as they aro nahl at thn farm nnd no money or labor Is expended In hauling the milt' to market. It Is not so expensive to ralso a calf as tho dairymen have thought. Tho grain and hay consumed by tho helfors of high quality will give much bettor ro turns than tho samo feed fed to cows, liaising tho helfor calves of good high-producing cows, is a great fuuda mental lequlslto for tho best and easiest Improvement of the dairy herd. Hut those calvcB will tako their qualities trom both patents, and It Is equally Important that tho calf Bhall 'Vacs-jfiw vziA V- -5?c-. have good pnrentago on tho mnlo side. An Inspection of dairy herclB will show that many times comparatively llttlo attention Is paid to tho quality of the Biro. In n recotit visit to the dairy region of northern Illinois, the wiltcr noted six herds In which tho heifer calves were raised for future cows, hut In which tho sires used were miserable llttlo scrubs, veritable runts and weaklings, obtained by sim ply saving u grade calf from a poor herd Of many other sires fairly good as individuals, nothing Is known of tho Deal In Picking Up These Sacrificed to Three Dollaro Apiece. actual milk production of their femalo ancestors. With a herd of 10 cows, as hero il lustrated, each cow represents ono eightieth of tho ftituro herd each year, and the wholo number of 40 cows rep resent forty-eightieths of tho herd, and tho good well-bred slro represents one half or forty-eightieths of nil the qual ity and qualities, character and char acterlstlcs, tho capacity for milk pro duction, and everything else, transmit ted to tho cnlves which aro to consti tute tho succeeding herd. A fine dairy slro can be bought for $150, and with 40 grade cows at $00 per head, tho herd comes to $2,400. The bull costs only one-seventeenth of tho Investment, yet ho will Improve the future herd as much aB the other slxteen-seventeenths. The extra $100 put Into a good slro is tho best Invest ment In tho herd. Forty-ono nnlmals aro purchased; ono animal will influence the future herd nB nitieh as tho other 40. It Is worth while, then, to give much extra time nnd study to tho selection of that one, tho sire. From generation to generation tho succession of well-selectod sires goes on Increasing and Intensifying tho Im provement of tho herd. In this way tho slro becomes three-fourths, seven eighths, fifteen-sixteenths, etc., of tho herd. In fnct In a few years the sire la practically "tho wholo thing." So tho slro may he much moro than half tho herd whether Judged by tho quantity, strength, quality or accumu lated effect of tho characteristics ho transmits. It Is lltorally true that tho slro may thus, within a few years, at slight expense, completely transform a dairy herd and moro than doublo Its proilt. Every man who has had any ex tended experience or observation in the uso of a good pure-bred slro from high-producing dams at tho head of a dairy herd, will ngreo that this slro was of peculiar value nnd great econ omy In building up the herd. Tho rec ords of dnlry breeding havo proved It conclusively a thousand times over. No man who studies tho facts can doubt It. The cvidenco Is to bo seen In tho heifers of every such slro, and In their contrast with heifers lacking such pnrentago. Looso Shoes. Tho horse's shoos should bo kept tight. A looso shoo greatly tires tho horso that has to wear It, especially if ho has to woik on hard roads. It Is often a cntiso of lameuess. Iioso shoes can bo pre vented by taking tho horso to tho blacksmith's occasionally and having him examine the shoes to seo If they need tightening. Mow the Pasture Weeds. It Is a good thing to mow tho pasture weeds at tho beginning of summer, so that tho cows will not got a chnnco to eat them oven If they so desire. This will help keop tho milk fiom hnvlng a woody ilavor nnd will also glvo tho grass a chance to begin to supplant the weeds. A Paying True. A Now York farm er has a "Sweot Hough" applo treo that has not yielded less than threo bushols each year for If) successive years. Last year tho fruit was just as delicious as tho first tlmo it boro. Selecting a Breod. Select n breed nnd stick to It. You will be Just as well repaid In Improving and develop ing u good lot of fowls as well as you would In Improving good Uvo stock. Exercise the Drood Mare. Tho brood mare should havo n fow hours' oorelsu in tho yard or on the road every day. It does not pay to kcop her coullned. Provide Shade. Shady nooks aro relished by the layinjj bona. Beauty of the By Julia VVrff VN iW ,??&&$EW9mBr njuiAiv jv v c ' iv?v ii vr wwJ.HaDnHMuir x &tfw Tikiswar XTa & w jir' 1 1 -vxz r- m&Mw' KziSi t i:ir. 'tZTTif vnr k -, wmmmmmcr JVO.I No. 1. A pnnuinn, trimmed with ostrich and velvrt. No, 2. Midsummer moilo! trimmed with net edtjeil with silk braid. No. ;i Hnutit Btrcct lint trimmed with striped ribbon and straw ornaments. OMK Interesting facts come to light when one Is looking up tho subject of ostrich 5SKS fathers. It Is profitable to become acquainted with these. The ungainly bird of fine plumage, whoso splendor wo bor row and Improve upon, Is grown In South Africa and In our own country. South African species fur nish the best quality of feathers. The birds aro plucked for their plumes onco In every eight months or three times In two years. Loudon Is tho great central market for raw feathers. Huyera generally go there to obtain their stocks and buy the feathers which have been sorted Into different grades and sell at so much per pound. It is curious to observe the features that make a plume moro or less val unable. It Is tho practiced eye alone that can observe all the points of dif ference. Width of tho flues, quality of the fiber, length, texture, color and absence or presence of scars are all to be reckoned with. The business is fascinating in all departments: The buying, manufactur ing and selling. Each season Is a new chapter In tho long story of the os trich plume. For this airy splendid feather has nodded upon the head of beauty nnd waved from tho helmets of the bravo for many yenrs. Long before Tho helmet and the helmet feather, Vurned llko ono burning plumo toRetlicr. on Launcelot's dauntless head, or Guinevere looked dlstractlngly beauti ful In tho "light green tuft of plumes she bore," tho ostrich plume had lent Its state to high occasions. ARTISTIC NEEDLEWORK Two Pretty Centerpieces That May Be Easily Made. Tho wild carrot design, so well adnpted to hand needlowork, Is shown hero In an unusually odd centerpiece Odd Centerpiece. conception. It mny bo worked entire ly solid or with tho little eyelets to contrast, nnd should provo decidedly attrnctlvo whon finished. This graceful 24-lnch centerplcco to be done In solid embroidery, with tho blossoms In French knots, will provo Graceful Design. attractive to tho practical needlewom an. It Is a now design and Is exceed ingly popular on account of Its at tractiveness when finished. Winter Millinery. Tho ndvanco models In winter milli ner' strlko out no nbsolutcly now notes and, Indeed, novelty would bo dllllcult after a season of such varloty ns has been shown this summer. Tho first fnll hats sit low upon tho coiffure, after the fashion with which wo havo become familiar, and many of them nro very largo and low, though odd llttlo high crowned shapes and curi ous dlrectolro bonnets such ns tho late summer has brought forth nrc In cluded uuioug tho now felts. J?fl3A3,S 1 'SXk.i.m,! AW ' VV7tf ii js isy Ostrich Plume Bottomlcy, m w.maK2mr K ni it.m jkv .u i-u im9im .el. r ' . C4JV !' Mimmw , m C $!!02 rr&& t :3 i-a -.. titji TO. c3 Ostrich, especially In high grades, Is a good investment for women who can afford It. It will not grow less val uable, but will bo more expensive as tlmo goes on. Although ostrich plumes hold first place In the matter of decorations for the hat and coiffure, ostrich libers are worked up Into other decorative pieces. Pompons and mnny airy fancy branchings are seductively placed on tho latest millinery. In Fig. 1 a hat from a great French designer is covered with spiral tufts of ostrich and n plumo that suggests In coloring nnd form tossing seaweed. In Fig. 2 the group of threo up standing plumes illustrates tho fa vorite way of all the myriad ways In which plumes have been placed on hats, a rich and stately decoration, while in Fig. 3 a novel mounting Is shown eccentric, but full of style. AUTUMN FASHION GOSSIP Some Valuable and Timely Points for the Woman Who Cares. Tho dlrectolre waistcoat promises to last over another season, and pro vision has been made for very orig inal and elegant effects In this regard. Ribbons havo been taken up en thusiastically by milliners during the summer, and in satin and velvet nro to have a great vogue In the winter millinery also. Borduro satins follow In the wako of tho beautiful bordered summer stuffs and some exquisite effects are secured In this line of materials. Buttons of nil kinds, but particular ly those covered with satin or with tho costume material, aro being used moro lavishly than ever upon the early au tumn models. Cedar led or cedar brown which nro ono and the same thing and sug gest tho old time ninhogany, though with an added softness of tone bids fair to bo a popular autumn color and tho chaudron or copper tones keep their hold upon public favor. Chiffon broadcloth nppoars In all the now colorings and of a lightness and softness even surpassing that achieved by the manufacturers last year. Fancy broadcloths In ono tone colorings and woven satin or chevron stripes aro numerous. Tho deep reddish brown nnd brown ish purple shades which havo claimed attention ns relieving colors this sum mer are exploited earnestly among tho tall silks and velvets. Wild plum, concord grnpo, pruno and vnrloiiH oth er kindred shndes seem likely to llguro prominently among the winter color ings. To Be Agreeable. The girl who gets a Riiovnneo, who feels herself ill used, who is quite suro that nobody understands her, hns a mental ailment nnd needs treatment. Now, I am going to pi escribe. Tho best euro Is action. Fill every hour of the day with interests. Acquire a hobby (many peoplo speak slight ingly of n hobby, but a hobby Is a grent thing). Throw yourself with en thusiasm into all you do. Try to mako overybody you meet happy. Forgot that you yourself exist, and tho llrst thing you know you will acqulro thnt wholesome, hnppy state of mind which Is tho most benellclnl of traits. To Wash Cut Glass. It is necessary to havo a soft brush In oidcr to keep tho crncks and crev ices of cut glass perfectly clean. Wash In hot wator with soapsuds and ammo nia, ilnso In clear cold water and wipe dry with a verv soft cloth. , vr: SJiNk K How to Use Flavoring. Never add flavoring of any hind to a dl3h while Its contents aro hot. When put In whllo the concoction Is hot much" of tho flavor of tho extract passes oft In the steam. Walt until tho pudding or whntover your dish mny bo Is cold beforo you add tho flavoring. Spots on Wood. Rub tho white Bpols mndo by wot or hot dishes on' your polished tables vlt'i spirits of camphor. It will ro inovo them. The Crowd and Success. To-day thoro ore no public entertain ments save thoso which aro, Intended for the world at large. Whether tho entertainment provided takes tho form of the drama, music or Bport, tho crowd 1b Invited, and its presenco Is Indlspensablo for both financial and moral success. Hlbbert Journal. Good Ones. Dr. Henry Van Dyko of Princeton, who hnndleB n trout rod almost as deftly a3 he handles a pen, was prais ing n book of new flies. "'They nro wonderful flics," he said. "Why, if I venture to leavo any of them lying! nmund loo30 tho spiders come and carry them off." Why He Never Spoke. There was a man In our town, and ho was wondrous wise; ho nevor spoke unto his wire of his mother's cakes and pies. The secret of his wis dom guess It If you can; but If you can't behold It ho was u bachelor man. Chicago News. Feminine Hand In Literature. Tho literature of all European coun tries reveals the feminine hand. Malo writers are devoting themselves more nnd moro to sport and Industry. All modern books are effeminate in char- actor. Maenz, Vienna. Use of Flowers. There's no phosphorescence in flow, crs to speak of, but they may Hght6n up mnny a darkened spot In life. Manchester Union. Sunday-School Contributions. The average missionary contrlbiii tlon for each pupil In tho Sunday schools Is higher In the Episcopal de nomination than any other. Seldom. People seldom forget tho names or faces of those whom It may pay to' know. .jkil Mother of Hard Work. Necessity Is tho mothor of hard, work with most of us. Atlanta' Georgian. Expensive Luxuries. Castles in the nlr cost a vast deal to keep up. Lytton. Friend Has $1,000 Fire Loss. Thursday morning the Friend) pumping station was found to bo oni flro. The lire company was absentj attending the tournament at North Platte, and the flro fighters at homoi were considerably unorganized. Tho, blaze was extinguished with a loss oil the north end of tho pump housej and some damage to the roof of the) electric lighting plant adjoining. The! loss Is about $1,000. The flro orlg-i lnated In the coal bins, where a conJ sldcrable surplus lias been stored fori uso In ease of a strlko. The plant is! not so badly damaged a to prevent; Its use. Tho recent disastrous storms have cmphnslzed tho necessity of protection against fire, lightning and tornado.) A good company for farmers to insure' in is the Fanners & Merchants of Lin-1 coin. Their policies nro easy to un- derstand and prompt settlements aro mado after adjustment of clnlmsJ Thousands of satisfied customers.; have received benefits. Sent Obscene Pootal Card. Arthur Jenkins of Norfolk, Vn., tlio naval clerk charged with having sentj nn obscene postal card to President Roosevelt, being unnblo to furnish $1,j 000 bail bond, was committed to thej Norfolk jail to await the signing otj extradition papers for his romoval to. tho federal jurisdiction of Connecticut for trlnl. Lincoln Directory Beatrice Creamery Go. Highest Prices Guaranteed for 8 See Our ARent In Your Town or Write Us J HERBERT E.GOOCH CO. HKOKHKS AND DtlAI.CKS Grain, Provisions, Stocks, Cotton fluln OJIke, aiM-ao.s fraternity Ulitir. Lincoln, Nebraska, Hell I'hnnii M:! Auto Phono MSB I. urgent Hiiuhii in Stnto FUR KADMCMTO Mirft t Order; Urtllltll.l1 1 O md Remodiltd 'STEELE 137 So. Itth St., Lincoln, Xob. Gasoline Engines rector fViC,2noPP.b """ CUSHBMN MOTOR C0.t LINCOLN, NEBR, Cs r "S w il & tmr I' mmmusir: