BREAKS COLD IN A DAY. This prescription IB ono of the very best known to science. The Ingre dients can he cotton from any good druggist , or ho will got them from hia wholesale house. Mix half pint of good whiskey with two ounces of glycerine and add one- half ounce Concentrated pine com pound. The bottle Is" to bo shaken each time nnd used in doses of a teaspoonful - spoonful to a tablespoonful every four hours. The Concentrated pine is a special pine product nnd comes only In half ounce bottles , each enclosed in an alr-tlght case , but bo sure it la labeled "Concentrated. " BUT SHE HAD ENOUGH. ( ILL CHIIDRBI HHLF PRICE Johnny Mother , lot's go In hero and buy a baby ; they're cheap to-day. Avoiding Popularity. "How shall wo avoid popularity ? " John Wcfelcy once nsked his preach ers , and straightway gave them the amnvor In a rct of rules. Hero Is rule 4 ; "Warn the pcgplo among whom you are most of esteeming or loving you too much. " And hero is rule D : "Converse sparingly with those who are partic ularly fond of you. " Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA , n safe and sure remedy for infants nnd children , and see that It Boars the Signature In Use For Over 'K ) Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Good Guess. i "Pa , what is a football coach ? " "The ambulance , I guess. " Nebraska Directogy A Prominent Doctor Says of UNCLE SAM Breakfast Food AS A CURE FOR CONSTIPATION As a natural remedy for consti pation it in far preferable to niiy drugs or mineral waters. " DR. R. M. C. ( Name on request. ) Dr. M. uses Uncle Sam in his family and prescribes it to his patients. ASK YOUR GROCER ABOUT IT HE CERTAINLY KNOWS U. S. B. F. Co. , Omnhn kODAKS AKD KODAK FINISHING Mull ordnrs tlvui special attention. All UlnJi amateur nuii | > llt < 8 Mrlctly f rosli. Bond fur cutnluKUt. LINCOLN PHOTO SUPPLY CO. Lincoln , Noli. 1 > ruu Hunt I lie llenl Corn Hlioller uiiuli'7 If no. ItihlMun Imvlnjiti MARSEILLES GURU SHELLER Wrltv for mulou or tee your local driller. JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. , OMAHA Specialty. Highest 1'rloeii imlil fur Bcnil fur prlccp nml tugs. UIENRY HOLM. 131 So. 9th Street. , Lincoln , Neb. Pays the Iilchcst i > rlco for Of all vn- rletleu JUT- million tly cured In n fnw ilnyn without n unrslenl oi > orntloii or detention from business. No r > ny wilt bo accepted until the patient In complctuly satisfied. Write or call on FRANTZ II. WRAY , M. D. Room 300 Bee Bldg. , Omaha , Neb. Bend foroiirtiowas-rwiro cat- lo.im. "Till ! itivr nr CLt.iMlMtSS.M It will toll you tbo putalltllttlc * ot lllltmn9KloT ( , fur * . necktlca. pinnies , cor. pet * . ll | > i > oni. mtlrU , Jacket * . wnlitK , Ilnu , Tolls , overrents , unicorn rugs , bat limbos , in jUrussus , blanii-U , 1 > 11U > < s. tilt underwear , imrasols , fiutlior boas , unlfot. loiltfo i > itni | > hurnalln , billiard table corers , lacobodsprrmls , mufti , fur rugs und mount- Ingi , ICKKIIIB , sweater * . huts , biitli ruas , oriental liuicy work , bland covers , camiiKO robes , pary druKMis , opera coats. l rn curtains , fancy vettx. Btiawln , lingerie , men n Milti , cushion * , beur and tlis r mats , suMies and hundreds ot otbcr tlilni-4. Wo Imva tlio Ittrircet cleaning and dyclneesUlv llsliraeiitln tlioweM , IOAMJ foot of Hour Ennct * | ru > lty.DOOOgnrnixntii per dar. Members Kulonu. ot Cleaners and DjFtirn. paldoua wajrtonny | H > lntln U.8. t'ullorwrlto J. C. WOOD & CO. 1322 N Street 1G21 Howard Street Lincoln. Nebraska Omaha. Nobrailu TBiPk Aak your DiRltr for Goods with this brnd American Hand-Sewed Shoe Go , OMAHA JNTIHC TX Rats Under Ban in New York Schools 13W YORK. The interest in vari ous important features of the dny's news recently was completely over- thndowcd in certain sections , of the .j i.y u rumor tiiat a great public up- Ihlng against the wearing of "rats" in women's hair has been started , nnd that the hirsute rodents were doomed to extinction. "Down with the rat ! " it was as serted was to be the battle cry. The rumor caused consternation , not only in several co-educatlbnal In stitutions , where the matter came up Tor swift and decisive adjustment , but In department store.1) ) and other places , where mere man had put his foot down hard on the familiar feminine head adornment , and there were unmistakable able- rumblings of a revolution to bo heard wherever the question was dis cussed. The trouble started at the Erasmus Hall high school , where the assistant principal , Miss Kate 13. Turner , laid down the law forbidding "rats" or "switches , " nnd the following day en forcing the law against violators by forcably removing the offending adorn ments. While these momentous events were transpiring In the borough across the bridge , indignation was at nn oven higher boiling point In the department store district in Manhattan. In sev eral of the big stores notices were posted In prominent places that "rats" May Go to Penitentiary in Barrel . LOUIS. The law of the State is ST. responsible for Albert Kapp , son of n poor widow being a jail prisoner. The rule of the penitentiary is re- Hponslblo for hla being almost without clothing in the basilic. Prisoners who reach the peniten tiary under sentence , nro divested of their clothes and the garments are burned. "Stir" clothes are provided and In these the unfortunates must Hvo till their sentence expires and then In garb furnished by the big prison they faro forth into the world , a prey for the keen eyes of the sleuths. Bvcry man who is sentenced learns this from the old-timers and there is a rule in the city jail that men going up eoll all their belongings before they start because the inscription of Dauto is paraphrased into , "All property abandon yo who enter hero" over the gates of the prison. Kapp is a youth. Ho had some trouble with a man , and the man said it was an attempted robbery. The police , because Albert had been In trouble before , Insisted on a two-years' sentence. So , fallowing the custom of the jail , ho sild to other Inmates of the cells his possessions save a torn and frayed pair of trousers , a tattered shirt and a worn pair of shoos. His mother brought him some dainties and left him. She could not bear to come back and see the lad , manclcd and leg Ironed to the long chain. Neither did the hey wish her to come to see him go. He dreaded the scene. Their appre hension was not necessary. Then the Stuto decided there were extenuating circumstances in the case and in order to look the facts over again , and with a view perhaps to pa roling the boy , the sheriff was asked not to take Albert with the thirty- eight other convicted licrsons to the penitentiary. "Butyhat am I going to do ? " ho asked Jailor Wolf , surveying his gar- ' ' nionts. They were just sufllcient to prevent him appearing a la Adam. The jailer laughed good naturodly and told the story of how Albert had divested himself in order that the State should not get any the better of him and how ho would have to attend services Sunday In a blanket. Cat Aids Auctioneer in . A big ofllce cat , the pet CHICAGO. of the real estate board , was. "as sistant auctioneer" at a recent sale In the exchange rooms , ami to tabby Is given the credit for many raises In prices , George L. Warner of the firm of Balrd & Warner waa the "emergency auctioneer , " but before ho had become initiated In his now task the cat ap peared on the scone and perched her self upon the desk In front of the "realty salesman. " Mr. Warner started In as if ho had been In the auction business all his life. The bids cunio In fast and in largo sums. AH the time the cat peer ed down at the men Htruggllng to get a chance at a certain desirable piece of property. In the hair of cmployna would not bu tolerated , the penalty for Ignoring the order to be dismissal. During the luncheon hour nothing but the now order and plans for com bating It were discussed. In ono store It was decided that a committee should wait upon the manager and ask him to rescind the order or face a gen eral strike. "This Is the most outrageous pro ceeding I over hoard of , " said ono young woman , "and I think we would he fools to submit to it. The very Idea of a man telling us how to wear our hair ! It was bad enough when the manager said wo must wear black gowns mid white collars , but It is goIng - Ing too far when they tamper with our pnmpadoiir.s. "Why , they wouldn't dare to do such things In Siberia or China or wherever It Is they have a czar. I for one am going to wear just as big a 'rat * an I like , and I don't caio If the floorwalk er does report me. " That the last crusade against false hair adornment Is not being confined to high schools and department stores was further evidenced when the wom en employes of the telegraph com panics In the city hold animated dls cusBlon ever the report from Kansas City that A. U. Richardson , distiict superintendent of the Postal Tele graph Company there , had Issued this order : "On and after November 1 all worn on clerks and employes must dlscon tlnuo the use of 'rats' In their hair Please govern yourselves accordingly. ' The women employes heio wore extremely tremoly gloomy ever the situation , for it was prophesied that the order would reach New York next and that the much-abused "rat" would have to go Suddenly there was a lull in the proceedings. Bids were slow and the "raises" came dribbling along In small amounts. Auctioneer Warner couldn't understand It. Ho began to think that his success as a forceful auctioneer was to bo short lived. True , It was hln first experience , but he had started out with such a runh of business that ho was con gratulating himself. He looked at the desk where tabby had been. She had deserted her post. That sunned to oxplnin the situation. A hurry call was sent lor the cat. Scarcely had she resumed her place on the auction desk than the bidding livened up. Prices went soaring and the former enthusiasm was revived. "And the cat came back , " some ono remarked. After the bale was over It was agreed by all , Including Mr. Warner , that tabby was responsible for mak ing the day's sale successful. Several raises of from $25 to $50 were admitted by the "emergency auctioneer" to he due to the presence of the cat. She will have a prominent place in the future sales of the board. Hotel for Chinese Planned in Chicago -nlHCAGO. If Ah Slnj : , hero of V Bret Harte's world-famous poem , vcro to pay a visit to Chicago within the next month or so. ho would find himself able to enter a Chinese hotel , hand his grip to a Chinese bellboy , alllx his signature to a Chinese regis ter , eat a Chinese meal and sleep in u Chinese bed Also , ho would bo able > to read a Chlnoso newspaper , to bo awakened In the morning by n Chinese servant , to call for a cup of real Chinese tea and cat a dish of breakfast food hailing not from Battle Creek but Canton. And ho could hear a Chinese orchestra playing Chinese popular songs. For Chicago IB to have a Chinese hotel , the first In the city operated on the "Oriental Plan. " It Is to be an complete and as modern as the best American hostelry. Everything in it Is going to bo Chinese , from the guests to the chop-sticks In the dlnlng room. Everything will ho ileulgnod to make Ah Slug or any other oriental guest feel perfectly at home. / The new hotel will bo located In the heart of the Chinese industrial center , at 112 Foieral | otreot. The IP.JSO for the building has been applied for by the Chinamen behind the move to establish their own hotel. SIMPLE AND PRACTICAL TRAPS TO CATCH RATS Need for Their Destruction on the Farm and a Few Methods which Can Be Employed By David E. Lantz. Barrel Traps. No. 1 With stiff paper cover. , No. 2 With lilnsod barrel cover. A Stop. B Baits. The rat la the worst mammalian per.t known to man. Its depredations tluoughout the woild result In losses amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars annually. But these losses , Si eat as they are , are of less Impor tance than the tact that rats carry from house to house and from seaport to beaport diseases of all sorts. Few attempts have been made to collect statistics of damage done by rats in America , but it is known lp be very great. Fanners suffer enormous losses , both before and after their crops arc harvested , from these pests. Among methods for driving away rats that have proved useful under some circumstances are the follow ing : 1. Freshly slaked lime placed dry In all burrows and runs of rats. 2. Freshly made thin whitewash poured into the rat burrows. 15. A strong solution of copperas ( ferrous sulphate ) sprinkled in runs and burrow entrances. 4. Chlorid of lime , loose or In old rags , placed in burrows and runs. C. Gas tar daubed about the burrow entrances. C. Powdered red pepper scattered in rat runs and burrows. 7. Gas tar daubed about the bur row entrances. 8. Caustic potash placed In the bur rows and runs. The best bait to use In trapping is usually food of a kind that the rats do not get In the vicinity. As far as possible , food other than the bait should be inaccessible while trapping Is in progress. The halt should be kept fresh nnd attractive , and the kind changed when necessary. Baits and traps should be handled as little as possible. Ordinarily , traps should be frequently cleaned or smoked. About CO years ago a writer In the Coruhill Magazine gave details of a traj ) of which It was claimed thnt 3,000 rats wore caught in a ware house In a single night. The plan in volved tolling the rats to the place and feeding them for several nights on the tops of barrels covered with coarse brown paper. Afterward a cro&s was cut Ip the paper , so that the rats foil into the barrel. Many varia tions of the plan , but few improve ments upon it , ha\o been suggested by agricultural \ \ riters since that time. Reports are frequently made of largo catches of rats by means of a barrel fitted with a light cover of wood , hinged on a rod so as to turn with the.weight of a rat , as shown In illustration No. 2. The Burmese use an ingenious and simple method of trapping rats. A largo jar with a weighted cover is sunken into the ground. A hole is punched In the side of the jar on a level with the surface of the ground A Burmese Trap. where the rats can get it. Continue this for a week until the rats get bold and impatient to get at the milk. Then mix arsenic with the milk and await results. This plan is said to en tirely clean a barn of rats. Feed for Sheep. Sheep are better fitted to grind their own grain than most , nnlmnls , so it Is not necessary to do this work unless the sheep have poor teeth. Val uable breeding ewes are sometimes kept until quite old and their feed should bo ground. Bowel troubles are generally caused by errors In feeding. Success attends only the breeder who takes the utmost pains In selecting his stock. A combination of quality and size should be aimed for in breed ing A Good Cow. The fact that a cow has the dairy typo does not always indicate that she is a good cow , but a good cow always has the dairy typo. When a cow with the proper conformation does not prove profitable there is usually a rea son for it. She may have been so reared as to be worthless , or It maybe bo she is not receiving the right care. All cows In a herd will not respond to the same treatment. Too Much Com Shoals. When corn Is plenty and cheap the average feeder makes a mistake in feeding shoats too much while too young. . By the time they reach the age when they should have frame enough to carry a good lot of fat , they are stalled on corn. There have been few shoats stalled on corn since corn sold for over a half-dollar. In the illustration is shown the framework for the A-shaped hog house. Little explanation is needed rmco the dimensions are shown on the various parts. In. constructing the house it is important to have the raft- urs cut the right length so that boards 10 feet long cut in the middle will ex actly lit for roof boards. The following lumbar Is necessary to construct the portable house just and just large enough to admit a large rat. Ulco is used in the jar as bait. A writer states that he saw 72 rats caught in one such trap the first night It was set. To destroy rats on farms , place a little fresh milk , each evening when the cows are milked , In shallow pan described : Nine pieces 1x12 Inches 1C toot long and 11 O. G. battens 1C feet long for roof , five pieces 1x12 Inches 1-1 teet long for ends , ono piece 2x8 Inched ten foot long for ridge , two pieces 2xS ten foot long for plates , seven pieces 2x1 inches 1C foot long for rafters and braces in frame , three pieces 2xG indues eight feet long for runner * , and four pieces 1x12 Inches 1C lect long , rough , for flooring. The u IfA of the California Fig Syrup Co. nnd the scientific attainments of its chemists have rendered possible the production of Syrup of Tigs nnd Elixir of Senna , in all of ita excellence , by obtaining the pure medic inal principles of plants known to act most beneficially and combining them most skillfully , in the right proportions , with its wholesome and refreshing Syrup of California Figs. As there is only one genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna and as the gen uine is manufactured by an original method known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only , it is always necessary to buy the genuine to get its beneficial effects. A knowledge of the above facts enables one to decline imitations or to return them if , upon viewing the package , the full name of theCalifornia Fig SyrupCo. is not found printed on the front thereof. Schools for Tuberculous children. Special schools for tuberculous chil dren have now been established in Providence , Boston , New York , Roches ter , Washington. Hartford , 'Conn. , Chicago cage and Plttsburg. New York has three schools and Washington , D. C. , two. The hoard of education of New York city Is proposing to establish three more , and similar Institutions nro being planned In Detroit , Buffalo , Philadelphia , Cincinnati and Newark , N. J. In cities like Providence , Boston nnd New York , whore outdoor schools have been conducted for two years , the re sults obtained from the treatment of children In special tuberculosis open air schools seem to show the great ad vantage of this class of Institutions. This , coupled with the experience of open air schools in Germany and Eng land. proves that children can bo cured of tuberculosis nmd keep up with their school work , without any danger to fellow pupils. Boy's Essay on Clothing. Hero Is an extract from nn essay , written by n boy in a London school : "Clothing is an article which every body should wear. The least o this article is worn by savages or na tives , which Is a piece of cloth or a few leaves or feathers round the waist , in cold countries , same ns Eskimos , the people wear more clothes than we do , count of the Jcy cold out there. They can skate all the year round , ex cept about one thaw there is in sum mer. If they walked about like na tives they would catch cold directly and die of bronkltls. We put clothes on which are nearly like our bodies , gome have caps , coats and trousers , but women and glrla wear hats and frocks to tell who they are. " Still for Equine Comradeship. Horse owners get a pleasure from their horses which they got from nothing else. When they ride or drive they get pleasure of gentle motion , conservative progress and companion ship. Some men will not give up the horse for a piece of machinery , even though it moves faster and kicks up more dust. The man who owns a horse should not bo driven off the road by a man who happens to own , or partially own , a machine. WashIngton - Ington ( D. C. ) Star. Foreign Trade of United States. Great Britain buys more goods from the United States than from any other fi f three principal countries In the world fe $020,000,000 worth in 1008 ; $10.000- 000 more than from France , Germany and Holland combined , according to the July report of the department of trade and commerce of Canada. The Likeness. "He says he knows her like a book. " "Yes , so ho does ; like a Henry James book. Ho simply does not un derstand her at all. " SECRET WORKERS The Plan Upon Which Coffee Operates. Coffee is such a secret worker that It is not suspected as the cause of sick ness or disease , but there is a very sure way to find out the truth. A lady in Memphis gives an inter esting experience her husband had with coffee. It seems that ho had been using it for some time and was an Invalid. The physician in charge shrewdly suspected that coffee was the "Worm at the root of the tree , " and ordered It discontinued with instructions to use Postum regularly in its place. The wife says : "Wo found that was the true remedy for his stomach and heart trouble and we would have glad ly paid a hundred times the amount of the doctor's charge when wo found how wise his judgment was. "The use of Postum Instead of cof- f6e was begun about a year ago , and It has made my husband a strong , well man. Ho has gained thirty-five pounds In that time and his stomach and heart troubles have all disappeared. "Tho first tlmo I prepared it I did not boll it long enough and lie said there was something wrong with it. Sure enough it did taste very flat , but the next morning I followed directions carefully , boiling It for fifteen minutes , and ho remarked 'this Is better than any of the old coffee. ' \i "Wo use Postum regularly and never tire of telling our friends of the bene fit we have received from leaving off coffee. " Look for the little book , "Tho Uoad to Wollville , " in pkgs. "There's a Reason. " liter will tlie lllime letter ? A neiv one iipnenrN from time to ( line. They iiw genuine , true , nutl full ot liuiuuu Interest.