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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1910)
. . _ . - - . I ' " . m . " ' , ' ' ood' , . . . . . . - . ot : 'r . . . ' - ( : : : I . : . S ; . rsaparl mil . . ' For ' " , : > AII- pring ' Blood Diseases . , . ' # . 'I- : , I , .j. : : . : - and Ailments . . : ' Possesses medicinal merit Peculiar to Itself % and has ! Y. . an unequaled record of cures. Take it this spring , in usual liquid form or tablets known as Sarsatabs. - - WESTE . t @i ii Senator , DoIHver , of Iowa , says : . . . . , . JTho Btroam of emigrants from tho United States I Canada will continue. " , . Senator Dollivcr recently paid o e visit "Western Canada " . : and says : "There is a lna < l hunger in tho hearts \ t of Em.'lish : : , Breaking pno- plo ; thisrill account for tho removal of BO many lovrti farmers Canada. tI Our people nro pleased 0 with its GO\'ornmentand tho excellent ndmlnis- ' " trntion of law. and they ' " nro cominR to you In ! f'l" . tens of thousands , and _ . , , t : ! ; : thoy nro still coming. " , lown contributed : large ; ly to tho 70.OOO Ameri i can farmers who nindo Canada t their liomo during 1909. F Field crop returns nlono durljjffyear added to tho wool tli oftuocountry upwards of 61 'dOe@Ooe@o o & Grain crowlne , mixed farm- . Incr , cattlo raisins and dairying aro nil profitable. Free Home- - steads of 10O ucrc.1 aro to bo $ f Imd In tho very best districts 100 ncro pre-emptions at $3.00 ; per nrrovltJiln certain areas. _ . ; _ Schools and churches In every P _ settlement cllmato unexcelled , solltherlehcst.wood. water and k : : buUdlng material plentiful. + P For particulars as tolocation low ' Bottlers' railway rates and descrip . . \ tive illustrated pamnhlot , "Last $ ' " other informa Best west" and tion nrrito to Hup't of Immigra . tion. Ottawa. Canada or to tho following Canadian Gov't Aeents : IX T. Holmes. 315 JacksonSt. . St. Paul. Minn. , and J. MacLachlan. Box 11C. Watertown. South Dakota. ( Uto addrc&s nearest you. ) Please say where you saw this advertisement. i 1.T ' /it . H r Chauffeurs , Drivers and Repair- men Earn Big Money , $20 to t $50 prWek 1s the usual par for trained men. Some earn as : much moro on tho side selling our Auto Sup- Iplies andSpecialties. . Do you want a chance ? Write us now for outline of our complete Cor- 'respondence Course in Automobile Engineering Repairing- and Drivinir. We can teach you by mail all about tha care running and repairing- Automobiles. You can fit yourself at home to take a position as chauffeur , driver or repair man. And you ; can MAKE MONEY WHILE LEARNING by puttinsr in your spare time selling our supplies , on liberal commission building up a perma nent trade. Writo us today-now-if you want to learn all about the automobile. To men who will become our agents we sell this famous $ SO J course for half price - only $10 down , bal- ance in small monthly payments. Write today. - ATLAS AUTO SUPPLY CO. 837 43rd Street CHICAGO , ILL. R SALE. pO . . . Printing Office Outfits ( tor large or small el tabl1l hmentli. Estimates furnished ' ' ' . ompU . . . . ] ' . , . For . . . . . full . particulars address tho CHICAGO J-- ' % Hn"'no' ; - II\ . . . . ImlxItyln. . On the Loop. - Stranger - How about those elevated cars ? Are they the pay-s.s-you-entfcr kind too ? Suburban - No ; they're the pray-as- vou-enter kind. This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil dren used by Mother Gray , a nurse in Children's Home. New York cure Const- ! nation , Feverishness , Teething Disorders Stomach Troubles and Destroy Worms ; 0.000 : : testimonials of cures. All drug- gists. 25c. Sample FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted , Le Ho ) " . N. Y. A cod weighing twenty-seven and one-half ! pounds has been caught in the harbor at Folkestone . England. Jt'H PettitN Eye Salve , that gives instant relief to eyes , irrI- tated from dust heat , sun or wind. All druggists or Howard Bros. , Buffalo , X. T. A new electrical device : has been put on the market to thaw out frozen water pipes without danger of bursting them or ignitingv surrounding woodwork. FOR IXDIGESTIOX AXD HEART Burn there is nothing so good as A-B-C Tea. Large package 25c at all dealers. The entire Bible has been translated into and printed in 105 languages , f.he New Testament in 102 more , and por- tions of the scriptures in still 211 more tongues. Dr. Pierce's Pellets , small , sugar- coated , easy to take as candy , regulate and invigorate stomaph , liver and bow- els. Do not gripe. Tho shipbuilding output of the United Kingdom last year : was 92G.G69 , as against 1G07S90 the previous year. WIIEX YOU'RE AS HOARSE as a crow. When rou'ro coughing and gasping. ( When you've an old- tashioned deep-seated cold tako Allen's Lung Bal aam. Sold by al' ' -Irugiflsts / 25c , 50c and $1.00 bottles. Russia's wheat crop of 783,000,000 bushels for 1909 was the largest ever produced by any country for a single year. Mrs. WInslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething softens the gums re- duces inflammation , allays pain , cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Tragedy of the Deep. Suddenly there was a wild shriek The passengers on the lower deck , caught a momentary glimpse of a dark . object falling swiftly from above. They rushed to the side of the boat and gazed in horror at a woman's hat bobbing up and down on the rapidly receding waves. It was all they could see. . Where was the woman ? Up on the hurricane deck of the steam- er , bare headed , and wringing her hands in despair. It was her only traveling hat , and had < cost her $2.98. " , - . . " ' ' ' , , ' . ' ; - " ' tu1L I ' i 3o. 1 , . : . . . " " " . . l ( - " . . : . . , . : " . . . , . . " . . . " " . . " " . . . J 0 , " , . ! . For Infants and Children. T The Kind I < You Have M , . , p I - f Always Bought ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. " ' geablePreparaionforAs- ( [ - sirailatingtheFootfanu'Regiila-l Bears the . , ; tiDgUieStoniadisandBowElsof' ( ( * , . Signature ' - 's , , , ( ; : Promotes DigeslionCki : Of ' c : i'l ' nessandRestContainsneir p ' OpiunuMorphine norMioeraU ? . , , , : , 1 ; , NOT NARCOTIC. 1 . o . . . , , , ' I ctafOldlf' ' M 1 , . g"OldttJ ttJ- ' ' & : Scm7 t L I . 1 1lx6dleSilh- I ! - I I. : n ptWfDll 11/ - , lk' ' lo ; : ntlsS ; . , . JfinnSttd- : Gcrihcd Sizpr i s ltlt' : c:1'f1mr. ! . , U 1 + 1 . - S e , , , ; Aperfect Remedy for Ctmsfipa- - tion ( , Sour Stowadi.DiarrfioEa . b WorrasCoiwulsioiisFcvErtsh- F 0 0 r Ve r ' ness andLoss OF SLEEP. = . . . - . Facsimile SignatureoT _ v 4 a 'tGl pi ' ( t Thirty Years i . NEW'YORK. . I I h t(1 ( ? : Gunrant ec un rt c Ford . I Exact Copy of Wrapper. , . . . . . . . THC : CCNTAUR COMPANY. NCW YORK C4TT. , . . . . . , . . , - , . . . ' ' - - } T , " " " " ! , m. GoY ' " , 'S'1' , . . - .J ; , " r . Thp n n Pink Eye , Epizootic Shipping 0 U lcTEMP ; : : II50 Fever and Catnrrhal Fever Sun- cure and positive prevent ! . . , no matter how horses at any ga ara $ ' ' infected or "exposed. " Liquid given on the. ton ue , acts on the lll . o " and , Glands ; expels the poisonous germs from the body. Cures Distempar in r , t , . Dogs and Sheep and Cholera in Poultry. 'Largest selling live stock re n.d y. o n , Cures La GripjiC among human beings and is a fine Kiduev remedy. 90c \ md s r $1 a bottle ; S5 and $10 n dozen. Cut this out. Keep it. Show to your drug- - gist , who wilhget it for you. Free Booklet. "Distemper , Causes and C r . s. " Special agents wanted. - r p Spohn . Medical Co. ' j ' ! : o : Sli Goshen , nd. ! , 11. S. / ! . . ' : , " . : ' . it - "I" - , , / \ " . . ' . . . . . . M . . 7 . ei 1 The average daily mail received at the White House is , of course , very large. The President cannot , it fol lows , read these letters as an ordinary business man reads his morning mail , but by a carefully developed system their contents are in substance pre- sented , to him , an exchange says. A corps of confidential clerks open the letters and give them a first reading. They are then carefully sorted. Many of them do not need to go to the Presi- dent , as they are simply recommenda- tions for office. These , after being courteously acknowledged , are referred to .the proper departments , and placed on file there until the subject to which I each of them relates can be taken up for consideration. Many of the let- ters are purely formal , or contain re quests for something which cannot be granted. These the clerks answer and the President's secretary signs. The requests for charity are so many that a special "form" has been devised to be used in answering them. They are all alike necessarily and politely re fused. All letters which the President ought to see are carefully briefed-that is , a slip is pinned at the top of each letter , and on this is a typewritten synopsis of its contents , telling who the writer is and what he has to pre- sent. Frequently the President is suf- - ficiently interested by the brief to cause him to read the whole letter. Sometimes the communication is re ferred to a cabinet officer , in which case the slip is retained at the White House and filed away. When a large amount of persons write on the same subject the letters are bunched , and the brief at the top gives the names of those who present one argument , and in another list the persons who offer a different view. This is an admir- able way of "jumping at conclusions , " made necessary by the excessive bur- dens of the presidential office. . _ . . _ . . _ At the end op February , when eight months of the fiscal year had expired , the deficit of the treasury was a little less than twenty-five million dollars. The ordinary receipts were a little less than four hundred and twenty- seven and a half millions ; the ordinary expenses slightly more than four hundred and fifty-two mil ] lions. The ordinary receipts and , ex penditures are the entire receipts and disbursements except those on account of the public debt and the Panama ca- nal. As compared with the same months of the preceding year the re ceipts were forty-two ; millions more , and the disbursements a million and a half less. In that former year the def- icit for the eight months up to the mil end of February was sixty-eight lions , or more than forty-three millions above that of the current year. The appropriations become effective on the first day of July ; and in' that and the three or four succeeding months the disbursements are heavy in amount , whereas the receipts are not usually larger than the average. Almost al ways the last few months of the fiscal year , which , ends with June , exhibit an improvement over the first half of the year. * * - - - The opinion of officials in the cen sus bureau at Washington Is said to be that the population of the country as a whole will ba found to approxi mate 90,000,000. If the same rate of increase , however , has been maintain- ed in the last ten years as prevailed in the preceding ten the population will reach 93,000,000. There are ex perts who figure that even a bigger rate of increase will be found to have occurred and who declare that the number of inhabitants of the United States will be discovered to be par- ticularly close to the 100,000,000 mark. i If these optimists ; are right , the na ! tion's population has jumped ahead about 24,000,000 in ten years. At the last census the population was 76,000- 000 , an increase of about 14,000,000 over the census of 1890. ' - - - An array of counsel greater in num ber and more noted than ever assem- bled at The Hague to engage in the trial of a special case has been retain ed to represent America and Great \ Britain in the determination of what is undoubtedly the most important is- sue ever presented to the great peace tribunal. Arguments will be begun on June 1. Technically this is the deter- mination of differences which have arisen between the two governments as to the true intent of the provisions of the treaty of 181S defining the fish- ing rights of Americans and Cana dians in their respective waters. - . ' - . ' . . Mrs. John B. Henderson has come to be known as the Terpsichore of Wash ington. It was Mrs. Henderson who formed the famous Greek and Span- ish waltz classes for the Lenten per- iod in which her pupils danced upon arising ! ' before open ' windows to make ' them supple and graceful. - . - . - Home consumption of the country's products continues to show expansion when compared with last year. For the nine months ending with last month the exports of breadstuffs , meat and dairy products , food animals , cot- ton and mineral oils from the United States , as shown by figures of the De- partment of Commerce and Labor , ag gregated in value $653,289,954. For the corresponding period of 1908-09 the value of the commodities was $687,794 , 128. . a \ . , , I ' . o : . ' " _ : ' . . " Earn f 20 to $ vO Pc Week. That is the usual pay for trained chauffeurs , drivers _ and auto repair men. Some earn as much more on the side selling auto supplies and spe- cialties. For an outline ! of a complete correspondence course in automobile engineering ! , repairing and driving , stlch as will fit you to take a position t s chauffeur , driver and repair man , write the Atlas Auto Supply Co. , 837 Forty-third street , Chicago. He , Hoped Not. "So you're a fugitive from justice , are you ? " "Thunder no ! " exclaimed the hunted man , turning redwith indignation. "It's a suburban constable that's after me ! " 1.IH Ilandw Crnclced Open. "I am a man seventy years old. My hands were very sore and cracked : open on the insides for over a year with large sores. They would crack open and bleed , itch , burn and ache so that I could not sleep and could do ! t t but little work. They were so bar ] that I could not dress myself in tho morning. They would bleed and the blood dropped on the floor. I called on two doctors , but they did me no good. I could get nothing to do any good till I got the Cuticura Soap ahd Cuticura Ointment. About a year ago my daughter got a cake of Cuti cura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment and in one week from the time I began to use them my hands ! : were all healed up and they have not been a mite sore since. I would not be without the Cuticura Remedies. "They also cured a bad sore on the hand of one of my neighbor's childrens and they think very highly of the Cuti cura Remedies. John W. Hasty , So. Effingham H.Mar.o . and Apr. 11 , ' 09. " To place ferns upon the window sili means their death , as they cannot live In a cold draft. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications , as they cannot reacli the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness , and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness , Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mu- cous lining of the Eustachlan Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling Bound or Imperfect hearing , and when It is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result , and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored ; to Its normal condi tion hearing will be 'destroyed forever ; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh , which Is nothin ? but an Inflamed condition of the mucous ; surfaces. We will glvo One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness ( caused by Catarrh ) that cannot bo cured by xHall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars , free. F. J. CHENEY & CO. , Toledo , O. Sold by Druggists ! ; , 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Equal parts of milk and lukewarm water are excellent for sponging palms. GERMANY AND CANADIAN WHEAT. , Looks to the Canadian West for Hur Supply. ' A dispatch from Winnipeg , M.aJliI I toba , dated March 18 , 1910 , says that Germany is "anxious to secure a share ' of Canadian wheat : to supply her im- ports of ttat cereal. " The recent ad- justment of the trade relations with Germany has made it possible to carry on a Canadian-German trade with much fewer restrictions than in the past , and considerable development of trade between the two countries is now certain. The great men of the United States aro alive to .the wheat situation in this country now , and there Is consequently the deepest in- terest in , every feature that will tend to incroasa and conserve the wheat supply. With its present 650,000,000 bushel production , of wheat ' and all efforts ; to increase It almost unavail- ing , and the rapidly growing consump- tion of Its Increasing population , there Is certainly the greatest reason for , the anxiety as to -where the ' wheat is to come from that will feed , the na tion. The United States1 will be forced as Germany is to look to the -wheat- fields of Canada. One province ' alone raised last year one-eighth as much as the entire production of the United States , and 'but a twelfth of the wheat area has yet been touched. The Amer- icans who hare gone to Canada , are to- day reaping the benefit of the demand for Canadian wheat and they will con- tinue to join in the benefits thus reached for a great many years. Splen- did yields are reported from the farms of that country . , and from land that the Government gives away in 160- acre blocks , and from other lands that have foean purchased at from $12 to $15 an acre. John Munter , near Eye- brow , Saskatchewan , a , former resi- dent of Minnesota , says : "Last fall got over 30 bushels of wheat to the acre and , had'30 acres of it ; also 20 acres spring breaking on which I had flax of which I got almost 20 bushels per acre. Had 20 acres in oats and got 70 bushels ' per acre , and 500 bushels potatoes on one and three- quarter acres , and can therefore safely saythat I had a fine crop and am well satisfied with my homestead. " He is considered but a small farmer , but he will be one of the big farmers , soma of these days. There are many others , hundreds of others , whose yields ware beyond this , and whose average umder crop was vastly greater. The story of the experience of Ameri- can farmers in the Canadian West is a long one. The time to go , would appear to , be now , when splendid selec- tions may be made , and where land can ba purchased at prices that will be doubled in a couple of years. The most powerful and durable saws In the -world : ar Q of American manufac- ture , vanadium being : used in the steel. , Kefl , WcIr , Weary , Watery Eye" Relieved By Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murino Fer Your Eye Troubles. You Will Like Murln . It Soothes. 50c at Your Druggists. : Write For Eye Books. Free. Murina Eyo Remedy Co. . Chicago. J . . . - ' Aids Nature ' . , J The great success of Dr. Pierce's GoMfefl : Medical Dis : t covery in curing weak stomachs , wasted bodies , weak ' lungs , and obstinate and lingering coughs , is based oa the recognitiqp : of the fundamental truth that "Golden Medical Discovery" supplies Nature with body-build- ing , tissue-repairing , muscle-making materials , in con- densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest food , build up the body and thereby throw off lingering obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" rs-establishes tn ! - digestive and nutritive organs in sound health , purifies J and enriches the blood , and nourishes the nerves - in fihort establishes sound vigorous health. j , it your dealer offers something "Just as J1ood , " . It is probably better FOR HIM . . . It pays better. . . I . . , But you are thinking of the euro not the profit so - . there's nothing " Just as good" for you. Say so. , Dr. Pierce's ' Common Sense Medical Adviser , In Plain English ; or , Mede.J Icine Simplified , 1008 pages , over 700 illustrations , newly revised up-to-date q * . Edition , paper-bound , sent for 21 one-cent stamps , to cover cost of mailing , only Cloth-bound , 31 stamps. Address Dr. H. V. Pierce , Buffalo , N. Y. I- . AN UP-TO-DATE STOVE Do you realize there is no longer any reason why you should use a coal range ? Oil is cheaper than coal ; it is lighter and easier to handle , and gives an intense heat. Provided you have the right stove , oil is more \ economical , cleaner and less trouble. Have you seen the. New Perdim N . . "il COok-stove The accompanying illustration gives you only a rough idea of its appearance. You really can't appreciate it until you either use it yourself , or talk to someone who has used it. It does everything that A coal range will do-except heat ths room. The New Perfection Oil Cook- ' / Stove will do anything , from heating a. kettle of water to cooking a course ! dinner , but it won't heat a room. It. 'doe ' " " ' smoke. It . doesn't "smell , it doesn't : s , , lrs can't get out of order. Light it and it , is ready. Turn it down and it is out. ' Only a woman who knows the trouble- of carrying coal and cooking in a hot s kitchen can appreciate what it means to- tr . - have a clean , perfect stove that will. ' . cook anything , boil , bake or roast , and. yet won't heat the kitchen. How is It done ? The flame is controlled in tur ' , h- and. , S - quoise-blue enamel chimneys , : directed against the bottom of pot , pan . - kettle or oven , and only there. Th e - i . . ; flame operates exactly where it is needed .V - and nowhere else. With this stove- = your kitchen is cool. r" The nickel finish with the bright blue ; Of the chimneys makes the stove orna . mental and attractive. Made with 1 , t : Caallonary Note : Ba sure W and 3 burner ; the 2 and 3-burner you eet this stove-see V H stoves can be had with or without that the * name-plate ? II Cabinet. reads : ' NewaCi CCtion. ' , " KveryiloalpreveryTrherp ; If not atyourswrltofc' ! Descriptive Circular to tUu nearesagency of t : . e StandaFd Oil Company ( Incorporated ) , , , , - _ _ _ . . , , _ " ' _ ' . . " , " . ' - . , , " . . , , , ofO" , , _ _ , _ " ' 't.i" : ' ' .I ! ! ! Of " ' . : " ' : ' . ' * _ ft , " . .rWIf , - - = _ " . ; r. ' _ . - - ' 'I''J\ . , , : : : -r : ? t > ' ! : Gt ' 3-'l' ; ' , , ' . . , . , _ _ r - - ; . ; ; . . . . . , , , .a. . . V * , _ . _ _ . _ --'ilI r. ' ' ' ' 'ar ; L = : ' - - " ' 3 > . The Overland . . . . .11. . . -s , The King of Cars . : , : ; . ® tstsn3.e t ® * No other has large l sale-none har- car as so rge a sae-none ai I made such , amazing records. Price , $1,000 upj It requires four factories , employing 4,000' men-turning out 140 Overlands daily - to meet the flood-like demand for these cars. - Yet two years ago a hundred rivals had a larger sale. The reason lies largely in the car's utter simplicity. Its able designer made It almost trouble-proof. He created an engine which for en- durance , is the marvel of engineering. He designed the pedal control. One goes forward or backward , slow or fast , by merely pushing pedals. The hands have nothing to do but steer. A child can master the car in ten minutes. A novice can drive it a thou- sand miles without any thought of trouble. The Overland always keeps going , and almost cares for itself. All the usual complexities have been elimi- nated. That is why each car sells others , and our orders for this year's Over- lands amount to $24,000,000. Another fact Is that no other caz gives nearly so much for the money. This is due to our enormous output , and the fortunes invested in our auto matic machinery. It would bankrupt a smaller cnaker to try to compete with us. | us.You You can get a 25-horsepower Over- . land , with a 102-inch wheel base , for 1 1000. You can get a 40-horsepowa ! Overland , with a 112-inch wheel basa > , i for $1,250. The prices include lamp . and magneto. This car , which has captured the country , is the car you will want when you know it. Two Free Books Nothing is published about automo- biles so interesting : as the facts abo it Overlands. They are told in two booka which we want to send you. Every motor car lover should have them. Cut out this coupon as a reminder to wrlte- for the books today. E77 The Willys = 0verland Co. , Toledo , Ohio Licensed Under Selden Patent Please send me the two books free. L - . $1,000 to $1,500.-According to size , style and power (49) - _ . . ' - - . . . . . . ' - - U . ; ; r . . $175 PIANO PURCHASING BOND Given for a Solo tion to this Eebos ONLY ONE SOLUTION ALLOWED FROM THE SAME FAMILY " " Soad in yonr solution at ( ) no . , also send with TOOT so * ' l . ti . n the names of two or moro families in your vicinity , . who faaTo no pianos. I am of- ' ' + L. i . R farlag ! this Purchasing Bond't . ' - , 0 ' . - to apply only as part payment . & . , , on tk > purchase of tho Purcell . 1 _ , - r - , J naicea Piano , and in order addresses to secure of fami- the < f. jt-l- @ " _ . - ' - . - llez can got who them have Interested no pianos in so my I \ r ) - I. , , . , C ! . . . - I ' j ll ? method of Factory-to-some - C1 Selling of the high grade Pur- ' - & - - ' cell piano. C . _ _ ; : , I will send you the bond , , , , 'i . . IS t . - . : free trial order blank cata'n " t , . " . + - FPrvz , ' ' _ ' -n i2-.s r- , * - - logue and full particulars. > . . l" ' r""o. * o < Bw , . (1 ( \ i/ ; , Send in your solution , on ' 2 ) T-H E . _ ' ' \ . . . . : . this or a separate sheet of . - - - ' ' - ' ' _ 44 papor , at once to - - - I. \ S. PURCBl , Factory-to-Home Piano Han , Dapi 32 , 10 i Wesfarn An. CHICAGO , ILI1H01S n . _ _ _ _ A slowly moving landslide on an Italian mountain , two miles long by half a mile wide is carrying with it a village with 1,000 population. S. , C. N. U. - - No. 17.-1910. i Sere n afflicted Eyes , with ase IHOMPSON'8 EYt WAIl _ _ _ Watson E.OolemnnWn3l * , . PATENTS Ington.D.CX Roots free . Higtta. est references. Best results - - I PUTNAM FADELESS , DYE Coler monnB < jo4s ! Mahler and lasler colors Ibonur olher dye. , One 1 Ocnackaoe colors all lltos. : Iky * ye In cold wafer beller lhan any clier dye. Ton can dye swr axmest aUfeoul > rlpplnp apart. Write ler 1m lIoglht -tor. ,9 fJYC DJudiaMIi1x' ( ! oa , MGWSUQE WRVG CO. . Quincy. IIline , . f , . . - ' ' , . . - a . . ! , . . ' - . - ' . . - - . , . k