Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1914)
NEWS NOTES OF CURRENT WEEK POULTRY ........ and Dairy Produce • I an k'lMt* w AfiU d. W rit« fo r our LASH OFFER Pear*on-Ptge Co. '1!liSi< A ,SD T V P K W U IT K K S , A L L M ARKS 1 é*rgm MMMirUnont.Ho« • le J lM r o e ftftMKTftft mi Resume of World’s Important Events Told in Brief! uifT« m o i . IIS U» M u ih liiM ih lp |M ii on •|>l*rov*i an I iruoron food by 11 out« vonearn. W rit« for ■«mfl«** of Work. ■ •*♦»>!* in * k * p ra fa m a i. Kvory county in tha stats o f Dragon haa votod " d r y .” Woman aulfraga Is baliavad to hava TTPEWMTU UCHAM& 3SI* Wwk. k . P «M . Or won In Montana and Nevada. NKW HOTEL HOUSTON Ik iv # llo o atn ti. Prop I f . H. ThorMMM. Mar T h u ro 'iirh ly ru<»(«*rn. 101 Honms of rotn fort. Mi*t- arata | r l « a. T h ro « m ln u W w alk fr»»m Union I »-l ot. W rit# for ra ta *. f2 ft SnÉ k . RM H Aft). Oft There is a technical point raised against prohibition In A rlion a. Kmperor Nicholas haa arrived army headquarters at the front. at London is again promised a raid by German Zeppelins some tim e this A gtisrantetwl ri-rn*<ly for Cukla and month. WEEKS’ BREAK UP-A-COLO TABLETS La Grippe. Prica ‘¿ I* - of your druggist. It's good. Taka nothing otaa.—Aav. A t iK M li .n u t profit. Sell «very mirhiiiU on »UftlL Naw invasion, rarloalv« territory, write l»ahl Co . M Kaat 4*4. New York. Tobacco Habit Cured Not only lo u r n o f p it» and cigar». but U m vu-Wua r ta a r .u . hal.il u ovarroma by ualng Uia “ NrrUITK'- trratmaflt. I l i a mrnplaU p.«rla«o paid. l in n , la tu a -tla v la Drug Co.. Id awl Yam. MU. I'ortianJ, Or. (Whan writing m m i II m Una p ap e r.) Induatrlal Era For Ua. Fifteen million men In tba field will uao sppart-l nbout Ihrna l In m a aa fait mu when peaca prevalla. Tha equip ment of 1 , 000,000 horaea la no amall lii-m and tin-ena att-ndy equipment of auppllea and foml for thla vaat army. Kuropa ran not flttht and maat tbaae requlrvinunia almultnnaoualy. Tha more one of our Imluatrlea la Insnd the greater tba activity which will ho reflected upon others. It la the history of war that tba first shock prod w a d dullness, hut Upon recovery industry boomed und price» soared ’I hern la reason to believe that history will repeat Itself and aa lha wnate and uomolltlon exceed any previous dem onstration tha sources of supply must he looked to to meat tha Inevitable demand. We are at peace, the greatest Indus trial nation; we have tha mills, the farma. In short, the equipment wanted. In spite of fear wa must be busy for ourselves aud for othera. Some Im portant materials we may lack, but wa will be Itigenlois enough to evolve adequate substitutes.— Fiber and Fab ric. r o t a OWN M I'W ilS T WILL t e l l y o u T r y M u rtn r K j * K r iu e d / f o r H -d . W * * k . W » i« r j K>- • a n d O r a n u la i« * ) K jrr lt d « ; N o H n ia rtiu jr — Iii4 < K ]r « ia t o f u r i W r it « fu r Hook o f ih * E y e by u iftii f r # « . M u rin e E y e K e m e d y C o ., Chic»go- A Plea of Qullty. "W h a t!” exclaimed the teacher, ‘'does no one know? Wbat animal has bristly hair. Is dirty all the time and loves getting Into the mud?" A small hoy raised a timid hand. "W ell, Allan," said the teacher, "tell us what It Is." "Please, ma'am,” said the little boy reflectively, ‘'It's me.” —Chicago Amer ican. And 8ometlmes Trousers. The teacher was examining the claas In physiology "Mary, you tell us," she asked, "what Is the function of the Stomach?" "The function of the stomnrh." the little» girl answered. "Is to hold up the petticoat.” — liuffalo Kx press. The Mosquito Habit. "What tunke» Jack keep slapping himself on the back of hla neck?" " lie spent his vacation at a New Jersey summer resort and he can't get rid of the bublt.” —8L Louts Dost Dispatch. A Time Saver. " I always tell the waiter what I'm going to tip him." "Why?" "Ho he won't keep me waiting half nti hour while the rashler splits a $10 hill Into dimes."—Detroit Free ITess. Adm iral Cradock's ship is believed aunk In the engagement with the Ger mans off the coast o f Chile. The Russian army marches 80 hours in deep snow In mountains, and It la claimed its front is 100 milaa long. A Marconi wlrslsaa dispatch from Berlin says that in Egypt the English have abandoned the Arabian frontier and withdrawn across the Sue* canal. A dispatch to the Amsterdam Tele- graaf says Prince Joachim Albrecht, o f Prussia, son o f the late regent o f Brunswick, has been wounded in Prance. According to the London Daily M ail's Rotterdam correspondent the inhabitant o f Ostend have been or dered to take to their cellars with live days' provisions. Kog was responsible fo r the loea o f the German cruiser Yorck, which struck a mine in Jade bay, an inlet o f tbs Norjh sea, Novem ber 4. This statement is made by Berlin papers. London Trembles in fear of German Concealed forte Ixmdon — London haa been greatly excited by the report that a German- owned music printing plant in Wllles- den, a prominent manufacturing sub urb o f Ixmdon, has an immense build ing, whoee heavy concrete foundations, floors and roof are well adapted to the use o f siege guns. Tw enty o f the German employes o f the Arm were taken Into custody and m ilitary experts are studying the building carefully. Meantime the e x cited public ia fu lly convinced that the plant was deaigned to act as a German base for attack upon Ixmdon proper. The building unquestionably occupies a strategic position. It stands high with a clear range to Cryatal Palace. WII- leeden Junction, where two main lines entering Ixmdon center, is but s short distance from the plant. However, the English architects who deaigned the building and super vised its construction eigh t years ago say it la sim ilar to many printing plants and has no heavier foundations and floors than are required where heavy machinery is to be installed. The building ia about 200 feet square on the outside and is constructed about a court 60 feet square, i t ia only one story and the foundations are o f con crete and aix feet thick. The English manager o f the concern aaya this un usually thick foundation was laid as the Arm expected to add additional stories to the plant when business ex panded. A concrete roof covers moat o f the building. Discovery by the allies that Ger many haa prepared concrete bases for its howitzers surreptitiously in many places in Belgium and France has made all Englishmen auspicious o f pos sible German preparations in England. Lieutenant Murray lost hia life in an aeroplane accident at the English a v i London— Charges that men and boys ation school at Avon. It la believed be miscalculated the distance while land in England's training camps are not ing, a fter making a flight over Rushall receiving humane treatment and that Down. many deaths are resulting from bad The British mine sweeper Mary was feeding and poor shelter are causing aunk by a mine in the North aea. Six great indignation. The complaints re o f the erew o f 14 w ere rescued. The survivors, who were landed at Lowes call charges o f criminal neglect that toft, reported heavy gun firing off the were made against m ilitary authorities Yorkshire coast. responsible for conditions at m obiliza Tw o German officers and two men o f tion centers in the United States dur the crew o f tha German cruiser Geier, ing the Spanish-American war. now at Honolulu, who have been held Some o f the charges against the fo r some tim e at San Francisco, w ill be paroled, but must remain in the British war office have been put into United States until the end o f the specific form. A letter w ritten by E. H. Bailey, o f Leamington Spa, whose war. son enlisted from O xford on Septem W ireless dispatches from Berlin say ber 19 and died from pneumonia on the that Shanghai newspapers report the training grounds on Salisbury Plains, German artillery Are is systematically has been made public. destroying the entrenched positions oc In the course o f his training, the cupied by the Japanese around Taing young recruit wrote to his father. On Tau. The Japanese have postponed October 2 he said : indefinitely their attacks. The waters " W e , o f course, are stiff and suffer around Taing Tau are sown with mi nos. from bad feet, but we should not mind A wireless dispatch from Berlin to these discomforts i f they would only Vienna officially reports that in Rus feed us properly. Today the food was sian Poland the Austrians captured slightly better, but it was not cooked. over 2000 prisoners, including 20 offi None o f ua have had a square meal cers. On the Galician front 600 Rus since we le ft home— or a cup o f tea. sians surrendered. During the opera W bat they call tea ia colored water The clothes they tions against Servia 77 officers and 660 dosed with salt. men were taken at Roumania, aa well have given us are rotten and tear at the slightest strain. A ll the buttons as much war material. hang on by a thread or two. This a fte r I,ondon — The Alexandria, Egypt, noon about 100 o f the 600 that were correspondent o f the Exchange T e le d rillin g had their trousers split from graph company sends the follow in g end to end.'' dispatch: " A German officer named Mors was arrested by the Egyptian po lice on his return from Turkey with Siege of Naco; Mexico, plans for dynamiting the Sues canal, Is Renewed by Villa lie was sentenced by court martial to Naco, A r i* .— Three bodies o f Gover imprisonment for l i f e . " nor M aytorena's V illa troops appeared A Berlin report says British cruisers sunk a Greek torpedo boat, m istaking in their form er positions seemingly in fulfillm ent o f the promised renewal o f her for a Turkish vessel. the Naco, Sonora, siege. Emperor Nicholas, has gone to the Yaqui Indians took up positions to front again, accompanied by General Soukhomllnoff, m inister o f war. the south and west o f Naco, Sonora, change Telegraph company aays Servia camp. Probably It Is an unwise plan to haa severed diplomatic relations with A t sight o f these suggestive move count the enemy. It might be better Turkey. ments, Mexican refugees flocked to the to discount them und then lick them. Am erican side. There was no e v i have many friend» who uao I ham aa a general tonic am i for Kidney trouble. t koxea fo r 11.00. Pries tte per box. Foreale by Laus-Davla Pru* Co., M and Yamhdl 8ta.. Portland. Ora. DENTAL HEADQUARTERS EOR OUT-Of-TOWN PEOPLE - People from ell part* of I Oregon «m l Washing- 1 ton con*lantly v i»it our I office for dental treat- Im rn L Our »kill i* ao- I knowlcriffed. and our I promptnees In flnlnh- |in»r work !n one dey I when required iaappre- Iciateil by out-of-town 1 patron*. I Dr Wise i* a falee- I tooth e it pert. There i* |"AI.WAYH ONE BEST* Int. and I Dr. Wine lay* claim to If hi* distinction In Ore- | iron. 27 Y e n ’ mmrimm. What we can’t guar antee we don’t do. l o w r m i c m f o e h i g h - g r a d e w o r k . flood K»d Robber P la lro . rock . . . . ..........................» .» • Th e Boat Red R o b h rr P la lro , oarb ....................... T J J * J .K a r a t Hold or P o rro la ia C r o w s .......................... I " WISE DENTAL CO. ■ EL1ARI.K PAINI.K8S DKNTI8TB. P h o n e . M ala IS IS . A M S . m i x T h ird R tro rt. F a lll» « B id « .. P a n la n d . O ra « sa H. K . C o r. T h ird and W aah lag tea. ». N. U. N o. 4 «, 1(14 A Rome dispatch to the Irondnn Star states that a royal decree prohibits dence, however, that there would be the exportation o f rice, rye and pota an immediate attack on Naco. General Benjamin H ill, commanding toes to Germany and Auatria. the Carranza garrison o f Naco, has The London Star publishes a dis for a fortnight, since the institution patch from its Petrograd correspond o f the truce between the hostile fac ent dated Nov. 3 in which he saya that tions, been busily preparing for such an the Russians are now securely estab attack. H is lines have been strength lished inside the East Prussian fron ened and his troop« reinforced and re equipped. tier. Governor Maytorena le ft Nogalea The imperial government o f Eng Sonora, recently with the avowed in land haa consented to assist Australia tention o f coming to Naco to renew with a loan o f £20,000,000 ($100,000,- the siege. 000). This sum w ill be advanced in two installments o f £10,000,000 each, Consul Dies of Smallpox. repayable in five years. Washington, D. C. — United States Norw ay haa form ally asked the Consul Theodore Cushing Hamm died United States to take the Norwegian Tuesday o f smallpox at his post in consulate at Batoum, Russia, on the Durango, Mexico, where he has been Black sea. The Norwegian consul has atationed since August, 1911. During placed the archives in the hands o f the the recent Mexican troubles Consul American consul and left. Hamm was active in protecting Am er ican interests in his district, and hia It ia officially declared in Berlin name figured in many o f the dispatches that the stock o f gold in the Imperial to Washington from the revolutionary Bank continues to grow. The last storm centers. Mr. Hamm was born weekly report shows an increase o f in Vermont in 1882, and was educated 30,000,000 marks ($7,600,000), and a in Colorado and George Washington total supply o f 1,868,000,000 marks, Univeraities. ($464,600,000). A wireless from Berlin say* a Dan ish physician named Thorson, a fte r a visit to the German lines, praises the organisation o f the German ambulance corps. The Germans, he declares, do not make any difference between their own wounded and the wounded o f the enemy. from ua 6000 tons of barbsd wlrs to be used In military operations The effectiveness of barbed wire entangle ments as defense measures has been demonstrated repeatedly since our war with Hpaln. They were brought Into use then with much success and wsro very effective as a part of the Russian defenses at Fort Arthur In the war with Japan. The Russians probably have In mind their experi ence In tha far east and are hoping to make equally good use of the wire they would purchase In this country. The Russian entanglements before Fort Arthur consisted of four parallel lines of three-atrand fences about three feet high. The fences were about 10 feet apart aud zigzag lines of barbed wire were strung back and forth between the fences. And In ad dition large quantities of loose colls and pieces of wire were scattered on the ground. The combination waa al most an Impassable barrier It waa found that the Japanese could not make progress by cutting the wires. If they got through the first fence they became entangled In the wire on the ground If they were not shot down before reaching the second fence. The Japanese tried the expedient of having their soldiers charge with mat tresses which they threw on the fences. That was only a partial suc cess, as many men became helpless In the entanglement of loos# wires on the ground. The entanglements fl -1 nally were disposed of by pulling up the posts and dragging the fences away under cover of darkness, but It wa» a long and costly task for the at tar-king force. The use of wire entanglements Is valuable as a defense measure and even then has Its limitations. An en tanglement which would keep an army of Germans from reaching the Rus sians also would prevent the Russians from getting at the Germans. It Is effective In delaying and hampering the progre»» of an enemy and it also ! protects him against pursuit and as sault In case the fortune of battle la against him.— Indianapolis Star English Recruits Com plain ot Poor Shelter No Opener Needed. The president o f France bestow* the and a column o f infantry and cavalry Two Philadelphians have patented a crown seal for bottles to which Is at cross o f an officer o f the I>egion o f joined them on the west. tached a bit of metal to lift It with Honor upon nineteen British officers. A troop train with men and supplies out the necessity for a separate The Rome correspondent o f the E x also arrived at the old Maytorena opener. Kola Tablets Barbed Wlrs In Warfare. Rossis Is lo tb* market to purchase German Tobacco Concerns Sold. Berlin — The Britiah-American To bacco Company, Ltd., haa disposed o f one o f its principal German subsidiar ies at Dresden. The British board o f trade made an exception in this rase and perm itted the company to sell its holdings in Germany. Rheumatism Muscle Colds “It ia easy to use and quick to respond. No work. Just apply. It penetrates without rubbing.” R e a d W b a t O th ers Say l " I I « » « need roa r I i»im « n t r w y euecaasfuUy la s ----- at ' i n n l ‘ ~ «a d always h a »« ■ b o lila os hand la eaaa ot a sold or k m throat. I • uS lo my I think It oaa ot tha bam ot botuahold raroadiaa. 1 would aot ha»a u««d It oaly it n a rscommsadod la mo by a frlaad of roina who, I wiab to la y, la oaa of tha beat boootara for your I Ialmrat I » ' « oaw T'—J. W futUr, Dmttr, C«L / W dJ / 4 | SLOANS LINIMENT G o o d fo r N e u r a lg ia , S c ia tic a , S p ra in * a n d B r u n e t. A l l D e a la r o 2 5 c . Sow) focr canto ia atainpa for a free T R IA L BOTTLE. DR. E A R L S. S L O A N , PROPERLY Inc. MADE TEA THE MOST HEALTHFUL AND EX HILARATING OF BEVERAGE8. Y o u r M a rg in o f H e a lth ■'foot a Haa ia prmiss o f Sloaa’o I.mimsnt. I hava baaa III aaafly fuuitaaa wsaks with rhaumollam. tiara bam traatad by doctor» who did thair beat. I bad aot alrpt for the terrible pain lor aevrreJ ai«htr, • M a y wife «o t mo a «mail bottle of too h iaim m l and three eppifea- eauoar ( a n me railof ao that 1 oouid alaap ."—Joorph Tamhlyn. »IS Ctm- n t h S trut. McKeaapart. Fa. D e p t. B Philadelphia, Pa. Ruptured Person* suffer more from inexperienced truce fitting then from hernia. Why cot buy your trueecs from experte? Try Leue-Deri* Drug Co.. at 3d end Yamhill. Portland. Ore., who ere ex pert* end know how. Whors It Dooa Harm the Fault Is A» ways With the Maker— Unwhole some Qualities A rt Brought Out In ths Steeping. Didn’t Need To. “ What are you laughing at?” aaked is very small, indeed, the Old Fogy. "What's so funny In that paper?" when the appetite is “ It says here that a hundred per It Is said that we tan our stomach» poor, the digestion and becomo, therefore, Incapable of sons hare left New York to engage In missionary work,” said the Grouch.—• digesting food—that we turn Into nerv Cincinnati Enquirer. bad, the liver lazy ous wrecks If we diluk tea. And this and the bowels clog would be so it we used tea Immoder A Sure Proof of Love. ately and made it carelessly. Let us ged — but don’t re "I'm certain he loves me.” said tha ' Investigate a little and see what can be done to preserve to our use ths suburban girl. main that way; take "H ow ’s that?” cup that cheers. “ It is a four-mile walk to town. Ha Analysis shows that tea la rich In misses the last car about twice a week, proteid, that It contains alkaloid— but he still keeps calling.”— Pittsburg theln— and a volatile oil and tannic Post. acid. Its stimulating effect Is due to Well Answered. theln and the oil—lta astringency Is caused by the tannic acid. Theln la Teacher of Hygiene— Why must we today and let it help so soluble that It la almost Immediate- always be careful to keep our houses Nature restore these ly drawn from the leaf when brought clean and neat? Into contact with boiling water. Theln Little Girl— Because company may organs to their proper stimulates gastric digestion, but the jva'k in at any moment—Judge. tannic acid and oil ere harmful. Ex functions. Be sure to Moral— Never Give Up. periments show that tannic acid Is de GET HOSTETTER'S Mrs. Flatte— Did you see the doctor veloped In very smalt quantity as soon as tea comes In contact with about your indigestion today? Mr. Flatte— Yes. boiling water, and that more tannic Mrs. Flatte— Did be aak you to give acid is developed when tea haa steeped up anything? five minutes than when It has steeped No Danger. Yes, $2.— Yonkers Statesman. three minutes, and that the longer It An old woman was greatly fright stands the more this acid la drawn Flour Imported to Egypt ened when the train thundered into out. the long tunnel. Flour imports in Egypt Increased It ! b known that tea Is stimulating, from $2,500,000 during the firat four "Do you think," she asked the con ductor. "this tunnel is perfectly safe?” refreshing and au alleviator of head months of last year to more than “ Don't be afraid, madam." replied ache and bodily fatigue. It has a $4,000,000 in a like period this year. the waggish official. "Our company slight Influence In regulating the cir got you in this hole, and we're bound culation of the blood and the tempéra A Self-Denying Editor. to see you through.”— Kansas City | ture of the body it Is one of the most At any rate we have never stated Times. warming drinks In winter and cooling that the Germans went Into Ostend drinks In summer. without ostendation and that oetendsl- Her Belief. In view of tbes# facts all will ad bly they were bound for the Channel. "Do you.” he asked, "believe in early mit that to get the good and reject — Philadelphia Public Ledger. the unwholesome qualities of tea It Is marriage?" “ Well," she replied. 'T used to. but necessary to make tt with freshly I am willing to say that at present I boiled water—fast boiling because the believe ‘better late than never’ may stimulating property, thetn, cannot be be applied to marriage as well as to extracted below the boiling point—and some other things.”— Brooklyn Citi for this reason also the teapot should zen. be thoroughly scalded before the tea Is put Into It; freshly boiled water, HOW RESINOL CURED because long cooking causes Its at A Function Greatly Assistée} ITCHING SKIN TORMENT mospheric gases to escape and ren By a Well-Known Baltimore, Md„ May 23. 1914: "M y! ders It flat and Insipid. (Soft water Is Remedy. limbs from knee to ankle were com-, nest used when It first comes to a pletely covered with eczema for a rapid boll, hard water may be boiled year. I hated to go in company, it fifteen to twenty minutes before us itched and burned so badly. I had no Ing). rest at night. I tried a good many j Tea should always be made as an remedies for eczema, both liquid and Infusion—never boiled—and with but salve, but they did me no good, only one infusion to each measure of tea made the skin more rough and scaly. The habit of renewing the boiling wa I learned of resinol ointment and resl- nol soap and tried them, and was re ter over the first measure of tea, or lieved of the severe itching and burn of using and reusing the tea leave* ing AT ONCE, and after a month's with a small additional supply, la a steady use was completely cured.” ▼ary objectionable one and Is most (Signed) T. S. Lewis, 1821 Summit St. strongly condemned by all health and Most readers w ill be Interested t » W»rS Sold by all druggists.— Adv. food authorities. This Is the way to clearly understand why analysts o f urlna la obtain all the injurious qualities and ao Important. la the ua« of S. S. 8. to TJ»s South's Fear. none of the benefits of a pot of tea. purify the blood. Its actios la a stimulant to the myriad o f tine blood T«as«la that Here in the south our chief fear No wonder people tan their stomachs make up tha coustruetlva tissues o f tha kidneys. A ll the blood frosn all ovar the now is that the European savages will when they follow such a method. body must pasa through tha kidneys. They Here Is the way to make one cup of a rt aa testers and aaaayera. And according quit wearing clothes. — Galveston News. tea without a teapot: Heat a cup to to what they allow to pats out In the urine, as to quantity and materials, tha boiling point with boiling water, meas both health ot the kldners and the quality o f the ure one-halt teaspoonful of best tea; blood le determined. The catalytic energy The system of some candidates, by 8. S. 8. ts shown Is the urtne. Like loving, loyal brothers. pour the water from the cup, put In forced U Is also demonstrated In the akin. And Is to extol their own virtues the tea, pour over enough fresh boil aa the blood continues to sweep through By bawling out the othera. ing water to fill the cup three-quarters the kidneys the dominating nature ot 8. 8. ft., acting aa It does through all tha full, cover closely and let stand In a avenues of elimination, showa a marked The Germans deny overtures, decrease o f disease manifestations as dem warm place (not In a draught and not tatnly. The “ Wacbt Am Rhein” by urtne analysts. Thla assist over the fire) for three minutes. Ha vs onstrated ance Is a great re lief to the kidneys. The “ Deutschland Uber Alles'’ have ready another hot cup and a hot body waste« ara more evenly distributed te planted mere overtures. rm unctorlee; their elimination la stim strainer: strain the tea Into the cup the ulated by the tonic action aforded ths That relief ship certainly can be re- and serve at once with sugar and liver, lungs, skin and kidneys. Thus, in One thousand boxes of It are on board, cream or milk, or with thinly sliced rases of rheumatism, cystitis, chronic sors husklncss o f voice, bronchitis, asth ferred to as bringing home the bacon. lemon and sugar.—Chicago Record- throat, ma and the myriad o f other rrDex indica tions o f weak k id n e y action, first purify Herald. your blood with 8. 8. 8 . so It w ill rnabla Good Missionary Year. the tissues to rebuild the cellular strength Rubber in -Malays. In one mission in India last year and regain the normal health. 8. 8. 8. Is prepared bv Thic S w ift Specific 40,000 were baptized. In the last two A gum has been discovered In large 827 S w ift Bldg . Atlanta. Ga and l| years this mission has added more quantities in the Malay peninsula that Co.. you hare any deep-seated or obetlaate blood people to the Christian covenants than yields from 10 to 20 per cent pure trouble, writa to their Medical Dept, for free advice. in the first forty years of its labors. rubber. HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS Helping Kidneys By de alin g Blood PUTNAM FADELESS DYES CHor me»« goods taatat and b rig h t» colors than any othrr dye. E v e t v package guaranteed te color S ilk . W ool. Cotton and M lsed Good« at ona korling. 10 cants oackaga. W rite 1 » tree booklet "H o w to D ye and M u Coloes.” calendar, blotter», etc. M O N B O E DMVG C O M P A N Y . Depsetmant Z . Q uhw y. Instate