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NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD. DURING THE PAST WEEK RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENT* CONDENSED FOR *U»V PEOPLE. Western N’Mnp»l'»r I'nlon News SFr\lc«. WESTERN. The Chicago Municipal Courts certi fied babies hereafter will be awarded for adoption only to certified foster parents Importation of livestock or food stuffs from Mexico has been pro bibfted by Constitutionalist officers at Piedras Negras. A death march" of boys, organized by I'pton Sinclair, inarched up and down past the Standard Oil Company's offices in Chicago. At Kansas City, Dr. \V. T. Elam was found not guilty of killing W. Put nam Cramer last November because the latter had broken up his home. A strike vote of 55,000 engineers and firemen, on ninety-eight, railways w*-st of Chi« ago, was ordered when all negotiations for increased wages were broken off. The body of Mrs. Frank H. Dunlevy was positively identified at Quebec by her brother, according to a telegram received by her sister-in law, Mrs. E S. Dunlevy. of Denver. En route to Quebec to claim the bodies of their fiancees, who lost their lives in the Empress of Ireland dis aster, Thomas Edington and Robert MeChord of Hillsboro, 111., left Chica go A strike of brickrnakers in Chicago has cost the construction, real estate and labor interests approximately $1,- 000,000 a day for the thirty-three days It has been in progress, according to the estimate of building experts. Mrs. Goldie Flanagan was killed and Gus Rase dangerously injured by an automobile filled with joyriders and runing at a high rate of speed, which crashed into their conveyance upon the Arkansas river bridge at Tulsa, Okla. Dr and Mrs. W. A. Winters and W. 11. Qooper were rearrested at New castle, Ind., on affidavits filed in Cir cuit Court charging them with con spiracy to murder Catherine Winters and burn her body. Affidavits filed before Mayor Watkins charging con spiracy to commit a felony were dis missed. The effect Is to transfer the cases from city court to Circuit Court. WASHINGTON. Brigadier General Bliss reported to the War Department the arrest of Quevedo and bis followers at El Paso. President Wilson and Speaker Clark delivered addresses at the Memorial !>ay services under the auspices'of the G. A R. in Arlington National Ceme tery. William Simms, an American, was executed by Mexicans at Salina Cruz April 16, according to apparently au thentic reports to the state depart ment • The President nominated Boaz W. Ixjng of New Mexico, now- chief of the division v f Latin American affairs, de partment of state, to be minister to 'Salvador Anti trust legislation to be enacted at this session of t ongress will carry no exemption from prosecution for labor organizations which may violate laws against restraint of trade. Creation of an intereste trade com mission has been approved by the membership of the Chamber of Com merce of the I nited States by a vote of r.'jj to 1 u 4. according to results of a referendum vote. President. Wilson assured a delega tion of Baltimore and Washington business men that for sentimental rea sons he thought the proposed Lincoln Memorial high wav should pass through Washington Secretary Bryan announced that if public business permitted he would spend part of his vacation this year lecturing on the Chautauqua circuit, as h«- did last Bryan's first lecture will be delivered in North Carolina, July 4. A delegation of labor representa tives. headed by Representatives Gor man and Sabath of Illinois, presented to President Wilson a petition signed by 1,"00,000 laboring men, asking ex ecutive clemenc y tor Thomas M. Ryan, former president of the Structural Iron Workers, and twenty-nine others convicted in the dynamite conspiracy. Twenty persons were killed in a clash between contending forces near Puerto Plata, Santo Domingo. Cap tain Eberle of the cruiser Washington reported to the Navy Department. Officers of the steamer Iroquois re ported that Sanchez and Samana were quiet, but that rebellious forces were operating in that vicinity. Trades unions an*. farmers' unions would be legalized and declared not to be combinations in restraint of trade by a parag’ aph which the House in corporated In the Clayton bill to sup plement the anti-trust law*. FOREIGN. Premier Doumergue and his cabinet resigned at Paris. The Empress of Ireland was valued at $2,000,000 and with her cargo, val ued at $250,000, was fully insured. Peter Paul Von Mauser, inventor of the rifle bearing his name, died at Stuttgart. Germany, aged seventy-six. Piero Rossi, an art student who was arrested on suspicion of being the man who shot and robbed Mrs. Mary Flavelle of Chicago on a train between Florence and Assisi, has confessed the crime. Nine southern states of the I'nited States now owe British bondholders a total of more than $75,000,0<m),• not Including interest, on account of debts which have been in default from forty to seventy years, according to a re port of the Council of the Corporation of Foreign Bondholders. President Huerta, with regard to the settlement to which the Niagara Falls peace conference Is directing its efforts, according to persons c lose to him. has proposed that the elections for President, vice president, sena tors. deputies aud state governors should be held on July 5 next, as de creed by Congress. Th£ French government decided to treat Colonel Theodore Roosevelt in the same wav it does former rulers and furnish him with a special per mit authorizing him to pass through the police linos at all times on his journey through France on the way to Madrid to attend the wedding of his son Kermit and Miss Wyatt Willard. The collier Storstad which rammed the Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Ireland in the St. causing the loss of more than 900 liYes, com pleted unloading her cargo of coal at Montreal, and It was possible to make a thorough inspection of her bow, shattered by the shock of the colli sion. Her stem was twisted so much to starboard tliat it almost formed a half circle. Some of the lowermost plates in her bow were also twisted and torn away. There is a large in dentation on each side of the stern aud the rivets are torn clear SPORT. *lan<llnK W ealrrn l.eaiiur < IuI»m. Clubs Lost I’.t SiOU 1 .t \ - $ '■ : 4 Denver 24 15 615 St Joseph 23 IT 57 5 | D. m Moines 21 538 Lincoln 21 22 4h* < imaha . . IT 21 4 4T Wichita IT 26 395 Topeka 13 28 317 G. H. Rogers, catcher, who was with the (.'Diversity of Michigan team this spring, joined the Pittsburg Nationals at Chicago. Alfred Agostinelli. a student aviator, fell from his machine into the Mediter ranean sea near Antibes, France, and was drowned. Harry Brewer of Kansas City and 1 Frankie Fowser of El Faso. Tex , have been signed for a fifteen-round go at June 11. Ted Johnson of Salt Lake won the News marathon race from Littleton to Denver on Decoration day. Clyde Owens was second. A1 Reich, former national heavy weight champion, knocked out Soldier Kearns of Brooklyn in the sixth round of a ten round matc h in New York. Swedish athletes will go to Buda pest next month to accept the chal lenge of the Hungarians for a track and field meet, including all the events of the Olympic program. The date set is June 27 to 28. Twelve running horses, all the way from Vancouver. B. C., arrived at Overland Park in Denver. They are the property of T. A. Davis and Tom Crestler. lu the party is one Derby candidate. Custom House, by Joe ! Carey and Ellen Atkin. GENERAL. ■ District Attorney Charles S. Whit | man of New York announced his can didacy for the Republican nomination for governor. Fire at Corinth. Ky\, swept the ’ main part of the town and destroyed twenty buildings with a loss of sou,- 000. The origin is unknown. Miss Jessie L. McClennan, a tele- I phone operator, lost her voice at Pattsville, Pa., ten minutes after seating herself at the switchboard. Her case puzzles the attending phy j sician. I A special from Tuper in the Xdirondacks. says a forest fire is 1 threatening the state forestry planta ; tions in the vicinity of Cross Clearing. N. Y. The fire already has swept over j 3<>o acres. An automobile driven by Ballard Haines weut over a seventy-five-foot 1 embankment near Rich wood, N. Y. Mrs. Reid Long will die, her baby was crushed to death and Mrs. Susan | Fox was badly injured. Haines ea- I caped injury. Anonymous letters, written Miss Georgia W. .lav, in which the writers begged Miss Jay to drop her $50,000 breach-of-promise suit against Billy Sunday's chair leader. Homer Rode heaver, figured in the *rial of the suit at Chicago. At Kltteranning. Pa., in the pre»- euce of Elizabeth Belle Scoops, eleven years old. a mother of Apollo and her six-weeks-old baby boy. W. T. Phillips, pleaded guilty to a charge made by the girl. Phillips was sentenced to three to five years in the workhouse. The final production of the pageant and masque of St. Louis —the spec tacle-drama that illustrates and in terprets the history of that city—was given before another great throng. For the four nights on which the spec tacle was given the total attendance is estimated at more than 500.000. THE IDAHO SPRINGS SIFTIXGS-XEWS. COLORADO STATE NEWS Western Newiptpcr Union Newsservice DATKS FOK (OMIMG EVKftT*. June 9-11 —Q. A. it. Encampin'-:.' *»* Fort Moi Kan June 16-18 State Sunday School Con vention at Denver. June 1 -20 Strawberry Day at <Jl»’- wood Springs. June 19 -2 u .Meeting Colorado Bar-k --ers' Association at Colorado June 25-28 State Christian Kiid'.c ■' Convention at Colorado Spring.- 1 June 13 July 4 Have Meet. Denver July 7-11 —Race Meet. Pueblo June 16-17 Meeting Colorado 1 --t --musters' Convention »‘‘t Denver July 1-4 Semi-Centennial Horne-* m ing Celebration at Fort Collins July 9 Cherry Pie Day. Manzan- - July 13-15* (Jiand Dodge Session. PP (» Klks at Denver. July 22-23 --Cattlemen’s Day. Gunni son. Auc 18-21- Prowers Co Fair. Dma' Auk 25-27 K of P. Grand Dodge and Uniform Rank Encampment. Pu*-t *!*• Aug 25-28 - Bent Co Fair. IgisAn.n Aug 27.—Santa Ft Trail Day. Las Aro mas. Aug 28. Farmers’ Fair at Fowl*" Sept 14 Arkansas Valley Fa r Rocky Ford Sept. 3 Watermelon Day. Rocky F •<1 Sent 2-5 Farmers' and Stockin' n’s Fair. Burlington Sept. 1-4 Morgan Co. Fair. Fort M • gan Sept 1-5 Larimer County Fair, L •** - la nd. Sept 7 Kiowa County Fair at 11 * ** Sept 8-11 --Crow ley Co. Fair, fc> j-• > City. Sept 8-11 --Cheyenne County Fair at Cheyenne Wells Sept JO - Sugar Day. Sugar City Sept. 14-15* Colo State? Fair. Pu- 1 • Sept 15-18 Lincoln Co. Fair at 11 Sept 18 26 Race Meet. Denver Sept 21-23 Inter-Co. Fair and Race Meet at Llmon. Sept 22-25 - W•-stern Slope Fair. M* nt- Sept 22-25. Montezuma Co. Fair at Cortez Sept 23-26 El Paso c ’<• Fair. Calhan Oct 1-3 Grand County Fair at Kremmlihg Oct. 6 8 -Colo.-New Mex. Fair at Du rango. 1915 Last Grand Council of North American Indians at Denver. The coming summer promises con siderable activity in the Breckenridge gold fields. George Meikle, eighteen years old, employed on the? C. A. Nix Bixler farm, nine miles east of Boulder was killed by lightning. Harry K. Bunkstrom, aeronaut, dropped 2,000 feet to his death at Elltch 6 gardens In Denver, before a crowd of 1.200 spectators. Decoration day was fittingly ob served in Rocky Ford by members of Wadsworth post, G. A R., and mem bers of other local patriotic organiza tions. Four persons were seriously injured at Colorado Springs when an automo bile. in which R. C. Meader and Harry Burns were riding, collided with a street car. Eight hundred cars of Texas cattle passed through Denver during the last ( few weeks consigned to Eastern mark ets. according to Colorado & Southern officials. „ Nicholas Tomeo. a Louisville sa loon keeper, was arrested by United States troops on a charge of trying to sell liquor to a soldier. He was taken to Boulder to await trial. Janies B. Bingham was appointed cashier of the Rocky Ford factory of the American Beet Sugar Company, to succeed F. E. Hawley, who recently resigned from that position. The Colorado Supreme Court de cided that the town of Aurora must pay the $150,000 in water works bonds issued by the tow n of Fletcher, out of which the present Aurora grew Chief Justice George W. Musser of the State Supreme Court, whose term expires next January, will not be a undidate for re-election. Justice .Mus ser confirmed rumors to this effect. Mrs. R. B. Spaulding and Mrs. L. A. Bickford, the oldest twins in Colora do. recently celebrated their seventy eighth birthday, at a luncheon given in their honor by Mrs. Fred H. Thomp son of Denver. The city commissioners of Den vet passed the bill providing a SSO to S3OO fine and a ten to ninety-day jail term for contractors engaged in city work’ who fail to pay a minimum wage of $2.50 a day to their laborers. The State Supreme Court decide! the case of Marion Ethel Pearse. eight years old, who has been the sub ject of an international dispute be tween her mother and three sets of foster parents. The Supreme Court found that Mrs. F. B. Parks, wife of i wealthy cattleman of Grand Junc tion. should have charge of the child. According to a report made by Les lie E. Hubbard, inheritance tax col lector, eighteen estates yielded $4,696 *o the state. The largest estate was that of O. L. Davis of I .as Animas ountv. $128,101, the tax amount mg to $1,599. The smallest was that of Antonia Pighetti, who left an '-state worth $3,000. carrying a tax of $75.40. During a severe electrical storm in the vicinity of Rocky Ford, one of the poles carrying the current for the lo ?a! plant from Pueblo was struck, in consequence all the lights in the city suddenly went out. A performance ol •Never Say Die,” featuring Nat C. Goodwin, was in progress in the new Rourke theater when this occurred and the last act had to be played by candle light. Joe Costello. Spanish foreman, a Utah Hide and IJve Stock Company sheep herder at Pinon Mesa, near Grand Junction, shot and instantly billed Juan Gonzales, a herder, at ?arnp, twenty miles from Grand Junc tion. High water in the Poudre river probably will cost the city of Greeley $5,000 as the swift current has thrown jp an island of silt and sand diverting the main channel of the stream some distance. Ultimately it will be neces sary to extend the intake price 1,500 feet up the river. HOMESTEADERS BENEFIT BY RECENT DECISION OF SECRE TARY OF THc INTERIOR. Will Be Credited With Continuous Residence and Cultivation of Lands Occupied Under Special Permits. Wotern ,\>»ipap*r Union N**i Denver.—A decision has recently been handed down by the secretary of the interior to the effect that per sons. who have or who may hereafter apply for and make homestead entry on the national forests under the for est homestead act, will be credited at final proof for continuous residence upon and cultivation of lands occu i {tied under special use permits, is ■ s-ued by the forest service, prior to actual restoration of the lands to en | try. This ruling of the secretary rees tablishes the original interpretation placed upon the law by ex-Secretary Garfield, but which was reversed by a decision promulgated January 1, 1910. It is the opinion of forestry of ficials that the new decision will ma terially benefit all bona fide settlers on the national forests, since it places them upon an equal footing with those making homes upon the public do main. Considerable delay is frequent ly encountered between the time agri cultural tracts applied for are ex amined and can be opened to entry. In order to prevent any hardship on account of this delay It is said to have been a policy of long standing with the forest service to issue to the ap plicant a free special use permit au thorizing him to occupy and use the land pending its restoration to entry. This permit in itself was of great ad vantage to the homesteader since it enabled him to improve and cultivate the land The added benefit of be ing able to accelerate patent by hav ing their time and labor credited to them at final proof will undoubtedly prove a boon to a large number of settlers seeking permanent homes on the national forests. He’s 76; 24th Baby Weighs 10 Lbs. Sterling.—C. C. Copley, a farmer living twenty miles northeast of Ster ling. was in the city, coming osten sibly for the purpose of purchasing farm supplies, but in reality to an nounce to his friends that a ten-pound girl has been born to him and his wife. This is the twenty-fourth child to have been presented Copley, eight of whom were born during a former mar riage and sixteen to the present union. The father is seventy-six years of age, but has the appearance of a man of not over forty-five or fifty. He came to I>ogan county five years ago from Ypsilanti. Mich. Of his twenty four children, nearly all are living. Most of them are school teachers. Husband Chides, Bride Ends Life. La Junta. —Mrs. John \V. Dunkin, a bride of two months, committed sui cide by shooting herself in the temple because her husband upbraided her for walking in the city park alone. After a few cross words the young woman picked up a revolver and killed herself instantly before her husband's eye. The couple was mar ried in Salida in March and came to La Junta several weeks ago. Former Mayor. 77, Weds Neighbor, 65. Fort Collins. —W. B. Miner, former mayor of Fort Collins and a delegate to the Republican convention which nominated Roosevelt in 1904, and Mrs. Annie Battey. his neighbor for forty five years, were married here. The bridegroom is 77 years old and one of the best-known men in this part of the state. The bride is 65. Boulder Cañon Bridget Carried Away. Boulder. —Three bridges in Boulder Canon were carried away and the city pipe line, which supplies Boulder with drinking water, was damaged in five places for distances of from 200 to 300 feet, as the result of the overflow ing of the Silver Lake dam twenty five miles west of this city. Moose Supreme Council to Meet. Denver. —The official call for the meeting of the supreme council of the Loyal Order of Moose, to be held in Denver, June 22 to 25, has been issued. The committee to investigate locations for the national tubercular sanitarium of the order will make its report at j that time. Griffiths Is Candidate For Senator. Grand Junction.— From immediate friends of Benjamin Griffith, former attorney general, it was learned that be will be a candidate for United States senator on the Costigan tick et. Fire Destroys Department Store. Colorado Springs.—Merchandise val ued at $65,000 was destroyed by fire and water when flames grutted the Pelta department store at Tejon and Cucharras streets. Predicts Bumper Orchard Yield. Grand Junction. —Optimism by the carload is growing on every tree in the Grand valley, and according to F. R. Davis, assistant manager of the Grand Junction Fruit Growers' Asso ciation. there will be about 3.500 cars of it marketed during the coming sea son. Uncle Sam also has 400 men at work digging the big ditch which will water 53,000 acres of land in the val ley. Hence it is easy to understand why every man in the district is an optimist of the most pronounced type. ORDER TO BLOCK SHIP AT TAMPICO OUN SHIPMENTS TO MEXICAN REBELS ORDERED CAPTURED BY PRESIDENT WILSON. MEDIATORS SEND NOTE CONSTITUTIONALISTS' AGENTS SEND ABC ANSWER TO CHIEF AND URGE RESISTANCE. WMltrn N>mpp«p*r l Dion NfsiSrnur Washington.—The efforts to make mediation of the Mexican troubles successful were shifted Wednesday from Niagara Falls to Washington, and to Durango. Mexico, the temporary headquarters of General Carranza. The outcome of these latest negoti ations will determine largely the fate of mediation. Rafael Zubaran, General Carranza's chief diplomatic agent here, received the reply of the ABC mediators to Carranza's note of several days ago. While the contents of the reply were not made public, it is understood it re iterated the demands originally made by the mediators, that Carranza agree to a cessation of hostilities between himself and General Huerta before en voys felt the constitutionalists would be welcome at the mediation confer ence. Sefior Zubaran, immediately on re ceipt of this note, put it in cipher and telegraphed it to General Carranza at Durango. With the ciphered note went an urg ent recommendation from Sehor Zu baran and the other representatives of the constitutionalists here that Gen eral Carranza decline to participate in the mediation conference on the terms laid down by the mediators. Orders went forth to the several de partments of the government to pre vent arms and ammunition going from the United States from falling into the hands of the rebels in Mexico. This means that the navy has received in structions to stop the Ward liner An tilla which sailed from New York with 3,000,000 rounds of ammunition con signed to the rebels at Tampico, from delivering the cargo. When informed that Secretary Bry an had also received orders to stop the shipment of arms, the revolution ists admitted they needed the ammu nition to carry on their campaign against General Huerta and they be lieved the action of the United States government was for no other end than that of forcing General Carranza to accept the offer of the mediators. Niagara Falls, Ont., June 4. —Media- tion waits on General Carranza, com mander-in-chief of the constitutionalist forces in Mexico. He has in his pos session a communication from the three South American diplomats which opens the door for constitutionalist representation in the conferences here. Upon his word depends whether the entire Mexican problem will be set tled by diplomacy or whether the con stitutionalists will continue to fight their way to Mexico City. The mediators have, in a dignified way. smoothed the path for constitu tionalist participation. The United States government wants them to ac cept. A rejection of the invitation may eventually mean the withdrawal by the Washington government of the moral support it has been extending to the constitutionalist cause. The mediators are hopefully confi dent that General Carranza will send envoys here. CUMMINS’ MAJORITY IS 35,000. Des Moines. la. —Incomplete returns from Monday's primaries In lowa indi cate that Cummins defeated Savage for the Republican nomination for I'nited States senator by 35.000, and that Connolly has the Democratic nomination, defeating Meredith by about 6,000. Outside of his home county. Connolly and Meredith broke even in the rest of the state. For Congress, the Democrats nomi nated. where contests took place, the following: Second district, W. J. Mc- Donald. lowa City; Sixth district, W. H. Hamilton. Sigourney: Seventh dis trict. C. S. Cooper, Des Moines; Ninth district. H. S. Mosher. Walnut: Tenth district. D. M. Kelleher. Fort Dodge. Republicans nominated in contested districts: Third district, B. E. Sweet, Waverly: Sixth district, C. W. Ram sey. Bloomfield; Seventh district. C. C. Dowell, Des Moines. Democratic State Convention July 30. Denver. —At an executive committee meeting it was decided that the Demo cratic state assembly will be held in Denver. July 30. One Killed; Two Hurt, in Explosion. Washington. One man. Bernard Glosmet of Carbury. N. D., was killed, and two others were dangerously in jured in an explosion aboard the scout cruiser Salem at Vera Cruz, according to a dispatch from Admiral Badger. Resolute Winner of Second Race. Rye. N. Y. —The Resolute won the second trial race with the Vanltie in the series to select a defender for the America’s cup. The boats are now tied, one to one. Dog Mothers Kittens. Mike, a rat terrier owned by Wil liam Bailey of Georgetown, was di» covered yesterday mothering a pair of kittens he had stolen from the home of a neighbor. Mike had gone to the house, picked the kittens up by the neck, and carried them to his own home, where he was discovered play ing with them and making them com fortable in every way. When the two kittens were returned to their mothe* Mike was inconsolable, and has since refused to eat. —Georgetown (Del) Dis patch to thf Philadelphia Inquirer. MRS. LYON’S ACHES AND PAINS. Have A0 Gone Since Lydia E. Pinlrham’a Veg etable Compound. Terre Hill. Pa— " Kindly permit me to give you my testimonial in favor of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound. When I first began taking it I was suffering from female troubles for some time and had almost all kinds of aches—pains in low er part of back and in aides, and press ing down pains. I could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound the aches and pains are all gone and I feel like a new woman. I cannot praise your medicine too highly. ’ ’ —Mrs. Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman’s work nas produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. From the roots and herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever com pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is recognized from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. In the Pinkh&m Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seek ing health many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; and in some cases that it has saved them from surgical operations. Distress After Eating is nof usually caused from what one eats but from food not properly digested and ex cessive fermentation. Stop Fermentation and you ■will not suffer witß Indigestion of the stomach and Intestines, for Indigestion af fects the other organs of tha body which makes it necessary to aid imperfect Digestion. Booth-Overton Tablets Immediately Relieve Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Ileart burn, Belching Gas and Sour Stomach. Buy a 50 cent bot tle at your druggist’s, safe in the belief if the tablets do not help you Money Refunded A trial bos of six tablets will be sent direct from our office on receipt of 10 cents. Booth-Overton Co. 11 Broadway. New York. DAISY FLY KILLER tZgSTXSi Si tin cl*»n, or- Damental. ctmvonißnt cheap. Lasts all season. Made of wietal. rant api II or tip UTer ' win not soil or Injure anything. '’UftrAnteed effective. All dealers r express paid for 11.00. HAXOLD SOMXKI. IN Daffal* Avs., Brooklyn. M. T. - 11 1 ■ CASH PAID FOR GENUINE ELK TEETH KIHXOCK* SHERRILL. ** Wjhfen New York City, or 801 Mmoiilc Temple, Chicago, Ills. DEFIANCE STARCH is constantly growing in favor because it Does Not Stick to the Iron aod it will not injure the finest fabric. For Uundry purposes it has no equal. 16 or. package 10c. 1-3 more starch for ume money. DEFIANCE STARCH CO., Omaha, Nebraska HAIR RALBAM Atotlat preparation of merit Bet pa to oredlcate dandruff. For Rasteri»« Color and Bl* Money Writing W. N. U, OENVER, NO. 23-IShT