NDS ate It Is ors. nent to 1 bill of- xXas, pro- iting the rmful to d discus- oner had een read e. e gentle- asure to yw,” said > gentle- asure to ralue the than the st?” ask- blain the but Mr. ubject of stopped. ory,” he hts that e mistle- man who Nicholas lS exper- e whole + exper- 3 amend- ed amid SILL sident Is ure. 'y com- a speedy liability e agreed nois, the ziven au- ccording- 1 will be Friday, that it the par- by ‘the bility of loyes on whethef nterstate ie Presi= » federal inclusive whether, nd that riven ums act need 3 on of the neourag: ind ship- h prices d to the 5 believe lve been . ased deé- w its ef- ¢ quota- Yhio and _ to 34c; 7 to 38c; uawash- hantable, 1g, 29 to I, 27 to TOR al Peace ion. Mitchell, d Mine announc- vote his vhich he S. . 11 be the between FIELDS cted by 1ers and a before | strikes han ever ed from district, 50 each. ttle. en a re- at Yaun ansi and Peking. hat the surgents t lasting was not ~vins. boy and s.. 0. He. f sooth- parents ven the le medi- tigating. NTS. irteenth andidate . the at- ~ of the d labor 3s of in- combin- 00. a wage nt, tak- 6, were of the ompany. d. Kansas al court itter of favor of le state Gypsum in Oklahoma. According to recently published statistics in Mining Science, Charles N. Gould, professor of geology at the State University, estimates the amount of gypsum in the three re- gions of Oklahoma examined as fol- lows: Main line of gypsum hills, second line of gypsum hills and the Greer county region, at 1235,800,000,- 000 tons. . Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle An international exposition is con- templated, to be held in Brussels, which, while it will be of very gen- eral nature, will be largely devoted to electrical matters. . The new telephone exchange rec- ently installed at Johannesburg will accommodate 24,000 lines. There are now about 6,500 entering the building. HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. First Had Itching Rash—Threatened Later With Blocd-Poison in Leg— Relied on Cuticura Remedies. “About twelve or fifteen vears ago I had a breaking-out, and it itched, and stung so badly that I could not have any peace be- cause of it. Three doctors did not help me. Then I used some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent and be- gan to get better right away. They cured me and I have not been bothered with the itching since, to amount to anything. ‘About two years ago I had la grippe and pneumonia which left me with a pain in my side. Treatment ran it into my leg, which then swelled and began to break out. The doctor was afraid it would turn to blood-poison. . I used his medicine ‘but it did no good, then I used the" Cuticura .Remedies three times and cured the break- -. ing-out on my leg. "J. F. Hennen, Milan, . Mo., May 13, 1907.” Pays $1,000 a Night to Sleep. Like most autocrats, the Sultan of / Turkey goes about in hourly fear of assassination, and it is on this ac- count that he will never sleep in the dark. His constant dread of death -has made him a prey to insomnia,, and he does not often sleep for more than three or four hours at a time. It is said to cost him nearly $1,000 a night to have his bedroom guarded, for the attendants entrusted with this important mission “are all tried’ re- tainers, who receive princely salaries for their work. Many are. the ruses adopted by the sultan to escape from would-be assassins. In one of the ante-chambers leading to his private apartments is placed a life-sized fig- ure of his majesty, for the purpose of misleading any prowling revolution- ary who might happen to penetrate thus far.—Tit-Bits. - > Balloons Need Pure Gas. A writer in a contemporary states that he examined the envelope of a balloon which burst at the interna- tional exhibition at Milan in 1906. A number of spots were visible on the envelope, and at these places the ma- terial could be easily torn, whereas at other parts it showed great resist- anceance to tearing. These spots were found to have been caused by phosphoric and arsenic acide acids, produced by oxidation from hydrogen ureted and phosphureted hydrogen contained in the hydrogen gas. The presence of these impurities is due to impure materials in the prepara- tion of the hydrogen, and the author recommends that the preparation of the gags for filing balloons should be under strict chemical control. Hold Car Seats New York men have justly earned the reputation of being less polite in their treatment of women in. public conveyances than are the men of other cities. Figures obtained from other cities show an average of 13 per cent of men seated while women are standing, and New York City shows about 70 per cent. 15 THEY GROW Good Humor and Cheerfulncss from Right Food. Cheerfulness is like sunlight. It dispels the clouds from the mind as sunlight chases away the shadows of night. The good humored man can pick up and carry off a load that the man with a grouch wouldn't attempt to lift. Anything that interferes with good health is apt to keep cheerfulness and good humor in the background. A Washington lady found that letting coffee alone made things bright for her. She writes: “Four years ago I was practically given up by my doctor and was not expected to live long. My nervous system was in a bad condition. “But I was young and did not want to die, so I began to look about for the cause of my chronic trouble. I used to have nervous spells which would exhaust me and after each spell it would take me days before I could sit up in a chair. 3 I became convinced my trouble was caused by coffee. I decided to stop it and bought some Postum. “The first cup, which I made ac- cording to directions, had a soothing effect on my nerves and I liked the taste. For a time I nearly lived on Postum ‘and ate “little food besides. I am to-day a healthy -woman. “My family and relatives wonder -if I-am the same person I ‘was four years ago, when I could do no work on account of nervousness. Now I am doing my own housework, take care of two babies—one twenty, the other two months old. I am so busy that 1 hardly get time to write a letter, yet I do it all with the cheer- fulness and good humor that comes from enjoying good health. “1 tell my friends it is tc Postum I owe my life to-day.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a Rea- son.” PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Love all; trust a few.—Shakespeare. Economy is the mother of liberty. —Johnson. A vain hope flattereth the heart of a fool.—Greek. The breaking of a heart leaves no traces.—Sand. Beware of no man more than thy- self.— Terence. Mental gifts often hide bodily infirm- ities.—French. Accidents rule’ men, not men acei- dents’—Herodotus. The man of least sense makes the most noise.—Irish. A pretty woman’s worth some pains to see.—Browning. Mildness governs better than anger. —German Proverb. Age glides steadily on and beguiles us as it flies.—Ovid. A light wife doth make a heavy hus- band.—Shakespeare. Little minds are too much wounded by little things.—Rochefoucauld. Add a little to a little and there will be a great heap.—German Proverb. It is only the men who have the strength not to forgive.—Dumas fils. A man that is young in years may be old in hours if he has lost no time.— Bacon. Women are twice as religious as men; all the world knows that.— Holmes. - There is scarcely any one who may not, like a trout, be taken by tickling. —Southey. Between a woman’s “yes” and “no” I would not venture to stick a pin.— Cervantes. Friend, beware of fair maidens! ‘When their tenderness begins, our ser- vitude is near.—Victor Hugo. There is nothing more beautiful than a frigate under sail, a horse galloping, or a woman dancing.—Balzac. : It is so easy to forget a kindness, and to remember a kick. Yet controll- ing our recollections is almost as im- portnant as controlling our temper.— George Eliot. CHARITY'S RECORD IN 1907. About $120,000,000 Given to Various Good Causes. Nearly $120,000,000 was given to charitable, educational, and other caus- es during 1907, in the United States alone, according to figures prepared for the Chicago Record-Herald by Warwick J. Price. Of this huge total, miscellaneous charities received $15,- 186,300, . while hospitals, homes and asylums were the recipients of further bounty aggregating $7,882,500. About one-fifth of all sums given were contributed by women, Mrs. Russell Sage leading, with $13,830,000 dispensed in distributing some of the vast estate left her by her husband. Miss Anne T. Jeanes of Philadelphia also figures prominently with a be- quest of more than $2,000,000. ‘Besides four of these women who are in .what may be called the “mil- lion clas,” there are eleven men, John D. Rockefeller leads with gifts of $42, 315,000, chiefly for educational work. H. C. Frick comes next with $10,205,- 000; P. A. B. Widener, a like sum, and Andrew Carnegie with $8,957,000. The largest gift coming. under .the head of miscellaneous charities was from ‘Mrs. Sage, with $10,000,000 for ‘general philanthropies. In the al- lied branch of hospitals, homes and asylums, Mr. Rockefeller stands first with his $2,000,000 contribution for the Institute for Medical Research. Thom- as R. Patton gave $1,500,000 for a Ma- sonic orphanage. The late Anne T. Jeanes gave $295,000 to various Phila- delphia hospitals. OQutside of the Car- negie gifts, the largest contribution for libraries was $325,000. John D. Rockefeller made the largest gift in land in 1907, transferring property worth $2,000,000 to the University of Chicago. The year’s gifts are grouped as fol- lows: Education, $61,737,277: galler- ies, museums, etc., $22,161,770; miscel- laneous charities, $15,186,300; hospi- tals homes and asylums, $7,882,500; churches, Young Men’s Christian as- sociations and home missions, $6,265, 000; libraries, $2,132,000. Penny Post. Nothing if not persistent in the cause he has made his own, that of a world-wide penny post, Mr. Henni- ker Heaten, M. P., has now address- ed to the Postmaster-General a long letter in which he sets forth Ten Suf- ficient Reasons for an Anglo-Ameri- can Penny Postal Union. In the course of his appeal the honorable member calls attention to the faet that an American can send a letter 5,000 miles by land (say from Mexico to Alaska) for 2 cents (1d.), but must pay 5 cents (21-2d.) for a letter of half the weight sent 3,100 miles across the ocean to England. An En- lishman pays 2 1-2d. on a letter cross- ing the Atlantic, 3,100 miles, and 1d. only on crossing “the Indian and South Pacific Oceans, 15,000 miles, to New Zealand.—London Globe. . How Times Have ‘Changed. “The times are changing,” said Bai- 1iff William Phipps. “You know they used to say that you could always look around and see a white horse whenever you spied a red headed wo- nian. Generally, too, it was true. It's different now. “lI was walking the Circle yester- day and saw a girl so red headed that I'd be willing to take. out fire insur- ance on her. I looked about for the proverbial white horse, and discover- ed nothing but six automobiles. Ver- ily, thé times are changing.”—Indian- apolis News, ‘FINANCE ARD TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Volume of Business Still Much Below Normal, but Moderate Improve- ment Is Noted. New York.—R. G. Dun ond Com- pany’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: “While the volume of business is still much below normal, moderate improvement is constantly noted, al- though the rate of progress is very different in the leading centers of trade. Aside from the idleness of bituminous coal mines, which is not expected to be prolonged, April did not bring any serious labor disputes, and many wage earners were enabled to resume work by accepting small reductions in pay. . “Sales of pig iron have beet mad at lower figures than at any time since the decline began, although regular quotations are nominally un- changed. Furnaces that have be- gun to accumulate stocks, however, make concessions rather than reject offers. “Some finishing mills have also sought raw material more freely; and the net result is a better tonnage of pig iron, although it ig estimated that little more than 50 per cent of. the steel making capacity is now in oper- ation. Demand is still best for tin plate, with the wire and pipe trades next in point of activity, but the rail- ways do not place much business. “Fall buying is still light in the men’s wear division of the woolen goods market, although inquiries are more numerous and the net result is favorable. “The increased interest of jobbers in the footwear market that was noted last week has not been main- tained. ‘Exports have increased, ship- ments from this city for the last week running three or four times greater than has been the rule of late. Hides maintain the recent improvement in activity and prices, while some descriptions have made further gains.” - MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red.... $ 9: yo—No.2........ 72 73 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.. . 66 67 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 61 65 Mixed ear................ 5... 66 67 Oats—No. 2 white........ 53 54 0.3 white....... ~.. 5) 52 Flour—Winter patent... . 495 50) Fancy straight winte 46) 473 Hay—No. 1 Timothy..... 150) 15%) Clover No. 1.......... 0 155) Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton . 2750 2800 Brown middlings...... Bran, bulk..... . B55) 25) 8:raw—Wheat 935) 100) ressse rensies sare sii eae rite 9 10 02 . Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $8 2 31 Oho CTEeAMBYY..... coo crineres 22 .24 Fancy country roll tee 13 20 Cheese—Ohio, new... ses 13 17 New York, hew..........c..vs0.s 16 17 Poultry, Etc. Hong=por Ih... ....cosivecnssraaens:® 17 18 Chickens—dressed........ueceeeeeen 2 13 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 18 21 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fandy white per bu.... 70 7 Cabbage—per ton............ «es 1500 180) Onions—per barrel............ cna 10) 3 23 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.............! $ 5% 58 Wheat—No. 2 red.... Eggs........ . . Butter—Ohic creame PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 53 57 Wheat—No. 2 red.... 97 Corn— Culls and common................ 2)) 310 Lamba. ...nciiie cr. i wees 90) 1300 a Calves, Yeal calves, .. nf. 39) 2; Heavy and thin calves. ............ 33) 2 J From Maine. Jo Green, of Bowdoin, was a quaint character who is still remembered in Sagadahoc County. One day‘he went ‘to Litchfield after a pig. ‘“Hadn’ more than started back with the pig” said Jo, according to the Lewiston Journal, “when I looked round and ‘saw - a big thunder head “behind. 1 was in a beach wagon,:-and didn’t rel- ish the ‘idea of getting wet, so 1 drove like- blazes until I found a big barn. I just made for that with the shower gettiig nearer and nearer all the time. As I got into the barn, 1 looked back and there was my pig in the back of the wagon drowned dead. I had kept just ahead of {lat tarnal shower all the time!” A. “hurry” microbe is said to have been discovered. If there is any way of arranging a contest, suggests the Washington Star, the odds will be considerably in favor of that old-time champion, the “lazy” microbe. yeu of fies Flixief Senna Ql th Sie E X= Usanses tho etom Effect, yep nd le aches due to Constipation: Acts naturally, acts ral as a axative . Best or Men Women and Child- ren - Young an : To get ite Beneficial Effects Always buy the Genuine which he fall has name of t e Lom- "CALIFORNIA 1c Srrup €0. by whom it is manufactured, printed on the ont of every package. SOLD YALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, one size only, regular price 50¢ per bottle. Germs and Electric Light. It has been found that the bac- tericidal effect of the arc light is much superior. to that of sunlight, be- cause the very rapid ultra-violet rad- the atmosphere. A rapid oscillation high-tension arc, particvlarly when formed between iron points, gives off an abundance of ultra-violet rays of extremely short-wave length. Quartz is transparent to this light, of which it transmits 60 per cent, but gelatine and an oxide of irom, even a thin film of it, are entirely vpaque. Ice is as transparent as air to these rays, but blood is opaque, and accordingly, in applying them to the human body, they are passed through ice pressed upon the region affected so as to make it bloodless. RAISED FROM A SICK BED After Being an Invalid With Kidney Disorders For Many Years. _ John Armstrong, Cloverport, Ky., says: “I was an invalid with kidney complaints for many years and cannot tell what agony I en- dured from backache. My limbs were swol- len twice ‘natural size and my sight h, Was weakening. The NM kidney secretions were discolored and had a sediment. When I wished to eat my wife had to raise me up in bed. Physicians were unable to help me and I was going down fast when I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills. After a short time I felt a great improvement and am now as strong and healthy as a man could be. I give Doan’s Kidney Pills all the credit for it.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Inventor of Envelopes. It is somewhat curious that such a simple confrivance as the envelope should be a comparatively modern in- vention. As a matter of fact it is just 100 years since a paper manu- facturer of Brighton named Brewes invented ehvelopes for letters in thelr present form. Even then it was some considerable time before their use became at all general, in fact, un- now will remember) a letter, written only on one side, was folded in two, then in three, sealed with a wafer or sealing wax and addresscd on one of the blank sides.—The Gaulois. The british Columbia Grand lodge Of the Ancient Order of United Workmen has seceded from the American Supreme lodge. Aerial Letter Boxes. Aerial letter boxes have been placed in all large tenement houses and apartment buildings in Buda- pest, Hungary. When the postman enters the hall on the ‘first floor of a building he places the letters in the boxes allotted to the different families. A spring is then pressed and electricity does the.rest. = The boxes are shot up to the floorire- quired, where they remain until emp- tied, or until the postman comes again and brings . them down by touching another spring.—Popular Mechanics. If You Suffer From Asthma or Bronchitis get immediate relief by using Brown's Bronchial Troches. Contain no harmful drugs. Copper Mines in Chile. Chilean government official report shows there have been 7,854 copper claims worked in Chile at different times, of which only 748 were worked the last year. Garfield Tea cannot but commend itself to those Sesiring a laxative at once simple, pure, mild, potent and léalth-giving. is made of Herbs, All drug stores. Proposed Statute to Sheridan. A mode] of the proposed statue: to General ‘Philip Sheridan, which is to be erected in Washington, has been received-and approved by the Sheri- dan Monument Commission. -— Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. A quantity of paper notes are to be issued by the Financial Board Bank in Peking to relieve the string- ency of the money market. D R oO P S Y FEV 2 1500 VERY) worst eases. Book of testimonials and 20 Days’ treatment ¥ree. Dr. HN. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box I, Atlanta, @a. PUT NAM iation from the sun is absorbed by! til this date (as many who are living |’ Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write for free bookist—How to Dye, Bleach and MAY BE OLDEST OF TEMPLES. | | Building Unearthed in Babylonia | Containg Bricks cf 4500 B. C. The oldest temple in the world, so far discovered, has been unearthed by excavators at Bisya, in Central Babylonia. The walls of the tower were first uncovered and the summit cleared. The first inscription on the surface was on a brick stamped with the name Dungi, which goes back to 2750 B.C A little lower appeared a crumpled piece of gold with the name Param Sim, who lived in 3750 B. C. Just below were large square bricks peculiar to the reign of Sargon, 3800 B. C., and who was’ probably the first Semitic King of Bablylonia. A large platform was discovered two and a half yards below the sur- face which was constructed of pecu- liar convex bricks such as were used in building material 4500 B. C. Destruction of French Forests. A vigorous campaign is under way to prevent the destruction of the for- ests of France, which are gradually disappearing under the insistent axe of the woodman. The movement is led by the Society of the Friends of the Trees and the Touring club, who have appealed to parliament for legis- lation. and who have gained active support of M. Ruau, the minister of agriculture. k FITS, St. Vitus’Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,981 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Curious, Indeed. One old member of the New York bar, who has long been in touch with court methods and proceedings, says he wonders why a certificate of good character is required before a man is admitted to practice. Money has become so tight at New- chwang, China, that prices have risen 30 per cent. ~ Old Horseshoes in China. The market in China for wornout horseshoes seems to be almost with- out limit. Chinese iron dealers buy the horseshces and sell them to knife and tool manufacturers all over the province. It is claimed by the Chi- nese that the temper of this class of iron makes it the best obtainable for knives and cutlery, and also good for tools.” The reason ascribed for this is that the constant beating the shoes have received under the feet of the horses has given them a peculiar temper absolutely unobtainable in any other way, and that tools made from them are superior to all others. “ Population of the World. The population” of the world is com- puted by a foreign contemporary as one and a half billions, the mean density of the population being about ten inhabitans per square kilometer. Asia leads the rest of the world with from 820,000,000 to 850,000,000. Eu- rope is second with 402,000,000, fol- lowed by America, 151,000,000, and Africa, from 145,000,000 to 160,000,- 000, Oceanica and Australia have a populaticn of about 7,000,000. " How's This? ; We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. . J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & Marvin Whole- sale Druggists, Toledo, ©. . “Hall’sCatarrh'Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free, Price, 75¢c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, Books Made of Aluminium. The aluminium books for the blind now being printed in Edinburg are of thin sheets embossed in the usual way. They are easier to read than paper books, do not soil and are practically indestructible. Their ex- pensiveness is their drawback. Owing to the increasing number of automobile accidents in Paris more rigid regulations have been made to govern this traffic. a | A SURGICA OPERATION If there is any one thing that a woman dreads more than anotherit is a surgical operation. We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun- dreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos- pitals which are entirely unneces- sary and many have been avoided by LYDIA E.PINKHAR’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ For eight years I suffered from the most severe form of female troubles.and was told that an operation was my only hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman.” Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes: “I feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia iE. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound has done for me. IL suffered from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that an operation was necessary. My husband objected, and urged me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and to-day I am well and strong.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass, No a” FE Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un- healthy germ-life and disagrecable odors, which water, seap ard tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- fecting and deodor- izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex- k cellence and econ- omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet (i stores, 50 cents, or {I by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample THE PAXTON TOILET C0., Boston, Mass. P. N. U. 15, 1903, SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, Certain Oure for Frei hness, SU Constipation eadn WN N itomac roubles, Teething e An estro Mother Gray, WV ; . germs. Th : Nurse in Ohta in 24 Roars, aa ak 8, Side ren's Home, Sample mailed FREE. ddress, Now York Oity. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N.Y. 28¢c.—4LL DRUGGISTS—800, $-JACOBS OIL CONQUERS FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS; SPRAIN OR BRUISE, NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE} LUMBAGO’S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE ; 8CIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL. PAIN & SHOES AT ALL A PRICES, FOR EVERY = EMBER OF THE FAMILY == W. L. Douglas makes and sells than any ” ef BE world, because th hold shape, Ff 8 CAUTIC@N. W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom. Take No Substitute Sold by the hest shoe dealers everywhere, Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Illu W. L. DOUGI trated Catalog free to - ny address, FADELES One 10c. package colors all fibers, They : ™ MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. o men’s $2.50, $3.00 and $8.50 Fr manuf. Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CU., Qui SYSURIOE) a 25 = ot Used RIOR Exclusively, AS, Brockton, A S DYES dye in cold water better than any other dye. You i Lilinois. <