Richmond Palladium (Daily), 27 September 1901 — Page 6

RICHMOND llAU.Y PALL VIHUM. FH1PAY. SlTTlMllXE 27, 1901.

ROOSEVELT IN REALITY.

Character and Aims as Seen by a Personal Friend. TO BUS HI3 OWH ADMINI3TBATI0JT tllnatratlr laeldeata Recalled Froaa , tfsa President's Career Hia Altl- , fade Toward the lattaaalaa Canal, j Bneau ar. tiara and Crltlelaaa, Tralral laitaan of liia Seaae of Honor. The tHatement made the other day by President Roosevelt to bis friends In Buffalo concerning his plans for the coming three years consisted of mere outlines, as befitted so Informal an utterance, writes the New York Post's special Washington correspondent. If any value attaches to the opinion of a personal friend of several years standing, who has had exceptional opportunities to study him on a side which is not commonly turned toward the public. It would be pretty safe to fill in some of these outlines without waiting for the event. The first great question with which the new president will have to deal will be that of the isthmian canal. Ills brief summary of his policy on this point Is "the building and completion as soon as is possible of the isthmian canal, so as to give direct water com munlcatlon with the coasts of Central America, South America and Mexico.' In view of his assertion of his "aim to continue absolutely unbroken the policy of President McKlnley for the Deace. prosperity and honor of the country," it is assumed In many quarters that Mr. Roosevelt will make every effort to further the construction of a neutral canal. ' With one modification, this Is probably correct. For commercial purposes tie has always favored and will continue to favor the neutrality of the coming canal, but his idea is as fixed as ever that, for war purposes. neither our country nor any other or combination of others should guarantee the neutrality of : this waterway. He doubtless realizes as fully as any one the Improbability that any foreign nation would attempt to send her warships through the canal on a hostile errand, and on the general principle of not advocating the Impracticable or providing against the Inconceivable he would withhold guarantees which he expects never to see called Into operationThe case presents Itself to his mind like a grant in a general deed of conveyance of a right of way which in all human probability would never be used. Different persons would look at such a thing differently. One would argue that if the right were never to be used it would do no harm to grant it. His neighbor would retort that it Is foolish to cloud a title with an incumbrance which is to be of no use to any one. However, such a discussion Is now academic. The canal treaty which will be sent to the senate next winter will contain the substance of all the senate amendments to the original Hay-Pauncefote treaty without their offensive form. This, it is believed, will satisfy every diplomatic demand on both sides of the water, and the canal will follow as soon as a decision can be reached upon the route and the requisite appropriation can be obtained from congress. The uest point likely to be raised concerns revenue reform. Here some clew to President Roosevelt's future conduct may Ik? obtained by noting the course his education has taken. He was graduated from Harvard at a time when practically every man turned out from that institution was an ardent free trader, and he then held to his free trade doctrine as stanchly as the rest. But what we may call, for lack of a more satisfactory term, the '"logic of events" made him afterward a protectionist, though leaving his mind in euch an attitude that free trade apIeals to it as the ideal condition toward which a logically controlled pro tective system must tend. In general terms, perhaps, the difference between him and the ordinary tariff reformer is that they are approaching the same economic end from opposite directions. It will be recalled that another New York Republican, raised suddenly from the second place In the government to the first, devoted a large share of two successive annual messages to tax reform, reminding congress, before he had been in the Wbite House three months, that "we may well consider whether It Is not the part of wisdom to reduce the revenues even If we delay a little the payment of the debt." and that "the time has arrived when the people may justly demand some relief from their present onerous burdens." President Roosevelt may be found agreeing with President Arthur that the present tariff system Is In many respects unjust. It makes unequal distribution both of its burdens and its benefits' and echoing bis recommenda tion of 'an enlargement of the f ree t

list so as to Include within It the nu-j whites It would be better to say that merous articles which yield lneonsidec- I this is true only of a part of the state, able revenue, a simplification of the i says the New Orleans Times-Democrat, complex and inconsistent schedule of! The Yazoo delta has become the greatlnties upon certain manufactures j er Mecca of the negroes, and there and a substantial reduction of the du- j they have flocked not only from the ties upon those articles' and others, j hill counties, but from the neighborOn the subject of reciprocity no one is j ing states, Alabama. Georgia and the more keenly alive to the advantages of ; Carolina. They have been pouring In an interchange of concessions with the i for the last dozen or twenfy years, ever countries with which we have com- j since the protection of the delta from xnercial relations; but, on the other overflow has been assured. There have band, no one appreciates more the diffl- been several exoduses from the hills to arolty of inducing a favorable vote on the tvtoms of such great proportions

reciprocity treaties from a senate of j which each member is looking out for the Industries of his own state ratht-r .than for those of the country at large. ! t The Philippines problem cannot be olved for Mr. Roosevelt by any one mtae, nor would it be safe to say that'

he expects by tuw ruU ol urn lm-e four years In office to Doing this to a definite and final solution. A better statement of his views would doubtless be that In the course of four years the Filipinos can be carried a long distance forward on their way toward self government. It is Inconceivable that a man of Mr. Roosevelt's moral type would favor the retention of colonie

merely for the sake of retaining them if majorities both of the colonists and of the citizens of the pareut country frankly desired a separation. It is equally out of the question for any one who know the workings of fcis m:au to suppose him in favor of turning ;-t-b a people as the Filipinos loose uKn the sisterhood of nations till they have been instructed In the ways of self governing commonwealths. He would tell you that he is never an oppressor, al ways a civilizer, but he would hardly judge a people capable of passing in telligently upon the question of their permanent future form of government till they had tasted and tested what he regards as the Ideal form. What will be our new president's at titude toward criticism? That will de pend upon Its motive and its method. He has never had any quarrel with the critics who attack his opinions or his politics or his mode of putting those policies In force, provided only that they tell the truth about him and abstain from imputing to him a dishonor able motive. No one has relished more keenly than he the satires and cartoons in which he has figured ever since he came Into national prominence, but when writer or artist has assailed his honesty or tried to throw suspicion upon his worthiness of purpose all the warlike impulses within him have sought expression at the surface. His enemy may condemn his projects as foolish, his logic as juvenile, his appearance, words and manners as ludicrous, and he Is ready to shake hands and break bread with the censor five minutes later, bt the man who hints that he Is a hypocrite or a rogue finds a very ugly and quite unappeasable antagonist In him from that uay forth. Mr. Roosevelt is a democrat with a small "d." It will surprise no one to see him In a few weeks walking the streets of Washington as freely as Lincoln and Grant did. He has always lived his own life and chosen his own friends in defiance of the carpers. Some persons have accused him of being theatrical in his methods. If this charge be true, the tendency is as natural in him as his sense of humor, and that is simply irrepressible. He is certainly not without a sharp eye for dramatic effect, but this more often shows Itself in some isolated act designed to convey a lesson than in one which is merely incidental to his general course of conduct. A typical in stance occurred when Dr. Ahlwardt, the anti-Semitic agitator from Berlin, visited New York in 1803. Mr. Roosevelt was then police commissioner, and not a few of the New York antiSemites came to him in alarm lest the Jews should arise and mob the orator on the night of his first address. The commissioner's response was to select from the whole police force a squad of Hebrews whose physiognomy bespoke their race most conspicuously. These officers he placed in charge of the hall where Ahlwardt was to appear, with a reminder that in this country of free speech they could show their good citizenship in no more striking manner than by protecting the very man who had come to hurl contempt and abuse at their people. The effect of this bit of comedy, worthy of a Gilbert, was to make Ahlwardt ridiculous and cause his whole crusade to fall pitifully flat. There has been some curiosity among the politicians to know who is going to "run" the new administration. Some have been unkind enough in their feeling toward Senator Lodge to suggest that he might attempt the task. Obviously they know neither their proposed runner nor his "runnee." Three years from now they will probably wake up to the fact that the Roosevelt administration has been run throughout by a man named Theodore Roosevelt. GRAVE FOR POET. Marble Seat to De Raised In Memory of Daniel O'Connell. The memory of Daniel O'Connell, one of the group of potts whose songs have been so typical of California's cloudless blue skies, is to have a fitting me morlal, says a San Francisco dispatch to the -New York Evening World. On a lofty hill in the suburb of Sansalito, where O'Connell had his home for many years, a simple marble seat is to be erected. On the back of the seat the words of bis poem, "The Chamber of Sleep," will be carved. O'Connell was a lineal descendant of the great Irish liberator. He served for some years In the English navy and ! In the early sixties came to San Fran Cisco aboard a British man-of-war. He resigned while at San Francisco and j became a journalist. lie was an ideal ' Bohemian until his death, a year ago. Tasoo Delta the Nrgrors' Mercs. . 4In speaking of Mississippi as showins a larser increase of neeroes than as to alarm the farmers in the hill country lest they might be left without sufficient labor for their crops. If this movement of population keeps on, it will have a tendency in time to whiten the rest of Mississippi by concentrating the bulk of negroes in the Tazoo delta.

Itattaaolea ta uerc" "Button Holes For Sale Here" Is a ign which peers out through a rathei dirty window of a lower tioor tene ment oa the east side. la view of the possibility that it migLt mean ju-t what it said and that t)e dealer real! sold holes for buttons a Tribune re porter Investigated. A woman whose dress was a mixtr.rt of bathing suit and ball gown auswtr ed his knock. "You sell buttonholes hereF was asked. "Naw, we make 'em! she exclaimed, with as much disgust as a very squeaky voice was capable of showing. "Well, the sign in the window says ."Nevrr mind the sign! she snapped back. "Want do you want with mer She was finally persuaded to tell something of her new business. "You see. it's this way," she began. "The working girls who live over here have to dress pretty well and do It on little money. Most of "em makes their own clothes, but they have not too much time to do the work in. Now, if

you was a woman you'd know that It was mighty hard to make buttonholes, specially by hand. Poor girls can't afford buttonhole machines. They make up the dresses and bring em over to oa, and we put in the buttonholes at so much a hole, 'cording to the kind of stuff and how well they wants it done. And that's all there is to it." New York Tribune. A Toothful Financier. A correspondent asks. Will some of your mathematical geniuses kindly tell me if I am absolutely devoid of the calculating faculty in not Wing able to see through the following three cornered trick, shall I say?. A beggar boy asked an old gentleman In the street for sixpence. "What will you do with it If I give you one?" asked the old gentleman. "Turn it into ninepence quick," replied the boy. "How?" "Give me the tanner, and I'll soon show you." The boy got the money, darted off to a baker's shop and bought a threepenny loaf, with which he returned to the old gentleman and handed him back 3 pennies. "How's this? You said you would make the sixpence into ninepence." "So I have. The baker's got threepence, you've got threepence and I've got a threepenny leaf. That's Binepence." Pearson's Weekly. The LaoisMrr of SavnRea. The general impression one derives from the accounts given is certainly that savage tribes are not victims of a sullen despair, but, on the contrarv. have a large and abundant mirth. Their laughter and other signs of good spirits are of the most energetic kind. Darwin and a number of travelers assure us on this point. The Tasmanians. Ling Roth tells us, accompanied their loud bursts of laughter with movements of the hands to the head and quick tapping movements of the feet. The loud, deep chested character of the men's laughter , is sometimes specially noted. A recent visitor to central Africa regrets that under European influence the deep chested, hearty laughter of the men is being replaced by what is known as the "mission giggle" in the younger folk. International Monthly. An Odd Neat. A correspondent of Cassell's Magazine records a curious freak on the part of some wasps in Gloucester, England. The wasps were noticed going in and out of a lock which secured a workshop door. The owner of the shop had the lock removed to satisfy his curiosity about the doings of the busy workers. He found a nest inside. The cells were made of mud and were full of larvae. There were several dead wasps inside the lock. As the lock was in almost daily use the wasps could not have had a very peaceful home. The Ysssa of the Sea Deril. You may find In the sea devil a curious illustration of nature's system for adjusting reproduction. The cod lays several hundred thousand eggs at a spawning because nearly all of them must necessarily be lost while floating on the waves and those which hatch are mostly devoured. But the sea devil, which produces but a single young one at a tim rpt.iins tht l.itfpr in ira 1 r untll the infant creature is from four to six feet In length, so that when bom it is able to take care of itself and is In I no danger of being destroved. ) 1 , i - raprr Covered Books. f The life of the paper covered books i that accumulate' on everybody's hands and amontr which one snmotim fir,,i i one she would like to keep may be prolonged by this process: Cut a piece of gingham or print a trifle larger than the cover. Taste It to the paper c-ov-ers and trim the edges. Dry under a ! weight and letter the title on the cov ! er. The cloth should be in one piece. A Fallible Sljra. Mrs. Housekeep I don't know much i about the new girl, but she's good ! natured and harmless, at ajr rate. Mr. Honsekecp How did yon find that out? Mrs. House-keep I notice that she sings at her work. Mr. Uousckeep Hugh! That's no sign. A mosquito does that. Exchange. Orlartaal.. "What do you think of my Ideas? toaTtfali? Tla Ww-.rl.l Kfi r,rwi .ne "Well," replied the editor, banding! hack the manuscript, -you've got one i . very original idea." "What's that?" I Tour idea that your lateas are orizi-! BaL Philadelphia Press.

LIKED IliRICHlJpp The Renown eff the Great Author and Physician Dr. A. W. Chase is Accnted By Richmond People. Its by the words of the people that A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills have eeme into such active demand. The announcements for this medicire are not depecdent on the testimony of people so far away that they cannot be authenticated. Its hi me evidence that convinces because easi'y substantiated. Its the simple statement of things done and told in the words of the relieved. Mrs. H. Brooks of 220 fifteenth street, Richmotd, says: 'l was a victim of severe nervousness, indi

gestion and a dizzy feeiirg in mv head. I got a box of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Piils at A. G. Luken Co.sdrug store and cow, after taking one box, I can say that m nerves are steadied, my digestion improved ank these dizzy spells relieved. I thick these pills a splendid cure for nervousness and can recommend them." Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve P'.lls are sold at 50c a box at dealers o Dr. A. V. Chase Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. See that portrait and signature of A. W. Chate, M. D , are on every package. Richmond, Ind. Her Reason. "Did you ever try any of these health foods?" the sympathetic friend asked of the dyspeptic lady. "Yes," she replied, "and I'm not going to eat any more of them." "Why not?" "Because they spoil my appetite. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Saw Ifotninar Supernatural la It. Sunday School Teacher You say Delilah cut Samson's hair and it took away his strength. Can you think of any reason why It should have had that effect? Tommy Tucker Maybe he saw himself In the glass after she'd done It, ma'am. Chicago Tribune. A Beanttfal Enainc. "Mr. Bashful, how long have you been coming to see me?" "About six years. Miss Julie. Why?" "Nothing, only I had a little argument with mamma abont it this morning. She thought it was .ven or eight. Isn't it a beautiful evening?" Interesting Moltf. Mother What are you thinking about, my son? Tommy I was just wondering If j son;e angel bit out the other half of the moon. Chicago News. j Sentimental. The capitalist colored when we spoke j of the check that hung In a neat frame j over his dsk. j "A bit of sentimentalism. said he. ! "The first billion I ever made." Detroit Free Press. Cures Cancer, Blood Poison,! Eating Sores, UlcersCosts Nothing to Try. j Blood poison or deadly cancer are the worst and most deep-seated' blood diseases on earth, yet the j easiest to cure when Botanic ITood j Balm is used. If vou have blood j Pison' Pr' ducing ulcers, bone pains, i pimp1, mucous patches, falling , Dair itching skin, scrofula, old rheu- j matism, or offensive form of catarrh, j scabs and scales, deadly cancer, ! eating, bleeding, -festering - sores, swelling lumps, persistent wart; or s0116' tase isotanic UiOOd Balm j (ll. 15. Li.) XZ vrui cure even me j worst case alter everything else fails. Botanic Blood Balm ( B-, B. B.) drains the poison out oi tne system ana tne biooa, then every sore neas, mauiug tne biood pure ana ncn, ana duuui me up the broken aown boa?, is.ls. B. thoroughly tested for 30 years, f tte - A triaI treatment sent free by wr.V.ng iiiooa lialm Co., Atlanta. Ua. Describe trouble and free medical ad vice given until cured. Botanic Blood Balm does not contain mineral poisons or mercury (as so many advertised remedies do), but is composed of Pure Botanic ingredients. Over 3,000 testimonials of cure bv taking B.B. B Keep 1 Your Bowels Strong. Constipation or diarrhoea when your bowels are out of order. Cascarets canay uainaruc wiu mane them act naturally. Uennme tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in ' bulk- All druggists, ioo

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NEXT 8ATI R04Y.

Will Toe Rail end Day at the Pan-American Exposition. An unavoidable change in plans necessitated the postponement of Railroad Day festivities at the PanAmerican Exposition. They will be held next Saturday, September 28. The original program with added attractions will be carried out. Excursion tickets for et jovicg the occasion may be obtained at ticket offices of the Pennsylvania l;nes. Find out aoout the low fares ard through time by consulting C. W. Elmer, passenger ticket agent. Schneider's Own make of vehicles at reduced prices for 30 days, 47 north eighth street. 23d-wtf Takes the burn out; heals the wound; cures the pain. Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, the household remedy. Take Rocky Mountain Tea. See it xterminate poison. Fuel it revitalize your blood aed nerves and bring nack that happy, joyous feeling of hovhood days. 35c. Ask your druggist. Butler County Fair Excursions to Hamilton via Pennsylvania Lines. Excursions tickets to Hamilton for the Butler county fair will be sold September 30th to October 4th, inc'uivs from Cincinnati, Richmond and intermediate t'eket stations on tht- Pennsylvania lines. Fot particulars see local agents. One of nature's remedies; cannot harm the weakest cons' iut ion; never fai's to cure summer complaints of young or old. Dr Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. The Reidston DairyHas changed its base from Hussons and is now supplying its customers direct from watron, which is delivered the residences of its patrons. SVe deliver Done but mornings milk fresh from the cows which does dot sour, as milk which is kept over night and delivered the following morning. We are prepared to deliver any quantit v of milk in any part of the city, and can furnish dealers in pure miik to supply their customers at prices that will leave them a prolit for handlir g. Orders left with Dougan & Co.. rbone 139: George B Doutran, phone Reidstrm Farm, phone 94; T F McDonnell's drug store; Richmond Oream Co., phone 1188, will receive prompt attention. julyl0d3m Reipston Dairy. It's foil v to suffer that borrib'e plague of the eight, itching pil. s i Doan's Ointment cures quickly end ! permanently. At any drug store, 50 cents. ; Roosters often crow over ees j I who sell a imitation of Rocky Mouc- j j tain Tea, mad' famous by the .Mbdi-1 i s-on Medicine Co. t advertising. 35c. i j Ask your druggist. j CURE YOURSELF ! ITse Bie4 for unnatural j diew-hargt-s.irjriammation.. ; irritations or ulcerations 5 of ibucoqi membr.n.. ; Painless, and nut at,ria- 1 eE'-sChM'C.C. gent or powi.nous. j V!iHCtHltT1,0.n ma,m "r iiraerwis, or sent In plain wrapper. by express, prepaid, fur j Lflo, or 3 bottles, ti.n. Circular sent oa request, i OlTR.r LAl'NDRY PLANT is equipped with! everything necessary to do satisfactory work Customers need have no aesitation in sending their most treasured pieces. They will he handled tenderly and returned in perfect condition. RlchmontlQSteans Lanndrj i has become celebrated through the fine quality of its wort'r "Evcrs thing" Is cone O. W. WALTER Prep. Pt-ens IB, SIB AIM. S.K. MORGAN TELEPHONE 718. Employment, Real Estate Information, Abstractor, Insurance, and Notary Work ... A place to bay a home as yen pay reu O. B. MORGANPractical Plumber and Gaa Fttter, 8t aad N. K St.. Richmond. Ind.

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I MM BOt to SLTlCtBr.

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rortured by Nervous Diseases. Women And in Celery King the great healing tonic that free them from pain and inakea living a Joyful ex rx-rienea. Constipation, headache and stomach, liver n 1 kidney diees all yield to the ioiiwnoe fUiis grand medicine. Celery King la a peculiarly pleasant medline. It Is auld in 23e. and 60c. packaa by ggisis. 7 m Y, M CONQUEftOn BELLAV1TA Vraenlc Beauty Tat eta mad PUm ao "petty fe and aruanuiw-ed tr-wi t f- . ir c ludera 8 s torts the 'o o,euta te c a. 0 days u-eaCB.ent 50e: ' da W.Ou. b ir.tA wid f nrer r. Addreea, a vit M0ICA1. CX. Cm HcfcM V. Cal4 Sold by A. G. Luken & Co., Main street, and Curme & Co., 415 north eighth street, Richmond DON'T BE FOOLED! Take the genuine, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TCA Mad only by Madison Medl. cine Co.. Madisua. Wis. It keeps you well. Our trad mark cut en each package. Price, 35 cents. Net er aolai In bulk. Accept tio aubati. raoaeoTce..a tute. Ask your dru!U ELECTRIC P.LLS Benefit is Immediate and Permanent Restores the Power intended alt men sUouid have, if it has been wasted and destroyed by Excesses. Abase, Indiscretion of Yoatn or Oveiworn: doee away with that Tired. Weary, Restless and Melacholy Feeling, Nervous and sleepless N iuhts.W Back and Lack of Ambition. Makes u feel freshed, yojntt again, and life wort it livinv C'Hnpletely rebuilds tiie Nervous System. One box is sutbeient to cure most cases, end enruh to prtve its worth to tne most severe, x.oo per box, or fnil guaranteed core of a boxes for vv. You take no chances, as we guarantee 6 boxes to cur in 30 days or refund your money, wnivb. is proof that we must cure the majority of cur patrons. By oiail, in plain wrappet , on receipt of price. ELECTRIC PILL COMPANY 73 wear jackson stmcct. Chicago ilu a. G JLuken & Co., 630 Main St. Charles Ii. Mag-aw, 20t Ft. Wayne Ave. FIRE ALARM BOXES. FIRST DISTRICT. South of Main, West of Seventh Stret 12, First and south C, Piano factory 15, Second and south B 14. Fourth and south D 16, Fifth and south B " IB, Fifth and south H 18, Severtb and south C SECOND DISTRICT. t-onth of i'ain, between 7th and 11th eta" 21, Eighth and Main ' 23 Eighth and south El 24, Seventh and nouth G 2R, Ninth ard south A 2, T?nth and south C i 27, Eleventh and Main 2f, Eleventh and south J - :third distri JT. couth of Main. East of Eleventh 5tree81. Twelfth and south B 32. Twelfth and south E 34, Fourteenth and Main 85. Fourteenth and south C 86. Eighteeintb and south A 87. Twentieth and Main " ' FOURTH OISTRIOT. North of Main. West of 10th t. to River. 41. Third and Main, Robinson's shor. 42. Third and north C 43. City Buildine, Fire Headquarters 45, Gaar, Scott & Co 4H, No. 1 hose house, north 8th street 47, Champion Mills 48, Tenth and north I FIFTH OISTRIOT. West Richmond and Sevastopol. 5. West Third and Chestnut SI, West Third and National road 62, West Third and Kinsev 68, XT- . . nr-v : . , , . , , . c&i a mra ana tucumosa avenue; 64, Earlham College , state and Boyer 56. Grant and Ridge 87, Hunt and Maple 5K, Orant and Sheridan 69. Bridtf e avenue. Pancr Mill SIXTH OISTRIOT. j North of D Street, East o ,?nta Stre 01, jiaiiroaa &not fii, Hutton'a Coffin Factory . 63, Hoosier Drill Works 64, Wayne Agricultural Works 65, Richmond Citv Mill Work e. Westcott Carriage Co 67, Thirteenth and north H SEVENTH DISTRICT. Z' Between Main and North JJ sta, E of lOti 7, Ninth and north A 71, Eleventh and north B 72, Fourteenth and north C 73, No. 3 hose house, eat end 74, Eighteenth and north C 75, Twenty-aecond and north E SPECIAL SIGNALS 2-2-2 Patrol call 1-2-1 Fire out S-3-8 Fire pressure 8 Fire pressure o3 10-10-10 Natural gas off IO Natural iraa rw Working TCIglit and Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into strength, listlessness to energy, brain-fag to mental power. They're wonderful in building up the health. Only 25c per box. Sold by A. G. Luken & Co., druggists.