Richmond Palladium (Daily), 3 October 1901 — Page 6
GREAT
...AT
I PAN-AMERICAN I
TIIE postponement of some of the special days has crowded many great events fhto the month of October. Toronto day opened the month veti many thousand visitors from Canada on the 3d. Pennsylvania day, on Oct- 4. with Governor William A. Stone, his staff and several regiments of the national jruartl. made a splendid showing. New York day comes Oct. 9, following Brooklyn day. These two days will be the occasion for reunions of people went and east, as New Yorkers are found all over the Union. The Citizens Committee of Brooklyn has been hard at work for several months preparing for Oct. 8, and the programme which has been arranged promises a rare treat for those who are fortunate enough to gain admission to the Temple of Music during the time of its presentation. The special oration of the day will be delivered by the Hon. St. Clair McKelway. editor of the Brooklyn Eagle. The Hon. Ludwig Nissen will preside at the gathering, and other addresses will le delivered by Mayor Diehl of Buffalo. William C. Bryant, chairman of the Brooklyn Citizens' Committee, and Hon. W. I. Buchanan, director general of the Exposition. The music incidental to the occasion will lie furnished by the Innes band of New York city. Elaborate fireworks have been planned for the evening. On New York day Governor Odell will be escort in! to the Temple of Music by sixteen out of town organizations In addition to the three located in Buffalo. Over 3.000 men will be in line, composing one of the largest and moif Imposing parades which has ever taken place in times of peace. All branches of service will be represented infantry, cavalry, artillery, naval and signal. An elaborate programme has been arranged for the Temple of Music and a reception in the New York State building with magnificent fireworks in the evening. Illinois day, on Oct. 7, is to be one f the great days of the Exposition. While the death of President McKlnley made it necessary to postpone the day from Sept. V Governor Yates and the State commission have determined that the day shall Ik? an event of great importance at the Exposition- Thousands of Illinois people are coming. The great middle west. Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, with Michigan, have sent great crowds already to the Pan-American, and there is every indication that the attendance from that section will be greater than ever during the month of October. Buffalo will have a great day on Oct. 19. At the Chicago fair Chicago day was the crowning event of the Exposition. So Buffalo people are laboring hard to make Buffalo day the climax in point of attendance. Many nearby cities will have special days In October, notably Erie, Pa., on Oct. 10 and Dunkirk, X. Y., on Oct. 10. The list is constantly being added to. National Grange day, Oct. 10, will bring Patrons of Husbandry from every part of the nation. Atlantic City people and New Jersey people will visit the Exposition on Oct. 11, Atlantic City day. Alaska day, on the 2Sth, will bring Into prominence the products and people of that great golden land of the midnight sun, ice, snow and wealth. Every day from Oct. 1 to the 31st will be replete with interest, from Carnival Meek, which opens the month with the gorgeous floats of King Uex and the replica of Mardi Gras pageantry, to the magnificent pyrotechnic display on the night of the last day of the month. No exposition ever held in the United States so appealed to the American public as has the Pan-American Exposition in its architectural beauty and symmetry, its gorgeous flowers, now In the fine beauty of fall bloom; its gardens and fountains and Its special amusements, music and carnival features. "No person." said Secretary of Agriculture Wilson during a visit on Sept. 10, "should miss seeing the Ex- i position. It is magnificent beyond com- i pare. Never again will the world see such an illumination. Not every city has the wonderful electric plant driven by Niagara Falls, and without some nch plant it will be impossible to reproduce the solemn grandeur, the glorious beauty, the impressive radiance of this City of LightThere are yet a few more weeks in which to see this vision with all its attendaut beauties. Conventions at Buffalo. October will be a great convention month at Buffalo. Thousands of members of orgauizations will take this opportunity of visiting the Exposition at tTaat time. Beginning with the International Cremation congress from Oct. 1 to 3. the ionth closes with the American Langshan club on Oct. 20. National Graagre Oar. Thursday. CHt. 10. wi!l be National Graugf day at the Pau-Americaa Exposition. At a meeting n tbe ity of Washin-rton held in l;X the National t;rauers adopted resolutions setting aside this day. and a great assemblage of Tatrons of Husbandry and farmers -neralls is eiojceted.
DAYS
THE... OCTOBER FLOWERS. There I. a. Heaotlfnl Displar of Them at the Pan-A tnerteaa Th Garden of the City of l-lnt Are One of Ita Moat Attrnetlte 1'ealoira. Artistic Scene Whieh the Lover of Beautr Sbonld l Fall to See. The Pan-American Is one of the greatest flower shows that ever was. but there are so many other things in which it is great that the rarity and beauty of its floral features are perhaps apt to be ov(Axked. If people would take more time to allow the artistic and beautiful features of the Exposition to impress their senses and permeate their Inmost being instead of j racing from one part of the grounds to another, trying to see every exhibit and every show on the Midway, they would go home feeling greater benefit from their stay In the Rainbow City. The Pan-American Is full of gardens which tempt the visitor to rest awhile and drink In the beauties of nature. It may seem surprising that In the month of October there are flowers worth looking at. but such is the fact. The rains of the past few weeks have kept the landscape as fresh and beautiful as in May and June, and as one flower goes out of the scene another takes its place. On opening day the hyacinths filled the air with their dainty fragrance, in June tulips lifted their proud heads, later In the month of brides and sweet girl graduates came roses, with their rich perfume, and as the summer passed the other flowers In their season sprang up as if by magic to take the place of those which had done their blossoming and served their turn in the entertainment of the visitors to the City of Light. And now one sees the tall canna. the gay geranium and snch old fashioned flowers as grandmother's garden had the phlox, the pfnk. the begonia, the petunia and other posies which are no less beautiful because they do not happen to be novel. In entering the grounds by the Elmwood gate visitors pass two tall ami curious looking trees, which perhaps few in their anxiety to reach the heart of the Exposition stop to notice. If they realized that they were century plants just budding, a thing which, as all know, century plants only do once j in a long, long time, they would doubtless stop and look with open mouths and wondering gaze. It is a sight which one cannot see very often anywhere else. One of these century plants Is nearly forty feet In height. The Hose Gardens around the Woman's building, having for their background the outlines of the Spanielrenaissance buildings about the mala court and the Electric Tower looming j, u ! Lakes and the Triumphal Bridge and j the groups of statuary alwjunding, form j a scene whose artistic aspect must appeal to even the least aesthetic visitor, j The cannas are very effective decora-. tive plants, with their tall leaves in , green and red and brown. A rich canna ; one sees here is named Governor j Itoosevelt. It would seem appropriate now to change its name to President ! Itoosevelt. On the opposite 6ide of the Triumphal Bridge is the Wooded Island, and here one roams amiu old fashioned flowers, growing as though they had sprung up there all by themselves without any assistance from the landscape gardener and his corps cf assistants. But of course that is not the case. The studied carelessness of the gardening j of this island is only one of the pretty j deceits employed to produce the im- j pression that it is all the work of Moth- ! er Nature herself. ! Have you seen the fairylike effects i In the garden about the Fountain of ; Abundance at night? It is one of the new things. This small garden is very ; beautiful by day. and at night electric lights of different colors have been hid- . den among the flowers and planks, so j that one sees the surface of the ground j dotted with these little spots of light, j bringing out the beauty of the flowers, j and all forming a scene impossible to describe, but very charming indeed to j witness. It Is quite a pretty surprise j even to old Pan-American visitors. j Did you ever notice in crossing the ' Court of Lilies, south of the Machinery building, a heavy vapor arising from j the basin In the center of that court? j Sometimes it has so much the appear- j ance of smoke that people think some- ! thing must be atire in the garden, but j it is only the steam or vapor created by the heating of the water in that La- j sin for the benefit of the tropical lilies j whieh grow therein. These lilies, which i are known as the Victoria Kegia, have enormous leaves, some of tbein three ! feet in diameter. ! Other gardens where there are flow- i ers in bloorn during this month of Oc- j tober are those in front of the United t States Government building and the Horticulture group, where the gay ge- i raniums and sweet petunias contrast their colors with the green flags grow- j ing in the basin and with the white j statuary disposed along tbeir slopes. 1 There was a floral fete at the Ex;v.ji- j tion during the first week ci October. j and this ia its way. of course, was :ui ; affair of much beauty and magnifi- j cence; but. as a matter of fact, there j have been floral fetes at the Pan-Aiaer-lean since opening day.
UK II3UIri1J.Y rLLI)ir3lTHU1tSDAY. CCTOHER
AFRICA IN A MbW LibnT Dr. Silas Johnson Describes the Southern Interior. STEASGE, UJSIQTJE PEOPLE FCU5E" Seven Tear. Observation of a Med ical Missionary on the German Possessions la the Heart of the African Forests Cartons Customs of a Little Known Race. Sea:d- about the banquet board at Levy's in Los Angeles. Cal.. the nif rubers of .Le University club a few nights ago her.: J strange, unique things about a land anJ people with which the world is very little acquainted, says the St. Louis I'ost-lJispatch. Dr. Silas S. Johnson, a member of the club, who spent seven years as a medical missionary In the Interior of South Africa, related some of his interesting observations on the German possessions In the heart of African forests. "They are not a people like the negro with whom you are acquainted here." he said. "Near the coast 1 have seen a few resembling the negro you know, but not many. The people of South Africa's -Interior are tali, brown and muscular, with features sharp and intelligent, often bespeaking large capability and astute cunning. "We found them without a written language. Tbey had never seen a written character. Indeed necessity for the written message never manifested itself since tribal and Intertribal wars made prolonged absence or distant journeying Impossible. Few of the people of the clans we knew had ever been twenty miles away from their native towns. A town would be composed of half a dozen villages and a village of as many huts containing fifteen or twenty brown people. They had for the most part never seen a white man before our coming. They had never heard of the great outside world that lay beyond the ocean, which they considered to be merely a large river. They were as Ignorant of any conception of the world as were the chimpanzees which they shot In the treetops with their slender poisoned arrows. "We gave them a written language of their own as soon as we could devise one. We found them to possess marvelous memories. This Is not to be wondered at, for they trusted all conTracts anu an Kuowieuge exclusively to memory. ! "Their language Is beautiful in Its ' simplicity and rarely full when you consider their limited environments. They employ many fine shades of ' meaning where we employ only one. Especially is this true In expressions j of their sly, cruel tactics of war. Their j words and sentences are short, abrupt i find as clear cut as terse. They have j no law, no government. Dim cen- 1 turies ago they had kings, but as they ! moved coastward it'eame to pass that f the strongest, richest and most . astute ruled by means of material strength, j by will and acumen. They have a j traditional respect for the law of ! primogeniture and for precedent, but j a king's son or a headman's son can- j not rule except he possesses that mark- i ed ability which makes him a natural : leader. They possess a keen sense of j Justice, as is manifested In their j palavers In the palaver or public meet- j Ing house which each village possesses, j The men hunt, fight and trade. They I trade In rubber. Ivory, mahogany and spices. "On the shoulders of the women fall j the chief responsibility of livelihood. ! They clear a little new ground patch, grow their gardens and prepare the j food, which is served to the men In j the palaver houses. All the luxuriant j growth of a tropic forest is theirs. Ba- j nanas. pineapples and sweet potatoes j they have In wild profusion. The i sweet potatoes grow from the banks of j the cliffs and over the houses when not cut down. "Because the women do all the work ! the men who are able to afford them ' have many wives. 'One wife, doctor!' exclaimed a man of my town in surprise. 'No, no; say five at least! Five ; might do. but one wife! She could i never support me.' And Indeed she j could not, for I have known him to : have fifteen and twenty guests for two months in succession. Headmen j have from forty to ninety wives. Ev- j cry wife is bought. Quaint dogs of fox terrier type that they have always had. 6heep with hair as fine as that of a horse, beautiful goats that are never i milked and all manner of articles of : trade go Into the bargain. Quantity i is nothing, variety everything. Once j you buy a wife she Is Insured to you. ; If she elopes, she is returned or re- j placed. If she dies, she is replaced or j your money is refunded. Nor do you j take the first girl offered In her stead j unless she pleases you. Satisfaction is i guaranteed. Marriage is abject slavery, but man must have the goods with which to buy his wife. The girls are sold at five years of age. Rich old ! men buy them up in large numbers. cornering the market and depriving j young men of wives. This frequently j means trouble. Almost all of their ; wars come of a woman's elopement or j abduction. They are scrupulous about j marrying any one in the remotest way ; related to their clan. j "A male child is made brave by i throwing red pepper in its eyes. On j the same principle young men about to J go to war are made brave by swallowing live hornets. Only those who are not bewitched go to war. These wear hair, teetli. nails and splinters of ancestral skulls as cbanns. "Thev Inlieve strongly in a life be yond, but they worship nothing. They t believe there is a great creating spirit who has no care for the work of his i hand. Death, they believe. come of j being bewitched- The men are buried '
t -it L-ji..-.tr a t Lie iiki ut p&iivct ; use and the women and children bej nd the houses. Below the surface j the earth, where the dead all lie. tey believe there exists a town of i louts, where life goes on as h. re. A j'W believe there is one life space j metlmes between this life and t:Host ;fe. when the spirit lives in a wild ' limal. generally a gorilia or el phaut. "bile highly superstitious most of
im. as I said, worship nothing, t lve known four or five kings. l:ow'er, who secretly maJe prayer to sastral skulls or a graven ini::Te. .range to say, they know of the flood aditionally." . DEFORESTING MAINE. ortT Teora to See the End of Sprnce tVlth Present Methods. In 1SS0 there were seven pulp and j reive paper mills In Maine, having a j tpital invested of about ?2.5OO.t.00. At j Ircsent there are thirty pulp mills and i Irenty-eight paper mills, with a daily pacity of aliout 2,105 tons of pulp j tad paper. The amount of capital ia- ! te-led in the business is not far from t0.000.000. These mills consume about i 50,000.000 feet of lumber each year, j "here are ground wood pulp mills and : ueinical fiber i:iill.-i. Three plants use j loplar wood only In making pulp. ; "bile others use spruce wood mainly. ' though a few mills use small quantiles cf poplar, fir, pine and hemlock. Ixperiments of a successful character bve been made looking to the utilizalon of birch, beech and ash wood, and is predicted that soon every species hard and soft wood will be used In tie manufacture of pulp, writes the iugusta (Me.) correspondent of the Sew York Post. S. W. Matthews, chief of the Maine iureau of Industrial and labor statisrfes. says that to supply the pulp and lumber mills of the state requires ibout G00.000.000 feet of spruce lumber jearly. He estimates that the amount f available spruce timber In the whole Sate of Maine today approximates 27.000.000,000 feet. "Assuming." he adds, "that the yisj.rly demand from the pulp and lumber mills will for many years be not far from 000,000.000 feet of spruce, it will take a period of more than forty years to cut over the whole spruce producing section, a period sufficiently long for spruce to grow from twelve to eighteen Inches In diameter. But there are some dangers now menacing the forests of Maine which should be avoided. The reckless and unnecessary waste In leaving so much of the tree In the woods should cease at once. More care should be taken in yarding the logs and In hauling them to the streams or railroads, and all unnecessary destruction of small trees should be avoided. If timber land owners will see to it. the forest area of the state will be msde to yield a perpetual annual Income." DIEDR1CK NOT MAROONED. Ir. Psrjr Sara Restraint Hlsht Have Made Htm Violent. Mrs. Peary, wife of Lieutenant Peary, returned to South Portland. Me., the other day and promptly denied the report that Dr. Diedrick was marooned, says the New York World. The doctor, says she, left the ship on a hunting trip, as it was supposed, but the boat brought back a letter from him stating that he would not return to the ship. He asked to have furs and provisions sent to him. Dr. Cook and others went ashore and argued all night with him. He positively refused to go back and said he would stay with a party of natives. It was not deemed proper to attempt to compel him to return to the Windward because of his peculiar mental state. It was thought that possibly he j might recover if left on shore, but In j the opinion of Dr. Cook he was In dan- j ger of becoming violently insane If j taken back. j Snilai Malclntr Proarresa. With the object of encouraging agriculture In the Sudan the British government has tentatively begun to purchase the crops raised by the fellahs, says the London Mall. Special commissions have been appointed for the regulation and establishment of titles to real property in town and country. These commissions settle the questions at issue on the spot- The continuous possession of a piece of ground for five years is regarded as sufficient evidence of title. The prohibition to grow tobacco has been withdrawn. An experiment in colonization has been carried out in the districts along the Blue and White Niles with two disbanded Sudanese battalions, but even so soon as this there is a considerable improvement in the condition of affairs in the Sidan. Colombia. Sow blow ye winds a steady g-ale Across the sparkling main As strains Columbia's snowy sail To win toe cup again. Kor shift nor lull, but hill and strong Sweep o'er the foamy sea And bear our gallant yacht along To goai of victory. Full oft our yachtsmen, trae. bare sbowa Their skill to bold the cup; Full oft Britannia's had to own That we can do her up! JCow once aain, O Euros, play A fair game for the two White steeds that breast the ocean spray. That's all we aa cf you. A clou!ess fefcy. a bracing breeze, A start exact and fair; Our bra w Columbia with ease Ts victory shcu?-i boar. W ask no farors in tbe race. We crave no ssnemre. But may Co'umbia set the pace. And may fcer fame endureSo. here's a bumper an3 a cheer To captims and to cr?ws! Td tra e a bon-7r still be dear Wboe'er ea!l win or loe. TbtKjjrfc "air i.'olurntia take the game Cn Shairrock win mitb ease, afay still t;r motto, aii the same. Be ""Banes aTs the seas!" Emiie Fukiiarit in Boston Glob.
3, 1901.
ELECTRIC PRINTING. The Cnentlcala t sed In the Frleaeoreeae Proeeaa. An account of ti. interesting process of electrolytic printing devised by Mr. Fricse-Greene was given in a lecture by U. C. Darling to the Koyal Artillery institution last year and Is published In the proceedings of that society. The object of the Inventor is the supersession of printing Ink, with its accompanying complications. The same presses and type can be nsed as heretofore, but Instead of inking the type the latter is connected to the negative line of some source of electricity. The paper used is Impregnated with suits ble chemicals, while the pressure rollers are connected to the positive line. A current accordingly traverses the paper as it passes through the press, and the chemicals ling decomposed thereby a sharp impression of the type appears on the surface of the paper. The amount of chemicals needed to give a good impression is small. Thus In one experiment with a silver nitrate paper the current used was measured, and on deducting therefrom the amount of silver libera Nil It appears that an eight page newKpuper could be printed with the liberation of 0.13-1 grain of silver. Of course silver nitrate, though convenient for. experimental work, is unsuitable for practical use. since a paper impregnated with this salt turns black on exposure to light- The chemicals originally suggested for use In the industrial development of this scheme were a mixture of manganese sulphate and nitrate of soda, both of which are very cheap. This yielded an Impression of a very dati brown, which tends to become blinker with age. Other salts have, however, been discovered which give perfect!;.- black prints, the Impression, It Is stated, being sharper tha-i can be obtained with Ink. The rate of production Is very great, the experliut-nt going to show that some 30.000 Impressions per tiour are quite feasible, aud It Is Ksstb!e to print on both sides of the paper, which Is of course essential If the process Is to compete with the older methods. By suitably selecting the impregnating salts prints can be obtained in a great variety of color. It has further been suggested that the method might be applicable to the typewriter, the Inking riblHin being done away with and the preired paper used In conjunction with metallic type connected to the negative main of an electric lighting circuit. A modification of this scheme bas been suggested by Mr. Wren of the United States weather bureau. In this a little book the size of an ordinary type replaces the type wheel or keys. This block is built up of a very great number of very fine wires, eacli insulated from the other. These wires are connected In groups to the keys, the arrangement of each group being such that on putting It In circuit the letter corresponding to the key depressed Is printed on the paper. Engineering. Some Thine;. Melba Doean't Want. Mme. Nellie Melba enjoys meeting her friends In the most simple way. She does not hedge herself about with guards to keep people from her. Therefore a recent injunction of hers Is of much Interest. In Paris she met an American millionaire who Is on the shady side of fifty and has great charm of manner and a good sense of humor. lie asked Mme. Melba for the privilege of bringing to see her one or two Philadelphia friends who were staying In Paris, She turned and said very earnestly: "Now. Mr. C. do you really warn to be a good friend of mine? If you do. I want you to keep absolutely these rules that I have given to my best friends. I don't want to meet auy young man. I don't want to meet nny oor man. I don't want to meet any stupid man. I don't want to meet inauy women. and I don't want to meet any who are not lov-ly and well dressed and brilliaut." . "San. I Bow." The imiisp"! o ! I .iit-nomfnon of a rainbow (i.odiici-d '.v the sun shining not on rain '.rops. hi;t on particles of sand susn-n'li-d in tti n!r by wind, was witnessed titer a p:iu of the Great Salt lake rwvDiIy by Professor James E. Taliuage of the University of L'tab The colors were very brilliant, and there was a secondary bow visible The main bow was ft'ily double ibe width of an ordinary rainbow. Only a segment of St was set-u. The (sand was oolitic, consisting of calcareous epher ules of fairly uniform size, ranging between the limits of No. S and No. lu shot, wbit-h are polished and exhibit a pearly luster. Professor Talmae point out that the production of tbe bow must be due to reflection from tbe out er surface? of the apherules and can not be explained ou the principle ot refraction and total re6wtion. generally applied to the explanation of tbe rainliow. The larsest Neebive fn the west ! claimed by Lexington. Ill In the bridge tf Tbe Alton railroad over the 1 Mackinaw river a reat colony of the j Insects have established quarters. The i bive is in the main span, which Is YZ; t feet Ion?, and the stretch of comb i j fully that length. Bonn Ami The Finest Cleaner Made Cleans knives, forks & plates.
ELECTRIC PILLS Benefit is Immediate ind f crmananl
Restores the Power intended I1 men ihould haw if it bas been wasted and destroyed t xcessea, A bass. Indiscretion of Youth or Oviots. : does mi with that urea, wmnr, kjiisi .m obolV reeling. Nerroosand Sieerles N ictits.WI , L . t. . . . . Stairs. ,UI hP rat K ana fc. w .i. .--. - - - -rresned. young- again, and I He worth liln Completely icDuimtme ... . .... - is sufficient to eura most :ases. end ennneh to ptv its worth to the roost severe. i. pet bos. or full guaranteed cura tl a boses for oo. ao k sf.asaataa A fwi W aval talk a"M lwl MBe DO coantce. k - In o iy or refund your money. hici i prooT tnat wo mustiuio " r in plain jrrsppet . on r--eipt of price. ELECTRIC PILL COMPANY T5 WT JaaasON STeT. CHICAGO ILU A. G Luken & Co., G30 31ain St. Charles L.. Ma (raw, 201 Ft. Wayne At. Don't Be Foo D! Take the geovAae. original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Made only by Madidon Medl cine Co., Madison, Wka. It keeps you well. Cur trad mark cut en each package. Price, 35 cent. er sola In bulk. Accrpt no substl" aswpsrM tsss Ak your dr i:;kiU OUR LAl'NDRV PLANT is equipped with everything necessary to do satisfactory work Customers need haver no hesitation in sending their most will be handled tenderly and returned in perfect condition. Riclnnond Steam Laundry has become celebrated through the fine quality of its work. Everything is done nght. A postal card will bring messenger. O. W. WALTER Prtp M9sN. Phnna . FIRB ALA RBI BOXES iriRST DISTRIDT. South of Main, West of Seventh Strte 12, First and south C, Piano factory 18, Second and south B 14, Fourth and south D 15, Fifth and south B; 16, Fifth and south H 18, Seventh and south C SEOOMD DISTRICT. if mth of Main, between 7th and 11th sta 21, Eighth and Main 23 Eighth and south El 24, Seventh and south G 25, Ninth ard south A 28, Tenth and south C 27, Eleventh and Main 28, Eleventh and south J :thiro oistrirt. South of Main, East of Eleventh Stree. 31, Twelfth and south B 82, Twelfth and south E 34, Fourteenth and Main 85, Fourteenth and south C SA, Eighteenth and south A 87, Twentieth and Main FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Msin. Wert of 10th st. to Piver. 41, Third ard Main, Robinson's shop, 42, Third and north C 43, Citv Buildirg. Fire Headquarters 45, C-aar, Scott St Co 4rt. No. 1 r"-e VoTipe, north 8ib street 47, Champion Mills 48, Tenth and north I flFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Sevastopol. B. West Third and Chestnut 61, West Third and National road 62, West Third and Kinsey 58, West Third and Richmond sumt,' 54, Earlham College 65, State and Boyer 56, Grant and Ridge 67, Hunt and Maple 68, Grant and Sheiidan 59, Bridge avenue. Paper Mill SIXTH DISTRICT. North of D Street, East o T-nth Stre 61. Railroad Shor 62. Button's Coffin Factory 83. Hooaier Drill Works 64, Wayne Agricultural Works 65, Richmond City Mill Works 66, Westcott Carriage Co 67, Thirteenth and north H SEVENTH DISTRICT. Between Main and North D sts, E of lOth 7, Ninth and north A 71, Eleventh and north B 72, Fourteenth and north C 73, No. S hose house, east end 74, Eighteenth and north C 75, Twenty-Second and'hoTth E SPECIAL SICMAIS 2-2-2 Patrol call 1-8-1 Fire out 9-9-Jt Fire pressure Fire pressure o1 10-10-10 Natural gas off lO Natnral rs rf WorUliJgJXiRlit and Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing tbat ever was made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. Tbes-e pills change weakness into strength, listlessness to energy, brain-fag to mental power.. They're woriderful in buiidirjg up the per box. Sold Co., druggists. health. Only 25c by A. G. Luken & My bart and hand another claimed His plea had cotce too late. It's ever thus with people without pluck and vim, Take Rocky Mountain Tea, don't get left again. Ask your druggist.
