The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 25, 1904, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1904. DELECATES NAME THEIR EDITORS Methodist General Confer-| ence Selects Men to Direct | the Chureh Publications EPISCOPAL RESIDENCES Prolonged Warm Debate at|| Los Angeles Session (Jveri the Choice of Cities| et May 24.—The Meth- e held two long frem 8:30 a. m. | { adjournment greater part ken up in speech- king ident » fixing the places piscog esidences A session editors for T ations were elected, 53 Herald ng omitted t. It will come up for a n after the ort of the rth ague committee shall have to the conference. The | t £ committee on the con- | i f urch was not the benev s special e to-morrow after rec o | rere was very little interest in the | tion of editors, as the field had | thoroughly assed by r Christian rthwestern Thompson; " Rader, A JN F Herd, g ] 2 a T ladelphia member was also . There report to- tions upon the ixteen Bishops to made upon Philip; “foreign ter- ) the mission- i The judiciary { that it might be so | e that the episco- commend a mis- this field, but at this late stage of | a the committee May Join YORK Mothers’ Club. May 24.—After a New York City amended its con- o admit men as as- The ladies an- would gladly re- membership fee spectable person of asion who is in sym- | purposes of the or- Of course, as an assoejate | ill not be allowed to O YOU Our suggestion one. to you free. | building prov | cept, of course, the annual appropria- ! tary may desire. | country. WORK IS BEGUN ON T HE NEW BUILDING FOR AGRICULTURE Proposed Structure, While Magnificent in Design and Detail, Is Said to Be Inadequate in Its Plans to Meet the Demands of the Most Expansive of the Various Government Departments + 5 = - N W AGRICULT . WHICH IS REND! ) BY THE T‘HEA\'QMENA!‘ RANCH OF 1 ¥ RVICE, THE STRUCTUR OF THE MOST SUBSTAN- AND IMPOSINC 1 7 SEE R i g essential part of their business. Any- CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTO WASHINGTON, May Stakes have | thing the Agricultural Departmen | been driven in the mali—that stretch of | WAR!S they think it onght Aoty :n‘;“g | green extending a mile west from the | pa)¢ “mil country, Capitol=for the new home of the De-| what th ey get to- | partment of Agriculture. It is to be a A y to “‘go.” beautiful home, although it will cost }l'nv! appropriation gor (lhe work of ust $1.000,000 short of what Secretary | the department is less than one per T L O o o spend upo | Cont Of the sum of the annual appro- i ol ¢ G ’ tions, less than one dollar per farm, it. Secretary Wilson is therefore not at b tmscogil s AT all satisfied with it, although confei department that turns pocket of the Govern- condition the farmer ing tk the present housing it is a vast improvement upon f the department. the r th That is not much of a co ion, how- | 15 B¢ to the Congress, l?E n y g 8 | partment do all the good it can. ever, for it can hardly be said that the | "0 o0 W Ghation of the expanding | gartment is housed ac al—it is| A% *3 TSATON 00 RGBS Niiipit: | away in a dozen haphazard| ca¢ion of its members or employes will more or le d s a,nd mav-- erve. When Secretary Wilson took AR rom st tral building, most| oharge seven years ago the census of of which is rented and few of which To-day it the department totaled 1900. were remotely designed for its use. The | ;'S 00P 0 Rt I ore than doubl- museum of the department, the de-|.3 And the increase during the last struction of which would be a great| w, years is above that of the pre- loss, is In an old ramshackle wooden i This exgining’ . the | ceding vear labels on the residences and barns all about the neighborhood as showing them to be in the service of the de- partmant and accounts as well for the anxiety of the Secretary as to the ade- quacy of the new building. He would build for the future a little, taking intg account that when the present build- ing was constructed only thirty-six vears ago it was deemed all sufficient. There are more department workers building. Many of the bureaus are quite as poorly disposed; some of them are broken up through not being able to get all their members into the one ded. the proposed structure | improves this condition suggests the question as to how much. It will bring the many bureaus that are now em- braced by the department into compact groups about the executive building, So that to sa but it will not leave them much room side of that building now than in. to expand. And that is the difficulty.| Ang why this expansion? The law For this department is one of rapid| . cating the department defines its expansion, and there is no limit under | “designs and duties” to be “to acquire the law by which it was created, ex-| and to diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture in the most general and comprehensive sense of the word.” By this leave the Secretary may go into merchandising if he chose as did Secretary Rusk when he introduced cornmeal into Europe and Secretary Wilson when he sent American dairy products to London to test the conditions under which they might enter into competition with European goods. He can explore the tion. And the chances are that as Con- | gress is educated to the good works of | this department year by year, so, year | by year, will it raise the denomination of the treasury warrant as the Secre- And not the depart- ment itself will work upon Congress to this end as will the farmers of (he‘ BULLETINS ARE WELCOME. That insidious little “bulletin” that| fiies =o frequently from printing presses | underneath the agricultural building | into the mail boxes of the farmers all| over the country has come to be an in- | stitution with them, and they have through it grown to look upon this de- partment as peculiarly their own—an earth’s surface to discover if it have in any hidden or remote place any de- irak diversified soil or climate, or If there be any art or Insect or plant thdt might combat the ailments of our na- tive products. By this right he has discovered and brought here the won- derful fertilizing insect by which the growing of Smyrna and Capri figs is brought to perfection in California; dates have been brought from Persia and Africa that have made themselves at home in California, new strains of rice from Japan have been domesticat- ed in Louisiana and Tex Sumatra’s tobacco is made to grow in Connecti- cut, and macaroni wheat is found to thrive when transplanted in the semi- arid regions of the Northwest; insects have been brought from far South Africa and beetles from China and Japan that have been set to destroy the destroyers of our fruit trees. Every foot of soil in the whole country is be- is a timely ite- i i ing tested and mapped, showing its You need it “{e g|ve:- it needs or its best capabilities; the You will be in- farmer is being met indiv d and i i "0 and “‘shown how, ed, terested in one of these it min own Dest caps o4 young are being interested in agricul- BATH They come in domestic and imported crash--a large va- riety to select from--in plain and fancy colors--all sizes to fit any one. PRICE $3.50 Better Bath Slippers --a comple = selection from 75¢c to $2.00 carry the these goods for KEARNY HOUSE COATS We are direct importers and largest stock of home comfort garment--per-- fectly tailored. A good one $5.00 ROOS BROS. | tural pursuits; farmers are not only shown the necessity and great advan- | tage of good roads, but the Secretary undertakes to show the experts how the best roads may be made better. All these things he does and a great many others and still a great many others he is going to do when he gets round to it. RISE OF A DEPARTMENT. The work of the department is di- vided up among various bureaus, di- visions and offices, each with its chief and corps of experts. First there Is the weather bureau, the work of which is most familiar to all the people. The work of this bureau was one of the first undertakings of the department. It was inaugurated by the first Com- missioner of Agriculture, Isaac New- ton, while the present department of the Government jyas a mere division of the patent office. It was at first given over to the War Department, subsequently taken back by the Ag- ricultural Department, again handed back to the War Department and final- ly, thirty years after Commissioner Newton's suggestion, developed into a full-fledged bureau, with Willis L. Moore its present chief. The bureau maintains stations throughout the United States and West Indies, 180 in number, and from their reports fore- casts are made up covering forty-eight hours and these are published broad- cast. Through an arrangement with those Governmendts advices are re- ceived from Mexico and Canada, the Azores and also along the Western coast of Europe. This bureau also keeps advised through similar stations numbering nearlv 300 d4s to the condi- tion of the rivers, and fgretells floods. It gathers statistics on climate and the condition of the crops and dis- tributes the information and is con- etantly experimenting within and ex- tending the lines of its province, The bureau of animal industry in- vestigates the problems and difficul- ties that beset the live stock indus- try. It fights disease in a compre- hensive and scientific way, inspects the stock living and the food products when entering into interstate and ex- port commerce and has been instru- mental in breaking down barriers of trade by sending inspectors abroad to countries where American cattle ana hogs were under the ban, as, for in- ROBES ones also. in the West. A AT POST | stance, in England and Germany. This | bureau maintains a special dairy di- | vision which not only gathers and dis- | tributes information, but maintains a | system of inspection. It also maln- | tains an experiment station. The chief of the .bureau is D. E. Salmon. The Bureau of Plant Industry studies plant life in all its relations to agriculture. It has charge of the ex- tions; searches the world for new plants and seeds and distributes vast | quantities over the country without charge. This bureau is the one that, perhaps, gets closer than any to the agricultural community and its work is of the most far-reaching im- portan The chief of the bureau is Dr. Beverly T. Galloway. The Bureaun of Forestry was allowed by Congress in 1899—just five years ago—the sum of $28,520. For this vear its provision is $350,000, which is a sign of the expansion of this par- ticular branch of the department. The bureau stands between the for- ests and the lumber men for both of their sakes and for the sake of agri- culture and other interests as well. It labors for the conservative lumbering of the forests, it studies commercial- ly valuable trees, takes measures to protect the forests against fire and gives practical assistance to tree plant- ers. shown in the recent creation of the bureau from a “‘division” of another bureau and in the large funds al- lowed it. GREAT WORK BEING DONE. Dr. Harvey W. Wiley has been with the Agricultural Department for twenty-one years. He was conducting experiments and making analyses years before there was any Bureau of Chemistry, but now he is at the head of such a department and 120 men | are employed in its service. He can remember when $15,000 was gracious- tural Department and this year he was granted $50,000 for his department. department, having been organized with its establishment in 1862, It di- rects its attention to tion of soils, fertilizers and irrigation waters, insecticides, foods of men and animals, quality of materials used in road construction, inspection of ex- port and import food products. This terse statement covers a wide fleld of experiments. There is a food labora- tory, a special sugar laboratory, a dairy laboratory, a road material laboratory, soil and fertilizer labora- tory, insecticide and agricultural water laboratory, drug laboratory, contracts laboratory. The bureau co- operates with the Association of Of- ficial Agricultural Chemists, with the experiment stations and also with other departments of the Government. | There is the bureau of soils, charged with the study of soils in their rela- tion to practical agriculture. The great work of this bureau is the classi- fication and mapping of soils in ag- ricultural regions throughout the country, showing the distribution of the various soil types with a view to determining their adaptability to cer- tain crops and their management and treatment. This is an immense con- tract, but is being steadily prosecuted with excellent and valuable results. The work has been carried on in thir- ty-four States and Territories, Of the area covered in the several States, North Carolina leads the list accord- ing to the latest report, with 4646 ;&yare miles, California following with 921, An investigation is also carried on as to the materials and methods in- volved in artificial fertilization and its influence upon the criginal soils. Extensive investigations have been and are still being carried on with re- gard to the alkali problem. Milton ‘Whitney is chief of the bureau. SYSTEMATIC STUDY OF PESTS. The study of insects affecting fleld crops, orchards, forests, etc., and in- sects in relation to diseases of man and other animals in all the wide ap- plication of the term is under the di- vision of entomology, L. O. Howard chief. The work, of course, is directed at a cure in every case. The division has been having a long and expensive contest with the cotton-boll weevil, for which Congress appropriated $258,- 000, and despite which the pest still remains in devastating activity in the cotton belt. That a cure will be ulti- mately discovered and applied, how- ever, under this patient, persistent and comprehensive Government system of investigation as it could not be by pri- vate and sporadic attempts, there can be no doubt. It was this division that dispatched C. L. Marlatt to China, who brought back Wwith him several colonies of the ladybird proving so ef- fective against the San Jose scale and which brought also the fig fertilizing insect from Smyrna. The division of biological survey studies the geographical distribution of animals and plants and maps the natural life zones of the country. It encourages the preservation of the beneficial and the destruction of the injurfous species. C. Hart Merriam is chief of the division. The bureau of statistics is an im- portant one. The statistician, through the agency of about 250,000 correspond- ents, collects statistics and makes es- timates concerning the products of ag- He figures up the area sown to all the leading crops and through the growing season collects and pub- lishes statements as to their condition. perimental and test gardens and sta- | other | The importance of the work is | ly alowed by Congress for the Agricul- | The bureau is one of the oldest in the | the investiga- | MOTHER GIVES INFANT POISO Steamfitter’'s Wife Her Child and Then| She Takes Her Own Life! {SON GIVES THE ALARM Kills Despondent Woman Causes | a Double Tragedy in Her Home in Los Angeles| LOS ANGELES, May 24—Mrs. M. G. | Stratton, wife of a steamfitter, took the | life of her four-month-old babe by ad. | ministering a dose of carbolic acid mixed with laudanum, and then com- ! mitted suicide by taking a dose of the same poison at her heme in this city | late to-da | The discovery of the bodies of the mother and child was made by a six- | year-old son of the dead woman upon his return from school. His cries for, help attracted the neighbors, who found the babe dead and Mrs. Stratton bare-| ly alive. She''died before medical as- sistance could reach her. Mrs. Stratton had been ill and despondent for some | time. She was 28 years old. I ot Sk e MAHON WILL NOT RUN | | FOR COVETED OFFICE Secretary of the American Mining Congress Does Not Desire a Re-Election. | ! PORTLAND, Or, May 24—Irwin | | Mahon, for years secretary of the| American Mining Congress, has an- | nounced that he will not be a candi- date for re-election at the coming | convention, which is to meet in this }chy during August next. Competition | for this office is always keen, as it is | ! expected the man chosen will become | | secretary of the department of mines {and mining, which it is firmly be- | | lleved will be added to the President’s | | Cabinet shortly. | —_————————— Reprieve for Condemned Chinese. SACRAMENTO, May 24.—Governor Pardee "to-day granted a six months’ | reprieve for Yung Sing Bow, a Chinese, who was sentenced to be hanged next | Friday for murder. Physicians of the State Hospital who examined the Chi- nese say he is insane. & A special foreign agent reperts upon | these crops in other countries. He es- | timates also the number and kind and | condition of animals on the farms and | ranches of the United States. He sends | | his reports out by telegraph and by | poster through the maill for the in- formation of the farmer and others in- | terested. | An important division of this bureau | is that of foreign markets. It works | to the end that the export trade in ag- ricultural products may be extended. | | It gathers information as to the status | of supply and demand throughout the | world and distributes the same. Chief | of the bureau is John Hyde. Chief of | i ol 1 | the division of foreign markets is George K. Holmes. Then there is the office of experi-| | ment stations, of which A. C. True is| director, and the experiment statioms ! themselves in Alaska, Hawaii, Porto | Rico and several in the United States. | The office maintains relations with in- !stitutions for agricuitural education |and research throughout the United | States and aids in the formation of farmers' institutes. The office is very | effective in that it takes the initlation {along interesting lines. It publishes | the Experiment Station Record, com- prising abstracts of the bulletins and | annual reports of the experiment sta- tions of the United States. Irrigation investigation and nutrition investiga- tion are conducted by this office. There is the office of public road in- quiries, of which Martin Dodge is di- | rector. It prosecutes inquiries touch- | |ing the making and management of systems of roads and conducts experi- | ments. | FINE BUILDING PROPOSED. | Finally, there is the division of pub- | | lication, which gives out with a lib-/ |eral. hand the information secured | through the experiments of the bu- reaus and divisions, as well as the| army of agents at home and abroad. George William Hill is the chief. He| compiles the Year Book, edits the re- | ports and send' out the farmers’ bul- | letins. | The importance of a department or| | the Government devoted to the fur-| thering of the interests of agriculture ! | was recognized by Washington, who, | as President,”suggested it. The first appropriation for this purpose was| made in 1839 and amounted to $1000 for the distribution of seeds. An in-| dependent department was created in 1862, with Isaac Newton the first Com- | missioner. The department was raised to the first rank in the execu- tive branch in 1888, during the term | | of Commissioner Norman J. Colman, 1 who less than a month after being ap- pointed Secretary, was succeeded by Hon. Jeremiah M. Rysk. There have been but two successors to the office, Hon. J. Sterling Morton, 1893-1597, and the incumbent, Hon. James Wilson. | From a room in the patent office in | 1862 to the proposed big but said to be inadequate buidling in 1904 is an index to the growth of the department for the future as well as the past. The | | building is to be located just-back of the present building and out of the ! line of Senator Newlands’ vista 900 feet wide from the Capitol to the monument across the mall. This vista is another ! jdea of Washington's, at this late day being carried out by the Newlands bill ! to allow no building within its limits. The arbitrary lines, seeing that no other adequate site has been provided for the big department building, are proving rather embarrassing to its projectors, for it throws the struc- ture close out against B street, with no room to grow additions and wings, and the prediction is made that about the time it is to be occupied there will be need of still rentirig the houses across the street. | The buiiding will comprise three structures, two laboratories flanking the central executive building, but joined to it by covered curtains ana ' corridors. The executive building is to me monumental in character and square, extending front and back be- yond the line of the laboratories, which extend from it 266 feet each way, thus giving to the building the form of a cross. The material will be marble or white granite and, completed, will form one of the most imposing structures in the city. a proper token of the im- | portance and dignity of the great in- dustry in the interest of which it is builded. ‘Extension of Train Service. Service of train 506, leaving San Francisco, foot of Market street, narrow gauge, 4:15 p. m.. | is extended on Saturdays and Sundays from Los Gatos to Santa Cruz. Returning, leaves | ta % ys, 7 a. m., arriving San i'l-:nmm 10:50 a. m.; Mondays, leaves Santa Croz 5:05 a. m, arriving San Francisco 8:50 & m. > — WASHINGTON, May 24—The -boat is to from the Pacific station and go into dock for repairs. Hor place will be taken by the destroyer Perry. | other organs to health. DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. THOUSANDS HAVE ~ KIDNEY TROUBLE AN D DONT KNOW IT To Prove what Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy, will do for YOU, Every Reader of “The Call” May Have a Sampie Bottle Sent Free by Mail Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for more sickness and suffering than any other d fatal results are surc to follow. iscase — therefore, when, through | neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to continue, Your other organs may need attention—but your kidneys most, because they do most and need attention first. If you are sick or ‘“fieel badly,” begin taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because as soon as your kidneys begin to get better they will h:lp all the The mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root will sgt your whole sys- tem right, and the best proof of this is a trial. 53 COTTAGE ST., MELROSE, MASS, Dear Sir: Jan. 1ith, 1904. “Ever since 1 was in the army I baé more or less kidney trouble, and within the pa: ear It became 80 severe and compiicated that suftered everything and was much alarmed— my rength and power was fast leaving me. I maw an advertisement of Swamp-Root and wrote asking for advice. I began the use of the medicine and noted a decided improvement after taking Swamp-Root only a short time. 1 continued its use and am thankful to say that I am entirely cured and strong. In order 10 be very sure about this, 1 had a doctor ex- amine some of my water to-day, and he pro- mnounced it all right and in splendid condition. T know that your Swamp-Root is purely yeg- etable and not_contain any harmful drugs. Thanking you for my complete recov- ery and_recommending Swamp-Root to all sut- ferers, I am.” Very truly yours, * L C. RICHARDSON. You may have a sample bottle i famous kzydney remedy, Swam;{(:’t;’ sent free by mail, post-paid, by which you may test its virtues for such dis- orders as kidney, bladder and uric acid diseases, poor digestion, being obliged to pass your water frequently night and day, smarting or irritation in passing. A tria! will convince anyonz. | brickdust or sediment in the urine, | headache, backache, lame back. dizzi- | ness, sieeplessness, nervousness, heart disturbance due to bad kidnev trouble, kin eruptions from bad blood. neural- | gia, rheumatism. diabetes. bloating. ir- | ritability, worn-out feeling. lack of am- bition, loss of flesh, sallow complexion, or Bright's disease. If your water, when allowed to re- | main undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms a sediment or settiing or has a cloudy appearance, it | is evidenze that your kidneys and | bladder need immediate attention. Swamp-Root is the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist. Hospitals use it with wonderful success in both slizht and severe cases. Doctors recommend it to their patients and use it in their own families, because thev recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most successful remedy. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is for sale at drug stores the world over in bottles of two sizes and two prices—fiity cents and one dollar. Re« member the name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad- dress Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. _EDITORIAL NOTE.—So successful is Swamp-Root in promptly curing even the most distressing cases of kidnev. liver or bladder trou- bles, that to prove its wonderful merits you may have a sample bottle and a book of valuable information, both sent absolutely free by mail. The book contains many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial let- ters received from men and women Swamp-Root is so well known that o.- sample bottle. ton, N. Y., be sure to say vou read cisco Daily Call. The proprietor of of this offer. cured. The value and success of readers are advised to send for a In sending vour address to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Bingham- th'is generous offer in the San Fran- this paper guarantees the genuineness — e e e e e e MANY ENDEAVORERS WILL MEET AT SANTA ROSA} City Is Making Elaborate Prepara- tions to Entertain the Delegates. SANTA ROSA, May from all sections of the State indicate great enthusiasm over the coming State convention of Christian deavor societies, to be held in Santa Rosa from June 29 to July 3 inclusive. The city is making preparations to en- | tertain between 1200 and 1500 dele- gates to the convention and the v ors who will gather at the convention may be greatly in excess of that num- ber. Special trains have been ar- ranged to bring the delegates from Los Angeles and other Southern Califoraia points and these will make the jour- ney to San Jose and stop over night as the guests of the Endeavorers of that city. The San Jose contingent will also travel to this city in a special train. Dr. David P. Anderson, chairman of the executive committee, and his vari- ous sub-committees are making good progress with the arrangements for the convention and it is anticipated that the meeting in Santa Rosa Will be one of the best ever held. —————— MILLIONS ARE PAID BY ORDER IN BENEFITS Report Made on Operation of Insur- ance Plan in Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. LOS ANGELES, May 24.—The con- vention of the Brotherhood of Loco- tive Engineers resumed consideration of its insurance report at to-day's session. the operation of the insurance .plan $12,500,000 has been paid out in ben- efits, averaging at the present time $100,000 monthly to beneficiaries and disabled members. The insurance re- port showed a greater advance in that branch of the brotherhood’s work during the last biennial than at any time in its history. It is hoped by the delegates to reach the work of electing grand of- ficers within the next two or three days. According to the statement of several of the brotherhood leaders, Grand Chief Engineer W.. S. Stone will be elected to fill the position which he now holds by reason of the death of Grand Chief P. M. Arthur. There are two other candidates prom- inently mentioned for the place, H. L. Wills and Matt H. Shay. For the first assistant grand chief engineer F. S. Ingraham has no opposition. For the office of grand guide there ap- pears to be but one name before the convention, that of R. W. Kelly of Los Angeles. ————————— Awards for State Printing. SACRAMENTO, May 24.—Assem- blyman Phil Walsh of Oakland ap- pel.re‘ before the State Board of Ex- 24.—Reports | En- | The report shows that during | aminers this afternoon to urge the !\o!iv}' of making awards for furnish- ing the State printing office with p: | per on flat bids instead of a sliding |scale. Walsh claimed the State had |lost money in the past by not de- manding flat bids. The board will | consider the matter next Friday. —_——— | Printers Re-elect President Lynch. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 24.—It | was announced from the headquarters lof the International Typographical Union to-day that returns from the vote by unions already received insure the re-election of President Lynch over C. E. Hawkes by 7000. Secretary Bramwood is elected over Graham by from 22,000 to 23,000. | Because Its Formula Is Submitted to | Them. " Alexander McMillan, M. D., a promi- | nent physician of Lansing, Michigan, | writes: “On three cases I have tested Herpicide for dandruff and the result has been all that could be desired.” Herpicide is made upon an entirely new principle, that is, that dandruff and | falling hair are caused from a microbe that infests the hair bulb, and, by de- stroying the microb@ one's hair is bound to grow luxuriantly. Herpicide is the only hair remedy that claims to and really does destroy the dandruff germs. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Z T Bears the Signature of There are twenty differen: cinnamon barks, and they cost from 4 to 55c Ib. This ex- plains the market, all but one particular. Schilling’s Best is the best with the coarser pieces picked-out; not thrown-away ; oh no; thev go to some less particular grinder. Meacyback overythiag. :

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