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Anmmnmncnt EXCLUSIVE AGENCY SHOE FOR WOMEN Val'dlez {Mercantile Co., Inc. true: VALUES ►! On the basis ot Security and Service we solicit your account. WE DO A BANKING BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY. VALDEZ BANK & TRUST CO. Job Printing At The Prospector Office COMMENCE WORK ILES POLE LINE Contractors Establish Camp On the Beach—Will Parallel the Old Line. Sanders and Carter have com me'noed the work of erecting the pole line from the lies power plant to Valdez. Three men were sent across the hay yesterday and they have established camp near the power building on the beach and will cut a right of way through the timber, about 75 feet above the line1 used by the Alaska Water, Light & Telephone Company. The present plans call for the use of about 175 poles, which will bring the pow er to the junction of Hobart street and Keystone avenue, op posite the Arctic Hotel, from which place it will be conveyed about the town. LOCAUilS All new movies at the Orpheum tonight. A Life For a Kiss, at the Or pheum tonight. Joe Bourke returned from Landlock bay yesterday. Splendid change of program at the Orpheum tonight. Pink’s Garters at the Orpheum tonight. A comic comedy. \V. A. Dickey, of Landlock bay, arrived in Valdez last night. The regular Wednesday night dance at Moose Hall. " Dancing tonight in Moose Hall at 9:30 sharp. Home waltz at twelve. Jack McLean returned from the Ry.Strom property on Land lock bay. Tom Donohue returned to Val dez after visiting the Schlosser property. W. A. Dickey has his bunkers filled with picked ore, for ship ment lo Tacoma. Sidney Drake, returned to Val dez last night from the Camer on-Johnson claims. Geo. Reinke. the watch repairer and jeweler, is at the Valdez Drug company. John L. Steele made a visit to Landlock bay, returning , last night on the Copper Nugget. When in need of bicycle pumps, bells, grips and other supplies and parts call on Owen E. Meals. Dr. Ryslrom is driving a raise in order to ventilate his mine. The work is being pushed rapid *>'• _ | Charles Bush and party of friends returned from an outing at Shoup bay, with plenty of ber ries. The Copper Nugget, in com mand of Captain Wiilliam Cyrus Harrington, reached Valdez last night. Word was received on the last boat that a baby boy had been born to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brown. C. H. Wilcox left last night for Cordova to become editor of the Cordova Times, the weekly paper of the railroad town. The Valdez Transfer company is having a pew foundation plac ed under the office building. Gus Djarf is doing the work. E. E. Campbell, the mining engineer, returned to Valdez af ter making an inspection of the Three Man Mining company. General Agent B. F. Watson, of. the Alaska ,Coaet Co., was aboard the Sampson^ on his way to Seattle on a* business trip. Word received on the Samp son indicates that the salmon are running heavily in the Cook In let waters and that all the can neries and salteries are working to capacity. : - '• ' .. Mrs. J. C. Dieringer, who was taken ill a few days ago, is im proving, although still confined to her bed. Judge J. J. Finnegan, of Sew ard, was a passenger u»n last night’s steamer for Cordova. He is going into the new diggings. Mr. Stein, a large owner in the Cameron-John'son company, re turned last night from the prop erty much pleased with the prop erty. There was no show at the Or pheum last night because of the lack of power, but a special pro gram will be run tonight to make j up for lost time. The Ellamar Mining company is constructing a long wharf to the reef, near the mine, which will greatly aid in the loading of ore and unloading of supplied. .Eli and Louie Larsoft; have com pleted the cement sidewalk in front of their property on Key stone avenue. Cement sidewalks are becoming popular in I his town. George Treat is having the former Cantwell studio enlarged and will make a number of im provements in the structure. Eli and Louie Larson are doing the work. L. A. Lavensaler returned to Valdez after making an inspec tion of the Fidalgo-Alaska Cop per eompay’s work, which has been discontinued for several months. ■A raft of 400,000 feet of lum ber is expected some time today or tomorrow fro.ua Montague is land, where, under Manager Fin ical, the Copper River J,umber company, ha's had a logging ■camp. The launches n. F. M. and Elvira are towing the big raft and the Nellie M., owned by Jacobson, left yesterday to ascerttain if any further assistance is necessary. The sawmill will resume work next week and the raft will be cut into lumber and stored in the yard. If you want all the new* all the time, read the Prospector. CINHAMON OF CEYLON. How the Aromatic Bark Is Prepared and Packed on Board Ship. More than 200 years ago the Dutch rulers of Ceylon, anxious to retain their monopoly of the pre cious spice for which that island is famous, enacted a law that made it a capital offense to buy or sell the wild jungle cinnamon, then the only sort known. The plants, wherever found, were held to be the property of the state. If a shrub chanced to spring up in a man’s dooryard, he could neither destroy nor use it un der severe penalties. Things are different hov.\ Today the cultivation is something like that of a willow copse, straight young shoots springing up round the stump of the plant previously cut. These shoots are cut every second year. They measure two inches in circumference. Many of them are sold as walking sticks and find a ready market among steamer passengers, who think that there must be a special charm in a cinna mon stick, though in truth it is hard to distinguish it from common hazel. The real thing to be secured is of course the highly aromatic inner bark. First the leaves are stripped off and then the bark is split from end to end with asharp knife that has a curved point. With this, aid ed by the fingers, the bark is care fully removed in long pieces. These are shaped up and left to sodden, so as to facilitate the next process, that of scraping off the outer rind. In order to do this each piece of bark is placed on a round piece of wood and carefully scraped with a knife, the almost nude brown work ers sitting on the ground and using their toes as an extra hand to steady the end of the stick. The bark is then left to dry in the sun, when it rolls itself up into tight quills. These are neatly sort ed and packed, three or four inside one another, made up into bales covered with cloth and are then ready for export. Cinnamon is so sensitive tnat care has to be taken with regard to its surroundings on board snip, as a bale of fine cinnamon will lose much of its delicate aroma if packed among bales of coarser bark. Vari ous expedients have b6en tried to remedy this. The Portuguese and Dutch isolated the baleB by packing them in cocoanut fiber or in hides, trat it is found that the only real safeguard is to pack bags of pepper between the bales.—New York . Tribune. 4. A. A. M. Dieringer , Valdez Transfer Company General Trucking and Freight* ing to all interior points LIVERY ar d FEED STABLE STORAGE Teaming of all kinds' Positively no coal delivered iUnless paid for in advance PROFESSIONAL Dr. H. COCKER1LLE Graduate., of National University Washington,^. C.” DENTIST Phone 92 aZFeurteenfyearsIin Office in Whaling building VALDEZ Next to cable office DR. GERMAN phone .9 THE DENTIST Office rooms over Owl Drug store. Office hours 9 a. m., to6t>. m., 7 p, m„ to 9 p. m. Sundays by appointment All work guaranteed C. E. BUNNELL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Offices Wall Street Phone 31 VALDEZ E. E. RITCHIE LAWYER phone i3« Valdez, Alaska MINING ENGINEER F. butterworth: Civil Engineer and'1 ' U. S. Deputy Land and Mineral Surveyor ®^ue Printing Res. ph0ne, ]sg L. W. STORM. E. M. Valdez, alaska > Reports oh Mines Patent Surveys General Mining Engineering Phone No. toa EO. F. WHITE The Assayer Assaying and Ore Testing CORRECT RESULTS No More, No Less VALDEZ, ALASKA CAMP VALDEZjNo. 10 Meet every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock In Eagle Hall. All members are requested to attend. S. McNIEOE. Arctic Chief VALDEZ LODGE NO. 6,1.0. O.F. K1,'! Meets every Monday at 8 p. m- in ODD FELLOWS HALL Visiting Brothers especially invited Wm. Thomas, h. o. P. S. Hunt. p. G.,rSEC PIONEERS OF ALASKA IGLOO NO. 7. Meets every first and third Mon day of each month. All visit ing Brothers welcome. E. G. AMES, Secretary. Valdes lodge No 168. Free and Accepted Masons Regular Communications first Wednesday Id each month in McKinley Bell Visitors always welcome. < James B. Patterson,,W. M C. C. Reynolds. See F o E VALDEZ AERIE No. 1971 M«et emi Friday. 8 p. «n.I Ewlt Hal