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PHARMACY  AND  CHEMISTRY  AT  THE  WORLD'S  FAIR. 
By  Cari,  G.  Hinrichs,  Ph.C, 
Professor  of  Chemistry,  Marion-Sims  Dental  College. 
{Continued  from  p.  474.) 
V.  THE  PHILIPPINES  '.  A  LAND  OF  PROFESSIONAL  PHARMACISTS. 
When  old  Tom  Benton,  of  Missouri,  said,  "  There  to  the  west, 
there  lies  India,"  he  little  thought  that  when  a  half  century  had 
scarcely  rolled  away,  the  great  railroad  he  then  opened  for  the 
benevolent  assimilation  of  the  commerce  of  India  would  be  carry- 
ing American  soldiers  on  conquest  bent  to  the  bloody  swamps  of 
glory,  malaria  and  mosquitoes  of  the  Philippines — a  country  whose 
men,  customs,  climate  and  products  are  as  mysterious  and  wonderful 
as  the  most  impossible  tales  from  India's  jungles;  a  land  whose 
people  are  small  of  stature  and  intelligent,  but  with  as  much  of  the 
old  Adam  to  the  running  foot  as  any  people  on  the  face  of  the  globe  ; 
islands  where  the  gentle  zephyrs  of  the  typhoon  waft  the  deep  and 
continued  rumblings  of  the  quaking  earth  far  out  to  sea.  Fortu- 
nately there  was  enough  left  after  all  the  natural  and  unnatural  acts 
of  nature  and  man  during  the  past  ten  years  to  bring  to  St.  Louis 
one  of  the  grandest  displays  of  the  Fair,  a  collective  exhibit  worthy 
of  an  empire. 
The  Philippine  Commission,  in  addition  to  showing  the  many 
naked  and  half-naked  tribes  of  the  islands  in  separate  villages, 
have  large  separate  buildings,  namely :  Agriculture,  implements  and 
