Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 187, 13 May 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOXD PAIXADimi AND SU3f-T12L,EtiKAM, FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1910.
Tto Rlcfcrnonu Palladium ui Sin-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 days each week, evenings and Sunday morninfr. Office Comer North 9th and A streets. Horn Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
G. Lni ...... Edltot Cttarle M. MergM. ..Maaaclas EdMer Carl Berakardt Associate Editor W. R. Poaadstoao News Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond $6.00 per ar (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance 1$ 52 His months, In advance 2.60 One month, in advance .......... .45 RURAL ROUTES. One year. In advance '2 f 2 81 it months. In advance 1-J2 One month. In advance 25 Address changed aa often aa desired: both new ana old addresses must be Siven. flubscrlbers will please remit with order, which should be Riven for a specified term: name will not bo entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post (flea aa second class mall matter. 1SJJOLSjusjb.sj.sj Mtf ISM Tha Association of Advertisers (Naw York City) haa mwliii sad eertUUd to the drcnlatlon j et tola publication. Only the ttfures of irtalattoa eoatalasd la Its report an y the iMotiistioi, RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of 23,000 and la crowing;. It is the county seat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agricultural community. It is located due east from Indianapolis 69 tnllea and 4 miles from the state line. Richmond Is a city of homes and of industry. Primarily a manufacturing; rlty, it is also the Jobbing center of Eastern Indiana and enjoys tha retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond is proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yards, its cement sidewalks and beautiful 'shade trees. It has 3 national banks, 2 trust com- ? antes and 4 building; assoclulona with combined resources of over $8,000,000. Number of factories 125: capital Invested $7,000,000, with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of $3,700,000. The total pay roll for tho city amounts to approximately $6,300,000 annually. There are five railroad corn ? antes radiating In eight dtferent directions from the city. Incoming; freight handled daily, 1,750,000 lbs.: outgoing: freight handled dally, 750,000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 cars. Number of pansanger trains dally, 8. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual post office receipts amount to ISO, 000. Total assessed valuation of the city, $15,000,000. Richmond has two interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 13.000. Richmond is the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state, and only second In general Jobbing Interests. It has a piano factory producing; a high grade piano every 15 minutes. It is the leader In the manufacture of traction engines, and produces more threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city in the world. The city's area is 2,640 acres; has a court house costing $500,000; 10 public schools and has tha finest and most complete high achool in the middle west under construction; 3 parochial schools; Karlham college and the Indiana Business College; five splendid fire companies in fine- hose houses; Glen Miller park, the largest and most beautiful park in Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual Chautauqua: seven hotels; municipal electric light plant, under auccessf ul operation, and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition; the oldest public library In the state, except one, and the second largest. 40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed; 65 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 25 miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty churches. Including the Reid Memorial, built at a cost of $250,000; Reld Memorial Hosftltal, one of the most modern n tha state: Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000, ona of tha finest in the state. The amusement center of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the slse of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. . The Richmond Fall Festival held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given In tha Interest of the city and flnaifc.ed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panic Proof City. Items Gathered in From Far and Near Running "Amok" in Java. On every side of me the violent closing; of doors and shutters resembled a rapid-fire volley from machine guns. The Parapalang was deserted and not a thing stirred in any direction. Not a sound was heard except the repeated ""Rap rap rap-rap!" It was the amok signal! It had started at some point in the city where an agent of the people or possibly a citizen had first taken from v its book a stoat, solid wooden club and bad struck a lone, also solid beam that bung suspended from an adjacent portico. It had been taken up Instantly at many different points in Weltevreden by , citizens and police agents, so that the amok signal was flashed all over Weltevreden as quickly as if a central telephone or telegraph operator had flashed It over European wire. The signal meant that some-unfortunate little brown Javanese bad gone suddenly mad and as ' only a Malay can become. The repeated signals warned all who valued , their lives to escape the maniacal rush ..of the dreaded amok runner. - Around the corner I came upon a native stretched out' stark and then upon ; a dog that - was limping along with frightful cuts across its body. A hundred feet further 1 saw the first signs of life since the dreaded signal Hi ft aw WVU gviauMVU aaUUVOt sV U9
Expediency and Perjury "Insurgent votes favorable to the exoneration of Ballinger are being sought, not for Ballinger's sake, but for the sake of the party. It is repre- . Bented that party necessity demands that Ballinger be acquitted, and it believed this sort of argument will appeal to a good many congressmen who privately condemn' the secretary of the interior and disapprove of his act3. It is pointed out that with a campaign just about to open it would be very disastrous If the legislative branch of government should paint the executive branch black." News Item.
There is a great deal of truth in that news item; it is undeniable that every effort will be made by the powers that be to whip every vote Into line to give Ballinger another whitewashing not indeed because he is innocentbut foorsooth, because it will hurt the party to declare that Ballinger has been in the least guilty of any improper conduct. The statesmen who argue along these lines can not conceive that the people read the newspapers or have any intellect at all. They do not think it possible that the American people would not believe or see through a flimsy attempt on the part of the "regular" republicans to give Ballinger a clean bill of health. What are we coming to; or rather where are we, when the Congress of this country must perjure itself "to save the party?" Men kill fellow men and technicality intervenes to save them from the gallows; yet the man whose acts eventually tend toward the killing the murder of the commonwealth a greater crime; is aiso to be let off on a technicality. From time to time men steal from the till of their employers and are they punished? You have seen the attempts to stay the hand of justice because of the dishonor it would bring on a family. They never thought of the family. They seek to hide behind that excuse. Is the Republican party big enough to clear itself of dishonor? The people can not be fooled. And the Congressman who believes that Ballinger is guilty yet votes for expediency is guilty of perjury.
Slavery and Politics
The address of Theodore Roosevelt before the Berlin university is a confession of the attitude of the foremost American .toward the world. When Welles, the Socialist romancer of modern England was in America, he talked with Roosevelt on the future of America. In response to his question as to what he thought of this civilization and its outcome Roosevelt said that he did not know whether this nation had a new story to tell but that he was going to think so as long as he could and live in that way. Thus his speech before the imperial gathering in Berlin shows the march of his thought. Comparing this situation with that which faced Greece and Rome in all their decline and fall he said: "Knowledge, luxury and refinement, wide material conquests, territorial administration on a vast scale, an increase in the mastery of mechanical appliances and in applied science, all these mark our civilization as they marked the wonderful civilization that flourished in the Mediterranean lands 20 centuries ago; and theey preceded the downfall of the older civilization. Yet the differences are many, and some of them are quite striking as the similarities. The single fact that the old civilization was based upon slavery shows the chasm that separates the two. Let me point out one further and very significant difference in the development of the two civilizations, a difference to relations of wealth and politics. In classic times, as the civilization advanced toward its zenith politics became a recognized means of accumulating wealth. Theodore Roosevelt. In the time that Roosevelt has bsen away the American people have had a chance for a clear vision through the smoke of the battle which raged while Roosevelt stood at the head of this government. They have seen the hand which moves the chessmen on the board. No longer do the kings, the knights and the bishop the pawns move as if actuated by their own volition we know that they do not. The tariff, the Alaskan episode, the railroad bill these be the things which have shown Americans the slavery which is theirs if they do not bestir themselves. In the Great Game what master mind is at work now preparing the formation of still further political slavery?
And the petty representatives of the Unseen Government which we are all beginning to see, tell us that Theodore Roosevelt will be a party to a further dlsfrancisement of the American people for the profit of the greatest Overlords this world has ever seen.
same moment that I saw a small group of police agents, natives and a few Europeans gathered on a lawn down the street there came the "finish' signal of three short raps repeated in rapid succession. This signal, like the first which gave the alarm, concerned the amok runner only the signal now meant that the madman had been caught or dispatched. It was taken up in all directions. People emerged from their houses and soon the little group on the lawn had grown into a veritable surging mob. When I came upon this scene I found a small, wiry Javanese stretched out on the lawn. He had evidently been stunned by a blow from a club in the hands of a police agent. Near him law a knife, and the knife showed that it had been put to awful use very recently. The warning amok signals had been altogether vain in the case of one European, for near by, in the entrance to his house, lay a prominent planter, the victim of the mad Javanese. He had been stabbed to the heart. Before the dead planter reached the bed that was to be his last the little Javanese outside had recovered from the amok fever, was wondering what had happened to him. and still more so at what he had done and was led away for his execution. Emile W. Voute in Harper's Weekly. TWINKLES The Unterrified She. The cow had Just jumped .over the moon. "I have no patience with the folks who are afraid of the comet," she cried. "'Bring it on!" New York Sun. The Lone Exception. Gunner The world hasn't any use for knockers. Guyer I don't know about that. It doesn't object to opportunity, and she's a great knocker. Chicago News. The Unambitious. Now let the auto toot or chime! Let- airships tempt the sportive youth! The street car's safer every time, And much more sociable, in sooth. Washington Star. His View. ' "See here!' cried the busy merchant, "don't you know my time is valuable?" , "Well. replied the book agent, "I'm sure it might be valuable to me. If you'll give me five minutes of it I
believe I can sell you a set of these
books." Catholic Standard. Too Strict. "Why did you break your engagement with that school teacher?" ask ed the friend. "If I failed to show up at her house every evening she expected me to bring a written excuse signed by my mother." Woman's Home Companion Ballad of Troubled Times. My neighbor's cats stay out of sight Beneath my neighbor's house all day. My chickens squawk from morn till night, My petted spaniel ran away; My horse is nervous mouths his hay I do not dare go near my cow; My troubles stand in long array Our Willie has an air-gun now! In all the house no window light Unbroken surface can display. My wife is sick in bed from fright, The cook has said she will not stay; Some fourteen men called in to say Their eyes were sore and raised a row And talked with tongues that did not pray Our Willie has an air-gun now! I feel my face go pinched and white Whene'er I see the doctor's shay; My heart pounds on, my throat grows tight, I view his passing in dismay; For, be his visage grave or gay, Who knows where death may strike or how. We have no hold on living nay! Our Willie has an air-gun now! , L'ENVOI. Friend, I am growing old and gray, The mark of care is on my brow; There is the very duce to pay Our Willie has an air-gun now! Charles C. Jones in Puck. Her Reason. "My wife wants to take a Chinese magazine.' "What put that notion into her head?" "She learned of a Chinese magazine that has been running one serial gtbry for over 200 years," Louisville Courier-Journal. for Grippe n- Nearatoia Headache Ul alia Via 25 rnts 25 Cents ANTI - HEADACHE You can obtain prompt relief from Backache and Kidney Disorders with a 60c Box of DAVIS KID-NE-TABS. Druggists or Fred C Keeling, Chicago, III.
DEMOCRATIC PLUM
COMES VERY HIGH It Costs Money to Be a Candi date for That Party This Campaign. 10 PER CENT ASSESSMENT STATE COMMITTEE IS VERY CLOSE-MOUTHED ON THE MATTERKERN SPEAKS AT A MEETING ON THURSDAY. Palladium Special) Indianapolis, May 13. It comes high to run on the democratic ticket for a state office. The democratic state committee met here yesterday and made the assessments of the candidates who were nominated at the recent state convention. The members of the committee were very close- mouthed about the whole business, but it was learned that the committee decided to assess each candidate ten percent of the total amount of the salary he will receive if elected to the office for which he has been nominated. This makes the assessments as follows: Thomas Honan, candidate for attorney general, $1,500; Lew Ellingham, candidate for secretary of state, $1,300; W. II. O'Brien, candidate for auditor of state, $1,500; W. H. Vollmer, candidate for treasurer of state, $1,500; Robert J. Aley, candidate for superintendent of public instruction, $600; Edward Barrett, candidate for state geologist, $600; Thomas Brolley,. candidate for state statistician, $600; J. Fred France, candidate for clerk of the supreme court, $2,000. The assessments of all of the candidates for supreme court judge and appellate court judge will, under this arrangement, be $3,000 each. Their term is for six years and the salary is $6,000 a year. The committee was not long in session, yesterday afternoon, the only work before it. so far as known, being the levying of the assessments. John W. Kern, candidate for United States senator, made a speech, but only Kern and the members of the committee know what he said. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.is.ht, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye A WORKING GIR.L WIFE. Young Mr. Knox, son of the secretary of state, ran away with a young girl who worked for a living and married her. The couple eloped because the parents of the young man objected to his marrying the girl. Well A great fuss was made about the matter. It was not expected the young man would select somebody "below the salt" Some girl of aristocratic breeding from upper Fifth avenue or Newport would have filled the bill. Meantime Knox Junior has gone to work to support his wife. Good! If some such thing did not happen once in awhile in "the upper circles" of our American life we might begin to feel as if a part of our population bad lost its red blood. In all likelihood the Knox family will not need to go very far back in its history to find wives and mothers who worked for a living. The most of us are now on earth and in the enjoyment of reasonable health because of working fathers and mothers, and we are proud of it! Mr. Knox, Sr.. himself Is an able man. No doubt about that But he got his healthy body and his keen brain from some strong, wide hipped, sensible and hardworking grandmother, a grandmother either on this or the other side of the sea. And the. boy's -brain came in a like way, as shown by his strength of purpose and sturdy independence. And this is true: You will find the mothers or grandmothers of the future presidents and state secretaries and successful business men among the working girls in the kitchens and shops and fields. Quite certainly you will not find them in the congenial society of lap dogs or smoking cigarettes. Good for young Knox! To say nothing about his being In love with, his girl, an all sufficient reason for marrying her. he may be thankful to her ail the days of his life because to get her he had to become a self respecting, self supporting worker, owing no man anything save good will. And he will get in his working girl wife no doubt Just what he wants a devoted, loyal, loving wife and a good mother of his children. What more could a man want in a wife? The population of southern California, according to Colonel Drake, who is the world's foremost statistician in such matters, can not fail. ; in a very short time, to exceed twenty million souls, for there is a human breed there which multiplies with the miraculous rapidity of Belgian hares. When Long Beach had a population of only a little more than a thousand there sprang up in a few months, from the smallest beginnings, more than nine hundred real estate agents. Formaldehyde is used in meat exported to England and the government is making investigations as to its effect on the health of consumers.
Trade of lhe U.
Trade of the United States with Germany in the nine months ending with March. 1910, aggregated $330,000,000, an increase of $42,000,000 compared with the corresponding period of the fiscal year of 1909 and a decrease of 9,000,000 compared with a like period of 1908. Imports from that country in the first nine months of the current fiscal year were $132,000,000 in value, against $104,000,000 in 1909 and $113.-! 000.000 in 1008; while exports therto in the same period were $205,DiX,00O in I 1910 compared with $191,XX,00 in 1909 and $232,000,000 in 1!. Imports from Germany in the nine months of 1910 were larger than those for the corresponding period of any year in the history of our commerce, while exports to that country although $14,000,XH greater than those for the nine months of 1909 were $27,000,000 less than those of the same period of 1908, Manufactures form by far the greater part of the articles Imported from Germany. Considering only those items whose imports are shown in the Monthly Summary issued by bureau of statistics of the department of commerce and labor, the leading articles are cotton laces, edgings, etc., silk manufactures, toys, cotton knit goods, crude india rubber, undressed furs, wood pulp, hides of cattle, wool dress goods, leaf tobacco, linens, wool cloth, still wines, books and art works. In many of the important classes marked changes have occurred in the voulme of trade during the past four years. Thus in the nine months under review india rubber has increased in value of imports from $2,390,9,"S in 1907 to $4,filrt,872 in 1910; still wines from $971,987 to $1,240,749; leaf tobacco other than wrapper from $010,007 to $1,S.",0G3; hides of cattle from $207. 3221 to $2,040,000; wood pulp from $597,211 to $2.232,4ST; undressed furs and fur skins from $2,224,892 to $3. R40.n73: cotton laces from $4,.")95,14 to $5,390,005, and art works from $217 50) ti $929,520. In certain of the foregoing a large increase in imports im mediately followed the changes in tar iff rates under the law which became effective August H, 1909, notably art works, twenty years old and over, and hides of cattle, free on and after the date named. Other articles, however, show decreased importations; sugar from $0,750,570 in first nine months of 1907 to $2,749 in the same period of 1910; copper pigs, etc., from $782,740 to $91,741 ; pig iron from $784,170 to $83.844; gloves from $3,505,509 to $2,410, 380; books from $1,327,497 to $948,019; cement from $1,093,911 to $243,129; cotton cloths from $438,319 to 2SO;039, earthen, stone and china ware from $3,957,430 to $3,074,705; linens, etc., from $1,788,247 to $1,595,039; silk manufactures from $5,757,903 to $4,S25,2S2, and toys from $4,987,770 to $4,821,161. The most important articles whose im ports in 1910 show decreases compared with 1909 are sugar, manufactures of furs, cement, books, cotton cloths, pig iron and carpet wool. Exports from the United States to Germany cover a wide range of articles, chiefly material for use in manufacturing, foodstuffs, and manufactures. Of raw cotton the exports In the nine months ending March were 114 million dollars in 1910, against 95 million in 1909, 119 million in 1908, and 107 million in 1007; copper pigs, etc., 13 million dollars In 1910; against 13 million in 1909, 15 million in 1908 and 13 million in 1907: leaf tobacco, 4 1-3 million dollars in 1910 compared with 3 1-3 million in 1909, 4 1-3 million in 190S and 3 million In 1907; illuminating oil 5- million dollars in 1910, compared with 5 1-3 million in 190!), 5 million in 1908 and 4 million in 1907; and furs and fur skins 3 4-5 million dollars against 24 million in 1909, 1 1-3 million in 1908 and 1 million in 1907. Articles of food have in nearly all instances decreased. Wheat exports to Germany in the nine months under review were in 1910 5 million dollars against 9 million in 1909, 11 2-3 million in 1908 and 5 million in 1907; flour 1 million dollars against 1 million in 1909, 2 million in 190S and 1, YEARS GROWTH Removed by Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound Holly Springs, Miss. "Words are inadequate for me to express what y ourwonde rr ui med icines nave done for me. The doctors said I bad a tumor, and I had an operation, but was soon as bat a gainas e ver.I wrotf toyouforadvice.ant began to take Lydir E. Pinkham's. Vegetable Compound as yon told me tc do. I am glad to say that now I look and feel so well that my friends keep asking me what has helped me so much, and I gladly recommend your Vegetable Compound." 3Iks.Wiixie Edwards, Holly Springs, Miss. One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman's oread enemy tumor. If you have mysterious pains, inflammation, ulceration or displacement, don't wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the horrors of a hospital operation, but try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable compound at once. For thirty years Lydia H. Pinkham'f Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and such unquestionable testimony as the above proves thr value of this famous remedy, an: should giT6 everyone confidence, - - If yon would like special advice about your case write a conflden tisvl letter to Mrs. Ptnkhsun. a Lynn, Mass. Her advice la free and always helpful.
TUMOR
OF
mmmwmm
S. With Germany
million in 1907; corn 3 million against 2!-; million in 1009, 5 million in 1908 and 514 million in 1907; cotton seed oil cake 2Vj million in 1910, against 4 2-3 million in 1909, 3 million in 1908 and 4 million in 1907; and lard 0 1-3 million in 1910 against 13 2-3 million in 1909, 14 million in 1903 and 13 2-3 million In 1907. In meats marked de creases occurred in almost every class. exports of lard for example having fallen off from 13 2-3 million in 1907 and a like sum in 190O to 9 1-3 million in 1910; bacon from $253,047 in 1907 to $3O,590 in 1910, and salted or pickled pork from $227,150 in 1907 to $31,859 in 1910, the figures in each case referring to the nine months ending in March. NERVOUS TWITCHINGS. An Affliction From Which Man e' Gsnius Often Suffer. Many men of tenuis, tike the Insane, are subject to curious spasmodic auc choreic niovetneuts. Irofwor. Lotn broso In ot'.e of bin books pointed out that Lenau and Montesgtiieu left m-ku the floor of their rooms the sijfDK uf the movements by which their feel were convulsively agitated during composition. Buffon, Dr. Johnson. SanteuiU Crebillon and Lornbardici exhibited the most remarkable facial coutortlons. There was a constant quiver on Thorn as Campbell's thin lips. Chateaubriand was long subject to conTulsire movements of the arm. Napoleon suffered from an habitual spasm of the right shoulder and of the lips. "My anger." he said one day after an altercation with Lowe, "must have been fearful, for 1 felt the vibration of my calves, which bas not happened to me for a long time. Peter the Great suffered from convulsive movements which horribly distorted his face. "Carducci's face at certain moments." writes Mantegazza. "Is a veritable hurricane; lightnings dart from bis ejes, and his muscles tremble." Ampere could express ids thoughts only while walking and when his body was in a state of con stant movement. Socrates often danced and jumped in the street without rea son. Sns Toid Him. Stern Parent What was going on in this room yesterday evening, Clara, when Mr. Spooner called? Clara (complacently) This ring, papa. (And even the stern parent had to admit that the ring was a beauty.) London Fun. RUGS Made From Old Carpets. We use ANY KIND. We make beautiful FLUFF RUGS. Any "size desired. Phone Central Hotel, for E. B. SPENCER, Representative of Ashjan Bros. Rag Co., Indianapolis. Satisfaction Guaranteed. "GINGER UP" Your Water Heater and get Hot Water quickly. Our heater and methods relieve the pain." MEERHOFF, the Plumber Phone 1236. 9 South 9th St. -BURGLARYThe summer outing season will soon be here, when you will leave your silverware, furs, rugs, paintings and bric-a-brac to the burglars. Upon your return, if you find some valuables gone, others destroyed, locks broken, and your pretty home turned into a place of desolation, a draft covering the loss and damage will look mighty good to you. Let DOUGAN & CO. protect you. Phone 1330. All the Novelties of Spring Bat Pins, Bell Pins, Call Links, Lockets, Necklaees and Fancy Ulnos at Jenldns & Co. 726 Main St. Fresco Painting and Interior Decorating Dickinson Wall Paper Store Phone 2201. 504 Main St.
ASSOCIATES. As there are some flowers which you should stneB but slightly to extract all that is pleasant in them and whkh. if you do otherwise, emit what is unpleasant and noxious, so mere are some men with whom a slight acquaintance is quite sufficient to draw out all that is agreeable. A more intimate one would be unsatisfactory and unsafe. Landor.
FINE TWO FIGHTERS William M. Thompson and Arthur Druley were each fined fl and costs in the city court this morning on charges of assault and battery. The fight occurred directly across the street from police headquarters yesterday morning. Thompson alleged that Druley called him several Kinds of a liar. He said he would stand for being call ed, a plain ordinary liar all right, but when Druley began to mix adjectives with the title, Thompson felt his angry passions rising which broke forth in the form of blows. The encounter was witnessed from police headquarters, and the men were promptly '"pinched." Both fines were paid. Why Pay More? Piehl & Essenaacher Fancy and Staple Grocers, We sell everything that Is clean and fit to eat. 319 N. 5th Phone 1688 I Sporting Goods Full line of Base Ball and Tennis Goods. Tennis Balls, 15c up. Play Things For Boys , Express Wagons, Hand Cars, Automobiles, Velocipedes. Indian Suits, 75c up. Croquet Sets, 60c up. English and Collapsible Doll Go-carts. We carry a complete line of tops. Bicycle tires $1.95 up. r Line of Flower and Garden Seeds. - The Geo. Drehm Co. SUUabiSL A big lot of Fine Suits direct from the manufacturer at greatly reduced prices, which he is offering at his usual bargain prices, $10 and $15, These are the nicest things for the money ever shown in this town. $10 and $15 Saits $1 and $2 llats
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