Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 235, 1 July 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR. THE RICHMOND TALLADIU31 AND SUX-TELECRAM, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1910.
Mz Richmond Palladium ioi Sin-Telegram PuMlsbsd and owned by th PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Xssusd 7 dars neh wwk. evenings and Sunday morula. OffU Corner Snrt th and A stre.U. Horn Phons 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA. R4lk O. Urm. I54lt tUmm 4mm.. Bulim MaaaK" Cart Bernhardt AaMriat Editor W.R. hnlMMt ...lw Wiur. bubscription terms. In Richmond 6.00 par ar (In J- - vance) or lOo per weak. MAIL SU11SCRIPTION3. On year. In advance ..$ His month. In advance One month. In advance RURAL ROUTES. One year, In advance ..fSSi) Pis month. In advance I S One mo (.to. In advance ' Jtddrsss rhanrM aa often as desired; both new and old addresses must be Ivan. Huliscrlbera will please rrmlt with erder. which should b riven for
perlfled term; nairv will not be entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office ae second class malt matter.
'.e.m.e.Bjs.j nimiinium ' Tfc Association of American
AaWtWs (New York City) ha 4
t aamlaed and eertllled to the circulation 1
Uli publication. Only ins ucures ox
' orewntioft eontalned in its report an 1
guirtm bp Ue Aitoeiatioa.
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RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY"
Has n population of f 3.000 and I' growing-. It la the county seat of Wayne County, and tho trad!nr center of a rlcii agrl cultural community. It la located due east from Indianapolis es mllos and 4 miles from the state line Richmond Is a clt of homes and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city, It Is also the jobbing center of Eastern Indiana and enjovs the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its Splendid streets, well kept yards. Its cement sldewalKS and beautiful shade tree. It lias 3 national hanks, 3 trust companies and 4 building asnocla- - tlons with combined resources tit over . 000,000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested 17.000.000, with an annual output of $27,000,000. and a pay roll of $3,700,000. The total pay roll for the cltv amounts to approximately 1. 300,000 annually. There are five railroad companies radlattna; In elxht different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled'dally. 1,760.000 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally. 750.000 lbs. Yard fsctlMles. per day 1.700 cars. Number of pansanger trains dally, St. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual post office rerelpta amount to H6. 000. Total assessed valuation of the city, $15,000,000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of SS.000. Richmond la 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 clty'e area Is 2.S40 acres; has a court house costing $500.000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high' school In the middle west tinder construction; 3 parochial schools; Earlnam collere and . the Indiana business College: ' five splendid fire companion In fine hose houses; Olen Ivlller park, the 'largest and -most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual chtiutaunua: seven hotels: municipal electric light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric light plant. Injuring competition: the oldest ' public library In the state, ex- . eept one. and the second largest. 40.000 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed: 5 miles of Improved streets; 40 mites 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 Reld Memorial, built at a cost of OtRft.OOO: Tteld Memorial Hoariltal, one of the most modern n the state: Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000. one of the finest In the state. The amusement center of Rt ern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the else of Richmond holds as fine an annus! art eshlblt. The Richmond Kali Festival held each October la unloiie. no other city holds a simtlnr affair. It la given In the Interest of the city and financed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise in the ranlo Proof City.
T. R.'s Smile
Items Gathered In From Far and Near
Everyone who comes away from Oyster Bay wears a smile. It riva!3 and outdoes the erstwhile Sunny Jim. It Is the grandest game of political poker that this country has Been for some Uttle while. And Theodore Roosevelt smiles. Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt met yesterday. . Mr. President and Theodore. Both smiled. " . ' ,
A few days ago Senator LaFollette came away smiling from Oyster
Bay.
And Mr. Roosevelt smiled.
The right hand bottleblower of the Lord Mayor of the Senate Mr. Lodge, the friend of Mr. Aldrich, is smiling. Mr. Roosevelt went up to Beverly with him in his limousine yesterday. And all the way T. R. smiled.
A Fall In Domestic Prices Of Leading Commodities Is Shown
The special session in New York called by Mr. Hughes to consider the primary law swatted that measure and adjourned till 2:30 this afternoon. Every one is smiling. And all the dispatches verify the statement that Mr. Roosevelt is still smiling though he' was in favor of the law and took the pains to telegraph to that effect. Nevertheless there is a smile on Mr. Roosevelt's face. The thermometer is StVOO in New York. Heat prostrations and occasional thunderstorms are predicted. Everyone is Joyfully smiling at the lovely weather, particularly Mr. Roosevelt. And he is just having a bully time.
Is the smile from habit? And is everyone Just delighted? Ask as many questions as you want. This is the closed season. And Mr. Roosevelt is smiling!
prize fighting exactly as ho does money. Roth are desirable, and his only inquiry in regard to either is: Is it genuine? If the heavyweights now In his Jurisdiction can convince him that they intend to fight in earnest he will not interfere with them. This position is so sharply in conflict with that held in most of. the other states that it may be worth a moment's consideration. Pretended or imitation prize fights can be held almost anywhere. Are they less objectionable than tho real thing, and if not, why are they tolerated? The state which insists upon having its pugilism unadulterated is as likely to be near the total extinction of that "sport" as those commonwealths in which it is kept alive under various fave disguises.
Solicitude of the People. From the Chicago News.. Gov. Hughes would not like to leave with the voters a first-class direct primary law before he goes away, but the politicians do not see why they should impose upon the dear people the additional burden of self-government.
TWINKLES
BP PHILANDER JOHNSON.
A Neglected Example.
The days drift quietly along
At Pohick on the Crick.
There's a time for work an' time for
song. Events don't move so quick
That folks get nervous when they try
To step with the parade.
Each looks his neighbor in the eye An' smiles an' ain't afraid. Our congressman has things to say Concernin' ancient Rome, An' how its prospects went astray. An' when he'3 bringin' home Great truths he says we ought to learn. We know that pretty soon Hig grave reflections he will turn To France an' tho commune. The folks out our way fail to see What business 'tis of I heirs, If way-off people cannot be Discreet in their affairs. "Mongst us the grafter or the crook In vain attempts Ho trick Why don't they wire a hist'ry book 'Rout Pohick op the Crick?
but lower berths or theaters that contain only isle seats in the first five rows."
Explosives. In favor it still makes advance. The Fourth that's glorious but serene. Why add unto the daily chance That people take with gasoline?
On Second Thought. "I guess our boy Josh will be back on the farm soon," said Mr. Corntossel. "I thought he had a good situation in town," replied the summer boarder. "Yer. But I judge it kind o" set
him thinkin, when he found out that
the value of one good hog was pretty near as much as a two weeks' salary."
Washington. July 1. The recent fall in prices in the United States is sharply Illustrated by the Bureau of Statistics figures covering domestic and foreign trade for the month of May, 1910, in comparison with earlier months of the current fiscal year. The Bureau publishes each month a statement of the export prices of about fifty principal articles of the export trade, also the wholesale prices of certain important articles in the domestic trade. The export prices are those prevailing in the wholesale markets at the ports of exportation, since the customs regu
lations state that "all articles exported shall be valued at their actual cost, or the value which they may truly bear at the time of exportation in the ports of the United States from which they are exported." The domestic prices quoted by the Bureau are the wholesale prices of the articles named at certain great centers, chiefly New-
York, as supplied to the Bureau from recognized and reliable authorities.
The May export figures show mater
ially lower prices in practically all the important articles forming the export trade, with the exception of meats which, on the other hand, show higher prices in May than in earlier months of the year. The export price of corn, for example, is stated in the tables which will shortly appear In the forthcoming issue of the Monthly Summary of Commerce and Finance, as averag
ing (57.(5 cents per bushel in. May,
against TO.l cents in February, and
".".0 cents in August of last year.
Wheat shows an average export price
in May, 101O, of fMJ.C cents per bushel.
against $l.fw in January and $1.21 in July of last year. Anthracite coal
shows an average export value per ton
in May, 101O. of $4.73, against $..5 in January and $5.11 in September of
last year. Copper pigs exported in May
were valued at 13 cents per pound against 13.4 cents in March, 1910. Raw cotton shows an average export value in May of 14.5 cents per pound, against 14.1 cents in the first month of the present year. Unbleached cotton cloth shows for May an average export price of (5.5 cents per yard, against 8.1 cents in March, and 8.8 cents in December of last year. Pig iron shows an average value in the exports of May of $17.55 per ton, against $li).04 per ton in December of last year; steel billets, $25.55 per ton in May, against $20.33 in April of the current year; steel rails, $28.23 per
Feet Tired - So Tired?
TIZ Makes Sick Feet Well No Matter
What Ails Them.
Choosing One's Work. From the Omaha Bee. This matter of choosing one's life work Is one of the severest tasks a , person has to meet. Many men do not find their spheres of greatest usefulness until middle age. while others never find them. Education ought to help one to find his true sphere. The great difficulty with so many young .people is they show an adaptability to too many things they become what tbelr fellows or Instructor; call versatile. The versatile man sometimes is the worst handicapped man. Ho can do a dozen things fairly well and he spends his time between them, scattering his fire. Instead of concentrat- ' Ids on one object a single purpose and learning to do that in the aggregate better than he could do each or the eleven. The man who. with a bent for music, can play half a dozen instrut ments I not nearly so likely to play as well aa the man who becomes expert In the uso of but one. The versatile? man is seldom more than an amateur, being kept out of the pro- ' fesslonal class simply because he has never learned to concentrate his full ' powers on one thing. Young men and ' women must look out for these pit- ",. fall. The only talent that ever accomplishes anything worth while Is that trained along a certain, definite, fized line. J ?," . Humbug In Pugilism.' from tho New York World. . Governor of Nevada regards
Admiration. "You are admiring my library?" said the collector. "Yes." replied Mr. Cumrox. "A big library always commands my admiration and interest. It is an evidence of the patience and skill of the American book agent."
"Economy," said Uncle Eben "makes rue think about de music in our choir. Ev'body wants to give lessons, but nobody ain, very strong foh practlcin' em.-
No Hope. "There's no hope that the human race will be entirely content." said the philosopher. "No." replied the man who was selling tickets; "it's out of the. question to build sleeping cars with nothing
TIZ acts at once and makes tired, aching, swollen feet remarkably fresh
and sore proof.
It's the 6ure remedy, you know, for everything that gets the matter with your" feet. It's for sore feet and for
sweaty, bad-smelling feet, and for
corns, callouses and bunions, too.
"For years I have been troubled with sore and tender feet; suffered intense pains. Have had the assistance
of physicians without relief. I bought
a box of TIZ, which worked a perfect
cure, as it has with a great many of
my friends. I would not be without it
All it requires is to be known to be
universally used." A. F. Dreutzer, Chi cago. '
TIZ is not a powder. Powders and
other foot remedies clog up the pores.
TIZ draws out all poisonous exuda
tions which bring on soreness of the
feet, and is the only remedy that does TIZ cleans out every pore and glori
fies the feet your feet.
Yoifll never limp again or draw up
your face in pain, and you'll forget
about your corns, bunions and cal louses. You'll feel like a new person
TIZ is for sale at all druggists. 25
cents per bo, or it will be sent you
direct, If you wish, from Walter Luth
er Dodge & Co., Dodge Bldg., Chicago,
III.
Have You One Oi These Buckets?
We have a thousand Ice cream packers lost in Richmond and vicinity. ,lf you have had one of them on hands for one week or more, put it outside where we can get it, then call us by phone or write a card and we will appreciate the kindness. ALSO, DO NOT FORGET that it Is - "First come first served," and it will be necessary to place your order early for the Fourth.
COMMONS DAIRY CO. Phone 1188 9 S. 5th St.
ton In May, against $29.24 in April; structural iron and steel. $44.72 per ton in May. against $4&1 per ton in March, and $31.4 in October of last year. Sole leather shows on average export price in May of the current year of 21.2 cents per pound, against 22.7 cents in February last. Crude mineral oil exported in May of the current year is stated at 3 cents per gallon, against 3.4 cents in April, and 3.! cents in August of last year. Illuminating oil is given at 0.1 cents per gallon in May, 1UIO, against 7.1 cents in May, 11)00. Paraffin is reported at 3.5) cents per pound in May, 101O, against 4.4 cents in March. 1VHO, and 4.S cents in March and April, 10O0. Meats, on the other hand, show higher prices in practically all cases. The average export price of fresh beef in May, 101O, was 10.S cents per pound, against lO.l cents In January. 1010, and lo.2 cents in May of last year. Canned beef in May, 1910, averaged 12.1 cents per pound, against 11.1 cents in January, and 10.7 cents in May of last year. Bacon in May of the current year averaged 15.3 cents per pound, against 13 cents in March, 12 cents in February, 11 cents in August, loot), and 10.S cents in May of that year, an advance of practically 50 per cent in tho. export price during ths year. Hams and shoulders exported in May, 1010, averaged 14.0 cents per pound, against 11.2 cents in May, 1000.
Lard exported in May, 1010, averaged 12.7 cents per pound, against 11.1
cents in August and 10.4 cents in May of last year. In the domestic markets nearly all articles show lower prices in May and June, 101O, than in the corresponding period of last year. The Bureau of Statistics figures of domestic prices come down to a later period than those of export prices. Of rice the price In the New York market on June 20th was 4 3-S cents per pound, against 5 3-4 cents per pound in the corresponding period of last year; cotton on June 24th in the New Orleans market, 4 7-S cents per pound, against 15 3-4 cents per pound in December of last year; washed Ohio XX wool on June 10th was 32 cents per pound, against
37c per pound in November and December, igot; unwashed Michigan one wool, on June 24th was 21 cents per pound, against an average of 2tJ cents in August of last year; scoured territorial fine medium Wool of "staple grade on the 10th of last month, 63 cents per pound, against 72 cents in the second half of last year; Bessemer
pig iron on June 25th, was $10.t5 per ton, against 10.90 In November and December of last year; steel bars on June 25th. $30.00 per ton, against $31.0 in February and March of the current year; Bessemer steel billets in June, $20.00 per ton, against $20.00 per ton in December of last year; cruda Pennsylvania oil $1.30 per barrel in June of the current year, against $1.08 per barrel in June of last year; refined oil per gallon in barrels, 7.05 cents in June of the current year, against S.50 cents per gallon in June of last year; wheat No. 2 red, in June, 1010, in the New York market, $1.03 per bushel, against $1.33 in January; corn, 07 cents per bushel last month, against SO cents per bushel in the same month of last year.
r Why Pay More?
X Piehl & Essenmacher
MASONIC CALENDAR. Friday, July 1 King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Called meeting, work in Royal Arch Degree. Refreshments.
Trio hirocit Kind. "Ever do Mii.vthiu- in lUt? way of settlement work?" "Yea; I've tried bill collecting." Pittsburg Post,
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
We sell everything that Is clean J J and fit to sat. J 319 N. 5th Phone 168S
Faney and Staple Grocers.
Fresco Painting and Interior Decorating Dickinson Wall Paper Store Phone 2201. 504 Main St.
FIRE INSURANCE E. B. KNOLLENBERG Room 6, Knollenberg's Annex.
The Flower Shop 1015 Main SL Phone 1093
BUY YOUR WINTER SUPPLY OF COAL NOW Prices Low H. C. BULLERDICK & SON. PHONE 1235
..Daylight All the Way.. By the Kodak System W. H. Ross Drug Co.
804 Main St. .
LAHRMAN-TEEPLE CO. SHOE HUSTLERS Hot Weather Shoe Bargains While They Last BAREFOOT SANDALS All sizes up to 2 in Misses' and Boys' Barefoot Sandals, 49c a pair. WHITE CANVAS SANDALS-Misses' and Children's White Canvas Sandals, 5 to 11, $1.24 a pair. Misses', 11 to 2, $1.49 a pair. LADIES' TAN STRAPS and Oxfords in welts, turns and McKays, $3.00 grade, now S 1.98 ELK SKIN SHOES for Men, Boys and Youths. TENNIS SHOES Fresh line, of them just arrived. , LAHRMAN-TEEPLE CO. CLOSED ALL DAY, JULY 4TH.
FOREST and ESEX MILLS UNDERWEAR will give underwear satisfaction these hat days. AH prices.
Pony Stockings For the boys and girls, 25c pair.
NEW NECK WEAR Handsome line of Jabots, baby Irish trimmed; 50 cents would be cheap; choice for 25c! NEW HAIR GOODS 1 Entire new stock just received in Puffs, Curls and Switches. Puffs, $1 .00 to $3.50: See the special Puff at $1.00. See the $3.50 Switch at $2.98; also the
$8.00 3 oz. 26 men switch at $5.00.
NEW JEWELRY
Lot 50c and 75c Belt and CollaiPins, beautiful goods.
an ennreiy new un winaow;, cnace 33c.
NEW LEATHER BELTS
The new reds and blacks in patint leather can be seen
m street case. Special, 50c.
Parasols
LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S 50c to $5.00 Children's Parasols, good line 19c to $1.50 Ladies' and Misses' Parasols 50c to $5.00 New line just received, all colors and styles. See the white numbers $1.00 to $3.00 See the Pongees $2.00 to $3.00
NEW BARRETTES See the new 10 strasr goods in shell or amber, beautiful goods. Special price, 25c.
HAND BAG SALE. Just one more day. Free initial with each bag. See the window. Xotice the bags at $1.00. $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00.
j $1.00 CORSET, 69c inother shipment of our popular cefset bargain. Long hip model In batiie, si 18 to 26- Self reducing in crftHle, sizes 21 to 32. All have six shorter. See window.
1
Beginning Tuesday, July 5th, the atorJ will Ios dally at 5:30. Saturdays excepted.. Same to continue during th suramef nwtha of July, August and September. 1 . , "
