Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 138, 27 March 1911 — Page 3
4
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY 3IARCI1 27, 1911. PAGE THREE.
NOTABLE WEDDING AT CAPITAL CITY Daughter of German Ambassador Weds Member of the Embassy Staff.
(American w Service) Washington, March 27. Not In a long time has the capital witnessed uch an outpouring of distinguished representatives of official and resident society as 111 led Concordia church, a modest little place of worship of the German Lutheran denomination at the wedding this afternoon of th Countess Louise Alexandra von Hernstorff, daughter of the GerInan ambassador and Countess von Hernstorff. and Count Raymond J'ourtalcs, an attacho of the German rinltassy. The. wedding was a notable event both in social and official circles, for the guest list Included the names of 1ho president and Mrs. Taft, Vice President and Mrs. Sherman, the members of the cabinet. Justices of file supreme court, senators and representatives, foreign diplomats and many other officials and their wives. Owing to the limited accommodations of the church only about oo guests were Invited to witness the marriage ceremony, but the wedding reception lhat followed at the German embassy was attended by several thousand persons well known in social circles In Washington, New York, I'hiladeldelphla, Italtimorc and u number of other cities. Tho little church was a bower of whit lilacs, white roses and apple blossoms when the bride leaning on the arm of her father, walked up tho flower marked aisle. The usual custom of a wedding In Germany were followed, with an adoption also of the forms In vogue In America. Following tho custom of the fatherland, the bridegroom escorted the Countess von nernstorff. The bride had no maid of honor but was escorted to the altar by her father, preceded by her four bridesmaids, Misu Alys Meyer, daughter of tho secretary of the navy, MIb Klsle Aldrich. daughter of ex-Senator and Mrs. Aldrich, Miss Cecelia May, who Is soon to be the bride of Mr. Kobert L. Huron and Miss Mary K. Southerland, daughter of Captain and Mrs. Southerland. Instead of a best man, there were four ushers for the bridegroom. They Jtrere Count Uuenther von Hernstorff brother of the bride: Jonkheer II. van Weede, secretary of the Netherlands legation; Lord Kustace Percy, Hritish attache, and Baron llardenbroek, German attache. The four ushers chosen according to the American custom wero Count Klemer I'ejaesevlch. Austrian attache; Major von llerwarth, German military attache; Commander Itetzmann, German naval attache, and A. C. Ilorstmann, German attache. Tho marriage ceremony waa iti acrordaneo with the ritual of the GermanLutheran church and was porman Lutheran church and waa perpastor of Concordia church. A coincidence of today's wedding of pedal Interest In tho United States la that the mother of the bride and tho stepmother of the bridegroom. both were Americans. The wife of tho German ambassador and mother of the bride was Miss Jeanne Luckemeyer of New York, whilo tho stepmother of Count l'ourtalcs was Miss Helen Harbey of Now York City and Tuxedo. Tho brldo was born In Herlin twenty-two years ago, and when she was eighteen uhe was given n brilliant debutante pnrty nt the diplomatic court In Cairo, whore her father was then minister from Germany. Since coming to America in l!os she has been extremely popular In Washington society life and noted for her beauty, her wit and social charm. In pile of her youth she Is a thoroughgoing cosmopolitan and speaks several languages fluently. The acquaintance of the bride and bridegroom began a year ago when Count l'ourtalcs first came to Washington. This marked the count's entry Into the diplomatic service. Previously he bad served six years In the Herlin guards. J'ho count, who Is twenty-eight years old. was born in Rwltzerlnnd and educated In Munich. Ills father. Count Hermann Pourtales USUALLY ONE DOSE ENDS INDIGESTION If your meals don't fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating an! 3011 believe It Is the food which fills you; If what little you eat lies like a lump of lead on your stomach: if there I difficulty In breathing fter eating, eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of gas, you can make up your mind that you need omethlng to stop food fermentation and cure Indigestion. To make every bite of food you eat Id In the nourishment aed strength of your body, you mut rid your stomach of poison. excessive acid and vtomach gas which sours your entire meal -Interferes with digestion and causes so many sufferers of Dyspepsia Sick Headache. Billiousness. Constipation, Griping, etc. Your case is no different -j 011 are a stomach sufferer, though you may call it by some other name; your real and only trouble U that which you eat does not digest, but quickly ferments and sours, producing almost any unhealthy condition. A case of Pape's Dlapepsln will cos fifty cents at any Pharmacy here, and will convince any stomach suffered five minutes after taking a single c!o.o that Fermentation and Sour Stomach Is causing the misery of Indigestion. No matter If you call your trouble Catarrh of the Stomach, Nervousness tr Gastritis, or by any other namealways remember that a certatn cure Is waiting at any drugstore the moment you decide to begin Its use. rape' Diapepsin will regulate any wit of order stomach within five minltd, and digest promptly, without any fuss or discomfort all of any kind of food you cat.
Quickly Cures Coughs,
Colds and Catarrh If you, dear reader, cou'.d spend an hour looking over a few of the thousands of testimonials that we have on file, you would not go Buffering from catarrh, that disgusting disease that will surely sap your vitality and weaken your entire system if allowed to continue. You would have just a much faith In HYOMKI as we have, and we have so much confidence in its wonderful curative virtue that it is io!d the coun try over under a positive guarantee to cure catarrh, croup, sore throat, coughs and colds or money back. No Ktomach dosing w hen you breathe HYOMKI. JuKt our a few drops of the liquid into the Inhaler, and breathe It in. It la mighty pleasant to use; it opens up those stuffed-up nostrils in two minutes, and makes your head feel as clfar a a be'.l in a short time. Hreatlie HYOMKI and kill the catarrh germs. It's the only way to cure catarrh. It's the only way to get rid of that constant, hawking, snuffling and spitting. A complete HYOMKI outfit, which Includes a bottle of HYOMKI and a hard rubber pocket Inhaler, costs $1.00. If you already own a Hyornel inhaW you can get an extra bottle of HYOMKI for o0 cents. Sold by Ixo H. Fine. was a soldier of the German army. His mother died In 1SS8 and two years later his father married Miss Harbey. Count. Hermann Pourtales died lu 1904 and his wiow has since continued to live in Kurope, spending her usnimers in Germany and her winters in Rome. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BHO.MO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. E. V. GROVE'S signature 13 on each box. 25c. At Local Theaters At the Murray. WANTED Any one desiring to see an excellent, clean, refined, vaudeville show to go to the Murray this week where the bill Is one continual laugh from start to finish. If you want a sure cure for tlie blues see Dopie Dopefield, one of the Three Dreamers and that half unwilling smile will break Into a merry Ha Ha before you are aware of the fact. Al Hayncs and Julia Redmond present their laughing success "The Critic and the Girl." The Four Olivers, sensational wire artists and Pearl Stevens the singing comedian conclude this fine bill. "A Told in the Hills." "As Told in the Hills" will be presented at the Gennett theater tonight for the first time in many years. Another standard success, this play has appealed to theatergoers across the continent for a long time and Is ever fresh in its Interesting story. The heroine is a real live Indian girl and she affords a refreshing change in her wild native charm. "Sven Days." There are real engagements, secret engagements, summer engagements, broken engagementa and a popular song a few years ago told of "a kind of an engagement." "Seven Days" has a new one a trial engagement. I'.ubbles Wlison has wearied of living alone. His yearns for the white man's burden a wife. He asks Kit McNalr to become tho load. Kit isn't quite sure whether she loves Hubbies or Just wants to be a sister to him, so tdie says, with sudden inspiration, and sparring for time: "Let's have a trial engagement." "Any kissing in a trial engagement?" asks Hubbies, hitching closer. "No." replies Kit. "that's one of the trials." That isn't funny to Rubbles. Nothing in "Seven Days" is funny to the persons in it. That's what makes it so excruciatingly funny to others. The predicaments and complications that swirl about the persons iu the play, the week of misadventures and mixups that start In a drawing room, descend to the kitchen, climb to the roof and involve everybody, create the snappiest, wittiest, drollest comedy of a decade. "It is the most amusing comedy that has been seen in New York in years." said the MetroiKiIitan magazine. "If you like comedy you must see this one. and be sure you see the beginning because the laughs start with the first curtain." "Seven Days," direct from two years In New York, with a Hroadway cast and production, will be presented by Messrs. Wagenhals and Kemper at the Gennett Friday night. Attend Miss Tinney's Millinery opening nil this week. 10 N. Mh. 27-6t Not a Disease. I cant understand my busband. doctor. I am afraid there is something terrible the matter with blm." -What are his symptoms?" "Well, I often talk to blm for half an hour at a time, and when I get through be hasn't the least idea what I've been waylng. "Don't worry any more about your husband. I wish I bad bis gift" All Depends. "I don't like to listen to bard lock atorlet. Do you?" "That depends cn whether tbey are reminisceuces or the preliminaries to a touch." Washington Herald. Warned. "Too many cooks spoil the broth." quoted the wise guy. "Tea, Just aa too many appetizers loU the appetite." agreed the simple mug. Philadelphia Record. It doeant take any grit to gnusWv Chicago Tribune. ,
TO EMPLOY SHEEP TO EAT THISTLES
Government Will Use Them on Irrigation Project in Washington. (Palladium Special) Spokane, Wash., March 27. Five hundred head of sheep and an experienced herder will be employed this season in an endeavor to eradicate thistles and weeds on the bank of the Sunnyside canal, a federal government irrigation project in central Washington. The animals will go over the ground three times during the growing period. Afterward the banks will be seeded with white clover and blue grass, rye being used in the drier portions to bind the soil. Stephen O. Jayne of Spokane whose investigations for the United States department of agriculture include the maintenance and operation of irrigation canals in this district, said in making the foregoing announcement that it cost the management of the Sunnyside project several thousand dollars last year to destroy weeds and growths along the canal and right-of-way. Railroad officials, municipal organizations and farmers and orchardists all over the United States and Canada, as well as ditch owners and growers in the irrigated districts, will watch the outcome of this experiment with keen interest, as the Folution of the weed problem in America will mean the saving of hundreds of thousands of dollars expended annually in controlling the rank growths. The uncultivated banks of Irrigation canals afford the most inviting prorogating ground for thistles, wild mustard, saltbush and other noxious weeds, the seeds of which, carried by the wind and the water laterals, are scattered far and wide. In many instances the growth becomes so dense that it is difficult to pass through on foot or on horseback, and when occurring on large fills hiding places are afforded to burrowing animals, which are menaces to banks and often the cause of disastrous breaks in canals. Supper at Christian church Tuesday from r:30 to 7:3023 cents. 2."-3t REAL ESTA TE TRANSFERS Richard Kelsey to Emma Kelsey. March 20, 1911. $1, Pt. X. E. !4 Sec. 2S-1C-I2. Thos. Kelsey to Julia Kelsey, March 20. 1911. $1. Pt. N. 4 Sec. 2S-16-12. Mary Harrett to Elinor W. Hall, March 2. l'Jll. $900. Lots 9 10, Ulk. S, W. R. S. R., Cambridge City. Albert Oler et al to Win. A. Parker, March 24. l'Jll, $:,. pt. lot 11, Oler & Howes Add. Richmond. Seen in a Dream. Mr. Hi!precht. professor of Assyriol.ogy in the University of Pennsylvania in 1893. when puzzling over sketches of objects excavated at Babylon, learned in a dream the solution to the difficulty that confronted him. Two drawings represented fragments of agate inscribed with characters. They were supposed to be bits of finger rings and. being apparently of different colors, wese not closely associated together by the professor. P.ut in a dream he saw nu Assyrian priest, who told him how the priests of the Temple of Bel. having received a votive cylinder of agate from their king, were ordered to make earrings for their god. They made throe by cutting up the cylinder, and the professor would find by fitting the fragments together that these were two of them. He did this and found that tbey gave a continuous description. Helping Him Out. For years Squire Latham, of whom many amusing stories are told, was a resident of BrMgewater, Mass.. and it was while he wss living there that the incident occurred which is related below. It Illustrates his habitual coolness ami whimsical temper. He was awakened one night by his wife, who told him she thought there were burglars in the house. The squire put on his dressing gown and went downstairs. In the back hall he found a rough looking man trying to open a door that Ipl into the back yard. The burglar had uulocked the door and was pulling it with all his might. "It doesa t open that way. yon idiot!" shouted the squire, taking in the man's predicament instantly. -It slides back!" SORE FEET GO Leo H. Fihe Lands the Agency for Ezo, Already the Greatest Remedy for Painful Feet Rejoice and be glad all ye residents of Richmond who suffer from sore, painful, burning or smarting feet, for Leo H. Fihe now sells Ezo. the different remedy that banishes all misery from the feet and makes them feel fine In almost no time. Ezo is a refined ointment, verypleasant to use, and a large glass jar only costs 25 cents. It surely is the finest thing on earth for swollen or aching feet. and. it promptly extracts the pain and soreness from corns, bunions and callouses. If you want a pair of comfortable feet that won't give you any bother throughout a strenuous day, get Ezo and nib it in. And Ezo is mighty good for other things too, sunburn for instance, and chafing, and is very soothing and beating in skin diseases. Only 23 cents. ... Ezo Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y, Makers.
COUGH REMEDY RECEIPT.
Many Requests for Famous Formula Compel us to Reprint It. Manyf families in Richmond and vicinity have quickly cured their coughs and saved considerable money at the same time by using a very simple receipt for home made cough syrup. Here is the famous recipe: Dissolve one pound of sugar in half a pint of water; add one bottle itwo ounces of LOGOS Cough Remedy Extract; shake and it is ready for use. This gives you a full pint, $2 to $3 worth, of a logical, household cough .syrup, free from opiates and good for jany member of the family, all for j about fifty cents. It is so soothing, so pleasant in taste and so effective iu results that you should lose no time, but prepare a supply at once. To cure your cough and save money try the LOGOS plan. You will get the quickest and safest remedy you ever used at about a sixth the usual cost. The LOGOS extracts arc for sale at all first class drug stores. THE FOG BUOY. fv Safeguard to Fleets of Warships In Thick Weather. Probably the greatest menace to the safety of navigation at sea is the fog. Modern steamships are seldom endangered by the most severe weather, but when the impenetrable envelope of mist Incloses a ship she is exposed to the most terrible of perils, a collision at sea. A single ship may be comparatively safe even In a fog. but where there is a fleet of vessels the danger is greatly multiplied. There is always considerable danger, too, on account of the fact that many of the ship lines hare what could be termed a beaten path across the ocean, and they always follow this route when possible. In addition to the customary fog horns and sirens, a fleet of warships, often keep informed of their relative positions by the tiring of signal guns nt intervals only a few minutes apart. Another method used is the fog buoy. Each vessel iu the fleet, especially if it Is a warship fleet, carries a fog buoy, a large cask painted a vivid red. This Is cast overboard at the first sign of a fog. and It floats from the stern of the Tessel. attached to a rope of grass fiber, which does not sink beneath the surface of the water. By this means the exact location of the individual ships of the fleet is maintained, even though proceeding at a moderate rate of speed. Wichita Eagle. AN ANCIENT CUSTOM. Wassailing of Apple Trees Still Observed In Parts of England. What is the wassailing of apple trees? This is an old custom, fast dying out, but still observed in parts of Somerset and Devon. At WootonBasset, near Minehead, the ceremony takes place on old Twelfth eve. All assemble at the farmhouse and after a hearty meal form a procession to the nearest orchard, the master in front with a light and men with old guns, blunderbusses and anything that makes n noise in the rear. Plenty of cider is taken and some pieces of toast. When tlie orchard is reached a ring is formed, and the master, in the center, seizes a branch and sings a verse beginning "Oh, apple tree, I wassail thee, in hopes that thou wilt blow." Then all shout in chorus: Hatfuls, capfuls. thre bushel bagfuls, Barn fioorfuls, tullet holefuls And a little heap under the stairs. Then follow cheers, drinking of healths, shouts of "Now, Tom Pod, we wassail thee!" and the placing of the pieces of toast, soaked in cider, among the branches for the robins. London Answers. Frogs. There are forty species of frogs known to science, only one species of Tvbich is edible the Uana esculenta. Purify Your Blood The cause of pimples, boils and other eruptions, as well as of that tired feelinj and poor appetite, which are so common in the sprinjj, is impure and impoverished blood. The best way to purify and enrich the blood, as thousands of people know by experience, is to take Hood's Sarsapariila Accept no substitute, but insist on having Hood's. Oet it today In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs. MURRAY'S WEEK OF MARCH 27th FOUR OLIVERS Sensational WIRE ARTISTS MATINEE. 10c EVEYINGS, 10-25C
JORDAN, M'MANUS & HUNT FUNERAL DIRECTORS & EMBALM ERS Automobile Service for Calls Oat of City. Private Chapel and Ambol&ncex Telephone 2173. Psrlors 1014 Main Street.
TUESDAY THURSDAY SATURDAY MORNING, AFTERNOON & EVENING Moonlight Skating Thursday Night
BOY SCOUTS WILL
WAR
YEGGMEN
Dan Beard Is Teaching Them the Secret Signs of These Crooks. (Palladium Special) New York, March 27. Daniel C. Beard, national scout commissioner of the Boy Scouts of America, and the originator of the Boy Pioneers and the Sons of Daniel Boone which helped clear the way for the development of the boy scout movement, has devised a means by which the boys throughout the country can make a systematic war upon yeggmen and hoj boes who molest hbusewlves and rob homes. He is doing this by teaching the boys the secret signs of the yegg fraternity, so that the boys may know them and tell what the mystical mark on fences, houses and other buildings mean. By making the secrets of the tramps common knowledge. Beard hopes to destroy the communication between the tramps and thus prevent them from doing so much harm. Beard not only studied the signs of the hoboes, but has has gone back through the ages tracing the signs of different nations and studying their meaning even to the hieroglyphics of the Egyptians. He took special interest in this work when preparing to illustrate Mark Twain's book named "A Yankee in King Arthur's Court." Beard says that many of the yegg signs can be traced back to ancient Egypt. He has learned the meaning of the majority of those signs which can be found on gate posts, barns and fences. By those signs the yeggmen comunicates information about the house marked to their fellow men who follow along the same path. Beard says that there arc signs indicating whether there is a dog in the house, whether the housewife is kind and whether it is easy to rob the house. As Beard has learned these signs and can decipher them, he has arranged 10 teach them to the boys and it is probable that in the new Man ual of the Boy Scouts of America he will have several pages devoted to these symbols and their meanings. If the boys learn them they can read the messages of the hoboes along the public highways. If the signs are dangerous to people the boys can rub them off and warn the police. All this means that the secrecy of the hoboes will be destroyed, thanks to Beard and the energy of the Boy Scouts of America. It means that if the hoboes wish to continue their symbolistic communication, they must work out new signs and this would take years. One Good In Flimsy Houses. The Japanese have an easier time than their confreres in Europe. Crime in the land of the chrysanthemum is almost limited to theft and case3 of bodily harm resulting from street brawls. It is next to impossible, the chief of the Tokyo police says, for a murder to be committed without some one hearing of it at the moment. This is due to the fact that the houses are composed of paper and bamboo, so any noise in a house occasioned by robbers or assassins would not fail to attract the attention of neighbors. Dundee Advertiser. cm it MP Is not recommended ROOT you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it will be found just the remedy you need. At druggists in fifty cent and dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful new discovery by mail free, also pamphlet telling all about it. Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, X. Y. OLD RELIABLE PAINT When Reduced Ready to Use Only Costs the Consumer $1.35 PER GALLON Old Reliable Paint Co. We Retail Goods at Wholesale Prices. Phone 22S0. 10-12 S. 7th. MILLIONS OF CHICKS die in the shell every year for the want of proper moisture conditions. The "Tycos" Incubator Hygrometer is not a regulator of moisture, but is an indicator of conditions, so that if not correct they may be made so. "Tycos" Incubator Hygrometer each $1.50. "Tycos" Incubator Thermometers, 50 to ?1. W. H. Ross Drug Co. S04 Main Street.
RAINFALL IN TEXAS
Has Been Exceptional So Far This Year. San Antonio, Tex., March 27. Rainfall in Texas has been unusual for the past three months and one of the peculiar things is a heavy downpour in those sections where rain has been very light for a number of years. The Pecos valley country has received the heaviest fall of rain so far known in j the history of that section, the entire area having been drenched a number of times in the past sixty days and tho rain of the past twenty-lour i,ours bieaking all records. This valley has long been known as one of the dry belts and while the fertility of the soil unparalleled almost in the country the main obstacle to agricultural development hss been the lack of moisture. In spiie of the fact that the section lias been dry. considerable development has t een carried on and much of the soil harnessed for cultivation, it is believed by those who have had wide experience in the work that the cultivation of tracts in various places in the valley and unusual evaporation caused by small irrigation plants is responsible for a change in moisture conditions. Very naturally those who are interested are elated over the unusual rainfall and the promises of prosperity which are the result. While there has been greater precipitation in a number localities rains have been general over the entire Southwest. Cattlemen here from the pan-handle report an unusual growth of grass as the result of recent rainfalls. One ranger who has been twenty-five eais iu that section declares that tho pasteurage outlook is the most promising ever seen. In t'ua Neuccs valley, where great irrigation plants have been built, one of these, that of the Holland-Texas compauy. footed youuefl! Get the Original and Genuine HORLICK'S MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. For Infants, Invalids, and Growing children. Pure Nutrition, up building the whole body. Invigorates the nursing mother and the aged. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no substitute. Askfor HORLICK'S. In No Gombine or Trust D. E. ROBERTS INDEPENDENT PIANO TUNERand REPAIRER Thirteen Years Factory and "N'areroom Experience Phone 3684. 1818 Main St. DON'T FORGET .That NOW Is the time to protect yourself against loss by WINDSTORMS. Costs but little. DOUGAN & CO, Room 1, I. O. O. F. Bldfl. Phone 1330. Know thy . Opportunity to the FEEDER and GROWER that means OmerG.Whelan Feed and Seed Store 33 South 6th St. Phone 1679
Burglary, Windstorm, Cyclone, Tornado Fire. Llle. Accident, Health. Live Stock. IN CI ID liXPV t Plate Glass. Automobile. Liability: 111 ijUii AlllEi I
F R IftVnr r l7TJRl7I2 knollenberg
mawjLjaiaii.jrJLjaA.x9 ANNEX.
A New Shipment of Wash IPcsai (CoaiH Try it for your UNDERFEED FURNACE! H. C. BULLERDICK & SURJ PHONE 1235.
costing more than $30,000, every pool is filled with water and the storm floods roll over the dams with a quantity sufficient to irrigate two such valleys if it were conserved. In this section of the state it is maintained that the precipitation of moisture has been sufficient to insure a bountiful crop without resorting to irrigation. It can truthfully be said that the entire state of Texas has been thoroughly drenched in the past sixtydays.
J"5f t Have You a Rheumatic 'Jt Friend? If tint reaJrr of this has a friend or rotative- sufirirK from rheumatism It woulit lo well to Hip this prescription anil present it. It is probably the mom effei-tive. prompt nj reliable treatment for nil forms of rheumatism ever prescribed. The inirrvdients are In common use. but tlie virtue seema to lie in the exact combination of the true mul pure tlrusrs. Have a reliable tirus:" fc'ixt mix it. loiliito of Putdsaiuio 2 drams Sodium Salicylate . . drams Wine of Colchieum Conip. Kss t'ardoil I o Oomp. Kid. lmlmwort. . ,. .1 o Crmin, Svvnp Sarsjtparilla...5 ozn Mix iitut benin bv taklns a teaspoonful after each meal and one at bedtime. After tlu first week Rredually increaa the dose to two teaspoonf uls. Truly vndtrful relief Is experienced and if jQrsisted in u cure may be assured. BURPEE'S SWEET PEA SEEDS That Grow At H. G. H ADLEY'S 1025 Main Has by far the best JACKSON, ANTHRACITE and SOFT COAL. GENNETT TONIGHT AS TOLD IN THE HILLS A REAL INDIAN HEROINE ISC. 25c. Sic. 5c SILVER MESH Purses and Bags From 50c Up. Also a Fine Line of Leather. Bags. See our display of Alligator goods. Miller's HarnessStore "The Quality Leather Store.' 827 MAIN ST. FHOIJE 1811 Arc You Pinched For Money? Do you need a little assistance temporarily? The proposition is easy. Call at our office and state your wants to us confidentially. We can help you out without any embarrassment or publicity. Our system Is simple and easy easy to get and easy to pay. Money Loaned On wagons, pianos, household goods, horses, or any personal property of value without removing them from your possession. Loans made anywhere within 40 miles of Richmond. $1.20 Is the weekly payment on a $50 loan for 50 weeks. Oth-' er amounts in proportion. If you need money, call or write at once. Private Reliable RICHMOND LOAN CO., . Room 8, Colonial Bldg Automatic Phone 1545. RICHMOND, INDIANA
