Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 293, 14 October 1912 — Page 4

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THE EICHllOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGRAM, SiOXD AY OCTOBER 14, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and San-Telegram Published aJ awned bt the PALLADIUM PKINTINO OO. Iaaued Every Kvenlna; Except Sunday. Office Corner North tb tad A tree'a. Palladlum and Sun-Teletfram Ptwn"UiMlneae Office. 2CS; Wewa luent, 1121 RICHMOND. INDIANA

Hadolph G. L,eee aMStes - BUBSCKIPXIOJ4 TASKMtf In Richmond Sa.Ot per la " vance) or 10a p" weeslI:UUAL KOtTf BUB , os On year, in atfvanea fjS l months, in ad vane ,i month. In adva&oe AUdreaa changed aa often a 1,r?' both new and old addrca nut arlvan .th Bubacribera will dIhm remit l ordar which ahould be .tveu ' pafied term; nam w:U not O d untu paaeat la rcelvd. MAIL. BU?a4RlPTION8 One year. In advanoe fix month, in ad anna .......... Una montfc. in advance Kntered at Richmond. Indians, pest office aa second class mtU mattar. New York Representatives Payne Jounsr. 30-14 Waat ltd atreet. and iJ Waat 2nd street. New York, N. Y. Clcag-o Repraaentatlvee Payna & Young- 747-741 Marquette BaUdlna;, Chicago. IH. That Association mf Amaav lean Advertiser a fhaa ax. '181 T , . .,, a . BDimra ana tai ui wia w the circa latiemt af this Dfiblicatloo. THa f igurea of circulation eontained In th Aasociatioa'a report only are guaranteed, Association of American Advertisers ICS. Whitehall Rlda. M Y. Eirn Progressive Ticket For President, Theodore Roosevelt. For Vice President. Hiram W. Johnson. Governor. Albert J. Beveridge, Indianapolis. Lieutenant Governor, Frederick Landis, LogansporL' Secretary of State, Lawson N. Mace, Scottsburg. Auditor, H. E. Cushman. Washington. Treasurer, B. B. Baker, Montlcello. Attorney General, Clifford F. Jackman. Huntington. Stata Supt. of Public Instruction, Charles E. Spalding, Wiuamac. Statistician, Thaddeus M. Moore. Anderson. Reporter 8uprme Court, Frank R. Miller, Clinton. Judge Supreme Court, First Division, James B. Wilson. Bloomlngton. 'Judge Supreme Court, Fourth Division, William A. Bond. Richmond Judge Appellate Court, First Division, Minor F. Pate, Bloomfleld. Congress, Gierluf Jensen, Shelbyville. Joint Representative. John Clifford, Connersville. Representative. John Judkins Prosecuting Attorney. W. W. Roller. Sheriff. Jacob Bayer. Recoder. B. F. Parsons. Treasurer. Albert Chamness Coroner. R. J. Pierce, M. D. Commissioner. (Eastern District.) Albert Anderson. (Wayne Township.) Commissioner. (Western District.) . Mordecal Doddridge, (Washington Township.) Surveyor. Levi Peacock. Dr. AbbotVs Views Dr. Lyman Abbott, the distinguished editor of the Outlook, has been an intimate friend of Theodore Roosevelt for many years. One of the illuminat ing articles of the campaign is Doctor Abbott's intimate view of the Progressive leader in the cweat 'issue of the Outlook. At the outset he refers to the grotesque caricatures of Roosevelt that have appeared in the New York newspapers, and the many lies that have been printed about him. He continues: Falsehood, however baseless, if repeated with sufficient frequency, finally produces an impression on the public mind, and even high minded and thoughtful men get conceptions which, because the men are thoughtful and high minded, they ought not to be unwilling to correct. Thus, in his recent letter, elsewhere reported in this issue of the Outlook, Mr. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard University writes of Mr. Roosevelt: "The candidate of the Progressive party has shown himself capable while in power of taking grave public action which, of course, seemed to him wise and right in disregard of constitutional and legal limitations." This charge has been often made, and the friends of Mr. Roosevelt have often called for specifications of it; but the specifications have never been given. We have never been told what specific clause of the constitution or what specific provision of law any act of his has ever disregarded. For the last thirty years I have been a somewhat careful student of current American history, and I hope conscientious in an endeavor to report and interpret it to my readers. During the nearly nine years of his executive life aa Governor of New York State and President of the United States, no executive act of Mr. Roosevelt's, and no legislation which he has recommended, has ever been declared unconstitutional by the courts; and I think ft is equally true, though on this subject I do not speak with equal certainty, that no administrative act of his in the preceding years, as civil serrloe commissioner, and assistant secretary of the navy, was ever set aside by his superior officers because by it he transcended the limits of his legal authority. I bare not only been a careful student of current vents', but for more

i

Watson Shows His

Last Saturday night James E. Watson made a speech at Lebanon, Boone county, which is the home of Samuel M. Ralston. Democratic candidate for governor. In the course of his remarks he said that Mr. Ralston would, if elected, make an honorable, respectable, patriotic Governor. Mr. Ralston will be elected and willbe all that Mr. WTatson says of him. New Castle, Ind., Times.

In paying tribute to the Democratic candidate for governor, James Eli .Watson for at least once in his life is sincere. It has never been a secret that since Beveridge entered the liBts as a candidate for governor Watson and the gang he travels with have bent every energy to defeat the Progressive leader, knowing full well that his election means loss of power to them and the curbing of the special interests they represent. Weeks ago they, decided that if their own candidate for governor was not strong enough to defeat Beveridge they would abandon him, without a protest on his part, and employ every political trick at their command in an attempt to elect the candidate of the Taggart Democratic machine. Machine government, either Democratic or Republican, must be maintained at any cost, they reason. Judging from Watson's recent enthusiastic indorsement of Ralston the G. O. P. machine leaders have now realized that the fight for the governorship is between Beveridge and Ralston, so the skids are being adjusted under Durbin. Whoever Watson, Kealing & Company are for, it is wise for the people to be against. Mr. Beveridge is engaged in a hard fight, being opposed by two powerful political machines and all the corrupt interests whose graft would be taken from them in the event of a Progressive victory, but the fight has been made easier for Beveridge by Watson's indorsement of Ralston.

than thirteen years I have been in intimate relations with Theodore Roosevelt, and for the last three years have been very intimately associated with him in editorial labors. We have met together in editorial conference and at luncheon once a week. I have seen him in his office at work, and I have seen him in his home at play. In temperament we are very different. Mr. Roosevelt physically is an electric battery of inexhaustible energy. I have been compelled all my life carefully to conserve such physical energy as I possess, and to do my work within the limits which a not naturally strong constitution has imposed upon me. Mr. Roosevelt is by temperament. a soldier; in phrenological language, his combativeness is large. I am by temperament a teacher, and avoid battle of every description when it can be avoided without cowardice or dishonor. Mr. Roosevelt has, either by inheritance or by long training, great decision of character. My decision of character and I do nv; think I am wholly without it has been laboriously built up by conscious, deliberate effort persistently continued ever since the days when as a boy I read Foster's "Essay on Decision of Character" and discovered my own native weakness. Mr. Roosevelt acts upon questions presented to him with a celerity of judgment which takes one's breath away. I am accustomed to follow my grandfather's advice and, when a difficult question is presented to me, to sleep on it. Mr. Roosevelt always goes to his goal as directly and as swiftly as one of his rifle balls. Sinuous ways are abhorrent to him, and ways of indirection distasteful. I am always more inclined to persuade an opponent than to vanquish him, and in conflict recognize, as I do not think Mr. Roosevelt often does, the advantage of sometimes resorting to a flank movement rather than to a direct attack. I think, therefore; I can understand the reason why Mr. Roosevelt is persona non grata to men of certain temperaments. Those who think that caution is the sum of all the virtues are afraid of his courage. Those who are unwilling to sacrifice peace to obtain righteousness dread his militant character. ThoBe who are accustomed to reach their conclusions in the quiet of the study, after careful deliberation of the pros and cons, attribute his quick executive action to a rash and heedless temper. Mr. Roosevelt abhors that which is evil. He hates, as David did the enemies of Jehovah, with a perfect hatred, impurities, meannesses, falsehoods, shams, dishonesties of every description. He is fighting honest. Easygoing good nature is a natural American vice, and Mr. Roosevelt's hearty, and in the main healthy, hatred of wrong-doing and wrong doers, always vigorously but not always temperately expressed, offends the taste of gentle natures. It is not true, however, that Mr. Roosevelt acts from impulse, or that he is rash, heedless or impetuous. I am accustomed to play solitaire, sometimes with a companion whose eyes are much quicker than mine. The cards are laid out on the table. I have to look at them one by one. My companion sees at a glance their relations to each other and what can be done with them. Present any problem to Mr. Roosevelt, and he instantly sees all the conditions of the problem, and forms his judgment, not without careful thought, but without the delay involved in deliberation. I have not always at first agreed with him, but when I have given to the problem the deliberate study which my temper requires, I have come either to the conclusion that Mr. Roosevelt was correct or that the difference between us was less than I had thought it to be. When he ordered the discharge of the Brownsville soldiers, I thought he had acted rashly. I went to the law library, spent a morning in investigation of the authorities and came to the conclusion that he had acted fully within his constitutional and legal powers, and was fully sustained by military precedents. Later, taking up the official reports, I could come to no other conclusion than that he was equally sustained by the facts. Babies' skin will be soft and smooth if you give them Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea this month. It regulates the 6tomach and bowels, makes them eat, sleep and grow. S5c. A. G. Luken & Co. Advertisement. Must Have Hit Him Hard. A tourist from the east, visiting an old western prospector In his lonely rabin in the hills, commented, "And vet you seem so cheerful and happy!" "Yes," replied the one of the pick and shovel. "I spent a week in Boston once, and, no matter what happens to me, I've been cheerful ever since." Argonaut.

Hand.

This Date in History OCTOBER 14. 1655 Massachusetts passed an act prohibiting the immigration of Quakers. 1712 George Groenville, father of the Stamp Act, born. Died Nox. 13, 1770. 1774 Continental Congress adopted a "Declaration of Colonial Rights," claiming self-government. 1780 Gen. Nathaniel Greene appointed to command the armies in the South, superseding Gen Gates. 1806 French army under Napoleon defeated the Prussians at battle of Jena. 1837 Rt. Rev. Ellison Capers, P. E. bishop of South Carolina, born in Charleston, S. C. Died in Columbia, S. C. April 22, 1908. 1866 Twenty-live thousand houses destroyed by fire in the French quarter of Quebec. 1884 Frank Hatton of Iowa appointed Postmaster General of the United States. 1889 Protectorate of Italy over Abssinia announced. 1890 Edward Robert Atwell consecrated P. E. bishop of Western Missouri. 1894 Golden jubilee of Johann Strauss celebrated in Vienna. 1911 John M. Harding, associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, died in Washington, D. C. Born in Boyle County, Ky., June 1, 1833. This Is My 59th Birthday JOHN W. KENDRICK. John W. Kendrick, vice-president of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, was born in Worcester, Mass. Oct. 14, 1853, and at the age of twenty was graduated from Worcester Polytechnic Institute. He began his railroad career with the Northern Pacific in 1879, being employed as level man in the Yellowstone division. The next year he was put in charge of construction, and in 1883 he was appointed chief engineer of the St. Paul and Northern Pacific. He was promoted to the position of chief engineer of the Northern Pacific in 1888. When the j road went into receivership in 1893 j Mr. Kendrick was made general manaI ger and proceeded to reorganize the property. He was made second viceI president of the Northern Pacific in (1899 and in 1901 he left to accept a j similar position with the Santa Fe , road. For the past three years he has been in charge of operation of the en tire Santa Fe system, comprising more than 10,000 miles of road. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Earl of Calloway, 76 years old today. Sir John Blunt, 80 years old today. Sir Edmund Walker, president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, 64 years old today. Joseph R. Lamar, associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, 55 years old today. Rear Admiral Newton E. Mason, U. S. N. retires from active service, 62 years old today. William P. Borland, representative in Congress of the Fifth Missouri district, 45 years old today.

ISraga Masonic "9rfS Calendar

j Monday, Oct. 14. Richmond Comjmandery, No. 8, K. T. Special Con- ! clave. Work in Knights Templar degree. Tuesday, Oct. 15. Richmond lodge No. 196, F. & A. M. called meeting, work in Master Mason degree. Wednesday, Oct. 16. Webb lodge, No. 24, F. & A. M., stated meeting. Friday. Oct. 18. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M., called convocation; work in Royal Arch degree. ' PofrAahmontG Saturday, Oct. 19 Loyal Chapter, No. 49, O. E. S. Stated meeting. Saturday, Oct. 19, O. E. S. has initiation and basket supper. ELKS Meet Every Thursday Night

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

CONTENTMENT. This Is a true tale with a moral. Will and Jean lived In a small town. Though neither rich nor poor, they were comfortable and content- They owned a neat cottage and had a fair business. Jean sung at ber work. Will employed one clerk. When trade was slack there were picnics and neighborly good times. A new sow 5 a year sufficed Jean. Will never bought more than two suits yearly. They had a little savings account that grew. One day city friends came. They told Will he was burying his talents; the same ability and effort would bring ten times the return. The women filled Jean's ears with tales of the city's pleasures. Why not live to the full? The leaven worked. After much hesitancy Will sold his business and the cottage They went to the city, where he engaged in his line of business. They rented a flat which cost five times the sum Will paid for the little village store. The neighbors employed a maid some two. One must lire like his neighbors. They saw much of life Jean did. Also Will prospered. But the expense Jean must buy a lot of clothes. And there was the cost of entertaining. They were making more money, but where did it got Will consulted Jean, but she did not know. And Will began lying awake of nights figuring how to make both ends meet. And Jean worried. She knew Will was troubled and he was working to the limit. She was getting most out of the new life. But what did she get? A hurried, harried existence, dates with dressmakers, late hours, wrinkles! She worried about Will and the ways of the maid and the expense and their future. Despi'e prosperity they were running behind. You can see their finish? No, they did not go to smash quite. One day Will said he could sell the business, pay the debts and have enough to buy back his old store. The little cottage and the little bank account had been devoured. Jean cried. She did not want to leave the city, though she. knew they had not been as happy as in the old town. But she knew It was best So they returned to the village, where they were warmly welcomed. It was like changing a tight shoe for an old, easy one. And the moral? Change one word of the proverb, "Better Is a dinner of herbs where contentment is than a stalled ox and hatred therewith." ARE TO CONSIDER IMPORTANT CASES United States Supreme Court Resumes Its Sittings at Washington Today. (National News Association) WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 14. Twenty-one cases of major importance have been set for argument before the Supreme Court which began its fall term today. Among the important suits to be argued are the International Rate Case, the cotton corner case, the suit against the alleged bathtub trust, the L. & N. rate case, which involved the power of the Commerce Court to weigh evidence presented and previously passed upon by the Interstate Commerce Commission and the embezzlement case . of William R. Breese, and Joseph Dickerson, of Ashville, N. C. It is also probable that the Kansas Ballot case, involving the right of the Roosevelt electors to remain on the Republican ticket in that state will come up. The ballots must be printed for the November election several days before that event. If the Supreme Court is to say anything of practical effect on the case, its decision must be rendered during the latter part of October. The Inter-Mountain Rate case involves the question of long and short haul rates, to what extent rates from the Atlantic sea board to Spokane and other inland towns may exceed the rates to the Pacific coast is the proposition. The bathtub trust case involves the monopolistic power of patent rights. The suit bringing before the court the question of whether a company may control the price of the finished product through controlling the use under license of a patented tool used in making the article. Several railroad matters of extreme importance also come before the court. The jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission over transportation property in stock yards, the right to enforce switching privileges for electric lights and the right of railroads to limit their liability will come before the court. The latter case is of particular Interest, because some states declare null and void bills of lading seeking to limit the liability of the common carrier, while in other 6tates there are express constitutional provisions against a limitation of this kind. Another case that will come before the Supreme Court and which will be followed with keen interest, not only because of the diplomatic questions involved but for many dramatic elements, is that of Porter Charlton, the young New York clerk, who murdered his wife In Italy in 1910, and threw her body, which he had placed in a trunk, into Lake Como. Young Charlton has been lying in jail in New Jersey for two years, awaiting' the verdict of the Supreme Court as to whether or not he will have to go back to Italy and stand trial. If the court decides that be should not be extradited, it seems there will be no other alternative than to set him free.

DEFENDS STATEMENT OF BLOND ESKIMOS American Museum Says Stefansson's Statements Are

To be Accepted. NEW YORK, Oct. 14 In refutation of certain criticisms made in Europe and rumors in America concerning the discovery of blonde Eskimo in the Arctic regions by Vilhajalmar Stefansson, the following statement was issued by Dr. Frederick A. Lucas, director of the American Museum of Natural History . The Stefansson-Anderson expedition to Arctic America was organized in 1908 and sent out under the auspices of the American Museum of Natural History. The expedition was in charge of Vilhjalmar Stefansson and Dr. R. M. Anderson, both graduates of the University of Iowa. Mr. Stefansson devoted his attention to the anthropological work of the expedition, while Dr. Anderson was occupied with the zoological work for the museum. Between May 13, 1909, when he first came in contact with the Eskimo of Cape Bexley, and May 18, 1911, when he left the Prince Albert Sound people to return to his base near Cape Perry. Mr. Stefansson saw about a thousand persons, roughly speaking. He took cephalic measurements of 206 of these. Hair Beards. It appeared both to Mr. Stefansson and to the Alaskan and Mackenzie River Eskimos who accompanied him that the people visited differed considerably from any Eskimos they had seen before. Perhaps the most striking feature was that beards were not only more common and more abundant than among the men of the western Eskimo, but also of colors varying from black to a very light brown, tending to red. The blond tendencies are most prominent in southwestern victoria Land, but they are met with at least as far east as a hundred miles east of the mouth of the Coppermine River, Coronation Gulf. Although no scientific census was taken to determine the exact degree of blondnesB of every individual seen, Mr. Stefansson feels safe in saying that more than half the individuals seen have eyebrows and hair lighter than black and ranging all the way to a very light brown. The tendency to blondness seems less strong in the women than in the men. A few individuals had curly hair and perhaps a dozen had eyes noticeably lighter than the ordinary Eskimo brown, ranging to blue or blue gray. Came from Greenland. These and other facts of a similar character were observed by Mr. Stefansson and will in due course of time be published by the museum. It is too early to settle definitely on any theory explaining the facts. Of the various explanations that have so far been suggested it seems to Mr. Stefansson that the one open to the fewest serious objections is that of the admixture of a large amount of European blood at some fairly remote period. In this connection, the disappearance in the fifteenth or sixteenth centuries of the Norse colony from Greenland suggests itself as a possible source of the Europeanlike character. Many things militate against the sup position that they can be derived from any of the Franklin expeditions of the middle of the last century. One of these is that the only Eskimo of this district seen at close quarters by Franklin himself is described by him in trms which fit very well the blond type found today. The purely biologic S I Cat oot the t&saa at this Tbe $3.00 New WEBTI3UA 1912 DICTIONABY IUaa4reite4 J, wttfs stftxarc I

theories that might explain the facts also seem to have serious drawbacks. With reference to the discoveries of the expedition in Arctic regions. Explorer Stefansson said. In reply to some of his critics: "I am not making any lecture tours for profit and cannot see what my object would be to make statements that cannot be proved. The field up north is an open one and any one can go there and see the Eskimo tribes for themselves." Two bands of missionaries from abroad have entered the field recently, according to letters received by the explorer yesterday. Two missionaries represent the Church of England and others the Roman Catholic church. Mr. Stefansson reaffirmed that he visited three tribes of blond Eskimo living on Coronation Gulf. Dolphin and Union Straits, so far as known had never met white men. About 500 specimens of Arctic curios gathered ty the expedition were placed on exhibition in the Natural Museum yesterday. They include elaborate ornate costumes worn by the Eskimos of Coronation Gulf, for some of which fabulous prices were paid; sval harpoona. the wood utilixed from driftwood and the points made from caribou antlers; bows and arrows of spruce with the cords of caribou sinews.

Fur Opening, Tuesday, Oct. 15, Knollenberg's Store. BUYS PIANOS HERE Turkey Not Too Busy Fighting to Overlook Music. "The man that hath no music in himself. Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds. Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils." Shakespeare. Turkey apparently has heard of Shakespeare. and takes some stock in his observation, for the Starr Piano company ships hundreds of instruments to that country. Although Turkey is being kicked by the Bulgarians on one side, fought by the Greeks on the other, slapped by the Montenegrins, and is having trouble with the Servians, the demand for pianos and piano players has not diminished. The local piano company last week shipped a car load of pianos to Turkey. The demand for pianos in the Balkan countries Is very slight. MISS NEANEN DIES AT NEW PARIS, O. (Palladium Special) NEW PARIS. O.. Oct. 14. Mary Neanen, daughter of Patrick and Mrs. Neanen, died Saturday night at her home in this place. Death was due to paralysis. The funeral will be held Wednesday morning. Burial in the New Paris cemetery. The deceased had many friends in Richmond. PIANO TUNING D. E. ROBERTS 15 Years Practical Experience. Formerly with the Steinway House at Indianapolis. PHONE 3684 4 DR. JOHN80N Dentist Comstock Building 1016 Main X ' jCO UPON 3;

RICHMOND PALLADIUM OCTOBER 14. Jt",!

OF CONSECUTIVE.

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of DiaUeaary selected (which crra tha Itraa at the ceat af ckW. aaaassa Croat taa factory, ckeckiae, dark hir mmi atlaar aicmary ZXTLTiSt steaas), aad racaira year choice of these three book t Tbe $400 ' (Like illustrations in the announcements from day to day.) New This dictionary is MOT published by the original pubWEBSTEKIAN Ushers cf Webster's dictionary or by their successors. f n It is the only entirely vrit compilation by the world's leJ greatest authorities from leading universities; is bound in DICTIONAKYiull Limp Leather, flexible, stamped in gold on back and Ulaetrte4 sides, printed on Bible paper, with red edges and comers rounded; beautiful, strong, durable. Besides the general contents, there are maps and over 6oo subjects beautifully illustrated by three- I E " color plates, numerous subjects by monotones, 16 papes of c,n"sf

educational charts and the latet Una Mates census. at this office SIX Consecutive Dictionary Coop one

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AMERICAN HUMANE SOCIETY MEETING Opened at Indianapolis Today with Large Number of Delegates Present. (National News Aoc!atton) INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. Oct. 14 The thirty-sixth annual meeting of the American Humane Association opened here today. Many delegates representing anti-cruelty associations and societies from all parts of the United States are in attendance at thi convention. These meetings Mil last for three days and will be demoted first to the consideration of work for children and the second half of the session will be devoted to the consideration of animals. This evening a meeting will be held at which addresses will be made by Governor Thomas U. Marshall. Sena

tor John W. Kern. Dr. William O. Stillman, president of the American Humane Association, Mayor Samuel Shank, of Indianapolis, and Dr. Francis H. Rowley, president of the Massachusetts S. P. C. A. Many important addresses pertaining to the treatment of children and looking to the eliminations of child labor have been prepared by eminent men and women, who have devoted their lives to this humane cause. In fact, everything pertaining to children and every kind and condition of childhood will be ably discussed. "Save the child is the ruling spirit of the day," said President Stillman at the opening of the Congress. "This noble work should engage the attention of every good man and woman In the country, and I venture to believe that within a few years such things as little children working In factories, will not be beard of. Giving Her Credit. "Glddings willingly give bis wife full credit for what be Is." "What Is her "Bankrupt. Chics go Peord-Tflersld. 1 At the Time You Need It Loans made on furniture. Pianos, Horses, etc; No delay. Some people are backward about calling for money the first time. You need not hesitate about calling on us. We extend the same courteous treatment to everyone. All dealings confidential. If you need money for coal or winter clothing, consult us. If you need money, fill out the following blank, cut it out and mail It to us and our agent will call on you. Your Namo Address Loans made In all parts of the city. - We give you a written statement of your contract. We allow extra time without charge In case of sickness or loss cf work. Phone 1541. Richmond Loan Co. Colonial Bldg., Room 8, Richmond, Indiana, I

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