Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 48, 6 January 1913 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND STJX TELEGRA3I, MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1913.

PAGE SIX.

1911 TEAM DEFEATS PRESENT H. S FIVE

Rough Game from Finish. Score 19 to. 11. Start to Was In one of the roughest games played on the Y. M. C. A. floor this season, the high school alumni basket ball team defeated the high school team by the score of 19 to 11. The game was a battle royal from start to finish for the honors and was not decided until the last few minutes of play. The game started out at a furious clip and the ball was beneath the high school goal when it was necessary to delay the playing for three minutes. When the ball again went into play the team seemed about evenly matched and it was several minutes before Schepman of the Alumni waa able to cage the first basket. Throughout the Jlrst half, it was a contest for strength and weight rather than skill and team work. When the whistle blew, the score was about even. The second lialf started out in the eame way until Castor of the Alumni was removed from the game for slugging. The former teamwork of the Alumni team then asserted itself and they were able to take the ball down the floor at will. Pstrker, who was put In the game upon Castor's removal, did the best work- on the floor as both teams were almost, exhausted from the strenuous pace set Jn the first half. The game ended with the score 19 to 11 for the Alumni. The high sc.ool team was at a disadvantage in the game because of irrjuries to its best players, Mayer and Thornburg, for whom substitutes were put in. As the Alumni team has had very little practice together, it cannot be said that they won the game because of that reason. The lineup was as folliows: Alumni. High School. Forward Laning : Quigg Forward Castor-Parker Hoover Center Scott Ball Guard Schepman Phillips Guard Kicodemus Lyons LAST OF THE YAQUfS. Passing of a Once Famous Tribe Mexican Indians. Oi All the world has heard of the famous Yaqul Indians of the state of Sonora, Mexico. They are for the most part dwellers in the hills, crudely armed with primitive weapons, but terrific fighters who have more than once decisively beaten the soldiers of Mexico. Peaceable when undisturbed, fully alive to the richness of , their mines and the value of their fertile valleys, they sought only to defend that which was theirs from the grasping hands of those who desired their mines and their lands. Like most aborigiues, however, they were doomed from the first. What was at the time of Cortes a tribe of 5,000 strong, able to defy the warriors of Montezuma, has dwindled until there are now not more than COO souls in the valley of the Yaqui river and in the mountain gorges which wall in the source of this stream. The bulk of the Taquis have beeu wiped out in sanguinary wars or taken prisoners and shot, and those for whom no excuse for death could be found have been deported to the fever stricken vales of Yucatan. The Yaquis as a race are no more, but their passing has been made complete only during the past few years. Wide World Magazine. testing a picture. Tissot, the Famous French Paintsr, and His Critic. An interesting story is told of Jacques Tissot, the great French paint er. While in England he painted a beautiful religious picture and. meeting a countrywoman, asked her opinion of his work. "It's a chef d'oeuvre," she replied, giving a remarkably just and detailed appreciation of the various merits of the really splendid painting. "Are you satisfied?' asked a friend. Tissot answered in the negative. , He entirely repainted his picture, working night and day When finished he sent again for his fair critic, who pronounced it admirable and remained silently admir- . ing it with smiling criticism. "Are you satisfied?" asked the friend again when the lady had departed. "No." replied the artist, and he set to work for the third time. When the Parisienne saw the new painting she gazed at it for some moments with evident emotion and then without a word sank softly to her knees and began to pray. "Are you satisfied now?' whispered the friend, and Tissot said "Yes." London Saturday Review. Hannibal's Downfall. The fate of Hannibal turned upon the result of a promenade. It was after he had crossed the Alps and entered Italy, with winter quarters established at Capua. His residence was one of the best houses in the ctity. and while walking in the garden he heard a female voice singing not far away. Struck by the tones of the voice, he issued an order that the singer should be brought before him. He was so greatly impressed by her charms that he at once attached her to his household, disposing of the husband by beheading him. Retribution followed closely upon the cowardly perpetration of the outrage. The balance of the winter was devoted to pleasure, discipline and drills were practically abandoned, and with the advent of spring the Carthaginian army was so demoralized by the dissipation of the city that its prestige was lost, and with it came the downfall of Hannibal.

Next President of France is in

ARREST CIRCUS MAN Charged with Giving Shelbyville Man Bad Check. (Palladium Special) SHELBY VILLE, Ind., Jan. 6 Dan R. Robinson a prominent circus man, who is wanted on the charge of passing a fraudulent check, probably will be brought to this city from Cincinnati. It is not likely that he will be brought here immediately, as he has been released on bond temporarily through a habeas corpus writ. The warrant for the arrest of the man is based on an indictment return ed by the grand jury at the October j term of the circuit court. Although j the indictment has not been made pub-! lie, it is understood that it charges ' Robinson with passing the check at ; the Morrison and DePrez drug store, j the alleged felony having been commit ted last summer at the time the street fair was being held in this city. Robinson, however, was not connected with the carnival aggregation, but it is said the check has been issued to one of the employes of the company and then passed on to Robinson, who got rid of it at the drug store, by having James Morrison, of this city, identify him and indorse the check. It was for the amount of $25. PURE FOOD LABELS. They Were Used In Palestine as Early as the Year 850 B. C. Professor George A. Reisner of Harvard university discovered among some speclments of earliest Hebrew writing in the excavations of the city of Samaria. In Palestine, a most interesting record of the first pure food laws in history- He also found ancient writings dealing with the first instance on record of the keeping of wines in a government warehouse tin- I der bond. Dating back to the period of King Abab, 850 B. C, these inscriptions are considered to be one of the greatest finds of the Harvard Palestinian expeditions which delved into the city of ,hab and Omri for three years. They Tound labels on wine and oil jars. These mention the year in which the wine was laid down in the cellars of the palace storehouse, and they state the vineyard from which the wine came, important facts that are recogpized equally well by vintners today. On the oil jars the label runs, "A jar of pure oil," with the mention of the district from which the oil came. The bits of pottery on which the descriptions were written were not parts of the jars, but were evidently intended to be attached to the necks of the receptacles, just as are labels or seals at the present time. New York World. How Fielding Spelled His Name. The Fieldings are an ancient race, and the Denbigh earldom dates from 1622. By the way. there is a funny story as regards the famiJy name and its spelling. The author of "Tom Jones" was one of the race, and the then Lord Denbigh said to his relative: "Why don't you spell your name 'Feilding.' as the rest of ns do and not 'Fielding'?" The writer made answer, "Because 1 am the first of the family who learned to spell." London Gentlewoman. African Giants. There are many giants in Africa nine feet high. Some of them weigh 300 pounds and are strong enough to kill a panther at one blow. Perhaps you think such big fellows must be clumsy, but they are not. They can run faster than any horse, springing twelve to fourteen feet at a leap. Thi3 all sounds like a fairy story, but not so when you hear that these African slants areostriches. In Niw York. "The woman ncross the hall from ns is dead." "How did yon nd that oat?" "Why. I happened to see it in the paper." Life, Beginning Young. Parent Is my boy precocious, do yon think? School Principal Very. He told the teacher he had been sitting up with a sick friend. Puck. Sincerity is the basis of all true friendship. Without sincerity it is like a ship without ballast

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On January 17th, the Chamber of Deputies and National Senate of France will convene for the purpose of electing a successor to President Fallieres of France for a term of seven years. Premier Poincare is looked upon as very likely to be the next head of the Republic. (Top, left to right: George Clemenceau, ex-Premier and M. Delcasse, Minister of Marine. Below, 'Prime Minister Raymond Poincare and Ex-Premier Cal-laux.)

CALENDAR OF SPORTS Monday. j Annual trials of United States Field Trial club begin at Letohatchie, Ala.

j Alfred De Dro vs. James Mature at Brighton, a small station near Cinfor pocket billiard championship, at cinnati last week, was well known by

New York. Koji Yamada vs. George Slosson, 18.2 billiard match, 2,400 points, at Chicago, Opening of annual show of Cleveland Automobile Dealers' association. Opening of Mississippi Valley Motor Boat show, at St. Louis. j Tuesday. ! Opening of tenth annual mid-winter golf tournament at Pinehurst, N. C. Wrestling match between Henry Ordeman and Jess Westergaard, at Minneapolis. Meeting of the Wisconsin-Illinois Baseball league, at Milwaukee. i Annual championship tournament of Kansas Chacker association, at Manhattan, Kansas. Harry Trendall vs. Wrillie Schaefer, 8 rounds, at St. Louis Wednesday. Joe Rivers vs. Leach rounds, at Empire, A. C, York. Thursday. Sutton vs. Morningstar, Cross, 10 at New at New

Y'ork, for world's championship at their schedules very well today, in 18.1 balkline. j spite of the cold and the snow. Delays Friday. ' were felt on the trains from the east. Opening of the Western intercol- The high wind had the effect of slowlegiate basketball season. ing a number of them down. Annual bench show of the American a sudden cold snap usually throws Pomeranian club, Waldorf Astoria, train schedules away to the bad, but

New York. Saturday. Opening of annual automobile show ; in Madison Square Garden, new Y'ork. j Annual meeting of the United States j Golf association, at New Y'ork. Annual indoor track and field meet i of the Xavier A. A., New Y'ork. j Patsy Callahan vs. Y'oung Driscoll, io rounds, at Brooklyn. THE WORD ''BUNGALOW." it Comes From the Hindi Bangla, Meaning a Thatched Hut. The word bungalow is an Anglo-In dlan version of the Hindi bangla, which primarily means Bengali, or of Bengal, and is also applied to a thatched hut. says Country Life In America. It may be worth while to explain how this trivial and merely lo cal name came to be fixed on the En lishman's house in India Early residents there engaged in mil itary. administrative or trading duties lived a nomadic life for the greater part of the year in tents. And since there was nothing in the indigenous buildings of Bengal suited to their requirements their first dwelling houses,

designed by themselves and built of vision; 5 miles automatic between Harmaterials at site, were naturally plan-j risburg and Rockville, Philadelphia ned on the model of the Indian serv- division; 10 miles automatic between

ice tents to which they were accustomed that js. a large and lofty room surrounded by double walls of canvas inclosing space between them, with partitions at two or more corners for bath or store rooms. It is probably, indeed, that in the beginning the tent itself was occasionally covered with the sun proof thatch or bangla. The name and the thatch were all that were taken, and now the origin of the name Is forgotten even by most Indians, who accept the resonant, trisyllabic bungalow as the Englishman's own name for his own peculiar house. Necessary Limitation. Physician I would sug.cest a diet. Patient Well. It will hare to he something that agrees with the cook.

This Group

RAILROAD NOTES William Parish, of Peru, a bridge carpenter in the employ of the C. & O. railroad, who sustained fatal injuries C. & O. employes here. PENNSYLVANIA PROMOTIONS. Bulletins announcing the following additional changes in the roster of the Pennsylvania company were received nere Saturday: C. M. Smith, assistant to the first president ; William G. Phelps, assistant to the purchasing agent; J. W. Orr,' J. B. Britton and ' John Herst, assistants to the comptroller. PRIZE FOR INVENTION. ST MARY'S Jan. 6 An offer of $io,000 reward for the invention of an automatic train stop that will safely arrSt an express steam locomotive that has passed danger signals has heen made public here. The test of ef1 ficiency is to be made in 1913, 1914 or 1915 by the New York Central or the Pennsylvania or the New York, New Haven and Hartford. ON SCHEDULE. Trains on all the railroads kept to this morning was an exception on most of the roads. The C. & O. had little trouble, but not enough to amount to anything. P. O. ECONOMIES. The annual deficit of the post office department has been reduced only by cutting down the amount paid to the railroads for hauling mail. This comes out in a statement issued by the committee on railway mail pay. During the ten years from 1901 to 1911 the department took up an enormous increase in business at a greatly decreased cost for railway transportation and at a largely increased cost for other purposes. AUTOMATIC SIGNALS. In connection with the statement of mileage of road block signaled, which S is given on another page of this paper, the Pennsylvania Railroad has sent the following notes concerning the sig naling work laid out for the coming year on the lines east of Pittsburg and, Erie: Twenty-two miles of automatic signals to be installed between Atglen and Dillerville on the Philadelphia diBranch Intersection and Harrisburg. Philadelphia, division; 16 miles between Rockville and Iroquois, Middle division; and 2S miles between Huntington and Elizabeth Furnace, on the Middle division. Poetry. Poetry is not made out of the understanding. The question of common sense Is always. "What is it good for?" It is a question which would abolish the rose and be triumphantly answered by the cabbage. LowelL Jamaica. "Xaymaca." a combination of two words signifying water and wood, from which the name Jamaica is derived, describes exactly the characteristics of the island.

IIISTITUTE TO BE DPEHED TOMORROW Interesting Program Arranged by Center Township Farmers.

(Palladium Special) CENTER VILLE, Ind., Jan. 6. The Center Township Farmers' Institute will open tomorrow morning at the Town hall. The Institute will be continued Wednesday. An interesting and instructive program has been arranged by the committee in charge. Among the subjects which will be discussed are "Breeding and Feeding of Hogs," "Farmers' Poultry Business," "Modern Conveniences on the Farm," "Farmer's Wife and Bank Account" and "Silos." J. P. Prigg of Danville, a member of the Indiana Corn Growers' association. Indiana Cattle Breeders' association and Indiana Live Stock Breeders as sociation, will deliver several ad dresses before the institute. G. C Borcherding will also talk. Mrs. E. T Stanley, of Liberty, is on the program. A large attendance is expected. OLD NEWSPAPERS. Their Usefulness Is Not Oons Just Because You Have Read Them. The mere fact that moths cannot read is no reason why they should detest newspapers, but they do nevertheless. It isn't exactly the newspaper or its editorial policy that moths dislike. It's the ink used in printing the type that makes the moths stay away. That is why, in the absence of mothproof bags and cedar chests, some housewives pack their furs and woolens away wrapped In newspapers at the end of the winter season and find j thnt is a satisfactorv wav of nreservIng them against the ravages of moths. There is nothing better than old newspapers for use under the carpets for the same reason. Old newspapers have many other uses as well. Wet In water they serve to clean out the stove splendidly. Crushed newspapers are excellent to clean lamp chimneys. They can even be used for an iron holder for an emergency. Newspapers dipped In lamp oil are useful for cleaning windows. Irons not much soiled can be rubbed on old newspapers and thus made fit for use. Dipped in lamp oil they are splendid to rub the outside of the dishpan. They keep it bright and shining. Torn in shreds, slightly dampened and scattered over the carpet, they keep down dust when sweeping. They clean the sink of its grease and sediment. Nothing is better, for the greasy paper can be at once burned after use. Many times folded newspapers will serve as a mat to stand hot and blackened pots or kettles on and save soiling the kitchen table. The kitchen stove is kept bright after the cooking of each meal with old papers, and this saves many polishings. - - - i LIFE BUOY AND OAR. Putting on the One and Supporting Yourself With the Other. Very few persons know how to get into a life buoy, and, as In this uncertain world one never knows when one may need to make use of a buoy in real earnest, a little practice might prove of great value In an emergency. Now. when the buoy is thrown into the water the temptation is to try to lift it over one's head and shoulders or to dive through it This, however, is Impossible. The correct thing is to grasp the two sides of the buoy with fingers of the hands uppermost, lower yourself under the buoy and come up through the center, then rest your arms upon the sides, and you will be comfortably supported as long as It is necessary. More often than otherwise, in case of accident, a life buoy is not at hand. In such an event an oar may be used as a substitute. Now. there Is some little art In saving oneself by this means, for an average sized scull Is not buoyant enough to support a person if grasped as the first impulse would direct. There is only one way in which the oar will support a human being. It must be ridden like a hobbyhorse. The baft is put between the legs and the blade allowed to project above the surface of the water in front of one. By this means the bead is kept well above the water. Pearson's Magazine. Feeling For Death. For a week the self appointed guide to the blind on their daily walks had noticed that the two men who were her special charges felt carefully of the wall on either side of the door or the asylum when passing in and oit. Since she was there to lead them, that precaution seemed not at all necessary, and she finally asked their reason for it. j "i am looking for crape on the door.' one old man told her. "They don't like to let us know hero in the asylum when any one dies ior rear or malting os feel bad. but they put crape on the door, ana by reenng ior n wu w pass in and out we cn find out for our selves when one of us has gone." New Y'ork Press. The Peacock at Home. The real home of peacocks or peafowls is in India. There they were and are hunted, and their flesh is used for food. As the birds live in the same region as the tiger, peacock hunting is a very dangerous sport. The long train of the peacock is not lta tail, as many suppose, but is composed of feathers which grow out Just above the tail and are called the tail coverts. Peacocks have been known for many hundred years. They are mentioned in the Bible. Job mention them, and they are mentioned, too, in I Kings x. Hundreds of years ago In . .. .. .v rA nntfwfc' were killed for the great feasts which the j .i- n-v. f th; '"r .t" : T peacock were considered a great treat. and many bad to be killed for a single feaat.

WHY PASS

The Lie that Edgar Allen Poe Was a Drunken Degenerate When the Facts of His Life Disapprove It? Half Baked Information Given the Public.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Nothing dies harder than a lie. Nor sticks faster than a tradition. Esnecially about a celebrity or one temporarily in the public eye. This holds as well among the rantt and file. iin mnnv nersons are misjudged or I lUKfU ill lurrn n , w v - I i .k.i. Afltimatji rtt ff-n i

Hnn tn familT or local history as oflsantanic and dastardly ne wnicn says

i amairm noniin I a certain i j ui c-nu, v v . . v..M0riat. lis When they possess the exact oppo-lor ai to ctrono with a e.wl ho.ilthv Tair of I bines will make an oracular statement .hnnt nmohodv else. It will sound authoritative because of the tone of volc or ignorance of the truth by the person to whom it is said or for a variety of other reasons. This nerson will hand it on to the next. And so on down the line. And the object of the original remark can never shake off the incubus fastened to him. It's rot worth while to deny it. Or try to convince of its absurdity or utter baselessness. So and so said it and so and so said it and of course it must be true. "Where there is so much smoke there must be a little Hre." This is one of the most degenerate and illeEitiraate old saws of all the repertoire. It has done more to ruin reputations, blast character, smirch white lives and carry general devastation in its wake I than anv other combination of damning words. When some one isn't sure of his I i . i ground, when he has been pushed up . ... , . i i neainKt tnp va in a taoncauon or me I hauls nf a rumour he will alwavs sidestep with this old saw. "Well." he'll say, "where there is so much smoke there must be a little nre " I And slin out the door before anyone has rhanrp tn refute him. These casual remarks follow a peri usal ot some remarks made about Ed-I gar Allen Poe which the writer saw in a Sunday paper. I To the effect that Poe "led a life of dissipation." I There never has been nor never will be anything more despicable than the effort made originally by Poe's enemies and jealous detractors and car-1 ried on by the callow, the misinformed and the uncou to brand Poe as a drunken degenerate. Poe was a great genius. One of the greatest this country any country has ever produced. He was and is so recognized in France. And in England. And because he was a great genius he was set upon by the mediocre pack of his contemporaries. The world's affairs are administer ed by mediocrities You only have to take a snap-shot at officialdom to recognize that. Very few geniuses are thrust into the official limelight. When they are! "There's something doing," in the ! language of the street. Although one brilliant mind recently published a pronouncement to the effect that "something doing" was of Shakesperean origin. And rubbed it in by citing page and act and line. But this is by the mark. It is the truth, however, that when geniuses take a hand at nation-making, or otherwise adjusting geographical boundaries or guiding the famed "ship of state" things happen. Napoleon in instance. And Bismarck. Abraham Lincoln. And Cromwell let us say. But didn't they have the whole pack snarling at their heels? Sure it's a mere matter of history. "Get 'em out of the way they're dangerous," is the cry of the scared mediocrities. Scared, because they know there Is no chance for their own exploitation while the god-like mind is fermenting. It was thus with Poe. Poe was one of the keenest, the most trenchant of critics. He tore some of the mediocrities who were posing in the spot-light, or attempting to do so, into rage and tatters. They never forgave him. The truth is that Poe was not a hard nor a heavy drinker. A single glass would throw him out of focus sooner than a series would affect the ordinary stodgy male j It produced immediate excitation. But he never indulged In sprees or orgies. Poe was. indeed, a singularly pureminded man. Of fascinating personalty he attracted women. But his love affairs were of an en;tireiv romantic character j He ,oved and adored b5s young jwif Virginia, who died in the famous tFordham cottage died from the effects of the stress of poverty. A year or so ago a single copy of a small edition of Poe's earlier work a J thin volume containing one poem, in j short, of which but three known cop-j ies were known to exist sold for over j one thousand dollars. I And yet Poe at one time wrote a j magazine editor who had bought but j not paid for an article j "For God's sake send me forty dol-! lars!" t Poe was a hard worker you will find most geniuses so. Genius is not the capacity for hard work as one of the ridiculous Outlook people have denominated it. But hard work is attendant upon the possession of genius that Is if genius flowers. There are, of course, the "mute, inrious M iltonn output. Poe's output, considering his short life and its stress, was tremendous.! , j Voa only have to consult a complete . 1 edition of his work to verify this. j

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His life was a sad and brilliant tra-' edy. his career meteoric But the essence of his genius was ; concentrated in some of the finest em-1 anations of the human mind. His contribution to the literature, of this country, and to that of the world. incomparable. Ana ioe rui n ion ni mr muriivir. - -j that t.f n rinmkn and a desenerate. - -- . only made by a slanderous coward I in silly and Inexcusaeie ignorance. The writer never beard of Mrs. Ora Delpha Ine. But jestt-rday saw her name attachled to an article in the magaiine Ition of the Sunday "Star" with the folMowing legend written beneath: Written especially for the Sunday Magazine section of the "Star." With a feature head "Indiana artists and musicians challenge authors for i state honors." The article itself was a mere com pilation, a sort of Who's Who but not Why. Kvldently the writer has not made as heavy research as she might bar Idone for some of her more or less nomalous statements. Among them this: "Kvaleen Stein, of Lafayette, and Charles S. Connor, of Richmond, deserve mention as promising artists." This is almost too amusing for com mentary. Especially the "deserve." It might be pointed out, however. that Charles Connor one of th greatest painting geniuses this state jhas ever produced, although his repu tation did not extend much beyond .. .... me connnes or maiana. oecaus or uionuimj auu iuisiuhuu ..i. AM i .Anti; M i,, . was not a "promising' artist. He had arrived In addition Connor is dead Died in l04 nine years ago "Is" might, therefore, be regarded las a trifle cut of focus. tvaieen Stein does not "deserve mention. Miss Stein has been recognised as one of the leading literary artists of this state for the past fifteen years or more ller volumes of verse and children s stories have made her a national reputation. She is not generally classiled with the painting artists Although she has illustrated her own books and has worked In a form of art little known to the public and in which few can exploit themselves. The art of illumination, in short. The art of the old monks who produced those marvelous missals which sell at great prices in the auction room. As long ago as 1902 and 1903 examples of Miss Stein's work in this medium were exhibited in this city. Half baked statements of this character are responsible for much raislnformation among the superficial and lead nowhere. NOTICE. The Eden Rebekah and the Hermania Rebekah to meet at Odd Fellows' hall this evening at 7 o'clock to attend the funeral of Mrs. Day. Mary Bond. Noble Grand. Emma Schirmeyer, Secretary. e-it MASTERING A TEMPER. The MetheJ by Which Marion Crew, ford Controlled His Anger. Mrs. nngh Eraser, sister of the late F. Marlon Crawford, tells some interesting stories of him In her book. "A Diplomatist's Wife In Many Lends." It was at the Villa Negroni. Rome, that Crawford was born, an event which so delighted his father that, as Mrs. ' Fraser says, "my father was beside himself with joy and showered pres. ents on all of us to make ns understand and share It. When young Francis was about ten years old It dawned upon him that be had a violent and uncontrollable temper, and with the simplicity which marked all his character he decided to get it in band. "One member of the family constantly irritated him to the verge of frenzy, and he Invented a form of self discipline which very few children woald have thongbt of Imposing on themselves. My mother entered his room ' one dar and found him walking round and round it, carrying on his back a heavy wooden shutter which he hid lifted off its hinges at the window. "My dear child. she exclaimed, what are yon doing? "'Getting over a rage he replied doggedly, continuing the exercise. When I am so angry that t want to kill somebody I come in here and carry the shutter three times round the room before I answer them. It Is the only way.' " SOCIAL DANCE I. O. O. F. Hall, Tuesday night. Music by Smith, Jelly and Jones. Admission aOc.. 31 Money to Loan Use our money to pay your little outstanding debts. We will give you plenty of time to pay It back, from one month to one year. We make loans from $10 up on household goods, pianos, etc., and all business strictly confidential. Mail or phone applications receive prompt attention, THE STATE INVESTMENT oV LOAN CO. 40 Colonial Bldg. -Phone 2560. Richmond. Indiana

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