Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 241, 18 August 1913 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 1913
PAGE NINE
INDIANA LESSON IN GERMANJIRE LOSS Fire Marshal Mails 1,500 Assistants a Printed Statement.
WRITTEN BY LIEBER INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 18. In line with his efforts to bring about better construction of buildings in Indiana, the state fire marshal is mailing to his 1,50 assistants in Indiana a printed excerpt from a statement made by RlchTVd Llebler of Indianapolis, showing how European cities reduce their fire losses through proper attention to construction. The contrast between American and European methods and results is forcibly shown in a comparison of Berlin, Germany, and Indianapolis. Berlin has a population of more than 2,000,000. Indianapolis has 250,000. Yet the Are in Indianapolis, according to Mr. Lienor's statement, is almost twice that of Berlin. Cities Poorly Built. ' "Our cities are so poorly built," says Mr. Lieber, "that a fire may spread throughout the building in which it started and from it to other property. A special consular report of 1913 shows that in such foreign . cities as Harve, Rouen, Milan, Rome, Brussels, Antwerp, Leeds, Sheffield and Bristol, every fire in 1890 was confined to the building in which it originated, while in Dresden, Florence and Vienna, and other cities, every Are was confined to the floor on which it originated. "In Vienna there is no case known where the fire has extended beyond the building in which it originated. This is preTented, the report says, by the solidity of the buildings, by strict Are regulations, and by a well trained fire department, the latter consisting of five steam engines, but seldom called into action, and a large and sufficient number of hand engineB. An Expensive Smile. "Of course we smile, but we should alBO know how much that smile costs us. The' average loss in Boston is $2,- , 000,000. The loss of the average city of equal population in Europe is $150.000. Indianapolis, which, by the way, was lowest in the list of cities of over 200,000 Inhabitants, has almost twice as much annual fire loss as Berlin. Other cities are, of course, far worse, but all of them have this in common, that their general run of buildings is of insecure or even hazardous construction. "As long as the cities prefer the rights of the individual to the rights of the community, we shall have this criminal participation in the fire loss. If it is right and fair to require a certain improved building construction for new buildings, these same laws should be rigidly enforced in the remodeling of standing risks. A city that fails in this point is a partner in crime." PERFECT HEALTH WOMAN'S CROWN OF GLORY Did you ever observe a woman who has reached the age of sixty or even seventy in perfect health and say to yourself. "I hope I may grow old as gracefully as she does"? In order to reach a lovely old age, women should guard against woman's diseases, as they are the greatest menace to Joy and gladness. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is nature's own remedy for organic derangements, safe and certain. Nearly forty years of success Is a grand and peerless record for any one medicine. (Advertisement) Panama Canal. It Is more than probable that the building of the Panama canal would never have been possible but for the discovery by Dr. Jesse Lasear of he United States army, who. by the way. sacrificed bis life while making the experiments leading to the discovery, that yellow fever was transmitted by the bite of the deadly stegomia mosquito. But for that wonderful and timely discovery the mortality and attendant misery of the fever woulq have been a handicap too great to hare been borne. New York American. A Pessimist. "Persistence will gain you fame an? fortune, my son," said the Sage. "Oh, I don't know," replied the Pool "If the dandelion wasn't so persistent the blame things would be raised under glass and would be worth as mucb as American Beauties." Cincinnati Enquirer. Her Mind. Hilton My wife is a matter of faci woman. She only speaks her mind Chilton So does mine, but she changes her mind so often that It keeps taei talking all the time. Chicago News. COMFORT YOUR TORTURED SKIN WITH RESINOL
No matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by itching, ourning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, antiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and the suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very minute, and your tkin gets well so quickly you feel ishamed of the money you threw away n useless, tedious treatments. Whenever drugs are sold, .you can De Just as sure of finding Resinol Dintment as court-plaster or a toothOrush. This is becaxise doctors have prescribed it so regularly for the last eighteen years that every druggist knows he must keep it constantly in itock. Trial free: Dept. S-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Works wonders for lunburn. (Advertisement)
Page on the Country Life Problem
"The largest problem that faces American civilization today is the building up o country life," declares Walter H. Page, ambassador to Kngland, in a bulletin on "Education in the South," Just issued by the United States bureau of education. "We have just passed through a period of organization of the machinery of the modern world, making the city and the railroad, but the country has been left out. Now we must build it up. We all know that in the coming centuries, as In the past, the character and the vision of American life will come from the soil. "In our early days the characteristic of the people of the United States was individualism. Great as this was for the cause of democracy, it rested upo na false economic basis. A man's home can not be his castle, for he is mutually linked as his brother's keeper, whether he will or no. A larger vision and a large liberty and a larger opportunity have come upon us as the task for our working hours. We must organize in the country." News Briefs From Milton A colt belonging to LindJey Baker caught its ear on a barb wire fence, and tore it almost off. Sixteen stitches were necessary "to replace the ear. Milton While driving cattle, Walter Wood, who is suffering from rheumatism, fell and received painful injuries. Milton The ladies of the Merry-go-round club met Friday afternoon and reorganized for another year. They will meet with Mrs. Lycurgus Beeson, Thursday, August 26. Hagerstown Mr. and Mrs. Ellas Hoover spent Sunday at Miamisburg and were acompanied home by her sister, Mrs. Peter Allmeyer. Cambridge City The Brothernood of the Methodist church will meet Tuesday evening. Hagerstown Mr. and Mrs. Florence Nicholson, of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Hoover were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orpha Jones Sunday. Eaton To recover the sum of $2,400 attachment proceedings have been filed in the common pleas court against Isaac D. Eikenberry, of the Wheatville Dunkard neighborhood, who disapr MILTON MILTON, Ind., Aug. 18 Miss Cassie Turned was at Centerville and Richmond "Saturday. Mrs. Benton Wagner and daughter, Miss Alma atended the old settlers' picnic Saturday. They are now camping at the Richmond Chautauqua. Mrs. Harry Underwood, who has been the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Chas. Roark, has returned to her home in Cincinnati. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bertsch are visiting Mr. and Mrs. qiarence W. Bertsch near New Lisbon. The Daughters of Rebekah will meet Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. William Berry entertained Mr. and Mrs. C. A. McMillan, Mrs. Emma Bickel and Mrs. Harry Berry of New Castle, Sunday. Levi Crull, Jr., youngest son of Levi Crull, of Rushville, has joined the U. S. navy. Miss Edna Crull, who is nursing her aged aunt, Miss Elizabeth Wissler. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Wissler, east of town, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Crull. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Clevenger have been entertaining Mrs. Nellie Bish of Columbus 'O. Miss Mary Sills and Miss Ruth McCormick who have been visiting in Hartford City have enjoyed a number of social functions arranged in their honor. Mrs. Charles Shuts and son Robert have returned from a pleasant visit with relatives in Williamsburg. Misses Katie and Mabel Voris, who have been visiting their father, Prof. Voris, returned to Indianapolis Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Wissler entertained Dan and Joe Wissler of Arcadia, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wagner of Pendleton, and Martin Wagner of Dayton, as their week-end guests. Miss Kate Baker of Indianapolis is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Baker. PLUCK THE FOREIGNER. That Appears to Be the Patriotic Motto In Switzerland. A foreign resident in Switzerland was fined 10 francs because his little girl had plucked three buttercups growing on a piece of land on which she and some half dozen children had for years been accustomed to play. The land had recently changed hands, and its new owner had put up a notice forbidding the plucking of flowers. A passing gendarme had found the children fragante delicto and had forthwith instituted proceedings against the little foreigner while letting the natives go scot free. The child's father appealed against the sentence and by dint of hard fighting, which entailed, of course, expense, forced the higher court to reduce the fine from 10 francs to 3 i. e., one franc for each buttercup. When 1 tried to learn the ways and wherefores of this case 1 was told by a Swiss that one-half of every fine levied goes to the gendarme who reports the offense for which it is levied, and also the Swiss gendarmes cannot fairly be expected to be quite as alert In takiDg proceedings against natives as against foreigners. Further, I was told by an American that in Switzerland all foreigners rank as Egyptians and that the one Scriptural injunction that is faithfully obeyed there is that which ordains that Egyptians shall be spoiled. From "The Latter Day Swiss" in Cornhill Magazine.
Speaking of the work of the conference of education in the south, to which the bureau's bulletin is chiefly devoted, Mr. Page said: "The historian of the progress of democracy could hot write a more thrilling chapter than the events of the past ten or fiftet-n years, taking as the cue the note of the conference of education in the south. We began with the school and the child, and we end with them, of course; but every ste phas been toward a widening democratic ideal, to see how we could teach one another, and we have come to have a broadening sense of all that co-operation means. "To till the soil, to train the children, to make the home, a work of continuous human service, I count these the greatest privileges that can fall to the lot of man. We have worked on a program to bring- to pass the dream of the fathers, that our republic shall be and remain the hope of the world.
Surrounding Towns i peared about three weks ago, taking with his another man's wife. Cambridge City Miss Alma Garvin has returned from her engagement as lecturer and demonstrator of domestic science at the Shelbyville Chautauqua. Cambridge City Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wilson entertained at six o'clock dinner In honor of Mrs. Bessie Wright of Tampa, Kla. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bryan, Miss Nicholson, Miss Gertrude Itouthe, and her father and mother. Eaton Mrs. Thomas Somers and Mrs. Johnson, living near Fair Haven, were badly bruised Saturday afternoon when the horse which they were driving ran away and upset the buggy. Eaton After an engagement of a week, the carnival held under the auspices of the Eaton Fire department came to a close Saturday evening w ith a record crowd in attendance. Members of the company say that a good profit will remain when they have settled all bills. Cambridge City The following young ladles of Cambridge City attended the League Club dance at Jackson Park, Misses Elizabeth Ohmit, Janet VanMeter, Esther Straughn and Maud Allison. r CAMBRIDGE CITY CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. 18 The dance given by the Red Men in their newly stuccoed building was well attended and much enjoyed in spite of the excesive heat. Miss Shelton, guest of honor and niece of Mrs. W. J. Bryan, left for her home at Springfield, Ohio. Miss Lillian Wright of Indianapolis is visiting at the country home of Miss Edith Bertsch. Miss Helen Johnson has as her guest her cousin, Miss Bunyan of Matamora. Mrs. Arthur Cosgrove is visiting this week with her son Henry, at Indianapolis. Miss Bertha Cosgrove will be a week-end guest of the Misses Shuttleworth of M uncle. Mrs. E. C. Boi.d visited Abner Bond near Greensfork for a few days. John Boyd and family visited the Newcastle fair this past week. Evelyn Gaar visited her grandfather near New Lisbon and attended the fair at Newcastle. Miss Ruth Burdick is spending the day at Richmond. Mr. and- Mrs. George Ward and grand daughter, Virginia Richardson, are visiting at eCnterville. Hon. Lee Reynolds of near Hagerstown, is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ault. Miss Blanche Bond is spending ten days with her uncle, Daniel Bradbury, at Indianapolis and is also pursuing her regular lessons in voice culture at that city. DIDN'T WANT TO BE HASTY. Hence He Was Pleased to Have His Judgment Confirmed. A Kansas man, who had played the role of the henpecked husband for a number of years, one day met an agent who was selling a book. The book agent dilated at length on the beauty and literary merit of the book, but the Kansas man told him he wasn't prepared to buy. "But," he said, "there is a woman who lives in the hoiise next to the corner in the next block who I'm satisfied wants that book and wants it bad." The agent hastened to the house and managed somehow to get inside the door. In about a minute he came out on the run and in a wild jump from the porch missed all the front steps and lit on the sidewalk running. The hen pecked husband had been an Interested spectator from the outside. When he san; the Kansas man, the agent stopped and with some heat said: "Say, that woman you recommended me to is the worst wildcat I ever saw." "Sure about that, are you?" said the Kansas man. "Sure? Well I should say I am sure." said the agent as he rubbed the place on his head that had been hit with the broomstick. "Sort of glad to hear you say so. saJ the Kansas man. "After twenty-five years experience with her I'd about come to that conclusion myself, bnt I didn't want to be hasty about formin' an opinion till I had the judgment of some unprejudiced witness." Kansas City Journal. CHICHESTER S FILLS L.sdl Ak fr Drf(UH7i Mil la K4 -- faol4 MiilicVVy K sri,f-J with Bl Ribbcm. Take her. Bit of -tsar v Irrgit- AsVfrt Ifl-C !ft.TEB S ULAMUSD KRA.NU n M yea. kaowa as B-l, Safest. A., ft ; a:
BLOODHOUNDS FAIL
i Palladium Special) i KATOX. O. Aug. IS. Nothing thus far ha developed to reveal the identity of the two masked men whe held up and robbed Kiohard Loan and his wife of their life's fa vines, which :they had hoarded in a trunk for the purpose of providing respectable burials. Bloodhounds were taken to tlu-ir home, two and one-half miles southwest of Campbellstown, but the tracks were cold and the dogs failed to pick up the trail. Neighbors of the aged and infirm couple declare the job was evidently done by j ersons who knew ti.e money was kept in the house. PENSION REMOVES ! CAUSE OF UNFITNESS (Continued From Page Eight) licly placed under ban. and made to , see how unworthy was his action. i An Institution for Brain Building Would Also Be Good. Unselfishness was the religious keynote of the society, and had it let sex i problems alone it jvould have been one of the greatest factors for bettering the world which ever existed in America. If our schools and colleges and churches could adopt this excellent idea of the Oneida Community and establish the "Criticism Committee" and then carry Dr. Elmer Gates's dream of a brain-building institution into realization, the children of the idle rich might stand as good a chance of becoming agreeable and useful citizens as do the children of the poor today. BUSINESS MEN ON AUTO TOUR (Palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. 18. The automobile tour in which nearly all the business men of this city will drive their cars, has been set for Labor day. All the merchants of tht city and their friends who have cars will leave early in the morning for a sociability run. At noon they will stop at MeCullough park, Muncie, for lunch. The return trip will be made by a route differtnt from the morning drive. ANNOUNCE WEDDING OF THEIR DAUGHTER (Palladium Special.) MILTON Ind., Aug. 18. Invitations to the wedding of their daughter. Miss Eva Pearl Thornburg, to Carl William Caldwell, of Harrisburg, have been sent out by Mr. and Mrs. Oliver H. Thornburg. The ceremony will take place the evening of September 3. DONOVAN-SMITH (Palladium Special) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Aug. IS. Gayle Donovan, of Falmouth, and Florence Smith of this city, wore married Friday in Richmond. Judge Fox of the Wayne circuit court, performed jthe ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Donovan win mane tneir nome on his farm near Falmouth. One Way to Make a Living. In the vicinity of the London docks there is a man who makes money ! whenever he wants it by a crafty ruse. He fills an old port wine bottle nearly up to the neck with water, then be pushes an old cork down the neck until it meets the water. The small space above is filled with good port wine at a cost of about sixpence, and a cork is gently placed in the top. He soon findaJ a flat on the streets who after sampling the wine is willing to forfeit a few shillings for the bottle, whereupon the sharper speedily vanishes before the deception is discovered. Sheffield Telegraph. A Weird Race. A theatrical man happened to strike a small town in the northern part of the state of New York liiteiy. "So you're In the theater business?" said the proprietor of tbe little hotel where Kingsley stopped. "Well, all I've got to say is that you troupers certainly are a funny lot. Thirty -two of them minstrel fellows stopped over with me last week, and all of them was named Cull but one, and his name was Props." Saturday Eveniua Post. Over the Limit, Fortune Teller I see by your hand that you will die when yo'i are twenty-seven, Willie But, my dear woman. I'm twenty-nine now. Fortune TellerWhy, my good man, you should have been dead two years. You are living under false pretenses. London Mail. KRESKO CURES RINGWORM Sufferers from ringworm will find a permanent and rapid cure in KRESKO. Apply KRESKO to the sores and wash with KRESKO Soap. After several applications the itching and sores will disappear. KRESKO is different than any other preparation. It has a pleasant odor and can be used without annoyance. KRESKO is unrivalled for eczema, pimples, blackheads, rash and other afflictions of the skin. KRESKO trial size, 23c. Large Jar, 50c. Family size, $1.00. KRESKO Soap, medicated with KRESKO. 25c a cake. Free samples by addressing Kresko Laboratories, Dept. S9, 450 Fourth Ave., New York. Sold by Clem Thistlethwaite, Conkey Drug Co. and other leading druggists. (Advertisement) TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sale at Cooper's Grocery
Stale News in
Goshen Six cars of automobiles were smashed when a freight train on the Wabash Railroad was wrecked. Ten other cars containing sugar, silk and wire, were reduced to kindling wood. Logansport Attempting to escape from Mrs. James Pugh who was pursuing her with a revolver. Miss Carrie Richardson leaped from a third story window in the flat to the roof of a one story building below, where he as found by the police an hour later. Mrs. Pugh charged the girl with being i too friendly w ith her husband. Columbus A committee appointed by the Columbus Grange has raised $500 with which to tile a petition for an agricultural expert in this country. The County Council will meet Saturday and make the appropriation. ; Greenwood Charles F. Dearmin of this city has a genuine Stradivarius violin. Anderson The Sefton Manufacturing Company will give its employes and their wives an outing Saturday at Winona Lake, paying all expenses. About 1,200 persons will be in the party. Winchester Twelve employes of the Vaugh Furniture Company at Parker City have filed suK against the company for foreclosure of a mechanic's lien. The company recently made an assignment. St. Paul Gerald Suttles, 9 year old. fell from a haymow ladder and was impaled on a meat hook hanging below. A companion released him a fewminutes later. The wound under his arm was not serious. Michigan City Alexander Byrd, a parole violator, will be brought back to prison from Denver, Col , where he was caught. He was sentenced from Muncie in 1&U8, for deserting his family and was paroled to Portland, Ind., in 1910, but fled. Logan sport James" Hatfield, a section foreman, was killed by a PajthanMRS. DEEM BREAKS HIP IN A FALL (Palladium Special) EATON, O.. Aug. 18 Mrs. Sarah Deem, 82, of this city, fell Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Kate Rollman, of Brookville, and suffered a fracture of her left hip. She was leaving a rear door of the home when she slipped on a wet board and fell. Because of her advanced age it was thought at first that she would not recover, but she has since shown improvement. A HOUSE PARTY CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind.. Aug. 18. A week-end house party was held at the home of Miss Pearl Thornburg. The guests were Carlysle Dlffenderfer, Lena Luddington, Julia Boyd. Mary Caldwell, Helen Doney and Helen Tilby.
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THE PEOPLE'S MODERATE 'T "W!'- HAD ft Tooth -fvn J Witts PXHiKZCN Vvaovf5
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HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WAR Including the BRADY WAR PICTURES . Clip this coupon and two others (which will be lound ou this page each day for the next thirty days) and bring to this office accompanied with 98 cents. This book i3 the most valuable history ever published. It contains over 1,500 actual reproduced photographs of the Civil War. This collection of Brady's pictures was purchased from the United States government. Don't fail to clip this coupon and two others. AUGUST 18
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a Brief Form
die train. He was the father of lna Hatfield, the 14-ear-oli n:rl for hos delinquency her stepmother and George Dunon of this city are serving prison sentence. Bioomfield Ralph Resler, ? years old, by hi next friend. Mary Rosier, his mother, has sued the Chicago and Southern Railroad for $10,000 for injuries sustained when he was struck by a train at N orthington. The toy was in a milk wagon with his father, who was killed Nashville The Rev. Clemmens preached at the Duncan schooihouse last maht and, during his discourse, a shower of es was thrown Several young women and men were hit by the egg. Although the congregation left llu house, the Rev Clemmens preached on. It is believed Vu "g:s were thrown by some boys whom he had "called down" during a former service. Evansvtlle An epidemic of hog chol era in this vicinity has assumed alarming proportions. Covington County commissioners will recommend the purchase of sixteen voting machines. Greensburg Thieves used a waon to steal a steam drill valued at $75 from Reed and Thompson. Shelbyville A . meeting has been called for Monday night to put a citzens' ticket in the field. Veedersburg Dr. O. V. Simmerman has been elected city chairman by the Democratic organization. Silver Lake The annual camp meeting of the Church of God w ill open at Yellow- Creek Iake grounds Friday. Worthington The fifty-third annual session of the Greene County teachers' institute will be held here from Monday until Friday. Crawf ordsvllle The coroner has decided that Mrs. Francis J. Harrison, whose body was found in Dry Branch, committed suicide. WALKE RFUNERAL MILTON. Ind . Aug. IS Rev. C. F. Westhafe conducted the funeral services of Mrs. Frank Walker, near Economy. Thursday. Mrs. Walker's death resulted from injuries received when j a horse w hlch she was hitching up ! it her sick mother. Owing to the fact that M. Constans, i of France, had public enemies a friend offerend to pick a quarrel with one of them and kill him. "Many thanks," said Constans, "gut I do my own murders." The retort found Its way to Constantinople, and when M. Constans arrived there as French ambassador he was struck by the exaggerated deference of the Turkish officials of Armenia. A man who did his murders himself was & remarkable figure to administrators who employed the Kurds for that necessary business. PRICE DENTAL OFFICE Gold Crowns $3.00 Bridge Work $3.00 Full Sets $5.00 Gold Filings $1.00 up Silver Filling 50c up Inlay Work a Specialty. Examination Free. All Work Guaranteed. We not only claim, but have indisputable proof of the greatest and most perfect method now used for the painless extraction of teeth. New York Dental Parlors 9042 Main St, RICHMOND, IND. Open Evenings.
UNIFORM
RANK TEAM
GOES TO DANVILLE tr!Udi jm Spe-is!) CAMBRIIV.K CITY. Ind . Aut IS The local company of the Uniform Rank. K. of P . left Sunday morning for the joint encampment of companies of Illinois and Indiana, at Danvill, 111 The company is composed of the Lieutenants R M Wilhams and H. K;er. Sir Knithu Frank Tiefenthaler. Alvm Hormel. R I.. Scott. Dan Smith, levin Swallow. Albert Boyer and William like The company will appear In new uniforms SH1LT IS NEW HEAD (Palladium f-p-ll) KATOX. O. Aug IS The Prebl. County Teachers' association in session In Km ton last week, has been reortt.miied for the coming year by the selection of the following officers: President. V. J Shilt. Verona; vice president. Frank Schloser. Kldorado; secretary. Miss Sarah MclJrew, Gratis; executive committer, S L Yochura of Camden. J. S. McDivltt of Campbel'.stown and H. A. Keplinger of Eaton. GET TO THE CAUSE Richmond People Are Learning the Way. There Is but little peace or comfort for the man or woman with a bad back. The distress begins In early morning keeps up throughout the day. lt' hard to pet out of bed. it's torture to stoop or straighten. Plasters and liniments may relieve, but cannot cure If the cause Is inside the kidneys. When suffering so. use Doan'a Kidney Pills, the tested and proven kidney remedy, used In kidney troubles for over 50 years. lVans Kidney Pills are recommended by thousands for Just such cases. Proof of their effectiveness in the testimony of this Richmond resident: Mrs. John Morris. 433Vi Main St, Richmond. Ind., says: "We hate need Doan's Kidney Pills In our family with success. It Is Just as much a pleasure to recommend them now as it was some years ago. I suffered from kidney trouble and my back ached. I was restless and mornings felt very tired and nervous. I got my supply of Doan's Kidney Pills from A. O. Luken & Co's Drug Store and they made me well. Another of my family was also relieved by this remedy. For sale by all dealers. Price $0 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole a gents tor the United States. Remember the name Doan'a aa4 take no other. (Advertisement . THE BUSIEST BIGGE8T LITTLE STORE IN TOWN Kennedy's If you want to get the best in i Jewelry such as fine Neckwear, Handsome Bracelets, Watches that are guaranteed to keep time, stop at our store. Get in the fashionable set and buy a "Lucky Blue Bird." We have them all sizes and prices. Your Patronage Appreciated FRED KENNEDY JEWELER 526 MAIN STREET RICHMOND FEED STORE Feed at Reasonable Prices. We sell the Famous Gilt Edge Flour. Alfalfa Seed for sale. 11 & 13 N. 9th St. Phone 2196. LEGAL RATE LOANS 2 Per Cent. Per Month We loan $5 to J1C0 and from one to twelve months' time. We have not changed our plan of Long Time and Easy Payments, which has become so popular with the Borrowing Public. On the other hand, we have lowered our rates to conform to the new law, under which we will operate, and are licensed and bonded to the state of Indiana. We loan on. Household Goods, Pianos. Horses, Wagons, Fixtures, etc, without removal. Also on Diamonds and Jewelry. Loans made In all parts f the city, and towns re&cbed by 1 lite rurb an roads. Mall or phone applications receive prompt attention. PHONE 1545. Richmond Loan Co. Colonial Building. Room 8. Richmond. Ind.
