PARK AND CEMETERY. 
Ill 
It Will Increase Your Revenue 
Van Camp Burial Vault Co. 
819 Board of Trade :: Indianapolis, Indiana 
One of the best revenue producers a Cemetery 
can have is a dependable burial vault 
The above photograph was taken of a “Perfection” vault and the casket it con- 
tained, which had been buried for more than ten years and was opened and the 
casket removed to a new grave in Mt. Jackson Cemetery, Indianapolis, June 24, 1913. 
This vault, made in eleven sections, of reinforced cement concrete, was so hard that it 
required a strong man with hammer and cold-chisel to get it open. It was perfectly 
dry inside, showing no evidence of ever having contained a drop of water, and the 
casket was in such a state of preservation that it was carried by the handles across the 
cemetery to the new grave. 
Arthur J. Graves, the well-known cemetery man of Bloomington, Illinois, has had, 
in all, 515 “Perfection” vaults within about ten years, and the revenue he has derived 
from this source alone is not to be despised. Write Mr. Graves and ask him what he 
thinks of the “Perfection” vault. He will tell you. He buys them by the carload — 
and, by the way, our carload proposition to cemeteries is really tempting. Don’t turn 
away from this page and forget it. Read' it again, then write us for carload prices and 
terms. It will be a step toward the most satisfactory part of your business. Write now. 
