Richmond Planet
Saturday, May 25, 1901
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
KNIGHTS OF PYTH1AS THERE.
REMARKABLE PROGRESS OF THE ORDER.—HARMONY EVERYWHERE.
Gorgeous Street Parade.—Tidewater Ablaze for Pythanism.
XVIII NO 23
KNIGHTS OF PY
Fine Session A
REMARKABLE PROGRESS
MONY EVER
Gorgeous Street Parade.—Tid
PORTSMOUTH, VA., May 21, 1901.
The Grand Lodge of Virginia met today at True Reformers Hall, High St., at 9:30 a. m., sharp, Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., of Richmond, presiding; T. M. Crump, G. K. of R. and S. The following filled the stations: G. V. C., John T. Taylor; G. M. of W., J. E. Coles; G. P., W. A. Millner; G. M. of Exchequer, W. M. Reid; G. M. at A, S. Baker; G. I. 1st Attendant, J. S. Anderson; G. 2nd Attendant, — G. I. G., J. W. Wells; G. O. G., Isham Powell.
After opening in ritualistic form and the collection of credentials the Grand Lodge took a recess in order to permit the Committee on Returns and Credentials to prepare its report.
There is a large attendance here. A large delagation arrived last evening from Richmond. The parade will take place to day. First Brigade Headquarters have been opened at the Hall and Col. Jesse Scruggs is in charge, subsequent to the arrival of Assistant Adjutant General John R. E. Washington commanding. The First Regiment Headquarters are at the same place in charge of Capt. A. J. Smith, Jr.; Major E. A. Washington commanding. Many residences are decorated with Pythian colors. The hall is also decorated. A large United States flag flies from First Brigade Headquarters. The Grand Court will meet this afternoon at 4 p.m. The report of the Endowment Advisory Board showed that the amount expended was $4751.00, the amount expended, $3483.43, leading a cash balance for the year in hand of $1311.67, an increase over last year of $1801.70. 1244 new members have been added to the order since July, 1900.
Mr. S. B. Steward closed on Friday, May 10th, one of the most successful sessions ever held at Springfield, Henrico, Co., Va.
Exercises were begun with the Lord's Prayer chanted by the school, and consisted of reading contests select and humorous readings, choruses, solos, dialogues etc.
Closing Day, a song and "Playing Sch ol," a dialogue, and practically a recitation in Physiology, both composed by Mr. Steward, were especially good.
"Kissing Thro' the Bars," by Mrs. Sallie Green and "Lead me Saviour" by Mrs. C. B. Hall were well rendered. The Sinner and the Song" by Miss A. M. Steward and "In Thy Love" by Miss M. Alice Johnson with Miss R. W. Steward and Mr. T. H. Wyatt completing the choruses were features of the occasion.
The pole plat by Hannah Robinson, Mamie Philips, Fannie Robinson, Mary Record, Maggie Anderson, Pattie Jones, Issie Robinson and Bertha Philips would have done credit to any children.
Ten prizes given by Mr. Steward were won as follows: Reading, 5th class, Hannah J Robinson; 4th class, Adell Wood; 3rd class, Hattie Hill; 2nd class, Charles Harris; 1st class, Myrtle Shields; spelling, Hannah J Robinson; arithmetic, Mary Record; Physiology, 15th Robinson; letter-writing, Pattie Jones; geography, Hannah J. Robinson, Mabel Houston and Chester Houston deserve special mention for letter-writing.
After guitar and mandolin selections the exercises were concluded with addresses by the pastor, Rev. A. H. Jackson and Mr. T. H. Wyatt.
The pleasures of the day were concluded with the always acceptable county feast, marked by exceptionally well filled tables.
FULTON NOTES.
Rev. Binford preached a most excellent sermon at the Mt. Calvary Baptist Church last Sunday 3:30 p. m. A nice sum was raised for the church club.
Rev. F. W. Williams being absent last Sunday a. m. Rev. Campbell most ably flipped his pulpit.
At 3:45 p. m. Rev. Watson of the Va. Union University delivered a most excellent address and lecture to the young people of Fulton.
The Sunday Schools regret very much that the students who have been working so faithfully all winter and Spring with them must now leave.
They hope for the young men pleasant and successful vacations.
A nice social was given at the resi-
dence of Mrs. Alice Holmes last Thursday p. m. in honor of Messrs Jones and Watkins of the V. U. U.
The Rising Mt. Zion Baptist Church exults in the success of her pastor Rev F. W. Williams in getting the degree B. D. from the V. U. U.
Grand Rally at the Rising Mt. Zion Baptist Church next Sunday.
Mr. George Williams of King William County is here visiting his son, Rev F. W. Williams.
Rev. and Mrs. Williams are jubilant over the advent of a baby boy.
The Fulton Court I. O. of Calanthe was set apart last Monday night with 48 members
The Covenant meeting and Lord's Supper services last Sunday at the R. M. T. Zap. Church were excellent.
Rev F. W. Williams preached a most excellent sermon at 8 p. m.
His Church is very pleased at his completion of the divinity course of the V. U. U. He receives his diploma with the degree of B. D. next week
Mrs. Margaret Koune Pres., Mr. Heskiziah Whiting Seey. Rev. Arche Ferguson Pastor.
Mr. and Mrs. William Calloway are very much pleased over the advent of fine their baby boy.
Miss Daisy H. Whiting was quite indisposed last Sunday.
The Fulton business Association has opened a nice confectionary on Gralam St. Mr. William Dickerson is clerk and Manager. Give him a call.
WINDDALE PARK.
Mr. S. B. Steward has Winddale Park in readiness for picnic parties, outings and moonlights. The place has all conveniences and he is arranging now for a biblele merry-go-round, a bathing pool and probably hobby-horses. The R. P. & P. Co. guarantee ample accommodation, or special cars can be characterized and controlled. The county road is excellent for hay-rides and is secure the park has been reduced. Secure your day at once. Five dates have already been taken.
A Romance of the Great Corner
Wheat speculation, love and business are the motives of a great serial story by Meyrin Webster, authors of. The Short Line War, which will be begun in THE SATURDAY EVENING Post of May 25. The Ex-President Cleveland will contribute to the following issue (January in publication) The War of Public Money. In this article Mr. Cleveland sounds a warning note against National extravagence and the criminally reckless expenditure of public money.
Each member and friend of the 5th Street Baptist Virginia Seminary Circle is requested to report their cards and pay the annual membership fee of 25 cents by June 15th, as the W. B. S. E. Convention will convene in Lynchburg about June 21st. Pres., Mrs. Bettie Tinsley.
Cantata Notice.
The Cantata of Jephthah and His
Daughter, under the directorship of
Prof. Q. Wm. Moon will be presented
at the True Reformers' Hall, Monday
night. May 27th, by the University
Club, No. 2, of First Baptist Church.
General admission, 15 cents.
Reserved seats, 25 cents.
All of the members of the First Baptist Church are expected to be present Monday night, June 3rd, 1901 to vote on the call of a pastor. The candidates recommended by the committee are R. C. Benson, D. C.; Rev. A. W. Peques, of Raleigh, N. C., and Rev. W. T. Johnson of Lexington, Va.
NOTICE.
RICHMOND, Va., May 25, 1801.
The members of the Fannie Lewis
Chapter, U. D. Order of the Eastern
Star are requested to attend a special
meeting to confer degrees on all new
candidates and such other business as
may come before it.
By order of the Chapter,
LUCI A. COLMS,
Secretary.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, MAY 25 1901.
CHARLES' FRIENDS ON TRIAL.
CHARLES' FRIENDS ON TRIAL.
THEY ARE CHARGED WITH MURDER.
THE THREE JACK3ONS BEING PLAED BEFORE A JURY
For Their Part in Aiding The Black Robert Charles, Who Killed Many Police Officers And Citizens—A Hunt For Jurors by the Defense Accompanied By Some Novel Questions.
NEW ORLEANS, LA., Daily PICAYUNE
May 14th, 1901.
Yesterday was the day fired for the first trial of the colored people accused of murder in connection with the Robert Charles matter, which occurred in July last. Ten colored persons were arrested and charges of murder and harboring a murderer were preferred against them.
Several weeks ago, on motion of the counsel for the defense, a severance was granted, but these three cases against the accused for murder were divided and made nine of. The late Judge Moise had appointed counsel for the accused, and the result of the severance was that each of the lawyers received a separate trial for such of the accused as they might represent. W. H. Hearn, the lawyer to represent Silas Charles and Martha Jackson, and it was desired to try the case of these three first. Yesterday was the day fixed and the case came up.
The separate affidavits or endiments were pending against each of the accused; that is, for murder of Sergaean Porteous, Corporal Lally and Bloomfield or Brumfield, a boy who was killed that fatal day. The district attorney not-provised the case against the three accused as far as Sergaean Porteous and Brumfield were concerned, and the not convict the three accused of the murder of Corporal Lally, that it would be a waste of time to seek to convict them on the other two indictments.
The accused were entitled to thirty-six peremptory challenges and the state to eighteen, but the state did not exert the right to challenge to and appreciable extent, and nearly every juror who was not opposed to capital punishment or to convicting on eireum stantial evidence was tendered to the accused. On the part of the defense, the cross-examination of the jurors on their voir dire was extraordinary to say the least, being entirely different from any ever held in the criminal court before. The attorney for the defense went into an examination which was lengthy, and, to a certain extent quite strange. Among the questions propounded by the defense were the following:
Are you married?
How long?
How many members of your family are living?
Where do you reside?
Have you any prejudice against the Negro race?
What is your religion?
Protestant, what kind of a Protestant?
Are you are a citizen?
If naturalized, when did you arrive in this country?
If naturalized, have you any prejudices against the accused because they are native-born?
Are you educated?
What schools did you attend?
Did you graduate?
Did you study Latin or Greek?
did you study geometry or trigonometry?
What is your business?
Are you very busy?
If the juror replied that he was, the attorney would say, "Well, we'll let you go then." If not busy, then the attorney would say interrogatively, "Well, then you could give us all the time we want for the trial." Do you believe Negroes your equal? If not socially, do you believe them equal in law? According to the golden rule, put yourself in the place of a Negro, and if you were a Negro, would you be willing to be tried by white people? Do you think there is any race prejudice existing among the white people against Negroes.
Do you believe in God?
One witness, a Frenchman, was asked in French by counsel for the defense Did you read Voltaire or Victor Hugo?
Do you frequent corner groceries or barrooms?
Do you believed the accused are guilty now?
Where are you working?
One juror said he was unemployed, and counsel asked him, Why he wasn't working? How long have you been married?
You would be discharged if you got drunk, wouldn't you?
Can you afford to spare the time to give the accused a full and fair trial?
Wheneyer a juror said that he was, the counsel would ask politely if the juror could spare the time, and if he said "no," then the counsel for the as-
cused would considerably challenge him for the defense.
Don't: you think it would be good to hang a few niggers whethe. there was any law or not?
Do your employers need your service very much?
Do you belong to any church?
What reader were you in when you left school?
According to the constitution of the United States, after the Confederates were cleaned out, the Negroes are equal.
Do you believe that?
Do you keep fast company?
Wasn't there a race prejudice among
the white people against the Negroes
at the time of the riots?
Would you require the state to prove the guilt of the accused or they to prove their innocence?
Do you think the accuser I would have a good chance with a white jury?
If you found anything wrong in the case, or illegal, would you give the benefit of that doubt to the accused? Have you any objections to serve as a juror? The state only asked a few questions and they were whether the jurors was opposed to capital punishment, whether the would convict on circumstance, whether the had formed or expressed an opinion. Quite a number of jurors answered the two first questions negatively, while some answered the third question affirmatively, and a few even went so far as to aver that he believed thaacused all guilty, and was promptly challenged for cause by Judge Christien even before the district attorney, could interpose a challenge for cause. Not much interest was manifested in the case, and beyond the panel of jurors, businesses, court officials and a few attorneys were no spectators in court as is usually the case in a murder trial.
The state was repre- sented by Di- strict Attorney, J. Ward Gurley, and As- sistant, District Attorney, Montgomery, and the defense by W. W. Handlin. The accrued are common-looking colored people of the poorer class, but were neatly and cleanly attired. William William, the only colored man on the jury was placed on the stand. He was opposed to capital punishment. He would not flaid a verdict of guilty against a female under any circumstances, or against an insane person. He was challenged for cause. He said he was an undertaker by pro- fession. At 8:40 o'clock Judge Christen ordered a special veri- ce of fifty tales, jurors to be drawn, and made returnable at 9:30 o'clock this morning. Nine jurors had been secured when the panel was exhausted, and court adjourned until 9:30 o'clock this morning. The following are the jurors who were empanelled yesterday.
Jackson, Pedarre, Edward T. Poursine, Charles Ennautt, Louis Unavargat, Jacien Rault, Henry Babirae, W. Benedict Reynolds, William O. Baker.
Y. M. C. A. NOTES.
Prof. G. R. Hovey, Dean of Wayland College made the explanation on the Sunday School lesson extremely interesting last Saturday.
The committee work last Sunday was very encouraging. Mer. continue to be faithful.
The mass meeting last Sunday held at the True Reformers' Hall showed that the people are interested in the Y. M. C. Moorland of New York gave an address which was full of information. All who attended were highly pleased. This was proven by the liberal collection which was given for the purpose of helping to pay the expenses of the delegate to the Y. M. C. A. Jubilee in Boston. The music readered by Madam Zomoria Jones Wood, Miss Margaret L. Tinaley, and Trent's Quartette accompanied by Miss Nannie B. Jones was enjoyed by all.
Explanation on the Sunday School lea on Saturday 5 p. m.
Meetings in the Almshouse, jail and upon the corners of the street Sunday 11 a. m. and 3 p. m.
President Clifton Cabell will address the boys Sunday at 4 p. m. Be on time.
Mr. Paul Pollard, one of our young men who is a student of the V. N. & C.I. will address the men Sunday at our rooms at 5:30 p. m. subject, "The Duty of the Hour" Good music. Invite every man you see. Free.
After a very successful term our night school closed last Wednesday with an excellent program by the students, assisted by friends. Our teachers are very happy over the success. Later we hope to give the program in full.
Good Samaritans and the Public.
A rare opportunity to attend the opening session of State Grand Lodge No. 6. of Virginia.
Jordan Lodge, No. 40, I. O. of G. S. will run an excursion to Hampton Monday night, June, 10, 1901. Train leaves Broad street station via C. & O. R. R., at 11:30 P. M., leaving Hampton Tuesday, 8 o'clock P. M.
Tickets at train, Fare, round trip, $1.00; children under 12 years, 50ets. Come one, come all.
8t
Mr. John Cox, of Brazil, Ind., is in the city. He will remain in this section three weeks. He is stopping at 715 N. 2d street.
FIRST HONOR PUPILS
FIRST HONOR PUPILS
Week Ending May 17, 1901.
5th Grammar—Mr. J. Andrew Bower
leer, teacher: Claudia Dandridge, Rosa
Lewis and Virginia Rowlett.
3rd Grammar—Miss Rosa B. Yancey
teacher: Scott Gwathmey.
2nd Grammar—Miss Rosa B Moody,
teacher: Mary Warwick and Pinkie
Scott.
1st Grammar—Miss Lucy V Bolling,
teacher: Sarah Williams and Junnie
Glover.
8th Primary—Miss Annie M. Jackson,
teacher: Samuel Carden, Sarah
Baxton, Ethel Gwathmey, Annie
Gary, Iashel Johnson and Mary Melvin.
7th Primary—Miss Nannie O Wyatt,
teacher: Mary Christie, Ruby Cliborne,
Mattie Barnes, Lucile Law
rence.
6th Primary—Miss Lula A. Willis,
teacher; Mary E. Tancil, Beatrice
Christian, Eunna Hill, Jieugetta Temple,
India Howard, Lelia McAlister.
Perry Jefferson, George Lewis, George
Hatchett, Marie White, Robert Johnson.
5th Primary—Miss Mary E. Willis,
teacher; Adèle Johnson, Ida Thompson,
Mary Burke, Julia Nelson.
4th Primary—Miss Maud E. Mundin
teacher; Frank Morton, Willie Sound,
Olivia Scout William Preston,
Lissie Blank, Arthur Rison, John
Lawrence, Aurelia Hunter, Oleopatra
Scott, Bartha Anderson, Elijah Gordon,
Rosa White.
8th Primary—Miss Annie S. Keene,
teacher; Hattie Hunter, Bassie Kirby,
Olivia Scout William Morton, Felix
Gwathmey, Hasel Blatt, Bert, Joseph
Harris, Mary Stewart, Mary
Woodson, Marie Harris, Julia Atkinson,
Maggie Coleman, Madeleine Lewis,
Robert Thompson, John Taylor, Eddie
Washington.
2nd Primary—Miss Lula G. Haskins
teacher: Aleek Adam, Robert Boisean, James Coleman, Judson Clark.
James Easley, Frank Norman, Arthur Scott, Percy Slayes, Ernest Warwick.
Augustus Turner, John Wingfield, Bessie Aller, Willie Caldwell, Esther Coyle, Anna Ford, Rosa Howard, Isabel Bood, Bertha Johnson, Beatrice Johnson, Birtha Jones, Gertrude Moss, Sarah Elya Eva Stewaro, Della Turner, Alma Thompson, Florence Wingfield.
1st Primary—Miss Lula G. Haskins
teacher: Lizzie Bradley, Estelle Bentley, Claudine Baylor, Rosa Blackwell, Amelia Clark, Mary Gentry, Lottie Harris, Bettie Harris, Mary Hubbard.
Jay Jones, Dora Jackson, Martha Rohlen, Ruth Hill, Alma Scott. Emma Smith, Edith Williams, James Christian, Samuel Eatman, Helen Jackson, Robert Johnson, Allan Lewis, Luther Minor, Heskeiah Slayes, Eddie Noel, Roger Williams, Lillie Williams
For other names see 7th page.
ROBINSON—Entered into rest Sun day at 5 p.m. at Phoebus, Va., Samuel L., son of Edward and Catherine Rebinson of this city, after an illness of only a few weeks, which he bore very patiently.
All that loving hands could do was done for him, not only by his family but also by the many friends by whom he was surrounded, and to whom the family is very grateful.
He expressed a willingness to submit to whatever was God's will, and when He called him, closed his eyes without a struggle and fell asleep in Jesus. He is survived by a father, mother, wife, one child and three sisters.
The funeral was from Zion Baptist Church, Phoebus; interment in Hampton, Va.
ELLINGTON—Sydney M. Jr. son of Emma and Sydney M. Ellington, Sr., departed this life Wednesday, May 15, 1901, at the home of his parents, 621 East Franklin street, in the 19th year of age, after an illness of about four months.
His funeral took place from the First Baptist Church of which he was a member for 6 years, Friday, May 17th, Rev. A. Binga, Jr., officiating. He leaves a devoted mother, father, on brother and a host of friends to mount the hill. He is a member of Rescue Council, Independent of St. Lukes, a devoted and loving son, a kind and true friend, loved and respected by all who knew him.
His father, SYDNEY M. ELLINGTON, SE
A Pleasant Time.
MANCHESTER, VA., May 21, 1901.
There was a grand entertainment given by the Second Baptist Church Choir at the residence of Mrs. Elvira Jenkins, 2311 Decatur street, in honor of Revs. Watson and Brown of the Virginia Union University, who are expecting to leave the city in a few days. Some of the best talent of the city was present, and some very interesting solos and recitation were rendered, especially those by Rev. D. W. Davis.
SEVEN PINES JIM CROW CAR.
The Jim Crow car of the sunny South
Runs now to Seven Pines,
And if you're doubts of the truth
And if you've doubts of the truth hereof!
Walk in and read the signs.
"For colored passengers," reads one;
Now, read the other life:
And that reads "For white passengers,
Thus doth the law provide.
Ob, hang your heads for very shame!
Sons of the Old Dominion;
Shade of Jeffers well your face,
For its the world's opinion.
That such laws dim Columbia's fame,
And tell a shameful story
Of Freedom's land where dwell the
O! Freedom's land where dwell the brave!
QUOUQUE TANDEM MOSTRA PATIENTIA ABUETERE?
The above interrogation propounded by Cicero so the fland, Oatline may be fittingly asked by the Negro to the intelligent mind of to-day. This question has been silently asked by the Negro for many years, and manly answers have been evaded. While it has occasioned agitation, it seems as if it has been been proper consideration in the United States—the practical 'Utopia'—the land of the free and the home of the brave.
MacCainlay says, "It were better for men to be ruled by enlightened public sentiment than by bruise force." Has enlightened public sentiment much weight in this country when Negroes are concerned?
Does enlightened public sentiment govern here or does brute force? Do the highest political and civil officers, men who are supposed to represent the highest type of human character do all in their power to alleviate and make right the unjust conditions that exist to day? Let realities speak out in eloquence greater than can tongue or pen.
The Negro question has been passed through the sieves of speech from generation to generation throughout the centuries. It has sometimes been thrust into the background and crushed, but like truth, it has risen and will continue to do so until it finds its levelling proper adjustment of unjust conditions.
The Hon Frederick Douglass gave the only solution of our racial difficulties: "All we ask is fair play." Upon the recognition of this proposition hangs the destiny of the race. "Mishike me not for my complication."
We realize that no such problem as this has ever been known in the history of the world. Races or men have invaded the territory of others and the conquerors have lived in harmony with the conquered, but instances are none. I think, where races have lived under a democratic form of government with exercise of equal suffage. I also think instances are rare where conditions conducive to the highest mental and moral development have been shaped and measured by color of skin in so great degree.
"Fleesey locks and black complexion, Do not forfeit nature's claims."
"A man's a man for a that."
There are some rights of the Negro that the white man is bound to respect and this must be brought about before our country can hope to realize its true development
Many of these disadvantages have been the outgrowth of the Civil war. The abolition of slavery, the placing of the ballot in the hands of the freedman, each played their part in the engendering of racial animosity in the south.
The former made the north and the Negro friends; the latter made the south and the Negro enemies.
Taking a retrospective view, we can see the policies of these measures unavoidable. The north put great stress upon the ballot and believed it essential to manhood completion of freedom. Prior to this manhood suffrage with a few exceptions had wrought such success that as a result it naturally led to the establishment of populisms. One can imagine the great responsibility accordingly placed upon the freedman. For any one to assert that he did not deport himself nobly it would be unjust in spite of the horrors of the Reconstruction. The ballot was in the Negro's hand then by the white man's consent. Now, if he could vote then, why can he not continue to exercise his right of suffrage after thirty years of unparalleled advancement in the history of nations? We know the mass of the Negroes are Negroes and he is goodly number of individuals are on the plane of intelligence, and the atom must undergo a change before the masses can be transformed—the individual before the nation or race.
Then why not land our successful individuals and not tie them to the mass when recognition is sought? The advancement of the Negro has successfully disputed every theory advanced against him and has put to flight all the "gloomy predictions" of his enemies.
We can realize how poignant and pleasing to the Anglo-Saxon heart it is to come to the keen realisation of the fallacies of his theories, but this should not hinder the accordance of our guaranteed rights. How manly and altruistic would it be to give the Negro an equal chance in the race of
PRICE 5 CENTS
life! This is all he asks. All laws should be just. Justice should be meted out to all alike. A government which is founded in justice and unable to secure this to all, its citizens is a farce and its name should be blotted from the esacutecheon of nations. If the American would adhere more to the line of duty, which is right, let him be guided by an enlightened pliant agent. When we adhere to law, we approach the line of duty and vice versa. Law is an external agency harmonious with conscience to make duty "plain and definite." "Conscience sines most clearly, close to the line of duty." The centre of gravity for law is also on the line of duty; when we get off this line moral power is weakened. A duty definitely performed, strengthens will; and repetition of this duty, which is this right habit "reaps a character." This is applicable to the nation as well as to the individual.
We must ever remember that two consequences result from the violation of law—a negative and a positive. The former is the effect produced on the character of the individual or nation; the latter is the wrong condition that the law was intended to prevent. American sentiment seems to entirely disregard the negative effect. By not regarding this crime soon becomes a habit and the government makes its inability plea to correct the habit.
"Einem Liligner glaubt man nicht Wen er auch die wahrheit spricht."
Oh, for a spirit of government that lead into an atmosphere of pure thought where we could see things as they are that conditions might be altered!
These questions must be answered. The problem must be solved. It is far more important than the Cuban, Porto Rican, Hawaiian or Philippine problem, and it must and will be looked after.
We think Christianity will have its share in its solution. But America will have to cultivate a spirit of true Christianity before we may hope for a just solution.
"Tyre mocked when Salem fell. Where now is Tyre? Heaven was against her."
May God accelerate the time when measurements of man will be made by a standard of true worth! In the meantime, let the Negro do nothing to tarnish his past or injure his future.
I. LEONARD SCOTT>
Austed W. V.
THE SUN DO MOVE:
PITTSBURG, PA., April 28, 1901.
Mr. Editor:
Please allow me space in the columns of your paper to announce to the Negro some facts that the greater part of them are ignorant of. I want to say that the truth of God's word has made its way clear and plain through all ages past in the Prophetic age as well as in the Early age.
The hero, Jasper is sleeping in his grave and the truths which he began to utter 20 years prior to his death was considered by some men as folly and ignorant in their estimation, but God was the author of these words through Joshua in saying: The sun stood still over Gideon and the moon over the valley of Ajleon; and Solomon was a man of distinction and he said the sun rise in the East, goes down in the West and hastens back where it came from.
The hera, Jasper defined himself to God's word and G'd has made it plain. The colored children have said that Geography was correct in saying that the earth revolves on its axes, but I want to show the children that their minds have been befilled and the astronomers also. Although Jasper is dead, but he said that the day would come when the astronomers would sanction and coinise with him in say-ing that the sun do revolve, and at a length God called Jasper the Guild of labor to rest. God has left us here and read the publication of one of the greatest astronomers and he said the sun do move and not only the sun move, but the sun, moon and stars are still going same where at the rate of 40,000 miles per hour and where they started from and whither they are bound are questions which must be left for future scientists to solve and rehearse this that the Negro children may be no longer billed who thought and said that Jasper did not know; that from the question they may realize that the hero, Jasper, was the right and only right one because took God at His word and God brought him out conquer and more than conquer.
Just think of it, God told Jasper no man should exceed him in his day and he has put the philosphers to a test and caused the astronomers to wonder and at last be forced to take up his pen and says the sun, moon and stars, all love him, his grave, but we are here to convey him to our born generation. I love the dust of that hero's grave. Pray God may send us another Jasper.
Yours in Christ,
REV. G. W. CARRIER,
Formerly of Richmond, but now of
Pittsburg, Pa.
—Mrs. M. T. Lightfoot, Dowell,
Va.; Mrs. S. L. Freeman, New York,
and Mrs. George Berkley of this city
called us.
---
This was the question Sim Banks asked himself as he sat there holding that note in his hands, reading over and over the few lines it contained. What could it mean, and who could have written it?
Though Sim pondered these questions long, he was able to find no answer to them. The whole affair was wrapped in a thick and impenetrable mystery which he could not solve. He felt, however, that there must be something dark and unpleasant back of it all, and a sensation of uneasiness took possession of him. After his experiences of that day, which had been a day of events in his uneventful life, he was in a state of mind to expect all manner of curious and unaccountable happenings.
Could it be possible that Louisa had an important secret that she was keeping hidden from him? Could it be possible that she and some man had formed a friendship, or at least an acquaintance, the existence of which they had guarded so well that he had never even so much as suspected it?
That the author of the note was a man he was assured from the first. The strong, bold chiography and the language of the note convinced him of that. This much, and this much only, was clear to him.
The thought that his wife and some man should be linked together by a secret which no one else must share made his heart sick. To his mind it smacked of a dangerous and unwarranted intimacy, and it caused him to surmise the possibility of unpleasant things. For the first time in his life he felt the bitter pangs of jealousy.
It did occur to him for a moment that the note might have been written by Melvin, which was very natural considering all that had happened that day and in view of the fact that Melvin was the only strange man who had been at Beckett's Mill for weeks. A little reflection, however, decided him that he would have to look further for the author. Melvin was a total stranger there, so what could Loulsa know of him or his name?
Sim said nothing to his wife that night about the note, but the next morning when they were seated at the breakfast table he took the scrap of paper from his pocket and handed it to her, remarking quietly:
"Thar's somethin I found last night, Loucesy, an from what I can make out it must be your'n."
Louisa reached out and took the note, and as she glanced over it Sim was watching her. He saw the color mount to her face, while her head drooped until her eyes were fixed on her plate. She remained silent, and after a moment's wait he said:
"Loucey, is that your'n?"
There was a short pause. Then she looked up, and instead of answering his question she asked:
"Where did you get it?"
"I found it on the floor, where you'd likely dropped it. Is it your'n?"
"Yes, it is," she admitted hesitatingly.
"Then what does it mean, an who is it from? he demanded almost sternly.
"That I cannot tell you," she answered in low tones.
"Why can't you?"
"Because I have no right to tell."
"No right to tell anything to your man, your own husband?"
"Not that. You had as well say no more about it."
Sim looked at his wife very hard for almost a minute, his face rapidly changing color and a variety of thoughts flashing through his mind.
"Louesey," he said at last, "that note was wrote by a man, an I want to know what it means. I have a right to know."
She flashed him a look full of resentment.
"Whether you have a right to know or not," she replied, "you will never know from me."
"Why?"
"Because, as I have already said, I cannot tell you."
"Can't tell me? Loueesy, what am I to think of such talk as that?"
"You are to think what you please, I presume."
"But what can I think when you and some man have a secret between you that I aln't allowed to share?"
She fixed him with her eyes and with a scornful curl of her lips retorted:
"And what am I to think when you and some woman have not only one secret, but many secrets, between you that I am not allowed to share?"
He looked at her in astonishment.
"Me an some woman have secrets?" he repeated. "What do you mean by that?"
"I mean just what I say. Last night was not so long ago that you should forget what took place then."
"I don't understand you. I've never had a secret from you in all my life, much less a secret between me an any woman."
"Are you so sure of that?"
"I am."
"Then you must have forgotten Mary Mann."
Sim's face flushed instantly, and his head drooped. He had forgotten Mary Mann, but now he remembered her, as well as his meeting with her the night before. It was the memory of that meeting that made him blush, and he blushed, not for himself, but for her.
"And your meeting with her last night," Louisa added after a pause.
"Who told you about that?" Sim asked inconsiderately, thus admitting the truth of the charge.
"Then you did meet her?" Louisa said.
C3.
"You will never know from me."
"Yes, but it was not my fault. Who told you?"
"It doesn't matter who told me. Although you say you have never had a secret from me, I am certain you would never have been the one to tell me that."
"You're mistaken thar, Louesey. Why I ain't no reason on earth why I should not a' told you, an I'd a' done it. Nothin' happened at that meetin, so far as I'm concerned, that I'd be ashamed to tell to the whole world."
"Not even your hanging over the fence and making love to Mary Mann?"
"I never done it, Louesey, an anybody that went an told you any such a thing told you a p'int blank lie. I never made love to nobody in all my life but you."
"That will do for you to tell, but you can't fool me. If you were not making love to Mary Mann last night, why were you with her?"
"I was jest passin along the street, an she called to me."
"And you stopped?"
"Of course. What else could I do?"
"Nothing but stop and make love to her."
"I tell you I never done any sich a thing as make love to her. You ask her if I did."
Mrs. Banks tossed her head disdainfully.
"I'll be apt to ask any woman such a thing as that, and that woman in particular."
"Waal, you needn't, then. But it was jest like I say. I never dreamed of makin love to her."
"But you stopped there with her and hung over the fence and talked to her?"
"Waal, s'pose I did. I couldn't help myself. I couldn't jest walk on an leave her while she was talkin, could I?"
"Certainly not when her talk was so sweet and interesting. You must have found it real pleasant to have her assure you that I didn't love you, but that she knew some woman who did." "I didn't find it pleasant, an if I had."
I wouldn't 'a' done the way I did."
"Wouldn't have staid to listen to her?"
"I wouldn't have let on that I didn't understand what she meant an discouraged her ever' way I could."
"By hanging over the fence and talking back to her?"
"If I did hang over the fence an talk back to her, I never said nothin out of the way an nothin to be ashamed of, nary a word."
"Some people haven't a very keen sense of shame."
Sim paused for a moment. Then he said very solemly:
"Loueesy, you don't love me. If you did, you wouldn't never believe the lies somebody's gone an told you when I tell you they are lies. A woman that loves her man ain't never a-goin to believe some old long tongued tattler as ag'in him. It's a gospel truth, if ever I spoke one in my life, when I say I never made love to Mary Mann, an I'd swear to it on a stack of Bibles a hundred feet high. You ain't got no right to accuse me of any sich a thing."
"But you have a right to accuse me of something just as bad?"
"I ain't never accused you of nothin, Loueesy, an you know it."
"Not exactly in so many words, perhaps, but you have intimated it pretty plainly."
"Me intimated that you made love to some other man besides me?"
"Something like that. You remember, I suppose, what you said about that note?"
"I never said an I never meant that you loved somebody else."
"I know what you think."
"If I thought sich a thing as that, would I a' told Mary Mann yisteddy that she was a-lyln when she said what she did? An last night, when Jim Thorn hinted at the same thing, do you know what I done to him? I jist knocked him down plumb flat on his back, an if they didn't 'a' held me I'd 'a' stamped the very daylights outen him."
Louisa looked up, a surprised and palmed expression on her face.
"Did Jim Thorn dare to say such a thing as that she cried.
"He did," Sim replied, and, feeling sure of her gratitude at least, he added: "But he ain't never goin to say it no more, I bet. I done settled him for that."
"Yes," she said; "but you've gone and set everybody else to talking. I wish you had let Jim Thorn alone."
Sim was amazed, and the look on his face showed it.
"Why, my land, Loueesey," he exclaimed, "you can't almin to say I done wrong in k ockin Jim Thorn down, are you?" "You had better not have done it" she replied, "and I wish you hadn't."
“Waal, I’ll be blamed! Why, Pap Sampson an Hicks an Jason an all the rest, they all 'lowed I done jest right, an ever' one of 'em said he'd 'a' done jest like I did if he'd 'a' been in my place. Lord, I was countin shore on you bein pleased 'cause I tuck up for you that a-way, an now you don't think I ort 'a' done it! 'Pears like can't nothin I do please you. Louesey, an ever' time I try to do something for you I seem to make a mess of it.”
Sim's voice was so pathetic and his disappointment so evident that, in spite of her ill humor, Louisa was touched. She looked at him, and there was an expression of pity and something like sympathy in her eyes. Slowly and sadly she said:
“Sim, it is a sad thing to say, and you may think it cruel, but God knows it is true. It would have been better for us both if we had never met.”
"Louesey!" Sim exclaimed fearfully, starting to his feet, all in a tremble. "What is that you say? Surely you don't mean them words." "I do, and what I say is true. It would have been far better for us both if we had never, never met." He stared at her a long time in silence, and he noticed that her face was painfully white and drawn. His, too, he knew, bore the marks of a great dread and fear. "Louesey," he said, his voice husky and scarcely audible, "for God's sake, don't say that! Remember, you are my wife. Please take back them words. Say they're not so." "I cannot, Sim. I cannot, for I would only be lying if I did."
She folded her arms on the table and dropped her head on them and began to sob. Sim stood watching her, a sickening dread stealing over him. Uncertainly he hesitated for a moment, then went to her and put out his hand and began to stroke her hair. She drew away from him, and a cold shudder ran over her. He stood aloof and looked on her, his face painfully white and drawn and a hard, tense sensation clutching at his heart.
"Loucesy," he said presently, "what does this mean? Why do you treat me like that?"
She made no reply, but continued to sob. He reached out his hand again and placed it gently on his head, and again she shrank from him as though his touch were poison. Her action cut him deep, and a pain, sharp and poignant, passed through his soul. When he spoke again, his voice was low and husky.
"Loueey," he said, "is it true, as Mary Mann says, that you don't love me none?"
She did not answer, and when he had waited a moment he repeated his question. This time she looked slowly up until her eyes met his. From that moment there was no need for her to speak. In her eyes he only too plainly read her answer to his question. Slowly, as one in a dream, he turned to leave the room. There was a queer sensation of emptiness about his head, and everything around him bore a strange air of unreality. At the door he stopped and put his hand up to his forehead and for a full minute stood like one dazed. Then, turning his eyes once more on his wife, he said:
"My God, Loueey, you are killin me! You have broken my heart. Oh, please, please tell me it is not true, that look I saw in your eyes, and that you do love me!"
She did not raise her head, but between her sobs he heard her murmur:
"Tan it, I can't, for I don't love you!" Without another word he passed from the room and went staggering uncertainly down the walk to the street. He felt that he had received a deathblow, and in reality he had received that which was far worse, for death would have brought an end to pain and suffering, and this brought pain and suffering only. At the yard gate he stopped, and, leaning heavily against a post, he look
"For God's sake, don't say that!"
"For God's sake, don't say that" ed back at the house. Through the window he saw his wife sitting as he had left her, and a great yearning came over him to take her in his arms and hold her to his bosom and kiss her. But the next moment he remembered the words she had spoken and the look she had given him, and, laying his head against his arm, he said sadly: "But she is not mine! She is not mine!"
CHAPTER IX.
DANGEROUS MEETING
Although a couple of weeks had passed since James Melvin arrived on Possum Ridge, the public had by no means lost interest in him, and neither had its curiosity regarding him been in any degree satisfied. He was still an object of wonder, and speculation concerning him—his past life and character and his purpose in coming to the Ridge—was as rife as it had ever been.
Of course his statement to old man Turner that he had come there to prospect for mineral had spread abroad among the people, but there were very few who believed for a moment that there was a word of truth in it. There were no mineral developments in that section and, so far as any one knew, no indications of mineral deposits. In view of these things, what likelihood was there of a company of capitalists sending a man there on any such mission?
Pap Sampson, so beautiful of his ability to judge people at first sight, had been compelled to admit.
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BEFORE. AFTER. TRADE-MARK.
Recognizing the fact that there are many SO CALLED hair-growers and hair-straighteners now on the market, and knowing to a certainty that many of these are franks pure and simple, we wish to make a straight-forward, honest statement to the colored race although this great paper. In the year 1871 our late secretary, Mrs. S. M. Moore, through a fortunate circumstance, acquired the receipt for OZONO. It was not offered for sale until the next extent to 1875, when it was put upon the market and met with marked success, a thorough test by the colored people of that time it was pronounced an honor, legitimate remedy, true to all that was claimed for it, and worthy in every regard of confidence of every member of the colored race, because they found it to can be the hair to grow long and straight, soft and fine, and as beautiful as an April morn, whenever a genuine article appears upon the market there are always a number of people who limitate and make capital out of the merits of other people's goods. Seeing our marked success, numerous firms have entered the market, offering hair-growers and hair straighteners, many of which are worthless, causing the hair to fall out and doing great damage to the hair and scalp, and the colored people are buying these spurious companies, with animal fats, and do the hair more harm than good. These let us sound a warning—be careful what you use on your hair. Do not be deceived by flaring advertisements and big words. Buy the King of all Hair Tonics.
OZONO.
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which is sold with an iron-clad guard we will forfeit $5,00. Now, we ask lately agree to forfeit $5,00 if you if they were not true to all we clavered years under this guarantee, who has used Ozone has been satisfied 20,000 people are to-day using a recommends Ozone as the King of take the Kinks out of Knotty, Kinks some Hair. It will make short, hard your head of all itching, worrying se and Scurf can not live after Ozone to from falling out. It will restore grah hair long and soft. Now, right here, let us make a remedies to straighten hair, but when you use hot irons. Friends, do no life of the hair, and cause it to draw outside assistance. Nothing but straight forever. You can comfort the hair are seen in a day or two. The price of Ozone is 50c. a b this liberal offer, which is good at as to us, enclosing with it the sum of four large boxes of Ozone and one which makes black skin bright, rou skin diseases. Also removes all facial small-pox pits. We will also include Food—Nature's great beautifier—re and all facial blemishes; makes the younger. We will also include one package absolutely CHEMICALLY PURE,
which is sold with an iron-clad guarantee to do all that is claimed for it, or we will forfeit $50.00. Now, we ask you a plain question—would we absolutely agree to forfeit $50.00 if you are dissatisfied with our preparations, if they were not true to all we claim for them? We have advertised for several years under this guarantee, and we are glad to say that every one who has used Ozono has been satisfied in every respect.
20,000 people are to-day using our preparations, and every purchaser recommends Ozono as the King of all hair Tonics. Ozono will positively take shinks out of Knotty, Kinky, Harsh, Curly, Refractory, Troublesome Hair, make short, harsh hair long and straight. It will cure your head of all itching, carrying scalp diseases. Itch, Eczema, Dandruff, and Scurf can not live after Ozono has been applied. It will stop your hair from falling out. It will restore gray hair to its natural color, making the hair long and soft.
Now, right here, let us make a statement. Many firms are advertising remedies to straighten hair, but when they send the preparation they tell you to use hot irons. Friends, do not use hot irons; they will burn up the life of the hair, and cause it to drop out. Ozono straightens without upset outside assistance. Nothing but Ozono is necessary, and the hair stays straight forever. You can stop the use at any time. The good effects on the hair are seen in a day or two after the first application.
The price of Ozone is 50c. a bottle—4 boxes do the work. We make this liberal offer, which is good at any time: Cut out this coupon and send to us, enclosing with it the sum of One Dollar, and we will forward to you four large boxes of Ozone and one large bottle of Electrical Skin Refiner, which makes black skin bright, rough skin soft and pliant, and cures all skin diseases. Also removes all facial imperfections, and actually removes small-pox pits. We will also include one fancy jar of our Electrical Skin Food—Nature's great beautifier—removes wrinkles, moth patches, freckles, and all facial blemishes; makes the old look young and the young look younger.
We will also include one package of our celebrated Scalp Soap, which is absolutely CHEMICALLY PURE, and no soap but a pure soap should ever
It reluctantly enough, that for once he had made a mistake when he so confidently asserted that Melvin was a preacher and that his object in coming to Possum Ridge was to hold some "meetin's" at the Coon Run "meetin' house." Jason Roberts, still having an excuse for holding to his first formed opinion, continued to argue that he was there for the purpose of buying something. But Jason was alone, or very nearly so, in his opinion, and both he and Pap had the satisfaction of seeing Jim Thorn, a mere upstart, holding the lead in public opinion for once.
Melvin soon observed that wherever he went the people watched him curiously and that the great majority of them showed an unmistakable disposition to avoid him. He could engage but few of them in conversation, and if he approached a group of them and undertook to show them the social side of his nature they immediately began to exchange furtive glances and presently, one by one, dropped away until he was left alone.
Of course this conduct on the part of the people was unpleasant to a stranger, for it made him feel that he was not welcome and that his company was less preferable than his absence. To Melvin it was more. It not only annoyed but it disturbed him. A man who is carrying in his bosom a dread secret is always under an apprehension that he is going to be found out, and any little peculiarity in the conduct of those about him is sure to excite his suspicions and awaken in him a feeling of uneasiness.
Several times during the two weeks Melvin had made visits to Beckett's Mill, ostensibly to make trifling purchases at the store, but in reality for a far different purpose. Each time, however, he had come back as he had gone, his purpose unaccomplished. But at last fortune favored him.
One evening he had left the village to return to Turner's, where he was still stopping, when in passing through a thick wood he came suddenly face to face with Mrs. Banks. Both started back in surprise, but Melvin recovered himself quickly, and, grasping her hands in his, he looked full into her face and cried:
"Thank God, Louisa, I have met you at last!"
Then he caressed her hands, his mind in such a tumult that he could find no further words to speak, and when after a moment she would have drawn her hands away he held them fast.
"Don't, please don't!" she said in tones of soft remonstrance, looking anxiously around: "I— Please let me go!" "No, no!" he replied. "Don't ask me to do that. It would be cruel after I have hungered and starved for a sight of you all this long time. Oh, Louisa, you don't know how I love you and how I have missed you and yearned for you! Oh, my darling."
queatee to do all that is claimed for it, or you a plain question—would we also be dissatisfied with our preparations, or them for them? We have advertised for them we are glad to say that every one holds in every respect. Our preparations, and every purchaser all Hair Tortions, Ozono will positively vary, Harsh, Curly, Refractory, Troublehair hair long and straight. It will cure scalp diseases. Itch, Eczema, Dandruff, has been applied. It will stop your hair by hair to its natural color, making the statement. Many firms are advertising then they send the preparation they tell not use hot irons; they will burn up the out. Ozono straightens without any Ozono is necessary, and the hair stays on use at any time. The good effects on the first application. Bottle—4 boxes do the work. We make any time: Cut out this coupon and send One Dollar, and we will forward to you large bottle of Electrical Skin Refiner, high skin soft and pliant, and cures all side imperfections, and actually removes hide one fancy jar of our Electrical Skin removes wrinkles, moth patches, freckles, the old look young and the young look of our celebrated Scalp Soap, which is and no soap but a pure soap should ever
He made a movement to put his arm about her, but she tore herself from his grasp and, staggering back, stood leaning against a tree. She was trembling all over, her face red and white by turns and an uneasy, scared expression in her eyes.
After a momentary pause he advanced toward her, but she held up her hand to stop him.
"You forget," she said in low tones. "Forget what?" he asked, his eyes fixed eagerly on her.
"That—that I am married."
He hesitated an instant, then said slowly:
"No; I don't forget that. I wish to heaven I could and that you could forget it too. But I love you, Louisa, and if you were married a thousand times I'd love you. It may be wrong, but I don't believe it is; but, right or wrong, I love you, and I'll always love you. I can't help it."
"A light of heavenly bliss swept over her features, then quickly died away. "Don't say that," she pleaded. "You have no right."
"But I have," he replied. "I have more right than any one else, for I love you more, and you love me. Isn't that true, Louisa? Don't you love me?"
She made no reply, but hid her face in her hands. Presently he repeated: "Don't you love me, Louisa?"
She waited a moment, then looked up appealingly.
"You are cruel, cruel!" she cried. "If you were not, you'd spare me. You have no right to ask me that."
"Then it is true," he cried joyfully, "and you do love me."
She looked up into his face and said quietly:
"God knows I do! It is wicked, but it is true, and I cannot help it. I love you with all my heart and all my soul."
"It is not wicked," he replied. "We learned to love when we had a right, before you married that man. It is not as though we had begun to love now. You were mine—your heart and your soul—before you became his. We loved each other then, and it is not wicked in us that our love will not die."
"I don't know," she answered thoughtfully. "It seems like all happiness is wrong and that we can't do right without being miserable. Oh, I don't know why we should ever have met!"
"Say rather that you don't know why we should ever have parted," he said. "Oh, Louisa, why did you go away from me when you knew I loved you and wanted you to be my wife? Why did you leave me when you loved me?" "If didn't know then."
"No. I knew I liked you, and I thought of you sometimes in a different way from what I ever thought of any one else, but I was young, and I didn't
be used on the scalp. And, lastly, to prove our liberality, we will put in a pint package of Anti-Odor, a positive cure for Sore Throat or Mouth, all forms of Womb Diseases, Chilblains, Sore and Frosted Feet; also removes all smells and odors arising from the human body.
The actual value of this Grand Aggregation is $4,00, but we let you have it for $1,00, simply to introduce honest goods. In order to protect the public in general from imitations of our goods, and to avoid mistakes, we have placed upon our coupon our Trade-Mark, one head showing Short Hair and the other head Long Hair. The U. S. Government has granted us this coupon, and it is registered in the Patent Office at Washington gon; so if the coupon has been made no mistake. Use only the coupon having the two heads on it. As to the referrer you to the Editor of this paper or to the Metropolitan Bank of Richmond, Va. We have thousands of testimonials we have not space to publish. Here is a sample of one:
Dear Sister,—You are at liberty to st
need OZONO, and give it my most hea
tion so often, it does me good to recom
here is another:
Gentlemen,—After using OZONO a
that my hair is already straight and grow
A last word. OZONO is absolutely
cause a beautiful and luxurious growth
you can use it to secure a glossy loon
"OZONO." Send us $1.00 at once, and
day we receive your order.
BOST
$1
Gentlemen. After using OZONO a short while only, I am glad to say that my hair is already straight and growing finely.
A last word. OZONO is absolutely guaranteed to straighten hair and cause a beautiful and luxurious growth. If your hair is already straight you can use it to secure a glossy long growth. Buy only the genuine stock at $1.00 at once, and the goods will be sent the same day we receive your order.
Boston Chemical Co.,
I enclose you $1.00, for which please send at once
4 Boxes of Ozono, worth $2.00.
worth 50c. 1 Bottle Electrical S
(1 pint) Anti-Odor, worth 50c.
Total, $4.00.
Name.....
Street.....
County.....
If you want 4 lots like above, send $ no coupon, let her write her name on a when you send your order.
4 Boxes of Ozono, worth $2.00. 1 Bottle Electrical Skin Refiner,
worth 50c. 1 Bottle Electrical Skin Food, worth 50c. 1 Package
(1 pint) Anti-Odor, worth 50c. 1 Package Scalp Soap, worth 50c.
Total, $4.00.
County. State.
If you want 4 lots like above, send $3.00. If you have a friend who has
no coupon, let her write her name on a piece of paper and pin to coupon
when you send your order.
"Why did you marry—that other?"
"My parents urged me, and I liked him. I even thought I loved him. Afterward there was an awakening, and then I knew the truth. That awakening was bitter and cruel."
"And you suffered," he said softly, placing his hand on her head. "My poor little girl!"
"Yes; I suffered," she replied wearily, "and God alone knows how much I suffer yet."
"I know," he said, again taking her hands in his. "But there is the future."
She shook her head slowly.
"It will be the same as the past and the present. I shall go on suffering to the end."
He was thoughtfully silent for a little while. Then he said:
"Louisa, you have no right to sacrifice your life and happiness, and not only your life and happiness, but mine. It would be a sin, a far greater sin than—the other."
She knew his meaning, and she drew away from him. When she spoke, there was resentment in her voice.
"I don't think I have given you any excuse for saying that," she said. "If I have, I didn't mean it. You must let me go."
"Have you nothing more to say to me after all our long separation?" he asked in hurt tones.
"I did not mean to say anything to hurt you, and I humbly and sincerely
M. BURNS.
beg your forgiveness. Loving you as I do, I would not hurt a hair of your head. Won't you believe me, Louisa?" "I—yes; I believe you. Now let me go." "No, no, not yet! Think how long it
Boston Chemical Company;
BEFORE AFTER
SENIOR
the following goods :
know what love was."
She shook her head slowly.
"But you need not."
"Don't please don't!"
MAGGIE B. PROCTOR,
Box 114. Fairfield, Texas.
MISS BESSIE POWERS,
383 Missouri street, Toledo, O
has been since I saw you! Don't go
just yet."
"I must."
"You are cruel. Louisa."
"It is you who are cruel."
"I? How?"
"Can't you understand what your keeping me here means?"
"I can understand that it means a taste of heaven to me."
"And more pain and suffering for me."
"Why should it do that?"
"Do you think I have no conscience?"
"No, but—"
"Do you think it costs an honest woman nothing to keep a thing like this a secret from her husband?"
"I don't know. But, there, I will not keep you, though it is hard to let you go. When I see you again?"
"Never?"
"No; don't say that! I must see you!"
"It is best that we should never meet again, best for both of us."
"Never?"
"Never in this world! We should never have met this time."
"Nothing good can come of it, nothing but more pain and more misery. Why did you come here at all?"
"I couldn't help it. You were here, and I couldn't stay away."
"When you knew I was married. You are weak—weaker than I, and you are a man."
"No; I love more. If you loved me one-half as much as I love you, you would not be so cold and exacting."
She looked at him a moment with an incredulous smile on her lips.
"Listen," she said. "I have told you that I love you, and now I may as well tell you this. I love you so much that I worship your very shadow, while one drop of your blood, one atom of your flesh, is more precious to me than all the millions of human beings on this earth. Is your love greater than that?"
"No. But yet you drive me from you."
"I do, because I know it is best and because I am strong enough to resist temptation. You must leave here, and we must never meet again. Goodby."
"I am glad of it. I was afraid the boy I sent it by might lose it or get it misplaced. You knew who it was from?"
"Of course."
"And I presume you wondered what it meant?"
"Naturally. I could not understand why you should be so anxious to keep your name a secret."
"Shall I tell you?"
"Just as you please."
"I think I would better. I am in hid-
CONTINUED ON THIRD PAGE.
HE PLANET
AN HUMBLE
HERO
By Thomas
P. Montfort
Copyright, 100, by
Thomas P. Montfort
ing."
"In hiding! From what?"
"From the law."
She started back with a little cry of surprise and pain and placed her hand on her heart.
"Oh, Frank!" she cried. "You have not committed a crime? Don't tell me you have."
"Louisa," he said in all seriousness, "I have done something dreadful, something I would give all the world to undo. But it was not my fault. I did it because I could not help it."
She looked up at him wonderingly, while a terrible sensation of fear and dread tugged at her heart. With that keen, unaccountable intuition peculiar to women she guessed the truth at once, but she would not accuse him even to himself. She drew a little nearer to him and spoke in low tones.
"Frank," she said, titill me.
"Frank," she said, "tell me the truth. What have you done?" "Are you sure," he asked, "that I had better tell you?" "Yes; I must know." "But it is dreadful, Louisa." "Yes; I expect the worst." "The very worst?" "The very worst." "And you do not shrink from me?" "No, because you say you were not to blame and that you couldn't help it." "But I tremble to tell you." "Have no fear for me. I believe what you have said. You have"—
"You ums may say what you please, an you ums may say it jest as long as you ums please; but, as I have said before an as I will continer to say, thar's somethin pow'f heavy a-welghin on Sim Banks' mind."
"Lord, Pap Sampson, you've been a-sayin them words till we ums have all done learnt 'em by heart, an you can keep on a-sayin 'em till you'were 'em plumb out, if you want to, but I tell you right now you're barkin up the wrong tree. I've said before, an I say ag'in, that all on earth's the matter with Sim Banks is that he's fixin to have a spell of fever."
"You have said that, Jason Roberts, an mebby you have said somethin you know, an mebby you hain't. My notion is you hain't. But if you'll allow me I jest want to ask you one question."
"You jest go ahead, Pap Sampson, an ask all the questions you please. I answer all I kin of 'em, an when you ask one I can't scrape up no answer for I'll holler."
"Very well. Now, then, Jason Roberts, can you tell me why a feller fixin to have a spell of fever would go mop in round for two long weeks, not a feel-in sick nor nothin, but jest actin for all the world like he'd lost ever' cent he owned an ever' friend he had to his back? Can you jest tell me that?
"Couldn't a feller fixin to have the fever act that a-way?"
"Mebby he could, Jason, but he don't. You hain't answered my question, though."
"My notion is, Pap, that thar ain't no need of him answerin it, for I reckon you an Jason's both got the wrong pig by the tail."
"If you're so smart, Jim Thorn, why don't you retch into the pen an git a hold of the tail of the right pig?"
"I have."
"Then you jest show that pig to us an let us see its color, will you?" "I will. All on earth's the matter with Sim Banks is jest this. He's in love with the Widder Mann, an he's moonin round 'cause he can't have her." "That's the color of the pig you got by the tall, is it?" "It are." "Then, Jim Thorn, all I got to say is that you didn't even git your pig oten the right pen. The one you got's a plumb stray." "That's jest your notion, Pap Sampson, but you jest wait an you'll see."
"Jim Thorn," he said, "you'll never make me believe no sich a thing as that of Sim Banks, not if you preach it till your head's as bald as a pumpkin. I've known Sim since he wa'n't no bigger than a cat, an I can say, an say it open an aboveboard, that I ain't never yet known him to do ary a single thing that he had any call to be ashamed of." "My land, Pap, do you think bein in love with Mis'us Mann is anything to be ashamed of?" "It would be for a man that's already got a woman shorely, an I don't know, Jim Thorn, but what I'd be ashamed of it even if I didn't have no woman." There was a general laugh at this, which caused Pap to straighten up and look important. "That's a putty hard knock on the wilder," Hicks observed presently, "but if Pap was a wildower I bet he wouldn't talk no sich a way."
"Nary time he wouldn't," Jason agreed. "Lord! If Pap was single, he'd be cuttin round after the women wuss'n a hungry cat after cream."
"That's all right, Jason," Pap said,
"an I reckon you ain't talkin so moughty much out of your head as some folks mought think. Lord a massy, it's a pawful good thing for these young chaps round here that I hain't single. Lord, I'd soon have all their noses out of joint even if I am risin on to 70."
"You low you could cut 'em all out, Pap?" Hicks asked.
"Jest as easy as fallin down a well. Why, shucks, Jake, don't you know I'd have the pick and chice among the women?"
"Mebby you wouldn't, Pap," some one said, "if that Mr. Melvin were to turn loose an take to sparkin round."
"Reckon Sim Banks' wife is the only woman Melvin keers 'bout sparkin', young Sam Morgan observed.
Pap Sampson brought his cane down emphatically.
"Sam Morgan," he sald, "do you mind how Sim Banks done Jim Thorn thar, right here on this platform, the other night?"
"I guess I do," Sam replied.
"Then let me tell you that if you ain't achin to be done the same way you'd
M.
"Tell us all about it, won't you?" better tighten the reins on your hoses a little an be sorter keerful whar you drive." I haintn't afear of Sim Banks." "You better be if you git to lettin rearmen."
your tongue run on Loueesy."
"I hain't said nary a word about Loueesy, have I?"
"Waal, mebby not exactly."
"But I will say this, Pap Sampson. I wouldn't want no wife of mine meeting that feller out in the woods an standing a-talkin to him, with him a-holt of her hands."
"You mean to say, Sam Morgan, that Loueesy Banks done that?"
"I ain't callin no names, Pap Sampson, but I reckon most anybody ort to see through a board if it's got a auger hole in it."
"Sam," he said, "have you been seen in that Melvin an some woman doin like you said?"
"Thout mentionin no names, Jake, I'm bound to say I have."
"When was it, an whar?"
"Yisteddy evenin, right down here in Sim Banks' own piece of timber land."
"Tell us all 'bout it, won't you?"
There was a concerted hitching of chairs up closer around Sam, and a hush almost as still as death fell over the little group. There was little, very little, of excitement or interest in the lives of the citizens of Possum Ridge, and when anything strange or out of the common did happen they liked to make the most of it and enjoy it to the fullest possible extent.
Then, too, in this instance, they scouted something in the way of scandal, and that made them all the more eager listeners. Unsophisticated and simple as they were, they possessed that insatiable curiosity and that morbid love of the unsavory which are not altogether things apart from the lives of many of the more cultured.
Sam Morgan, finding himself the center of an eager group who waited with open mouths for him to speak, felt his importance, and it was excusable in him that he remained silent for a little while to enjoy the situation. It was not every day he could occupy a position like that, and it was very natural that he should desire to make the most of it.
But glorying in a triumph, even such a triumph as that, cannot last forever. So finally Sam condescended to speak.
very much concerned to speak.
"I'd been out a-huntin,' he began, 'an comin' long up across Sim Banks' timber land, I felt sorter tired an 'lowed I mought's well set down an rest a bit. So I turned out of the path an went a few steps out to that big tree what Pap Sampson told us he shot six squirrels out of at one time when he was a young feller. You all mind 'bout that tree, I reckon."
They all nodded assent. Then Pap Sampson spoke.
"It was seven squirrels, Sam, 'stid of six."
"You said six last time you told 'bout it,' Sam replied. "I mind that most distinctly."
"An five time before that," Jason Roberts added. "Lord, I reckon it'll be eight next time Pap tells that story."
"Waal, don't squirrels nat'rly multiply an increase?" Pap asked.
"Not dead uns don't," Jason replied. "Waal, thar was seven squirrels if thar was one—I mind I counted 'em both before I killed 'em afterward—seven squirrels settin' long on a limb all in a row, with all their heads turned the same way. I drew up my old rifle an tuck aim at the head of the nighdest to me an banged away. Imagine my surprise when all seven of them squirrels come a-tumblin out of that tree an fell in a pile on the ground, that bullet havin' gone clean through ever one of their heads."
"An then gone on an killed a wild turkey over in another tree," Jason added.
"Waal, yes, that's allus been my opinion," Pap admitted, "but thar was another feller shot his gun off at the same time, an he 'lowed he killed the turkey. But, as you was a-sayin, Sam, tuck a few steps out to that tree"—"An sot down behind it in the shade," Sam resumed. "I'd been a-settin thar 'bout ten minutes, I guess--don't 'low
RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
if could 'a been more'n 10 minutes an not more'n 15 nohow—an I'd begun to git sleepy an doze off like when all to queet I heard voices a-talkin. I peeped round the tree kinder cautiouslike, an then I see that Mr. Melvin an a woman — in't mentionin no names—a-stand in that a-talkin, pow'ful interested, him a-holdin both of her han's in his'n'.
Th Reign of Lawlessness
"What was they. a-sayin?" Hicks asked eager.
"Waal, they talked kinder low most of the time," Sam replied, "so I couldn't hear much they said, but what I did hear was moughty int'restin, I can tell you."
"What was it?" Hicks asked, and the others all leaned forward in breathless eagerness to listen for the reply.
"Waal, in the first place," Sam said, "I heard Melvin say, 'I may be wrong, but I don't b'lieve it is; but, right or wrong, I love you.'"
"Lord!" Jason exclaimed. "He was gittin sweet, wa'n he? But what did she say then?"
"She says: 'Don't say that. You ain't no right.' Then he says, 'I have more right than anybody else, 'cause I love you more an 'cause you love me,' an he says, 'Don't you love me?'"
"Then what did she say?"
"She didn't say nothin."
"Jest stood that an never opened her mouth?"
"At first she did, but after while, when he had crowded her a right smart an had said to her, 'You do love me, don't you?' she up an says: 'God knows I do. It's wicked, but I can't help it. I love you with all my heart an soul.'" "Lord! Did you ever hear the like? Say, I bet then he jest gathered her in his arms an kissed her."
"No; he didn't."
"Wonder why. Any woman was to tell me, like that, she loved me I'd shore kiss her."
"Not if she wouldn't let you, I guess."
"Wouldn't she let him?"
"Not much; wouldn't let him tech her, only her hands."
"What else did they say?"
"Didn't make out much they said after that on account of 'em talkin so low, but I heerd her call him Frank oncet, which shows that he ain't gin by his shore 'nough name, an toward the last I heerd him say he'd done somethin dretful an was hidin out from the law."
For a full minute Sam's auditors sat staring at him in astonishment. Then Hicks broke the silence by ejaculating: "Waal, I'll be dad gummed! If that don't stump my taters!"
"I reckon, Jake," Jason said, "it's enough to stump anybody's taters. Lord! Did anybody ever hear of anything like it?"
"I wonder what we ort to do 'bout it?"
"I don't know," Jason replied. "I reckon, though, we shore ort to do somethin. 'Pears like it's our plumb duty, don't it?"
"Do somethin 'bout what?" Pap Sampson asked.
"Why 'bout puttin the law on to the track of that fellow an bringin him to jistice an 'bout—well, somebody ort to tell Sim Banks, I reckon."
"Bout puttin the law after that fellow—that's all right, an I'm willin to help you. But 'bout tellin Sim Banks—are you willin to be the one to do it, Jason Roberts?"
Jason made no reply. Pap put the same question to Hicks and Sam Morgan and the others, and they all shook their heads. Then he turned to Thorn and said:
"Jim Thorn, are you willin to be the one to tell Sim Banks?"
"It ain't nothin to me," Thorn replied, "an I guess I ain't got no call to mix up in no sch matters."
"That's sensible, Jim, an I feel 'bout it jest like the rest of you." Hicks said.
"We ain't none of us got no call to tell Sim Banks nothin, an the best thing we can do is to keep our mouths shet. I tell you now, an it's a gospel truth, as shore as Sim Banks ever finds out what Sam Morgan has told us he'll shoot that Melvin down jest like he would a sheep killin dog. You mark my word for that."
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
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Richmond, Va.
YORK RIVER LINE, WEST POINT
The Favorite Route North.
LE VE RICHMOND
Train No. 16,4:30 P.M.
(71) CRE LIMITED, Daily, except Sunday,
for West Point, and intermediate stations
making commuter trips to Wednesday
and Fridays with steamer for its iti-
more. Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
18 Ainor Wilson, colored, Fired on white men, Silver City, Miss.,
19 O. G. Bord
20 Willis Bord
LOCAL Express Mon Wednes & Fridays for
women. Intermediate stationes, con-
tains with stairs to the station.
Kkt and Tappahannock; also at West Point
clearers for Baltimore. stops at all stations.
Train No. 74, 5:00 A. M.
LOCAL MIXED, leaves daily, except Sunday from Virginia Street Station for West Point intermediate stations, connecting with stage at the manor for Walkerton and Tapannock, TRAINS ARRIVE AT RICHMOND) 9:15 a.m. Daily, from West Point, with connection from Baltimore Wednesday Fridays and Saturdays, from West Point and Mondays 6:08 p.m. Daily, except Sunday from West Point and intermediate stations.
steamers leave West Point Monday Wed
nesday and Friday. $500 M. m. arriving Baltimore
$500 m. in. Bouncing leave. Baltimore
$500 p. m. Friday, Thursday and Saturday
steamers call at all landings on York
Hiver.
C. W. WESTBURY,
Traveling Passenger Agent,
$200 E. Main St Richmond, Va.
J. M. CULL,
traffic manager
genn. Pass. Ag.
FRANK S. GANNON.
Third Vice-president and General Manage-
Washington, D.C.
VIRGINIA NAVIGATION
COMPANY'S JAMES-RIVER LINE
To Norfolk, Portsmouth, Old Point, Newport,
Newg, Omahaemes and James Landings and
Portsmouth, Baltimore and Portsmouth,
Washington, Baltimore and the North.
STREAMER POCAHONTAS LEAVEN MONDAY, WED
Friday. Electric cars direct to wharf. Warehare only.
and $1.00 to Norfolk, Portsmouth, Old Point,
Newport News. Music by a grand Orchestra.
Freight received daily from above-named
places and all points in Eastern Virginia and
Nerth Carolina.
IRVIN WEISIGER
Superintendent
EDWARDE, BARNEYREF son#8
A
Southern Railway
SCHEDULE
11:00 P. M no 11 SOUTH EXP. and points south, sleepers J. Tazville, Greenboro, salisbury, and Charlottesville. Sleeper open at Richmond 20 u. m. for connections to Atlanta. Connects at Danyville and Charlottesville with New York and Florida Express (No 2) carrying through sleepers be for connections for all Florida points, also connects at Danyville. Charlotte with the Washington and Southwestern Limited and bet'n New York and Nashville. New York and Memphis and New York and Fullman Tourist sleeper Monkey's West Day days, Washington to San Francisco without change, with connections for points in Texas, Mexico and California.
12:00 P. M no. 7, solid train daily or Charlottes, N. C. Connects at Moseley with Baltimore and Durham, Keysville for Clarksville, Oxford, Henderson and Durham and at Greensboro for Durham, Raleigh, and Winston-Salem State Fast Mall, solid train, daly for new Orleans and points South, which carries sleepers New York to New Orleans and Miami for Nassau and Habana, Cuba Drawing room buffer-sleeper Richmond to Birmingham through Atlanta. Through train sleeper Salisbury, to
Through train sleeper Sainbury,
to Memphis via of sheville and Chattawan.
6:00 P. M., NO IT, LOCAL, daily except Sunday
for Kevestville and intermediate points
TRAINS ARRIVE AT RICHMOND.
6:00 A. M.
6:38 P. M. - from Atlanta Augusta, Amherstville
S. 40. - from Keysville, and local stations.
S. 41. - from Keysville, and local FREIGHT TRAINS.
Nos. 61, 62, between Manchester and Nespolis, Va
Atlantic Coast Line
Atlantic Coast Line
Schedule in Effect January 14, 1901,
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND—BYRD
TREE TATION.
9:00 A. M. NORFOLK LIMITED Daily
Arrives Petersburg 9:00 a.m.
folk 11:37 a.m. Stops only of
Petersburg, Waverly, and Suffolk, Va.
9:05 A. M. Daily, Arrives Petersburg
9:50 a.m. Weldon 11:50 a.m.
Fayetteville 4:25 p.m. Charleston
10:55 p.m. Savannah 2:55 a.m.
Jacksonville 8:30 a.m. Port Tampa
7:10 p.m. Connects at Wilson
with No. 47, arriving Goldabor 8:
25 p.m. Wilmington 6 p.m. Pull-
man Sleeper New York to Jacksonville.
11:55 A. M. Daily, except Sunday.
Arrives Petersburg 12:30 p.m. Stops
Manchester, Drewry's Bluff, Cent-
ral and Old Orchard.
18:15 P. M. OCEAN LOST LIMITED,
Daily. Arrives Petersburg 8:45
p.m. Norfolk 5:55 p.m. Stops only
at Petersburg, Waverly and Suffolk.
4: 8 P. M Daily, except Sunday. Arrives Petersburg 5: 20 p. m., Weldon 7: 42 p. m., and Rocky Mount 8: 56 p. m. Makes all intermediate stops.
6: 00 P. M Daily Arrives Petersburg 6: 50 p. m. Makes all stops
6: 57 P. M FLORIDA AND WEST INDIAN LIMITED. Daily Arrives at Petersburg 7: 87 p. m. Connects with Norfolk and Western for Norfolk and intermediate points. Emporia 8: 40 p. m. (connects with Atlantic and Dauville for stations between Emporia and Lawrenceville, Weldon 8: 10 p. m., Fayetteville 12: 32 a. m., Charleston 5: 23 a. m., Savannah 7: 50 a. m., Jacksonville 12: 15 p. m., Port Tampa 11: 36 p. m. NEW LINE to Middle Georgia Points—Arriving Augusta 7: 51 a. m., Mason 11: 15 a. m., Atlanta 12: 35 p. m., Thomasville 2: 25 p. m., Pullman leevers New York to Wilmington, Charleston, Port Tampa, Jacksonville, Augusta and Macon, New York to Thomasville every Tuesday.
9:10 P. M., Daily, Arriving Petersburg
9:55 p. m., Connects at Petersburg
with Norfolk and Western railway,
arriving Lynchburg 2:80 a. m.,
Roanoke 5 a. m., Bristol 10:40 a. m.
Pullman [leaper] Richmond to Lynchburg.
11:80 P. M., Daily, Arrives Petersburg
12:16 a. m.
11:50 P. M., Daily, Except Sunday THE
NEW YORK AND FLORIDA
PECIAL Arrives Charleston 9:38 a. m.
s. Savannah 15:00 a. m., Jacksonville 2:50 p. m., St. Augustine
4.20 p. m., Port Tampa 11:30 a. m.
TRAINS ARRIVE IN RICHMOND.
4:00 A. M. Daily, From Jacksonville,
Savannah, Charleston, Atlanta,
Maecon, Augusta and all point's
South.
6:40 A. M. Daily, except Monday From
St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Savannah and Charleston.
7:85 a. m. Daily From Petersburg,
Lynchburg, and the West.
8:45 a. m. Daily, except *nday*. Pet-
terson, Lynchburg, and the West.
11:10 a. m. daily, except Sunday From
Goldsboro and intermediate
stations, Norfolk and Suffolk.
11:42 a. m. Daily, From Norfolk, Suffolk and Petersburg.
11:05 a. l. Sunday only from Norfolk, Suffolk and Petersburg.
2:10 p. m. Daily, except Sunday, From Petersburg.
7:22 p.m. Daily From Miami, Port
Tampa, Jacksonville, Savannah,
Charleston, Wilmington, Goldsboro
and all points South.
8:56 F. m. Daily. From | Peterburg
Lynchburg
T. M. EMERSON.
3
LD DOMINION STEAMSHIP CO.
DAILY LINE FOR NEW YORK, EXCEPT SUNDAY
Passengers can travel from Richmond daily except
sunday via Cheapeake or Richmond and Petersburg railroad
or Richmond and Petersburg railroad
morning at Norfolk route 9:00 A.M. Domin
Line steamer sailing same evening at 7
o'clock. Tickets on sale to Richmond Transfer
Company's, 808 east Main Street; Cheapeake
and Richmond and Petersburg
r'road depart company's office, 1813
east Main Street. Richmond. Baggage checks
through.
PERSONAL
for new York and all points beyond can be
shipped by steamers, sailing from Richmond
and Richmond and Petersburg.
GAY at 5:00 P.M. The steamer carries stea
age passengers only.
Most closed one hour before sailing time
Freight is loaded and forwarded and through
bills of lading issued for all northern, eastern
and foreign ports.
FROM NEW YORK
Passengers can leave daily except Sun day
$ P M (S M or F M.) to Norfolk or k Old
Point Comfort, conditioning with Norfolk and
Western railroad or Chesapeake and Oate
railway.
or Richmond by stamer vial 'Ri'or
folk Mondes and Wednesdays: 8:00 P M, S
durations: 4 P M
company's pier. No 3 North River foot of boat received and forwarded daily except unday.
W. L. Guillauden, Pres
S.A.L.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY.
The Favorite Route South.
Schedule in Effect June 3rd, 1800.
Leaves Chesapeake and Ohio Broad Street Station.
7-80 A. M. Daily, except Sunday, for Petersburg, bu. g. Henderson, Durhaw, Raleigh, Albany, and all points South and South-west.
7-85 P. M. "Florida Mall and Express," daily for Petersburg, Henderson, Raleigh, Oak raiw, Camden, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, Fernandina, and all Florida points.
0-40 P. M. "FLORIDA LIMITED," daily for
Petersburg, Henderson, Raleigh, Wil-
mming, harlotte, Chester, Athens,
Atlanta, Memphis, Mobile, Mew Or-
leans, points South,
Cheraw, Camden, Columbia, Saven ash
Jacksonville Tampa, Jernandina, and
all Florida points.
Trains arrive from outh at Chesapea
Ohio. Station 5-18 A
5-40 P. M. daily, also, 2 P. M daily
Sunday.
For tickets, checking baggage. Steeping O
reservation, etc., apply to the Seabourn
way office, 88 East Main St., Ric-
mond Train Company, 88 East Main
Jefferson Hotel, 88 East Main
H. M. BOYKIN, General Apt.
88 East Main St.
C. & O Chesapeake and
Ohio Railway
C. & O. Chesapeake and Ohio Railway.
ROUTE.
Schedule in Effect January 5, 1901,
From: Richmond.
LEAVE BROAD-STREET STATION.
9:10 a.m. daily for principal stations Newper
News, Old Fount, Norfolia and Pors-
mouth. Parlor car.
8:40 a.m.
Newport News
Old Northeast
ulman to Old Point
10:00
BRIAN.
10:00 a.m. except Sunday. Local Training for Clifton Forge. Connects at Madisonville for orange Warrenton. Madisonville and Washington only. Connects at Cliftonville for Lynchburg; a Basic for Hagerston and at Stainton for Lexington.
3:45 p. m. Daily limited, to Cincinnati, Louisville, and St. Louis. Pauline sleeping cars. Connects at Gordonville for lake and at Orange with Southern Ky train. Lainey Gage at 6:40 P. M daily for stations between Washington. Connects for Virginia Hot Springs. Local Train No 7, follows No 6 on Sunday, from Gordonville to Itaunton.
5:30 p. m. Accommodation, except Sunday to Doswell
10:45 p. m. Dally, F F F. V. to Clinemati and
Matsui, F F F. to keep car. Connects
for Virginia. Hosts connects for
connects at Concorveer with Greenbrier
Bible School sunday.
LEAVE EIGHTH ST. STATION.
10:30 a. m. Dally for L昂chgh, Lexington,
Clifton Forge, Columbia, with
with Buckingham and Albersee branches
6:15 p. m. except Sunday, to Columbia
STATION
8:30 a.m. except Sunday from Doswell. 8:30 a.m. no p. m., daily, Cincinnati; and Louisville.
11:35 a.m., daily 6:30 p. m., from Norfolk an Old Point.
8:15 a. v. Accept Sunday, from Clifton Forge.
TRAINS ARRIVE EIGHTH STREET STATION.
8:40 a. m. ~, except Sunday, from Columbia 8:20 a. m., Dally, from Lynchburg, Clifton Forge, and except Sunday from New Castle, Lexington Ford. For detailed information, connections, etc. apply at Richmond Transfer office, No 90 East Main street, No 90 East Main street, Ohio Passenger Office, No 90 East Main street, Station Ticket Offices, or address JOHN D. POTTS, Ass't. General Passenger Agent.
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St thoke eleven sistes “and ibe whit
* apeople wt those-cle ven’ evatee get thor,
Mak aes madeed; ‘milltoa dollars
_webrtir of thie weelth thud prodhded.
TEAGKE white ‘btother “pats” thé “taxa
sad the coldred brother produces the
vevalthowith whieh-the white sbeo: Her
Paywthe'tdtas 8 oot ta |S
207% mami #282: |
=:
‘<> et Few vO ROB ERY.
Se .
pic =Wachave xepeatediy: insisted: that
‘iivadsbbibery of colored'men by Demo-
"“@mitie heeler!*jould “p}timately (rev
*; wait ip the cheating of whisemen when
siebe cllizét of eolbr Wau eliminated .-
© * “This seewisite bye bet the-sade in
MawteoCoumty Alleged Maher ejard
*2Macdeen-out.done and’ the best diti-
mens of the country disfranchised. |<
ovat fend top.to open _wider ‘the
* esac Mains heats
a maire Democrat of the county,
PAwho war- tebdtitly “defeated: i] |the
So fttitint ion bf aefegate'to: the Waste
seq Seitign souyention fe 09 | 5:
«4 Henedembate Democratic, reporley
taaid initiy De towlatic: Daren Tiahas of
Sg t6 or {a
——=Eaemsming ore Demreats of
CNR oe
2 cdoha appara rokee
ghia: “it ata srepn’s
Bs FAA PoOroom
=) ose’ 14: Dagked.) with , padple.
spire
> i mpg
eR eer aimee eau we
~ evanty Hamiticeman rts recingt
@alled'the gathering to order, there
18 te She etrest were from one aun
dred end tty to two hardred voters.
Chey were :0 4 state of nerv: us excite-
ment, and kept yelling out that some
plan should be edopt-d whereby they
would be able to register their
jehoies of the eandilater for
8 Gecerior. | Among | those” whi
jcould not get into te hall were Mr
Felix Jones, member of the House;
Mr. Addison Maupin. former delegate:
Mr. 8. B Cnaffia ana many other
vrominent eitisens of the eoun'y”
‘This was the old game of getting »
small meeting place, psek it with par
tiwans and freese out the other fel-
lows. The Trucs continues:
“Mr Russell after calling the meer-
ing to crderand stating that the ob-
i, was to elect four ae to the
_rfolk Oonvention, asi thet he
would preside over the gathering and
Beme ‘he secretary.
“Mr. Joha C. Esiey rote and said:
Mr. Chairman, this seams to me to be
2” anusoal ae It is custom-
‘ery for sae of this character to
leet their own chairman.’
“The remark wa: loudly spplanded
by the Montague people. but the
fiends ot Me Swanson erivd out for 8
vote.
“Thre was more confusion than you
eculd ordinarily fi dio a week's jour
ney Assoon as Mr. Russell couid
make bimseif heard he ssid:
“«-It is customary for the precinet
commiteeman to preside and I wil!
act ss chairman.’
“Mr, Russell was both cbeered and
hined, Nearly every man wes on his
feet. Tas crowd on the outsiae war
pleading for a chance to participate io
the proceedingsof she meeting. It
was suggested that everybody go out
into a Yseant lot nearby and vote, but
this was not heeded.”
Mark yon, this iss sample of thr
representative Democratic white
man’s government. And again:
“Excitement was at ite bighert
piteh when Mr. Russell stated that
pcastections for delegates were in or-
er.
“A Swanson man nominated Wessrs,
Alex H. Sands RW. Browning, Ed-
ward Ryan and Terry; and a Montegue
opporier named, Messrs. Robert | M
ith E. Grey Wyatt, Ben. Rose and
A. Pulling.
“Some one jumped up and made the
of order thet the nomination of
lontague candidates hed not been
réconded and that, ‘according to pat
famentery practices’ the Swanson
people would have tobe unanimously
“The confusion ard excitement thet
vailed in the earlier stages of
btn ‘mere tame in comparison
‘th' What followed this statement,
There were several l:tle_ rerape, but
jnO one wae a num! .
etd stighal'in diagust, Tt war fully
before ord«r was resto--
ed. gisgne people appealed
for 801 fayetem in vot'ng the
7 baa I put the mo-
Of the election 0”
fagieorilieay Aye.’ Thore
mm sponse
ajaratitonanee delegates
vas Ces aoe
wh y Beata ie bet ones
ee renivnity, but Mr.
we the: won cand.
sad dibsdonting waeed
oorssiml!® a.
rt ab us as
RatacteeretSenth oo
sire cir own
dig eoinsaieg thei . delegates.
pea voted. gave bis Dane
and. ,address--:. Tap Sanson people
'qodra ewe way. @f and <pyllied”
Soshr pow nte iy
tip Swerace mane eT
ea hont g
SOuiths ie down. right, xebbery.’
o) me she reply feom the: other side,
* Sakeowaur -medicine,and try to
Joek gleamonsde+] Ded Atte - Be ansdn-
"Sve wil dx’ you cAiale sin th:
5%. tleopign.-wsid, come gas, ba the
ite SR ee ae
} + gn? ‘tke bape des ene
. a all Sake sing thé’ Fal
kid Ola Mi fetog’t: be Gar:
Bee eee Re eR
PES ails Bitvetsétion went ao.
Bnd Montage min were ined. Le
Tee's hey were hot: if tele collate,
a SF Adeonsteek Wed ‘Ruel ton wee
Jbeby.* "Boon ors oN in the
atest inmebeoa i Skawlga ean, 2
-othé-one gaherdly beHieted to-be fi
ae te she genes VKH ‘i
F rec iP
Soiegia le eiant i nere
tome Nile del NB entyy bad to be
dorteytd ‘frott ‘a-‘cdighBorifg rept
Mehgge = soi Teess ate |
> Thisisretribation wih wvdigeange.
Hdw long will" hs” Peop'e=tyand |?
HoW tong will tt tape, i eee 6
to-leaen thet, £0 ,rob the) Negeo is .o
cheat the whiteman? = 5 0f ¢ |
*-Wheli will he réstiz' that'Hereountry
e¢h proshet OF people. be treg that ppd
mite she robbery of une, glass of _citi-
zens st the expense of the other sini?
’ THs Yeenbs isi Hentieo county were dis-
srpcetnl butthe Negtods “iooked |on
Chit iuicetat ht eeeak Tatie-
Ged thes the prectieir.z apanthe white
‘nar -ntthtds in vogue Witt? the color-
ed one will. ultimately prodaeé a revo
iusion which will Jena 10 the = proper
oeatment of both, «0:
* Gtod gy iting, Mr. SwAxsos} Good
mornice, M.“Mowtacust ~'”
2 Yost, ye cripples; and may the. shent
MR, J:O" NIXON OF W SHINGTOY
ps0: WRITES US AGAIN BOT,
2 (<NOT-ROR-PUBLISATION! |
Havaye 22% ied 2 a 83:18 |;
chs Fag pour weber, Sdpeoinliy
ety irdi Pu eg
ene
of dbeneet abe deqiapatio rs
Boson) aang) on 5
ers tea sett to me ths
ithe Negroes. gp eBay id
given pot ieal seuppgt.-to,.gnen ike
eather sae ean wee tia
ed,7 the e Would hot
Bea Re ete ehh
jato in the entire comaWwRz < {| >
Thetis only" “QPhgie- ME Nixon, bes
cat Halong
eonter; m dis F
hae a them and
ime to their suppor
° iFriends would have. be-
come diagasted and the proposition of
HE PICHMOND PLANET RICHMOND VIRGINi.’
these came Sca‘hernars to deny as the
deuriis of the Fifteenth Amendment
would have been accepted and ‘by-
sweea the two stools we would have
gone to the ground.”
He eontinues:
Inasmuch a your people are now
compeiled to depend ups shoes a
tor protestion in the Constitutional
‘enveotion is would heve been to the
taterent bay sean it before.
“while I'donst believe that Bx-@ ¥.
(’Paaxatt’s views will sway the eon:
vention from ite fated missions, but iv
vill do harm ip haviog him as» friend,
even at this late day Nor dol believ:
hat the work of the convention wi'l be
defeated at the ballet box.
The convention is ealled to quality
nore suffrage, and ip my opimion, it
ill bs accomplished betore it shal
have agjoai
The colored people of Virginie are
not depending upon these men to sway
ho convention in their Joterest.
Whenever statesmen of the calibre
of O'Fuxeatt, Daxren and Wier ay
pear and spesk, it fe not for the inter
est of the Negro as such
‘They sre fesrfal for the safety of
the commonwealth, which ea not be
rately piloted without taking the Ne
gro abcard and being csreful of his
welfare
The white men of Virginia must pull
the Negro up with him or the Negro as
® member of the ody politie will drag
him down.
An igvorent white man do » ‘tkno~
this, bat an intelligent white man
does.
Do you suppose, Mr. Nixon, that the
masses of our people wou d support
Democratic white men who advosated
lyoehing, ba’lot b:x stuffing end the
denial to them of every right gusran-
teed to them by the atase snd federal
‘onsti'u ion ?
Mr.JNixon continues:
When the question was raised as to
whether the Negroes in Noxra Cano
Lita should be quilifl-d, we hed some
cee ste pe ee 0 Fassiay
ei ards inst it; but it had no
practioa! eftset
Lnotieed « similar condition of «'-
fairs exived in S .urm Oarortna, when
she had her quaiifi d suffrage law un-
der eontid:ration; but the Negrie.
were nevertheless qualified.
I contess that some years agol was
fool enough to believe tb.t the mere
tact thataman “Jub” hims-It “R--
pcbliin” makes him b-tter than «
Democrat; but I am grateful to th-
Lord that Iam now able to see thas
(be mere name doesnot make the char
soterof aman. And this is jis: eee |
‘be race hes made its grravest vis
take and thus real: d_ its politigal dam-
vation,
Ons political party ‘snot better then’
enother, if it is apparentiy b- tter, it ie
vot intrinsically tra-, batt is rather
~0, 00 account of eireumstances |
i am not writing for publication, bs |
cause I am fully aware that the paseiro
of the Negro for tke Repub feaa party
‘sto great anil ne ill eiay hie own
ro z she says or dues asoyrhing
inst that party
POrexon |
Winans. N.0.. |
Aorii 22-4. 1901
‘Thatis the esre in the nutshell.
Demceratic South-roere of thie
strips aod at thia time and at al tim-s
have been ip a h -peless minority on
such questions,
Colored men would gladly support
them on either the Demogr-tior Re
publican ticket
Mr. Nixom seems not to be informe
selative to the fact that tens of thous-
snd eolored men supported Gn, Ww.
Minoxz, an ex-Jonfedsrate who
ought to enslave them. They voted
tor Gen. ¥irzavon Lex, whose war re-
ord is knows of all men
TAPy supported Colonel Ws Laue
vfosg. Confederate preeiivities have
‘ebmgold in song and story and they
lé¥ope for Cuantes T. O'Fxmnant
set the party he represented,
Qapwingsiac well the pricciples for
which he contends,
eMeted men hove adopted the
oot kvSeE oa by M-. Nixon with
voor resulte ie attested by tke fact that
the Demoeratic Managere rigidly ex-
etude D moeratie N-groes from any
parsicipstion whatever in Democratic
primaries.) snot 5
All of these expediants have been tried
and the colored man, while somewhat
battered is still in the ring contending
for his rights as a citizen and begging
no favors from any party.
Itthe white Republican is for him
he ri ne UE, hite Dem.
coratt tok ates Bebe ia in that
side of the procession.
sei siliivagasd webrom
nasi! Aeelb Shipbuilding Cambine.
i-Phiadlphia, May 2pebdPbe Press
‘sgysceoWPRere is Mtthecdodbt thit the
seca: in the Soaeinees Cobia
jckhers-Bethlehem 66 “Have
beet Hindvottand°that tema! an
RguRCP Be} e completion of the
ee eee iene! a
few baits enlsse:Stockhoherp- of. the
Cramp Pompmage vill, it isssattstave
the opttons ob -taling- onsh-tn°@xoh ar
Ing their hojdings, share for share or
fiptern meme terdbr gar ngoek ta the
MP Rt GH
‘worth of Cramp stock, and $16,000,000
cash’ will be necessary “to buy out
jopeita/eBingaghe stunk wtil becsobt
ech pense sa feaent 255-000, o9eb worn &
edpiaa- ae Che new bontMidsee WAT
Joely, pot exceed, $8,000,000."
9 ae is nfease nae
be A ee ye oe
Jo ten Rensus aMloaslerk, In sbecKen-
more hotel, early last Wednesday
morning, and which because of the pe-
culiar circumstances surrounding it
has aroused api ore thi
tay tregeay in ter FALE wan salt
ed yesterday by a voluntary confession
from Mrs. Lulu I, Bonine, a married
woman, and elgyestast Met house, that
2 RRaG! Heese he cheaetsh Sev qwtereis
Ayres’ life. The woman, says
a a Sa
ith @ re
struggle for the possession of the wee-
pon he waged She was held for
‘the grand jury.
DISCIPLINE FOR CADETS.
Five Sentenced to Dismissal From
- West Point Military Academy.
QUSPENSION FOR six. OTHERS.
wisted By Court Martial of Mutiny
and Breach of Discipline—Minor
Purishmerts For Meny Others.
Washington, May 22.—Col. A. L.
Mills, superintendent of the Military
Academy, left Washington yesterday
after a conference with the Secretary
‘of war in order to be present at Weal
Point today, when an order will be
read dismissing five cadeta from the
academy and suspending sfx more on
charges of mutimy and breach of dis-
eipline. There ate a large number of
other cadets upom whom will be in-
Aicted minor punishments, such as ex-
tra duty, confinement to quarters, de-
privation of holidays and reduction of
class rank. It is understood that
Douglas MacArthur, son of Maj. Gen.
MacArthur, commanding in the Philip-
Pines, will escape with a minor punish-
ment.
An official statement of the situation
vat the academy was made at the war
department. It was safd that the ca-
deta had been guilty of acts which
would not be serious in any other col-
lege or school, but in view of the fact
that these young men were: educated
‘by the government, at a government
tastitution, to learn obedience and to
Tear how to command men and them-
selves, it was necessary for them to
be under a somewhat more rigid dis-
cipline.
The trouble grew out of attempts to
suppress hazing. Although promises
of the suppression of hazing have been
made, “bracing” still has been carried
on against the orders of the officials:
Class officers have failed to report cases
of “bracing.” There also is the case
ef Cadet Ralston, who was reduced for
Rot reporting misbehavior at the mes:
table.
‘The muttay or insubordination grew
out of the resentment of the second
¢laes mem, who have been at the acad-
emy for three years, at the punish-
ments inflicted by the academy of-
ficals. It took the form of such of-
fenses toward the superintendent as
training the gun upon his quarters and
in other acts which the academy of-
ficers could not but take notice. This
resulted im the trials and sentences to
iamissal approved by the secretary of
war yesterday.
There are two other court martial
cases in the academy pending in the
dopartment where cadets have been
sentenced to dismissal. There ts a
rule at the academy that a cadet tn-
vited ont to dinner can be excused and
lave the post. Two cadets invited
each other to dinner and made this
thelr excuse for absence. Their ruse
wan discovered.
Sontenced For Burying Child Alive.
New York, May 2%—Gtovanno But-
tacavollo’ was placed on trial yester-
dey at White Plains for having burted
a baby, of which he is the reputed
fe Sor, at Hastings several weeks ago.
The indictment charged attempted
murter. The young woman who was
the mother of the child placed all the
blame on her uncle, tho prisoner, who
she said was the father of the child.
Ker tears alone, she sald, prevented
the man from splitting the child’s hoad
open with a hatchet. Buttacavollo was
convicted, and Judge Lentz sentenced
him to nine years and ten months in
state prison.
To Prohibit Company Store Orders.
Harrisburg, May 22.—The senate
committee on finance gave another
public hearing yesterday afternoon on
the house bill known as the company
store bill, which places a prohibitive
tax on all orders, checks or other pa-
per representing wages of employes,
and the committee afterward decided
to report the bill favorably to the aen-
ate with a few amendments. The
amendments will not effect the orig-
{nal purpose of the bill. Unless its
progress is impeded the measure will
come up for final passage next week.
Governor Stone has declared he will
sign the ball.
; “rhe Aliany Gtriice Ended.
Albany, N. Y., May 20.—The great
railroad strike, lasting 12 days, requir-
ing the presence of 3,000 members of
the national guard in the élty, costing
the lives of two prominent merchants,
and entailing an expense to the county
‘of Albany of over $39,000, is amicably
acttled, and if the agreements are kept
there will be no trouble for three years
at least. The men get some wage in-
creases and other concessions and the
company has the right to employ non-
union men and {s not compelled to rec-
ogaize the union.
Satisfied With the Constitution.
Bristol, R. L., May 22.—Up and down
Naraganssett bay yesterday the cup
defender Constitution was put through
igs first paces and acquitted herself,
‘as Mr. Duncan, her manager, sald,
ymdet, satisfactorily. Every point of
ailing was tried, and at no time did
‘she act listless or show any Inck of
‘speed. It was a builders’ trial and
confined entirely to six or seven miles
water below Bristol harbor.
Admital Schley Home Again.
New York,.sfay 22.—Admiral Schley
sstived from Surope yesterday. Dur
Ing the afteraeon the admiral visited
Qe AWblaBwhere his son Is. being
treateA? Std ained with him two
hours, we “came away he said
he thought fig;yfsit had done Dr.
Schley much spade,
ener
9 ACEP OF FITZLIOHN PORTER.
Gentral Who-Wee Diemissed From the
pentlaneatminedesens
eM Srristowth Ra, 2.—Gen. Fitz
atta: tH for eer
eral weeks al ere, died yes:
terday; aapdidih 5 Hie Saad: been suffer-
ing from che@miaitiinbeles, and his
death had deen sexipictad Sycaeveral
days. Among ttl pambehrerd™ill be
Gens. Webd, Scofield, Butterfield,
Fraukiin and Smith and ex-Maysy¥
Hewitt.and Grace. Gen. Brooke, com:
mander of the department of the east,
will have entire charge of the military
arrangements for the funeral.
Fitz John Porter was a native of
Portamouth, N. H., his father being a
captain im the navy. He graduated
from West Point in 1845, and in the
Mexican war was breveted captain and
major for gallantry. From 1853 to
1855 he was instructor at West Point.
In the cfvil war he rose to the rank of
brigadier general in the regular army
and major general of volunteers. In
1862 he was relieved of his command,
arrested and court martialed. He was
accused of falling to obey Gen. Pope's
order Aug. 27, 1862, for a night march
from Warrenton Junction to Bristoe.
He was also accused of disobeying or-
ders on Aug. 29, 1862, ome to advance,
the other to attaek, and with retreat-
ing before the enemy. He was con-
victed and casblered trom the army.
After years of conflict he was, in 1866,
Festored to his rank by congress. Soon
after his vindication he resigned from
the army and was appointed president
of the New Jersey insane asylum. He
was subsequently president of New
York's fire commission. At one time
the khedive of Egypt offered Gen. Por-
ter the rank of major general to com-
mand in his army, with a salary of $25,-
000, but the offer was declined.
To the Colored People of the World.’
THE GREA7I37 oF £1 HAIR TONICS.
STRAIGHTINS KINKY, NAPPY, CURLY HAIR.
Bea eiasaschaden es Sie spc tas we od a ecoase See oapa cite
teu your har boven Coal
oP =
Our Regular $5.63 Complete Treatment for $1.00
Lustorone is put up in 2 forms, both m~=' be used to secure positive results,
Ce “ie SN
Sa SRE fe - Sa
oe fe an PAR.
he Ag i A es ae g
AAW! “SCA os “BRS
AT Nb
ry |
BEFORE USING: See AFTER USING
Napph, Ep Cuipiine icacte Cust tatty Saty see bouts a steueeens Nees
{eivetr wont foc yest ratareneie ancy pees racemase
otetieas sro usnd “Docaetaralpeess Chaos any eased nee
__EUSTORONE No, 2:Must be ased in connection wth Lastname No: 1. et
Bessie a "Chant wheats to rsoe tne ning ta omaits Seabee Nal eda
uta entoes the Haire prow Soc Sesien el cates rep Restos eked
poRUREONGHE CAGE OL eACH eitcm acetate posers
Fipien Sisk uous a8 thes easel acie aoeas sae oe ea
LasSUSTORONE SCALP SOAP.—Is absolutely pure. It should be used with
Tengkr elses
OUR GREAT OFFER!
S- Cut eet thls advortioomeat and wall to ws with $1.00 and we will send you
pM por typrgeey rreamgpge trmahnbdoes treeless 3
‘Tats attr age to letreauce Houest Gnade. "We cas nema te omy piece la the arta:
Pott Directions whem every treatment
DOMINION MANUFACTURING CO.,
‘Stamps accepted 2220 E. Marshall St., RICHMOND, Va.
Veteran Will Wed to Win Millions.
Dayton, O., May 22.—A copy of the
will of Josephine Kelat, nee Fairfax,
an English woman, who recently died
im France, has just been received here,
which bequeaths to Hamlet Henty
Hawthorne, a veteran of the Soldiers’
Home, # fortune of $2,500,000, this be.
ing his reward for saving the woman
from drowning in the surf off Kent,
England, tu 1854. He refused all of
fers of reward at that time. The wil
instructs him to marry a good woman
to aid In carrying out the provisions
of the will, Hawthorne {s to establish
in New York a poor man’s church, and
fs Instructed to devote much time tu
charitable giving, especially to homes
for widows and orphans. He will carry
out ail the provisions of the will.
ites we caah aad Gtamana tiie
New York, May 22.—Discussing the
death of Rey. Father Phillips Coroner
Bausch sald last night: “The autopsy
shows that Pather Phillips was in very
poor condition physically. A collapse
‘was liable to come at any time. When
it did come, he simply lay down and
died. I think that he and Stanley had
deen drinking together. In my opin-
ton, after the priest died Stanley was
frightened and took one drink after an-
other until he was in a state of abject
stupidity. He just delayed notifying
the proper authorities. That, I think,
ts his worst crime.” Father Phillips, the
miners’ friend, was found dead in Stan-
ley's massage rooms on Thursday of
‘nee ache:
BEAUTIFUL, BREEZY, =e,
: ~—ng
RIGHT ON THE CHESAPEAKE BAY. SEA-BATHS,
SEA-FOOD, SEA-AIR.
| The managers of the Bay Shore Summer Resost, on. the
electric car line near Hampton and Old Point, have pleasure
in announcing that that their Resort will be pened toZthe
public for the season of r90r, on Wednesday, May 2gth. This
popular Resort is now undergoing important improvements:
A large pavilion to accommodate zoo people is now being
erected and a neat hotel with ae Ge rooms and —
cious parlors and private dining room is being built. ‘The
‘equipment is thorough and the service is the best.
i
Correspondence solicited, Adilress,
BAY SHORE HOTEL COMPANY, z
P. O. Box 364, Hampton, Va.
Pan-American Exposition Dedicated.
Buffalo, May 21.—The formal dedica-
Yon of the Pan-American exposition
yesterday was fully up to expectations.
There was a brilliant parade, a flight of
5,000 carrier pigeons, daylight fireworks
and a maguificent electric display at
night. All of the American republics
were represented at the formal dedica-
tory exercises, and there was oratory,
music, song and poetry in abundance.
The principal speakers were Vice Pres-
{dent Roosevelt, Senator Lodge, Mayor
Diehl and President Milburne, of the
Exposition company.
Carnegie’s Latest Princely Gift.
London, May 21.—Andrew Carnegie
has given £2,000,000 to establish free
education in four Scotch universities,
Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and St.
Andrews. He stipulates that the bene-
ficlaries be his “Scottish fellow coun-
trymen” only, no English, Irish, colo-
nials or foreigners. The fund will ap-
ply to medical as well as to commercial
education, and will be placed tn the
hands of trustees, who will pay the ex-
penses of Scottish students benefitted
ender the echeme.
Ride™ RICHMOND STAR
imac DB ICYCle.
[Re Citeat anatase Rea
We Build Enamel & Repair
ANY BICYCLE. LARGE STOCK OF
‘Trres, Bon Sapp.es, CEMENT, INNER TUBES
Bask Batts, Barts, BicycLEs, Stoves & PisToLs-
ON INSTALLMENT. Our prices are lower than any
house in the city. Call on us.
Harris Hardware Company,
409 East Broad St., Richmond, Va.
Harrisburg, May 22.—Bishop Shan.
ahan, of the Harrisburg diocese, was
notified yesterday of the receipt at the
archepiscopal residence in Philadel.
phia of a cablegram from Rome an-
nouncing the appointment of the Rev.
Dr. Eugene Garvey, of Pittston, as
bishop of the new Pennsylvanta dlo-
eese, which will be composed of por.
tions of the Harrisburg diocese and the
Philadelphia archdiocese, and the
headquarters of which will be at Al-
toona.
Death of Bx-Congreseman Boutelle.
Boston, May 22.—Former Congreas-
man Charles A. Boutelle, of Bangor,
Me., died yesterday at Mclean asylum,
Waverly, Mass. Mr. Bouteile had been
at the institution for many months for
treatment on account of brain trouble.
Death was due primartly to pneumonia,
which developed last Sunday. Mr. Bou-
telle was 62 years of age, and on his
retirement from congress last winter
was placed on the retired list of the
davy as a captata,
! er To
' % LETUS ~&
FURNISH YOUR HOUSE
i
Ree
| Pay As You Earn the Money!
Se cee eS
———EInNxqTweqeOD“=NOD"SOe
This week we shall do some unparalled p ice-
| cutting in Parlor Suites— also Bed-Room, Dining-
| Room Furniture and fine Carpets, Carload of
new spring goods are arriving—and room must
be made for th m—no matter what the sacri.
| fice, Special prices will also prevail this week
| in Crockery, Draperies and Framed Pictures. Come
in to-morrow and get acquainted; you will enjoya
| look through this magnificent stock of Furniture,
Carpets and Housefurnishings—aid, remember—
you canhave anything in this big store fora
Pp omise to pay. Your—for home comfort.
C*2eeew
MAYER&PETTIT.
Southern Furniture and Carpet Company.
7&9 WEST BROAD STREET.
SIX MINERS MET DEATH
And Five Patully Injured—Dinantes
Caused by Disobeyiug Orders,
Fairmont, W. Va., May 16.—Six min.
ers lost their lives, five were fatally in
jured and three seriously burned yes
terday in an explosion at the shaft o:
the George’s Creek Coal and Iron com
pany at Farmington, seven miles wes
of this city, on the main line of th»
Baltimore aud Ohio railroad
The dead are: Maynard Beaty, o:
Mannington; Joe Nichols, Lonaconing
Md.; J. H. Everson, Everson, W. Va.
Dan Alferrel, Farmington; Joe Dom
iniek and Tony Phillippl, Italtans. Fa
‘tally Injured: Charles Carpenter, Car
Hunter, flershel Everson, Josap)
Blaney and an Italian
One of the men in the rooms, it ts al
‘ieged, had smuggled a torch into the
mines, as it gives 30 much better High
‘than the safety lamps prescribed bs
the company. At 9:15 the mine
fierd s shot and the smoke, which wa:
very dense, caught fire from the torc?
and spread to either the gas or dus:
‘and the explosion resulted. Fortunate
ly the mine did not catch fire to any ex
tent.
HEY LUNG
SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1901
THE TWO BUILDERS.
Two men, a Chinese legend runs,
Once found that each must build
A house. And each, in building, was
A house. And each, in building, was
But one thought of the days of work,
And weary was at heart.
The other thought not of the toil,
But how 'twere best to start.
The one knelt down before his Joss,
With countenance dismayed.
He asked the Joss to build the house,
And prayed, and prayed, and prayed.
The other asked the Joss to straight the task assailed.
He hewed the joists and hung the doors
And nailed, and nailed, and nailed.
The one prayed on, before his Joss,
Through all the weary while.
The Joss peered from the altar smoke
With something like a smile.
The other, when he built his house,
The other, when he built his house,
And burned them at the Joss' feet—
An offering of thanks.
The one looked up from where he knelt,
And cried: "Oh, wretched man,
You did not wait for holy aid,
Yours was a wicked plan."
The other smiled, and answered him:
"No, I ask so to bless
A quality that might be termed
As simple laziness."
The beauty of the legend is
That it may be applied
To any work we may attempt,
Or any faith be tested.
For, asking Providence to do
Some toll which we would shirk
Is apt to teach a lazy man
The usefulness of work.
—Baltimore American.
The HOSTELRY of
the HAS-BEENS
By Ethelyn Leslie Huston.
(Copyright, 1801, by Authors Syndicate.)
We all had seen better days, and we used to sit in the little parlor evenings and tell each other of the glories of departed times with quite pardonable pride. We were very polite in our recognition of each other's claims to past glories, more or less great or remote, and because we were poor we were merciful to our poverty, and rose nobly above the petty worldly vanities in the matter of raiment.
There was the little artist, with her snuff-colored gown with the patch on the left sleeve and the mended place that showed above her belt. We knew the number of stitches in that patch and the mended place as well as we knew the number of fingers on the little withered hands that guided the brush as deftly as though they had been plump and white, instead of thin and blue with the cold.
Then there was tall Teddy, the newspaper sketcher, with the near-sighted eyes that would peer in their kindly way through the thick glasses; and Mr. Marlowe, the clerk, who gathered our little change weekly with as much dignity as though we were renting en suite in one of the palatial inns downtown, and who wrote sentimental stories for a paper in the south. And there was the dressmaker who had a one-burner gas stove to heat her iron for pressing, and who gave nice little coffee parties in her room. We would contribute the crackers and cheese and things and bring in our own cup, and sit on the breakfast-food box and the side of her bed and the window sill, and the coffee used to taste very good indeed. And there was the dancing master who had afternoons in different halls around town, and who would play on the piano for us evenings, while the pretty girl, who brought her shy blue eyes and pink cheeks from the country to be bleached out at the cashier's desk in a steam laundry, would sing home melodies and sometimes home hymns.
And there was the blind war veteran, who lived on a pension, and there was me — but, as Tommy Atkins' chronicle says, that is another story. We were not unhappy, though we never paid our rent more than a week in advance; sometimes we were several weeks behind. And when some of us would happen to have a gleam of good fortune and make two or three dollars extra, we all rejoiced exceedingly and each felt a personal pride in the sudden wealth, and then we would celebrate in the little dressmaker's room with hot coffee and condensed milk.
We took our dinners at Bennies, which was a nice little restaurant several doors down the street, where the prices were such as would meet the necessary restriction in expenditure of people who had been better off. And when, now and then, one of us would plead a headache when dinner time came, each of the others looked as though we believed it, which was not quite true, and said we were sorry, which was true. And then we would try to have a coffee party in the dressmaker's room that night at bedtime, and insist that it would cure the headache. Which it usually did. We each of us had those kind of headaches at different times, but we held up bravely, and managed to get through somehow.
After awhile the delicate rose pink in the shy cashier's face began to fade and the blue eyes to grow larger, with ominous shadows smudged around them. And because the rest of us were city folk, and were more less accustomed to the hard grind of city life, we felt uneasy. And when the songs became fewer, because she was so tired, and the pretty face was turned wearily against the back of her chair, our little evening gossips about old times became rather less cheery, and the wonder "why" crept into our thoughts, that we all tried to drill into unquestioning acquiescence for ourselves.
Then the old blind war veteran, who could not see the little face growing paler and thinner, fretted because the "song-bird" was silent so often, and we had to invent reasons.
So into the modest Hostelry of the Has Beens the great dread crept, and we who had felt rich as long as we could go to Bennie's and did not have a headache too often, began to feel the pain of watching a life slip from us. while we stood aside with powery-manacled hands.
One evening the little artist had a headache, so after we had returned from Bennie's and sat for awhile in the parlor trying to call up some of our old cheerfulness, I was deputed to go after the "headache" and carry it to the dressmaker's room. The others scattered to gather up the needful for a lunch, and I went up and tapped on the artist's door.
I found her perched on a stool in front of her easel, her feet doubled under her and the blanket from her bed pinned around her. She had some white paper plinned around the lamp to throw all the light on the canvas, and she was painting away for dear life.
"You'll spoil your canvas, working by this light. And you will make the head worse. They have sent me after you—we are going to have a kaffe klatch. Come on."
She looked up with wide eyes starting out of a white face that had the peculiar strained look that comes when headaches interfere with dining too frequently, and the brush fell from the nerveless fingers while she shivered.
"It's an order, you know. And I was nervous, anyhow, and could not sleep—"
I turned out the light, tucked my hand under the patched sleeve and led her out, closing the door behind us.
"We are going to try and decide something about the veteran's songbird. She is going to vanish into space if we don't. And it will make things unpleasant trying to make him understand. As the rule of the hostelry is that we mind everyone else's business with even more assiduity than our own, you must help us out, for we are going to decide upon something to-night."
At the dressmaker's door the odor of boiling coffee greeted our nostrils, and we sniffed. There was a royal spread of rye bread, Swiss cheese and wiener-wurst, and the dancing master was doing the honors.
"Just in time, meadames. I will now pour the coffee. Behold, it is on the boil. A dash of cold water to settle it, and—voila!"
We did justice to the banquet, and while we sipped our hot coffee we considered the matter of the songbird, who had gone to bed because she was tired. She was always tired now, and the veteran had gone to his room in a bad humor. He knew it was our fault, somehow.
"What's to be done?" I took the scissors away from the clerk, who was cutting cheese with them, and tapped them on the table to call the meeting to order. The sketchist, who was balancing on the footboard of the bed and gazing ab-
"YOU'LL SPOIL YOUR CANVAS WORK-ING BY THIS LIGHT."
sently into his coffee cup, flushed a deep pink.
"If you thought—if she cared—if I might—" he said, and I replied, promptly: "The very thing! How stupid we have been, after all!" There was a chorus of assent, and the little dressmaker added:
"We certainly do think—and I happen to know that she does care—and you may. Why not?"
And so, with superb scorn of such matters as pecuniary obstacles, we planned out the immediate future of the song-bird and the sketchist. The clerk said he could get transportation from the southern paper and an opening in the sketchroom, as the editor was a friend of his. The little dressmaker said she would fix the song-bird's clothes evenings, and the rest of us said we would help. The little artist said she had a small "pot-boller" we could ruffle, to help out on incidentals, and the dancing master said that he would get up a benefit at the nearest hall, and we all agreed to sell tickets.
And so everything came out just as we had planned, which does not always happen. A short time after we all sat in the parlor and read a letter from the sunny south telling about a small married woman with pink cheeks and a happy sketchist who was doing well on a southern paper, and they both expected to come back next winter. And we were all very happy except the veteran, who said the song-bird had gone for good, and it was all our fault. And perhaps he is right.
Too Much Color
"Your narrative is too highly-colored," remarked the editor, returning the bulky manuscript.
"In what way?" inquired the disappointed author.
"Why," replied the editor, "in the very first chapter you make the old man turn purple with rage, the villain turn green with envy, the hero turn white with anger, the heroine turn red with blushes and the coachman turn blue with cold."—Tit-lits.
Effective.
"If you had a rival how would you get rid of him?" "I'd marry the girl."—Chicago Record.
RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
FOXES ATTACK DEER.
Rescued Just in Time by a Hunter and His Guides.
Stagnalus Forest Incident Away Up in the Wilde of Maine-Gentle Creature Blented Out Its Gratitude to Its Deliverers.
A correspondent of the New York Sun, writing from Norcross, Me., says that James Mayberry, a drummer for a Boston wholesale house, has lately returned from a two weeks' vacation trip to the woods of Maine and reports that the French Canadians and Indians have been making great slaughter among the deer and moose by chasing them on snowshoes. The weather has been very favorable for crust hunting all through March. The snow was from three to four feet deep on the level and coated with a very fine crust, which would not hold the fleeing animals, but which cut deeply into their flesh, causing many to bleed to death from their self-inflicted wounds. Nat Ronco, an Indian who had been discharged from a lumber camp, shaved a set of Norwegian skis from green beech wood, and killed eight deer in walking home, 46 miles. While on his vacation the drummer took a trip with a game warden and three guides to capture two living deer to put into a park near Waterville. The party went to a cedar swamp near Sebois, and in two days caught eight deer, all of which died from exhaustion and wounds inflicted by the crust before they could be taken out to the railroad for shipment. They secured five deer on the second attempt, two of which survive and are now doing well in confinement.
During this hunt Mr. Mayberry and two guides were crossing the head of Schooloide lake one morning on snowshoes when a deer came out of the dense cedar swamp and made a dash to cross the lake. As long as the animal remained near the woods where the crust was shuck it made good headway, but upon approaching the edge of the lake, where the sun had thawed the snow and made it soft the creature was buried to its neck at every leap. At times it fell on its side and made heroic efforts to regain its footing.
ON THE DEER'S BACK
kicking frantically and wounding itself with its sharp hoofs. The men, who were behind a small island at the time, were about to capture the deer, when four large foxes came out from the cedars and followed the path of the deer, nosing out its tracks with the accuracy of trained hounds. As this was something new to the party the men waited to watch proceedings.
The foxes came on silently, wagging their bushy tails and winding in and out among the islands, keeping on the course the deer had made. As they came around the end of the last island the deer had turned end over end in its struggle to get along and was lying with its head toward the foxes. No sooner did the animal see its foes than it rebounded its efforts to get away, but the foxes were light and had large hairy feet that would hold them up on the lightest snow, and inside of five minutes they were on the deer's back biting at its throat to open an artery so the poor beast would bleed to death.
The hunters, who had believed that no fox could kill a deer, and had not for a moment contemplated the outcome of the affray, took up their rifles and shot two of the foxes, thinking that the sound of firearms would scare the survivors away, but they continued to worry the fallen deer until the men had fired again, killing another fox whereupon the fourth one walked off to the woods, casting regretful glances behind.
On arriving at the scene of the conflict the deer, which was exhausted but not badly injured, seemed grateful for the rescue, lapping the hands of the men with its soft tongue and bleating out its thanksgivings in a way that anyone could understand. This was one of the two deer that was able to withstand the severe strain of capture and is now doing nicely in a large park, where it has all the hay and grain it can eat and where no harmful animals can annoy it.
Victim of a Clever Swindle
Mrs. Anna Patterson, the wife of a prominent Brooklyn attorney, recently received a telegram from Denver announcing the death there of Mrs. Emile Riviere, her niece, and asking that money be sent for burial expenses. Mrs. Patterson sent $150 to persons she believed were her niece's friends and engaged a grave in Greenwood cemetery, where the interment was to be made. Now Mrs. Patterson learns that her niece is alive and well and she believes she is the victim of a novel swindle.
Kilts in the British Army:
There are ten battalions in the British army that wear the old Scotch kilts.
A Pilemma.
Towne—He's in hard luck. He had pretty good backing for an army commission, but his name queered him. He had to sign his application: "A. Coward."
Browne—Why did he have to sign it that way?
"Because that's his name."
"But wouldn't it have been better to write his first name in full?"
"Hardly. His first name's Adam."—Philadelphia Press.
CAMPFIRE STORIES
GEN. GRANT'S COURTESY.
He Said on One Occasion That the Womca of the South Could Not Be Conquered.
Lida Lord Reed gives in Century a true account of "A Woman's Experiences During the Siege of Vicksburg." It concludes with an extract from "a letter which gives a graphic history of the rest of our experiences with Gen. Grant and his army, and has the advantage of being written and posted on the spot:"
"George came in to-day, and such a description as he gave of the destruction and desolation in the county! Oakland, where our things were, was completely sacked. I had fitted up two rooms with my own furniture, lace curtains and mantel and toilet ornaments. I left a pantry stocked with provisions for many months, a cedar chest full of handsome clothing, the rector's fine library packed in boxes, and even my little trunk full of sewing materials, and my writing desk and work table just as they stood. The soldiers cut the carpets into strips with their penknives and tore the lace curtains from the windows with their bayonets. Valuable books were torn from their covers and thrown to the winds. Our clothing was piled in a heap in the yard and barrels of flour and molasses poured over it. The men stirred the heap with their bayonets and called it a 'rebel stew.' They tore my bonnets up, tied the pieces to their bedposts and even went so far in their wanton mischief as to kill a sheep in the parlor and cut it up on the handsome table. I had never believed the stories we heard of such things, looked upon them as newspaper items gotten up for excitement, yet ours was only one of many cases.
"But I must tell you about our interview with Gen. Grant. After much discussion it was decided that I had better go to Grant and ask him to send us out with our soldiers as prisoners of war to New Orleans. We feared the exposure of the children to the heat of the July sun, after their underground life and scant fare and the hardships of travel in wagons. So Jennie and I called upon Gen. Grant, who received us with every courtesy, and given us papers which would secure us transportation through his lines. He behaved throughout our interview like a brave soldier and kindly gentleman. He expressed himself as being anxious to aid the people all he could, admired the heroism and self-sacrifice of our army as much as I could ask, and 'as for the women of the south,' he said.
"THEY CANNOT BE CONQUERED."
'they cannot be conquered.' Those were his very words.
"While we were there Admiral Porter entered, and we were introduced to the man who for 18 months had been bothering us with bombs. On our way home we passed a wagon full of confederate soldiers, who, when we bowed, as we always do when we meet them, filled the air with their cheers. Our whole army is devoted, every man of it, to the ladies who shared with them the trials and dangers of the siege."
Where He Got Og
As he entered the car he saw at a glance that there was one seat with a young lady in it, and he marched straight down the aisle, deposited his overcoat, sat down and familiarly observed:
"I entirely forgot to ask your permission."
"That's of no consequence," she replied.
"Thanks. Just arrived in the city, I presume," he ventured to remark as he glanced at the bundles and grips on the floor near by.
"Not exactly."
"You're all alone, eh?"
"Almost, but not quite. My husband is the conductor on this car, the motorman is my cousin, and my father and e brother are in the seat back of us."
"Aw! Aw! I see," gasped the man, and the floor of the car suddenly became so redhot that he lit out without another word.—Salt Lake Herald.
Her Wish Was Granted
A runaway horse caused the death of its owner, Edward Madison, at Bethel, O. The widow persisted in driving the same fractious animal, and said that she wished to die as her husband had died. A short time ago her wish was granted. The unruly horse dashed over an embankment and Mrs. Madison's lifeless body was found. some hours later, battered and bruised, among a mass of rocks.
---
Argon and Its Companions. Since the discovery of that new constituent of the atmosphere, argon, a few years ago, four other previously unknown gases have been found, and Prof. Ramsay recently gave an account of their properties before the Royal society. They are helium, neon, krypton and xenon. Of these, xenon is the heaviest and helium the lightest. In the vacuum tube they are
very beautiful, neon being extremely brilliant and of an orange-pink hue, whily krypton is pale violet and xenon sky-blue. -Youth's Companion.
"The Marriage Knot" Is Not a Myth. How few of those that talk of the "marriage knot" realize that the knot was ever anything more than a mere figure of speech. Among the Babylonians, tying the knot was part of the marriage ceremony. There the priest took a thread of the garment of the bride and another from that of the bridegroom, and tied them into a knot, which he gave to the bride, thus symbolizing the binding nature of the union which now existed between herself and her husband. -N. Y. Herald.
MUTUAL COMPASSION.
"Oh! my poor woman! My heart bleeds for one in your condition!"
"Thanks, sor; Oi was thinkin' the name of the loikes of you!"—Chicago Chronicle.
As to Gods.
In ancient days they had their gods
Of love, their gods of pain.
Their gods of war, their gods of health,
Their gods of wind and rain.
Ah, foolish ancients! In the paths
Of ignorance they trod—
To such a man, wiser grown, sets up
Himself to be his god.
—Chicago Times-Herald.
No Rival.
Mr. Blinks—Who has been here?
Mrs. Blinks—No one.
Mr. Blinks—Huh! Who's been smoking those cigars you gave me last Christmas?
Mrs. Blinks—No one, my dear. The lamp was turned up too high, that's all—N. Y. Weekly.
Why He Relented
Burglar (sternly)—Where's yer husband?
Woman (trembling)—Under the bed.
Burglar—Then I won't take nothing. 'It's bad enough to have such a husband, without being robbed, too.—Tit-Bits.
Smart as a Lawyer
First Burglar—You was mighty lucky to get cleared; but that there lawyer charged ye about all ye stole, didn't he?
Second Burglar—That don't matter. I'll watch my chance w'en he goes home to-night a'd get it back.—N. Y. Weakly.
HEARD ON A PLUG ROAD.
"Rather a large boy for half fare, isn't he, sir?"
"Yes, he is now, but he was a small boy when we started."—Moonshine.
A Plen for the Erring,
If people never made mistakes,
Which would be a lonely place,
This world would be a lonely place,
With ne'er a chance to laugh.
Well Satisfied.
Bliffers—Buncom is a self-made man, isn't he?
Wiffers—Yes. What made you think so?
Bliffers—He seems to be so well satisfied with the job.—N. Y. Weekly.
He Understood His Business.
First Beggar—Why didn't you tackle that lady? She might have given you something.
Second Beggar—I let her go because I understand my business better than you. I never ask a woman for anything when she is alone; but when two women are together you can get money from both, because each one is afraid the other will think her stingy if she refuses. This profession has to be studied, just like any other, if you expect to make a success of it. See?—Leslie's Weekly.
Ah Sin's Ways.
To a Chinaman the idea that a judge should take bribes seems as natural as that a duck should take to the water. And yet the Chinaman will not, unless he knows he is on the right track, brutally push his bribe under the judge's nose. Either he or one of his countrymen will from the judge's arrival have rendered him good service. Does the judge want a gardener or a cook? Ah Sin soon provides an excellent one who never asks for his wages. Have some visitors arrived at the alcaldia? Ah Sin sends in a dozen chickens, a turkey and the best fruits. Is it the judge's name day? The wily Celestial presents a few cases of wine and boxes of fine cigars. Is the roof of the alcaldia leaking? A couple of Chinese carpenters will set it right without sending in a bill for it. Then, having prepared the way, should Ah Sin be summoned before the alcalde, he may confidently hope that his patron will not hurriedly give judgment against him, and that he will probably get a full opportunity, to present substantial reasons why the suit should be decided in his favor—"Inhabitants of the Philippines."
HAD SAVAGE LOVERS
Women of Refinement Who Eloped with Coarse Barbarians.
A Phase of Love-Making Which Is Above the Average Comprehension — Notable Cases Which Have Become Historic.
The student of mysteries who may have tired of trifling with such subjects as the food supply of the planets might be advised to devote his attention to solving the problem of the love of some women for men who are morally, physically and intellectually their inferiors. It is one of those things no ordinary mind can understand.
It was only a few years ago that the daughter of a Johannesburg physician ran away with a Zulu chief who chanced to visit the Rand about some gold he had discovered in the land under his control. The girl, who was only 17, is described as having been unusually good-looking, of very sweet disposition and refined tastes.
When it was first discovered that she had run away with the savage the general opinion obtained that the chief had kidnapped her; but when she was tracked to the man's hut and asked to return home it was found that not only had she run away of her own free will, but she absolutely refused to leave the chief, even though she had had some three weeks in which to learn the degradation of her position, and the chief had offered to exchange her for a few trifles. What eventually became of her will probably never be known.
The young wife of a French gentleman, while staying in Alexandria, became desperately enamored with a half-caste who used to visit the market-place occasionally. The fact that this lady and the savage, for he was nothing else, met frequently in the public streets of Alexandria was not even suspected by her husband until the two had flown away together. With the lady went all the money and jewels she could hurriedly collect, which amounted to a considerable sum, as she had a large fortune. The black was noted in Alexandria as one of the most evil-looking deserts
IN LOVE WITH A SAVAGE
dwellers who ever ventured into the town, whereas the lady, who was the daughter of a French artist, had been a theatrical "star" prior to her marriage, and had at one time ranked among the lesser professional beauties of Paris. She was only 30 when she eloped. Numerous instances of American and Canadian ladies eloping with North American Indians or Sloux could be cited. Some of them are almost historic, all of them strangely interesting. One of the most remarkable was that of the two daughters of a French-Canadian merchant. Both these girls, one of whom was 20 and the other two years younger, eloped with Sloux lovers, Blue-hair and another whose name has been variously translated as Fleetfeet, Runner and Flier.
Resisting all appeals of their relatives, who learned the sisters intended to run away with the redskins, the strangely-disposed young women endeavored to discover some one willing to wed them to their lovers, but finding many obstacles put in their way, they decided to be married by whatever rites the savages would suggest. They left a happy home, where they had wanted for nothing, and secretly joined their lovers, with whom they sped away to become squawns, who, as a class, are perhaps worse treated than any other class of wives.
At least one of the girls lived to bitterly regret her mad infatuation, and after a few months' slavery under the command of her brutal lord, Fleetfeet, she attempted to get back to civilization. But the redskin followed and murdered her in cold blood, he himself being killed a short time afterwards in a raid upon a farm. The wife of Blue-hair seems to have been rather more fortunate, for she was at least allowed to die a natural death from fever.
New Jersey's Monster Oak
The largest tree in the state of New Jersey is a white oak, situated three miles north of Mickelton, Gloucester county. Its dimensions are: Height. 95 feet; diameter of trunk, three feet above the ground, seven feet ten inches, and spread of branches, 118 feet. This tree antedates the settlement of the colony.
National Park for Canada
The Ontario government has reserved 1,400,000 acres of wild land near Lake Temagami, a great lake lying west of Lake Temiscaming, on the upper Ottawa. This will be used as a national park, where the timber will be preserved and the game will be allowed to increase. The number of beavers and deer is increasing.
Prefectent Teachers
"How nicely Mr. Jamaica dancer the two-step!" exclaimed Miss Flushing.
"Well, no wonder," responded the Cheerful Idiot, "he was taught by his two-step-sisters."—Brooklyn Eagle.
Even Worse
Mrs. White—Is your husband ill?
Mrs. Black—No, but he thinks he is
Somerville Journal.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By
THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S HAIR CARE
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Old hunters say
The MARLIN
has so many things to comm-
mand by. The bay of the
action is always closed, the
mechanism the most sim-
ple, the falish elegant, the
trem anarchy which must
to throw its bullets a little
more accurately and plant
them with a little more force
than the usual force in
deerhakes 38-55 or 30-30.
150 yards, 200 Illustrations.
MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO.
NEW HAVEN, OOHM.
Colored girls wishing to secure positions such as Cooks, Chambermade, and General Housework in Philadelphia and suburban towns, can secure such and also accommodations at the Ladies Southern Directory. No fees until positions secured.
Call or address.
MRS. UPCHURCH,
1231 Pine Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
FUMMER BOARDERS WANTED
Mrs. J. T Allens, Cumberland county, Va. 15 minutes' walk from Farmville station. Plenty of vegetable and fruit. Good mineral water of all kinds and a very quiet place. For other information apply to
Mrs J. F. ALLEN,
Farmville, Va. Box 71.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY.
( THE CAPITAL CITY LINE. )
Its Magnificent Through and Local Passenger Service B. between The East and South and South west.
THE SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY is called THE CAPITAL CITY LINE, because it enters the Capitals of the six States which it traverses, exclusive of the National Capital, through which its trains run solid from New York to Jacksonville, and Tampa Florida. It runs through Richmond, Vass Raleigh, N. C., Columbia, S. C. Atlanta, Montgomery, Ala., and Tallahassee, Fla.
This road will continue to run the famous FLORIDA AND METROPOLITAN LIMITED, and THE FLORIDA AND AILANTA FAST MAIL TRAINS affording the only through limited service daily, including Sunday, between New York and Florida, and is the shortest line between these points
These splendidly modern trains of the SEABORD AIR LINE RAILWAY arrived at, and departed from Pennsylvania Railway Stations at Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York carrying Pullman, most improved equipments, with unexcelled dining car service, compartment, drawing room, and observation cars. It has Pullman service five times per week each way from Washington to that resort, Porthurst, N.O. It has the short line to and from nash nord North, Portsmouth, Raleigh, Southern Pine, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa and Atlanta, and the principal cities between the South and East. It is also the direct route to Athens, Augusta and Madison. In Atlanta, direct connections are made in the Union Station for Chattanooga, Nashville, and Memphis, also for New Orleans and all points in Texas, California and Mexico.
In addition it is the only line operating through trains and Pullman sleeping cars between Atlanta and Norfolk, where connections are made with the Ou Dominion Steamship Co. from New York, the M. & F. Company from Boston, and Providence, the Norfolk and Washington steamat Company, from Washington, the Baltimore Steam Packet Company from Baltimore, and the N. P. & N. Railway, from New York and Poliadelphia.
Through Pullman cars also operated in quick seddels between Jacksonville and S. Louis, via Monticello, and between Jacksonville and New Orleans in addition to through trains with Buffalo Chair Cars between Savannah and Montgomery.
The local trai service is first class with most convenient schedules.
In fast the SEABOARD AIR LINE
RAILWAY will ticket passengers for
any points, affording the quickest
schedules, fleet trains, and most com-
fortable services. Its 100 mile books
sold at $26 00, are good from Wash-
ington, D. C. over the entire range
of 3,400 miles flown by Air.
= -
Haas.
te
NY ae
KYA
| SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1901
FIRST RONOR PUPILS
neo
Week Moding May 17ch.
5th Grammar—Misa F.G. Robinson,
teacher: Alberta Smith, Estelle Smith.
8rd Grammar—Mr. A, L. Morton,
teacher: John Danes, vohn Johnson,
Walter Johnson, Robert Jackson, Flor.
ence Bolling, Mary Brown, Gay ‘Thom.
as, Inez Williams.
1st Grammar]—Miss F. B. Dixon,
teacher : Milton Ssmpeon, Emma Craig
Sadie Lee.
2nd Gcammar—Miss A. G. Foster
teacher- Ollie Frayser, Robert Cole’
Peter Hadson.
Sch Primary— “iss 0. L. Patterson,
teacher: Ollie Gaerrant, Sirah Hilton,
Alberta Jones, Celia Minor, Will Rab-
inson. Minnie Booker.
Tth Primary—Miss L. A, Paters
teacher: Hunter Goode. Joseph Cokes’
Willis Johoson, Wortham —Purpear
Willian Gsodmas, Gaorgs Robinson
Roser Smith, Cornelius st>ward, Al-
tred Wyatt, Rosa Howard. Will Ohan-
dler.
6th Primary—Miss A. D. Patterson,
teacher: Geneva Trent, Rhode Nes’
Nottie Fox, Lidnssy Glasgow, Henry
Littlepage, Samue! Reyaolds, Robert
Williams,
Sth Primary—Miss _B, L. Marray
teacher: Hester Glasgow, Olara joht-
ton.
4th Peimary—Miss_E. 7A. Ohristian,
teacher: Daisy O'Neill, Martha John-
aon, Sallie Booker, Samuel Lee.
Pa Primary, B—Wies H.E Walizee,
teacher: Ernest Branob, William Jack
son, Louis Parrish, Joha Smith, Mars
Oraig, Marie Oousins. Pinkia Fuon,
Mary Mertin, Nettie Trent.
Sd Primary—Miss H. E. Walisce,
teacher: Lillian Golemvn, Helen Gar:
nett, Nellie Jasper, L'zzie Roberts, Re-
Decca Winston, Mary Smith, Lee Fras.
ier, Richard Walker, Low.n' Wilis,
2a Primary—Miss K..G. Robinaon,
teach or: Edmand Ford, Frank Teter
‘Thomss Jaaper, Williata Jackson, Hen
ry Johoson, Tis Booker, Nannie Jack-
eon, Lizzie Haghss.
2ad Primary B—Miss _E. 8. Powell,
teacher: Mary Carter, Eliza Cuivalry,
Sirlessioe Bolling, Will Kenney, Leroy
Johoson, Mary Way, Bettie Mayo,
Robert Uarter, Margaret Richardson,
Rosa Kenny, Harvey Page. James Ran
doiph, Will Johasoa, Westly Pierce,
Verno: Holmes.
1st Primary—Miss K. G, Robinson,
teacher: Arthur polling Geo, Brown,
Henry Booker, James Booker, Joseph
Savlton, Eulalia White, Sallie Wit
liams, Moselle Liwscn, Bertha Rose,
Ast Primaty—Miss ki. 8, Powell,
teacher; Benetta Stovall, Sam Saddler,
Sam Mayo, Laura Seott, Will Smith,
‘Mag West, Mary Coles, Maggie Joba:
on, Goran Wyott, Goores Lease.
NAVY HILL SOHOOL.
sh Grammar—Mr. A. V. Norrell
teacher: Alise Giles, Ethel Murray,
5b Grammar—Misa Rosa B. Brooks
teacher: Emma Bailey, Ross James
Edna Minor, Carrie Wiskam,
4:h Grammar—Miss Lena V. Itham:
teacher: Fannie Cowan,
3:d Grammar—Miss B. L. Whittle
teacher: Coralease Norrell. Bessie
Branch, Howard Page.
Qed Grammar—Mise C, L. ‘Brown,
teacher: Mildred Bolling, Lucy Wil:
liame.
1st Geammar—Miss M. E. Turner,
teacher: Olarence Hayes, George John
son, pale Ayers.
8 h Primary—Mies Mary L. ?Saspsr,
teasner; Eddie Coleman, Lou Phillips,
Seving Seay, Estella Branch, Mozsile
Fox, Annie Burrows
7h Primary—Mies E, B. Lucas
tencher: James Ware, [da Griffin.
6th Primary—Miss Earlie A. Lae
tescher: Joseph Baker, Louis Booker
Frank Cross, Alfred Kamo, Josephine’
Adderson, Sallie Baylor. L'zzie Carter
Laura Jackson, Estelle Pride, Marth
Williams,
5 b Primary, No. 1 Miss M- 1. Tio
ley, tescher: Willie Frayer, Willie K-r
sey, Harvey Scott, Robert Woodson,
Mit7 Pleroe.
53h Primary, No. 2—Miss EB Made
line White, teacher; Mantord Gate
wood, Rebeces Curr, Sallie Twyman
4 n'Primary, No.l’ Miss ME. Mor-
ris, teacher; Abram Snith, Williem
Shelton, Eva Cosby, Bilen Griffis, Sar-
ab Howard, Bianche Morris.
4b Primury, No. 2,—Miss Sarah E
Brown, teacher: George Barrell, J oh
Freeland, Aibsrt Norrell, Edie Ward,
Oscar Watkins, Joseph Winaton Pestle
Banks, Virgie Boover, Lrene Care, Lil
Me Fountain, Lillian’ Frayser. Mattie
N arrell, Ross Page, Mary Richardson,
Ada Ross, Kate Stephene,
2ad Primary, 2—Miss M. C. Trico,
teacher: Leroy Ragiand, Albsrie Os.
sar: Thomas Robinson, Bessie Booker,
Wallace Holmes, Eams Randolph, 4l-
bert {Vaugha, Rebesea Sith, Sus ¢
Thompson, Rosa Reese, Willie Hall,
$4 Primary, 1—Miss Sarah E. Bcown
teacher: James Barnett, John James,
Booker Owens, Aron Robinson, lies
Polmesu, Lodise Chalmers, Maggie
Fitsgerala, Marion Jonce.
Srd Primary, 1—Miss M. O. Trice,
teacher: Joseph Brooks, Mary Brown.
Willie Jackson, Ger:ruds Ubaaber-
Jayne, Jacq? Pride, Helen Hope, Jas.
we ae Teme Robinson.
2ad Prim—Wieo J. L- Stephens, toxsh-
er: Sherman, “Willie Grandison,
"ghaese enon Greer, Sr
Spnedoen aapesiomeetite
He Owons, 8: item - <onen me
A METRICAL MEDLEY,
Im April,
De you ever think. as I think, when the
‘April sunshine falls
Yn a flood of yellow splendor on the gray
old city street,
Lighting up the narrow houses with thetr
smoke-discolored @ralls, -
-And the pavement ever grimy from the
Aread of many feet—
Do rou think of leafy woodlands, where
the hidden cuckoo calle,
‘And the primroses gleam faintly, and tha
hyacinths are sweet?
Do you cver Hear, as T hear, ‘mid the hub-
bub of the town,
Soft music made by silvery waves upon
a quiet shore;
Or the laughter of the glad winds that
rush across the open down
To dry the tearful blossoms when an
‘April shower Is o'er?
Do you ever know, as I know, how thes
undertones can drown
All the strident sounds of labor and the
traffic’s ceaseless roar?
Do you ever long, as I long, for a glimps
of wide: blue skles,
Which no creeping fox will darken, where
no steep roofs intervene;
But the snowy clouds part softly as the
home-bound swallow flies
‘Through their drifting sunllt fleeces, with
the azure space between—
Do you ever long, as I long, with a mis
‘before the eyes,
And a prayer that trembles on the lips
“Lord, keep such memories green!”
—E. Matheson, in Chambers’ Journal.
A Dangerous Accomplishment,
‘There dwells near me a little kid
‘That's learnin’ how to taik.
He tries to do as he ts bid,
‘An’ does bis best to walk.
An’ If T thought that he'd receive
‘Advice, I'd give him some,
And that would be to make belleve
‘That he was deat and dumb.
T'd_ tell him to quit practicing
His “ah goo" by the hour:
‘To smile an’ never do a thing
But blossom like a ower.
Yd show to him how often men
Go siidin’ down luck's hill.
‘By simply sayin’ something when
‘They ought to have kep’ still.
It's kind o* hard, when you have tried
‘To steer aright your bark
‘To see your fragile hopes collide
Agin some fool remark.
If Twas him I'd change this bent,
Nor try to rise above
‘My present state, but be content
‘To live an’ laugh an’ love.
—Washington Star.
i de
If you crave a word of cheer,
Karn it:
Jf you sigh for glory here,
Earn It:
Fortune's ready with her smile,
Would you have her beam on you?
Don't expect her favor while
‘You sit pondering and blue—
Earn it.
Is It love that you would claim?
Barn it;
Do you fondly dream of fame?
Earn tt.
Fate herself may not deny—
Lat her do the worst she can—
‘The reward that by and by.
‘Time delivers when & man
Earns tt.
8. E. Kiser, in Chicago Times-Herald
(aaa
Have you seen the new creations of thé
millinery art—
Hats of Parisian conception that must
thrill the maiden heart?
Flowers rare and colors dainty—such a
‘maze of beauty—oh,
‘Hear the cute ejaculations as they by the
‘window go!
Have you felt that sinking feeling some-
‘where In your peaceful breast,
Like the sinking of the shadows when the
sun has gone to rest,
‘When the millliner comes smiling: “Please,
air, pay this, if you can?”
Never!’ Well, my friend, I'm certain that
you're not @ married man!
RB. Thompson, in Metropolis (11) Her-
‘aid.
Who Loves the Trees Rest?
Who loves the trees best?
“1, said the Spring.
Thelr ivrves 20 beautiful
‘To them I bring.”
‘Who loves the trees best?
“1,"" Summer said,
“L give them blossoms,
‘White, yeligw, red.”
‘Who loves the trees best?
“L"" said the Fall,
“1 give luscious fruits,
‘Bright tints to all.””
‘Who loves the trees best?
“Tove them best,””
Harsh Winter answered,
“I give them Fest.”
Allee May Douglas, in N.Y. Independent,
‘he Saati Bae
I saw two foolish lovers pass
Along & winding way,
And tn his hand the malden's hand
‘A willing captive lay,
1 saw their looks, I heard thelr sighs,
‘And called them fools, for, oh,
I had forgotten that I, too,
Loved—not #0 long ago.
And while I stood aside and smiled
I saw the maid caressed—
Beheld her head inclined against
‘Her foolish lover's breast—
T scoffed at sighing lovers and
‘Thelr foolish ways, when lo!
I heard him say some words that I
Sald—not so long ago.
8. E. Kiser, in Chicago Record-Herald.
For Mo, For Me,
Fardownthestreet—the darkened street—
Par through the storm and gloom,
A wavering light tolls me to-night
"Tis Alice in her room,
And in the voice of wind and rain
I wonder could there be
A message from her dear, dear lips
‘For me, for me!
Far down the street—no other light
‘Phe darkness now dispels;
‘The low-drawn shade, the fecble ray,
A story trembling tells:
‘The storm may rage and dangers rite
‘May dwell on land and ses,
My darling waits in safety there
For me, for me.
-R. B. Thompson, in Metropolis (11l.) Her-
Love's Tokeus,
‘The lilies fair
Tgive to thee—
Emblem of thy purity.
‘The roses red
I give to thee~
‘Token of sincerity.
My truest love
Live to nec
Forever and eternit;
"per
Let Us Sing It That Way.
Wa a deautitul world, with ite love and
sts light:
Let us sing It that way!
With its sighs and its sorrows—tts wrong
and tts right,
Ms love-scattered blossoms—its dark and
is bright;
Over its darkness ts streaming the light;
Let us sing tt that way.
FL. Stanton, tp Atianta Constitution,
Honest Labor.
“Look at those, these, them!" said
Weary Watkins, proudly showing two
dollars. 4
“I hope you ain't been working!’
exclaimed ‘his friend and partnor,
Hgngry Begins, i
aeribia rot
tameple” ak .
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Men Who Are Helping to Make
the History of the World
William Waldorf Astor, the nian
without “country, has discovered a
* new branch to
7, his family tree
{fj fj) that has given
R Ma) vim new social
iy ] aspirations, ad
f] which may cause
een him-to transfer
ins his residence
aT from London,
— where he has
WRIA FCs © eeeceene
a
/ yD ;
Lae i
ie
iy
Cot
Se
tally to break into the exclusive so-
cial set dominated by royalty and the
nobility, to Paris.
John Jacob Astor the first, the
great-grandfather of the present head
of the Astor family, was troubled
but little by sock ‘a thing as 8 family
tree. Instead of investigating the
history of his ancestors he devoted
his time to the building up of a great
fortune, and succeeded. The second
John Jacob added to the fortune left
by his father, and when he died his
sons were among the wealthiest men
in the world. With an abundance of
money the third generation developed
social aspirations of » high order.
William Waldorf’s were so high that
nothing in this country could satisfy
them, and, though this government
had gratified his political aspirations
to the extent of sending him as min-
ister to Italy in 1882, he did not be-
lieve that his talents were sufficiently
appreciated at home, and_ shortly
after the death of his favher, in 1890,
he removed to England, where he has
on various occasions been snubbed
unmercifully by the royalty and no-
bility with which he wishes to asso-
ciate.
For more than 20 years William
Waldorf Astor has given close atten-
tion to the cultivation of a family
tree. He is said to have traced his
ancestry back through countless gen-
erations until he found that he was
descended from the ancient Spanish
dons, and that the blood of the cava-
liers flowed in his veins. But he has
round that in England the blood of
the Spanish dons would not be al-
lowed to mingle with that of the Eng-
lish nobility, and that the standing
of his claimed ancestry would not
open sealed doors. "Recently he
sprouted another branch of his fam-
ily tree, and now finds that instead
of being Spanish dons his ancestors
were French dukes, who became Prot-
estants at the time of the Huguenots.
On the strength of this new discovery
of his it is said he will make an effort
to become a part of the Paris colony
of discarded royalty that furnish re-
publican France with much of its
Te count.
‘Two Heroes Rewarded.
Two young men who have distin-
guished themselves by acts of bravery
in the militany
and naval service oe
of this country '
have reeently 2 RD
been honored by ue
the present, (le ale
Osborne Wa r- 3!
en Deignan, who ae
ren Deignan, wh ad
guided the | Mer- Oe
rimae into. the ~
mouth of Santi- Calvin Titus.
co
4
ago harbor when the attempt was
made to bottle up the fleet of Ad-
miral Cervera, has been promoted to
be a gunner’s mate in the navy, a po-
sition worthy the ambition of any
American boy; and Calvin Titus, who
was the first of the foreign soldiers
to scale the walls of Peking, and by
whose hand the stars and stripes was
planted on that wall ahead of the
flag of any other of the allied armies,
has been given an appointment to
West Point. Both are Iowa boys.
Of the two acts it is hard to say
which was the bravest. Deignan was
one of a company that faced death
together, but of all that company
none but the brave commander of the
doomed vessel occupied such an ex-
posed position, for they stood side by
side at the wheel, at which every
Spanish shell was directed, and it is
probable that neither expected to
ever escape with their lives. For this
‘act Deignan would in all probability
have been sent to Annapolis had he
not have been past the age limit for
naval cadets. As it is, a way is now
opened for him to advance to the
rank of an officer from the ranks,
Titus acted practically alone in his
daring, and in the face of a murder-
ous fire. By his daring he made pos-
sible the entrance of the allies into
Peking at a time when every moment
was valuable. His reward is none too
great for the act of bravery he per-
formed. His home is in Vinton, Ia,
and he is but 20 years of age.
After the South Pole.
-An attempt is to be made to find
the south pole by the man who has
come nearest
reaching the
north pole, the
duke of Abruzzi
He will sail for
antarctic waters
sometime during
the coming sum-
mer in an expedi-
Waals erek tee ha
ez Some RSS Eset
~ reaching the
Wh \ north pole, the
i ¥\ duke of Abruzzi.
3 } «= He will sail for
antarctic waters
en sometime daring
- iY the coming sum-
dis mer in an expedi-
Duke of Abrurzi. tion fitted out by
the king of Italy, the Italian govern-
ment and a number of Italian scien-
tifle societies which are interested
in his explorations, and while he
hardly expects to reach the southern-
most point of the earth he does hope
to come nearer doing 20 than any-
obe cle ever an clone.
Quen wi tae es.
Friend—Why don’t you marry?
Goodfello—Can't.
“You have a fine house?”
“Yes.”
“And a good income?”
“Year
“Then what's the matter?”
“My housekeeper and her servants
have ae ‘s‘union, end if I marry
outeide of their union they'll strike.” —
N.Y. Weekty.
* Behind this young man, of whom
the world heard so much a year ago
when he returned from his explora-
tions in arctic waters, there is some
interesting personal history. He is
described as a quist, unassuming
young man of 28 years; fond of soli-
tude, but eager for adventures of a
thrilling nature, which he has
searched for in all parts of the world,
and yet he was born amidst all the
tumult that attends half dozen
Spanish revolutions.
He is a grandson of Victor Em-
manuel I, king of Italy, and a cousin
of the present king of Italy. At the
time of his birth his father was the
reigning king of Spain with the title
of Amadeus I, who was elected sov-
ereign of Spain to succeed Queen Isa
della IL. Hig reign was but short
and tumultuous, and was remarkable
for the number of revolutions against
his authority, instigated by the Car.
lists, by the adherents of Prince Al-
fonso, son of Isabella, and by the
republicans. It was in the midst o!
these that the duke of Abruzzi was
born in Madrid January 29, 1873. A
month after his birth his father re.
signed the Spanish throne, to be fol-
lowed by the short-lived Spanish re-
public, and with his queen and family
returned to Italy, where he died in
1890.
The duke of Abruzzi was a third
son and was educated for the Italian
navy, in which he now holds the rank
of lieutenant. His first achievement
that brought his name prominently
before the world was the ascension
of Mount Elias in Alaska in 1897.
A Self-Made Man,
Everybody in America is interested
more or less in the firm of J. Pier-
pont Morgan be- x
cause of the Sea \
great industrial / A
combinations
which that firm ¥
represent, and ny
which have \¥j =
brought them
prominently ‘be- \@MN
fore the whole UGA
civilized world. a
It is a banking Gecrge W. Perkins.
‘Ga \\
fs \
i, —
x5 H
NO Bi
PNP ag SD
house that caters not to the ordinary
banking business, but to the great
capitalists of the country. The latest
member of this great firm of finan-
clers is George W. Perkins, and be-
hind his rise to power in the world
of finance is some interesting person-
al history and achievements,
Mr. Perkins fs a son of the west,
being born in Chicago in 1862. The
silver spoon was missing at the time
of his birth, and was not found in his
mouth. His father was a life insur-
ance agent, and the son began. his
business career as an office boy in
the Chicago branch of the New York
Life company. There are to-day men
connected with the life insurance
business in Chicago, and who claim to
have predicted his rise to power in
the financial world because of the
ability he displayed as an office boy.
During his connection with the life
insyrance company promotions came
raplily, and when de quit that com-
pany to enter the great banking es-
tablishment he had risen to the po-
sition of second vice president of the
company, a member of its board of
trustees and the chairman of its
finance committee, He is in all re-
spects a self-made man, and a sample
of what any progressive American
boy may become if he but has the
mish.
y ——
¥. MG. AL Leaders,
‘There will meet at the jubilee con-
wanblon of: the. Yaune Se (Cec
tian association
at Boston in June
leaders of that
association repre.
senting three
countries.
From England
will come — Sir
George Williams,
who founded the
original London
association in
aN
A
bi
1844. From New York will attend
Rev. George M. Van Derlip, who
wrote the original letter from Lon-
don in June, 1850, which was printed
in the Watchman and Reflector of
Boston, and which occasioned the
founding of the Boston association
that will now act as host for the con-
vention, and from Canada will come
Lord Strathcona at the head of the
delegation from that country.
Of the three Lord Strathcona has
probably had the most interesting
history. He was born in Scotland,
and from there entered the service
of the Hudson Bay company, and was
sent to Canada, where he endured
the hardships and privations that fell
to the lot of the northwestern fur
trader. In time he rose to the head
of that great corporation, and was
its last resident governor. He has
served Canada and the western prov-
inces of Canada in many capacities;
was a special commissioner In the
Red River settlements during the
first Riel rebellion; was a member of
the first executive council of the
northwest territory: has sat in the
Manitoba legislature and the Ca-
nadian parliament at Ottawa, and is
now the high commissioner for Can-
ada in London. For the war in South
Afriea he organized the regiment
known as Stratheona's horse, which
has but recently returned from Cape
Town to Canada.
WRIGHT A PATTERSON.
: Sil Es Saeed cetaress
Anxious Clubman—Doctor, please
come just as quick as you can to Col.
Tom Timberlake. He's seeing snakes.
Dr. Proctor—My dear sir, I do not
cure snake bite; I take only surgical
cases.
Anxious Clubman—Oh, that'll be all
right; by the time yow get round
to him: Taare aay Col. ‘Pimberlake will
have fallen’ out of bed amt broken his
week.—Leslie'n Weekl¥.) "4 2
» %
\
2,000 REWARD,
Dr. Shea, Marvelous Kedtum,
Gives the names of dead and
sires ieseasseretaranae cna
heaieh. or oud Jou Know, no tateer
what tb ts. Ho. cam call up ‘spirit
thom rap aileround theroon: scene
them rap all around the room.” He asks ne
Guestions Gone ask you to. write: names for
se bom en to bump you in any way,
porte yet ott Bee on
dorsed. spirttualists
Pipa eee S Et mesa and spec-
fal posnge #0 practice wenderful powers;
Smoatands of wrtarences te both, White und
See. Sarat ee att YeOaeR
<soven fa irooktyn—will show you that he
gan do all that he can tell of. ‘Can tell what
business is best for you and ‘where, how t¢
rin speedy marriagy wish tho one Fou love.
How to "be suco~éatul in ail your Goings tt
‘short what ts'bevt vo fo. He suoceeds when
Sil others fail." Positive satistaction, or ne
Pay. Gall and vee. You will fnd It Incky te
Segiemaeten tance eas
m ‘cure drunkenness,
Degiven patient not koowing it. Thosands
ehvougn him arenow ne ‘
@ RICH, HAPPY AND SUCCESSFUL. @
with all thetr undertakings, while those whe
Regloct his advice are still Taroring ayatant
Poverty. “Thrown tis pertect knowledge of
themtistiy, he cam impart toyoua secret that
Riitorerepme your enemies and win
Trends. His ald and advice tas often beet
solicited; the resuit has always been these:
Saring’of speedy and ‘nappy marriages ane
ailyour. wishes In love. affairs he never
Talis. He has the secret of winning the at
feotions of the onposite rex, It ts the curse
ofspiritualise that tn ail Jarge cities there
are"a class of men and" women ‘who clate
Powers: theydo uot passers, They have
Relthor ‘gifts, ereentials. nor referenc:s
Surely’ the colorsa reply are not so. wanting
in'seuso ns ¢> throw their tims and” neney
sraron sunk,” Dr. Shea refors, th the How
Wiltlam Deaniore, arohivect wad “batider. &
Cleveland, Ave. and Arthur Sewell Ship:
Dallder, South "Brook yn. all rave knows
Bim fof, the past ‘seven seats, "ile: giver
freo test, of hls power t) all. ‘The degter-hae
Practiced five yours in Sew Orleans: St Louts
Memphis ‘ana’ Loutvviile” understands “the
roughly the diseasos, spells or infloences the
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HE PLANET
SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1901 THE PRESIDENT'S WIFE
Rapidly Recovering From Her Recent Serious Illness.
MAY START FOR HOME SATURDAY
The President Cheered by Fifty Thousand San Francisco School Children, to Whom He Makes a Speech of Fatherly Advice.
San Francisco, May 22.—The convalescence of Mrs. McKinley is very rapid and she is fast regaining her normal strength. She was able to sit up yesterday and read the papers. So marked is her improvement that it is very probable the presidential party will start for Washington next Saturday. If no untoward developments should occur it is thought Mrs. McKinley will be able to endure the journey by that time.
The president yesterday reviewed nearly 50,000 school children of this city. Both sides of Van Ness avenue from Jackson street to Market street were lined with cheering and enthusiastic children as the president and members of his party and local officials in carriages were driven from Jackson to Market and back the avenue to Jackson. The president was the recipient of a continuous ovation. Almost every child had been provided with a good sized American flag, and their voices and flags were in unison. Each little girl wore white and most of them had red sashes. Thousands of the youngsters had large bouquets, which they threw at the president as he passed along. In some cases every pupil from a certain school carried a bouquet of the same variety and color of flowers. Some classes spread the flowers in the street that the president and his party might literally ride among the roses.
Half way between California and Sacramento streets the president's carriage brought up and the other conveyances came to a standstill. "Speech, speech, speech," rang out along the avenue, and the children swarmed about by the thousands. President McKinley sat in his carriage, reaching down and shaking hands for several minutes. He finally rose and was greeted with cheers. The president spoke briefly, saying in part:
"I desire in a single moment to express the pleasure which has been given me to meet the school children of the city of San Francisco. It has given me an introduction into the countless homes of your great city, and has permitted me to witness the sunshine which this vast number of young people bring to the firesides of the city. I know of no richer possession than scholarship, no nobler ambition than to obtain it. We cannot all be great scholars, but we can all have good scholarship. I want to assure you young people that there is nothing so essential to your easy advancement and success in after life as a good education.
"If those of us who have battled in the rivalries and contentions of a busy world could go back to our youth and school days we would embrace cheerfully our neglected opportunities and pursue them with industry and delight. If the testimony of the active men of San Francisco and of the country could be taken, it would be uniform in the declaration of the embarrassments under which they had suffered from scanty mental training in youth.
"What an army for liberty and union and civilization. Why, we have in public schools of the United States four fold more children than there were people when this government was founded, and all of them proud of their country, and all of them revering its institutions, and all of them meaning that when the time comes for them to take the responsibilities of administration they will be prepared to do their duty and pass along this free government with ever increasing virtue, intelligence and patriotism. I thank you and wish for all of you the realization of every worthy ambition."
After reviewing the school children President McKinley and party drove to the Presidio.
GENERAL SOUTHERN NEWS.
Richmond, May 20.—The insurance on the Jefferson hotel, which was destroyed by fire March 29, has been adjusted. It is understood that the basis of settlement is about $505,000.
Newport News, Va., May 20.—Mrs. George W. Nelms, president of the local chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy, has been appointed sponsor for the First brigade, Virginia division Confederate Veterans, at Memphis Tenn., May 28, 29, 30.
Huntingdon, W. Va., May 20.—Mrs. Amelia Rollins, of this city, fell dead inside the grave of her brother in Catlettaburg, Ky., yesterday. Her brother died only a few days ago, bequeathing her all of his property. Yesterday while weeping at his grave her death summons came.
Birmingham, Ala., May 20—G. A. Boyleston, a citizen of Atlanta, was shot and killed Saturday night by nego highway robbers while in company of E. D. Evans, of Pratt City. The killing occurred near the office of the Pratt City Lumber company, of Pratt City. The people of the little mining suburb are aroused, and if the negroes are caught a lynching may follow.
Savannah, Ga., May 16.—John Martin, 25 years old, a lineman in the employ of the Georgia Telephone and Telegraph company, fell from a pole yesterday and received injuries which resulted in his death shortly afterward. He came in contact with a live wire, hung limp and inert for a few seconds, and then fell to the ground. His head was crushed by the fall and blood and brains were scattered on the sidewalk.
Suffolk, Va., May 20.—Tried for a tragedy which grew out of a practical joke, Joe Brinkley, colored, was today given ten years' imprisonment by a Nansemound county jury. While passing along a road near Chuckatuck Brinkley met Eli Wilson, also colored, whom he ordered to throw up his hands, and whom he fatally shot when Wilson refused and drew a pistol. Witnesses said there was no malice. The evidence was conflicting.
Williamson, W. Va., May 16.—Yesterday Senator S. D. Stokes stood up in the court room and pleded not guilty to the indictment accusing him of the murder of Rev. J. J. Woll, a Presbyterian minister here, last November. The trial was the final outcome of Rev. Woll's sensational sermon in which Williamson came under the sharp lash of his invective. Last night the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, and Senator Stokes is again free.
Knoxville, Tenn., May 20—H. H. Gouchenhous, of Greenville, a democratic politician, is under indictment before the federal court for using the United States mall, it is alleged, for purposes of fraud. It is alleged that he collected from some of the postmasters in the district contributions to the campaign fund, promising to repay. He made this promise good, it is claimed, by mailing at the several postoffices enough campaign literature to more than reimburse the postmasters.
Dallas, Tex., May 20.—A torrential rain fell in this city last night. The precipitation is estimated at two inches in less than three hours. For a time every street in the city was flooded, and there is no question but that stocks of goods in basements and cellars have been heavily damaged. The rain was accompanied by an electrical display of sublime proportions. This necessitated shutting off the public lights, leaving the city in darkness and bringing the cars on all of the systems to a standstill.
Tampa, Fla., May 16.—All the cigarmakers in West Tampa went on a strike yesterday because they had to cross the river in ferryboats. About 6,000 people are out. The men claim they lost a good deal of time crossing the river, and were in much danger in doing so. Workmen claimed if they went on strike manufacturers would use influence to have the city authorities place pontoon bridges so they could walk across while bridges were being rebuilt. Orders were at once given and pontoons started. They also boycotted the street cars because the management did not give them more cars. It is not sure now that they will go to work when pontoons are up, as they may continue the fight against the street railway.
A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED.
Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan arrived in Paris yesterday from London. Governor La Folette, of Wisconsin, vetowed a compulsory vaccination bill. Germany's beet sugar acreage this year is 1,165,170 acres, an increase of 69,946. The total population of greater London, including the outer ring of suburbs, is now 6,578,784. Rev. Henry C. Minton, of California, was elected moderator by the Presbyterian general assembly at Philadelphia. Jacob Wynne was convicted of second degree murder in Philadelphia for complicity in the killing of Father Riegel by knockout drops. Friday, May 17. The superior court at Chicago declared the employers' "black list" legal
Mrs. Lyman J. Gage, wife of the secretary of the treasury, died in Washington, aged 58.
Governor La Follette, of Wisconsin, issued an order for bidding the Root-Carter boxing match at Oshkosh last night.
Edwin F. Uhl, assistant secretary of state and ambassador to Germany under Cleveland, died at Grand Rapids, Mich., aged 60.
In the race for the world's cycling championship at Paris Jacquellin, the French rider, defeated "Major" Taylor, the colored American.
Saturday, May 18.
It is reported that the shah of Persia is dying of kidney disease.
Governor Stone yesterday appointed Joseph N. Shomo, of Hamburg, controller of Berks county, Pa.
Manager McGraw, of Baltimore's American League baseball team, has been suspended five days for abusing Umpire Cantillon.
A. P. Brady, a merchant of Jackson, Miss., was arrested last night for the murder of William Dinsmore near Coleman, Tex., 28 years ago.
In a fight in a Polish saloon at Duryea, Pa., last night "Sailor" Crowley was killed and the bartender and a woman wounded.
Monday, May 20.
Turkey has apologized to the powers for violations of foreign mall bags.
The Colombian government has imposed a tax of $20 a head on exported cattle.
The British government is to transport all Boer prisoners to the Bermuda islands.
Two men were killed and three fatally injured by escaping molten metal in a mill at Youngstown, O.
Robert Pitcairn, of Pittsburg, was appointed moderator of the Presbyterian general assembly at Philadelphia.
Cumberland (Md.) voters declined to accept Andrew Carnegie's conditions $25,000 gift.
Contributions for the relief of sufferers from the fire in Jacksonville amount to $58,270.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND VIRGINIA
STRIKING MACHINISTS
Elaim Substantial Gains in Their Fight For Nine Hours.
A CONFERENCE IN NEW YORK.
Employers and Employes Will Attempt to Settle Their Differences. In Cincinnati Some of the Big Firms Threaten to Import Non-Unionists. Washington, May 22. — President O'Connell said last night that the advises received up to 6 o'clock at headquarters here indicate that an early settlement of the trouble between the machinists and employers will be effected. Information at hand showed that during the day over 120 firms had settled by granting the nine hour day. Mr. O'Connell said that 7,000 men are out in San Francisco and about 3,000 in Cincinnati. In Chicago nearly all the important shops have settled with the men. The reports from the south, he said, show that all through that section settlements are being effected.
Half the firms in Philadelphia, he said, have come to terms and the others are expected to follow suit. There has been no news of a clash anywhere. At Dunkirk, N. Y., because 700 machinists employed at the Brooks locomotive works struck an order was issued closing the works until further notice. This throws 2,600 men out of work.
A CONFERENCE IN NEW YORK.
Employers and Employees to Discuss the Existing Differences.
New York, May 22.—Henry F. Devens, agent of the Metal Trades' association, yesterday went to the headquarters of the strikers immediately after the meeting at the Astor House had adjourned. His mission was to pave the way for a joint conference, in which the strikers could explain their position and their demands, so that the employers could find out what the men wanted. It was later announced that President O'Connell had authorized a conference.
When the executive board of the International Association of Machinists, District No. 15, adjourned last night the members were much elated, as they said that there were fair prospects that the differences with the employers would be settled, and settled in favor of the men, before many more hours had passed.
As far as New York city is concerned the machinists practically considered that they had things their own way. Few reports of concessions had come in during the day, but the members of the executive board congratulated each other upon the fact that all the larger firms had come to terms. According to Mr. Devens the purpose of the Metal Trades association for asking the conference is to gain an opportunity to lay before the machinists fairly the situation. Mr. Devens says that there is no question but the machinists under existing agreements are entitled to a nine hour day. This the employers are willing to concede. But the question at the bottom of the present difficulty is whether or not ten hours' pay for nine hours' work is to follow the introduction of the nine hour system.
Miss Lula Anthony of Providence, R. I., in company [with Miss Fannie Elliott called on us.]
Mr Charles Thomas will leave the city Friday to spend a few days in Charlotteville, Va.
The great revival at Fifth Street Baptist Church is still in progress. There were 264 converts up to Wednesday night and still 140 mourners. Dr. Graham says he can't tell when they will close.
United Confederate Veterans Re-Union, Memphis, Tenn., May 28, 30th, 1901.
The Norfolk & Western will sell excursion tickets May 25th, 26th and 27th.
W. B. BEVILL,
G. P. A., Roanoke, Va.
The Hartshorn Memorial College held its commencement exercises on Friday evening. Mrs. Rosa K. Jones who occupies the chair of music again displayed her great ability in the musical part of the programme.
Excursion Rates via Norfolk & Western Railway, -Pan-American Exposition, May 1st to Oct 31st, 1901.
The Norfolk & Western Railway will sell Excursion Tickets to Buffalo May 1st to September 30, 1901.
In the Law and Equity Court of the city of Richmond the 20th day of May, 1801.
Hillery Cook, Pltf, } IN CHANCERY.
against
Elise Cook, Deft,.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a vinculo matrimonio by the plaintiff from the defendant.
And affidavit that having been made and filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the state of Virginia, it is ordered that she appear here within fifteen days after due publication hereo and do whatever may be necessary to protest her interest herein.
To Elise E. Cook:
Take notice that on the 29th day of June, 1901, at the office of N. J. Lewis, No. 609 E. Marshall street, in the city of Richmond, Va., between the hours of 9 a. m. and 6 p. m., to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit panding in the Law and Equity Courts of the city of Richmond, where I am the plaintiff and you are the defendant.
If from any cause the taking of said depositions be not commenced or concluded on the day named the taking of the same place will be contained at the same place and between the same hours from day to day until the same shall have been completed.
HILLERY COOK,
By Counsel.
N. J. Lewis, p. 11.
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To ODIB BLAKBY:
Take notice that I shall on the 10th day of June, 1901, at the office of Gilles B, Jackson, No. 812 E. Broad St., in the city of Richmond, Va., between the hours of 9 a. m. and 6 p. m. on that day, proceed to take the depositions of Fred Gray and others, to be read in the evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in Equity depending in the Law & Equity Court for the city of Richmond, wherein you are the defendant and I am the plaintiff, and if from any cause, the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall be completed.
GILES B. JACKSON, p. q.
In the Law and Equity Court of the
Greece, Richmond, the 27th day of
April, 1901:
IISHAM MANN, Plainiff in Chancery
against ODIE MANN, Defendant
The object of the suit is to obtain a divorce, a Vinsulo Matrimonii by the plaintiff from the defendant.
And an affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant, ODIN MANN is not a resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that she do appear here within fifteen days after the publication hereof and do what is necessary to protect her interest here-
A copy, Teste.
P. P. WINSTON, Clerk.
GILES B.' JACKSON, p. q.
4t
VIRGINIA:—In the Chancery Court
of the County of Henrico on the 3rd
day of May, 1801.
Bettie Loving
vs.
Richard Loving
} In Chancery.
The object of this suit is to obtain
for the plaintiff against the defendant,
a divorce, a vinculo matrimonii and af
idifid having been made and filed that
the defendant is a non-resident of the
State of Virginia, it is ordered that he
do appear here within fifteen days after
due publication of this order and
do what is necessary to protect his
interest herein.
G. W. LEWIS, Attorney.
J. E. BROADDUS, Clerk.
To Richard Loving:
Take notice: That I will proceed to take the depositions of J. S. Booker and other witnesses at the office of G. W. Lewis, No. 311 N, 5th St., Richmond, Va., on the 19th day of June, 1901, at 10 o'clock a.m., to be read as evidence in my behalf in the above styled cause, and that the taking of said depositions will be continued from day to day at the same time and place until completed.
By Counsel
Bernie Lovette
By Counsel. BETTIE LOVING.
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J. T. TEMPLE,
THE BICYCLE MAN.
Alls of the body; cures hot, swollen, tired, stable odor caused by prespiration of the varies and pure. The price is only 25 Cents and delighted with the MIRO PREPERATION, hired by graduates in the employ of a bondary of the above MIRO PREPERATIONS. Write name and address plainly. Send
RAL COMPANY
ARATOGA STREET
The Illinois
662 WEST SARATOGA STREET, Baltimore, Md.
THE ILLINOIS AUTOMATIC Ref
Is not the Cheapest and not
is the best and most econom
get a little Booklet, which
tomes think of it.
SYDNOR &
711 &
BLACK SKIN REMOVER
REGISTERED
PATENT OFFICE
U.S.
BEFORE AFTER
Wonderful, Face, Bleach
Any person sending us one dollar in a letter
to you, we will send you one dollar, even
der or registered letter, we will send it to
the mail postage prepaid; or if you want it sent
to you, we will send it to the mail postage
In any case where it fails to do what we
say, we will return the money or send a box
to you. No matter what, no one will know
contents except receiver.
All Conveniences and Reasonable Terms. Special cars can be chartered and controlled.
S. B. STEWARD.
2818 P Street.
Gen. Pina Agent,
Roanoke, Va.
219 West Broad
Gives away a bicycle every month.
A chance with every purchase or repair job, no matter how small the price.
Come to see me. Only shop run by power in West-end. 3:30-3m.
KNOW YOUR FATE & FORTUNE.
S.
MADAM ALVIAH.
Wonderfully Gifted Clairvoyant and Business Medium.
If your lost or absent friends interest you; if you desire to be more successful; if you desire to have your domestic trouble removed; your lost love returned; your enemies converted into stunch friends—in a word, whatever may be your trouble, suspicious of desires, call on this Wonderfully Gifted Lady.
If secret enemies have hurt you, the madam can remove their evil influences and cure you.
Madam Alviah advises you with a more than human foresight and power. She can diagnose disease through her Clairvoyant sight.
Readings by mail, send soiled pocket handkerchief, $1.00, 2 cent stamp and receive complete life reading. All business strictly confidential.
321 Brook Avenue, Richmond.
OFFICI HOURS:
From 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. Daily.
Epworth League Convention, San Francisco, California.
Cheap excursion tickets by the Norfolk & Western Railway, July 5th to the 12th. Good until August 31, 1901.
W. B. BEVILL,
The Illinois Automatic.
Refrigerator
Is not the Cheapest and not the Highest in pace, but it is the best and most economical Case at our Store and get a little Booklet, which will show you what our customers think of it.
122 West Broad Street,
RICHMOND, VA.
WINDDALE PARK.
WOMAN'S UNION.
(INCORPORATED, JULY, 1898.)
HOME OFFICE:
ST. LUKE'S HALL, 900 ST. JAMES
RICHMOND, VA.
We pay sick Benefits Promptly.
Death Benefits in 24 hours after sat-
factory proof has been filed in the
Office.
OFFICERS & BOARD:
PRES., - - - ROSA K. JONES
VICE-PRES., - - MAGGIE L. WALKER
TREAS., - - FANNIE C. THOMPSON
SECY & MAN'GR, PATSIEK K, ANDERSON,
LIZZIE M. DAMMALLS, M. LOU HARRIS,
VICTORIA MOON, LILLIAN H.
PAYNE, JULIA H. HAVES,
ROSA E. WATSON, DELIA LEWIS.
Tonsorial Artist.
LITTLE BILLY'S PLACE,
20 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
FIRST CLASS SHAVING
AND HAIR-CUTTING.
Our Styles are the Latest and cannot be easily imitated. Your patronage respectfully solicited.
German Baptist Meeting, Lincoln, Neb.
One fare round-trip excursion ticket on sale by Norfolk & Western Railway May 21, 22, 23. Good until June 80, 1901.
W. B. BEVILL,
G. P. A., Rosnoke, V
Mr. A. G. Gordon representing the Indian Brown Co. of Gordonsville, Va. called on us and presented; the office special of the handwork of the company