Richmond Planet
Saturday, August 10, 1901
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
STORMIEST OF ALL THE MEETINGS. TURBULENT SCENES AT FIRST CHURCH.
A Vested Right Declared to be a Public Offense WANTED THE EDITOR EXCLUDED FOR DOING BUSINESS—DEACON HARRIS' PLEA.—DEACONS WILDER'S WARNING. Outrageous Ruling.—Brute Force.—Triumphant by Eight Votes.—Wholesale Disgust. A Split Threatened.
VOL. XVIII NO. 34
STORMIE
TURBULE
FIRST
A Vested Right D
WANTED THE EDITOR
HARRIS' PLEA.
Outrageous Ruling.—Brute Fore
The regular meeting of the First Baptist Church Monday night, 5th instant, was the stormiest as yet held and at times could be heard a block away on the outside.
Several times the members were admonished that the officers of the law might presume that a free fight was imminent and thereby be induced to enter.
CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE.
The main trouble was caused by the revolutionary action of the chairman, who is a licentiate without a charge and is known as Rev. Thomas H. Briggs. He was supported by an organized ring, led by Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application for a meeting. Rev. Briggs rendered decisions absolutely absurd and ridiculous. He interrupted speakers, recognized those who sided with him ruled at one time that he would entertain no motion and then when his partisans offered a motion, he proceeded to recognize and put the same.
OUTRAGEOUS RULING.
He declined to recognize a motion by Brother Wilkerson to table the charge, although it was made and duly seconded and the brother who made it had been recognized and had the floor. He refused to recognize a motion by Deacon John S. Powell to dismiss the case, although the motion was seconded and Brother Powell had the floor. He declined to recognize a motion of Deacon Harrison Smith to adjourn although it was duly seconded. He, on the other hand recognized and put the motion made by his partisans, although other brethren had the floor.
UNPRECEDENTED ACTION.
The motion that Brother Mitchell be required to ask the church parson was made and carried, while brother Mitchell was on the floor in his own defense. Because he refused to recognize such a motion, and declined to do otherwise than proceed-with his defense he recognized the motion of Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application for a meeting to exclude Brother John Mitchell. Jr. may avoid the names of those declaring that he not ready, put the call for the question; declared it carried and then proceeded to put the motion to exclude declaring that it had been carried by a vote of 56 to 64.
THE MEETING COMMENCES
It was well-nigh 8:30 p. m. when Deacon J. C. Farley moved that Deacon James Wilder take the chair.
Brother William Henry Davis moved that Brother Thomas H. Briggs take the chair. Other True Reformers backed it up and the result was that Brother Briggs was elected, the vote standing 28 to 48.
The routine business of the church was transacted. It was decided to send one delegate to the Shiloh Baptist Association.
Deacon J. C. Farley nominated Deacon James Wilder. A True Reformer nominated Brother Thos. H. Briggs and another named Brother Robert Watkins who was guard at the penitentiary during the Readjuster rule.
The vote was taken with the following result: Wilder, 123; Briggs, 3; Watkins, 3.
DEACON WILDER WINS OUT.
Brother Wilder was declared elected and $5 was appropriated together with $2 for expenses.
Much time was afterwards expended in discussing whether or not Brother A. J. Smith, Jr., of the PLANET should be permitted to remain. He finally retire, but was afterwards seen several times at the open window and caused consternation among the opposing forces.
Clerk Vandervall read a letter from Rev. Johnson which had been in his possession for nearly a month, stating that he had accepted the call and would be ready to take active charge September 1st, 1901.
PECULIAR HASTE.
At the church at its last meeting, on Bs
July 1st a letter was read from Rev. W. and
T. Johnson which contained the following:
"I will have to give my people here three months notice should I come. So you see how important it is for me to hear from you."
At the meeting July 1st, it was illegally decided that he be notified that his salary would be $1000 and that he would be expected October 1st, 1901.
Instead of this he gave his church less than two months notice of his intentions, for if the church meeting was held July 1st and he was notified the next day, he could not have notified his church until that time. From July 1st to September 1st, '01 is but two months instead of three months.
LROTHER MITCHELL'S CASE
Then the case of Brother John Mitchell, Jr. was called. Brother William Henry Davis, who had previously made a most disgraced exhibition of himself moved as a substitute to the ten minutes resolution that each member be limited to five minutes.
There was a protracted discussion of this.
Brother H. F. Jonathan opposed this, declaring it to be an outrageous limitation of free speech. The case could not be properly discussed in time, namely the explanation was made that this rule did not apply to Brother John Mitchell, Jr. The five minute rule was adopted.
WANTED TO LIMIT THE DEFENSE
Then a motion was made by Bro. R. J. Bass that Bro. Mitchell be allowed half an hour in which to conduct his defense. It was then 11 o'clock. This was bitterly opposed by Brother H. F. Jonathan, Deacon J. C. Farley and Deacon Harrison Smith. Deacon Farley declared it to be a most outrageous proceeding to talk of limiting Brother Mitchell. It was contrary to every principle of right and justice. The courts of the land granted to the humblest greater latitude than that how much more necessary was it for the church to do even more courts. Finally the petition was defeated no limit being set and Deacon Wilder was sent to request Bro. Mitchell to come forward. He did so, bringing under his arm the Code of Va., the Baptist Church Directory, Hiscock's New Directory for Baptist Churches and the Holy Bible
He politely expressed regret that he should have been the cause of any trouble and if what he had heard was true, he did not see why he had been called for at all. The church might as well go ahead and do what it had decided to do. He was unwilling to proceed unless the priest and assume him that he would not be interrupted.
A POINT ON THE CHAIR.
At this point Moderator Tom H. Briggs stated that the church desired to know whether or not he was guilty. This led to a discussion in which Brother William Henry Davis, H. F. Jonathan and J. C. Farley engaged. Brother Mitchell stated that he was ready to retire, that the chair had not stated the matter properly. the meantime, Brother H. F. Jonathan arose as counsel for Brother Mitchell, but Brother Briggs would not recognize him as such.
THE LAW CITED.
However, Brother Jonathan had succeeded in reading the following from the church polity, page 188: "Note 4—Anyone tried by a church should be allowed every opportunity, both as to time, place and circumstance to vindicate himself. The very justice of Christ's house should incline to mercy. It should be made manifest that the object is not to punish, but to reclaim. Note 5.—"Every person so tried has a right to demand and receive copies for all charges against him, the names of the accusers and witnesses, both of whom he should take the privilege of manhood to face, bearing their statements, bringing witnesses in his side, and answering for himself before the Church itself, as the ultimate and authoritative tribunal." Under these sections of the church law, Brother Jonathan claimed that Brother Mitchell had a right to know and face his accusers. Moderator Tom
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST. 10, 1901
Briggs ruled that Brother Mitchell could not argue his case. He must say whether he was guilty and produce witnesses and then take his seat. Brother Mitchell produced the following notice to prove that he had a right to question and argue his case, showing why the question of fellowship should not be withdrawn:
NOTICE TO APPEAR
You are hereby summoned to our next church-meeting, the first Monday night in August, 1901, to show cause why the hand of fellowship should not be withdrawn from you, upon the following charges:
Bronwyn Mitchell, Jr. is hereby charged with publishing the private letter of Rev. Johnson to the author of the business of the church in disclosure of the church polity and the authority of the Baptist Church, same appearing in the PLANET of July 6th, 1901.
NELSON WILLIAMS. JR."
Done by order of the church July 15, 1901
Rev. T. H. BRIGGS, Chairman;
B. P. VANDERVALL, Church Clerk.
APPEAL FOR ORDER.
Brother Mitchell thereupon appealed to the chair not to interrupt him.
He called for his accusers. Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application for the meeting and who had published the proceedings of the same church meeting in his paper of July 1st, 1901, stated that he was not the accuser, the church was the accuser. Brother Mitchell had been adjudged guilty at the last meeting. This created excitement.
Brother H. F. Bathurst demanded to know whether Brother Williams, who forged the names to the application for the meeting, had taken the first steps as set forth in the 18th chapter of Mathew and the church polity (Hiscock's New Directory for Baptist Churches)
DIDN'T WANT LAW READ.
He sent the book up to the clerk and asked him to read Page 185, Section 1 and 2.
Moderator Thomas H. Briggs declined to permit the clerk to read this Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application for a meeting would not answer.
He was also asked as to what evidence he had that Brother Mitchell had written the article. He had none except that it was in the PLANET.
Brother Mitchell should state whether he did it or not. He would not answer questions so the chair called for the other accusers. No one responded.
Brother Jonathan,] 'Brother chairman, here is Brother William Henry Davis, who said he was going to exclude Brother Mitchell to-night. Let him tell all he knows.
KNEW NOTHING
Brother Davis stated he knew nothing but that Brother Mitchell had published the church proceedings in the PLANET. He was asked to produce the paper, but he did not have a copy, neither did Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application.
THE PLANET READ.
Finally, a brother in the back part of church brought forward a copy of the PLANET and it was decided to read a report of the proceedings. It was read, taking much time, it being after 12 o'clock when the clerk completed the task.
BROTHER CARTER MAKES A DISCOVERY.
Bro. Henry G.Carter, who wore a pair of big leg white breeches and a shad-belly coat called attention to the fact that a reporter was at the window. Brother Russell was detailed by the Moderator to go out and order the reporter from premises. Chairman Briggs]. Brother Mitchell will now come forward and say whether he published that article. Brother Mitchell stated that it was the first time that he had ever known that it was the business of the accused to prove his innocence.
MUST PROVE GUILT.
It was required of his accusers to
prove his guilt. He wanted to know whether he was called to the church as John Mitchell, Jr., the member, or as John Mitchell, Jr., the publisher. The chair responded that he was called there as a member.
"Then," responded Brother Mitchell, "I enter a general denial to the charge."
BROTHER MITCHELL AND THE FIRST STEP.
He arose and stated that he would read the law called for by Brother H. F. Jonathan and which the Moderator Tom Briggs would not permit the clerk to read. It could be found on page 185, section 1st and 2d and was as follows:
THE FIRST STEP.
1. "The first member who has in wedge of the offense should, the same as in private cases, seek the offender and, if possible, remove the difficulty."
True, he is under no special obligation to do this simply because he chanced to be the first to learn the facts.
But if he can win a brother from his evil way, and remove a reproach from the Church, such would be a work of faith and a labor of love, with which any Christian might feel greatly satis-
THE REASONS GIVEN.
This personal labor should be undertaken because each member of the body suffers in any wrong inflicted on the body, and because such personal efforts are often the most effectual should there be many individual efforts, by many members at the same time, aiming at the same end; so much the more effectual would it be.
But if no one can or will pursue this course of personal private labor, or if such a course should prove successful then should the one who has knowledge to consult the pastor and deconsecrs or if a person should themselves beidential committee for such purposes, refer it to them, and leave it to their judge ment as to what further course should be taken.
THE LAST RESORT.
If they will not notice the barrier this brother could bring it up at the next business Church meeting. But even then it would be well not to give names and facts, but say a case deserved attention, and ask that a committee be appointed to which facts would be referred.
All such cases should be kept out of the church and managed privately so long as there seems hope of an effectual settlement by that means."
Brother Mitchell stated that this course had not been pursued. No one had visited him. He had only received the written communication referred to.
DEACON POWELL'S PLEA.
Deacon John S. Powell, one of the most conservative members in the church arose and asked Brother Mitchell to yield for a motion. He consented to do this. He then announced that it was plain to him that the church had erred. The whole proceedings was out of order. He moved to dismiss the case. It was seconded. Moderator Tom H. Briggs refused to put the motion, declaring it out of order. He would not hear any motion. Then pandemonium reigned Brother H. F. Jonathan denounced the action of the chair while Deacon J. C. Farley was equally emphatic. Brother W. S. Solden declared the chair to be bissed and its actions a disgrace to the church.
BROTHER BRIGGS ANGRY
This angered Moderator Thomas H. Briggs, who looking over his spectacles declared he would call on the church to discipline Brother Selden. Brother William Henry Davis, whose conduct disgraced the meeting moved that Brother Selden be silenced. This was declared carried although the chair had but a moment before announced to Deacon J. S. Powell that he would recognize no motion. On the meantime Brother John Mitch, el. Dr., created for order. He offered to retire. Up to this time he had not spoken five minutes.
TRYING TO DISCUSS THE QUESTION.
Othe remembers attempted to get the floor, including Bro. Edmund Warner. Sister Young in a lond voice declared the meeting to be shameful. She insisted that Brother Mitchell be allowed to proceed.
Bro. William Henry Davis,] "Brother Moderator, I move that she be silenced." He wanted to silence Brother Harrison Smith and Brother Jonathan. The latter replied that he was already silenced when his rights were taken from him. Brother W. H. Anderson protested against actions of the church. At this point the meeting was a veritable mob. Then quiet was in a measure obtained and Brother Mitchell read from Church polity, page 168, section 2.
UPON WHAT IT DEPENDS
The justification and the effectiveness of discipline depend not a little on the spirit with which it is exercised. It must not be exercised in a spirit of arrogance, nor of distention, nor of assured superiority, much less of vindictiveness, but of fraternal solicitude of the body. In love, impression be given the offender that there is a disposition to condemn and punish, the whole purpose is frustrated.
THE MODERATOR CORNERED.
He asked Moderator Tom H. Briggs whether the letter of Rev. W. T. Johnson was an official document to the church. He replied that it was official. He remarked Brother Mitchell, it was private one. We invited private one. Even had it been private, we
received on motion by the church it became a public document and as a part of the church as much my property as any other member's property. Brother Mitchell read from Church polity Page 178. Note 7. If a member attempts to bring before the church, or rather way make public, any matter of prison or offense, before he has fully pursued the course, according to the Gospel rule, he makes himself an offender thereby—subject to labor and d'cipline.
DIDN'T WANT TO HEAR ANY LAW
Brother Mitchell was here interrupted by the moderator. Tom H. Briggs, who said—
Brother Mitchell, this church doesn't want to hear any more of that church polity. That aint the part they want to hear. You read this. I rule that you can't read any more of it here.
Then followed the greatest confusion. Deacon Harrison Smith declared the course of the chair to be scandalous.
WAITED FOR ORDER
Brother Mitchell waited for order, Brother Robert Watkins, who was guard at the penitentiary during the Adjuster rule was recognized, over all of the others and in a sing-song voice said: "Brother Mitchell had published the proceedings of this church in his paper from Maine to Mexico and I move that he be made to come forward and ask pardon of this church." Brother John Mitchell, Jr., called the attention of Brother Tom H. Briggs that by a vote of the church he had the floor in his own defense, he had not been able to take up his case, in fact, had not spoken fifteen minutes, all told, being interrupted either by the chair or the brethren on the floor.
RESTED IT ON THE BIBLE
He rested his case on the Holy Bible. Every parliamentarian knew, according to Hisock's guide, a motion could not be made while he held the floor. Brother Mitchell never lost his temper, but was quiet and respectful throughout. Sister Mildred A. Cross, who had been an interested spectator, denounced the proceedings as the most disgraceful she had ever seen. "It was," she declared, "worse than a ministrel show. Brother Mitchell had not been treated properly and all knew it."
BROTHER CROSS ANGRY.
She was int rrupted by Brother William Henry Davis, who moved that she be silenced. He acted in a measure like a madman, until Brother David R. Cross, her husband moved in that direction with an evident intention of protecting his wife. Then she was permitted to proceed. Her ringing utterances produced a profound sensation. The chair refused to recognized a motion to adjourn and put the question declaring it carried.
WANTED HIM TO ASK PARDON.
Moderator Briggs,] "Nothing is in order but for Brother Mitchell to come forward and ask pardon." Brother Briggs waited, finally looking in the direction of Brother Mitchell urged him to come forward. Brother H. F. Jonathan hastened to the side of Brother Mitchell. Then Brother Mitchell stated that he would come forward if the chair desired. Then
would come forward if the chair desired. There was silence at once and Brother Mitchell announced that he came forward to continue his defense. He had not committed any crime and was not guilty of any public offense. The church had voted to hear him and had not done so. He did not recognize the motion to ask pardon. It was out of order.
A CALL TO EXCLUDE.
Brother Briggs,] Brethren, he will not ask pardon and the church must exercise its authority.
Brother Nelson Williams, Jr., who forged the names to the application for the meeting said, "I move that the right hand of fellowship be withdrawn from Brother Mitchell." It was seconded. "The question was put.
Then followed a scene long to be remembered, Deacon J. C. Farley, Brother H. F. Jonathan, Deacon Harrison Smith, Deacon R. J. Bass, Brother Edmund Warner Deacon Jas. Wilder arose and in impassioned language warned the church against such a step.
NEVER SAW SUCH A PROTEST
The oldest member had never seen such an emphatic protest.
Finally Deacon James Wilder was recognized and with a voice choked with emotion he declared that the church would not in five years recover from such abuse. This young man has not committed murder. He is guilty of no heinous crime and to exclude him would be wrong.
A REMARKABLE SCENE
Then came cries of sit down. Vote! Question! Question! And still Deacon Wilder pleaded. He had been on the other side, but he claimed that such a step would injure the church. "Oh yes," he said sadly, "like the Jews, you cry, 'Crucify him.'" Then followed Deacon Benjamin Harris, one of the oldest Deacons in the church. "Don't do that, brethren! Stop and consider, the church is in error. You have not heard Brother Mitchell. I warn you against such action. In vain he pleaded. Brother Richard Carter pleaded with uplifted hands. Then followed Brother W. H. Anderson, who declared that Brother Mitchell
had committed 'no crime against the church.
TRIED IN VAIN
Others tried to speak. It was useless. The clamor was deafening. Above the din, the chair declared the call for the previous question ordered and announces the vote 56 to 64 in favor of the exclusion of Brother John Mitchell, Jr. There was wide spread condemnation of the proceedings. Sister Mildred Cross was outspoken as were others who hastened to sadly grasp Brother Mitchell by the hand. He however was least concerned of all and came out with the books of law with which he had hoped to enlighten the memb r of the congregation. S e d u l one of the most remarkable and disgraceful meetings ever held in the First Baptist Church.
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Brother, William Henry Davis stated to Brother H. F. Jona h n that there was some more work to do, as they intended to get rid of the Deacon Board.
Rev. W. T. Johnson was the guest of True Reformer R. T. Hill, last Thursday.
Mrs. H. L. Johnson left this week for Baltimore.
Mrs. A. R. Carr is now at Bayoune, N. J.
Miss Florence Coleman after an illness of several weeks is convalescent.
Carrier Thomas Byrd enjoyed his birthday Monday, August 5th, having been born in 1847; in Stafford Co., Va. He is now 64 years of age and as sprightly as a three year old.
Miss Lucy J. Morton of Washington, D. C., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Holland Powell, No. 1513 Taylor Street. She will be glad to see her many friends.
Mrs. Geo. W. Richardson left the city Aug. 7th to visit mother and sister in Tennessee. She will be gone several months. We hope her a pleasant stay.
Mrs. John T. Allen and daughter, Peachye, of 521 N. 12th street, have left the city to spend the rest of the summer with friends and relatives in Baltimore and Washington.
Miss Ella L. Scott is now in the Catskill Mountains, N. Y. recuperating.
Mrs. Abbye Webley left the city Thursday, Aug. 8th, for Plainfield, N. J., to spend some time visiting her children.
Don't forget the Old Boys Sunday night, Aug. 11th to Washington.
Grand Chief J. W. Thompson left for Atlantic, N. J. Wednesday for 15 days vacation.
Mr. J. M. Busner of Alexandraia who has been recuperating at Farmville, Va., was in the city last week en-route home. His daughter, Miss Amanda is now the guest of Miss Mary H. Johnson, 516 N. Harrison St., where she will be pleased to see her friends.
The price to Bothwell Park is only 50 cents; children, 25 cents, Tuesday, Aug. 20th, to the t. Olivet Baptist Church S. S. pic-nic.
All preachers, teachers, collectors, clerks, coachmen, teamsters, washwomen, housemaids, cooks, shoemakers, carpenters, barbers, painters, printers, musicians, dressmakers, blacksmiths, general laborers, and in fact every class of laborers are cordially invited to attend as it will benefit you.
Monday night, Aug. 19th, 1901; League Hall, 412 N. 3rd St.
JAMES-CARTER The marriage of Mrs. Sarah Nicholas Carter to Mr. Wm. H. James will take place on August 20th 8 p. m. at the home of her mother, Mrs. Nicholas, No. 1212 Christian St. Phila. Reception at No. 703 Gilmer St., Richmond, No. 37 from 8 p. m. to 11 p. m. Friends and acquaintances are invited. No cards.
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SMITH—Sister Martha Scott Smith, of Powhatan Co., died on July 26th, 1901, at the age of 60 years, two months and twenty-six day. She was a faithful member of Hollywood Church for 23 years. She leaves a husband, two daughters and four sons, the latter residing in Pittsburg. She died in the full triumph of faith. She was a loving mother and a faithful wife.
Jesus loved her and we love her still. A vacant place is in our home, which never can be filled.
HER CHILDREN.
BROOKS—Died July 23, 1901 at his residence, N. 3rd St., Squire Brooks, husband of Mrs. Jane Brooks, in the 85th year of his age. He was a patient sufferer and the faith. He told his wife she had done all she could for him and that he would leave him.
He leaves a wife, one son, and a sister to mourn their loss. He was born in 1816.
He was the brother of Christopher Grant and nephew of Collin T. Payne of this city.
Explaining the objects and aims of organizing every class of labor in order to benefit the employer and employee.
Every class of labor, trade and profession are cordially invited to attend.
If we are to hold the work by which we have lived for years, we must organize every class of labor and try to excel.
$150. Endowment Paid.
NEWPORT NEWS, VA., July 19, 191.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia,
One Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($150) in payment of the death claim of Sir Anthony Black, who was a member of Damon Lodge, No. 12, K. of P., N. A.,
S. A. E., A., A. and A.
Signed: MILLIE BLACK.
Witnesses:
J. E. Byrd,
W. T. Bell,
J. J. Booker, D. D. G. C.
REV. DR.GRAHAM'S CALL TO DUTY
RICHMOND, VA., AUG. 5, 1901.
To the Baptists of Virginia.
Dear Brethren;—
The call from the officers of the Baptist S. S. Convention of Virginia, which meets in Lynchburg Aug. 21st, must be heard, must be answered with strong delegations. This Convention means as much to the young Negroes of this state as does the Constitutional Convention. The old S. S. Convention which meets this year at Charlottesville is bitterly opposed to all denominational enterprises, fostered by the great Negro Baptist Family of this country. They have openly condemned our great National Baptist Convention, our Publishing House at Nashville, Tenn., the Va. Baptist State Convention and the Theological Seminary and College fact they have condemned every thing they look like Negro Baptists Proprietorships Management. W who are going up to Lynchburg have pledged ourselves to the causeof our denomination and race.
Therefore, Brethren, let us go up to Lynchburg with a strong determination to do battle for the right.
Yours for the cause,
W. F. GRAHAM
aug 10 97
A Pleasant Surprise.
Mrs. Mildred Johnson of 1000s St. Peter St., was very much surprised last Tuesday night, July 30th, about eleven o'clock, when, in answer to a ring of the bell, she found herself being pressed and surrounded on all sides by a number of dear friends and familiar faces. It was indeed a surprise and an occasion of much merriment.
Mrs. Johnson was presented by the members of Mildred Court, No. 242 with a handsome rocker, with head and feet stets. The presentation speech was masterly and entertainingly made by Sir Knight S. P. Robinson, of Royal Lodge, after which refreshments were served.
Mrs. Johnson expressed thanks to her young Court for their appreciation in her mild and sincere way, being very much affected by the honor shown her.
All expressed themselves as having spent a very pleasant and enjoyable time in being well into the early hour of morning when the last of the guests departed.
Woman's Central League Training School and Hospital.
Classes in Cooking, Dressmaking, the (Taylor and White System), Domestic Service, Trained Nursing and Care and Feeding of Children, etc.
School opens Sept 16th, 1901. Class lists are now open at the Building, 412 and 414 N. 3rd St. Richmond, Va.
Hospital open all the year.
BETTIE BROOKS, Pres.;
LENA V. JACKSON, Sec'y;
Dr. R. E. JONES,
Gen. Director & Fin. Agt.
Address all communications to Dr. Jones, 412 N. 3rd St.
1—mo
WANTED—50 men to learn Cooking,
and 20 men to learn Trained Nursing.
A great demand for both.
Y. M. C. A. Notes.
Chairman Stephen Braxton conducted two meetings in the city jail last Sunday. Committee conducted two meetings in the almshouse and visited 25 sick persons.
The boys meeting was very interesting last Sunday. All took part.
Brother F. W. Quarles addressed the men last Sunday. Subject: "The Drag Net." Everybody was pleased. Our brother has been asked to repeat.
General Secretary S. C. Burrell was invited to Suffolk last Sunday to preach for Rev. M. B. Hucless. He was pleased to find Revs. Hucless, J. J. Woodson, Rev. Gaines and Rev. Thomas doing so well in the cause of Christ. Revs. Hucless and Woodson are young men who deserve much credit. They still have the spirit of the Y. M. C. A. work. Young men, do not compromise with the world and you will succeed. You have our prayers.
Meetings in the jail and almshouse Sunday 11 a. m. and 3 p. m.
Boys' meeting Sunday at 4 p. m.
Brother A. D. Deilly will address
men at 5:30 p. m. All men are invi
Do not forget to tell your friend a
the Y. M. C. A. night school.
Always reliable, first-class seer
the Old Boys excursion to Was-
Aug. 11th. Go with them!
eee a
SAREE Te ate oe aie ee eA ERM Iss nen be ee
SORENESS ace es Maen
» LIKE OTHER MEN
= By Frederic Van Rensselaer Dey, a
% Author of “The Brotherhood of Silence,” “The “=:
e Quality of a Sin,” Etc
3 Copyright, 901, by Frederic Van Rensselaer Dey. =
ARN te patina ante me mtn a anate
Bp SS Se Ae TESS Fade CIS Dee PR ee ge eae oes
2
CHAPTER V.
CRAIG THOMPSON'S WISDOM.
Tasg] Precedented In the experience
that others had known of
Bim, but it was true, and when at the
close of the second day they arrived at
the ranch Lisle remembered with sur-
prise that be had never known his fa-
ther to be so companionable witb a
stranger before, but in this case he had
Appeared to find much that was con-
genial in thelr tastes, It Is possible
that bis owa intense love for Lisle per-
mitted lim more readily to appreciate
the good qualities of another who also
Joved him. It may be that he intul-
tively foresaw the time when Lisle
Would need a friend and that be dis-
covered in Thompson the man whom
he would select for that position.
Thompson's ranch adjoined | Max-
Well’s, although 30 miles separated the
buildings which the respective owners
called home. In that land of maguitl-
cent distances such an interval of
space was trivial, but Ricbard Max-
well had always Isolated himself from
his neighbors ina way that utterly re-
Pulsed frieudly advances, so that he
was known more as a ranch owner
than as a man, but now he volunteered
every outward demonstration that he
desired to create more friendly rela-
tions with bis nearest netshbor.
Daring the Journey to the ranch
Lisle’s father permitted It to be under-
stood that he preferred that no refer-
ence should be made to the lasso duel.
He seemed to have blotted It out of bis
memory as utterly as though It had not
‘eccurred.
At home the old life was taken up
‘where it bad been left off, and with the
exception of the presence of a guest—
and within the memory of Lisle an in-
Mited guest had never before been a
Part of the housebold—it was the same
fs It bad always been. Studies were
resnmed at the polut where they bad
een abandoned, occupations recom-
menced where they had broken off, and
everything resumed tts accustomed
routine, for the master of Crescent and
Cross never permitted anything to in-
ferfere with the rules of his daily life.
Rut the week of Thompson's stay
came to an end, and Lisle was surpris-
ed when he remembered that during
the entire time he had rarely been
‘lone with their guest—never, in tact,
except at such times as they passed
upon the broad veranda, where the
old frontiersman loved to sit and smoke
and chat with the “kid,” interspersing
his stories and anecdotes with whole-
fome advice that was always given In
bis inimitably blunt and forcible man-
zer. Lisle was often astonished by the
deep learning of the strange man,
Whose customary disregard of correct
English was at once a mixture of as-
sumption and carelessness. The youth’s
fatuition revealed to him that behind
and beneath the rough exterior of his
new friend there existed a fund of ten-
Gerness and sympathy most profound.
He was Uke a lump of rich quartz—
the Intrinsic value was all there in-
cased within the roughest and hardest
of substances.
On the other hand Craig also met
witb surprises which puzzled him
greatly, although be made no com-
ment unless to Lisle In person, One
of them came during an evening when
Richard Maxwell was not present.
Craig was smoiing bis pipe oa the ve:
randa, loing back in one of the com-
fortable chairs. when he beard the p-
ano.
“That's right. boy.” be called out.
“I'm tn Just the mood for some music.
Couldn't you sing something for a
ebange?”
There was no reyiy in words, but the
melody changed, and presently a su-
Perb voice, in tender contralto, floated
out to him. With Increasing power it
Swelled Into the pathetle alr of Ash-
€r’s “Alice” until the clear high notes
Swept out across the starlit plain so
sweetly, so purely. so longingly that
Craig forgot his pipe, forgot Lisle, for-
fot Where he was, forgot everything
except a memory that the song cou-
Jored up. His bead sank tower and
fower upon bis breast, tears stood in
his eyex aud splashed anbeeded upon
bis tightly clasped bands, and when
the melody ceased be did not move.
Lisle left the piano and went out to
-htm, but Craig Thompson was not
Aware of his approach until he felt a
touch upon bis shoulder.
} Then he started up with a ery as one
, Who has been rudely awakened from a
dream,
j “Come here, boy,” he said in a tone
‘that shook with emotion, “I want to
look at you. Who taught you that
Song? Who gave you that vole? What
strange mixture are you?”
“Craig,” said Lisle in sueprise, not
heeding the questions, “what is the
matter? Are those tears in your eyes—
tears because I sang to you?"
“Yes, they're tears. Do you think
that 1 am ashamed of them? Men shed
tears qnly when they are necessary to
keep the heart from bursting. Mine
Durst long ago, but somehow I got it
together sgain, and maybe the cement
I used wears a little with time, Any-
yw, that song of yours opened a seain
two in the old wound. That song
gs back memories, and memories
piizin things to have around If they
't Just the sort that a feller wants.
a ta hk een ae oe
| SO mae. 6S xed Ke because ber name
"was Alice, like the song. It's a good
many yeats since I saw her, Lisle, and
1 don't know whether she Is allve or
dead. Don't you see, kid, why my cal-
lous old heart tilled up with tears so
that It would have burst If 1 hadn't
shed a few?" ,
een conc Gee ae
I selected that song.”
“Don't you be sorry; be glad. It
saved me from one of tay fits, for one
of ‘em bas been coming on ever since
T have been here."
“Shall 1 ing something else for you?”
“No; don't sing: don't play. I don’t
want to get the taste of that one out
of my mouth. Sit here and talk with
me. We won't have another evening
together for a long time—maybe nev.
paar
“Why do you say that?”
“I'm going to light out in the morn
jing before that ft comes on. You
think I am older than your father, don’t
you?"
“T should say that you are, by sev:
eral years.”
“Well, I reckon I am In some ways.
It comes of having fits, 1 suppose, but
Dick Maxwell Is five years older than
Tam. He's 48 or thereabout, according
to bis say. I look about 58 but I'm
only 43. Do you know what I am get-
ting at?”
oe”
“This: I'm preaching, Iad. Every one
of those years that rest on my hea!
without having come into my life wa»
put there by a piece of scoundrelist
| that 1 committed when I was just the
age that you are now, and I hadn't any
more excuse for getting Into it than
you have now elther. I don't say that
You'll ever get into a place where you
may be likely to do ansthing that ain't
right, but if you do there will be time
to think.-there always Is, for thinking
ts mighty quick work —and {f that
time ever does come you remember
what I have sald Just now and stop
Jong enovgh to bum that song over to
yourself before you cut loose from the
outfit and go it alone. Life ain't going
to be all roses for you, Lisle Maxwell,
and don't you forget It! Your father
hasn't brought you up right, to my way
of thinking, You needn't get buffy. 1
ain't criticising him. Um analyzing
you. You don't know any more about
‘the world outside of this ranch than a
hog knows about skating, and that
ain't much to speak of. I've been
watching son while I've been bere.
and there are a whole lot of things that
you have got to learn between now and
the me when you will have to go It
alone, and nobody ever knows when
that time Is coming. It's Just lke a
blamed Injun and draws a bead on
your vitals from behind a bush or a
Tock when you ain't looking and it's a
dead shot every time. You can't throw
@ Joop over circumstance and drag It
along a willlng captive, Ike we did that
steer. It's got a way of slipping out
and roping you Instead, and you've got
to post sourself about things so that
you will be ready to keep one hand out
in just about the same way that sou
Poked yours through the loop of Jim
Cummings’ riata over In the Smoky. 1
don't wonder that some of the boys
have sald that yon look like a woman.
You do, and you do not. You do be
| cause yon have got a tender beart. like
@ woman's. and it sticks ont through
Your masculine garb Just as plain as
| daylight when you ain't thinking. Dick
| Maxwell bas trained you right enough
as far as he bas gone, for all I know,
but he's a good ways from going far
) enough. 1 want you to make me a
"promise, Lisle."
| “What sort of a promise, Craig?”
“You'll be 21 some day. and when
the day comes that sees you that old I
Want you to promise that you will ride
over to my ranch and see me. Will
you?"
“Certainly. 1 will ride over a great
many tmes in the meanwhile, too, if
you care to bave me.”
“That's all rigbt. Of course I care to
[have sou, but T want you to remember
that promise anyhow.”
“T' remember It."
“And now, while we've got a chance
to talk, 1 want to say one thing more
to you about women, This {dea that
you've got that they are abominations
on the face of the earth Is all wrong, if
Your dad did teach Ht to you, and some
day I'll prove it to yon. I've been look-
{ng through your Ibrary. and there
ain't a book there that will tell you a
Dlamed thing about them—not cne. To
‘my way of thinking you ought to bave
a few, even if you read ‘em against the
wisbes of the old man. ‘They won't
hurt yon any, and in my opinion they
will do you a lot of ood. Do you
know where that old corral Is, down in
the southwest corner of my ranch?"
“Your
“Well, next Sunday you ride over
there, It uin't much more than a doz
en miles. I'll leave some books there
for you to read. Maybe I'll meet you
there if you come about sundown.
‘They will be books that will teach you
something that you ought to know, and
don't, and—here comes Dick. Lord! I
never delivered such a tong lecture be-
fore in my life. It all comes of your
singing that song.”
When on the following morning Lisle
BS ab oP ghey Aertennbahisr B= paige, eesesk
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND VIRGINIA
—————————————————————
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of the riige aa Thom yaun dxappeared.
“Maybe you wen't ile what F aay,
Maxwell, but I'm going to say Tt
whether you go or not. You ain't do-
ing right by that kid. He's too much
Uke a woman in some things, and he's
too blanked Inorant about a Tot of
other things that every man and ev.
ery woman on the top of God's green
earth ought to know. While you're
sigs home Just turn over in your
‘mind what would become of your boy
‘if you should be killed before you get
there. Good day.”
“Good day.” responded Maxwell, and
be sat there In his saddle for an hoor,
with his eyes xed upon the summit of
the ridge over which Craig Thompson
“Rad disappeared.
pale
CHAPTER VL
Nor?”
ISLE rode to the old corral at
liga) c- He found the books, but
BES not bis friend, and after wait-
ing until_bope of bis arrival was past
he turned bis borsc’s head homeward,
and after that be spent much of bis
time while In the house perusing his
hew treasures. They were simply good,
wholesome stories and biographies
which dealt with the noblest types of
Women, nnd to the youth they opened
up a new and unexplored field which
possessed a strange and unaccountable
fascination for hho. Craig Thompson
had selected them with great care, and
had be known the character of the mis-
sion work they were to perform he
could wot have exercised better Judg-
ment. They contained nothing that
was calculated to shock the awakening
faculties of Lisle Maxwell's emotional
nature, but to his immature percep-
tions they were flied with unthinkable
revelations as beautiful and profound
as they were mysterious. They did
what nothing else had ever done—they
set him thinking —and be began to
dream and wonder and surmise upon
subjects and theories which never be-
fore had been permitted access to his
mind. Richard Maxwell could guard
Against outward and visible assaults
‘pon the fortress that be had built up
around his son. but he could not con-
tend with this subtle foe to his theories,
And the battle went on under bis eyes
without once revealing Its existence.
There was one conversation between
them which rather startled the father,
and possibly it had something to do
with a serious incident which immedi
ately followed It. It Is true, however,
that be believed that the invisible for:
tress that be had erected about his son
Was wo nearly mpregnable for suc:
cessful assault.
“Father,” said Liste on that occa-
sion, “I will be 19 in June.”
“Yes, Lisle,” was the reply. “You
are almost a man grown—and still a
child.” Riebard Maxwell sighed deep-
ly, and his mind leaped backward over
the fight of years.
“And still a child,” echoed Lisle.
“Will you tell me why I am still a
enila?*
“I mean, my son, that you are still
@ child to your father, You will al
Ways be that. Sons who are loved for
ever remain ax chitiren to their par
ents, 17 Is one of the elements tn Pie
economy of creation
Lisle was silent for several mopients:
then, raisins bie head, he sald slowly:
“P have in mind several things that
are ypuzeling me. 1 wish that you
would discuss them with me now.”
“Tell me what they are. You know
thay 1 am always anxious to reason
upon perplexities with you."
“1 think of three, sir, each one sug-
gested by the replies that you have al-
ready made. 1 will approach them one
by one.”
“Very well The first, then?”
“I am still a child; not in the sense
to which you refer—that Is, not solely
in that respect—but in every way.
Why bave I not matured more nearly
to manhood? While I was with you
in the Smoky valley I saw several
young men who were younger than I
am. There was something about them
that Je different from anything I have
ever known or experienced. It was tn-,
tangible, If you please, but It was nev-
ertheless real, because I could not dis-
cover that it existed between them
individually, ouly between them, or
any one of them, and me. They were
rougher, brawnier, heavier in voice, in
canner, fa figure, than I am. Their
‘features were _ coarser — everything
about them was different. Hair grows
upon thelr faces, as it does on yours,
Will you explain this difference to
me?”
“Your training has been different
from theirs, Lisle.”
“Pardon me, sir, but I cannot under-
stand why that should make all the
diftereuce. There were subtle differ-
ences which I have not words to ex-
plain because I do not know bow to
define them, but I could feel them.
One day, while we were sorting our
cattle, two of them sat upon their
horses close beside you. I studied
them, and I studled you. Afterward
I rode up and took a place beside
you myself, and then I studied over|
them again. The same difference did
hot manifest itself between them and
you us it did between them and me
or between you:and me. Do I make
myself understood? I mean that In
some ways those strangers were more
Uke you than t, who am your son, am
Uke you. The same subtle something
which distinguishes those young men
from me does not separate them from
you, and the same tnexplicable ditrer-
ence that exists between them and me ,
‘T could discover also between you a:
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se N ea ANY, sgranow on the market, and knowing to aeertalnty thst anany of thasegre trees pace ; >i
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ae s QIN siraeen this erent paper. In the year Isl our late seeretary, Mrs. SM. Moore throug, YG TAPES i
ig 3] ‘abecs’ one? S fortunate circumstance, acouired the receips for OZONO.. it was nol oflered for ssle et S >|
aw | Sa purchased to any extent until 1875, when it was put upon the market and met with marked bros ar >|
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at Bll tovic that has ever done my hair any hair togrow. Jong and straight, soft and Sue, and as beautiinl as at April morning, Now, S78: I bave used your preparations [J
ax food. If has catned my hair to grom Whenever a genuine ardcie appears chon the marker taetumte ng T CROCE NONE Bier nave doncnors terre ia
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bot) Sit ol Htslgitenerss many of whch ane gunasiee aang he jot fat promers at halt
rait-| 16 image tothe halraad scalp, and tne colored guste baat rg oe ana Golnk Brent
past | ESI hit aed yihanina! ssh al bate npa tu i Me he et
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ood, =| Fue Sela with ap tron-clad guarantes to do all that 1g elatmed for tt, or we will forfeit =
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be | SIIB Sarid 0! koot. Everrone that uses tt straighten the, halt vat whet they send the Meniraian Gre, Aagertsatng, remedies {© says: My hair war short and knotty ff
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nat
me. 1 am not Ike other men. Why
am I not?"
“Am I like other men whom you
know, Lisle? Am I lke Craig Thomp
son?” asked Richard Maxwell.
“Yes, you are in the sense to which
1 refer—in that subtle sense which |
cannot define, It ts In the air you
breathe, In the way you breathe it, In
the unspoken understanding between
you and other men, or, since you have
mentioned a name, between you and
Craig Thompsoo—an understanding Ip
which I have no part or place.
“These subtleties, Lisle, are freaks of
the imagination whieh result from your
habits of study. Your life has been dif.
ferent from the lives of any other young
man I ever knew. It is my love for
you that bax made It so. T have kept
you tear me and away from the world
which 1 have repudiated. 1 have
tanght you differently, trained you dit:
fervently, led yon to think differently.
Your manner of tiving. your methods
of study, your isolation from strangers,
have, combined, created the differences
that you discover. Your Imagtnation
has emphasized and maguitied them.
‘That ts all.”
Lisle sighed and shook bis bead neg-
atively.
“You do not or you wiN not under.
stand,” be sald. “Your reply does not
comprehend the question. It is like
building a house without windows. 1
am your son. You are my father,
Should not father and son be alike?”
“Sometimes they are very much
alike; sometimes they are very ditrer-
ent. There is no rule which governs
Such @ condition. Step with me to the
mirror. Have you forgotten bow great-
ly we resemble each other, eliminating
the difference In age?”
“No; it le true that our features are
alike. Our forms are different. Fre-
quently I see you at work without
your coat. You never permit me to re-
move mine except here in the house.
‘The men remove theirs and place them
across thelr saddles. Their figures,
thus disclosed, are not the same as
mine. Yours Is not the same as mine,
I have studied myself before my own
mirror. 1 know that I am cast in a
different mold from other men. | know
that you are cast in the eame mold as
other men. I am as different from you
as the day is different from the night.
‘Tell me truly, am I like a woman?”
“Yes, you bave the best qualities of
oman and the best qualities of man.
Strangers see and recognize both: hence
‘such remarks.”
“Again you fall abort of a comnlute
response to my question,” sighed Lisle.
“We will pass It for the present. You
mentioned my parents. Who are ot
were they? You are one; who was the
other?”
“Your mother.”
“You have always@tused to speat
of her to me. Will you not do so now?”
“No.”
“Was pot my mother—a being whom
you have taught me to despise—a won:
an?”
“Yes.”
“Does my mother live?”
“We will not discuss your mother.”
“I will not urge you, father. I have
learned to know that the subject ts
painful to you. although you will not
tell me why It Is so. May a child dur
Ing Its growth change from woman to
man or from min to woman?"
“Human beings come loto the world
by the will of God. ‘They Uve out the
period of existence allotied to each of
them and pass away in order to wake
room for others. God appoints that
they shall be men or women. Human.
ity has no power Iu the selection—a
newcomer Is not permitted to choose
between the two entitles, They zrow
up Uke the sagebrua:, some of them:
others Hke the trees which [ planted
Around this house when you were very
small. You have teen in our orchard
with me when you bave seen me prune
and graft amoug the trees. You have
seen me take a tender shoot from one-
that Is the child—and affix it ro anor:
or of a different species: yon have seen
that shoot grow to maturity, Just ay
you are growing: you have seen it bear
fruit different in quality and texture,
fo size and in shape from the other
fruit produced by that xaine tree.”
“¥es. but what te thar tree to which
you attach the shoot’ 1s it the father
or iv It the mother?”
“It ts both; it is the father and the
mother.”
“You are replying now to the third
question I would have asked, for it
eoncerné} creation. Children are not
grafted upon their fathers and moth-
¢rs as you graft the shoots upon the
trees in our orchard.”
“The principle is the same, Lisle,
throughout all nature. ‘The law of cre-
ation fs the same in all things, from
the alfalfa growing on the river bot-
toms to the sagebrush on the hills,
from the trees in our orchard through
the animal kingdom to humanity. You
know what evolution Is. I have taught
You that. The younger and weaker
Plants, whether they are vegetable or
Animal, are the result of laws which
are controlled by the Supreme Father
‘of all and which are and forever will
remain a mystery to all mankind
‘They evolve into the older and stron
ger product. Let us end this discus
ston now. On the day when you are
21 we will resume these subjects. Come
to me then.”
“Is 21 the crucial age of man? Axe
all things revealed to him then? Will
I experience a change when I arrive
at that age? Will all things be made
clear to me then?”
“All things which puzzle you now
will be made clear to you then, my. sen.
I dread the day.”
“Why?”
“It can bring no Joy to you—nothing
but misery to me,”
“Rather!”
“Go, Lisle! Leave me now. Remain
as you have been until that time. Aft-
er that”—
“What, father?”
Richard Maxwell did not reply, and
after waiting a moment Lisle silently
left the room and the house, mounted
his horse and galloped away through
the starlight alone. He was: not un.
happy. far from it, but he was pos
sessed by the spirit of Investigation,
and without his knowledge he was
borne as rapidly as his horse could run
straight toward the immediate solution
of all his vexing problems.
pa mrevED)
English by Creoles,
The intelligent struggles of the Cu-
ban teachers with English have fur-
aished us wita a good many pretty
stories, Oue day not long ago the
teachers were invited to some sort of
an evening function at the Longfellow
house on Brattle steset. It happened
that shortly before the hour for he
Assembly some ladies who were in
front of that house were politely ap-
proached by ® gyoup of male Cuban
teachers, who, with their hate in thelr
aands, stood bowing. “If you please,
dear madams,” said their spokesman,
‘we are invited at this house to-night.
We wish to attend. We were been on
an excursion to the distance, and bave
aot the time to ge to our house. So
that we wear, ax you ses, our day dress.
Perhaps you caa tell us itit would be
permitted us to go to the reeeption in
our duy dress? Lf it would not, then
certainly shall we take the time to go
to our home and put onour night dress.”
The ladies assured em that ther
would db ‘mueh better to go as they
were than to put on their night dress,
and they bowed gravely and gratefully
and withdrew.—Detroit Post.
A Nelson Reitc.
An interesting plece of history
hangs around the section of the fore-
mast of Nelson's flagship, the Victory,
which King Edward has just presented,
together with other relics, to the mu-
seum of the Royal United Service insti-
tution in Whitehall. The mast in
question, the one against which the
great admiral was leaning when he
received his fatal wound at Trafalgar,
was originally erected in small tem-
ple in the grounds of Bushey lodge,
then occupied by William IV., to whom
it was presented. While there a pair
of more than ordinarily aggressive
robins built their nest in the shot-
hole which went completely through
the mast, and reared a brood of young
ones, to which his majesty and Queen
Adelaide were greatly attached. Sub-
sequently the relic was removed to the
dining-room, where it supported the
famous bust by Chantrey; and upon
the death of George IV. it waa placed
in the guaed chamber at Windsor
castle, with the inscription: “Auspice
Gulietmo IV."—London News.
Ee Fy ae en ee
* London paper has discovered a
Chimese picture that represents—or
is supposed to represent—Noub's ark
eating on the top of Mount Ararat.
The picture is of great antiquity. As
is well known, the religious literature
of almost every nation and race con-
tains an account of a deluge, but a
Chinese manuscript recently un-
earthed follows very closely the story
as recorded in the Bible. It is par-
ticularly interesting in that the roof
of the Chinese ark is of the gable
variety associated with the Noah’s
arks which proye such entertaining
toys for our youngsters. The Chinese
picture, however, shows a double-
storied vessel, and, so far from there
being only one window in the root,
there are windows in every possible
space.—Chicago Record-Herald.
Tent of Sobriety.
Agent—Allow me to impress upon
you the good qualities of our flooring.
In the whole width of the room there
Will not be a single crack.
Mrs, Bender—Oh, dear, then 1
wouldn't care for it. You see, I always
Uke a long, straight crack for Henry
to walk when he comes home.—Cbie
eago Daily News.
oS AA me
Tea ARNE: =
" We ; Aca F
a Qy
f YY
\
SATURDAY, AUG. 10, 1901
< SAS Cras
ese al aaa
GSA ERS ww &
FIRST UNION FLAG CAPTURED.
Bee ee
nthe 4
The first union flag to be captured
and the first union officer to be taken
prisoner in a fight during the civil war
are in New York city. The officer is
R. M. Shurtleff, who wus a volunteer.
‘He has the flag, says the St. Louis Re-
public. :
It is blood stained and torn. Hecdr-
ied it while on picket duty near Hamp-
ton, Va., on the morning of July 19,
2861, when a small confederate party
lying in ambush, wounded him and an-
other officer, and took them prisoners,
Mr. Shurtleff was the first prisoner;
his brother officer, who was taken cap-
tive @ few minutes later, died about a
year afterward; Maj. Rowling, « third
member of the union party and a war
correspondent, was killed.
The flag returned to the possesston
of Mr. Shurtleff in September, 1885. Tt
was handed over to him by Col. J. M.
Sandidge, leader of the confederates
who had’ made the attack from am-
bush.
Mr. Shurtleff was a lieutenant and
adjutant of the Ninety-ninth New York
volunteers, who were encamped in
Hampton, Va. Gen. Max Weber had
sent Capt. Jenkins, Liens Shurtlef
and three other members of the Nine.
ty-ninth volunteers to reconnoiter for
confederate picket¥ on the night of
July. 18,1861. The Dying Party was
accompanied by Maj. Siowlins.
Owing to several union scouting par
ties having fired upon union soldiers,
orders iad issued from headquarters
that some member or members of ev.
ery scouting party should carry one or
a
hia ae
ARR ae, <
(ape
Ade Cree 7s
Eg re, a
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els ee,
pooner hae, en?
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=
Sug Gain oon aca
more union flags, to wave in order to
prevent further mistakes. Lieut.
Shurtleff carried a flag in one hand
for his party.
They journeyed past the New Mar-
ket bridge and saw in the distance the
confederate pickets. Near the bridge
John M. Sandidge, a member of the
Charles City (Va.) troop, with his son
George, another trooper named Bur-
dette Terrett and a guide, saw the
union party and hid in the woods.
Sandidge was the leader of the con-
federate party. He afterward rose to
the rank of colonelin the confederate
army. He decided that he would wait
until the union party had returned
from their scouting and attack it from
ambush. Sandidge believed that the
federals might capture some confed-
erates, and that his party would be
able to rescue them.
‘The union party returned im the
morning by the New Market Bridge
road and came to the point where the
confederates lay in ambush. Col. San-
didge gave this deserfption of the af-
fair:
“We were each to pick out e mamand
thus make the best use of our ammuni-
tion. At about seven o'clock they ap-
peared, the three officers abreast,
whose names, as afterward ascer-
tained, were Maj. Rowlins, Capt. Jen-
kins and Lieut. Shurtleff. "When they
were some 20 paces distant we fired,
Rowlins fell, shot through the head.
“Shurtleff was wounded in the arm
and side by Terrett. Capt. Jenkins,
who was third in the repk, wae, un-
touched, as my son George had not
fired.”
Col. Sandidge then related how Capt.
Jenkins had continued fighting until
he was badly wounded in the breast.
Capt. Jenkins was not captured, how-
ever, until after Lieut. Shurtleff.
“Having reloaded my gun,” cop-
tinued Col. Sandidge, “I returned to
Shurtleff. Aiming the weapon at him,
I demanded the number of his party
and their whereabouts, He said they
had taken to the woods. Tordered him
to get up and call on his companions
to surrender. This he did, but they did
not appear,
“Shurtleff was badly shot. At the
time he was wounded he was carrying
a small-sized union flag. This was used
to stanch the blood that flowed from
his wound.
“The union flag captured on thts oc-
casion was the first taken in the war
and was carefully preserved. After
having been displayed im Richmond it
waa restored to me.
“The sizht of it naturally recalled
recollections of the union soldier who
had borne it so bravely, and I often
wondered whether he had survived the
events of the war. It was my desire
to ascertain his fate, and if he were
still living to send back the bloody
teouhy of civil strife.”
“This description of the ambush was
given by Col. Sandidge in 1885 in New
Orleans. He had been trying to locate
Mr. Shurtleff for several years, and
Gnally did succeed in learning in the
summer of 1585 that the man he wished
to reach was a New York artist, who
had @ camp in the Adirondacks. After
an interchange of letters, Mr. Shurt-
leff received the flag in September of
chat year.
Cob. Sundidge said in # letter accom-
panying the flag: “Asa mite from the
past to the future please accept the
flag—no longer of war, but of per.
petual peace, alliance and friendehip.”
Col. Sandidge died during the Spen-
ish-American war. He had been a
member of the Louisiana legisiature
from 1846 to 1855. and had been a rep-
resentative in congress from 1855 to
1850.
During the terrible flood on the Gulf
coast in 1874 Col. Sandidge’s heart was
touched at the generous aid which the
northerners gave to the southern #uf-
ferers, and he decided then that he
would do what he could for the rest of
his life to cement the bond of friend-
ship between the north and the south,
After his capture on the morning of
July 19, 1861, Lieut. Shortleff was sev-
eral weeks in prison in Yorktown, Vt.,
and was then removed to the county
Prison in Richmond, where he spent
about seven months, until he was
paroled. Mr. Shurtleff did not reenter
the union service. He hasnever fully
recovered from his wounds.
ERRORS IN WAR HISTORIES.
Prominent Educator Saya Schoo!
Children Are Being Tanant
Thinas What Aue vane
a, 1s oynton, president of
the school board of the District of
Columbia, and notably well-informed
in the history of the civil war, offered
@ resolution in the b-ard not long
go, which was unanimously adopted,
suspending four histories from use
in the public schools of the district
until certain inaccuracies found in
them are corrected. These mistakes,
due to carelessness or misapprehen-
sion, are set forth by Gen. Boynton
in a pamphlet of seven pages con-
taining a series of terse paragraphs.
The number and seriousness of the
errors are surprising, says the St,
Louis Globe-Democrat, and suggests
that a general overhauling of his-
tories relating to the civil war would
be timely. From this detailed show-
ing it would seem that the authors
of such books make a hasty synopsis
of campaigns froth a course of desul-
tory reading without going to the of-
ficial records for verification. ‘The
official reports of the war have been
published at great expense by the
government, but.aa they form a large
library in themselves the school his-
torians evidently have not mastered
their contents.
In the course of his specifications
Gen. Boynton points out that McClel-
lan was not relieved during Pope's
campaign; that Hooker did not and
could not carry the vertical walls of
the crest of Lookout mountain; that
Sherman was 550 miles, not 200 miles,
from Rosecrans when’ the battle of
Chickamauga was fought; that Grant
di@ not order any charge on Mission-
ary Ridge: that Rragg did-not resign
after the battle: that most of the
union army at Chickamauga did not
flee in confusion to Chattanooga, for
the number driven back was less than
5,000 in 56,000; that instead of all po-
sitions being marked at Gettysburg,
only one confederate organization in
258 has placed a monument there,
and that one division, not Sherman's
whole army, stormed Fort McAllister.
Though the official figures of losses
in the battles of the civil war are 0:
file, these histories are often thou
sands out of the way. Some impor
tant campaigns are not even men-
tioned. One book dismisses the batt!
of Franklin, Tenn., in a line or two,
though the confederate loss there
was 6,252, including 12 generals killed,
wounded and captured.
‘The authors of the foregoing school
histories are Barnes, Montgomery,
Johnston and McMaster. Gen, Boyn-
ton submitted to his board a special
paper on Fiske’s history, and that is
now under examination. Mr. Fiske
states that only the left wing under
‘Thomas remained to contest the bat-
tle of Chickamauga. Gen. Boynton
says that no less than seven divisions
belonging to the center and right re-
mained with Thomas to the end.
‘There are in the book errors amount-
ing to 23,000 men in stating the losses
of both armies at Gettysburg. One
statement: is that after Bragg’s de-
feat in 1863 “the confederacy was
practically cut down to the four
states of Georgia, the two Carolinas
and Virginia.” But the union army
in 1864 was larger than ever before
and there was severe fighting in
every southern state. It seems clear
that a careful school history of the
eivil Wie ty 908 20 be Written.
‘The manner of constructing the fort
is interesting, and throws some light
on customs and practices then in
vogue. The work was almost wholly
done by slaves, who were brought to
the place by their masters and leased
to the engineers in charge. ‘The slave
owner received 50 cents a day for each
slave, and the government furnished
each “labourer,” as the slave was
called, with two suits of working
clothes, a pair or two of shoes, ra-
tions, quarters and occasionally a lit-
tle:tobacco. ‘The “labourers” worked
with very little clothes and generally
without shoes. They lived in barracks
and were subject to a kind of military
@iscipline. The owners were regular
in coming in to collect the hire for
their slaves, from which we may infer
that the “constituents” of those days
knew how to appreciate a good thing
to s degree worthy of the present gen-
eration.—Leslie’s Monthly.
Ganumaanaes De
Pay a woman a compliment, end the
next time anything annoying
she doesn’t fiy all to pieses.—Atchison
Globe.
Tatomptete.
“What did you send back that book
to the library for?”
“Why, you told me you weren't go-
ing to finish it.”
“True. But I wanted to read
snouch in it to talk about."—Judre.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND. VIRGINI
TOLD OF ROYALTY.
‘The king of England. has decided
that his eldest daughter will not beat
the title of princess royal during the
life of Empress Frederick, Queen Vic
toria’s eldest daughter.
‘The monument to the father of
Emperor William of Germany will not
be the only memorial to that mon
arch, as there is to be built a museunt
named for him on an island in the
Spree.
Prince Nikita of Montenegro, wha
has already written a drama, “The
Empress of the Balkans,” has now
given way to the historical romance
fever, and is preparing a tale about
Duke Stephen of Herzegovina, the
founder of his dynasty.
Emperor William bas blossomed
out as a builder of electric railways,
according to two American engineers
who have just returned from Berlin.
‘The kaiser is « joint partuer with the
well-known electrical engineering
firm of Siemens & Halske for the
eonstruction of a great fast express
line between Berlin and Hamburg.
‘The dowager empress of Russia is
the possessor of the finest collection
of Russian sables in the world. One
of her mantles, which she wears ip
winter sledge drives and in traveling,
has @ lining worth £49,000. It was
made of skins gathered for her by
the governor of a polar provinces
where taxes are paid in kind with
furs.
‘The emperor of Japan has an allow-
ance of something like $2,000,000
year to keep up the imperial estab-
lishment. He has aleo a large private
fortune, having invested in stocks
and a great deal of wealth in land,
At the close of the Chinese-Japanese
war parliament voted his majesty
20,000,000 yen, an amount equal to
10,000,000 gold dollare, out of the in-
demnity paid by the Chinese as .s
mark of gratitude for his directing
the naval and military operations.
FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
A late innovation in carpet sweep
ers is one that has a plate-glass top,
through which the machine at work is
easily watched for clogging of the
brushes or an overful dustpan.
A delicious sandwich filling is made
from one part chopped almonds and
two parts shredded or grated celery,
with a dust of salt. Moisten the
mixture with mayonnaise and spread
detween thin crustless slices of
brown bread.
One good thing to know is f pute
bow! of fresh water, at night, in a
room where men have been smoking.
In the morning you will find it has
completely absorbed all odor, provid.
ing you either burn or throw out all
cigar ends and ashes.
‘The lips are apt to indicate charac-
ter. Thick lips that hang forward and
display their toner lining show indo-
lence and a love of ease and luxury.
‘When the outline of the lips is narrow
end united with a sinister mouth
there is a great deficiesey of natural
kindness, a want of warmth and but
Little capacity to love in the individ
ual's nature.
Hominy croquettes with maple
sirup are a very agreeable addition to
the breakfast menu, although they
are good for any meal. They require
‘one cupful of boiled hominy, one beat-
en egg, one tablespoonful of meited
butter, one teaspoonful of sugar and
@ saltspoonful of salt. Stir this mix-
ture until smooth, form into conical
or ball shapes, roll in flour and after
they have stood for several hours in a
Gal slnaa See tn Che Seed ee
SOME HORTICULTURAL BRIEFS
| Put soapsuds around the peach
trees.
| Set out young fruit trees and plants
every year.
In transplanting no manure should
de placed in direct contact with the
roots.
| ‘The value of an orchard depends
very much on the proper selection of
‘the varieties.
Raspberry plants should be set out
at the very first favorable opportuntty
in the spring.
) ‘The pear tree is more liable to dis-
ease than any other fruit tree, unless
we except the peach.
| In manuring the orchard remember
that the roots of the trees extend as
far out as the branches,
All the frait trees should be care-
fully labeled, so that the owner may
know what he possesses.
If the fruit trees need pruning, it
is easier to prune as soon as the ne-
cessity shows than after years of neg-
lect.
Unless needed for the purpose of
Propagation it is best to keep the
suckers from around the raspberry
and blackberry bushes,
‘The commercial . orchardist who
plants too many varieties makes a
mistake; better select a few of the
best that do well in your locality.
OVER COPPER WIRES.
There are 10,000 miles of overhead
telegraph wires in London.
The projected electric railway be-
tween Hamburg and Berlin will cost
$33,000,000.
Chamounix can now be reached
from Geneva in less than four hous
by the new electric tramline.
It is estimated that an electric
pneumatic tube for transmitting
Packages eight inches in diameter
would cost $8,000 a mile.
The largest lightning conductor in
the world is in Bavaria. The top of
it is some yards above the meteoro-
logicel station on the Zugspitze, the
highest point of land in the Ger-
man empire. It runs down the side
of the mountain to a body of running
water, The length of the rod is three
ands half miles, _
_—
A Promt tn sight.
“Yes,” sald the man who prides him-
Self on being exceedingly astute, “I
lent Bim an umbrella.”
“I am surprised at you! When bis
unreliability about umbrellas {s one of
his chief characteristics!”
“Yes. But I lent it with the under-
standing that he is to bring me back
the one he gets in its place."—Wash-
ington Star. be
Quite Different,
. He—I suppose the more hair a girl
has the longer it takes her to make
it up?
She—Certainly.
“I suppose it is different with a
girl's mind?"—Yonkers Statesman,
; Reaswuring,
“I actually believe you like the pup-
gy,better than you do me.”
“Nonsense, George! You know I
would do as much for you, dear, as I
rould for the dog."—Tit-Bits, :
Im the Mountains,
Among the summer hills and dales
Sho wanders night and day.
Although she finds her searching fatla,
For fo man comes her way.
And while she vows she can’t exist
‘Without & single one,
Yee all the summer through she's kissed,
But only by the sun.
—Lesile’s Weekly.
POP RIE tes ay
Helen—Oh, he is not at all mer-
cenary.
Alice—But he doubtless knows you
‘are worth two millions.
Helen—Yeo; but he says he would
love me just as much if I wasn't
worth but « million and a heif—
TUG ye ee
A Delteate Mint,
“My dear, I was just reading @ very
interesting article on ‘How to Enjoy
aa Outing Without Impedimenta.’”
“Welle”
“Well, I was wondering, my love, if
it wouldn't be a good idea for me to
take my outing alone this time ?"—
Clevetend Plain Dealer.
‘ellis. dh tdscaan eae
| City Editor (to new reporter)—You
omitted something very important in
your account of the bank faiture.
Reporter—What was that, sir?
City Editor—You neglected to say
that the depositors would receive dol-
lar for dollar—Harlem Life.
Mistaken im His Calling.
“Who is that whistling in the other
room?” asked the proprietor.
“That's the clerk who's addressing
the letters, sir,” said the typwriter.
“Well, just tell him he's not en-
gade as & musical director.”—Yon-
kers Statesman.
: ‘Sameniiabhiie<
| “Did you hear what Judy Gibbs
seid?”
| SNo—What was it?”
“She said the new bride next door to
‘them has the most elegant repertoire
of shirt waists she ever saw.”—Chi-
cago Record-Herald.
| 1A Bate Coarse,
| Jimmy Plate—Say, Billy, yer lack
pradence in gettin’ so drunk before
‘yer goes up to that house.
Billy Burgiar—I know me business.
I want to get in an awful condition so
de dog will think it's his master comin’
home.—Cincinnati Daily News.
Pon ee
Clarence—Billy, if you were disap-
Pointed in some great love or high
ambition would you get even with the
world by becoming a hermit?
Billy—No, sir-ee; I'd buy a cheap
cornet and move into a thickly pop-
ulated flat.—Chicago Record-Herald,
Refinement of Torture,
De Wiggs—Old fellow, I am truly
sorry for you. You seem to have mar-
Flag. e tartar.
Biggs—It is true. But, then, she
fs beautiful and wealthy.
De Wiggs—Ah, a sort of cream of
tartar.—Harlem Life.
"uasaninaibekene,
“Your husband loved you very
much, did he not?"
“Yes indeed! He even insisted
upon remaining ip the house when I
practiced my vocal exercises!"—
Brooklyn Life.
_—————
INSURES LOVE AND 'A HAPPY
HOME FOR ALL
Bow any man may quickly cure himsett a
fer reais gf mutering drom Sexuai weakness
Tost/vitailty, night losses, varicocele ae end
qutargeamal Week Come Er ene aoane
S\ Se
G . x
a a.
\ ' <
tZ a S > Be Pa
BED iO Os
AiR eee”
L. W. KNAPP. M. D.
Se as Wr Rmee: tee a eens eacrene
Soe rw Xuan, tea wll big, Dearate
ich “ha ated? a a bee
Spt neal GEARY Sec e
Suey cay a Su ean le
iige weston danny esos”
inp cveaea stent att anit
ticomanea ares
Spear uoRcee Sap e taows
saan tee et fae Pa De
Sibaer Gelanenrs tersant deans
Slog Earnest seeioeins® “ht as
Sometime eueethte at te
Seeteretanc manent yaa eascee ta
hbw bappy Tam.”
Baar RE Nar mason workee. bent
Riudaennld Gir age aaron
He S
Heal end Shatin isttea eke
seis Retorareravestn Iba
senile arrest ons
oucraedattanr beta aa cat tack
Rivscpisciete eae” Tam
ee areas de SS and
an dence is strictly confidential,
sali amened araay act
irrvgt ine asing cud"ke'vanar ee
Brien
Se ee
OR ANY KIND OF UNIFORMS
Small Cash Payments and remainAer ix
small installments
Box 288. - Hamptoa, Va
Box 288.
Southern Railway
SCHEDULE
IN EFFEOT MAY 26Th, 1901,
"Peains Tecwes Richmand Ve,
ne ee ee eee
11.00 Pu. No. SOUTHERN EXPRESS éa‘ty
‘Atlante tagunta Sacks ils. aus
Points soni sleeper: for Dutvtie
Prmensvero. salary: ona charlotte
Sepa ict passcugers at cca! stations.
Connects at Danv'lit ana Cnarlotte.
lithe, fork ane’ ovtae zore
freon New Fork sua Tera sue eis oot
Bections for ‘nil Florin points, alae
Sounects at Danvilie. Cantietie wits
the Wastingvon and Southwestern Tim
itea' (xo fh ourrring through sleepers
auguate Se vannen: Jacks vite tainpe
fastrviie. and M-inpie, aud Aunt
Mew Oricans. sito. Pullman Yours
sleeper Mons ays, Wednesdays and Fri-
| age washington Se 'San') Premetece
| SaReat ahanges with connegtigns foe
FAIRS MReaes ietnioe ad’ Galt
0 Pa Re. 1, solid irate aasiy vor On
lotte, #:C Connecta at Mossley wish
Eeyaville for ‘Clestevtiies Ontsra: ates”
Sermon ans Durham wad ar Geeonsnsr:
for Devbam. Raleigh. ane Winston
Salem vat Davie wfth ar ‘a8 Caiee
‘States Fast Mall, selid train, daly fo:
Sew Orleans and points oka waist
| Rttien sleepers Xo ew OF-auay use
Teekronmii’e connect ng for Masons
Haters,
Hutet aréwine rom sleeper Rich:
Turotae train siseper, senatn ts
Semple. . e
6.00 7. 4.0 1, Loca. except Banca:
ar Kevavilie snd intersesints avr
eral i8 ARRIVE AT RIG! OND.
—" ee
PENG, trom auante anguste, Ashore
‘hd alt pointe Bomthe
5 40.4 Kytrom Kepevilic 034 local stations.
wocar Yanent reas
os. ti and @2 between Manehester and Ne
ena
The Favorite Route North.
Laays aromxex>
paurmmont hints, Dally entept Bung
‘connecting at West Point with steay
setter uitinore and ‘York Hite
Fandings. Stonr ong at tations
freen Guinton and, Wert Point
“Train No. ie, 90". me
Loo 1 Bzpress duily except Sauday for
Rects with singe at Lester “Mancr to Walker:
fon and: Tappabauncek=
| ‘Frain We. 76,0:00 4. .
Screener metas
Binge ttigstor Menoror Walkeriom ‘aad Tap
TRAINS ARRIVE AT RIOHMOND
from W
‘Dhotion from Baltimore except Mondarace
10:48 a.m. Gallylexceptisundays and Mondays
515 pm. Datly, except Sunday from ¥ est
Polgrenmmers leave West Point dally excopt
sunday S902. Me arriving Saitimore ‘GS
“* Steamers call at aiwonds and York
Qagmy Clay bank and: Gienee ter
Point Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
0. Ww. WESTBURY,
ao k, wan st Richwond: Va,
J. M. Cup, Treffic Manager,
8H. Harpwick Gen. Pas. Agt.
FRANK 8. GANNON.
Third Vice-Pres. acd General Mana.
ger, Washington, D. C.
WANTED—A first-class preseman
Send samples of work end resommend-
ations to
THE PLANET,
w Richmond, Va
SIC AMOUND. *
Faxpenick:avno
& Potomac R. R,
Schedule in Effect May. 28, 1901.
LEAVE BYRD BT, STATION,
300 ALM. Datly, ashing ton
Mo Rela orn “stops Sues
Fallmon Sleepers Sor ashing:
ton and New fork, ms
a0 Ara] Eunday only, for Washington
ra polaees Werte ,
favGieu “alien and iacal ata™
Sous Mauhlana” 2, Quantico
inclusive "Butter Pastor Cars
880A, Me ‘Dally, “except Buneaye for
Pratkincion ‘nd oints North
Stopa at Biba, Glen Allen, and
Iveal stations, Ashland to
guansice inclusive, Buffet
12.00 M. Dally’ “except sunday, for
eee acres
ative :
TanG, ‘Doswell, wufora,, Wred-
fricksbarg end Guantics, “Def
EePanerear. Gonmesis, with
Waskirgions
FORM. Duly for, Wasntngion and
2
Kitisud:Doewell, wiltord Fred:
sriuabaie: Broake, Nisewates
bad genie. Stabe eter te
Bond to Rew York and
Washingion to Philadelphia.
Anaiva Bynp-Srasut Brariox.
$04. Bally, Steps at Wide water
ford, Boawellt “aaniend, aud
Hise, ‘stops ab diker ations
Sunciaye. sleeper Rew York to
aft P.M.» Dallg except Surday. stops at
“ focal ‘seations - Usantico to
2Ssiand inclustve; Glew Allen
sor M., ral sigpe ab Fredercksbur
“fulltordBoewell," Asbiant and
cat P. Me dass Fredericksba:
L087 Bs Me ewells aebland end Se
Poltmau Gers freu ‘New York
6.40 P. UL, Belize Biope nt, local sta-
“Dis Gone” Guanticy to "anhisind
inelgnve. ‘Glen allen Sud Ei
ber Bumet Pariorce”:
Accommopazion TRAIN.
(Daily except Sunday)
7 : for astiland
TEE RASTA asan
6-40 P.M, Teaver Elbe for <shinn
440A: M2, aries Fibs from suians.
8 2 Sinives Bara street “tation trom
Frederickabers
502P Meine be fd aemiand
Sa. UW ibrough freitin,
Vie 8. A.D. ducction ard KK. & P.
Ballroaa
LEAVES A 1 BKOsD STREET STA
| i
aMe , for: Weabington and
fH a. Mo Dtat notin. stoparat, Pred:
Eiektpttg auelGeendeo Bicep
p.m, Day, for. Washibuton and
as goints Noten’ Stope At dose
rleksburg 20a" Quai
Pullman Steeptr to New York ©
ARRIVE £,4,L BROAD SIREET 874
TION
200 PLM. Daily. Btope, a
Sie
from New Yor
aur. M. Daily. ‘stops a oredxaburg
Doswe and Aahland. Sleepe!
from New York. sk
W.P. TAYLOR, Trame Manager
E.T. D, MYERS, President.
yen NAVIGATION
Suteije cites ie iad
Spices a ee
‘Washington, Baltimore and the North
SraaMae Pocamonras Luavzs MoxpaT, Wap
aber
Sees setae
Se ee
IRVis WEISIORR
Superiatenées
a DWARDE. BAREBYreaPvenes
Atlantic Coast Line.
Se renee znnuary 14, 1001
TRAINS LEAVE RICH MON D—6YRI
STREET STATION.
9:00 A. M. NORFOLK LIMITED Dail;
‘Arrives
Petersburg 9:24. m. N rfolk 11;
sm. Stops only at Petersburg and
Pricipal stations east of Petercburg
9:05 A.M. Dai'y. Arrives Peterabury
9:50 a, m., Weldon 11;50 a.m.
Fayetteville 4:25 p. m., ' hacleston
10:55 p. m.. Savannah 2:56 a. m.
Jacksonville 8:30, m., Port Tam:
Pa7:l0 p.m, cnnecta at Wilson
Bib Ne aL besviog Goldsboro 8:
P. m‘, Wilmington 6p. m. ;
‘man Sleéper New York to Jackson
le.
11:55 A.M. Daily, except Sunday. Ar-
Fives Botersburg 12:80 pan, Stan
Mapaneaten, Drewry's Bint, Cen.
sand Sinestro alenal.
BisDally: Artes Peeoabese aa
r Arrives Petersburg; 8:
ma. Noetonk 8:88 p,m. ‘Stops anh
frees, ‘averly and Suf-
4:00 P. M. Daily, except Sunday. ar
tives Petersburg. 6:20 p.m. Welt
don 7:42 p m., and Rocky ‘Mouni
8:56 p.m. Makes all intermediate
‘stops,
$2002; M. Daily, Arcives Petersburg
8:45 pm Makes all stope
6:67 P, M. FLORIDA AND WEST IN.
DIAN LIMITED. Daily, Arrives at
Petersburg 7:87 p. m. Connects
with Norfolk and Western for Nor.
folk and intermediate points, Em-
posse. $49 p. m. (conneats with Ar
lantio and Danville for stations be.
treen Emporis and Lawrenceville,
eldon 9:18 p. m, Fayettesville
12:82 «. m., Oharleston 6:23 &. m.,
"Savanah 7:50's.m., Jaokeonville
12:18 p. mo Port Tampa 11:90 pam.
NEW LINE to Middle-Gecrgis
Fointe—Arriving Augusta 7,50 8
ta., Macon 11:19 a, m., Atlante 12;
85°p. m., Thomasville ‘2:25 p.m.
Pullmad Sleepers New Weck ts
Wilmington, yharleston, "Bort
Tampe, Jacksonville, Augusta and
9:10 P. M., Daily, Arriving Petersburg
9:85 p.'m., Ronnecte mt Petersbare
with Norfolk and Westers redeut
arriving Lynehbarg 2:80, a.
Roanoke 5s, m., Bristol 10:40 «.
m, Pullman Sieeper Richmond to
Lrnehbarg.
11:80 P. M. Dally, Arrives Petersburg
12:ica. m.
TRAINS ARRIVE IN RICHMOND,
8:20 A. M. Daily, From Jacksonville,
Savannah, @harieston, Atlanta,
Macon, Augusta end all poinss
South.
7:05 8. m. Dally From Petersburg.
Lynohborg, and the West.
845 a, m. Daily, exoept Sunday. Pet-
eraburg local.
11:10 a. m daily. except Sunday From
Goldsboro and intermediate ste-
12a th, Dally From Nortole, Sat
1:42 a. m. Daily, from Norfolk, Suf-
folk and, Petérebarg.
11:05 »."m, Sanday only from Norfoik
Soffolk and Petersburg.
2:10 p.m, Daily, exeept Sunday, From
jetersburg.
1:22pm. Daily From Miam}, Port
‘atapa, Jacksonville, Savannah,
Charleston, Wilmuigton, Goldabo-
Fo and all pointe South,
78:0 p. m, Daily From Norfolk. Pete ra
burg and)jntermediate ataticas.
8:06 p.m. Daily, Brom Petersbarg,
mehburg and West
Fee M. EMERSON
‘Traffle Manager,
J.B, KENLY,
General ‘Manager,
4. M, EMERSON,
General Passen, n
0.8, CAMP! "
ivision Passenge. Ag
‘B94 Base Main a
JED DOMINION STEAMSHIP 00
bliss nansen cai FOE epee es
Panes tt Ton ere TORK xuvars soxpas
seuigr ni ciate ons oacrase,
OP. M.. of Richmond and Petersburg rait
read, (Norfolk and Western route]®.00 A. M
gon urcting at Norfolk with Old Domini
odsartar Nore =e evening 31
Tickets on sale st Richmond Transfer Om
BRIS Tallway and Rionssoed cnet ereoen
; att ac
eet inet osee eee, office,
- ‘ea ‘FRAIORY.
Iniehea pFeue and algetiae porous. can »
i
see tbne ty RE SOE me
Biv ee eA eee ahaa
“ianifest Slosed o&6 hour before sailing tim
sient sete Meters mung
Tie (atirdced rttrsseasa eat
encuesee
aca oeaa
Sater a cesar
ape tan tn treo qxonps ona
Bint Bosna cal i eu a
Wan. oaiiceeeeeat ci eet
5
exieesa Woceae vase
sores Merwe soeess PES
eae
ee eae is
Heteeteraay rest, Prsigas resiee
"Vor fartusr inference epple ey
Tony aTEH, Spent
RSEER Aen.
‘Bickmend, ¥
Wy ive tame es
ne a
NEW Norfolkso
Be a
Navby Sic estem
We DR aoe
Teo coe et
Sar pec trate nel
Head arma eran
Sibi Ss eee ee
dint. Risetatee te
ierince. Pee
Somers
fener Pe
Sree nese
ca » Berean
Eee anes
00 v. st, Dally fo ipuehbargand Roanoxs
: ‘Connecis dt Rosnoke with Wash
See eee
cot ayes geet
a oe
Eeetteencees fe
fog mate eatoar ee
er between Richmondand Lynck-
end ere teva
Petersburg to Roanoke.
us ehh etter eae
and the West daily, 8:18 s. m.., aud a} 5:66 p m
from Norfolk and the East 11:06 am and Vesti
iSaitaiab ga aeete
JORN E Wael
ii joerc)
Duvet AE
coon,
vane cmees SgneralPaesenge Agta
The Economy’
W.0. ‘Teemee Eien
FINE TAILORING
+ OLRRRING DIN
3
SS,
Ss e A a L s
RAILWAY.
“OAPITAL OITY ROUTE.”
Short Line to Principal Cities of the
South and Southwest, Florida, Cu-
ba, Texas, Oalifornis and Mex-
igo, reaching the Uspitals
Of six States,
Schedule in Effect May 28. 1901
weave No.7 No. 81
Richmond . .........2:40 pm 10:40 p m
Peberabargemcenn8:27 pm 11:80 pm
Bibeln ene 7:40 Pim 43100. ws
ive
Heletecnse.... 10:85pm 7.008 m
AAD Eee 9:008m 4:45 pam
Leave
Hamlet... -ncecnlO260 pm 7:20 8m
Arrive
folumbia, east’n time 2:00am 10:85 am
ve
Qolumbis eeat’l time 1:05 5 m9:40 0m
Arrive
SaVADMAD cece 4:528m 1:47 pm
Fernanding 9:000m $0p a
fscksonville........ 9:15am 6:1 pa
Tallahassee. 8:15 pm 6:50 km
QeBLe n.eeuesemnemere 1348 Pm 1:00 a me
Orlando. IS BHO pm 7320 0 ae
Tempa.nn woos SOP m 81am
Port Tamps ......... 10:80 pm 8:80 »
Mlentl...... ......... 94350 °°
m., daily for Petersburg, Neciiae
m., daily for Petersburgs Nor
RVG. and. ali_taverseaneig eat
og trom Headers Sia
riving from Headerson 3:10 pam
Ralelgh 8:60 p.m dally, tod" Bese
4:15 p.m, ee except Sunday.
Trains leave Richmond for Wathing-
ton, New Virk and the en uly.
No. 44 at 640 #. m. and No, 66 at 8:
Pam.
Oonnections at Jacksonville and
— for ali Florida East Coast
Bplatg snd Cubs a: 4 Foro Boo at
iow Orloane fer ail’ pointe ia’ Text
Mexico and Ualitornia.
TRAING ARRIVE AT RICHMOND DArLY.
6:820.m.No 34 { From all points south
8:21 p. m. No. 68 and southwest,
5:46 p. m. No. 38—From Norlina, N.C,
Petersburg and local points,
SLMEFENG-CAR azavice,
Nos. 3 nee pete and po
jiten Lim! |. rawing-room
Semeaetes Through Day Conte
ge beween New York and Tampa,
Through Drawing-room Buffet Sleep-
ingears between New York and At
Janta.
Nos. 27 and 66—Florida and Atlants
Fast Mail. Through Drawing-room
Buffet Sleepine-cars between New
York and Jacksonville, connecting af
Hamlet with Sleeping-oar to eet eet
Atlents, in connection with which
Taroogh Pullman Tickets are “sold
Finest Day coaches,
Z.P. Smith, Dist. Pass. Agent,
886 E. Main At, "Phone, 405,
3. M. Bare, 1st V, P, & Gen'l Mong
Porlamouth, Vax
R, E. L, Banch, Gen’l Pass, Agent.
C.80, onic nate 224
Schedule in Ettect May 28, 1901,
From Richmond,
LEAVE BROAD-STREET sTaton
For Newport News, Ola Point,
Norfollt and Portsmouth,
8,00 s, m, (exespt Sunday) Looal,
9:00 a, m. Daily. Fast train. Stops on-
iy at Wiliamnabarg, eonnebtar sa
Beach Monday: Wednagey, Woe
fonday, Wednesday,
day and Saturday with Boston
amers.
3:45 p,m. (oaily) Looal. Connects at
pe None Soe aati with Washing-
ton and Cape Charles steamers,
Yoru (Old Doses? web New
cs ion an -
more steamers,
0500 (except Banday) for 11
10300 a. m. (excep: lay) for lit-,
fon Forge, connects for Orange
Warrenton, Manassas Branch,
Hagerstown and Kexington,
No, 1 2:45 p, ma. daily 8¢ Loute limited
with “Paliman fcr Oinsianat,
Louisville, St. Louis and Chioage
No 7, loeal train follows Nol ee
gept Bunday, from,Gordonsvilis
ip eS a
5:80 p. m. aecommod at jon, exee; en
Pasy to Dowwell, .
10.454 m. daily, with Pullman for
Oineinnati, bieago, Louisville,
St. Louis, ete.
| onrects at Ronceverte, exeepe
Sunday with Greenbrier River
Railway.
LEAVE EIGBTH $7, station,
29,80 a. m. daily for Lynchburg ; Lex-
ington, and Clifton Forge, con
nests exce lay with Baek
ogham sod Alberese branes,
jor ear.
5:15 pm. accommodation, exeept Sum
Gey to Columbia.
TRAINS ARRIVE BROAD STRERY
STATION.
8:00.82. From Dowell.
*8;308 mand * 8550 p.m. from Cin-
sianai,
12:60.9 um” 47:05 v.m.* 1C p.m, from
N rfolkand Old Point
x 8:15. m.. tom clifton Forge, and
Rtauntor,
TRAIN ARRIVE EIGHTH STREET
STATION.
x 8:40 a m. from Columbia.
6:20 p. m. from Gifton Forge ané
Lynehburg.
x 6:20p m. from New Castle, Lexing
ton ard Rospey.
Trains marked * are daily, thor
withs are dally except Sanday,
Applf at 809 east Main, 902 east Main
and Marphy’s Hotel for furtier infor
‘mation.
the Nations! atl Be.
ANTI-MOBeand VV
ime re ef
ASSOCIATION “> 7 Ds
Uncorporated.1 “> aiid J
mala GN
Spriietea, 0. / \
HO. Jenkins, Pres. 4
Yas. Harris, Vico Pres, //[BS
ET. Bauer, Organiser, ff bs
Hepa: (AN
PRE |
gaat "Spey tae OL EN
Basted, serine 1am ay
eld, O Liverty, Sastice | 14
‘and ‘Protection. Write = E
Wegman tor crower <egeocmnd
aiving fol particulars SeoaeessaMied
NANTED AT ONGE—An
ienced colored shoemaker.
- LN. BaRorr,
Gor, 25th
—_
oe
ze AN ees =
aireawi ce:
Lae Fle
AU aC 3:
; SS,
ae of Wy :
’ <9 eg
<a vam?
Pubilshed every Saturday by Jone Mrrcimtr,
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., - EDITOR.
Seon eee eases
eb: TERMS IN ADVANCE.
ADVERTISING RATES.
Foroneinch,one insertion, =o
For one inch, ench submequent insertion,” 35
Fortwo aches three montha, ==" 6.40
Fortwoinches: sxmontha = + = 1000
Fortwo inches mine months,“ - > 1p
Fortwo incheg twelve months, © - "2 3.00
‘Marriage and Runcral Noticesy) 2 ==
Standing and Fransnt Notices per Une,” 10
€@-POSTAGE STAMPS OF A BIGHER DE-
‘NOMINATION THAN TWO CENTS NOT
RECEIVED ON SUBSCRIPTIONS.
Tar PLANrT is ineed weekly. The subscrip-
‘tion price 1961.50 Fear tn wal wanee.
‘There are Fon ways by which money can be
seont by mnil st cur fakin a Pont Oriew Man
SFOrder, by Banik Check or. Draft, or pm Ex
‘prow Money Onder, and ‘when pone of brew
ante procand, in'a Registered Letter”
‘Moxey OxnERs.—You can bas 9 Moncy Ord.
sunsgans Fons Otten, papatie at thechivend
Feat Sinces and we will be nesponw ble: for is
dafearrival.
“Express Moxey Opus can be obtained st
‘Wahred States Exptem Oo. nnd tho Woll's Par
Sond Cov xprews Compas. | Wo, Will be fe
Spomibto fgemaney sen hy hy af theme ony
Epi convensent way for forwarding mame.
Rrotrene Lerren—It a Money Onier
Pot omtice or an Express Office te not, within
oar reach fur Foeaaater will Regier. th
Utter’ yo lah te nen na on payment oF fem
seni. Then, ifthe etter talon or stolen: I
can be traced. You can send money in this
manner at our risk
‘Wo cannot be responsible for money, sent in
Jettersin ans other way than ote of thn four
Mayementicned above. If yow mind oar mon
Srlnang other way, you tiast do it at yous
own rik
Rexmwataere.—it you do not want Tnx
Pyasercontinaed for avother sear Wher year
sect pen as run out, yon then notty ge ty
Foutal Gard to disrontinae te ‘The comes have
divided that subseribers to newspapers who &
Rot onder their paper diwrontinusd ne the xm
Potion of time for which it haw toven, paid ar
Heid hate for the parment of the subeeription
Fatnginte wher Wey order the paper” Gon
COMMUNICATIONS —When writing tow
to-renew Your stiteeription or to dimcontians
Siebaper, Fes ahold pve your mang, and nd
Sree Th HilS otherwhoo we cannot And yor
Shame on ou books.
CHANGE OF ADDRER—In omer to chan;
foeaddress et paleeribar, wo-must: ber nen
Ep formor a: welt a te present addres
Exterad in the Post Otice nt Eichmond, Va
ie eS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 1901
eens
Tux Amalgamated Association of
s teel-workers has, through its president,
Mr. Sarren, declared a strike against
¢ United States Steel Corporation rep-
resented by President SCHWAB.
Tt goes into effect to-day. ‘There is
some talk of the importation of colored
stecl-workers to take the places of the
strikers.
Woe are of the opinion that this’ is an
ill advised movement on the part of the
colored men. It would result in only
temporary relief and would be followed
by an era of bitter feeling on the part of
the labor clementsof the United States
which would require years to eradicate.
The discrimination against us by the
white labor organizations is exasperat-
ing and causes our’ people to feel that
they should accept any opportunity’ to
administer a blow to its interests.
Bat to attempt to enter into such a
combination will last only for a brief
period. One side or the other is bound
to win, and with the success of either
the colored brother must yield up the
position which he was called upon t
‘fil.
MR. MCLAURIN’S OPINION.
‘Unsrrep States Senator McLaurn
‘of Sour Camoisa knows Senator B.
R. Tillman of the same State. Is re-
plying to the request of the StateDem-
ceratic Executive Committee's demand
or his resignation, he says of the afore-
said TILMAN:
““I shall ask the people to decide be-
tween the man who fies trjed to help
cotton factories, 0} WAYS 0
Shae ants coe eB
-eratic party as to it the
confidence and coe eh ts ‘business
and laboring elements North and South,
and the man Whose coxduct and record
thas been to sink the jarty into disrepate
and impotence. I stall ask them to say
‘whether they prefe:, the Senator whc
oor a digally von bY ion hed
jonor an ity Won by a ine 0:
ilhustrions sons and glorious deeds, 01
the Senator wbo has postured as buffoon
and bully, and who is proclaimed of the
Senate that he Teprosent on the fat
6f the Senste that he represented a con:
stituency of ballot-box stuffers and mur
derers, wito Wanted their share of th
stealage.
‘He continues;
I desire to proclaim to the world that
yd do not represent the intelligence,
tye Democracy, of the people of South
Carolina, and t you and Senator Till
than that he has never been my’ master
and shall never bo; that he shall not es-
‘cape the vengeance that must surely fall
japon him when the people have beet
made to understand his motives, his me-
‘thods, his debased character, ‘and his
shamefal record. To that grand conser.
ator of f froo government, the reserved
‘and common-sense of the pec
, I make this appeal, aguinst partisan
tolerance and tyranny.”
Further comment is unnecessary
than to remark that Senator Mc
foRIs knows Senator Truman, and
of his character will pass
‘ag’ correct description of che
yamental humbug now parad
the public.
THE SECRET OUT AT LAST.
‘The Constitutional Convention has
taken a recess, but gave permission to
the Suffrage Committee to keep at
work.
‘The report of the Committee of which
Mr. Withers is chairman, reducing. the
uumber of judicial circuits, abolishing
the county court, ete., was the first defi-
nite information which the people of the
State received as to the purposes of the
‘Convention.
| ‘The report was referred to the Com-
‘mittee on the Judiciary and when it
‘comes from that ‘ody, it is presumed
‘that it will be so disfigured that its most
intimate friend will not recognize it.
Nevertheless, the colored people of the
State will uow understand that the suf
frage question was sprang to avert at-
‘tention from the-mnin issue, that of cut.
‘ting off alleged useless office-holders,
“and the reduction of alleged unnecessary
expenses,
| ‘We have never seen the need of any
particular uneasiness on the part of our
‘people relative to the cutting off ou
right to yote. That right is already
flagrantly denied us, and we are ns un
‘coremoniously disfranchised in Vina1x
‘1A, as though we were a blanket Indiar
upon a reservation in Indian Territory.
| _ It is the wh te man who will be mos
injured when the compaign is ended
' and the list of casualties roported at the
' headquarters of the people.
| So long as the 14th & 15th Amendment
to the Constitution of the United State:
' remain upon the statute books, we car
little for the proscriptive provisions en
' grafted upon the vonstitation of the sev
' oral states.
| The time will come when God wil
| Taise up expotndors of the law in our St
preme Conrts who will have the manli
ness to spoak the truth and render decis
' fons in a cordance with justice.
| ‘The tomporary expedients to disfran
chiso us will be brushed aside as are ool
i webs by a housemaid wielding with
skillfulness the handle of a new broom
| We must and shall wait for that time
j believing that, “Justice may sleep, bu
never dies.””
Wrong flourishes for a little while; bu
right, like God is eternal.
TILLMAN AND LYNCHING.
| Sexaton B. R. Tuamax of Sovrn
Canons, delived an address to a large
Jaudionce at Marinette, Wisconsin, on
the 4th inst., and after attempting to
justify lynching said:
| “In Wisconsin you have 5,000 black
men."” “Why doit you try the bleach-
ee pone an anteoranie
tern > repugnant to
pos, ia Soath Caroltan we bare 750,000
and. 550,000 whites. The carpet-
Thggers,'the ‘nigger and the Southern
wags and scoundrels ruled us after
the war until they had stolen everything
that there was in the State. ‘Then we
went with our shotguns to the polls and
took it away from them, All men are
not created equal, and the ‘niggers’ are
not fit to vote. Come what may, the
white people of the South will govern
their own country. ‘A
The above is strong defiant language
and yet Senator Tillman swore to. main-
tain andsapport the I4th and 15th A-
mendments to the Constitution of the
United States which pledge him to the
recognition of the very equality which
he condemns.
His reference to the stealing by the
carpet-laggers of every thing in the State
is on a par with the action of the south-
ern office-holders, who took whatever
the carpet-baggers left and that which
accumulated since thelr departure.
‘The record of the absconding treasur.
er constitutes an interesting chapter and
tell the story of the dishonesty of some
white men, who stop not at thousands
but uame hundreds of thousands in
their reckless peculations.
Senator THLMAN speaks of the murder
of innocent black men with a hilarity
that is disgusting.
He is quoted farther:
He condemned Booker Washington’
scheme of educating the Negro along in
Austria! lines as an attempt fo place him
on an equality with the white artisan,
something that would intensiry race ha
tred in the South. He said that amon,
the 4,000,000 slaves during the civil wa
there were more Christians than then
are today among the 9,000,000 backs
the South.
“T do not want to uphold slavery,”” h
continued. “I thank God there are
slaves to-day under the Stars ané
Stripes”
Such talk should awaken the North t.
A sense of its duty: ‘The condemnatior
of Prof. Booker T. Wasticrox’s
scheme will do more to show the tra
inwardness of Senator THLMAN’s vap
oring than anything clse that could b
conceived or thought of.
He may not want to uphold slavery
but the inhabitants of Anderson Count;
South Carolina have been doing it.
| ‘The report concludes as follows:
| Mr. Trutata made an eloquent ple
in justification of lynching, saying tha
Sonthern women could not be brough
into court to testify to their shame am
degredation before a jury for the. pu
pose of convicting a beast.
His reference to, the siuetity of th
| Southern household and the Souther
women and. his remarks on lynchin
.| were heartily applanded. He close
'} with sn impassioned.statement to th
| effect that the white people of the Sout
‘| would remain on top “in spite of the d
i] Vil,” and declared that if necessary _b
{]and his brethren were ready to tak
1} down their shot guns again.
*| This was an appeal to the worst pa
j| sions and was a base ignoring of thie fa
>| that more than sixty per cent of all th
a lynchings are for other crimes than thi
of criminal assault upon white female
WOMEN THE VICTIMS, |
‘The lynching of Bersie, her son Bri
Forpand daughter pA McOray on the
nightof Angust 1901 at Carrolton.
RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
oe ae eT he Se ere Sore
Miss. was one of the most horrible atro-
cities as yet chronicled. These people
were confessedly not guilty of any:
crime whatever. It is only alleged that
they knew something about it. .
Proof was submitted and uncontro-
verted that they were not present when
Mr. and Mrs. TALIAFERRO were murder:
ed, but the mob would hear no reason
‘Their blood was demanded and they
were conducted under the hill a quarter
of a mile from town and the two. wom-
en and man hanged and their body rid-
‘dled with bullets.
Yes, we say two women ware hanged.
Hanged without evidence, -hanged
without being guilty, hanged in the face
lof their protestation of innocence, hang.
‘ed against the pleadings of the best
white citizens of that county, hanged
althongh the son of the. murdered peo-
ple protested against the hanging, yes,
hanged while the Governor was enronte
to beg the mob to respect the law.
‘These marderers did this and the only
remark that Gov LoxatNo makes is that
Mississippi isagain disgraced—and why?
He hadtthe armed forces of the State at
his disposal. He had the United States
troops at his command. Fe had citizens
jot color who would have accepted arms
and organized posses either to hunt
down the murderers or to protect the in-
nocent, but he used none of these re-
sources.
He permitted two innocent women
and aman to be lynched. Oh, it was
pitifal!
We believed that Betsy prayed for
herself and asked Goa’s blessings on her
children. She had no doubt led an up-
right life. All of the white people who
Knew her seemed to be friendly to her
cause.
But the “low-ground” whites would
hear no reason. It was the work of the
mob, and betwoeu the heavens and the
earth, their bodies were swung up while
the crack of rifles and and whirr of the
muskets released their spirits for flight
to the other world.
‘What shall wo do in the premises?
This is the ‘question. What would
white men do under similar circumstan:
ces?
Answer that question, and you have
the answer. As for our part, we know
what we would do. Had we lived in
the neighborhood, we would have ask
ed no greater favor than to have boen
permitted to die in the defense of those
two innocent women and man whose
souls have gone on before.
The law must be upheld at all haz-
ards. Brutal cowards, whether white or
black must be taught a lesson and brave
chivalric white and black men should
stand ready to do it.
‘Were a mob of colored men to attempt
to lynch two white women and a white
man, we should stand out against it and
be as forward in their defense as in the
cases cited. It is the principle for which
we are contending.
Every colored man should own a re-
poating rifle and shot gun with nerve
enough to use it.
Every mob should be made to carry
‘one or more of their number back home
‘as asilont testimonial of the unerring
aim of some Negro, whom they went
out to lynch.
‘When this is done, the popularity of
the “rope route” by lawless parties will
Degin to wane and colored men will find
protection in the lonely sections of the
Southland.
Mississippi has her constitution per-
petuating a white man’s government.
Tt was declared to be a great panuces
for race prejudice, What good has it
accomplished? What rights for jus at
taine i?
B Itisa sham and a deception enactec
by designing parties and meant to de
ceive the country at largo.
We are disgusted and emphasize the
fact that the exercise of back-bone anc
the presence of manhood will cansé
lynch-law to goand the lynchers with
Ig
Electric Railways For Sweden.
Vienna, Aug. 7.—The Swedish gov
ernment is said to be considering
plans for the installation of electricity
throughout the whole railway system
of Sweden.
le, Chink geek Getter Ateaa®
Victoria, B. C., Aug. 7.—The steamer
Queen Adelaide brings news to the
effect that a large number of defeated
soldiers of Tung Fuh Siang have com-
dined with Lian Chwang Hul and un-
furled in the government premises of
Shen Chow many banners with the
motto “Sweep China and destroy
allens.”
‘These Men Have a Grievance,
Chicago, Aug. 7.—While union mold-|
ers were walking the streets because
their employers, local members of the
National Founders’ Association, re-
fused to pay them $3 a day, these same
“employers voted yesterday to replace
them with non-union men. who are to
receive $4.50 and $4.75 a day.
Train Jumped the Track.
Wilmington, Del., Aug. 7.—Two Ital-
jans were killed and three others were
seriously hurt last night by a train
jumping a track near Bellevue, a short
distance from this city. The men were
employed in a quarry and were on their
way home when the locomotive of the
train left the track,
L. A. W. Day At Buffalo.
Buffalo, Aug. 7.—Hon. Horatio 8.
Earle, of Detroit, president of the
League of American Wheelmen, has
Issued a general and urgent invitation
to all members of the league to meet
him in Buffalo on August 14 and 15,
on the occasion of the 224 annual meet
of that organization.
Declared 233 1-2 Per Cent. Dividenc
Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 7.—The In-
diana National Bank yesterday de
clared a dividend of $700,000 or 288 1-3
per cent. Of this $450,000 was de
clared out of surplus and $260,000 out
of undivided profits. The capital atock
was increased from $300,000 to $1,
000,000.
STRIKE ORDER ISSUED
Steel Man Told to Stop Work
After August 10.
NAW .GAsTias Nah AVE OTT
President Shaffer Forestalled Ciever
Trick of National Steel Company.
Strike Benefits From Now On—Ald
From the White Rats.
Pittsburg. Aug. 7.—The dio Is cast.
President Shaffer issued the long.
looked-for general strike order last
evening, to take effect after the last
turn of the mills on August 10. It
includes practically all Amalgamated
men of the steel corporation not now
on strike, and will be mailed to vice
presidents of the districts in which
there are mills operated by the Na
tional Steel, National Tube and Fed-
eral Steel companies.
The text of the call is as follows:
Brothren—The officials of the United
States Steel Trust have refused to recog:
nize as union men those who are now
striving for the right to organize. The
executive board has authorized me to
issue a call upon ll Amalgamated and
other union men in name and heart to
Joln tn the movement to fight for labor's
‘You will be toa that you have strned
contracts, but you never agreed to sur-
Fender these contracts to the United
States Steel Corporation. Its officers think
you were sold to them Just as the mills
were, contracts and all.
Remember, before you agreed to any
contract. you took an obligation to the
Amalgamated Association. It now calls
you to help tn this hour of need. .
Tniean the trouble # acttied on or before
Seturday, August 10, 1901. the milis will
close when the last turn is made on that
wee 1. J. SHAFFER, |
The-call to the men of the three
companies in the mills of which the
association {s strongest is expected to
be promptly rexponded to on Saturday,
which will swell the number of idle
men to 109,000. It will practically sus:
Pend operations of the Federal Steel
company and cut off half the produc
tion of the other two companies. At
the plant of the National Tube com-
pany at McKeesport the organization
Is new, and the effect of the strike
order is uncer-atn |
President Sh. "er declined to say
whether the order wes meant to go to]
the union men in the Carnegie Steel
company, but it is probable that they
will be expected to join in tho strike,
An offort will also be made to hamper
the operations of the Ame.ican Steel
Wire an¢ the American Bridge com-
panies, although there is no organiza-
tion among the plants of the latter
concern.
At noon yesterday President Shaf-
fer called out all the men employed
in the New Castle mills of the Na
tional Steel company. They stopped
work at 12 o'clock last night. He
stated that his purpose in doing this
was that he had learned that the
trust has been piling up union-made
bars im the old housings of the dis-
mantled Jennings sheet mill for the
Durpose of supplying the trade to the
Bon-union mills when the plants were
sbut down. About 1,500 men are af
fected by this, the initial strike since
the failure of the conferenoa
In an address to the striking em-
ployes of the Painter Steel and Hoop
Mills last night, President Shaifer
ald:
“Men of Painter's mill, the final test
between organized capital and or-
ganized labor is now on. It is a fact
that last Saturday in the office of J.
Plerpont Morgan in New York we
could bave settled the strike had we
agreed to desert you. We would not
desert you, and we now ask you not
to desert us (cries of “No, no”). This
{s @ contest in which millions of dol-
lars are concentrated to crush out or-
ganized labor. I have gone over every
fnch of the ground, and assure_you
men that the general strike order will
be obeyed to the letter. Our financial
Fesources are in good shape, and we
will pay strike benefits from now on.
}] f you remain steadfast, victory and
garlands will be yours.”
| Secretary John Williams followed
Mr. Shaffer. He told of the support
that has been offered the association
by union men from all over the coun
try. Yesterday, he said, he had r
| ceived @ telegram from the Whit:
| Rats of New York, in which that or
| Sanization offered to cona’e a per
| centage of their earnings for the s°-ike
fund and also to give perfor. asce
for the beneft of the sirikers in ali
parts of the country. Membe.s of th:
] Bricklayers’ Union had vo.uatarily dc
J uated a generous sum for the sirik
J and also announced that they woul.
-| assess their members 20 per cent. o:
-] thetr earnings for alding the s rike
t] This, tt was estimated, would bring In
2] $1,000 @ month.
;| By Monday of next week the Amal-
gameted Association expected to shor
ite hand in an unexpected quarter. The
-| Mclals of the organization decline t<
»| even intimate what this means, but
s| Promise that there will be develop
-| ments of an interesting character by
a} tust time, In this connection, tt ts
g| fd, that upwards of 90 per cent. of
>| the men employed in the Carnegie
mills are union at heart.
Gompers Declines To Speak.
Atlantic City, Aug. 7.—President
Gompers, of the American Federation
of Labor, who is sojourning here, sald
last night that he would not deny or
affirm anything in regard to the Fed.
eration’s attitude towards the steel
strike.
Stee! Strike Has Effect.
Niles, Mich., Aug. 7.—Effects of the
steel strike are being felt here. The
Merrill-Stevens company, nranufactur-
ors of railroad cattle guards, were yes-
terday compelled to shut down their
local plant, being unable to secure
yaw material.
DOWAGER EMPRESS DEAD.
"Emperor Willlarn and Other Childres
Were Present.
Cronberg, August 6—The Dowager
Empress Frederick, mother of Emperor
William, died at 6.15 p. m. yesterday
‘The death was unexpectedly sudden
as at 4p. m. her physicians had re-
ported no change in her condition. Shi
Wwas fully conscious during the las
hours, and abl her children, with the
(ne eae
5d Aap ee ae)
\ TR
Wen 3)
ae
Sep SS .
OT ome
Swan eS
Se eo Oe
F Fine LA RRE
RSENS
se CHEANE
EMPRESS FREDERICK
exception of Prince Henry, who ‘eS
Cadiz, were assembled in the sick rbom
Ot her death the Norddentsche Alle.
gemeine Zeitung in a splendid eulog)
says: “The most brilliant earthly for
tune and the most profound humar
suffering were alike not known to her
In the greatness of soul with whict
she bore an incurable malady sh
showed hersdlf a true companion o
the German hero who, by his suffering:
and his deeds, will ever remain dea:
to the hearts of our people. By bii
side she now sleeps, and her name wil
endure among the names of the grea
Princesses who have adorned th
throne of the Hohenzollerns.””
SENATOR McLAURIN’S REPLY,
Holds Tillman Responsible For Re
quest For His Reelanatian.
Sats OR ae ar ee ae een
Columbia, 8. C., Aug. 7.—The state
Democratic executive committee yes.
terday received Senator McLaurin’s
reply to their action of July 25 con.
demning his course in the Senate
and demanding his resignation. It {s
of considerable length.
In the course of the letter Senator
McLaurin writes: “I hold my commis.
ston from the Democratic voters of
South Carolina. I recognize no au-
thority but theirs, take no orders from
any source but them, and shail in due
course appeal to them for judgment
on my course as a senator and my
character as a man and a Democrat.
Personally, I am indifferent to your
action, because nobody has made you
my master or censor, and I regard
what you have done as merely ex.
Pressing the malice and the foars of
one individual, Senator B. R. Till:
man.”
ANOTHER JOHNSON RAILWAY.
In Which 3-Cent Fares and Free Trane
tnan: dee Bandhan”
Cleveland, Aug. 7.—The United
Traction company, of Cleveland, a con:
cern in which Mayor Tom L. Johnson
is believed to be a prominent factor,
will within the next few weeks, it is
said, ask the city council for a street
car franchise in this city for a system
that will embrace half a dozen lines,
east and west and cross town. Three.
cent fares and universal transfers will
be two of the concessions the new
‘company will offer as reasons for its
request for franchises.
Mayor Taggart Declined Fourth Term,
Indanapolis, Aug. 7—Mayor Thomas
Taggart, three times mayor of In
dianapolis, {n a letter to the Demo:
cratic city committee, positively de
clines to accept a fourth nomination.
The committee has accepted the letter
as final. Mayor Taggart’s renomina.
tlon was assured. He ts Democratic
national committeeman from Indiana
GENERAL MARKETS.
Dae ey at eg EN Rp Ao Ele eet
winter superfine, #2.1592.30; Pennsylvania
roller, clear, $2,903.15; city mil's, exten,
$2.40G2.65. Rye four slow, at Gis
Der barrel. Wheat firm: No. 2 red,
spot, T3@79%e. Corn dull; No.3
yellow, local, #2e. Oats firm; No, 2 white
clipped, W@4Ke.: lower grades, Mekte.
Hay in'good demand: No. 1 timothy, $1¢ 80
G17 for large bulex. Beet firm: beet hama
$9.50G20.50. Pork steady; family, $1750,
Live poultry quoted at’ We, for hens,
Te. for old roosters, 12@le. for spring
chickens. Dressed poultry at 10g0Me. for
choice fowls, Sige. for old roosters, 18i#2e.
for nearby broliers, 12@Me. for frozen
broilers. Butter steady; creamery, 21'e.
factory, 19@2lc. Cheese ungettled.
fancy large colored, S499Kc. Eggs firm:
New York and Pennsylvania, ie; west.
ern storage, at mark, 12G14. Potatoes
Off; Jerseys, Sbatse.
Baltimore, Aug. &—Flour quiet and un.
changed. Wheat strong: spot and th
month, TI4GTac.; September. UTIKe.
October, “THaliee.; | December. ee.
steamer No.’ 2 red, G26TiMe.: southern,
by sample, 62G074i9c.; southern, on grate
WHETHC. Corn dull; spot, STGE.e ; the
month, STie.; September, Sho s-eimer
mixed, Sé\yGSic.; southern white cor. 6
Bele; southera yeliow corn, 6G Ie. Oat
firm ‘for old: new more actle; No, 3
white, old, Wattse.: new, 6G": No. 5
mixes, old, 4B@G@ke. Rye stro: and
higher; No. 3 nearby, Séc.; No. 2 western,
See. Hay firm: No. ‘1 timothy. $16.16 50
Butter firm and unchang-d; f ney im'tu:
ton, 17Glkc.: fancy creamery. Nc.
fancy ladle, 15@16c.: store packed, lay. l4e
Eggs firm’ and unchanged: fresh, Me
Cheese firm and unchanged: large, ie.
medium, 10ie.: small, Xe. Sagar frm
and unchanged; fine and coarse «ranu:
ated, $5.55
From Elmira To Towanda By Rall.
Elmira, N. Y., Aug. 7.—New York
and Pennsylvania capitalists, it is an.
nounced, will construct a railroad,
utilizing both steam and electricity,
from this city to Towanda. Pa, pass
ing through many intermediate towns.
‘The incorporation papers are expected
to be filed within a few days.
Richmond, Va., Aug. 1.—At the con.
stitutional convention yesterday Mr
Withers offered a resolution creatins
A corporation commission to be electec
by the people, and providing agains
discrimination in freight and passen
ger rates. Mr. Anderson, of Rock
bridge, offered an ordinance providiny
for purity of elections, persons wh
alter returns, or who buy or sell vote:
to be punished by confinement in jai
for from six to 12 months and to b
disfrancised for a perlod of six years
Warrenton, Va,, Aug. 2.—As the thir:
anoual exhibit of the Warrenton Hors:
Show association draws near it is ap
parent that greater interest than eve
will be taken in what is now the mos
popular and successful horse sho
south of Philadelphia. The entries wil
not close until about ten days prior t
the show—Aug. 28 and 29. The grand
| stand has bee increased to twice it
former seating capacity, and for th
| convenience of exhibitors « large num
| ber of private boxstalls have bee
erected.
To the Colored People of the World.
THE GREA7E7T CF ALL HAIR TONICS.
STRAIGHTS KINKY, NAPFY, CURLY HAIR.
Yea estilgieissie*. iris jainninjcone.. Raage Beatles yoteeal eet wl kon
tow your hair reame eraigh
2 A ; i
OUr Regutar $5.03 Complete Treatment for $1.00
Lustorone is put up in 2 forms, both must be used to secure positive results.
Em
Soe <Z (IS
rap ee » > EA
Sf org y yy et
=. @\ So AS
ne a CSD once
7s Se EAU)
2) <inGa UE i Cee)
pay ON
fis ONS
+ r ‘ 4 . € <
BEFORE USING ade ee AFTER USING
Nappy, Kinky Cun Hote acs guick eke ns every cle, Steiettens Koety,
te rats rant tae reclensscereer es Seventy a fae hence ees eet
NoTbot tone ae used" Lustorsan scclghtess SRbent ay oSiey eee
FUSTORONE No. 2.—tust be used in connection with Lustorone No. 1. tts
Eien Sc. Cams the hate fe gece loot CNY Soa tetas Sema ba ee hie
Gut, and causes the bai i grows Sue bakit esd Resarse as Hae ws haaal Ge
spadeslipmer pring ecsate een Citiee tasde oor Cats ah Pea secs
Pimples, Back Mendes WE, alco curce ad Ste Diseases Sad tesioces San eae
tukUSTORONE SCALP SOAP.—In sbuaiutey pore, Ie should be wed with
“tea picasa
OUR GREAT OFFER!
42- Cut out this advertisement and mail tows with $1.00 and we will send you
sit of ton Gases ex samaad abuee, te ps weapon os mo ane'os tate enomie
‘This otter made te atreduce Woncet Govds.” We caa ound to any place le the world.
Fall Dicectlone with every treatereat,
DOMINION MANUFACTURING CO.,
‘Stamps accepted 2220 E. Marshall St., RICHMOND, Va.
BEAUTIFUL, BREEZY, ==,
_ Buckroe Beach!
RIGHT ON THE CHESAPEAKE BAY. SEA-BATHS,
SEA-FOOD, SEA-AIR. :
| The managers of the Bay Shore Summer Resort, on the
electric car line near Hampton and Old Point, have pleasure
in announcing that that their Resort will be Speed toethe
public for the season of rg90r, on Wednesday, May 29th. This
popular Resort is now undergoing important improvements:
A large pavilion to accommodate 700 people is now being
erected and a neat hotel with comfortable rooms and spa-
‘cious parlors and private dining room is being built, The
equipment is thorough and the service is the best.
jee P g!
one eases nto Sion "RS Seas
Correspondence solicited, Address,
BAY SHORE HOTEL COMPANY, x
P. O. Box 364, Hampton, Va.
aie a er ee Ow Os
John W. Murray,
[Formerly with John Podesta]
Groceries and Country Produce
MEAT A SECIALTY
ho, 126 and 128 N. 18th St Prompt Delivery of Goods,
eee eee
CARRIED KNICHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLD
ER
ao ee
PR Eee V. P. & F. K. of W.
F iY oe ~ ‘TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
aa B Weise Wiis trganisation lias beet chartered. end Jegelly in-
Bs > f iS: —— are the laws. ~ wept Socthed ee ee
ise a4 mea’on. the Broad Bases of Charliy— Beneficisl and
Fraternal and to promote the Social and Moral condition of humanity.
Its two distinct military and uniform ranks will secure for this organization a
place in the front ranks of all sacred institutions of modern events, a grand oppor-
tunity for active men, Deputies wanted in allsections of the country to organize
lodges. Kindly address,
G. W. ALLEN Supreme Voyager,
346 W. 37th Street, New York City.
fOld hunters say
The MARLIN
mend fe the pet met Sy
{cto Is always closed, the| 53
‘mechanism the most sim- =
Fly the nah clegane, tne | aoe Or
SGrow ha belles ¢ hee Pape gL P
Rote accurately <1 plant tee .
een oy ether nike, For
eertak w38:58'0¢ 30-30. aS :
Tessa, ek, OF
iancIn Fine Anus Co. 4 i
mew maven, conn [ab
oe aa
hee? EB Ae
Pp. Soo SPN aR?) £
kag ey
oe Suet 7 é
SS sae ae Kia
4 SOS
fees Be
SUMMER SOARDERS WANTED,
Mra. J.T. Allens, Cumberland eoun
ty, Va 15 minut » walk from Farm
Tille station, Plenty of vegetable ni
fruit, Good mineral water of all king
and « very quiet place. For other ir
Formation apply fo
| ee J. fr, ALLEN,
Farmville, Va. Box 71
aS i
(INCORPORATED, JULY, 1398.)
HOME OFFICE:
ST. LUKE'S HALL, 000 ST. JAMES
RICHMOND, VA.
We pay sick Benefits Promptly.
Death Benefits in 34 hours after 950.
isfactory proof has been filed in the
Office.
OFFICERS & BOARD:
Pers, - : Rosa K, Jones
Vice-Pres., + Maccir L, WALKER
Teeas., Fanmix C. TH03 250
Sxc'y & Man’or, PaTsIEK. ANDTRSON,
Luzzim M. Dasocarts, M. Lor 91 .2Ris,
VicroRta Moon, Litti \» i
PAYNE, JOLLA H Fy sy
Rosa EB. Watsox, Dzii.. wis.
© ristian Workers Ass-mbly. Montraat
VT G., Juty 2let-Aagast 4th. 1901
for the above ovasioa “he doa heen
Kailway will eel toe from ail ate
tions on ite lines in Vieg nix ta Black
Mountain, N.C. railroat e:asion tor
Montreat, N. °. <nd return at fara one
and one-third fr the ronrd tr'p, sell-
ing dates Ja’y 19 1 to 22nd inclasive
with return Ime Anvast 8:h, and
from ull stations i Nic > ‘s olina at
ome fare for "s* -oart crt), sailing
dates from Nth Oar ins poi srs Saly
[soto 2s inalasiva, wih retain idem
Tt Aug, 8th
THE PLANET
SATURDAY, AUG. 10, 1901
GOLD BULLION ROBBERY
Smelting Works at Vallejo, Cal.
Tunnelled By Bold Thieves.
QUARTER OF A MILLION TAKEN
Robbers Worked in the Dead of Night
and Gained Entrance to the Vault
Detectives Thus Far Have Discovered Ne Trace of the Thieves.
San Francisco, Aug. 7.—About $280,
000 worth of gold bullion was stolen
from the Selby Smelting Works at
Vallejo on Monday night. The robbery was not discovered until yesterday morning. Access to the strong room, where the bullion was stored, was secured through a tunnel, which the thieves had bored from the edge of San Francisco bay to the building, some distance from the water's edge. It is supposed that the thieves took their plunder away in a boat.
The Selby Smeltter is the largest on the Pacific coast. Ores are sent there from all parts of the western slope for reduction. The works are located near the bay shore, about 30 miles from San Francisco. The gold is kept in a steel-lined room. The robbers tunneled until they got directly under the room, and then cut through the floor. The tunnel was skillfully constructed work, which it must have taken many days to complete. An official of the Selby works made the following statement this morning:
"The robbers must have succeeded in entering the vault some time between midnight and l o'clock yesterday morning. They entered the vault through a hole about the size of a manhole in a boiler, and indications point to the fact that the robbers have been working on the scheme for some time. Over 150 holes were bored in the bottom of the vault, and the workmanship indicates that mechanics of more than usual ability superintended the job. The holes were bored to within a hair's breadth of the surface, and when the proper time came the plate was forced up, thus giving the robbers access to the vault. The plotters first excavated a hole alongside the building, directly in line with the vault. The work of excavating must have taken some time, and at the end of each night's work (for the work must have been done at night), a covering of laths, rubber sheeting and sacks was made, the whole being covered over with a layer of dirt, thus hiding any sign of what was going on.
"What became of the excavated dirt we have been unable to find out. It must have been removed in sacks. The covering we have ascertained was not strong enough to hold the weight of a man, but the excavation was made so close to the building that the man never walked over it. We find that the plotters were aided by some one thoroughly familiar with the system employed at the works and one fully informed as to the construction of the vault.
"Monday night one of the watchmen employed about the premises heard noises inside the vault and informed his fellows that the devil or ghosts were inside the vault. They laughed at him and made no investigation, and thus the robbers were left unmolested at their work.
"The weight of the gold carried out of the vault aggregates 1,200 pounds, and it must have taken several trips for one man. And several men must have been employed in carrying the metal to the boat. We are assured a boat was in waiting for them.
"Inside the vault were several sacks containing $110,000, but this was not touched. It may have been that the men became alarmed. That they were alarmed is also indicated by the fact that two bars of gold of great value were left on the beach in their haste to escape."
HOWISON ON SCHLEY COURT.
Berry On Famous Board.
Washington. H. Washington, has been appointed
Henry I. Howison, has been appointed
REAR ADMIRAL HOWISON. to fill the vacancy on the Schley court of inquiry, caused by the inability of Rear Admiral Kimberley to serve. Admiral Howison is one of several officers who, Rear Admiral Schley notified the department, were satisfactory to him. The navy department has received from Admiral Schley a list of officers whom he desires to have summoned as witnesses before the court. Among these are Lieutenant Commander Seaton Schroeder, governor of Guam:
Ensign William B. Wells, who served with Schley on the Brooklyn during the Spanish war, and Lieutenant B. W. Wells, Jr., who was Rear Admiral Schley's private secretary.
A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED.
Rev. Daniel E. Mahar, of Altoona, is now president of the Brighton Seminary at Boston. Cresceus, the champion trotter, will start against his record of 2.02% on Friday at Cleveland. The board of directors of the Seaboard Air Lines has been increased from eight to twelve members. The tea growers of Japan are about to take steps to control the market for Japanese teas by limiting the supply. Charles W. Morgan, a stock broker, of New York, Philadelphia and Washington, has been adjudged a bankrupt. Friday, August 2. Harry C. Mason, former speaker of the Ohio house of representatives, is dead at Prescott, Arz. The Virginia constitutional convention by a tie vote of 39 to 29 yesterday again refused to take a recess. Theodore C. Search called on President McKinley at Canton yesterday in the interests of Philadelphia manufacturers.
Mr. and Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Clark-decker started from New York yesterday on a 2,900-mile ride to Beaumont, Tex., on their automobile. Israel M. Parr, senior member of the grain firm of I. M. Parr & Son, and one of the most prominent of the old line of Baltimore merchants, died last night at Fernwood, his country home, near Baltimore.
Saturday, August 3.
The Illinois, Indiana and Iowa railway will extend its lines into Detroit.
John Welde, a well known Philadelphia brewer, died yesterday from diabetes.
Boers to the number of 500 have invaded Portuguese territory in South Africa.
Judge Gillette, of Valparaiso, Ind., is a candidate for the United States district bench to succeed the late Judge W. A. Woods.
In a speech in the house of commons yesterday, that was attended by much excitement, Mr. Chamberlain said the war policy of the government in the future would be a most severe one.
Monday, August 5.
Ninety per cent. of the horses in Chicago, Ill., have influenza.
Corn in Kentucky has fallen off 55 per cent. and tobacco 26 per cent. from the drouth.
Foshall Keene, the noted polo player, has returned to this country from England.
The torpedo boat Biddle, built at Bath, Me. has been accepted by the government.
Benjamin S. Banks, a Philadelphia lawyer, died yesterday at the Salem, Mass., hospital, of typhoid fever.
For conducting a raffle of a building at Omaha, Neb., several prominent officeholders are to be prosecuted.
Charles H. Hayden, a noted landscape and animal painter, died in Boston yesterday on his 45th birthday anniversary.
Tuesday, August 6.
David E. Hill, a prominent sewer
pipe manufacturer died at Akron, O
pipe manufacturer, died at Akron, O.
Leonard G. Sefing's jewelry store at
Allentown, Pa., was robbed of between
$4,000 and $5,000.
The new state reformatory at Rahway, N. J., was formally opened yesterday.
Jesse Haney, owner at one time of the New York Picayune, died at his home in New York yesterday.
Governor McMillan, of Tennessee,
and Governor Tyler, of Virginia, determined upon the share of expense to be borne by their respective states in settling the boundary line.
The Gottleib Baurern-Schmid-Strauss Brewing company, a combination of Baltimore brewers, was incorporated at Camden, with a capital of $5,000,000.
Wednesday. August 7.
At Raleigh, N. C., the most destructive rain in 40 years fell. The United States training ship Saratoga has arrived at Cherbourg. Valuable mineral treasures have recently been discovered in Palestine.
council has been discovered in Palestine.
Preparatory work was begun in Cleveland yesterday for the encampment of the G. A. R.
Norfolk was visited by a tornado at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon which blew off the roofs of twenty houses.
The United Mine Workers of district No. 1, endorsed the stand taken by the Amalgamated Association.
Daniel Maher, the jockey, will probably never enter another race. He has hemorrhage of the lungs.
In retaliation for the German tariff bill, Russia will forbid its farm laborers crossing the frontier to work in Prussia.
Samuel Shinn, convicted of the murder of Thomas Applegate, of Extonville, N. J., was yesterday sentenced to 18 years at hard labor.
PRISONER'S NOVEL OFFER.
Will Give $100,000 To See G. A. R. En-
campment At Cleveland.
Columbus, O., Aug. 7.—Ben De Lamos, a United States prisoner from Alabama, in the Ohio penitentiary here, offers to give bond in $100,000 if permitted to attend the G. A. R. encampment at Cleveland. He says he has never missed one. De Lamos was sentenced for a technical violation of the pension laws. He is the man who slept in the speaker's chair in the Alabama house as a tramp, and within two years was elected as a member and afterward filled the chair as speaker.
Carrollton, Miss., Aug. 2.—The murder of Mr. and Mrs. Tallafero culminated last night in the lynching of Betsie McCray, her son, Beffield McCray, and daughter, Ida McCray, all colored. The mob was composed of about 600 white citizens of Carroll county, who marched to the jail in order, demanded the keys from Jailer Duke, proceeded to the cells of the unfortunate negroes, bound them by the necks and hands and carried them to the corporate limits of the town, where they hung them to a tree by the publicside and riddled their bodies with bullets.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
GENERAL SOUTHERN N
Macon, Ga., Aug. 5.—A special frost Gainesville, Ga., says: "Mrs. Dic Chatham died at her home in this city yesterday morning of hydrophobis She was bitten by a mad dog severs days ago.
Jackson, Miss., Aug. 6.—W. J. Lygon, sanitary inspector of Jackson, last night shot and killed David L. Shelton. The men had quarreled earl in the day. Shelton, it is said, returned to the attack with a stick, whe Ligon pulled a revolver and shot him through the heart.
Montgomery, Ala., Aug. 6.—Miss Carrie Jones, 20 years of age, daughter of ex-Governor Thomas G. Jones, was run over and killed by a street ca yesterday in front of her father's residence. The accident was witnessed by the ex-governor.
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 5.—A special fro
Leesburg, Ga., says: Ten persons were
poisoned with ice cream last Thursday
at the home of Mrs. W. R. Bunkley
W. R. Bunkley died yesterday from
the effects, and Mrs. Bunkley and
daughter are critically ill. The guest
and others of the family are recor
ering.
Smithville, Tenn., Aug. 3.—The first
lynching in the history of DeKal
county was recorded yesterday, when
Charley Davis, the man who was
charged with assaulting Miss Kai
Huse last Sunday evening, was tak
from the court house by a mob o
about 25 people and hanged about
quarter of a mile from town.
Knoxville, Tenn., Aug. 5.—The Knoxville Traction company made an effort to run cars yesterday. This cut down the church congregations and made Knoxville a city of stay-at-home. Chilhowie Park, owned by the Traction company, which usually is crowded on Sunday, was deserted there being no way to reach it.
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 6.—Adjutant General Robertson last night ordered Major Barker to put himself in command of three companies and report with them this morning to the sheriff of Cherokee county at the Fultor county jail in Atlanta, to accompany Raymond Ross, a negro, to Canton Ga., where he will be tried to day-for an alleged assault on a white woman
New Orleans, Aug. 5.—The Picay unee Carrollton, Miss., special says: "Your correspondent has just learned that the armed mob which has been in the Tallafero neighborhood for two days, looking for Sallie Laytor and others, some time last night killed Will Pice, the negro who worked for Mr. Tallafero and lived within 200 yards of his residence.
Carrollton, Miss., Aug. 3.—The alm has been rife with rumors of additional lynchings all day but these reports are without foundation. A posse of men is scouring the country in an effort to apprehend several negroes suspected of complicity in the murder of Mr. and Mrs. Tallafero. The only persons lynched in connection with the murder were the three McGray negroes.
Charleston, S. C., Aug. 3.—Dr. Henry B. Horlbeck, at the time of his death and for many years health officer of this port, died yesterday. His body, according to his direction, will be cremated, the third instance of the kind in the history of South Carolina, the first having been Henry Laurens, the president of the continental congress, who died in 1792, the first cremation in this country.
Jackson, Miss., Aug. 2.—After an exciting chase and escape from a mob bent on lynching the prisoners, Sheriff Magee, of Simpson county, arrived in Jackson yesterday, having in custody Sterling Johnson and Reuben Tezelle, negroes who murdered a young white man named Mangum, near Magee, Miss. Tuesday night. A mob surrounded the jail Wednesday night and endeavored to break down the gate.
Charlotte, N. C., Aug. 5. — A special from Shelby, N. C., says that Chief of Police Jones of that place was shot and instantly killed by Jim Lowery, a negro employed at the South Carolina and Georgia depot, yesterday morning. Jones, with a warrant charging Lowery with selling whiskey without a license, went to serve it and was shot through the heart. Four bloodhounds and over a thousand people are on the nogroe's trail.
Sensible Course of Action.
A pedantic pedagogue had taken a few of his pupils to the zoo. While the lions were being fed he asked the keeper: "If one of these gigantic and ferocious carnivora should contrive to emancipate itself, and should hurl its prodigious strength into our midst, what steps would you take?"
"Long uns, sir," answered the boy—Tit-Bits.
Began to Economize
She—As we are to be married next month, don't you think you ought to begin to economize?
He—Oh, I've begun already. That very thought occurred to me this evening as I was coming here.
She—What did you do?
He—Passed the candy store without stopping.—N. Y. Weekly.
Hygienic Enough.
Lady (seriously, to policeman in Central park)—Officer, did this walking through the wet grass according to Father Kueipp ever really cure anything?
Officer (with enthusiastic heartiness)—Shure, ma'am! Dirty feet.—Judge.
Only Natural.
Schermerhorn—How amusingly most girls write. I receive letters from three different girls, each of which is one long sentence without punctuation from beginning to end.
Stuyvesant—That is not peculiar.
That is simply the way girls talk.—Brooklyn Eagle.
It Made a Difference
Dr. Bigfee—Have the Joneses paid their bill yet?
Secretary—They have.
Dr. Bigfee—Ah, Mrs. Jones is in the office—I didn't know whether to order her to the mountains or order her out—Judge.
A Match and a Mystery.
Her name was Short—his name was Long—They married; now, you see.
She's always Long—he's always short—How's always Long—he's always be?
-Chicago Record-Herald.
FOR
SUNDAY
READING
THE SETTING SUN.
In stately grandeur goes the setting sun
With still increasing glories down the
west.
His measured course across the heavens
is run.
And his-born glories mark his place of
rest;
Like a great spreading sea of flame and
fire
Broken in waves of color and rich hue. The center is green, the blue of the sapphire
Orange and pearl and purple woven through.
Like a great chart of some Hesperian sees,
Where lie the tabled islands of the blest,
Beyond in all their splendid imagery,
What tongue or artist's penil can express.
Great arm of light, that in columns rise,
And break in minarets and flashing domes.
That fill with new-born hope and glad surprise,
As doth some dream that in the night time comes.
And as my eyes dwell on the wondrous beauty,
My thoughts reach out beyond the changing show.
Beyond the fleeting, unubstantial sheen
That soon shall into ashen shadows grow,
Where lies, 'mid splendors fadeless that
endure.
The city of our God and His redeemed;
Where is no change but such as shall insure
A greater glory than erstwhile was dreamed.
So, too, the goal now reached, and closed the race,
The Christian goes in triumph to his rest;
The smile of God transfigures his pale face,
The heart of God abounds within his breast,
The setting sun becomes a rising sun,
Before which shadows flee, the new day's dawn,
A day which shall in endless cycles run,
With glory crowned, forever on and on.
-William G. Hasesebarth, in Christian Work.
THE LITTLE CHILD.
Why He Was Selected by Christ to Exemplify to the World the True Life.
It has been said that "Jesus Christ discovered the child." And this is true in its best sense. He left it for boastful "psychologists" of a later age to ascertain by means of "child study" how many babies in 100 put their right thumbs in their mouths and how many prefer their left, great toes; but Jesus Christ saw in the child those primal requisites of the spiritual nature upon which the happiness and the moral life of the world alike rest.
The one great question of all religions had been: What kind of life on earth is most approved by the heavenly powers? It was significantly when His disciples had been striving about questions of precedence that He "took a little child and set him in the midst of them" and said: "The greatest in the kingdom of Heaven is the one most like this."
It was a reversal of the popular conception in a sentence. Man's conception of God has been of one impassive, stern, self-conscious of His infinite perfections. The exposition of Jesus taught that God was sympathetic, forgiving, self-forgetful in His aims. Each age has certain virtues that are in a measure native to it. Those native to childhood, said the Master, are supreme. By Heaven's measurements he is not "greatest" who can best prove, but he who most readily believes; not he who can systematize a moral theory, but he who is most responsive to moral intuitions; not he who can surmount obstacles, but he who is most sweetly conscious of and glad in his dependence.
No age ever needed that lesson more than this; no people more than we. Our popular heroes are all of the "strenuous" kind. In finance they are multi-milliomires; in state, imperial counsellors, men of blood and iron. Even in religion we have not only abandoned the cloister; we have forsaken the closet. We worship only the big, the powerful, the triumphant. We must have "great" revivals, or give up. That Kingdom of Heaven which cometh not by observation is "too slow" for our day. We must count our members every year; and our faith rises or falls with the figures of the census.
But, after all, our own experience only goes to show that Jesus was right, as He always is. The noblest manhood always carries a heart of childhood in its breast. The most Christlike church has still something of the early simplicity in its faith and ways; while the divinet soul, the one most fitted for the kingdom of God on earth or in Heaven, believes because it must; obeys, as a matter of gracious instinct, and loves because it is life to love. It is of such souls the Kingdom of Heaven is built up; and the best thing we can do for the kingdom ourselves is to cherish such a spirit in our hearts.—Chicago Interior.
SUNBEAMS.
Peace with God gives power with men.—Ram Horn.
After all, more souls are won for Jesus Christ by saintly conduct than by any argument.—Alexander Maclaren.
For that is the essence of true religion—to be redeemed from the bondage of sin as well as its punishment.—James Hinton.
If Heaven doth not enter into us by way of holiness, we shall never enter into Heaven by way of happiness.—John Mason.
To the bright-spirited friend we always turn when we need human help. In affliction we have no use for the one who looks on the dark side of life. He is as useless as dark, lowering skies are to the already storm-beaten land.—Christian Intelligencer.
A SERENE SOUL
In Christ the Only Thing That Can Give Any Real Peace of Mind.
And that ye study to be quiet.—I. Thessalonians, 4:11.
Peace of mind is worth more than many things which we work harder to require. It has no relation to that stolical indifference which driftwood feels when it tries to stem the current
and then resigns itself to fate, but is the result of faith in the purpose and power of God to adapt every possible experience to our higher welfare. A man can be calm only when he knows that a stronger hand than his is guiding events, and that behind the hand is a warm heart.
Our spiritual difficulty is that we cannot consent to allow God to rule His own universe. If we were traveling through a strange country we should accept the word of our guide as final. His familiarity with the environment would render him an authority, and though many things might not be to our liking, we should hardly take the responsibility of dismissing him and trusting to our ignorance rather than his wadmom. The profitableness of the journey would depend on implicit obedience, for without the guide we should be helpless. We know nothing of the new language, nothing of the customs of the people, and if left alone, therefore, we should be like a blind man among pitfalls. The guide is the autocrat of the occasion, and unless he is the autocrat the whole journey will end in grief. He does not advise, he commands. He even insists when you rebel, and will make no compromise whatever. There is but one safe way to proceed in order to insure the end you seek, and he is master of that way. Your sole business is to obey him, and to prove his ability to lead by the results which come to you.
If, therefore, you are convinced that your guide is competent, you can be quiet under the most perplexing circumstances. When he assures you that you need have no fear, that though danger threatens he is in perfect control of the exigency, you learn to suffer discomfort with something approaching cheerfulness, and the fact that you have confidence in him affords a serenity and even a contentment which you could not enjoy but for his presence. He tells you frankly that there are hardships to be borne, but no real harm can come to you; that there are sufferings to be endured, but because of them you will find yourself a stronger and healthier man in the end.
I take it that life is just such a journey as that. It is through a new and strange country we are traveling. It is not an easy road that leads through earth to Heaven. Neither can it be denied that our experiences are frequently inexplicable. Problems present themselves which we cannot solve, and we wonder with a rebellious kind of wonder why we must suffer while others seem to enjoy. Only one grim fact stares us in the face, namely, that the unwelcome experience cannot be evaded, must be met, and, if possible, used to our advantage.
I am ready to admit that there is apparent injustice in human life, and ready to confess that I do not understand it. But this I know: there are just two ways, and no more, in which to meet whatever fate befalls. If I have no faith that wisdom and love are in control, I am the most desperate and unhappy being on the planet. My doubt is a source of weakness which disables me. My mental attitude affects even my physical health, and I am like a warrior who goes into battle without his weapons.
Life is not profitable if you must go through it on your own personal judgment and responsibility.
Outside of yourself there must be someone to call on for help, for comfort, for consolation.
The universe is a dreary place without a God to worship and to pray to.
God is the soul's prime necessity, and until you find Him and effect some kindly relation to Him, you can accomplish nothing better than failure.
But with God always in the background of your experience nothing can happen that cannot be mastered. Peace of mind is the result of faith. Philosophy cannot furnish it, wealth cannot buy it, fame cannot give it to you. It is the product of religion alone. The religion which makes you bear with patience, suffer with resignation and seek in sorrow and be reevaluation the good they hide—that is worth having. It is practicable, and proves itself Divine by bringing God and the angels close to the soul when it needs them most. It is like bread to the hungry, water to the thirst. Christ was calm. His heart was an untroubled sea. Calvary did not dismay, Gethsemane did not disturb. The secret of His serenity was the presence of God, which, like sunlight, made darkness impossible.
Even so with us. With Heaven in sight, with angels near at hand, the dull experiences of earth are transfigured by the radiance of eternity. We canbe cheerful, quiet, serene when the hand of man grasps the hand of the Father—George H. Hepworth, in N. Y. Herald.
Spirit of True Contentment.
Does it rain to-day? Is it dark and gloomy? That is all right; there must be some stormy days. To-morrow the clouds will have a silver lining, or disappear entirely. Does the sun shine? Enjoy the sunshine. To-morrow may be bright, also. Are you well? Enjoy your health and use it to the best advantage. Are you ill? Then it is a day in which to be patient and endure cheerfully. Are you free from trouble? Then it is a thanksgiving day. Are you carrying heavy burdens for yourself or others? Then it is a day for the rolling of your burdens at the foot of the Cross.—Louise Heywood.
His Alleged Views
First City Man—How does Subbubs like that place of his?
Second City Man—Well, he has only one objection to malaria now — it isn't necessarily and quickly fatal.— Puek.
Avoiding the Rush
Politician—Tell me the best way to get out of politics.
Friend—Turn prohibitionist.
"Oh, that's too sudden; I want to get out gradually."—Smart Set.
People Who Are Trifling
People WHO ARE Triming.
Wl-en you see people who are trifling, they do not keep their engagements.-Washington (Ia.) Democrat.
A Girl's Shoe
Shoes that exude in a girl are a
curiosity—Chicago Blow News.
The Scheme That Failed.
"I say, Gaddesby," said Mr. Smith, as he entered a Peebles fishermonger's with a lot of tackle in his hand, "I want you to give me some fish to take home with me. Put them up to look as if they've been caught today, will you?"
"Certainly, sir. How many?"
"Oh, you'd better give me three or four-barbell! Make it look decent in quantity without appearing to exaggerate, you know."
"Yes, sir. You'd better take salmon, eh?"
"Why? What makes you think so?"
"Oh, nothing, except that your wife was down early this morning, and said if you dropped in with your fishing tackle and a generally woebegone look, I was to persuade you to take salmon if possible, as she liked that kind better than any other."—London Answers.
Things That Might Be Bettered.
This may be the age of steel, steal, progress and reform, but we are not improving in some lines with commendable speed. The eyelets in our shoes are round, but we still wear flat strings. The loops on our summer trousers are placed so low that the waistband protrudes above the belt. The strap on the neckband of our shirt is long enough to let our tie slip over the top of the collar. Our hats are made for bullet-headed men; those with long heads must have a new purchase stretched out of shape to obtain a fit. The only kind of bachelor's buttons that are not utterly worthless grow wild in the fields of the United States. The country youths used to carry them in their pockets to divine their success with their sweethearts.—N. Y. Press.
Painters Mixed in Their Flags.
The cleaning of the frescoes at Westminster abbey has called attention to the fact that in the picture of the pilgrim fathers there the good ship Mayflower is flying the union flag that first came into existence in 1800, says a London newspaper. This anachronism is not uncommon in naval pictures. In the collection of all paintings of sea fights at the British Royal United Service institution there are many pictures of battles fought before 1800 in which the British ships飞 the union flag of to-day. The explanation of this anticipation of history is that some years ago, when the older pictures were cleaned and restored, the restorer "corrected" the flags by painting in St. Patrick's red cross over the white St. Andrew's cross of Scotland.—London Mail.
Lion Versus Buffalo.
When Purvis and Clark were exploring in Africa, north of the Zambesi, they saw a large lion stalking a buffalo bull and a calf. In his native wilds the lion is no particular hero, while the African buffalo is one of the most dangerous of the wild things. So Purvis and Clark watched. Suddenly the bull charged, but the lion sprang to one side for an instant, then leaped for the calf. Before the beast could strike, however, the buffalo bull had turned again and charged. The lion, on the defensive, struck at his assailant, but the blow had no effect on the enraged creature. One of the long, cruel horns caught the lion in the side and the creature, weighing more than 400 pounds, was thrown ten feet into the air—Chicago Tribune.
Too Reallistic Altogether
The drama has sometimes a curious effect on the mind of the people, and an incident proving this occurred here recently. The drama "Inez de Castro" was being played by a Lisbon tournee company at Evora. In the fifth and last act Inez is cruelly murdered by three men, who stab her and her children to death in a most harrowing manner. This aroused such indignation in the hearts of the occupants of the gallery that a party of them waited at the stage door for the murderers to come up, and attacked them with sticks and bludgeons, to the great dismay of the actors.—Lisbon Vanguarda.
In a lecture before the University of Aberdeen, Dr. A. Keith expressed the opinion that both the gorilla and the chimpanzee are codecendants of an anthropoid animal which lived in the early miocene time, and he suggested for this creature the name of protroglodytes. He estimated that more than 5,000,000 years have elapsed since the separation of the human stock as a distinct animal form. -Science.
Making a Strong Impression
"Now, ma, you know I'm anxious to make an impression on those New York people. Bring me the coal oil can. I want to perfume my clothes." "With coal oil! Mercy, child, what do you mean?" "Why I want 'em to think we own an automobile." — Cleveland Plain Dealer
Can Animals Cry!
Lady Burton says she has seen horses in the Syrian desert cry from thirst, a mule cry from the pain of an injured foot, and camels shed tears in streams. A cow, sold by its mistress who had tended it from birth, wept bitterly. A young soko ape used to cry from vexation if Livingstone didn't nurse it in his arms when it asked him to. Wounded apes have died crying, and apes have wept over their young ones slain by hunters. A chimpanzee trained to carry water jugs broke one, and fell a crying, which proved sorrow, though it wouldn't mend the jug. Rats, discovering a young one drowned, have been moved to tears of grief. A giraffe which a huntsman's rifle had injured began to cry. Sea lions weep for the loss of their young. Gordon Cumming observed tears trickling from the eyes of a dying elephant. And even an orang-outang, when deprived of its mango, was so vexed that it took to crying. There can be little doubt, therefore that animals do weep from grief, or pain, or annoyance.—Cassell's Little Folks.
A Historic Punch-Howl
Quite possibly the most revered piece of silver plate in the United States navy is the massive 18-pound silver pumpe bowl of the battleship Indiana, which bears the honorable
MOVING IN EXTREMES.
Friend—How is your wife, old chap?
Friend—How is your wife, old chap?
Mr. Hanpeck—Last week she was dangerously ill and just now she is dangerously healthy—Heiltere Welt.
The Stald Young Man.
Her bean, he is a stald young man;
Ah, yes, the wee sax hours.
Have often proved anew to her
His staying powers.
—Philadelphia Bulletin.
An Overpowering Argument.
"Joe, how on earth did that man work you with a gold brick?"
"Well, he took a mean advantage of me, you see; it was a hot day, and he first worked me with an ice cream brick."—Chicago Record-Herald.
An Abstract Topic
"Do you think that young Mr. Cady-takes after his ancestors?"
"Really," answered Miss Cayenne,
"I haven't time to discuss the Dar-
winian theory." - Washington Star.
Just So.
"She winked at you, eh? Well what
followed?"
Folly of an English Girl.
Devonshire, England, is to lose an interesting monument of the folly of a wealthy man. The earl of Egremont, who pursued so picturesque a career in the '50's of the last century, resolved to erect a mansion at Silverton, near Exeter, which should be an example to the world of what his genius and riches could produce in the way of beauty and luxury. He was his own architect, and so profuse were his ideas that he put up about 200 marble mantelpieces, had the doorknobs of the principal rooms fashioned of amber and the bath cut out of a solid piece of marble. He spent a quarter of a million on the place, and even then it was incomplete. It is, in fact, incomplete to this day, and now it is to be sold as building material.
Two Exor Two
Jones, like a fool, had poked his nose
Twixt man and wife—and got the blows!
Quoth Jones: "It has been truly said,
Angels fear tread. —Chicago, Daily News."
A man is kneeling on a table, preparing a bowl of food. A woman stands behind him, holding a spoon and a fork. A cat sits on a shelf above the table.
Sweet-Tempered Wife — i'm glad you're takin' a wash, John—there ain't a drop 'n ink in the place.—Ally Sloper.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By
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HOWARD UNIVERSITY.
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Tuition fee in medical and Dental
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For catalogue or further information
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901 R St. N.
Washington
HE PLANET
THE STORM.
squadroned troops of the Storm King rolled
Up from the darkening west;
With rumble of chatter who is untold,
And glancing of the tattered st.
And deep in the wooch, a celll heard
and waited with oooping head.
While out from the tree the twittering
bird
Into the thicket spind.
With flashing of mary a signal light,
And matter of mortal dim.
He brought the conquering hosts of Night,
And the sun was overcome.
From hill and valley along his way
Were stricken the bonds of Heat
And not a leaf or a twig or spray
But blessed his hurrying feet.
Till the work was done; and adown the sky
He passed to the distance dim.
He drew his pennants, fluttering high.
AM a newspaper man—that is, I am employed on a morning newspaper to write news, not love stories.
In my "assignments" I meet many men and hear many strange tales, some true, but the majority not. But surely the strangest of all is that I am about to relate.
It is customary for newspaper men to buy almost every afternoon paper in order to familiarize themselves with events that have taken place in the time intervening between the previous issue of the morning paper on which they are employed and the following one. Not that this has anything to do with the story—except that it nerves to introduce one of the characters. I always bought my paper from one boy—"Jim" Taylor by name—and thus formed a liking for him, for he was always courteous—and dirty.
"Jim," I had learned from him, was an orphan and lived at the Newsboys' lodging house. He had no care beyond earning enough to feed and clothes himself, and, of course, a sufficient amount left over for a ticket for "de gallery in the teayter," accompanied by the traditional pint of peanuts.
In the two or three years I had known "Jim" he had never been absent from his post of duty at the corner. But about two months ago he was missing from his accustomed place or business, and although made inquiries, I could get no information concerning him beyond the fact that his companions "hadn't heard marthin of him." So, after pondering as to whether the little fellow had committed a criminal act and had been sent to some institution or had been run over by some vehicle and was perhaps lying in a hospital without relatives or friends to care as to the result of his injuries, and further inquiries proving fruitless, the name of "Jim" passed temporarily from my mind.
A week ago, upon going to the office to get my "assignment" for the day, I found that opposite my name on the book were these instructions: "See Senator H— in regard to the rumor that he had been offered the presidency of the — national bank."
Going to the senator's house, my summons at the door was answered by a rather bright-looking boy dressed in the conventional blue suit with white metal buttons, of whom I inquired: "Is Senator H—at ho—well, I blessed if this isn't little 'Jim'. How in the world did you get here?" At which "Jim" smiled a very broad smile and replied: "Yes, sir, the senator is at home. How did I get here? Oh, the senator will tell you that if he isn't too busy. Your card, please." This was said in a tone plainly indicating that he was to be treated in a manner becoming his station as door boy, and not with the familiarity he had been accustomed to as news-boy. My card was handed him, and he returned with the announcement that the senator would receive me in his study, and would I "please to walk in."
The senator proved to be a man of small stature, with clean shaven face, and had altogether a boyish appearance. After such formal introduction customary to newspaper men making themselves known to enfire strangers, I boldly started in with: "Senator, I called to see you in reference to the rumor that you were offered the—oh, by the way, excuse me, but how do you happen to have 'Jim' Taylor in your employ? He and I are old acquaintances."
I could not resist the temptation to satisfy my curiosity on that score before attending to my duty.
"Indeed," replied the senator, "I am very glad to hear it, for my wife and I think a great deal of James, and are happy to do a favor for any of his friends. As to how I came to employ 'Jim,' as you call him, it is a story well worth the telling, in confidence, of course, although the joke was on me.
"As I had only an hour to spare before starting off again—this time for Albany—I thought it would be a good idea to get some bright newsboy to carry a note I had written on the train over to Judge Brown's office. I had learned that a quarter of a dollar invested in a newsboy will bring quicker results than double the amount paid to an incorporated institution for the service of a slow-going messenger.
"Well, Jim Taylor happened to be standing near the hotel steps selling papers, so I called him and instructed him as to delivering the message. As Jim had a great many papers, I said I would take them into the hotel and leave them with the clerk until he came back. Just as I was about to go into the office who should sing out a cheery 'Why, senator, how are you?' but Judge Brown himself, Glad to see him? Well, rather. I forgot that I was standing there on the steps of a public house with a mudgy face and a bundle of papers under my arm.
"The judge and I stood there for some minutes discussing some business matters, when our conversation was interrupted by a handsome woman, accompanied by an equally attractive young girl, who asked me for an evening paper and tendered a ten-cent piece in payment.
"The situation dawned upon me as quick as a flash and although my face assumed all the colors of the rainbow, I calmly (at least I think I did) handed over the paper and gave the young lady her change. Just imagine! She thought I was selling papers, and that in the presence of the judge, too! However, I smiled serenely. But when I overheard the conversation that ensured between the two ladies you can picture that smile changing into chagrin. It ran this way:
"Poor fellow!' said the young lady to her companion, 'he looks as if he had seen better days.'
"Yes,' responded the younger, 'but he seems old enough to keep his face washed.'
"This was too much. Abruptly leaving the judge, who was convulsed with
MY CARD WAS HANDED HIM
laughter, I threw the papers away, rushed into the hotel office, registered, took a bath, was shaved, and left just in time to catch my train.
"As James was writing at the judge's office for him, of course I had departed before he came back, and so he did not get either his quarter or his newspapers, for I did not give him a thought in my chagrin and haste to get away.
"Well, I met the pretty young lady several times afterward at receptions, and those at the judge's house too, mind you. And although the judge had not known her at the time of the ridiculous mistake, he immediately recalled the incident and came very near making the facts known to her. I managed to draw him aside in time to enforce a compact not to breathe a word about the matter.
"Two weeks ago, as you know, I was married to that same charming young lady, of course, and when I furnished this house, what better could I do than make a place for James, who was primarily the occasion of my happiness? Now, I want you to promise not to say a word about the matter, for if my wife was to know it—ah, er—Lucy, this is Mr. Blank; Mr. Blank, my wife."
Ah, well, I am only a newspaper reporter, sent about among scenes that both cheer and sadden, skilled by years of training to display no emotion, but somehow when I left the couple I felt that I would have willingly played newsboy for a year in order to have reaped the "profit" that the senator did.—N. Y. Times.
Last of the Fighters
The last English king who fought on a battlefield was George II. At the battle of Dettingen, in Bavaria, 158 years ago, between the British, Hanoverian and Hessian troops (52,000 men) under George II. and the French (60,000 men) under Marshal Noailles, which resulted in a victory for the allies, his Britannic majesty continued the whole time in all the heat of the action. The conflict is said to have been fierce. George appeared in the same red coat he had worn at Oudenarde 35 years before. At one time he was nearly taken by the enemy, but was rescued by the Twenty-second regiment, the members of which, in remembrance of that day, wore a sprig of oak in their caps upon the anniversary of the battle for many years afterward.—N. Y. Press.
Teaching the Mosquito.
It is possible to accomplish not only more than one expects, but much more than one desires. "I understand Brown went to New Jersey last summer to study the mosquito," said one man to another, referring to a well-known entomologist. "So I heard," said the second man, "but when I met him the other day he said he felt that instead of studying entomology he'd been engaged in teaching anthropology most of the time!"—Youth'sCompanion.
"What are you doing?"
"I'm footing up this running account to see how it stands."
"You must like calisthenics."—Indianaapolis News.
RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
BITS ABOUT BRITAIN.
Eight out of every 10,000 English people emigrate every year.
A Dublin firm has produced a typewriter writing Irish characters.
It is said that over £1,000,000 is spent by Londoners for flowers yearly.
Liverpool, with 99 people to the acre, is the most crowded city in England.
A party of Suffolk (England) farmers have gone to Denmark to secure hints on dairy farming.
Christ's hospital is about to give up the historic "blue coat" and dress its boys in modern costume.
If a cyclist were to ride round the coast of England and Wales he would cover a distance of nearly 2,500 miles.
A Hobbema landscape has been sold in London for $11,250 that brought $1,380 in 1837, $1,420 in 1817 and $1,925 in 1813.
No British ship may carry a deckload of timber into a British port between the last day of October and April 16.
The United Kingdom produces only 40,000 tons of cheese out of the 120,000 eaten every year by the people of that country.
Jury trials are going out of favor in England. Out of 494 cases in the king's bench at the present Trinity session, 162 are to be tried without a jury.
The Forth bridge is constantly being repainted. So vast is the structure that it takes 50 tons of paint to give it one coat, and the area dealt with is something like 120 acres.
A British pickle maker has his pint bottles made to hold just over a pint, so as to be on the safe side of the English law. His caution met with poor reward when some of these bottles arrived in Canada, where the law provides that any measure holding more than a pint must pay duty as a quart.
THE VERY LATEST.
Linen gowns are being trimmed with figured pique.
One may have the bust of one's favorite author as the handle of a seal. The dominant tone of the latest and smartest dress features is extreme daintiness. The average duration of the reign of English menarchs for the last 600 years has been 21 years.
Light blue is the favorite of all the colors for the moment, but white and a pale yellow are even smarter.
White silk rose with black velvet leaves make a chic trimming on a white straw hat faced with black.
A pretty little neck arrangement which is becoming of black velvet, fastened in front with a buckle of gilt.
There seems to be a sort of fashionable passion prevailing for materials that can be starched to boardlike stiffness.
Get a satin button to the strap of your satin slipper, bride or summer girl. It is twice as pretty as one of porcelain.
Distinguished by perpendicular lines of open work, like drawn work, with a dainty, interwoven design, is a new China silk.
A novelty in bracelets is of gold of Etruscan design; on pressing a secret spring the inscription: "Dinna forget," is revealed.
Scarlet or pink geraniums seem much liked in Paris millinery this year. Many hats are really smothered in them; a little black is sometimes happily introduced.
IN THE WORLD OF LETTERS
"Magic and Religion," Andrew Lang's latest book, just published, is a volume of essays on subjects already familiar to those who follow Mr. Lang's writings.
Alfred Austin, poet-laureate of England, is 66 years old. It will soon be 50 years since he published his first book, "Randolph: A Tale of Polish Grief."
Grand Duke Karl Alexander of Saxe Weimar, as a young man, saw a great deal of Goethe. Shortly before his death he dictated his recollections, and they will be published by the Goethe society.
Mrs. Voynich, the author of "The Gadfly" and of the new novel, "Jack Raymond," is married to a Russian refugee who escaped from Siberia after some extraordinary adventures. It is not generally known that Mrs. Annelia Barr's eldest daughter is the wife of Kirk Munroe, the popular author of juvenile books. Mrs. Munroe is said to very much resemble her mother in personal appearance.
SEASONABLE SUGGESTIONS.
The pain resulting from the sting of a bee may be instantly relieved by applying a small piece of raw onion to the affected part.
To remove sunburn wash the face at night with either sour milk or buttermilk and in the morning with a weak bran tea to which a little cologne has been added.
Persons who are troubled with prickly heat will experience great relief if the parts affected are dusted over three or four times a day with common rye flour.
A glass of milk to which has been added a raw egg beaten light, a little sugar and grated nutmeg will relieve the physical exhaustion so often experienced in warm weather.
Tan may be removed from the face and hands by mixing magnesia in soft water to the consistency of paste, which should then be spread on and allowed to remain for a minute or two; then wash off with castle-soap suds and rinse in soft water.
Natural Question to Ask.
"We must have an interview with the heroine of that scandal," asserted the managing editor of the sensational sheet.
"But the details are all known," protested the city editor. "What is there left to ask her?"
"She should be asked," replied the managing editor thoughtfully, "whether it is her intention to write a novel or go on the stage."—Chicago Post.
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LITTLE BILLY'S PLACE.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Warerooms: 1508 E. Broad Street, OLD PHONE, 920. RESIDENCE, 1308 E. Leigh St. Richmond, Virginia.
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102 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
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To all who owe the Pittsburgh agent, Mr. Joseph Evans: Please settle up with him at once. The Planet can be obtained at Mr. Nelson Coleman's restaurant 1214, Wylie Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
New Telephone. 328.
W. S. SELDEN.
S. J. GILPIN.
506 E. BROAD STREET,
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WOMAN'S CORNER-STONE BENEFICIAL ASSOCIATION.
INCORPORATED, MARCH, 1897.
Claims promptly paid as soon as satisfactory notice of sickness or death is placed in home-office.
OFFICERS:
LOUISA E. WILLIAMS, President
KATE HOLMES, Vice-President
BETTIE BROWN, Treasurer
MILDRED COOKE JONES,
Secretary and Business Manager
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
LOUISA E. WILLIAMS, KATE HOLMES,
MATTIE F. JOHNSON, A. N. M. JOHNSON,
BETTIE BROWN MILDRED C. JONES
From a Dodger to a Three-sheet Poster, Business Cards of all sizes, Note, Letter and Bill-heads, Placards, Statements, Envelopes, Checks, Financial Cards, Order and Financial Books for Lodges and Societies, Policies, Application Blanks, Medical Certificates, Tags, Labels, Minutes, Lodge and Society Constitutions.
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THE PLANET
IN COUNTRY LANES
O country lanes, white-starred with bloom,
Where wild things neate, shy and sweet.
Where all your waving grasses laugh
And part before my eager feet—
Cold I forever dwell with you—
Cold I like the mad old world rush by,
And just wield the wind and sun,
Of rocking nest and brooding sky!
How often, in the crowded streets,
I dream of you, sweet country lane,
And feel once more your soft breeze soothe
Mys, sordid breast and weary brain.
Ever above the city's din,
Above the clink of yellow gold,
I hear a wild bird's ringing call,
I catch the scent of fear-strewn mold.
Your grasses kiss my fevered cheek.
Your hawthorn drops her saturated rain,
I am a child again, and dream
The heavens blides here, O flower-starred lane—
- Florence A. Jones, in Criterion.
ELLIOTT and Edwards are already back from their vacation. They did not stay as long as they expected and they had one adventure which they have sworn to keep a secret. It happened the first night after they reached the lake. Though Elliott and Edwards have lived on the shores of Lake Michigan all their lives, they had never until this spring been out on the water. When they decided to go to the Wisconsin lake for their vacation trip they decided that they must at least learn how to row a boat. So they went up to Lincoln park after office hours and practiced until they felt that they were finished carmen.
When they reached the summer resort at which they had engaged a cottage they wore blue yachting suits and white yachting caps, and were "made up" in every way like a couple of sad sea dogs. Outside of vacation days they were bookkeepers in an insurance office on La Salle street. They were only a few years over 20, however, and it was natural they should want to cut a dash. Elliottdown a downy red mustache, and both youths wore gold-rimmed pinch nose everglasses.
After dinner in the big dining-room they decided it was "up to them" to give an exhibition of their seamanship. Old "Tom," the man in charge of the boats, snailled when he saw them bare two pairs of arms which it would take a wholesale poetic license to call brawny. He tried to give them a broad-beamed, flat-bottomed old skiff which could hardly be tipped over, but they were too knowing for him. They insisted on having a crankly little thing, pointed at both ends, and too narrow for either comfort or safety. As the lake was perfectly calm "Tom" let them have it, and they started out. Some one had told them of a log-cabin resort across the lake where the beer was good and there was a "nice little poker game" in operation.
The boys went across in fine style and made a dashing landing on the sandy beach of the log-cabin resort. The beer, they found, was cool and good, and, after three steins apiece, they "sat in" the poker game. Before they knew it both boys had made dangerous holes in their vacation money. That was bad enough. When they started to go home they found that a heavy sea was running. It was also true that the beer they had drank had the effect of making the sea look even more tempestuous and terrifying than it really was.
But the sad sea dogs from the Lincoln park lagoon were not to be easily daunted. They got into their cranky little skiff and pushed boldly off, encouraged by the cheers of the
THEY DESIRED A LITTLE THING POINTED AT BOTH ENDS.
men who had won their money. When they got beyond the end of the point the big waves sweeping across the lake struck them and set the "Water Lily" to bubbling like a cork. Shortly it got into the trough and commenced to ship water. Presently Edward and Elliott found their new white tennis shoes entirely submerged, while the probability constantly increased that if something we did not done the rest of them would soon find a watery grave. They looked back at the log cabin resort. It was wrapped in darkness. If they ran ashore they would not be jeered at by their late companions. Then they turned the half water logged boat and let it drive before the wind. Fortunately the shore where they struck was low and sandy, and they landed without difficulty.
"We'll leave the boat here," said Elliott, "and walk around the shore to the hotel. In the morning early we'll row over for the boat. Nobody need ever know."
Now, as some people know, and as Edwards and Elliott discovered that
night, there are few things more deceptive than the difference between point and point on a lake by water and by land. A journey which may be made in half an hour by boat may take three or four hours when one must follow the ins and outs of a tortuous shore line. But the Lincoln park sailors had no suspicion of this interesting fact in physical geography when they started on their trip.
It was 10:30 o'clock and the moon was full when they started. For the first mile the walking was along a high grassy shore, with nothing to impede their progress. Then suddenly everything seemed to happen at once. The moon went under a black cloud, and presently it began to rain. The open shore gave way to a tangle of underbrush, and presently the boys pitched down into a swamp which ingulfed them half way up to their knees. In the darkness they waded around for a few minutes until suddenly Elliott plunged at full speed into a barbed wire fence. The rebound sent him down backwards into the slime, while his gold nose-glasses went into the darkness as if they had been shot from a gun. Presently Edwards had the same experience. His glasses flew off his nose as he tripped over a root, and the next half hour was spent by both young men in looking for the treasure they had lost. After groping around in vain for 15 minutes Elliott became desperate, for without his glasses he was next to a blind man. He went down on his knees in the swamp and clutched fiercely at the tall clumps of swamp grass. Meanwhile it was pouring rain, and the new yitching suits of both were soaked. By the light of a flash of lightning Elliott finally miraculously found his glasses hanging on the tall leaf of a flag.
Edwards was a little less dependent on his glasses, and he agreed to give up the search when Elliott was once more ready to start.
Soaked and dirty, dripping with rain, and covered with shine up to
A
THE BIG WAVES SET THE "WATER
LILY" TO BOBBING
THE BIG WAVES SET THE "WATER LILY" TO BOBING.
their knees the two young men took hold of hands and proceeded to slowly grope their way through the inky darkness. Wet leaves slipped them in the face and sharp branches cut them as they blundered through the underbrush, but anything was a relief after the swamp. Presently the big bulk of a building loomed up before them.
"Thank Heaven," gasped Elliott, "here's a farmhouse. Now we'll get a lantern."
Their approach to the house was greeted by terrific growls, and the sound of a running dog. Fortunately a tall board fence was convenient and they clambered to its top. Then they proceeded to call for help. After yelling for several minutes an upper window was raised and a man leaned out. "If you drunken wretches don't clear out I'll shoot," he yelled. "I've been bothered enough by people from the lake."
"O mister," called the despairing Elliott, "we only want to borrow a lantern. We're lost and can't find our way. We'll pay you for it."
After a talk of several minutes, during which the dog made several vicious charges on the fence, the farmer finally came down and plodded across to the fence with a farm lantern in his hand. Even then he was doubtful. He called the dog and kept it close at his heels until he had carefully inspected the young men on the fence. Then he laughed.
"Pretty wet looking kids," he said, "Lie down, Rover. Ain't you ashamed of yourself? What you been doin'? Tryin' to ketch frogs? If I give you the lantern will you run straight home?" Wet and wobegone Edwards and Elliott were beyond the reach of an insult. They borrowed the lantern at the farmer's own terms and started again on their trip to the hotel. It was five o'clock in the morning when they got there. Old "Tom" had got worried at their absence and had rowed across the lake to the log cabin shortly after midnight. There he was told that they had started to row home. Close by he had found the empty skiff where they had beached it. Naturally he had come to the conclusion that they had been tipped over in midlake. He had rowed back and arroused the hotel. Steam was up in the little steam launch when they got back to the hotel, and several parties were already out searching.
Fortunately there was an early train for the city that morning. Edwards and Ellott took it. They did not even wait for breakfast. Fortunately they had enough money left to pay their bill and bus fare. Return tickets they were wise enough to bring with them.-Chicago Tribune
Peek-a-Boo!
"Now," said the teacher, "we come to transparent subjects. Give us an instance, Miss Sophie."
"A pane of glass."
"Very good. Now another?"
"A-a-keyhole, sir." — Philadelphia
Times.
At the Summer Hotel
Proprietor—We have only one empty room—in the attic.
The Haughty Applicant—Think I'd be satisfied with a room in the attic?
"Well, it is often taken by folks who don't expect to be satisfied with it."—Puck.
CALLS HER A WITCH.
Farmer Accuses Old Woman of Practicing Black Art.
Failing to Obtain Services of Law-
yes Me Takes Law in His Own
Hands and Shoots Animals
Owned by Mrs. Collins.
A hardworking and active young
farmer who lives a few miles out of
the village of Limestone, in Aroto-
took county, Me., is a firm believer
in witches—a statement that reads
strangely in these modern days.
A short time ago, says the Chicago Tribune, the man came into the village of Fort Fairfield and consulted a lawyer in regard to a certain old woman in Limestone. The farmer declared that she had bewitched his cows. He said that the old woman was also doing other things to bother him. He told how a few days before he was driving a yoke of oxen, which drew a two-wheeled cart. He said that when they were passing along a piece of road that skirted a lake the witch, making herself invisible, pulled the linchpin out of one of the axles, and away went the wheel. It rolled down through a pasture, so the farmer declared, the witch steering it and keeping it upright, until splash! into the lake it went.
The lawyer explained that in all probability that witchcraft wasn't recognized in law these days.
The farmer went home declaring that he would take the law in his own hands. Out of his determination has come a rather singular case in court. It seems that this "Aunt" Collins, whom the farmer accused of witchcraft, owns some troublesome live stock.
One day "Goody" Collins' row and family of little pigs slid under the division fence and began rooting in a potato field owned by the farmer. The farmer was ready. He had molded some bullets, into the center of each of which he had put a little
HE FLED INCONTINENTLY
square of sumach wood. For years this wood has been known as "witch wood," and it is said by those who believe in such things that it is a sure charm to overcome "black art." The farmer took down his gun, put in one of the sumach bullets, and drew a bead on the sow. He dropped her at the first shot, and the motherless litter fled home, squealing.
A few days after the tragedy of the potato field another of "Goody" Collins' barnyard families, a bustling, clucking hen with a brood of fluffy chicks, made her way through a hole in the old fence and got into a newly sown wheat field. Once more the farmer loaded his gun and he stalked the old hen. Bang! and the hen was a dragged bunch of feathers, and tae brood was motherless.
When "Goody" Collins heard the sound of the gun she guessed what was going cn, and, despite her 80 years, she rushed out of her little house and climbed the fence, carrying a broom. The farmer saw her coming and fled inointenitly. He had no mind to face that octogenerian wrath, and, moreover, he had heard of "witch bridles" and "witch brooms."
"Aunt" Collins, however, did not pursue him. She collected in her calico apron the chickens that were scuttling about in the grass.
Now this was too much for the old woman to bear, and she brought suit against the farmer.
"I want to estimate the damage," said the judge. "Did any of those little pigs die?" he asked Mrs. Collins.
"No, sir." she replied.
"I'll tell you how it was, judge," broke in the farmer. "Sh: jest burned medicine in the pen and said: 'Wally-bahoo' the right number of times, and everyone of them little pigs had teeth grow and went to eatin' corn right on." "Aunt' Collins, did any of the chickens die as a result of losing the old hen?" "No. sir," said "Aunt' Collins."
"No wonder they didn't die," cried the irrepressible farmer. "Her old cat had a nest in the ash hole and a litter of young kittens. I tell you, that old woman is a witch. She just dumped them chickens right in with the kittens, and she made a cluck and put it on the old cat, and them chickens never noticed the difference."
This original explanation provoked such a howl in the courtroom that the justice fined the farmer for contempt of court, and made him pay Mrs. Collins the value of the property he had killed. Now the farmer more than ever believes that the old woman is a witch. He even insists that she bewitched the judge.
Why He Declined
"Have a care, sir!" shrieked the Leading Lady to the Heavy Villain, while she tried to pull her train where the calcium light would strike it.
"No, thanks," he laughed the Heavy Villain, "I've just had one."
True, he had just secured his divorce the day before, but it was so unliked him to draw the family affairs to the front in this manner—Baltimore American.
THE RICHMOND PLANET RICHMOND VIRGINIA.
CH. man of I Law- Own Is
One to Admire.
"Somehow," she said, "I never can see you without thinking of truth."
"Is that so?" he asked, being a fellow who was always doing something original.
"Yes. Truth crushed to earth will rise again, you know."
"But what has that to do with me?"
"Well, you've been thrown down by nearly every girl in this town, but I see that you continue to come up smiling."—Chicago Record-Herald.
man? inquired the prison visit.
"Well, lady," replied the prince.
"I guess my trouble started from tending too many weddin's."
"Ah! You learned to drink or steal, perhaps?"
"No, lady: I was always the groom."—Tit-Bite.
Clinging to a Good Thing.
"My daughter," said the fat beautiful girl, "young M will very likely propose to
Bound to Make a Salad
Book Agent—Here, sir, is a brand new edition of a dictionary which is being—
Victim—I don't want any dictionary.
Book Agent—But your children, sir, they surely should have one.
Victim—Have no children—only a cat.
Book Agent—Well, you may need it to throw at the cat. It's very effective that way—N. Y. Times.
Then and Now.
"This is indeed a lonely world," said the widow, with a sigh:
But now she has caught on again,
And she winks her other eye.
-Chicago Daily News.
FILIAL DEVOTION
"Coward nuffin! Yer don't tink I'd lift me hand agin me mudder, do yer?"—Chicago American.
**Horse Sense.**
There's a small grain of wisdom
Which runneth this way:
Men who have horse-sense
Know how to say "reigh."
—Philadelphia Record.
**Savors of the Truth.**
Little Willie—Say, pa, what's the difference between a genius and a lunatic?
Pa—If there is any difference at all, my son, the odds are in favor of the lunatic. He, at least, is sure of his board and clothes—Chicago Daily News.
**Chip of the Old Block.**
"What a fine head your boy has," said an admiring friend.
"Yes," replied the fond father, "he's a chip of the old block—ain't you, my boy?"
"Yes, father; teacher said yesterday that I was a young blockhead."—Tib Bits.
Town Improvement
"We have had three cases of appendicitis in the last three days," says a rural exchange. "That shows how the town is improving. All we could boast a few years ago was ordinary measles."—Atlanta Constitution.
Merely an Incident
"I clutched that child and saved her from falling off the street car going at frightful speed."
"That was fortunate."
"Not for me; the child's mother berated me for tearing its frook."—Chicago Record-Herald.
**Something Worth Knowing.**
Book Agent—If you'll buy this book, sir, I'll guarantee that you'll learn one thing that will save you lots of money. Man of the House—I'll take it. What will it teach me?
"Never to buy another book from a book agent."—Harmlife
The Canny Folk
Sport—Did you see the Derby when you were abroad?
Travels—No, I did see a close race in Great Britain, though.
Sport—That so? What was it?
Travels—The Scotch. — Philadelphia Press.
It Made Business
First Suburbanite—What was the strawberry and ice cream social at the chapel given as a benefit for, last night?
Second Suburbanite—I am not sure; but I guess it was to make business for the new doctor.—Puck.
Good Words Scarce
"If we can't speak well of people," said the gentle young woman, "it is better not to talk of them at all." "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne; "that is why the weather is such a prevalent topic of conversation."—Washington Star.
Coolness
Mistress (to the new servant, who has overslept herself)—How about breakfast, Bridget? Bridget—Ye nadenn't trouble to bring me up anything, ma'ar', I ain't feein' very hungry this mornin', N. Y. World.
Proof Positive
Singleton—Do you believe it is possible for one person to hypnotize another?
Wedlerly—Never met my wife, did you?
Singleton—Why, no. I nev—
Wedlerly (interrupting) — So I thought. Otherwise you wouldn't have asked me such a fool question.
-Chicago Daily News.
Loved a Bat
Prison Missionary—Ah, you have a pet, I see.
Convict—Yea—this rat. I feeds him every day. I think more o' that 'eve rat than any other lion' creature.
Missionary—Ah, in every man there's something of the angel left, if one can only find it. How came you to take such a fancy to that rat? Convict—He bit th' keeper.—N. Y. Weekly.
He Wes a Biggist.
"What brought you here, my poor
man?" inquired the prison visitor.
"Well, lady," replied the prisoner
"I guess my trouble started from at
tending too many weddin's."
"Ah! You learned to drink there
or steal, perhaps?"
"No, lady: I was always the bridegroom."-Tit-Bite.
Climbing to a Good Thing
"My daughter," said the father of the beautiful girl, "young Milyuns will very likely propose to-night, and—"
"Father," she cried, "I cannot marry him."
"No? Welk put him off for a week. I want to borrow another thousand from him."—Philadelphia Record.
Encouraging Him.
"If I thought that any girl would accept me," casually remarked the bashful Mr. Dolyers, "I'd propose toorrow."
"Why not this evening?" asked Miss Poedick, coyly.
The affair will take place in about a month.—Detroit Free Press.
A Talented Man
Junior Partner—I see you have engaged a new clerk. Is he a good salesman?
Senior Partner—Good salesman?
Great snakes! I had to send for the police to prevent him from talking me into taking him into the firm.—N. Y. Weekly.
Little Pitchers!
Mrs. Halsey—You mustn't cry when you cut yourself a little, Harold. Be a man, like your papa!
Little Harold—B-B-But—boo-hoo—I bet you'd lick me if I said the bad things pa says when he cuts himself just a teeny bit, when he's shaving!—Brooklyn Eagle.
Pessimist Reproved
"I suppose," he ventured, "that you
would never speak to me again if I were
to kiss you?"
"Oh, John!" she exclaimed, "why
don't you get over the habit of
always looking at the dark side of
things?"—Tit-Bits.
Benefits Forgot.
Man is an ingrate. When it's hot
His soul to wrath is stirred;
But when it is like as not,
His neer says a star.
—Washington Star.
Wright Smooth—Suppose you were in danger of being kissed, sweet maid, how would you meet such an emergency?
Polly Wogg (the milk maid)—Face to face. Cincinnati Enquirer.
Arrived.
On the ocean the sunlight dances;
The glad waves rush to the shore
To welcome their queen, who advances—
Theummer girl's here once more!
-Puck
A Valuable Man
The City Editor—Spacer is forever dead broke from playing the races.
The Managing Editor—I know it. But the paper simply can't get along without him; he writes such good "Tips on the Turf!"—Brooklyn Eagle.
As to a Mutual Friend.
"Nice fellow, but he never did know his own mind."
"Well, now that he's married, he won't have to."—Puck.
Always Open.
"What a firm and resolute jaw Mrs. Henpecque has."
"And yet Henpecque says she can't hold it to save her life."—Town Topics.
You Know Him.
He so eagerly tells all he knows. We scarcely need stop to ask. This season for it is because It is such an easy task.
-Harlem Life.
WILLING TO SUFFER.
Girl—Are you a lover of music, professor?
Professor—Yes, I am; but it does not make any difference. Just go on and play away.—Heitere Welt.
At No Disadvantage
"We have a deaf and dumb member of our Woman's club," said Miss Gabbeigh to young Mr. Duggesby.
"Indeed," gurgled the youth.
"I should think she would be at a disadvantage."
"Oh, my, no. Why, we let her make all the motions."—Baltimore American.
Wrong Dinghosis.
"What's the matter, pet?"
"That life, ugly man you sent to look at poor Fido says he has dis temper, and I told him it wasn't true.
and I wanted him to go away. There's nothing at all the matter with Fido's temper. It's his poor little stomach!—Chicago Tribune.
The New Baby
Happy Father—We've got a new baby up at our house.
Friend—So? What do you call him?
H. P.—We don't call him; he does all the calling himself.—Detroit Free Press.
An Apology for Heaven.
Mrs. Crimsonbeak—It seems strange to me, if matches are made in heaven, that there should be so many unhappy marriages.
Mr. Crimsonbeak—Oh, you forget; it is the matches that are made there—not the misfits—Yonkers Statesman.
A Jewel.
Ethel—Papa says he likes your book of poems immensely!
Cholly—Aw—really?
Ethel—Yes—he says it's the only thing he can throw at cats nights and not care whether he finds it again or not in the morning—Judge.
Just Like a Strawberry
Mr. Crimsonbeak—Please remember, dear, that a woman is a good deal like a strawberry.
Mrs. Crimsonbeak—Howso, John? "Why, she is all the sweeter from having plenty of sunshine in her life." —Yonkers Statesman.
0f on the Name
"I don't like your heart action," the doctor said, applying the stethoscope again. "You have had some trouble with angina pectoris." "You're partly right, doctor," sheepishly answered the young man, "only that sin't her name."—Tit-Bits.
Emergency Ability.
"Women have no originality—no inventive genius."
"Nonsense; I've seen my stenographer make a memorandum with a hatpin on a cake of soap when she had no paper handy."—Chicago Record-Herald.
Accounted For
Grierson (winding up the discussion)—Yes, I daresay. But you must admit you didn't know much when you married me.
Mrs. Grierson—Yes; no doubt that accounts for it!—Tit-Bits.
A. Definition
Little Elmer—Papa, what is spring fever?
Prof. Broadhead—Spring fever, my son, is an air-borbing desire to sit back and see other people work.—Puck
Coughed Up All He Had
Yeast—The doctor's not attending you any longer for your cough?
Crimsonbeak—No; what's the use?
He made me cough up the last dollar I had—Yonkers Statesman.
Commendable Generosity
"If a bashful man were to court you, Clara, would you meet him nineteenth of the way?"
"Of course, Dorothy! If I felt him to be the right man I'd meet him eleven-tenth!"—Puck.
BECOMING AMERICANIZED.
First Chinese Laundryman—Hi, yal Me goin' to stike—likee Mexican man!
Second Chinese Laundryman—What for stike?
First Chinese Laundryman—More yen, and 19 Hours a day, 'stlead of 50!—Brooklyn Life.
The Custale House
Having remodeled my bar, and having an up-to-date place, am prepared to serve my friends and the pubs the same old stand.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Clqars.
FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT?
Meals At All Hours,
New 'Phone. 1261. Wm. Oustalc. Pro
H. F. Jonathan
Fish Oysters & Produce
Orders will receive prompt attentive Phone 157.
S. W. ROBINSON,
NO. 23 NORTH 18TH ST.
DEALER IN
DEALER IN
FINE WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, &c. All Stock Sold as Guaranteed. PROMPT ATTENTION. Your patronage is respectfully solicited
P.
MR.S. MARTH, the world renowned and highly celebrated business and test Medium reveals everything. No imposition. Can be consulted upon all affairs of life, business, love and marriage a specialty. Every mystery revealed, also of absent, deceased and living friends. Removes all troubles and estrangements, challenges any Medium who can exceed her in startling revelations of the past, present and future events of one's life. Remember she will not for any price deserve you; you may not assume you will be consulted upon all affairs of Life, Love, Courtable arrise Friends, etc. with description of future companion. She is very accurate in describing missing friends, enimies etc., business, law suits journeys, contact wills, divorce and speculation is valuable and reliable he reads your destiny--good or bad; she withhold nothing.
MFS MARTH tells your entire life past, present and future in a DEAD TRANCE, has the power of any two Mediums you ever met. In tests she tells your mother's full name before marriage, the names of all your family their ages and description, the names and business of your present husband, the name of your next if you are to have one, the name of the young man who now calls on you, the name of your future husband, and the day, month and year of your marriage, how many children you have or will have; whether your present sweetheart will be true to you and if he will marry you; if you will not be the sweetheart and his name, business and date of accession. All your future will be told in a clear and plain manner and in a deadrance. Mothers should know the success of their husbands and children young ladies should know everything about the sweethearts or intended husband. Do not keep company, marry or go into business until you know all, do not let silly religious scruples prevent your consulting.
Madame is the only one in the world who can tell you the truth. I am your future husband, will you late of marriage, and tenis whether the one you love is true or false. There are some persons who believe that there is no truth to be gained from consulting a Medium, but such beliefs are contrary to the truth. It is only from the lack of discrimination that such a conclusion can be reached. It is not every one who places himself or herself as a medium that can stand a test of what he or she claims.
And a person of an enquiring mind may ask the reason way. It is simply these advisers do not take the able to study hun an nature. They do not spend their thoughts for a moment with acquiring the art of phaseology and kindred branches that will have a tendency to make the nathaway to the road of the business clear and devoid of all obstacles.
It is an undeniable fact that persons will come for advice in full knowledge of what they want to know, and get as soon as they confront a Medium try their utmost endeavor to dispel from their minds what they know so as to hear if it will be rehearsed by a Medium. To get the secret out of a person by communicating it is the art used by many unprincipled mediums, but to take hold on the head and gain control of the mind there is a matter of impossibility to most of them. And this can be done and by consulting M. Martin the seering mystery becomes a deliberation. This subject has reported to it in attention by eminent men and women college professors. So it provesclusively that although there are infringers in our midst with oily tongues perhaps the gates of wisdom have not been closed to the entire profession.
It takes a great deal of study to become an accomplished medium and by a continuous and uniring effort, the key to the well of apparently unfathomable mysteries has been secured by MRS. MARTH for the benefit of humanity.
ADVICE BY LETTER. $1.00
AURS FROM 10 A. M., TO 8 P.
MRS. M. B MARTH
246 W. 51st St. (near 8th Ave.)
New York City.
Knowledge stamp for reply
Please mention the PLANET
JOHN M. HIGGINS.
1610 East Franklin Street,
[Near Old Market.]
RICHMOND, - - - VIRGINIA
First-class Hacks and Caskets of all descriptions. I have a spare room for bodies when the family have not a suitable place. All country orders are given special attention. Your special attention is called to the new style Oak Caskets. Call and see me and you shall be waited on kindly. NEW PHONE, 1198.
PATENTS
Carcars and Trade Marks obtained and all patented constructs contained in the MOVEMENT BOOK.
Our Orders are received and we can secure parcel in time and are remote from Washington.
and models, drawing of jousts, was
donated to the museum on an annual
donation. Our collection is on loan.
A MARVELLE: How to tie... Festivals
and celebrations. Our collection is on
loan. A MARVELLE: How to tie... Festivals
and celebrations. Our collection is on
loan. C.A.SNOW&
THE PLANET
SATURDAY, AUG. 10. 1901
LOOKING FOR THE DEAD
Hundreds Searching Ruins for Victims of Philadelphia Explosion.
AT LEAST SEVEN ARE DEAD
Four or Five Others May Die In the Hospitals, and Police Expect to Find a Dozen More Bodies Under the Debris When All Is Gone Over.
Philadelphia. Aug. 7.—Seven dead, three or four probably fatally injured and more than 60 other persons hurt more or less seriously is the latest revised record of Monday night's explosion in the block of buildings on Locust street, above Tenth, in this city. How many more victims, if any, are still in the ruins will not be known until all the debris has been cleared away, which will require many more hours of hard work. The latest find was made at 8 o'clock last night, when the badly burned remains of a colored man was found in the wreckage on the sidewalk.
The list of dead is as follows:
Elizabeth Mountain, aged 38 years.
Frederick Lee, aged 40 years, colored
Unknown colored child, aged about 3 years.
Unknown colored woman, aged about 28 years, and three unknown colored men.
The most seriously injured, who are likely to die, are: Mrs. Patrick Quigley, Samuel Gales (colored), Lizzie Watkins (colored) and Morris Rosenthal. The escape from death of Lizzie Watkins is considered remarkable. She was buried almost a dozen feet under the debris, with fire all around her. She was taken from the ruins four and a half hours after the explosion occurred. She was badly burned and bruised and her sight was destroyed.
Undeterred by the incessant rain, the work of searching for the dead has been kept up continuously since the explosion took place. The only person who was positively known to be in the ruins was Elizabeth Mountain, and a large force of men was kept constantly at work in the debris where her mother's house had stood. The efforts of the searchers were rewarded at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, when, in a corner of the cellar, covered partly by broken bricks, the remains of the unfortunate woman were found. Her mother and brother had stood by during the entire night and day watching the searchers.
One colored man was found in the ruins of the restaurant, which was patronized by negroes. He was supposed to be a helper in the place, but no one could be found to identify him. The man found last night was about 35 years of age, and had on the uniform of a bootblack.
Today 200 men, under the direction of the department of public safety, are vigorously pursuing the search. Many of the residents of the neighborhood believe there are more bodies in the wreckage. There are several persons still missing, but as some of these had no known permanent place of residence it cannot be stated to a certainty that they are buried in the ruins. The police and fire officials can give no opinion except what they gather from those who live in the virginity of the disaster.
The police and fire officials are also making a search for the cause of the explosion, but up to this morning they have found no positive proof as to its cause. They hold to the theory that gasoline did the damage, and that it had been stored in one of the three grocery stores. The officials are indicted to believe that the explosion occurred in the McClemmy store, which was in the middle of the block. McClemmy, who is badly injured, claimed that he had only a gallon of the oil in his place and that he kept it in the rear of the building.
Do You Know Them?
The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children of New York has in its charge a boy who gives his name as James Davis, claims he lives at No. 66 John street, Richmond, Va., and that his mother remarried, her present name being Annie Van Netten. She has two other children, Fannie and Stephen. They first lived at Farmville, Va., where his uncles, Brants and Tucker have lived. Any information concerning them will be thankfully received.
Good order on that pic-nic—the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church S. S. at Bothwell Park, Aug. 20th, 1901.
George McGowan, a colored man em- moved in a sand-pit on the R. F. and P. broad several miles above the city, a seriously injured last Saturday by a amite explosion. The dynamite was in blasting the sand. McGowan and a colored man had of the blasting, when, in some the dynamite exploded before old the pit, McGowan was to the city and was treated by most of the ambulance corps. He burned about his face, head The other man was not in the city.
In China liquids are sold by weight and grain by measure. John buys soup by the pound and cloth by the foot. A Chinaman never puts his name outside of his shop, but paints instead a motto, or a list of his goods, on his vertical sign board. Some reassuring remark is frequently added, such as "One word hall." "A chic two feet high would not be cheated." Every single article has to be bargained for, and it is usual for the customer to take his own measure and scales with him—Albany Argus.
Sabbath in the Suburbs.
Mrs. Parke—Henry, we are in a terrible dilemma.
Mr. Parke—What now?
Mrs. Parke—Why, there is no gasoline in the house, and unless some is procured we will have no breakfast.
If we take it from the incubator the little chicks will die from exposure.
If we take it from the automobile we must stay at home all day. What is to be done?—Chicago Daily News.
In the Smoking Car
"Here's a good one," said the man from Denver. "What's the difference between a pen and a pencil? Give it up. A pen has to be driven, but a pencil has to be lead. see?" "The automatic bell buoy beats'em both," murmured a quiet little chap who had gone on at Cleveland. "It rights itself." -Philadelphia Press.
A Reasonable Conductor
Pickey—And just because you had lost your nickel the conductor made you get off the car and walk all the way home.
Bilkey—Oh, no. He only put me off. I could have sat by the roadside all night if I had wanted to.—Baltimore World.
Hoax—Funny! Did you ever notice it?
Joax—Notice what!
"Why, in the beginning of the world a rib became a woman, and now it's ribbons that become a woman."—Philadelphia Record.
Hardly Suitable.
First Tramp—Bill won't get much if he goes 'round askin' fer help wit' a high hat an' a cane.
Second Tramp—Well, I don't suppose he'll dress dat way durin' business hours.' Puck.
Absentminded.
Blithers—Poor Bingley is so absente minded. Blathers—Is he? "Yes, sometimes he pays his rent in advance."—Ohio State Journal.
News From Worcester: Mass.
Worcester Mass., Aug. 1901.
Mrs. Bryant the Governess of Aug. 1901 is striving hard to bring us with the other Governess on the final day, which will begin about September 16th, and run the entire week. There is First and Second Prize. First Prize to the Governess of Governor who have the largest amount of money. The Second Prize is to any one who brings the largest amount on their card.
Virginia will give a concert Thursday, Aug. 8th, September 2nd, Labor Day and one September 20th. Everybody come and own your own church.
Mr. R. T. Coleman finds his business rushing now in Worcester, he has his hands full. He was so busy last week that he could not deliver the PLANET to his customers.
Mrs. Coleman has returned home from a very pleasant trip.
Mr. Joseph smith and Miss Maude Briggs were married on Friday evening, July 26th by Rev. Conway.
Mr. Smith seems to be perfectly satisfied with his fortune. We wish them much success.
T.J.SPELLMAN.
West Virginia Baptist [State Conven-
This convention will hold its next annual meeting at Alderson, August 20-24. For this occasion, agents on the N. and W. sides be instructed to sell round-trip tickets to Kenova at the usual conventional rates. August 19-23, good, returning, until 27th.
The hack-line will give rates from Lurich to Lowell. The C. & O. and other roads will give rates on the card order plan.
Cards will be sent on application.
J. J. TURNER, Cor. Sec'y,
Mt. Carbon, W. Va.
FROM NEWPORT NEWS VA.
NEWPORT NEWS, VA., JULY 20, 1901.
At the regular meeting of Eureka Lodge No. 30, K of P, of N. A. S. A. E. A. A & A. held Monday night July 15, D. D. G. C. Maj. J. J. Booker installed the following officers for the ensuing term.
R. A. Hawkins, P. C.; E. T. Veals, C. C. Robt. T. Price, V. C.; James Carrington, M. of C. Chas. H. Robinson, K. of R. & S.; Joe Branch M. of F.; Sum McPhail, Prelate; J. H. Epps, M at. A.; Chamland Alexander, Inner guard, W. D. Gee. Outer guard.
Tyler's Hair Improver establishment has removed to 1218 N. 2d. St.
Go with Mt. Olivet Baptist Church S.
S. on their pic-nic to Bothwell Park,
Tuesday, August 20th, 1901.
The train will carry you. We mean the Old Boys go to Washington tomorrow night Aug. 11th.
Ladies are safe on the Old Boys Excursion to Washington Sunday night,
Aug. 11th.
Russell's Nerve And Bloop Cure.
Cures Nervous Exhaustion and General Debility. It quits the nerves, revitalizes the Blood, restores the appetite and infuses new health and strength in- to all the tissues of the body.
MAKES ONE FEEL BRIGHT AND BUOYANT. INCREASES THE FLESH.
For Sale by Druggists or sent by mail,
postage paid for 50 cents per box.
RUSSELL MEDICINE CO.,
P. O. Box 50, Richmond, Va.
Agents wanted in every county. Write
for particulars. Druggists on Commission.
Agents. 8-10-tt
ANOTHER INNOCENT MAN LYNCHED
New Orleans, La., Aug. 4.—The Picayune's Carrollton, Miss., special says: "It has just been learned that the armed mob which has been in the Taliaferro neighborhood for two days looking for Sallie Layton and others, some time last night killed Will Price, the colored man who worked for Mr. Taliaferro and lived within 200 yards of his residence. He was found dead in the road on Mr. Duke's place this morning some distance from a tree with a rope around his neck and mutilated by gunshots. "Squirre John Irving held an inquest over the body. The verdict was, "Came to his death by the hands of unknown persons."
LOOK OUT FOR THE WORKING SONS OF HOPE 28TH ANNUAL
EXCURSION!
FROM RICHMOND TO BEAVER DAM,
BY THE WORKING SONS OF HOPE,
"It is said that he went to the Taliaferro residence yesterday and told Jack Taliaferro all about the murder, and said that the plan was to kill both the old people and Jack, the youngest boy, while Lynn was away, and to shoot Lynn when he returned. It is understood the mob has quit work now and gone to their homes. No arrests have been made."
Urging Prosecution of Lynchers.
Cumberland Md., Aug. 1.—The father and brother of William Brooks, colored, who was lynched at Elkins, W. Va., for the murder of Chief of Police Robert Lilly, have arrived at Elkins from Indianapolis, Ind., to claim the body, and also to urge the prosecution of the lynchers. Their advent has occasioned much excitement, as has also a letter written by Gov. Albert B. White to prosecuting Attorney Harding urging that the lynchers be punished. He points out the disgrace to the state, and offers to assist in the prosecution. It is not thought anything will come out of this as sentiment is entirely against such a move.
To organize and, train all classes of labor. Monday night, Aug. 19th, 1900, at 8 o'clock, there will be a public meeting in the interest of all of the citizens of Richmond.
Dr. R. E. Jones, under the auspices of the Woman's Central League will hold a public meeting at League Hall, 412 N. 3rd St.
FULTON NEWS.
Religious Items,—Personal Notes.
Last Sunday being fair in the forenoon the Sunday School and morning services of the three Churches were well attended.
Rev. F. W. Williams preached two most excellent and impressive sermons to his congregation and especially to the younger part of the congregation.
Rev. Archer Ferguson and Rev. K. Jeffries were at their respective posts and fed their flock well. Rev. A. Ferguson administered the Lord's Supper.
Rev. W. Williams administered the Lord's Supper at Little Bethel in Heinrico Co. on Sunday, at 3:30 p. m.
He will administer the Lord's Supper at his own Church next Sunday. Covenant meeting 11:30 a. m.
Mrs. Hattie Brown is convalescing.
Miss Virginia Bossieux and little Minnie Yancy are still sick.
News come that Mrs. Calotta Calloway and son and Miss Cassie B. Harris reached Phoebe alright last Wdnesday and that Mr. L. R. Morris had a pleasant trip to Trenton, N. J., where he was most pleasantly greeted by his sister. Don't forget the Friday evening meetings at the R, Mt. Z. Baptist Church. Wait and take a trip to De Witte on the 19th with the Mt. Cavalry Bapt. Church. Miss Watkins of New York City visited her sister Mrs. Clara Tyler and Miss Mary E. Gordon this week. The committee on this excursion assure you a good time. —Rev. W. S. Holland, pastor of the Concord Church Church Providence R. I. called on 1st. He will return home about Sept. 1st. His Madame is at Newport News, Va. Both will visit Franklin, Va.
Well! Well!!! Well!!! On the Right Track at Last. THE REFORMER.
Too often do we hear the complaint that Negro journals contain little or no news. Yet some of these very complaints an never subscribe nor pay for a negro paper. Many of these when they have job work of any kind, they run the white printers, and then come to the Negro press to herald the news gratis, contained in the very job that has been printed elsewhere at big pay. To all such, we here serve notice that when you give us your job printing for piemics, etc. we will also advertise same in the columns of our paper, but when you have your work done elsewhere, be generous enough at least to pay for advertising. We are not in the news-paper business for health.
THE COLORED FAIR
—AT—
The managers are sparing no pains in setting the grounds in a tasty order.
The circle is being prepared for speedy flights and several jockeys are availing themselves of the opportunity of educating their horses how to come down the home stretch.
One of our drivers gave his horse her head some days ago and the "test was equal to the task." The gait she pulled the bike is only a secret to be made known at the Fair if necessary. We hope no one will be unnerved but be pre pared vigorously to meet competition.
The grand stand and ladies' hall are being beautified with a coat of paint. The grand hall has special facilities for display and safe keeping of articles. Nothing is overlooked or undervalued by the managers.
We hope the friends and patrons will show their appreciation and manifest their interest by producing something to put on exhibition.
We ask the ladies especially to show their skill in needle work, bakery, cannery, and culinary line, while the gentlemen will make full the agricultural, mechanical and stock departments.
The railroad authorities have given special trains and excursion rates to visit our Fair at Tasley, Va., August 13, 14, 15, 16th.
We send a cordial invitation to the public to visit our Fair this season and be courteously conducted through the thoroughfares of same.
The merry go-round and other amusements will be there.
Read our weekly articles through these columns and follow them up to the Fair.
For any information, write to J. D. UZZLE, Sec'y, Accomac C. H.; or
LOOK OUT FOR THE WORKING SONS OF HOPE 28TH ANNUAL
FROM RICHMOND TO
BEAVER DAM.
August 18, 1901
Parties going on this excursion will have the opportunity of spending a pleasant day at Beaver Dam, where the Protracted Meeting will be going on at the Union Baptist Church, Rev. C. H. Phillips, pastor, assisted by other able divines from both the city and country. There will be two services held, at 11:30 a. m. and 3 p. m. in the old and new churches.
This will be a protracted meeting of the old kind, where the mingled voices of a thousand souls all singing praises our Maker. Those who have gone with the old, reliable Working Sons of Hope on the third Sundays for a number of years can testify to the good maintained on the train and pleasant time spent at Beaver Dam. Tickets will be sold by the committee.
Fare from Richmond, Round-trip, $1.00 East of Peaks to Beaver Dam, 75c. Hanover & Wickham to Beaver Dam. 50 Dowell & Howlett to Beaver Dam.
Train will leave O. & O. depot Sunday morning, August 18th, at 9 o'clock promptly. Returning, will leave Beaver Dam at 6 o'clock p. m.
Committee of arrangements:—J. Harper, James H. Shelton, Wickham, R. J. Robinson, Dewell; James H. Harris, Hewlett; E. F. Lightfoot, Hanover; J. W. Jackson, Robert Johnson.
J. H. COLEMAN, Manager;
ARCHIE HAWKINS, Secretary.
Republican State Convention, Roanoke
Va., August 21st, 1901.
For the above occasion the Southern Railway will sell tickets from all points in Virginia to Roanoke and return at four (4) cent per mile one-way for the round trip, tickets to be on sale August 19th, 20th, and 21st, with return limit August 27th. aug 10, 3t.
Meeting Bluestone Baptist Association, Drakes Branch, Va., August 21st 23rd,1901.
For the above occasion the Southern Railway will sell round trip tickets South Hill, Averett, Clarksville, Randolph and Richmond and all intermediate points to Drakes Branch and return at specially reduced rates in accordance with tarriff two, tickets on sale August 20th and 21st, with return limit August 25th.
Montreat Bible Conference, Montreat N. C., August 11th-25th, 1901.
For the above occasion, the Southern Railway will sell tickets from points within the state of North Carolina at one fare for the round trip, and from points in other states fare and one-third for the round trip, tickets to be on sale from North Carolina points August 10th, 11th, & 12th, and from points in other states August 9th, 10th and 11th.
This affords an opportunity for those wishing to visit Black Mountains and Land of the Sky at a most seasonable time. The rate from Richmond to Black Mountains and return for summer tourist tickets good returning October 31st is $14.75. Black Mountain is located only a few miles east of Asheville.
aug 10, 3t.
TO THE LADIES
OUR MONTHLY REGULATOR has made hundreds of women happy. There is no remedy known that will so surely and quickly bring relief. It is perfectly safe and never fails. All packages sent securely sealed by Mail or express. Price, $2.00.
OXFORD MEDICAL CO,
Rumford Falls, Maine, Box 1147
8-2-Im
VIRGINIA BAPTIST STATE SUN
DAY-SCHOOL CONVENTION.
Danville, Va., July 5th, 1901 To the Sunday-Schools, Associations Unions, and all connected with the VIRGINIA BAPTIST STATE SABRATH-
WE take this means of calling your attention the fact that the annual meeting of your Convention will convene with the First Baptist Church Sunday-School [of Charlottesville, Va., on Thursday before the fourth Lord's Day in August, 1901. The state B. Y. P. U. will hold its annual meeting also on Wednesday preceding, so that all delegates who desire to do so may have an opportunity to attend the sessions of both bodies. It may be useless to remind you that it is your duty to be represented at this gathering, as you have been so very dutiful in the past. But we are living in an active, earnest, and progressive present. Conditions have changed. New issues are to be met, and if you are convinced that the position taken by the Convention up on the questions that are now being titated in our State is the best calculated to advance our interests as a denomination and as a people, then show your faith by your works by being represented at Charlottesville.
It is the earnest desire of the Board that our representation shall be larger and our contributions greater than at any previous session. See to it, brethren, that you send up more money for Home Missions. The Board cannot successfully do the work we have undertaken unless you contribute more liberally. Do not forget our Educational work. We have obligations that are pressing. They must be met. Our last University, Hartshorn College and Spiller Academy all expect help at your hands. Let all be remembered. At our last mission we decided to do our Foreign Mission work through the Lot Carey Foreign Mission Convention. Send up, there, something with which to carry out this obigation. Come to Charlottesville. Come with a renewed zeal. Come with a determined and fixed purpose to support and advance all the objects for which our Convention stands. The Convenion will meet on the original date Aug. 21, 1901. Reduced rates will be secured over all railroad lines leading into Charlottesville!
Let every School, Association and Union join in the cry: On to Charlottes ville.
Votes for God and humanity.
R. T. HILL, W. F. GRASTY.
President, Corresponding Secretary.
iv 204k
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They can be worn by either male or female, being called either Button or Medallions. We have made special arrangements with one of the largest concerns in the country to furnish all new subscribers, who pay $1.50 cash in advance for the PLANET one of these handsome Medallion free of charge. Fill out the Coupon and send it with $1.50 together with a good Photograph of the person whose features you desire reproduced in colors and we will send the button or medallion. All photographs will be returned. Enclose 5 cents extra to pay postage on the same. If you are not satisfied, your money will be refunded. Send us one yearly subscriber and we will send one Medallion. Two yearly subscribers, two Medallions.
Now is the time to take advantage of the offer. The Medallion alone is worth the price of the subscription.
Please find enclosed $1.50 for the Planet for one year, which you will send to the following address:
Find enclosed photograph which I desire inserted in medallion or button.
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IMPORTANT NOTICE
The Virginia Baptist State Sunday School Convention.
Dear Co-Workers:
After considering the various interests of our Convention, the Board, after consultation with Rev. R. C. Quarles, G. P. Inge, Esq., Rev. R. B. Hardy, Rev. Toliver and other friends of Charlottesville, with whom the Virginia Baptist State Sunday School Convention will meet, has decided to have the Convention convene on the original date, AUGUST 21st, 1901, at the First Baptist Church of which Rev. R. C. Quarles is pastor.
All Schools, Unions, Conventions, Associations, etc., are urged to take notice of the above statement.
Send names of delegates and representatives to Rev. R. C. Quarles as soon as elected, so that ample provisions may be made for entertaining them.
R. T. HILL, President;
W. P. EPPS, Chairman;
NELSON WILLIAMS, JR., Sec'y.
jy-13-4t
Virginia State Democratic Convention Norfolk, Va., August 14, 1901.
For the above occasion the Southern Railway will sell tickets for all points in Virginia to Norfolk and return at one and one third fares for the round trip, tickets to be on sale August 12, 13, and 14, with return limit August 19th. aug 10, 3t.
82:50—RICHMOND TO BALTIMORE.
Via Popular York River Route.
aug 10, 3t
Leave Richmondville Southern Rail-
way daily except Sunday 4:30 p. m. The
favorite route to Pan-American Expo-
sition, Buffalo, N. Y., Atlantic City, Cape
May, etc. Special excursion tickets to
Atlantic City and Cape May on sale
Wednesday of each week. $7:00 Round
triip, good eighteen days, returning.
Round trip season tickets $11:00. $4.
round trip ticket between Richmond
and Baltimore.
jy 27 3t
BLACK SKIN REMOVER.
REGISTERED
PATENT OFFICE
U.S.
BEFORE AFTER
both in a box for $1, or three boxes for $2. Guarantee to do what we say and to be the "best in the world. One box is all that is required if used as directed.
A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH.
A PEACRLIE complexion obtained if used as directed. Will the skin of a black or brown person four or five shades darker than person perfectly white. In forty-eight hours a shade or two will be noticeable. It does not turn the skin remaining beautiful reaches out white, the skin remaining beautiful touches out purple. It will remove wrinkles, freckles, dark spots, bumps or black heads, making the skin very soft. It will small pox pits, tan, liver spots removed without any skin. When you get the color you wish, stop washing.
THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER
that goes in every one dollar box is enough to make anyone's hair grow long and straight, and makes the hair look out. Highly perfumed and makes the hair look easy to comb. Many of our customers say one of the dollar boxes is worth ten dollars, yet we sell it for a dollar box. The NO-SHIELD thrown in free.
Any person sending us on dollar in a letter or a money order, express money order or registered letter, through the mail postage prepaid; or if you want O, C, D, it will come by express. $2c, extra.
Wanted Weekly-100 Cooks,
Housemaids and Waitresses for New
York and other Northern cities. Wages
from $3.00 to $5.00 per week. Transportation furnished. Also 50 Farm
hands for Maryland.
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.
A.
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 stance friends—in a word, whatever may be your trouble, suspicions or 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.
Reading by mail, send soiled pocket handkerchief, 4,000, 2 cent stamp and receive complete life reading. All business strictly confidential.
MADAM ALVIAH,
321 Brook Avenue, Richmond.
From 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. Daily.
NEW PHONE, 1133.
PRICE,
IMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN.
Notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls
ents Plenty of room with all necessary
ons for hire at reasonable rates and noth-
Keeps constantly on hand fine Funeral
HIGH STREET.
A. D. PRIC
THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegram rented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty of conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at re- ing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constant Supplies.
212 EAST LEIGH ST
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine Funeral Supplies.
[Residence Next Door.]
IMPROVED SCHEDULE BETWEEN
RICHMOND AND DURHAM, N. C.
Bost Service Ever Offered.
The Southern Railway's newtrain between Richmond and Durham N. C. is very popular. This train leaves Richmond daily at 9:20 a.m.; Burkville, 11:08; Keysville at 11:40 a.m.; Durham, 12:21 p.m.; arrive Buffalo Lithia Spring, 3:40 p.m.; Clarksville 12:50; Oxford, 13:17; Henderson 4:50; Durham 2:40; Raleigh 3:46. Connection is made at Burkville for Farmville, Lynchburg and local station on the N. & W. Schedule north bound leaves Raleigh daily 8:45 a.m.; Durham 9:55; Oxford 11:00; Buffalo Lithia Springs 10:50. Clarksville 11:03; arriving Richmond 3:12 p.m., connecting with York River Line leaving Richmond 4:30 p.m. daily except Sundays, for Baltimore and points north and east. Connection is also made at Richmond with all rail route for Washington and points north.
jy 27 3t
BUNNY
Greatest Healer of the Sick on Earth, Cures all Diseases or No Charge.
I cure all diseases that are known to man or beast or no charge, no matter what your disease, sickness or affliction may be, and before you to perfect health. Millions of people, the best and leading ones in the United States, will testify that I am the most wonderful healer of all complaints in the world. I use nothing but herbs, roots, barks, gums, balsams, leaves, seeds, berries, flowers and plants made into teas, for all complaints. I have cured thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physicians in America have given up to die and said there was no cure for them.
I cure the following diseases: Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Stricture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quincy, Sore Throat, Lung, Dyspepsia Indigestion, Rheumatism in any form, Paina and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all itching sensations, all Female Complaints, La Gripe or Pneumonia; Ulcers, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer, the worst forms without the use of knife documents; Becma, Pimples on face and body; Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. I cure any disease, no matter of what nature. All Venereal diseases *specialty*. Medicine sent to any address by hv express.
For full particulars, send two-cent stamp for answer, 404 West Broad St. Richmond, Va.
'PHONE, 577
MADAM ALVIAH.