Richmond Planet
Saturday, November 1, 1902
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
CAN GET JUSTICE HERE!
SO DECLARES POLICE JUSTICE CRUTCHFIELD.
Mr. Richardson Concurs. Twelve Months For Eastham.
The Girl a Good Witness.----Those Spicy Love-Letters Read in Open Court. The Cross Examination in Detail. The Argument of Counsel.
"I am very glad, gentlemen that this case has taken the scope it has. As the commonwealth's Attorney said, where colored people respect themselves and are respectable; they should be protected.
I think this is one of the worst cases I have ever known. This man is entitled to the full penalty of the law. I therefore sentence him to the city jail for twelve months."
Decision of Police Justice John J. Crutchfield, rendered Saturday, October 25th, 1902.
judge and jury in this case and I insist that these letters should not be introduced until it is proven that they were written by Mr. Eastham."
(Justice Crutchfield.)—"The court is simply investigating this matter to find out whether these letters should be introduced. I do not intend to let any technicalities stand in the way of the evidence. We want to get at the facts and find out whether or not this man is guilty. The objection is over-rules."
(Lawyer Smith.)—"If your Honor satisfied look appeared upon his countenance and he passed them back to the counsel.
LETTERS ADMITTED.
"I am satisfied," said he, "I rule that the letters shall be admitted."
(Lawyer Glenn.)—"I ask that the letters be passed up to His Honor to read and not be read in open court."
(Lawyer Richardson.)—"Your Honor, I think that it is proper that they
VOL. XIX NO. 47
CAN G
SO DEC
Mr. Richardson
The Girl a Good
Open Co
"I am very glad, gentlemen
scope it has. As the common
colored people respect themselves
should be protected.
I think this is one of the w
This man is entitled to the full
fore sentence him to the city ja
Decision of Police Justice
Saturday, October 25th, 1902
pass, Louisa Co. Va., charged with attempting to abduct Miss Josephine Johnson, 14 year old colored girl was called in the Police Court Saturday morning, October 25th, 1902. The examination was reserved until all of the other cases had been disposed of. Eastham was represented by Harry Glenu Esq., Commonwealth's Attorney D. C. Richardson assisted by H. M. Smith Jr., Esq., conducted the prosecution.
SKILLFUL CROSS EXAMINATION.
Mr. Smith skillfully cross examined the witnesses, no point being neglected and every subterfuge which might have been used to hinder a thorough investigation of the case was ruthlessly brushed aside by his Honor Police Justice John J. Crutchfield. Eastash was attired in a blue suit and wore a light colored fedora felt hat. His face was a study as damaging evidence was introduced he at times vehemently whispered to his counsel and apparently protested against statements made which in reality had little or no bearing upon the main features of the case.
When letters were being read he rested his face upon his hands and seemed to be rooted to the desk in front of him. At first an attempt was made to deny the authenticity of the letters but under Mr. Smith's merciless cross examination all hope of this line of defense was abandoned.
MANY PEOPLE OF PROMINENCE
There were many colored people of prominence in the court room who watched with keen interest the progress of the trial. Commonwealth's attorney Richardson open and closed the case for the prosecution. His language was temperate and conservative and his utterances in keeping with the proprieties of the occasion.
No one entered into the case with greater zest and with keener regret than the presiding justice of this tribunal. He had the law before him but the evidence was so plain and the circumstances so aggravating that there was no retreat and no hope of the reduction of the penalty.
Eastash's counsel showed signs of the hopelessness of the case and as the most damaging testimony was given driving him from one line of defense to another he finally admitted that he was heavily handicapped by those letters the like of which under similar conditions had never been heard in the court room.
AN IMPASSIONED DEFENSE.
Mr. Glenn made an impassioned defense. It was the best that he could do and his predicament in the defense of his admittedly guilty client was one of the features of the morning trial. Eastham had brought with him a colored witness. She resided in Louisia county. A conference with her satisfied Mr. Glenn that nothing could be accomplished by her introduction as a witness. The nature of the case may better be understood when it is asserted that Eastham had no witnesses in his favor not even himself because it was realized that it was a dangerous proceeding for him to go on the witness stand.
MISS JOHNSON TESTIFIES.
The first witness introduced by the prosecution was Miss Josie Johnson. She said, "My name is Josie Johnson. I am 14 years of age and will be 15 on the 29th of next May. My father lives at Bumpass, Va. His farm is about two miles from the station. I have been knowing Mr. Eastham for a long time."
(Lawyer Smith) "State all you know about the attentions of Mr. Eastham to you. "I was passing along the road and he passed me on horse back and said I will get of this horse and kiss you. I said no you won't and he laughed and went on. The next time was the third Monday morning in last September he was in a wagon and said to me, do you want to ride? I said nothing and he laughed and went on.
The same evening he met me and he said "Good evening, pretty eyes; if any one can look at you without loving you it is more than I can do." I was then going to the store, when I came back I brought John Taylor back with me on account of Mr. Eastham.
THOSE SIX KISSES.
I was with my brother on the hillside once and he heared six kisses at me. I saw him at St. Thomas Church during the protracted meetings. He stood on the side of the road that night as I passed. No he did not say anything to me because my mother was with me. [Lawyer Smith] Did you tell any one about his attentions to you? Yes I told my mother and father. They told me to pay no attention to him. I left Bumpass soon after that."
[Lawyer Smith] "Why did you leave? Was it on account of Eastham? "Yes, I left on account of Mr. Eastham, I left there because my father said it was best for me to leave. I came to Richmond and received a letter about two weeks after." At this point the letters were sent for they being in the possession of Mr. B. L. Jordan.
[Mr. Glenn] "I object to the introduction of the letters until it is proven that they are Eastham's letters."
EASTHAM'S HANDWRITING
[Lawyer Smith] "Have you ever seen letters in Eastham's hand writing?"
"No, none but those letters there," replied the witness.
[Lawyer Glenn.]—"I object to the introduction of letter No. I, until it is proven that the letter was written by Mr. Eastham."
[Lawyer Smith.]—"That is just what I am about to prove. Give us time and we will prove that this is Eastham's letter, to the court's satisfaction and I believe even to your satisfaction."
[Lawyer Smith.]—"Josie, tell His Honor why you believe that letter was written by Mr. Eastham."
[Lawyer Glenn.]—"I object."
[Justice Crutchfield.]—"Object over-ruled. I am not going to have any thwarting of justice or red tape down here."
Miss Josie then proceeded to read. "Do you remember the fellow that passed you on horseback at the station the Sunday morning the meeting commenced at St. Thomas?" She explained that Eastham was the fellow that passed her on horse-back. She read further, "I thought surely that I would get a chance to talk to you that Monday afternoon when you went down to the store, but you brought John Taylor back with you and I just had time to get out of the way when I saw him with you."
STILL TRYING TO PROVE IT.
[Lawyer Smith.]—"Did you bring John Taylor back with you?" [Witness.]—"Yes sir, I did." [Lawyer Glenn.]—"Your Honor, I object to the reading of any portion of those letters until it is proven that they were written by Mr. Eastham." [Lawyer Smith.]—"If your Honor please, that is just what we are trying to prove." [Lawyer Glenn.]—"Your Honor is
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1902.
satisfied look appeared upon his countenance and he passed them back to the counsel.
LETTERS ADMITTED.
"I am satisfied," said he, "I rule that the letters shall be admitted."
the letters shall be admitted."
(Lawyer Glenn.)—"I ask that the letters be passed up to His Honor to read and not be read in open court."
(Lawyer Richardson.)—"Your Honor, I think that it is proper that there should be no concealment in this case and I ask that the letter be read in open court."
(Justice Crutchfield.)—"The letters will be read."
It was decided that Lawyer Smith should read the letters. He arose and said: "It morifies me to read such letters written by a white man to a colored girl." He then proceeded to read as follows:
Dearest One:--
Doubletless you will be surprised to receive this letter and I assure you that I would not take the liberty of writing to you, but for the fact that much as I have tried, I have never yet had a chance to talk with you any and I can tell you that I had much rather be near enough to look into those sweet, pretty eyes, and to be in hearing of that sweet voice than to be 50 miles away and have to satisfy myself with writing.
A COLORED FELLOW BOTHERED HIM.
I tried to see you when you were up here, but it seems that it was not intended that I should. I thought surely that I would get a chance to talk with you that Monday afternoon when you went down to the store, but you brought John Taylor back with you and I just had time to get out of the way when I saw him with you. I think you treated me well. You just brought him back to keep me from talking with you and he bothered me that other time when I passed you in the wagon and I don't like him any better for it I can tell you.
What made you leave up here so suddenly? I had heard that you were going to stay until Christmas and I did not know any better until the day after you left and then I heard that you had gone and I hope that I will never have to feel that way any more. I never had anything to hurt me as bad in all my life. I thought I would never stand it in the world.
WOULD GRIEVE HIMSELF TO DEATH.
I thought I would grieve myself to death anyhow and I don't feel much better yet.
Josie darling, sweet little Josie, I love you better than anything on earth and that's the truth if I ever told it and I do wish that you would let me come down there and see you, wont you darling?
Why not, no would ever know it and
I hate it so bad, that I have known you
all of your sweet, little life and yet
I have never had any chance to talk with
you any.
Though I have loved you so long, ever
since last year, and you are "prettier
than ever this summer," if such a thing
is possible. I do know that you have the
sweetest, prettiest eyes, I ever saw, and
the prettiest hair and if any man can
look at you and not love you he can do
what I cannot do, for I love you all I
know how, and that's all I can tell you.
Josie, precious, sweet little Josie, wont you let me come down there to see you? Say yes, wont you, darling? I am coming down to the Horse Show this month, but I don't care to come unless you will tell me that I may see you and if you will, I promise on the honor of a man, that no one shall ever know it and you can surely trust me, whether you think so or not, because I never tell any one my affairs and I certainly don't want any of these boys up here to know
judge and jury in this case and I insist that these letters should not be introduced until it is proven that they were written by Mr. Eastham." [Justice Ornutchfield.]—"The court is simply investigating this matter to find out whether these letters should be introduced. I do not intend to let any technicalities stand in the way of the evidence. We want to get at the facts and find out whether or not this man is guilty. The objection is over-ruled." [Lawyer Smith.]—"If your Honor please, I will pass to the witness letter No. 2."
Mary Josie Johnson looked at the letter critically.
[Lawyer Smith.]—"State by whom this letter is signed."
"J. P. Eastham," was the response.
[Lawyer Smith.]—Is this letter in the same hand writing as letter No. 1 which was not signed?"
[Miss Josie.]—"Yes sir."
[Lawyer Glenn.]—"I object."
THE BOY WHO CARRIED THEM
The witness continued—"My sister opened the letter. I told her to open it. I then gave it to Mr. Jordan, my brother-in-law. My brother-in-law answered it. We waited one day." The prosecution at this point rested the case so far as this witness was concerned. Lawyer Smith stated that he would prove Eastham's connection with Seitz's place.
To this end, the boy who carried the letters for Eastham was placed on the witness stand. A light, brown-skinned boy about 13 years of age came forward and testified as follows:
"My name is Nathaniel Moody. I used to work for Mr. Charles P. Seitz. I was there last week because his boy was away. I have seen this gentleman (Mr. Eastham) at Mr. Seitz's barber-shop. I shined his shoes and he got me to carry two letters to No. 809 St St. I gave the letters to a girl at the house."
[Lawyer Smith.]—"Which of these letters did you deliver there?"
He examined them critically and pick ed out two letters, declaring that these were the letters that Eastham had given him to deliver.
[Lawyer Smith].—"Whom did he tell you to hand them to?"
[Witness.].—"He told me to give them to nobody but her, and I gave them to her."
[Lawyer Glenn].—"I object to the letters being read."
[Justice Crutchfield].—"I over-rule your objection."
[Witness.].—"I saw Mr. Eastham last Saturday. I worked for Mr. Seitz last year. I was just around there shining shoes because he had no boy. I saw Mr. Eastham at 5 o'clock and then he gave the letter at 5:30. I saw one of her brothers when I went there. I took the next letter at about 10 o'clock. I waited there about half an hour because some one came in."
[Lawyer Glenn].—"Which of these letters did you deliver?" The witness picked out the two letters.
[Lawyer Glenn.].—"How do you know that these are the two letters that you delivered?" [Witness.].—"Because they haven't got any stamps on them and the name is spelled a little different."
MORE ABOUT THAT CORRESPONDENCE.
Miss Josie Johnson was then recalled to the stand. She was asked to identify the letters. She did so.
(Lawyer Smith.)—"Your Honor, I ask permission to introduce the letters."
(Lawyer Glenn.)—"I object."
(Lawyer Smith.)—"Pass those two letters up to His Honor and let him decide whether they were written by one and the same person."
(Lawyer Smith.)—"Let Clerk White and Sergeant Thomas examine the letters."
(Police-Justice Crutchfield.)—"I'll do nothing of the sort. I care nothing for their opinion. I'll examine the letters myself."
Police-Justice Crutchfield elevated his head to the angle of his eye-glasses and scanned the letters closely. A self-
LEFT TOO SUDDENLY
NO ONE WOULD EVER KNOW.
PLEADING FOR THE MEETING:
VIRGINIA STATE LIBRARY
RICHMOND
COULD DO ANYTHING.
If you will let me see you, when I come down I promise you that you shall not be sorry for it. You shall have no fault to find of me and you know I can do anything I want to do. Josie, please don't slight this letter. Answer it, wont you? No one will ever know it, because I get lots of letters from Richmond and you could change your hand so that no one at the office here would know it and write on a pain envelope, such as men use for business. Get some man to back it for you that don't know either of us.
COULD BE NO HARM TO ANSWER.
Josie, it certainly is no harm for you to answer this, as I have written to you first. If you fail to take any notice of it, it will certainly make me feel bad. I will think you are mad and that you are going to show it and "give me away," you do that, because you certainly have no better friend in the world than I am.
WAS CAREFUL ABOUT HIS BUSINESS:
I hope I have not offended you by writing to you as I have. I would not have you to get mad with me for the world. Now, please don't give me away. I don't want any one to see this, but your own sweet self and I would hate sc bad for any one uphere to know anything about any of my business.
I will mail this at Fredericks Hall or on the train, as I do not want the P.M. here to know it and no one at the Hall knows me.
If you do not know who this is from [see at top] remember this word that I have told you before, that you are 'prettier then ever this summer.'
Good-by, my loveliest and best and dearest—my darling, sweet little Josie. [Excuse pencil and stationery.]
Do you remember the fellow that passed you on horse-back at the station the Sunday morning the meeting commenced at St. Thomas?
At the conclusion of the first letter, there was a hush in the court room.
ACQUIRIAR ADVICE GIVEN.
Oct., 16, '02
[Burn this.]
I coming Friday morning, the 17th.
My Dearest Josie:
I just received your letter this afternoon and that is why I have not written before. I waited so that if you were going to write I would surely get your letter when I went. I wish now I had gone to the office sooner as I am afraid that I am not giving you notice enough but you must try and meet me some where tomorrow if you possibly can. If you can't do that I will have to stay in town until Saturday, because I can't live without seeing you "and that's right."
WANTED. THE LETTER SOONER.
I am awful sorry that I did not get your letter sooner so you must excuse me for not writing before, I will not try to write much now as I am in a hurry to get this off this aft.
Now you must try to meet me somewhere, where I can talk with you as much as I want to and no body can say anything. I will have to leave it to you to fix that—because you know I will not have time when I get there.
MUST FIX IT RIGHT.
I hope you will fix it right for you
know you can depend on me and youknow
you can trust me all right, because
you may think I am lying, but I love
you and that's the truth, if I ever told
it and I have told it, a few times in my
life I know.
POOR OPINION OF THE HORSE SHOW.
I don't give a d—m for the Horse
Show. All I am coming for, is to see
my sweet little Josie. So you must fix
it all right so I can see you and tell me
it right plain so I can find you all right.
In the afternoon will suit me best if
it suits you and now,
"My only Joe and dearie O"
Good-by till I see you,
J.P. EASTHAM
LOOK INSIDE FOR MY ADDRESS.
I will give you my address below. Don't write before 11 o clock as I want to get there first, and you can write as much later as you like and you can send it by some one' or through mail. This man won't think anything, I will tell him its from some of my country friends, it can be left there, and I will call for it.
J. P. EASTHAM
care of Chas. P. Seitz, 1210 E. Main, St.
care of Chas. P. Setz, 1210 E. Main, St.
At the conclusion of letter No. 2 Lawyer Smith's voice showed signs of weakening and he requested the Commonwealth's Attorney to read letter No. 3.
The following letter was postmarked
The following letter was postmarked Oct., 17, 1902, 8;30 P. M., received at 809 N. 1st St., at 11 A. M.
Dearest Josie:—
I did not get your note until so late that the only way I could write to you would be by private messenger or by special delivery, for in no other way could I get a note to you in time and I don't because I would. I also afraid I might "give you a message." I called there a good many times during the day but as there was nothing for me, I had
about concluded that you were not going to write. I am awfully sorry I was out and did not see the boy because I would much rather have seen you tonight. As it is, I suppose I will have to take in the horse show, d——m the lock.
COULD FIND PLENTY PLACES.
It's all my own fault for not writing sooner. I can find plenty places where I could see you—but I don't know whether they would suit you or not. So I hate to do it, but I will have to ask you to try and find a place tomorrow and write me word where and what time. I will have to leave town about 5 P. M.
Now you know the city, better than I do, and I know you can find some place if you will try. Now you must do this for me—because I just can't go back without seeing you—that's all I am here for. I will come anywhere at any time. Of course to-night would have been the best time, but I can't help you do it, certainly do hope you can get off tomorrow as I don't know when I will be in own again. I would have gone home to night, but that I failed to see you.
THOUGHT HIS PLAN A GOOD ONE.
My plan is a good one as no one can possibly think anything. Write to me through the Richmond Post Office like I will tell you and it will be there until I call for it. You will have to send it by some one so as to get it there early. Have it mailed at the Post Office and no where else or I will not get it in time and don't put me off too late in the day and don't see you as long as I can. Good night, dear. Yours now and always,
"You know who."
Gen. Del., Richmond, Va.
P. S. If you had rather, you can send
it to the same place. I leave that to you.
He then read letter No. 5 as follows:
The following letter was received October, 18, at 5 P. M., by Messenger; Dearest Josie;
I wrote you last night and asked you to answer today through the mail, but I have heard one word from you, and I don't know what the matter I am afraid I have told you mad. I did not get your letter until late yesterday, so that I could not fix things like I wanted. I want to see you so, but that I have concluded to stay over to night and on the 2 o'clock train to night, if you will tell me that I may see you before I go. Now please darling, don't make me go back without seeing you.
DECLARED HE LOVED HER.
Now you know I love you, don't treat me so bad, Josie, precious sweet little Josie, tell me that I may see you before I , ad I will stay until 3 o'clock tomorrow 'if I can't see you, please let me know and I will have to leave on t . , o'clock train to night. If you don't know any place, let me know if I must find a place and write to you again, now you must tell me something right away. I will tell the boy to say this is from a girl friend of yours.
I wait at above named place until I hear from you.
MUST NOT GIVE HIM AWAY
Don't ever give me away and if can't see you, please let me know in time to go on the 7 o'clock train, but I want to stay and see you. Now, don't deny me darling, you know it will nearly kill me if you do.
If you don't know of any place, 'tell me if you will meet corner of 14th and Broad, St., tonight and I will go out there and make some arrangement and will be there—or go out to the horse show and I will see you out near the door and talk with you.
Say what you will do and let me know at once."
He then read letter No. 5 as follows;
This letter was received Oct. 18, 1902, at 7:30 p. m.
THE PLACE APPOINTED.
"Maggie Smith, 320 Jail Alley—Not far from old C. & O, Passenger Waiting Rooms.
Go up Broad St. from old O. & O. waiting room about 100 yards and turn down the alley—it is very little ways,—or go past old O. & O. waiting room as if you were going up Broad and then turn down that road that goes through the yard. "You will meet very few people this way, the road will wait for you at the end of the road at side of Broad, and if you want me, I will walk with you."
HAD JUST BEEN THERE
"This is a nice, quiet place and no one there but the owner. Have just been there. The woman is all right. Don't fail to come. The reason I chose this place is because you said you would have to go to market and it's near there." No more disreputable neighborhood in town could have been found than that specified. Jail Alley has been the residence of some of the worst characters in the city, and to designate such a locality was in itself a tell-tale confession of his motive.
He then read letter No. 6.
BITTERLY DISAPPOINTED.
The following letter was received
Oct. 19, 1902 at 11 a.m., through messenger boy sent to 809 N. 31st St.:
Dearest Josie:
I received your note after so
PRICE,FIVE 5 CENTS
long a time. I thought the boy had fooled me. I am bitterly disappointed because I didn't see you to-night. It looks as if it was not intended for me to see you, but I still live in hope. I don't suppose a man ever had as hard a time trying to see one little girl before, but I will not mind it with all the trouble and I will not mind it only see her at last. I am awfully sorry I can't write to you so much, because I don't want to make it hard for you with your people, but I could not help it.
COULDN'T GIVE HER UP BASILY.
I have been loving you too long to give you up easy, but I tell you I had about given up to-night until I got your note. I thought sure the boy had fooled me. O O course there are plenty of girls and pretty ones, too, her 'There is only one girl in the world for me,' and that's Josie, the sweetest darling of them all, and I am stuck on her right, if ever a fellow was.
MUST LEAVE THE OLD TOWN
I came down here to see you. I have staid until now trying to see you and have not seen you yet, but I have got to leave this old town to-morrow at 2 o'clock, no matter what happens, so I hope you will meet me as early as you can. I want to see you as long as I can and I think I have worked hard enough to deserve to see you—don't you, sweet heart?
WANTED PLAIN DIRECTIONS
I will send this out to-morrow at the time you said and I hope you will give me plain directions so that I can find you and tell me what to do so that I wont make any mistake.
I don't know a great deal about the city. I send card with the name of the place where I will be to-day. So that if I fail to find you, you will know where I am.
Always your lover and friend,
Good by."
WILLING TO STAY LATER.
"P. S.—If it does not suit you to meet me so early, I will stay till the 7 o'clock train to-night and I will stay any how, if you will stay with me a long time. Tell me what time to meet you and what time are you going."
Card is as follows:
Old 'Phone, 1358.
THE PEN-MAR,
Phil. G. Kelly, Proprietor,
Richmond, Va.
Franklin St., Cor. 17th.
Hotel and Restaurant.
MR. JORDAN'S LETTERS.
Mr. Glenn introduced the lett er Easham had received. Two of them were mutilated, but they were read in the presence of the court.
Miss Josie Johnson was recalled. The letter which had her name signed thereto were handed to her.
"Did you write those letters?" asked Mr. Glenn.
"No, sir," was the response.
"you even seem them before" asked MK Glenn. "No sir," responded the witness.
(Lawyer Glenn) "Do you recognize the hand writing of those letters?" "Yes, sir." They are in my brother-in-law's writing. "She told the arrest of Eastam." "I did not go to the place of meeting" she said "but was in a store across the street with my brother in law and my sister and her children." This concluded her testimony.
MR. JORDAN'S TESTIMONY
Mr. Jordan was placed upon the stand.
He said:—"My name is Booker L. Jordan. I was a merchant and served for four years in that capacity.
I was General Manager of the True Reformers' Stores, five in all and I resigned to accept a position as General Inspector of the Southern Aid Society, being a member of the Board of Directors of the same.
I was up at St. Thomas Church and saw Mr. J. P. Eastham watching Josie every way she turned.
I am superintendent of the Fountain Baptist Church Sunday School and am a usher and a regular attendant of the Church. My wife goes up there every summer. This girl has been staying with us during the past three years. I took her up there this September for good.
A TALK WITH HER FATHER
I talked with her father in the yard and learning of the attentions of Eastham, we decided to bring her back to Richmond.
She usually spends the summer at home. Her father has been a friend and laborer for Eastham for thirty years. Her father was afraid to say anything to him. I wrote the letters to disclose his intentions.
He then explained that he appointed the place at 13 E. Duval Street, a highly respectable family residing there. I carried with me in addition to the girl, Josie, my wife, my brother, and my two little children.
I saw Eastham come to the corner and ask a colored man something. He pointed to No. 13 E. Duval St. Mr. Mitchell was also there at the time.
(Justice Crutchfield)—"What Mitchell is that?"
(Mr. Jordan)—"John Mitchell, Jr." "Josie was born May 29th, 1888." (Lawyer Glenn)—"Why did you not order Eastham to desist? Why did you lead him on?"
HAD BEEN WARNED ENOUGH
(Mr. Jordan)—"I thought he had been
Continued on 8th Page.
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ALCOHOLISM IN FRANCE.
Ge: Valliant, a Soclaiial Depety tor
aris, Satine! alice vac?
‘enti Oe
The most strenuous fighter against
alcoholism in France to-day Is Dr
Vaillant, a socialist deputy for
Paris. He introduced the subject in
the last chamber and had to strug.
gle against general indifference. On
all sides of the house deputies per-
fonally feared the publicans. The
government feared loss of revenue
Dr. Vaillant made so strong a case
against alcohol that the resolution
he moved was voted by a show of
hands. But this act of the legisia-
ture came to nothing. The minister
of finance at the next cabinet coun-
cil asked the minister of the in-
terior, who spoke in favor of “doing
something,” whether, to give pleas-
ure to a faddist, he was going to
destroy one of the most fruitfu;
sources of taxation?
Dr. Vaillant believes that he will
“slay the monster” “What grounds
have you for this faith?” I asked.
“Simply that I have on my side sci-
‘ence, sad and convincing experience.
and the conscience of every non-in-
ebriate workman. I may say the
fonscience, too, of every decent
‘Workwoman. The alcohol drinkers,
Poor souls, do not count. They are
Mnorally, mentally and almost phys:
feally played out.”
Dr. Vaillant believes that the
leaflet, and especially the pictorial
leaflet, has a deterrent effect: on
those who have not found their way to
the public house. His greatest am
Dition is to be Peter the Hermit in a
crusade against alcohol. He warns
young doctorg who help him to
avoid rhetoric or strong language
but to give strong facts and in such
@ way that a man must be a fool
who cannot draw from them the
right conclusion. Deputy Vaillant
has had reason to complain of every
minister of the interior since he be
fan to wage his holy war. But he
hopes M. Combes will give more sat
isfaction. He is a practicing physi
sian and he has long fought —an¢
still fights, the publicans at Pons
the town of Lower Charente 0
which he has been mayor for 3
years. M. Combes has the virtue o!
fearlessness and Is of one mind wit!
the Academy of Medicine on the
Face deterioration that alcoholism
causes,
M. Vaillant will soon bring th
rink question again before the
chamber. He looks forward to th
Passing of a stringent bill against th
manufacture or the sale of drink:
destructive to health, acconting t
the list of the Academy of Medicine
The propertied class with big in
comes are on the side of the public
ans. Revenue derived from drink Is
in their opinion, clear gain to them
selves, as it saves them from an in
come tax.—National Advocate.
A HELPING HAND.
Extended to a Fallen Cabman It Res:
cuex Him from the Depth of
_. Miserable Drankenness,
* (Ge Thou and Do Likewhe:")
A cabman signed the pledge for Rev
be tude be Cor cere crn
Sev eh Oasianpiciouer nonce
misésible wanlund, wesing bolscein
Bat uence
chs, bes thie Fuad ta aifipary, an
yest oab uurss tate Gown ried soe
go with him?”
br ns ihts spnpoliie sSnlisd sek
eWell & bara ecmsts Seine taan
seid Mr. Garrett, affectionately; “the
wh TT am 1
SLs Fs i
oF Fay i ttt
ae OS,» Bs : ‘
wet VS sie
= vif ee
=
Wi id *
ny 4)
FUL { ?
i i 4
fe sie
eT ~~ WN ee
A ed
THE CABMAN'S HEART WAS
Yoad was slippery, I know, John, and
you fell; but there's my hand to help
you up again.”
‘The cabman's heart was thrilled. He
caught his friend’s hand in a vise-like
grip and said: “God bless you, sir;
you'll never have cause to regret this
—I'll never fall again.” And to this
day he kept his word.
Widow Against Saloonkeepers,
Mrs, Summers, of Sheldon, Ill, has
been given a judgment for $3,500
against Messrs, Baker & Reddick,
saloon keepers, whom she sued for
‘damages for the death of her hus-
band, who was killed in a drunker
brawl. Mrs. Summers was given =
verdict in the circuit court, which
has been affirmed by the appellate
court.
FOOD OR POISON QUESTION.
Summary of Exhaustive Treatment
of Atwater Theory by # Vienan
‘Waimea
In view of the discussion called forth
some time ago by the report of Prof
Atwater's experiments, which were
intended ta throw light on the ques.
tion: Is alcohol a food or @ poison?
paper in the latest number of Pilu:
ger's Archiv is of more than passing
interest. This periodical is the lead-
ing physiological journal of Germany
if not of the world. The paper re-
ferred to is by Prof. Kassowitz, of Vi
enna. It consists of 39 pages of care-
fully discriminating review of the sci
entific evidence on the question, un-
der the title: “Food and Poison: A
Contribution to the Aleohol Question.”
‘The position of the author and the
Place of the publication would lead
one to expect a rigidly scientific treat-
ment of the subject, not a prejudiced
polemic, and certainly not a harangue
from the point of view of the profes-
sional temperance reformer. For this
reason the paper is one of unusnal im-
portance, and ought to be read. by
those who profess to-speak-on the
matter from a scientific standpsint.
‘The author sums up at the close the
main conclusions to bedrawn from the
Fesults of all reliable investigations
up to the present time. I give below
the gist of the greater part of the
summary, presenting the general ideas
rather than a literal translation:
1. ‘The assumption of a nutritive ae-
tion of alcohol rests upon the suppe-
sition that a part of the food is con-
sumed by direct chemical change with-
out first taking part In the upbuild-
ing of the protoplasmic substance.
2. The logical consequence of this
supposition, that substances of equal
fuel values can take the place one of
Another in the cheniical changes im
the living tissue, is contradicted by
reliable experiments. The same can
be said of the supposition that a food
can be of use through its direct de-
struction without any intermediate
protoplasmic steps.
3. The single remaining possibility,
that all food material is assimilated,
A. ¢., in applied to the building up of
chemical units, agrees very well with
all the ascertained facts and stands
in contradiction to none.
4. According to this conception of
the nature of food the proptoplasmic
molecules are highly complex and
hence chemical changes are extremely
easy to bring about in them.
5. Evey stimulus and every chemfcal-
ly acting poison causes a disturbance,
destruction of chemical units of the
protoplasm.
6. Since alcohol as a stimulating and
Poisonous substance destroys the pro-
toplasmic molecules, it cannot at the
same time be assimilated and applied
4s a Yood material. A substance can-
not simultaneously act aa a food anda
Poison. ‘
7. After a short period of atimula-
tion, alcohol acts as a paralyzing agent
to the tierve centers which innervate
the muscles; the muscles are thus lens
efticiently excited through the action
of the nerves and less carbon dioxide
is produced.
8. The reduced amount of carbon
dioxide excreted indicates no economy
of the tissue substance, but is an in-
direct consequence of the poisonous
action of the alcohol.
9. In agreement with the above con-
clusion is the fact proved by experi
ment that if for a part of the non-
nitrogenous food a quantity of alco-
hol of equal fuel value is substituted,
there results a reduction of working
Power and a loss of body weight.
10. The nutritive value of a sub-
stance does not depend simply upon
the fact of its oxidation in the body.
11, The practical conclusion to be
drawn from the known facts both on
theoretical and empirical grounds, is
to the purport that for purposes of
nutrition alcohol should be employed
neither for the well nor for the sick. —
| S.S. Maxwell, in Chieago Standard.
Quite Naturelic
“He claims that he's a self-made
man, and nobody disputes him.”
“Of course not. If he’s willing to
take the blame, why should anyone
else go out hunting for it?”—Chivago
Post. : :
ITEMS.
The mistake of the state is locking
up the drinker instead of the d#ink.—
National Advocate,
Within the last five years the con-
sumption of absinthe has doubled in
Paris. The amount now drunk in a
‘Year is 8,000,000 bottles.
‘There is an English total abstinence
eociety among railroad employes
which now numbers 20,000 and hae
been In existence 18 years.
No more wine for banquets. This fa
the decision of the Alumni Association
of the William and Mary college, of
Richmond, Va.
Prof. Hoppe, of Berlin, calls atten-
tion to the fact that in 1899 and 1900
41 per cent. of the insane admitted in
the hospitals of Prussia were chronic
alcoholists or children of alcoholic
parents.
The treasurer of the United States
Brewers’ association reported at the
annual meeting last month a balance
on hand of $56,496.58, and it was ex-
pected that increased assessments
would bring it up to $100,000 or more,
to fight against righteous legislation
affecting the traffic.
‘To Help Women Inebriates.
‘The local council of women at Ot-
tawa have adopted a resolution ask-
ing that the government establish cot-
tage homes for inebriate women.
‘They state that in their city of Ot
tawa intemperance among women and
girl prisoners has increased to the
alarming extent of 75 per cent., and
that women in many cases under or
about the age of 20, have been incar-
cerated for drunkenness or for crimes
committed while under the influence
of drink. Imprisonment to check this
evil hae proven an utter failure, as
there are women in a brief life of 40
years who have spent 20 years in jail.
“Journal of Inebriety.
THE RICHMOND OND; VIRGINIA.
VALUL UP LOVE] tostting teteess angen
HUF Thos BO rilling fiterest anything ever seen] Teapps
shai ‘ in their long and varied experience in} Wife—8thin
apne eeens the big forests and mountain fast-Jithe minister ¢
2 nesses of Mount Tacoma. an’s extravaga
We a Hard Thing vo Betimiate Ie me)" 90,' case en were cathe drelll echo te
Dollars and Cents. headed for Indian Henry's Happy] trouble you. 1
Hunting Grounds, when a singular{ plain.
Saee | ee Wife—that's
Seomte to Vary tn Price from Thirty | @ireea Ran . call everybody
Conte to Lite ttscit—a Few | WARD pete iy Ys} Journal.
Cases Miasteating the i AAV pe, Oe | a
ee AR nce, ey A aoe
No one hax yet lived who was able
to place a tue vaiue upon love. At-
tempts along Wis tine have been made
in the courts by wen and women seek-
ing redress for tue alienation of af-
fection, but they usually grow ficti-
tious in their essimates and seldom
have the satisfaction of seeing sheir
ealculations borne out by the votes
of 12 jurors. ‘The tendency im sued
litigation is to rate love at a figure
considerably higher than facts will
substantiate, and, as might be ex-
pected, values vary according to the
conditions attaching toeach individual
case.
‘There is, however, im Indiana a mam
who has satisfied himself on this ques
tion, Harvey Tallerday, of Elkbart,
made up his mind how much his wife
was worth to him and without at-
tempting to fix a standard for the
guidance of other husbands put a
value on her and placed her on the
market. She was sold. Mr. Tallerday
may have been influenced by, the fact
that he needed the money, but this
condition does not enter inte the gen-
eral proposition of the yalueof a wife,
because when a man ix within a few
cents of absolute bankruptcy: he is apt
to realize all he can on whatever he
has to sell, ‘Tallerday’s available
assets were one wife, xo when he
went home and found her talking to
Morgan Gordon he calmly, coolly and
reflectively announced that Mrs. Tal-
lerday was for sale and that 49 cents
would buy any man the foundation for
a home—a wife.
Thirty cents was all that Mr. Tal-
Yerday asked for Mrs. Tallerday, be-
eause he considered her worth ne more
| e fl
ty mf
fe \ i i ae
(iy
UN
‘than that amount. It happened that
Gordon was looking for bargains and
it happened also that Mrs. Talierday
was willing to be sold, so the transfer
was agreeably made and everybody in-
volved In the incident was ‘satisfied,
But this case, says the Chicago Trib-
une, is one of the adverse extremes g0-
ing to prove that there cannot be any
fixed value upon love. How unnatural
and contrary to all established rules of
sentiment such an incident must seem
to the heroic figures in a real, heart-
consuming romance. While the Indi-
ana man was willing to dispose of his
spouse for the paltry sum of 30 cents
theré are others who go to the other
extreme in order to secure a wife.
And it must be admitted that stories
of the latter class are more in keeping
with what the world calls heart in-
terest. Take, for instance, the recent
marriage of Miss Ruby Simonds and
J.P. Jansen at Clinton, Tenn. In this
case love rescued a young woman from
the arms of death.
‘The marriage ceremony itself was a
weird affair, but the story attaching
to it is full of romance, which began
in a Chieago hospital while Miss
Simonds was a professional nurse.
It was the old, old. story. She went
to Minneapolis om a visit, met Jan-
‘sen, and they fell fn love. His sta-
tion in life was not equal to hers and
she was afraid to tell her parents of
her love affair until she went to Clin-
ton to visit. ‘There she fell ill with
typhoid fever, and when fearing death
she unburdened her heart and let out
the necret. Jansen was sent for and
he went south from Minnesota. A
| speedy marriage was agreed upon, and
the ceremony was performed while
the girl apparently was on her death
bed. But love proved a great restora:
tive, and the moment Miss Simonds
became Mrs. Jansen she began to im-
prove. Now her ultimate recovery
is assured.
Love must be of some value when it
fs rated higher than even life itself.
Etta Cook, of Sew Haven, Conn., kitled
herself in'the presence of Alfred Aus-
tell, her lover, because he told her
he was going away and might never
see her again. She didn't want to live
without his love, 0 she took carbotic
acid and died.
Another strange ease of lifelong de-
votion came to light recently in Mil-
ford, Pa., where George Gledhill, aged
60, and Anna Mayo, aged 76, were
salted tn marriage, ‘They had admired
each other from early childhood, yet
aid not decide to marry until both
were old with few years yet to live.
After the ceremony was performed
they began making preparations for
death. Within a stone's throw of
their house Gledhill bas built a mauso-
Jeum for himself and bride, The tombs
have been prepared and eich is suit-
ably inseribed with a headstone bear-
Nig’ dhe kansas wt the Heldeads acon
SNAakS SiKANGLE CUB.
Placky Young Hears Tecth and
— Chaws Are Unavailing Against
Reptiles’ Folds,
‘A struggle to the death between o
bear cub and two immense bull snakes
has been witnessed by three hunters
Bear Mount Tacoma, Wash. Len Long-
wire, Burt Hall and Charlie Price, the
three woodsmen who saw the fight,
declare that the spctacle exceeded in
Thrilling iiterest anything ever seen
in their long and varied experience in
the big forests and mountain fast-
nesses of Mount Tacoma.
‘The three men were on the trail
headed for Indian Henry's Happy
Hunting Grounds, when a singular
PIE I an: a>
WY ay ee ‘
y Vy Wie a VEY Y
4 UG ry Th VA
Re?
\ We Bee HORA
OORT UN A
) VM
yee Ks,
Wit! Fy” p Ws
Rae; M4)
te, YF) yy, ')
: a "4
ah
i fp a
a
aa
envnniad ira eosin
noise in the-bushes a short distance tc
one side of the trail attracted theit
attention, amd on breaking their way
through the underbrush in the direc:
tion whence the noise proceeded, their
eyes rested, om a spectacle rarely seen
in the animalkingdom.
A small but. plucky bear cub, which
Had evidently been left by its mother
only a short time, was having a fierce
Battle with two large bull snakes. Tt
Proved to be an unequal eonflict. In
vain the little-bear used his claws and
teeth, though putting up a vicious
fight.
One of the Lig reptiles succeeded in
winding itself around the Body of the
cub, and getting it position to squeeze
the breath nearly ont of him. The oth-
er snake, after-a hard struggle, got a
colt around the cub’s neck, and then
managed to drag him up over the limb
ofa tree, thus effectnally hanging him,
and ending the struggle in a few min-
utes. Hunters say these big bull
snakes are rarely seen. They are
afraid of men, and seek the seclusion
of the rocks and "woods.
HE WAS THOUGHTFUL.
Daxange Man Kicks Valine Under Hts
‘Wagon to Save It from Having.
‘@ Trank-Fen on te.
“I don't know when,” said Mr. Griz-
zleby to a New York Sun reporter, “I
have seen any more pleasing act of
thoughtfulness than one which I wit-
nessed this morning on the part of the
ativerof abaggags wence.
“Of a number of pieces of baggage
which this driver-had to deliver at one
point, the last two that he teok off the
‘wagon were a valise and atrunk. The
valise,-when he pulled it clear of the
dashboard and letit fall on the ground,
did not bound at all, but just squashed
right down where it dropped. Now,
the act of thoughtfulness was this:
“If he had been. careless or reckless
man, thisdriversweeld now, when he
fz Ee «
A EZ
es ae
q a a)
DP ANG 4 0
F. a)
CH en A Wee
-G Y wg Ng
NP Kass Z
cs ee”
w”\ 2
om v8 ra
| .
\KICKED THE VALISE ASIDE. —
eame to pull the trank off the wagon,
have simply let it drop om the valise
lying there on the ground directly un-
der the tailboard. But hedid nothing.
of the sort. No, sir.
“When he was all ready to let the.
trunk drop, but before actually lete
ting it fall, he kicked the valise out.
of the way, underneatlt the wagom
And then he let the trank topple ane
fall, to drop with a crash upon the
pavement.
“The owner of that vnlise may think
when he gets it, as very likely he will
think; that it's been pretty roughly
handled; but what would he have
thought if it had chanced to falPinte
the hands of a man who wouldn't have
taken the trouble to kick it aut of
the way, ax this onedid, but whowould
have let that trunk fall on it?
“It was a thonghtfal act, indeed,
thet kicking of the valise ont of the
way, and I don’t know when ave seem
anything more pitasing.”
Nery Pleasant for Duby,
-ACanadian firm recently pinced with
the Montreal aad Toronto aewspapers
an advertisement of a new nursing
bottle it had patented and was about
to place on the market. After giving
directions for use, the “ad” ended in
this manner: “When the baby fs done
drinking, it must be unscrewed and
laid in a cov! place under atap. If the
baby should not thrive on fresh milk
ft choula be boiled.”
A Koh-t-s0or,
Teacher (in mineralogy class)—
Johnny, give the name of the largest
known diamond.
Johany—The ace—Nashville Amer-
ican.
Am Adeqoate Supply.
“Henpeck has given up smoking, eh?
‘That takes a good deal of will power.”
“Yes; his wife has it."—Puck.
atest Im Burglar Alarms,
An ingenious mechanic in Brooklyn,
in a district where burglaries are fre-
quent, has invented a novel burglar
alarm. It consists of a pistol and a
bell actuated by mechanism under the
floor. As the intruder steps inside
the door he treads on a platform,
which sinks just sufficiently to start
the alarm. The pistol goes off and
shoots the Intruder, while the bell
rings until stopped by one who under
wiande bbe device.
Taapprecinrca Sermon.
Wife—tthink it was awfully mean of
the minister to preach against wom-
'an’s extravagance in dress.
Husband—t don’t see why that should
trouble you. The gown you had on was
plain,
Wife—that's no reason why he should
call everybody's attention to it.—N. Y.
Journa}.
Chewed Food Pine.
| A little girl was overheard talking to
her doll, whose arm had come off, ex-
posing the sawdust stuffing.
“You dear, good, obedient dolly . I
knew I had told you to chew your food
fine, but I didn't think you would chew
it so fine as that.”—Cincinnati Bn-
quirer.
‘Ornitholosy.
Roderick—Your wife used to say
you were a bird before the wedding.
Any change now?
Van Albert—Well, I guess she
thought T was-a jay then, but from
the quality of eooking she gives me
now, she must think I'm an ostrich.
—Chieago Daily News.
tine Ian,
He wrote her a letter that told her
‘He loved her withipassion divine,
And in it, with farvent entreaty,
‘He said: “Will you, dearest, be mine?”
He waited in vain-for an answer,
‘The weeks went despairingly by,
And still, to ble sarrow and anguish,
‘He never recelved.a reply.
“A falne-hearted creature he though
“Alas, ‘she's ae f1tkie as fair!”
‘Then one morning he felt tn his pocket
And found that the letter was there.”
Brooklyn Lito.
DISASPOINTSD._
| |
— fi) 4
Lee Ee
The Lady—Did anyone call while I
was out?
‘The Maid—No, ma’em.
“That's very strange. I wonder
what people think I have an “at home
day” for.—Moonshine.
PASSENGER TRAINS LEAVE AND
ARRIVE NEW MALN-ST. STATION.
OCTOBER 5th, 1903,
LEAVE RICHMOND.
vo ce ron
vo oe
“Sere Feit Sah ee
mata Su, “Stee Wu
4:00; p. me Dally wxeope Senay Yo “ON
a, Mapee a =
nf Banal Rare, os
ikatbaeg "Servant Se
uments, Souhes af at t
ii Wanaon cents an as
soteanuivior Sena
*mrtuae ima ada ange =!
Main Line West Bound. ee
100m eta Rang Bana
Calverton and Manassas. :
100 ©: arms paror cafe ar £5 Gordons
Feline fom Geetearie ce
Sant nat Cone Cain te
fer Upedegeit ie Bia dgune mab
fap. Dally Se Lule and Chong spect
Pei tatty, Beas
saan a mB Ea en
and ent
= are
for ,Bomey and. ‘Alberene ax. New
$26 p mereecept Sunday. ‘To Bromo
. Arrive.
ramos Drvmion From Nort and
RCs awe arate
Fos gigs Hawa sp
Bi ate
}. From Ts pails 5
weer eat Rene
ron Door aretven 830 aes oxcope
Jasmns iryen Dyrsrox,— From Stifton Forge
Creer ania
goo ain Morgen
Best a tt
BSRTR AR tt ates th
W. O. WARTHEN,
Drstrrcr PassENGER AGENT.
QE. DOYLE, H. W. FULLER,
Ges’. Ma'r. Gry't PLA.
Norfolk and Western R. R.
Sept. 28th, 1902,
LEAVE RICHMOND (DAILY), BYRD
STREET STATION.
O00 A: Nistale 0 A; Me Blope ca wePoe
Shburg. Waverly and Sener shops
st Waltsnold unly gotet off pment
Boiling’ Wickets” fom iklnond ond
005 4. THE "ORICAGO EXPRESS, for
Eieago. Bucs Parioe nr Potervers
$2 Columbsis: aor for" Sriatot Roos
{2 Cofsoaba: aloo, for Eritat, Rhos
oo, See ea
tsa. jo. Reancke Rxprom” for Farmvilo
W=0P Euchiurw. Roanoke and intermedia
800 Pole gm) P. Be Bhogm only at Focarnterg
: oa "
Waren fai: Ceainects af Sos
20k with Steuer 4s Boston, Ber
dence, New York, Baltimore and Wasb-
T29P. Matfer Suftolk, Norfolk and intermed
pee pigeon sive of Nort
85. M.for Lanchbarg, and Roanoke. Com
OSE acto ot Lerockicg, with Washinton
go See ae ‘and
ow Orlcaitn Cate, Pusiorand Giser™
tion Cars Radford to aie ‘Ala. Pull:
finn Slewper Uotwecn jichinand and
Dash dapaanatt
nal eee Timekivare and
he West dally 728 A°M E00 pom, and
S03 | from Norfolk andthe’ East
selidA! i, WA, my and 620°
=
Office 838 Main St.
JOHN BE. WAGNER,
ity Passonger and Ticket Agt.
©. H. BOSLEY,
District Passenger Agent.
W. B. BEVILL,
General Pucungor Agent
‘General Office; ‘a.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Sehedule in Effeet July 20. 1902
‘Trains Leave and Arrive Heh St: Station
Et + ae
area a a
for Farmville, Lynchburg and all i
iim Reneoeere ati
Sao
aeersies ts bu nse oe fatty enue
ea toad al Picea plnte; Ravana
Farmville: snd Pockets iatiead? ee
Gresnabors, for ‘Durban, Raleigh dd
BS, United Statow fast mnnile solid train,
Se eee
Sefer ees ogee on
Pee ccna
Senin, with Blooper easel ae Meee
phis.” Dining-Car-Service.
lesbo, ses baiaoes meee ga
ee cores
Spay hcant ea Boke
Conners hao
eee ee ee a
area thwart "ipa aoa
Seat ieecte eae Shea
Memphis, Atlanta, New Orleans, eto.
ese oce ee
Sencar een ae emcees ot
ieee ere eens
pe” BSR om mete weentnerer. te
nentions for all points in Texas, Mexico
re
aioiesdgeteeee beh ft, crane cia,
EM Me th dat, eset Sone
TRAINS Ak K1\ EIN RICHMOND,
faa
Ps es guenan here aco
ete
ne aap
ee ee ee ate ee
coe eee as
LOCAL PREIGHT.
‘Nos. 61 ae between Manchester and Neapo-
YORK.RIVER LINE, VIA
WEST POINT.
THE FAVORITE ROUTE NORTH.
dE
Mis No. nunore Limited, daily ex:
ing at Woot Point woth steamer for
2:15 p. meNorio dally ‘except Sundae tase
8 P expres for West Point. and, iesrmedi-
steptations, Gommects, Seth. ceage at
Seton Manor for Walkerton and Tap
5:0 a. Bt No. 74, local mixed. Leaves daily,
suedlate staticas, consed Engi es
St Letter 'Mgnor for" Walkerton aed
TRALNS ARRIVE RICHMOND.
15 A.M, No: Ww.
coe sane rection roms "Duimones eames
10:6 4 No.8, daily except Sundays and
eee
ex, ana 16 will make no stop. between,
Stontmers wall frou. Went Point 50pm.
daily envoy Sundays. Steamers call at Glow
Sestet Pome and Clay-bank, Mondays, Wedtior-
days and nr Saal Xceanowra and Alluonds:
“OW: Wistony, DEA. mei
920 E. Main St., Richmond, Va.
8. H. HARDWIOK, GP. A.,
‘0. H. AOKERT,
General Manager.. Washington, D. 0.
Agr Lawes Ramway. |
| Shoat line to Principal Cities of the South |
thwest. Florida, Guba ‘Texas, Califor:
Bama ence, Pasching the Capitale of Sis
SOHEDULE (8 EFFECT APRIL 13,
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND—MAIN sT:!
ae ae
Net Nona,
$5 Pa 104. xy. Richmond
Bhi RS Rees
farm dida w Lv. Rated
was Rae FWA SAT Hamlet:
ark. bk toi tamien
and Banshee Siam ;
154. 904 eb. colin on)
| eral Time,
$A x aon wp. Sarina
O55 2: iv's SoA tnomonvnle
isto ae “Ar Se Augustine.
Seah tsa Ar tame
10 32 Poe ee Ly. bg met
Baa Sco essa enar Cao
* (Bustern time.)
1:96 4.38 9:404.3—Lr. Columbia.
Are ee Gontead Time.)
4:55 Age. 230 Pe —Ac, Suwaamals”
B15 AM. C80 A. M,—Ar. Jgcksonville.
B30 A aca et Aen
ee ee
Wis teat, Me a MAP. Chaplotte.
Ta Ade RBA iin Chester,
Made. Wale aly Greonwenod.
CHROME Fale sti athens
Poa Fab rac ar Atlan”
Bia) eo, Augustin
Gai Wah aan Montgomery.
oe 935 AT um an Molle ¢
ges ne Taka ae. Navas
SS Eh.
‘Train No.8 leaves Bichiond 9:10 A. 4. dally
dur Potersbarg. Norattoay R, Cennd all iotee
diate points, “Connection nt Noratina with
Spunarving Hendewson 20 bat ana iat
ee ee 4 P.M. daily
een :
"Traine leave Richmond for Washingten, and
Naw York ana the kart dally-No: Stakecb a
*etimentions at dackgarville and ‘Tampa for
or iden; at Sew ofan fora patkaets
Toxas, Merion and California,
‘TRAINS ARRIVE AT RICHMOND-DAILY.
635.0, Now ‘rom all points South.
PERE Nog | Pentnarse
38 FM No. Sh, Nonaling NC
and local pointe.
SLEBLING-CAR SERVICE.
Nos, SI and S4—Florida & Metrepolitan Lim:
suas Puulinam, Drove: itoom, aed
irs tetwoon: New YoEk al asaper Verse
Sa Cease een Sanna We
Bond, and bat mond, and Jackson:
Yili." Palluan Sleping Cars tally) berween
Sesicmltand Sp Ate See rae
tg oom Sinaine Cars ietween New ark
‘nd Atlanta, ad Cafe-Cars Uetween"Hassice
‘tnd Atlania’and Hamict and Sawenuae
‘Nos. zt and @¢—Seabonrd Past Matt Pall
spin broming Goon ate, Storing ‘Cary be
Ergin Aare forijand Jocktanviko,Sonnecug
Tefianet with Sioegar ty anit from RE
Innta, in connection with which “Greer PAT
man "tirkets are. sold. ‘Palla Bee
Coaches. We
W. J. MAY, €ity Miaket Agent.
Z. P, SMITH,
‘District it,
eo ase Reais ess,
eetiniseiaiie:
New Outing and Picnic Park at Jones:
boro.
There is a New On 1d. Ponte
Park, Jonesboro, at Fort Leon tie wae
torn Branch of the O. 4&0. R. R. com
‘venient for Picnics by wagon or rail.
‘There is a large pavilion that will ac-
commodate 800 persons and other af
Excellent water on the grounds. You
shureh, Sunday School westore or ot
Yate plc-nioe oF ong, that will’ afford a
more perfect day of rest, recreation or
pleasure. For particulary as to dates
and rates apply at once to
Jo. H. Bravron,
10 W. Jackson St.
OS EER Tis stasis tonal
THE MIDWAY LUNCH
ROOM,
726 N. 3rd St. Richmond, Va.
MEALS PROM 7.4.4. TO 8 P.M.
‘Term Reasonable, Quick Service.
Give Mo’ A‘Call.
MRS.S.L. MITCHELL, Proprictress,
Richmond, Fredericksburg
and Potomac Railroad.
Schedule in Bifeot May 25, 1902.
Seutus-Leave Bichmenl Becerra:
422 A.M. from BYRD STREET | -
Heaters a Tg
at Mil ‘and
fencers bee eee ©
6:45am. from MAINS T &
eis Paramainer bees
Be weckinetess att Menem, Lamited,
Gar to New York, a
nM keep nay from te St
cena ae erates
eeaeee aes
a only fret BYRD
ehitetol ot
Setanta ca
50 PRD STREET
SEATION for WaatinatSe reat 6
‘st Elisa, Gon Allen: sind decal stations aah
Rieresing OT tottalve, Seminary end
EBUNGDs, Raowpt Bundy, trom BYRD 67.
STATION, for Washington cad Sond, Sas
SPARON anion turers Stns
Soenectt with Congreciene Tasy cere Oo
chip ar Hepa amin tts bra,
sustod, Caceeceanaeen hs! 9S ioe, 2g!
"58 P- My Daily, teow Main St. Station, for
Be an ne sas me pasa
Wakingied Pa foo MBO Station, toe
Foerster tad ecshic Basie
6:12 P. M., Daily from fhe Station for Wash-
spinnin igrond Seponensig pf,
Fock Dt. sing Gare. COANE Ose toow
6:00 P. M., Except. from ELBA 8TA-
rises meemicriae Sn BA gr
peo tee
SSH uty, trom Byrd Sir statin,
ne Waku cers Sith
Gaede Se ae
ee et
Sepeen eltee sa aresg see Alena
Sediatat ie Ree Sak aad Goats
Sons.
abe eo andar, frpm mi EA.
Tie Actseetias ore ahs
‘Trains “Arrive In, Richmond South.
wands
a ea
Accremedaton rom Aubland” ced "Inte
Se ee etiiaaany sirunpyiligr
{TION Accommodation From Fredericks.
Clie: sodinectmotints pants
Su Soir baleat Bee sen toms
bana ts Da ot eee oiaon
Siege, tec: Rerren shannon ead
"Eats aac senday wget orneme
Raat =
sbi dies teicent aa. or ee OT REET
Selous hand inten Cita "Ala Sak
Ee
Ss Pa Dai, oh RRA er aTyON, mee
eth bariatie ts Rinker Se
SAAT Meet Bigs fae
ang ao
205 P. M., Daily, at MAIN STREET
STATION, ‘stop nk Alexandria, Frederick»
Are erence
Ete ree ae
Nese is oobeonday smURA er sion
Soe Recerroan dat LRA FTATIO
one
ION. Ghoge vat” lama Bean ee
FON eRe shaadi
Se eres Satan ee as
PER? alk Bib. ch mem ea:
1 0 Awhl ‘toclastv Glen Allen,
Srse Saat ote
SURE pci gai sta eee
Fok Fiotatind s
eeesieir ect Bat
1100P. M., Exeopt Sunday, at ELBA STA-
‘TION Avookunelation trom Anbinods
WY: Brats Manse.
wm: ae
ie peas
ATLANTIC COAST-LINE.
Schedulo-In Rifect June. 8, 1902,
TRAINS, LEAVE RICEMOND—BYED
STREET STATION.
P06 oe me. NORFOLK TIMITED, Daily.
Ses Nee eee
S ox
se .Slra eeee
PRS Seca ican enna
faa Nias S305
igh yahg eon raease 0
ie a isin wit ea wea
Bim Bulinan Baeeper em Yc to.
ion SOME ceca peaea
Ay, arrives. Foeeare
‘Dinwty’s Bute, Genbralin nid Choatet:
> cana
one Say Ses ora
atten allteat or Mian at at
Bist Gontraiis and Geester.
&0@p. m OCEAN SHORE war meas
(reget, Potersbure.8-0P. 3, oe
ACES TE haa,
Seaverly. on Barto: co
490 p.m. Daily, except Arrives:
Fee SET ATS
SERS GSB. Seah ate
EDT ivan Potersborg T
coor pals, "Riven Poarbars TP me
‘T:26P. M. FLORIDA & WEST INDIAN LIM.
TIED. Daly AYuees Petertbare,
TAP bal, ABER
foe Kock" Re teins ot
Be kore ts Paes Cone te a
flat tania
Baports apt Tam renemon Waldoe
PREG Fy ecgller i he
Peete rete thle
Jacksonville ia:80 P.M. Tampa 10:06
SSPE hae ae
NEW LINE ‘SO MIDDLE GEORGIA
Siuson DAS Adlaate foe MS
Pullman Sleeper New York to Wilming:
ton, Charlesten, Port Tampa, Jackson
eee ieee
sr Hh DE. cr eeee ik wan
E Weller auay arate a iets
pore aA, Roanoxe 5 A. M.
10:0 At ‘Pullman Slosper Richmond
ap PTB arrives Potonbore 0
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND,
2M, Daty, Brom dacksonvilie, Seven:
te in Shatin Slant Madan, A>
cme alee ale Weeeee eee. ena
egal we Wak
848 A.M. Dally, except Sanday. Petersbarg
yo A. MM. Daily, From — Goldsboro
one. intermediate stations. Nor
ny@ At belly: Frum Norfolk, Suffolk and
14 Pie" Buly® Prom Potersbare Roancke
1 1S eee
“intermediate points.
6:80 P. ete From Norfolk, Suffolk, and
T45PM. Daily. From Miami, Port Tampa,
‘Savannah, he
fee RS
eae Se best, From ;
kM. Pen Petersburg, Lyneh-
T. M. EMMERSON,
Traffic Manager.
i. M. EMMERSON,
W. J. ORAIG,
General Passenger Agent.
oO. Gente
ivision Passenger ”
Me Beeniate be,
AS or Orr ee
wreck Gan bo; minds working fr as, and mach
Soot donor tr rac: Soca
cose wp donire so ware thonasslven aay OT
partioulars furnished free. Apply by letter
7, Pas beceeera
Tilchmond Vay
cate
ALPHEUS SCOTT,
CHURCH HILL
FUNERAL DIRECTOR ;
«+. AND EMBALMER,
‘Open Day and Night. Office
Qecstlns gros Pate Choon tae
Orders By T ‘and "Telephone
panty stansied tor Al batons ore
‘Old Phone Mo. 3183.
: So Bt HE Hest Laser tenernn te el acainacs
B/e\ te . fe Scan
4 Lut =z
eS. 3 : :
LiKe =\ \ we | =o
: . i Togation. = 3
oh he
ay ess | oY tore = ee
d Sy iG Mk PRY Saarseearat Ses
Aso 4 ry 84 _ face ambi. nda bo wan me |
ja 4 [ J Rasceunaeat ier: eaee ie ey = a tae :
a4 4 \ | a! uw is mc : :
f \ cP j |} Seatas nae into an armachat picked crue and wed ce :
= 2 se 33 aha < ial no Doak ho armchae, war pete] through Sioa :
| .
Sa SK IS a inv lr ni 0 esa ——
fs $ 2 B THRI Bra eens nas could 200 at ae :
Keon at LLIN Ss be ope lea ‘einer Senne :
| 4 h | OF THE ie STORY SF % mathe’ etmek iy sill for s. quater mor ‘ight wee os, a 5 .
Vesey Z IN CHINA. ERS eZ f blood it bi cath cilia ee Set erenttal "ee ores =e
Se ] 7 :
BY GARLTO 3 | b= pointe tera or aa —
oy e A — ty ter ren pera : |
i S TOW DAWE. ea Sr uta om Ta Seco es Fl
eem Eas Copy; —_— _ . customed to of day, but Sree though he aoe a
sit 3 3 Cops 0, tg en (eats Sica tien te eats aera See
$3 83 HS He at R Roos LA tng prin i and the opal itn iain =u
SET hg: SIS 2 3¢ Z tnd physical “con were ar che ae = = 2
eg orae ee Vas 2 yy SS Ss SS | He a Z cc bakekeeee cee eae =
8 SOME Be. 3So-28 eoe” irew Forth = starts, Ae, steer Neate ta oF a s.
8 2 t66 $f = an — , I vent - afte ped the . a a
set, staan a | pain ant ecto 3 Bales arin, fenty nontwmel 9D reared te ine acer aking a han SERIES ee
n ce mm el: ras Tt iver. neleome “De io with oo tt Set = :
4 2. Ey se nents a with or oursel we actway, nce Ul it first je went
e and extracted therefror | aes Set new the or of a De. with ourselreer” ves. <a hae
d therefrom a Brad- | hs Pn forngla por baba nything f Yori Sa See Maes paren eee on ss
a eae "have oe ing me wit! on his kn peated. m glance: were forev he street. spondent,
ie ta | Ways Inued, “thé you what ‘ye | do you st h a puzzled ees and fa- upon th naan as con. Eve - :
cecenaned. sae mnaxpectéd. fein See noe Took. “Whath eae the highroed ¥ direction, eng bark Heke
rere i Son eauntakabe - Saat ‘oven ite bu ik
Rhy toe ae eee eo en mye thowe aly
1e least idea. ly that I was Mecaiee tee was wi Soreness 3 ‘aut “4
fasedl; ras looking for v0 Sil in view. el lighter
een mebody; he expe He “tue tog
ne one. — le seemed aren eo 1 rm
He seer d assured sate cod
ned assured of the| s0™,000 st
iw Travis }
and a vast amount of uneasiness. My
father's manner, nervous, excitable
and suspicious, ‘was one well calculat-
ed to arouse suspicion and excitability
in others. He gave me no reasons for
his burried departure. He did not even
condescend to tell me why he was go-
ing to Wales. We drove in a fly to the
‘station, and, though the afternoon wes
beautifully fine, he made the man put
the hood up. This naturally produced
an atmosphere which was anything
but agreeable, and when I hinted at it
he replied that he always avoided an
umnecessary draft. To me, on the con-
trary, It seemed that a draft was most
necessary, but what I thought mat-
tered nothing. The silent man in the
corner bad taken the helm.
At the station he discharged the fly
4nd hurried me into the waiting room,
in the remotest corner of which we sat
with our belongings. He informed me
that his beavy stuf had gone on to
Denbigh, which “heavy stuff,” I dis-
covered later on, consisted of nothing
but a Gladstone bag. My father was a
man who did not believe in heavy bag-
gage. To move and move quickly was
the principle upon which he worked.
He never went out on the platform to
see a train dash through or to watch
the passengers alight, but sat! in his
corner of the waiting room reading,
reading incessantly. And yet I notic-
ed that whenever any one entered the
room he seemed to know It as If by {n-
tuition, and the top of the paper would
gradually drop to a level with his eyes,
-and he would subject the newcomer to
@ careful scrutiny. At first I thought
that I must be mistaken, that bis
glance was such as most people bestow
upon the advent of a stranger, for
who has not entered such a place and
seen every eye Immediately turn his
way? To me, however, there seemed
something more than mere {dle curlos!-
ty In my father’s glance, and after a
Ueief interval I was assured of It.
T huppened to be speaking to bim at
‘the nioment, when, without any appar-
ent cause, f saw pis eyes, which were
turped toward tle start nervons-
Ty, while a any Spas seemed to
Sweep across bis face. Hastlly he
raised his paper and at once seemed to
be deeply engrossed in bis reading.
‘The cause of this sudden transition I
immediately sought for, but I could see
nothing to warrant ft. The few people
scattered about the room were yawn-
ing as usual and lolling about on the
hard benches in the most ungraceful
attitudes, while tn the doorway, the di-
rection in which my father had looked,
‘there stood a little man of a dark, for-
eign appearance, but whether he was
‘Turk, Malay or Mongol I could not tell.
‘He merely stood there for a few mo-
‘ments while he surveyed the room, but
evidently not king the appearance of
it turned away and began slowly to
promenade up and down the platform.
As soon as he had gone my father, as
though instinetively aware of the
man's departure, stole a stealthy
glance over the top of his paper, and I
‘saw that his usually pale face was if
anything more ghastly than usual.
“You are ill, str,” I anid. “What ts
the matter?”
“Nothing,” he answered sharply, irri-
tably, “except the cursed cold of this
@reary room.” And he huddled up
closer into the corner aa though he
gained warmth thereby.
Now, to me the room seemed un-
pleasantly warm, permeated as it was
by an odor which seems inseparable
from such places, and I could not help
eaying something to that effect.
“Aye,” he answered, “but If you had
the fever in you as I have you'd wish
yourself well out of this cursed drafty
country.”
‘Well, as far as the country was con-
cerned, he had little to complain of. He
had not troubled it much of Inte years.
Presently a train thundered into the
station, and I went to the door to
Watch the people coming and going.
When I returned, my father evinced
Some curiosity as to the passengers
who had departed, and even went so
far as going to the door and looking
out. The scrutiny evidently satisfied
him, for be came back with a smile and
told me to bring my things out on the
platform.
Punctually to time our train slid into
the station, and my father and I en-
tered a first class smoker. During the
few minutes that the train stood there
he glued his face to the window and
watched anxiously the entrance to the
platform. But at last the guard's whis-
‘tle sounded, the engine replied with a
short, sharp shriek, and slowly we
crept out of the station. Then my fa-
‘ther threw himself back with a sigh of
content, rested his feet on the seat op-
posite and quietly began to fill his pipe.
Once the train was fairly under way,
‘the Jond skimming by us on either side,
and no sound came but the roar and
the rush of the wheels, my father set-
fled himself down to read, and I
searce!y think he moved unless it was
t retil his pipe or to cross or uncross
Ais lees. “I tried hard to follow his ex-
‘ample, tried hard to convince myself
that i found my varied store of litera-
tore interesting, but I was conscious
oj the time of the utter fallure of my
Nexdeavor.
"As we began to epproach Shrewsbury
Bradshaw was a companion of his
which was in constant requisition.
‘Thumbed and dog eared, pencil marked
on the margin, it showed a mutilation
or an indignity upon almost every
page. To me Bradshaw bas always
been @ weariness to the flesh, a thing
devised to drive men mad and hurry
‘thelr souls to perdition, but to my fa-
ther it was an endless page of lunatic
‘delight: It didn't matter where the ed-
{tors hid away a train, he pounced up-
on It like a hawk. Their ingenuity was
‘wasted on him. He reveled In moun-
tains of bewildering figures; he read
the columns of hieroglyphics as easily
as I could read the English alphabet.
‘The compilers little knew when they
chuckled in secret over their flendfsh
‘work that they were creating an {n-
finite source of intricate happiness for
at least one son of man.
After studying the mystic pages for
some time he, having akgorbed his n-
formation, carefully deyexited the pre-
cious tome once more in bis bag. «ben
he began to collect his various papers,
which he also placed in the bag. It
looked to me as though hé was making
‘preparations for leaving the train; but,
knowing this to be an tmpossibility, I
“merely regarded tt as another of his
ttle eccentricities. However, as we
began to slacken down he cried out
suddenly, “Stand by.”
I looked # bim. He repeated almost
harshly: “Stand by. Get ready. Don't
‘stare at me like a fool.”
“But this is Shrewsbury.”
_ “I know that as well as you.”
“Thinking ft Just possible that the
Uquor he bad s!pyed might have made
him forget, I said, “But we «tarted for
Denbigh?”
| “We did nothing of the kind. We
started for Shrewsbury, and here we
are.”
At that moment the train glided nto
‘the station and so cut short all further
remonstrance. But I think he saw
that he had annoyed me, for as we
Jogged away together inthe cab he
explained, with some attempt at plaus-
AbNity, that it had been his orfginal In
tention to stop the cight at Shrews:
bury, but that he had forgotten to
make me acquainted with such a tri
fing detail. I assured him that his ex-
planation was quite unnecessary. In.
deed, It was a matter of perfect tndif-
ference to me where we went, since ev-
ery place was sure to prove distaste-
ful. My father and I did not yet quite
understand each other, and to have as
/@ traveling companion one with whom
“You are in no sort of sympathy Is dis-
tinotly distressing.
Arriving at the hotel, his first in-
quiry was for a room with two beds,
and I may here state that during the
remainder of our wanderings we al
ways slept in the same room when it
‘was possible, and when not he insisted
‘upon two rooms communicating wit!
each other. In this instance a very ex-
cellent room on the second floor was
shown us, a glance at which at onc
convinced me of its suitability, but he
was harder to please. He felt the
Deds, examined the windows, saw that
the door had both a bolt and a key
and then and not until then declared
himself to be fully satisfied.
As it was already Inte he ordered
dinner to be brought to the room, and
I thought that he now seemed like a
rational man for the first time. His
frigid reserve thawed in the most re
markable manner, and he condescend-
ed to crack an occasional joke at my
expense. What wrought this change
in him I could not then fmagine, for I
id not think It was the good food, and
I felt sure that it could not be the
quantity of wine. It seemed te me
‘that he cast aside his suspicions as on.
Would a cloak and that for the first
time that day he felt the blessing of se-
curity.
That evening we retired to rest at a
comparatively early hour, but before
80 doing he once more examined the
windows very carefully and saw that
‘the door was locked and bolted. Then
he lifted his bag on to the table, opened:
it and drew forth an extremely hand-
some six chambered revolver. This he
handled very carefully, almost loving-
ly, I thought, and then, after balancing!
it and taking sundry imaginary aims,
he turned to me.
“I suppose you know what this is?”
‘Truly he had but an indifferent opin:
fon of me. an opinion bred of ignorance,
‘Ro doubt, like so many indifferent opin-
fons, yet none the less offensive on that’
@ecount. ee
“Yes,” I said. ’
“Have you ever fired one?”
I could not help smiling as I thought!
of the weeks of daily tuition I bad un-,
dergone with my uncle. {
“Often.”
“Come,” said he, apparently much re-
Heved, “that’s not so bad. Do you ‘think;
you could hit that window yonder?’ |
‘The window in question was an ordi-
nary one, some 10 or 12 feet from my
bed. He evidently had not heard of my,
prowess with the gun.
“I think so,” I said. “What is more,
I could put a ball between a man's!
eyes if he stood outside.”
“Good,” he cried, “if you see him’
there put a ball between his eyes.”
“See him?" I echoed, not a little star-
tled_at his suddeg vehemence.
il
ean
_ “Nor was I ence, nor of anything
€lse, but mow I haven't got the nerve
‘of a goat left me. I tell you what tt.1s,”
he continued, “the unexpected is al-
ways happening, and I'm afraid of tt”
“But a burglar would hardly venture
into a place like this,” I suggested.
-*"Who knows? A desperate man will
do anything. If this one has a yellow
face and strange dark eyes, shoot! Put
your bullet fair between those eyes.
Give him no time to pray, for as there's
& God above he'll send you to join him
‘without a moment's hesitation.”
“If he has a yellow face and strange
dark eyes,” I repeated. “It was such a
man who killed my mother. It was
for such a man my Uncle Jim and 1
have searched everywhera Are you
also afraid of him?”
|. The question startled him a little, but
he clinched his teeth, and a furious
‘scowl contracted his brows.
“I am afraid of no man living,” he
snarled. “The man who says Bob
‘Kingston's afraid of him ts a Har.”
: ‘T had not the least intention of dis-
puting this statement, though his sud-
den glance round the room might have
led one to believe that he expected a
challenge. To me this outburst ap-
‘Deared to lack that fine intensity which
‘should accompany such brave words.
Indeed, there was a ring of bravado in
At which robbed the utterance of some
of its terror, The ferocious sentiment
id not come well from one who was
afraid of his own shadow and who had
broken his Journey because an tnof.
fensive foreign looking gentleman had
‘stood for a moment at the door of a
‘railway waiting room.
CHAPTER VII
‘WANDERERS.
Notwithstanding the sensations of
the day and the novelty of my sur.
roundings I slept exceedingly well that
night, once sleep had setzed the brain.
The day had been full of wearying,
strange surprises, but I possessod In
full the superb quality of youth, A
thousand trains might have whirled by
at express speed without arousing me;
the man with the strange eyes might
have picked the ‘ok with impunity.
But none of t) things happened,
and when I flually awoke I beheld my
father, alrondy dweset, aitting om the
edge of hie bod witehing me.
“You sleep soundly,” he said,
I smiled. “Always.”
“An easy conscience?”
“I think 80,"
“Sabbee.” He bad a way of using
odd words, chiefly of the pigeon Eng-
Ush variety, which he had picked up tn
the far east. Other words also, which
Were pure Chinese, he used in moments
of great excitement, but of them I
could only guess the meaning. “Do
you know,” he continued, a troubled,
‘earnest look playing about his eyes, “1
have not slept soundly for 20 years.”
“That, I suppose, is why you look
so pale and 11?"
He shook his head slowly as though
balancing some matter in his mind.
“So I look pale and ill, do? Yes, 1
suppose I do, but a man Is apt to think
Uttle of that to which he Is accustom:
ed. And T've had some cause,” he
added as if speaking to himself; “I've
had some cause.” ‘
I did not doubt him for an instant.
His face, bis suspicious manner, the
sudden starting at a sound, the peer.
ing at people from beneath the brows—
were these things to be associated with
& man of clean reputation? I would
not have had my father’s consclence
for a king’s ransom,
I went below to breakfast, leaving
him in his room. He was going to
have a Uttle of something brought to
him, professing a dislike to crowded
public places. I thought {t rather fas
tidious of him, but beyond that it trou-
died me nothing. If a man wishes t.
‘eat alone and can pay for the priv:
| flege, there is nothing more to be said.
I preferred the stir of life and the view
of people.
As I lounged about the vestibule
‘smoking an after breakfast cigarette
curiosity led me to look at the visitors’
Book, which lay open on a desk a lit
‘tle to the right of the office. On the
‘Page for that day there were already
‘two entries, but on the page of the
jday before I failed tc see my father's
‘name, And yet I had most assuredly
seen him advance to the book, take up
}a pen and write, What he had written
I was in total ignorance of, but that he
‘had written something I felt perfectly
‘certain.
‘There had not been many entries that
day, only some nine or ten, but among
them there was no name resembling
ours. ‘The two last, written in the same.
hand, were “R. Martin” and “D. Mar
tin,” and I knew that these must be
the names which my fathér had Insert-
ed. An indefinable shame selzed me. I
hastily turned the page and quitted the
desk, hoping that no one was watch-
ing. I slunk away from the lynx eyes
of the young man In the office—slunk
‘away in the shadow like one who had
‘been caught doing a discreditable
thing. '
Mounting to our room, I knocked up-
on the door and almost at the same,
moment turned the handle, but to my,
surprise the door was locked.
“Who's there?” cried my father.
—"
“ont”
T heard him limp across the room; the
lock went back with a click. Then the
‘door was but partly opened, and his
beetling brows filled up the aperture.
_“ was just going to change,” he ex-
plained in answer to my look of inter.
}fogation. Probably, but the room was
‘full of tobacco smoke, and a book was
turned face open on the table.
: I went to my bed and sat down. He
threw himsolf into an armehair, pleked
‘up the book and resumed his pipe. I
‘had no book, no armehair, no pipe, and
even if [had had all three T could not
have Interested myself in one of them.
So I sat doggedly still for a quarter of
‘an hour or so, thinking, thinking; but
instead of thought easing my mind or
‘blood it but Irritated the one and ren
dered the other more tempestuous. This
secret, horrid life might sult one whe
feared the light of day, but I had beer
accustomed to fresh alr and the open
fields, and I could not tolerate this sit
ting In prison, as it were, this mora’
and physical confinement. So, after
much hesitancy, after numerous fata
starts, I ventured to inquire what we
were going to do with ourselves.
“Do with ourselves?” he repeated,
dropping his book on his knees and fa
voring me with a puzzled look. “What
do you suppose we are going to do with
ourselves?”
I said and rather confusedly that |
hadn't the least idea.
| “Of coursenot,” he replied. “It seems
to me that they have not taught you
how to employ your time to advantage
Get a book and improve your mind.”
But I never felt so little ike reading
in my life, The “bluddiest” of “bluddy"
books would not have held me then.
“I cannot read,” I said. “I think 1
‘shall go out for a stroll.”
He looked up sharply. “What do yor
‘want to go out for?”
“Because I shall go mad if I stay tn.”
“Nonsense. Look at me. I stay ix
enough, but I don’t go mad.”
Forgetting myself for the moment, 1
replied a trifle too pointedly perhaps
“It may suit you. It doesn't me."
| He turned more in his chair and
peered up at me through his thick
brows.
“What do you mean by that?” he
asked coldly.
Seeing that I had advanced, too fa:
| for retreat, I answered with more
| boldness than discretion: “Simply this.
sir. I do not understand this hole an¢
Corner business, this game of hide an¢
seek.”
He looked at me without replying.
but I saw his little eyes burn through
the shaggy forest of eyebrow. Then
he rose and Imped toward me. and br
Pa i
Sell |
Uf
\-40 |
ZZ ] :
ee ee Sa a es
their Jaces,
the way bis underilp writhed 1 knew
that he was in a great rage, Indeed |
fully expected that he would strike me
and somehow I didn't care much. 8:
that we understood exch other noting
else minttered. But if that had been his
Intention, bo very cousiderately altered
his mind. Indeed he came close up to
| me, and his look bore w decided wist
for an understanding.
| “Look bere,” he said harshly, “you
seem to be an obstinate mixture o!
Your mother and me, What do you
want?"
“Simply to know, str, why we seem
to be hiding.”
| He laughed. “And if we are not hid
ing at allt"
|, “Why, then, do we take such precau:
tions to conceal our identity? Why dc
‘we travel under the name of Martin?”
A curious smile fitted over his sal
low face.
“And why not that as well as any
other name?"
“People do not change thelr names
without a reason.” =
“Why should they?" He smatied, but
only with his pale lps, showing his
teeth in a decidedly unpleasant man:
ner, I might have sald more had It not
been for the sight of that pallid, writh:
ing mouth, After a pause he continued:
“I will admit to you that there is a rea-
‘son, but what it Is I may not say. Per:
haps one day, but not now. It 4s a lon,
story and one whieh, 1f known to you}
Would contain but ttle consolation
And so I repeat—there is a reason. As
you see, Iam getting old; I shall =
‘set sail for foreign parts,” his referen
to death. “My nerves are not what they
were, I need companionship; maybe I
shall require help, and I look for it td
my son. We shall go to many strange
places and do many strange things, and
T cannot say when our wanderings will
cease. Perhaps soon, perhaps late; but
soon or late I want obedience and an
end to this questioning. If I do an odd
thing, you are to believe that I have a
good reason for it, and leave me alone
when you see me struggling with the
evil of fear or melancholy.” '
‘Though this confession left me no
wiser than I was before, it to a certain
extent cleared the alr. In his own way
he had spoken civilly, had treated me
for the first time as a rational being,
and as a result I felt considerably mol-
Iified. That some potent reason forced!
him to this contemptible subterfuge 1
had ho doubt whatever; that it did not,
encroach upon the domain of Scotland
Yard I also firmly believed. Whatever
my father was, or whatever he may
have been, it was not to escape the
Police thet he behaved In thix extraor-
dinary manner. |
We left Shrewsbury that night by a
late train. I spent that day wandering
about the town, but I do not believe
my father left is room during the
whole of our stay. When the time
came for our departure, he went
through the same mysterious perform~
ance, mufling up to the ears, ordering
& closed cab and sitting huddled up in
the corner. He was not on the plat-
form when the train arrived, but as
soon as it came to a standstill and the
passengers began to make toward the
‘exit he took up a position where he
‘could see thelr faces as the lamplight
‘streamed upon them. Evidently satis-
fied with his scrutiny, be chose his
carriage and entered it. A minute or
so later and we were pounding along
through the night.
We arrived at Denbigh without mis-
hap and there acquired rooms on the
outskirts of the town For some six
or eight weeks we pursued a quiet, un-
eventful life, and my father, ‘who
scarcely ventured out of the house for
the first eight or ten days, gradually
began to throw off the fear which
seemed to clothe him as a cloak. But
though he went abroad he seemed un-
able to forget. He never left his room
without rat going to the window to
‘see who was tn the street; he never
stepped out from the door without first
taking a hasty glance up and down
the roadway, and when in the street
Itself his eyes were forever darting
keen glances in every direction. Even
upon the highroad, seeing a solitary
figure advance toward him, he showed
unmistakable signs of apprehension
until the person was well in view. He
was looking for somebody; he expected
some one. He seemed assured of the
meeting and yet fearful of It. What
would happen then? His evident fear
tended toward catastrophe. Being a
fatalist, I think he had no doubt what
‘would be the result of the encounter.
During this period my own soreness
Wore off, and as 1 knew him better I
discovered the suggestion of many
good points In him and when the terror
Was not on him jovial to a degree. Or
rather I should say he showed the
wreck of a stanch heartiness from
which one might guess what the ship
jhad been. And so I began to take an
interest in him and his affairs and
thought less of myself and my Uncle
‘Jim. I will not pretend that i felt for
him anything like the affection which
I had bestowed upon my mother, but
he was my father, and, account for it
ag you may, one must take a certain
amount of interest in one’s parents.
‘Thus bis fears became my fears, and I
used to long for him to take me into
his confidence, but that, despite numer-
ous broad hints, he would never do, re-
garding me as nothing more than a
boy. Yet boy as I was misfortune bad
sharpened my wits, and, piecing his
‘words together, I knew that he feared
the yellow, slit eyed men of the east. I
had not forgotten the man with the
strange eyes nor the little brown faced
‘gentleman who had stood tn the door
of the waiting room.
I remember once reading out to him
the account of an attack by a Chinese
mob on an English mission during
which the rioters had set the place on
fire and deliberately burned several of
the inmates.
“So Uke them?” he said. “I loathe
the yellow, slimy swine. Cruel, treach-
‘erous, they know neither pity nor mer-
‘cy. Of course it's only English life and
English property. It doesn’t in the
least matter to the bloated fools who
sit at home and fancy they know how
to govern outside of England. It’s not
their property. It's not their life. Ig-
norant, pigheaded fellows, they want
whipping, every one of them. They
are responsible for these outrages on
Englishmen because they do not make
‘the name of England feared. Heavens,
‘Wf they'd only give me command of the
‘Squadron and a free hand I'd teach
‘those yellow devila and all the world
beaides what the power of England ts.
It makes me mad,” he continued, “to
think that our ministers insist upon
treating these Asiatics as civilized be-
ings. Any sign of courtesy or of con-
ciliation bas but one meaning for them
J—fear. ‘They have never been treated
as Intelligent human beings, and they
do not expect such treatment. Give
them orders; don't ask favors.”
Iam afraid my father got very ex-
cited as he dilated on the delingaen-
cles of the Asiatics and that he used.
somo language which might sound
stirring when delivered from the
bridge of @ ship, but which would be
singularly out of place in a decent,
barrativa. He also spoke with con-
tempt of her majesty’s government
Jand gave ft some sound advice, which
I would reproduce if I thought minis-
ters would profit by it. But as advice
lof any kind, and, above all, sound ad-
‘Vice, is the thing most detested by the
Jack in office I refrain. After all we,
have our own village pumps and
own parish councils, and the present!
holder of a great office ts necessarily
a great man, and the government
come everything about everything.
(x0 Bm conTINvED)
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Rioce ponte tre bore catnet nace
as word night bee ee tees
omens ee anes
Moco comae teres.
2 es
/ mam ow eum Poon sori
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Ck CLIN
Cholly—In what profession woulé
you like me to distinguish myself?
Miss Kiddem—Oh! any at all—a life
long explorer in Africa, for instance
—Chicago Chronicle.
—————
‘The best advice that one may give
In this brave world of toll and tussle
Ie this: If you would really Live,
‘Then hustle, hustie, hustle,
Detroit Free Press,
‘Bt esas.
| She—There goes my mother.
He—Who is the gentleman she 4
swith?
| She—I have forgotten his name. Hé
ds my latest stepfather —Chicago Reo
ord-Herald,
WOODS AND STREAM.
Odd Happenings Observed by Hunt
ers and Fishermen,
Unconventional Foxes, Muskrats
Fish and Other Creatures Lend
Variety to Outdoor Lite in
Denteseceek
| Jesse Travis, of Starrucea, Wayne
county, Pa. was chopping in the
woods on his furm a few days ago.
The barking of a little dog that accom.
panied bim by and by attracted his at-
tention.
| He went to the spot where the dog
‘was, writes a New York Sun corre-
spondent, and discovered a silver gray
fox, which, in running past a shag-
bark hickory tree had been caught by
{te bushy tail in the rough, strong,
bristling bark of the tree. Effort to
extricate itself had only drawn the
‘tail tighter in the hold of the bark.
The dog had been afraid to tackle the
fox, and stood at a safe distance, bark-
ing Travis knocked the fox on the head
with his ax and had a pelt the like of
‘which has not been seen in the Pennsyl-
vania woods for many years. It is
‘worth more than a month's chopping
0f cordwood.
Virgil McCarty was scouting about
the marshes at the headwaters of the
Lackawanna the other day on the look-
out for a possible shot at a jacksnipe,
when a muskrat slipped into the water
Just ahead of him. A second later a
large trout leaped a foot or moré
above the surface of the water and the
back of the muskrat came in sight.
‘The trail fell back into the stream. In-
stantly there were signs of a struggle
‘im the water. The back of the muskrat
jeame in sight again and MeCarty fired
at it. The muskrat turned over, dead.
McCarty pulled it ashore. The trout
‘was in its mouth. It was still
alive. McCarty removed it _care-
fully from the mmuskrat's mouth and
Placed it in the water. While he was
watching it feebly swimming about on
the surface it suddenly went down
with a sharp jerk. A watersnake had
stolen from the crippled fish from
aS a
pe AD, ae
|| ——
.e = oe Ba
é Cg—_
pre
we —_—_—_——--
epObiEED Io kwene mene:
below and seized it. The snake came
up with the trout in ite mouth on the
‘opposite eide of the creek. MeCarty
shot it as it was crawling out on the
bank, The trout dropped back into the
water still alive. It wiggled about or
the surface again, gradually gaining
strength, although the mushrat's teeth
had made a deep woundin its belly, and
ot last swam away up the creek and
disappeared.
A fisherman on Lake Ariel, neat
Scranton, one duy last week, saw a big
fish floundering around on the surface
of the water near the shore, He rowed
lover to the spot.
‘The floundering fish was a pickerel
}The fisherman knocked it in the head
with an oar. Then he found that the
pickerel had tried to swallow @ good
‘sized catfish, which had set its spines
to prevent ite swallowing. The result
was that the pickerel could neither get
the catfish up nor down, and fell vie-
tim to its greed
Will Jennings was driving along the
Toad by Lawrence's dcademy, near
Chester, the other day, when he heard
@ rattling in the bushes. He investi-
gated and found a woodchuck with its
head buried in a big tomato can, and
unable to get it out.
Jennings killed the woodehuck. It
was much emaciated, showing that it
had been fast in the tin cana long time,
land was being slowly starved to death.
ow it got ite head in the can no one
knows.
Ames Young, of Sterling, Wayne
leounty, took a load of hay to Seran-
ton the other day and soldit. Whenhe
went to unload it at the barn of the
man who bought it he found a big hor
net's nest hanging to a beam in the
mow.
‘To render the occupants of the nest
harmless some sulphur was placed in
la pail, set on fire, and held under the
Inest so the fumes would:suffocate the
hornets. ‘The pail was held too close,
e nest caught fire and cropped into
ie pail.
‘The hornets began to swarm out and
the hired man who held the pail
hucked it, nest, fire and all, out of
the mow window, It fell onthe load of
hay, which caught fire Young had
time to get his horses unhooked and
jout of the way, but the hay and hay
wagon and part of the barn were con-
med. The hornets escaped.
Stone Cares Hydrophobia.
A wonderful madstone is possessed
by Harry Bundy, of New Castle, Ind.
tt was originally found in the stom-
jach of a deer, 77 years ago, and has
been in the family ever since. In
lover 100 cases of dog-bite it has been
applied, and has never failed but
jqnce to prevent hydrophobia.
ROBIN TACKLES HAWK.
Astulc Redbreast Makes a Brave and
Successfal Fight to Liberate
@ Chicken,
It fs well known that the howk
Ino matter how fierce and big he may
be, has no terror for the kingbird.
Ht is 1 common sight in the spring-
time, when they are breeding, to see
lone of these plucky little chaps mer
cilessly following, pecking aid arte
ing away a great bird of prey @
dozen umes its size, reports the New
York Sup. A merchant who was
camping out on the Chelsea Hills
learned that the kingbird is not the
enly emall bird bold enough to at
<7 8 oS
2D 2 - <e
ie ‘ ns:
GEEZ
a4 3 F
<4 -
aN
a — 6
oe @ ee f
f~
oda Gclehs 20 arene
tack and drive away the robbers of
the air.
‘The man was approaching a farm-
yard vne morning for his supply of
milk, when a commotion among the
poultry drew his attention to a large
hen hawk which was sailing away
with a good-sized chicken in its
talons. The poor old hen was doing
its best to prevent the raid. With
much squalling she ran along, and
tried to use her clumsy wings in
flight ofter the thief.
| Just as the hawk rose to the level
‘of the treetops a robin, which had
evidently been taking measures to as
‘sist the hen mother, sprang from a
limb right atop of the hawk, with a
‘shrill cry of rage. So fiercely did the
game redbreast use its sturdy bill
‘upon the hawk’s back, at times even
alighting upon It to peck it to better
advantage, that after a good deal of
maneuvering, finding {t impossible to
escape this persistent foe, it dropped
its prey and turned upon the robin.
But the brave little bird was by no
means fighting for fighting’s sake,
and as soon as the chicken had been
restored to its mother darted back
to its tree and began a song of rev
Joicing.
Disconnected, '
He ran a street car for awhile
“And took the fares up merrily, 5,
Until they found hekeptatew— |
A non-conductor now ts he.
—Ciweinnatl Commercial Tribune,
ek Cha
Her Papa—Yo' aspiah ter marry
mah daughtah, sah? H'm! Whad am
yo'r prospec's?
‘The Suitor (a widower)—Ebery sim
gle one ob de pussons fo’ whom mah
late lamented wife done washin’ fo?
hab promised ter liber'ly paternize
her successah.—Judge.
Probably Did.
“You told me the other day you
were going to put creosote on a corn
you had. Did you do it?"
“Yeu.”
“Did it cure the corn?”
, “I don't know. The surgeon that
removed the toe took it away with
him.”—Chicago Tribune.
RETURNED THE BAG.
An Incident Which Destroyed a Chi:
cago Lawyer's Fatth in Haman
‘Ceutibeiness.
| “The ‘glorious uncertainty’ or in-
glorious miscarriage of the law,”
said Attorney Joseph David to a Chi-
cago Daily News reporter, “often re-
sults from a bogus alibi or a wrong
identification. I was interested in
@ case where three young fellows
were charged with robbing a saloon
in Archer ayenue. The saloon keeper
said that one night when he was plae-
ing the receipts of the day in a small
bag the trio came in and with re-
volvers in their hands deprived him
of the hag and its contents. ‘They de-
clared that it was a case of mistaken
2 Tie
y itis if
a : | )
ah Ny
co b ih
ao
identity. Oh, no, they were not the
robbers—they were virtuous young
men and would not dream of com
mitting such an atrocity. ‘They were
elsewhere, all of them, on that night
—and they brought witnesses who
swore for them a cast-iron alibi. The
fury brought in a verdict of not
‘guilty. When the defendants were
‘brought back to the jail for the usual
formuls before release Charlie Smith,
‘one of the bailiffs, who had his own
ideas as to the justice of the verdict,
remarked:
“Well, you fellows are pretty
‘lucky.
) “You bet!" coolly retorted one of
them. ‘I thought we'd get ten years,
anyhow. As it is—well, here, you may
give that guy of a saloon Keeper his
little old bag.’
“And he handed over the bag that
had contained the stolen money.”
. The Caar’s Corn Doctors.
| Twenty-four physicians guard the
health of the czar, and among them
‘are two chiropodists. When tho
‘royal corns persist in aching, the
ezar leads the corn-doctors a ively
dance, and jaws them until he ts red
im the face, und they are as pale as
ashes, ass
HE PLANET
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BENEWAL, ETC.—If you do not want THE PLANET continued for another year after your birthday, you may take the day off Postal Card to discontinue. The courts have decided that subscribers to newspapers who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for it, it has been paid new halders for the payment of the subscription up to date when they order the paper discontinued.
COMMUNICATIONS:—When writing to us to request your paper, you should give your name and address in full, otherwise we cannot find your name on our books.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS:—In order to change the address of a subscriber, we must be sent the former as well as the present address.
Entered in the Post Office at Richmond, Va., as second class matter.
SATURDAY, NOV. 1, 1903
The lawless colored elements must learn that they do us much harm, and endanger the shred of rights which we now enjoy.
---
COLORED men can 'console themselves with the hope that there is an end to everything, even to the outrageous conditions now existing in the Southland.
POLICE-JUSTICE ORUTCHFIELD seems to have sounded the key-note in the EASTHAM attempted abduction case. He has been unanimously commended by both white and colored citizens. He had the law and the facts before him, and he fearlessly did his duty.
---
So EASTRAM is crazy. We thought it would come to this, when it was ascertained that the commonwealth had a "dead open and shut case" on him. "Crazy" colored men who commit crimes are either hanged or sent to the penitentiary.
CULTIVATE and practice politeness, colored men. Impress these principles upon the minds of your children. The present school system does little in this direction and at times it erroneously appears that the more education, this rising generation receives, the more boorish and insulting it becomes. We need a cultured, educated element in our midst in order to promote our success.
President Will Vote at Oyster Bay.
Washington, Oct. 29. — President Roosevelt next Monday will go to Oyster Bay, where he will cast his vote on Tuesday. He will receive the election returns at Sagamore Hill that night, and on Wednesday will attend a Masonic celebration in Philadelphia, returning to Washington on Wednesday night or the following morning.
Mrs. Roosevelt will probably leave Oyster Bay at the same time as her husband, and come direct to Washington, probably taking up her abode in the remodeled White House. Several of the living rooms in the second story of the White House are now ready for occupancy.
U. S. Consul Was Lost In Mountains.
Huntington, Ky. Oct. 27.-United States Consul Alonzo Garrett, at Lando, Mexico, returned to the consulate Saturday night, according to a telegram received yesterday, after wandering with a party of friends in the Sierra Madre mountains for twenty days, the greater part of the time without food. The party was on a hunting trip and its water supply failed. Garrett resides here.
Coal Barge Crew Probably Lost.
Nortport, L. I., Oct. 29.-It is feared that the crew of a coal barge has been lost off Eaton's Neck. The barge, which had a full load of coal broke away from the tow yesterday and soon afterward sank. A gale was blowing at the time. No trace of the crew has been found.
ARBITRATORS START WORK
Strike Commission to Investigate Mines and Homes of Men.
BAER OBJECTS TO MITCHELL
Reading's President Took Exceptions to Labor Leader Representing Mine Workers' Union—Operators Offer to Furnish Full Data—Commission Will Not Accept Special Train Offered Them By Presidents of Coal Roads. Washington, Oct. 28.—The anthracite coal strike commission yesterday, in the hearing room of the interstate commerce commission, held its first conference with the parties to the controversy in the anthracite regions. The commission occupied the elevated seats, Judge Gray, as president, occupying the center seat, and Messrs. Wright, Watkins and Clark the seats to the right of him in the order named, while General Wilson, Bishop Spalding and Mr. Parker sat on the left in the order of their names. The proceedings covered about two hours' time and were given up entirely to a discussion of the time and method of proceeding with the proposed investigation.
Mr. Mitchell, president of the United Mine Workers of America, and District President Fahey appeared for the miners, and the coal carrying roads were represented as follows: President Baer, of the Reading; E. B. Thomas, of the Pennsylvania Coal Company; Alfred Walter, of the Lehigh Valley; W. H. Truesdale, of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western; David Wilcox, of the Delaware and Hudson; John B. Herr, of the Scranon Coal Company; J. H. Torrey, attorney for the Delaware and Hudson, and Francis I. Gowan, attorney for the Lehigh Valley Company.
To Begin Its Work at Scranton.
The commission decided to begin its work Thursday morning at 9 o'clock, the first days of the investigation to be devoted to an examination of the mines and the homes of the miners, starting in the vicinity of Scranton. The entire anthracite field will be covered. There was considerable discussion over a proposition made by the commission to have expert accountants appointed to audit statements of wages and classification of miners to be made by the operators for the use of the commission, but no result was reached on this point beyond the announcement by the chairman of the commission's intention to appoint such an accountant in case his services should be found necessary.
During the progress of the meeting, Mr. Mitchell, as the representative of the miners, presented a copy of the original declaration of the miners as formulated by the Shamokin convention, as the basis of the demands of the miners. This demand is for an increase of 20 per cent. in wages of those not engaged by the day, a reduction of 20 per cent. in working hours of those engaged by the day; the payment for coal mined by weight at a minimum rate of 60 cents per ton of 2.240 pounds; a wage agreement between the operators and the miners for an adjustment of wages.
Baer Objects to Mitchell.
Mr. Baer, on the part of the coal operators, took exception to Mr. Mitchell's appearance before the commission as a representative of the Mine Workers' Union, but said that he had no objection to his presence as a representative of the strikers as such in their individual capacity. The commission made no attempt to settle the controversy, but it was made apparent that the recognition of the Miners' Union will be an important and knotty problem for the arbitrators.
Preceding the discussion over opening the books to the experts, Mr. Baer said the operators would be prepared to meet the miners in the region and to assist in giving all information. Many of the individual operators are not represented, and they were not consulted and were not compromised by the letter he had written.
Judge Gray suggested that they could be represented. At the meeting next Monday they would determine which of the companies would be taken up first, and the place of meeting could be determined by the location of the coal company taken up.
Mr. Baer made a point of saying that if the case of each coal company would be dealt with separately he would contend for the sliding scale in the regulation of wages.
"I shall urge the adoption of that profit-sharing plan," he said, "which gave us peace formerly in our relation to our employees."
Mr. Thomas, of the Hillside Iron and Coal and the Pennsylvania Coal Company, said he noticed that the word "arbitration" had been applied to the commission's work, while he wanted it considered as an investigation.
Judge Gray said the president's instruction settled that as an arbitration.
The question of the examination by the commission into the conditions under which the mining of anthracite coal is conducted was then entered on, and Mr. Watkins, of the commission, suggested that a week or ten days' time would be necessary in order to make an adequate examination of the physical conditions about the mines. He appealed to Mr. Thomas for his opinion as to the time necessary, and
that gentleman replied: "You will certainly need that much time; I should think that 30 days would be none too little. We've grown gray in our study of that question." Mr. Baer also fell in with the suggestion, saying that it would be impossible to do justice to the investigation without a complete physical inspection of the mines and the methods of operating them. Mr. Mitchell thought that not only should there be
an inspection of the mines, but also of the homes of the miners. He considered this investigation necessary to a complete understanding of the subject.
Commission Will Accept No Favors. While the subject was being considered, Mr. Baer said that the mine operators would furnish all facilities at their command to enable the commission to make its investigation thorough. He said they would place a special train at the disposal of the commission, providing also for the accommodation of miners' representative
WUTING FANG RECALLED
Chinese Minister Ordered to Shanghai by Shortest Route.
HIS SON MAY REMAIN HERE
Emperor Appoints Mr. Wu Minister of Commerce and a Member of Commission to Negotiate Treaties With Foreign Powers
necticut, New North Carolina, Ida, Alabama, nols, Missouri, Dakota, Wis, Utah, Colorado and California, Oregon, Arkansas also elect a se chosen.
ELIZABETH WELL-Known W OLD A
The public meeting of the commission then came to a close, and the commissioners retired for the purpose of private consultation. They first took up the question which had been raised by the proffer of a special train by Mr. Baer, and unanimously decided not to accept the train. The exchange of views which followed brought out the fact that the commissioners expect personally to pay all of their expenses, accepting no favors and relying on the government to reimburse them if so disposed.
Official stenographers to report the proceedings of the commission and also to act as secretaries were appointed. An agreement was reached to leave the Hotel Jermyn in Scranton at 9 o'clock next Thursday morning for the first tour of inspection. There was, however, no agreement as to what mines should be visited first, that point being left for future determination.
MANY MINES WORKING
Scranton, Pa., Oct. 28—Of the 108 collieries operated by the five big companies having headquarters here, only 13 are still idle. The Erle has 33 places working and one idle; the Delaware & Hudson, 25 working and five idle; Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, 19 working and three idle; Ontario and Western, 11 working and three idle; Temple, seven working and one idle. Even the Butler colllery of the Erle Company, which was allowed to flood, is being worked in the levels not reached by the water. The individual operators are rapidly getting into line, and before many more days all of them except a very few will be in operation. About 80 per cent. of the old employees of the collieries in the Lackawanna regions are back at work. The companies are getting out 70 per cent. of their normal output.
Large Output of Coal.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Oct 28.—More coal was mined and more men were employed in mining it yesterday than any day since the mines in the anthracite region resumed work. The only districts that lag behind in the output are Lehigh and Mahanoy. The individual operators and their employees in those districts are still at loggerheads. In the Wyoming and Lackawanna regions all the collieries are in operation with the exception of a few which are still under water. The seven large companies all had large outputs, and heavy trains of coal were moved rapidly to seaboard points. The miners and laborers who left the region during the strike are returning in large numbers.
MITCHELL DAY IN MINE REGION
Coal Miners Celebrate With Parades and Mass Meetings.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Oct. 29.—Mitchell Day was celebrated throughout the anthracite mining regions today. Nearly all the mines were closed and a general holiday observed. The operators preferred that the men would work, but under the circumstances they were helpless in the matter, and as a consequence nearly all of the mines were idle. Thousands of visitors arrived in this city to witness the demonstration and attend the mass meetings. Owing to the presence of President Mitchell in Wilkesbarre the principal demonstration of the day was held here.
Among those registered at miners' headquarters are: Rev. Powers, of Spring Valley, Ill.; "Mother Jones" and Organizers William Blakely, of Linton, Ind.; T. L. Wright, of Carbon, Ind.; Thomas Haggerty, of Reynoldsville, Pa. The latter was the principal speaker at the meeting. Mr. Mitchell and citizens and clergymen rode in carriages in the parade, which was composed of about 15,000 men and many bands, floats and banners bearing pictures of John Mitchell and other prominent labor leaders.
T. L. Lewis, vice president of the United Mine Workers, was the orator of the day at the demonstration held at Hazleton, where over 5,000 men were in line.
In the Lackawanna Region.
Scranton, Pa., Oct. 29—Nearly every coal mine in the Lackawanna region was closed today by reason of the observance of Mitchell Day by the mine workers. The companies received no notice that the men would not work, and blew their whistles as usual this morning, but very few of the men responded. The day was observed by a parade and several mass meetings. President Mitchell's portrait was conspicuously displayed in the mining towns throughout the region, and was greeted with enthusiastic cheers by the mine workers and their friends.
Bear Fatally Injures a Boy.
Hot Springs, Ark, Oct. 29.—At Happy Hollow, a resort near here which, among other attractions, include a zoo, a black bear fatally injured Robert Tatum, an 8-year-old boy. The lad was passing the animal which was chained, but came too close, and before the horrified spectators could interfere the brute had the boy hugged to his breast. Then the animal closed his great jaws on his prisoner's head. A keeper pried the bear's mouth open and released the boy, but he was unconscious and dying from several fractures of the skull.
Crowd Threatened Boer Generals.
London, Oct. 28.—The Boer commander, Kritzinger, Fouche and Joubert, after addressing a meeting at Cambridge last night, had a narrow escape from the angry crowd of people that had listened to their speeches. Kritzinger was obliged to scale a wall to get away, while the others were escorted to their hotel by the police.
WUTING FANG RECALLED
Chinese Minister Ordered to Shanghai by Shortest Route.
HIS SON MAY REMAIN HERE
Emperor Appoints Mr. Wu Minister of Commerce and a Member of Commission to Negotiate Treaties With Foreign Powers.
Washington, Oct. 28. — Wu Ting Fang, who has been the minister of the Chinese empire to the United States
Wu Ting Fang.
since May 1, 1897, has been recalled to China by an edict of the emperor cabled to Minister Wu yesterday by the Chinese foreign office. The edict is peremptory. Mr. Wu being directed to return to China at as early a date as possible, over the route by which he is to make his voyage from this country being indicated.
The edict informs Mr. Wu that he has been appointed minister of commerce in association with Chang Chi Tung. He takes the position just vacated by Sheng, whose father died recently. Under a peculiar provision of Chinese law, when an office holder loses by death his father or mother, he vacates his office and he is not eligible to hold office again for three years, although by custom the period of his official mourning is reduced to 27 months. Mr. Wu said yesterday that he might be able to leave this country in about three weeks, but the precise date of his departure has not been determined.
Mr. Wu also received a cablegram announcing that he had been appointed one of the two members of a commission to negotiate commercial treaties with foreign powers. He will be at the head of this commission and will have associated with him Mr. Lu, who, until about a year ago, was the Chinese minister to Germany. As Mr. Wu has been ordered to proceed direct to Shanghai, it is probable that the headquarters of the commission will be in that city.
Minister Wu will be accompanied to China by Madame Wu and some members of his personal suite, but he said that whether he would leave his young son in this country had not been determined. He desires that his son should have a good American education, and he may conclude to leave him in the United States, at least for a time.
In official and diplomatic circles the news of the early departure of Minister Wu was received with sincere regret. For years he has been one of the most popular-members of the diplomatic corps.
MARKSMAN'S FATAL SHOT
Feat of Shooting: Apple From Man's Head Ends In Death.
Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y., Oct. 27.—The coroner yesterday held an inquest on the body of John Volkman, aged 18 years, a barber, who was accidentally shot and killed Saturday night on the stage at the Thespian Hall by Charles Meinel, of a company which has been giving a two weeks' show in connection with the sale of medicine. One of the star features of the show was Meinel's feat of shooting an apple from the head of any person who would volunteer to stand up and allow the apple to have his head for a resting place. When no one volunteered a member of the troupe performed this service.
Volkman had offered to allow the apple to be placed on his head. Meinel for some reason was not shooting well, having missed a card target a short time before the barber came on the stage. When the apple was placed on Volkman's head, Meinel began shooting at a distance of about 20 feet. The first two shots failed to hit either the apple or the man, but the third struck Volkman in the forehead and he dropped to the stage and died within an hour. Meinel was arrested and held for a hearing on a charge of man-slaughter.
THE FALL ELECTIONS
Forty-two States Will Choose Officials and Congressmen.
Washington, Oct. 29.—There will be elections in 42 states next Tuesday, the other three (Maine, Vermont and Oregon) having already selected this year, state officials and their representatives in the Fifty-Eighth Congress. In 22 of the 42 states, a governor and other state officers and congressmen are to be chosen, in 11, minor state officers or judges of the supreme court and congressmen are to be voted for, while in nine, congressmen only are to be elected.
The principal state officers are to be chosen in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, South Carolina, Alabama, Texas, Michigan, Kansas, Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wisconsin, North Dakota, Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada and California. New Hampshire elects only a governor, Tennessee, a governor and railroad commissioner, and Pennsylvania, a governor and two other state officials.
The terms of thirty United States senators expire March 4th, 1903. Five, have already been filled by the election of James B. McCreary (Dem.), Kentucky; Joseph B. Foraker (Rep.), Ohio; Arthur P. Gorman (Dem), Maryland; W. P. Dillingham (Rep.), Vermont; and Samuel B. McEnery (Dem), Mississippi. In the following states legislatures which select a senator, are to be chosen: New Hampshire, Con-
necticut, New York, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Kansas, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Nevada, Washington and California. The legislatures of Oregon, Arkansas and Georgia, which also elect a senator, have already been chosen.
ELIZABETH CADY STANTON DEAD
Well-Known Woman Suffragist Dies of Old Age in New York
Old Age in New York.
New York, Oct. 27.—Elizabeth Cady
Stanton, the well-known woman suf-
ELIZABETH CADY STANTON.
fragist, died yesterday at her home in West Ninety-fourth street, in this city. Old age was given as the cause of death. She was conscious almost to the last. About a week ago Mrs. Stanton began to fall rapidly. This became more noticeable last week, and then it was known to the family that her death was only a question of days or hours. She was nearly 87 years of age.
STARVING DUKHOBORS MARCH
Sixteen Hundred of Them May Cause
Trouble at Yorkton, Manitoba.
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Oct. 29—A special from Yorkton, Assinibola, says that 1,600 Dukhobors, men, women and children, have arrived at that place. They entered the town last evening singing a weird hymn and carrying their sick and infants on stretchers. They are in want of food. A hasty meeting of the town council has been summoned. Special constables are being sworn in. The citizens are greatly excited.
The Dukhobors are affected by a religious mania. They believe it to be a sin to hold domestic animals in restraint, and they have, therefore, turned their cattle and horses loose upon the prairie. They will not wear leather shoes or any clothing produced from animals, and the men and women have been yoking themselves to the plow and wagon. A large number of the horses and cattle have been seized by the government and sold at public auction. The amount realized, about $20,000, will be used to take care of the fanatics when the winter sets in.
Will Finance Beef Trust
New York, Oct. 27. — John D. Rockefeller and James Stillman, president of the National City Bank, will finance the $500,000,000 Beef Trust, according to Wall Street. It is conceded that the syndicate will make not less than $10,000,000 in financing the merger, and probably its profits will be nearer $20,000,000. P. H. Valentine, of Armour & Co., who engineered the merger, is to be the potent figure in the packing world under the new regime. The companies in the merger have already paid out more than $30,000,000 in absorption of the smaller plants, and by January 1 the trust will be doing business.
10,000 Died From Measles.
London, Oct. 29.—The St. Petersburg correspondent of the Dally Mall cables that there is an epidemic of measles on the Kamchtka peninsula. Ten thousand persons have died of the disease, and the populations of some country villages have been nearly wiped out.
Plead Guilty to Bigamy.
Baltimore, Md., Oct. 28—Ephraim Skorman, charged with bigamy, on being confronted by the three women he had married, in the criminal court yesterday, plead guilty. One of these he married in Russia, one in Boston and one in Baltimore.
SOFT COAL COMBINE
Companies to Consolidate, With $110,
400,000 Accumulated
000,000 Authorized Capital.
Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 29 - Negotiations are under way for a merging of the Pittsburg Coal Company and the Monongahela River Consolidated Coal and Coke Company, with their combined authorized capitalization of $110,000,000 and assets of $120,088,581. Consolidation of these interests will launch by far the strongest bituminous concern in the world. The combined coal output of the two concerns is close to 30,000,000 tons a year. The plan is to make the Pittsburg company lesssee and the purpose to economize operations.
Successful termination of the deal will end the trade rivalry which has existed between the two companies, either under or on the surface.
Easy Proposal.
"If I only had an ambassador at the court of love!" sighed the bashful swain.
"A minister would be good enough for me," replied the demure malden.
"Arabella!"
"Herbert!"
And so they were married.—N. O. Times-Democrat.
Contemptible Young Chap.
Ethel—Why, what's the matter, Gertrude?
Gertrude—Oh, nothing. Only Jack and I had a quarrel the other day, and I wrote and told him never to dare speak or write to me again—and the wretch hasn't even had the decency to answer my letter.—Tit-Bits.
Feminine Charity
Tom—I don't see what Miss Thirty-odd ever married such a homely chap for. He must have been her last chance.
Nell—On the contrary, I imagine he was her first.—Chicago Daily News.
W. I. JOHNSON, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER.
Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Corner Broad. HACKS FOR HIRE: Orders by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Wedding, Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended. Old 'Phone, 686, Residence in Building, New Phone, 48.
This organization has been chartered and legally situated under the laws and statute of the state of New York, for the purpose of uniting together all acceptable men on the Broad Bases of Charity—Beneficial and
Fraternal and to promote the Social and Moral condition of humanity. It is two distinct military and uniform ranks will secure for this organization a place in the front ranks of sacred institutions of modern events, a grand opportunity for active men. Departmented in all sections of the country to organize lodges. Kindly address.
Coffees Coated
with stale eggs, glue
and other things are
not fit to drink.
Lion Coffee
is pure, uncoated
coffee—fresh, strong,
well flavored.
The sealed package insures uniform quality and freshness.
PETER
This subject has received no little attention by prominent men and even college professors. So far it has continued that although the
are infringes in our midst with oily tongues,
perhaps the gates of wisdom have not been
cleared to permit professions.
It takes a great deal of study to become an
accomplished medium and by a continuous and
untiring effort, the key to the well of apparent
properties has been secured by MRS. MARTH for the benefit of humanity.
ADVICE BY LETTER, $1.00.
HOURS FROM 10 A. M. TO 9 P. M.
MRS. M. B. MARTH,
246 W. 31st St. (Near 8th Avenue.)
NEW YORK CITY.
Enclose Stamp for reply.
Please mention the PLANET.
MEXICAN VOLCANO ACTIVE
Sun Hidden By Showers of Ashes.
People Are Terror-Stricken.
People Are Terror-stricken.
Mexico City, Oct. 28.—Showers of ashes have fallen in the extensive region from San Juan Bautista, capital of the state of Tabasco, and Comitan, in the state of Chiapas. It is believed that a hill near Palenque, where there is a great prehistoric city in ruins, has suddenly been transformed into an active volcano. The ashes falling at Palenque and Comitan have hidden the sun.
Indians arriving at San Cristobal Las Casas say that a hill in the Guadeloupe Sierra is vomiting fire and smoke. People in many towns have been running about in terror and offering prayers publicly for the safety of themselves and children. Scientific opinion is that the eruption is part of the general awakening of volcanic forces in the West Indies and Central America.
W. I. JO
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Office & Warerooms, 207 N
HACKS F
Orders by Telephone or Te
pers and Entertainme
Old 'Phone, 686, Residence
KNIGHTS
TO WHOM I
This org
stituted under
York, for the
men on the
Fraternal and to promote the Social and
Its two distinct military and uniform
place in the front ranks of all sacred ins
tunity for active men. Deputies wante
lodges.
Kindly address,
G. W. ALLEN S
346 W 37th St
Special rates to California and the Northwest, Via Southern Railway
During the month of September and October, the Southern Railway will sell one-way, second-class settlers ticket to California and the northwest at greatly reduced rates. Superb service is offered by this route. Before arranging your trip, it will pay you to see a representative of the Southern Railway for detail information. The schedule and service via this popular route is without equal, in many respects.
CANYASsER
—WANTED—
to sell PRINTERS' INK—a journal for advertisers—published weekly at five dollars a year. It teaches the science and practice of Advertising, and is highly esteemed by the most successful advertisers in this country and Great Britain. Lateral commission allowed Address PRINTERS No. No 10
Spruce St., New York
Notice !!!
The East End Memorial Burial Association of Richmond informs the public that having purchased six (6) acres of land, situated in Henrico County, near the city of Richmond, adjoining Oakwood cemetery and that they are disposing of the same, in sections, half sections and at the following terms. Sections, $25.00 and Half Sections, $15.00.
The situation of this Cemetery is high, dry and rolling and accessible to the Richmond Traction Street Railway and Seven Pines Railway lines, adjoining Oakwood cemetery.
This Association has at a considerable expense divided this tract of land in sections, erected a fence around its improvements, which with the additional improvements contemplated, will be an inducement, those desiring or contemplating purchasing resting places for their deceased relatives and friends.
The attention of the general public is solicited and advantageous inducements offered.
J. R. Griffin, President, No. 2412 E. Broad street; E. A. Washington, Secretary. Old 'Phone, 1983.
For information, apply to John coleman, Keeper, No. 2920 street; Wm. Custalo, 702 East Broad street; W. H. Jones, 1037, St. Peter street; W. H. Maredith, 1323 North Street; Samuel Maredith, 1323 North Street; Joseph Robinson, No. 49 1st Market; 39 9-mile Road; D. J. Chavers, Supt., 1827 Carrington street.
Go to Beach Park. Westpoint Excursion and Piecie Grounds.—Only 30 Miles, One Hour's Ride From Richmond, via Southern Ry.
A great many exclosures have already been booked for "Beach Park" for June and July. The various attractions and improvements at this popular resort gives it more prominence each season. To close proximity to Richmond, and the unlimited supply of the most wholesome artesian water, together with many other natural advantages, places it second to none as a pleasure and health resort for Richmond people. King William Pier, a substantial structure, extending 689 feet in length and 38 feet wide over the York River, with waterproof roofing as a protection from sun rain, adds considerably to the beauty and convenience for pic-nic and other outing parties. In addition to the new Beach Park Hotel, now being erected, you will find other hotels and many nice boarding houses, furnishing cheap rates and good first-class accommodations.
The principal attractions are such as fine fishing, boating, sailing, merry-ground, shooting galleries, steam and naptha launches, a large dancing pavilion with a band of music day and night, several wells of fine artesian water on the grounds, and various other attractions to suit the older people as well as the little ones. For any other information apply at or write to the Southern Ry. office, 920 E. Main St., Richmond, Va.
Old Phone, 1233. New Phone, 1553.
THE PRIVATE LIVERY
700 CATHERINE ST.,
QUICK TRANFERING
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Saddle or Driving Horses, Buggies and
Surries To Let at Lowest Prices.
N. B. Tandem Lessons Given. Strict
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George Jenkins, Proprietor.
NE PLANET
SATURDAY. NOV. 1. 1903
WAR
REMINISCENCE
GETTYSBURG, THE THIRD DAY.
From the picket lines, on ridge and hill.
All through the night the lines reforming,
Strong lines of cannon, and of mow as well.
Now commander waits the storming,
The crash and havoc of both shot and shell.
Then from the ride, where Lee had formed
His lines of cannon with their brazen throats,
Turned to the hill soon to be stormed;
Burst forth a roar, and d'or the field of cats
Swept the fierce gale of shell and shot.
The answering came the thunder sound,
As cannon vole with cannon hot.
Till all the distant hills resound.
Now comes a full, amid the storm of fire,
And all the hosts the respite glady greet;
When from the strong a mass in gray attire,
Five thousand strong, come forth grim
death to meet.
In double line, as if on dress parade,
They march, nor filch, on each side
Their even lines are torn and frayed,
As comrades fell, and falling died.
Oh, men of valor, true ye are,
From Picket down to private least;
An high above the smoke of war
The nations on your valor feast,
But on
And shot and shell pour out as fast.
As gunners in their garb of blue
Stand by their guns until the last.
But on they move; the columns newly
drest.
As in their ranks the guns sad havoc
make.
For from the batterles on the crest.
The men roars make earth to quake.
And from the ranks come bursts of
flame.
And rank by rank the soldiers fall.
Each cannon seems to mow a lane
With cannister, and grape, and ball.
Tis man to man, and breast to breast.
For upward climb the ranks of gray.
To reach at last the hillop's crest.
And find a foemin brains bearer.
They waver, all in vain they strive.
Back from the crest now step by step.
No reinforcements can arrive,
So, backward from the hill are swept.
The day was lost, and yet the day was won;
The ground is sacred in our eyes today.
Our hearts rejoice at deeds of valor done by those who wore the blue, the gray. For as o'er the storied hills we roam, And live the scenes of war again. The flag, dear emblem of our home, Waste o'er the men of Georgia and of Maine.
For men are men, and a human breast Pierced by the implements of war Lets loose the life blood, and they sink to rest While yet the triumph is afar. So of the thousands that went forth that day, From out the wood, in valor strong and true, So few returned, the rest they lay Down where they fell beneath the night and dew.
H. J. LA TOUR
LAST SHOT OF THE WAR.
Fired by a Texan in a Hot Battle with Yankees on the Old Palo Alto Battlefield.
A Texan in Washington tells the Post that the last shot of the rebellion was fired by Capt. S. H. Barton, now a prosperous ranchman in western Texas. He says:
"When a line of the confederate cavalry was slowly retiring from the field on the plains of Brazos Santiago, in Texas, where the blue and the gray had met in deadly encounter for the last time, a soldier turned in his saddle, and, throwing his gun to his shoulder, fired. It proved to be the last shot of the last battle, and it was certainly the last shot of the long war. Barton was a captain in the confederate army and was held in high esteem by his superiors and loved by the brave Texans he led.
"He now lives at Del Rio, in Western Texas, where he owns one of the
HE FIRED THE LAST SHOT
most desirable small ranches in the state and considerable town property. Capt. Barton is sure that he fired the last shot at the close of the last battle of the civil war, and I believe him, for he is a perfectly truthful man and would not misrepresent a matter of that kind in the least, not even to have his fame spread over 40 pages of history.
"The story of that last battle, which was fought on the 13th of May, 1865, after the war was ended and peace was declared, has escaped the attention that it merits, for it was an affair or no little importance. Gen. Egbert Brown, who recently died at West Plains, Mo., was in command of the federal troops in southern Texas; and he was doubtless well informed concerning the termination
of hoazillifies. Gen. J. E. Slaughter, who commanded the confederate troops encamped at Brazos Santiago, had heard rumors of the surrender of the armies commanded by Lee, Johnston and other generals, but he had received no official notice of these facts from the war department. Gen. Brown, under a flag of truce, informed the confederates of the state of affairs about Washington and Richmond, at the same time inviting them to come in and lay down their arms, as the war was certainly over.
"Gen. Slaughter refused to act in the affair of such importance until he was better informed. Thereupon Col. Barret, at the head of a considerable force, was dispatched to break up the enemy's camp. A hot battle ensued, and, curiously enough, most of the fighting was done on the old field of Palco Alto, where Gen. Taylor achieved his victory ever the Mexicans nearly 20 years before. The French soldiers encamped on the southern shore of the Rie Grande were in sympathy with the southerners, and they kept Gen. Slaughter posted as to the movements of the federal troops. Several spirited encounters occurred, and the loss sustained by some of the colored regiments must have been severe.
"While the battle raged the confederates were frequently informed by some bold cavalrymen in blue that the war was over; one daring fellow shouted 'Lee surrendered a month ago; the war is ended; why don't you go home?'
"When the engagement was hottest, Gen. Slaughter received dispatches, and the French sent him a bundle of newspapers. Fully satisfied that the cause for which they were fighting was forever lost, he ordered the firing to cease. At that particular moment neither side could have claimed any advantage, but both armies began to retire from the field at the same time.
"As Capt. S. H. Barton, in command of the rear guard, was slowly riding away a etray ball struck a young man by his side, and he fell from his saddle. That was certainly the last man killed in the long war. Capt. Barton has been unable to recall his name. "I thought that was hard luck," said the old soldier. "The young man had served four years and never got a scratch. The last bullet that came our way killed him. Prompted more by spite at fate than bitterness toward the enemy. I turned in my saddle and fired toward a dark blue line, which I hope was out of range. That was certainly the last shot of the great war."
ORIGIN OF "FIT MIT SIGEL."
An Ex-Confederate Thinks the Welk Known Phrase Started in a Missouri Court Room.
"The poem of Grant P. Robinson, I Fights Mit Sigel," reproduced in the Sun of August 22, in connection with the death of Gen. Franz Sigel, reminds me of the time when the name of Sigel was despised in Missouri." says an ex-confederate living in New York who was chased by the men who "fit mit Sigel" in that state, relates that paper. "It was the belief in old Missouri that Pap Price, as his soldiers called him, was invincible. When we heard that a Dutchman named Sigel was in the field on the union side we Johnny Rebs laughed until we were too rous to march. Anything in camp that was no good was called Sigel. Whenever we got into a country where the people were weaving between the seash and the union we brought the hesitators around by asking them how they liked a country that had to hire a Dutchman to fight its battles. This started the laugh and often won a recruit.
"Finally we went up against it in the battle of Pea Ridge. It was the first square-toed fighting we had done, and, according to history, we were not in it. We didn't sit up in camp much after that singing and cracking jokes about Sigel.
"But the saying: 'He fit mit Sigel,' originated, I think, in the court of a justice of the peace of Missouri who was a union man. An old soldier was arraigned before him on the charge of stealing hogs. The evidence was going against the prisoner pretty hot and the old J. P. was scratching his head and biting the ends of his whiskers until his beard looked like a hedge fence after a rabbit chase. The soldier, who couldn't speak much, if any, English, was put on the stand, and muttered something the justice didn't understand.
"What's your client trying to say?" asked the justice of the country lawyer. "The lawyer replied—of course the lawyer did not know—he says he fit mit Sigel.' " "Then he didn't steal the hog,' said the justice. 'Prisoner discharged.'"
No Danger.
"Old Skynflint's one fear is premature burial," said the doctor. "Huh!" remarked Skynflint's neighbor, "his burial couldn't be too premature to suit us."—Philadelphia Press.
Another Genius Discouraged.
He glided into the office and quietly approached the editor's desk.
"I have written a poem," he began. "Well!" exclaimed the editor, with a look and a tone intended to annihilate.
But he calmly resumed.
"I have written a poem on 'My Father's Barn,' an—"
"O!" interrupted the editor with extraordinary gentleness, "you don't know how greatly I am relieved. A poem written on your father's barn, eh? I was afraid it was written on paper, and that you wanted me to publish it. If I should ever happen to drive past your father's barn I'll stop and read the poem." — Stray Stories.
Only Indian Pensioner.
Armstrong Cornsilk, who has been granted a pension by the North Carolina pension board, is the only Indian thus provided for by that state. Cornsilk is a Cherokee. He served in the Sixty-ninth North Carolina regiment from April, 1862, to the close of the war—Indianapolis News.
Is Not Labeled.
The opportunity of a lifetime seldom has a label on it.-Chicago Daily News.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
FIDDLES IN HIS SLEEP.
Untrained Harvey Joyce, of Tingley, Pa., Develops Truly Marvelous Musical Gift.
Harvey Joyce, of Tingley, Pa., who has never had any musical training, while in a somnambulistic state can play a violin with the skill of a professional.
Joyce is a planing hand. His fellowworker and roommate is John Richler, who plays the violin at dances and other festivities. A few nights ago Richler awoke to see Joyce standing in the middle of the room with the violin in his hand. Richler saw by the fixed gaze of
MIDNIGHT SERENADE
Joyce's eyes that he was in a somnambulistic state.
Suddenly Joyce struck up a familiar tune. Richler immediately recognized it as one he had played on various festive occasions. Joyce also rendered other selections, some of which Richler was familiar with, while others he never remembered having heard.
The impromptu programme consisted of selections ranging from the inspiring music of the waltz to the most difficult classical selection.
The midnight concert was brought to a sudden close by Richler leaning too far over in his excitement and falling out of bed, awakening the somnambulistic musician.
Joyce was apparently very much astonished to find himself in that attitude with the violin in his hands. He looked to Richler for an explanation. When informed of what had occurred he was as much surprised as Richler was.
Love's Tender Eye.
Harold—How do you know you really love me, Henrietta?
Henrietta—O Harold! Since There have known you I have come to admire ears that stand out—Puck.
No Big Purse.
He—I really believe that you enjoy fighting with me.
His Wife—Well, I don't know. I would enjoy it more if there was more money in it.—N. Y. Herald.
THE CRUISER CLIMBED.
Indians Made White Man Ascend a Norway Pine and Kept Him There for Hours.
A Chicago Inter Ocean correspondent writes from St. Paul, Minn., that Gideon Young, timber cruiser, a resident of Duluth, was accosted by two drunken Indians near Virginia, on the Rainy Lake road, in the vicinity of the international boundary.
"White man Finlander?" grunted one of the reds.
"White man got money?" "No." "White man no good," grunted the second brave.
"GOT BOTTLE?"
"White man climb tree?" one asked after a pause.
"N—n—n, yes, if I have to," said Gideon.
"Then white man climb tree," pointing to a Norway pine. The cruiser climbed. The reds insisted that he go "way up." He did. Then the Indians smoked and watched him, with grim enjoyment. At the end of three hours Young's party overtook the treed man, and the reds were frightened away.
A Tenement House Tragedy.
In Philadelphia is a big dog, rejoicing in the name of Kaiser. He has all the affection and much of the intelligence of a human being. Early one morning he discovered the dead body of Rebecca Ettleman, the nine-year-old daughter of his master, lying at the bottom of an air shaft in a downtown tenement, into which she had fallen during the night. No one heard her fall, and the dog, knowing that something was wrong, sought the father, who was sleeping in a doorway, and awakening him, led him to where the body lay. The family had come from Massachusetts on a visit. The night was hot, the quarters close, and all the inmates of the house slept on rooftops and fire-escapes and in doorways. This is a typical tenement house tragedy.
Cats Exterminate Birds.
Cats have become so numerous in Switzerland that the extermination of the birds is feared.
The True Hair Grower and Hair Straightener IS FOUND AT LAST.
Acts Quicker. Smells Sweeter, and Easier Applied than Any Other Preparation. IT WILL TAKE THE PLACE OF ALL OTHER HAIR TONICS.
Cures Dandruff, Tetter, Itch, and all Scalp Diseases at once and forever. Straightens curly troublesome Hair in from 7 to 30 days, without the use of hot irons or any other mediums. When the Hair has become straight, which it surely will if you use GLOSSINE, it will stay straight forever. It will stop the Hair from falling out in 2 to 4 days. It will restore Gray hair to its natural color in 30 to 60 days. It will grow Hair on the baldest head in from 10 to 40 days. It will improve the hair at once. You do not have to wait. Just as soon as it is applied the Hair will become soft, lustrous, pliant, and wavy, so that you can dress it in any style you wish. It has never failed to straighten and beautify the most continate, curly, refractory, troublesome Hair, and will be sure to give you supreme satisfaction. It is good for all kinds of Hair for white or colored, for ladies and gentlemen, children or grown-up people, babies, and boys and girls. Good for the Hair, the Mustache, and the Eye-Brows. It is made from roots and herbs and leaves, and is
HERE IS A TRUE AND GENERAL
JUST READ THIS.
Now you must send to us
which will sell at retail for
agree to use it on your ow
have commenced to use it
done for you, they will e
receive for same, to coop
with us, and do unall they
you actually $6.00 worth
have seen your Hair, the
GLOSSINE, PLEASE
of GLOSSINE and seen
and some of all Hair Ton
To Continental
Enclosed please find
HAIR TONIC, worth
sell all that I do not use
ation of you allowing me
me is not true, you are to
the future, I will endeav
privileges as specified ab
JUST READ THIS. Now, here is the glorious opportunity we offer you. Remember, GLOSSINE sells at 50c. for an extra large box. Now you must send to us only $2.00 and the very moment we receive the money we will at once send to you 12 extra large boxes of GLOSSINE which will sell at retail for 50c. each or $6.00. We exact of you only the following easy conditions, which are easily complied with: 1st. You agree to use it on your own Hair: 2d. Just as soon as you see the improvement in your own Hair (which will be in a few days only after you have commenced to use it) you must talk it up to your friends, showing your own Hair to prove its merits, and, as they will see what it has done for you, they will eagerly buy it. 3d. You are to sell it for no less than 50c. per box, and you are to keep all of the money that you receive for same, to compensate you for your kind efforts in introducing the great remedy in your locality. All we ask is that you act fair with us, and do us all the good you can, by showing the people, white and colored, what GLOSSINE has done for you. REMEMBER, we send you actually $0 worth of goods for only $2.00. Why? Because we know it will give you a beautiful head of Hair, and, when the people Hair from Hair to thousands of boxes. Every one whom you sell a box) white or colored will be a walking advertisement for GLOSSINE. PLEASE DONOT WAIT A MINUTE, but fill out the Coupon and mail to us at once, and after you have received the $0.00 worth of GLOSSINE and seen its good effects you will certainly become our Agent. Remember that GLOSSINE is now recognized as the standard and acme of all Hair Tonics by the best people of the country, who are sending us hundreds of testimonials daily.
Enclosed please find the sum of $2.00, for which please send me at once twelve (12) of your regular extra large boxes of GLOSSINE HAIR TONIC, worth 50c. each, or $6.00 in all. In return for this favor, I hereby bind myself to use GLOSSINE on my own Hair, and to sell all that I do not use at no less than 50c. per package. I also agree not to cut the price under any consideration. And for and in consideration of you allowing me to keep the money that I receive for same, I agree to act as your Agent in the future. But if all that you have told me is not true, you are to return the $2.00 that I hereby send to you. If from sickness or any other good reason, I cannot act as your Agent in the future, I will endeavor to find some one who will take the Agency in my place. To all these agreements I hereby bind myself for the privileges as specified above.
If you send only $1.00, 6 boxes, worth $3.00, will be sent to you.
Name___ P.O.___
Street___ House No.___
State___
Nearest Express Office___
The curious ways of curious old Fats
Is there a man who understands?
We scarcely lose one candidate
Till there's another on our handel
-Los Angeles Herald.
Time Yet.
"That certainly was a clever joke of
yours," said the first paragrapher, en-
violously. "I wish I had written it."
"You will, some day," replied the
other, pointedly—Philadelphia Press.
Wit.
Hillis—Whew! Why do you have
your office as hot as an oven?
Intended as a Compliment.
They were dining out.
"But, Henry," she protested, "you know you shouldn't drink coffee at night. It keeps you awake."
"Oh, well," he replied, with a polite bow to the hostess, "this coffee won't." - Chicago Post.
Marriage Would Cure Him.
Mr. Gumpps—That boy will never be good for anything until he marries.
Mrs. Gumpps—I suppose not.
Mr. Gumpps—No. He's got to get over the habit of hanging around the house. - N. Y. Weekly.
There's the Rub
Mrs. Clubb—I tell you this discussion of the servant girl problem is a serious thing.
Mrs. Housekeep—It is, indeed. You can't tell what minute the servant girl will overhear you.—Catholic Standard and Times.
"Type Ever Then
High-priced meat makes boarding houses
Harp the same continuous tunes;
they give you hash for breakfast, and
for prunes. They prune.
Dolly—Please, Miss Sharp, mamma says, have you really left your songs at home?
Miss Sharp—Yes, dear. Why?
Dolly—Well, papa says "it sounds too good to be true!"—Punch.
GLOSSINE
WHAT GLOSSINE WILL DO
BUSS OFFER-Not a Bluff to get your money, but a ch
Now, here is the glorious opportunity,
only $2.00 and the very moment we receive
or 50c, each or $6.00. We exact of you on
own fair: 2d. Just as soon as you see the
you must talk it up to your friends, she
aggerly buy it. 3d. You are to sell it for
you for your kind efforts in intellect
good you can, by showing the people, whit
good you can, by showing the people, whit
you will buy thousands of boxes. Every one
you will buy thousands of boxes. Every one
it good effects you will certainly become
lic by the best people of the country, whi
$4.00—This Coupon is
Special Trial-Order
Chemical Co., 1700 Luc
the sum of $2.00, for which please send
50c. each, or $6.00 in all. In return for
at no less than 50c. per package. I also s
to keep the money that I receive for sam
return the $2.00 that I hereby send to you
to find one who will take the Age
love. If you send only $1.00, 6 box
Name
Street
State
Nearest Express Office
Southern Employment Agency is the leading agency for good work of all kinds for both white and colored, to obtain a position of any kind, namely as Cook, Chambermaid, Waitresses, House workers, Waiters, Butlers, Janitors, and useful men Laundras, Gardeners, Porters, maids, Book-keepers, Elevators, any place you wish in private family or boarding house.
N. F. DREW & BRO., Props.
1793 3rd Ave., near 100 St.
New York, N. Y.
WONDERFUL
DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
RATEN WREN JACK
ZONIZED OX 11400, CO.
76 WOODLANDS, COLLEGE.
man who whiten
any kind of game
rargest to the smallest
marlin
time complete. We make all short of repeating
riles from as to 45 cage, cafe, and our reputing
shoguns are the best value for the money over
offered. All these also sell well and
eject at the skic. Our newustomed
recruit-operating device now furnished on
all of our shops can make it the unbiit
breech-loading gun ever
Illustrated Catalog for 5 eta.
The Browne Pwr Arms Co.
Rew Harrow, Dorset.
---
GLOSSINE THE WONDER
QUEEN OF ALL HAIR TONICS
FOR DIRECTIONS BEFORE AFTER SEE INSIDE
STRAIGHTENS CURLY KINKY
KNAPPY HAIR
CONTINENTAL CHEMICAL CO
ST. LOUIS, MO.
your money, but a chance we offer you to secure a beautiful head of Hair. Various opportunity we offer you. Remember, GLOSSINE moment we receive the money we will at once send to you. We exact of you only the following easy conditions, which you as you see the improvement in your own Hair (which we your friends, showing your own Hair to prove its merits, are to sell it for no less than 50c. per box, and you are to do efforts in introducing the great remedy in your locality, the people, white and colored, what GLOSSINE has done. Why? Because we know it will give you a beautiful hair box. Every one whom you sell a box, white or colored in, but fill out the Coupon and mail to us at once, and affair certainly become our Agent. Remember that GLOSSINE of the country, who are sending us hundreds of testimonials.
Coupon is worth $4.00 to You—$1.00 Mail-Order Agents' Company, 1700 Lucas Ave., St. Louis, Mo. which please send me at once twelve (12) of your regular mail. In return for this favor, I hereby bind myself to use this package. I also agree not to cut the price under any conscience. I receive for same, I agree to act as your Agent in the future, thereby send to you. If from sickness or any other good reason will take the Agency in my place. To all these agreements only $1.00, 6 boxes, worth $3.00, will be sent to you.
P. O.
House No.
(if any)
(if any)
separation equal to
every bottle. Only 50
and delivery or sent.
or $1.40 for three
less charges. Send
order. Write your
no.
KROD . CO.
Centuries of labor in ages to come. True, above all things, of the Remington TYPEWRITER.
and Prix
Paris, 1900
Outranking
all medals
Bird Remington Standard Typewriter Co. Richmond, Va.
so harmless that it can do no injury—not even to a three-day-old baby. Three boxes are sure to complete the treatment, and in most instances one box alone is sufficient. It is very cheap—50c. for an extra large size box, or $1.00 for three extra large size boxes, guaranteed a full and complete treatment. You will never have to use more than three boxes. After you have used that quantity your Hair will be in a perfect condition, and you will never have to use any Hair Tonic of any kind again. It is the greatest worth of century, and will take the place of all other Hair Tonic, and will take the place of no one, after once using GLOSSINE, will take the place of any Hair Tonic, because there is nothing to equal it in the whole wide world. Everybody be they white or colored, old or young, who will only use it, cannot fail to have a beautiful head of long, fine Hair. It is a wonder and as sure as sunrise. Who is it that will let a $1.00 bill prevent them from having a beautiful head of Hair?
beautiful head of hair, besides putting money in your pocket.
Glossine sells at 50c. for an extra large box once send to you 12 extra large boxes of Glossine conditions, which are easily complied with: 1st. You Hair (which will be in a few days only after you love its merits, and, as they will see what it has and you are to keep all of the money that you your locality. All we ask is that you act Glossine has done for you. REMEMBER, we send a beautiful head of Hair, and, when the people write or colored will be a walking advertisement for once, and after you have received the $6.00 worth that Glossine is now recognized as the standard of testimonials daily.
To You—$4.00.
Is' Contract.
Mails, Mo:
In your regular extra large boxes of Glossine myself to use Glossine on my own Hair, and to tender any consideration. And for and in consider- agent in the future. But if all that you have told my other good reason, I cannot act as your Agent in these agreements I hereby bind myself for theent to you.
(if any)
A Good Route to Try
It traverses a territory rich in undeveloped resources; a territory containing unlimited possibilities for agriculture, horticulture, stock raising, mining and manufacturing. And last, but not least it is
The Frisco System now offers the traveling public excellent service and fast time—
Between St. Louis and Kansas City and points in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas and the Southwest.
Between Kansas City and points in Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida and the Southeast.
Between Birmingham and Memphis and points in Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas and the West and Southwest.
Full information as to route and rates cheerfully furnished upon application to any representative of the Company, or to
Passenger Traffic Department,
Commercial Building,
Saint Louis.
Hotel Building, Int Louis.
REPRODUCTIVE INFILMS, restores weakness of men and causes reproduction in barren women in one month. INFILMS, restores weakness of men and causes reproduction in barren women in one month. INFILMS, restores weakness of men and causes reproduction in barren women in one month. INFILMS, restores weakness of men and causes reproduction in barren women in one month.
2 to 10 days; 3ph, $16, stitching, carton, 5 to 35 days; 2 sizes, $1 and $2 each; by mail.
The East India Remedy Co., 511 - 12th, Delhi.
IF YOU ARE OUT OF YOUR WORK, can't find any to do; or if you are working, BUT ARB NO GREAT WORK, WAIT WORK NO GREAT WORK, and see what we can do, you can PROCURE POSITIONS IN ALL counties, LYING FROM $15 IN COUNTY, SINGH IN COUNTY.
No labor saving invention of the century appeals so strongly to the brain worker. It enables him to do twice the writing with the hoof of the foot and in half the time.
Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict
527 Broadway, New York
FRISCO
SYSTEM
The Scenic Route for Tourists.
BEND ME DO YOU WANT
GOOD HAND IN DENY
Parker's Indian Lucky Charm will positively bring luck to the owner in
many different ways, no difference
how bad your condition may be,
the charm will make it better. It will also cause
you to gain and control the affections of anyone
who sees you. It will prevent
those days. No one can hurt or harm you while
have this charm, because it's a sure preventive
that will prevent an unnatural sickness. If
you want to be protected from this
"arm" at once, Price $1 to $5. Sent anywhere.
Also tell what you want to know, and
say any spells or mages you want.
Madden Parker 1244 W. 12th St.
corporated in one. Capital, $0,000,000 divided in
or $10 to each person. PAYABLE $1 cash $1
months. PAYABLE $1 cash $1 month.
THE OBJECTS for which this Corporation
is formed are to MANUFACTURE, PURCHASE,
CONSIGN, PAYMENT, TRANSFER, INVEST, DEAL in and deal with
GOODS, WARS and MERCHANTABILITY and
PROTECTIVE, BENEVOLENT and INDIVIS
FRIAL DEPARTMENT for the BENEFIT of the
MEMBERS THE DURATION OF THIS CORP
Come & join with us, admission $1.
OBJECT-Buy and borrow of ourselves. All
kinds of societies and clubs can join.
SIGNS. THIS ASSOCIATION buys properties for
members and gives long time to pay for it. Saves
and dry goods bill. Looks then money at small
interest. Gives them $1 to $10 week when sick.
Women paid for all complaints. Furnishes docu-
sors and dry goods bill. Looks then money at small
interest. Gives them $1 to $10 week when sick.
Having briefly outlined our intentions
to benefit you, we can be of benefit to you cut this circular out, send it and
$1.00 to the president, Dr. E. Parker Reed, $27
combined and made and certificate
to send you and authority to act as
Dr. E. P. Reed, Pres.
Miss J. P. Shields, Sec.
Bob P. Shields, Sec.
Lawyer T. Wheeler, Sol.
PARKER'S PREVENTATIVE COM-
POUND. Positively prevents ladies having
trouble, unless desired. QUICK BELIEF.
PILLS, guaranteed to remove obstructions like
IF YOU ARE OUT OF WORK, AND
cannot find any to do, or if you
would like to work with a
WAGES YOU WOULD LIKE,
send and see what we can do,
PROCURE POSITIONS IN ALL
DATES, and send a MONTH,
for either sex or color. If
one send us $2 membership fee and satur-
kind you want, and if we fail to get
the money, we will dress the National Co-Operative Employment
sociation, 511 S. 12th st., Philadelphia, PA 19105.
CLAIRVOYANT.
Fortunes told. Send 13 cents, birthday
3 questions answered, your lucky bitch,
stone and horoscope promptly mailed
free. Gonzales heals Body and Mind,
removes evil influences, reunites the Mip
arated, causes speedy marriage, teaches
how to make the one you love, loves
you, gives luck and success.
Address,
GONZALES, 236 Bergen St.
5-31-3mos.
Brooklyn, N. J.
Wanted Weekly-100 Cooks
Housemaids and Waitresses for New
York and other Northern cities. Wages
from $3.00 to $5.00 per week. Transport
portion furnished. Also 50 Fare
hands for Marynard.
R. W. ELSON,
417 E. Broad St. Richmond Va.
REC PLANET
SATURDAY. NOV. 1, 1802
FARM AND GARDEN
Effecacious Cure for Plant Diseases Due to Fungus Parasites Has Now Been Discovered.
The agricultural department has been studying certain diseases which attack plants and, for some of them at least, has found a cure. The Saturday Evening Post assures farmers who raise peaches, sea island cotton or cowpeas, that they need no longer fear "peach leaf curl," "yellows," "little peach disease," "cotton wilt," or "pea sickness."
All these diseases are due to fungus parasites, which, year after year, have been slowly but surely spreading through the country. Besides the external symptoms, they manifest themselves by causing knots to form on the roots, whereupon all the small fibers become distorted, swollen, and incapable of fulfilling their proper functions, and this leads, of course, to the death of the plant. Every attempt to kill the fungus by the ordinary ways of treating the soil, and the plants with fungicides failed entirely, and growers were in despair when the department hit upon the cure.
When it was found it was so astonishingly simple that the only wonder was that no one had thought of it before. It seems that in many cotton fields, and in many peach orchards, in many pea patches, there were often observed to be one or more plants that refused to die with the rest and which survived to come to bearing. When the seeds—or cuttings—of these were sown in the same soil, it was found that a large proportion of the resultant plants possessed the resistant power of the parent. Repeating this process of artificial selection again and again, sooner or later there developed a strain that was wholly resistant to the attacks of the fungus. When this was done the problem was solved.
STARTING A CORN SHOCK.
With the Aid of the Device Here Described the Heaviest Crop Is Handled Readily.
Last season quite a number of corn binders were purchased and used in this country. The acreage of the individual farmer is so small that it does not pay one man to buy a machine, but in many instances three or four have combined and seem well satisfied. They worked perfectly in standing corn and picked up the stalks that were down very readily, making fair bundles. Of course, if the stalk is lying along the row the way the machine is running it cannot be picked up, but if it lies crossways, or, in fact in any other position, the corn binders will as a rule pick it up nicely. Where the corn is badly down and quite ripe quite a number of ears are knocked off, but these can be picked up when shocking and no great loss will result. Down
FOR STARTING CORN SHOCK.
corn can be picked up much better than by hand.
The grain ordinarily is cut quite green. Shocks contain 20 to 30 bundles. No trouble has been experienced in corn molding. Seven acres is a good day's work for a corn binder. Two men can keep up shocking. For shocking, a horse like that shown in the accompanying illustration is very satisfactory. When the shock is well started the crosspiece is pulled out and the horse removed. This horse enables the shockers to make a shock that will withstand wind much better than if it is not used. Any farmer can make this in a short time. The very heaviest corn is thus handled readily by the binder. —Orange Judd Farmer.
Worms as Soil Renovators
Earthworms are not soil farmers, for they are seldom met in soils that are destitute of organic matter. They are simply renovators. Every time a worm is driven by dry weather or any other cause, to descend deep it brings to the surface, when it empties the contents of its body, a few particles of fresh earth. At the same time it fertilizes the subsol by opening up passages which encourage the roots of plants to penetrate deeper, these passages being lined with excreted matter, which provides a store of nourishment for the roots. On meadow land Darwin found these worm casts amount annually to 18 tons an acre, and on good arable land to about ten tons.-American Fertilizer.
The Fool and His Money.
An amateur was induced to place a ten-dollar bet with a bookmaker, and won $25. This pleased him so much that he placed the $25 with the bookmaker on the next heat. He won again. The third heat he played all his roll, amounting to $60 or $70, and lost, whereupon he fell over in a dead faint. His brother, who chanced to be present, ran for a doctor and asked him to make haste, he imagined, his
brother was dying. "I am a veterinary surgeon," the doctor said. "You are just the man I am looking for," the man replied, excited, "as my brother is a jackass." -Rural World.
Natural Enough
Mrs. Gaussip—I hear Mrs. Vane has several full-length mirrors in her dressing-room.
Mr. Gaussip—I suppose, womanlike, she wants to see everything that's going on. Philadelphia Press.
PRACTICAL FARM GATE.
Its Usefulness Will Quickly Pay for the Time and Money Devoted to Its Construction.
A good practical farm gate is one of the handiest conveniences a farmer can have on his farm to save time and unnecessary labor. Its usefulness will pay for all time and expense of constructing it and the worth adds a good percentage to the valuation of a farm. As a general rule, farmers overlook the simple conveniences about their farms, while in reality such
DURABLE FARM GATE.
things would increase greatly the appearance of their property.
The sketch inclosed shows a practical farm gate. In making a gate of any kind see that it is wide enough to admit all kinds of farm machinery. The gate shown in the cut is one I built some time ago. It hangs on the corner of a barn and leads to the barnyard. In constructing the gate I used two eight-inch boards and one 12-inch, to make the main strips, each strip being four inches wide, except the bottom board, for this used an eight-inch piece, to add strength to the gate. For cleats I used the same four-inch stuff, nailing one on each side of the gate. The main piece on which the gate rests is four by four, extending about four feet above the top of the gate. I mortised the strip into the four by four to hold the gate when swinging. A brace is firmly nalled, as shown in the cut. The gate will swing either way, which I think is a strong point in favor of this kind of a hanger. —Leo C. Reynolds, in Ohio Farmer.
KNOWLEDGE OF PLANTS
Farmers Should Know What Their Crops Need In the Way of Food and Cultivation.
Prof. S. F. Johnston, of Purdue university, writes: If we would be successful in the culture of Indian corn, we must first know what the plant requires in the way of food, water, cultivation and climatic conditions. Two of these lessons are early learned, viz.: the fact that plenty of water must be had, and that the sun must be generous in supplying heat. We do not always stop to think just why the water is so necessary. If we did give more attention to this thought we should be surprised, perhaps, to find that the plant performs all its functions of growth, either directly or indirectly by the aid of water and the sun's light and heat. No food can be supplied in a form available to the plant without first being broken down and brought into solution by the action of water. After the small particles of rock and vegetable matter are broken down and have passed into solution they enter the very small rootlets of the plant and are carried along in the stream until they have passed all growing parts of the plant and nourishment has been taken out with which the tissues of the plant are built up. This stream of water also serves to keep the cells expanded and in growing condition. When we have come to understand fully the structure of the plant we shall see the importance of carefully guarding all the conditions which influence its growth. Cultivation of the soil will have a new significance when looked at from this viewpoint; and the fact that there is only about half enough rainfall in the state of Indiana to produce maximum crops will also make us want to understand better the growth of plants, that we may increase in all possible ways their development. Thus if we have a working idea of the extent of the root systems of crops, know whether they are plants that get food readily, know whether they demand large quantities of a particular element in the soil—in short, if we know something of what the plant is and what it demands as well as the means for supplying its demand—we can work intelligently. In production, therefore, of natural products, constant care and thought are absolutely necessary.
GENERAL FARM NOTES.
If you have not time to kill weeds when they are young, mow them off so as to prevent seed ripening.
The first cotton bale of this season in the Tennessee valley was marketed 22 days earlier than last year.
Plan to attend the home county fair and if possible the state fair. Not only be an attendant, but be an exhibitor.
Exports of wheat from India for the year 1901-02 were 366,601 tons of 2,240 pounds each, or 13,667,397 bushels of 60 pounds each.
The progressive farmer likes to have a good road along his farm, and is willing to work out his tax; yes, and a little more, too, for the sake of having it.
The way to make your county fair a success is to make just as big a showing of your live stock and farm products as possible; get your neighbor to do the same and both go with your families.
The more thorough knowledge the farmer has of general principles, the better he is equipped for his business. It is his place to apply them and determine what to do when the opportunity arises.
Early plowing, rolling and harrowing for winter wheat grows against the effects of deficient soil. With a given amount of fertility, the better the control of the moisture, the better he yield of the crops.—Farmers' Voice.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
BUM BILL IS TOUGH.
Chicago Dog Who Is a Veritable Canine Degenerate.
Associates Only with Racehorse Toutts, Bartenders, Cheap Graffers, Prize Fighters and Women of Questionable Repute.
"Bum Bill" is what they call him on the levee, but before he came there to live, says the Chicago Tribune, he probably answered to a less disreputable name, and it is barely possible he was the pet of some Chicago household that still mourns his absence. He was found in the doorway of a barber shop at 372 State street one frosty morning three years ago this coming winter by the proprietor, George Norris. If you were to ask the saloon keeper next door who George Norris was he would shake his head and say: "Never heard of him." For Norris is known only as "Props."
"Bum Bill" was a pup about three months old when he was found almost frozen to death in the barber shop entrance. "Props" carried him in and made a bed for him under the stove. The colored porter raked the heater and dumped in another scuttle of coal. After awhile the little black pup began to get thawed out. He timidly crept out from under the stove and took a turn around the room, sniffing for the pan of food which he undoubtedly was used to before he left his happy home. A saucer of milk was set before him, and to show his appreciation he drank every drop of it. Then he played with the barbers until he got tired and again sought the cozy spot under the stove. That is how "Bum Bill" came to the levee. The story of his life since that winter morning when "Props" found him would make a good-sized book. He is known to everybody in
BEGAN TO TUG AT HER SKIRT.
State street, from Van Buren to Twelfth. Having lived for nearly three years in the toughest part of Chicago, it is not strange that the dog has become contaminated from evil associations. He goes from one saloon to another "down the line." Ike Roderick, court clerk at the Harrison street station, is one of "Bum Bill's" numerous friends. This is a story that Roderick tells of the dog's sagacity;
"One night about a year ago, 'Bum Bill' followed me from State street to the station. There had been a 'touch' a day or two before that in a State street saloon and the man who was robbed was at the station when 'Bum Bill' and I came in. He was telling the 'coppers' on the case that the woman who stole his money was at that moment in a saloon a few doors from where the robbery had taken place. He had been doing a little detective work on his own hook and had seen her enter the saloon with a man. The police had recognized her from the description and her name was mentioned while 'Bum Bill' and I were standing by listening.
"The officers and the victim hurried over to State street to get the woman, but 'Bum Bill' beat them to the saloon. We afterward learned that the dog rushed into the room where the woman and her escort were drinking and he began to tug at her dress skirt. She tried to drive him away, but he kept on barking and tugging at her garment From the dog's queer actions the woman got a 'hunch' that something was doing and out the back door she goes with 'Bum Bill' just as the 'coppers' came in the front way. An hour later she was arrested, but through no fault of 'Bum Bill's.' He knew the police were next to him for tipping them off to the woman and he kept away from the station for weeks. Every man in the station knows that to be true."
"Bum Bill" cats three squares a day—as they call it on the levee—at Stross' restaurant. He is as regular as clock work in showing up at meal time, and the patrons of the place all know him as the star boarder.
There isn't a dog in town that "Bum Bill" won't tackle if he ventures on "Whisky Row." He has been chewed up several times, but, like all real prize fighters, he doesn't know when he's whipped. He's a terror to cats, and one of them can't live in the neighborhood.
Like the denizens of the levee, "Bum Bill" is most wakeful at night. He makes his nightly rounds of the saloons and other resorts and sleeps late in the morning.
If there is such a thing as degeneracy in the canine family "Bum Bill" is a degenerate.
The Way It Often Is.
"Now, what do you advise me to do?"
"Will you act on my advice?"
"Not necessarily."
"Then why do you want it?"
"Well, if your advice coincides with my intentions I'll feel a good deal better satisfied with myself, and if it doesn't I'll put you down as a fool and won't feel any worse."—Chicago Post.
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IN LIFE'S JOURNEY.
The race for wealth and fame often ends in poverty and disgrace.
We find many occasions to wish we had chosen a different course.
It is not always the great men who are thought of the most kindly.
Many men achieve success by an ability to conceal their lack of ability.
We see indifferent men march to fame through some other man's mistake.
Too little attention is given to the signs of the times.—Philadelphia Bulletin.
High hopes are often shattered through too much attention to personal comfort.
Come moments when a man is capable of any act of cruelty or of generosity.
Did Very Well.
"How did your son do at college last year?"
"Very well, indeed. He did so well that he got an encore."
"A what?"
"An encore. You see, the faculty requested him to repeat the year."—Chicago American.
Knew from Experience.
Proser—You know Scribbly, don't you?
Barder—Yes, the fellow who edits the Cozy Corner Companion, you mean? What about him?
Proser—Oh, he's going to marry one of his lady contributors, that's all! Awfully struck on her he seems, too—told me to-day she was a perfect poem.
Barder—Don't you believe it; he doesn't know good poetry when he sees it. Why, he declined things of mine that would have made the fortune of his wretched little rag.—Ally Sloper.
A Common Sentiment.
I grieve to see these millionaires
Who glitter on the highway
Spend money on these fads of them.
I wish they'd spend it my way.
—Washington Star.
A
She—I wonder how you can bear to
see me go out in this old hat.
He—I can't—I've got an idea.
She—What is it?
He—Is it cook's day out?
She—No.
He—Then borrow her! — Ally.
Sloper.
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THE PLANET
SATURDAY.....NOVEMBER 1 1903
FOR
SUNDAY
READING
REVIEWING THE PAST.
The past lies all before me,
A map before my sight,
A scene of sun and shadows,
Of darkness and of light.
Of many pleasant pathways,
Delightful to me then:
And as I lie and ponder
I tread them o'er again.
Oh, many cares and sorrows
Came to us by the way;
And many joys and comforts
Were gathered day by day.
Yes, sometimes heavy shadows
Come looming up to sight;
And then again dispersing,
By God's most precious light.
And when my most great sorrow came,
What anguish! what surprise!
I thought my bleeding heart was crushed
That it could never rise
But God, my God, drew near me then,
And taught me lessons wise.
Duties and cares were waiting me,
And many tender ties.
I rose and asked of God my aid,
And heart and hands were fill'd.
My sorrows at his feet I had,
And in His strength was stilled.
It seemed God's sovereignty to prove,
With such a blessed light:
He gave in love and took in love,
Twas God, and so twas right.
—Mrs. E. H. Walker (a very aged invalid),
in N. Y. Observer.
ONE'S WORTH TO OTHERS.
A Principle That Relates to Self, But That Is Very Far from Being Selfish.
It is intensely important to every young person to have foremost in mind the purpose to so qualify himself as to become increasingly worthful to other people. I believe that this principle is, in various ways, prominently presented in the Bible. It is a principle which, first of all, relates to one's self, yet is far from selfish. It means that one ought to begin early in life to use the best possible means to rightly cultivate both mind and heart for the express purpose of using the cultivated powers in the coming years in just such ways as God's providence may guide one into.
It is not to be expected that a Godless youth will or can take a view; and yet if even such an one have Christian parents they ought to regard it as their duty to properly shape the education of their young son or daughter, with an eye to his or her best worth to other people in the advancing years. Their position and prestige should be kept out of mind; the highest personal worth to others should be the dominant thought and ambition. And every young Christian should be steadily urged to possess himself with this wide and far-reaching principle. The more thoroughly that one equips himself for some honorable sphere of service the more worthful will he become to others.
The question: "What is the Christian religion worth to you?" is really not so important as is the question: "What is the Christian religion, as possessed by you worth to the community in which you live, and to those beyond it whom you reach in various ways?" It was very common, during past generations, to ask a professed Christian: "Are you enjoying religion?" A much better question is: "Are you doing all you can to make the religion of Christ in you permanently worthful to all with whom you have dealings?"—Rev C. H. Wetherbe, in Boston Watchman.
Some Don't Enjoy the Bible
Because they have learned to enjoy trashy novels.
Because they think it is a back number.
Because it doesn't give the telegrams.
Because they don't like to feel serious.
Because they think it is a funeral director's guide.
Because they understand it conflicts with science.
Because it doesn't speak well of their habits.
Because they had to read it as a punishment when they were children.
Because they go to the book out of tune with it.
Because they read it for want of something better to do.
Because it contains so many uncomfortable reminders.
Because they don't want to enjoy it.
—Cincinnati Lookout.
The Road to Right Living
He who hath appointed thee thy task, will proportion it to thy strength, and thy strength to the burden which He lays upon thee. He who maketh the seed grow thou knowest not how, and seest not, will, thou knowest not how, ripen the seed which He hath sewn in thy heart, and leaven thee by the secret workings of His good Spirit. Thou mayst not see the change thyself, but He will gradually change thee, make the another man. Only yield thyself to His molding hand, as clay to the potter, having no wishes of thy own, but seeking in sincerity, however faint, to have His will fulfilled in thee, and He will teach thee what to pray for, and will give thee what He teachet thee. He will retrace Fis own own image on thee, line by line, etailing by His grace and gracious discipline the marks
and spots of sin which have defaced
it.—Edward B. Pusey.
Need Courage.
We need courage to be righteous in
small things.—Rev. E. D. McHose.
THE SIN OF WORRY.
Thousands Trust God for the Distance Future, But Not at All for Present Difficulties.
There are thousands of Christians who trust God absolutely and quietly for the eternal life, who hardly trust Him at all for to-morrow. They have given over worrying about the great decision and expect to be accepted by the company of Heaven, but they are wasting strength God gave for service in worrying about bread and clothes and shelter for themselves or those they love. Of all the promises of Christ the one which is most frequently forgotten is that which Christ most frequently insisted on: "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."
"Your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need for these things." Is He helpless, then, or can He only begin to provide when we have passed the confines of this present life? Are His hands tied for to-morrow, that they may be loosed in some far distant hour of Heavenly care? It is blind and stupid unbelief or childish perversion of our faith which thus falsely estimates the love and care of God. Worry is unbelief, or, at the best, a warped and unaccomplishing belief. It takes for granted either God's carelessness or powerlessness for earthly days, and a careless or a powerless God is not the Heavenly Father whom our Saviour taught us to obey.
Life is for work; and work depends upon efficiency; and efficiency is destroyed by worry. There is nothing more distracting, nothing more disintegrating. It writes its tale of inward weakness on the face. It trembles in the quaver of the voice. It transforms a brave disciple, armed by faith and love against the trials of the world, into a servant of the times, a trembler at the threats of fortune.
Kill-joy worry robs the world of its needed witness of good cheer. To win men to our hope, we must make that hope attractive. And we must make it attractive in spite of real trouble, which no man can escape. It is easier to endure real than imaginary and borrowed troubles. It is the foreboding that bows down our hearts in weak despair. Suffering weakens less than worry.
There is contrast even in our Lord's experience. He lived the perfect life of faith and was never guilty of the sin of worry. Yet He who bowed in anguish with the foretaste of death in Gethsemane, and longed in vain for human sympathy, stood upright before priests and rulers, and bore in silence the anguish of the cross. Sorrow and cheer, trial and peace, are combinations which the church has often shown the world, and they have proved its best attraction. But when did the companionship of worry ever win a soul to Christ?
Life is not easy for most of us. We have battles to fight and troubles to endure—and the hardest of all we must carry in our little Gethsemanes, as our Master did, alone. God will not give us more than we can bear. He will sustain us in every trouble and provide for every need. But where is it promised that there shall be help in borrowed trouble? The canker of worry can only be cured by the simplicity of faith. Let God be real—a very present help in trouble—and the sunshine will break through. We shall be strong to meet our trial when it comes. We shall work to-day, trusting quietly for to-morrow, casting all our anxious care on God—for He careth for us.—Boston Congrationalist.
Still Open.
She—I suppose games of chance are absolutely prohibited in New York city?
He—Oh, no. The marriage license office is still running wide open. Judge.
RELIGIOUS TRUTHS.
Human gratitude should rise to meet divine goodness.—Wellspring.
No brotherhood less wide than the brotherhood of man can satisfy the disciple any more than the Master.—Seth Low.
May we not only be delivered from the outward act or word that grieves thee, but may the very springs of our nature be purified!—F. B. Meyer.
A man's best desires are always the index and measure of his possibilities; and the most difficult duty that a man is capable of doing is the duty that above all he should do.—Charles H. Brent.
No gift, no talent or faculty is merely private property. The right use of our powers, our opportunities and our time puts us in direct relations to our fellow beings. Whether it be a day's work, a sermon or a song, we owe it to somebody.—Charles Gordon Ames.
A man must not choose his neighbor; he must take his neighbor that God sends him. In him, whoever he be, lies hidden or revealed a beautiful brother. The neighbor is just the man who is next to you at the moment. This love of our neighbor is the only door out of the dungeon of self.—George Macdonald.
Do not fear circumstances. They cannot hurt us, if we hold fast by God and use them as the voices and ministries of His will. Trust Him about every one and everything, for all times and all needs, earth and heaven, friends and children, the conquest of sin, the growth of holliness, the cross that chafes, the grace that stirs.—Anthony W. Thorold.
Every hard effort generously faced, every sacrifice cheerfully submitted to, every word spoken under difficulties, raises those who speak or act or suffer to a higher level; endows them with a clearer sight of God; braces them with a will of more strength and freedom; warms them with a more generous and large and tender heart.—Henry P. Liddon.
Selfishness.
In the last analysis, every fault, sin and vice in human nature begins with an "s," for selfishness includes them all.—Wellspring.
IN A COURSE GIRP.
Six-Year-Old Child Is Rescued from Perilous Position by His Plucky Older Brother.
Four children of Mr. Rodenberg, whose home is at Big Skookum, in Washington state, go to school at a public schoolhouse a long way off. One Wednesday during the last of June these children, being on the road homeward, were straggling along at some distance from each other, when a cougar sprang out of an ambush and seized the little boy who brought up the rear. This little fellow was the youngest of the party, being only six years old, and least likely to resist the beast, as that watchful creature seems moved the dog kept vigil and then ran to the spot where Moore was killed by a train.
Moore was a machinist and lived with his wife and mother at No. 1225 West Marshall street. When he left his work Wednesday night in the Sen-board Air line shops his little dog
MILK BOTTLE HIS WEAPON.
to have known when it saw the school children going by, single file.
The cougar seized the lady by the head and sat crouched upon him, snarling at another boy of the party, an eight-year-old youngster, who came running with might and main to save his brother. The brave boy had in his right hand a milk bottle, of heavy glass. He took hold of one of the cougar's ears, and with the bottle began to beat the snarling beast over the head. At the third or fourth blow the bottle broke, and a hundred fragments of glass were shattered about.
It is possible that some of these fragments entered the cougar's eyes, for as soon as the bottle broke he let go his hold and ran off, plunging into the bushes, from which he did not again emerge.
Meanwhile the unhurt children took the wounded boy into a neighboring farmhouse. The wounds were all flesh wounds, and when they had been dressed the little fellow grew quite animated in his account of the adventure, which was soon the talk of the neighborhood.
HE'S SAFE EITHER WAY
An Interesting Situation in the Shack of a Western Man Who Entertains a Rattler.
Every time John Prentice, of Kennewick, Wash., rolls over in bed at night, a big rattlesnake lifts its ugly head and bur-r-rs, and some night there promises to be a battle between the two.
Ten days ago Prentice first heard the warning bur-r-r of the rattle in his shack. He is an old westerner and dwells on the bank of the Columbia, half a mile from Kennewick, and just across the river from Pasco.
His cabin is a one-room affair in the midst of a wild, sparsely settled, sage brush country, and is piled high on one
WATCHING FOR THE BATTLER
side with plunder gathered from the river. Here are dozens of heavy boxes and other articles which would take half a day to drag out. Prentince heard the rattler, looked twice at the boxes and then decided not to interfere with the intruder enclosed behind the mass of rubbish. He shifted his bed a little and gave up half his house to the snake. The rattlesnake bur-r-rs at every move Prentice makes, but the nervy westerner pays little attention to it. On one side of the shack dweller as he sleeps is a big shotgun and on the other a bottle of approved snake bite. "If I see that snake first, heaven help him," remarked Prentice. "If he gets in on me first, here's the snake bite. I'm safe either way."
The law of Connecticut allows a one-dollar bounty for each fox killed, and the state refunds to the town the amount paid, and allows the town treasurer 15 cents for his services in each case. Last year the various towns paid bounties on 1,272 foxes killed within their respective limits.
Oszrich Has Queer Ways.
An ostrich never goes straight to its nest, but always approaches it with many windings and detours, in order, if possible, to conceal the locality from observation.
But In Accomplishing the Humane Feat, Waverly Moore Lost His Own Life.
Under a recent date a Richmond (Va.) correspondent writes that, with grief according to its kind, a faithful dog mourned the other day when its master, Waverly Moore, was buried Moore sacrificed his life for the dog. Until the casket was re-
moved the dog kept vigil and then ran to the spot where Moore was killed by a train. Moore was a machinist and lived with his wife and mother at No. 1223 West Marshall street. When he left his work Wednesday night in the Seaboard Air line shops his little dog
THREW IT OFF THE TRACK
was there as usual to accompany him home. Moore was wearied after his day's work and was walking along the main line tracks over which the fast trains pass, when the Southern express approached from behind. Neither Moore nor his dumb companion heard the express until it was upon them. A shrill whistle was the first warning and it came too late. Moore glanced around and saw that the engine was almost upon him. He was apparently unmindful of himself in the presence of the sudden danger. The dog was trembling from terror a few paces in front of him. Moore made a mighty effort, and bending forward, grasped the dog and threw it clear of the track. The next instant the express train struck him and hurried his lifeless body high in the air. But the dog was saved.
Two tramps witnessed the tragedy. They say that Moore could probably have saved himself had he not overlooked his own danger and turned to the dog. From the time his master was killed the dog remained beside the body. He followed the undertaker's wagon, and was allowed to take his place beside the casket, where he watched until the time of the funeral, when he was taken away from the sad scene.
A TOUCHING INCIDENT.
It Filled the Conductor's Eyes with Tears and Pleased His Little Passengers.
A baker's dozen of little tots—all girls—stood in a row under the bridge in the charge of a young woman, says the Brooklyn Eagle. Evidently they were orphans and were waiting for a car to bear them to the seashore. In little white bonnets and clean calico dresses they stood with cheeks flushed with excitement and
SHE WANTED A KISS.
their eyes sparkling with anticipated pleasures. They looked as fragrant and were as pretty as the peeping rosebuds of June. By and by the proper car came along and the young woman hailed it. The indifferent conductor turned with callous face to see what had obstructed the passage of his car and caught a glimpse of the happy and expectant row. His face softened; he was off his platform in a twinkling, busy with lifting the little ones into place, all the passengers looking on with interest and smiles and some assisting. As the last little tot was lifted into place with a heavy sigh of satisfaction, she lifted her little hand to pat the cheek of the conductor and her crumpled rose-leaf mouth to be kissed. Then they saw the eyes of the conductor fill, two tears coursing down his cheeks. They smiled some more, with little lip quivers. Akwwardly and hurriedly the conductor, brushing the tears away, sought his eyrie, and when there said out loud: "I'm a big stiff, I know, but the grass hasn't grown over a little one of my own in Cypress Hills yet."
Jews T thrive in Russia. Russia has more Hebrews than any other nation in the world. The number is about 5,800,000.
Suffering for His Dogs. A tender-hearted man in Hoboken, N. J. pawned his only coat to enable him to pay for two dog licenses. Although lacking money enough to supply bread for himself, his kind heart would not permit him to part with his beloved dogs.
Salting and Salting.
"Well, 'salting' a mine may be a good way to sell it to folks what want to buy anything, but it don't work with other things," remarked Johnny Upthecreek to his friend, Willie Hayrick.
"Been tryin' it?" asked Willie.
"No; but a feller I sold a string of fish to the other day came back inside an hqrr and said he would lick me if I didn't give him his money back. He was real mad jest because I'd sold him some salt mackerel, out'n the grocery store."—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
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Please find enclosed $1.50 for the Planet for one year, which you will send to the following address:
Quality Furniture
We have some twenty-five or thirty suits bought, most of which will be in stock in a few days. "Don't do a thing" until you see this line.
MORRIS CHAIRS
This always popular chair of rest will be in as much demand this fall as ever. Part of our stock has already arrived and $10 values vie with $15 values of a year ago.
Call, see our stock of Bed Room Furniture and save time and money.
Passenger elevator.
Sydnor & Hundley,
NOW OPEN
WALKER'S HOTEL
For First-class Colored Guests.
116 South Ave.,
Near New Market, Petersburg, Va.
7-14-3m
NOT ONE CENT TO PAY!
GLOSSINE THE WONDER
QUEEN OF ALL HAIR TONICS
FOR DIRECTING
SEE INSIDE
STRAIGHTENS
KNADPY, HAIR
CURLY KINKY
CONTINENTAL CHEMICAL CO
ST. LOUIS, MO.
GLOSSINE is Queen of all Hair Tonics to straighten the hair and cause it to grow long and beautiful.
We will send you a large sample box PRESENT CHAGER which will prove its value. If you absolutely write your name and address on a postal card and mail promptly to CONTINENTAL CHEMICAL CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.
RIPANS
There is scarcely any conditions of ill-health that is not benefited by the occasional use of a R-I-P-A-N-S Tabule. For sale by Druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year.
The JUST
Actual Size.
This offer is, without the least doubt, the greatest value for the least money ever offered by any newspaper in the whole history of journalism.
★ FULL SIZE ★
3½ cts.
LARGE TYPE ★
SHEET MUSIC
★ GOOD PAPER ★
a Copy
UNABRIDGED ★
WE have made arrangements with one of the largest music houses of Boston to furnish our readers with ten pieces, full size, complete and unabridged. Sheet Music is thirty-five. The quality of this sheet music is the very best. The compagnet's names are housed works all over the continent. None but high-prized copyright pieces or the most popular reprints. It is printed on regular sheet-music paper, from new plates made from large, clear type—including colored titles—and is in every way first-class, and worthy of your home. 3,000,000 copies sold
This offer holds good to any of our subscribers or to any person so much as 50 cents for a subscription to the PLAYER.
PRICE OF ABOVE PIECES.
Any 10 for 35 cents.
Any 21 for 65 cents.
Any 43 for $1.35.
Any 100 for $3.00.
Write your name, full address, and list of
pieces wanted by **the number**; enclose
this, with stamps or silver, and mail it bring
to address given below, and the music will
besent direct from Boston, postage prepaid
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.,
311 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
8
ae 2 ww Ss
CAN GET
JUSTICE HERE.
ect Paice No. 8, Gull ke contineen
answer letter No. 3. Still he continued
his attentions.”
‘At this point, the commonwealtn rested
its case. After'a hasty sonsultation, Mr,
Gienn decided not to put any witnesses
on thestand.
Eastham showed no disposition to
testify himself. >
‘There was another lull in the Court
room, Lawyer Glenn consulted with
Lawyer Richardson and Lawyer Smith.
Te was decided that the caso should be
""Gommonwealth's’ Attorney Richard.
son arose and said;—‘‘If your Honor
please, there are two classes of cases:
‘One is where there is no evidence and
the other where the evidence is #0 plain
that all the time the Attorney is on his
feet he feels he is doing unnecessary
labor. a
‘This is one of the most remarkable
cases I ever saw in my life and it is the
Alsat the oaloces poopie
Tsay that the ve as
much right to the protection of their
families as any other people.
OvGRT To BE PUNIEHED.
For a matt, 1 don't care if be is white to
be guilty of such a crime he ought to be
ther a lunatic and it ee
man is either a to
in an asylum or he is an pn a char.
acter and should be imprisoned.
Ifthe color had been different and
‘those letters bnd fallen into the hands
of white men, bleod-shed would have
resulted, I commend these people for
their forbearance and respectable colored
Porte can feel assured that they can go
jual protection of the law.
ents, was en intemces attempt to lead
‘astray an innocent girl.
‘There is no use to talk about a trap
here is a man who had bech after. this
Firl, Her old father ad to ‘send her
to get rid of him
‘Then he followed her here and_ap-
Seer cate mations sareanene oA
ont arious purposes.
the ‘method it is being done time and
again.
‘THE USE OF DECOY LETTERS.
Decoy letters are put in the mail time
ernabe gen and this action has been sus.
by the United States Court
‘This case is one on all fours in that this
man was an offender.
‘They hayedone it:1 commend then
for it and I hope that the Court will af
ford them adequate
Gir. Glenn)" do not, know that
have over boon in a case of this kind bo
(Justice Orutchfleld)—Never heard o:
‘one before.
(Mr. Glenn)—“The United State
Aetectives send decoy letters to cate!
the thief, not to make one. They aske
your Honor to change the warrant. Ni
crime was committed. There was n
abduction.
{Mfesurs. Smith and Richardson)—"W.
don’t charge abduction, we charge a1
attempted abduction.
[Justice Orutohfield)- Well, str, if yox
hadn't changed the warrant I ‘shoul
have done 80."
(Mr. Glenn]—This case is a very peu
liar one. He wrote a letter to a girl.’
[Justice Crutchfield)}—"Yes, ton Ne
gro girl”
0 CREWE ComATTED,
Lawyer Glenn]—“Nocrime had beer
Sc basetstod Wisma fig ote woo write
‘This man was not going to Booker Jor:
dan’s house. He encouraged him tc
come down here. Of course Mr East.
ham did wrong in writing this letter to
a colored girl, but there was no crime
in writing this letter.
‘There was noattempt to take the gir
from under his control. There was no
intimation that he wanted to take her
away. After receiving this letter he
delieved she wanted to go with him.
‘There was no harm in the first letter
except it was an affectionate letter.
‘This man tells you that he laid this trap
fast ho took b fcxy where oc oah
it he er or attemy
bo take ber anywhere after he teoatren
the letter encouraging him. Now, if
your Honor please, in order to attempt
to abduct a girl, aman must do some-
thing towards the commission of the
set, "Tt doem’t mean where a girl will
ingly meets a man =e ere for
that purpose that a man is liable under
that section.
A DISTINCTION WITHOUT A DIFFERENCE.
‘This says where you take a girl un-
der the age of 16 for the purpose of pros-
as tbe the definition of
en gave the of ti-
tution, citing authorities to sustala him
in his contention. ‘I say if this
man had taken her to house of prosti-
tution to barter her body then he would
‘be liable under the statute, but I say
hero she willingly goes erith him one
time, without pay, I ‘say that it is not
taking her away for the purpose of
prostitution, neither would it cover the
case of con-cubinage, Ifshe is carried
toa honso ot prostitation ‘where sho i
to be kept for the purpose of prostitution
then it Would come under this law.
‘This man must have been infatuated
pith this gir} in somo way. “Te in “not
‘the first time that the sexes haveboen in.
fatuated with those of the opposite race
‘We cannot but blame this man fo
Writing those letters and 1 blame Book.
er Jordan for writing those letters,
‘MR RICHARDSON’S RESPONSE,
Commonwealth Attorney Richardson
arose and snid:—“The main purpose
this man was plam. He knew he could
not marry her. He knew it was a fel.
ony in this etate for « whiteman to mar.
¥y-a colored woman"?
‘Mr. Richardson then analyzed the let
ter line by line to. show that a crime
‘was attempted. He showed that East
hham had admitted in his letter that’
Maly frend, be Glos ‘ this
iend, Mr. Glenn argues this oasc
‘as though the girl had been abducted
J. Cratebfield busied himself writing in|
the large court-record book. He said
dking and «hoa fell on the endlence
‘which was terrupted nc
‘tion in iii the counsel and the
prisoner before
““Are all the packages there?” - he en-
yuired. Upon being answered in che
ree rent gentlemen, that this
“1 am very glad gent
‘case has taken the scope ithas. As the
;Commonwealth’s Atty said, where ool-
cored respect themselves, they
shoud be protseted. I think Gita is one
of the worst cases Ihave ever hnown.
‘This man is entitled to the full penalty
of the law.
I therefore sentence him to the City
Jail for twelve months.””
‘That the decision gave satisfaction to
doth the whito and colored spectators
‘Was evident although silence reigned:
Eastham did not seem to realized
what it all meant until his counsel evi-
dently gaye him to understand the hope-
Jessness of an appeal to a higher court.
No motion was made for a stay of judg-
ment ee anda few moments
later, he was led to the prison-van on
the outside and carried to the place ap-
pointed forhim to serve out the seh-
tence.
—- = ____
Semeritnns Tasuranhe.
It has been demonstrated beyond
doubt that the Samaritans can and is
rai an Endowment successfully.
We have paid 12 death claime within 1
months and the treasury is in condition
to pay the claims mould they occur.
Sec, land Gen’l Manager went
to Granite afew weeks ago and paid
‘the death claim ‘of "Merritt Dromgeale
of Golden Rule, No. 190 to his
pe on George Cor pg he ‘the
i rant
ieee ee cath oe
. No. :
aaae Harris. ier
on wish to live after death, take
out a policy in the Benevolent Eudews
ent Awccation of State Grand Lod,
No. 6, of Vi Any member of n
subordinate lodge’ in geod sanding i
eligible to membership in. this depart.
feoester ae has aay ans —
‘mon iam,
Se sea a ain
mond, Va.
“a 5 Wy Tmommeos,
ane a
—_—_—-=—__
Dr, tiraham Makes a Call.
All tho members of the Ministers and
Deatons Conference of Richmond, Man-
chester and vicinity mre requested to
oot atthe Filth ‘St, Baptist Church
‘Monday, November 8, 1902, promptly
‘at 4:30 p.m. Business of very great
importance. Be on time.
W. F. Gnamam, President.
eee pr esee etase
Peculiar Plea.
"On last Wednesday morning R. Lind-
sy, Gordon, Bet of Louisa satel
ith Mr. Harry Glenn’ entered an @p-
peal in the case of J. P. Eastham.
Basthatn sanpeurace tn ‘he “Hang
"8 ap] 106 e
Court and he left for Bumpass, Va. It
was alloged that Eastham was insane or
crazy at times.
‘It was also annonnced that he had at
one time taken up from the grave
the body of his dead brother and car-
ried it tohis room. This may be news
a tie peepia pe sO county as well
as those of Richmond city. While here,
he had given no evidence of *
‘but seemed to realize keenly the
ment in which he had placed bimself.
There will be a grand rally at the Sth
St Baptist Church Mission Sunday
Preaching by Roe FW. Willass,
by Rev, F. W. peo.
ae Baptist Oburch,
ton.)
At niet. 8:80 o'clock, Rey. L. J.
Morris of the Sth St. Baptist Church
will preach. We ournestly hope that
our many friends will come out and
help us as we are trying to raise money
to pay off the indebtedness of the mis-
sion. It is earnestly hoped that all
those that have cards will tarn them in
on that date.
M. H. Paywer, Pastor.
B. H. Peyton, Supt.
Ricemoxp, Va. Oot. 98, 1903.
~This is to certify that I have received
shane ct tie Ceaed tc ook ‘Virginia
¢
One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in pay-
ment of the death claim of Sir John
Brice, who was a member of Unity
Lodge, No. 24, K.of PN. A., 8. AL,
B, A. A.ond A
Bigned: Frances M. Barca.
‘Witnesses:
Rev. A. Dennis,
Rev, Edward Moore.
Don't fail to attend the Bazaar by the
Srito Tih Good maeaio.” ‘Single pars
to 7th. m per-
fon, 18 cote, Lady and gent, 60,
Why God let the Devilexist? Is a
question that puzzles a millions of
Peoples. Yet few can satisfactorily
answer it.
‘This book makes the matter clear. Tt
tells’ who the Devil is and where he
‘came from, IO Cents Ench.
‘Address all letters to,
DR. 8. W. PATTERSON,
45 W. 66th, 8t., New York, N. ¥.
Paid 8380.00.
f RicemMonp, Va., Oot., 15th 1902.
‘This is to certify that I, Bell Johnson
have received from Grand “Worth
Mother Mrs. A i. ‘Taylor the, deat
clam of my daughter Tesbel’ Johnson,
who was a member of Olive Leaf Band
sree ot aoe Eee
value at one y ). paid at
ist Ciacen, Charen Ei. “Witnesses:
Miss Mary EB. Allen, S. M._ Mrs. Eliza-
beth Robinson, Mrs. Mary Jackson.
=
\ Messiah Association Hall, No. 823
North 17th St., Clubs, Societies or the
lio desiring toengage a neat com-
Tortable hall for meetings or other ‘pur.
‘Poses at reasonable rates, would do well
to inspect our hall at the above address.
For terms or information apply to
B. J. Johnson, 227 N. 17th, St. 2
‘The American Beneficial Insurance
Company.
Como and got your certificate of stock
Tuesday night 6:90 o'clock at Price's
Tess this meeting: don't forgot the
to bo at this meeting; don’t 6
time Tooeday night November the 4th.
W. F. Gy. ax, President,
B.H. Puytox, S.. < Gen'l M’g'r,
ee
= Mrs. ME, Smith of Brighton is
now ‘to furnish ladies
withthe Winter hats, Gail snd see
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
ROLL OF HONOR |SENSATION AROUSED w sess
‘Week ending October @4, 1902.
Sth Grammer—Mias M. L. Chiles,
Teacher—Gertrude Taylor.
Srd Grammer—Miass M. ©. Tinsley,
Teacher—Mamie Johnson, Bessie Ed
wards, Mary Austin, Arnita Wells.
2nd Grammer—Miss Vera A. Holmes,
‘Teacher—Rosa Goodwin, Serena Robin:
son, Azelia Storrs.
ist Grammer—Miss M. H. Smith,
Teacher—Leora Smith.
6th Primary—Miss Rosa L. James,
Teacher—Bennie Bass, Willie Gray,
‘Emanuel Stuart, Henry ‘Yancey, Arneta
Stokes, Carlotta Kersey, Lacy Walliams.
bth Miss M. E. Allen,
Teacher Mater Boel; Seniesa
wards, Richard Jackson, Mildred An.
Gayles, ‘Th ‘eoet Geven
pi xiete eat Otte
Powell, Bessie Ware.
4th Primary—Miss Martha R. Oram)
Teacher—Ira Dean, Thurlow’ Jones
‘Charlie Storrs, Percy Vanghn, Louise
Ohristian, a re Erma Holmes,
Goldie Lee, Minor, Ollie Robin.
‘son, Rosa Scott, Beatrice Wells.
8rd Primary—Miss Ellen V. Trent,
Teacher— ‘Horman. Grawford ‘Lucy
‘aughn. Allen Stewart, Mary Vanghn
eas Rosa Brown, Mamie
, Marie Brown, Flonnie Tay-
Jor, Willnna Geeregy Aes agen Ander
son, Carrie aor Orawford,
Beatric Elridge, Lizzie Harris, Mary
Harris, Ida Harris, Lottie Lewis, Marth
‘Meriwether, Eba Smith.
HOME WEDDING.
Events fof Interest to the Colored
Society People—Last Evening.
Newnvrvrors, Mass., Sept, 24, '02.
Avery pretty home wedding took
Bites last evening at the “residence of
and Mrs: Mores P. Townes. on. Tit
ford became the bride of William P.
ore sdeics prettily deco-
was
rated by Pearson, the florist, and. the
gauple stood under an_evergresn arch.
‘The ceremony was performed by Rev.
™iiiee Pathe Hardy’ uatied the
bride
as bridesmaid and Melvine Pearson
acted as best man:
After the wedding a reception was
held by afr, and. Mrs. Ooleman” after
wedding supper wasfeerved
Ontorer Tibbete, while music was ae
dered by Mason's Orchestra.
“The couple were the recipents of
are ene to
the esteem in which they are ar by
Mrs, Goleman is a vary socors
. ‘dy and la wocy: wall know
Rereebouts. "Mr. ‘Oclenan covuples 4
‘position as butler in the service of Fred:
‘erick S. Mosely.
———+ — ___
| ‘Cand eh Gita”
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Williams
their many fviende for the, large met,
many num:
der of handsome wedding gifts presented
them.
——
- ‘The Mount Olivet Baptist Charch,
‘Use Autum Rally of the Mount Olivet
Baptist Church will take place on the
Second Sunday, Nov. oth.
‘The ing well known divines
have accepted invitations to be present
and preach on that day.
11.808. m., Dr. Joseph Perry of the
5th Baptist Church,
4p. m., Dr, W. F, Graham of tho 5th
st. Baptist Ghureh.
8.80 p. m., Rev. D. Webster Davis,
A, M., 3nd Baptist Church, Manchester
bean invited to a ene
‘to accompany’
"All are Welcomel ‘Come and ‘unito
with us in giving thanks to our Heaven-
ly Father for His manifold blessings un-
to the children of men. eZ
| —— Mr. Steoly Holmes, who is station
gon the U.S. Monongahela,’ ts spend.
ing a few days vacation with his parents
—Rev. Hughes will be married this
week to one of the Richmond's fair
Delles.
Mr. John Palmer, whois steward to
the U.'S, Oommandent at Havana was
Rarried to Mise Joseniine Bryht laa
.¢ First Baptist Ohurch,
Nine Wins Gay, atied tor ensle ae
home, Ovpa.
——Mrs. Victoria Wilson, wh6 is con-
fined to her bed with pneumonia is now
convalescing.
——Dr, and Mrs. Gren paid a fying
Visit bo Baltimore last wreak, sebursing
Monday morning,
cools; Graham W,, Jackson the
county St. Dyer, loft Friday even
for Puiledelphie,
——Mr, Cland Wright, of High St.,
wins una boon coating! to Eds. fod. fe
toveral days is now convalecing..
—The wedding bells are still ring.
ing among Portsmouth circle.
CURES WEAK MEN FREE.
Insure Love and a Happy Home For
‘How any man may Sas him.
self after years of suffering sectual
weakness, loss vitality, night losses, var
icocele, etc., and enlarge small weak or-
gans to fall size and vigor. Simply send
ar name and address to Dr. j Sow
Medical Oo., 825. Hull Building, De-
troit, Mich., and they will een
freo” receipt “with “fall dlrections 8
that any man may easily cure himself at
home. This is certainly a most gener
ous offer, and the Soe ‘extracts tak.
en from their daily |, show what
men think of their generosity.
“Dear Sirs:—Please ncoopt my sincere
ean cea a en oo
given your treatment a test
and the benefit has been extraordinary
Tt has completely braced me up. I am
just as vigorous as when a boy and you
‘cannot realize how happy I am.””
“Dear Sirs:—Your method worked
beautifully. Results were exactly what
I needed. Ete com.
pletely returned and enlargement is en.
‘Dear Sirs:—Yours was received and 1
had no trouble in making use of the re.
ceipt as directed, and can truthfully say
is 19 8 boon to weak men. Tam greatl
Hin vorrespontlasse S manlouty ease
tial, mailed in Ba, sealed envelope.
receiptis free for the asking and
‘they want every man to have it.
SENSATION AROUSED
THE PEOPLE SUBILANT,
Members Happy. Officers
Smilling.
AGENTS AND CLERKS
| BUSY. SOUTHERN AID |
| TO THE FRONT. |
A Word from One of ais
Members.
‘To the Managers of the Southern Aid
Society:
; Having read with much pleasure
a. statement of your very excellont work
in the colored papers of Richmond, seo-
‘ing the remarkable growth of the com-
‘pany and its financial standing, I must
‘Sonfees that I felt proud to know that I
have beou oarrying & policy in’ such a
strong institut \
Toan readily agree that there is no
other company in Richmond, whether
Fan by white or colored people that
pezs its claims promptor. sick
twat indeod a pleasure to mo to” have
yoncall., I your courteous
‘ours respectfully,
Wo are indeod gratofal for the above
fo are whe at
statement and we have in our office any
pom itary letters com.
ing free gratetal seem ‘who have
deen waited on during sickness. Our
new offer of Immediate One Half Bene-
fits 6 taking like wild fire and our
agents are all emiling beotase of, the
‘success they sre g in writing
new work.
This is indeed a chance of your life
‘and if you wish to put your money
Srbero it will yield gare and prompt ro
faras, take out a policy with the South.
em Aid Society.
‘We promise what we are to
Puy sad you need not question” oar sbi
ity to pay, but give usa trial, Our reo-
ofa le already made and the of
Nizginia and elsewhere are ‘our
Like methods. If your agents
go not call on you, our home office is
No. 604 North Second St., Richmond,
VBheath tices and, Agents:—Now
Port News, Va., 004—28rd St., corner
Jefferson Ave,, M. O.H. Green, Mann
ger. Staunton, Va., 111 E. Main Street
ite House, Mr. Wm. 0.
ie Mane on fae Se
0. H .
Mr Tavard Baler, Charlotteys
‘a., Mr. A. F. Angel, No. Ridge
St" Gordonsville, Va., Mr. Wm. B.
Steward.
10-25-2t.
— Rev, W. A. 0. Brags. pastor of
the Leigh Stroet M.'E. Church is home
again and will preach at his church
Sunday, Noy..2nd at 11a, m. and 8 p,
m. Friends are invited to be'present,
WANTED OOLORED Cotton Fiele
hands to grow Cottor
in West Africa, Comfortable home
just treatment guaranteed. De.
serving. applicants please write to New
Cotton ‘Limited, 43, Devonshire
Chambers, Bishopsgntestrect, London,
England.
VIRGINIA: In the Circuit Court for
the County of Henrico, the 80th day of
September, 1902. In Vacation,
Va In Chancery.
Nannie Robinson, Defendant.
The object of this suit is to obtain a
aivoree a Mansa et Thoro by, the plain.
tiff against the defendant. An affidavit
having been made, and filed that the
plain: uscd due diligence to as-
certain in or mn
one ae
without effect, it is ordered that she ap-
Rear here within fifteen days after the
ius publication hereof and do whatever
may be necessary to protect her interest
ea
“Poste: J. B. Broappos,
Ee Olerk.
To Nannie Robinson? >
‘Take notice that I shall on
the 2st of November, 1902, at the
office of J. ‘Orutchfield, numbered
111g B. street, in the city of
Richmond) Virginia, Between the hours
of Do'clook A. M. ahd @ o'clock P.M.
that day, to take the deposi-
ae ee haa ee
in my behalf (n a certain suit in Ohan-
cory, depen: Oirenit Court for
tho county of Henrion, Virgiaia Shae,
in you are defondant sind I am plaintis
and if from any cause, the taking of the
said depositions be not commenced on
that day, or, if commenced, be not con-
cluded on that day, the taking of the
same will be adjourned and continued
from day to day, or from time to time,
at the same plece and between the same
hours until the samo shall be complet-
Setfrowas Honrmaos,
By counsel.
J. Henry Crutchfield, p. q.
VIRGINIA; In the Law and Equity
Gourt forthe city of Richmond, this
80th, day of September, 1902.
Wii1as Surre, Plaintiff,
vs; t In chancery
Susan Sarr, Defendant.
‘The object of this suit is to obtain a
divorce a vinoulo matrimonii by the
plaintiff against the defendant.
An affidavit having been made and
filed that the defendant is a non-resi-
dent of the State of Virginia, it is order-
ed that she appear here within fifteen
days after the due publication hereof
and do whatever may be necessary to
protect her interest herein.
8 copy.
Teste; P. P. Wixstox, Clerk.
J, Hexry OxcrcHrrenn, Bs. PQ.
To Susan Surrm:
‘Take notice that I shall on the 20th
day of November, 1903 at the office of
J; Henry Crotchfiold,/namberod 12113¢
¥, Broad St., m the city of Richmond,
Va., between the hours of 9 o'clock
A. ML and 6 o'clock P, M., of that day
Proceed to take the depositions of wit-
‘nesses to be reai as evidence in my
‘Dehalf in a certain suit in chancery de-
ding in the Law and Equity Gourt
Kor the ity of Richmond, Va., ‘wherein
youare defendant and i am plaintiff
‘nd if from any cause the taking of the
said depositions be not commenced on
that day or if commenced be not con-
cluded on that day the taking of ‘the
same will be adjourned and continued
from day to day, or from time to time
at the ‘same place and between tho
soe Rowse andl the seaie ball be toon
Respectfully,
Ws. Sucrn,
by counsel
J. Haney Oxuronrimip, Fo.
S, 10-2-02-4t.
——Messrs. Anderson and Thompson,
the house and sign painting contractors
of Petersburg were in the city this
Week on important busine-s. ‘They te-
Port trade as flourishing.
—NMiss Mary Walker, who met with
a very, painful nccident » few weeks
ago. after a v succerst operation
by Dr M. B. Joes is able to use her
hand again. | Dr. Jones is indood a very
skillful, painstaking physician and. de-
serves many words of encouragement
among the community.
Salts, Lucy B. Miles is no longer
the secretary of the Board of Contresl,
this isto certify that Mrs. Annic El
Tackgon was elected on Sept. 22nd 1002
Secretary address 910 St. James, St.
REDUCED RATES VIA SOUTHERN
RAILWAY.
Womans’ Foreign Missionary Soci
of "Virginia, ‘Richmond, ‘War’ Octobe
petal aes mil
rat cents je one
way distance for roomie taken
sale Oot., 20th-2ist, return limit Oct.
Annual Meeting Womans’ Missionary
Union of Virginia and North Carolina,
Special rate ao por Susi es ail oy
rate a8 ap-
py; tickets on tale Nov, 825, ‘retura
November 10th.
aden Chapter Royal Arch Masons
rand Commandery Knights Temp-
lng, Richmond. Va., Nov,, 11-18, 1002
Four conts per mile one way distance
for round trip; tickets on sale Nov. 91
inclusive, with return limit 16th,
United Danghters of tho Confederacy,
New Orleans, La , Nov., 12-18, 1902.
Ono first class fare for the round trip
from all points; tickets on anlo Nov,
8th-9th-10th, return limit ten days from
date of sale;
American Bankers Association, New
Orleans, La., Noy., 11-13, 1902.
One first class fare for the round trip
from all points; tickets on sale Nov., &-
9-10, return limit ten days from date of
General Association of
arta Ya., Nov. 18, 1902. aes
four cents per mile, one way distance
for round trip, tickets on aale Nov.s 12
14, return limit Nov., 19th,
For detail information as tothe'above,
inquire of any Southern Railway ticket
agent. ig
WANTED—To know the whereabouts
of Sallie Gatewood. Her address was No.
120 Granby St., Norfolk, Va.
"Yours traly
Sandy Anderson, .
Mineola, Tex.
| Market.
‘The leading Grocery in the city for
its low prices. This store should be
eee by all Afro-Americans, a full
ine of Green Groceries and Poltry,
Wood and Coal,
All goods delivered free.
A..C., Booker,
501 WEBSTER, STREET.
6mths
+++» PAINLESS EXTRACTION ....
For beautiful Teeth, Comfort,
Pleasure and Health.
Orrice Hours:—From 8 A.M. to 6P.
M. Old Phone, 816,
DR. P. B. RAMSEY,
102 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va,
~_SUACK:SSIN.REMOVER.
x >
=
eee
earoat omnet
US Bs
es RE | SAFTER
A Wonderful Face Bleach.
AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER,
both in box for $i, orthree borestor $2. Guaran-
Yond, Guo tox wall chet mrentunes dads
Sireoted. =
A WONDERFUL PACE BLEACH.
A PEACR-LIKE complesion obtained if ed a
sa feeaineannses as
ror Sande ina
otwon perfeetiy white: Iaforcy-ight hounen shade
etwo will be noticable. Tides act Tare te
tkin'n spot but Mauches out wit, the skin Re
maining beautiful without, contiseal ease Wi
remove oF Back Re ae eo, Pimples or
Bumps oF back hoads, taking ts? tele seb est
froved withoat harnrioeetkinn’ Wien P 2%
tho color you wish, op using the proveration®
‘THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER, —_
that goca in every one dollar box S» enough Yo
Ete kos age ate act td
makes the hair soft sad erst Bee Many
of our customers say one of Sur asline boss
orth fen sellers yews soll fot one lar 8
Tox. THE NO-SHELL tarown ttre” :
‘Ain pore mending us ont dolar a leer o&
oat bRice monoy order express mats etc Of
rogitared letan, wo will art seagh Chet
Foaage Prepaid: or yom want it woke On De
with come by expats" ett
Tn any caso where it falls (sds What we clatm
weir eoary he motiey or bend a oe feast
ienlgexcept rectners = n> 03? Know cot
9, ORANE AND 00,, ©
+ 122 wost Broad Street,
. Ricumorn, Va.
LS ee Bhs
WOMAN'S UNION
"
(INCORPORATED, JULY, 1898.)
HOME OFFICE:
ST. LUKE’S HALL, 900 ST. JAMES
RICHMOND, VA.
We pay sick Benefits Promptly.
Death Bekelite in 24 hours siete
Isfactory proot has been filed In the
Office.
OFFICERS & BOARD:
PRES., - - Rosa K: Jonzs
Vick-PRes., +. Maccrm L, WALKER
Taxas., Faxnig C. Tompson
Suc'y & Man’or, Patst2K. ANDERSON.
Luz M. Dasnearis, M. Lou Hanns,
Vicroria Moon, Lituian HY
Payng, Jor1a H. Hayes,
| Rosa B. Watson, Dexia Lawns,
Tau MEW _NroTO rosr. $5.00 PER DAY.
Ge 2 SELLING THE GREAT
os
S- RS
(oa SS) aS ;
By OF PROF. JAMES E. McGIRT,
pe eee Oi ‘The New Poet of the Race.
His Poems are declared by both American and pe critios to be among
the greatest written in this age regardless of race or color, and that he has made
a work in literature for his race, that will last for s.
The books can be bought for half price for a tow dave. The complete work,
two cloth bound volume silk finished, will be sent to any one sending $1.00.
Persons desiring to become nts, will ask for agent’s terms with their order.
Eo, are endorsed by Me Julian Hawthorne, Col. A. K. McOlnre, Miss El-
la Wheeler Wilcox Rebecca Harding Davis, Margaret Sangster and others.
(Send Money Order.)
wriTE, J. E. McGIRT,
Perot St., King’s Bridge, N. Y.
_AN IDEAL HOME, |
d THE PLACE WHERE
i
i Wou Spend
|. Hl Wour Wife |
! May be as pretty as.any in the land if k
4 you will only make it so,
| WE WILL HELP YOU. |
| OUR TERMS ARE Yours. |
| PETTIT & CO., |
: Successor to Mayer & Pettit. f
SIS SISSIES RTS TST Sa Ie oe
MECHANICS” SAVINGS: BANK
511 North 3rd Street, Richmond, Va.
Se
—SSSSS|S==
$ a \ =.
Capitul $25S00.
—_—————_—
— SS
4 PRR CENT Interest Paid on All Deposits Remain-
ing 60 Days or over.
LOANS NEGOTIATED.—The fatronage of the Public
is solicited. s
WGFor all information concerning Stock, Deposits, and
Loans, Etc., apply to the Cashier.
Apartments are fitted up with modern improvements. Building lighted with
gas and electricity, Polite officials will be pleased to serve you.
OFFICERS:
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President.
THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier.
BOARD OF DIREOTORS:—J. O° Faxty, 'W. F. Gaamax, E. R. JErrEnson
Jvo.R. Ontrs, B.P. Vaxpervatt, 0. J. Omavers, " Wat. A. HANKINS,
JouN Mirromers, Jn., JNO. T. Tayton, H. F. JonatmaN, Taowas Sarr,
R. W. Wurrixo, Taos. M. Oru, Sro'y,E. A. Wasuinotom, J. J. OARTER,
‘Wintiam Oustaro.
"PHONE, 577 NEW PHONE, 1133.
A. D. PRICE, |
——————__—_—_—_—_—_—_—_——
THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR, “EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN.
> 2l2 EAST LEIGH STREET,
[Residence Next Door.]
OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT—Man on Daty All Night:
ieee nee ee ee
Want to Pind Them. 777 | HAWARN TNIVRRON
__I would like to know the whereabouts
of my brothers William and Anderson
Robinson. When last heard of they
were working in Richmond. Also my
fistere Sallie, Jangand Louise Robinson,
Sallie married and went
tolive, ‘My father's name Wan Walter
Robinson, he was absent at the time of
the war and has not been heard from
since. My mother’s name was Martha
Robinson, and when last heard of was
living with Sallie. Myname is Fran:
Robinson. Posed
Any information concerning them
will be gladly received by
the same.
FRANK Jonsox.
94 Ashland, St. New Haven, Conn.
Seaboard Air-Line Railway, low Zrates
to California and the West.
Every day during the months of Se}
tember and October, the Seaboard lr
‘Line will sell one-way second clase set-
tlers tickets to California and other
Wostern points at _exceodingly low
rates, Service offered by the
unsurpassed by any railroad in’ tae
south.
Farther information cheerfully far-
nlshed by agents or representatives. of
. A. L,, oF call on or
Faneugee Agee”
District a
1006 Bast Main St.,
‘Richmond, Va.
HOWARD — UNIVERSTIn,
Medical Department
Roseting Matta Dental and Phar
maceutic Coll
are ces ‘Sonsfon (1002-1908) will
begin October 1, 1902, and continue
seven © months,
Tuition fee in Medtca? and Dental
Polleges, each $80. Pharmaceutic Col-
lege $70.
All students must register before
October x 1903,
For catalogue or farther information
‘spply to
‘
¥.J.SHADD, a a
$8 B Street, Northwest,
Washington, D, GQ
et eg:
Money to Loan‘
On Easy Terms
Rents are being advanced every day.
It is cheaper to buy. After you have
bought, the pri cannot be raised on
you Wowilll loan yousthe ‘money to
bay, o Pay oft your mortgage on such
easy monthly terms that the money you
ey rent will pay for your ‘house.
GEO. 0. JEFFERSON,
‘Times Building,“*
No. 6 North Tenth Street,