Richmond Planet
Saturday, December 19, 1903
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
A cotene of travelers
On some great errand bent,
Toil o'er mountains and valleys till
Their strength is well nigh spent;
A night is spent in quiet rest,
In the shadow of some great rock,
Where the fire light reveals near by
A shepherd and his flock.
Their garb is of the orient;
Their language of the same;
Their time in thought and converse
spent,
Their learning of great fame;
Their mode of travel, void of haste,
Observant every eye,
Their equipage bespeak at once
That their estate is high.
Absorbent is the subject they
Discuss as there they lay,
They talk about a king to be,
Till comes the break of day,
They all agreed that Palestine
Should be the honored land
Wherein Messiah should appear,
As God ordained and planned.
Again they moved toward the west,
Conversing still of Him,
Whose birth place is their earnest quest,
Till lamps again they trim
For another night of rest before
Their hopes are realized,
And they should view the king of kings.
Whom some would hence despise.
This night as others now was spent
In converse and in rest,
The savans rehearsed prophecies,
And told how men were blest
In having sent into the world
The greatest of his race,
And when His banners were unfurled,
His Foes would find no place.
They traveled yet another day,
Till near the Jewish realm
When, nearing night there came a star
And stood o'er Bethlehem:
This star had been their guide e'er since
They started from the east,
And now it stood as token that
Their wanderings had ceased.
Go, read the Bible, it will tell
How Herod, when he heard,
That one was born to rule in truth,
Sent forth his kingly word,
To say all children born of late;
And thus he would secure
Unto himself the power of state,
Thus have his sway endure.
The wise men who had come from far
to greet this infant king,
Knelt down and proffered praise and
gifts,
Such as the rich might bring,
Without, an angel clothed in white,
Toid of the great event,
And that the Lord of heaven had
To men a Savior sent.
Then in the skies appeared a sign,
On that eventful night;
A countless host of angels came
On wings of swiftest flight,
And sang in chorus "Peace to earth!"
Begus l'are God's great plan;
From this illustrious birth shall date,
Salvation unto man.
Let all the earth in praise break forth,
In honor of this day,
Which heard the heavenly heralds cry,
That first glad Christmas day,
When earth caught from the heavenly
birds.
The song of Jesus' birth,
When angels taught men how to sing,
When heaven came down to earth!;
—O. M. SEWARD
Concord Baptist Church,
Borough of Brooklyn,
New York City,
Dec. 12th, 1908.
Editor John Mitchell, Jr.
Editor, John Patterson, Sr.
My Dear Brother:—The Planet never rendered sweeter news than when it published "Peace Like a River." I read it with great delight, and arose from my chair saying "Glory to God in the highest. Peace on earth, good will to all men." Amen.
May this be the omen of all our great Baptist interests coming together—no North, no South, no East no West—but all one in Christ Jesus.
HEY JUPITER
SATURDAY.....DECEMBER 19, 1903
IN A DENSE FOG.
So Thick That It Stopped Cannon Balls and Created General Havoc—Next!
They were gathered around a campfire telling of the old times. The leading subject had been the fogs down south, says the American Tribune. After the others had tried their memory and imagination in describing dense fogs a little, nervous fellow, with a red nose and a red badge, told the following experience:
"Well, comrades, you may talk about fog for a week and then I can tell of a little difficulty that I had with the stuff that will overlap all you ever saw or imagined. If you had never encountered these dense fogs I would not dare to tax your credulity with my story, but after your experience I believe that here I will have hearers who can comprehend truth, and I will repeat a story I once embodied in an official report and thereby lost a fine chance for promotion, and worse than that lost the name of 'truthful George', which had clung to me for many years. We were down on the Texas coast, and, though only a sergeant, I was in command of a section of our battery. One day scouts reported an advance upon us by the enemy, and I was sent out to the right with two companies of infantry and ordered to throw up a lunette to protect the guns and support. I staked out a redoubt and set the men to work; then went to a planter's house in rear of position, where I took several drinks of peach and honey, and filled my canteen with the same.
"After dark a terrible frog raised, and I ordered the men, who had finished the earthwork, to build a wall of fog back of the fort to portect us in the rear in case the enemy surrounded us. About daylight the rebs advanced, and we gave them case and canister as fast as we could load, and with terrible effect. The enemy replied with cannon and rifles. Though they were in overwhelming force, we could easily have held the position without much loss if that wall of fog had not been built in our rear. You see, the boys, having plenty of material, had built the wall about ten feet high, and every rifle ball and cannon shot that went over us struck that dense wall and rebounded, doing fearful execution. One after another the men were cut down, and I was left alone. Selizing a cartridge, I rammed it home and covered it with a double charge of canister. Just as I withdrew the rammer a ball rebounded.
WE GAVE THEM CASE AND CANISTER.
taking off my right arm. I sprang behind my gun, inserted a primer, and was pulling when another shot struck me back of the neck, but as I fell dead, my hand still grasping the string, the primer exploded, the fire gun, killing so many rebels that the rest—" Just then Colonel Ellis fired the morning gun, the men sprang to their feet and rushed to the cook tent for coffee and hardtack, and "truthful George" did not finish his story.
Cavalrymen as Artillerymen.
"Capt. E. R. P. Shurley," said the sergeant, "used to tell the story of a battery of artillery that was never at the front, and yet was on active and important duty from the day the men were enlisted to the day they were mustered out. This was the Twenty-fourth Ohio battery, organized in August, 1864, and sent immediately to Johnson's island in anticipation of an attempt to release the rebel prisoners at that point. The attempt was not made, and on the 27th of August the battery was ordered to Camp Douglas, Chicago, where it remained until June 10, 1865. It was one of the best drilled and best disciplined batteries in the service, and yet it never fired a shot in battle"—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
Military Tactics
A majority of the officers and men on both sides were very green about military tactics at the beginning of the war. A Michigan captain, it is said, who had been accustomed to driving an ox team in a lumber camp, when he first undertook to march his men, instead of saying "file left," or "file right," or "march," used to call out: "Whoa; gee, there!" "Haw round ahead;" "G'lang in front, an' hurry up the ind!" An Arkansas colonel of cavalry is credited with the following: First Order—Prepar'er ter grit on to yer critters! Second order—Git—American Tribune.
Looking Forward.
"Does your wife ever borrow trouble?"
"Does she? She's already begun worrying about the hay fever that she'll have next summer:."—Chicago Record-Herald.
Discontent.
The root of all discontent is sad love—J. F. Clarke.
---
MAKES MEN VIGOROUS.
Valuable Prescription by Which Any
Ma Can Make His Own Remedy
to Cure Himself at Home Sent
Free to All. write for it.
For the return of that youthful feeling of manhood a prominent Detroit physician and savant is in possession of a receipt which he has
America's Greatest Specialist.
If you need such a remedy, send your name, address to day to the Dr. Knapp Med. Co., 851 S. 10th St., Chicago, IL 60610, marked envelope the doctor will at once send you the receipt, as promised, in explained in advance that use and how to compound, so that you can himself in his own home without being under obligations to any one. If costs you nothine, sooner, you write, the sooner you will be incurred.
Embracing All Classes.
The "sandwich army" of London is over 7,000 strong. In the service of one advertising contractor have been clergymen, doctors, architects, actors, clerks, and even a former wealthy souire. Sheer misfortune, as a rule, presses men into the work, but, according to a well-known contractor, drink is the chief recruiting sergeant of the army of board-bearers, whose ordinary wages vary from one shilling to two shillings a day.
To Foll the Rats.
To keep rats away from vegetables a simple way is to set four bricks on end and set the barrel on top of these bricks, using the bricks for legs of the barrel. This places the barrel at such a high that the rat cannot reach it to gnaw, neither can he climb up, for the reason that the bricks are inside the chine and when he reaches up he strikes the bottom of the barrel and cannot go any further.—Good Housekeeper.
A. La Chinoise.
"Miss Tenterhook has asked me to be one of her bridesmaids," said Miss Elder to Miss Flypp.
"Oh, then, she really has adopted the Chinese idea," was Miss Flypp's comment.
"What is that?"
"Why, don't you know? In China only the elderly ladies act as bridesmaids."—Town Topics.
Explained It All.
"Sir," began the youth, "I have come to ask for your daughter's hand in—" "No, sir!" snorted her father, "You can't have her! What could possibly have prompted you to ask—" "Why—er—she did, sir!" "Oh, that's different. Also, that settles it."-Philadelphia Press.
A Woman Engineer.
Miss Nora Stanton Blatch entered the Cornell university to take a course of instruction in engineering. She was the only woman graduate who made a study of this subject and so thorough was her training that it included forge work. She actually took her place at one of the college blacksmith's 20 forges.
Great Lover of Animals
Mrs. John Morley, who is a great lover of animals, always has a pet dog sitting on his lap when he is writing in his study; and when he used to live in a house at the top of a hill he invariably alighted from his carriage at a certain point in order to relieve the horse.
Sareasm.
Mr. Klumsay (waltzing)—My! how slippery this floor is. It's hard to keep on your feet.
Sharpe—Oh! you're really trying to keep on my feet, then, are you? I thought it was merely accidental.—Philadelphia Press.
Pretty Compliment.
No public man ever paid a prettier compliment to the fair sex than Mr. Choate, the American ambassador, who, looking up at a public meeting to the ladies in the gallery above him, said: "Thou madest man a little lower than the angels."
Worked a Bln$
"What did you bow to those people for? You don't know them."
"What's the difference? They don't know whether I know them or not, and it makes people think I'm in society."—Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.
And Not In Sports Alone.
The Maid—But the other team doesn't admit the possibility of defeat.
The Full Back—That's proper. It may be all right to know when you're beaten, but it's a great mistake to find it out too soon.—Puck.
Girl Drug Clerks
There is a demand for girls as clerks in German drug stores. The course of instruction requires three years, except in the case of high school graduates, who need only two.
The Color Red.
Red can be distinguished at a greater distance than any other color.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
When you want nice dry, sawed pine wood, call up 2883. We sell $1/2 cord for $2 75, guaranteed full measurer. A full line of fancy and staple groceries and fresh meats. Granulated sugar $4/4 cts per lb. Prices low on everything this week. Hard and soft coal. Hay and Grain.
FRANK WALLER, JR.
PRACTICAL HOUSE PAINTER,
914 N. St. James St., Richmond, Va.
(Rendence) 1 E. Orange St.
Residence, P. E. Orange St.
Prompt attention given to all mail orders. Satisfaction guaranteed.
All Kinds of Painting Done Cheap.
Give me a call before going elsewhere
Hellol Call Phone No. 4432.
RICHMOND GROCERY CO
NO. 430 N. 6TH STREET.
And order your high grade goods
AT LOW PRICES.
POLITE ATTENTION,
Prompt and free delivery to any part
of the City or Manchester.
E. F. LIGHTFOOT, and
6mo R. D. GRANDERSON, Agts
WHY WORRY over your dreams or enemies when our book will give you the interpretation n to any dream, also a charm to protect you from danger? If you are in trouble or want to find anything out it will tell you exactly what to do. It also contains the Hindoo secret of love, how to manage, what to say and do to gain the love, heart and hand. Sent postpaid to any address for 180. in stamps. PRUNTY & Co., 127 Roy St., Braddock, Pa. 3t
Wanted—TRUST WORTHY LADY or Gentleman to manage business in this County and adjoining territory for house of solid financial standing $20.00 straight cash salary and expenses paid each Monday direct from headquarters. Expense money advanced; position permanent. Address, Manager, 605 Monon Bldg., Chicago. 11-21-03to1-9-04
THE FRISCO SYSTEM
OPERATES Double Daily Train
Carrying Pullman Sleepers. Cafe Car (a la carte) and Chair Cars (seats free
Electric Lighted Throughout
BETWEEN
Birmingham, Memphis and Kansas Ca
AND TO ALL POINTS IN
Texas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory
AND THE
Far West and Northwest
THE ONLY THROUGH SLEEPING CAR LIE
BETWEEN THE SOUTHEAST AND
KANSAS CITY
W. T. SAUNDERS, GENL AGT. PASS. DEP.
OR
W. T. SAUNDERS
Gen'l Agent Passenger Department
ATLANTA, GA.
YOUR LIFE READ FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE
For the benefit of those who wish to have their life read by the world's greatest life reader, one that can tell you all that you wish to know, give you luck, change your life from evil to good, reunite the separated, restore a lost love, draw to you your sweetheart, husband or wife, make people do as you wish them
In fact this wonderful WOMAN is the Greatest on Earth.
Now if you want to find out what your future life will be and what your past has been, and want to have it changed from evil to good, send at once to this wonderful medium.
Send lock of hair, date of your birth and 25 cents in silver, and receive your life written from cradle to grave. Do not send postage stamps. Address all letters to MRS. Dr. WEHT.
1917 E. Pratt St. Baltimore, Md.
The Watch-word should be, "YOUR OWN FIRST, LAST AND ALL TIMES."
We carry a full line of Overcoats for men, youths and children from $2 up to $15. SUITS, from $1.00 up to $18.00. SHOES, from $1.00 up to $4.00. HATS, from 25cts. up to $4.50. UNDERWEAR of all descriptions for men and women, both wool, cotton and mixed. Special discount allowed to Ministers and Students. Don't make a mistake in the place. The only one of the kind in Richmond. Country Orders Solicited and Goods promptly shipped to any part of the state.
New Enterprise,
Southern Aid Society
HOME OFFICE -- 504 N. 2nd St. Richmond, Va.
One of the strongest and promptest paying Sick Benefit Insurance Companies in the State. You cannot afford to be out of it and should not hesitate to join when our agents call on you.
HONESTY THE BEST POLICY is "OUR MOTTO"
OFFICERS AND BOARD:
A. WASHINGTON, PRESIDENT; EDWARD STEWARD, VICE-PRESIDENT;
WALTER E. BAKER, TREASURER;
B. L. JORDAN
REV. STONEY R. STANTON
HONER R. BROWN
B. L. JOYCE REV. SIDNEY B. STANTON HENRY B. BURWELL JAMES T. OARTER A. PAUL THOS. M. CRUMP, SECRETARY & GENERAL MANAGER
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
Mechanics'
Savings Bank
OF RICHMOND, VA
—511 North Third Street.—
Capital, $25,000.
Mechanics'
Savings Bank
OF RICHMOND, VA
—511 North Third Street.
Capital, $25,000.
in deposit and interest paid on a
which remains 60 days and over.
Satisfactory Security.
Handled Promptly.
nts and upwards received on deposit.
up in the most improved style, having a large
chest, electric lights and every modern conven-
tionation of the public.
Mining Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the
arranged for the special convenience of the work-
to 4 P. M. Saturdays, 9 A. M. to 3 P. We
open again at 5 P. M., remaining open until 7
a work.
Money received on deposit amounts above $1.00 which re-
Money Loaned on Satisfaction
Business Accounts Handled
Amounts of ten cents and
This establishment is fitted up in the white vault, burlar-proof steel chest, ele-
lence for safety and the accommodation
For all information concerning Stock Cashier.
Banking Hours have been arranged in people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. close Saturday at 3 P. M. and open again. P. M. Call by as you come from work.
OFFICI
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President.
THON. H. W.
BOARD OF
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., JN.
E. R. JEFFERSON H. F. JONATHAN
J. O. FARLEY
E. A. WASHINGTON, R. W. WHITING,
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., FRES.
Money received on deposit and interest paid on a amounts above $1.00 which remains 60 days and over.
Money Loaned on Satisfactory Security.
Business Accounts Handled Promptly.
Amounts of ten cents and upwards received on deposit.
This establishment is fitted up in the most improved style, having a large white vault, burlar-proof steel chest, electric lights and every modern convenience for safety and the accommodation of the public.
For all information concerning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the Cashier.
Banking Hours have been arranged for the special convenience of the working people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Saturdays, 9 A. M. to 3 P. . We close Saturday at 3 P. M. and open again at 5 P. M., remaining open: until 7 P. M. Call by as you come from work.
OFFICERS:
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President.
THON. H. WYATT, Cashier.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., JNO. R. CHILES, B. P. VANDERVALL,
E. R. JEFFERSON H. F. JONATHAN, THOMAS SMITH D. J. CHAVERS,
J. C. FARLEY, JNO. T. TAYLOR,
WILLIAM CUSTALO, J. J. CARTER,
THOMAS M. CRUNP, SEC'r.
+ +
DENTISTRY
PAINLESS EXTRACTION
For beautiful Teeth, Comfort,
Pleasure and Health.
OFFICE HOURS:—From 8 A. M. to 6 P.
M. Old Phone, 816.
DR. P. B. RAMSEY,
102 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
Fred G. Gray,
208 West Leigh St.
THE STOVE MAN.
The Watch-word should
We carry a full line of SUITS, from $1.00 up to $18.00 up to $4.50. UNDERWEAR and mixed. Special discount in the place. The only one of Goods promptly shipped to an
New
You can have all kinds of Stoves Repaired and put up. Also your Roofs, Gutters, Conductors Repaired and Painted at a reasonable price.
Your patronage will be highly appreciated. old Phone, 2807. FRED G. GRAY, Richmond, Va. SYDNOR AND HUNDLEY, LEADERS IN Quality Furniture
I. J. MILLER, Prop.
Out of Town Orders Solicited and will Receive Prompt and Careful Attention.
Family Wine, Liquor and
Cigar Store
422 East Broad Street, Richmond, Va.
We make a speciality of, Mt. Vernon,
Gibson, Old Jasper, Pennbrook Rye, Wilson, Old Henry,
Old North Carolina Corn Whiskey
and Mountain Apple Brandy.
PARLOR SUITS.
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.
BEST AND MOST POPULAR BRANDS OF CIGARS.
Goods Delivered Free to all Parts of the City. BUFFETIN REAR.
PHONE 2234.
MORRIS CHAIRS.
This always popular chain 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.
Hotel Lawson,
406 Cor. Monroe & Gay Sts.,
DANVILLE, VIRGINIA.
OPEN AT ALL HOURS.
The only colored Hotel in the city.
Visitors will end this the place to rest well and enjoy a good repast. Meals—25cents and served at regular hours on reasonable notice.
Sydnor & Hundley,
MISS O. E. JONES, Proprietress,
LA WASON, Genl Manager,
de12'99:
L. W. G. G.
Wood and Coal, Cigar
AT THE LOWEST P
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY
ALL GOODS DELIVER
TELE PHONE
A. C. BOOKE
501 WEBSTER ST
PHONE 577.
A. D. P
THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
All orders promptly filled at short
rented for meetings and nice entertainment
conveniences. Large picnic or band wa-
ing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc.
Supplies.
212 EAST L
GLOBAL, CIGARS and TEBACCO.
LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
E MONEY BY GIVING ME A CALL.
IS DELIVERED TO YOU FREE.
PHONE 1307
OOKER, Prop.
WEBSTER ST., RICHMOND, VA.
77. RICHMOND, VA.
D. PRICE,
DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN.
ply filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Hall
nice entertainments. Plenty of room with all necessa
nicic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and noo
gages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine Funeral
EAST LEIGH STREET.
AT THE LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY GIVING ME A CALL.
ALL GOODS DELIVERED TO YOU FREE.
PHONE 577. RICHMOND. VA.
THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Hailer rented for meetings and nice entertainments Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and noticing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine Funeral Supplies.
212 EAST LEIGH STREET.
212 EAST LEIGH STREET.
[Residence Next Door.]
Y & NIGHT--Man on Duty All Night
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLD
V. P. & F. K. of W.
OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT--Man on Duty All Night
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
This organization has been chartered and legally instituted 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 to the Social and Moral condition of humanity. Literary and uniform ranks will secure for this organization all sacred institutions of modern events. Grand Deputies wanted in all sections of the country to organize finally address.
7. ALLEN Supreme voyager.
46 W 87th Street, New York City.
Enterprise !!
Stock. New Prices.
For the People of Richmond and the State of and examine our Stock of Clothing, Hats, s' Furnishings before making purchases are the only Colored Clothiers in the state. Selected line of goods for Gentlemen, La. We know we can please you both in. An increase of business means an in- Negro Problem to solve, the only way to do and patronize colored enterprises.
IN FIRST, LAST AND ALL TIMES."
Men, youths and children from $2 up to $15. men $1.00 up to $4.00. HATS, from 25cts. s for men and women, both wool, cotton corsets and Students. Don't make a mistake Richmond. Country Orders Solicited and
erprise,
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 metals. Broad Bases of Charity—Beneficial to the Social and Medical
Fraternal and to promote the Social and
Its two distinct military and uniform
place on the front ranks it all sacred in
unity for active men. Deputies wante
lodges
Kindly address,
G. W. ALLENS
340 W 37th Street
It two distinct military and uniform ranks will serve for this organization place in the front ranks of all sacred institutions of modern events. a ground course unity for active men. Deputies wanted in all sections of the country to organize lodges. Kindly address,
G. W. ALLEN Supreme voyager.
846 W 87th Street, New York City.
New Enterprise !!
New Stock. New Prices.
AN APPEAL to the People of Richmond and the State of Virginia to call and examine our Stock of Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Gents' Furnishings before making purchases elsewhere, as we are the only Colored Clothiers in the state. We carry a well selected line of goods for Gentlemen, Ladies and Children. We know we can please you both in prices and quality. An increase of business means an increase of clerks.
If there is any Negro Problem to solve, the only way to do it is to build up and patronize colored enterprises.
S OF FURNITURE
are becoming more pupular each succeeding year. It's a wiser plan to BUY NOW and have the goods set aside. The diversity of our stock and the large number of exclusive designs in
make our store particularly interesting to gift buyers. CREDIT AND TERMS TO SUIT.
A
Booker'S Market
501 Webster St. A FULL LINE OF FINE GROCERIES AND FRESH MEATS & VEGETABLES
528 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
SCOUNDRELS & CO.
By COULSON KERNAHAN
Author of "Captain Shannon," "A Book of Strange Sins," "A Dead Man's Diary," Etc.
Copyright, 1899, by Herbert S. Stone & Co.
CHAPTER I.
SEE A STRANGE SIGHT IN THE CABIN OF THE SEA SWALLOW.
It was getting dark when I arrived at Southend, whither I had journeyed to join a friend who was on board his rach't. I had unluckily missed the train by which I was expected, so there was no one to meet me at the station, but knowing that my friend's little craft was to be some few hundred yards off the pier-head, I made my way to the beach, and hailing a waterman who had just come ashore in his skiff, I asked him if he knew Mr. Arthur Duncan's yacht by sight.
"No, sir," he said. "I don't know Mr. Duncan, nor his boat. What's her name?"
"Ahl! That I can't tell you," I replied. "I know she's a ten-tonner and a yawl, and that she was to be off the pier-head, but her name I don't know."
"That's all right, sir," said the man seassuringly. "She's there yet. The Mids on the turn. If you'll jump in I can put you alongside o' her in twenty minutes."
He was as good as his word, but though as soon as we were within carshot of the yacht I hailed her with a lusty "Duncan, ahoy!" one one came on deck in response to my summons.
"I suppose my friend has gone ashore—perhaps to look for me—and has taken his skipper with him. He must have done so, because I see that the dinghy's gone. Never mind, I'll go aboard and wait for him." Saying which I scrambled from the skiff upon the yacht's deck, paid the waterman, and dismissed him.
As I had been up very late the night before, and the strong air of South- and had made me sleepy, I decided to go below and have a nap. My first idea was to make myself comfortable upon one of the cushioned lockers in the cabin, but, thinking to play a practical joke upon Duncan, I disposed myself, lasted, in the empty space under the sleeping berth in the fo'castle, covering myself with some old tarpaulins which had been bundled there—I suppose to be out of the way. The cabin was curtained off from the fo'castle by heavy plush hangings, but I managed to arrange the tarpaulins and the hangings so that I should be able to see what took place when Duncan enferred. That done, I settled myself for a sleep, from which I was aroused by the bumping of a boat against the yacht's side.
There was a scuffing sound, as of somebody clamming on board. A voice which I did not recognize said, "Here you are, boatman," and a grant "Tankee," sr." was followed by, "Wish you good-night," as the boat was shoved off.
The dip of the oars had sternely died away before another voice, which was unknown to me, halted us from the water: "Sea Swallow, ahoy!" "Sea Swallow, it is," said the man on deck, and soon a second boat grated against the yacht's side and put a passenger on board.
I was now beginning to feel rather uncomfortable. Should it turn out that the yacht on which I had so foolishly concealed myself was not my friend's craft, after all, I should look extremely silly when called on to account for my presence there. Hence I need scarcely say that I awaited the advent of the new-comers with considerable anxiety — anxiety which was not relieved by the feet that, instead of coming below, they remained on deck talking together in tones so low that I could not catch their words.
By-and-by one of the two said, "Here's another dinghy," and soon a third boat ran along of us, followed not long after by a fourth and fifth, which arrived simultaneously.
Thon when a sixth, and finally a seventh, had put a passenger on board, a voice which I had not before heard, said:
"Come, gentlemen; let us get below." The tone in which the words were spoken seemed to imply a command rather than a request, and was certainly not that in which a host would address his guests.
But what else might be the relations between the speaker and the rest of the company, the simultaneous shuffling of feet overhead told me that the proposal to adjourn to the cabin had received the assent of the meeting.
As the cabin was lighted by a swinging oil lamp, and the fo castle, where I was concealed, was entirely in darkness, I ran very little risk of discovery; but all the same—when I heard the first step upon the companion ladder which led from the deck—instinctively drew back my head under the tarpaulins, where I could neither see nor be seen.
After about half a minute I made bold to advance my head again, so as to get a sight of what was going on. And such a sight!
For the first moment I could not believe my eyes, but was persuaded that I was still sleeping. How else was I to account for the sight I saw, except by supposing that the whole business of the seven boats, each carrying a mysterious passenger, was a dream of which the present scene was a continuation.
Standing around the table were seven men, all so exactly alike that I should not have been surprised had I been told that I was looking at one man surrounded by six fascimiles of himself.
No one who had seen that sight, under such circumstances as I saw it, would have wondered that I could not believe the evidence of my senses, but lay there open-mouthed and scarce daring to breathe, my eyes journeying in a circle from face to face and from figure to figure, till I was dazed and drunken with imbecile astonishment.
All the seven were of swarthy complexion. All had bushy brown hair, with brown beards, trimmed in the same manner. All wore glasses, and all were dressed exactly alike in blue
Ferge suits, with turn-down collars, blue and white spotted sailor scarfs, and black bowler hats of similar shape. While I was gaping at this singular spectacle, one of the seven took the seat at the head of the table with his back to me, motioning to the others to seat themselves, which they did, three on each side, leaving the space at the foot of the table unoccupied. Then the chairman struck the table sharply with his open hand.
"Let the candidate for the seventh place on the council stand forward," he said.
For the space of three of four seconds nobody stirred. Then a man, who was sitting near the entrance to the cabin, shot to his feet as if taken by surprise, squared his shoulders, with his arms lying stiff at his side, and stood in the attitude which in the drillyard is known as "at attention." I could not see the face of the man at the head of the table, but I knew instinctively that the two eyes of him were covering the candidate, like twin guns in a battery screwed up to cover a target. Though his back was to me, I seemed in some way to feel the penetrating intentness of his eyes, and to share the discomposure which the object of his scrutiny was evidently experiencing. The military stiffness of the upstander's bearing seemed to ooze out of his fingertips. His shoulders contracted, and his head, which at first was well thrown back, came forward, and into his eyes stole a sheepsh. furtive look which but ill became him.
All this was not lost upon the man at the head of the table. It seemed to me that his voice took on an added sharpness as, with the single word "There," he pointed with his pen to the foot of the table where the candidate would be facing the company. The man moved to the position indicated, and then the chairman addressed him in a hard, cold voice— "You have come here as a candidate for the seventh place on the council? Is that so?" "That is so," replied the other spollenly.
"I need not tell you that you have not been invited here to night without due consideration as to your ability for the post you seek to fill. I may tell you too that you have been a 'marked man' for some months past. If I mistake not, you have suspected the position of affairs in regard to this council for a long time, and we decided that one of two things must happen—either that your undoubted ability must be enlisted on the side of the council, or else—well—that the council must be protected from any injury you have it in your power to do what. The latter alternative would necessitate need not now, fortunately, be dwelled upon. You have, I believe, been sounded—carefully, of course—in regard to your readiness to undertake the responsibilities of the post. Am I right in supposing that you do not come here altogether ignorant of what these responsibilities mean?"
"I do not," said the candidate.
"You are aware that once having joined us there is no going back, and that for the man who plays us false there is only one penalty?"
The fellow nodded.
"Very good. And, on the other hand, you are probably not unaware that there are certain advantages accruing to a seat on the council which are not altogether to be despised?"
"I had surmised as much," said the candidate, almost insolently, and with a greedy glitter in his small eyes.
"Very good," with an inclination of the head.
"Is it your will, brothers, that this man be elected to the council in place of Councillor Number Seven, whose name we have decided to remove?"
He looked inquiringly at his six colleagues, some of whom responded with "Yes," while others merely nodded assent.
"Very well. You are elected, and will be known henceforth as Councillor Number Seven. You may perhaps think, considering the importance to yourself, and to us, and to others, of the post you now occupy, that our ceremony of election is somewhat informal. But we are men, and in earnest: not children playing at being conspirators. Hence we go through no melodramatic form of 'initiation,' and exact from you no harrowing vow. We, who constitute the council, are united by the strongest of all bonds—self-interest. That is a bond which binds men more closely than any oath. Sit down, Councillor Number Seven. Now that you are one of us, it is right that you should be taken into our confidence to some extent. You are no doubt aware that most of us here are more or less officially connected with certain organizations and societies, some of which are secret, and some of which are not?"
"Quite aware," was the prompt response. "All of which are of a political nature?"
"That I understand, too."
"Very well. Just now there is a big public that is in favor of agitation of every sort—of leagues, associations and unions—and we have practically got the management of such matters into our own hands. Then, as you know, there are some secret societies which are not ungenerously supported in this country and in America, and these, too, we may be said to control. In fact, if I may use such a term, we who constitute this council form a sort of syndicate for the taking over and carrying of everything in the way of agitation and revolt, from a secret society for the assassination of crowned heads and tyrants, down to an agitation against an unpopular landlord, a political meeting, or a strike. Do I make myself understood?"
"Perfectly."
"You have perhaps, however, sur-
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
mised that, although we fully approve the patriotic and commendable sentiments which inspire so many thousands in England and America to subscribe their money for the carrying on of the work, we ourselves are not inclined to give our services entirely gratuitously?"
He paused and looked curiously at the new councillor, who nodded his entire consent and hearty approval of this statement of the case.
"In fact, you will not be surprised to learn that—like statesmen and patriots, who devote their time to the public service because they find that by
Jannier.
COUNCILLOR NUMBER SEVEN.
doing so they can best forward their private interests; like clergymen and ministers, who so long as people are willing to pay for religion are quite ready to preach it; and, in short, like every one else who is not absolutely a fool—our first consideration, in the conduct of whatever business the public think fit to entrust to us, is not to put too fine a point upon it, to feather our own nests. It is quite true that there are many men and women working in connection with these associations and societies who, there is no denying, are honest and disinterested; and very good decoy ducks they are too, to bring the money in. But such men and women, though they do not suspect it, are simply our tools. We are not, of course, such fools as to spoil, our own game by killing the goose, that lays the golden eggs. But in our case the game is a very easy 'one to play. If an attempt—successful or unsuccessful—upon the life of some hated monarch or unpopular statesman, the blowing up of a palace or prison, or similar demonstration, did not occur every now and then, our subscribers would begin to think that they were getting nothing for their money, and supplies would cease. But though much of the enormous power which is given to us by the complete control of all these societies, leagues, associations and unions is used by us for political purposes, we do not hesitate to use this same power in the interests of our own pockets. For instance, if we heard that large sums of money or other valuables were being conveyed from one place to another, or were secreted in any particular building, and we could avail ourselves of the power which we have at our control to secure that sum of money for ourselves, we should not hesitate about putting the machinery into motion. Do you remember the mysterious robbery at the duchess of Doncaster's?"
"Why, yes!" gasped Number Seven, for once genuinely surprised. "One hundred thousand pounds in jewels and hard cash disappeared, no one knew where."
"Precisely," said the chairman coolly. "They did not realize so much as that, however, although, owing to the fact that we have agents in most of the continental cities, we have exceptional facilities for the disposal of valuables.
"That now, as a case in point, could never have been negotiated successfully but for the intricate machinery which we have it in our power to set in motion. No ordinary 'conveyor'—if I may use the term—could have carried that bit of business through to a successful issue, even with the assistance of skillful confederates."
"And the proceeds of that haul, do I understand that they were divided among the seven councillors?" asked Councillor Number Seven, with glittering eyes.
"Precisely. It was a benefit performance. You are still desirous of assuming the—shall we say—responsibilities of councillorship?"
"Need you ask?"
"And when would you like to commence the duties?"
"This minute."
"Good. Well, as I have told you, we do not, when we elect a new member to the council, exact any solemn oath of secrecy from him. The rule—the invariable rule—which we have adopted in place of any such meaningless exaction is this. Whenever a new member is elected, that member has to qualify himself, so to speak, by carrying out personally the first 'removal' which may be decreed by the counsel. We do this as much for our own protection as for any other reason. The fact that a member is equally 'committed' with ourselves and has rendered himself liable to the same legal penalties, is the best guarantee of his loyalty that we could possibly have. Do you follow?"
"I follow," replied the new councilor, doggedly.
"Well, this is the situation. We recently elected to a place on the council—to the very place you now fill—a new member. He had taken life on more than one occasion, and we thought we were sure of our man, or we should not have invited him to join us. But we have since discovered—it is the one and only mistake of the sort we have made—that we have been misled in him. Not that he is not fully as eager to accept responsibility—even the most dangerous responsibility—as any of us. On that ground we have no cause for complaint. But the fact in that when he joined us he was under the impression that our motives were entirely disinterested and patriotic. The discovery that we were not altogether uninfluenced by personal considerations was a shock to him,
and produced so great a revulsion of feeling that—as we have entertained—he is in communication with the police, in order that he may serve the cause about which he is so infatuated by ridding it of the men—ourselves—who in his opinion are its betrayers and enemies. He is at this moment alone on board the little yacht which lies in a straight line a couple of hundred yards further out at sea than this vessel. At present the police know nothing of what he has to tell them. The matter has not gone far enough for that. All that he has done is to send word to a certain detective that he has an important communication to make. He has asked that detective—Detective Marten—to join him at 12 o'clock to night on board the yacht to receive the communication. His reason for so doing is as follows: The council was to meet on board this yacht not to night, but to-morrow night. The man who intends betraying us does not know that we are aware of his intended treachery and that we have altered our date of meeting. He thinks it is to-morrow that we are to assemble, and after he has made known our plans to the detective he will propose that our meeting be allowed to take place, and that then, when we are gathered together here like rats in a trap, the police shall surround the yacht and make the whole of us prisoners. It is a prettily enough arranged programme, but the poor fool has underrated our abilities and our resources for obtaining information." "And where do I come in, in this business?" asked the newly appointed councillor pernously.
"Ah! you are business-like," replied the chairman, with a smile. "Listen. The detective is to join Councillor Number Seven, as we will continue for the present to call him, at midnight, on board the yacht I have told you of. It will be our business to see that he is prevented from getting there, and you may rely upon our doing it, for the resources at our command can compilish anything. We are going to take you in advance with us in the dinghy when this meeting is concluded. There a skiff will be waiting for you, in which you will row out to pay a visit to Councillor Number Seven. In fact, you will go there impersonating his expected visitor Detective Marten. He has never seen Marten, and doesn't even know what he is like, which simplifies matters very much. You see this india-rubber ball, scarcely bigger than a marble? You will have no difficulty in concealing it in the palm of your left hand. You notice that there is a tiny tube or pipe to it? Well, Councillor Number Seven has a long story and a dry one to tell you, and from what I know of him, I can promise you that he will offer you refreshment, and will not want much pressing to join you himself. You must make some opportunity, when he is not looking, to pass your hand over his drink. As you do, so squeeze the ball, and if one drop of what it contains goes into the whisky, your business will be done. But even if you can't manage the business that way, you will have no difficulty in effecting his removal, for he has arranged to give the detective a berth for the night, and you can easily chloroform him when he is asleep. We'll supply you with the drug for the purpose."
"And what do I do with the body?" asked the new councillor. His face was now deadly pale, and his fingers were picking at the braid on his coat while he spoke.
"That too we have arranged," was the answer. "You see that brown leather hand-bag on the locker? Lift it. Rather heavy, isn't it? Let me show you what it contains. This weight attached to a chain is heavy enough to sink two men. When your business with Councillor Number Seven is transacted, you will slip the chain round his ankle, fasten it so, and drop the body overboard. Then haul up the anchor, row ashore, and leave the yacht to drift with the tide. She may go a long way out to sea, and the farther the better.
"On the first of next, month the council meets again, when you will make your report. Put this letter in your pocket. It contains instructions as to where we meet and under what circumstances.
"And now about the disguse. You received, before you came here tonight, the clothes you are wearing, the false beard and the rest of it, with instructions in regard to 'getting up.' "Yes," said the recruit; "but I didn't know that all the seven were to be disguised allie, and it gave me a turn when I first came down in the cabin. It is the clearest thing I ever saw, for behaved if the seven of us aren't as like as two peas. If we were all shuffled together like cards in a pack I don't believe I could pick out any one of us again to save my life. What's it for, and how do you know each other again?"
"We don't know each other again," was the calm reply. "No man here except myself, so far as I am aware, knows the name of any of his fellow councillors. Why should they? There's no chance of my turning informer. If I turned Queen's evidence a thousand times over, it wouldn't save my neck. What there is against me is too bad and there is too much of it for that ever to be thought of. Hence we are known to each other only by a number. You are Number Seven and I am Number One, as I ought to be, for I originated the whole concern. Every man here has been invited to join us on my responsibility alone. I do the thing carefully, you must admit. In your own case, for instance, I knew what your suspicions were about the council and I had satisfied myself that it would be safe to make overtures to you, or else you would not have received the invitation in response to which you are here to-night. And yet you don't know who I am, nor whether you and I have ever met until to-night. Is that so?"
The admission was made grudgingly and reluctantly. But, blended with something very like fear, there was in the way in which the words were spoken, the submission of one who recognizes his master.
"As for your inquiry, 'What's it for?' went on the councillor who called himself 'Number One.' " "I should hardly have thought a man of your acumen would have needed to put the question. The facts about a con-
cern of this sort can't be kept too close. Why should you put your head into a noose of which others hold the string? Don't you see it's safer for each individual councillor if his identity is kept a secret? This man whom you are replacing on the council—if he'd known who his fellow-councillors were, it is very possible that he'd have given all our names to the police and that each of us would have had two or three detectives on his track who would have arrested us separately. As it is, all he can tell them is that the whole of us meet here to-morrow night; but who we are and where we hang out, he can't say: so that it is only now and then, and for a few hours, that we run any danger. And I need hardly tell you that we didn't come here to-night until I had satisfied myself that no traat, was being laid to take us, and that there was nothing stirring among the police beyond what I have already spoken of. Can't you see, too, what advantage this system of our all being disgusted alike presents? We will have to put your beard and wig in your bag when you go to see Number Seven, because you go to him personating Marten. But you will resume the disguse when the business is done. Suppose you are coming ashore after accomplishing the job, and a description of you gets into the hands of the police. They will at once inquire at the two railway stations if a man answering your description has been seen, and they will be told 'Yes,' for the six of us will be leaving Southend—as far as possible by different routes or by different trains—and the police will be pelting all over the country after us, leaving the course almost clear to you. Don't you see how it scatters the scent? The police are at a disadvantage in fighting us. When we bring off any little job, they start, knowing nothing about it, and when they get to know they have to ind out, then takes time; whereas we start knowing all about it, and with all our arrangements made beforehand. In fact, seven determined men with brains, all working together as we do, can snap their fingers at Scotland yard; and it seems to me that there is a big future for this syndicate as a business concern. What say you, Councillor Number Seven? Are you still as strong as ever on joining us?" "Yes."
"Very well. Let's get to business. We'll go ashore now, gentlemen, and arrange for the new councillor. Number Seven here, to make his little cal-upon Councillor Number Seven that was."
He rose from his chair as he spoke, and led the way to the deck, the recruit following closely behind him with the bag. In a very few minutes the dip of their paddles had died away, and cramped and chilled by my long vigil, I crept out from my hiding place into the now empty cabin, wondering how best I could go to work to frustrate the villainy of this precious Syndicate of Scoundrels.
CHAPTER II
HOW I WARNED A DOOMED MAN OF
HIS DANGER.
I was not long in making up my
mind. Had I known anything on
o yachting, I should have set sail, hauled
up the anchor, and made for the shore;
but no First Lord of the Admiralty
knows less about a boat than I did at
that time. Row ashore I could not, as
the rascals who had just left had
taken the dinghy, and I did not like to
call out for help, lest I should bring the
same crew of scoundrels back to the
yacht. Unless I made an effort to swim
to the pier-head I should have to
remain on board all night, and in the
meantime murder was being done.
Without more ado I slipped off my clothes and dived into the water, striking out with all my strength. But it was not to be. The tide was now setting seaward at a great pace. Struggle as I would, I soon realized that it was impossible to reach the plier-head; so I ceased swimming and, turning on my back, I had the current drift me, feet foremost, towards the yacht which I had just left, paddling meanwhile with my hands, that I might keep my body on an even keel. As I neared the yacht I raised my head a little and squinted across my chest to my toes, to make sure that I should not be carried past her. In doing so I caught a glimpse of another small vessel that lay some quarter of a nile out to sea and in direct line of the current. It was no doubt the very boat on which the crime was to be committed. With the tide in my favor it would not be difficult to reach her, so I turned on my chest again, and passing under the yacht's counter, I struck out boldly for the farther craft.
By the time I reached her I was quite exhausted, and when some one jumped up suddenly and called out, "Is that you, inspector?" I thought it better to say "Yes," and to get on board as soon as possible, than to expend what little breath still remained in my body by entering upon what under any circumstances would be a difficult explanation.
"Well, I've always heard that you were a tricky one, Marten," said my new friend. "But I'll be hanged if this doesn't beat cock-fighting. Fancy your swimming all the way out so that no one should know where you were going to. I guess you're blown a bit, aren't you? We'll go below and have a drink, if you'll wait here a minute while I light the lamp."
My swim from one yacht to the other had been undertaken in such a hurry that I had no time in which to speculate upon the probable appearance of the person whom I had come there to warn; and I was therefore quite unprepared to find, when I joined him in the cabin, that he resembled in every way the seven mysterious beings whose extraordinary and uncanny likeness one to the other had so startled me an hour ago. Had I given the matter a moment's thought, I might have known that there was nothing strange in the fact that he was still wearing his disguise. But the events of the night had made me suspicious, and as I stood there staring at him I could not help asking myself, "What if I am too late? What if this is not the man who was marked out for murder, but the murderer himself. Why did he bid me wait while he went down to light the lamp? and whi-
was ne so long about it? Can it be that I surprised him at his devilish work, and that while I was waiting shivering on the deck he was putting the body out of sight and clearing away the evidence of his crime?"
While all of this was passing through my mind my companion had been starring back at me in a way which showed that he too was ill at ease.
"What's the matter, inspector?" he said, looking about him nervously.
"Any one would think you had seen a ghost. The cold swim has affected you a bit, hasn't it? Help yourself to a whisky. That'll put life into you sooner than anything."
DANNER
MOTIONLESS UPON THE TABLE.
Pushed first a spirit-decanter and then a water-bottle towards me with one hand, pointing with the other to a rack on my right, where some glasses were neatly arranged.
I poured off a liberal allowance, and tossed off the half of it at a gulp.
"Why shouldn't this child have a drink too?" my companion said, with a feeble pretense at jocularity, stretching a hand across my tumbler to get at the decanter.
There was nothing in the action to arouse suspicion under ordinary circumstances; but as I thought of the India-rubber ball, small enough to be concealed in the palm of the hand, and of the deadly poison it contained, a sudden panic seized me, and, scarcely knowing what I did, I snatched up my half-emptied tumbler and dashed its contents on the floor. The man sat staring at me with a look in his eyes that to my dying day I shall not forget. His mouth dropped open all awry, like that of a paralyzed man. His face went grey, his lips white, then screaming out, "You're not Inspection, Marten at all! I knew it from the first. You are one of those infamous sever—one of those devils from hell—come here to prevent me handing you over to justice!" he sprang forward, mouthing and gibbering at me like a monkey, and with outstretched, twitching fingers pointed at my throat.
I was on my feet in an instant, more anxious to explain the mistake into which he had, not unnaturally, fallen than to defend myself. But neither course was necessary, for the next instant his arm dropped to his side, and with a great groan he fell forward motionless upon the table. Agitation had brought on syncope of the heart. The man whose life I had come there to save was dead.
(TO BE CONTI UED.)
In the slang of the Day.
The two dudes were wandering through the retail shopping district with eyes for everything feminine that same their way. In fact, their gaze proved annoying.
"They make me think of a shoe store," said the slangy girl.
"Why?" asked her companion.
"A pair of rubbers," said the slangy girl.-Chicago Post.
The Unattainable.
Now what is human happiness?
After we contemplate it.
Is what some other fellow has
Who can't appreciate it.
-Washington Star.
Celeste—Why does Chumpleigh hang around here so much?
Marie- He is considered an AI judge of dogs.
Celeste--Wouldn't it be better to call him a K9 judge?--Boston Globe.
Trouble on the Big Road.
Met trouble on de big road.
He tell me: "Howdy-do?"
He ax me: "What you gwine?"
"I'll time him on."
He say: "I'll keep you compy"
De lonsome way en long."
But Mister Joy come de road
Ea sker him wild a song.
-Atlanta Constitution.
Her Only Comment.
"I'd have you know, madam," said the loud-voiced head of the combine, "that I am a self-made man."
"Well," rejoined the meek and lowly other half, "all I've got to say is there ought to be a law to prevent a man from cheating himself."--Chicago Dally News.
Positively Brutal
"According to this paper," sald Mrs. Naggs, "widows make the best wives." "I don't doubt it, my dear," replied Naggs, "but nevertheless I don't fell justified in shuffling off at the present writing merely for the sake of making a good wife of you."—Chicago Dally News.
JEHOVAH-JIREH
How seemed it to the lad,
as down Moriah she slope slowly went.
They who had gimpsed th' eternal plan
of God?
Bohind, the pressure of encircling core,
the vision of a sacrificial knife,
and dying, ashes upon alar-stone-
Before, a life that nevermore might be
The gland, free life of sunny-hearted youth,
For he had looked into the face of death.
How seemed it to the lad,
When at the mountain's base they run
meet
And welcome back the chieftain and his
son?
Marked they upon his brow a graver
Within his eyes a stronger, clearer light,
As panoplied with power beyond his own?
And said they, under breath, from man so
man,
The while they passed along the home
where way?
The prince has seen—has seen and talked
with God?
How seemed it to the lad,
While for his mother's greeting low he
knows
And felt her welcoming kiss upon his
cheek?
Oh, did she see, with tender mother's
a change had come? And think you can
The tale to her? Or did he hold it clear
Poo sacred for the common speech of earth
While dimly soiling through the mists of
years.
In the great Sacrifice, the type fulfilled?
-Alice M. Guernsey, in Youth's Companion
STRING3 THAT PULL.
"Our Tastes Are Strings Pulling Use Into Place"—Hence Duty of Cultivating Right Tastes.
There seem to be many missteps in this world, but after all, before Hives are finished, most of them are seen to be fitted into their places, says the Philadelphia Young People. The thing which a man can do, and can do best is generally that which is appointed him. If one has a passion or even prediction for a certain thing, he will make or find a chance somehow to do what he longs to do, and will obtain a degree of proficiency in it. "Our tastes," says one, "are strings pulling us into place." The taste for books and music will pull one into the place of libraries, songs and sweet sounds inevitably, invariably. There may not be complete graification, nor perfect development of existing talent, but the taste that dominates the man and the circumstances. The strings pull, and with definite results. In spite of difficulties, Eilhu Burritt's taste for books, pulls, even at the blacksmith's force, and Abraham Lincoln Nes at length upon the cabin floor to read by the light of the flaming brands. Did not these men, and multitudes of others, find their places? Did not the strings pull?
Such notable and instinctive reliance for the best things is God given, and the bestowal is one of the means whereby the place is found. It is often far better to be thus pulled into place than to be born in it.
What is the duty then? It is twofold: Strengthen these strings that pull by cultivating to the utmost the taste for the best things. determined not to stop short of the right place for the exercise of it; and never be discouraged by obstacles which seem to hinder reaching the place toward which the soul is longing and the possibility of doing the best work.
HOW WORK REACTS.
Grant Purposes and Great Effects
Never a Total Failure—A Truth
Often Overlooked.
Work makes the workman. That truth is as certain and as important as that the workman makes his work. A man's manhood, his character, wisdom, skill, are largely developed by the things which he has done. A writer on sociological subjects says that the University of Oxford went to East London to convert East London, but East London converted the University of Oxford. He meant that, while the efforts of the Oxford settlements were not exceedingly manifest in results in London, they were very manifest in changes of thought and ideals at Oxford. The success or failure of good endeavors is relatively unimportant; they have accomplished a great purpose either way in the one who makes the endeavors. Often, when we fall in our work, God makes our work succeed with us. And how really unimportant is the prominence or the obscurity of our labor? How little it matters whether our work be done within the four walls of a home! So long as it is faithfully done, it will accomplish that purpose in us for which, very likely, it was sent. Work, then, for what you can do by your work, and also for what your work can do for you.—S. S. Times.
The Saloon a Corrupter.
The New York Wine and Spirit Gazette is quoted in one of its temperance exchanges—we do not have the felicity of seeing the paper in this office—as saying that the new excise law of New York could easily have been defeated if the liquor men of the state had only been live enough to take "cash money" to Albany and pay down for votes of legislators at the rate of $5,000 per legislator. It rails against its own friends because some "who probably thought themselves very smart fellows attempted to do business in the legislature on a promissory basis." It may be set down as one certain thing in the problem of political corruption in this country, that we will never get rid of it as long as the saloon exists—Chicago interior.
Chicago Confidences.
"I was married to that man once," said the first Chicago woman.
"To Mr. Marryat? The Ideal Way, so was I." replied the other.
"You don't say? Were you before or after me?"-Philadelphia Catholic Standard and Times.
The Charitable Sex.
"Miss De Bloom certainly has a beautiful complexion," said the man at the dancing school.
"Oh, yes," rejoined the kind-hearted girl; "but I'm afraid it won't wash."-Cincinnati Enquirer.
Help.
Ferdy—I put in a good word for you, old chap. I told her you had more money than brains.
Algy—And what did she say then?
Ferdy—She asked me if you had any money.-Puck.
THE BUSY CORNER FOR XMAS GOODS.
THE REFORMERS STORE CORNER 6TH AND CLAY STREETS.
GOODS DELIVERED PROMPTLY TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY.
Reformers' Store, Corner 6th & Clay Sts. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA.
MAGNO WAS SURPRISED.
Sourced Neapolitan Girl by Proxy and Now Is Shocked at Brilliance of Her Collure.
When he went to the Dominion line dock, at Boston, to claim the maiden who had come out from sunny Italy on the Cambroman be his bride, the other day, Magno Castrucci had never seen her, nor had the girl ever set eyes on the man she expected to love, honor and obey. When they met the man experienced a shock from which it took him some minutes to recover. The girl was red-headed. It was not a dark, unobtrusive kind of red, which might be charitably styled auburn, but a bright fire color, which took the man's breath away as he looked at her, and made him repent for a moment his rashness in letting anybody else select a wife for him. In southern Italy a red-headed girl is as scarce as a negro in Siberia, and is looked on with little more favor. However, the prospective husband rallied nobly and decided to take her. He departed in search of a marriage license, and the girl awaited patiently in the detention room the reappearance of the bridegroom.
Vittoria Lostracco resided in a little cellage in a southern province in Italy and had attained the age of 24 without
EXPERIENCED A SHOCK
passing under the yoke of matrimony, an age which in Italy is dangerously near that of an old maid. In this country Magno Castrucci had labored for 11 years, alone and friendless, and at last felt the need of a companion to share his joys and sorrows. He looked around him, but the Italian girls of his acquaintance were all provided with husbands or lovers, or were unwilling to mate with him. In this country there are not near enough Italian maidens to go around, and a girl can afford to be fastidious. He wrote his troubles home to his parents in the old country, and they at once thought of Vittoria. They sang the
praises of their son to her, and of the girl to the son, and in a short time the matter was arranged. Details were, of course, meager. None of the parties concerned were fluent with the pen, and it never occurred to them to exchange photographs. But as they both declare themselves satisfied with their bargain the story may be said to have a happy ending.
CONQUERED BY WASPS.
Mud-Daubers Force a Confirmed Old Bachelor to Seek Safety in Matrilony.
A curious tale is told of a young man from Grant's Pass, Ore, who was cured of the bachelor habit by "mud-dauber" wasps. The hero tells the story on himself of how he was working in a mine near his native town, and at the end of a hard day's work always tumbled into his bunk in an old cabin without taking the trouble to arrange his blankets. The cabin was infested with "mud-daubers," and one day several of these located themselves in the miner's bed. The young man retired without ceremony that evening, but he arose again very rapidly. According to
AROSE AGAIN VERY RAPIDLY.
his own statement, which may, perhaps, best be taken with a grain of caution, he flew cleat to the roof and knocked off half a dozen or more shakes, came down, kicked over the table, and otherwise gave evidence of a worried man for several minutes. The wasp ended his bachelor career, for the miner went next day to Grant's Pass and secured a housekeeper in the person of a pretty bride.
Beauty Beats Intellect
A club of young lady students in the Chicago university recently engaged in a very interesting debate. They decided, by a large majority, that beauty is better for a woman than intellect This means that her proper sphere is the home.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND VIRGINIA.
YOU CAN SAVE 40 PER CENT.
Orange and Lemon Peel, per lb., - - - 15cts
Chocolate Bon-Bons, per lb., 25cts or 5 lb. boxes for $1.00
Xmas Mixed Candy, per lb., - 9cts or 3 lbs. for 25cts
Fine French Candy, per lb., - - - - 6cts
Stick Candy, per lb., - - - - 9cts
Assorted Caramels, per lb., - - - - 20cts
Assorted Creams, per lb., - - - - 20cts
Mixed Nuts, 2 lbs., - - - - 25cts
English Walnuts, 2 lbs.. - - - - 25cts
Filberts, 2 lbs., - - - - 25cts
Hard Shell Almonds, 2 lbs., - - - - 25cts
Best Granulated Sugar, per lb., - - - - 5cts
Kingan's Reliable Ham, per lb., - - - - 16cts
Rib Pork, per lb., - - - - 11cts
Good Meat, per lb., - - - - 9cts
Best Lard, per lb., - - - - 11cts
Good Lard, per lb., - - - - 3 lbs. for 25cts
LOFTY TOSSED BULL.
Circus Giant Made Short Work of Infuriated Beast.
Threw Him Over a Fence Into a Pool of Water and Coolly Walked Home—An Old Story in Reversed Form.
"Every now and then, you know," said the old circus man to a New York Sun reporter, "you see in the papers a paragraph headed 'Chased by an infuriated Bull.' It is a simple little story, and it always runs about the same:
"As Farmer Jones, of West Cheshire, was crossing his pasture lot on Thursday last he was caused by an infuriated bull, and it goes on to tell how Farmer Jones barely escaped, and all that, the bull hooning on the top rail of the fence just as Farmer Jones went over it, and so on.
"A simple little story, sure enough; and one that we've read a hundred times; but do you know if the newspapers should stop printing it, I should miss it greatly? For somehow that little story has always interested me very much, and ever since a little experience that the greatest of all giants had once with an infuriated bull it has interested me more still.
"We had a pasture lot right next to the home lot at the show's winter quarters, and in that pasture lot we had at one time a bull. The home lot and the pasture lot stretched along from the house alongside a road.
"The giant stepped over the fence between the home lot and the pasture lot one day to make a short cut across the pasture to a point down the road, and just as he'd got pretty near across somebody back in the home lot hollers out to him:
"Hey, Lofty! The bull!"
"The bull, down in one corner, had spied the giant making across the pasture, and it started for him at once. It didn't make any difference to the bull how big the giant was; you can't scare a mad bull.
"Did the giant start and run away from it? He could have done it easy; but he didn't stir a peg. He just stood still till the bull was about ten feet of him, and then he side-stepped just one step, which was equal to three steps of an ordinary man, and stood stock still again; and when the bull turned around to follow him, and just as he was ready to spring, the great giant took him by the horns.
"He gave the bull a swing and swung him clean off the ground and up and around his head, and swung him so
twice, like a hammer-thrower swinging a hammer before he throws it, and then he launched the bull into the air. And the bull went sailing over the pasture fence, and over the road, and over the fence beyond, and—disappeared!
"But it didn't take long to find him.
"IT'S A SIMPLE LITTLE STORY."
On that property across the road there was an abandoned quarry, that had been quarried out to the depth of about 60 feet, and had about ten feet of water in the hole at the bottom, and the bull had dropped into that quarry; and here he was when we got over and looked down the sides, swimming around in the water down below.
"Well, we got out some of our tent tackle that had been stored for the winter and got the bull out and put him back in the pasture lot, where he frisked around as gaily as ever, what you call defeated, but not dismised; and he'd have charged on the giant again in a minute if the giant had set out to cross the lot again."
"But that was something the giant never tried to do. He was a man of sense, the giant, and he knew that it was doubtful the next time he hewed him, whether the bull would come down in as soft a spot as the pool of water, and he didn't want to hurt the bull, and so the giant and the bull never met again.
"But that one meeting between them, as you can easily imagine, gave me a new interest in the time-honored little story that we see in the papers every now and then under the heading of 'Chased by an Influrated Bull,' and every time I read it I think of what happened when the bull chased not Farmer Jones, but the greatest of all giants."
Lightning Burned Big Hole.
Lightning burned a chimney hole in a hayrick on Mrs. Allison's farm, on West Grand river, near Grant City, Mo. The rick was not far from the house, and a couple of boys, seeing it smoking, went to it at once. They found in the top of the rick a small hole, from which the smoke was issuing, and, throwing a wisp of hay into the hole, smothered the fire. When the end of the rick was cut off it was found that the lightning had burned a hole from the top to the bottom of the stack about two inches in diameter.
"It was a brave and manly act, young man," said the millionaire. "At the risk of your own life you rushed into the burning building and saved my only daughter from a horrible fate. How can I reward you?" "Oh, I don't know," replied the hero. "Do you think a couple of dollars would be too much?"—Cincinnati Enquirer.
She Didn't Care.
Jack—My darling, I want to tell you something. I have deceived you. I am not rich. Will it make any difference to you?
Ethel—Not the slightest, Jack.
"I am so glad. Are you quite sure it will make no difference to you?" "Quite sure; I can marry old Mr. Moneybags."—Tit-Bits.
Cut It Out.
If you have an evil thought,
Cut it out;
If to you some scandal's brought
Cut it out;
Should you like this sort of verse,
If you think it's not "so worse"—
Cut it out!
—Yonkers Statesman.
PEOPLE SHOULD BE CAREFUL.
O
Caller (who has been waxing funny)—And—haw—are you the new maid?
Pert Servant—Well—I ain't no old maid, I hope.—Ally Sloper.
Moths.
"There are no birds in last year's nests."
But many a closet shows
Small winged things in last year's vests
And coats and other clothes.
—Philadelphia Press.
As a Matter of Form.
Mother—If you hadn't encouraged the young man he wouldn't have kissed you.
Daughter—O! mother, I told him to go away.
Mother—You did?
Daughter—Yes. I said, "now, you go 'way' every time—Philadelphia Press.
A Disagreeable Habit.
Old Grumps—Sure that girl loves you instead of your money?
Son—Absolutely. Why, she actually keeps count of the kisses I give her.
Old Grumpps—Hum! That's bad.
She may keep it up after marriage.—N. V. Weekly.
Compliments of the AMERICAN GROCERY and PROVISION MARKET 1221 St. James St. Phone 2883.
Thanking our many customers for their liberal patronage and hoping that our low prices, free and quick delivery of our goods will merit your continuance, we ask you to call and examine our Xmas goods and varieties of Fire Works.
6½ to
Levay Islasina per lb. from 9 to
all kiln-fired Fargo Gages per lb.
All kinds of Fancy Oakes, per lb,
from 8½ to
Mixed Nuts, per lb
Prunes, per lb
Dates, per lb
Large Cocoanuts
Large, Juicy Lemons, per doz
Oranges, per doz, 25 and
Sweet Cider, per qt
Vinegar, per gal
Butter, per lb 15 to
Plenty of fresh eggs and Cow
hundreds of articles. Canned good
and cigars. Nice Citron, 12% per
Coal and wood. 1/2 cord dry, save
Per cord, $5.00, delivered to you.
The Co
Have made a ree
regular stocks unti
Headquarters
Because the bulk o
presents were boun
class of goods, in I
Handkerchiefs a
Are here in profu
and you can save a
Plenty of fresh eggs and Country Produce. We have LOW PRICES on hundreds of articles. Canned good at cost. Fine teas and coffees. Fine tobacco and cigars. Nice Citron, 12½ c per lb. Hay and grain. Herrings, par doz, 100. Coal and wood. ½ cord dry, sawed, pine wood, $2.75, full measure, guaranteed. Per cord, $5.00, delivered to you.
The Cohen Co.
have made a reduction of about 25 per
pound stocks until XMAS.
Herdquarters for Holiday Gifts
because the bulk of our most acceptable
presents were bought, the fountain hea-
ts of goods, in Europe.
Merchiefs and Fancy Meets
here in profusion for the yuletide
you can save a full half on any of the
The Cohen Co.
Have made a reduction of about 25 per cent in all regular stocks until XMAS. Headquarters for Holiday Goods. Because the bulk of our most acceptable goods for presents were bought, the fountain head for this class of goods, in Europe.
Handkerchiefs and Fancy Neckwear.
Are here in profusion for the yuletide shopping and you can save a full half on any of them.
A Unique Book Store.
Unique because in the largest book-sto each to $25.00 for a between. Thousan
que because in Richmond you find o largest book-stores in America. Book to $25.00 for a full set, and all theween. Thousands of the finest titles at
Unique because in Richmond you find one among the largest book-stores in America. Books from 5c each to $25.00 for a full set, and all the prices in between. Thousands of the finest titles at 9c, 12½c and 15c. The Cohen Co.
4½c Large Jars Pickle . . . 5 and 10o
Gelatin, per pkg . . . 9e
Condensed Milk, per can . . 10o
Snow Drift Lard, per lb . . . 9e
Butchers' Lard, per lb . . . 11o
Salt Pork, per lb . . . 7½o
Best Pork, per lb . . . 11o
Smoked and Fresh Shoulders,
per lb . . . 9½o
Cheese, per lb . . . 1o
Varieties of fresh meats, per lb,
from . . . from 10 to 12o
Plenty of Dressed Fowls, Large Rabbit,
Best flour, per bag . . 28 and 30o
Preserves, per lb . . . 6o
S H. WILLIAMS, GEN'L MANAGER.
ohen Co.,
duction of about 25 per cent in all
XMAS.
for Holiday Goods.
our most acceptable goods for
light, the fountain head for this
Europe.
and Fancy Neckwear.
vision for the yuletide shopping
full half on any of them.
Richmond you find one among res in America. Books from 5c full set, and all the prices inds of the finest titles at 9c, 121/2c
6
pO saree
CO rs
5 Ma .
Sib einer
Yrsta a
J Oy 8
q 2 IN .
ey
a -
milcnole ioscicces, cio
! CLIMBING,
Astand at the bottom and upwand 1 gage:
Tho fruit that I soo 1 shuuld think would
bo uweet.
Fmean to have somo of it one of these days,
‘Phe climbing, Lowever, must be quite &
Teat.
Me footholds are slight and at best inse-
cure
Some ladder rungs rotten I plainly can
200,
What ICs worth ail the risk I'm not per-
fectly sure,
- But [4 ilke to get up to the top of the
‘tree,
Tv got to the top L must make up my mind
‘To care nothing for rubs and my hands
1 must soli;
T ihust tread on the beads of those strus-
gling boting,
As I'm trod on’ by those who above me
uilt toll
& ts not a nico thing, just between me and
you,
As 1 iook from the ground it seems crue!
to mo,
Wut of course I'l: be given a much broader
view
When once I took down from the top of
the tree,
Pome climb pretty swiftly and others are
“stow,
LEME ART of the climbers are stopping t
WAU dreaidiess and strugsting still upward
they go
To where, high above, Is the frult of the
dest,
«And the ones who climb hardest are these
‘at the top.
‘Which is renliy as strange asa thing may
‘well be,
‘There is not the Joust chance that they
‘evor will stop,
For thpre’s not any top to this wonderful
tree.
Chicago Dally News.
THE BITTER
PROBLEM <<
NE by one, Mrs, Presley's guests had
deserted the breakfast-room and
wparated to their respective pursuits.
For several minutes sho sat staring
across the table at her husband, Her
‘ps betrayed an intangible encer; she
was wondering hoy in the world she ever
‘amo {0 marry the man. Certainly, he
Awa not good fo look at, nor interesting
q—not rich. And she? Well, there were
pres mea, any aymber of inem, ready
swoar allegiance.
, “Come out for a waikwon't you?
“There's a fine Drege posting -iteett te
the gycamores,”
Treviston's voice made a sudden breah
im her reflections. Mrs. Presioy glanced
‘ep, haif-startled, thea cast a furtive
Mook at her husband, but his face was
Ruassiry, almost stolid, revealing: noth-
mg. She rose, after the instant’s hes!-
tation, tnd Joined Treviston on the
veranda,
“You aren't cold, are you?”
“Oh, uo.” She laughed off the little
shiver of nervousness as they left the
fhouse and walked on rapidly down the
‘Wide shell path.
“What's the matter?" Treviston asked
wrosentiy, observing for the first time
: SO
Li ete a
| fis ae OS
Ra Dla) i}
BB. Mae PX
Y, eA : f3)il
TE | a
‘ aa ——
a.
pale ee
“how wretchedly pale the woman looked,
end the effort she was making to keep
uw.
Mrs. Presiey did not answer at once;
ther eyes were fixed In a dreamy stare on
‘Ge restless tree-lops beyond.
After a moment, he reached down and
wok her hand in his, holding it tightly
elasped between both his own. “Wiat
4s it?” he insisted, trying to catch 4
Glimpse of her averted face.
In a little while, she turned her eyes,
misty and half-strained, up to his.
“Oh, Dick,” she sobbed, “I don’t know
—tean't tell; To-wy feel that this can’t
go on. The earth seems slipping from
under my feet—it is all so terrible!”
‘He bent down to her suddenly; the
perfume of her b:.ir swept through him
Mke a stimulant: twice he kissed her,
‘three times, on Uh > lips.
\ “it will have 'o end, somehow,” she
‘went On, sighing. ‘‘He suspects—I'm con-
ident of that.”
| Previston remained silent.
“We can't keer on being together,”
‘she resumed, evenly, adding, after a
pause, “aud perhaps that’s best; God
knows how {t might all end—the other
way.”
‘They walked on, silence between them
down the twistini, sun-dappled lane.
“You don’t love him,” said Treviston
foalty.
Wea”
\ “And you do love—me.”
| “Heaven help m.e!”
“And you are ssoing with me—awa;
from here—away from cverything—
swway from him!”
He looked down at her, flushing, the
veins In his neck throbbine.
The woman drew a quick breath; the
muscles of her f.. ce (witched spasmod.
feally. “That I cannot,” she said, in ¢
hanged yoice
‘The other frows ied unobserved, a 100}
ni oe
of dotermination setting his face,
Ne eg a er ae tae oe Oe ee Co
on in a low tone: “You are sure, Kate,
are you not, that we would be happy—
together?”
“For a time, perhaps.”
He bent to look into her face, forcing
the appeal of his eyes upon her. “And for
a Uttle time—fust a little year—or a
week—or hour In the calendar of love—
what would all eternity matter?”
‘The woman beran to tremble as she
Ustened. “Don’t!” she said, cbokingly,
thrusting out a hand, as though to ward
off a phystcal blow,
‘They moved on in silence for several
minutes. Treviston was the first. to
speak.
“Ishall go, then,” hesald, slowly, “and
knowing that you do not love me, in
spite of all your protestations; or know-
ing that your love, so boasted, s0 su-
préme"—his voice was keen with irony
—is nothing more than—weak water!”
She burst into passtonate tears, cling-
ing to him in an agony of failing strength.
“t can’t give you up,” she said, after
awhile, calmly,
“To-morrow, then,” heexplained, hur-
riedly, “at ten o'clock—at this spot. The
team will be waiting; there's a steamer
at three; we'll have Just time to catch
ira
Mrs, Presley whitened to the temples;
once she opened her lips as though to
speak, then closed them again and her
head dropped,
| When tre, Prestey entered the room,
‘Treviston was standing before an open
window, looking out into the dusk. He
turned at the sound of her step, and came
forward with outstretched bands.
“Only o year," he said, “but It has
seemed like a century!”
She motioned him to a chair, and took
the one opposite. “A lifetime, Dick,” she
returned, with a faint smile, “and, oh,
how I have missed you; how I have want-
ed you!"
“I've been away—very far away,” he
explained, “since that day—the day you
were taken ill—the day we were to have
commenced a new lite—together. But
now—" He broke off and the light came
to his eyes, deeply,
“Now," she toO% up his words quickly,
“now we are back again to the old bitter
problem. In spite of time's perspective,
there things seldom change.” In her
voice was a little tremor of joy, despite
the assumption of regret. She regarded
him, tentatively.
‘Treviston leaned close to the woman,
}and again took her hands in his, press-
| ing them softly between his cold fingers.
“There js no bitter problem, Kate; oniy
life and hope and love—always.”
For a long time Mrs. Presley did not
speak; words seemed out of plsee to
her now. At last she glanced up, two
glow!ng points of color in her cheeks pro-
duclug An almost unnatural contrast to
the rest of the face, grown, in the past
year, transparently pale,
| For the first time, ‘Treviston noticee
that she was wearing all black, and a
| sudden, inexplicable uneasiness swept
fover him,
“Why do you wear those clothes?” he
asked, abruptly.
Mts. Presley winced, as though under
& probe, and a flash of tears for a mo-
ment made her eyes misty. Her glanc
fell away from his fa the pause that fol:
lowed,
“Surely.” she faltered, “you know—
you have heari-—that my husband—
She broke off, struggling for self-mas
tery.
Treviston went white, white as th
shirt he wore. No, he sald, he had no
heard. As a matter of fact, his steam
er had but just arrived; he had seer
no one that he knew, He stared at he
stupidly, as he made the announcement
Mrs. Presiey was regarding him wit
darkened eyes. Her li¢s contracted a
the lids of one in sudden pain,
‘Treviston shifted in his chair, holdin
his glance stubbornly averted, but bi
consciousness did not escape the ver
| adict of her eyes.
’| He rose mechanically and moved ove
to the mantel. For a second he stoo
‘| staring oddly at the face of a tiny Delf
| clock.
A silence, charged with flerce menta
\/ struggle, fell between them. At las
| Mrs, Presicy left her seat and crossed thi
| room to his side. The lines about he
‘| eyes and mouth had deepened for a life
time.
| “Good-by," she said, with @ sort o
strange calm, “good-by for all time.
{| might haye known this, Dick; surely
‘|might have known!” ‘The lips tha
| framed the words were as bicodless a
the white rose at her throat.
>] The sweat broke out on Treviston’
"| face. When he had collected himself, h
“{ put out hishand, blindly. “Katherine!
he erled.
| She turned and looked at him curious
“]1y, and a certain hardness came tnto he
face
.|__A moment later, the door closed noise
"|lessty behing her.
1] Too Trining to Be Remembered.
"| Lawyer (to promoter)—Is this you
signature on this check for $234,000
“| 0007
| Promoter—How much?
Creditors are often voted hard-heart-
ed, when they merely ask men to re-
debrs thelr_nromives,
Bie SH Centers,
Milan and Lyons are at the head of
the world’s silk industry, having respec-
tively conditioned 21,668,570 and 15,763,
253 pounds of silk last year.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
NE
A PANCAKE BULLET. CII DIDI 000) WI
It Took = General Down, But was se| GoSigenVanyere Saas SAW a PNP
Fiat 1¢ Didn't Break
the Skin.
“Speaking of pancake bullets,” sald ‘¢
the colonel, “I met Gen. Waiter C.New-|
berry on the street the other day, and é
while we stood talking he seemed nerv-|
ous, throwing his weight first on one
foot and then on the other, changing «
frequently. But he wasn't nervous. I
knew that, and I knew also why be| [@
seemed nervous. When the head of our .
column crossed the James and advanced %
toward Patecsbure/ dtewhaiey was Waa cae
2 aie y “eg
TBA ow aa
i. * ¢
i ‘i A Ses a
<2 A Ves
a
: ay) NW east
anil Po ia
ll Meee. ° SS
‘See ‘ec
ss Se
ene WENT DOWN.
tenant colonel of the Twenty-fourth
New York cavalry. When what was
left of us got back Newberry was the
senlor officer {n the cavalry division.
| “In that advance, when we reached
the Petersburg & Norfolk railroad, we
Tan up against the real thing in the way
of defensive works. Col. Newberry led
the advance and struck an angle of the
works and soon his line was in the air,
the supports not being able to get up be-
cause of the enemy's terrific fire. Three
brigade commanders fell in the attempt
to reach Newberry, but he did not re-
tire until the enemy began to envelope
his flanks. The line went back in some
Aisorder, but Newberry was cool and de-
liberate, and when we got under cover
of the creek he went back with a squad
to make a lodgment in front.
| “As usual, the colonel was in the lead,
and after he had posted the boys to his
satisfaction he started to rejoin us in
line. When he got down under the brow
of the little hill and only his head and
}shoulders were exposed, a southern
sharpshooter blazed away at him. The
bullet struck a big oak treo, flattening
out like a pancake, glanced off, and
Struck Newberry qn the top of his
head in front. The bullct had a flat sur-
face, nearly as large as a silver dollar,
and when it struck his head Newberry
went down as though be had been shot
through the heart.
| “Almost Tamedistely he put bis hand
tole head expectles to Md bleod. As
his senses returned he looked at his
hand and then feli his head again. Find-
ing no Dlocd an expression of disgust
came over bis face, he believing that he
fad been struck by aispent ball. How-
ever, that pancake bullet-affected the
| muscles of the general's left side and
ever since he has appeared nervous on
his fect. It isn’t nerves, however; it la
& case of pancake bullet, a case of a
, Wound that did not break the skin, but
‘left its mark.”
JOHN BROWNS WHISTLE.
‘Whe One That Siznaled His Follower:
ac maces mecry mulan
eee eo
‘The silver boatswain's whistle, with
which John Brown piped orders to his
men while they were at Harper's Ferry,
has been discovered in Washington by
the officers of the Kansas Historical sm
clety. An effort is making to secure the
instrument for the society's museum
says the Detroit Free Press. When Joht
Brown gathered his men around Harper's
Ferry and began preparations for the
selzuro of the arsenal, he instructed
them, according to the story, to hide
themselves in the mountain forests and
to refrain from being seen together
‘Then he gave them instructions to lister
for thelr orders each day at sunrise an¢
sunset which would be piped to them
with the boatswain’s whistle. ‘These tn:
structions were carried out to the letter
and for some days preceding the attack
‘on the arsenal the people of Harper's
‘Ferry heard the mysterious piping from
Brown's headquarters. The notes would
]be taken up by the nearest of his fol
lowers and sent on over the mountains
until the farthest distant of the band
had received the word of the commander.
‘When Brown was captured, the whistle
‘was taken from him by Lieut. Stewart, o!
the regular army, who afterwards be:
came a lieutenant general in the confed-
eracy. Stewart finally gave it to Col
Washington, who in turn presented {1
to John Cassin, then a well known lawyet
in Washington. The whistle fs now 11
‘Possession of Mrs. Mary A. Cassin, whc
resides in Georgetown.
ee eae
The young officer, in his white dack
trousers, was moving gallantly among
the ladies who were visiting the battle-
ship that lay off Newport. He was not
aware that he had sat down in paint,
or in plain dirt, and that his trousers
were not spotlessly clean. Finally
someone on one of the small boats that
were circling about the battleship called
out in a rich Irish voice: “Och, Mister
Liftinant, wudn’t yer ducks be betther
for a shwim?”—Washington Star.
Proof Positive.
Singleton—Is young Pillsbury a good
@octor?
| Wederly—Sure. He attended my
wife's mother when she was {Il inst
month.
“And he pulled her through, aid he?
“No, he pushed her through." —Obt-
cago Daity News.
Had Low Forehead.
Kaut, Germany's greatest philoso-
her, had a large head, but an unusually
low forehead,
ene
Sir Henry Irving is said to have no
fewer than 60 pairs of eye glasses and
spectacles. 4
Water-Lily as Pood,
‘The water lily {s largely used in some
ports of india by the natives as food,
ORS aaa NSN NTIS IB
THE WHITE FRONTY
'¢ PRINTING HOUSE,
; wa ‘ |
1 3 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
9% POPOL CONE EED From a Dodger to a Three-sheet Post'r, Pxsiness Cards of all sizes,
‘ WE PRINT Note, Letter and Bill-heads, Placards, Statenents, Envelopes, Checks,
* oe Finantial Cards, Order and Financial Root... for Lodges aud Societies, |
EVERYTHING Policies, Application Blanks, Med cal Certificates, ‘fags, Labels,
eaksababeceane ckekesstechioamsooseece Minutes, Lodge and Society Con-“itvrions, |
Our Job Department [7 ;
IS THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED. FOR fHE PROMPT DE- WE WONT . :
LIVERY OF ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK. OUR PRICES Your TRADE
ARE THE LOWEST, CONSISTENT WITH FINE STOCK ‘ U 2
AND GOOD WORK.
ie ° ’ - e
tFine Wedding Stationery...
‘
‘ OUR LATEST DESIGNS IN STATIONERY FOR BALLS, PARTIES, ENTERT/ MENTS
»
: MAY BE SEEN AT THIS OFFICE.
r e
Che Richmond Planet*
&- rf He ~
ie
: As an Advertising Mediom cannot be surpassed. Our Solicitor will quote you Special Rates. Asa
A Fam" Paper, it is uot to be excelled inany quaser, tf known of all men. One Year, $.50;Six Months,
BS bee 3 Pareaihs ilonaatoa cll on
“a
a: JOHN MITCHELL. JR., Proprietor,
G avew ‘Leiephone, 328, 313 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
Gone RON CARS) CPR IRI) III) IIIT ITI IRI
¥
ow
pels
MRS. MARTH, tho ¢ irid renowaet and
baellooeerriga Bote” fan feet Meat
serena Pode: and ee
Consulted psa allitals ciiter bustneas tote
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Beck ecteorat eer ges tas
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Sate, cannery, Meaiun whecea ae
Secunit craing, reat, ohn bat
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Be itne setter on Pes ay
Sete grat gn fe haat no
Life, Love, Courtship, Marriage Pretcs, Eto.,
with fall description of your future compan:
sent gil cre of our ote conan’
ioe eads actaharee teers nin
goat cera ftir ese
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SH Pe we sestolag noting
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manager bea SHAN, i
Jn tests she ‘ells your mother’s fall name be-
gers gant, Meat nation? tallnane
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Seng genus eee es es
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eter Lenten Lat eh
rests itt tae, teen dnc the wh
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Sse th nal tesa a
Ream ais dete of oenipemnce: A ous
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Binge ndin x don rane. Sten
Raines mansions
strugereiiere or ekeunr a
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foe nate ae tt
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snes fate say fa een wh x
sohoaihe tall Sumeot you Sars henben
Tibbes see dest ears eo
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sigreteae eee fal from comma
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pilings Sateen cl re conte to,
ash Pingel trom the fab deci og
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eapeciee
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-——ADVIOE BY LETTER, {$1.00.—
Hours From 10 A. M. ro 9 P. M
| MRS. M. B. MARTH,
246 W. 31st St. (Near 8th Avenue.
NEW YORK CITY.
“THE ECONOMY.”
| 808 N. 8rd St.,
Fine Taivsoring,'
| CLEANING, |
DYEING,
AND REPAIRING,
W. 0. TURNER, PROPRIETOR.
W. S$. SELDEN,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EMBALMER.
Warerooms:
4508 E. Broad Street,
OLD ’PHONE, 1484
RESIDENCE,
1308 E. Leigh St.
Richmond, Virginia.
S. J. GILPIN,
506 E. BROAD STREET,
~ Richmond, Va.
DEALER IN —at>
Fine Boots, Shoes,
and Ladies Gaiters,
All Kinds of Fine Footweas.
H. F. JONATHAN
Fish Oysters & Produce
qed
Z120N. 17th St., RICHMOND, VA.
ALL” ORDERS WILL REOERIVE
ae PROMPT Pieae e
New Phone, 478.
ROBT. S. FORRESTER
—=FLORIST—
215 E, Leigh Street,
RICHMOND, - - VIRGINIA
Plant Decorations, Choice Rosebads,
Devorstious for Weddings Fartion, So.
SORA OER
JOHN M, HIGGINS,
DEALER IN
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES LIQUORS,
AND CIGARS.
PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR
THE MONEY,
4610 East Franklin Street,
tg [Near Old Market. .
ae - + + Vircnay
) —§ W. ROBINSON, -
NO. 23 NORTH 18TH ST.
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, &c.
BaP All Stock Sold as Guaranteed.~ga
PROMPT ATTENTION.
Your patronage is respecttully solicited.
"Phone, 1589. Residence No. 911 32d
Street.
ROBT. W. WILLIAMS,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR &
| EMBALMER.
NO. 3019 P. STREET, BETWEEN
30TH AND 31ST STREETS.
RICHMOND, - - - VA.
Special attention given to all business
entfusted to me. Carringes. for funer-
als, receptions and marriages at all
hours, Satistaction guaranteed to all.
ti16-20-"04
(fat teeta = a
Ls 2
A. Hayes
e
OFFICE AND WARE-ROOMS,
727 North Second Street.
9 RESIDENCE, 725 N. 2nd St.
First-class Hacks and Caskets of all de.
scriptions. I have a spare room for bod.
ies when the family have not @ suitable
place, All country orders wee giver
special attention, Your special artention,
is called to the new style Oak Caskete,
Call and see me and you shall be waited
on kindly. SNe TT RCT aah th
Phone, 2778.
The Custalo House.
792 E. BROAD ST,
Having ent my bar, and hey
terre my ‘rionds aod ‘te, pose
the same old stand.
Chotce Wines, Liquors aqé
Cigars.
FIRST CLASS RESTAURAN}
Meals At All Hours,
New "Phone, 1261. Wm. Qustalo, Pre,
MRS. P. ¢. RASLRY,
615 N. Second St.
ICE CREAM, CONFECTIONARIBS,
——| CAKEs, ETC. | ——
(O28 Lawn and Pio-nio Parties, Fest
vals, Weddings etc., furnished with
the best high-grade Ice Cresm om
the Shortest Notice.
Satistcation Guaranteed.
8.7-8mos.
When You Are Sick .
Sorirovoe then pursuers ‘year
‘Drog@and Medicine fram; @#*
Leonard’s ;
Reliable
Prescriptios.
Drug Store,
724 North&econd Street. 4
» SECOND TO NONE. *
WOMAN'S CORNER-STONE
BENEFICIAL A[SsociaTion.
INCORPORATED, MARCH, 1897
Office: - 502 W. Leigh St.
Authorized Capital, $5,000:
aoe ee ena or dees
placed in home office.
orricens:
LOUISA E. WILLIAMS, President
KATE HOLMES, + Vice-President
BETTIE BROWN, - Treasurer
MILDRED COOKE JONES,
Secretary and Business Manager
® BOARD OF DIRECTORS: >
Loutsa E. WiuiaMs, Karr Horseng,
MATTIE F. JouNSON, ANN M. JouNson,
Berrig BRowN. Mitpren C, Tones.
a atta id
BEFORE
MAKING >
J Your purchase you would da well
‘to Gall at the most reliable furnitare
fee the city ana see the fins
U Refrigerators,
| Blattings, Oil-Gloths,
R Jana in tect overything that is need-
| ed in house farnishings,
Gq RUGS AND CARPETS,
1p] Otevery cosription also tho ins!
RB lest designs in ROOKERS and spea-
‘ial OHAIRS. ere go are the
beat for the priee the price it
Niverziow.
J,
gC. G. Jurgen’s Son,
421 EaST BROAD 8T., ©
MMF between 4th and 5th Street
| $00600000000000000000000004 100000NS00SS
HE PLANET
FARM
AND
GARDEN
HOW TO BUILD FENCES.
End Posts, Properly Braced, Are Most
Important in Prolonging
Their Usefulness.
I have been building wire fences for more than 30 years, and have learned many good points from experience. I consider the end posts very important factors in building a fence. These should be properly braced. If this is neglected the fence will surely suffer later. I always put my wooden brace on the level with the top wire and securely fasten my brace wire over the top of the second post and the bottom of the first. Or a better plan which I sometimes follow is to anchor the brace wire with a stone buried in the
BRACE FOR WIRE FENCE
ground, as shown in the accompanying illustration at Fig. 1.
This serves a double purpose, as it not only holds the post in a firm position, but if one of the posts rots out and has to be replaced it can be easily done by loosening the brace wire at the top of the post. By bracing in this manner the wires cannot slack. The brace wires should be twisted tightly, using for this purpose a piece of iron rather than wood. Holes should be bored in the first post to draw against the face to keep it from twisting. Do not drive the staples clear in, and then you can tighten the wires whenever
FIG. 2.
END POST BRACE.
Necessary. The distance between the posts and the number of wires to be used depends on the stock to be in-closed.
Three or four sharp barbed wires driven tight will easily turn cattle. Wires of this sort should not be placed near buildings where horses are liable to run into them. For such purposes I prefer smooth or woven wires, as it is much safer. I have several miles of barbed wire fence, and never had an accident to any of my stock except last summer, and in that instance it was on account of the carelessness of the animals. Lightning struck the tree and the bolt flew off on the wire and killed two fine cows which happened to be near the place where it ran off and grounded.
An anchor, such as is shown in the other cut at Fig. 2, can be used to good advantage, as it needs no wooden brace. This, of course, can be used only in places where the brace wire would not be an obstruction. I have a large number of end braces of this sort in use, and find they are very satisfactory.—H. H. Tomiln, in Orange Judd Farmer.
DREAD POTATO BLIGHT
Agricultural Scientists Should Use Their Best Endevors to Stamp Out This Disease.
The potato blight is a point that our scientific investigators ought to work at until they can help the farmers to master the conditions. The experiment stations do not seem so far to have done more than explain the nature of the pest. Bordeaux mixture is recommended; but it must be borne in mind that Bordeaux is not so much a remedy as a preventive. So far as we can get at the subject now, it seems probable that farmers will be doing the right thing by spraying their potatoes all summer—beginning as soon as the first of July. The loss this year is simply enormous, striking out the profits of many farms altogether. My own plan has been to dig up potatoes as soon as the blight shows on top. I then give a thorough drying and store in dry bins, in a well ventilated cellar. Rot will not develop in the cellar, if the rooms be thoroughly dry and clean. I have a note from a potato grower who says: "I counted on my potato crop to settle my mortgage; it is very dispiriting to have it swept out in a day." This subject of blight should be our chief subject to solve.—E. P. Powell, in N. Y. Tribune Farmer.
Make Home Life Happy.
True economy does not encourage stinginess. It calls for pleasure for the whole family. It calls for music and song; it calls for pastimes and outings. To keep the family together and contented, it is necessary that the home life should be happy, attractive and interesting.—Farmers' Voice.
Application of Manure.
As a rule, manure stays just about
where you put it. If plowed under in
lumps, it has not the power to sink
nor rise, nor can it in any way intermix
itself. Thorough harrowing before turn-
ning the manure under, rewards in large
crops.
PROLIFIC SEED WHEAT.
To Select It Is a Far More Critical Business Than Appears at First Sight.
Most farmers object to seed wheat that contains small quantities of some different varieties; the objection is perfectly legitimate though the crop be as good from such mixed seed as from pure seed of a single variety. The same rule applies to other grains. Few men lack system and uniformity to the extent of altogether ignoring fine lines of stock and grain; a farmer will succeed best with what he likes best and with that of which he is most proud. There is but one way of purifying seed wheat that has become mixed with undesirable heads; this method is "picking" or selecting heads true to type and name. But this is a more critical business than appears at first thought; not only must the length of the straw, conformation of the head, and its color be closely observed, but heads thus selected may hide within the chaff a very different grain; it is necessary then to resort to experimental hand shelling to preserve the uniformity of berry. This to many farmers may seem bookish and impracticable, but it is the only method pursued, and the man who buys pure seed pays some one else for this special care and labor. Such work, in addition to the tangible result, which is a very small start of superior seed, identifies a man with his business and gives him an insight that casual handling does not afford. Besides, such procedure is certain in its results while buying at a premium is uncertain and may even result in a worse seed than one's own mixed product. Another case brought to our attention was that of an intelligent farmer who went through a badly winter killed field of wheat and selected those stools which had best resisted the unfavorable conditions. By this method he claims to have secured a more hardy stock of seed; this result seems very plausible. Farmers have not time to magnify and comprehend every trifle that comes to their notice, but it is advisable that they have a correct appreciation of what constitutes a trifle, and of other seeming trifles, which really afford the intelligent approach to their business.—George P. Williams, in Epitomist.
BRACE THAT BRACES
Fence Builders Will Find It Far Superior to Other Devices of Similar Nature.
My ideal brace for a fence is shown at Fig. 1. Put the deadman at the first post from the corner, and not at the corner, as most of them do. This places the stone out of the way. To hold the corner post in place, take a 4x4x8 and mortise it in at the top of
IDEAL BRACE FOR FENCE.
the post. If the deadman is put in the ground two and one-half feet it will prevent it from pulling up. If galvanized wire is used it will not rust. This kind of brace will not cost half as much as most of them, and I think it better in every way. Wire can be stretched for a mile on a brace of this kind and it will not give an inch.—Arthur Corey, in Epitomist.
IUST THINK THIS OVER
The office that has to seek the man is a fake.
Apple's spare rib was garnished with apple sauce.
No man, who woos a widow, can be her first choice.
No woman can feel pretty and look it at the same time.
One's own bowlegs are models of beauty to one's self.
The man who is merely blunt is often miscalled sharp.
Brains without balance means early, total and hopeless wreckage.
Without mortgages there would be a sudden stop to the bulk of business on earth.
The farmer who prunes his young trees down to mere stalks has a stock of prunes on hand.
The husky man, who can manage the biggest animal, often fails to manage the smallest woman.
The man who ridicules his wife because she is prone to risk "marked down" goods should bear in mind that she probably ran a bargain counter risk when she allowed a certain man to select a wife. All is not "ice cream" that sells for ten cents per at the church social—A. B. Salom, in N. Y. Farm.
Cut Feed for Horses.
Many farmers know that cut hay, or even straw, wet and sprinkled with meal, is a better feed for working horses than whole grain and hay. In this shape the nutriment in the feed is easily eaten and digested. Horses do not need water when eating, except as it is put on the chopped hay to make the meal stick to it. The meal, being fine, digests perfectly, while much of the nutriment in whole grain is lost. Again, the wasted effect made in digesting the latter is so much detracted from the strength which should go to the work.
Rotation for Sandy Loam
On a sandy loam with some clay I have found a good rotation to be corn, wheat, clover, plowing for the corn, but not for the wheat. Some of our best Michigan farmers are using this rotation—Prof. C. D. Smith.
Not Recognized
Teacher—Ah! Another apple for me,
my dear?
Scholar—No-o-o, mam! I know my
lessons to-day. Chicago American.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND VIRGINIA
Mr. Potts (to his wife)—My dear, the air is chilly. Fermez la fenêtre. The Visitor (soffte voce)—Why do you ask your wife in French to shut the window?
Mr. Potts (ditto)—Because you are here. If I asked her in English she wouldn't do it, as she won't take instructions from me before visitors. But if I say it in French she gets up and does it at once, so as to let you see that she understands the language—Tit-Bits.
No Need.
Spokesman (of committee)—We want you to come to the meeting of our society to-morrow evening and give us an address about an hour long. Eminent Lecturer—To-morrow evening? That will not give me time to prepare myself.
Spokesman—You'll not need any preparation. What we want you to talk about is "How Our Newspapers Ought to Be Conducted."—Chicago Tribune.
What He Meant:
"The ills that are easiest to bear," said the philosopher, "are—"
"I know, I know," interrupted the friend. "You mean to say that, when you get right down to it, the ills that are the easiest to bear are the real, rather than the imaginary ones that seem so great."
"On the contrary, I mean that the ills that are easiest to bear are the ills of other people."—Chicago Post.
Not in the Mood:
The Deacon—I thought you intended to preach on the evils of profanity this morning. Why did you change your mind?
The Parson—Well, I dropped my collar button while dressing for church, and I didn't feel that I could do the subject justice.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Something Exceptional
Tess—She's a remarkable woman; not like other women at all.
Jess—Why, I've never noticed it.
Tess—I have. I watched her making bread the other day, and all the time she had her hands in the dough she didn't have to scratch her nose at all.
—Philadelphia Press.
Good Advice.
"What am I going to do?" he cried as he emerged from the water. "A thief stole my clothes?"
"Well," replied the stranger who happened along and naturally noted his condition, "I can't think of anything better than to go back in swimming again."—Chicago Post.
Took Something Away.
"He used to kiss me every time we passed through a tunnel before our marriage," said the little woman, with sad reflections.
"And does he do so now?" asked the bosom friend.
"No, he takes a drink."—Spare Moments.
Ought to Be.
"I don't understand," remarked Smithers, "what Peary wants to be always going after the north pole for. It must cost a lot to live up there."
"It does, generally speaking," replied Smuthers, "but just think how cheap ice must be!"—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
Fly in the Ointment.
"You kill time with your motor car?"
A shadow fell on Mildred's finely chiseled face.
"Yes, but the more time, the fewer people," she replied vexedly—Detroit Free Press.
As He Wandered On.
Weary Wilkins—Lady, I seen jus' such women in me dreams.
Mrs. Coldphiz—Go on; this is interesting!
Weary Wilkins—Yes'm, an' den I signed de pledge.—Cleveland Plain-dealer.
A. Deliberate Insult
Fred—I stole a kiss from Miss Peachy the other evening, and now she won't speak to me.
Joe—Why didn't you apologize?
Fred—I did. That's what made her mad.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
"Twas Ever Thus.
Alas! man's cup of sorrow
Is ever filled with woe;
When the ice man disappears
The coal man gets his dough.
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
TO BE QUITE EXACT.
The Sweet Maid—It must be awfully dangerous to go up in an airship.
The Inventor—Not half as dangerous as coming down—Chicago Chronicle.
Needs the Dough.
Old Jones—Do you play cards for money?
Daughter's Lover—Y-yes, sir; but—Old Jones—Well, let's have a game. I'm about busted.—Judge.
Sure to Get It.
Higbee—All that Larks needs is experience.
Dyer—Well, he's just been married and has bought an auto, so I guess he'll get it—Town Topics.
Still Griking
"So she lost her husband? Hns she recovered from her grief yet?" "Not yet. You know how slow these insurance companies are in settling."— Judge.
Prof. Broadhead—Amusements that we have grown tired of, my son.—Puck.
OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP COMPANY.
Night Line for Norfolk.
Leave Richmond daily at 7 p.m., stopping at Newport
News in both directions.
Daily except Sunday by O. & O. Railway, 9:00 a.m., 4 p.m. 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. by N. & W. Railway; all lines connect at Norfolk with direct steamers for New York, sailing daily except Sunday, 7 p.m.
Steamers sail from company's wharf (foot of Ash Street) Rockets.
K. F. CHALKLER, City Ticket Agt., 1212 E Main St.
JOHN F. MAYER, Agt. Wharf Foot of Ash St., Richmond, Va.
H. B. WALKER, V. P. & T. M., New York
Nov. 1st, 1903.
C & O
ROUTE.
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO
RAILWAY.
2 Hours and 25 Minutes to Norfolk.
7:50 a.m.-daily-Local to Newport News
and way stations.
9:00 a.m.-Limited-Arrives Williamsburg 9:50 a.m. Newport News 10:30 a.m. Old Point 11:00 a.m. Norfolk 11:25 a.m.
4:00 a.m.-Week days-Special-Arrives Williamsburg 4:50 p.m. Newport News 5:30 p.m. Old Point 6:00 p.m. Norfolk 6:25 p.m.
5;00 p. m.—Daily—Locals to Old Point.
MAIN LINE—WESTPOINT
p. m. - Week days - Local to Fred's Halls
10:30 a.m. Louisville, St. Louis and Cincinnati,
Louisville, St. Louis and Chicago
JAMES RIVER LINE.
10:20 a. m. Newburg, Newburg, Newburg,
Castle, Clifton Forge and parking
stations except Sunday to Lexington.
5:15 a. m. Train's RIVER RICHMOND FROM
TRAIN'S RIVER RICHMOND FROM
Old Point 10:55 a. m. daily. 11:45
a. m. Ek. St. Louis and Newport. Newport
News Local 8:30 p. m. daily.
James River Line Local from Ufton Forge
8:30 a.m. daily. Bremo Accum. 8:30 a.m. Ex. M.
Sun.
DOYLE, W. O. WARTHEN,
Gen'l Manager. Dist. Pass. Art
Effective Oct. 4th, 1903.
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND.
7:00 a. m.-Daily. Local for Charlotte.
12:30 p. m.-Daily. Limited. Brent Pullman.
12:30 p. m.-Daily. and Fu jingham. New Orleans,
Memphis. Clemson. All the South.
6:00 p. m.-Ex. uj4 y. Chastity.
11:05 p. m.-Daily. limited. Pullman ready.
9:30 p. m.-fourth to South.
YORK TOWN LINE
The favorite route to Baltimore and eastern
points. Leave Richmond 4:30 p. m. Daily ex-
cept Sunday.
5:30 p. m.-Except Sunday. Locals mixed for
West Point.
2:15 p. m.-Local for West Point.
2:15 p. m.-Except Sunday. For West Point,
connect with steamers for Baltimore and
landings.
TEAIN'S AREYE RICHMOND.
8:55 a. m. and 6:45 p. m. - From all the South.
8:45 p. m.
a. m. - From Chase City.
8:15 a. m. - Baltimore and West Point.
4:50 p. m. - From
H.C. ACKER, G.M. S.H. HARDWICK, G.P.A.
C. W. WESTBURY, D.P. A., Richmond, Va.
SEABOARD
**TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY**
2:30 a.m. - Seaboard Mail-10:35 p.m. - M. Seaboard E-mail-10:35 p.m. - Jacksonville
Atlanta and Southwest.
1:30 a.m. - M., Local-For Norrina and Hamlet
1:30 a.m. - M., Local-For Norrina and Hamlet
2:30 a.m. - No. 34-4-355 - DAILY.
3:35 a.m. - No. 34-4-355 - 66 - From Florida, Atlanta, and Southwest.
W. J. MAY, City Ticket Agent.
ATLANTIC COAST-LINE
TRAINS LEAVE PICHMOND DAILY
BYRD STREET STATION.
8:30 a. m. To all points South.
8:30 p. Petersburg and Norfolk.
12:30 p. Petersburg and N. & W. Wes.
8:30 p. Petersburg and Norfolk.
14:10 p. Goldboro local.
5:56 p. Petersburg local.
5:56 p. Petersburg local.
5:56 p. To points South.
5:56 p. To points South.
9:35 p. m. Petersburg and N. & W. West.
11:30 p. m. Petersburg local.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND.
4:07 a.m. m. 7:35 a.m. m. 8:25 a.m. except Sunday
11:10 a.m. m. 11:42 a.m. m. 2:00 p. m. m. 6:50 p. m.
m. 7:40 a.m. p. m.
*except Sunday.
C. S. CAMBELL, Div. Pass. Agt.
W. J. CRAIG, Gen Pass. Agt.
Norfolk and Western R. R.
LEAVE RICHMOND (DAILY), BYRD
STREET STREET
STREET STATION
600 A. m. ROEKOLK LIMITED. Arrives at Norfolk 11:20 a.m. holds only at Peersburg, Waverley and Suffolk.
8200 A.m. CHICAGO EXPRESS Belfort Parcel Company to Lynchburg end Bawkes. Pullman to Cincinnati and Puffield to Uctianum also. Roanoke, Knoxville, and Knoxville to Chattanooga, and Madison.
1220 p. m. Roanoke Express for Farmville, Lynchburg, and Roanoke.
1220 p. m. Ocean Sheets, limited Arrives Norfolk 11:20 a.m. holds only at Peersburg Waverley and Suffolk. Puffield to Boston. Providence, Raleigh, Baltimore and Washington. for Norfolk and all stations east of Petersburg.
9:35 P. M. NEW ORLEANS SHORT LINE. Pull man Sleeper Richmond to Lynchburg, Lynchburg to Memphis and Memphis to Lynchburg to Chattanooga. Memphis to Carrins Carrins to Carrins to the west. 7:35 m. m. 3 p. m. and 8:58 p. m. from Norfolk 11:10 m. 11:38 a. m. and 8:59 p. m. from E88 East Main Street. W. B. BEVILL C. H. BOSLEY Gen. Pass Art Div. Pass Agent
Low Winter Tourist Rates via Sea board Air Line Ry.
Seaboard Air Line Railway announces special winter tourist rates to all of the principal points in Florida and the Southwest. Tickets on sale daily until April 30th good returning until May 31st, 1904.
Drawing-room Pullman Cars on all through trains; Dining Car service south of Hamlet, Information as to rates, tickets, etc., cheerfully furnished on application to the undersigned.
H. S. LEARD, W. J. MAY,
Dist. Pass. Agt., City Ticket Agt.
830 E. Main St.
Richmond, Va. tildec19inc
ALPHEUS SCOTT,
OHURCH HILL
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
... AND EMBALMER,
Open Day and Night. Office and Ware rooms 3006 P St., Church Hill
Orders By Telegraph and Telephone promptly attended to. All business confidential. Old Phone No. 3183.
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WE WILL SEND YOU A HANDSOME GOLD-PLATED BREAST-PIN WITH YOUR PICTURE HANDSOMELY COLORED AND REPRODUCED THEREON FREE OF CHARGE.
They can be worn by either male or female, being called either Button or Medallions. We have made special arrangements with one of the largest concerns in the country to furnish all new subscribers, who pay $1.50 cash in advance for the PLANET one of these handsome Medallion free of charge. Fill out the Coupon and send it with $1.50 together with a good Photograph of the person whose features you desire reproduced in colors and we will send the button or medallion. All photographs will be returned. Enclose 5 cents extra to pay postage on the same. If you are not satisfied, your money will be refunded. Send us one yearly subscriber and we will send one Medallion. Two yearly subscribers, two Medallions.
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Special Land Buyers' Excursions
Will run to the new lands of Greer County, Oklahoma, and other sections of the great Southwest in November and December, via the Frisco System. Are you looking for rich and fertile farming lands in the Southwest which you can buy for from one-fourth to one-tenth the cost of lands of the East and North. They produce as much acre for acre. Here is a chance to better your condition and add a liberal amount to your pocket book.
For full particulars and special railroad rates apply at once to R. S. Lemon, Secretary Frisco System Immigration Bureau, St. Louis, Mo.
Winter Tourist Excursion Rates Via the Southern Railway
Beginning with October 15th, 1903 and continuing until April 30th, 1904, the Southern Railway will have on sale excursion tickets to many points in the South and South-west, at greatly reduced rates. Frequent and convenient schedules; Through Pullman and Thoroughfare cars; diuing car service of the highest class on all through trains. For details, apply to agents. C. W. Westbury, D. P. A., Richmond, Va.
To California, the South and South West Via Southern Railway
Low rates excursion ticket one way, and round trip now on sale Via Southern Railway to California and the South West. Elegant through service, "Dining cars." For details, apply to agents. C. W. Westbury, D. P. A.
Cheap Settlers' Tickets.
On the first and third Tuesday of each month till April, 1904, the Frisco System (St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad) will sell reduced one-way tickets from Birmingham, Memphis and Saint Louis to all points in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Indian Territory and Texas. Write W. T. Saunders, General Affient Passenger Dept., Atlanta, Ga., for further information.
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RAILWAY.
2000-Mile Tickets Discontinued.
On and after June 1, 2000-Mile Tickets will be withdrawn from sale and replaced by the 1000-Mile Refund Interchangeable Tickets heretofore announced.
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_—_—_—
PETA ES
muedy UIRNES
f AG Aa ASS ds
a \ Nes
i f pee
1a
BATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1008
THE RECONCILIATION SEALED.
Editor Mitchell Communes at the
First Baptist Church—A Pathetic
Seene—The Closing Chapter—
“All's Well That
‘The First Raptist Church was the
scene of another chapter in the “Peace
Jubilee Among the Baptists.” A large
‘Songrepation was present at the com.
amunion services lost Sunday afternoon,
and members of the Fifth Street Bay
Bist Church were to be seen in the audi
ence.
Editor Jobn Mitchat, Jr., had oy a
few moments before left the able Rev.
‘Dr. W. F. Grabam, after telling him
‘that ne had decided to attena the ccm-
amunion rervices and thus geal the bap.
penings of the Mondoy vight before: He
Was acecmpanied by Col. Jesse Scroggs,
who preceded him. ‘Then come Broth’
er Willem Beny Davis, who insisted
upon escorting the editor up the centre
aisle to the lower rostrum and gave hixn
mat smong the deacons.
THE FIRST COMMUNION.
It wns a scene long to be remembered.
Rev. Dr. W. T. John+on was the presid-
ng genius of the occasion and he called
upon Rev. Hines to deliver the prayer
Diessing the bread. This he did ina
ost op propriate and soul.stirring man-
ner. Then the deacons filed up and the
Fasicr passed to them the bandscave
Silver plates ond the congregation was
fed. Yor the first time in more than
two scars, Deacon W. T. White offered
Roster Mitchell the holy sacrament. of
the Bsptist Church. ‘This concluded
the deacons were served by the pastor,
while the congregation sang soul stir:
Ting old-fashioned hymns. Rey. R. J.
Bass sung a selection.
THE PRAYER Ix Zl0N.
Rey. W. T. Johnson then asked a
Dlessinig on the “vine and called upon
Bro, Jobn Mite2il, Jr., to lead in pray-
fer, there was a momentary selence, then
followed the prayer, which, fot the time
Being, stirred the church. The scene was
pathetic and, with voice quivering with
emotion, the editer preyed, He asked
Blessings on the wine, the pastor and the
officer-and men bers! thechurch. Many
eyes Were Wet with tears at the concla-
sion and wine was passed around among
the homble | worshiters, whe _ were
thre “to do this in memory of Him
who premised to bring all things right
4m His own time.”
THE CLOSING SCENE.
‘The fine] hymn was sung end glad
bends were grasped. bot rot before
Deacon Benjumin Herris, the most oped
men.ter of the cburch end one of Editor
Mitchell's mest nemiring friends, hac
waikea unstendily towards him, and
with a benediction, grasped his hand
heartily as once more being reconciled to
thechurch. Brother Richara Carter was
another enthusiast. Ho too had stood
by the edvtor during ll of his troubles
and, with his gray head lifted and voice
strong ns of yore, he sang two hymns of
rejoieng aid seemed ready “to say
Sora, now lettest thou thy servant de-
part in peace *** For mine eyes have:
deen thy nlvation,” |
—_—_oro—___
‘The National Kaptist 8.8. Union. |
‘The regviar monthly meeting of the
National Paptist S. 8’ Union was_bele
on Inst Sunday, Dec. isth, at the Fifth
Baptist Church, (Syeney }, Rev. Joseph
Peny, D. D., pzstor.
‘The edifice was well nigh packed with
an suxicus and enthusiestic audience.
Brother J. L. Brown, of the Fifth Bap:
tist S. 8. we'comed the Union in a soul.
stirring and timely ndéress. The Presi.
dent responded. “The recitations and
roles Ly the little ones were very inspir
ang. (Little) Miss Lizzie Dickerson, of
the Union Mission, deserves special
arention for her sweet solo. Miss M. L.
Coleman, of Zicn Peptist Church, Man:
chester, ford n fine paper on “Temper.
ance’””’ Miss Corrie B, Fitzhugh deliv-
ud a very fine declamation, — ‘The
Nenyereil Quartette sang as never be-
fore.
An address, "Why ere We Baptists?”
‘wos delivered by Hon. J. Henry Orateh-
field. R@marks by Dr. Anderson. A
‘very Jorge collection wes lifted
The next Union will be held pt the
Zien Fuptist Church, Menchester, Va,
on the second Fundsy in Junnary,
‘The cfhicers and members of the Un-
ion are well pleased with the year's
work and will start out with new vim
and greater determiuation,
a
REY. FISHBURN DID NOT RETURN
Arrested in New Jersey.
‘The arrest of Rev. James W. Fish-
burn in New Jersey and his subsequent
‘Anaring at Mt. Holly, N, J., has created
sinch comment in’ this” state. He
preached in the “Methodist ‘churches
ereand was a promoter of a New
Jersey Land scheme. Many parties
claimed that he did not give them credit
for the entire amount paid by them,
while others claimed that they were
unable to secure valid titles to the
property, .parchased and said to be
telin New Jersey.
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford of Petersburg
seem to have invested in this New
Jersey property and so interested did
they become that the husband visited
fii locality in which the lots which he
purchased from the Rev. Fishburn
were located. The result was stated
by him was that be did not have a title
and could not secure a ttle to the prop-
ty under the money already paid,
‘He returned home a sadder, but wiser
man, The Petersburg grand jury in-
‘yestigated the matter and returned an
imdictment against Rev. James W.
Fishburn. He was located in New
Jersey and requisition papers were so-
ured from Gov. Montague. Armed
with these the Peterburg officials went
to Mt, Holly, N. J., but did not suoceed
in gotting the New Jersey Governor to
aaa eget conse sal at
be e divine will not
tried at this session of the court.
EERSTE SETS
—Sir James H. Ferguson, D. Deputy
@rana Obancellor of Gharlottsviile, Va.
galled on ws. |
THE AMERICAN
BEN. INS. 60
ITS MONTHLY MEETING
President W.¥.(Grana Makes En-
couraging Remarks—General Man-
ager B.H. Peyton Renders a Fine
Report—1018 New Members Receiy-
ed During the Month of November—
The American the Wonder of the
Age.
Oh Wednesday, night, the 9th inst.,
the Foard of Managers of the American
Beneficial Insurance Company met at
their place of business, 613 N. 2nd St,
and conducted the usual routine month
ly business, pnd listened to the reports
of the general officers. ‘There were
present at the meoting Directors Dr. W.
. Graham, Prof B. H. Peyton,
R. H. Fauntleroy, Esq; Mat
thew J, Harris, Esq; Attorney J.
‘Thomas Hewin. A.D, Price, James #.
Poge, Edward. Coleman, James E.
Chiles, Virgil L. Hawkins, Joseph I ov-
ing, Adcljhus Humbles, Esq.; Lewis
Cheatham,
Very encouraing reports came in
from all of the branch offices. Genera
Manager B. H. Peyton showed in his
report that 1018 new members had
joined the company during the month
of November, that seventeen death
claims had been paid and 678 sick
claims, smounting to $2459.98 paid out
during the month for sick and death,
He stated that the field was in a health:
ly condition, Stirring and most inter.
esting reports were made by. General
Inspectors Matthew J. Harris and R.
H. Fountleroy. Gen. Supt. John W.
‘Howard brings in a glowing report
from the field.
| President Grabam gave a glowing ac.
‘count of the outlook for the future. Af-
ter which Mr. A.D. Price made.a most
business-like address, speaking of the
great futore that awaits the American.
Lawyer J. Thomas Hewin and Treas:
urer Virgil Hawkins mde addresses
which showed that they are deeply. in-
terested in the work of this great com.
pany. The Vice-President Edward T.
Coleman also made a very happy speech
and the Board is looking forward to the
ircrease of the capital stock in the very
near future to $200,000.00 in order that
thg compauy may branch out it-to all of
the states where large numbers of color-
ed people live.
Rey. Taylor's Son in Trouble.
F Mr. W. L. Taylor, son of Rev. W. L.
Taylor, D. D., was’ arrested at Appo-
mattox, Va., last week upon the charge
of cutting Conducter Harry Douglass of
the N. and W. R. R. It seems that
Mr. Taylor who 18 Manager of the Trae
Reformer Store at Roancke,. Va.. was
enroute home to be married. He spoke
tothe white brakeman, calling him
porter and asking him to wake him xP
at Petersburg. The brakeman tool
offense and the conductor took the
matter up with Taylor. Hot words
iollowed and the conduetér fstrack Mr.
‘Taylor, who hada knife in his hend.
tue bad teen whittling a tooth-pick,
Suffice it to say that the conductor was
ent. Mr. Taylor was arrested. His
father bearing of the affair secured the
services ot Lawyer J. ©. Robertson and
W. ©. Franklin, Esq., of Pauplin, Va..
und after tome difficulty secured bail
for his son in the sam of five thousand
dollars. The case will be heard to-day
at Appomatcx Mr. W. L. Taylor was
niorried last ‘I uesday night and it is un-
fortunate that his honey-moon is to be
cloned by such a disagreeable alter-
cation.
Pays Up to 1906.
: DOE TY” eee a We RC One
Jobn Mitchell, Jr.,
Dear Sir:—Enelosed fined Postal Or
der for $4.00, for which you wil
continue to send me your paper to Feb
rosry 15th, 16, which has been giving
£0 mach good advice to the Sons of
Ham. If they will take heed therete
aud pot in practice the wholesome ad:
vice that yonr paper, The Planet, bring:
to them in time, those that ure ‘of the
opinion that the Sons of Ham are alike
will wake up some of these fine Sunday
mornings and find that the Son of
Righteousness has penetrated in the
heart of the despised race and he has
‘become a reflector to teach, all men that
God 1s (he one who roles and has
‘no respect to those that hate him or do
it to the least cf them.
| 1, in my vision, feel and sometimes
think I can see the lightning flashes in
the cane brake, foretelling of the storm
that will take hold of mens’ works, and
God has in preparation the Moses that
will lead his people out of the wilder-
ness from sinful men with the pillow of
righteousness to Jead them, and the
cloud of darkness that will come before
the destruction of thos: that hate him,
0 thut they, the Sons of Ham, may go
forth in peace to till the earth and earn
his bread by the sweat of his brow
without fear from eny enemy of truth
and righteousness,
May Gud's Dicisinga s.st upon you
and the work you are engaged in be the
lifting up of the weak and the seeds
yon have been scattering havé uot fall-
gn by the wayside or on stony hearts.
Some have taken root and with showers
from Heaven above will bring forth
fruit of right and justice to all men.
Yours ever to lift up and not tear down,
W. A. Bryays.
: Mass Meeting Cor Parents,
Rey. W. H. White, pastor of Mt. Oar.
‘mal Baptist Church, will deliver a speo-
ial sermon, “The Relationship of the
Church and $.8. and Its Importance,
‘at the Fifth Street Baptist Charch next
‘Sunday, Dec. 20th, 1903. at 3p. m. Tae
meeting is ander ne ansplces ot the
sunday & Parents, Suanc
School workers and friends are invited.
Excellent music. Special solo by Miss
H. Bell Fitzhugh,
—<—-=__
Now Tourist Sleoping Car Line to
California,
Commencing December oth, the
Frisco System will inaugurate througl
Pullman Tonrist Sleeping Oar servic:
between Birmingham, Als., and Sar
Francisco, California.” Cars 'will leave
Birmingham at 10:20 p. m., every Tues
day, and will be routed via: the Frise«
System to Kansas City, Rock Islan¢
System to Pusblo, Denver and. Ric
Grande and Rio Grande Western tc
Ogden and Sonthern Pacific to’ San
Francisco.
Requests for reservations should be
addressed to
W.T. SAUNDERS, Gengral Agont,
aa ae pt.
Oorner Pryor Decatar St's
~ Aélanta, Ga,
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
———
IN MEMORY OF WM. 3. SMITHS] —Sir 1. 8. Keon, of Danville, Va.,!
aS = es | WRIGHT P'
Late Member of Starlight Beneficial rae a L. Smith, of Chula De-
Club, Died Dee. 12th, 1903. pot, Va.calledomus. | NEWTAR
‘This is to certify that Brother Wil-
Mam B. Smith, who departed, this Ife
on Setorday evening, ber 12th,
‘at 10 o'clock, was one of the founders
of Starlight’ Beneficial Club, No. 1, of
Richmond.
Eive yenrs ago, with others, he deoid-
ed that it was his duty to do what he
could to bring together and benefit the
Young men of the race. “He opened. his
ouse for the purpose, and our club
came into existence. In time it out-
grew the confines of his private resi-
dence, and yet be provided us a home
over his place of business.
He was elected treasurer at the time
of organization and held the position
until his death. He was always kind and
pleasant and exhibited a Christian dis-
position, and in every possible. way, do-
ng what good he coald. Because of bis
amiable qualities every member of the
club loved him, and his death comes to
‘ng with a peculiar shock. for his place
can never be filled with us.
‘Not only was he a good member of our
club, but he was a conscientious Chris-
tain ‘and member of the Ebeuezer Bap.
tist Church. When in good health his
voice could often be heard raised in
songs in praise to the God whom he
earned in early life to serve.
‘As a citizen he was useful and was
for many years an hunored member of
the Richmond City Council, As a
neighbor he was loved by all.
While we feel deeply bis Joss, yet in
his last vying testimony he left us not
‘comfortless, for he assured those around
him thar he was ready and willing. to
meet that God who bad many years be:
fore promised to be with him in the
hour of death.
He leaves a large family and a host of
friends. To his widow we desire to say
that you bave our sympathy in this,
your preat loss, but we bez of you not
to weep as forone who has no hope, for
we feel that yon shall see our brother
again where parting will be no more
and where sorrow cometh not.
Keeling that whatsoever God doeth is
right, we can only say for our brother:
“Thou art gone to thy rest, brother!
‘We will not weep for thee;
For thou art now where oft on earth
‘Thy spiait longed to be.
“Thou art gone to thy rest. orother!
‘Thy toils and cares are o'er;
And forrow, pain and suffering now
Shall ne'er distress thee more.
“Thou art gone to thy rest, brother!
‘Thy sins are all forgiven;
And saintsin light have wlecomed thee
‘To share the joys of heaven!
“Thon art gone to thy rest, brother!
‘Death had no sting for thee;
: Thy dear Redeemer’s might hath
; gained
For thee the vietory.””
Done by order of Starlight Beneficial
Club, No. 1. =
Jons H. Mapry, Pres.;
N. P. Tver, Secretary,
W. P. Burrell,
E,W. Brown,
‘W. D. Payne,
Committee on Resolutions.
Y¥. M. C. A. Notes,
| The Y. M. ©. A. Conference last Fri-
day was very interesting. The Bee
stung.
She member's meeting last Friday
evening was very encouraging. The
reports were good. Twenty new mem-
‘bers were reported. Each man. present
pledged himself to find a new member.
The explanation on the Sunday
School Lesson last Saturday was a help
to all who attended, Come again.
The reports from the jail and alms-
house last Sunday showed thet the men
had been faithful in the work of the
Lord. One hundred requests for prayer
came from the jail. The committee
visited fifty sick persons.
| The boys were addressed by Brother
J. 1H, Roher, who is particularly inter-
ested in the boys. Subject: ‘Solomon's
Choice.” It was very timely and frait
will be seen in the near future.
General Secratary S. ©. Burrell con-
ducted the open meeting for men last
Sunday. All took an active part. One
man Was reported who was led to
Christ last Friday. An after meeting
was held for the benefit of a man who
did not know Christ. The results were
that the man accepted the Saviour.
Men, be on the watch, for there is work
to be done now for the Lord.
‘Women and men are invited to the
explanation on the SOUaey, School Les-
son Saturéay 5 p. m., at the ¥. M.O. A.
rooms. Free.
A special meeting for boys Sunday ti
p. m., at the rooms. Come,
Lawyer George W. Lewis will ad-
dress the men Sunday 5:20°p. m., at the
Y.M. OC. A. rooms. ‘Subject: “The Call
for Men.'' Duets will be sang by Rev.
A. D. Daly and Rev. Adolphus Hobbs.
Do not miss this meeting. Find the
other fellow, See that be comes. Free
for ell men,
Rev. A. D. Daly will conduct the ear-
ly meetin Christmas morning at 9
o'clock. Come out men, and start, We
will have a good time. A plenty for
every man that comes. Do not miss
this meeting.
we men a invited to make ae
. A. their stopping place during
the holidays. ee ther Gees come |
in and help them to take that which
will make them strong for the right.
, The Young Men’s Christian Associa-
tion wishes everybody a joyous Christ-
mas.
FARMER—Died December Ist, at 12:
80. m., 1903, Mrs. H. Farmer, late of
Richmond, at the residence’ of _ her
daughter, Mrs. Annie Davis, No. 226 E.
127th St., New York City, after a brief
illness of fifteen days, age 51 years,
Sho was a member of ‘the ‘Mt Olivet
Baptist Onurch, Richmond, Va. Her
faneral took plage Friday, Deo. 4th. In-
termont at St. Michel's Cemetery, Long
Island, N. Y. She leaves two daugh-
ters and ‘a host of friends to mourn
their loss.
———++=-—___
——Mrs. Mary Jones has issudd_invi-
tations to the marriage of her daughter,
Miss Franc.s Jones, of Richmond, Va.,
to Mr. Henry O. Watkins Wednesday
evening, December 23rd, 8 o'clock at
29 Princeton St., East Orange, N. J.
Mr. Watkins and his bride will be at
home after the ¥7th inst., 55 Oakwood
Ave., Orange, N. J.
———
——Mrs. J. M. Funn, the wife of Mr.
J, Marks Fann, is quite siok at her resi-
dence, 608 N. 8rd St. re ad
-_ ——Sir El. 8, Keen, of Danville, Va.,
called on ve.
—=Rev. W. L. Smith, of Chula De-
pot, Va.. called on us.
——Sir Joe Rose, of Clifton Forge,
‘Va, is io ho city this week
——Mrs. Eliza Baker, formerly of
Richmond, but now residing at Mt.
Clair. N. J., has returned home after a
pleasant stay of one month, the guest
of Mr, and Mrs. 8. 8. Baker.
“Mistakes and Misfits” at First Bap-
tist Church, Manchester, Rev. A. Bin-
ga, Jr., pastor, on Monday night. Dee.
2st. Rev. R. Beecher Taylor will lec-
ture on the above named subject. Spec
tal music. Admission free. Special
collection will be taken for benefit of
Swansboro Baptist Church. Public in-
vited.
————
= The marriage of Miss Jonnie Hick:
man, formerly of Richmond, Va., but
now of Washington, D. ©., daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Hickman, tc
Mr. James E. Young, of Washington,
D. O., will take place Tuesday, Decem:
ber 22nd, 1903, at No. 1624 ‘Madison St.,
Woshington, D. ©. All friends are in
Baltimore, Md., Deo. 1908.
Mrs, Fannie Bill.
I would like so much to bave you
home. My dear wife, if you only knew
my feelings I am sure you would not
regret coming home once again. Dc
come,
‘Your loving busband,
James Hitt,
ANNOUNCEMENT
Or THE
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY
ORCHESTRA AND GLEE CLUB.
The Club is a unique organization,
the only one of its kind traveling. I!
gives a high class and refined entertain
ment of orchestral music, song and
story. It bas appeared under the pat
ronage of various churches and other
organizations and has been commended
by pulpit and press.
It has given concerts in Carnegie
‘Hall, N. ¥.; Odd Fellows’ Temple, Wil.
‘ington, Del., under the auspices of U.
A.M. P. Church; Carroll Hall, Phila.
delphin.
Under patronage of Dr. Blackwell,
Wesley A. M. E. Z. Oburch; bev. J. B.
Reeve, D. D., Central Presbyterian
‘Church; Rey. W. A. Creditt,D.D., Cherry
Street Baptist Church; Rev. Dr. Phil
lips, Shiloh Baptist Church; Rev. J. W.
Ico, First A. Presbyterian Church.
‘The Club will appear in True Reform
ers’ Hall, Friday, January Ist, 1904, at
8:15, p.m,
Tickets sold at box office on evening
of December Sist and afternoon of Jan-
uary Ist, 1904.
ML. Bernet, A.B. McCoy,
Conductor. ‘Manager.
—— oe
SUIT FOR $500,000 DECIDED
Court Finds That Mr. and Mrs. W. C.
Andrews Died First.
New York. Dec. 16.—It was decided
by Surrogate ‘Thomas that Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace ©. Andrews died about 15
minutes before Mrs, Andrews’ sister,
Mrs, Gamatiel ©. St John, in the fire
Which destroyed the Andrews home in
67th street on April ‘7, 1899, In this
the surrogate reverses the report of
‘the referee, who found that the three
-Yietims of the fire met death simulta-
“neously.
Mrs. St. John was a beneficiary un-
der the will of Mr. Andrews for a large
sum, belng one of several relations
among whom $500,000 was to be dis.
tributed, and had she lived would have
received a portion of the property of
Mrs. Andrews. The heirs of Mrs. St.
John will now receive their respective
Portions of the inheritance.
Mr, Andrews, who was one of the
original standard ofl men and at the
time of his death was president of the
New York Steam Company, left an
estate estimated at $2,000,000,
LAKE SUPERIOR SOLD
Assets of Concern Bought by Speyer
&@ Co. For S480 000
New York, Dec. 16.—The assets of
tha Consolidated Lake Superior Com-
pany, held by Speyer & Co. for a loan
of $5,050,000, were bought in at public
auction by Speyer & Co. for $4,500,000.
‘Theirs was the only bid. ‘The sale ‘was
held In spite of several protests by rep-
resentatives of other creditors.
Just before the auctioneer asked for
bids he was served with a notice that
suit had been begun in the State Su-
Preme Court to set aside the same,
James Speyer declined to say what dis-
Position the syndicate contemplated
makiag of the collateral now owned
outright. Replying to further ques-
tlons Mr. Speyer and Charles Tweed
said that to the best of thelr Knowledge
the United States Steel Corporation
would have no interest whatevé? in
the property.
Glrlg Confess to Robbing Schools.
Washington, Dec. 16.—Two girls,
giving the names of Celia Gilson, 16
years old, who said her address was
14 East 114th street, New York, and
Fannie Lewis, 18 years old, who safd
she lived at 180 East 10ist street, New
York, were arrested by Detective O'Day
and were lodged in the house of deten.
tion penditig a hearing in the police
court, They confessed to an extensive
series of robberies, and acknowledge
having committed thefts in over 100
school houses, most of them in Nev
York. A number of local schools also
have been entered and ransacked.
Chicago Gets Republican Convent .
eee Te eid) emer
‘Washington, Dec. 14.—The Repypi\_
can national convention will be held
in Chicago, beginning at noon ry june
21 next, the Republican 9 mittec
Feaching this conclusion ay. “Sajourn.
ing subject to call. PIL ure and St
Louis were rivals of CP icacs for the
convention. Each city way walt rep.
resented in oratory 'yefore the conn
mittee, and each a¥ 6 had cash offers
to make. Pittsby cg offerea $100,000,
Chicago Ey “and a Til and St
Louis $40,000-“and a half. ‘The vote
stood 43 for/Chicago, se cen for Pitts-
burg and 60 for St. Loi sis. The work
of the committee wiry harmenious
throvghout.
WRIGHT PREDICTS
NEW LABOR SYSTEM
se Fre inh ape
| WAGE DEMAND NOT SUFFICIENT
Philadelphia, Dec. 14.—“The wages
system will pass away. In its stead,
I believe, there will come a system
‘which will be composed of the profit.
sharing and the co-operation ideas,
‘The great labor question means the
struggle of humanity for a higher
standard of life. The employer must
consider his employe, as well as the
stockholder, as an investor.”
‘These words were contained In an
address upon “The Wage Question,”
made by Carroll D. Wright, United
States commissioner of labor, before
the Society of Ethical Culture of this
city.
Of scarcely less interest than his
prediction of a new labor syste was
Colonel Wright's approval of a plan
to insure labor against incapacity re-
sulting from accident, fllness or ad-
vancing age. The German idea was
quoted, under which the employer
must pay one-fourth the cost of a sick
and death benefit policy, the employe
one-fourth, and the government one
half. “England,” said Colonel Wright,
“has taken up this question, and we of
the United States are steadily ap.
Proaching it.” ,
Contin:ing, Col. Wright sata: “Capt.
tal charges to the consumer the depre-
ciation of property and machinery.
‘Why should not the depreciation of 1a-
bor’s machinery, its hands, its brains,
ite body, be included in the final cost.
“We see in every progressive com-
munity that the demand of the work-
man 1s no longer for a wage sufficient
to enable him to keep body and soul
together. Labor has been taught to
feel that it is a social as well as an
economie power in the community and
this educating process has gone on un-
til the demand of labor is for a rea-
sonable margin beyond that fixed by
the iron law of wages.
“The wage system will pass away. It
ig as has been shown, unsatisfactory
in many of its applications. It de-
pends too largely on its equities upon
the generosity and great mindedness of
employers. That there are many svch
‘Who would scorn to influence the votes
or action of their employes, and who
would be incapable of taking petty or
great advantage of their workmen is
happily true. That there are others,
however, who make use of these oppor-
tunities proves the weakness of the
system and argues for a greater meas-
ure of independence for those who la-
bor, The system that will take the
place of that under which mere wages
are paid probably will be composed 62
the profit sharing and co-operation
plans. The work people will then ac-
ugire the interest of investors, the more
capable will rise to their opportunities
and the less worthy will find their
level.”
CAMDEN SUSPECTS ARRESTED
Two Held For Numerous Robberies
Gasmsssithas an Sie Serene,
Camden, N. J., Dec. 14.—Two con-
Stables arrested two men In the Penn-
sylvania Railroad yards at Bordentown
on suspicion of being connected with
the gang of five robbers who late on
Friday night and Saturday morning
terrorized the citizens of Pavonia, in
East Camden. ‘The mon gave their
names as John Gaffney, of Ireland. and
Hugh Phillips, of Philadelphia, 90%
denies that he had any connection #1
the robberies committed on the ea
Bide of this city.
The desperadoes early Saturday held
‘up & couple of bridgekeepers, cracked
the safe of the Pennsylvania railroad
Station at Pavonia, made the engineer
and fireman of a drill engine move on,
So that they might proceed with their
work; bombarded a too inquisitive
towerman with pistol shots and finally
got out of town with bullets from po-
Hcemen's revolvers whistling past their
cars.
The Pennsylvania railroad towerman
at Rush Rusling Station, em the Cam-
den ond Antsy Geistcs, toor ots
from Trenton, was held up Saturday
night. Three men entered the tower
and at the point of a revolver secured
from James Kinsey, of Bordentown,
the contents of his pockets, consisting
of only small change, The robbers
then made their escape, and Kinsey
Sent word to Trenton. While a squad
of police were going toward the tower
they saw three men, who upon the ap-
proach of the officers took flight. One
of them, Robert Mitchell, who gave his
address as Trenton, was captured and
held on the charge of trespassing on
the rallroad. The police have no evi-
dence of a more serious charge. It is
believed that the men who held up
Kinse¥ belonged to the band of rob-
bers that operated in East Camden,
Met All Presidents But Washington.
Johnson City, Ténn., Dec. 16.—Malor
Willlam H. Garland, aged 94 years, is
dead at the National Soldiers’ Home
here. He had shaken hands with every
President of the Upited States except
Washington. He was Gh the m&val ca
det detail that Welcomed Latagette on
the second visit to America in 1824,
and he at one (me conversed with
Napoleon on the Island of St. Helena.
Major Gaxtand’s wife and children
were d-owned in the Evansville, Ind.
floo*, im 1884. He was for many yearo
® Baptist minister.
| Bhot While Beating Hise Father.
Hamlin, W. Va. Dec. 16. — William
Copeley attempted to brain his aged
father with a stick of stove wood, and
‘Willikm Burns, a neighbor, drew a
gun ‘and shot the boy fatally. The
elder Copeley ‘will probably die also
Burns surrendered.
Cardinal’ Strange Bequest.
London, Dec. 16—The will of the
late Cardinal Herrero y Espinosa con-
tains, according to a special despatch
from Madrid, the extraozdinary be-
quest of $10,000 to the “first Spanish
general landing in United States terri-
tory with an army sufficiently strong to
avenge the defeats of Cuba and the
Philippines.” Pending the happening
of this event the legacy {s to remain
‘deposited in the bank of Spain.
KNOX SHOWSWHY
MERGER IS ILLEGAL
‘Washington, Dec. 16.—The argument
in the Northern Securities casm was re-
sumed in the United States supreme
court, and again the court room was
crowded by attorneys and others inter-
ested in the case. Attorney General
Knox was recognized almost imme-
Giately after the court came in and re-
sumed bis argument at the point at
which he left off. He declared that by
the union of the Northern Pacific and
the Great Northern in the Northern
Securities company two competing in-
terstate railroads have been brought
into such relations that their independ-
ence as competitive factors in in‘er-
‘state commerce is destroyed.
|The attorney general said that it
‘Was not his intention to reargue any
‘of the propositions settled by the trans-
Missouri and Joint Traffic cases, but to
o what he could to show thelr appli-
cation to the facts of this case. He,
however, made the following statement
of the great questions settled by the
court In those cases:
“First—That to shut out the oper-
ation of the general law of competi-
lion between competing interstate rail-
roads is to restrain interstate com-
merce,
“Secon¢—That te bring the opera-
tions of two or more competing inter-
State railroads under the control of a
single body shuts out the operation of
the generai law of competition and con-
‘stitutes a restraint upon interstate
commerce.
| “Third—That congress is competent
to forbid any agreement or combina-
vion among companies competing for
interstate commerce which restrains
commerce among the states by shutting
out the operation of the general law of
competition.
“Fourth—That in order to maintain
a suit the government is not obliged
to show an intent to restrain com-
merce, if such restraint is the natural
and necessary effect of the arrange-
ment.”
Attorney General Knox held that the
combination was in the form of a
trust, and was specifically invalidated
by the statute.
He also declared that the power to
suppress competition has been exer-
cised, and he declared that Messrs.
Morgan’ and Hill had the power to sup-
Press competition between these two
roads when they held the control of
the majority of the stock of the two.
He also asserted that they executed
That Fewer, eaé aetually suppressed
and destroyed competition between
them the moment they parted with the
legal title to their segregated holdings
and vested them in the Northern Se-
curities company, with the power in
that company, as its charter specifies,
“to exercise all the rights or owner-
ship, including the right to vote there-
oan
He then took up the doctrine of di-
Teet and immediate effect upon inter-
state commerce, On that point he sald:
“The Northern Securities arrangement
Operates directly upon commerce, be-
cause its certain effect is to control
every act, policy, and operation of two
gigantic systems of railroads by which
commerce ts carried on. Nowhere docs
it appear by suggestion even, that the
Durpose of orsanizing the Northern Se-
curities company was other than to se-
cure the contro! of these two roads, |
“Congress,” he declared, “can regu-
Inte anything and everything in the|
sense that it can prohibit and prevent
its use in a way that will defeat a law
that congress may constitutionally en-
act. For this purpose, the supremo
power operates upon everything, upod
every one.”
In concluding, he called attention to
the great possibilities of a securities
holding company as # financial ma-
chine for manipulating railroads and
other properties and concentrating
their contro! in the hands of a power-
fai clique, aud said:
“T qomnet think that a combination
held together by a rope of sand comes:
within the prohibition of the law, and
that one which is bound by links of
steel may defy its wisdom and its
Power,
“To prevent such a dangerous con-
centration of power, dangerous to com-
merce and a menace to our freedom,
the people have done all that it is pos-
sible for them to do under our system
of government. They have legislated
against it. If this law can be construed
50 as not to cover the situation, or if
the court says yea to the proposition
affirmed in the last paragraph of Mr.
Morgan's answer—namely, con:resa
has no power to prevent such combina-
tions, then, indeed, the government's
grave concern as to this litigation may |
be easily understood.
Wife Murderer Hanged at Media, Pa.
Media, Pas Dec. 16—Henry, alias
“Kid" YOHes, colored, was hanged in
Tie county jail yard here for the mur-
der of his wife in Chester on March 8
Yast. His neck was broken and he was
pronounced dead in six minutes. The
condemned man, who had been surly
Newspaper of 160 Pages.
St. Louis, Dec. 15.—The twenty-fifth
anniversary of the publication of the
Post Dispatch was celebrated by the
issuing of an edition a single copy of
which weighed two pounds and con-
tained 160 pages. Ten streot cars and
more than 60 wagons were required to
distribute the paper in St. Louis. Al-
though 260,000 copies were issued, the
supply was soon exhausted.
STEEL TRUST TO CUT WAGES
180,000 Men to be Reduced from § to
20 Per Cent.
New York, Dec, 15—The statement
was made by a leading official of the
United States Steel Corporation that
beginning January 1, 1904, about 96
per cent. of the employes of the cor-
poration will suffer wage reductions,
Yanging from 5 to 20 per cent. This
Feduction will affect about 150,000 work-
‘Qoen Im the various grades of the sub-
Geary companies.
‘The remaining 10 per cent. of em~-
Ployes are members of the Amalga~
mated Association of Iron, Steet ud
Tin Workers, whose wage schedule
Funs to July 1, 1904.
‘The finance committee of the steot
corporation has, it is understood, under
consideration the dismissal of many
high salaried employes, in add tion to
those already discharged, but no state-
ment on this point was forthcom ing.
It was asserted that, barring some
unforeseen technicalities, employes of
the corporation who participated in
the profit sharing plan will in the com-
ing month receive a $5 dividend on
the preferred stock to which they sub-
scribed at $82.50.
FIVE TRAINMEN KILLED
‘Two Engines and Train On B. @ O.
Plunged Into Deep Ravine.
Piedmont, W. Va, Dec. 14—Five men
Were killed and several severely in-
Jured by the overturning of two en-
gines attached to a heavy Baltimore
‘and Obio freight train on the “17 mile
grade,” near this city.
‘The dead are: Engineer Ernest D.
Ervin, Cumberland, Md.; Engineer
Emery Ervin, Tunnelton, W. Va.; Plre-
man Walter B. Nine, Terra Alta, W.
Va; Fireman J. V. Carter, Cumber-
Jand, Md.; Brakeman John Hays.
‘Staunton, Va.
‘The more seriously Injured were:
Engineer Michael J. Gibbon, Cumber-
Jand, Md,, fatally crushed; Fireman i.
©. Buckler, Terra Alta, W. Va. arms
and head cut and bruised; Brakeman
B. F. Bolinger, Grafton, W. Va, seri-
ously crushed.
While descending the “17 mie
grado” the train, to which were at-
tached two engines, left the track. The
engines and nearly ail of the 24 loaded
cars tumbled into a deep ravine, ear
tying the trainmen with them. The
tracks were torn up for nearly 10¢
yards.
Waves of 30.000 Reduced.
Connellsville, Pa, Dec. 30.—A te
duction in wages averaging 17 per
cent and affecting 20,000 men in the
Connellsville coke regions has been
announced. The H. GC. Friek Coke
Company takes the tnitiative in this,
the first reduction since the great
strike of the early nineties, and posted
notices at all their plants announcing
the reductions. Just a year ago an tn
creast of 10 per cent. was announced
by the company. Nothing but ad-
vance notices have been posted by
the compant=s of the soft ¢oal ragion
since 1895, and the averagé Sov
since February 1. 1904, bas been 16 p
cent,
Dowager Queen’s Marriace Denied.
Rome, Dec. 15.—The report tete-
Graphed from Bologna that the Dewa-
Ber Queen Margherita, during a reeent
Journey to Norway, had contracted a
morganatie marriage with an engineer
80 years old is authoritatively denied.
‘The engineer to whom the queen moth-
er is alleged to have been married is
named Tenerand He is over 50 years
of age, and is employed as caretaker of
tho numerous charitaiie institutions
which are supported by the queen.
Bank Defaulter Pleads G.wilty.
‘Trenton, N. J., Dee. 15.—Jau. M-
Edge, the defaulting Paterson bank tel
Jer, pleaded guilty in the United States
District Court, and will be sentenced
next Monday. Edge was recently ar-
rested after an absence from Paterson
of nearly a year. His peculations
amounted to nearly $100,000.
UNEXPECTED FORTUNE TO EIGHT
sreire to Envaceiphia Property.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Dec. 15. — News
comes from Bloomsburg to the effect
that a large fortune has beon loft in
Philadelphia, in which the estate of
Mrs, Henry Litwiler, of Roaring
Brook, Columbia county, is direetly in-
terested, which may result in leayine
a comfortabie fortune fot eack ot abet
children who survive her. It ts eid
that the first Information that the fam
ily had of this wealth cad with a lot
ter from the Philadelphia and Reading:
Railroad company to Mrs. Henry Lit
wiler, in which the railroad eompany
asked to release some props ri in Phu
adelphia belonging to the io ichér es-
tate, of which Mrs. Litwiler was a fin-
eal descendant. The property in quas-
tion is located on Broad street, Phila-
delphia, and ts valued at $400,000, Mrs.
Litwiler died some time ago, and the
letter was opened by her son Edward,
who at once took steps to establish
rights to the property. It ts expected
that thelr interests will be looked af-
ter by ex-Governor Robert H Pat-
tison, The probabilities are that
when their rights aré established they
will not agree to releasing the land,
but will insist upon a sale
Together with the som Hdward ther
are the following Lrethers and ststets.
William W, rank H, Stephen &.,
Mrs, dy B, Sass, Mrs. Amanda Linder
muth, Nffs. Jacob Turnbach, all of
Roarg Creck township. ‘Their tater.
ests are one-cighth of all the estate,
which would bring to each the com-
fortable fortune of $63,500.
IN MEMORY OF BILL NYE
Movement Afoct to Erect Monument
Over the Humorist’s Grave.
Asheville, N. C., Dee. 14.—The grave
of Bill Nye, the famous humorist, whe
died nearly eight years ago and was
buried at Arden, near bere, is unmark-
ed, and a movement 1s afoot to have
‘@ granite monument erected above his
resting place. The North Carolina dtvi-
sion of tho Sunshine Society is ralging
the fund.
‘When Nyo passed away his devoted
widow placed a memoriat window in
Calvary Episcopal Church, nearby, but
her plans for # more Atung memoria!
wore frustrated by the failure, foor
after Mr. Nye's death, of banks in
which practicaly all the fortune lef:
by her husband had been deposited
At present a Jittle tree is growing a:
the head of tho grave, and some on
has laid upon the mound a rude piece
‘of stone picked up om the highway
Gcier: aree, shore: are sone. ee
M. Ransier, president of the Sufishine
Society, Hendersonville, N. ©, ts the
active head of the memorial enter-
prise, and contributions are invited
from the friends of Nye thronghou!
the country. They should be adiress.
ed to Battery Park Bank, Asheville
N.C, custodian of the fund