Richmond Planet
Saturday, February 6, 1904
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
Stock=holders Met
Fine Showing of the Southern Aid Society.
OFFICERS REELECTED—PROMINENT BUSINESS MEN—A SKETCH OF THE PERSONS CONTROLLING AFFAIRS—A FINE SHOWING.
The annual meeting of the Stock. In Pythian circles he is generally known holders of Southern Aid Society was as "Our Tom."
VOL. XXI NO.9.
Stock=ho
Fine Showing o
Aid S
OFFICERS REELECTED
MEN-A SKETCH
CONTROLLING A
SHO
The annual meeting of the Stockholders of Southern Aid Society was held on Monday night, January 25th, at the office of the company, 504 N. 2nd St. Very nearly all of the stockholders were present, a few being represented by proxy. One of the principal features of the meeting was the report of the Secretary and General Manager, which showed that the company had enjoyed the most prosperous year of its existence.
The increase in membership was exceedingly large as was also the cash receipts and real estate holdings. The excess of business over that of the preceding year was very near $7000. It has real estate to its credit in Richmond and Newport News valued at $0000, which not only places it among the most substantial corporations of its kind in this State, but gives it a financial standing second to none, and secures its policy-holders in case of increased sickness and death. The company has been able to pay all of its just claims promptly and has established an unshaken confidence. The name, Southern Aid is a household word, and its reputation for prompt payment of claims is quite an enviable one.
The report of the condition of the work was most gratifying to the Stockholders, who were unstinted in their praise of the officers in charge of the affairs. Rev. Z. D. Lewis, the company's first president, made a speech complimenting the officials for their work. He made a most excellent comparison of the past and present condition, and was listened to with marked attention.
The officers and directors were all reelected, which is indeed an evidence of the confidence indeed their ability by the Stockholders. Messrs. J. V. Carter, B. L. Jordan, Rev. Sidney Stanton, Mossrs. H. B. Burwell, Walter E. Baker, Armistead Washington and Thos. M. Crump made speeches, thatking the Stockholders for their re-election and complimentary remarks.
MR. ARMISTEAD WASHINGTON.
Officers and Directors for the ensuing year are Mr. Armistead Washington, President. He is also President of the St. Luke's Association, Director of the Richmond Hospital, Deacon and Treasurer of the Second Baptist Church and has been for many years with Dr. Wm. H. Taylor, State Chemist. He is known for his veracity, keen insight in business matters and is considered by those who know him to be one of the best and most successful financiers in the world. That is a college graduate, he has, from his wide experience in business, won the reputation of having an extraordinary amount of common sense and his opinions are sought by many. To have the benefit of his judgment means success.
MR. EDWARD STEWART
Mr. Edward Stewart, Vice-President, conducts a well-stocked grocery store at 205 S. Second street, between Canal and Byrd Sts. He is better known by "Ed." Stewart, and his name is a household word. He is polite, affable and easily approached, and his trade among the white people is as great as among the people of his race. His business is successfully run and he enjoys the confidence of the public. He is chairman of the Trustee Board of the Second Baptist Church and his influence has been much felt.
MR. WALTER E. BAKER.
Mr. Walter E. Baker, Treasurer, is a young man who has spent all of his years conducting the wholesale and retail liquor business for Mr. A. W. Rosene at 13th and Cary Sts. There is scarcely a man or boy who is employed in that vicinity who does not know him. He is faithful, honest and a thorough business man. He knows how to make friends, a gift that many persons do not possess.
MR. THOS M. CRUMP.
Mr. Thos. M. Crump, Secretary and General Manager, won his business reputation while engaged as bookkeeper and assistant manager of the Richmond PLANET, a position he held with credit to himself and honor to his employer for eight years and 6 months. He is Grand Keeper of Records and Seal of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias; Secretary of the Board of Directors of the Mechanics' Savings Bank; Colonel of the 1st regiment, Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias; Director of the Y.M.C.A., and Chorister of the Second Baptist Church choir. He is widely known throughout the State for his business tact. He is courteous and easily approached, and has made a most successful manager.
MR. B. L. JORDAN
Mr. B. L. Jordan, General Inspector, is one of the youngest men on the Board. He was for several years the most successful agent of the company, and resigned to accept the position as manager of the mercantile department of the True Reformers. While in this position he established all of the large stores operated by this organization. That he was successful has been more than once conceded by the officials of the organization. He is a thorough business man, enjoys the distinction of being a graduate of the Baltimore Business College. He is a valuable man to the company, being also a member of the Anciting Committee. He is Superintendent of the Fountain Baptist Church Sunday School.
MR. JAS. T. CARTER.
Mr. Jas. T. Carter is probably the youngest man on the Board and is chairman of the Auditing Committee. He is at present, and has been for several years, the stenographer and copyist for the firm Messrs. Christian & Christian, Chamber of Commerce Building. He is the only man of his race in this city holding such a position with a white firm. He is unassuming, careful, painstaking, well versed in many practical law points and noted for his dignified manner. He is a fluent speaker, a quick thinker, a man of considerable discretion and judgment and the safeguards of the corporation. He is a teacher in the normal department of the Second Baptist Church Sunday School.
REV. SIDNEY STANTON.
Rev. Sidney Stanton is a member of the Auditing Committee. He has for a number of years been with H. W. Rountree & Bro., trunk and bag manufacturers, as foreman in the shipping department, a position of great responsibility. He is a man of wide experience and knows what business is and how it should be conducted. He is noted for his dignified bearing and Christian qualities. He is also Superintendent of the normal department of the Second Baptist Church Sunday School and is an earnest worker.
MR. A. D. PRICE.
Mr. A. D. Price is the most prominent funeral director in this city and probably the most widely known member of the Board. He needs no introduction to the public, for he has, by his sympathetic, humane, yet business like manner in dealing with his many patrons, won their respect esteem and contends with his broad views and high aspiration in his judgment is worth a great deal to this corporation, having had considerable experience in insurance matters.
MR. H. B. BURWELL.
Mr. H. B. Burwell, the junior member of the Board, is cool, calm and not easily excited. He is a man of munc discretion, has the courage of his convictions and unswerving in his opinion. He is one of the most reliable agents of the company and a man of integrity and forethought. He is a successful music teacher, in fact one of the most successful in this city. He is organist of the Second Baptist Church and Sunday School and has been for a number of years.
With such men as these directing and managing a corporation, success is an assured fact, because they have been successful along individual lines. One of the best proofs of a man's capability to handle the business of others is to handle successfully his own.
The public has the company's thanks for their patronage and best wishes, and we trust to be able to continue to merit their esteem and confidence.
Hustling agents can get employment with the Southern Aid at all times. The people know our ability to keep our obligations, and you can make money by representing us if you are energetic. Should our agents fall to call on you, contact us, 504 N. Second St., Richmond, Va. Thank you again for your very liberal patronage in the past and praying a continuance of the same, we are.
Yours respectfully.
Boy Preacher Here.
Mr. J. L. Washington, the eloquent Boy Preacher, called on us. He is now engaged in evangelistic work in this city. His blind father is here at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Jackson. He is looking well and expresses the intention of attending school next fall.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1904.
Baptist Ministers' Conference.
An interesting programme was executed at the conference last Monday morning; but owing to the sadness caused by the deaths of Revs. R. C. Kemp and W. W. Christie it was not so sunshine as heretofore. The brethren spoke in highest terms of both of the deceased elders, whose work have been so helpful in our community as pastors. The names of Revs. J. Andrew Bowler and D. W. Davis were entered as members. The visitors present were Drs. Green, of the A. M. E. Church; Pinkney, of the A. M. E. Church; Rev. Washington and Rev. Goff. Rev. Goff made a very happy address. He is the able young pastor of River Mount Baptist Church, Lynchburg, Va., editor of the Interpreter and leader of the Great Royal Order of Joseph.
President Archer Fergusen ruled in his usual dignified manner. Rev. W. W. Young conducted the devotional exercises. Dr. W. T. Johnson read the minutes. Mr. T. H. Ellett, one of the leading business white men of the city, appeared before the conference in behalf of preaching services for the prisoners on the State farm. He made a very touching statement, and it is hoped in the future that arrangements will be made by which members of the conference may safely visit the farm and preach to the prisoners. Rev. A. S. Thomas preached a very able sermon before the conference from Mark 16:15, "The Divine Commission Unlimited." The sermon was full of rich thought, well analyzed and eloquently delivered. It was discussed by Rev. Dr. Lewis and others, and accepted with thanks by the conference.
Arrangements were made for attending the funerals of the two deceased pastors.
The conference was very largely attended. Next Monday the special order of business will be the arrangements for religious services at the State farm.
$100 Endowment Paid.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counsellor of the Grand Court of Virginia, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Sister Millie Jackson, who was a member of Dora's Court, No. 41, I. O. of Calanthe, Signed:— JAMES HENRY JACKSON, Witnesses: Beneficiary. Mary L. Merchant. Dora J. Sears.
8150 Endowment Paid.
Norfolk, Va., Jan. 29, 1904.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars, in payment of the death claim of Buddie Olds who was a member of Golden Seal Lodge, No. 39, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E. A., A. and A. of Norfolk, Va.
Signed:— EMMY X OLDS.
Witnesses: mark
W. T. Capps, Golden Seal Lodge, No. 39, K. of P.
J. C. Wilson, C. C., Friendship No. 3.
J. W. Gramby, D. D. G. C.
—Mr. Herbert Fitzgerald of Blackstone, Va., visited our office this week.
—Mr. J. W. Thompson is as yet confined to his residence, No. 104 W. Jackson St.
—Cashier E. A. Washington of the Nickel Savings Bank is indisposed.
Now is the time to save, or if you are anxious to own a home, start now. Try the Mechanics' Savings Bank. It is one of the strongest and best institutions in the city.
Mr. F. H. M. Murray, editor of the Home News, of Alexandria, Va., and Mr. W. S. Blackburn, editor of the Mirror, of Daxville, Va., in company with Mr. George St. Julien Stephens, called on us.
We return thanks for an invitation to the Full Dress Stag of the Richmond City Gun Club, Feb. 10 at 10 p.m., at the League Cafe, Mr. G. W. Bragg, president; Mr. D. A. Ferguson, secretary. The event promises to be one of the finest of the season.
Mr. George Williams, Jr., of Lynchburg, Va., called on us and also Mr. George F. Knickerbrocker of Washington.
The Mechanics' Savings Bank pays interest on deposits. It is one of the safest money depositories in the city. Call and see Cashier Wyatt.
One Exception.
"All the world loves a lover," quoted the young man who was making his first call. "You haven't met papa yet, have you?" queried the fair maid in the parlor scene.—Chicago Daily News.
No Hope for Her
A good parti was bragging before a lot of girls as to how, when he married, he should go off after the wedding with his cigar in his mouth. A handsome girl, who was suspected of having done her best to catch him, exclaimed: "Disgusting! I should knock it out of your mouth!" "Pardon me," was the retort, "you would not be there."-Tit-Bits.
GOV.W.F.TAFT SUGGEEDS ROOT
New Secretary of War Sworn in and
Assumes Office.
GOV. WRIGHT INAUGURATED
Washington, Feb. 2.—Governor William H. Taft has taken the oath of office as secretary of war, and at once
Secretary of War Taft.
entered upon his new duties. The ceremony took place in the large reception room attached to the secretary's office in the war department, and the transfer of authority from Elhuh Root, the retiring secretary, to Governor Taft, while simply made, was more impressive than any similar event in many years.
The rom was cleared of all except the participants in the induction save the party of friends and the members of the general staff. Governor Taft and Secretary Root took their places at the long table where stood John Randolph, a notary, who administered the oath of office to the incoming secretary. Then there were congratulations showered upon Secretary Taft and good-byes were said to Secretary Root. Every army officer on duty in Washington was alligned at the doorway, and the brilliantly uniformed column passing before the retiring and incoming secretaries formed a pretty spectacle. Secretary Taft was in the beat of spirits, and he had a smile and good word for every one, while Secretary Root showed in his countenance the relief he felt in laying down the cares of the great office.
Hanging in his office as the new secretary was inducted into the arduous duties of his post, was the picture of his distinguished father, Alphonso Taft, who was President Grant's secretary of war in 1876. Thus father and son have held the same portfolio, this being the second instance in the history of the war department, the first being presented in the incumbency of Simon Cameron under Lincoln and James D. Cameron, his son, under Grant.
GOV. WRIGHT 1NAUGURATED
Imposing Demonstration at Manila, In-
including Parade of 3000 Troops.
Manila, Feb. 2.—Governor Luke E.
Wright and Vice Governor Henry C.
J.
EULK E. WRIGHT, GOVERNOR OF THE PHILIP-
IPINES.
Ide were inaugurated here. There was an imposing demonstration, including a brilliant military pageant, about 3000 troops being in line.
After taking the oath of office, Governor Wright delivered his inaugural address. It was a straightforward speech, dealing with the most important interests of the islands. Governor Wright invited attention to the improvements that had been accomplished in the Philippines under American rule and declared his intention of adhering
to the principles of the Taft administration. He urged Americans to establish cordial personal and business relations with the Filipinos, who must constitute their chief customers. Governor Wright asked for the sympathetic co-operation of all classes, to whom, he said, were assured equal opportunities for advancement.
Senator Hanna Improving.
Washington, Feb. 3.—Senator M. A. Hanna, who suffered a temporary setback by venturing from his sick chamber to soon, is again on the mend and his physician says his condition is favorable. It probably will be a week, however, before the senator is permitted to leave the house, as the doctor thinks absolute rest and care are necessary in order to prevent another relapse.
CZAR CONSIDERS REPLY
May Take Several Days to Review Answer to Japan.
St. Petersburg, Feb. 3—The czar now has before him the report of the special council on the Russian response. All the papers relating there-to were submitted to him yesterday by the Grand Duke Alexis, and the czar is giving them earnest consideration. He had not rendered his decision up to last evening, and it is authoritatively said it may possibly be several days before the response is forwarded to Tokio.
A dispatch from Vladivostock, issued here by a semi-official agency, says the Russian fleet at Vladivostock has been fully equipped for immediate service and prepared for sea. All the wood fittings of the ships have been removed. The harbor is being kept open by ice breakers.
Hopeful Feeling In Washington.
Washington, Feb. 3.—If the Russian reply indicates a willingness on the part of the St. Petersburg government to conform to the general lines of Japan's last proposition it is learned on adequate authority that a continuation of the negotiations in the earnest efforts to reach a final settlement by diplomacy may be expected. The qualifying statement is added, however, that Japan's last note was at the time declared to set forth an irreducible minimum of her demands, and it is difficult for those conversant with the Japanese position to believe that any important departure from the general lines of that note would be acceptable at Tokio.
IS MRS. MAYBRICK FREE?
Reported Release From British Prison Shrouded In Mystery.
London. Feb. 1.—In spite of the mystery with which officials shroud the action in connection with the reported release of Mrs. Florence Maybrick, who is serving a life sentence for poisoning her husband, it can be definitely said that she has been removed from Aylesbury prison. At the United States embassy it was most emphatically declared that she had not been pardoned and that she was still a prisoner. Where she has been taken remains a mystery, but reports from Aylesbury are to the effect that she has been removed to some institution in Cornwall. The home office and the governor of Aylesbury prison refuse to make any kind of a statement on the subject. If the ordinary course had been followed, Mrs. Maybrick would have been taken to Holloway if her immediate release were contemplated, but she is not there and has probably been removed to some other prison of less rigorous discipline, where she can recuperate prior to her release. Or, possibly, she has been conveyed to one of the government homes of detention or to an asylum.
The Daily Mall this morning says that Mrs. Maybrack is now in Liverpool, and that the following conditions attach to her release from prison: That she will not appear on the public stage or write a book of her experiences and shall in no way endeavor to attract public attention to herself.
COLOMBIAN TROOPS FIGHTING
Panama Hears They Had Conflict With Indians On San Blas Coast. Panama, Feb. 3.—A report has reached the Isthmus that Colombian troops are fighting with the Indians on the San Blas coast, which is in Panamanian territory. It is impossible, however, to obtain reliable confirmation of this. The United States gunboat Bancroft was to have sailed from Colon to Bocas del Toro, but these orders were countermanded at the last moment because of the report of fighting on the coast. A letter was received here some time ago from Captain Torrets, commanding the Panamanian troops at Chapo, on the south side of the Isthmus and directly south of the San Blas country, saying that he had decided to cross over to the Atlantic side. There is a possibility that the Indians are fighting with Captain Torrets' command, mistaking them for Colombians.
BEGHTEL FAMILY MAKE CHARGES
Petition Court to Punish District Attorney Lichtenwainer.
TELLS OF INSULTING CONDUCT
Allentown, Pa., Jan. 30. — Charges were preferred against District Attorney E' J. Lichtenwalner to Judge Frank M. Trexler in chambers alleging gross misconduct on the part of the district attorney before and during the Bechtel trials. They were filed by Attorney William J. Jones, on behalf of Allison K. Brobst, Mrs. Bechtel's son-in-law, complainant, in the form a petition to the court.
The petition of Mr. Brobst sets forth that the district attorney "has wilfully and grossly neglected to comply with his duties, much to the chagrin and humiliation of the deponent, his wife and her family, as well as the counsel." It is further alleged that the district attorney on October 27, 1903, at the beginning of his inquiries into the death of Mabel Bechtel, "grossly and negligently conducted the same while in a state of intoxication and in an insulting manner," toward the family of the murdered girl; that the district attorney later, in the course of the several trials, did attempt to conduct the same "while in a state of intoxication, which fact compelled your honor to adjourn court until the following day, when he was again incompetent to try the cases properly because of his condition the day previous;" that on Thursday, January 21, he was "again unable to appear at the afternoon session of court and had to be taken away from the law library, thereby throwing upon his assistant the entire onus of the trial, which again constituted wilful and gross negligence on his part."
Attached to the complaint of Mr. Brobst are several affidavits in support of his allegations. The first one on the list is that of Mrs. Catharine Bechtel, the mother of the murdered girl, and in it she affirms, among other things, that when, on October 27, the district attorney called at her home he was in a state of intoxication. She asserts that she was ill and nervous and was barely conscious of what was going on.
"I remember," she states, "that the district attorney staggered and I was really afraid of him. He seated himself on the couch beside me and announced that he had come to get evidence to hang David Wcisenberger. He embraced me and repeatedly kissed me. I made attempts to repulse him, but in my weakened condition I was unable to do so. I was so overcome with grief and emotion and so frightened and insulted at the man's actions that I became partly unconscious and don't remember clearly what happened save that he thrust money in my hand.
"I resented the manner in which the said Lichtenwalner acted toward my daughters. I saw him embrace and try to kiss my daughter Martha. I next recall that the police entered to take Lichtenwalner from the house."
Mrs. Harry D. Newhard, in her affavit, avers that Lichtenwalner was insulting and tried to embrace her, Mrs. Newhard says Lichtenwalner made improper proposals to other women in the house, and to Mrs. Brobst, sister of the murdered girl, he offered a ring.
Mrs. Brobst makes similar charges against Lichtenwalner in her affidavit. She alleges that he took her "mother around the neck, kissed her repeatedly and hugged her roughly." "Then," the affidavit goes on, "Lichtenwalner sat beside my mother while lying on the couch and presented her with his endearments and pretended to console her as follows: 'Your darling, dear, beloved daughter Mabel.' Then Lichtenwalner ordered ham and eggs and drink and cigars to be brought, as though in a saloon, and wanted a cab to be brought to carry my mother home, not knowing that she was then home. He persisted in his behavior and I was forced to have an officer called."
Martha Bechtel, also a sister of the murdered girl, corroborated the testimony of her mother and Mrs. Brobst, and says "Lichtenwalner, who was in a state of intoxication, came to me while seated in a rocking chair, leaned over me, grasping the arms of the chair so that I could not escape and leaned into my face." (Here follow charges of improper proposals.)
The papers were filed and the case will come up for a hearing on Monday.
Hearing Postponed
Allentown, Pa., Feb. 2.—Edwin J. Lichtenwalner, the accused district attorney of Lehigh county, resented the institution of the Bechtel family that he was no gentleman. He appeared in court ready to fight any charges that might be made against him. Judge
Trexler decided, however, that the time was not yet ripe, and fixed Friday, March 11, as the date for a formal hearing.
Probably the best criminal lawyers in Lehigh county will defend Mr. Lichtenwalner. He announced that he had engaged former Judge Edward Harvey and State Senator Arthur G. Dewalt to represent him. Mr. Harvey was the Democratic candidate who opposed the present Judge Trexler in the exciting campaign last fall.
Still Balloting In Maryland
Annapolis, Md., Feb. 3.—The Maryland legislature in joint session balloted for United States senator, with the following result: Democrats—Isidor Rayner, 35; John Walter Smith, 29; Bernard Carter, 9; E. E. Jackson, 7. Republican—Louis E. McComas, 23. Necessary to elect, 57.
A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED
Thursday, January 28.
In a collision of trolley cars at St. Louis, more than 20 persons were injured, some fatally.
Oscar Murray, president of the B. & O. railroad, has been elected president of the B. & O. S. W.
The National Editorial Association will hold its 19th annual convention in St. Louis May 16, 17, 18 and 19.
President Roosevelt has appointed John L. Snelling apperiser of customs at Boston, vice A. W. Brown, resigned.
Governor Pennypacker, of Pennsylvania, has ordered an investigation into the mine disaster at Cheswick, Pa.
The Canadian Pacific Railway has placed an order for 40,000 tons of steel rails with the Pennsylvania Steel company.
Friday, January 29.
Three children of Louis Cohen, of New York, were suffused in a tenement house fire.
General Joseph Darr, formerly chief of staff of General Rosecrans, died at his home in Washington.
Thirteen inches of snow fell at Jackson, Miss., the heaviest fall of snow known there in 25 years.
Caleb Thorpe, aged 103 years, believed to have been the oldest soldier in the Civil War, died at his home at Millersburg. O.
A dispatch from Bessemer, Mont., says the copper country has experienced the coldest weather in its history, thermometers registering 48 degrees below zero.
Saturday, January 30.
Earl McCann, aged 7 years, of Wilmington, Del., was burned to death by his clothing catching fire while passing a stove.
Officers of the Clairton Steel company, Pittsburg, Pa., say there is no deal pending to transfer the plant to the United States Steel company.
Another speed trial of the new United States protected cruiser Denver, which failed to reach contract speed, will be held the latter part of February.
As the result of an explosion following an attempt to hurry a fire with coal oil, Mrs. A. F. Gray, of Pittsburg, Pa., is dead and six of her family seriously injured, one fatally.
Monday, February 1.
Enough new Springfield rifles will be ready by late summer to equip the entire United States army.
Dr. Jacob Cooper, professor of philosophy at Rutger's College, New Brunswick, N. J., died of pneumonia, aged 74 years.
The Eastern Alumni Association of Franklin and Marshall College, of Lancaster, Pa., held their annual meeting and banquet at Allentown.
Authority has been given to open a national bank on the exposition grounds at St. Louis, to be operated only as long as the fair lasts. Carbic acid, taken with sulcidal intent, because she was sent home from school, caused the death at New York of Anna Reindeers, aged 16 years. Tuesday, February 2.
The prison at Dawson Springs, Ky., was destroyed by fire and one prisoner burned to death.
The report of Treasurer Harris, of Pennsylvania, for January, shows a balance of $10,431,057 in the general fund.
While walking home from a nearby town, Robert Hines, a farmer, of Petersburg, Ill., was frozen to death in a snow drift.
Senator Penrose introduced a bill to appropriate $100,000 for the erection of a statue of Abraham Lincoln in Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Anne Hurd, aged 71 years, was killed by falling down stairs and breaking her neck at her home at, Wilmington, Del.
Wednesday, February 3.
The national committee of the Socialist party has re-elected William Mally, of Boston, national secretary.
The Kentucky legislature has postponed indefinitely consideration of a bill designed to disfranchise illiterate negroes.
Two children of Frank Bennett, of Somerset, Pa., were burned to death in a fire which destroyed their home.
A lamp explosion caused the fire.
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SATURDAY.....FEBRUARY 6, 190
LOVE UNDERSTANDS.
‘Eg often sald that 1dve is blind,
t faults it cannot see
&m the beloved and most "cored ‘
Bui it scoms more to me
hat love vill gain an inner sight,
‘The depth of soul to know,
Where others but the surface see,
And not the heart's warm glow.
‘Whey do not se the heart concealed
And bid trom human sight,
Which is reveaied to the twin soul
Who has the inner tight,
‘To see and read the ioved one’s thoughts,
‘And eympathy to feq.
With his desires and alms of tife,
And all that is most real
‘Bhe knows his motives for each deed,
And judges him aright;
Wor she isever guided by
Love's clearer, inner licht;
She, too, has mercy for his faulte,
_gAnd leads his soul above
‘To hetghes where she will help him soar
By the sweet power of love
She knows the snares of human ilfe,
And knows that there may be
Some faults in every mortal soul;
Hut through them, learns to see _
‘The sweet and tender soul beneath
‘The Little faults he owns,
An her eyes, loving tenderness
For many? faulis. atones
—Bartha Shepard Lippincott, in Good
Houseker ping.
| By J. c. PLUMMER
POSOSLOODSOO0O98O9OOO
ie WOULD be just my blooming luck
to meet Mackay to-night,” muttered
apt. Duncan Strong, of the steamer
‘Walisman, as he walked unsteadily up
Bhe street. -
An evening spent with fellow cap-
@ains, jovial and bibulous, is vot con-
ucive to sobricty and, despite resolves
to the contrary, Capt, Strong left the
Barty drunk.
Most people would regard an oc-
‘easional lapse from #briety as a mere
matter of a headache, brandy aud soda
anda brand new resolve, but it was not
Just ro with Capt. Strong. He was much
‘4m love with Doris Grey, one of the pret-
Gest girls in Newcastie, and he was en-
@aged to her provisionally. He had
Promised to refrain absolutely from
‘@rdent spirits and on this promise Miss
Grey had allowed herself to be engaged.
‘As & private citizen's actions are not of
(xternational importance, it would seem
Possible for Capt. Strong to get drunk in
America and his dereliction not be
known to a girl in England, but there
‘was Mackay.
Capt. Mackay, a stern old temperance
mdvocate, secretary of the Seaman's
Blue Ribbon society, was Doris Grey’s
ancile and guardian. It was Mackay
‘who had consented with a bad grace to
Ais niece's engagement on the promise
alluded to, and it was Mackay who
would instantly have it broken if the
@romise was not kept. His influence
over her was great and she was also an
enthusiastic temperance worker who
Bated strong drink as flercely as did her
uncle.
Capt. Mackay was now in Baltimore
fu command of his steamer and hence
the foreboding that the unfortunate fate
ef Capt. Strong would bring him in
‘eontact with Captain Mackay this very
- evening.
“It would be just my luck,” muttered
the captain, gloomily. “I'll take a tram
and go to the steamer.”
He entered the car with wavering
wtep, fell heavily into a seat and his
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aon EGE Haas een AND
eves roved vacuously around the car un-
‘tM they fixed themselves with a stony
stare for, directly opposite with a queer
expression on his weather beaten face,
Capt. Andrew Mackay. He had wit-
Serechiiseaateance of Capt, Strong into
‘Whe car and was evidently fully aware
of the cause of his stumbling into the
eat.
For & moment the befogged brain os
Capt. Strong wrestled with the problems
as to whether he should speak to Mac-
kay, keep silent or get off the car, but
Mackay settled the matter by arising
jand abruptly getting off the car himself.
‘Capt. Strong’s eyes followed him as,
‘onder the glare of astreet lamp, he
walked with a strangely halting step to
ke pavement and then stood with bis
rm around the lamp post.
| “He's 60 angry he can’t sen walk,”
faurmured Capt. Strong to himself, “it’s
Bll over with me now.”
During the next day Capt. Strong ex
ected a visit, a thunderous and denun-
elatory visit, from Mackay, but the visit
‘Was not paid and in the afternoon Capt
Mackay’s steamer pulled out of the pier
&nd started on her voyage to Englend,
Jeaving Cupt. Strong in a most perturbed
satate of mind.
Some men conceal their troubles in
‘thelr breasts as the Spartan boy did the
fox and Jet it enaw there, but others
eek te teak tek a
Mr. Stokes listened sympathetically.
He was not a Blue Ribboner and he
had sailed a number of years with Capt.
Mackay.
“The pint of the thing is that Mackay
didn’t see you drink banything, so he
can't swear you were drunk. Wertige
’s the word for this mix,” remarked the
old man, coolly.
| “Vertigo?” exclaimed Capt. Strong.
“Yes, wertigo, men stagger hawful
When they have it and it’s a common
complaint.”
“I don't want to lie about it,” objected
Capt. Strong.
| “Theré's times when lying must be
done,” said Mr. Stokes with firmness,
“and this is one of them.”
‘The bewildered captain considered the
“situation without committing himself
_ to Mr. Stokes” expedient.
| When the Talisman entered the Tyne
tt was too late to dock, so she dropped
her anchors in the stream. Capt. Strong
| did not go ashore. Newcastle had no
charms for him. To be coldly recetved
by Doris was a blow from which he re-
colled and he felt sure, strong-minded,
enthusiastic girl as she was, that his
| Weakness would be bitterly resented. He
| imply turned In and dreamed éepress-
ing dreams,
In the morning he started for the of-
fice to report his arrival and on the way
eame face to face with Doris. She ac-
knowledged his salutation coldly: and
swiftly passed on without giving bim a
chance to say a word, When the cap-
| tain returned to his steamer In the low-
est possible spirits Stokes confronted
him at the gangway.
He had a grin on his face as he sald:
“Capt. Mackay’s been aboard. He
wanted to have a talk with me and says
‘he wants to see you,”
Capt. Strong said nothing. He didnot
| want to see Mackay and he walked up
and down the bridge until the whirr and
clatter of the blocks as they hoisted up
the cargo ret him mad and he left the
ship. He went to the office, where a
clerk told him Capt. Mackay had en-
quired for him. What could Mackay
want with him, To insult him probably
on top of bis present troubles, He
would stand no lecturing from him. He
took a long walk into the suburbs and
| was returning slowly when he felt him-
self seized and pushed against a wall.
“Wertizo,” exclaimed Stokes’ yotce,
“It'll be the death of *im.”
Strong angrily chook hitiself free and
{was about to pour out the vials of his
wrath on Stokes when he noticed Miss
Grey standing near laughing. “I hope
you will recover, Capt. Strong,” she said
and walked on.
| “What the devil did you mean by
that?" asked the captain of the grinning
Stokes,
“L was a helpin’ you out don’t you see?
1 was a showin’ theyoung leddy how yu
had vertigo,.” and with this remark Mr,
Stokes disappeared into a public house,
Capt. Strong continued his course to
sthe steamer and was disagreeably sur-
prised to find Capt. Mackay seated in the
cabin waiting for him.
| “I want to have a word or two with
you, Duncan,” said he." “The last time we
met was in a tram car in Baltimore.”
j Capt. Strong nodded sulkily.
! “I suppose you thought It queer T did
not speak to you in the tram?” con-
| tinued Mackay.
As Capt. Strong did not think it was
diieer he said nothing,
“You see,” said Mackay, moistening
his lips as If the words did not come
freely, "I had a bad attack of vertigo
and when {t comes on I can't ride and
can’t speak a word to any one.”
Capt. Strong stared at him fn mute
wonder.
“I knew you were hurt at my not speak-
ing to you,” resumed Mackay, “and 1
wanted to explain. Now, I don't want
| you to say anything to Doris about my
Attack, as she 1s so easily alarmed about
sickness, Come up to-night.” After
Mackay had left and he had come out
of his trance of astonishment, Capt.
Strong fe't Ike shcuting with joy. Evi-
‘dently Mackay bad told Doris nothing.
‘There was somthing mysterious about
it, but this fact was evident and he
hastily dressed himself to call on her.
As he carve on deck he noted Mr. Stokes
in convu.sions of mirth leaning against
| the side, “What did he say,” enquired
that grotleman in a voice stifled with
laughter.
“Vehat did you say to Capt. Mackay?”
asked Capt. Strong. A
“He wanted adwice,” replied Mr.
Stokes, choking with laughter, “and I
gave it to him.”
Strong raised his hand menacingly,
Dut Stokes escaped below and the cap-
tain hastened to call on Doris. He soon
found her coldness of the previous day
‘was the result of pique that he did not
come to see her the evening of his ar-
tival. He had « most pleasant visit and
returned to the steamer in high spirits,
| “I'd never have thought It of Mackay,
never,” sald Capt. Strong to himself as
_ he went to bed.
Abyssinia.
Abyssinia, an African empire known
to the ancients as Ethiopia, is rapidly
rising in importance. industrially and
commercially. It is presided over by
@ emperor with the title “Negus Ne-
gust,” which signifies “king of kings.”
‘The president ruler is Menelik II, born
in 1842, @ man of rather remarkable
character and singular clear-headed-
neas for one 50 far separated from the
outside influences of the civilized
world. The area of the country is
about 150,000 square miles and the pop-
ulation is a little less than 4,000,000,
The last census estimates it to be
3,500,000. The chief industries of the
empire are the rearing of cattle, sheep
and goats, and the cultivation of bar-
Jey, dhurra, wheat, hops and tobacco
for home consumptiop, ;
Missionaries Need *Km.
Among the presents on a South Orang?
(3) Sonday schoo! tree was 2 num
of rifiee. Preparing the boys to be-
come missionaries? asks the Buiiulo ix-
PANEL Ko aaitent 8 okays:
Chicago Restanrants Vindicnted. '
One man ate so much in a Chicage
restaurant that be dropped dead, re-
amarks the News of that city. Doesn't
that rather vindicate out restaurants?
The Heroine.
In the drama of existence,
Should you take a searching look,
You will find tke lending indy
| Very atten te the cook.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
_—————————_—————
a SNS . ToMespins, bread, bluing, aid svery- Bmiled again,
EVIL OMENS DEFIED, Toca teat we ae sre patted seat
——— $7.50. But, says the Chicago Inter resting on the
Brides Had More Courage Than the Soo ie tim ges Nowene him a hero, the anarchists
Men They Married. | Thursday night when his wife, Mrs. “Why, that,
aon | Caroline Buchholz, went to their home “is only a
At 820 Herndon street, Chicago, after
Moldty They Flew tm the Face of AU g hard day's work, she called her hus- [—=====—
) the Superstitions of Our Gramd- band in from the kitchen, where he | === |
mothers—Took a Bridegroom | was preparing supper, and asked for an | ===
from City Jail. | Srsparing Sepper, and as SE
Most young people contemplating
matrimony prefer .o have good omens
for the eventful day. It may be that
they are not superstitious—no one real-
ly is, of course—but just the same on
that day they prefer to have every-
thing proceed auspiciously.
Even when the brice and groom ob-
Ject_to old suces and white ribbons
the oride will not only consent but
may ask for a hanaful of rice, “just for
luck.”
It fs certain that most brides would
refuse absolutely to be married on Fri-
day, most of the small minority wao
would not object to Friday would balk
at Friday, the 13th of the month.
Tt happens, however, that some
young people have laughed at all the
terrors of auch superstitions.
In the first case it was tue bride who
was courageous. Lemuel W. Morse, of
Bayonne, N. J., had fallen in love with
Miss Emma Johnson, of Pensacola,
Fla, then on visit ‘to the northern
town. It came time for her to go
home and Morse endeavored to pre-
vent it,
ive Friday,” he sald. “It's a bad
day for a railroad trip.”
| “Lam not frightened,” sald Miss
Johnson, laughing.
The separation might mean the end
of thelr friendship and acquaintance;
80 Morse braced nimself and made an-
‘other objection.
“It’s the 13th of the month,” he con-
‘tinued.
__ “1'm not at all superstitious,” she re-
‘plied.
| ‘The young man was downcast for a
‘moment and then he recovered des-
perately.
“Will you marry me?” he asked.
“Yes,” she answered.
Since she had not objected to Friday,
and the 13th with regard to the rail:
| Toad trip, she could not object to them
with regard to a marriage. It took
place that day. As this all happened
}in November, tt Is too early to say
whether they were unwise or not—bnt
of course every one hopes that they
were not.
Itremained fora Pacific coast couple
to, brave all the alleged danger of
‘dad omens. They were married on
Friday, the 13th. ‘They sat down with
13 at ‘the wedding breakfast. They
fairly harried the 13 superstition to
l¢ plige. SEZ
ms: 4
HF an
7) en
“ hy Mn
te ! (2 rl 0
death. They took a train leaving at
13 minutes after the hour. The groom
received 13 cents in change from the
Ucket agent. They carried exactly 13
pieces of baggage and parcels. ‘The
groom broke a mirror intentionally,
and if there was ary superstition they
did not brave it was because they did
Bot know of it. Then they laughed
and departed on their honeymoon.
| There were several other marriages
jf recent date in which the supersti-
tions were dared to do their worst.
hese are the exceptions, however,
which may prove the rule that most
brides and bridegrooms prefer not to
take any chances with something
Sich may do no harm but which
‘might cause them to look back and
wonder if that were the cause of their
misforiune,
| Tt may not be a particularly bad
omen to take a bridegroom out of jail.
Common sense and not superstition
might argue against that. Mise Mina
Bennis, of New York, has defied them
both. Her sweetheart was in the Lud-
low street jail. She married him there
and bas just secured his release. Mor-
rig Tannenbaum, the young man she
has married, had been in the prison
since October on a charge of breach of
promise made against him by Mrs
Frida Rosenthal, a widow twice as old
as himself. She brought a sult for
$10,000 damages. A civil process wae
fesued and he was put in jail.
Tannenbaum had been engaged to
be married for eix yoars to Mina. They
had known each other since ebild-
hood and only waited until they were
at age to be married,
‘When Miss Bennié’ friends @ld her
that her fiancé had made love to the
attractive widew, Mra, Rosenthal, she
Tefused to delieve ft, and said that
she would stick ta Morris even if he
‘Were in prison. She called to see birt
4nd was glad to hear him say that he
[never promfued to marry the widow.
| Mina said that she would do all she
‘ould to help free him from prison
| Bhe offered to marry him in jail, amd
he agreed.
Wits Boats a Hero.
Bus*and Kepe Rouxe on $9.05 a Week
and In Rewarded by Being
Wed and Pounted.
‘This hasband swept “he floors, made
the heds, couse three meats every day,
did the washing and looked after the
chikiren. His wife was away for two
‘weeks making the living. Then he was
Jmaten and arrested, because the fort-
gight’s expenses, including sap,
‘Gothespins, bread, bluing, afi@ svery-
thing else needed to run the place were
$7.50. But, says the Chicago Inter
Ocean, the judge thought him a hero,
and let him go.
‘Thursday night when his wife, Mrs.
Caroline Buchholz, went to their home
at 820 Herndon street, Chicago, after
&® hard day’s work, she called her hus-
band in from the kitchen, where he
was preparing supper, and asked for an
account of his stewardship:
“I spent $7.50, all the money you
gave me,” said Buchholz, as he wiped
his hands on his apron.
“What! $7.50 to run this house only
two weeks!” the wife shouted, and, ac-
cording to the police, she tied her hua-
AY We S
gus OM :
ws { )
Ae
“Nh A
a? M7 i
ek ize
band’s feet with a clothesline and sent
for the police,
When a wagon load of policemen
[trom the Sheteld avenue’ station
Teached the house they found Buchholz
‘helpless on the floor. He was being
beaten by his wife, and was crying to
her to desist.
“Arrest that man for disorderly con-
duct!” shouted the woman of tho
house. “He spent $7.50 in two weeks!”
‘The police cut the man’s cords and
took him te the station. His wife ap-
eared against him in the court of Jus-
tice Mahoney, She wanted to charge
him with larceny as baflee, but she
changed the charge to disorderly con-
duet.
“Enough.” sata Justice Mahoney,
‘when ue heard this much of the evi-
dence. “A man who could keep house
on $7.80 for one week, let alone two,
ought to have a gold medal.”
Mrs. Buchholz and ber husband lock-
ef arms and left the station.
| WAS A RUSTY COOK.
An@ When “She” Was Arrested ax an
Eacaped Negro Convict There
, ‘Was a Fine Scare.
Something new and rather appailing
in servant girls has turned up at Bir-
mingham, Ala. An escaped negro con-
viet from the Pratt City mines, put on
skirts and a wig and as “Annie San-
ders,” obtained employment as a cook
for a well-to-do family living in{the
South Highlands. He worked there for
three months without detection, but
has now been found out by the police.
“Why, my husband used to be away
for days at m time,” exclaimed the mis-
tress of the house, in telling about it.
“He always had such confidence in An-
nie, and so did I, that we felt perfect-
ly safe. She had all the keys and lock-
yA 4 ]
m ii \@| ral
Ye pen
EAC f; ( h Fi
7 4 | i. RJR
4 ae h
Lig Ae
i fi if hi hil " |
eT -Win Vp y
me pe = (\ = (
@d up the house every night. She nev-
€r went out and was the quietest ser-
vant we ever had. With ner in the
house I simply felt that nothing could
happen, and then she was a most aatis,
factory cook. She had no company and
no bad habits, and my husband and {
congratulated ouyseives on getting bold
of her.
| “I Searly fainted when the officers
veame and said, ‘We want your éook,
madam!’
“Not Annie!’ I gasped. ‘Why, An-
ule never did anything. She hasn't
even been out of this house for the
three months she's Been here.
| MAU they did was to show me her
‘record and I cap tell you I was fright-
ened.”
| TAKEN FOR ANARCHISTS,
{Pour Pesivefal Bowlers Carcying +
Ligeim Vitue Bomb Frightea
| eles
“YR bet they're anarchists, every
one,” said young woman (o her es:
cort, riding home after the theater ix
a New York elevated car. “Just look
at them!” And she indicated to him
three foreign-looking men, sitting side
by side and talking together, a litte
@istance away on the other side af the
car.
‘Truta to tell, says the New York Tri.
Dune, they were not very desperat
looking to the young man.
“But, I tell you that’s what they are,
insisted the young woman, “ant
they've got a bomb with them now
Look! They're going to blow up some
thing, I know.”
‘The young man looked again at th
object she indicated to him. and hi
Bmiled again. The bomb was about
the slze of a ten-inch snell, and tt cy
resting on the floor in front of one of
the anarchists, in a canvas cover that
had loop handies at the top of it
“Why, that,” said te young man,
“is only a Wgnum vitae bomb. It
=] | aa
a | Ck s 4 |
1 ee
eg 1 aN ee
OH) OV,
WY Mh hk
wi LIN Ke) q
I FEL
Wak Y Hn) | ta
Aleta) Soma
\ eS i E
a eee
. Se) [a
<< tod
LOOKED LIKE ANARCHIsSTo {
Would hurt you if it dropped on your
‘toes, but there is no danger of it ex-
ploding. That is a bowling bail, whose
owner carries it about with him in
that manner when he goes bowling.
The four foreign looking men are
members of some bowing club, and
they are doubtless going to peaceful
homes after rolling in some tourna-
ment. I hope they were victorious,
though, judging from thelr looks I
Suess the other side won. I think that’s
what makes them so glum.”
“Oh!” said the young woman; and
she and her escort got off at the next
station, the three anarchists with the
big lisnum vitae bomb going on fur-
ther uptown.
ELOPERS ARE OUTWITTED.
Enthustastic Lover, by Mistake, Car-
ries Wis Sweetheart’: Enraged
Father to the Ground.
With the supposed form of his
Sweetheart in his arms, Eddie C. Row-
erly, a Baltimore & Qhio railroad tele-
graph operator, descended a ten-fuvt
ladder from a window at the hoie of
James Hagerty, At Farmington, 0.,
the other morning. When terra firma
was reached instead of a lover's kiss
he faced a loaded revolver in the
hands of an irate father.
In company with Miss Dayton young
Rowerly cautiously proceeded to. the
Hagerty residence, and Miss Dayton
Placed a ladder to the girl's window.
Young Rowerly mounted to the win-
dow, and taking the form heartily
mel Sy y
Pru Sy, figs
My \V Vi ))
( Vy )
WN \
HI WRAY \ \A hb
\ \ \\\ VON) ib
Wrapped in a cloak started to descend
the ladder. The prospective groom was
radiantly happy for only a short
period. |
As they reached the ground the
cloak was thrown off and the father
of the girl, with pistol im hand, stood
before the frightened lover, who took
to his beeis with his companion, and
nothing has since been heard of the
pair. Hagerty had been apprised of
the scheme, and succeeded in outwit
Ung the plans of the lovers.
Wife's Room « Sanctuary.
In Corea the rooms of a wife or
mother are the sanctuary of any man
who breaks the law. Unless for trea-
gon or for one other crime, he cannot
be forced to leave those rooms, and #0
long as he remains under the protecr
don of his wife's apartments he is se
cure from the officers of the law. |
Has Never Been Shaved,
Im one Fespect Senator Stewart, of
Nevada, is a remarkable man. He has
never been shaved. At the age of 16
Bis beard began to grow, and has been
growing for 60 yeara,
CuanD et woREy.
=
. %y
7
i
uN
Ke
y ite)
Wte
\
¢ SRR
A ee NY
= _ 4 Secon
niki
“How ald you manage to get 80
thin?”
“Oh, worry.”
“What happened?”
“Nothing —only I was getting so fat
and that worried me."—Town Topics,
= B k Fes
| 6 OOKEr S
ee Market
oy, arke
¥
ey Ne <> 501 Webster St.
" GZ ¥ \ A FULL LINE OF FINE
7 RN Z, GROCERIES AND FRESH
' MEATS & VEGETABLES.
‘Wood and Coal, Cigars and Tebecco.
} AT THE LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
| ce aor ee eee
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY GIVING ME A CALI,
ALL GCODS DELIVERED TO YOU FREE.
| TELEPHONE 1507~——
A. C. BOOKER, Prop,
| 18 W, B- KER ST.. RICHMOND. va,
| 7~
— W. 1. JOHNSON,
©
FUNBRAL DIRSCTOR* AND BMBALMER. ,
Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Corner Broa@s
| HACKS FOR HIRE:
Orders by Telephone or ‘Telegraph filled. Wedding, Sup-
pers and Entertainments promptly attended. —
Old "Phone, 686, Residence in Butlding, New Phone, to
SS eee
b> fr tad.
CAR ay KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLB
eS x ‘ '
ate 2% V. P. & F. K. of W.
(ie Lg TO WHOM IT MA¥ CONCERN:
CO APSR aici ongaization Nos ben chartered and ery ir
ha ory ienag tue holy meget Cee ee
Fraternal and to pronvite the Social and Moral con. ition of humantty ‘
its two distinct military and uniform ranks wil) secure for this organization @
place the front ranks ot all sacred institutions of siodern events « grand oppor
tunity for active men. Deputies wanted in allsections of the coumtry to omganiar
lodges, Kindly address,
G. W. ALLEN Sopreme voyager, _ -
846 W. 87th Street, New York ‘Chy,
esa fe, ee _— — e
ZX ee <
\ ’
| / @& \. Mechanics
/
faire \
( sees | Savings Bank
Baye, rs |] OF RICHMOND, VA
Lt aes. //
ie y/ —s1x North Third Street
a Capital, $25,000.
Money received on deposit and interest paid on
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 cones.
ience for safety and the accommodation of the public.
Giskie all information concerning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, eto., apply to the
Banking Hours have been arranged for the special convenience of the work-
ing people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 - M. Saturdays,9 A.M. to 8 Pi aw. We
close Saturday at 8P. M. and open again at 6 P. M., remaining open tatil ¥
P.M. Call by as you come from work,
OFFICERS:
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H.P, JONATHAN, Vice-President,
THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
Rev. W. F. Gramam, D. D., Jno. BR. Onmes, B. P. Vanpervats,
E.R, Jerrerson H. F. Joyataan, Tomas Sire D. J. Onavens,
J. O. Fariey, Jno. T. TayLor,
E, A. Wasmworon, R.W. Warrise, Writs Cusrao, J.J, Osnvme, _
JOHN MITOHELL, JR., Pues. THOMAS M. ORUMP, Sxo"<.
FRANK WALLER, oR
PRACTICAL HOUSE
PAINTER,
14 W. Baker St., Richmond, Va.
Residence, 1 E. Orange St.
Prompt attention given to all mai
orders. Satisfaction guaranteed.
All Kinds of Painting Done Cheap
Give me acail before going elsewhere
Fred G. Gray,
208 West Leigh St.
THE STOVE MAN. =
‘You can have all kinds of Stoves Re-
Batters, Sonductors, Secpaired “ond
Painted at a reasonable Price,
race ‘old Phone, shod
FRED G. GRAY,
Richmond, Va.
W=LOOK OUT FOR
OUR PRICE LIST.
——IT CAN'T BE EXOELLED——
Your Patronage is Invited. __,
The AMERICAN GROCERY
and PROVISION MARKET
1221 St. James Street.
Wh t nice dry, sawed
woods call up 2688, "Wo col 3 cord for
$2.15, teed full measurér.
P'A fullline of fancy ard staplo_groo-
Sets pe Ib, Prices low on everything
0 : low on 6v
Chews. "Hinrd’ and’ oft Cool.” Hat
‘and Grain.
AND
HUNDLEY,
LEADERS IN
Q | |
Quality
Furniture
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.
MORRIS CHAIRS.
‘This always popular chair
of rest will be in as much de-
mand this fall as ever, Part
of our stock has already ar
rived and $10 values vie with
$15 values of a year ago.
Call, see our stook of Bed Room Far
uiture and save time and money.
_____ Passenger elevator.
Sut & Hud,
7309-11-18 E. Broad Sty
SCOUNDRELL & CO.
By COULSON HERNAHAN
Author of "Captain Shannon," "A Book of Strange Sins," "A Dead Man's Diary," Etc.
Copyright, 1899, by Herbert S. Stone & Co.
"CRIMIMAGE" IN WHICH I PLAY THE PART OF FOOTBALL.
The lights once switched off, I felt that there was not a moment to lose if I wished to be on the spot to get first snatch at the bag when it was tossed through the window.
Walking quietly out, I worked my way unobtrusively to the gate which closed the passage leading to the yard at the back of the hall. Fortunately for me, the hubbub inside the building, and the sudden putting out of the lights, had served to distract the attention of the loungers inside the railings and of the crowd outside, so I was able to open the gate and to slip through unobserved. Closing it si-
A man is falling down a steep hill. He is wearing a hat and a coat. The hill is made of rocks and there is a gate in the background.
"LET ME GO, YOU DOTARD!"
lently after me, I hurried along the passage, but before I had gone a dozen paces I came upon some one walking slowly in the same direction, whom, when he burned on hearing my foot-steps, I found to my dismay to be the old care-taker.
"Where are you going, young man?" he inquired gruffly.
Perhaps my momentary hesitation in search of a plausible excuse aroused his suspicion, for when I said that I was only taking an airing, as the heat of the hall had made me faint, he answered, none too genially—
"Then you take a airin' somewhere else. These ain't infirmary grounds, and if you feel faint the best thing you can do is to nip round to the Red Cow and get two penny'orth of brandy."
"Oh, I shall be all right in a minute, my friend, thank you," I said, thinking it best to humor him. "I don't care to go out into the street for the present, it's too crowded; but don't you bother about me, I shall be all right when I've had a stroll round in the air for a few minutes;" and with that I essayed to slip past him, being impatient of this unlooked-for blindance.
"Well, you can't stroll round here," he said, barring the way with his bulky figure. "We can't have no strangers along this passage. It's private property; so out you go and sharp."
Finding him thus obdurate, I did what I ought to have done at first, and slipped a coin-half a crown I thought it was—into his hand. His fingers closed upon it in an instant.
"I don't want to be disagreeable when a gentleman ain't feeling quite well," he began. "All the same—" Then he stopped disgusted. "Why, it isn't arf a crown. It's a penny—not so much even as the price of a drink. If you think—"
Just then I heard the bursting of the bomb inside the hall. There was not a moment to lose if I was to secure the bag, so, determining to take by force what had been refused me as a favor, I nudged my shoulder to the caretaker's chest and "charged" him in the good old fashion of the football field.
"Would you?" he shouted. "You rascal I knew you were after no good!" and catching at my coat collar as I was in the act of passing him, he tried to swing me round, but, losing his balance, fell back heavily on the gravel, dragging me, sprawling over his chest, on top of him. As we went down, a man—it was evidently Hubuck—carrying something in his hand darted round the corner, and jumping lightly over the prostrate pair of us, passed through the gate, which he banged behind him.
"Let me go, you dotard!" I shouted to the care-taker. "Let me go before I strike you. I must follow that man at all costs."
The old fellow was a man of spirit, notwithstanding his years, and held me so stoutly—I could not bring myself to strike him—that some seconds passed before I could shake off his grip.
When at last I managed to wrench myself free and leaped up to follow Hubbock, it was only to find that I had left the frying-pan for the fire.
From the open door of the hall a awaying throng was now surging like devils vomited from the mouth of hell. Some of them must have heard the meaningless cry of "Stop him! stop, thief!" with which the old care-taker eluted my flying figure. All I know is that for the second time that evening I was reminded of my football days, only on this occasion it seemed to me that I was the football and the center of the scrimmage, and that some two dozen of devils—mad for blood, and pounding and bashing at me with hands and sticks, as well as with feet—were the players.
The old man's meaningless cry of "Stop, thief!" had led them, no doubt, to suppose that I was the stealer of the money, and that, if they were only quick enough about it, they might se-
Cure the booty for themselves.
care the body for themselves.
It did not take long to undeceive them, for in less than half a minute I hadn't as much as a rag to my back; and I was allowed to drag myself, bleeding, breathless, naked, and trembling in every limb, to a corner, where I lay feeling as one might who had been snatched from the ravening jaws of a pack of hungry wolves.
It was some days before I was sufficiently recovered to journey to Tarborough to claim my share of the money and to hear how Number Two had fared. I had telegraphed to say I was coming by the three o'clock train, and Hubbock was there with the trap to meet me.
"Well, is the money safe, Hubbock?" I said, as we drove off from the station.
"Yes, sir. I took care of that. Your share is waiting for you all right Rather cheaply earned, sir, wasn't it?" "No," I answered, grully. "It struck me as rather dear. Where's your master?" "In bed, sir—what's left of him. And a bad attack, too."
"Attack—what of?"
"A catching complaint, sir. You appear to have suffered from it, too—universal brotherhood, the master calls it. What did you say, sir?"
But what I said about universal brotherhood is not fit for publication.
CHAPTER XIX
FISTS AND FINGER-NAILS AND HOB-NAIL BOOTS.
Hubbock was quite right in observing that Number Two had had a "bad attack." The poor man's face was patched like an old coat, he wore a green shade over one eye, and was sitting up painfully in bed and as stiffly as a sawdust doll.
"How are you, Number Seven?" he said with a feeble smile. "Excuse my not getting up to receive you. I have to move an arm or a leg all of a piece like a pump-handle, and even then I wince and sometimes squeal aloud with pain. How do I look, do you think?"
"Like a stuffed Guy Fawkes on a barrow," would have been my answer had I felt called upon to adhere to the truth. As it was, I answered cheerfully that he was "looking a bit chippy, but that a day or two would no doubt set him on his legs."
"Set me on crutches you mean, don't you?" he grouned. "Oh! what a mauling I've had! The voice of the people may be the voice of God, but how about the people's fists and fingernails and hob-nail boots? How did you get on?" "I should have 'got on' well enough," I replied, ruefully, "if only I could have 'got off.' But I couldn't. The people saw me switch the light off, and two or three of them strolled up to interview me after." "Ah!" he said, trying to screw himself round the better to see me, and grinning hideously, but whether from pain or from gratification at finding a fellow-sufferer I could not say. "Ah! so you, too, have been interviewed by the people, have you? And how did you fare at their hands?"
"It wasn't their hands I objected to so much as their feet," I said. "Tearing one's clothes off one's back and bashing at one's head with half-bricks and sticks may have been only their playfulness. But when it came to knocking a poor devil down and dancing on his stomach, not to speak of kicking him in the ribs, why, then I began to feel that there was such a thing as having too much of the people."
"I believe you," he groaned. "There is such a thing, and I've had it—Lord knows. However, there's one consolation. We did the devils out of their £5,000, though I wouldn't go through such an experience again for £500,000. Your share's in that writing-desk on the table there. You'll find a bunch of keys in the top pocket of those trousers hanging at the foot of the bed. The little key's the one. Open the desk and take out the parcel with a big 'seven' upon it."
I obeyed, and found, a little to my surprise, but greatly to my satisfaction, that he had not misied me. There, sure enough, was a parcel marked "seven," containing no less a sum than £1,000 in gold and small bank notes.
After I had expressed what he appeared to consider unnecessary thanks, I asked him whether our fellow conspirators were "upstairs."
"No," he said fervently, "they're gone, thank goodness. They were restless to be off as soon as they had pocketed the money; and as the hue and cry about the murder in the shed has blown over, I let them go—one at a time, of course. But talking of the money, I must warn you, as I warned them, not to let any one notice your're flush of cash, either by paying it into a bank or by blueing it too prominently. That sort of thing always arouses suspicion, and has led to the discovery of many a crime."
"Have they gone for good, then?" I asked.
"More likely for bad," he laughed. "Crime, like poverty, brings one into strange company. How you, and, for the matter of that, how I came to row in such a galley I can't think. I don't know anything about you personally, Number Seven, for Number One, who 'put you up' for election to the council, didn't take me into his confidence on the subject; but I fancy, as I've said to you before, that you were meant for a gentleman."
Even had there been no note of interrogation—as of one inviting confidence—in his voice. I should have taken the last part of his sentence less as an involuntary compliment than as an intentional "draw" to lead me to talk about myself. Piqued apparently by my non-committal reply of "You're
Very kind," he changed the conversation abruptly.
"A meeting of the council is to be held here to-day week at five in the afternoon. Until then I need not burden you with my company, as I have nothing further to discuss. If you choose to remain here until then as my guest, you are at liberty to do so. Or you are at liberty to go. Which is it to be—stay or go?"
Under the circumstances I felt that it had better be "go," and said so.
scheme? In that case, empower him to act, tails make themselves salts."
I did not at all apprehend things had taken. It I had been apprised of the conspirators' line of action on more than one occasion in frustrating But if secrecy were not garrd to their proposed
"Quite so," he assented curtly. "The social attractions of Heath cottage are not, I am aware, great, especially when the host is laid on his back. To-day week, then, we shall have the honor of welcoming you again. If you will come down by the same afternoon train, Hubbock will meet you with the trap. The time and route by which the other two are coming have been arranged. I wish you speedy recovery from your hurts. Good-day!" "I wish you the same," I said, and so we parted.
CHAPTER XX
THE MUSICAL BOX THAT PLAYED TWO VERY DIFFERENT TUNES. Number Two was sufficiently recovered to preside at the reassembling of the syndicate. After greetings had been exchanged and inquiries had been made in regard to his health, he came to the point without further delay.
"Our newly-elected councillor, Mr. Hubbock, who celebrated his advent to the council by successfully accomplishing the carrying off of the money which had been sent from Germany to furnish sinews of war for the dock strike, is apparently not content with that exploit, but is burning to distinguish himself still further in the service of the council. He has communicated to me a project which I have promised him to put briefly before you. It is, as you know, most necessary that we should impress our numerous subscribers in this country and in America with our activity. Unless we keep ourselves well before them and before the public, subscriptions will assuredly fall off. Nothing has been done for some time in the way of striking a blow at the monarchy or at the aristocracy, or at any of the other figureheads which we set up before our own particular public—just as a showman sets up the ever-familiar figure of Aunt Sally at country fairs—in order that the public in question may dump down money for shying at it. The public dearly loves some sort of Aunt Sally to shy at, and in a general way the Aunt Sallies are not very much the worse. But a wise showman who wishes to keep the coin coming in, humors his public, and takes care that every now and then one of the many edgels that are thrown shall catch the old lady full in the face, and perhaps bash her features as well as break the pipe in her mouth. That makes the throwers feel that they are getting something for the money, and it keeps the coin coming in.
"Well, we've had two tries at the popular 'Aunt Sallies' lately, and each time we have missed. The first time was when we tried to blow up that best-hated man in England, Lord Cranthope, and the second was the failure of our jubilee programme for hoisting the queen and the royal family sky high. It wasn't our fault that we failed. We know now, though we didn't then, that our failures were due to treachery, and if any proof were needed that it was so, it is, I think, to be found in the fact that the very first enterprise we undertake, after we have rid ourselves of the traitor, turns out a complete success. If that female Judas who pulled the linch-pin out of our plans for the blowing up of Lord Cranthope's place and for celebrating the jubilee on quite another way than her majesty intended, had been a member of this council when we planned to lay hands upon the £5,000 that was sent to the strikers by Germany—if she had been a member of the council and in our secrets, the money would not be in our pockets to day."
Number Two paused for breath, and a murmur of unmistakable approval and applause hummed through the room.
"Well, my friends," he went on, "Hubbock has devised a plan for retrieving the failure at Lord Cranthorpe's and the failure at the Jubilee. Here it is.
"Some years ago Hubbock was chef at the Ishmael club. Have any of you ever been there? No? Then the Ishmael club, you must understand, is a coterie of travelers, artists, authors, journalists, musicians and so on, who pride themselves on being Bohemians. They are popularly supposed to be in revolt against conventionality of every sort, and in suburban and provincial society a member of the Ishmael club is looked upon as a dreadful upsetter of the order of things and as one who stands for all that is 'advanced' in thought and manners and morals.
"As a matter of fact the members of the Ishmael club—Brother Ishmaelites,' as they call themselves—are just as sober and solvent a set of respectable, law-abiding, custom-following taxpayers and citizens as you will find outside the precincts of the clubs of actual fogeydom. It is true that the original members who founded the Ishmael club some 50 years ago were a Bohemian harum-scarum lot, but the club as it now stands is simply living on its past tradition and reputation. The present members do their best to delude themselves and the public into the belief that they are a dare-devil crew, and they take their club and themselves so seriously that I verily believe most of them are persuaded that no four walls in the world contain such a gathering of sad dogs as is to be seen in the dining-room of the Ishmael on their 'house dinner' night. They stick their heads, like so many ostriches, into the sands of the past, and refuse to see that the old order changeth and that the members of the Ishmael are Ishmaelites no longer. All that, however, doesn't concern us. If they like to play at Tom and Jerry, they are quite welcome to it, and if they can make believe so well as to persuade themselves that they are the original and only Toms and Jerries, why let 'em in Heaven's name, and be hanged to 'em. Our interest in them doesn't hinge on that; but there is one custom of theirs that has been handed
A
PRIDE THEMSELVES ON BEING BOHEMIANS.
oh from what Mr. Hubbock calls 'time immoral' which does concern us and which I must describe to you.
"One of their rules—a very excellent one—is that of 'no long speeches.' Ten minutes is the maximum of time which is allowed to any man, guest or member, prime minister or paragrapher, and to keep this golden rule involate the original Ishmaelites initiated a custom which is still religiously followed. At every meeting of the club there is placed on the table in front of the chairman a little metal cube about the size of a pint-pot. When any one rises to speak, the chairman presses a spring at the top of the cube which sets an inside piece of mechanism in motion. This piece of mechanism is timed to run for exactly ten minutes, and if by that time the speaker has not finished and the chairman has not reversed the action, a bell strikes, at the sound of which the speaker, whoever he may be, must sit down. It is a rule that might with advantage be introduced into other institutions. To be interrupted or called to order by a member of one's audience—even by one's chairman—is not pleasant. But no one, no matter how touchy, can accept a pull up from an irresponsible piece of dead mechanism other than good-humoredly.
"But what has it I this to do with us, you say. Well, I'm coming to it. The 15th of next month is to be a field day with the Ishmacites, and they have succeeded in nobbling the prince of Wales as their guest. And who do you think is to be the chairman? A gentleman who has been honored with a considerable amount of attention from the syndicate already—no less a personage than our friend Lord Cranthorpe. Gentlemen, wouldn't it be tempting, Providence, who has, so to speak, delivered these two men into our hands, to let slip such an opportunity of retrieving the failure which attended our previous attempt on the life of Lord Cranthorpe and the royal family? The idea is not mine, but our excellent friend Hublock's; but I am bound to confess that if he succeeds, as he believes he can, in effecting the assassination of the prince and of Lord Cranthorpe at one stroke, he will have struck a blow at the powers that be, the powers with which we are at enmity, that would immeasurably encourage the anarchist spirit which it is so much to our interest to foster, and that will bring in the subscriptions as nothing else we have attempted lately has done."
"How it is to be managed?" I asked;
"and who's to do it?"
"Hubbock offers to take the sole responsibility and the sole risk upon his own shoulders," was the answer. "Iho knows that it has been a rule of the syndicate that every new councilor shall qualify for the honor and commit himself irrevocably to the responsibility attending a place on the council by undertaking the first piece of risky work that is to be done after his election. It is true that Hubbock has already qualified by undertaking the task of securing the bag containing the money which was tossed out of the window the other day. He hopes and I hope that the fact that he accomplished the difficult enterprise and conveyed and delivered the cash safely and intact into the hands of the council has satisfied the councilor who at our last meeting raised the question of Hubbock's honesty, I beg pardon, honor. But he is anxious still further to prove his zeal by striking what I am bound to confess seems to me a peculiarly daring and deadly blow at royalty and at the aristocracy. We who constitute this council are paid to wage a war against the upper classes and the capitalists, and if Hubbock succeeds, I think it will go far to satisfy our clients and subscribers that we are giving them something for their money."
"Yes! yes!" interposed Councillor Number Six rather testily, being annoyed, perhaps, at the reference which had been made to him. "It seems to me there's too much jaw about these meetings. You don't need to explain all these things to us over and over again as if we were a pack of schoolboys. Ever since we lost our old chief, you jump at any chance of lecturing us, same as some old women do who want to hear their own voices. We all know that to blow up the prince of Wales and the other aristocratic perilsher, Lord Cranthorpe, along with him will set business moving in the subscription line and we don't want to be told it all over again at every council meeting. 'The show ain't a prayer-meeting. The point is, can the things be done? If so, how?' Number Two took the interruption in better part than I had expected.
"Very well, my friend," he said, good-humoredly, "I don't want to inflict too many details upon you, I'm sure. Only as we all share the responsibility as well as the profits, it seemed only right to me that councilors shall be fully acquainted with what was being done in their name. When you know beforehand how the thing is to be done, you will be able to judge the better whether Hubbock has acquitted himself capably and is deserving of further confidence and trust. I'm very sorry if I have overburdened you with detail. Shall I spare you all the details of Hubbock's
scheme? In that case we can merely empower him to act and let the details make themselves known by results."
I did not at all approve the turn that things had taken. It was only because I had been apprised beforehand of the conspirators' line of action that I had on more than one occasion been successful in frustrating their projects. But if secrecy were maintained in regard to their proposed operations, the game would be up as far I was concerned, for unless I knew what move they were about to make, I should not know how to go to work to checkmate them.
"The chief's quite right in insisting upon everything being above board," I said, boldly. "We don't want any hole-and-corner business in a concera like this. We are all like so many mountaineers roped together on a mountain. If one of us makes a slip and the others aren't prepared to set their feet hard and meet the jerk when it comes, the chances are that the iot of us get pulled over the precipice. And mind you, friends, a rope round your body on a mountain is one thing, and a rope round your neck on a scaffold is another. I've sampled one, but I don't want to sample the other. So I think the chief is right in taking us into his confidence as he has done. We all hang by the one rope, so what I say is, 'Let us know where we're going.' Besides, in a concern like this, which claims before all things to be democratic, we don't want any one man show. Here are we working to overthrow the autocrat or aristocrat wherever you find him, and you propose setting up one man who is to be our pope and lead us all blindfolded by the nose."
"Give us your hand, Number Seven," said Number Six, slapping me familiarly on the shoulder. "It's a good job you can't a parson, for if I heard you preach a few times, I believe you'd convert me, and I'm damned if I could stand that. I'd no idea we'd got such an orator among us. Anyhow, he's convinced me; so go ahead, chief, and let's have the details in full."
Good humor being thus restored, Number Two continued his explanation.
"The thing is to be done in this way," he said. "Hubbock was once chef at the Ishmael club, and is still friendly with the steward and the other waiters. From one of them he has heard a little secret which is supposed to be known only to the secretary of the club and the committee. The Ishmaelites are very fond of having what I may call unrehearsed effects at the house-dinner evenings, and the member who is in the chair often springs a surprise upon the company by providing some unexpected feature for their entertainment. The secretary—a whimsical fellow—has hit upon an idea which he purposes to carry out on the occasion of the prince's visit. 'Good fellowship' being a sine qua non for election to the Ishmael, the prince of Wales, who is, as every one knows, the best of good fellows in the social sense, is naturally a prime favorite there. As you all know, the prince is only now recovering from a serious illness, and as his presence at the Ish-
mael will be his first public appearance after his convalescence, the lmaealites intend to give him an ovation. The speech of the evening will be, 'The health of our guest his royal highness the prince of Wales.' Well, the secretary has sent the ten-minute timekeeper to Switzerland to have the ordinary gong replaced by a musical box which shall play 'God Bless the Prince of Wales.' The chairman, in proposing the prince's health, will purposely outstay his ten minutes. The gong will stifle, but instead of merely sounding ten warm, notes on the bell it will lead off with 'God Bless the Prince of Wales.' As soon as the members 'tumble' to it (for the affair is to be kept secret from all but two or three), the chairman will spring to his feet and take up the air, which will be sung, all standing, and ending up with 'three times three.' That's just the kind of thing to catch on with the lshmaealites, and I shouldn't be surprised if it proved an immense success and pleased the prince into the bargain.
"Well, Hubbock has contrived—in virtue of his old connection with the club—to get engaged as an assistant chef for the occasion, and he also managed to get a peep at the address on the box that contained the gong, when it was sent off to Switzerland to have the inside mechanism taken out and replaced by a musical box. The address was that of a well-known instrument maker in Geneva to whom Hubbock has since paid a visit. Need I tell you why? It was to get a duplicate gong made—a duplicate, that is to say, so far as the outside is concerned. But it isn't a duplicate inside, for instead of the musical box, Hubbock is getting an infernal machine made from a newly discovered explosive. It is an explosive so death-dealing and terrible that even the small quantity that can be packed away inside the gong will be sufficient to kill every in its immediate vicinity, and in fact, it is more than probable that it will kill every one in the room. Anyhow, the chairman, our old enemy Lord Cranthorpe, and the prince, who as the quege of the evening will sit on his right, will be as good as dead men. The joke of it is that it will be Lord Cranthorpe himself, who, by winding up the gong—according to the regulations of the club—when he gets upon his legs, wilt with his own hand put into motion the machinery which will give him and his guest, the prince, as well as a good many of the members, a bare ten minutes more of life. The secretary is no doubt chuckling to himself to think of the stir that his own ingenuity in preparing so pretty a little surprise is likely to make. I think that the surprise which we are preparing for his royal highness, as well as for his lordship and the other members of the club, is likely to make a bigger stir. That, however, we can discuss when the thing's fait accompli. I'm getting shy of counting my chickens before they're hatched, since that miserable jubilee has so. All the same, I think Hubbock's idea for adding to the evening's entertainment is very curious, and as he is willing and, in fact, anxious to undertake the business, I think that he should be allowed to consider his scheme as under
our 'distinguished patronage' as the placards put it, and to have our best wishes for his success. Anyhow, there's his programme, and as discussion is freely invited, I hope any of you who have anything to say will speak up."
"It's a very clever little arrangement," said Councillor Number Six, "and what I says is, is here my respects and best wishes to Mr. Hubbock, hoping as he'll go ahead and scoop the trick. What do my other two honorable colleagues say?"
"We say 'ditto,' too," I answered, speaking for myself and for "the silent councillor," to use the name by which I had dubbed the remaining member. "But if Mr. Hubbock and the chief will pardon me for saying so, there's a difficulty ahead which it won't do to overlook."
"What's that?" asked Number Two. "This. Isn't it very likely after Hubbock has changed the gongs, that some member of the executive of the Ishmael will want to test the mechanism, if only to see that it is in working order? In that case the explosive would be a bit previous. We have no quarrel, I take it, with the members of the Ishmael club as Ishmaelites. In fact, I'm not sure that the members of this council are not exceptionally qualified for membership of a club so-called, and, indeed, it occurred to me while the chief was speaking, that the Ishmael club would be a very suitable name for the particular fraternity of which we who are present in this room have the honor of being members."
"You are quite right, my friend," said Number Two, with a laugh. "Hubbock and I both recognized that that would be a tickle point. But Hubbock's idea is not to change the gongs until the last moment, when the table is laid and relay for the dinner. The庐mel is a very tree and easy place and Hubbock is so well known there that he anticipates no difficulty in finding some excuse to effect the change. I think we may be content to leave it in his hands, since he is willing to undertake all responsibility."
No one demurring to this. Number Two announced that the next meeting of the council would be held in the same place, and at four o'clock in the afternoon of the day following the proposed outrage at the庐mel club.
"I hope on that occasion," he said, genially, "that we shall be in a position to offer Councillor Hubbock our heartfelt congratulations at having succeeded in blowing his royal highness, the prince of Wales, and the Right-Honorable Lord Cranthorpe, M.P., to blazes." With which humane sentiment the meeting broke up.
CHAPTER XXI.
THE PRINCE OF WALES AT THE ISHAEMEL CLUB.
It was the night of the Ishmael club dinner to the prince of Wales, and though the rule by which members are permitted to introduce guests had on this occasion been suspended, the muster of Ishmaelites in their handsome trophy-hung dining room was so great that even a director of the London, Thatham & Dover Railroad company would have acknowledged that for once in his life he had met with a genuine case of overcrowding. So democratic a gathering—notwithstanding the fact that the future king of England and emperor of India sat in the midst—is not often to be seen. At the Ishmael, brains and "good fellowship" are counted greater righteousness than "coin" or a coronet. Within its walls all men are equal. To a good fellow, the right hand of fellowship is readily extended. The "stick" will find himself as readily cold-shouldered, and the assumer of "side" may think himself hucky if he be allowed to depart unbaited. To see the Ishmaelites "trail" a sufferer from "swelled head" is to undergo inoculation against that fell malady. The public and as suddenly lost himself, or the moneyed noboy, who has made a successful bid for a baronetage by placing his thousands at the disposal of his political honors, would do well to air his new honors elsewhere than at the Ishmael. When such a man is known to be in the house, the word goes round, and to him these trusting children of nature come to be instructed in the secret of his greatness. They sit at his feet and drink in his words of wisdom as if hoping thereby one day to follow—be it ever so humbly—in his footsteps. They ask him artless questions about himself, and when he condescends to gratify their very natural desire to be informed upon so interesting a subject, they tell each other audibly what a great man he is, or sit listening with unconcealed admiration in their eyes. They beg to be allowed to present to him this or that friend or member who will esteem it a privilege to know so distinguished a person, and when their victim is most swollen—like a human wind-bag—with gratified vanity and a
A
PROPOSING THE PRINCE'S HEALTH.
sense of his own importance, they unostentatiously produce the necessary pin, and what is left of him when they have done with him is scarcely worth the trouble of sweeping up, not to say of interment.
With the Ishmaelites the heir ap-
parent had always been a prime favorite. Whatever their faults may be, they are at least not flunkeys, and his popularity with them is in no sense attributable to his exalted position, but to their regard for him as a man. If there is one man in all England who may be pardoned for allowing a flatterer to get the blind side of him, it is surely he whose every wish or whim it is the business of those about him to humor. Yet if there is one man in England who is absolutely inaccessible to flattery, it is the genial, generous, but keen-eyed prince. This the Ishmaelites know well, and they love him for it, just as they hail him prince of good fellows, and the best and most honest hater of sham and humbug in the country.
Hence the dinner which was being given in his honor was the most brilliant and at the same time the heartiest function that the club house has ever witnessed. Brains, pluck and good-fellowship—these are what the ishmaelites most delight to honor; but being a British club, they put bravery before even brains, and at the high table that night sat wearers of the Victoria cross, leaders of forlorn hopes, admirals who had saved life as well as fought the enemy at sea, explorers, travelers and soldiers who with a handful of men had held an impossible position or not hesitated to face a thrice outnumbering foe.
Everything had gone without a hitch, and there was no denying that the function was a magnificent success. The prince, still pale from his recent illness, was, it was easy to see, both touched and gratified by the genuinely enthusiastic and affectionate greeting which had been accorded to him; and never had he looked more thoroughly at home than when hobnobbing with the ishmalites.
Dinner being finished, and the permission, 'Brother Isabacaciles, you may smoke!' has gone forth and been received with the customary yell, the chairman rose in his place to make the speech of the evening, by proposing the prince's health. Another yell greeted the placing of the ten-minute bell before him, and yet another the setting of the machinery in motion. Then he began his speech. Nothing of the sort could have been happier, for there was not a false note throughout. He claimed for the prince only that illustrious personage's due, and yet he referred to sympathetically to his illness and paid so graceful a tribute to his qualities as a man, a sportsman and a good fellow, that the Isabacaciles interrupted him again and began with raining cheers.
The announcement—the unexpected announcement—that the prince and that evening expressed his wish to become a member of the club and a Brother Ishmaelite, brought the enthusiasm to the culminating point; but the welcome words had scarcely passed the chairman's tips before the first stroke of the ten-minute gong was beard, and at the sound he held up the customary silencing hand and dropped back into his chair.
The rule of the club is that when the gong strikes, the speaker, whoever he may be, at once resumes his seat, and every one sits in silence until the ten strokes have sounded, when members are at liberty to give expression to their feelings, a privilege of which they avail themselves by yelling, howling and hurling epithets, and even match-boxes, cigar-ends, or anything else which may be handy, at the offender who has transgressed their time-honored ten-minutes rule.
Hence when Lord Cranthorpe relapsed into his seat there was a sudden hush while the member waited dutifully for the ten strokes to sound. Half a dozen seconds had not throbbed away before the Ishmaelites became awere that something out of the ordinary—but what they did not know—was happening. There was a flutter of repressed excitement. Then some one called out "Hush!" and the silence became electric. What was that sprinkling of bird-song music that percolated the smoke-hung atmosphere as if fair hands were linging the largest of tiny wafer-li silver coins for all to gather? "Hush!" some one said impatiently again. Expectation stood on tiptoe, as every ear was strained and every face became alert and expectant.
Note by note the thin thread of muscic
rippled out. It was recognized,
and a tremendous cheer set rattling
the trophies on the wall as the chair-
man rose and with a wave of his hand
above his head took up the strain.
In another second every man was on
his feet, and "God Bless the Prince of
Wales" was being sung as it had never
been sung before.
"With heart and voice awaken
Those minstrel strains of yore,
Till Britain's name and glory
Resound from shore to shore.
From all our ancient mountains,
And from our lovely vales,
O'er the sea."
God bless the prince of Wales."
The secretary's little unrehearsed effect was a huge success. Perhaps the prince's illness had left him somewhat weak and shaky, for as the hymn concluded with the most deafening "Three times three," and yet again "Three times three," that ever left human ears buzzing and human hearts thumping, the kindly eyes of that right royal prince of good fellows were suspiciously bright, and when in a few many words he thanked his "brother Iskha-melites" for the greeting that had been accorded to him, there was just the ghost of a tremble in the voice that is generally so firm and strong.
(TO BE CONTI UED.)
Briggs—I don't know whether play golf, Sunday, or go to church. Griggs—Why not be guided by conscience?
Briggs—But I don't dare run the run
—Brooklyn Life.
Same Material.
Mrs. Joggins—My! They make car wheels out of paper! The idea! Paper car wheels!
Joggins—That's nothing. They have stationary engines, too.—Browning.
He Repents.
She—You only married me for money.
He—Serves me right for trying to buck up against one of those get quick games.—Judge.
4
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@OHN MITCHELL, JR., - EDITOR.
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SATURDAY — FEBRUARY 6, 190:
Taere is not a colored person in the
state of respectability, but what regrets
to learn of the horrible crime commit.
ted at Roanoke, Va., where a white
lady was murderously assaulted and
outraged and her child barbarously
treated on Saturday last. In order that
‘the guilty man may receive his just de-
serts, it is only necessary that a colored
jury be empanelled and an opportunity
de given for the law to take its course,
Such fionds are the enemies of society
in general and of the colored people in
particular.
‘The hope every law-abiding citizen is
that the guilty person may be appre-
hended and panishea by the authorities
of the law. He can ¢xpect no sympa.
thy from colored men and ifthe guilty
person is caught and convicted, a hearty
amen will go up from every colored
man’s home in Virginia,
A man, be he white or black, who
would commit such a crime on a fe-
male, white or black, deserves death,
and the courts of this state will not be
slow to mete it to him,
‘The question of color should not en-
ter into the discussion. It has been
demonstrated that crime knows no col-
or or race. White men tave committed
and are committing outrages as heinous
as any ever found in the catalogue of
brutish achievements.
DR. THIRKIELD AND HIGHER
EDUCATION.
Rev. Dr. W. P. Turrereto in his ad-
mirable address as published in the
Cincinnati, Ohio, Cu#istrax Epvcator
continued:
“The question now, then, no longer
is, ‘Oan the Negro take the higher edu-
cation?” —but to what extent under
present conditions, is it wise to furnish
facilities for the higher education, see-
ing thac the lack of endowments for
his colleges must throw the burden of
thelr support largely on the benevolence
of the people ? the Negro, in the
present stage of his development, really
need the higher education ?
“Yes, even now after a generation,
(hough the capacity of the exceptional
Negro tor higher education has been
demonstrated, the trend of opinion in
some quarters has set strongly away
from calloge education, to elementary
‘and industrial training for the race,
‘Many of the tried and true friends of
the Negro aro the strong advocates and
Uberal supporters of this form of train-
ing, almost to the exclasion of the high-
education. ‘There must be reason
and truth here. Facts must plead
strongly to gain such advocates.
Granted that for tho masses, industria
training is first in importance—a neces-
sity to existence and progress, shall we
discourage; restrict, give up_ the higher
education for the men of exceptional
capacity and power ?"’
As a premiso for his reply, he lays
own the following statement of facts:
«On the higher education the yery
<xistence of any education depends.
‘No people will long maintain common
sehool for primary education, that doo
not possess and sustain colleges for
higher education, The fountain-head
of ia not the common school,
Dut the ‘The college not only
furnishes the trained teacher, but gives
motive and inspiration for the common
school. Blot ous that university in the
wilderness and the intellectual leader-
shipand achievements of Harvard men,
and the entire history of a common:
wealth would be changed.”
‘This isemphatic language, but the
facts speak for themselves and history
will bear out this contention.
‘He pays tribute to common schools,
but in this does not lose sight of the
main purpose of his address when he
says:
“The elementary schools of the South
have done an unparalleled work since
emancipation. But that work would
have been an impossibility had it not
been for the teachers trained in the
higher institutions, established and sus-
tained by Ohristian benevolence.
“Without thesc trained teachers, mil
ligns expended by the State for public
edumtion must largely have gone to
waste. Had it not been for these
‘schools of higher training, that early
enthusiasm for knowledge which afver
emancipation, carried old and young into
the schools, would long since havespent
itself, and millions of the race would
have sunk back into the low levels of
iguorance where slavery left them.
‘hese colleges and normai schools have
notonly given thousands of teachers to
the public schools, they have also
brought ideals and higher hopes to. an
entire race. Fortunate it is that these
were Christian schools. ‘The influence
of moral and spiritual ideals in the
teachers of a race just ont of bondage —
A race without standards of homelife,
virtue and morality—is beyond esti-
mate.”
Bat enough for this week. We shall
consider this remarkable address farth-
er in our next issue.
CONDEMNING VARDEMAN,
| Wehad thonght to make extended
comment upon the address of Gov.
-Varpeman before the}Mississippi legis.
Intare, but, finding that the day of the
‘extremist has passed and that conserva.
tive white men are as forward in “com-
demning such uncalle-dfor utterances
‘as thoughtful colored ones, we deemed
‘itadvisable tocite a few of the com-
‘ments made by white Democratic jour-
nals which, as a rule, have an antip ithy
‘tothe people whom this official has so
wantonly assailed.
The Richmond, Va, News-Lraper
in its issue of Jan. 20th, 1904, said:
‘'Governor James K. Vardeman, of
Mississippi, in his inangural address de-
vered yesterday, declared that educa-
tion is ruining the Negro race. Ho as-
serted that the commission by Negro
men of unmentionable crime is an ox.
‘Pression of desire for racial equality,
‘and that the Negro becomes more crim:
inal as he becomes more intelligent.
“Governor Vardeman's declarations
and doctrines are much more sensation-
althan jast or sensible. Mistaking co-
incidences for cause and effect is an old
and familiar fault of shallow 1gnorance.
Perverting coincidences to make them
appear cause and effect is au old and
cheap trick of demagogues and quacks.
A few years ago we had argued to us
from very high sources that because
‘prices of wheat, cotton and silver had
Tison and fallea about the same time
the prices of cotton and wheat depend-
‘ed on the price of silver.”
The above is caustic Ianguage, but it
nullified Gov, VAaRpEMan’s statistics
when it comtinued:
“Governor Vardeman says the statis.
tis prove that in New England,
where the Negro is most. generally edu-
cated, he is most generally criminal.
Therefore education makes the Negro a
criminal, he tells us, We could prove
precisely by the same method that’ edu.
cation destroys the white man moray.
It is unquestionably true that in com.
munities where nobody can read or
write forgery is an unknown crime. We
could demonstrate by statistics and ob-
vioas facts that in jails and penitentin-
ries there is leas crime than anywhere
else in the world. The inmates donot
have the opportunity for erime. ‘The
Nogro as a slave wats watched, guarded,
managed and punished like a child, and
ho bad little more than thechild’s oppor-
tunities for crime. It is a wonder
that Governor Vardeman did not carry
ca fe conrve of intelligent, reasoning
and protes¢ against the decree of the Al-
mighty that haman beings must grow
to intelligence and maturity; for, as
children all of us are innocent. The
statistics will prove beyond doubt that
maturity morally destroys humanity,
because under the age of six the erimin-
als and offenders against morality are
fow and over.that age they are many.
“In all the histories of the world
pastoral, ‘primative, unsophisticated
rople have been innocent “and Iaw-
abiding as compared with the busy,
Progressive, informed people of the
cities. We aro told that in the days of
King Alfred, of England along “aboat
the year 883, a virgin could from
one ond of England to the other unat-
tended with a purse of gold in her hand
in perfect security. Then nobody in
England, outside the monasteries, could
road oF ‘rita To-day a virgin’ unat-
tended and with a purse of gold in her
hand would hardly be safe walking 500
yards in England. Therefore, accord-
ing to Governor Vardeman, education
has been a curse to the English-speak-
ing race, and the sooner we pat the torch
to school-honses, universities and col-
leges, slaughter the professors and teach-
er and leave learning to the monks, the
better it will be for our morals.””
The above is good reading, bat what
follows is equally so:
“Statistics show beyond question that
in New England and the Northern
States crime among white people is
tery much more gengral than it is in
the South. Tn the South the ignorant
white people are man: 1e North
they are few. Azording to tho sagact.
ons Vardeman, this is conclusive evi
dence that education is a curse not only
to the Negro, but to the white man.
Men and brethren, let us lay hands on
books and schools together. Obviously,
it Vardeman be right, the thinkers and
teachers of all tie ‘world have been
Wrong these centuries and education,
instead of a blessing, is a deadly curse.
Let us work oarselves and our children
back to idiocy and isolation as fast as
possible, because those two conditions
mean innocence, while activity and
knowledge mean crime.”
This is sarcasm and irony with a
vengeance.
It continued:
1 ve.gannot comprehend the mothods
of t of the white ‘who con-
of thought of the white people who con-
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND. VIRCINTA.
educational ities. What do
they expect to do with the Negro? ‘They
say he must not leave us, becanse we
need him to work our fields; that he
must not be educated, because «duca-
tion destroys his morality. Do they be-
feiie ae eam eee ane
peo} em generat ter
generation to be cotton-pickers and
corn-field hands? Do they consider that
to be justice, morality or decent regard
for the hoges and instincts sup; to
be common to all humanity? Beonuse
the Nogro like the white man, finds
| his opportunities for crime increased as
| he gains knowledge and comes in con-
| fact with other men and his wants in-
|grasse, shall we gravely. take tho. pos
tion that to educate the Negro at all is a
hideous mistake? Do we think we
will be permitted to Keep a race in
bondage while it is nominally froo, that
the world will look on while we hold
the Negro here as hewer of wood and
drawer of water, denying him know!
edge and light on the pret.xt of guard-
ing his virtue and promoting his hap-
pines.
“From 1820 to 1864 we had here in
the South Vardemans who preached
and proclaimed alond that the Negro
was made to be a slave; that slavery
was fastened on him by the immu-
tibie decree of Providence; that he was
‘happier and better cared for in slavery
than otherwise; that we were his bene-
factors, rightfal owners and natural
guardians, How much of honesty there
was in our belief of those things, Gol
knows. Oertainly we were talking for
what we believed to be our interests,
however conscientious we may have
been, and where self the wavering bal.
|aance’ shakes its adjustment is, Sarcly
jest. Vardeman no doubt thinks he is
talking for the interests of the South
now. ‘The world refased to accept our
contentions or to share our theories. in
the old days, and it rose against us
| when we alone of all the world stood
|for slavery. Cannot we learn by bitter
|experience? Are we to undertake, an-
|der the leadership of the Vardemans
jand ‘Tilmans ond our own projadioes
and interests, to defy the world’s public
sentiment and all the lessons of human
| story?”
___We wonld to God that the sontherner
who wrote that editorial would continue
along the “good old road.” It sounds
like the plea of our southern white
friends of other days. He speaks for
justice and declares for fair play in alj
| this land. He realizes that “righteous-
ness exalteth a nation and sin is a re-
proach to any people.”
Yes, God is raising up friends for us
where we least expect to find them, and
advocates who speak boldly when the
occasion requires it.
We dare say that there were many
white members in the Mississippi legis.
Inture who have criticized Gov. VanpE-
MAN as severely as has this editorial
writer of old Virginia. One thing we
know—when a Virginian is for you, he
speaks and labors with all of his energy
/—and he will be with you from the be
ginning and even without God's help,
will be witn you to the end.
“AN ILLOGICAL GOVERNOR.”
Tar Richmoni, Va., Tates-Diseater,
under the caption of “An illogical Gov.
enor” in its issue of January 2ist, 1904
said:
“Governor James K. Vardaman, of
‘Mississippi, in’ his inaugural address,
which we printed yesterday, declared
that education is the curse of the Negro
Tace, tending to mako him worse. in-
‘stead of better, and urged an amend.
ment to the ‘State Constitution that
‘would place the distribution of the com:
mon school fund solely within the pow-
er of the Legislature,
“After citing some statistics, which
proved to the Governor's satisfaction
that unter a system of education the
Negro race hax become more brutal and
more criminal, he says: ‘The better
class of Negroes are not responsible for
this terrible condition, nor for the erim-
inal tendency of their race.’
“It seems to us that the Governor ut-
terly refutes his own argument in this
saying. He admits that there is a ‘bet-
ter class of Negroes.” and we ask, in all
reason, how this class is to bo contin-
uel and still further improved and in-
creased in number. Are we to accom-
plish it by turning our tacks npon the
fogro. race, and. withholding. from
them the means of education? “Can we
make more Negroes of the ‘better clase’
by keeping them in ignorance and su-
perstition, and in a state of moral isola.
tion? Is it possible to improve any tan
whether he be black or white, by with-
holding from him the means of mental
and moral development?
“Governor Vardaman’s doctrine
seems to us to be utterly illogical, un-
tenable, harsh and cruel. As one of
our great educators has well said: ‘Lg-
norance is the remedy for nothing.’
Onr system for educating the black man
is defective, but it is scarcely less than
an axiom, that if we would improve
him, we tnust educate him, for improve-
ment is education, and education is im-
provement.””
‘This is what we call from a logical
stand-point, ‘eating him up alive.”
Farewell, Brother VARDaMaN!
GENERAL MARKETS
Philadelphia, Pa. Feb. 3. — Flour
steady; winter supertine, $3.25@3.50;
Penna. roller, clear, $4@4.15; city
mills, fancy, $5.10@9.25. Rye flour was
quiet, at $8.39 per barrol Wheat was
rm; No. 2 Penna, red, new, 98:4 ade.
Corn firm; No. 3 yellow, ‘local, 3c.
Oats were quiet; No. white, clipped,
48i4c.; lower grades, 46c. Hay steady
No. 1 Umothy, large bales, $15@ 15.50.
Pork firm: family, $11.50@ 18." Beet
steady; beef hams, $20@ 21. Live poul-
try, 1c. for hens and. $c.” for" old
roosters, Dressed poultry, itse. for
choice fowls and 1c, for old rosters.
Butter was steady; creamery, 27c. per
pound. Eggs steady; New York’ and
mia., $5¢- per dozen. Potatoes were
steady; 95@98c. per bushel.
Baltimore, Md... Feb. 3—Wheat firm:
spot contract, 94@9414¢.; spot No. ?,
red western, S5Q 9s Ke: steamer No. 3
red, 85% @8be. Corn firm; spot, 49% @
50c!; steamer mixed, 1814 @ 48%c. Oats
firm; Ng. 2 white, soigadse.; No. 2
mixed, 4c. Rye firm; No. 2, in export
elevator, 61@b2c.; uptown, 66@bre.;
No, 2 western, in export elevator, 62
Gése.; uptown, Sa@ré3e. Butter steady;
cy, imitation, 19 20¢.; fancy cream-
ery, 25¢.; fancy ladle, 16@18e.; store
packed, 15@17c. Eggs firm; 85e. doz.
Live Stock Markets.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburf, Pa.,
Feb. 3.—Cattle steady: choice, s.10g'
6.85; prime, $4.85@5; fair, $3.40@4.25.
Hiogs higher; prime heavy, $5.1006.15;
mediums, $6.15@5.20; heavy Yorkers,
$5.05@5.10; "light Yorkers, $5@5.05;
Bey Magee nite tiaie WEC
jeep siow; prime lambs, $6.
6.25: veal calves. $7.50@8.
WM. C. WHITNEY *
PASSES AWAY
Died of Peritonitis Following an Op-
eration For Appendicitis,
HE WAS ILL BUT FOUR DAYS
New York, Feb. 3.—William Collins
Whitney, former secretary of the navy,
died at his home, 871 Fifth avenue. He
a > nN
tp Ge ©
pia.
Fee SSS = =
NP
WS LSS M4
come eUee
died while under the influence of ether
administered preparatory to a second
operation for appendicitis. By his bed-
side were his son, Harry Payne Whit-
hey, and his daughter, Dorothy Whit-
ney, as well as Dr. William T. Bull,
the chief surgeon in attendance.
‘Mr, Whitney was in his 64th year.
Mr. Whitney was taken {ll Friday
night at the performance of “Rigolet-
to” at the Metropolitan Opera House,
and had to leave before the opera was
ended. Dr. Walter B. James, the Whit-
ney family physician, was summoned,
and found that the condition of the pa-
tient was such that after consultation
an operation was decided upon, and
was performed by Dr. Bull. The pa-
tient rallied so well that it was fully
believed he would recover.
Mr. Whitney's condition was yery
grave, however, on Sunday and Mon-
day, and at a consultation held yester-
day the conclusion was reached that
the only hope for the patient lay in a
Second operation.
A bulletin issued in the morning
stated that there had been a slight im-
provement in the patient's condition,
but shortly before 3 o'clock alarming
symptom’s were noted, and hurried
Preparations were made for a second
operation. Mr. Whitney was placed
under the influence of ether, but
whether the operation was. proceeded
with or not is not known.
‘When the physicians perceived that
the patient was in danger of death,
Harry Payne Whitney and Miss Doro-
try Whitney were immediately noti-
fied. They hastened to the side of their
father, and In a few minutes he had
breathed his last. Oxygen was used,
and all the skill of the physicians and
surgeons brought into play to save the
life of tho distinguished patient, but
to no avafl.
The following statement was issued:
“Mr. Whitney died of peritonitis and
blood poisoning following an opera-
tion for appendicitis. The interment
will be at Woodlawn, at a date to be
hereafter fixed, in the family plot
where are the remains of Mrs. Flora
Payne Whitney, Olive Whitney and
Mr, Whitney's grandchild, Flora Payne
Paget.
“The funeral services will be held
at Grace Church, where Mr. Whitney
was a pew holder.”
Soon after the death visitors began
to call at the house. Among them were
Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt and ex-Sec-
retary of War Eliju Root.
Cleveland Greatly Shocked.
Princeton, N. J., Feb. 3.—Mr. Cleve-
land was deeply moved when he learn.
ed of Mr. Whitney's death. He said:
“The news of Mr. Whitney's death
has greatly shocked me. As I think of
hi., my mind, passing beyond recent
years, dwells upon the days of my as-
sociation with him in high official duty
and recalls the time when I had the
opportunity to enjoy his unreserved in-
timacy and friendly companionship.
Onr relations have never changed, but
the exigencies of life have forbidden
recent close intercourse.
“Wr. Whitney had more calm, force-
ful efficiency than any man I ever
knew. In work that interested him he
actually seemed to court dimculties
and to find pleasure and exhilaration
in overcoming them. His conquest over
the obstacles he encountered in under-
taking to build up our navy afforded
him greater delight than the contem-
plation of the great results he achieved
in his department of the government.
His judgment was quick. clear and as-
tonishingly accurate; and, when It was
called into action, hts mental poise
was so complete that neither passion
nor irritation could lead it astray.”
Blehon of Nassau Drowned.
Miami, Ala, Feb. 2.—Mail advices
from Nassau, Bahamas, announce the
drowning there of the Right Rev. Dr.
H. N. Churton, bishop of Nassau, The
bishop was making a visit to Ragged
Island, one of the outer tslands. In
attempting to go out to his yacht, the
‘Message of Peace, the small boat was
swamped and he was drowned.
Shot and Killed at a Dance.
Philadelphia, Feb. 1—Alfred Carter,
living near Avondale, Chester county,
was shot and killed at a dance near
that place. He was shot during a quar.
rel. Some of those who witnessed the
shooting declared that the shot was
fired by Samuel Keely, a partictpant
in the dances, and he was arrested.
Dynamite Plot Along Lehigh Valley.
Hazleton, Pa., Feb. 3.—Detalls of an
alleged dynamite plot along the Lehigh
Valley railroad 20 miles north of
‘White Haven has come to light. T. H.
Pindell, of Wilkesbarre, superintend-
ent of the Wyoming division of the
Lehigh Valley railroad, last week re-
eelyed an anonymous letter, saying
that if $10,000 was not deposited at
Lake Station, on the Wilkesbarre
mountain, that section of the line
‘Would be blown up.” Sheriff Albert Ji-
cobs was notified, and he with a posse
patrolied the tracks.24 hours, but no
attempt was made to carry ont the
threat. A guard {s still maintained by
the railroad company between Fair-
view and Lake Station.
Three Men Scalded to Death.
Detroit, Mich., Jan. 30.—Three men
were so badly scalded by the break.
ing of an iron elbow connecting the
Doiler and engine in the basement of
the Hotel Metropole that they died in
@ short time at the hospitais to which
they were removed. The dead: George
Vincent, engineer; William Cupp, fire-
man; Frank Casper, fireman at Hotel
Brunswick. Casper had gone to the
Metropole engine room to see one of
the other victims. The three men were
deluged with hot water and steam
when the coupling burst, and they suf-
fered agonies.
Pickpockets to Serve In Mexican Army
Mexico City, Feb. 1—Several pris-
oners convicted as pickpockets were
placed in the regular army to serve
out the terms of their sentenees. Gov-
ernment officials believe this modern
punishment will prove more satistac-
tory than Imprisonment.
eae Rin taNonohile | macneeunecieok:
i eager are eae eee Oe ee
Preaching Lynching Sermon.
‘Wilmington, Del, Feb. 3.—Rev. Rob-
ert A. Elwood, pastor of Olivet Prés-
bytorian church, of this city, who was
tried by the New Castle Presbytery
‘on charges growing out of the sermon
entitled “Should the Murderer of Miss
Helen Bishop Be Lynched?” preached
by him the day before George White,
the negro murderer of Miss Bishop,
was burned at the stake, was found
guilty on three of the six specifications
Presented against him.
Tho specifications on which he was
found guilty are, in substance as fol-
lows:
Guilty of unministerial and unchris-
tlan conduct in that he violated the
constitution of the Presbyterian
Church in the United States of Amer-
fca, in the 20th chapter of the Confes-
sion of Faith, section four, by preach-
Ing an unsound and unwise sermon.
Guilty of charging, in the event of
the lynching of the alleged criminal,
the responsibility therefor upon the
Judges of the courts of New Castle
county and the state of Delaware, and
thereby tending to lessen the rever-
ence and respect to the constitutional
authorities intrusted with the mainte-
nance of civil law.
Guilty of advocating the lynching of
the alleged criminal if his trial be de-
layed, or if found guilty, through some
technically he be not given capital
punishment.
After Mr. Elwood had been found
guilty a committee was appointed to
fix punishment. This committee ¢on-
sisted of the Revs. T. A. McCurdy, S.
R. Shaw, J. L. McElmoyle, H. L. Duye-
Kdnek and J. R. Hodgson. After due
deliberation the committee reom-
mended that Mr. Elwood be cautioned
to be more careful in the future. The
recommendation was accepted, and the
Presbytery adjourned,
DARING PHILADELPHIA ROBBERY
Thieves Clean Out Small Jewelry Store
After Beating Woman Unconscious.
Philadelphia, Feb. 2.—Four men en-
tered a small jewelry store at 3416
Market street, West Philadelphia, and
beat, bound and gagged the aged owner
of the place, Mrs. Annie Hassler, and
then gathered up Jewelry to the value
of about $500 and escaped. The dar
ing robbery was committed while per.
sons were passing the store, but sc
quietly was it done that no one’s at
tention was attracted until the men
left the store and ran away. A nelgh:
bor who saw the robbers leave entered
the store and found Mrs. Hassler un:
conscious on the floor. She Is seri
ously injured, but will probably re
cover.
Mrs. Hassler, who {s 71 years of age,
says that the four men entered the
store and asked to see clocks. As she
turned to get one, two of the men
seized her by the throat, twisted her
head, and one of them struck her with
aclub. The blow rendered her sense
less, The robbers bound and gagged
her, and then gathered together the
more valuable jewelry in the show
eases and in the window. They did not
attempt to open the safe.
FIVE ROCKMEN KILLED
‘Torn to Pieces By Explosion While Be-
Sod Shih Bin MAR Bia
oe Ame S lee SS as a ee
Mahanoy City, Pa., Feb, 1. — Five
mer. were instantly killed in the Maple
Hill colliery of the Philadelphia an¢
Reading Coal and Iron company. The
victims, who were rockmen, are: Mor
gan Jones, aged 25; John Mackey, 28;
Joseph Junis, 35; Adam Savage, 23
and John Huderick, $1.
The men were killed by an explo
sion of powder in a steel cage in whict
they were being hoisted. ‘The explo
sion ripped the cage apart. and the
mangled forms of the rockmea fell 30(
feet to the bottom of the shaft. ‘The
head of one of the men was blown off
‘The Maple Hill is one of the collieries
visited by the anthracite strike com
mission, and it is one of the best
equipped mines in the hard coal re
gions.
Serious Charge Against a Doctor.
Springfield, Ill., Feb. 2—Dr. Charles
A. Nichols, of Urbana, ML, was arrest
ed and brought before Judge Hum
phrey, of the United States dfsirict
court, charged with sending obscene
letters through the mails, He was ar
rested on complaint of Mrs. Susan C.
Day, of Urbana, divorced wife of Wil
lam A. Day, assistant United States
attorney general at Washington. Mrs.
Day charges that Dr. Nichols attempt
ed to extort money from her. Dr.
Nichols was released under $1000
bonds.
Sink ot: Ghia: readaank we meskes.
Dijon, France, Feb. 1.—Arnold Com-
tesse, son of the president of Switzer
land, committed suicide here by shoot-
ing. M. Comtesse, who had been living
here recently, drove out to pay a visit
to a woman of his acquaintance. Upon
being informed that she was not in,
Comtesse re-entered his carriage and
shot himself in the mouth with a re
volver, the bullet penetrating bis brain.
He was taken to a hospital, where he
died. He had been suffering from cere-
bral derangement resulting from ma-
larial fever.
CUPID ON THE PIERS.
Romances Found on the Docks of
Steamship Lines.
Young Cuban's Emotional Meeting
With Bride (0 Whom He Had teen
Married by Proxy—Pleasing
atin’ Miocarers.
| Cupid must spend a large part of his
time sitting on the pier where he can
Watch the coming and going of ocean
liners entering and leaving New York.
If the small gentleman of the wings
and bow were a personal deity and cir-
eumscribed by the law which declares
against @ person being in more than
One place at one time, that undoubtedly
- ie the place he would elect as his home.
Take the scenes of one day along
‘the docks as an illustration, and those
scenes were not all. They were the
ones that happened te be observed
and known.
The White Star line steamsh!p Oceanic
‘Started it by arriving with four engaged
couples and 14 brides to be on board.
The 14 young women came from abroad
to marry men who had preceded them
to make homes in this country. Their
husbands to be were waiting for them on
the deck. You may be sure that Cupid
smiled broadly as he saw 14 different
bets of greetings and beheld the four en-
saged young couples stalking happily
away.
‘The Oceanic had been through rough
Weather, but Boreas was working against
Cupid on that trip and the 14 brides to
be and the four engaged couples came
safely through,
Then, says the Chicago Tribune, at
another dock another scene was being
enacted. Since morning a young Cuban,
Rafael Hicalgo, had been waiting in the
cold and snow, watching for a steamer to
appear. He had been married by proxy
in Havana, November 19, his father act-
ing as his representative in signing the
Wedding contract.
‘The eagerness of both the young man
‘and the young woman defeated the ob-
ject they had in view—a welcome the
moment the dainty foot of the bride
touched American soll. As the passen-
gers began to come off the bridegroom
mistook another young woman for his
bride and dashed madly down the pier
for her. Discovering his mistake he
plunged through the crowd of disem-
barking passengers, but {t was not until
he had searched 20 minutes that he
found her.
Then he discovered her in charge of a
strapping member of the United States
nen p>
y WYN A W/
NAB ar
Ny \ \ Way
WY He
ers es ee
‘army hospital corps. Private John
Stremer, in whoso care she had been
Placed on leaving Cuba.
‘The two Cubans had not seen each
other for three years, but the recogni-
tion was Instantaneous. Private Strem-
er stood at “attegtion” with a pleased
smile on ais tae te nc two exbauned
the vocabularly of endearments,
The bride was hysterial at first. The
crowds, the unaccustomed cold, and the
language she could not understand
frightened her and she bid her face in
her husband's coat and sobbed. He held
her while sympathetic women passen-
gers tried to soothe her and aftera while
the little fear passed away and she waa
emiling with confidence again.
She had heen married to Rafael, his
father acting as proxy, because the
young man himself could not leave his
employment at the Rogers Locomotive
‘Works in Paterson, where he is studying
to become an engineer.
At another dock there was an outgo-
ing steamer whiah carried two happy,
Passengers with a story worth repeating.
‘They had been married in Pennsylvania.
‘The young man had told his bride that
the money he had saved for the wedding
Would tke them on a wedding trip to
New York, but that they must not be ex-
travagent, they would need to be eco-
nomical in beginning housekeeping.
At this she smiled and promised to be
exceedingly careful of the houschold
funds. A trip to New York was all the
wedding trip any girl needed, she
thought.
So they were married and ste-ted on
their trip. When they got to New York
the bride informed ker husband that it
would be nicer todrop their arrange-
ments for the wedding trip and make a
tour of the world instead.
“You see,” she said with a blush and
in an apologetic manner, “instead of be-
ing poor, as you thought me,I have a
modest fortune of half a million dollars,
but I wanted to be loved for myself
alone.” =
It was an astonished young man that
listened to this announcement, but thelr
appearance on the pier, taking an outgo-
Ang vessel, was proof that he did not re-
gret the fact that the woman he had
Married as poor had turned out to be
toh.
MOTHER WAS FRANTIC.
Carriage Got Lost with Baby Instde
and General Bxettement Was
the Resalt.
“Where's the carriage with a baby
in it?” cried a woman, young, smartly
wned and handsome, as she emerged
ros Twenty-third street toy store,
New York, and looked anxiously up and
down the street.
Shoppers hurrying by stopped. The
carriage caller on Tuty fa ifant a
shop asked: “What carriage?
babyr*
“My carriage and my baby ia ft,” easte
the half sobbing reply. “Find them for
me! Oh, what shall I de if baby te
goner”
“Where's the carriage with a baby tal
it?” roared the carriage man in a voice
that echoed down the block. ‘Them he
was off on a run for the head of the line
of carriages, startling the crowd by bel=
lowing: “Where's the carriage wit
a baby tm it?”
The cry was ‘taken up br melieaesa,
! Ga) Ah oy
Na
TN ae pips eg ih
> UL
bua ey) | LE
i 8
A HA
Nine) > A HH
Pi Me i if ei HH}
aR ee
UA Na) 7
AN a yi
a ae
UNS
Bees :
Half a hundred men’s voices swelle@
‘the chorus. The ordinary trae of the
street ceased. The distracted mother
‘wrung her hands. “I want my baby,
‘she kept repeating, “Tonly left it a mow
ment to go inside and buy a present.
Now it’s gone.”
| ‘There were dark whisperings of kid
Raper. Every carriage that hove im
sight was eyed with suspicion, |
__ When the oxcitement was at its height
& carriage threaded ite way to the curty)
There was a glad cry from the veotad
Woman, and opening the door heraelf she
‘was inside with abound. The next thing
the crowd saw was a baby about Owe
Years old being smothered with Kisses,
“Home, Thomas,” came a voles from
the carriage, and mother and baby were
whirled away before anybody had =
chance to find out who they were or how
the carriage had come to get lost. i
TRAGEDY IN ASYLUM. }
Mexican Madman Nailed Fellow Inq
mate's Head to the Floor to
‘dawn Shes 0 Seika:
Ambrosio Samano Campa, a Mexicam
madman killed a fellow inmate of the
San Hippolita insane asylum in the City
of Mexico, the other day while profess
ing to shave him.
Campa induced the other man to rev
move his straitjacket. When this was
accomplished he asked his companion to
don the garment, which he did without
protest. Then, laying his victim on the
floor, Canipa proceeded to drive a large
spike throush his head into the floor.
With a shocraker's knife, which by
some means he had contrived to secure,
he tried to shave his vietim, but finding
the latter's position inconvenient, re~
moved (he spike and nailed the man’s
head (o the floor in a different manner,
This operation he repeated four times.
The dead man was a brother off
Manuél Marron, prosecuting attorney im
the Belem criminal court, and a well’
aA Se
| Te ai
ye a + , ie
a AN
oO
ED HIM ee .
known iitterateur. When news of the
tragedy was conveyed to the lawyer he
‘Was summing up the case in the trial of
Jorge Lezama, who was finally sentenced
to death for murder. As the attorney
asked the terrible penalty for Lezama
tears were streaming down his cheeks,
Samano Campa, whohad been inthe asy-
lum for nine years, was a powerful man,
He believed himself to be God on earth.
‘Once he grasped a man who refused to
worship him by the throat and struck
his victim's head against the wall, fae-
turing the skull. Two years ago in a
fight with another inmate, who also
claimed to be God in Heaven, Campa se~
cured-a club and killed his opponent. .
Coffins Made of Glass. 4
Hermetically sealed glass coffins are
coming in vogue in French cities It ip
asserted that a body buried in a gl
‘boffin becomes mummified in ‘bout 30
yearn,
diaeetnnts Wave “tea
‘The post burns the midnight off
And lonely vigils keep:
While products of his wakeful toll |
Put other folks to sleep.
—Spare Moments,
‘ The One Thing Necdfat. |
“Can you make bread, cake and pia
Miss De Type?”"
“Certainly, Mr. Cautious, if you cas
furnish the dough."—N. Y. Times
The Drama ef Dirt.
Madge—How was (he play last night?
Dolly—Just lovely. It was full of
things a girl had to pretend she didn’t
understand.—Town Topics.
Beaatital,
“She's pretty as a picture.”
“Yes—any picture except her own.
Cincinnati Commercial Tribune,
Homiliattos.
She—Has he any degrading ties?
He—Yes, those his wife bought for
him.— Yonkers Statesman.
AC PLANET
SATURDAY ... FEBRUARY 6, 1904
WAR
REMINISCENCES
STARTED SHERIDAN.
Illinois War Veteran Who Awoke the General to Make His Historic Ride.
The man who started Gen. Phil Sheridan on his famous ride from Fairfax station to Winchester to win back a battle that was lost lives in Warrensburg, a village in this county, and his name is George Mixell, says the Chicago Chronicle. This incident is the old veteran's most treasured memory of the war and he delights to tell how he sent Sheridan galloping down the Shenandoah valley at two o'clock in the morning of October 19, 1864.
"I was a private in the Two Hundred and Second Pennsylvania," says Mixell, and Col. Charles Albright commanded our regiment. We were on duty at Fairfax station, 25 or 30 miles southwest of Winchester, in old Virginia. Near Winchester runs Cedar creek, near which Sheridan's army was in camp. City Point, where Grant was at the time, is about 25 miles south and west of Winchester, in West Virginia.
"You know Sheridan left his army to visit Gen. Grant and have a conference with him. He did not think Early, the confederate leader, would surprise and sout his army; he didn't think Early was strong enough. So he took plenty of time and was in no hurry to return to his command. That is why he came by Fairfax station.
"It happened that I was on guard duty at the headquarters of our colonel the evening Sheridan arrived at the station. Col. Albright had his headquarters in a large house near the railroad and I patrolled the porch.
"When Sheridan arrived he was alone and came up on a black horse, not a large one, but a magnificent animal full of spirit and splendidly proportioned. He dismounted in front of the house and started to pass me, but I stopped him, not knowing who he was, but just then my colonel came out and welcomed him and I saluted.
"He spoke to me pleasantly, and that's probably what gave me courage to do what I did later. Sheridan went into the house and was soon in bed, I guess, for it was late when he came. I continued my watch without anything unusual happening until about two o'clock in the morning, when sounds of cannon firing came from the direction of Winchester and some other sentry called to me that he thought Sheridan's army was in a night battle.
"I knew this was unexpected and something told me to call my colonel and Sheridan and I woke them up. Sheridan jumped out of bed and asked what was wrong, and I told him. He
GEORGE MIXELL
ran out on the porch in his shirt, listened a minute, made some strong remarks and called for his horse.
"While the animal was being brought he was getting into his clothes. He jumped on his horse, ordered my colonel to get his men out and galloped off. He was alone then, and if he had a guard he picked them up in our camp. He may have left a couple of his men there when he came up to the colonel's house. I never heard anything more about his ride except that he got there and found his army on the run and made them stand up and fight. Our regiment did not get in the fight because it was over before we got there and we were stopped on the way."
Mr. Mixell gleefully relates how Sheridan seemed put out when he heard the sounds of cannonading as of distant thunder when aroused from bed.
Why the Lord Made So Many
In Lincoln's lips, the words that often came were these: "The common people." To those who lived with him and talked with him, especially during the civil war, it seemed as if he could never cease thinking of those who were just human beings, unlettered, unknown, inglorious. A congressman from a western district approached him during his term as president, and apologized for presenting a petition from his constituents, because they were very common people. "Well," said Lincoln, pleasantly, "God must love the common people. He's made so many of 'em."—Success.
Purest Gold Ores.
The purest gold found anywhere is in the Mount Morgan mine, at Queens-
land, Australia. The mine holding second place in this respect in the Guillempe mine in Tuolumne county, Cal. The Mount Morgan gold is 997 fine, 1,000 being chemically pure gold, worth $20.67 per ounce.
AN ENTERPRISING YANKER.
How He Got Horsehair to Make Fancy Bridles and Other Trap-pings.
"Speaking of curious things that happened during the war between the states, reminds me of a little enterprise launched by a smooth Yankee in southeastern Arkansas," said the old-timer in the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "and if he could have held out he would soon have become a millionaire, and he would have owed it all to the traffic in horses' tails. He was a genius in his way, but turned out to be a bit clumsy, else he would not have been caught so early in the game. As it was, however, he made a neat sum, and when he was told that the climate of that section was not good for him, that his health was run down, and in fact that he would not live long if he did not leave forth with, he left and had ample funds with which to leave.
"He was about the cleverest and most enterprising fellow I met during the unhappy season of the country's history. He could make all kinds of neat, useful and attractive things out of horse hair, the hair of the horses' tails and manes. The prettiest and most artistic bridles I ever saw were made by him out of this
TAILS OF THE ANIMALS DISAPPEARED
material. Leather bridles were scarce. Many men were using bridles made out of pawpaw bark, and the bark of other kinds of trees. When he started his horse-hair bridle and leather enterprise it looked like the salvation of the country. He was doing an immense business. Wherever there was a dead horse there you would find him, also, carefully cutting away the manes and tails. It would have been all right if this Yankee genius had confined himself to dead horses. He could even find a few men who were willing to sell the manes and tails of their horses. But as a rule the old fellows of that time were proud of the manes and tails of their horses and would have as quickly permitted you to cut off one of the animal's legs. So he could not get all the hair his expanding business demanded.
"The result was that in a short while complaints began to be made from all sections of the country by the owners of horses that in some mysterious way the manes and tails of the animals disappeared. The beauty and grace of family pets had been marred in some way during the nighttime and there was walling and gnashing of teeth. In the meantime the business of the horsehair bridle and haltermaker kept steadily growing. Besides, he was now actually making harness of all kinds out of horsehair—ropes, hamestrings, martingales, breeching, backstops, backbands, even trace chains—and these facts naturally brought suspicion down on his head. By a bit of detective work on the part of citizens the responsibility of this unique kind of vandalism, if I may say it, was placed upon the Yankee bridlemaker. The result has been stated. When he was told that the climate of southeastern Arkansas did not agree with him he agreed to the statement and in a short while scuttled out of that section. He left behind him the strangest-looking lot of horses you ever lied eyes on and actually people were ashamed to let their horses leave the stables in their hairless condition."
Tunneling Out of Libby.
Aside from the effects of hunger, there was a feeling of unrest among many of the prisoners, which, if yielded to, often led to serious despondency and even insanity. Plan after plan was devised for escape, only to be proved to be impracticable. In the dead hours of the night men could be seen prowling around the prison, in the hope that some means of escape might offer. Often on dark, stormy nights the guards would come up for temporary shelter, under cover of the prison walls, where, unobserved by anyone from the outside, they would enter into conversation with the prisoners, often giving expressions of sympathy. Among them frequently was found a man of northern birth who had been conscripted into the confederate army and was at heart a unionist. Bribes were sometimes offered by the prisoners and taken to the guards; but attempts to escape by that means generally resulted in the prisoner being handed over to the authorities after he had got outside and given up his valuables.—James M. Wells, in McClure's Magazine.
In a Boston Nursery
Johnnie-Ma, what does me-e-t-a-g-r-a-b-o-l-i-z-i-n-g mean?
Ma—It means, dearie, the contripetal force which is displayed by those who fire off their mouths in vain aspiration for the ephemeral essences of cosmic generalities which have not been brought into pellucid ratioscination by the processes involved in the metaphysical grouping of the cosmic air contradistinguished from the lambent ablutions of the peripatetics. Johnnle—Ah!—N. V. Sun.
Perversity
The kicker sings a sorrowing song.
There's nothing else can ease him.
The more this world keeps going wrong,
the more items to please him.
-Washington State
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
that is helping to regulate the price of eatable commodities? Is it a specter invented for the satisfaction of man's just for gold, or is it a reality?
She Lost It and Beau of Her Childhood Found It.
Naturally This Combination Led to Reunion and a Happy Wedding
—A Case of Meddlesome Father.
"She lost her heart to him"—extract from any popular novel of the deeply sentimental type.
Once at least it has happened actually. The heart was lost—actually. The young man who got it married the girl who lost the heart. The only unromanile thing about it was that the heart was leather.
"Wine girl with leather heart" was the headline they put on the story. That sounded like the ery of a dime museum "commercial orator," but that also was a fact.
The girl with the leather heart was Miss Neomi K. Woods, daughter of Benjamin F. Woods, of San Francisco. The man who found the leather heart and won the girl was Wilmot F. Haughton, son of the late Maj. Charles Haughton, of Louisville, Ky.
Mr. Woods had refused to allow Haughton to marry his daughter until he had stopped gambling and had saved $2,500 by honest toll.
The way the leather heart comes to figure in the case is thus: Last year the Wholesale Saddlery association, of which Mr. Woods is a member, met in Cleveland and Miss Woods attended the sessions with her father. The women at the meeting were presented each with a photograph case of morocco leather in the shape of a heart. Miss Woods put her picture in the case and then lost it—the heart and the picture. It was found by Haughton, who was astonished to find the picture that of his old sweetheart, from whom he had been separated by the edict of her father. Woods was determined that Haughton should not marry his daughter, believing that he gambled and was not saving. That had been four years before. When Haughton found the picture he carried it to the girl and said: "I should like to return this and claim the reward."
The father found that the young man had stopped gambling and had saved the necessary $3,500 and accordingly the engagement was announced. Here's a stubborn father. This one was John Dineen, of Yankton, S.D. His rebellious son was Albert Dineen, aged 17, and the bride was Miss Jessie Lane.
RETURNED THE HEART.
the same age. They were married at Dakota City after they had been arrested by the Sioux City police while passing through that city.
After they had been arrested at the father's request he relied, the son declaring that he would not give the girl up. The conversation of young Dineen with the policemen while he was being held at Sioux City was interesting.
"Well, I see the old man has got me," exclaimed the young lover angriily. "I expected as much. I don't care. I won't give up Jessie for a minute. You won't consent to give me up, will you?" "Never!" exclaimed the girl.
"Father's mixing in this won't do any good," continued the boy. "I won't go home. If I go, I won't stay. I'll like right back to Jessie. You just watch me. Is the old man coming down after me?" "I don't know," said the officer.
"Well, if he does, he'd better bring somebody with him, for I am a better man than dad is any day. He can't take me up there."
Dineen was searched at the police station. A pocketbook, in which reposed a lock of Jessie's hair, tied with a red ribbon, was found. He looked lingeringly at the lovelock as he passed it over to the officer.
The young man then told of how at seven o'clock in the morning he awoke, went into the next room, where his intended wife was staying, and waked her. They gathered together a few articles of clothing, hired a hack, and went to the depot. He said their elopement would have been perfectly unknown to his father if he had not purchased a ticket at the depot.
"We intended to go to Dakota City and there get tied up," he said. "Jessie's mother lives 16 miles from there, and five miles from Homer. I can work. I have had to work ever since I was big enough to travel around, and I guess we could get along. The folks don't like Jessie. My parents and all the kids have it in for her. I am game, though, and I won't give her up."
Whereupon Jessie's eyes gleamed with regard, while she watched every movement of her boy lover.
Afterwards the father relented, the police released the levers, and they went their way in peace.
Horse Versus Man Power.
The strength of two horses equals that of 15 men.
She Came Back at Him.
"I mustered up enough courage last night to ask my wife if she knew that some wise man has said that a maximum of talk is a sign of a minimum of thought?"
"And what did she say?
"She looked at me for some time and then said that she had begun to notice that a minimum of talk usually indicated a maximum of idiocy."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Causes of Her Threatened Rapture with Russia.
A GREAT FIGHT FOR HER LIFE
Sees Danger of the Bear Absorbing Northern Provinces of China —Cocera Not the Real Cause of the Trouble.
WHAT is it all about, this rumpus in the far east that fills the columns of the press of the world with theories and rumors; that keeps the bulls and bears of the stock pits clawing at each other:
By all means it is a reality. A reality founded upon a condition that has in it nothing that is new in the world of international economics, nothing the world has not seen before. The press one days tells us that Japan has issued what is virtually an ultimatum to Russia; another the news is cabled from Peking, from Hong-Kong, from Nagasaki or other seat of the enterprising scribe, that new negotiations are on foot and a settlement seems near. A settlement of what? What are the negotiations about? What was Japan's ultimatum? What is the rumpus all about anyway? It is one little nation fighting for its life, its future, its prosperity. It is more than—it is this one little nation fighting for the life of another little nation and a big nation near her borders, and for the commercial rights of other big nations of Europe and America. Japan is saying to Russia: "Corea must not be stepped upon; it must remain a free and independent people; the seal of the czar must not lock its doors. That is what is said in words. What is said in meaning is that Japan must have a chance to live, a chance to grow, a chance to sell the products of her accumulating factories. That the
THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA.
greed of the Russian Bear must stop before it has cast the shadow of its hoary paw over all that semiconscious nation, a nation worse than helpless, on the mainland that means to Japan life, future, opportunity, prosperity.
As a matter of necessity, Japan has set up a Monroe doctrine of her own in Asia. The little empire is not large enough for the awakened activities of its people, and there must be room for commercial expansion. Long before Japan was awakened by Commodore Perry and his followers, Yernak had crossed the Ural mountains and the Russian Bear began his migration eastward. Before Japan had awakened he had reached the Pacific and found—a sea of ice. He tarried there, and it was not until Japan had awakened and rubbed the sleep of centuries from her eyes that he tired of his sea of ice and began casting covetous glances southward to an open sea. Those glances in-
ADMIRAL ALEXIEFF,
The Representative of the Czar in the Far East
and Commander of the Russian Forces There.
cluded Corea, then claimed by China as a dependency, a claim which the world scarcely recognized. In Corea, too, Japan saw an opportunity, and she was then but beginning to look for opportunities, and she grasped at it. Europe wrung from her what she had fairly earned by defeating the Dragon in open warfare, but she insisted, at least, upon Corea's independence. The Bear, in the meantime, moved southward. Policy forbade him middle with Corea, for a time at least, and with wily smiles and fair promises he won favor with tottering China and a foothold on the open sea. Japan has watched the menace grow, and proposes to stop it. China, when it is too late, sees the danger opening before her, but is powerless. The nations of Europe, for very fear of each other,
Not Worth Mentioning.
Foreman (explaining the accident to the owner of the building)—Barney was working on the roof, sir, and he slipped and fell the whole four stories, bringing the cornice down with him, sir, and breaking both his legs and half his ribs.
Owner—Oh, well, never mind. I intended that cornice to come down in any case.—Tit-Bits.
W
ADMIRAL ALEXIEFF.
dare not move a hand. The peaceful policy of the United States forbids more than sympathy with the little combatant.
And the menace that is seen is closed ports in a developing market.
No, little Corea, with its 82,000 square miles of territory, is not the only bone of contention. If it were the question so far as Russia and Japan are concerned, would be easily settled. Russia is quite willing to concede the independence of Corea as demanded, upon the condition that Japan acknowledge Russian sovereignty in Manchuria. What Japan demands is that Russia concede Corean independence, and the
gree to keep his paw off the hermit nation without asking conditions, for Japan is too wise not to know that the acknowledged control of Manchuria is but another step in the scheme of Russian agrandizement, the full object of which is the control of all the great northern provinces of China containing the very best markets now open to Japan, markets the gates of which would be closed and looked with Russia in control.
There is a peculiar political situation back of this lone fight of little Japan to prevent the disruption of the Chinese empire. Every commercial nation of Europe and America has cast covetous glances upon China, either upon its territory or its markets. Had not the Washington government stepped in an opportun time the great empire would undoubtedly have fallen a prey to the territorial greed of the nations of Europe, but with American mills, American machinery and American genius back of these the Washington government could see a better opportunity for this country in an undivided China with open ports than in a divided China with closed ports. That this country could share in the distribution and division of the empire was not, or is not, to be considered, and even if it could, it would be valuable only from the commercial standpoint, and undivided China offers a better opportunity than any small part of the empire this country might, by any possibility, secure.
The wise heads of England look upon the subject in much the same way as do the officials at Washington. Though England might share more largely in the territorial spoil than could this country, yet England cannot afford to
```markdown
```
see the disruption of the Chinese empire. Lord Curzon put the case tersely when he said: "It is only in the east, and especially in the far east, that we may still hope to keep and create open markets for British manufactures. Every port, every town and every village that passes into French or Russian hands is an outlet lost to Manchester, Bradford and Bombay."
Russia is not a competitor with the other nations of Europe in the world's markets. She wants only exclusive markets, and to get these she must control territory. The development of Siberia lacks nothing but a market for its products. What better is at hand than North China. French politicians at least are willing to help Russia get what she wants if in turn she may have her pick of the southern provinces bordering her already large interests in Cochin China. But republican France is not so easily handled as a more stable monarchy. The intentions of the French politicians may be all right, but Russia mistrusts the temper of the French people. The military alliance with that country cannot be counted upon too strongly for such a purpose as the dismemberment of the Chinese empire in opposition to the wishes of Japan and the United States, and so Russia has curried favor with Germany, who covets territory in the provinces lying to the south of Peking. Just how much Russia is willing to grant in return for the assistance she needs is hard to say, but she will probably be quite generous in promises if such are necessary.
The smaller nations of Europe which can in no way hope to profit in territory by the distribution of China at the hand of the czar, sympathize with Japan in the struggle she is making, but, like the United States, their help can go no further than that of sympathy, and this neither buys warships or wins battles.
Thus it is that Japan is left virtually alone to fight for the maintenance of the Chinese empire and for the open door policy of which we have heard so much. It is the mikado and his army and navy that must keep the Russian Bear out of Manchuria, out of Corea, out of Mongolia, out of Peking, if he is to be kept out, and the ports of this section of China remain open to the commerce of the world. If she is not successful, the great wall of China will be moved south some several hundred miles to mark the new Siberian frontier, and Russia will have secured new and exclusive markets which she so much desires. That these markets will still remain open to the trade of the world is an idle dream
Lady—Begging must be hard.
Tramp—It is, lady. This is the sixth time that I've had to eat soup to-day.
—Fllegende Blaetter.
Two Kinds.
Rebecca—Who are the "smart set?"
Isadore—Why, those who are in it and those who keep out of it—Detroit Free Press.
DANIEL CLEVERTON
Southern Aid Society
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. SIDNEY B. STANTON,
HENRY B. BURWELL
JAMES T. OARTER,
A. D. PRICE
THOS. M. ORUMP, SECRETARY & GENERAL MANAGER.
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine Funeral Supplies.
OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT--Man on Duty All Night
NOVEL TRIP TO SCHOOL
Brother and Sister Make Daily Round on Railroad Velocipede Pro-pelled by Big Sister.
Miss Ina Crossett, who as telegraph operator and ticket seller helps her father in the railroad station at Wyandot crossing on the Rock Island and Burlington roads, has a novel way of getting her bother and sister to school at the village of Wyanet. In the morning she takes them in a velocipede car and with the same vehicle brings them back again at night. She makes the mile and a half between the crossing and the village and back again in ten minutes.
In order to make the operating of the car easy for a woman her father bolted a board crosswise over the seat of the car. The young woman sits on one end and little Lucille, her sister, on the other, Willie, the brother, is made to sit on the rearseat, facing backwards, spotting any trouble that may come in the way of an approaching train. The track is double between the two stations, so that the tr
K.
GOING TO SCHOOL.
is most concerned as to what is running ahead.
Miss Crossett graduated at the same school and she figured it out that she had walked 5,000 miles in going back and forward while she was at her studies, and she determined to save her brother and sister such an extended trudging. The car is used to put up switch lights and for other purposes, and she induced him to equip it as described. When she and her sister each get a foot on the treadle and the wind is with them they sail up the big steel highway in grand style. If for any reason they are obliged to take the machine off the track the three are drilled to take hold after a certain agreed on fashion and the contrivance is yanked off the rails and set down at a safe distance on the right of way.
In the evening the children wait at a given point and are ready to help set the car on the right hand track and take their places. In an instant the car is spinning homeward bound.
A CHILD OF THE TIMES.
A woman is standing in front of a man who is sitting in a chair. The woman is facing the man and appears to be speaking to him. The man is sitting in a chair and looking at the woman. There is a table with a book on it in the background.
"Why, Charlie, what are you reading this book on 'Child Education' for?"
"I just want to see whether I have been brought up properly."—Flegende Blaetter.
He—Then-ah! you come in and rule the world. I'm tired. Tit-Bits.
THE
FRISCO
SYSTEM
OPERATES
Dovble Daily Trains
Carrying Pullman Sleepers, Cafe Cara
(a la carte) and Chair Cara (seats fresh
Electric Lighted Throughout
BETWEEN
Birmingham, Memphis and Kansas City
AND TO ALL POINTS IN
Texas, Oklahoma and Indian Territories
THE ONLY THROUGH SLEEPING CAR
BETWEEN THE SOUTHEAST AND
KANSAS CITY
Descriptive literature, tickets
ranged and through reservations made
upon application to
W. T. SAUNDERS, Gen'l Agent, Pass. Dere
OR
F.E. CLARK, TRAV, Pass. Agent., ATLANTA,
W. T. SAUNDERS
Gen'l Agent Passsnger Department
ATLANTA, GA.
THE
Wonder of the World
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 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. Wurts
Now Tourist Sleeping Car Line to California.
Commencing December 9th, the Frisco System will inaugurate through Pullman Tourist Sleeping Car service between Birmingham, Ala., and San Francisco, California. Cars will leave Birmingham at 10:20 p. m., every Tuesday, and will be routed via: the Frisco System to Kansas City, Rock Island System to Pueblo, Denver and Rio Grande Western to Ogden and Southern Pacific to San Francisco.
Requests for reservations should be addressed to
W. T. SAUNDERS, General Agent,
Pass. Dept.
Corner Pryor and Decatur St's
Atlanta, Ga
Southern Women Wanted.
Young women to do plain cooking,
washing and ironing for families in
and around New York. Nice homes
and good wages. We send you tickets.
Address,
HUNTER,
321 W. 59th St..
New York.
Enclose stamp. Agents wanted
at once. 1m-1-16-04
Aid Society
VIRGINIA
2nd St. Richmond, Va.
omptest paying Sick Bene-
the State. You cannot
should not hesitate to join
you.
CV is "OUR MOTTO"
Eo ak
oun
6 q
aaa
SEER tector een
Gene ae
nome) ANE
FEA ONE:
eA HAT
OV ihe oe
Fa Ss
S Sn «Ny i
ee a ae,
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 100
as aa
ieee
j Finest? +
jes ING spa
$3. Ps oN
A USEFUL IMPLEMENT,
wer Palverisinn tne Sol No Otner
Took Ie More Effective Thanene
toe ee
Of the many tools introduced for
pulverizing the soil, none is cheaper
and less used than the drag. Some
farmers term it “block,” “leveler” or
“clod-emasher.” Its use can begin with
@ two cr three-horse sixe, immediately
after breaking. when it levels the land,
@0 tooth or disk harrow can do most
thorough work, and this same form
;
es CN
A
PTITTT LS
LITI [I ||
WUT Ci
BOMEMADE ONE-HORSE DRAG.
@oes admirably, preceding grain plant-
ers of all types. Bat it is ‘the. one-
horse style, used immediately after {he
cultivator In growing crops, whiere the
alcety of work proves it one of the
‘Most profitable tools. *
In early cultivation it gently. hills
the plants, doing away with an enor-
mous amount of hand-hoe work, and
Yeaves the surface in its natural level
fondition, Insuring uniformity of depth
‘of future cultivations. During dry pe-
Fiods it is inval_abie; all other tools
Joosen the surface, while the block, on
Previously well-fined land, packs and
Jars the earth to the depth cultivated,
retarding evaporation without injuri-
ous root disruption. A one-horse drag,
similar to that shown in the above cut,
ean be made by anyone at very small
cost. It may be modified or improved
to suit one’s fancy.—Orange Judd
Farmer.
TALK ABOUT GINSENG.
Proper Time (@ Set In Elbe in Sep-
tember oF October or in Feb-
‘abe ‘ale Deaden.
Young ginseng is very tender, but
with, age It becomes more hardy and
with a litue care and Knowledge of its
habit may be transplauted with
safety, It should be set in the fall;
September or October are considered
the best monuis. {1 can also be set in
the spring with good results during
February and March, Some prefer
growing it in a thicket or the edge of
woods, but I think it is much better
to grow it out in the open field and
provide an artificial shade. It cannot
stand the direct rays of the sun, and
will not grow unless shaded. A very
convenient shade is made by setting
Bine-foot posts 2% feet deep in the
ground. Nail heavy strips or rails to
top of posts and then cover with
brush.
‘The soil should be rich and loose to
imsure rapid growth. The plot of
ground should be north or northeast;
‘the latter being the most preferable.
Tt will not grow to advantage on south
or west land. T have hunted the woods
im this section but never found a wild
plamt growing in land with that ex-
posure To insire good drainage,
choose a plot of ground that is a little
rollimg, and (hen dig a ditch around it
from 22 to 16 inches deep and about
the same in width. This will carry off
the water and make a suré protection
against moles. Beds for planting
should be about four feet wide and any
convenient length,
A coat of leaves and leaf mold
ts necessary as a protection during win-
tex, It is estimated that on one acre
160,000 plants can be set. Ginseng usu-
ally comes up in May and blooms usu-
ally t June.and July. By September
there will be a cluster of bright red
bewries, each containing one to three
seeda. As soon as the seeds are fully
ripe the top begins to die. The! next
year's bed forms on the root, but lies
dormant until the coming spring.—El-
mer Clark, in Orange Judd Farmer.
Seediess Frait Prodaction.
IR aEAOF
3
4
‘The experts in the fruit department
of the department of agriculture at
Washington have been very succesaful
dartag the past season with their ex-
iwents in producing stoneless and
Qatar ted Bhan or vereane
eltis from swallowing fruit seeds is
stinalating the innovation very much.
cree of the ‘seedless naval or-
anges of California is well known. Seed-
less plums from “the same state
were put on the market for the first time
this year, They were of a large size,
& deep blue colot and delicibe, in favor
and quality. A seedless prune is prom.
deed among the next season's novelties,
asare also scediess watermelons, ap-
ples, peaches. pears. grapes, strawber-
Ro
Pores
2am
wtltew box
Reteas oe
Sensible Orchard Treatment.
In central New York, there is a 14-
year-old orchard (hat has always been
magaged on 2n exceedingly. sensible
and profiistie pian. The brahehes ake
trained lo ihe spreading habit,
which opens “the thee’ to the air and
gun. For » cig years. the, or-
chard) was plowed ‘end ‘planted “to
erops, which recuire thorough eultt-
vation like’ corn, beansand potatoes.
Then it was seeded down with alfalfa
Re
and inoculated. ‘This developed a very,
thick sod, which ts cut three times a
year for hay. This kay ts fed to stock,
‘and then the manure is all hauled back
again and spread around the trees.
Under this system the orchard has made
& very remarkable growth.
BUT ONE PROPER TIME.
Noted Massachusetts Morticaltariat
Says That All Praning shoutd
Bb tens tc
After three score years of experience
im orchard culture, allow me w: say
something oa the proper time © for
Pruning. There is but one proper time,
the month of June, when the new bark
forms on the wood.
More orchards are ruined by being
pruned at improper times than from all
other causes. If pruned in autumn ot
Winter, the bark will dry around the
stump and heal there, but never over
the end; this exposed stump will rot
out in a few years, leaving a ragged
hole where water can enter, and the
decay of the center of the whole tree
begins, shortening its life many years,
if pruned in the spring, the wound
bleeds, the sap often running down
and killing the bark below, making a
black, unsightly wound, which never
heals over, and the whole tree is sub-
Ject to decay.
if pruned in June, when the new bark
and wood is forming, the wound begins
to heal at once, and no matter what the
size of the branch cut may be, the
Wound will heal before decay begins if
the tree is vigorous and in: good condi-
tion.
Care should be taken to cut close to
the trunk or larger branch, so that the
Wound may heal over the end, for if
cut two or three inches from the trunk
or main branch, nainre forgets to carry
the necessary material to heal over the
wound, and again tie water enters and
decay occurs.
When from accident, the effect of snow
or ice, a large branch is broken, ent tem-
porarily. leaving a foot or more to be
cut again close to the trunk in the
month of June.
‘The reason farmers generally prune
in early spring is that they then have
time and little elxe to do and are anx-
lous to be at work, and thns have some
excuse; but if they could realize the
damage they ate doing to their own
property, they might. perhaps refrain
and put the'r labor to. better account at
the proper xeason.—W. § Ripley, in
Conntry Gentleman.
SAVES LOTS OF woRK.
Wheel Hoe of Simple Conntraction
and Adapted Enpectally tor
Light Garden Werk,
The accompanying cut explains itself.
‘Use an old bucksaw, bent at rightangles
for blade, eight inches is wide enough
for pnions, etc.; in 14-inch rows. Have
Ta a /
G4 os Kp
NI i Cw
ONS,
a
USEFUL WHEEL HOR,
the blacksmith punch thecholes for bolts
and turn the corners. A wooden wheel
will do. The large wheel of an old sew-
ing machine is best. The average farm
boy will have it bullt and out in the
snow with it to see If it hangs right
before you know it. On good garden
soll, free from stones, he will do as
much with it in ten minutes as you can
with a hoe in oue hour—John Jack-
son, in Kpitomist.
RR goin rent 1 NRE
A Missourian reports having tried
the method of keeping tomatoes in
lime, with varying success. Each to-
mato was wrapped in paper and placed
in shallow boxes—one layer between
‘two layers of lime to each box. The
tomatoes kept best thus stored in a
toft where the temperature was about
40 degrees. ‘The lomatoes should be
‘gathered in October and be dry waen
‘packed. A smal! green one will keep
a5 well as any, but Is Hable to be
wilted when it ripens. Our friend says
he has kept tomatoes in this way un-
Ul March and April. He prefers. a
green tomato gathered just before it
commences to urn. Any tough,
smooth-shin tomato will, keep if
handled carefully, wrapped In paper
and packed in lime or ashes, The
ashes seam to do fully as well as lime.
Witlaun far Wiadbrenks.
In telling how to expeditiously plant
willows for windbreaks, @ writer says:
“Take poles of the willow of any length
that may be desired. Bury these in the
ground some six inches below the sur-
face. This ean be dove by laying them
in the bottom of a furrow plowed out
to the depth desired, Before Jaying
them thus, cut a notch in the pole
wherever @ tree is wanted. Let the
poles lap alittle at the ends. When put
in place the earth should be) put back
in place again, and ff firmed somewhat,
80 much the better, In a short time
the shoots will appear above the surface
‘of the ground. Cultivation should be
given along the sides of these for a
couple of years, thus forming a dust
blanket, which will help to keep In the
moisture, and which will’ also keep
down the weeds.""—Shaw's Farmer.
Keentas Vemetabtes fan trbetedk.
To enjoy wholesome and palatable
Vogetables during the winter months
proper care is eesential in gathering and
storing. A good plan of storing is great-
ly needed. Sink a barrel, box or cask
two-thirds its depth: into the: ground,
heap thé carth around the projecting
part with a slope on all sides, place the
Vegetables in, cover the top water
tight, and when winter comes throw an
arm foad’ of straw over them. If the
bottom ts out of the barrel so much the
better. Vegetables will keep. in this
way as fresh as when taken from the
ground, Celery should “stand nearly
‘perpendicular, celery and earth alternat-
ing. “Freedom from frost, eas of access,
and especially freedom from rot, and
freshness; wre the advantages of this
plan.—E. L. Morris, in Epitomist.
Always milk In the samejorder anc
at the same time of day. ||
Phe Melninn Beak.
“And what did Miss Specie do when
she heard the count’s tale of woe?”
“She gave him a helping hand.”—
‘Town Topics.
__THE RIGHYVOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
NN are
v Tau y Pps A Big ig eS PLT :
A CHRIST MAS FROs1 ‘ ae Fo Como a oe
Harrowing Experience of an Acto:]
Down in New J-rsey, ts
fame Ker Money accu ae ¢
eee
Sh ere every actor has had some
unpll Mt eryeriences on Christmas
day,” said Kaymond tiiicheock, the
star of ‘The Yan. ce. Consul,’ to a Chi-
cago Inter Geoun revorter.. “but 1
challenge any oiher man in the ‘pro-
fession to prove that he had an ex-
perience as harrowing as one 1 had
while playing the New Jersey one-
night-stand circuit about 12 years
ago.”
| “At that time I was unfortunate
enough to believe that 1 was destined
to become a great manager. | thougat
the profession of acting was over
crowded. J saved my salary during
the previous season, and by borrowing
from some of my friends | managed
to scrape enough money together to
‘take out a show.’ It was a very sad
Tural melodrama, called “Down Yon-
der on the Farm.’ We started out
very late in the season, and for a few
Weeks before Christmas business was
bad. ‘The day before Christmas 1
looked over my statement, counted my
cash, and to my dismay discovered
that I had but $33 to take the company
to the next town. We were to open
there with the Christmas matinee (I'll
Rot mention the name of the town,
because it is still on the map, and the
same manager is there). My $38 was
just enough to pay railroad fare. With
true managerial instinct it occurred
to me that | had better keep my $33.
After a long argument with the of-
cials of the railroad it was agreed to
send my company to the next town ‘C.
O. D.* Of course. when we got to the
town I touched the box office and got
enough money to pay the railroad
fare. To make matters worse, the wom-
an who was playing the principal
character came to me and demand-
ed her salary for the preceding
week, at that time unpaid even in
part. While T was using my most
suave and persuasive fanswage on the
character woman the transfer “an
came in and demanded $20 for hauling
the scenery and bageage.
“While T was talking to him the
actor who was playing the lead
aaa
f \ ce
PAX
TURNED TNE HOSE ON HIM.
stepped in the door and announced
that he would not play the part unless
he got his salary for the past week. I
left the character woman and the
transfer man, called the trate leading
man out in the alley and gave him the
$38, saying, ‘I will owe you the other
two dollars until I go out to the box
Mice; I have several hundred dollars
‘out there, but am too busy now to go
and get it!" I supposed everything
was settled satisfactorily with the
leading man, but when the time came
for the curtain to go up I was pained
to learn that he had left town. ‘Then
it was up to me to play the lead. 1
knew only a few of the lines, but I in-
tended to ‘fake’ and get through with
the performance some way. While I
was making up I was called outside my
dressing room to face another cred~
itor, and when I returned I discovered
that the two pairs of trousers, one
pair that I wore on the street, the
other the pair the leading man used
on the stage, had been stolen. There
I stood, trouserless, In my dressing
room, and the thermometer, even In-
doors, was 15 below zero. I was won-
dering whether the audience, if we
had any, would permit me to appear
on the stage trouserless, when again
the manager of the theater appeared
in the doorway and demanded the
money he had a@vanced for railroad
fare.
“‘T have just learned that my trou-
sers, containing my purse and all my
funds, have been stolen,’ I said.
““Aw, come off,’ sald the manager,
“IN give you just one more chance to
fork over that money.’
“LE atarted to explain for the | ff:
teenth time, when I was deluged with
@ siream of icy water. The manager
‘had, as a last resort, turned a hose
on me. I ran screaming with pain
from \the dressing room, and, defying
the elements and the rules of propri-
ety, dashed down the street, with tce-
beres forming on my unprotected
limbs, and fell senseless in the lobby
of the hotel. The proprietor of the
hostelry took pity om me, gave me
warm clothing, loaned me a postage
stamp, and I wrote to New York for
funds. Afier waiting three days I re-
celved enough money to purchase a
ticket to New York.
“I do not know what became of the
company. Have not heard to this day.
Yes, I think that is the worst Christ-
mas [ever spent.”
Diners, Beware!
Time flies while one is eating, yet
‘This morning we would speak;
One dinner may beget
An indigestion week.
—Philadeiptia Press.
The Fenlaine Ways
Bimberly——Did you eyer notice 1?
Jimblecute—Did [ ever Lutice what?
Bimberly—The frankness with which
a 17-year-old girl refers to herself as ap
old maid?—Cincinnati Enquirer.
CII, a. SIRI IDE IIR yen [ae
: PRINTING HOUSE,
fi 9
3 ‘Dp; VW
¢ SIL N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
SY Ss enenennasee: From a Dodger to a Three sheet Post +. Pesiness Cards of ull sizes,
é DDI Note, Letter and Bili-heads, Piacar@s, Srat- uents, Envelopes, Checks,
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EVERYTHING Policies, Application Blanks, Med cal Certificates, Lays, Labels,
retrtoaatbaretassicohetalastchaassk 21 viAlinuten, Paitge did Society Goomitedels.
Our Job Department [3 7-74
a
IS THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED FOR fHE PROMPT DE. WE WONT '
LIVERY OF ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK. OUR PRICES YOUR TRA :
ARE THE LOWEST, CONSISTENT WITH FINE STOCK your TR DE.
AND GOOD WORK: Pasctocescewesostaste
e ; j rg *
{Fine Wedding Stationery...
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# OUR LATEST DESIGNS IN STATIONERY FOR BALLS, PARTIES, ENTERT/.-XENTS
y .
MAY BE SEEN AT THIS OFFICE. F
! i s WI tar
& Che Richmond Plane
As an Advertising Mediom cannot be surpassed. Our Solicitor will quote you Special Rates. Asa
Z Far. i Paper, it is not to be excelled inany quater. It is known of ali men, One Year, $1.50; Six Months,
@ 80a ia For further iiformation, call on
JOHN MITCHELL. JR., Proprietor,
tvew ‘Lciephone, 328. 313 N. 4th St, Richmond, Vas
GAA IM PMD MI IIIT III IIIRI.
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MEN. MAIH tells your entire lite unt and
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homer fang two Sedlunn jaovar met
torg marriage thence ct al Sams
thelr ates aia desorption. the! tame andl bun
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Beornbe claims:
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SRE MAIEH for the venedtor hermasitye
——ADVICE BY LETTER, $1.00.—
Hours From 10 A. M. tro 8 P. M
MRS. M. B. MARTH,
246 W. 3est St. (Near 8th Avenue.)
\ NEW YORK CITY.
Enchee Stamp for reply.
“THE ECONOMY.”
808 N.8rd Sty
Fine Taiioring,
CLEANING,
DYEING,
AND REPAIRING,
W 0. TURNER, PROPRIETOR.
y
WV. S, SELDEN,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EMBALMER.
Warerooms:
1508 E. Broad Street,
| OLD "PHONE, 1484
| RESIDENCE,
1308 E. Leigh St.
: Richmond, Virginia.
S. J, GILPIN,
506 E. BROAD STREET,
. Richmond, Va.
DEALER 11 —te
Fine Boots, Shoes,
and Ladies Gaiters,
All Kinds of Fine Footweas.
H. F.JONATHAN
Fish Oysters & Produce
$120N. 17en st., RICHMIOND, VA.
ALL™ ORDERS WILL RECEIVE
Long Distance Phone, 7520
New Phone, 47. if
ROBT. S. FORRESTER
FLORIST
215 E Leigh Street,
MOON. Gu PRONE
at Tiomary, Pueia Deg Hou
‘S specialty. Give me a call.
2 inch, Sm.
Ie
JOHN M. HIGGINS,
DEALER Ix
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES LIQUORS,
AND CIGARS.
PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR
‘THE MONEY,
apace Franklin Street,
(Near Old Market.) -
(Reeobn = + = | Virmomae
' $, W. ROBINSON,
NO. 23 NORTH 18TH ST.
DEALER IN
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, &c.
Bay-All Stock Sold as Guaranteed.wea
PROMPT ATTENTION.
‘Your patronage is respectiully 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
entrusted to me. Carriages for faner.
als, receptions and marriages at all
honrs. Satistaction guaranteed to all.
til6-20~04
Sere
A. Ha yes
OFFICE AND WARE-ROOMS,
727 North Second Street.
) 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 p suitable
place, All country onlers we giver
special attention, Your special artentio:
iscalled tothe new style Oak Caskets
Cail and see me and you shall be watted
on kindly. ee egon ae
Phone, 2778.
The Custalo House.
702 EB. BROAD ST.
| Having remodeled my ber, and tar:
tBeceve my fide ad the bantiee
the nme old stand.
“hoice Wines, Liquors and
| Cigars.
FIRST CLASS RESTAURAN(
Meals At All Hours,
New "Phone. 1261. Wm. Oustale, Pre
MRS. P. G. EASL
615 N. Second St.
ICE CREAM, CONFECTIONA’
| —— | CAKES, BPC. | —
(WF Lown and Pio-nio Parties,
| vals, Weddings eto,, furnished
the best high-grade loo Oret
the Shortest Notice.
Satistcation Gearant
€.7-3mos.
——— ee
When You Are §
ure and Fresh Mediemes on!
"Sinan hans a
Leonard’s
Reliable -
Prescription
Drug &
724 NorthSecond Stre
SECOND TO NON
WOMAN'S CORNER-S1
BENEFICIAL pyssoce
INCORPORATED, MARCH, 1f
Office: - 502 W. be
Authorived Capital, $5, j
factory auice Ni iesesatedl
placed in home five. |
orricsas: © |
LOUISA £. WILLIAMS, 7
KATE HOLMES, - Vite]
BETTIE BROWN, = }
MILDRED COOKE JONES,
Secretary and =
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Loursa FE. Wrnitams, Karst
Martis F. Jonsson, ANN M.
Betriz Browr Mitorsa CY
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BEFORE
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| @Your purchase you woal
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house in the city and
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Blattings, Oi
Ritfe cores
(jj BUGS_AND Cc.
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THE PLANET
SATURDAY... FEBRUARY 6, 1904
THE DAIRY
Scheme of a Kansas City
Genius for Making a Rocker Do
Troublesome Work.
The very newest thing in the way of a
churn has been invented by a man from
Kansas City, who stands all day long
on the corner of Fourth and Main dis-
playing his ingenious butter-maker.
The churn is made in the shape of a rock-
ing horse. It is crudely shaped, and
painted a vivid blue, but the way that
animal gives butter milk is a wonder.
The body of the horse is the churn
proper. The head comes off in the
shape of a lid and reveals a cylinder
with three dashes attached. The cylin-
UNIQUE CHURN ROCKER.
der is to hold cracked ice when the beast has been on the rampage, or hot or cold water, as the case may demand. A spigot of a nose gives forth buttermilk when the butter is formed, and, altogether, that blue hobby horse is fearfully and wonderfully made.
For the busy farmer's wife, this blue hobby horse offers visions of the millennium and Saturdays full of case. Unless the hobby horse go lame, the week's end butter is made quick as a cat can wink its eye and walk twice around the red barn.
There are several ways of keeping the horse at a trot, and, incidentally, the milk at butter pitch. A string attached to the beast's neck, like a bridle, will keep it going at a fair pace by an occasional jerk. A foot on the rocker as the housewife does the week's mending will bring a pot of butter into existence with no effort whatever; and the third and last method is the best of all. It offers a double inducement. Put the baby on the hobby horse and go on about your business. The baby can get butter out of that churn as well as the next one. To be sure, he doesn't know that he's churning. The baby, if he has leisure in which to think, probably fancies he's having a tremendous horseback ride, just like papa. He doesn't dream that he's being useful. Babies seem to have a deep-rooted dislike to being useful. No doubt any well-regulated baby asked to jump on his horse and do the week's churning would rebel.
But tell him to go play with his hobby horse, and while he's hunting up his riding whip surreptitiously fill the beast with sour milk. The result is butter without any worry or work, and the baby is amused. Every armre should have a blue hobby horse—Los Angeles Herald.
INFLAMED UDDERS
Nine-Tenths of the Cases of This Annoying Disease Are Caused by Taking Cold.
Many complaints are in about this malady, and this will answer all of them. In the first place, cows properly cared for rarely have this trouble. The udder of deep milking cows is very sensitive, and nine-tenths of the cases are caused by taking cold, says the Dairy World. Recently one of the windows in a cow barn was raised a little in a warm day and was left open during the night. The next morning the cow standing nearest the window had a swollen udder. During the night she took cold from the draft and it settled in the udder. Closing the window after the evening milking would have avoided the trouble. For treatment the udder was frequently bathed with hot water, scrubbed vigorously until dry and vaseline was applied. Generally a physic is recommended, but with the treatment described we have not found it necessary. At this season many cows are fresh, and if allowed to lie on the damp ground they are likely to take cold, especially if they have been well housed during the winter. If the udder begins to cake before calving follow the remedy prescribed, and milk out. Of course the best way is to prevent this chief cause. Daily access to salt is important because if salt is given only occasionally they will take too much, causing abnormal thirst followed by drinking too much cold water which often results in a cold.
Why Dairying Pays Well
Dalryng is profitable because it brings the farmer the largest return for his labor and products of his farm. It enables him to get a larger gross and net income from his farm than he can obtain without it. The seed that will make two pounds of beef will make a pound of butter, and
the value of a pound of butter is always more than the value of two pounds of beef, even during the last few years of relatively high prices of beef and low prices of butter.—Farmers Review.
WATER AFFECTS BUTTER.
Valuable Information Contained in a Recent Bulletin from the Iowa Experiment Station.
All well water, whether it be from shallow wells or deep wells, contains bacteria. Water from shallow wells is polluted with impurities to a greater degree than water from deep wells. The conditions which surround shallow wells do not guarantee a creamy pure water at different seasons of the year. Filthy surface water is all the time seeping in from the sides, especially during the wet season. In the spring of the year, or at any time during the different seasons when heavy rains are frequent, shallow, open or bored wells act as a receptacle for inflowing, nasty surface water containing a great deal of organic matter, and where organic matter is present gorms of different species are always sure to be present.
Besides being a receptacle for such inflowing water, shallow wells serve in the capacity of traps for a number of animals, such as rats, mice, rabbits, skunks, minks and squirrels. The presence of one or more of these dead animals in an open well is sure to result in water strongly impregnated with undesirable odors and a multitude of undesirable and putrefactive organisms, which, when distributed through butter, will produce no good results. If every open well was drained and searched for such dead animals, very few would be searched in vain.
The writer has seen water used which was impregnated with impurities and bad odors to such an extent that it imparted directly to the butter this same undesirable odor and taste. The very fact that water from certain wells has a clean appearance and pure taste does not necessarily indicate that it is free from undesirable germs. Deeply drilled wells are much the best for supplying creameries with water. They cannot in any possible way serve as a trap for small animals as can the open wells. Germs do not enter the soil so deep as to cause water to be infested with them, so the number of germs deep well water contains largely come from the atmosphere after exposure to it or to unclean receptacles. Prof. Pammel found shallow well water containing as high as 18,000 germs per cubic centimeter. Deep well water he rarely found to contain more than 400 germs per cubic centimeter.
BIG MONEY IN ANGORAS.
Massachusetts Farmer Claims That They Are the Best-Paying of All Farm Stock.
I am a farmer in a small way compared with western ideas. We keep cows for butter making, hens, geese, turkeys, sheep, and last, but not least, Angoras. I have a rocky hill pasture of more than 100 acres; bushes of all kinds, including birch. For years we have mown the bushes, but seldom kill any, but now that the Angora has come, the bushes have to stand back. They are the best paying of all stock enumerated by us, and they have come to stay. It is bushes
STONE FENCE FOR GOATS
with them, and for a relish grass; they are always fat, ready for the butcher,
and no better meat do we have on our table. No skinness, none killed by dogs;
they come to their house every night without help. The most care we have in dipping them twice a year. The kids are hardy. We have saved one for every doe that kids. Most of them kid in January; they are out every day except when rainy.
Our fence is stone wall (see cut), two wires; posts are on pasture side. That is our way for cattle. For Angoras and sheep sticks are driven in the wall and nailed on post or stake; top of that are put small poles and brush; if no wall then woven wire is best. We sell the kids for six dollars, the does, eight dollars, and supply the neighbors who have none with meat. Our cattle and Angoras go together in pasture. With us there is more real gain in one Angora than two sheep. The dogs often kill the sheep. Forty cents a pound is about the price for unwashed fleece; ours average about three pounds. The kids carry their fleece till the next year in April.—John B. Jenkins, in Rural New Yorker.
HINTS ABOUT MILKING
Milk as rapidly as possible without irritating or worrying the cows. Before commencing to milk, brush all loose dirt from the sides and udder of the cow. Always confine cows in a stable to be milked. It is better than having them chase one another around the yard. There should always be a friendly feeling between the cow and the milker, and milkers should not be changed if it can be avoided. After a little manipulation of the teats and udder, the milk is ready to "come down." Then is the time to take it, and do not delay. No definite rule can be given as to how the teats should be handled in milking, as cows differ and hands differ so much; but be sure of one thing, please the cow if possible.
Have the stable clean and have the cow clean, or you cannot get clean milk. Lime and whitewash for walls and posts is a good thing. Land plaster is a good absorbent in the stable.
His Advice.
"Frankly, madam," said the honest salesman, "I wouldn't advise you to take that gown."
"Why not?" asked the woman.
OLD DOMINION ST. AM.
SHIP COMPANY.
Nortt Line for Nortolk
Leave Richmond daily at 7 p.
m., stopping at Newport
News in both directions.
Daily except Sunday by O. & O. Rail-
way; 9:00 a. m., 4 p. m. 9 a. m. and 3
p. m. by N. & W. Railway; all lines
UNHAPPY
HOMES
Caused By
A Michigan Specialist Finds an Easy Way to Cure Any Case of Sexual Weakness Even in the Oldest Men. This Wonderful Cure Has a Most Marvelous Record of Successes.
SENT FREE TO ALL WHO
APPLY IN WRITING
There are thousands of cheerless homes in this country filled with discontent and unhappiness, lack in love and companionship through the sexual weakness and physical impairment of a man whose years do not justify such a condition. Indiscretions, abuses, and recklessness often cause a temporary cessation of vital power that instantly yields to the wonderful treatment discovered by the great specialist, Dr. H. C. Raynor, of Detroit, Michigan. It has remained for this great physician to discover that sexual we kness and similar troubles can be cared and in a remarkable short space of time. This treatment does not ruin the stomach, adding the miseries such injury entails, but it is a new treatment that easily and quickly restores youthful vigor to
The discovery is beyond doubt the most scientific and comprehensive that our attention has ever been called to. From all sides we hear private reports of cures in stubborn cases of sexual weakness, enlargement of the prostate, vococele, spermatorrhca, lost manhood, im potency, emissions, prematurity, shrunken organs, lack of virile power, basiliskness and timidity and like unnatural conditions. It does this without appliances, vacuum pumps, electric belts or anything of that kind.
Satisfactory results are produced in a day's use and a perfect cure in a short period of regardless of age or the cause of it. The tucky discoverer simply desires to get in touch with all men who can make use of such a treatment. They should address him in confidence. Dr. H. C. Raynor, 172 Lack Building, Detroit, Mich, and immediately on receipt of your name and address it has agreement with this paper to send you a receipt or formula of this modern treatment by which you can cure yourself at home.
"It doesn't match your complexion," he explained.
"Oh, well," she replied carelessly, "I can change the complexion."—Chicago Post.
Fish-Hooks.
Brown—Do you know McGregor?
McTavish—Ou aye—a vera guildly mon.
Brown—He's a ayeing thief!
Brown—He's a thundering thief!
McTavish—He always keeps the Sawbath, mon.
Brown—Yes, and everything else he can lay his hands on—Ally Slooper.
In the Dark.
Father—Doesn't Ethel know what the young man's intentions are yet?
Mother—No. She says he is keeping her complete in the dark.
Father—What! My dear, when I was calling on you, you wouldn't let me keep you in the dark until I had declared myself—Philadelphia Press.
Village Jealousy.
Visitor—You haven't got half as nice a cemetery here as we have in Elmville.
Prominent Citizen (of Hawville)—No; I've always heard that the cemetery is the only part of your town that holds out any inducements for permanent residents—Tit-Bits.
Klippax—And who is your favorite author, Mrs. Softly?
Mrs. Softly—My husband.
Klippax—Pardon me; I didn't know he wrote.
Mrs. Softly—Oh, but he does, and nicely—checks—Town and Country.
Too Many to Drink It.
"Did you have a full meeting at the firehouse last night?" asked Faye.
firehouse last night?" asked Faraway.
"No, indeed," replied Subbubs, of the swamphurst Volunteer Hose, "nowhere near full. Why, we had only one case of beer and all the boys were there."—Philadelphia Press.
Merely a Question of Time.
The weather prophet wears a smile.
His cares in life are very few;
No one will but wait awhile.
What he says say comes true.
—Washington Star.
TOMMY
"Ethel rubbed it in on Tom when she sent him back the engagement ring." "How?" "She sent it back in a box marked 'Glass—Handle with care.'"—Chicago Chronicle.
Was Unoccupied.
A teacher in a quiet country village, on the second morning of the session, found leisure to note his surroundings, and discovered a three-legged stool. "Is that the dune block?" he inquired of a little girl of five. The dark eyes sparkled, the curls nodded assent and the lips rippled out: "I guess so; the teachers always sit on that."—Public Ledger.
OLD DOMINION ST AM
Leave Richmond daily at 7 p.
m., stopping at Newport
News in both directions.
Daily except Sunday by C. & O. Railway,
9:00 a.m. 4 p.m. 9 a.m. and 8
p.m. by N. & W. Railway; all lines
connect at Nerfolk 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.
LEAVE RICHMOND-EASTBOUND.
7:30 a.m.-daily-Local to Newport News
and way stations.
5:00 p.m.—Week days—Special—Arrives Williamsburg 9:35 a.m. m. Norfolk 8:35 burg 9:35 a.m. m. Norfolk 8:35 burg Old Point 11:00 a.m. m. Norfolk 11:25 a.m.
4:50 p.m.—Week days—Special—Arrives Williamsburg 4:36 p.m. Newport News 5:36 p.m. Old Point 6:30 p.m. Norfolk 6:22 p.m.
5:50 p.m.—Daily—Locals to Old Point.
10:30 p. m. - Daily. Local to Freds Hall 10:30 p. m. - Daily. Local to Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis and Chicago. RIVER LINE 10:20 p. m. - Daily. Excursion New Castle, Clifton Forge and principal station, except Sunday to Lexington. 8:15 p. m. - Daily. SEAINS RICH MORED FROM SEAINS RICH MORED FROM 8:15 p. m. - daily. 11:45 p. m. Ex. Sun. and 7:00 p. m. daily. News News 8:30 p. m. daily.
1. Upcensiland and West 7:55 a.m. daily
2. and 8:30 p.m. daily Line Local from
Clifton Forge 8:10 p.m.
3. Frederick's Hall Accommodation 8:10 a.m.
Excuse
4. James River Line Local from Clifton Forge
6:35 p.m. daily. Bremo Accommod. 8:30 a.m. Exc.
Sun
SOUTHERN RAIL W. Y
SOUTHERN RAIL W. Y
Effective Jan, 10th, 1904.
12:30 p. m.-Daily. Limited, Buffet Pullman to
atlanta and Ft. wingham, New Orleans,
Memphis, Chattanooga and all the South.
6:00 p. m.-Daily. Keysville.
6:30 p. m.-Daily.
10:30 p.m. - Daily, Limited; Pullman ready
10:30 p.m. - Daily, Limited; Pullman ready
FORE #INVINYL
WORK VIRTUAL
The favorite to route Baltimore and eastern
points. Leave Richmond 4:30 p.m. Daily ex-
cept Sunday.
4:30 p.m.晨.晨.晨.
4:35 a.m.—Except Sunday. Local mixed for West Point.
213 p. m. Mon. Wed. Fri. Local for West Point
420 p. m. - Except Sunday. For West Point
connecting with steamers for Baltimore and
river landings. Mon. Wed. and Friday.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND
8:35 a.m. and 6:25 p.m. - From all the South.
8:35 a.m. - From Keysville.
8:35 a.m. - Baltimore and West Point.
8:35 a.m. - H.C. ACKERN, M. S.H. HARDWICK, G.P.A.
C. W. WESTBURY, D. P.A. , Richmond, Va.
ATLANTIC OAST-LINE.
TRAINS LEAVE HICHMOND DAILY
BYRD STREET STATION.
8:30 a. m. To all points South.
8:30 a. m. Petersburg and Norfolk.
12:30 p. m. Petersburg and N. W. West.
8:00 p. m. Petersburg and N. W. West.
14:10 p. m. Goldsboro local.
14:10 p. m. Goldsboro local.
6:56 p. m. To points South.
9:35 p. m. Petersburg and N. W. West.
9:35 p. m. Petersburg and N. & W. West.
11:36 p. m. Petersburg local.
**RAINES ARRIVE RICHMOND.**
~4:30 a. m. 7:35 a. m. 8:25 a. m. except Sunday
11:30 a. m. 7:35 a. m. 2:00 p. m. 6:50 p. m.
7:45 p. m. 8:45 p. m.
~Except Sunday.
N. J. GASBELL, Div. Pass. Agt.
W. J. CRAIG, Pass. Agt.
Norfolk and Western R. R.
LEAVE RICHMOND (DAILY), BYRD
STREET STATION.
9:00 a. m. NORFOLK LIMITED. Arrives at
Waverly and Suffolk.
8:30 a.m. CHICAGO EXPRESS Buffet Partier
Our Petersburg to Lynchburg and Roanoke,
Columbus and Bluffton, % Chattanooga also
Knoxville, and Knoxville to Chattanooga, and
12:30 p.m. Roanoke Express for Farmville,
Lynchburg, and Roanoke
8:00 P.M. Ocean Shores, limited Arrives Now
folk 5:20 P.M. Stops at Petersburg Waverly
and Suffolk. Connecns with Steamers to
Boston, Providence, W. Merck, Baltimore and
Washington. 6:56 P.M. for Norfolk and all stations east
of Petersburg.
9:38 P.M. M. NEW ORLEANS SHORT LINE. Pull man sleeper Richmond 10:38 Lynchburg, Petersburg to Roanoke; Lynchburg to Chattanooga. Trans arrived from the west 7:38. Trans arrived from the west 7:38. p.m and 8:58 p.m. from Norfolk 11:10 a.m. 11:39 a.m. m.-a.m. 8:50 p.m. 8:58 East Marsh Street. W. B. BEVILL 8:58 East Marsh Street. C. H. BOSLEY Gen. Pass. Agt Div. Pass. Agent.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Short Line to Principal Cities of the South and Southwest, Florida, Cuba, Texas and Mexico
Schedule in Effect Jan. 10th, 1904.
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND—MAIN ST. & STATION—DAILY.
10:26 p. r. "SEABOARD FLORIDA LIMIT ED," composed exclusively of Pullman's Apparel, Dining Car, Dairy Double Drawing Room, Sleeping Car, Compartment Car and Observation Car, to Raleigh, Southern Pines, Hamlet, Camden, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville and St. Augustine.
2:15 p. r. "SEABOARD MAIL," composed by Coachy coaches, Pullman Sleeper, Pullman Café Car, to Henderson, Raleigh, Southern Pines, Hamlet, Pinehurst, Atlanta, Camden, Savannah, Jacksonville, St. Augustine and Tampa.
11:00 p. m. "SEABOARD EXPRESS," composed of day coaches, Pullman Cars to Atlanta, Jacksonville and Tampa Cars South of Hamlet, Pullman Sleeping Cars between Washington and Pinehurst, St. Henderson, Raleigh, Southern Pines, Hamlet, Pinehurst, Atlanta, Garden, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Tampa and New Orleans.
9:10 a. m.-Local for Norlina, Hamlet and Charlotte.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND-DAILY.
6:45 a. m.-No. 34, from Florida.
5:10 a. m.-No. 50, from Florida, Atlanta and
4:55 p. m.-No. 68, from Florida, Atlanta and the Southwest.
5:20 p. m.-No. 36, from Norlina and Local Points.
H. S. LEARD, Pass. Apt.
No. 830 E Main St. Richmond, Va
The Greatest Offer Yet! JUST WHAT THE LADIES WANT. Send A Good Photograph.
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 court, to furnish all new subscribers, who pay $1.50 cash in advance for the PLANET one of these handsome Medallion free of charge. Fill out the Coupon and send it with $1.50 together with a good Photograph of the person whose features you desire reproduced in colors and we will send the button or medallion. All photographs will be returned. Enclose 5 cents extra to pay postage on the same. If you are not satisfied, your money will be refunded. Send us one yearly subscriber and we will send one Medallion. Two yearly subscribers, two Medallions.
Now is the time to take advantage of the offer. The Medallion alone is worth the price of the subscription.
closed photograph which I desire insert pd in medallion or buttons.
TAKEN FROM A MEN
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois
Hello! Call Phone No. 4432.
RICHMOND GROCERY CO
NO.430 N.6TH STREET
POLITE ATTENTION.
Prompt and free delivery to any part of the City or Manchester.
E. F. LIGHTFOOT, and
6mo R. D. GRANDERSON, Agts
ALPHEUS S'OTT,
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.
C
Health.
OFFICE HOURS—From 8 A.M. to 6 I.M.
M. Old Phone, 816.
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 Affent Passenger Dept., Atlanta, Ga., for further information.
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RAILWAY.
2000-Mile Tickets Discontinue 1.
On and after June 1, $2000-Mile Tickets will be withdrawn from sale and replaced by the 1000-Mile Refund Interchangeable Tickets heretofore announced.
The
JUST
Actual Size.
Send A
WE WILL SEND YOUR
YOUR PICTURE
THEREON FREE OF CH
They can be worn by eithe
lions. We have made special
to furnish all new subscribers
This offer is, without the least doubt, the greatest value for the least money ever offered by any newspaper in the whole history of journalism.
WE have made arrangements with one of the largest music houses of Boston to furnish our readers with ten pieces, full size complete and unabridged sheet Music for thirty-one CDs. Our music is the very best. The composers' names are household words all over the continent. Non-commercial copyright pieces or the most popular reprints. It is printed on regular short-music paper, from large, clear type — including colored titles — and is in every way first-class, and worthy of being in 2000 copies sold.
LIST OF THE PIECES OFFERED AT THIS LIST
This offer holds good to any of our subscribers or any person much as 50 cents for a subscription to the PLANET.
PRICE OF ABOVE PIECES.
Any 10 for 35 cents.
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Any 100 for $3.00.
Write your name, full address, and
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this, with stamps or silver, and mail
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be sent direct from Boston, postage prope
HE PLANET
SATURDAY....FEBRUARY 6, 190
THE CAUSE OF TEMPERANCE.
The cause of temperance is God's, its foes cannot prevail;
love may yet linger for a time, and yet it cannot fail
come at last fall flame of fire, in tidal flood;
burn and flow and purify and introduce the good;
age of peace and reason, of harmony and love,
yet be distant for awhile and tarry yet above;
trave of light and tones of love are seen and heard to-day
give us hearts to labor, and zeal to watch and pray.
George Dutton, in Suggestion.
A WARNING.
The Story of What Drink Did for One of Uncle Sam's Sailor Boys.
Recently, while crossing on the ferry from Jersey City to the New York side, a sailor, one of Uncle Sam's boys, stepped up to me, wishing to sell a watch guard. It was beautiful, made of white silk; yet he wanted to part with it for the paltry sum of one dollar and a half. And why? That he might pay a debt at a saloon. Physically, he was a splendid specimen of manhood, tall and broad-shouldered, weighing nearly 190 pounds, but yet his face detected suffering and deep wrinkles appeared on his face. Then, by questioning him, I received the following story, which I here give to you word for word, as near as I can remember, hoping that it may reach the heart of some one:
"Son, don't you want to help me out?
want to sell this watch guard. I owe
bill at a saloon, and being that I owe
"YOU DO NOT KNOW THE AWFULNESS OF TEMPTATION."
"YOU DO NOT KNOW THE AWFULNESS OF TEMPTATION."
tracted that debt, I feel obligated to pay it, even if it is to a saloon."
I complimented him on his honesty, and asked him to what ship he belonged.
"The Indiana," was his reply.
"Some people have an idea that all sailors are the off-scouring of the earth, but it is false." Then with a pathos in his voice that touched me to the quick, he continued: "My mother is a God-fearing, praying Christian, God bless her. I have three sisters, the best the sun ever shone on, but I am the black sheep of the family. I had a splendid wife, as true and loving as it is possible for a wife to be. I had a beautiful child, which was the joy and pride of the home, but—but—I am divorced."
This he said with tears in his eyes.
I have been home two days of my fullough, recovering from my weakness, brought on by drink. I am now on my way back to the navy yard, although my time is not up till morning. I have signed the pledge and I am going to reform. Young man, never touch a drop of any intoxicating liquors." Then, turning to my younger brother, he salt: "You are young yet, you do not know the awfulness of temptation. God grant that you never may. Oh, to be a boy again! Oh, for another chance!" Till my dying day I shall never forget the look of anguish that passed over his face, as he thus ruminated over his past life.
"I have seen some of the saddest sights ever mortal man was privileged to witness right over here in the navy yard," he said. "Some of the finest fellows I have ever known have died one after another in the strait-jacket, drink being their only fault."
As the ferry reached the slip he left us, with that look of longing still on his face. That man had reformed, and but for us, we who give the devil his license to ruin men's souls, would have been on his way to Heaven., but, temped, fell.
Later, out on the street, I saw him pull a bottle from his pocket and hilariously lift it to his lips, bought from some accursed saloon.
How long shall we license the devil to break mothers' hearts, wreck the lives as well as the souls of our fellow creatures, fill our courts with divorce suits, and our jails with criminals? How long no one knows, but may God grant that we may have a great awakening in the very near future—Charles T. Yost, in Ram's Horn.
Moderate Drinking Hurtful
In Switzerland an advocate of moderate drinker experimented for 18 months upon his children, whose ages ranged from ten to fifteen, several months' use alternating with several months of abstinence. During the wint periods the children were languald and less inclined to perform mental tasks, their nights more restless, and their
shing. Two of the cat they be excused the-drinking, being im- lar lack of condition.
Extracts from a Paper by Dr. Legrais of Paris, at the Anti-Alcohol Congress at Bremen.
It is a fact, nowadays disputed by nobody, that a certain relation exists between tuberculosis and alcoholism.
1. Alcohol in its action as a predisposing agent stands in the same relation to tuberculosis as to other contagious diseases. But the problem is here of greater importance, as tuberculosis is the disease that has the greatest predisposition for the human body and demands the greatest number of victims.
2. Alcohol makes a person more disposed for tuberculosis by its paralyzing and smothering effects on the protoplasm of the cells, making their power of resistance against the bacteria less. It prepares the soil for the tuberculosis by destroying all the works of defense of the organism, especially by affecting the nervous system, for which it is a powerful poison. It also produces organic troubles in the organ of nutrition and their works.
3. By producing innate weakness it makes a person predisposed for tuberculosis from its birth.
4. At last alcohol makes disease worse by continued influence on the already affected organism, thus hastening the development of the infection. It prevents the cure of the disease, which generally is possible.
5. Therefore it is absolutely wrong, although some Italian specialist (Marighiana) lately claims the opposite, to systematically treat tuberculosis patients with alcohol, showing a great ignorance of the human nature.
6. Alcohol makes the human system more predisposed to tuberculosis from the social side by removing from him every moral support, every other ideal, and by darkening the consciousness of his real wants. This brings the consequence that he neglects his body and it is this that brings the pauperism with all its well-known signs—small, overpopulated, unhealthy habitations, unwholesome food, and ignorance of the most simple rules of private and public hygiene. The inebriates do not know enough to eat, to dress, to live, or to get a habitation in harmony with the other wants of a human being.
7. Therefore, from a social standpoint, the bacteria are not the real cause of the disease, but all such conditions that are suitable to extend this field for the power of the bacteria and to bring the infection to its full effect—sickness; physical, moral or financial pauperism, absence of proper sanitary conditions—all causes that come direct from the use of alcohol when it has become a habit.
8. A logical consequence hereof is that the fight against the tuberculosis must precede the treatment of the tuberculosis patient, and that this fight in the first place must tend to remove the social causes for the disease, that is, to prevent those. By curing a few tuberculosis patients the tuberculosis does not disappear more than drunkenness would disappear by curing an inebrile.
9. That tuberculosis is contagious is a fact, but this has been greatly exaggerated. It is all right to cry out the risk of infection, as the wholesale terror this will cause among the people, by and by, may induce them to change their way of living in accordance with the general rules for sanitary conditions, but the scientists themselves must never estimate the danger higher than that from other contagious or infectious diseases. 10. I do not at all hereby say that we should not treat the tuberculosis patients and give them all the help we can, but it is, in my opinion, as the importance of the subject demands, that we first of all concentrate our works in trying to change the drinking habits, thus annihilate the alcoholism and terminate the cause of tuberculosis.
11. If, also, the sanatories are a great help for the tuberculosis patients, it is yet from a social side to proceed in a wrong way. If not at the same time means are provided to prevent the evil. The most important of these means is, without doubt, the fight against alcohol. To triumph over alcohol is almost as to triumph over the tuberculosis.
12. The efforts of the official authorities and of the private charity will be almost fruitless if they, as at present, concentrate their work on the tuberculosis alone.
13. The efforts of the states and the capital spent in the interest of society are used in the wrong directions as long as they are not to the same extent used in the fights against alcoholism. The sanitation of tuberculosis patients demands one for the treatment of tuberculosis.
14. Cooperation with the work against the alcohol can do more against the tuberculosis than the sanatories. Those only give their attention to the slick, but neglect entirely to teach them how to live after they are cured, and in this we have one of the greatest causes of the spreading of the disease.
15. Both for the individual and the community the most important treatment of the tuberculosis is to take the proper measures to prevent the evil. Of all such measures the most important is total abstinence from alcoholic beverages and to spread among the people the knowledge of the importance of total abstinence.
16. Therefore the fight against tuberculosis must necessarily be a fight against the alcohol. The physicians at the asylums for treatment of tuberculosis patients must consider it their duty to be testtakers and to educate the sick to be testtakers also.
17. Before everything, the now-existing hospitals and sanitariums for treatment of tuberculosis patients must also be a school that educates the patients by teaching the example of total abstinence. The treatment at such asylums must include a methodic, successful and scientific education to a total abstinence life. Total abstinence is, under this double view of curing and educating, absolutely necessary.
Popular Young Man.
Archie—See how I am run after; all these invitations.
Friend—Good gracious! All Invitations! Invitations to what?
Archie—To call and settle accounts.
-Tit-Bitz
THE RICH MOND PLANET, RICH MOND, PLANET.
HAUNTS DEEP WOODS
Wild Man Whose Face Is Hidden by Rough Beard.
Avoided Civilization for Years, But How Comes Daily to Country Hotel—Hair Like Mane Adds to Repulsiveness.
Living alone in a lair located in a tract of dense woods not far from Cincinnati is a mysterious creature, human in form, but with all the attributes of the animal strongly apparent.
Seldom seen, except in the early dawn, or at dusk in the evening, no one has been able to give a good description of the mystery, and those who attempt to do so unconsciously fall into the use of woods descriptive of beasts of the forest.
The locality chosen by the strange creature is a tract of dense woods situated about 11 miles from Cincinnati in Kenton county, Ky., and along the line of the C., N. & T. railway.
Through the trees in these woods occasional glimpse of firelight have been discovered at night by the few people who live in that vicinity.
Investigation in the daylight failed to locate any habitation, even so much as a hut of boughs or of sods.
For a time the source of the firelight was a mystery which the simple refused to investigate at night.
Soon, however, those on the edge of the forest, regularly the people living at Geo-one-zu Springs, became aware of the cause of the nocturnal gleams in the forest.
There appeared at dawn one day to the startled servants of the little hotel at the springs a strange and weird-appearing creature.
It was without doubt a man, of whom description fails to give a true conception.
He was hatless, with a thick mane of tawny hair matted into an almost solid mass, the lower part of his face concealed by a heavy beard as unkept and tangled as his hair, the upper part of his face an indescribable color from the effects of smoke and dirt.
His bristish appearance was augmented by the color of an old chinchilla uister, which had once been brown, but which, from long use and exposure to the sun, wind, rain and contact with the earth, was, as has been described by one who saw the creature, "about the color of a red fox."
The remnants of a pair of ragged trousers showed beneath the coat. More by
A
signs than by speech this strange being signified that it was hungry.
Food was offered him, which he grasped ravenously, but instead of eating it at the door of the kitchen, he thrust it into an old coarse bag, and, turning without another word, he trotted off into the forest and was lost to sight.
The servants told of their experience and the landlord and guests of the hotel awaited the next coming of the "wild man," as the servants called him.
When he again appeared, attempts were made to question him and to learn something of his mode of living, as well as his identity.
The question appeared to be unintelligible to the creature, with the exception of one, which asked where he came from.
In reply to this he muttered "Michigan," or a word that was taken for the name of that state. Securing his morsel of food, he again trotted away to the woods.
Further efforts to elicit information have been even more signal failures than the first. He does not seem to understand what is wanted of him. He does not appear to fear questioning or investigation. He returns to the hotel daily, always at dusk or dawn, however and gets his food, much as an animal would be prompted by instinct to seek its sustenance in the same place daily.
Cat Rides on Car Truck.
An Albany (N. Y.) cat, perched on one of the trucks of a New York passenger train, made the journey between that city and Utica, traveling the distance at the rate of a mile a minute. The feline was well groomed, its sleek body indicating that it had a good home in the capital city. All attempts at persuasion did not stir the cat when the train reached this city, for the reason it was frozen to the trucks. The cat was finally dialogued, and within ten minutes had thawed out, jumping nimbly about. It was ascertained that the cat had jumped to the car trucks when the train pulled out of Albany.
New York of Shipping Fish.
Salt water is to be attached to the sides of some of the German railroad cars, for the purpose of conveying live fish from the seaboard to the inland cities and towns.
KEEPING CUT FLOWERS.
"Cut flowers when properly treated," said a St. Louis florist. "can be made to look fresh for three or four weeks. "Every night take them out of the vases and thoroughly rinse the stalks under a faucet, removing with the fingers any decomposed matter. Then put them
To bed for the night in a basin of strong soapsuds, but be careful not to allow any water to touch the blossoms. The soapsuds supply a certain amount of nourishment.
"In the morning rinse the stalks under the water again, and, as each blossom is arranged for the day in the vase of fresh water, sniff off a tiny portion of the stock with a pair of scissors. Always carefully trim away any faded part.
"Food for the day is supplied by sulphate of ammonia, a few drops of which should be added to the water put into the vase.
"At night put the flowers into some dark, cook place—say a canopy—as it is not good either for the flowers or the household that they should remain all the time in the living rooms.
"To revive cut flowers put them into warm salt water, to which has been added a few drops of sulphate of ammonia.
"Cut flowers are constantly sent by express and through the mails, but esidom in such a fashion as to preserve their bloom and freshness.
"To effect this, pack them in a light wooden box lined with cotton or wadding, laying over this a sheet of tissue paper. Then lay the flowers, not on top of each other, but in rows, side by side, the blossoms of each row on the stems of their neighbors.
"Pack closely, otherwise the flowers will be displaced and injured in the journey. Before packing they should stand in water for several hours in order to absorb moisture enough to keep them from withering.
"It is not good to sprinkle them too heavily after they are in the box, for without air this is likely to produce mildew."—St. Louis Republic.
PRETTY DUTCH DESIGNS.
In High Favor Just Now for the Decoration of Lamp Shades, Boxes and Cushion Frises.
Those well known Dutch designs (representing sturdy little Hollanders, animals, geese, et cetera) are so striking as freeses upon cushions and decorative boxes that it is pleasant to find them in still another form.
From France can the suggestion of using them upon lamp and candle shades. Not until the results of the plan are seen does one realize just how clever a choice it is.
Of course the material used in the shades must be of a character appropriate to such treatment. Heavy carbon paper or cardboard without a glaze is a good choice. So are denim and other heavy fabrics.
Some women will be able to do original work in applying the design. Those who
DELFT LAMP SHADES.
have no gift in this line can transfer the colors with transferring fluid.
A very postery decoration is obtained by the new application method of fancy work. Here, the rough sketch or outline of the picture is drawn in with a soft pencil, the various divisions being afterwards cut out of cloth, cardboard, et cetera, and pasted on.
In this way, if the Dutch gamin is wearing a dark blue blouse, a traced pattern made over the sketch is cut out of dark blue flannel or carbon paper. This fits exactly into the sketch. It is neatly pasted in with gum arabic. Sabots can be shaped from heavy yellow paper or cardboard, and any other portions of dress or figure added until the picture is complete.—St. Paul Globe.
Creme de Meathe Sandwiches
Creme de menthe sandwiches are a pretty novelty, the Félice for which is given in the Cooking Club. For 20 minutes infuse a tablespoonful of pulverized mint leaves in two tablespoonfuls of hot water; strain and add it to one plint of whipped double cream; add also a saltspoonful of salt, a dash of white pepper and half an ounce of gelatine softened in a tablespoonful of cold water and dissolved over hot water. Cool in a square mold, and when cold cut in thin slices and place between similar-sized pieces of brown bread.
Egg Stains on Napery.
In washing tabel linen, or any cloth stained with egg, avoid putting it in boiling water, which will set the stain. Put the cloth in cold water, and the stain can be very easily removed. The same rule applies to eggcups and any dishes stained with egg. If they are set with the other china into hot dish water, the stain will harden, and it requires considerable patience to remove it. Egg stains come out easily in cold water.
**An Egg Poaching Hint.**
Add a little vinegar to the water in which you poach eggs, to prevent the whites from spreading. Breaking each into a cup about a quarter of an hour before it is to be used will also help.
Well Worth While
First Financier—Do you think it worth while to depress this stock any more?
Second Financier—Why not? Why, all the people who bought it at high prices have had to sell. We might as well buy it back—Brooklyn Life.
A Bond of Union.
"I wouldn't marry the best man on earth."
"And I wouldn't marry the best woman on earth."
So they were married—for neither seemed to regard the other as the best. —Chicago Tribune.
One Way.
Hannigan—Shure, these scales is no good at all fur me. They only weigh the hilt o' 200 pounds, an' Oi'm near to 250.
Flannigan—Well, man alive, can't ye git on thim twice?—Philadelphia Press
WE WANT AGENTS!
Good active handlers can make a big money handling items and taler experience necessary. We promise you with a complete package to measure Suits to Measure $1 up Trousers $ .50 up Express Prepal Excellent copier equipment establish 1 BUSINESS OF QUOTING Send 2 couch shirts for a pleas and further particulars PROGRESS AILING COMPANY 195-L Market Street, CHICAGO
"Colored People" IS THE TITLE OF A Book
Which I am preparing to publish. It will be made up almost entirely of cuts and biographies of colored people of both sexes. When proper, and desirable, the cut of the wife may appear along with that of her husband's.
If the people make adequate returns, the set of books will be arranged somewhat as follows:
VOL. I: Will be made up of discussions of "the status of colored people" by presidents, ex-presidents, congressmen, governors, cardinals, ministers, educators, bishops, editors, and scientists among white people; and of people of like standing among our own people, when obtainable.
VOL. II: Bank officials, judges, lawyers, physicians, chiropodists, mas sagers, trained nurses, dentists and others.
VOL III: Congressmen, all Federal office holders, all State, County and City offials; army, navy and militia officials; store, office and other clerks; book-keepers, stenographers, typewriters and others.
VOL. IV: Bishops, missionaries, ministers, authors, poets, artists, publishers, job printers, engravers, photographers, typesetters, electricians, electrical and other engineers, noted singers, musicians, actresses, actors, elocutionists, pantomimists, inventors, music teachers and traveling salmenz
VOL. V. All merchants and manufacturers, all first-class mechanics, plasterers, carpenters, masons, plumbers; all proprietors of first-class barber shops, hack and transfer lines, hotels and restaurants; stone cutters, moulders, firemen, owners and tillers of farms, planters, gardeners, fruit-raisers, dairy men and others; first-class sign and house painters and decorators; cuts of colleges, publishing houses, hospitals, sanitariums, city and farm homes and other buildings.
VOL. VI: Officials of and educators in colleges and educational institutions, including all school teachers, college graduates and, perhaps, high school graduates.
The above classification is subject to change and the number of volumes published will depend upon the amount of material sent in.
We want everybody to be properly represented.
We want to get as many volumes of these books as possible, into the waiting rooms of offices and hotel lobbies in order that white people may know what we are doing. And there can be no doubt that we, ourselves, would be greatly benefited by having placed before us a pictorial representation of the progress of others of our people.
The object of this publication is to benefit our people; and we hope that you will do your part by sending us immediately the name and address of as many people as you can think of. Our history and literature should be preserved.
Write to-day to
Your Respectful Friend,
WESLEY ROBBINS, M. D.,
Rooms 100-101 Paterson Block,
FLINT, MICH.
VIRGINIA—In the Law and Equity
Court in the city of Richmond, January
18th, 1904.
BENESE JOHNSON, ..... Plaintiff.
vs.
BEN JOHNSON, ..... Defendant.
In Chancery.
The object of this suit is to obtain a
divorce, a vinculo matrimonii, on
behalf of the plaintiff with the defendant
half of the plaintiff from the defendant.
An affidavit having been made and
filed that the defendant Ben Johnson,
is a non-resident of the State of Virginia,
it is ordered that he appear here
with fifteen days after due publication
of this order and do what is necessary
to protect his interest in this cause.
A copy test. P. P. WINSTON,
Clerk.
A. L. TOLIVER, p. q.
To BEN JOHNSON:
Take notice,
That I shall on the 23rd day of February, 1904, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. on that day, at the office Phin B. Shields, Commissioner in Oban-
yment, in the city of Richmond, Va.
proceed take the deposition of witnesses
to be read in evidence on my behalf in a certain suit pending in the law and equity
Court of the city of Richmond, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff.
Respectfully,
BESSIE JOHNSON,
A. L. Toliver, p. q.
By Counsel.
Man of Action:
"George certainly is a man of action." "What has he done?" "Why, the very next day after the heiress accepted him he gave up his job at the bank and joined the Don't Worry club."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Usual Answer.
Dora—Men may not think so, but nowadays there are a great many girls who have no intention of ever marrying.
George—Oh, I know it. I've proposed to a dozen of them. N. Y. Weekly.
Its Delivery.
"You delivered your speech in a manner that was most timely and effective." "Yes," answered the political orator. "I had to be particular about the delivery of that speech. It was a G. O. D. transaction." -Washington Star.
A
SOLUTION TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZEL WEAKFISH.
BOOTH TARKINGTON'S
BROADERS
Great American Story
THE GENTLEMAN
FROM INDIANA
published in this paper beginning in a few days.
It going to say much about it and we will tell
describe the story as it is you will say before
read it that we have greatly exaggerated. Af-
we read it you will say we failed to do it justice.
A story of a fearless editor who incurred the
white caps and was murderously attacked by
but we must not say what came of it, for that
selling, and would take away from your pleas-
ling it.
THE GENE
FROM IN
Will be published in this pa
We are not going to say mu
you why.
If we describe the story a
you have read it that we hav
ter you have read it you will
It is the story of a fearle
hatred of white caps and w
them, and—but we must not
would be telling, and would
ure in reading it.
THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA
Will be published in this paper beginning in a few days. We are not going to say much about it and we will tell you why.
If we describe the story as it is you will say before you have read it that we have greatly exaggerated. After you have read it you will say we failed to do it justice.
It is the story of a fearless editor who incurred the hatred of white caps and was murderously attacked by them, and—but we must not say what came of it, for that would be telling, and would take away from your pleasure in reading it.
It pictures vividly a phase of life which is too common in America.
It ought to be read by every man who loves his country and by every person who loves a lover—for the hero is a passionate lover, whose love making is superb.
We know you will read it if you dip into the first chapters—and our word for it, you will enjoy it as you have seldom enjoyed a story.
NICKEL SAVINGS BANK,
Located at Richmond, in the State of
Virginia, at the close of business Jan-
uary 23rd, 1904, made to the State
Corporation Commission.
RESOURCES.
Loans and Discounts ..... $ 5 341 25
Overdrafts ..... 30 00
Furniture and Fixtures ..... 1 600 00
Checks and other cash items. ..... 216 21
Exchanges for clearing-house. ..... 389 48
Due from National Banks ..... 2 159 00
Specie, nickels and cents ..... 1 942 16
Paper Currency ..... 2 529 00
Capital stock paid in ..... $6 000 00
Surplus fund ..... 1 100 00
Individual deposits subject to
check ..... 5 784 24
Time certificates of deposit ..... 1 323 81
Total ..... $14 207 05
I, E. A. Washington, do solemnly
swear that the above is a true statement
of the financial condition of the Nickel
Savings Bank, located at Richmond, in
the State of Virginia, at the close of
business on the 22nd day of January,
1904, to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
E. A. WASHINGTON,
Correct—Attest: Cashier.
R. F. Tancil,
R. J. Bass,
A Ferguson,
Directors.
State of Virginia,
City of Richmond.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 30th day of January, 1904.
Geo. W. Lewis,
Notary Public.
Commission expires Feb. 5th, 1906.
Another Exposure.
Mother (after the wedding)—Horrors!
I'm afraid Clara has made an awful mistake.
Her afflianced looked young, and had excellent credentials; but I do believe he's an impostor, and has been married dozens of times before.
Friend—Goodness! It can't be.
Mother—But did you see him? At the altar he didn't drop the ring, or stumble over his own feet, or act like a half-witted donkey a bit. He's a fraud, and I know it—N. Y. Weekly.
TO......
OUR READERS
STATEMENT.
RESOURCES
LIABILITIES.
THE STORM
CONSTANTINE II
RICORDIUM
IMPLEMENTO
CONSTANTINE II
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Stops Hair Falling Out 10 to 20 days
Grows Hair on all Bald Spots Many
times. Grows hair on all sides. Improves
improves all kinds of hair, causing it to
grow long, straight and silken. If you wish
a beautiful growth of hair, try it.
Small boxes 25c. 6 for $1.00
Large boxes 50c. 3 for $1.00
Send expenses of delivering it to you.
Address all orders to
Bruno Mfg. Co.
235 Washington Street. - Boston
AGENTS WANTED.
R.F. & P. R. Richmond, Fredericksk
& Potomac R. R.
Trains Leave Richmond—Northward.
4:15 a.m., daily, Bn. St. Through.
6:55 a.m., daily, Main st. Through. All
Pullman Cars.
634 a. m. 1. excepc. Monday, Byrd s. 7
712 a. m. 1. excepc. Monday, Ashland scoon-
712 a. m. 1. excepc. Monday, Ashland scoon-
12:05 noon, week days. Byrd st. Through.
12:05 noon, week days. Byrd st. Fredericks
burg accommodation.
5:05 p. m., daily. Main st. Through.
5:05 p. m., week days. Elba. Ashland accommodation.
8:15 a, m., week days, Byrd st. Fredericks
burg accommodation.
2338 p. m., daily, annn. m. s. through
week days. Eba. Aahland soccom-
mation.