Richmond Planet
Saturday, May 14, 1904
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
A STREET= CAR CRASH.
Walking Colored Folks Not Injured--Mr. Powers Disgusted.
THE "JIM CROW" RULE VERY UNSATISFACTORY COMPANY EXPLAINS—THE SITUATION AT PRESENT.
VOL. XXI NO. 22.
A STREET
CAR
Walking Colored
jured--Mr. Pow
THE "JIM CROW" RULE V
COMPANY EXPLAIN
AT PRI
The street-car situation here remains the same. Eighty or ninety per cent of the colored people are walking. It would require much space to detail the individual cases, where colored people, both male and female have suffered in their efforts to emphasize the disapproval of this iniquitous rule made by the street-car company.
One colored female weighing approximately two hundred pounds has been walking from up-town to Church-hill, although she has been unfit for service when she reached her place of employment.
WHITE FOLKS IN STREET CAR WRECK.
The wisdom of the colored people in coiling trouble by staying off the street cars was never more strikingly illustrated than is shown by the crash of the freight cars at the C. & O tunnel entrance near 18th and Marshall Sts,uto street-car No. 353 last Monday. Only white people were on the car as the blacks Gayle, Mr. Frank W. Fields and Mr. George Outland, all white were injured. The first named is at the Virginia Hospital.
MR. POWER'S LETTER.
The feeling of the white people is well expressed in the following letter of Mr. R. W. Powers of the firm of Powers, Taylor & Co.
Richmond, Va., April 22, 1904.
Mr. S. P. Huff, Manager Passenger and Power Company:
Dear Sir:
I take a lively interest in every thing that tends to promote the best interest of this city, one of the elements of our growth and prosperity is a good car service, and I am pleased to observe that you are rendering a first-class service. I however regret exceedingly that you have felt it necessary to enforce the law dividing the races on the cars. I have heard but one expression, and I have heard many that it was unnecessary and calculated to produce friction if nothing worse I have freely used the cars since they have been here and have never had any trouble or been inconvenienced by the Negro.
It is not pleasant to have a conductor speak to your wife as one did to mine to day. She got on a Clay street-car at Park and Harrison, about 9 a. m., she took her seat very near the middle of the car, she was the only passenger on the car when the conductor told her she must move up to the front of the car; she replied to him that she was the only passenger and that there was no necessity of her moving, that she would do so if it was necessary. When he replied, "You will have to move, there is the law." Now Mr. Huff, what has occurred to Mrs. Powers may occur to others and there are some people who will not stand it—I hope you will look carefully into this question and see if it will not be to the interest of the public as well as to the management of the cars that this foolish law be not enforced.
Very truly yours,
R. W. POWERS.
MR. HUFF'S EXPLANATION.
The Virginia Passenger and Power Company, through General Manager S. F. Huff replied that the present arrangement was due to an effort to prevent the placing of separate compartments in the street-cars, a thing which would tend to bankrupt the company. Mr. Powers promised to try to comply with the Richmond, Manchester and Petersburg are the only cities that have "Jim Crow" street cars. If the colored people continue to stay off the cars, the company will be as much of a bankrupt as it would be to have separate cars. The officials of the company are of the opinion that the colored people will within three months get tired and be back on the cars in full force. The colored people alone can decide the question. The white gentleman, who speeds us as fast as his cook says that he has a row with her nearly every day about bringing his dinner to him on the street-cars. "She wants to him
The great objection to the rule is that it was unnecessary. General Manager Huff can remove the obnoxious signs and restore the former status of affairs whenever he chooses to do so. There is no law compelling a "Jim Crow" system on the street-cars of Richmond.
MR. J. E. BRUCE SPEAKS PLAINLY.
The Street-Car Situation
Yonkers, N. Y., May 9th, 1904.—My Dear John Mitchell:—
The Negroes of Virginia are, with
you to be commended for their magnifi-
cent display of self respect, and their
courageous refusal to ride in "Jim
Crow" compartments on public carriers,
I have recently heard several very prom-
ent white gentlemen in New York,
speak the highest terms of the manliness
of the black men of Virginia, in the
stand they have taken while they de-
nounced in rmeasurement terms con-
temptible action of the street railway
company in thus seeking to further
humilate intelligent and self-respecting
Negroes.
PEOPLE WILL YET WIN
They predict that if the Negroes do not weaken, the Company which is pandering to a mandlin public (?) sentiment will feel the effects of the loss of patronage, which loss cannot fail to affect the pocket nerve of the promoters of this latest iniquity. I hear only words of praise for your manly stand in this crisis and of your sensible advice to our men and women to "walk."
VOICES THE HOPE
God grant that there may not be found in the city of Richmond any Negro man or woman so wanting in self-respect or pride of race as to submit to the gross indignities against which the thoughtful men and women are now contending. Their effort for the triumph of justice and fair play cannot fail to be productive of good. Twenty years hence, the white race in Virginia will be ashamed to refer to the record which is now being made by white men in Richmond who seem to forget that the law of compensation compensates, and that this world was not made for Caesar and his Queens.
GOD'S JUSTICE SUFFICIENT.
When human justice fails there is consolation in the thought that God's justice is sufficient for all purposes. The present petty persecution of our race in Virginia, politically and otherwise by white men is a magnificent tribute to the worth and value of the race and a common progressive spirit. If the Negroes of Virginia want that Mr. Page pictures them in his Magazine articles, there would be no fear of them politically and no objection to them on street-cars.
TIME WILL DETERMINE.
The logic of events will determine all these grave questions within the next few years. This whole movement is part of the conspiracy to put the "niggers" face in the sand. It can only be averted by such vigorous methods as the Negroes of Virginia are now employing in self defense. Keep up the fight, and may God bless and prosper your efforts.
Sincerely yours, believe me,
JOHN E. BRUCE.
Rev. Dr. Barksdale Dead.
May 6, 1904—
BARKSDALE—Rev. Dr. J. L. Barksdale, pastor of the Union Baptist Church of this city, died at his residence, 624
South 16th St, this a m, 9:55.
Another Court in Manchester, Va.
Grand Worthy Counsellor John Mitchell, Jr., assisted by Mr. Thos. H. Wyatt, Cashier of the Mechanics' Savings Bank and some of the ladies of the Grand Court of Virginia, instituted King's Daughters Court, No. 70, Monday night, May 9, 1904.
This Court was gotten up through the energetic effects of Sister Anna Taylor, making her fifteenth Court established.
The Grand Worthy Counsellor highly complimented her on her work of only a few weeks and hoped the Order would blossom and bloom in Manchester as a result.
The following Grand Officers filled the chairs:
G. W. Inspector, Miss M. L. Chiles; G. W. Inspectrix, Mrs. Katia Thomas; G. W. S. Directress, Miss Fiona G. Davies; G. W. J. Directress, Miss L. Lucinda Smith; G. W. Orator, Mrs S. L. Mitchell; Conductress, Mrs Rosa Lovings; G. W. As? Conductress, Mrs Nancy E. Christian; G. W. Escorts, Mrs Anna Taylor, Mrs R. E. Wesley, and Mrs
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, M. Y 14, 1904.
Nannie C. Johnson. R. of D., Miss V. C. Proctor; R. of Dep. Mrs. Georgia Bolling; Herald, Mrs. Adlaide G Thompson; Protector, Mr. Thomas H. Wyatt.
The visitors made short speeches of congratulations after which a bountiful repast was enjoyed by all.
The party went over in one of Mr. A. D. Price's large picnic wagons, and the trip made in 25 minutes time, was highly enjoyed by all.
ald, Bettie Galvin; Protector, William Shepherd; Trustees; Mr. James H. Ferguson, Mrs. Adeline Roy, and Mrs. Sallie Brooks
After the initiation, a supper was served and the visitors heartily enjoyed the repast. They expressed themselves as being much pleased with the visit.
The party left for Richmond at 4:05 this morning. Miss Procter will remain with us today.
The Meeting at Charlottesville
The Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias
N. A., S. A, E., A., A & A., will meet
at Charlottesville, Va., in its ninth
annual session next Tuesday. Reduced
rates have been secured for the Uniform
school, which will leave next Monday-
night. The delegation will leave Monday at
2 P. M. The public meeting will be
held Wednesday night in the church of
which Rev. R. C. Quarles is pastor.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Burgess, P. O., Va., April 27th, 1904.—
This is to certify that I have received
from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Chanc-
cellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia,
Knights of Pythias, ($150.00) One Hundred
and Fifty Dollars in payment of
the death claim of James Diggs, Jr.,
who was a member of Pythias Lodge,
No 21, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S.
A., E., A. & A.
Signed:—
his
JAMES X DIGGS,
mark.
Witnesses:—
J. W. PEGRAM,
MRS. J. W. PEGRAM,
MARIETTA DIGGS,
JAMES KEISER.
Mr. W. L. Young of Ideal, Va.
called on us.
Messrs W. T. Keen and C. L.
Pritchard of Danville, Va., were in the
city this week.
President G. W. Hayes of the Virginia Theological Seminary and College called on us this week.
Rev. E. D. Samuels of East Orange, N. J., was in the city this week enroute to Portsmouth, Va. He reports his church in a most excellent condition. Mrs. Samuels who underwent a painful operation some time ago is improving.
Messrs Henry Bassett and W. M. Preston of Martinsville, Va., and Mr. J. R. Elam of Danville, Va., visited our office this week.
Sir Geo. W. Rison, in company with Mr. Sutherlin cf Danville, Va., was in the city this week.
Miss Helen Clarke of Phoebus, Va., accompanied by Miss Dobson of this city visited us this week, she anticipate spending a few days visiting relatives and friends. We wish her a pleasant stay.
We return our heartfelt thanks to Sir W. E. Williams and his mother for courtesies extended us during our recent trip to Pulaski, Va. We longed to remain in the "Valley City" of the mountains.
WANTED—A first-class practical horse shoer, must be sorer, industrious and willing to sign contract for at least a year. Reference required.
WANTED—An energetic, honest man, who understands and can take charge of a job-printing office.
The CLEVELAND JOURNAL,
3t
Cleveland, Ohio.
WANTED—A first-class colored barber to go to Ronceverte, W. Va. Must be rapid and of a polite and agreeable disposition.
Address "M," cto. PLANET.
THE FIRST COURT OF CALANTHE THERE.
The Grand Worthy Counsellor Present—New Offeers.
Charlottesville, Va., May 12, 1904.—Grand Worthy Counsellor, John Mitchell, Jr., arrived here last evening at about 5 p. m., accompanied by Mrs. Anna Taylor, Deputy; Miss Lucinda Smith, Miss V. C. Proctor and Col. E. R. Jefferson, Assisant Surgeon General for the purpose of organizing a court of Calanthe here.
They were met by Deputy Grand Chancellor James H. Ferguson and Sir Hudson Jenkins. They were soon conveyed to the residence of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ferguson, where they were made comfortable.
The new court Mt. Calvary was instituted with the following officers:
succeeded with the following officers:
Worthy Counselor, Mrs. Lucy A.
Jenkins, Inspector, Mrs. Mary M.
Davenport, Inspectrix, Mrs. Nannie A.
Arnett, S. Directress, Mattie L. Terry;
J. Directress, Ida A. Washington;
Orator, Annie Coles, R. of Deeds, Mrs.
Carrie Lee; R. of Accounts, Mrs.
Nannie Holt; R. of Deposits, Mr. Hadson
Jenkins; Worthy Escort, Jennie Nelson;
Worthy Conductress, Maggie Cooper;
Asst. Conductress, Ophelia Scott; Her-
ald, Bettie Galvin; Protector, William Shepherd. Trustees; Mr. James H. Ferguson, Mrs. Adeline Roy, and Mrs. Sallie Brooks
After the initiation, a supper was saved and the visitors heartily enjoyed the they expressed themselves as being much with the visit.
The party left for Richmond at 4:05 morning. Miss Procter will remain with us today.
The regular monthly meeting of the National Baptist S. S. Union was held on last Sunday, May 8th, 1904 at the Zion Baptist Church, Rev. W. R. Ashburn, B. D., pastor, at 3:30 P. M. The edifice was crowded from pit to pit. Rev. James H. Stephens welcomed the Zion Baptist Church of the part of the church and Sunday School. President H. Peyton responded. The parish was well rewarded by the various schools was very interesting. Excellent addresses were made by Rev. D. W. Davis, D. D., Rev. W. R. Ashburn, B. D., W. H. James and Col. E. A. Washington. The Union is proud to note the large number of converts reported from the various schools. The next Union will be held at the Mt. Olive Baptist Church on Sunday in June. A lively time is expected in meeting plans will be put forth looking forward to the S. S. Convention, which will meet in Danville in August.
---
NEARLY 200 THIBETANS KILLED
British Loss Four Killed and Twenty-one Wounded In Last Fight.
British Camp, Karo Pa, Thibet, May 9.—A stiff fight to drive the Thibetans from their positions two miles below the pass lasted for six hours.
The Thibetans, numbering 1500, held the position with great tenacity, and lost nearly 200 before they were expelled. The British losses were Captain Bethune and three men killed and 21 men wounded.
A snow storm prevailed throughout the fight.
Advance on Lhassa Inevitable.
London, May 10.—The Daily Mail this morning says it understands that a British advance on Lhassa is now inevitable and that preparations to that end are progressing.
Five Hundred Mine Workers Strike.
Shamokin, Pa., May 11.—Five hundred employees went on strike at the Greenough colliery, operated by local capitalists, because the latter changed a system of disbursement which the men claim less earnings their daily earnings.
CAN'T GRANT LIQUOR LICENSES
New Jersey Supreme Court Decides Borough Councils Have No Power.
Trenton, N. J., May 11. — Justice Swayze rendered a supreme court decision in a Hightstown case, which in effect holds that the common councils of boroughs have no power to grant liquor licenses. A number of borough councils throughout the state have been granting licenses by virtue of their charter. The borough laws were revised in 1897, and in the revision nothing is said about licenses. Justice Swayze holds that the revision supercedes all former laws and charters relating to boroughs, and that the power of boroughs is limited to the revision. In consequence of this decision, hotel licenses in all boroughs will now have to be obtained from the county court under the general inn and tavern act.
WILL FLOOD BURNING MINE
Fierce Fire is Still Raging in Locust
Gap, Colliery.
Shamokin, Pa., May 10.—All hope that the five men who were imprisoned on Thursday last in the burning Locust Gap mine are alive has been abandoned and the mine will now be flooded to extinguish the flames. A fierce fire is still raging in the mine. James E. Roderick, chief of the state bureau of mines; John Fahey and Miles Dougherty, officers of the United Mine Workers, officials of the Philadelphia and Reading company and relatives of the five men in the burning mine agreed that the missing miners were dead, whereupon Chief Roderick gave permission to the company to flood the mine.
All for a Girl.
A Russian widower in Lipowetz wanted to marry a young girl, who refused him because he had three children. He thereupon took them into a forest, where they got lost and were finally found as frozen corpses. The widower was imprisoned.
Space for It.
Byron Tennyson Kiplung—I hope you will find space for my poem, "In the Midnight's Stilly Gloom."
Editor—Yes; I'll have the boy empty the waste-basket just as soon as he comes in.—Woman's Home Companion.
MONGOLIA
MANCHURIA
BARIA
Kin
Madhoshok
Muhden
LIAOTANO
CHOSAN
KONJU
Gensan
Seoul
KOREA
TOKIO
Yokohama
Yokosu
CHEFON
YELLOW
SEA
Massampho
Mysan
Tsu Shima
Sasebeho
Nagasaki
THE CIRCLES ARE DRAWN AT
100 MILE INTERVALS
MAP SHOWING DISTANCES IN THE BUSSO-JAPANESE WAR
Starting at Port Arthur on the above map, the outer edge of the first circle is 100 miles distant from the Russian stronghold, and each circle beyond adds another hundred. Thus, from Port Arthur to Fusan is 500 miles, from Port Arthur to Nagasaki about 630, from Vladivostok to Port Arthur about 630, from Port Arthur to Harbin nearly 500. These distances, of course, are as the crow flies, and by water routes and rail they are greater. When it is noted how near Japan is to the scene of war her great success following the sudden beginning of hostilities is not to be wondered at. The strait of Korea, separating Korea and Japan, is only about 100 miles wide, and warships and troops had comparatively short distances to go.
THE HOME OF RUSSIA'S MINISTER TO KOREA.
JAPS AGAIN
BOMBARD
PORT ARTHUR
London Hears They Are Firing at High Angle on Fortress.
COMMUNICATIONS RESTORED
Russians Report Railroad and Telegraph to Port Arthur Re-established. Japs Occupy Feng Wang Cheng After Sharp Skirmishing—Hropatkin May Abandon Liao Tung Peninsula—Rumors of Severe Fighting.
London, May 11.—The Tokio correspondent of the Morning Post, cabling under date of May 10, says that a high-angle bombardment of Port Arthur is proceeding.
One of the explanations of the restoration of the Port Arthur railway suggested here is that the landing of the Japanese at Pitsewo was interrupted by a gale and compelled their temporary retirement to the coast, or that the Japanese are allowing the line to remain open for the removal of non-combatants from Port Arthur prior to a bombardment from land. According to telegrams from Shanghai, General Kuropatkin is making a general concentration of troops at Mao Tien Ling Pass, where the next great battle is expected to take place.
The Daily Chronicle's correspondent at Shan Hai Kwan, under date of May 10, says that the Japanese first army from the Yalu river already is threatening the Russian position at Hai Cheng. The second army, marching in three divisions in order to cooperate with General Kuroki, has defeated the Russians near Wafung Tien with great loss, the correspondent says. He adds that the Japanese artillery was splendidly handled.
The Daily Chronicle's Tokio correspondent declares that Port Arthur will be bombarded with heavy guns, and that a concentrated assault will be made on a well-known vulnerable point in the defenses.
Gen. Zassalitch Killed in Battle.
Paris, May 11. — The Matin's St. Petersburg correspondent says it is
persistently rumored that there has been a big fight near Mao-Tien-Ling pass between the Russians and General Kuroki's army. The Russians, he says, lost heavily, Lleutenant General Zassallt being among the killed.
Russia Still Holds Port Dalny
St. Petersburg, May 11.—A semi-official dispatch from Mukden denies the reports that the Japanese have captured Port Dalny.
An official investigation shows that there is no truth in the report that the Vladivostok and Port Arthur squadrons have effected a junction after a navy battle, in which both squadrons suffered losses.
PORT ARTHUR RAILROAD OPEN
Alexieff Reports That Communication With Fortress Is Again Established.
St. Petersburg, May 11.—The most important official news from the front is that telling of the complete re-establishment of railroad and telegraphic communication with Port Arthur, although how it was brought about and whether a battle was necessary to accomplish it are mysteries which Viceroy Alexieff failed to clear up.
The elation of the authorities, a natural consequence of this achievement, is sobered by official dispatches showing the activity of the Japanese in Eastern Manchuria. Kuang Gen Sian (Huang Tiang Sai?), 50 miles northeast of Feng Wang Cheng, was occupied by the Japanese May 5. This enables an advance along the bad roads to the flank either side at Liao Yang or Mukden. The territory between the main road to Feng Wang Cheng and the river Tayang has been penetrated by such a strong force of Japanese as to lead to the suggestion that another army has landed at Takushan, of which the outside world has not before been
The activity of the Japanese, however, has been expected, and therefore has not diminished the satisfaction felt at the opening of communication with Port Arthur. The Slav swings from pessimism to optimism as quickly as a pendulum, and Viceroy Alexieff's dispatch has produced a feeling among the people that the defeat on the Yalu and the interruption of communication with Port Arthur should not have been taken so seriously; that General Kuropatkin never had any intention of making a stand on the Yalu; that the attempt to cut off Port Arthur was an absolute feature of the enemy's plan of campaign and was bound to occur sooner or later, and that the Russians should be thankful that they had time
to prepare for the defense of Port Arthur until General Kuropatkin could relieve it.
The people naturally wish for more details concerning the re-establishment of communication with Port Arthur. All they know definitely is that the railroad has been repaired and that at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon the first dispatch passed over the reconstructed telegraph lines.
30.000 at Port Arthur.
The Associated Press is further informed that the garrison at Port Arthur is stronger than heterofore has been staked. "There is no reason to keep the strength of the garrison at Port Arthur a secret," said the informant of the Associated Press. "The Japanese know it because of their perfect information. We have 20,000 soldiers and 10,000 sailors there. The latter will not be used on the fortifications except as a last extremity. The Japanese will not obtain possession of our fleet even if they capture Port Arthur. The orders to the commander there are that he shall, when a fall is inevitable, to put to sea and engage the enemy. We do not propose for the Japanese to find in the harbor a number of valuable warships which they can seize and add to their fleet. Moreover, in battle the Japanese will suffer as well as our ships, and those of the latter which do not escape will go down to the bottom."
Has Food For Three Months
Shan Kai Kwan, May 10.—A merchant here who is in a position to have trustworthy information has informed a correspondent of the Associated Press that at Port Arthur there is only coal sufficient, to last the warships for six weeks and that the food supply there will feed $000 men for three months only.
JAPS OCCUPY FENG WANG CHENG
Russians Blew Up Magazine Before Retreating.
Tokio, May 9.—Last Friday, after sharp cavalry skirmishes at Erhtaitsa, Santalua and other places, a detachment of infantry belonging to General Kuroki's army took Feng Wang Cheng. The Russians before retiring exploded the magazine, but left large quantities of hospital stores, which are being used by the Japanese hospitals.
Natives in the vicinity of Feng Wang Cheng say that last Monday the Russians carried about 800 wounded through that place, and that their casualties probably were above 3000. A detachment of the Japanese army operating on the Liao Tung peninsula dispersed small bands of Russian troops on Friday and captured Pulan Tien, a railroad station. The Japanese destroyed the railway and telegraph, thus severing the Russian communication with Port Arthur.
EVACUATING NEWCHWANG
Russians Will Leave Guard to Prevent Pillaging By Bandits.
Shan Hai Kwan, May 10.—The evacuation of Newchwang continues. The Russian authorities have promised to leave a sufficient rear guard to prevent pillaging by the Chinese bandits, who are in the vicinity and awaiting an opportunity to get into the city. Dismantling of the fort continues, all artillery being placed on trains.
Nothing further has been heard of the Japanese transports which were seen recently near Kai Chau.
The Russians are commandeering cattle on the west side of the Liao river, and the Chinese are indignant at this procedure. Eight hundred head of cattle have been seen at Yin Kow.
A Japanese spy has been discovered at Newchwang. He was approached by Russians, who pulled at his queue, which came off. He was taken prisoner, but subsequently escaped with the help of some Chinese, who distracted the attention of the Russians.
The dynamo connected with the mines at Newchwang has not been removed.
Abandoning Liao Tung Peninsula.
Shan Hai Kwan, May 9.—It is reported here that there has been severe fighting at Feng Wang Cheng, in which the Japanese were victorious. They took many prisoners. The Russians are retreating toward Hai Cheng, 32 miles east by north of Newchwang, and are evacuating the western side of the Liao Tung peninsula.
BUILDING SUBMARINES FOR JAPS
Newport News Shipbuilding Co. Said to Have Contract For Four.
Newport News, Va., May 11.—From a reliable source it is learned that a contract has just been awarded the Newport News Shipbuilding company for the construction of four Lake submarine boats, destined for service with the Japanese navy in the war now going on in the Far East. Shipyard officials here refuse to confirm or deny the report, but it is believed here that the yard has been rushing work on warships contracted for in an indirect way for the Mikado's government for some time past.
HEY SPERNET
IDEALS.
Mom says he's good as he can be—
So gentlemenly an jolie.
An' she is awful sure that he
Would never throw a stone or fight.
She says he does as he is bid—
I think I'd like to lick that kid!
She says he never tears his cloes,
An' loves to wash his hands and face.
An' when he's through with things he goes
An' puts them back right in their place
I'm glad I'm not like him, you bet;
I'd hate to be a mommer's pet.
An' then he never makes a noise,
But plays at some nice, qulet game.
He isn't built like other boys.
I guess, but I am, all the same.
I'd think they'd put his hair in curl;
He isn't much better than a girl.
Mom talks about him all the time,
An' wishes I was more like him.
She thinks I ought to be, but I'm
Auld said the chance is sorter slim.
I think it'd just as lief
Run off an' be a play chief.
-Chicago Daily News
The Call of Arcady BY EDWIN J. WEBSTEK
WILLIAM, the tramp, was seated on a little bank by the side of the highway under the shade of a big elm. The day was warm, but not uncomfortable hot; he was eating a frugal yet satisfying lunch of bread and cheese, and nearby ran a brook from which he could quench his thirst when he had finished eating. Whenever he might tire of rural life, the railroad was only a short distance away, he could jump on a freight train and be quickly carried free of charge to the city. William, the tramp, was contented with his lot. But as his glance fell on a little cottage up the road, a vague unrest filled his heart. A young mother followed by a child clinging to her skirts had just come out of the cottage and was feeding the hens and ducks who flocked at her call. Near the house a man was plowing. He also heard the young housewife's call, and looking up from the furrow, threw her a kiss.
"Must be sort of nice, after all, to have a home, and a wife, and a baby like that fellow's got," thought William, the tramp, regretfully. "Used to think I would have one myself. But I guess I'd better give up that idea."
He brushed away the crumbs of bread and resumed his journey. At the next farmhouse he stopped and asked the woman who came to the door to give him something to eat. William was not hungry, but he might be before nightfall, so it was the part of a prudent man to try and lay in a supply of food. Even if he did not care to eat then, he could put it in his pocket.
But the woman called him a big, lazy tramp, and slammed the door in his face.
This did not worry William. He always expected a certain number of refusals during the course of a day, but like many other tramps in this big land had found that he was seldom forced
HE CONTINUED HIS WALK
to the unpleasant alternative of either working or going to sleep hungry. So whistling cheerily he continued his walk.
As he neared the curve of the road, William heard the thudding sound of horses' hoofs. To his experienced ear the galloping sounded louder yet more uneven than that common to an ordinary team of horses on a country road.
"Either that fellow is driving mighty fast or it is a runaway," he soliloquized. And he hurried around the curve in the road.
Down the highway, swaying from side to side in their mad gallop, came a team of horses, drawing a wagon which bounded up and down over the rough road, threatening each second to turn over. William's first instinct was to stand in safety at one side and let the frightened team pass. Then he noticed that a little girl was clinging in white-faced terror to the seat of the wagon.
For a moment he hesitated. To try to stop the team was to risk his life. Then the tramp gave a second glance at the frightened child, little more than a baby, on the seat of the wagon. He drew a long breath and ran in the direction of the team. Unless they were stopped before they reached the curve the wagon would be hurled into the ditch.
When a few yards distant from the runaway team William whirled around and began racing with them. As the horses caught up to him, he hurled his body forward, his hands out, he
gripped the reins firmly. He was dragged from his feet.
But now the long and varied experience of the tramp In catching fast freights stood him in good stead. As the horses plunged forward he only clung the tighter. Nearer and nearest to the curve drew the team. But even frenzied horses cannot run with 170 pounds of sturdy humanity hanging from the bits. Little by little they slowed down, until at last, with a few final, fierce tugs. William brought them to a standstill little more than a yard From the catch at the curve of the road And now that the danger was over the little girl, who had been clinging to the seat, broke into tearful sobs.
The owner of the farmhouse from which William had just been scornfully driven had seen the galloping team and was running to William's assistance His wife, who had just turned William away, was hurrying behind him. The farmer's face grew a little pale as he saw how near the ditch the team had been halted. "It's our Minnie," he said to his wife. "I never could have got there in time. She would have been killed if this brave man hadn't stopped the horses at the risk of his own life." "And I just refused him something to eat," replied the woman, with a big sob in her voice as she helped the child down from the wagon. The farmer looked hard at William. He had a deep-rooted dislike to tramps. But this one seemed different from the others.
"Can't you leave the life you're leading and come on my farm?" he inquired in tones far more cordial than William was accustomed to hearing. "I'll give you good wages, and the place will be a permanent one. It won't be long before a young man like you will have a home of his own, and perhaps a wife and child like the one you saved to-day. You're too good a man to be on the road. And you will find it grows harder and harder each year. By and by your strength will be gone, or you will miss your grip catching a freight some night, and then all that will be left for you will be the poor-house or the morgue."
William, the tramp, could feel his heart beating quicker. The vision of the little cottage with a wife and home of his own was drawing very close to him. Perhaps, after all— Then he looked down the long highway, bordered by green, arching trees in which the birds were singing. The smoke from a distant freight train floated lazily over the tree tops. At the sight a vague feeling of unrest stirred his pulse. The love of the careless, wandering, reckless life, banished for a moment, returned with renewed force. Arcady was calling her child, and the undefined call thrilled his heartstrings. William, the tramp, shook his head with a sigh.
"No, I can't do it." said he. "Somehow the love of the road is in my bones and I'm bound to go back to it, even if it does mean what you say in the end." And turning away, William, the tramp, walked rapidly in the direction of the drifting smoke. He had heard the call of Arcady and answered it. For though the end thereof was death, the path was very pleasant.-N. Y. Times.
BAD TELEPHONE MANNERS
Dignified Matron Who Has a Just Complaint to Make—Inexcusable Curtness Over the Wire.
A dignified matron who has a couple of debutantes in her family complained the other day that the "phone" was conducive to bad manners, reports the Chicago Tribune.
"I do not think I can be accused of being unprogressive," she said, "but I never shall become accustomed to telephone manners. This is what happens to me about every hour in the day:
"Phone bell rings. I, being convenient, answer. Masculine voice calls 'Hello.' Now I realize that the possessor of that voice is probably a youth of 20, and while I resent the familiar 'Hello' I respond, 'Hello,' and he begins:
"Who is this?"
"Who is this?' There is something so abrupt in this form of question that I feel like making an explanation that will not only be considered satisfactory but final, but having identified myself to the young man's satisfaction he proceeds:
"Oh, this is Mrs. B! Well, Mrs. B, I want to see Miss H. Will you tell Miss H. I want to speak to her?" "He does not apologize, sedelm says 'Thank you,' and never by accident says 'Please,' and allows me to hunt all over the house for the one he wants; sometimes grows impudent when I can't find her, and seems to ignore the rights of every one but himself."
COMPROMISED WITH RAT
Rodent in Summer Cottage Defied Attempts to Capture—A Subsidy Scheme That Worked.
A Portland man who maintains a summer cottage on the cape has during the past winter exercised a bit of diplomacy that achieved the desired result nicely, says the Kennebec Journal. During last fall a large rat made its appearance about the cottage and defied all efforts to trap or exterminate it, and the aggressive campaign was abandoned in despair. But it would not do to leave the rodent in full and free possession of the premises, as the mischief it might inflict on the furnishings during the winter would be considerable. The owner concluded to try an expedient that suggested itself to him, and, as before stated, the plan proved an emphatic success. At least once a week the cottage has been visited and a quantity of food left in the cellar. This arrangement was at once ratified by the rodent, which has abstained from depredations in consideration for the bounty upon which it has waxed sleek.
Bribery and corruption have been unearthied in the Swiss army, and officers of high rank have had to resign.
Density of Cuba's Population.
The density of relative population of Cuba is nearly the same as that of the United States.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
FISH STORY WITH SEVERAL THRILLS
R per said to a New York Herald reporter: "You know, boy, I alus' carry that the old gun o' mine, whever I goes. As I wuz a sayin', wuz out fishin' fer bass, when lookin' up into the sky—I allus keeps an eye out fer squalls—I sees a bald headed eagle swoopin' down right fer me. Seizin' Old Ben, I aimed straight fer the critter's heart! Bang! went the old gun! An' thet air eagle wuz hit! Down inter the water he flopped. I wuz jist about ter pull over ter git him, when one of the fish lines I had overboard commenced to run out, I tuk hold on it an' tried to pull in. But nary an inch could I budge it. 'It's a salmon,' says I. And makein' the line fast to an eye bolt forrad I settled down for a good smoke. "I know salmon! An' the only way is to let them pull an' tug till they gits tired; then you kin vann them in.
THINGS WERE GETTING WARM
Suddenly the boat began to move; that air salm wuz a pullin' the boat; jest at that air moment. I heerd a noise behind me; I looked an' there wuz that eagle a risin' outen the water; my hair stood on end, fer a wounded bald eagle is wuss than a grizzly.
"I grabs 'Old Ben' agin, but jist as I wuz about to take aim, the doggoned boat took a suddent plumge ahead, and flat I fell inter the bottom and overboard goes the old gun. I cud have cried, but there want any time, fer that eagle war a comin' for me, lickety split.
"He war only usin' one wing; my shot hed bruk the other. Things wuz a gittin' highy warm; the salmon wuz a pullin' me through the water like a locymotive.
The sweat wuz a bubblin' on my forehead, for theet eagle wuz only a few feet back! Closer and closer he came. I cud hear him breathin', cud hear the wind a whistlin' through his pin feathers. Boys, it war turrible! Somehim' must be did. I did it. I toore off my moccasins, my pants, my
GHOST REVEALS CASH
Portion of New Jersey Miser's Hoard
discovered by Aid of a Super-
natural Visitor.
When William Berlin, an eccentric
old miser, residing at Little Silver, N.J.
died a few years ago a search was made
for the money he was known to possess,
but not a penny could be found.
William Wainwright, however, could
not give up the hope of finding the money
FOUND $187 IN BILLS
and obtained permission from Joseph V. Holmes, owner of the house, to tear it down. Every stick of timber was carefully examined as it was razed. No money was found, but Wainwright felt sure it was somewhere about the place. He says that a few nights ago he had a dream, in which the ghost of Berin led him to the ruins of the old house and pointed out to him under the chimney a tn spectacle case. When Wainwright awoke in the morning his dream was still vivid, and he dressed in a hurry, went to the spot and found the spectacle case in the place pointed out by the miser's ghost. He opened it and $187 in bills fell out. Wainwright is not yet satisfied and believes he will have more dreams.
Champion Eight-Year-Old
A German medical paper reports that at a school inspection in Brandenburg an eight-year-old boy was presented who weighs 126 pounds and stands five feet three and one-half inches. The young prodigy is physically and mentally well developed
WOMEN FIGHT A BEAR.
Vicious Animal Iz Killed After Hand-to-Hand Encounter Lasting Several Minutes.
Three Christine (Cal.) women, Mrs. E H. Irish, and Misses Willie Moore and Minnie Boyd, had a hard fight with a bear the other afternoon, and came out proudly victorious.
The bear, the largest of his kind probably ever killed in Mendocino county,
ITH
LLS
It Tells of an Eagle
That Was Drowned.
a Salmon That Was
Boiled and a Liar
Who Has No Equal.
coat, all my clothes, throwin' each of
them aforesaid articles at the voracious 'bald head,' hopin' to gain a little time. But, boys, we wuz goin' so fast that the wind tore 'em out of my hand afore ye cud say 'Jack Robinson.'
"To the 'pelt' stood 1, just as nater made me. The wind chilled me to the marrow, and I soon begin to feel numb all over.
"By the Great Horn Tout! I war freezin' to death! What should I do! Jump overboard; No! That eagle would git me! Stay where I was! No, I'd freeze to death. Suddenly the eagle tuk a spurt and got its nose over the starn! I makes a quick lep an' grabs it by the neck, but my toes got caught under the starn seat and held me fast. Thar I wuz, stripped naked, with all my body over the back of the boat a-holdin' on to the tether.
"He wuz a flyin', the boat wuz a flyin', and I wuz half flyin', half floatin' and darned near hull fruz! I candn't git one or tother. Soon I hear the roar of the falls. I felt my time had come, fer that salmon wuz makin' dead fer 'em! We would all drown tergither! Nearer an' nearer sounded the roar! I could see the eddies and rapids as we rushed through them! I expected every moment to be dashed agin a rock! When suddenly the air boat began to jump upward! And the bird and I fell downards. I felt me ankles crack, but me trusty toes held on.
"The eagle's body was under the water that came pourin' down on us, exceptin' his mouth, which was open, gaspin' for breath! Higher and higher we went, till suddenly we war in smooth water again, still a goin' at top speed.
"Boys, thet air salmon hed clim them air falls.
"My body stood out over the end of the boat as stiff as a flagpole. Wuz I to die this way? Suddenly I begins to feel warmer! I thought sure I war freezin' fer good, 'cause you allus feel warmer when you're about to friz. It kept gittin' hotter and hotter! Sez I. 'I'm dead an' nearin' 'tother place.' The heat limbered me up. I pulled myself back into the boat, still holdin' on to the eagle. I expected him to make a fight, but nary fight—he war dead. Its mouth bain' open as we wuz towed up them falls it got drowned. "Suddenly somethin' red hot landed on my back. The water was a hissin' an' a b'ilin all around me. I knew then I wuz dead and in torment. I looked 'round 'spectin' to see some ole friends, and what do you think? I wasn't in hell 'tall!' It war jist a forest fire, but, boys, it saved my carcass, fer just at this time the boat hed stopped a movin'.
"I pulled in the line, an' there wuz a salmon, seven feet three and a half inches long, dead as a door nail! The water had got so hot from the fire, and he gain' so fast that before he could turn 'round and git back he had billed to a turn.
"My pipe's out—gimme a match!"
had been making throads on the flocks in the vicinity of Christine, and a trap had been set for him. The ladies in question were out for a stroll, Mrs. Irish being armed with a 32-caliber Winchester. They found the animal had been trapped. In his rage he had eaten through a side of the trap, and his head and shoulders were free of the cage. Fearing that he would escape, Mrs. Irish took alm and fired. The charge only infuriated the beast, however, and matters began to look serious for the ladies. There were no men near at hand, so it fell upon them to protect themselves. One of the ladies blocked
Y
MRS. IRISH TOOK AIM.
the side of the trap that the bear had torn down. Two of them engaged the attention of Bruin at the strong side of the cage, while Mrs. Irish fired the fifth bullet. This lodged in the animal's heart. Mrs. Irish retains the skin as a memento.
Starvation Wages in Spain.
Farm laborers in Spain get $1.50 a week. Women employed in vineyards get 15 cents for ten hours' work.
Amenced.
The head master of a school recently put up notice that on an early date he would lecture on the following subject:
"Our eyes, and how we see through them."
Shortly afterwards he was ascribed to find an alternative title written underneath:
"Our pupils, and how they see through us"—London Tit-Bits.
Made in America.
The sad discovery has been made that the Metropolitan museum's $40,000 Etruscan chariot never saw ancient Italy, but was made right here in America. The blow is somewhat softened by the knowledge that at any rate it contains some genuine bronze fragments, and is not all a modern "fake." Even archaeological experts can be deceived by smooth Yankee artisans, it seems.
WENT ON BIG SPREE
EMBALMED GRASSHOPPERS THE CAUSE OF UNIQUE SPECTACLE.
Fish That Swallowed the Alcohol-
Soaked Insects Got Gloriously
Drunk and Surprised Two
Ancient Anglers.
If Sunday had not been a fairly pretty day Ats Hartley and Maj. Davis, of Anaconda, Mont., would not have discovered a few new kinks in the fishing business. These two anglers—the most famous in the west—have lashed the waters in all parts of the world, and have even gone harpooning for whales, but the experience they had Sunday discounts anything and everything of their past.
When the two anglers went to the Bitter Root, they found a little shore ice, not enough to hurt, but enough to make the water cold. They used ordinary bait until Hartley dug up a jar filled with some mysterious stuff. Examination showed the stuff to be grasshoppers pickled in alcohol. Hartley lifted his hat, smiled, and bowed to the major. Hartley then placed one of the embalmed grasshoppers on his hook and made a cast. There was no rise. Another cast was made, and this time there was a rush and swirl and a big fight was on. The fish was a monster. It required all the strength and skill of Hartley to land it, but the task was finally accomplished. The fish lay gasping on the shore, and Hartley wiped his brow and looked for more bait.
Then was when his heart broke. In the excitement of landing the fish he had upset the jar of preserved hoppers, and found himself without any more of the magic bait. Out in the river the jar floated bottom upward, and his heart sank as he thought of what he might have done had he been able to preserve that jar of grasshoppers.
While he was bitterly reproaching himself for his carelessness, Maj. Davis called his attention to the fact that there was something doing in the deep hole
FISHERMANS
A RUSH AND A SWIRL.
in the river in which they had been fishing. It was across this hole that the bait jar had drifted in its cruise from the bank, and into the hole had dropped the grasshoppers that were preserved in alcohol. When Hartley looked after the major had spoken, he saw a boiling, seething mass in the hose. It appeared to be alive with fish. There were big fish and little fish; char and red bellies; whitefish and grayling—all the fish that are known to inhabit the Bitter Root were represented in the mass that swirled and swished through the water of the fishing hole.
Hartley rubbed his eyes to assure himself that he was not dreaming. He took a second look, and a third, and then was satisfied that his first impression had been correct. There were more fish in sight than he had ever seen before at one time. And they looked like a scrimmage on a football field, so eager were they to get hold of some of the alcoholized hoppers. And as he looked he witnessed the sequel. It didn't take long for the fish to get the hoppers disposed of. There were plenty of hoppers for ordinary use, but there were more fish than had been expected. Thus it was that the hoppers were consumed earlier than had been anticipated. The disturbance quieted, and the writhing fish disappeared from view. Hartley thought the circus was all over, and stooped to pick up the one big fish that he had handed.
He was mistaken. The fun was yet to some. The fish had eaten the hoppers, as they had eaten many others before. But these were the first hoppers preserved in alcohol that they had ever encountered. To their uninitiated palates and unseemed stomachs the alcohol that the major had used in pickling his bait was an entirely new experience. When they settled to the bottom of the stream to digest the grasshoppers they were totally unprepared for what enquired.
The alcohol worked, and in a few minutes the fish were as drunk as a lot of sailors on shore leave. If they had been active in their pursuit of the bait, they were still more active now. They dashed through the water and they danced two-steps. They played tag and they turned handsprings. They went through all the antics that any franken crowd ever tried, and they did themselves proud. Some of them turned somersaults so vigorously that they landed on the shore ice, and the cool surface felt so good to their heated brows that they decided to remain there. They were pieced up and brought to town by Hartley and the major, and this, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, is how it happened that they had a big string of fish with no hook marks in their mouths.
Consumption and Environment. An English medical man points out that in the last ten years consumption has increased in countries where economic conditions have become worse, as in Ireland, but decreased where the conditions have improved, but it is to be remembered that environment, light, pure air, good food, contentment and happiness are potent preventive agents.
J. H. B.
Booker'S Market
18 W. Baker St. A FULL LINE OF FINE GROCERIES AND FRESH MEATS & VEGETABLES
Wood and Coal, Cigars
AT THE LOWEST M
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY I
AJ J. GOODS DELIVER
TELEPHONE
A. C. BOOKER
18 W. BAKER ST.
W. I. JO
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Office & Warerooms, 207 N.
HACKS F
Orders by Telephone or Tele-
pers and Entertainmen
Old 'Phone, 686. Residence
Cigars and Tobacco.
LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
MONEY BY GIVING ME A CALL.
DELIVERED TO YOU FREE.
PHONE 1307
OKER, Prop.
OKER ST. RICHMOND. VA.
JOHNSON,
RECTOR AND EMBALMER.
Ins, 207 N. Foushee St. Corner Broad.
BACKS FOR HIRE:
One or Telegraph filled. Wedding, Sup-
tertainments promptly attended.
Residence in Building, New Phone, 18.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLD
AT THE LOWEST MARKET PRICES. YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY GIVING ME A CALL.
W. I. JOHNSON. FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER.
Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Corner Broad. HACKS FOR HIRE:
Orders by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Wedding, Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended.
Old 'Phone, 686. Residence in Building, New Phone, 18.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLD
V. P. & F. K. of W.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
This organization has been chartered and legally situated under the laws and statute of the state of New York, for the purpose of uniting together all acceptable men on the Broad Bases of Charity.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS OF THE WORLD
V. P. & F. K. of W.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
This organization has been chartered and legally instituted under the laws and statute of the state of New York, for the purpose of uniting together all acceptable men on the Broad Bases of Charity—Beneficial and the Social and Moral condition of humanity.ry and uniform ranks will secure for this organization all sacred institutions of modern events, a grand oppo-puties wanted in all sections of the country to organi-ly address,
ALLEN Supreme voyager,
W. 87th Street, New York City.
Mechanics'
This organization has been chartered and legally situated under the laws and statute of the state of New York, for the purpose of uniting together all acceptable men on the Broad Bases of Charity—Beneficial and
Fraternal and to promote the Social and
Its two distinct military and uniform
place in the front ranks of all sacred ins
unity for active men. Deputies wante
lodges
Kindly address,
G. W. ALLEN S
846 W. 87th Street
Its two distinct military and uniform ranks will secure for this organization a place in the front ranks of all sacred institutions of modern events, a grand opportunity for active men. Deputies wanted in all sections of the country to organize lodges.
G. W. ALLEN Supreme voyages.
846 W. 87th Street, New York City.
Mechanics'
Savings Bank
OF RICHMOND, VA
— 511 North Third Street.—
Capital, $25,000.
Savings Bank
OF RICHMOND, VA
-511 North Third Street.
Capital, $25,000.
Money received on deposit amounts above $1.00 which re-
Money Loaned on Satisfaction
Business Accounts Handl
Amounts of ten cents and
This establishment is fitted up in the white vanit, burlar-proof chest steel, ele-
lence for safety and the accommodation
For all information concerning Stock Cashier.
Banking Hours have been arranged in people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. close Saturday at 8 P. M. and open again P. M. Call by as you come from work.
OFFICE
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President.
THOS. H. WY
BOARD OF F
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., JNK
E. R. JEFFERSON H. F. JONATHAN,
J. O. FARLEY
paid on deposit and interest paid on an
so which remains 60 days and over.
on Satisfactory Security.
ents Handled Promptly.
cents and upwards received on deposit.
itted up in the most improved style, having a large
steel chest, electric lights and every modern conven-
commodation of the public.
accurring Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the
seen arranged for the special convenience of the work.
M. to 4 P. M. Saturday, 9 A. M. to 8 P. We
and open again at 5 P. M., remaining open until % from work.
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 light and every modern convenience for safety and the accommodation of the public.
For all information concerning Stocks. Deposits. Loans. etc. apply to the
For all information concerning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the Cashier.
Banking Hours have been arranged for the special convenience of the working people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Saturdays, 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. We close Saturday at 8 P. M. and open again at 5 P. M., remaining open until 9 P. M. Call by as you come from work.
OFFICERS:
President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President,
THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
D. D., JNO. R. CHILES, B. P. VANDERVALL,
F. JONATHAN, THOMAS SMITH D. J. CHAVERS,
BLEY, JNO. T. TAYLOR.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President. THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier. KENNEDY H. WYATT, Cashier.
E. A. WASHINGTON, R. W. WHITING,
JOHN MITOHELL, JR. PRES.
WILLIAM CUSTALO, J. J. CARTER,
THOMAS M. ORUMP, SEDY.
SYDNOR
AND
HUNDLEY,
LEADERS IN
Quality
Furniture
FRANK WALLER, JR.
14 W. Baker St.. Richmond, Va
Residence, 1 E. Orange St.
Prompt attention given to all mat
orders. Satisfaction guaranteed
Fred G. Gray,
208 West Leigh St.
THE STOVE MAN.
You can have all kinds of Stoves Repaired and put up. Also your Roofs, Gutters, p Coatings, Repaired and Painted at a reasonable price.
Your patronage will be highly appreciated.
old 'Phone, 2807.
FRED G. GRAY,
Richmond, Va.
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.
LOOK OUT FOR
OUR PRICE LIST.
IT CAN'T BE EXCELLED
Your Patronage is Invited.
The AMERICAN GROCERY
This always popular chair
of rest will be in as much demand this fall as ever. Part
of our stock has already arrived and $10 values vie with
$15 values of a year ago.
Call, 800 our stock of Bed Room Fur
niture and save time and money.
Passenger elevator
and PROVISION MARKET
1221 St. James Street.
When you want nice dry, sawed pine
wood, call up 2883. We sell $2 cord for
$7.75, guaranteed full measurer.
A full line of fancy and staple groo-
ries and fresh meats. Granulated sugar
46 shots per lb. Prices low on everything
this week. Hard and soft coal. Hay
and Grain.
Sydnor & Hundley,
709-11-18 E. Broad St.
---
= Ohe Gentleman :
: From Indiana i;
33 By Boor TARKINGTON ¢:
] == iam Shaan an £
. 4s your nephew?" :
CoRR ‘The old man took his band tn
was 5 o'clock when Harkless | his own and looked him between
climbed the statre-to the Her-| eyes and thus stood while there w
ald office, and bis right arm | tong pause, the others watching t
‘ena bani were sthing had | coe ae Ahere wate
son in the editorial room, and there
was nothing tn bis appearance that
should have causéd a man to start and
fall back from the doorway, but that
Js what Jobo did. “What's the matter,
Mr Harkless?" cried Ross, hurrying
forward with a fear that the other
Rad been suddenly re-seized by illness.
“What are those?" asked Harkless,
‘with a gesture of his hand that seemed
te include the entire room.
“Those?” repented Ross, staring blank-
vy.
“Those rosettes — these streamers —
‘that storepipe—all this blue ribbon?”
Ross turned tale. “Ribbon?” he sald
inquiringly. “Ribbon?” He seemed
uaable to perceive the decorations re-
ferred to.
“Yes,” answered Jobn. “These ro
‘Settes om the chairs, that band, and”—
“Ob!” Ross answered. “That7" He
fingered the band on the stovepipe as
At he saw it for the first time. “Yes;
I nee.”
“But what's it for?”
“Why—it's—it's likely meant fer dec-
‘orations.”
“It seems to have been bere some
time.”
“It bas. I reckon it's most due to be
called in. It’s be'n up ever sence—
ence” —
“Who put it up. Ross?”
“We aid.” Se
“What for?"
Ross was visibly embarrassed. “Why
~fer—ter the-other editor.”
“For Mr. Fisbee?”
“Land. no! You don't suppose we'd
£0 to all that work and bother to brisk-
em things up for that old gentleman,
do you?”
‘I meant youns Mr. Fisbee, He is
the other editor, isn't be?”
“Ob!” said Koss. “Young Mr, Fis-
bee? Yes: we put ‘em up fer him.”
“You did? Did be appreciate them?”
“Well, be—seemed to—kind of like
‘m.”
“Where is be now? I came here to
fd him.”
“He's gone.”
“Gone? Hasn't he been here this aft-
ernoon?”
“Yes; some the time. Come in and
stayed durin’ the leevy you was boldin’
end saw the extry off all right.”
“When will be be back?”
“Sence it's be'n a daily be gits here
by 8 after supper, but don’t stay very
late. Old Mr. Fisbee and Parker look
after whatever comes in then, unless
it’ something special. He'll likely be
here by half past 8 at the farthest off.”
I can't wait till then. [I've been
‘wanting to see him every minute since
1 got in, and he hasn't been near me.
Nobody could even point him out to me.
Where bas be gone? 1 want to sce him
now.”
“Want to discharge bim again?" sald
& voice from the door, and, turning,
they saw that Mr. Martin stood there
observing them.
“No,” said Harkless. “I want to give
him the Herald. Do you know where
he is?”
Mr. Martin stroked his beard delib-
erately. “The person you speak of
hadn't ought to be very hard to find in
Carlow, and—well, maybe when found
you'll want to put a kind of a codicil
to that deed to the Herald. The com-
mittee was reckless enough to hiro that
carriage of yours by the day, and Keat-
tng and Warren Smith are sitting in It
up at the corner with thelr fect on the
cushions to show how used they are
te riding around with four white horses
every day in the week. It's walting
ull you're ready to go out to Briscoes’
‘There's an hour before supper time, and
you can talk to young Fisbee all you
Want. He's out there.”
‘The frat words Warren Smith spoke
had lifted the vell of young Fisbee's
duplicity; had shown Jobn with what
fine intelligence and supreme delicacy
‘and sympathy young Fisbee bad work-
ed for bim, had understood him and
had made him, If the open attack on
McCune had been made and the damna-
tory evidence published in Harkless’
‘own paper while Harkless himself was
& candidate and rival he would have
felt dishonored. The McCune papers
could have been used for Halloway's
Denefit, but not for his own, aud young
Fisbee had understood and bad saved
him. It was a point of honor that many
would have held fnical and inconsist
ent, but one that young Fisbee had
compretiended was vital to Harkless
And this was the man he bad dis
charged like a dishonest servant, the
man who had thrown what (in Carlow
€¥es) was riches into bis lap. the man
who had made his paper and who bad
made him and saved him. Harkless
Wanted to see young Fisbee as he long.
4 to see only one other person in the
world
As the barouche drove up to the
brick house be made out through the
trees a retreative flutter of skirts on
the porch, and the thought crossed his
mind that Minuie bad flown Indoors
to give some final directions toward the
Preparation of the banquet. But when
the barouche halted at the gate be was
Surprised to see her waving to him
from the steps, while Tom Meredith and
Mr. Bence and Mr. Boswell formed a
Se ere nC rT ee eee See
Se ceet Bepaewr. os
‘The old man took his band tn both
his own and looked him between the
eyes and thus stood while there was a
long pause, the others watching them.
“Xbu must not say that I told you,” be
Said at last. “Go Into the garden.”
But when Harkless’ step crunched
the garden there was no one there
Asters were blooming in beds between
‘the green rosebusbes, aud their many
fingered hands were flung open In wide
surprise that he sbould expect to find
young Fisbee there. It was just before
unset. Birds were gossiping In the
‘sycamores on the bank. At the foot of
the garden, near the creek. there were
some tall bydrangea bushes, flower
laden, and beyond them one broad
shaft of sun emote the creek bends for
& mile in that flat land and crossed the
garden like a bright, taut drawn veil
Harkless passed the bushes and step.
ped out into this gold brilliance. Theo
he uttered s cry and stopped. Helen
was standing beside the hydrangeas
with both bands pressed to her face
and her eyes cast on the ground. She
had ron away as far as sbe could run
There were high fences extending
down to the creek on each side, and the
water was beyond.
“You!” be said. “You! You!”
She did not lift her eyes, but began
to move away from him with little
backward steps, When she reached
‘the bench on the bank she spoke with
‘& quick intake of breath and in a roiee
he almost failed to hear, the merest
whisper, and her words came so slow.
ly that sometimes minutes separated
them. “Can you—will yon keep me—on
the Herald?”
“Keep you"—
Be came near ber. “I don't under
stand. Is it you-you—who are here
again?’
‘Have you forgiven me? You know
—now—why I wouldn't resign? You
forgive my—that telegram?”
“What telegram?”
“The one that came to you—this
morning.”
“Your telegram?”
“Yea.”
“Did you send me one?”
“Yea?
“Tt did not come to me.”
“Yes—it did.”
“But—what was it about?”
“It was signed.” she said; “It was
signed”— She paused and turned halt
away, not lifting the downcast lashes
Her band, resting upon the back of the
bench, was shaking. She put it bebind
her. Then her eyes were lifted a little,
and, though they did not meet his, he
‘saw them, and a glory sprang into be-
ing in his heart. Her voice fell still
lower, and two heavy tears rolled down
her cheeks, “It was signed,” she whis.
ered, “it was signed—H. Fisbee.’”
He began to tremble from head to
foot. ‘There was a long silence. She
had turned full away from him. When
he spoke his voice was as low as hers
and he spoke as slowly as she had.
“You mean—then—then it was—you?”
“Yeu.”
“yout”
“Yes.”
“And you~you have—you have been
here all the time?”
“All—all except the week—sou were
—hort”
The bright vell that wrapped them
was drawn away, and they stood in the
/ ie es,
re HAND,
inne i
f Tone Pein pL Beep hie ae eee
quiet, gathering dusk. He tried to
loosen bis neckband; it seemed to be
choking bim. “I—1 can't—I don't com:
Prehend it. I am trying to realize
what it all means."
It means nothing,” she answered.
“There was an editorial yesterday,”
he said, “an editorial that I thought
Was about Redaey McCune, Did you
write it?"
“Yes.”
“It was about—me—wasn't it?”
“Yes.”
“It said—it said that—that T had won
th—the—love of every person in Car-
low county." :
Suddenly she found her voice. “Do
hot misunderstand me,” she said rapid
ly. “I have done the little that I have
done out of gratitude.” She faced him
now, but without meeting his eyes. “I
owed you more gratitude than a wom-
an ever owed a man before, [ think,
and 1 would have died to pay a part
of it.”
“What gratitude did you owe me?”
“What gratiude? For what sou did
for my father.”
“I have uever seen your father in my
lire”
“Listen. My father is a gentle old
man with white hair and kind eyes.
My name is my uncle's. He and my
‘aunt have been good to me as a father
And mother since 1 was seven years
old, and ther cave we their name by
TIt UCI OV? *,ANST, CSI“ OND, VIRGINIA.
Jaw, and I lived with them. My ta-
ther came to sce me once # year; I nev-
er came to see him. He always told me
everything was well with him, that bis
Mfe was happy, and I thought it was
easter for bim not having me to take
care of, he has been #0 poor ever since
I was a child. Once he lost the littie
he bad left to bim in the world, bis
only way of making bis living He had
no friends; he was hungry and desper-
ate, and he wandered. 1 was dancing
and going about wearing jewels—only
I did not know, Alt the time the brave
heart wrote me happy letters. I should
have known, for there was one who
did and who saved him. When at last
1 came to see my father he told me—he
had written’ of his idol before, but it
was not till I came that he told it all
to me. Do you know what I felt?
While his daughter was dancing co-
tillons a stranger bad taken his hand
and—and"— A sob rose in her throat
and checked her utterance for a mo-
ment, but she threw up her head proud-
ly. “Gratitude, Mr. Harkless!” she
erfed. “I am James Fisbee’s daugh-
ter?"
He fell back from the bench with a
sharp exclamation and stared at ber
throug the gray twilight. She went
‘on hurriedly, still not looking at him.
“T wanted to do something to show you
that I could be ashamed of my vile
neglect of bim—something to show you
bis daughter could be grateful—and it
bas been such dear, bappy work, the
Uttle T have done. that {t seems, after
all, that I have done It for love of my-
welf. It ts what I bad always wanted
te do—to earn a living for myself, to
Hye with my father. When I came
here, my aunt and uncle were terribly
afraid T would stay with him. It was
to prevent this that they determined to
go abroad, and my father said I must
go back to them. Then you were—
were hurt, and he needed me so much
be let me stay. When you—when
you told me”—she broke off with a
strange, futtering, half inarticulate lit-
tle Iaugh that was half tears and then
resumed in another tone—“when you
told me you cared that night—ihat
night of the storm—how could I be
sure? It had been only twe days, you
See, and even if I could bave been sure
of myself—why, I couldn't have told
you. Oh, I bad so brazenly thrown my-
‘elf at your head time and again those
two days in my—my worship of your
goodness to my father and my excite-
ment tn recognizing in his friend the
hero of my girlhood that you had ev-
ery right to think I cared; but if—but
if I had—if T bad—toved you with my
whole soul I could not have—why, no
Woman could have—I mean the sort of
girl L am—couldn’t have kdmitted It—
must have denied it. Do you think that
then I could have answered ‘Yes.’ even
if I had wanted to—even if I had been
sure of myself? And now"— Her
volce sank again to a whisper. “And
now" —
“And now?” he said tremulously. She
gave a burried glance from right to left
and from left to right, like one in ter-
ror seeking a way of escape; she gath-
ered her skirts in her hand as if to run
into the garden, but suddenly she turn.
ed and ran to him. She threw her arms
about his neck and kissed him on the
forehead.
When they heard the judge cailing
from the orchard they went back
through the garden toward the house.
It was dark. ‘The whitest asters were
but gray splotches. There was no one
in the orchard. Briscoe had gone in-
doors.
“Did you know you are to drive me
into town in the phaeton for the fire.
works?” she asked.
“Fireworks?”
“Yes, The great Harkless has come
home.” Even in the darkness he could
see the look the vision had given him
when the barouche turned into the
square. She smiled upon him and
sald, “All afternoon I was wishing |
could have been your mother.”
He clasped her hand more tightly
“This wonderful world!” he cried
“Yesterday I had a doctor—a doctor tc
cure me of lovesickness!”
After a time they had proceeded
Nttle nearer the house. “We musi
hurry," she said. “Iam sure they have
been waiting for us.” This was true
they had.
From the dining room came laughter
and hearty voices, and the windows
were bright with the light of mang
lamps. By and by they stood just out
side the patch of lizut that fell from
one of the windows.
*“Look!" said Helen, “Aren't they
good, dear people?"
“Tbe beautiful people! he answered
THE END.
‘The British Gainen.
It is among the things generally
known that the guinea obtained its
name from the gold from which it was
made having been brought from the
Guinea coast by the African company
of traders. ‘The first notice of this
gold was in 1619, during the common-
Wealth of England, when on the 1th of
April of that year the parliament re-
ferred to the council of state a paper
Presented to the house concerning the
coinage of gold brought in a ship lately
come from “Guiny” for the better ad-
vancing of trade. But it was in the
reign of Charles II. that the name was
first given to this coin. It is among
things not generally known that when
the guinea was originally coined the
intention was to make it current as a
twenty shilling piece, but from an er-
ror, or rather a series of errors, in cal-
culating the exact proportions of the
value of gold and silver it never cir-
culated for that value. Sir Isaae New-
ton in his time fixed the true value of
the guinea in relation to silver at 208.
8d. and by his advice the crown pro-
claimed that for the future it should
be current at 21 shillings.
Rlsbe ta Une.
Hicks—He's trying berry culture now,
you know, and he says he's baving
considerable success,
Wicks—Yes?
Hicks—Yes, although he admits the
returns are small as yet.
Wicks — Well, that sounds natural.
You might call that “success, with small
fruits."—Catholic Standard and Times.
Wisdom That Comes with Marriage.
Here is something a man soon learns
after he marries: Nothing that is tash-
fonable is too thin for winter or too
heavy for summer.—Atchison Globe,
pear eri a7 yA aaa
ba EA: Sa dae .s
Sol! ee EY ear /
Be NOE AS ft Mes
yy eas Che
é Me SS rin
ee ees
a ae JAPAN oa
tN SEA i oe <
a et
eee Boot
i) — See <
Mi i Se >
Fa CAP FES
aay SVs SCR
fe EN PP ee SO
4b. eon
"BRONSON .*
oe =. e
sa ~~, ™ :
THE SEAPORTS OF JAPAN.
Raa 2 ) hee sas
Reg i)
a Oe Y
We Is
\ Ms i,
ae of Se
e Wao h oy 7 Wy é
Ng
© a 7 a, pay waaLsKO
fom ei} VLADIvgst j
OLED ti ene
anos pilleroen Serteege a
pay sae ek
Rees g * @ISPNGCHIN
AMT oh re) =
Be Fuh cd wi ony S_E A.
Fe Nena hacer 0
fA ii a eee EO
Up a) JAPAN
5s SNS STATUTE MILES
SA. CHEFOS ay : “Tt 100 0 oO
MAP_OF VLADIVOSTOK AND VICINITY.
THIS CROW IS ALL RIGHT, | Louts. after jeaving Keokuk. Miss Vai
Calls the Hour When the Clock Strikes
and Always Gets the Time
Correctly.
George Wreake, of Sibley township
near here, has a pet crow, Bob, which
has been with him four years, and
which he asserts is the most intelligent
nd useful bird living, says a Lesueur
(Minn.) correspondent of the New York
Herald.
‘There is in the Wreake home a
beautiful cuckoo clock, brought from
Switzerland in pioneer days.
After the crow had been in the fam-
ily about two years he began to mock
the cuckoo, and this finally grew to be
@ passion with him, so that he hardly
ever failed to give a melodious, caw
when the clock was calling the “hour.
Some six months ago, by reason of au
accident to the shelf on which it was
standing, the clock fell and the cuckoo
Part was completely broken, so. tM:
the door never opens and the bird
ever comes out. This appeared to be
cee
Pe? ay R |
2 iv \
aa y Bi
@ great puzzle to Bob, for he watched
the clock several days and seemed to
be studying deeply.
At last, however, he came to a con-
clusion, and greatly startled the family
by taking up the duty the cuckoo had
previously performed, and counting
out the hours perfectly, at the exact
moment, with a clear call of “caw” for
every hour the clock ought to havo
struck, one for one o'clock, five for fiva
o'clock and so on around the circle,
He has kept bis word up to the present
time, and calls every hour when he can
see the face of the clock as regularly
and perfectly as an ordinary timeplece
with its hammer and bell.
If a lamp be lighted and a pin bé
thrust into the wooden face of the
clock, so that the minute hand will
pass over it, but the hour hand will
catch on it and stop the clock at any
hour of the morning, between four and
seven o'clock, Bob will notice it as
soon as the clock stops, and raise a
shrill cawing and keep it up till some
one gets up and removes the pin.
ROMANCE BEGAN IN DREAM.
Man's Conquest Was Arranged and
Known Several Years Before
He Saw His Bride.
‘There are fewer life romances
stranger than the one which came to
Miss Ada Vail, of Keokuk, Ia. One
aight while the family were living in St.
Louls, after ieaving Keokuk, Miss Vail
dreamed of the man she was going to
marry. The dream was a vivid one. In
it she not only saw her future husband,
but learned his name. In the morning
she told her mother of the strange pre-
sentiment and said that her future lord
and master’s name was Dr. Barton, The
family laughed over it, and thought no
more about it at the time. Later Mrs.
Vail’s health failed, and, accompanied
by her daughter, she went to a health
resort.
‘While passing through the lobby of
the hotel one day Miss Vail suddenly
<slinadhs tables ‘euaiadili dass catia Moon Citailee baat
Las ay
ag Kd \y
iF Na id
J if i i ‘We
NN
Hi Me \
ea \ A
“There he is, mother, that is the man
fam to marry.”
The man was a stranger. They had
never seen kim before, but Miss Vall
was positive that he was the lover she
had seen in her dream.
‘They met, and from the first Dr. Bar-
ton, for that was the stranger's name,
was attracted by the young woman.
They were married, but it was not un-
til after the wedding that he learned the
strange story of how his conquest was
arranged and known several years be-
fore he saw his bride,
Newest Kink in Stockings.
The most popular stockings in Paris
Just now are those made like a glove, with
@ separate compartment for each toe.
It is said they prevent corns, and ease
them if they already exist.
Mountain Moonshine.
When some mountaineer down in
Kentucky undertakes to gather the
fragrance of flowers, and the rays of
the sunshine, and the music of the
birds, and the glories of the heavens,
and blend them all into a little moon-
shine whisky, there is always some-
body there to see that he is brought
before the commissioner and prose-
cuted under the law.—Hon. Martin J.
Wade, of Iowa.
2h Siiielie Cuatean
Citizens of Manchester, England, are
complaining bitterly and writing to the:
Papers because the conductors on the
tram cars “squeeze 20 persons into
Seats constructed for 18," and worse!
SUll, “allow some people to stand up.”|
London Proper.
While London is steadily growing,
the, population of the -“city” Is con-
stantly decreasing. In 1871 it was 47,-
000; to-day it is 30,000. Nearly 5,000
of its buildings are not inhabited at
night.
London Prover.
I rm Kh Sy Y > +
AND (a £)
— Wy
PO QBEES
GRADE THE CRACKED CORN.
It Pays to Do This Wherever a Large
Number of Hens and Chicks
Is Kept.
In feeding dry cracked corn to poul-
try much of the very fine is wasted un-
less it is sifted more thoroughly than
is usually the case when brought from
the mill, and often it is impossible to
get the sizes wanted for feeding from
the finely crackeu for little chicks to
very coase cracked for fowls and pig-
fons. This led me to arrange a sort of
Grader I made a hopper large enough
to hold @ hundredweight or so of
cracked corn, with a shut-off in bottom
so as to regulate the flow of grain, then
with three sizes of galvanized wire net-
ting I made screens about one foot
HOMEMADE SCREENER.
wide by six feet long. The hopper was
Placed up at the head of the granary
stairway with the screens underneath
in such a manner that when the
cracked corn is allowed to run slowly
from the hopper it grades nicely into
three sizes of cracked corn, besides the
fine meal, which would go to waste if
scattered on the ground for the poultry,
and anyone would be surprised at the
amount of this meal saved even from
the best sifted cracked corn. The size
of screens may be arranged to suit each
user. I use No. 4 for top or coarsest
as I want it as coarse as possible for
pigeons; No. 6 for second, and No. 12
for nest. These sizes if set at an angle
that, the corn will run down nicely
without requiring any shaking to pre-
Yent lodging. will give nice grades of
eracked corn. The more upright the
grader is placed the more fine will be
left in the coarser grades, and the less
thoroughly will it be sifted. ‘This has
Saved me many times its cost in the
meal saved alone, aside from the con-
venience of having the sie cracked
wanted for the different birds. At times
when feeding largely on cracked corn
T have saved enough meal to feed two
cows.—Rural New Yorker.
ENTRANCE TO THE BEEHIVE
It Should Be Large Enough to Allow
Ventilation and Plenty of
“Elbow” Space.
Common opinion holds that the low-
er part of the hive is the proper place
for the entrance as it protects the
brood nest and at the same time gives
the bees a better chance to clean their
hive of capping refuse and dead bees
and to keep their house in general or-
der. Some argue that the entrane
should be near the top of the hive, thus
giving bees a short cut to the combs,
Dut on the other hand you are giving
the cold air a chance to get to brood
‘cluster, and this will bring about bad
results. The size of the entrance
Should be ample and not too small.
During the rush of the honey season
the writer uses a space 3x% inches, and
during very warm weather raises hives
one-quarter inch in front by means of
wedges. This allows ventilation and
plenty of space for all requirements
during warm spring days. When rob-
bers are apt to cause trouble close up
the entrance, allowing only about
enough space for two bees to enter at
once. Of course your strong swarms
will take ‘care of themselves, but by
doing this with your light ones you
Will Save much trouble—G. H. Towns-
end, in Ohio Farmer.
POULTRY PARAGRAPHS.
A chick that becomes stunted seldom
Attains good size or weight. Keep them
growing.
Chicks should never be kept on
‘board floors. Such floors should be
well covered with dry earth and litter.
|The breeder who expects to arty. of
the laurels at the fall fairs of 1904
‘should get his chicks well under way
now.
| Well-kept, well-ventilated and thor-
oughly clean houses should be proof
against sickness of any kind in. the
flock.
It fs not advisable to give a male
more than ten females to take care of,
ordinarily, althorgh more than. this
number can be given an extra vigorous
male.
It is a waste of time, space and food
to attempt to grow exhibition birds of
merit from inferior stock. ‘The very
best will throw quite enough of the
Poorer quality.—Commereial Poultry.
‘The Hens Pay the Rent,
John Pridge, of West Union, Ia.,
lives upon an 80-acre farm and by hard
work and the raising of poultry he has
been able to do exceedingly well and
make more than a comfortable living
by the raising of chickens and selling
of poultry and eggs. Mr. Pridge has
sold in one year's time $267 worth of
eggs, or more than enough to pay the
rent of the farm. He attributes his
success to the attention he gives to the
elite ihe Side baa ce
EVOLUTION OF THE CHICK.
A Study in Embryology Which Can-
not Fail to Be of Interest to
Poultry Raisers.
One of the best means of studying
embryology is the egg of the fowl—
any breed will do. So alike are the
embryos of such vastly different be-
ings, as the fish, the fowl, reptiles, the
s
}
Borse, the man, af certain correspom@t
‘ing stages in their prenatal career:
only a skilled scientist can tell “
from which.” All animals start life
‘@ single cell (none larger than the slz€
of a pin point), and although the eI
esses of nutrition are dissimilar,
Principles are practically the same. al
‘The incubator has ‘Scarcely gone
its hatching career or the hen hes
scarcely set on her eggs 12 hours be:
fore some lineaments of the head an@
body of the chicken appear. The heart
may be seen to beat at the end of the
second day. It has at this time ‘somes
what the form of a horseshoe, but n@
blood yet appears. At the end of twe
days two vesicles of blood are to be dime
tinguished; the pulsation of which te
very visible. One of these is the ete
ventricle, and the other the root of
the great artery. At the fiftieth hour
an auricle of the heart appears, Tee
sembling a noose folded down upon {te
self. The beating of the heart is first
observed in the auricle, and afterwardy
in the ventricle. At the end of the seve
entieth hour the wings are distinguish.
able; and on the head two bubbles are
seen for the brain, one for the bill, an@
two for the fore and hind parts of the
head: Towards the end of four days the
two auricles already visible draw nearer
to the heart than before. The liver ap
pears toward the fifth day. At the en@
of 131 hours, the first voluntary motion
is observed. At the end ofseven hours
‘more the lungs and stomach become vise
ible, and four hours tater the intestines,
the loins and the upper jaw. At the one
hundred and forty-fourth hour two ven=
tricles are visible and two drops of blood,
instead of the single one as seen before,
The seventh day the brain begins tohave
some consistency. At the one hundre@
and ninetieth hour of incubation the bilt
opens and the flesh appearson the breast,
In four hours more the breastbone te
seen. In six hours after this the ribs
appear, forming from the back, and the
Dill ts very visible, as well as the galt
dladder. The bill becomes Breen at the
end of 236 hours; and, if the chicken be
taken out of its covering, it evidently
moves itself. The feathers begin to
shoot out toward the two hundred an@
fortieth hour, and the skull becomes:
gristly. At the two hundred and sixty~
fourth hour the eyes appear. At the
two hundred and eighty-eighth the vibe
are perfect. At the three hundred an@
thirty-first the spleen draws near the
stomach and the lungs to the chest. At
the end of 355 hours the bill frequently
opens and shuts, and at the end of the
eighteenth day the first chirp of the
chicken is heard.—Wilcox Review.
COOPS FOR SMALL CHICKS,
Models Here Described Have Been
‘Used to Advantage for Quite s
a Long Time.
‘The coop I use, shown in sketch, is
much better if made of pine. It is made
in three separate pieces, the roof and
bottom being removable. The roof pro=
Jects over the coop on all sides, but much:
farther im front and back. This is te
keep rain from beating in. The roof
boards are nailed to two narrow pieces,
which are just the length of the inside
CO esnit
| :
of the coop, and are placed far enough,
from the front and the back to fit inside
the coop. The cracks are battened.
‘The floor (d) is made to slip in at the
back like a drawer. This coop is very
easily sunned and cleaned on account
of the removable floor and roof. The
eight-inch board at the top in front has
holes bored in for ventilation. A wood-
en button on top board and a two-inch
strip at the bottom holds on the frame
of wire screen which is used stormy
days when the chicks are too young to
Tun out, and on warm nights. At oth-
er times a slatted wooden front (b) ig
used. a
Tmake this coop in two sizes—a single
coop 20 Inches square, 24 inches high
in front and 16 inches in the back, and a
ouble coop is 30 inches long and 24
inches wide. A removable lath parti-
tion (c) divides it—Orange Jugg
Farmer. }
Dies Geen Pak en te. |
Tt ts customary on farms to give all
the surplus milk to the hogs and let
the chickens have what they can suc~
cessfully forage, when the truth of 3g-
ures proves conclusively that milk fed
to chickens will produce more pounds
of poultry to a given amount of food
}than can be transformed into hog
meat, and that this poultry meat is on
Jan average worth about double the
price per pound that can be obtained
for hog meat. Notwithstanding this,
the hen must still run the gauntlet of
& shower of corn cobs, old shoes and
flying clubs if she gets a grain or two
of corn from the hog pen at any time,
—Inland Poultry Journal.
| Those who know the value of using
only the best stock obtainable in the
‘Breeding pen are the ones who make
‘high-class poultry pay. t
Peete
Judge Knox—You are charged with
arson.
Prisoner—Call my wife. She can
swear that I never started a fire in my
Hife—Toronto Siar.
Interested. ‘
“Do you admire Beethoven's works?*
“I never visited ‘em,” answered Mr.
Cumrox, absent-mindedly. “What does
he manufacture?”—Washington Star.
‘Stuteieat eiehaston:
Harker—My wife hasn't spoken a cross
word to me for some time.”
Barker—Indeed. When did she leave
town?—Chicago Daily News.
Mostly That.
“He has invented a flying machine.®
“What is it—gas or hot air?”
“Hot air, | think,from his talk.""—
Chicago Post.
THE PLANET
published every Saturday by JOHN A. AUCK
B. at 311 North 4th Street Richmond, Va
All communications intended for publica
should be sent so as to reach us by Wednesda
TERMS IN ADVANCE
ADVERTISING RATES
for one inch, one insertion, $ 50
for one inch, each subsequent insertion, $ 25
for two inches, three months, $ 20
for two inches, six months, $ 10.00
for two inches, nine months, $ 11.77
for two inches, twelve months, $ 30.00
for two inches, thirty months, $ 45.00
standing and Transition Notices per line.
POSTAGE STAMPS OF A HIGHER DR
COMINATION THAN TWO CENTS NOT
RECEIVED ON SUBSCRIPTIONS
THE PLANET is issued weekly. The subscrip-
tion price is $1.5 a year, in advance.
There are four WARS by which money can be
obtained in the Post Office. Money
Order, by bank Check or Drift, or in Ex-
press Money Order and when none of these
can be procured, in a Register Letter.
Money Order at your Post Office, payable at the Richmond
Post Office, and we will be responsible for its
arrival.
EXPRESS MONEY ORDERs can be obtained at
the United States Express Co., and the Wei, Far-
co and Co.'s Express Company. We will be
responsible for money sent by any of these com-
panies. The Mail, Money Poster is safe and
convenient way for forwarding money.
REGISTERED LETTER—If a Money Order
post Office or an Express Office is not with-
holding, you may send it to the post
letter you wish to send us on payment of
tokens. Then, if the letter is lost or stolen,
you can send money in this manner at our risk.
We cannot be responsible for money sent in
atters in any other way than one of the four
ways mentioned above. If you send your mon-
ney in another way, you must do it at your
own risk.
RENEWALS, ETC. If you do not want the
PLANET continued for another year after your
payment, you must re-continue it. The courts have
decided that subscribers to newspapers who do
not order their paper discontinued at the expire-
date, and said liable for the payment of the subscrip-
tion up to date when they order the paper dis-
counsured.
MUNICIA —When writing to us to
renew your subscription or to discontinue
our paper, you should give your name and
address in full, otherwise we cannot find you
their accounts.
CANCELING PRESS —In order to enqage
the address of a subscriber, we must be sent
the former as well as the present address.
Entered in the Post Office at Richmond.
Second class master.
COLORED people should read and support race journals.
A movement is on foot to establish an automobile service in this city.
Some colored folks can walk twenty-miles a day and be happy at the end of the trip.
THE "Jim Crow" department of the street-cars look as though colored folks were sent up town and couldn't.
THE present troublous conditions should emphasize the fact that colored people have no time to be fighting each other.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT is resting himself while the Democrats are fighting each other as to whom they shall nominate against him.
OUR dodging United States Supreme Court is somewhat tired, but will dodge a few more cases, if some one will be so impolite as to throw them up there.
WALKING is good now. Continue to stay off the street-cars and avoid trouble. Those who framed the law to injure us are very much chagrined to find that white folks are receiving the full effect of the blow.
---
We are not giving the street-car people any trouble on their cars, but we are causing many frowns on their countenances when they look at their pockets.
Colored folks are walking, yes, nearly all are walking.
The Virginia Passenger and Power Company officials are still trying to explain why they were forced to make a "Jim Crow" arrangement on the street-cars that it was not forced to make.
The more they explain, the angrier the white folks get, and the colored folks—are walking.
ME. THOMAS NELSON PAGE'S CONCLUSIONS.
MR. THOMAS NELSON PAGE contributes a third paper on "The Negro: The Southerner's Problem," to McClure's MAGAZINE for MAY.
It is the best and the worst of all of the dissertations that he has delivered upon this subject. He makes some remarkable concessions, but he blurs the whole by the concluding statements to which we shall call particular attention before we conclude our review of all that he has beed unkind enough to say. Mr. PAGE writes:
"Thirty-eight years have passed since the Negro was set free and became his
own master. By sentimentalists and Negro writers and orators most of the Negro's shor comings are usually charred to slavery, and undoubtedly slavery leaves certain traits which the student can readily detect. But most of the class of writers referred to ignore the fact that the Negro at the close of slavery was in a higher condition of civilization than when he came a savage from the hills of Africa; that, indeed, this very civilization of slavery America had given to him the only semblance of civilization which the Negro race has possessed since the dawn of history.
The above admits of no denial. It is the statement of a fact conceded by the pro Negro as well as the Anti-Negro elements of the Southland.
We concede the following also:
"Whatever evils slavery may have entailed upon the Negro, this much may unquestionably be predicted of it; it left him a trained laborer and in good physical condition. He started in on a new era with a large share of friendliness on the part of the South and with the enthusiastic good-will of the North. He had little property, and not more than two or three per cent, were able to read; but he commanded the entire field of labor in the South, while a certain percentage, composed of house-servants, had the knowledge which comes from holding positions of responsibility and from association with educated people."
But Mr. PAGE in stating that the Negro was a trained laborer carefully avoids the statement that he was a skilled mechanic. He knows that intelligence and education are the essential elements in the composition of a work man of the latter character. He makes the following glowing statement which in all of its essentials is specifically true:
"When the war closed, among the four millions of Negroes who then inhabited the South, there was, with the exception of the invalids, the cripples, and the superannated, scarcely adult who was not a trained laborer or a skilled artisan. In the cotton section they knew how to raise and prepare cotton; in the sugar belt they knew how to grow and grind sugar; in the tobacco, corn, wheat, and hay belt they knew how to raise and prepare for market those crops. They were the shepherds, cattle men, horse-trainers, and raisers. The entire industrial work of the South was performed by them. They were the treadmill servants; laundresses, nurses, and midwives. They were the carpenters, smiths, coopers, sawyers, whealwrights, bricklayers, and boatmen. They were the tanners and shoemakers, miners and stonecutters, tailors and knitters, spinners and weavers. Nearly all the houses in the South were built by them. They manufactured most of the articles that were manufactured in the South."
He gives the following interesting ap- proximate statistics:
"In 1860 there were in the Southern States between five and six hundred thousand slave owners and slave hirers, and there were four million and a quarter slaves, or about eight slaves to each owner. In Georgia, for example, there were in 1860, 462,198 slaves, owned by 41,084 owners. Of these slave owners, perhaps, every one had at least one house servant, and most of them had several. Striking and between the smaller slave owner and the larger, it would probably be found that the proportion of mechanics and artisans to the entire population was about the same that it is in any agricultural community, or as the man is known to be generally not as industrious and efficient as the free workman, the percentage was possibly higher than it is to day in the West or in the agricultural parts of the South. It is not pretended that this is more than a conjecture, but it is a conjecture based upon what appears a conservative estimate."
He then tells what the South has done for the Negro in the matter of education, without a single reference to what the Negro has done for the South in the matter of increasing its material wealth and adding to its industrial prosperity.
He says:
"Since that time over $109,000,000 has been expended by the South on the Negro's education, besides what has been expended by private charity, which is estimated to amount to $30,000,000."
The South has faithfully applied itself during all these years to giving the Negroes all the opportunities possible for attaining an education, and it is one of the most creditable pages in her history that in face of the horror of Negro domination during the Reconstruction period, of the disappointment, in face of the fact that the education of the Negroes has appeared to be used by them only as a weapon with which to oppose the white race, the latter should have persistently given so largely of its stores to provide this misused education. Of the $109,000,000 which the Southern States have since the war, applied to the education of the Negro by voluntary taxation, over $100,000,000 was raised by the votes of the Whites from taxation on the property of the Whites. Several times of late years, propositions have been made in various legislatures in the South to dovo e the money raised by taxation on the property of each race exclusively to the education of that race, but in every case, to their credit it is said, the propositions have been overwhelmingly defeated. The total expenditure for public schools in the South in the year 1898 1899 was $2,849 892, of which $5,699,978 was to sustain Negro schools."
Mr. P. Poggi states that the South has given the Negro ($109,000,000) one hundred and nine million dollars for education. What has the Negro given the South in wealth?
He boasts that one hundred million dollars of this money came from the direct taxation of the Whites. We rise to enquire who gave the Whites this property from which this taxation was derived? Let us see.
The official statistics show that the total number of bales of cotton produced in this country in the southern states, and almost exclusively by Negro labor for seventy four years, from 1839 to 1903, was (317 509,461) three hundred and seventeen million, five hundred and nine thousand, four hundred and sixty-one bales of cotton.
The price of cotton ranges in the markets from 13 cents per pound upwards. We have placed it at ten cents per pound and the value of this vast output which the Negroes have poured into the pockets of the white people of the South is ($15,463,710,750.70) fifteen billion, four hundred and sixty-two million.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
seven hundred and ten thousand, seven hundred and fifty dollars and seventy cents or fifteen thousand, four hundred and sixty-two million dollars.
Now let Mr. PAGE value this cotton at 5 cents per pound and see even then the great value of the Negroes to the Southland, or let him make a liberal discount and allege that some of the cotton is picked by white labor.
Admitting this to be true now, he must concede that for all of the true—years preceding the Civil War—about seventy-nine years, the entire cotton crop was the product of Negro labor.
But what about the tobacco? The value of the tobacco crop for 1902 in VIRGINIA, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA, GEORGIA, FLORIDA, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, LOUISIANA, TEXAS, ARKANSAS, TENNESSEE and KENTUCKY was ($40,115,068) forty million, one hundred and fifteen thousand and sixty-eight dollars.
Make your liberal reductions, Mr. PAGE, for the portion produced by white labor. You know that more than fifty percent of the tobacco crop is the product of the much abused black man of the Southland.
Here then, you have of only twostaple products of the South, sixty five thousand and million dollars worth of it produced by the Negroes to whom you, representing the white people of the Sunny South have given one hundred million dollars, extending over a period of forty-four years.
According to your own figures, you still have sixty-four thousand, nine hundred million dollars now to the credit of these Negroes, whom you alleged have been living upon the White man's bounty, Mr. PAGE.
Mark you, we have not figured on the corn, wheat, cats, sugar, molasses and the orchard and truck products of the Southland.
We ask you in all kindness, what becomes of your hospitality? Do you argue like Robin Hood or other Knights-errant of the road that you took only a part of our labor instead of all, or that admitting you took all, you distributed a per cent, be it ever so small, among the poor (Negroes) in the localities in which you plied your avocation and waxed fat upon the accumulations of others?
But enough, we shall deal with the question further in our next issue.
He Was Flourishing.
"I hear that Jimpkins is getting along fine in the city," said Hobbson.
"I supose he is, maybe; but I never thought he would," commented Niverly.
"His father told me he was flourishing, though."
"Yes, he is. He is teaching penmanship."—Judge.
Too True.
Yes, "asters by the brookside"
Make the asters in the brook.
But cook books in the kitchen
Don't always make a cook.
-N. O. Times-Democrat.
Cook—I wonder what would happen if tradesmen allers told the truth?
Made Some Reservation.
A man who bought stock in a co.
Inquired if its value would be.
They told him it could.
And it probably would.
Proved the price didn't so.
-Life
She Knew Him.
"We've got to economize," he said.
"Do you mean that literally?" she asked.
"Of course," he replied.
"Well, I'm glad of that," she said, "for you usually mean that I've got to economize when you say 'we.'" - Chicago Post.
Benevolent Microbes
And germs that you meet at the phone.
She was shy of the theatre-payhouse,
she was shy of the theatre-payhouse.
But she wasn't a bit bit of the microbes
If there were any on Archibad's lips.
I'll just stick with the original.
Grievance.
Clergyman—Yes, time is speeding on; eternity looms before us and the season will soon be buried in the past—
Giddy Girl—Isn't it dreadful? I haven't worn half my gowns yet.—New York Herald.
One Advantage
Myer—Some of these Biblical characters were smart people. Gyer—Yes; but we have one great advantage over them.
Myer—And that is?
Gyer—We are still living.—Chicago
Daily News.
It All Depends.
"They tell me," said the Ludlow youth. "that men who work live longest. Do you believe it?" "Well," replied the Cumminsville sage. "it depends a good deal on who they try to work."—Cincinnati Enquirer.
WENTZ WAS SHOT THROUGH HEART
Coroner's Inquest' Probing Death of Philadelphia Millionaire.
ACCIDENT, SUICIDE OR MURDER
Bristol, Va., May 11.—The shrunken and decayed body of Edward L. Wentz, the Philadelphia millionaire, was literally taken to pieces by physicians and detectives in the course of the coroner's inquest.
The startling feature of the inquest was the discovery of a 32-calibre pistol ball in the body, which might have been discharged from the empty pistol
EDWARD L. WENTZ
of the same calibre found 18 feet from the remains. The bail had passed through the fifth rib, entering in front, had penetrated the heart, a back rib, and lodged in the muscles of the back, one and a half inches from the spine. Several holes were found in the clothing other than where the bullets entered, but beneath the body was found intact. The right hand was found to be missing, and was probably borne away by wild beasts. A white pearl button, which could not have belonged to the murdered man, was found near. Detectives on the scene made careful examination of the pistol, finding it to be a Smith & Wesson. Two cartridges were on either side of the hammer, but the chamber under the hammer contained an empty shell, as well as the two lower chambers. A loaded cartridge of 32-calibre was found seven feet from the body. Many articles in his pocket were found intact.
At the conclusion of the inquest it was decided that nothing further could be gained by holding the body here longer. Consequently the special train which brought the brothers of the dead man, physicians and detectives to the scene, left today. The remains occupy the front section of the private car in which the party travel.
F. P. Dimalo, superintendent of the Pinkerton detective agency, of Philadelphia, who accompanied the Wenz brothers to the scene, will not return, but remains to make a thorough investigation, following the verdict of the coroner's jury.
It was stated by persons close to the Wentz boys that the question of reward will be settled as to the amount and time of payment after the verdict is rendered. The terms of the offer standing of the past month are said to be a "suitable raward," instead of a specified amount. The most intense excitement prevails, and at the inquest there were 500 persons gathered. There is a great difference of opinion as to the cause of Wentz's death, whether accident, suicide or murder. Many believe it was suicide.
Warrants Served On Suspects
Warrants Served On Suspects.
Knoxville, Tennessee. May 11.—Warrants were served on Silas Ison and Tom Wright, prisoners in jail at Tazewell, Tenn., charging them with the murder of E. L. Wentz, whose body was found near Big Stone Gap last Sunday. The two men were being held in jail on the charge of being fugitives from justice, awaiting orders from Virginia. The men were first suspected of being the murderers of Wentz, because a riding suit similar to one worn by Wentz when he went riding was found in their quarters in the mountains. This suit of clothing had blood stains on it. Wentz, it is said, was strongly opposed to these men running a blind tiger in Wise county, Va.
SAVED BY BRAVE ENGINEER
Scranton, Pa., May 9—James Shay, engineer at the Blue Ridge colliery, near Peckville, has made himself a fitting candidate for enrollment on the Carnegie hero roll. With flames all about him and a hose company playing a stream of water on him to keep his clothing from taking fire, he stood at the lever in the fiercely burning engine house and safely hoisted 15 men to the surface. A moment after he staggered out of the building, with his face and hands badly blistered, the roof of the building fell in. The engine room, the fan house and the shaft tower were completely destroyed. The loss is about $10,000.
Memorial Meeting to Judge Simonton
Richmond, Va., May 11.—Chief Justice Fuller, of the United States supreme court, sat with Judge Purnell, of North Carolina; Judge Brawley, of South Carolina; Judge Morris, of Maryland; Judge Goff, of West Virginia, and Judge Waddill, of the district court of Virginia, at a memorial meeting here to honor the late Judge Simonton. The chief justice was among those who paid tribute to the departed justice.
Suicide at World's Fair.
St. Louis, May 11.—Captain Walter Allen, of St. Louis, connected with the World's Fair Jefferson Guards, and a brother of former Congressmen John Allen, national World's Fair commissioner from Mississippi, committed suicide by shooting himself through the heart in a room in the dormitory of the Washington University, now utilized by the exposition. He left a note stating that ill health had driven him to commit the act.
CHIEF ENGINEER OF PANAMA CANAL
John F. Wallace to Have Charge of Construction of Waterway.
Washington, May 11. — Admiral Walker, president of the Panama canal commission, has received a telegram from John Findley Wallace, of Chicago, general manager of the Illinois Central railroad, accepting the appointment of chief engineer in charge of the construction of the canal. Mr. Wallace will receive a salary of $25,000 a year.
"Mr. Wallace has been considered for some time by members of the canal commission for the position of chief engineer," said Admiral Walker. "No one stands higher in his profession or is better equipped to take up the work mapped out than he, and the commission is to be congratulated on securing the services of such a man."
Mr. Wallace will take up his work with the commission on June 1. He will arrive in Washington on or before that date, and for the present will have his office at the headquarters of the commission in this city. It has not been determined when he will visit the isthmus, all matters of detail being left for a future conference with the commission.
In regard to the salary to be paid Mr. Wallace, Admiral Walker said that when a man undertakes to direct the construction of the Panama canal project it is necessary for him to burn his ships behind him, and that $25,000 is not too high for a man competent for so important a trust. "Whoever undertakes that task gives up his business in this country, for it will require all his time on the isthmus for an indefinite period," said the admiral.
During the recent trip of the Panama canal commissioners to the isthmus one of the subjects of discussion was the appointment of the chief engineer. It was agreed by every one that the man selected must possess exceptional qualifications, must be not only an engineer, but an administrator and executive, must have mature judgment, and yet energy of accomplishment; must be well known and favorably known, as a very great measure of the success of the commission would depend on the chief engineer.
While the commission was at sea on the way to the isthmus, a letter was written to Mr. Wallace, asking him to meet the members in New York on their return and talk the matter over. President Fish, of the Illinois Central, was very unwilling to have Mr. Wallace leave the service of the company, but the appointment having been tendered, left the decision entirely with Mr. Wallace himself. In reaching the conclusion to accept, Mr. Wallace gave up his prospects of promotion and a much higher salary than $25,000 a year, but by taking the position of chief engineer of the Panama canal his name will be attached to the greatest piece of construction ever undertaken.
It is estimated that about two years will be required to complete the surveys, make the estimates of cost and decide on the final plans. In round figures the canal will cost $200,000,000, and will require 10 years to complete. Aside from the engineers, machinists and other skilled labor, the constructive work will give employment to 50,000 men.
TO RULE CANAL ZONE
General Davis, of Panama Board, Will Be the Governor.
Washington, May 10. — President Roosevelt had a long conference with Secretaries Hay and Taft and Attorney General Knox, at which the regulations to govern the isthmian canal commission were determined upon finally.
General George W. Davls, the army member of the commission, is appointed governor of the American zone on the isthmus. Until the expiration of the 55th congress the isthmian commission will exercise legislative authority over the American strip. Governor Davis is given authority to appoint one judge, who shall exercise judicial authority.
The commission will report directly to the secretary of war as often as he may direct upon all phases of its operations. It will be under the same sort of control of the secretary of war as is the Philippine commission.
Sir Henry M. Stanley Dead
London, May 11. — Sir Henry M. Stanley, the African explorer, is dead. A fortnight ago Sir Henry, who has been in weak health some months, caught a chill, which resulted in a severe attack of pleurisy with complications. He was quite conscious to the last and able to recognize his wife. Before he died Sir Henry expressed a wish to be buried at his country seat, Furze Hill, Pirbringht, Surrey. The question, however, is being discussed of burying him beside Livingstone, in Westminster Abbey.
Body Found Floating In Delaware
Wilmington, Del., May 9. "The body of John W. Proudfit, of New Castle, was found floating in the Delaware river off that town by some fisherman. Proudfit was drowned on November 3 last by the capsizeing of his canoe, and it is supposed that the body has been imbedded in the bottom of the river throughout the winter. A reward had been offered by his relatives for the recovery of the body. Proudfit was a son of the late Rev. Alexander Proudfit, of Baltimore.
U. S. Warship Ordered to Chefoo
Washington, May 10.—The navy department has cabled Admiral Cooper, commander-in-chief of the Aslatic station, to send a cruiser and a gunboat to Chefoo. This is the nearest neutral port to Port Arthur, but is outside the zone of military operations. The selection of the vessels is left to Admiral Cooper.
MRS. POWELL FOUND GUILTY
Slayer of Estelle Albin Condemned to Prison For Life. Dover, Del., May 9. — Mrs. Mary Powell was convicted of the murder of Estelle Albin, the jury fixing the punishment at imprisonment for life. The jury deliberated just two hours
A.
MRS. MARY A. POWELL
then sent for the court, which, after a week's ordeal, adjourned subject to the call of the jury.
The jury was polled and Mrs. Powell was committed for sentence. "We have nothing to say after such a verdict," was all that could be obtained from Mrs. Powell's attorney, but Attorney General Ward, while not fully satisfied with the verdict, said: "The woman undoubtedly had great provocation."
The jury agreed on the sixth ballot.
NEW JERSEY REPUBLICANS
Endorsed Roosevelt and Elected Delegates to National Convention
Trenton, N. J., May 11.—The Republican state convention, which was held here for the purpose of electing delegates for the national convention, to be held in Chicago on June 21, was unusually enthusiastic, considering the fact that there were no contests of importance. The incidents of the convention were the ovation given to Clerk in Chancery Stokes, who it is expected will be nominated by the Republicans for governor this fall, and to Major Carl Lentz, the Republican leader of Essex, and State Assessor David Baird, the leader of his party in Camden county, and in fact in most of South Jersey.
The only hitch in the cut and dried program for the election of delegates-at-large was the unexpected objection offered by William Howland, of North Plainfield, to the unanimous election of the four men who had been named for the honor. The four men were Governor Franklin Murphy, United States Senators Kean and Dryden and State Assessor David Baird, of Camden. Mr. Howland stated that there was a sentiment in his county against the election of Mr. Baird. He said he did not know Mr. Baird personally, and only opposed him politically, as he did not believe he fully represented the Republican party. Mr. Howland spoke only a few words, and no one attempted to answer him.
The platform adopted by the convention was a strong endorsement of the Republican national and state administrations, and indirectly favored the nomination of President Roosevelt to succeed himself, although in keeping with the policy that has always prevailed in this state, the delegates were not instructed.
A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED.
Thursday, May 5.
All the woodwork in Pine mountain tunnel, on the Southern railway, near Columbus, Ga., was burned, and trains had to be stopped.
Secretary Taft has returned to Washington from the St. Louis Fair, where he represented President Roosevelt at the opening exercises.
Four bandits were garrorted at Santiago, Cuba, being the first legal executions since the Spanish regime.
President Roosevelt has appointed Adolph Grant Wolf, of the District of Columbia, to succeed Judge Sulzbacher as associate justice of the supreme court of Porto Rico.
Friday, May 6.
The 75th annual commencement of the Reformed Theological Seminary was held at Lancaster, Pa.
M. Waldeck Roussseau, the former premier of France, was operated upon by Paris surgeons for a malady of the liver.
A gas explosion demolished the house of James McDaniel, at Merion, Ind., killing Mrs. McDaniel and two children.
The Republican national committee will meet at Chicago, June 15, to hear all contests and prepare the temporary roll of delegates.
The blowing out of a controller on a Kansas City trolley car caused a panic among the passengers, in which 11 persons were injured, nine of them women.
Saturday. May 7.
United States Judge Bradford, of Delaware, will hear arguments in the Northern Securities case at Newark, N. J., May 21 and 22.
Curtis Jett, who murdered J. B. Marcum in the court house of Breathitt county, Ky., has accepted a life sentence rather than face a new trial.
The delegates to the biennial convention of the National Society of Colonial Dames of America were received by President Roosevelt at the White House.
Rev. E. N. Gerhart, D. D., LL. D., professor of theology and president of the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church of the United States, died at his home at Lancaster, Pa., aged 87 years.
Monday, May 9.
Three men were badly hurt by the explosion of a battery on William K. Vanderbilt's yacht near New York.
James J. Hill and wife have given $1,500,000 toward the $3,000,000 Roman Catholic cathedral to be built at St. Paul, Minn.
Theodore Campbell, aged 14, of Millville, N. J., died at his home of what
the physicians say was excessive cigarette smoking.
Mrs. Sarah Draumadel, of Harrisburg, Pa., ran a pin in her thumb while washing clothes a week ago and died after terrible suffering from blood poisoning.
Tuesday, May 10
Barton F. Thorn, ex-state senator from Burlington county, N. J., died at his home at Crosswicks, aged 71 years. The loss sustained by the fire insurance companies of Germany in the recent Baltimore fire is officially stated as $352,240. Quarreling over a game of poker, Harry Simmons, of Chicago, shot and instantly killed L. B. Wickman. Simmons is under arrest. While fording a river near Milan, Kan., a wagon containing W. Hanlan, wife and five children overturned, and the woman and three children were drowned. Thomas Costello, for 28 years clerk in the paymaster's department of the Brooklyn navy yard, pleaded guilty to stealing $302 and was sentenced to five years in Sing Sing and $5000 fine. Wednesday, May 11. Vice President L. E. Estevey, of Cuba, has arrived in New York from Havana.
The 12th annual convention of the Pennsylvania Knights of Malta was held at Gettysburg.
Secretary of the Navy Moody and party arrived at Havana, Cuba, on the dispatch boat Dolphin.
Secretary of War Taft is detained at his hotel by illness. He has some trouble with his throat and a slight fever.
The mills of the Schaghticoke Powder company, at Troy, N. Y., were blown up and two men were killed and many buildings demolished.
GENERAL MARKETS
Philadelphia, Pa., May 11. — Flour
steady; winter superfine, $3.50@3.75;
Penna, roller, clear, $4.40@4.70; city
mills, mills, fancy, $5.20@5.35. Rye fowl
quiet; per barrel, $4.30. Wheat firm;
No. 2 Penna, red. $1.05$1.05@1.06. Corn
firm; No. 2 yellow, local, 54$1.26; Cota
quiet; No. 2 white, clipped, 47$1.26;
lower grades, 44c. Hay steady; No. 1
timothy, $18@18.50, large bale. Pork
firm; farm size, 16.50. Beef steady; beef
$20@20!; live oysters, beef, hens,
12$2; old roosters, 9.50. Dressed poultry
choice fowls, 13$3.c. old roosters,
10$1.06. Butter steady; creamed
Eggs steady; New York and Penna,
17$1.76. Potatoes firm; per bush $1.20
Baltimore, Md., May 11. — Wheat steady; spot, contract; $1; spot 12 red western; $1.01; steamer No. 2 red; 94c; southern; by sample, 95c;@$1.01; spot 13 red western; $1.01; steamer No. 2 quiet spot; 62%@$2.52; steamer 48%@$5.02; southern white and yellow corn; 55%@$8.52; Oats firm; No. 1 white; 48%@$4.12; No. 2 mixed; 43%@$4.12; Rye dull; uptown, No. 2, 79%@80; No. 2 western, 81c; Hay easier; 15.50; farmer mixed; 15.50; Butter firm; farm mutual; 19@20; do creamery; 25c; do ball; 15@16c; store packed; 12@13c; Bggr firm; per dozen, 17@18c
Live Stock Markets
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburgh, Pa.
May 11.—Cattle steady; charge, $5.35
$4.20; hogs active, $4.20
@4.25. Hogs active; prime heavy
mediums, $5.15@5.20; heavy Yorkers,
$5.15; light Yorkers, $5@5.10; pigs,
$4.75@4.85; roughs, $3@4.40; Sheep,
$4.75; prime weters, $4@5.00; choice
lambs, $6.16@5.20; veal calves,
$5@5.50.
DWARFS MAY FIGHT DUEL
A serious love affair in the world of dwarfs is just now engaging the attention of Paris, and it is hinted that the outcome may be a duel.
Princess Chihuahua, a tiny American woman, who was born in 1881, stands two feet six inches in her high-heeled boots, and weighs 19 pounds, is now on exhibition at Bostock's menagerie at the Paris Hippodrome.
Some time ago two dwarfs, who also happened to be in Paris—Auguste, who is 26 years old and stand three feet six inches high, and Delphin, aged 21, height two feet seven inches, went to see the little lady, and both fell desperately in love. Auguste is a French-
BOTH LOVE THE PRINCESS
man, and Delphin a German, and both started writing inflammatory love letters to the little princess, who, as became a well-bred young lady, handed the letters to her papa, a man of normal size and appearance.
The French dwarf is, however, of a feaulous and fiery character, and on hearing yesterday that the German dwarf Delphin had been to see the princess, and had handed her a bouquet which had been graciously accepted, is now beside himself with anger. He has threatened that if Delphin continues to pay such decided attention to the lady he will challenge him to fight a duel. Delphin, on the other hand, says that he is "not afraid of that big French bully Auguste."
Princess Chiquita, who converses equally well in English and German, declares that she is quite happy to remain as she is. Auguste, she said, she feared was rather quick-tempered, and Delphin was so ardent and sentimental that she hardly took to take all that he said for gospel truth. "I do hope the silly boys will not fight about me," she said.
"Do you live for money alone?"
"No — altogether." — Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
THE PLANET
SATURDAY ..... MAY 14, 1904
SPRINGTIME
Once more, thank God! once more,
Bweet skies of sunlit blue
Shine on a world that thrilled anew
Is glad from ocean shore to shore.
The bilthe song sparrow on the bush,
In joyful bursts of song
Proclaims how springtime, looked for
long,
Has come our sallow cheeks to flush.
Warbling his minor love-notes three,
He, too, is one of Spring's first gifts.
And in the sweetly-smelling woods,
The little sisters of the Spring,
Newly awake, are listening
To the swift-bursting of the buds.
The noisy brooks all joyous flow,
And gladly now our eyes discern
The tuft of grass, the fronded fern,
And all that greener hastes to grow.
We, too, feel through our pulses run
Something akin to that which fills
The flower-stems on the many hills,
And glad we turn us to the sun.
God's springtime! Oh, the joy divine
Of being in the green world now,
Alive to see, and harken
Loud pipes the thrasher on the wing!
Loud pipes the thrasher on the pine!
Moses Teggart, in Springfield (Mass.)
Republican.
The Way to
Mamma's Heart
By BELLE MANIATES
MAURICE CRAMER sat before the piano in his studio, his fingers wandering in harmonious random over the keys. Though passionately fond of music, the giving of lessons to untouched voices had come to be drudgery to him, save in one instance to the pupil whose coming he now awaited. He heard her step in the corridor. Instantly he ceased playing and opened the door to admit Christine Vaughn—a girl as fair and fresh as a summer morning.
"Where is your music?" he asked after a moment's conversation.
"I haven't come to take a lesson," she replied, a shadow coming into her young eyes. "I have come to bid you a long farewell. Mamma and I leave for Parks to-night."
"To-night!" he repeated, vaguely, forcing a calm constraint to cover his overwhelming surprise. "Isn't it a very sudden journey?"
"Yee; mamma hasn't been feeling well of late, and the doctor ordered an ocean trip. She learned a day or two ago that some friends of ours in Boston were to sail to-night and so we made arrangements to accompany them. We are quite rushed in getting ready on so short notice. Mamma doesn't even know I am here," she added, naively. "I slipped away to tell you. I shall miss our lessons—"
"So shall I," he replied in a calm, even voice, but with painfully throbbing heart.
There followed a little desultory conversation in regard to her trip, a half agreement to correspond and then Christine left the studio.
At the age of 18, Christine Vaughn, though frank and impulsive, was fully matured in character. She did not belong to that class of mollusks so frequent among girls whose nature depend upon time and circumstances for development. Although, not possessed of genius or more than ordinary talent, she was a lover of music. Perhaps just at this time her devotion at its shrine received an impetus from the fact that she was greatly interested in her teacher. Maurice Cramer, impassive, cool and forceful, was just the sort of man to appeal to her proud and impetuous nature. She had reached that point in her attachment for him which was on the verge of ground marked "dangerous," and was so dimly aware of the fact that when the silent but strong hand of her mother intervened and snatched her away, she scarcely realized where she had been.
Mrs. Vaughn was a wise and subtle woman and well understood her daughter. When she saw the tendency of Christine's thoughts and Cramer's attentions, she offered no opposition seemingly. She allowed the singing lessons to continue and was most gracious and courteous to her daughter's instructor when he came to the house. Had she shown the slightest objection to the intimacy, she knew that Christine would be his warmest champion, so she systematically treated him as she did any ordinary caller.
Cramer was equally wise. He clearly understood that Mrs. Vaughn did not include him in the horoscope she had cast for her daughter's future. He was far too proud to fan these passing sparks of Christine's preference for him into a glowing flame, as he could easily have done. Knowing that in the mother's eyes he was an inferior who would show marked presumption in aspiring to be anything more to her daughter than her "teacher of voice," he took infinite pains to maintain a dignity and coldness of demeanor he was far from feeling. He dared not hope that Christine loved him. Her fancy for him he thought to be the first passing impulse of an untrained heart, "the primrose that fell to make way for the rose."
Mrs. Vaughn, though understanding his attitude, knew the danger of trusting to the strength of pride which so often totters at the touch of love. She
consulted her brother, Gen. Laurent, who was her adviser when she needed one. He appreciated the position and the necessity for immediate action.
"Julia," he said, impressively, "as a military man, I should say there is nothing so effective as 'removal from station.' There is danger in propinquity and opportunity. Make occasion for a prolonged trip abroad."
It was no difficult matter for Mrs. Vaughn to convince her physician that an ocean voyage was essential to her state of health. Christine, though bewildered at the suddenness of the journey, saw no hidden motive. They would be gone but a year, and perhaps an absence would bring Maurice to a realization of the pleasure he took in her society, in talking to her and cultivating her voice. In all their discussions on different subjects they experienced mutual interest, but their discussions had never touched upon personal topics, nor had he sought to interest her in himself.
She had come to his studio that morning to bid him adieu, vaguely hoping that something—she knew not what—might happen; nothing did, and she half expected to see him at board ship, but she found a box of flowers and a polite little note wishing her a bon voyage.
She enjoyed life in Paris to the full, but was quite ready to return home at the end of the year which was the proposed expiration of their trip. As the others in their party wished to continue their travels, another year found them still abroad.
These two years had not been idle ones with Maurice Cramer. He had finished the composition of an opera that had been a life work with him and it had been successfully put on the stage. The hit was tremendous and he had now found himself the lion of New York drawing rooms, a position he coveted with only one object in view.
It was with mingled sensations that he received a note from Christine one morning announcing their return and saying that she would be at the studio at her old lesson hour, which he had kept sacred to her memory. At the appointed hour she entered. As he heard the well-remembered knock and the opening of the door, he turned and rose with outstretched hand. Het
AT THE APPOINTED HOUR SHE ENTERED.
AT THE APPOINTED HOUR SHE ENTERED.
face was slightly flushed, but the dark eyes looked into his, searchingly, perhaps, but with the old expression of frank kindness.
He stood silent, unconscious that he still held her hand. She was like and yet so unlike the Christine of two years ago. A beautiful, striking-looking woman with complexion of the dawn, clear and delicate; her hair of golden hue, her eyes deep and dark.
The first slight constraint so often felt in the renewal of an intimacy soon disappeared. They talked of many things, reviewing other days, speaking of her travels and her coming plans. He felt her presence leaping like wine to his brain as they talked. Finally he asked her to sing to him.
"You can't criticise my method," she said, turning over the scattered music for a selection, "for I am the victim of many methods. Every place we visited meant a new master—every master a new method. I think I was introduced into the mysteries of all but one. I missed the signor in Florence who required his pupils to recline at full length while singing. His theory was that people breathed correctly only when in that position."
"Please don't sing," he said with a shudder. "I don't want to hear such a cosmopolitan production as your voice will be capable of."
"It isn't so bad. You see I only followed their instructions during my lessons. At home in my pricetic I was loyal to my teacher at home and sang as he had taught me."
He was about to commence the accompaniment to her song when there was a knock at the door, which Maurice answered. When he returned to the piano, he brought a note upon which Christine's eyes fell carelessly; then, recognizing the stationery and cres, she exclaimed:
"Why! Isn't that mamma's writing?"
"Yes;" he replied, his eyes shining with triumph and something else, "she has invited me to dine at your house to-night."
Christine's eyes sparkled.
"Mamma went daffy over music and musical celebrities while she was away. When we heard of the triumph you had scored I knew you had found the way to her heart."
"Christine, the way to her heart is but a secondary consideration to me. Its the way to your heart I want to find. Dear, I loved you ever since I gave you your first lesson."
"Maurice," she said, softly, "you found the way to my heart even then."
Age of Utility
According to the director of the mint the coins of Greece in the fourth century B. C. are regarded as more beautiful than any made to-day. Why cannot we have as beautiful coins? Because we desire "low relief," that is, figures which will not come out higher than the edges, so that our coins will stack. Moreover, the modern coin loses less by abrasion than the ancient. Thus the interests of beauty and utility stand in conflict, and this is a practical age.
In Leap Year.
Hopeless Widower—Nothing can meet a broken heart.
Hopeful Widow—Except re-pairing.
—Judge.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
SAD FATE OF SIR WALTER RA-
LEIGH IN CHICAGO.
Tramp Played Part with His Ragged Coat All Right, But the Lady, Afraid of Deadly Microbes, Flunked.
William E. Eagan, alias Reading Bill, read the story of Sir Walter Raleigh and his famous cloak the other afternoon and he was kicked and threatened with arrest and probably contracted pneumonia as a result.
Reading Bill's beat extends along Michigan boulevard from Jackson boulevard south to Harrison street, Chicago. He was patrolling it in the early afternoon when a woman, who looked as if she might be sympathetic, came along.
"Jest a dime, fair lady," began Reading Bill, and there was genuine hunger in his voice. "Maybe w'en I gits prosperous I'll meet you at Newport and pay you back."
There was hope in his voice, for the lady was fumbling in her shopping bag, "Here; take this and learn what stuff heroes are made of," said the woman, and she gave Reading Bill a book. It was almost as good as money to the tramp, for he is a litterateur. He darted into an alley, and a few minutes later was reading of Walter Raleigh and his cloak. It was toward evening when he again appeared on the boulevard. Then he met Red Face Mike. "Well, Red Face, you hungry?" asked Reading Bill. "Ain't heard of no miracles bein' performed lately, has you?" returned Red Face. "Well, you just come with me and in three hours we will be dinin' on the fat of the land, as the newspapers say," said Reading Bill, and the two hoboes disappeared.
The Chicago Inter Ocean says they were in front of the Auditorium theater at eight o'clock. It was the grand opera season, and the fashionable people arrive at that hour in Chicago. "In ten minutes I'll be a hero," said Reading Bill, as he stationed himself near the entrance. Carriage were arriving at the rate of ten a minute, but a hundred had passed
"YOU'RE UNDER ARREST."
when Red Face Mike felt a tug at his sleeve.
"Now, watch me," said Reading Bill, as he sprang forward.
At the curb stood a swell equipage. A man who looked as if prosperity and he were old friends had just alighted. Upon the step stood a woman, and the diamonds at her throat represented a fortune.
"I'll certainly spoil my dress," she said, as she pointed at the pool of water.
It was Reading Bill's cue.
"Permit me, lady," and his ragged coat had spread over the water. "Step upon this poor garment and tread your way to safety," and his hat was in his left hand while his right was folded over his breast.
"Murder!" shrieked the woman. "See the microbes on his coat! enough to kill an army," and she would have fallen had not the strong arm of her escort supported her.
"Wretch! What mean you by addressing a lady whom you have never met?" and the right foot of the escort assisted the unhappy tramp litterateur to reach the middle of the street.
"You're under arrest," said a blue-coat, as he caught poor Reading Bill by the trousers. "Why don't you brace up and behave?"
"Mister, I tried to brace up and be a hero," and there was conviction in his voice; "but people don't seem to care for heroes no more."
and sadly, he went to jail.
Lett $2,000 to His Horse.
A strange case of the affection a man may have for a dumb brute came to light at St. Louis when the will of Dr. John Gilwee was probated. The first clause of the instrument provided for a trust fund of $2,000, to be held in the name of a faithful old horse, Tony, which had served the physician continuously for nearly 23 years. The clause in the will was as follows: "In case that my horse, Tony, which I have used for nearly 23 years, survives me, I order that $2,000 of my estate be placed in trust at six per cent. per annum, and said interest used for his food, shelter and care so long as he lives, and after his death said $2,000 shall be divided among my legal heirs."
Girls in a Sandbag Duel
Two young women in Paris quarreled about a young man whom they both admired. They agreed to fight a duel. Meeting by appointment in a lonely park, at night, each took off a stocking and filled it with stand. Then they began to slash each other. One of the young women was so severely hurt that she had to be taken to a hospital.
Made Himself Disliked
"It seems to me that you can be depended on to say the wrong thing more than any other man that I know."
"What have I done?" "Insulted the Bliggins family." "Why, I tried to compliment them." "You said that their baby, who hasn't any hair, looked exactly like its father."
excited the capacity of the unprincipled, who, to get your money, are putting on the market vile nostrums, injurious to the hair and skin, and dangerous to health and life. Be warned; don't send your money to get only in return a mass of lard and tallow and animal fats, that injure your hair and cause it to fall out, destroy its growth, and cause you to become bald. Deal with a legitimate firm, who will treat you fairly and give you value for your money. We do solemnly swear that our remedies are true to all we claim for them; that they do not contain any animal fat or injurious drugs, and we will return the money for every case of dissatisfaction. We refer to Metropolitan Bank, Richmond, Va., or to the editor of this paper. The word OZONO and the cuts shown in this advertisement are registered as our trademark in U. S. Patent Office. Any infringement will be promptly prosecuted.
OZONO positively straightens Knotty, Knappy, Kinky, Stubbery, Hanky,
OZONO positively straightens Knotty, Knappy, Kinny, Stubborn, Harsh, Refractory Hair. No injurious hot irons are necessary to produce this effect. OZONO does the work alone, and the use does not have to be kept up after the hair becomes wright, and washing the hair hastens the treatment, doing it good in every way. Cures Dandruff, Baldness, and all itching, running, scalp Diseases; causes the hair to hang and straight, soft, fine, and beautiful as an April morning. Price, 50c a box; 4 boxes does the work. OZONO cannot fail. Read our grandmother's advertisement and send to us with $1.00, and we will send you immediately four boxes of OZONO; one bottle of ELECTRICAL SKIN ROOD, which removes Wrinkles, Freckles, Moth Patches, Tan Liver Spots, Small-Pox Pits, Birthmarks, &c. It makes the skin look young, and the young look younger. We will also, to show our liberality, include a package of ANTI-ODOR which removes all smells and odors arising from the human body—such as feet, arm-pits, &c.; cures Sore Throat, Mouth, Womb Diseases, Sore and Frosted Feet, &c. This grand combination, worth $3.50, we will send you in receipt of One Dollar, to introduce honest goods. Parties sending us $3.00 will receive four lots. Register your letters.
AGENTS WANTED.
"Yes?"
"Well, Bilgins is insulted on his own account, and his wife is insulted on behalf of the baby."—Tit-Bits.
The Servant Problem.
Mrs. De Vissitte—What! Worrying still over not having a servant girl?
Mrs. De Vissitte—Oh, then she is a bad have one now.
Mrs. De Vissitte—Oh, then she is a bad one, eh?
Mrs. De Stickatome—No, Indeed. On the contrary, she is such a good one that I am scared to death for fear of losing her.—Baltimore American.
Conflicting Testimony
"Say, give me a synonym for 'expert,' will you?" said the court reporter, nibbling his pen.
"What are you writing about?" asked the other.
"Expert testimony."
"Oh! the word 'conflicting' amounts to the same thing."—Philadelphia Press.
Just What Papa Wanted.
"But, papa," wailed the young woman, "you can have no idea how he loves me. He is willing to die for me this very minute."
"Well," said the old man, scratching his head, thoughtfully, "I don't know as I have any objection to that. I was afraid he wanted to marry you."—Tit-Bits.
Personal Experience
"The taste for classical music is something that comes with time and cultivation."
"That's right," answered Mrs. Cumrox. "I've noticed that some of these grand operas don't sound near as bad as they did at first." - Washington Star.
What's the Use.
Teacher—Thomas, mention a few of the proofs that the earth is round, like an orange.
Tommy Tucker (who has been playing truant)—I didn't know we had to have any proofs, ma'am. I thought everybody admitted it.—Chicago Tribune.
Force of Habit
"Tell me," she asked, after she had accepted him, "am I really your first and only love?" "Well—er—no, dear," replied the drug-clerk, "but you are something just as good." "Philadelphia Press."
Something Missing
One day three-year-old Margie was passing through the market with her mother, and seeing a strange-looking object, she asked what it was.
"Why, my dear, that's a head of cabbage," replied her mother.
"Zen where's its mouf an' eyeses?" asked the puzzled little miss.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Just Out!
If you have read the Pilgrims Progress by John Bunyan, you ought to be sure and read the
SEVEN SEALS
by Mrs. Lucinda Young. This Book sells for $1.00 and is meeting with great success all over the country. Truly a great book. Address all communications to
MRS. LUCINDA YOUNG,
Lambertville, N. J.,
AGENTS WANTED.
ap16-6n
Kin-Killa
A wonderful preparation for straightening kinky hair. Compounded from a physician's prescription, it is absolutely harmless. Will positively render the coarsest hair soft and wavy. Once tried always called for. Large size bottles 50 cents, or sent prepaid by mail for 60 cents in stamps or money-order.
Send 10 cents in stamps for generous sample to
Please mention this paper when ordering
RELIABLE AGENTS WANTED
FIRST CLASS Restaurant.
Barber Shop, Pool Room, Boarding House and Employment Office. CHARLES H. BAILEY, Proprietor and Manager. Center Ave., opposite R. R. Station,
P. O. Box 219.
3mos Atlantic Highland, N. J.
This is the smallest and lightest weight (about 61-2 pounds) repeating gun ever manufactured, and opens up many new possibilities to the up-to-date sportsman. It is not a 16-barreled
12 action, but a new, well-balanced, properly-proportioned gun that, with modern smokeless powders, enables a shooter to use a powerful load in a small shell and reduce, materially, the weight of shells and gun to be carried. The small, light gun handles fast, results in close holding and increased accuracy. *Full description in new Marlin Catalog No. A542, just out-Send three stamps for postage to THE MARLIN FIREARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, GONN*
YOU
Can gain Health, Wealth, Love, Luck if you will only accept it. Matters m is your chance to rise in life; God ga people teach you how to use it. Drs. T. H. and Cornelia White Workers and Teachers of Spiritual Mental and Magnetic Healing and W have had over twenty years practice quarter of the globe in search of Science. Drs. T. H. and Cornelia W
Wealth, Love, Luck and Prosperity. It is waiting for you to accept it. Matters not who you are, or where you are are rise in life; God gave you the power and these wonders how to use it. and Cornelia White are the Greatest and most Powerful teachers of Spiritualism, Hypnotism, Personal Magnetics Healing and White and Black Art, in the world. The twenty years practical experience; they have visited every lobe in search of new truths in all mysteries of Occ H. and Cornelia White
Can gain Health, Wealth, Love, Luck and Prosperity. It is waiting for you, if you will only accept it. Matters not who you are, or where you are now is your chance to rise in life; God gave you the power and these wonderful people teach you how to use it.
Drs. T. H. and Cornelia White are the Greatest and most Powerful Workers and Teachers of Spiritualism, Hypnotism, Personal Magnetism, Mental and Magnetic Healing and White and Black Art, in the world. They have had over twenty years practical experience; they have visited every quarter of the globe in search of new truths in all mysteries of Occult Science. Drs. T. H. and Cornelia White
Teach you Spiritualism, Hypnotism, Personal Magnetism, Mental and Magnetic Healing and White and Black Art. They can teach you to call up Spirits; teach you to Locate Buried Treasures; teach you how to Heal the Sick of all Natural and Unnatural Diseases; teach you how to Draw to Yourself and Others, your Sweethearts, Husbands or Wives. Teach you how to Place Persons under your Influence; how to Reunite the Separated; teach you how to Remove All Evil Influences from Yourself and Others. Matters not what your Desires are, or what you wish to learn; these wonderful Mediums can teach you by their Simple and Complete Correspondence Course; they teach you by mail and you can learn in your home at your spare time.
Virtualism, Hypnotism, Personal Magnetism, Mental Ating and White and Black Art. They can teach you to heal you to Locate Buried Treasures; teach you to Heal Alcal and Unnatural Diseases; teach you how to Drawers, your Sweethearts, Husbands or Wives. Teach your sons under your Influence; how to Reunite the Separate. Remove All Evil Influences from Yourself and Other Desires are, or what you wish to learn; these wonders teach you by their Simple and Complete Correspondence, which you by mail and you can learn in your home at your
Teach you Spiritualism, Hypnotism, Personal Magnetism, Mental and Magnetic Healing and White and Black Art. They teach you to call up Spirits; teach you to Locate Buried Treasures; teach you to Heal the Sick of all Natural and Unnatural Diseases; teach you how to Draw to Yourself and Others, your sweethearts, Husbands or Wives. Teach you to Play with Persons under your Influence; how to Reunite the Separated; teach you how to Move All Evil Influences from Yourself and Others. Matters not what your Doing, or what you wish to learn; these wonderful Mediums can teach you by their Simple and Complete Correspondence Course; they teach you by mail and you can learn in your home at your spare time.
WRITE
To these Wonderful Workers for the
Correspondence Course; it is the grea
They have taught thousands of people
wonderful Chairvoyant Mediums; the
Hypnotists; they have taught thoughe
and Black Art. They can teach you
your life. Let them teach you how
free and full particulars to
Dr. White's College
Drs. T.
1917 E. Pr.
*Furful Workers for full particulars about their Marvel course; it is the greatest method of teaching in the world to thousands of people in all parts of the world to becoyant Mediums; they have taught thousands to becoyant taught thousands to master the Mysteries of Whi they can teach you. Don't remain Poor and downcast them teach you how to gain fame and fortune. Write *luculars to*
*White's College of Science,*
To these Wonderful Workers for full particulars about their Marvelous Correspondence Course; it is the greatest method of teaching in the world. They have taught thousands of people in all parts of the world to become wonderful Clairvoyant Mediums; they have taught thousands to become Hypnotists; they have taught thousands to master the Mysteries of White and Black Art. They can teach you. Don't remain Poor and downcast all your life. Let them teach you how to gain fame and fortune. Write for free and full particulars to
Dr. White's College of Science,
Drs. T. H. and CORNELIA WHITE,
1917 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, Md., U. S. A.
(Please mention this paper.)
..... PAINLESS EXTRACTION .....
For beautiful Teeth, Comfort,
Pleasure and Health.
OFFICE HOURS:—From 8 A.M. to 6 P.
M. Old Phone, 816.
DR. P. B. RAMSEY,
102 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
ON & CO.,
ERS IN
ND GAME.
The Institute for Colored sixty-six years in Philadelphia.
M. LAWSON & CO.
FISH, OYSTERS AND GAME,
FRESH MEATS & GROCERIES
All orders receive prompt attention.
619 Brook Ave. 'Phone 1580.
the educational work among us
"A professional school w
industrial training, kindergarten
life might be inculcated."
The school will begin its
site at Cheyney, Pa., about n
P. W. and B. R. R. The group
ings and the equipment will be
The institute has at present
The proximity of Philadelphia
THE
FRISCO
SYSTEM
REACHES ALL, POINTS IN
THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST.
HOMESEEKER round trip tickets on
sale 1st and 3rd CUESDAYS of each
month.
SPECIAL low round-trip rates to CAL-
IFORNIA points.
On sale in MAY and AUGUST. 10
DAYS STOP-OVERS AT ST. LOUIS.
Advertising matter forwarded and rates
with full information given upon
application to
W. T. SAUNDERS, D. P. A.,
1108 East Main St., Richmond, Va.
---
---
(Please mention this paper.)
fair dealings, together with the fact that OZONO uine Hair Grower and Hair Straightener in exist-race, we have met with grand success, which ha
A Supreme Educational Need Met.
A Normal School devoted to the Professional Training of Teachers, furnishing that correlation of academic and industrial education, discipline professional training and practical skill which will best fit them for teaching.
The Institute for Colored Youth with a most valuable history of sixty-six years in Philadelphia, Pa., presided over by such distinguished educators of the race as Charles L. Reason, E. D. Bassett and Fanny Jackson Coppin has been reorganized under Prof. Hugh M. Browne to meet what the late Dr. J. L. M. Curry considered the supreme need in the educational work among our people, namely:
"A professional school which should combine teacher training, industrial training, kindergarten work and where better ideas of home life might be inculcated."
The school will begin its operations September 1994 at its new site at Cheyney, Pa., about nineteen miles from Philadelphia on the P. W. and B. R. R. The grounds cover 117 acres. The new buildings and the equipment will be up-to-date.
The institute has at present an endowment fund of about $210,000.
The proximity of Philadelphia will afford unusual educational advantages. The school is under the management of a Board of Members of the Society of Friends (Quakers) and is undenominational.
The corps of instructors will comprise only teachers of broad training and experience. The school is open to graduates of higher institutions, high schools and persons who have completed work in History, the Sciences, English and Mathematics equivalent to that required in the first three years of a high school course.
In addition to the other industrial subjects there will be a practical course on the "Useful Applications of Electricity." Teachers may take either the full or an abridged course. For full information write at once to the principal:
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 huck, 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 UOMAN is the Greatest on Earth.
Now if you want to find out what your future life will be and what your past has been, and want to have it changed from evil to good, send at once to this wonderful medium.
Send lock of hair, date of your birth and 25 cents in silver, and receive your life written from cradle to grave. Do not send postage stamps. Address all letters
to MRS. DR. WHITE.
1917 E. Pratt St. Baltimore, Md.
GONZALES
The Greatest Clairvoyant &
Fortune Teller the World
Has Ever Known.
Unites Separated, Brings back the
one you Love, Helps Quickly all in
Trouble.
Removes Evil Influences, Cures Mysterious Diseases, Gives Luck and Success.
Send Lock of Hair, Date of Birth
and 12 cents. Ask three questions and
receive Horoscope and Lucky Birthstone by mail. GONZALES, 236 Bergen St., Brooklyn, New York.
the Educational Met.
quoted to the Professional Train-
furnishing that correlation of
industrial education, discipline,
ing and practical skill which
is for teaching.
Youth with a most valuable history of
P.A., presided over by such distinguished
les L. Reason, E. D. Bassett and Fanny
organized under Prof. Hugh M. Browne to
M. Curry considered the supreme need in
our people, namely :
which should combine teacher training,
en work and where better ideas of home
its operations September 1909 at its new
nineteen miles from Philadelphia on the
sands cover 117 acres. The new build-
e up-to-date.
At an endowment fund of about $210,000,
Philadelphia will afford unusual educational ad-
der the management of a Board of Mem-
(Quakers) and is undenominational.
It will comprise only teachers of broad
the school is open to graduates of higher
persons who have completed work in
and Mathematics equivalent to that re-
of a high school course.
Industrial subjects there will be a practical
tions of Electricity."
the full or an abridged course.
at once to the principal:
tl-8-13-6m.
PROF. HUGH M. BROWNP
CHEYNEY, PA.
6
—————
ir ie
rian ica
qletmac Atl.
Z Ae
NW
SATURDAY, ........ MAY 14, 1908
erates
SE SS
Fee eecmene errs
j © God, be merciful to us,
| And bless Thou us, Thy servants pray,
And cause the brightness of Thy face,
| To sbine on us with cheering ray:
‘That known on earth Thy way may be,
And gations Thy saivation see,
Ob, let the peopies praise Thee, Lord.
Lat all the peoples give Thee praise,
Ob, let the nations all be giad,
And sing to Thee In joyful lay!
For Thou wilt judge in righteousness,
| Barth's nations shalt Thy sway confess.
| OB, let the peopies praise Thee, Lord,
Let ahi the peoples give Thee praise,
‘The earth hath yielded her Increase,
- And God will biess us all our days,
ea, God, our God, will blessing send,
‘Til He Is feared (6 earth's far end.
Edward A’ Colier, in N.Y. Observer.
THE PERFECT HOME LIFE.
Not the Result of Luck or Happy Cir-
| cumstance, But a Work for
| Brains and Heart.
, ee ee ee
i Se
\ Let us recognize that the making of
& perfect home is a work of art and
not the result of luck or happy cir
cumstance. There is indeed a genius
for architecture and a genius for po-
‘try, a genius for science and a genius
for music; but how slow we are to rec-
ognize that the perfect home is built
by brains! For the outside of our
ome we choose, if we can afford it,
an architect who has studied all styles
and who knows every detail necessary
to a perfect structure. We rejoice to
see the material expression of his
thought standing vefore us, with its
Many features running together into
unobtrusive but attractive unity. How
feldom it occurs to us that the invisi-
ble interior, the spiritual and intel-
Jectual home, the library of luminous
thought, the rooms of love and sweat
vourtesy and gracious interchange of
feelings and ideas, are more diMeult
to plan and far more difficult to exc
cate than all this work in stone and
‘ood! When the visfon of the sculp-
tor has taken shape of beauty to our
delighted eyes, we are not silly enough
to glory in the mallet and the chisel,
We praise the artist's mind. Yet if
the rough-hewn block should never
yield its finest possibility. its veins are
Rot of blood, nor running into nerves
that suffer torture, and the seulptor's*
Blunder sends no suffering through the
marble fiber. But when we mar with
thoughtless words and cutting speech
the souls intrusted to our love, this
hurts and keeps on hurting. Our
Dunder is a cruelty, our carelessness a
crime. |
Now the life in the family Is a life
of souls that shape each other daily.
either into ugliness or beauty. Tho
aged mother, fretful, impatient, impert- |
Ser icine anssereatee a by Gee
too frequently of selfish husband and
@isobedient children. They complain |
of her! God forgive them! They.
should complain of themselves, for
they have made her what she Is.
That pale-faced girl, gentle, uncom-
plaining, her T mean with the hecite
fush upon the cheek, who coughs at
Intervals and laughs to hide her congh
—why abe is her mother's handicraft |
Poor child, her mother always nags
her so! Her fingers are full of rings,
but a clasp of love were worth ‘hem
all. Gowns! Dear me, she has no
end of gowns! And the rough broth-
ere are good to her, they think. And
her father speaks of her with pride and
then lets her serve him like a slave
© these blundering sculptors of a hu-
man life, how they mar and mutilate
in sheer neglect and selfishness the
happiness they might create!
But yonder man, so strong, 80 cheer-
ful. so serenely masterful in times of
éifficulty—whose handicraft, pray tell
us, is that soul of his? The Joint work
Mkely of God and himself? Ono! But
of the mother that loved him, of the
‘wife that he loves. of the children that
rise up to call him blessed. And he
has thought about his home. He took
pains and brains to make ft perfect. |
Busy all his life—for he has performed
great tasks and evaded no duties—he
has for all that never robbed the wife
of his love, by giving to business the
hours that belonged to her; he has
never cheated his children wholly of
their father's presence and their fa-
ther's thoughtful eare. He has faced
calamity. Death, too, has struck him
with.his ernel wings—there are mo-
menis when his features show the
traces of recollected gloom—but the
children as they gather round him re-
Joice to see the touches of their loving
hands upon their father’s features
«ven as they feel the touch of his shap-
ing Intelligence upon their strong
fouls. While the wife of his love re-
jeices in him and in them, knowing
quite well that they are the reward
of her patient thonghtfulness and un-
wearied hope. This interchange of in-
fiuence inside the family is at once
the mystery, the power and the pos-
sible destruction of its peace and joy.
Put the law of it must be grasped
early and applied with luminous pa-
tience and sagacious love. Each
honsehold will encounter its own prob-
Jem and each family must face its own
Uiffieulties: resolutely, courageously,
cheerfully to apply one's mind to the
solution and the conqnest of them
Ss ghe part of wistom. But the chief
unthg, I repeat, is to recognize the di-
Vine sacredness of the tasks of fam-
Dy Ufe, and, having assumed them.
to achieve them with calculating skil?
and unwavering affection.
But, thirdly, the home must be cre-
‘ated now. For there 1s 20 knowledge
and no device In the grave whither we
are going. Think, says the wise man,
how helpless are the dead towards the
‘ving. Just what power we may have
over this world when we become im-
mortal spirits none of us may krow.
But one thing ts quite clear, any power
we may have hereafter will be lim-
ited by the memories of us in the
minds of those with whom we lived.
Even Jesus our Saviour submitted to
this law. For He wrought His image
into the hearts of His disciples, of
Mary and Martha, ard the women who
ministered to Him, so that when He
reappeared to them after the resurrec-
tion the sound of His votce thrilled
their souls and the sight of His hands
touching the bread He blessed told
who He was, even as He vanished from
their bewildered eyes. ‘To-day is rich-
er, if yesterday was beautiful. What
cam to-morrow be for us if empty of
Precious memories? The dead rest
from their labors and their works do
follow them, if there are any works
to follow. Mother may die, but she
may leave behind her recollections $0
gracious, so beautiful, so powerful that
her new life with God is a perpetual
reminder and a perpetual inspiration
to her children. If she leaves no mem-
ories, her grave will have no power.
The flowers that blpssom above her
dust are fragrant with no reminis-
cences and the poor dust is power-
less to warn or to help, to encourage
or to console. But if she leaves a pre-
cious image in her children’s minds,
then there is something for her angel
finger to touch, by which to thrill, to
master, then she has left a ladder for
her beloved, up which their faith can
help them climb to be clasped once
‘more In her glorified arms.
Browning has given expression to
this Idea in the wonderful lines ad-
dressed to his wonderful wife:
“0 lyric love, half-ange! and haif-bird,
And all a wonder and a wild desire
Boidest of hearts that ever traved {Re sun,
Can thy soul know change? Hall then,
And hearken from the realms of help.
Never may I commence my song, my due
To God who beat taught song by gift of
thee,
Except with bared head and beseeching
Rand.
That still despite the distance and the dark
Whas was, again may be. some. inter=
‘change
Of soul, some spiendor once thy very
thouxht,
Some benediction ancientiy thy smile."
You catch the poet's thought? The
whole power of his beloved to help
him in his loneliness originated in the
splendor formerly her thought, in the
denediction anciently her smile. God
knows, I would not make you sad.
But death may smite us any moment.
Shall we have no anchor in the souls
of those we love? Shall we drift out
into the distance and the dark, never
again to do them any good? | Never
to help them in their struggles, in
their temptations, in their defeats, in
their agony and sorrow? Aye, wa
shall vanish away into utter helpless-
ness unless we do with our might
whatever now we find to do—Dr.
Charles J. Little in his “Angel in the
Flame.”
FACES THAT COMFORT ONE
Kindnesses Done Unconsciously Mean
the Most—Goodness Aware of
Itself Is Without Charm.
“I wish some people knew just how
much their faces ean comfort one!” The
speaker was a young woman who had
passed through deep sorrows; she was
telling a friend how many people com-
forted her, though they were uncon-
selous of it. ‘The Epworth Herald tells
the story. “I often ride down in the
same street car with your father, and
it has been such a help to me to sit
next to him. There is something £0
xood and strong and kind about him, it
has been a comfort just to feel he was
beside me. Sometimes, when T have
been utterly depressed ard discouraged,
he has seemed somehow to know just
the right word to say to me; but, if he
didn’t talk, why, T just looked at his
face, and that helped me. He prob-
ably has not the least idea of tt, for
1 know him so slightly, and I don’t sup-
pore people half realize, anyway, how
much they are helping or hindering oth-
eres!” There is a great deal of this
unconscious Kindness in the world.
Moses wist not that his face shone, ‘The
dest people are not aware of thelr go0d-
ness. According to the old legend, it
was only when it fell behind him, where
he could not see it, that the saintly
man’s shadow healed the sick. ‘This is
a parable. Goodness that is aware of
Itself has lost much of its charm. Kind-
nesses that are Cone unconsciously mean
the most.
GEMS OF THOUGHT.
There is nothing in life which has not
Its lesson for ts, or its gift —Ruskin.
Great ideas travel slowly, and, for a
time, noiselessiy. as the gods, whose
feet were shod with wool—James A.
Garfield
God reads our character in our
prayers. What we love best, what we
covet most, that gives the key to our
hearts.—T. L. Cuyler.
‘The g6od things that we have missed
Im thid world sometimes make us sad:
but the sad things that we have missed
should mitigate our sorrow, and give us
spirit of praise.—United Presbyterian,
Oh, the littleness of the lives that we
fare living! Oh, the way in which we
fall to comprehend, or, when we do com-
prehend, deny to ourselves the bigness
of that thing which it is to be a man
te be a child of God!—Phillips Brooks
A religion that stays in the clouds is
of no use to anybody. Religion must be
definite, practical, ~useful—a binding
rule of daily life—or else it is as mueh
a mockery as the gilded prayer whee
of the Buddhist—Philadelphia Young
People
The one who successfully decetves an-
other makes it hard for himself after.
wards when the deception shall have
Been discovered—ae it is sure to be it
time. He will always be distrusted, nc
matter Whether he is again attempting
deception or not. ‘Theonly method that
wins clear to the end is honesty.— Well
‘pring.
The Time.
“Youth is the time tolearn.”
“It shouldn’t be. It’s the time you krow
it all.” —Cincinnati Commerical Tribune,
THE RIGSMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
—_——— WE INVITE THE ATTENTION OF THE PUBLIC TO OUR—————_—__—_______
it is thoroughly equipped Cards, Policies, both straight We print Wedding Invita- opes, Note and Letter Paper
to do all kinds of printing on life and benevolent, Physi- tions, and High Class Sta- Bill-heads, Monthly State-
short notice. We make a cian’s Certificates, Sick Cards, tionery for Balls, Parties, Pic- ments, Business Cards, Fi
specialty of Society printing Application blanks, Agents nics and all entertainments of nancial and Order Books,
and work for Insurance Com. Report Sheets, Rate Cards, a social nature. Cireulars, Check-books, Pame
panies, such as Financial ete. We print Church Envel- phlets.
=——$Sg 2 We print Church Envele f_phlets
ee ee ie
We print. Handbills, QuarterSheets, Half and Whole|,, aoe a andto| We furnish “cuts” when desired and we will arrange to
Sheet posters, Tags, Tickets, Placards, Society Cards, Min-|give them the best service at|complete special work in our line. When in need of any work
utes, Visiting Cards, Mourning Stationery. Bi ee eect [incur ling; call and! sec ua und estimates will be firniahed:
__ WHICH WE WILL SHOW ANY ONE DESIRING TO SEE THEM.
—_ > ; _
—=< Our Stock Room Embraces a Full Lines.
OF THE LATEST STYLE BOND, FINE WRITING—FLAT AND LINEN PAPER, ENVELOPES, ETC.
Ree ae a I,
WE CAN PRINT A BILL AS SMALL AS A DODGER. WE HAVE ONE OF THE LARGEST ASSORTMENTS
A Three-Sheet Poster y f OF WOOD-TYPE
AS LARGE AS A FRONT DOOR. Of Any Job Printing Establishment in the city.
———— ae oa eae
NEEM Ree nn ee OED
| Our Present Corp or EMPLOYEES ARE COMPETENT AND QUICK-WORKING. OUR OFFICE
Vo a | IS WITHIN Easy RkAcH oF THE Pustic, BEING wITHIN Fiery Yarps or Broap St. oa
Our street-entrance is retired and has no objectionable features, the most
fastidious lady being able to enter without embarrassment or annoyance. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, APPLY TO
2 a
= ~ John Mitchell, Jr
oO gy as 3
Lone Distance TELEPHONE, 2243. 811 N, 4th St., Richmond, Va.
Not a Clean People.
Cleanliness is not understood in
Thibet. What serves as clothing by da"
serves as bedding by night; the bat*.-
robe, which constitutes a man's suit
of clothes, is simply ungirded when he
lies down to. sleep. It is neither
changed nor Washed until it goes to
pieces. ‘The man inside the bathrobe
fares no better.
Armenian Spinsters.
When an Armenian girl attains her
seventeenth year, and is neither mar-
ried nor engaged to be married, she
has to undergo a strange punishment,
For three days she has to fast, tien
for 24 hours her food consists of salt
fish, and she is allowgd nothing to
quench her thirst.
Not an Every Day Occurrence,
Cheerful Widow—Why so dismal?
Future Husband— am afraid our
wedding trip will take all the cash L
have saved up?
Cheerful Widow—What of it? A
wedding trip only happens once in five
or six years.—Illustrated Bits,
Polished Iron Work.
Polished ironwork can be preserved
from rust by an inexpensive mixture
made of copal varnish mixed with as
much olive oil as will give it a degree
of greasiness and afterwards adding
to this mixture as much spirits of tur-
pentine as of varnish.
Feather Beds.
Never place feather beds or pillows
in the sun, for the sun, acting on the
oil in the feathers, is apt to give them
@ rancid smell. The right plan is to
air the beds and pillows on a dry,
windy day, ina shady place out of
doors
A City’s Problent.
‘The disposition of karbaze has been
one of the vexatious problems of muni-
cipal sanitation in Memphis, Several
years ago ctematories were established
there, and now nearly 120 tons of gar-
bage are collected and consumed daily.
Canny Heir.
A miserly rich man by will directed
his son and heir to put $5,000 from the
estate into the father's coffin. The
canny heir wrote out a check for the
amount’ and buried that with his
parent.
lesceieia hk ee ane
Even beggars have their “season” in
Constantinople. During the winter
months the city harbors a much la, ger
number of them than in the summer,
when many migrate to the country.
Illinois’ Cereal Center.
The center of the proguction of the
most important cereals—corn, wheat,
oats, barley, rye and buckwheat—taken
in the aggregate, is in IMinois, a few
miles north of Quincy.
To Identity Father.
The Cop—What kind of man was
your father?
Willie (who is lost)—He was a tall
man with a baid-headed face—Butte
Inter-Mountain.
ae C1000
| a \. § be
| F Given
eS J To You
ANS
BOB 7 it you can produce
ee a inore harmless or
beter fair Toute
than
THE BAST INDIAN HAIR TONIC,
Cures Dandruff, stops falling hatr, turns
gray hair black, grows hair on bald
pote tt any roots remain, parsed hake te
grow long. ‘soft, thick, straight and silk-
€n. Small box %o, large box boo. 3 for $1.
Mailed to your address.
OUR MAGIO SKIN BLEACH
Beautifies thoskin at once, the wonder
ef all complexion creams for bleaching
fhe akin, and for cure of pimples tak
Frookton; oto. Large otteane aaa ei"
GERCIAL OFFER FOR 80 DATS
1 bottle French Rose Shampoo 8 50
lextra large-box Hair tonto 1.00
hottie Maio Face Biecek Fr
5 Cakes Hose Oreusn Beare ‘2
93.00
All for $1.00. Send money with order.
BRUNO MFG. CO.,
Buk WebMail dns staan
URS. P. G. BASLRY,
615 N. Second St.
ICE CREAM, CONFECTIONARIES
—— ' CAKEs, ETC. | ——
@@ Lawn and Pic-nio Parties, Fesn
vals, Weddings etc., furnished wit
the best high-grade Ice Cream o
the Shortest Notice.
Satistcation Guaranteed
8 2-8mo8.
ee ee ee eee eee
BEFORE
MAKING >
J Your purshase you woald do wel.
ito call atthe most reliable furnitare
house in the city ana see the fine
line of
U Refrigerators,
Blattings, Oil-Gloths
Bho eee
Gj BUds_AND CARPETS.
Biacistanis won se
‘ial CHAIRS. Our ee es the
best for the price amd the price 1
N very low.
’
g) 0. &. Jargen’s Son
WD) _qixastT BROAD Bt.,
‘MMF between 4th and Sth Street
oececencenscsncnennenocone reenenente
a
| Subscribe to THE PLANET.
$1.50 per year,
&
MRS. MARTE, the ¥ irld renowned and
way celsrnga ge” an’ Ret" Bt
Forel everythings ie ntcatien ea
Consulted upon nila cies butines toe
Sed'marringe a speciale. ‘Byer mentary We
Yealed, also of absent keesased and ving
Eaends. “Remover al. trouble saat masta
ments, challenges any. Mediams whoean a2
Seed Rerin startling’ revelations ‘of tse pest
Prevent, future evette of snes ite: Rermeetes
ES wiltnot for any price fatter You" yon may
Fest samured you wit gain feats Sitagee ay
epee’ She eam be conselted ton a aflire at
Lite, Love, Courtship, Marriage Brietds, Rte,
sri Fal dveripton af Pour" futare’colapan”
Ton., Ghe le very. scoureteln cesmrtse soa,
tng friends, "enciies ste Moai, Jat alt
joteneyn, contested wills: divorce aad "mpeseis
‘on in valuable nnd ‘reliable, She reads cone
eghiny spe or id the witholds nothing”
MRS MARTH tells your entire ite “ant ana
prevent and fare DEAD TANCK, Ns
power oc anf two Sodiamn you ever met
ntterts se vols Your tmother's fall harms ye:
tore marriage, the names of ‘ail Sour fomny.
Hkcitees and desrption, the’ adue and Ba
bees of four present husband, tnesnaes oe Poe
Rextif you are tohave one, ‘the name of the
Foun tan to wow cal Sa Yo, he sao of
Jour butare husband, and the Gay, towel asd
Jenrotzeur mnrnnge, how many children fou
We oF will haves ‘whether your prescat
sweethoart will be true te you ane “the wil
Rarry you: it you hnvwnowvecthears he Wil
fellyoa'when Fou willhave one and’ is bane
funihen andl date of acquaintance. “Au yen?
Fatare will be ‘told int bemest, cleared
Pini ganner and in dead francs." Stothers
Enpuld Know the susocn of ther husband cd
laren; young indies should kao every
Stout theirewecthearts on intended ‘Seabend
eon company, inary of =
tness until you know ali, do not let silly reli.
igtecraniee grevent yourconmalting:
Maca n ‘Be aly Sn in the, world who can
Serene fg ence at peer Pacers bo
Mie Renena Getsttoveros pu: cadens aaa
Sites tee yon love le tras ef tate,
‘Thcre ary sotue. persons who” believe that
gre ano trata 62 gate & from comsaitag
Siicaitim batwuch beliets’ ee contrsey to the
truth. It is only from the ack of discrimina:
Son that wach weonclunion wn be‘ reached fy
omatevery che who pincanie Names or helt
feifeep maim that oon sand he et wht
“Aud a person of an inquiring mind may. ask
spe teats Santa a
Seoeee aie Ghats wee we eae neon
slur. ey dnt po ote ea a
Stacmsens with soquiring the
Sad kindred branches Gat will have a tendons?
Sane Seer Soares eee
PG iSiand ‘undeniable tact that pe n
es aalabte eas ons wi
come for advice in full knowledge Of whut they
Sant to know, and yet ax soon a hey coutront
Timeginm they ty” thelr mart gadeavar to
‘rom the.‘ winds what they Snow 80. as
tefcerift willbe renearea bythe Mediu
jonceret ote ‘gf. paren by wna
ana dfshoneatanenns ts che" aft coed Ur ‘any
Shprineipled Mediums, Dut to take hold of ths
Baba'and gain control of tne mind thereby ir
Bea fps to aaa ge
Stndye ik can by done and by oaaltng
= farth the seemingly mystery becomes a
Realization,
This misjoct han reosived no Uitlo attention
oqeminent mam ana-even, woveye neafenare
Yt proven conclusively that afvhotme there
areintHngors in our midst with otfy tatieuoe
Derhaps the gates of wisdom have’ aot been
Bloaed to the entire profesion
fakes great ‘nal Of phedv to. become an
accomplished medium and by a covtinnous and
Strang ctorg she Key tose Weak apparent
SESS MABEH for the boneft of namanity. "7
——ADVIOE BY LETTER, $1.00.—
Hours From 10 A. M. 109 P. M
MRS. M. B. MARTH,
W. S$, 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 1N —>
Fine Boots, Shoes,
and Ladies Gaiters,
All Kinds of Fine Footweas.
H. F. JONATHAN
Fish Oysters & Produce
120N. 17th St., RICHMOND, VA.
ALL ORDERS WILL REOEIVE
PSOMPT ATTENTION.
Long Distance Phone, 752.
stew Phone, 478.
RORT. S. FORRESTER
— -SFLORIST=
255 E. Leigh Street,
RBIOHMOND, . - VIRGINIA
Plant Decorations, Ohoice Rosebuds,
Ses homer, Panera! Desens, Hue
‘8 specialty. Seater eS ok
When You Are Sick
weugrec tenvesian ee"
Drogetand Medicine from:
Leonard’s
Reliable
Prescription
Drug Store.
724 North Second Street, _
"Phone, 1589. Residence No. 911 2d
1589. = 9
ROBT, W. WILLIAMS
7 Dy
FUNERAL DIRECTOR &
| EMBALMER.
NO. 3019 P. STREET, BETWEEN
30TH AND 31ST STREETS.
RICHMOND, -- - VA
Special attention given to all business
gutrasted to me. "Carriages for faner-
, Teceptions and marriages
hours.” Satisfaction guaranteed. to all.
til6-20-"04
pone ee EN
° °
A. Ha yes
OFFICE AND WARY-ROOMS,
727 North Second Street.
. RESIDENCE, 725 N. 2nd St. «
First-class Hacks and Caskets of all de.
geriptions, I have a spare room for bod-
ies when the family have not @ suitable
place, All country orders we. given
Special attention. Your special attention
is called to the new style Oak Caskets,
Call and see me and you shall be watted
on kindly. Ser ee ea
’Phone, 2778.
The Castalo House,
792 E.BROADST. __ a
ees eae a pene and hav-
ano] am
Seat ee,
Choice Wines, Liquors and
Cigars.
FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT.
Meals At All Hours,
Nowr‘Phone, 1981, Wm. Custale, Prag
a rae
S. W. ROBINSON, ~
NO. 23 NORTH 18TH ST.
DEALER IN
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, &c.
8@7-Alll Stock Sold as Guaranteed.-wa
*PROMPT ATTENTION.
‘Your patronage is respecttully solicited.
JOHN M. HIGGINS,
CHOICE GROC ERIES,
WINES LIQUORS,
AND CIGARS.
PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR
THE MONEY.
1610 Fast Franklin Street,
3 [Near Old Market} @
Ricewonn, + + + Vingmeaa
HEY PLANET
ENGLISHMAN ENCASES BODY OF WIFE IN CEMENT.
George Crossman, Young Chap with Eight Wives, Kills Himself Rather Than Be Arrested by London Police.
Public interest in London continues to be largely absorbed in the extraordinary developments following the suicide of a man named George Crossman. On the night of March 23, Crossman, who was living in the respectable suburb of Kensalrise, killed himself to avoid arrest by the police, whose suspicions had been aroused regarding the contents of a trunk which Crossman was sending away from his house.
On opening the trunk the body of a woman was found encased in cement. Examination proved that she was murdered about six months ago and that she was one of Crossman's eight wives. Five of his wives were traced and found alive, one is dead and two are missing. The identity of the body found in the cement cannot yet be ascertained on account of decomposition and mutilation of the skull, which had been split with an ax or similar instrument. The police believe it possible the investigation may prove that Crossman adopted a similar method in ridding himself of other superfluous wives, of whom it is suspected he may have had several who have not yet been traced.
Though only about thirty years of age, Crossman's career rivals that of the most famous criminals. Under various aliases he led a double and even a triple married life, posing successfully, according to the necessity of the moment, as an engineer, compositor, wigmaker or bookmaker. His chief support, however, appears to have been his wives, several of whom he secured through advertisements. In 1899 Crossman was sentenced to five years' imprisonment for bigamy, and when he killed himself he still was on ticket of leave. Yet his neighbors always regarded Crossman as a respectable man, who led a quiet and uninteresting life. Crossman's first wife died, apparently, of natural causes, in 1897. He remarried in 1898 at Maidstone, and the same year contracted a bigamous marriage at Maidstone. For this he was sen-
A
CROSSMAN STARTED TO RUN.
lenced to five years' penal servitude.
Good conduct in prison enabled him to avoid the full term. Once free, he set to work to marry by wholesale. Wife No. 1 was quickly secured. She and her baby recently were living at Crossman's house at Kensalrise. At Reading Crossman secured a fifth wife, under the name of Seaton. A month later he married again. The whereabouts of this sixth wife are still uncertain. For a year he kept up the deception, and apparently none of his wives had the faintest suspicion of his honesty. Crossman found his eighth wife in the young daughter of a London railway employee, and she is supposed to be the victim he encased in cement.
At the time of his suicide Crossman thus had five wives, besides several children. The discovery occurred through the suspicions of a lodger to whom Crossman let some rooms at Kensalrise. For several weeks the lodger had noticed an obnoxious odor, and complained of it, but Crossman attributed it to the drains. At this period Crossman was living with one of his many wives, who occupied the same room where the dead body of another wife was concealed in a trunk. The lodger traced the odor to the trunk, and Crossman agreed to send it away. On the evening of March 23, while moving the trunk, the lodger's suspicions were further increased, and when he saw a black fluid ooze out of the trunk he went to the police station. Just as the grusome load was being lifted into a cart the police appeared.
With a cry Crossman started to run, with the police at his heels. Just as the foremost of his pursuers was at his heels Crossman drew a razor from his pocket and cut his throat, dying almost instantaneously. The body found in the trunk, from which the cement had now been chipped off, is that of a young, finely formed woman. It was only partially dressed. The police theory is that while she was disrobing Crossman struck her from behind with an ax, completely severing a portion of the skull, part of which is now missing.
The Electric Light Industry. Now we get far more illumination from electricity than from gas. According to figures just issued from the census office, there are nearly 4,000 electric light stations in the United States and
not quite 1,000 gas plants. The electric light plants are earning about $85,000,000 a year, and the gas plants $75,000,000 a year.
BILLYGOAT, DOG AND BOY.
Whenever Such a Combination Hap pens to Meet, Trouble Is Reasonably Sure to Come.
Steve Muscuga, a saloonkeeper of No. 18 Williams street, Bayonne, N. Y., gave his son a goat for a birthday present recently. The goat was christened Buck, but he was a very good-mannered goat. The other afternoon, Bum, the toothless bulldog, a family heirloom, made life so miserable for the goat that he decided to get the dog have the yard to itself.
A bad boy snapped a clothespin over Buck's tail and climbed a tree. Buck started for home, casting bleats and eyes at the strange pincher on his tail. Into the barroom raced the poor Buck and began chasing that clothespin about a circle.
When Bum appeared and started to finish the fight he had begun earlier in
BOOK
BEER
MADE FOR THE OTHER GOAT
the day Buck jumped on a chair. Bum was able to nip his legs. Buck jumped to the bar. There he was safe. He began chasing the clothespin again, when suddenly he got a glimpse of the looking glass. What he saw there made him forget the clothespin. Buck poised himself after the manner of his masonic brother about to administer the thirty-third degree. Then he shot himself at that other goat. Steve Mucsuga ran in with his rifle, believing the laborers from the gas house were raiding his place. When he saw what had happened, he took aim at the billy-goat and pulled the trigger. But Bum got in the way of the bullet and went down with a yelp. Mrs. Mucsuga ran in and fainted. Buck ran out, conscious of nothing except that he had smashed that other goat. Neighbors hurried in and found Mucsuga, with a smoking rifle, leaning over his prostrate wife, and good old Bum dead on the floor.
"Murder," they yelled. The police held Mucsuga until he proved to them that he hadn't murdered his wife. A general alarm was sent out for Buck.
CRIME CAUSES SENSATION.
German Musician Takes Lock of Hair from Dead Sweetheart in Church on a Wager.
A young German musician has been arrested at Berlin for committing a sensational crime which has stirred up all Berlin.
A few nights ago the Church of the Apostles was violently entered between one and three o'clock in the morning and a coffin containing the body of a young girl who had committed suicide was broken open.
The musician who was arrested was the former sweetheart of the girl, and he confessed before the police that he had broken into the church because of a bet made in a saloon near by that he would prove his courage by entering the
O
church, breaking open the coffin and putting a lock of his sweetheart's hair from her head.
As his excuse the young man pleads that he was half intoxicated, but the sentiment against him is so strong that he will probably be very severely punished.
**Starvation Wages in Italy.**
No wonder the working people of Italy are eager to come to the United States. In Italy laborers earn 40 to 50 cents a day; bricklayers 80 cents to $1; stone cutters and carpenters, 60 to 70 cents; painters and frescoers, 40 to 50 cents; experts, 60 to 75 cents.
**Japs Admire Long Noses.**
The Japanese are noted for long noses; therefore they are considered a mark of beauty. A Japanese girl with an unusually prominent nose is considered a belle.
First in Germany
The first woman who got the degree of doctor of medicine in Germany was the wife of a pastor named Erxleben. She got it at the University of Halle, just 150 years ago.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Trump—Please, mum, I don't want nothin' but the privilege of sittin' here and listening to Mme. Patti, th' great prima donna, sing.
Mrs. Youngwife—Goodness me! She isn't here.
"Parding, mum, but I hear her now."
"Why, that's my baby crying. But don't go. Dinner will be ready soon."—N. Y. Weekly.
He complained bitterly of the slowness of the train.
"If you don't like it," said the conductor, "why don't you get out and walk?"
Afraid you'd hitch the blamed train
out, me and make me drag it." Chicago
out.
First congress meets and day by day
Men speak 'mildst plaudits and acclaim'
Adjourns and strange to say
The world meets on about the same.
-Washington Star
"Look here," said the conductor, "this is a bad nickel."
"Well," said the passenger, "what do you want me to do with it? Spank it, or send it to church?"—Chicago Tribune.
Buy Your Goods From the AMERICAN GROCERY, 1221 St. James St.
They retail their goods at wholesale prices. They are also handling a nice line of fresh fish of all kinds at the lowest market prices. Wood and Ice by the wholesale or in any quantity you want. We can assure you a better service now as we run two delivery wagons. We will give you a few of our prices to show you how much you can save by buying from us:
Best Granulated Sugar. 43%
Best Water-ground Meal, per pk. 20
Good Salt Pork, per lb. 77%
Best Rib Pork. 10
California Ham. 94%
Snack & Tray Lard. 97%
Butchers' Land. 11
Pork and Beef Steak. 11-12
Fresh & Corn Shoulders. 10
Link & Tray Sausage. 10
Smoked Joles. 7
Small Can Tomatos. 6
Large. 8
Can Corn. 9-10
Condensed Milk. 5-10
Large Can Salmon. 9
Large Can Beef. 121%
Dunlop & Obelisk Flour, per bag 35
Harter's A No. 1. 36
Good Luck Powders. 4
TOBACCA AND CIGARS. 6
Green, Black or Mixed Tea. 35-40
Fresh Roasted Coffee. 10%-11-12%
Octagon Soap. per bar. 4
Good Family Soap. per doz. 20
Moon, Polio or Forest City 6 bars. 15
Nice Toilet Soaps
Large Candy & Cakes—Daily
Large buns of Fresh Fish
Croakers, Trout, Dutter Fish,
Hickory, Shad and Fresh Herrins
per bunch 10-25
Large Shad. 20-25
Extracts of different Flavors. Fresh
Eggs and Butter, and fresh Country
Produce at extremely Low Prices.
Call and see samples. Orders promptly
filled.
PHONE—2883.
THE AMERICAN GROCERY
AND PROVINSION MARKET,
1221 St. James St.
S. H. WILLIAMS, General Manager.
HALL MEMORIAL I
HALL MEMORIAI INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
MASSILLON, OHIO.
ONE OF THE FINEST EQUIPPED
YOUNG LADIES IN THE NOV
Our building has been newly furnisf
Heated and Lighted by Natural Gas.
GIRLS ADMITTED H
Special Preparatory course for those desi
COURSES
DRESS MAKING
Music (Instrumental and vocal.)
SPECIAL COURSES IN ALL BRAN
WRITE FOR
FRANCES A. RILEY,
Tuition
Lodging.
Boarding in Institute
Our winter term opened January 12
ONE OF THE FINEST EQUIPPED BOARDING SEMINARIES FOR YOUNG LADIES IN THE NORTH. COMPETENT FACULTY.
Our building has been newly furnished throughout, modern conveniences—Heated and Lighted by Natural Gas.
GIRLS ADMITTED FROM 14 YEAR$ UP.
Special Preparatory course for those desiring to become Domestic Science Teachers.
COURSES SPECIAL.
FRANCES A. KILEY, PRESIDENT.
Tuition.....$50.00 per year
Lodging.....$2.00 per month
Boarding in Institute.....$9.00 per month
Our winter term opened January 12, 1904. Summer course closes. June 30
Special Course for Teachers of Domestic Science beginning May 16, closes Sept. 1.
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Hallented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and notting but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine Funnerr supplies.
OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT--Man on Duty All Night
Always a Way.
"Afraid of what?"
THE PLANET FOR 1904.
```markdown
```
FOLLOW
To any person sent on the basis stated, we will and placed therein. A hail Pillow Massacre, Fall of the charge of 9th and 10th Cat Hill.
We will furnish pick President Theodore Roosevelt parents and ten children, President McKinley and his Cavite, Spanish and American.
Anyone sending two
We will send the St. United States to any one who will pay the advance one year.
To any one sending scribers, we will give a free These Offers are made and the PLANET one year for
Good, L
IN EVERY P
JOHN
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
FOLLOWING LIBERAL OFFERS:
To any person sending us a yearly subscription of $1.50 and the name of a friend or relative as a subscriber on the basis stated, we will send them, postage prepaid, a handsome gold-plated breast pin, with their photograph colored and placed therein. A handsome chromo, size 22x28 inches of the Battle of Shilch, the Battle of Fort Wagner, Fort Pillow Massacre, Fall of Petersburg, Battle of El Caney, Battle of Manila, Land Battle of Quasimas, showing charge of 9th and 10th Cavalry, charge of the 24th and 25t Infantry in rescue of the Rough Riders at San Juan Hill.
We will furnish pictures of the following: Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass, Prof. Booker T. Washington, President Theodore Roosevelt, Gen. U. S. Grant, Family Record for colored people, containing space for photographs of parents and ten children, Autograph copy of the Declaration of Independence, with portraits of all the signers thereof, President McKinley and his Cabinet, Explosion of the U. S. Battleship Maine, Admiral Dewey's Great Naval Battle off Cavite, Spanish and American Peace Commissioners.
Anyone sending two yearly subscribers will be entitled to two of any one of these offers.
We will send the St. Louis, GLOBE-DEMOCRAT, semi-weekly edition, one of the leading Republican papers in the United States to any one sending two yearly subscribers. We will send this great Republican journal to any subscriber who will pay the advance rate of $2.00. This will give the PLANET for one year and the St. Louis GLOBE-DEMOCRAT for one year.
To any one sending 25 yearly subscribers we will send a Sewing.Machine. To any one sending Seventy-five Subscribers, we will give a free trip to the World's Fair at St. Louis.
These Offers are made in good faith and will be carried out to the letter. The Cosmopolitan will be sent one year and the PLANET one year for $2.00 for both
Good, Live, Active Agents Wanted
FED BOARDING SEMINARIES IN
WITH. COMPETENT FACULTY.
ed throughout, modern convenienc
FROM 14 YEARS UP.
ing to become Domestic Science Teach
SPECIAL.
MILLINERY
Food Economics
NCHES OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE
IN EVERY PART OF THE COUNTRY. WRITE TO US FOR TERMS. ADDRESS:
In order to promote circulation and to create additional interest, we have decided to make the
Knights of Pythias,
It pays an endowment and burial benefit of $200.00 for all ages. It pays $4.00 per week sick dues. The badge, costing 75 cents each is the only absolutely necessary regalia. For information concerning the organization of lodges, apply at the main office.
a feature and persons cannot do better than to enter the little ones in this mystic circle. The expense is nominal and the benefits all they could be expected. It pays from $1.00 to $1.50 sick dues and death benefits or from 5.00 to $40.00. If you have no Pythian Ledge or Court or Band in your neighborhood, or raise one
For all information concerning the Children's Department, address.
For all information concerning special rates of membership for new lodges and courts address.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAVS.
F.C.B.
311 North Fourth St., Richmond, Va.
This organization is one of the most powerful in the country and its progress has been phenomenal. The Grand Lodge of Virginia has jurisdiction over all of the cities and counties in this state. Thirty males are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitute one of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything else. Founded on Friendship, based on Charity and established on Benevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will find it an order worthy of their heartiest support.
The Courts of Calanthe
The Courts of Calanthe
Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership of thirty persons to organize a court. Its members are pledged to exhibit Fidelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love one for the other. It pays an endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per week sick times. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions.
N. A., S. A., E., A., A. AND A
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.,
311 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.