Richmond Planet

Saturday, February 9, 1907

Richmond, Virginia

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THE RICHMOND PLANET THE TROUBLE AT BROWNSVILLE TEX. Senate Committee Hears Evidence. Positive Testimony by the Colored Soldiers. VOL. XXIV. NO. 10. THE BRO Senate C Test THE DEFENSE IS MAK [Washington Post, Feb. 5, 1907.] The investigation by the Senate Committee on Military Affairs into the shooting up of Brownville, as alleged, by members of the Twenty fifth Infantry, colored, was commenced yesterday at the Capitol. The proceedings were begun with out formality, and the entire morging session was devoted to the examination of one witness, Sergeant Israel Harris of Company D who had been in the service eleven years and six months. He is now employed as a porter in the Elliot National Bank, at Boston, having obtained that position shortly after his dismissal from the regiment. This witness proved to be a man of fair intelligence. His testimony developed utter ignorance of the names of those who were engaged in the shooting, or who might have had knowledge of it, and the further alleged fact that after the shooting there had been absolutely no discussion of the affair among the men of his own company. HAD ANTICIPATED TROUBLE Herris admitted that he had an anticipated trouble, and that the subject of the relations existing between the soldiers and the citizens had been discussed before the shooting. The matter was not discussed afterward, he said, except by some of the men, who, to use the language of the witness, "wondered what would be the outcome." A score of Negro soldiers of the Twenty fifth Infantry, discharged from the army without honor be cause? of their alleged participation in the shooting up of the Texas town, were in attendance when the committee began its first sitting. They were not invited into the com mittee room as a whole, but were assigned to an unused of a con ridor near the room. Only a lim ited number were permitted to sit during the proceedings. There was only one white man in the group of witnesses. The color ed men, while waiting to be called, discussed political affairs, with an occasional reference to the probable length of the inquiry, but, because of agreement or for reasons best known to themselves, the merits of the affair to be investigated and the probable result of the inquiry were tabooed as a subject of con versation. ATTENDANCE IS LARGE The attendance of members of the committee at the hearing was large, but it is expected that after the investigation is well under way, it will be necessary for the chairman to appoint a subcommittee take testimony. Attorneys were barred from the committee room, the colored soldiers under investigation having no representatives at the hearing other than members of the committee. It is understood that Senator Foraker, author of the resolution of inquiry, will look after the interests of the men if they are placed in jeopardy. During the assembling of the committee, which was rather slow, Senators referred continually to the proceedings as the "trial," and as often were compelled to correct the term and call it a hearing. Senator Warren, chairman of the committee presided at yesterday's meetings. Before the proceedings opened there reported, in response to subpoenas, the following former members of the discharged battalion: Mingo Sanders, whose twenty six years' service has been described in debate in the Senate; W. H. Miller, E. L. Daniels, L. T. Thornton, C. H. Madison, Israel Harris, A. H. Ro land, T. R. Altman, Wallington, Elmer Brown, Franklin, Dessure, Jackson, and Winter Washington. SENATOR FORAKER ACTIVE. Senator Foraker took charge of the calling of witnesses and first summoned Harris to the stand. He was questioned by Senator Foraker explained the position he had asked in D Company, and was then interrogated concerning the happenings at Fort Brown on the night of August 13—14. In reply to questions he said: "We had some disturbance—some shooting, I mean. I was asleep in D barracks and at about 12 o'clock I was aroused by the noise of guns. I put on my trousers and shoes, but no blouse or leggings. Then there was the sound to arms and D company got dressed and we started for our guns." The witness then told of getting the guns in the dark, after the racks had been opened. He described the racks and showed that there is but one key to a rack and that this key will unlock only one rack, and that the keys are in the possession of non commissioned of ficers. CAPTAIN CALLED THE ROLL. The witness said that when the company formed outside, Capt. Lyons of D Company, was present and immediately called the roll and personally counted his men, and tait none was absent. He said that no persons had joined the company after the formation and he declared that no men could have fired from D barracks without having been detected. He told of the patrol of the town by D Company, said no soldiers were found in town, and finally he told of the return from the patrol and the surrender of arms and the locking of the arms in the racks. The inspection of guns on the following morning was explained. It was found, he said that none of the guns had been used, or, if they had been, they had been cleaned over night. Senator Foraker read from the report of Maj. Blocksom, who invites tigged the affray for the War De partiment, in which the major said he did not take much stock in the story of the clean guns as a defense because the guns could have been cleaned by the men while returning from "shooting up" the town, and that the cleaning could have been done in a minute or two. EXPLAINS RIFLES IN USE. Calling for guns furnished to the committee by the War Department, Sen. Foraker first had one gun then tiffed by the witness as a new model Springfield rifle, and another as the Krag Jorgensen rifle. The former was in use by D Company, but the witness was familiar with the Krag. Harris took the Springfield like an expert, threw back the shell ejector sighted along the barrel, and made the members of the committee look nervous. Mr. Foraker asked the witness to show how a gun is cleaned. "Can't that be dispensed with?" asked Senator Lodge. "No. I want to show how long it takes to clean a gun so it will pass inspection. How long does it require?" Mr. Foraker asked the witiness. Harris said it could not be done in less than ten minutes, and he then went through the moves. He testified that a gun cannot be cleaned to pass inspection without a regulation rod, and that only four RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1907. such rods are provided for each company. COULD NOT HAVE BEEN CLEANED. He said that one shot would put the gun in condition to require all most as much cleaning as six or more shots, his inference being that it would have been impossible for any guns of D Company to be used in "shooting up" Brownsville and to be cleaned surreptitiously, so as to pass inspection when the racks were unlocked and the guns inspected the next day. Harris' testimony was interrupted by Senator Warren, chairman of the committee, who proceeded to examine him at some length as an expert in ordinance for the purpose of obtaining the opinion of the man behind the gun for the benefit of the committee as to the relative merits of the Krag Jorgensen and Springfield rifles. Harris' preference was for the latter weapon, and he told why. Senator Foraker also read from the army regulations as to the best method of cleaning guns. Finally, after the ex, sergeant's views on army equipment had been obtained Senator Foraker proceeded with questions relating to target practice, for the purpose of bring ing out the point that it was impossible for the men to have smuggled cartridges from target practice for use at any other time. Witness said the cartridges were accounted for at all times. DENIES KNOWLEDGE OF SHOOT ING. Senator Foraker was about to conclude with the witness, when Mr. Scott suggested that he had asked him nothing concerning his knowledge of the men who did the shooting. "Oh, yes, I had forgotten that," said the Ohio Senator. "Sergeant, do you know who did the shooting?" "No, sir, I do not." "Did you have any reason to suspect the members of your battalion of having fired the shots?" "No, sir." "Did you hear of any dirty guns or missing cartridges?" "No, sir." In answer to a question by Senator Pettus, the witness said that on the night of the shooting he heard seventy five or eighty shots fired. At the suggestion of Senator Foraker the cross examination was tak en up by Senator Warren. Harris had said in answer to questions by Senator Overman that he had listened to the voices of tae men as the roll was called, as he wanted to make sure that none of the men of his company was absent because he had said fears that there would be trouble at some time be tween the citizens and the soldiers. REFERS TO "PAST EVENTS." What made you think that some of the men of your company, or any of the soldiers were mixed up with the citizens?" asked Senator Warren. Only from past events," replied the witness. "What past events?" "We had had some trouble; the men claimed that some of them had been insulted. We had been stained in Texas before and there was trouble with the citizens in San Antonio." "Shooting?" "Yes." "What difficulty do you refer to in Brownsvills?" "I had heard that one of the men had been knocked down in the street and another had been pushed into the river; that had been discussed among the men." "You knew, that made a rather bad feeling between the citizens and the soldiers?" "Yes, sir." Continuing, witness said he had heard about the order that soldiers were not to leave the barracks after 8 o'clock; that was a normal or der. He knew further that the soldiers were not allowed at the bars in the saloons. In view of this, he admits that he had reason to fear there would be trouble. WITNESS EXPECTED FIGHT. "What kind of trouble?" asked Senator Warner. "I thought there would be a fight of some kind." "It occurred to you at the time of the call to arms that some of the men might be in the shooting?" "Yes, sir." "Did you communicate your fear to Capt. Lyon?" "I didn't that night." Witness said that he had heard the relations between the citizens and the soldiers discussed prior to the shooting by Newton and Reed. "You knew," asked Senator Warner, "that members of your company were suspected of doing the shooting?" "Yes, sir." "What effort did you make to find out who it was?" "The only thing I could do was to listen to the conversation of the men, and I did listen, but I never heard a man say anything about it which would lead me to believe that any of them knew who did it. All I heard them say was to worrier what would be the outcome." OTHER INCIDENTS DISCUSSED "You heard all the other incidents discussed, but you never heard anything discussed about the Brownville affair?" asked Senator Warner in surprise. "No; just wondering what would be the outcome." Senator Scott, Senator Lodge and other members of the committee pressed the witness along this line and he grew somewhat restive, but persisted in his answer that he had never heard the subject discussed, even though it was unusual. The examination of the witness was not concluded, and will be continued to day. The full platoon of ex members of the Twenty fifth, corralled in one of the blind corridors, when the hearing adjourned were told to report this morning. [Washington Post. Feb. 6th. 1907] The Senate Military Affairs Committee resumed the Brownville hearing at 10:30 o'clock yesterday morning. Former Sergt. Israel Harris, who was before the committee on Monday, was examined again yesterday. So far Harris is the only witness who has been questioned by the committee, although there are twenty or more witnesses in attendance and more on their way to Washington. Only one witness at a time is admitted to the committee room. At the rate of progress made during the last two days, the committee will not complete its investigation for several months. However, a prominent member of the military affairs committee said yesterday that the examination of many of the witnesses summoned would be very brief; that after they had gone ove er the case thoroughly with two or three important witnesses the committee could make quicker work of the others, but they would hardly be able to finish the investigation before the end of the session. SERGEANT CROSS EXAMINED Almost immediately yesterday Sergt. Harris was subjected to a sharp fire of cross questioning by Senator Warner. Mr. Warner's questions related largely to the time when the son CONTINUED ON EIGHTH PAGE. KNIGHTS OF KHORASSAN Mecca Temple, Improved Dramatic Order of Knights of Khorassan and a grand spectacular initiation at the Pythian Castle last Wednes day night. The full uniform and equipments of this branch of the Order had been secured and all heartily enjoyed themselves. The supper was served at the conclu sion of the ceremonies. The outfit was expensive, but it served its pur poses well. Many more candidates will be initiated at the next meet ing. —Miss M. L. Chiles has been in disposed at her residence during the week and has been unable to attend to her duties. —The Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church has increased the salary of its popular pastor, Rev. R. V. Peyton, D. D. from $1,200 per year to $1,500 per year. —The Fifth Baptist Church (Sydney) has increased the salary of its pastor, Rev. W. F. Graham, D. D. by just $200 per year. He is highly regarded there. —Miss Mabel Holmes has been very sick and is confined to her residence. —Mr. R. N. Smith, the well known headwaiter was the guest of honor at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. William Custalo last Sunday afternoon. Mr. W. M. T. Forrester and Mr. John Mitchell, Jr. were present. A collation was after wards enjoyed at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. John Powell. —Everybody is going to the Grand Union Quartette Contest at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, Monday, February 18th, under the auspices of Class No. 3. Admission 10cts. If the colored man who was rob bed by News Agent on train R. F. and P. R. R. about a monta ago will call on me, I will refund the money. District Manager Wanted—$40 per Month. WANTED—At once, Manager, (male or female) for every district in Virginia. Steady work. Experi- ence unnecessary added at the Consolidated Order of Friendship. Roanoke, Virginia. WANTED—100 young girls of good character to do ligat manufac turing work. Can make large wages after learning. Will be paid while learning. Steady employ ment. Apply at once to 516 N. 12th Street. Opposite Colored Normal School. 2t Dr. Graham's 30th Anniversary Last Sunday was a gala day with the Fifth Baptist Church. The Church celebrated its 41st Anniversary in connection with the 30th Anniversary of the pastor's ministerial life and his first anniversary as pastor of that church. The day was a beautiful one and the people poured out from all parts of Richmond in honor of the occasion. In the morning the pastor preached from Mark 16:15, Matthew, 28:20. After the pastor Mr. Martin Crittendon spoke beautifully on the Sunday School work. At 3:30 P. M. an overflowing congregation was present to hear Rev. Z. D. Lewis, D. D. of the 2nd Baptist Church. Dr. Lewis preached an able sermon and swayed his audience at will upon the subject, "The Watchman upon the Wall." After the sermon Mr. James H. Chiles a ten minutes address on the work of Dr. Graham during his thirteenth year pastorate at the Fifth Street Baptist Church, showing that during that time a debt of $11,000 was can beled, $42,000 raised for all pur poses, 1020 members received by Baptism and over 200 by letter and otherwise. This history given by Mr. Chiles electrified the great waiting and lence. Deacons Edward T. Coleman and James Page of the Fifth Street Baptist Church were present and took an active part in the exercises. Deacon Armistead Washington of Second Baptist Church called for the collection. At 8:30 P. M. the Bishop of the Hill, Rev. Evans Payne, D. D. occupied the pulpit. The Doctor preach ed from 2nd Samuel, 5th Chapter, and 4th verse. The sermon was pronounced as one of the best ever delivered in Richmond. The great congregation sat bathed in tears and at times wept and shouted for joy, while God's great servant proclaimed the word. As for the congregation, 500 people were turned away who could not get in. The collection was a novel one in the plan. The Pastor had asked that friends take envelopes and put in them thirty cents each, thus making one penny for each year he had preached the gospel. By this method $105 was laid on the table. Deacon Carver Taylor of Fifth St. Bapt. Church made an elegant appeal for the collection and the people heard him. Father Wilson of the church de livered a ten minutes address on the history of the Church, showing that it was organized forty one years ago by Rev. Mr. Barnett, a native of Africa. Only brother Wilson and one more member are with the Church who were in its organization. His bit of history was quite interesting. Monday night was the social occasion. A programme was rendered in the auditorium, Mr. J. York Harris being Master of Ceremonies. The Choir rendered sweet music and then Prof. B. H. Peyton adressed the large gathering on the subject "The Accomplishments of a Faithful Worker." Prof. Peyton reviewed Bible and profane history, showing what creat men had Jone and concluded in a flight of eloquence on the work of Dr. Graham which captured the entire audience. After him came Deacon George Woodson, who represented the Deacon Board. His remarks were timely, catchy and instructive. He is one of the time honored deacons of the Fifth Baptist Church. The recitation by Miss Avies Harsley was pronounced one of the finest artistic elocutionary renditions ever heard in the city of Richmond. She made her mark. After these services the guests were invited by Mrs. Goodwyn Brown to the lecture room where a sumptuous, elaborate and beautiful supper was served by the refreshment committee. Around taile short spicy addresses were de livered by Rev. A. B. Smith, Attorney J. Thomas Hewin, Rev. Phil Winston, and Rev. W. W. Young. Rev. W. H. White graced the table. It was generally pronounced that the supper in its arrangement, in its bill of fare and in quantity was an up to date affair. Fifth Baptist Church is in her glory. During the year the Church raised over $3,200 and reduced the debt from $5700 to $4000. About 40 members were added by baptism and a great many otherwise. The membership of the Church is 350. —Mr. R. N. Smith, the popular headwaiter of the Homestead, at Hot Springs, Va., in company with Mr. W. C. Collins called on us. —Mrs. Gregory W. Hayes, Principal of Virginia Theological Seminary and College was in the city during the week on business. Last Monday she addressed the Ministers Conference and made a fine impresion. She dined in company with Dr. G. B. Howard at Mrs. W. F. Graham's. She reports the work at Lynchburg in good condition. PRICE. FIVE CENTS Resolutions of Sympathy and Respect from the Board of Directors of the Southern Aid Society of Virginia, Inc. In Reference to Mr. Levi W. Holbrook, of Danville, Virginia. Richmond, Va., Feb. 3, 1907. In view of the loss we have surained by the decease of our friend associate and director, Mr. Levi W. Holbrook and of the still heavier loss sustained by those who were nearest and dearest to him, be it RESOLVED. That the Board of Directors of the above named corporation consider it but a just tribute to the memory of the departed to say that we regret the removal from our social and business relations of so valuable and distinguished a member of our Resident Board at Danville, Va. RESOLVED. That we sincerely condole with the family of the deceased on the dispensation with which it has pleased Divine Providence to afflict them, as well as our selves, and we commend them for consultation to Him who orders all things for the best, and whose cas tirements are meant in mercy. RESOLVED. That copy of this heartfelt testimonial of my sympathy and sorrow be forwarded to the deceased's family, also spread upon our minutes and be published in one or more of the colored papers in the State. Done by order of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of the Southern Aid Society of Virginia, inc. A. D. Price, Pres.; T. M. Crump, Sec. and Mgr.; B. L. Jordan, Aud itor; Edward Stewart, 1st Vice Pres.; James T. Carter, 2nd Vice Pres.; B. A. Cephas, 3rd Vice Pres. Pres.; Treas.; E. C. Brown, W. A. Jordan, Charles N. Jackson, Samuel Morgan, Wm. E. Randolph, A. Washington. From Petersburg. Sunday, Feb. 3rd was a high day with the inmates and nurses of the Central Asylum at Petersburg. The occasion being that of a visit by Rev R. O. Johnson, B. D., pastor of the Moore Street Baptist Church of Richmond, Va. Rev. Johnson, our old friend, who has visited us almost yearly since 1892 always brings us joy and sunshine. Being accompanied by two of his members, Rev S. W. Turner and Mr. Roscoe W. Johnson, President of the B. Y. P. U, he arrived about dinner hour. After visiting most of the male departments they were taken to the beautiful newly built chapel where were seated about 300 of the inmates and a large number of the nurses waiting with eager eyes and open hearts to receive the word of God. After devotional exercises, Deacon Banks Wood, who has booked after the farm and religious part of the Institution for more than 40 years, introduced his esteemed friend and brother Rev. Johnson, who in his usual way electrified his hearers by the text 2 Thess. 1:7: "And to you who are troubled rest with us." The parting scene was very affeive when the host of men and wo men gathered around the speaker to shake his hand, some rejoicing with glad hearts while others were bathed in tears. There are something over 1260 imates at Petersburg Asylum. God bless our dear old Commonwealth for providing such a comfortable place for the unfortunate ones of our race, and the brotherly and sisterly care by those who have them in charge. Too much praise cannot be given to the President and Doctors of the Institution whose interest could hardly be deeper, if it were an Asylum for the whites, their own people. $100.00 Endowment Paid Norfolk, Va., Feb. 4, 1907. This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counsellor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Calanthe, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Jennie Jones, who was a member of Friendship Court, No. 143 of Norfolk, Va. Signed—Phillip Jones, Beneficiary. Witnesses: Lizzie T. Donaldson, W. G. Lucy L. Peaks, P. W. C. Fannie Cooke, D. D. G. W. G. $100-00 Endowment Paid. Richmond, Va., Feb. 6. '07 This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. Calan the ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Mary A. Young of Milfred's Court, No. 242 of Richmond, Va. her Signed—W. M. X Young mark Beneficiary THE Masquerader By KATHERINE CECIL THURSTON. Author of "The Circle," Etc. Copyright, 1905, 1904, by Harper & Brothers TWO CHAPTER VII. I T was a little less than three weeks since Chilcote and Loder had drunk their toast and again Loder was seated at his desk. His head was bent and his hand moved carefully as he traced line after line of meaningless words on a sheet of foolscap. Having covered the page with writing, he rose, moved to the center table and compared his task with an open letter that lay there. The comparison seemed to please him. He straightened his shoulders and threw back his head in an attitude of critical satisfaction. So absorbed was he that when a step sounded on the stairs outside he did not notice it, and only raised his head when the door was thrown open unceremoniously. Even then his interest was momentary. "Hello!" he said, his eyes returning to their scrutiny of his task. Chilcote shut the door and came hastily across the room. He looked ill and harassed. As he reached Loder he put on his hand nervously and touched his arm. Loder looked up. "What is it?" he asked. "Any new development?" Chilcote tried to smile. "Yes," he said huskily. "It's come." Loder freed his arm. "What? The end of the world?" "No. The end of me." The words came jerkily, the strain that had enforced them showing in every syllable. Still Loder was uncomprehending. He could not or would not understand. Again Chilcote caught and jerked at his sleeve. "Don't you see? Can't you see?" Chilcote dropped the sleeve and passed his handkerchief across his forehead. "It's come," he repeated. "Don't you understand? I want you." He drew away, then stepped back again anxiously. "I know I'm taking you unawares," he said. "But it's not my fault. On my soul, it's not! The thing seems to spring at me and grip me"—He stopped, sinking weakly into a chair. For a moment Loder stood erect and immovable. Then, almost with reluctance, his glance turned to the figure beside him. "You want me to take your place tonight, without preparation?" His voice was distinct and firm, but it was free from contempt. "Yes; yes, I do." Chilcote spoke without looking up. "That you may spend the night in morphia—this and other nights?" Chilcote lifted a flushed, unsettled face. "You have no right to preach. You accepted the bargain." Loder raised his head quickly. "I never"—he began. Then both his face and voice altered. "You are quite right," he said coldly. "You won't have to complain again." Chilcote stirred uncomfortably. "My dear chap," he said, "I meant no offense. It's merely"— "Your nerves. I know. But come to business. What am I to do?" Chilcote rose excitedly. "Yes, business. Let's come to business. It's rough on you, taking you short like this. But you have an erratic person to deal with. I've had a horrible day—a horrible day." His face had paled again, and in the green lamplight it possessed a grayish hue. Involuntarily Loder moved away. Chilcote watched him as he passed to the desk and began mechanically sorting papers. "A horrible day," he repeated, "so bad that I darn't face the night. You have read De Quincey?" he asked, with a sudden change of tone. "Yes." "Then read him again and you'll understand. I have all the horrors without any art. I have no 'hidies of sorrow,' but I have worse monsters than his 'crocodile.'" He laughed unpleasantly. Loder turned. "Why, in the devil's name"—he began; then again he halted. Something in Chilcote's drawn, excited face checked him. The strange sense of predestination that we sometimes see in the eyes of another struck cold upon him, chilling his last attempt at remonstrance. "What do you want me to do?" he substituted in an ordinary voice. The words steadied Chillotte. He laughed a little. The laugh was still shaky, but it was pitched in a lower key. "You—you're quite right to pull me up. We have no time to waste. It must he I o'clock." He pulled out his watch, then walked to the window and stood looking down into the shadowy court. "How quiet you are here!" he said. Then abruptly a new thought struck him, and he wheeled back into the room. "Louer," he said quickly—"Loder, I have an idea! While you are me, why shouldn't I be you? Why shouldn't I be John Loder instead of the vagrant we contemplated? It covers everything; it explains everything. It's magnificent! I am amazed we never thought of it before." Loder was still beside the desk. "I thought of it," he said without looking back. "And didn't suggest it?" "No." "Why?" Loder said nothing, and the other colored. "Jealous of your reputation?" he said satirically. "I have none to be jealous of." I have to be serious on. Chilcote laughed disagreeably. "Then you aren't so far gone in philosophy as I thought. You have a niche in your own good opinion." Again Loder was silent; then he smiled. "You have an oddly correct perception at times," he said. "I suppose I have had a lame sort of pride in keeping my name clean, but pride like that is out of fashion, and I've got to float with the tide." He laughed a short laugh that Chilcote had heard once or twice before, and, crossing the room, he stood beside his visitor. "After all," he said, "what business have I with pride, straight or lame? Have my identity, if you want it. When all defenses have been broken down one barrier won't save the town." Laughing again, he laid his hand on the other's arm. "Come," he said, "give your orders. I capitulate." An hour later the two men passed from Loder's bedroom, where the final arrangements had been completed, back into the sitting room. Loder came first in faultless evening dress. His hair was carefully brushed, the clothes he wore fitted him perfectly. To any glance, critical or casual, he was the man who had mounted the stairs and entered the rooms earlier in the evening. Chilcote's manner of walking and poise of the head seemed to have descended upon him with Chilcote's clothes. He came into the room hastily and passed to the desk. "I have no private papers," he said, "so I have nothing to lock up. Everything can stand as it is. A woman named Robins comes in the mornings to clean up and light the fire; otherwise you must shift for yourself. Nobody will disturb you. Quiet, dead quiet, is about the one thing you can count on." Chilcote, half halting in the doorway, made an attempt to laugh. Of the two he was noticeably the more embarrassed. In Loder's well worn, well brushed tweed suit he felt stranded on his own personality, bereft for the moment of the familiar accessories that helped to cloak deficiencies and keep the wheel of conventionality comfortably rolling. He stood unpleasantly conscious of himself, unable to shape his sensations even in thought. He glanced at the fire, at the table, finally at the chair on which he had thrown his overcoat before entering the bedroom. At the sight of the coat his gaze brightened, the aimlessness forsook him, and he gave an exclamation of relief. "By Jove!" he said. "I clean forgot." "What?!" Loder looked round. "The rings." He crossed to the coat and thrust his hand into the pocket. "The duplicates arrived only this afternoon—the nick of time, eh?" He spoke fast, his fingers searching busily. Occupation of any kind came as a boon. Loder slowly followed him, and as the box was brought to light he leaned forward interestedly. "As I told you, one is the copy of an old signet ring, the other a plain band—a plain gold band like a wedding ring." Chilcote laughed as he placed the four rings side by side on his palm. "I could think of nothing else that would be wide and not ostentations. You know how I detest display." Loder touched the rings. "You have good taste," he said. "Let's see if they serve their purpose." He picked them up and carried them to the lamp. Chilcote followed him. "That was an ugly wound," he said, his curiosity reawakening as Loder extended his finger. "How did you come by it?" The other smiled. "It's a memento," he said. "Of bravery?" "No; quite the reverse." He looked again at his hand, then glanced back at Chilcote. "No," he repeated, with an unusual impulse of confidence. "It serves to remind me that I am not exempt—that I have been fooled like other men." "That implies a woman?" "Yes." Again Loder looked at the scar on his finger. "I seldom recall the thing, it's so absolutely past. But I rather like to remember it tonight. I rather want you to know that I've been through the fire. It's a sort of guarantee." Chilcote made a hasty gesture, but the other interrupted it. "Oh, I know you trust me. But you're giving me a risky post. I want you to see that women are out of my line—quite out of it." "But my dear chap"— Loder went on without heeding. "This thing happened eight years ago at Santasalare," he said, "a little place between Luna and Pistoria—a mere handful of houses wedged between two hills; a regular relic of old Italy crumbling away under flowers and sunshine, with nothing to suggest the present century except the occasional passing of a train round the base of one of the hills. I had literally stumbled upon the place on a long tramp south from Switzerland and had been tempted into a stay at the little inn. The night after my arrival something unusual occurred. There was an accident to the train at the point where it skirted the village. "There was a small excitement. All the inhabitants were anxious to help, and I took my share. As a matter of fact, the smash was not disastrous; the passengers were hurt and frightened, but nobody was killed." He paused and looked at his companion; but, seeing him interested, went on. "Among these passengers was an English lady. Of all concerned in the business, she was the least upset. When I came upon her she was sitting on the shattered door of one of the carriages calmly arranging her hat. On seeing me she looked up with the most charming smile imaginable. "I have just been waiting for somebody like you,' she said. 'My stupid maid has got herself smashed up some- THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA where in the second class carriages, and I have nobody to help me find my fog." "Of course, that first speech ought to have eulighed me, but it didn't. I only saw the smile and heard the voice. I knew nothing of whether they were deep or shallow. So I found the maid and found the dog. The first expressed gratitude, the other didn't. I extricated him with enormous difficulty from the wreck of the luggage van, and this was how he marked his appreciation." He held out his hand and nodded toward the scar. Chilcote glanced up. "So that's the explanation?" "Yes. I tried to conceal the thing when I restored the dog, but I was bleeding abominably and I failed. Then the whole business was changed. It was I who needed seeing to, my new friend insisted; I who should be looked after and not she. She forgot the dog in the newer interest of my wounded finger. The maid, who was practically unhurt, was sent on to engage rooms at the little inn, and she and I followed slowly. "That walk impressed me. There was an attractive mistiness of atmosphere in the warm night, a sensation more than attractive in being made much of by a woman of one's own class and country after five years wandering." He laughed with his eyes. "But I won't take up your time with details. You know the progress of an ordinary love affair. Throw in a few more flowers and a little more sunshine than is usual, a man who is practically a hermit and a woman who knows the world by heart and you have the whole thing. "She insisted on staying in Santasalare for three days in order to keep my finger bandaged. She ended by staying three weeks in the hope of smashing up my life. "On coming to the hotel she had given no name, and in our first explanations to each other she led me to conclude her an unmarried girl. It was at the end of the three weeks that I learned that she was not a free agent, as I had innocently imagined, but possessed a husband whom she had left ill with malaria at Florence or Rome. "The news disconcerted me, and I took no pains to bide it. After that the end came abruptly. In her eyes I had become a fool with middle class principles; in my eyes—But there is no need for that. She left Santasalare the same night in a great confusion of trunks and hatboxes, and next morning I strapped on my knapsack and turned my face to the south." "And women don't count ever after?" Chicote smiled, beguiled out of himself. Loder laughed. "That's what I've been trying to convey. Once bitten, twice shy!" He laughed again and slipped the two rings over his finger with an air of finality. "Now, shall I start? This is the latchkey?" He drew a key from the pocket of Chilcote's evening clothes. "When I get to Grosvenor square I am to find your house, go straight in, mount the stairs and there on my right hand will be the door of your—I mean my own—private rooms. I think I've got it by heart. I feel inspired. I feel that I can't go wrong." He handed the two remaining rings to Chilcote and picked up the overcoat. "I'll stick on till I get a wire," he said. "Then I'll come back and we'll reverse again." He slipped on the coat and moved back toward the table. Now that the decisive moment had come it embarrassed him. Scarcely knowing how to bring it to an end, he held out his hand. Chilcote took it, palling a little. "Twill be all right!" he said, with a sudden return of nervousness. "Twill be all right! And I've made it plain about—about the remuneration? A hundred a week, besides all expenses." Loder smiled again. "My pay? Oh, yes, you've made it clear as day. Shall we say good night now?* " "Yes. Good night." There was a strange, distant note in Chilcote's voice, but the other did not pretend to hear it. He pressed the hand he was holding, though the cold dampness of it repelled him. "Good night," he said again. "Good night." They stood for a moment awkwardly looking at each other, then Loder quietly disengaged his hand, crossed the room and passed through the door. Chilcote, left standing alone in the middle of the room, listened while the last sound of the other's footsteps was audible on the uncarpeted stairs. Then, with a furtive, hurried gesture, he caught up the green shaded lamp and passed into Loder's bedroom. CHAPTER VIII O all men come portentous moments, difficult moments, triumphant moments. Loder had had his examples of all three, but no moment in his career ever equaled in strangeness of sensation that in which, dressed in another man's clothes, he fitted the latchkey for the first time into the door of the other man's house. The net was quietly done. The key fitted the lock smoothly, and his fingers turned it without hesitation, though his heart, usually extremely steady, beat sharply for a second. The hall loomed massive and somber, despite the modernity of electric lights. It was darkly and expensively decorated in black and brown; a frieze of wrought bronze, representing pencocks with outspread tails, ornamented the walls; the banisters were of heavy ironwork, and the somewhat formidable fireplace was of the same dark metal Loder looked about him, then advanced, his heart again beating quickly as his hand touched the cold banister and he began his ascent of the stairs. But at each step his confidence strengthened, at the head of the stairs, as if to disprove his assurance, his pulses played him false once more, this time to a more serious tune. From the farther end of a well lighted corridor a maid was coming straight in his direction. For one short second all things seemed to whiz about him; the certainty of detection overpowered his mind. The indisputable knowledge that he was John Loder and no other, despite all armor of effrontery and dress, so dominated him that all other considerations shrank before it. It wanted but one word, one simple word of denunciation, and the whole scheme was shattered. In the dismay of the moment he almost wished that the word might be spoken and the suspense ended. But the maid came on in silence, and so incredible was the silence that Loder moved onward too. He came within a yard of her, and still she did not speak. Then, as he passed her, she drew back respectfully against the wall. The strain, so astonishingly short, had been immense, but with its slackening came a strong reaction. The expected humiliation seethed suddenly to a desire to seethed suddenly. Pausing quickly, he turned and called the woman back. The spot where he had halted was vividly bright, the ceiling light being PADONNE Loder bore his scrutiny without finching, directly above his head, and as she came toward him he raised his face deliberately and waited. She looked at him without surprise or interest. "Yes, sir," she said. "Is your mistress in?" he asked. He could think of no other question, but it served his purpose as a test of his voice. Still the woman showed no surprise. "She's not in, sir," she answered. "But she's expected in half an hour." "In half an hour? All right. That's all I wanted." With a movement of Loder walked back to the stair head, turned to the right and opened the door of Chilcote's rooms. The door opened on a short, wide passage. On one side stood the study, on the other the bed, bath and dressing rooms. With a blind sense of knowledge and unfamiliarity, bred of much description on Chilcote's part, he put his hand on the study door and, still exalted by the omen of his first success, turned the handle. Inside the room there was firelight and lamplight and a studious air of peace. The realization of this and a slow incredulity at Chilcote's voluntary renunciation were his first impressions. Then his attention was needed for more imminent things. As he entered the new secretary was returning a volume to its place on the book shelves. At sight of him he pushed it hustily into position and turned round. "I was making a few notes on the political position of Khorasan," he said, glancing with slight apprehensiveness at the other's face. He was a small, shy man, with few social attainments, but an extraordinary amount of learning—the antithesis of the alert Blessington, whom he had replaced. Loder bore his scrutiny without finching. Indeed, it struck him suddenly that there was a fund of interest, almost of excitement, in the encountering of each new pair of eyes. At the thought he moved forward to the desk. "Thank you, Greening," he said. "A very useful bit of work." The secretary glanced up, slightly puzzled. His endurance had been severely taxed in the fourteen days that he had filled his new post. "I'm glad you think so, sir," he said, hesitating. "You rather poohpoohed the matter this morning, if you remember." Loder was taking off his coat, but stopped in the operation. "This morning?" he said. "Oh, did I? Did I?" Then struck by the opportunity the words gave him he turned toward the secretary. "You've got to get used to me, Greening," he said. "You haven't quite grasped me yet. I can see. I'm a man of moods, you know. Up to the present you've seen my slack side, my jarred side, but I have quite another when I care to show it. I'm a sort of Jekyll and Hyde affair." Again he langged, and Greening echoed the sound diffidently. Chilcote had evidently discouraged familiarity. Loder eyed him with abrupt understanding. He recognized the loneliness in the anxious, conciliatory manner. "You're tired," he said kindly. "Go to bed. I've got some thinking to do. Good night." He held out his hand. Greening took it, still half distrustful of this fresh side to so complex a man. "Good night, sir," he said. "Tomorrow, if you approve, I shall go on with my notes. I hope you will have a restful night." For a second Loder's eyebrows went up, but he recovered himself instantly. "Ah, thanks. Greening," he said. "Thanks. I think your hope will be fulfilled." He watched the little secretary move softly and apologetically to the door, then he walked to the fire and, resting his elbows on the mantelpiece, he took his face in his hands. For a space he stood absolutely quiet, then his hands dropped to his sides, and he turned slowly round. In that short space he had balanced things and found his bearings. The slight nervousness shown in his brusque sentences and overconfident manner faded out, and he faced facts steadily. With the return of his calmness he took a long survey of the room. His glance brightened appreciatively as it traveled from the walls lined with well bound books to the lamps modulated to the proper light; from the lamps to the desk fitted with every requirement. Nothing was lacking. All he had once possessed, all he had since dreamed of, was here, but on a greater scale. To enjoy the luxuries of life a man must go long without them. Loder had lived severely—so severely that until three weeks ago he had believed himself exempt from the temptations of humanity. Then the voice of the world had spoken, and within him another voice had answered with a tone so clamorous and insistent that it had outcried his surprised and incredulous wonder at its existence and its claims. That had been the voice of suppressed ambition, and now as he stood in the new atmosphere a newer voice lifted itself. The joy of material things rose suddenly, overbalancing the last remnant of the philosophy he had reared. He saw all things in a fresh light—the soft carpets, the soft lights, the numberless pleasant, unnecessary things that color the passing landscape and oil the wheels of life. This was power—power made manifest. The choice bindings of one's books, the quiet harmony of one's surroundings, the gratifying deference of one's dependents—these were the visible, the outward signs, the thing she had forbidden. Crossing the room slowly, he lifted and looked at the different papers on the desk. They had a substantial feeling, an importance, an air of value. They were like the solemn keys to so many vexed problems. Beside the papers were a heap of letters neatly arranged and as yet unopened. He turned them over one by one. They were all thick and interesting to look at. He smiled as he recalled his own scanty mail-envelopes long and bulky or narrow and thin, unwelcome manuscripts or very welcome checks. Having sorted the letters, he hesitated. It was his life task to open them, but he had never in his life opened an envelope addressed to another man. He stood uncertain, weighing them in his hand. Then all at once a look of attention and surprise crossed his face, and he raised his head. Some one had unmistakably passed outside the door which Grazing had left aside. There was a moment of apparent doubt, then a stir of skirts, a quick, uncertain knock, and the intruder entered. For a couple of seconds she stood in the doorway; then as Loder made no effort to speak she moved into the room. She had apparently but just returned from some entertainment, for, though she had drawn off her long gloves, she was still wearing an evening cloak of lace and fur. That she was Chilcote's wife Loder instinctively realized the moment she entered the room. But a disconcerting confusion of ideas was all that followed the knowledge. He stood by the desk, silent and awkward, trying to fit his expectations to his knowledge. Then, faced by the hopelessness of the task, he turned abruptly and looked at her again. She had taken off her cloak and was standing by the fire. The compulsion of moving through life alone had set its seal upon her in a certain self possession, a certain confidence of pose, yet her figure as Loder then saw it, backgrounded by the dark books and gowned in pale blue, had a suggestion of youthfulness that seemed a contradiction. The remembrance of Chilcote's epithets "cold" and "unsympathetic" came back to him with something like astonishment. He felt no uncertainty, no dread of discovery and humiliation in her presence as he had felt in the maid's, yet there was something in her face that made him infinitely more uncomfortable, a look he could find no name for, a friendliness that studiously covered another feeling, whether question, distrust or actual dislike he could not say. With a strange sensation of awkwardness he sorted Chilcote's letters, waiting for her to speak. As if divining his thought she turn toward hini. "I'm afraid I rather hint." "Don't think that," he said hastily, "I was only looking through-my letters. You mustn't rate yourself below letters." He was conscious that his tone was hurried, that his words were a little jagged, but Eve did not appear to notice. Unlike Greening, she took the new manner without surprise. She had known Chilcote for six years. "I dined with the Fraides tonight," she said. "Mr. Fraide sent you a message." Unconsciously Loder smiled. There was humor in the thought of a message to him from the great Fraide. To hide his amusement he wheeled one of the big lounge chairs forward. "Indeed," he said. "Won't you sit down?" They were near together now, and he saw her face more fully. Again he was taken aback. Chilcote had spoken of her as successful and intelligent, but never as beautiful. Yet her beauty was a rare and uncommon fact. Her hair was black—not a glossy black, but the dusky black that is softer than any brown—her eyes were large and of a peculiarly pure blue, and her eyelashes were black, beautifully curved and of remarkable thickness. "Won't you sit down?" he said again, cutting short his thoughts with some confusion. "Thank you." She gravely accepted the proffered chair. But he saw that without any ostentation she drew her skirts aside as she passed him. The action displeased him unaccountably. "Well," he said shortly, "what had Fraide to say?" He walked to the mantelpiece with his customary movement and stood watching her. The instinct toward hiding his face had left him. Her instant and uninterested acceptance of him almost netted him. His own half contemptuous impression of Chilcote came to him unpleasantly and with it the first desire to assert his own individuality. Stung by the conflicting emotions, he felt in Chilecote's pockets for something to smoke. Eve saw and interpreted the action. "Are these your cigarettes?" She leaned toward a small table and took up a box made of lizard skin. "Thanks," He took the box from her, and as it passed from one to the other he saw her glance at his rings. The glance was momentary. Her lips parted to express question or surprise, then closed again without comment. More than any spoken words the incident showed him the guilt that separated husband and wife. "Well," he said again, "what about Fraalde?" At his words she sat straighter and looked at him more directly, as if bracing herself to a task. "Mr. Fraalde is—is as interested as ever in you" she began. "Or in you?" Loder made the interruption precisely as he felt Chilcote would have made it. Then instantly he wished the words back. Eve's warm skin colored more deeply. For a second the inscrutable underlying expression that puzzled him showed in her eyes, then she sank back into a corner of the chair. "Why do you make such a point of sneering at my friends?" she asked quietly. "I overlook it when you are—nervous." She halted slightly on the word. "But you are not nervous tonight." Loder, to his great humiliation, redened. Except for an occasional outburst on the part of Mrs. Robins, his charwoman, he had not merited a woman's displeasure for years. "The sneer was unintentional," he said. For the first time Eve showed a personal interest. She looked at him in a puzzled way. "If your apology was meant," she said hesitatingly, "I should be glad to accept it." Loder, uncertain of how to take the words, moved back to the desk. He carried an unlighted cigarette between his fingers. There was an interval in which neither spoke. Then at last, conscious of its awkwardness, Eve rose. With one hand on the back of her chair she looked at him. "Mr. Fralde thinks it's such a pity that"—she stopped to choose her words—"that you should lose hold on things—lose interest in things—as you are doing. He has been thinking a good deal about you in the last three weeks, ever since the day of your—your illness in the house, and it seems to him"—again she broke off, watching Loder's avert- P. RENNIE "I'll think over what you've said," he repeated. ed head—"it seems to him that if you made one real effort now, even now, to shake off your restlessness that your—your health might improve. He thinks that the present crisis would be"—she hesitated—"would give you a tremendous opportunity. Your trade interests, bound up as they are with Persia, would give any opinion you might hold a double weight." Almost unconsciously a touch of warmth crept into her words. "Mr. Fraide talked very seriously about the beginning of your career. He said that if only the spirit of your first days could come back"—Her tone grew quicker, as though she feared ridicule in Loder's silence. "He asked me to use my influence. I know that I have little—none, perhaps—but I couldn't tell him that, and so—so I promised." "And have kept the promise?" Loder spoke at random. Her manner and her words had both affected him. There was a sensation of unreality in his brain. "Yes," she answered. "I always want to do—what I can." "As she spoke a sudden realization of the effort she was making struck upon him, and with it his scorn of Chilicote rose in renewed force. "My intention"—he began, turning to her. Then the futility of any declaration silenced him. "I shall think over what you say," he added after a minute's wait. "I suppose I can't say more than that." Their eyes met and she smiled a little. "I don't believe I expected as much," she said. "I think I'll go now. You have been wonderfully patient." Again she smiled slightly, at the same time extending her hand. The gesture was quite friendly, but in Loder's eyes it held relief as well as friendliness, and when their hands met he noticed that her fingers barely brushed his. He picked up her cloak and carried it across the room. As he held the door open he laid it quietly across her arm. "I'll think over what you've said," he repeated. Again she glanced at him as if suspecting sarcasm. Then, partly reassured, she paused. "You will always despise your opportunities, and I suppose I shall envy them," she said. "That's the way with men and women. Good night." With another faint smile she passed out into the corridor. Loder waited until he heard the outer door close, then he crossed the room thoughtfully and dropped into the chair she had vacated. He sat for a time looking at the hand her fingers had touched. Then he lifted his head with a characteristic movement. "By Jove," he said aloud, "how cordially she detests him!" CHAPTER IX ODER slept soundly and dreamlessly in Chilcote's canopied bed. To him the big room, with its severe magnificence, suggested nothing of the gloom and solitude that it held in its owner's eyes. The ponderous furniture, the high ceiling, the heavy curtains, unchanged since the days of Chilcote's grandfather, all hinted at a far reaching ownership that stirred him. The ownership was mythical in his regard and the possessions a mirage, but they filled the day and surely sufficient for the day. That was his frame of mind as he opened his eyes on the following morning and lay appreciative of his comfort, of the surrounding space, even of the light that filtered through the curtain chinks, suggestive of a world recreated. With day all things seemed possible to a healthy man. He stretched his arms luxuriously, delighting in the glossy smoothness of the sheets. What was it Chilcote had said? Better live for a day than exist for a lifetime. That was true, and life had begun. At thirty-six he was to know it for the first time. He smiled, but without trony. Man is at his best at thirty-six, he mused. He has retained his enthusiasm and shed his exuberances; he has learned what to pick up and what to pass by; he no longer imagines that to drain a cup one must taste the dregs. He closed his eyes and stretched again not his arms only, but his whole body. The pleasure of his mental state insisted on a physical expression. Then, sitting up in bed, he pressed the electric bell. Chilcote's new valet responded. "Pull those curtains, Renwick," he said. "What's the time?" He had passed the ordeal of Renwick's eyes the night before. The man was slow, even a little stupid. He drew back the curtains carefully, then looked at the small clock on the dressing table. "Dight o'clock, sir. I didn't expect the bell so early, sir." Loder felt reproved, and a pause followed. "May I bring your cup of tea, sir?" "No, not just yet. I'll have a bath first." Renwick showed ponderous uncertainty. "Warm, sir?" he hazarded. "No, cold." Still perplexed, the man left the room. Loder smiled to himself. The chances of discovery in that quarter were not large. He was inclined to think that Chilcote had even overstepped necessity in the matter of his valet's dullness. He breakfasted alone, following Chilcote's habit, and after breakfast found his way to the study. As he entered Greening rose with the same conciliatory haste that he had shown the night before. Loder nodded to him. "Early at work?" he said pleasantly. The little man showed instant, almost ridiculous, relief. "Good morning, sir." he said. "You, too, are early. I rather feared your nerves troubled you after I left last night, for I found your letters still unopened this morning. But I am glad to see you look so well." Loder promptly turned his back to the light. "Oh, last night's letters!" he said. "To tell you the truth, Greening, my wife"—his hesitation was very slight—"my wife looked me up after you left, and we gossiped. I clean forgot the post." He smiled in an explanatory way as he moved to the desk and picked up the letters. With Greening's eyes upon him there was no time for scruples. With very creditable coolness he began opening the envelopes one by one. The letters were unimportant, and he passed them one after another to the secretary, experiencing a slight thrill of authority as each left his hand. Again the fact that power is visible in little things came to his mind. "Give me my engagement book, Greening," he said when the letters had been disposed of. The book that Greening handed him was neat in shape and bound, like Chilcote's cigarette case, in lizard skin. As Loder took it the gold monogram "J. C." winked at him in the bright morning light. The incident moved his sense of humor. He and the book were co-operators in the fraud, it seemed. He felt an inclination to wink back. Nevertheless he opened it with proper gravity and skimmed the pages The page devoted to the day was almost full. On every other line were jottings in Chilcote's irregular hand, and twice among the entries appeared a prominent cross in blue penclling. Loder's interest quickened as his eye caught the mark. It had been agreed between them that only engagements essential to Chilcote's public life need be carried through during his absence, and these to save his confusion were to be crossed in blue pencl. The rest, for the most part social claims, were to be left to circumstance and Loder's inclination. Chilcote's erratic memory always accounting for the breaking of trivial promises. But Loder in his new energy was anxious for obligations. The desire for fresh and greater tests wilt indulgence. He scanned the two lines with eagerness. The first was an interview with Cresham, one of Chilcote's supporters in Wark; the other an engagement to lunch with Fraide. At the idea of the former his interest quickened, but at thought of the latter it qualified momentarily. Had the entry been a royal command it would have affected him infinitely less. For a space his assurance faltered. Then by coincidence the recollection of Eve and Eve's words of last night came back to him, and his mind was filled with a new sensation. Because of Chilcote he was desplied by Chilcote's wife! There was no denying that in all the pleasant excitement of the adventure that knowledge had rankled. It came to him now linked with resemblance of the slight, reCONTINUED ON SIXTH PAGE. ```markdown ``` --- THE PLANET SATURDAY....FEB. 9TH, 1907. GARDEN FARM NUBBIN CHOPPER. One That Can be Made at Home and Will Do Good Service. I have a plan for a simple and cheap nubbin chopper which I think will be of interest to others, writes a correspondent of the Prairie Farmer. I have used this chopper for two years How the Nubbin Chopper Works. and find it satisfactory. I use it to cut up corn for feeding cattle. The cutting blade is made of a heavy corn knife with a hole drilled in the end and fastened to a crib post with a one-quarter inch lag screw. The bottom of the chopper is made of a 2x6 plank nailed to the crib post under the corn chute with a 1x3 inch strip on the outer edge. The two form a trough along which I push the corn to the knife. DRAINING LANDS Much Rich Land Goes to Waste Because This Work Is Not Done. Many undrained and unprofitable lands can be drained well, or at least considerably improved, should you only spend a day's work in scraping but ditches, with an ordinary two-horse scraper. Some of the ditches need not necessarily be wide nor deep. It has been estimated that from one to thirty per cent of certain sections of good farming lands in some sections of the Northwest need draining. Some of this undrained land is reasonably productive in growing slough grass, which in many cases serves as feed for cattle in the winter, but a large fraction of these lands lie idle and are hotbeds for the propagation of weeds and undesirable insects. The soil in sloughs and small swamps is usually fertile and rich in plant food, due largely to the decay of plant life, which has been accumulating there year after year. It is this land that should be brought into condition for the growing of crops. It will support plant growth better than the adjoining higher lands whose fertility has been considerably depleted by constant cropping. When drained well these lands make admirable fields for grasses, such as timothy and millet grasses, also folder corn. There is no work of this kind done if done at proper time and place but what will easily pay for the expense in the raising of the first few crops from lands. J. F. Vojta, professor of agriculture, Gustavous Adolphus College. BIG OR LITTLE FARMS. The Size Depends on Location Writes an Iowa Farmer. Whether a man should have a big or a little farm depends on his location. In this part of Iowa, writes a Clarke county farmer in Farmers' Review, we must depend on the more extensive methods of agriculture to give us a living. A man that has a farm of only 80 acres or 120 acres will have a hard chance to make a living. He needs at least 160 acres, and if he has 320 acres he will be still more fortunate. 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BATTLE OF ATLANTA, GA., BATTLE OF SPOTTSYLVANIA, VA., BATTLE OF VICKSBURG, MISS., BATTLE OF LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN, TENN., BATTLE BETWEEN THE MONITOR AND THE MERRIMAC, BATTLE OF BULL RUN, VA., BATTLE OF CHANCELLORSVILLE, BATTLE OF THE BIG HORN, (CUSTER'S LAST CHARGE) STORMING OF FORT WAGNER, S. C., (COLORED TROOPS IN THIS FIGHT), BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS, LA., CAPTURE AND DEATH OF SITTING BULL, THE GREAT INDIAN CHIEFTAIN; FORT PILLOW MASSACRE, FALL OF PETERSBURG, VA., BATTLE OF WINCHESTER, VA., BATTLE OF OLUSTEE, FLA. WE WILL SEND FAMILY RECORD. SIZE 22 BY 28. WHICH CONTAINS SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHS OF PARENTS AND TEN CHILDREN. WE WILL SEND SOLDIERS WAR RECORD (CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE IN UNITED STATES ARMY.) FOR ONE YEAR EACH, OR THEIR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY OF UNCLE TOM'S CABIN, THE MOST INTENSELY INTERESTING BOOK IN THE COUNTRY. WE WILL SEND YOU A GOLD-PLATED BROOCH WITH YOUR PICTURE THEREIN, YOU TO keep the balance on the right side of the page. ```markdown ``` Don't keep your ewes too long. Much loss results from keeping them until they are valueless when put on the market. WORK IN THE TOOL SHED. Where a Good Many of the Winter Days Can Be Profitably Spent. One of the many profitable winter jobs can be found in the tool shed in going over, cleaning up and repairing the machinery that will be used next summer. After a season's work there is nearly always something about a mower, binder or cultivator which needs fixing. When one wants to use a tool he seldom has time to fix it, and if it must be repaired the work is usually done as quickly as possible with an eye only to the work immediately at hand. Plows may now be cleaned off and oiled, hoes and mattocks sharpened, scythes ground, etc. Then there are always bolts to tighten, fractures and breaks to patch up, and adjustments of various kinds to make. If any machine needs repairs that must be ordered from a distance this should be done during the winter and the machine made ready for use. If this is neglected now, remarks Farm and home, you may forget all about it until you want to use it, and then you will be in a hole. A few hours' work at odd times will have all the tools ready for use when the time comes, if they are stored in a shed or room where you can get at them and the rain and snow cannot. If they are left, as many tools are, out in the weather, they will be in bad shape when you go to use them. So if you have no tool shed it would be a good winter job to build one. WHAT TO FEED WITH CORN. Missouri Experiment Station Proves That Linseed Oil Is Best. That some other feed should be used with corn to secure the best results in pig feeding is known by all practical feeders. The gains are better than on a pure corn ration, and if the other food is well chosen the gains may be made at lower cost. In a test at the Missouri experiment station a comparison of wheat, middlings and other purchased feeds used with corn meal was made. With corn at $5c a bushel it would be an even thing so far as the cost of gain is concerned, whether corn be fed alone or with oil meal at $30 per ton. In these tests, linseed oil meal proved to be better than wheat middlings as a food to use with corn. The oil meal ration was so much more palatable than the middlings, that much more of it was eaten daily. They made more rapid gains and seemed to thrive better upon this feed. To be equal to oil meal at $30 per ton, middlings would have to be bought at from $14 to $15 per ton. As oil meal is usually cheaper than $30 in Missouri and middlings worth $15 or more, these tests show that linseed oil meal is one of the best feeds to use with corn. Mysteries of Navigation Sweet Girl (in a rowboat)—What is this place in the back of the boat for? Nice Young Man—That is to put an oar in when you want to scull the boat. Rowing requires both oars, one on each side, but in sculling only one is used. That is placed at the back and worked with one hand. Sweet Girl (after meditation)—I wish you would sculling awhile.—N. Y. Weekly. The amateur theatrical performance was being discussed. "You know that part of the new play where the man seizes the woman, forces her into the cupboard, and turns the key on her?" "Yes." "Well, last night a fellow in the audience applauded it so much that they had to put him out." "I don't think there is anything to applaud about it." "But there was. It turned out that the fellow was the husband of the actress, and it was the first time he had ever seen anybody shut her up," was the cool reply. MRS. JOSIE A. GRAHAM Virginia's Most Successful Hair Culturist. ...PARLORS... 108 E. Leigh St. - Richmond, Va. 'phone, 1034 Private Parlors, Confidential Interviews and Correspondence. The largest and most up-to-date Hair Dressing Parlors in Richmond. The very best preparations that can be made for the hair, scalp, face and skin. Graham's Superior Scalp Food for growing hair on bald heads and bare temples, 25cts. per jar. By mail, 35cts. Graham's Superior Orange Flower Skin Fo' for developing and beautifying the skin, 25cts a jar. By mail, 35cts. Graham's Superior Velvet Liquid Powder for giving the face a beautiful fair color, 25 cents a bottle. By mail 3¢cts. Graham's Vegetable Hair Dye the best on market giving a rich natural color, $1.00 per bottle. By mail, $1.25. Mrs. Graham makes a specialty of massaging and beautifying ladies' faces for parties and public gatherings, 35 cents. Mrs. Graham shampoos the head and puts it in a healthy condition, 25 cents. All ladies who attend parties and other social gatherings should have their finger nails manicured and made beautiful. 25 cents. Mrs. Graham's preparations sell at sight. Ladies living in other cities and towns can make good money by seiling these preparations. Write for terms to Mrs. J. A. Graham, No. 108 E. Leigh St., Ricamond, Va. To interest yourself in promoting the CIRCULATION of the IN ORDER TO FURTHER INCREASE OUR STEADILY GROWING CIRCULATION WE WILL OFF WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND THE ST LOUIS, MISSOURI, SEMI-WEEKLY GLOBE DEMOCRAT, ONE OF THE LEADING REPUBLICAN JOURNALS IN THE UNITED STATES FOR $2.25 PER YEAR FOR BOTH. WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE FOR $2.25 PER YEAR FOR BOTH. WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR $2.25 PER YEAR FOR BOTH. OR THEIR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL SEND PICTURES, ONE ONLY, OF PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT, DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, BATTLE OF SANTIAGO, LAND BATTLE OF QUASIMAS NEAR SANTIAGO, JUNE 24, 1898, SHOWING THE NINTH AND TENTH COLORED CAVALRY IN SUPPORT OF ROUGH RIDERS, SIZE 20X28 AND 20X24 INCHES, LAND BATTLE AND CHARGE OF THE 24TH & 25TH READ THE GREAT INDUCEMENTS OFFERED BY THE PLANET THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA IF YOU WILL TALK WITH YOUR NEIGH- ```markdown ``` FOR TWO YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS FOR FIVE NEW SUBSCRIBERS REQUISITE NUMBER IS OBTAINED, WE WILL FORWARD THE PRESENT INDICATED. A PERSON WHO TRIES TO GET FORTY SUBSCRIBERS AND GETS TIRED MAY INDICATE HIS WISH AND WE WILL SEND THE PRESENT FOR THE NUMBER HE HAS SECURED OVER FIVE. THE NUMBER WILL BE FOR NOT LESS THAN FIVE NOR MORE THAN TEN AND NOT LESS THAN TEN NOR MORE THAN TWENTY AND NOT LESS THAN TWENTY NOR MORE THAN FORTY, TO DETERMINE THE PRIZE TO WHICH THE WORKER IS ENTITLED. IF ANYTHING IS DESIRED NOT SPECIFIED IN THIS LIST, WRITE US ABOUT IT AND WE WILL TELL YOU IN WHAT CLASS IT BELONGS. JOHN MITCHELL, JR., 311 North Fourth Street, RICHMOND. VIRGINIA A man sitting in a chair and a man standing in front of him. LANET EEEKLY LEADING UNITED TH. T AND ER $2.25 T AND YEAR ND PIC THEO- WASH- D BAT- UNE 24. H COL- UGH RI LAND & 25TH Poppy REQUISE FORWA SHOULD YOU DESIRE ANY COLORED JOURNAL IN THE UNITED STATES, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE PLANET AT A GREATLY REDUCED RATE FOR BOTH. FURNISH THE PHOTOGRAPH, ONE FOUNTAIN PEN, GOLD POINT; ONE LADIES RING, ONE BREAST-PIN, GOLD FILLED; HALF DOZEN LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, ONE ALARM CLOCK, ONE DOZEN NAPKINS, ONE HALF DOZEN TOWELS, ONE CHOCOLATE POT, ONE PAIR VASES, ONE PAIR KID GLOVES, ONE HAM, ONE TURKEY. FOR TEN NEW SUBSCRIBERS WE WILL SEND ONE CH PIECES; ONE NECKLACE PEARE, BYRON WORKS; PLAIN GOLD RING, ONE 1,000 ENVELOPES, 1,000 PRINTED AND DELIVER ONE HALF CORD OF SAV FOR TWENTY NET WE WILL GIVE ONE HAL WITH OPALS, RUBIES OF ELRY BOX FINISHED IN ONE SILK SHIRT WAIST DRESS, ONE GOLD WE RANTED FOR TEN YE CHAIR, ONE LOAD OF SOAP, EITHER WASHING BARREL OF BEST FLOU ETS, ONE MANICURE SHE WORK BOX, ONE PAIR S DIES. FOR FORTY YEARS OR EQUIVALENT, WE W ING MACHINE, ONE D GOLD WATCH, ONE P RINGS, ONE MUSIC BOX, ONE READY MADE DRE TLEMEN'S CLOTHES, CANE, ONE GOLD-HEA CHINA SET, ONE DOL KNIVES AND FORKS, O SILK DRESS, ONE WEEK SHORE, RAILROAD FA PAID. FOR ANY RICHMO THESE OFFERS MAST AGE OF BY SENDING SCRIBER'S NAMES AT KEEP A RECORD OF TH THE NUMBER IS OBTAINED, WE RD THE PRESENT INDICATED PERSON WHO TRIES TO GET BERS AND GETS TIRED M IS WISH AND WE WILL SEE T FOR THE NUMBER HE OVER FIVE. THE NUMBER WILL BE FOR N VE NOR MORE THAN TEN A MAN TEN NOR MORE THAN IT LESS THAN TWENTY NO ORTY, TO DETERMINE THE B THE WORKER IS ENTITLED. IF ANYTHING IS DESIRED NO THIS LIST, WRITE US ABOUT TELL YOU IN WHAT CLAS ALL SEND ONE CHINA SET, THIRD ONE NECKLACE; DICKENS, OR BYRON WORKS; ONE UMBRELLA, GOLD RING, ONE PAIR LACE CU ENVELOPES, 1,000 SHEETS OF AND DELIVERED; ONE TOI LF CORD OF SAWED WOOD. FOR TWENTY NEW SUBSCRIBER ALL GIVE ONE HANDSOME GOL PALS, RUBIES OR PEARLS; ONE BOX FINISHED IN GOLD OR K SHIRT WAIST; ONE READ ONE GOLD WATCH, FILLED FOR TEN YEARS, ONE R ONE LOAD OF COAL, ONE G EITHER WASHING OR TOIL OF BEST FLOUR, ONE PAIR THE MANICURE SET, ONE SEAM BOX, ONE PAIR SHOES, GENTS FOR FORTY YEARLY SUBSCRIBER QUIVALENT, WE WILL GIVE O MACHINE, ONE DIAMOND RING WATCH, ONE PAIR FINE GOL ONE MUSIC BOX, ONE PHONO READY MADE DRESS, ONE SUIT N'S CLOTHES, ONE GOLD- ONE GOLD-HEADED UMBRELL SET, ONE DOZEN SILVER AND FORKS, ONE HAT-RAD PRESS, ONE WEEK'S TRIP TO T RAILROAD FARE AND HOT OR ANY RICHMOND WORKER COME OFFERS MAY BE TAKEN OF BY SENDING ONE OR TW YEAR'S NAMES AT A TIME. WE RECORD OF THEM; AS SOON IS OBTAINED, WE WILL SENT INDICATED. O TRIES TO GET FORTY GETS TIRED MAY INDIC WE WILL SEND THE NUMBER HE HAS SE- WILL BE FOR NOT LESS MORE THAN TEN AND NOT MORE THAN TWENTY AN TWENTY NOR MORE INTERMINE THE PRIZE TO OR IS ENTITLED. IS DESIRED NOT SPECI- WRITE US ABOUT IT AND IN WHAT CLASS IT BE- WE WILL SEND ONE CHINA SET, THIRTY-ONE PIECES; ONE NECKLACE; DICKENS, SHAKESPEARE, BYRON WORKS; ONE UMBRELLA, ONE PLAIN GOLD RING, ONE PAIR LACE CURTAINS 1,000 ENVELOPES, 1,000 SHEETS OF PAPER PRINTED AND DELIVERED; ONE TOILET SET, ONE HALF CORD OF SAWED WOOD FOR TWENTY NEW SUBSCRIBERS WE WILL GIVE ONE HANDSOME GOLD RING WITH OPALS, RUBIES OR PEARLS; ONE JEWELRY BOX FINISHED IN GOLD OR SILVER; ONE SILK SHIRT WAIST; ONE READY MADE DRESS, ONE GOLD WATCH, FILLED, WARRANTED FOR TEN YEARS, ONE ROCKING CHAIR, ONE LOAD OF COAL, ONE GROSS OF SOAP, EITHER WASHING OR TOILET; ONE BARREL OF BEST FLOUR, ONE PAIR BLANKETS, ONE MANICURE SET, ONE SEAMSTRESS' WORK BOX, ONE PAIR SHOES, GENTS OR LADIES. FOR FORTY YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS OR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL GIVE ONE SEWING MACHINE, ONE DIAMOND RING, ONE GOLD WATCH, ONE PAIR FINE GOLD EARRINGS, ONE MUSIC BOX, ONE PHONOGRAPH, ONE READY MADE DRESS, ONE SUIT OF GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHES, ONE GOLD-HEADED CANE, ONE GOLD-HEADED UMBRELLA, ONE CHINA SET, ONE DOZEN SILVER-PLATED KNIVES AND FORKS, ONE HAT-RACK, ONE SILK DRESS, ONE WEEK'S TRIP TO THE SEASHORE, RAILROAD FARE AND HOTEL BILL PAID, FOR ANY RICHMOND WORKER. THESE OFFERS MAY BE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF BY SENDING ONE OR TWO SUBSCRIBER'S NAMES AT A TIME. WE WILL KEEP A RECORD OF THEM; AS SOON AS THE ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO IN MITCHELL, 311 North Fourth Street, ND, THE PLANET CHELL, JR., Fourth Street, VIRGINIA. THREE ```markdown ``` . FOUR THE PLANET Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL, JR., at all North 4th Street, Richmond Va. JOHN MITCHELL, JR., EDITOR. communications intended for publication might be sent so as to reach us by Wednesday. TERMS IN ADVANCE ADVERTISING BATES COMMUNICATIONS—When writing to us to review your subscription or to discontinue your order, you should give your name and address on our books. We cannot find your name on our books. CHANGE OF ADDRESS—In order to change the address of a subscriber, we must be sent our order as well as the present address. Entered at the Post-Office at Richmond, Va. in good-class matter. Hon. William T. Vernon, Register of the Treasury is in the limelight these days. We have received a handsome programme of the banquet tendered him. Wednesday, January 30th, 1907 at 8 P. M. at the Odd Fellows Hall, Washington, D.C. This distinguished American has secured a firm hold upon the affections of the colored people of this country and his conduct in office has been such as to win the approval of all classes. May his shadow never grow less. TROUBLE IN GEORGIA. It seems to us that President Rosevelt might well learn a lesson from Gov. Terrell of Georgia, the state from which the maternal side of his family hailed. The Atlantic, Georgia Constitution of Jan. 31st, 1907 says: "Two petitions were presented to Gov. Terrell yesterday urging him to offer rewards for the parties guilty of causing three Negroes, Frank Grant, Henry Scism and Marshall Davenport, to leave their homes in Habersham and Banks counties for fear of bodily harm. It is charged that parties who were desirous of running these Negroes out of the counties went to their homes and fired into them, so terrifying them that they refused to remain in the community to be shot at, and left it. The three Negroes in question were, it is stated, honest, indus trious and hard working citizens and had moved there to accept em ployment on farms. There is a scarcity of labor in that section, and there is a big demand for it on the peach farms, as well as in other agril cultural lines. There are very few Negroes in Habersham and Banks counties, and among some of the native white people, there appears to be a prejudice against them. It is supposed that this led to their being ran out of the communities in which they lived. Ordinary M. Franklin and other officials of Habersham county, seceded by Mayor George W. Grant and the city council of Alto, filed these petitions urging the governor to offer suitable rewards for the arrest of the guilty parties. Governor Terrell has written the Ordinary for further particulars, and in the event the law authorizes it, the rewards will be offered. The matter is an important one to the people of that section, as it affects not only the peace of the community, but the question of securing an adequate amount of suitable labor." Here is a case "on all fours" so to speak with the trouble at Brownsville, Texas. The houses of colored citizens have been fired into and the colored people are in a panic strick en condition. Despite all of this, instead of indicting and punishing everybody in the county because they will not tell who the guilty white men are, Gov. Terrell and the local authorities are actually putting in motion the machinery of law for the purpose of finding out who the guilty white men are. This is contrary to the letter and spirit of the Rooseveltian doctrine All of the citizens of that county should be adjudged guilty until they prove themselves innocent. If this is not done, then Mr. Roosevelt and his ideas are not being treated with proper respect and the doctrine and principles of Senator Joseph B. Foraker will prevail in even the "rock ribbed" state of Georgia. JEROME ATTACKS THAW EXPERT Dr. Wiley Savagely Cross Examined For Declaring Prisoner Insana. QUESTIONS BAFFLED ALIENISTS New York, Feb. 5.—The state laid its case against Harry K. Thaw—aplain, unemotional story of the shooting on the Madison Square Garden roof, leaving the malice and the motive to be inferred from the act—and the defence replied with a plea of hereditary insanity. It was asserted that Thaw in slaying Stanford White believed he was acting as an agent of Providence, but that real or fancied wrongs committed by the architect and former friend of his wife, had boiled and bubbled in his brain until at last there came the explosive MIS. HARRY R. THAW. impulse to kill. When the deed was done Thaw made no move to escape its consequences, but holding the fatal revolver aloft stood as if mutely proclaiming to the world: "The deed is done; it was right; it was not wrong." Thus Thaw's counsel outlined his case to the jury, after the prosecution had occupied less than two hours in relating through eye witnesses the narrative of the tragedy. Story of Killing or White. Mr. Garvan, in telling the story of the alleged murder occupied less than 10 minutes, and the prosecution's entire case was kept within two hours. With the exception of young White and the coroner's physician who performed the autopsy and described the wounds on White's body, the only persons called to the stand by the state were five eye-witnesses. They were cross-examined briefly by Attorney Delphin Dalmas, of the defense, who thus appeared actively in the proceedings for the first time. The witnesses related the deliberate manner in which Thaw approached White, faced him and fired. They repeated Thaw's assertion "He ruined my wife," and Mrs. Thaw's remark to her husband. "Yes, but look what a fax you are in now." To this last remark Thaw replied: "Dearie, I have probably saved your life." It was brought out that Thaw looked back at his victim as he walked away "with a starling look in his eyes." Mr. Garvan's outline of the state's testimony was the briefest possible story of the crime. He told how White went to the roof garden on Madison Square Garden to see the initial production of a summer musical comedy, and then related in simple language the incident of the killing. "The people claim," he concluded, "that it was a cruel, deliberate, malicious, premeditated taking of human life. After proving that fact to you, we will ask you to find the defendant guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree." Jerome Grills Expert. Thaw's attorneys endeavored in vain to place before the jury evidence tending. it was said, to prove a strain of insanity in the collateral branches of the defendant's family, but they were blocked at every point by District Attorney Jerome, whose objections were upheld by the rulings of Justice Fitzgerald. The defense did, however, get before the 12 men in the box the testimony of an expert, that in his opinion Harry Thaw was "suffering from insanity" the night of the tragedy. Mr. Jerome undertook to break down the evidence of the alienist—Dr. C. C. Wiley, of Pittsburgh—and for three hours put him through a cross-examination as severe as was ever heard in a New York court. The prosecutor was relentless in his attack, and before he had finished Dr. Wiley protestingly declared: "I didn't come here as an expert. I came as a witness to a fact, and I have been converted into an expert without being prepared for it." The district attorney astonished every one by his intimate knowledge of medicine and its technical phraseology, demonstrating the care will which he had prepared himself to meet the very defense which Thaw's course have entered in his behalf. Mr. Jerome searchingly inquired into Dr THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA Wiley's record as a physician and as an expert on insanity. He hurled volleys of technical questions at the witness, who at times sat mute, and at other times declared he could not answer, or gave evasive replies. Often he brought upon himself sharp warning from the district attorney to make a reply and not an argument. Dr. Wiley testified that he predicated his opinion as to Thaw's insanity upon his actions the night of the tragedy, as described to him in a hypothetical question propounded by the defense, and upon an incident which he witnessed on a Pittsburg street car during the summer of 1905. Thaw, said the doctor, acted irrationally on the car, coming in suddenly and jerking up one of the window blinds, slamming it down and then lifting it up again, the while engaging in a wordy war with the conductor. "Have you ever examined this defendant with any of the recognized tests of insanity?" asked Mr. Jerome. "No," replied the witness. "Have you ever conversed with him?" "No," replied the doctor. The district attorney then drew from the alienist the opinion that Thaw's acts on the Madison Square roof garden, when he killed Stanford White, were not acts of insanity when taken singly, but constituted evidence of insanity when considered collectively. At times Dr. Wiley seemed entirely baffled by the questions. He hesitated at each, and before he could answer Mr. Jerome had framed another query replete with impressive sounding technical terms and apparently offering a problem no less difficult than its predecessor. The witness admitted that many of the tests to which the district attorney referred, such as the Romberg test and the Argyll Robertson pupil test were unknown to him, and when he was asked to quote from any accepted work on insanity, declared he could not give the exact language from any book. Thaw's counsel sat silent and without protest as Mr. Jerome grilled the first witness for the defense. Thaw himself seemed to take but little interest in the cross-examination at the outset, but later began to take notes and was often in earnest conversation with those of his counsel who sat nearest him. At times Thaw could not altogether suppress the suggestion of a grin at the keenness of some of Mr. Jerome's questions and the subtle humor they so thinly concealed. But before the close of the day Thaw seemed to worry. He bit his finger nails and seemed anxious for the doctor's ordeal to end. His attorneys appeared a bit puzzled at first, but evidently determined to give the district attorney the widest liberty. Tried to Show Strain of Insanity. It was at the close of Mr. Jerome's cross-examination of Dr. Wiley that the attempt was made to introduce testimony tending to show the strain of insanity said to have existed in certain branches of the Thaw family. Among the witnesses called to the stand was Albert Lee Thaw, of Richmond, Va., who said that his father and Harry Thaw's father were first cousins. The defense stated its purpose to draw from the witness the fact that his father died in an asylum for the insane, when Mr. Jerome objected. He declared that the relationship of both the witness and his father was too far removed from the defendant to be competent. "And the law," he added, "is not satisfied that a man is insane merely because he died in an asylum or a retreat for persons suffering from mental disorders. The fact that a man dies in an institution such as that conducted by Dr. Wiley, the eminent specialist we had upon the stand today, for instance, is no proof that he was insane. There must be competent testimony to the fact." Justice Fitzgerald upheld this view of the matter, saying, however, that his ruling was subject to revision if the attorneys for the defense could cite authorities on the subject. Mr. Gleason, who alone conducted the case for Thaw, did cite some cases, but promised to have more authorities in court. The defense next introduced as a witness Benjamin Bowan, who testified that in January, 1904, he had a conversation with the defendant. He was about to tell what the conversation was, when Mr. Jerome objected, declaring a conversation so far back was not relevant or material. Justice Fitzgerald again called upon Thaw's attorneys for citations of authorities covering the introduction of testimony of the character proposed. Justice Fitzgerald sustained Mr. Jerome's objection, and the witness stepped aside. Dr. C. H. Bingaman, of Pittsburg, who has been a family physician of the Thaw's for 30 years, took the stand and testified that he had known Harry Thaw ever since his infancy. He had treated him once for St. Vitus dance. He seemed to be a lad of highly nervous temperament and slept badly at night, said the witness. Mr. Jerome's cross-examination was brief. "How old was the defendant when he had St. Vitus dance?" he asked. "Seven." "That is all doctor." Dr. John F. Deemar, of Kittanning, Pa., the family physician of the Couley's, Mrs. William Thaw, the prisoner's mother having been a Miss Couley, was the last witness of the day. He was called to testify as to the mental condition of John Ross, a cousin of Harry Thaw, when Mr. Jerome objected. Justice Fitzgerald held that until the defense's authorities on the introduction of testimony as to collateral insanity were presented, he thought it best to rule out all such testimony for the time being. Lawyer Dropped Dead In Court Lawyer Dropped Dead In Court. Tunkhannock, Pa. Feb. 6. C. Oscar Dissheimer, a prominent member of the Wyoming county bar, died suddenly in court in Montrose. He was attorney for the Lehigh Valley Railroad company and was conducting a case in which the company was interested. He rose to object to some testimony offered, and after sitting down dropped his head in his hand and expired almost instantly of apoplexy. He leaves a widow and two children. BRIGGS ELECTED JERSEY'S SENATOR Was Made Republican Caucus Nominee After a Hot Fight. SUCCEEDS JOHN F. DRYDEN Trenton, N. J., Feb. 6.—State Treasurer Frank O. Briggs was elected by the New Jersey legislature to succeed John F. Dryden as United States senator for the six years beginning March 4 next. Mr. Briggs's election came as a result of a series of caucuses or attempted caucuses on the part of the Republican members of the legislature. There was trick of a combination against Mr. Briggs in favor of State Senator Bradley, of Camden. Later in the day Governor Stokes took an active hand in the matter in favor of Mr. Briggs, with the result that Mr. Bradley practically withdrew. When the Republicans finally decided to take a vote in caucus Mr. Briggs captured the nomination with 22 votes out of the 40 members present. The other 18 votes were divided as follows: Governor Stokes, 7; Senator Bradley, 5; Justice Pitney, 4, and former Governor Griggs, 2. Immediately at the conclusion of the Republican caucus the legislature went into joint meeting, and Mr. Briggs' election was accomplished. He received 41 votes, a majority of the entire legislature. Senator Colby voted for Justice Pitney, Senator Ackerman voted for former Governor John W. Griggs and Assemblyman Buck was absent. Assemblyman Fake, who refused to go into the Republican caucus, voted in the joint meeting for Mr. Briggs. This he did at the solicitation of Governor Stokes and former Assistant Postmaster General William M. Johnson. The Democrats held a caucus, buried their differences and agreed to support James E. Martine. This eliminated Dr. Woodrow Wilson, of Princeton University, who was being supported by former United States Senator James Smith, Jr., and Colonel E. A. Stevens, who was backed by the Hudson delegation. Mr. Martine in the joint session received the votes of all of the 23 Democrats who were present. At the conclusion of the joint session Mr. Briggs held an informal reception in his office in the state house. He has not yet decided when he will resign as state treasurer, but he will probably do so before the present session of the legislature adjourns. The state treasurer is elected by the legislature in joint session, and the Republicans are in a position to choose Mr. Briggs' successor. DON'T OPPOSE NATIONAL GUARD Military Organizations In Coal Reserves gione Protest Against Charges. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Feb. 4. — The Catholic Total Abstinence Union Regiment and the Junior O. U. A. M., two strong military organizations in the anarchic region, held meetings in this city to take action relative to the report made by Captain Henry H. Whitney, of the Coast Artillery, to the government. Captain Whitney is one of the regular army inspectors, who was sent into Pennsylvania to inspect the national guard, in which he is reported to have quoted in his report that independent military companies are secretly armed and drilled and whose purpose it is to oppose the national guard in case of strikes and other labor troubles. These two organizations possess the strongest military regiments in this state, and they took occasion to show their disapproval of the statement made by the inspector. They passed resolutions showing their friendly position toward the Pennsylvania and all other national guards, for the good work they have accomplished. They dispatched copies of the same to Secretary Taft, of the war department. RAILROADERS GET INCREASE Southern Railway Raises Wages From 6 to 25 Per Cent. Washington, Feb. 6—All the conductors, trainmen and yardmen of the Southern railway are to receive an increase in wages aggregating between $350,000 and $400,000 a year. The increase amounts to from 6 per cent. as the minimum to 25 per cent. as the maximum. Through freight conductors are to be paid on a basis of $3.18 per 100 miles; local freight conductors, $3.80 per 100 miles; local freight conductors, $2.15 per 100 miles, and through freight brakemen, $1.75 p.r 100 miles. Other conductors and trainmen are granted proportionate increases, as are the yardmen. Two Drowned While Skating Reading, Pa., Feb. 4.—Three boys broke through the ice while skating on the Schylkill river, and two, Paul Nuss and James T. Jessum, each 9 years old, were drowned. The bodies were recovered. 1907 FEBRUARY 1907 Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Outbreak of Typhoid at Allentown. Allentown, Pa., Feb. 1. There are 25 cases of typhoid fever in this city, all but two of which have been traced to the imame source, contaminated milk. The health authorities located the source of the trouble after four cases had developed. The state authorities gave taken the mater in hand. The first death was that of Miss Adele Abele. A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED By an explosion of powder in a coal mine at Johnson City, Ill., five men were killed and 11 hurt. Fire destroyed the stables of J. J. Dunbar, at Norfolk, Va., and 48 valuable horses were burned to death. A bill was introduced in the U. S. senate providing that September 23 shall be set aside as "Paul Jones Day." Nancy White, a negress, 106 years old, the oldest woman in Western Pennsylvania, is dead at her home in New Haven, Pa. Miss Lillian Barber, of Iron Hill, Md., died in Wilmington, Del., from burns received in falling downstairs while carrying a lighted lamp. Friday, February 1. Thieves stole $6000 worth of jewelry from the home of Mrs. Katie McKenna, at Niagara Falls, N. Y. General William Shakespeare, soldier, editor, lawyer and banker, died at Kalamazoo, Mich., from wounds received in the Civil War. The third annual convention of the American Society of Religious Education was held at Reading, Pa. William J. Donohue, a member of the New York legislature, committed suicide in Brooklyn by shooting himself. President Roosevelt will deliver an oration at the dedication of the McKinley monument at Canton, O., the last week in September. Saturday, February 2. Henry B. Constable, aged 80 years, a prominent banker, died suddenly at Norfolk, Va. In a dispute between John Gebhardt and his son Charles at Steubenville, O., the father was shot and killed. Harry Smith, teller of the Hocking Valley National Bank at Lancaster, O., is under arrest for embezzling $5455. The U. S. senate passed a bill increasing the pensions of survivors of the Indian wars from $8 to $10 a month. Edward Newbury, a section hand on the Pennsylvania railroad, was killed at Bordentown, N. J., by being struck by an engine. Monday, February 4. The "Day and Night" Tobacco company's plant at Cincinnati, O., was destroyed by fire, Loss, $65,000. Gambling at Cananea, Mexico, has landed in jail Edwardo Arnold, the mayor; his brother and 40 Americans. Mrs. Johanna Wolf and Mrs. Mary Mellvain were burned to death in a fire which destroyed a tenement house at Cincinnati, O. A ton of powder and 1000 pounds o. dynamite exploded at Lenton, Ind., killing one Monon railway workman and injuring six. John Carter, of Titusville, Pa., has just concluded the sale of his West Hickory timber farm of 3000 acres to C. W. Stone and James Wetmore, of Warren, and Thomas McCabe, of Kinza, for about $300,000. Lady Grenfell, eldest daughter of Lord and Lady Grey, died in Ottawa, Can., of typhoid fever. Mrs. A. Haskell, a wealthy widow, was burned to death in a fire which destroyed her home in Chicago. President Roosevelt has appointed Ruch J. Bruce to be assistant appraiser of merchandise at Baltimore, Md. Rev. Seymour A. Baker, one of the founders of the Republican party, died of pneumonia at Kansas City, Mo., aged 91 years. While pouring molten steel into an ingot mould at the Carnegie plant at Homestead, Pa., an explosion occurred and three workmen were seriously burned. Wednesday, February 6. Street thermometers in St. Paul, Minn., on Tuesday registered from 22 to 32 degrees below zero. The fourth annual convention of the Road Makers' Association will be held at Pittsburg, Pa., March 12, 13 and 14. Fearing he would be robbed of $3600, an Italian jumped from a Wabash train near Adrian, Mich., and was seriously injured. One trainman was killed and two injured in a collision near Uniontown, Pa., between a Monongahela railroad passenger train and a freight. United States District Court Judge Charles Parlange, one of the leaders of the anti-lottery movement in Louisiana, died suddenly of apoplexy at New Orleans. PRODUCE QUOTATIONS PHILADELPHIA FLOUR firm; winter extras, $2.65@12.5; Pennsylvania roller, clear, $2.99@3.10; city mills, clear, $2.99@3.10; IRM firm, per barrel, $3.65; WHEAT firm, 2 Pennsylvania red, $77@77%; CORN firm; No. 2 yellow, local, 51%; OATS firm; No. 2 white, clipped, 44@44%; lower grades, 42%; HAY steady; No umothy, large bales, $21; PORK firm; many, large bales, $21; steady, beef hams, per barrel, 19%; POULTRY: Live steady; hens, 14%; old roosters, 9%; Dressed steady; choice fowls, 14%; old roosters, 9%; BUTTER steady; extra creamy, 35%; nearby, 8%; nearby, 8%; nearby, 28%; southern, 25%; OTATOES steady; per bushel, 55%@58 BALTIMORE - WHEAT steady; No. 2 spot, 79% @80c.; steamer No. 2 spot, 73% @78c.; southern, 73% @78c.; CORN steady; mixed spot, 49% @50c.; mixed, 48% @48c.; southern, 48% @48c.; No. 2, 48% @44c.; No. 3, 42% @43c.; No. 41% @41c.; mixed, No. 2, 42% @42c.; No. 3, 41% @41c.; No. 4, 38% @40c BUTTER firm; creamy separator extras, 31% @32c.; held, 24% @25c.; prints, 33% @33c.; Maryland and Pennsylvania prints; print, 33% @33c; fancy Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia, 24c.; West Virginia, 23c.; southern, 21@22c. Live Stock Markets. PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)— CATTLE steady; choice, $5.75@6; prime, $5.40@5.70. SHEEP steady; prime wethers, $5.50@5.70; culls and common, $2.24; lambs $7.70; veal heavies, $2.24; active prime heavies, $7.25; medium and Yorkers. $7.30; light Yorkers, $7.25; pigs, $1.75@7.20; roughs, $5.50@6.00 Mrs. Longworth Improved. Washington, Feb. 5.—Considerable improvement was shown in the condition of Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, wife of Representative Longworth, of Ohio, who has been confined to her home for several days with an attack of the lagripe. Mrs. Roosevelt was an early caller at the Longworth residence to inquire of the condition of her daughter. BIG BLAZE AT HARRISBURG Theatre Burned and Nine Buildings Damaged; Loss $230,000. THRILLING RESCUE OF ACTOR Harrisburg, Pa., Feb. 2.—Starting in a cellar of the historic Grand Opera house block, the most destructive fire Harrisburg has known since the burning of the capitol building within one day of 10 years ago, completely destroyed the building and damaged nine other buildings on Third and Wulnut streets and either wrecked or injured several other business establishments. The loss on buildings and contents is estimated at $300,000, which is partially covered by insurance. The losses on buildings are as follows: Grand Opera house, $80,000; Park hotel, $20,000; Hotel Columbus, $20,000; Duncan building, $3300; Security Trust building, $2500; Harrisburg Gas company building, $5000; Harrisburg Cycle and Typewriter company's store, $2000; College block. $1,000; Bijou theatre, $4000; Hoover's jewelry store, $1500. Other losses were tenants of the opera house, the Park hotel and adjoining buildings. The following firemen were injured: George Ehler, injured about legs; Edward Waldon, hip injured; Raymond Collins, injured about legs; C.W. Gillchrist, contusion of thigh; Frank H. Downey, Jr. fingers injured. John Smith, a stage hand, who was rescued from the Grand Opera house; may die from exposure. He is in a critical condition at the Harrisburg hospital. While thick clouds of smoke were coming out the windows of the Opera house the firemen saw a figure at one of the big windows high up in the building. Then came a crash and a jingling of glass, and what looked like a man naked all but his shirt crawled out on the sill. Standing on the window sill, he shrieked for a ladder. "Send a ladder up here. Hurry up; send a ladder up here." More smoke piled out of the windows then, and slowly a ladder was raised. Its top came within several feet of the window sill. A small ladder was hoisted by men on the big ladder. The man on the window sill stopped screaming. He swung his arms; the crowd thought he was going to jump. "Don't jump, boy; hold on." cried the firemen. The man got on his knees and crawled out on the window and let his legs hung over. By that time the smaller ladder had reached him, and he grabbed the hooks, and fitting them onto the sill, he began to crawl down. Edward Holbert, a fireman, went up to met him and got the man in his arms. Then the rescued man fainted and had to be carried the rest of the way. He was hurried to the Harrisburg hospital, where it was found he was not badly hurt. His name is John Smith, his home being in New York. He belongs to the stock company, and had been sleeping in one of the dressing rooms when the firebroke out. WOULD CHANGE CONSTITUTION Bill In Pennsylvania Legislature For Convention Next Fall. Harrisburg, Pa., Feb. 6. — Senator Langfitt, of Allegheny, has introduced a bill calling for a constitutional convention. It provides that the people shall vote on the question at the next November election, and that delegates on the basis of three from each senatorial district, shall be ected. The candidates for delegates are to be named at the spring primary, and if a majority of the people vote, in favor of the convention in November, it is to be called by the governor. The convention shall be held in the hall of the house on the first Tuesday in December next, and the amendments then agreed upon shall be submitted to the voters. Compensation is fixed at $150.0 with mileage and $150 for postage. HAD A WAGON LOAD OF LOOT Shoplifter Captured By Police Carried a Back Scranton, Pa., Feb. 5.—Mrs. Peter Scalzo, a young Italian woman, of Old Forge, was arrested for shoplifting. When the police returned from her home in Old Forge they brought with them a wagon load of stolen goods. There were 614 different articles in the load, including some valuable silks and the like. A sack that she carried under a long cloak when she was arrested contained 21 articles, representing as many thefts, and the stores had been open only seven hours when she was taken. Four different storekeepers have already identified some of the stolen goods. MORE PAY FOR LETTER CARRIERS Senate Passes a Bill That Applies to Free Delivery Offices, Washington, Feb. 2. — The senate passed a bill increasing the salaries of letter carriers in free delivery offices. It was explained that the same provision was to be made in the post-office appropriation bill, but it was desirable that the senate place itself on record in favor of the measure. The bill fixes the first year's salary of such carriers at $600, with an annual increase of $100 until the maximum of $1200 has been reached. CAPTAIN CASTO TO THE RESCUE Atlantic City, N. J., Feb. 6.—Captain Mark Casto, hero of the Clerokee, risked his life again. A fourmasted vessel, believed to be one of the Reading railroad's steel barges, was sighted by the government life saving crew at the Atlantic City station drifting helplessly before the furious northeast gale, nearly four miles from shore. No signs of life were visible aboard. The government life savers made no attempt to reach her. Captain Casto, knowing that these boats usually carry a crew of three men, besides a captain and a cook, called his crew about him and asked for volunteers to go to the rescue. The schooner Alberts cast off and made for Subscribe to the PLANET. the mouth of the inlet. With the fourth attempt Casto got a line to the unknown ship. Those on shore saw saills raised on the strange craft, and, running before the storm, the vessel, with the Alberta alongside, disappeared down the coast. Whether Casto found the crew aboard or not, he and his crew can claim rich salvage at the first port they reach. WILL AUDIT CAPITOL ACCOUNTS New York Company to Assist Pennsylvania Probers. Harrisburg, Pa., Feb. 5.—Governor Stuart advised the capitol investigating committee of the appointment of the Audit Company of New York to assist in its investigation. The governor suggested that as the auditors and accountants are ready to proceed that they be directed to commence their investigations immediately. The committee directed the auditors to begin an immediate investigation of the accounts between the capitol contractors and the state. The governor has not yet selected special counsel for the committee. State Treasurer Berry said that he would ask the governor to permit him to be represented at the investigation by private counsel. The committee organized by the selection of Senator John S. Fisher, of Indiana, as chairman, and Harry S. Calvert, of Pittsburg, and Frank Bell, of Harrisburg, as secretaries. The committee adjourned to meet at the call of the chair. TRAINMEN TURNED DOWN Philadelphia, Feb. 5.—The grievance committee of the Brotherhood of Firemen and Trainmen on the lines of the Pennsylvania railroad east of Pittsburgh and Erie, who have been asking for higher wages and what they term an equalization of hours, were refused any concessions on the part of the railroad at a meeting with General Manager Atterbury and superintendents of the various divisions. The trainmen have been dissatisfied since the railroad some time ago announced the general increase of 10 percent. in wages of all employees receiving less than $200 a month. The trainmen complain that the increase was not in proportion to that received by the conductors, considering the duties performed by each class of employees. AGED WOMAN BURNED TO DEATH Her Remains Found In Snow Outside Her Home. Allentown, Pa., Feb. 4.—Mrs. Sarah Ann Dunkard, an aged woman, who lived a hermit life just outside of Telford, on the county line, was burned to death during Saturday night or early Sunday morning. Her charred remains were found outside of her home by a Philadelphia & Lehigh Valley Traction car crew. They were lying on the snow, the woman having died in a vain attempt to reach help. The woman habitually smoked a clay pipe, and this is supposed to have ignited the woman's clothing. RUN DOWN BY A TRAIN Man and Wife Fatally Injured While Returning From a Funeral Returning from a Funeral. Allcntown, Pa., Feb. 4.—Returning from a funeral at Emanus, Mr. and Mrs. Menno Gehman, of Zionville, were fatally injured, and their adopted son, John Fidler, seriously hurt when the carriage in which they were riding was struck by an empty freight engine of the Philadelphia & Reading road, near Emanus. Gehman is about 55 years of age and a farmer. The boy is the son of a deceased Mennonite missionary. THE EMPIRE LAMP SHADE How Any Deft Fingered Woman Can Make One. An empire lamp shade may be made at home if one cannot be found in the shops, says the New York Herald. The frame consists of an upper and a lower ring of wire connected by four supports. The upper ring is sixteen inches in diameter, the lower ring twenty inches and the supports twelve inches in length, placed equally distant around the rings. Wind the wires of the sides and top ring with narrow strips of china silk of a color harmonizing with the general tone of your room or with the article of furniture nearest which the lamp is to stand. The materials required are three and one-half yards china silk, two and one-half yards lace as deep as the distance between the top and lower rings, four and one-half yards lace of the pattern four inches deep, enough iron wide gold braid to sew around the rings and to form frames for the five pictures which adorn the sides. Cut a lengthwise piece of silk three yards long and one-half inch wider than the distance from the top ring to the base of the frame. The extra half inch is to allow for the turning in of the edge at the top and for drawing around the lower wire. Care should be taken so the silk will not bag and that the sewing is done securely. The lace is sewed at the lower edge first without any fullness, then gathered evenly and sewed at the top ring. A strip of the silk one and one-half inches wide is fringed one-half inch and gathered extremely full to fit the top ring. This is sewed with raw edges on the outer side of the shade. A narrow gold braid covers all these edges and finishes the top. A silk ruffle four inches deep is sewed to the lower wire and over this the lace ruffle, a strip of gold braid hiding the joining. Exercise much care in sewing on the braid. By holding the unattached end in the left hand and keeping the braid stretched quite tightly a smooth effect can be obtained. The pictures should be severely empire in style, a visit to a second hand book store being helpful in getting old fashioned prints that can be easily colored with water colors. Around each picture sew the braid, turning the corners neatly as with a frame effect. Place the pictures evenly on the shade, leaving the same space above as below, and sew firmly through the braid, picture, lace and silk. When this is securely done with sharp pointed scissors cut away not too closely the silk and the lace directly behind the pictures, overcast these edges and you are done. THE PLANET SATURDAY.....FEB. 9TH, 1907. FELL INTO OCEAN; SWIMS ALL NIGHT SAILOR TELLS STORY OF HIS AC CIDENT AND REMARK- ABLE RESCUE. UNDRESSED IN THE WATER Topplets from Bridge of Ship While Asleep—Dozes at Times But Manages to Keep Afloat for Eight Hours. New York—Paul Seldler, the Hungarian sailor who fell from the bridge of the Carpathia, 200 miles off Gibraltar, at 8:30 at night and swam until picked up by another steamer at 4:30 the next morning, told his story for the first time the other night. He arrived here a few days ago. "I fell asleep leaning on the rail on the starboard side of the ship, at the highest point of the deck. I woke up all of a sudden, with water all around me. I had fallen 45 feet. I am used to the water, but there was something awful in coming to the surface and seeing the cabin light of a ship disappear in the night. "I heard a rattle, so I knew that they were lowering a lifeboat. The big ship stopped when it seemed almost out of sight. I might have shouted, but I reasoned that they would find me and I would be wasting breath that I might need. "I had on all my clothes, including an overcoat. They began to bear me down. The current must have carried me, for the ship got further and further away and the boat was out of sight altogether. I knew I must get out of my clothes. First I got off my coats and then I tried to take off my shoes. I had to let myself sink each time I unlaced a bit of the strings, and I would struggle to the surface for alr. Finally I got off my shoes and I was almost exhausted. "What did I think of? I am an atheist, and I found myself asking if I believed in God. I knew I was near death. My friends used to tell me that when I was near death I would see God as they saw him. I argued with myself, but I could not believe. "Then I thought of what the people on the ship were thinking of me, and it gave me joy to think they were sorry for me, because I thought all must think me lost. "I shivered in the cold. I thought of sharks. I talked aloud. I fell asleep. Yes, I fell asleep. That sounds funny, and it scared me as I woke up with a start as the water came into my nose and mouth. I don't know how long I would sleep at a time. It probably was only a minute, but it seemed half an hour. I would wake up talking about the sharks. After awhile I fell to thinking of my wife and child. I didn't know where they were. Then I wondered if I was J. H. They Rescued Him in the Nick of Time. going to die, and I was sorry because I could not go to sea again. "The time passed quickly. I suppose it was because my senses were so numb from the cold. After a long time I saw a ship. I could almost have cried for joy. I must have been in the water six hours then I was naked and cold and my legs and arms was so tired! I rolled over on my side and watched the ship as I swam in the cold. It was awful! I would measure the distance and the speed of the ship and I would look at the stars "I think I must have lost my head several times. The ship seemed to be coming and then going. Finally I thought myself right in front of it and I shouted with all the strength left. My shores were heard. I saw men leaning over the side. Then I saw a boat drop into the water, with men at the oars. They came to me and me up me. They dragged me into the boat, and when we got to the side of the ship I climbed up the rope ladder. I surprised myself in doing that. "Once in the cabin, I got some hot whisky, and after a time I told them my story. They could not believe me at first, but when we met the Carpathia at Gibraltar, they did. I had been in the sea eight hours." CHURCH AND CLERGY. The Presbyterian church in the United States of America has now 1,158,662 members, a gain of 43,000 for the year. The Rev. Gifford Dorey, who has been in the active ministry for nearly 60 years, is the oldest minister of the Wesleyan church of Great Britain. The George Sealy memorial window is being put in place in Trinity church at Galveston. The window is 20 feet high, 9 feet wide and cost $7,000. A much loved Sunday school teacher, who had taught her class since 1853, not missing a single Sunday, passed to her reward from Astoria, L. L., a short time ago. The Rev. F. B. Meyer of London, England, will be 60 next spring, at which time he purposes to sever his connection with Christ church of that city, of which he is now pastor. The Rev. L. L. Conrady, the Belgian priest in whose arms Father Damien breathed his last at the Hawaiian leper colony on the island of Molokal, is on his way to China, where he will establish similar colonies and spend the rest of his life. According to the year books of the denominations the per cent. of gain in members for the year 1905 was as follows: Baptists, two and three tenths; Congregational, two and two tenths; Presbyterians, two per cent.; Methodist Episcopal church, one and eight-tenths. Methodism has at least one living follower who became identified with the church more than a century ago. Mrs. Mary Ramsey Lemons Wood recently celebrated her one hundred and nineteenth birthday at Hillsboro, Ore. She united with the Methodist church in 1799. DOLLAR Package MAN MEDICINE FREE You can now obtain a large dollar size free package or Man Medicine—free on request. Man Medicine has cured thousands upon thousands of weak men. Man Medicine will cure you; restore you to full strength. Man Medicine cures vital weakness, nervous debility, early decay, discouraged manhood, blood poison, brain fag, backache, prostatitis, kidney and bladder trouble and nervousness. You can cure yourself at home by Man Medicine, and the full size dollar package will be delivered to you free, plain wrapper, with full directions how to use it. The full size dollar package free, no payments of any kind; no receipts; no promises; no papers to sign. It is free. All we want to know is that you are not sending for it out of idle curiosity, but that you want to be well and become your strong, natural self once more. Man Medicine will do what you want it to do—make you a real man. Your name and address will bring it; you want to do is to send and get it. We send it free to discouraged man. Interstate Romedy Company. 263 Luck Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Mardi Gras, New Orleans, La., Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola Fl. Feb. 7-12, 1907. Very low rates via Southern Rail way from all points to the above points and return. Selling dates, February 6th to 11th, inclusive, return limit Feb. 16th with privilege of extension return limit to March 2nd, 1907. Buy deposit of ticket at destination and payment fee of fifty cents. These tickets embrace stop over privileges at many points. Two through schedules daily. Drawing room Pullmans, dining cars. CONDITION OF The Mechanics Savings Bank, located at Richmond in the State of Virginia at the close of business, 26th day of January, 1907, made to the State Corporation Commission. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts..... $4427.94 Overdrafts..... 1871.11 Stocks, Bonds & Mortgages 2762.36 Other real estate..... 84816.46 Furniture & Fixtures..... 2160.62 Exchanges for clearl'g house 3650.87 Due from Nat. Banks..... 20359.94 Specie, nickels & cents..... 628.64 Paper Currency..... 550.00 All other items of resources 1287.67 Total..... $122514.71 LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in . . . $23533.82 Surplus fund . . . 6250.00 Dividends unpaid . . . 213.00 Individual deposits subject to check . . . 31081.13 Time certificates of deposit 61431.76 Certified checks . . . 5.00 Total . . . $122514.71 I. Thomas H. Wyatt, do solemnly swear that the above is a true state ment of the financial condition of the Mechanics' Savings Bank, locat ed at Richmond, in the State of Vir ginia at the close of business on the 28th day of January, 1907 to the best of my knowledge and belief. Thomas H. Wyatt, Cashler. Correct—Atest. John Mitchell, Jr. D. J. Chavers. J. J. Carter. State of Va., City of Richmond. S sworn to and subscribed before me this 4th dav of Feb. 1907. J. Thomas Hewin, Notary Public. My Commission expires Apr. 18th, 1910. THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA JOB DEPARTMENT EXCURSION We print Handbills, Quarter-Sheet posters, Tags, Tickets, Placard utes, Visiting Cards, Mourning Stations WE HAVE Our St OF THE LATE WE CAN PRINT A BILL AS SMALL A Three-Sheet AS LARGE AS A FRO Our street-entrance is retired and fastidious lady being able to enter w EXCURSION WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS We print Handbills, Quarter-Sheets, Half and Whole Sheet posters, Tags, Tickets, Placards, Society Cards, Minutes, Visiting Cards, Mourning Stationery. OUR AIM is to please our patrons and to give them the best service at the lowest prices, consistent with satisfactory work. We furnish "cuts" when desired and we will arrange to complete special work in our line. When in need of any work in our line, call and see us and estimates will be furnished. WE HAVE AN ELEGANT LINE OF SAMPLES WHICH WE WILL SHOW ANY ONE DESIRING TO SEE THEM. Our Stock Room Embraces a Full Line OF THE LATEST STYLE BOND, FINE WRITING—FLAT AND LINEN PAPER, ENVELOPES, ETC. WE CAN PRINT A BILL AS SMALL AS A DODGER. A Three-Sheet Poster AS LARGE AS A FRONT DOOR. Our street-entrance is retired and has no objectionable features, the most fastidious lady being able to enter without embarrassment or annoyance. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE, 2213. His eyes leaped into a blaze of wrath. His eyes burned with resentment. He opened his lips to reply; every word was a coal. Her cheeks flamed suddenly. His face was lurid with anger. She went out slowly. "That" we also see; you it not?" "Yes, s "Grackle you are shall at --- It is thoroughly equipped to do all kinds of printing on short notice. We make a specialty of Society printing and work for Insurance Companies, such as Financial TOOK THE SOVEREIGN. An automobilist who was touring through the country saw, walking ahead of him, a man followed by a dog. As the machine drew near them the dog started suddenly to cross the road; he was hit by the car and killed immediately. The motolist stopped his machine and approached the pedestrian. "I'm very sorry, my man, that this has happened," he said. "Will a sovereign make it all right?" "Oh, yes," said the man; "I suppose so." Pocketing the money as the car disappeared in the distance, he looked down at the dead animal. "I wonder whose dog it was?" he said. "Lend us a bob. Sam." "Ow do I know I shall git it back" "I promise it yer on the word of a gent." "Well, bring the gent down 'ere to me, and yer shall 'ave it."—jester THE HOLOGAUST. The hot words leaped from his lips. His ears were scorned by her vehemence. Even as he crumpled into a heap on the table the smoldering remnants of his rage gleamed fitfully through the ashes of repair that veiled his countenance.—Life. PENNIB'S GREAT RAISE. "Mr. Richly," began Pennib, the bookkeeper as he entered his employer's office on New Year's morning. "I have called to see why my salary has not been increased this year." "Why—why, hasn't it, my boy?" nervously asked the head of the firm. "No, sir; it has not." firmly replied Pennib. "I have been with you now Cards, Policies, both straight life and benevolent, Physician's Certificates, Sick Cards, Application blanks, Agents Report Sheets, Rate Cards, etc. MISSION WORK Charter-Sheets, Half and Whole Placards, Society Cards, Min- ing Stationery. WE AN EL WHICH WE WILL Stock Roof LATEST STYLE BOND, FIRE AS SMALL AS A DODGER. Sheet Poster A FRONT DOOR. OUR PRESENT CORP OF EMPLOYE IS WITHIN EASY REACH OF tired and has no objectionable f enter without embarrassment o 2213. Notice, The 1907 Official Servi on Anniversary or Thanks $2.00 for 100, $1.25 for 50, should have them. Money y to S. W. STARKS, Supre West Virginia if you need $150 PER SURE TO GOOD AGENT greatest seller in America to day. Nothi does the work. Sells at almost every ho on the dollar. Write to-day for full parti Address N WORK C is, Half and Whole Society Cards, Min- istry. is to please give them the lowest with satis AN ELEGANT WHICH WE WILL SHOW AN Rock Room D STYLE BOND, FINE WRITE AS A DODGER. Poster DOOR. PRESENT CORP OF EMPLOYEES ARE IN EASY REACH OF THE PUBLISHER is no objectionable features, the but embarrassment or annoyance Notice, K. o The 1907 Official Service or Prog anniversary or Thanksgiving Day, or 100, $1.25 for 50, or 75c. for have them. Money must be sent W. STARKS, Supreme Chance, virginia. If you need Badges ord 150 PER MON TO GOOD AGENTS, handling in America to day. Nothing else like it Sends at almost every home over and over Write to-day for full particulars, with rea Address WORK OF ALL and Whole Cards, Min- OUR AIM is to please our patrons and to give them the best service at the lowest prices, consistent with satisfactory work. ELEGANT WE WILL SHOW ANY ONE DESIRI Room Embrace BOND, FINE WRITING—FLAT AND OODGER. ster TOP OF EMPLOYEES ARE COMPETENT AND O REACH OF THE PUBLIC, BEING WITHIN P ctionable features, the most assment or annoyance. FOR FUR Jol ce, K. of P's Official Service or Program to be used for Thanksgiving Day, can be had for .25 for 50, or 75c. for 25. All Lodges . Money must be sent with your order KS. Supreme Chancellor, Charleston, if you need Badges order them at once. PER MONTH GOD AGENTS, handling the world's greatest of day Nothing else like it No long talk My plan most every home over and over again. 87 clear profit for full particulars, with real chance of a lifetime. OUR PRESENT CORP OF EMPLOYEES ARE COMPETENT AND QUICK-WORKING. OUR OFFICE IS WITHIN EASY REACH OF THE PUBLIC, BEING WITHIN FIFTY YARDS OF BROAD ST. The 1907 Official Service or Program to be used on Anniversary or Thanksgiving Day, can be had for $200 for 100, $1.25 for 50, or 75c, for 25. All Lodges should have them. Money must be sent with your order to S. W. STARKS, Supreme Chancellor, Charleston, West Virginia If you need Badges order them at once. $150 PER MONTH $150 PER MONTH SURE TO GOOD AGENTS, handling the world's greatest of the greatest seller in America to day. Nothing else like it. No long talk. My plan does the work. Sells at almost every home over and over again. 87 clear profit on the dollar. Write to-day for full particulars, with real chance of a lifetime. Address J. F. CLARK, CONWAY, ARK. All members of Companies B, C, and D of the Twenty fifth Infantry are urgently requested to send their names and address to Senator J. B. Foraker, United States Senate, Washington, D. C. It is hoped that every person in the country will take a personal in teetert in this matter and aid in the great contest now at hand. Rev. W. H. Scott, Chairman and Wm. L. Reed, Secretary, No. 263 Washington St., Room 30, Boston, Mass. have charge of the Defense Fund and contributions can be sent to them. for some years, and I think you will admit that it would be a difficult matter to fill my place." "D don't leave us, my dear boy." "Well, that, of course, depends entirely upon yourself. I don't want to put the firm out of business when it is doing so well, but I must consider myself, you know." "That's very true, Mr. Pennib, and we also must consider you. Let me see; your salary is $14 per week, is it not?" "Yes, sir; only $14 per week." Yes, sir; only $14 per week." "Graciolac! what an oversight! Why, you are worth $50, and your salary shall at once be, increased to that amount, and—" But just here Pennib's alarm clock went off, and a few hours later, when he tremblingly entered Mr. Richly's office to ask for an increase of one dollar, he choked up so that he could only mumble "good morning," and make a hasty exit—Judge. "William," said the boss, "sort those eggs into two piles. They are to be sold at different prices." "Yes, sir," said the boy. "The fresh and the near fresh." "No, you lunkhead; the big and the little."—Chicago Tribune. big and the --- --- Notice! Lord of the earth—such is man's part, So all the teachers say; But when the grip germ gets a start He keeps the right of way. —Washington, St. — "I can't believe, lieutenant, that you would be contented all your life in the country." "With you, countess, I certainly should! I've taken a great interest in farming of late!" "Really?" "On my word! I've even had hay fever!"—Lustige Blatter. Jenkins—I am told that the happiest marriages are between people who are exactly opposite in every respect to each other, so I am looking for a young lady of that sort, don't you know. Miss Pert—Then you have come to the right place. Come to the other side of the room and I'll introduce you to a bright, intelligent, well-educated girl. We print Wedding Invitations, and High Class Stationery for Balls, Parties, Picnics and all entertainments of a social nature. ALL DESCRIBE ns and to service at consistent work. We furnish "cuts" when de- complete special work in our in our line, call and see us an T LINE OF S DESIRING TO SEE THEM. oraces a full AT AND LINEN PAPER, ENVELOP WE HAVE ONE OF THE OF WOOD Of Any Job Printing E NT AND QUICK-WORKING. OUR OFFICE WITHIN FIFTY YARDS OF BROAD ST. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, AP John Mitch 311 N. 4th St. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, APPLY TO John Mitchell, Jr. John Mitchell, Jr. Not to Be Stopped. His Opposite WE HAVE ONE OF THE LARGEST ASSORTMENTS OF WOOD-TYPE Of Any Job Printing Establishment in the city. 311 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va. JOSHUA BANKS & SONS CATERERS EVERY FACILITY CONSISTENT WITH FINE CATERING. Special Attention Given to Balls, Suppers, Installations and Smokers at the Shortest Notice. Address all communications to ELAM L. BANKS, 511 N. 3d St. Residence: 1312 N. 26th St. WANTED—All able bodied men who go North in need of work to call and consult me. I can at most any time and esp cially in the warm weather secure employment for several hundred. Address. J. L. WALLACE, Agent. International Union of Pavers and Rammersmen. 456 W. 57th St. New York, N. Y. BLACKWELL & BRO ONE OF THE LEADING PAINTERS Practical House and Sign Painters, Graining and General Contractors. .... ALL WORK GUARANTEED..... Cards, Letters or Orders. ...Give us a trial, you will never regret it.... Address, Cor. Price and Jackson Sts. RICHMOND, VA. PLANET DEPOTS NEW YORK CITY P. Ritzhelmier, 7 N. 134th St. Greeen and Bailey, 249 E. 127th St. J. H. Parker, 144 W. 26th St. Charles Devan, 1.1 W. 30th St. W. J. Buckner, 150 W. 53rd St. M. W. Slaughter, 312 W. 40th St. W. W. Johnson, 247 W. 47th St. E. H. Mitchell, 152 W. 27th St. Turner R. Robinson, 12-6th Ave. E. A. Williams, 200 W. 63rd St. M. B. Walker, 209 W. 37th St. J. H. Jarrett, 453-7th Ave. Smith & Miles, 212 W. 41st St. M. B. Wineyglass, 322 W. 59th St. PHILADELPHIA, PA. M. Clay, 1801 Fitzwater St. J. H. Gray, 1233 Pine St. Bishop Robinson, 1234 Melon St. E. P. Mackens, 1116 Pine St. James E. Warwick, 254 S. 11th St. Mrs. B. Homsher, 1040 Pine St. William Parker, 631 Pine St. Mrs. Lavinia Adridge, 521 S. 12th. Chas. A. George, 4063 Market St. F. A. Stewart, 1730 Federal St. PITTSBURG, PA Jon. Evans, care Jones & Laughlin E. K. Thumm., 1402 Wyle Ave. bOSTON MASS Branum, 657 Shawmut Ave. Whitehite 832 Tresor T. E. W. Perry, 2 Jones Place. CHICAGO, ILL. E. H. Faulkner, 3104 State St. FIVE opes, Note and Letter Paper Bill-heads, Monthly Statements, Business Cards, Financial and Order Books, Circulars, Check-books, Pamphlets. SCRIPTIONS resired and we will arrange to line. When in need of any work estimates will be furnished. SAMPLES Line TYPES, ETC. LARGEST ASSORTMENTS OD-TYPE Establishment in the city. PLY TO nell, Jr., Richmond, Va. BROOKLYN, N. Y., Lee Ricks, 782 Fulton St. William A Dabney, 3 Quincy St. William Pope, 174 Myrtle Ave. CHARLESTON, W. VA. L. C. Narrar, 601 Brooks St. ASTORIA, L. I. Frank R. Wood, 144 Broadway. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Hursey Bros., 1217 Commerce Ave. BRONX BOROUGH, N. Y. J. H. Barrett, 603-162d St. Thos. H. Bridges, 614 W. 4th St. WASHINGTON, D. C. L. H. Singleton, 20th and E Stn. Southwestern Drug Co., 732-2J Street, f W. LAWRENCE, MASS. A. E. Evans, 382 Essex St. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. W. H. Brown, 13 Stockbridge St. COVINGTON, VA. E. J. Jefferson, 1211-30th St., George T. Hall, 1332-30th St. TARPORO, N. C. V. E. Howard. WILMINGTON, N. C. William H. Moore. STAUNTON, VA. Wm. C. Johnston, 111 E. Main St., LYNCHBURG, VA. Charles Morgan, 702 Taylor St. HAMPTON, VA. John M. Phillips. DANVILLE, VA. G. P. Clark, 233 N. Union St., PORTSMOUTH, VA. H. S. Cooper, 1332 County St., JACKSONVILLE, FLA. John H. Johnsea, 210 Bridge St., PROVIDENCE, R. I. Douglass A. A. P. Agency, DEMOPOLIS, ALA. John W. Anderson. MILWAUKEE, WIS. J. D. Cook, 26 Juneau Ave., OKLAHOMA CITY, O. T. E. P. Feagan. BALTIMORE, MD. Henry Albert, 203 Richmond St. SIX = ae 7 i A — keer vie S Ny TAE MASQUERADERS, Eh vol mec aetelnarmeptetala che tells pao It was a trivial thing, but It touched Bis pride as a man. That was bow he Put It to himself. It wasn't that be Valued this woman's opinion—any wo- man’s opinion. It was merely that it touched his pride. He turned again to the window and gazed out, the enzage- ment book still between his bands. What if be compelled her respect? ‘What if by his owa persouality cloak €d under Chileote's identity he forced her to admit his capability? It was a matter of pride, after all—scarcely even of pride; self respect was a better word. Satistied by his own reasoning, he turned back Into the room “See to those letters, Greening.” he said. “And for the rest of the morn- ing’s work you might go on with your Khorasan notes. 1 believe we'll all Want every inch of knowledze we can get In that quarter before we're much older. I'll see you again later." “With a resssurinz nod he crossed the room and passed through the door He lunched with Fraide at his club and afterward walked with him to Westminster. The watk and lunch Were both memorable. In that hour he learned many things that bad been sealed to him before. He tasted his firat draft of real elation, bis first drop Of real discomiture. He saw for the first time how & great man may con descead—how unostentatiously, how fully, how delichtfully. He felt what tact and kindness perfectly combined may accomplish, and be burned in- wardly with a sense of duplicity that crushed aud elated him alternately. He was Joun Loder, friendless. penn less, with no present and no future, yet he waike! down Whitehall in the full light of day with oue of the greatest statesmen England has known, Some strangers were betug shown over the terrace when he and Fraide reached the house. and, noticing the ‘open door, the old man paused. “I never refuse fresh air.” be sald “Shall we take another breath of It before settling down?” He took Lo der’s arm and drew lim forward. As they passed through the doorway the pressure of bis fingers tightened. “L shall reckon today among my pleasant- est memories, Chilcote,” he said grave- ly. “1 can't explain the feeling, but 1 Seem to have touched Eve's husband, the real you, more closely this morulng than I ever did before. It has been & genuine happiness.” He looked up with the eyes that through all his years of action and responsibility hnd remained 60 bright. But Loder paled suddenly, and his glance turned to the river—wide, mys. terious, secret. Unconsciously Fraide had stripped the illusion. It was not John Loder who walked here; It was Chileote—Chileote with his position, his constituency—his wife. He half extr- eated his arm, but Fraide held it. “No,” he said. “Don't draw away from me. You have always been too ready to do that. It is not often I have & pleasant trath to tell. I won't be de Prived of the enjoyment.” “Can the truth ever be pleasant, sir?” Involuutarily Loder echoed Chilcote. Fraide looked up. He was half a head shorter than his companion, though his dignity concealed the fact. “Chilcote,” he said seriously, “give up cynicism! It fs the trademark of fall- ure. and I do not like it in my— friends.” Loder said nothing. The quiet in- sight of the reproof, its mitigating Kindness, touched him sharply. In that moment he saw the rails down whieh be had sent his little car of ex- istence spinning, and the sight daunted him. The track was steeper, the gauze narrower, than he had guessed; there. were curves and sidings upon which he had not reckoned. He turned his ‘gead and met Fraide's glance. “Don't count too much on me, sir,” he said slowly. “I might disappoint you azain” His voice broke off on the last word, for the sound of other voices and of laughter came to them ‘cross the terrace as a group of two ‘women and three men passed throush the open door. At a glance he realized that the slighter of the two women wan Eve. Seeing them, she disengaged herself fro her party and came quickly for- ward. He saw her cheeks tush and her eyes brighten pleasantly as they Fested on his companion, but he noticed iso that after her first cursory glance she avoided his own direction. As she came toward them Fraide Grew away bis band in readiness to Greet her. “Here comes my godchild!” be said. “I often wish, Chilcote, that I could do away with the prefix.” He added the last words in an undertone as be Feached them, then he responded warmly to her smile. “What!” he said, “Turning the ter- ‘Face into the garden of Eden in Jan- ‘ary! We cannot allow this.” Eve laughed. “Blame Lady Sarab!” she said. “We met at lunch, and she carried me off. Needless to say 1 ‘hadn't to ask where.” ‘They both laughed, and Loder joined, @ litte uncertainly. He had yet to Jearn that the devotion of Fraide and ‘his wife was a long standing jest in au ee if him to Fraide. ‘The keow!- (vl had au excellent night.” be said. | "Bomewnat steely andr i slowly and reluctantly Bre looked back. “No,” she said truth- fully and with a faint surprise that to Loder seemed the first genuine emotion ‘she iad shown regarding bit, "No. 1 doit think T ever saw you took so well.” She was quite unéouscious and very charming as she made the acmis- ‘sion. It struck Loder that her coloring of bair and eyes gained by daylight were brightened and vivitied by their setting of somber river and somber stone, | Fraide smiled at ber aifectionately, ‘then looked at Loder. “Chileote bas got a new lease of nerves, Eve,” he sail quietly. “And t—believe—1 have got a new henchman, But 1 see my wife beckoniag to me, 1 must bare a word with ber before she fits away. May I bo excused? He made a cour feous gesture of apology, then smiled at Eve. She looked after him as he moved away. “I sometimes wonder what 1 should do if anything were to happen to the Fraides.” she sald, a little wist fully. Then almost at once she laugh: ed, as If regretting her impuisiveness. “You beard what be sald.” she went om in a different voice. “Am I really to, congratulate you?" ‘The change of tone stung Loder un- accountably. “Will you always disbe- lieve in me?” he asked. Without answering, she walked slow- ly actoss the deserted terrace and, pausing by the parapet, laid ber hand On the stouework. Sul in silence, ehe looked out across the river. Loder had folowed closely. Again ber aloofness seemed a challenge. “WII you always disbelieve in me?" he repeated. At last she looked up at him slowly. “Have you ever given me cause to believe?” she asked in a quiet tone. To this truth he found no @uswer, though the subdued Incredulity netted him afresh. Prompted to a further effort, he spoke again. “Patience is necessary with ‘every person and every circumstance,” he said. “We've all got to wait and ae She did not lower ber gaze as be spoke, and there seemed to him some- thing disconcerting in the clear, candid Diue of her eyes, With a sudden dread of ber next words, he moved forward and laid bis baud beside bers on the parapet. “Patience is needed for every one,” he repeated quickly, “Sometimes a man is like a bit of wreckage. He drifts ti some force stronger than himself gets in his way and stops him.” He looked again at her face. He scarcely knew what be was saying. He only felt that he was a wan in an egrezions- Jy false position, trying stupidly to Jus- tity himself. “Don't you belleve that flotsam can sometimes be washed ashore?” he asked. High above them Big Ben chimeh the hour. Eve raised her bead. It alinost seem- ed to him that he could see her answer trembling on her lips. Then the voice of Lady Sarah Fraide came cheerfully from behind them. “Eve! she called. “Eve! We must fly. It's absolutely 3 o'clock!” ‘TO BE CONTINUED. SAVE THE WOMEN. Revolving Clothes Horse Which the Wife Will Appreciate. There ts no little thing that will Bave the household so much as a re- volving clothes horse, so near the back stoop that the clothes may be hung upon ft without stepping out in the snow. A solid post should have a hole bored in the top and the arms may be beveled and spiked to a piece of plank through which a bolt passes into the post, or each arm may be bored to let the bolt pass through it. Revolving Clothes Rack. Three, four or five arms may be used as desired and of any length, provided all are of one length. No skill is re- quired in making it, says Farm and Home, as the rope holds the arms up simply by being tight enough. It 1s well to set the post before measur ing the arms, so that they may be sure to reach the veranda. Some Jaths may be nailed together at first to make a model if you are not sure of your ability as a carpenter. FARM ITEMS. Ventilate the cellar. Keep fruit cool, but do not let it freeze. Sort the apples frequently. Of all the new money-making schemes, none of them beats the old- fashioned way of earning a living — Farm Journal. Sandy soil can be greatly improved by plowing in barnyard manure or other things that will add decaying matter. Spinach is an easily grown garden crop, and there is, perhaps, no other of its Kind that will give as good satisfaction. Three or four ounces of seed planted in the autumn after a summer crop has been harvested from the land, will produce an abun- dance of greens for the average fam- fly during the late autumn and early spring. Cattle Prices Hich. The reports from the beef cattle market indicate a demand in excess of the visible supply, and that good prices for cattle will be maintained for sometime. This will stimulate ‘tha rearing of cattle, remarks Farm THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. JSUT and wr- ee mauce more prosperous conditions among eastern and middle west farmers. PAJAMA WEDDING NEW MARITAL DEPARTURE Justice and Witnesses Clad in Ex treme Negligee Costume at Early Morning Ceremony. New York—Jersey City has sup- ed the Iatest marital novelty—a pa- ama wedding at four o’ciock tm the morning, The bride—Florey"—well, did her part, for she married her wn stepfather, “Nelse,” while guests Eb@ the dustin Sho pronounced tee “Fyaak © Lalaos, the “mareitag ice ¢," ied the knot, but only after the jaw had been k up and a statute nd which p 1 a woman to arty ber a divorced second Nelson W ieee Voticed tines of Norwich, Conn., who admits follow i AEy : ie y ‘5 jad] \ li #4 \ A T f) WAG LS we ing Mfe's furrows 42 years, got Into Jersey City the other day. “Miss Flora B. Young, Norwich, Conn., he wrote upon the hotel regis- ter directly under his own scrawl. The pair were rattled through the streets of the sleeping city to the home of the “marrying justice,” ring- ing his bell as a rooster in a neigh- boring yard was flapping his wings and emitting his first crow. Magistrate Labane put on a frock coat over his pajamas, and at four o'clock opened his door and let blush- ing “Florey” and her swain into bis front parlor. Noise of the marriage had awaken- ed the entire nelzhborhood, and, upon invitation of the mavistrate, a number of married men living in his own flat house trooped in. They wore pajamas covered with thelr overcoats. LEOPARD UNDER THE BED. Household Much Excited Until a Fa- mous Hunter Kills Animal. Natrobi, British East Africa.—Mr. Sandiford’s daughter missed her pet cat and in hunting the house for it went into the spare bedroom on the ground floor. There she saw lying snugly under the bed a big leopard, its tall wagging viciously. With great Presence of mind she tiptoed out of the room without disturbing the fe- rocious beast, closed the door and told her father. Manlike, he scoffed, snying it prob- ably was @ strange cat. He went bold- ly into the room to prove her fear groundless, and, lifting up the over- hanging sheet, peered under and found himself within three feet of the gleam- Ing eyes and bared fangs of an angry leopard. He rushed out of the room and called a neighbor, Captain Young- husband, a famous hunter of big game. Meantime the boys about the place became excited and crowded about the window to get a glimpse of the beast. Fortunately the window was protected by fron bars, for the leopard, aroused by the noise, sprang at the glass. The bars stopped his rush and made him so furious that he threw himself against them time after time. Captain Younghusband watched his chance and fired into the animal's head a bul- let which ranged through the body and plowed a furrow in the floor, The leopard proved to be full grown, but gaunt and starved looking. Evidently it had been prowling around for some- thing to eat. The family cat undoubt- edly had scented the danger, for it was discovered hiding in one of the boys” rooms. Misjudged. The manager of an office had adver- Used for an office boy. In conse- quence he was annoyed for an hour by a straggling Hne 7 boys of all sizes, claiming various accomphsh- ments. “Well,” he sald to a late applicant, ‘t suppose yon can read anything, and write anything, and figure a little, and use the typewriter a little, and—" “Naw!” interrupted the boy. “If I could do all them things, I'd strike yer fer yer own job. I ain't nothin’ but an office boy.” He got the position. Innocent Youth. In a village in New Jorsey the school mistress saw one of the little boys crying. She called him to her and inquired the reason. “Some of the big boys made me kiss a little girl out in the school yard,” was the re- oly. “Why, that is outrageous! Why did you not come right to me?” “I— [—dldn’t know that you would let me xiss you,” be said. Corrected. Yeast—Do you go fishing in # boat? Crimsonbeak—Never. “Rut I saw you yesterday, fishing !r roat” “No, you didn’t. 1 was sitting in t’ but I was fishing in the rive akers Statecmas. Rnigbts of Pythi nights of Pythbias, N.A.,S. A,E. A., A. AND A. SS eens eos This organization is one of the most powerful in the country and it PD. progress has been phenominal. The Grand Lodge of Virginia has juris S Ss diction over all of the cities and counties in this state Chirty male haf CY)_\'} are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitate om Wee SIP EO of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything XGe” Bey } cise. Founded on Friendship, based on Charity aud established oe int \ SEN, nevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will Gnd it ae ork Wxcoccayey worthy of their heartiest support. Sow It pays an endowment and burial benefit of of $200.09 for all ages. Ih Pays $4.00 per week sick dues. The badge costing 75 cents each is the only absolutely necessary regalla, For information concerning the orgauzaition of lodges apply at the main office, The: @ourts of ‘Calanthe. 2a is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership of thirty pers ms to organize a court. Its mempers 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. dues. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, so cents and * a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions. THE BANDS OF CALANTHE or Children’s Department also con- stitutes a feature and persons cannot do better than to enter the little ones into this mystic circle. ‘Phe expense is nominal and the benefits all thit could be expected. Tt pays from $1.00 to $1.50 sick dues and death benefits of from $3.99 to 840.00. If you have n »>Pythian Lodge or Court or Band in your neighborhood, orgrnize one. For all information concerning the Children’s Department ad dress, Mrs. ANNA Taytor, W. M a 120 W. Hill -t, Richmond, Va, For all information concerning special rates of JOHN MITCH3LL, IR., membership in the lodges and courts, address 311 N. 4th St, Richmond, Va NOT A REAL FAIRY STORY. / an ) a time,” said little Har. ty who had been pre- i ‘a fairy story, “there was a poor oid woman who had to take quite along Journey in a sireet car, The motorman wes careful, when ‘he saw Fer waiting. to etop his car exactly at the crossing, so that she could get abeard without stepping in the mud, which was very deep in the Street, and the conductor reached down kindly and carefully helped her up the steps. The platform was crowd- ed with men, who considerately press- ed aside so that the poor old woman ‘could get into the car without a great deal of trouble. Many people stood in the aisle of the car, but all of them moved forward yoluntarily when the poor old woman tried to get in, thus making ft unnecessary for her to stam- ble over the feet of any of them in order to get past the door. The only man who had a seat was a cripple, who was wedzed In between two large, richly dressed Indies, and who could not have surrendered his place to the Poor old woman even if he had wanted to do so, But it was not necessary for him to exhibit any gallantry. A very beautiful and stylish looking young lady stood up immediately and offered her seat to the poor old wom- an, who accepted it thankfully. But the beautiful young iady sald: “I do not deserve any thanks. I have done only what it was my duty to do.” “Gee, grandma, that’s no fairy “What would you call it, then?” “The worst ‘ile I ever heard.”—Chi- cago Record-Herald. His Need. “What you need, my man, is change of scene.” “Gee!” “What {s your business?” “I'm a scene-shifter at de t'eater."— Houston Post. ode Geers Pinthabis | Howell—What do you think of Row- eu? Powell—Well, to be _ perfectly frank, I don’t think he {s fit to have desk ‘room im a dog house—N. ¥. Petia: The Futility of Wisdom. ‘To wisdom each of ue pretends And in his heart declares Tieden Jald Me dividenda We'd ait be miilfonaires, Washington Bear. Another Possibility. Jimmy—Adam made the biggest blunder on record. Why, if he had eaten a banana instead of de apple he wouldn't had a downfall. Micky—No, not unless he stepped on de peel—Chicago Dally News. Quite a Difference. “Did Howard's rich uncle's death ‘make much ditference in his style of living?” _ “Decidedly yes. He changed from hardpan to Panhard.”—Judge. ; Se Me Benham—A fellow called me a lar today. Mrs. Benham—Well, you can make gv04, all right—N. ¥. Press. ICAN SELL YOUR REAL ESTATE OR BUSINESS srsnsen No Matter Where Located. roperties and Business of all kin.is ‘ld quickly for eash in all parts of ve United States Don't wait. “rite to day yescribing what you ‘ve to sell and give cash price on me. If you want to buy any kind of isiness or Real Estate anywhere, any price, write me your require ents. I can save you time ané ‘AVID P. TAPE, The Land Man. 415 .iamsae Avenue, Topeka, oe Kansas. United Aid Insurance Company, HOME OFFICE, 312 East Broad St, Richmoad, Va Incorporated 1804 under the lawsof Virginia. Capital Stock, €25,008 Has written over Three Million (83,000,000-00) Dollars worth » business since organization. Over sixty-fve thousand policy holders. Over twenty-five Branches. All claims pala to date Ten Thousand Dollars on Deposit with the Treasurer er Virginia. OFFICERS. J. BE. Byrd, President, W. W. Lee, ist Vice President. D. 8. Alston, 2né Vice President. W. J. Spratley, Sect’y. and Gen’l. Manager, R. L. Clay, Asst. Secretary. R. H. Stokes, Cashier and Treasurer. R. C. Malloy. General Inepector. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. J. EB. Eyrd, W. J, pratiey W. W. Lee, D. §. Alston, FL. Clay, ¥ Bailey, W. C. Carter, P. 8. Brown, C. H. Jones, R. HL Stokes, F. E. Puryear. Reliable men can find employmentas solicitors and agents. Address, UNITE, AID INSURANCE °0., 312 BR. Broaa ‘St, ~ chmond, VWs THE PEOPLE’S REAL ESTATE AND INVESTMENT COMPANY. egg WHY NOT CALL ON US? When renting, Whea buying, S a, ~~ | = When lending money, — ae Cos When borrowing money, eS When you have Real Estate for sale t er eat hi When you want am estate managed sea see B% dust cal Phone 4854. J. J. CARTER, PrestJeat. asia. W. F DENNY, Secrewary. No, 717 N. Ona we. ‘The Difference. Mike—Kin yez tell me phwat's th’ difference betwane humor an’ wit, Patt Pat—Well, it's lotke th’ diference betwane whin yure wolfe tickles ye undher th’ chin wid a shtraw from th’ broom an” whin eho hits ye over thi head wid th’ handle av ut— BEFORE MAKING ~> ~ooo | Your purebase pension Seotine Jesters rebsbie furn'sare fe the city ana see the fine ine of qj Refrigerators, | Elattings, Oil-Gloths, R ‘And in fact everything thet is need ed in house farnishings. (| BUGS AND CARPETS, |e Of every description ; also the Las. BR est designs in ROOKERS and spee. vial OFAIRS. Our goods are the (best for the price and the prige t+ Nirerz tow: 4, |G. &. Jurgen’s Son > 431 FaS! BROD BT. EMD between stn and 5th Street Subahiddonanhonaséndansinks sataeinian A. Ha yes OFFICE AND WARE-KoOMS, 727 North Second Street RESIDENCE, 725 N. and St First-class Hacks and Caskets of all de scriptions. I ave a spare room for bod. des when the family have not » suitabls place. All country orders we giver special attention. Your special aentiox Iscalled to the new style Onk Cuakete Call and see me and you shall be waite: oe cindiy. see *Phone, 2778. Established 1899. "Phone 4169. JOHN FOXEL, Dealer in General Line of FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, NOTIONS, FRESH MEATS, CI- GARS, TOBACCO, ICE, WOOD, COAL, &. 118. 41H ST, RICHMOND, VA. BOARDING & LODGING Rates Reasonable. All the Comforts e% orfiome « « Orders received by letter or telegraph MRS. BOOKER LEFT WICH. PROPRIETREESS, 816 N. 2nd St, Richmond, ¥s eee ita RICHMOND MEDICAL COLLEGE 400 EB. Baker Street, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Chartered June 14, 1905. Co-ed ucational. The only Colored Col lege in Virginia. for a thorougt course in Medicine, Denistry ant Pharmacy. Session: 1905-1906 be gins Oct. 2, 1905. For further information, write, J. ALEX. LEWIS. M. D., Secretary 9-23-3mos. H F Jonathan FISH, O¥323 AND PRODUCE. 120 N. 177TH 8t., RICHMOND, VA ALL ORDERS WiLL RECEIV? PROMPT ATTENTION. Long Distance Phone. 75a. THE aes sy 303—5 North Third St. SPINE TAILORING. CLEANING, DYEING AND REPAIRING CHITMAN M. WHITE, PROPRIETOR. S. W. ROBINSON, NO. 23 NCRTH 18TH ST. pan oe FINE WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, &c. 8@- All Stock Sold as Guaranteed.-we FRumrl ATTENTION, ‘Your patronage is respecttully solicited. ‘Phone 2043 ua W Lege S REAL ESTATE & LOANS Private Banker and Broker, Loans negotiated on Real Estate, Fnterest allowed on Deposits, Estates managed, Rent collected and Prompt retarns Special attention to repairs, | Notary With Seal. Established 1892. ‘ SMITHS TUS TISS CCLECE LYNCHBURG, va. COURSES: Phonographic, Commercial, Penning English, Electric wiring, Civil Engineering. Ro. Vacation. Instruction Thorough... Positions Se cured. Correspondence Solicited. Send 2c for particulara. Address: T. PO SMITH, ALB President _ STRAUS’ SPECIAL SIRAUS SPECIAL Old Yacht Clsb, WH) Matinty the sover of the ight kind of stimulant Wprvtal petire. We have all grades of good Uquare, Cigars and Tobaceo. Osll and see = ISAAC STRAUS & CO., 422 E. Broad St., Richmond, Virginia. GEORGE O. BROWN, PHOTOGRAPHER, a GUS N, 2nd St, Kichmend, Ya. ine Photograthe. Troeto Lite, Mieh<lnae Fetctoor Wack eneeuted Rowman St cre Ged eee ee Pheer ES, 999990090000. FORD’S ; Pormerty keewrs on “OZONIZED OX MARROW” *» y : STRAIGHTENS EDIKY or COREY Mayet it cas Teas opie dead Baa SERS peperet IME RUBY alata insase ‘hitky "ar"eurig wate Bertheaaas tows fem See nlakes the moet stubs Bishi Seleangee Sedna faay be obcained S00 treatment, Bho ¢ Se gf Pardee aie Pounds tditndes Sa cece tellig facies Ses tena syekeeh ered Sect Sas gives it new life and a ing ‘elegant peceg. toh omer ges Heats ane Poeatae Pensa eb ty BRS MEE Sa Sead inet Sees eases coe nes OH TR SEMAD Were eeeutea inti res Sing Bane onic (SSui "ie nt tha es Berta shine mets Rea'tet weeehns Sesrrctietae be Moines Sevuseeres Sev isia PORSe Wale BounbP stent Eneg' tsttnr ean tpar dee 2k tas Exons ise Sn eaicihe™ Bebe set PLR LE oars et tsiatitce hetiantee de pea py Make Pounds -deoeMeS fra fe made galy if Ueldagt tal Oe HS, Eeselne hae she iggasara hares Voss peat Se"shth package "Retacs teattee'yomray Fepdas sae stars pein bela ag ce ERY Sete tad deters Teepe finest ladlar eat'nar tony Serksase Groen whan nit foliar PERS eiatn cee Eel iene totees bah maaetsar ESR hee Giew'os Pan Skargse lalt onisePhe Pook” ie cae ine geet pontoon on woe Set Sg address plainly to oe toe The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. (None genuine without my ngnuwere) Chile Ford Bak ® 76 Wabash Ave., Shicago, Hl, ‘Arcats wanted cververteres eae : Custalo H ustalo House, 702 East Broad Street. Having remorlelel my BAR, and hav. seuorve ey. front nad toa" petle st the same olf stand. CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS, First CLass Restaurant, (OM MEALS AT ALL HOURS “eq Sew Phone 1261, WM. CUSTALO, - Prop. —Hring oF send ux your JOB WORK; we do it nicely. We do it eniteiies THE PLANET SATURDAY.... FEB. 9TH. 1907 LIVE STOCK THE HOGS' BATH TUB. Handy Device Which Makes the Dipping Process Easy. Dipping hogs is at best nasty work and by providing a properly constructed bath tub much, if not all, of this work may be avoided. Construct a tank of any width and length you please, just so it is large enough, but be careful not to get it more than 15 inches deep, directs the Prairie Farmer. A good size to make is five feet wide by ten feet long and 15 inches deep, using lumber two inches thick and 15 inches wide for the sides and ends, and flooring of galvanized iron for the bottom. Plan for the Bath Tub. Set this in the ground under a shed near where the hogs are fed and fill to a depth of about ten inches with water and on top of this place half an inch of crude oil. During summer and fall, and even on real warm rays in winter, hogs will gladly use this to wallow in if shut away from mudholes, and it is sure death to lice and skin diseases. The advantage of this tub over pouring the crude oil into mudholes as has been suggested, is that it is more economical and is cleaner, besides being more effective. GIVE THE SHEEP A CHANCE. Protect the Little Fellows From Parasites and Germ Diseases. The lambs come into the world perfectly free from parasites and generally from germ diseases. It is probable that most of them are free from internal parasites. The flock owner should realize this and endeavor to protect the little things from all that would make them less thrifty than they are when they are born, says Farmers' Review. Some of the most successful flocks of sheep in the country have been made so because of the care bestowed upon them. In the very first place they have been protected against all kinds of parasites, and have been given quarters in which disease germs could not thrive. Their owners have realized the fact that about all that sheep need is a chance to be thrifty. It is well known that they have in themselves an unusual power of resisting disease and of rising above averse conditions. The successful raising of sheep does not require extraordinary measures. The steps to be taken need to be those of protecting the sheep against enemies of various kinds rather than to devise new methods generally. It will be found that the successful shoppheres are in all cases men that look carefully after the multitude of little things, which go to make up the grand total of things making for the welfare of the flock. To give the sheep a good fighting chance is all that is necessary to insure success. SEPARATOR MILK FOR PIGS. It Should Prove the Best Kind of Feed When Warm. There is an impression among some farmers that the feeding of skim milk warm from the separator is injurious to pigs. Prof. William Deitrich, of the Illinois experimental station, writing on this matter, says that there is no reason why it should cause trouble since warm milk is the natural food of pigs. It may be that the scouring and running down in flesh that is sometimes observed is caused by sudden changes in feed; such as, for instance, change from cold sour skim milk to warm fresh skim-milk. The skim-milk in either form is good feed, but it will not do to change from one to the other very suddenly. Another cause of the trouble may be that the pigs are being fed too much. Sometimes people think that when the cream is taken out of the milk there is not much left that is of any value and young animals are fed very liberally and often overfed, and this becomes a very serious matter. The skim-milk has relatively more protein than whole milk and a comparatively small excess of protein in the system will very likely bring about digestive troubles. Give Bear plenty of Room. Many breeders make the mistake of keeping the herd boar in a small, dirty pen and provide no yard for him to exercise in. He should have a strong pen and a yard of about an acre away from the rest of the herd. farmers to go into the sheep business as we advised. This country ought to grow all its wool, export a lot, and cotton ought to be within the reach of every man's table. WINTER FEEDING OF HOGS. How a Missouri Farmer Manages on His 40-Acre Farm. My 40-acre farm is shown in the accompanying diagram, writes farmer Meyers, in Farm and Home. The barn lot is largely a steep, oak-covered, south slope. To improve this natural shelter the bank barn and the hog shed were located at the west side. It has been cleared except scattering trees over most of the barn lot, with a thicker fringe, including the underbrush, left along the top of the slope. The hog shed is 96 feet long, containing a double row of pens 12x8 feet in size and separated by an alsele 4 feet wide. Each pen has a floor, a trough and a hay rack. The shed is tight and warm with windows to admit sunshine and fresh air. Along with such repairs as this building needs in the fall preparatory to winter use the pens are thoroughly whitewashed. A little bedding is used and every forenoon the floors are cleaned. They are also occasionally scrubbed. The hogs themselves are regularly dipped, and they have no access to manure except as they find it spread on the fields. The two south pens in the hog shed have heretofore been used only for hay. Of the other 14 pens one is reserved for the boar, three are occupied by the brood sows and the remaining space is given over to the younger stock divided into bunches of 10 to 12. Care is taken to put together those of about the same age and size. This winter the larger number of swine made it necessary to press into use the two south pens as soon as the hay was out of them. Every animal in the drove is a pet, and each one knows its place so well that the same individuals are bedfellows night after night. In the lower southwest corner of the barn is a room called the office. It contains a cook stove and a tank such as is used for heating water in the kitchen at the house. From this tank a pipe extends into the hog shed and down the aisle, with a faucet for B C BARN BARN YARD SWINE PASTURE HOUSE GARDEN ORCHARD each trough. Every morning soon after daylight the hogs are watered. if the weather is mild they get water at the temperature of the cistern; if it is cold their drink is warmed. They are next given some grain other than corn, ordinarily oats and alfalfa hay, supplying altogether with about half a feed. Except in the severest weather the hogs have the freedom of the barn lot and a 10-acre field. Every winter finds two of the fields in rye and the third in meadow, usually 5 acres of clover and 5 acres of alfalfa. In case the ground is too soft the hogs are confined to the barn lot, and in that event they receive a more liberal allowance of feed. Before dark the hogs are again admitted to the shed. Although they have free access to water during the day they now get warm water if it is cold. They are then given all the shelled corn they will eat. On days of chilling rain, deep snow or extreme cold the hogs are kept shut up. At such times, however, they are turned out while the pens are being cleaned and then called back for additional breakfast. At noon they are also provided with more feed of some kind. This is usually in the form of a change, such as small cooked potatoes or other vegetables that are not marketable. The hogs are also let out a few minutes and the pens cleaned again before supper. Another part of their regular diet includes coal, salt, charcoal and ashes. At a certain spot in the barn lot is kept a supply of salt while at another is a pile of soft coal. These are relished by the hogs. Old stumps are being burned, to supply charcoal. The morning grain feed is ground for the young stock and fed to them in the form of slop. Special attention is given to the younger litters by supplying them with all the spare skim milk and otherwise favoring them so that by spring the whole drove of young stock will be as even as possible. The aged hogs are never allowed to become poor if it can be prevented, but danger lies in their becoming too fat. Early in the winter as soon as the sows are in good flesh, the corn of their night feed is largely displaced by less fattening grains. The boar is given a bone and muscle making ration all the year round. His special run-way is the lane from the barn to the chicken house. At the south end of the lane is a trough in which he daily finds some kitehen slop, adding greater variety to his food. Swine thus cared for spend the winter in comfort. Their growth is as steady and almost as rapid as in the summer. They go into the field every morning hungry enough to graze industriously a large part of the day. As Interpreted. Percy—I am tired of this life of ease. I want a life of toll danger, excitement, and adventure! Penelope—Oh! this is so sudden! But you may speak to my father. THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Everthing! Everthing! IN FURNITURE AND FLOOR COVERINGS SYDNOR & HUNDLEY, INC. Leaders. 709 711 713 EAST BROAD STREET. Ice-Cream, Wholesale and Retail. Special Attention given to Festivals, Suppers etc Fruits and Delicacies. Tobacco and Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Prompt and polite service. 'Phone orders duly attended to. The People's Restaurant, 750 North 3rd St., Richmond, Va MEALS at All Hours—Hot or Cold. Board by Day, Week or Month. SOFT DRINKS. Send in your name, post-office address, and nearest express post office. Tell us whether you are a lawyer or a business owner. Tell us whether you are a lawyer or a business owner. If it anthaneth you, after a careful examination of your records, you might, if it doesn't, please return it to us at the post office. A 20. Year guarantee will be placed In the front case of the water we send and to you the 10. 100 customers we will send to you. A 20. Year guarantee will be offered 1 the First National Bank of Chicago, Capital $10,000. NATIONAL CONSOLIDATED WATCH CO. DIPLOMATICALLY DONE. The agent for Perkins' Perfect Polishing Powder walked briskly up the path to Miss Priscilla Prim's residence. Miss Priscilla and her 16-year-old niece were engaged in practicing a pianoforte duet. "Madam," said the agent, stopping respectfully at the French window and taking off his hat, "I feel sorry to interrupt you, and should not do so but that I have in my bag an article which will so lessen the work of your house that you will have much more time to spend in the musical exercises in which I see you are now engaged." Miss Priscilla brought the wisdom of 60 years of focus on him through her spectacles and waved dismissal. "I shall be sorry if you don't try Perkins' Perfect Polisher," said the agent. "Of course I shall not press it upon you, but as I came up the walk and saw you and your sister sitting there I thought—" "My niece," said Miss Priscilla, conscientiously, but in a tone of unusual mildness. "Nicee!" ejaculated the agent, and raised his eyes to heaven in default of words. "Really, madam, of course I must believe what you say, but—" "Let me see what you have, young man," interrupted Miss Prim. "I don't object to labor-saving goods on principle, for I don't believe in growing old before my time," she added, affably. Ten minutes later the agent turned his back on three tins of the Perfect Polishing Powder, and Miss Priscilla went into the house to hunt up some long-discarded curling-tongs. Worst of All Mrs. Oldwed—Your husband seems like an awfully nice man. I hope he hasn't any bad habits. Mrs. Newed—Only one—but that is the limit. It is the mother habit. Mrs. Oldwed—the mother habit. Mrs. Newed—Yes. Mother's coffee, mother's bread, mother's pies, and all that sort of thing, you know.—Chicago Daily News. Didn't Use Harsh Language. A woman whose throat had troubled her for a long time grew impatience at the slow progress she was making and consulted her doctor. "Madam, I can never cure you of this throat trouble unless you stop talking and give your throat a complete rest," said the medico. "Oh, doctor," objected the patient, "talking can't affect me! I'm very careful. I never use harsh language!" Sanctum Mysteries Humorist's Wife—What in the world are you sending all these mother-in-law and plumber jokes to the Daily Blowhard for? They are as old as the hills. Humorist—Yes, my dear; but the editor who selects the humorous matter for that paper is a young fellow just out of college, and they all be new to him.—N. Y. Weekly. ONE EFFECT OF GOOD WORKS. "Great heavens, neighbor, what's happened? Burglars? Fire? Or what?" "Nope, m' wife's church is holding a rummage sale to get money to clothes the heathen."—Sloux City Journal. Too Expensive. Reggy—And you mean to say you are not engaged to Miss DeFlyer? Why, I heard her say for two pins she would accept you. Gussie (gloomily)—Yes; but I found out she meant diamond pins. NOT AS YOU WOULD HAVE EXPECTED. The story of Christopher Millsap, a young bookkeeper in the employ of a wholesale house, affords a striking illustration of the way in which the wind is often tempered to the shorn lamb. Not on account of any fault of his, but because the business would not justify keeping him on the salary list any longer, Christopher had lost his situation. Day after day he tried to secure another, but without success. One morning, when he found himself reduced to his last cent and was thinking gloomily of suicide as the only way out of his troubles, the postman handed him a letter. It was from Ketcham & Fleece, attorneys at law, Brattleboro Vt, and read as follows: "Dear Sir: Your uncle, Orville Stinjay Millsap, died last week. As administrators of his estate we have been looking over his papers, and we find that you owe him $50 for money borrowed February 17, 1902, with in interest at six per cent from that date An early settlement will oblige"—Chicago Tribune. At the Reception: Maude—Mr. Huggins looks unusually happy this evening. Elsie—Yes; he proposed to me less than an hour ago. Maude—Ah, I see—and you refused him.—Chicago News. Mechanics' Savings Bank OF RICHMOND, VA. 511 NORTH THIRD STREET. Money received on deposit and amounts above $1.00 which remains Money Loaned on Satisfactory S Business Accounts Handled Pro Amounts of ten cents and upward This establishment is fitted up in the most white vault, burlar-proof steel chest, electric high science for safety and the accommodation of the pr For all information concerning Stocks, Depo Oasisian Banking Hours have been arranged for the s ing people as follows: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Satu close Saturday at 3 P. M. and open again at 5 P. P. M. Call by as you come from work. OFFICERS JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H. R. THON. H. WYATT, O. BOARD OF DIRECT REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., JNO. R. CUR E. R. JEFFERSON H. F. JONATHAN, T J. O. FARLEY, JNO. S. A. WASHINGTON, R. W. WHITING, WI JOHN MITCHELL, JR. PRES. TH The J. V. Hawkin's on deposit and interest paid on which remains 60 days and over. Satisfactory Security. Is Handled Promptly. ents and upwards received on deposit up in the most improved style, having a large chest, electric lights and every modern conven- tion of the public. ning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the arranged for the special convenience of the work to 4 P. M. Saturday, 9 A. M. to 3 P. W. open again at 5 P. M., remaining open until a work. OFFICERS: President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President OS. H. WYATT, Cashier. ARD OF DIRECTORS: D., JNO. R. CHILES B. P. VANDERVALL, JONATHAN, THOMAS SMITH D. J. CHAVER LY, JN. TAYLOR. Money received on deposit and interest paid on amounts above $1.00 which remains 60 days and over. Money Loaned on Satisfactory Security. Business Accounts Handled Promptly. Amounts of ten cents and upwards received on deposit. This establishment is fitted up in the most improved style, having a large white vault, burlar-proof steel chest, electric lights and every modern convenience for safety and the accommodation of the public. For all information concerning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc., apply to the Cashier. Banking Hours have been arranged for the special convenience of the working people as follows: 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. Saturdays, 9 A.M. to 8 P. W. close Saturday at 8 P.M. and open again at 5 P.M., remaining open until P.M. Call by as you come from work. OFFICERS: JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H. F. JONATHAN, Vice-President THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., JNO. R. CHILES B. P. VANDERVALL, 8. R. JEFFERSON H. F. JONATHAN, THOMAS SMITH D. J. CHAVERS J. O. FARLEY, JA. TAYLOR. awkin's HAIR GROWER & RESTORER The J. V. Hawkin's HAIR GROWER & RESTORER The J. V. Hawkin's HAIR GROWER & RESTORER [TRADE MARK REGISTERED.] Has proved to be a fortune to many of the unfortunate, who are to-day delighted with its wonderful results. The merits of this great hair preparation naturally places it in a sphere all of its own, and the glowing terms in which our patrons speak of it reassures us of its satisfactory results. We can well boast of a large patronage throughout this and other States and also enjoys the commendation of the very best white and colored people in this immediate community. In order to convince the most skeptic readers of the merits and results of the J. V. Hawkin's Hair Grower and Restorer, we will from tune to time produce in print the photographs of those giving us permission to do so who have used our preparation. among the many bearing witness of its genuine correspondence of those expecting a miracle or a ration is a natural and pure compound, the ingre- nate to put in print. We will just here remi- nate to in print. States Government has placed national patent ri- which it is protected and we are in turn response est methods and square dealings. It will positively remove Dandruff, Cura Scos of all impurities, Restore Hair on Olean Temp or Bold heads, where the roots are not dead. **RICE'S:** -15 cts. per box; eight boxes, $2 express prepaid. The Face Beautifier makes the use of powder tirely unnecessary, and is perfectly harmless. Sprices: 25, 50 cts and $1.00. Money can be sent by Post Office Money Ord or Express Money Order. A charge of 10c extra is imposed on all out of city orders. less of its genuine qualities. We do not desire the mirage or anything unreasonable. Our prepa compound, the ingredients of which we would not will just here remind the public that Unitec national patent rights on our hair preparation by are in turn responsible to the government for hon ers. andruff, Cure Scalp among the many bearing witness of its genuine qualities. We do not desire the correspondence of those expecting a miracle or any unreasonable. Our preparation is a natural and pure compound, the ingredients of which we would hesitate to put in print. We will just here remind the public that the United States Government has placed national patent rights on our hair preparation by which it is protected and we are in turn responsible to the government for honest methods and square dealings. It will positively remove Dandruff, Cure Scalp of all impurities, Restore Hair on Clean Temples or Bold Heads, where the roots are not dead. PRICES; -15 cts. per box; eight boxes, $2.80 express prepaid. The Face Beautifier makes the use of powder enti- trely unnecessary, and is perfectly harmless. Sale prices; 25, 50cts and $1.00. Money can be sent by Post Office Money Order or Express Money Order. A charge of 10cts. extra is imposed on all out of city orders. . PRICE, Embalmer and Liveryman. at short notice by telegraph or telephone and nice entertainments. Plenty of roomences. Large pisic or band wagons for nothing but first-class carriages, buggies, and fine funeral supplies. 12 East Leigh Street. Residence Next Door. NIGHT.—Man on Duty All Night North LEAVEN 4:00 A.M. New York Waverly 9:00 A.M. Loran R. Pulham Bluefield ville and plaza. 1:00 P.M. Lytechb 3:00 P.M. New York Waverly to Boston and Wake of Peter 3:00 P.M. man Sleep burg to Margaret Tram p.m. am A. D. PRICE, Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liveryman. All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty at room with all necessary conveniences. Large pisicn or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class carriages, buggies, etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine funeral supplies. No. 212 East Leigh Street. Residence Next Door. OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT.—Man on Duty All Night W. I. JOHNSON, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Corner Broad HACKS FOR HIRE: Oriate by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Wedding, Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended. Ol' Phone, 686, Residence in Building, New Phone, 18 K Strange. Wonderful but True are the awe stricken tests given by The Great Austrianian Medium. PROF. D. D. BRUCE. M. D. the only Living Apostle of Science of the Mysteries. $5000 in Gold to any one in the World to compete with him. Possessing more power than any four mediums combined. No card, trance or hand humbug Greatest Hindoo Medium in the World. SO GREAT IS HIS POWER that we can tell you while in a Claivroyant state, all you wish to know with out a word being spoken. Come, all ye unbelievers, scoffers and jeers; bring all your skepticism with you—he will open your eyes to the private chamber mystery. Come all ye broken hearted wives, all with low spirits and let him lift the burden from your aching and jealous heart. He challenges the World to compete with him in causing a speedy marriage with the one you love: 1720 A. B. C. uniting the separated and bring back the lost one. Traces lost or stolen goods. Unearths hidden treasures. Removes evil influences Crosses. Spells. Ill Luck, cures tricks and Conjurations, gives Luck and Success in all you undertake. Cures the Tobacco and Liquor Habits. Allows the Captive to be set Free. He is the only one that will give a Written Guarantee to complete your business or refund your money Are you sick? Do you know what the trouble is with you? Come and Consult Nature's Doctor. Rheumatism, Insomnia, Hysteria and all Diseases cured. Points given on Horse Racing and all Games of Chance. No matter what alls you, come and see this wonderful man. Reader have you noticed that some people have a hard time to get along, no matter how they toll, while others have success. Many wealthy men and women owe their success to this wonderful man. He will tell you whom you will marry. Will you be happy? He will tell you who your friends and enemies are. Can you tell? Don't take a leap in 'e dark, but be advised by this wonderful man. Greatest Prophet in existence. He always Succeeds when others fall. That is the chance of a life time. Don't pass you. Office hours: 9 A.M. B.M. Office hours: 9 A. M. to 9:30 P. M. Sunday: 2:30 to 7:30 P. M. Sunday: 2:30 to 7:30 P. M. N. B.—Our consultation Fee is 50 cents. Sittings, $1.00. All let- ters containing $1.00 will be answer- ed in full. MAIN OFFICE: 510 S. 8th St., Philadelphia, Pa. —Now is the time. Send your advertisement to the PLANET and look pleasant. Capital, $25,000. WILM A. CUSTALO. J. J. CARTER THOMAS M. CRUMP SEC. 10 Richmond, Va SEVEN SOUTHERN RAILWAY TRAIN LEAVE RICHMOND N. B.-Following schedule figures published on information, and are not guaranteed. 7:30 a.m.-Daily. Mail 1 a.m. Bedford, New Atlanta and Birlingham New Orleans M. Washington and all the south Through coach for Chase City, Oxford, Durham and halleigh 6:00 p.m.-m.-x.-x. Sunday, Keysville Local. 5:30 p.m.-m.-x.-x. Fullman read at 9:30 p.m. for all the South 4:20 p.m. E-book. No. 16. to West point, connecting for Baltimore Mondays, woaded and yr Fridays 2:15 p.m. No. 10. Local to West Point Mondays 4:45 a.m. opt Sunday. No. 74. Local to West Point UNSARVE RICHMOND. 6:30 a.m. 8:35 p.m. to the South 8:35 a.m. From Charlotte, Durham, Chase Kaldenhill and local stations. Village and local st-houses. 15 a.m on No 15, From Bantam rd and West Point. No. 9. W. Wheeling days and Fridays. No. 5 15 p. No. 10 West Point and local stations. Except Sunday. W WESTINGHAM 200 E Main St. Richmond, Va. C H. HACKETT 200 E Main St. Richmond, Va. V. P. & Gen. Mgr. Pess. Trait. Mgr. Washington D. C. R. F & P. Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Pote 6:30 a.m. inerty, Main St. Through, all fullman Cars 7:00 a.m. Except monday, Byrd st. Through All Pilman cars 8:00 a.m. weees days, Elba, Ashlina seom- dation 8. 4) a. m., daily Byrd st. Tarough Local stops. 10 a.m. week, week days. Byrd st. through 11 a.m. week, week days. Byrd st. Frederick's borg accommodation 12 p.m. daily, Main st. Through 13 p.m. week, week days. Elba. Asisnand accom sation 14 m.daily, Byrd st. Through 15 arrive thicmoun. Southward 16 a.m. daily, thicmoun. Asisnand accom modation 17 daily, Byrd street. Through 18 a.m. week, week days. Byrd st. Frederick's borg accommodation 19 a.m. week, week days. Byrd st. Through Local stops p. m. daily, hyrd St. Through. p. m. daily, cyrd St. Through. Loac 099 9:30 p. m. daily. Main St. Through. All uil m. cars 11:40 p. m. cars. Main-street. Through. 11:30 p. m. Woe Days. Ilyrd St. Through All ruimua c. s. TEE - Palmieri Sleeping or Parlor Cars on all day trains except train arriving Richmond 11:00 a.m. week days and local accommodations. Time of arrivals and departures and connections and quarantine. W. GULP, W. P. TAYLOR W. D. DUKE, W. OULP, G. SUPT Tref Mgr. Asst to irres. Geer SUPT Tref Mgr. SCENIC ROUTE TO THE WEST ROUTE CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS, ST. LOUIS CHICAGO, LOUISVILLE, NASHVILLE, MEMPHIS, 2:15 p. m. and 11:00 p. m. daily. WESTBOUND LOCAL TRAINS. 7:30 a. m. daily and 5:15 p. m. week days. NEWPORT NEWS, NORFOLK AND OLD POINT. 9 a. m. and 4 p. m. daily. Local For Newport News and 5:35 p.m. daily Arrive&shim Line 1: **8:30 A.M.** *8:30 A.M. $3.45 P.M. $4.75 P.M. From Eastside* 8:30 A.M. *11:45 A.M. *7:0 P.M. and James Riv r: *8:30 A.M. *6:35 1:1 M. (*Daily.* *Ex. Sunday.) OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP CO. NIGHT LINE FOR NORFOLK Leave Richmond every evening (food Ash Street at 7 P. M. stopping at Newport Nash Street. Fare $2.00 on way. $4.50 round trip, in hudson at waterborne be the meals 50c. each. Strew Cars for Wharf FOR NEW YORK Via Night Line Steamers (except Saturday snapping connection in Norfolk with Main Line snapping day in Norfolk) *M* also Norfolk and Western Railway M and Y and Cheapea and Chapea & Oli. Ky. at 9 A. M. making connection (except Sunday) at Norfolk Main Line steamers calling at 7 P. M. Tickets. 88 E. Main Street Steamer Pocosinus leaves Monday We steamer Friday at 7 a.m. for Norfolk Portsmouth. We will be at Norfolk monica and James River inundations, and connec g an OLD North or WB wington, Baltin or g OLD West or WB room at South night $t . oderate prices. All electric cars to the wile $r only $15 $none . Norro to the wile $r only $15 $none . Norro all points in Eastern Virginia, at North oil at WEISGEN, GEN'l agr E. A. Barber, Jr. SEABOARD Schedule Effective, May 27, 1906. Short Line to the principal Cities ♦ the South and Southwest, Florida, Cuba and Mexico. SOUTHEAST BROAD TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY 9 30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Durham, Raleigh Hamlet, limestone to the north, 2 20 p.m. Fast train with three-hour ceer and coaches to Raleigh, Columbia, Jacksonville and through sleeper to 2 1/2 lace, Birmingham, mines to these pomes and the entire south-west. 10 00 p. m. Through Pullman n. n. coaches Florida, Savannah Jacksonville and Florida, Jacksonville, Atlanta, Birmin ham am Memphis, in connection with the Friso System, making immediate connec tion for all south-western poi s. Northbound Trains Arrive Richmond Daily, 10 00 p. m. 455 P. M. 5-30 P. M. H S LEARD, D. M. W M. TAYLOR, C T.A. 880 East Main street, Richmond, V Nortok and Western R. R. LEAVE RICHMOND (DAILY), BYRD STATION. * 00 A. M. NORFOLK LIMITED Arrives at Nortok 11:30. M. Mokops only at Petersburg, Waverley and Suffolk. 9.00 A.M. CHICAGO EXPRESS Buffet Par Tuesday. Yay! yay! yay! yay! yay! yay! yay! Fulman Siever Roan, also Roanote to Knoxville Buffet to Cincinnati, also Roanote to Knoxville and Knoxville to Cincinnato and Memphis. 12:10 P. M Roanoble Express for Farmville Lynchburg and Roan-ike 3:30 P. M. Ocean Shore Limited Arrives 3:30 P. M. Ocean Shore stops only at Petrab rab Waverly and Washington connects with Stew ar to Boston, revidence, New York, Battum- and Washington, New York 6 '20 F. M. for Norfolk and all stations care of Norfolk. 9 NEW ORLEANS SHORT LINE. PULL- nature Sleeper Richmond to Lynchburg, Peters burg to Noseake: Lynchburg to Chattanooga. Memphis and New Orleans. Cafe Dining ("ar- t" or "b") 2:05 p. and 50 p. m., from Norfolk. 2:05 p. and 50 p. m., from Norfolk. ATLANTIC COAST LINE EFFECTIVE MAY 27TH. For Florida and couth, 9:55 A. M. 7, 25 and For Norfolk, 9:00 A. M. 3:00 P. M. and 6:20 P. For N. & W. By. West, 12:10 and 9:50 P. For Petersburg 9:00 A. M. 12:10, 6:30, 9:00 and 11:30 P. For Goldsboro and Fayetteville, 9:58 P. Trans arrives dichondra dairy, 5:10 **8** **11:40** 11:40 A. M. 1:00, 6:30, 8:00 and 11:40 A. M. 1:00, 6:30, 8:00 and * Frept Sunday. * Sunday only. C. S. CAMPBLE / D. P. A ABRAHATS1 LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY, Tuesday, February 12th, 1907. EIGHT et Zo ie br nea Ely ay; =~ qUKAaeUIe {ieApa ater Sa i (ae s&s : oy SATURDAY. .....FEB. OTH, 100 THE TROUBLE AT BROWNSVILLE, TEX. ‘= diers were calleq for the roll cal and inspection. “The sergeant coulc Rot state definitely the time, bu: said that it was very early in tac morning. It might have been 6:3¢ o'clock, but it was nearly dark. Senator Warner had the witnes detail trouble tuat had previously gccurred between citizens and men bers of the Twenty fifth Infantry at Fort McIntosh and San Antonio. ‘Texas. Under redirect examination by Senator Foraker, Harris declares that the tien were dissatisfied. wit, service in Texas, because of the treatment accordeg them by the ct) izens and several of them waose e. listments had expired, retused to rx enlist there. He had himself mad up his mind not to reenlist, if ni regiment was to remain in Texas. AROUSED BY THE } NG. In response to questions by Se. ator Foraker, the witness declare that he lad listened to the shootin. down town when he was aroused b the firing. The shots sounded t him like those from Wincaester and six siooters, and mixed fin, rather than reports from Springfie! rifles. He would not be _positiv: that none of the snots were fro: Springfields, but ‘he could dist gulsh none. Senator Warner sougat to shot that it was at least unusual that th: witness should be aroused at mic night and while responding to : call to arms which was also unu: ual and indicated trouble, should |: the confusion give his attention t listening to the character of tac Guns being fired in the town. Harris said that when the batts fon was ordered to leave Fort Brow: after the raid, they marched dow the main street between rows 0 citizens armed with Winchester: and six shooters, and that these ci izens followed them to the railroad station. The sohtiers had orders not to look about. He had not heard that the governor of Texa: fhad offered a reward for informs tion leading to the apprehension ot the men who did the shooting. DENIES CONSPIRACY OF 5! LENCE. “It has been charged,” sali Seu ator Foraker, “that there was 4 conspiracy of silence among the men, not to talk about the affair do you know anything about that?” “No. sir, I never heard of it.” “From what you saw and heard you do not believe any of the men of your company were engaged in the firing?” asked Senator Overman ‘The witness—I do not believe they were. Senator Overman.—Or any of the men of the other companies? ‘The witness.—I go not know a Dout them. Senator Overman.— Personully, you had had no trouble in Texas? ‘The witness.—No, sir. Senator Overman—Because you behaved yourself? The witness—Yes, sir. Aske if the other men would have avoideg trouble if they had o« haved themselves, Harris safd thai some of the men did not look at th- matter in the way he did. The wanted to go to places and be trea ed the same as other people. The; did not like to go to the saloons an, be forced to enter the rear Yoor tc spend their money. Some of then. considered that they had been insu! ed. As for himself, he did not fre quent places where he knew he wa not wanted. He thus avoided trouble ‘The reason he did not want to r enlist was that there were time: when he wanted to go to places an.! ‘be was deterred rom gving because he knew he was not welcome. He wanted to go in the front door tac same as other men, and, if he coul J not, he wouht not go at all. He Preferred service in the North where he could get better treatmen Senator Foraker then examine the witness regarding the bullet clips, and shells sent to the Senate by the President with bt: message, but it appearing that tac bullets and shells had been returne to the War Department further questioning on that line was di: continued, to be taken up again. This concluded the testimony o: the witness, and the committee ac Journed to meet again at 10:39 o lock. TO BE CONTINUED. *; ‘The Wedding Prelude. . Little Boy—Say, ma says you are Boing to take sister off. Engaged Youth (soon to be married) —Yes, in a few weeks she's going to my home, and my ma and pa will be her ma and pa. Sec? “I see. Then she'll be your sister, same as mine. Say, don't you do anything she doesn't like, for if you do she'll bang you around awful when your ma and pa ain't looking.—N. Y. Weekly. With the mitts. \_ “Excuse me, sir,” sald Mr Buttinski, “but have you a good education?” “Pretty fair, pal.” replied the man with oxlike biceps and beer-mallet hands. “Well, aid you acquire it through a Jong course of study?” “No, I acquired mine in scraps.” “In scraps?” “Yes, I am a pusilist.”--Chicago ‘Daily News. Two Things of Which Lincoln Was Ashamed By ROBERTUS LOVE BRAHAM LINCOLN. whose life was never a model or dignity and convention, enzaged in two affairs during his career which ‘he always wanted to forget. Of bia connection with these events he seem- ed to be heartily ashamed. One was almost a duel, aud the other was a rer- olutionary act as a legislator. | Lincott as a Whig served in the Il. “nols legislature of 1840-41. There was “a bitter fight against the state banks, | led by the Democrats. The state of uf fairs was such that the Democrats be- “Meved that an adjournment of the leg- fslature sine die would kill the baaks. ‘The Whigs undertook to prevent this by absenting themselves and thus re- ducing the attendance below quorum. | Lincola and Joseph Gillesple, another Whig, were delegated to attend the |essious and call the yeas and nays ‘The sergeant at arms Was sent out to ‘gather in enouch Whigs to make a “quorum. Lincoln and Gillespie, with ‘nother Whig, then ran to a window of the church In which th legislature sat and Jumped out. Gillespie sald after Lincoln's death, “I think Mr. Lincoln always regret- ted that he entered Into that arrange ment, as he deprecated everything that savored of the revolutionary.” But it was what Lincola ta a letter to his close friend Joshua F, Speed called ‘his “duel with Shields” that caused him’ more regret than any other Incl- ‘dent connected with bis public life. ‘This also was brought about indirectly Decause of Lincoln's attitude regarding state finances, thoush there was a more romantic side to it "in 1942 Lincoln was engaged to Mary ‘Todd, whose particular chum was Ju- lia Jayne. afterward the wife of Ly- man Trumbull. James Shields, a young Irishtuan, was the state auditor. He ‘Was sald to be “inordinately vain" and to have set himself up as a great beau, though uniitted by nature for playing that part. Mary Todd and other Spring- field belles secmed to take delight in Fidiculing Shields for his social preten- ‘sious. Miss ‘Todd had some taleut as a sarcastic writer. There appeared in the Sangainon Journal, a Springfield newspaper, a series of articles, presum- ably humorous, In which Shields was ‘made the butt of ridicule. The first ar- ticle criticised him In a good natured ‘way for his management of state finances. The succeeding articles held him up to public ridicule on account of his social ambitions. Lincoln wrote the first, and the two girls wrote the other articles, but when Shields demanded of the editor the name of the author Lin- coln gallantly “stood for” all. Shields demanded a retraction. Lin- coln considered his letter offensive and Fequested him to withdraw the letter and state his case more mildly. This Shields refused to do. He challenged Lincoln to fight him. Lincoln bad been strongly opposed to dueling, but under the circumstances he felt compelled to accept the challenge. As weapons he named cavairy broadswords of the lar- gest size. A point in Missour! opposite the town of Alton was designated as [| Le a ere the place. The two prospective com- batauts and their friends accordingly met there, broadswords and all, but at the eleventh hour some mutual friends intervened, and the affair was settled ‘with honor and without actual Szbting. It appears that the friends of Shields Doasted mightily of his fighting prow- es and bis ferocity. Lincoln said to William H. Herndon, his law partner, afterward: ‘I did not intend to hurt Bnields unless I did so in self defense. If it had been necessary 1 could have split him from the crown of his head to the end of his backbone.” Consider- ing the length of the Lincola arm as compared to that of Shields, who was boilt otherwise. this does not seem to have been a vain boast, ‘This “due:” kept popping ap for many years afterward. In 1858 Lin ‘coin said to Herndon, “If all the coos things 1 have ever done are remem- bered as long aud well as my cove with Shields it ts plain I shatl a-~ 590: be forgotten.” + Mr. Herndon speaks of Shiclts with eonsiderable disparagement. Neverise- Jess Shieids in bis later curver proved that he was a brave and abie man. In mauy respects bis career was most te markable, He volunteered his services in the Mexican war and was promoted rapidly. Both at Cerro Gordo and Cha- pultepec be was severely wounded. For his bravery at Cerro Gordo he was brevetted major general. President Polk thea appointed him the first terri- torial governor of Orezon, but [linois elected him to the United States senate in 1849, where he served a full term of six years. Then he removed to Minne- Sota, and when that territory became a state be was elected to the United States senate for the firat short term of two years. Later General Shields set- ‘ted at Carrollton, Mo. and served two terms In the state legislature. But for Keg tS] Bae) oy Mt aa! Ata i NATE Do Yu, a abl. the third time he waa sent to the Unit- ed Siates sonate, being appoluted to serve out the unexpired term of Sena- tor Lewis V. Bogy, who died early In 1S79. Shields sut In the senate two mouths throuzh that appointment. Then he went to Ottumwa, la, where he died Jess than three months after leaving the senate. Duriug the civil war the challenger of Lincolu also proved bis military spirit. He weat to Waslagton In 1962 aud was appointed by his old enemy a brigadier general. Shields bad the dis- tinction of defeating Stonewall Jack son at Winchester, Va, though be had received a wouud in one leg the day before. Some months later Jackson de- feaied Shields at Port Republic, Though, according to Mr. Herndon, the man’ whom Lincoln might have split open from top to bottam was “in ordinately vain,” bis record as a Unit- ed States seuator from three states and as a leader of armies in two wars, with several honorable wounds, would seem to vindicate bim and cause posterity to rejoice that Mr. Lincoln did not get a chance at him with that cavalry broad sword on the 22d of September, 1342, wieaa thane See Ge Charles Wiegand was major of @ German regiment frou New York and, being-of an enterprising turn of mind, secured a personal interview with President Lincola and importaned him for authority to raise a brigade of Ger man troops. He was extremely op- timistic and conceived the affair to be then already accomplished, but, after waiting awhile for the desired presi- dential spontaneity, be pressed the mat- ter and was discomfited by being turn- ed dowa in this remorseless mode by the president: “I think this man called on me once of oftener, but I really know nothing as to bis capacity or merit. If a brigade was promised bim by the war department, I know nothing of it, aud not knowing whether be Is fit for any place I could not with pro- priety recommend him for any.” He treated with equal superciliousness one F. L. Capen, who engrossed some of his attention in am endeavor to es- tablish a belief that the state of the ‘Weather could be predicted. The prest dent was bored and cut Capen’s career short by this matter of fact Indorse- ment on bis letter: “April 28, 1863. It seems to me Mr. Capen knows nothing about the weather in advance. He told me three days ago that It would not Fain again till the 30th of April or Ast of May. It is raining now and bas been for ten hours. I cannot spare any more of my time to Mr. Capen.” ‘ed mite ie ae John Hay, assistant secretary to President Linco'n, is anthority for the statement that Mr. Lincoln “ate bis meals mechanically,” never seeming to take much interest in eating. That the great presicent was not bronght up as &n epicure fs indicated by an account of a visit to the home of Thomas Lin- coln, his fither, by an old lacy of In- Guna, This woman said that when she, with other visitors, was seated {a the Lincoln cabin a plate was passed around conta’ning raw potatoes, neatly Peeled. Not having been accustomed to eating this kind of “fruit.” she waited for the others to give her a cue. ‘They proceeded to ext the potatoes as gue eats apples, biting cut mouthfuls, THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Lincolns Birthplace As It is Today 4 moadgenvitie,Nentucky | Berks 2 S59 : Be GPA ey Sar BN ae pa AA ies - | ~~ PS AT ee © — ists age, eae ee Ps EE Ne ee A | ine oe CD oan — Ig <9 ee! rc, eaters roe Ss Sy ie 5 —— i errr P ASE ———— a) e ee eee Pamege ee FD =| ens et RR on Late ae ee ae SS ee oe EN Tm SS "Se i ee ASE Pe EES OA eet ~ ey) ——Z_Tne Kock SPRING \ aS oa oe Pay 8: Sa CR Met k of ou wee Te Pa eae: Se De Si ead fay RR MC ae eds 28 Ps Sh. 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OLp MILL Near By ae ‘ (Ie Sue Sore rae < PES Rcksh pe i mete Ac ee SRR Seat nite Paria Time tg webs Bice: (7 pan Re Gn eae ea ea es age i SAN wr “yrraimd ited eee id od eee SS PPT aE Ce ree tia ae? ee APRS Pe cue pr RAS ae FF RSLS ae Va oe. tiene A fee ee etic oea Ay cee rs AR ORR oP Ogeark cr a rea aes ih) econ beer ses ee att Oy) Bee Al ee Bas A ames ge Oe (oe eae ae Me oh _ 3 ee ea Sect ass Rika rer ea pi 2426 = 40 2 Ce i Se ee ee Sees x eae renee ot ee eee - NS by zi RS Yi oie he ore, “a Pie oes ga ES Leics OR a pesmi Sk ee ale heey aa eR mie ‘eae «4 pre ye ee eee we A ee ey \) peas ue pi ‘ _ 3 FS . oe ‘ 9) LouisviLie AND NASHVILLE PIKE \— —f04 HE farm where A¥rabail Lincoln was born comprises 120 acres It ta T less than @ bund Billes from the center of population in the United States. The little old log cabin of one room, with dirt floor, in which ‘the great man was born baa been exhibited to patriotic Americans in a Louis ville park, but the Lincoln Farm essociation wil! restore it to its original site for permanent preservation. The farm will be Improved and beautified by this estociation, of which Gaernor Folk of Missovrl is president. Every old land- mark connecting the plate with Lincoln's boyhood will be preserved. President Lincoln’ One Brief Vacati By WALTON WILLIAMS dabesksaes1s07¢ (0s. Ameiteka Fiets” Reccataalcs URIG, bis more than four | sentially sprinkled with frlasde, zsnts se preniteat of the Units] Saran chine to him, nor wes th fook but one wacation, "That @2¥ teat of harm. Hie was enjoy was just after the beginning of his} MS boliday. He talked to many o bew term, after four years of censtunt | C* Tegarding the coming peace a Application to the nation’s business ta | NHAt should be done for the resto time of terrible civil wee. ‘The vaca- tion of the south. His advice was |! tion ended but a fow days before the | Hberal terms and kindness to the sou assassination of Mr. Lincoln, but it | *™Deople. was a glorious vacation and was ‘The president returned to City Pot sea eiccioae acslth Siae ee U ehae 5 nasa of imtiesertie ete patet | ers cheered him.- He turned to / Lincoln's vacation was quite differ. | Mra! Porter and remarked: ent from the presidential outings to| “They Will never shoulder a must kh welare . ‘ustomed of Inte. He Sin in anger, and if Grant is w Gid not seck a sequestered lake tar up | 22 Will leave them thelr guns to sh in the north, where be coult Osh, cut oa s with and thelr borses to pi fz, oN | Se = \ Oy UU. ) AF Kf SE CED MRO TERSW MIMSELY Af TB FEET OF LINCOLS. . did he betake himself to a swamp jun- gle or a wountain fastness to shoot Dears or wildcats. He took a boat ride. He went down to City Point, op the James river, in Virginia, to see how Geueral Grant’s army ‘was getting along. Grant had bis headquarters there In 2 group of cottages oa a high bluff where the James and the Ap- Pomattox rivers join. For ten days the president lived there, greeting bis great generals, chatting with the lesser odicers aud visiting the private sol- diers in their tents, Always for com- manding general or for the blue blous- ed man in the ranks he had a word of cheer and frequently a funny little story that illustrated some wise point of argument. It was an odd sort of vacation, Lin- cola called it his holiday, but as a mat- ter of fact he was still at work, doing his duty by the people, making person- al inspection of the army and odering fm is almost apologetic manner now and then a suggestion to General Grant, _ General Sherman, fresh from his fa- mous march to the sea, visited City Point to confer with Lincola apd Grant. All kuew that the war was drawiog to its close; that the great strugzle was nearly over; that ultimate Victory lay Just beyond. Grant and ‘Sherman each believed that he must fight oue more terrible battle. jgrion't do it if you can help it urged the humane Lincolu. “Ne more bloodshed, no more bloodshed,” be re- ‘peatedly said. All day oa the Sist of March, when Grant was beginning his tinal’ move- ment agaiust Lee, Lincoln sat in the telegraph office at headquarters for- warding to Mr. Stanton, secretary of war, the reports that came in from Grant, who was here and there and everywhere up and down his long line of army maneuvers. Joyous news Lin- coln seat to Washington. One item ‘Was the victory of Geveral Sheridan ut Five Poiuts ov the Ist of April. An- other was the evacuation of Petera- burg. ‘The president himself entered Petersburg but « few hours after the Confederates moved out for a final talk With Grant, who was about to move ou from there after the retreating army. On the 2d of April the joyful news that Richmond bad been evacuated reached City Point. and Lincoln Immediately sald, “I want to see Itichmond.” |_ Two days Inter he started up the James, and, with four frieuds and a guard of ten United States marines, the president of the United States, landing from bis little steamer, walked nto Richmond, the Confederate cap!- tal, which for four years his armies had been tring to capture It is re- Jated that an old negro threw himself at the feet of Lincoln, kissing the big boots which he wore, and cried out: “Bress de Lawd! Heah am de great Messiah!” Such crowds gathered about the pres- Sdent. who was so tall that he could be sewn and recognized even from the ‘outer edge of the multitude, that the small guard of marines had a bard ‘struggle to cet him through the throng to the White House of the Cooferlera- the war" Ste avn at Cote war Mr. Davis of course mete we house tar’ ‘eadquar- made bir amid a plentifully sprinkled with friends, and no harm came to him, nor was there any threat of harm. He was enjoying his holiday. He talked to many off- cers regarding the coming peace and what should be done for the restora- tion of the south. His advice was for Uberal terms and kindness to the south- em people, ‘The president returned to City Point, where a squad of Confederate prison- ers cheered him.- He turned to d- miral Porter and remarked: “They will never shoulder a musket again in anger, and if Grant ts wise he will leave them thelr guns to shoot crows with apd their horses to plow with.” “Let them down easy,” be had sald to the military governor of Richmond. Word reached the president at City Polnt that his secretary of state, Mr. Seward, had been thrown from a car- riage and injured. This cut short his yacation, for he returned to Washing- tou at once. It was observed by mem- bers of bis cabinet upon bls return that @ great change had come over the President. His thin face had grown thinner during the Increasing sorrows of the war, and latterly it had assum- ed a gray pallor that was almost ghastly. lis eyes looked forth an un- utterable grief, Ho had borne the bur- dens of a great nation in its time of Keenest-agony, and the terrible stress and strain of those four years were re- fected in the features of the man. But now—after his first and only vaca- tiou—what a change! ‘The man walk- ed with a springy step, the stoop disap- peared from his shoulters, the tense Ines in his drawn, wad face began to disappear, and there was a hint of ruddiness in bis cheeks, and his laugh was hearty. Yet it was not the vacation that had rejuvenated Lincoln. It was the very recent success of his armies, the evacu- ation of Richmond and, last and great- est, the surrender of Leo on the 0th of April—these things had transformed him. For five days he was the bapplest mun in the United States or in the world, the happiest because for four years he had been the saddest, and now that Indescribable xadness, in the words of one of his friends, “hid been suddenty changed for an equally Inde- seribable expression of serene joy, as if conscious that the great purpose of his life had been achieved.” During this time he said to bis wite: “Mary, we have had a hard time of It since we came to Washington, but now: we chall have four more years here of - ¥2 ht * 4 Uf AN - | ls Lae rm {| SHY Ss e “many, wa mAvE HAD A HARD THUR OP ms easier times, and then we'll go back to Tiinois and live the rest of our lives im peace and quiet. I'll open a law office io Springfield or Chicago and do work enough to make a living for us.” Then on the night of April 14, when the rejuvenated chief was smiling broadly at a comedian’s joke in the theater, came the assassin’s bullet. A New Lincotn Story. Tn her book “Dixie After the War” Mrs. Myrta Lockett Avary tells the following new Lincoln story im con- nection with General Pickett, who led the charge at Gettysburg: Mr. Lincoin had taken warm interest in young George Pickett as a cadet at West Point. During his burried sojourn in Richmond Lincoln's carriage and arm- ed retinue drew up In front of the old Pickett mansion. ‘The general's young wife came out with her baby in ber arms and said, “I am General Pickett's wife.” “Madom,” Lincoln answered, “I am George's old friend, Abrabam Lin- cola.” “The president of the United States?” she asked. “No,” sald the visitor, with a smile, “only Abraham Lincoln, George's old friend.” ‘The child reached out his hands, and when Lincoln took bim In bis arms he kiased the president, “Tell your father,” said Lincota, “that I will grant bim a special am- nesty—if he wants it—for the sake of Your mother’s bright eyes and your good manners.” .