Richmond Planet
Saturday, June 22, 1907
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
RINGING TRIBUTE BY A WHITE OFFICER
TEXANS' TESTIMONY DISCREDITED—ONLY OWLS COULD HAVE SEEN ON THE NIGHT OF THE TROUBLE
VOLUME XXIV, NUMBER 29
RINGING
Senator F
ore
TEXANS' TESTIMONY DISCRE
[Washington Post, June 13, 1997.]
No public session of the Senate Committee on Military Affairs was held yesterday, an adjournment having been taken until to-day, on account of the death of Senator Morgan. Senator Lodge referred briefly to the lass to the Senate and to the country, and suggested that it would be fitting for the committee, which is the only Senate body now in session to adjourn as a mark of respect.
An executive session of the committee was held at which Senator Pettus was permitted to record his vote in support of the administration on the Brownsville question. This was done for the reason that Senator Pettus will go to Alabama with the body of his colleague and probably will not return here during the present session of the committee. It was stated that the committee would conclude the examination of all of the witnesses in prospect by Tuesday next, but it is not believed that any report will be prepared at this time.
The question of going to Brownsville was discussed and the argument made by several Senators that the case already was sufficiently outlined to make the visit unnecessary. The question was not decided, however, beyond reaching the agreement that if later it should be necessary to send a committee to Brownsville the trip will not be made until November next.
[Washington Post, June 14, 1907.]
Officers of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, who had previously testified in the Brownsville investigation before the Senate Committee on Military Affairs, were again on the stand yesterday.
Lieut. Lawrason, of Company B, testified as to the darkness of the night, contradicting a large number of citizens of Brownsville, who have testified that they had recognized men as Negro soldiers from thirty feet to a block away. Lawrason said that he could not even distinguish a uniform seven feet away.
Capt. Macklin, of Company C, concluded his examination, begun on Tuesday.
When Capt. Lyon was examined he was shown the two guns sent to the committee by Gen. Crozier, one of which had been cleaned in one minute by running a thong through the bore, the other being uncleaned About one week ago both of these guns were fired five times at Fort Myer and taken to the War Department, where the cleaning of one of them in one minute took place by direction of Gen. Crozier.
The witness looked at each gun carefully and picked the one he thought was the most foul. That gun proved to be the one that had been cleaned. Considerable amusement followed this statement, and the witness was asked many questions to bring out the fact whether the gun stated to have been cleaned might not have been cleaned at the time and had become foul since. Gen. Crozier's statement before the committee was read to him.
"So far as appearance is concerned," said Gen. Crozier, "I would not be able to say it had been fired."
That statement referred to the gun that Capt. Lyon said was in a worse condition than the gun that the gun that had not been cleaned at all after being fired five times.
[Washington Post, June 15, 1907.]
The investigation of the Brownsville array by the Senate Committee on Military Affairs came to a close yesterday when an adjournment was taken until November 18. At that time the committee will decide whether er it is necessary to go to Brownsville to continue the investigation. No attempt will be made to formulate a report until the next session of Congress.
Four witnesses were on the stand yesterday. Brig. Gen. Andrew S. Burt, retired, reowned Indian fighter, who was colonel of the Twenty-fifth Infantry at the time of his promotion and retirement, testified that this regiment of Negro soldiers was one of the best in the United States army or, in fact, any army in the world.
He said he had served with as many regiments as any man in the United States army, and with no troops of higher character than the Twenty-fifth. Of course, there were some bad men in the organization, he said, as in every organization; that he did not mean that all of the men "were angels" with wings sprouting but they were very near it."
PRAISES MINGO SANDERS
Concerning Mingo Sanders, the first sergeant of Company B, with twenty-six years continuous service he said there was no better first sergeant in the army; that his veracity was beyond question, and that he could be depended upon under all circumstances. An incident was recalled by Gen. Burt, since the discharge of the Negro soldiers without honor, Mingo Sanders called upon him after he came to Washington to testify. Gen. Burt said to Sanders:
"Sergeant, we are here alone. Now tell me all about this affair."
He said that Sergt. Sanders told him that if he knew anything about it he would tell, but that so far as he knew none of his men had had anything to do with the shooting. He had tried his best, he said, to find out all about the affair, and that he did not believe any of the Negro soldiers were implicated in the out break.
Gen. Burt testified to a number of the men he remembered and gave incidents to show the confidence he had placed in them. He declared that all of the men were to be believed on oath, and said:
"I would believe them if I were sitting on a courtmartial, even if they were testifying in their own defense."
Senator Foraker asked the witness if he would expect 140 or 150 men to withhold what they knew of a raid upon a defenseless town if such a raid had been made by 10 or 15 other men of the command.
SOMEWOULDHAVELEAKED
Gen Burt replied that such a thing was an impossibility from what he knew of the Negro race; some of the men would have leaked.
Lleut. Harry C. Leckie, of the Twenty-sixth Infantry, who was on the stand several weeks ago and testified concerning the finding of a bullet in a post in front of the Crixel saloon, yesterday produced the shavings of the bullet, which had been removed with a brace and auger. The bullet had no steel jacket, and he was sure that it was not government ammunition. On cross-examination it was brought out that he went to Brownsville to make his examination, with a view to becoming a witness for the defense, in the Maj. Penrose court-martial.
John I. Kleber, prosecuting attorney of Cameron County, Tex., who conducted examinations of witnesses before the grand jury, which inquired into the shooting, testified concerning the failure of the grand jury to return indictments.
Capt. John H. Rice, of the ordnance department of the army, told of the cleaning of the guns sent to the committee as exhibits.
[Washington Post, June 18, 1907.]
Senator Foraker, of Ohio, last night gave out a written statement summing up the testimony taken by the Senate Committee on Military Affairs in the Brownsville inquiry, and declaring that it failed to show that any soldier took part in the affray. The statement which the Senator said he made as "plain duty to the truth as well as to the accused soldiers" and because he is "more familiar with the testimony than anybody else" was in answer to a published statement that the testimony conclusively showed the soldiers of the Twenty-fifth Battalion did the shooting. Mr. Foraker said: "The testimony given by the soldiers in their own behalf is not, in my opinion, shaken by the testimony
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1907.
given by the citizens of Brownsville. That testimony in the first place, is but a repetition of what was first taken by the citizens' committee and afterward more elaborately retaken by Mr. Purdy.
NO NEW EVIDENCE.
"No important item of new evidence has been brought forward action." Ninety percent of what the citizens have testified about had relation to matters over which there was no controversy. For instance, everybody concedes that the town was shot up; that somebody did it; that these people who did it passed through the streets and alleys where the shooting was done, and that they had guns or revolvers or fire-arms of some sort, and that one man was killed and another wounded. The only dispute is as to whether the raiders were identified as soldiers or of the garrison.
"There are two kinds of evidence relied upon to show that the soldiers did it. One consists of the shells and bullets that were secured from the streets and houses of Brownville. The results of microscopic inspection interpreted in the light of the other testimony of the case, completely disposed of this part of the case.
TOO DARK FOR IDENTIFICATION
"The only other testimony is that of the people who claim to have been eyewitnesses to the shooting. This consists of statements by various people, that when they heard the firing they looked out of their windows and houses and down dark alleys, where there were no lights, at distances varying all the way from 50 feet up to 150 feet, and recognized the men who were doing the firing as Negroes, wearing the uniform of United States soldiers. The officers of the battalion have testified generally and specifically as to the darkness of the night. By specifically, I mean have given specific incidents coming within their personal experiences that illustrated how dark the night was. According to this testimony, in the language of Maj. Penrose, the night was so dark that he could not distinguish one of his officers, who were all white men, from one of the enlisted men, who were all colored, at a distance of ten feet, nor could he at that distance tell anything about how a man was dressed. "All these officers have testified that the claims of the citizens who testified that they saw the raiders and recognized them as soldiers at the distances and under the circumstances stated by them are utterly impossible. These officers are intelligent, high minded, honorable men."
OFFICERS CHANGED VIEWS
"At one time, when the case was only partially investigated, they were of the opinion, and frankly stated it, that their men were guilty, but that fact only strengthens their testimony, as they now give it that the testimony of the citizens by which they claim to identify their soldiers is utterly unreliable, untrustworthy, and by them unbelievable.
"I do not know whether any more testimony will be taken, and, of course, do not know, if any should be taken, just what it will be, and I cannot, therefore, the climate, say results, but I have no hesitation in taking the testimony taken down to this time utterly fails, in my opinion, to show that the soldiers, or any of them, had anything whatever to do with the shooting up of Brownsville.
"I shall take occasion when I speak at Wilberforce next Tuesday to deal with this subject at some length."
Do You Know Him?
Any information of the whereabouts of William H. Bowman, will be gladly received by his step-father, William Johnson. He is about five feet tall and worked in a coal mine at Petersburg, Va., when last heard of.
Address all information to Wm. Johnson or D. Johnson.
BROKE DOWN.
Owing to a break down of our linotype motor, much matter was left out of this issue.
SACRED CONCERT
There will be a Sacred Concert at the First Presbyterian Church Sunday, June 23rd, at 8:15 P. M. The following programme will be rendered:
1. Violin Solo - Adoratton,
M. H. S. Fortune,
2. Paper - Mrs C. K. Foreman
3. Reading - Miss Grudetrude Bacchus
4. Solo - Miss M. E. Clay
5. Reading - Miss Alice Smith
6. Soprano Solo, Miss Margaret Tinsley
7. Reading - Prof. B. C. Buck
8. Quartette,
All are invited.
CARR—Died at his residence 612 9.3 n. St. Wednesday June 18th 1907 at 10:30 A. M. Paul Carr. Funeral took place Friday, June 12th 1907 at 3 P. M., Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church. He leaves a widow Mrs. A. R. Carr, two daughters Mrs. Martha McKenzie, Bridgeport, Conn; Mrs. Willie A. Johnson, Bridgeport, Conn., and one sister to mourn their loss.
NOTICE
We wish to call the attention of our readers to the 10th annual session of the National Afro-American Council which convenes at the Sharp Street M. E. Church, Baltimore, Md., on the 26th inst. Rev. A. L. Gaines, D. D., 114 E. Centre St., Chairman of the Local Committee will give any information desired. Bishop Walters, President and our Dr. Jordan, Cor. Secretary, are bending every effort to make the meeting a success. The continued assaults being made upon the race by those who seem to hate us without cause, make it necessary that our leaders get together. It is hoped that much good will be accomplished by this meeting.
Nelson's Hair Dressing can be bought at Jennings and Brown Drug Store, Pittsburg, Pa.
SPIRIT WROTE HIM.
Mrs. Pepper-Vanderbilt Only "Bright Eyes" Medium.
NEW YORK, June 19.—"Bishop" Mary Ann Scannell Pepper, the high priestess of the Brooklyn Spiritualist church, who married Edward Ward Vanderbilt, the wealthy lumberman, less than a month ago and whose honeymoon was rudely disturbed about a week ago by the bridegroom's daughter, Miss Minerva Vanderbilt, instituting proceedings to have Mr. Vanderbilt declared an incompetent, is much concerned over the allegations that have been made about the spirit letters her spouse received from "Little Bright Eyes."
The letters in question, which purported to have come from "Little Bright Eyes," a spirit guide, through the mails, via Germany, to Mr. Vanderbilt while Mrs. Pepper was in Europe and which, it is charged, are in the handwriting of Mrs. Pepper, are a prominent factor in the suit. Miss Vanderbilt, the petitioner, alleges that these letters were largely instrumental in influencing her father to marry the "bishop" also to make a will in the "bishop's" favor and in making her presents of houses, money, candy and wearing apparel.
"For many years past," Mrs. Pepper Vanderbilt says in her affidavit, "I have been subject to entrance by various spirits of departed persons, and when so fully entranced I am utterly unconscious of what I say or do. Not all spirits of departed persons can approach and control me."
$1,250 PAID OUT. Pythians Pay Many Death Claims to the Heirs.
THE GRAND CHANCELLOR AND GRAND WORTHY COUNSELLOR KEPT BUSY DURING THE PAST MONTH-MANY TEARS MADE DRY.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 17, 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 Rhoda Tinsley, who was a member of Mechanics' Court, No. 45 of Richmond, Va.
Signed:
Emma Braxton and Florence Page,
per M. S. B. Beneficiaries.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 17, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.,
Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Calanthe, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Adaline Gilliam, who was a member of Mt. Calvary Court, No. 71 of Charlottesville, Va.
Signed—Mary M. Davenport,
per M. S. B.
$100.00 Endowment Paid. . .
Richmond, Va., June 17, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Calanthe, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Julia A. Crump, who was a member of Rising Mt. Zion Court, No. 55 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—Joseph T. Crump
per M. S. B
Beneficiary.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 17, 1907
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Canaan, the ($100.00) One Hundred Dollar in payment of the death-claim of Anna Robinson, who was a member of Blooming Lily Court, No. 142 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—George E. Booker,
Guardian of Sam'l. & Marie Robinson, beneficierles.
$100.00 Eadowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 14, 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 Robert S. Forrester, who was a member of Verbena Court, No. 61 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—Martha E. Forrester.
Beneficiary.
Witnesses:
Rosa L. Holmes.
N. Winston.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 14, 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 Frances Johnson, who was a member of Fulton Court, No. 244 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—J. Thomas Hewin Administrator.
Lynchburg, Va., May 21, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Calanthe, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Alice Stratton, who was a mem-
ber of Celestial Court, No. 211 of Lynchburg, Va.
Signed—Samuel P. Leftwich.
Administrator
Witnesses:
W. J. Wells, D. D. & R. of D.
W. S. Jones.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Lynchburg, Va., June 7, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, I. O. of Calanthe, ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Emaline Ellis, who was a member of Meridian Court, No. 57 of Lyncaburg, Va.
her
Signed—Matilda X Gilliam
mark
Executrix.
Witnesses:
Mrs. Wm. P. Allen.
W. J. Wells, D. D.
Mrs. Sarah Norvell.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Athens, Ga., June 8, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.,
Grand Chancellor of the Grand
Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A. A. and A.
($150.00). One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
claim of Samuel Hiram, who was a
member of Planet Lodge, No. 23 of
Richmond, Va.
Signed—L. C. Hiram.
Beneficiary.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 17, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.,
Grand Chancellor of the Grand
Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias,
N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A.
($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
claim of J. C. Stanford, Jr., who was
a member of White Rose Lodge, No. 87 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—Adelaide Stanford, Moses
Stanard, William Stanford, Mattie
Stanard, Mary A. Stanard.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., June 17, 1907.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the deathclaim of Benjamin L. Philips, who was a member of Venus Lodge, No. 46 of Richmond, Va.
Signed—C. H. Phillips, Marla L. Phillips, Melvina Phillips,
BROWNSVILLE MAN IS SLAIN.
Col. S. H. Wreford Had Criticised
Senate Inquiry Witness.
Brownsville. Tex., June 14.—A tragedy growing out of the investigation of the Senate Committee on Military Affairs at Washington of the shooting up of Brownsville by Negro soldiers of the twenty-fifth Infantry was enacted upon the streets of Brownsville early to-day in which Col. S. H. Wreford, of the most prominent citizens of the city, was killed, and Jesse Thornham, a stepson of Capt. William Kelly, the wealthiest resident of this section, was arrested charged with the shooting.
The shooting took place about 3:30 o'clock infront of Capt. Kelly's office. Wreford was shot twice with a shot gun and died in about half an hour. The tragedy caused great excitement. Col. Wreford was a merchandise broker and about sixty years old. Capt. Kelly is probably
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
OUT.
ny Death Heirs.
COUNSELLOR KEPT BUSY
RS MADE DRY.
the wealthiest man Brownsville has ever produced except James Stillman, president of the National City Bank, of New York. He is not in any way connected with the army.
The causes leading up to the tragedy appear to be a circular printed and distributed yesterday by Col. Wreford bitterly attacking Capt. Kelly's testimony before the Senate Military Committee. Capt. Kelly testified that the Negroes of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, stationed here prior to the raid, were discriminated against not only by the people but by the police force, and were made to feel that they were not wanted. He said they were subjected to rough treatment by the police department. It appears that this feature of Capt. Kelly's testimony angered Col. Wreford. Capt. Kelly, the stepfather of Thornham, is also the father of Miss Kelly, the fancee of Lieut. Mas Richardson, who committed suicide at San Antonio a few days ago.
Wants a Wife.
A young man, 23 years old wants to marry. He is a stock raiser in central Nebraska, owns a lot of live stock and a good section of fertile land. Any young lady with good qualities who wants to marry will do well to write him soon.
Address R. L. H. P. O. Box 93, Broken Bow, Custer Co, Nebraska
COLEMAN—LEE
The marriage of Miss Alice R. Lee to Mr. George Coleman of Phoebus, Va. will take place Wednesday June 26th, at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Crump, No. 603 W. Leigh Street at 8 o'clock P. M. Friends invited. No cards.
Look! Come and see something new in Richmond. 100 persons on the stage Watch for the Queens of all Nations, the Beautiful Tambourine Drill, the Famous Japanese Parasol Drill, the Novel Catchy, Dudes, Drill at True Reformers Hall, Monday night, June 24, 1907, under auspices of Circle No. 9 of the First Baptist Church, Rev. W. T. Johnson, pastor; Mr. Henry G Carter, Pres; Mrs L. G. Brown, Mgr; Mr. Joseph Charity, Asst. Mgr. Admission, 25cts., Children 19cts.
NEGRO ENTERPRISES AND RESIDENCES.
Send 27 cents in stamps to D. A. Ferguson and Company, 609 N. 2d, St., Richmond, Va., and receive a copy of "Souvenir Views" of Negro Enterprises and Residences in Richmond.
FRIENDSHIP BAPSTIST CHURCH.
Friendship Baptist Church, 412 North
Third Street. Services:
Sunday School, 9 o'clock a. m.
Services; 11 o'clock, a' m.
Night Services. 8:30 o'clock p. m.
Friends invited.
TENNANT—ROANE
The marriage of Miss Lelia Elenora Roane of Brooklyn, New York, to Dr. Albert Alonzo Tennant of Richmond, Va. will take place Tuesday evening June 18, 1907 at Saint Augustine's Protestant Episcopal Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. At home, at their residence, 1005 N. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. Sunday, June 30, 1907 from 3 to 6 P. M. No cards. Friends invited.
Information Wanted.
Information wanted of Louisa Bruce or her husband, Billy Bruce, by her sister, H. TURNER, 117 E. 84th St., New York City. West Virginia papers please copy.
The MYSTERY CARNEYCROFT
We breakfasted at Hoskins'. As we were rising from the table, MacArdel said: "I've got a trunk up at the station. I suppose I can get somebody around here to take it down to the house."
"There's an old fellow here who drives what he calls an 'express.'" I
"Where Did You Get It?"
replied. "I expect he'll attend to it for you."
Hoskins was standing by the door as we left the room and I asked him where we could find the stage driver, but his reply was far from encourag ing.
"Ye can't find him at all," he said. "He didn't sit in till nigh nornin' an' he's abed yet. His wagon's aout teh th' barn, an' ef ye want to hitch up yerselves an' gilt th' trunk ye're welcome to, fur all I can see. I'd send one o' my boys fur it ef I could, but they're all workin' to-day, an' I can't git hold o' one nohow."
We decided that we were quite equal to this task, and, proceeding to the stable, undertook to "hitch up" on our own account.
MacArdel did the driving, and I sat on the seat behind him in all the glory of an escorted guest. As we turned the corner into the road that led to the station, a sudden gust of wind wafted into my face the same indescribable odor that had offended my nostrils the night before and I called him to stop.
"Mac!!" I said, "there's something wrong here! I can get that confounded smell again!"
He pulled up his horse with a jerk and, springing to the ground, began, with me, to peer under the seats of the vehicle. A moment later he extracted, from a pile of blankets and laprobes, a bundle of white cloths similar in appearance to those we had discovered on the previous night, and exhaling the same odor.
"Put them back!" I exclaimed suddenly, "and cover them up again, too! After we get the trunk we can take them to the house and see what they are."
"Great idea!" muttered MacArdel,
"only I was on the point of suggesting
it myself. Get in here with me. The air's better up front."
I clambered into the seat by his side
and we proceeded on our way to the
station.
"Who is it that owns this turnout?"
asked MacArdel. "Do you know anything about him?"
"Nothing more than that he makes regular trips to and from the trains."
I replied. "Runs a sort of local express, you know, between the station and Hoskins' hotel. Carries the mail and passengers, if there are any."
"Did you ever see him and talk to him?" continued MacArdel.
"Oh, yes!" I said. "He was the first to tell me about the ghosts at Carney-Croft; all that story of the Bruce woman's prophecy that the place would be haunted, you know."
"Humph!" said MacArdel, thoughtfully.
"And where's the Bruce woman now?"
"She lieves on the place yet," I replied. "Miss Carney gives her the use of a little house and about 20 acres of land rent free, and some man about here works the property on shares for her. It's that hilly land about a mile east of the house, where the big elm is. You remember, I told you the new golf links would take in that tree and the land around it."
Our return trip from the railway station took us past Hoskins' again, and that individual was sunning himself in front of the house as we drove up.
"By the way, Hoskins," said MacArdel, stopping his horse and beckoning the man toward him, "what's the name of the fellow that owns this outfit?"
"Jenks," said Hoskins, briefly. "Sam Jenks, th' lazy cuss."
"When is he going to marry the widow?" asked MacArdel, in a most matter-of-fact way.
"That's jest it!" replied Hoskins in obvious disgust. "You tell me an 'I'll tell you. Goodness knows; he's be'n a-sparkin' her long enough; ever sence 'baut a month after her boy got killed. Spose he felt kinder sorry for her at first, an' then, after a time, he began teh git mushy over it. I wish teh goodness he'd either marry her or leave her alone! What with his gallantin' all over the country with her every week or ten days, an' not gittin' his boss in tb' stable till nigh onto daylight, there's no dependin' on him
teh meet th' trafais of do anything else, fur that matter! Here he is now. abed an' asleep, an' ef it hadn't ben fur you gents a-drivin' up teh th' deepo', we wouldn't ha' got no mail till night, in all probability." With this remark he fished out two mail bags which the station master must have tessed into the back of the wagon as we were driving away. "We thought it was he and Mrs. Bruce that we saw last night," said MacArdel, pleasantly. "We were out enjoying the moonlight when they drove down the road." "Didn't see nuthin' else, did ye?" asked Haskins, in a confidential tone. "Why, not!" laughed MacArdel. Why do you say?"
"Wal," said Hookins, drawing near and speaking seriously. "Jonny says th' ghosts was about again' an' they went past him, dawnin' the road just as he was a turmin' into th' pike. His boss give a jump as they weed scoutin' an' it an' it threw him asin' th' dash an' cut his hand some. He called us up teh git him a rach teh aaround it an' he looked scared enough to ha' seen 20 ghosts."
"Was his hand badly hurt?" I asked. "Nashin' teh speech of," said Hookins. "lest a little stick along the side like he'd gouged" a piece nonten it."
"See here. Hookins!" said MacArdel sharply. "We didn't see any ghosts last night, and all your friend Jonka could have seen was ourselves, in our shirtseaves, walking back of the hedge by the river road. You remember how his horse jumped and ran, don't you, Ware?"
"Certainly," I replied, obediently. "We wondered what the trouble was, at the time."
"Now, then, Hosking," continued MacArdel, looking at his watch and speaking rapidly. "Don't let Jenks hear a word about this business. He don't know that I had a trunk at the station, and, if we can get back here before he wakes up, he needn't even know that we've had his wagon."
"No fear of his walkin' up for a good bit yet," grinned Hoskins. "He wuz no scared when he got in that he liked teh hair finished a plato' whisky 'fore I could stop him."
"So much the better" said MacArden, gathering up the reins. "Now, remember what I say, and keep this business to yourself. We'll have some fun with him before he gets through!"
We drove as rapidly as the tired beast could carry us, until we reached the gate leading into the stable grounds, when MacArdel pulled up suddenly and said:
"Let's dump the trunk in here. We can carry it up to the house after we get this horse and wagon back where they belong. No one will touch it here."
As soon as the trunk was on the ground by the side of the roadway, MacArdel dragged out the parcel from under the blankets and, opening it on the grass, began to examine the pieces minutely.
After a moment he straightened up and exclaimed:
"It's just as I thought. It's the same stuff that we found last night and
M. 19
They Were Wafted Along as If Part of the Air Itself.
the scoundrel went back and got 'em all after we had gone to bed."
CHAHPTER XI
Replacing the parcel under the blankets in as nearly as possible the same condition and position as when we found it, we drove rapidly back to Hoskins' stable and were successful in safely housing the horse and wagon before Jenks put in his appearance.
"Now," said MacArdel, "all we have to do is to tip off that man at the station, and we can keep Jenks in the dark until we are ready to bring him up with a round turn."
We walked the short half mile to the railway and found no difficulty in bribing the fellow to silence concerning the trunk, laying stress on the alleged joke that we purposed practicing on the driver of the "express."
"You see," said MacArdel, as we strolled leisurely along the grassy roadside "the whole business is plain enough now. This Bruce woman started a ghost story when she first came here purely in a spirit of idle gabble and to impress the wondering natives with the knowledge of the homes of the robility in England. Then, when ner boy was killed, she tried to make trouble by again circulating these yarns and frightening the men off the
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND VIRGINIA
place."
"Well," I replied, "she ought to be satisfied now, at any rate. Miss Carney gave her a good bit of money in a lump sum, and provided her with a comfortable house and a generous plot of land around it. I don't see what more she wants or what she hopes to gain, and, to tell the truth, I'm about as much in the dark as I was at first."
"Well, it's plain enough!" continued MacArdel. "You gave her the money in a lump sum, you say, so she has nothing more to expect in that direction. You'd have done better if you had given her an annuity instead, and kept the control of her funds in your own hands."
"We do, in a way," I returned. "We give her the use of the house and land, you know."
"That's where the whole trouble lies now!" exclaimed MacArdel. "Don't you see, Ware, she and this fellow, Jenks, are going to be married. She's got a good house and farm on the estate, and just as they are about to settle down for better or for worse, you come along with a scheme to cust her, bag and bagnage, and turn her place into golf links."
"What of it?" I replied. "We are going to provide for her elsewhere and she will be better off than she is now."
"You know that, but she doesn't," continued MacArdel. "and there may be other reasons why she does not want to move. This seems to be a pretty prosperous community, and apparently no one asks her is especially anxious to have the house open."
"No reason why they should want it open," I said. "Practically all the servants are brought from the city and almost nothing is purchased in the village, so the natives don't deserve any material benefit from the place."
"But they may when it's closed up." MacArdel inhaled. "There's fruit and nuts and game and grass and timber and other things that can be picked up and never missed from one year's end to another when the house is unoccupied and no watchman or caretaker is about. I tell you. Ware, these people don't want the Carneys to come back, and they are playing this ghost game for all there is in it to frighten them away."
"They'll have a fine time doing it," I said. "Miss Carney isn't afraid of anything under the sun, and even if she returns before we are able to make out a case against them, she'll stay here and fight it out to the last."
"Hope she likes to do housework," said MacArdel.
"What's that got to do with it?" I snapped.
"Well," he returned, grinning, "she'll have to live here without servants until you get this business cleared up. She may be satisfied that there is nothing supernatural about these midnight visitations, but she won't get a servant to stay on the place while there's any hocus-pocus going on."
We were on our way back from the railway station, and, coming to the brow of the hill, we could look down across the valley and see the grim gray walls of the Carney mansion through the occasional openings in the foliage as it waved in the gentle morning breeze. To one side, and less than a mile away, was the Widow Bruce's cottage, and I pointed it out again to MacArdel.
"Let's go over there," he said, briefly. "I want to see her."
We tramped across the fields and over the fences of stone and brush, soiling our boots, tearing our clothing, and decorating ourselves with a generously distributed collection of burrs, which clung to our garments with a tenacity wonderful to believe.
A sharp knock at the cottage door was answered by a pleasant-faced, motherly appearing woman of about 45, who spoke with a marked English accent. MacArdel took the initiative and introduced us without delay.
"This is Mr. Ware," he said, "the attorney of the Carney estate, and I am his friend, Dr. MacArdel."
The widow bobbed up and down like a duck in a puddle and invited us into the house with a great show of ceremony.
"No, thank you," said MacArdel.
"We won't come in. We've just been taking a morning stroll over the hills and we stopped to ask if you could do some washing for us. You know we've been stopping over at the house for a couple of days and the sheets and things are so musty that we thought we had better have some of them washed and aired out. We can get along to night again, but if you could get some of the things back to us tomorrow we wish you would."
Mrs. Bruce was quite willing to do us this favor, and MacArdel told her to call for the things at six that evening, explaining that we would not return to the house until that hour.
As we left the cottage and wandered on down the hill, MacArdel said:
"She don't look half bad, after all. I confess I expected to see a very different sort of woman."
A moment later he muttered as if to himself: "We'll get the story out of her, though, or I'll miss my guess," beyond which sage remark he became absolutely uncommunicative on the entire subject.
We kept our word about returning to the place before evening, and, after lunching at Hoskins' and taking a row on the river in the afternoon, we arrived at the house a little after five to await the appearance of Mrs. Bruce. MacArdel had been far from talkative for some time, when suddenly he said:
"Ware, go back to the village right away! Send two or three meaningless telegrams to your office within an hour or so. Tell it around that unless you receive a reply before ten o'clock we will both have to return to town on the midnight train. I'll stay here and attend to the widow when she comes."
"Of course I won't get any reply if my messages are meaningless." I exclaimed, in amazement. "What or earth are you driving at?"
_ "Never mind about that." said Mac
Ardel. "Just do as I tell you and be mighty careful to so word your message that no one can make any sense out of them, but be sure to send them to your own office. Then they'll look like cipher dispatches. Now, when ten o'clock comes and no answer, get hold
A
"What's That Got to Do with it?" of this fellow Jenks and make him drive up here along with you to get our things, he may pretend he's afraid, but he'll come willingly enough, especially if you offer to pay him well."
I did as I was told, and shortly after ten o'clock, Jenks and I drove up to the house and found MacArdel waiting for us on the veranda.
"Hello, Were!" he called out, cheerily. "Didn't you get that message from down?"
"No," I responded shortly. "I wired them three times myself, but I couldn't get any work."
"Spose well have to get started to right, then," said MacArdel. "The trunk is all ready. Will your horse stand, Jenks."
"Will ef some one holds him," said Jenks guilty.
"All right," said MacArdel, ignorant the fellow's early manner. "Get hold of his head, Ware, and Jenks and I will fetch the trunk."
The man chambered down from his seat, slowly and unwillingly, and as he did so the moonlight fell on his injured hand and illuminated the crudely applied bandage.
"Why, what's this, man?" exclaimed MacArdel, with interest. "Have you hurt yourself?"
"Nothin' but a scratch," replied Jenks, gruffly. "Got dragged again a nail in th' barn last night."
"Let me look at it," said MacArdel. "I'm a doctor, you know," and he reached for the injured member and grasped it firmly at the wrist. An instant later Jenks 'went spinning through the air with MacArdel astride of his chest, holding him firmly to the ground.
"Wonderful what an hour a day at the gymnasium will do for a fellow," said MacArdel, when he had regained his breath. "There's a bit of rope there on the step Ware. Give it here and help me him. He's wriggling like the devil."
"Hope I didn't hurt you, Jenks," said MacArdel, apologetically, when we had him securely pinioned. "I just want to have a little quiet talk with you, but I'm not quite ready yet."
We let the fellow up and seated him in a chair passing the hitching strap from the wagon about his waist for greater security.
"By the way, Jenks," said MacArdel, as we were performing this last thoughtful act. "Nobody can hear you if you shout, but don't do it, anyway, or I'll have to gag you. Mr. Ware and I have some matters to discuss and we don't want to be disturbed."
We sat and talked about everything under the sun except Carney-Croft and its affairs, while I marveled at MacArdel's actions, but was unable to question him as to his plans or objects in the presence of the conquered Jenks.
MacArdel consulted his watch with gradually increasing frequency, and finally, when the hands pointed to ten minutes before 12, he said abruptly: "Ware, you take this fellow down to the path where the ghosts come out and I'll go and get the widow. I've got her locked up in the house."
The behavior of Jenks was remarkable to witness, as MacArdel uttered these words for, although his capture and that of his accomplice effectually prevented the reappearance of the ghost, at least on this occasion, he could not have shown more evidences of genuine terror if he had expected to encounter an army of specters. After some difficulty I succeeded in getting him to rise, and, with his arms snugly bound behind his back, he shambled with trembling legs down under the trees where we were joined in another moment by MacArdel and Mrs. Bruce.
The two guilty ones did not look at each other, but stood in soiled defiance waiting for what might come next. MacArdel placed them side by side, and, as we faced them, he began:
"You two have been circulating ghost stories about this place all over the country. You've even been here yourselves at midnight, wrapped up in sheets and trying to scare people out of their wits and injure this property. You were here last night and when we shot at you we hit you, Jenks, and wounded your hand. You dropped the sheets and a lot of other things and then you came back and got them all after we had gone to bed. You can't deny it, Jenks, for we found them in your wagon this morning, while you were asleep. Now, there's more than this." continued MacArdel. "There has been some queer doings inside the house, too, and you've got some way of getting in and playing your tricks."
He stopped speaking and eyed them closely for a moment before going on. Then he resumed, slowly and impressively:
"But there's something even worse than all this to be explained, and we
are going to find out about the whose matter if we have to keep you here all night. Several of the pieces of cloth in that bundle have been used for something else than making ghost clothes. You know what they've been used for and—"
"Oh, my God, help me!" screamed Jenks, and before I could reach him, he reeled and fell forward on his face. As I turned to his aid I saw the same pair of filmy figures glide slowly past us but with increasing speed as they neared the river, where, on the previous night, they suddenly vanished before our eyes.
The widow made no sound, but stood perfectly motionless with face like marble and eyes almost bursting from her head.
MacArdel stamped his foot impatiently and muttered:
"There's more in this than I thought. Help me get this fellow up, Ware, and we'll take 'em both back to the house."
CHAPTER XII.
A Second Note.
Half leading and half carrying the unfortunate Jenks and followed by Mrs. Bruce who walked as one in a dream, we returned to the th. house. Once on the veranda, MacArdel unbound the fellow's arms and, noticing bloodstains on his face and shirt front, examined him closely to see if he had sustained any severe injury in his helpless fall. Nothing more serious than a badly cut lip was discovered, and we took the pair into the library, where a light was burning dimly. Turning up the lamp so that he could see distinctly, MacArdel sent me for a basin of water and a bowel and stitched up the wound with material from his pocket instrument case.
Jenks submitted to this procedure in a stupidly dazed condition and as soon as the little operation was completed and the improvised dressing applied, the again fell forward in a swoon.
"Get him a drink, Ware," said MacArdel. "There's whiskey in my bag, you know."
Jenks coughed and sputtered over the stuff in a manner nowise complimentary to the quality of liquor adfected by MacArdel, and then, bursting into a cold perspiration, he began to tremble violently and beg piteously to be allowed to go home; while Mrs. Bruce, with pain, ghastly face, preserved the silence that she had maintained from the first.
"You may both go on one condition," said MacArdel, sternly, "and on one condition only! You must swear that you will MacArdel, never reveal a word of
M.
"And on One Condition Only!"
this night's doings without the consent of Mr. Ware or myself.
"Swear nuthin'," muttered Jenks, feebly. "I'll have the law on ye fur this, ye varmint!"
Like a flash MacArdel grasped his arm in a vice-like grip and said coldly:
"You remember how I handled you before, Jenks? Well, you know I'm your master when it comes to a fight, and unless you do as I tell you and do it at once, back you go to the path where the ghosts are!"
"I hain't afforded of 'em of you hain't," mumbled Jenks, with a half-hearted attempt at bravado. "I reckon they won't hurt nobody none."
His very manner showed that he was quaking in his shoes, and MacArdel was quick to note it and make the most of it.
"You won't have me with you, Jenks," he continued, impressively. "We'll tie you to a tree and leave you there alone, unless you do as I say. Do you understand?"
That Jenks understood there could be no doubt, for his terror was obvious as he hastened to exclaim:
"I'll swear, mister! I'll swear teh anything, ef yell' only let us git auuten this place an' go home!"
There was a small Bible on the library table and MacArdel caused Jenks and the widow to place a hand upon it as they successively took upon themselves a solemn obligation to preserve absolute secrecy concerning the affair of the evening. This done, MacArdel addressed them briefly but impressively:
"Do not think for a moment," he said, "that I have changed my opinion as to your knowledge of the things that are going on here. I'll admit that there is more to it than I thought at first and that more people are mixed up in it than I had supposed. But that only makes it the easier for us, because, in affairs of this kind, there is danger in numbers, and, while I am convinced that you two are the ringleaders in the whole business, the more confederates you have the sooner will we be able to make one of them confess.
"You may go now, but mind you remember the you have taken tonight or it will go hard with you both. As long as you keep this thing to yourselves you won't get into trouble, but the moment you start any fuss about it you will hear from us in a way that will make your hair stand on end! And whatever you do, don't forget that I'm a doctor, and that I
GHOSTS GUARDING RICH SILVER MINE
MEXICANS ARE CONVINCED THAT THE FAMOUS MUERTA IS HAUNTED.
Nervy American Gets Title to Property But Men He Takes with Him Refuse to Remain in
Marfa, Tex. —Tom Borgus came in from the Chinati mountains, 60 miles southwest of here, the other day and laid in enough camp supplies to run him and his men several weeks. He is trying to reopen the famous Muerta mine, which is said to be haunted. The mine is the terror of the Mexicana of the upper portion of the Río Grande border and they cannot be induced to visit the locality where it is situated, much less, center its dark and grease shaft.
Borgus is an old mining man. He has prospered all over the west and southwest and in many mining districts Mexico. He was in Cuzahuañah a few months ago when the story of the Muerta mine was told to him by a Mexican who was down there from Presidio del Norte. Borgus made up his mind to take hold of the property. He came to Marfa and had no trouble in obtaining title to the mine. He spent some time trying to organize a working force among the Mexicans of this section. Not a man could be found who was willing to go with Borgus to the mine and help him work it.
Finally Borgus went over into New Mexico and employed 25 Mexicans to work in the mine. He said nothing to them about the shaft and underground workings being haunted. Mexicans remarked while employed in this work that they heard strange rumblings which seemed to come from the interior of the mountain. Borgus laughed away their fears and told In less than a week the whole body of laborers were in Marfa again. They had deserted their work despite the vehement objections of Borgus. When questioned as to the cause of their quitting the job the Mexicans shruged their shoulders and answered: "Shrits!"
The leader of the gang of Mexicans told a thrilling story of the adventures of the men. He said that the shaft is about 100 feet deep and at its bottom a shaft or tunnel extended to a chamber of considerable size from which it appears a considerable quantity had been removed at some period in the history of the property. This is evident from the fact that a large pile of rich silver ore was found at the far end of the chamber. Soon after their arrival at the mine Borgus set the men to work cleaning out the shaft and straightening up the decaying timbers. Some of the
H. H.
They Fled from the Grewsome Sight in Terror.
them the noises were only the echoes of the sounds from their own picks
When the shaft was cleaned an exploration of the tunnel and chamber was made. Borgus set the men to work carrying the ore which was in the chamber to the surface. Shortly after they started in on this the skeleton of a man was uncovered from the rubbish. This grewsome sight unnerved the superstitious Mexicans and a few minutes later when a sound which seemed to come from under their very feet was heard and was accompanied by a strong gust of wind that extinguished the lights every man of them dropped his tools and fled in terror out of the chamber and up the ladder in the shaft to the open air above.
Borgus was at the surface and witnessed the exit of the men with no little dismay. He could not induce them to return to work and despite his entreaties they all left the place and came to Marfa.
The ancient mining records on file in the archives of the state of Coahuila, Mexico, at Saltillo, are said to show that the Muerta mine was operated by the Spanlards more than a century ago. It was abandoned on account of the mysterious and weird demonstrations that were said to have occurred in the underground workings.
Kitten Has Long Ride on Engine. Altoona, Pa.—The pet kitten of the employees of the Harrisburg roundhouse rode to Altoona over the Pennsylvania the other day on the driver brakes cylinder pads of the locomotive hauling the Pittsburg express. It was found when the engine was run into the Altoona roundhouse, and inquiry soon found its owners.
Know just as well as you do, what those old rags have been used for!*
those old rags have been used for!" With this significant remark, MacArdel opened the door of the room and we followed them out of the house and watched them as they clambered into the wagon and drove rapidly away.
When they were out of earshot I said abruptly:
"This is a pretty mess that you've made of things, Mac! Do you realize that these people can have us up for assault and duress, and I don't know how many other crimes into the bargain, and yet we're no wiser than we were before!"
"Oh, yes we are!" said MacArdel.
"We know a lot of things that we never dreamed of at first, and if you hadn't been so busy with Jens when he toppled over you'd have seen what I mean."
"Well," I returned, "they were both frightened nearly out of their wits by the spooks, and I don't believe they know any more about em than we do!"
"Nonsense!" cried MacArdel. "You did not watch them as closely as I did, that's all. I confess they were frightened, but each in a different way. Now, Jenka was scared almost to death, and you may take my word for it that his terror was genuine, and that he believed the things to be supernatural. But it wasn't so with the widow. She knew all about them, you may be sure, and when they came so close to us she was only afraid that we would capture them or shoot them or do something of that sort. Of course, this Jenka knows about the bundle of cloth because he had them last night when you shot him in the hand, but I don't believe he has any idea of what they had been used for. I tell you. Ware, the widow is at the head of this whole job and Jenka is nothing but her tool."
"Well," I replied, "it may be as you say, but I wish we were out of it. You may be right in your deductions, but they've got a perfect case against us if they choose to take it into court, and, with the popular prejudice that exists around here against the Carnyms, a jury of these farmers would give us the limit of the law. It isn't a matter of fine, either. Mac. It's a felony that we've been committing tonight, and that means a term in prison, I want you to understand."
"Don't worry, old man," said Mac Ardel, with a satisfied smile which, however, was far from reassuring. "They'll never tell. You may be certain of that. Jenks is so afraid of me that, with the ghosts and the blood-curdling cath I made him take, he's shut up as tight as a clam. As far as the widow is concerned, she isn't the sort to appeal to the law in a case like this, and, if she does, we can very soon tangle her up in a mass of evidence that will justify us in everything we have done. I don't believe she'd fancy the idea of having her house thoroughly searched."
Closing up the house we retired to our room and, as we were making ready for the night, I said:
"Why didn't you make them sign some kind of a paper that would have exonerated us? It would have been just as easy as swearing them to it and it would be hard for them to overthrow it in court. I might have thought of it myself, I suppose, but as I have been following you blindly all the evening without any definite idea of what you've been driving at, my brain wasn't working as quickly as it should have been. I tell you, Mac, I wish we had some sort of documentary evidence to show that we wouldn't be clapped into jail within the next day or so."
"Little good it would do to you," said MacArdel, "if you treated it as carelessly as those things you have in your pocket. You'll lose 'em out in another minute."
I extracted from the side pocket of my coat, as if lung upon a chair, a folded paper which was on the point of falling to the floor, and as I did not remember having seen it before, I opened it and read with interest and amazement. On it was written in a bold flowing hand:
"If you persuade Miss Carney to remain away from Carney-Croft and leave the house closed as in the past, the ghosts will make no further appearance, and neither Jenks nor Mrs. Bruce will disclose the affairs of tonight. Otherwise BEWARE!"
I handed it without comment to MacArdel who read it attentively and then exclaimed in triumph:
"What did I tell you, Ware? It's just as I said. The widow knew what to expect when I locked her in the house and she wrote this note so as to have it ready in case she needed it. Then she watched her onpu
A BOAT
unity and slipped it into your pocket as she stood by your side. I told you I was on the right track, old man." "Maybe you are, and maybe you're not," I grumbled, as I curled up in bed and reached to see if my pistol was handy before I closed my eyes.
[To be continued.]
Spooky Shaft.
“Gee Le i a s
4 Ay
WOMEN LEARNING
TO FIGHT BULLS
SDOMMERETARNEG A OAR
PRACTICE ON DUMMY ANIMAL
Metadoras as Expert With the Sword
as Male Rivals—Feminine Tore-
adors Sometimes Receive
Serious Injuries in Ring.
Madrid.—Women appear to have In-
Faded every known calling of man
from steeplejuck to deep sea diver,
Yet it will be news to most to hear
that there is a cuadrilla of lady bull
fighters in Barcelona—the only troupe
of its kind in the peninsula. The
writer came upon them rehearsing
‘one afternoon in the great silent bull
fing at Barcelona, under the super
Intendence of their business mana-
ger, Senor Tott!. Totti had undoubt-
edly struck a gold mine in his cua-
Grilla de senoritas toreras, or group of
woman bulifighters.
‘They have now been at work four
‘or five years and have performed not
nly all over Spain, but also in
France and South America. In this
‘as in other matters the work of inno-
vation was difficult, Spain's prinet
pal matadors ungallantly sought to
drown the lady bullfighters with rid
‘cule, but without success. Even thelr
practice in the empty arena was
enough to draw a crowd and Senorita
Lolita, the first of the two matadoras,
4s as skillful a hand with the deadly
short sword as any crack espada from
San Sebastian to Algeciras.
Lolita was capering about and try-
ing to plunge the regulation sword
into a dummy made from a large pair
‘of real bull's horns surmounting a
wooden face roughly painted with tar
and adorned with two ferocious white
eyes. His back was a wooden plank
In which was a square hole two inches
across, situated just where the most
vulnerable point would be in the real
animal and where a good matador al-
‘Ways tries to strike. ‘This tmitation
bull was mounted on a kind of gocart
and was trundied about rapidly and
in as realistic a manner as possible
by a youth, while Lolita did her best
to drive the bullfighting sword
Straight into the hole
She was wearing skirts during this
practice, but when in the arena Lo-
lita and her comrades in arms put on
the regulation dress of the male bull-
fighter. These women toreadors oc-
casionally meet with serious injury.
Lalita’s dark face bears a long white
sear stretching from mouth to ear.
She was terribly gored at Saragossa
last year and nearly lost her life.
“It was my fault,” she sald, “for T
Jet my capa fall Just when I needed it
most. You may be sure,” she told
me, “I need all my nerve to deal a
ood clean blow at the end and my
‘greatest safoguard les in always
keeping as cool as possible.”
Both Lolita and Angelita, the other
matadora, are from Catalonia, and,
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‘The Ferocious Bulls Have No Terrors
for These Female To sadors.
Uke most Spanish giris, were enthust-
astic followers of bullfighting from
earliest childhood. They often sighed
that they were not boys and regretted
being precluded from taking up the
hational sport. One of the girls in the
cuadrilla comes of a family of toreros.
Her brother is a very expert man in
the bullring and the girl herself was
early initiated into the dangers of the
arena.
It ts a profession which must be
taken up young, while the joints are
still supple. All the men who are
00d at it show what they are made
of before they are 20. Lolita began at
16 and her sister principal at 17, At
Present these women bullfighters con-
tent themselves with killing two-year-
ld bulls, and so far their manager
has deemed it imprudent to allow his
ebarges to tackle the bulls of six or
seven years.
At the same time, the women per
form many feata not attempted by the
men. There {s, for instance, the busi-
‘ness of jumping over the bull's back
‘bu_means of anole, and both “leading
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
THRER
ladies” tackle the bull on horseback
‘with a long lance. i
Senor Totti himself super'tends
the practice in the empty arena,
placing the giris in strategic positions,
‘while the young man with the wheeled
ares runs hither and thither, first
at one and then at another. If one of
the cuadrilia is inattentive to the per-
formance the master of ceremonies
Tebukes her severely.
After this practice has gone on for
half an hour or so an exhibitfon of
pole jumping is given and this con-
cludes the day's exercise. Next day,
it may be, the lady bullfighters give a
real exhibition and attract the whole
town. Thousands turn out who would
‘not in the ordinary way attend a bull
fight and bets are made as to the
ability of the respective matadoras.
In nearly all respects the corrida of
these women bulifighters is the same
as that of the men, and the time-hon-
ored state entry, strategic distribu:
tion of forces over the arena, entry
of the bull and miscellaneous play
thereafter aro all closely followed.
Naturally noy and then one of the
girls grows timid before an unusually
determined charge and takes to her
heels with a stifled scream. The au-
dience roars with laughter, even
though her life may be in serious dan-
ger. Truth to tell, however, these
young bulls, known as novillos, have
little of the true fighting spirit.
‘The pay of the women is very small
as compared with that of the first:
rate male bullfighter. Lolita herself
seldom receives more than $30 for
killing six young bulls, while the rest
of the troupe account themselves
lucky if they get five dollars for thelr
share of the entertainment.
—--—-
i I $3?
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: q INGTON, BATTLE OF SANTIAGO, LAND BAT- ONE HALF CORD OF SAWED WOOD. EE
hy TLE OF QUASIMAS NEAR SANTIAGO, JUNE 24,
, F\ 1898, SHOWING THE NINTH AND TENTH COL: FOR TWENTY NEW SUBSCRIBERS .. §
; ORED CAVALRY IN SUPPORT OF ROUGH oH WE WILL GIVE ONE HANDSOME GOLD RING &
: DERS, SIZE 20X28 AND 20X24 INCHES, ean d WITH OPALS, RUBIES OR PEARLS; ONE JEW- te
BATTLE AND CHARGE OF THE 24TH & 25T! ELRY BOX FINISHED IN GOLD OR SILVER:
P EGLORED INFANTRY. IN RESCUE OF ROUGH ONE SILK SHIRT WAIST; ONE READY MADE
ILY 2, 1898, SIZE DRESS, ONE GOLD WATCH, FILLED, WAR- 2%
E RIDERS AT SAN JUAN HILL. JULY 2, 1898 S RANTED FOR TEN YEARS, ONE ROCKING ©£&
20X28 AND 20X24 INCHES, ADMIRAL DEWEY
EAT NAVAL BATTLE OFF CAVITE IN MA- CHAIR, ONE LOAD OF COAL, ONE GROSS OF #:
NILA BAY, MAY IST, 1898, NAVAL BATTLE, SOAP. EITHER WASHING OR TOILET; ONE $3
DESTRUCTION OF | ADMIRAL CERVERA'S a BARREL OF BEST FLOUR, ONE PAIR BLANK. 4h
: : ) DE CUBA, JU- ae ETS, ONE MANICURE SET, ONE SEAMSTRESS’ t#
SPANISH FLEET OFF SANTIAG( A, in WORK BOX, ONE PAIR soonest i
LY 3RD, 1898, SIZE 22X28 INCHES; LAND BAT- XxX, ONE PA\ . GENTS OR LA- aay:
TLE, CAPTURE OF EL CANEY, EL PASO AND f DIES. pet
FORTIFICATIONS OF SANTIAGO, JULY FIRST FOR FORTY YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS The
F AND SECOND, 1898, SIZE 22X28 AND 22X27 ; eee
B INCHES. WE WILL SEND YOU ONE OF ANY fi), OR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL GIVE ONE SEW- S23
# OF THE FOLLOWING BATTLES OF THE CIVIL i ING MACHINE, ONE DIAMOND RING, ONE ott
b WAR ON THE SAME TERMS. THE PICTURES , GOLD WATCH, ONE PAIR FINE GOLD EAR. ##
- LIKE THE OTHER BATTLES ARE FINISHED IN RINGS, ONE MUSIC BOX, ONE PHONOGRAPH, eas
F COLORS. THEY ARE 22X28 INCHES AND RE- ONE READY MADE DRESS, ONE SUIT OF GEN. sos
TAIL AT ONE DOLLAR EACH. WE WILL TLEMEN'S CLOTHES, ONE GOLD-HEADED ¥
f FURNISH FRAMES FOR ANY OF THESE FINE Ft CANE, ONE GOLD-HEADED UMBRELLA, ONE 33
OMOS FOR 2 DOLLARS & 50CTS. EACH AD ‘ie CHINA SET, ONE DOZEN SILVER-PLATED 2%
B CHR p ; a
DITIONAL. BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, BAT Cet KNIVES AND FORKS, ONE HAT-RACK, ONE iE
TLE OF SHILOH, BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS, VA., a (| SILK DRESS, ONE WEEK'S TRIP TO THE SEA. $¢
BATTLE OF ATLANTA, GA. BATTLE OF Ly SHORE, RAILROAD FARE AND HOTEL BILL 22%
SPOTTSYLVANIA, VA. BATTLE OF VICKS- PAID, FOR ANY RICHMOND WORKER. Forkofe
BURG, MISS, BATTLE OF LOOKOUT MOUN- THESE OFFERS MAY BE TAKEN ADVAN. #2
TAIN. TENN., BATTLE BETWEEN THE MONI- TAGE OF BY SENDING ONE OR TWO SUB. Soo
TOR AND THE MERRIMAC, BATTLE OF BULL SCRIBER'S NAMES AT A TIME. WE WILL £E
RUN, VA. BATTLE OF CHANCELLORSVILLE, KEEP A RECORD OF THEM; AS SOON AS THE 2%
t BATTLE OF THE BIG HORN, (CUSTER’S LAST ie ais) tut
CHARGE) STORMING OF FORT WAGNER, S. REQUISITE NUMBER IS OBTAINED, WE WILL ih
C., (COLORED TROOPS IN THIS FIGHT), BAT- FORWARD THE PRESENT INDICATED. & EEE
= OF NEW ORLEANS, LA., CAPTURE. AND A PERSON WHO TRIES TO GET FORTY s 9
MAN IS BALD-HEADED;
THINKS HE'S BALD EAGLE
SITS IN TREETOPS AND SwooPS
DOWN ON PREY—RELATIONS
SAY HE IS INSANE.
Jermyn, Ia—When Dick Bemick
facieceuga bs crag = sana
ee
eee tw
b~ xh a
SQ) |
Ne
edi
= Lak Ge Ry
¢ ie Stn ae »
Fr we
%
PIGS see
He Drops on His Prey from the Tree-
ranches.
astonished Judge Foley by gravely
Announcing that he was a bald eagle
and the lamb was his lawful prey.
Dick {s bald-headed.
Bemick seems to be {nsane, and bis
brother told the court that ‘he had
been acting strangely ever since a des-
perate battle with a bald eagle along
the Mississipp! blufts,
Finding an eagles’ nest Bemick tried
to capture the young ones, but was at-
tacked by the parent birds. Before he
had succeeded In driving them away
he was covered with deep wounds in-
Micted by talons and beaks.
| Evidently a poisonous virus entered
bis system, for his whole nature is
seemingly changed. He makes unpro-
voked attacks on nearly every person
he meets; he sits for hours In tree
tops screaming like an eagle, de-
scending only to make a swoop on a
chickenor a rabbit.
His arrest came when he caught the
lamb in a field and, after slaying ft,
tried In vain to soar into the sky by
waving his arms as if they were
ee
Nee iain Reade ee ee
| Portsmouth, O.—Men and women
were knocked down and trampled and
women fainted during a pitched battle
In the Free Will Paptist chureh here.
_ Hymnbooks were hurled back and
forth and the pews and other church
property were demolished, The. po-
lice finally quelled the riot after a
number of persons had been badly
burt.
‘Women started the hymnbook hurl-
ing, but when the men clashed in a
hand-to-hand conflict some of the
women were knocked down, while
others fled screaming.
The riot was the result of one fac-
tion bringing Rev. George Vance, of
Galford, to conduct the services. His
appearance was the signal for the
women followers of the regular pas-
tor, Rev. Freeman Chase, to begin
battle,
Sinbeibin: arenas Si Dien
Mectectse, Wyo.—Henry Goodmtil-
ler, a sheep herder, began to sneeze a
few days ago and he continued to
sneeze almost uninterruptedly until
he fell over dead. The bursting of a
blood vessel, caused by the violent
attack of sneezing, was the immedi-
ate cause of death.
Goodmiller had contracted a severe
cold which had settled in his head. He
sneezed much for several days and
the attack which resulted in his
death came on a few minutes after
he arose from the breakfast table
early in the morning. He was power-
less to check it and as he was at @
ranch house it was impossible to
summon a physician. He sneezed
constantly for more than half an
hour and then he fell over and died.
Nary a One!
Carre
eee creeereres we
Se sy op
Floating in oyster stew.
—Judge.
FOUR
—_—_—_—_—_—
a TIP ee
“4 ik if
ies or astiar
[et A RSS
S SS
weeN
" Nye
Published every Saturdar by Joun MizomecL,
Sus ae ail Nort tik Beret, Mictusoad Vi
JOHN MITCHELL, JR, = EDITOR
‘Stoulat be nah soon tovseckns Gor Wanner:
ee TERMS IN ADVANCE
Sesteceereea > 3+. a
ms inchs cath engin’ tection ‘3
p= Sy ec
So re
Gite aemeta °° BB
wiegennd Puss Neteesrasinck. "$3
Standing end Transient Notices per ine, 10
6@-POSTAGE STAMPS OF A HIGHER DE
MoMA BON TRAN Te} EORER
RECEIVED ON Sussckinmiows
STE PLANET ts tesned weekly. The:
ton price te 0.80 per year te akvanse ee”
‘There are rou wats by which
scmipamiienr ak ite ihr Salah
Sy Order by Bonk Check cr Dewtor anes
Mow Order, and when owe ofthese
Sin be procured, in s Hengisnered Lather
a Moret Onna — Joe cuz bay 8 Meer. Or-
frond Pust-OiBies, aad we will te :
Beletomen es ‘reponaitte
ievases MOpET Onswas'one te cbtetnad ot
Balecd Sintra Biome Gow nod he Well Fare
ound Gon Euprus Company. Wewdl te
Suet. as Mvprocr Mocey Grlte it's ‘cxte
Rediciavenient wey fortarardig may
Reomrenn =" s Ort
resto or at Expr rhise fecnok within,
reach, your saater will hegister the
EG vah wocest farm ie
ean be traced. You cas send. money in
Steamer st oar risks =
‘We cannot be. rexponstble fer money sene in
letters in any onbes Way, thas, one oe Boat
Saprmentiges aleve ye em four se
— any other way, you must do i at your
Thesewaza, Beef you do net weet Tan
phannt continued for Resthce pear Giter Soe
Forni Gard todiscontinasis. ‘The ouste hace
mntal Gard to giscontinasis, ‘The courte hace
Sccided that gutmcrvours to whoa
ica der their paper Giacontinted ay the cx:
Siration ot times Yor wack bas ech pa
Erevhid ate for the Paysvent of the sate
Son tguate whes ty order the’ paper i
Comnrsicariows —When writ to na to
Peper, Tem ehoall Give your nares sat shies
En Pull Stherwise we cannot fin] your namcon
curbooke,
‘Chance or ADDAES.—In order $0 chanze
aie eidremat aqstocritocs we mes Sheet
86 former un well an the prounat oalhrwe
Entered at the Post Oise at Richmond. Va.,
speck nee
SATURDAY,......JUNE, 22ND......1907,
eee ee
Chairman New of the National Re-
publican Committee declares that Pres
ident Roosevelt will be the issue in the
wext election, and incidentally anuounc-
es that the platform of the party or its
declaration of principles will be a sec
ondary consideration. From this plain
‘Statement, it would seem that the pro-
claming of the distinguished occupant
of the White House as the Diaz of this
‘country would be now in order.
Rev. W. Bishop Johnson, D. D,, has
been appointed by the Census Bureau to
secure & complete religious census of the
Negro Baptists of this country and he
asks that all information relative to
this denomination be sent to him at
once. Members of Associations, Con-
ventions and religious bodies of every
description will do the denomination a
favor and advance its interests by ad-
dressing him simply as Rev. W. Bishop
Johnson, D. D., Washington, D, C.
es
THE BROWNSVILLE CONCLUSION.
Senator J. B. Foraker declares that
the testimony before the Senate Com:
mittee on Military Affairs has failed t
establish the guilt of the colored sold.
iers. Some persons may be surprised to
know how this conclusion was reached
after such positive testimony by the
white witnesses from Brownsville Texas.
It was brought about by the process of
elimination.
To be plain, it was a case of where
they tried to prove too much. When
these people swore that they could iden-
tify a soldier thirty, forty and even six-
ty feet away, when it was proven that
a white man could not be distinguished
from a colored one ata distance of ten
feet on the mght of August 13th, 1906,
‘when itis alleged the affair took place
it demonstrated their untruthfulness.
‘We have always contended that there
‘was'one fact clearly established aad ad-
mitted and that was that over 150 col-
ored soldiers did not participate in the
affray, It has not been proven that the
other members of the battalion did par-
ticipate init. It is unfortunate that pol-
‘ities has been injected into the contro-
versy and yet were this not so, silence
would have reigned where jastice is
holding carnival.
‘We may attempt to eseape the conclu-
sion whenever we may choose so to do
‘and yet it is evident to every donserva-
tive citizen that this essence of our re-
public, the basic principle of its exis-
tence is so woven and interwoven in its
ng up that to eliminate one class of
ties is to sacrifice them
altar of some other class of cit-
izens’ ambition.
>
REOPEN BOISE TRIAL
Harry Orchard’s Long Ordeal
Not 2s Yet.
STATE TO REST CASE THIS WEEK
as to Haywood’s Part In
he Trageay.
BOISE, Ida., June 19.—The prosecu-
tion in the Steunenberg murder trial
‘offered one of its most important pieces
of evidence against William D. Hay-
‘wood when, recnlling Harry Orchard
for redirect examination, it Introduced
four letters tenting to show that Hay-
‘wood during the fall of 1905, when Or-
chard swears he was engaged on vari-
‘ous crimes for the federation leaders,
had participated in a plan to deceive
Mrs. Orchard of Cripple Creek as to
the whereabouts of ber husband.
Over a variety of protests from the
‘defense Orchard was allowed to tes-
tity that early in the summer of 1905
Haywood told him that Mrs, Orchard
‘was writing for information as to Or-
chard’s whereabouts. Orchard swore
that he wrote Mrs. Orchard a series of
letters that were falsely dated and de-
livered to Mrs. Orchard by axents of
the Western Federation of Miners. Or-
chard said that he first wrote two let-
ters, dated San Francisco, and bad.
them delivered through Paddy Mulll-
ney, who represented the federation at
Cripple Creek. Orchard identified the
two letters and, overrulins all objec-
tions of the defeuse, Judse Wood ad-
mitted them.
“Why did you tell Haywood, Morer
and Pettibone that you bed given the
letter to your wife to Paddy Mulliney
and bad dated the letter from San
Francisco?"
“The reason is.” sald Orchard very
Geliderately, “that my wife bad told
parties that if she knew where I was
She would sooner seo me in Jail than
not know where I was.”
Noxt Orchard swore thet he wrote a
thind letter purporting to come from
Nome, Aleske, and that, under the gen-
eral arrangement he hed made with
the federation officers, Marian Moore
earried the letter to Nome, where he
Went ae organizer of the federation,
and posted {t. This lettor, bearing tie |
Gate of Nome, Avg. 5, 1905, was pro-
Guced, identified and admitted as evi-
dence. Orchard then identified a letter
which Heywood himself wrote to Mrs.
Orchard, and that was admitted In evi-
dence and handed to the jury as show-
ing that the prisoner had knowledge of
the Alaskan story.
Orchard also testified that the repties
of Mrs. Orehant were sent to him
through Haywood.
‘When Orchard took the stand it was
made evident that the defense pro-
poses to bring a number of witnesses
to prove that Orchard had for years
nursed a yongeful spite against Steu-
nenberg and had repeatedly made
threats agalast him.
“Do you know Max Malich of Den-
ver?" asked Richardson.
| “¥es, sir.”
“Did you tn June or July of 1905 say
‘to Max Bfalich, you and he belug alone,
that you were going to kill Steunen-
berg even if you had to swing for It?”
“No, sir, I never had any such con-
veraation.”
“Adams told me,” sald Orchard,
“that I could not be alone in making a
confession, but that he thought he
would make a confession himself.”
‘The next great dramatic situation In
the trial will come when Adams is
called to the stand to affirm or repudi-
ate hie confession.
‘The state will offer in evidence
copies of certain printed articies over
Haywood's siguature showing the lan-
guage used by the defendant against
Steonenberg when the former govern-
or was running for office. ‘The decision
of the supreme court of Colorado, hav-
ing to do with the elght hour bill, which
Maywood was supporting and which
was doclared uneonstitutlonal by the
supreme court when Judge Goddard
Was on the bench, will be offered tn
evidence. Orchard swore that he was
employed to kill Judge Goddard and
Judge Gabbert of the supreme court
and that he did attempt to kill them.
‘The defense has announced that It
will have" between 1? and 200 wit-
nesses. Subpoenas have not been ask-
ed for these, and It is probable that
they will voluntarily testify for Hay-
wood. The defense's witnesses, it is
sald, will contradict Orchard ns to the
whereabouts of Haywood or Moyer or
Pettibone and even of Orchard himself,
i a
SAN DIEGO, Cal, June 19.—Com-
mander Cameron McR. Winslow, one
of the wealthiest officers in the navy,
the personal friend of President Roose:
yet and commanding the crulser
Charleston, who was arrested by cus-
toms officers charged with smuggling
champagnes, cigars and other dutiable
Articles, has been released under spe
elal orders from the treasury depart-
ment.
Forty Avté¥ Rained In Boston Fire.
BOSTON, June 19.—Fire which
threatened Boston's automobile district
destroyed forty automobiles and did
$100,000 damage at an early hour. The
blaze is believed to have started from
spontaneous combustion. It was in the
garage of the Back Bay Automobile
company.
“A Tramp Abroad.”
LONDON, June 18. — Ambassador
Reid will give a bachelor feast in
honor of Mark Twain at Dorchester
House on Friday evening.
Wiehe Miners Killed at Petecbure.
SCRANTON, Pa., June 19.— Bight
miners were killed by sn explosion of
gas in the Johnson colliery at Price
burg, Pa.
Sethenbed we Sauee any Suen i.
NEW YORK, June i8—Darwin P.
Kingsley, son-in-law of the late John
A. McCall, has been elected president
of the New York Life Insurance com-
pany.
———_—___
Wii) Risiens ait Waanth tie
OYSTER BAY, N. ¥., June 18.—Sen.
ator Beveridge said the policies of
President Roosevelt will be the issue
of the next campaign.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA.
DEN BROKE HER BACK.
Charles G. Herresho Nearly Drowmed
‘Sn Baten’ Beet Gre
BRIDGEPORT, Conn, June 19.—
‘Charles G. Herreshoff, nephew of the
Roted yacht designer Nat C. Herreshotf
‘and himself a designer of powor boats,
with his engincer, Edward J. Sherman
of this city, was reseued from drown-
ing in Long Island sound off the
Bridgeport lighthouse after the power
boat Den, owned by George H. Hoad-
ley of New York and said to have
been the fastest craft of its kind on
the coast, had been wrecked and sunk.
The men managed by clinging to a
cushion to keep afloat until Lighthouse
Keeper Wright came to thelr assist-
ance ina launch. They had been tm the
water about twenty minutes and were
almost exhausted.
The accident came without warning
and was peculiar in its nature, accord-
ing to the story told by Mr. Sherman.
He said Mr. Herreshoff had taken the
boat out for the purpose of testing a
new propeller which had just been put
in. The Den was running about twen-
ty-eight miles an hour and suddenly
as it mounted the crest of a wave
broke amidships and sank with its ma-
chinery, leaving the two occupants
struggling in the water.
TAFT MAY WITHDRAW.
Secretary of War Fears Strain of
| Presidential Campaign.
WASHINGTON, June 19.—Rumors
fre afloat here that Secretary Taft Is
Ukely to withdraw from the presiden-
tial race on his return to Washington.
His health ts one of the reasons aserib-
ed, it betng doubtful whether he can
stand the combined strain of making a
fight for the presidency, running the
Philippines, supervising the Panama
canal management, heading the war
department and necting as general ad-
viser to the administration in all sorts
of matters,
‘The secretary's breakdown at Fort
Snelling 1s cited as showing that Mr.
Taft Is already overworked. Besides,
he has never entered heartily into the
presidentia} race and would far prefer
the supreme court. It Is understood
there will be Important conferences be-
tween Mr. Tart and some of his close
advisers when he returns June 22, and
it will be discussed whether it is worth
while to stay in the field.
A UNIQUE TRAGEDY.
James Wardell Confesses Murder.
Wife Potsoned by Gas,
NEW YORK. June 19—Under pres-
sure of a merciless examination James
Wardell confessed to Coroner Actitelll
that in furtherance of a suicide pact
he shot bis wife at the latter's flat in
West Twenty-tifth street. At the time
of his confession Wardell did not know
that an autopsy bad disclosed that his
wife was dead from filuminating gas
when he fired a bullet into her brain,
Wardell’s admissions have added
something unusual if net unprecedent-
ed to the annals of crime in this city.
Just what charge will be based upon
his acknowledgment of an intent to
kill the coroner has not made known.
‘Mrs. Wardell, who was nineteen
years of age and strikingly attractive,
was found dead on her bed. Wardell
wes arrested and told the police that
his wife had shot herself after the two
had agreed to die together. His cour-
age fatled him when the time came for
self destruction,
Edward Invites Kaiser to England.
BERLIN, June 19—A report Is in
circulation here that King Edward has
Invited the German emperor to visit
him this summer.
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
Closing Stock Quotations.
‘Money on call unquoted; prime merean-
tile paper, GiGG per cent: exchanges,
$555.495,507; “balances, $11,255,006
Amal. Copper... $2% N. ¥, Centrat...111%
Atchison........: 914 Nort. & West... 72
Be & 0.00000, 4 Penn, RR... 119%
Brooklyn RT. 62 Reading ........ 9%
C.C..C. & StL. GM Rock Intand..... 30%
Ches. & Ohio....334 St. Paul... 125%
Chi. & Northw.342” Southern’ Pac... 7%
D. & M....../064 Southern Ry... 18
Biles. nsec sssess 82 South. Ry. pl... OM
Gen. Wisciric! [33% Sugar...
WU. Central...-48M Texas Pacific... 94
Tnekawanna....40i% Union Pacitic.. 19%
Louis. & Nasii.110% U. 8. Stecl....... 22%
Manhattan...... 1904 U.S. Steel pf... 97%
Int-Met...0001-.16 West. Union... 70%
Missourt Pac... 74%
Seidel hase ame
atonite, SQRGS winter patente taenoen
atents, Kae: winter ‘patente, Be0ge
pu tae Wagier in. Maes
RYE FLOUR Steady: fate to good, 17
Debates to taney, SeiDee a.
SWHEAT Adar” emits "shalt con
thy market ‘readied cnder resiiaicg int
again Brewed up on bullian crop adie,
eats ott Tas aun es
Teutber. a Wa Decatiner’ a velo
BEANS—Easy; marrow. $225: medtum,
peeisy: peas, FS0G1.8i4; red kidnny,
HOVSGulet; state, common to choc,
Jum lepaee we.” Wider, Paclic ‘const
BUTTER Creamery, extra, per paund
siugaie. Gtereantiic’ Sxchanger, Baleiel
Seconds, Rogie", renovated. extras ae
irsin Sige. pecking wiocky No, i. Be
ChiwSe—Wew, state, full” crean “col
ored and white.’ email and. intge,” best
Uke Magne akiiia. "eRe; Ralf, skims. beat
Wie fore eenta AE
nearby. firsts lo extra firsis, 16@7c.: os
there getra trata, Jig ta
rea Nokes No. 2 a
Es
POTATOES Steady and in fair de
mandi cholog, per bathed, ete fate t
o 3
Mink FOUN uict! tows dower:
towin Meso ite; spring chick:
Ree ‘Gucks, old, iid! do." spring
fe TRY- it
nay; trek’ Killed foi, ‘choice, Tie?
Sor" fair to wood, Bolas 4, rointers
foc'; ‘broglerat nearby, ao, west
ern, GB.
ks ae ee SL
; Sry 3 Market stead
prime Sue TMendiee, ioge sb: veal
Pkves, $0007.
HOt Receinte, light; market, steady
priine heavien, #5. mediums, W650, Fork
Sep ena pier, Woogie rouse sega
market slow: prime wethera, BGC; eel
Sie'commoa, Biya: mbes, vigaee
Governor Cottrell Resigns,
NORFOLK, Va., June 19—The di-
rectors of the Jainestown Exposition
company at a meeting last night me-
cepted the resignation of Governor W.
E, Cottrell, practically made James
M. Barr director general, with full
powers, and succeeding to the duties of
Mr. Cottrell and indorsed a second
bond issue for $700,000 to cover all the
exposition company’s liabilities.
CHAOS IN RUSSIA
Czar Dissolves the Doume
Because of Plots.
ASSASSINS TRY NEW WEAPON TO KILE
Emperor tannes Imperial Ukase Gy.
ing Reasons For step Which May
Cause Open Revolt Throngh-
anil Vast Maauhin.
(OBt His Vast Domain.
ST, PETERSEURG, June 19.—Em.
‘Peror Nicholas aifixed his signature te
‘an imperial ukase abolishing the pres
ent douma and ordering that the elec
Hons of members to its successor,
Which is to meet on Nov. 14, be held
‘under the new election law, which pro
vides against the “submergence of the
educated classes by the uneducated
masses.”
Following ts the text of the emper
‘or's manifesto:
“We, Nicholas TL, by the grace of
God, emperor of all the Russias, czar
of Poland, grand duke of Finland, ete.,
declare to all our faithful subjects that,
conformity with our order and in-
structions since ‘Le dissolution of the
first douma, our government has adopt-
ed a series of successive measures to
pacify the country and establish the
affalrs of state in regular course,
“The second «ouma convoked by us
Was summoned o contribute, accord-
ing to our sover: <n will, to the pacif-
cation of Russ\:, principally by the
‘Work of legisiation, without which the
life of a state snd the perfection of
{ts administration is tmpossible: next
by an examinaiion of the budget of
revenue and expenditure, which insures
regularity im national finance, and
finally by adopting the national use ot
the right of addressing interpeliations
to the government with a view to es-
tablishing ever;whore truth and jus.
tice throughont lussia.
“But an act wis committed unbeard
of in the annals of history. ‘The ju
Aicial authorities discovered a plot by
@ section of the douma agatnet the
state and power of the czar, but when
our government ‘emanded ‘the exclu-
sion until Judgment had been passed
of fifty-five members of the douma im
plicated fn the crime and the arrest
of those among in most compromis:|
ed the douma flied to carry out tmn-|
mediately the i:wful demand of the
authorities whic) admitted of no delay. |
“All this cov jotled us by ukase to.
the senate to-d'saive the second dou
ma, fixing Sept. 14 as the date of the
convolution of ‘he new douma.”
This act cons'iutes a virtual coup
@etat and overiies the specific pro-
Vislous of the fintamental Iaws, sol
emnly proclaime! by his majesty on
the eve of the convocation of the first
douma, which ssiounced that the elec-
toral law could over be changed with-
out the consent 0 parllament itself.
In the course of the night nine of the
sixteen accused Social Demoeratle lead-
era named fn the government indict-
ment, includins Prince ‘Tzertzeretelt
and M. Dahaycride, were taken into
custody. ‘The cther seven eluded eap-
ture. escaping across the frontier.
A. V. Bobriteheff-Pushkin, the head
and front of the Rinck Hundreds, ts
looked upon by Kessian revolutionists
as the real destroyer of the douma,
Nobody, not even the douma officials,
4s allowed to enter the precincts of
the palace. A laconic notice 1s post-
ed on the gates announcing that “for-
mer deputies” would receive thelr sal-
aries upon application to the chancel-
ae ee .
Admiral Wiren, commanding the
Black sea feet, was cruising about tn
A steam cutter while a torpedo boat iu
command of Lieutenant Ruzhek was |
practicing firing Whitehead torpedoes
in the spacious Janer bay.
When the admiral’s cutter was at
short range the torpedo boat suddenly
changed her position and fired a blank
Airectly at the cutter, penetrating. its
water tank. Only the promptitude of
the crew In Leaching the cutter saved
the adiniral
Lieutenant Ruzhek explained that.
the torpedo was fired through an nc-
eldent, bot Le and three juntor ieuten-
Ants, who were sullen and refused to
salute the snfral, were degraded and
arrested on the charge of attempting
to sink the cutter.
It now opycars that the mutiny at
Odessa of che Black sea fleet, consist-
ing of eight battleships, eight cruisers
and a division of torpedo boats, whose
crews in i. wumber 5,000 men, was
Aiscovered (ately in thme to prevent
the planned bombardment of Odessa
and the Caucasian coast towns. |
Five More Mignesota Victims Found.
NORFOLK, Va, June 19.—A dis-
patch from Kear Admiral Emory, in
command of the fleet in Hampton
Roads, says that the bodies of Mid-
shipmen Herbert L. Holden and Wal-
ter Carl Ulrich of Milwaukee, Seamen
Robert H. Dodson, H. 1. Vandorn and
FB. R. Plumber and Coal Passer Jesse
Conn, victims of the Minnesota's
launch accitent, have been recovered.
Midshipmen Holden was from Port-
age, Wis., and Dodson from New York.
New Milford te Celebrate Settlement
ge NEW MILFORD, Coun., June 17.—
‘The bicentennial observance of the set-
tloment of New Milford, which will ex-
tend through four days, opened with
exercises on the village green under
direction of a committee of towns
People. _ ee |
CONDENSED DISPATCHES.
ate melt ol
‘Chrenicied,
The wedding of Miss Edith McGor
Fay at Cleveland to Professor Bdward
HL. Schwab of Notre Dame university,
| brother of Charles M. Schwab, took
place at St. John’s cathedral,
| At North Woodstock, Conn. the Elm-
‘Wood hotel, on Woodstock Hill, was
burned to the ground, but through the
great efforis of the people thereabouts
the outlying buildings and Woodstock
academy were saved.
‘Taesday, Jane 18.
‘The Missouri two cent passenger fare
act will go into effect at 6 a. m. for
three months’ “trial. If at the end of
that time it Is found to he x maconenee
Ative Its enforcement can fought
the courts by the raflroeds.
| ig & ip cds 4k Backwash ee
\ scldeh abe Guneariad ob: teiselt aieeie
| arday was convicted of second degree
| murder for the killing of Edward Pull
pece he Fra ets Miia areal itd
Senator Foraker of Oblo at Wash
Angton gave out a statement |
[ontatice on satiensy aise Oo
declares that it fatis to show that axiy
soldiers took part in the affray.
United States Senator Beveridge of
Indiana, who made a personal call on
President Roosevelt, left Oyster Bay
for New York. Mr. Beveridge would
netther afirm nor deny the report that
he 1s to marry Miss Katherine Eddy,
remarking that the reports were
tere which no gentleman could dong,
Monday, June 17.
‘Two Spaniards, Nesed Atlas and Al-
exander Artoso, have been arrested at
Buffalo on a charge of selling cigars
with counterfeit union labels. ‘The
cigars were made in New York and
shipped to Buffalo. A consignment of
8,000 cigars was seized.
Chariestown's celebration of the one
hundred and thirty-second anniversary
of the battle of Bunker Hill was ush-
ered in by the lighting of an immense
bonfire on the shores of the Mystic
river. The pile measured more than
fifty feet high and twenty feet at the
base.
Satorday, June 15.
At St. Paul, Minn., Secretary Taft
became suddenly very {ll while at Fort
‘Sneliing witnessing the review of
troops and fell to the ground. He had
an attack of acute Indigestion.
‘The president has confirmed the sen-
tence of death Imposed by the court
martial In the case of Private William
B. Taylor of the Twenty-fourth In-
fantry, who was convicted of shooting
First Lieutenant Calvert of the same
company at Albuera, Philippines.
Andrew Carnegie is to extend his l-
brary gifts, and Germany is to receive
8 Sine present from the Pittsburg steel
man. The prime object of Mr. Carne-
gie’s visit to Kiel Is to announce to the
German people that he will erect for
them at Berlin a library, to which his
first donation will be $1,000,000.
Friday, June 14.
At Oklahoma City, Okla, T. P. Gore
has been nominated for United States
senator from the new state of Okla-
homa. He has been blind since he
was eleven years old, when he acci-
dentally shot his right eye out with an
arrow gun. |
A sensation was caused at Harris-
burg, Pa., by the discovery that Wil-|
Nam L. Mathues, former state treas-.
urer, who figured in the new capitol
scandal, was detected looking over the |
books of the treasury department
about 11 o'clock at night with one of
the clerks of that department and a
political eutenant of Mathues from
one of the other departments. |
‘Thursday, June 13.
‘The Italian senate has passed a bill
making the centenary of the birth of
Garibaldi, July 4, a national holiday. |
At Kingston, Jamaica, sleeping citt- |
zens were aroused by a violent earth-
quake at 1,20 o'clock in the od
and many rushed out in their night
clothing to the streets. The shock last. |
ed several seconds and was accompa: |
nied by a loud rumbling noise. No |
damagt was Soom |
‘Wednesday, June 12.
Genere! Baron Kuroki sailed for Ja-|
pan on the steamship Kaga from fae
tle, Wash. Before leaving General Ku-
roki, through the American honorary |
escort, General O. EB. Wood, sald that
his visit to this country had been a |
most pleasant one and that he leaves |
with the Kindest feelings for Uncle
Sam and his people. |
Andrew Carnegie and Mrs. Carnegie
will be the guests of Ambassador and |
Mrs. Charlemagne Tower during the
yachting week at Kiel, Germany. It
has already been arranged that Mr.
Tower shall present Mr. Carnegie to
Emperor William, Joseph Wharton of
Philadelphia will also be the guest of |
Mr. aud Mrs. Tower at Kiel.
WINE GROWERS’ REVOLT.
octegeer 6 ako), ay age matedintesnta ciel
PARIS, June 19.—The wine growers’
revolt in southern France is going
from bad to worse. The eloquent ap
peal made by Premier Clemenceau to
the mayors who have resigned office
to resume their functions bas had no
effect whatever.
Marcelin Albert, the energetic leader
df the revolt and president of the com-
mittee of Argelliers, openly defies the
government and has issued proclama-
tions stating that the mayors will not
Usten to any orders from the prime
minister,
‘The wine growers will not listen to
reason and feel convinced that the gov-
ernment by one stroke of the pen or by
some magic means can alleviate the
results of their own shortsightedness
in producing more cheap wine than
can be consumed, for, after all, it is to
this cause that the crisis is due. The
wild charges of adulteration are great.
ly exaggerated, because wine 1s so
cheap that there is no profit In adut-
terating by artificial fabrication,
Meanwhile the civil ceremonies of
marriages and registrations of births
and deaths and funerals are suspend-
ed, and no taxes or octrot dues are
Wu oat —aetas: Tie cae
| ‘To CLEAR OUT GRAFTERS.
Da eee ee
at San Franctsco,
SAN FRANCISCO, Jone 19.—Mayor
Schmitz was formally removed from
office by the supervisors at their meet-
lng here. Supervisor James Gallagher
was named as acting mayor in his
place.
This is the first step taken by the
graft prosecution in the execution of
the pian to restore good government in
San Francisco. The ground on which
Mayor Schmitz was remoyed is that
owing to his incarceration in the coun-
ty jall following bis conviction on a
felony charge he is no longer able to
perform his official duties.
Gallagher will not bold the position
ef acting mayor for more than a few
days. The resignation of a certain
member of the board of supervisors
will make room for the appointment of
& responsible citizen, who will take
Gallagher's place as acting mayor.
AOKI DOES NOT CREDIT IT.
Japanese Ambasandor Knows Noth
tug of ils Reported Recall.
WASHINGTON, June 19.—State de-
Partment officials und members of the
diplomatic corps were much interested
fm the statement in a Tokyo newspa-
ber, the Hoch}, that the Japanese goy-
emment would recall Viscount Aokl,
the Japanese ambassador, and is con:
sidering the appointment of Baron Ka-
Reko as his successor. Ambassador
Aoki when interviewed did not attach
any credence to the report.
During his stay In this country at the
time of the Portsmouth conference
Ie
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Jy PRES =
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e “PEA eas jaan
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/ ae ee My
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Baron Kaneko became acquainted with
President Roosevelt. They grew very
intimate, and it Is reported that Baron
Kaneko was the representative through
whom the president transmitted his
Suggestions regarding settlement of
disputes between the Japanese and
Russian commissioners
eect ot ages
BIG FOUR WRECK.
Small Boys Blamed For Open Switch
at Columbus.
COLUMBUS, 0., June 19—The Big
Four Limited, which left New York
city over the New York Central at 5:30
o'clock, ran into au open switch three
salles east of here, overturned and se
Mously Injured four passengers and the
fireman,
‘The engine and every coach were
thrown on side, and the passengers
were piled in heaps, The tender ran
along the side of the track for some
rods and then plunged into the ground
several feet,
‘The engine continued for 200 yards
and then turned over.
Small boys who were seen playing
about the mck by the engineer of a
train which passed the point a few
minutes before the wreck occurred are
belleved to have turned the switch, not
meantug to do any harm, The engineer
of the first train reported the switch
O. K. when be went by.
Engineer William T. Smith stuck to
his post, but escaped Injury. Mahaffey,
his freman, jumped and as a result
may not recover. The passengers had
no opportunity to even leave thelr
seats, because the train took the switch
while traveling at the rate of fifty
miles an hour and the cars were piled
ima heap In a twinkling.
ABRUZZI AT BOSTON,
Dake Attends the Grand Annual
Seousteckade.
BOSTON, June 1. — The largest
crowd that ever attended races at
Clyde park, Brookline, saw Robert
Nevell’s black gelding, Mr. McCann,
win the Country Club Grand Annual
steeplechase.
The presence of the Duke of the
Abruzzi and bis party at the course
added greatly to the Interest, and so-
clety thronged the stands and club-
house lawns. The duke, sunburned
and smiling, held an almost continued
reception with Mr, and Mrs, Lars An-
derson in the Anderson box In the
grand stand.
During the running of the Grand An-
nual the duke was in the Judges’ stand.
Country club badges Hke court decora-
tions were pinned to his coat by the
stewards and officials. He was not in
uniform, and, dressed in a modest
brown suit and straw bat, he looked
more like a prosperous young Ameri
can than a foreign duke.
Standing of (he Baseball Clabs.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
gh 3B oF RS
Rew Nore Bo a
Piladeiphie Se
Pltsburg sc ee
Boston I ae
faeppald SB Be
Brooklyn saci Bae
AMERICAN LEAGUE,
won Pc
Chicas e *S
Bevrort S 8 fe
Now vork au ie
St Louis 1 6 Se
Boston &b 8 3s
Hughes Signs Recount Bil.
ALBANY, N. ¥.. June 19.—Governor
Hughes has sizned the New York city
recount bill, introduced by Assembly-
man Prentice and providing for a re-
count and recanvass by judicial proc
ess of the ballots cast for the office of
mayor at the election In New York
clty in November, 105.
Nelll to Investigate. |
WASHINGTON, June 18.—Commis-
sioner Neill, it is understood, at the
president's suggestion left for New
York today to begin an investigation
Into the telegraphers’ grievances. .
Senator Beveridge to Wed.
OHICAGO. June 19-—Atise Katherine
Rady, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, An-
gustus N, Eddy of 1601 Michigan aye-
‘ue, will marry Senator Beveridge of
Indiana, possibly within the next nine-
ty days. Senator Beveridge will sall
tomorrow for Europe. Miss Eddy is in
visiting her brother, Spencer
{Fenatay, who in secretary ot the Unie
‘ed States embassy in Berlin. | ee
ated ee
ST. Tishaa, Jone 39.—Thi
news of s dissolution of the d
Tesuited mitinous acts z
vates in a battalion of at Kier,
Other batiallous "were sommoned. to
quell the mutiny, and the entire muti-
nous battalion were disarmed and ar-
rested. One loyal oficer was killed tn
the fight.
Noted Astronomer Dies mt Pont.
LONDON, June 19.—Professor Alex-
ander Stewart Herscbel, the distin-
guished astronomer, is dead at the
Observatory House. Slough, Bucks,
where his grandfather, Sir William
Herschel, aud Sir John Herschel made
most of thelr world famous discover-
tes.
Death by Sunstroke.
LEAVENWORTH, Kan. June 19.—
Lieutenant Willimm Stewart of the
Rlerenth Pennsyivania infantry in the
civil war was killed by stnstroke at
the Soldiers’ home here.
Does Not Know the Kart.
LONDON, June 19.—“I do not know
the Earl of Munster, and I am much
annoyed by the unauthorized report,”
said Mra. Potter Palmer, replying to
a question here on the subject of her
reported engagement to the Irish earl,
ks eek eee on ie a
NASHVILLE, Tenn.. June 19.—At
the annual alumni dinner at Vander-
bilt Chaucetior J. H. Kirkland an-
nounced a contribution of $100,000
from Wiltlam K. Vanderbilt, grandson
of the founder of the university.
Roosevelt and Neyan Dominate.
WASHINGTON, June 19.—Chalrman
Griggs of the Deniocratic congressional
committee said; “Al this talk of nomi-
nating a southern man for the presi
dency next year is nonsense. ‘There Is.
only one man in sight to lead the De
mocmey next year, and his name is
William Jennings Bryan. If he wants
the nomination that’s all there will be
to it. Bryan dominates the Democrat-
fe situation as thoroughly as Presi-
dent Roosevelt controle-the Republican
party. I don't know whether he wants
to run or not. So far as I know he
has not taken anybody into bis confl-
dence.” 3
Hard to Open.
Dick—Succeed in touching the old
gentleman for a ten spot this morn
ing?
Jack—No; the money ke carries is
ike the umbrella he carries.
Dick—How so?
Jack—Why, 1's a close roll.—Chk
cago Dally News.
NOT AN IMAGINARY LINE.
Es] sam
Ese) Sy fo
mt ie f
3 eps N
Pt eee
“ aS en sein
eect a: hoses!
4. és al an Mana
Uae
SS <3
Pedagogue—Now Snarker, junior,
give an example, by reference to any
familiar object, of what ts meant by
the word equator
Snarker (rather at a loss)—Well,
air, er—er—it's like the—er—walst-
band on your trousers runuing round
yer stummick, sir.
Willing Helpers.
He—Then it Is settled that we are
to elope at midnight?
She—Yes
He—And you are sure you can get
your trunk packed In time?
She—Oh, yes. Papa and mamma
have both promised to help me-—Chi-
cago Dally News
ue ae
The Bride—Ob, Algernon, are you
certain, are you positive, that noth-
ing will ever come between us?
The Groom— Nothing, dearest!
Nothing can ever come between us so
long as we live in this flat—there
isn’t room.
ASTONISHED THE BARBER.
Quietly entering a barber's shop, the
stranger removed his hat and coat,
and taking a card from his pocket
wrote on it
| “I want to be shaved.”
A barber stepping forward read the
card, and, pointing to a chair, said to
his brother artists
“Deaf as a brass kettle and dumb as
an oyster.”
| ‘The man straightened himself out
in the chair, when bis manipulator be-
gan lathering his face.
“This cuss has a cheek like a stone
wall,” he said, when a geueral laugh
followed
| “Stick a pin In him and see if he is
entirely dumb,” said another.
The victim remaining undisturbed,
the following shets were fired at him
by the delighted tonsorial artists:
He needs a shampoo. His head fs
dirtier than a public-house doormat.”
“Shave him with a stoolleg. Don’t
‘spoil your razor on that stubble.”
“Gracious, what a guy! He'd make
& good bird-frightener.”
“He ought to rent that nose for a
locomotive head-light,” ete.
While all these complimentary allu-
sions were flying about bim the opera-
tion of shaving was finished, and the
man arose and put on his coat, and
then,turning to the astonished barber,
said:
“How much for the shave and com-
pliments?"
“I—I—I—I,” gasped the astonished
man, “oh, nothing — nothing — call
again—excuse;” and as the strang-
‘er left the shop the discomfited bar-
bers swore that they would never be-
eve in a deaf and dumb man again
“Until they had first fired @ ten-pound
cannon about his cars.
THE PLANET
GRIZZLY RODENT CAUSES
PANIC IN A STREET CAR
RAT APPEARS IN MIDST OF HOUSEWIVES WHO SEEK SAFETY IN HEIGHT.
Indianapolis, Ind.—No one knows how it got there, but a shaggy, overgrown veteran rat, with long stragging whiskers and a pleading, wistful face, was a passenger on a street car which left Illinois and Washington streets at five o'clock the other night. The car was well filled, mostly with West Indianapolis housewives with suppers to prepare for six o'clock husbands. In the confusion and turmoil the big, undfondling rat, without money, ticket or transfer, settled comfortably in a dark corner under a woman's skirt. The conductor gave two bells; the motorman threw on
A RAT RUNNING
Panic Reigned in the Car. the current and the car, loaded with possibilities, bounded down the rails to the south.
It was not until the car had turned into South street and was bowling merrily to the west that the venerable and battle scarred stowaway was prodded into action. Reposing in content beneath the skirts of an ample colored woman he merely whisked his tail when she readjusted her avoidpoils and inadvertently dug him one in the short ribs with a massive heel. Sufficient unto the day were the skirts thereof, and the rat overlooked the indignity in return for shelter. Another shifting of the bulk above brought a jab under the chin that even the meckest and middest of rodents would have resented. The wistful face contracted in fury and the straggling whiskers stuck out straight—a beautiful fringe for the white teeth that snapped at the offending foot. And then, with flashing eye and teeth a-gleam, the stowaway "lep" into the aisle, for one brief moment struck a tragic attitude and then—scurred. Meanwhile the passengers were moved—most of them to the top of the scats.
"My Gawd," screamed the woman, who had been the shelter house for the rat. "Look a there." She mounted the seat pointing in terror. Her skirts were held high. Every one followed her example—only there were some who didn't hold their skirts high. These—the men—with rare presence of mind, shouted to the conductor and made ineffectual attempts to boot the pestered animal as it dashed bewildered here and there in search of another friendly petticoat.
One bell jangled in the motorman's cage and the car came to a sudden halt for the final scene. Hysteries were rife and every skirt in the car was wildly shaken—for the rat had disappeared. A nice big hole, which loomed like the gates of Paradise to the pursued one, offered advantages too alluring to be resisted and through some rat avenue the hero of many hair-breadth 'scapes leisurely disembarked—no one knows where—and courage and skirts were restored within the car.
Canary Whistles Tunes
Norwalk, O.—Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Burgess, of Garden street, this city, own probably the only canary bird in the country that whistles tunes as well as sings. The bird is about a year old. It came into the possession of the Burgess family soon after it was hatched. The bird often heard Mr. and Mrs. Burgess whistle to summon their pet dog, and the bird soon began to whistle. While engaged in her household duties, Mrs. Burgess would whistle some tune, and it was not long before the canary bird began to imitate her. Now the bird whistles nearly all of "Nearer My God to Thee," "My Country," "Tis of Thee," and "There's Only One Girl in This World for Me."
No Cause for Alarm.
The honeymoon had bumped the bumps.
"You know, John," said the young wife, "that I used to be your type-writer?"
"Um—yes," grunted John.
"Well," she continued, "I wish you would discharge the girl you have now and hire a man in her place."
"Huh!" rejoined hubby. "I hope you don't think I would make a fool of myself twice in the same way."—Chicago Daily News.
Many Things to Remember in Proper Use of Powder
THE BRURETTE
WOULD USE
DARK SPACE
POWDER.
PRESERVE THE DELICACY
OF YOUR SKIN
The society woman is generally an adept at making up. She studies it and understands how to give her skin that youthful luster which is so much admired in woman. The society beauty can apply powder to her face in such a happy manner that not even her husband will suspect her of powdering. It was the boast of a husband who married a society beauty that his wife did not own as much as a powder puff. "If he could only see my makeup box," whispered his wife.
To apply powder properly takes the right sort of powder to begin with. The powder should be just the tone of the skin. A dead white powder on a deep yellow skin is productive of nothing but sorrow. On the other hand, the powder should not be too dark. Do not put brunette powder on your face if your skin is a pure white. Powder comes in three or four shades and you should match it to your complexion.
Don't take the first box that is handed out to you, but insist upon trying the box before you buy. "Look before you buy" is excellent advice for the buyer of face powder.
When you powder remember that you have eyebrows and that they are prettier when there is no powder in them. The woman with white powder in her black eyebrows is a familiar sight upon the thoroughfares. She is almost as noticeable as the woman who powders her nose and forgets that she has a forehead, cheeks and chin.
In these days all women powder. They consider it an essential of lady-like cleanliness. The powder box is fitted out in a very luxurious way and the daimy woman has from three to six different implements for apply powder to her face. The proper way to put powder on the face is by means of a powder puff, which should be small and very fresh and daimy. An old powder puff is an abomination. When not doing duty the puff should be inclosed in a bag scented with racket. This makes it always fragrant.
IS PRETTY IN PLAID
There are any number of pretty plaid materials, both silk and wool, that may be used for making up this blouse. There are two inch-wide tucks carried over the front to the bust, and to the waist at the back. The front
A
has the material cut away in the center above a strip of insertion down the center, and there is a small V-opening, filled in with a chemisette of lace; this is outlined with a shaped velvet band. The insertion is crossed by loops of fine silk cord, fixed by small buttons.
The sleeves have the tight-fitting lower part trimmed to match the front.
Materials required: Three and one half yards 28 inches wide, one half yard velvet, 16 buttons, two and one half yards cord.
The Daintiest Apron
Cut the bottom in three points about six inches deep; slightly glove the sides up to the top; cut the top in one point; hem all around.
At the waist line make 11 graduated tucks one-half inch wide, narrowing to a point at top and bottom. The middle tuck should be 15 inches long; the ones at each side seven inches.
Trim all around with lace about an inch wide. The strings should be 28 inches long, three inches wide.
Tuckers with the "V" Shape
Pointed lines prevail for tuckers and chemisettes and some are long enough to deserve the title of vest. When the "V" shape is not used, then absolutely square lines are employed, suggesting the square bibs for infants. Often these deep bib patterns are elongated back and front, with little kimono sleeves attached and then become diminutive and most effective jackets.
Raise a Few Sunflowers.
Ralse a few sunflowers. The seed adds to the variety of poultry feed, balancing the common grains. Then birds fed sunflower seed have a plumage which cannot be improved upon.
Watch the Flock.
There is not much danger from diseases and pests where the watchful shepherd is in charge, but slipshod methods will let trouble into any flock.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA.
BAGS FOR SUMMER
One of the fads of the summer will undoubtedly be the handbags of embroidered linen. It is therefore well that the woman who can embroider and make things neatly should employ her leisure moments in creating one of these bags. The idea of linen handbags is not an original one, but is the revival of an old fashion which has been in vogue in Italy and other parts of the continent for many years. The Italian linen bags carried by ladies of quality are wonderful pieces of needlework and are worth fabulous sums. They are generally rather ample in size and are a solid mass of the heavy, intricate Italian embroidery which, though done on linen, scarcely shows a half inch of that fabric left intact after the work is finished. The decoration, intricate and minutely perfect, turns the solid fabric into what resembles a piece of handsome, heavy lace. The intrusted embroidery is mingled with openwork, but all is so heavily and handsomely done that the substantial quality of the bag is increased twofold by the handiwork.
The bags shown in the American shops for ordinary use are much simpler, the embroidery design, although heavy and well done, covering only a small portion of the bag and being comparatively open in design. These bags are made of pure white linen generally, whereas the Italian bags are in the true linen color, which adds to their beauty. The new bags are in many shapes—oblong, with the length up and down, square or larger across than they are in depth. They are also rounded at the bottom, with pointed tops, etc. Some of them are drawn up through a casing with a white cord and others are neatly finished with a flap, after the manner of pocketbooks. They are of heavy linen and double, and the embroidery is quite heavy.
Gray Shades.
In striped fabrics some of the most pleasing color schemes are in gray, varying shades being used. If a bit of contrasting color is introduced it is used sparingly, and employed as a trimming for the neck and vest, with probably a suggestion added to the cuffs. Bat, faume and the light French grays occupy a place all to themselves in the realm of spring modes, and are quite as pretty in this fabric as in the stripes and checks. The new pale greens are also exceedingly pretty, but are not capable of the varied treatment that one finds so advantageous in some of the other colors. The complementary tints look well in volles, chiffons, muslins, etc., and are delightfully fashioned with various laces and braids.
Exaggerated Ego.
Editor—But all these jokes can't be original. Don't you know there are only seven original jokes in existence. Humorist (egotistically)—Well—er I wrote the seven—Chicago Daily News.
How Did He Know.
"Lushley thinks that automobiles are a snare and a delusion."
"Does he labor under one of those delusions?"—Life
knights of Pythias,
This organization is one of the most powerful in the country and its progress has been phenomenal. The Grand Lodge of Virginia has jurisdiction over all of the cities and counties in this state. Thirty males are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitute one of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything else. Founded on Friendship, based on Charity and established on Benevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will find it an order worthy of their heartiest support.
It pays an endowment and burial benefit of of $200.00 for all ages. It pays $4.00 per week sick dues. The badge costing 75 cents each is the only absolutely necessary regalla. For information concerning the organization of lodges apply at the main office.
The Courts of Calanthe
The Courts of Calanthe
Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership of thirty persons to organize a court. Its members are pledged to exhibit Fidelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love one for the other. It pays an endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per week sick dues. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions.
THE BANDS OF CALANTHE or Children's Department also constitutes a feature and persons cannot do better than to enter the little ones into this mystic circle. The expense is nominal and the benefits all that could be expected. It pays from $1.00 to $1.50 sick dues and death benefits of from $30.09 to $40.00. If you have no Pythian Lodge or Court or Band in your neighborhood, orgrnize one.
For all information concerning the Children's Department address.
For all information concerning special rates of membership in the lodges and courts, address
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAAS
FCB
only absolutely necessary regu-
apply at the main office.
The Court
Is the Female Department of the thirty persons to organize a co-
Fidelity, exercise Harmony and an endowment and burial bene-
dues. The only expense for me a rosette, costing 25 cents for a
THE BANDS OF CALA
stitutes a feature and persons a circle. The expense is nomin-
$1.00 to $1.50 sick dues and d
Lodge or Court or Band in you
For all information concern
For all information conce-
membership in the lodges and
HOW MANY FRAMES?
Many Conditions to Be Considered in Determining the Question.
A correspondent asks what size bee hives are best eight or ten frame. This gives me an opportunity to discuss hives, a subject that is very old, yet recurring again and again in the minds of beginners, writes Eugene Secor. It is a question that cannot be answered in a word. Locality, management and the kind of honey produced all have a bearing on the answer. If one winters his bees out doors a larger hive is desirable than if he carries them into a cellar in the fall and out again in the spring, because bees consume more food out doors than in a cellar where the temperature is kept at a uniform degree and just right.
Ample stores are always desirable, and with a large lhve there is pretty sure to be more honey stored in the brood chamber, and consequently the bees are more certain to have enough And when one is working for extracted honey exclusively the large size of brood chamber isn't so objectable, because one can empty the outside frames if necessary, but if one whitens indoors and is compelled to carry those large ten-frame hives in and out in his arms, alone, it is no easy job. Another thing, if one is working for comb honey, a brooder chamber may be so large that the bees will put a great deal of the best honey where the manager does not want it.
Therefore, for comb honey and cellar wintering I prefer an eight-frame hive. If the climate is mild enough to winter the bees on their summer stands with or without packing, and if extracted honey is wanted there would be no objection to a larger hive. The eight-frame Langstroth hive is probably used by more bee-keepers than any other style.
DOOR FOR HEN HOUSE.
One of Simple Construction Which Will Work Smoothly.
But few small doors can be so arranged that they work smoothly without binding, and the hingeless arrangement such as is shown in this sketch is quite a convenience. The door consists of one piece of one-inch plank, which is about 12 inches in diameter and covers an opening ten inches
Handy Door for Hen House.
across. The door rests on a cleat,
the upper side of which just fits the
side of the door. It will usually
remain shut when closed, without additional fastening, but if need be a hole may be bored through both door and the frame surrounding the opening
and a pin inserted.
EITHER WAY.
A traveler lately returned from Ireland has a story illustrating the ready wit of the Irishman. An old gardener, meeting his employer, touched his finger to the tip of his cap and said: "Good morning, yer honor, of had a fine drame of ye last night." "Indeed, Michael!" remarked the employer. "What was the dream?"
employer. "What was the dream?"
"Ol dreamed that ye gave me a fine box o' tobacco, an' that her ladyship, yer honored wife, gave me huml e wife a can o' th best tay."
"Ah, Michael, but you know dreams always go by contraries."
"Thin," said Michael, "maybe ye'll be after givein' me wife th' tobacco an' her ladyship 'll give me th' tay,"—Harper's Weekly.
N. A., S. A. E. A., A. AND A.
organization is one of the most powerful has been phenomenal. The Grand Dauver all of the cities and counties in to organize a new lodge. The biggest features, but the principles is based on Friendship, based on Charity the respectable, upright people of their heartiest support. An endowment and burial benefit of per week sick dues. The badge of regalia. For information concerning courts of Calantia in the Order. It requires a member court. Its members are pledged to and prove Love one for the other. Benefit of $150.00. It pays $3 00 per regalia is the cost of the badge, 500 funeral occasions. ANTHE or Children's Department cannot do better than to enter the final and the benefits all that could death benefits of from $30.09 to $40 our neighborhood, orgrize one. ing the Children's Department ad
is the most powerful in the country and its
ital. The Grand Lodge of Virginia has juris-
dent counties in this state. Thirty males
new lodge. The benefits paid constitute one
of the principles are greater than anything
based on Charity and established on Be-
right people of the state will find it an order
port.
A burial benefit of of $200.00 for all ages. It
uses. The badge costing 75 cents each is the
ation concerning the organization of lodges
men's Department also con-
tan to enter the little ones into this mystic
is all that could be expected. It pays from
on $30.09 to $40.00. If you have noPythian
orgnize one.
Department address,
Mrs. ANNA TAYLOR, W. M.
120 W. H.
merning special rates of
courts, address
JOHN
31
$150 PER
SURE TO GOOD AGENT
greatest seller in America to-day. Nothing
does the work. Sells at almost every home
on the dollar. Write to-day for full particul
Address
O PER MONTH GOOD AGENTS handling the world's greatest of haird tonics. Absolutely theica to-day. Nothing else like it. No long talk. My plan at almost every home over and over again. 87 clear profit o-day for full particulars, with real chance of a lifetime. address
$150 PER MONTH
SURE TO GOOD AGENTS handling the world's greatest of HAIR TONICS. Absolutely 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-clance of a lifetime. Address
J. F. CLARK, CONWAY, ARK.
FARMING PAYS When the Farmer combines Scientific Methods with his Labor. The Sun and the Soil have no Race Prejudice.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE
Offers a new Undergraduate Course of three years for training practical farmers in modern methods. Young men without money can earn their way. All who have completed the Graduate Course have good positions. Write for circular to PRINCIPAL, HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Hampton, Virginia.
ING PAYS When the Farmer combines Scientific Methods with his The Sun and the Soil have no Race Prejudice.
TON INSTITUTE
Indicate Course of three years for training practical farmers in men without money can earn their way. All who have the Course have good positions. Write for circular to CIPAL, HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Hampton, Virginia.
AGES TO Established 1899. Phone 4160.
Offers a new Undergraduate Course of three years for training practical farmers in modern methods. Young men without money can earn their way. All who have completed the Graduate Course have good positions. Write for circular to PRINCIPAL, HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Hampton, Virginia.
HIGHER WAGES TO NEGRO WORKMEN
Secured by This New Union Order—Grows By Leaps and Bounds—Started Five Years Ago with Nothing But a "Principle"—Now Has Over 400 Subordinate Lodges and 36,000 Members.
Over 30,000 homes of our people have been filled with joy, because of the Protection of a great and powerful Union Order, which is using its strength and influence to secure better conditions for our people. This is the first and only great Union Order in this country, holding an International Union Charter from the Courts, which give a full Protection and Benefits to our race.
There is no color, race or sex discrimination in this Order. The negro has an equal standing with the white members, and can be elected to hold any office. Every effort is made to advance the condition of the members, by securing equal opportunities to work with other workmen, to learn the trades and to have steady work at high wages and Union hours.
The Grand Lodge donates $100,00 for the burial of each deceased member. A fine monthly Journal is published. A Membership Book of the Order is recognized by all Lodges everywhere. Distressed members are assisted. Each member and Subordinate Lodge has the privilege of buying stock in the Order, on low monthly payments, said stock paying 8 per cent interest, guaranteed. A Leading Negro Deputy is wanted in each locality, AT ONCE, to form Lodges, sell Buttons, take Journal Subscriptions, sell Stock and act as DISSTRICT DEPUTY ORGANIZER. This work can be done in spare hours, but many devoting their whole time and attention it. Big money is made by good hustlers.
Write at once. State name of this paper, and enclose 10 cents for full information and postage. Address
THE I. L. U. GRAND LODGE,
34 to 40 Canby Building, Dayton, Ohio.
A certain well-known humorist recently attended a banquet at which he was seated beside a man who seemed to have almost a mania for story-telling. He began with the oysters and had at least one story for each course clear down to the Roquefort. The humorist listened in patience, but did not smile or make any comment. Finally the story-teller noticed the fact that he was not eliciting any expressions of mirth, and, being one who was not at all afflicted with diffidence, he asked:
"Say, old man, what's the matter with my stories, anyhow? You haven't cracked a smile over any of them."
"If I haven't seemed to appreciate your stories you will have to blame my modesty."
"Your modesty? There's nothing about any of the stories I've told that ought to interfere with anybody's modesty. At least I supposed they were clean. If there's a double meaning in any of them, for heaven's sake tell me. I told nearly every one of them to a lot of women the other night." "There's nothing at all the matter
HIS MODESTY FORBADE
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311 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va
JOHN FOXEL.
Dealer in General Line of FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, NOTIONS, FRESH MEATS, CI-GARS, TOBACCO, ICE, WOOD, COAL, &c.
11 S. 4TH ST., RICHMOND, VA
BOARDING & LODGING
Rates Reasonable. All the Comfort:
of Home
Orders received by letter or telegraph
MRS. BOOKER LEFTWICH.
PROPRIETRESS,
816 N. 2nd St., Richmond, Va
H F Jonathan
FISH, OYSTERS AND
PRODUCE.
120 N. 17TH St., RICHMOND, VA
ALL ORDERS WILL RECEIVE
PROMPT ATTENTION.
Long Distance Phone. 759.
with them. They're good, clean
stories. Nevertheless, my modesty
forbids me to laugh at them. I wrote
them."—Chicago Record-Herald.
THE REASON.
CHURCH
Blinner—I notice you always contribute to the foreign missionary society.
Skinner—Yes; I always try to make my money go as far as possible.—Brooklyn Eagle.
Strange, Indeed.
Tall Bard—Here is an article that says overeating prevents poets from writing good poetry.
Short Bard—Great Homer! Who ever heard of a poet suffering from overeating?—Chicago News.
Virginia's Most Successful Hair Culturist.
...PARLORS....
108 E. Leigh St., - Richmond, /
'Phone, 1034.
Private Parlors, Confidential Inter-
views 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 beauti-
fying the skin, 25cts a jar. By mail 35cts.
Graham's Superior Velvet Liquid Powder for giving the face a bea-
tiful fair color, 25 cents a bottle. By mail 35cts.
Graham's Vegetable Hair Dye the best on market giving a rich natural color, $1.00 per bottle. By mail, $1.25.
Mrs. Graham makes a speciality of massaging and beautifying ladies' faces for parties and public gatherings, 35 cents.
Mrs. Graham shampoos the head and puts it in a healthy condition, 25 cents.
All ladies who attend parties and other social gatherings should have their finger nails manicured and made beautiful, 25 cents.
Mrs. Graham's preparations sell at sight. Ladies living in other cities and towns can make good money by selling these preparations.
Write for terms to Mrs. J. A. Graham, No. 10$ E. Leigh St., Ricmond, Va.
John H. Braxton
REAL ESTATE & LOANS
REAL ESTATE & LOAN
Private Banker and Broker,
Loans negotiated on Real Estate,
Interest allowed on Deposits,
Estates managed,
Rent collected and prompt returns
Special attention to repairs.
Notary With Seal
SMITH'S BUSINESS COLLEG
LYNCHBURG, VA.
COURSES:
Phonographic, Commercial, Penning
English, Electric wiring, Civil
Engineering.
No Vacation.
Instruction Thorough. Positions Se
cured. Correspondence Solicited.
Send 2c for particulars. Address:
T. P. SMITH, A. B.
President
STRAUS' SPECIAL
Old Yacht Club.
PURE WHISKEY
WIM Satisfy the lover of the right kind of stimulant. Special prices. We have all grades of good liquors, Cigars and Tobacco. Call and see us. ISAAC STRAUS & CO., 422 E. Broad St.,
S. W. ROBINSON.
NO. 23 NORTH 18TH ST.
FINE WINES, LIQUORS
CIGARS, &c.
All Stock Sold as Guaranteed.
* PROMPT ATTENTION.
Your patronage is respectfully solicited.
—Subscribe to the Richmond, Va.
PLANET. $1.50 per year.
GEORGE O. BROWN.
Fine Photographs. True to Life. High-class service. Latest Improvements in Photographic Out-door Work executed. Reasonable Estimates and Prompt Service. Pictures Enlarged from Old negatives or Photographs. 3-ms
THE ECONOMY,
303—5 North Third St.
FINE
TAILORING.
CLEANING, DYEING AND
REPAIRING
CHITMAN M. WHITE,
PROPRIETOR.
A. Hayes
OFFICE AND WARE-ROOMS,
727 North Second Street
RESIDENCE, 725 N. 2nd St.
First-class Hacks and Caskets of all de-
criptions. I have a spare room for bodies
when the family have not a suitable
place. All country orders are given
special attention. Your special attention
is called to the new style Oak Caskets.
Call and see me and you shall be wanted
on cindly.
'Phone, 2778.
ee)”
STORIESEF
P 5
by FAD
na
fat 7 AWAR|
Ars ee 3
THE FIRST SHOT FROM SUMTER.
In an article on Fort Sumter tn the
aT ie Sime
esse | ice
ii ee
AUN | sisep io so
ee A ye ee
Gos) | nea yo
ny & = be the i ow
ES Pe :
em!
& =
siege
Ares
Bk ae
S 5
was orderly sergeant of the company
&nd gerved ta the war of 1861
Early in tho spring of 1954 Gibbons
was one of over 100 cavalry, artillery
and infantry soldiers under _ First
Liout. Eicnemaf and) a ‘corps of
United States enginecrs who came
east across. the trackloss desert of
San Antonio, Tex.
Gibbons was assigned for duty with
Capt Richards, company ©, First
United States artilters, at Ringgold
barracks and at Fort Clark, Tex, His
Ume of enlistment expired November
15, 1856, and he lived for a time at
Cincinnati, O., and New Oritans, La.
His old company I, under Capt. Ma-
gruder (late cqnfederate general),
had come east across the plalus, and
Gibbons reenlisted in his old com-
pany, five-year enlistment, was trans
ferred to New. York, then to com-
pany E, under Capt. Doubelday, in
June, 1850, at Fort Moultrie, Charles.
ton harbor, South Carolina, When
Maj. Anderson evacuated Fort Moul-
trle, on the eve of December 26, 1860,
and occupied Fort Sumter, the post
flag and other emblems were put in
® barrel and Private Gibbons was de-
tailed to guard the barrel and contents
in transit.
Gibbons took a very active part in
helping strengthen and in defending
both Forts Moultrie and Sumter. He
tells of many anecdotes and incidents
of bravery by the women, officers
‘and soldiers at both forts. | At Fort
Moultrie, when both Capts. Double-
day and Seymour were worn out by
constant work by day and marching
on the ramparts at night, Mrs. Double-
ay and Mrs. Seymour stood watch,
relleving each other every two hours
while their husbands slept.
‘When Maj. Anderson allowed his of.
sficersto return the enemy's fire at
7:20 a. m, April 12, 1861, Capt
Doubleday sighted the first gun, and,
at his orders, Private James Gibbons
pulled the lanyard and sent the first
shot from Fort Sumter. Some com:
rades doubted Gibbons’ story. A let-
ter was written to the war depart-
ment, and the answer stated that Pri-
vate James Gibbons answered to roll
eal the morning of April 12, 1861, at
Fort Sumter. Capt. Doubieday's His.
tory contains the names of Corporal
Charles Bringhurst and -Private James
Gibbons in company E.
GRANT, THE UNASSUMING.
His Natural Simplicity of Manner.
Grant and Sherman were the only
officers of high rank I ever met who
did not change the atmosphere about
them with military consequence.
While at City Point T frequently join-
ed my friends of Gen. Grant. staff,
Porter, Babcock, “Billy” Dunn, and
others, at his headquarters, The gen-
eral, in undress uniform, always neat
but not fastidious in appointments,
would sit at the door of his tent,
or sometimes on one of the long set-
tees that faced each other under the
tent-fiy, smoke, listen, and sometimes
talk; and not a soul of us from the
youngest to the oldest ever had a
thought of rank, writes Gen. Morris
Schaf, in Atlantic. Without lower-
ing his manner to the level of famil-
farity, he pat every one at his ease
by his natural simplicity. He had
none of the caprices of moods or
vanity, Quiet in his presence and
natural in his manner, gentle in volee,
of absolute purity In speech, of unaf-
fected, simple dignity, Grant threw
@ charm over his campfire, West Point
never graduated a man who added
‘80 little austerity or to the
te pretense
‘Cae Cite ee Wee:
A portrait has recently been obtain-
ed of the last man to fail fn the civil
war, He was a Union soldier, John Jet.
ferson Williams, from Jay county, In-
diana, a member of company B of the
Thirty-fourth Indiana regiment.
The fight in which he was killed, oc-
curred at Palmetto Ranch, Texas, on
March 13, 1865, more than a month
after Lee's surrender.
‘The word to lay down arms had not
reached Texas at that time, and an
engagement took place between «
sraall force of union troops and a de-
tachment of confederate cavalry, Wil-
Yams was the only man killed.
AN ARMY STORY.
How O’Brien Rose From Drayman te
Lieutenant Colonel.
A civilian and an army officer were
‘The civilian had suggested
that the recent assiznment of a troop
‘ef colored cavalry to duty at West
Potnt had been made by the war de-
partment to mitigate the bumillfation
felt by the colored regiments because
of the Brownsville affair. The elvilian
thought it was a compliment to send
colored soldiers to the show pluce of
the whole army, says the Chicago
Dally News.
“Compliment?” said the officer.
“Well, it may have been vo intended
by the department; for the depart-
ment, the civilian part of it, doesn't
necessarily know the status of the
West Point detachments of eavalry
And artillery. They really are not sol
Miers. They really are crooms. They
used to be enlisted right there with &
full understanding on the part of the
man who enilsted of the sort of sere:
fee he was gettiny into. They had
houred and were allowed to marry and
therefore mi&y men were willing to
eulist for a-sort of service.”
“But,” sald an ex-volunteer officer,
who stood by, “I used to eco Oriths
West-Point battery there In Virginia
Waring the war, and it was a fine body
of soldiers.”
“Enlisted when the war broke out
from far re.on the, Hud
th cadet acuiterty del. The
were! trans lien. It
a mis dmanto be an
ariver
“Do trou remember Lieitesant Col
eo ia ak a hives te
By CS eye
ba XK ji @
by? Ba A %
ye Res) q
be rae
a Oa
egy
Bok
| Ss FOG
i, APN fi
ie) od Mf
ee eg eae
Ls tee cee
ize, pi fae a
iti BO i Foe
Lee
O’Brien Went Into the Drili That Day.
GriMiths’ battery. There was a queer
chain of clrcums:aaces that took him
along from drayman to Heutenant col-
onel and mace bis sons graduates of
the institution where he started in by
scraping artillery horses
“O'Brien was a drayman in New
York city, not long over from Ireland,
a strong, husky chap and with an ex
cellent command of his fists. One day
he got in a jam away down there at
the time end of the city and a pollce
man spoke more harshly to him than
O'Brien liked. He jumped down from
his dray, which was so tightly wedged
in that the horses woud have to stand,
and thumped the policeman to a fin
ish. The policeman calied for help
and 2 lot of other policemen took after
O’Brien, who ran like the mischief,
dodging around corners and leaping
over obstacles, Other policemen took
up the chase as fast as he passed
them and the others behind shouted
on the word to them.
“O'Brien got to. the waterside just
as a tug with a lot of empty canal
boats was starting up the Hudson. He
leaped over three feet of water and
hid in one of the boats. The police
could have nabbed him, of course, if
they had known be was on the wa-
ter, but they thought he was behind
some lumber pile, and so he escaped.
The captain of the tow boat let him
work around a little until they made
their first landing, which happened to
be West Point. Fhen he put O’Brien
ashore.
“Belng peantless, he was glad to en
Mst in the artiitery detachment, which
had a vacancy Just then, He went
to work scraping horses. One day a
driver was laid up and the artillery
instructor was fuming around won-
dering what he should do. O’Brien
spoke up and said that he knew how
to drive. Sitting on a piunging horse
with your right leg done up in iron
to keep it from being crushed against
the pole between you and the other
horse isn’t quite like driving a dray,
even under the most exciting condi.
tions of dray driving, but the Heuten-
ant colonel couldn't do any better and
so O'Brien went into drill that day as
driver of the middle team of a caisson.
He was strong, intelligent and a quick
and he stayed driver.
“Sumter was fired on soon after-
ward and O'Brien went to the front
with Griffiths and got promoted right
along. After the war he was trans:
ferred to the regulars. So in time he
was retired as a lieutenant colonel,
aji because he got mad and licked @
cop in lower New York. It he hadn't
been able to lick the cop the cop
might have held him. Then O'Brien
would have had 30 days in jail, gone
straps with silver leaves on them.”
Dog and Pig Are Chums.
Bellefontaine, O.—At the home of
Amos Braden, a little pig that was
discarded by {ts mother, has taken
up with the big shepherd dog on the
farm, and it chums around and nestles
up to the dog and seems perfectly
content in his company, and the dog
‘exercises a very friendly sovereigaty
‘over the castoff,
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND. VIRGINIA.
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& SYONOR & HUNDLEY ING
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facet abaceacsies ceiicss
me The People’s Restaurant, -apgy
——-—— 750 North 3rd St., Richmond, Ya——_——
MEALS at All Hours—Hot or Cold, Board by Day, Week
or Month. SOFT DRINKS.
Po. warace a
eecoecsoocecooeecooeson
FORMER LOVER RETURNS
AND ELOPES WITH BRIDE
aie haa
S ea | 4
Nee Ae
y Hay. Vth \
AYES SA Ww
ayy
She Packed Her Trovaseou and Flea
place at eight o'clock tn the evening
@ few days inter at the home of the
bride's. paren
But on the day before Bacholder
appeared on the scene and as a result
the nuptials were not celebrated
After visging the home of bis par-
ents and. Wreing “his Identity he
Young man went to the home of Miss
Claussen, convinced her that he was
her old lover and begzed her to jilt
Pritchet and marry sim.
‘The young woman was overjoyed to
see him again and it was not diicalt
for him to persuade her to clope with
him,
Without saying a word to the mem-
bers of her own family or anybody
else of what she intended to do Miss
Claussen packed her wedding gown
and other clothing fn @ truak and pre-
Pared to run away with Pachelder,
‘That night Pachelder called at her
home and she told her family she was
going with him to the home of a
Relghbor to make a call.
She did not return and her parents
became uneasy. A messenger was
sent to the home of the neighbor. He
returned and reported that she had
not been there.
Then her mother went to her room
and found a note written by Miss
Claussen, in which she said she was
going to run away with Bachelder,
“the man she had loved and promised
to marry whea she was young and the
man she still loved better than any
other tn all the worlc.”
Bachelder said be ran away from
his parents’ home 12 years ago be
cause he was restless and wanted to
0 out and see the world and that
he had not written to his folks be
cause he had met with reverses and
thought {it well to let them think he
was dead.
Just before his return home he
made a snug sum ot money tn Nevada
and it was that dit of good fortune
that prompted him to come back.
PIG 18 BORN WITH TRUNK.
Michigan Freak Resembling Elephant
Lives Two Hours.
Fowlerville, Mich—One of a litter
of pigs born on Walt Pedder's farm re-
cently had a head that was combina.
tion of elephant and human. The ani-
thal ifved bat two hours.
ra a es
| The aan SR was perfectly
Yormed up to the head. Where the
forehead should have been was a
trunk about two inches in length.
‘This bad a hole tn it, through which
the anima! breathed, and bore a strik-
ing resemblance to the trunk of an
elephant.
‘Directly underneath was a large
eye, the only one poss:ssed by the
freak. The ears were large and on
the elephant order.
| ‘The lower part.of the head strik-
ingly resembled the human face,
Michael Pude bas secured the body
of the freek and ts having it mounted.
. All the others In the Mtter were
normal.
Cow Is the Size of 2 Dog.
| Atlanta. Ga=f H. Overby, of this
city, six montha aso boveht for one
dollar a cow, which as a freak of na:
ture Is rapidly becoming famous, so
famous that’s Oterby line refused
to sell a half intore: for $500.
Though tto years old. " ntl
fully developed, the eee a
dog. She ta Fu, A and
weighs onty 73 fou
of nature. She: 1s aa
in Chicago for $21.000.
4. They Know.
“Remember, cebildren.” eata the
stranger Who Was ad !rcosins the Sun
day school, “tha Bessa: labor is as
useful and even Wee cnifed as any
other kind, ds aa tor to do some-
thing that leaves. aj. > ocneat imprens
upon the ageta Wt? © alive. Who,
for Instance, baltds () -.: magnificent
apartment houreg! we oo around ws?
“The poltes tnsperto =" ehouted'the
Vors with “GAS "voles — Chicago Trib-
une. ,
Diplomacy.
“Jobn,” she sald, “I notice that al
most everybody [a wearing earrings
now.”
“But, my dear.” replied John, “if
they had such stall and sheltlike ears
as yours they wouldn't clutter them
up that way.”
Thus did diplomacy. at tons. for the
moment, stave Of a contemplated
sagech :
Prect of it.
“Henrietta,” sald Mr. Meekton, “ts
At true that women have no perception
‘of the comic?”
“It must be true, Leonidas,” was the
answer. “Otherkiee some of them
would never marry such ridiculous
bey
eB ce
“Why are you slways quarreling
with your wife?”
“She (8 always arsving with me.”
“But you need not cet angry; just
explain to her in a calm, gentle tone
of voice wherein she Is wrong.”
“But she fs newt wrong.”—Houston
Post.
Exception to the Rute.
Gyer—We are told that love ts a dis-
ease no physician can cure; but it's a
mistake.
Myer—How do you know it is?
Gyer—A friend of mine was in love
with a feminine M.D. and married
her.—Chicago Daily News,
| Smith's Yarn.
_ Smith's yarns were always wel-
comed.
“Did T ever tell you the tale of two
wells?” he asked
“No, never herd it; let's have It,”
chorused the listeners.
“Well, well,” replied Smith, dryly.
Unappreciative.
“Your husband says that when he
is angry he always counts ten before
he speaks,” said one woman.
“Yes,” answered the other. “I
wish he'd stop it. Since he got dys-
pepsia home seems nothing but a class
in arithmetic.”—Wasbington Star.
Met Canina”
“Your name will probably go down
in history xs one of the great men of
your time.”
“No,” answered Senator Sorghum;
"I bave no especial aspirations in the
way of history. History doesn't inftu-
ence any votes."—Washington Star.
— Sy : »
1 @& \ Mechanics
tS \
f eS. \ ‘
{ ree. \ Savings Bank
i Sree biichS.
\\ tee ect oe ane if OF RICHMOND, VA.
Biecemeeatagy 51% NORTH THIRD STREET.
TER fa oa ne
Sees
EES nd Capital, $25,000.
Money received on deposit and interest paid on ©
amounts above $1.00 which remains 60 days and over.
Money Loaned on Satisfactory Security.
Business Accounts Handled Promptly.
Amounts of ten cents and upwards received on deposit
This establishment is fitted up in the most improved style, having = larg
white vault, burlar-proof steel chest, electrio lights and every’ modern conven
tence for exfety and the accommodation of the pablic.
For all information concerning Stocks, Deposits, Loans, etc, spply to the
Banking Hours have been ‘arranged for the special convenience of the work
ing people as follows: 9 A. M. to4 P. M. Pon aoe tos Pi aw We
close Saturday at 3 P.M. amd open again at 5 P. M., Temaining open ratil §
P M.Call by as you come from work.
OFFICERS:
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President. H.P. JONATHAN, Vice-President
THOS. H. WYATT, Cashier.
BOARD OF DIREOTORS:
Rev. W. F. Grama, D.D., Jvo.R Cmtues, B.P. Vaxpmmvat.,
BR. Jarrensox = HF. Joxarwax, — Tuowas Sure D. J. Omavzns
J. 0. Fantay, Ino. ¢. Tavion,
B.A. Wanuxorox, RW. Witisa, = Witt am Ovsralo, J.J. Oantar
JOHN MITOHELL, JR.. Paes. THOMAS M. ORUMP, Seo"e. |
The J. V. Hawkin’s #4IR GROWER &
—— RESTORER.
—— (TRADE MARK REGISTERED.) ——
Has proved to be a fortune to many of the un.
_— fortanates, who are to-day delighted with its
tA 2 wonderful’ results. The merits of this great
y hair preparation naturally places it in a sphere
jj all of its own, and the glowing terms in which
f our patrons speak of it reassures us of ita satis:
f factory results. We can well boast of a large
i : patronage throughout this and other States and
F also enjoys the commendation of the very beat
" = yy white aud colored people in this immediats com-
' J munity. In ordor to convince the moat. skepti
y cal readers of the merits and results of the J. V.
3 ay Hawkin’s Hair Grower and Restorer, we will
y from time to time produce in print the photo-
—_ graphs of those giving us permission to Go se,
who have ased cnr Brenarstinn ant ce
hesitate to put in print. We will just here remind the pablic tha tmnt
hesitate to pat in print. We will just here remind the pablic that the United
States Government has placed national patent rights on our hair preparation b
which it is protected and we are tn tarn responsible to the government for hon,
est methods and square dealings.
It will positively remove Dandraff, Oure Scalp
of all impurities, Restore Hair on Clean Temples
or Bald Heads, where the roots are not dead.
(OM Prices;—25 cts. per box; eight boxes, $2.80
express prepaid.
he Face Beautifier makes the use of powder en-
tirely 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 097A charge of 10cts.
extra is imposed on all out of city orders. “Gy
‘Address all communications to
MME. J. V. HAWKINS,
G12 N. First Street, = Richmond, Va
PRONE, 4601.
(OF Correspondence strictly confidential. “Wy
*Phone, 577. Richmond, Va
| AD. PRICE,
Funeral Director, Embaltmer and Liveryman.
| aul orders promptly alleg at shortnotice by telegraph or telephone
| with all, necessary “conveniences. Large pisalc or band wagons for
| hire at reasonable rates and nothing but areb-class carriages, buggies,
etc. Keeps constantly on hand fine funeral supplies.
wa No. 212 East Leigh Street. ce
OPEN ALL DAY & NIGHT.—Man on Doty Ali Night
ee
W. I. JOHNSON,
°
FUNERAL DIRECTOR” AND EMBALMER. |
‘Offtee & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St: Corner Broad.
| RACKS FOR HIRE:
| Osliere by igaeeoseice Teegreek Sites, Wedding, Sup
> (pers and promptly attended. «
: wee, 686, Residence in Butiding, New Phone, t&
.
| i
aoe |
= po |
i P| =
[ail a BES
PROF. D. D. BRUCE, M.D,
Strange, Wonderful but True are
the awe stricken tests given by The
Great Austrialian Medium,
PROF, D. D, BRUCE, M.D.
$5000 in Gold to any one in the
World to nompste with him. Pos
eessing mere power than any four
mediums combined.
No card. trance or ham! humbag
Greatest Hindoo Medtum in the
World.
80 GREAT IS HIS POWER that
fo can tell you while in a Clairvov-
ant staté, all you wish to know with
out a word being spoken. Come,
all ye unbellevcrs, senffers and foor-
ers: bring all your skepticism with
Fou—he wil oper your eyes to the
private chamber mystery. Come all
F@ broken hearted wives, all with
low apirite and let bin Uft the bur-
den from your aching and jeatons
heart. Me challenges the World to
compete with him in causing a specd-
¥ marriage with the one yon love:
uniting the separate! ami bring
back the lost one. Traces lost or
stolen goods. Unearths = hiiZen
treasures. Remove: evil innuences
Crosses, Spells, INLuck, cures tricks
and Conjurations, gives Luck and
Success in all you undertake. Cures
the Tobacco and Liquor Habits. Ai-
lows 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 giv-
& on Horse Racing and all Games
of Chance.
No matter what ails you, come
and see this wonderful man. Read-
ler have you noticed that some peo-
ple bave a hard time to get along,
no matter how they toil, while oth-
ere 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 trieede ena
enemies are. Can you tell? Don't
take a leap in ‘Se dark, but be ad-
{sed by this wonderful man, Great-
lest Prophet in. existence.
| He always Succeeds when others
fail. This fs the chance of a life
time, Don't let it. pass y
Office he 9 A.M. to 9:30 P.M
IAIN OFFICE
—Now ts the time. Send your
Adverticement to the PLANET and
look pleasant.
SEVER
TRAINS LEAVB S/CEMORD.
N. B-Following schedule figeres published
only as toformatige 27a Son pearamvent
740 8m daily, Local tor Chae
His 8 dally mite Safe Peiiman to
Atianta ‘and’ ‘Hirmingham, Mew: Orinase.
Mempile’ Chastanoore und all the erie
. ihrouns coach for Chase City, Oxford, Dux
6:00pm. He. Sontay Keyortie Lael
ligip mi. dally Limited” Puttee ready ap
Siatp. nm, for au the Bont
{Ong RIVER LIN
420). m. Except Sunday Ne 16, to Woes
Epint, “conomcting’ tor’ Balitinsee “afSadeest
“eraser
dag, Wodnondar and Frise: Wo Point Mon-
Weg, Breer Sunder: No. 14, Local to
vest PERAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND,
[4.35 a i ane 8.15 pm = Fro A ae eect,
Rags Rron Charlotte Dashes, Segth
SAG a. te pros seen ‘tnd local stations,
pasa mn. No ih, Bron Baitinmee maiations.
Poe
& 0. m. Wetneedays and Fridays. No. 9,
IS pte. a. See Fees Weed Baaye QNP.
al a Brecet Sandee
Wi Wierwng DES ‘i
Srios, oP
» [2 QB J) Richmond, Preaere
{i # ,icksburg, and Pote
teen ee
TTT henge thraend —“Northwards
alm dni Here Sh Tae
i Siam bally, Stainse Theme
i 3i8 mc woe dara, Kiba ASbland abeonm
wee BM: daly Byrd st, Throagh.
icone Weck days. Etbe. Ashland ao,
"ISAT noome week aaj rd et Thy
atid. My trtakdaya: Byet ah. Wanineen
SEG R Bettiay ooly.. Rit. Washington
ie ‘ee Wek Una, Bib. Aablawa soeorms
CG 0 to. datty, Mate we. Throgs.
8:20». ta..deily, urna si. Three.
Trains Attive [onmond neater,
6:3) sta, Week days: Hibe Aeblowe seoom
1 "fad acm. Dally, Bre streot, Tareagh,
S33. i Wook days, pra Be Waetingtom
Lisa amc enday only. iba. Wankingion
10/428 ts Weakdays, Kile Astiland accom,
"HE. wo, dally Mais wt. Through,
28 pin Dally, Byrd ctrect Tattseh,
SINR week’ diye. Biba Ashiane’ aneom
nya Daly, ere 8, Thom
222 bts ales igre be Ree. sont
sym,
TS p.m. dally, Stain a,
OTK Pritam thawing oF Peete Pees os
sil above trains sxcepe local neem molatiode,
Time’ Gf srrtvais and departures ena ton
Se Te TM WCOLS, WikieKrenk
Geol Bup't Traf. Mer.
Ge SCENIC ROUTE
un) TO THE WEST
CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS, BT.
Louis CHICAGO, LOUISVILLE,
NASHVILLE, MEMPHIS, 2:16 pn
WESTBOUND LOCAL ‘RAINS.
7:30 a.m, daily and 6:15 Dp. ™. week
days.
NEWPORT NEwWs, NORFOLK AND
OLD POINT.
9 a m. and $ p.m. dally.
Local For Newport News and
cece ee taraes
JAMES RIVER LINE:
are at SE dal |
ew aM. ab PM ras bh. M Prom,
Bast: 010 0b AM. °11:6 a. Me, oP 200, PM.
poe RA, James River: Sera) AMS gas
: M. Dally; "Bx, Sunday)
ee
QO" vominion
None, SGEAM SHUR,
NIGHT EIN} ‘Ne 0.
ERAN eT STUN, tot
own ‘on route. ‘Fare, 44) ae nene™ foes,
Sea tet ae Rees Weert
genes Re Sc
yin Night tees es TO aaa,
Bip eAowtngtict se evtln ty Male ke
Wettern ity OL. Mand SPM eee ae
feahng ie a, SLA, aoa oP
Socket stars din once Bao gs
M.''Tickets, 608 I Main Street
VIRGINIA NAVIGATION
COMPANY,
James River Bay Line.
Stcamer Pocahontas lev Monday, We
porgag and Rear at fam. foe Worth
PSciatonath. Old Points Newer Sows oT
tnd ang dames Hever emia Nagel
Beat Old Point for" Waskiagtae Segnee
hd the North State Peers eye
Bight at maderatepris Biectic See, ;
toithe wierd "Pats only apavands ame
Piet preted fopatote nese pine fy
nif otita i Raatore Vinnie and Wu s
olina, IRVIN WEIS IGEN, Gen'l Mgr
B.A. BarborsJrs Seersey:
ee ee
Norfolk and Western R. R.
LEAVE KiCHMOND (DAILY), BYRD
ORROUE Saar,
#:00 a. m. NOREOIN . TArvivse ao
ert gna fms omy os Palntber,
Clb A” Mt CHICAGO EXPRESS Bates Par
ieee Ptinterg tenho
Bullman ‘Siceper ‘Meansts to Gites heen
Blnetield to Clocinnatt aig Rome pes
ile aad Knoxville ts Chattancnas aed Snes
PAE I P.M. Roanoke Express for Farmville
aidtats i Geet, Ln, Arcves
x caus ne
Waverly and Sutfoti. Connects with Sresece
to Beatan, Vrovidence, New York! Rettaness
Soa Weaabingtog
SOc Mesfor Norfolk and ait stations vasa
208A Siw omtaana snows timn, Pun
qua Sleeper Richmond to. Ereegeare ess
Gee oteoee:Ermaerd tothe
. ‘Trains arrives from the west 1-55 a. =..2.05
oe eae eaten tara hoe
Ws sevine et Maaucee
Hoe Pat ase Bit ROMER,
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
EFFECTIVE MAY 77H
Trains leave Richmaod daily
For Moride nnd tows: Sua. M., 7.25 and
For Norfolk, 60 a. Ms dio, i? SB
a Pe
Tor N-'& W. By. West, 12:10 and 0.30
pi
For Petersburg, 9-0 A. M., 12:10, 820, 6:20
obo and 1130 8
Vor Goldsboro and, Payettevtile,°$:68 P. 34
Trains arrive Wichweee Sait. ¢4, Toss
$°10.45 and 11.40 A. M., °1.00, 2.06, 6.30, 8.60 and
cee Me
*igecopt Sunday, * Sunday only
Cc. S. CAMPBRY ©"). P, A
Rate cae, ca
——THE—~-
Custalo House,
702 East Broad Street.
is Having a my me and hav-
fovverve'iay frieeke ond thr peuiie cs
the same old stand.
CROICE WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS.
First Crass Restaurant,
(OM MEALS AT ALL HOURS, “SQ
New "Phone 1261,
WM. CUSTALO, - Prop.
Beeline Sate
—Bring or send we yom JOB
WORK; ~~ 2 ae ‘aiealy. We
jqutekiy. as — “ite :
EIGHT
THE PLANET
THE COWPEA.
Glives Heavy Yield of Fine Hay for Stock Feeding.
No field crop is increasing in popularity so fast in this locality as the cowpea, writes an Indiana correspondent of Orange Judd Farmer. This is on account of its profitableness in mixed farming and stock feeding, as well as in the fact that it is an excellent substitute for clover. Of late years, clover has not been as sure a crop as it was formerly. It is a difficult matter to secure a good stand. Even when a stand is secured, there is some sort of blight or insect pest that destroys the crop and this interferes with the farm rotation.
The increasing popularity of the cowpea is due to the fact that it gives a heavy yield of the very finest hay for stock feeding that can be produced upon the farm and at the same time is a soil renovator. It is grown very cheaply in a cowpea, wheat, grass and corn rotation. One good breaking of the land in spring is sufficient not only for the pea crop, but also for the wheat that should follow it. After the pea crop is exhausted the ground is loose and the only preparation necessary for wheat is to disk and drag down, this giving a perfect seedbed and splendid conditions to insure a paying crop of wheat.
The hay is relished by all kinds of farm stock, including swine and poultry, and comes nearer being a complete ration than any other crop that can be raised on the farm. One thing I notice is that the farmer who gives it a test is sure to adopt it somewhere in his regular rotation. It is a crop that has come to stay in this part of the country.
There is no hurry about starting the crop in spring. Land should be deeply and thoroughly plowed and worked down. Some time the latter part of May or first of June the seed is sown, about a bushel and a peck to the acre. It may be sown broadcast or with the drill. From 100 to 200 pounds of good fertilizer should be used per acre.
The time to harvest comes along the latter part of the summer when conditions are usually perfect for hay-making. The peas are cut when the seed pods are hard, if both hay and grain are desirable. If for hay alone, cut a week sooner. A rain will not injure the hay as it does clover. After it is cut, allow it to remain in the swath until cured and then move away. A longer time is required for curing properly than for clover hay, but it is much more valuable. It is almost indispensable in the dairy, and will reduce the expense of bran buying to the minimum. Some persons advise the sowing of oats with peas to hold them up, but this is not necessary or satisfactory.
It will pay to grow peas for pasture, for they come in when in the grasses fall, either on account of drought or overstocking. Those who have never given cowpeas a trial should give them a test this season and be convinced of the profitableness of the crop.
USING THREE HORSES
How It Can Be Done by Use of an Offset Iron.
When three horses are used for heavy hauling, a double tongue is sometimes used. But for farm work, an offset iron may be put on the tongue of the wagon or almost any farm implement. The offset should be made of iron, two inches wide. The draw-hole in it should be ten or 12
```markdown
```
The Offset on Wagon Pole
inches from the tongue as shown in the cut. It is easily and cheaply made, says Farm and Home, and very quickly put on or taken off when one wants to change from two to three horses or back again.
FARM GLEANINGS
One thing we have always noticed:
A good corn year nearly always has a dry spring for a starter.
There is no great loss without some small gain. If it is too cold for crops to do well we can console ourselves by thinking that the weeds are getting a set-back, too.
In a dry time it is always a good plan to get the seed down on solid ground. Planted in the loose ground left by the sub-soller, it is apt to dry out if the weather continues dry. If the planter puts it down to the bottom it is pretty certain to come.
There is one thing becoming more certain every day. It is: A cow can no longer be kept at a profit when all she brings in is a calf each year. The price of stock cattle late years, together with the high price of land, is fast settling that question.
If hogs are kept in a dry pen they
are either kept at a loss or else the bill for shorts is a big one. Shorts at $20 per ton are high in price compared with corn, but they must be fed in a dry pen or the hogs will be at a standstill. Corn alone will stunt any growing pig.
IF A MAN WOULD SUCCEED.
He must not live on past successes.
He must not mistake egotism for originality.
He must be able to forget himself in his work.
He must ever set himself more difficult undertakings.
He must understand that every business has its trials.
He must study situations as they present themselves.
He must be more willing to grant favors than to ask for them.
He must know that struggle is the most valuable part of success.
He must know that the most fortunate of men have their trials.
He must learn to solve difficult problems quickly and still cautiously.
He must know that his two hands have been given him so that he may work.
He must learn that most things gained in a hurry are not worth the having.
He must be able to distinguish between a partial success and a total failure.
He must know most men suffer many a defeat before earning a single success.
He must not change his employment every week in the hope of finding something better.
He must know that the most golden opportunities are close at hand if he will study them.
JUST THOUGHTS.
The path of duty leads to happiness.
Fortune tellers are fortune swellers—for themselves.
Many a man takes a better half in a half-hearted manner.
Courtship is the juicy grape and marriage the appendicitis.
Judge no man's sincerity by what he says, but by what he doesn't.
Present a small boy with a watch and he'll have the time of his life.
Hot air is the motive power that operates the human talking machine.
Many a man becomes a jailbird through his strenuous efforts to feather his nest.
When a man is looking for trouble few of his friends are too busy to assist in the search.
And the mining prospectus gets the coin while the hard-luck story is bumping the bumps.
Did you ever notice how few people there are present when anyone happens to say nice things about you?
A successful financier is a man who can separate other men from their money without the aid of a sandbag.
MAXIMS FROM MEXICO
There's no gain without pain.
To the hungry no bread is dry.
He who has little has little to fear.
Flies cannot enter a closed mouth.
It is good fishing in troubled waters.
No evil will endure a hundred years.
A cat in gloves will never catch rats.
A book that is shut makes no scholar.
A frugal rich father and a spend-thrift son.
If the plll were not bitter it would not be gilt.
When the river is passed the saint is forgotten.
No word is ill spoken if it is not ill understood.
A tongue may inflict a deeper wound than a sword.
MERE OPINION
Man learns to talk. Woman talks by instinct.
Man boasts of his experience. Woman is proud of her lack of it.
To a man wealth means power; to a woman the joy of being envied.
A man with a future and a woman with a past can generally be sure that they are being talked about.
The woman who fondles a dog to make a man jealous generally succeeds in filling him with disgust.
If it were considered fitting that wives should be older than their husbands marriage would become obsolete.
Don't pawn your gun to buy ammunition.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
MILLER'S HOTEL
W.M.MILLER.
PROPRIETOR
WITHIN
ONE BLOCK OF
STREET CAR LINES
THAT TAKE YOU
TO ALL
PARTS OF THE
CITY
TERMS
REASONABLE
SECOND AND LEIGH STS.
RICHMOND, VA.
A warm friend is the kind to freeze
on to.
Blacksmiths are not the only men
who have their vices.
Fate is the scapegoat on which we
blame our shortcomings.
A fellow can't do two things well if being in love is one of them.
A woman can make it hot for a man without being the sunshine of his life.
It doesn't require a college education to make fools of some young men.
Most fathers try to bring up their children in the way they should have gone.
There are lots of good points about a man we never suspect till we read his obituary.
Faint heart ne'er won fair lady, but for that matter neither does a faint bank account.
We are told we shall be made perfect in heaven. Wonder if we shall meet our veriform appendixes there?
THE BEATITUDES ACCORDING TO FORTUNA.
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for they are easily fleeced.
Blessed are the unscrupulous, for they do inherit the earth.
Blessed are the war-makers, for they are honored of men.
Blessed are the merciless, for they are the rulers of the world.
Blessed are the corrupt in heart, for sinecures are given unto them.
Blessed are they that do hunger and thirst after boodle, for they shall be filled.
Blessed are they that mourn, for they are relieved of the burden of inherited riches.
Blessed hot are they who are persecuted for money's sake, for theirs is the kingdom of hell.
Blessed are ye, lords of fortune, when men shall flatter and prostrate themselves before you, and shall say all manner of compliments to you falsely, for sake of office.
Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is the reward of villainy; and so were honored the villains which were before you.—William Restelle in Life.
SPINSTER'S THOUGHTS.
Love is that thing which makes you believe what you know is not true.
A remembered kiss is like an exclamation point in the mental landscape.
It is fearfully discouraging when we are good to find how monotonous and lonely life is.
When a man is willing to go to church with a girl he is terribly fond of her, for the time being.
There is at least this one good point about being married—that, while you are, you cannot be so foolish again.
One of the queerest things about a man is the way he thinks that the woman who loves him should adore his faults.
Strange that even when a man is married and has freckles on his face or is bald, that he still thinks girls should like him.
VIRGINIA—In the Circuit Court of the County of Henrico, the 29th day of May, 1907.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce, a vinculo matrimonii by the plaintiff from the defendant And affidavit having been made an filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that he appear here within fifteen days after due publication here of and do whatever may be proper to protect his interests herein.
Teste—Samuel P. Waddill, Clerk N. J. Lewis, pq.
To Isham Barnes:
Take notice that I shall on the 8th day of July, 1907, at the offices of N. J. Lewis, No. 2118 E. Main St. Richmond, Va., between the hours of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M., on that pro-
ceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read in evidence in my behalf, in a certain court depending in the Circuit Court for the County of Henrico wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and, if from any cause, the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if commenced, be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours, until the same shall be completed.
N. J. Lewis, pq.
VIRGINIA—In the Office of the Circuit Court of the County of Hencico, the fifth day of June, 1907.
IN CHANCERY.
Plaintiff
Junius Russ.
Junius Russ, Defendant.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce, a vinculo matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant. And addifavit having been made and filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the State of Virginia; it is ordered that he appear here within fifteen days after due publication of this order and do whatever may be proper to protect his interest herein.
Teste—Sam'l. P. Waddill. Clerk
Teste—Sam'l. P. Waddill, Clerk
N. J. Lewis, pq.
To Junius Russ:
Take notice that I shall on the 16th day of July, 1907 at the offices of N. J. Lewis, 2118 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. between the hours of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M. on that, proceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read in evidence in my behalf, in a certain suit depending in the Circuit Court for the County of Henrico wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff and if from any cause, the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if commenced, be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours, until the same shall be completed.
Very respectfully,
Mattie Russ,
By Counsel.
N. J. Lewis, pq.
VIRGINIA—In the Office of the Circuit Court of the County of Henrico, the fifth day of June, 1907.
IN CHANCERY
Philip Mills. Defendant.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce, a vinculo matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant.
And affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the State of Virginia; it is ordered that he appear here within fifteen days after due publication hereof and do whatever may be proper to protect his interest herein.
Teste—Saml. P. Waddill, Clerk
N. J. Lewis, pq.
To Philip Mills:
Take notice that I shall on the
16th day of July, 1907 at the offices
of N. J. Lewis, 2118 E. Main Street,
Richmond, Va. between the hours
of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M. on that, pro-
ceed to take the depositions of wit-
nesses to be read in evidence in my
behalf, in a certain suit depending
in the Circuit Court for the County
Henrico wherein you are defen-
dant and I am plaintiff and if from
any cause, the taking of the said
depositions be not commenced on
that day, or if commenced, be not
concluded on that day, the taking
of the same will be adjourned and
continued from day to day, or from
time to time, at the same place and
between the same hours, until the
same shall be completed.
Very respectfully,
Lillie Mills.
By Counsel.
N. J. Lewis, pq.
VIRGINIA—In the Law and Equity
Court of the City of Richmond,
the 4th day of June, 1907.
IN CHANCERY
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce, a vinculo matrimonil by the plaintiff from the defendant. And affidavit been made and filed that the defendant is under ten sence of confinement in the Virginia State Penitentiary; it is ordered that he appear h re within fifteen days after due publication hereof and do whatever may be necessary to protect his interests herein.
A copy—Teste: P. P. Winston, Clerk.
N. J. Lewis, pq.
To Pleasants McCaw, JR.:
Take notice that I shall on the 22d day of July, 1907 at the offices of N. J. Lewis, 2118 E. Main St., Rica-
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mond, Va. between the hours of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M. on that, proceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read in evidence in my behalf, in a certain suit depending in the Law and Equity Court for the City of Richmond wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if from any cause, the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if commenced, be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours, until the same shall be completed.
Very respectfully,
Laura McCaw,
By Counsel
N. J. Lewis, pq.
VIRGINIA—In the Law and Equit. Court of the City of Richmond the 29th day of May, 1907.
Victoria Maner, Plaintiff vs Frederick Maner, Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant And affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the state of Virginia, it is ordered that he appear here within fifteen days after due publication of this order and do whatever may be necessary to protect his interests herein.
Take notice that I shall on the 8th day of July, 1907, at the offices of N. J. Lewis, No. 2118 E. Main St. Richmcd, Va., between the hours of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M., on that, proceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read in evidence in my behalf, in a certain suit depending in the Law and Equity Court for the City of Richmond wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and, if from any cause, the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if commenced, be not conclude on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours, until the same shall be completed.
Very respectfully,
VICTORIA MANER,
By Counsel.
N. J. Lewis, pq.
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