Richmond Planet
Saturday, January 2, 1909
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
A SOUTHERN NEGRO IS HEAVY= WEIGHT CHAMPION OF WORLD.
JEFFRIES SAYS HE WOULD NOT FIGHT HIM FOR ONE MILLION DOLLARS.
RICHM
VOLUME XXVI. NO. 5.
A SOU
Jack Joh
Graphic
No
JE
Sydney, N. S. W., Dec. 26.—Jack Johnson, the American Negro, won the heavyweight championship of the world here this morning in the fourteenth round. He had Torumy Burns, of Canada, the title holder in such a condition that the police ordered the fight stopped, whereupon Referee Hugh D. McIntosh awarded his decision to Johnson amid a wild scene.
Johnson outclassed Burns in practically every respect. He was faster in attack and defense, delivered the more accurate and powerful blows, and gradually wore the white man down. Burns was the aggressor at the outset and indulged in hard rushing, the idea being to land a knockout blow in a rough mix-up. The Negro was so shifty on his feet that it was a difficult matter for Burns to reach a vital spot, so that he soon discovered that he was up against a most puzzling proposition.
JOHNSON'S AIM GOOD
When Johnson cut loose he generally landed. His left hand was used with telling effect, as Burns was repeatedly jolted and jarred with it. Johnson worked the left on the white man's head and stomach, and saved the right for a critical moment. In generalship Johnson was the master. He was cool headed and never lost a trick. He followed Sam Fitzpatrick's instructions to the letter, and as the battle progressed in his favor the Negro's confidence increased until it was a foregone conclusion that he would win.
At times the slugging by both men was terrific. Blood was drawn by each fighter and as the battle raged 25,000 spectators went mad. When the end came Burns looked as if he might be stopped at any moment. Johnson was panching him all over the ring when the police broke up the mill. The referee had no alternative but to declare Johnson the winner, and the verdict appeared to meet with general approval.
GREETED WITH CHEERS
At 10:42 o'clock Johnson entered the arena, accompanied by his seconds, Sam Fitzpatrick, Mullins, Unholz, Lang and Bryant. Wild cheers greeted him and the big black man turned and bowed to all four sides of the ring. Just as Johnson took his seat Burns appeared. He was smiling and the plaudits of the spectators were even more enthusiastic than those accorded Johnson. Burns took up his position in the western corner of the ring, surrounded by his seconds, Keating, O'Keefe, O'Donnell, Burke, and Russel. When the cheering had died down somewhat Johnson crossed over and shook Burns by the hand. The Canadian glanced at the big maulers of the Texan and noticed that both were covered with bandages. Fearing that perhaps they might not be of the soft, surgical kind, he scrutinized them closely, but finding them to his satisfaction, he made no objection.
The announcement was made that if during the contest the police should interfere and stop it, the referee would immediately give a decision based on points scored.
When Burns stripped it was noticed that he wore elastic bandages about his elbows. Johnson shouted across the ring, half angrily, "You must take those off." Then the men met in the center of the ring, and for a few minutes argued the question. Then they retired again to their corners, but Burns did not remove the bandages.
TOOK OFF TAPE
From Johnson's seconds came the announcement that their man refused to fight unless Burns took off the wraps around his elbows, and it lookek as though there was a possibility of the fight not taking place, for Burns was stubborn and Johnson in-
slisted on his point. The referee, however, here took a hand in the controversy and said that the wearing of bandages was not against the rules. Johnson still demurred, nevertheless, and Burns, with a show of impatience, bad his seconds unwind the tape. His action brought forth from the spectators a tremendous round of applause.
At 11:15 o'clock Johnson and Burns posed for a moving picture machine, and, having received final instructions from Referee McIntosh, retired to their corners. Then the battle began.
After a few minutes of preliminary sparring in the first round Johnson reached Burns with a sharp uppercut and the Canadian went to the floor, remaining there for the count of eight. He signalled to his seconds that he was all right, however, and when he arose he sailed in for Johnson's body. Johnson swung a hard right to the head and Burns staggered backward nearly across the ring from the impact of the blow. Then Burns, rushing in, planted a right of great force on Johnson's chin, and by an excellent display of boxing warded off a return. Johnson, nevertheless, managed to put through a stinging left to the head at the sound of the gong.
BURNS DOWN AGAIN.
When the gong changed for the second round Johnson yelled across to the approaching Burns, "Come right on," and he swung his right and land ed on Burns' chin. The champion's ankle gave way under him and he went down. He was up immediately, however, and Johnson got to close quarters with him and placed his right and left to face and body. Burns' left eye here commenced to swell. Johnson thus far had the bet- (Continued on Eighth Page.)
Fifth Street Baptist Sunday School Rendered the Beautiful Cantata "Santa Claus Headquarters."
A large gathering turned out on last Tuesday night to witness the cantata, "Santa Claus Headquarters." The church was packed from pulpit to door. Admission fee was either an Irish or sweet potato. More than one barrel and a half were collected for the poor of the church. Presents were numerous.
The children well performed their parts and much credit is due the committee consisting of Mrs. Josie A. Graham, Mr. R. H. Fauntleroy, Misses Jennie Wood, Annie Morris, Virginia Taylor, Messrs. N. G. Booker and B. H. Peyton. The pastor and all the people present expressed them selves that this was one of the best Cantatas in the history of the school.
A Brilliant Morning Marriage
On last Tuesday morning, December 29, 1908 the home of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Jones, 200 W. 21st St. Manchester, Va. was the scene of a beautiful wedding. Promptly at 11 o'clock the strains of Mendlessohn Wedding March, played by the accomplished Miss Alberta Jenkins, rent the air, which announced the coming of the contracting parties, Miss Maud E. Hickmon and Mr. David Lee.
The groom entered with Mr. Ernest Eggleston and then the bride, leaning on the arm of Mr. Hezekiah Jones. The scene was a brilliant affair. Dr. A. Binga performed the ceremony in his usual solemn manner.
Refreshments were served and the happy couple left for Lancaster Co. Va., their future home amid congratulations of the many visitors.
The presents were numerous and costly.
May they live a long and happy life. COG
SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1909. PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
JACK JOHNSON,
THE HEAVY-WEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE WORLD.
No fighting like Johnson's was ever seen here since Australia was shoved up above the waters. Australians understand now why Fitsimmons could not stand up for TWO ROUNDS before the black man.
Johnson grinned and yelled to Burns across the ring, "Come right on!" Burns did not repeat his headlong rush. As they came slowly together Johnson made a quick feint, and his right flicked out to Burn's chin again. A wild yell went up as the champion went down. This time he did not wait for the count, but was up again and into it. Johnson leaped at him, and in a second had driven half a dozen blows to body and face. Burns staggered back and doubled up as he got a fearful left hook in the stomach. Burns was forced backward all through the round, and as he walked to his corner blood trickled from his mouth, and there was a swelling over one eye.—[NEW YORK AMERICAN, Dec. 27, 1908.]
Fifth St. Church and Its Pastor.
It seems that the Fifth Street Baptist Church is sparing no pains to assure Dr. W. F. Graham of their determination to encourage and support him in his pastoral labors. Last Sunda, was the closing communion day of the year and great crowds thronged from every direction to enjoy the happy occasion. The pastor preached of a large congregation at the morning service from the subject: "The world's Christmas Gift." The choir under the masterly leadership of Prof. McCoy rendered choice selections of music to the satisfaction of all present.
On last Monday night at about 9:30 a large number of members representing the various clubs of the church called at the home of the pastor and presented him with a very valuable purse of money. Prof. B. H. Peyton was president of the gathering and made a very fine address in honor of the pastor's services. He was followed by Mrs. Martha Ann Seay, Miss Alice Robinson, Rev. Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Madolin Moss Deacon Edward Coleman and Deacon James Page, all of whom made happy speeches.
The following are the names of those who helped to make up the purse: Ladies: Elizabeth Jackson, Alice Robinson, Mary Richardson, Nellie King, Mary Anderson, Caroline Roane, Sarah Peterson, Callie Brown, Ella Hill, Georgie Williams, Rachel Williams, Jane James, Mary Mayo, Elmora Thomas, Mary Traylor, Sister Frend, Josephine Baker, Mary Hamm Sallie Lewis, Ann Jones, Caroline Clements, Jennie Cheatham, Blanche Bullock, Jane Jones, Sophia Nicholas, Martha Cooper, Sarah Powell, Emma Christian, Emma Spurlock, Henrietta Brown, Mary Scott, Jeanette Mitchell, Julia Alston Mary Brown, Mary Page, Ella Johnson, Martha Scruggs, Florence Scruggs, Bell Gray, Martha Seay, Bettie Tribute, Virginia Anderson, Nellie Hern, Mollie Lowis, Martha Nubell, Martha Redd, Madolin Moss, Annie M. Coleman, Mildred Matthews, Emma Jones, Jennie Wood, Rebecca Brasenton, Mary Wood, Cora Sheppard, Bertha Lee, Goldie Lee, Mrs. Turner, Lillie Hardy, Annie Ware, Addie Lemas, Jemina Moss, Jane Reed, Alice Pearson
Gentlemen: B. H. Peyton, James Page, John Mitchell, Jr., E. T. Coleman Samuel Brown, Nat Pearson, Powhatan Baker, George Lee, J. A. Moss, Robert W. Moss, A. Randolph, John W. Howard, Obediah Ware, Edward Brown, James West, John Beard, Maurice Epps Robert Winston, John R Holmes, C. K Royster, Roscoe C. Mitchell, W. W. Page, James E. Sheppard John Dance, A. J. Taylor, C. E. W. Simms, James E Shells, Jackson Nicholas, John H. Smith, Frank Redd, Henry White, Robert Cox, Walker Gray, Levi Scott, D Wade Johnson.
Thus did the members of the great Fifth Street Baptist Church for their pastor on last Monday night. Mrs. W. F. Graham and the children are happy. The pastor is holding his head high and declares that he feels stronger for preaching the gospel.
Tomorrow Dr. Graham will preach from the subject, "What are you going to do this year?" He is an anxious that all business men, professional men, men of trades and all pursuits of life be present, as he thinks he has a message for them. The choir will render special music. The Deacons desire all the members to re-register, so that the church may know its proper membership.
Rev. Archer Ferguson Dead
Rev. Archer Ferguson, former pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church died suddenly last Wednesday morning at his home in Fulton. He had been complaining for some time. Rev. Ferguson was one of the best
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
ORLD. y Burns Comers. m ARS.
known ministers in this city, being presiding officer of the Minister's Conference. His wife died only a few months ago.
PERSONALS AND BRIEFS
—Miss Elizabeth C. Dixon, who is a student at the Hampton N. and A. Institute called on us in company with Miss Cora L. Bright.
—Mrs. W. C. Scott who is attending Ingleside Academy at Burkeville is in the city for the holidays.
—Mrs. Thomas L. Anderson of Shelton, Conn, and Mrs. C. J. Coleman of Ansonia, Conn, called on us.
—Miss Carsie D. Isham spent the holidays in this city. She called on us in company with Mr. W. C. Hemmings of Dillwyn, Va.
—Rev. Oscar H. Massey, of Monrovia, Liberia, West Coast of Africa called on us. He gave an extended account of conditions in Liberia and seemed somewhat fearful less the Republic lose its independence.
—Miss Mattle L. Maultisby of Winston, N. C. called on us.
—Mrs. Ida B. Anderson, Shelton, Conn, and Mrs. C. J. Coleman, Ansonia, Conn, called on us.
—Rev. H. Paul Leak is in the city in the interest of the Royal Order of Joseph.
—Rev. Thomas Knight of Richmond has been called to the pastorate of St. John Baptist Church at Grove, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Cogbill of Charlottesville, Va. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Cogbill of Manchester, Va. this week.
Mrs. Fannie J. Chiles, wife of Lawyer J. Alex. Chiles of Lexington, Ky. is spending some time with his sister, Miss M. L. Chiles helping to care for her sick uncle, Mr. John Morton at 114 W. Leigh St.
Mrs. J. A. Moss of 419 W. Duval Street, who has been very sick for five weeks is much better and hopes to be out soon. She thanks her many friends for their kindness and presents sent during the holidays
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
A New Lodge in Halifax County.
Vernon-hill, Va., Dec. 23, 1908.
Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., accompanied by Grand Medical Register E. R. Jefferson, Grand Master at Arms J. Alexander Lewis, District Deputy Grand Chancellor S. S. Baker arrived here yesterday in a driving rain and snow-storm and instituted Vernon-hill Lodge, No. 153 with the following officers:
Chancellor Commander, Sydnor Hankins; Vice Chancellor, Embra Clark; Prelate, Ed Hankins; Master of Work, Jesse Vaden; Keeper of Records and Seal Letcher Davis; Master of Finance, Elisha Williams; Master of Exchequer, Nat Williams; Master at Arms, Mitchell Hankins; Inner Guard, Anthony Vaden; Outer Guard, C. S. Powell; Trustees, Armistead Williams, Littleton Stith. Howd Mills. The initiation was a success despite the severe weather.
Grand Chancellor Mitchell and Dr. Jefferson walked about a mile through the snow to their stopping place and Dr. J. Alexander Lewis and Sir S. S. Baker walked about three miles. They were no worse for wear the next morning however, although Dr. Jefferson complained of feeling a little stiff. They left this morning for Richmond. Grand Chancellor Mitchell spent the day however at Elmo.
This lodge was organized through the efforts of Sir M. D. Logan of Sinal, Va., assisted by Sir A. B. Betts, District Deputy Grand Chancellor
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1 (Cae |
< Satan * Se
| Sanderson (==!
.
“Who's Who” In the Story.
“BATAN” SANDERSON, the
bero, dere-deril. gulzotic friend apd
parte gpg aan
HUGH STIRES, prodigal and
crimisal
JESSICA HOLME, the beautiful
ies uipiees tas teen ot
ieteuts aad ton pelle cational
Sane eines Gooey
MRS. HALLORAN, the camp
ote
DAVID STIKES, stern, yet for-
firing: and at the tant made baogy
by another's unhappiness
THE BISHOP, the victim of a
misunderstaoding
HALLELUJAH JONES, the re
Mgtous favatic on whose shoulders
Pesta nar SNE ala te of Cn SOR
EMMET PRENDERGAST, the
false friend. perjurer and thief.
THE SHERIFF, who is very
Sch airticd tatwone auc andts
Stones,
“BIG” DEVLIN, who turns
hampton Instead of prosecutor aft
er the hero’s race with death.
Chapter |
B
}O my eon Hugh. tn re
turn for the care and
sorrow he has caused me
all the days of his lie,
for bis dissolute career
and his desertion, I do
give and bequeath the sum of $1,000
and the memory of ‘his misspent
youth.”
It was very quiet In the wide, richly
furnished Mbrary. The May night was
stil, but x falnt suspiration heavy
with the fragrance of Jasmine flowers
stirred the Venetian blind before the
open window and rustied the moon
Bilvered leaves of the aspens out-Nie
As the Incisive professional pronounce
ment of the judge cut through the st
lence the grin face on the pillow of
the wheel chalr set more grimly. a
girl seated in the sliadow of the fre
wcreen cangbt her breath, and tro
across the table the Rev. Henry Sar
@erson turned bis handsome, lv
@haven face and looked at the wid ma
‘A peevish misogynist the netghbo:
hoot Inbeled the latter, with the par
chapel for hobby aud for thorn-tn-th:
Mesh this only son Hugh, a black shee
‘whose open breaches of decorum t
town bad borne as best It micht t
the trad'tlon of ls forbears took bir
off to an eastern university A re:
less life there and three wastrel years
abroad had sent him back to resume
Bis peccadiioes on a iarger scale.
quarrel bitterly with his father and t
aeave his home tn anger
“Wait.” came the querulous votce
from the chair “Write In ‘graceless
Before the won! ‘desertion. *
“For his dissolute career and his
faceless desertion,” repeated the law
rik Wis Zz
Ae eS
JZ ee
The parchment crackling under his pon
Jer, the parchment crackling ander his
pen
Judge Conwell glanced curiously at
Harry Sanderson as be blotted the
emendation He knew the liking of
the cross grained and taciturn old in
valid, St. James’ fichest parishioner
for this young man of twenty-five who
had come to the parish only two
months before, fresh from his theo
logical studies, to fill a place tempo
rarily vacant and had stayed by sheer
force of personality. He wondered if
aside from natural magnetic qualities
this Itking had not been due first of
all to the curious resemblance between
the young minister and the absent son
whom David Stires was disinheriting
for as far as mold of feature went the
young minister and the ne'er-do-well
might have been twin brothers.
No one perhaps had ever interested
the community more than had Harry
anderson. He had entered apon ht:
Guties with the marks of youth, good
looks, self possession and an ample in.
‘come thick upon him and had brought
‘with bim « peculiar charm of manner
and an apparent ineapacity for doing
‘things in a hackneyed way. Conveo-
tion sat lghtly upon Harry Sanderson
He recognized few precedents either
in the new methods and millinery with
which be had invested the service or
Dis personal habits. Instend of at.
tending the meeting of St. Andrew's
guild, after the constant custom of
Bais predecessor he was apt to be found
laying bis violin (a passion with
him) in the smart stody that adjotnes
te gothic chapel where he shepherded
his fashionable flock or tramping across
the country with a brier pipe tn his
month and his brown spaniel. Ramm
Rosing at his heels His athletic frame
nnd clean chiseled features made him
& rare figure for the reading desk. ar
his violin practice. the cut of his gol
flannels the immaculate elegance of
bis motor car, even the white carna
Uon be affected in his buttonhole,
made him for the younger men a good.
ly pattern of the cloth and it had
speedily grown to be the fashion to
hear the brilliant young minister,
Something of all this was tn the Inw.
Jer’s mind as he paused—a perfunctory
pause—before he continned
“I do give and bequeath the sum of
$1,000 and the memory of his misspent
yeath”
Harry Sanderson's eyes bad wan
dered from the chair to the slim fig
ure of the girl who sat by the screen
This was Jessica Holme, the orphaned
daughter of a friend of the old man's
early Fears, who hed recently come to
the house tn the agpens to All the void
left by Hugh's departure. Harry coulit
see the contour of throat and wrists,
the wild rose mesh of the skin agains!
the Romney blue gown, the plenteous
red bronze hair uncolled and falling tn
8 single braid and the shadowy pathos
of her eyes. Clear hazel eyes they
were, wide and full. but there was in
them no depth of expression, for Jes
sica Holme was blind. As the crisp,
dellberate accent pointed the judicial
period as with a subterranean echo of
irrefutable condemnation Harry saw
ber under itp tndrawn, her hands clasp
ghtly, then anciasp to ber lap Plant.
graceful bands, he thought, which even
blindness could not make maladroit
) “Go on.” rasped the okt man
“The residue of my estate, real and
personal. I do give and bequeath to
my ward. Jessica Hoime”—
He broke off suddenly, for the iri
was kneeling by the chalr groping for
the restless hand that wandered on the
afghan and crying in a strained, agi
tated voice: “No—no—rou must not
He is your son!”
“In the eyes of the law, yes. But
not otherwise!” His voice rose. “What
has he done to deserve anything from
me? What has he bad all bie life tut
Kindness? And how has he repald it?
Ry being a waster and a prodigal. By
setting me tn contempt and finally by
forsaking me in my old age for bis
own paths of rtbaldry.”
The girl shook her head. “You don’t
know where he Is now ot what be Is
doing. Ob, he was wild and reckless, t
have no doubt, but when he quarreled
and left you wasn’t it perhaps because
he wes too quick tempered? And f he
hasn't come back Isn't {t perhaps be
cause he ls too proud?
“Jessica, I've not forgiven bim seven
times. I've forgiven him seventy. times
seven, But he doesn't want forgive
ness. To him Iam only ‘the old man
who refured to ‘put up’ longer for his
fopperies and extravagances! When be
left this house six months ago he de
clared he would never enter it again
Very well: let him stay away! He
shan't come back when 1 am in my
grave to pity ducks and drakes with
the money he misuses! And I've fixed
it so that you won't be able to give it
away either, Jessica.”
The girl, still kneeling, turned brif
about with a hopeless gesture. “Oh.
won't you help me?" ehe said She
spoke more to herself, t seemed. than
to either of the men who waited
“Sanderson,” said the old man with
bitter flerceness, Ufting his hand. “I
dare say you think Tam hard, but
tell you there has never been a day
since Hugh was born when I wouldn't
have Iaid down my life for him! You
are so like! When | look at you I seem
to see him as he might have been but
for bis own wayward choice’ If he
Were only as like you In other things
as he is in feature! You are early the
same age. You went to the same col
lege, I believe You have had the same
advantages and the same temptations.
Yet you, an orphan, come ont a divini
ty student, and Hugh—my son!—comes:
out # rotsterer with gembling debts, a
member of the ‘fast set.’ one of a disso
lute fraternity known as “The Saints,
whose very existence, no doubt. was a
shame to the institution!”
Harry Sanderson turned slowly to
the light. A strange panorama in that
moment had flashed through his brain
~kaleidoscopic pictures of an early
reckless era when he had not been
known as the “Rev. Henry Sanderson.”
“I think 1 ought to say that I was
the founder, and at the time you speak
of, the abbot of The Saints. | was in the
same year with Hugh. We sowed our
Wild oats together, a thay crop, I fancy,
for us both. That page of my life Is
pasted down. I speak of It now be-
cause It would be cowardly not to. I
have not seen Hugh since college
closed four sears ago. But then I was
all you called bim—a waster and a
prodigal. And 1 was more. for while
ethers followed. | let At eallecs ft
—— ee
Fit ts the Heeb Of The present tic
1 am dealing with,” said th ol man
For David Stiree wan Just and he was
feeling a grim respect for Harry's
honesty.
‘larry acknowledged the brusque
kindliness of the tone with a little mo
‘ion of the band. As he spoke be bac
} a feeling bis way through s maze of
contradictory impulses. For a moment
be bad been back in that oid trrespon-
sible time; the Hugh be had known
then had sprung to his mind's eye, ao
imitative idler, with a certain grace
and brilliancy of manner that made
him hall-fellow-well-met, but withal
shallow, foppisb and tncorrigible. 1
cheap and shabby tmitator of the out
ward manner, not the inner graces, of
good fellowship. Yet Hugh had been
one of his own “fast set” They had
called him “Satan's sbadow.” » tribute
to the actual resemblance as well as
to the palpable imitation he affected
Harry shivered « little The situation
Seemed, In antic Irony. to be revers-
ing itself. It was as If aot alone
Hngh, but ne. Harry Sanderson, in the
person of that past of bis, was cow
Drought to bar for Judgment tn that
room. For the Instant he forgot bow
utterly characteriess Hugh had shown
Mimeel? of old, how devold of all de
sire for rehabilitation bis present rep-
utation In the town argued him. At
that moment ft seemed as if in saving
Hugh from this condemnation, be was
Pleading for bimeelf as he bad been,
for the further chance which he, but
for circumstances, perhaps, bad needed
too.
“You.” be said, “have tived a life of
Just and dalaaced action It ts bred
im the bone Youd bate ali loose cov-
duct, and rightly. You bate it most in
Hugh for the simple reason that he ts
your son, The very relation makes it
more impossible to countenance. He
should be like you—of temperate and
Prudent habit’ But did you and he
start on equal terms? Your grand
father was a Standisb: your ancestry
was vrdiluted Puritan. Did Hugh
have ali your fund of resistance? With
me It was the turning of a long lane.
Hugh perhaps has not turned—yet.”
A breath of that past life had swept
anew over Harry, the old shuddering
recofl again had rushed upon him. It
gave his voice a curious energy as he
ended: “And I have seen how far a
man may go and yet—come back!"
There was a pause. The Judge had
an Inspiretion. He folded the parch
ment
“Lerbaps it would be as well," he
said In a matter of fact way, “if the
signing be left open for the present.”
He rose as he spoke and laid the, gor
ument on the table &
For a moment David Stires sat in
silence. Then he said, with a glint of
the old fronte fire: “You should have
been a special pleader, Sanderson
There's no client too bad for them to
make out a case for! Well—well, we
won't sign tonight. 1 will rad It
over again when I am more equal to
te”
For long the old man sat alone, mus
ing in his chair. At length he sighed
@nd took up a magazine. He was
thinking of Harry Sanderson.
“How lke!" he said alond. “So San
derson sowed his wild oats too! * * *
‘When he stood there, with the lightjon
his face—when he talked—I—I could
almost have thought ft was Hugh!”
a
ee fi i —— ae
we oe
24 chapter 272}
jee ee ee
[eBay ARRY SANDERSON ana
\. gate, and Harry walked
tH Slowly home tn ts
PEM moonlight,
(a B24 ARRY SANDERSON ava
"the judge Garted wt ts
. gate, and Harry walked
WBANTIE Siowiy nome” in the
WME cioonlight
4 “The ‘youthful toittes
that he had resurrected when he bad
called bimself hia old wickname of
“gatan Sanderson" be had left so fat
bebind him. ad buried eo deep, thet
the ironic turn of circumstance thet
had Gesgged them into view seemed
Intrasive aod malicious
He bad exved ap old college cate
from possible disinberitance and the
oontstaiscihindeilihsnitetticiaitcsibl
GEORGE O. BROWN,
PHOTOGRAPHER,
608 N, 2nd St., Richmond. Ya
(GOS N, 2nd St., Richmond, Vs
| ine Ph: ‘rus to Lite, High-cley
goss oe erect ievpnotterag
Gitrom Tid neantives or Photoprapas eet
-—
—Subserfbe to The Richriond
PLANET. $1.50 per year.
>
8
a | We
“a #9 We vere
= (y fereieee
Tae a eel te) ica ce a
Sanderson” that curred to him
was, getting hs Did any man
desert. reap what he
sowed. after all? Was he. the “Satan
Sanderson” that was, getting bis de
sorts?
o,) Te) Sabie ie ae ee
‘The inter night was very still, and
the moon, lifting lke a paper iantern
over the aspen tops, ellvered all the
landscape. In its piacid radiance the
white bouse loomed tn a ghostly pallor.
The windows of one side were blank.
but behind the lbrary shade the
bulbous lamp still drowsed like « mon-
ster glowworm From the shadowy
ride of the bullding stretched a narrow
L, it front covered by a rose trellis
whore pale Nossoms in the soft night
air mingled thetr delicate fragrance
with that of the jasmine.
Save for the one bright pane there
seemed now no life or movement in
the house, Bot outside tn the moon-
Ught a larebing. sbabblly clothed fg:
ure moved. making bis uncertain way
with the deliberation of composed to:
ebriety The sash of the window was
raised a few toches, and he nodded
sagely at the yellow shade.
“Gay old silver top.” he bicconghed.
“see sou in the morning!”
He capsized agninst an althes bush
and shook bis head with owlish gravi
ty as he disevtangted himself. Then he
staggered serenely to the rose trellis
and, choosing ttagngle with an assur
ance that betrayed ancient practice.
climbed to the apper window, shot tts
bolt with a knife and let himself tn.
He painstakingly closed both windows
and inner blinds before he turned oa
an clectric Nght.
In the room in which be now stood
he had stored his boyish treasures and
shirked bis maturer tasks !t should
have had deeper human associations,
too, for once, before the house had
been enlarged to its present propor
tons, that chamber had been bis moth
ers, The Marechal Niel rose that clam
bered to the window sill had been
planted by her hand. In that room he
had been born And tn ft bad occurred
that sharp, corrosive quarre! witb bis
father on the night be had Sung htm
self from the house vowing never to
return.
As Huch Stfres stood looking about
tim it seemed for en tastant te bie
clouded senses
that the past six
months of wan-
dering and un
savory adven:
ture were a
dream. There
was his bed.
with its clean
linen sheets and
soft pillows
How he would
like to le down
Just ashe was
and sieep a full
round of the
clock! Lastnight
he had slept—
where bad he
slept?) He had
forgotten for the
moment. He
Hii
Ae i)
AN
ye
|at the spotless coyerlid. No; some one
be seen in bis present condition. It
was scarcely 10. ‘Time enough for that
| afterward
| He drew out the drawer of a chiffo
| nier, opened a closet and gloated over
the order and plenty of their contents.
He made diiicuit selection from these
and, steadying bis progress by wall
and chair, opened the door of an ad
Joining bathroom. It contained a cir
cular bath with a needle shower. With
out removing ais clothing he climbed
into this, balancing himself with an
effort, found and turned the cold fav
cet and let the fey water, chilled from
artesian depths, trickle over him in a
hundred stinging needle points.
It was a very different figure that
re-entered the larger room a balf hour
later from (ne slinking madlark thrt
bad climbed the rose trefiis, The olu
Hugh lay, a beap of soiled and sodden
garments; the new stood forth shav
en, fragrant with fresh linen and clean
and fit appare! The maudlin had van-
ished, the gaze was unvered and
bright. the whole man seemed to have
Settled into himself, co have grown
trim, nonchalant, debonair. He held
ap his hand. palm outward, between
the electric globe and his eye. There
Was not @ tremor of nerve or muscle
He smiled No headache, no fever, no
Uncertain feet or trembling hands or
swollen tongue after more than a
Week of deep potations, He could still
“sober up” as be used to do (with
Blake, the butler, to help him) when
| t bad been a mere matter of an even-
tng’s tipsiness. And how fine it felt to
be decently clad again!
-
| a they were, subtle lines of self in-
dulgence had already set themselves,
and beneath their expression. cavalier
and caressing. lay the unmistakable
stigmata of inherited weakness But
these the gnzer did not see. [He re
garied himself with egotistic compla-
cency. Here be was just as sound as
ever, He had had bis fing and taught
“the governor” :"at he could get along
well evough without any paternal help
If be chose.
He attentively surveyed the room.
It was clean and dusted—evidently tt
had been carefully tended. He might
have stepped out of It yesterday. Not
a thing had beem disturbed —ses, one
thing. His portrait that had hung over
Bis bed was uot tp its place A mo-
mentary sense of trepidation rushed
{throug him Could bis father really
bave meant all he had said in his rage?
Did he really mean to disown him?
| For an instant he faced the hall door
‘with clinched hands Somewhere tn
the house, unconscious of bis presence,
was that ward of whose coming be bad
learned. Moreau was a good friend to
have warned him. Was she part of a
plan of reprisal—her presence there a
tentative threat to him? Could bis ta-
ther mean to adopt ber? Might that
great house. those grounds, the bulk of
his wealth, go to her, aud he, the son,
be left In the cold? He shivered. Per
baps be had stayed away too long!
As he turned again, he heard a sound
tm the hall. He listened. A light step
was approaching—the swish of a gown.
With a sudden impulse he stepped into
the embrasure of the window, as the
| figure of a girl paused at the door. He
felt bis face tush. She had thrown a
crimson kimono over her white night-
gown. and the apparition seemed to
part the dusk of the doorway like the
red breast of a robin. She held in ber
hands a bunch of the pale Marechal
Niel roses, and bis eye caught the long
Febellious sweep of her bronze hair
and the rosy tint of bare feet through
the worsted meshes of her night alip-
pers
To his wonder the sight of te light
@1 room seemed to enuse her no sur
prise. For an instant she stood still as
though Ustening. then entered and
Placed the roses In a vase op a reading
stand by the bedside
Hugh gasped. To reach the stand
the girl had passed the spot where he
Stood. but she bad taken no note of
him. Fler gaze had gone by him as if
he had been empty air. Then he real-
fred the trath; Jessica Holme was
bind! Moreau's letter bad given him
ho Inkling of that So this was the
girl with whom his father now tureat-
ened him! Was she counting on his
not coming hack, waiting for the wind.
fall? She was blind—but she was
beautiful! Suppose he were to turn
the tables on the old man, not only
climb back Into his good graces through
her, but even.
The thin line on his brow s)rnng
suddenly scariet. What a supple
graceful arm she had! How adroit her
|anscee as they arranged the rose
stems! Was he already wholly black
ened in her opinion? What did she
think of him? Why did she bring
those flowers to that empty room?
Could tt have been she who bad kept
itclean and fresh and unaltered agatnst
his return? A confident, daring look
grew iu bis eyes.- He wished she could
see him tn tuat purple tle and velvet
smoking Jacket. What angspportunity
for a romantic self justification’
Should he speak? Suppose it should
frighten bert
Chance answered him. His respira-
tion had conveyed to her the knowl.
edge of @ presence In the room. He
heard her draw a quick breath. “Some
one ts here!" she whispered.
He started forward “Wait, wait!
he said in a loud whisper as she
sprang back. But the voice seersed to
startle her the more, and before be
could reach her side she was gone. He
heard her flying steps descend the stair
and the opening and closing of a door.
‘The sudden flight jarred Flugh’s
pleasurable sense of novelty, He thrust
his hands deep into his pockets. Now
he was in for it! She would alarm the
house, rouse the servants. He should
have a staring domestic audience for
the imminent reconciliation his sobered
sense told him was so necessary.
Shrugging his shoulders, he went
quickly down the stair to the Mbrary
| He bad known exactly what he
Should see there—the vivid girl with
the bue of fright in her cheeks, the
shaded amp, the wheel chair and the
feeble old man with his furrowed face
and gray mustaches. What he himself
should say be had not had time to re
| fleet. 5
| The figure tn’ the chair looked up as
| the door opened. “Hught” be cried
and half lifted himself from his seat.
‘Then he sectied back, and the sunken,
indomitable eyes fasteued themselves
| 00 his son's face.
| Hugh was melodramatic—cheaply 80.
| He saw the girl start at the name, saw
her bands catch at the kimono to draw
Ite folds over the bare white throat,
aw the rich color that flooded ber
brow He saw himself waddenly the
moving hero the stagery, the
tractive force of the situation. Real
?
ae
Bey
i
r MS 7 a
| y \ ‘|
VAR A
of =
outward coisequences he had so dras-
Ucally banished, and partly to sheer
nervous excitation.
“Father!” be said, and came and
caught the gaunt hand that shook
‘against the chalr.
‘Then the deeps of tie old man's
heart were suddenly t-oken up “My
son!" he cried and threw his arms
about him. “Hugh. my boy, my boy!"
Jessica waited to hear no more
Thrilling with gindness and Sushing
with the sudden recollection of her
| bare throat and feet. she slipped away
|to her room to creep Into bed and lie
wide eyed and thinking.
What did he look like? Of his face
she had never seen even # counterfelt
Presentment Through what adven-
tures had he passed? Now that he had
come home, forgiving and forgiven,
would he stay? He bad been in his
room when she entered tt with the
Toses—must have guessed, if he had
not already known, that she was blind.
Would be guess that she bad cared for
that room, had placed fresh fowers
there often and often?
Since she had come to the house in
| the aspens Jessica had found the
imagined figure of Hugh a dominant
Presence tn a horizon lightened with
& throng of new tmpressions, The
Girerul catastrophe of her blindness—
ft had been the sudden result of an
Accident—had fellen like a thunderbolt
upon a nature elastic and Joyous. It
had brought her face to face with a
Tevelation of mental agony, made ber
feel herself the hapless martyr of
that curt thing called chance. She bad
always lived largely in books and
Short and ber world was still full
of idest> and of brave adventures.
Gratitucs had made her love the mo-
Tose old Invalid with his crabbed tem-
Pers, und the wandering son, choosing
for pride'’s sake a resourcelss battle
with the world—the very mystery of
his whereabouts—bad taken strong
hold of her imagination. Of the quar
rel which had preceded Hugh's depar-
ture she had made her own version
‘That he should have come back on this
very night, when the disinheritance
she had dreaded bad been so nearly
consummated, seemed now’ to have an
especial and an appealing significance.
Presently she rose, slipped on the
red kimono, and, taking a key from
the pocket of her gown, stole from the
Foom. She ascended a stairway and
Unlocked the door of a wide, bare at-
tic where the moonlight poured
through a skylight In the roof upon an
Unfinished statue. In this statue she
had begun to fashion, in the imagined
figure of Hugh, her conception of the
Prodigai son—not the battered and
husk filled wayfarer of the parable,
but a Sgure of character and pathos,
erring through youthful pride and
spirit The unfinished clay no eyes
had seen, for those walls bounded her
especial domain,
When Hugh went shamefacedly up
the stair from the Ubrary the artificial
glow that had tingled to his Singer tips
had inded. The poise of mind, the
certitude of all the faculties of eye
nd hand that his fey bath bad given
him, were yielding ‘The penalties be
‘had dislodged were returning re-en-
forced. He was rapidly becoming
@run
He groped his way to bis room, turn.
4 out the light, threw himself fully
‘dressed upon the bed,and slept the
| deep sleep of deferred intoxication.
eo
i
( ae OMe
os
Chapter 3°¢
5
7, % Na June day a month
jater Harry Sanderson
sat in bis stody, took:
<a ing out of the window
\ act ss the dim summer
- haze of heat, negligent-
! Z, Noa June day a month
later Harry Sanderson
sat in his study, look-
ing out of the window
A, chs the dim summer
haze of heat, negligent
ly smoking. He couli see the long
White mari road beading in a broad
curve between clover stippled mead.
ows. to skirt the willow green bluff
Above the river. There, miles away,
on the high bank he could distinguish
the rafiroad bridge, a long black skel-
eton spanning “the hole,” a deep, fish
haunted pool, the deepest spot in the
river for fifty miles.
Since that moonlighted evening of
the wil) making Harry bad learned
that the long lane had bad no true
turning for Hugb. He had sifted him
through and throug. At college be
had pat him down for a weakling—
‘unballasted, misdemeanant. Now he
knew him for what be really was—a
moral mollusk, @ scamp in embryo. @
decadent. realizing an ogiy propensity
to a deplorable nale A consistent
career of loose living bad earried
Hugh far since those college days
when he bad been dobbed “Satan's
shadow.” While to Harry Sandermon
the eccentric and ngnostical bed then
been. as It were, the mask throug
which his temperament looked at life.
to Hugh it had spelled shipwreck.
Harry Sanderson bad done broadly as.
he pleased. He had entertained whom
he listed, had gone “slumming.” had
once boxed ft a finish for # wager @
local pugilist whose acquaintance he
affected, known as “Gentleman Jim.”
He had been both the hardest biter
and the hardest drinker tp bis class,
‘yet withal its most brilliant student.
| Native character had enabled bir to
Persist, as the exasperating function
of success which dissipation declined
to eliminate. But the same natural
gravitation which In spite of at! aber-
ration had given Harry Sanderson
classical honors had brought Hugh
Stires to the tmminent brink of expul-
sion And since that time. without
the character which belonged to Har-
Ty as a possession, Hugh hed contin-
ued to drift aimlessly on down the
broad tax way of proSigacy
‘The conditions he found upon bis re
turn, however, had opened Hugh's
eyes to the perilous strait in which he
stood. He was a materialist. and the
taste he had had of deprivation bad
sickened him. Io the first revulsion.
when the contrast between recent
famine and present plenty was strong
upon him, be bad been at anxious
pains to make himself secure with his
father—and with Jessica Holme Har
ry's mental sight—keen as the hunter's
sight on the rifle barrel—was sharpen.
2d by his knowledge of the old Hugh.
an intuitive knowledge gained tn a
significant formative period He saw
more clearly than the townfolk who
in a general way bad known Hugh
Sures all their lives. Week by week
Harry had seen bim regain lost
ground tp bis father’s esteem Day
by day he had seen bim making studi-
ous appeal to all that was romantic {o
Jessica, climbing to the favor of each
op the ladder of the other's regard.
Hugh was naturally a poseur, with o
keen sense of effect. He could be
brilliant at will, could play a little on
plano, banjo and violin, could sing a
ttle and bad himself well tp hand.
And, feeling the unconscious chord of
romance vibrate to his touch, be had
played upon it with no unskiliful fin-
gers
Jessica was comparatively free from
that coquetry by means of which a wo-
man's instinct experiments in emotion.
Although she bad been artist enough
before the cloistered years of her blind-
hess to know that she was comely, she
had never employed that beauty in the
ordinary biandishments of girlish fas.
cipation. But steadily and anconscious-
ly she bad turned tn her darkness
more and more to the bright and ten
der alr with which Hugh clothed all
their intercourse. Her blindness bad
been of too short duration to have de
Feloped that tine sense-perception with
which nature seeks to supplement the
darkened vison. The tneradicable
marks which Il! governed itving had
set in Hugh's face, the self indulgence
and egotism, she could nofsee She
mistook impulse for instinct. She read
him by the untrustworthy lgbt of a
‘colorful fmagination She deemed him
=> (2)
Sry :
high spirited and debonatr, a Prince
‘Charming, whose prideful rebeliion had
| been atoned for by a touebing and
manly surrender
TAIL his lary, bad watched with a
Painful sense of Impotence. and this
feeling was upon him today as he
Stared out from the study toward the
white poreh glistening in the sun
At length, with a little gesture ex-
pressive at once of helplessness and
puzzle, be turned from the window
took his violin and began to plas fe
began a barcarole, but the music wan.
dered away through Insensible varia
tions Into a moving minor, a compost
tion of hts own
| It broke off suddenty at # dog's terce
snarl from the yard and the rattle of @
‘thrown pebble. Immediately a knock
came at the door, and a man entered.
| “Don't stop,” sald the new comer.
“I've dropped in for only a minute.
‘That's an ill tempered little brute of
youre If I were you I'd get rid of
him.”
Harry Sanderson laid the violln care-
fully in Its case and shut the lid before
he answered “Rummy ts impulsive,”
he saidjdryly. “How is your futher to-
day, Hingh?”
| ‘The other tapped the toe of his shin
ing patent leather with his cane as he
sald with @ look of fl humor:
| “About as well as usual He's plan-
ing now to put me in business and ex.
pects me to become a staid pillar of
society—like Sanderson, as he says
forty times a week. How do you do
it, Harry? ‘There isn't an old indy in
town who thinks ber parlor carpet half
good enough for you to walk on. You're
only # month older than I am, yet you
can wind the whole vestry and the
bishop te boot around your finger.”
“I wasn't aware of the idolatry.”
Harry iaughed a little—a distant laugh
“You are observant, Hugh.”
“Oh, anybody can see it’ I'd like to
know bow you do it. It was always
80. with you, even at college. You
could do pretty much as you liked and
Yet be popular too. Why, there was
hever a Jamboree complete without you
and your violin at the head of the ta-
bie.”
“That Is a long time ago,” said
‘Harry.
“More than four years. Four years
and a month a ae that cag
evening of coltege, 1 imagine
il bp espe haters rar ”
2 : ook An O68.
S05 Sh soe ee ee:
BEATLES
SATURDAY... JANUARY 2. 1909
SATURDAY
the corner, in which he kept his ites
and his charities. When Hugh, shrug-
ging his shoulders as if he to dismiss the
unwelcome picture he had painted,
turned again. Harry was putting into
it some papers from his pocket. Hugh
saw the action. His eyes fastened on
the safe avidly.
"I say," he said after a moment's
pause as Harry made to shut its door,
"can you loan me another fifty?" I
flat on my uppers again, and the old
man has been tight as nails with me
since I came back. I'm sure to be
able to return it with the rest in a
week or two."
Harry stretched his hand again to
toward the safe, then drew it back, with
compressed lips. He had met Hugh
with persistent courtesy, and the other
had found him sufficiently obliquely
with loans. Hugh's lowered gaze saw
the arrested movement, and his cheek
flushed.
"Oh, if it's inconvenient I won't trou-
ble you for the accommodation," he
said. "I dare say I can raise it."
The attempt at nonchalance cost him a palpable effort. Comparatively small as the amount was, he needed it. He was in sore straits.
"It isn't that it is inconvenient, Hugh," said Harry. "It's that I can't approve your manner of living lately, and—I don't know where the fifty is going."
The mark on Hugh's brow reddened "I wasn't aware that I was expected to render you an accounting," he said sulkly, "If I do borrow a dollar or two now and then. What if I play cards and drink a little when I'm dry? I've got to have a bit of amusement once in awhile between prayers. You liked it yourself well enough before you discovered a sudden talent for preaching!"
"Some men hide their talents under a napkin," said Harry. "You drown yours—in a bottle. You have been steadily going downhill. You are deceiving your father—and others—with a pretended reform which isn't skin deep. You have made them believe you are living straight when you are carousing; that you keep respectable company when you have taken up with a besotted and discredited gambler."
"I suppose you mean Dr. Moreau," returned Hugh. "There are plenty of people in town who are worse than he is."
"He is a quack—dropped from the hospital staff for addiction to drugs and expelled from his club for cheating at cards."
"He's down and out," said Hugh sullenly, "and any cur can bite him. He never cheated me, and I find him better company than your sanctimonious, psalm singing sort. I'm not going to give him the cold shoulder because everybody else does. I never went back on a friend yet. I'm not that sort."
"You never had a friend, Hugh," said Harry steadily. "You never really loved anybody or anything but yourself. You are utterly selfish. You are deliberately lying every hour you live to those who love you. You are playing a part-for your own end! You were only a good imitation of a good fellow at college. You are a poor imitation of a man of honor now."
Hugh rose to his feet as he answered hotly; "And what are you, I'd like to know? Just because I take my pleasure as I please, while you choose to make a stained glass cherub of yourself, is no reason why I'm not just as good as you! I knew you well enough before you set up for such a pattern. You didn't go in much then for a theological diet. Pshaw!" he went on, snapping his fingers toward the well stocked bookshelves. "I wonder how much of all that you really believe! I imagine your friends don't call you 'Satan' now?"
"No," returned Harry quietly, "they don't call me 'Satan' now."
He went back to the safe.
The movement set Hugh instantly to regretting his hasty tongue. If he had only assumed penitence instead of flying into a passion he might have had the money he wanted just as well as not.
"There's no sense in us two quarrelling." he said hastily. "We've been friends a long time. I'm sure I didn't intend to when I came in. I suppose you're right about some things, and probably dropping Moreau wouldn't hurt me any. I'm sorry I said all I did. Only—the money seemed such a little thing, and I—I needed it."
Harry stood an instant with his hand on the knob; then instead of closing the door he drew out a little drawer. He lifted a packet of crisp yellow backs and slowly counted out $100. "I'm trying to believe you mean what you say, Hugh," he said.
Hugh's fingers closed eagerly over the crackling notes. "Now, that's white of you after everything I said. You're a good fellow, Harry, after all, and I'll always say so." He pocketed the money with an air of relief and picked up his hat and cane.
Just then from the dusty street came the sound of carriage wheels and the click of the gate latch.
"It's Bishop Ludlow." he said, glancing through the window. "He's coming in. I think I'll slip out the side way. Thanks for the loan, and—I'll think over what you've said."
Avoiding the bishop, Hugh stepped toward the gate. The money was in his pocket. Well, one of these days he would not have to grovel for a paltry $50. He would be his own master and could afford to let Harry Sanderson and everybody else think what they liked
"So I'm playing a part, am I?" he
said to himself. "Why should your holiness trouble your ever if it I am? Not because you're so careful of the governor's feelings, not by a long shot! It's because you choose to think Jessica Holne is too good for me. That's where the shoe pinches. Perhaps you'd like to play at that game yourself, eh?" He walked jauntily up the street—toward the door with the little barred window "The old man is fond of her. He thinks I mean to settle down and let the moss grow over my ears, and he'll do the proper thing. It'll be a good way to put my head above water and keep it there. It must be soon, though."
(To Be Continued.)
MUST BE PERFECT
MUST BE PERFECT
ONE-PIECE GUIMPE AND SLEEVE
HARD TO FASHION.
Delightfully Becoming When Well Made, But Easily Spoiled If Artistry Is Not Bestowed on It.
Although there is nothing more difficult of attainment by an unskilled modiste than the arrangement of a one-piece guippe and sleeve, fashion continues to advocate this style of dress, probably for the very reason it has proved more or less impossible for the great majority. No fashion is more delightfully becoming when it is correctly carried out, and none more to be avoided when there is doubt of the perfection of the artistry to be expended upon it. As shown in our
One-Piece Gulmpe and Sleeves.
illustration the fabric to be used is also of paramount importance in determining whether the guimpe is to be made with seamless shoulders or not. A delicate lace, figured net chiffon and similar fabrics are suitable for the seamless fabrics and sleeve, but a stiff fabric, even a heavy lace which does not drape well, is disappointing for this purpose, no matter how beautiful in quality or design. A tight, hard effect over the shoulders is entirely out of place with this shape bodice. When properly carried out the high-waisted empire frock is more graceful in effect when completed with this sort of draped bodice than with any other. The drooping effect which it gives to the shoulders is particularly harmonious with the empire lines.
THAT BROWN LINE AGAIN
Try Powdered Pumice Stone to Rem
move Marks of Sun.
The girl who has been struggling vainly during the fall with the dingy brown line on the neck, the result of too much sun or too tight collars, should not despair until she has tried pumice stone.
If rubbing the stone and soapy water on the neck each time it is washed is too hard for the skin, try mixing powdered pumice with grease.
Put cold cream on a piece of fine chamois, cover it with powdered pumice and rub it lightly but firmly on the neck. Finish the process by washing with a lather of fine white soap.
Should even the powdered pumice irritate the skin, rub the neck, after the washing, with a little cold cream.
Emollient for the Hands
One of the best embolients for the hands, which should be used during the cold days of winter, is that of honey and oatmeal. Curious as the combination appears, it is an old-fashioned remedy, which was once strongly believed in, the meal acting as an efficient cleanser in addition to its softening qualities. To make a ball of the two ingredients, which can be rubbed over the back of the hands, it is usually necessary to add a little olive oil, while a few drops of rosewater, or, if a still more distinct perfume is desired, oil of geranium or attar of roses, give it a delicate fragrance.
Use for Old Gown
Many an old-fashioned satin evening gown is lying by considered hopeless, yet such a frock has wondrous possibilities. It will probably have a perfectly plain skirt, with or without a train. Anyway, it will be only the right length in the front, so as to bring it up to date. Cut the skirt off a foot above the hem and insert a deep band of fillet lace.
This will make it possible to bring the skirt above the waist line. The old-fashioned waist will provide sufficient material for draping a blouse or fillet net or lace.
Trimmings for the Neck
There are many good neck trim-
mings, chief among which will be
found the tiny thick ruches of tulle,
followed by narrow plaited ones of
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
silk, heathing silk stocks worn under
traghe ice collars, Smart dressers
are wearing quilted ones like the Wate-
teau ruche, and on evening dress will
be found a cleverly arranged ruche of
small flowers mounted on tulle.
Revival of Spanish Elocunce
A good many of the new models show the return of the simple and attractive Spanish flounce or skirts. This has come about from the demand for easy fullness. This flounce, from its depth and its close gathers, gives a great chance to put the material around the feet in swirling folds.
The Law of Speculation
Big men are given to taking profits, while smaller men are laying a basis for profits that may or may not be shown. The law of the fishes in the sea applies in speculation. The big and the little fish have their respective missions, and the small ones are safe when the large ones are not hungry.
Clock Made of Straw.
A shootmaker named Wegner, living in Strasburg, has a clock of the grandfather shape, nearly six feet high, made entirely of straw. The wheels, pointers, case and every detail are exclusively of straw. Wegner has taken 15 years to construct this strange piece of mechanism. It keeps perfect time.
Instantaneous Relief for Group.
Group can be cured in one minute, and the remedy is simply alum and sugar. The way to accomplish the deed is to take a knife or grater and shave off in small particles about a teaspoonful of alum; then mix with twice the amount of sugar to make it palatable, and administer it as soon as possible.
Safeguard for Coal
The best preventive for spontaneous ignition of coal, says Compressed Air, is a small cylinder containing compressed carbon dioxide, fitted with a fuse plug melting at 200 degrees Fahrenheit. A cylinder one foot long and three inches in diameter is sufficient to take care of eight tons of coal.
Sound "Taps" on Mayer
A "striking" ceremony marks the expiration of the Grantham (England) mayor's tenure of office. The robe is stripped from him, the chain is taken from about his neck, and with a small wooden hammer the town clerk taps the ex-mayor on the head in token of the demise of his authority.
Essence of Culture
The very essence of culture is shaking off the nightmare of self-consciousness and self-absorption and attaining a sort of Christian Nirvana—lost in the great whole of humanity, thinking of others, caring for others, admiring and loving others.—E. R. Sill.
Women Then and Now.
The "old-fashioned" women certainly knew how to rule, and "advanced" though we be, may do not manage to wield so much power, on the whole, as the clever women of past generations. It must be that our methods are at fault.—Lady's Pictorial.
Unconscious Socialism.
It is one of the most notorious tendencies of human nature to believe that when you have made use of other people's property for a sufficiently long period you are absolutely entitled to it to the exclusion of the real owner.—Estates Gazette
Practical Labor
"George," spoke his better half, "you are interested in the temperance movements, are you not?" "Why, certainly I am," he answered. "Well, suppose you go out and make a few of them with the pump handle. I am in need of a pail of water right away."—Bohemian.
Some Heavy Swells
"Society is like a wave," comments a contemporary. He then explains why, but misses the main point, which is that there are some heavy swells. —San Antonio Express.
Many a man who has heard his glowing letters read in a breach of promise suit realizes that, after all, the telephone is cheaper in the end. Somerville Journal.
True to Conscience
I'd rather fail by being true to my conscience than make a popular success* by being false—From "Lynch's Daughter," by Leonard Merrick.
The Misery of Vengeance
To avenge misdeed on the misdoer is Misery to feed with her own broken heart—Percy Byshe Shelley.
The Price.
It takes some people a long time to find out that things are not always valuable because they cost dearly.
The intellect is perfected not by knowledge but by activity.—Aristotle.
French Proverb.
An ounce of favor goes farther than an ounce of justice.
The Politician's Ideal.
In the opinion of the average politician the ideal form of government would be one under which everybody could have a public office.
If One Is Cautious
Home is a restful sort of place where we may all say just what we please if we are discreet about it.— Galveston News.
The Pangs of Love
"It's a dreadful thing to be in love," said Mr. Despairing Swain. "I have a heartache that would fill three hospitals and then some."
BEST OF ALL SHADES OF BLUE.
One of the new shades of blue which are calculated to carry all before them this season in the world of dress and which have no rival even among the softer and more effective tones, which, according to the standard of yesterday, should have come first in order of merit, is the clear, vivid tint known as "Eugene." This is the facsimile of the old-fashioned blue which in the days of the second empire was worn so frequently by the beautiful bride of Napoleon III, and which extended its popularity over a far longer period than is usually the case where fashion is concerned.
The only difference which obtains nowadays is that, instead of being carried out in the crisp rustling silks which our grandmothers delighted in, and of which the quality of "standing alone" appeared to have been rated above all others, it is reproduced in the softest crepe meteor, satin charmeuse or cashmere de sole, which gives a very quaint effect to this vivid and somewhat crude tone.
WEAR THE COAT SWEATER.
Snugly Fitting Garment That Affords Much Comfort.
The fashion for waltcoats has brought about a new sweater which is tight fitting and is made to show.
It is knitted in most of the fashionable colors and is smart in leather brown, jade green with a black border, bright blue with a striped border, and gray with a black edge and smoked pearl buttons.
These go by the name of coat sweaters. They are to be widely worn in the country life this season.
Any girl who suffers with cold should get one to put under her coat on the street. They fit so snugly that they do not disturb the shape of anything they are worn under.
Outside of the city they serve quite as well as a coat. They have long sleeves with turnover cuffs, flat revers and good-looking buttons.
They reach below the hips and usually have one or two pockets in front.
THE NEW COIFFURE
The above cut shows the correct arrangement of the fashionable loose psyche. As will be noticed, the hair is almost flat on top, but stands out in large, loose waves on sides. A simple but pretty ornament is a bow of ribbon as indicated.
Spangled Scarfs.
The spangled or sequined scarfs are in great demand for neckwear, and the girl who is quick at spangling or beading can make one of these at little cost.
Buy figured, dotted, or ringed with gold beads or white, in a supple quality.
Outline each figure, dot or ring with gold beads or tiny sequins, and you will have the effect of the Syrian scarfs which cost from $15 to $20.
These are heavy and suitable for theater-goers of rather mature years.
The younger girl should content herself with a long, soft scarf of chiffon cloth or figured net, trimmed with lace, or, best of all, fine crepe de chine in delicate colorings.
The latter may have deep hems with the owner's monogram embroidered in self-tone on one end.
A Child's Bed.
The mattress for a child's bed should be firm and not too soft. If any pillow at all is used—and it is best not to have one—it should be a small pillow stuffed with hair. Never load the bed with blankets. Let the cover be light and warm. Also remove the counterpane, or heavy Marsililes coverlid, at night. Never let a child sleep on a feather bed. Children should sleep alone. Each child should have his own bureau and closet, or at least space in the closet, so that method and neatness may be installed from the first. Care should be taken that the child use his own hairbrush and washcloth.
Steel Ribs in Fur Neckwear
The very latest notion is the "spring" collar, a smart strip of fur through which runs a thin, flexible rib of steel something like the steel bracelet which the bicycle enthusiast wears to keep his nether garments from flapping around his ankles. This new fur collar needs no snap or other fastening, for it springs into the right snugness around the throat. When the wearer is in a warm room the collar may be clasped around the arm, with less danger of losing it than when, as heretofore, it was held in the hand or on the lap.
Serge Remains Popular
Serge is to retain its restored popularity, and in plain, herringbone and chovron weaves will be much in evidence among the new tailored costumes, as will the wide-wale diagonals, which gained a firm hold upon feminine fancy in the late spring season
Would Be Here
A law is to be passed in France exempting wives from obeying their husbands. Isn't this a work of supererogation?
May Be a Whited Senulcher
It is a woman's way to think there
is always some good in a man who
wears a white vest. -Galveston News
QUAKER MUSINGS.
Even the rainbow follows its natural bent.
Many a man is as dull as his point of view.
Some people won't steal as long as they can borrow.
Even the left-handed man may feel that he does everything right.
It is sometimes hard for a man to be on the level and climb upward.
We would all rather profit by the mistakes of others than by our own.
Good habits require constant cultivation, but bad ones grow like weeds.
The hen that has just laid an egg cackles almost as much as a woman who has just told a secret.
Virtue is its own reward, as the fatted calf discovered when he got it in the neck for the prodigal son.
"It's the little things that count," quoted the Wise Guy. "That's right," agreed the Simple Mug. "A microbe isn't as big as an elephant, but it does more damage."
"Why don't you stop begging and look for work?" demanded the man who had been touched. "What's the use of giving up a sure thing for an uncertainty," replied the beggar.—Philadelphia Record.
REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR.
A woman's idea of having great charm is for you to tell her so.
About the meanest trick the average girl can play a man is to be his sister.
A girl could feel romantic even over a love letter she had to write to herself.
The kind of dinner a woman enjoys is when it's hers and you tell her how good it is.
Men wouldn't even want to go fishing if that was a good way to earn their living.
A great advantage in being a bachelor is all the relatives-in-law you don't have to stand.
What a woman adores about a stage hero is she couldn't possibly live with him if they were married.
The best man in the world would want to cuss once in a while just to make sure he is a human being.
The thing that tickles a man to death is how people can't help admiring him in spite of his unpopularity.
A woman can have a grand time writing a letter unless there is some news to put in and take up room she needs to tell about how the baby is just as cunning as ever.—New York Press.
ORIENTAL WISDOM
All this triple world were a thick darkness, had not the light of the word shone upon it from the beginning.
Nobody belongeth to thee, and thou belongest to nobody; wife, relatives, friends, are but chance meetings upon the way.
He hath read all, and heard all, and fulfilled all, he who hath turned his back upon hope and seeth herein his perfect welfare.
To the wise, heaven is but a blade of grass; to heroes, life is but a blade of grass; to those who have overcome their senses, woman is but a blade of grass; to those who no longer desire, the world is but a blade of grass.
"Stand up, O, friend, and for a moment bear the load of my poverty, while I, weary after long waiting, give myself to the joys you owe to death." So said the poor man, going hastily to the burial ground; but the dead friend made no motion, for he knew that death was better than poverty — The Sunday Magazine.
STUBS.
The generous turtle lays 200 eggs
at a time.
A pound of saccharine equals 500
pounds of sugar.
Germany produces 1,394,000,000 picture postcards a year.
The latest chain-making machine
makes two miles of chain a minute.
The Belgain bachelor has one vote,
the married man two, and the priest
three.
Clothing dyed with coal-tar dyes
has been known to cause skin diseases.
Russian soldiers carry compasses
with luminous needles—excellent
things for a night attack.
There are neither bachelors nor old maids in China, where cellibacy is deemed unnatural and vicious.
The first Sherlock Holmes novel, "A Study in Scarlet," was sold cutright for $125. Sherlock Holmes stories now bring more than that per paragraph.
Present Duty
He who is false to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will find the flame when he may have forgotten its cause—Henry Ward Beecher.
Worry and the Liver
Worry is a demon. Look to your liver. If it is out of action it can scare up more ghosts than a novelist could paint in the same time.
LINCOLN
HAIR POMADE
MAKES
KINKY
HAIR
SOFT
REMOVES
DANDRUFF
KEEPS
HAIR
FROM
BREAKING
OFF
LINCOLN
HAIR POMADE
KEEPS
SCALP
FRESH
CLEAN AND
WHOLE-
SOME
MAKES
HAIR
GROW
LONG AND
LUXURIOUS
WHICH WAY WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE YOUR HAIR-SOFT AND
LONG SO THAT YOU CAN PUT IT UP IN THE LATEST STYLE
OR SHORT AND KINKY
A WOMAN'S JUST PRIDE IS HER
HAIR. TO STRAIGHTEN OUT THAT KINKY, CURLY HAIR, PUTTING IT IN THE MOST PERFECT CONDITION TO BE COMBED INTO ANY SHAPE JUST TRY A BOTTLE OF LINCOLN HAIR POMADE. There is no other preparation on earth to equal Lincoln Hair Pomade in producing soft, beautiful hair. Lincoln Hair Pomade is a natural hair cleanser—a natural promoter of growth and naturally reduces the air with straight and combable condition; but also supplies the air with moisture matter more rough or heavy your hair is now, no matter how hard it may be, the use of Lincoln Hair Pomade will give you hair that can well be the envy of others. Lincoln Hair Pomade is the only highly recommended preparation for this purpose on the market.
It is Lincoln Hair Pomade you want, so refuse weak and inferior substitutes. Do not take anything that is claimed to be just as good, but insist on getting the genuine.
The Lincoln Pomade Co
NORFOLK, VA., U. S. A.
Agents Wanted Everywhere. Write for particulars. If your dealer does not keep it, send 26 cents in stamps or silver to THE LINCOLN POMADE CO., Department B, Norfolk, Va. and we will send you a bottle by return mail.
The Hawkins-Price Co. Thair Growers and Restorers.
(TRADE MARK REGISTERED )
Carries a full Line of natural human hair- braids, bangs, pompadours and the latest styles in front pieces— all colors—black, brown gray and mixed gray Those desiring pieces to match the hair must be very sure in stating explicitly the colors desired. It is always safe to send a small sample of hair if possible, so that we may be in a position to match it correctly.
For Brads, (Natural Hair)
For All-round Pompardours, (Natural Hair)
For Front Pieces, (Natural Hair)
This preparation has prepared to be a fortune fortunate, who are to-day delighted with the merits of this great hair preparation in the sphere all of its own, and the glowing terms a speak of it, reassure us of its satisfactory rejoast of a large patronage throughout this and enjoy the commendation of the very best whiff in this immediate community.
In order to convince the most skeptical and results of the Hawkins-Price Hair Grower will from time to time produce in print the giving us permission to do so, who have used are to-day among the many bearing witness of it. We do not desire the correspondence of those or anything unreasonable. Our preparation is compound, the ingredients of which, we would in print.
We will just here remind the public that the Government has placed national patent rights by which it is protected, and we are in turgovernment for honest methods and square deed. It will positively remove Dandruff, Cure purities. Restore Hair on Clean Temples or B Roots are not Dead. Price, 35 cents per box.
The Face Beautifier makes the use of powsary and is perfectly harmless. Sale Price, 25 per bottle. A charge of ten cents extra is imp orders. Money can be sent by Post Office More Money order. Address all communications to
HAWKINS-PRICE COMPANY
'Phone 4601.
616 N. 1
Correspondence Strictly Confid
The Face Beautifier makes the use of powder entirely unnecessary and is perfectly harmless. Sale Price, 25 and 50 cents and $1 per bottle. A charge of ten cents extra is imposed on all out of city orders. Money can be sent by Post Office Money Order, or Express Money order. Address all communications to
HAWKINS-PRICE COMPANY.
'Phone 4601. 616 N. 1st St., Richmond, Va.
Correspondence Strictly Confidential.
Richmond, Fredericksb'g & Potomac R. R.
SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE SEPT. 6, 1908.
TO AND FROM WASHINGTON AND BEYOND.
TRAIN
N. B. - Follo
only as form
6:20 A. M. D.
11:00 A. M.
Atlanta
Memphis.
N. H—Following schedule figures published on
n. a. formation, and are not guaranteed
N. J—Following schedule figures published on
11: 00 A. M—Daily-Limited-Buffet Pullman
Atlanta and Birmingham, New Orleans
Memphis Chattanooga, and all the South
coach for Coach City, Orlando
Durham.
6: 00 P. M—Ex. Sunday-Kayville Local
12: 30 P. M—Friday Pullman ready 9: 30
P. M. for all the South.
4:50 P. M. -Ex. Sunday -To West Point -On
meeting for Baltimore Monday, Wednesday and
Friday.
7:15 P. M. -Monday, Wednesday and Friday -
Local to West Point.
4:84 A. M. -Ex. Sundays -Local to West Point
TRAINS ARIEVE RICHMOND.
7:00 A. M. 9:30 P. M. -From all the souls.
6:10 P. M. -From Charlotte, Raleigh, Durbin
Chase City and local stations.
8:40 A. M. -From West Point.
9:29 A. M. -From West Point and from
more Wednesday, Friday and Sunday.
10:45 A. M. -From West Point from roses
N. E. HURGENS (J.)
SEABOARD
For Lynchburg, the West and Southwest
9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. M. and 9:48 p. M. idl
Arrive RICHMOND, North Portland, HI
M. and 8:50 p. M. daily. From the Wes
7:40 a. M. 2:05 p. M. and 8:50 p. M. daily.
Parlor and Sleeping Cars. On
Dining Cars
W. B. BEVILL,
Gen. Pass. Agent.
C. H. BOLLEY,
Div. Pass. As
9:15 a. M. - L.
SOUTHBOUND TRAINS SCHEDULED TO LEA #E
RICHMOND DAILY.
12:55 A. M. - Sleepers and coaches, Jacksonville and Southwest.
NORTHBOUND TRAINS SCHEDULED TO
RIVE RICHMOND DAILY
8:00 A. M. 8:15 A. M. Florida Lakeside. 8:30
P. M. 8:15 P. M.
—Mr. Joseph Evans, our agent at Pittsburgh, Pa. destres all his customers whose subscriptions for the Richmond PLANET are past due to call and settle at once.
tions not guaranteed.
O. B. CAMPBELL, D. F.
---
A. E. H.
RAILROADS.
ASHLAND ACCOMMODATIONS—WEEKDAYS.
Leave Elba Station - 7.30 A.M. 1.30 P.M. 6.35 P.M.
Arrive Elba Station - 6.40 A.M. 10.40 P.M. 5.40 P.M
*Daily. & Weekdays. & Sundays only. All trains to or from Byrd Street Station stop at Elba. Time of arrivals and departures not guaranteed. Read the sign.
N & W NORFOLK & WESTERN.
ONLY ALL-RAIL LINE TO NORFOLK
Leave Byrd Street Station, Rihmond Isa
fect December 1, 1907.
For Norfolk - 9:00 A. M. 8:00 P. M. and
P. M. daily.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
For N. and W. Ry. West - 9:00 A. M., 18:1
and 9:40 P. M. 8:00 A. M., 15:10, 8:00 P.
P. M. 8:00, 9:40 P. M. 7:25 and 11:00 P. B
For Goldaboro and Fayetvelle: 8:20 P. B
For dichroma daily: 14:10, 8:20
7:40 P. B: 9:25 A. M., 8:20 A. M., 7:40
2:05, 8:50, 8:00 and 8:50 P. M.
*Except* Sunday. ***Sunday only.** ****Exa-
ment* Time of arrivals and departures and con-
sults.
TUNH
---
A. B.
Southern Ry
TRAIN8 LEAVE RICHMOND
YORK RIVER LINE
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND
20 E. Main Street Phone
THE PLANET
*Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL,
JR. at 311 N. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va.
**JOHN MITCHELL, JR., - EDITOR.**
All communications intended for publication
should be sent so as to reach us by Wednesday.
**TERMS IN ADVANCE**
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One Copy, six months. .80
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Single Copy .06
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**POSTAGE STAMPS OF A HIGHER DENOMINA-
TION THAN OCTOBER NOT RECEIVED
ON SUBSCRIPTIONS.**
THE PLANET is issued weekly. The subscription
price is $15 per year in advance.
MONEY ORDERS. You can buy a Money Order in your Post Office, payable at the Richmond Set Office and we will be responsible for your service.
MONEY ORDERS can be obtained by the office of the American Express Co., the United States Express Co., and the Wells Fargo's Express Company. We will be responsible for money sent by any of these companies. We are safe and convenient way for forwarding money.
REGISTERED LETTER. If a Money Order, Post Office or an Express Office is not within your reach, your Postmaster will Register the letter for you. If the letter is lost or stolen, it can be traced. You can send money in this manner at our desk. You are responsible for money sent in letters in any other way that one of the four ways mentioned above. If you send your money in any other way, you must do it at your own.
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COMMUNICATIONS—When writing to us to review your subscription or to discontinue your order, you should give your name and address we have weise can find your name on our books.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS—In order to change the address of a subscriber, we must be sent the new address.
SATURDAY....JANUARY 2, 1909.
A GLOWING TRIBUTE.
We have received a clipping from a Georgia paper, the same being sent to us by one of the most distinguished white gentlemen in this city. It reads as follows:
"Every now and again we read in the newspapers of lynchings in the south, of race wars, of the negro problem, of race prejudice. If we knew nothing beyond this of the relations between whites and negroes we would assume that constant antagonism existed, frequently coming to a head in hangings or burnings. But we do know that it is only the tragic that finds its way over the telegraph wires and that pleasant, helpful relations between the two races, accompanied by mutual respect and sympathy, are the rule rather than the exception."
This is unquestionably true. The relationship between the better class of white people at the Southland and the better class of colored people is steadily improving. It says further:
"A few days ago there died in Augusta, Ga., an old Negro, named George Washington Walton. He was born in slavery but for many years an industrious barber and law-abiding citizen. His funeral was held from the First Presbyterian Church, white, one of the oldest, largest and most fashionable in the city, at which Walton had been an attendant for a great many years. Dr. J. T. Plunkett is the pastor. Read what he said over the old Negro's coffin, in the presence of hundreds of the best white people in Augusta and see if you find any trace of 'race prejudice.'
"It is not my practice to preach a funeral sermon, and I shall not depart from my custom to deliver a funeral oration over the sleeping dust of our beloved brother and our friend. What could I add by word of lip to the honor of his long, modest, humble Christian life as he lived it throughout all his years in this city? That which I might say could not add to it, and God forbid that I should take from it in a single degree." The man for generations or citizens knew the matter through all the trying years of the "wife" and since his life has been as an open book, and read by all. And it was full of instructions for the young, for it was not in him, nor of him, to put a premium upon idleness in any class or any race.
"In early life he began his labor, and though God blessed and gave to him a competence, he never ceased his work until the setting sun of his life and the shadow of death cut short his faithful laboring. He walked among us modest, humble, unobtrusive, arrogating to himself no place, no power, no influence that was not rightfully his—that of a man who respects himself and others.
"Through all his intercourse with those of his own color and with those of the white race he bore him self without abuse, and was worthy of the grand old name of gentleman.
He was a true citizen, and bore responsibility intelligently and faithfully. In every relation of life, as brother, husband, father and citizen, in spirit and in letter, he endeavored to be true and faithful.
"Out of the fullness of the pastor's heart I speak. For years he identified himself with this church, even before I came to it as pastor, and since his public profession of faith he gave the adversary no opportunity to challenge his adherence to his faith.
He walked in this world of shadow and sin, and as a light his life shown, his trust and belief in God an influence that may not be gain-said
"And so it is meet that white and black should gather in the house of God, before whom there is no distinction, to pay tribute to the devoted father, the humble, true citizen, the faithful child of God. I lay my personal tribute on his dust. He never failed to express his love to me, and he knew that I loved him, and I will say that George Walton was worthy of the love of any man." This then was the tribute, given from the heart by a white Christian, who meant all that he said. We have more than once emphasized the fact that there can be no such thing as a general race war in the Southland, so long as this generation and the next generation and the one that follows lives in this land of the fathers.
- All over the sunny land, black mammies are rearing with steadfast devotion the off-spring of the white race and they will stand up not only for their foster-mothers, but will defend the children of these same people, who in many cases are the only playmates that they have known in their early childhood. Colored men, who have white friends would warn them of any danger from the lawless elements of their own race and white men, who have friends amongst us would vouch-safe the same favor.
Let us talk peace, let us advocate peace and let us pray for peace among the races. So far as we are individually concerned, we are looking for our rights and privileges from the white people of this state and we are confident with the light of past experiences before us that we can get more justice in Virginia than we can before the "powers that be" in the District or Columbia.
His Retort.
A meek-looking little man, with a large pasteboard box, climbed on the tram. As he did so he bumped slightly into a sleepy, corpulent passenger with a self-satisfied look and two little dabs of side-whiskers. As the car rounded a curve the box rubbed against him again, and he growled: "This is no luggage car, is it?" "No," returned the meek little chap with the box, and when you come right down to it, it ain't no cattle car, either, is it?"
Historical Anydate
Alexander was before Tyre.
"To succeed," counselled his generals, "we must invest the city."
Aleck frowned
"To make our revenge keener, why not compel the citizens to do the investing, and let us be the promoters?" he answered.
Whereupon the court jester withdrew to draw up the prospectus.—Puck.
A. Memory Aid
Goodfello—Here's your health, old fel. By the way, what is that knot in your handkerchief for?
Jollifello—H'm! That is to remind me that I've sworn off.
Goodfello—But you just this minute took a drink.
Jollifello—Y-e-s. Fact is, I never see the knot till I take out my handkerchief to wipe my mouth—N. Y. Weekly.
In a Good Cause
Amazed Mother—What does this mean, miss? The idea of allowing a young man-to hug and kiss you that way?
Sweet Girl—Oh, it's all right, ma. Mr. Nicefelo gives me a penny a hug, and it's all to be applied toward raising the mortgage on our church.—N. Y. Weekly.
Always Comes High
One trouble with experience is that we seldom get it at marked-down prices.
Almost Honeless
It is pretty hard for any man to be a hero to his sweetheart's brother.
The work that a man likes to do is too often done by somebody else.
Generally
The man who thinks he is one of the
chosen few generally turns out to be
one of the disappointed many.
Where Pride Is Ignorance.
To be proud of learning is the greatest
ignorance.
Man Always Omnivorous
It used to be held that primitive man was a vegetarian; out the anthropologist Ortvay has made careful and extended investigations, which indicate that primitive man, like the modern savage, was omnivorous.
Helps Some.
"There's one good thing about a college yell," observed the man on his way to the football game, "and that is that while they're giving\it they can't sing a college song."
The Bumping Place
Many a man has gone to the wall because he was unable to see the partition between enterprise and chicanery.
THE RICHMOND PLANET RICHMOND VIRGINIA
TRAPPED BY FLASHLIGHT
Detective Posed as a "Promoter," and With Officers Within Hearing Discussed Bribe With Councilman, Who Wept When He Found He Was Trapped—It Is Said a National Bank Paid $17,500 to Become a City Depository.
Pittsburg, Pa., Doc. 23.—A flashlight photograph of a member of councils in the act of accepting money from a decoy "promoter," it is said, will be one of the strongest features of the evidence to be presented when seven members of councils and two former bank officials are to be given a preliminary hearing on charges of bribery, corrupt solicitation and other illegal acts brought by the Voters' league. This picture, it is said, was taken in a private room in a downtown hotel immediately before the councilman was arrested.
No additional arrests were made, and it is said that none are likely to be made until after the hearing.
Besides the councilman, the flashlight photograph is said to show an agent of the Huffing detective agency, of Scranton, Pa., which worked up the cases. This man is reported to have posed as a member of a firm anxious to sell wooden paving blocks to the city and to have become very intimate with the councilman. With other detectives concealed within hearing distance the councilman is alleged to have been induced to tell of the negotiations to secure the passage of the legislation, to name the other members who were to share in the bribe and to say that the members were tired of promises and wanted to see some real money. The detective peeled off $100 and $500 bills from a large roll, and just as the councilman reached for his allotment the flash was ignited. The councilman, it is said, broke down and wept, and when he accused his companion of trapping him there was no denial. Then an officer appeared and made the arrest.
Bank Examiner Harrison Nesbit is expected to testify to finding a suspicious entry in the books of the German National bank accounting for $17,500, and that President W. W. Ramsey and Cashier A. A. Vilsack, of the bank, upon being summoned before the directors, admitted that the sum had been expended to secure the selection of the bank as a city repository. The directors repudiated the action of the officers and immediately asked and received the resignations of the officers. It is reported that some of the bribe money was paid in checks and that the checks and stubs will be offered in evidence. It is practically admitted that a number of decoy contractors and promoters were introduced to trap councilmen and that many temptations have been offered members during the past six months. Friends of some of the accused men charge that the whole probe is a part of a scheme to elect an independent candidate for mayor, yet to be named.
Arrested For Selling Colored Milk. W. A. Taylor, a dairyman at Le moyne, near Harrisburg, Pa., was placed under arrest by the order of Dairy and Food Commissioner Foust on the charge of selling milk artificially colored by the use of yellow anatto. This offense is the first of its kind to be noted in the state.
RAN THROUGH BLAZING DOOR
Forty-two School Children Had Narrow Escape From Cremation.
Circleville, O., Dec. 23.—Forty-two school children had a narrow escape from cremation when fire broke out in district school No. 5. With the door in flames and all the windows securely barred, the situation was critical. A fire panic followed. Luther Compton, the teacher, induced the children one by one to run through the blazing doorway, the only means of escape, and all were saved. The teacher was the last to leave the building. The doorway became ignited from an overheated register.
CIRCUS WOMAN DEAD
Molly Hillman, Former Ring Star, Dies In Poorhouse.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Dec. 23—Molly Hillman, who for years appeared in this country and Europe as one of the foremost circus performers, died in the poorhouse at Greenfield, near here.
She was ninety-two years old. In her day she was a star in both the Barnum and Forepapau circuses. She was marred four times, and each husband met a violent death.
Carload of Christmas Presents Burned Chicago, Dec. 23. — A mail pouch loaded with Christmas presents was burned, five mail clerks barely escaped with their lives, while one was injured in jumping to safety, and an engine was derailed and overturned when a southbound Baltimore & Ohio railroad freight train crashed into a westbound Chicago & Alton passenger train in the west side of Chicago. As soon as the trains struck a gas tank in the mail coach exploded and set fire to it and the piles of Christmas mail.
Fractured Father's Skull With Clock, Washington, Dec. 23. — Using the family alarm clock in defense of his mother, Everett Clark, aged fifteen, of this city, threw the timepiece at his father, Richard Clark, inflicting two fractures of the skull. The elder Clark is in a serious condition.
Major Orlando J. Smith, Founder of American Press Association.
President of Country's Largest Newspaper Syndicate-He Kept In Touch With Publishers All Over America Thinker, Philosopher and Writer, as Well as Executive Head of Extensive Enterprise. Many Well Known Men at Funeral of LateHeadAmericanPressAssociation.
LateHeadAmericanCemeteryAssociation.
Tarrytown, N. Y., Dec. 23.—With simple ceremonies the body of Major Orlando Jay Smith, late president of the American Press Association, whose death occurred Sunday evening, was laid to rest in Sleepy Hollow cemetery.
Funeral services were held at the home of Major Smith in Dobbs Ferry. They were attended by many well known men, friends of the deceased.
MAJOR ORLANDO J. SMYTH
by a delegation of officials and employees of the American Press Association and by members of the Loyal Logion and other organizations of which Major Smith was a member. Banked around the casket in which the body lay were many beautiful floral pieces. Major Smith had been ill since September, at which time he was operated on for cancer of the stomach. Through his long illness he retained his interest in daily events.
Major Smith was born June 14, 1842, on a farm near Terre Haute, Ind., of Vermont ancestry. His father, Hiram Smith, was one of Indiana's pioneers. He sent his son to the public schools and later to Asbury college, now Depauw university. In later years the university conferred on its distinguished alumnus the degree LL. D
At the outbreak of the Civil War Major Smith enlisted. He served until the end of the war in the Armies of the Potomac, Ohio and Cumberland, rising to the rank of major in the Sixth Indiana cavalry. He was wounded near Atlanta, Ga., and was taken prisoner. After a confinement in a Confederate prison at Atlanta, Ga., Major Smith was exchanged and rejoined his regiment.
Major Smith was a member of the Loyal Legion. After the war Major Smith engaged for three years in cotton planting at Enterprise, Miss. Major Smith began his journalistic career at Terre Haute, Ind., as editor of the Terre Haute Mall, Later he acquired the Terre Haute Express. In 1873 he removed the latter newspaper to Chicago, continuing its publication as the Chicago Express.
In 1882 Major Smith founded in Chicago the American Press Association, the monument to his fame. Later the main offices of the American Press association were removed to New York, where they remain.
In person Major Smith was distinguished among men, tall and well built. He bore himself with dignity and ease, and his clean shaven face bore the impress of his splendid mind. In his later years his abundant hair became silvery white, adding an indescribable charm to his appearance. His manner was kindly and genial, without effusion. He had a keen sense of justice, to which testimony is borne by a host of employees, in whose welfare he took an active interest.
Major Smith is survived by a widow, two daughters and a son. The last named, Courtland Smith, is vice president and assistant general manager of the American Press Association.
CANAL TO OPEN IN SIX YEARS
Secretary of Panama Commission Says Jan. 1, 1915, Is Date.
San Francisco, Dec. 23.—The Panama canal will be opened Jan. 1, 1915, according to an official communication received by the California promotion committee from Joseph Buckline Bishop, secretary of the canal commission.
Mail Pouch Stolen
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 23—A mall pouch containing sixty pounds of registered Christmas packages, consigned to eastern points, was stolen from the baggage room of the Twenty-second street and Grand avenue depot of the Belt Line railroad. Although the postoffice authorities refuse to make any statement as to the contents of the pouch, it is believed to have contained much valuable merchandise. There was no money in it.
Live Stock Marketa
PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)—
CATTLE slow; choice, $6.20@6.75;
prime, $6.20@6.40;
lambs strong; prime
wethers, $4.30@4.30; culls and
mon, $1.50@2.50; lambs, $4@7.25; veal
calves, $4@8.75.
HOGS active and higher; prime
heavies, $5.75@6; mediums, $5.75@
kerries, $5.60@7.55; light
Yorkshire, $5.25@6; pigs, $4.90@1.10;
roughts, $4.50@6; pigs, $4.90@1.10;
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CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS.
Thursday, December 17.
After eight years of torture from a broken back, Frank Sandoval died at Monrovia, Cal.
While playing with his father's revolver, Harold Brouse, six years old, shot and killed his two-year-old sister at Sellingsgrove, Pa.
The Russian Grand Duke Alexis, whose sudden death occurred recently in Paris, died intestate, leaving a huge fortune of $30,000,060.
Wesley M. Owen, of Leroy, Ill., has been appointed a justice of the supreme court on the isthmus of Panama, to fill a vacancy.
President Roosevelt declined an invitation to attend a banquet to be given in New York by the Aero Club of America in honor of the Wright brothers.
Friday, December 18.
President Roosevelt has appointed George E. Work to be collector of internal revenue for the district of West Virginia.
The most disastrous fire that Goldsboro, N. C., has suffered in many years raged for several hours and caused damage and loss of property estimated at $100,000.
The treasury has purchased 100,000 ounces of silver for delivery at New York. 75,000 ounces for delivery at New Orleans and 50,000 ounces for delivery at Denver, at 48,692 per ounce.
Rev. Berryman Green, for several years connected with the Episcopal Theological Seminary of Virginia, was elected bishop coadjutor of the diocese of Virginia by the Episcopal convention at Alexandria, Va.
Saturday, December 19.
Rev. Thomas A. Wallace, former chancellor of the Roman Catholic diocese of Newark, N. J., died of paralysis.
James Jenkins, John Portella and Lee Chung were hanged on the same scaffold in the provincial jail at New Westminster, B. C.
James F. Tracey, of Albany, N. Y., an associate justice of the supreme court of the Philippines, has resigned and the resignation has been accepted by the president.
Five highwaymen blew up the Holloway Exchange bank, of Gibson, Neb., held the inhabitants at bay while they secured $2500 from the vaults and escaped in an automobile, the citizens pursuing them.
Monday, December 21.
A national tariff conference will be
A national tarm conference will be called for Feb. 9 to 11 at Indianapolis. Paul Rotkosky was run down and killed by a Pennsylvania railroad train near Shamokin, Pa.
Mrs. Harriet Armstrong, who died at her home in Rosnoke, Va., aged 101 years, lived all her life at the spot where she died.
The Good Government League of San Francisco has indorsed President Roosevelt's attitude toward the secret service and congress.
When the police searched A. B. Smith at Ventura, Cal., held for forgery, the found a cavity in his wood, en leg holding alleged forged notes.
Tuesday, December 22.
The supreme court of the United States adjourned until Jan. 4.
Two children of William Johnston of Plumbrook, N. Y., aged two and four years respectively, were burned to death in their beds when their home was destroyed by fire.
Worried by continued illness of several months from rheumatism, August Winkler, a Wilmington, Del., cabinetmaker, went into an alley near his home and fired two bullets from a revolver into his right temple.
In the presence of the young woman who had just refused to marry him, Rev. W. Woodfolk, aged twenty-two, of Dallas, Tex., shot himself through the heart and fell dead across the couch on which the terrified young woman had been reclining.
Wednesday, December 23.
Wilmer V. Shellender, a well known carpenter, fell from a scaffold at Kennett Square, Pa., and was killed.
The Rt. Rev. John S. Michaud, bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Burlington, Tt., died at St. Vincent's hospital, in New York.
Mrs. Mary Green, an elderly woman, who lives alone at Columbus, near Mt. Holly, N. J., committed suicide by hanging herself in her bedroom with a rope fastened to a lamp bracket.
Henry Neumeyer, a prominent citizen of Macungle, Pa., got up before daylight, and while walking about in the dark smashed a pane of glass with his face and nearly bled to death from his injuries.
KNOX WILL HEAD TAFT'S CABINET
He Has Accepted the Place as Secretary of State.
PRESIDENT-ELECT PLEASED
Feels That He Should Be Congratulated In Securing Senator Knox's Services and Says He Is Recognized as One of the Greatest Lawyers in the Senate.
William H. Taft, president elect of the United States, announced the appointment of United States Senator Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania, as secretary of state in his cabinet.
The announcement followed the receipt by Mr. Taft of a telegram conveying the information from Mr. Knox that he would accept the premiership of the Taft cabinet.
Mr. Taft without delay made the announcement that the matter was settled.
"I feel that I am to be congratulated in securing the services of Senator Knox in my cabinet," said Judge Taft in making the announcement. "In selec g a secretary of state, I wanted, first, a great lawyer, and, second, a man who would fill the public eye, not only here, but abroad, as a man who stands out pre-eminently as a great American. Mr. Knox was a great attorney general; he was a prominent candidate for the presidency, and he is recognized in the senate and elsewhere as one of the great lawyers of that body."
Judge Taft also feels that from a political viewpoint the selection of Mr. Knox is most happy. He explained that there was often a feeling that the state of Pennsylvania, with its assured Republican majorities, often was slighted in the matter of recognition in the high councils of the party. That this will not be the case in the next administration was indicated by the announcement by Mr. Taft that he would invite Senator Knox to come to Augusta that he might consult him freely with reference to filling other places in his cabinet.
Carnegie Again Urges Free Steel.
Andrew Carnegie, famous for the millions he made in the steel business and for his views on economic questions, made a most entertaining, if not instructive, witness before the house ways and means committee in Washington in connection with the proposed revision of the tariff.
"Permanent protection is an injustice to the consumer," said Mr. Carnegie impressively. "When an industry reaches that state of development where it no longer needs protection it is a gross injustice to the consumer to continue it."
Mr. Carnegie's principal contention was that the steel industry needs no more protection, that it has reached a point in its development where the American manufacturers can compete with the world under free trade conditions. While he claimed that the cost of labor and production of steel are less in this country than in the other countries producing steel, Mr. Carnegie gave no figures to support his contentions.
He said that Judge Gary told the committee that the United States Steel corporation can get along without a tariff on its product and that should be sufficient evidence for the committee to take off the duty on steel and iron.
Couple Slain In Bed.
Wycomy Florezik, aged thirty-eight years, and Rozlye Florezik, twenty-four years old, his wife, were found murdered in their home, at 132 Bird street, Wilmington, Del. The grusome crime had been committed with a hatchet. Between the beds in which the bodies were found was the cradle containing the two-months-old child of the couple. Splashes of blood were found on the infant, but it was not hurt.
In the adjoining room was the two-year-old daughter of the dead man and woman. She was badly frightened and had evidently been in her parents' room, because marks of blood were found on the floor of the room which she occupied. The bodies were found by Alexander Florezik, aged eighteen years, a boarder and half-brother of the murdered man, who did not spend the night at the house, but went there in the morning to learn why he could not get in when he went home. The police have taken the young man into custody.
Penna. Capitol "Trimmers" Sentenced.
John H. Sanderson, contractor for the furnishing of the new state capitol; ex-Auditor General William P. Snyder, ex-State Treasurer W. L. Mathues and ex-Superintendent of Public Grounds and Buildings James M. Shumaker, convicted of conspiracy to defraud the state of Pennsylvania in the first of the cases growing out of the capitol scandal to be tried, were sentenced to two years in the penitentiary, $500 fine and costs, the maximum punishment allowed by law, and after being in the custody of the sheriff for seven hours were released on $100,000 ball. Their attorneys appealed from the refusal of the judge to grant a new trial and his sentence to the superior court, and that tribunal, sitting in Philadelphia, allowed a supersedesess. When the terms of this order staying the execution of the
sentence were received at Harrisburg ball was entered in the sum of $25,000 each for the defendants, this ball to hold good until the superior court decides their fate.
John D., Jr., Sues Newspaper For Libel Upon a charge of criminal libel, which was made by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., S. S. Carvalho, president of the Star company, publishers of William H. Hearst's New York American
Was arrested and arraigned in police court before Magistrate Finn. At the solicitation of Clarence J. Shearn, attorney for the Hearest publications, and without any objection being raised on the part of Assistant District Attorney Garvan, who had charge of the prosecution. Mr. Carvalho was paroled in the custody of his lawyer until Dec. 26 for examination.
Mr. Rockeferell, accompanied by his counsel, Lawyer Murphy, appeared in District Attorney Jerome's office and made complaint that the article published in the New York American of Dec. 17, under a Chicago date of Dec. 16, with the head line "J. D. Rockeferell, Jr., Originated Peonage In Stockade, It Is Said," tended to injure his good name, reputation and credit and to make him appear malicious.
Hanged to Tree By Hobbers.
While enroute with his wife and twelve children from Esterhazy, Can., to Petersburg, Va., where they were to make their home, Charles Kreicar, an Italian, met a tragic death near Graham, Va. His body was found hanging to a tree, suspended by heavy twine around his neck. The police believe that Kreicar, who displayed a large roll of money on the train between Cincinnati and Bluefield, W. Va., according to the conductor, was robbed and murdered. When the train reached Bluefield Kreicar left it to get lunch for his wife and children. The train pulled out before Kreicar returned and he was left behind. Kreicar had the railroad tickets from Roanoke to Petersburg in his pockets, and when the train reached Roanoke after midnight Mrs. Kreicar and the twelve little ones entered a waitingroom and remained there all night. A message told of the finding of the body. A small cord was about the neck.
Found Will Nailed to Washtub
Enclosed in a red envelope, which was nailed securely to the bottom of a washub, the will of the late Patrick Monahan, of Charlestown, Mass., disposing of property valued at $250,000, was found and offered for probate. Monahan was a grocer and was not married. When he died last September no will could be found, and John Monahan, of Chicago, a brother, was made administrator. The will was found as described in a sub-cellar.
Monument to Governor Stuart
Linglestown, a small town about seven miles east of Harrisburg, Pa., will erect a handsome monument in honor of Governor Edwin Stuart. The inhabitants of the town fought the good roads movement for a long time, but recently gave the chief executive's policy a trial and were so pleased with its success that the residents have decided to honor "the Good Roads Governor" by placing a lasting tribute to his efforts.
Body Found In the Delaware
A burlap bag containing a leather coat and the body of a man or woman in such a state of decomposition that it was impossible to fully determine the sex of the corpse, was found in the Delaware river near Lambertville, N.J. The body had been wrapped in a clothes line and was weighted down in the water with about forty pounds of railroad spikes.
Dying Man Electrocuted.
While he was assisting in the making of tests at the power plant of the Allentown (Pa.) Electric Light and Power company, William Werley, an expert electrician, was suddenly stricken with heart failure and, grasping for support, received a shock that killed him. Werley, when he felt the attack coming on, called to the superintendent to throw the power off, and then sank, dying to the floor.
Elbert Hubbard Injured
Elbert Hubbard, the Roycrofter and author, was nearly killed by a tree in the woods near his East Aurora, N. Y., colony. Mr. Hubbard was assisting workmen, when he miscalculated the direction in which one of the trees which he was felling was going to fall, and he was crushed badly. Mr. Hubbard will be laid up for some time
WOMAN THROWS ACID IN DOCTOR'S FACE
Revolver.
Washington, N. J., Dec. 23. — Dr. Charles B. Smith, mayor of this city, who has held office for nine years, and considered the most popular man in this place, was nearly blinded by a woman patient, who threw carbolic acid in the doctor's eyes after trying to kill him with a revolver.
The woman was Mrs. Alice Castner, a wealthy widow, living in the country a mile from Washington, who, Dr. Smith says, is suffering from paranola. Dr. Smith has long been the physician for the family of John Bowers, a wealthy farmer living near Washington, who is Mrs. Castner's father. Mrs. Castner's husband died ten years ago and she has four children.
SHOPPERS IN PANIC
One Killed, Many Hurt, When Joker
Yellied "Fire!"
St. Joseph, Dec. 23. — Christmas
shoppers in a downtown department
store were thrown into a panic by a
cry of fire, and in the wild scramble
for the exits that followed one child
was crushed to death and a half dozen
women fainted and were trampled on.
The fire cry was a hoax.
Morgan Paid $120,000 For Caxtons.
London, Dec. 23—J. P. Morgan, it
was announced, paid $120,000 for the
Caxtons which he bought recently at
the sale of the library of Lord Amherst.
Election Judge Sent to Prison.
St. Louis, Dec. 23.—Four years in
the penitentiary was the sentence pronounced upon Thomas McCrath, convicted of fraud as a judge of election
at the last general primary.
THE KENN
SERVED IN NEW WAY
SERVED IN NEW WAY
DESSERT DISHES FOR THOSE WHO LIKE THE QUINCE.
Sweet Apples Mixed with the Fruit Add Flavor—Chopped Preserved Quinces Served with Boiled Custard—Quince Tart.
Quince chips are a thick preserve of tender quinces and sugar syrup. A little invention may vary this by adding fruit that does not disturb the flavor. When cooked all alone the quince flavor is quite strong, and sweet apples seem created to
little invention may vary this by adding fruit that does not disturb the flavor. When cooked all alone the quince flavor is quite strong, and sweet apples seem created to borrow an equal flavor from the quince. A very few quince preserves with ice cream is a dainty dish, and a spoonful served with a mound of whipped cream and gelatin is delicious.
The Housekeeper suggests new ways for the fruit, and one of these is a trifle made with chipped preserved quinces. Arrange them in a deep glass dish with alternate layers of macaroni or sponge cake crumbs, then pour over a rich boiled custard made with the yellows of six eggs, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, three cupfuls of milk and half a teaspoonful of almond extract. Pour the custard over while it is still warm and set aside until very cold. Just before serving heap over the top the whites of two eggs whipped to a very stiff snow with two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and two tablespoonfuls of chopped blanched almonds. Garnish with candied orange carpels or candied cherries.
A quince tart is either a pie or pudding if one prefers it so called, but it is equally delicious under other name. Press one plum of quince pulp through a colander, add to it one cupful of granulated sugar, the beaten yolks of four eggs and one pint of milk. Line a shallow pudding dish with puff paste and pour in the quince mixture. Twist a strip of the pastry around the edge of the dish for a border and bake in a moderate oven for about half an hour or until done. Whip the whites of the eggs to a very stiff snow with four tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, heap it over the top and let it brown very delicately in a slow oven. Serve cold with whipped cream.
Tapioca cooked in water until perfectly clear and thick to jelly makes another pleasing foundation for a quince dish. Sweeten the tapioca to taste and flavor with a little nutmeg and lemon juice. Place it in layers in a buttered pudding dish with chopped preserved quinces, cover the top with the whites of two eggs whipped to a stiff snow with two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, and let it brown delicately in a slow oven. The syrup should be drained from the fruit and used as a sauce. Whipped cream is also a delicious accompaniment. This pudding is excellent either hot or cold.
Swiss Roast.
Take a round steak—from two to two and a half inches in thickness—and pound into it as much flour as it will take, using the edge of a heavy plate for that purpose. When the flour has been pounded into both sides put the meat into an iron skilllet with some lard, and brown it on both sides. Then cover it with water, adding onions enough to flavor and a whole ripe tomato, or an equal quantity of canned tomatoes when fresh vegetables are not in season. Cover tightly and cook two hours, adding more water as necessary during the time. Just before the meat is done, salt and pepper to taste. Delicious as this dish is when served hot, it is also nice when cold.
To Clean Algrettes
Make a soap suds from any pure soap and warm water; after fastening the gidgette by the wired end to a clean, smooth table—an oilcloth covered table is good—take a fine fibered brush and clean by gently brushing with the soap suds. When thoroughly clean you will find that your feathers are limp. Let them dry and dip in a bit of cold starch, then hang up by the wired end to again dry. You will find them to be like new if treated gently and carefully as indicated.
Concerning Fish
When a fish is to be broiled, never bone it. If the bones are removed the tissues are broken and the juices escape. Before frying fish dust it off with salt and pepper. Never use filling or stuffing in a fat fish that is to be baked. Fish fat is very strong and, mingled with a stuffing, is most unpleasant.
Savory Breakfast Dish
A tasty breakfast or luncheon dish for two people: Large cup of calves' liver left from previous meal cut into small pieces, half green pepper cut in fine pieces, piece of butter in frying pan; stir liver and pepper together until hot. Break in two eggs. Stir all together. Serve before eggs get dry.
Graham Pudding
Two-thirds cup of molasses, one
fourth cup of butter, one-half cup of
sour milk, one egg, one-half teaspoon
soda, $1\frac{1}{2}$ cups graham flour. Sauce:
One cup of sugar, one tablespoonful
corn starch, one egg, and boiling
water; cook until as thick as cream;
one teaspoonful of vanilla.
Chestnut Pudding Sauce.
Add four tablespoons of maple syru
to one pint of whipped cream, remove froth and arrange about pudding when unmolded. Garnish with boiled chestnuts.
THE COOKING TIME TABLE.
Perioda That Should Be Allowed for the Various Dishes.
Bacon, fried in its own fat, two to three minutes. Chops, breaded, five to eight minutes. Croquettes, one minute. Doughnuts, three to five minutes. Fish balls, one minute. Fish, breaded, five to eight minutes. Fish, small, two to five minutes. Fritters, three to five minutes. Potatoes, two to five minutes. Brown bread should be steamed for three hours. Puddings, from two to three hours, and rice, 45 to 60 minutes.
time Table for Broiling Meats and Fowls.—Bacon, four to eight minutes. Birds, six to eight minutes. Chicken, 15 minutes per pound. Chops, six to eight minutes. Small, thin fish, five to eight minutes. Thick fish, 12 to 15 minutes. Liver, four to eight minutes. Squab, ten to 15 minutes. Steak, one inch thick, six to eight minutes. Steak, 1½ inches thick, eight to ten minutes. Tripe, four to eight minutes.
Time Table for Roasting Meats.—Braised beef, three to four hours. Fillet of beef, 30 minutes. Roast beef rare, 12 to 14 minutes per pound. Chicken, one to one and one-half hours. Duck, 18 minutes. Take duck, one to one and one-half hours. Mutton one and a quarter to one and one-half hours. Pork, two to three hours. Turkey, two to three hours, or 15 minutes per pound. Veal, two to three hours.
The Home.
Put a few drops of oil of lavender in bookcases to prevent mildew on the books.
Oatmeal put to soak in water the night before only requires about one-half the time to cook.
It is best not to have carpets on the bedroom floors; use rugs instead. These can easily be cleaned.
Celery should lie at least half an hour in cold water or upon ice before serving in order to be firm and crisp. Stuffed olives chopped fine, mixed with cream cheese and made into balls are delicious if served with a plain salad. Chicken salad is delicious if mixed with small pieces of green pepper and mayonnaise. Press the meat into pepper cases. When starching children's pinafores add a small piece of sugar to the boiled starch. This will make them iron more easily, and leave a beautiful gloss on them. Stockings should not be washed in the same water which has been used in washing white clothes, as they are apt in that case to become covered with lint.
Delicious Potato Ring
A potato ring promises to live long as a substantial resort in time of need. Harper's Bazar says: "This makes an exceedingly nice dish for either a family luncheon or dinner. It is attractive to the eye, besides affording a good opportunity for economy. The mashed potato should be reheated in a little milk or cream and placed in a pan set into hot water. While these are heating cut the left-over fowl or meat into small pieces and reheat in the gravy. When ready to dish, whip into the potato the stiffly whipped white of one egg, and then place tablespoonfuls around the meat. A garnish of parsley adds to the good effect, and tufts of this or of celery foliage may be placed around the base. Should there be any onions left over they can be reheated with the meat and gravy.
Warmed-Over Dishes
Peas and cabbage may be warmed over in the following way: Butter a small mold or basin, put in the article to be warmed and place some pieces of butter on the top, cover with a saucer and put into the oven until sufficiently hot.
New potatoes are troublesome to reheat; the best way is to measure them out before scraping, so that none may be left. This is not always possible, however; if any are lift they may be put into the steamer and made hot, covering them with a cloth instead of the saucepan lid.
Delicious Dessert
One cup of white sugar, three tablespoons of grated chocolate, five tablespoons of grated bread crumbs, three eggs, one good pint of sweet milk; add a little salt and vanilla to taste. Mix the sugar and the yolks of the eggs thoroughly, then add the bread, then the chocolate, and lastly the milk. Bake about 20 minutes, then cover with the whites of the eggs well beaten, mixed with three tablespoons of sugar. Put back into oven until brown.
Raisin Light Biscuits
Take a lump of light dough ready to make down, shorten with a lump of butter, about a tablespoonful to a pint of dough and let it rise as for light biscuits. Flour the rolling board well and roll the dough about half an inch thick. Spread thickly with melted butter, sprinkle with sugar, raisins and cinnamon. Roll up, and with a sharp knife cut off pieces about an inch thick. Bake in a moderate oven.
Pickled Grapes
Pick fresh grapes from the stems without breaking, and put in a jar. For seven pounds grapes, allow a quart of vinegar, three pounds of sugar, a tablespoonful each of whole cloves and cinnamon sticks. Cook vinegar, sugar and spices together a few moments. Cool to a little hotter than lukewarm and pour over the grapes, which are not to be cooked. Cover and set in a cool place.
Don't Parade Your Troubles.
Shakespeare: He bears misery best who hides it most.
Work as Opportunity Offers.
He that waits to do a great deal at once will never do any—Johnson.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
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WE WILL SEND YOU McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR BOTH.
FOR TWO YEARLY OR THEIR EQUIVALENT, TURES, ONE ONLY, OF DORE ROOSEVELT, DR. INGTON, BATTLE OF SAN TLE OF QUASIMAS NEAR 1898, SHOWING THE NINTH ORED CAVALRY IN SUPPLIERS. SIZE 20X28 AND 20 BATTLE AND CHARGE ONLY.
ED INFANTRY IN RESCUE OF AT SAN JUAN HILL, JULY 2, AND 20X24 INCHES, ADMIRAL NAVAL BATTLE OFF CAVITT, MAY 1ST, 1898, NAVAL INDUCTION OF ADMIRAL CENSH FLEET OFF SANTIAGO DE OCT, 1898, SIZE 22X28 INCHES; LA CAPTURE OF EL CANEY, EL PUBLICATIONS OF SANTIAGO, JULY SECOND, 1898, SIZE 22X28 AND WE WILL SEND YOU ONE, THE FOLLOWING BATTLES OF THE SAME TERMS. THE PRESENT OTHER BATTLES ARE FINAL. THEY ARE 22X28 INCHES, WITH FRAMES FOR ANY OF THE MOS FOR 2 DOLLARS & 50CTS. EQUAL. BATTLE OF GETTYSBURGH SHILOH, BATTLE OF FIVE FOR OF ATLANTA, GA., BATTLE SYLVANIA, VA., BATTLE OF MISS., BATTLE OF LOOKOUT, PENN., BATTLE BETWEEN THE AND THE MERRIMAC, BATTLE OF AMA., BATTLE OF CHANCELLOVE OF THE BIG HORN, (CUSTER) STORMING OF FORT WAR.
CORED TROOPS IN THIS FIGHT IN NEW ORLEANS, LA., CAPTURE OF SITTING BULL, THE GRANTHIEFTAIN; FORT PILLOW MAP OF PETERSBURG, VA., BATTLE, AR, VA., BATTLE OF OLUSTIH, SEND FAMILY RECORD, SIX WHICH CONTAINS SPACE FOR PARENTS AND TEN CHILDREN SEND SOLDIERS WAR RECORD OF SERVICE IN UNITED STATES.
IF YOU WILL TALK WITH YOUR NEIGH.
BORS AND INTEREST THEM IN THE PLANET
WE WILL HELP YOU TO OBTAIN A PREMIUM
SHOULD YOU DESIRE A JOURNAL IN THE UNITED STATE SEND IT TO YOU IN CONJUNCT PLANET AT A GREATLY RELIABLE FOR BOTH.
IN ORDER TO FURTHER INCREASE OUR STEADILY GROWING CIRCULATION WE WILL OFH.
WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND THE ST LOUIS, MISSOURI, SEMI-WEEKLY GLOBE DEMOCRAT, ONE OF THE LEADING REPUBLICAN JOURNALS IN THE UNITED STATES FOR $2.25 PER YEAR FOR BOTH.
WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE FOR $2.25 PER YEAR FOR BOTH.
FURNISH THE PHOTOGRAPH TAIN PEN, GOLD POINT; ONE ONE BREAST-PIN, GOLD FILL EN LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS CLOCK, ONE DOZEN NAPKIN DOZEN TOWELS, ONE CHOCO PAIR VASES, ONE PAIR KID HAM, ONE TURKEY.
WE WILL SEND YOU THE PLANET AND McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR $2.25 PER YFAR FOR BOTH.
OR THEIR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL SEND PICTURES, ONE ONLY, OF PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT, DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, BATTLE OF SANTIAGO, LAND BATTLE OF QUASIMAS NEAR SANTIAGO, JUNE 24, 1898, SHOWING THE NINTH AND TENTH COLORED CAVALRY IN SUPPORT OF ROUGH RIDERS. SIZE 20X28 AND 20X24 INCHES, LAND BATTLE AND CHARGE OF THE 24TH & 25TH
COLORED INFANTRY
RIDERS AT SAN JUAN
20X28 AND 20X24 INC
GREAT NAVAL BATT
NILA BAY, MAY 1ST
DESTRUCTION OF
SPANISH FLEET OFF
LY 3RD, 1898, SIZE 22
TLE, CAPTURE OF E
FORTIFICATIONS OF
AND SECOND, 1898,
INCHES. WE WILL
OF THE FOLLOWING
WAR ON THE SAME
LIKE THE OTHER BAT
COLORS. THEY ARE
TAIL AT ONE DON
FURNISH FRAMES FOR
CHROMOS FOR 2 DON
DITIONAL. BATTLE
TLE OF SHILOH, BATT
BATTLE OF ATLAS
SPOTTSYLVANIA, VB
BURG, MISS., BATT
TAIN, TENN., BATT
TOR AND THE MERE
RUN, VA., BATTLE OF
BATTLE OF THE BIG
CHARGE) STORMING
C., (COLORED TROO
F OF NEW ORLEA
ATH OF SITTING
DIAN CHIEFTAIN; FO
FALL OF PETERSBUR
CHESTER, VA., BATT
WE WILL SEND FAM
28. WHICH CONTA
GRAPHS OF PARENT
WE WILL SEND SOLD
TIFICATE OF SERVICE
MY.)
COLORED INFANTRY IN RESCUE OF ROUGH RIDERS AT SAN JUAN HILL, JULY 2, 1898, SIZE 20X28 AND 20X24 INCHES, ADMIRAL DEWEY'S GREAT NAVAL BATTLE OFF CAVITE IN MANILA BAY, MAY 1ST, 1898, NAVAL BATTLE, DESTRUCTION OF ADMIRAL CERVERA'S SPANISH FLEET OFF SANTIAGO DE CUBA, JULY 3RD, 1898, SIZE 22X28 INCHES; LAND BATTLE, CAPTURE OF EL CANEY, EL PASO AND FORTIFICATIONS OF SANTIAGO, JULY FIRST AND SECOND, 1898, SIZE 22X28 AND 22X27 INCHES. WE WILL SEND YOU ONE OF ANY OF THE FOLLOWING BATTLES OF THE CIVIL WAR ON THE SAME TERMS. THE PICTURES LIKE THE OTHER BATTLES ARE FINISHED IN COLORS. THEY ARE 22X28 INCHES AND RETAIL AT ONE DOLLAR EACH. WE WILL FURNISH FRAMES FOR ANY OF THESE FINE CHROMOS FOR 2 DOLLARS & 50CTS. EACH ADDITIONAL. BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, BATTLE OF SHILOH, BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS, VA., BATTLE OF ATLANTA, GA., BATTLE OF SPOTTSYLVANIA, VA., BATTLE OF VICKSBURG, MISS., BATTLE OF LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN, TENN., BATTLE BETWEEN THE MONITOR AND THE MERRIMAC, BATTLE OF BULL RUN, VA., BATTLE OF CHANCELLORSVILLE, BATTLE OF THE BIG HORN, (CUSTER'S LAST CHARGE) STORMING OF FORT WAGNER, S. C., (COLORED TROOPS IN THIS FIGHT), BAT-
5 OF NEW ORLEANS, LA., CAPTURE AND ATH OF SITTING BULL, THE GREAT INDIAN CHIEFTAIN; FORT PILLOW MASSACRE, FALL OF PETERSBURG, VA., BATTLE OF WINCHESTER, VA., BATTLE OF OLUSTEE, FLA. WE WILL SEND FAMILY RECORD, SIZE 22 BY 28, WHICH CONTAINS SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHS OF PARENTS AND TEN CHILDREN. WE WILL SEND SOLDIERS WAR RECORD (CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE IN UNITED STATES ARMY.)
FOR FIVE NEW SUBSCRIBERS
FOR ONE YEAR EASILENT, WE WILL SEND CLE TOM'S CABIN, THE INTERESTING BOOK WILL SEND YOU A WITH YOUR PICTURE
THE YEAR EACH, OR THEIR
WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY
HIM'S CABIN, THE MOST INTEN-
TING BOOK IN THE COUNTY
END YOU A GOLD-PLATED
YOUR PICTURE THEREIN.
FOR ONE YEAR EACH, OR THEIR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY OF UNCLE TOM'S CABIN, THE MOST INTENSELY INTERESTING BOOK IN THE COUNTRY. WE WILL SEND YOU A GOLD-PLATED BROOCH WITH YOUR PICTURE THEREIN, YOU TO
ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.,
311 North Fourth Street,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
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To interest yourself in promoting the CIRCULATION of the
FOR TWO YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS
REQUISITE NUMBER IS OBTAINED, WE WILL FORWARD THE PRESENT INDICATED.
A PERSON WHO TRIES TO GET FORTY SUBSCRIBERS AND GETS TIRED MAY INDICATE HIS WISH AND WE WILL SEND THE PRESENT FOR THE NUMBER HE HAS SECURED OVER FIVE.
THE NUMBER WILL BE FOR NOT LESS THAN FIVE NOR MORE THAN TEN AND NOT LESS THAN TEN NOR M HAN TWENTY AND NOT LESS THAN Y NOR MORE THAN FORTY, TO DET THE PRIZE TO WHICH THE WORKER TLED.
IF ANYTHING IS DESIRED NOT SPECIFIED IN THIS LIST, WRITE US ABOUT IT AND WE WILL TELL YOU IN WHAT CLASS IT BE LONGS.
ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.,
311 North Fourth Street,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
A man in a chair
LANET
EEEKLY
READING
UNITED
H.
T AND
R $2.25
T AND
YEAR
ND PIC
THEO-
WASH-
D BAT-
JUNE 24,
H COL-
GH RI-
LAND
& 25TH
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REQUISIT FOR WAR
SHOULD YOU DESIRE ANY COLORED JOURNAL IN THE UNITED STATES, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE PLANET AT A GREATLY REDUCED RATE FOR BOTH.
FURNISH THE PHOTOGRAPH, ONE FOUNTAIN PEN, GOLD POINT; ONE LADIES RING, ONE BREAST-PIN, GOLD FILLED; HALF DOZEN LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, ONE ALARM CLOCK, ONE DOZEN NAPKINS, ONE HALF DOZEN TOWELS, ONE CHOCOLATE POT, ONE PAIR VASES, ONE PAIR KID GLOVES, ONE HAM, ONE TURKEY.
WILL SEND ONE CHINA SET, THIRTY-ONE PIECES; ONE NECKLACE; DICKENS, SHAKESPEARE, BYRON WORKS; ONE UMBRELLA, ONE PLAIN GOLD RING, ONE PAIR LACE CURTAINS 1,000 ENVELOPES, 1,000 SHEETS OF PAPER PRINTED AND DELIVERED; ONE TOILET SET ONE HALF CORD OF SAWED WOOD
FOR TWENTY NEW SUBSCRIBERS
WE WILL GIVE ONE HANDSOME GOLD RING WITH OPALS, RUBIES OR PEARLS; ONE JEWELRY BOX FINISHED IN GOLD OR SILVER; ONE SILK SHIRT WAIST; ONE READY MADE DRESS, ONE GOLD WATCH, FILLED, WARRANTED FOR TEN YEARS, ONE ROCKING CHAIR, ONE LOAD OF COAL, ONE GROSS OF SOAP, EITHER WASHING OR TOILET; ONE BARREL OF BEST FLOUR, ONE PAIR BLANKETS, ONE MANICURE SET, ONE SEAMSTRESS' WORK BOX, ONE PAIR SHOES, GENTS OR LADIES.
FOR FORTY YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS
OR EQUIVALENT, WE WILL GIVE ONE SEWING MACHINE, ONE DIAMOND RING, ONE GOLD WATCH, ONE PAIR FINE GOLD EARRINGS, ONE MUSIC BOX, ONE PHONOGRAPH, ONE READY MADE DRESS, ONE SUIT OF GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHES, ONE GOLD-HEADED CANE, ONE GOLD-HEADED UMBRELLA, ONE CHINA SET, ONE DOZEN SILVER-PLATED KNIVES AND FORKS, ONE HAT-RACK, ONE SILK DRESS, ONE WEEK'S TRIP TO THE SEASHORE, RAILROAD FARE AND HOTEL BILL PAID, FOR ANY RICHMOND WORKER. THESE OFFERS MAY BE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF BY SENDING ONE OR TWO SUBSCRIBER'S NAMES AT A TIME. WE WILL KEEP A RECORD OF THEM: AS SOON AS THE
FOR TEN NEW SUBSCRIBERS
FIVB
NOT= THE
COLORED WE WILL WITH THE RED RATE
ONE FOUNDED RING, HALF DOZZLE ALARM ONE HALF POT, ONE DOVES, ONE
BERS
SHIRTY-ONE IS, SHAKES-HELLA, ONE CURTAINS OF PAPER DILET SET.
BERS
GOLD RING ONE JEWELER SILVER; DY MADE FED. WAR-ROCKING GROSS OF FILET; ONE IR BLANK-AMSTRESS'TITS OR LA-
BERS
ONE SEWING, ONE GOLD EAR-NOGRAPH, SET OF GEN-HEADED HELLA, ONE PLATED BACK, ONE IN THE SEA-OTEL BILLER.
IN ADVANT-WO SUBWE WILL ON AS THE
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= 7 7 i
Diletta eselatvapsiieaatn omni
saronar JANUARY &, im
2S —
ae
CELLAR FOR COLD STORAGE
Type ef One Which Can Be Built at
An inquiry regarding an outside
Vegetable cellar reminds me of the
trouble I had keeping my dahlia roots
fm my home cellar, I have a hot-air
furnace, and I lost so many roots by
‘drying that I was forced to get them
outside.
Perhaps a plan of my cellar would
be of interest to your readers. I used
& glass cover, as I had always wanted
to do my coldframe work without
breaking my back. and, if possible,
4 : ss
ero otg-- 4 |
L
SECTION OF CELLAR.
1, Earth Floor; 2, Loose Floor; 3,
Benches; 4, Eight-Inch Concrete
Wall; 5, Double-Boarded Air-Space;
6, Ground Level; 7, Sodded Banked
Earth.
without freezing to death. As I had
to cover tt anyway, I figured that the
fmcreased cost of the cover as it ts
Would not be much more than the
shingled roof, and would give me «
Place to work on sunny spring days,
when the balmy breeze from old Lake
Erie would tear the hair from an Es-
imo dog, writes a Lake county
(©.) farmer tn Country Gentleman.
I had an ‘Yea that by putting the
floor in loosely the warm afr from the
cellar would help to keep {t from freez-
ing, but I was mistaken; {t helped
the cellar to freeze. I use an old stove
‘and leave the venti!-‘)rs open. Set
the stove in a box connected with the
Outside and don’t have any trouble
getting afr enough.
I planted lettuce, radishes and asters
(early ones) last spring. on March 5.
After the seed came up, temperature
went to 12 degrees, but I got them
through in good shape. Of course if
4 had stayed long I couldn't; tt was
only two nights
T may add as a caution that most
Persons who build this house will have
to supply opportunity for dra, sage,
which I don’t need on my porous soll
The total cost of the 12 by 14 foot
cellar to me was $65.
PREPARING THE GARDEN.
Work Which Can Be Done Before
Next Spring.
To be successful in gardening re-
quires a great deal of planning, and
T always do all I can in the fall and
winter, says a writer in Orange Judd
Farmer. I always try to plow my gar-
den ground as late as possible, as T
am positive it destroys ‘a great num
ber of insects, especially cutworms. T
Always put a coat of manure on to
plow under if I can get it, and have
time to haul it. Then during the win-
ter I haul manure and spread on this
plowed ground. My land is quite level,
Of course, I would not put it on steep
hillsides.
If the manu.e is coarse I shake tt
out in the spring and haul off the
coarse straw and hay, and pile It to
Tot for next spring. I vse ‘he disk in
the spring, and thoroughly disk, mix-
ing the two coats of manure, one on
top and the other plowed tn very thor-
oughly, which places it where the
Plants can get at ft, and ts not all in
the oottom of the furrows, to dry out
in « drought.
If you use hotbeds in the spring, as
you should to be successful in rais-
ing good plants, see that the pits are
dug this fall and frames set on them;
thea cover with old pleces of board
and some wild hay or straw, and you
‘will save a lot of time in the spring.
Also get your soll that you are to
use in the botbeds together this fall.
The rich, light spots in the garden
will make good soil, and the manure
taken out of the old hotbeds will
make g20d maaure. Break it up fine
and mix thorourhly with the soil,
and form in a heap having a fiat top.
Put old pieces of board over this,
‘and about a foot of horse manure,
then pile on wild hay or straw until
you know it will not freeze. And ob,
What a snap in the spring when snow
‘and {ce are plentiful, not to have to
serape up any old thing for soll to
False plants ta!
‘Then there are probably some
taings that you wish to winter over in
‘the garden that will need protection.
T have @ nice patch of Welsh and
J onions, which I =z cover
: two inches of
then a good coat of wild hay.
Clover in Orchard,
Clover is one of the best orchard
Grops. Seed is cheap this year. If your
qrohard soil ix not adapted to red
ee
clover, try atstke. It will grow where
red clover will not, The seed now te
more expensive. but {t will go twice as
far, making !be cost of seeding of a
definite area e: cheap as with red
clover, ‘
HEELING IN TREES.
Method of Caring for Nursery Stock
Until Planted in Spring.
A word about heeling In trees at
this time will doubtless be of benefit
to some of our readers. Where fall
delivery of nursery stock is received,
it is probably best to heel the trees
in rather than to set them out in their
permanent location. The setting can
usually be more satisfactorily done in
the spring. John B. Katzner, a suc-
eeasful fruit grower of Minnesota, of:
fers the following advice on the sub-
dect:
I consider it very important that
you buy and order ail fruit trees to be
‘delivered in the fall. There is more
time all around for the nurseryman
‘a8 well as for the farmer at that time
of the year, and you can tale care of
the stock just as well, if not better,
than the nurseryman can by heeling
tm your stock over winter. For this
work select a place where the water
dose not accumulate. When you got
notice that the stock has been skipped.
dig a hole the length of the trees,
few inches deep, for the tops of the
trees, slanting down to the north to
‘about two feet for the roots, and wide
enough so that all the trees can be
placed tn the trench without crowding
them too much. For a hundred trees
a hole six feet wide is about right.
When the trees arrive, unpack at
once, prune the roots slantivg—so that
the tree will stand on the cut part of
the root when planted, to insure a
downward growth of the new roots
Cut off all broken parts of the roots
Now place the trees in the hole—
which onght to be a little deeper just
where the roots come so that they will
not be injured. When you have put
in about five or stx trees, throw a
Mttle dirt on between the roots. Above
the first tier of trees you ean place
one on two more. When all the trees
are in the bole, shovel some more
earth on the roots till all are well
covered. Now place a board on the
ground over the roots and stvollar
boards across the stems and branches,
so that the trees are entirely covered
A few short stakes under the boards
Will _keep too great pressure off from
the trees. Fill up the hole with dirt,
make a mound a little higher than the
surface to let the water flow off and
then put on a mulch about a foot
deep when the ground freezes up. The
trees are covered with boards so that
they shall not be Injured by the shov-
el when they are taken out In the
spring,
The stock fs now well heele. in and
will come out of its winter quarters
full of sap and vigor. ready to start
Into active growth at once. It is my
experience, running back over the last
15 years, that trees so handled will
not fail to make a growth of from six
inches to three feet the first season.
If you compare the growth of these
trees with spring delivered trees, if
you think of the consequent success in
the one case and the frequent failure
of the other, the great advantage of
‘tall delivery stock will be evident to
jyou. Another advantage of fall de
livery which we must not lose
sight of is that we have our trees on
band in spring to plant whenever we
ube seats.
A HANDY SACK HOLDER.
cee eal
oo
era
sits ntact
ar, a na
sete cea
Pearson ne te
st tears ee
Se
i
EN
aba
eit
: - :
‘Sack Holder in Use.
ters or one inch thick, as shown at A
and the strip B. This strip should be
about three inches wide, and of a
length to suit the sacks used. A hole
is bored in the center of B and three
holes in block A as shown. These
holes should be little larger than the
rope used. ‘Thread the blocks as
shown, by putting the two ends
through the center holes in A. Bring
the lower end down, and tie fast to
strip B, the other end is: made fast
to block A by tying in the top hole.
Now drive two sharp-pointed wire
nails through strip B as shown at
C C for holding the sack. If desired
a heavy wire or strap of fron may be
made fast to B and the ends dent to
fit inside to assist in holding sack
open. The holder has advantage:
over any other we have used. It fs
easily moved, as the rope may be
slipped over any nail or projecting
timber. It fs instantly adjusted to any
height by pulling the rope slightly
out of the block A in the center; slip
the block where wanted. up or down
the rope; allow the rope to again be-
come tight, and the block will hold it
In place.
In fertilizing the orchard, remember
that the feeding roots extend far ow:
from the trees.
Lord Bacon’s Wise Advice
». Seek not proud riches, but such as
thou mayest get justly, use soberly,
Wstrinute cheerfully and leave con.
‘tentedly—Lord Bacon.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMONE VIRGINTA.
VERSE WORTH READING
fhe
ee ae
Pleasant the ways wheroon our fect wer
© Sweet the young hills, the valleys of
content,
But now the hours of dew and dream are
fled.
Lord. we are sper.
We did not heed thy warning in the
skies,
We have not heard thy voice nor known
thy fold,
But now the world is darkening to our
eyes,
Lord, we grow old.
Now the sweet stream turns bitter with
our tease,
Now dics the star we followed in the
‘went,
Now we'are sad and {il at ease with
years,
Lord, we must rest.
Lo, our proud lamps are emptied of thet
ight,
Weary our hands to toll, ov- fest te
roam,
Our day ‘ie past and swiftly falls thy
night,
Lord, lead us home.
Marjorie L. C. Pickthall, in the Metre.
polltan Magazine.
‘The @ea Hata
Soft it sings in shining ripples, glad be-
neath the golden day,
With a laugh among the dune grass, as
At flings tte jewel apray:
But I hate its emilee and whispers, tor
beneath the white curled crests
Lies the great black heart of terror and
the wrath that never rests,
Hidden trom the blessed daylight, in tts
‘caves it heaves and throbs,
With a dreadful choking gurgle and «
sound of dying sobs:
And the long, dark. trailing seaweed,
lifted on its ebb and flow,
Ie Uke hair of drowned women whelmed
‘within the undertow.
Through the pale green dusks of twi-
Ught from the rolling mystic Itne,
Comes a chant of fear and beauty, calling
weet to me and mine.
But I flee the siren music of the cruel
luring flood,
For its doom ie in tts message and the
answer in my blood.
‘Shi Ant aam tg Minden
Sonaider the life of the sluggard, O ant!
Why ruin your lungs with that torturing
pant?
Why climb with your burien those weart-
some steps,
While the sluggard at ease a0 reattully
sleeps?
He Gritta without care on « river of
dreams,
While the sweat from your forehead ts
Tunning in atreama:
An@ when lean from your labor your
hoardings you crunch,
He'll feed, fresh and fat, at the charity
lunch,
‘Twixt cradle and grave but brief le your
race
If you gallop through life at the strenu-
‘oun pace:
To your ruinous folly pray open your
eyes:
Consider ‘the sluggard, © ant, and be
‘wine!
—Lippincott’s,
ee eee,
‘Men mourn the lies that women tell—
‘The cunning, heartless lies
Her Judas Nps that hide so well
‘The narrowing of her eyes,
A heart Is hers; she seeks to slay It
A soul Is here; she does not weigh It
Toe kame is called; how well she'll play
Her debt is there: she does not pay It...
Men mourn the lies that women tell—
‘The cunning, heartless lea.
Men @o not know the Hes they hear—
‘The brave, heartbroken Nea
‘Her smiling lps that hide, from fear,
‘The shadows In her eyes
A heart is hers: for just a while—
A soul iw hers; it bears defile—
‘The game is called; her wit on trial—
Her debt is there; dear’ God! her
smile! f
‘Men do not know the los they hear—
‘The brave, heartbroken leat
—Helen Hamilton Dudiey in Smart Set.
png
oe to soft sleep we give ourselves
wey,
And ina dream as in 2 fairy bark
Breton and om through the enchanted
ark
To purple gray daybreak-tittle thought
we, pay
To the aweot bitter world we know by
‘day.
We are clean quit of it, as tn a lark
So Righ in heaven no ‘human eye can
‘mark
The thin swift pinion cleaving through
8 the ea
TIM we awake, {11 fate can do no It
The esting heart shail not take up mgain
‘Phe Reavy load that yet must ‘make I
bleed
For this brief space the loud world's
voice ts still,
No faintest echo of it brings ue patn,
Flow will it be when we wall sleep, tue
aved?
=. B. Atarien.
E The Little One.
Because 1 toll for you, dear litle one,
T do not grumble when my tasks are
great
Becatise of you, my work i gladly done,
“There alwayw is your love to compen:
‘mate.
Because you give me love, dear ttle
‘one,
T have. the strength to scorn Tempta-
‘lon's call,
To make brave resolutions and to shun
‘Php. slippery places where the foollah
‘ail.
Because of your aweet faith in me, T
‘cling
To ‘hopes that with your coming were
begun
How pitital were Ihow tase a thing
Hf, having you, I fell, dear Wttle one
ea |
Before him weltered in a shoreless sea
‘The souls of them that had not sought
to. be,
‘With ait their guitt upon them, and they
cried
‘They that had sluned from hate and lust
‘and pride;
“Dhow that did'st make us what we might
Lecome,
Judge us!" The judge of all the earth
was dumb,
But high avove them, tn his sovereign
piace,
He Ufted up the pity of his face.
William Dean Howella,
1 Wonder.
I wonder if ever a song was sung
But the singer's heart sang sweeter;
I wonder tf ever a rhyme was rune
But the thought surpassed the sweter;
wonder it ever a sculptor wrought
TM the cold stone echoed ‘hia ardent
thought:
Or if "ever @ painter with lgnt and
made,
The dream of hie inmost heart por
trayed’
FROM THE PENCIL’S POINT.
Offensive wives make defensive hus-
bands.
It's the worst kind of luck when you
‘have that kind.
But few men who say nothing have
‘the wood-sawing habit.
COSCSEESGSETSELCesEREESEBE
Wer The People’s Restaurant, a
—— —— 750 North 3rd St., Richmond, Va-— —
eee ke ae
MEALS at All Hours—Hot or Cole. Board by Day, Week
or Month. SOFT DRINKS.
POLITE ATTENTION... . GIVE MEA CALL
Mme. SYLVIA L. MITCHELL, Proprietress.
SPCSCTHFSEStevesseesaeeesees
!
Everybedy knows thai a a The Wiil and Its Application.
realize that she misses the “Mrs.” |] biggest muttonhead on earth can have
REFLECTIONS OF UNCLE EZRA.
sia
| Many a successiul poet got his start
writing epithets for tombstuns.
| Of Andy Carnezio really wants to
die poor, he might (ry writing for
inaguzines.
A pelea dali
and a demagogue fs that the states-
‘man has got the job,
The funniest thing I ever seo was a
feller with one tooth trying to eat
sweet corn off the cob.
There is several kinds of molly-
coddies, but they all wear passionate
socks and smoke cigarettes.
‘There ain't a campaign orator an
the business that couldn't make more
‘Money selling patent medicine.
‘This is a great world. A feller prays
for rain, and it rains, and then the
‘grass in his front yard grows about a
font, and he has to pay $4 to have it
‘cut.
ex
I see by the papers that a feller
down to York has-got a motor boat
that kin make 70 knots an hour. Huh!
that's nothing Hod Peters had a
boat out on Duck lake last year that
made 70 knots a minute. The heaving
Mne got tangled up tn the propeller
wheel —Judee.
FLASHES OF FUN.
Some mortals are overloaded with
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Do not waste your time in trying to
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Some homes are merely well-regu
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Nothing can convince a lazy man
that he is not a victim of bad luck.
Why was Eve Iike Sunday? Be
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‘She—On the lapse of time.
Mamma—Marion, I am surprised
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Marfon—But, mamma, it wasn't suf-
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MERE OPINION.
Few things are more common than
serfousness,
Every cheerful thought points the
way to another.
Politeness is Ike medicine. ‘Too
much of it is sickening.
The child that is paid to be good
forgets as soon ns the money ts gone.
Declining to waste precious mo
ments in nursing hatred for him Ye
the sorest defeat you can Infilet upon
your enemy.
The man who goes to the bad be
causo of unrequitel love would prot
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A PHILOSOPH™R’S NOTEBOOK,
A successful manicure never hits
the nail on the head
Forgetfulness of yesterday and an.
etpation of to-raorrow make trouble
sonie todays.
‘The man who borrows trouble has
at leaet the solace of knowing that no
one will ever dun him to pay it back
Possibly the chap who growls about
the washday dinner would have found
it more pleasing to his taste if he bad
done the washing.—Success Magasine.
Simple Carole for Sore Throat.
Tincture of uy) rh, two drachma, wa-
‘Mix by shaking up a a Dottie.
The Will and Its Application.
Am individual's wilt ts like a bi
Piece of strong machinery; the inte!
lect must direct tts workings. The
biggest muttonhead on earth can have
& strong will; the real strength ts in
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few arguments, quarreis or distressing
situations are worth a fight. Instead
of following an tmpulse to gain re.
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and decent to back up and forget.
Controtied by Combine,
| There is a trust in fuller’s earth
with the Hnal process known only to
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rigidly sealed. The deposits of fuller's
earth exist chicily at Bath and Not
Ungbams ire, England, and at Maxton,
in Scotland, in addition to deposits
im the London district. ‘The industry
fe practicaily controlied by a combine
which strictly preserves the methods
Of preparation of the earth,
Army Dogs.
The German army dogs are so
trained that when they find a dead
‘body they set up a prolonged howling
If no one comes they taxe the dead
man’s cap or some small article, and
with this in thetr teeth go on a hunt
for their trainer, whom they lead to
the spot. If the man {s wounded he
Bives his cap to the dog and the same
object Is accomplished. — Animal
Worlé, London.
Introspection Not for All,
Solitude can be delightfui only to
the innocent —Leszerynsk,
Portuguese Proverb.
There ts never wanting a dog to
bark at you
Obedience the First Requisite.
To learn obeying ts the fundamental
art of governing —Carlyle.
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MAIN OFFIOR:
510 & sta ot, Fteadetgere ta
A Southern Negro is Heavy-weight Champion of World
EIGE
(Continued From First Page.)
ter of the battle. The big b'ack man was coming all the time, and he swung a terrific left into Burn's stomach. Burns was doing but little. He was bleeding from the mouth and apparently was tired. The men were clinched as the bell rang.
Burns swung his right to Johnson's head and then did some wonderful execution at in-fight, chopping his wrist from frequently the third round. Johnson during the round landed some terrific blows to the kidneys.
When the men met in the center of the ring Johnson shot a heavy right into Burns' ribs in the fourth round. The men talked wildly to one another each seemingly intent upon getting the other excited and landing the money-winning punch. During the jeering they sparred fiercely, but few blows being struck. Then Johnson swung left to the body and Burns brought right to head. Johnson, closing in, threw a terrific right and left to the head or the Canadian. The belly of the head was held high. Apparently refreshed from his minute's rest Burns started the fifth round briskly, landing his right on Johnson's head and punching the body with both hands. Johnson managed to slip over a few rights to the head during the round.
Johnson rushed and Burns clinched in the sixth round, breaking loose however, with one hand. Johnson swung his right a dozen times into the white man's ribs. Burns joined Johnson's body frequently and swung his right hand over the ribs and put stiff left to the stomach several times Johnson, however, treated these blows as a joke, laughing at the crowd and making sarcastic remarks to his opponent as he busted Burns into a corner and scored a couple of rights to the body.
JOHNSON RUSHES BURNS.
In the seventh round Johnson rushed Burns across the ring, dealing out rights in which there was no mercy. Burns got a left to Johnson's jaw, and Johnson raised a lump under Burns's right eye in return. Burns here seemed to be losing strength. Johnson was landing repeatedly on Burn's eye, meanwhile addressing the people about the ring side, and though Tommy was working dexteriously at in-fighting, he placed several terrific drives on Burn's ribs, dropping him to the floor for a few seconds. Burn's eyes were puffed up in the eighth round, and he was bleeding from the mouth when he emerged from his corner. The white man's blows apparently had little effect on the Texan, who went severely about belaboring the head of the champion.
"Come on, Tommy, swing your right," yelled Johnson—as the gong rang for the ninth round. Burns responded by calling the Negro a "yellow dog." There was not much fighting—probably more talking—during this round.
In the tenth round both men seemed to Johnson still used his fists effective, Johnson's head and stomach, and Burns was doing all he could in reply. His blows, however, lacked steam.
BURNS BEGINS TO WEAKEN
The perspiration pouring off the body or Johnson made it look not unlike highly polished walnut. Burns tried to cross his right over, but Johnson cleverly avoided him, meantime laughing at the champion. Burns was outclassed and Johnson apparently was invulnerable. When the bell rang Burns limped to his corner at the end of the eleventh round. Johnson sailed in and Burns took a tremendous lot of punishment gamely in the twelfth and thirteenth rounds. His jaw was greatly swollen. Johnson continued to play for the injured eye, and the bleeding mouth of Burns was swollen twice its normal size. Blow after blow colored man rained upon him, and the gong alone saved the white man from defeat, for he was reeling and groggy as it rang.
During the intermission between the thirteenth and fourteenth rounds the police officials consulted together and it was probable that they would stop the fight in the next round. Referee McIntosh went to Burn's corner and had a talk with the champion, who declared that he was strong. McIntosh then asked the police not to interfere. Then came the final round. Johnson went right after Burns when time was called. The white man wary backed away, but Johnson, following him up, dropped Burns with a right to the head." One, two, three" slowly counted the referee, and Burns remained down until the eight seconds had been reeled off. When he arose Johnson few at him like a tiger, and, using both hands unmercifully, soon had the champion tootting. The police then jumped into the ring and stopped the fight.
The referee immediately declared Johnson the winner. He added that he considered it the best fight he ever had witnessed in Australia, and that both men had fought most fairly
CANADIAN FAVORITE
Sydney was fighting mad when dawn broke this morning. All yesterday afternoon trains brought people from various points to this city to see the big mill, and before midnight the hotels and boarding houses were overcrowded. Early this morning more trains arrived and the streets were soon alive with an enormous crowd. Nothing was talked of but the championship battle. Burns was a 2 to 1 favorite, last night, simply because of the great amount of money bet on his chances, but which found few takers at 7 to 5. But when the odds lengthened there was a sudden play of the Johnson end that indicated a strong following for the Negro. Early this morning there were all sorts of rumors in circulation, but most of them were without founda-
tion. One report had it that there was so much ill feeling between John son and Burns that their seconds were afraid of a street brawl. Another yarn was to the effect that the fight had been so fixed that it would result in a draw, but this was offset by the positive statement of Promoter Andre McIntosh that the mill would be decided strictly on the level.
BOTH WERE CONFIDENT
Both pugilists rested easily at their quarters during the night, and were ordered to remain their until 10 o'clock. As far as concerned, it was a toss between them. Burns was positive that he would win decisively by a knockout inside of 20 rounds, while Johnson said the same thing. That Burns had the greater following was manifest everywhere. The fact that he is a Canadian by birth made him extremely popular with the masses, especially among those who were opposed to Johnson because of his color. Burns had beaten Bill Squires, the Australian champion, three times and for that reason the people who gathered to see to-day's fight could not see how Burns could be defeated. They did not seem to be worried by that Burns was smaller and lighter than Johnson. They did not care for any arguments in favor of the big Negro, but went to the huge stadium at Rush Cutter's Bay feeling sure that Burns, the conqueror of Squires, would win.
The crowd started for the ringgale early. In fact, it was not long after sunrise that the advance squad of the army of spectators reached the stadium. Some rode in cars, carriages, automobiles and wagons, while others walked. The stadium contained seats for 20,000 persons, and had standing room for perhaps 5,000 more, yet the indications pointed to an overcrowded house.
LARGE SALE OF TICKETS
The advance sale of tickets up to this morning was estimated at nearly $60,000, the prices ranging from $5 to $50, and in some cases $100 each. The ring was a 24-foot affair, pitched in the center of the amphitheater, which surrounded it on all sides and towered aloft in the most imposing manner. The city officials, fearing trouble had a large force of police on hand at 9 o'clock, and in that way perfect order was maintained while the great crowd poured through the entrances.
Many Australian notables were in the throng. It was reported that Premier Wade would be at the ringside with several English noblemen who had box seats, and it was also said that there could not be no interference with the fight unless it turned into a rough and tumble affair or one of the men was in a helpless condition. Referee McIntosh was instructed by the police authorities to prevent brutality and to stop the mill the moment it ceased to be a scientific contest for points.
The entire amount of the purse, $37,000, which included money for picture privileges and return tickets to London, was posted in a local bank some time ago, so that there was no doubt about its payment. By the terms of the articles of agreement, Burns received $20,000, win, lose or draw, while Johnson's share was $5,000, yet the Negro willingly accepted the short end for a chance to tackle the French-Canadian.
When Johnson arose this morning, he said that he was never better. "I am stronger and faster than ever before," said he. "and I am going to show these people why I chased Burns half way around the world before I cornered him here. He is a counterfeit and I intend to show him up. He has never beaten a good man, and will be an easy mark. I will go to England after the fight, and will be in America some time next year, possibly in February. I will meet all comers, too, as I will defend the championship against anybody who wants to fight me for it." Johnson welged 200 pounds after his breakfast, and told his trainer, Sam Fitzpatrick, that he would stop Burns inside of fifteen rounds. This has been the Negro's prediction ever since his arrival here.
SAID NEGRO WAS FOURFLUSHER
Burns had a crowd of friends and admirers at his training quarters at breakfast time. He was in rare good humor and said that he fight would be merely a cakewalk for him, "Johnson is just another man," he said, and I will make him shoot his yellow streak in short order. He's never licked anybody and is a foulisher. A few stiff punches in the stomach will make him double up and quit. Of course, the fight will be on the level. Why shouldn't it be? I've got an easy mark here, and I will prove it. The mill will not last the limit, and I will win."
The men were matched to box 20 rounds, Queensberry rules, with four ounce gloves, for the heavyweight championship of the world. They did not agree upon a referee until early yesterday morning, when McIntosh was selected. McIntosh is a reputable citizen and business man, who has long enjoyed the confidence of the sporting public, and when it became known that he would be the third man in the ring intense satisfaction prevailed. When the puglists started for the scene of the battle they had to literally fight their way to automobiles that were waiting for them.
All the way to the Stadium they were cheered by the crowds in the highways, and when they reached the big structure the greatest excitement prevailed. Johnson was attended by Sam Fitzpatrick, Bill Lang, an Australian, and several others. He looked confident and fit. As he shouldered his way to his dressing room he was warmly applauded, but his reception was nothing compared to the ovation tendered to Burns. The latter had his seconds and trainers with him, and smiled in response to the roar of welcome that went up for him.
The men both wore adhesive bandages on their hands by mutual a-
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greement. They also wore breechclothes and black fighting shoes. Burns did not say how much he weighed, but to competent judges he looked as if he would tip the beam at about 175 pounds. The fight was scheduled to begin at 11 o'clock, and it was close so that hour when the men were ordered to come to the ring. Jack Johnson is the first Negro who ever won the world's heavyweight pugilistic championship—in fact, he is the only Negro who ever was permitted to battle for the honor. He was born in Chicago in 1885 and began his ring career in 1901. He is 6 feet 1 3-4 inches tall and weighed at the ringside close to 190 pounds.
Burns was born in Hanover, Ontario, in 1881, and started fighting when he was 19 years old. He is 5 feet 7 1-4 inches tall and weighs when trained for battle, about 175 pounds. Burns during a fight is a rough-and-ready fighter, and delights to sail in and mix things with his adversary. Favored with great length of arm—his reach measuring 74 1-2 inches—Burns has proved himself a bad man at close range. Despite the fact that Johnson overtopped him in height by 6 1-2 inches, Burns had the better of the argument in reach by 1 3-4 inches.
BURNS GOT BIG END.
A purse of $25,000 was hung up for the battle, which was scheduled to go twenty rounds. Of this amount Burns demanded and received $30,000, this sum to be paid him despite the outcome of the fight. Johnson had to be satisfied with $5,000 and return tickets to London for himself and his manager, Sam Fitzpatrick. According to reports, both Johnson and Burns bet heavily on themselves at the prevailing odds, which slightly favored Burns at the ringside. The fighters were trained to the hour, and before what probably was the largest crowd that ever witnessed a pugilistic contest. Burns did his training at Darling Point, while Johnson got in condition at Manley, a seaside suburb Besides a retinue of skillful trainers who gave the men daily practice at the game of hit, stop, and get away, both Burns and Johnson followed American methods by doing hard road work. Each man picked up a lot of loose change by giving training exhibitions twice a week at the stadium.
JOHNSON TRAILED BURNS
Since James J. Jeffries retired and Tommy Burns claimed the championship, Johnson has been trying to get the Canadian boy to meet him and he has trailed him throughout the United States, and even to England in quest of a match. It was not until Mr. McIntosh, the promoter of this fight, and who also acted as referee, offered a purse of $35,000 for a battle at Rushcutters Bay, a suburb of Sydney, that Burns consented to meet Johnson. Then he stipulated how the money should be split up, the size of the ring, and all the conditions surrounding the fight. Johnson immediately accepted, and sailed from London for Australia to begin training.
Johnson, during his ring career, has fought 64 bettles, and 22 of his opponents have gone down to defeat by the knockout route. Prominent among those who have been put to sleep by the big Negro are Jack Jeffries, a brother of the former heavy weight champion, who was knocked out by Johnson at Los Angeles in 1902 in five rounds, and Bob Fitzsimmons, who, in Philadelphia in 1907, was able to withstand Johnson's shifty work but two rounds. He has lost but two fights, a 20-round decision to Marvin Hart, and the other on a foul to Joe Jeanette. Not since the days of James J. Corbett has the prize ring seen so perfect a boxer as Johnson. Long and lithic, he is as graceful as a dancing master, and as true as an row in placing his blows. Especially deft is he with his left hand, and few boxes, unless they have great skill, are able to keep the big black man from beating their faces to tatter
In courage Burns was a bulldog always: Johnson, it was said by some, had a "yellow streak." In none of his many battles however, has it been proven that Johnson would not take a good beating. Neither Burns nor Johnson, however, can be classed with Jeffries, Sullivan, or Corbett in the fighting game.
[Jack London in the New York Herald.]
Sydney, Australia, Saturday
The fight! There was no fight. No Armenian massacre could compare with the hopeless slaughter that took place in the Sydney Stadium to-day. It was not a case of "Too Much Johnson," but or all Johnson. A golden smile tells the story, and a golden smile was Johnson.
The fight, if fight it might be called, was like unto that between a Colossus and a toy automaton. It had all the seeming of a playful Ethiopian at loggerheads with a small and futile white man—of a grown man cuffing a naughty child; of a monologue by one Johnson, who made a noise with his fists like a lullaby, tucking one Burns into his little crib in Sleepy Hollow; of a funeral with Burns for the late deceased. Johnson
Here's Wishing You
Good-Bye, 1908.
A liberal pass public during pass appreciated.
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The Cab
J. G. CORL
A liberal patronage by a generous public during past years is most sincerely appreciated.
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for undertaker, gravedigger and sexton.
START OF THE BATTLE
Twenty thousand men were at the ringside and twice twenty thousand lingered outside. Johnson, first in the ring, showed magnificent condition. When he smiled a dazzling jash of gold filled the wilde aperture between his open lips, and he smiled all the time. He had no trouble in the world.
When asked what he was going to do after the fight, he said he was going to the races. It was a happy prophecy. He was immediately followed ed into the ring by Burns, who had no smile whatever. He looked pale and sallow, as if he had not slept all night before. If he had just pulled through a bout with fever. He received a heartier greeting than Johnson and seemed a favorite with the crowd.
It promised to be a bitter fight. There was no chivalry or good will in it, and Johnson, despite his carefree pose, had an eye to the instant need of things. He sent his seconds intently into Burns' corner to watch the putting on of the gloves for fear a casual horsehoe might stray in. He examined personally Burns' belt and announced flatty that he would not fight if Burns did not remove a tape from his skinned elbows.
TAPE IS REMOVED
"Nothin' doin' till he takes 'em off," quoth Johnson.
The crowd hooted, but Johnson smiled his happy golden smile and dreamed with Ethiopian solidity in his corner. Burns took off the offending tapes and was applauded uproarously. Johnson stood up and was hooted. He merely smiled. That is the fight epitomized-Johnson's smile. The gong sounded and the fight and the monologue began all right. "Tahmy," said Johnson, with an exaggerated English accent, and thereafter he talked throughout "eight—when he was not smiling. Scarcely had they mixed when he caught his antagonist with a fierce uppercut, turning him completely over in the air and landing him on his back.
There is no use giving details. There was no doubt from the moment of the opening of the first round. The affair was too one-sided. There was never so one sided a world's championship fight in the history of the ring. It was not a case of a man being put out by a clever or a lucky punch. In the first or second round it was a case of a plucky, determined fighter who had no chance for a look in at any single instant or the fight.
BURNS NEVER A FACTOR
There was no fraction of a second in all the fourteen rounds that could be called Burns'. So far as damage is concerned Burns never landed a blow. He never phased the black man. It was not Burns' fault, however. He tried every moment throughout the fight except when he was groggy. It was noopeless, preposterous, heroic. He was a glutton for punishment, and he bored in all the time, but a dewdrop in Sheoil had more chance than he with the giant Ethiopian.
In all justice it must be urged that Burns had no opportunity to show what he had in him. Johnson was too big, too able, too clever, too superb. He was impregnable. His long arms, his height, his cool seeing eyes, his timing and distancing, his footwork and his splendid outparring and equally splendid infighting kept Burns in trouble all the time.
NO EFFORT NEEDED
At no stage of the fight was either man ever extended. Johnson was just as inaccessible as Mont Blanc, and against such a mountain what possible chance had Burns to extend himself? He was smothered all the time.
As for Johnson, he did not have to extend. He cuffed and smiled and smiled and cuffed, and in the clinches whirled his opponent around so as to be able to assume beatific and angelic facial expressions for the benefit of the cinematograph machines.
Not Burns, but Johnson, did the infighting. In fact, the major portion of the punishment he delivered
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was in clinches. At times he would hold up his arms to show that he was no party to the clinch. Again, he would deliberately and by apparently no exertion or strength thrust Burns away and clear of him, and yet again he would thrust Burns partly clear with one hand and uppercut him to the face with the other, and when Burns instantly fell forward into another clinch would thrust him partly clear and repeat the uppercut.
LIKE LIGHTNING
Once he did this five times in succession as fast as a man could count, each uppercourt connecting and connecting savagely, but principally in the clinches Johnson rested and smiled and dreamed. This dreaming expression was facinating. It seemed almost a trance. It was certainly deceptive, for suddenly the lines of the face would harden, the eyes would glint viciously and Burns would be frightfully hooked, swung and uppercourt for a bad half minute. Then the smile and the dreamy trance would return as Burns effected another clinch. At times, too, when both men were set, Johnson would deliberately assume the fierce vicious, intent expression only apparently for the purpose or suddenly letting his teeth flash forth like the rise of a harvest moon, while his face beamed with all the happy carefree innocence of a little child.
PLAYING ALL THE TIME
Johnson play-acted all the time, and he played with Burns from the gong of the opening round to the finish of the fight. Burns was a toy in his hands. For Johnson it was a kindergarten romp.
"Hit here, Tahmy," he would say, exposing the right side of his unprotected stomach, and when Burns struck, Johnson would neither wince nor cover up. Instead he would receive the blow with a happy, careless smile, directed at the spectators, turn the left side of his unprotected stomach and say, "Now here, Tahmy," and while Burns hit as directed Johnson would continue to grin and chuckle and smile his golden smile.
One cridicism, and only one, can be passed upon Johnson. In the thirteenth round he made the mistake of his life. He should have put Burns out. He could have put blim out. It would have been child's play. Instead of which he smiled and deliberately let Burns live until the gong sounded, and in the opening of the fourteenth round the police stopped the fight and Johnson lost the credit or a knockout.
But one thing remains, Jeffries must emerge from his alfalfa farm and remove that smile from Johnson's face. Jeff, it's up to you.
The Christmas Period
The Christmas period this season was more enchanting than usual to the colored women of New York, because they looked better and their beaux looked better than ever before. The reason is they have learned to use the Chemical Wonder Company's remarkable discoveries to make colored people more pre-possessing and presentable. These 'Wonders' consist of 'Complexion Wonder' which gives a lighter color to any colored skin and improves any colored countenance. This Company has a 'Wonder Comb' which helps straighten the hair and a pomade called 'Wonder Uncurl' which keeps the hair straight flexible and luxuriant. If the hair is too short, one should use 'Wonder Hair Grow' which fertilizes the scalp and makes the hair grow longer just as fertilizer in the cotton field will make cotton grow. Any of these 'Wonders' will be sent for 50 cents by M. B. BERGER & CO., 2 Rector Street, New York.
Got His.
Bill—And so you proposed to Lulu,
last night?
Jill—Yes.
"And did the old man kick you out-
doors?"
"No."
"He didn't?"
"No, he didn't He didn't wait until
I got outdoors!"
CABLE PIANO COMPANY
All Hail 1909.
The New Year bring
with a new name.
So, by this name
friends—and to new o
the same high standard
always been the pride o
and which commends
ued consideration of the
munity.
Cable Piano
J. G. CORLEY, P
The New Year brings us before you with a new name.
So, by this name we pledge to old friends—and to new ones who come—the same high standard of service that has always been the pride of our business life and which commends us to the continued consideration of this splendid community.
Cable Piano Company.
J. G. CORLEY, President.
If not, why not, when a home is so easily secured in Omohundro's Plan on New North Road, near St. John's Church, $5.00 cash and $5.00 per month?
If you want to be somebody, buy land and own a home.
If you want to own a home, or buy land, see
M. H. OMOHUNDRO,
Room 32, 1103 E. Main St., City.
PLOT TO KILL GOMEZ FAILED
Castro Charged With Complicity In Murder Scheme.
Caracas, Venezuela, Dec. 23.—The end of the rule in Venezuela of Cipriano Castro has come. The dictator, who has governed the republic with a rod of iron ever since he took forcible possession of the Yellow House in Caracas in 1899, is now openly charged with conspiracy to compass the assassination of a man he left at the head of the republic when he sailed away on Nov. 23 from La Guaira, nominally to secure skilled medical aid in Berlin for a malady of long standing, and is today thoroughly discredited. The Bank of Venezuela has cabled its correspondents at Berlin and Paris cancelling the unlimited letter of credit given to President Castro when he left Venezuela for Europe, and no one in Caracas believes he will ever dare return to the capital. The Castro cabinet has been forced to resign, and a new and progressive ministry has been appointed by Juan Vicente Gomez, the acting president.
The attempt upon the life of Gomez was frustrated by the cool nerve and courageous daring of the acting president himself. Alone and unsupported he arrested the ringleaders of the conspiracy with his own hands in the presence of their armed adherents, and after this action he issued a proclamation saying that not only had he saved his own life, but he had maintained the highest ideals of the chief magistracy of the republic.
The men concerned in the conspiracy were President Castro's closest friend and best known adherents.
HEIR TO DUTCH
THRONE EXPECTED
The Official Announcement is
Greeted With Joy.
The Hague, Dec. 23—It was officially
announced in the chamber of deputies
that Queen Wilhelmina was in an in-
teresting condition, and the statement
was greeted with joyful "bravos" from
nearly the entire house.
Her majesty's physicians conclude
their announcement with these words:
"We rejoice to be able to state that
all signs are in consonance with an
absolutely perfect state of health."
The event is expected early in the spring.
The hopes of the Dutch people for an heir to the throne of Holland have twice before been disappointed. The queen is twenty-eight years old.
Safe Blowers Get $3000.
One of the biggest safe cracking jogs that has ever been pulled off in Lehich河县, Pa., occurred when burglaries entered Schuler's store, at East Texas, blew open the safe with dynamite and got away with over $3000 worth of stamps, cash and securities.
Blight Killing Chestnut Trees.
The farmers in the southern part of Lancaster county, Pa., report that the blight is steadily killing off the chestnut trees, and that if its ravages are not checked it will not be long before the chestnut will be wiped out entirely.
HAVE YOU A
we pledge to old
ines who come—
of service that has
of our business life
us to the contin-
is splendid com-
Company.
resident.
Colored Skin Made Lighter
For centuries the scientific men have been trying to make dark skin lighter colored, not by artificial whitening, but in a natural way. At last the CHEMICAL WONDER CO. of New York has discovered "COMPLEXION WONDER, which does bring a lighter natural color every time it is applied. The effect is not artificial. The lighter coloring is natural. The effect on the colored countenance is magical. The CHEMICAL WONDER CO. is the best friend the dark race ever had. It has preparations for kinky hair which exactly suit colored people. The WONDER COMB magnetic metallic, helps to straighten hair. It costs only fifty cents and will last a life-time.
The pomade called WONDER UNCURL keeps hair straight and pliable. The WONDER COMB and WONDER UNCURL when used together, will make any kinky hair dress well. If the hair is too short, use WONDER HAIR-GROW. This is a liquid fertilizer for the scalp. Just as fertilizers in the corn field make the corn stalks grow, so this liquid fertilizes the scalp and makes the hair grow longer. M. B. BERGER & CO., 2 Rector St. New York will send any of these WONDERS for fifty cents or all of them for $2.00 delivery free. Send post-office order or money. Information book free. If you desire to improve your appearance we will cheerfully write you without charge and promise that our WONDERS will help to advance colored people socially and commercially. Agents Wanted.
Straighten Your Hair
DEAR SIRS: I have used only one bottle of your por-ade and now I would not be without it for it makes my hair soft and straight and easy to comb and also starts a new growth.
Miss W. K. Waters, St. Lukes, London
(Formerly known as Ozonized Ox Marrow)
The use of Knee-Hair proved its merits. The use of Knee-Hair Hair was born. harah, kinky or curly-hair straight, and easy to come and arrange in any style. Hair is available in ARY styles.
Removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp, stops the hair from falling out or breaks it, helps with drying and vigor. Absolutely harmless—used with splendid results even on the youngest children. It is also useful, its use is a pleasure, as ladies of refinement. Ford's Hair Pomade has limiters. Don't buy anything else alleged to be "just as good." If you want it to be as good, Ford's Hair Pomade will pay on. Look for this name
on every package.
If your drugstore supply you with the
genuine, we will send you
one bottle regular size for . $ . 10
Three bottles " " " " " "
Six " " " " " "
One bottle, small " " " " " .25
Pay package and express charges to all points
to the store. All orders shipped promptly
Money Order. All orders shipped promptly on
receipt of price. Address
The Reconized Ox Marrow Co.,
FORD MORRIS CO. in Oakland
FORD MORRIS FOAM MODEL is made in Obl
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
130 East Kintla St.
Chicago, IL
The MADE is made only in Chicago by the above firm.
Agents Wanted Everywhere.
—For fine printing call at the PLANET Office.