Richmond Planet
Saturday, August 7, 1909
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
hands of a stakeholder and Coffroh has the signature of both mea to battle in his arena on October 12. When Ketchel heard that Jeffries had put up $5,000 he said: "Jeff is wasting his time. I am going to begin training in a week or so and will be in magnificent trim for the fight with Johnson. What is more, I am going to knock the colored man out and that will relieve Jeff of the responsibility. I know that I can outpunch Johnson and as hard hitting can win in nine cases out of ten, I will be the next heavyweight champion of the world. I am taking on weight now, but I am ready to fight Langford to a finish before I meet Johnson. Langford, however, does not want any of my game, for if he did he would have accepted a $5,000 bonus to meet me at Ely, Nev., on Labor Day. That is more money than Langford ever got before, and yet he passed it up when he had a chance to whip me and win a fortune. Let me say, however, that if Johnson should beat me, Jeffries, if he is right, will stop him inside of ten rounds. Jeff is a wonderful fighter, the best the world has ever seen."
It's hot here and the work is tiresome. That's why they are all going to West Point with the Ebenezer School Sunday School August 11. 1309.
Normal, Ala., Aug 2.—Mrs. M. H. Council announces the engagement of her daughter, Ida Christine to Walter Solomon Buchanan, President of the A. and M. College, Normal, Ala. The marriage ceremony will take place August 24, 1969 at the Councill residence, Normal, Ala.
Because of the recent bereavement there will be no invitations.
Summer School at the Virginia T. S. and College.
Mr. Editor:
The summer chool of this Institution has continued with great success.
Thirty-seven students were enrolled in the different departments. The corps consist of President J. R. L. Diggs, A. M. S. H. Clarke, Arithmetic, Algébra and Virginia History, J. W. Cromwell, Washington, D. C. Higher English, Civics, U. S. History and Ancient History.
Geo. McA. Sullivan, Physical and Grammar School Geography, Physiology and Pedagogy; Miss Alys V. O. Cox, Typewriting and business form.
Among the visitors may be numbered, Rev. R. H. Bolling, D. D., of Norfolk, Rev. W. F. Graham, D. D., of Richmond, Rev. W. R. Brown, D. D. of Roanoke.
Mr. Jackson Davis, Petersburg State Examiner for the second circuit, delivered a most helpful address, showing himself to be in hearty sympathy with the movement to improve and raise the standard of the colored school, of this State.
Mr. T. C. Walker, of Gloucester County, representing the Jeanes Fund delivered a most practical address to the teachers, giving them most timely hints for the lengthening of the school terms of the rural schools and for the increase of their influence in their respective communities.
United Aid Insurance Company Fails Receiver Appointed.
Against the United Aid Insurance Company, Judge Ingram, in the Law and Equity Court, last Wednesday issued a decree in the suit of Addie Griffith, plaintiff. Otis P. Walker is named as receiver for all property of the company, and is authorized to take possession at once of all assets of the company, except $10,000 of Roanoke' city bonds. The receiver's bond is put at $10,000.
The liabilities of the company to the American National Bank and the Commonwealth Bank, running up to $4,000, have been paid, and on injunction previously granted is dissolved so far as $4,000 worth of the Roanoke bonds are concerned, and $6,000 worth of them are to be delivered to the receiver.
The Richmond Beneficial Company has arranged to take over the business of the United Aid Insurance Company, although the appointment of a Receiver for the corporation by Judge Ingram may complicate matters somewhat. This is the company formed by J. E. Byrd, Esq., who is now located in the neighborhood of Pittsburg, Pa., and is doing business for another concern.
VOLUME XXVI NO.36
Current Sporting Gossip.
Johnson Says He Will Cover Jeff's Money Next Week.
New York Sun, July 30, 1909.
Jack Johnson says he will be here next Tuesday to cover the $5,000 forfeit posted by James J. Jeffries on Wednesday to bind a match for the heavyweight championship of the world. Johnson declares that he will post the full amount of the side bet, $10,000, and will sign articles of agreement as soon as the proper time arrives. He favors San Francisco as the battleground which means that in all probability James Coffroth will get the match. The negro cannot get it out of his head, however, that Jeffries is not on the square and declares that he will not rest easy until he sees the boiler-maker actually in the ring.
"I will stop him inside of fifteen rounds!" is the colored man's prediction. "I hope he will be fit!"
Jeffries continued to receive congratulations from his friends all day yesterday. He repeated the statement that it was now up to Johnson to cover his money and agree to the terms offered. He also stated that he would be in his old condition when he entered the ring and that Johnson would prove as easy a mark as Jack Munroe. Jeffries, however, declined to say a word about the division of the purse. It is believed that he will insist on a winner's and loser's end, possibly 75 and 25 per cent, in which case nobody can accuse the big fellow of naming unfair conditions. Jeff also believes that California is the place for the big mill and shows an inclination to do his training at Los Angeles. If Johnson puts up his coin next week he will set at rest all rumors that he does not want to meet Jeffries, but he will probably have to wait until some time in September before signing final articles of agreement. As Jeffries will not be ready to fight until three months after that incident, it is thought that the men will not settle their differences before the latter part of December or early in January.
Jeffries insists that he weighs only 235 pounds at the present time, although he looks much heavier. If he trains vigorously for three months he will surely reduce to a proper fighting weight, but he may find it a rather difficult matter to perfect his wind. Close friends of the boilermaker have repeatedly asserted that a week breathing apparatus has been Jeffries's chief trouble and that it will require no end of strenuous work to overcome the ailment. The big fighter's willingness to meet Johnson in practically a finish fight, however, is taken to mean that he has perfect confidence in himself. But at the same time it is believed that the longer the battle the better it will be for the negro, whose remarkable defensive tactics are expected to enable him to stand an unlimited strain.
Jeff's assertion that he is still the champion and that he is now ready to defend his title against all comers particularly Johnson, has surprised some people. It was always believed that Jeff relinquished his title to Marvin Hart and that it passed into the hands of Tommy Burns when the latter beat Hart several years ago. Burns was recognized as the technical champion when Johnson stopped him last winter, and ever since then the big negro has been generally regarded as the title holder, in spite of the fact that he has deliberately sidestepped a signed agreement to box Sam Langford. Jeffries, if fit, is undoubtedly the greatest fighter in the world. He has never been defeated, and his willingness to return to the ring will convince hundreds of ring followers that he is the real champion.
For that matter, he says that he never gave up his title, but simply went into retirement after his ridiculous easy victory over Jack Munroe, because there were no first-class heavyweights left for him to subdue. He also states that he would never have returned to the ring if a white man had beaten Burns, and he further intimates that if Ketchel should defeat Johnson at Colma in October he will give up pugilism forever. Those sceptics who still have an idea that Jeffries has no idea of mulling again say that the big Californiaan regards the Ketchel-Johnson affair as a sort of anchor to windward. Jeffries has never regarded the negro as a first class pugilist, it is said, and has an idea deep under the belt that Ketchel, if he takes care of himself, can put the colored man away. The posting of forfeits and the signing of articles by Jeffries and Johnson can in no way prevent the Johnson-Ketchel wall, as forfeits are in the
Announcement.
To Take Over the Business
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1909.
WILL FIGHT JEFFRIES.
Jack Johnson, the Heavy=weight Champion of the World accepts the challenge of the Ex=Champion and posts $5,000 in Chicago to bind the bargain. The deposit was made August 2, 1909.
FOUND DEAD ON PARLOR FLOOR
Unlighted Gas Jet Ends Life of James Alexander Bagby.
Stretehed prone on the floor of his front parlor, James Alexander Bagby, of 909 West Marshall Street, was found dead by his brother, Brandt Bagby, at 8:30 o'clock Sunday morning. The room was filled with the fumes of gas, and a burnt match and another, which had not been fired, found near the body told the story. It is believed that he attempted to light the gas and fell to the floor before the flame had reached the jet. The other match was evidently dropped, and it may have been that he was searching for it on the floor when he sank down, unable to rise again. None of his friends or his relatives believe that it was a case of suicide, for he had never been heard to say that he intended taking his life, and there had been nothing which would have led him to such an act.
Mother of Little Wife
Gave Him Sixth Through 18
Mistaking calomel powders which had to be by a physician, the molliam Mahone, a white and a half old, gave him of that medicine For 30th inst, at 3 o'clock o'clock the child died Hospital.
The baby had been time, and Mrs. Mahoe at 1702 Lownes Street physician, who prescine suited to the cott. The mother had seen and she put them together. In selecting the dose have been given, she a calomel, and the baggins of it before her mistake.
The last seen of the dead man was on Fourth Street at 7 o'clock Saturday evening. It is now known what time he reached home. When a brother and a friend called yesterday morning to accompany him to a Bible class they were not able to open the door, and they entered the parlor through the window of a bedroom which adjoins in the rear. Bagby had evidently been dead for some time. He was in the house alone, for all the members of the family are out of town for the summer. Coroner Taylor was notified, and he decided that an inquest was unnecessary. Bagby was a teamster by occupation. He was thirty-two years old. He leaves a wife and family.
Mother of Little William Mahone
Gave Him Sixty Grains
Through Error.
Mistaking calomel for certain
powders which had been prescribed
by a physician, the mother of William Mahone, a white child a year
and a half old, gave him sixty grains of
a half medicine Friday morning,
36th inst. at 3 o'clock, and at 12 o'clock the child died at the City Hospital.
The baby had been sick for some
time, and Mrs. Mahone, who lives
at 1702 Lownes Street, called in a
physician, who prescribed a medicine
suited to the child's sillment.
The mother had several powders,
and she put them together in a glass.
In selecting the dose which should
have been given, she got hold of the
calomel, and the baby took sixty
grains of it before she discovered
her mistake.
But no sooner had the tearful
mother discovered that she had made
a terrible mistake than she wrapped
the baby up and went out to the
City Hospital, where the ambulance
surgeons did everything they could
for the little sufferer. The child
lived about nine hours.
Coroner Taylor stated last night
that it is rather unusual for calomel
to poison anybody, but said that the
dose administered to the Mahone
child was too strong. As he deemed
the dosage entirely accidental, Coroner Taylor decided that an inquest
was unnecessary.
Don't stand there yawning. Go with the Ebenezer Baptist Sunday School to West Point, August 11, 1909.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
A New Court at Manassas—Fine Times There.
Manassas, Va., August 3.—A court of Calanthe, Knights of Pythias was organized here last night at the Knights of Pythias Hall. Grand Worthy Counselor John Mitchell Jr., arrived here from Washington at 5:18 P. M. He was accompanied by Miss M. L. Chiles, Grand Worthy Register of Deeds and Dr. E. R. Jefferson. Miss Chiles stopped with Rev. M. D. Williams, the well known pastor of the First Baptist Church. The initiation was appreciated by the ladies who joined. The new body will be known as Manassas Court, No. 148. The following are the officers: Worthy Counselor, Mrs. V. Johnson; Worthy Inspector, Mrs. Martha Penn; Senior Directress, Mrs. Mary Hollis; Junior Directress, Miss Louisa Stokes; Worthy Inspectrix, Miss Ruth Ford; Worthy Orator, Mrs. Chanle Harris; Register of Deeds, Miss Julia Green; Register of Accounts, Miss Georgia Thompson; Escort, Mrs. H. T. Cherry; Receiver of Deposits, Mrs. Georgia Conway; Herald, Mrs. Annie Lambert; Protector, Mrs. Lucy Naylor; Trustees, Mrs. Chanle Howard, Mrs. Georgia Murray; Mrs. Martha Penn, Conductress, Mrs. Katie Harris, Assistant Conductress, Mrs. Edith Harris.
This court was organized through the efforts of Sir Homer T. Cherry. Rev. J. R. Conway, assisted. The repast served was heartily enjoyed by the visitors and the members of the new court. Mr. Mitchell and party left here at 8:43 for Richmond via Washington.
Otherwise.
Mr. James Richardson, of Hampton, Va., called on us.
Mrs. Wright and Mrs. Darades, of Salem, Va., called on us.
Dr. Albert A. Tennant is building an addition to his residence at 1005 N. Fourth Street.
Mrs. W. F. Graham has been spending the summer at Hampton for several weeks.
Mrs. A. D. Price and son are taking an extended northern tour. They are expected home this week.
Rev. T. D. Atkins, D. D., Pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, Charlotteville, Va., was in the city this week.
Messrs. Ofton Seldon and John E. Hall, of Manchester, accompanied by Mr. Pleasant Johnson, or Swansboro, called on us last week.
He stood on his head, but he has a ticket to go with the Ebenezer Baptist Sunday School to West Point Aug. 11, 1909.
Rev. Braxton Dover, or Rose Garden, King William Co., Va., called on us. He was in attendance at the Quarter-Century celebration of the U. O. of T. R.
Miss H. B. Kyles and Miss Grace A. Peebles, of Washington, D. C., in company with Miss Fannie M. Robinson of this city, called on us.
Miss Carsie D. Isham spent last Sunday at Phoebus, Va., the guest of her sister Mrs. A. A. Graham.
Mrs. Virginia Smith, the wife of Capt. John G. Smith, is now able to be out again after a long and serious illness.
Mrs. R. Eleanora Wesley who has been indisposed has recovered sufficiently to leave this week for Burkesville, Va., where she will spend some time.
Subscribe to THE PLANET
Miss Beresenia N. the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. Brown, who was quietly married on March 1st, to Dr. Ira E. Nash, has gone to join her husband in Buffalo, N. Y., where they will temporarily reside.
Miss Maud Lavina Pryor has return from Brooklyn New York, to visit her mother and father Rev. and Mrs. James W. Pryor, of S 1-2 E. Orange Street, Richmond, Va., and will be glad to see any of her friends.
Mrs. Nancy Thompson has return from Brooklyn N. Y., to visit her friends and relatives of 2 E. Orange Street, Richmond, Va.
Mr. P. A. Chappelle, Chief of Atlanta Division, State Deputy for Florida and Georgia, Attorney at Law, and Mr. W. R. Griffin, Chief of the Washington Division and Treasurer of the Sight Seeing Automobile Co., called on us.
The New Baptist Church, Rev. A. H. Edwards, D. D., pastor is nearly ready to begin work, on their new church building at the south-cast corner of Duval and Fourth Streets. The architect is at work on the plans. It will be an attractive structure.
Mr. W. C. Smith, of Fifth Street, between Broad and Marshall has pulled down the old house adjoining the PLANET office and is erecting a two story building which will be used as a garage for automobiles. There is a movement on foot to purchase the PLANET office building owned by John Mitchell, Jr.
Dr. R. F. Boyd, the well known physician and surgeon has launched another bank at Nashville. It is known as the Peoples Savings Bank and Trust Company. The officers are as follows: Dr. R. F. Boyd, President; A. N. Johnson, V. President; Dr. A. M. Townsend, V. President; D. A. Hart, V. President; T. G. Ewing, Cashier; W. D. Hawkins, Teller; S. P. Harris, Auditor; T. Clay Moore, Manager Real Estate Department; James Bumpass, Attorney, Executive Committee; Dr. J. B. Singleton, Chairman, Dr. R. F. Boyd, T. G. Ewing, Dr. Hale, J. W. Simmons.
We wish the new venture success.
Your subscription to the PLANET is due. Have you paid it?
PRICE, FIVE CENTS
PREACHER FLAYS STONE
Rev. Madison C. Peters Calls Missouri Senator White Coward.
New York, August 1.—A "white coward" was what Rev. Madison C. Peters called Senator Stone in his sermon at the Church of the Open Door, Brooklyn, to-night, during a review of the recent slapping incident between the senator and a negro waiter.
"Thank God," exclaimed Dr. Peters with great fervor. "Senator Stone belongs to a class that the public is not proud of—a class that is rapidly disappearing.
"It is the pitiful plight of the negro to-day; we have no friends in either the pulpit or politics. It is emphasized by the silence following the Stone incident. I think the negro man in this incident was the southern gentleman.
"It is a plittable travesty on justice to see one of our lawmakers, one of our powerful senators, airing such un-Christian views and stirring up so much race antagonism. It is sufficient to make blindfolded justice jump off her pedestal.
"Senator Stone and his whiskey glass on one hand and the poor negro waiter on the other offer notable parallels. The senator's action is directly opposite to the spirit of the age and the teachings."
christianity.
"If the negro was so inferior, why did Senator Stone pick a quarrel with him? It is safe to say the negro was not the senator's size.
I believe it is the foolishness of men like Senator Stone that is responsible for any existing negro impudence."
Buys More Property
The Mechanics' Savings Bank has purchased the property adjoining the site of the bank and having a frontage of thirty-three feet by one hundred and fifty feet for five thousand dollars. The building will be the same size as before 27 feet by 97 feet. This gives the bank a frontage on Clay street of 64 feet. The tenants will vacate the premises by September 1st, 1909, and then the work will be pushed on the new building.
Why He Was Discharged
It is now stated that the police officer recently dismissed from the police force was found in a compromising situation with a iolated man's wife. The colored man would not be comforted and the discharges of the officer was the result. Criminal proceedings may yet be instituted against him.
The rainy weather has been a blessing to the farmers in this state. Many springs and wells had dried up as a result of the long drought.
Dr. Wm. Troy, of Franklin, Va., was in the city this week.
Have the PLANET sent to your address. It is only 50 cents for 4 months.
True Reformers Celebrate
The Grand Fountain, United Order of True Reformers celebrated the Quarto-Centennial of their existence last Tuesday by a creditable street parade and by speaking at the Broad Street Baseball Park. Capt. B. A. Graves was Chief Marshall. President W. L. Taylor rode in a carriage surrounded by his aides. There were two bands, which discoursed lively airs. The exercise at the park were interesting and able addresses were delivered. Many citizens decorated in honor of the occasion and all seemed to have enjoyed themselves who participated in the festivities. There were many visitors from other states and cities.
$150.00 Endowment Paid
Roanoke, Va., July 20, 1909.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia. Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the deathclaim of Brother W. H. Reid, who was a member of Key West Lodge, No. 76, of Roanoke, Va.
Her X Mark,
Signed: MRS. ELIZA WILLIAMS,
Beneficiary.
Witness:
K. M. Robinson, M. D.,
H. C. Johnson, K. of R.,
Dr. I. D. Burrell, D. G. C.
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Dicksie stood seemingly helpless. Mc-
Cows Saat his finger into his waist-
coat pocket. $34 hela something out
in his hand. “This shell pin fell trom
your hair that might you were at camp
by the bridge—do you remember? I
‘couldn't bear to give it back.”
Dicksie's eyes opened wide. “Let
me see it. I don't think that is mine.”
“Great heaven! Have I been carry-
ing Marion Sinclafr's pin for a
Month?” exclaimed McCloud. “Well, 1
‘won't lose any time in returning it to
her, at any rate.”
“Where are you going?” Dicksle’s
voice was faint.
“P'm going to give Marion her pin."
“Do nothing of the sort! Come
here? Give it to me.”
“Dicksle, dare you tell me, after a
shock like that, it realty {s your pin?"
“Ob, I don't know whose pin it is!”
“Why, what is the matter?”
“Give me the pin!” She put her
hands unsteadily up under her bat
“Here, for heaven's sake, if you must
have something, take this comb!” She
slipped from her head the shell that
held her knotted hair. He caught her
hand and kissed it, and she could not
get it away.
“You are dear,” murmured Dickste,
“if you are silly. The reason 1
wouldn't let you ride home with me is
beenuse T was afraid you might get
shot. How do you suppose I should
feel if you were killed? Or, don't you
think IT have any feeling?”
“But, Dicksie, is it all right?”
“How do I know? What do you
mean? I will not let you ride home
with me, and you will not let me ride
home alone. ‘Tie Jim again. I am
soing to stay with Marion all night.”
CHAPTER XXX,
The Laugh of a Woman.
Within aa hour, Marion, working
over a hat in the trimming room, was
startled to hear the cottage door open
and to see Dicksie quie unconcernedly
walk in. To Marion's exclamation of
surprise she returned only a laugh. “I
have changed my wind, dear. 1 am
going to stay all night
Marion kissed her approvingly
Really, you are getting so sensible t
shan't know you, Dicksle. In fact, I
bolieve this 1s the most sensible thing
‘ou were ever guilty of
Glad you think 30,” returned Dick
ie. dryly, unpinuing her hat: “cer
tainly hope it is. Mr, McCloud per
suaded me It wasn't right for me to
ide home aloue, and I knew better
than he what danger there was for
him in riding home with me—so here
Tam. He ts coming over for supper
too, in a few minutes,
When McCloud arrived he brought
with him a porterhouse steak, and
Marion was again driven from the
Kitchen. At the end of av hour, Dick
aie, engrossed over the broiler, was
putting the finishing touches to the
steak, and McCloud, more engrossed.
war watching her, when a diffident
and surprised-looking person appeared
in the kitchen doorway and put his
hand undecidedly on the casing. While
he stood, Dicksle turned abruptly to
McCloud.
“Ob, by the way, I have forgotten
something! Will you do me a favor?
“Certainly! Do you want money or
& pass
‘No, not money,” said Dicksle, lift
ing the steak on her fork, “though
you might give me a pass.”
“But I should hate to have you go
away anywhere—*
“I don’t want to go anywhere, but I
nover had a pass, and I think it would
be kind of nice to have one just to
keep. Don't you?"
“Why, yes; you might put it In the
bank and have it drawing tnterest.”
This/steak is—Do they give Inter-
est on passes?”
“Well, a good deal of interest is felt
fa them—on this division at least
What is the favor?”
“Yes, what fs it? How can I think?
Ob, I know! If they don’t put Jim io
@ box stall to-night fhe will kili some of
the horses over there. Will you tele-
phone the stables?”
“Won't you give me the number and
let me telephone?” asked a voice be-
hind them. They turned in astonish-
ment and saw Whispering Smith. “I
am surprised.” he added, calmly, “to
see a man of your Intelligence,
George, trying to broil a steak with
the lower door of your stove wide
open. Close the lower door and cut
out the draft through the fire. Don't
stare, George; put back the broiler.
And haven't you made a radical mis-
take to start with?” he asked, step-
ping between the confused couple.
“Are you not trying to broil a roast of
beet?”
“Where did you come from?” de-
manded McCloud, as Marion came in
from the.dining room.
“Don't search me the very first
thing,” protested Whispering Smith.
“But we've been frightened to death
here for 24 hours. Are you really alive
and unhurt? This young lady rode in
20 miles this morning and came to the
office in tears to get news of you.”
Smith looked mildly at Dicksie. “Did
you shed a tear for me? I should like
to have seen just one! Where did I
come from? I reported in wae ge
the telephone ten minutes ago.
Marion tell you? She is so forgetful.
‘That is what causes wrecks, Marion.
I have been in the saddle since three
have had nothing for five days but
: _steer garnished with sunshine.”
» four sat down to oe =
ae Wevmiory 'evtee chews ta
3.3 aoe. toe anaeee
eat the tardy <bpparebe
‘hey anted. “Dy Sang to shoot
Seats rug eaaberradalatesd
teat aRate 9 me 9 ha
“wore up above, even if he could have
‘out through the upper canyon,
| which is very doubtful with all the
now. After a little talk back
and forth, Du Sang drew, and of
‘course then it was every man for him-
‘self. He was hit twice und he died
‘Sunday night, but the other two were
not serlously hurt. What can you do?
Jt te elther kil or got killed with those
“ae course, I talked plain-
ly to Du Sung. He had butchered «
man at Mission Springs just the night
before, and deserved hanging a dozen
times over. He meant from the start,
he told me afterward, to get me. Oh,
Miss Dunning. may I have some more
coffee? Haven't I an agreeable part
of the ratiroad business, don't you
think? 1 shouldn't have pushed in
here to-night, but I saw the lights
when I rode by awhile ago; they
looked so good I coulda’t resist.”
McCloud leaned forward. “You call
it pushing im, do you, Gordon? Do
you know what this young lady did
this morning? One of her cowboys
came down from the Cache early with
the word that you had been killed In
‘the fight by Du Sang. He said he saw
you drop from your saddle to the
ground with Du Sang shooting at you.
She ordered up her horse, without a
word, and rode 20 miles in an hour
and a half to find out here what we
had heard. She ‘pushed in’ at the
Wickivp, where she never had been
before in her life, and wandered
through it alone looking for my office,
to find out from me whether I hadn't
something to contradict the bad news.
While we talked, in came your dis-
patch from Sleepy Cat, Never was
one better timed! And when she knew
you were safe her eyes filled again.”
Whispering Stith looked at Dickste,
quizzically. Her confusion was de-
Hghtful. He rose, lifted her hand in
bis own, and, bending, kissed it.
‘They talked ttl late, and when
Dicksie walked on the porch MeCloud
followed to smoke. Whispering Smith
till sat at the table talking to Marion,
and the two heard the sound of the
low voices outside, At intervals Dick-
sie’s Inugh came tn through the open
door.
Whispering Smith, lstening, said
nothing for some time, but once she
laughed peculiarly. He pricked up his
ears, “What has been happening since
T left town?”
“What do you mean?” asked Marion
Sinclatr.
He nodded toward the porch. “Me
Cloud and Dickste out there, They
‘have been fixing things up.”
\ “Nonsense! What do you mean?”
“I nieait they are engaged
“Never in the world!
“I may be slow in reading @ trail,”
said Smith, modestly, “but when a
woman laughs like that I think there's
something doing. Don't you believe
4t? Call them In and ask them. You
won't?) Well, I will. Take them In
separate rooms. You ask her and I'l
ask him.”
Ta spite of Marion's protests the two
were brought in. “I am required by
Mr. Smith to ask you a very silly
question, Dickste,” sald Marion, taking
her into the living room. “Answer yes
of'no. Are you engaged to anybody?"
“What a question! Why, no!”
“Marion Sinclair wants to know just
one thing, George,” said Whispering
Smith to McCloud, after he had taken
Bim into the dark shop. “She feels
she ought to know because she ts in a
way Dickste’s chaperone, you know,
and she feels that you aré willing she
should know. I don’t want to be too
serious, but answer yes or no. Are
you engaged to Dicksie?”
“Why, yes. I"
“That's all; go back to the porch,”
directed Whispering Smith. McCloud
obeyed orders.
Marton, aloe in the living room,
‘was waiting for the Inquisitor, and her
face wore a look of triumph. “You
are not such a mind-eader after all,
are you? I told you they weren't.”
“I told you they were,” contended
Whispering Smith.
“She says they are not,” insisted
Marton.
“He says they are,” returned Whis-
pering Smith. “And, what's more,
Tl bet my saddle against the shop
they are. I could be mistaken in any-
thing but that laugh.”
CHAPTER XXXiI.
A Midnight Visit.
The lights, but one, were out. Me
Cloud and Whispering Smith had goue,
and Marion was locking up the house
for the night, when she was halted by
@ knock at the shop door. It was a
summons that she thought she knew,
but the last in the world that she wanted
to hear or to answer. Dicksie had
gone to the bedroom, and standing
between the portieres that curtainea
the workroom from the shop, Marion
in the half-light lstened, hesitating
Whether, to ignore or to answer the
midnight intruder. But experience,
and bitter experience, had taught her
there was only one way to meet that
particular summons, and that was to
act, whether at noon or at midnight,
without fear. She waited until the
knocking had been twice repeated,
turned up the light, and going to the
door drew the bolt; Sinclair stood be-
fore her, and she drew back for him
to enter. “Dicksie Dunning ts with
me tonight,” sald Marion, with her
hand on the latch, “and we shall bave
40 talk here.”
Sinclair took of his bat. “I knew
"a4 had company,” he returned in the
low, gentle tone that Marion knew
very well, “so I came late. And I
‘heard tonight, for the first time, that
this railroad crowd is after me—God
Kaows why: Dut they have to sara
salary somehow. I want to keep
out of trouble if I can. I won't kill
@nybody if they don’t force me to it.
‘They've scared nearly all my men
Away from the rauch airesdy; ‘one
erippled-up cowboy is all I have got
to help me look after the cattle. But
‘I won't quarre! with them, Marion, if
I cam get away from here peaceably,
‘so I've come to talk it over once more
‘with you. I'm going away and I want
you to go with me; I've got enough to
Xeop Ur as well as the best of thom
and as long a3 wo live. You've given
Me a good lesion, 1 needed tt,
hte ~ ."
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
“Don't call me tnat*
vat 3 oe that's what I
‘ft to be again. I don't blame
you. You're worth ail the women I
ever knew, Marion. I've learned to
oo oe few things in os
came I've spent up on t
Frenchman; but I've feit while I was
there as if I were working for both of
us. T've got a buyer in sight now for
the cattle and the land. I'm ready to
clean up and say good-by to troubie
—all I want ts for you to give me the
one chance I've asked for and go
along.”*
‘They stood facing each other under
the dim light. She lstened intently
to every word, though in her terror
she might not have heard or under-
stood all of them. One thing she did
very clearly understand, and that was
why he bad come and what he wanted.
‘To that she held her mind tenactously,
and for that she shaped her answer.
“I cannot go with you—now or ever.”
He waited a moment. “We always
got along, Marion, when I behaved my-
self.”
“I hope you alway® will behave
yourself; sbut I could no more go with
you than I could make myself again
what I was years ago, Murray. I wish
you nothing but good; but our ways
parted long ago.”
“Stop and think a minute, Marion.
I offer you more and offer it more
honestly than I ever offered it before,
because I know myself better. I am
alone in the world—strong, and better
able to care for you than I was when
T undertook to—"
“I have never complained."
“That's what makes me more anx-
fous to show you now that I can and
will do what's right.”
“Ob, you multiply words! It ts too
late for you to be here. You are tn
danger, you say; for the love of
heaven, leave me and go away!"
“You know me, Marion, when my
mind is made up. I won't leave with.
out you.” He leaned with one hand
against the ribbon showcase. “If you
don’t want to go I will stay right here
and pay off the scores I owe. Two
men here have stirred this country up
too long, anyway. I don't care much
how soon anybody gets me afer 1
round them up. But tonight 1 felt
like this: You and I started out In
Mfe together, and we ought to live it
out or die together, whether {t's to-
night, Marion, or 20 years from to-
night”
“If you want to kill me to-night,
Thave no resistance to make."
Sinclair sat down on a low counter.
stool, and, bending forward, held his
head between his hands. “It oughtu't
ail to end here. 1 know you, and I
know you want to do what's right. I
couldn't kiN you without killing my
self; you know that." He. straight
ened up slowly. “Here!” He slipped
his revolver from his hip-holster aud
held the grip of the gun toward her:
“Use tt on me if you want to. It is
your chance to end everything; it may
Save several lives if you do, I won't
leave McCloud here to crow over me,
and, by God, I won't leave you here
for Whispering Smith! I'll settle with
him anyhow. Take the pistol! What
are you afraid of? Tuke it! Use it!
I don't want to live without you. If
you make me do It, you're to blame for
the consequences.”
She stood with wide-open eyes, but
uttered no word.
“You won't touch {t—then you care
a little for me yet,” he murmured,
“Not Do not say so. But I will not
do murder."
“Think about the other, then. Go
with me and everything will be all
right. I will come back some evening
soou for my answer. And until then,
if those two men have any use for life,
iy Ae
let them keep In the clear. I heard
tonight that Du Sang ts killed. Do
you know whether {t is true?”
“It is true.”
An oath half escaping showed how
the confirmation cut him. “And Whis:
pering Smith got away! It is Du
Sang’s own fault; I told him to keep
out of that trap. I stay in the open;
and I'm not Du Sang. I'll choose my
own ground for the finish when they
want it with me, and when I go I'll
take company—I'll promise you that.
Goodnight, Marion. Will you shake
hands?”
oe
“Damn it, I lke your grit, girl!
Well, good-night, ‘anyway.”
She closed the door. She had even
strength enough to bolt it before his
footsteps died away. she put out the
Mght and felt her way blindly back to
the workroom. She staggered through
Mt, clutching at the curtains, and fell
tm the darkness into Dicksie’s arms.
“Marion, dear, don't speak,” Dicksie
whispered. “I heard everything. Oh,
Marion!” she cried, suddenly con-
sclous of the inertness of the burden
faher arms, “Oh, what sball 1 do?”
Moved by fright to her utmost
strength, Dicksle drews the © unco>-
scleus worian back to ber room an‘!
managed Co lay her on the bed. ‘Mari.
on orened her eyes a few minutes
later to gee the lights burning, to hear
the telephone bed ringing, and to fin:
‘kale on che edge of the bed. desic’
ner. SG Sh aoa
*Ob, Marion, thor ke hesran, von +
sviving! I have Booa frig a si
feath” Don't mind the telephone; tt
fs Mr. McCloud, 1 didn’t know what
to do, se I telephoned him.”
“But you had better answer bim,”
said Merion, faintly. The telephone
bell was ringing wildly.
“Oh, po! he can walt. How are you,
dear?’ I don’t wonder you were fright:
ened to death. Marion, he means to
kill us—every one!”
“No, Dicksie. He will kill me and
Hil Bimteit; that ig where it will end
Dicksie, do auswér the telephone.
What are you thisking of? Mr.
McCloud will be at the door in five
minutes, Do you want him in the
street tonight?”
Dieksie fled to Mle telephone, and
an exctied conferéice over the wire
closed in seeming reassurance at both
ends. By that time Marion had re-
gained her stendingss, but she could
not talk of what had passed. At times,
as the two lay together in the dark
ness, Marion spoke, but it was not to
be answered. “I do not know,” she
murmured once wearily. “Perhaps 1
am doing wrong; perhaps 1 ought to
xo with him. wish, oh, I wish I
knew what I ought fo do!
CHAPTER Xxx.
‘The Call.
/rode into town and rode out again on
their separate and’silent ways, Whis.
pering Smith for two days seemed to
do nothing. Yet tfstinct keener than
silence kept the people of Medicine
Bend on edge during those two days,
and when President Bucks’ car came
in on the evening ‘of the second day
the town knew from current rumors
that Banks had gone to the French-
man ranch with a warrant on a sert
ous charge for Sinclair, In the prest
dent's car Bucks and McCloud, after
& lace dinner, were Joined by Whisper
ing Smith, and the president heard
the first connected story of the events
}of the fortnight that had passed.
Bucks made no comuent until he had
heart everything. “And they rode
Sinclair's horses,” he said in con
clusion,
Sinclalr's horses," retired Whis
pering Smith, “and they are all ac-|
counted for. One horse supplied by
Rebstock was shot where they crossed
Stampede creek. It had given out and
they had a fresh horse in the willow
for they shot the scrub haif a mile up
one of the canyons near the crossing
The magples attracted my attention
to it, A piece of #kin a foot square
had been cut out of the flank.”
You got there before the birds.
It was about am even thing,” said
Smith, “Anyway, we were there in
time to see the horse.”
And Sinclair was avay from the
ranch from Saturday noon till Sunday
night?”
A rancher ttving over on Stam
pede creek saw the five men when
they crossed Saturday afternoon. Ti
fellow was scared and lied to me |
about It, but he told Wickwire who |
they were )
“Now, who Is Wickwire?” asked
Bucks,
You ought to remember Wickwir:
George,” remarked Whispering Smlth.
turning to McCl6@¢, “You haven't
forgotten the Smoky creek wreck?
Do you remember the tramp who had |
his legs crushed and lay in the sun all|
morning? You put him in your car
and sent him down here to the rail
road hospital and Barnhardt took cave
of him. That was Wickwire. Not a
bad fellow, elther; he can talk pretty
straight and shoot pretty. straight
How do I know? Because he bas told
me the story and I've seen him shoot
‘There, you see, fs one friend that you
never reckoned on. He used to be a
cowboy. and I got him a job working
for Sinclair on we Frenchman; he
has worked at Dunning’s and other
places on the Crawling Stone. He
hates Sinclair with a deadiy hatred
for some reason, Just tately Wick-|
wire set up for Himself oa Little
Crawling Stone.”
T have noticed that fellow’s ranch,”
remarked McCloud
T couldn't leave Bim at Sinclair's,”
continued Whispering Smith, frankly
“The fellow was oa my mind all the
time. T felt certain he would kill Sin
clair or get killed If he stayed there.
And then, when I took him away they
sprang Tower W on me! That ts the
price, not of having a consclence
for I haven't any, but of listening to
the votce that echoes where my con.
science used to be,” sald the railroad
man, moving uneasily in his chair
Bucks broke the ash from his cigar
{nto the tray on the table. “You are
restless tonight, Gordon—and it tsn't
Uke you, either.”
“It ts in the alr. There has been
a dead calm for two days. Something
is due to happen tonight. I wish I
could hear from Banks; he started
with the papers for Sinclair's yester-
day while I went to Oroville to sweat
Karg. Blood-poisoutng bas set tn and
it Is rather important to us to get a
confession. There's a horse!” He
‘stepped to the window. “Coming fast,
too. Now, I wonder—no, he's gone
by.”
Five minutes later a messenger
came to the car from the Wickiup with
word that Kenacdy was looking for
Whispering Smith. Bucks, McCloud
and Smith left the car together and
walked up to McCloud’s office.
| Kennedy, sliting on the edge of the
ee. was tapping his leg nervously
with a ruler. “Bad news, Gordon.”
” “Not from E4 Banks?”
"Sinclair got him this morning.”
Whispering Smith eat down. “Go
son.”
_ “Banks and I picked up Wickwire
‘on the Crawling Stone early, and we
Fode over to the Frenchman. Wick-
‘wire said Sinclair tad been up at
‘Williams Cache the day before, and
‘he didn't think he was home, mae
‘Tknew the Cache was w.
‘a he wouldn't be t long, so Ed
me to po _cotto
and watch the creek for He and
“Wickwire couldn't tind j / home:
owhen they got to the | and
oe ee orral together ta
¥ ‘guia ee
| Smith's as oar
‘For God's aake, wh
‘stay at the house?
a ‘Fade out from behind the
a gl cn a
‘barn and hit Wiekwire in the arm be
fore they saw him. Banks turned dnd
‘Opened on him, and Wickwire ducked
for the creek. Sinclair put a soft bul-
let through Banks’ shoulder—tore it
pretty bad, Gordon—and made his get-
away before Wickwire and I could
reach the barn again. I got Ed on his
horse and back to Wickwire’s, and
we sent one of the boys to Oroville tor
a doctor. After Banks fell out of the
saddle and was helpless Sinclair talked
to him before I came up. “You ought
t have kept out of this, Ed." he said.
“This ts a railroad fight. Why didn't
they send the head of their own gan.
after me?—naming you.” Kennedy
nodded toward Whispering Smith.
“Naming me.”
“Banks says ‘Tm sheriff of this
county. and will be a long time yet!
I took the papers from his breast
Pocket,” continued Kennedy. “You
can see where he was hit.” Kennedy
laid the sheriffs packet on the table.
Bucks drew his chair forward and
with his cigar between his fingers,
picked the packet up and opened it
Kennedy went on; “Ed told Sinclair
if he couldn't land him himself that
he knew a man who could and would
before he was a week older. He meant
you, Gordon, and the last thing Ed
told me was that be wanted you to
serve the papers on Sinclair.”
A silence fell on the company. One
of the documents passing under thicks
hand caught his eye and he opened tt
It was the watrant for Sinclair. He
read it without comment, folded 1:,
and, looking at Whispering Smith,
pushed t toward him. “Then this, 1
guess, Gordon. belongs to you."
Starting from a reverie, Whispering
Smith reached for the warrant. He
looked for a moment at the. blood.
stained caption. “Yes,” he sald, “this
1 guess, beloags to me."
(To Be Continued.)
SUFFERING.
Release my hands ste sald to him
AR they stood in the entry way?
Te was nlebt, dark nist wher he stood
with her,
And nothing the youth dia say:
And “Rotease my hands! sha sald again,
But he would not let them go;
And he sald things tn her seantell ear
Tn @ throbtut voice and low:
“Oh, release my hands!” screamed the
maid to hin
But he woulda't, sins? alack!
“Well, If you won't,”” slricked the maid
at last
“Then, dara tt allt scratch my: back!”
Depew tnherite Talkativeness,
“My father." said Chauncey M. De
Dew, “was a frugal and saving man
He never approved of the waste of
anything, including time.
“One night be went to a prayer
meeting. The brethren were back
ward. After a walt of a quarter of
an hour my father rose and sald: ‘It
is a shame to waste all this valuable
time, Will not some brother tell his
experience?”
"No one rose and my father con:
tinued: “Wl some one lead us in
prayer?
“There was no response to this ap
peal and my father said: ‘In that
tase I will improve the time by mak
ing a few observations on the tariff.’ ”
New York Sun,
Smmbarracsed Mules.
Ove of the humorous passages in
Mark Twain's “A Connecticut Yan:
kee at King Arthur's Court,” relates
how a party of travelers, composed of
ladies and gentlemen, were telling
funny stories and how the Yankee
was able to trace the progress of the
Joke down the cavaicade by the way
the mnuies biushed. The Mea of a
mule blushing atanything,even the Sw
lome dance, in these times is of course
preposterous. The embarrassment of
those early mules was a fitting rebuke
to the ladies aboard the mules, for
We are led to infer that tke ladies
didn’t blush
He's Famous Now.
“Some people work years in vatn to
become famous and others win fame
in @ single day.”
“*Right you are. ‘There {s the case
of that Ohio man who traded his
‘le far Knew OF beer *
FOR H16 SAKE.
i} ?
We
{ ‘
LS [Ys \
“He hasn't enough sense to get in
es
Beer ee lceiice
oe
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Mar Peecvince: 002M, 13:15 sm, 30
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TRAINS LRAVE RICHMOND.
N. B—ollowing schedule Agures’ published
only am information art are pot ‘guatanteets
S40 A. Mo Dally—tocal for Casters
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2:5 Pe M—Monday, Westoesday and
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JORGEN'S SON
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Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Va. as second class matter.
Hot weather and good temper
rarely go together.
All colored folks should set out
for heaven, even though they never
get there.
Colored folks can be happier on nothing than white folks can be on something.
When you fail to pay a preacher you are interfering very seriously with his religious convictions.
We must continue to do business and to engage in enterprises that will give our own people employment.
President Taft is in favor of the Negro, but he is in favor of him out or public office in the Southland.
Some folks seem to think that religion is only for Sunday use. They are saints on that day and devils all the rest of the week.
Some of our people believe in taking short cuts to make money. They are like customer's at the paying teller's window of a bank. They simply lose their place in line and then start all of it over again.
Some folks say, "Pray without ceasing", but our advice is do a little praying and much working Faith without works is no good and prayer without work will land you in the poor-house.
Some people live in an atmosphere of hard times. No prosperity seems to affect them and they are always prophesying worse days ahead for themselves and everybody else. This policy may afford them satisfaction, but it does not help business.
The colored man is making a great mistake in not taking more interest in the pursuits of the skilled mechanic. The young men seem to want to get away from skilled labor
instead of getting to it. The easy money of the hotel is proving a serious handicap to our material industrial prosperity.
The Gazette and Guide, of Buffalo, N. Y., published by Mr. Jas. A. Ross is highly creditable to the management. It is a souvenir edition of the Elks unification meeting at Detroit. Michigan this month. It is finely illustrated and is printed upon high grade book.
Rev. J. J. Smallwood, D. D., President of the Temperance, Industrial and Collegiate Institute at Claremont, Va., is making some admirable speeches in Pennsylvania. He is demonstrating to the people of that section that he is conservative, able and manly. We wish him continued success. The daily newspapers are devoting much space to his deliverances.
We desire to express our appreciation of the many kind things said concerning us by the Omaha, Nebraska Enterprise. Our good friend, M. T. P. Mahammitt will accept this acknowledgement in the spirit in which it was written. Whether we win or lose, our hat is off to him and his.
---
Liberia is expecting much from this country. It may find itself in the same predicament of the Negroes of the United States. They sat down and waited upon the promises and got to work for themselves just in time to save them from starvation. Any person with a dark skin, who expects help from Washington will wake up to be disappointed.
____0____
RETURN OF THE VETERANS
The Tenth Cavalry has returned to the United States and it will be quartered in Vermont. From extreme heat, it has been assigned to extreme cold. It is gratifying indeed to read the account of the manner in which these colored veterans were greeted in New York city. It indicates that sentiment will yet swing their way and injury done the Black Battalion at Washington will yet be cured by the recognition of the many qualities of those colored soldiers who yet remain in the service. The New York Evening Sun of July 27th, 1909 says:
As well set up and business-like a regiment as anybody could want to command was the verdict of one observer, not without experience of fighting men, after the 10th Cavalry (colored), parading as infantry, had passed in review before the acting Mayor at the City Hall yesterday.
The ovation in the Wall street region, the cheering crowds further uptown, did not produce the slightest apparent effect on these long, sliny fit regulars with some ten years of exceedingly active service to their immediate credit and a regimental history before that to be proud of. They took it all stoically, as they take the day's work. But they must have liked it.
New Yorkers were glad to stand in the hot sun for an hour or so, waiting for them. It was not from a desire to see a brave show, though it was that, but undoubtedly the real reason was the general desire to do honor where honor was due. Certainly what happened within the gates of this old town, in the course of that unusual parade, ought to convince these troopers that the public is in favor of giving a square deal, under all circumstances, to the colored men who wear the national uniform and fight under the national flag.
This then was a moment of triumph when the sober second thought of the white people was in evidence. It was another indirect rebuke to the presidential policy of persecution of one of the bravest battalions that ever faced an enemy or had ever been mustered into service. Right is being vindicated and truth lionized and both virtues are uppermost in the black troops of the United States Army.
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE
It seems to us that it is about time for the law-abiding, conservative colored people to make some concerted move against the dissolute lawless classes of colored people, who are not only injuring themselves, but damaging our prospects in this community. They care absolutely nothing for either decency or for the rules of propriety. They fill up on cheap liquor and instead of going into their homes and sleep off the effect of their debaucheries, they go to public places, where often respectable colored people are assembled and attempt to assume an air of importance and impress upon the public their greatness by carving some one of their associates or by shooting some person who is indiscreet enough to oppose them.
This class of people terrorize the officers of Sunday Schools and churches. They are passed on account of their showing a knife or by their displaying a revolver. They
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
cower before white men, and they become unusually brave before colored ones whom they think fear them. They are upheld by lewd women, who take this means of inspiring them with courage by declaring that they are "bad niggers", and should be let alone. This evil has grown until picnics and excursions have been abandoned by certain law-abiding people. Protection can only be secured by employing white men to appear and defend the Negro against the Negro.
It seems to us that some concerted effort should be taken to stop this kind of thing. It is injuring us as a people. We should do missionary work among these deprived colored folks on the one hand and we should take legal steps against them on the other. These thoughts have been caused by the display of lawlessness at Johnson's Brook Avenue Roof Garden last Monday night. A wagon load of reserves had to be ordered out in order to preserve the peace and the screams of the women and the yells of the men made a bedlam scene that was a disgrace to this community.
The average white man does not know that the better class of colored people did not participate in this disorder. "All Negroes look alike to him". It is a part of our duty to change this kind of thing and see to it that these people are put down "under the hill", where they belong. They injure every man, woman and child or the race. We need a criminal work-house in Richmond. We need patriotic colored citizens, who will come together to stop this species of lawlessness and who will unite with the better class of white citizens in punishing it.
The time of standing up with our hands uplifted in holy horror over the lawlessness of this kind and class of colored people has passed. We must take steps to punish them and thus save the respectable colored people of this community from the opprobrium that is attached to their lawless exhibitions.
THE HAND-SHAKE AND THE
MOE.
We have always insisted that yielding to race prejudice has a tendency to increase it. President William H. Taft has not taken this view of the matter and we submit the following telegraphic report for his mature and prayerful consideration.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 3.—Because he shook hands with the negro presiding elder of a Methodist conference at Ethel, Miss., the Rev. Frank N. English says he had a narrow escape with his life from the town. He has returned to the pastorate of Finley M. E. Church, this city, and the presidency of the Cincinnati missionary training school, and has declined the presidency of Rust University, a big Methodist institution for colored folk, under the control of the Freedmen's Ald Society and situated at Holly Springs, Miss.
Mr. English had gone South to look into the field with which the presidency of Rust University would bring him in touch. He was asked to deliver an address on education at the colored conference and went to Ethel, Miss., on Sunday, July 24, expecting to make his speech the next day. On Sunday morning, however, a representative citizen or the town called upon him to tell him the address must not be delivered.
"We don't believe in the education of niggers down here," said the representative citizen.
Mr. English, however, went to the conference. As he mounted the rostrum he shook hands with the colored presiding elder. When he returned to the little hotel a delegation of furious citizens met him and made threats of what they were going to do to him. They would not let the hotel keeper serve him any dinner.
Mr. English, dinnerless, beat a hasty retreat to the home of the Illinois Central station agent. He appealed to the agent as an official of the road to shelter and protect him. He was allowed inside, but was not given anything to eat, as the station agent was fearful of violence. Meanwhile, the mob was gathering, armed with clubs. As the train pulled up he made a quick dash for the cars and gained them in safety.
Now here he has the name of the white minister, Rev. Frank N. English, the name of the locality and the place where this divine can now be found. He did not dine with Negroes, he did not sleep with Negroes, but he shook hands with the presiding elder in a Methodist conference. He was denied the protection guaranteed by our laws and although he had committed no crime, he was treated as a criminal and narrowly escaped bodily injury. The nation will ultimately be forced to face these outrageous conditions in a courageous manner. The citizens of one state will ultimately demand protection in another. Of course, it is Mr. English's business to secure this protection and we as colored people cannot do anything for we have "troubles of our own."
The failure to accord protection to Negroes, though has led to the inability to accord protection to white men. The issue will be presented in a more embarrassing form after a while and President Taft will yet see the wilting effect of his pernicious policy in dealing with the colored men of the South-land.
THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP.
Jack Johnson has covered the live thousand dollar forfeit of James J. Jeffries and it begins now to look as though a fight will take place between the two acknowledged leaders in the heavy-weight class. There is much doubt on the part of many that the deal, even now is being made in good faith. We do not believe that there has ever been as much interest shown in any prospective encounter as seems to be manifested in this one.
It is a fact too that Jeffries, after saying "he'd neer consent, consented." Public sentiment is a great power and in this case, it has forced Jeffries into this contest against both his interest and against his will. He must demonstrate his superiority over Jack Johnson, the colored heavy-weight champion of the world. Should he make it a fight to a finish, there can hardly be any doubt as to the out-come. If he is able to come out of his retirement and show all of the old time force and agility in the ring, then he is indeed a wonder or else Johnson is a much over-rated man. There is one thing certain, Johnson will take no chances with Jeffries. His training will be not only thorough, but his appearance in the ring will mean that he is there to do or die, for Jeffries has already been quoted as saying that should he meet him in the ring, he will kill him. Fortunately, this is "a game at which two can play". We are not given to the prize-fight fever and this kind of sport is demoralizing and savors of a kind or brutality that is degrading, but we are free to say that we have an attack of the "prize fight fever" and when the Johnson-Jeffries bounce is over, we shall hope never to have another attack again.
DRIVING THEM AWAY
News comes from Oklahoma that explains itself and demonstrates that President Taft's policy towards colored men is operating against these same colored folks and not in their favor. We need only invite our patrons to read the following:
Fort Smith, Ark., August 1.—Because Stigler, Ok., a town of 5000, bars negroes and Chet Lefore had imported a 17-year-old black boy to act as cook in his home, a lynching of the negro was narrowly averted last night, when a mob or white civiliens surrounded the house with the avowed intention of killing the black. A white man, Frank Ferbrecht, warded off the attack until both city and county officers arrived and succeeded in dispersing the crowd. Before leaving, the leaders of the mob demanded that the negro leave town within twenty-four hours and threatened to dynamite the house.
Ever since the negro arrived, three weeks ago, his presence has been bitterly resented. In passing along the streets he was in constant danger, and on one occasion a heavy dry-goods box was dropped from an upper story, narrowly missing the negro.
Two weeks ago a mob of thirty men surrounded Lefore's house, while occupied only by Mrs. Lefore and her children. When the mob approached the kitchen door, Mrs. Lefore seized a rifle and fired several shots. The mob was disorganized and no further persecutions were manifested until last week, when the Lefore family was summoned to Rogers, Ark., by sickness.
Knowing the state of public feeling, Mr. Leforet asked Frank Ferbrecht to watch the house while he was absent. About 11 o'clock last night a mob appeared and demanded the negro. Ferbrecht went to the gate and attempted to reason with the leaders, but was seized. He wrenched himself away and ran to the house and, securing pistols, threatened to shoot any one who came into the yard. He fired several shots to attract attention and was finally en-reforced by sheriff and deputies, city marshal and town police, who dispersed the mob. Notice has been given Leforet to get rid of the negro before another twenty-four hours, under threat of dynamiting his house.
It will be noted that the southern white man has been standing, by his Negro servant and that while he was in the town, the "poor whites" as they are known there did not dare interfere with his household. Mrs. Leflore is as brave as her husband. This is the kind of protection on which the average colored person in the South can depend. A full blooded, aristocratic southerner will stand by a colored servant to the last and will emphasize his preference in a manner that leaves no doubt as to his intentions.
Colored men who are looking for aid or succor from Washington had might as well change their opinions and devote their attention to other themes and individuals. We are here in these "low-grounds or sorrow" and we might as well realize that help must come from those in our own immediate neighborhood. Self reliance is what is needed and a devotion to duty. We should take hope and increase our courage. Death is the worst that can overtake us and as for suffering, we have been experiencing that ever since we first cried and ever since we first saw the sun-light in the heavens.
THAWWOULD BE PUBLIC MENACE
Dr. Baker Says He Should be Kept Under Restraint.
THAW AGAIN - ON STAND
Slayer Was Ruffled and Nervous, But Jerome Dismissed Him After a Few Questions—Doctors Flint and Hirsch Declare Thaw "a Degenerate Paranoiac."
White Plains, N. Y., Aug. 4.—Three of those medical men known as allenists, who have become such a familiar part of modern criminal court procedure, united in the supreme court to make it unpleasant for Harry K. Thaw, who killed Stanford White and was adjudged insane, but now demands his release from the Matteawan asylum as a mentally normal man.
All three testified that he was insane, and when Thaw took the stand briefly, after some disconcerting testimony, he was plainly ruffled and nervous, but Mr. Jerome dismissed him after a few comparatively unimportant questions.
Says Thaw Is Insane Now.
Says Thaw is Insane Now.
Of the alieists who testified—Dr Austin Flint, Dr. William Hirsch and Dr. Amos T. Baker, the last named gave testimony of the most importance. He is acting superintendent of Matteawan, and appears as a witness without compensation, the only alieist in the case with this distinction. Justice Mills called attention to this fact and took a hand in questioning him. Dr Baker said that in his opinion Thaw was not only insane now but a dangerous person to be at large and would be a menace to public peace and safety.
Slayer Again on Stand.
It was shortly after this declaration that Mr. Jerome quickly called Thaw to the stand. He was pale and apparently shaken and kept moving and wiping his eyeglasses. The district attorney put some rather incoherent notes written by the prisoner in evidence and asked him to explain them. After parries back and forth and laborious explanations by Thaw as to the meaning of certain writings, he said:
"And I want you to know, Mr. Jerome, that many of these notes you call suggestions were written at the request of my lawyers."
Mr. Jerome pointed his finger at the witness and said: "Do you mean to sit there and tell us, who observed you in both homicide trials, that you did not believe you knew more about the case than your lawyers did?"
"I do," was Thaw's quick reply.
"You were nice and docile all the time?"
"I think I behaved myself."
"Never discharged any lawyers?"
"Oh, yes; I discharged some lawyers."
"And yet you did not interfere at all?"
"Only when I thought it was absolutely necessary."
"Then you did offer some suggestions, I take it?" said the district attorney, sarcastically.
"Oh, yes; some," was the reply.
Allenist Describes a Paranolac.
Thaw was excused after a bit more of this ordeal and Dr. Austin Flint was called. Dr. Flint described a paranolac as a person dominated by certain delusions, whose mental and physical state might not otherwise be affected, except in so far as these delusions influence him. The progress of the disease was usually very slow, he said. It rarely caused death, and except in the last stages the patient might retain his faculties unimpaired.
"Paranolacs," he concluded impressively, "never recover."
Dr. Hirsch varied the general verdict by declaring Thaw "a degenerate paranolac."
FALLS SIXTY FEET: UNHURT
Turned Three Somersaults, Alighted on Feet and Walked Home.
Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 4.—A new record in acrobatic stunts was made here, when Joseph Mitchell, aged twenty-five years, a painter, dropped a distance of sixty feet from the Ohio river bridge near here and, turning three somersaults, alighted feet first on the ground, arose, brushed his hair and walked to his home, saying he needed a little rest. Mitchell was working on the bridge, when he missed his footing.
File In Beach Basket Halt
Fire In Peach Basket Hat; Loss, $30,
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 4.—A fire upon
the hat of a pretty girl traveller at the
Union station called out two fire companies, a hose cart, a score of willing amateur firemen, delayed a fast train and destroyed about $30 worth of finery on the peach basket aforesaid.
1909 AUGUST 1909
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
Rite Playing With Son.
While he was playing with his son Harry at their home in Bethlehem, Pa., Samuel W. Bennner, aged forty-one, fell from a second-story, window and was killed. Ti , two were playing tac, when the son took refuge in a bedroom, locking the door. In order to surprise his son, Bennner crawled out of a window, but in attempting to cross on a narrow ledge slipped and fell twenty-five feet.
CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS.
Thursday, July 29.
The union scale has been signed to cover the tin plate mill at Cumberland, Md., of the N. & G. Taylor Co., of Philadelphia.
The Western Federation of Miners instructed the executive board to print Socialist literature in a number of languages for distribution.
While working in a hayfield at Lack awack, Ulster county, N. J., John Hoff, Sr., seventy-eight years of age, dropped dead from heart disease.
One man was killed and two were injured when a mortar exploded during a fireworks display in connection with the convention of the National Hay Dealers' association at Cedar Point, near Sanduky O.
Friday, July 30.
The French ambassador to the United States, J. J. Jusserand, and Mine Jusserand sailed for Euroye on the steamer La Lorraine.
John R. Talt, ranking high as an artist and a critic of note, was found dead at the foot of a flight of steps in his home in Baltimore.
The plant of the South Baltimore Steel Car and Foundry company was bought in by the reorganization committee of creditors for $340,000.
George Watson, seventy-six years of age, a prominent retired citizen of Reading, Pa., died on a trolley car while returning from a park, where he had become ill.
Frank M. Boyer, an appendicitis patient in the Harrisburg, Pa., hospital fell or threw himself from a third story window in the hospital and died two hours later.
Saturday. July 31.
The senate ratified an arbitration treaty between the United States and Paraguay, which was signed on March 13 last.
President Taft has been elected an honorary member of the Tuna club, the famous fishing organization of Catalina island, at Los Angeles, Cal.
As a result of a switch engine dashing into a heavily loaded suburban street car in Memphis, Tenn., one person was killed and five or six were injured.
Claude Brooks, aged twenty-one years, a negro, was hanged at Kansas City for the murder of Shiney Herndon, a well-to-do real estate owner, for merly of Tyler, Tex. Jan. 13, 1908.
Monday, August 2.
The government contract for $25,000 yards of olive drab cotton cloth for the army goes to a Massachusetts mill at 25 cents a yard.
A nail in the foot, then gangrene and amputation of the leg to save his life all ended in the death of Thomas Lauer, at Berwick, Pa.
From a bullet wound inflicted by his divorced wife, John Haker died near Lansing, Mich., a question of money having started the trouble.
The North Carolina corporation commission has closed the Citizens' Bank and Trust company, at Southern Pines, because of a cash shortage.
In an auto accident at Lake Geneva Ill., Philip Swift, eldest son of Edward F. Swift, the packer, had a leg broken and was badly cut and bruised.
Tuesday, August 3
President Taft has decided to include Charleston, S. C., in his itinerary for the western and southern trip. The funeral of Harry C. Pullium, late president of the National League who committed suicide in New York, was held at Louisville, Ky. Franklin K. Lane, a member of the interstate commerce commission, is at present in France, studying the regulations applied to French railroads. In the presence of a large number of citizens the tablet marking the site of old Fort Yates, where General Grant led his regiment, the Twenty-first Illinois infantry, in 1861, was dedicated at Springfield, Ill.
Wednesday, August 4.
Thomas H. Heist, former owner of the Bolton house and a prominent business man of Harrisburg, Pa., died suddenly at his home at Wayne Junction, Philadelphia, aged seventy years. The raising of the battleship Maline in Havana harbor by the United States government was favored in a resolution passed by the New York state department, United Spanish War Veterans. President Taft has approved the sentence of dismissal in the case of First Lieutenant Frank W. Ball, Twenty-fifth infantry, U. S. A., recently tried twice by court martial in the Philippine Islands on charges of drunkenness.
PRODUCE QUOTATIONS
The Latest Closing Prices For Produces
and Live Stock.
PHILADELPHIA — FLOUR weak;
winter low grades. $4.25@4.75; winter
clear, $4.90@5.15; city mills, fancy,
$6.80@6.05
RYE FLOUR quiet; per barrel
$4.50@4.70.
WHEAT steady; new, No. 2 red
$11.0@1.11.
CORN steady; No. 2 white, local
79@80c.
USS quiet; No. 2 white, clipped
53@$0c; lower grades, 5c.
POULTRY: Live steady; hens, 15½@16c; old roosters, 10½@11c. Dress
ed steady; chice fowls, 17c; old roos
ters, 12c.
HUTTER firm; extra creamery
30c per lb.
EGGS steady; selected, 26@28c;
nearby, 24c; western, 24c.
nearby western, 24c.
NOWATOES; steady, new, per bar
rel, 75c @ $1.75
Live Stock Markets
PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)
PITTSBURG choice, $6.50
@ $7.5; prime, $16.5@ $4.0
@ $7.5; prime, $16.5@ $4.0
SHEEP slow and lower; prime
wethers, $4.75@4.85; culls and
common, $1.50@3; lambs, $4@7; veal
calves, $7.50@8.
HQGS higher; prime heavies, $8.40;
medrums, $8.25@8.30; heavy Yorkers,
$8.20@8.25; light Yorkers, $8.10@8.15;
plugs, $8.20@8.9; roughs, $6.50@7.38
Revenge Nearly Cost Forty Lives
Revenge Nearly Cost Forty Lives.
Forty miners were overcome by gas in the Central Coal and Coke company's mine No. 31 at Pittsburg, Kan. Twelve of the miners were seriously and three perhaps fatally hurt. An inspection by the state mine inspector indicates that some one had deliberately checked the ventilation, evidently for revenge.
RECEIPT THAT CURES WEAK MEN-FREE.
Send Name and Address To day—
you Can Have It Free and Be
Strong and Vigorous.
I have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains or the follies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man must so regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy of the prescription, free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any man who will write me for it.
This p prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men, and I am convinced it is the surest-acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor-failure ever put together.
I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence, so that any man, anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what, I believe, is the quickest acting, restorative, upbuilding, SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever devised, and so, cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson, 389$ Luck Bldg., Detroit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid receipt, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, free of charge.
A GENIAL CROWD
Recently at a dinner party the conversation turned upon the subject of clubs. The special features of the Athenaeum were referred to with great respect, and then J. M. Barrie, who was the only member of that august club who happened to be present, intervened.
"After having been elected by the Athenaeum club," he said, "I went there for the first time and looked about for the smoking room. An old man with long, white hair was wandering in a lonely way about the hall. I asked him if he would be so kind as to tell me the way to the smoking room. He agreed with alacrity. When we returned to the hall I thanked him heartily, when he begged me to do him the honor of dining with him. 'But, my dear sir,' I said, 'you have been far too kind to me already. I cannot think of imposing myself upon you in this fashion.'
"I imposing yourself" exclaimed the old man in an eager voice. "On the contrary, you will be doing me the greatest favor in the world; the fact is, I have belonged to this club for thirty years and you are the first member who has ever spoken to me!" — Bellman.
YOU CAN HELP ME DO THE DISHES
The same Cupid that officiates in the parlor does business in the kitchen.
The Unlift
Most all the farmers that one meets
Of this opinion seem to be:
"If you'll uplift the cash receipts,
You need not be concerned for me."
New Artistic Viewpoint
This story is told of Ricardo Martin, whose voice has conquered New York:
It appears that his tailor was very anxious to hear him sing, so the other day Martin sent him a couple of tickets for "Carmen."
A few days later, when he saw the tailor, he naturally asked him:
"How did you like it?" To which the tailor replied:
"It was simply awful! Your trousers didn't fit you at all!"—Musical America.
How It Happened
Tjarks—Who was that sporty chap in the high hat and diamonds that spoke to you outside?
Bjarks—Don't you know him? Why, he's a spring poet.
Tjarks—Spring poet? Mean to say a spring poet can sport a tall hat and diamonds?
Bjarks—Sure thing! He' wrote a poem on a wagon spring and the manufacturers are paying him an opera singer's salary.
Disinfection
"The sanitary department is soatering quicktime everywhere. I wonder what's the matter?"
"Why, didn't you know 'The Blue Mouse' was in town this week?"
A CLOSE RELATION.
"Is he a relation of yours by marriage?"
"Yes, he married my girl."
THE PLANET
SATURDAY.....AUGUST 7, 1000.
SET DATE FOR VOTE ON TARIFF
Senators Agree to Take It on Thursday.
LEADERS SURE IT WILL PASS
An Effort Will Be Made to Correct the Leather Schedule by Concurrent Resolution After Bill Is Passed. Will Try to Place Cotton Bagging on the Free List.
Washington, Aug. 4.—The complete collapse of all important opposition to the conference report on the tariff bill was evidenced when the senate agreed to vote on that measure at 2 o'clock tomorrow.
Thursday.
Senator Aldrich is confident the bill will go through without further difficulty, and President Taft, it is said, has joined in the campaign.
When the senate met the lack of interest in the proceedings was very evident. This had been caused by an agreement on the part of western senators to vote upon the conference report and to correct the hide and leather schedule by means of a concurrent resolution to be acted upon separately.
The form of the concurrent resolution was agreed upon in an informal conference in Senator Aldrich's committee room. Instructions are given by this resolution to the enrolling clerks of the senate and house to change the language of the provisio reducing duties on boots and shoes and harness.
The change will make dutiful at 10 per cent boots and shoes, the upper leather of which is made wholly or in chief value from the hides or skins of cattle, including calf skins. A similar change will be made in relation to harness, saddles and saddlery.
The effect of the amendment is to make the reduced duties on boots and shoes and harness and saddlery apply to such articles as are composed of leather from the hides and skins of cattle and calf skins, instead of confining the reductions to articles made from hides which have hitherto been dutiable. The range of the reduction is greatly increased. The suggestion for an agreement to vote was made in the senate by Mr. Bailey, representing the minority, and at once concurred in by the chairman of the finance committee. The Texan intimated that there might be considerable debate on the concurrent resolution, but it is not believed that the discussion can be continued many hours.
Senator Culberson gave notice that he would seek to amend the concurrent resolution by placing cotton bagging on the free list, that article having been placed there by the senate and removed by the conference committee.
The appended tables, which have been prepared by Sereno E. Payne, father of the new tariff bill, give an approximate idea of the effect of the new rates on commodities consumed by the United States.
The tables are based on consumption value of the articles enumerated in all cases where the amount of production could be ascertained. The first table shows that the new bill provides for a decrease in duties on articles valued at nearly $5,000,000,000. Increase has been made on articles valued at only $852,000,000. This is shown as follows:
Duty. Decreased. Duty. Increased.
Chemicals ... $433,099,840 $11,105,820
Earthware... 128,423,732
Metals ... 1,248,200,269 11,432,255
Lumber ... 566,827,950 31,280,372
Sugar ... 300,965,953
Tobacco, no change.
Ag. products... 482,430,637 4,380,043
Wine and liquor 462,001,856
Cotton ... 41,622,024
Flax, hemp and jute ... 22,127,148 804,445
Wool, no change.
Silk ... 7,947,566 106,742,646
Paper and pulp 67,628,055 81,486,466
Sandries ... 1,719,428,669 101,656,598
Total..... $4,978,122,124 $552,512,525
According to these figures, Mr.
Payne estimates that luxuries—that is
articles strictly of voluntary usage—
bear the brunt of the increased duties,
which would indicate that the burden
of the tariff rests on the rich. He estimates that increases fall on luxuries
valued at $579,000,000, leaving only
$222,000,000 of necessities out of the
total of $552,000,000 worth of articles
on which increased rates are imposed.
Mr. Payne's estimate of increase on
luxuries is shown as follows:
Chemicals, including perf-
umeries, etc. ..... $11,105,820
Wines and liquors ..... 462,001,856
Silks ..... 106,742,645
Preacher and Boy Drowned.
New London, Conn., Aug. 4.—Rev.
H. L. Mitchell, rector of the Episcopal
church at Plymouth, Conn., and Clar-
ance Blakesile, organist of the same
church, were drowned in Fisher's Isl-
and and sound. The clergyman lost his life
lying to save the boy.
One for a Family.
One for a Family.
Penguin eggs are rich in fatty phosphorized constituents. They are easily digested, and English physician feed them to invalids. One is big enough to make an omelet for a family. A man lined with a penguin's egg is good for a hard day's work. It takes twenty minutes to boil a penguin's egg, but the result is worth the wait.
When Anesthetics Were Unknown.
In 1839 Velpeau, one of the greatest surgeons of his time, wrote as follows: "The escape from pain in surgical operations is a chimera which it is idle to follow up to day. 'Knife' and 'pain' in surgery are two words which are always inseparable in the minds of patients and this necessary association must be conceded."
Too Fund of Domestic Animals
Ocean Park or Domestic Animals.
From a Japanese newspaper: "A man named Uyedan Rikimatsu, aged 28, of Kobe, has been sentenced to ten years' imprisonment for stealing a young dog belonging to the proprietor of a piece-goods store at Tachibana-dori, three chome, Kobe. It appears that the accused had previously been convicted of stealing a cat."
Pay Day Always Comes.
Bent Murdock's warning: "One thing is certain. Too many people in this land of the free and home of the brave out-eat, out-drink, out-wear, and out-gad their incomes, doubtless in the belief that pay day will not come. It always has and always will."—Kansas City Journal.
One of Lamb's Witticisms
Charles Lamb was invited to a party where the room was crowded with children. Their noise and tricks plagued him not a little, and at supper, when toasts were flying to and fro, he rose to propose the health of the "m-much ca-ca-calumniated g-g-good King Herod!"
Pity for the Malade Imaginaire
Suffering, even if "imaginary," is nevertheless real enough—the one real thing, think those who have to bear it, in a world of dreams and shadows. Therefore, we must pity even the fanciful valetudinarian—London Daily Mirror.
Coincidence!
"Now, Tommie," said the teacher, "you may give me an example of a coincidence." "Why, er," said Tommie with some hesitation—"why, er, why—me fadder and me mudder was both married on de same day."—Harper's Weekly.
Delicate Compliment
Modiste-To wear a fashionable hat with grace you must have a head like this wooden model. That is the reason why madame looks so charming in the hat I made for her.—Simplicissimus.
Husbands and Babies
After the baby comes, a woman realizes that the lesson in patience she had to learn to get along with her husband, was only the a b c of what she had to learn later.—Atchison Globe.
Wisdom of Little Value
"Superior wisdom," said Uncle Eben, "don' pear to do much foh some people, 'ceptin' to keep 'em worried 'bout de mistakes dey is enabled to notice in others."
Ancient Use of Asbestos
Asbestos was known to the ancients, who used it in which to wrap bodies previous to cremation, to separate the human ashes from those of the funeral pyre.
Beyond Reformation
Patience—"She says she married him to reform him." Patrice—"And he says he was a fool when he married her." "Well, she says she hasn't reformed him a bit."
"Some men sit with folded hands waiting for their ships to come in," remarked the Observer of Events and Things, "who never made a single move toward even raising a sail."
Cats Subject to Influenza
Cats are subject to a form of influenza which is communicable to human beings, and they can catch it from man just as readily.
A Mistake.
Most men feel absolutely sure that the trouble is that opportunity made a mistake in the number of the house. —Ohio State Journal.
At the commencement Game
She—Oh, isn't the man that throws the ball, on your side, just splendid! He sends it so they hit it every time. —Life
Uncle Ezra Says:
"A grocery store is a good place to do farmin' in pervidin' the farmin' is all done before you git there."
His Strong Card.
In the game of love, when hearts are trumps, a fellow is expected to lead a diamond.
Wise Man's Advice.
Virgil: Trust not too much in an enchanting face.
No Task Impossible.
Horace: Nothing is difficult but what man will accomplish it.
Don't Gush
There is no trait in a woman more objectionable to the sensible-minded than gushing. A little flattery now and then is most certainly relished by all of us, and takes our vanity intensely. To be effective, it must be administered in small doses and at well selected moments. The woman who gushes not only sacrifices the respect of others but self-respect, too; for in time she comes to live up to
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
the reputation she has gained for herself of being insincere.
Ring Information:
"Rings should be chosen with discretion," says a woman who has made a study of the subject. "Few women, for instance, can wear a large solitaire diamond ring, which requires as a background the whitest of dimpled hands. The antique, old Venetian and marquise rings look best on thin hands with bony fingers, the sunken places below the enlarged knuckles requiring to be filled out with rings of a showy type."
What "King's English" Means.
"Queen's English" and "king's English" are both terms that have been in common use for years to designate grammatical English. In Shakespeare's "Merry Wives of Windsor" we read: "Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English." Such phrases as "murdering the queen's English" and "clipping the queen's English" arose from a book by Dean Alford on the subject of accurate speech.
The Printer's Children
The case of the musical man who named his four daughters after the eight notes of the tonic sol-fa scale is matched by that of the provincial printer who named his children from the type fonts he used—Ruby, Pearl, Diamond. The first two are no uncommon names for girls, only Ruby happened to be a boy. He followed in his father's footsteps and afterward became a printer's manager in London.
Modern Ideas Grafted on Ancient.
The ceremony of cutting the wedding cake, which falls to the bride, is a survival of the old Roman "eating together," which signified that the bride was reconciled to her lot and that the husband granted her a share of his property, and the habit of putting back her veil is a remnant of savage custom, which decrees a woman must dress differently after her marriage to signify she is a wife.
Fish Caught Fisherman
Catching a monster fish and the line becoming hooked to the boat underneath, where he could not reach it, Felipe Ocampo, a fisherman of Salina Cruz, Mex., was dragged out to sea and was missing two days before he could get back. Friends thought his boat had been swamped.
Daily Thought.
There is something, in fact, a great deal, to be said for the conventional point of view. But if you cannot with perfect sincerity accept it do not attempt odious compromise and outward forms of subservience to laws which you find unjust.—Mrs. Craigle.
Business Is Business
The judgment of Solomon is out of date. A woman who gave away her child in infancy and desired to get it back is repulsed by the courts, not even getting an offer of half of it. A bargain is a bargain in these material days—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Had Made Fools of Fourteen
When a young girl entered a pawnbroker's shop with 14 rings she was suspected and detained. Inquiries proved that she was the rightful owner and that the rings were souvenirs of 14 flances.
A Difference
"I see that our friend still entertains the idea of running for congress." "Not exactly," answered Farmer Corntossel. "The idea entertains him"—Washington Star.
One of Atchison's Sights
One of the sights on Commercial street to-day was a 17-year-old girl staring at a dry goods window and coolly scratching her knee.-Atchison Globe.
Capitalistic Reflections
The pronoun "T" and the interjection "O" are never written without using a capital. Let "U" be added, and it signifies that the writer has got no capital at all.-Judge
Judgment
Never judge a town by the size of the type with which its name is printed on the map of a railroad that doesn't pass through it.
National Development or Colleges.
One of the differences between love and a puppy is that a puppy ceases to be blind when it is about nine days old. Sometimes it takes love a little longer to get its eyes open.
In Praise of Sincerity
Sincerity is like traveling in a plain, beaten road, which commonly brings a man sooner to his journey's end than byways in which men often lose themselves.—Tillotson.
Tree Has Two Good Uses.
While the seeds of the dorowa, an East Africa leguminous tree, are extensively used for food, the pods and leaves form an excellent cement when mixed with crushed stone.
Look Forward
If I were you, I would not worry.
Just make up your mind to do better
when you get another chance, and
be content with that.—Beatrice Harraden.
Its Meaning Brought Home
"When a man begins to pay his son's college debts," says the Philosopher of Folly, "he understands what is meant by a 'liberal education.'"
Knows He Is Victorious
Cupid grins when a woman bosses around the man she loves.—Manchester Union.
Watch the Small Things.
Chinese proverb: Attention to small things is the economy of virtue.
Life's Perfect Duties
Gentleness and cheerfulness, these come before all morality; they are the perfect duties. If your morals make you dreary, depend upon it they are wrong. I do not say "give them up," for they may be all you have; but conceal them like a vice, lest they should spoil the lives of better and simpler people.—Robert Louis Stevenson.
A Versatile Californian
Fred Conwel, justice of the peace in Groveland, combines his legal dispensary with the tonsorial profession, and also carries a large stock of jewelry. His residence of over twelve years in the town inspires confidence in his ability to please in all lines. Added to his other responsibilities is that of notary--Big Oak Enterprise.
Persevere.
Persevere in whatever calling you adopt. Your progress may be slow, and results seemingly meagre; but there is no reason for growing fainte-hearted. Remember how the little brook persistently winds its way to the river, and the river to the ocean; both reach their destination — Ruskin.
Exceptions.
"You don't have to be enthusiastic to succeed in some things," said the boarding-house philosopher; "I once saw a man achieve a speed of a mile a minute sliding down a mountain side, without the slightest effort on his part and without having had any ambition to do it."
We are never more discontented with others than when we are discontented with ourselves. The consciousness of wrong doing makes us irritable, and our heart, in its cunning, quarrels with what is outside it, in order that it may deafen the clamor within.—Home Chat.
Wanted a Cool Waiter
A guest in a hotel sent this note to the clerk: "Send me a cool waiter to take my breakfast order. If you have only fat, warm waiters I want nothing for breakfast but an orange with a very thick skin and two eggs with the shells on."
Not Appreciative
"To be in the swim, I paid $4 admission to hear that new pianist last night." "Well, you do begrudge it?" "Yes, I do. He turned out to be the fellow I complained of to the police for thumping the piano all day and all night in the next flat."—Judge.
It Depends.
"How do you pronounce st-i-n-g-y?" the teacher asked the young gentleman nearest the foot of the class. And the smart boy stood up and said It depended a great deal whether the word applied to a man or a bee.
Work Fascinating.
There is an indescribable fascination about work. The laziest man in town will stand watching with evident enjoyment the labor of a street gang laying pavement.—Port Worth Record.
One Want Supplied
Walter—You'll find our roast goose very satisfying, sir.
Regular Patron—I don't doubt it, William. The last roast goose I tried here will satisfy me, I think, for the next ten years. Bring me some broiled ham, William.
The Preacher—You boys shouldn't play ball to-day. Sunday is a day of rest. The Kids—We ain't tired, sir.
Art of the Cocouette
"A coquette," opines the Philo-
opher of Folly, "is a young woman who
has mastered the art of encouraging
a man by discouraging him."
Don't Pray for Riches. But—
I don't pray for riches, but of I
ever gits my man's on 'um, I bet dey'll
never git away fum me!—Atlanta
Constitution.
Dog's Bark an Acquired Habit.
The bark of the dog is an acquired
habit. In his wild state he never
barks, but whines and howls.
He Deserves No Sympathy.
It is merely a waste of time to pity
a man who is being made a fool of
by a pretty woman.
Not Worth the Time
Not Worth the Time.
No man resolved to make the most of himself can spare time for personal contention.—Lincoln.
Limit to Cork's Buoyancy.
A cork carried 200 feet below the surface of the water will not rise again.
After the Bush
Weight of Human Heart.
The average weight of the heart is from nine to 11 ounces.
Pupils' Backs to Teacher.
The Chinese pupil reciting the lesson turns his back to the teacher.
THE LANGUAGE OF THE GAME.
"He ambiled to the A-one sack."
"The pestle welder soon was whiffed." "Umpire the quarter was sack." "A Wilbur Wright the batter biffed." "Tis here again, O brothers all."
"The pleasing language of baseball."
"He leaned against the hurler's slant." "The catcher pegged him by two feet." "Of bingles we were somewhat scant." "Such spitball serves were hard to beat."
"Beside it classic tongues seem tame—"
"The language of the gibious game."
"He whanged the shy, elusive pill." "The garden guardian speared the sphere." "The beacheries yelled: 'Oh, you Bill!'"
"Ree: he was the cannonner." "No doubt of it being the floor—"
"When baseball talk has bloomed once
Some Eating
An Icelandic legend relates that upon one occasion Thor ate without any assistance, save that of being provided with the rations, eight salmon, a full-grown ox, a large quantity of sweetmeats and three firkins of "sparkling mead." No wonder he was a husky god and was a fine hand with a hammer. The bold men of the north strove to emulate Thor's prowess as a trencherman at every feast they had, sometimes with astonishing success. Those were indeed brave days, before indigestion had come to vex the world and centuries before man ever dreamed that he had an appendix.
That Kind of a Man
The Georgians of Augusta are chuckling over a new anecdote about Mr. Taft.
Mr. Taft, it seems, drove out one afternoon to see a Georgia planter. The planter's cook, a very old woman, takes no interest in public affairs, and she did not recognize the portly guest.
"What did you think of that gentleman, Marta?" the planter asked, after Mr. Taft had driven off.
"Well, sir," old Marta replied, "I can't say as I saw nothin' pettickler about him. He looked to me like the kind of man as would be pretty regular to his meals."
T
He—I'm going to have a fiver on Bullrush at 10 to 1.
She—I'm afraid you're late; it's half-past two o'clock now.
Shown Up.
Oh, sunshine of the springtime!
You turn the dust to gold—
But, gee! you make the furniture
And wallpaper look old!
A Peevish Editor
The man who is too poor to take a good county paper like the Democrat, is able though, to buy a dog, shotgun and a two-dollar watch. He usually educates his children on the streets, and boards his chickens on his neigh bors.
Conundrum
Freshman—Who is the smallest man mentioned in history?"
Sophomore—I give up.
Freshman—Why, the Roman soldier who slept on his watch—University of Pennsylvania Punch Bowl.
Name and Measure Matched.
"Why did you change your coal dealer?"
"I didn't like the name of the last one."
"What was it?"
"Littleton."
Electrocuted
"Yes, sir; by electricity."
"Well, take it back and give it and
other shock."—Judge.
Outdoor Trimmings.
"Tell me something."
"Well?"
"What is your husband's chief amusement?" asked the curious neighbor.
"Doing things I don't want him to do," replied the wife quickly.
His Natural Class
"Tramps are a class of people who do not seem to me to live at all. They simply vegetate."
"Well, they really are beats, you know."
The Way Out
He—Your milliner's bill has cost me last year as much as the salary of my two bookeepers. That is more than I can afford.
She—Well, discharge one of them.
A Usual Sight
"A lot of men have gone under lately."
"I was not aware of it."
"Then you haven't seen much of current automobiling."
Sudden Stops
Sparker—In spite of the airships autos are still all the go. Coggweod—That's just the trouble. Some of them won't go at all.
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WRIGHT FLIES FAST TEN MILES
Safely Completes Final Speed Test Over Fort Myer.
MADE 42 MILES AN HOUR
Lieutenant Foulois, a Passenger in the Aeroplane, Witnesses Triumph of Wright Brothers—Average Altitude During Flight Was 200 Feet.
Orville Wright attained the zenith of hard-earned success. In a ten-mile cross-country flight from Fort Myer in the famous aeroplane built by himself and his elder brother, Wilbur, and accompanied by Lieutenant Benjamin D. Foulois, an intrepid officer of the army signal corps, he not only surpassed the speed requirements of his contract with the United States government, but accomplished the most difficult and daring flight ever planned for a heavier-than-air flying machine. Incidentally he broke all speed records over a measured course and established beyond dispute the practicability of the aeroplane in time of peace and in time of war.
Forty-two miles an hour.
Wright's speed was more than forty-two miles an hour. He made the ten mile flight in fourteen minutes and forty-two seconds, including the more than twenty seconds required for the turn beyond the line at Shuter hill the southern end of the course. He attained a height in crossing the valley of Four Mile Run, of nearly 500 feet, and the average altitude of his practically level course was about 200 feet. The official board will determine the speed made. It is agreed that it exceeded forty-two miles an hour. The Wrights will therefore receive $20,000, including a bonus of $5000 for their airplane.
President Taft, who has become an enthusiastic spectator of the aeroplane trials, arrived upon the parade ground at Fort Myer just in time to see the aeroplane land and to participate in the wild demonstration which welcomed the triumphant aviators. He sent Colonel Treat, commanding officer of the artillery at Fort Myer, to bear his congratulations to the victors.
Earthquake in Mexico; Fourteen Dead
With the city of Chilpancingo destroyed and Acapulco, in Mexico, partly razed and the loss of life problematical, central Mexico from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Querato on the north to Oaxaca on the south, an area of more than 1000 square miles, was shaken by a series of the most severe earth shocks felt in the region for the last quarter of a century.
The quake was severe in Mexico City, but not prolific in destruction.
Reports telling of the loss of life are weaker, but the official figures thus far given out show fourteen killed and more than a score mortally injured.
While word comes from G. Poyros, an American commercial traveller at Chilpancingo, Guerrea, that the city was destroyed and the inhabitants are living in the open, suffering from the elements, the loss of life is not definitely known. The shocks continue at Chilpancingo with subterranean rumblings and flashes of lightning, rain and hall.
So far as can be learned from the police records, six persons lost their lives in Mexico City and its environs as a result of this second shock. Two men of the lower class, the others being three women and a child. Four persons are now in hospitals and they cannot recover, it is said.
The second shock frightened the in habitants so much that no one ventured indoors again until daybreak. The large American colony escaped unscathed.
Blind Boy Saves Drowning Brother.
Directed by the sound of his voice
above, Henry Gilbert, a twelve-year-old
blind boy, of Paschal, an expert swimmer,
saved the life of his brother John.
ten years old, in Baird's quarry, at
Ateon, Pa., after a desperate struggle.
The quarry in some parts is said to be sixty feet deep.
Both boys, with several companions.
---
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journeyed out to the old swimming hole. Henry was the first one out of the water and was dressing on the bank. when John took a last plunge. After a lapse of several seconds his head appeared forty feet out in the pond. The silence of the lad's companions indicated to the blind boy that something was wrong.
"What's the matter?" he exclaimed.
"Where's John?" In that instant he became alert and started toward the bank.
After John came to the surface of the water he started to swim to the shore as if in pain, but after making a few feet he called for help and sank. At the first sound of his brother's voice Henry called out that he was coming and leaped overboard, clothing and all. With strong overhand strokes he fairly raced through the water to the place where he had heard his brother call, but he could not find him.
"He went down just where you are," cried the boys on the shore. Treading water, Henry waited there for fifteen seconds, when his brother appeared ten feet away, and called feebly once more. Turning quickly, the blind boy swam in that direction, but again his brother sank before he could be reached. When the boy again came to the surface Henry caught him by the head, supported him and slowly swam toward the shore, directed by the sound of the boys' voices on the bank.
Woman Elected Chicago School Head.
The superintendency of Chicago's great school system has been given into the hands of a woman for the first time in its history.
Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, principal of the Chicago Normal school since 1905 and an educator of national reputation, was chosen by the newly organized board of education as head of the public schools.
Mrs. Young's selection followed a struggle for the office which has been going on since the resignation of Edwin G. Cooley several months ago. At one time the question of Mr. Cooley's successor appeared to foreshadow a split among the members of the school board.
Mrs. Young is sixty-four years old and was born in Buffalo, N. Y. She has been teaching since 1862.
Jeffries Posts Forfeit to Fight Johnson
Actual steps looking to a fight between James J. Jeffries and Jack Johnson for the heavyweight championship of the world were taken when Jeffries, on his arrival in New York from the west, posted $5000 as a forfeit to bind a match with the negro pugilist for a fight of anywhers from twenty to a hundred rounds. Jeffries insists that the fight shall be held before the club offering the largest purse and that when articles are signed an additional forfeit of $5000 shall be posted. The whole sum of $20,000 is to go to the winner of the mill.
Harry Pulliam Kills Himself
Harry C. Pulliam, president of the National League of base ball clubs, shot and killed himself in his rooms on the third floor of the New York Athletic club. It is said that he was dependent.
Standing in the center of the room, Mr. Pulliam held a revolver to his right temple. He fired only one shot. It went in at the right temple and came out seven inches away on the left hand side of his head. The bullet destroyer the sight of both eyes. It is not believed that he can recover, al though he continued conscious for some time after the shooting.
Johnson Posts Forfeit to Fight Jeffries
George Lymph, the manager of Jack
Johnson, the colored heavyweight
champion, posted with Edward Smith
of Chicago, $5000 to bind a match with
James J. Jeffries for the heavyweight
championship. Smith will transfer the
money at once to the New York Journal.
The only condition attached to the
forfeit is that Jeffries shall agree to
the match before he goes to Europe
and must appoint the time and place
where the match is to be held.
General Henry C. Worthington Dead.
General Henry C. Worthington, formerly member of the California legislature, delegates in congress from Nevada, diplomat and jurist, died at the Garfield hospital in Washington from cerebral hemorrhage. He was eighty-one years of age.
Last Survivor of Fremont's Expedition
The body of Wolden Bledsoe, ninety-
years of age, said to be the last survivor of General Fremont's first expedition to California, was found in the Archer Lake canal in Denver, Colo. It is believed he committed suicide.
FIVE
x SIX
qTEAIENE
zy at RN ae |
eae
Saturpay.......AvGUst 7, 1909.
‘Paul’s Teachings to
| Thessalonicans
Sanday School Lesson for Augest 8, 1909
GOLDEN TEXT.—“See that pone ren-
der evil for oxi unto any man. but ever
follow that which Is good Thea Si
TIME.—This eplstie wan written prob
ably in A. D. St. or early In A.D. a
PLACE—At Corinth during Paul's year
and & half work in that city
Suggestion and Practical Thought.
Paul's Letter of Consolation and
Wise Advice—1. Characteristics of
the First Epistle to the Thessalonians,
Note the facts in “The Lesson in Its
Setting.” Review the circumstances
of the Thessalonian church as given
in Acts 17. See lesson 3 of this quar
ter, ‘Three missionaries had come
there froom Philippi, two of them
torn and bruised by a terrible flagel
lation at Philippi, emerging from the
lowest dungeon of a prison, their
Whole aspect bespeaking theit pov
erty, their sufferings, their earthly tn
significance. These poor persecuted
wanderers supported themselves by
weaving black goat's hair into tent
cloth. Here they preached a few
weeks, founded a church, and were
driven away by persecution
2. Paul longed to visit them again
and made three vain attempts to do
80, from Berea, from Atheus and from
Corinth. He felt their need of train.
ing and of more knowledge of the
truth, of comfort, and of guidance
2. Timothy had just come back
from Thessalomica, and bad brought
a report concerning the church, giving
& favorable report in genersl. But
two facts were made known by hit.
One was that they were suffering se
Vere persecutions from both Jews and
Gentiles; the other that they were dis
couraged and troubled by the death of
some before the second coming of
the Lord Jesu
4. The epistie {s very personal and
retrospective, breathing a spirit of af
fection and of joy
5. If it seems strange that such a
letter could be written to « church
founded by Paul less than a year be
fore, implying the wonderful watur
ity of this infant church, when we
compare it with the slow progress of
modern missions, we must remember
that the first church members were
Jews and religious proselytes, long
trained in the religion of the true
God. Moreover, many of the Greeks
were cultivated and thoughtful peo
ple, who through the Gospel had been
enlightened by the Holy Spirit
A Lesson in Morals for the Build
ing Up of the Noblest Christian Life.
V, 23. First, the idea! and aim. The
First sentences of the Lord's Prayer
express the ideal of the whole prayer,
and, therefore, of all prayer and all
living. It {8 as necessary to have the
right Boal of life as for a sea captain
to know the port for which he is sail
ing.
“And the very God of peace.” Bet
ter as R. V,, the God of peace himself
the God who brings peace—the peace
with himself, through sins forgiven,
and niture in harmony with his;
peace in the soul, peace of conscience,
the peace of trust in God our Father.
“Sanctify you.” Make you holy, pure,
free from sin and Imperfection, from
every taint of evil. “Wholly.” | Unto
completeness, to full perfection, in de
gree and in kind
“Whole spirit and soul and body.”
Every part of your nature, the spirit
that allies us to God, the highest
moral nature. “And soul
Second. On our way to this ideal we
have first as a means, the right treat
ment of pastors and teachers (vs. 12
13). “We beseech you." Because It is
so important, and lies within your
choice and power “To know them"
‘To ufderstand their feelings and mo
tives and self denials, and their desire
to help you, even when they “admon
ish you.” They hate to do it, but i
they love you they must do it at
times.
“Esteem them very highly in love.
‘The greatest force for building char
acter is to love and esteem good peo
ple, such as are worthy to be pastots
and teqchers. And show your esteem
and love in every possible way.
“Be at peace with yourselves.” By
being 90 earnest in seeking the object
of Christian worship and teaching
that all differences between individu
als are of little value compared with
‘the great purpose that binds all in
one.
We build character by service for
others (¥. 14). ‘To this end Paul says
“We exhort.” Encourage, summon, ip
spire dy word and example.
‘Warn them that are unruly,” Like
disorderly -soldiers, breaking =
their ranks, Such is the picture
sented by the Greek word. Cause the
unruly to see the evil and danger o
their - x
Comtart. the, feebleminded.” Bet
ee sien
discouraged.
the weak.” Pay especial
Panam is what your
strength is for, a
While we are not to despise prophe
syings we (¥, 21) “prove all
nines AR. ete Sig C00 fe
mee eee tanet Lane
‘guich ueteroen gyeatss S28 countertgs
i ee er ee
ett Dee ane see ee
Se che e perm a
‘needful in our day. ere
fm word (v.22) “abstain from
every form of evil.” R. Y., which is
the true rendering of “abstain from all
appearance of evil
You can do this, because (y. 24)
faithful ts he that ealleth you to this
ife and this work. He will perform
Ms promise
“
FOR “SECOND BEST”
GARMENT OF EXTREME VALUE
IN A TROUSSEAU.
Mode! Shown, Made Up in Semi-Prin-
cess Style, Is Not Only Fashion.
able, But Also Becoming to
i Aniseies Gidea
No matter how complete the bride
elect may think she has made her
trotisseau—and no matter how much
proper girlish pride she may take in
this belief—before she has been a
bride niany weeks she usually discor-
ers that after all she omitted several
more or less necessary things from
life's most important wardrobe, and
that ft is incumbent upon her to sup-
plement her trousseau with this, that
or the other dress necessity, comfort
or luxury. *
At the same time the woman who is
single, or who has been married for
lot some time, but who has begun to
discover that ber summer wardrobe
Ys not as complete as she thought it
“>
f x A
i, 3 i A
Aw,
Ai : i
HW oR iM
RAN
i ‘iy
Enhancing to Siim, Graceful Figures.
was before real summer weather set
™, may find some of the hints in the
talk useful and timely to her needs.
No gown ts more fashionable than
the one made in sem{-princess style,
and the model shown avoids the ex
aggerations which are threatening to
shelve such pretty fashions. It gives
the slightly raised waist line whic
is so enchanting to slim, graceful
figures, and provides with its square
[neck and possibility for dlaphanous
sleeves Juat the right thing for after
noon callers, little tea parties and in
formal dinners. It would serve excel.
lently for a “second best” dress, x
garment many, many trouxseaux over.
took.
Any lingerie material could be used
most acceptably for the model, but for
& realiy stylish gown, which would be
serviceable ax well, it is advisable to
choose delicately tinted or white pon:
gee, rajah silk or cashmere, which
dust now {s having n very stylish
Vogue Then, too, often a summer
gown of some solidity is needed. With
Any one of these materials the band
ing employed in the model could be ot
lace insertion or in the form of em
broldery on an applied band. In the
latter case, If the dress is made al
home, the needlework would supply
pretty occupation for idle afternoon
hours.
‘The quantity of material required
for a medium figure is 10% yards 24
inches wide, with four yards of band
ing in any width liked, though the nar
Tow band shown is preferable to 4
wider one. With the addition of «
gulmpe, as the rear drawing shows
the model could be suitable for an;
dressy street occasion.
‘The detail calls for fivecighths yaré
of lace, .net or embroidery 18 inches
wide.
Scalloping Petticoats.
When the French neediewoman
scallops a petticoat for this season
she cuts ft after the very newest pat.
tern—a close fitting, sheath-like af.
fair, with all unnecessary fullness
seamed out of it from waist line to
knees. To this 1s added a lower rut-
fle, finished with a regular button.
holed scallop in long, shallow half.
moons. This very most simple of all
the handmade edges ts just as well
thought of in Paris as the most. or.
hate of flounces, because It has never
‘seen a sewing machine.
As for the pattern of this skirt, is
{t not the natural underslip for the
gown of the long hip line, with its
plaiting from knee to foot?
Care of Hands,
Hands that are moist and clammy
without perspiring may be made more
comfortable by washing and brushing
them in tepid water in which a few
grains of alum or a few drops of aro-
matic sulphuric acid have been ‘dis
solved. Dry them with a rough fow.
el and then dust the palms with in.
fant powder or with powdered starch
and Florentine orris mixed, wiping
the superfluous powder off with a soft
Pecado ey Oy ay
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
‘SASH WITH LINGERIE FROCK.
Adornment Now Much Worn Is Not to
Be Tied in Old-Fashioned Bow
and Ends.
Sashes will be much worn with the
lingerie frock. The girl who makes
it ® practice to save ribbons will look
over her stock.
As few of the new sashes are tied
in the old-fashioned bow and ends,
those of last season should be taken
apart and modernized.
Many of the sashes are brought in
double strips from quite high under
the arms in the back, to give a slight-
ly empire effect, but are brought to
A decided point’ in front below. the
waist line.
Instead of bows the fashionable
Birls wears knots, sometimes one in
center of back, again one at head of
each streamer. The favorite finish
for the sash end is a long knotted
fringe of silk or a line of satin balls
the color of the ribbon. Soft mes.
saline ribbons are preferable to heavy
satins for sashes. Where a soft rib-
bon is used it should be wider than
when the ribbon has more body, or tt
will soon be stringy.
Charming sashes can be made at
small cost from colored silk muslins,
finished on the bottom with a deep
hem and several rows of hemstitch-
ing, or with a silk fringe to match.
Chiffon makes a softer sash than
the muslin, but more expensive.
If the thick-walsted girl wears a
sash at all she should attach it to
@ boned and shaped belt. A girdle ‘is
usually more becoming to her.
See to it that the sash 1s supplied
with hooks and eyes in the right
place. To tie @ sash each time is
ruination to the ribbon. It is rarely
done, though the loops are arranged
not to look ready prepared.
BACK TO THE BEDFORD CORD
Old Material, Go Long Deservedly
Popular, ta with Us Again tn
Re Gates:
Bedford cord comes back, and there
fs strong probability that we will take
up the acquaintance exactly where we
left off, as if there had never been
@ break. It is a most delightful ma-
terial to be near, which means 80
much to the wearer. Woe all have
in mind the other sort which seems
impossible, so rasping is it to the
touch. Bedford cord should be in-
troduced because its name has
changed since last we saw it. The
new Olympia cord and Coteline are
the one-time Bedford, it is shown in
all the colors of spring and in at-
tractive two-tone effects. Liberty of-
fers from among his London guild ma-
terials a corded crepe of satin finish
that is none other than the most delf-
cate of Bedford weaves,
The cotton quality is, in reality, a
pique in wide wale and with the cord
running lengthwise of the material.
Pique has responded to the call for
cords in canary, old rose and a won
drous blue, and in ribbing of varied
widths,
Linen is woven with heavy horizon
tal ridges from selvedge to selvedge
resembling the ottoman and tussor
textures, Silk poplin has taken its
place among the ribbed materials, and
in the spring weights of costume
cloth there is a multiplicity of cord.
like fabrics.
IN BLACK AND WHITE.
of, ye
y'\ F As ae
Aes
UN Ze
\\s SY We ie
ce Whi Ze
EXSY tg
Sa
Bees ‘
IS co
WOES SS)
OO" SOREL OF IN
tyes Ba
7 Rie age
Qt. P25 is
\ Natsaigate “D>
af DY,
SEZ
fs SN <
Black and white ts once more a f
vorite combination for summer mil
‘linery and some handsome models
have been turned out during the last
week for wear at horse shows, The
cut to-day illustrates a striking bat
im black chip, whose high crown is
almost covered with a wide band of
jet trimming. ‘The only other decora
tion is a gorgeous white sigrette fan
tened directly in center of black with
ee
Bleaching Feathers.
An authority on cleaning gives this
information: To bleach white ostrich
feathers use peroxide of hydrogen,
one-half pint to ten pints of water, to
which add three tablespoonfuls of- am-
monia. The feather should be entirely
covered with ttis solution and allowed
to remain in it overnight.
Take out in the morning, and, if not
thoroughly cleaned, the process should
be repeated.
Rinse in clear water, and if a blu-
ish tint is desired the feather should
be again rinsed in slightly blued wa-
ter. Hang up in air to dry and then
curl with the blunt edge of a knife,
Aid in Finishing Buttonholes,
An improvement on the finish of
buttonholes is to work a straight bar
in a buttonhole stitch across the end.
This gives a neat, tailored finish, the
bar being worked toward the slit,
National Traits.
It takes one hour to know @ French-
man, one month to know a German,
almost a lifetime to know an Eng:
Ushman—well—Rome Corriere.
Dog Team's Fast Traveling.
A record of 412,tmiles in four days
been made by an Alaskan dog
team. at
LESS tw EacH TOW
/ FS WANTED—A RIDER AGENT 2825:2":
A IN Sic ion ere planting time
SS foe Sno OWES stati hil well seoreronsel eee ci soer Sere, We tie
PM INS Sorte DATS vices eitac Gates Seven e o
f i BRIN Sesto Soir tack wy Sonar ive esos nates oceeen em
PAN HUiM8 FActoRY Prices ©: lowsh 8: Wren cnr hak RT
FRNOMERIE 8 $25 wicdicmen's pects by Taping Tent et oe cat he aceoctoeee
ITN 20% bet your Biscle: "ho Rw wy t's pair ot tires {rom anpeme
CIMINO fiat nomad apes spiny oeadte'ngeaaes™ owt Sober ot ecg
vi iV 07 Wa VOU WILL BE ASTONISHED 2255 121535 guts lop as
if I, WO, DECNCER DRAPER, rye ce cll chad adel Sete Se nase Gass
LFS scoNt avn miCvetas. © We dor rexuarly handle second hand Bicycles, bat
pron at whey mises from Wf ts Bot BIB. “Decpive yrs he maled eat’
COASTER-BRAKES, "2s!" Beels, Imported roller chalns and pedals, pare, tepalre aod
S@p5° HEDGETHORN PUNCTURE-PROOF Sq 80
SELF-HEALING TIRES % ixracocce ‘om?
TO iNTROOUCE, ONLY
Be ener panera
wiipenasims fsrforii Sahar ae
NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUHCTURES [Jr (iT Pr
ad ose oe ce sna Re act BT da
DESORIPTION: sta!ci0 oes Ticte'y Causa :
S"eprcial qualfiy of rubber, which sever becomes * y iv
Poraesrlsmeh ee anal peace netator BM motes the inde rubber treed
secon uct wattacureearcolt een bntpe QD aoa "Ex-"aian ris ately =
Shordinary Ure, the punctore resisting Quailives being gives. erence ee ee
by several tayeis of thin secial’y prepared fabric tne QM) My, will utiass Say othes
Soot Sheree treet er ranean ets My mast Ripa
the vider oftoaly $4 So per pair. Allorders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C0. D, on
sce FUCL Catsit Witt OMOEA tad caine thle eae Nee Se Re Bea Tes
| Sauk: If you onder a paty of these Crea’ you wil Goa that, hey Gill ke casion tes fees
Ba OE A a a cateealrens
| AF YOU NEED TIRES sicigetsien vesctere Po Gres sa. Sypioenl oad al
Es anretal introductory pre quoted abuwey or write for our big Fire snc Sundry Catalogue Wale
DO NOT WAIT 2 sao NGS THINK OF morae «voy
(itera we are mahlog. Iesiy Qetss posal (imate Peryiaieg.” Write w ROW.
31 MEAD CYCLE COMPANY euIraen et
John Vaughan,
315-317 N. 18th St. Richmond, Va.
First Class Lunch Room. Meals at
All Hours. Furnished Rooms,
Day or by the Week. Low-
est Rates.
| Good Car Service to all Points of City,
anions abate
A. Hayes
ics sche ssteeate
727 North Second Street
* RESIDENCE, 725N, and'St.
Ficstaieme ties a, Cables
aa aeetrone ae eae
room for bodies when the family
pager gee pe
‘ton. Your special attention ts call-
ed to the new style Oak Caskets.
JOHN M.
Higgins,
Dealer tn
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
san we eae
1610 East Franklin Street.
{Near Old Market.]
BILL STUSBS OF KANSAS.
Kansas views the activities of the
new governor with feelings of almost
unmixed joy. But the railways, whom
he disciplined with an antt-pass lav
and several other forma of drastic
legislation besides the public commis
sion bill, have another idea about him
“What do you think of Stubbs?" a
visitor asked one of the ex-railway
lobbyists,
“Well,” he replied, “he reminds me
of the story of a North Carolina
wedding. ‘They as the Lord have
Jined, tet, mo man put asunder,’ says
the parson.
““Pargon,’ says the bridegroom, *
rises to question your grammar ip that
Sentence. We wants this wedding
done right’
“When the smoke had cleared away
the bride looked around on a dead
minister, a dead brother, a dead bride.
Sroom and several other dead men ly
ing near, and sighed:
“Them new-fangled, self-cockin’ re
Volvers,’ said she, ‘sure has played hell
with my prospects.’
‘TOO COSTLY.
Wp j
Hee TINTHHH
| iy =f
|
{ x
a
Geraldtne—I don’t beteve ta Airting
Gerald—Neither do 1 The last
time leet ores feed Sor Mecaen
o waded
The Finish,
was plied te oe
py
witaee mie eaee
lel ne'er more be,
\ wy
~ Rnigbt ias,
~ Rnights of Pythias
: :
N. A.,S.A,E. A., A. AND A, f
| V——__— ee
a Ae
LEP is organization is one of the most powerful in th:
Wes By progress has been phenominal. ‘The Gland Ledge of vinine hae facie
ky GA diction over all of the cities aud counties in this state. “Thirty masles
PY fy eS are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitate one
iy AAG} °f its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything
NNGE* By | cise. Founded on Friendship, based om Charity and established oa Be
\i Ci ns v3 nevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will find it an order
NSS worthy of their heartiest support.
| ae t pays an endowment and burial beneiit of of $200.00 for all ages. Tt
1. ats. PayS $4.00 per week sick dues. The badge costing 75 cents each is the
a ey io as : y regalla. For information concerning the organzaition of lodges
| The Courts of Calanthe
Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a ate of
thirty persons to organize'a court. Its members are pledged to exhibit
Gcelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love one for the other. It pays
jan endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per week sick
dues. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and
a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions.
| THE BANDS OF CALANTHE or Children’s Department also con-
‘stitutes a feature and persons cannot do better than to enter the little ones into this mystic
circle. The expense is nominal and the benefits all that could be expected. It pays from
$1.00 to $1.50 sick dues and death benefits of from $30.09 to $40.00. If you have noPythian
Lodge or Court or Band in your neighborhood, orgrniz one.
For all information concerning the Children’s Deparisuent address,
Mrs. ANNA Taytor, W. M.,
120 W. Hill St., Richmond, Va,
For all information concerning special rates of | JOHN MITCHELL, JR.,
membership in the lodges and courts, address 311 N, 4th St., Richmond, Va.
.
COULDN'T see
1 Py | fz)
t/, | | =|
| lg
boy
RAN
a\\ “
‘3 B rl
Se €
: ~<
ik
j
4
Little Girl—a tin of rat polsan,
please.
Shopkeeper—Is it for your mother?
Little Girl—No, for the rats
More Substantial.
‘The moon was shining: down’ on: théin
‘Ad Chane rone er ie ater
“We'll live om eye, tay. preciegs gem =
he onde oe Seer SL Penctows em.
Talkative.
“I wouldn't objeck to de man dat
keeps talkin’ all de time,” said Uncle
Eben, “if he didn’ insis’ on th'owin’
in a question every ten minutes or s0
dat you's got to answer to show you's
keepin’ awake.”
Said Uncle Silas:
“A woman that does all her own
work for a family of eight, includin’
the washin’, when she kin just as
well afford ‘help, ain't no martyr,
She's & chump.”
‘The Summer Gardens,
‘Youngster—Say, have you seen that
‘swell dancer, “Le Petite Trixie,”out
‘at the park? *
Oldster—Not since I was @ boy,
Let's goo, -
THEECONOMY, >
303—5 North Third St
SEIN BY
TAILORING
CLEANING, DYEING ANL
REPAIRING
CHITMAN M. WHITE,
PROPRIETOR.
SOARDING & LODGING
ates Reasonable. _All the Comforts
BP tiene 44
Orders received by letter or telegrapb
MES. BOOKER LEFTWICH,
PROPaIvranae
S16 N. 2nd St., Richmond, Vs
eer ete ene
BLACKWELL & BRO.
ONE OF THE LEADING PAINTERS
Practical House and Sign Painters,
Graining and General Gontrac-
tors.
su ALL WORK GUARANTEED...
Cards, Letters or Orders.
Give os 8 trial, you will never regret it...
Address, 608 St. Peter Street,
RICHMOND. VA.
"Phone 5688,
—
——Nelson,s Hair Dressing can_ be
ought at Jennings and Brown Drug
Store, Pittsburg, Pa.
Hard to Tell,
With women's stockings decorated
with apple blossoms, nasturtiums, It
lacs and pinks, it's going to be
mighty hard to tell the difference be-
tween hosiery and a seed catalogue,
Advice.
It ts good advice not to believe
everything you hear, but it is better
advice to believe everything you say.
Salting a Diamond Mine.
Howard DuBois, the noted mining
engineer, told a good story to the
‘Tech men recently, illustrating the
“art” of salting « diamond mine. The
story was told of a man in South
Africa who, while walking one day
over his property, suggested that they
assay some of the soil.
In sthe search that ensued eight
rough diamonds were found and offers
degan to fly through the air at a rapid
Fate for the land, when the host's wife
called out tq her husband, “Why,
Jobn, where are the other two?" ‘The
sequel of the story was left to the
imagination. |
Disclaline! |
__ From the classroom occupied by the
‘roughest boys in the Sunday school
‘came a great uproar. A secretary in
‘the mext room went to investigate.
Complete silence followed the open-
ing of the classroom door.
“Haye you a teacher?”
ner
“Do you want one?"
“No.”
“Then be quiet or you'll get one.”
Result, comparative peace —Mas-
chester Guardian.
Sey ao
“Now that you are married, my son,
listen to me.”
“What fe it, dad?”
| “Try to be a husband, not merely
an ex-dachelor.”
; Geman ides Dindediiena et
“You say he poses as a diplomat?”
“Just so, but I don’t see how it helps
him any.”
-—“You'don't? *
“No; he always pays his debts.”
STRAUS’ SPECIAL
STRAUS" SPECIAL
Old Yacht Club,
Will Satisty the lover of the right
kin of stimulant. Special prices.
We have all grades of good liquors,
Cigars and Tobacco. Call and see
ISAAC STRAUS & CO.,
422 E. Broad St.,
Richmond, Virginia.
ee
H F Jonathan
FISH, OYSTERS AND
PRODUCE.
1 N. 17th St, RICHMOND, va.
ee ORDERS WILL RECEIVE
PROMPT ATTENTION.
ba Distance "Phone, 752,
SCHOOL SHOES,
=
Capitol Shoe « Supply
Company,
No. 210 East Broad Street.
A complete stock of Boys,’
Misses,’ Men's, Ladies,’ &
Children’s Shoes.
ALL THE LATEST STYLES,
DR, P. B. RAMSEY,
3 DENTIST,
: 115 East Leigh St.
3 "PHONE, 816,
60 YEARS*
Par EXPERIENCE
Track Manns
Desiane
Copyrmichts &c.
acheter Seetcl and descr ptien may
Sore ikea
smecad nats, witsak change is eg
| Scientific Fimerican,
; Sanaa aes et
Mice
— —___—_—_
eae the PLANET do your Job-work
pets aE SE Som,
S. W. ROBINSOK,
NO. 23 NORTH I8TH ST,
DEALER IN 5
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, &c. .
Sar-All Stock Sold as Guarsdtéed. whe
» PROMPT ATTENTION.
| Wour patronage te respecttully’ solicited.”
CRETONNE FOR BED
Seoenns~ Srey
one has cream
white background
with self-tone fig:
ures scatered over
the material.
Broad panels of
Delft blue flowers
on a trellis cover
this background,
a ie De ele
are finished’ with a cotton fringe,
braided in a network effect. This
design comes in different colors
to match the bedroom and they
have a gay. summeriike air. A far
jess expensive spread, having much
the same effect, may be had by buy-
ing printed dimities for 12% cents a
yard, joining the widths together and
bordering it with a plaited rumle of
the same. This dimity comes in all
sorts of flower patterns, tiny pink or
yellow rosebuds scattered about, oF
Pin stripes of delicate mauve with a
Dresden border effect of mauve
phaded roses.
There are always the dainty, dotted
Swiss spreads with the full frills of
ths same, made to match the window
curtains and nothing could be airier
and easier to take care of than these.
If a more expensive sort is desired,
allover embroidered batiste might be
used, and this, covered with miniature
sprays of embroidered flowers, is
really charming.
A dainty summer bedroom has a
wooden frame bedstead covered en-
Urely with the loveliest tower strewn
chintz with a coverlet and pillow
cover to match. The little dressing
table ts also covered with the chinty,
and the white wicker chairs are cush
Joned with it. White filet net cur.
tains are hung close to the glass and
straight widths of the chintz falling to
the sill are used as over curtains with
® short valance running across the
tops of the windows.
For the nursery the nicest kind
of crib coveriet can be made of sim:
ple white dimity, which launders eas.
fly and is always cool and Inviting
Even in summer blankets for thé
young infant are a part of the crib
furnishings and for this purpose noth.
tng could be more desirable than the
snowy little Krinkledown baby blank:
ets which are as light as a feather,
yet warm, and because of their pecu
Mar weave especially hygienic. They
sre bound with pretty, pale colored
sateen on the ens and come packed
each in a white box,
Inexpensive summer hangings have
Rever been shown in more tasteful de
Signs than those that are temptingly
isplayed in the shops this spring
White and ecru nets in numberless
simple patterns sell from 30 cents a
yard up. The plain square mesh net
in ecru, with a border design darned
in white mercerized floss up the side
and across the hem of the curtain,
makes the most effective kind of win
dow hangings for summer cottages
‘The darning is cone by hand, and {s
work that is quickly accomplished
Printed scrims, 36 inches wide, that
sell for 25 cents a yard, make sott
and airy looking draperies. The
ground may be had in pure white or in
several tones of ecru, and the print
ings are in simple craftsman-like de
signs in strong, clear color or in soft,
Dlurred tints —Vogue.
Coceanut Cream.
Required. Four ounces of ground
rice, two ounces of ilesiccated ‘cocoa:
But, ome quart of milk, two ounces
of butter, sugar to taste,
Work the ground rice into a smooth
paste with cold milk, then add the
Fest of the milk, and stir over the fire
till st bolls, then add the butter and
Sugar with one ounce and a half of
cocoanut. Pour into a wet mold and
scatter the remains of the cocoanut
over.
Spice Cake from Bread Dough.
Two cups bread dough, two cups
sugar, one cup butter, four eggs, one
teaspoon cinnamon, one teaspoon
cloves, one teaspoon allspice, one
small teaspoon soda dissolved in wa-
ter, one pound raisins well floured;
ream butter and sugar; add beaten
yolks of eggs; add spices; mix with
bread dough; add raisins; add well
Deaten whites of eggs; then ‘Soda;
bake in very slow oven one hour and
© half.
Mock Terrapin.
One cup veal ent in dice shape, one
cup cream or rich mifk, one hard
Dolled egx cut in small pieces, one
tablespoon butcer. Put all. together
fm a stew pan, season with salt and
pepper to taste, heat to boiling paint,
and 2 with one teaspoon of corn-
etcreh, ved in milky “Serve on
bot Cee. sk ae
Candy, Fruit and Nuts.
Candy, fruit and wits are used on
the table as decoration and passed at
the close of the meal.
Nute are passed during the meal
and olives with the soup.
Cheese and crackers for salad are
merved from a side tabla
FOR THE LUNCHEON TABLE.
Hazelnut Waters & Delicacy That Hos
tess May Be Sure Wil! Be
Greatly Appreciated.
‘These are quite a change from or-
inary cakes, and are invariably appre-
ciated. Required: Half a pound of
four, four ounces of brown sugar, two
‘ounces of butter, two ounces of shelled
and finely-chopped hazelnuts, four ta-
blespoonfuls of milk, a few drops of
Jemon juice and vanilla.
Cream the butter and sugar with a
‘woeden spoon unti! soft and white.
Add the flour very lightly, then stir
in the milk very slowly and smoothly.
Shake in the nuts, and add lemon
Juice and vanilla to taste. Rub a flat
baking tin over very lightly with salad
oil or butter. Spread some of the mix-
ture very thinly on it, and mark it out
into squares with a knife.
Bake in a moderately hot oven for
about six minutes, or until set. Rub
the handle of a wooden spoon over
with a very little off, cut out the wa-
fers, lift them up, and press them
round the spoon-handie, so as to crul
them.
| Draw each one gently off as it ts
moldéd. This process needs to be
quickly done, or the mixture hardens.
‘The best plan ix to do it near the fire
or by the oven door.
| ‘These wafers will keep for a long
time if placed in an air-tight can. The
nuts can be bought ready shelled and
dried from any grocery.
Required: Three pounds of rump
steak, one ounce and a half of butter,
‘one pint of stock, three large Spanish
onions, four cloves, two tublespoon-
fuls of Worcester sauce, cayenne and
salt to taste, half an ounce of flour.
First fry the steak in butter till
nicely browned, then put {t in a bak
ing pan, with the fat in which it
was fried. Have ready the parboiled
insides of two or three large Spanish
onions, put {t in a baking pan, with
the fat in which it was fried. Have
ready the parboiled insides of two or
three large Spanish onfons, put these
with the steak, cloves, one pint of
stock, the Worcester sauce (or ket
chup), cayenne and salt to taste
Cover the pan and bake slowly for
two hours, Slice the outer paris of
the onions and fry them a golden
brown, dish the stew, and thicken the
gravy, colored to a nice brown, and
strain over. Garnish with fried onions
and serve.
. Pinina Old Chaira,
| If you have old rush bottom or cane-
seated chairs and do not want to go
to the expense of having them re-
cained, try making a seat for them at
home.
Cut away carefully the caning and
hail strips of girthing tightly across
the opening. Cover with a plece of
fine fibre matting or burlap, just the
‘shape of the seat, but a halt-inch larg
‘er. Turn in the edges all around and
nail to the chair with brass-headed
tucks for studding.
If the woodwork has grown shabby,
buy a preparation that quickly re.
moves and softens the varnish and
scrape with pleces of glass, The chair
can then be done up with any desired
stain,
Savory Pancakes. ‘
Required: Six tablespoonfuls of
flour, three eggs, a tablespoonful of
minced scalded onion, a tablespoonful
chopped parsley, half a tablespoon
ful of pepper, lard for frying.
Put the flour into a basin with 1
small teaspoonful of salt. Make this
into a batter of proper consistency
with three eggs beaten up in a little
milk UH smooth. Then stir in a ta
Dlespoonful of minced onion, parsley
and a liberal ‘seasoning of pepper.
Let the batter stand for two hours
and fry a small coffee-cupful at
time in a Uttle boiling lard. Roll uz
each pancake as soon as finished.
dust with salt and coraline pepper,
ahi eet aa CE ae
Summer Bedding.
Inexpensive as ordinary cheesecloth
fs, it makes excellent summer bed
comforts if lined with split cotton and
Sied with baby ribbon. True, these com-
forts will not wash without color fad
ing, but they are so very inexpensive
that one could afford new ones when
Old ones were too badly soiled for use.
Pale blue cloth, knotted with pink,
yellow or blue, is very pretty; laven-
der knotted with white is equally at-
tractive and white knotted with green
4s cool looking.
. Lancashire Pudding.
Line a pie dish with good short
vrust paste; line also the edges of the
dish, and brush over with egg. Beat
up two eggs, add half a pint of warm
milk, two ounces brown sugar, the
grated rind of one lemon, and | one-
fourth pound of currants. Bake till
set, and serve either hot or cold,
@ Light Biscuit.
To each quart of wheat flour add
one-half cup of graham flour This
makes delightful biscuits and are
much more healthful, as the graham
flour does not lie heavily on the
stomach as the white flour does. More
graham may be added if desired.
ee
After boiling a piece of ham the
short shank end is generally stringy
and often wasted. If this is passed
twice through a meat ebopper anc
then mixed with a little sweet cream,
ft makes ham which is excellent for
sandwiches.
Caps for Rockers.
Little caps made of heavy cloth and
fitted over the ends of rockers save
much scratching on baseboards and
other furniture from baving rocking
chairs pushed against them.
The New Idea.
“He hasn't much sense,” said the
health fad enthusiast, disgustedly.
“Why, be basn’t enough sense to go
out into the wet.”
The Triumphant Feminine.
. Woman's superiority over man is
proved by the fact thal she can be a
heroine even to the maid who pins on
ber switches and adjusts ber rat.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
PLEASING OCCUPATION FOR THE
LEISURE MOMENTS.
Directions for Working Really Pretty
Ornamentation with the Cro-
chet Needies—Edging and
Heading instructions,
Work 19 chain stitches, turn,
One treble ip the eighth from hook,
2 chain, pass 2, a treble in each of the
next 6, 2 chain, 1 treble im end stitch,
turn,
*, B chain, 1 treble in frst of 6 tre
ble, 4 chain, trebie on last of same
group, 2 chain, treble oa next treble,
2 chain, treble on end stitch, turn
Five chain, treble on treble, 2 chain,
pass 2, treble on each of the next 6, 2
EE ey ge ry
OKA So
Pt ke ee eed
beturch-beh teeth Se
SP tet SH Het et Be
Loe Peh neh te ae oe bel
ES eee pg Py
3 3: te oN ye
ectian Coane:
chain, treble on end stitch, turn, and
Tepeat from * for length of lace re-
quired.
First row of edging.
Treble on end stitch of last row, °
2 chain, a double crochet on end ‘of
next row, 2 chain, treble on next row,
repeat from *.
Second row—A double crochet un-
der first loop, *, 3 double crochets un-
der next loop, 4 chain, 2 more double
crochets under same loop, 1 double
crochet under next loop, and repeat
from *.
For heading.
Thread twice over the hook, draw
through end of first row, thread over.
draw through 2 loops, leaving 3 on
hook, thread over, draw through end
of next row, and work off all the
loops two at a time in the usual way;
2 chain, 1 treble into center of cross.
treble, 2 chain, and repeat from be
ginning of row.
On this row work 1 treble tn every
other stitch with 1 chain between
each.
HAVE TOPS OF PLATE GLASS.
Newest Tea Tables Formed of Mate
rial That Is Not Easy to
tajure.
So many housekeepers bave had
their handsome mahogany trays ru-
ined from hot dishes that they wel-
come to the fad of the glass covered
tray and table.
One of the newest tea tables Is of
the old-time square shape with a top
and shelf haif way below. This ts
made of highly polished mahogany
which a linen cover badly protects
from the heat of the tea service, A
tray is made, however, to exactly fit
the top, of heavy plate glass set in a
rim of mahogany with broad brass
handles.
‘This tray is carried into the draw.
ing-room at tea time with the entire
tea service and hot water kettles on
it, or if one has no maid, the tray
can be put in readiness before the
‘guests arrive.
The cost of such trays is an ob-
jection to many women. This can
be greatly lessened if heavy pieces
of glass are bought at a hardware
store and are taken to a picture
framer's to be framed in regular wood-
en picture molding.
This molding comes in all widths
and prices of mahogany and cherry,
and If one with a beveled edge is se
lected it will give a handsome fin
ish to the tray. Heavy brass handles
can also be bought at the hardware
store and one should be fastened t
the molding at each end. The advan
tage of such trays fs that they can
be made in any desired size. The
framing is apt to be cheaper if they
fre either square or oblong rather
cick cain tm'tean®:
Fringing Linen Gowns.
Some long linen fringe, looking very
like the knotted fringes of a damask
towel end, is shown edging the tunic
of a brown French linen gown. The
drapery {s longer in front than at the
sides, while separate and shorter tu
nic ends fall at the back of this in
teresting model, but all of them are
frayed and fringed to a depth of six
inches, with a knotted heading extend.
ing an inch and a half below the tu:
nic.
This is nice work for the needle.
woman, and the drawing out of the
linen threads is delightful play for the
small daughter who loves to help
mother.
‘The gown, in soft brown, with its
long Ines and graceful fringe, is well
suited to the tall, slender woman.
Some Shirtwaist Helps.
The best interlining for shirtwaist
cuffs ig butcher's linen. Shrunk cot-
ton also may be used. The gap in the
shirtwaist between the first button
and the neckband, which confronts so
many amateur dressmakers, is caused
by the buttonhboles not being placed
exactly opposite each other or else
by the stretching of one side more
than the other. To avoid this stretch.
tug fasten both sides of the fronts to-
gether, top and bottom, and measure
the buttonholes carefully.
ee oe eee
‘The proper method is to brush those
in the upper jaw down, and in the
lower jaw up, and to brush the gums
as well as the teeth. This forms a
sort of healthful massage for them,
which stimulates circulation and pre
vents disease,
‘Fr Gletin Sie
Do not use soap In cleaning marbie
table tops and mantels,
It yellows them.
Better results aré had from washing
with water softened with ammonia,
New Edge to an Old Saw.
The hand that stws the kettle is the
hand that rules the world.—Baltimore
on
SMALL VEIL NO LONGER SEEN
Mideummer Stytes Conspicuous by
Their Bigness and Easily Cover |
the Entire Hat.
Midsummer vetls are conspicuous
by their bigness. The prettiest ones
are in great squares of dotted tissue
or shaded chiffon, the former with
borders of satin stripes ard the latter
with hemstitched edges.
‘The veil covers the-entire hat and
when adjusting it the wearer is care-
ful to put the center immediately over
the middle of the hat crown. The ends
of this delightful foratn. whieh
makes a pretty woman fairly heart-
breaking, are gathered loosely at the
sides and pinned at the bac® of the
coiffure with a veil bar. Such veils,
though designed primarily for motor-
ing, may be worn on any morning oc-
casion. They are a little too masking
for the elegant afternoon owns which
go afoot and are primarily the privt
lege of the summer resort. Handker-
chief parasols of flowered scrim are
suppiled for thin frocks. The name,
however, concerns only the shape of
the sunshade, which has deep points
suggestive of those of the mouchoir
when it is held up by {ts center. An
adorable scrim parasol of this de-
scription showed strange green flow-
ers on a cream background, a half
Mining in solid green serim and an
immensely long handle in emerald
wood. :
| For every day service a paraeol in
natural colored pongee with a green
lining fs very smart. Mony women
have these made up from a piece of
the gown material, $6 that the en.
semble is very harmonious. A pon:
gee dress and matching parasol and
& panama or straw hat with a draped
veil for trimming make a superb hot
weather get-up.
7 MY
| .
This is a charming model for a
linen coat suit. The skirt is quite
plain, and the coat ts devoid of trim:
ming save two large pearl buttons at
closing. The smart effect is obtalned
from the Hnes, which must be per-
feet.
Dressing the Hair.
Under no condition wear a Grectan
knot if you have a tip tlted nose. A
silhouette view of plebelan features
and & classic colffure ix hardly appro-
priate. Instead, dress the hair low
at the nape of the neck or upon the
crown of the head. Do not forget,
either, that dark hair should be
smoothly dressed, and where it Hes
close to the head should shine like
satin. Light hair should be arranged
as loosely as possible in order — to
bring out the prettiest tints and hues.
If the line from the chin to the crown
of the head is long the mass of hair
should be poised just where it will
break that line. If the line is too
short for a regular contour, cover the
deficiency and supply the needed full
ness by coiffing the halr so as to
lengthen this line.
“then Genet Cénie:
It is almost as variously shaped as
the season's gowns.
It ts worn with everything, with ab
most every sort of gown.
Morning gowns are accompanied by
@ scarf mantle of some sort, in one
of the coarse cotton nets.
They are seen even with gowns of
percale or chambray
Those of the dressier order, how-
ever, are made of the sheer, gauzy
stuffs.
When worn .with one gown exclu-
sively they echo the color note of it.
When designed for separate wear
the coats may be of a different color
from the frock.
To Make Gear Short Didi
In making over short sleeves these
general directions are the rule: Rip
your old sleeve carefully apart, and
press well; provide youself with a
pattern of a one seam close long
sleeve, which has been cut to fit the
arm exactly, for !n making over there
must be no’ mistakes.
Mercerized Cotton Shawis.
Shawls for evening wear at the sea-
shore and mountains are being made
of a very heavy mercerized embroi-
dery cotton that resembles a fine
rope. The effect is as if made of
sik The shawls are made in white
and colors and may be washed.
A Primer of Life.
Only a dreamer asks Jie and Tae
to walt for him, when he “head”
them off, sell ‘Time for money, and
make Tide turn a mill wheel. «
| Wise Limitation on Growth,
If & human being continued to grow
at the same rate as he does tm his
first year he would be 68 feet tall at
he aged of 10. eee) 2:
MIR GROUCH.
. mee
knew # certain citizen who had an aw-
Tui “Kroweh.
No matter what ithe day might bring, he
always bellowed) “Ouch!”
‘In truth, he had so long a face, wore
a uch a look of woe.
That when he died, "moat everyone was
j alad'Co see im ae.
‘They put him tn hin grave to sleep, but
Tag One shed 8 tear: ;
Instead, the blithe pall-bearers wore ex:
Dressions of Kood cheer.
And "when the mound was heap-ed o'er
oe thes hurried back to town
“And everywlere they found a drink they
OO teled to pat It down,
‘The purpose (hat they had in view It was
"No celebrate,
We didn't hear a single word addressed
|” Yo cruel tate
For taking off ld Mister Grouch—whteh
ot was a ting end
For one who always growled #0 much he
never had n friend
QUALIFYING.
yr >}
o2i, ba
Sees <3
Crome | (4
La
Ye: ‘See
Henry Peck—I te oe no
magither, let's argue this matter.”
“Well, you little rascal, what have
you to say?”
“You told me just now that this
licking would hurt you more than it
‘would me.”
“So I did.”
“Then, why inflict needless suffer.
ing on us both and break the entente
cordiale which was established be-
tween us this morning when I prom-
ised not to tell mother what you
asked me not to tell her?"
‘The castigation was postponed.
Detective Story.
“It is believed that the robbery
Must have taken place after midday
on February 20, when the treasure
was certainly intact, and before two
o'clock on the afternoon of February
22, at which time the discovery was
made."—Daily Chronicle.
The author of “Sherlock Holmes”
has not lived in vain.—Punch.
They're All Suffragettes.
‘Don't you wish you lived in Eng-
jana?”
“Why 2
“They imprison suffragettes over
there.”
“How would that help me?”
“You have a motherinJaw, haven't
you?”
ee
__He’e @ four-fusher.”
“Worse than that—he don’t even
try to work at anything.”
“Doesn't he ever make a bluff at be
ing busy?”
“Yes—whenever he's busy ity a
bluff.”
A Crue! Insinuation.
“It is a wonder girls generally go
to the grandstand at a baseball
game.”
“Why shouldn't they?”
“1 should think they would find it
more natural to prefer bleachers.”
Needs No Winding.
“I understand you spent. a quiet
evening with your wife last night.”
“Noo, a man might spend a quiet
evening with a phonograph or a me-
chanical piano, but hardly with bis
wife.”
A Good Suggestion.
“Oh, I should so like to become fa-
mous,” sighed the youthful poet.
“Well, if you will get a hafreut and
put On a clean collar,” sald the sensi-
ble old gentleman. “maybe Fame may
be persuaded to cake you on proba-
tion.”
inated al.
Stubb—I notice your wife doesn’t
wear her 500-button gown to church
any more?
Penn—No; it was too embarrassing.
Every time & button turned up on the
collection plate the parson glanced at
her.
In Self-Defense.
“How do you tell bad eggs?” queried
the young housewife.
“I never told any,” replied the fresh
grocery clerk, “but if f had any-
thing to tell a bad egg I'd break it
gently.”"—Christian Guardian.
Levee Chaeee of Gunes
He—In olden tmes women disap.
pointed tn love used to don nun's
garbs.
She—Yes; but the styles have
changed. Nowadays they go into
breach of promise suits.—Bohemian.
An Unheeded Command.
“Ma, George kissed me last night.”
“What did you do?”
“I told him to stop.”
“Did he?” a
“Well, ma, I don’t believe he heard
me.”
Not Unusual.
“Withersby scems to have a grouch
all the time. I wonder what can be
the matter with him?"
“Oh, a very common cowpiaint.”
“And, what may that be?”
“He's married.”
F€€€39535359559555555
J evetyshilg ventions
§« FURNITURE 3
——“““=w FURNITURE SPECIALTIES B= 8
FrLoor CoverINcs :
SYDNOR & HUNDLEY, INC. :
gag
s Leaders.
a 709 711 713 EAST BROAD STREET. 8
$395353955555539553S 53 CECE
TE SOS DATS OER Mee QUIses
_ Phone. 577. Richmond, Va
E
| A. D. PRIC
: ° e 9
Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liveryman. |
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or tel-
ephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments.
Plenty of room with ali necessary conventences. Large piente or
band wagons for bire at reasonable rates and nothing but frst- |
class, carriages, buggies, ete. Keep coustantly on hand fine fun-
| eral supplies.
~—“sey No. 252 East Leigh Street. go
(Residence Next Door.)
OPEN ALL DAY AND NIGHT.—Man on Duty All Night.
EER er ana . emcees SRE
|
Subaeateaeatet teeta ttettcoceeeceseee
wee The People’s Restaurant, -—a>gq
oe -— 750 North 3rd St., Richmond, Va————_
lee ee eae
MEALS at All Hours—Hot or Cold. Board by Day, Week
or Month. SOFT DRINKS.
POLITE ATTENTION. GIVE ME A CALL
Mme. SYLVIA L. MITCHELL, Proprietress.
Meee eee eee Ee BESS ESSE ES a ee
ee
| W. lL. JOHNSON, |
ode ’
Funeral Director and Embalmer, |
Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Cor. Broad. :
HACKS FOR HIRE.
Orders by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Weddings,
Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended.
Telephone, 686. Residence in Building.
A ROYAL CONNOISSEUR.
James BL Laughiin, a wealthy cot
lector of Pittsburg, recently discor:
ered a hoax in his gallery and com-
pelled @ dealer to refund the $9.500
that has been paid for a $30 work of
art.
Mr. Laughlin, as this episode shows,
is a connoisseur of no mean ability.
At a@ recent dinner he pointed out bril-
Mently the Hmitations and the shal-
lowaess of “court painters.” Then he
laughed and sate
“A movement was on foot for the
alliance of King Charles of Wurtem-
berg und the Grand Duchess Olga of
Russia, An emissary of the Russian
court came to the young king. laid
certain proposals before him and sub
mitted a portrait in oils of the royal
nay.
King Charles, after a close seru-
tiny, said
““This portrait fatters overmuch
The eyes are too large and brilliant
the hair too abundant, the complexion
too flowerlike and the neck and arms
too beautiful altogether
"Rut, you majesty,’ sald the aston-
ished Russian, ‘you do not know the
grand duchess
“"Noy said the king, ‘but 1 know
court painters"
ee ame
Many of the new summer frocks
will be made of heavy net, embrold-
ered in cart wheels, Plain white floss
will be used. singly or triple, and the
work need not be done by expert
hands. It looks very much like rough
darning.
Little Won by Perfiay.
LaFontaine: Perfidy often recolls
upon its wuthor.
Wits ba Treubhas.
The only really miserable people
are those who haven't anv troubles.
As to Public Nuisances.
| ‘There would be np public auleances
if public nuisances never increased
the profits of Influential people.
Rite tein
Human judgment is finite, and it
ought always to be charitable.
Lasting Lessons of Experience.
To know a truth well, one must
have fought {t out —Novalis,
SEVEN
Not Stighted.
*A minister's little daughter was vis
iting a family in a parish which her
father had recently left One day
she explained to her hostess that he
hoped the people of the church would
not send for him to conduct funerals,
but would have the present pastor of
the church. Thinking perhaps she
might have given offense she looked
up with a bright smile and added:
“But of course he would be very glad
to attend your funeral"—Tke De-
lineator.
‘Bie. dedeose ie Ec ee
When Boswell suggested te John-
son that “Gen. Paoli,” whom they had
Just left, “had the loftiest port of any
man he had ever seen,” Johnson de-
nie that military men were always
the best bred men. “Perfect good
breeding.” he said, “consists in having
‘no particular mark of any profession,
Dut a general elegance of manners:
whereas, in a military man, you can
commonly distinguish the brand of
soldier.”
‘The Last Trumpet.
First’ Farmer (pointing to the
flaring born on an automobile) —
“What's thet thing for?” Second
Farmer—“Thes't th’ thing they blow
Jes’ before they run y' down!”—Town
and Country.
The Pessimist.
We make him pause in his reptn-~
ing: make him admit the silver ining
may be there, as stated. Alas, he is
a hardened sinner, and says be'll
wager us a dinner that Iining’s only
plated.
Superman.
Only he is lord of riches who de-
spises them, and he is so whether he
kas any or not—Puck
Yea, Verity.
Man’s clothes ‘are of man’s life a
thine apart: they're woman's whole
existence —Washington Herald.
Not a Profitable Job.
No niin has ever succeeded in get-
ting a big salary for the purpose of
Uving down an unsavory past.
Where Woman Is Supyame.
It fs only a woman thac can make
@ man become the parody of himself.
=—Freach,
THE PLANET
PENNSYLVANIA DEMOCRATS
Convention at Harrisburg Nominates State Ticket.
Harrisburg, Pa. Aug. 4.—In contrast to the convention a year ago, when Colonel James M. Guffey, of Pittsburg, fought to retain his leadership of the party, the Democratic state convention, which was held in the Majestic theater here was a quiet affair. Prominent Democrats from all over the state were here, and not a discordant note was heard. There were no contests for seats in the convention. The candidates who are to lead the Democracy in the fall campaign were nominated unanimously. The candidates are: Auditor general—J. Wood Clark, of Indiana county. State treasurer—Former Congressman George W. Kipp, of Bradford county. Associate justice of the supreme court—C. Larue Munson, of Lycoming county.
ROOSEVELTSEESBRIGHT FUTURE FOR AFRICA
Large Tracts Fit For Prosperous Settlers, He Says.
Nairobil, British East Africa, Aug. 4
—Theodore Roosevelt and his son
Kermit, the guests of honor at a
public banquet given in Nairobil. Fred
rick J. Jackson, governor of British
East Africa, was chairman and 173
persons sat at table. Captain Sander
son, the town clerk of Nairobil, read
an address of welcome to the former
president of the United States and af-
terwards handed him the address en-
closed in a section of elephant tusk
mounted in silver and with a silver
chain.
Mr. Roosevelt, in reply to the toast
proposed by Governor Jackson, sald:
"I wish to take this opportunity to thank the people of British East Africa for their generous and courteous hospitality. I have had a thorough good time. I am immensely interested in the country and its possibilities as an abode for white men. Very large tracts are fit for a fine population and healthy and prosperous settlements, and it would be a calamity to neglect them. But the settlers must be of the right type.
"I believe that one of the best feats performed by members of the white race in the last ten years is the building of the Uganda railroad. I am convinced that this country has a great agricultural and industrial feature, and it is the most attractive playground in the world. It most certainly presents excellent opportunities for capitalists, and ample inducements should be offered them to come here. The homemaker and actual settler, and not the speculator, should be encouraged in making this a white man's country."
TAFT AND DIAZ TO MEET
Executives Will Exchange Greetings at El Paso, Tex., Oct. 18.
Washington, Aug. 4. — President Taft, of the United States, and President Diaz, of Mexico, are to meet at
M.
PRESIDENT DIAZ.
El Paso, Tex., Oct. 18. This program has been arranged as the result of correspondence between the United States and Mexico. The president will be attended by his secretary, military attache and several personal friends who are to accompany him on his western trip.
There will be an exchange of greetings between the two executives, but the function will not be of an ostentacious nature, so far as President Taft is concerned.
TURNED ON GAS IN SLEEP
Fifteen-Year Old Girl Was Dead When Found by Parents.
Harrisburg, Pa. Aug. 4—Walking in her sleep, Sugar Rudy, fifteen years old, the daughter of Abraham F. Rudy, turned on a gas jet in her bedroom and was dead of asphyxiation when found by her parents.
Pascoe, editor of the Germantown Telegraph, sentenced to six months in jail for libelling Sheriff W. H. Brown of Philadelphia, was refused a pardon by the state board of pardons. Pascoe has served seven weeks of his sentence.
A trap gun which Emmett Booker, a merchant of Smithville, Ga., had set for burglars, was discharged when Mrs. Booker opened the store door, two charges of buckshot entering the woman's body, causing death.
Died After Eating Lobsters
Captain Christopher G. Newbury died at Groton, Conn., from ptomaelone poisoning after eating lobsters. John Billford, of New York, is in a precarious condition and three others are seriously ill.
Pennsy Awards Contracts For Cars. Contracts were awarded by the Pennsylvania Railroad company for freight cars to cost between $8,000,000 and $9,000,000.
Mother Drowns With Daughter.
Mrs. Gordon Hoyt and her daughter,
Clark, were drowned at Sung Harbor
near Hammondport, N. Y. The
daughter had gone in bathing and, be-
ing seized with cramps, called to her
mother, who was on the bank nearby.
Mrs. Hoyt, who is an expert swimmer,
went to the rescue. The daughter was
no frightened that she shewed her arms
abutot her mother and both were
drowned before help could reach them.
State Wide Prohibition in Alabama.
Montgomery, Ala. Aug. 4.—The Car-
michael bill providing for state wide
prohibition was passed by the house
by a vote of 75 to 19.
HAPPY, ANYHOW
Just a little love to
Help the day along;
Just a little love was
The burden of his song.
When the bells were ringing
On his wedding day,
Didn't have the money
Praetor for to pay.
Asked the man for credit,
So the knot was tied.
Gracias, that's a funny
Way to take a bride.
Poor as any woodchuck,
But he didn't care.
Said that love had made him
"Take a millionaire!"
A Truthful Verdict
Fargo, N. D., once boasted a composite postmaster and coroner. He was called one day to give his verdict upon the case of a stranger who had been the victim of a fit on the main street.
As the man was known to nobody, he was hurried to the much prized new city hospital. There the case was diagnosed as appendicitis, but when the operation took place the attending surgeon discovered that the patient had been previously relieved of his appendix.
The doctor endeavored to retract his steps, but the strange man died from the effects of the operation.
The postmaster-coroner, in rendering his verdict, filled in the space, after "Cause of Death" with a rubber stamp, which read, "Opened by Mistake."-Success Magazine.
Louis Cross-Eye
A doctor, visiting a small country town, went over the local museum. After admiring one or two of the exhibits, the curator, who was an old man, said:
"Ah, but we've got a chair here that belonged to Louis Cross-Eye."
"Oh," said the doctor, "who was he?
"Don't you know, sir? Why, he was one of the kings of France."
"King of France? Louis Cross-Eye? There must be some mistake. Show me the chair."
The old man promptly complied, and pointed with conscious pride to a ticket inscribed:
"Once the property of Louis XI."
Miss Passe—I wonder what he meant when he said my teeth were like stars. Lady Friend—Probably that they come out at night.
Our Aggregation.
They're leaders our ball tossers are,
That is to say,
They would be leaders was the league
Headed the other way.
Impossible.
"I see that fellow pass by every
evening with a clarionet."
"Perhaps so, but he isn't a musician."
"How do you know he isn't a musician?"
"Because he plays in the Salvation
Army band."
More Appropriate
"Lord Broken has arrived," re marked the tall clubman, "and he has 'M. P.' behind his name."
"Yes," chuckled one of his lordships creditors, "but it should be 'N. P.'"
A Faux Pas.
"How do you harpen to be here?"
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
asked the sympathetic lady visitor.
"I was caught on the wrong side of a residence," answered the prisoner.
"And how wus that?"
"I was on the inside when I should have been on the outside."
One Exception
"I think," said the merchant, "I'll have to fire your friend Polk. I never saw any one quite so lazy." "Slow in everything, is he?" "No, not everything. He gets tired quick enough."
The Style of Other Days
"An old-fashioned editor, you say?" "Yes, he belongs to the old school. There is a jug of whisky in his desk for his friends and a six-shooter for his enemies." Hard to understand
"For instance?"
"Well, for instance, some men like to ride motor cycles."
THE FUTURE OF FLIGHT.
The convalescent aviator, his crutches at his side, sat in a wheeled chair on the beach.
"Man already, in his primitive aeroplane, flies 50 times better than the bird," he said. "Think how he'll fly in 1915, in 1925, in 2000."
"A 12-pound bird in flight puts forth a tenth of one horsepower—that is all its strength. Man's primitive aeroplane, in which no single man has yet flown in the aggregate more than a dozen hours or so, puts forth, for every 12 pounds of its weight, 4.4% horsepower. It is 50 times stronger than a bird.
"Man, flying a few hours, already beats the bird 50 times over. What will he do when he has been flying a century?" Why, he'll go round the world in 24 hours. He'll girdle the globe in eternal sunshine with the sun. "There will be acroplane sanitariums in those days, wherein men taking the sun cure will keep up with the great luminary in his course, and on those blessed people will pour always, day and night, the most brilliant morning sunshine."
NO TIME TO LOSE
"Is your mistress at home?" asked the lady at the door.
"No, ma'am."
"Do you expect her soon?"
"She ought to be home any minute now."
"Here—hurry! Take my card, and be sure to tell her Mrs. Jennisen called."
Like Clubmen.
A lamp that's run by kerosene. Is not the best of lights;
The room has a common room. It smokes and keeps out lights.
But recently arrived, a shade bustled up to St. Peter.
And St. Peter, eyeing him sourly,
told him where he could go to
A Better Crop
The peach crop may a failure be
Down in old Delaware.
But the summer girl won't fail us.
Therefore we do.
His Finish
"Give woman the credit she deserves," the suffragette cried. "and where would man be?" "If she got all the credit she wanted, he'd be in the poorhouse," she sneered a coarse person in the rear of the hall. —Stray Stories
Bigger Yet.
"That," said Blinkers, as he gazed in astonishment at his wife's new hat, "is the biggest thing I ever saw." "Oh, that's nothing," rejoined Mrs. B. "Just wait till you get the bill for it."
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Danville, Va., July 28, 1909.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death-c claim of Brother L. C. Woodruff, who was a member of Moving Light Lodge, No. 86, or Danville, Va.
Geo. W. Rison,
W. J. Hubbard.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., July 26, 1909.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A.
S. A., E., A., A. and A., ($150.00)
One Hundred and Fifty Dollars. in payment of the death-claim of Brother Rufus G. Porter, who was a member of Fulton Lodge, No. 42, of Richmond, Va.
S. S. Baker, D. D. G. C.
Dog As a Witness.
Marietta, Ga., July 27.—(Special).
The evidence against Willard Webb, the negro now in the Tower in Atlanta, charged with assaulting Mrs. Exle Brown, at Vining's last week, was considerably strengthened today when a dog which was found at the negro house was taken before Mrs. Brown and identified by her as the animal which accompanied the negho who attacked her.
Mrs. Brown made the statement immediately after the assault that her assailant had a dog with him when the attack was made. As she has since identified both Webb and the dog, the officials here are confident that he will be convicted, not-withstanding his claim that he can prove an alibi.
VIRGINIA:
VIRGINIA:
In the Circuit Court of Henrico
County, August 3, 1909.
Emma Hawkins. Plaintiff
vs. In Chancey
William Hawkins Defendant
William Hawkins Defendant.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a Vinculo Matrimoni, by the plaintiff against the defendant; and an affidavit having been made and filed, that due diligence has been used by, and on behalf of the plaintiff to ascertain in what county or corporation the defendant, William Hawkins is without effect, and that the plaintiff does not know his whereabouts; it is ordered that he appear within fifteen days after the due publication of this order to do whatever is necessary to protect his interest herein.
A copy—Teste:
SAMUEL P. WADDILL.
Clerk.
J. Henry Crutchfield, p. q.
William Hawkins: You'll take notice that I shall on the 23rd day of September, 1909, at the office of Philph B. Shield, room numbered 60. Chamber of Commerce building, situated south-west corner of Ninth and Main Streets, in the city of Richmond, Virginia, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. of that day, proceed to take the depositions or witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in Chancery depending in the Circuit Court for the County of Henrico, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if, for any cause the taking of said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if, commenced be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours, until the same shall be concluded.
By Counsel
J. Henry Crutchfield, p. q.,
Office 1211 121 E. Broad St.,
Richmond, Va.
PROF. D. D. BRUCE, M. D..
Strange, Wonderful, but True are the awe stricken tests given by The Great Australian Medium.
PROF. D. D. BRUCE, M. D. the only living Apostle of Science of the Mysteries.
$5000 in Gold to any one in the World to compete with him. Possessing more power than any four mediums combined.
No card, trance or hand humbug.
Greatest Hindoo Medium in the World.
SO GREAT IS HIS POWER that he can tell you when in a Clairvoyant state, all you wish to know with out a word being spoken. Come, all ye unbelevers, scotters and jeers; bring all your skepticism with you—he will open your eyes to the private chamber mystery. Come all ye broken hearted wives, all with low spirits and let him lift the burden from your aching and jealous heart. He challenges the World to compete with him in causing a speedy marriage with the one you love; uniting the separated and bring back the lost one. Traces lost or stolen goods. Unearths hidden treasures. Removes evil influences Crosses, Spells, Ill Luck, cures tricks and Conjurations, gives Luck and Success in all you undertake. Cures the Tobacco and Liquor Habits. Allows the Captive to be set Free.
He is the only one that will give a Written Guarantee to complete your business or refund your money. Are you sick? Do you know what the trouble is with you? Come and Consult Nature's Doctor. Rheumatism, Insomnia, Hysteria and all Diseases cured. Points given on Horse Racing and all Games of Chance.
No matter what ails you, come and see this wonderful man. Reader have you noticed that some people have a hard time to get along, no matter how they toll, while others have success? Many wealthy men and women owe their success to this wonderful man.
He will tell you whom you will marry. Will you be happy? He will tell you who your friends and enemies are. Can you tell? Don't take a leap in the dark, but be advised by this wonderful man. Greatest Prophet in existence.
He always Succeeds when others fall. This is the chance of a life time. Don't let it pass you.
Office hours: 9 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Sunday: 2:30 to 7:30 P.M.
N. B.—Our consultation Fee is
50 cents. Sittings, $1.00. All
letters containing $1.00 will be
answered in full.
MAIN OFFICE:
510 S. 8th Street, Philadelphia, Pa
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Danville, Va., July 28, 1909.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Brother George R. Palmer, who was a member of Moving Light Lodge, No. 86, of Danville, Va.
Her X Mark,
Signed: CENIA PALMER,
Beneficiary.
Witness:
Geo. W. Rison,
S. H. Smith,
W. J. Hubbard, D. D. C.
Bell Phone—Locust 1774-A.
HOTEL- MACEO.
1418 Lombard St., Philadelphia.
Finely Equipped. All Modern Improvements. Restaurant and
Cafe. First-Class. Meals
Served. European
Style.
Strangers Can be Accommodated.
Write for further information.
L. A. HUGHES, Proprietor.
Long Island Bay Terrace.
Building Lots 100x100 near River head, Long Island, County Seat of Suffolk on Main Line Long Island R. R., Penna, System, Overloving Great Peconic Bay, in the Village of Flanders, Long Island's Most Exclusive Summer Colony in Millionaire Section of Long Island.
$225.00 per lot cash or installments $15.00 down, $7.00 monthly, 10 per cent, discount for cash.
These Lots are High and Dry and in a Direct Line of the Penna, R. R. Tunnel. Improvements. I Have just a Few Lots Left. Please Send Money by Register and Oblige.
WM. H. LUCKADOE,
1759 3rd Ave., New York, N. Y.
MRS. JOSIE A. GRAHAM
Virginia's Most Successful Hair Culturist.
.....PARLORS.....
108 E. Leigh St., - Richmond,
Phone, 1034.
Private Parlors, Confidential Inst.
views and Correspondence.
The largest and most up-to-date
Hair Dressing Parlors in Richmond
The very best preparations that can
be made for the hair, scalp, face
and skin.
Graham's Superior Scalp Food for
growing hair on bald heads and
bare temples 25cts. per jar. B
mail. 35cts.
Graham's Superior Orange Flowe
Skin Fo. for developing and beauti
fying the skin. 25cts a jar. By mail
35cts.
Graham's Superior Velvet Liquid
Powder for giving the face a beauti
fial fair color. 25 cents a bottle.
By mail 35cts.
Graham's Vegetable Hair Dye the best on market giving a rich natural color, $1.00 per bottle. By mail $1.25.
Mrs. Graham makes a specialty of massaging and beautifying ladies faces for parries and public gatherings, 35 cents.
Mrs. Graham shampoos the head and puts it in a healthy condition, 25 cents.
All ladies who attend parties and other social gatherings should have their finger nails manicured and made beautiful, 25 cents.
Mrs. Graham's preparations sell at sight. Ladies living in other cities and towns can make good money by selling these preparations. Write for terms to Mrs. J. A. Graham. No. 105 E. Leigh St., Riley mond, Va.
Straighten
Your Hair
DEAR SIRS:-I have used only one bottle of
your pomade and now I would not be without it,
for it makes my hair soft, smooth straight and
easy to comb and also starts a new growth.
Miss. W. F. Walker, Sta. I—Harriman, Tenn.
Ford's Hair
Pomade
---
Those Hats.
"I read a funny story once which told how a woman put blinders on her hee-packed husband to keep him from looking at pretty girls on the street."
"No need to do that now. It's im-
"No need to do that now. It's impossible to see their faces, any way."
HOPELESS.
DIAMOND OUTPUT.
The Kimberley mines in South Africa have produced 12 tons of diamonds, valued at $5,000,000,000. So it will be absolutely useless for any social leader to hope that she may ever be able to wear all the diamonds in the world at once.
Hartshorn
College, Rich
For the Higher Education
For the Best. For Catalogue
LYMAN B. TE
THE MAGIC IS TWO TIMES LARGER THAN PICTURE 11:15 BY
STEEL HEATING BAR
ALUMNIUM CORPS
LADIES LOOK!
The Magic will not burn or injure the hair, because bar which irons the hair, is alone, put into the The Aluminum Comma is easily detached from the comb goes back into place and is held by The Magic Hexer is also suitable for curl hand bar. Magic Shampoo Drier $1.00. Magic A Write for Literature today.
orn Memorial
Richmond, Va.
Education of Young Women.
Catalogues or Information, address
N B. TEFFT, President.
PICTURE-11 I S 9 IN LONG
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER
AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $1.00
POSTAGE PAID
SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
Hartshorn Memorial College, Richmond, Va.
For the Higher Education of Young Women.
For the Best. For Catalogues or Information, address
LYMAN B. TEFFT, President.
Every lady can have a beautiful and luxuriant head of hair if she uses a MAGIC. After a shampoo or bath the Magic dries the hair, removing the dandruff, and is will straighten the earliest head of hair.
Magic Shampoo Drier Co,
W. R. ASHBURNE, D. D., A. ASHBURNE
THE ASHBUR
Manufacture
A. ASHBURNE, A. B., J. ASHBURN, JR., A. B. SHBURN BROS., Manufacturers of
SHIRTS.
Splendid Opportunity for Agents.
Three Sample Shirts. Be quick before represent a Negro Factory in your O
The Only Real Negro Manufacturers.
Helping to Solve the Negro Problems
Capacity, 50 to 100 Dozen Shirts
Employed Under Ex
Office and Factory, FRANKLIN, VA.
Agents. Large Profits Allowed. Send $2 for quick before some one else will be the first to in your Community. Manufacturers in Virginia. Shirts Made to Order. Gro Problem. Workmanship Guaranteed. Bozen Shirts Per Day...25 to 30 Workmen Under Experienced Managers. KLIN, VA. S. S. Phone 105—P. O. Box 102.
Splendid Opportunity for Agents. Large Profits Allowed. Send $2 for Three Sample Shirts. Be quick before some one else will be the first to represent a Negro Factory in your Community. The Only Real Negro Manufacturers in Virginia. Shirts Made to Order. Helping to Solve the Negro Problem. Workmanship Guaranteed. Capacity, 50 to 100 Dozen Shirts Per Day...25 to 30 Workmen Employed Under Experienced Managers.
Its wonderful how
Cream Cardozo
Brightens and Beautifies the Complexion.
An exquisite toilet cream that whitens the skin, removes pimples, blackheads, ringworms, and other facial blemishes without harming the most delicate skin. Ladies say its the best face bleach and skin cream they ever used. Order a jar to-day. Price fifty (50) cents. Mailed anywhere on receipt of price, silver or two cent samps. Prepared only at CARDOZO'S PHARMACY #1201 R Street. Washington D.C.
N. WINSTON,
CONFECTIONER.
Headquarters for Pure Ice-Cream
Wholesale and Retail.
Special Attention to Family Trade, Picnics, Excursions, Sunday Schools, Lawn Parties, Etc.
Furnished on Short Notice.
Choice Pound and Wedding Cakes furnished to Order. Foreign and Domestic
FRUITS AND DELICACIES.
N. WINSTON,
537 Brook Ave., Richmond, Va.
'Phone, 2253.
JAMESSTOWN TERCENTENNIAL EXPOSITION M.C. NILI
COMMEMORATING
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Fine Photographs. True to Life. High-class Service. Latest
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Estimates and Prompt Service...Pictures Enlarged from Old
Negatives or Photographs.
Accident.
First Sailor -Did you ever have
bad accident in the dog?
Second Sailor—Well I should say
so! Once I ran into a fellow, I owed
five dollars to in a fog!—Yonkers
Statesman.
More Up-to-Date
"Hist!" cried the handsome hero in
the heavy melodrama. "There is a
on foot!"
"What is it doing on foot?" shouted
a lad in the gallery. "Why don't it
come in an automobile?"
His Wife—Oh. I suppose a man's judgment is fairly good at times, but—
Her Husband—But what?
His Wife—A woman's instinct is always better.
Little Willie—Say, pa, what is a pessimist?
Pa—A pessimist, my son, is a man who derives most of his pleasure from his effort to spoil the pleasure of others.
Harker—That fellow Buggins is always making bad breaks.
Parker—Yes; he's one of those chaps who believe that it's never too late to mend.
Minneapolis, Minnesota.