Richmond Planet
Saturday, April 16, 1910
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
By Lucian B. Watkins.
In Shlinear plain we saw all people one,
Yea, one in tongue of language, one in faith
Of single purpose dwelt they in one place
And strove with common interest to the end
That Babel might tower shouldst arise
Far-reaching to the heaven 'bove the earth.
And it was there we saw the human world
Made different, and with different tongues became
A different country, scattered to the winds
And climes of different countries of the globe.
Each country gave its welcome to its charge*
Of human life, set to its portioned lot.
Dark Africa received her own, and here
She gave them nests of comfort in her vales.
Where, listening to the Nile's of lulabies,
They dreamed a simple life of joy and song.
They did not dream of Babel tower here
To raise them into heav'n without prayer.
But lived domestic children of a peace,
Rocked in the cradle of a sweet content.
(To Be Continued.)
Mr. Ball's Opinion—Does Not Like the Word, Negro.
Editor of The PLANET:
For some months I have been watching line after line written upon the pages of your paper, also your very able editorials, but in all I have read and have been able to understand I have not as yet heard of the "Wise men from the East" that are coming to bring peace to the millions of colored people.
The staying away of these wise men makes every hour, day and year, an earth or gloom these sad hours days and years. Until we, the colored people who are left alone to the mercy of the world.
NO ONE TO SAVE
Among the millions of colored people, Who is he or she that has come to the front to save the race? Look everywhere to day, you can not hear of a single voice that means an appeal to all the nations for the protection of the colored people. And those of the race that owe it to God, themselves and their fellowmen to speak the true conditions. Our good has gone behind that death-dealing monster the name of Negro. Playing for thousands of years in the camps of the slave holders. Even today it is hard for a colored lady to get the same respect as is shown to other ladies from every lan'. And who is to blame for it?
THE ONES TO BLAME.
Why the answer is, that those who can save us from all kinds of insults are those who love the name or Negro. They and they only are responsible for the insults to which a colored lady must be subjected every hour of her life. The colored men the world over should be ashamed. But these colored men tell you that God has suffered it to be so, and time will change these things. God has nothing to do with these insults. The females of every race should find the highest respect from all men. And it is time that every colored man having a voice in the press or pulpit to remember who is his mother, wife, or sister. The name Negro is an insult to the dead, say nothing of the living, and if education is good for anything, it should be death to the name Negro. I have never heard a meaner insult in all my life.
R. H. BALL,
Lawrence, Mass.
"How Much Should a Man Weigh?"
Prof. H. T. Kealing, A. M., of Nashville, Tenn., and editor of The A. M. E. Review, will undertake to answer the above question, in a lecture to be given at Third Street A. M. E. Church, Monday evening, April 18, 1910. The lecturer is said to be one of the most brilliant forceful, eloquent and instructive public speakers on the American platform. It will be Richmond's first opportunity to hear him. The subject is a most attractive one and a crowded house is expected to greet him.
This is to be the last event by the church for this conference year, as the pastor, Rev. E. H. Hunter starts the next day for Wytheville, Va., where the conference is to convene. The Junior Choir will sing on this occasion, directed by Madam Fannie Payne Clark and Madam Bernard Glipin will be the soloist. The lecture is given under the patronage of the Dunbar Literary Society, for the benefit of the Steward's Department.
The Tuesday Club, a musical organization instituted for the purpose of serving in the same capacity the long felt want and need among the colored music loving people of our city as that of the Wednesday Club, among the white people of the city; in that it affords an opportunity for the race to hear in oratorio and cantata work, the best and highest production of the masters. Music goes a long way toward finishing up ones education, and no race can hope to ever reach the highest point of art and civilization that neglects music, or fails to recognize it as one of the important studies necessary to complete the education of its subjects.
The Tuesday Club is doing good among the colored people, as the Wednesday Club, a similar organization, is doing among the white people. These music festivals are usually largely attended by the best element of the city, both white and colored. The management has always striven hard to give their patrons the worth of their money, and all of the festivals given by this note worthy organization have been in every way satisfactory, and it is certainly a step in the right direction by the management in that the city Auditorium has been secured by unanimous vote of the city council; being assured that good order and conduct would prevail. Every music loving citizen should not neglect such an opportunity to hear their own race produce sweet tones of melody and beautiful harmony in oratory and cantata.
Stock-holders Meeting
The annual meeting of the stock-
holders of Evergreen Cemetery Asso-
lation, was held at Johnson's Hall
at 8 o'clock. April 12, 1910.
The officers were elected as follows:
E. T. Coleman, Pres.; C. C. Smith,
Vice-President; D. J. Farrar, Sec*;
J. H. Jones, Ass't Sect*; Lewis Braxton,
Treas.; Fred N. Brown, Supt.
Board of Directors—E. T. Coleman,
Lewis Braxton, C. C. Smith,
John H. Jones, W. I. Johnson, John
H. Beard, A. D. Price, Fred N. Brown,
Walter Brown, D. J. Farrar.
Executive Committee—W. I. John-
son, Chairman, E. T. Coleman, Fred
N. Brown, C. C. Smith, D. J. Farrar.
Finance Committee—A. D. Price,
Chairman, Lewis Braxton, D. J. Farrar.
Portchester Notes
St. Francis A. M. E. Zion Church was well attended last Sunday. The Sunday School had a large attendance also.
Rev. Crews, our pastor, and Rev. Rude, of New York City, called the scholars attention to some very important points on the lesson.
The Wilmore Club met last Monday night with a membership of forty-nine. All officers were present. The club will be organized April 30, 1910, through the dispensation of the Grand Lodge of New York state.
PERSONALS AND BRIEFFS.
Mr. W. C. Hemmings, or Dillwyn, Va., was in the city this week.
Miss DelSeine Maxwell, formerly Mrs. Wingfield, was married to Mr. James B. Fergusson, at the parsonage of Presbyterian Church, April 5, 1910.
Mrs. V. A. Smith, wife of Major John G. Smith, is dangerously ill. She was reported as being something better at the time of our latest enquiry.
Messrs. W. L. Young, W. R. Young, B. S. Johnson and D. H. Rlch, of Caroline County, Va., were in the city on business this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Haskins, of New York, have just returned from Florida and are now the guests of Mrs. Agnes Taylor, 732 North Fifth Street, and will be pleased to meet their friends.
Mrs. Helen G. Wilson (nee Carter), formerly of this city, but now residing in New York, is in the city. Mrs. Wilson was called here about two weeks ago on account of the death of her brother. She will be glad to see her many friends at the residence of Mrs. S. S. Baker, 909 North Seventh Street.
Child Wanted
I DESIRE A CHILD OR A BABY to keep as my own. Please address MRS. G. BROWN, Windsor P. O., Isle of Wight County, Va.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1910
Colored Lawyer Refuses to Plead Before Prejudiced Court.
Something of a sensation was produced during the closing sessions of the army court of inquiry which is investigating the Brownsville raid of August, 1906, by statements made by U. B. Marshall of the Washington bar, who was associated with Brig. Gen. A. R. Daggett, U. S. Army, retired, as counsel for the negro soldiers seeking restoration to the army.
Attorney Marshall declined the offer of the court to submit an argument on the general ground that it would serve no purpose and implied broadly that the court had been improperly instructed by the Secretary of War, and that he recorder of the court, Capt. Charles R. Howland, 21st Infantry, had made no effort to produce any evidence favorable to the discharged soldiers.
BASIS FOR DECLINATION
In declining to argue the case Mr. Marshall gave two specific reasons as follows:
"First. Because the procedure adopted by the recorder (Capt. Howland), and acquiesced in by this court, leaves it undetermined in my mind whether this court is a court of inquiry or a court martial; or, in other words, whether the recorder is an impartial investigating officer or a prosecuting officer.
Second. Because the instructions of the Secretary of War to this court conflict $s_0$ fundamentally and totally with my legal training as to make it impossible for me to build an argument which would attempt to prove a negative."
"For these reasons," said Mr. Marshall, "I can neither argue nor can I appeal to your merciful consideration. For, in all honor, this honorable court is bound by the limitations imposed by the authority from which its instructions proceed."
WHAT RECORD OF COURT SHOWS
"The record of this court will show that I offered to produce testimony of an affirmative and positive character, giving the names of the participants (persons not in the military service of the government) in and details of an alleged conspiracy to commit this crime.
"The record of this court will also show that no effort has been spared to produce before this court evidence no matter how filmy or circumstantial, which might in the slightest degree tend to demonstrate the guilt of the men who formerly defended the flag and the honor of this, our common country."
The particular instructions given by Secretary Dickinson to the court at the outset of the investigation, to which Mr. Marshall took especial exception, are as follows:
"Such conclusions as may be reached by the court in respect to the eligibility for re-enlistment of the former enlisted men of the 25th Infantry, at Brownsville, who were separated from the military service in the operation of discharges without honor, should be affirmative and positive in character and based upon such preponderance of testimony as will support its specific finding."
NO INFANTRYMAN VINDICATED
The court listened to the lawyer's remarks without comment, and are ranged to sit again next Monday to hear the closing address of Capt. Howland, which will include a summary of the evidence submitted to the court together with his conclusions thereon.
It is understood that he will claim that the evidence showed conclusively that the "shooting up" of Brownsville was done by the soldiers of the 25th Infantry, and that not a single one of the number examined had proved affirmatively that he had not participated in the raid or that he had not some knowledge of it.
The Mechanics' Savings Bank
There has been much interest shown at the new Mechanics' Savings Bank building, at the corner or Third and Clay Streets, this week. Work on the hauling of the new vault to the building was begun last Monday and Mr. N. Anderson, the vault constructor of the York Safe and Lock Company, of York, Pa., is here doing the work. The vault door and vestibule weigh nearly twelve tons and it took one whole flat car to bring that here.
The other material occupied a freight car loaded to its full capacity. The combined weight was over twenty tons, or forty thousand pounds. The door is in position and it will take about three weeks to install this latest device for the safety of money. The round door is now in position and the door alone weighs about nine tons. It has attracted the attention of both white and colored people, and curious crowds are always standing around looking.
The inside of the banking room is now being frescoed. The steel ceiling is greatly aired.
Death or Colored Girl Is Topic of Hour in Hampton.
Hampton, Va., April 11.—The coroner's jury has just rendered the following verdict: The said Rebecca Chandler came to her death by reason of acute lobar pneumonia at Dixie Hospital on April 9, 1910, following an alleged criminal assault committed March 31, 1910, by E. A. Vandyke.
Hampton Bureau, Times-Herald, April 11.—Coroner George K. Vanderslice, is today investigating the facts surrounding the death of Rebecca Taylor Chandler, the nine-year-old colored girl, whose death at Dixie Hospital at a late hour Saturday evening is the sensation of the hour. E. A. Vandyke, the white man who is held in the Hampton jail charged with the horrible crime of assaulting the child, has asserted his innocence of the crime and employed counsel to defend him.
The coroner's jury which is investigating the case is composed of J. V. Jones, L. N. Mears, R. H. Richardson, Thomas M. Keaton, J. D. Hicks, Jr., and H. B. Johnson.
It is in the province of the jury to ascertain the cause of the death of the child and place the responsibility therefor.
Following the child's death on Saturday evening Sheriff Curtis notified the coroner, who summoned the above jury, which made some preliminary investigations yesterday and adjourned until today.
Today the jury has been making a pains-taking investigation into the cause of death of the child and will probably conclude its investigation by tonight.
The child has been critically ill ever since a day or two following the alleged assault. She was said by the attending physicians to have been terribly injured. Pneumonia, however set in and was the immediate cause of the death.
It is probable that Vandyke will be held responsible for causing the death of the child.—Newport News Times-Herald.
ALLEGED VICTIM
OF VANDYKE DEAD
Hampton Negro Girl, Said to be Criminally Assaulted, Dies in Hospital.
Rebecca Taylor Chandler, nine years old, the alleged victim or E. A. Vandyke, the white man row in the Hampton jail charged with criminal assault, died in the Dixie hospital yesterday afternoon. According to the physicians the child's death was due to pneumonia, brought on by exposure on the occasion that Vandyke is alleged to have mistreated her.
Following the child's death, Sheriff R. K. Curtis, informed Dr. George K. Vandershe, the coroner, and the latter decided that an investigation of the facts in connection with the crime charged against Vandyke was necessary. The sheriff then summoned a jury consisting of J. Vaughan Jones, L. N. Mears, R. H. Kichardson, Thomas W. Keaton, J. D. Hicks, Jr., and H. B. Johnson.
The jury went to the hospital and after viewing the remains of the dead child, adjourned over until this afternoon at 4 o'clock, when the investigation will take place in the office of Sheriff R. K. Curtis.
ILL EVER SINCE
Dr. Caesar Bassett, who attended the child, and Drs. W. E. Atkins and Harry D. Howe, who were called in consultation, will be witnesses before the coroner's jury, while the child's mother and a small colored boy will also give testimony.
The child was taken sick soon after returning to her home on the day that the alleged crime is said to have been committed on Thursday of last week and her condition continued to grow more serious.
Friday pneumonia developed and the child was then removed to the Dixie hospital. While none of the physicians will discuss the case, it is understood that he child was horribly bruised and internally injured.
MEANS MURDER CHARGE
Vandyke, who is confined in the jail, stoutly denies his guilt and declares that he will be able to prove his innocence when the preliminary hearing is taken up. He retained Fay S. Collier as his attorney.
In the event that the investigation of the circumstances in connection with the death should show that the child died from the effects of the treatment she received, Vandyke will also likely have to answer the additional charge of murder. In either charge against him the severest penalty is death.
Vandyke's wife is said to be desperately ill. She and her children are living in LaSalle avenue.
A PECULIAR CASE
MraBonaparte to Make a Great Legal Argument.
Washington, D. C., April 5. — Protesting against what he terms an attempt in some Southern State again to reduce the negro to captivity, Charles J. Bonaparte, formerly Attorney-General of the United States, today filed a brief in the Supreme Court of the United States in behalf of "Pink" Franklin, a South Carolina negro under stentence to be hanged on a charge of murder. The negro's appeal to the Supreme Court will be argued orally in about two weeks. It promises to bring to the fore the question of the status of "agricultural contracts," to which objection has been raised. The negro was under an "agricultural contract" to work for J. D. Thomas, in Orangeburg county, S. C., in 1907. He quit before the contract obligation was completed. A statute had been passed in South Carolina making it a misdemeanor for a laborer to break such a contract if he had become indebted to his employer. On the ground that Franklin had violated the statute of the State, a warrant was sworn out for his arrest. The constable, H. E. Valentine, in attempting to arrest the negro, went to the latter's house, entered and was killed. Franklin was convicted of the murder.
Mr. Bonaparte's brief attempts to show that the negro had a right to resist arrest and protect himself, his family and his domicile, because the statute on which the warrant was based has been held $t_0$ be obnoxious to the State Constitution, and that any attempt to enforce its provisions by arrest of a person in the situation of Franklin constituted a crime against the United States under the laws forbidding neonage.
Capt. A. C. Brown Gone.
The Second Baptist Church was packed from "pit to dome" last Sunday morning at 11:30 o'clock, the occasion being the funeral of A. C. Brown, a well-known and popular letter-carrier, who died after a brief illness The choir sang admirably well and Rev. Z. D. Lewis, D. D. delivered one of his best sermons, deeply affecting those who had come to hear him. The men in the mall service sat in a body, while Mr. W. P. Burrell had charge of the boy cadets that Mr. Brown once commanded. The deceased was a faithful officer and member of the Second Baptist Church. Funeral Director W. Isaac Johnson, officiated. The floral designs were numerous and costly. One of the wreaths seemed to be about four feet in diameter.
Grand Turn-out at Centralia, Va
Centralia, Va., April 5.—The Knights of Pythias and Courts of Calanthe of Centralia, Va., accompanied by Chester Lodge, observed their anniversary in Centralia Baptist Church March 27, 1910. The church was handsomely decorated with cut flowers and ferns, which won the attention of many.
The Uniform Rank and Sir Knights met at the Pythian Hall and marched to the church, where they were met by the Courts of Calanthe. Services began at 2 o'clock. A short program was rendered by the Courts of Calanthe and Knights of Pythias, as follows:
Singing, by the choir. Prayer, by Sir Willie Patterson. Address on Pythianism, by Sir Emmet Shepard. Solo, by Sister Emma Bromley, which was elegant. Paper on Calantheism, by Sister Rosa B. Wilkerson. Captain Wm. White, acting as Master of Ceremonies. Rev. W. H. Bolling, of Chester Lodge, C. C. for the day, after which an elegant sermon was delivered by Rev. M. C. Ruffin, of Richmond, Va., which was heartily enjoyed by the members of the order and friends also. Music was then rendered by the choir of Centralia Baptist Church, after which collection was taken up. The sum of $12.00 was lifted.
DR. WIMPELBERY. EYE-SIGHT SPECIALIST, is now permanently located at 18 East Marshall Street. Eyes examined free. Special attention given school children. Office hours: 3 to 8 P. M.
Natural Life. Do you love it? Read "Natural Life in the Human World." The big little booklet. Interests everybody. 10 cents. Address LIUCIAN B. WATKINS, M. T. D., Ft. Russell, Wyoming.
WANTED—A Good Baker on Bread and Cakes. Write E. P. BLAIR, Pulaski, Va.
STH ST. BAPT. CHURCH.
Located, Cor. 5th and Jackson Sts.
RICHMOND, VA.
Weekly News Column.
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., Pastor
Residence:
108 E. Leigh St., Richmond, Va
The well-known proverb, "In Union there is strength," is a lesson which should be daily taught and practiced. There can be no true success where this element of character is wanting. Whatever may be one ideas and purposes, success will not cheer, unless this element together with others, is moulded and blended in a focus.
No church or people can succeed with an unfading success where they are not taught and practiced. Be it ever remembered that Union is a Divine precept and attribute. Let him who would succeed think and consider that to obey is better than sacrifice. In the light of such teaching hath the members in general of the Fifth Street Baptist Church united to further the purposes of God, cheered by the perfect law and sure testimony of the Prince of Peace. They are buoyantly working to succeed in every loyal effort put forth for advancement and encouragement along all true lines. It is not how much one knows; but the good that one does, that sounds his life faithful and true.
At its last meeting the members of the Fifth Street Baptist Church, added another plank to its plans, looking to the celebration of its Thirtieth anniversary. A number of committees were appointed whose names will be given hereafter. A hearty spirit characterized the meeting in onward and forward march seems to be the watchword of all.
Last Sunday the church enjoyed some of the blessings of the faithful. At 9:30 Supt. Prof. B. H. Peyton opened the Sunday School. The teachers and officers were in their respective positions. A fair attendance of pupils were present with eager desire for the fruit gathered at this service. All were pleased to meet Mrs. Mamie Black, wife of Deacon Edward Black, of Savannah, Ga. The entire service was good.
At 11:30 o'clock church services began. Owing to the absence of Miss Edmonia Anderson, who is sick, Mr. R. H. Fauntleroy presided at the organ. The choir rendered sweet music as usual. Everybody likes to hear the choir sing.
Our Pastor, Rev. W. F. Graham preached an extraordinary fine sermon. Feeding his congregation with the needed food plying to a degree suited to their situation. He knows his people and their needs. No one can get closer to them than he can. God called and ordained him for the Fifth Street Baptist Church. There is no doubt in our minds about that. He suits the Fifth Street Baptist Church better than any other preacher, and the Fifth Street Baptist Church suits him better than any other people. Equality is equity, and equity is a principle of divinity.
At 3:30 o'clock the National Baptist Sunday School Union convened with Pres. Prof. B. H. Peyton, presiding. The entire exercises were will rendered. The program will be published in our next issue. At night the day's services were closed by a good sermon from the Pastor.
The B. Y. P. U. will meet Friday night. Come out at 8 o'clock. Pres. John W. Howard wants to meet every member.
The prayer services are getting along nicely. Come out every Wednesday night at 8:30 o'clock and enjoy yourselves.
It is announced that the marriage of Miss Jeannette H. Mitchell to Mr. W. H. Brooks will take place Thursday, evening, April 21, 1910, at 8 o'clock P. M. at Fifth Street Baptist Church. We wish them success.
The anniversary exercises or Theban Beneficial Club will take place Sunday, April 17, 1910 at 3:30 P. M., at Fifth Street Baptist Church. The following program will be rendered:
Song, Choir
INVOCATION
Scripture Reading,
Chap. L. V. Eggleston
Solo Miss Cora B. Epps
Welcome Address,
Mr. R. H. Fauntleroy
Response Pres. J. O. West
Quartette, (Harmony)
Matthews, Gilpin, Smith and Hill
Sermon Dr. W. F. Graham
Collection E. L. Banks, F. B. Miller
PART II.
Solo Dr. Q. W. Moon
Recitation Miss Alice E. Smith
Solo Miss Blanche V. Bullock
Quartette, (Coronella), Misses
Epps, Nelson, Phillips and West
Solo. Mr. Frank J. Mayo
Benediction
William W. Wilson,
Master of Ceremonies
Ushers—Misses Bertha E. Thompson.
Alberta Hughes, Susie A. Monroe,
Cynthia Edmondson, Mesdames
L. O. Bland, Juanita Norrell Peterson.
The Pastor will preach next Sunday morning and night.
Don't forget to re-register your name.
The Fifth Street Baptist Church is making preparations for representation at he Virginia Baptist State Convention May 11, 1910, at Suffolk, Va.
MRS. HICKMON PASSES AWAY
Well-Known By All
Manchester, Va., April 9, 1910.—The death of Mrs. M. Rosa Hickon of 119 E. 15th St., Manchester, Va., who departed this life Monday night, April 4, 1910 at 11:20 o'clock, marked the passing away of one of the oldest and most respected residents in the Southside city.
She was a member of the First Baptist Church and had been a faithful and consistent Christian ever since her conversion. Many were the words of encomium spoken of her as were shown by the number of resolutions of condolence and papers read by Prof. James H. Blackwell in his usual calm and pathetic manner.
The funeral took place from the above named church Thursday afternoon, April 7th at 2:30 o'clock. Rev Dr. A. Binga, preached a very sympathetic sermon, picturing her true Christian life as she had lived it ever since he had known her—for more than thirty years.
Mr. Richard Drew, her brother, of Washington, D. C., was in attendance of the funeral.
Miss Dawson of Richmond rendered a sweet and touching solo, as did also Deacon Munford.
The pall bearers were Deconcs George Archer, C. H. Munford, S. W. Johnson, Sydney Hilton, George Cunningham and John Washington, Sr. The interment was in Maury's Cemetery.
She leaves a devoted husband, 2 brothers, sister, 2 daughters and a host of relatives and friends to mourn their loss. "Peace to her ashes!"
"Her loving relatives stood around, Loath to let her go. She shouted with an expiring breath And left them here below."
Her Cousin,
JNO. R. COGBILL
The Golden Wedding Postponed.
. On account of the death of their niece, Mrs. M. B. Hickmon, the Golden Wedding Celebration of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Cogbill, Sr. was postponed to May 5th, 1910.
Struck by a Base Ball
Little Luther Seldon, a pupil in the public schools (colored) of Manchester, was seriously injured in the head Wednesday by a base ball, thrown by one of his playmates. He was knocked unconscious.
In Memoriam
James West died at 910 12 North
Third Street, April 18, 1909.
"May he rest in peace."
Oh, father, thy gentle voice is hushed.
Twy warm true heart is still.
And on thy pale and peaceful face
is resting death's cold chill.
Thy hands are clasped upon thy breast
We've kissed thy marbled brow,
And in our aching hearts we know
We have no father now.
There was an angel band in heaven
That was not quite complete,
So God book our darling father
To fill the vacant seat.
Darling father, you have left us
You have left us for ever more;
But we hope to meet our loved one
On that bright and happy shore.
MRS. CLARA LIGHTFOOT,
MRS. LUCY EPPS.
Here We Are!
Prof. D. W. Davis will give his famous lecture on Fits and Misfits, at St. Lukes Hall, on Tuesday, April 26, 1910, for benefit of Grand Solar Star Association.
Prof. Billy Smith's quartette will sing some of their latest songs. Come out and help us to laugh. Admission ten cents.
W. HENRY JONES,
MRS. M. E. MATTHEWS, Chor.,
M. P. TYLBR, Secty.
THROUGH THE WALL
By
CLEVELAND MOFFEET
Copyright, 1909, by D. Appleton & Co.
CHAPTER XII
HEN brought to the Annsby by the pollc authorities and shown the two rooms of the tragedy kittridge was perfectly calm and denied any knowledge of the affair. He had never seen these holes through the wall. He had never been in the alleyway. He was also nately innocent. Mattre Pleidnaux, his lawyer, nodded in approval. At the morgue, however I lived allowed a certain emotion when a door was opened suddenly and he was pushed into a room where he saw Martinez sitting on a chair and laying at him Martinez with his shattered eye replaced by a glass coil and his dead face painted to a horrible sumbance of life. This is one of the theatre tricks of modern procedure, and the Amerian was not prepared for it "My God be muttered" "He look alive!" Nothing was accomplished however by the questioning here Nothing was exported from the prison
While his heroes were still tinging with the greediness of all the Lloyds were brought to Judge Haleville's village on the banks of Justice He was told to sit down on a chair beable Mae Haleilleut A police secretary sat at his desk. After a guard alerted of before the door was a saber swung in his belt The examination began "Kitterreige began the judge have dental all knowledge of crime Look at this pistol and tell if you have ever seen it before
DARREN
"MY GOD!" HE MUTTED. "THE LOOKS ALIVE"
offered the pistol to Lloyd a manacled hands Maitre Plioindeaux took it, with a frown of surprise
"Excuse me, my honor" he bowed
"I would like to speak to my client the fore he answers that question"
But Kittredge waved him aside
"What's the use?" he said "That is my pistol"
"Ah!" exclaimed Hauteville. It is also the pistol that killed Martinez.
"Now," continued the judge, "you say you have never been in the alley way that we showed you at the Annoonia. Look at those boots. Do you recognize them?"
In opposition to the advice of his counsel Kittredge now admitted the ownership of the boots that had made the accusing footprints, but he dented to Hauterville that he had ever quarreled with Martinez. At this Hauterville produced the letter Kittredge had written Mrs. Wiltmott regarding Martinez.
"There was a quarrel, and you did threaten him?"
"I advise my client not to answer that question," interposed the lawyer, and the American was silent.
"As you please," said Hauterville, and he went on grimly "Kittredge, you have so far refused to speak of the lady to whom you wrote this letter. She was your mistress. Do you deny that?"
"Yes," cried the American.
"Ah!" shrugged the judge, and, turning to his secretary, "Ask the lady to come in."
Then in a moment of sickening min
Copyright, 1900, by D. Appleton & Co.
I don't suppose the lady" said Kittredge. "I think sent after she enquired with her. And the man committed a single piousness. We have the man
pected the late Mr. L. F. Littler to the old friend from her the story of her life with his troglodyte girl. This was in New York about a year ago. Mr. W. Wither, not a good friend with the trip and being unhappy was a friend of her friends written in the country who had seen a good friend of Mr. Knappidge she had met in the young friend for her wife consolated in New York and had grown fond of her. Let to the realized it he was sir only infatuated and the end of it was when she returned to Paris and I was fond of another stranger in the city of Paris processing it the ideal life up a hill and getting to trouble with it.
Yeah. He gave me a kick in the
I hope he'd educate me at the
fany's I love flushed under the
judges searching book I wouldn't
have accepted but that I should
just as I was saying for the
I sent it to the teacher
Ah! Have a look at the book
Matterdge and find that
on the same site as that arrived you.
No, she should be. I know
the passport and it was of among
them.
"He was not arriving the first cabin
passengers.
You must arrive by boat in the
middle of what I had been it."
No, he had arrived Hortonville with a
girl, a little boy, but got in the second
cabin he went to the storage.
In the storage, she murmured
against
"And during the five or six months
here in Paris while he was dancing at
tendance on you he was practically
without resources."
"I know better, she insisted. He
took me out all the time and spent
money freely.
The judge shook his head.
He spent on you what he got by pawning
his jewelry by gambling and some
times by not eating. We have the
facts."
"Mon then she shuddered. And I never knew it. I never suspected it."
"This is to make quite clear that he loved you as very few women have been loved. Now I want to know why you quarrelled with him six months ago."
"I don't know. Really I don't know." she insisted with a weary gesture.
"Then I must do what I can to make you know he replied impatiently and, reaching forward he pressed the electric bell."
"Bring back the prisoner he or ordered as the guard appeared, and a moment later Kittredge was again in his place.
"Now," began Hauteville, addressing both Lloyd and Mrs. Wiltmott. "I come to an important point. I have here a packet of letters written by you. Kittredge, to this indy. You have already identified the handwriting as your own, and you, madam, will not deny that these letters were addressed to you. You admit that, do you not? "Yes," answered Pussy weakly. The judge turned over the letters and selected one, from which he read an admiring passage. He took out his watch and laid it on the desk before him. "Madam, I will give you five minutes. Unless you admit within that time what is perfectly evident—namely, that you were fond of this man—I shall continue the reading of these letters before your husband." "You're taking a cowardly advantage of a woman" she blurt out. "No," answered Hauteville sternly. "I am investigating a cowardly murder." He glanced at his watch. "Four minutes!"
Then to Kiltridge, "And unless you admit this thing I shall summon the girl from Notre Dame and let her say what she thinks of this correspondence."
Lloyd staggered under the blow. "Two minutes!" said Hauteville coldly. Then he turned to Mrs. Wilimott. "Your husband is now at his club. One of our men is there also, awaiting my orders. He will get them by telephone and will bring your husband here in a awit automobile. You have one minute left." Now his dinger finger advanced toward the white button. Then she yielded. "Stop!" cams her low cry. "I did love him."
"That is better," said the judge. And the acclaiming of the greeter's poe recorded unalterably Mrs. Wilimott's hawaii.
"I don't suppose you will contradict the lady" said Huntville turning to Kittredge. "I take your silence as consent and offer all the lady's confession is sufficient. You were in love with her. And the evidence shows that you committed a crime based on malicious jeubousy and barred of a rival. We have the motive for the murder and the evidence that you committed the murder. What have you to say for yourself?"
"I threatened to punch his head. That is very different from killing him." And the platoon. "And the footprints?"
"I don't know I can't explain it, but I know I am unconcerned. You say I had a motive for this crime. You're mistaken. I had no motive."
"Didn't you follow her to Europe in the stoerage because of your infatuation? Didn't you bear sufferings and privations to be near her? Shall I go over the details of what you did, as I have them here, in order to refresh your memory"
"No said Kurtidge honestly, and his eye was beginning to flame. My memory needs no refreshing. I am fighting for my life and now that she has admitted this thing, he eyed the woman so fearfully. I am free to tell the truth all of it.
"That is what we want," said Hauteville.
"I thought I lost her with a fine, true love, but she showed me it was only a base limitation. I offered her my life are future, and she would have taken them and broken them and scattered them at my face and and laughed at me. I well never mind, but you can not all your pretty French philosophy. I didn't go about Paris looking for forlorn players to kill on a count."
"Then, why did you quarrel with Martina?," she danced the judge.
"Because he was interfering with a woman whom I did love and would fight for."
"For God sake, stop," whispered the lawyer.
"Then you consider your love for this other woman. I presume you mean the girl at Notre Dame?"
"Yes."
"You consider your love for her a fine, pure love in contrast to the other love?"
"The other wasn't love."
The teacher wasn't here.
As Haunderie listened his frowly deepened his eyes grew harder. That's all she once "he" objected, "but if you hated this woman why did you risk prison and worse to get her things? You know what you were
her things? You know what you were risking I "opposed."
"Yes I knew."
"Why did you do it?"
Kittigele hesitated "I did it for- for what she had been to me I meant and disagree for her, and well if she could ask such a thing I could grant it. It was like paying a debt and I paid mine."
The judge turned to Mrs. Waltmott. "Did you know that he had ceased to love you?"
I pussy Waltmott with her fine eye to the floor answered almost in a whisper. "Yes I knew it."
"Do you know what he means by saying that you would have spilled his life and all that?"
"You do know" ried the American "You know I had given you my life in sacred pledge, and you made a plaything of it. You told me you were unhappy married to a man you loathed, a dull brute. But when I offered you freedom and my love you drew back. When I negged you to leave him and become my wife, with the law's sanction you said no, because I was poor and he was rich. You wanted me but you wanted your luxury too. Love! What did you know about love? You wanted me along with your case and pleasures, and you couldn't have me on those terms. Not!"
"On the whole, I think he's guilty," concluded the judge an hour later, speaking to Coquenil.
"Quercet" muttered the detective. "He says he had three pairs of boots." Coquenil had drawn two squares of shiny paper from his pocket and was studying them with a magnifying glass. Suddenly his face lighted, and he sprang to his feet. "Great God of heaven!" he cried in excitement, his eyes glued to the magnifying glass, his whole soul concentrated on those two pieces of paper, evidently photographs.
"What is it? What have you found?" asked the judge.
"The allway footprints are not identical with the soles of Kittredge's boots."
"But you said they were. The experts said they were."
"We were imitated. They are almost identical, but not quite. In shape and size they are identical. In the number and placing of the nails in the heel they are identical. In the worn places they are identical, but when you compare them under the magnifying glass this photograph of the footprints with this one of the
Door when you are dimmestreamed, differentness is the scedrother on separate nail in the heel, unmistakable difference. There are slight differences in size in position, in wear. They are not the same set of nails. It's impossible. Look for yourself. Compare any two and you'll see that they were never in the same pair of boots. "It seems true; it certainly seems true." Hauteville grumbled, "but how do you account for it?"
Coquenni smiled. "Kittridge told you he had three pairs of boots. They were maching made and the same size. He says he kept them all going, so they were all worn approximately alike. We have the pair that he wore that night and another pair found in his room, but the third pair is missing. It's the third pair of boots that made those alleyway footprints. I think we shall have found Martinez's murderer when we find the man who stole that third pair of boots, unless Kittridge lied when he told that girl he had never suffered with gout or rheumatism."
CHAPTER XIIY
"FROM HIGHER OR"
A part of a day's work M Paul had taken steps for the finding of the anger dropped into the Selby by Pussy Wiltmott, and betimes on the morning after that day's examination a diver began work along the Concorde bridge under the guidance of a young detective named Bobet, selected for this duty by M Paul himself. Another man was circulating in and out among friends of Martinez, whom he must study one by one until the false friend had been discovered. And another thread was hurrying still another man along the trail of the fascinating Anuta, for Coquill wanted to find out why she had changed her mind that night and what she knew about the key to the alleyway door, somebody gave that key to the assassin! Besides all this, and more important, M Paul had planned a piece of work for Papa Tignol when the old man reported for instructions this same Wednesday morning
"Ah. Tignol," he exclaimed, with a buoyant smile. "It's a five day, all the birds are singing, and—we're going to do great things." He rubbed his hands exultantly. "I want you to do a little job at the Hotel des Erangers, where Kittredge lived. You are to take a room on the sixth floor if you can afford and spend your time playing the fute."
"Playing the fute!" gasped Tignol. "I don't know how to play the fute!" "All the better." Spend your time learning. There is no one who gets so quickly in touch with his neighbors as a man learning to play the fute."
"Ah," grinned the other shrewdly, "you're after information from the sixth floor." "Fh. Ah? A droll idea! I'll learn to play the fute!"
"Meet me at 9 tonight at the Three Wise Men and--good luck. I'm off to the Sante."
He proposed to make Lloyd walk back and forth several times in a pair of his own boots over soft earth in the prism yard and then show the impressions of these new footprints were different in the pressure marks and probably in the length of stride from those left in the alleyway. This would be further indication, along with the differences already noted in the nails that the alleyway footprints were not made by Kittedge.
Not made by Kittredge, reflected the detective but by a man wearing Kittredge's boots, a man wearing the missing third pair the stolen pair. Ah there was a nut to crack! This man must have stolen the boots, as he had doubtless stolen the pistol, to throw suspicion on an innocent person. "It was essential to his purpose that the boots be found in Kittredge's room. He must have intended to return them. Something quite unforeseen must have prevented him from doing so. What had prevented the assailant from returning Kittredge's boots?
As soon as Coquennil reached the prison he was shown into the director's private room, and he noticed that M. Miedet received him with suspicion. "What's the trouble?" he asked.
"Everything the devil did you mean by sending that girlsto me?" "What did I mean?" repeated Coquennil. "Didn't also tell you what she wanted?"
Dedet made no reply, but he searched among some envelopes and produced a square of faded blotting paper. "There" he said. And, with a heavy finger, he pointed to a scrawl of words. "There's what she wrote, and you know d— well you put her up to it." "I have no idea what this means," declared Coquiln.
"You lie!" rotortod the tailer
You me, returned the jaller.
M. Paul sprang to his feet. "Take that back!" he ordered, with a look of menace, and the rough man grumbled an apology. "Just the same," he muttered, "it's mighty queer how she knew it unless you told her."
"Knew what?"
The jaller eyed Coquenil searchingly. "Nom d'un chien, I guess you're straight after all, but how did she come to write that?" He scratched his dull head in my magnification.
"I have no idea."
Coquenil took off his glasses and rubbed them carefully. Then without more discussion he left the prison and drove directly to the Palais de justice to see Hauserville, who had previously summoned him. What did this mean? What could it mean?
As he approached the lower arm of the river he saw Bobet saunting along the quay.
"What are you doing here?" he asked. "I told you to watch that diver."
The young detective shrugged his shoulders. "The job's done. He found the auger."
"Ah! Where is it?"
"I gave it to M. Gibellin because he told me to."
"You must be crazy! You take your orders from me."
"Do it!" laughed the other. "M. Gibellin says I take orders from him."
"Well see about this," muttered M. Ranl. He entered the contrarnd of
the Palais de Justice and hurried to the office of Judre Hauteville. On the wrists he met Gigelin.
"See here," he said abruptly, "what have you done with that auger?"
"Put it in the department of old iron," rasped the other. "We can't waste time on foolish claws."
Coquell glared at him. "We can't, oh! I suppose you have decided that?" "Precisely," retorted Gigelin.
"And you've been giving orders to young Bobet?"
"Go in there and you'll find gut," sneered the fat man, jerking a derisive thumb toward Hauteville's door. M. Paul entered the judge's private room.
"My den?" Coquell, exclaimed Hauteville, with corollal hand extended, "I'm glad to see you, but you must prepare for bad news. They have taken you off the force. Your commission is conceded."
"For influencing Dedet to break a rule about a prisoner an unsecret"
"I thought the girl might get important evidence from her lover"
"No doubt, but you ought to have asked me for an order. I am afraid you will have to suffer"
"Did you make the complaint?"
"No, no." The order came from higher up"
"And I am discharged from the force—discharged in disguise. Then I'll tell you what Gibbett will do and that is important. He will let this American go to trial and be found guilty for want of evidence that would save him"
"Not if I can help it," replied Hauteville
"Thanks," said M Paul "I think I have a word with the chief"
The cliff come out, followed by a black bearded judge, who was bidding him obsequious farewell
As M Simon moved away briskly his eye fell on the waiting detective, and his genial face clouded
"Ah, Coquenil," he said "I'm sorry about this business"
"Sorry?" exclaimed M Paul So is Hauteville sorry but if you re sorry why did you let the thing happen?"
M. Simon laid a warning finger on his lips. "This is in strictest confidence. The order came through his office, but I don't believe the prefet de police issued it personally. It came from higher up."
Coquell kept his appointment that night at the Three Wise Men and found Papa Tignol waiting for him, his face troubled even to the tip of his luminous purple nose. Later, with Tignol and Pougeet, he started on a ride in a taxi cab which mystified his two companions. During the ride, which took them into the country,
Coquenil ordered the chauffeur to knock at the door of a desirately located house. No sooner had the operator obeyed when Coquenil climbed into the chauffeurs seat and started the machine ahead at full speed despite the cries and imprecations of the deserted machinist, who plunged desperately after the machine. "That was Gibellin," laughed the great detective to his astounded companions. "He was the chauffeur and was spying on me. He'll have only fifteen miles to walk to reach Paris."
During the return to Paris Coquenil
said to Soulet in very serious tones:
said to Pougeon in very serious tones: "I may have to call on you suddenly. You may get some strange message by some querc messenger Look at this ring Will you know it—a brown stone marked with Greek characters? It's a talisman. You'll listen to any one who brings you this ring, old friend, eh?" Pougeon grasped M Paul's hand and wrung it affectionately They went to the room of Tignol, who announced to Coquenil, "I have found a little shrimp of a photographer who has seen your murderer, all right." "The death!" started M Paul "Where?" Tignol pointed out of a window to a balcony running along the front of the hotel. "There! There are six rooms opening on that balcony" Taking a sheet of paper he made a rough diagram
"Now, then, continued Papa Tignell surveying his handwork with pride "I think that is clear B. here, is the balcony just outside, and there are the six rooms with windows opening on it. We are in this room, D. I my friend the little photographer is in the next room, E, peacefully sleeping but he wasn't peaceful when he came home tonight, and heard me playing that tune, although I played in my best manner—eh, eh? He stood it for about ten minutes, and then, eh, eh? It was another case of through the wall, first one boot, bang, then another boot, smash, only there were no holes for the boots to come through. And then it was profanity!" "Well, well!" frretted Coenbill.
Won, then woot Treated Coquennel.
"Then we got acquainted. I apologized and offered him beer, which he likes. Then he apologized and told me his troubles. He's in love with a pretty dressmaker who lives in this Room C. She is fair, but sickle. He tells me she has made him unhappy by drying with a medical student who lives in this Room G. It sooms the little photographer has been getting more and more jealous lately. He was satisfied that his adylove and the medical student used this balcony as a lover's lane, and he began lying in wait at his window for the medical student to steal past toward the dressmaker's room. For several nights last week he waited and nothing happened. But he's a patient little shrimp, so he waited again at Saturday night, and something did happen."
"The night of the murder."
That's it. He saw a man pass his window, and he was sure it was the medical student. He stepped out softly, and followed him, as far as the window of Room C. Then he sprang upon the man from behind, intending to
chasties him. The man turned on him like a cash, and it wasn't the medical student."
"Who was it? Go on!"
Who was it? 16. What is anything about the man except that his hand slut like
THE
"PARBLED MUTTERED THE BUMP,
a vise on the shrimp throat and nearly choked the life out of him. You can see the nail marks still on the cheek and neck, but he remembers distinctly that the man carried something in his hand."
"My God! The missing pair of boots!" cried Coquenil. "Was it? Tignol nodded "Sure" He was carrying 'em loose in his hand. I mean they were not wrapped up. He was going to leave 'em in Kittridge's room. Here it is. A" He pointed to the diagram.
"It's true. It must be true," murmured M Paul "And what then?" "Nothing. I guess the man saw it was only a shrimp he had hold of so he shook him two or three times and dropped him back into his own room, and no he said a word." $
Coquenil's face grew somber. "It was the scream!" he said. "There
not about it. The detective
told short. Great heavens," he
helled. "I can prove it. You say his nail
marks show."
Tignol shrugged his shoulders. "They
show as little scratches."
"Little scratches are all I want,"
said the other snapping his fingers ex-
citedly. It is simply a question which
also of his throat bears the thumbl
mark. We know the murderer is a
left handed man and, being sudden-
attacked he certainly used the full
strength of his left hand in the first
desperate chutch. He was facing the
man as he took him by the throat, so
if he used his left hand the thumb
mark must be on the left side of the
photographer's throat, whereas if a
right handed man had done it the
thumb mark would be on the right
side."
"Yes," said Tignol.
"Now bring the man in here."
"I'll get him in," said the commis-sary.
A few moments later was brought in a thin, sleepy little person wrapped in a red dressing gown.
The photographer stood meekly for inspection while Coquenil studied the marks on his face. There, plainly marked on the left side of the throat, was a single imprint, the curving red mark where a thumb nail had closed hard, while on the right were prints of the fingers.
"He used his left hand, all right," said Coquenil, "and, sapristi, he had sharp nails."
"Parbleu" mumbled the shrimp.
Patently the photographer stood still while the commissary and Tignol tried to stretch their fingers over the red marks that scarred his countenance. And neither of them succeeded. They could cover all the marks except that of the little finger, which was quite beyond their reach. Coquenil remembered Alice's words that day as she looked at his plaster cast.
A very long little finger—here it was, one that must equal the length of that famous seventeenth century criminal's little finger in his collection. But this man was living! He had brought back Kittredge's boootal. He was left hounded! He had a very long little finger! And Alice knew such man!
CHAPTER XIV
THE MEMORY OF A DOG.
I was a quarter past 4 and still night when Coquennil left the Hotel dos Etrangers. He carried the leather bag taken from the automobile. A hundred yards behind him, in exactly similar dress, came Papa Tignol, peering into the shadows with sharpest watchfulness against human shadows bont on harming M. Paul. Close to Notre Dame the lender paused for his companion. "There's nothing," he said as the latter joined him. "Take the bag and wait for me, but keep out of sight." Coquennil walked across the square to the cathedral.
He was pleased and condenst as he rang the night bell at the archbishop's house beside the cathedral, for he had one precious clew—he had the indication of this extraordinarily long little finger, and he did not believe that in all France there were two man with hands like that. And he knew there was one such man, for Alice had seen him. Where had he seen him? And presently, after a sleepy salutation from the archbishop's servant and a brief explanation, M. Paul was shown through a stone passageway that connects the church with the house, and he found himself alone in Notre Dame. As he stood uncertain which way to turn the detective heard a step, and a low growl, and, peering amok, the alchemist of the choir, he sat in a lambert advancing, then a figure holding the lantern, then another
crankling, rattle, shrieking through the eastern "Thin that蔓延着 Cucar." "Those, those," he whimmed softly. "Good old Cucar." There, there," murmured Cucarli, fondling the eager head. "I'm all right, Donneton," and, coming forward, he bolt out his hand.
Wondering, Donneton led the way to a small room adjoining the treasure chamber.
"Hey, Francois!" He shook a sleeping figure on a cot bed. "It's time to make the round."
Francois looked skidply at Cucarli, and then, with a yawn and a shrug of indifference, he called to the dog, while Cucarli growled his reluctance. "It's all right, old fellow," encouraged Cucarli. "I'll see you again," whereupon Cucarli trotted away reassured.
"Now, then," began M. Fulli, "I want to ask this girl who sells candles. She boards with you. You know she's in love with this American who is in prison?"
"I know."
"She came to see me the other day, and the result of her visit was—well, it has made a lot of trouble. What I'm going to say you mustn't tell a soul—of all your wife."
"You can trust me."
"To begin with, who is the man with the long little finger that she told me about?"
"Why, that's Groener," answered Bonneton simply
"Groener? Oh, her cousin?"
"Yes"
"I'm interested, because I have a
collection of plaster hands at my
house, and there one with a long
little finger that the candle girl noticed.
Is her cousin's little finger really very
long?"
```markdown
```
"It's pretty long" said Borneton. "I used to think it had been stretched in some machine. You know he's a wood-carver."
"Borneton," continued the detective mysteriously, "I don't know whether it's from here, or in some other way, but that girl knows things that she has no business to know."
Then, briefly and impressively, Coqueli told of the extraordinary revelations that Alice had made not only to him but to the director of the Bante prison. She's possessed of dangerous knowledge, and I want to know where she got it. I want to know all about this girl."
Bonneton shook his head. "We know very little about her, and the queer thing is she seems to know very little about herself. I believe she is perfectly honest. Anyhow, her cousin is a stupid fellow. He comes on from Brussels every five or six months and spends two night with us—never more, never less. He eats his meals, attends to his commissions for woodcarving, takes Alice out once in the afternoon or evening, gives my wife the money for her board, and that's all. For five years it's been the same. I've noticed she's nervous just before his visits and sort of said after them. My wife says the girl has her worst dreams then." "I have it!" Coupeau exclaimed presently "Tell me about this man Francois." "Francois" answered the sacristan in surprise "Why he helps me with the night work here. He takes two meals with us a day."
"Ah. Do you think he would like to make a hundred frances by doing nothing? And you would like to make 600?"
"Five hundred frances?" cried Bonneton.
"Don't be afraid," laughed the other "When do you expect the wood carver?"
"He'll be here next Wednesday."
"Next Wednesday," reflected Coquill
"He always comes when he says
he will?"
"Always. He's as regular as clock-
work"
"And he spends two nights with
you?"
"Yes."
"That will be Wednesday night and
Thursday night of next week?"
"Yes."
"Good! Now I'll show you how
you're going to make this money I
want Francois to have a little vacation.
He looks tired. I want him to go
into the country on Tuesday and stay
until Friday."
"And his work? Who will do his
work?"
Coquill tapped his breast.
"I will take Francois' place. I'll be
the best assistant you ever had, and I
shall enjoy Mother Bonneton's cook-
ing. None of them will know me. You
won't know me yourself."
"Ah, I see." nodded the old man wisely. "You will have a disguise." "I shall come on Tuesday When do you want me?" "At 6 o'clock," answered the scriastian doubtfully. "But what shall I say if any one asks me about it?" "Bay Francois was sick and you got your old friend Mattthieu to replace him for a few days. I'm Mattthieu." "You wouldn't get me into trouble, M. Paul?" he appealed weakly. "Papa Bonneton," answered Coquell all earnestly, "have I ever shown you anything but friendship? When old Max died and you asked me to lend you Cheasar I did it, didn't I? And you know what Caesar is to me, I love that dog." M, Paul beed out his hand frankly, and the scriastian took it with emotion. "That settles it," he murmured. "I never doubted you."
"Thon it's understood. Tuesday, at 6, your friend Matthew will be here to replace Francois. The detective rose to go. He moved toward the door. "Oh, I forget about the dog. Tignor will come for him Tuesday morning with a line from me. I shall want Caesar in the afternoon, but I'll bring him back at 6. "All right," nodded the sacristan. "He'll be ready. An revol until Tuesday." "Things are marching along," amused Coquenil some minutes later to Papa Tignor as they rolled along toward the Eastern tailway station. "Tom know what you have to do. And I know what I have to do. We meet Tuesday at noon near the Autumn station beneath the first arch of the vault." Coquenil had certainly chosen the
1
SATURDAY. APRIL 16, 1910.
busiest end of Paris for his meeting
with Paris, Témol.
:
Their rendezvous was at noon, but two hours earlier Tignol took the train at the St. Lasare station. And with him came Caesar—such a changed, unrecognizable Caesar! Poor dog! His beautiful, glossy coat of brown and white had been clipped to ridiculous shortness, and he crouched at the old man's feet in evident humiliation.
"If was a shame, old fellow," said Tignol consolingly, "but we had to obey orders, eh? Never mind, it will grow out again."
Leaving the train at Autoleu, they walked down the Rue La Fontaine to a tavern near the Rug Mosart, where the old man left Caesar in charge of the proprietor, a friend of his. He now a quarter to 11, and Tignol gent the next hour riding back and forth on the circular railway between Autoleu and various other stations. He did this because Coquenil had charged him to be sure he was not followed. Finally, after an amusing adventure, he met Coquenil, who had disguised himself so cleverly as to doceive even Papa Tignol himself Going to a room in the Rue Poussin, Coquenil changed his disguise very materially, while Tignol gave him the latest news from his mother, who sent word that she was praying for his safety. Tignol later went out and procured the dog Caesar. The men then walked in the Bols toward Passy, and Coquenil recounted important discoveries he had made in Brussels regarding Groener, the woodcarver
I saw the place where he boards, this Adolf Groener. In fact, I stopped there, and I talked to the woman who runs it, a sharp eyed young widow with a smooth tongue, and I saw the place where he works. It's a woodcarving shop, all right, and I talked to the men there. Papa Tigolou, he said impressively, "they all call a simple story. His name is Adolf Groener. He does live in Brussels, and the widow who runs the boarding house knows all about this gri Alice.
"Then something happened," went on the famous detective "You see, I was waiting in the porch of this boarding house for the widow to bring me my old and I happened to glance at a photograph she had shown me when I first came a picture of Alice and herself taken the same year when Alice was twelve years old. There was no doubt about the girl and it was a good likeness of the widow I now noticed that it had no photographer on it, which is unusual, and it seemed to me there was something queer about the girls hand I went to the window and was studying
C
"YOU COWARDS YOU HAVE KILLED MY DOO"
the picture with my magnifying glass when I heard the woman's step outside, so I slipped it into my pocket.
"An as soon as I was outside I jumped into a cab and drove to the principal photographers in Brussels. There were three of them and at each place I showed this picture and asked how much it would cost to copy it. The first two were perfectly businesslike, but the third man gave a little start and looked at me in an odd way. I made up my mind he had seen the picture before, but couldn't get anything out of him. From here I drove straight to police headquarters and had a talk with the chief. An hour later that photographer was ready to tell me the innermost secrets of his soul. He told me he made this picture of Alice and the widow only six weeks ago."
.
"His works ago" stared the other. "But the widow told you it was taken two years ago. Besides, Alice wasn't in Brazil six weeks ago, was she?" "Of course not. The picture was a fake, made from a genuine one of Alice and a lady, perhaps her mother. This photographer had blotted out the lady and printed in the widow without changing the pane. It's a simple trick in photography." "You saw the genuine picture?" "Of course--that is, I saw a reproduction of it which the photographer made of his own account. He suspected some crooked work, and he didn't like the man who gave him the order." "How mean the woodworker?" "Gosquen" shrugged, his shoulders. "Oh him a woodworker, call him what
you like, the dickn' go to the photographer in his woodcarver diaglare. He went as a gentleman in a great hurry and willing to pay any price for the work.
"And the smooth young widow lied." "Lied!" snapped the detective savagely. "I should say she did."
"Then," cried Tignol excitedly—"then Grouper is not a woodcarver?"
"He may be a woodcarver, but he's a great deal more. He—he"—Coquennil healtated, and then, with eyes blazing and nostrils dilating, he burst out: "If I know anything about my business he's the man who gave me that left handed Jolt under the heart. He's the man who choked your shrimp photographer. He's the man who killed Martinez!" "Name of a green dog!" muttered Tignol.
Coquennil went on. "He isn't her cousin, and she isn't Alice, and he will be at Bonneton's house tomorrow." "What?"
"Her name is Mary, and he is her stepfather."
"How do you know that?"
Coquenil smiled. "I found an inscription on the back of that Brussels photograph—I mean the genuine one. It was hidden under a hinged support, and Grocer must have overlooked it. That was his second great mistake. It read, 'To my dear husband, Raoul, from his devoted wife, Margaret, and her little Mary.' You notice it says her little Mary. That one word throws a flood of light on this case. The child was not his little Mary." "I see, I see," redirected the old man. "And Alice? Does she know that—that she isn't Alice?" "No." "See here." suddenly said Coquenil; "we've talked too much. You must hurry back to Alice. Better take an auto. And, remember, Papa Tigolol." he added in final warning, "there is nothing so important as to guard this girl."
A few moments later, with Caesar bounding happily at his side, M. Paul entered the quiet paths of the great park. With the dog at his heels M. Paul turned his steps toward a beautiful cool glaze. Here he came into plain view of a company ladies and gentlemen who, having witnessed the review, had chosen this delight spot for lunchoon. They were elegantly rich and fashionable people, for they had come as a coaching party on a very smart break, with four beautiful horses, and some in a fashing red and black automobile that was now drawn up beside the larger vehicle. Coupeau's interest was heightened when he overheard a passing couple say that these were the guests of no less a person than the Duke of Montreuil, whose lavish entertainments were the talk of Paris.
So they went on together, master and dog and were passing around on the far side of the coaching party when suddenly Caesar began to nose the ground excitedly. Then, running to his master he stood with eager eyes, as if urging some pursuit. The detective observed the dog in surprise. Was this some foolish whim to follow a squirrel or a rabbit? It wasn't like Caesar. "Come come be reasoned with friendly childing 'don't be a baby'
Cesar gravelled in vigorous protest and, darling now began circling the ground before him back and forth, in widening curves as Conquenil had taught him
M Paul was puzzled Evidently there was a scent here, but what scent? He had made no experiments with Cesar since the night of the crime, when the dog had taken the scent of the platoi and found the alleyway footprints. But that was ten days ago. The dog could not still be on that same scent impossible. Then, deciding quickly he gave the word, "Cherche!"
On through the woods went Caesar, nose down, tail rigid, following the scent, moving carefully among the trees and once or twice losing the trail but suddenly thrilling again, and presently as he reached more open ground, running ahead swiftly, straight toward the coaching party. Coquennal realized the danger and called loudly to the dog, but his voice was drowned by the cries of ladies on the break, who, seeing the bounding animal, screamed their fright. The dog was flying full at the break, eyes fixed, body tense and now, with a splendid effort, he was actually hurling him self through the air when among the confused figures on the coach a man leaned forward suddenly. There was a sharp report, and then Coquennil saw Caesar fall back to the ground. "My dog, my dog" he cried, coming up in the stricken creature
One glance showed there was nothing to be done. The bullet had crushed into the broad breast in front of the left shoulder, and it was all over with Cearar.
"You coward!" flung out the heart-skid man. "You have killed my dog." Then some one on the break said, "We had better more along, hadn't we. Result?" "Yes," agreed another "What a beauty bore!" (To Be Continued.)
The Matter of a Semicolon.
A Russian military paper tolls of a lieutenant who overheard a sergeant giving a recruit a short lecture upon his duties. "The military service," said the sergeant, "requires little prayer to God and a strict attention to the orders of a superior." Somewhat astonished at this singular definition of military duty, the officer ventured to ask the sergeant for his authority, whereupon the sergeant produced an ancient volume containing the following: "The military service requires little; prayer to God and strict attention to the orders of a superior."
For a Change.
And now the alrship comes along to cheer
the weary heals.
Celebration of Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of John Street Baptist Church Marked by interesting Gathering of Religious Workers. Successful Pastorate of the Rev. Illram Conway—Church Free of Debt.
By ANNA L VAN ALLEN.
One of the most pleasing as well as interesting events in church circles at Worcester, Mass., was the recent celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the John Street Baptist church by the members and congregation.
The church was prettily decorated with flowers and streamers, and strung across the front were the two dates, 1885-1010.
The celebration began on Sunday, and there was special music by the choir under the direction of its able chorister, George E. Stewart, at all the services.
Among the speakers were the Revs. Horatio Carter, pastor of the Mount Olive Baptist church, Cambridge; R. French Hurley, pastor of the Bottol A. M. E. church; Charles E. Simmons, chaplain of the Worcester county jail, and Rev. Hiram Conway, pastor of the John Street church, who gave an interesting talk on the work of the past. One of the most enjoyable features of the celebration was the reception to the members and their invited guests. Descon Richard Brown was in charge of the program. The choir sang one of its charming anthems at the opening, and after a prayer and a vocal trio by the Misses Grace M. Johnson, Olive Johnson and Nanny Anderson the welcoming address was given by the pastor, the Rev. Hiram Conway. At the close of his speech the pastor was presented with a beautiful bouquet of carvations amid considerable aplause.
There were several ministers from the various local churches present, among them being the Rev. W H. Davenport of the A. M E. Zion church, Rev. A B. Ridgways of the South Baptist church and J P. Cheney, who brought greetings from the Pleasant Street Baptist church, the society from which the John Street church sprang. The addresses were interpersed with musical numbers. Mr. and Mrs. William Cook of New York, former members, sent a beautiful silver individual communion set, with the name of the church and the date inscribed, along with a letter stating their regrets at being unable to be present. The principal address of the occasion was that of the Rev Charles E
M. H. B.
BEV. IIEAM CONWAY
Simmons, chaplein of the Worcester county jail. The Rev Mr Simmons was in charge of the John street society when it was a mission, and he told some interesting details about the society while it was in its infancy and named some of the members who were with him at that time, only four of whom are now living. Not long after the church was organized the Rev Mr Conway, who is a graduate of one of the southern colleges, went to Worcester and was called to the John Street church, where he has since remained
The Rev Mr Conway was congratulated by all the visiting clergymen on the record he has made for himself and the church—a record which is not equaled by any other minister in the city. He is the first and only pastor the John Street Baptist church has ever had, and this fact alone testifies to the high regard in which he is hold not only by the members of his own church, but by the public at large. His genial disposition has won him many friends, and under his administration the congregation has progressed onward and upward until now it has a splendid little church building entirely free of debt.
Busy Workers For the Coleman Home. Some of the most prominent men of Pittsburgh have agreed to speak for the Linden club on Tuesday evening, March 22, at which time the club will give a grand rally at the John Wesley A. M. E. Z. church in aid of the Coleman Industrial Home For Boys. Ten captains of groups of persons are working earnestly to raise the necessary money for the incorporation of the home. The reports will no doubt result in a large amount of money, as each captain is endeavoring to outstrip the other
Funny For Father!
A lady was entertaining some friends of her own sex at a select 5 o'clock tea, and her little son, who had been exceptionally well behaved, was in high feather. "Mother," he said as caké was being haped round, "may I have some tongue, please?" "There isn't any tongue, sonny." "That's funny," was the child's simple comment. "I board father, say there would be lots of it!"
'Phone, 577. Richmond, Va
Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liverymon.
All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large picnic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class, carriages, buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies.
PSYCHOLOGY AS A FIRST AID.
When you've dropped a dollar-button and it's rolled beneath the bed, Just as jokesmiths, through the years, do not waste your choice language—simply cause your mind to shed a psychotic wave that rolls it out.
When you've stepped on a banana, and have lost both airying feet, Do not think disgrace you are surely going to quaff. Grab a psychologic layer, do a "giant dog of meat." And you'll give the waiting mob the merry laugh.
When you've reached your home at even with your arms quite full of toy, And you catch your youngest son's suspicious eye. Cast psychology upon him, in his tense, expectant pose, And he'll never think to ask you how and why.
You can use it on the pitch roof of a rival baseball team. It works in football matches, so they play. But as it isn't perfected or at least, so it won't work. So 'twil bring to one a needed boost in pay!
Denver Republican.
Getting the News.
What do you mean by delivering
PHOTO
We offer you, the latest and moderate figure, than you can obey. Special attention paid to the interior work.
We will also be pleased to offer from old photos, a speciality.
Geo. O. Brown
603 North 2nd St.
Funeral Director
Office & Warerooms, 207
HACKS F
Orders by Telephone or Tee Suppers and Entertainment
Telephone, 686
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.
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Possessing more power than any four
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Greatest Hindoo Medium in the World.
80 GREAT IS HIS POWER that he can toll you while in a Clairevoyant state, all you wish to know with out a word being spoken. Come, all ye unbelievers, scotters and jeers, bring all your sketchness 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 smooth marriage with the one you
Everything IN FURNITURE FURNITURE FLOOR
my Sunday paper at this hour of the day? Why, it's most noon!" shouted the little householder.
"But, boss, do we heavy—"
"Then get a wagon. If you can't bring it around before noon, I'll find same one who can. When it comes as late as this, I don't any more than get the advertising pages sorted out and carried away before the Monday morning edition courses." Judge.
A Sameness Noticeable.
Patience—I see it is said that the United States has the greatest variety of postage stamps.
Patricio—And yet they all seem to taste the same—Yonkers Statesman.
It is.
"My boy be polite and honest"
"But dad"
"Say on."
"Sometimes it's pretty hard to be both at the same time."
First Aid
Cholly—Me duah boy why do you have that bandage round your head*
Reggie—A thought struck me, old chapple*
PHOTOS.
and most artistic photos, at a more
main elsewhere.
Children. Enlarging and copying
quote you prices on exterior and
PHOTOGRAPHER,
Richmond, Va.
JOHNSON,
r and Embalmer,
N Foushee St. Cor. Broad.
ATOR HIRE.
Telegraph filled. Weddings,
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Residence in Building.
love, uniting the separated and bring back the lost one. Traces lost or stolen goods. Ursulaeth hidden treasures. Removes evil influence 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 Morse Rading and all Games of Chance. No matter what ails you, come and see this wonderful man Reader have you not helped that some people have a hard time to go along. No matter how they toll, while others have success? Many wealthy men and women owe their success to this wonderful man
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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:
$10 0 S 8th Street, Philadelphia, Pa
Everything
MATURE AND
SPECIALTIES
COVERINGS
LINCOLN
HAIR POMADE
MAKES KINKY HAIR SOFT REMORES DURING KEEN'S HAIR FROM CREATING OFF
LINCOLN HAIR POMADE
NOTHER MAY WOULD BE RATHER HAVE YOUR HAIR-SOFT AND LONG, SO THAT YOU CAN PUT IT UP IN THE LATEST STYLE OF SHORT AND KINKY
KEEPS SOALP FRESH OLNARD WHOLE-SOME MAKES HAIR GROW LONG AND LUSTROUS
HAIR. TO STRAIGHTEN OUT THAT KINKY, CURBLY HAIR, PUTTING IT IN THE MOST PERFECT CONDITION TO BE COMBED INTO ANY SHAPE JUST TRY A BOTTLE OF LINCOLN HAIR POMADE. There is no other preparation on earth to equal Lincoln Hair Pomade in producing soft, beautiful hair. Lincoln Hair Pomade is a natural hair conditioner that reduces the hair to a straight and combable condition; but also supplies the air with a silky sheen and gloss. No matter how rough or heavy your hair is now, no matter how hard or curly, it may be, the use of Lincoln Hair Pomade will give you hair that can well be the envy of others. Lincoln Hair Pomade is the only highly recommended preparation for this purpose on the market.
it is Lincoln Hair Formade you want, so refuse weak and infec-
tious hair. It is not only claimed to be just as good, but insist on getting the genuine.
The Lincoln Pomade Co.
NORFOLK, VA. U. B. A.
Agents Wanted Everyone. Write for us. If your dealer does not keep it, send 20 cents in stamps or silver to TEB LAN-
COLN POMADE CO., Department B, Norfolk, Va. and we will send you a bottle by return mail.
The Hawkins-Price Co. Hair Growers and Restorers.
(TRAD MARK REGISTERED)
Carries a full line of natural human hair-braids, hanges pompadours and the latest styles in front places—all colors and textures. Unlined gray. These dressings es to match the hair most very ears in stating expiellency. The braids are easy to sway to send a small sample of hair if possible, so that we may be in a position to prices: Braids, (nator al hair) $9.50; Allor pompadours
(natural hair), $4.00; Front Hair
This Preparation has powered to be a to-day delighted with its wonderful result. Upon arrival, place on your own, own piece, measure up its of its appearance throughout this and other States and also on colored people in this immediate community. HAWKINS PRICE BIRTH GROWER AND HER in print the photographs of those giving preparation and are to-day among the most desirable. Our preparation is a natural and we would not hesitate to put in print. Our public national patent rights are our hair preparation turn responsible to the government for hood it will positively remove Dandruff. On Clothes Sale Price 25 and 50 cents and is imposed on all out of city orders. Money or Purpose Money Order HAWKINS-PRICE
This preparation has prepared to a fortune to many of the unfortunate, who are to do the work that results. The merits of the great hair preparation naturally place it in a sphere all of its own. We will speak of it, reassure us of its satisfactory results. We can well boast of a large patronage throughout this and other States and also enjoy the commendation of the very best while and indeed while in order to convince the most skeptical readers of the merits and results of the HAWKINS PRICE HAIR GROWER AND RESTORER, we will from time to time produce in print the photographs of those giving us permission to do so, who have used our preparation. We will have the pleasure of seeing them in our office. We do not desire the correspondence of those expecting a miracle or anything surmountable. Our preparation is a natural and pure compound, the ingredients of which, we will just have reminded the public that the United States Government has placed national patent rights on our hair preparation by which it is protected, and we are in turn responsible to the government for honest methods and square dealings.
RAILROADS.
RAILROADS.
N. & W. NORFOLK & WESTERN.
OLYL ALL MAIL LINE TO NORPOLE.
Schedule in Effect April 11, 1980.
Leave Flyd Street Station, Richmond Daily.
For Norfolk-0-00 A. M.; 8:00 P. M. and 8:00
For Lynchburg and the West-0-00 A. M.; 12:10
P. M.; 8:00 P. M.
ARRIVE RICHMOND
From Norfolk-12:14 A. M.; 8:00 P. M.
From the West-7:00 A. M.; 8:00 P. M.; 8:15
P. M.
Fulman, Parlor and Sleeping Cave Cafe Dia-
W. H. HELLY.
G. I. DOLLEY.
Gen. Press. Agent.
Dietrich Peat Agent.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
REFLECTIVE APRIL 14, 1990
TRAIN LEAVE LEIGH RICHARD DAILY
Training Leigh Richard, 8113 A. M. and 7115
P. M.
For Florida and Maryland, 8113 A. M. and 7115
P. M.
For West Virginia, 8113 A. M. and 7115
P. M.
For M. and W. Ky., West, 8113 A. M., 8115
and 8118
For Fultonburg, 8113 A. M., 8115, 8118
and 8118
For Goldsboro and Fultonburg, 8113 P. M.
Travel artye Richmond Colony, 8113 P. M.
For Fultonburg and Fultonburg, 8113 P. M.
For M., 8118, 8118, 8118 and 8118
*Benedict Sunday, "Monday Only.
Time of arrival and departure and exmoo
```markdown
```
'Phone 4601.
Southern Ry
Southern Ry
N B--Following schedule figures published only as information and are not guaranteed;
M B--Following schedule figures published only as information and are not guaranteed;
10 45 A M--Daily Limited--Buffet Broiler to Atlanta and Birmingham, New Orleans, Memphis, Chattanooga, and all the South Pacific coach for Chattanooga, Oxford, Dubuim coach
6 00 P M — Ek. Sunday — Keysville Local
11:46 P M — for all the South.
P M for all the South.
TORK RIVER LINE
4 80 P M — Ek. Sunday — To West Point—on-
shore Baltimore Monday, Wednesday
and Friday
2 15 P M — Moody, Wednesday and Friday—
4 80 A M — Ek. Sunday — Local to West Point
TRAINE ARRIVE RICHMOND
From the South 7 00 A M. 9 00 P M. daily
(Express)
8 40 A M. Es Sunday 4 10 P M. daily
(Local)
From West Point 9 00 A M. daily. 11 38 A
M. Wednesday and Friday '3 45 P M. except
Sunday
C. & O.
0'00 A First train to Old Point, Newport
0'00 P News and Norfolk.
7'10 P Dally Local to Quay News.
7'10 P Dally Local to Old Point.
8'30 P Dally-Lentrilla, Ocknell, Old
mays and St. Louis, Palmum.
8'30 A Dally, Gilton Fergus.
8'30 P Week days, Local to Gordonsville.
10'00 A Dally, Lynchburg, Lexington, O. Fergus.
10'00 P Week days To Lynchburg.
THAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND
*10:10 P. M.
Local from Week - 9:30 A. M. 7:45 P. M.
Through - 10:00 A. M. 8:55 P. M.
Until - 10:10 A. M. 8:50 P. M.
*Daily record. Sunday
Higgins,
Dealer in
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR
THE MONEY.
1610 East Franklin Street.
[Near Old Market.]
Rickmend, Virginia.
C
C
C
TRAIN LEAVEN RICHMOND.
YORK RIVER LINE
B. E. BURGESS, D. F. A.
920 E. Male St. 'Phone 453.
a st on ROA MERIN Wire R ea GREE ORR Saar >
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PERE TE, Poh er lcanood, Ye
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JORN MITOHELL, JR. + EDITOR.
OE nn
Ti pemneintions Intenied te peletie
SUP EROSS einceh antby Woden.
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POTTAT AAN TRO ORIG NOT RECEIVED
* "ON SUBSCRIPTIONS.
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SATURDAY APBIL 16, 1910
ANOTHER ONE GONE
President Tafts administra’ |
vertalply “embarrasgiog How Ke
W Tyler ta his defense of the f
stow of the Republican leaders 1
announcement is made that the dr
Uaguished wwenpint an the White
Howse bas further eeduced the nun
ber of reyeesentaune positions held
by colored area tn this country by
the removal of Hon HOA Rucker
Collector of feternal Heyenur at At
Janta, Ga He has appoloted Hon Ht
S Jackson (whiter to aurcord bin
tod 10 18 aaaerted that the appatntin
War not even an nyplesnt for the
position
Of cours: (hid meank the 1 anosa
of the deputies antdiow dt by Mr
Rucker Tt was only rovently that
Judge Fie of Georgla openty deta
the totoraal revenue authoritiog aid
the federal sourin 1 gowns that
Ue federal as dune not permit an
Avputy Mtornal revenue funy tor te
give avy tnforinat on careerning the
Vuninews of wbiakey estabhanments
holding foderst lena Judge Fie
preabding jurtet in a xtate rourt en
dvavored to tuahe nite of Mr Ruck
ta depution, a white man de thie
Ho referred the matter tn Mr Rusk
or and he WAS tostructed ter ete y the
federal law
The caso was taken Into the United
Staten Court and both the cwltertor
nnd hin deputy were anatained The
deputy who was under arrest for
somtempt by order of Judge Fite s
‘onrt was ordered released Later
the Intoraal Revenue Department at
Washington twsned an enter permit
Hog depution to teatity to whiskey
‘aes and the Pronident of the United
Staten bias followed this up by the
removal of Hon IL A Rucknr aftor
he had studiously obeyed the taw as
net forth in the federal ntatuton
Wo have a bigh regard for Hon
Ralph W Tylor and wouht do what
we ould to bolp him fn this bis timo
of need, but no man this side of the
Faquator or south of the North Pole
conlé maintain a position taken fo
defense of » farty when that party
te foroishing ovidencé directly ab-
tagovistic to the argument being pro
duced to favor of that party Tho
Republican leadors at Washington
from Preatdent Taft down are got
atraigbt on this race question 2
the man who cannot seo it ts ax blind
nea Unt and ax ileal ap a pont,
VBTORD THE DIGGRA RIN.
Gov. Aastia L. Crothers, of Mary-
Tand, has vetosd the Diggts Bil, dis-
franchising, colored cititons in etate
and aranicipal elections and he gives
ta poe of Sie reasons that fk woold
place the State of Maryiand’ tn the
positian of detying the Constitution
of the United States. Jt will bo re-
membored that wo took « different
‘view of this plece of mischievous leg-
Islation from that ontertalned by our
contemporaries and wo regarded the
movement as a blessing in disgylse
for it would bave forced an iaug
upon the United States Supreme
Court at Washington that it could
not ernde
The Democratic leaders of the
country were quick to soo this and
pressure was brought to bear upon
the Chiof Executive of Maryland, who
roally favored the bill and he has
extrieated his party from tho tangle
In which It had hopelessty inveiglod.
{wolf The DigKes BIN would have
been a dead letter from start to
finish and the only effect 11 would
Bove had would have been to nullify
one of two state aod municipal elec
tons aod left many a elty govorn-
ment tn tbe atr so to #pvak as to
the fegniity of the elevtion of off
cers slovted at oar of these uncom:
stituGoaal elections
The atte-nit was made to do thin
sans thing 1 Florida and proasure
Wan heonght to tw ar to stop the move
maent
The time wil set come though
when the hot headn* of the Demo
erate Party ail break away from
conservative leadership and fores
the tnsus Then the Supreme Court
of the Volted States whether It br
Democrat of Republean will ad
ininister one of the most crushing
rebukes exer given to any platatitt or
defendant aypeariog before it The
Democrats who reach the bench of
the supreme tribunal are oot as a
rule, of the kind and calibre, who
fraquent legislative balls and who
[will do anything ta please cortata
(Neate batts coputituents. The Thit
yteenth Fourteenth and Fifteonth
Amendments have been so construed
a to apply to white as well ax to
colored men Peonuge tn the etaton
bas been fous ed under Its provistons
and corporations have sought the
courtuning shelter of thelr magsbst
wings
As long ws this condition of af
faire exists white men will Aght for
the Intgrity of these measures, os
vigurousiy and as ably as colored
inen ‘The Negroes aa an lesue are
paswing ont of the Imelight and
ANI men whys attempt to remurFoct
the scarecrow of hy gone days are
looked iron with contempt and re
gated wth duefasor The Digges
Ty) os dead tn Marsiand for it pees
af fhe legislatures he une vate but
Hee aneanney of the tennite BL eaniKe
So ang Of regret Goth In the breanta
+ the Segro haters of that common
sth aad an the heurte of the far
hse ng voloted men who hapad thet
ss ractrent went eaune the Sa
1 oun Contt of the Unlted States to
Veeak iti Deng ete nen m dative tes their
Peete” wears vain vat ew ates
Roy MERDERER CONUICTED
Fourteen Year Old Inin Hans hett
Mast Go to Gallen
DeLand Fla April 11 tevin
Manet the fourteen yearend Con
nerthat hoy was found guilty In the
Criminal Contt here today of th
murder of Clos Tedder — thirtees
seare old asd aentenew dota ts
hanged
The crime of which the routhtu
nuirderer gan sanvieted Bax one o
(He most brutal io the criminal ap
hale of thin State Tye part the Ht le
girl while abe wae on her way
eehant atl after she had rofoctor
Tie pe uimenta he atnhbed her ta
death Tey body war a massa!
knife sounde one phyaletan testify
ing at he telat that he counted Ker
ent five wonade
Fotlon ing the hoy # artest be on!y
cw aped Iavtiug by helng xpicited
Throughout the trial Hanehett
maintained a atoll Indifference te
the teatimony and recetved the death
sentence with the same demeanor
Unnrhert ie a former Inmate of
the Connes nent Stat’ Reform Behoal
An Observant Child
Lite Adewoale ae iweltned to bo
cowardly Her father foaud that sym
pathy odly Un reaved thle tendeuey and
Ueclied to have m we rioun emi eith OMe
ttle daughter ou tthe autyect of ter
foollsh fenrn Hay ane ventured
At the clone of the leture whey sou
nee a cow arent yuu afrnidy — Woy,
certatnly apt, Adeinide — Whs ehoujd
Fiber Ret when sou ver a dug
arent you afraid then™ “No 19
deed" witb marked emphanin on tho
“an” “Aren't sou afeatd when It than
Germ papa” “Why uo and oe
Innghed mt the thought and added.
“oh, you alily ebild™ — Hapa and
Adelaide cause clmet and looked {nto
her parent'a ese ~ureot uu afrald of
nothing In the warld but Jost ninm
ma?” Bac ens Maganine
The Father—Dora, don't you think
{t'n pant bedtime The Daughter (en
tertalning a eniler) -Yoo, Indeed, papa.
‘What's Keeping you up?—Bxcbange.
Inthe Lily Trade
AfCor a short acarch the man was
Gincorernd cnrefulls painting the ity.
“Go to, thou fool™ sneered that ma.
Jority which in ever the slave of tradi
ton
But tho man explained "This ts a
1009 Illy." he pointed out. “By paint:
tog {tt wake ft the 1910 model. As
Goon as penple ace fi they'll throw
away thelr old lilies ood buy new."
And, 20, It was ae be predicted.—Puck,
CLIMBED MT. MKINLEY, |
Famous Alagke Mauitain and, .
fe tten
oe
ee
| ee
Lo SSENSP easiness
NO COOK RECORDS
ON MT. MPKINLEY
Fairbanks Expedition Scales
Alaska Peak.
ONE =oMONTH «AT TASK
Trip to Test Polar Voyager's Claim
Find No Trace of Hie Alleged Ae
cont
Fairbanks Alaska April 13 — The
Fairvanks expedition to Mount Mo
Kinies the highest peak tn North
Ann ta rom hed (he aumumtt April 3,
after a climb of ono month from the
base it was announced No traces of
Dr Fredeciek A Cook « alleged ascent
were fournt a
Thomas Lloyd leader of the expe
Aiton arrived here HI companions
were Danie! Vattersan WR Taylor
aod Charles MeGonigle All reached
the top af the mouatain
The expedition which left Fete
banka Dev 13 while tbe controversy
lover Gir Cooks diaputed aseeat was
aril) raging wae Mloanced by August
Peterson and Witifim Me Pheo, of this
rity The plan wan to go Into camp
‘on the mountain as high as posable
and probably about the middle of May
make a dash for the summit
The obstacle encountered were not
ao great ax lind heen predicted
Four sompe were eatabltxhed during
he ascent and 9 trail wax blazed all
the wat the eeout Mp to 12000
foot the «limbiag dit aot present ap
Iaual IMs ultian Bor the agat 4000
fort the was lod weer a ateep ice
fwld which at frat aeemed to forbid
further progrean but through which
upon @xploration it was found poss!
Mle ta Inert a paths
PNybe Anal asm tthe top wan made
trom the 16> foot «amp
Mount M. Kinley terminates in twin
peake of equa: height one aumewbat
rounded ant revered with anow the
hither compose! af bare and wind
Seept rocks On the rock peak the
Fatchanha biwbers placed an Amert
an fag in a tienament nf atones
The expeditien which wan pres! ted
Ath De Che nape and data en
favored He follies Hie aupposedt route
ha atterls fadet to eorift ane part
YE hte aerwent al an ame ht
The expe titian wean eaileped with
A dug team nnd snppin sand with the
latter they estahlinhed a base at the
tot of thet mountain They planged to
meke the stash fur the summit at the
vengk of winter In March The mem:
here at the party agreed to fartett
Shen Ht naw of them reached the
sommit One of thett objects wan to
verits of dlapreae te thelr own eats
faction the cnn, of Fir Feadarick A
Hook that he rea hed the sumenlt in
the fal! uf 190"
Dr Cank anes tt he had aa ended
Mount Me Kine and to have reached
the gummi on Sept te Me gatd that
he had left at tie tay at the mountain
pewte that he had teen there
Mount MeKinies ik the agaumed
culminating pote! «if the North Amer
ean contivent ant me in the Alesis
range latitude 62 arerers 4 minuten
north langit te al degree wont Ie
height te given na 2" 466 feet
BOTH SIDES AT GETTYSBURG
Propose Giand Union of Blue and
Gray on Bat tietield,
Oa Ty eranetas Way ease
Wanhington Apri 13° Veterans of
the Civil War both those who wore
the bine and thone who wore the Kray
At the battle of Gettysburg forts eight
sears ago will meet again on that fa
moun battlefield thin year If the more.
mnot atarted by leuteoant Colonel
J A Watroun 1° 8 A tn Parrted out.
Owing to the fart that vetorans of
both armiex are reaponding In large
numbers each year to final “tape.”
Oolonel Watroun bollover it would be
better to hold anch a reunion this
yoar rathor than wait tntll the Afticth
annivernary of the battle
FORTUNE IN WALL PAPER
Mining Btock Used to Paper a Room
Proves Valusble.
San Francieco, April 18 — Henty
Brink,, of Motrose, paperod a room
with sharex of stock {n an Arizona
cold mine This wae efter ho hed
grown weary of waiting for dividends.
Porcelain clay of rare qiality ban been
Alacovercd on the mine alte, and bie
certificates are now worth a fortune
Brink and a paperifanger are now try
ing to got the stock off the walle.
Arbitrate Wage Dlepute.
New York, April 12.--The wage die
pote betwern tho trainmen and cob
ductors of the New York Ceotral rail
road and the oficlals of the company
fe to. be aettied by arbitration Aft
polute of didtarence will be arbttrated
by ©. E. Clark, mentor of the inter
Style commerce commission, and PH,
li see PE Te
ee eg rss oe fae on
York: Psi “Aprit 18. While the body
of Wiltiad & Randall was bolag low-
‘trod tote the Rrave at York on0 2 ge
ateaps tor¥y éllowing the coftin
Seer Moan bottn of he rave
‘The coffin’ Broke open and the body
rolled oaes{tbe ‘mourners, greatly
ebocked by the accident, were ordered
‘to retara te the church until the body
jand coffin, gould Ys rearranged,
‘MAN STRANGLES MAD DOG
TOWERS FRDHCNOUGS SIS WeSperaye
Biruogie With Rabld Animal,
Burlitigton, N J., April 13—Strang-
Ung to death Ina deaperate struggle 8
big Englisb bulldog that bad suddenly
gone mad an! attacked hie faailly,
Howant McCullougb, of | Floreace,
saved six portes trom injury @ind
‘posible desth The, dog bad Deon
‘pitten by & aupposedly rabid cur s0v-
| eral days ago tut was thought to bavo
recovered.
| MeCullough # son brought the an
mal co the Hotite and without warning
‘the dog rok away from bis young
aster and, frothing at the month
dashed Into the dintngroom soappiog
at the children who hopped {nto
chairs, ani Mnelly making a grab for
MeColloug'a throat whon he falled to
brain the animal with @ char
To protect himself McCullough érop-
ped the chair and scized the dog by
the throat, "Man and dox rolled to the
‘floor and for nearly five minutes the
erce struggle went on before Me
Cullough'a powerful grip choked the
animal to death McCullough escaped
jwith badly torn clothes aod several
acratehes, but was not bitten
eine
USES HYPNOTISM 10
QUIET MOTHER-IN-LAW
;
Renders Her Speachless and
| :
Helpless by a Look.
| patil ;
/ WilkesBarre Pa. aprit 13 - Charg
¢4 with bypnotiziog bis mother {n-law
rested and (hen before Mayor Kalt
fen The gharge was made by the
other inige sates “Wiliam “Roore
family be declared there was a
power {n Dis oye whied rendorad them
that hele iimbe bereae uuciens. ate
Peercred Gree Clegscana nnialash oot
declares by @ look from har aon in
law's, eye
Avondale dis laved he nes nothing
ag to whats fe bur Analy held bim
BULL TRAMPLES BOY
SS eS ee ee
Kilted In Street
Prtaturg Pu Apel 1% Knocked
down and trampted by a pain mad
dened bul’ whibs be wan trying to 748
cue le siagter wegen five yoar ott
Joroph Hochberxer of Gratton ‘a mt
Durh of thie etty te dving at hie (ath
Jers home
“The boi pith an tnjnred foot was
baing aris ovtp a qtock yard It pawed
at the chlg body with tte foretect
hile the letore scoeame. calla sh
men ts kis rescue The bull attécked
the mer who fired bullet after bullet
Into the ar'mas suniit it fell dead to
the stroet :
BODY FOUND IN TRUNK
Wealthy Woman Had Been Missing
and Murder te Suspected.
Hannibal Mo April 13- The body
of Sra Gertrude Maxwell a wealthy
whiow who lived alone on ber farm
fone mile onst of Palmyra twelve miles
went of here was found in a trunk at
ber home hy the sberiff Thomas C
Lastay
Bhe had ena miasing wince last
‘Wednesday The tronk 114 war closed
but not locked A club wan also found
in the room, but the body bore no
tmarka of vicieace.
“Bothered by Spirite;” Kills Children.
Akron © April 13° “The spirits
kept bothering me," Is the explanation
offered by Mrs. Rosa Marquardt. agod
twenty yoara who killed ble twoyoar
016 daughter, Margaret. and to serl-
ously injured her one-year-old babo
that the child's death {s expected
French President to Visit Rome.
Parle, Apri} 13.—Aceording to the
Figaro, plans are undor way for a visit
by President Falllores to Rome to em
phasite the friendiy relations exlating
between France and Italy.
One Way of Creation, a Wife.
1 wrote a pos "8 87 0
Fate vow map wife's fat batt
Another one to Cora’a sme
A dreas she made of that.
| My wife ts named Maria Ann.
Tm fond of her, ob, yes,
Bot can't turn out m verve to ber
] ‘That's sultadie for dresat
"Now, x she has a need for clothes,
For stockings, bats and shoes,
spe guiteagreng with toe that there
not @ to tore,
ani See ay
‘To Mavd's and Fanoy’s curis,
; ape teeta Cie ony t erene ee wile
‘verve to, other girls
hi eS Liatocees Atagexine,
aetcreree
ae
ep teenees
Ghett on Time.
Ot precious jmp Cor spa
a8
| me'ygurrts ei seal yy" cae
‘An’ dey Wun'na tilled dar,
eee eS Avante Conpttutivea:
at ot
STATEMENT..OF THR | FINANCIAL
re SISGORDON e ove te
Pega rs
‘he "Mechautes' Bayingn, Danie of
ichicusts located’ te Tigupsoae
ta the Vonuty of Hontteo,.Blate of
Vieziny tie: clone of uatnee,
Srey Ey Beare 1040. sani $0
ee,
Lopps and Discounts. .. $18,248.61
Overdratts,—.
secured, $1,144.85, on
Rocured, 9316.89.. ... 1,960.74
Bonds, Gecurities, " sic.,
owned, indluding pre-
mium on samo ... .. ¥ 3,630.00
Banking Houso ........ 18,684.94
Other. real estate owned. . 78,201.13
Fourojture and Fistures. 2,160.62
Exchanges and Checks for
next day's cloarings 2,049.78
Due from National Banke 19,884.65
Paper currency . 2,061.00
Fractional paper curroncy,
Rickols and cents 145 88
Gold coin 260.00
Silver Coin 704.34
All ether items of Re-
auurces vit 1,267.29
Total $147,639.08
LIABILITIES
Capital atock paid in $27,130 00
Surplus fund 6,250.00
Individual depoutta subject
to check 27,864 44
Timo certificates of deposit §6,693 16
Cashlor's checkw outsthad-
ing 14s
‘Total $147,639 08
Total $147,639 08
T, Thomas 1L Wyatt, do solemnly
swear that the abovo fs a true state
ment of the financial condition of the
Mechanic's Gavings Bank, of Rich
mond, lorated at Riehnfdad, tn tho
County of Honrico, Stato of Vir-
ginla, at the close of buainesa on she
19th day of March, 1910, to tho best
of my knowledge and bollet
- THOMAS HL WYATT. Cashier
| Correct- Attest
) Sno. Mitchell Je
Jao T Taylor
| 3d Carter
Directors
State of Virginia City of Richmond
"Sworn to aad subscribed before me
by Thomas Hf Wyatt, Casbler, thle
Tih day af April 1910
3 THOMAS HEWIN
Notary Public
My commfaston expires 18th Way of
April y9to
STATEMENT OF THE FINANCIAL
CONDITION OF
BRE
The Nickel Savings Bank, looated at
Ruchmond, fa the County of Hen:
rico, Htate of Virginia, at the close
of business March 29, 1910, made
to the State Corporation Commis
‘dies,
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts $11,701 94
Overdratts -
secured, 3389 06 389 06
Other real cotate owned — 15 260 40
Furniture and Fixtures 2 109 00
Exchanges and Checks for
next day's cloarings 387 23
Due from National Banks 1.426 87
Paper currency 1.219 00
Fructional paper currency
bickels and cents 308 13
Gold coin 452 Bo
Silver coin 168 73
Total $83 402 Xs
LIABILITIES:
~ ny
Capital stock paid in” $ 8,980 00
Surplus fund 1102 00
Individual doponits subject
to check er 1at27
Time oertificates of deposit 2.229 61
Total $23,402 88
1 R F Tancll, do solomnly sera
that the above Is n true statemont of
tho financial condition of the Nickel
Savings Bank, located at Richmond,
in the County of Honrico State of
Virginia, at tho closo of business on
the 29th day of March, 1910, to the
best of my knowledge and boltof.
the RAT
R F TANCIL,
Prosident
Corrret Attont
3 A lows MOD
Jno Lewis.
Ren) Amith
Directors
7 oe Tree
State of Virginia City of Richmond
Sworn and subscribed beforo mo by
RF Tancil, Pronident thin 6th day
ot April, 1910
ROSCOR C BROWN, +
Notary Public
My commission expires Soptember
6 1913.
An Efficient Mintress.
Mra A., who bad a sbiftiess colored
maid, aves borrying through ber mora
fog’e ‘work tn order to go out with
frlend in the afternoov As she dew
About from room ¢o room she heard
the colored woman chuckilug to ber
self aa If very much enjoying nome:
thing. Impatiently be aald.
“What tn the world ts It that amuses
you a0, Isabel?” /
» Weal, My Doss, when I heard you
galtopin’ upstairs I fes* tought
if you'd bewa de Lawd It wouldn't ‘a
took you no atx day to make de beb-
bons an‘ de yearthr’—Woman's Home
‘Companton,
A Pracious.Thing.
/ Quldide w gentiy rosy abeen
| More beauteous than the glow serene
Which make the ortent peart = thine
| Fit for tbe tavorite of « xing,
And jurt within the colors play
| Reftly and swiciiz ay tne ray ‘
| Feblch alge the re ith yuaden start
| That dwelle witht thtvopar'e heart.
And, forthe aut, n ruby great
Glows to Ie tone’ put radiant wtate>
+ For eaplanauén go you best
Thg elmple answer feman ege.
yee Washington Star.
AccaplsPlacht'stnton te
dress Gonservatlon Congress,
RESULT OF LONG INTERVIEWS
Porto Maurizio, April 13, — Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt accepted an invt
tation, porsooally delivered by Gittord
Pinchot, whom President Taft romov.
ad as chief forester of the United
Stater, to address the mocting of the
National Conservation League, whict
will bo bold ta Kansas City oarly in
Septembor
‘The uccoptance of this tnvitation
lots the firat real light into the nature
of tho confidential toterviews that
were begun Monday between the for
mer president and Pinchot and werd
resumed Tuesday
Both Roosovelt and Pinchot con
Unue thelr sphinrlike silonce rogard.
{ng thetr conversattona, but in view of
the developments this ellonce ts nc
longer baMling the correspondents.
Friends of Mr Pluchot resard Mr
Roosevelts acceptance of bis tavite:
tion as algnifcant One of Roosevelt's
pet reforms was the consorvation
movement. Pinchot was his right
bower Pinchot and Secretary Bal
Mogor ran afoul. Prosidont Taft sup
ported ghia cabinet member and called
for the resignation of Pinchot f
Roorevolt bas heard the Pinchot
side of the controversy
Mr Piochot's face was wroathed to
amtles when be announced that Sr
Roosevelt had accepted his Invitation
to make a speech bofore the league
next fall. Mr Pinchot had the appear
ance of s man who was unreservedly
Gellghted with what he has accoth
pilabed since be resched Porto Mau
rizio, where he remained with Mr
Roosevelt half a day longer than was
Aret arranged
It ta becoming more apparent dally
that Roosevelt is going to learn of
othor phases of the American polltical
situation before be returns to tho
United Btates The report that Fran-
cls Heney former proserutor of Sap
Francisco and Seth Bullock United
States marabal at Deadwood SD al
to tieet bim tn Europe and éiaclove dt
him the altuation in thefr respective
territories beara out this conclusion
Roth Henoy and Bullock are stanch
supporters of Roosevelt
Pinchot's mecting with Roosevelt
leatad almost untit midnight and that
{te was entiroly aatisfactory to the ex
forester was Indicated by the broad
mmile that lightened his face when be
returned to bls hotel
“It gortainly necms Ike old times"
Pinchot sald to the corrapandenta,
who tried to break thremeh hie guard
“Sy walk with Roones: ir reminded
me of the atrolin we uned to take
about Washington *
Thora was a ring of elgoifirance tn
Pinchot's words
Another perfoct day rected the
Roonevelts at Miss Carow'a ville
Wherever the Roorerelte went whath
er walking or riding ther were greet
ed enthuatantieally by the vilingers
who several times bombarded them
with Ganwnete of Vbilvis aud rose
ARRESTED FOR BIG THEFT
Reading, Pa., Man Charged With Steat-
Ing $10,000 From tron Company
Philadelphia, April 13. —~ Bonjatain
‘F Hunsicker, a former president of
‘the Reading. schoo) board and for
years prominent in Republican poll-
ica in Refiling wan arrested In thle
elty o@ a charge of the larceny of $10
000 of the funds of the Reading Iron
company
« Mr Hunsicker ratired avveral weeks
ago as chiof clerk of the Brott foundry
department of the tron company, and
jslnce that time he has deen living
with @ sister in this city Hin filch-
Ings were done it in alleged Uy moans
‘of padded payrolls
/Hunsicker’s family {9 well known
socially and occupied 8 fine home on
North Fifth street in tho fasilonable
Tenidence rection of Reading
Farmers Emigeate to Canada
Washington April 13 Morosthan
12,000 American citizena with from
$1000 to $5900 each practically alt
Tarmors and tho heads of families. ex-
patriated themarives between March
31 1909 and April 1 1919 They went
from all portions of the I'ntted Staten.
but particularly from the middie weat
to take up government homesteads !n
Canada
Weiss Fas tn Dismal Geen
Norfolk. Ve April 13 ~Kiereo for
at fires havo been raging to the Die
mal Bwamp and hundredn of wha nol
mala ate Geaing SMany of the animale,
mado dosperate by hunger and thir
are pillaging farma tn Nansemand
county and truckers had to organise
armed forces Sevoral bears have beer
wilted
Rencom ts be Returned,
Washtngton, April 13.—A dil op
Bropriating $61,000 for repaymont te
private oltizens of the aum edvancet
fo rthe ranzom of Mian Bilon M Stone
the American missionary who was ab
dusted by Bulgarian brigands in 1901
‘was patsed by the senate.
1010] APRIL [i610]
[amin [ren [wea,[renc] ert, et |
osteo we (tl2
41816) 71.819
11}12)]43}14)13}16] |
18|19/20/ 21122123)
195 |26|27|28|29| 30] -
ts é; Se LOUBBS WEAR
SG Ra ESR re
De ears reas
Hee eeu
ey gaitbe Ue ish 9 tye ice
‘vigor,= kena’ eneee Rods 7: tay
epord. And Unie Ack eoagent on
7. Reo aS re
folliog vfs youtae: pias nite atked
Seen Cnetyelis:;moa iright
to thelf- own ae sh doa
ditlotial + helper spied tol o 3
think svery nian’ who withes. ta te-
gala’ bin banly ‘power and wisity,
Quickly. and quietly, should have &
copy. Bo T have determined to.send
& copy, of the prescsiption free of
charge, in a. plain, ordinary soalnd
‘enyelope to any mai who will write
mv for St, ‘
‘This presoription comes from =
physician who bas made a special
tludy of men, and T am ogavinced it
fa-the surest ‘acting ‘combination for
tie cure, of Wedalent manhood and
vigor fallite ever put together,
T think 1 owe it to my follow man
to send them a copy in confidence
so that a diego anywhere who te
Wosk an Oureged with repeated
fallures may stop drugsing himself
with harmful patent mod{tines, s9-
cure, what T believe ts fhe quiksat
acting reatorative, upbuilding, APOT-
TOUCHING remedy ever Wovised,
and 40 cure himaolf at home quistly
and quickly. Just dsop me-a ling
Uke this: Dr. A. B. Robihson, 9895
Luck Building, Detroit, Mich, and ¥
‘will send you @ copy of thia splendia
roptpe In @ plain ordinary envalope
free of charge. °A great many doo
‘tors would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for
merely writing out @ prescription ke
this—bot I send it entirely free,
No Color Line in Boanty.
Some beautiful women bare cro-
ba color; some have Indias brown
or, others have white tnoss, snd
othors bave black volvet faces. Somo
Yory handsomo «girls have ght
brown ‘skin with pink cheeks. No
matter what color your skin may be,
It you Keep ft clear, bright anu
smooth, by using “Complozion Won-
tor” you will bo as handsome as
your features, will permit.
“Complexion Wonder Crome” ts
uiod by aristocratic white women,
and any women, no matter what
color her complexion may bo, can
make bor face look attractive.
“Complexion Wonder Creme” tm-
proves any faco like magio.
We send one white sample and
one pink sample of “Complexion
Wonder Creme” for 10 cents; also
sample of “Wonder Hair Grow” for
1o conts. If you send 60 conta, we
sond all these samples with a “Won,
der Comb.” This magnetto-motallic
comb can be heated before using.
M. B. BERGER & CO,
2 Rector Btrect,
Now York.
SE
Our Now Line of Onlondars.
‘Wo have & full itne of calendars
for 1911 from the J. W. Butler Pa-
per Company, of Chicago, IL They
aro the Intest designs and will mect
with favor from every one who. will
take the time to ezainins them, Call
t our office afd see them.
THE STRUGGLE OF LIFE.
Or W. UL. Bulkley Sounds Note of
Warning te Young Men.
‘Tuo woman» ausillary of the Carl-
ton avouue branch of tho Young Mon's
Christian association, Brooklyn, hold
# Joint aeeting with tho membera of
the branch ut the Concord Baptist
<tured recently. whys Dr WL. Balk
key, principal of public school No.
125, as the chief spenker, Tho scad-
emy quartet, led by Professor P. Al-
bert Myers. sang special aclections,
aud after introductury remarka by
Chatrman E. U1. Wisop, who presont-
ed the apenker, Dr Bulkley spoke on
“Tho Struggle of Life” He sald to
part
“1 don't know if the won of thie
branch sre awake to tho importanco
of the fact that the chiof necessity of
life 18 a round body
“Wenge the strengthening infu-
ence of vhxorous bodies. | hnve often
trhel fo Uincourage parents who asked
for worklug papers for ‘tors and girl.
1 Qnd that two oF three oF four dol-
lars ner wek Go out pay the boy
or girl of fourteen to learn echool, for
sdo8 they become nieu and women
‘and aro unqualldc! to earn good
wages.
“You live ty a city that offers ooex-
celled advantages. No other city ex
eels ours in educational advantages.
When | started the Night lodusteial
school iri this city tn tho borough of
Manhattan, 1 bad in mind tho ad-
tnutages {t would give, especially to
wy own pecple In lean than a year It
Fegiatered over 1.500 scholars of all
feces, I wanted colored people to
realize that unloss they aro trained
they cannot compete with the othe
people {n this country flere you have
the Itbrartes. publir lectures, etc. and
thoro te no reason why orery man and
woman herr whontd not bave ao edu:
cation,
“It {a the onstest thing In the world
to go down the bill _{ mysoif bare to
study to keep np There t no auch
thing ax progressing by onture, Lik
the tree, we havo to grow front oor
own elfecte”
Se CREO ES ONG PETE CRTC.
John Mitchell. Jr. ange: When we
note the expressions of good will com-
fog from the better class of white peo-
Ble to the better claus of colored folks
‘who are progressing we take courage
apd press onwant
: The Gtolen Kise.
1 stole a kiss the other night.
‘FRSAy my conscience oricks me game,
1 dilak Vif have to #0 around
‘Abd pitt tt where | got it from.
___ eDoston Tranestipt.
—
He Knew b-Better Wey.
- Tenchet—It that tlie colored bay
atriicea you, Tomy, you musta arrike
Jbim back :
- Mofomy~You bet I woo't, “Vit kirk
bine tha whine. — Clereuind Piahe
Dele ° oS *
SATURDAY, ... APRIL, 18, 1910.
Closing Argument Heard in Brownsville Army Court.
The closing arguments of counsel today marked the beginning of end of the long-drawn-out military investigation of the "shooting up" of Brownsville, Tex., in August, 1906. The investigation has been conducted by an army court of inquiry, of which Lout. Gen. Young, retired, is chairman, and has been in progress almost continuously since April, 1899. The opening argument was made by Brig. Gen. A. S. Daggott, U. S. A. rolig. Gen. Daggott represented the discharged soldiers and made an earnest appeal in favor of the re-pollution of those who had shown by the only possible evidence that they had not participated in the raid and had given the court every bit of information they had bearing on the subject.
It has been claimed, said Gen. Daggott, that these men "without honor" had not punishment, but simply a removal of bad men from the army.
"These men were charged with committing, or concealing knowledge of, an atrocious crime. It was a crime that, would brand the perpetrators with a serious record of their families forever." They were "discharged without honor" for this crime by the authority to which the offender is subject. Men can endure the loss of fortune, friends, family life itself; they cannot bear disgrace. They were not allowed to for them if they had been killed in battle! Some of these men had served their country long and faithfully and honorably. They had endured hardship and exposed their lives in battle. They were looking forward, as usual, to a stable retirement, and a happy home during the remainder of their lives.
DISGRACE WORSE THAN DEATH.
"Every member of this court has hold a commission in the volunteer service. Which one would not rather have been killed in battle, or any other way, than have been 'discharged without honor.' And yet it has been claimed that those soldiers have not been punished. But the definition or punishment includes the fact that they have been entitled to rottie in less than two years on a comfortable support for himself and family At one stroke he is deprived of this right. If an advanced age of life, with a family to support, unacustomed to the ways of earning a living in civil life, he is thrown out on the cold, moreless world. Others, with various periods or services, are supposed to the same privileges, suffered the same treatment. And yet it has been claimed that they were not punished.
"It has been claimed again that the discipline or the army required the discharge of these men "without honor" it is fortunate that I am speaking to old army officers on this subject I think all will agree that the company commander has the best opportunity to be involved that discipline is and how to attain it. The greatest stroke on the discipline of the army that could be struck today would be to show the army that justice shall be moted out to those men of the 25th Infantry. Punish the guilty, If there are any, restore the innocent to all their rights. If no guilty can be found, be governed by the rule of law, that a man is innocent till proved guilty. If no guilty can be proved that one innocent man can be punished in the adage. We have no right to punish the innocent with the guilty. No emergency can justify it.
DECLARES EVIDENCE LACKING
"But suppose some of the soldiers did the shooting. Were they? What individual is there against whom there is a spark of evidence? If they are not, then they be restored to duty. But it is more important for the army that innocent-men may roat in the conciliences that they will not be thrown out suddenly and disgraced for the country. It cannot afford to stand sponsor for the errors of the servants, however, well intentioned they may have been. It shows the nobility of a man to right a wrong. How much more a governmentalty officer be done unto a nation or a man."
"All witnesses who heard bullets that night, whether passing up the strokes of Brownvillie or over the barracks and parade ground, described the sound as a "whizzing, whirring sound. Not one of them which is the only word that can describe the sound of the Springfield rifle bullet. This is nearly conclusive that these bullets were not fired from the Springfield rifle. Before the microscope inspection of the shells they wrote the strongest evidence against the soldiers. Since that inspection, the evidence of their innocence. "It is a principle of American and British law that a man is innocent till proven guilty. It is an axiom of American and English law that the law will not exact impossibilities. It has been said that those men must prove their innocence. Woll, what can they do? How shall they do it? Nearly all of the soldiers who does not know of any soldier who was engaged in the shooting.
"Where could they and other wit-
nesses, who had any opportunity to
know about the shootout? What other
evidence was it possible for them to
WITH THE WORD, I AM, I AM, I AM,
the law, does, and exact, impossibilities.
The honor of these men, dearer than
life, is with this court. It can con-
tinue the mirage on these men, and
their offspring.
"if ever there was, n, case where
"if ever there was, n, case where
"now allowing decision."
THE END COMICS
The War Department Wins in its Fight on the Colored Soldiers—A Few Men Reinforced.
Washington, D. G., April 6.—The military court of acquittal, during the last year, has been investigating the shooting-up of Brownville, Tex. finds that the evidence clearly sustains the charge that the shooting was done by soldiers of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, colored.
As to the charges made by the mayor and citizens of Brownville, the soldiers of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, stationed at Fort Brown, Tex. did on the night of August 13-14, 1906, shoot into houses of the town of Brownville, Tex. occupied by men, women and children, killing Frank Natus, a citizen of that town; seriously wounding the lieutenant of police, Domingus, causing the loss of a man and killing the horse under him. The court is unanimous in its opinion that the evidence sustains the charges
Also, as to the disciplinary aspect of their crime, including the performance of duty by officers and enlisted men of the Twentieth-fifth Infantry, garrisoned in Fort Bryan, N.C., in April 1914, 1906, as measured by the standard in the army, the court is of the opinion that if the officers, non-comissioned officers, and private had performed their respective duties on the evening of August 13-14, 1906, immediately prior to the shooting affray, with apprehension or the objection upon them by the serious situation then confronting them, the shooting affray could not have occurred. Also, if immediately after the shooting when the man had been charged with the crime, a careful inspection of every man in the garrison, including his arms, equipment and ammunition, was attempted at daylight, several hours afterwards, some of the guilty men would have been discovered.
As to the eligibility to relatement, a majority of the zernt finds favorably as to the qualifications of the following man: Company B, Twenty-fifth Infanty—Jones A. Cotrane, Edward E. Daniels, Edward Warfield, Company C, Twenty-fifth Infanty—John A. Adair, Henry W. Arvin, Calvin Smith, John Smith, Company D, Twenty-fifth Infanty—Robert Williams, Winter Washingtin, Ellas Gant, John A. Jackson, Samuel E. Scott and William Van Hook.
Brig-Gen Theodore Schwan does not concur in the second conclusion. Lieutenant-General Samuel B. M Young and Major-General Joseph P. Fanger do not concur in the third conclusion. Bring to the terms of the act creating the board of inquiry, its findings are final, and cannot be reviewed by any one
---
THE BROWNSVILLE SHOOTING
Verdict Says Nobody In Guilty, There fore Everybody In Guilty.
Under the Forkar resolution the military court of Inquiry appointed to investigate the Brownsville shooting affray, as a condition to their re-enlistment, was to pass on the innocence and guilt of the 270 negro men who three years ago were dismissed without honor by President Roosevelt.
Like all the previous investigating bodies, after a year's diligent efforts the court is unable to establish the guilt of a single individual. According to the report, the court again convicts the entire battalion.
The logic of the verdict is as clear as day. As the report reads, nobody is guilty, therefore everybody is guilty, and, everybody being guilty, nobody is innocent, unless it be presumably the fourteen men who re-enlisted. How could escape being guilty when the entire battalion is guilty, except they were in Alaska or the Philippines or some equally distant place at the time of the shooting, is one of the mysteries of the case. And if these fourteen men are innocent, why have they undergoing punishment for three years?
One other point the court brings out, perhaps inadvertently. According to its findings, if the officers or the regiment had performed their duties immediately prior to the shooting affray, it could not have occurred; and also if immediately after the shoot the regiment had formed their duty "some of the guilty men would have been discovered." So no guilty men have been discovered and 270 have been punished; but the officers, who did not perform their duty on two occasions, were known and have enjoyed immunity. To be successful a farce should lead up to a grotesque climax. The course of the guilty man done as that possibly be guilty by the same Brownville burlesque upon justice a triumph of absurdity—New York World.
The Latest Brownsville Outrage.
The gross injustice, the variable outrage or the report of the Tatt Brownville Board is shown by the comment of the Boston Transcript, pro-choice, tough-hearted reactionary. It makes it more difficult to light the its attitude on this question in the past to have approved the finding. Instead it speaks statically of the investigation by the Cameron county, Texas, grand jury, by the marshal, by the U. S. Senate committee, by the antitrust detective agency.
and finally by this special court of inquiry. Then it concludes this: 'Yet the mystery of Brownville will cling to Brownville inquiries. The court is not unanimous. Two of the most important mending restoration of the specifie fourteen; and one, General Schwan amphitheaterly disarrants from the majorly criticism of the conduct of the offenders of the garrison limned.'
If a board of veteran officers, long familiarized by actual service, with troops in the field, camp and garrison, finds itself able to specify only a certain number of soldiers as absolutely innocent of participation in the military service, the civilian public may as well abandon all hope of ever identifying the actual raiders. Military man, by reading all the evidence, in the light of their tactical knowledge, may not be able wholly to solve the mystery of the attack, but was strong recently with some of those who had thus endeavored to penetrate the obscurity that not more than eighteen soldiers were involved. A conjecture which has found favor in army circles is that the enemy was three or four sets of "fours" with a few fainthoated accomplices following in the rear it will be noted that the special court does not wholly indorse President Rocovelli's course, nor wholly disapprove it, for it recommends the restoration of fourteen soldiers to the order of discharge without honor."
Though heretofore the talk on Roosevelt's part was only about 30 soldiers, now out or 167 only 14 are recommended for re-enlistment. This last seems to make glaring the call rage. —Boston, Mass. Guardian
The Brownsville Decision.
The court of inquiry in the Brownville case has at last rendered its decision. As has been forsahadowed by those who know most, several months ago, this decision is adverse to the soldiers. They could not prove that the soldiers were injured, and hence genesis ever undestakes to prove a negative. They could not prove that a single soldier was engaged in the shooting up of Brownville, and yet they declared that one hundred and twenty-five of them were guilty. The soldiers from which it deducted the fact that some of the soldiers did the shoot ing, and because none would say who did it, all it were adjudged guilty alike. Only fourteen are named as being worthy of re-enlistment. We presume that they are those who were absent from the barracks on the night in question.
Attorney Marshall who represented the soldiers did perfectly right to refusing to make any argument before the court. There was no way by which the colored men could prove direct that they were innocent, but they offered to prove indirectly by showing that some one did it. Attorney Marshall of forced to produce evidence to show that there was a conspiracy against the soldiers, who participated in the conspiracy, who shot up the town, and all the circumstances aroused him to this testimony. What the Court wanted was for some "nigger soldier" to brand others as midnight assassins, and because none would do this none was fit for reconstituent President Roosevelt was wrong. Congress was wrong by the fact that the Court of Inquiry was wrong when they required an unbehind of thing in American jurisprudence an accused person to prove his innocence.
The colored people have not the money that the Jews of France had with which to keep up the agitation and secure justice in the Droyls case, but they have those very Goddess们 who have perhaps not receive justice at the hands of the government which they have served, history will vindicate them, and those who have wronged them will suffer in the estimation of posterity. Forarker's chion voice no longer rings throughout he balls of Congress and we may believe that the last misgrace as it deserves to be—Philadelphia. Pa Odd Fellows Journal
WANT LEE STATUE REMOVED
Massachusetts G. A. R. Encampment
Sends Prot to Congress.
Boston, April 8 —At the Massa-
chusetts G. A. R. encampment today
the veterans unanimously entered a
national House of Representatives of
the status of Gen Robert E. Lee and
pitiloned Congress for the removal
Retiring Department Commander
John L. Parker said on the subject:
It would be an insult to the memory
of the men who gave their lives
to the war, and the veterans who have survived the war and who still cherish a love for the
flag they fought under to place the
status of Robert E. Lee in the full
uniform of a robot General in the
Hall of Fame, as it would teach to
coming generations that the man who
fought to destroy his country like
the highest honors the nation can best
Commander Parker said further that Congress passed the act setting apart the Hall of Fame in April, 1864, and that in the same week one commander by Robert E. Lee made an assault on the capital of the nation under the leadership of Jubal Early. The resolution said in substance that the Department of Massachusetts had requested the convention assembled, most courteously and earnestly requests the State of Virginia to withdraw this statue from the national Capitol, and most respectfully petition the Congress of the United States to remove the same order by the donors of the statue. Senior Vice-Commander Brown said that, after full investigation it had been determined that Robert E. Lee never accepted the terms of amnesty offered by Gen. Grant, but did not accept the terms of States, and that his claims therefore had no basis in the hall of honor.
PASTOR SLAIN BY MADMAN
Shot by Man Who Listened to His Sermon.
Said She Would Die For the Church, and Insane Man Took Him at His Word—Slayer Escaped.
A sermon on martyrdom, in which Frank Skala, an editor and prominent mission worker, had declared himself willing to lay down his life for the Christian cause, was followed by his assassination in a highly sensational manner, and the shooting down also of a fellow church leader, John Gay.
Arm II arm, the two missionaries were, leaving the little Congregational church in Wood's Run, a suburb of Pittburg at the head of more than a hundred of their followers. A raggedly dressed and collarless man poked his way through the corner of Wood street and McClure avenue, and when he was but a step behind the leaders, he pressed a revolver to Skala's head and frod twice.
The bullets took effect in the jaw and in the temple and in the midst of his followers he fell dead. Gay, who threw up his right hand as if to ward off the weapon, was struck first in the chest and then in the head. He fell unconscious across the lifeless body of his colleague. For a moment the assasinator stood over his victim in crazed grumph over the deed flourishing his revolver, while the panic stricken crowd fled to shelter behind posts and doorways. The murderer was Jan Radowich, a student known to most of his mission for his shiffless helmets, slovenly dress and radical opinions. A moment before he had meekly read from juvenile leaflets in the Sunday school led by Skala, previously he had sat in a back paw of the church during the regular sermon, and at the commencement of the services Skala had shaken his head in all this Dadowitch had given no warning of his murderous intent.
There were no police in sight when the murder was done, the church people were too frightened to grab the assassin, and after the wild flourish of the weapon and stamping his foot on the bodies, he made off down the avenue to the Fort Wayne railroad tracks and was soon lost to view. A large armed pose of police detectives and church people was soon in pursuit, but they have found no trace of them. After the madman's disappearance the mission crew reassembled about their fallen leaders and passionately mourned their loss. Shakla's body was removed to an undertaking establishment and Gay was taken to St John's hospital. His wound is dangerous but it is believed at the hospital that he will recover.
None of the church workers believe that there was any method in Radovich's madness. He was a man who raided and as a charitable parasite elsewhere, but was always at variance with the reachings of his Christian leaders. It is doubtful if he had ever seen Skala before.
Millionaire Indicted For Brirley
The grand jury at Pittsburg Pa.
indicted Frank N Hofferf president of the German National bank, of Allegheny, as well as president of the Pressed Steel Car company, on the charges of bribery and conspiracy President Emil Winter of the Work ingnson's Savings Bank and Trust company, of Allegheny another financial power of Pittsburg, went into court to confess that he had bribed councilmen to the extent of $200,000 and Anderson general book keeper of the Workingman's Savings Bank and Trust company was arraigned on a charge of having mutilated the books of his bank to save the ex poseure of certain persons. He pleaded nolo contendere and was placed under ball
The most startling feature of the graft probe up to date is information conveyed in the presentation handed down against Hoffat District Attorney William A Blakely appeared as a citizen before this grand jury in connection with the Hoffat investigation and told how before he became district attorney he had been approached by the prosecutor and by Councilman Charles Stewart and asked to act as stakeholder for a fund of $2,000 which they said were to be paid certain councilmen for the passage of a bank ordinance.
Ballroads Bales Wanes
Employees of the Philadelphia & Reading railway were notified that beginning April 1 their wages would be increased 6 per cent. The announcement, made in Philadelphia, says that the increase will be general among all permanent employees receiving less than 6 per cent. The increase been adjusted within the last ninety days.
Coming within twenty-four hours after the announcement by the Pennsylvania Railroad company of its wage boost and the increase all alike, has given rise to a report that there has been a slip-up in the announcement of the increase that raises were intended to be published simultaneously in railroad circles it was recalled that the last general increase in wages, made by the two companies in 1808, were announced at the same time. The increase at that time was 10 per cent.
The Reading's increase will affect about $7,000 employees. As the average pay is about $60 a month, the addition will cost the company about $7,800 a month, or $1,166,400 annually. The total number of employees, including those in the general offices, is $7,500. Not including the general office, the
number of employee is given as $R.100$.
To Reqare Oil and Tobacco Cases.
Both the oil trust and the tobacco trust dissolution cases must again be argued before the supreme court of the United States. This announcement was made by the chief justice.
The reargument of these cases contended that the death of Justice Flower a few days after the Standard Oil case had been argued.
As Justice Moody, was unable to participate in the consideration of these cases only seven justices were left to give a decision.
How the court was divided in regard to the decision is still as much a mystery as before the assignment of the cases for reargement.
It is believed, however, that the court was evenly divided or almost so, probably by the objection to the country's decision which was not supported by a majority of a full court. Buch a majority would be five members.
The fact that the corporation tax cases were not set for reargument is taken to mean that a decision will be announced in regard to the constitutionality of the law authorizing it in a short time.
Accidentally Killed His Wife
Mrs. Catherine Bomgardner, wife of a plumber, was shot by her husband, John W Bomgardner, in mistake for a burglar at their home in Harrisonburg, Pa. She died a few hours afterwards. The Bomgardners live in the central part of the city. As there have been several burglaries reported recently, Mr Bomgardner placed a revolver under his pillow several nights ago.
Before daylight Mrs. Bomgardner who had been ill, arose to get some medicine. This aroused her husband, who seeing her moving about the room, opened fire. One bullet struck the building a wound that resulted in her death.
A coroner's jury gave a verdict of accidental shooting
Thomas F. Walsh Doad.
Thomas F Walsh, the Colorado mine owner died at his home in Washington Mr Walsh had been ill for more than six months with heart trouble: that followed an attack of pneumonia. Mr Walsh her daughter Mrs Edward McLean and Edward McLean were at his bedside when the end came. Mr Walsh's wealth has been 'variously estimated at from $10,000,000 to $40,000,000. His daughter married Edward McLean a son of John R McLean, the publisher Mr Walsh was a friend of the late King Leopold oop and at the time of his death was one of the few men in this country to come forward with a statement in his behalf
Blow at High Cost of Living
The secrete committee headed by Senator Lodge哈 offered a remedy for the present high cost of living. This is in short to set a time limit on cold storage the limit to be a year. After that food in storage is to be considered as adulterated and to come under the provisions and prohibitions of the pure food act. It has a restraint on the matter it is being with it under the control of the federal government and not limit the latter's authority as the investigation conducted during the winter at the instance of Congressman Hampton Moore limited it to the District of Columbia and the territories
Woman Leavers $800,000 to Charity
Woman Leaves $800,000 to Charity
Miss Martha R Hunt eighty-six
years of age of Somersville Mass and
a graduate of the University of
March 15, after having increased an
autate of $200,000 left her by her
father in 1856 to more than $900,000 Her
will leaves $100,000 to relatives and
friends and $800,000 in public bequeat
remarkable increase in the in
valid's estate was due to her urgency
in investing in town and city loans
and conservative railroad bonds
Sibley Recover Light
Former Congressman Joseph C. Sibley, of Pennsylvania left Washington fag New York. Mr Sibley has been in a Washington hospital for nearly a month having cataracts removed from his eyes. He has been assured the danger of loss of sight is over Bicyclist Killed Training For Race. While he was training for a race at Newark N. J. Maurice Vanden dries an amateur bicyclist was almost instantly killed at the Volodrome track here. He sprinted headfirst into a post fracturing his skull Base Ball's Second Victim of Season Bass ball has claimed its second victim of the 1910 season in the death of fifteen year old Rudolph Rubling of New York who was struck on the head with a pitched ball.
T B Jr Wedding Date
Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and Misa Elena Alexander have set their wedding for June 20 in the afternoon in New York Colonnade Roosevelt salla for this country on the 10th
Chicken Pie Soar
Chickens sold at 19 cents a pound on the South Water street market in Chicago This is the highest price ever recorded in the history of the trade
A Dollar Bill Remedy
A Dollar Bill Remedy
I'll give you a bill and ill
Take a good old dollar bill
Aching her ear or falling hair,
Rheumatism causes, mumps,
Beats my time the way pain jumps,
Dollar bills the thing for you
Scarlet feet, chiblings, pip.
I'll cure em, likewise.
Baldinuns run
Modernism.
"Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
"I'm going first to Smith & Jones to match a piece of ribbon, then to Jones & Smith's to get a dozen hair pins, next to Jones Bow's to look at those darling little pink pins, after that to Smith Bow's to look for some of those like what-do-you-all-om, and then to Hairdresser's air" she said.
CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS.
Customs officials at San Francisco boiled $23,000 worth of contraband plum and poured the valuable drug into the sewers.
While roller skating in the street at Harrisburg, Pa., Genevieve Gano, the thirtysone-year-old daughter of Rev G. R. Gano, of Carlisle, was run down by a street car and killed.
Thomas Neal, one of the colored men under sentence of death who escaped from the Norfolk, Va., county fall March 5, was captured in Drumonda' woods, on the outskirts of Norfolk. He was shot with a revolver and a shotgun and is dying.
Friday, April 8.
It was announced that the engineers of the Central Railway of Georgia will be given an increase in wages of 5 per cent.
In a wreck on the Georgia railroad near Berrickia, Ga. two men were killed and one white man and four negroes solemnly hurt.
Frank Stachura six years old died in Chicago from drinking whiskey. The police have begun an investigation of a story that two men forced the liquor dealer to throw a throat.
Ten men were buried when the roof of the new car barn of the Shore Line Trolley company at Baybrook, Conn. fell in Jerry Kahan superintendent of the barn was killed his neck and back being broken
Saturday, April 9
John Chikamanda and Joseph Ham lock were arrested at Joliet III on a charge of blowing up the bank at Coal City
The farm house in which Mrs Mara Baker Eddy was born on July 18 1821 at Bowl N. H. was burned. The house had been occupied lately by Walter Perrigo and his family.
The estate of Annie Hays Bryers of Pittsburgh worth $100,000 is to be divided between the Western Humane society and the Pittsburg Hospital for Children, according to the will
Chikamanda of Civil War veteran an inmate of the National Soldiers home near Johnson City Town was shot and killed just outside the house Charles Sellers, a young man was arrested near the house suspected of the crime
Monday April 11
Dawnpoint in love. Michael Has
selenar sent two big snakes in a box to
Roose Cubana at Manchester N H
An infant of Mr. and Mrs J F
Holland of East Manchuk Chunk Pa
was fatally burned by a treacle of
coffee being spet
Admitting ember element Caasler
R Coddlington of the Grand Valley
State bank at Glenwood Springs Cal
was sentenced to ten years imprisonment
to the residence of Irwin Briner in
Balmbridge Pa workmen digging a
cellar found the skull and skeletons
of Indiana of the Dekawagh trite at
one time settlers at Balmbridge
Tuesday, April 12
Thirty nine more bodies were taken Cherry III where they had been on tombed since the disaster of Nov 13. Burrell Brown a burglar returning home at Fort Wayne Ind and finding Emmett Williams in the house shot Williams and fatally wounded his wife. V. Mappittani an Italian was shot and killed and Michael Martino a policeman and another man were seriously wounded at Metzle Park Chicago in a raid in fight which originated in jealousy. Seventeen physicians of Los Angeles 'ul' assisted as an operation was underway. A nine-inch length from the woman Sarah Carlson an innkeeper woman. The operation was successful.
Wednesday April 13
The federal court of appeals in a decision handed down in New York holds that a man's reputation is not infured by the protesting of his check by a bank in mistake.
Bible suffering from the toothache in New York for forty six years old of Pittsburgh Pa dragged a two ounce bottle of carabine盐 at her home and died soon afterward.
Members who attended the class dinner of John D Rockefeller Jr. A Bible class in New York paid 10 cents extra owing to the advanced cost of living. Hitherto the price had been 10 cents a plate.
In front of a found a small package in front of a jewelry shop last Friday in New York and opening it found a $100 diamond necklace. He received from the owner just half of its value as a reward for his honesty. $5000
PRODUCE QUOTATIONS
The Latest Closing Prices For Produce and Live Stock
PHILADELI PHIA • FLOUR quiet,
winter low grades $40 • 30 winter
clear $40 • 50 city mills fancy $8
RYE FLOUR dawn at $40 • 40 per
barrel
BEAT quiet, No 2 red $11 • 16%
118%
CORN steady No 2 yellow local
66 • 67%
Quiet No 2 white 48 • 69%
49c lower steady 47 • 49c
POILTRY Live steady hens 20
@20 • 20 cold roaters 14c Dressed
cold roaters 19a 14c old roaters
14c
BUTTER steady extra creamery
46 • 46
EQUIS dawn, selected 26 • 26c
moth, 23c, western 23c
POTATOR quiet at $26 • 36 bush
Live Stock Markets
PITTSBURU Stock Yard
CATTLE steady, choice $20.95
prima, choice $19.95
HEBER heber, prime wothers, $10
culls, culls and common $45.40
lambs, $6.98, calves, $6.98
HOGS steady, prime heaves, me
diamonds and yards Yorke $10.95
Yorke and pls. $11.95
$9.80
$10.
To Bult Her Habits
She was telling how she once had a canary, a dear little yellow thing, but she had forgotten and left him out in the rain one night, and in the morning there he lay, a little yellow, pitiful beep at the bottom of his cage, "But" they said to her. "If you must know you can learn the poignant lag rain, you can learn the poignant lag rain." She didn't you get a nice little deck?—New York Press.
Real Estate and Private Banking. House Bonds or Sold, Renis Collected, Loans Negotiated.
Temporary Office:
1018 St. John Street.
'Phone Monroe 2017.
"CHEROKEE"
Blood Tonic,
'THE RED MAN'S GIFT TO SUPERFERING HUMANITY."
An Invaluable Comedy for Scrofula, Rheumatism, Eczema, Trotter, and All Diseases Arising From Impure Condition of Blood.
Can be found at
JOHN G. SMITH,
1301 East Leigh Street.
WANTS FOR JERSEY Gooak
$25 to $80; Launchers $25 to $60; General Wish
$15 to $25; Man and Wish $10 to $10; Farm
$10; Address K. E. H. GREEN, 143 East 23rd Street
REV. DR. H. N. BOUEY DIES.
Faithful Herald of the Cross Passes
Away in Africa.
The news of the recent death of the
Rev Dr H N Bouey, missionary in
charge of the work of the foreign
mission board, west coast of Africa, for
the national Baptist convention of
the United States, came as a great shock
to the entire Baptist brotherhood in
America. Rev Dr Bouey was born in Georgia
Aug 4, 1840, and was a missionary in
Aug for nine years. Before going
to Africa he gave $100 toward the
founding of the Western college,
Macon, Mo., and spent twelve years as
superintendent of missions in that
state. On Dec 11, 1908, he sailed for
Africa for the third and last time. He
succeeded in building a church at Tal-
tahua territory, and planned the erection of a permanent house for the Jordan
industrial mission at Bendon station.
JOHN H. HARRIS
REV. DR. H. M. BOEHN.
At his death the work was almost completed. Dr. Bouye leaves three boys to mourn their loss. His dying request was that his sons be educated in the United States. To this end Dr. L. G. Jordan, secretary of the foreign mission board, will work
Dr. Petitford and wife of Birmingham, Ala., have agreed to give $100 toward the home passage of the boys. Memorial services in all churches throughout the denomination will be held during this month for the deceased missionary. Letters from pastors and missionaries at the mission rooms in Louisville, Ky., daily, asking for information concerning the life and work of Dr. Bouye in order to make the memorial services more interesting and effective
The foreign mission board is making a attentive effort to raise a large sum of money on Easter Sunday, March 27, the day set apart for the annual foreign mission rally, and is urging every Baptist Sunday school in the country to use programs arranged and sent free to the Sunday schools by the board, provided the money raised on that day be given to foreign missions
Judgment!
Sometimes in selling motion line
As "Regular leader, auditee"
The butcher fails if the tale is true
To separate the shoe from the goose
Scriptural Reflection
The man with the falling fringe of hair in sort of a frown from ear to ear across the back of his head stood in a store and watched a woman purchasing braids, swatched and so forth. Turning sadly away he mourned "Unto her that hath shall be given but from him that hath not shall be taken even that which he hath"—Life.
A 8:1gn
There is no doubt that spring is near
We soon shall hear the cooking frog
For yesterday more while sitting here
I got the seedman's catalogue
Matter of Position
A prominent lawyer wife and fads about hygienic sleeping. She once asked her husband, "Is it better to lie on the right side or on the other?" He answered succinctly, "My dear, when one is on the right side it generally is not necessary to do much yelling."—Leahle's Weekly
---
SIX
SATURDAY APRIL 10, 1910
The Question of John
the Baptist
Sunday School Lesson for April 17, 1910
Specially Arranged for This Paper
LESSON TEXT Matthew 14:11 D Mem-
ory verse, 4
GOLDEN TEXT That the witness
which I have is greater than that of
John which I gave me is a amplifier the
works that I do bear witness of me.
that the Father bath sent me John
6 M
TIME Perhaps in the summer of A
D 23 before our last lesson
PLACE 2 Jesus was somewhere in that life. According to Luke he had just raised the son of the widow at Nain John the Baptist was in prison at Castle Boleyn on the east of the Dead Sea.
Suggestion and Practical Thought.
Christ's Answer to Honest Doubt -- Who was this doubter this John the Baptist? He was the last man in the world one might have expected to entertain doubts regarding Jesus. He was his cousin according to the flesh born only a short time before our Lord. He was brought up as a Nazir arts like Samson and Samuel, and his pure and simple life gave him fine insight into spiritual matters.
II The Doubt Vs 13 Under what circumstances did John begin to doubt the Messiahship of Jesus? He had been cast into prison as a punishment for his bold condemnation of the sin of Herod Antipas. Herod had sent away his own wife and had perused his brother's wife to become his
What was the sensible course that John took to rid himself of doubt? He sent directly to Jesus by "two of his disciples," who had remained faithful to him in all his trials. The message was, "Art thou he that should come a common and well understood description of the Messiah - or do we look for another?"
Illustration "A weaver who had an elaborate piece of tapestry hung it stretched upon the tenter books in his yard. That night it was stolen. A piece of tapestry was found by the officers which seemed to answer the description, but as the pattern was not unlike that of other fabrics, there must be definite proof it was brought to the weaver's yard and there the perforations in the fabric were found to correspond precisely to the tenter books. This was demonstration in like manner if we place the life and character of Jesus against all prophecies of Messiah in Scripture in the sacred books of the false religions, and in the universal longings of the race, we shall find that there is a perfect correspondence point by point." David James Farrell (D. D. L. D.
Christ's Answer to the Doubt, Vol. 46 Luke tells us (Luke 7:21) that when John's message was delivered Christ proceeded at once to work many miracles of healing including the cure of demonace and of the blind. Not until he had done this did he give the messengers his reply.
Christ gave two credentials of his Messiahship what was the first "His miracles, the unbelied fact that the blind receive their sight and the lame walk the path are cleansed and the deaf hear that are raised up."
With what significant exhortation did Jesus close his message to John? Blessed is he whoever shall not be offended in me.
Christ a Institute of the Honest Doubter. What? Why our Lord as soon as John's disciples departed, tell the crowd what he thought of John? Because they right think that John a question into a weakness in him at which Christ would be fended. As John had exalted Jesus so Jesus would exalt John. Christ's Estimate of Dishonest Doubter. -Vs 16 19 John was ready to receive Jesus as soon as his mind could be convinced that is, he was an honest doubter. John turns severely upon a set of men, the Pharisees and lawyers (Luke 7 30), who showed plainly that they were dishonest doubter being unwilling to receive the truth no matter how much evidence was given them.
To what does he compare them? To children playing in the marketplaces at marriage, and funerals trifling with the greatest things of life. Some are pretending to play the fiddle, like the hired musicians that headed the wedding proceedings followed by other children will not join in the piping or the walling at the right times to please them. These last of course are Jesus and John.
To what comforting conclusion did Christ come? That wisdom—the Truth of which he was an incarnation—is justified approved, accepted, by her children even though all the children of the cell one reject her. Their hearts are in union with the gospel harp when Christ a minister strikes its golden strings their feelings vibrate to every touch they can accompany him through its whole compass of sound, from the low notes of pious grief and penitential sorrow up to the high thrilling tones of enraptured gratitude love, and praise"—Edward Payson
Be not anxious about little things,
if thou would learn to trust God
with thine all. Act upon faith in little
things, commit thy daily cares
and anxieties to him and he will
strengthen thy faith for greater trials
that may come—D. Pussey.
Contantment comes neither by culture nor by wishing. It is a reconciliation with one's lot, growing out of an inward superiority to our surroundings. J K McLean
We need not more method, but more motive. John Willis Bauer
Bill Jones was an eccentric character, a local justice of the peace in a South Carolina town. He was exceedingly tall—so attenuated, in fact, that but for his hat he would not have cast a shadow. One night a number of fellow bon vivants joined him in a symposium, and many mint juleps were consumed. One of the party unsteadily produced a revolver. It was accidentally discharged, and a bullet struck Bill Jones in the leg. Conscience stricken and wrably with excitement and juleps, the owner of the weapon hastened to the home of the nearest doctor and pulled the door bell. At length the physician, who had himself been spending a riotous evening, stuck his head from the second story window. "Whaza unazzer?" he demanded thickly
"I jush shot Bill Jones in the leg" repited the man below. "Shot Bill Jones in the leg" repented the doctor wonderingly. "Thash what I shald," returned the offender "what Bill Jones in the leg" the doctor gazed down upon him admiringly. "Well," he said, "that wash a bell of a good shot." And he closed the window and went back to bed.
The Hall of Fame
Wait not for luck to show the boil
Nor chance give up her key
The door that opened for the great
Is open yet for thee
Luck is a sleepy sentinel
As chance a fickle light
Many a man lath passed them both
And entered in the night
Have little care if neither heed
The lamar call or din
Take up the magic touch and key
And let thine own self in
Snared Humself
Charles Mathews, the famous English actor once indulged in his talent for mimetry to his own misfortune Mr Tattersall the well known guitarist, was conducting a sale of blooded stock "the first lot, gentlemen" said Mr Tattersall is a boy filly by Smolensko.
"The first lot, gentlemen," echoed Mr Mathews in the same tone of voice is a boy filly by Smolensko. The nicest look looked somewhat unposed but proceeded "a well what should we begin with?"
"Well what should we begin with?" replied the child.
"Well indulge in one of his verses." Mr Tattersall called out "One hundred guinea." "One hundred guinea," echoed Mathews.
"Thank you sir," cried Mr Tattersall belonging down the hammer with a bang "the fly is yours."
Could He Halo It?
A lady and a little boy entered the car but the boy applauded and fidgeted so much on his seat that at last one of the other passengers expatulated "For goodness sake keep your child still madam" I am very sorry" said the mother "but the truth is untrue I get to the hospital I didn't be able to quiet him
Dear me, What's the matter with him?
He will need a trainee on yesterday and ever she has a job on the site
The Law and the Lady
Pat I think in had been summoned to jury duty. Coming downstairs one morning dressed in his Sunday outfit his wife looked at him and said, 'Where are you going Pat?' He replied, 'I'm going to court.' 'If I'm' said the wife and that stalked out Next morning Pat came downstairs all shaved and shorn with the same suit of clothes on. 'And where are you going today?' said the wife.
"Sure I'm going to court!
"Ye are are ye?"
Pat went out and slammed the door
The third morning Pat came in and
sat down to the breakfast table with
the same suit of clothes on and gret
ed his wife who said
"And where are ye going this morning Pat?"
"I'm going to court
The wife laid her hands upon
a rolling pin stood before the door and
said
"You're going to court are ye?
Ya," said Pat
"No, ye are not. If there are any coor-
ting to be done it will be done right
here. Go upstairs and take off thin
clothes." Newark Star
A married man ran away with a silly young girl, and after an exciting chase the elopes were finally captured and returned to their homes. Feeling in the town ran high against the man, and a number of neighbors were sitting together one evening discussing the case. Naturally everybody had an idea of his own as to what action should be taken against the married man.
One suggested jail for life, another said silently years in the penitentiary would do, and a third offered tar and feathers. A little man who sat in the carer looked up and smiled.
"I have a scheme," he remarked, "that beats all of yours a mile."
"What would you do with him?" the chorus asked.
"I would turn him over to his wife's mother," said the quiet little man. Philadelphia Telegraph.
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THEIR FRIENDS.
Stetson's Advice as to Where They Might Possibly Be Found.
John Stetson used to have a vauceville house in Philadelphia, and he is augmented there the custom which prevails now in some of the cheaper theaters of taking a performer off in the middle of the turn if he did not please the patrons in front. Every Monday night opened his house with fifteen acts, and as each one went on he stood in the wings and allowed those in front to decide whether it should be retained on the bill.
Sometimes the people in front would cry, "Take him off John, he's no good!" and Stetson would march out on the stage and drag the performer off, give him $10 for his performance and tell him he need not return. One evening there were two men who seemed especially obnoxious to the audience, who greeted them with cat calls and howling derision. They man aged, however, to get through with their song and came off the stage nervily preparing to return for the re-mainder of their act.
"Here you!" shouted John Stetson "what was the name of that song?" "What a to that you?" asked one of the singers.
"It may be something to you," an swerved Stetson with a few of the curse words for which he was noted "I am John Stetson and I want to know the name of that song."
"Beg pardon, Mr Stetson!" said the crestfallen variety man "It is called 'Where are the Friends of Our Youth'."
"Well you didn't seem to find them out in front. Take this $10 and go and hunt them on the outside."
Show Your Talents.
Exert your talents and distinguish yourself, and don't think of retiring from the world until the world will be sorry that you retire. I hate a fellow whom pride or cowardice or laziness drives into a corner and who does nothing when he is there but sit and growl. Let him come out as I do, and bark - Samuel Johnson.
A Suggestive Bark
The man who ruined a sausage maker a trade by walking into his shop with a sackful of dead cats and dumping the contents down on the counter now finds a rival albeit an unintentional one in the person of a London waiter. The latter worthy, being asked by a customer for sausages, replied that there were none left, but, being an obliging disposition he went on to say that if the gentleman did not mind waiting for a few minutes some should be obtained for him including
FLRD WILDLY INTO THE STREET
of course, that they should be sent out for. The customer having signified his willingness to wait, the waiter proceeded to the culinary department to give the necessary instructions, but on arriving there he had the misfortune to step on the tail of a dog which belonged to one of the kitchen attendants. The injured animal immediate let out a series of agonized poles, whereupon the customer, being evidently a man of imaginative mind, turned pale, hesitated only a second and then, grabbing his coat and hat, fled wildly into the street.
Knew What Would Happen. A famous corporation lawyer was telling some anecdotes of criminal law:
telling some uneducated of criminal law: "One case in my native Lynchburg," he said, "implicated a plantar of sinister repute. The plantar's chief witness was a servant named Calhoun White. The prosecution believed that Calhoun White knew much about his master's slady side. It also believed that Calhoun, in his misplaced affection, would lie in his master's behalf." "When, on the stand, Calhoun was
ready for cross examination, the pro-
secuting counsel said to him sterilized.
"Now, Calhoun, I want you to
understand the importance of telling
the truth, the whole truth and nothing
but the truth in this case."
"Yes, sah," said Calhoun.
"You know what will happen I
suppose, if you don't tell the truth?"
"Yes, sah," said Calhoun promptly.
"Our side 'I will do case.'"
On the Sly
Professor Percival Lowell, the famous astronomer, once told an amusing story of an old woman he at one time had as housekeeper, to whom he made a sporting offer
"Janet," he said to her one day "the very next planet I discover I will make you a present of $5."
"You are very kind, air," she replied, "and I am sure I hope you will soon discover one."
Several months went by, and no planets were discovered.
"The fact of the master is, ma'n," confided the old woman at last to Mrs. Lowell. "I do think the professor goes out at night and discovers planets on the aly."
DAMES AND DAUGHTERS
Miss Caroline McGill of the University of Missouri faculty has been made a scholar of a Naples association for promoting scientific research by women.
Miss Belle Squires, a music teacher in Chicago, has refused to pay a personal tax, urging that without a vote she would be submitting to tyranny to pay a tax.
Mrs. Helen Trop of Auburn, N.Y. has been received into full membership of the Six Nations. She has devoted the last fourteen years to study and research regarding the Iroquois traditions.
Mme. Anna Rogstad, the first woman member of the storthing, which is the lower house in the Norwegian parliament, was a teacher in one of the primary grades of the public schools in Christmas when elected.
Mme. de la Roche has won an air pilot's license from the French Aero club by flying four times around the aviation course at Heliopolis, a total distance of twelve miles. She is the first woman to get this distinction.
Miss Jeanette Mitriam Goldberg of Jefferson, Tex., and Philadelphia, field secretary of the Jewish Chauqua movement, is one of the foremost Jewish woman of the world and one whose work along social lines has extended through practically every state in the United States and into many foreign countries.
Things Theatrical.
Logan Paul is in the company playing The Souwai Man "
Oscar Whide's play, "The Duchess of Padun," is to be produced in London by George Alexander
Sheldon Lewis has been engaged by Harrison Grey Elake for Mrs. Flake's company in "Pillars of Society"
"The Dawn of a Tomorrow," in which Eleanor Robson has been starred, will be produced in Berlin
Olga Nethersole will have a spring season in London, opening in May. She may later, on make a tour of the South American cities. It is said that E. 13. Sothern and Miss Julia Marlowe will not act together next season and that Miss Marlowe may visit Australia
Tales of Cities.
Singapore has been for some years the most prosperous and progressive city in the far east.
The city of Pekin has supplanted its insatiable wells with a thoroughly modern system of waterworks, including pumping stations, settling tanks, filtration beds and water fowers.
The maldon name of Nassau street, New York, was Pie Woman's lane. It was opened in 1900 by a man-named Kay, who was granted, the right to make it a cartway to what is now City Hall park.
"Forward" is the motto of Atlanta, Ga., and her taxpayers seem more than willing to live up to it. Recently by a large majority they voted to issue $3,000,000 of bonds for permanent improvement $200,000 of the laws to be
This organization is one of the most powerful in the country and its progress has been phenomenal. The Grand Lodge of Virginia has jurisdiction over all of the cities and counties in this state. Thirty males are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitute one of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything else. Founded on Friendship, based on Charity and established on Benevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will find it an order worthy of their heartiest support.
It pays an endowment and burial benefit of of $200.00 for all ages. It pays $4.00 per week sick dues. The badge costing 75 cents each is the only absolutely necessary regalia. For information concerning the organization of lodges apply at the main office.
The Courts of Calanthe
The Courts of Calanthe
Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership of thirty persons to organize a court. Its members are pledged to exhibit Fidelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love one for the other. It pays an endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per week sick dues. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions.
For all information concerning special rates of membership in the lodges and courts, address
John Mitchell, Jr. 311 N. 4th Street.
SIRIOF D. NATURA
only absolutely necessary regu-
apply at the main office.
The Court
Is the Female Department of the
thirty persons to organize a co-
Fidelity, exercise Harmony and
an endowment and burial bene-
dues. The only expense for re-
a rosette, costing 25 cents for f
For all information concerning
John
31
used for the schools. A new hospital a cermatory, a complete sewer system and water extensions are also provided for.
Church and Clergy.
Forty two per cent of the clergy live to be asphengemenss
The oldest Presbyterian church in the United States is said to be the one at Southampton, N. Y. The building was erected in 1707 and was dedicated in 1700.
In the English Church Times the clerical obituary for 1,523 contains 401 names. The ages of 510 of the deceased clergymen are mentioned and these show the attainment of an average age of seventy one and one half years.
Roy B. M. Stewart who has spent eight years on the northern coast of Labrador, says that up there it is of ten question of starvation or a diet of raw seal. He says that it tastes like a combination of codfish and beef steak with a dash of rabbit thrown in
Facts From France.
Park has 80,000 liquor selling establishments.
In France the prime minister is more powerful than the president.
The coal trade in Paris is almost monopolized by natives of the single province of Auvergne.
The Paris Exair announces that an absolutely stable smokeless powder has been discovered and is now at the service of the French army and navy Chemical agents, heat, excessive cold, humidity. Might and Herzian waves have no effect upon this powder
Short Stories.
During 1009 the patent office issued 83,514 patents, while 22,328 expired
Pass a warm iron over stamps that stick together, and they'll come apart.
A novel restaurant to Vienna is surrounded by a curtain of falling water to simulate rain.
Phonographs on push carts are replacing the long familiar hand organs in the streets of European cities.
Russia has the highest death rate of any European country but Spain and Austria-Hungary are also high
Beside the Question
Miss Curt-The women are now sending out a ringing cry to the man Miss Fert-If they are young and pretty they can get the ring from the men without crying for it. Baltimore American.
We Are Tough Creatures.
After all, civilized life is full of perils. Nobody could stand it but civilized people, who are the toughest creatures on the face of earth. Savages die of sleeping indoors, die of rum, of the measles, smallpox and various epidemics that civilized people merely take in their stride. Civilized people can stand anything. The English variety can stand tube and unlimited exercise, the German sort an unwholecome deal of voluntary attention. We Americans—oh, we shall learn to digest or endure whatever excesses of food, drink, work, abstinence, legislation, attention or institution are proper to our stripe of civilization and thrive on them in the end. Harper's Weekly.
Millman Sawed In Twale
Milton, Pa. March 30.—John G. Yvonne, of White Dead township, Union county, about three miles from this place, met a horrible death in his saw mill, when a large plank pitched blinds into a circular saw, which covered his body near the middle. He leaves a widow and two sons.
Replaced manuscript.
"A panny for your thoughts."
The postman says.
The downward gulpe rather hard.
And, sadly, pays.
And the squiggle through.
The shake and splug.
To see a pack of thoughts come back!
With postcard date.
—Leuville Courier-Journal.
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Of every description, also the latest designs in ROCKERS and special CHAIRS Our goods are the best for the price and the price is very low. C. G. JURGEN'S SON, ADAMS AND BROAD STREETS.
A. Hayes
OFFICE AND WARK-ROOMS,
727 North Second Street
RESIDENCE, 725 N. and St.
First-class Hacks and Caskets of
all descriptions. I have a spare
room for bodies when the family
have not a suitable place. All country
orders are given special attention.
Your special attention is called
to the new style Ozak Caskets.
Call and see me and you shall be
waited on individually.
Alwava Marked Down.
While prices swell and women don't
And living hard and harder get,
There's consolation mixed with all
These vain and clamorous regrets.
For instance, posts should rejoice
That verse this soaring habit mocks
At any store you're sure to find
Their volumes in the book
—New York Press.
Can You Beat it?
"Woman is very unreasonable," said a venerable New Hampshire justice of the peace. "I remember that my wife and I were talking over our affair one day, and we agreed that it had come to the point where we must both economize. Yes, my dear, I said to my wife, we must both economize—both! Very well, Honry, she said, with a tired air of submission, you shave yourself, and I cut your hair!"—Everybody's Magazine.
Pen and Paper.
"Paper," whether of rags or of wood pulp, still its name from the papyrus. A "book" is the beech, the wooden rod on which our forefathers cut their runic letters. And a "pencil" is still by derivation "penecillus," a little fall, having been, originally the name of the Roman painter's brush.
Least Precious Metals:
The loss from wear and tear and shipwreck of precious metals has been estimated at two tons of gold and a hundred tons of silver nearly.
Subscribe to THE FLANKT.
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the lodges and courts. address
l, Jr.,
Street.
THE ECONOMY
303-5 North Third St
FINE
TAILORING
CLEANING, DYEING AND
REPAIRING
CHITMAN M. WHITE,
PROPRIETOR.
STRAUS' SPECIAL
Old Yacht Club.
Will satisfy the lover of the right
kth of stimulant. Special prices.
We have all grades of good liquor,
Cigars and Tobacco. Call and see
us.
ISAAC STRAUS & CO.,
422 E. Broad St.,
Richmond, Virginia.
H F Jonathan
FISH, OYSTERS AND
PRODUCE.
114 N. 17th St., RICHMOND, VA.
ALL ORDERS WILL RECEIVE
PROMPT ATTENTION.
Long Distance Phone, 763.
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,
DENTIST,
115 East Leigh St.
'PHONE, 816.
60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
SATURDAY APRIL 16, 1910
FARM NOTES.
Never disturb the bees in cold weather
Spring is the best time to make a start in bee-keeping
Never approach the bee hives from the front if you would keep peace with the inmates.
You can breed the nubbins out of the corn just as easy as you can breed the scrub cows out of the dry hard.
Isn't it a shame that the wheat lands of this country produce an average of only about 12 bushels per acre?
The hired man who shirks or dodges his work to save a backache will never be anything but a hired man.
Gardening time will be here before you are ready for it. If you are not careful, regardless of the cold winds to-day.
While you are backed up to the big store in the grocery store, don't leave your team shivering in the cold, unblanketed.
The gasoline engine, valuable as it is, will never entirely take the place of really good horses on the farm or anywhere else.
It is not good policy to keep a boy on the farm if he has the ability to earn the wages of a dozen bred men in the city. Let him go.
The seeds of all kinds should be selected and the cleanest and best of the different varieties. If possible none other should be used.
Select for fall plowing the stubborn, refractory clay soil, and on all fields not fall plowed have cover crops growing, to be plowed under in spring.
Bees are very susceptible to odors and that of a dog or horse which may cling on the garments of some one near the hive will rouse their anger.
IMPLEMENT FOR SOD-CUTTING
Tool Shown in Illustration Will Dig Out Section of Turf with Neat mess and Dispatch
Expressly designed by a New Jersey man for the purpose of cutting sod, the implement shown in the illustration greatly expands that work. It resembles a shovel with high, sharp sides, and has a hinged footpiece which comes down in front and chops out the section of turf which the shovel dig loose. The shovel is
Bod-Cutting Tool.
thrust under the sod until it can go no further. Then the knife is jammed down and the whole withdrawn with a neat piece of sod. The operation consumes only a fraction of the time required to dig out a piece of turf by the old method, and has the additional mortar of bringing the sod out whole and with smooth sides, and not in the ragged shape that it sometimes is out. In the middle of the handle of this tool is a catch to engage the knife section and hold it out of the way when it is not needed to cut the sod loose.
PLANNING FARM FOR PROFIT
Bulletin Recently Issued by United States Department of Agriculture Important to Farmer.
A recent bulletin issued by the United States department of agriculture entitled "Planning a Farm for Proof," deals with principles that are vital to successful farming in the corn belt. Pew farmers rehilts the difference in income that may be produced on the farms by the systematic introduction and rotation of clover or other leguminous crops over the entire area of their tillable land. The planning of rotations to meet certain feed requirements and to grow crops which shall be the greatest income producers under given conditions is a problem that is not easily solved by all the tillers of the soil. The conservation of soil fertility by appropriate rotations, together with applications of manures and fertilizers in each manner, will maintain a permanent system of agriculture has been largely overlooked by farm owners in the past. Farmers, Builders, 1970, describe the farmer's solving these difficult it challenges. A landowner in Illinois and others in the Midwest will find crops and farming tasks that may be substituted for the main tasks of corn and cotton farming practices, so as to raise the income
all the way from two to five times as much as that commonly received, and at the same time, increase the fertility of the soil. A copy of this bulletin may be, had free on application to a member of congress or the secretary of agriculture. Washington
HOW TO LIFT A WAGON BED
Illustration Showing How Body Can Be Raised, and Can Be Made by Any Hardy Farmer.
An apparatus for lifting a wagon body is a simple contrivance and may be made by a farmer handy with tools. A A A (Fig. 1) are joists of an ordinary wagon shed upon which is placed a wooden roller B. This is four inches in diameter. D is a strong rope which winds around the roller and is fastened at its lower end to the cross place E. Through each end
Lifting Wagon Body.
of the cross piece passes a half-inch round bar F, with a bar on top of E. The lower ends of these bars end with square bends of three inches, which hook under the wagon bed and when turned half around will slip off and may be hoisted up and put out of the way. The handles C are four feet long and are morticed into the roller. A man or boy standing on the ground can turn the handles with ease and lift the bed in half the time it would require four men without this apparatus.
Fig. 2 shows a jack for a wagon bed and a platform or frame to re-
Wagon Bed Jack
ocive the bed by driving four stout stakes into the ground, as high as the top of the standards and nailing cross pieces to them. The lifter consists of a stout piece of scantling or timber, which will reach two feet above the wagon bed, the top rounded, and a pin driven into it, which passes through a slot in the lever. Two chains with hooks are fastened at the short end of the lever and a rope or chain at the other end. The arm should be three feet and the lover and nine feet. The wagon is driven close against the side of the platform. The lifter should be placed as shown in the illustration, on a line midway between the wagon and the platform. The hooks on the ends of the chains are then caught under the bed, or on the rod which passes through the rear end of the bed, and by pulling on the rope or chain the bed is easily lifted out and swung around on the platform. The front end may be lifted over. The jack can be used to return the bed to the wagon. The jack may be moved from place to place and is serviceable for lifting other heavy articles.
SELF-FEEDER FOR THE BEES
Simple Device for Feeding Industrial
Little Insects with Sweet
Stuffs is Shown.
A very simple device for feeding
bees on syrup is shown herewith.
Take an ordinary fruit can, fill it full of syrup and over the top to a thick rag with a string. Then invert the cap in a
Take an ordinary can, fill it full of syrup and over the top tip a thick rag with a string. Then invert the can in a small pan or dish. The syrup will see out through the rag around the edges of the far just fast enough for the bees to keep it cleaned up.
Spending is Harder.
"Any blockhead, can make money." The old counterfeiter said;
"But the man who tries to spend it Must have a level head."
Reasoning It Out:
"Oh, come," he said, "what's the good of your answering no night after night and week after, week when you love me and are going to say yes at the end!"
"I admire your self-assurance. What makes you think I love you?"
"My, you treat me with no more consideration than my first wife ever did."—Chicago Record-Herald.
A Diefyback.
Bacon—They say that's one of the healthiest places to be found.
Egbert—But there are so many files there.
"Yes; that is just why they go there."—Yonkers Statesman.
Why He Lost
"Why do you want to run for office?"
"The state is calling for me."
"Ply it isn't calling loud enough for the voters to hear it"—Cleveland Leader.
"Heard that story about a big tale
plush bright"
"Who?"
"What is there, in it?"
"Nothing but talk, I guess."—Gove,
and Lederer.
FOURTEEN ERRORS OF LIFE.
The 11 mistakes of life are:
To expect to set up our own standard of right and wrong and expect everybody to conform to it.
To try to measure the enjoyment of others by our own.
To expect uniformity of opinion in this world.
To look for judgment and experience in youth.
To odensevor to mold all dispositions alike.
Not to yield in unimportant trifles.
To look for perfections in our own actions.
To worry ourselves and others about what cannot be remedied.
Not to alleviate if we can all that needs allotiation.
Not to make allowances for the weaknesses of others.
To consider anything impossible that we cannot burselves perform.
To believe only what our finite minds can grasp.
To live as if the moment, the time, the day were so important that it would live forever.
To estimate people by some outside quality, for it is that within which makes the man.
KEEP THESE IN MIND.
The value of time. Lost capital may be restored by diligent use of experience; time lost is lost forever
The success of perseverance. "Keeping everlastingly at it" always brings the hoped-for result.
The pleasure of working. The only really unhappy, rich or poor, are the idle.
The dignity of simplicity When the "frills" are off the man is "on"
The worth of character In the last analysis the only real value is a clear conscience
The power of kindness It wins when all coercive measures fail
The influence of example. Practice does more than precept, in showing the way.
The obligation of duty Your concern should not so much be what you get, as what you do for what you get.
The wisdom of economy The man who saves makes more than tb saves.
The virtue of patience. "All things come to him who waits."
The improvement of talent. Talent is the only capital which compounds itself by exercise.
The joy of originating. The happiest man is he who does the best thing first.—From the Master Printer.
FOR A MUSICIAN.
Music was taught to Achilles in order to moderate his passions.—Homer
For recreation from your musical studies road the poets frequently.—Schumann
The love of the beautiful, next to the spiritual perception of God and eternal relationships, must be admitted to be man's crowning distinction.—Vancleve.
The love of beauty is taste; the creation of beauty is art—Emerson.
Think more of your own progress than of the opinion of others—Mendelsohn
The master works of the past should be the standard of the works of the present.—Franz.
It is much easier to be critical than to be correct.—D'Iserelli.
SNAPSHQTS.
When a man offers to pay you in advance, take the money.
There's been many a slip this winter 'twint downtown and home.
Unless you give the poet the right sort of thing to eat he will give you doggerel.
Since the suffragettes have joined the most boycott they will not have as much blood in their eyes.
Be careful when you dig a nice little hole for some pet enemy to fall into that you don't grow absentminded and tumble in yourself.
The man who can do a thing that's very unpleasant, and at the same time keep a smiling face, is usually pretty hard to keep at the foot of the class.
If you will just remember that it's a whole lot easier to start something than it is to stop it, you will save yourself a vast amount of trouble in this old world—Dallas News.
Hopelieve.
"Put, did you bring back my umbrella?"
"No, sor. When I come imptly handed I'll bring it."—Life.
Hobelius
A. New Outlook
1. First Giant—Wear going, in to dinner soon, I hobble, and I'm ready.
2. Second Giant—Be a girl! for the
Second Street—Be'c Adn I?—For the world
LIVE STOCK NOTES.
Good care of the owe may save the lamb.
Moldy corn is dangerous feed for the horses.
Heavy horses are not calculated for hard driving.
Never feed corn alone to hogs. It is false economy.
Carelessness in handling pigs is a bad habit to acquire.
Sheep are excellent farm cleaners, weed killers and fertilisers.
Does the barn smell stuffy these mornings? Fix that ventilator.
Even on cold days, hogs should have plenty of good fresh air.
The idea that anything is good enough for a pig is a mistaken one.
Blanket your horses during the one storms as well as when it is extremely cold.
On bright warm days open up the stable doors and let the blessed sunshine in.
Some cornstalks may be fed to the porkers every day. They are sweet and do the hogs good.
Every sheep owner should keep a pure bred ram, but every man is not qualified to keep pure bred stock.
Everything possible should be done to bring the ewes to a vigorous floss forming condition at the mating period.
The man who desires large profits from his stock should provide it with the best that good management will produce
The man who sells his calves for veal and his young steer for other people to breed is robbing his own family.
The man who keeps cattle, hops and sheep and owns a manure spreader will never be in fear of the fertilizer trust.
If your best brown mare is worth $200 to the man over in the next township you may be a sure she is worth more than that to you—keep her.
SKELETON OF COMMON HORSE
Illustration Given Below is Reproduction, with Description of Important Points.
This illustration is a faithful reproduction of the skeleton of a horse.
Skeleton of a Horse.
The description of the most important points follows.
1 H, first cervical vertebra (atlas).
7 H, seventh cervical vertebra; 1 R, first dorsoal vertebra; 6 R, sixth rib.
17 H, seventh dorsoal vertebra; 18 R, eighteenth of last rib; 1 L, first lumbar vertebra; 6 L, sixth or last lumbar vertebra; 6 K, sixth rib cartilage; 1 scapula (shoulder blade), 2 epine of scapula; 9, radii; 10, carpus; 12, metacarpus (shin bone), 14, sternum (breast bone), 18, femur, 20, patella (knee cap), 21, tibia, 23, fibula; 24, tuberosity of calcaneum; 26, phalanges; 27 internal trochanter of femur; 28, external or third trochanter of femur
SCRATCHER FOR MANGY HOGS
Leg Stretched Between Two Posts,
- Covered With Oil, Kept Well Bat-
urated, Is Excellent.
To construct a practical scracher
for hogs, place two posts, five feet
long firmly in the ground and ten feet
LENGTH 10'
Hog Scracher.
apart. Get a small log and mortise an end in each post, having one end six inches, the other 12 inches from ground. This will fit both plugs and hogs. Cover posts and log with old grain sacks and tack them on securely. Mix common machine oil and harrosse in equal parts and keep hogs well saturated. The hogs will do the rest.
Cate of Animals
Much is said about the health of hogs, cows and other domestic animals, and there is some ground for the agitation. All will admit that our domestic animals are not as robust and free from disease as they should be, yet we believe that conditions are such that our animals might be as healthy as they ever were in the history of farming.
Producing Honey
A colony of 40,000 bees will require three weeks to produce 50 or more pounds of surplus honey. In some situations of perpetual bloom hives have been known to give up as much as 500 pounds of honey. One bee owner on the Pacific coast had 5,000 hives which produced 200,000 pounds of honey every year. $40,000
GOOD CURRYCOMB AND BRUSH
Does Work with One Stroke, Saving
Much Time—Handle is Remov-
able at Pleasure.
The object of most inventions is a
saving of time or labor or both. The
man who succeeds in doing this usually
finds a market for his invention,
so it would seem that the California
man who designed the combination
currycomb and brush has made him-
self solid with the rural vote. This
apparatus consists of an ordinary currycomb plumb with a projection ox-
Currycomb and Brush.
tending from the handle, and a brush with a hollow handle. To make the combination all that is necessary is to thrust the handle of the comb into the handle of the brush and one implement is formed. Instead, then, of raking a horse with the currycomb and going over him again with the brush, the whole operation can be performed with one stroke by passing the brush portion of the new implement over the path left by the preceding strokes of the comb when the next sweep of the comb is made. In this way two horses can be cleaned in the time it used to take to groom one.
ADVANTAGES OF THE SILAGE
Experiments Demonstrate That Field of Corn Will Yield $33 per Acre
—Use in Fattening.
(D) PROF D H OTIS. UNIVERSITY OF WILCOONS.)
Of the various feeds which are the most palatable corn silage is without doubt the cheapest and most effective ration. It is a valuable feed for dairy and beef cattle and also for horses, calves and sheep. Many of the leading Wisconsin farmers find that allage can be handled as cheap, if not cheaper, than the corn crop can be handled in the usual manner. Silage furnishes a succulent feed with very little waste and is always ready to use.
In combination with alfalfa or clover, with a mixture of corn or barley for grain, silage furnishes an especially good ration, all growth on the farm and cheaper than mill feeds. The importance of palatability cannot be overestimated as it increases the amount of feed eaten and, when properly assimilated, the more the animal eats the larger product it will return. A ton of mixed hay occupies 400 cubic feet of space and eight tons of corn silage can be put in the same amount of room. The ton of mixed hay contains about 960 pounds of digestible dry matter while eight tons of silage contain 2560 pounds of dry matter. This one point of the economical storage of the corn crop when put up in the form of silage is worthy of attention where a large number of animals are fed.
The advantages of feeding silage during periods of drought fall easily precluded by those who have tried it during the latter part of last summer. Wisconsin suffered a severe drought and corn silage was followed by another summer alfalfa herd. The flow of milk was never kept up so weeding the summer as it was by the use of this silage. The amount of silage to become a more typical factor in successful dairy farming.
The use of silage for fattening beef cattle has been tested at a number of experiment stations and by stockmen with excellent results in experiments conducted by the writer it was found that silage fed steers sold at $495 per 100 pounds, while those fed silage brought only $470 per 100 pounds a gain of 26 cents in favor of silage fed animals. It was found that for every 100 pounds of gain 471 pounds of silage fed saved 18 pounds of grain and 168 pounds of alfalfa.
In these tests silage was fed in connection with alfalfa hay, corn chop, Kadir corn chop and cottonseed meal. The average soil, in unusual seasons, will produce 12 to 16 tons of green corn per acre. Even with a yield of 10 tons per acre there is an income, according to this experiment, of about $33 per acre.
The financial statement of this experiment showed that the silage fed steers made a profit of $4.10 per head, while the same grade of steers fed on the same feed except silage lost $1.47 per head.
Nothing Wasted with Sheep.
Nothing need be wasted on the farm where sheep are kept—tufts of grass, weeds and aftermaths and odd bits of feed can all be utilized and converted into wool and mutton.
Bad Habits of Colta
Look out for bad habits in your colt. It is so much easier to keep them out than it is to get rid of them if they once get a hold on the young horse.
Storing Celery.
If your colery is to be stored and hold for late marketing it will keep better if not blanched too much in the field. Boll drawn up about the plants will help make the stalks straight and the plants compact, so they will store without necessary loss of space, but it is a mistake to try to complete blanching before storing.
You Must Read
THE MAN
IN LOWER
10 TEN
A Tale of Vivid and Thrilling Mystery Coupled with a Sparkling and Abundant Humor
From beginning to end you will find no dull, moment—no cessation of interest—in this remarkably clever story.
Watch for the Opening Installment IN THIS PAPER
Watch for the Opening Installment IN THIS PAPER
Why Not Make Use of Your Spare Time.
1. TO INCREASE YOUR KNOWLEDGE
2. TO INCREASE YOUR USEFULNESS
3. TO INCREASE YOUR SALARY.
The Afro-American School of Correspondence, incorporated, Tampa, L. Jones, L. L. D., President and W. Mishap Johnson, D. D. L. L. D., Secretary, will do these things and more for you. It is the only school of its kind for colored people and is conducted by experienced educators.
It provides a course in English, Theology, Law and Special Acadademic College and Business Course.
It will make a course especially for you, of the things you need to know and teach you privately and confidentially and you will lose no time from work, studying or home of where you are employed, when it is convenient, and raise to us whenever you get ready. $89.66 will pay for our course, payable at $3.00 per month, until that amount is paid.
We will text books and there are no other charges. We give you five years to learn and graduate you.
We teach by mail. If you know how to read and write, we can help you. Send for a catalog, on step in our office and get information.
W. BISHOP JOHNSON, D. D. Req.
Bux 2264 Stillman G.
Office of Second English Church, Third Street, Between H and I Stem, M. W.
Public Confession
The pastor of a country church, a middle-aged widow was credited with having courted every eligible woman in his book One Sunday morning the good person, having occasion to admonish specially the feminine membership, was amazed at the very audible titter that ran through the congregation when, with an inclusive wave of his arm, he exhaled "Sisters. I have addressed you in public and in private." Judge
Awakened
I dreamed J was a red rose glow.
Bright with she golden summer glows.
Kissed by the sweetest breath that blows.
With sunny skies oceanspread.
Of sweetest fragrance ever smelled.
By love's own hand to love a breast hold-
When a voice roused me which farcely
yelled
Wake up you canbage head
Miss Antique—I don't like this gown at all. I wish I knew how to improve it.
Miss Caustique—Why don't you let some other girl wear it?—Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin
Privilege
Heat is the right to share
The griefs of hearts forlorn.
With other men to bear
What bears them to borne
For right bestows dawn's Orient rose
And glories of the morn.
And as its shadow wing
Lends to the glight worth.
So out of suffering
Arise the joys of earth.
The good and illUnited still.
And offspring of one birth.
Great is the gift of life
To hip who lives indeed
As the sufferer
The toll the pain that speed-
Like hidden rills veined through the hill-
Like a vein deep to God!
-Florence Sario Coates, in the Independent
Amends to Nature.
I have loved colors, and not flowers:
Their motion, not the awaits of wings
And wasted more than half my hours
Without the comradeship of things
How is it now that I can see.
With love and wonder and delight,
The children of the hedge and tree,
The little lords of day and night?
How is it that I see the roads
No longer with usurping eyes,
A twilight meeting place for toads,
A midday mart of butterflies?
I feel in every midge that hums.
Life, fugitive and infinite
And suddenly the world becomes
A part of me and I of all other humans
Care of Cellar
Everything keeping nicely in the collar? An iron kettle filled with the hot coals from the kitchen stove and set on the floor of the cellar every night will keep it dry and pleasant, but not too warm
The Telephone.
The telephone on a farm cannot take the place of a hired man, but it helps wonderfully
Take Use of Your
Time.
LENDGE.
YOUR USEFULNESS.
TO INCREASE YOUR SALARY.
Of Correspondence, incorporated, Then
W. Bishop Johnson, D. D., L. L. B,
and more for you. It is the only school
and is confined by experienced educa-
tion, Theology, Law and Special Acadamis
ly for you, of the things you need to
confidently and you will lose no time
there you are employed, when it is ocea-
get ready, $85.00 will pay for our
until that annual is paid.
We are no other charges. We give you
how to read and write, we can help
up in our office and get information.
W. BISHOP JOHNSON, D. D. Ree.
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Even Money Bet That He and Harris
Will Go Before Trials.
Due either to an exaggerated opinion of Edith Pay's prowess as a jail break suspect, lack of confidence in Henrico store and nerve, the public has boldly asserted its belief that the nutritious yeggmen and little Dick Harris, his companion in crime, will not be in the hands of the law when their trial for robbing the Richmond post-office is called in the United States District Court on April 20th. All over town bots are being made that Pay and Harris will escape from the Henrico fall. These wagers are not being made solely by the men who sit around saloons and rack their brain for subjects of discussion. A different class is gambling. True, every element is represented in the getaway betting, and not many on the other side have covered the money
OFFICIALS DEPLORE FEELING
This fact, according to officers, presents a picture not at all to their liking. While they do not take any stock in this jail delivery talk, they do deplore the eagerness with which the public has seized that end of the argument, just as they deplore the tremendous feeling of sentiment which has been expressed in the prisoners' behalf.
Out in Chicago they are gambling that Fay will not be in custody one week from to-morrow. Police officials in the Middle West know his record. The remorse he hone is out way of Janesville. Wis. falls some years ago, and they declare that crooks of the same type, who are anxious to return favors of the same kind, are now in this locality, waiting and hoping
"A live Pinkerton man might pick up some of his old friends in Richmond," an officer in Chicago is quoted as saying "and if those yeas are around there now they may do a little second story work on the slide to pay expenses You can bet that they are within reach."
SHOWS WRONG SPIRIT
Henrico people bitterly resent the lack of confidence to freely expressed by the people of Richmond. They believe that it shows the wrong spirit giving out, as it does, the practical admission that there are no prisons in a town with 140,000 inhabitants safe enough to house a burglar. And they can understand that the prisons should have worked so much sympathy.
The daring maner in which they robbed the post office is responsible for much of it," said an officer yesterday who is naturally anxious to see the park in the Federal penitentiary "It will come out at the trial that Fay who is known all over the country, is an ordinary crook of ex-traordinary type. All this talk about his being a millionaire, with a fine hope in Chicago and a string of horse races, is so much bosh. There is no standing reward of $0,000 for his head. You will hear of his confession you will hear that he and his kang had planned to rob the post-office in Asheville N C but gave it up only when convinced that little money was to be had there. They pulled off the biggest robbery in the history of the post-office department. They had the tools to do it. They would just as soon rob a bank—they might take some or your money, too and their record proves that they have shot and killed while committing crime.
AERRAID TO FACE CAMERA
If Fay is Fay- and there does not appear to be any doubt on that score he is a murderer as well as a robber, and the possible hope of escape may be responsible in large measure for his bitter fight to keep from being photographed Fay deserves no sympathy anywhere If by any chance he should be acquitted here, he will be immediately arrested to serve out unexpired terms, and to answer for other crimes. An escaped convict is a bad man. He ought be treated as an escaped public not as a martyrs' public does not know the unseen guards are around the Henrico jail If the men in duty there should get torrified, those criminals would never escape. And lurking around the place is mighty dangerous."
They are not saying much around the Henrico fall about his public talk of escape. But the faller is constant on the job. Fay and Harris are in separate steel cages, and if any delivery attempt is made there will probably be a shooting exhibition which will make Henrico famous. But an even money bet that these criminals will gain their liberty, despite steel and shooting irons, is offered almost every hour in Richmond.—Richmond, Va. Times-Dispatch, April 12, 1910.
POLICE GUARD TO
KEEP EYE ON FAY
Bicycle Officer Chatterson Detailled for Duty at Henrico Jail.
Acting on a request from Jailor Sydrón, of Henrico county, Chief of Detectives McMahon, who is in charge of the Police Department during the absence of Major Werner, last night detailed Bicycle Followers Chatterson for special guard duty in the Henrico jail, where Middie Pay and little Dick Harris are held for trial on the charge of robbing the Richmond postbailer.
Officer, Chathamon: went, on, duty
this morning, in a colony, Arrange
ments will be made today by which a police guard will be maintained in the jail until the prisoners are convicted and sent to the Federal penitentiary in Atlantas, or acquitted.
PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES.
It was explained that nothing out of the ordinary had happened to make this extra precaution necessary, although the stand taken by Jailer Gordon was generally commanded by those who knew the situation and who resulted that he is determined to prevent any possibility of escape. Captain McMahon said that Officer Chatterson was selected because of his especial fitness. He is absolutely fearless, he is wide-awake and an athlete of some renown. He will not be the mere permanently, however, as the Police Department will detail other men to break the watch. The prisoners will not be tried until April 20th.
When the government heard that practically the whole town was betting that Fay and Harris would escape, thus showing a lack of confidence in the county jail and the special guards' employed by Sheriff Kemp, the question of sonding postoffice inspectors or secret service men to Richmond was discussed, although the police detail will probably make that step unnecessary.
TAKE NO PRISONERS AT NIGHT.
Arrangements have also been made by which strange prisoners brought to the jail late at night by county Constables will be sent to the First Police Station for safe keeping over night. The authorities are not willing to take chances with confederates of the regimen who might get themselves arrested for trespassing or trivial offenses. In a word, when the county jail is locked up for the night it will not be opened again to receive prisoners or anybody else except a police officer detailed for duty by the department.
It was explained yesterday—dor the information of the doubting public that Fay and Harris cannot possibly escape so long as the jailer has absolute loyalty on the part of the assistants in "The States Marshal" is keeping eye on the situation and he is not at all worried or alarmed by the street talk that he will be unable to produce the prisoners one week from today. Now with the police patrol, Fay's hope of gaining liberty will not amount to much.
AFRAID OF LYNCHING
A curious fact in connection with the notorious post office robber came to light yesterday. When he was being driven from the Byrd Street Station to the county jail, Fay lost control of his nerve and seemed terribly frightened. Even before his train reached the city he asked a deputy marshal if there was any danger of lynching, saying that lynch law, as he understood it, was a Southern product and that he didn't believe a robber would be shown any more mercy than was shown a murderer. He was shown a murderer, trodden and again when he saw hunts of people lining the sidewalks. Richmond Va Times Dispatch, April 1, 1910
1 M C A Notes
The membership campaign was a warm number last Friday evening Companies A and B rendered a pro gram that will ever be remembered. The hour is waxing warmer and warmer The judge's stand is now in sight Men do your best
Prof J W Barco made the lesson last Saturday as usual very helpful to all who attended
The meetings in the city home for last Sunday were good We are glad to know that more men are joining this committee
Two prisoners were led to accept Jesus Christ as their Personal Saviour last Sunday Do not stop men Keep at it
Gen See B C Burrell spoke to men In the penitentiary last Sunday Twice prisoners accepted Christ
The boys meeting last Sunday was good Prof J H Rhorer gave the boys a special address Subject "Precious Jewels"
Never before has Dr D Webster Davia spoken as he did last Sunday. Subject "The Devil's Advice to the Young Men." The Doctor took a decided stand for righteousness. This address is being passed on to the other follow and will be for ages to come We are working for the men and boys and we must help them Mr J M Daly sang a special solo The meeting was a breaker
Come today 5 P M to the explanation on the Sunday School lesson at the Y M C A building
Men he on time Sunday ready for hard work and the other man
All boys are invited to the meeting for boys Sunday 4 P M. at the Y M C A building Mothers send your boys.
The great mass meeting for men will be at the Pythian Castle Sunday, 3. 30 P. M. Rev. Charles L. Somors, Pastor of the St. Philip's E. Church, will address the men. Subject: "Our Responsibility for our Weaker Brother." Special music will be rendered by an orchestra, under the directions of Prof. Nelson S. Harris. Bring the other man. Be on time.
All women are invited to the Easter offering, for the Y. M. C. A. By women Sunday, 3. 80 P. M. at the True Reformers' Hall. Dr. R. V. Peyton, Pastor of the Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church will address the women. Subject: "The Habit of Cheerfulness." A female quartette will sing under the directions of Madame Gertrude C. Roper. Come and bring an offering. All women are invited.
Do not stop praying for the Y. M. C. A.
Subscribe to The PLANET.
the mineral wealth of the South has hardly been scratched. Untold million$ in gold, silver, iron and copper mines awaits the fortune man or men who discover their true location.
A wonderful instrument called the Spanish Magnitude Needle has recently been perfected which has been used with wonderful accuracy in discovering both mines and treasures. The needle has interchanged parts designed for use to indicate the particular mineral sought for. Lost and buried treasures of money, gold and silver, are located. Successful miners and prospectors use these needles, but in the past they have been very difficult to obtain. We understand, however that the Prospectors and Miners Agency of Palmyra, Pa., handle a complete line of these needles and other mineral rods and would be glad to correspond with any one interested in the subject. They issue a large catalogue which will be mailed free to anyone writing them. Address P. and M. Agency 179 Second St. Palmyra, Pa.
HAIR AND SCALP REMEDIES.
The world's great remedy for Dandruff Cure, Scalp Diseases, Ball Headaddress and Bare Tumples, which trouble the people of the world so much today. I have the best known remedy on the market. Dr. Conrad's Crystalline Hair Dressing grows hair on ball headads and bare tumples. 25 and 50 cents per jar.
Dr. Conrad's Hair Invigorator, 25 and 50 cents per bottle. It stimulates the roots of the hair. Dr. Conrad's Crystalline Hair Dressing grows hair on Conrad's Talcum Powder, 35 cents per bottle. Send 10 cents and got a trial jar of Dr Conrad's Crystalline Hair Dressing.
We sell also wigs from $15 to $20, and $25 a piece.
Transformation pieces, $2.50, 2.3
inches long, 9 inch pump, $1.50; 1.8
inch pump $2.00, puffs, 25 cents a
piece Switches, $1.50 to $2.00. Coronation brads, $2, and $3. Send sample of hair when ordering.
Address all communications to DR. L. CONRAD, 798 Main Street, Cambridge, Mass. Write today. The Conrad Manufacturing Co.
PURE IRISH
LINEN
Tailor made waist, embroidery
pleats. $1.25 Pure Linen Suit,
$6, any color, value $10 Linen
dust-coats, $3 Taffeta Silk Pot-
tiecoats, $4 Wedding-sets, very
fine $6 to $10 Write to-day for
Free pillow cover, catalogue,
and dressgoods samples. Prices
wholesale. JOHN J. O'HARE,
20 Went 27th Street, New York.
(Linen Warehouse.)
See our Stock of Calendars for
1911, before placing your order.
In the Law and Equity Court
of the City of Richmond.
the 9th day of April, 1910.
nomas Haskins. Flaintiff
against In Chancery
ery Haskins Defendant
Thomas Haskins, Plaintiff
against In Chancery
Mary Haskins Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant.
And an andawitt having boon made and filed that due diligence has been used on behalf of the plaintiff to ascertain in what county or corporation the defendant, Mary Haskins is without effect. It is ordered that she do appear here within fifteen days after due publication heroe, and do what is necessary to protect her interest herein.
A Copy—Teste
P. P. WINSTON Clerk
TO MARY HARKINS.
Take Notice—You are hereby notified that I shall on Thursday, June 2, 1910, at the law office of Phil B. Shield, oom No. 62, Chamber of Commerce Building, corner of Ninth and Main Streets, City of Richmond, Va., between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. on that day proceed to take the depositions of Joseph and John in evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in equity, depending in the Law and Equity Court, of the City of Richmond, Va., wherein you are the defendant and I am plaintiff.
If from any cause the taking of the said deposition 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, the same place or time during the same hours until the same be completed.
If you want results, put your ad in the PLANET.
PANAMA HATTERS
Panama Hair Cleaned, Bleached,
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Straw Hair Cleaned and
Pressed, Moisture
Silk, Silk, and Soft Hair Cleaned
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404 E. Marshall St. (Basement)
Makes the Hair Grow.
An Ideal Soap Food and Hair Tonic. The peer of all other Hair Dressings. On sale at all first class drug stores. 25 cents the box, the bottle. Soap—23 cents the cake. Agents Wanted. COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO., Newport News, Va.
The Independent A STAUNCH FRIEND OF THE NEGRO
THE INDEPENDENT was founded in 1848 as a Weekly Magazine 18 secure the freedom of American slaves. In the sixty-two years that have followed, it has always been the friend and champion of the Negro Race. We have printed frequent articles from prominent Negroes and have closely followed their activities and successes. This attitude has cost us, many thousand subscribers, but we have the courage of our own convictions. We feel we are publishing a Magazine that every Negro should read.
SEND $1.00 FOR SLX MONTHS
To acquaint you with the character and policy of THE INDEPENDENT, we shall be glad to accept a six months subscription for one dollar. Our regular price is $3 a year. We believe that by reading THE INDEPENDENT you will realize our fair attitude and position. Remember, THE INDEPENDENT is an illus trated Weekly Magazine, and that you will therefore receive 26 copies for about four cents each. Use this blank
Dollar for which please send me The
week for Six Months
Hair Beautiful
Enclosed find One Dollar for w
INDEPENDENT every week for Six M
Enlaced find One Dollar for which please send me THE INDEPENDENT every week for Six Months
Is' Your Hair Beautiful
Is Your Hair Be
Soft, S
NELSON
pomade
It makes your hair
tangled hair as a
It keeps it from
and gives it that
Use Nelson's B
Your head will keep clean.
Soft, Silky and Long?
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING in the floral hair pomade on the face of the earth for colored hair. It makes your hair grow faster it makes stubble, khaki and fried hair. It makes hair more shiny and it makes hair from oil or sebring to breaking off. It makes it rich and gives it that charm no longer for by all true ladies. Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never have dandruff. You will keep clean. The root of your hair will have the necessary oil solution. You will be delighted with its delicate to perfume. Dressing is put up in handmade four-square tin boxes. Like the lady holds in her hand. Druggies and bots. If you can't get it, send it 50 cents and we will mail it.
amount of oil. You will never have scalp disease. You will
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up by the
agents everywhere hell it at 25 cents a bout. If you wear
you a full wigs you get pothole. Go and buy it now, so that
NELSON MANUFACTURING
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handmade four-suite square tuxedos, like the lady holds in her hand. Druggists and agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a bout. If you can't get it, send us 50 cents and we will mail you a full lot box postpaid. Go buy it now, on our nightly and write up an Address.
LOOK I READ!! THINK AND ACT!!!
Star of Zion Union Reform Royal Bulles Corporation of Virginia.
This is an ideal organization, founded upon a solid financial basis and chartered under the laws of the State of Virginia, March 16, 1909. In this brotherhood, members do not die to win. They can win in life as well as in death. This fraternity offers protection to the whole family upon a single fraternal membership. Where else on earth is the same offer made? Persons of sound mind, good health, good moral character, good temperate habits, can join upon application to any Agent, Dunny or G. W. Secretary, any of its departments. Inclusion fees: out rates now in force $1.50 and $2.00. Policies from $50.00 to $129.00. Stock benefits per week, $2.00 for eight weeks with no reductions. Paid out for death in 1909, $2,75.55. Paid out for sickness, $1,684.00. Paid out for hair or member, $670.54.
For further information write to B. G. W. Secretary. Agents wanted. Writes today to R. H. HAPTBF, R. G. W. Body., Box 21, Boydton, Va.
THE INDEPENDENT
130 FULTON STREET
NEW YORK
Regular Subscription Price
$2,00 a Year
Does it comb easily without breaking?
Is it straight?
Does it smooth out nicely?
Can you do it up in any of the charming styles, -so it will stay, and makes you proud of it?
Is it long and full of life?
If you cannot give YES to all of the above questions, than you need
Nelson's
Hair Dressing
IT HAS A FINE ACADEMY course including manual training for those who have completed common-school subjects.
COMMON-COURSE OWNER is trained and complete its requirements and standing for a high level of college for white youth in the State; according to the rating of the Carnegie Board.
The greatest Fratralong Society of the age. None like it in methods. The best plans and the most liberal considerations. Established on a safe basis and conducted on a sound, conservative and reliable actuary. The most liberal and absolutely safe.
The very best commission allowed honest workers. These commissions are not included in the $10,010.00 given away in prices. If you mean business write,
DEL. L. SMITH,
Waynesboro, Virginia.
P. O. Box, 109.
In the Law and Equity Court, City of Richmond, this 23rd day of March, 1910.
Evangelist H Jackson. Plaintiff vs. In Chancery.
Rebecca Ann Clay. Love Jackson, in her own right and as administra-trix of Branch Jackson, deceased.
Defendants
OBJECT.
The object of the above suit is to have partition in one of the modes prescribed by law the real estate of which the late Branch Jackson died seized and possessed in the City of Richmond and Henrico County, Virginia. And an amdavit having been made and filed that Robecca Ann Clay, one of the dofendants in the above suit is a non-resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that the said Robecca Ann Clay appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this order, and do whatsoever is necessary to protect her interest herein.
A copy—Teste:
P. P. WINSTON, Clerk
J Henry Crutchfield, p. q.
Office 1215 E. Broad St.
Richmond, Va.
WANTED----100 Colored Girls and Women to start small business. No risk involved, COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO., (Dept. P.), Newport News, Va.
DO YOU LIVE in a town having 200 or more Negro population? If so, and you, to make up $20 to $25 per month pay, send $.80 for scheme giving full participation. Satisfaction guaranteed. Address J. P. CLARK, Coway, Arkansas.
FOR RENT—good hand laundry, in Oak Park. Cheap. With well at door. Good patronage. M. H. OMOHUNDRO, (Room 32) 1103 East Main Street, Richmond, Va.
SEE
WM. CARTER
528 NORTH ADAMS STREET,
For Correct Plumbing,
Steam and Gas Filling.
Opportunity For Economical Buyers.
Best bargains on the market.
Up-to-date household articles, Jewelry.
THE SOUTHERN SECRET SERVICE
Bureau. All business strictly
confidential. Representatives wanted
in every city and county in
the South Liberal focus to good
men. Main Office: 020 E. Main
Street, (Rooms 12 and 18), Richmond, Va.
S. W. ROBINSON
19 & 21 N. 18TH ST.
Dealer in
Fine Wines, Liquors,
Cigars, &c
ALL STOCK SOLD
AB GUARANTEED.
PROMPT ATTENTION.
Your Patronage is Respectfully
Solicited.
Southern Law and Collection Co., Sick, Accident, Life and Fire Insurance, claims a specialty. It costs you nothing if we don't collect your money. We can obtain a loan on your property at very small cost. It will pay you to call and acct us. 920 E. Main Street. (Rooms 12 and 18). Richmond, Virginia.
Ford's Hair Pomade
Fifty years of success have proved the merits of this preparation.
What is more attractive than a beautiful head of hair? It is has been the ambition of women in all ages. The use of Fevereau's Hair Pomade curts hair softens, more gleable and sleek, easy to comb and arrange in any style desired consistent with its length, as long as the Pomade rests in the hair. This result is accompanied by directions. Two basic applications a month will keep the hair in satisfactory condition, and two to four bottles, regular sizes, are usually sufficient for a year. Directions with every bottle.
Ford's Hair Pomade removes and prevents lather, invigorates dry, dry, fresh and protects the hair from falling out, causing breakage and stress. It is new with extended growth and provides with extended growth and durability. Dulcisly permeates the use is a constant pleasure. A more esthetically toddler-friendly product.