Richmond Planet

Saturday, April 23, 1910

Richmond, Virginia

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THE RICHMOND PLANET GERSHOM (CONTINUED) OR THE STORY OF THE NEGRO. Lucian B. Watkins. But, in the course of events of these lives, There came the serpent of a subtle will To bind in spell of sacrilegious quise Of friendship's kind and sympathetic hand, These vale-taught people of simpli-city Too pure for any knowledge of a harm. When "knowledge of the good and evil" bore Its fruit in these the lives of people grown To know the meaning of the curs name Of bondage from a will of liberty. The sack-cooth and the ashes of their grief Spoke in the language of a mighty pow'r. They came to know oppression and the brand Of shave beneath a master. Here they knew Experiences most varied in breadth. Extending from the blackest sins below Unto the whitest virtues of above. They fought in battle for their masters' lives, And gave their blood and strength to save the cause; The records or their masters' history Do bear their deeds immortal in the earth To grace the pages of the human world. Yet thru it all, loved liberty was deemed A thing apart from any need of theirs; The sacred human attribute of soul Wast not to them accredited. They were As brothers to the ox of labor held. But mysteries of mysteries were wrought. And angel-hearted friends rose up and breathed The mustard seed of faith into the cause. The leaven of a will divinely great. Then one of the oppressed rose 'up and gave His life upon the gallows for his race; He hung betwixt the earth and heaven's blue. So like that other One who died to save By hanging on the cross of bitter death. Whilst trembling earth didst drink His precious blood (To Be Continued.) WHITE MAN SENTENCED Gets Eighteen Years For Killing Colored Girl. Hampton, Va., April 17.—After deliberating for fifty minutes, the jury in the Elizabeth City County Circuit Court yesterday returned a verdict, finding Earl A. Vandyke guilty of attempted assault upon Rebecca Chandler, a nine-year-old colored child, and fixed his punishment at eighteen years in the penitentiary. Judge Clarence W. Robinson, who presided over the case, refused to set the verdict aside, and immediately pronounced sentence on the convicted man. A stay of thirty days was granted the prisoner, so that his counsel may appeal the case to the Supreme Court. CHANGE TERMS OF WILL Mistake of One Word Affects Estate of $250,000. Cincinnati, April 15.—A mistake by which the word "her" was made to read "my" affects the disposition of an estate of $250,000 in Cincinnati. It is now in the Common Pleas Court here for decision. Robert Gordon, a rich colored man, died in 1883, leaving a will directing that one-half the rents and personal property should go to his wife Ella during her life, and the other half to his daughter, Virginia Ann Jackson, wife of a colored attorney here, and that after the death of the wife and daughter the whole property should go to the children of the daughter, "providing, of course, that the children should be those living at the time of her death." In copying the will somebody made the words "her death" read "my death." The Title Guarantee and Trust Company, which is named as one of the executors, asks the court to decide it. 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. TWO NEGROES LYNCED Warrants Sworn Out Charging Five White Men With Killing. Ashburn, Ga., April 15.—The news of the killing of two negro men near Amber, about four miles north of here, reached this place today. Later on in the day warrants were sworn out by two negro women charging five prominent white men with lynching. The negroes killed were Albert Royal and Charley Jackson. The verdict of the coroner's jury was delivered sealed, and nothing is known of its action. The trouble is said to have started over an alleged criminal assault near here about two weeks ago. Charley Jackson, one of the negroes, was arrested at the time, charged with criminal assault on a white woman, but was released on bail. The other negro. Albert Royal, is said to have signed the bond of the accused man. The two negroes, it is said, began to openly boast of the deed. The killing is said to have followed. Brownsville. The final decree in the Brownsville case permits only fourteen of the discharged soldiers of the twenty-fifth infantry to re-enlist, presumably through their ability to prove their innocence. It would be interesting to know just what kind of evidence these fourteen men presented to prove their innocence, inasmuch as the proof of innocence is the most difficult of all proofs to establish and is not required by any civilized tribunal. It is guilt and not innocence that must be proven. Had Mr. Roosevelt's original order been allowed to stand, not even these fourteen men would have received justice.—Yonkers New York Standard. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS The First Lodge There—Grand Chancellor Mitchell Speaks. Cape Charles, Va., April 20.—Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., accompanied by Dr. E. R. Jefferson, Grand Medical Register, Dr. J. Alexander Lewis, Grand Master at Arms, S. S. Baker, D. D. G. C. and Past Chancellor Regecoe C. Mitchell, were here today to set up a new lodge of Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E. A., A. A. and A. Dr. Lewis came over yesterday morning and the others arrived here last night at 9 o'clock. The party was met at he boat by the club led by Dr. D. W. Palmer. A regular college yell greeted the Grand Chancellor. The visitors were conducted to Masonic Hall, where a repast was served and heartily enjoyed. Mrs. D. W. Palmer and her friends had charge of the dining arrangements. Thirty-six men reported and were examined by Dr. Jefferson. The initiation was a grand success. Sir Walter Coston assisted in the initiation. The new body will be known as Cape Charles Lodge, No. 174. The following officers were installed: Chancellor Commander, R. F. Everett; Vice Chancellor, James Cabanis; Prelate, E. Dillard; Master of Work, D. W. Palmer; Keeper or Records and Seal, J. G. Goffgan; Master of Finance, H. S. Morris; Master of Exchequer, D. D. Jefferson; Master at Arms, L. T. Sample; Inner Guard, Walter Page, Outer Guard, Alfred Davis; Trustees, W. T. Haywood, W. H. Watson, R. H. Dillard, Attendants—J. B. Brady, R. L. Inman, W. H. Thomas and John Elliott. The Grand Chancellor delivered a stirring address. He was followed by other speakers. This lodge was organized through the efforts of Dr. D. W. Palmer under the instruction of Dr. J. Alexander Lewis. It is composed of some of the best colored citizens on the Eastern shor. The visitors left at 6:15 this mo ning for Richmond. PROF. KEALING HERE He Delivers an Able Lecture at The Third Street A. M. E. Church. H. T. Kealing, A. M., editor of the A. M. E. Church Review, of Nashville, Tenn., undertook to tell a highly appreciative audience last Monday night, 'How Much Should a Man Welg?' He succeeded admirably well at the task. His lecture was highly entaining, and instructive, and those who paid the price were well satisfied with the investment. He came here upon the invitation of Rev. E. H. Hunter, who has proven himself to be one of the ablest financiers this section has ever seen in this tenomnational work here. His success in steering entertainments of this kind has attracted much attention. Prof. Kealing will always be a welcome visitor in this city. LANGFORD WINS FIGHT Knocks Out Jim Barry in the Sixteenth Round. Los Angeles, April 14.—In a fight which demonstrated anew the ability of Sam Langford, of Boston, and added to the reputation of Jim Barry, of Chicago, only for gameness and ability to stand punishment, the Boston "Demon" sent his white antagonist to the mat for the final count in the sixteenth round at the Vernon arena today. It was a vicious go from start to finish, with the negro well in the lead after the first six rounds. From the tenth, in which Barry twice went down for the count of nine, until the sixteenth, when a straight left to the chin ended the combat, it was one-sided. Langford landed almost at will, and a knockout appeared only a matter of time. Barry surprised the ringside crowd with the strength he displayed, despite the terrific punishment, and a rally in the fifteenth inspired his backers with the hope that he might outlast Langford. While the men did not weigh in before entering the ring, it was said a difference of 30 pounds in weight favored the white fighter. Barry's weight was given as 196 and that of Langford as 166. In the clinches the white man was far the stronger of the two, and he was cautioned by the referee several times for rough tactics at close range. The pugilist went at one another viciously at the sound of the gong for the first round. There was fast fighting at close range in the second, and both men were bleeding at the mouth at the close. A ROUGH BATTLE. In a clinch near the end of the third round, Barry almost threw Langford through the ropes. From then until the eighth, the milling was a mixture of terrific slugging, rallies, and infighting, Barry throwing the negro around roughly in the clinches, and undergoing severe punishment whenever they fought at long range. Several times during the eighth and succeeding rounds, the men were hooted for wrestling. Langford showed the utmost good nature. "Stop your tickling," he admonished during a clinch; "you can't win that way." In the tenth the negro executed a couple of ring tactics. He suddenly threw the white man against the ropes, and catching him on the rebound landed a terrific swing flush on the jaw. Barry dropped for the count of nine. Barry's left eye, cut open early in the fight, was almost closed by that time, and his cheeks were puffed. Blood flowed in a stream from his nose and mouth. The last four rounds were marked by a succession of slugging matches. It was during one of these hard rushes in the sixteenth round that Langford caught his almost exhausted opponent with a straight left to the chin and ended the combat. A Card of Thanks. Richmond, Va., April 16, 1910. TO the Editor of the PLANET: Richmond, Va. The Instructive Visiting Nurse Association wishes through your columns to express to the colored people of Richmond the gratitude and appreciation of the school work done by them on Tag Day, April 16. The enthusiasm displayed by the workers and the liberal response of the people at large, were especially gratifying to the Association. By order of the Association, MRS. L. R. HAMBERLIN, Cor. Sec. A Card of Thanks. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Jackson desire to express their sincere gratitude to their many friends, who so kindly remembered them on the occasion of the forty-sixth anniversary of their marriage. Natural Life. Do you love it? Read "Natural Life in the Human World." The big little booklet. Interests everybody. 10 cents. Address LUCIAN B. WATKINS, M. T. D., Ft. Russell, Wyoming. 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. TYLER, Secty. Y. M. C. A. Notes. The membership campaign closed last Friday evening with the greatest success in the history of the work. Every man who joined cane with the spirit of the Y. M. C. A. (Hard work and the other man.) These are men whom we can use. All of the companies fought hard, but Company F won under the directions of Capt. W. H. Cary. A full orchestra under the directions of Prof. Joseph Williams rendered special music for this occasion. The social committee, under Chairman Darius Harris, initiated the new members. The table was heavily ladened with many good things and every fellow was happy and said that he would have no objection of being introduced again very soon. The campaign spirit is still on. Get a new man. The class for the explanation on the Sunday School lesson was well attended last Saturday. Bro. George R. Burrell conducted the meetings in the City Home last Sunday. One inmate accepted Jesus Christ. The jail committee had a big time last Sunday in jail. Two prisoners were won for Jesus. The boys' meeting was good last Sunday. Pres. W. H. Cary conducted the meeting. Rev, Charles L. Somers, Pistor of the St. Phillip's Church, delivered a very straight address to the men last Sunday. Every man was helped. The music added much to the hour. Rev, R. V. Peyton, Pastor of the Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church spoke, His subject was: "The Hulft of Cheerfulness." The quartet sang with the spirit of the hour, under the directions of Madame Gertrude C. Roper. The Easter offering by the women was a great success, and we are now to hear from many. We thank you. Come to the explanation on the Sunday School lesson today, 5 P. M. at the Y. M. C. A. building. Men be on time Sunday, ready for hard work and the other man. A special meeting for boys Sunday 4 P. M. at the Y. M. C. A. building. By special request, Dr. W. T. Johnson, Pastor of the First Baptist Church, will address the men Sunday 3:30 P. M., at the True Reformers' Hall. Subject: "Fishing for Men." Mr. Jacob M. Daly will sing special solos. Tell the other man. Be on time. Gov. William Hodges Mann, of Virginia, will address the men Sunday, May 1st, 3:30 P. M., at the True Reformers' Hall. Hon. John Mitchell, Jr, will introduce the Governor. Be a committee for this meeting. Do not stop praying for the Y. M. C. A. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS A Company. Organized in Halifax Brig. Gen. John Mitchell, Jr., organized Fearless Company Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. Saturday night 16th inst, at New Arbor, Halifax County, Va., with the following officers: Captain, Granville Marable; First Lieutenant, J. A. Marable; Second Lieutenant, Albert Edmunds; Recorder, Spencer Marable; Treasurer, William Marable; Guard, J. C. Barksdale; Sentinel, *Allen Wilson*; Quartermaster, R. A. Penick. Refreshments were served. Gen. Mitchell left for Richmond shortly after 2 A. M. Sunday morning. COLORED CUBAN NAMED Delgado, ex President of Senate Havana April 17.—President Gomez has appointed the following as new members of the Cabinet: Martin Morua Delgado, Secretary of Agriculture and Commerce, succeeding Orteillo Foyo; Congressman Mario Garcia Kohly, Secretary of Public Instruction, succeeding Dr. Ramon Meza, and Emilio Del Junco, Secretary of Justice, succeeding Luis Octavio Divino. The last is the only Zayista member of the ministry, Delgado who was formerly President of the Senate, is the first Negro to receive a portfolio. Mr. Lewis Braxton is still confined to his home. "Jim Crow" Car Law Up to the United States Supreme Court. Washington, D. C., April 20, 1910. Editor of The PLANET: The case of J. Alexander Chiles vs. C. & O. Ry. Co. has reached the U. S. Supreme Court, and that august tribunal now has it under consideration. Next to the disfranchisement laws, the "Jim Crow" laws of the South, are of vital importance to the Negro. In a most forcible and pointed argument, Lawyer J. Alexander Chiles presented the case on Monday, April 18th, to the court, seven members being present; the Chief Justice Fuller and Justices Harlan, White, McKenna, Holmes, Day and Lurton. The vacant chairs those of the late Justice Brewer and Justice Moody, being ill. In the recollection or some of the attacks of the court, no case of such importance has ever been presented by a Negro lawyer, and in but few cases has the court displayed such attention as was manifested, during the argument. For nearly two hours, Lawyer Chiles, addressed the court in behalf of the rights of ten millions American citizens of color, the whole time being consumed in the presentation of law, and a more convincing argument we have never listened to. He acquitted himself with credit, and with honor to the race. The case comes up from the State of Kentucky, and is to test the law as effecting inter-state passengers. A favorable decision is hoped for and should be prayed for. The prayers of our fore-fathers, in slavery, were answered through Lincoln in emancipation, and in this article may I ask that those who read it, and who believe in the efficacy of prayer, that in their daily prayer, they will ask God's guidance of the hearts of the Justices, towards a righteous decision, and that the ministers in our churches may do like wise in our worship on Sunday, April 24th. It is of vital importance to us as a race, and the termination of this important case means, not that conditions remain as they are, but for better or worse. A decision is expected during the next week. Damon and Pythias Come to the Fifth Street Baptist Church, Monday night, May 2, 1916 there you will see the full life of Damon and Pythias, and the parade of the last Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias. Sacred music by Sharon Independent Band. Given under the auspices of Free Will Workers' Club Admission ten cents. MRS. JOSIE A GRAHAM, Pres. and Eureka Company, No. 1. FOR RIGHTS OF NEGROES. Case of "Pink" Franklin Now Being Heard in Supreme Court Washington, April 20.—An alleged infringement of the rights of negroes in the South came before the Supreme Court of the United States, in an indirect way today, when argument of the "Pink" Franklin murder case was begun. Franklin was convicted of the murder of H. E. Valentine, a constable, who was trying to arrest him, and sentenced to be hanged. He appealed to the Supreme Court. A few weeks ago former Attorney-General Bonaparte filed a brief in behalf of Franklin, claiming that the South Carolina act under which the warrant for Franklin's arrest was issued was one which "attempted to reduce the plaintiff in error to captivity." Mr. Bonaparte did not appear today. John Adams, one of the colored counsel for Franklin, explaining that the former Attorney-General was "unavoidably detained." According to Adams, Franklin shot the constable as he entered his house at night, without knowing that he was an officer. He contended further that Franklin was justified in resisting arrest on a warrant issued under an unconstitutional law, such as he claimed the "agricultural contract law" to be. The argument will be continued tomorrow. Mr. Kit Pettis, of Newport News, en route to Chase City, Va., called on us. Prof. H. T. Kealing, A. M., editor of the A. M. E. Review, Nashville, Tenn., called on us in company with Rev. E. H. Hunter. 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. STH ST. BAPT. CHURCH. Located, Cor. 5th and Jackson Sts. RICHMOND, VA. Weekly News Column. REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., Pastor, Residence: 10$8 E. Leigh St., Richmond, Va. 1215 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va. Last Sunday was a dreary day, dampness and rain abound. People as a rule stayed home; thousands of seats in churches were vacant. We often wonder why are there so many dry weather Christians. A little sprinkling from the clouds sometimes after Baptism would be good. Bad weather is often a scrutinizing test. What would have become of America if Gen. George Washington in colonial days had failed to discharge his duties, because of rain, snow and ice? It would be well for the christian world today to take lesson from Gen. Washington's trip across the Delaware, American victory over the British is in great measure due to loyal soldiers, who fell upon the enemy unaware in times of dreary weather. A certain captain of a colored soldier company, once asked one of his men, why was he absent on a certain night. The soldier responded: "Because of the hail and sleet." The captain angrily retorted: "Don't you know a true soldier don't stop for rain, snow, hail and sleet?" The next time you are absent when ordered out, I'll send a squaw for you. Let us stop for a moment and think what does General Jesus think of His soldiers, who lay in camp in disobedience to orders, because of the weather? Many of us want to be in front rank, Brigadiers, Colonels, Captain, Lieutenants, etc. Do you think He will ever select one who is afraid to brave the storm? Many times timidity cut us short of many a blessing. One or the greatest blessings that he heavenly charity shed upon the Americans during the Revolutionary War, was at a time when they confronted the perils of the sea, amid a cold stormy night. A great victory was achieved by them without lost, and consternation was thrown into the camp of the enemy. I am inclined to the opinion that more increase is made to the Devil's rank during inclement weather than at any other time. The christian should remember that Satan never sleeps or slumbers; always ready and active to take advantage. He co-webs mostly during inclement weather and makes great parades in fair. Services at the Fifth Street Baptist Church last Sunday was about as well as is consistent with the usual custom of the christian people. While the different departments felt the lethargic condition, which prevails among most christians in stormy weather; yet the Sunday School was fair, Supt. Prof. B. H. Peyton did his best in making everything lively and instructive. The church services were fairly attended and the Pastor preached a nice sermon. The choir sang delightful music. Don't forget the Wednesday night services. Come out rain or shine, and send us praises to God and ask for other blessings. Pres. John W. Howard wants to see every member of the B. Y. P. U. Friday night. Come out on time: 8:30 o'clock, exercise will commence. Be on time. Demands upon the services of our Pastor in assisting others seem to grow as time runs on. He has had to say "No." to many persons, and institutions, calling for sermons, addresses and speeches, during this year. But he will try and find time to fill the following: Lecture on the 25th, at Franklin, for the Norman Industrial Institute; May the 4th, preach in Roanoke, at the unvailing of costly paintings of the Crucifixion, at the High Street Baptist Church; May the 8th, he will preach the anniversary sermon of the Old Fellows, of Richmond; May the 15th, he will preach the anniversary sermon of the Theban Beneficial Association; May the 29th, he is to be the chief orator of the day at the National Baptist Sunday School Congress, at Atlanta, Ga. And then in June, he is to enjoy the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Fifth Street Church and the same of his ordination to the ministry. The Pastor will preach Sunday morning. At 3:30 o'clock, communion. Come out on time. At night, Pastor will preach. By request, the following letter is published: Mrs. Josie Graham: Dear Madam—Please publish this statement. I was at the Fifth Street Baptist Church on the 27th of March, and your concert was just grand, and the gentleman, Mr. Carter, who played the part of "Uncle Joe" was a lead- PRICE, FIVE CENTS ing feature. In the play he played his part from start to finish, and it was so fine, I had to go Monday night to the St. Luke Hall. The dral was grand. The whole concert was fine, and I wish you would repeat it, at my church—the Second Baptist Church, for "Uncle Joe" I could see him play all night, and would not get tired. He plays his part with so much vim and vigor. He certainly can sing. "Uncle Joe" is a real star comedian. Please publish this in your church paper. From a concert loving friend. MRS. LOUISE E. DABNEY. Richmond, Va. P. S.—I hope to see your concert again soon. Don't forget Grand Concert, entitled "The Old Maids' Convention" at Fifth Street Baptist Church, Monday night, April 25, 1910. Mrs. G. A. Payne, Manager; Mrs. Geneva T. Carey, Pianist, Admission ten cents. Military Court's Unjust Findings The Military Court of Inquiry has given out its finding in that Brownsville, Texas, affair which has been such a nightmare to some people in authority in this country who have devoutly tried to saddle it on the Negro soldiers. Yes, they have labored assiduously and insidiously and continuously, in season and out, day and night, to make the responsibility for that episode stick to the great Negro fighters, but all efforts, and they have been many and strenuous in that direction, have been utterly futile. The dogged persistency with which this last court, composed of high-titled military dignitaries from captain to lieutenant-general, has sought to build up a case just anyhow, out of one that frustrated and staggered into silence the great Roosevelt regime, was worthy of a better and juster cause. This puissant military court forgot or ignored the fact that the white commissioned officers who had command of the troops of the Twenty-fifth had been absolved from all blame touching that affair. To give their findings in the case some air of justification or tolerance the court proceeds to abuse the non-comissioned officers and the men of the line. Sacred history furnishes another example of the crying need of testimony to insure conviction. When the Great Nazarene was shifted from court to court until he was adjudged finally by Pilate, it was for no other reason than to give the Jews a chance to hatch up some sort of evidence that would partially stand the test before the blas Sanhedrin. The outcome of Jesus' many trials was that he was found guilty. But guilty of what? Not one of the courts before which he appeared was able to find in Him any guilt. The deep-prejudiced Jews yell out their answer as to the Lord's crime or guilt by shouting. Away with Him! crucify Him! Devilish Pilate, the synonym or cowardice, sentenced the Son of Man as being guilty of the crime with which he had been charged by the Jews, though the charge had been unsupported by an iota of reasonable testimony. He, then, a carping craven and an uncompromising hypocrite, called for a basin of water to impress upon the Jews that he was washing away the stain of the part he had played in condemning an innocent man without proof and that on them would fall the responsibility for the act. But Pilate had played falsely with justice, and the day of retribution was reserved for him, and he got it. The Military Court of Inquiry has played in the Brownsville affair a role similar in its general aspects to that of Pilate. Pilate played to the prejudice of the power of the Jews, whom he thought might work his undoing politically. He pandered to prejudice at the expense of justice, and the world now executes his weakness and will ever do so. The Military Court's findings were to be the last word in the matter, and it threw away its one great chance. Before Roosevelt's ghost or shadow, which is looming upon the political horizon of the affairs of this country again, that court fell down, ingloriously fell down. The court was unable to fix the responsibility on any soldier, yet it proclaims to the world that Negro soldiers shot up the Texas town. It either overlooked or was insensitive of the ridiculous position it placed itself in to declare that the evidence before it showed that the soldiers were guilty and yet could not show which soldiers were guilty. How in the name of the least common sense can a court say that a certain man committed a certain crime unless it proves that he did commit it? This Court of Inquiry has been caught squarely as being incompetent to weigh unprejudicially the stuff it had before it and render its findings in accordance thereto. — Nashville, Penn, National Baptist Review. yall (CN y LY [Yom AWS | EWo. f CHAPTER XV fo oe eee eee ee be aeeved in ene cet apie ts 26d as he raed we te Mather Hes Beton a mvadest tute te Ne Hal te good vaturediy te Martiey the sit etitute WAL Dict whe a the nm ciatae tatroduced THE ond. arver hn! the new DIF A Bho ew Lute te ate close ent br woh teurd He ww dressed. ithe a siet or work! gran fon Geonel whit y feu te wnt Off stained ane sdtist spr ikle ttl be wore thick wuied Inwte Ete sletor 184 wan forved Ce int tht If tas om a dixguive tt 19 tye mut adniratl fone he had eter meen Doring the wal Gruner tarked free Ty, aprakin. wth a shaht Helgion o cebt tot tuitly cee ach He weenied to havew mave spnt fade tere ME Mant marvetet at the nue sel ponwessiot ONstn tw cr Bate a QOS Letraset tite It was tea Feline ath ged ta tela ets tthe Bp. bur we wt ate There wos tt teas bite tegen plan Wy sini he dds eo twee fe aevoutoenth vettury crt The weed aree we tt etme. 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Jil teli tt al! When girl slipa away from ber work at the ehareh and goon to ace a mnan Nie Paut Coquentt “Have you never heard of Paul Co quenh? roiled tatthion, kh king Papa Ronpetun warningly wader the gable Cirnener nimwered with perthet wo piety Ne wonder you mite, M Matthioy Stut think how fer awny from Paris 1 tive! Hentdet 1 want thia to ben happy day Come gsttic cousin, yon sal! tell me all about I when wer are out together Ran aloug RoW and put od sour nice dreaa and bat” Aller rote from the tale deathly white ft xeomed te Caanentl that her eyee mot his in doxporare agneal at then, with 0 glance at Groener, balf of fumigation talf of dedance abe let the roam Matthien bowed politely and follow ef by the aarrigtan went out “Now Rrmnetun, ordered the deter tire nbarply when they wore Ip the lower hallway I want sou to goright acrong to Netre Tame and when yon get to the dour tnke sour hAt off and stand there for a minute or xo fanntic yourself ‘Then Tignat who's watch tng In one of thexe duorwayn, sh’ come recom and jain cou Eel im to be ready to move ane mingte now He'd better twat around the Arndt w° the church until he gets a signal trot me Mil welt here Naw goon” “rm going M Pao! I'm going. obeyed Bonneion And he burried away Coquent! saw Alice hurrying toward im, tenes with rome eager porpore “Oh, M_ Matthtent’ exctalmed {he str In apparent surprise. “T know who you are. You arepAt Coquenll,” now whispering, 4 * “Does he know t* Tho girl's handa closed convalalrely. Bbe stammered thes singular words: He knows crerything” “Te be Panning something” Ror a moment Alice hesitated, biti Copyright, 1900, by D Appleton & Co. Ce ther were ne 1S Bho ae OG eae awa fwas fee Dots b vetheard tan Just nos tee Mother Kennet nt Tm kt RE Re takes ne aes Lt @heder estes Stee ase me anked tte atu Vlad wii AR WY Hite RvR Pal gee de eas Sates Sb apembng E56 Ip wid ASE ON tte dete tie Kaye Mie pte te nate tue ten he Bed ee a mtn t vee bre rstt atte thet Ves fou cerstamt ab wee do ar fo Det She ten Pe eee Ven ant batt . Sted what a ste “ BOs eR oa wed ww ee we se tid weer a a9 : e ON tana teas fle se me hee thee a ste wt teed ane ae 4 E ee en ‘ sae Bt note wwe we RE MA ag Mee Ge new ate as ber dearth wes rut gn hee teat reeset tone ter oetee had bbe Ber and pee tN she potest tier come In Me Se ie Fe hae eat ttn hn A hemp gt eet Peete as tine tak wits Mtr Wher tin at te ae nee Het ket an wef twenty Wohl oct ete eh af we Mbit tat ants as or te nannies post ay Dee bee te Etat atent aie ferent (hinge Hite eet ket Be ther Aowin vesteriiy wil he sud t Bight cnet te ttn tne to 3 for coufeess SWI He make ven feel es FOR fem tite h bees per SAM right be nate tbh ey Tieng tou Vi wares rat ak nt beNe Le twee ae He esol her hort oY 4 geatnt trouble te nw ta Ege tthe ebureh with von There wasn thine mere tas nud 8 few migntes later Ve aniston ered onternt Sette ame f tte wed be the woodenrrer WL sou walt here sensi ty ane Uttle table abe askist Awoetts You seem anxloun ti gor thd af me he amited "No, no she protested 1 thousbe thin chatr would be mnere stort bie * “Any chai will de fer me he ald Aryiy * Where tn your +ontessional?” “On the other mide atl =the tod the way, and presently ae thes sain to 9 confesnional box in tbe space near the wactiaty Alice pointed tu the amie “Patber Anaelin ” “Cousin Adolf, she whixpered if you go along there batk of the cholr and down a little atatraay you will come to the treaxure room It might taterent you He looked at her in frank amure ment “T'm Interested! already T'll got along very nicely here The git enter tn cqnfenstonal Grooner sen et hove Con ane of the, Uttle chairs god ke ved tak with @ tatiefled shurkie tin iog uy he aw Matthien pollaiing the cnrved atalle Teo mlnuten pasned Greener roe and paces tack and forth gervounly What a Ume the girl wan taking’ Then the door of the confessional box spennd, and x black robed prieat came gut and mored npigmnly away BUI Alice wing: Groener looked at his watch again. Twenty oinuter past 31 It was ridiculous, “Alice bo called. There wan no answer “y Groener drow anide the enrtain The confessional box wan empty Alles wan gone! ‘Tho confessional box was one not in ase owitig to repattarin the wall be- hind it ‘Thess reyalre ha _neceaat tated the comoval of scveral large stones, replaced — terpporarily by lengths of supporting Umbere, be- tween which a person might easily pass. Coqueni! had taken sdvantgo of ft to effert Alice's escape Tho girl had entered the confessional aa bad then alipped out throtigh the ‘net wall. And the priegt was Tignot “1 scored $n him that thme," boc kied Coqpentl, ribbing away at the woodwork. “ME Matthieu!” celled Groener. yeald you mind comleg. hero @ mo- it? A inost Unforttinate thing has. “Bho bas gehe rua awoy™ Mattbleg etired in lank warpeine Not your cousin Greener waded “Yen ay comin hae run awas" It muakes ae sud Wall you Jom me tne glasw at the tavern? Hite companion agteed to tbin and a few motuente liter the tho men were abaregundocite awisagiatanesiueee Wise Men *Now "begun Grener LN explain the trouble between Alew aud. te Ter mother made one mintake that roined ber Ife andy racticauy killed ber ull Whut mistake was that? inquired Mariblew with weupatdy Why aby aineried am Anperican who Kas—the teow we sue about bi the better ‘The polot te Aller ia bal Amortan ond sbe ts erazy about Atertan wen That» wbs 1 bad t bend ber to Paria thre yours ago “You don t aay And now 104 @ ian tw priwa As song an Matter Tonuetun aerate ine atout {tT xaw Td bave to take the girl mwas agai fold her this mora Irae she unt jue k up ber ain and pe bask to fern te stil ae und tht Made the treble She knew tet Joie eye wis Ber wo sbo wut this prtest to bets her ee ean) naw sane win Deiped her hers war pasted Mat thie THe wamueser Gaede, tn come sot oF iin onfewstouat aint TH gota sew Whe ts ton feet of tw Paw tis fae alle tthe © PWM one iter pits aahed the ond: anter oe shill we gor an Ppa an Ob of onretyen dent knew ine plan 1 wah tel yon You woe Id unt find Alice 1 awuat trp tw nave her froin this fly for tet mather 9 tage Well 1 know heer te fod ber Mew a sen tad bee 1 ih yed ge we dene wome * Coquvett aes einpanted Gevener Ina cate tos a telegraph wilew where the Inttee whe a mekiage When, thes: i ATS ) Z S came out Cogneni! gave a quick algal with bin band =A moment later I’apa Tignol entered the oflee Tbe pro ceeded to 8 doorway tp the Rue Trou chet, which Greener entered after in forming the dinguived det tive that bo would return tu 9 few minuten “AI right) uedded MoPoul ‘Tn bo pationt Aud an the woodcarrer Alsappeared he xignated Tignol to aur. round the heme with the nexintante be had brought to a cab “He's trying to lone ua, * aniit the old fox, burrsing up a ioment later ‘Phere nee three exite hore .Pheee?" “There's a pnasnge from the Sret courtyard Inte o Kecond eur and from that you can go ont either into the Place de ia Madelvine or the Hue de Vageade. Ive gots man at each exit” “It's Mme Ceelle’n ten honxe'’ ertes Coqbenit “Pot the chanffour with ene of your men Ip the Rue det Ar cade bring pune ine ie nag bere, and well duubie nh u¢ with tus driver “Now " went on Coquent! to Tignok, you wn | wilt take tho extt on the Place de ta Made ting * Whey went t+ no imposing entrance With stately juts on the white stone floor and the glimpse of an tmposing atairway “To think that 1 tind corgoties this house" muttered Coquentl. | “Remember that binckaual) ense,” whispered ‘Tiguol, “wheo ye grenked the countean out by the Ree de FAT ender Coquent! nodded. “Tlow about that telegram?’ i ‘The off ano stroked bis rout ebtd, “The clerk gare me a copy of Ht, all THE RICHMOND PLANET, RIGHMOND, VIRGINIA. ALICE Was Oomn! right, when T showed my phpera, Mere Wim Rit taned good It will do bia: - tr). Dubots, 3 Rue Chagrin. fprcal sivgiae, smnteudrboullog dat wer caust havé andre easly Grosner arent Esporaibie: saa “1 soe,” nodded Coquenit, “It onght to be ao egay cipher, We must took we a yy at } | il aed a A up Wnbota letter go in gow and to eate thie felow Look orer tho two courtyarda Finally ‘Toznot coturaed and report ed aft well at the other exita, No ape hid gone out who could posstbly ba the woodearver Suffering coda,” suddenly muttered M_Faul “bes coming" Thu glass doo? at tho foot of the stire openel and & bandrome couple advaneed twwant them-a woman young and criveful the man a perfect type of the slashing bonlerardier Co quenil could ser no resemblance be- tween the wootearver nud this gev: tleman wite ts suiact clothes The woodcarvers bair was yellowish bipwo, thin mane was dark. Ungos with gray Ihe woodearver wore a beard nnd nustacbe. this man was ciwan shove» Finnily the woodearver wax store’ nad bearter chan thie man The centh man opened the door St a colin: soupe The tady caught Sp her allken skirts aud wen about to ‘enter whe. tequcnll brushed against her ns {f 1. areideot and ber pirse fell to the rood ' Stupid tute" exeinimed tho geo: Metnan ag te rearbed for tite purse with bis gloved hand —Coquenil eetzed [the extende! wrist in auch dere at- tack that Uefore the map could resist be was belpiess with bia left arm bent behiud bim in twiated torture. “No nounuxe or you'll bretk your farm" he warvod his captive Tignol Diew s ahrill quamous “Rip off thts glove 1 want to xee bie hand Open ft oup Mer EM make you open It There. a tbovgdt wm New then, off with thn glove! Ab‘ he cried as tho Dare baud came to view “It's too bad Fou couldn't bide that long litder Bo Ber Jiguot quik with the handcuffs’ ‘There 1 think we bore you safely Invded wow, M_ Adolf Groener" ‘The prinoner leaning close to Coque Dil, wispered * Fou poor footl* CHAPTER XVI TPGE HAUTENILLE sat. tn hte aftr at the Palais do Jue tee “ke M Coquentt pack yet? be rhe! of ils clerk “Yes, sit Ue waiting * Stood Ltt oe Ut ‘The srk withdrew and ushered th M Pour “SIL down mottoned the judge “Coquens La Ured but 1m going to examiur this man of yours tonight. Rewember, sou tare po staoding {0 thin case “The work bas been done by Tignol, the warrant was servéd by Tignol, ood the witnesses bavo been auuimoned by Tignol ta that upder- stood ” “Of course.” “That tx my official attitude.” stalled Bauvterilte, unbeving a iitue. “l Reedn't add that between ourselves I appreciate what you havo done. and I bai! do my best to bave your services Properly recognized" Coquenit bowed “Now then.” continued the fudge, “bare you got the witnesses?” shee e “And tho girl? “1 went for her myaeif Sb ie out side" “And the prisoner” “He's in another room under guard” + “The things be ware? Did you find them" The detective todded “Wo found that be baa « room on the fifth floor over Mme Cecile’ He keeps it by the sear He made hts change there, anu we found everything that be took off -the wig, the beard and the rough clothen* “Capital” Capital! 1 want you to be Present, Coquentl, at the examination.” “Ab, that's klod of you!” exclaimed M Pau! “Not kind at all, You'll be of great Service Gat thoro witncssey out of ‘alght nd then bring in the man.” A few momenta Inter the prisoner entered, waiting with bands manscied. He atill wore fis smart clothes and was ns coldly self poasesyrd as at the moment of his dtrost. ‘The clork set- tled himeelt at bis veok and prepared to write, “What #2 your namet” began the sage, 7 “Ldon't care to ¢ivo It “1a your ware Adolf Grosuer?” “No.” ‘ “Are you 2 woodcarrer?” "Won, “Gtooner, you mre tying. Tell movst you bave money to employ « lawyer?” “1 whi ho temper” “That ts not oe Senter, oi de onder mapiniod t baying, coma! ‘under erga, be bavllyy, eotpraltted ee ee eee eee Cerne the man closely as this name wa spoken, but nelther saw the allghtes algn of emotion. : “Go 1 ask {f you will provide a law yer “No,” answeroll the accused. * “Theo the court will assign « law. yer for your defense.” “It'e quite useless,” sbrugged the prisoner. ‘Then the magistrate resumed stern ly: “You werp arrested, alr, thls after noon {a the company of a woman. Dx you know who abo ts?” “Ido. Sbo ty a lady of my acquaint. ance” ‘The judge suorted tncredulousty “You don't even know her name?" You think not?" “Groeueé anid Hautertite sternsy “sou say this woman is a person of your acquutiftance Well see” Tie touched a bell und as tho door opened. “Mme. Ceclle.” he anid ‘A moment Inter there swept to a largo woman of forty Ove with bold, dark eyen and hair that was too Fed to be real She sat down “You are Mie (celle and son keep @ tea room un tho Pineo de la Made- letne” “Yen, str ‘The woman weutgon to relate that the man before ter iad come into ber establishinent that afternoon and pro- valled on a woman mt @ table. to whom he bad tutroduced himuelf, to go out and drive n fow blocks with him in a carriage He offered bor G00 francs, He assured her that bo woald not require Ler company for over ser en oF eight minutes She accapted tbe offer be koow that be had never Biet the woman before Now the wo- mun Ip quevtlen was brought in She had been traced by Tignol’s men. She corroborated what Sime Cectle bad said, and teth hortied out “Now wir what bave you to say?” demanded tbe Judge, facng the prs oncr “Nothing At this the judge leaned over to Co queutl. and after a few low swords he Bpoke to the clerk whe bowed nnd weut out The judge resomed “Do sou also deny tat vou base a room rented by tho seur iu the boase of Mme Ceclie?” Thao setting about such a fom declared the other “DP muppese sou dida't go there to change your + ithe" “Certniply st “Cail Jules sald Uautevitle, The clerk reappeared with a targe leather. bag ! “Open Ht, directed the magistrate: “Spread the thingy ou the table Groe- ner whut about this wig aad falne beara” Groener walked deliberately to tho table - “Tse peser area these things be fore 1 know notbing about them," ho sald ‘The Judge looked up and sald quietly fo the guard “Take off bis handeutts, coat aot shirt tots ni trousors.”” The guns obey ed M_ aul whiapered to Hautestite “Take off hin gnrters and pail up bis drawers I want hls logy baro below the kneen “Hm an ovtrage* erlod Grooner “Bilence, air" glared the magintrate Caquenil mtood by taeager watehtol nesw a8 the prtwaner's lower logs were vucovered Ane he cried tn telumph —“T knew Mt) There’ He pointed to an eg. shaped wened on the eight calf, (wo red semictri mn in the white Seah ‘It's the frst time 1 ever marked a man with my teeth” “What tuade that mark on your leg? naked the judge 4 1 Twas bitten by g dog” “Its a wonder you didnt aboot the dog.” Gaxtied the detective What do seu mean?" retorted the other Coquentl bent clone black wrath burning tu te deep set exer, and spoke three simple words that seemed to rmite the prisoner with sudden fear. “Uh, nothing Raoutl* So evident was the prisaner’s ome Hoy that Hautectile turned for an ex Rlanation to the detective, who sntd Komething under his breath “Nery atringe! Very tmportant™ Feflected the magistrate, then to the eecused. “Now 1 want you to put on the things that were In that bag” “No™ he cried boamely “I won't do ft! never do it Both the judge and Coquentt gave tatisfied nods at thin nign of @ break. down but they rejoled too soon, for by a marvelous effort of the will the man recovered bla self mastery and calm, “after all.” be corrected himself, “what does It matter? Pl put the things on” He donned the boots and girments of the woodcarrer. There" said the prisoner when the thing was done. Bot the judge sbook bis bead. “You're forgotten the beard and the ‘At the alxbt of him Alice atarted tn surprise and fehr and cried out, “Ob. Cousin Adolf!” “Am | talking to yoo with your cousin's vole? Pay attention—tell me am 1% anked the prisonds, ‘Alico ubwk ber bead ta perploxity. “It's not ~wy cousin's voice,” sbe ad- united. ‘The prisoner pulled off the beard and wig Now the girl retracted bor orlgs- pal Wentifeation “And It's wot your cousin,” declared the prisoner Then be faced the Judge. “Ie M reasonable that 1 could bave lyed with this girt for years In 80 th- thoate a way nnd been wenrlng a dls guise all the time? {t's absurd. she bas good eyes. She woul. tinve de- tected this wig and false beard Did you ever muspect that your couxit Wore a wlk oF n falko twnrt?* bo axked Allee. “No.” she repiicd “I never did” “You ace” bw triumphed te the mag. fatrate, “she can't wlentify ww ay ber cousin for the excellent reason that I'm not ber cousin {tell you Tm oot Groener “Who ere you then?” demanded the judge. . “You hare no business ( ask Uulex you can show that 1 havo comunitted Pa crime, which you haven’ done get’ Here Coqueull pbiepered to who judge “Certainly “ nodded (he latter, aud, turning to Alire. be sald, “Yoo may fo" ‘Tho girl left the room, followed by M. Paul ~Coquenth soun re-entered, followed ‘by the shrimp photographer, who wan evidently muh depresged The shrimp turned to the prisoner and started for- ward accusiogly "That is the man,” he cried, “That Is the mao who chok ed mo" | “One moment.” sald the magistrate: “What ts your name?" “Alexander Godin” piped the pho tographer “On the vixbt of July 4 you attacked & man passlug along the balcony of the Hotel dea Etrangere? In that cor- rect ye ‘Tho photographer put forth his thin ‘hands. palms upward. in alld protest Tw eny that [ attarked him Isis a monner of apeaking The fact is be- hbe'— Alexander stroked his neck rue folly “T understand be nearly choked sou The marke of Lin nally are «till oo sour neck? “They ure air * “Ls thls prisoner the man? SU even to 1 “Good New stand wtih Come here Qroener Reach out seur arms as tf Jou Were gulng to elwho this souns dion Pur your left hand on bie nek With the ually of sour Chub avd Bo Bers exe: tly on these marke ‘There In the thusly right” Nat the Ort Anger Bond Now the (hint! And now the Uttle Anger? An ‘The nally of the prisoners left haud correspondet exactly with ‘the unl marks on the sletap photographer a neck’ CHAPTIN NIE PATEL caver sar BOK BOE N LD Wore satis ted te a xe Veee eto exminiati ns but halttloed ignerame of any Aexautit on the photographer Ad of the stwlew booty of Isittredge He anrered contemptuvusly at Hnute Fille aud Cojuentt The fuze thaalty had the guard put band ats onthe priwuer prive to ordering tila te the Sante prison Sow the ac used show ed furious anger “Mark my words Judge Hautes tle bo threateped Heeesty you have ur dered hand: uffs putan a pertsuner fu the tast ume * “What do you mean” But utmost tustantly Groener had become cali axatn “Groener’ deinanded the snags trate Impremaively we aze comlug tc AD unpleaxant part of this exaroina tion Tt fs unpleasant becoure tt forces a guilty pernou to betray bim acif and, reveal moro or tess of the truth thi bo trieg to bide” The prisoner looked up incredulous ly “You say It forcen him to betray bimself? “That's practically what it does.” “why?” eRecause Uf voy ite gullty we shall know it aud iu gy on confidently looking for certaiv floks now missing in the chain of evidence against you On the other hand, Lf you are inno cent we shall know that, too, and if you ate innocent, Groener, here is your chance to prove it, We mako the ac- cuned register bis own gullt or bis own Innocence with bis owt words.” “Whether he wishes to or not?* ‘The jusgo opened a leather portfolto and selected soveral sheets of paper ruled in aqaares. Then he took out bis watch, “On these atieots,” bo explained, "3 Coquent! and 1 bave written Gown about a hundred words, simpié, every day words, most of them, such as ‘pouse,’ ‘manle,' ‘tree,’ ‘baby,’ that have no particular significance. Among these worfs, however, wo have intro duced thirty that havé some associa tion tith this crime, words like ‘An- nonin,’ ‘billiards,’ ‘pistol. 1 atall spenk these words slowly, one by one, aud when I speak a word I want you to speak another word that my word aug: geste, For oxampie, if I aay ‘tree’ you Might any ‘gotten? if 1 aay ‘house you might aqyv ‘chair.’ Of course yor are freo to say doy word you pleare. ‘Ddout you will Ond yourself irrestatibly drawn toward certalo ones according ‘as you are innocent sree | “Bor instance, Martinez, the 8pan- Jard, was witely koown as « billiard ‘Diayer Now. if | should aay ‘Dilltord player’ and you had no persons) fect Ing aboot Martincs you might sasily, by, .ansociation of ideas, say “Bpan- tard! but if you pod willed Martinez and wished to conceal your crime then when 1 «nid ‘illinrd player’ you ‘would not aay ‘Bpaniand,’ but would ghooss some Innocent word dike table .oF chalk, ‘That toa crude {iiustration bat tt inay give-you thp idee” “And ts that allt" ated Groener, tn ‘evident retor. , “No, There ts also the tune taken tn ctiovaing a trond. itt say ge ot ‘utnbrelia’ it may take you threéquar- tere of # eccond te anawer ‘ink’ or ‘cain! white 4t quay take another map (Bay whaee mind arte slowly a :etcond, and ‘© quarter oF even -tidtwfor. bls: reply. Each person bas tly of-ber-kvarage ‘Ume for the thought procens,' vome longer, some shorter. Barthee Lime process is alwwaya lengtbentd after one of the critical or emotional worte—1 mean sf the person is guilty, Thus if I way ‘Ansduls’ to you asd you aro the murderer of tfartines it will tke you one or two on three scconds longer to decide upon a nafo answering word than ft would have taken tf you @ere not the murderer and spoke the drnt word that came to your tongue. De you see?" “1 ace.” shrugged the prisoper, “bur It never woutl carry woight In a court of law” “Never ts a long time.” sald the Jodge. “Wait ten years We bave a Wwouderfal ruentat mk roscope here, and tho world vl learn to aso It. 1 uxc ft now" “De you really think " Groener ashint presently, “that tf 1 were guilty of tis crime f could not make these answers without betraying myself?” “I'm mure you coukl not.” “Then if 1 stood the teat you wonlt believe me innocent?” Tho magintrate reflects) a moment “Yea 1 should think you tunocent * “Let qe understiod this," lauhest the privoner You aay over a pum her of words. aud I anawer with other worl Vou note the ext moment when you apesk your word and the ge eee Ppl co A PHINOSE bert TH Can DIME exact moment whew Lxpeak glue then You see bow tanny se ands elapse be txoen ibe twee moments ty that it “That'a It only | bate n waten that marks the fifthm of a neem Ate yo willing to make (he teat “Ruppene 1 refase? Tbe gingitrates faye hardened “tt you refure today Tsiail kuew baw to force you to my WH unether day Did you ever hear of the thint degree, Groener* be asked shat After al Groene sald earetoasis whit duos it guitter? tse ahead wit, Four little gone He edthor aninses ane” ‘The test bean Hautes tte «peaking the prevent wordn aod banding the stop Wat ho whee Congentt sitting be flde bin wrote down ie answered Words and he prev ine thu Inters ale FiratTthes eatabillabed (rocner's ut erage or ermal Une of reply when there was ne emotion af mental of fort Invoiet ‘The judge said ait * fand Grieuer atone by axse intion of Wdeas said vrenm the Judge nafih Samehe Groner replted fire © the judge maid carly Groener aad “Ite the judge sand water,” Groe her onswered river tha judge mid Stobaice Greener anxwernd “pine And the Intervai carted from four ffthe of n necond to a second and o Afth, which was take an the prisoo era average time for the untroubled thought procera, “He's clever” reflected Coquent! “He's establishing a slow average.” ‘Then began tho real teat the Judge going deliberately through the entire Ust, which Incinded thirty important words seattered. nmong xeventy untin portant ones. Tho thirty important words were 1, Notre Dame$ 2, eyo holo; f wated- dog; 4, photographer; 6, guillotine: & Champs Elysees. 7, false beard. Brassels; 9, Olbelia 10, sacriatan, 11 Vilta Montmorency, 12, Rov. 14 dreame, 14. auger, 18, Jha sian, 16 dotective: 17° Brazil, 18, canar*bird 19, Ore, 20, red sky, 21, ansasain, 2 Doots, 23, Mary, 24, coaching party 25, Inpanend print. 26, charity bacanr. 7, footprints; 2 Margaret; 20, rd , hair: 80, Fourth of Joly They went through this Ist slowty word by word. with everything cnre [fatty recorded. which took neatly an hour; then they turned back to the Deginning and wet through the tin ‘again, 90 that to the hundred origina! ‘words Groener gave two ets of ait awering wards, moat of whieh proved to bo the enmo. espgetally in the ser enty unimportant words. Thas both times he anewered “darkness” for ight," “ton” for “coffee” and “clock™ for “watch” Thero were 2 fow cx ceptions, na when ho annwered “salt for “sugar” the Arat thine and “nweet * fot “angar” tbe second tima Tt waa Gifferent howerer, with the Important words, an Hauterille point €4 out when the text was Oniabed tn over hnif the cases the accused hind Answered different words In tho tw questiontngs. “Fou made np your mind. Grocner.” eafd the jndge ax he glanced over the abeotn, “that you would anawer the critical “words within sour avorage time of reply. and you have done It. but zou hare’ betrayed yourself in av other way. asd know you would In oor eaire to answer’ quickly yon re- Deatedly choso words that you would nob have’ chosen if you bad reflected! longer; then In Rolng through tho list & second tlae yom teaiieed this ant Improved on sodr Gray anewers by tijuting more fhnorght words For exatupin, the fret, tine fo ap- wrbred “bole” wtisti | anid nage? bot the second thos sou enewered ‘banr night when he escaped from the Ansonia, and he has it now. Soel! The judge observed the prisoner carefully and nodded in agreement. There was no doubt about it. As he walked Groenner was limping noticeably on his left foot! Dr. Duprut was waiting for them in his laboratory, absorbed in recording the results of his latest experiments. A kind oyded, grave faced man was this, who, for all his modesty, was famous over Europe as a brilliant worker in psychological criminology. Entering the laboratory, they found themselves in a large room, quite dark. The prisoner leaped the red column as if the frightened heart were trying to burst the tube with its spurring red jet. The doctor put his mouth close to Coquennil's ear and whispered, "It's the shock showing now, the shock that he held back after the body." "There! Do you know these faces?" As he spoke there appeared the fake photograph that Coquennil had found in Brussels—Alice at the age of twelve with the smooth young widow. "Look at the girl in this false picture which you had cunningly made in Brussels!" cried the judge. "Who is she? There is the reason for your The prisoner was seen limp and white, sprawling over his hair. "He has fainted," said the doctor. Hauterille hurried to the open window, there listening. Just below him in the courtyard he made out the fasting helmet of a mounted garde de Paris. And he caught some quick words that made him start. "A messenger from the prime minister," muttered the judge, "you urgent business with me." (To Be Continued.) mer" You said to yourself, "Note that not a good answer because he will think I am thinking of those eye holes so I change it to "hammer," which means nothing." And when I said "watchdog" you answered first "scent and then 'tall'; when I said "Breat you answered first 'ship' and then 'coffee'" You tried deliberately to get as far away as possible from associations with the crime. "Not at all," contradicted Grooner "I made the changes because every word has many associations, and I felt lowed the first one that came into my head. When we went through the first a second time I did not remember or try to remember the answers I had given the first time." "Ab but that is just the point," insisted the magistrate "in the seventy unimportant words you did remember and you did answer practically the same words both times. Your memory failed only in the thirty important words. Besides, in spite of your will power the test reveals emotional disturbance. It is true you kept your answers to the important words with in your normal tone of reply, but in at least five cases you went beyond this normal time in answering the unimportant words. "The words are unimportant, and so are the answers. "Then explain this. You were an answering regularly at the rate of one answer in a second or so when suddenly you hesitated and climbed your hands and wailed four and two-fifths seconds before answering feathert to the simple word hat." The magistrate leaed nearer. Yes and perhaps you were inwardly disturbed by the shock and strain of an answering the previous word quickly and unconcernedly. I did not warn you of that danger. Do you know what the previous word was? "No." "It was guillotine." "Ah!" said the prisoner absolutely impassive. "And why did you waver and wipe your brow and draw in your breath quickly and wait six and one fifth seconds before answering violin when I gave you the word more." "I'm sure I didn't know. Garner started at the podge." "Shall I tell you why, Garner?" It was because your brow was ending your head through the brow of your whole macral machinery, caused by the shock of the word before it, the terror that went through you when you answered wrenched work to charity bargain. The prisoner bounded to his feet with a hoary hair. My God you have no right to torture me like this! His eyes were staring. "Sit down, under the judge. The prisoner dropped back weekly on his chair. "You can yourself a great deal of trouble. I am thankful he be confessing your part in this time. No answer me." With an offer the man straightened up and met the judge's eyes. "I feel faint, he gospel. Would you give me a little beauty?" The guard put a flask to the prisoner's lips and Grooner took several swallows. "Thanka! he whispered." "I told you it wouldn't be amusing" said the investigator grimly. Fither you confess or we go ahead "I have nothing to confess." "I know what was the matter with you just now With a tilt of his former insolence the prison answered. Look at that clock. It after it. You've had me here for the hours and I've had no food since now." Coupled was a skeptical. Several times he fancied he had caught Groomer's eye fixed anxiously on the clock. Was it possible the fel lew was trying to gain time? But why? As the detainee puzzled over this there shot through his mind an idea for a move against Groomer's resis- tance. He turned quickly to Huntville and said. I think it might be as well to let him have some supper. The judge directed the guard to take the prisoner into the outer office and have something to eat brought in for him." "Well, he asked when they were alone 'what is it?" Council talked earnestly while the magistrate listened. "Positively possible," reflected the judge. "Anyway its worth trying" and he gave the necessary orders to his clerk. "Let Tignol go," he directed. "Tell him to wake the man up if he's in and not to mind what it costs. Tell him to take an auto." CHAPTER XVIII THE WORKING PICTURE ATTENTION to detective noticed that the prisoner glanced anxiously at the clock. It was a quarter post. "We will have the visual test now, and it will take. Take the prisoner to Dr. Impress a laboratory." he directed the guard. "I hope this goes off well," whispered the judge uneasily. "You don't think they have forgotten anything?" "Trust Pina Tamai to obey orders," replied Coquenil. "Ah!" he started and gripped his companion's arm "Do you remember what I told you about those alleyway footprints--about the pressure marks? Look!" and he pointed ahead excitedly. "I know it! He has gout or rheumatism--just touches that come and go. He had it that The judge observed the prisoner carefully and nodded in agreement. There was no doubt about it. As he walked Grooner was limping noticeably on his left foot. Dr. Duprat was waiting for them in his laboratory, absorbed in recording the results of his latest experiments. A kind oed, grave faced man was this, who, for all his modesty, was famous over Europe as a brilliant worker in psychological criminology. Entering the laboratory, they found themselves a large room, quite dark, save for an electric fanat at one end that throw a brilliant circle on a sheet stretched at the other end. The light reflected from this sheet showed the dim outlines of a tiered amphitheater before which was a long table spread with strange looking instruments. "Everything is ready" said Dr. Duprat. "Is this the—er, the subject?" He glanced at the prisoner Hauvelle nodded "Please bring him over here. That's right—in front of the lantern." Then he spoke gently to Groener. "Now, my friend, we are not going to do any thing that will cause you the slightest pain or inconvenience." For some moments he studied the prisoner in silence "Interesting very interesting," murmured the doctor. Especially the lobe of this ear! I will leave a note about it for Bertrand himself! Please turn a little for the back of the head. Thanks! I must study this head when we have time. Very remarkable. We must have these off! he pointed to the handcuffs. Also the coat Don't be alarmed. There Now, I want the left arm here above the elbow. When these directions had been carried out Dr Duprat pointed to a heavy wooden chair "Please sit here!" he went on "and slip your left arm into this leather sleeve" "Why must I sit in this chair?" asked Greuer. 'Why do you want my arm in that leather thing?' Some pictures of persons and places will be thrown on that sheet and, as each one appears I want you to say what it is. Most of the pictures are familiar to every one. But the leather sleeve? "The leather sleeve is like the stop watch, it records your emotions. Sit down." Greuer hesitated. 'I want to know how it records my emotions.' The magistrate answered. There is a pneumatic arrangement he explained by which the pulsations of your heart and the blood pressure in your artist's are registered automatically. Now then. I warn you if you don't sit down willingly well you can better sit down. Then greuer sat down. The presser was shouted You surely recognize this picture Look. The desk and the fountain, the Pinteres grids. "The Place de la Grondelle" answered Grocer authority. The picture changed to a view of the Grand Open House and at the same moment a point of light appeared in the headboard back of the chair. It was shaded so that the prisoner could not see it and it placed a graduated white dial on which was a glass box. bees long, the white box, the commuter bus, the table and the not moved regularly up and down and down in steer beats, and a compass understood that this column was registering the beating of Grocer's heart. Standing behind the chair the doctor the magistrate and the detective at the same time watch the pulsating column and the pictures on the sheet but the prisoner could not see the column. "What is that?" asked the doctor. Greer answered at once. "The Grand Open House. Good. Now another." "The Bastille column." "And this." "Notre Dame church. So far the boats and come uniformly about one in a second for the man's pulse was slow. At each beat the liquid in the tube shot up six inches and then dropped six inches, but at the show of Notre Dame the column rose only three inches, then dropped back and shot up seven inches. The doctor nodded gravelly, while Cougenil with breathless interest, with a morbid fascination, watched the heating of this red column. It was like the heating of red blood. "And this As the picture changed there was a quiver in the pulsing column a hesitation with a quick fluttering at the bottom of the stroke then the red shot up full nine inches, M Paul shot at the shot and saw a perfect reproduction of private room No 0 in the Anselma. And she as they looked two holes appeared in the wait Then a dim shape took form upon the floor more and more distinctly until the dissolving lens brought a man's body into clear view a body stretched face downward in a dark red pool that grew and widened, slowly staining and wetting the polished wood "Groener," said the magistrate, "do you recognize this room?" "You are lying, Groener," accused the judge, "There." He signaled the lantern operator, and there leaped forth on the sheet the head of Martinez, the murdered, mutilated head, with shattered eye and painted cheeks and the greenish death pallor showing underneath, a ghastly, leering cadaver photographed at the morgue. "Who is it?" demanded the judge. "I don't know," declared the accused. Again the picture changed. "Who is this?" "Queen Victoria." Here suddenly, at the view of England's peaceful sovereign, Groener seemed thrown into frightful agitation. Up and down in mad excite- nept leaped the red columns as if the frightened heart were trying to burst the tube with its spurring red jet. The doctor put his mouth close to Coquennil's ear and whispered, "it's the shock showing now, the shock that he held back after the body." "There! Do you know these faces?" As he spoke there appeared the fake photograph that Coquennil had found in Brussels—Alice at the age of twelve with the smooth young widow. "Look at the girl in this false picture which you had cunningly made in Brussels" cried the judge. "Who is she? There is the reason for your killing Martines." Now the prisoner's pulse was running wild, faster and faster. "Martines knew the truth" he went on, "Martines held your secret. How had Martines come upon it? The whole slim of this investigation has been to get the secret and we have got it! Grooner, you have written this secret for us in words of terror. We know what Martines knew when you took his life, we know the story of the medal that he wore." "I know nothing about this man or his medal." dung back the prisoner his breast, being back the present. "No! Then you will be glad to hear the story. It was a medal of solid gold awarded Martinez by the city of Paris for conspicuous bravery in saving lives at the terrible charity baar zaar fire. Have you forgotten the details of the charity baar fire?" "I am not interested in the subject," answered the accused. "Ah, but you are, or you ought to be. Hundreds burned to death—think of that! Cowardly men trampling women find children! Duchesses burned to death! Rich women burned to death! Think of it Groover, and—" he signaled the operator "and look at it!" As he spoke the awful tragedy began in one of those extraordinary moving pictures that the French make after a catastrophe. Here before them leaped redder names than ever crackled through the real charity baskets; here were women and children pertinently in more average torture than the actual victims endured were here horrs piled on horrors. Cougnih had seen this picture in one of the boulevard theaters, and straightway after the precious nine second clew of the word test he had sent Tupa Tignol for it posthaste. If the mere words "charity bazar" had struck this man dumb with fear what would the thing itself do—the resulting ghastly thing? Then suddenly the tension snapped, the prisoner sprang to his feet and, tearing his arm from the leather sleeve, he faced his tormentors desperately. "No. no, no!" he shrucked "You dogs! You cowards!" "Put the bandcuffs on him!" ordered Huntville. "What does all this prove?" the prisoner screamed in rage. "Nothing! Nothing! You make me look at disgusting, abominable pictures, and why shouldn't my heart beat? Anybody's heart would beat if he had a heart." The judge went on in a tone men and cold as a knife. "Before you go to your cell Grooner you shall hear what we charge against you. Your wife perished in the charity bazaar fire. She was a very rich woman, probably an American who had been married before and who had a daughter by her previous marriage. That daughter is the girl you call Alice. Her true name is Mary. She was in the fire with her mother and was rescued by Martinus but the shock of seeing her mother burned to death and perhaps the shock of seeing you refuse to save her mother!" "It's a lie" replied the prisoner. "All this terror and anguish caused a violent mental disturbance in the girl and resulted in a failure of her memory. When she came out of the fire she did not know her own name. She was helped. And she was a great heirs' heart. If she lived she inherited her mother's fortune if she died this fortune reverted to you. So you destroyed her identity, you gave it out that 大公 "YOU DOO YOU COWARDS!" she, too, had perished in the flames, and you proceeded to enjoy her stolen fortune while she sold candles in Notre Dame church." "You have no proof of it!" "No? What is this?" and he signaled the operator whereupon the lights went down and the picture of Alice and the widow appeared again. "Now watch the woman, your firmals accomplish watch her carefully" The smooth young widow faded gradually while the face and form of another woman took her place. "Now we have the picture as it was before you satisfied it. Do you recognize this face?" "No, answered the prisoner, but his heart was pounding. "It is your wife. Look!" Under the picture came the inscription, "To my dear husband Raoul, with the love of Margaret and her little Mary." We will also be pleased to quote you prices on exterior and from old photos, a specialty. Everything Everything IN FURNITURE AND FURNITURE SPECIALTIES FLOOR COVERINGS SYDNOR & HUNDLEY, INC. Leaders. 709 711 713 EAST BROAD STREET. 'Phone, 577. Richmond, Va' Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liveryman. 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 plonic or band wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class, carriages, buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies. No. 212 East Leigh Street. (Residence Nart Dress.) OPEN ALL DAY AND NIGHT—Man on Duty All Night. The prisoner was seen limp and white, sprawling over his hair. "He has fainted," said the doctor. Hauteille buried to the open window, there listening. Just below him in the courtyard be made out the fashing helmet of a mounted garden de Paris. And he caught some quick words that made him start. "A messenger from the prime minister," muttered the judge, "our urgent business with me." (To Be Continued.) A Query. The Danes are sons of Danish man. The Spanish son of Danish man. Now what is quite beyond my ken Is why the Danes aren't Danishs. - New York Herald. Paradox. Her-Why on earth do they call him the paying teller? Him-Because that's his job Her-But it isn't I asked him how much you had in the bank, and please to give it to me and he wouldn't tell and he wouldn't pay-Cleveland Leader PHOTOS. We offer you, the latest and most moderate figure, than you can obtain old special attention paid to children. Interior view work. We will also be pleased to quote you from old photos, a specialty. Geo. O. Brown, PH 603 North 2nd St., W. I. JOHN Funeral Director and Office & Warerooms, 207 N Fo HACKS FOR Orders by Telephone or Telegram Suppers and Entertainments 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. $5000 in Gold to any one in the World to compete with him Processing more power than any four mediums combined No card trance or hand humbug Greatest Hindoo Medium in the World. BO GREAT IS HIS POWER that he can tell you while in a Clairvoyant state, all you wish to know with out a word being spoken. Come, all you unbelievers, scoffers and jeers bring all your skepticism with you—he will open your eyes to the private chamber mystery. Come all ye broken hearted wives, all with low spirits and let him lift the burden from your aching and jealous heart. He challenges the World to compete with him in causing a speedy marriage with the one you Everything Eve IN FURNITURE FURNITURE SPECIAL Method "Oh, I don't know. Some of my customers haven't had time to notice the scales since I lung up the mirror"—Cleveland Leader So It Seems Lecturer. To day the men are living much faster than the women Man (in audience) That's a right Twenty years ago when I got married my wife was five years the older, now she's five years the younger Somebody's Joke Dr Stitgen Good morning! How do you find yourself today? Mr Stitk is this a professional question or a friendly inquiry? Cleveland Leader 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, ments promptly attended. Residence in Building. love, uniting the separated and bring back the lost one. Traces lost or stolen goods, Unearths hidden treasures. Removes evil influences Crosses, Spells, Ill Luck, cures tricks and Conjurations, gives Luck and Success in all you undertake. Cures the Tobacco and Liquor Habits. Allows the Captive to be set Free. He is the only one that will give a Written Guarantee to complete your business or refund your money Are you sick? Do you know what the trouble is with you? Come and Consult Nature's Doctor. Rheumatism, Insomnia, Hysteria and all Diseases cured. Points given on Horse Racing and all Games of Chance. No matter what ails you, come and see this wonderful man. 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Sittings, $1 00 All letters containing $1 00 will be answered in full MAIN OFFICE: 610 5 8th Street, Philadelphia, Pa Everything TURE AND SPECIALTIES LINCOLN HAIR POMADE MAKES KINKY HAIR SOFT REMOVES DANDRUFF KEEPS HAIR FROM BROADING OFF LINCOLN HAIR POMADE WHICH WAY WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE YOUR HAIR--SOFT AND LONG SO THAT YOU CAN PUT IT UP IN THE LATEST STYLE OR SHORT AND MINNY KEEPS SCALP FRESH CLEAN AND WHOLE-SOME MAKES HAIR GROW LONG AND LUXURIOUS A WOMAN'S JUST PRIDE IS HER The Lincoln Pomade Co. NORFOLK, VA, U.B.A. Agents Wanted Everywhere. Write for particulars. If your deal or does not keep it. send 20 coins in stamps or silver to THE LIN. 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. (TRADE MARK REGISTERED) Carries a full line of nat-ural human hair-braids, bangs pompouders and the latest styles in front pieces-all colo-ors-black, brown, gray and mirrored gray. Those desiring to we to match them must very sure in stating expli-ly the colors desired. It is rays easy to send a small sample of hair sample so that we may be in a position to match it correctly. Prices: Braids, (natur- al hair) $2.50; All- round Pompouders, (nautral hair), $4.00; Front Pieces (nautral hair), $2.50. 4.00; Front Pieces (nautical hair), $2.50. provided to be a fortune to many of the unfortunate, who are wonderful results. The merits of this great hair preparation nat- ural, for own, and for the flowing term in which our patrons attain their results. We can well boast of a large patroness States and also enjoy the commendation of the very best white immediate community. OF THE MOST IMPORTANT of the merits and results of the GROWER AND RETOUCHER. FOR GROWER AND RETOUCHER, we permit us to do so, who have used our many among the many bearing witness of the genuine qualities. interdependence of those expecting a miracle or anything unre- sultual and pure compound, the ingredients of which, we in print, unindicate the public that the United States Government has placed our hair preparation by which it is protected, and we are in beautiful health because of the good Dandruff. Cure the Scalp of all Impurities. Restore Hair Itches, where the Roots are not Dead. Price $3 cents per box, makes the use of powder entirely unnecessary and is perfectly easy orders. Money can be sent by Post Office Money Order. Address all communications to HAWKINS-PRICE COMPANY, 610 N. 1st St., Richmond, Va. respondence Strictly Confidential This Preparation has proved to be a fortune to many of the infortunate, who are to-do delighted with its wonderful results. The merits of this great hair preparation naturally extend to the beauty of the skin. We can speak of it, reassure us of its satisfactory results. We can boast of a large patronage throughout this and other States and also enjoy the commendation of the very best white and colored people in this immediate community. We are proud of the merits and results of the HAWKEN-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 and are to-day among the many bearing witness of the genuine qualities. Our preparation is the correct care of those expecting a miracle or anything unreasonable. Our preparation is a natural and pure compound, the ingredients of which, we would not hesitate to put in print. We will just here remind the public that the United States Government has placed national patent rights on our hair preparation by which it is protected, and we are in turn responsible for the enforcement of these rights. It will positively remedy Dandruff, Cure the Soap of All Impurities, Restore Hair on Glen Tremont or Hald Heala, where the Roots are not Dead. Price, $3 per box. The Face Dandruff makes the use of powder entirely unnecessary and is perfectly harmless for 25 and 50 cents and $1.00 per bottle. A charge of ten cents extra is imposed all over the country by Post Office Money Order, or Express Money Order. Address all communications to HAWKINS-PRICE COMPANY, Phone 4601 616 N. 1st St., Richmond, Va. Richmond, Fredericksb'g & Potomac R. R. TO AND FROM WASHINGTON AND BEYOND Leave Richmond Leave Richmond 4.00 L. M. Male St. St. 4.50 A. M. Male St. St. 8.50 A. M. Male St. St. 7.10 L. M. Male St. 7.10 A. M. Male St. 7.50 A. M. Male St. 8.40 A. M. Male St. 8.40 A. M. Male St. 4.00 P. M. Male St. 4.15 P. M. Male St. 4.15 P. M. Male St. 8.70 P. M. Male St. ACCOMMODATION TRAINS - WEEKDAYS Leave Byrd St. St. 1.50 P. M. for Fredericksburg Leave Byrd St. St. 7.30 A. M. 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M. 13:10, 18:10 P. M. 0 P. M. 8:18 P. M. 7:18 and 12:18 P. M. For Colduridge and Fayetteville: 8:19 P. M. 8:18 P. M. 8:18 P. M. 7:18 and 12:18 P. M. 8:18 P. M. 8:18 P. M. 7:18 and 12:18 P. M. Reptent Sunday: *Sunday Only. Departures and accommodations not grounded. --- 'Phone 4601 RAILROADS. RAILROADS. EFFECTIVE APRIL 11, 1942 1 Southern Ry TRAIN LEAVES RICHMOND N B - Following schedule gruves published only on information and are not published 6 20 A M - Daily - Local for Charlotte 10 45 A M - Daily - Limited - Buffet Brother to Mary D. Dirmingham, New Orleans, Memphis, Memphis, Mississippi, Through coach for Chase City, Ozark, Purham 6 00 E Ex Sunday Keysville Local. 11 45 P M - Daily - Limited Pulman ready 9 90 P for all the South YORK RIVER LINE 4 30 P M Ex Sunday - To West Point -oon- connecting for Baltimore Monday Wednesday and Friday. 2 10 P M Monday, Wednesday and Friday - local to West Point 4 30 A M Ex Sunday Local to West Point. TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND From the South 7 00 A M 9 30 P M daily (apres) A M Ex Sunday 4 10 P M, daily (local) From West Point 9 30 A M daily, 11 $ A. Winter Point and Friday 9 30 P M, pzpos C. & O. 11 00 P. cargo and St Linda Fullam. 8 00 A. Daily Clifton Forges. 8 18 P - Week days. Lay in Gordonsville. 8 18 P - Week days. Lay in Gordonsville. 8 18 P - Week days. To Lynchburg. TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND. Local from East - 8:20 A. M. 8:25 P. M. Through from East - 11 40 A. M. 7:20 P. M. * 18 20 P. M. Local from West - 8:18 A. M. 7:48 P. M. Local from West - 8:18 A. M. 7:48 P. M. Jamie River Lake - 7:25 A. M. 6:00 P. M. * Daily except Sunday. JOHN M. Higgins, CHOICE GROCERIES, WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS. PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR THE MONEY. 1610 East Franklin Street. [Near Old Market.] Richmond. Virginia. --- FOUR Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL, JR., at 81 N. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. JOHN MITCHELL, JR., - EDITOR. 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The courts have decided that subscribers to newspapers who do not order their discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid are best liable for the payment of the subscription up date when they order r the paper discs. COMMUNICATIONS When writing to us to receive your subscription or to discontinue your paper you should give your name and address in full otherwise we cannot find your name on our books. HANDLE OF ADDRESS In order to change the address of a subscriber we must be sent the former as well as the present address. POLICE AT THE FIRST OFFICE AT RICHMOND. Va. as well as the matter SATURDAY APRIL 23 1910 Y H I N D CONVICILED ```markdown ``` CON GALKSONS CHEMISTRY What a singing sort of the end of Hepatitis he is. Who could have shown it. Clarkson so effectively. Clarkson has exposed himself. If Mr. Clarkson is a national moun that he is leaving the Republican court, no mind the letter for the court it entails, what bad when each man leave it. We are of the opinion that at the Post in error what it says that Gen. Clarkson when in office had no fault to find with the Republican party. His views were so well known by those who came in personal contact with him that it was presumed that his retention in office was due to his army record, and his past valiant party services. At no time has he given vent to any expressions of opinion that are not consonant with the views expressed in the interview. --- He has always been in favor of the "old line" Republicanism and a bold champion of human rights. It is possible that he has seen his best days, but at the same time he has never faltered in his devotions to great fundamental principles of ethical right-questioning. But what did God Clarkson say here is the telegram report New York, April 19. The Republican party was swept into power by a committee of both James S. Clarkson and Republican war horse and only yesterday survivor of the part of New York for the past eight years. But two years it has lived ```markdown ``` I will not be able to provide the text content for the image. It is stated that Gen. Clarkson is stated the condition of affairs on the There is no master mind and skillful hand recognized alike by Republii n and Inaugurati which can not pligh the results which this stateman has outlined The Demo- crat party of the country while temporarily united in Congress is in a state of disintegration in the country Its necessity to power would mean its destruction and the Republi n parties with all of its faults and weaknesses would come unto its own again Gen. Clarkson announced a cure for this condition of affaire. The correspondent says. The general was asked if it is not now merely the question of a national committee nominating a candidate for President in the Republican party He replied: "The national committee has nominated Presidents. It nominated McKinley. It has gotten so that the delegates merely ratify the choice of the national committee because the THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. delegates are too busy and want to go away. That has got to be done away with. ALDRIDGE BEATEN CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS. $0.50 RECIPES OURS WHAK MEN-FREE This is true Even President William H. Taft was the creature of the National Republican Committee, which committee was dominated and controlled by President Theodore Roosevelt. We have always believed that the distinguished ex President would make an effort to return to the White House Events seem to justify this conclusion and we are of the opinion that the return from Fifth movement will gather force until President Taft will either be forced to bow himself out of office or sold to the clamor of his friends and make a fight for a reelection to of great and honorable position that they are the two leading states who may try to remain friends but within our flight of their re- sults, supporters will be one of the most brave geoplanes ever of this of any other country We deliver his motives may have been believed in the soldier who is the leader was $15,000 Endowment Paid that I have to John Mitchell Dr. to the grand King's Seal Path W S E A V A N W Hunted and Littly Laws of the death of Brother Anderson Robinson was a member of North Star Rohn and Va MARTHA ROBINSON Assume FOOLED THEM BOTH Mr N. now I am sitting from his day a work for the little tears Oliver has always waited. I am so disgusted I think I will ever start to cook a right to keep your love for anew. Why what a daring new darling? But in the coffee or put red pepper in the mollionation sauce again or try to make omelet out of egg, at the time? Now I am to remember those blues and I am not no longer. Of yes I remember them a right. And you said they would be just fine that we were cooked a little now and we not so pale and sick. We gave those that were off to the cooks. I cooked them. Dear me, let the heeb eat any of them. Oh well, what can I expect of a stupid girl? But but that is fine. Miss New dore worked for me and said Funny how that character will all in them know so much things. And I am afraid she was not expecting to be sarcastically so funny now. But him in the middle. A1 Sameneas Yes, has been removed I remember that perfectly (1) the report detects clearly I ought for the moment that there right have been something that made one different from all the other men you ever knew. 1.6 Redelete Whom God Hath Joined Not for Her With one way of my wand, maybe the fairy I can make you grow young again! Excuse me, replied the woman. If I decline your kit offer, if you can bring youth to me at my present age, all right, but I positively refuse to travel through pyrography the first stages of bridge the habit back the straight front balloon sleeves and all the rest of the fads I can remember her"—Life Elected to Congress Over Q. W. Aldridge, Rep. T. SNOW STORM KILLS FRUIT Ground Covered In Lower Central Pennsylvania Hunting! Pa April 20 A heavy snowstorm caused this section of the state and four hours the snow fell and four feet the hills and valleys were covered with snow and the fruit is lost. Heavy Snow In Ohio Cleveland April 20. From one to the other, if we leave snow felt the ground up, we break down trees and graffiti and telephone wires it is believed however that the snow the serve to save the fruit and the spring grits from the freezing temperature. Snow and Hall in Virginia Winston-Salem, Va. April 20. Snow and hail fell at intervals over the fruit belt and northern Virginia as the thermometer has taken a decided tumble falling forty five degrees since Tuesday approaching danger alne near the freezing point. Fruit men ate greatly almed. ROOSEVELT VISITS BREEDING FARM --- Bodapest April 20 Colonel Roosevelt spent a day in the open air in spearing the great government stud farm at Babolina He left his hotel receiving the usual ovation and with a party took a train for Babolina Here the party were met by thirty phantasms a half dozen of which were drawn by four horses and the rest by pairs of state horses in which the Arab strain is preeminent. The drivers were picturesque uniforms. Party minutes of rapid drawing brought the party to the large model and farm. Lunch was served and the minister of agriculture produced Rogersville a health in the Magyar language. After RooseveltReply in which he promised as he as he lived to do everything he could for the Hungarians a minister of the Reform church and the local school master in Magyar and the other so far as could be guessed in English. I don't over the party lined along a long aisle and one after another more than twenty magnificent stallions of pure Arab showed their grace in followed an inspection of the large stables in which there are more than 80 horses and colts 20 of which are pure bred stallions. The most notched animal was a hay-filled barn 7 casses of a grey Arab mother and 7 capped Roosvelt. After the lapse of the stable there was a parade of the stallioned cattle and sheep. SOCIALIST JAILED FOR TAX Chicken Wire Bars in Grafton III City Hall Grafton III April 10 Because J I have a socialist leader refused to tax a tax of $15 he began a sentence six months imprisonment. The jail has been converted in a jail screening the windows with wire. Keen to lauret that he will serve his full term rather than pay the tax or work out at 75 cents a day. He is that such a tax is unconstitutional. --- New Postmasters Named Washington April 20. President Fatt also agreed the appointment of postmaster as follows Pennsylvanie Henry Mormon Dickson Meadville Frank Mormon Larry Fullerton Isaac N Backman Strusburg Jesse N Watson Holtner New Jersey William B R Maco Boundbrook William S Slater Atlower Gas Kills Woman and Two Daughters Chicago April 20. Mrs Nellie Mc Mamara wife of a fire captain Daniel McNamara and her two daughters aged fourteen and twelve years were found asphaltated by illuminating gas at their home here The gas is sup- posed to have been blown out by a gust of wind. Eplarge Leaves of Bread. New York April 20 — East Side bakers increased the size of their leaves of bread. They added two to three ounces to each loaf. Bread which formerly sold at 7 cents a loaf weighed two pounds. Now it weighs two pounds two ounces. This means the saving of thousands of dollars to the poor. Shrinkage of 60 cents a barrel in the cost of flour will the cause. ALDRIDGE BEATEN FOR CONGRESS Havens, Democrat, Elected In Rochester, N. Y., District. TURN OF 16,000 VOTES Republican Candidate Was Charged With Bossiam and Accused in Insur- ance Investigation Rochester N. W. April 20 The Democrat swept in without the slightest insinuation of the result of the congressional campaign in the special election to representative in the Thirty-second district between James B Haven's Democrat and George W Aldridge. Republican is an indication Mr Haveng has defeated Mr Aldridge by a plurality. Inasmuch as the late Republican Petitioner Republic can carried the district in 1908 by 10167 the result shows a change of 16002 votes. Mr Haveng carries the city of Rochester by 374 when in 1908 Mr Perkins carried it by 621 which records a change of 961 votes. The result tallies almost to a dot with that in the Fourteenth Massachusetts district where at a recent special election Eugene N. Fuss Democrat overturned a Republican plurality in 1998 of 14,000 and won by 600 making a change of 20,000 votes. This special election marked the culmination of the liveliest campaign ever waged in Monroe county. This district elected its last Democratic congressman in 1890. Mr. Havens is for tariff reform while Aldridge stood on the tariff policies of the Republican national administration. What gave the campaign its fever heat however was what the Democrats called the moral issue the question of dissent, and of the personal fitness of Mr. Aldretta to sit in the house of representation. The evidence that Mr. Aldhidge received a check for $100 from a representative of the insurance companies for the alleged purpose of influencing legislation was an argument his opponents kept before the people in the form of a photograph far simile of this check made to every one of the commissioners in the district. Also it has been known we all along that Mr. Aldhidge has refused to accede to the urging of the National Clothiers as soon as that he put him self in regard as having a reduction of the work he should be undertaking that he stood to the principles of his party. Then too Mr. Aldhidge has received letters most of them begging Where do you stand on cannism? Other demanded that Mr. Aldhidge declare immediately against cannism or take the consequence. Better if he were ahead. In 3 on Aldridge. The Saints are 11 and 11. Probationists had bad records in the first but this year it was not much better on the result. SAFE WASHED TO SEA Strong Box Worth $50,000 Found In Gulf of Mexico Galveston Fox April 20 A safe containing titanium pellets and man ey estimate at more than $1000 has been found in the gulf in twenty feet of water hurt in the sand The safe has been identified at the property of I. Williams a jeweller which was washed away in the ble tort seaper of Indiana in when that town was stewed by a gulf hurt and sent wavy by 187 The status of the safe is told by our living relatives who assist us. Williams is packing it. Williams and his laughter were armed and in the storm and the building or among the safe was washed to get divers have examined the safe and first it intact. Arrangements are being to lift the treasure and take it ashore. For many years there was a guarding reward of $1000 for any one locating the safe. It was found nearly a mile from the site of the building. PRICE OF HOGS SLUMP Decline of $1 in Two Days Due to Big Shipments Chicago April 20 Recent heavy arrivals of hogs are collected in a decline in prices of $1 in the last two days. A few weeks ago hogs sold at the highest since the Civil War thus attracting heavy shipments in view of which the present reaction is not considered remarkable. Salt pork on the board of trade recently underwent a decline of about $2 but the market steadied on buying by packers who were able to purchase the cured product on a basis of $4 cents a pound as compared with 9 cents for the live article. Plastin Riggs and Briggs are two Montreal citizens more or less interested in municipal affairs. They differ on several burning questions but unite in a strong dislike for O'Flaherty (which is not the gentleman's name). The same O'Flaherty has a positive gift for an manipulating votes and is capable of looking after a larger band of the "fairful" than any other Montreal politician. "It's man like O'Flaherty who give this city a bad name," said Riggs warmly. "He's got no principles at all. In fact, he doesn't think of anything but getting his man in." "That's so," responded Briggs. "If I had a conscience as elastic as O'Flaherty's I'd make it into a ruthless trust."—Argonaut. Real Cleverness A man is really clever if he can make you like an old story when he tells it.-Chicago Record-Herald. CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS. * Thursday, April 14. The $260,000 stone dam of the Otis company, at Three Rivers, Mash, has been blown up to permit the construction of a new dam higher up in the Chicopee river. Edward Roelich, a mechanic, was arrested in Chicago, charged with having thrown a pot of hot coffee on his wife and baby scalding them so severely that they may die. Paid a salary of $15 a month, Rev Thomas L. Fraser, of Cleveland, O has contributed his salary to pay off the mortgage on his church and carma living by working as a mechanic. Several score widows of miners who died in the St Paul coal mine disaster at Churrey III last November at tacked deputy sheriffs while the bodies of thirty-one miners were being prepared for burial. The wives were seized a board far on which were cawled in chalk on the walls. Still alive Nov 14. Friday. April 15 Hurried from a telegraph tower when it was demolished by a small freight wreck (C. Baldessis) was instantly killed at Thompson station near Pittsburg Pa. At a meeting of the directors of the American Hardware corporation at New Britain, Conn. It was voted to increase the capital stock from $7,500,000 to $12,000,000. The Newaska state railway commission has started a movement to in-fluence President Taft against the ap pointment of any person who has been a railroad attorney to the United States supreme court. Saturday April 18 A fully equipped moonshine still was found at Memphis Teen by Postoffice Inspector Kline in a shanty boat A froakish tornado at Parsons Kan swept away barns and outhouses in its 200-foot path and sucked dry the Batchleur creek for a considerable distance D B Kubna, chief engineer of the Marianna mines at Marianna Pa was struck by pieces of a burrowing fly wheel his skull fractured and an arm torn off H C Kennedy of Crawfordsville ind an expert in the manufacture of matches was killed in an explosion at the plant of the Arme Match company at Ranoke Va Monday, April 18 One fireman was killed and three were injured in a $40,000 fire at Nashville Tennessee. Sisters of Charity carried patients from their burning consent hospital at Cleveland 10. A temporary shut down of cotton mills at Fall River Mass has thrown 20,000 operative out of employment. Falling over a fifteen foot wall in the crack at Mahanoy City Pa. eight year old Anthony Wassell was fatally hurt. Insecurity is thought to have prompted Mrs. Cora Van Orsdale of Patrerry Neb. to kill her two year old daughter with a hammer. Tucaday. April 19 A lightning bolt descended upon a fishing camp on the bank of a creek eight miles from Salisbury, N. C., instantly killing Charles Carroll sixteen years old. Thirty-five of the 120 convicts at the western penitentiary at Pittsburgh Pa. appeared for the Sunday dinner dressed in near black suits instead of the regulation prison stripes. Three Milwaukee boys aged fifteen armed withowie knives and revolvers bound for the home of the late Jesse James in Missouri were arrested by the Chicago police. After they had danced 19 hours and 38 minutes a contest in which San Jose Cal men were the only ones on the floor out of a list of twelve entrants was stopped by the police. WEDNESDAY, April 20 Robert L. Brafford thirty nine years old was shot and killed at Faverville W. Va by Romeo Bennett so of Circuit Judge William R. Bennett James Jackson president of the Epilepsy Coal company at Indianapolis Ind has been sent to jail to answer to the charge of swindling customers by selling a sort weight coal Herbert W. Thers who pleaded guilty in Pittsburgh Pa. to abstract funds of the First National bank was sentenced to five years imprisonment has but his sentence committed by President Taft to four years. James Bruce British ambassador has accepted invitations to address the Kansas (U.S.) Mo. Knife and Forclub and the students of the University of Kansas at Lawrence Kan on April 25 and 29 respectively. PRODUCE QUOTATIONS. The Latest Closing Prices For Produce and Live Stock PHILADEPHIA FLOUR quiet winter low grades $3.65-$4.00 winter clear $4.75-$4.90 city milia farms $4 $26.25 Live Stock Markets FITTBURG (Union Stock Yard) chore 82 $6.80 Prime 76 $10.00 SHEEP higher, prime wethers. $24 @9.60, culls and common $34.4 lambs. $8@9.36, veal calves $8$5.69 HOG8 steady; prime hewings, medium, heavy Yorkers, light Yorkers @9.40; plga, roughs. @8@4.6 1910 APRIL 1910 Sat. Mon. Tue. Wed. Thu. Fri. Sat. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 $3.50 KROUPS OURLES WHAK MEN—WHEEK I have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame pains, brought on by excesses, unnatural draining, or the follicles of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous man right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man who wishes to regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope to any man who will write me for it. This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study or men and I am convinced it is the surest acting combination, for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together. I think I owe it to my follow man to send them a copy in confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what I believe is the quickest-acting restorative, upbuilding, SPOTTOUCHINO remedy ever devoured, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this. Dr A. E Robinson, $995 Luck Building, Detroit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary envelope free of charge. A great many doctors would charge $300 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but I send it entirely free No Color Line in Beauty Some beautiful woman have crea- color color some have Indian brown color, others have white faces, and others have black velvet faces. Some very handsome girls have light brown skin with pink cheeks. No matter what color your skin may be, if you keep it clear, bright and smooth, by using "Complexion Wonder" you will be as handsome as your features will permit. Complexion Wonder Creme" is used by aristocratic white women, and any woman, no matter what color her complexion may be, can make her face look attractive "Complexion Wonder Creme" im proves any face like magic We send one white sample and one pink sample of "Complexion Wonder Creme" for 10 cents, also sample of "Wonder Hair Grow" for 10 cents. If you send 60 cents, we send all these samples with a "Wonder Comb". This magnetto-metallic comb can be heated before using. 2 Rector Street New York Our New Line of Calendary. We have a full line of calendars for 1911 from the J. W. Butter Paper Company, or Chicago, Ill. They are the latest designs and will meet with favor from every one who will take the time to examine them. Call to our office and see them. Pen, Pencil and Brush. The reputation of Lewis Howard Blissfield the most trustworthy man on his murmur, descriptions. One of the largest of these was the description of the dome of the Congressional library at Washington the theme being the Progress of Civilization. John McCarthy the Chicago carologist has been founding in Africa with the ex-president of and has established some prowess as a slayer of wild boats. Two flies and a rhinoceros on two hold their lives at his feet on argent compulsion to say nothing of smaller game. Mrs Hodgson Burnett is often thought to be an American but that is a mistake. The first fifteen years of her life were spent in Manchester England and there it was that she gained her intimate knowledge of Lancashire life and interest. Receives of fortune caused her parents to go to America and settle at Knoxville, Iowa where at the age of eighteen, her first short stories were written Recent Inventions. A French scientist has perfected an apparatus for taking instantaneous photographs under water with the aid of a magnesium flashlight. A cover for stationary washouts that roll up has been patented by a Massachusetts man to prevent accidents due to solid tops falling upon persons' heads. A patent has been granted a Minnesota man on a sling provided with wheels that can be lowered so as to raise the runners from the ground should its driver find a road bare of snow. To make the sound from photographs nearer true to the original and without the metallic note is the idea of a New Yorker in patenting a cabinet for such instruments in which the amplifying horn is pointed to the floor. College and School. Cardboard coins and scales have been introduced into London schools for use in arithmetic lessons. Candidates for the profession of teaching in Canada receive a special course at government expense. Harvard college athletic authorities suggest that physical exercises be put upon the regular college curriculum. Chess is taught in every public school in Strohbeck Bazos, and every boy and girl carries a board and set of men to school. As It Was in the Beginning. "I'm sorry you're got to leave Eden and go to work simply because I gave you the rest of that apple," said contrite Eve. "Never mind," answered Adam. "The ultimate consumer always gets the worst of it."—Washington Star. SAYS PEWS ARE PUT ABOVE SOULS Princeton Pres Gritlelses Protestant Churches. COLLEGES “ASO SCORED democratic Teachings. Prestient Woudrow Wilsvn — of Princeton untveraity started hua dreds of Princeton gradutes who lis toned to his speech delivered at the aixty Mfth aniversary banquet of the Princeton Alumat Ansoctation of weat ero Paonsylvanta at Pittsburg So fradical wore bis views that tho ban quetora retusod to bellove thelr arn until Presideat Wilson had veriffed MMe quotations as correct after the foast In no unwiatakable terms President Wilson cristclsed the — Protestant eburch of the country as caring more for pow rent than for the saving o conte declared that colleges, such a Princoton, supported by private con tributions, ware a qouace rather than a help to the country on acrount of thotr undenominational teachings and In the samc hreath Inuded state od n onal fostitut{ona He touched lghtiv upon the Princeton graduate school and tatimated he was not In faror of accepting any donations to Princeton fo which there was “a atring ” After the banquet. to reuponse to question as ti: whether ho had been correctly quoted President Wilxon anid “While thear views of mine may ap poar socialise I have sald Just what To mean The Ume has come for an awakesing !n colloge life and educn thon Ferenn st thinkers of the country agren with my sontimenta and the soone: thene gentimenta are aprea! brondraat te bettor for the couatry at large Ip the course of hin banquet apesrhs Prosidont Wileon said “The colleges are ta the same dan gorous ponition as the churches 1 bope that tie last thing Léwill ever be capable of will be casting shadow on the church and yet the churches the Protestant. churches at lonat Dave dissociated themselves trom the poople They serse certain atrata cer fain vinthle uplifted strata anit ignore the mo w oar need te Aire They have more texard far pew rente than for aout and In proportion an they seek the respect of thelr congregations tr litt them tn eaten they sre lower'ng themselves in the whole acaly ut Christian endeavor “The volleges aro to the name clean looking to the support af wealth rath er than to the people The state unt veraity {a being lifted tn popular ow teem and the privatoly endowed inst! tution In being loweréd Tho future ts for the stair untveraity and pot for the privately ondowod ope The state unt Yoraity {a constantly sensitive to pub Ue opinion to the opinion of the un known man who can vote. “Afoat of the mastora of endeavor of aur day have not coma from the colleges but from the reat rough And ready warkera of the world Col leer mm acrve the noncoleno men do yo realize that? tn clans cap ucrve America The krent vole af Angoricn dacs aut come from the «ata of lonrning but {na marina fom the bile and the woods ant ras Marna and the factories ant the pis call ng on and Rminiog vl fa meet comma tn UK the: votem from the hemes of the common men Do thewe su nmura come tate the car | riders ot ths onteoraity? T have not beard them Steet Trust Provides Retlef For Men The United Statee Steet corgien Hon han eloptet a plan for gtotue financial net te the men injured to Its planta ant mee f+ pena oning t+ familiog of (16+ pt sen billed ina eldentn at a ok the cnt way entited At the tenting of presbtents af ube Alary rampanion and wOl go inte ef fect May 1 <M tea purely vatuntars Provision and in oinadie by the ates corporation and Ite munidiacien with aut ans ontechatton from the men Following the peoviniona af all for eign laws aut all legtalation auggeat 64 in thin vuuntre there In a pertet of ten dava tefore payment af relict Degina For peemancnt tnjurten lump aum payments are proylted Theae are based upon the extent te which each tnjury Interferan with omplosment an upon thr annual carnings of the men Injured fn cnse men are killed tn work arcdents thelr widows and chil dren will-rocelve one and a half year wager, with an additional 10 per cent for each child nnier alateen, and 2 per cont for each year of aarvice of the deceased shove five yearn, Proce Carmack Stayer. Colonel Duncan 1 ¢ vnper_convicter a yoat ago in Nasbrille Tenn on 1 charge of muwier for the slaying o former United States Senator Car mack and © ntenced to twenty yonr fn prlean wil! go free *Hiia ton Robin ennyirted on ths same charge at the same time ah! almitarly aeotancad. will have to atand trial agatn ‘Tole, atts came in a dectston Dy be aupren ant, of Ternesser ap {Bie apbea! . the Coopers from the eonvicticn 11" the trial court and tn a parton for Crone! Coopar immediste- iy granted t Governoy Patigrson Tho aupre 16 cour aftieraed the ver ict of gully In the cane of Colonel “obper, but reversed the lowar court as to the son Robin The deetuian to the case of Colonel Coopor would have meant that the aged defendant must go to prison had not the gurernor (c tervoned : 7 Governor Patterson, 19 pardoning Colonel Cooper, said ‘“Detng thoroughly familar with the record, having read all the testiinony and tostified (0 cortain facts within my personal knowlodge, It te noithergde Arable nor vecessary to delay actor for petition to be prosented, asking exocutive clemency “In my opinion. neither of the do feodante ts guilty They hare not bad a fair aod tmpartial (rial, but were convicted contrary to the law and evt donce “The proof showed that Rabin Coop: or killed the dece .sed and that DD. Cooper did not fire a shot Without reflection upon the court, It ts incon coltable to my mind and renugnant to every principle of justice Pat a man should be found guilty of murder who was not fn a conspiracy to kill and who In fact did not Kill © ‘tactile Cioake Senensed The consummation of months of prosecution of ballot bor stuffors and men concerned witb minor ofenees againat the purity of the ballot took place at Pottaville, Pa when elgbt conricted oftctale were sentence to all and alx othora were sentenced to nominal flove and coste The sen tencen were as followe Fred Zimmerman, Judge of elnction Bhenandoah convicted on three fadiet mente sontenced on but one charg. Ing him with making (alec returns, five sears Tobias Purcsil clerk Shensndagh, same Indictment one year and alz months T J Cummiags «lerk Shonandoah same charge one year and slx months. Martin Conville clerk Brownerllle makiog faine liet of voters and falee Felurns two yearn and slx months James MeBurdy Judge, WE Grow and Dominik Gaughan Inapecters, and WF Jones clerk of William Penn making falue returne three ‘years each All Rot @ fine of $1 and ‘coate “VAIL were dintranchined for a pertod of four years and forever debarred from bolllog pubille office In Penney vante Tenjamin Hrexton WJ Lemte and WR Powell all of Shenandoah. nak ed rave of court to withdraw thelr pleas of guilty made Inst fall and they apheameambaniwedhe cet’ Geamaasor Steven Killed in Explosion. By a premature explusinn ta the stone quarry of the Naeareth, Portland Cement company betweer Easton, Pa and Nazareth twelve men were covered under BOO tome of rock Eleven are dead and the other was Injured go serlously that he canot re cover All the vietime are Hungarians acd Uallann and It te fposalble to wecare their oames as they wete koown only by aunipere Be ‘The quarry farce were prepiring to tet of '& blast tp fonr bolew wach of therm twenty four feet deep apd bad fed tne halen with, buodreds of pounds of ¢ynamite Frum aome un Known chute thes hargen suddenly et Dinded Men were scattered. Ie. all ieettonn some being esnt many feet Into tho air The entire alde of the monntaip of rock was tarp lonse and the unfortunate victim were covered with earth and stone ‘Won $6000 For Deathbed “Yo” Lawyer Seth Fo Crows war given $5900 by Judge Pinckney tm the cle cult court at Chivago for advising Sarah Poterann that i would be legal for her t marry John Ro Sroith & wealthy mine owner on bin deathbd Misa Peterson marriad Smith and he died: almeat fmmediately When hia ostate was probated abe got $260, #09 Mr Crews thought that if Miss Peterson's "Yer wax worth $350.00 hin Yos” ought ( be sorth m tenth of that sum He brought suit for $35 on Mra Smith a defennn was that she had not married Smith for hie money Juige Pinkney tatimated that be held a contrary view “Lie not ae why a woman shoutd marry aman on hie deathhed as Mra Smith dit he anid Cis Bia Wake eS “Moeoles the pet cow and pure milk Provider of the White House fa dead The animal was allowed the excta: alive privilege of grazing on the White House fawns and the big White House lot InsuMictent green graas at this ara aon nf the vent Ind Mootey the other night to wanter aboyt the stable to search of fuot Bhe found an open vat hin and tetoatl herself ton treely to a grain intended for dorees and work animals Cunar juentiy abe de tame tt) Rtennis Morte were mate byw veterinary semen te ane der Ute but they were tn vain The tone af Montey fe mourned at the White Honve Miner Blew Up His Family Frank Hancinan a miner of Ne aaunve Mi plned a stick af ay AAmIte uniter the bed tn whteh hie wife and threo vearolt daughtor ware Alorping and anather ander the bed hat helt hin Mea yenr old boy Wher the dynamite wan exptwted by a slow fuse the men woman and boy wore blown to tome Thr girl bad a mtrac lowe escape being found practtenty unburt on the floor of the room Chala Gebends Conducer Charles A Miller 9 Northern Can tral aniroad conductor ving at Bun bury wan tun down and killed in the Petinaylvania raftioa! yarde at Har eieburg. Pa While walk'rs on thy tracks he wos struck by @ lecomotivr and docapitated i aires Rental Cards. Apstria was the (rat country to Adopt tho aystem of postal cards. ‘This was in 1800. Subscribe to The PLANET. “THE RICHMOND PLANBT; RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. MARJORIE GOULD “WEDS DREXEL Soclety and Wealth Witness {he Ceremony, GIFTS WORTH $1,000,000 ee ee ere ee eee rlage, Which Ranke With Maribor ough-Vangerbilt Nuptiale, Now York, April 20 —Mine Marjoric Gwynne Gould daughter of George J Gould, and Anthony J Drexel. Jr, o Philadelphia. son of Anthony J Drexel were married in St Bartholomew's Protestant Episcopal church ‘The wedding, by tong odds the mos important of the acason, eclipsed al that have been held for many years and took rank If It did not surpass ft lavishnosa, the famous Marfborough Vanderbilt nuptials Society of Philadelphia and New York was represented Io large num bers, while from othor parts of the country private cara, placed at tbe dis posal of the guests by the Goulds fot teveral daye past had bern bringing quotas of friends to witness the cero mony The Gould and Urexel yachts fa well as every Moer dox king withiz the Inst wevk brought many notables from Europe The ceremony united the Gould family with one of | Phitndelphja wealtblest and mist aristocratic fami Hes and the match bas exited com ment as notable because Mise Gould chone to wed an American tnstead o fone of the many titled Eurpeans whe sought her hand Te heldegroom 1 a banker second aon of Mr and Mra Anthony J Drexel und ts onty tw yearn the senor of his pineteen voar oll bette: Gifts Valued at $1 000.000 The Wedding Drese The wedding dreen han a full court train five yards feng caught to the shosidere tn a wide bor pleat it ts gaade of supple teory waite satin, the front vetled under & chiffim tunle bor dered with a band af heavy white em heotdery to orange blossome and Hansoe " tnichave spin. ase, relve Inches In width is draped on the left Side from the natin bodies to the Bem tnd tantinies, backward to the #t treme end af the toon train. At totes vate the fray lave te aught with a Muster of orange Dlonmoma. The nquare tnd ot the train. ts fnlebed with & Gide band wf tne bridal Rawer worked In hoewy. white embruldery sith Al though the sleevee are light fing apd ronrh vows over the hand In a deep Gro! the ner te cut ont ta the favor Ite aquare and trimmed with lace ‘Over thin drene whe. worn ab eEqOL site woddiag vel! of Tirueseln net with a nizinch band of Duchesse point lace | fininhing the entire edge 11 fe oval in thage. and adjusted with a wreath of Grate Birsnome. it rrachod quite (0 the end of the court train a eae EL Gain on ee ae OR DR a Oe NE a TO ee ee ES se oe . We iy - LOA i SETS Patent-Leather Shoes! Ga : ‘_ CBS ee Wate means no rigk or toss to Gi aoe noe ype. If thoy break from say dafoct in 3 ae ey | the leather wo will cheerfully give LEDER | you anothor patr. Besides this you CES AEC CT TEs | | savo # dollar on ‘Svety palr of shoes &; CER or Mera en cement ee eC Sate i | Rought at this store. We are out of iim, Aah atc seein Ry” the bigh ront district. Halt Airis ee Rabe pier ethan 4 - block from Fifth and Broad, pra ates Cea Se nae i Our connection with the big- Wai bf op Neat Ae pp eer odes fa tet ; gest manufacturers Rte atthe ON cuca BS ; | It posstble‘for us to buy at 4 Bis ee Pi” Mee * 8 lower prico, which 18° - A iSinaMMpaTeON NSS MekntwnMtreues paps femestees : another saving to you. Cs ac ESS PrN aS Sey heen ; Cee MR e Silay Seg Benny Fee ELITR ein Larry : | Bree Paper Dole Ager i ad Rs Wires : For the Children earosiem Reba R EES SS i en SL aE REN ORIEL) : * $3.00 Value for $2.00 | WOMEN'S SPRING“GHOES, LOW ) WOMEN 84 AND 83 LOW ) CHILDRESS LOW SHOES 8133 | : SPRING SHOES, 83 AND 63 50 4 : CUTS, $2.00 IP To 3200 ‘ Come and eee them If you want ; | You cu ecatcely duplicate | wtine on what astérrect and dainty | ‘Iie on a mpeclal Sate har thom elsewhere under $10 a | io Spring Shoe fashions Thirty | ean and we asstaw an early ‘all | pale, for they're styled to the | superb Low Shov Stodeln 10. all o i fe / minute, made of excellent leath lgathers including finest auete ae Sete 1ST “Seakee Wy eheugh Of 3 ers they both ft and wear unusu AN $4.00 and $6.90 values $e an [MIs fot ef te tant thimegh the: j ally well oo 82.00 | and B50 | das : ; PORTER'S 37ers ; Shoe Store, Bock of Thathimer's | 4 UHEAP HOUSE FOR POULTRY ‘Attuateation Showa Structure Intended oo Ntor Chickens All the Year— “Coat le Small A prntteat pwltry Bowne 20x32, 18 sewn tn the illustrate, berewith The conter part ts 12x24 feet 9 feet to the aguare, basing @ <itd Moor 3 feet abose toy at alll od etted Hae shows whece Muvr should der Thin Grvartimnt Is uned exclinlvely for aging end testing Gevund plan aban partition through length ut Dutlding wade of plnatoring lath, and fF NS Tr in iy fh. CRE be Bests Chad thet ich soa Rees Y Tor : 4 ' i i? | Mpeg Tm Bea we | Beactical Baulsy tibuar Booting ov and down om onan room The trans (out et ot tetae 23d Incheon weatte foie t wth © ked Dar bearde wee had wn ati wir wnooth wbty oat basing tuttding paper vor tar papers tecked ui tes the studding under 1 Kewate hang ton celling on Tron rode within ot or 16 tocger from te tee ow boaed set My REDO Ite the wath dovtelor Me: HME UNdOE FHOste ta keep deappinss Fram Ning #1 Hirer an titanic e ot flows Led tron ehy ate solaced wenn Sats ae eke wt In plan Landere teu up from acim e blag Meer te ete ty coon Aug roan Thi towering abe qear ene nt ts ented up on unter sides af ealtere AMID permite 6 6 8 ude IN rash Rable tare the spate Of the tedie Ing giving epleadel ¢ ntilation wt Ox any patent arcargemens Th Wings are T feet high In front ant ~ Tet where thes teln rseRt ron + Phe pace under tteer of main te thing tn W part of merate bing Mor with «lath Partition extending heeagh 1 da cul culated ae an a? sa: poultry house Tecan he nae dG oe flack by onl Hing the paris Ww) ote center af the Doute andere hog Soure The ap proinat oN § POULTRY THRIVE ON ALFALFA Experiment Den snatvates That it ts Exceltent a Gres Feed for the Grow ng Chickens ois se, Sp ase Tohase ae ont ot teomy anti fnetton during cet vent that al falta events oy “hay n Rteen fowl tor prewing 1 ke and a wloter Folieh fot nduit tes We hase a et ne ra nome te altnitn ir. tant bene the emtany vine al pee whee cane my chicks A wear age inst <uniner 1 notteed that ax roon me Teese the ebicke free range thee we 8 --K thin Meld and apend honre Ws oh growing alfalta, partientnrly whey 1 Cnwomed ready for cutticg Ay clone vie 6 len 1 found thar thes ate the tbs tope and. purple buds ravononaly abt certainly seamed to thelve on the fond Vite yas tee + + need in my furpery pen ant | wax wonderful 10 nee How the chicks enloved tt wee, Raity fellows Jet trom the tneubator Thin set me to thinking "When lant winter came ont housed 100 pure Hutt Cachtn pallets tn a fair 1y roomy and comfarinnte,houre The Inge hay barh was stored to the roof with alfaifa and miltet hay From the formar the leaves and dried blos toma still green in hur, fell tn inaases of fine fragrant {itter, ueclose to the cattle and horses which only ate the Dufur aterne All winter long I sised this alfalfa batt for iltter in my hounes, bedding the floor deep every dey.* The hena ‘acratched In It {or thelr grain az ate t QL 10 Teneren vest was founded wo 1Rg aca Weekly Maga rive to secure the freedom of \merican slaves In the sixty (4 + Mears that hive t howed, a has always been the tren | and ean sof the Negee Race We have printed frequent articles fone tt eet Neutnes and have closely fallowed their asteys tenet sr esses Thigattitade Bas cost as many tlie tard setebers Tat we have the oarace of oat own comet + We tet we are p Meshing a Magasine thit very Negro sh 1 real Fret yn veh the ctarscter ant pedicy of Tae Tes PSI owe stall be glide gecept a cry meaths sa! scription fercre oh ar Ctr regalar prion ys Stu year We he tee that by retin DI Tso ES SE Son will realize vet fave attiiele and poanen Kean her Lin Esneersorsr as an 1 teed Wersts Magasins ant tat yer salt theref re re nis | Hoes rade fae center Toa ths Maoh —————S—S$ THE INDEPENDENT Reguiar Subscription Price 130 FULTON STREET 83,00 a Year NEW YoRK Fe met Ome Dawe tr cela plese send me tne ‘i See ek ee te Menthe erory avattatle He tes kong Fo euane in sacar'g a Oe aa aot stad aaa callie Le ine abe red oe ee AIR BS ST ei el aout which te the wentes ant ones af Bena rr er spel mar yar reper tiateiteantheue ener en na ae SOAS ES ss Se ae SoU ce ae gent mere a PL ed ee er eh a art ee eae oi een To fact the one ete haw the heat ate oan he ace ae Se corre eam Mt veer bor a flock of 0 Hrown leeherna ae AINE 8 Oh lene gas nets Moon eattee hn ep ocimertnees eS nS ee ra rant ee a rocey es 1 brake up ay many aa a deren clare stan ec nae pre neater aie a ae iat ae i ed aE ee ee ee Sts Se es fale Light on Economy You alaaye want te tre to da all your reading tn the tacime anid the tern teaches fahyatologs addronsing the plana Sante? te a teh hotter than any weifeint light Can any one of you tal me why” Yea mnany wat Fuwin haa Rood deal chenser tudes Pte Chant: “You gay eheerre | Morging tere fa nearly Aina ews chine ttwke abont your mite “Yeo anaworet ehepging wey ‘ously What te it an a rie ® Me The Gimple Lite Passer by | uok bere sum are the man who struck me form alzpente ‘three dayn ago" Beggar You, str but do me boat. 1 gan't keep me expenses any lower than twopence a dey AN INCONSISTENT RISER, Mets eer ene anew, we ee aateat omer Be oe a Hos ar a ee Ho bw ow woe sue Doe eaeis ou ae Testes asiereeonen Wow ey : an =. nteat wo. oe wee. oa ef tae TWO REASONS [Ue ETT TT] ERISA | Bae BS uk Bt ae fa (I | Ke oe Lect lt hoa] aera) Ree ee Breteler Gl Exton t Neea eeare Patan BRAN eee RO Ae) fs? aN NY Se eis = ES SA secre ee, a a Eas eel eB Mre. Acker—You roally ought to Jet me get enough of that spring ma Iota te © ma aren Mra Acker Wall, ite reduced to only 89 cente— Mr Acker—And so Is my bank ac ae see i ee See ub pene Ee ame Ro hen Pia enor eee nase [Sera ae pee Pra er eer na y Cait perme sire Ad ema Ree | Reena eee Fee nu aeA ene HAIR AND SOALP REMEDIES. The world’s groat romody for Dan dru Cure, Scalp Discasos, Ball Moadedness and Baro Tomples, which trouble the people of the world so much today { have tho best known remedy on the market. Dr Conrad's Crystaline Hair Dressing grows hair oo ball heads and bare temples 2h and 69 cents per jar br Conrad's Hatr Invigorator, 26 and 60 cents por bottle It atimalates tho roots of the hair Dr Conrad's Faco Crom, 28 cents por jar Dr Conrad's Talcum Powder, 36 cents ger bottle Send 10 cents and get a trial Jar of Dr Conrad Crystalioe Hair Dressing We well alno wigs from $15 to $20. and $25 @ piece Transtormation pieces $250, 23 Inches tong. 9 tnch pomp. $160 18 foch pomp $200, puffs, 26 conta a piece Switches, $1 50 to $2.00 Coro nation brads $2, and 13 Sond aan ble of hair qten ordering Address all communications to bR L CONRAD, 798 Main Btroet. Cambridge Masa Write today The Conrad Mapufacturing Co SIRES AND SONS. MB Amett and bis son, Lewis W Arnett, aro metnbers of the senate of hentucky De Samoel Uinutz of Lawrence cot vege is the new president of (he ARso- clution of Methodist, College Preal dena Merbert Gindstoue tas accepted what bis father, the great commoner, WH Naw Ewart Glave, twice refased— 8 sent tp the huune of turds, Sir Morumer Leurnid former am Dannador to the Uutted States, wns do fented tp the rent English cleetlong, coutestiug a neat in qatlament trow the ety of Plymmurh Judge HW Hanis crear judge of the Hirer Judi ia distri t of Oregon, Daa Just Femi tne qsosition after tong Aerie et the teueh Judge. Hania tnd parwel tox enhtleth anol NeEsMey aunne (tig before he cestgned, Joseph He Chonte new gearing four. ware years, reveutty deltvered ao ad: evan bef ree the Uultead Staten eireult court tian manteriy antsiy that many oof bis auditory de tured it would rank fs nue of the great eine hes In the bls ters of the Vanek an bac Jone A Brudies Asbury Parka founder quietly celebrated bin elght: leith birthday mantener. me the St Trouds hotel New York where be and Mire Headley Lave rosntet fur ming journ Mr Hendley ter tetager takes am, netive tatereat I tur effnics of tho Heushore ety Whi bs he founded forty Sears Ago A Vandertiin fs nein genera Mot haw entered the olier tur tte af tho New York Central cocesnd Wituagn Iv Vanderviit Je tests been chosen fn few daym age to tht onw ef the vm mn cles rev ently efenitesd ie tat dire to Fate He fx of the fneth generation frow the creator of the Sew York. Central syaten Sporting Notes. Dotty Gros the sats nent bpaw Htehet on the Washingten elub a roe ter The ret img Ave rlean loague Hiote will gil try wut at lenat three sourbpawe eu: h Wining 2 Giner of thermore m bo slain the lang distawe aw suntog {Me bas begun feminine for a seta Coon Chnrleatown Eider ts Reston Nght $9 Monto Warher seat annener Nan Bran tw ete thet Cr iter ain day ants me the oa. ann fuer We wH be tun tte Tate to fae plan ute diners tea tom, Working eight tenes aed the grentoat titenge wins Prd Monte ie a tert aeventeen Sento aint ee we fae atl Unde eather the cake the satan wetebt Mair ans ere He sttl aon, te NaN. Teather cts ated then Ughtwetntis Meas te eet acatont Ale Stell before the seins a Mannger Jour gest ter ot haa pe ceived a lotive fest aren Mf earthy, comeh of the hy eras team at Toko dopin kira foun ts wbtate potniterlan Frew te Mier ge league to play gnmes wet ol fw \ aertean feagne tonne Ve tereate sate tow PIvuHINg tw I Sacer mee pag Cot lege tentnn wiles gum Aliiber awerebant was sitting in bie OMe ane das anaing wads + sor the Gevieral deprowter tn Cy wood trade When a quit nee Kamer et “Dio you soll hee he wal aRkeel the stranger Yom AIF ee chied ie vue havnt elk Ang with mtur rity ied te vung oe soamtty to book a tnrge sites We enn analy Roy QUANTITY oH the ah etest wotice olther ty the tg or te y stk Ob Tdont wane = nant i that” aald the youth ahve ble foot on easily *L Juat want a tt fora nadle bridge” Lamdun Vi enere Brea Tex “My boy San ios aatd the neighbor Sworrtes ine altwrt tf sleath with bie somnainbutixm "You ought te (ake it away frow him," said Mra Lapeling “Ho'll kit Dimeelf with {t some day” —Chicago Tribune a pe aot py Re earned ear Bi ae ut ns Aa Peer eC Ne AaTtRBAT “apni. 5, Avie Warning and Invitation Sanday School Lesson foe A pol 24, 1910 Seacbiiicangea rues Panes LERSON TEXT Mertem 2 1) Mem ory verse 2 GOLDEN TEXT Cone ow Ve that laden es 6 ee tan 1 wil Rive you tex Mek UME Tones ass ge te ome Rae Nene wet a ater i Tenn tn one Now tt te wae ed Ce ae ay te ‘ PLACE Ma entere in bey an oe way to Jerusaiony Buggeetion and Practical Thought. Our last lesson wan a Us is en of doudt—booest de bt ant dishonest doubt We beard wir Lord ater bighly pratsing John wr. had proved big readiness to foslow the eht ne Cet ag he recetved it turn wom aterm up Draidiag to the nr ten aud F hatter who bad proved ‘raves tikes Ine to recolve tbe anh who agh tre GRh? tc them {n aut di flereot ways as by Jobn and Chita Nar present fe anon carries the game theme! ther discus sing the most tiportant of ail subjes ts the rejeotlon or u -rptance of the Sa viour Rejecting thries When did Cimrtet spook the wort, we are te atudy? Matthew would avem 1) tmpis tbat he spoke them innedtiat \ after the coming and Riiue of the mens ngers from Joba tb) Natit Nit 1 ake (101346 212 tejserty alma dear cally tho ane wcets in cannes ‘on with the retire of the asyenty more than a sear Inter What ware tbe sf sea that (heist up braided? The vitinot Galtier where in most of his inghty works were done’ Thre are named an sainples Chorario, probabis alo.t one iniie north of tbe upper part of the Sea of Galilee Rethexda w city atuntod by the Jordan whire it empttes ute tho Sea of Galller trom the nor and ta Pernaum, our lari own cts tw which be removed from Nazareth and where he wrought many mighty works Why did thrist roproah these cities? Becaunr theigh given me mane opportunities, thet had not repented That was why (het weached and worked miracles to Uring nen to re pentance With what citles did (briet compare these favored towns of Gulllee? With Tyre and Sidon Mborni:tan citiex on the Moditerraneay coast to the gorth west Sidon was a very AM tent tty snd Tyre, Its offspring was in Christ « day the chief commer tal ety ot fal entlor and yrotatts 1) taserst pee to Jerusalem Alm wo Stun the city om the Prat <a dente yf with Gomorrah in the dave eh AM bain Rerotving Chriss Ve %.2 UC nebat then parted from te nibctation and warning to furful hunknars ng What was (be occasion of the tranes wh” AL tat time’ whould be tranninnd RY 1 at that emasen Poke souges 5 the following words with the rerirn of the erverty? they are a penver of re Joteing over the fuseralie fe eptton necorded them Frhayn thy name thoughts wire reced en the 61.0 of the (ween we wt he hater 2 of Matih: w> Peare ste \ mete We have Mudied the) be rbat re wet Chrtac and) pte at tage that ee ey with afin qi eet the oeaiion BO thea hat wy pt hrtat ohat BID bear AEE} bos ee tne te Noo To wine 66 te ee raton ad dread? tn sa tie teat There wae met tr th oseaeten of that side wart Ht othe Haviourvatd @ life tet. tbe thant bid theae things from th wise and prudent * Spargean In 4 sseond place to all that Inber und ats lense inden Thea denertin the birds t of humaniy beth atively and pass vole thane that are warn Va eeaes ‘oan tall and thoar that in mince and ob neurity are bearing lead that no one knows atwut are alike Invited to Joaua The por under the load of poverty ainnerk under the weight of Rillt Duties +» age tong under heavy orem ee tees all are in Cuded In thy br wer sitation ATT men are tw a) all nen are by hatte the tute of wrath alt men Are Inbortg 1. 9 ya) papaatt af earthly Payitieme all tere tre anny conalder He ve Wattad Prof Arebibald \iewes or What ate thew weary cnn ineitind to do? Simply rye te ta Prawn The Greek in weenie tad wor bog Nah and site Hither te me all weary ned Murdered And the wy 1 6 4 ng te Tonan WT Pw ee ae tee Mut what ty cee cee that Chet wlll give? We uauare atege here and lone the force af the menenge In the Neat verue the Phssttan jena hile danr ta rocelve hin patene Aq the tele w ug versea be preest nent nthe fe tnke phe one WHF Of the ee ew tM at sha poualnder ott te ake RK real dovtor and vi tne aunt agaln nly to fing ba eee te Inte the re Werte pak Mave ST we hal Chitee eines ec otenete er a Seabiy bear fee and Ine Pe wales sagen 16 The teat tet mont te tee cimive ts Vote Gat fete (8 oy “Perhaps (to-day nothing ts more necessary than to maintain the yro- test of personal convietions against the bold and large ansunption of act: ence and phitlomyhy Man's riches pre to be estimated rather by the fewness of hin wante than the greatnens of lly possessions Panama Mourns Loss of Obaldia People. Shocked by Unexpected Death of Ublef Magistrate, Iurn to Mendoza For Guidance and Are Ghing film Thetr Support Resume of Negro States. manship in the United States, ate ET ei dese, Laan de Obatlia present of Pauanui whl h esEreL eh Mas h 2 and the a6: end fem) of Dr Carla (Mende to Un presiien yo rea tl seme Interest tag fe te as to the part whieh Ne gras have passed in nett cal aod state atfaira tthe Uaited States One of the uiest striking lustauees In tite Senne Gen bappened io Leaidana in INTL when our enn Minekney Beaton Stewart Cinehhack whe te stilt ising, Basen Dee h ISTE ele ted presidant fre tem of the state seagate and also entero Serner to OT the vaca y ausal bs the death of Oscar Dana Me Pum bark was acting governor of Louisiana duriug the tupes: tment trial of Governor Warineth frei Lee WASTE ty Jan PISTC fle wae also Ret dante $f 6 gevertor tnt withdrew In the interest of party peace and wae cle OME congrenaman an fy sane tek: tt He wat chosen senotur Jan 18, INT but after a bot debate whieh Titel for three years he was not al- leweel fy be Keated The cute was they tae te twenty nine Ho was, However atte the pat tumd p Penge of 8 xenator HOR rue werted oy sergeant at ar waft the Minaisslt pl he ginioture and on Leb 3 INTs was etocted Taited Statetscrat r tikerg bis seat tn that August nals Mar b $ 3nd gery ing until Maron ISM du West Verginte at the preent time Joc Giiner holds the poxithin af state ML sein And 80 Wem ht geen ty chunmerate taoy fore ex ptt exam fet tn whleh te Narohe pret Lae wert) and Stowe tase) 1 i oa statesman Prep OA Met ra the new pros Meret Da am non Nets the ae Kowtint meder of the Ttherat (arts Theis a aif made man who bs ble ein erecas nd ferns erance hiabe vee Pte most Liflnential uen tn Corre Anette He is a boted weer yl hat awaye taken Qo tterat 1 peliten! aftates Thou st esere eee Gti om the sth tak for My post Gen seney be has leon a went og aga Greeuiat Mea Gora bas dese the fethe game gti ine eon «hash of Recabtoag Tee f Sah x ae | RES Pe eS beige ST | Roi + : ie | Re. ag ee | Sars RS Ee eee ae | ee eee pe ee, fe eae Paar ee fee) Wed ety ress tthe sere wef the SW thee SOP SCRE Be dena be pris PAP ef the table ad den fer fab er Oat bet cea tastit eS Re) PESTLE wins pear ot a) ees ‘ ts Ftd ma et oe ba ameter Vig at Wf pree bmn wba mate tke eps ate beat ea te tie beet seta Lead tated Aer any tek opie there pert in the inert f the bite present Dhe Somes af tre Da dted states teat Fines avked the foreign se Men for per milsaben ty a tend with ta aus bear fig ara in the ity The aft. ote ef the fsthainn ai ate gidest te mind the ministers ond onsuts native ad foreign were lie tn attertin President Metelera detivered hes fu eral oration Roething th the poet a stiuotion on the Wathnne Fos ns fer arisen bea Alen omtarr, hs pe gle ef Panama, hate been ene cet ony with the death of the president whe was looked upon asa erent organizer and whe, hind Just conpls tit pans fer the de Selopment of he conntry Phe con servatives aia the parhsans of the Inte preaidont ate giving, hele enppert to Mendetn Bt Mark's Church Reunion March 24 Lenders tn relige na and aoe iat cine tes Are all agisw over the (irempecta of having n highly enjevable tive at the thirty third “avaual reunion of Bt Marka Metheatiat Foie opal churet (New Tork ett h with te hold at Grand Central Pate on Ph outlay eventag. Manh Phe bev ta Witltem Hf Trook pagter of the tore te one of the moat iteths eererimed aod ip Auentiat on am 4 the Afra \moerk Can pegmlanion ot the ory Women's Clubs to Meet In Brooklyn. Aug 10011 nod 12 are the dates noe nounced for the nese annual meeting of the Northousteru Eoderation of Woe mens Clube whieh will be held (n Brooklyn with the boreas Home Mis. slonary noclety at the Concord Hap thet church. 160 Dumiets stheet 1 scan AOR RR enemas eo AVIV EH bens ia ee ee Ri efete te MES CAR anueU ee 2 aT rats Nicene a eee ers at eee el ca Beer unfit ert ay Botha. Ae ee eee i i i Billie pilin ee bf ener rem eee eee des SEND 10c FOR SAMPLE OF WONDER HAIR GROW ANOTHER 10¢ FOR 2 SAMPLES OF COMPLEXION WONDER fad These samplos and our informatii beck and the private letters we will write to you will abow you how to haveall theseimproventents. Wa cannet ovescome nature, bed as far es your individea) characteriatica will permit, we can make you prepossessing, presentable and etuactive. The edi- tore of colored newepapars will tell yeu we are respoasible. We are daing more fet colared people than any business coocera in this country Our miasioa is pot e lofty ona like that of Dr Bookar Washington, bot im our way. we ave ving to do for their bodied, one deine ts thei minds. We Represent ree. pron ce have good uresamace and who are prepoureana tod The Chemical presentable, secure! tenes postions commercially and socially and et Wonder “WEE “OE GLAD. TO CORRESPOND, WITHOUT CHARCE, Company of = tty aie eek AWN SURE NOMARy be eate FS New York BEINFORMEDS GF DISCOVERIES WHICH WILL MENEFTT THEM SEND 20c FOR THE THREE SAMPLES IMMEDIATELY THIS LITTLE EXPENDITURE WILL BENEFIT YOU MORE THAN YOU KNOW After the samples are recetred, watth bor the postman. He will bring you letters very often e WRITE YOUR NAME AND STREET ADDRESS VERY PLAINLY = a M.B. BERGER & CO., 2 Rector St., New York js HELPFUL : Ko HINTS rN MWe CHTY vy Y FARMERS ji yy By H.L. Rann a Copyright 191fty Amerioen Press Association . FIRST ARTICLE. F ae ait tet wl Wee ee eS Cf martingy ote nge Plier onaty was We Rnew Of Sister is te tutete them te the beg herwe with mn bags hs Thiet paste: Bor sa ataes aut fe vatoulated tu inspire espe t for pareotie ou Thnetey: Ne self peng t ing farmer wit allow a bow leg Red, aquat nowt, ahort tatied axth rontic rooster ¢ wake fim and diy famity every WIT TH Te THE dae cS How WOUNe Wh nm bleh gear crow Phere te ne hecewstte of it Just ype the renar erm crow Thragh mf ur ti hy extnust Pe and min itn dergrenad inte sour neighbor aba ky ard Never all wore tread man te read Shakespeare of Carve white riding the corp calnvater We knew # hired hand whe de onred Pmeronn Ee fase” while thus engnged ang he be core xo absorbed that the team tacked Mey inte @ taried wire fone etpping the Hning from hie alweminal easity ot Mans cases tr ourate while others Fed te neh aad terciue trentnent fue boas ki Rig the wate.a, tn the pit a Mekling bis ae strite wrk nee wtane atroking blu guts ever the oape weet Amelie ee Dh be te Been eh er Id tert ately tn the huge ad rend exten tate the tek of dah while Ang fr te be set stiant the ehaces Ve nen er te ora ene tem rar frend ae Le han ree fe meporite he fe te ek heh Weber aticat ten ker the ont permet tg ne ues ener Hite is the pres nytt Fira Ing the hag gents en). hn kit the fromt path r nui pees bee etomarh with teed ten Phi gr kee g saat fuming thin on the part of the che a aac aan oN ah Or Wepesecarrita Sue fle AK (7 kp Y if i < Ox Sy q Ten QLD - Dp PRAY sis wrowWacie wrTit texD Tm surface when thes can le onally re moved with a pair vt pitore This treatment t cond only ductig the dog daya, fur chalera germs have ne thirst daring:thic. winter inthe: } After the bev has worked on the farta all auipiner for tie board and overalls hand bin 2) cents tn currency jana send tim to the county fair for an outlug ‘The average boy can have la regular Fourth of July celebration on 20 cents, and sour generosity will oo dear hin to the farm aod give bim « broad, lberal outlook on Ife Congjant Reader wants to know. tf there is any way to keep a su kling calf quiet while teaching her bow ty drink skim mlik fom a ten quart pall The remedy te very simple Grasp the crif Ormly by the tatt and vostrtin, turn ber face to- ward the setting sun and bit her twtr in sneces wien in the back wh By, ? ao asses TURN WHR FAD Te oF Che bead with Watt THE Hotton meat ax This aus treatment bas never been known te fall sine Adan Don't tick up sour nose ut the King drag It Wil moke a sour road look sweet th fos tue than any other dr, tice known to wan The wnls objew ton te it ts thut 1 fk too darned aim ple TH uugtt to bave three or four ty wheels, Ofty of sixty cogs and a few hundred e+) springs utturhed w it Then if $2 f o b Chicago wero charged for it It might come into gen erat uae As tt in It tn bandtcapped bs ebeapness Nobody wants a road dng which costa only a fow boards off te hack fener a bolt or two frow the windmitl aad a Ostful of skinned nu: kien Why net brichten up the hennery with thone Inge curtains that bare keen better days? ‘Sie te w Road Cline to look ever Gio’ catves’ beads for wartn If therein pe corn dn ter 1p the neighbor hood Temove the warts with a draw shave heat tng at thew antwent corner of the wart aid work tug due east If the eae te te in oto be rrstive under tate nat ment meth her with anny h ive Tab tinny ner ses Caves, eats Tae. warte If therein C2 Fan corn dine ter tp cee] the tieighilwe tod Cay remove the warts |G SOU witb a iene “7 PEL CR fave hea! wilng ( Cia tr ihe mcinnent (AGERE | corner ot the (Rae JP wart avd work OF SN | tug duo want tf (QM y the eal ts te iin SEARS ‘4 oto be stive RARNRRNSS tudor thle ts at RS a nent wets her ON a wihanns hte & ors Tatil trinity ne coe => the nese It whe MPMONF THE waANeR feenters frau KITA DRAWSH ACP Unie frente toshe WOE Mee te he elehty veered Wun ine coapertstar waaenree thie ore wats age gaunt tony tg $9 be thot es wm aratinad Idermenenin from + rafthe gia. We had a fret 6 penght a jack fron o LA fe pe | | RAGere La eA LF Bi | TF, wm AM ry Wad estan Nis ee WHAptOF acainsT —_ A JACK WITH clergyman friend, who anid that the ehldren contd uno hin caboose ne & atepinider und Inaide of a week the animal had «attered a Intge and grow ing family over w rock crushed road two and a halt miles long We would Sooner trust eft anatomy to the ten der mercies of a drunken cory rhred der than face the rotary action of a aleepy eyed inte which was once 8 momber of a preacher's family De spite the fart that the average prewch ef Goeen't know o inck from @ Jackpot pene at ws & Oh Saat gets “Spens agapal wer tae “Rnigbts of Pytbias, Lo : : : we ee ‘ . . toe , N. A,S. A,E. A. A, AND A. —— ——————————————— = eior> This organization is one of the most powerful in the tount: d ye Pp rogress has been phenominal. The Graud Lodge of Virgiula has jure fy hemes VAN Aieton | over all of the cities and counties in the: state. Thirty inales Pd A) 9 are required to organize a new lodge, The benefits paid constitute one om s Sion Fourlegan Evicadsbip, tac oa Chatty Soa eclaliitted eae cal? i . | on Bo Seite), nevolence, the Tespectable, upright people of the state wil] find it an order Ne Roca 3% worthy of their heartiest support. Sa ray It By an endowment aud burial benedt of off $200.00 for all ages. It : pays $4.00 per week sic . ie e costin; cents eac th oe absolutely necessary regalla. For information concertlug the Sigensaition of lodges apply at the main office. 7 : A | The Courts of Calanthe .% Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership «of ™ ete ‘thirty persons to organize a cotlst. Its members are pledged to exkibit Na Fidelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love oue for the other. It pays aN an endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3 00 per week sick ea) dues. The ouly expense for regalia is the cost of the badge; 50 cents and ao arosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions, N For all information concerning special rates of membership In the lodges and courts, address John Mitchell, Jr., oiiN. 4th Street. we votl) © when Tt fomes te here teed (0 it clase arene d Any ether asa far ett nehiy BER EERE CORE ANE ae em The pra th « of debormieg as usaaily carrin) out ie need sale cruel Lhe Dest meted ote hase the berus ea tracted byw palate ss dettist whe wrt draw thea white you wait at $1 per boro ‘The heifer white h bax lubated a couple ef tage of imughing gas while In the dentist ether wet never Ache anvlewts s front tovth loose again Every farmer omgtt te have a strap for hiv disk hirrow [ft neat and toy expensive ond when hung ta the par Jor jakes a uler stnament We ad Fike meratiet the aw of the Feit strep Ping barres bt ie net prae thent and ts Mable te test the fired man when th perfect healrh The colt whl, persists In kb kins the hind quarters off tts mother every das of tveo sheald be curries! wlth a 2 by 12 wenathe s apptipd acraxs Che fonterior ganiam befors every ment 4 Kicking cot one drive more er te the nearest saloon in pase ing n given potnt than any other article of furut ture on the farm f Or rX gay : \ Bde OF oe er 7) p tee CCRNIED WITH AZ AY readers writes te 12 ecastirse axk if anytbinc can be done ith the cotco af the female guinea ten We think net brother It f4 a4 bepelesa a propos! {lon ae the amateur tenor and. Jost about as wusteal The best treatment fe to extract the vole with a brend kolfe and a patr of pipe tougs. When this ts doue thoroughly the sole rare ly comes bask Here ts 0 little itera which ta wort's of cunstderation If sou ure fatten... cattle for market Just before wets Ing In feed a geuerous quantity yeast fous aud dried appion Be cure Tul not to overdo ft oF the buyer ams think you have been entertuining av epldemte of dropsv Very Boon Ah, soon too eaon We tnay depend upon it Tho men who make the joeen and tabe, The versetet neud the ronnet Will turn the hase of effort on ‘The helplers Faster bonnet! ‘t levetand Plain Dealer Coals eae tas oa lata “Who te that awarthy man watebing tho gyroscople ent asked the In- sentnr ‘That's a Nienraguap " whispered his ansistant “Indeed! Does te contemplate using our car down tp the tropical jungion?" “Oh. bo. He te only astonished at seeing anything that has wore revoin- tons than his home country “—Chicago News a ee ee ieee “made her father (an thn tank” Haid Percy — Ilia fair daughter Bhovld never have a ben La Ald Rut ah L fondly snugne her And laat night in the dewy dusk He found me wooing Marcy? Thats when f made bim ton the mark Ewan the mark’ algned Percy -Nizon Waterman Identified The new housemaid had fast open od tho door In reaponse to Wiggienby's ring “Is Mina Darborough 19?" asked Wigaleaby “Yis, wort, whe'n In aorr but she's engaged.” anid the malt “Yer, 1 know,” mintled Wiggierby “I'm what ahe's etngaged to."—ilar per'a Weekly Counted Out. ‘ Eenie, meente, minis mo. Teenie bugete, big auto Horaie jumpte—eplinter, epiit! Chauitenr enuckiee, “Gee you're hte! * Judge. BLACKWELL & BRO. ONS OF THE LBADING PAINTERS Practical House and Siga Patnters, Graihing and General Contrec: tore. ALL WORK GUARANTEED - Cards, Letters or Orders Give use trial, you will never regret tt Address, 608 St. Peter Strect, RICHMOND. VA. "Phone 5688. i JORGEN'S SON | Before making your purchase you would do well to call at the most reliable furniture house in the city and see the fine line of REFRIGERATORS, | MATTINGS, OIL-CLOTHS And in fact everything that is needed in house furnishings. RUGS AND CARPETS Of every description, also the latest desley in ROCKERS and special CHAIRS Our goorls are the best for the price and the price is very low C. G. JURGEN'S SON, ADAMS AND Broap StTRRRTS. A. Hay es OFFICE AND WARH-ROOMS, 727 North Second Street RESIDENCE, 725N.2mdSt. First-class Hacas ud Caskets of all deseriptions. 1 have ‘s® room for bodice when the 1a havo not a aultable place. All coun- try ordera are given special atten- tion = Your special attention Is call- od to the new style Oak Caskets Call and seo mo and you shall be waited om Individually. ‘Phone, 3778 Perilous Exoerimenta Even fungi cotlectory ace generally agreed that there ts realy no trust worthy teat for distinguishing whole some from dangerous mushrooms be yond the uli Baconian method of ob servation and experiment ‘Toward the end of the etghtoentb century Curtis the origion! compiler of Flora Lon Ainensis,” adopted an ingenious device for determining whether tungl were edible or poldenoux Ho tried every surpreted. fungus not ‘on the dog,” but upon Bix gardeners’ What happen- ed fo those unhappy horticulturista tn not recanted Londen Family Herald Earnings, “Father today I earned money for the Srat tine in my life’ | “Excellent: my aon’ How?" MD lost a bet * | “Loot a bet? ® Yes, father, and refused to pay 1" = Filegende Blatter . Pearls. Tho perfects round pearls are the moat sqluntte next come the pear abaped and tastly the egg shaped. ‘The Wrong Ticket. Mee a em mae Uae as Condogtor {on railroad tratn)—Thir ian't the right tickét, sir. Absontmindedt Passenger—WWhat's the matter With it? Confuctor—This ticket you gare me calls. for # dlamond ring!-Philade}- phth Bulletis. ° @ubecribe to The PLANET. THE ECONOMY, 303—5 North Third St REID EY TAILORING CLEANING, DYRING ANL REPAIRING CHITMAN M. WHITE, PROPRIETOR STRAUS’ SPECIAL Old Yacht Clob, Be ee agen Sie a Pe. * Sail ant neo ea, ISAAC STRAUS & CQ., 422 E. Broad St., Richmond, Virginia. H F Jonathai FISH, OYSTERS AND PRODUCE, 114 N. 17th Bt, RIOHMOND, vA. ALL ORDERS WILL REORIVYD PROMPT ATTENTION. Long Distance Phone, 75a, SCHOOL SHOES, =——= Capito! Shoe & Supply , Company, No. 210 East Broad Street. A complete stock of Boys, Misses,’ Men's, Ladies,’ & Children’s Shoes. ALL THE LATEST STYLES, MOOS OOOO OOOO S O09 C4 OR, P. 8, RAMSEY, DENTIST, 11S East Leigh St ‘prom, B16. OS ip ge Trassem WVV". Corvniants &o. Wis ie tenia eee See Finer, icl|THE LAST | FRONTIER abl | * BY Ht Se ete eae REMINISCENCE OF AN FRANCIS EARLY BORDER EXPERIENCE RENO OF A NOTED DETECTIVE 9929 [Fie wiure or evore vor] [Peseta ox oeore mars} Copyait isa by WG. Chapman) Rditer es mde tran se itn =the asthe omen at Gants oe Dh Sheers aed Nel tees’ aati te wetted CO'Riny Hehe OF s uster” Mtansucts’ tame Wee enptier sate oe ve ape ct tthe tr Tent af treoiet few Aviaune. where he wen fr nu re deity eter and Tater at ate) Bugres marahat at Tuten W's of ten invent ine. the ia ene Es toon Act an tin Mean bot Ger have teem boghly vamucsiated be. The Washington’ n shritien mint rev sinaieed De tne cab tmestern whe thea 6 dele St Bev sniw teat ate’ ctasety today Ge ltate seats ts bag vebt g highty ee sponte wentten wits wnt the IntkeRt ek prete tree anne iny we te the Caned Staten” as ae pufer ute ean nf Wear Fret hergiie Tan catabl ahe dna enetante fecont ne awsenn on Taneing dow Nene Wirmlare. “Thee store ate confined. Te hi ‘eather wajeeriet tm tothe wat tbe Sees nf whet gre told In Ariznnas and New ‘Meirn mar tte Mest an tender The Vaal be ntier, whteh one ment Yeara eae ait awd tawieas amd where the typeat "bad tnan at planeer days rade hin tant staost) OSTLY all chinatnen Took alike to ave * aut $6 Hoiim Baldwin kberit of Redlands Swine are Just a trifle ugiter than exon] Otbere but take ‘em on eae the whole there's a SoC B inighty strong faintly KSORGA vesembtone between Heed them and they aint ATG what you could call KILSGGEH 2 handsome type of RESMaRTee fanily either - not FSM without wtraining the SE type considerable is ‘That may be so an responded, but after all ita hardly fale to got ont vows up ue the only correct once If Re were In China now the chaners are that the natives Suuld took on ue aK neghty punk tpeciwenr of humanity — Idear of heauty vary tn the different connteles Wke the very desth, ta Well LM head to ty o8m hea of bat be good looking ter erned Mate Hin, atubborn's atid (hat rane te dont cover the fare of a velo Fink ot by ANY HAMNER of mie atin The furee ing cosersayion took place th tes GMlew at ies Pabdwin Daving aw he expreneed 1 droped in to pay attttle visit te Tawte Bam an fepresettd by ns homble oi Dont triugine that fae becdtine any brief for Chinanen ty general 1 sald yer rine the Chineme excl ston get went into force they bave enused me too Mush trouble to make me hall fellow well net with any of the confounded heathens Mut at that Baldy ft tant exactly fale to fudge the nation an a whole by the apwel mena we get ove, here Old travtlers tn the Orient tell me that Ps mueurls tag what One lowking «Baca anne of tbe Chinke In the tnteriur are “There may be womething in that, commented tt sheetft grudgingly “L remember ono ( hink 1 ra inte who was a heap anmrter tban apy other of bin countrrmen that 1 ever saw He used to work ax cook for Brady at the Blue Moon mine Hrady had all kinds of trouble with cookw and the fellow be hod there before the Chink wae probably the warst of the bunch Hirady picked itn up at Phoentz, where he bad gone to buy some supplies He wan tall raw boned chap about forty five yearn old, dark enough for a Greaner, pai with a tong under lip thet hug down like a motborless colt’ He oes up to Brady and says “T heard tell down to tho 3¥ Dia- mond ranch that they was wantin’ a SY uD to the,fluo Hoon mine, #0 1 jut pulled my' freight to strike the Joh Know ff It's 20" “Why, yea, says Brady ‘I'm man- exer of the Blue Moon Can you cook? “"Yoa,' seya the chap, ‘I can cook, {¢ you ain't too particular I ain't fond ef cookin’, but I can do tt. I can fry beef, make a tolerable sallyratus bis cult and o mpfdditn’ fafr plo outen most anything But I atn't enjoyed cookin’ much sined I reformed. I used to be as bad as any of,'em, but I got re Ugton with a follow I was herdin’ sheep with four years ago". ‘Well’ saya Drady, ‘I guess we ean give you a trial. ‘I'vo got some more business to attend to before I start Back to the mine, so If you hang around here for a spell I'll meat you to a couple of hours What might your namo be?" “They chrintened me Guetarua Maine,” sayn tho cbap,-‘but thom as knows moe always calls me the Don | Why I dunno (here ain't no foreign: blood in me ’ “Allright Don maya Tirady, laugh In’, ‘take care of yourself and I'll ce | you later’ “When Brady came back ho found that the new cook had beon takin’ care of himaclt in a regular rip-enort- tn’ kind of way He wae an‘drunk as ® lord, and If It wasn’t that thoy ware desporate bard up for cook at the mine, hed bave called all hete off Fight thore Dut he allowed he'd take a chanee on him, holated him into his saddle; and they started off For the firat two miles they went slow; then, as the Don grew a'bit more sober ana Dagan a{tting bis hotse steadior, they broke into a trot and wore ridin’ along very ntod when, makin’ a wudden torn | Sy the road, krouad the potut of mesa, they came acrona a herd of bufros, driven by three Mexicans, two boys and an old mah, As they passed them wy We old follow manure very ‘re Test seyip': “Dodnow dias, oengros: ; | They. bed passgd the Meiicane only pM SS faces at us” He insulted two white men, and Mu goin to rebuke hin’ Before Brady could make a move to stop him, thy Von whips out bis six shooter and fires utraight at the old Mexican It was @ chance shot. of course, but {t hit the mark, and down went the old man and the burro The Don was just stradying himself co take another shot at the party, when Brady"-grabded bis bridle laid bie Quirt over the horwe’s back, and they wont flyia’ down the road and out of sight around a turn It turned out Afterwards that the burro was bit, but the old man was unburt, except for the fright he got “Next day the Don was very down fn tho mouth over the bad break he made, and ho took the tongue lasb- in’ Brady gave him as meck a2 a lamb Now that he was sober be turned out to bo ® Yory quint sort of chap. and the boys at the itive Moon learned to Uke him He had a queer way of throwing off Scripture texts tp his talk that amused everyone and while ho waont of much account as a cook, aul no one cared tp find fault with him . “Them biscuits have got consider able sallyratus in ‘em, 1 guess,’ be used to say whon he lad 2 pao of hoary, yellow lumps of dough on the table, “but {t seems to tako a heap of It to operate this four Fear ye not death—ye won't mind ft with » litte raw onion and plenty of salt’ “He had deca at tho Mue Moon about two months, and Brady stood for bim all right ‘As long as the cuss keeps sobur, ho suits me, be eald Then one fine day this“Quong Wong beathen showed up Nobody knew whero he camo from, but he was frst seen around Uthe cook's sbanty chat tering away with Don That was cariy 1 tho morning, and at the noun hour the lads began chaMng Don about his new pal ‘Thata all right," says he “When- ever 1 seos a chance to win over a heathen soul I'm the boy to go after it I'm goin’ to convert that heathen, and give bim religion same as I've got myself" < Algng about four o'clock Mill Cham- bers told the reat of the gang that bo bad peeked Into tho shanty and seo Don and the Chinaman drinkin’ some- thing out of a bottle Ed Martin al lowed that was a Ile, because he didn't believe that the Don would lower himself by makin’ that treo with a Chink but the words wasn't out of his mouth when they hear a mad yolllig and Don comes capering out of (be sbanty, flourishing hie gun and taking snap sbote at the atmos- phere The boyn ducked for cover, not knowing but that Don might tako & fancy to ehooting at ome of them same as be had at tho old Mexican. Presently they see bim mako a beo Mine for the building where the borses ‘was and soon be comes out seading the old plug be camo to the Bluo Moon on mounts (nto the nadie and away with bim Nobody tried to in terfore, and Hirady being away at the Ume didnt hear of the affair until later on that afternoon Thon he wanted ta know what betame of the Chink, and one of the boys goen to the ebanty and finds bim sitting thero alone Whatever Don had been drink fog, it didn’t look an ff the Chinaman bad hit up the stuff to any extent for be waa aa sober asa fudge The boya Drought him to Brady, who began ask fog bim questfoas ax to how be camo thero and what bo was after The Chink was a much bigger man than the general run of bis kind, and spoke pretty good English, Coo, But all that Brady could get out of bim was that he could do American cooking and thought be might be able to get a job helping the cook Welly saya Brady, ‘I don't know but what you're responsible for got. ting Don off on this tear You look Uke a foxy reptile But anyway we've got Xo have some one to dish up the food, and @ Chink can’t be much worse than a dunken Junntic You can take hold and let us sco what you can do. Maybe Don'll ahow up again” “But that’s just what Don failed to do. He never even came back to get the trifflo of wages dus him, and no body knows to this day where he made tracks to Meanwhile the Chink got the Job and made good He could certainly cook some, and the Btue ‘Moon boys learned to enjoy the best Kind of feeding Still, they didn't neo to the new cook, which I suppose was eatural enough, for no man tn this eection of tho country fa over and | dove fond of that breed. At te | @ame time there wan't any libertics taken with him, for somehow, Chink though be was, ho gave you the im- pression of being a man that it ‘Would be wise to leave alone Thore’s tome people that nature neoms to have put @ danger stamp on, and that's how it wan with this Quong Wong. I saw bim one day when | dropped in to the camp to ane Brady bn some business, and | coulin't holp but notice the queer gleam in his Mt: Te eae | THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. os. ra ES Sen x te HE Hy ie etiesiae es j ae en Ly, <é ie eee oo ) ws 5 oF os shee Tae ie i ie i A ih i} ue a) a0 . A \\ YY Wb) Uy te a ai AN i Y) LO = a ee (iN \) Wh Z| a ft HK \ [EZ ee 1 Ba 77 ce , : 2 z NY ae Via , ee i RT op iV tw ’ = Wi (i AW eo aN) ye 4 ma a ae Bey TE Log Se hee a ae < ey pd Eos ay Sai pa AS Y e 2 . oe LG, Be a i Boa oe od AAS ( Z ; Bee gj ul Wi Balan i Fh a Oe en a “4, oes a vi ou ars gy oe : 7 a i Za a i Hag Uy . fa i Pike SS CTE ie _ > hy Si, Gf . LLY , /, _ ~ aS TD SO. / Bk 3 4) ) Serres Zee Ahh ZL ( 2 “onthe fey : ye Y savattuy ah / | : “ Sater in his mi Vs - | f] with @ oe N playing something of that kind, and fe Just Iytog low here account ef somebody e's butchered up Los Angelos or “Frisco way.’ z “Maybe so,’ says Brady, ‘but that aln’t none of my bysiness. All I know fs urat he tag ighotne cook, and could make a fie stow out of old shoes ff he bad to Walt till you taste some of the stuff he serves up end you won't care if he bolonged to aif tho Tongs from hore t China. I'll admit that be has some add fancies, though He keeps a big ratticanake for a pet fm that shanty where he sleeps (hat seems (o know him Uke 8 dog dova bin master “How can you tell? 1 asked “Well, It was ike thly,” says Brady “You nec he doesnt sleep tp tho bunk house with the reat of the gang | gocesed that the boys wouldn't care about having a (Chink put In with them, and so (o keep things peaceful | rigged bim up a place in an old shanty where he could be by himself Ono might I was pass ing by there when | heard n kind of queer whistling music and looked In the door There was Mr Wong squatting on the floor with a kind of flute in bis mouth, playing away like tun, and right fp front of him was 8 four foot rattler awaying his yellow. barred body {fo circles from side to side fn time with the music It made my halr stand straight. on my head for a moment, it was such an unex. pected sight Wong beard mo gasp. looked up and stopped playing The instant he did so the rattler stopped swaying and remained with half tte body erect, and poised in tho alr as though stiffened to stone The Chink made» motion with his fute, and 1 @ropped like a flash and glided away Into a narrow wooden box that lay {t @ corner of the shanty “ ‘Wong didn't seem tn the least dis turbed over my visit When I binted that I didn't quite approve of such dangerous pets around the promises he merely grinned, and assured me that ho bad the suake under perfect contro! and it would never leave the shanty unless he permitted it Of course, I didn't caro to prexs the mat ter any further, as the Chink is the only decent cook that I have had arouné here for the last two years, and if he wants to play witt! potsoa snakes that's bis own funoral” “Well! sald [. ‘t's all a matter of tabte, but I think I'd sooner put up with a little Dum cooking than have that Chink around me. I ain't stuck on snake charmers of any Dationallty "I found thet Brady badn't oxag- gerated any when he praised the Ghink’e cooking He sure turned out ® satlstactory suppor for us that night, and I left there feeling more charitable to his Uttle make-cbarming stanta than I would have supposed possible, still {t wasn't long before I was to hear of a racket at the Dlus Moon that iiade mo fancy that my original {dens about Mr Wong's amusdiments were the correct ones. “As I sald before, the gang didn't cotton very kindly to the Chink, for all that he wae much an extra Ane chuck provider Thore waa a fellow named Jim Blackburn fp partloular who had It in for Wong, and never let @ chance go by of making him feol It And one nigfit Blackburn and a couple of his pals who had been hitting up the whisky bottle pratty free, made up thelr minds to pay Wong a visit and hate him a little bit They know aoth- ing about the wnuke, for Tirady hed Kept bis maith ebut- regarding the Chfak’s pet not wishing to make him any more unpopular than he was. I always beloved to thin day that Wong; In some way got wise to thett kind intentions, At any fe wheh his three conspiring neta! alole a Sab qatetly oe dark, Wong was tying spoxly' wrapped in w blanket oa the far sidd of the bulla ing) He explained afterward that be waa bothered by the beat and lay down outside for the purpose of keep tng. goo! “Blackburn was in, the tead, pushed open the door of the guahty and stole fn with bis pals close behind him. He called Wong by name, but there was no anewer ‘Thegpone of thom struck a match and It & lantern they carried They looked around, but the sbanty was cmpty "Hell, says lackburn, the Diasted Chink ain't hero Wonder what be's got bidden away in that box” “Ho went over to the box that lay in the corner and raisod the lid The next minuto tho head of tht, snake darted out, rattling lke mad. and Blackburn gave a frightful bow! Tm u dead man, boys, ho yelled, ‘the snake's bitten me!" “One of hin pals turned bie gun loose and blew the bead off the rat Uer, and then they began pouring whisky Into Mackburn to try and savo his life. I.ucky for him, he had been well filled up with tho stuf before ho ever cume in the abanty, or it would have been all day with bim Even as it was it was touch and go with him, and be only cheated the coroner by the closest kind of a shave “You can imagino that this tocident didn’t help towards making Wong any more of @ favorita with the crowd At that"Yhere was some of them said ‘Blackburn only got what he deserved, and Brady, who {a a very obstinate kind of a cuss when he gets bis mind made up, sajd right out that the Chink wasn't to blame 1 took » different view of the affair, for I Sgured that the yellow man just naturally lald a trap for them fellows. But Nrady was poss of the Bluo Moon, and it wasn't Féally any of my buainess, so long as there hadn't been any fatal results “About eight weeks after this the Blue Moon was robbed, and robbed by someone who knew the lay of the land around there, for they got away with 4 bunch of dullion at night tau tard ‘ton that would havo been well aigd Impossible for strangers who wouldnt have known just where to put their bands on the stuff “This was my buelness, all right. and I lost no time in grabbing Mr Quong Wong, who I felt sure was mixed up tn the deal. Dut not a word could we get out of that heathen that would help us any. He slmply stood pat and declared his innocence. ‘What riled mo more than anything else was tho stand that Brady took. Ho sald I was projudiced against the Chink, and that, there wasn’t an atom of evidence to connect him with the robbery. In the long run I was obliged to let the yellow roptile £0; and if you'll bellere me, the frat think that Brady di¢ was to put him back an cook at the mine. And we didn’t get any trace of the robbers, either, As for Wong, ho stayed on at the Diue, Moon for several months and then quit, saying that he was golog to "Frisco to Ivo" “Didn't you ever hear anything more about him?" I queried, as finld- win fintehed hia tale, “Not me," etd the sheriff, ristog and atrolling over to tho window, “and what's more, 1 don't care if I never taw his ugly face again Ie made me look like a fool once and— Buffering snakes, Reno, come bere” [Joined him at the window, and be pointed to the Agure of ap uounually tall Chinaman who was passing on the opposite side of the atrect. “There's the {dtntioal cune 1 was tolling you about.” be aAtd, excitedly. “Now what In ho up to hora In Tue. sont” T looked, and indulges to 2 whistle ot sarprise. “Why,” I axclalned, “that {s « wall known Chinese merchant aid gambler who hes been located here for the Bast atx months, Me Ts named Quong Wong, ail right enough, but thos Chink pames are so much allke that never thought of hin when you were telling me your story A mighty amart Colential, toe, if all they aay about aim fs true” “Well,” growled Baldwis, disgust- edly, “It don't make any difference to me now The Blue Moon robbery is anctont history, and if 1 couldn't get the goods on blm then it aln’t likely 1d stand much chance at this atage of the game. 1 only wish he'd do something that ‘ud got tho federal government after him, and land the akunk In the pen” “Stranger things have happoned,” 1 laughed “We'll hope for tho best, Baldy * ‘Three days later I received 9 tele. gram from Los Angeles which caused mo to look upon myself in the light of an inspired prophet It contained fnatructions from Attorney Genoral Kaox to piace under arrost one Quong ‘Wong, on a charge of aléing and abet: ting the unlawful entry of certain of bia countrymen into the United States I hastened to tho store where Mr Wong dealt tn tho commodities of bis native land—ouly to find the bird flown Evidently some of his numer ous friends had obtained faformation of bis tndictment by the federal court and given him warning I went te Los Angeles and {ater viewed United States Marshal Os Doras, and was sworn is as special deputy for the Bouth district of Call fornia. Under ordimary circumstances my authority only covered the terrt tory of Arizona, and the secret service men were of the opinion that my quarry had taken refugo im the Los Angeles Chinatown. As I was aware that Wong know me by aight. it was necessary to proceed with extreme caution, the more so as, from what Baldwin bad told me, the man of whom I was fn search was gifted with talents of no mena order Accordingly, a Chinaman named ‘Lem Tong, employed in the United Btates accrot service emigration de partment, was sent for and ordered to place bimself at my disposal Lem was to report to me at the Third streot entrance of the Holland Beck hotel at two p.m. I was to wear a white ribbon In my left button hole as a moans of fdentifcation Prompt: Jy at two o'clock a Chinaman elad in Anferican garments and wearing a Fedora hat made his appearance As he passed mo he raleed bie hat, the aignal agreed upon 1 walked into tho hotel lobby and entored tho olevator followed by the celestial stranger Entering my room 1 closed the door and nfy assistant produced his creden- tala from the secret service depart- meat. T then told tim what was wanted and he Inquired if 1 knew what the suspects family namo was Tt fe an fovarinvie rule with China men residing in America to go under Aifforent nainen from thors by which they are known In thelr own country Tania 1 would wire a Chinaman in Toscon with whom I wan acqualnted and try to obtain the desired Informe- ton, In the meantime Len Tong ar- ranged to do « little sconting on bis own account in Chinatown, and we parted, with the understanding that he was to meet me at alz o'clock on the following afternoon When he again reported be Informed me that he tad discovered our man's family name to be Wong On. Thad not yet recelved a repiy to my telegram to Tuscon, and until I 4ié, T ‘would not authorize Lem Tong to €0 bead with bis earch = This was merely a precaution on my part be- enue) I did not know Lam, and could Ket Be cure whothor be would play mo false. Despite the fact that he was employed by the sacret service depart ment it was advisable (o move slaw- Some of the Features That Lend Interest to ee ee 2 ae EM he a He tie ta EF PAB Iee 2 4 LCOS AY ES RT IRIS OL COMMA ES TR Sere Mectal oy ARY ROBERTS RINEHARY # A tf ui i Bd Sta fi HEAL hit kA Zk fee sits & 124 A Capital Crime Committed on a Pullman Sleeper. A Daring Robbery. A Ternfic Train Wregk. H ; Evidenge That Seems to Incriminate Four Different People. Tracking the Cnminal by Kinetoscope The Clues of an Amateur Detective. A Battle Through a Locked Door in a | Forsaken Mansion at Midnight. The opening chapter of this most interesting | story will appear in this paper ina few days Don’t Fail to Read It | © rr e Why Not Make Use of Your Spare Time. fo Na aed INORBASS TOUR USEFULNESS, % «TO INCREASE YOUR SALARY. tenon EE pe'ecaa toe W. Bubop Tekan Bee ee bees te tere aay oe Th provides a ovurse , Law bosdamis what tam tenn ts Grae arose eee ee ee De pe net rs ire ost mena eee, EE ON. Oo CMe of Resend Boptich Uhiswh, Third Street, Botesgs Bi and I Gta, HH Ay The Ovetdental can never quite ‘fathom the subtie thoughts of the wily Orlental wind and a man, of Quang Wong wraith and influence among hia own countrymen might pos MIy be bie ty win my Celestial am Alstant s fuser tre ineans of a bribe Conrequenny | tad Lem to mret me the following twintnk when | would deetde di tinstety wnt wtepe we Would take in the wetter tee shat BIRDE my Ciulte were set ut rent by the rovnipt of a telegiats fom Tascam decinring the family pate of tie sus pect to be Weng On far informs Mon being hum corned ¢ etarted Im on Alf ruil and havwe anaumed the ordina'y earth of hss untrymep Fhe plunges big Wr wnt ey sage of Chinates 9 | PORES the ant urn og Len ap [peared tw rats 10 wih ag trtamptant Wy Ma quest had teen em cemat ad one and he ans alle to teqwtt tbat the muri ouaht for Goong. Wonk could de fovid on the tnd oor of a dullding wists Clas wtewot Sap Francisca In tan '* rag with @ Chinaman named vt ten To undirmtan) pr secly what aw. FaDtd place of detest ae werk thin was op the part of tes. teu it must be remembered that thes) are over 1000, coleatiain In Loe Ange os (1 snatowa all of them ax tke an two peas aed Dound by the viathe af their respective tonga to hinder by esery means 1D thelr power the artes: of a ertuntnal /Tloat 80 tine th string the local bit Feau of emigration ut San Francisee, giving in detailed aveeription of Quong Wong and ordering bis arrest Tho federal authoritier do not allow gran to grow under thelr feet when engaged on Uorle Rams business, and two boura later I reroived & mesaage which read i Have Quong Wong in custedy. come and get him { T loft at once for Ban Francisco, a trip of 440 miles and on the follow ing night Mr Wong was delivered.’ into my hands On ‘he return journey, Tendeasvored to dra® wy prisoner into 8 discussion of the Blue Moom rob Dery but withos! avail Whenered the conversation took this turn he tm: mediately forgot his Bogiinh and as sumed @ look of etuptéity that would SEVEN have done «redit 10 a hopeless imbe clle None tha lest { foi! vonvinced that Mr Wong sould if be chose. throw light on the sublet Tin was undoubtedly the beet edu ated China man that it wus ever ty furtune to meet and I fancy that at one time be rmuat have been @ pers of consid: erable conse onsen the Coleattar nopire 1 have aways found Chine Ten to de mnt tear tuble prinuners ‘The Ortental ber «in the ail powerfub decreos of Fate penich they deer tt unclean to resid prevents thea of fectually from king le desporate! chauies for rxape which a whltel man might avail bimeeif of when ib the tolls Quang Wong proved to be ho exeption to (ve rule but with the iuemots of Rulawins anake etory still frexh in my ming | wae U'sposed te keep a wary yan him a An a mater of fect 1 carted my! caution uo (ar as to compel him wear bandiwfs from the moment took bim into vustedy until 1 landed: bim safely In the loch up a precaution! T would never tare dreamed of om ploying wher an ordinary specimen! ‘of his race was concerned In due ‘course of tiv Quong Wong was tried! jeonvicred and arptenced to the penl- tontlary for a term of three yeare—e climax (o bts ambitious career whiss' proved a source of intense sattefay Uon to my redoubtable friend, Saget Jim Baldwin. . Maea’e Debet, ‘You make your deuut Maud to night. Tread tt tn the papere, And T know well jour make @ MC With all your preity eapera And argent awaine wil battle well To win you for a nance Bach crowning you in nivary Wiun wreains of tawee Toman Dear me how Time alee by! 11 aeeme ‘Dut yenterday that you Were making mot pies te the mand ‘Ae proper chindren fo Apa then tant aun ser shen we mat = Though ater many yeare AR, how you Mived. feral You Tet me ail in teare Bot te ed metry now atl tt ‘To sun and twas nn ain Tonight her THA A tee ing eut Yeon e Maraainn, SEEDERS emaneanaeenD Use of Your , ie * Tite. an B USEFULNESS, O INCREASE YOUR SALARY. lerrespendases, Disbep Jehasiny p ok 5 ere for you. Th te the ree etailsd ie tte aay odes BE A LEYLER JEFFERIES SPARS AGAIN Moves It Up With Armstrong For Three Bounds BY W W NALGHTON Jeffries Training Camp Howard uman Carl April 11. He grew Jim Jeffries best for a celebration of the anniversary in any other than the ordinary way will be cor- tained by the absence of Mrs. Jeffries and her preparation in an Oakland hospital for an operation. Something usually good had been planned by Manager Sam Burgers for the event but with Mrs. Jeffries and Lark Adams who has been with her away from the camp the day before to be quarter than the other. Mrs. Jeffries birthday comes next week and her husband on the eve of her departure for a couple of weeks gave her a costly diamond necklace a beautiful piece of jewelry that contains twenty or more gems Jeffries will be 65 years old tomorrow Dick Adams and Mrs. Jeffries left for Oakland on the evening train nearly the whole camp going to the Ben Lomond station to see them away An idea of what the appearance of the Emeryville area will be on July 4th was gained this afternoon when Jeffries and Black Bob Armstrong squared away in the ring for three rounds. Armstrong was with Jeffries to his preparation for his fight with Fitzsimons in seventh year ago and since the Jeffries fight changed blows the year Nine years ago Jeffries and Black Bob Armstrong who was it was to be joined Big Bob was added to the training staff for the Johnson fight because his long association with the other dancers has taught his skills of fighting with Jeffries hosts with Bob Willett him how to attack and how to self-fit from Johnson. BOLT 15 FAME Today's boy was slow to tell About four fifths of it was fountain- ing and sparring for an hour. But the end of the third round when Jeffries salled in and alighted. Bob over the trophy was a little off the match so she sat up and as to be almost a joke. Jeffries was now a whole row of crickets in his boat with three other day, but whether from a or inability could not be held though it seemed to be the further. Bob and Jeffries faced each other with broad grins. The first three blrows were landed by Bob on light fries face but all were light and the black fellow was backing away all the time. For the better part of the round the pair danced around the ring making little attempt to rush things and apparently having back for a wide opening. The round was saved from appearing rithrums by two smart blrows whose Jeffries sent with it a soft nudged kiss on Bob's face and took. Little more longer was slow as the fighters in the back left free dropped into his old crouch position but failing to book through. Armstrong a guard stood and the pair sparred lightly and indifferently almost throughout the short session. Again the round was gaved at the end by Jeffries running in after taking a couple of raps on the face and planting blows on Armstrong's stomach and face that made him turn to the tops and bother for help. Time was called. Hob's sociality kept him up until 2 o'clock this morning and he had to be out at dawn for the road work. Probably the two or three hours stop left him in poor fighting trim. JEFF GETS AGGRESSIVE Jeffries took on an aggressive attitude in the last round of the go and torre into his ransky opponent as though he had been booting before. With all Jeffries, siggern assault though the big blacks sent him well away until near the end when Jeffries jammed him hard against the ropes and almost hurried him out of the ring. In spite of Jeffries promise to his trainers that he would like his work more easily for some time he made almost a full day of it today. Road work at dawn a two-hour session at the wood pile with ax and saw three rounds of sparring and a half hour at the pumbbag bag and a couple of games of handball with Berger and Armstrong and Tod Hessier made up the days grind. One of Jeffries troubles has been very satisfactorily settled. His titration at being constantly trailed by a squad of photographers is great. Jeffries distills to have his picture taken and more than anything else he hates to be interrupted in his training by repeated requests to please hold that pose just a minute. Jim "I WIN," SAY8 JEFF; "ME. TOO," SAY8 JACK Both Big Scrappers Are Confident of Victory July 4th BY JEFF THOMPSON New York. 'April 16 - (Publishers' Press Special) - James J Jeff fries says: "I will knock Johnson out in ten rounds." Jack Johnson says "I'll boat Jeff good and plonty. I'll knock him cold about the eighteenth round." Sam Fitzpatrick, former manager of Johnson, says: "I'm not under- estimating Johnson's strength when I say that he is not good enough for Jeffries. Jeff will win, although I cannot predict what round the knockout will come in. Tommy Ryan, formerly Jeffries' manager "It looks like Johnson to me. This is a dispassionate view and I merely judge the men upon their fighting merits." With opinion divided in that manner among the experts how be it possible to say what the outcome will be* it is at least better to serve judgment into we see what form the men get into after so weeks' training. JOHNSON TALKS Nate Loomis Ryan in the town of Loomis, in the county of New York, the champion has won the best men in the county, but so as we well please with the most of it has no look. I should expect any trouble in beating left and Johnson. It is not that I sort not just left for I have him and admire but I just not really beats. I must be best man physically. The night we also eighty on two wickets, I will wait fast and for sure I know we have to push left to to斗 him and wear down. I call me a bad dancer fighter and not an nighter. Well I have the joy for me because I have a long reach. I have been hit with the dancer long time and we long to see the end of it but we the way. TWO NEIGHBORS ARE LYNCHED NEAR ASHBURN --- Bodies Helded With Bullets, Are Found Bound to Trees CALE OF SYNCHEM F.RO HAVEN BY MOH WARRANTY ARE LISTED The waves of the terges have a usual warrants to be issued for the arrest of a number of prominent farmers living near Amboy a station of the south Iloe Railroad in the northern portion of the counties. Letter of the Peace Enderer w. hold no impost on Saturday. $150.00 Endowment Paid Lynchburg Va. April 12 1910 This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia Knights of Pythias N A S V E A A and A ($15,000) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death claim of Brother Lewis Black who was a member of Hill City Lodge No. 10 of Lynchburg Va. Aldred Wood ( C ) James Brown C W Merchant ( D ) ( C ) $150.00 Endowment Paid Lynchburg Va. April 13, 1910 This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia Knights of Pythias N A S A E A, A and A., ($150,000) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death claim of Brother S B Hill who was a member of New Era Lodge No 76 of Lynchburg Va. Signed LIZZIE S HILL. Executrix Witnesses U S G Patterson. Alfred Ward. T W. Merchant, D D G C. Subscribe to the PLANET RICHMOND BARGAIN HOUSE. Our shelves are loaded with an up-to-date line of Socks, Ties and Suspenders with prices to suit. We also take measures and make Suits to order from $15.00 to $35.00. We have 1000 samples in this line to select from. Don't make a mistake 314 EAST BROAD STREET, RICHMOND, VA. [Image of a man's face] 100 men and youths' s 350 pair shoes men, wo 350 men and boys hats 350 shirts for men and b 350 suits of underwear f Our shelves Ties and Suspenders and make Suits to c samples in this line 314 EAST BROAD S 8100 00 Endowment Paid Richmond Va. April 14 1919 This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell Jr. Grand Worthy Counselor of the grand court of Virginia Order of Calantle $1000. One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Sister Hester A Scott who was a member of Fulton Court No. 244 of Richmond Va. Mary L Porter Rhonda Dawson Anna Taylor PURE IRISH LINEN Tailor made white embroidery plates. $12 2 Pure Linen Suit, $6 any color value $10 Linen dust coats $3 Taffeta Silk Pet- tments. $4 Wedding sets, very fine $6 to $10 Write to day for Five pillow cover, catalogue, and dressagood sample. Prices wholesale JOHN J. OHARE, 20 West 27th Street, New York (Linen Warehouse.) In the Law and Equity Court of the City of Rhondend April 20 1910 Hattie B Christian Plaintiff William E Christian Defendant The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a juicio matrimonial by the plaintiff from the defendant. And affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant is not a resident of the State of Virginia. It is here ordered that he deappear here within fifteen days after the publication of the notice and do what is necessary to proceed in this suit. P. E. WINSTON Cock M. R. ROBERTS VIRGINIA In the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a vacuole matrimonii by the plaintiff from the defendant. And an annulavit having been 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 hereof and do what is necessary to protect her interest herein. A Copy / Taste P P WINSTON Clerk TO MARY HASKINS Take Notice You are hereby notified that I shall on Thursday, June 2 1010, at the law office of Phil B Shield Room 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 Haskins and others to be read 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 depositiones be not commenced on that day, or if commenced be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time, at the same place and between the same hours until the same be completed. Very Respectfully, THOMAS HASKINS. By Counsel C F Whittle, p q D. J. Bradford Real Estate and Private Bank- ing. Houses Bought or Sold, Rents Collected, Loans Negotiated. Temporary Office: 1018 St. John Street. 'Phone Monroo 2017. Bands of Calanthe. Constitute a Feature, and persons cannot do better to let the Little ones join Children received from Two to Twelve Years. Benefits $1 100 to $1 50 per week when sick, and $30 00 to $40 00 at death Matrons wanted in all localities. For organization of new bands and all particulars write MRS ANNA TAYLOR, W M 120 West Hill Street, Richmond, Va. Silk, Stiff, and Soft Hats Cleaned Blocked, Retrimmed Latest Styles. AMERICAN HAT CO. (Old and Reliable Hat Shop), 404 E. Marshall St. (Basement) The Hair Grow Hair Tonic. The peer of all other Hair Dress- ess drug stores. 25 cents the box, the bottl- gents Wanted. COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO. Hair Beautiful Makes the H An Ideal Scalp Food and Hair Tonic. T ings. On sale at all first class drug store Soap—25 cents the cake. Agents Wanted Newport News, Va. Is Your Hair --- Makes the Hair Grow. An Ideal Scalp 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—25 cents the cake. Agents Wanted. COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO., Newport News, Va. Soft, S NELS pound It makes your 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 NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the finest hair pomade on the earth for the colored people. It makes your hair grow fast! It makes stubborn, kinky and tangled hair as soft and sweep as milk. It makes it healthy. It keeps it from chafing as much as it makes it rich and gives it that longed for by all true ladies. Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never will be too clean. The costs of your hair will have the necesary help disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Dressing is put up in handcaps four-ounce squares tin bezes, like the lady holds in her hand. Drugstore and a box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it new, we sit right down and write us. Address ACTURING CO., Richmond, Va. amount of oil. You will nerves have scalp disease. You will Nelson's Hair Dressing is pot up like the agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can you a full size box postal. Go and buy it now, as it is NELSON MANUFACTURING Live Agents Wanted. Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handmade four-square tuxedo boxes, like the lady holds to her hand. Drugs and agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, it send us 30 cents and we will mail you a full-size box邮箱. Go and buy it now, as it right down and write us. Address LOOK! READ!! THINK AND ACT!!! Star of Zion Union Reform Royal Rifle 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, Deputy or G. W. Secretary, any of its departments. Initiation fees: out rates now in force $150 and $2.00. Policies from $50.00 to $125.00. Sick benefits per week. $2.00 for eight weeks with no reductions. Paid out for deaths in 1909. $3,275.85. Paid out for sickness, $1,684.00. Paid out for hours of members. $670.54-. For further information write to S. G. W. Secretary. Agents wanted. Write today to B. B. BAPTIST, S. G. W. Sec'y., Box 21, Boydton, Va. HAT Panama Hats Cleaned, Bleached, Blocked. Retrimmed Lake New. Straw Hats Cleaned and Pressed. 25 cents. 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 make you proud of it? Is it long and full of life? If you cannot say YES to all of the above questions, then you need Nothing on earth is so valuable as a human mind. If a diamond is worth polishing as much as a human mind, we may never be satisfied with how we young man works all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not for good the young man. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few cents, when health is in danger? And who would choose an interior school to save a few dollars, when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a longer usefulness? Va. Union University Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN. ITS THIOLOGICAL COURSE has for many years been the standard course for colloquial Baptist Schools. Hebrew, Greek and all the regular subjects given in Northern Seminaries are given here. One hundred students for the ministry are enrolled in different departments of the school. ITS NINE GRANITE BUILDINGS, its finally equipped science laboratories, its library of 12,000 volumes, its able faculty and its full courses of study enable Virginia Union University to offer colored young men an education equal to that enjoyed by the favored of other races. For further information, address the President, VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY. $10,010.10. IN PRIZES DURING THE YEAR 1910. By The Society of the age. None like it'in methods, and the most liberal considerations. Estab- basis and conducted on a sound, conservative January. The most liberal and absolutely safe INVEST FOR AGENTS. Painted—Male and Female. Session allowed honest workers. These com- port included in the $10,010.00 given away in mean business write, DEL. L. SMITH, Waynesboro, Virginia. The greatest Fraternal 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, P. O. Box, 109, Waynesboro, Virginia. 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, Dofontants S. W. ROBINSON 19 & 21 N J8TH ST Dealer in 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 seated and possessed in the City of Richmond and Honrico County, Virginia And an afidavit having been made and filed that Rebecca Ann Clay, one of the defendants 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 whatever is necessary to protect her interest herein 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 Ford's Hair Pomade "CHEROKEE" Blood Tonic, JOHN G. SMITH, 1301 East Leigh Street. —See our Stock of Calendars for 1911, before plaing your order. OBJECT P P WINSTON, Clerk J Henry Crutchfield, p q. Office 1215 E Broad Bt. Richmond, Va. 528 NORTH ADAMS STREET, For Correct Plumbing, Steam and Gas Pitting. "THE RED MAN'S GIFT TO SUR- FERING HUMANITY." An Invaluable Imbedy for Serofula, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tetor, and All Diseases Arising From Impure Condition of Blood. Can be found at If you want results, put your adv. n The PLANET. Subscribe to The PLANET THE SOUTHERN SECRET SERVICE Burgeon. All business strictly confidential. Representatives wanted in every city and county in the South. Liberal fees to good men. Main Office: 020 E. Main Street, (Rooms 12 and 13), Richmond, Va. Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars, &c PROMPT ATTENTION. Your Patronage is Respectfully Solicited. Southern Law and Collection Co., Slick, 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 see us. 920 E. Main Street, (Rooms 12 and 18), Richmond, Virginia. Fifty years of success have proved the merits of this preparation. What is more attractive than a beautiful head of hair? It has been the ambition of women in all areas. The use of Fera's Hair Pomade makes stabborn, harsh, kinky or coarse hair. It can coath and shape in an style desired consistent with its length, as long as the Pomade remains in the hair. This result may be obtained by one thorough application according to directions. Two to four applications per week will keep the hair satirically dry and keep for longer, regular size, are usually sufficient for a year. Directions with every bottle. removes and prevents dandruff. Involves the scalp and keeps it from getting harsh and hairy from balminess or by being gently prognasys the hair from balminess or by being gently prognasys the hair from life and vigor. Absolutely harms the skin with spiked results even on children and infants. Dilutes carefully. Its use is a careless, a most sensitive preparation for ladies, gentlemen and children. Don't miss anything else allotted to be "just for fun" or "for the sake of fun" or "for the greatness of God." Look for this phrase Charles Nixon. Prose: on every problem. If you wish with the grunt, we will send you by you with the grunt, we will send you