Richmond Planet
Saturday, June 25, 1910
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
Colored Girl Graduate Says She's Going to the Dance.
East Orange, N. J., June 15.—The color line, ever a source of perplexity in the East Orange Schools, has yielded a new trouble here. The graduating class at the high school is in the thick of it and it is all because Isabel Vandervall, a colored girl and a member of the class, insists on her right to attend the graduate dance.
The tickets for the dance, which is to take place on June 24 in the Woman's Club of Orange, the most exclusive place of entertainment in all the Oranges, with the exception of the Essex County Country Club, were distributed among the members of the class on Monday, but Miss Vandervall was forgotten. While in school yesterday she wrote a note to John Hermann, manager of the dance, asking him for her ticket, but received no reply. Today she wrote him at his house. 569 Park Avenue, but does not expect an answer before tomorrow.
Between the two writings Miss Vandervall, who had enlisted the assistance of her father, induced the latter to pay a visit to Mr. Hermann and he did so, but could not find the young man at home.
Miss Vandervall says that she did not start the trouble. She was approached tentatively by other members of her class several days ago, who suggested that perhaps she would not care to go to the dance and that therefore she might be willing to part with her ticket for a consideration. Miss Vandervall replied that she intended to go to the dance, intimating that she would bring with her a male escort of her own race. When Miss Vandervall announced that she wanted to go to the dance and intended to do so some of her fellow students held secret meetings and tried to devise some way to circumvent her, but thus far they seem to have arrived at no definite plan. It is said that they contemplated either holding the dance on some other date or at some other place and withholding the tip from Miss Vandervall until too late for her to avail herself of any inkling she might get of the change.
The pupils have been very reticent about their trouble, not taking into their confidence either the principal of the school. Charles W. Evans, or Supt. Vernon L. Davey of the school system. Neither had heard of the situation this afternoon when he was asked about it.
There are eighty members of the high school graduating class, all of whom with the exception of Miss Vandervall are sons or daughters of wealthy residents of the city, Miss Vandervall, who lives at 71 Ashland Avenue, is the daughter of James N. Vandervall, proprietor of the Essex Steam Carpet Cleaning Works. He has lived in East Orange for a number of years and is considered well to do.
Five years ago the race question was raised by the Board of Education when it sought to establish an ungraded class. There were so many colored pupils in the class that the colored residents of the city took it to mean nothing more nor less than a "jim crow" class. They held public indignation meetings, at one of which Judge John Franklin Fort, now Governor, appeared and spoke in behalf of the colored race. He stigmatized the action of the Board of Education as unpatriotic. The board eventually had to abandon its ungraded class in the face of the storm of protest.
The father of the young woman who is the centre of the fuss would not say today what course he intended to pursue, but he intimated that he would make another effort to obtain a ticket for his daughter before doing anything else In case the ticket is refused him by young Hermann he may seek redress in law. If he should succeed in obtaining the ticket for his daughter it is probable, so it is said, that the dance will be abandoned.
John Hermann, who is the son of Edward F. Hermann, a New York business man, is backed up by the other members of the class. They declare that Vanudervall cannot force them to give up the ticket if they wish to withhold it.
MUNDIN—PACK
The marriage of Miss Minnie G. Pack, of Hinton, West Va. to Mr. H. C. Mundin, of Richmond, Va., will take place at the residence of the bride, Hinton, West Virginia. Wednesday, June 29, 1910, at 6 P. M. At home Friday, July 1, 1910, from 8 P. M. to 10 P. M., at 1002 North First Street, Richmond, Va.
Friends are invited. No cards.
Richmond PLANET on sale at Mr. Jos. Evans, 2602 Webster Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
They Meet in Bristol—Delegates
Robbed—A Fine Camp.
Bristol, Va., June 21, 1910. A large delegation arrived here last night from Richmond, Norfolk and Newport News and intermediate stations. Four coaches ladened with delegates to the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A. and A., led by Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., and his colleagues arrived here last night at about 11 o'clock. The train was about forty minutes late.
A FINE COMPLIMENT
The conductor stated that the party was one of the most orderly he had ever seen on the road during his years of long service. It was raining when they arrived, but they were led to the church where assignments were quickly made. Grand Chancellor Mitchell secured a combination baggage car and served meals to the delegation free of charge.
HAPPY BOYS.
The Pythian Cadets were elated and happy. They camped for the night in the church and this morning they marched out to camp. The most of them are playing baseball at Camp Washington.
POCKETS WERE PICKED
Quite a sensation was caused by the work of skilled pick-pockets who mingled with the crowd. They relieved Mr. John T. Taylor of his pocket-book, which contained his ticket and money. Mr. J. W. Robinson was robbed of three tickets and all of his money. The delegate from Strasburg was also robbed and Mr. Edward Wood, of Petersburg, was also robbed of his ticket and money.
GRAND LODGE CONVENES.
The Grand Lodge convened promptly at 9 o'clock this morning, Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., presided, while Grand Keeper of Records and Seal was keeping the minutes.
The Committee on Returns and Credentials made its report after which Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., made a lengthy report which created a sensation.
GRAND CHANCELLOR RE-ELECTED.
He was enthusiastically applauded. Delegates spoke in glowing terms of him and his work. Grand Vice Chancellor H. L. Jackson, presided, and he had quite a difficult time to limit debate. He succeeded and the rules were suspended and John Mitchell, Jr. was re-elected Grand Chancellor by acclamation. The meeting is harmonious. The Grand Court met at 10 A.M., Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr. presided. Miss M. L. Chiles, Grand Worthy Register of Deeds. There is a good attendance. The report of the Committee on Returns and Credentials made its report. The public meeting will be held tonight at Grand Opera House, which has been secured for the purpose. There are three hundred delegates here in attendance. Prof. Charley Brown, of St. Louis, Mo., arrived here this morning.
The marriage of Miss Fannie M. Turner to Mr. Chitman M. White took place at the Ebenezer Baptist Church Wednesday morning, June 22, at 10:30 o'clock. The contracting parties entered as follows: Miss Gertrude Bacchus and Mr. Leroy Edmunds, Miss Mayme Knox and Mr. Wilmer Turner, Miss Ida Crump and Mr. Whille Wilson, the maid of honor, Little Miss Ethel G. Bowies brought in the license, the groom and Mr. Roscoe Diggs, and the bride leaning on the arm of her father. The bride is the accomplished daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Turner, and one of our leading school teachers. Mr. and Mrs. White left on the 12:05 train for New York.
Outing to White City.
The talk of the day is Halley's comet, the talk of the hour is the outing to White City, Monday July 11, 1910. Just think, 10 hours at the sea shore. Train leaves Seventh and Byrd Street Station at 9 A. M. sharp; Returning will leave White City at 11 P. M.
Fare Round Trip $1.25.
This outing is under the auspices of the Willing Workers Association. Committee-Alpheus Scott, Washington Bolling, Hayes Willis, Samuel H. Green, W. G. Singleton, Robert H. Harrison, Thomas Jackson, Lucious Storrs, W. Henry Jones. M. W. Hudson, Secretary. Chas. A. J. Briggs, Chairman.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1910.
A Pictorial Day With Jack Johnson At His Training Camp in San Francisco.
OUT FOR A PROLIC SAVING NOTKING
THE GOLDEN SMILE
BUT SAWING WOOD
READY TO BURN UP ROADS
(San Francisco, June—Reports to the effect that Jack Johnson has been taking things a little too easy in preparing for his mill with Jeffries are scoffed at by his trainers. In answer to a query regarding seeming apathy in his recent work Jack Johnson declared that he could not afford to work himself out too strongly for the reason that he is now right on edge and does not want to go stale. "If I started in now to tear things apart," said he, "I would surely blow up before Independence day rolls around. This is one thing you want to keep in mind: The boxer himself knows better what his work should be than all the managers and trainers in the world, and he should be allowed to do just what appeals to him most so long as it is not a direct violation of training rules. Jeffries, for instance, is doing exactly what he pleases down at Rowardennan, and I think it is a very wise course. Let a man drive himself against his will into the strenuous work of the gymnasium every day and you will find in the end that it has done him much more harm than good. Just leave it to me to get in shape, and I promise that you won't be dispointed."
OUT FOR A PROLIC
Photos by American Press Association.
(San Francisco, June—Reports to preparing for his mill with Jeff ing apathy in his recent work J strongly for the reason that he is to tear things apart," said he, one thing you want to keep in the managers and trainers in the long as it is not a direct violation down at Rowardennan, and I the strenuous work of the gymn more harm than good. Just leave
PULLEN—CARSON
The beautiful marriage of Miss Essie Carson and Mr. C. C. Pullen was solomnized at 235 Flint Street, Asheville, N. C., Wednesday evening, June 15, 1910. Mr. Ernest D. Powell, of Lynchburg, Va., acted as best man and Miss Annie Bowman, of Columbia, S. C., was maid of honor.
The bride was attired in a cream mesaline; the groom wore the conventional black.
Miss Carson was one of the popular teachers in the city public school. She was the recipient of several receptions, and a handsome linen shower prior to the marriage. The bridal presents were numerous and costly.
Mr. Pullen is an enterprising citizen from Baltimore, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Pullen left on the Pullman for Baltimore, Md. where they will be at home to their friends, 118 West Biddle Street.
BAGBY—ANDERSON
Cards are out announcing the marriage of Miss Estella Leagh Bagby and Mr. Chas. Humphrey Anderson which took place, Tuesday evening, April 5, 1910, in the parlor of Rev. R. V. Peyton. The wedding reception, Wednesday evening, June 29, 1910, from 8:30 to 11 o'clock, at their home, 205 West Baker Street.
SWANN—MOORE
The marriage of Miss Lillian L. Moore to Mr. Richmond L. Swann will quietly take place at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Morton Deane, 116 West Baker Street, Wednesday, June 29, at 8 P. M. Owing to the recent death in the bride's family, only relatives of both families will be present. They will be at home Sunday, July 3 at 701 1-2 North Ninth Street.
Subscribe to The PLANET.
NEW $30,000 SCHOOL
Catholics to Add Imposing Building to Colored Mission.
Plans have been filed in the office of Building Inspector Beck for the erection of an imposing mission school for colored children on North First Street, to be known as the Van de Vyser School for Colored Children, the building being erected in honor of the present bishop of the Catholic diocese of Richmond. The plans have been drawn by Architect Charles M. Robinson, and the contract, which amounts to $30,000, has been awarded to John Amrhein & Brother. The school building will be erected as a constituent part of the mission work now operated under direction of the Rev. Father Hannigan on North First Street, the Catholic Church owning an entire block between Jackson and Duval Streets. The building will front 124 feet on First Street and run back to a depth of eighty-six feet. Work has already begun clearing the site, and actual construction will begin as soon as the drawings have been approved by the Building Inspector.
MORE OF BROWNSVILLE
Officer of Regiment in Famous Affray Will be Court-Martialed.
Washington, June 19.—The trial by court-martial of Captain Samuel P. Lyon, of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, the regiment of negro soldiers which took place part in the Brownsville riot, will begin tomorrow at Fort Myer, Va. Captain Lyon is accused of having made statements before the Foraker investigating committee in regard to the ammunition used in the riot, which were considerably at variance, it is declared, with those he made to the army military commission, which investigated the Brownsville affair last year. The outcome of Captain Lyon's court-martial probably will have no effect on any of the negro officers who were dis
charged from the army without honor, fourteen of whom were found to be eligible for re-enlistment, but one of whom, so far as the War Department records show, has actually been restored to the service.
SUMMER NIGHT SCHOOL
Instructions given in Arithmetic Bookkeeping, Grammar, Civics, Latin French, etc. Terms reasonable. PROF. P. J. HENRY, 1106 West Leigh Street
WANTED — Colored House Girls, Cooks, Chambermaids, Laundresses, Nurse Girls, General Hand Work, Maids, Man and Wife, for Private Family, Farm Hands, Chaufeurs, Men Cooks, Janitors, Porters. Best wages for women especially. Write Imperial Employment Bureau, 1310 Wylie Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Banking and Mercantile reference.
Mr. J. D. Johnson, of Newport News, Va., called on us.
Your subscription to the PLANET is due. Have you paid it? If not, why not?
Miss Lula and Kate Watkins spent this week in Washington, D. C., interest of the St. Lukes.
Miss Bessie L. Thomas, of Orange, N. J., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Johnson, 207 North Foushee Street.
Rev. O. Paul Thompson will preach in the Ebenezer Baptist Church at 3:30 o'clock, Sunday, June 26, 1910, for the benefit of the remodeling fund. Subject, "The Devil." You and your friend are cordially invited to be present.
(Senior Class, No. 10.)
WANTED—A Good Cook for small family. Good wages and a good home. Give references. Address, "Cook." Care of PLANET, City.
Christopher
Bryan
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D.
Pastor of Fifth Street Baptist Church. This is the 30th Anniversary of His Advent Into the Ministry.
5TH ST. BAPT. CHURCH.
Located, Cor. 5th and Jackson Sts,
RICHMOND, VA.
Weekly News Column.
REV. W. F. GRAHAM, D. D., Pastor,
Residence:
108 E. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, Editor.
1215 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
The Thirtieth Anniversary of Fifth Street Baptist Church and Pastor, is nearing its close. Next Sunday June 26 will be the last day of regular anniversary service. It will finally end however. Tuesday night, June 28, with an anniversary reception, Dr. W. H. White being master of ceremonies; Dr. C. H. Phillips, toast master. All are hopeful of a good time next Sunday.
At 11:30 A. M. Dr. R. H. Bowling, of Norfolk, Va. will preach a special sermon.
At 3:30 P. M. Dr. H. H. Mitchell, first pastor of Fifth Street Baptist Church, will be present and take part in the Grand Union Communion and historical covenant meeting.
8:30 P. M. Dr. G. B. Howard, of Petersburg, Va., will preach. The Thirtieth Anniversary Rally has been in progress during these series of meetings. It is hoped that a large sum will be realized by this financial effort and that none will fall in the discharge of duty.
Last Wednesday night Dr. A. S. Thomas, Pastor Sharon Baptist Church preached an excellent sermon at the Fifth Street Baptist Church. It was inspiring, praiseworthy and filled with sound advice. Dr. Thomas, good work at the Sharon Baptist Church speaks for him. His church moves onward and upward; gliding in peace upon the bosom of progressive stream.
Last Sunday morning our Pastor Dr. W. F. Graham, preached an extra fine sermon. Subject, "Thirty Years Ministry." A synopsis of which will be given in another issue.
Last Sunday night Dr. W. H. Stokes, Pastor Ebenezer Baptist Church preached a sermon at Fifth Street Baptist Church, long to be remembered; by a singular coincident a white minister of this city, whose sermon we had the pleasure of reading in one of the daily newspapers and Dr. W. H. Stokes, pursued the same line of thought with very little exception. Dr. W. H. Stokes is a young man with bone and blood, dignified, a fine scholar, devout christian and an able preacher of the gospel. We hope to hear him preach at our church again very soon.
(Last Sunday morning, Supt. Prof. B. H. Peyton opened the Sunday School at 10 o'clock. The officers and teachers were in their respective place. A large attendance of scholars were present. Everything seemed cheerful and happy. A nice sum has been raised by the school to aid the church in its rally. The school is on the increase.—E. W.) The B. Y. P. U. will resume its meetings on the first Friday night in July, 1910, at 8:30 o'clock. All are invited to be present.
Nelson's Hair Dressing can be secured from the agent, Mr. Joseph Evans, 2602 Webster Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa.
FIFTH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH.
Exercises will be Held there all of this Month in Celebration of the 30th Anniversary of the Church.
NEGRO FIGHTERS IN THE COUNTY.
Sheriff Kemp and Officers Looking for Evidences of Two Bouts Held Sunday Afternoon.
The constabulary of Henrico county, headed by Sheriff Kemp, is looking for evidence against the alleged promoters of a prize fight held in Forbes Lane Sunday afternoon in which Jack Chandler, of Richmond, and Miles Stokes, of Petersburg, and Jack Sharp, of Norfolk, and Alexander Wilson, of Richmond, are said to have been the principals.
All of the fighters were colored, and although they fought hard, it is alleged that their presence was more as a drawing card to a crap game, banked by the promoters, than anything else. Wilson took the first bout from Sharp with a straight arm blow to the chin, putting his opponent down for the count. In the second Chandler landed a solar plexus blow in the fifth round that stopped the bout.
If sufficient evidence can be got, Sheriff Kemp will have the promoters, fighters and as many of the spectators as possible arrested under the State law. The bouts were held on private property, however, and the officers are of the opinion that there will be some difficulty in getting the proper evidence. — Times-Dispatch, June 21, 1910.
$100,00 Endowment Paid
Newport News, June 13, 1910.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, Order of Calanthe ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Brother W. S. Hobson, who was a member of Silver Leaf Court, No. 241, of Newport News, Va.
Signed: VICTORIA L. HOBSON,
Beneficiary.
Witnesses:
Jane McPherson, M. C.,
Fannie Belcher, R. of D.,
Lillie D. Byrd, D. D. G. C.
---
THIRD VAN in
LOWER TEN
BY MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
AUTHOR OF THE CIRCULAR MIRACLE
ILLUSTRATIONS BY M. G. KEYTNER
COPYRIGHT & DRAFTS - MIDDLE COMPANY
SVNOP810.
CHAPTER I.—Lawrence Blakey, lawman goes to Pittsburgh with the forged knife of the chief witness for the prosecution. John Glimera, a millionaire. In the courtroom by the picture of a girl, whose Glimera guardian is his granddaughter, Alain West. He says her father is a reacal and a friend of the forger.
CHAPTER II.—Standing in line to buy a car, he asks a lady to buy an for her. He gives her lower 11 and retains lower ten. He finds a man in a drunken stupor in lower ten, and retires in lower nine.
CHAPTER III.—He awakens in lower ten, and appears in his stead is another the clothes likewise have been abbandoned for others.
CHAPTER IV.—An amateur detective investigates himself in the case. It is learned that man in Simon Harrington of Pittsburgh.
CHAPTER V.—Henry Pinckney naught is believed to be the man of the man who disappeared with Blakey's clothes and grip. He is suspected of the murder.
CHAPTER VI.—Blakey becomes impressed girl in juvenile dirk and stains an arm in lower seven. Blakey comes under suspicion.
CHAPTER VII - Circumstantial eviction against Blakeley is strengthened, the train is wrecked.
CHAPTER VIII - Blakeley is rescued from the burning car by the girl in blue, the arm is broken.
CHAPTER IX - Together they go to the firefighters for Blakey. She the her name is Alison West, his part is sweetheart.
CHAPTER X - Alison's peculiar actions justify the lawyer. She drops her gold bag and Blakey unnoticed, puts it in the pocket.
CHAPTER XI - He returns home and from his landlord of strange happenings.
CHAPTER XII - Blakey learns that a woman by the name of S. Brian a fellow victim of the wreck is in the hospital.
CHAPTER XIII - He also learns that he is under surveillance and that the Pittsburg police are looking for survivors of the wreck.
CHAPTER XIV Blakey hears of orange dings in a vacant house next door. Investigation is without result.
CHAPTER XV - Diversion plies with the wreck revealing a wreckreveal to Blakey a man leaping from the train with his stolen grip.
CHAPTER XVI Blakeley meets Allison at a dinner and returns her gold bag
CHAPTER XVII He learns that a man resembling Sulli can leap from the desk near Mr. K. The man spreads his table and stays some time at the aster place.
CHAPTER XVIII While making inquiries at the Carter place Blakeley finds Allison. He kisses her
CHAPTER XIX While dining in a patio the woman for whom it is bought a Pullman ticket summons him to her table
CHAPTER XX She tells him her name to Mrs Conway. She tries to make a bargain and fights not nottingham that they are married
CHAPTER XXI Blakeley tells his partner of the incident and the latter proves a theory that the woman an killed Harrington
CHAPTER XXII - The amateur detective trails Tomman and believes he has found Sullian.
CHAPTER XXIII - Blakeley and the home of Sullian aster to investigate
CHAPTER XXIV - From a servant
Blakeley learns that Alison West had
been sent on a visit to the Bullsley
had been attentive to her. He also learns
that Bullsley is married to a daughter of
the murdered man
CHAPTER XXV - Returning home
Blakeley is informed that his house has
been ransacked by the police
CHAPTER XXVI Blakeley a partner
paints him that his affair with Asa West
is off
CHAPTER XXVII Blakeley goes to the
Forbes country home and finds Asa
there
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Allison's Story
She told her story evenly with her eyes on the water only now and then when I too sat holding seaward I thought she glanced at me furtively And once in the middle of it she stopped altogether "You don't realize it probably she protested but you look like a -a war god Your face is horrible " "I will turn my back, if it will help any." I said stormily "but if you expeel me to look anything but murderous, why, you don't know what I am going through with That's all"
The story of her meeting with the Curtis woman was brief enough. They had met in Rome first, where Alison and her mother had taken a villa for a year. Mrs Curtis had hovered on the ragged edges of society there, pleading the poverty of the south since the war as a reason for not going out more. There was talk of a brother, but Alison had not seen him, and after a scandal which implicated Mrs Curtis and a young attacke of the Austrian embassy. Alison had been forbidden to see the woman.
"The women had never liked her, anyhow" she said. "She did unconventional things, and they are very conventional there. And they said she did not always pay her—her gambling debts. I didn't like them I thought they didn't like her because she was poor—and popular. Then—we came home, and I almost forgot her, but last spring, when mother was not well—she had taken grandfather to the Riviera, and it always uses her up—we went to Virginia Hot Springs, and we met them there, the brother, too, this time. His name was Sullivan, Harry Pinckney Sullivan."
"I know Go on."
"Mother had a nurse, and I was alone a great deal, and they were very kind to me. I—I saw a lot of them. The brother rather attracted me, partly—partly because he did not make loves to me. He even seemed to avoid me, and I was piqued. I had been appled, I apponed. Most of the others knew I had had—"
"I knew that, too." I said bitterly, and moved away from her a trifle. I was brutal, but the whole story was a long trudge. I think she knew what I was suffering, for she showed no resentment.
"It was early and there were few people around—none that I cared about. And mother and the three played cribbage eternally, until I felt as though the little pigs were driven into my brain. And when Mrs Curtis arranged drives and plenices I I slipped away and went I suppose you won't believe me, but I had never done that kind of thing before and I—well I have paid up I think.
What sort of looking chap was Sullivan? I demanded I had got up and was nacing back and forward on the said. I remember kicking savagely at a bit of water soaked board that lay in my way
"Very handsome, so large as you are, but fair and more modest. I drew my shields and straplets. I am straight to go, but I was fairly sagging with peaks as ruge.
"When mother began to get around and somebody told her that I had been going along with Mrs. Harris and her brother, and we had a dinner. I was dragged home like a bad child and I had always over that to leave.
"Not really ever cared. I was born an explorer, I lived with a teacher at a public body, I went.
If Mrs. Harris knew she never said an thing. She was to chatter to officers and to the summer when they went to dress, she asked me to tell her what I did. She was so proud to let her know that I did not go where I went, and so I sent Polly my mind, to her in the country, pretended to go to Seal Harbor, and really went to Tresson. You see I warned you it would be an unpleasant story."
I went over and stood in front of her. All the accustomed gallery of the last few weeks had been fired for what she told me: If Silliman had
"Did You Marry Him?" I Demanded
come across the sands just then, I
think I would have strangled him with
my hands, out of pure hate
"Did you marry him?" I demanded.
My voice sounded hoarse and strange
in my ears. That's all I want to
know. Did you marry him?
No"
I drew a long breath
"You—cared about him"
She hesitated
"No, she said finally "I did not
care about him"
I sat down on the edge of the boat
and mopped my hot face. I was heart-
ly ashamed of myself and mingled
with my abasement was a great de-
fault. If she had not married him, and
had not cared for him nothing else
was of any importance
"I was sorry of course the moment the train had started but I had wired I was coming and I could not go back and then when I got there the place was charming. There were no neighbors but we fished and rode and motured, and it was moonlight, like this."
I put my hand over both of hers, clasped in her lap "I know" I are knowledgeed repentantly "and—people do queer things when it is moonlight. The moon has got me to night, Alison If I am a boor, remember that, won't you?"
Her fingers lay quiet under mine "And so," she went on with a little sigh. "I—began to think perhaps I cared. But all the time I felt that there was something not quite right. Now and then Mrs Curtis would say or do something that gave me a queer start, as if she had dropped a mask for a moment. And there was trouble with the servants they were almost insolent. I couldn't understand I don't know when it dawned on me that the old Baron Cavaleant had been right when he said they were not my kind of people. But I wanted to get away, wanted it desperately."
"Of course, they were not your kind." I cried "The man was married!" the girl Jennie a housemaid, was a spy in Mrs Suillian's employ. If he had pretended to marry you I would have killed him "Not only that, but the man he murdered, Harrington, was his wife's father. And I'll see him hang by the neck yet if it takes every energy and every penny I possess."
I could have told her so much more gently, have broken the shock for her. I have never been proud of that wreaking on the wind. I was alternately a boor and a ruman-like a hurt companion who passes the blow that
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Esa hurt him on "to his playmate, that both may bawl together. And now Alison sat, white and cold, without speech.
"Married!" she said finally, in a small voice. "Why. I don't think it is possible, is it? 1-1 was on my way to Baltimore to marry him myself, when the wreck came"
"But you said you don't care for him!" I protested, my heavy unmuscled mind unable to jump the gaps in her story. And then, without the slightest warning I agalized that she was crying. She shook off my hand and fumbled for her handkerchief, and falling to find it, she accepted the one I thrust into her wet fingers
Then little by little, she told me from the handkerchief a sordid story of a shouter trip in the mountains with out Mrs. Curtis of a lost road and a broken car and a rainy night when they she and Sullivan trumped eternally and did not get home. And of Mrs. Curtis when they got home at dawn suddenly grown conventional and deeply shocked. Of her own proud half disdainful consent to make possible the backneyed compromising situation by marrying the rascal and those of his disappearance from the train. It was so terrible to her such a Heaven sent relief to me, in spite of my age against Sullivan, that I laughed about. At which she looked at me over the handkerchief. I know it’s over the handkerchief with a catch in her breath. When I think that I nearly married a murderer and did not I lay for sheer joy. then she buryed her face and eried again.
Please don't, I protested unsteadily. I won't be responsible if you keep on crying like that. I may forget that I have a capital charge hanging over my head and that I may be arrested at any moment.
That brought her out of the hand kerchief at once. I meant to be so helpful she said, and I was thought of nothing but itself. There were some things I meant to tell you. If Jenna was what you say then I understand why she came to me just before I left. She had been packing my things and she must have seen what condition I was in for she came over to me when I was getting my wraps on to leave and said, Don't do It Miss West. What you won't do it, you'll be sorry over after. And just then Mrs Corta came in and Jennie slipped out.
"No. As we went through the station the telegraph operator gave Har-Mr Sullivan a message. He read it on the platform and it created him terribly. He took his sash aside and they talked together. He was white with either fear or anger. I don't know which. Then when we boarded the train a woman in black with beautiful hair who was standing on the car platform touched him on the arm and then drew back. He looked at her and glanced away again but she recked as if he had struck her."
Then what? The situation was growing clearer.
Mrs. Cornish and I had the drawing room. I had a dreadful night just sleeping a little gown and then I saw his cigarette case in your hand. I had given it to him. You were his clothes. The murder was discovered and you were accused of it. What could I do? And then afterward, when I saw him asleep at the farmhouse—I was panic stricken. I locked him in and ran. I didn't know why he did it, but he had killed a man."
Some one was calling Alison through a megaphone, from the veranda. It sounded like Sam. "Allie," he called. Allie "I'm going to have some anchors on toast." Allie "Neither of us heard."
"I wonder I reflected "If you would be willing to repent a part of that story just from the telegram on—to a couple of detectives say on Monday. If you would tell that and how the end of your necklace got into the seakellin tag." "My no knee she repeated "But it isn't mine. I picked it up in the car. Alllee Sam again I see you down there I'm making a julep." Alison turned and called through her hands coming in a moment Sam" she said and rose "It must be very late Sam is home. We would better go back to the house." Don't I begged her Anchovies and juleps and Sam will go on for ever, and I have you such a little time I suppose I am only one of a dozen or so, but you she only the girl in the world. You know I love you, don't you dear."
Sam was whettling an irritating bird call over and over. She purred hered lips and answered him in kind. It was more than I could endure.
"Sam or no Sam. I said firmly 'I am going to kiss you.'"
But Sam's voice came strident through the megaphone. "Be good, you two, be beheloved. I've got the binoculars." And so under fire we walked sedately back to the house. My pulses were throbbing the little swish of her dress beside me on the grass was pain and cessant. I had but to put out my hand to touch her, and I dared not.
Sam, armed with a megaphone and field glasses, bent over the rail and watched us with glueful malignity "Home early aren't you?" Alison called, when we reached the steps
"Led a club when my partner had doubled up trumps, and she fainted. Dunn the heart convention" he said cheerfully "The others are not here yet."
Three hours later I went up to bed. I had not seen Alison alone again. The noise was at its height below, and I glanced down into the garden, still bright in the moonlight Leaning against a tree, and staring intertwinedly into the billiard room, was Johnson.
CHAPTER XXIX
In the Dining Room
That was Saturday night, two weeks after the wreck. The previous five days had been full of *swift*-following events—the woman in the house next door, the picture in the theater of*
man about to leap from the doomed train, the admirer at the Dallas, and Richard Telescope that Allison was the key to the case. In quick succession, come our visit to the Carter place, the finding of the rest of the telegram, my seeing Allison there, and the strange interview with Mrs. Conway. The Cresson trip stood out in my memory for its serio-comic horrors and its one real thrill. Then—the discovery by the police of the seasick bag and the bit of chain, Hotchkiss producing triumphantly Stuart for Sullivan and his subsequent discomfiture; McKnight at the station with Allison, and later the confession that he was out of the running
And yet, when I thought it all over the entire week and its events were two sides of a triangle that was narrowing rapidly to an apex, a point. And the said apex was at that moment in the drive below my window, resting his long legs by sitting on a carriage block, and smoking a pipe that made the night hideous. The sense of the ridiculous is very close to the sense of tragedy. I opened my screen and whistled, and Johnson looked up and grinned. We said nothing. I hold up a handful of cigars, he extended his hat, and when I finally went to sleep, it was to a soothing breeze that wafted in salt air and a faint aroma of good tobacco. I was thoroughly tired, but I slept restlessly, dreaming of two detectives with Pittsburgh warrants bing hold up by Hotchkiss at the point of a splint, while Alison fastened their hands with a chain that was broken and much too short. I was roused about dawn by a light rap at the door and, opening it, I found Forbes, in a pair of trousers and a pajama coat. He was as pleasant as most fleshy people are when they have to get up at night, and he said the telephone had been ringing for an hour, and he didn't know why somebody else in the blank etryk house couldn't have heard it. He wouldn't get to sleep until noon
As he was palpably asleep on his feet, I left him grumbling and went to the telephone. It proved to be Richey, who had found me by the simple expedient of tracing Alison and he was jubilant.
You'll have to come back, he said. "Got a railroad schedule there."
I don't sleep with one in my pocket. I rested, but if you hold the line I'll call out the window to Johnson. He's probably got one."
Johnson: I could hear the laugh with white. McKnight comprehended the situation. He was still chuckling when I came back.
Train to Richmond at 6:30 a.m. I said, "What time is it now?"
Four Listen I little We've got him Do you hear "Through the woman an at Baltimore Then—the other woman the lady of the restaurant"—he was obviously avoiding names who is playing our cards for us No—I don't know why and I don't care But you be at the Incubator to night at eight o'clock If you can't shake Johnson, bring him bless him"
To this day I believe the Sam Forboes have not recovered from the surprise of my unexpected arrival, my one appearance at dinner in Granger a clothes, and the note on my dresser which informed them the next morning that I had folded my tents like the Arabs and silently stolen away. For at half after five Johnson and I, the former as uninquisitive as ever, were on our way through the dust to the station three miles away and by four that afternoon we were in Washing ton. The journey had been uneventful. Johnson relaxed under the influence of my tobacco and spoke at some length on the latest improvements in gallows dilating on the absurdity of cutting out the former face passes to see the affair in operation. I remember too that he mentioned the curious anomaly that permits a man about to be hanged to eat a hearty meal. I did not enjoy my dinner that night.
Before we got into Washington I had made an arrangement with Johnson to a tender myself at two the following afternoon. Also I had wired to Alison asking her if she would carry out the contract she had made. The detective saw me home and left me there.
Mrs. Kopton received me with dignified reserve. The very tone in which she asked me when I would dine told me that something was wrong.
Now what is it Mrs. Kopton? I demanded finally when she had informed me in a patient and long suffering time that she felt worn out and thought she needed a rest.
"When I lived with Mr. Justice Springer, she began acidly her mending basket in her hands. It was an orderly well conducted household. You can ask any of the neighbors. Meals were cooked and, what a more, they were eaten there was none of this here one day and gone the next' bushes."
"Nonsense," I observed "You're tired, that's all, Mrs Klopton And I wish you would go out, I want to bathe"
"That's not all," she said with dignity, from the doorway "Women coming and going here, women whose shoes I am not fit—I mean women who are not fit to touch my shoes—coming here as inpatient as you please, and asking for you"
"Good heavens!" I exclaimed "What did you tell them—her whichever it was"
"Told her you were slick in a hospital and wouldn't be out for a year!" she said triumphantly "And when she said she thought she'd come in and wait for you, I slammed the door on her"
"What time was she here?"
"Late last night. And she had a light-hatned man across the street. If she thought I didn't see him she don't know me." Then she closed the door and left me to my bath and my reflections.
At five minutes before eight I was at the Incubator, where I found Hutchins and McKnight. They were bending over a table, on which lay McKnight's Total armament—a pair of plating, an elephant gun and an old cavalry saber.
---
"Draw up a chair and help yourself to ple." he said, pointing to the arsenal. "This is for the benefit of our friend Hotchkiss here, who says he is small and fond of life." Hotchkiss, who had been trying to get the wrong end of a cartridge into the barrel of one of the revolvers, straightened himself and mopped his face.
"We have desperate people to handle," he said pompously, "and we may need desperate means."
"Hotchkiss is like the small boy whose one ambition was to have people grow ashen and tremble at the mention of his name," McKnight jibed. But they were serious enough, both of them, under it all, and when they had told me what they planned, I was serious, too.
"You're compounding a felony," I remonstrated, when they had explained. "I'm not eager to be focked away, but, by Jove, to offer her the stolen notes in exchange for Sullivan."
"We haven't got either of them, you know" McKnight remonstrated "and we won't have, if we don't start. Come along Fido to Hotchkiss.
The plan was simply itself. According to Hotchkiss, Sullivan was to meet Brisson at Mrs Conway a apartment at 5 30 that night with the notes. He was to be paid there and the papers destroyed. But just before that interesting finale, McKnight ended, "we will walk in, take the notes, grab Sullivan and give the police a jolt that will put them out of the count."
I suppose not one of us, slewing around corners in the machine that night had the faltest doubt that we were on the right track or that Fake, scurvy enough before was playing into our hands at last Little Hotchkiss was in a state of fever, he alternately twitched and examined the revolver, and a fear that the two moments might be synchronous kept me uneasy. He produced and dilated on the scrap of pillow slip from the wreck, and showed me the stiletto, with its point in cotton batting for suitkeeping. And in the intervals he implored Richer not to make such fine calculations at the corners
We were all grave enough and very quiet, however, when we reached the large building where Mrs Conway had her apartment. McKnight left the power on, in case we might want to make a quick getaway and Hotchkiss gave a final look at the revolver. I had no weapon. Somehow it all seemed melodramatic to the verge of force. In the doorway Hotchkiss was a half dozen feet ahead. Hitchcock fell back beside me. He dropped his affectation of gassy and I thought he looked tired. Same old Sam, I suppose" he asked
"Some only more of him"
"I suppose Alarm was waiting is she" he inquired irrelevantly
"Very well I did not see her this morning Hotchkiss was waiting near the elevator McKnight put his hand on my arm. Now look here old man," he said "Ive got two arms and a revolver, and youve got one arm and a splint. If Hotchkiss is right, and there is a row, you crawl under a table."
The douce I will! I declared scornfully
We crowded out of the elevator at the fourth floor and found ourselves in another theatrical halfway of drapes and armor. It was very quiet; we stood uncertainly after the car had gone, and looked at the two or three doors in sight. They were heavy covered with metal, and sound proof. From somewhere above caho the metallic accuracy of a pianopiano and through the open window we could hear or feel the throb of the Cannonball's engine.
Well Sherlock McKnight said, "what's the next move in the game? It is our jump, or theirs. You brought us here.
None of us knew just what to do next. No sound of conversation penetrated the heavy doors. We waited uneasily for some minutes, and Hutchkiss looked at his watch. Thon he put it to his car.
"Good gracious" he exhilted, his head cooked on one side, "I believe it has stopped I am afraid we are late." We were late. My watch and Hottehk agreed at nine o'clock and, with the discovery that our man might have come and gone, our rest in the
For at Half After Five Johnson and Were on Our Way Through the Dust to the Station, Three Miles Away.
For at Half After Five Johnson and I
Were on Our Way Through the Dust
to the Station, Three Miles Away.
adventure began to flag McKnight
motioned us away from the door and
rang the bell. There was no response,
no sound within the rang it twice,
the last time long and vigorously,
without result. Then he turned and
looked at us.
"I don't half like this" he said.
"That woman is in, you heard me ask
the elevator boy. For two cents
I'd-
I had seen it when he did. The door was, alas, about an inch, and a narrow wedge of rose-colored light showed beyond. Then, with both men at my heels, I stepped into the private corridor of the apartment and looked around. It was a square reception hall, with hats, and a couple of chairs. A lantern of rose-colored glass and a desk light over a writing-table across made the room bright and cheerful. I was empty.
The
place was just of no importance it was made us feel the weakness of our position. Some such instinct made MoKnight suggest division.
"We look like an invading army," he said. "If she's here alone, we will startle her into a spasm. One of us could take a look around and—"
"What was that? Didn't you hear something?"
The sound, whatever it had been, was not repeated. We went awkwardly out into the hall, very uncomfortable, all of us, and flipped a coin. The choice fell on me, which was right enough, for the affair was mine, primarily.
"Wait just inside the door," I directed, "and if Sullivan comes, or anybody that answers his description, grab him without ceremony and ask him questions afterwards."
The apartment, save in the hallway, was unlighted. By one of those freaks of arrangement possible only in the modern flat, I found the kitchen first, and was struck a smart and unexpected blow by a swinging door I carried a handful of matches, and by the time I had passed through a butler's pantry and a refrigerator room I was completely lost in the darkness Until then the situation had been merely uncomfortable; suddenly it became grisly. From somewhere near came a long sustained grenon, followed almost instantly by the crash of something—glass or china—on the floor.
I struck a fresh match, and found myself in a narrow rear hallway. Behind me was the door by which I must have come with a keen desire to get back to the place I had started from, I opened the door and attempted to cross the room. I thought I had kept my sense of direction but I crashed without warning into what from the resulting jangle, was the dining table, probably had for dinner. I cursed my stupidity in getting into such a situation, and I cursed my nerves for making my hand shake when I tried to strike a match. The groan had not been repeated.
I braced myself against the table and struck the match sharply against the sole of my shoe. It flickered faintly and went out. And then, without the slightest warning, another dish went off the table. It fell with a thousand splinterings, the very air seemed broken into crashing waves of sound. I stood still, braced against the table holding the red end of the dying match and listened. I had not long to wait the groan came again, and I recognized it, the cry of a dog in straits. I breathed again.
Come old fellow," I said "Come on, old man. Let's have a look at you."
I could hear the thud of his tall on the floor but he did not move. He only whimpered. There is something companionable in the presence of a dog, and I fancied this dog in trouble slowly. I began to work my way around the table toward him
"Good boy!" I said, as he whimpered. We will find the light which ought to be somewhere or other around here, and then—"
I stumbled over something and I drew back my foot almost instantly. Did I step on you old man?" I exclaimed and bent to pat him. I remember straightening suddenly and hearing the dog pad softly toward me around the table. I recall even that I had put the matches down and could not find them. Then, with a bursting horror of the room and its contents, of the glibbering dark around me I turned and made for the door by which I had entered
I could not find it. I felt along the endless waistscoting, past miles of
"The Notes, Probably."
wall. The dog was beside me, I think, but he was part and parcel now, to my excited mind, with the Thing under the table. And when, after accents of search, I found a knob and stumbled into the reception hall, I was as nearly in a panic as any man could be.
I was myself again in a second, and by the light from the hall I led the way back to the tragedy I had stumbled on. Bronson still sat at the table, his elbows propped on it, his cigarette still lighted, burning a hole in the cloth. Partly under the table lay Mrs. Conway, face down. The dog stood over her and wagged his tail.
McKnight pointed silently to a large copper ash tray, filled with ashes and charred blots of paper.
"The notes, probably," he said ruefully "He got them after all and burned them before her. It was more than she could stand. Stabbed him first and then herself."
Hotchkiss got up and took off his hat. "They are dead," he announced solemnly, and took his note-book out of his hatband.
McKnight and I did the only thing we could think of—drove Hotchkiss and the dog out of the room, and closed and locked the door. "It's a matter for the police," McKnight asserted. "I suppose you've got an officer tied to you somewhere, Lawrence? You usually, have."
We left Hotchkiss in charge and wont downnatares. It was McKnight who first saw Johnson, leaning against a park railing across the street, and called him over. We told him in a few words what he had found, and he grinned at me cheerfully.
"After awhile, in a few weeks of months, Mr. Blakley," he said, "when
you get tired of snorkeling around with the blood stain and fingerprint specialist upstairs, you come to me. I've had the follow you want under surveillance for ten days!
Some Simple, Precautions That Will
Mean Addition to Life of
Now that taffeta petticoats are coming back again it is well to know how to make them last as long as possible.
Do not choose a silk that has much dressing in it, as it cuts much more quickly.
Do not have much shirring or tucking as the effort to keep dust brushed out is hard on the petticoat.
Do not fold in a chest or trunk as the creases will cut quickly. Hang by straps to the waist band.
Have a silk skirt put on a narrow band; pulling on a draw string, besides giving greater bulk, cuts the material.
One woman says her skirts wear longer if she hangs them upside down by loops placed on under side of ruffle.
Do not save your taffeta petticoats. They will cut from hanging too long in a closet, so you might as well have the satisfaction of wearing them out.
The Home.
Stuffed potatoes are made by mixing cheese and bread crumbs in with the contents.
A few alliace are an improvement to stews, thick soups and gravy. They give almost the same flavor as if wine had been added.
Plaster figures in hard or stabaster finish are easily cleaned by dipping a stiff toothbrush in gasoline and scrubbing into all the crevices.
If you have a black gown that needs freshening cleanse it thoroughly with clear black coffee diluted with water and containing a little ammonia.
After the weekly washing rub a little vinegar and spirits of camphor over the hands. This will keep the hands in good condition summer and winter.
Garments that are to be hung out to air can be put on hangers rather than planned to the line. This prevents sagging or marking with the clothespins
Cleaning Lace
Pure alcohol can be used with won-
dful success as a means of cleaning
black Spanish or chantilly lace. The
alcohol should be poured into a clean
basin and whipped with the hand until
it is frothy when the lace should
be dipped into it and well worked
about with the fingers until the dirt
is removed. After gently squeezing
out the spirit the lace should be laid
on a folded cloth, the patterned edge
fastened down with a pin. When per-
fectly dry the lace should be unplinned
and pressed gently between the palms
of the hands until smooth in lieu of
ironing it, as this would flatten the
pattern and scall the color
COMBINED FAN AND BOUQUET
Parlalan Novelty That Has Won and Well Deserves the Favor of Fashion
A decidedly novel) and attractive fan is this that first appeared in the ballrooms of Paris. The framework of the article is like that of an ordinary fan, but through holes in the tops of the sticks a ribbon is strung. At the end of each stick is sewed an artificial flower rose lily or some other type, and running from the bottom of the handle to the top is a border piece of ribbon, tied in a bow. When the fan is closed it so closely reem-
Bouquet
blies a bouquet of natural flowers that the difference is impossible to detect except on close examination. The illustration is helped by the flowers being performed so that in odor, too, they resemble the blooms they represent. A fancy metal ring, which may be of precious metal, and which looks like a bracelet, runs up outside the sticks when the fan is closed and holds them together. As can be seen the novelty combines usefulness with a high degree of ornamentality.
Baked Apples.
One cup granulated sugar in pudding dish, one half teaspoon of cinnamon, pinch of clove stirred in sugar, one cup cool water; put whole apples in bowl and bake slowly.
Victim of Fate.
"I saw you, talking to Mrs. Featherly.
Bha seemed excited.
"A case of bunched anniversary.
She was born the day before. Christmas and married the day after, and one present answers for all three occasions."
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SATURDAY. ..,....JUMB 23, 101
MY STORY
OF MY-LIFE
BY Wear aay)
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FRE PHOTO. Ta
APRIL IBISIO VEAP
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CHAPTER XVIL.
4 knock ovT OORMETT, TX OREATZAr
BOXER OF THEM ALL.
AB Seaside A. O. at Coney Is-
land was packed that Frifay
night when 1 fought Corbett.
At least 8000 people tumed
cut, Corbett was Grut tu thp ring, and
I didn't keep bim waiting. George
Considine, Billy Maédeo. Gus Bublin
and Leo Pardello were {a Jic's corner,
and Brady, Ryan, Jack and Dupkhorat
wore bebind me. Charile White, the
eeforve, came to tea minutes Inter.
‘As soon as Jim and [ met wo abook
donds, and it was Uke meeting an old
frend. \e wére golog to Oght all
eight, but that was a business propod!-
ton. Corbott smiled as if be was half
Uickled to death to soo me again, and
I guess bo was. Jim was the oniy wan
fo tho whole place who knew what
kind of Sighting condition bo was In
(hat night. He koow be was Mt to
Oght for bis life. ‘
‘The bell rang, and: wo camo together
slowly In the middle of the riog. 1
had plenty of time to aizo Corbett up.
His akin was white as marble oxcept
around bis wrists and bls neck and
hus head, whore he was tanted to a
sort of mahogany color. Anybody
could wee that .bo'd beon doing a lot
of work out fo the sua.
My recollection of this Oght ts @ Iit-
Go confused it waan't Uke apy Ogbt
I'd been tn before. Right at tho atart
Corbett begun dancing around, Ught
as a feather, to and out, reaching for
mo with the left end getting away
from my Tushes fp a way that made
qe fool 90 foolish 1 bad to stop and
laugh, Thoo when ! grinned be'd jab
again and jump away Uke « rabbit.
The crowd was cheering Corbétt for
bis cleverness, aod bo deserved all the
ebeering be got. 1 landed op him now
‘and then, bot ho was always gotug
away so fast that the blows didn’t do
much damage It's a lot Master to
beat @ man who'll stand up aod fibt
than one who runs away and picks bis
own time to trade punches mith you.
I kept oo chasing Jim ax fast as |
could, slamming punches at bim wheo
‘ever bo was in rango. Bost of thom
‘bo jumped away from or ducked, some
ho dlocked aad some got through to
tho mark. In the meantime be was
pecking at we witty both hands with-
Be tee
Aan S at
-%7) ep). ear.
eh oe
et toil
\ i 4
fu rma more ane tovont mx was
mt eae
out stopping except for @ sprint when
1 got too hot on bis trail, Now aod
thea he came to a clinch and as White
broke os sway snappbd‘left and right
to my fade almost before 1 could move
We was the featest man acd the great:
‘git boker 1 ever aaw that night. Along
tn the third oF fourth robtid Corbett
faa arcdod and around aie In clrolen,
while I stood and pivoted to face Bim.
When I shelly lunged out to get hind
Gordstt Jaughed and ran away un
touched. As the Aght want slong be
mxow micre and more conddent aod
GHed “bis right band ow od thea,
eondlik tt over as Dutd aa b6 boul.
tithe ninth round Jin thought be
wasWwitming, He rapped ins a ‘equ
ple onthe chio and then swung. his
right'to'the exine spot so bard that thé
forrh.be‘the:biw atioved img tr & on
miy RealA(%Y-coitd ade bis area Dinte
aa he-thavght-He tad me ateggeriqn.
and’ fot acndinuta ‘be. tusbed and. took
4 Wild) Chance mizing with ma io the
hate iiasdinga, Racexour.. stiased
cad) Necead | Mey News aad, walked
SR Ca ieoithantg?etirdlag
“apdich.\" tir the! geat roped he wont ar
ee tee Sate lied eae Teg Rees eee Rs
mo just as bard. It was wondorfu:
how that fellow could land and ge!
away. 1 chased tim around and
around the ring unul I was tired, and
at) be sprinted or dashed to agala
when bo saw an opeaing. My noad
was biceding, and my right eye was
badly swollen.
The Oght wes half over now. All
song Tommy Ryan kept tefog me to
“take my ume” and “jab ~ When
I walked out at the beginning of each
round Brady yolled {nstructions after
me 80 loud that Corbett couldn't heip
‘bearing, 1 asked Brady if ho was try-
Ing to got me licked, and ho kept quiet
after that. Ryan was still telling mo
to jab and box and take my time, but
asthe Oght went slong the crowd
yolled “Corbett, Corbett, Corbett!”
louder arid louder, and {began to
thiok what the decision might bo if I
didn't get Kim. Why sbould I bo
changing my style to sult Pommy
Ryan tnd be boxing a man fe Cor-
ett instead of cutting loose as hatd
and fast os I could until 1 landed the
right punch? 1 began to suspect that
Ryan wasn litte wore interested in
Corbott than-bo was in me. I told
Byau fo keep wtill and went out to
Oght my own Ogbt Round after
round 1 ebasod Corbett and tanded
wheoever 1 could get him into a cor-
cer Even then bo blocked most of
the blows with bis elbows or his
crossed arms But one of my swings
glanced from hia shoulder and bit him
00 the Jaw and sbook him badly, and
after that { jauded ofteser In the
nineteenth Jim looked tired. He tried
to duck under a left and lost his foot-
tng and fell He jumped up quickly
‘Through this nivetecath rquad Ryan
kopt yelling.to mo and tolling me f
“gtick the left out.” Near the end o.
the round there was a fuss {o the cor-
ner, and when 1 walked back for the
reat boforo thé twentleth Brady ‘was
ta the corner and Tommy Ryan bad
lsappeated, Bray told me afterward
that Ryan's advice made bim more
and more suspicious as the Oght weot
on,' Te began to suspect tbat Ryan
was trying to make me losa, so ho
Jumped up and told Ryan to get out
ot my corner
“Get down or f'll bust your bead,”
Ryan sald
Brady jumped down and went out
for two policenwn with thelr clubs.
Ho put them right bebind my corner
and climbed up again.
“You get away froat thls corner,”
anid Brady .
“Got away yourself before I take «
puoch at you." sald Ryao.
“This te my club, and I'm Jeffs man-
-ager.” said Brady “I'm just birlng
you. If you don't get back there aod
Hkeep still I'll band you to those two
copa, and they'll throw you oy”
Tommy looved at the cops and climb-
ed own, Brady jumpod up, and az 1
came back to my corner ho whispered:
“Jina, they've got tbe tlp over in the
other corner that Corbett’s going to
/get tho declatom. Your only chance ts
to knock bim out. Porget everything
about boxing and go out and Nght”
From thet on 1 mover gave Coybett
time to stop op one spot. | know I'd
‘hare to get bm. 1 bad my socond
wind, and the tired fosthg bad all
gone. Ax for Corbett, bo was wilting
Gamo and clever as he was, be could
not stend the pace much longer. ‘He
rap for bis life around the ring, end
when T caught him be alipped hls loft
sboitder {nto me and clinched. Io the
tweuty-econd I swung my right so
hard {het tt Knocked him Gown, al-
thougii ft only landed on his shoulder.
‘Corbett jamped up instantly -and mix.
ea with me 1 gut a heavy left toto
‘his ribs, which wore red abd sore now,
and he wioced and lost some of his
*, 1 5
‘The dell rang. and 1 wont back to
‘my chair, Tom OTourke ran arcund
‘to my corner and eal to Brady: “Por
heaven's sake send this min In, Ho's
doalngt”
“[ am, am 11" 1 gald to myself. Just
then the bell rang for the beginniog
of the tweotpthird, ‘There wasn't
much tine left, "and t surely dida't
want to riak foaing that champlonthip
doctaten. 1 fucaped out of my chalr
and ran at Corbett as hard ep I could
6, Tle Jabbed tlehtly edd. skipped,
‘gWay, but before he could mathor Bits.
BROT whe after dice with 4 tian 1,
“THE RICHMOND: PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. § 7 —
drove bim back nearly to the Fopos.
and bere. 1 anw the right chance af
jlast. 1 booked my left toto bis stom
ach, throwing bim back bard against
the ropes within & yard of bls own
corner. As he bovaced back 1 brought
the feft up obliquely to bis Jaw—my
double punch. It tlfted Corbett ap ia
tho alr, and bo foll to the oor solidly
like a sack of grain. ls right arm tay
ander plm and bia ueck rested across
tho rope of the ring He atrugwiod 0
little and foll back timp, end White
began to count Whilo the count was
{golng on 1 aaw Considine trying to
‘throw a bucket of water over Corbett
to arouse bim, which was agalast the
roles of tho game Reaching through
‘the ropes, I kicked at Considine to
drivo bim back, and be fell orer (wo
‘or threo people, water bucket and all
Jim was counted out, and Charlie
White belped to carry him to his cor-
nor After a minute oF a0 be ravived
enough (© ntaggcr over and sake
bands I folt worry for him, for he
cortainly bad mado a great and a
‘gume Oght :
That was # night to be remombered.
‘Tho tight had beeo so sensational that
‘whon ft was all over the crowd sent
wild, Euadreds of people ewarmed
‘over the ring. some cheering for Cor
det because of his Guo showing and
some for me because I bad won like &
champion with a knockout. 1 got
Greased a8 2000 as 1 could and started
for Ben Cohen's. I had my lucky No.
‘Vrootn there that wight It wes only
‘4 block oF a0 from the club, and I trled
to bustle through the crowd But it
was no oto, Before { knew what wan
happening a lot of men grabbed me
and shoved me up ov thelr shoulders
There wasa't any use Io strogallog. $0
I oat lay back acroxs a buch of
heada as if 1 bad # couch uoder me,
with a big cigar fo my mouth, and
ae thn Deck et-in:
| BRAKES ON BATTLESHIP. |
:] Steet wings on indians Open
to Check Speed
Fe
ea aii
a
za ee
Is Se: eke
WONT ADOPT 'SHIP- BRAKES
Navat Board Pings tpineréases Oange
Although It has been demonstrated
by practical trials that were mado oo
the: battlenllip Indiana that what {a
known as the “ship brake,” will uo
douptedly stop a verse! in somowbat
feag thme than were it not employed,
the device hes been found anauitable
for naval usage.
‘The saval board which conducted
the teat holde that the brake, which
‘teaomblen # bara door on elther side
& the abl, would toon become clog
ted with barnacles unless constantly
employed. {t would also tucrease the
danger from torpedo attack; would be
& grave menace In close evolutions,
and would retard the speed of the abip
Murdered by Black Hand.
Fatlure to hold » Biack Hand so
cloty's order to give up money resulted
{a the brutal murder of Tony Serafina,
one of a gang of, Itallans emplosed by
Fogel & Co, of Williamsburg, 1p con
structing 2 pleco of state road lead
fog out of Neffarille, ocar Lancastet
Pa
‘Tho murdored man, who bad been
tm this country twenty years, hed
amasned ® fortune of considerable
aire, Some was kept tn banks Jo
Philadelphia and New York, but be
was-known to hate tore thas $2900
on his person constantly. 3
Gaveral Gays ago wn italian; calla
Tony applied to Bowel & Co. for eit.
'’Phone, 577. Rtchmoad, Va
- A. D. PRICE, .
’ Funeral Director, Emibaimer ahd Liveryman.
an Orde proniptr aud at short sete by telégraph or tel
Pee ot ost wiih an neceeey convents, enemas.
pet wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing bot @ret-
ee buggies, etc. Keop constantly on hand ane fon-
—wy No, 212 East Leigh Street. go
(Residence Next Dow.)
OPEN ALL DAY AND NIGHT.—Man oa Daty AU Night.
PHOTOS. :
‘Wo Qier you, the IStest and most artistic photos, at @ more
nee than you can‘obiain clsowhere.
Giger ee ee Tn Talon Halaying emt conan
We will also be plessod to quote you prices on exteriop 45u
from old photos, » specialty, amet STOTT,
Geo. ©. Brown, PHOTOGRAPHER,
603 North 2ndSt, = - Richmond, Va.
W. I. JOHNSON,
Funeral Director and Embalmer, |
Office & Warerooms, 207 N Foushee St. Cor. Broad.
HACKS FOR HIRE.
Orders by Telepmane or Telegraph filled. Weddings,
Suppers and Hittertainments promptly attended.
Telephone, 686. Residence tn Botlding.
ployment. Serafina. who was the com
misaary on the work, feared thy
Granger whom he avoided at al
times When the men went to thei
@inner they found the storekeeper
body iylag in a pool of blood He ha:
first been shot. and bis bead wie het
eplit open with an axe The coS. 1
of the shanty lodicated a deaperat
struggle All of Serafina’y money war
pe
Bre
ead
id irs
PRor. p. D. Biod#, MD.
Strange, Wonderful, but True are
the Awe Striokon Tests glyon by
‘The Great Australias Medium.
PROF. D. D. BRUOE, M. D,
the only Mving Apostle of Scfence
of the Myiterié,
#598. fe Gold tb akiy one te the
World to compete with him. Por-
sessing mote powef than any four
mediums combined.
‘No card, trance or hand bambug.
Greatest Hindoe Modium ta the
= ‘Wortd.
80 GREAT 13 HIS POWSH that
he ean tell you while ta w Clairyoy-
ant state, all you whi to know wil
out ‘a word. being spoken. "orn
all yo wadrlisvers, poofers-and seer
are> bring all your akepticlam with
ou Sill open your area to i
rivets chamber mystery. ,Oome
a broxen ‘Reartod wed, ail eit
See
. “
Sart ae challenge ‘oss wente
compete with Rim ty ehastay
wendy marriage with (8s ene ide
gone and the empty mvovy bolt wu:
‘found near tho shanty
” ehtted tn Flet Fight. :
Private Heory Fry of the One
Huatred and Forty fourth company,
at Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's tslang,
near Charleston 8 ( has boen we
by Private J T Murray in a det gh
love; ‘uniting the separated and
bring back the tost one. ‘Traces Jost
or stolen goods. Unesstha hidden
treaaures. Removes evil influences
Crosses, Spells, Tl! Lack, cures trick
ang Cdnjurations, gives Luck and
8 ta all you nndertake. Cures
the Tobacco and Liquor Habite Al-
lows the Captive to bo set Free.
He 1s the onlf one that will give
& Written Guarantee to complete
your business or refuod your money.
Are you alck? Do you Know what
the trouble iy with you? Come a®
Oe te EA ere
eurmatigm,
acd at Diseased oust. ane gre
on Hofwe Racing and ell Games of
chanel”
No matter what alls you, come
and soe this wonderful man. Head-
jer bave you notlo¢d that eome peo-
plo have & bard time to get along,’
no miter how they toll, while oth-
era have succwsY Many wealthy
men and welnin owe thelr suocees
td this wondettal man.
Ho will tall you whom you will
marry. . WII you be happy t He
efit ttt you Who your friends and
enerhfey ari. Gas you tell? Dea
aks 4 leap im ie dark, Dut be si
vided By, this Wohdertal man. Great-
eat’ P tn éxlatenoe.
i mente abe
. YY ote
tinke: TGS $4t I peed Son.
et) ny AL ML fo $240 Pe
7 $8,180" B,
mE AA ELE oe
cent od
[. PLO wilt i an
‘$10 B.S Ca SRO 4
The Hawkins-Price Co.
Tair Growers and Restorers.
CGARRNES A PULL LINE OF NATURAL HUMAN HAIR
BRAIDS BANGS, POMPADOURS AND THE LATEST STYLES IN
FRONT PIECES--ALL COLORS BLACK BROWN, GRAY AND
MIXED GRAY THOSE DESIRING PLAITS fO MATCH THE HAIR
MUST BE VERY SURE IN STATING EXPLICITLY THE COLORS
DESIRED IT IS ALWAYS SAFE TO SEND A SMALL SAMPLE OF
HAIR IF POSSIBLE, SU THAT WE MAY BE IN A POSITION TO
MATCH IT CORRECTLY
PRICES BRAIDS, (NATURAL HAIR) $250 ALL ROUND
POMPADOURS (NATURAL HAIR? Shoo FRONT PIECES:
(NATURAL Halk), $250. :
‘Tle Preparation has grote to be « foctuoe to sany of ube calotuaaton wo are
vod’ deigoted with les woaderal rain. Toa eects of th great Bat prepatitin te
ally place ft tne ebry alo ity owas ent te glowing teras ia aS "ocr patiogs
goad cits ceamare on offer mileuctory rota. We cua wal toua cle ange palocass.
Rroughoot ls and ether Grats to ae eal the ccanenlaloe the terest hike
te Soret people Ls ths taediate coast.
ie, ordey to cocviaes the mice Yiader of (he eerits and roalte of the
aAWAivS-pRiGe Gaul GROWN AND GSTORRL we will Som tnt tote pesdect
i at tetra hve ego Grae fo do pba are tnd ot
‘preparation and are to-day smoag fang Witness of the geaxine qualities.
We coool. dears the carrcpeadensy of Wot axpecng © tlncie ot saything ares
cuiblaGug_peepertion iy w Satural asd pore oeopound, the ingredtsals ot which wo
Seid ot edits to pt pak
We wil fat he denlal'tho poblo tant Une United Beaten Goreruest has placed
sutuoaa!” pried Habis on our balr Brepericn ty which ts pisisced, aod we i te
er Gertie fie germ freien vi pd atu Sag
Ee Sil gestions eeracre, Dakine, Core the Sealy. of ‘Tanpurfiies, estore Halr
0 eta Terps oc bald Hinata wbare beg Boots ey eee Deed. ‘Bhoe ote pe Cot
‘Tox Wack Besides suse the ow of powder soctely eaewrmnry anal fete
W'ioped oa all sie et'Gty ordat. ‘Minty ek'be Sas OF Pea bie hunt,
or Eryes Kcsety Gilet” Advrew all emmmeaiantions to” a
‘SAWEING-PRIOR COMPANY,
"Phone 4601. O16 N. ist Gt., Bi va.
way" Correspondence Btrtetly Goniential eq
ee eee
Rirhmond, Frederictab’g & Potomas R. B,
TO AMD FROM WASHINGTON AUD BEYOND.
Leave Richmond | Arrive Richmood
eb ett aoc apne tin
SESLE syregy bic pris ee elena
SeULE Mattia lish cx gyri
ste Aas- niet se aie| sian Fa nage se
sisal sees Byrd oie] oat Pa Bpraac aie
(ERE ee eilen| ogra Brent oee
ASEM mainte see fideo PC Reinet Bis
SOUP Dyed Sealeinsonigheyrapene,
‘ACCOMMODATION TRAIKO—WEEKDAYS,
tears ita six Too ene eave ir antiere
Arve prvd ak heb fro Presta
ira Phapta wo Arnst 30a Cr katienk
Arr tha Bt 600 4.03650 Frm able
cree
dnferiSressotrenrantect esd He aieas:
N & a NORFOLK &
. * WESTERN.
ONLY Ate mast, time to NoasOLE.
Sehadale te Rach Apeil 11 1868
Letra Dr, Sawat Ration Richaced, Duty:
For Nertole=owi a. My #00 P Mand 6:80
er Lyodibong cxd the Wet-#:00 AL ML, 102
Pe, bee Pa
ARRIVE RIOMEOKD.
Fre Uttwotiae ies tas Poa, as
rat Fate st ne oom Cute
"SET. ATT.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE.
EFTOONVS APRT 11, ren .
TRAIXE LEAYA mtviniowD Day.
pty Tas od tent Was Ma ta
ef Matos te kM, ole ae ae
oes, Ss a rc ok me, ea
te Pde vz. ti atta et
: tan toate, r San, Sek
ates “pe aye “a ¥
a Lom ed co
leo al res eed coenoe-
, B ORRREL, DP. A,
Your anbscrintlas to
ts Que. ST ee
‘Teant Leaves miomonn,
X. RofoUowing echete gers
only, oh inlraation aid art oof rarustenhy
Mi kM =beyetost fer Charter
wa a eo mite eee
phate ed atta ee Oe
Toretas’ coach teen Olin Staak
WGP ot a amt tay oan
°F Me air oe boo
YORK piven Loe
$90 F. M=Re Raxday—To, West Polat—eoe
alg for Balitow Mandy, “Welaats
11S PM —Monday, .Wadoendsy and Frider
Local to West Fotnt.
0 Ter Bondar Local to Went Plat
‘TRAM ARRIVE RICTKOND.
From te Bact 120 AML, 0 PM, ty
(Erp
BOR a, Re, Bandy: tie Fa, ety
prem West Polat? 81D A. Xan i
tang aad Wig ls PMs a
— z Dk
OEE wrote
C rl & oo.
Gil mere
i elim
es Loe cae
hae ha es Eo oct
38 ESR ea ee
faites axirye Som,
CSA ETE ew
mans
eee
icoxmnianmnenasitiies
JOHN M.
Higgi
Higgins,
Dewter tn
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, HQUGRS
F610 Bagi Peta
Fiaimeed, a
THREE
published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL,
JR., at 811 N. Pyrith Street, Richmond, Va.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., EDITOR
All communications intended for publication
should be sent so us to reach us by Wednesday.
THE PLANET is issued weekly. The subscription price is $1.50 per year in advance.
There are four ways by which money can be sent by mail at our risk—In a Post Office Money Order, by Bank Check or Draft, or an Express Money Order, and these three can be provided in a Registered Letter.
MONEY ORDERS—You can buy a Money Order at your Post Office, payable at the Richmond Post Office and we will be responsible for its delivery.
EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained at any office of the American Express On. the United States Express On. and the Wall's Purge On. for delivery of money suitable for money sent by any of these companies.
The Express Money Order is a safe and convenient way for forwarding money.
REGISTERED LETTER—A Money Order, registered in the Post Office, is within your reach, your Postmaster will Register the better you wish to send us on payment of ten cents. Then, if the Letter is lost or stolen, it may be sent you on money in this manner at our risk.
We cannot be responsible for money sent in letters in any other way than one of the four ways mentioned above. If you send your money in any other way, you must do it at your own risk.
HENEWALS, ETO.—If you do not want THE PLANET continued for another year after your subscription has run set, you then notify us by Postal Card to discontinue it. The authors have decided that subscribers to newspapers who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid are held liable for the payment of the subscription up to data when they order the paper discontinued.
COMMUNICATIONS—When writing to us to repay your subscription or to discontinue your payment, you should give your name and address to full observers we cannot find your name on our books.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS—In order to change the address of a subscriber, we must meet the former as well as the present address.
Federed at the Post Office at Richmond, Va. on second class matter.
SATURDAY ... JUNE 23, 1910
THE TROUBLE IN CALIFORNIA.
The feeling which has been aroused in this country against the championship battle between James J. Jeffries and Jack Johnson is largely due in our judgment to racial antipathy, and the growing apprehension among the Negro haters that Jack Johnson is liable to win the contest.
Of course there is a moral sentiment which abhors these kind of brutal exhibitions, but it has not been strong enough to exert such an influence as to cause the Governor of a great state to do what he himself has previously declared that he had no power to do.
That the contest will take place admits of no question as the promoters have too much money involved to give up on short notice. We have never been able to see that any race question whatever involved. White men are backing Jeffries and white men are backing Johnson. There is no more sentiment in it than there is in a white race horse and a black race horse. Jack Johnson is an athletic wonder just as Jeffries has been. He has all of the odds in his favor save those based upon race prejudice. He has made many blunders, but none in the matter of training. He likes advertising. He likes a fight whether it be with his fists or in the courts.
The people of the United States are against the match and yet the people of the United States will stand at every bulletin board in the country to enjoy themselves and be happy upon being able to read the result of each round as the game proceeds. This is an age of hypocrisy we believe. The temperance man condemns whiskey, and yet the temperance man takes his dram or toddy "on the sly." The moralist abhors immorality and yet the moralist will indulge in secret immorality, when he is sure of not being detected. The profound church officer will lay down the rule of conduct for the governing of the lay members and yet this profound church officer will violate the very rule that he advocates.
We do not mean to say that all of them are this way, but enough are culpable to cause the average person to sit up and take notice, wondering if this is an age of doception and the day of chronic deceit and duplicity. Still, these peculiarities existed during the time of the Saviour for they are spoken about in the scriptures.
Makes Due Threats Against Virgini
ana—Attacks the Cleveland
Gazette Too—Its Able
Editor.
The I. L. U of Dayton O. is evidently much disturbed by the agitation in the country coupled with the drastic treatment it has received at the hands of the efficient commissioners of insurance of this state. Hon. Joseph Button. It is issuing and distributing a circular which will react upon Mr. W G Critchlow Hon H C Smith is one of the best known race leaders in the country and his integrity is unquestioned.
Here is the circular
STATEMENT
The Cleveland Gazette, published by one Harry D Smith of Cleveland, Ohio carried in a recent issue an attack on this Union Sold attack was reprinted from the Richmond PLANET, Richmond Va. The Richmond PLANET was evidently given their piece by the Insurance Commissioner of Virginia. The Commissioner got the piece from the Dayton Journal, a daily paper published in Dayton, Ohio.
THE TRUTH
The Insurance Commissioner of Virginia opposes this Union because we refuse to be coerced by his department into paying tax in that state as an Insurance Company. This Union is not an Insurance Company, never has been, never pretended to be and never will be so far as now known. Therefore, it will not be forced into paying excessive insurance taxes in Virginia.
HOW IT ALL HAPPENED
The Insurance Commissioner's Department evidently worked some scheme to get an article evidently written in that office, into the columns of the Dayton Journal. They then evidently took the piece and sent it out to the papers of that state. Probably they hoged to thus put this Union out of business. It is certain they were afraid to stand for the story sent out, and so hid behind the name of the Dayton Journal.
THE PLANET
The PLANET got the piece and printed it. That paper was at that day and date under contract with this Union, duly signed and sealed their contract without notice to this They Violated a specific clause of Union This indicates to us the management behind the publication who regard their signed contracts so lightly The matter is now in the hands of attorneys for this Union to investigate that paper a financial standing with regard to civil suit for breach of contract
THE CLEVELAND GAZETTE
The Cleveland Gazette copied the piece from THE PLANET That paper had been trying to get some of the money of this Union for advertising and failed. Failing to get our money he becomes a knocker. Read these letters from the publisher of that paper to this Union and see.
THE LETTER
The Gazette
Cleveland, Ohio
Harry C. Smith, Proper'
(Dated)
September 30 1909
Mr Critchlow
Dear Sir — We will run your 54
inch adv. (electro) six months, every
other week, for sixty dollars cash
to accompany electrotype with order
to insert the same aa per instructions. This is an extremely low rate
because of the size and kind of adv.,
and the length of time for which
you desire it inserted. During its
life in the Gazette we will give you
without extra charge a ten line read
notice which you can send three
times—one every month
HERE IS ANOTHER
The Gazette.
Blackstone Bldg.
Cleveland, Ohio
Harry C Smith Propr
(Dated) November 4 1909
W.G. Critchlow,
Dear Sir —Were the rates we gave
you or your large electro adv satis-
factory or not? Answer
Yours very truly
Signed H. C SMITH
NOW WHAT DO YOU THINK OF
THAT?
These letters show for themselves.
Smith did not get the contract. Now
he starts knocking. He wanted our
$60 00, and falling to get same he
turns the other way What do you
think of that follow?
THE REASON WHY
The reason the Gazette did not get the contract was because of its statement in a letter dated August 20, 1909, as follows "The Gazette has no equal in its class (race) as an advertising medium, reaching more Afro-Americans in central, southern and western U 8. than any, other publication." That statement we know to be false and we can prove it. If the proprietor was so far from the truth in one statement in which we had the correct particulare, we would not care to trust him in others. Draw your own conclusions as to this paper's motive.
THE DAYTON JOURNAL
The next day after publication the Dayton Journal retracted the statement worked into its columns by the Virginia people. The management of the Journal say they cannot understand how such a statement got into their columns and they not only regretted it, but retracted it and published a complete denial signed by this union. Every other Dayton tally paper investigated the story, found it to be a "faked" newspaper story, and would not print a line of it.
FOR THE YOUNGEST
From the youngest to the oldest this store has everything for men's and boy's wear, and the smaller the boy the bigger the variety in styles.
From wash suits to fancy velvets, from school suits to dress up suits.
You will find we are more careful than our most exacting customer can be about the fit and general looks of Berry suits.
Hats, Sailor- Caps, Stockings, Shoes—everything for the summer boy, and Maldy Blouse for the girls.
O. N. Derry 16
Draw your own conclusions
THE STORY
The story referred to herein is false in nearly every particular—it is misleading—it is malicious—and the printing of it we believe constitutes criminal libel under the United States laws
RETRACTION
Every paper printing said story that comes to the attention of this Union will be asked to print a retraction of same. Failing to do so the matter will be referred to our attorneys, with instructions to spare no expense in investigating financial responsibility of every such paper, and where responsible to file suit for civil damages—and if possible to have arrested under the United State criminal libel laws. We purpose to protect our good name, the good name and integrity of our officials, and to stand back of the reputation for fair dealings that we have in the eight years past built up.
ONE MORE PAPER
One South Carolina paper published the story, too. This paper failed to get a 1910 advertising contract with this Union, though it was tried. That may have had something to do with their position—who knows? Their case has been placed under investigation
NOT A COLORED UNION
This is not a colored Union Neither is it a white Union This Union draws no color line It recognizes no race discrimination in accepting membership And this Union is a success. Over eight years in business—over 1,000 Unions chartered—over 58,000 memberships issued—and we are here ready to prove it to all honest comers Come and see us. We will show you what a bunch of hustlers can do when they start to build a business organization on straight business lines
COME AND SEE US.
We invite you or your friends to come and visit us. We will guarantee you the surprise of your lives when you see our institution. If you cannot come, send a friend who lives near You or your friends will be welcome.
ASK THEM.
If you find any one talking against this Union ask them what they know. If we please our members and customers, why not boost instead of knock? We do business with all people. We do not draw the color line. Our business is world wide, among people of all colors, creeds and races. We spend a lot of money in colored papers, and hope you appreciate it. Those who do not, will find us able and perfectly willing to place it in other papers.
Read our Union Journal Magazine. We will gladly exchange with you if you do not get it now. Say the word, and we will gladly send it to you every month. Then you will learn what we are doing.
Home Office, The L. L. U. Grand Lodge. (Inc.) $50,000.00 (- Dayton, Ohio, U. S. A.)
Y. M. C. A. Notes.
The Y. M. C. A Workers' Meeting was held last Sunday 9 30 A. M. in the Y M. C. A building, Chairman Itzecklah Walls led the meeting. This hour is of a great help to all the workers. Remember that every Sunday morning in building this meeting will be held.
The Y. M. C. A. Conference rendered a special literary program last Friday evening in the building. It was a great hit.
The work in the city home by the committee last Sunday was good. Twenty-one prisoners were led to accept Jesus Christ as their Personal Saviour in the jail Chairman C. E. White was right with his men. This work is a very important part or the Y. M. C. A.
The boys' meeting was a warm number last Sunday. Master Horace Scott read a special paper also Richard Ballard. Secretary Bornard Allen read a special poem. The boys are manifesting much interest in this department.
Men be on time Sunday ready for hard work and the other man. Workers' Meeting Sunday 9 30 A.M. at the Y. M. C. A building. Men rise early in the morning. A special meeting for boys Sunday 4 P. M at the Y. M. C. A building. Mr. Bernard L. Allen will address the men Sunday 5 30 P. M at the Y. M. C. A building. Warm singing. Men be on time. Dr. H J. Brown, of Baltimore, has been very suddenly called home. The lecture which he was to have delivered to married and single women is postponed There will be no meeting at the True Reformers' Hall for women Sunday. Please tell the other woman. Watch for the next date.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Lynchburg, Va., June 14, 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., ($150.00)
One hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Bro.
Rouben Chambers, who was a member of New Era Lodge, No. 136, of Lynchburg, Va.
Signed MRS. LYDIA CHAMBERS.
Beneficiary.
Witnesses
Boat Cap盐; Woman Drowns.
Mrs Gertrudo Griffin was drowned in Onedida lake, at Utica, N Y. Tuesday, when a wave struck the boat in which she was rowing with Willis Dunn, Jr. of Sylvan Beach. When the boat cap盐ed Dunn tried to rescue the woman but his hold slipped after he had clung to her fifteen minutes, all she disappeared in thirty feet of water.
Church Hit by Lightning and Burne.
The Holy Family: Polish Rome Catholic church at Sugar Notch, near Wilke-Barre, Pa., was struck by lightning and burned, Loss, $30,000.
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Send Name and Address Today—You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous.
I have in my possession a prescription for nervous dubility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural draina, or the follies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man 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, unbuilding, SPOT TOUCHING remedy ever devised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson, $998 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 $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but I send it antiquity free.
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Supposed Corps Brought to Life.
Called in to lay out a supposed corpse, William Detrict, an undertaker of Greencastle, near Wayneboro, Pa., found life in Miss Flora Hupert, a middle aged woman, victim of an overdose of medicine. He summoned Dr C McLaughlin, who resuscitated the woman after two hours.
Pigeon Lands on Ship at Sea.
A homing pigeon flow on board the steamer Kansas City, from Swansea, Wales, when the vessel was sixty miles east of Fire island. Captain Franklin reported, when the Kansas City reached New York, that the pigeon had a silver ring on its right leg marked "T S. L., 1804, 1849."
Naval Pageant and Land Parade
Viewed by Hundreds of Thousands,
Who Tender Him Great Ovation.
Theodore Roosevelt is home His reception on Saturday exceeded in enthusiasm any given to a private individual in this country, or elsewhere for all of that. That the expresident appreciated the honors bestowed upon him was plainly evident from his vigorous node to right and left, accompanied by his usual smiles.
Flags, bunting, Teddy bears, G O. P. elephants and welcome signs were seen everywhere.
The din was at its height when the Roosevelt party was esploded on the upper forward deck, the colonel boyishly waving his hat to Collector William Loeb and other friends on the revenue cutter Androscoggin.
By his side were Mrs. Roosevelt, Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, Miss Ethel and Kermit Roosevelt and Secretary of the Navy Meyer, who met the steamer at Sandy Hook Friday night. There was but one warship and five torpedo boats in the fleet, but it lacked nothing of dignity because of the necessary omission. There were twelve divisions, each commanded by a vice commodore under the general supervision of Fred B. Daleil. In the first and second division were steamboats carrying members of various political organizations.
Straight up the North river the procession moved, factories and vessels along the shores adding their whistles to the din that carried for miles. The boats were in two lines 200 feet apart and kept up the New Jersey side of the river to Fifty-ninth street, where a stakeboat was placed. On the return trip the boats followed the New York side and enabled Colonel Roosevelt to review the procession, the Androscoggin passing through the center of the fistula. By the time Colonel Roosevelt arrived at the Battery the boats were still moving up the river.
Col. Roosevelt and the reception committee disembarked at the Battery, where Mayor Gaynor awaited them. Every available foot of ground not guarded with physical force by the police was occupied, and it was with difficulty that Breadway was kept clear for the land parade.
The debarkation was the signal for the start of a hoarse roar from the crowd, which was but temporarily checked by the presidential salute of twenty-one guns from the North Carolina. The arrangements at the Battery were so perfect that Colonel Roosevelt was landed without inconvenience and made his way on a raised walk from the pier to the platform facing Battery park in comparative comfort. The windows and roofs of the surrounding skyscrapers reflected the masses of people on the Hudson's shores, and no point of vantage was too dangerous to lack an occupant.
According to the committee's program, the ceremonies of welcome were brief. The advance of Mr. Roosevelt to the front of the platform was the signal for a marvelous demonstration.
during which time he renewed his acquaintance with Mayor Gaynor and others and then waited for the tumult to subside. The noise would dale away, and then the colonel, catching sight of some child in the crowd who was waving a handkerchief, would smile broadly and wave his hand, and the noise began again.
The mayor's remarks were inaudible to those within the charmed roped circle in front of the stand and to the committeemen and others on the reserved section of the stand. The people seemed content with looking at the ex-president and occasionally cheering without other incentive.
Hence the same conditions prevailed when Colonel Roosevelt made his brief reply. He thanked the committee and through it New York and the states generally which had tendered him the welcome, which he felt more deeply than any honor yet tendered him.
If the naval parade was a success the parade up Broadway and Fifth avenue was trefully so. It was here that the thousands upon thousands who lined the streets could see the man who had caused this uproar and greet him, and the canyon of Broadway resounded with caers. Here, as at the Battery, the office buildings were all jammed with sightseers. Even the wonderful height of the Singer tower was no obstacle to privileged ones who gazed at a spectacle that must have resembled an ants' procession in their eyes.
The band of Squadron A, the crack cavalry troop of Manhattan, led the Spanish war veterans, of whom several thousand were in line in the khaki of the Cuban and Philippine campaigns. Bringing up the rear were Captain Jack Abernathy, federal marshal of Oklahoma, and his sons. Louis and Temple, aged ten and six years respectively.
From the Narrows to Central Park it was the same, a continuous ovation but Colonel Roosevelt seemed never too tired to bow and smile, and the satisfied the people.
COL. ROOSEVELT.
Latest Picture of the Former President.
SIX
The Parable of the Tares
Sunday School Lesson for June 26, 1910
Specialty Arranged for This Paper
LESSON TENT No. 24 26 35 43
Memo to the
GOLDEN TENT. The tent will be
the rightmost tent in the
kingdom of the tent. Matt 13 43
TIME. 10:30 a.m.
PLACE. The Sea of
Galilee presents itself for the paper
naum
Suggestion and Practical Thought
This parable helped the disciples to
understand some problems that con-
tinually presented themselves in their
thoughts about the kingdom of
heaven. It is a picture of the con-
tending forces of good and evil in the
world, and the history of the good.
The Good Seed. Vs. 21, 37, 35
"The kingdom of heaven" is the king-
dom which has its origin in heaven,
and which Jeans as king came to
establish on earth in which the laws
of heaven are obeyed on earth, so
that earth becomes like heaven
The Sower of the Good Seed —Vs. 24, 37. The man represents the “Bon of Man,” in whom God was manifest in the seed sowing. He is the source of all good seed. He began in the Garden of Eden, and has been sowing ever since. Every good man, wherever found, is a child of God, born from above by the Spirit, and made alive with the life of God.
The Field Sown —Vs. 24, 38. “The field is the world.” It is not the church, but the whole world, not Christian lands; but all lands in which the true church is the good seed. “In his field.” The whole world belongs rightfully to Christ. The sowing of tares is a usurpation Christ “came unto his own.”
The Good Seed —Vs. 24, 38. “The good seed are the children of the kingdom,” those who in heart belong to the kingdom, are filled with its spirit, and drive to live according to its principles.
God's children are good seed, living seed The principle of life, of increase is in them Dead seeds do not increase. A dead church does not grow, and this is fortunate, for neither God nor man destroys an increase of that kind of Christians or churches.
There is a great variety of good seed adapted to all seasons and all circumstances, producing different kinds of fruit at different times.
But remember that Christians are planted as well as sown, planted where God destroys them to be, by the streams of water" (Lea 1 3)
The Enemy Sowing Tarsa Among the Wheat — Va 25, 28, 39 "While man slopt, that is, secretly, when the good did not realize what was going on, any more than a sleeping person"
The beginnings of evil are often scarcely discernible The young often begin courses of evil, as unconscious of its tendencies and outcome, as if they were sound sage
"His Enemy"—The wicked one, the devil (vs 38-29). He was the original source of evil among men. The story is truly told in Genesis. God is not the author of sin either at first, nor at any time since. Everything God does is toward making men good.
"The tares are the children of the wicked one," filled with his spirit, living according to his principles, and under his control. They are not a degenerate form of virtue, but as distinct as virtue and vice. They often resemble the good till the fruit begins to appear, but they are as different as wheat and tares, as thistles and roses.
The Wheat and Tars Growing Together —Vs 26, 30. “Let both grow together until the harvest.” Because at first it is very difficult to distinguish between the wheat and the tars. The tars are counterfeit wheat. Because when the distinction is clearer, there is danger less “while you gather up the tars, ye root up also the wheat with them,” for the roots of the two are interlaced together.
It is absolutely necessary before the grain is used in the harvest, “to avoid the mingling of the kernels of the darnel and the wheat least the bread be polished.
The Harvest The Fate of the Tars. —Vs 30, 29-42. “Let both grow together until the harvest, which takes place at the end of the world” (v 29), or age
“Say to the reapers . . . the angois” (v 39), (Matt. 16 27, 24:21; 2 Thas. 1, 7); any beings or powers which accomplish this work.
"To burn them." So as to destroy their power of evil, and to keep them from spreading "They shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend" (v 41), that cause others to stumble in the path of righteousness. The Harvest. The blessings of the righteous.—Va. 30. 43. "Then, when separated from evil, "shall the righteous shine forth as the sun." Here are found hope and cheer short times of opposition and the flourishing of evil. Make the evil help the good. Christians themelizes are educated and disciplined by contact with the lares. They would not be nearly no good if shut off in a community by themselves. Tarsw would still come in. If the wheat does not seek to change the tarsw fate, whee
wheal will degenerate into tarea. This is always so when good people would force themselves in from all contact with the world, whether by monasteries and convents, or by exclusives of churches, or neglect of missionary work. As Professor Howne says, 'Character cannot be good regardless of all.'
HAMILTON MAKES LONG FLIGHT
172 MILES IN 209 MINUTES
Daring Avator Wins $'0,000 Prize Offered by New York Newspaper Cheered byuge Crowds
Charles I. Bauer on the little red hair in a suit, the upper arm and a few from New York to Philadelphia and back accented with the $'10 prize offered by the New York Times.
The flight was made without mischance. Stight as a person on the wing Hamilton had some other officers and farms winging an unrestricted course. At 2:25 am he was shaking hands with governor Smart of Pennsylvania right, right made from cowerners Island. He made the trip to Philadelphia in 1 hour and 49 minutes.
His luck failed him on the journey home or he might have beaten Paul than a record for uninterrupted sight — 117 miles London to Litchfield Fifty three miles from Philadelphia he lost his bearings mistaking a green patch of Jersey for Staten Island, and simultaneously two of the eight cylinders of his engine coughed and quit work. He dropped into the clutch of a swamp near South Amboy and it was hours before repairs could be made and the aviator could escape the immense crowd that swarmed from the Jersey towns.
As it was, his actual flying time for the 172 miles was 209 minutes, and he fulfilled to the letter his contract with the New York Times to make a round trip from New York to Philadelphia within twenty-four hours. Glenn H.
[Signature]
Photo by American Press Association
CHARLES K. HAMILTON
Curtles, the first man in this country to make long distance calls in a flying machine, said he considered Hamilton's achievement the greatest in the history of aviation unsurpassed in that Hamilton struck out a course for himself, without land buoys to guide him, without a charted route to help him, and accomplished the feat with such accuracy that he kept to the sea on the schedule he had laid out. Few men have received the kind of reception that Hamilton got when he dropped out of the clouds. Along the Battery, the water front of lower Brooklyn, the edge of State Island and the Jersey shore the plains and sea walls were black with people. Thousands of them had waited for hours, awayed by rumors that came from the Amboy swamp on Governor's Island, at the aviation grounds a thousand chicks were turned skyward.
Hamilton came so fast that a few seconds after the officer spotted him the aerialplane was discernible to the naked oye. You saw, painted against the gray mists of Staten Island a blur. Tep seconds more and it was a wide winged bird, a bird with its head tucked out of sight. On it came in a line a quarter of a mile south of the Statue of Liberty, 400 feet above the bay. In another flash of time you made out the clean lines of the planes and you could see Hamilton crouched over his steering wheel.
As the air currents, frisked above the water, they dipped the aerialplane to the left and right. While still over the bay, but rapidly nearing the sea wall of Governor's Island, Hamilton shut off power. The propeller ceased its faint droning, revolved slowly for a few times, and the machine commenced to drop, slowly at first; then faster. Hamilton set the motor working just long enough to reverse the propeller and make sure of an easy landing.
With yells exploding all around him, he dropped his biplane to the sands in a long sweep, as a gull dives. The bicycle, wheels thumped the ground, the airplane bounced a foot perhaps and then ran along without a far for less than fifty feet. The crowd engulfed the little man and gave him no chance to climb out of the machine and stretch his crimped limb. He was a sight. If ever in the world there was a soiled aviation, he was that bird.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
TAFT GIVES SNUB TO CONGRESSMAN
ANGERED BY HUMILIATION
New Yorker Declares He Made Appointment For President to Receive Delegation and Had No Warning That He Would Not Be Received
Representative Francis Burton Harrison (D) of New York said at a capitol that he had received a round at the White House from President Taft
In congress with Representative Gooding, Young and Kellner of Maryland, Mr Harrison served out of the office of Hewes to the White House to talk with the president at his using his office in provincing massacres of Hebrows in Russia.
After the party had waited some time it said Mr. Harrison the president so easily privately informed Mr. Harrison that the president declined to see him. So quickly was this done that the rest of the party had got into Mr. Norton's room before Mr. Harrison was missed
Mr Harrison was to have been the spokesman of the party and Mr Kellher appeared much surprised when called upon by Mr Norton to present those who had called with him. No explanation of the incident was given out at the White House. Mr Norton said that a statement on the subject probably would be made later. He refused further to discuss the affair. There was a general disposition to connect the affair with Mr Harrison a resolution introduced in the house several weeks ago and later withdrawn calling upon the attorney general for information in regard to his summary of the Glavis charges against Secretary Ballinger. The resolution asked for the correspondence of Oscar Lawler assistant attorney general for the interior department who it developed in the Ballinger Pinchot, investigation made a draft or memorandum of the letter exonerating Secretary Ballinger and dismissing L. R Glavis from the government service.
Representative Harrison was very indignant inasmuch he said as he had made the appointment with President Taft ten days ago and had received no warning that he was to be publicly humiliated. He declined to comment upon the incident further than to give a short statement of what occurred.
"When I reached the White House with the delegation, said Mr Harrison, I informed Mr Norton that we desired to see the president. The secretary went to the president a private office and returned with the information that the president could not see me.
"I then told Mr Norton that I had made an appointment ten days ago for the delegation accompanying me to ask the president, and Mr Norton again conferred with the president.
"When he returned he informed me that the president would see the delegation accompanying me but would not see me. I admit I was surprised almost beyond expression."
"I immediately left the White House."
Hospital Orderly Heir to $500,000.
A letter received from his father who lives in London, Eng, has told Albert Wright, an orderly at the Presbyterian hospital in Philadelphia, that his uncle a tea importer of Mining Lane London has died and left him $500,000. Wright has given up his position at the hospital and will sail for England this week Last January he married an English girl whom he had known since both were children.
Arrangement. Note and Add to Race
The premier event of the Twin City aviation meet at the Minnesota state fair grounds at St Paul Mnn on June 22 to June 25 will be a race be between Curtiss with his new model biplane Barney Oldfield with his 2007 Bonz, and Minor Heir the fastest harpese horse. The horse will pace on the half-mile track Oldfield will drive on the mile track and Curtiss will have a wider circuit to the air.
Gift For Taddy, Jr.
A live hear cub, caught near DuLuth, Minn. on Monday, has been sent to Teddy Roosevelt, Jr. as a wedding present by John C Greenway, of Cole rains, superintendent for the United Staples Steel company Greenway, who is a former Rough Rider, has gone to New York to greet the former president.
Sugar Men Convicted.
bracht guilty as charged in the indictment. As to the defendant, Bondernagel, we cannot agree."
Princeton Gets Proctor's $500,000.
As a result of a special meeting of the board of trustees of Princeton university the institution will acquire about $150,000 in gifts. The bulk of this comes as a renewal of the offer made by William Cooper Proctor of Cinnamint and brings to an end the controversy over the site of the graduate college.
Mr. Proctor in May 1900 offered the university $500,000 on condition that the gilbert raised an equal amount.
SIR JOHN HENRY
all to go to the graduate college During the interview over the site Mr. Proctor's gist was withdrawn. With the renewal of the gift the half milion to be given by the alumni is to be augment in plodgos from prominent alumni. Mrs Russell Sage it was announced has given $150,000 to add to the dormitories already donated by her and to build a great memorial tower 160 feet high in the northwest part of the campus. Wealthy Planter Burned at Stake. The police of Lake Charles La are making every effort to find the men who tied James Perkins a planter to a tree and burned him alive.
Perkins was found in a pine thicket near his home a few miles from her by a party of searchers. He was unconscious and apparently dead from burns that had seared his whole body. He was taken home but refused to tell the names of the men who had burned him declaring he would live to avenge his own treatment. He became unconscious again but just before he died he resolved and attempted to tell the names of his persecutors.
Some time ago Perkins had trouble with squatters. Parish officers expect to make arrests among them Perkins was well known in western Louisiana and eastern Texas. He had big land holdings and was wealthy
May Whip Daughter
The rod as a corrective agent has been held legal by a Greene county jury at Weynesburg Pa even though the recipient of such punishment be nineteen and a social belle.
The jury which heard the case against Richard Ewart, charged by his daughter Iess with assault and battery, decided that he was within his rights and acquitted him.
The young woman testified that her father spanked and whipped her because she went to a skating rink.
Drops Dead as Ball Team Scores.
At a ball game between the Pooria and Springfield ill. ball teams of the Three I league on Saturday at Pooria, William Bister, a spectator, dropped over dead when the Pooria team had scored two runs.
Lynch Negro Who Attacked Girl.
Robert Matthews a negro was shot and killed by a posse in a swamp near Beulah sixteen miles east of Pousaola Fla. following an attack on a twelve year old daughter of C. E. Snowden.
PUTS "GIFT" TAKING UP TO CONGRESSMEN
Says Judiciary Committee Is Employed by Railroads.
Bemnational charges were made in congress against Representative Richard Waine Parker, of New Jersey chairman and other members of the house committee on the judiciary.
The sensation was sprung by Representative Choice B. Randell, Democrat, of Texas. He charged that Representative Parker and other members of the committee were "receiving gifts, franks employment and compensation of great and pecuniary value" from railroads.
Mr Randell charged that this was true to suit an extent as to disqualify these members of the committee from deciding upon the bill to prohibit congressmen and judges from receiving such gifts from railroads or other corporations.
Randell brought before the house a prfilled resolution to remove the measure referred to from the committee on judiciary and to have it immediately reported back to the house.
The committee assailed by Mr. Ran
dell includes some of the most promi-
nent members of the house, its mem
birs are: Richard Wayne Parker, New
Jersey, chairman; Charles G. Turrell
Massachusetts; John A. Stenberg, Illin-
inois; Rouben O. Moon, Philadelphia;
Gerritt J. Dohmeh, Michigan; G. H
Malby, New York; E. W. Higgles
Connecticut; H. P. Gobbl, Ohio; J
wm Denbey, Michigan; Paul Howard,
F. O. M. Nike, Michigan; W. P
Sh弘明, Rhode, Mishaw; Henry
Clayton, Afaibahi; Robbert L. Hae-
knights of Pythias,
This organization is one of the most powerful in the country and its progress has been phenominal. The Graud. Lodge of Virginia has jurisdiction over all of the cities and counties in this state. Thirty males are required to organize a new lodge. The benefits paid constitute one of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything else. Founded on Friendship, based on Charity and established on Benevolence, the respectable, upright people of the state will find it an order worthy of their heartiest support.
It pays an endowment and burial benefit of of $200.00 for all ages. It pays $4.00 per week-sick dues. The badge costing 75 cents each is the only absolutely necessary regalia. For information concerning the organization of lodges apply at the main office.
The Courts of Calanthe
Is the Female Department of the Order. It requires a membership of thirty persons to organize a court. Its members are pledged to exhibit Fidelity, exercise Harmony and prove Love one for the other. It pays an endowment and burial benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per week sick dues. The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions.
For all information concerning special rates of membership in the lodges and courts, address
John Mitchell, Jr., 311 N. 4th Street.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHESA
CIVIL WAR
1861
only absolutely necessary rega
apply at the main office.
The Court
Is the Female Department of the
thirty persons to organize a co-
Fidelity, exercise Harmony and
an endowment and burial bene-
dues. The only expense for r
a rosette, costing 25 cents for f
For all information concerning
John
31
Texas W. G Breastlaw Georgia, C. C
Ridgid Aarkansaa E. Y Wubb, North
Carolina Charles C. Carlin Virginia
FLOOD TAKES 200 LIVES
Fifty Spectators Persh When Bridge is Swept Away.
It is estimated that 200 persons lost their lives in the flood that swept the valley of the river Ahr in the Eifel region in Germany.
Eighty seven bodies were recovered.
These were found along the river banks toasted high by the flood, or let stranded as the waters subsided.
A report says that fifty lives were lost at the village of Schult when a bridge which was crowded with persons watching the turbulent waters was carried away.
Two barracks in which Italian and Croatian laborers were housed were swept away and their occupants who were in their beds were drowned
YOUNG BRONCHO BUSTERS
Louis and Temple Abernathy Rode
2000 Miles to Meet Roosevelt.
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Youthful Oklahoma Rough Riders Are Warmly Received.
After a ride of two thousand miles on ponies from their home in Oklahoma in a journey to New York to greet their father's friend, ex President Thoreau Roosevelt, upon his arrival of at least a thousand people when they drew up their tired bronchos before the Hotel Breastin and, dismounting rushed into the arms of their proud father Marshal Jack Abernathy, anxiously awaiting to receive them.
From the moment they reached the city the little rough riders were the center of a continuous reception. They rode off the ferryboat that brought them from Jersey City into a veritable mob. It took six mounted policemen to clear the way, and a constantly increasing crowd fell in behind.
Smiles as broad as their sombreros lighted up the youngster's faces as they bared their heads in salute. Then they slipped from their ponies and hurried into the hotel.
The nerry sons of the Oklahoma United States marshal left their father's ranch in the middle west on April 16 and have received great ovations at all points during their trip across the country.
Miss Dresel Now Lady Maldstone.
The marriage of Viscount Maldstone, the oldest son of the Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham, and Miss Margarotta Armatrong Dresel, daughter of Anthony J. Dresel, of Philadelphia, the first of three Anglo-American weddings to take place in London during June, was celebrated at St. Margherita's, Westminster.
But for the death of the king placenter many people in mindring this, was have been one of the big social events
N. A., S. A., E. A., A. AND A.
organization is one of the most powerful has been phenomenal. The Graud. over all of the cities and counties in need to organize a new lodge. The biggest features, but the principles based on Friendship, based on Charity, the respectable, upright people of their heartiest support. An endowment and burial benefit one per week-sick dues. The badge of galla. For information concerning surts of Calantia. In the Order. It requires a member court. Its members are pledged and prove Love one for the other. Benefit of $150.00. It pays $3.00 per megalia is the cost of the badge, 500 funeral occasions.
ing special rates of membership in the Mitchell 11 N, 4th
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of the season. As it was, there was a large attendance both at the church and at the reception held afterward at Mr Droxel's residence in Grosvenor square.
The service was fully choral the bishop of London and Canon Henson of Westminster Abbey, rector of St Margaret's onclating The interior of the little church had been decorated with white flowers, chiefly marguerites
There were ten bridesmaids in soft white satin, and instead of hats they wore bandeaux of marguerites with long tulle veils. They were Lady Gladys Finch- Hatten, sister of the bridegroom; Miss Milda Chichester and Miss Essex Vere Gunning, cousins of the bridegroom, Miss Rhoda Astley, daughter of Dowager Lady Haitings; Lady Violet Manners, Miss Sybil Fellows, daughter of Lord de Ramsey; Miss Constance Combe, the daughter of Lady Combe; Miss Edith Wayno, of Philadelphia, and two American brides-elect, Miss Mildred Carter, who is to be married to Lord Acheson on June 21, and Miss Helen Post, to be married three days later to Montagu Elijot. Charles Mills, son of Lord Hillingdon, was the best man.
The two received many presents. The bride's father gave her a diamond tarn and a medallion of diamonds attached to a joweloid chain, as well as an automobile, in which Lord and Lady Maidstone are to tour the continent on their honeymoon. Mrs. Draxel's gift to her daughter was a rope of pearls. The value of the presents has been estimated at more than a quarter of a million dollars. J. P. Morgan sent a diamond cable two yards long, and the George J. Goulds a twelve-carat gem set in a ring. A western school journal is responsible for the story that a youthful pupil in the history class wrote the following statement: "The American war of independence took place because the colonies refused to inhabit to station without temptation."
1.
the lodges and courts, address
I, Jr.,
Street.
THE ECONOMY,
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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
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MATTINGS,
OIL-CLOTHS
And in fact everything that is
needed in house furnishings.
RUGS AND
CARPETS.
Of every description; also the
latest design in ROCKERS
and special CHAIRS.
Our goods are the best for the price
and the price is very low.
C. G. JURGEN'S SON,
ADAMS AND BROAD STREETS
Herr Peter
SILK AND FLANNEL
DIFFERENT METHODS NECESSARY IN THE LAUNDRY.
Temperature of Water is the One Thing Necessary to Remember When Cleaning Flannels-Proper Process with Silks.
Silks are even more difficult to wash than flannels. In cleaning flannels all that is necessary to remember is that if one starts the laundry work with hot water the rinsing and bluing waters must be of the same temperature, or all three waters may be cold, for the shrinking of the material is caused by changing the garments from one temperature to another. The so-called fine silk flannels should be washed by the same method as is here given for silks.
With silks the process differs from that used for flannels that neither hot nor cold water should be used and that the washing rinsing and bluing waters should all be tepid. Make a lather with some good soap, do not rub soap on the silk unless to remove perspiration stains. Rub between the hands, not on a board, rinse, blue, and squeeze out as much water as possible, but do not wring. The advantage of this will be found when doing the froning as fewer wrinkles will have to be removed. Shake the garments into shape and hang where they will get air and dry evenly, but not in the sun, as sun burns silks as well as complexions. When they are almost dry iron with a moderately hot iron just hot enough to remove the wrinkles, and do not let it remain in one place longer than absolutely necessary, as it is the heat that discolor silks.
Soft silks wash, china and especially ponges must be ironed when damp all over or when perfectly dry. They, particularly the ponges cannot be sprinkled as after ironing the sprinkling will show in insignity spots and the garment must be again wet all over to remove them. The best results may be obtained by ironing silk when it is damp as so but an iron is not required to remove wrinkles as when the material is perfectly dry.
White and pink silks will turn yellow if washed in hot water and a deep yellow if boiled and especially will this be noted in the wash ribbon that are used so much in lingerie white pale blue will fade to a clear white and remain so as long as they are in use.
The easiest way to keep lingerie ribbons if order is to wash a number of them at a time in tepid water and wind around a large bottle and leave them thereon until dry. This has the same effect as ironing without the drawback of the heat. Fine laces may also be dried to great advantage by this method. White silk stockings, lingerie, underwear, waist and dresses that have become spoiled by careless washing and are too yellow to be attractive may be dipped in instantaneous dyes with most excellent results and be as pretty as new. Silk that has become yellow will take a fine shade of tan and that which is only a deep cream can be colored a dainty pink or baby blue while any dark shade is still easier to handle.
In using instantaneous dyes be careful to try a sample of the material first to be sure that the desired shade has been obtained and in dyeing to have all parts of the articles thoroughly soaked, special attention being given to shirrings, plaits, belts, and all parts where the goods is in folds. When the process of dyeing is completed the coloring matter will be in the materials and the water will be almost clear.
The only way to launder white silks and to keep them, white is to do one's self, avoid heat and complete the process as rapidly as possible.
Portola Cake
Cream one cup of brown or granu lated sugar with half a cup of lard and one teaspoonful of salt. one egg beaten well, one teaspoonful of chinnamon, half a teaspoonful of cloves, half a teaspoonful of nutmeg, one cup of sour milk mixed with one level teaspoonful of baking soda or one cup of sweet milk and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cup of snoodles raisins and two cups of sifted flour. mix thoroughly and bake in a moderate oven
GingerBread—Chocolate.
Less familiar to the average cakebaker is a delicious Gorman combination of gingerbread and chocolate. This is old-fashioned gingerbread made in layers with a soft chocolate fudge filling between, and a thick smooth chocolate lcing on top. The combination of chocolate and ginger will be found most happy by those who have yet to become acquainted with it.
An Ironing Board Hint.
If you do not want your ironing board to fall down when the door behind which it reposes is suddenly opened, try keeping it in place with a noose. Fasten a screw hook to the woodwork at back of door, and to it tie a double cord long enough to slip around ironing board and fasten the other end to the hook.
HAWKS DESTROY MANY QUAIL
Covsey of Little Bird Will Not Last Long Where Rapacious Fowls Are Around.
I have noticed several articles on the quail and quail hunters and they have attracted my attention to the loss of quail due to hawks, says a writer in Indiana Furner. During this season when the ground is covered with snow the hawk's principal diet is squall. While driving along a road near a hedge recently I noticed a hawk in hot pursuit of a quail, but the quail flew into the hedge and escaped. Two days later I passed the
Not Welcome on Any Farm. same way and again saw the hawk waiting for its prey I killed it, and upon examination found that it had been feeding on buall
Upon another occasion I shot a hawk and investigation showed that it had just eaten four quail. This goes to show that a covey of quails will not last long when there are hawks around.
I think there is no species of hawks, except the sparrow hawk, that do not destroy quail, as well as other small birds, especially during the winter season.
Some people think the sparrow hawk, as the name implies, lives principally on sparrows, but this is not the case. Its name is taken from the size of the bird, which is the smallest of its species. The sparrow hawk should be rigidly protected, as I have never yet seen it attack birds of any kind, but it does destroy immense numbers of mice, worms and insects.
The benefits derived from the hawk family, except the sparrow hawk, does not compare wits the damage they do. Therefore I am in favor of a state bounty on hawks.
SEED POTATO TRUE TO TYPE
Pearl Variety is Rather Vigorous
Heavy Yielder—Type Is Some-
what Flattened Oval.
(BY C. L. FINCH COLORADO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE)
Growers of potatoes should always remember that the round or oval, smooth few-eyed tubers are an artificial and not a natural product. The development and the selection given the potato in the 400 years since it was discovered by white men count very little in inheritance as compared with the unknown thousands of years in which the potato was a wild mound tall plant with long small, many-eyed tubers.
For this reason all seed potatoes should be true and very true to the artificial and improved type of the particular variety because only so can we count on overcoming the tendency to run out which is nothing more than the call of the wild inheritance back to wild and comparatively useless shape and to the small yield also of the old wild forms.
The Pearl potato is a rather vigorous, heavy wielder. Its type is a somewhat flattened oval with rather prominent eyes and a recessed stem end. The tendency given the variety when originated was to round out about the stem, leaving it recessed A Pearl with a flush stem end is a better eating potato, because more easily pared but such a flush stem end Pearl is of no account for seed, because unless we have the typical form we never have the vigor and the high yield (unless the natural conditions of the year be exceptionally good)
Similarly, no one should use Peach blossoms for seed that have any tendency to be long or even oval because Peachblossoms are typically round. Rurals or Chios with a tendency to pointed or nosey seed ends have lost their power to produce typical shapes or large yields. With the possible exception of the stem end of Rurals, a tendency to points on either end of the tubern of any variety should bar their use as seed.
Variations from trueness to type show most in large potatoes, less in small tubers. Hence, if small seed is used, much greater care is needed to secure exact trueness to type in order to get high yields and vigor.
A Cure for Nerves.
The "nervy" girl will find that an hour's sewing in a wonderful nerve soother. She can see in all her little irritations, her fancied injuries and generally become her normal self again when she has finished a long seam. One of the most neurotic and exoticable women, the famous George Band, wrote in praise of the soothing powers of needlework and every girl who tries this simple remedy for nerves will doubless confirm her testimony—House Notes
Progress.
A discovery results in an art; an art produces a comfort; a comfort made cheaply accessible adds family on family to the population; and a family is a new creation of thinking, reasoning, inventing, and discovering balings. Thus, instead of arriving at the end, we are at the beginning of the series, and ready to start with recruited numbers on the great and beneficent career of useful knowledge. —Edward Everett.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Honor Pupils
MOORE SCHOOL
Through its principal Mr H G Carlton as reported to the Supt J A C Chandler the following Roll of First Honor and promoted pupils for the term ending June 15, 1910 7 A GRADE First Honor—Lillian I Scott Others Promoted — Gladys V Booker, Maggie M Coleman, Florence O Gardner, Mulligan Jackson Rosa B Jackson, Janius J, Jeffess Herman C Lee Harvey W Mine, Lillian M Neal Janius J Scott, Evelin M Sittik 6 B GRADE—First Honor Ira Brown, Annie Epe, Lewis Goode Others Promoted —Leon Cooke Larke, Marie, Bource Chandler William Dulley Orlando Faunton Settle Funn Ollie Ferguson, Inez Freeman Cornelia Horeley, Constance Hill Joseph Jackson Jerdin Johnson, William Lester Robert Lewis, Marion Orrange Kate Smith 6 A GRADE First Honor—Ruth C Catlett Dals) B Green Gracie I Scott
Other Promoted Subdeal Anderson, Ruby G Anderson Oscar Butler Viola Butler, Lloyd G Carter Frances M Dawson Walter L John son Elizabeth Johnson, James Jackson, Leila B Lewis Gertrude A Wilson Moses B Page Robert W Perry, Virginia E Ray Olivan R Robinson, Willie L Robinson Calle E Smith Gerrande Smith Lawn Scott Marshall J Spinn Ebel L Taylor S B GRADE -First Honor Alma Burrell George Burrell Harry Howard Reginald Jacobson Rev Johnson McKinley Mosby Rosetta Mines Fate Reid, Arthur Wilkinson Richard Winston, Andrew Walker Others Promoted Maze Branch John Cary, Everett Evans, John Franklin Golde Fraser Lawrence Garrison Mamie James Ardell Jack Robert Robson Robert Martin Pauline Perry, Ruth Pemberton Marie Price Thos Randolph, Annie Marie Estelle Thornton Viola Wingfield Russell Williams
5 A GRADE No 1 First Honor
Leonard Carter, Benton Horsley Elma Jackson.
Others Promoted - Victoria Brown
Arnabella Cole, Iain Wood Coleman
Carrie Cousins Mary J Carter
Maurice Diamond Alan Franey Eddie
Giles Lloyd Glypim Mozelle Hicks
Jlnwood Hughes Augusta Harris
Norwell Jackson Ethel Knight, John
Lewis Koziah Lewis Rosa Mosby
Belle Payne, Willis Smith Mary
Turner Mary Williams Clar West
Mabel West
5 A GRADE No 2 First Honor
Charles Ferguson Emmett Randolph
Douglas Woolfoll
Others Promoted - Virginia Allen
David Allen Lenora Branch, Josse
Brown Anna Cox Elvira Epps Pascal
Fowkes Mary Gaines Willie
Harris Rebecca Jaquer Richard
Johnson Perrilla Kry James Lewis,
Lillie Masse Margaret Minor Davis
Stokes George Stares Wesley Taylor
Annie Trout Louis Warden
4 B GRADE No 1 First Honor Louise Jackson Mildred Johnson Gerrtude Robinson Gladna Robinson Others Promoted Edna Anderson George Anderson Ollie Bassett Gerard Brown Edgar Bardridge Fetelle Dawson, George Flournoy Margaret Goodman, Lizzie Halstrom Mary Jackson, Ethel Jasper Laura Johnson Eddie Johnson Simon Jonce Leslie Raine Clinton Rock William Stewart, Edmond Taylor Grannis Turner
4 B GRADE, No 2 First Honor
Marie M Clarken
Others Promoted Carrie Aycock
Helen Brown Joseph Beasley James
Bradshaw Letcher Chattman Edmona
I Cokes, Rosa Rose Clayton Gas
E Evans, Clarence Giles Besie St
Goude Fannie P Ivey Harvey John
soul Esterene J Jones William S
Kimbrough Wallace E Lewis, Carrie
Randolph, Richard Randall Emma
I Wingfield Elizabeth E Wood
Irene Lewis Stephen L, Wilkinson
4 A GRADE, No 1 First Honor
Waymouth Tupupee
Others Promoted Edward An-
thony Joe Brown, Eva Rolling Doyle
Cooke Harry Hickman James Hen-
ley Charles Jefferson, Amanda Johnson
Frank Lewis, Inez Lein, Annie
Lacy, Rebecca Mencer, Coral Orange
Alice Pettta, Leau Randall, Josie
Spain, Patrick Taylor, Louise Thomas,
Thomas Williams.
4 A GRADE, No 2 - First Honor
Koile Seoy.
Others Promotet—Mary Booker
George Branch, Houle Cox, James
Ella Olivia Fauntleroy, Charles
Freeman, Martha Goode, Gloesta
Hobson Arna Hurris, Efina Mann, Lillian
Hornell, Maude Randolph, Marla
Scott Naomi Thornton, Sadie
White Isaiah Wyatt.
3 B GRADE—First Honor—Hal
White, Willie Harris
the Fields, White H.
the Others Promoted—Drucilla Lisa
Pauline Bradley, Linwood Briggs,
Mary Carter, Morr. Coleman, George
Ewell, Louise Goode, Hamilton Goo-
bly, Lunctea Johnson, Fleming John-
son, Welford Jones, Lloyd Moore,
Hattie Mosby, Lucilla Mosby, Maceo
Neal, Jon Owens, Sarah Pryor, Fannie
Walton, Armadillo Walker, Lacy
Winderson, Dewey Woody.
3 A GRADE, No. 1—First Honor
—Arthur S. Randolph, Powell D.
Wilkerson
Others Promoted—Mollie Alston,
Peyton A. Blunt, Richard Brown,
Matthew Brown, Rachel C. Brown,
Frances C Cheatham, Sarah Cooke,
William N. Harris, Thomas Johnson,
Preston Johnson, Linwood Mosley,
Eula Gatney, Annis A. Parrish, Vioia
B. Patterson, Margaret E. Polindor-
mie Myrtle E. Priddy, Lotte M. Rich-
ranson, Florence E. Glaves, Mary E.
Taylor, Sadio B. Taylor, Mary E.
Warren, Reginald Whitlock.
3 A GRADE, No. 2—First Honor
—Daley Brown, Willie Carter, Pauline
Freeman.
Others Promoted—Flord Booker,
John Byrd, Howard Ellis, David Hill,
Theresa Howard, Joseph Johnson.
Jacob Logan, Ella Lynch, Harry-Payne, Robert Price, Lympool Wood, Richardson, Douglas Smith, Charles Thompson, Randall Thornton, Malcolm Trice, Florence Wagner, Katie Walker, Regina Wilson, Angus Wood.
2 B GRADE--First Honor-Esher Johnson
Rerer C Bland, Royal B Banks James Brown George C Bland, Bernetta L Hatcher Nathaniel J Harris, Ernest F Hill Maynard A Hopkins Walter J Harris Selda Jones, Olivia C Johnson Clathorne Jones Victoria C Minor, Alma Mann Ruth A Michael McKinley Minor Sam Moulley, Chloe Moolley Ruth B Randall, Hannah L Walker Joseph C Winston, Florence C Jefferson, Ella Goodwin Phoebe M Read Lillian B Ward Edward S Johnson
2 A GRADE--First Honor Cornelia Archer, Wilhelmia Patterson, Annie Hicks, Letcher Salle, Sarah Johnsah, Herbert Toler Louise Lewis, Mabel Taylor, Harry Poindexter Lucietra Wells.
Others Promoted--John Anderson son Oron Harris, James Barker Edna Johnson, Mary Baker, Elnora Johnsah, Sarah Chandler Engurtha Ray Martina Coyre Reid Maria Hickman, Imogene Smith Andrew Hughes, Marlon Smith, Pearl Logan, Clarence Thompson, Warwick Parsons, Louise West, Lucie Price Edith Wilson James Pleasantss
1 B GRADE First Honor-John Fields Robert Washington Samuel Walker Roland Williams Regetta Coles Lillian Green Marle Lou Rubie Peyton, Sarah Pearson Jennie Venable.
Others Promoted - Lewis Bland
Thomas Bradley Richard Barlow
Henry Holmes Harvey Josper, Emmett Miller, Albert Mason Washington
ton Norrell, Hilary Shleton Irwin
Turner Beeverly Bray Alma Reaves
Arlene Baber Rosa Dillard Vohl
Eligia Agusta Herndon, Bena Hook
Yeolanda Juhaus, Geneva John
son, Carrie Peton Rubble Smith
Louise Wilson Lucie Page.
I A GRAPE First Honor How
ard Johnson Russell Elliott Witman
Bradley Besale Harris Mary Lewis
Blanche Smith Eva Bassett
Others Promoted - Alexander
Golfman Irene Bryant Ins Cheat
ham, Pearl Foster Robert Freeman
Goldie Foster, James Jackson Olivia
Hobson Jesse Merritt Essie
Johnson Charles Tinsley Katie John
Lewis Westley Carrie Jones
Junta Jackson Rebecca Mitchell
Ida Scott Arthea Waller
NEWTOWN SCHOOL
Through its principal Mr. H G
Carlton has reported to the Sept Dr.
J A C Chandler the following Roll
of First Honor and promote a pupils
for the term ending June 15, 1910
2 B GRADE First Honor Joseph
Mallory Elizabeth Payne Mack M
Watton
Others Promoted Nathaniel
Baker Pernett Coleman Joseph
Winston Henry Young Marcel
Brown (O) William John Marshall
William William Lizzie Aycocke
Mary Rolling Wilie Charity Rosa
Scott
2 A GRADE First Honor - Alice
Alston Erma Fox Abram Martin
Others Promoted Bessie Aber
nathy Mary W Alston William Els
Emma Garrison Ida Johnson
Lanlandford John Leechost Maria
Leechost Mary Leechost Laylah Parnish
Willie Randolph Emelline Scott
George Washington
1 B GRADE First Honor-Sarah
Honaparte Robert Jackson Adeck
Johnson Esther B Robinson, Lilian
Scott
Others Promoted, David Alston
Martha Aycock Alice Boulding Nathal
anel Boulding, Elizabeth Fox Mabel
Harris Pauline Johnson Ada
leadetters John S. Richardson
Amy Stallings
1 A GRADE First Honor Helen
Suth
Others Promoted Emma Aycock
Martha Rooker Oliver Banks Marie
Briggs Melissa Boulding Mary Epps
Estle Glocke Theresa Warden Alfred
crawl cawley James Simon William
Morr Sylvester Thomas Irene
Lanford
MONROE SCHOOL
Through its principal Mr. H. G Carlton has reported to Supt. J. A C. Chandler, the following First Honor promoted for the session ending June 15, 1910
4 B GRADE Mary Carter, Lille Dahney William Henderson Irving Johnson Rescue Red
Others Promoted Emma Anderson, Lucy Black, Gerlte Brown, Samuel Booker Gerlte Burton Arthur Cooper, Ruth Davis, Junius Davenport, Adole Evans Ida Johnson, Arthur Johnson, Clarence Johnson, Henry Kington, Marian Liggins Catherine Mayo John Miles, Virginia Minor, Rosa Redd, Mary Tucker, Hattie Williams, William Woolfolk
4 A GRADE—First Honor—George Epps Bessie Hendley, Elenora Roy, Benjamin Warner.
Others Promoted—Frances Allen,
Eddie Barlow, Leola Hill, Hazel
Johnson, Orford Logan, Gertrude
Minor, Robert Patterson, Clara
Smith James Thornton, Rebecca
Woodson, Jasper Barton, Joseph
Barlow, Daly Gray, Marie Jones,
Russell Kear, Henry Mullory, Viola
Parrish, Ralph Roland, Percy Smith,
Joseph Warner, Albert Ammons,
Harvey Harris,
3 B GRADE—First Honor—Sangue
Knight, Willey Richardson.
Others Promoted—Robert Bates,
Mabel Konnyn, Elles Boyd, Rosa
Morgan, Malvinia Burton, Leon Pridy,
Joseph Eldridge, Rebecca Shelton,
Richard Flooming, Blanche
Sheridan, Cesteline Franklin, Lola
S辛, Henry Harris, Willie Washington,
Mary Hill, Lola West, Hortonz
Hill, Emma Williams, Clarence
Johnson, Daly Winston, Lola Jones,
Robert Smith.
B A GRADE—First Honor—Lolla E. Brown, Marlo E. Johnson, Ida D. Beverly, E. Louise Jones, Lillie B. Clark, Irma L. Mathws, Emma C. Claliford, Nathaniel Nichols, William H. Willis. Others Promoted—Martha E. Burrell, Llainwood N. Mason, Robert R.
Browns, Aleau L. Neal, Inez Coutte,
Thomas L. Patterson, Eldridge C.
Oford, Edward Peaton, Mary L.
Green, William J. Spraytle, Maud E.
Harris, Sarah A. Willis, George W.
Johnson, Corinne Williams, A. Eliza
beth Kenny, Eliza E. Williams Rudolph
Moore, Mary Washington Mara
th Washington.
2 B GRADE, No 1 First Honor
- Angle Chiles Marion Jordan
Georgia Collins George Mosby Hazella
Cox Victoria Perkins Mary
Coles Little Racks, Wm Harris
Arye Lee Woodson, Daisy Jordan
Isaac Woodson
Others Promoted - Luckie
Ammons, Charles Bolling, Brentcoe
Broussard, Bighold, Blake Davis
Mary Dixon Joseph Fountain, Peerh
Minor, Ruth Garlick, Alice Hill
Desdemona Hicks, Julia Holmes
Irene Holmes, Edward Hopkins,
Floyd Johnson, Roscoe Runsom
Charles Robinson
2 B GRADE 2 --First Honor --Alfred Brown Ruby Brown, Florence Grymes Alberta Hayes Matte Jasper Alfred Lee Elizabeth Lewis, George Mitchell Virgil Miles Perry Neal Oliver Price Charlotte Scott Others Promoted Josephine Coles Joe Smith, Helen Hull, Vincent Townes Beatrice Heddon Larry Williams Alexander Pollard Charles Williams Linda Pollard Vioa Burrell Joe Pollard Cornelius Harris, Mary Sadden Mary Mitchell Lille Smithers James Nelson Ida Staves Robert Smith Normal Wesley Hattie Townes Miller Shelton Grace Williams Luccile Davis Ada Washington
2 A GRADE --First Honor Eddie Blackwell, Mary Brown, Robert Crawford Albert Ford, James Jones Willie Johnson John Martin Clance Ross, Walter Scott Robert Woodson Beatrice Brown, Lilian Belverly Thomas Chisholm Alytre Hackett Peyton Johnson Arlene Johnson Cornelia Meade Walter S. Smithers Henry Wade
Others Promoted Constant Booker John Brown Robert Brown Burrittia Dan Welson Booker Willie Goode Grace Kenny Levy Martin Jeanne Smith Josephine Vaughn Webster BHF Ethel Banks, Louthe Cooper Charlie Burrell Gus Martin Candlen Fleming Sylvester Giles Pattie Lunch Maggie Scott Cathere Thomas Marie Washington 1 B GRADE First Honor Rosa Brown Rosa Anderson Helena Coleman Gertrude Daniel Lottie Prayer Charlotte Fraser Arthur Fung Satie Grammar, Willie Grammar Irene Goodman Grace Hobson Pryty Harris Edith Knight, Athena Peterson Beatrice Stewart Esther Taylor Carolina Watkins, Jesse Williams Adolphus Williams Albert Walkert Ellen Thoroughgood Others Promoted John Bolting Mabel Banks, Gertrude Carter Willie Christian, Bette Johnson, Ella Jendelsa Sarah Jenkins Chester Miles Luvesta Peterson Mary Rogers Chris Roane Ruth Scott Rosa Tyer Edna Young
1 B GRADE, No 2 First Honor
Louise Goodman Louise Allen
Hail Vola Johnson Horace Kahn
George Nash Viola Robertson Kath
Jeen Riand Louise Smith Alexand
de White
Others Promoted Julius Eggert
ton Susie Cross Rebus Green Leon
d Dickerson Tavanna Green Wav
ery Green Horace Jones William C
Gray Junius Lee Smith Joseph
Johnson Fhela Thomas Hallie
Logan, Charle Ammons Cornellus
Minor Rosa Anthony Newerson
Pené Corinne Brown Blanche Patterson
Martha Martin David Athanou Robert
Relson Win T Grupe Martha Rich
ardson Farner Carter Miles D
Smith
A GRADE First Honor Sophia
Booker Viola Virginia Henn
ry Lille Beutler Josh May Scott
tia Bowles Inez Stuart Raymond
German Joe Taylor, William
Grammar Moses Taylor
Others Promoted Cotton M And
Anderson James Kibble Blanche
Holmes Julia Lynch, David Tay-
well Leah Richardson, the Teas
Mozeb Robertson Joe Winston Ros-
Ross Gerritze Yancy, Eugene Scott,
Andrew Baker John T Smithers
Gladys Brown Grace Taylor, Sarah
Beatty Add Taylor Julia Coleman,
Wilbert Wade Elizabeth Gray, Ola
Williams Bentrice Houston Cora
Woolfolk Julia Johnson Margaret
Woolfolk Nannie Johnson
SOME LITTLE SONG8.
A little song of waiting
A little song of loss
A little song of happiness
We can't afford to miss
A little song of work to do
A little song of dawn
A little song of silver rain
And bloom upon the lawn.
A little song of singing birds,
A little song of bees
A little song of summer days
And dreams beneath the trees.
A little song of better luck,
A song without a tear
The sweetest kind of little song's
A little song of cheer
LENTEN JESTS.
A
Rev. Dr. Thirdly - I hope, my young friend, that during the Lenten season you will observe Fridays as a fast day. Impeunius - You bet. My salary is always gone by Thursday night.
"Jones is having trouble with
married woman."
"You don't say so! Who is it?"
"His wife."
LADY'S CROCHET TIE
BEST RESULTS WHEN WORKED
IN FINE SILK
Full Directions for Production of Neck
Ornamentation — Fringe Adds
Greatly to the Appearance
of Finished Product.
About one and a half balls of crochet silk and a rather fine steel hook
Any silk may be used, but fine looks
much better than coarse and it should
be worked rather closely
Work 24 chain stitches, turn and work a treble in the fourth from book, four more trebles in the same stitch, pass two, a double crochet in next, pass two five trebles in next, pass two, double crochet in next pass two five trebles in next pass two, double crochet in next pass two five trebles in next, pass two double crochet in end stitch, turn with three chain, five trebles in last made double crochet, both threads to be taken up through out the work a double crochet in middle of the group of trebles. * five trebles in the next double crochet, double crochet in middle of next group of trebles repeat from * twice more, turn with three chains and repeat from the commencement of the row.
Continue working to and fro in this manner until the work is 12 inches in length, then work four trebles only in each of the two middle groups, working the outside groups as usual, work in this way for another inch, then three trebles only in the two middle groups still keeping the outside ones as before for about ten more inches—or size required—then four trebles in the middle groups for another inch, then five trebles in each group for an other 12 inches as at first. Of course the exact length of the must be left to the discretion of the worker.
For the ends. Work five chain into every fourth stitch turn * five chain, into each loop of last row—repeat from * two florrs.
For the Fringe. Cut the silk into eight inch lengths pass the hook through the first loop at end of the fold six strands of the silk exactly in half and draw them a short distance
```markdown
```
through forming a small loop draw the 12 strands right through this loop and pull gently drawing the knot close up to the work repeat this into every loop being careful all the loops are turned the same way.
To knot the fringes take six threads of the first tassel and six of the next one and the them together half an inch below the other knots the remaining strands of the second tassel to six of the third and repeat to end row taking care to keep the knots quite level.
The another row of knots half an inch below this but this time taking the 12 strands of each tassel and tying them together.
Cut the offs level with a pair of sharp scissors.
NEW IDEA IN PARIS DESIGNS
Hindu, Embroideries and Printed Patterns Used in Costumes and Millinery.
Paris dressmakers are recommending Hindu embroideries and printed designs. Those eastern patterns are employed in numerous ways.
The other week, says the Paris correspondent of the Gentlewoman, "I described a cloak wherein the turned back collar and revers were fashioned in Hindu embroidery on white ground.
With foulard and taffeta dresses this Indian trimming appears either as an inner vest at the neck or is sown in narrow knitted fouches on the skirts.
"The printed specimens were recently launched by a well-known contouriere whose models are chiefly worn by English women and Americans. The designs in this case are smaller and blurred while the ground of the material is invariably of a neutral tint.
"Certain milliners select a larger pattern among these printed specimens for the crowns or brims of their hats and toques. The coloring of the different motifs and the ground can here be as glaring as possible owing to the fact that the material is draped and volved with black gauso or tullo. Some of the most becoming turbans and toques are made in this way and impart a cachet to the simplest tailor costume."
SOMETHING NEW IN "SHOWER"
Basket Party for Bride a Novel and Thoroughly Enjoyable Function.
Mary Bride-to-Be had been showered until she began to feel milded. She had been showered with aprons, stockings and handkerchiefs; she had been showered with kitchenware, hats and table linens; she had been honored at
SEVEN
so many fetus and feastings that she was assured by her father that if she didn't marry soon she would bankrupt the community So when Comrade Kate announced a new shower, she positively refused, but finally consented to a hardiness basket party.
On the day of the picnic she was delayed by any number of things, and when she reached the open place in the woods where the tablecloth was to be spread she was astonished at the upper collection of baskets huddled under a tree. When Kate appeared on the scene struggling under the weight of a tall brown waste basket Mary's suspicious were aroused, but Kate declared she had a perfect right to being a pitcher of lemonade in a waste basket if she wanted to, besides the handle of the pitcher was broken off and beaded again this was a basket party and food had to be conveyed in baskets' Ruth brought a shallow garden basket full of flowers for the centerpiece of the spread Jane brought a silver basket of creamy yellow lilies with felt which hold the knots and dorks burrowed for the afar.
There was an old fashioned spilt basket full of deviled eggs, exactly like the basket which always had blood on grandmothers back shawl for hunting eggs. There was a large fruit basket of dill green, wilted filled with fruits. A large pumpkin round basket held bottles of olives and pickles, but of course it was born a plain stocking basket. A shallow basket of redish brown was full of sandwiches.
A ruffled work basket with hinged cover and with little Italian figures intertwined exactly fitted a big chocolate cake. A large homemade wood basket held the tablecloth and dolls and other accessories. When the basket were all emptied and the lunchcomb had begun somebody a big brother appeared on the scene sugaring a huge wilted olives hamper, which hold a large freter of ice cream.
Of course, Mary Bingle to be protested but as that assuaded for there were always so often shows at places well and not just at these graceful ones. And so she did.
TO HANG ON NURSERY WALL
Decoration That the Little Folks Will Like Because They Can Make It Themselves
Any suggestion that tends to brighten on the walls of the nursery is always welcome and in our sketch may be seen a novel and pleasing little decoration for hanging above the nursery door that the little fools can quite well make for themselves.
A horse show is popularly supposed to bring good luck and the shoe shown in our illustration can be made in two ways. It can be cut out of cardboard and bound at the edge with narrow strips of colored paper, and the letters sketched on it in pencil and the paint can be applied to regulation and then covered or they can be cut out in colored paper and pasted on to the shoe. A lot of rhinom with a low at the top attached to the back by which the shoe has been spun from a nail in the wall.
Another way in which this deor-
tion may be carried out is the one that
will entail a little more trouble in to
GOOD LUCK
cut the shoe out in stiff cardboard,
and then cover it with some with some
pretty plece of material on which the
words "good luck" have been worked
in alk and then to finish it off, edge
it all round with a fine silk cord.
To Clean Silver Faucet
A successful experiment was tried by the owner of a blonde made of the material used in the Armenian scarf. Pure silver is hammered on to net, you know in such a fashion as never to become loosened and the material is sold by the weight of the silver. The blonde became soiled with wear and the silver tarnished, but the value of the garment did not warrant its discharge from duty. Into a bath of warm soapside and borax it went and an hour soaking with frequent squeezing and a thorough rinsing restored the material to its original beauty without ironing.
Real Wealth
Gunner They may since Cogkwood bought his new automobile he has run into wealth
Guyer Yes, he ran into a 400-pound hog the other day."
White Baun
Three, medium sized potatoes, one small onion Peel, slicer and corer well with water When done put water and all through colander Add one pint of milk Season with pepper, salt, and lump of butter
Copyright Outlawed Then
Manager (td composer)—Your piece is a fine one, but it can't be produced for at least three years.
Composer—Why not?
Managar—Because Wagner won't have been dead for 20 years till then—Lustige Blatter.
HUCKLEBERRY
Sister Claims One Also, But That Is Withheld.
East Orange June 16. They had a bad case of tweets today did the young folks of the graduating class of the East Orange High School chiefly in the matter of race war. They want it understood that the alleged race war is not and won't be it is a race bicker. For her part Isabel, Vandervell the colored girl who has had trouble getting a ticket to the class dance says she's going to the party and what more one doesn't think she's going with an escort of somebody class race, does one? Not much
Isabel Vandervall is 17 years old and speaks with force and precision. She has been an honor student at the high school and the young person who have been in class with her these four years say they think well of her. She has a sister from who is a bit older. Iron belonged to the class which graduated a year ago but she had to drop bake into 1810. The students declare that the teacher hasn't just why is a matter decided under the ancient laws and customs of the East Orange High School.
John Hermann is the chairman of the dance committee. He is the son of Edward Herman and lives at 569 Park Avenue. He says that the whole decision in so far as the specific instance of Iran is concerned, lies with him but that the abstract principle & under which he acts is one of the antiques consorties of the school and that the dance committee and the whole class believe just as R. does.
This fuss that has been kaked up over label Vandynerall said he is all tummy tired. The only reason why she didn't get her ticket to the dance at the same time that the others did is because she didn't show up at the class meeting on Monday. If she'd only been there she wouldn't have had any trouble I didn't see her on Tuesday but on Wednesday I went to her father's place of business and left the ticket for her there.
Isabel's father is James N. Vandervall, a prosperous colored man of this place, and he wears white side whiskers. He used to be proprietor of the Lakes Steam Carpet Cleaning Works but later he retired. He lives at 71 Ashland Avenue and has a telephone in his house. It was to the office of the carpet cleaning company that young Hermann took the ticket on Wednesday morning.
That same night Vandervall came around to 569 Park Avenue and took young Hermann why he felt given tickets to his two daughters. Hermann said that he had left a ticket for Isabel at the carpet cleaning works that morning and wouldn't he please go there after it. As for Irene she was another matter and couldn't have a ticket anyhow. That was certain.
Vanderwalt went to his old office forthwith and got the ticket. Then he went home and tried to explain just why it was that label got one and Irene didn't. It was a hard matter, and the daughters didn't understand. They thought it was in contravention of the spirit of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and made remarks to that effect.
John Hermann says no. This is his explanation. Irene was a member of the class which graduated a year ago. She got all the senior prizes then She had a ticket to the dance, to class day and to graduation. But she did not. She flunked back into our class. The committee that anybody who isn't a real member of our class can't use senior privileges now, and the class believes so too. That's the way it's always done. The committee did not have any discussion over Irene. They haven't met for a week. I decided the matter and the committee and she class is behind me.
Young Herman says it would be just the name with a white person. He says it is not a matter of concern to the class whether Isabel Vandervall goes to the dance or not. She is a member of the class and has a right to go if she wants to. And under the rules she can invite any young man she wants to, be he black or white.
"Take it from me," said he "the dance will go on. All the class will be there, eighty couples of ten." Isabel Vandervall said she expected to go to the dance and would not. She believed a ticket would be got from somewhere (from Thin She didn't know, to sure, where it would come from, but she thought her father would manage to get it. She supposed he would go to see it Mr. Herman again, and he refused, why it would be too bad. She wasn't sure what he would do after that, but he would do something.
"Irene is a member of our class." said she. "It isn't true what they say. She didn't get a ticket to the graduation dance of 1909 and she wasn't invited to class day either. She didn't have any senior privileges last year, and it's not right that she shouldn't have any now." It might be, she said, that she herself mightn't go to the dance if Irene couldn't, but it was so far from now she couldn't tell. But as to her escort, she had her mind quite made up. "I'm sure of one thing," she said, "and that is that I won't go with anybody of their race. Not I."
Generally Believed, That Reno Will be Chosen by Promoters.
San Francisco, Cal., June 18—"On to Reno" in the cry of the night bril
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grade Convicted by the postponement of the Kaufman and Langford match that San Francisco definitely has been eliminated as a possible scene of the Jeffries and Johnson fight positive announcement is expected tomorrow that the battle of the century 'will be fought in Nevada.
Tomorrow night at Reno Tex Rick and will receive bids for the big contest from committees representing Reno Goldo and Ely. The city of offering the most substantial light treatment he said will get the match and the winner will be immediately announced. It is generally said how over that Reno will be the choice.
The laws of Nevada do not prohibit finish lights and no serious obstacle to the staging of the great battle in that State is anticipated.
I think we are getting this championship into a safe spot at Reno. Rescued to the news station no day and to smile grinch, he has offended and abused an awaiting teammate. Our Prep team has been committed and on Monday morning the gods of fighters and trainers from Ben Lomond and San Francisco are expected to begin. Tentative arrangements for training quarters at Reno already have been made for both defenders and jockeys.
The day, in honour today of Louis Blot promoter of the Langford Kaufman contest as a result of Governor Gilbert's order to prevent that fight ended a stressful situation. A big crowd surrounded Blot's arena this afternoon cartoons to witness the test of strength between Blot and the authorities. Mounted police threaded their way among the spectators, and a detail of patrolmen managed to keep the sidwalk clear Blot stood at the entrance of his arena and greeted Adjutant General Laudek and Chief of Police Martin when they motored up to ascertain what was happening. The Kaufman nor Langford appointed house and finally the crowd moved away. Blot persisted in his assertion that the contest had been merely postponed and that Saturday in order to stage a minor boating event against the holding of which he hopes the victory will be taken up.
Vice Mayor L. A. Benson issued a
armed statement of his intention
protest against the threat of Gov-
ernor Gallant to send troops into
Mexico and to bring him to
confront the city officers re-
quired to take action.
Langford and Ketchel Agree to Finish
Hout.
San Francisco Cal June 21 Sam Langford and Stanley Ketchel will meet in a forty five round or a finish fight in Reno on the morning of July 4th at 10 30 for the middleweight championship of the world. The announcement was made yes terday by the managers of the fighters, Joe Woodman and Wilson Mizner Jim Coffrith who has been after the match for the past few weeks will likely handle it. Both fighters will leave at one for Reno they will establish training quarters which has been made as to what weight the men will meet at but Ketchel has already said that he will fight at catch weights and they will likely meet under those conditions as the time for battle is only two weeks off.
Langford is already in good shape, and he will only have to taper off for the match. His training for the Kauffman match, which was called off Saturday has primed him for a tough fight and it is expected that there will be almost as much interest centered on this card as there will be on the heavyweight battle. Ketchel and his manager, Wilson Mizner will leave tonight for the scene of battle to start work immediately. 'I am in fair shape now,' said the champion this morning. 'and the two weeks I have to be healthy, my condition I want to get just right. I beat this fellow Langdophia fight and had him gasping for breath all during the last two rounds. We and agreed to fight to a finish, but I don't think it will go over ten rounds. I now he is in good condition right now, and I am glad of that. He will be off the middleweight map after the Fourth jurt as sure as that day is coming.
Los Angeles Route Barred.
San Francisco, June 18 —Local fight followers are inking a little comfort in the fact that Gov. Gillett took no steps to prevent the Barry-Ferguson fight, which was pulled off in Los Angeles last night. The governor declares, however, that he was mired as in the date of the contest. When told of the Barry-Ferguson fight, Gov. Gillett said: "I did not know there was to be a fight in Los Angeles. I understood that they were going to sign for one down there some time next week." For that reason the governor said he had not notified the Los Angeles authorities to prevent any contest there tonight.
"Of course, they are breaking the law here as well," he continued, "and
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
it is up to the district attorney now to prescribe the lawbreakers.' Frisonism was a newspaper decision to allow a slow affair limited to ten rounds.
South Richmond Notes.
The thirty-six annual session of the State grand lodge No 6 I O of G and D and F that convened in the city last week was a dedicated success as to number of delegates department and the rapidity in the business transacted. The North Side was well represented with Mrs H J Johnson of Mrs Hurret Johnson and I W Scott the recognized leader in charge. Mrs I W Thompson a quiet worker with a power of influence and good was a sover loving a hand in the good work for success. Many others of which place will not permit us to mention. The happiest men of the whole Grand Lodge entitled Mr Him and J W, H Hattier F L. Williams C H Munford with their various committees worked necessarily commencing June 1909 holding weekly meetings and entertainments until the arrival of the grand lodge
The meeting was held in the First Baptist Church Dr A Binga pastor and chief of staff. Hubbard was heard to remark that the session was the best that he had ever attended during his career with the Order.
The committee implements "trade on not only as a single contract but also as an accommodation and concern."
All of the officers were retained. Mrs. L. to being the only new officer elected of which was treated to the Side. So according to the president set at Washington session Washington Ward knew that she would get officer as per relation without great grief.
For the first time in the history of Virginia has the colored officers of organization ever had the pleasure of being welcomed to a city to the colored master Mr. L. Williams in a telling speech captivated the entire ground lodge and visitors to the delight of all.
Following is the program arranged for the occasion (the mayor, H A Maurice, being absent)
Mrs. Rosa B. Wilkinson chairman on banquet and her assistant deserves a credit as well as the entire committee
on whom Big 2 gazed on with an art of satisfaction and was heard to say that it was the finest affair that has been ever witnessed in this city or state
Pay your taxes or else you will be sold out (call on 1 P Robinson Delinquent Tax Collector for Court No 2 Washington Ward Monday was sale day
Dr. David intends to raise $500 00 tomorrow Sunday Governor's day The different states as represented are bustling The collections promises to be the largest ever taken in the history of the church You have done something them?
Dr. Anthony, of the Zion Baptist Church emceed Clirts and candles in the noble James River on last Sunday morning.
Mr Joseph Southall vice president of the B Y P U rendered a fine program on last Sunday evening. Miss Miee B Johnson will have charge of the program Sunday evening.
Mr John H Turner, Sr is now prepared to take your orders for wood and coal Call on him.
The recent organizations of a male quartet in the First Baptist Church choir adds another feature to the Christian work and life of Dr. Blinge. In a recent contest at the Ebonezer Baptist Church they achieved great honors and received the second prize. Come and hear them Messrs S H Johnson, S W Johnson, J W, Harris, C H Munford C H Robinson, organist
Bought Qites have never made a leader and if you haven't the executive ability to lead, stand a side.
Miss Alberta Jenkins, of the Second Baptist Church, is a born leader and organizer.
Mrs. S B Wilkerson was married to Mr R T Cogbill. Jr was Wednesday night at the home of the bride's brother. East 17th Street.
$150.00 Endowment Paid.
Portsmouth, Va., June 15, 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. and A., $150.00). One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death-calm of Bro. William Parker, who was a member of Jonathan Lodge, No. 20, of Portsmouth, Va.
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OUR CALENDARS FOR 1011.
We have a complete line of Calendars for 1911 from the J W Butler Paper Company of Chicago, Ill. They are the latest designs and will most likely be used in the future. We take the time to examine them. Call at our once and see them.
LUCIAN B WATKINS—The poetic value of this name is well represented in the booklets, "The Solider's Home," and "The Old Log Cabin" Beautiful Washington and Lincoln editions. See for yourself 30 cents for both Address Box 57 Fort Russell Wyo
In the Law and Equity Court City of Richmond, this 4th day of June, 1916.
The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a virlio matrimonit from the defendant. And an andavit have been made and filed that the defendant Maggie Stewart is a non-resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that she appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this order and do whatever is necessary to protect her interest herein.
A Copy- Teste
P P WINSTON, Clerk
J Henry Crutchfield p q
To Maggie Stewart -
You'll take notice that I shall on the 21st day of July, 1910, at the office of Phil B Shield, Room Numbered 60, Chamber of Commerce building situated southwest corner Ninth and Main Streets in the City of Richmond Va. between the hours of 9 o'clock A M and 6 o'clock P M of that day proceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in chancery depending in the Law and Equity Court, for the City or Richmond Va. wherein you are defendant, and I am plaintiff, and if for any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded on that day, the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been completed.
Henry Crutchfield, P. q.
Office 1215 East Broad St..
Richmond Va.
$150 00 Endowment Paid.
Catharpin, Va. June 16, 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., B. A, A. a, and A, ($150 00)
One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in payment of the death-claim of Bro
William A. Bray, who was a member of Manahas Lodge, No. 109, of
Manahas, Va.
Signed CARRY BERRY.
Beneficiary.
Witnesses
Wm. Taylor,
Lute Berry.
$100 00 Endowment Paid.
Sutherlin, Va. June 17. 1910.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Worthy Counsellor of the Grand Court of Virginia, Creeks of Delaware, and 0.000 Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Bister Jude Adams, who was a member of White Oak Court, No. 123, of Sutherlin, Va.
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The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce a vinculo matrimonii by the plaintiff against the defendant. And an affidavit having been made and filed that diligence has been used by the on behalf of the plaintiff to ascertain in what county or corporation the defendant, Joe Moore is without effect, and that the plaintiff don't know his whereabouts. It is ordered that the said defendant, Joe Moore appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this order and do whatever is necessary to protect his interest herein.
A Court Teste.
You'll take notice that I shall on the 21st Jan of July, 1910, at the office of Phil B Shield, Room Numbered 60. Chamber of Commerce building situated southwest corner of Ninth and Main Streets, in the City of Richmond, Va., between two hours of 9 o'clock A M and 6 o'clock P M of that day proceed to take the depositions of witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in chancery, depending in the Law and Equity Court, for the City of Richmond, Va., wherein you are defendant, and I am plainly and I will for any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day, or if commenced be not concluded on that day the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day, or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been concluded.
Respectfully,
ANNIE MOORE.
By Counsel.
J Henry Crutchfield, p. q.
Office 1215 East Broad St.
Richmond, Va.
S. W. ROBINSON
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Nothing on earth is so valuable as a human mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not too good for a counting youth. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few cents when health is in danger? Who would choose an infant in need of care when we need to increase the strength of character and put mind for life and prepare one for a longer usefulness?
Va. Union University Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN.
178 COLLEGE COURSE is broad and complete. Its requirements and standing are as high those any college for white youth in the State, according to the rating system.
ITS THEOLOGICAL COURSE has for many years been, the standard course for colored Baptist School. Hebrew, Greek and all the regular subjects given in Northern Seminaries. One hundred students for the ministry are enrolled in different departments of the school.
ITS NINE ORANTE BUILDINGS, its fully equipped acroce laboratories, its library and its faculty and学 faculty and its courses of study enable Virginia Union University to offer色艳 young men an education equal to that employed by the favored of other races.
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