Richmond Planet
Saturday, July 2, 1910
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
ANET, RICHMOND
BOARD THE KA
THE RICHMOND PLANET
HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY
JUL 5 1910
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
Mechanics' Savings Bank Opens Its Doors.
Crowds Throng the New Building—Leading White Citizens There. All Enthusiastic. The Loving Cup.
The opening of the new Mechanics' Savings Bank building last Monday morning to the public was a grand success. The inspection has continued all of this week, President John Mitchell, Jr., the president and founder was subjected to a pleasant surprise last Monday morning when a delegation repaired to the reception department over the vault and sent for him. Rev. W. F. Graham had been designated as spokesman and right well did he perform his part. He offered prayer, after which he introduced Rev. R. H. Bowling, D. D., of Norfolk, Va., who delivered a scholarly presentation address and at the same time handed over to Mr. Mitchell a magnificent gold-lined loving cup, handsomely engraved.
MOUNTED ON MARBLE.
It was mounted on a marble pedestal. The cup is about ten inches in height and about eight inches in diameter. President Mitchell was well-nigh overcome with emotion and he made a most feeling response, expressing his satisfaction and gratification at receiving so valuable a present, showing as it did the attitude of so many people towards him. Rev. Dr. A. S. Thomas dismissed the assemblage after which Mr. Mitchell was congratulated by the many visitors, who had gathered to inspect the building.
WHITE CITIZENS JUBILANT
A singular fact in connection with this opening is the attitude of the white citizens, who do not hesitate to express their approval and to wish the management well. They are outspoken in their commendation of Mr. Mitchell and his associates and lavish in their praise. The decoration of the building is under the management of an executive and a local committee, Miss M. L. Chiles chairman, and Mrs. Thomas H. Wyatt, secretary.
A GRAND SIGHT
As one enters the door at either the Clay Street or the Third Street entrance, he is attracted by the handsome electrolayers that illuminate the neighborhood half way of the block. These are on the marble columns, twenty inches in diameter. Inside one enters the vestibule finished in mahogany, marble and plate glass. To the left is the ladies room and on the right is the lobby space. One gets a view then of the magnificent round door vault, highly polish-
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BANK OF NEW YORK
THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES
The Round Door Vault Open. Built by York Safe and Lock Company, Yo —Photograph by Geor
by York Safe and Lock Company, York
—Photograph by Georgh
Built by York Safe and Lock Company, York, Pa.
—Photograph by George W. Brown
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MECHANICS SAVING BANK
1909
CARL RUEHRMUND. ARCHITECT.
ed and appeara
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Photograph by George W. Brown.
sections clearing the han Second Tuesday
MECHANICS' SAVINGS BANK.
The inside of the vault, in the language of the ladies, is a dream. On every side the banking room was decorated with palms and cut flowers. The ceiling fairly beamed and glistened with its magnificent radiance. One would think that Fifth Avenue, New York had been removed to Richmond. Gallant white gentlemen and beautiful white ladies flitted to and fro gazing upon and admiring the magnificence of this creation of the leading colored men of this city.
Automobiles with their chaffeeurs pushed on that corner. Almost the entire city government was in evidence. Mayor D. C. Richardson and members of the Board of Aldermen and Common Council came to see this remarkable production. They went from the basement to the roof and enjoyed themselves. It was 12:30 when the last word was said and during the entire evening nothing happened to mar the affair.
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ed and burnished, giving forth the appearance of a reflector.
WELL LIGHTED
CITY OFFICIALS THERE TOO.
Bids for Cleaning Cemeteries.
All persons who desire to put in bids for cleaning the old cemeteries, near Barton Heights, will please hand in sealed bids for cleaning walks and sections in the six cemeteries and clearing out the roots. Bids to be in the hands of R. T. Hill, 604 North Second Street, before 5 o'clock, Tuesday, July 5, 1910.
Mr. Swann Disappears
Richmond L. Swann was scheduled to marry Miss Lillian Moore, a well-known and popular teacher in the public schools of this city last Wednes day night at 8 o'clock at the bride's residence. He had purchased a house and furnished it and every thing seemed to be all right. The prospective bride had purchased her wedding trousesean and all was in readiness for the event.
Mr. Swann disappeared Tuesday afternoon and did not appear on Wednesday. His watch and keys were found at his eating establishment near the corner of 10th and Main Streets, but he has not been seen since. It was thought that he had been fouled dealt with, but no tidings of him has been received. The marriage has been necessarily postponed and the intended bride prostrated by the affair is awaiting some tidings or the missing man. She had resigned her position in the city schools and the entire affair is shrouded In mystery.
Mr. Edward J. Cook received a letter from the management at the Buckroe Beach Bay Shore Hotel stating that Swann was there and left a letter in his room stating that the other letter must be delivered to him. In this letter to Mr. Cook, he is said to have stated that he intended to drown himself. The presumption is that he has done this, although his body has not yet washed ashore. He is said to have acted peculiarly a few days before his disappearance.
Lawyer James Alexander Chiles of Lexington. Ky. is in the city.
SUMMER NIGHT SCHOOL
Instructions given in Arithmetic,
Bookkeeping, Grammar, Clives, Latin,
French, etc. Terms reasonable.
PROF. P. J. HENRY,
1106 West Leigh Street.
Chapter of Sorrow
Fannie Lewis Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold a chapter of sorrow on Sunday, July 3, 1910, at 6 o'clock P. M. at 207 Foushee Street, Johnson's Hall, at which time the families and friends of their late members will be in attendance. All Masons, their wives, sisters, daughters, mothers and widows, are invited to come.
TAYLOR—FENNELL
The marriage of Mrs. M. Ellen Fennell to Mr. Charles M. Taylor will take place at 900 North Sixth Street, Tuesday evening, July 12th at 8:30 P. M. All friends are cordially invited to be present. No cards. Reception from 8:45 to 10:30.
Mrs. W. H. Isham has returned from New York, after a pleasant stay of three months with her sister.
Mrs. Fannie L. Coleman, of South Boston, Va., is spending a few weeks at 1116 West Catherine Street.
Mr. Charles H. Brown, principal in the Public Schools of St. Louis has been in the city for a week. He left last Thursday for No-folk.
D. J. FARRAR. BUILDER.
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The Round-Door Vault Closed. Built by York Safe and Lock Company, York Weight of Door and Frame, nearly 12 tons, well metal part only, over 33 tons. —Photograph by Goerg
Built by York Safe and Lock Company, York, Pa. Weight of Door and Frame, nearly 12 tons, weight of Vault, metal part only, over 33 tons. —Photograph by Goerge W. Brown.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
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,
Office:
1215 E. Broad St. Richmond, Va.
The thirtieth anniversary of the
Fifth Street Baptist Church and pastor
is now chroniced with the past;
but the sweet savories thereof, as
well as the mines of thought, the
lessons, reunion, christian merriment
and happiness it brought, still linger
in the bosom of both members
and friends. Ah, yes, under the
wisdom of divine inspirations:
We met garbed in Christian armor.
The walls around were fair:
We stand to our colors, steadfastly,
And By God's benediction, we
merry, we thrive;
Three cheers to the thirtieth anni-
versary,
Hurrah for its blessed betide.
General collection . . . $ 192.53
Macedonia Club (Pres. Mrs.
Callie Brown) . . . 339.76
Deacon's Club. (Pres. Dea.
B. H. Peyton) . . . 310.00
Willing Workers Club.
(Pres. Mrs. Josie Graham) . . 245.65
Usher's Club. (Pres. Mr.
John R. Holmes) . . . 228.00
Italy Club. (Pres. Mrs. Mary
Page) . . . 170.75
Lily of Valley . . . 43.10
Fifth Street Baptist Sunday
School. (B. H. Peyton.
Supt.) . . . 30.00
Fairmount Club . . . 25.75
Volunteer's Club. (Pres.
Miss Alice Robinson) . . . 15.75
The final anniversary service brought substantial memorials of friendship. Over this service Rev. Dr. W. H. White, pastor of Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, presided. The ministry of the city and vicinity was well represented; as well also were the deacons, officers and liaisons of the several churches. Among those who made short addresses was the Rev. Dr. H. H. Mitchell, first pastor of Fifth Street Baptist Church; he said to the church among other things, you have made great success along all lines, raised $1,600,00 in this anniversary which you could not have done had not God been with you and your pastor in the effort. Now said he, there are more than 1600 perishing souls in this city, let me ask you to put forth as great an effort to rescue them from darkness
(Continued on Fourth Page.)
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-Photograph by Goerge W. Brown.
$1,601.29
TAMMY
LOWERVEN
BY MARI RODENKINHART
AUTHOR OF 120 CIRCULAR WORKS
ILLUSTRATIONS BY M. O. KETNER
COPYRIGHT & DARBY NATIONAL COUNTY
8YNOP$18.
CHAPTER XVII. He learns that a brain tumor has taken place. He then apas and his nake and stayed some time at the earlier place.
CHAPTER XVIII. While making inquiries in the place Bakeley does Alison. He kisses her.
CHAPTER XIX. White dining in a restaurant the woman for whom Bakeley bought a Bulliwan that same time to her nake.
CHAPTER XX. She tells him her nake in Mrs. Cousins' she then makes a bargain for the first time not knowing that they are not migrating.
CHAPTER XXI. Bakeley tells his nake a theory that the woman killed Marrington.
CHAPTER XXII. The amateur detective trainee learns and believes he has found the delicat to the home of Bullivan sister to investigate.
CHAPTER XXIII. Blakeley and the delicat go to the home of Bullivan sister to investigate.
CHAPTER XXIV. From a servant Blakeley learns that Alison West had been attended to her. He also learns that Bullivan is married to a daughter of the murdered man.
CHAPTER XXV. Returning home, the infirmity that the house has been ranched to the police.
CHAPTER XXVI Blakeley's partner calls him that his affair with Allison West is or.
CHAPTER XXVII - Blakeley goes to the Forbes country home and finds Allison West.
CHAPTER XXVII She tells him that she was on her way to Baltimore to marry Bullian when the wreck came. She clears up some points regarding the tragedy.
CHAPTER XXIX Blakeley is summed up in plans to give Mrs Conway the forged notes in exchange for Bullian Mrs Conway's forged notes. The forged notes are found in the room.
CHAPTER XXX.
Finer Details.
At ten minutes before two the following day, Monday, I arrived at my office. I had spent the morning putting my affairs in shape, and in a trip to the stable. The afternoon would see me either a free man or a prisoner for an indefinite length of time, and, in spite of Johnson's promises to produce Sullivan, I was more prepared for the latter than the former.
Blobs was watching for me outside the door, and it was clear that he was in a state of excitement bordering on delirium. He did nothing, however, save to tip me a wink that meant "As man to man, I'm for you." I was too much engrossed either to reprove him or to return the courtesy, but I heard him follow me down the hall to the small room where we kept outgrown law books, typewriter supplies and, incidentally, our wrap. I was wondering vaguely if I would ever hang my hat on its nail again, when the door closed behind me. It shit firmly, without any particular amount of sound, and I was felt in the dark. I groped my way to it, and I stepped on the stilede. I shook it frantically, and was rewarded by a brilliant whisper through the keyhole.
"Keep quiet," blobs was saying hunkily, "You're in deadly peril. The police are waiting in your office, three of 'em. I'm gone' to lock the whole bunch in and throw the key out of the window."
Of a steaming September day, musky with the smell of old leather bindings, littered with broken overabses and handleslid umbrellas. I was appolice with rage one minute, and choked with laughter the next. It seemed an hour before Blobs came back.
He came without haste, strutting with new dignity, and passed outside my prison door.
"I got it," he remarked comfortably, and proceeded to turn the key. "I've got em fastened up like sardines in a can" he explained, working with the lock. "Get whit you ought to hear em!" When he put his breath after the shaking I gave him he began to sputter. Howd I know he demanded sulkiness. You nearly broke your neck getin' away the other time. And I haven't got the old key. It's lost.
Where it lost! I demanded, with another gesture toward his coat collar. Down the elevator shaft. There was a gleam of indignation satisfaction through his tears of rage and humiliation.
And so while he held the key in the door at the top of the shaft I quoted it as prince with the assurance that the look he had slipped and that they would be happy as he was as we could tell he was with a pass key. Stars went on thinly and the light was so bright that he looked how hard he had tried to see it and failed. When Stars appeared he was almost the height he would not appear on that sky. He shattered with the feeling of the shock. He kissed and we went in together. I sat with them and we went in with him with black shoes and a very very old dog. The latter an old dog that an old I had an old very old dog. A Petting session! I implored the dog to lay my hand over
Yes. All you can do is has a special skill in quality when the rider was not attached being in doubt. He will be in the skiffman. The skiffman shorter and rounded kept an ample distance. We hope you will be able to waltage extra distance. It will save time.
I'll come to the court I agreed.
The court the court but I want you to give me a chance here gentlemen. I think you are interested you. Have you?
The court the court the court two in his back.
"How about the catch of that door?" he ing迅 potentially. Any danger of it going off again. Really considering the circumstances they were remarkable cheerful thanks, how ever was not. He paced the floor uneasily, his hands under his coat tails.
The arrival of Mickey created a diversion he carried a long package and a corkscrew, and shook hands with the police and opened the bottle with a single gesture.
"I always want something to cheer on these occasions," he said "Where's the water, Blakeley? Everybody ready?" Then in French he toasted the two detectives
"To your eternal discomfiture" he said boxing ceremoniously "May you go home and never come back! If you take Monsieur Blakeley with you, I hope you choke"
The lean man nodded gravely "Prostil," he said But the fat one leanced back and laughed consumedly Hotchkiss finished a mental synopsis of his position, and put down his gait. The woman, he said pompously, "within five minutes the man will want be here, a murderer caught in a net of evidence so fine that a mosquito cannot get through."
The detectives glanced at each other solemnly. Had they not in their possession a sealkin bag containing a wallet and a bit of gold chain, by putting the crime on me, would leave a gap big enough for Billivan himself to crawl through?
"Why don't you say your little speech before Johnson brings the other man, Lawrence?" MoKnight inquired. "They won't believe you, but it will help them to understand what is coming."
"You understand, of course," the lean man put in gravely, "that what you say may be used against you."
"I take the risk," I answered impatiently.
It took some time to tell the story of my worse than useless trip to Pittsburgh, and its sequel. They listened gravely, without interruption.
Mr. Hotchkiss here," insisted, "but that man Sullivan, whom we are momentarily expecting, committed the crime. Mr. MoKnight is inclined to implicate Mrs. Conway, who stabbed Bronson and then herself last night. As for myself, I am open to conviction."
"I hope not," said the stout detective quizzically. And then Alison was announced. My impulse to go out and meet her was forestalled by the detectives, who rose when I did. McKnight, therefore, brought her in, and met her at the door. "I am a great deal of trouble," I said contritely, when I saw her glances around the room. "I wish I had not—"
"It is only right that I should come," she replied, looking up at me. "I am the unconscious cause of most of it. I am afraid. Mrs. Dallas is going to wait in the outer office."
I presented Hotchkiss and the two detectives, who eyed her with interest. In his poke, her beauty, is seen
THE RICHMOND
Her gown I fancy she represented a new type to them. They remained standing until she sat down.
"I have brought the necklace," she began, holding out a white-wrapped box, "as you asked me to."
I passed it, unopened, to the detectives. "The necklace from which was broken the fragment you found in the pealakin bag." I explained. "Miss West found it on the floor of the car, near lower ten."
"When did you find it?" asked the lean detective, bending forward.
"In the morning, not long before the wreck."
she was the set set her.
You, not her sulk, old Harry house, I three that, to.
"My after the for lo and young of a step and
"Did you ever see it before?"
"I am not certain," she replied. "I have seen one very much like it." Her tone was troubled. She glanced at me as if for help, but I was powerless.
"Where?" The detective was watching her closely.
At that moment there came an interruption. The door opened without ceremony, and Johnson ushered in a tall, blonde man, a stranger to all of us. I glanced at Allison; she was pale but composed and scornful. She met the newcomer's eyes full, and, caught unawares, he took a hasty backward step.
"Sit down Mr. Sullivan." McKnight beamed cordially "Have a cigar?" I beg your pardon, Alison do you mind this smoke?
"Not at all" she said composedly Sullivan had had a second to sound his barkings.
"No—no thanks," he mumbled. "If you will be good enough to explain—" "But that's what you are to do. Me Knight said clearly pulling up a chair. You got the most attentive audience you could ask. These two gentlemen are detectives from Pitsburg and we are all curious to know the four details of what happened on the car outside two weeks ago the night your father in law was murdered." Sullivan pitched the arms of his chair. We are not prified, either. The gentlemen from Pitsburg are batting on Mr Blakeley, over there. Mr Hutchles, the gentleman by the radiator, is ready to place ten to one ode on you. And some of us have still other theories, said slowly. I give you my word of hope that I did not kill Simon Hartington and that I do not know who did."
Fiddleddee* added Hitchcocks, bustling forward. Why, I can tell you—" But McKnight pushed him firmly into a chair and held him there.
I am ready to plead guilty to the larceny. Sillian went on "I took Mr Blakeley's clothes. I admit. If I can reimburse blm in any way for the inconvenience..." The stout detective was listening with his mouth open. Do you mean to say he demanded that you got into Mr Blakeley's birth as he contended with his clothes and forged notes and left the train before the wreck? "Yes." "The notes, then." I gave him to Illinois yesterday. Much good he did blm bitterly. Mr Blakeley for a moment. The two detectives were adjusting themselves with difficulty to a new point of view. Sillian was looking defected at the door his hands hanging loose below in his knee. I was watching Alton from where I stood, behind her, I could almost touch the soft hair behind her ear.
"I have no intention of pressing any charge against you." I said with forced clethility, for my hands were itching to get at him. "If you will give us a clear account of what happened on the Ontario that night."
Sullivan raised his handsome, haggard head and looked around at me. "I've soon you before, haven't!" he naked. "Weren't you an uninvited guest at the Laurels a few days—or nights—go? The cat, you remember, and the rug that allipped."
"I remember," he said shortly. He glanced from me to Allison and quickly away.
"The truth can't hurt me," he said, "but it's devilish unpleasant. Allison, you know all this. You would better go out."
"I use of her name or naked me." I stepped in front of her and stood over him. "You will not bring Miss West into the conversation." I threatened, "and she will stay if she wishes."
"Oh, very well," he said with assumed indifference.
Hotchkiss just then escaped from Richey's grasp and crossed the room "Did you ever wear glasses?" he asked eagerly "Never" Sullivan glanced with some contempt at mine "Id better begin by going back a little" he went on sullenly "I sup
Johnson Ushered In a Tall Blonde Man, a Stranger to All Of Us.
pose you know I was married to Ida Harrington about five years ago. She was a good girl, and I thought a lot of her. But her father opposed the marriage—he'd never liked me, and he refused to make any sort of settlement.
"I had thought, of course, that there would be money, and it was a bad day when I found out I'd made a mistake. My sister was wild with disappointment. We were pretty hard up, my sister and I."
I was watching Alison. Her hands were tightly clasped in her lap, and
The nouns then
she was taken out of the window at the character below. She had set her little loot, but that was all. "You understand, of course, that I'm not defending myself," went on the sullied yellow. "The day came when old Harrington put its both out of the house at the point of a revolver, and I threatened—I suppose you know that, too—threatened to kill him." "My sister and I had hard times after that. We lived on the continent for a while. I was at Monte Carlo and she was in Italy. She met a young lady there, the granddaughter of a steel manufacturer and an heiress, and she sent for me. When I got home the girl was gone. Last winter, for an Englishman, a wholesale grocer with a new title, but we had a row, and I came home. I went out to the Heaton boys' ranch in Wyoming, and met Bronson there. He lont me money, and I've been doing his dirty work ever since."
Sullivan got up then and walked slowly forward and back as he talked, his eyes on the faded pattern of the office rug.
"If you want to live in hell, he said swaggy, "put yourself in another man's power. Bronson got into trouble, ignoring John Jillinore's name to the police, and came home learned that a man was bringing the papers back to Washington on the Flor. He even learned the number of his birth, and the night before the wreck, just as I was boarding the train, I got a telegram." Hutchicka stepped forward once more importantly.
Which read, I think. "Man with papers in lower ten, car seven. Got them."
Sullivan looked at the little man with sulky blue eyes.
"It was something like that, anyhow, and I was a fast business, and it made matters worse that he didn't care that a telegram which must pass through a half dozen hands was more or less incriminating to me."
"Then, to add to the unpleasantness of my position, just after we boarded the train— I was accompanying my sister and this young lady, Miss West—a woman touched me on the sleeve, and I turned to face—my wife"
"That took away my last bit of nerve. I told my sister, and you can understand she was in a bad way, too. Who knew what it meant! I dah had heard that I was going..."
He stopped and glanced uneasily at Alison
"Go on," she said coldly "It is too late to shield me. The time to have done that was when I was your guest."
"Well," he went on, his eyes turned carefully away from my face, which must have presented certainly anything but a pleasant sight "Miss West was going to do me the honor to marry me, and—"
"You were! I burst forth, thriving byast Alison West's chair "You were! internal curt!"
One of the detectives got up and stood between us
"You must remember, Mr Blakeley, that you are forcing this story from this man. These details are unpleasant, but important. You were going to marry this young lady," he said, turning to Sullivan, "although you already had a wife living."
"It was my sister's plan, and I was in a bad way for money. If I could marry, secretly, a wealthy girl and go to Europe, it was unlikely that Ila—that is, Mrs Sullivan—would hear of it.
"It was more than a shock to see my wife on the train, and to realize from her face that she knew what was going on. I don't know yet, unless some of the servants—well, never mind that
"It meant that the whole thing had gone up. Old Harrington had carried a gun for me for years, and the same train wouldn't hold both of us Of course, I thought that he was in the coasah just behind ours."
Hotchkiss who leaning forward now, his eyes narrowed, his thin lips drawn to a line.
"Are you left handed, Mr. Sullivan?"
he asked
Sullivan stopped in surprise
"No, he said grumly 'Can't do anything with my left hand' Hutch klas subsided, crestfallen but alert.
"I tore up that cursed telegram, but I was afraid to throw the scraps away. Then I looked around for lower ten. It was almost exactly across—my berth was lower seven, and it was, of course, a bit of exceptional luck for me that the car was number seven."
"Did you tell your sister of the telegram from Bronson?" I asked
"No. It would do no good, and she was in a bad way without that to make her worse."
"Your sister was killed, I think?"
The shorter detective took a small package from his pocket and held it in his hand snapping the rubber band which held it.
"Yes, she was killed," Sullivan said soberly.
"What I say now can do her no harm."
He stopped to push back the heavy hair which dropped over his forehead, and went on more connectedly. "It was late, after midnight, and we went at once to our births. I undressed, and then I lay there for an hour, condoning me. Some one in lower nine was restless and wide awake, but finally became quiet. "The man in ten was sleeping heavily. I could hear his breathing, and it seemed to be only a question of getting across and behind the curtains of his birth without being seen. After that, it was a mere matter of quiet searching. "The car became very still. I was about to try for the other berth, when some one brushed softly past, and I lay down. Finally, however, what things had been quiet for a time, I got up, and after-looking along the aisle, I slipped behind the curtains of lower ten. You understand, Mr. Blakley, that I thought you were in lower ten, with the notes."
I nodded curly.
"I'm not trying to defend myself."
He went on: "I was ready to steal the
Hoses—I had do. But murder!"
He wiped his greehead with his handkerchief. "I slipped across and behind the curtains. It was very still. The man in ten didn't move, although my heart was thumping until I thought he would hear it.
"I felt around cautiously. It was perfectly dark, and I came across a bit of chain, about as long as my finger. It seemed a queer thing to find there, and it was sticky, too."
He shuddered, and I could see Alison's hands clenching and unclenching with the strain.
"All at once it struck me that the man was strangely silent, and I think I lost my nerve. Anyhow, I drew the curtains open a little, and let the light fall on my hands. They were red, blood-red."
He leaned one hand on the back of the chair, and was silent for a moment, as though he lived over again and the events of that more than awful night.
"The stout detective had let his oligar go out; he was still drawing at it nervously. Richey had picked up a paper-weight and was tossing it from hand to hand; when it slipped and fell to the floor, a startled shudder fussed through the room.
"There was something glittering in there," Suillan resumed, "and on impulse I picked it up. Then I dropped the curtains and stumbled back to my own borth. When you wiped your hands on the bed clothing and stuck the disk in to the pillow." Hutchles was seeing his carefully built structure crumbling to pieces, and he looked chagrined
"I suppose I did—I'm not very clear about what happened then. But when I railed a little I saw a Russian leather wallet lying in the slain almost at my feet, "did, like a fool, "I stuck it with the bit of chain, into my bag.
"I sat there, shivering, for what seemed hours. It was still perfectly quiet, except for some one annoting I thought that would drive me crazy
"The more I thought of it the worse things looked. The telegram was the first thing about me—I would put the police on my neck at once when it ten had been killed
"Then I remembered the notes, and I took out the wallet and opened it."
He stopped for a minute as if the recalling of the next occurrence was almost beyond him
"I took out the wallet" he said simply, "and, opening it held it to the light. In gilt letters was the name, Simon Harrington"
The detectives were leaning forward now, their eyes on his face
"Things seemed to whirl around for a while I sat there almost paralyzed,
wondering what this now development meant for me
"My wife, I knew, would swear I had killed her father; nobody would be likely to believe the truth
"Do you believe me now?" He looked around at us defiantly "I am telling the absolute truth, and not one of you believes me"
"After a bit the man in lower nib got up and walked along the aisle toward the smoking compartment I heard him go, and, leaning from my berth, watched him out of sight
"It was then I got the idea of changing berths with him, getting his clothes, and leaving the train I give you my word I had no idea of throwing suspicion on him"
Alison looked scornfully incredulous, but I felt that the man was telling the truth
"I changed the numbers of the berths, and it worked well. I got into the other man's berth, and he came back to mine. The rest was easy. I dressed in his clothes—luckily, they fitted—and jumped the train not far from Baltimore, just before the wreck."
"There is something else you must clear up." I said. "Why did you try to telephone me from M——, and why did you change your mind about the message."
He looked astounded
"You know I was at M—" he stammered
"Yes we traced you. What about the message?"
"Well, it was this way, of course. I did not know your name, Mr Blakeley. The telegram said 'Man with papers in lower ten car seven,' and after I had made what I considered the man in my birth in a bad way
"He would probably be accused of the crime So, although when the wreck occurred I supposed everyone connected with the affair had beeh killed, there was a chance that you had survived. I've not been of much account, but I didn't want a man to swing because I left him in my place. Besides, I began to have a theory of my own
"I've entered the car a tall, dark woman passed us, with a glass of water in her hand, and I vaguely remembered her. She was amazingly like Blanche Conway.
"If he, too, thought the man with the notes, was in lower ten, it explained a lot, including that piece of a woman's necklace. She was a fury, Blanche Conway, capable of anything."
"Then why did you counteract that message?" I asked courteously. "When I got to the Caterpillar house, and got to bed—had'prained my ankle in the jump—I went through the alligator bag I had taken from lower nine. When I found your name, I sent the first message. Then, soon after, I came across the notes. It seemed too good to be true, and I was crazy for fear the message had gone. "At first I was going to send them to Bronson; then I began to see what the possession of the notes meant to me. It meant power over Bronson, everything. He was a devil, that man." "Well, he's at hope now," said McKullet, and we were glad to laugh and relieves the tension.
Alice put her hand over her eyes, as if to shut out the light of the man she had so nearly married, and I felt touched touched one of the soft little curls that nestled at the back of her neck. "When I was able to walk" went on.
the sullen votes. "I. camp at once to Washington. I tried to sell the notes to Bronson, but he was almost at the end of his rope. Not even my threat to send them back to you. Mr. Blakeley, could make him meet my figure. He didn't have the money." McKnight was triumphant. "I will send them all as reason in my theory to the said." Mrs. Conway wanted the notes to force a legal marriage, I supposer" "Yes."
The detective with the small package carefully rolled off the rubber band, and unwrapped it. I held my breath as he took out, first, the Rusia leather wallet.
"These things, Mr. Blakeley, we found in the sealakin bag Mr. Sullivan says he left you. This wallet, Mr. Sullivan this one, no one found on the floor."
Bullman opened it, and, glancing at the name inside, "Simon Harrington," nodded affirmatively.
"And this," want on the detective—"this is a piece of gold chain"
"This, I believe, is the dagger." He held it up, and Alison gave a faint cry of astonishment and dismay. Sullivan's face grew ghastly, and he sat down weakly on the nearest chair. The detective looked at him shrowdy, ly, then at Alison's agitated face. "Where have you seen this dagger booby, young lady?" he asked, kindly enough. "Oh don't ask me!" he gasped, breathless, her eyes turned on Sullivan. "It's--it's too terrible!" "Tell him." I advised, leaning over to her "It will be found out later, anyhow." "Ask him," she said, nodding toward Sullivan. The detective unwrapped the small box Alison had brought, disclosing the trampled necklace and broken chain. With clumsy fingers he spread it on the tahoe and fitted into place the bit of chain. There could be no doubt that it belonged there. Where did you find that chain? Sullivan looked closely, looking for the first time at Alison. "On the floor, near the murdered man's berth."
"Now, Mr. Sullivan," said the detective, civilly, "I believe you can tell us, to the light of those two exhibits, who really did murder Simon Harrison." Sullivan looked again at the dagger, a sharp little bit of steel with a Florentine handle. Then he picked up the jacket and pressed a hidden spring under one of the cameses. Inside, very neatly engraved, was the name and a title: "Gentlemen," he said, his face ghastly, "it is of no use for me to attempt a dental. The dagger and necklace belonged to my sister Alico Curtis."
CHAPTER XXXI.
And Only One Arm.
Hotchkiss was the first to break the tension
"Mr. Sullivan," he asked suddenly,
"was your slater left-handed?"
"Yes."
Hotchkiss put away his notebook
and looked around with an air of triumphant vindication. It gave us a chance to smile and look rolled. After all, Mrs. Curts was dead. It was the happiest solution of the unhappy affair. McKnight brought Sullivan some whisky and he braced up a little
"I learned through the papers that my wife was in a Baltimore hospital and yesterday I ventured there to see
"I Understand Now What Puzzled Me Then."
her. I felt if she would help me to keep straight, that now, with her father and my sister both dead, we might be happy together.
"I understand now what puzzled me then. It seemed that my sister went into the next car and tried to make my wife promise not to interfere. But Ida-kera, Bullivan—was my father and papa, certificates, certificates and so on that would stop the marriage at once.
"She said, also, that her father was in our car, and that there would be the mischief to pay in the morning. It was probably when my sister tried to get the papers that he swaked and she had to do what she did."
It was over. Save for a technicality or two, I was a free man. Allison rose quietly prepared to get the papers. Bullivan, who sat crouched in his chair, his face hurried in his hands.
McKnight saw her, with Mrs. Dallas, to their carriage and came back again. The gathering in the office was breaking up: Johnson had slipped away as unnoticiably as he came. Sullivan, looking worn and old, was standing by the window, staring at the broken necklace in his hand. When he saw me watching him, he put it back on the desk and picked up his hat. I cannot do anything more "he had to leave." I think you have done about enough." I roplied, grimly, and we went out. I believe that they and Holtchick led me somewhere to dinner, and that, for fear, I would be lonely, without him, they sent for Johnson. And I recall a spirited discussion in which Holtchick told the detective that he could manage certain cases, but that
he locked induction. Richer Jane. I were, mainly silent. "Try, thoughts would slip ahead to that hour, later in the evening, when I should see Alison again.
I dressed in fringe baste, finally and was so particular about my tie that Mrs. Klopton gave up in despair. "I wish," until your arm is better, that you would buy the kind that hooks on," she protested, almost tearfully. "I'm sure they look very nice, Mr. Lawrence. My late husband always—" That's a lover's knot you've tied this time. I started, and, Jirking open the tie, I saw the woman's eyes, looked out of the window for Johnson—until I recalled that he no longer belonged in my perspective. I ended by driving frantically to the club and setting George to do it.
I was late, of course. The drawing room and library at the Dallas country home was very empty. I could hear billard balls rolling somewhere and I turned the other way. I found Allison at last on the balcony, sitting much as she had that night on the beach—her chin in her hands, her eyes fixed unselingly on the trees and lights of the square across. She was even whistling a little, softly. But this time the plainness was gone. It was a tender little tune. She did not move, as I stood beside her, looking down. And now, when the moment had come, all the thousand and one things I had been waiting to say forsook me, precipitately be a retreat and left me unsupported. The arc-moon sent little fugitive lights over her hair, her hair her gown. "Don't—do that!" I said unsteadily. "You—you know what I want to do when you whistle!" She glanced up at me and she did not stop. She did not stop. She went on whistling softly a bit tremorously. And straightway I forgot the
street, the chance of passers by my voles in the house behind us. "The world does not hold anyone but you," she said. "I am in our world, sweetheart. I love you."
And I kissed her
A boy was whitening on the pavement below I let her go reluctantly and sat back where I could see her
"I haven't done this the way I intended to at all" I confessed "in books they get things all settled and then kiss the lady"
"Settled" the inquired
"Oh, about getting married and that sort of thing. I explained with elaborate carelessness. We could go down to Bermuda or or Jamaica, say in December."
She drew her hand away and faced me squarely.
"I believe you are afraid!" she declared "I refuse to marry you unless you propose, properly. Everybody does. And it is a woman's privilege she wants to have that to look back to."
"Very well!" I consented with an exaggerated sigh "If you will promise not to think I look like an idiot, I shall do it knee and all."
I had to pass her to close the door behind us, but when I kissed her again she protested that we were not really engaged
"I turned to look down at her "It is a girl" "I said, exculptantly "to love a girl the way I love you and to have only one arm" Then I closed the door
From across the street there came an sharp crescendo whistle and a vaguely familiar figure separated itself from the park ralling in a horse whisper, "shall I throw in the key down the elevator shaft?"
ELECTRICITY IN BIBLE TIMES
Some Have Offered an Explanation for Miracles by Supposing Its Use.
An electrical engineer of Munich named Stendamann makes an ingenious argument to prove that the Jews in the time of Moses had an advanced knowledge of electricity, using passages from the Bible to enforce his claim.
His theory of the famed serpent of bronze is that it was a lightning conductor and he also says that the temple at Jerusalem was protected by metal points connected with the ground.
The most ingenious speculation is in regard to the work of the covenant, which was made of walls of wood covered on both sides with metal. If this connection was broken from the temple roof, it would form a sort of laden jar charged by the electricity of the atmosphere, and would give a shock to anyone touching it.
Mr. Stademann presumes that Moses gained his knowledge of electricity from the Egyptians. This ancient race certainly had a knowledge of many, branches of science that it took the rest of the world thousands of years to learn. But the only proof that they were electrical engineers is one recently advanced by an archaeologist—that they must have had electric lights because their underground temples show no traces of smoke.
Charm In Expression
An amiable expression while thinking is like an agreeable inflection of the voice while speaking. An exaggeration in either case brings unnatural and many quite unpleasant results — From an article in the Circle.
Lady Bylbil Grey recently accompanied her father, Earl Grey, governor general of the Dominion, on his trip to the Canadian arctic gold. Baldas, Near Dawson, City, the capital of the Montclair, she begged, but a claim for herself, with all the prescribed, legal formalities and christened it the Bylbil. Her first panning out produced $20 worth of gold, which she considered a very promising start. During the long arctic winter Bylbil Grey is working her claim by deputy, but she says she will return next summer to supervise operations and examine results in person.
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BATURDAXES si2s SULNIB, "4010,
SOME APPETIZiNG RECIPES THE
GIRL CAN MASTER.
Make Excellent Lessone In Cooking
for the Beginner—A Pretty Way
of Entertaining One's
Friends.
There comes a time tn evory girl's
fe when she wants to know ow to
cook, and there fe no pleasanter yay
¢o bogin than by learning to mauter
the chafing dish. *
Unloe# a dish can be propared tn &
fom minutes, preparations for the
cooklag should be dono in the kitchen,
for, of course, ike playing the plate.
chafingdisb accolnplistiments are for
company. Tho utensil Is put on tho
tuncheon or suppor table, and the cook
‘alts at bor toxk surrounded by all tho
Weule condiments and othor fixings
eveded. When (he young amateur haa
mastered a recipe or two to Its Opal
perfection a Iittly chafing dish spree
dn a very pretty way of ontertatning
‘one’s friends Hero are somo simple
recipes for very rophisticated dishes:
Mushrooms Sauted—Aa __gotting
‘mushrooms ready for cooking. Is 8
messy busincas, thoy should posittvely
be prepared away from the tabfi,
Hroak the urabrolias trom tho stems
and cut off tbe darkened lower onda of
thoxa, ‘Then ‘peel the umbrelias, be.
ginning at the outelde edges and pull-
ing off the skin lightly and delicately
It the musbroome are wot first the
gktn will stick, 20 the ppellng mupt Yo
done when they are dry. Drop, thom
fn cold sulted water for: ten rluituos,
then drata,- rinse thoroughly, . dala
‘again and’ place in a saucepan ‘gt
Dutter—a Itirge tableapoontul to halt
8 Sound of mushrooms. ‘Then covar
tho. “dish tightly, start the blaze of
the timp beneath, and cook without
uncovoring—It posslble—for half an
hour or more, Not one drop of tutd
other than the melting butter is need:
od, for mushrooms draw conaldorablo
Wator with copklng.- While this ue-
Mtelous dish, which goes auperbly with
chops or buttered toaat,- ta beng
cooked, some other course, not: pré-
pared at the table, may be diapatched.
‘Look for, treah thuehrooms, . If alate,
‘they afe'tough and tasteless, Galt
ster conkin,
Calves Bralne “and Tomato Bauce.
—Thfe dainty Is ay near to an ap.
Frosch In taste to eweetbreads ‘as
sould bo had, and the bratna cost about
4 fourth of the mut at. the more fash
fonable sweetbrends,
Get a pait of frowk brains and soak
thers In cold salt watet for two hours,
Parboll, and then denude them of ali
wkin end yelping, and divide thon ta
portions about the aisé of lirge: oyb
ters, “Maye this plate of sold. dtutt
brought to the table, whors the tomato
sauce would te made,
Take for thle three, {atgy freah to
- tatobi, ucalded and skinned, chapped
‘and spnegsind “with, cayenta, anlt, 7a
bering of, guslle: nda, spoontel “ot
butter, OF ¢0 of olive. bil: (Cook ii
* tomatose for. Atteon ox twenty mikates
chopping them ali the tims /wi0h: Ue
PO Ue PA eae AB:
CHF BL Cee Cir HAT jeanne AL a cere QS pa CH SES RS a WL
COLONEL ROOSEVELT. IN CONVERSATION: WI (MR, E MONT REILY: ON ‘BOARD “tH p KAN
COLONEL ROOSEVELT. IN 0 DVERSATION WITH. MAL, 10N) a TR ne
BESTS Ree aed ee anes og ck tn Se ee eka iy % ety teh
een ay, ANA A RR ECE ie and GUL od RN etek LA
ee En ones eee hs
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FeO aise ii ee genase oa
Bes Pa ee ne ere eee ER eee
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Ger ure eean Nee Ore om cee Sit: eee i
WER Pea ecsetn Ste ar as aa ld Sc Rarer ER ry See teers rr
EOC CANS Ss Ca ec
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During bis return voyage to Amorica on the Kalgerin Auguste Victoria Br Noosntelt did a great dedi of Ut
erary work and answered a busbel of letters. He wus very approachable sud talked with wany passengers each
day He was very noncommittal in hl anawers to politienl questioua of a leading chaructvr In the pteture be ls
sbown talking with E. Mont Relly, a business man-of Kansas City.
‘Tiscouraged «lant there some way
we can how our appreciation of his
worth and cheer bim up?" “Well,” re
piled old Philander, “we might try at
tending the midweek prayer meeting
‘That is bis lovellest hour.”
“1 want to hire a canoe”
“Acauatomed to rowing one, I sup
pose?”
“Never was tn one” |
Can you awim
“Not a stroke”
“Well, you pay donb'n and in ad:
vance. I've doen Ieft in tho lurch by
enough duicides.”
“Why. my dear.” expostulnted Br,
Ponsonby, “I wasn't druok Inet night.
1 was merely Imitating « drunk man
to. toot you"
“Well,” sniffed Mrs Ponsonby, “all
J have to say ts, ff that wan an Ime
tation you are wasting your talents
fh the grocery business, You'd draw
$100 8 weak in vaudeville.”
Eaveation.
+ ‘The Host—What ploce will you
Dave, Miss Tootsie
Mixa Tootslo—Picane carve me the
left equare tangent cast to 76 segment
above the Join disgonal to fat paral-
fol to— Ob, 1 bex pardon, | learned
the cuts In cooking schoot.—Puck.
| _ Lelghtly cook a kippored-herring, re-
it | move al] akip and bone, and pound the
®}oesh jn a mortay with an ounce of
butter, a desrsrtapoonfal of cream, »
few Arope'of anchovy sauce, and a iit
Ns pepper: mix all thoroughly, and
e|pqund ull “amdoth and creainy, ‘than
ag} ue into a pOs and ran butter meer Uk
aa op. fee ey
‘feces,
Cooking spoon, and when the sauce Ix
done, drop in the cold brains, eprinklod
with flour. ond cook some miautes
longer. ‘Tho mens soos well with a
serving of green peppers, stuffed wlth
stale white bread and fried In olive
oll.
Asparagus Omelet —Hlave a plate
on the table Mled with hot botiad ae-
paragus tipa—about two inches of the
caer es
@ egxs neaded, yolk and white to-
gethor, and drop them Into the chaftog
dish after tt te mediim hot and bas
buen buttored. When he omelet fs
att done—that ts, cooked on one alde
pour fn tho aaparagus tips, covor them
witb the egg, fap over for x roinute’s
more couking, slip on s hot plato, and
bateer the top with melted butter
Only use salt and black peppor with
cate,
| MAN OF HIGH 10EAL8.
“flo yon don't care to encourege,
that young port wih bis ethereal
fdesaT” (aterrogatod the cigar anles
man. -
“ft don't care a continental about bis
ethereal ideas,” growled (he grocery-
man, “as long as they dof't cost me
aégthiog”
*DId they ever cost you anything?”
“t should say vo! The other day
Jo came in and, ralsing hie right
hatid, struck a definatic attitude. apd
said, "I love everything that’s good.”
Then with hie lett band he belped
Jhimeolt to the candted citron aud tho
0.cent gimonds. 1 doa't Youbdt that
‘hé Uke. things that are good, but
Dlacied Mt -be's golng to make this a
aropply, atation.”
cot Sets SPE on
os <pntiander,” the
Doris Purtner's'-yillaxe Feaooty “our,
TRisivter: Rae wotked ard and, e¢ema,
Teek Precautions.
A Vivid Portrayal
Edueation.
Herring Cream.
i i ti i i il la aill
"Phone, 577. Richarad, Va
A. D. PRICE,
Funeral Digecfor, Embalmer and Liveryman.
‘All orders promptiy lied at short noticu by telegraph or tal-
ephope. Halla rented for mectings and alce satertainments.
Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences Large picnic or
band wagons for hire at reasonablo rates and sothing but fret-
class, carriages, buggies, etc. Keep constantly on haod fine fun-
ers] suppiles.
—“ay No. 212 East Leigh Street.
| (Residence Noxt Drs.)
OPEN ALL DAY AND NIGHT.—Man oa Daty All Night.
> 900490060900 000 O08 74
a a eR I EN ETT ee ee
PHOTOS.
We affer you, the [Steet and most artistic photos, et # more
ee thap you can obtain cleewhere, »
ay attention pald to children. Enlarging aod copying
Intertor view work.
We will also be picased to quotw you prices om oxterivr ani!
from old photos, » specialty. .
Geo. ©. Brown, PHOTOGRAPHER,
GOS North 2nd St., : Richmond, Va.
|W. L JOHNSON
a bs ’
Funeral Director and Embalimer,
Office & Warerooms, 207 N Foushee St. Cor. Broad. |
HACKS FOR HIRE.
| Orders by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Weddings,
Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended.
Telephone, 686. Residence in Boilding.
cea ali, OA ELE EOIN AL
Hurt Hie Festings.
“Rude man,” snapped tbe fery
housovife “you never assoctated
with gentlemen!”
‘The wayfarer was visibly burt
“Lady,” be sald humbly, “you do
mo an Injustica Aln't 1 Just from de
Pittsburg pen? And do warden says
himself dere are so many geot/omen
dore he ts guing to do away with
ateipes ”
PS STM 049 89 wi
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ee.
een
‘Berar
NE ates
Boe
pror.S. Ponwwen ae v.,
Strange, Soatartal,. Bo zine see
“ig ae Aes baer 27
* PROP. D. D. BRUOH M.D.
the Sor Apoatte of Bbtence
of the, om,
. “Gold to ay ‘dae in the
Fiprid tp covet wie ae
ton mie ‘iay four
si Pianos ot haut bumbus.
Greatest ‘wage Medtdm ‘bi’ the
eo gnmay UC HDs EOWAR co
shea tata ener
a poets ake Oca,
fit Ya Whognerérs. weer sah 2oan
ort Tae baat os ine
te, Wie rhs the
Pelvade’ eobinGer ein pers Cre
yo, broken hearisd: Peed San with
Sot BUA yoot chine kad Seaton
gchallengey, ne. te
Seavert
Vet aA Rl ra BON
FORMER PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WAVING HIS HAT TO ADMIRERS FROM THE DECK OF THE
oy . ~ ANDROSCOGGIN. ey ~ &
UE ciet wenn ee 5 Be RAY CANS A ae Pee ee J A pa tata: Bo
RSS SA ie ava NG AL OUNacen Reema EPSRC SCS ean ed
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Sake Se ae REED 1.00 AC rr Be ory sere aae ey a et cd ea
Rae fe ee eae eee er gies cece eee
es nee se Bee Nae sas . Sars ramen oa ncinc en nN
ge a eer Aa oe ae eae bog PRE REPEAL aknaccoreitn oh
pk Sas oseaerer Te os eee
ee eee ee ee
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Sta eet init a Fase eset eae ton IC au
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om rete ees ay ORGINIC een elpuree eee
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[ Photo by Amoricau Preas Association
Note for the Girls,
Statistics sbow that daldoese and | T
bigber education go together In otber
words, tho woman with a baystack of
balr on her bead dovcan’t know as,
much as the woman with o colffure
of doorknob #iz0 —atcbivon Globe
Simple Giobe Dont you know that
{ta unually the woman witb the door
Knob co.ffure who Geam the bay
stack of tart
Jove; uniting the separated and
being back the lost ong. Tracos lost
or stolen good. Uneesthe hiiden
treasures. Removes ovil influences
Crossca, Spells, IU Lack, cures tricks
and Conjurations, gives Luck and
Sriecets in all you ‘vodertake. Cures
the Tobacco and Liquor Habits, Al-
lows the Captive to.be eet Bred.
He halt deci Cad
s complet
Fou busines Sr eatand your moDey
‘Are You, slek?,, Do you know what
the trouble te ‘with yout, Come ad
Oe de mown
aod all Dligach ented, Potala gtven
. ven
on. Hot ding and all Games of
on Horse 4 all
> No mattor what alls you, come
and seg this wonderful. men. Rasd-
er a Dhat some
ie nxter bard Ue 0 gat aloes
Ho matter. how they toll, while oth-
ta have muccenst Mahy weslthy
Bien and women: owe thelr so0cee
thfe, wondertnl man. .
.- He. will tell ‘you. whom*you will
matey... WU you be bappy 7 He
will ta Fou who your trjende ang
epetileg are, yon tall? Don't
take leap in the dark, but de xi
viged bx, {hts wonderfal man. Great-
ent reaps. ta, axfetanon, as
vyHo alwaya Sudseeds when others
fail.. 5 oa Be of a ite
ae, Dani Joh pea Fen,
Hos pqurey) by. to 9:86 P.M.
Sepang: ge vo a ak
sp. conta, fi gariedea ne
eenta,,, Miisingy $1.90, x
fore cise LON ws et
reece
‘10K Oth Bore Oe cotta, Fe
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MATCH IT CORRECTLY
PRICES BRAIDS, {NATURAL HAIR) $250. ALL-ROUND
POMPADOURS, (NATURAL HAIR), $100, FRONT PIECES
CNATURAL HAIR), $2.50. Der sere rere
wu spinnin aed A Eee a ws easton eure
to-day delighted with Ite weeserful resulta. ‘Toa mucits of this gre! balr preperation, tae.
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Folled at the Post Office at Richmond, Va. on second class matter
Many people instigate what they exhilaration for true religion
good behaviour and politeness will
be more towards preventing race
troubles than anything we know
President Roosevelt retired must be reckoned with in all of the political calculations of the politicians and statesmen
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Colored folks are gut-actually out of politics altogether but from the lack of attention that they are receiving they might as well be
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Prayer is mighty good when you feel like cussing. It cools you off just as surely as cold water from a hose nozzle will do the same thing.
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Jack Johnson has the better chance of getting a decision in Nevada than he had in California. We labored under the impression that the police were getting ready to stop the bour. Busy people will have but little time to complain.
It would be well for the average colored man to pay very little attention to prejudiced white men. There are so many of them who will recognize methyl and ability in colored men that it is a waste of time to worry over the other kind.
A colored person who goes through this section of the country with a chip on his shoulder waiting for some white person to knock it off will not have to gd very far before he is accommodated. A white person who does this same thing relative to colored people, will travel much further but if he lives long enough he will find himself confronting the same conditions that we have prophesied for the colored brother. Let us all live in peace.
Dickinson Going Around World.
Secretary of War Dickinson, with
Mrs. Dickinson, left San Francisco for
Seattle on his tour around the world.
Brigadier General Clarence Edwards,
of the bureau of insular affairs, sailed
with them on the steamship Siberia
for the Orient.
A
You cannot put your finger on a spot on the map where you can buy such satisfactory clothes as at Berry's Why?
Because the customer's satisfaction is considered first.
Because there are no tricks bluffs or tariff tales about the prices
Because here are all-wool suits from $15 to $35
Because every suit is guaranteed to be as represented.
Because the customer's money is only on deposit and can be withdrawn if any purchase is unsatisfactory.
Because everthing you need to wear with the suit is of just the same character'
O. H. BERRY & Co.
A.
Charlton Confesses Murder.
Porter Charlton the husband of Mrs. Mary Scott Castle Charlton, whose body was found stuffed in a trunk which was taken from Lake Como Italy recently was arrested as he stepped from the steamship Princess from Hoboken N J Within a half hour he had confessed to the murder of his wife.
Charlton at first denied his identity, but after being given the third degree he admitted that he was the husband of Mrs Charlton and made a signed statement to the Hoboken police.
The following is the text of Charlton's comment:
'My wife and I lived happily together. She was the best woman in the world to me but she had an ungovernable temper. So had I. We frequently quarreled over the most critical matters and her language to me was frequently so fool that I know she did not know the meaning of it.
"The night I struck her she had been quarring with me. She was in the worst ever it she had ever seen her in. I told it she did not cause I would lose her and put a stop to it. She stopped for a little while and startled again. I took a mallet which I had used to do some household repairs and struck her three times I thought she was dead. I put the body in a trunk, in which I also threw the mallet. "About 12 that night I moved the trunk from the house dragged it to a small pier near the house and throw it overboard. I remained at Malprisal the next day and left the following night and went to Como and from there to Genoa, where I took the steamer from three days later. "The room where I killed her was an out-door sleeping apartment." At the suggestion of an attorney, whose service he secured shortly after his arrival at the police station, Charlton added this postscript to his statement.
"I have been informed that C. K. Impolatto has been implicated, and I wish to state that this gentleman is absolutely guiltiness. I have no defense to make and don't wish to."
Charlton will probably be taken back to Italy for trial.
The body of Mrs. Mary Scott Castle Charlton was found packed in a trunk which was taken from Lake Como near the village of Molkreslo by fishermen on June 10. The woman, with her husband, Porter Charlton, had occupied a villa on the lake front, leased by them some time before. At the time the woman's body was recovered Porter Charlton could not be found.
The Girl—I want you to help make him jealous—awfully, wildly jealous. The Man—En-let's get married.—Truth.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
and the blessings of Almighty God will ever delight to dwell with and bless you
Rev Dr W H White, master of ceremonies, after making a few timely remarks, stated that the time had about arrived to repair to another department, where arrangements have been made for entertainment of a different nature. Just here Deacon B H. Peyton interrupted and said, by request he desired to deliver to him a program which he desired carried out before leaving for other quarters.
Rev Dr Evans Payne, bishop of Church and pastor Fourth Baptist Church was called The Doctor came forward, and said he felt highly honored by the evidences shown him that he holds the Fifth Street Baptist Church and Pastor dearly to his heart, second only to that of his own that the relationship is interoven and bound by cords of love that he has been called to be honored, he was the first to have been called to honored position. That he is proud to say that Pastor Rev Dr W F Graham and he were called to the ministry about the same time thirty three years ago that about the same time thirty car ago, they both were ordained, and such affairs needlessly make each loving anxious about one another welfare. He further stated that no one can succeed in the ministry with full success without a good loving woman for a wife. That Dr Graham's son has in a great measure been due to his wife Josie A Graham that the Fifth Street Baptist Church realizing that fact has remembered
but in appreciation for her service
Mrs Graham's said the Due
to one is remembered only by what
he has done. You value and worth
to this chin being we are and
trade in all times to further the
cause of good together with our
kind kindly disposition. We want
for you affection and esteem in
the token on behalf of the mem-
bers and friends of Fifth Street Baptist
Church I present to you this
fine silver service, which we hope
you will accept and keep as evidence
of such affection and esteem Ms. Jesse
A Graham, being nearly overcome by surprise and true womanly dignified modest joy, responded
betterly.
Master of Ceremonies Officers
Members and Friends of Fifth
Street Baptist Church
I am taken by surprise. I had knowledge of the movement to make my husband present of a $75 00 bill of clothes and when I found it out I was told by some of the ladies to look sewed on that night. I told them that I could not but all of this tale told me to believe that it was no cause of the present expected to be given my Rev Dr W F Graham I cannot express myself in words for this evidence of your affection and esteem being filled with joy and reverence. I accept this silver service with pleasant joy pulputting through my buoyant heart relying upon God to aid me in being a better servant in His business
Rev Dr W H H Stokes pastor Ebboe nizer Baptist Church was next call upon he presented Pastor Dr W F Graham and Mrs Josie A Granh his wife with hansomely made cake bearing thirty Lighted candles Dr Stokes after making a few preliminary remarks relative to the cake its composition object and beautifully describing the lights represented a years service presented to them this handsomely made cake to which responses were made by polite appreciable bows
Rev Dr S C Burrell secretary Y M C A. the zealous untiring worker for the salvation of and the rescuing of perishing young men and women was next called. After making a few timely remarks, in which he stated that the pastor and he were the best of friends and giving words of encouragement to the church and pastor the Doctor presented to Rev Dr W F Graham a fine suit of clothes the gift of the Fifth Street Baptist Church as a token and approving their esteem for his service. He served for eighteen years service Our Pastor. Rev Dr W F Graham, responded in a few words expressing his appreciation and said that under guidance of the Holy Spirit he'll put forth every effort to bring about greater results in the future than what has been accomplished in the past.
Rev Dr W F Graham is worthy of all that has been done for him. He has been a blessing both to the church and the colored people in the city. Coming to Richmond about eightteen years ago, he was chiefly instrumental in revolutionizing thought and crystallizing new sentiments and ideas. Among his first lectures was the one known as "Young Mon to the Front." Prior to Dr. Graham's coming to Richmond it was almost suicidal for a young member of the church at its meetings to express his opinions on any subject. If the same was in opposition to those of superior ago A young man as a deacon was not thought of: Working hard and pushing forward the doctrine calling upon the young man because they are strong. His priest is open to everyone and officers, both young and old; thus combining together wisdom and strength. Following suit, nearly every church in Richmond and vicinity have done likewise. In the outer works he has raised many to higher walks of life. Following are notes worthy facts of our church from the record: (See Next Week.)
The Sunday school opened Sunday morning at 10 o'clock by Supt. Prof. B. H. Payton. Anniversary rally was the general topic of conversation among the children after the lesson was over. They had raised $30.90 for it by their little effort and were proud. Dr. R. H. Bowling, Norfolk, Va., addressed the school encouraging the children in their work. The attendance was fair.—B. W.)
Don't forget to attend the B. Y.
P. U. Friday night.
Wednesday night, June 22, Rev.
Dr. D. Webster Davis, pastor of Second Baptist Church, Washington Ward, orally Manchester, Va.
preached a fine sermon at Fifth Street Baptist Church. It was enjoy-
ed by all. A large number was out to hear him. Dr. Davis is of national fame as a great lecturer; as a preacher, he ranks among the boat.
Last Shipday morning and night Dr. R. H. Bowling, of Norfolk, Va., president of the National Bapt. State Convention, presched two extra fine sermons at Fifth Street Baptist Church. They embodied fine thought were scientific and filled with spiritual food for enlightenment. Dr. Bowling is one of the finest preachers in this country.
At 5:30 o'clock the church assembled for communion. Our pastor, presiding, Dr. H. H. Mitchell broke the bread. The deacons and officers were in their respective places. Several visiting pastors and preachers were present and spoke. The church was delighted to meet its former Pastor Dr. H. H. Mitchell, and he seemed equally so. All were well pleased at this communion and reunion
Next Sunday morning and night.
Dr R. Spiller will preach. In the
morning he will preach a special sermon. At night his subject will be Nebuchadnezzar's Image.
At 3:30 o'clock Dr. A. Blinga,
known as Old Man Eloquent," pastor of the Baptist Church, Wash-
ington Ward, family Manchester Va., by request will request the sermon he preached at Fifth Street Baptist Church, on June 12 Dr. W T Johnson, pastor of First Baptist Church, will introduce the renowned Dr A Blinga.
NEGRO PYTANHS OF
VIRGINIA MEET HERE
Nearly Five Hundred Deligates From
All Parts of Virginia, in Conven
tion in Bristol—Negro Bank
President Presiding
The most notable negro gathering
in the history of Bristol was conven
ed in Bristol Tuesday when the grand
lodge Knights of Pythias colored
of Virginia assembled at the Lee Street
M. E. Church Nearly Five hundred
delegates from all parts of Virginia
protect and advance an abol-
ished preside over by John Mitchell
of Rihmond one of the wealth-
est and progressive negroes of the
country He is president of the Me-
chanics Savings Bank of Richmond
editor of the Richmond PLANET and
enjoys the destination of being
the only colored member of the American
Banks Association which is
the greatest organization or financiers in the world
A public meeting held at the Harmlensing opera house Tuesday night, beginning at 9 o'clock at which the principal speakers included Grand Chancellor Mitchell and I President Charles Brown of the largest negro college in St Louis which has been in hundred pupils.
The Harmeling opera house was packed at the public session which lasted until nearly 11 o'clock. An interesting program was rendered and the speeches were especially enjoyable.
I have found that in recent years that our people are largely responsible for the conditions about which we complain most," said Grand Chancellor Mitchell, in opening his address. "The greatest thing that hinders our progress as a race is extravagance, which is proverbial among negroes. It is not a question of what we make, but of how much we can save out of what we do.
THE WHITE MAN AT HOME
"The administration at the national capital counts for nothing any longer. The negro who looks to Washington—the negro who looks beyond his own state of Virginia is a fool. We must learn to deal with the white man at home and we are learning it. The negroes of Virginia own $26,000,000 worth of property. In the city of Richmond alone they are worth $2,000,000. The bank of which I am president, which is the largest negro bank in the country, has just completed a magnificent new building, costing $50,000 and there is not a penny of debt against it.
Notwithstanding what we have done not over 15 per cent of our people are productive—wealth creators. We must study the methods of the white men and copy after them. We now have the co-operation and sympathy of the best class or the white people. The good wishes of the southern white man is one of our greatest assets. We must learn how to approach the southern white man and if we know how we can get him help from him in the minute from him out of our class in a week Go to the southern white man humbly with a tear in the corner of one eye, even if it is necessary to eat an onion to get it. Have it
COPIES AFTER WHITES
"Why every state in the union except Virginia, has passed laws prohibiting us from using the name of Knights of Pythias because we have copied after the white man. In the name of God, who else do they expect us to copy after? We must look to the white man. We have no such law in Virginia, but we were afraid to say anything about it until six months afterward for fear of embarrassing our white friends.
"What our race needs is leaders—wise, practical leaders to harness our latent power. We see a river here, which if harnessed would drive every wheel of industry in Bristol, but which undisturbed flows on to the sea. So with our race. We need leaders to harness and develop our power. The best white men want to see us become a potent factor and thus help to solve the question of the country's economic development. When a black man can write his check for $10,000 there is something doing in the white community. The white people all have respect for the nogroh who is trying to get ahead had be something. I want to inspire our younger people to look upward and onward for a better day has dawned for us here in the south and the future is bright."
FEATURES OF PROGRAM.
Prayer was offered by Rev. S. A. Moses, of Harrisonburg, Va., while Prok U. S. G. Patterson, of the Lynchburg school, rendered two beautiful
President Brown, of the St. Louis negro college, who was introduced by the presiding officer as one of the highest salaried colored men in the country, made a brief, but comprehensive talk. He urged the negroes to buy homes, saying that a planked house that one owned was more to be deprived than a rented mansion. He urged the parents to look after the training of their children. "Don't send your children to Sunday school," he said emphatically. Pausing a minute he added, "Take them." The parade will occur at 1:30 clock this afternoon and will be a exhibition and an interesting of the mansion. The parade about seventy-five delegates here from Richmond stone, and almost over country, city, town and hamlet in the state is represented.
Credit for bringing the big assembly to Bristol and for the success of the meeting thus far is due to E. M. Higgins, district deputy grand chancellor and secretary of the Negro Business league of Bristol — Bristol Courier Herald. June 22, 1910.
Received $800.00 Fee For Def-
ending F. Augustus Helzne.
S. W.
TRIED TO KIDNAP BOY
Gypsey Woman Promised Lad Candy to Go With Her.
The former a son of Mrs Fell Lancaster and the laughter of the Forest Mrs Fell a well-to-do real estate dealer of Little Hope was left by his mother standing front of a toy store at Newburgh N.Y. During her absence a girl woman persuaded telah to go with her by promising to has some candy.
Miss Iasha in Winsberg saw the epsode from the window of the store where she is employed. She followed and kept the strange woman and child in sight until Mrs Poag appeared. When the would be kidnapper was overkilled by Mrs Poag she released the child and died. In her joy of the moment over recovering her little son Mrs Poag forgot about the woman who disappeared.
AIRSHIP LANDS BURDEN IN TREES
The airship Deutschland landed in the branches of a clump of trees near Burg Germany in the Teutoburg forest. None of the passengers or crew was injured. The airship was slightly damaged.
The Deutschland left Düsseldorf for an excursion intended by Count Zeppelin to demand that it could be navigated under unavoidable weather conditions.
A still brighter was blowing when the craft left her moorings. She sailed over the towns of Elbefield and Sonnengen, fifteen miles from Düsseldorf and then apparently was driven by the wind in this direction.
This place is seventy miles north of Düsseldorf and the airship reached here flying with the wind. When on the city the pilot attempted to bring his craft about and after some maneuvering headed for Munster
This course was held for some time but eventually the Dutchschland was forced back on her track until she was again on the town
To observers it appeared that two of the airships motors were disabled and that only one was working properly
After jockeying in the air without power or stability to land safely, forts were given up and, apparently beyond the operator's control, the Deutschland settled toward the earth finally landing in a clump of trees
$15,000,000 InFake Curez
Over $15 000,000 is annually poured into the coffers of those who exploit and advertise "take" consumption cures, according to a statement issued by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis in Boston.
The report showed that for this vast sum the victims receive nothing in return, but are often permanently injured and in many cases deprived of the chance for a real cure.
Calf Born With Two Heads
William Kramer, a farmer resilient near Rohrerburg. Columbia count Pa., has a calf which is the processor of two perfectly formed heats four eyes, three ears and two humps on its back. It's the center of attraction in all that farming action.
Exposes Attempt of Powerful Lobby to Influence His Action on Oklahoma Indian Land Deal.
United States...Senator Gore started the senate by announcing that he had been, in effect, offered a bribe of $600,000 to withdraw his opposition to recognition of the so-called McMurray contracts for the sale of Indian lands in Oklahoma.
The senator went further and added to this declaration the statement that a member of the house likewise had been approached. This happened on May 6 last, two days after he had introduced a resolution prohibiting the approval of the contracts.
"On May 6, he said, 'a representative of McMurray came to see me. He was a man who resides in my home town, a man who had been a friend in time of need He came to my office and assured me that it would be to my interest If I would call on the senator from Colorado and advise him not to report the resolution There was a suggestion that $25,000 or $50,000 would be available if the contracts were not prohibited. And I am in formed that a similar proposition was made Thursday to a member of the house of representatives. Mr. Gore did not mention the name either of the agent who approached him or that of the member of the house. He also declared that 'an ex senator from Nebraska and an ex senator from Kansas are interested in these contracts' but in this instance also he likewise failed to name the man. Without indicating other personalities, he added that there was a large lobby here pushing the McMurry interests
Mr Gore announced that if the recessions of the senate from the amber lent to the general decedency bill was sustained Mr Mc Murry would get $1,000 as his fee for the sale of the Chuckaw and Chickaw Indian land. The amendments in question required proper approval of the contracts.
The declaration of Senator Gore was precipitated by the chair's declaring out of or for his motion to reconsider the vote by which the bill was passed. Senator Gahanger met this motion with one to lay the bill on the table which eventually prevailed without a roll call.
On a plea of personal privilege Mr Gore then took the floor and unfolded his tale of attempted bribery. The Oklahoma senator's announcement was the subject of decided comment in the corridors of the capitol and an investigation will follow.
Blay Farmers Son For Revenge.
Delloborately planning revenge, two Philadelphia colored boys, Henry Williams and James Sharp, working on the farm of Willmore Rogers, about three miles from Georgetown. Del shot and killed the farmer's fourteen year-old son, John Rogers, and afterward dragged him through a woods and buried the body in a skeid.
The body was discovered after an all-night search, in which the two murders took part. When the evidence of the crime pointed to the two boys the crowd of farmers began to aggrage for a lynching, until Dallas Rogers, a brother of the murdered boy spirted Williams away behind a fast horse and succeeded in lauding him in the county jail. State Detective Walls succeeded in bringing the other boy here later.
According to Williams' story John went to the field where the colored boys were working and complained of feeling ill but finally went into the woods. Coming back he asked the two boys to try to get a bird and tailed down in the ditch with his face down and between his hands after giving Williams a shell and the gun Williams and Sharp then went into the woods, but could not find any birds and there presumably arranged the plot. Coming out, Williams raised the gun and shot young Rogers in the neck. Terrified both grabbed their sticks with which they had been "suckering" the corn and beat the boys face and head until they were sure he was dead. Then Sharp went up to the house and secured a abovel, and both dragged the body through the woods to another field where they buried it, after taking over a dollar they found in the pockets. They hid the gun and abovel.
Taft's Son Buns Down Man
One of President Taft's automobile driven by his eldest son, Robert A Taft, ran over and seriously injured an Italian street laborer at Beverly Mass. At the hospital it was said that there were indications that the workman's skull was fractured had that he was in a serious condition. Young Mr Taft received a long telegraphic message from his father' re garding the accident. The president instructed the young man to give whatever assistance he possibly could to the injured man or to his family. At Pride's Crossing, about two miles from home, the streets were being bled by a gang of men. The automobile was slowed down. The horn sounded and most of the men stepped to the side of the road. One of them, however, was not quick enough and the machine struck him, topping him into the gutter. He was unconscious when picked up by Robert. Taft and his two friends. The man said his name was Michael Phiniswolla.
A nearby physician was summoned and the injured man sent to the hospital, while the president's son and his friends followed soon after. The song
tal sirconon said, that the skill appeared to be fractured and that the man was in a serious condition. All those who saw the Aguir sald that it was surrey an accident that the automobile was going slowly and that the man stepped directly in front of it.
Mexico Re-Elects Diaz President.
Porto Diaz, president of Mexico, was re-elected for another term of six years in the election held on Sunday.
He carried with him to victory Senior
[Image of a man with a bald head and a mustache, wearing a suit and tie. The background is plain white. There is no text or additional details in the image.]
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PERFORIO DIAZ.
Ramon Corral, vice president, and the choice of the administration forces to succeed himself. The face of the returns show comparatively little strength for the opposition
Think Roosevelt a Menace
"If Roosevelt is elected I am going over to England and become a citizen and stay there," said Eugene Zimmerman, railroad magnate, and father of the Duchess of Manchester, in Cincinnati O.
"If he is elected again the country will have taken the first step toward a duktorship, and when that happens I will prefer a country that is a liberal constitutional monarchy. Roosevelt today is our big national monge.
During the lifetime of King Edward it was reported that the king had no several occasions invited the American father in law of the Duke of Manchester to become an Englishman. It was also said that Edward had offered to make him a baronet Mr Zimmerman spent several months of each year at the castles of the duke
Sava "Medium" Got $40,000.
Suit has been filed in the supreme court of the District of Columbia at Washington by Lee J. Hurd charging that Mrs. Laura R. Cramer through supposed mediastatic" influences has obtained more than $40,000 from his grandfather a wealthy octogonarian. It is alleged that the elder Hurd was greatly afflicted by his wife's death and sought consolation by communicating with the spirit world Mrs. Cramer professed to be able to talk to his wife and through that means influenced the octogonarian
Ploe Causes Man's Death.
Frank Waiters, a former Easton, Pa., saloonkeeper, mot his death to a most unusual manner at the county almshouse. He was mentally derang ed, and when he was found near a small woods his clothing was almost burned from his body His pipe lay by his side, and the supposition is that while attempting to light his pipe his clothing caught fire.
Restless Baby Hands Herself.
Awakening early in the morning, Mr. and Mrs. George Seachman of Windsor, near York, Pa., found that their nine-month-old baby daughter, restless, had accidentally hanged herself in the night. The child's body hung between the barn at the foot of her crib
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADLPHIA — FLOUR quiet;
winter clear @$4 25, city mills fancy,
RYE FLOUR steady, per barrow,
$4.25@$4 40
WHEAT firm, No. 2 rod, $101@1 04,
steady; No. 3 yellow, local,
68%@69%
OATS steady. No. 2 white. 46½ ♀
48c; lower grade. 44c
POULTRY Live firm, hema, 16¢
16½¢, old rooster, 12¢/12¢ Dressed
steady, choice fowls, 18¢, old rooster
steady, 12¢/12¢
BUTTER firm; extra creamery,
$0c. per lb.
EGGS steady, selected, 26 @ 28c.
nearby, 21½c.; western, 21½c.
EGGS quiet; old per bush, 25@ 30c.
now, 60c. @ 165 per barrel, as
to quality
Live Stock Markets
PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)—
CATTLE lower, choice, $7.75/$8.
prime, $7.40/$7.65.
SHEEP lower; prime wothers, $4.30
/$4.50; culls and common, $2$3;
lambs, $7.50; veal calves, $8.50/$8.
HOGS higher; prime haives, $9.50;
mediums, $9.75; heavy Yorkers, $9.80;
light Yorkers and plums, $10/$10.10;
roughs, $8/$8.65.
Washington Poorman a Sulcida.
Walter J. Stuart, a Washington pro-
ficien, dependent because he had
been separated from his wife and
young child for several months, fired
a bullet through his left breast while
in the dormitory of one of the station
houses and died soon afterward
Ble Ofes Fox Flight Pictures
Big Offer For Fight Pictures,
Owner Rock, of the Jeffries-Johnson
moving picture rights, received a bilt
of $160,000 for his interest from Nail
& Bar owes, proprietors of a Canadia
vaudeville circuit.
Samuel A. Croxter Dead.
Samuel A. Croxter, prominent in Brist
ist church work and a wealthy manufac
turer and land owner, died in Upland,
next Chester, Pa., aged eight
years.
JAMES JEFFRIES IS
"A HUMAN BEAR"
That Is Opinion of Mike Murphy,
Trainer of Athletes.
BY MIKE MURPHY
Reno, Nev., June 24.—For a man of his years, Jeffries shows an almost incredible willingness to submit to the most severe rigors of training. I saw him do things today that it would be hard to exact of a college youngster burning with ambition to make his football eleven. He tackled the hardest kind of a program today Running, playing ball, skipping the rope, chest exercises, boxing with Bob Armstrong, Jack Jeffries and Jim Carburt, shadow boxing and finally a most terrific exercise for developing the abdominal muscles. Every stage of this work was marked by one important feature. Jeffries perspired freely, in fact, 'I never saw a man whose persecution ran in such a stream.
ROUGHEST OF WORK.
The boxing that Jeffries did was all of the roughest kind possible, and it is evident that Jim expects that it will be a rough bout, with all kinds of ingrighthing.
Corbett, good a man as he is, is simply like a child in the hands of this monster Jeffries. Of course Corbett can stand off at long distance and give him a pretty battle at the boxing game, but when it comes to the rushing the battering, heavy inside work, it is a man against a child.
Jeffries in his boxing today did not look to be very fast on his foot and on this point I want to see more of him in the days that are set to come. It is impossible but because the workof today was largely confined to ingrighthing and roughing that he did not have a chance to show with what lightness of foot he could move around if need be.
It was not possible either to judge much about Jeffries's judgment of distance in the work he did today. It was too much clinch, too much covered up.
What will help Jeffries in a roughing contest is the condition of his stomach. The muscles across it are hard as iron I never saw anything like them
NEVER LETS UP
The awful strain on the abdominal muscles in Jeff's abdominal exercises is continuous, but they show the hardening result. Jeffries never lets up, nor does he puff when it is all over. I tell you no man not in good shape could go through this without collapsing unless he had for months been engaged in the right kind of work to be in shape.
Another thing I like about Jeffries is that he can deny his thirst. This is another evidence of good condition. He hardly ever drinks anything except a mouthful of water and he only gargles his mouth with that. Many athletes spoil the effects of their training by drinking too much water and other liquids, but it is evident that Jeffries is not that kind.
The regimes that Jeffries has been following is pretty well balanced. He starts at 5 o'clock in the morning, takes three hours, loans an hour for two hours more after 9 o'clock. Then there is a loaf until 4 o'clock, and he takes two more hard hours.
Virtually all of the work here will be done out of doors, for Jeffries thinks that this will help him to get used to the altitude, which is of course, much different from that of California.
WEIGHS ABOUT 230 POUNDS.
Jeffries has been steadily declining to get on the scales in front of the newspaper man, but it is given to me straight that his weight is now 230 pounds, which is just about right for a man of his size. His eyes are beautifully bright and clear and his heart must be right to do the work he does, and not show the strain.
I spoke yesterday about the raspberry shortcake he ate. It is undoubtedly a fact that he does entirely follow the dictates of his own judgment in the matter of his meals, but he is old enough in the business, has trained often enough, and certainly knows himself well enough not to make any very sorious blunders. But while he insists on being his own boss, Jeffries is good natured in his training, and is very fair to those about him. He will not be bossed, but he is not arrogant.
Nor will anybody, Johnson included, ever be able to rattle him with any ring conversation. He is entirely indifferent to comment, and goes about his work in the most self-contained way I ever saw.
THIS HUMAN BEAR.
Ho seems to think very well of his work with Farmer Burns, the former wrestler, and the constantly work in the roughest kind of neck holds. If it be true, as has been said, that Johnson's nerve is not all it should be I am curious to see what will be the effect when this human heart gets him in the grip of one of those frightful hips.
THE JAZZ
expect to have a chance to tell readers of the Times-Dispatch how his condition compares with that of the man he must meet—Times-Dispatch. June 25, 1910.
KAUFMAN AS JEFFRIES
Imitates Big Fellow's Leads in Bout With Johnson.
B. W. N. W. NAUGHTON.
Reno, Nev. J. Nov. 27—Twenty-one rounds of boxing was the joint record of Jeffries and Johnson today. Jeffries boxed eleven rounds in the cool of the morning hours, when there was one oak boxing mat and a smile of writers. The latter had heard there would be something doing in the glove life, and were sanguine enough to believe that Jeffries would follow out the program for once. The big follow cook on Burgur, Armstrong, Oohyniki, and Corbett.
Jeffries' work was of a snappy character and if he adheres to his latest resolve he will box again tomorrow morning and the morning after. Thursday foreonon Jeffries will disport himself in front of the moving picture machine, and after that, if they can hold him to it, nothing but the lightest sort of exercise will be indulged in till he faces Johnson in the ring. Jeffries does not like to have a
```markdown
```
crowd around when he is working.
Johnson is quite the reverse, I doubt for that matter, whether Jack would take any interest in a practice bout if there was not a gaping throng looking on
CROWD WATCHES JOHNSON
There was a gathering of a couple of hundred around the outdoor platform at Johnson's quarters this afternoon.
Johnson, before he left San Franisco, referring to the current rumor that Joffries would make a rushing fight of it from the start, remarked, "I'll be ready for him. I'm making an especial study of in-fighting."
Today Kaufman gave an imitation of Joffries, and Johnson was almost entirely on the defense. The men did not stand away and spar for an instant at any point of the bout. Kaufman just kept shouldering in toward Johnson, swinging a left to the body in the way that Joffries has a habit of doing, and Johnson timed the coming of the Kaufman left and beat it down with his forearm time and again.
There was scarcely any variation to Kaufman's methods or going after Johnson. He would try for the body with the left Johnson would block and then they would clinch and sway in all the time they were clinched. Johnson was surely making a study of in-fighting, or rather, studying how to prevent his opponent doing any damage at close quarters.
POUR INITATION OF JEFF
At the beginning of each clutch Johnson would place his pains against the upper muscles of Kaufman's arm and thus prevent him from getting in body blows. As Al tried to break the hold Johnson, without being flurried, would entwine his arms with Kaufman's and bake his attempts to ram in jolly punches. From the way Kaufman behaved it was evident that he was told to do his beat, but he made very little headway. Johnson's defense was too perfect, so he had to get an arm free and cuff Johnson around the ears. Johnson would allow his head to roll with each punch, one of his ways of lessening the force of the blows.
Candor compels the remark that Kaufman gave a very poor representation of the way Jeffries uses the left. Al hit out from long range every time, and Johnson had very little difficulty in turning the blow aside. Jeffries rushes and cuts loose with the left at one and the same time. His arm is held close to his side as a ruse and his left shoulder is thrown forward as a buffer. Very often he does not 'let go' the punch until his shoulder almost touches his opponent's breast.
MONEY TRANSFERRED TO RENO
Promoter Rickard had time today to answer numerous telegrams and to discuss his many details of his presentations with his subordinates. Most important of all asked was the arrangement for transferring to Geno from Ban. Francisco $14,000 of the puppy money, now on deposit to the court city. Rickard was naked by Tim. Bul-
MR. JOHN ARTHUR (JACK) JOHNSON,
ilvan, of New York, stakeholder, do attend to this at once, and the funds probably, will he in a Reno bank to tomorrow-sullivan, according to his telegram today, expects to arrive on July 1.
Rickard and Johnson were in conference for almost an hour at noon, when the champion had done his 8 miles of road work. Both said the subject under discussion was without direct bearing on the fight, but would not say what had been talked of. Johnson later, visited a bank and cashed a check and then was whirled back to the camn.
Announcement was made by Tom Flanagan today that a representative or a Canadian syndicate had arrived at Reno to offer $150,000 for the Canadian rights to the fight pictures.
FIGHTERS ON LAST TRAN
Jeffries and Johnson Have Usual Workout
Reno, Nev., June 27.—Here is a cross-section view of the daily morning ceremony that is helping to make Reno a name in the world's mouth wherever spread. What happened this morning at Moana Springs before the sun was well up over the ragged top of the Washoe range may
MR. JOHN ARTHUR
be described as typical of what has been happening for a few days and what will continue to be a daily morning ceremony until July 4.
Remember that this ceremony is an important thing, hedged about by awe, that within an hour after its completion 100,000 words for the world's reading have been put on the wire and that within another hour or two, several million people will be reading these words between the coast.
An event which plumps into the world interest from beneath a cottonwood tree in a green valley of Nevada sends its ever-widening circles over wire and cable until the clock's hands have made a complete wring.
Then there is another plump, and again the ripples spread. There is a valley, blue green with alfaea, a sun-baked range of mountains on the east and the snow-splotched Sterras on the west.
A sprawling white bathhouse over a hot soda spring on one side of a lusky road and on the other a low cottage covered with vines. Behind the cottage is a tent, and the tum-
bled bedding on a cot, within it always holds the spectators' thirtier for a moment. His bud is near the tent, and just where two cottonwood trees mingle their branches to make a shade is a small dancing platform; in the middle of this a red-painted canvas is stretched out, and its surface is covered with little lumps of rosin and rosin dust.
On the night before Jack Jeffries draws this or that newspaper man aside and whispers in his ear that he would bother get but to the springs in the garden, for the big fellow is going to be born the sun is too hot. Brother Jack gives this advice tentatively and with an aid if in some degree betraying a confidence he only thinks that such will be the morrow's program, and he leaves it up to the vigilant newspaper men to act accordingly.
WOMEN TALK FIGHT
The electric car that leaves Virginia street, in the center of Rono, at 7:30 o'clock the next morning is comfortably crowded. There are ten or a dozen export observers, who sign these articles that less famous scriveners write for them, a handful of newspaper photographers, fifteen of the local newsmen, and have dropped into town from Pacific coast towns in good season to size up the situation before they wager. Of the plain citizens of Reno there
Of the plain citizens of Reno, there are at least a dozen women, who.
(JACK) JOHNSON,
freshly starched as to their summer frocks, are eagerly chittering about Mr. Jeffries and Mr. Johnson, their respective punches and modes of defense. A follow with a scarred face, who is going out to the ground early with his bundle of Jeffries pennants on varnished canes, tells a follow-passenger, whose wanderings have made him kik to the flag dosier, how when he was chilped water tender on the battleship Ohio at Manila Sailor Scholtberg, of the New Jersey, pounded Beesy Janifay, of the king's nays, to a pulp by using the Jeffries loft hook to the stomach.
By 8:30 o'clock there are about 100 persons about the dancing platform in the yard of the training quarters at the springs. An easy application of the privilege of caste divides the crowd. The newspaper writers and one or two chosen friends of the fighter take seats along the four sides of the platform. Among these is a novolist of the red-blood school who just landed from the night train from the East, and who has hurried out to the sooth of communities without waiting, for breakfast. There is a man who has soiled
post-haste from Death Valley via Goldfield. He left his pack train at Goldfield, but he stil has on his khaki habit, little saus, and creases of alkali dust. Behind the privileged beings and at a respectful distance stand the 'plain citizens of Reno, men and women, and, as was the case this morning, a 4-year-old boy in starched knickerbockers and a baby in arms
1. M. C. A. Notes.
The workers' meeting was a good one last Sunday morning. Every man was in his place and went to work with a zeal.
The work in the city home last Sunday was excellent under the directions of Bros. Chandler and Burrell.
The jail work last Sunday produced good results. Four prisoners were won Chairman C E White and his committee are working hard to help the other man every time.
Master Richard Ballard delivered a special address to the boys last Sunday Master Charles Gibba sang a special solo. Master George R P Burrell conducted the meeting Now is the time to help the boys. Let every mother join in this good work by sending the boys.
Mr Bernard L. Allen delivered a very timely address to the men last Sunday Subject. "The Demands of the Present" It was a great hit and every man was helped
Men be on time Sunday ready for hard work and the other man
A special meeting for boys Sunday 4 P M at the Y M C A building
Director N W Bouldin will ad dress the men Sunday 5 30 P M at the Y M C A building Bring the other man Be on time
Do not stop praying for the Y M C A
Crum for Liberia.
The Riemond PLANET in speaking of Crum's appointment as Minister of Liberia says 'Why he should be willing to accept such an appointment is a mystery to us. We thought something like that when the appointment was announced, but did not feel called on to say so. Since there are other offices that there are other who are thinking about it and incidentally (this to the PLANET) that "great minds run together."
It may be thought a little reflection on the job to express it that way yet it is hardly that, the personality of the man as it is understood to be is rather it. The PLANET says, "He is reported to have a large and lucrative practice in his home city and he must necessarily accept the position at a financial loss to himself. The honor though is something to be considered it is evident that he desired some other recognition and that it was a case of "take this or nothing." President Taft has made no mistake in his selection, but we fear that our distinguished southerner has made a mistake in contenting to accept the appointment."
The appointment is a good one personally considered; that is to say, Mr. Crum is evidently fit. But we cannot quite see why he feels that he just must have office at any price unless he feels a sense of vindication — Indianapolis Freeman.
Outing to White City.
The talk of the day is Hallay'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—Alpham Scott, Washington Bolling, Hayes Willis, Samuel H. Green, W. G. Singleton, Robert H. Harrison, Thomas Jackson, Lucious Storrs, W. Henry Jones. M. W. Hadson, Secretary. Chian, A. J. Briggs, Chairman.
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JEFFRIES
official heavyweight disguise souvenir medal or watch fob
MADE IN BROOKLYN & WEST ANTIGUE BAYS
JOHNSON
qualify and withhold is that of High Art Jewelry
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Pictures of the
Kingdom —
Sasday Schoo! Lesson for Jaly 3, 1910
ea ais a a am
We hot meet nnd drake € ete bingaemnen
find peace aridsur in the Vhaly tivo
Bee te
TIME. The autime of A
PLACE Inn teas tht apernsuny on
the mhore of the Rea ule Gaile
Suggestion and Practicat Thought
The Parable or Story of tho Mus
tard Aoed -Ve G1 $20 “Another par:
able.” showing anether agpect of the
Kingdom of heaven, which the Great
ower had sown im tho Auld of the
world 5
“The kingdom of heaven tn ike to &
rain of mustard seed, which a man,”
Fepresentiog the Son of tan as In the
previous parables, “aowed In hi eld”
Te was therefore good aod. livin
eed that vould produce tho harvest
“Which indeed I the least of all
needs." Not the least of all seeds
which botanists know, but tho small:
‘ext of the feeds the poopte datiy used,
and the amallest of these {a contrast
with the plant which grows from It
“Greatest among herba, and becometh
& tree Not mansive ike a fr tree
ot Lebanon, or osk, but an herb a
large “tbat the binds of the air como
And lodge in the braaches thereot”
The Teaching of this Parable (1)
‘The growth and auccefe In Gods fold
of this world of the kingdom be bas
planted I beard a statesman miasion
ary Wom India aay within a weok that
the roligtons of India looked upon tha
Drosent as the fron age, with thefr
olden age in tho past. But with
Christianity thergelden axo Is to the
future, the kingdom te growing Loward
{te Idea! ond goal, and growing mare
and more rapidly
‘The Parable of the Leaven —¥ 33
Showing the Method by Which the
Kiogdom Grows. The Kingdow of
heaven {4 like unto leaven” Some of
tho later writers arguo from the fact
that Teaven In usually tbe aymbol of
ovil, a corrupting thing. a apecies of
putretaction, that therefore this par.
Ablo represents “the fellowship. of
God tn service aren to be marred dur
ing tbe present ago by the Introduc-
Uoa of a corrupting Influence "—G
Campbell Morgan
“Which a.woman took The Son
of aan who puth this Inaven into the
meal {a here represonted by @ woman
hecaune Dreadmaking unvally dorolved
upon women
‘This Parable Trachea tbat bealdos
all the visible manifentationn of the
Goapol reprenented by’ the growtty of
the mustard seed thera ls a deeper
underlying progreax of the Gospel
which operates sflently without ob
nervation Uut with constantly increas
ing pervasiventas till the whole mass
‘of mankind, aj! hoasta, ail nations all
commerce andQbusinesa octal Ite,
and political Institutions ahall be
transformed The leaven works by
personal contact with thoxe whb nro
to be leavened from individual to in
dividual It tn personal work personal
rout In touch with other souls The
Jeuven that dors the work ts a Iving
organiem
Two Stories of Finding Treanures —
Va 4446 These two parablee wore
told to the disciples in the house to
which they returned from the soa
shore
The Hid Treasure “The ktogdom
cof htaven In Uke unto treanure bia Ia
a Geld” The hiding of treamure ts
necessary whore there are no banks,
where the country Is frequently over
run by marauders and robbers, where
no one can trust another to hold bis
troaaures Or to uso them In buslooes,
aod where the rufers are rapacious to
obtain the wealth of thelr aubjects, In
the unsettled state of the country oft
en the owners never roturnod, and all
Knowledge of tho treantire was Jost.
The Spiritual Treasures in These
‘Two Parables, There are two quite
different Interpretations ‘of these par-
anias, both of which are natural, both
‘of which may be tru, and each one
may imply the other ‘Tho movement
Bt tho parables depends on what ta
repréachted by the Troasure and the
Pearl, and who by the one who gave
‘nlt'he bad to vbtatn them
The common Interpretation tx that
we are the anckers for tho trensure,
and the Trensure and Pearl are the
Dioasings which are found tn tie ktng-
fom of hraven and only there. They
fare the treasures of charscter, useful-
‘hess, happiness: and peace, treasures
of efarnal fe, growing more and more
fn avary good quality of the abut tilt
‘wag decomne “angele excelling tn
strength,” with all the glories, ex:
Yeraal abd Intérnal, that.are portrayed
in the description of bearen
‘The Parable of the Draw Net —Va
“47-82 chmtaly explanation of the mys
tery tht good aqd bad are found fn
the visible kingdoth of God, foatead of
bply the good, and a warning that
ply belog 8 memes of the vate
Joxdom ¥ill pot save hier There will
fe # agparation of the good from the
Dad, and each will 0 Of neceasity to
hile ‘own place, and the fate which Is
‘the fruit of bis Cath and character,
Another interpretation bf the hid
treasure, akilfolly adyecated: by Or.
Wolcott Calkins to Bite beilitant “Par
ables for Our The,” and by Dr..Mor
ét, ts that Christ te tte scoker after
ibe “Treaaure and the Pearl: whleh
Betcecent tse yrocione aotie-o? aon
‘ihe freaeurs (s often bidden, (tke
Tat sheep Irom the aolorly and one,
hidden in publicans and sinners and
hoathen It Is not the search for good
men, but for the lost, for human na-
ture fn ita oral quality aud fn tte
spiritual capactty To fad (hie treae
ure Josie nade hie who e Ute aude
ordinaret te lis Meulin the treasure,
FOR THE LINGERIE
ALL sonts oF DAINTY ADORN
MENTS IN FAVOR
Tiny Rovtbuss Made of isk Ribbon
fe tach Lined-—Dreeden Ribbons
1 Feature of French Underwest
rea iciscdicinccsbaticnne
The baby tthbons used on tingerin
can be bout for 1S cont ® bolt and
upwards Delfghttul triminings mide
of the pink rivhons are tiny compact
rosetmls the ce xhwwing tn titted
Dunbierm on ie ests of thes ple ewe
Of wbrldal 6 tof handkers bet linen
ASAP Calenetenns = and hand ee brotd
ere the Ges bode were svutteredd
“tough the need work The ctor
wa au falar tte bande, weet coarsely
more that s4st
Dreads 0 titinins at captivation fea.
tures of seme ot the French under
wear Thyme are generally platnly
used, so an ty show of the lovely
bunds to the beat advantage drawn
through the ne khande of chemtses
for petticoat belt and Chrough tho
entre deuy above the Mouneot of draw
ere
Staple white snterasar for mourn
Ing sonetiows wb oes drawstrings of
& gauze Fibinn rhat bas the apperr-
ance of crape This willbe tn pure
white or bia'k lack or white fuot
tng or potnt dexprit footing arm the
laces uxed on mourning Mngerte of
black batinte or fawn 4 figured, lace
cannot possibly ba used for bincce
with Rood taste, but there I ne bar
againnt embroidery
Thoy Uinen covered turtone are rm
Karded with wore (aver for gowns
and corsct coverd than thosr of omar!
Some acon recently were covered with
2 dalicate woven gendrottors
Tucks for oll Aik materials are nae
row and arr Invarfably made by hand
With extremely tue thread — Tho
width Khown as tho pink tuck tbe
barest pinch of waterial—ts tbe ona
woos! seen,
French knote are superbly omploytd
‘on Mnen teaturen these sometimes xo}
fafy outining lace Innere
Ron tne pongve petients whieh ar
ao useful for day wear and hard use
Of every Kort turvhon lave exactly
tonte hing thr yeliew matertaa t4 ua ef
fective garnishing
The pertinars in striped eatten,
[which to ag eat oxime are tn import
(ed form are handsome with white
hamburg thongh the «ame materials
Took very well seit trhinmed
oA very useCul foature of the summer
fn a separate fauney in some fine
white wanh material made to button
on a inven or silk top as tn Hed This
Boginn with a fuandation — floupee,
shaped to be seant at the top and ond
tng with a lacetrimmed font rate
Over Jt tx a ounce In a aingle piece
profuse with lace at the botlom and
gometimes with lace insets all over tt
Te te draped witb garlands of narrow
ribbon caught here and there with
‘Ainy chou, and at the top of the
flounce thore fs a band with the but
tonholes nurdvd (© attach ft to the
top plore When ready made these
fouuens, which are made separate
from the nkirt for washing coave
nien» are high priced
PARISIAN MILLINERY
LEE
SEERA
Gs K hi Yj »
yee
eee,
Bata © ven
ga wy
ENV)
a/R
ay, Sih /-
eo |
"Gd Ai in /\
07 49 ye
“Chartotte” of pink and mauve ahot
gause, frill of gauze worked fn allie
Abreads, bow of Diack natin
NEW STYLE FOR THE JABOT
White Material and “Stan Crochet
‘Cambloed.to Maka a Nevelty In
“a Moke 6 |
A charming jabot struck an un
vsnal, and therefore welcome, note.
Mado of fina .whito material, and
edged with Irlah crochet, as‘ sine-
tentbs of the handeomor once are, It
was cut with a deep point at ite ven-
ter, which loft a bias or diagonal
along Ite uppor edge.
‘Thia was Snisbed with Iriah inser
tion, and just hero began the tly
band-run tucks, folded on the biak pf
the goods.
Each “tuck grew shorter than the
Inst as they approached tho point, and
each one fall ogen at its ead for sev-
eral inchon, «(Ving a fancioating cas.
‘cade appearance to tho whole Jabdt.
Thero te 9 decided retura to ‘the:
plafo tucked and boned stock collar
fastening at the back. They ara éver
Acceptable to those wearera of the
Tuche who scek its mort becoming ac-
companiment to collar form
‘The bay for dusters would mayo
farepenglve ttle preaont to td
tHt'A DEHde who Is going to bonsai
is ak Be cones
Nite 3a jae and ahoea eptths,
’aa #404 bye tanaste and Gord Beste
THE RICHMOND: PEANBT; RICHMOND); VIRGINIAS: 3
SS I aN TE ey Ter eT
BEFORE MOVING IN SORIETYTTQ MAKE AT HOME ae
Appropriate Costume for Young Girl a - ’
‘ See on
Outage of Charmed Cit Lo wryouumen FROCKS WITHIN
See: ® REACH OF ALL,
‘The dresa above tilustrated, intond-| z
ed for a girl of Bfteon or wistoed, In of a
white lawn, In princess style, It ta] he Woman That Can Sew Has No .
tucked at the top und hae a panel, Excuse if He Wardrobe la In
seer n ea ase bares rae eet, ISLES a MEE aWardcbe |e
iirc tan migiot ag peitian| AN? Way Babin
cembroldery =
Tre ans are pander wtih] =
atten vanes are ordered with] wig gummer materia so. cheap| C7 SgRNNES
mS
piv
an © ep
Sa \ eos
f Re SoBe r Se
— pl Ae.
AAT B ane
Peat
; i A
Aa)
s
Bi er
AN EE
ey
a ie
eS
ey
embrotders berdered with tucks trims
the bettom of the skirt and the long,
close Atttng slesven are alaa of the
embroiderr 1 materlal
The dreas In trimmed at the top
with draped bands of Mberty ribbon,
fantoned at ruch atde of the pancts
with knots of thy name ribbon
WHEN WASHING PONGEE SILK
Little Pointe That Will Make Alt the
Difference 80 Far aa Results
‘Are Concerned
Ponger Tk can be washed In wae
ter and comes out looking as well as
if dry cleaned but fo people seem
te know that it cannot be washed ta
the ordinary way at all, $f ood re-
Rultecare, expel tod Cae WA JuNe the
inte things ons mist Knog: about 1p
waahiug out aay allthe differ
nee
The frat ittte je nt to cemember ts
pet to want Hin tut water on rub
Sap on seo iat trong gaap ta
ntend dip Hantaa tukewarny suds of
Some pare white put and « iretaity
Rash Moat anol i ie clean rinwing
fn several waert without blung,
Never rub (on a washboard — but
ently wash It ont ith the hands
‘The neat bitte point ts In cannes
Hon with the traning god the es Ft
of quickly and uv astully traning
ponges It atmos tw allow tt ty be
hung te the sun and gir une it ts
bone dry Uetwre beg nDInK And then
fron It earefully on the wrong side
That te allt xmnda atusle und
perhaps for th sf asen theae pati
ftw afrriaaked west peoph «ho
do Just the opposite way aud ther
work onde in diester
Never on an aeconnt sprinkle
Pong unless yor saat Gy uate long
rary hans in dag Wall oser
pean for sarinkling will murs Leave
Ie eavered a th ait
And never try te dampen the whole
Ahing AL on ebstor tee nnInE for thie
alo ill end tt deaster —Hnfare one
part ta froned another will become
dry and redampentng the dry parte
will decorate your salt with had
ows "and then to Kot rid of these ob
Jectionable places you wil be obliged
to rewaxh {tall over again Dont
try even to fron pongee over a dunty
cloth far this method will produce
shadows also Aud. of course, Iron
ing ponges on the right side an ac
many do, Inaves an unsightly gloss al
over It
There ta no rrayon why _pongee
ahould not look an new and xilky
after It has byen proporly Inundercd
fn when firwt bought, if theae dime
Uons have been followed and it In al
lowed to become bone dry before be
sinning to tron tt
Ifa frock. of guinger th embrolderce
In colora It I”brst to wash a small
plecn of It before risking the entire
fault If the calora run at all, ther
wash Jt dn ganoline, or better nend
{te to the dry elvaners
Vests fof the Coat Bult.
Aren't thm new vents or walstcoats
tor wene with the cont nult natty lode
ing? Bo convenient. too thing the
mudlers we Uave becn wearing all
winter munt have suggentad the Idea,
though the summer vert Joos begid’
furt whore the winter one left off.
They bath pans around the neck,
T recently nsw Ina shop 8 pretty
false waistcoat Ins good quality of
white plaue, closed with gilt buttond
and worked buttonhotes, that cost only
60 centa; though of course, If one had
the time for it (thé work te almple
¢nough), material for four would cost
no more than this tom.—Exchange,
Too-Facad.
You aay ho ts twofaredt”
“T aay be Is “toosaced:’ bie wife has
Bim to well trilned ‘that be oever
‘pique bis tye Qtogpt to, any, e.toa
: » A user. Gort.
WRAL sort. of f0N0w te Latierer
+. "He puta th’; actent op the Mist dys
janie of Ole ocd "boul? |
DAINTY SUMMER FROCKS WITHIN
© REACH OF ALL.
fhe Woman That Can Sew Has No
‘Excuse it HA Wardrobe 1 In
Any Way Behind That of
o igee Netehber.
With summer materials so cheap
and vatled thore {¢ no excuse for thy
wowan who can sow not having all
the dainty hot wenther frocks abe
needs and wanta Tho wash textures
Aluplayod everywhere are of countless
sorts und sone of the most Inexpen:
nlve ones reproduces to x nicety the
designs und colors of taer fabrics.
For example, there Ian crazy Just
gow for French cinteey in the old
pattern», out of which ri@e and radl
aot materials the most coguettiah
Walats and Kownn are being made
Yey these lovely cottune aro imitated
to ordinary calico.and, if one has the
luck to come ceross a guod design. a
material which cost no more than
12% conta will serve for m dress
quite an readily os un haported chinta,
With the mele! French garments ia
thee charming textures, whose det
cate color blendings aad nntiquated
patterns all sbow a Watteay influence,
lace and net yokes aro put as @ mat:
ter of cours whily the high girdle
muay bo of satin or velvet
Other cheap wash materinly which
croate frocks uf sufcJent wnartues#
for the finest afternoon wvar are vol:
ton volles aud the Ittle mixtures of
silk and cotton, all of which lead
themselves delightfully to the grace
ful tuate effects so muck worn
Cotton mousseline apd cotton maf-
quinetta are also pretty and inexpou-
rea ,
4 fe
AA
sive woaves plain and patterned,
which are moat graceful for tho
dreancs nbowing a deep skirt founce,
topped by « straight ovorekirt, which
fs In dtself no more than. a deop
flounce, while for tailored effects—
thp sort of prim plala, and yet atyiteh
Kon which ts needed for morning
wear—there are cotton auftings tp a
bewildering array of colors and all
magkod at prices that make the fn
ep fatrly tingle for the needto.
jur Mustration puows ® costume
which could be developed charmingly
IP a day's work (rom one of the bor
palferas of Ilnon with embroidered
sodlions already worked. If witht one
of these thore is 8 fkpnt wkitt panel
to & ‘hecdlework, ths, dress wilt be
ail the bandsomer, for enfbroitery oor
tainly dominates with the: more efito
tive Hoon gowns. As white—that ts
all,whlte—ts a shade lors smart than
cotér 1 would advise looking itor ,oot
of ee decp dlue ehados, oF elty for 2
duff red, or deep yellow. ‘In'the Det
tor! bored Iinone tho embroidery
would not fall to iat 10 on te
thé;smart thing {8 sy tr & obe-toned
Soup As to the quality pf inaterial
eget Tony of the boked Grass pat
ters are designed for thls exact
strle ang a0 thato;Js adaquate. atom,
but with goods cut from the bolt, ton
yards would bo ample quantity for the
model, and with « handsome lnen the
Gibson waist could be made withou!
embroidery
Cotton duck, In brown of dark blue,
would produce 5 usofal morning fress
fn tile 'btyle, nue that with white col
lar and cuffs would make © good mar
Ket dr shopping dromy or practical
house frock
Horseradish Bleach,
| As old-fashioned and — barmtess
‘btogoh for tan nad freckles. Scrape
. {abletpdontn! of horseradish into
gupta sout mil and let it etand
fot ‘six or eight hours Dofore ustog.
‘Apply this to the tace, neck and hands
two of three times a day. Allow It te
. on tho akin,
; ea Bate.. 7
ad, tinger bed § velvet yotce.”
“1 edppose that accounte for the
pile abe gets from wr
What Waa Suiidestive,
a Silage
caine 2
ppt <i id he
“Beatt—prhat Kohl bur buapanal , -
Pe AR Sn en eo er ae tS MURR DR MOET Sy NOPE TC”
ee ee
‘Knights of Pythtas, _
CORIO Wh He Vee Oras:
7 NL Ay S Ay Be Ay ACAND AL es
, This organization {sone of the most powerful'in the country and {te
SED, ogress Bas boon phenominal “The Graud Lodge of Virginia hes juris:
<7 & o diet jon over allof the cities and counties in thisstate. Thirty males
& fy ¥ are required to organize a new lodge, The benefits paid constitute one
Whe Seas a of its strongest features, but the principles are greater than anything
te | else. Founded on Friendship, based oa Charity and. established oa Be
Lee -eetef. nevolence, the respectable, upright peaple of the state will find it an order
Sci worthy of their heartiest support. °
Sey” It pays an endowment and burial benefit of of $200.00 for all ages. It
So pays $4.00 per week sick dues, The badge costing 75 cents on is tho
only absolutely necessary regalla. For information concerning the organzaition of lodges
apply at the main offiee, :
. P34
The Courts of Calanthe “ee
Is the Female Department of the Order. , It requires a ssgutbership of © Ae
thirty persons to Sige scott Its mempers are pledged to exhibit Are
Frac exercise armony 98 prove Love one for the other. It pays # any
au endowment and burial benefit ef $150.00. It pays $3.00 per vek sick es aN
dues, The only expense for regalia is the cost of the badge, 50 cents and eee
a rosette, costing 25 cents for funeral occasions. . oe
For ail information concerning special rates of membership in the lodges and courts, addresa
Joh i¢tchell, J
John Mitchell, Jr.,
zn py 8,
oti N. 4th Street.
ot beard a bap worth son BLACK fia: LL & BRO. |THE ECONO)
ES ee ee amare nase es o» | ORE OF ie Lesa ares 303—5 North Third St
worth $1,000,000 to wiab that.” PRACTICAL HOUSE AND soni aa oe
MORE SLEEP WANTED.
TLV
yi aM
ie a
we? SO Be
<b ! yess
ee Cg
mae
Gee Bow wae as
che Deancouchenet 1 wid Sou
‘The Desroo—Perees, | wish you
could make your sermons a little
longor .
‘The Preacher (pleasod)—Why #07
. The Deacon—Well {t seems fk» 1
hardly got to slewp before It’s tine to
got up
It Wasn't Real
Lat olgnt Thad
jutey steal
Sot aad te any
Waa main amie,
How He Dig *t.
“How.” asked the young Indy ne
‘whe looked with admiration at the
Tagfed sontgenartan “bare you man
aged to live x0 long and preserve your
health 20 wall*”
“Hy rigorously dectiving 10 peactine
what my frlendx pave preached” he
candidly replied
Bliantly Mixed
“What waa the lesson at achuol thin
atterneon, Pommy* asked the fond
parjnt.
“Had @ reading on the destruction
of Tyre" responded the youngster
“Himt Autdmobin accigent, & up.
poser” ;
Beatie inn ine bab Batuatiat
Aa long ago an 1686 Sadat! ZeVt set
the Jews of Europe preparing for a
return torPalestine Not only the poor
or brethren, but even the rich mer
ebanta of Venice and Leghord were
aelzed by tho bxcliament and: for &
‘whole century the rast bulk df the
people refused to be:dipitiustons It
was not until the “dppearancd of
George Filose "Danlel Darpnga?: tat
je Jewish catlonalist movement re-
celved another stimulus 0 strang as
this; bot tn the meantime many
schemes were nropounded. Inludtog
An attempt 10 1854 to float = Yompany
“to enpbie the dascendante af farsa!
to obitald aiid. cultivate the Iapd of
promfae.” Vaflous fiinovs. people bare
Yeon tglerealed In the idem of esiab-
Mabing an {ndepéndent Jowinh btag-
dom, not necessarily Jo Palestine. The
Duteh Weat'tadla Company’ tried the
experiment in Curacos, and Oliver
Cromwell did the santé {n Surinam,
| Socialist Writing Memoirs.
Anguat Bobel, who Is on tho verge
of bie 70th your, baw takon onlx «
‘sual part in politieal life during the
last two years, The sturdy and #lo-
Rttent -lealipy of German goplal- dem-
sograny dastot: im: very’ potvuat whenlth
and bis appearances in the reichstag
and at public meetings are infrequent
wind Gieertain. Derliy papers now re-
por ‘that be bes been using his on-
Reet Sea Ir Golléotirig: aiate-
eo i xd ‘weidines 4 Zz mans
which aré to 1 fe 1
Sta Bedi Miu peactesy
Balory, Hf {od “acelalint donate i
Efraiviy afce Povo) frat ehtergd the
ae (eho
aC Se eo
ONE OF THE LEADING PAINTERS
PRACTICAL HOUSE AND SIGN
PAINTERS, GRAINING AND GEN-
BRAT CONFRAOTORE,
All Work Guaranteed. Cards, Let
tors or Orders. Give Us a Trial
You Wil Never Hogrot ft.
“| ADDRESS: = *
G08 Gt. Peter Street, Richmond, Va.
Telephone, Madison-868s,
ene git goat on
See ec re
ie ae Trane Manne
Pip TEM Desran3.
Comrnianra &e.
qohebipncercae gir Sram teen one a
Rrenba ie panatie Situ ee Eiee
mal netion nitboot haces ts
Sceutilic Americay..
“ La
fice poanis
I8tB reese,
UNH & Co,20¢sorme Hew York
A. Ha yes
OVVICE AND WARZ-ROOMS,
727 Rostth Second Street
| + masimence, 725N. mbt.
First-class Hacks and Casxets of
All Descriptions. I wave a Spare
Room for BODIES when the Family
have not a Suitable Place, All Coun
try Orders are Given Special Atten-
tion, Your Speclal Attention ts Call-
ed to the Now Style OAK CASKETS.
Call and See Me and You Shall be
Wattod On Indjvidually,
‘Phone, Madison-2778.
oe
7
Practice) Sige
Posunietrens-Then you like those
town blecas to send yon those new
fangied souvenir posal cards made
out of leather?
Uncle Wratherny -ly peck, yest
L ain't 56 much vp sentimental cyards,
but when they are «inde out of leather
they come In handy to mond boote
with
When He Stopped.
Stovd—-Did_you every {ry (0 count
a thousand sheep and fall asleep?
Pend--No, but { ant back of my wite
at a concert ne tue and counted
483 buttons on her sows and fell
asloep .
deieeica eae
-%S man who was the diack sheep
of Bis family diod and loft a fortune
to Ma brothers ead=glaters.”
st nee, Io aplte of Abe fact that be
was a biack sbvop, thay were glad to
sat bie wool.” &
Peaches and Peaches
“Well, there soon be" plenty of
peaches.”
1 don't care for ‘om, they're too
funy.”
. “The peaches you've been going
jaqlth’ toust noed # shave.”
Hie Variety.
|, “That man tives on anybody he
oan”
| "*He Goeax't ive—be merely vere
‘eaten
‘hare, he'e a baat”
‘ster. Tendency...
“Mabel Mare < ee chem:
fon,to,n fooltall hero for a beau «
. eenat abeeectbat ‘Mabel ts rowanan-
el irae
ee mets
staged Soolasy, lncayiagade f5y pe
etre rents
fasted Sa Ee re
THE ECONOMY,
303—5 North Third St
SEIN EY
TAILORING
CLEANING, DYBING ANL
REPAIRING
CHITMAN M. WHITE,
D PROPRIETOR.
——
| STRAUS’ SPECIAL
Old Yacht ISKE
| Reger nance esti ee
Wo Have AU Grades of Good Li-
quors, Cigars and Tobacco. Call
and Seo Us.
| ISAAC STRAUS & co.,
422 E. Broad St.,
| Richmond, Virginia.
H F Jonathan
FISH, OYSTERS AND
PRODUCE.
ee aE
tines
4168. ath 8, EXCRMOND, va,
Att PROMPT ATTENTION.
Long Distaace ‘Phong, 76%,
ee
SGHOGL SHOES,
Capitol Shige & Supply
Company,
No. 210 East Broad Street,
A complete stock of Boys,’
Misses,’ Men's, Ladies,’ &
Children’s Shoes.
ALL THE Latest ‘STYLES,
JORGHN'S SON
pon outa eae
the most relfable farhiture
house in the city aud sce tha
fine line of’ '' ~ ¥y
t TORS,
OMCLOTHS
d in fact everything that Is
osded fa Hoube Fataebiaya,
RUGS'AND °.
CARPETS
& ip 3 algo th
sat ge RoHS
spent CHAT Pest
Gee te .
“GG. JURGEN'S SON,
ApAus Ath Bight Gtnkiina
SORT | o
ScBIOBT. 1
coin yee a
oS Ee eect Oe {he
Gee ae!
Saas caer een a
oo Ne
EP mens :
SATURDAY...) JULY 2. 1010,
REELECT MITCHELL
CHASGELLOTE OF gamit
Nexrocy Namie Hichmond Banker av
Head of Pytiuin Lodge—spee
7 act Street Pageant Ve
Ceacts Autention of
‘eral ends
"A ppeetacular street pageant that
auractod the utenben of crowals
that Maed the side wel State
Street for blocks was URAC of
the colored grant lodge “Knlehte of
Pythian of Virginin, at 230 olor
Wedpentay afternoon “There wire
weverSt: hundred in the parade 1n-
cluding men on horseback, (n car
riages and footmen In the lead were
the footmen of the vartous ranks of
the onder attired in varying unl-
forin A score of more rode horee
back while the others matched. to
the music of the K of P band
‘The grand lodge wan in wravion
Wednesday mormiag and reetectod
John Mitchell Jr the negro banker
of Richmond. aa grand chancellor for
the ensuing year He ty the dom!
nallng spirit of the order of negroes
fa Virginia and (8 presiding wer the
Briatot meeting
In the afteraoon the colored P3th:
fans und tholr friends asrembied at
Falrmount park enjoyiug refresh
ments There were hundreds of then
preseot, including the several hun
dred delegates and many Hristol ot
frogs. The parade marched to the
park, followed by many afoot and
on cars,
A banquet will be given Contght at
the Ler Street MoE Charch where
the grand lodge meeting is bets
held The meoting wi end tonight
PROF BRICES ADDRESS +
The formal aylidress of welcome was
Qeaverea Uy Prof JH Brice auper.
IOViudent of elty schooln at the Lev
Street ME Church” Wednesday
morning mt In ecloch It wan in pur
a6 follows
Master of Ceremomte « Sir Kntshis
This ts Indeed an. honor to me and |
am very sensibly of It Some mer
are Wort Brent Others avhirys great
ness and sttll other hase greathes
theust upon them This ts an hens
that hax been thrust upon me
When ee take a retranpestive v1 8
of our Hvex remembering whot tors
SDares dangers geon vud Unseen tt
Tess we ur tnerates we eons TLh
raise out Gut Rie and Chanksi te
In nur heaeta te God the father Ged
the Sen and God thy Her Ghest
When we von abuit us we see We
Are surrounded Vea covered aver
Sith Hie Mewings This is a greet
world in whwh sou and Pte ms
brother mus raster ‘There rns te
larger worldy and grander at tt
ter worlda bur thie ts tric a a at
world in which we Mel! Tis ane
tains nee Gad thenehts pled upen
us and Rays fa tet the gift af a
Brains Rather ts He warward
ehidren This koa world that Is
had sm githass Vie eet a thorn
WII vyere Thm bat ure git the
Fosee Seer T Tif te not length out
Breadth Was what ae are wise te
To We alle te ohhh he appetite
Pleasure memes making and Bete
Koodnesy qttudiess purity sluts
flowers inuaee Gade eternal Tose i
‘to be all tnt deat One tay. ive
Ag a ronqueror but he muse dle as
aman Men die but thelr principles
Me on The principles of Damon and
Pythias will Ine on forexer The
Denutiful blue sky whove us te clear
this morning and just sv clear I the
xplrit of Pythinnism — 1 hase been
comtuiasioned to welcome this dete
gation to our dual city tn behait of
Zenith lodge Ne 111 of Uiriate
Ya. and St Clair lodse Nov of
Bristol. Teon
Let ns remember that we are to
Way treading the sacred soll of the
statw which gave birth 40 the Father
of His Country, that silver tongued
orator. Patrick Henry and the brave
and fearless General Robert E lar
the state In which thr hero of our
race Booker T Washington was ed
ucated No more hospitable people
can be found anywhere
“We wvlcame you The doors of
our tomes und our hearts are ajar
for you We are mindful that If we
would not be forgotton when we die
wwe must cither write things worth
reading or do things worth writing.
+ DROREES CONFERRED
Tho following tn x lint of Knights
recelying the Afth rank at the session
of tho grand lodge
Morea Moore Sainucl Moyer, EM
war J Evans, Wm Woodfork. PT.
Thompron Wm 1 Carter, ‘Alfred
Hrown, Green Hampton. WE Gar-
Hg. A D Arnett, Jotin Clarke, George],
Whitlock Wesley roole Paul Green
Dil Dr JO Dawson, 3 D Clarke.}!
Rev A Smith WG Henry, George]
Blankenship, James Bouldin, Ro A
Preston, Wim 8 Seott, Charles W
Young ‘Jotn — Hogans, T 3 Mit
Uner. Jt. W. Rokebaro, J. 1 Thomas |)
B.A Mores. Win J’ Strawbrldge
Robert Stoker, JP Calfee Janes
W. Thompson, Wm Mabe EJ Cun
ningham, Benj F Bowler. J 1, W
Staples. AL. Polk. WA Henderson,
Inine J. Morrie, 17 8 Jordan Al
phonao Martin GT Willis, 1) 2
Hale, Georgo Richmond. 3K.
Goode, Wills Wilkon, Thomas Fra:
xter, J. J Franklin, Wm A Robin
sop.—-Driatol Herald Courler June
23, 1910.
Ticbmond PLANET on salo at
+Mr, Joa, Byavp, 2602 Wobster Aver,
Pittaburg, Pa.
. Nolsod’s Hatr Dressing oan be se-
ae from the agent, Hr. Jotsph
Frans, MOL Wedster Avenue, Picte-|
Wares Pea a A
“URNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS, |
Grand Court Conveced.~—Fine Time.
Ladies Pleased.
| ‘The Grand Court O. of C. of Vir-
ainta convened Ia itp thirtgeath ane
nual aesalon at Bristol, Vi., June 22,
22, 22, with about one hundred debe
xaicw avd grand officers, uotwith
standing the expensive trip to four.
ney to the southwestern part of the
State five roaches were necessary f0F
the K of P delegation,
We were royally entertained by
the hospltable eltizens of both Bri
tol Va and Bristol Tenn und all
enjoved the unuaual privilege to step
over thy Tine 1oto another state hy
Simply crossing BAté affect The
Tes ing wae bed, i the Lor Street
AE odie t har 4 shite most Of Cs
Ietegiter were located tn Tens eee
The white ittzens bighly atm et.
mented the Wwtelligent dignified fas
Ing at alt the delegation and the
OR Ts house wan tegderd for the
Imbli tmeeting ‘The®spretons. butt
Vig wns crowded with an appreciative
iundienre und the program wan of 8
Meh order ‘The sweet voice of Sir 1
S76 “Patterson ehurmed the vast ‘an
wembly The main feature of the
ceentng wan the address of Hon John
Mitehell JT on the. Pragress of the
Pythian "Resides dealing with his
subject he save soumtt sractieal acl
Cee alone oats tal Mbes for the good
Gt eur pwap'e aad the ond hearty
applause that jreeted hinw at tte close
showed how wel, the people recetved
ri
Rev AS Thomas, Thomax H
White followed and all of the prow
foent menrenes hf thy xrand lodge
aint director of the Mechante s Hank
Mere Introduced te Thy vast can
Courae of pouple
The Aeliome adress by Prof
irsve on half wl the citizens of
Brite Sar une of the Dhest + ver
heard at any (ratesnel axsomblage
The weieaie on bebalt of the
cturhes by Rev Forrest pastor of
Lor Steeot Methadiat Sag alvo a mark
or rare wbihite amd equally’ bighty
Compimented while fhe seect valet
Gr Madame Copetiad se captivated
the andience that her votes was com
bared with Madan Florw Batsoq.
Th hanquet was ane af the fies!
in ihe history of the Onder Two haw
Aired anid Ot sates aerved ata toey
fuente a} that casuld “be adesiPed ei
punk otanten whit the lens 10m of
tuldeg wr re Beautify to beled
SThe finanetat and tie ftel on
@tino of the Order were nach be
tee Same inportaat wwe fur the
AMOUIM Ete Fister were etn t
fa and thn gran} eleets were age
serted
Taervboly tft wth theeh est praise
ant Weartfe pent tudes te Fema
tote amt teat gene ne Rirttal
Ve at estar eae hering ts
Nae wedtignie Bt sTacec here Na
© THE SCHEME FAILED
Rey Dr WR Galling indicated
Uy HUN People, Whe Were In
the Majority at the Meoting
Aste erat Tint a minister wit
feck ta deatroy the good intaeney
fee felony cubitister wae glans ze
Nest Thursday ntgut June 16 at
a wert g called bs Presi fing Elder
Ree HI Cooper te pear complaints
br obje tons te the preent. parter
af Wet! VME Chureh, German
teat ites Dr WR Gulling The
neeine Way a nagerable fallure Re
far asthe tteent and mone for eat)
Se waa comremmed bat wan a com
Lite sitgiation for Bastar Nev De
foie
Guta the pageitde 225 members
Of She churet only S were present
of thos number Atty voted In favor
of the ator und hig admintetration
and 3S oppo and gone of hose
nat menibere uf the eburel
Just why thh4 proceeding wns in
wiared upon at Mechel Chureh Ger
dantosn by Preskhing Elder Cooper
ecanse as. he alleged there were
foie vomplninte we wonder why the
Siete matte Foot peneewdure ie test
Fes stad uted 4s us xaMe Ofiietal at
Meter Hettel Church this elty
otite there hax been even a revolt
fu the part of the’ membra, Ina
polls that te bard to understand
‘The wore of Rey Dr Gulling at
Bers has’ bee a muccesn and far
mors 60 than that of any of his pre
Me s80Te
"The sindieation of Rev Dr Gul
Minx ‘Thursday night. i but anothor
‘worthy testimonial of his auceeen an
1 pastor Iu one of the toa tmpor
tnat appointments In the Phitadet
pita Annual Conference Philadel:
phia Fa Courant
Southern Political Stench.
The Richmond PLANET agrees
with the position of the Tribune a
to the appointment of Dr WA
Crum of South Carolina. to be Min
lster Pesilent and Consul Genorul to
Liberia. The PLANET says Wo
cannot understand why President
Taft should wunt to rend «9 good a
man out of the country He was an
Ideal collector of the port of Charles:
ton = We stated why In the Tribune
of lant week
Compromises for oMces or for cash
by colored Southern Wepublicans havo
destroys the yotitical righty rnd
party standing of the colored Repub:
Keane of the Southern States It Is
no satisfaction whatever to an (8
have to say to
‘The trath which cures thé false
hond of a given condition, although
kills those reaponsible for it, should
not only bo spoken now, but It should
have been symken all during the past
Uhirty yenra, but as in charch mat-
tera, no In Uhose political, we adopted
‘a polley of ailence, in the hopo thet
the evil would heal itself by its own
putrescence, the stench of {t, more
surely than by uncovoriog and atir-
ring it np. We preferred to fight the
gneroles without rather than within
the race house, It was a frleo pot!-
tion, amd the colored people have
pald dearly for It tn the Church and
jn politica, in the Northorn and South-
‘ern Btates. Wo shall 20 more make ft
‘or tho like of it. We shail show such
lopsided peoplo gs the editora of the
Southern Christian Reoorilor, the
Nashville Globe and the Sad{anapolt
[Freemin ‘that, far from deinx
‘drawback to race uplift, ot editorial
pone hea te ae eb ten oes wel E bye beret tees ER NTS Tn RU WL AN ett ot YE,
cae A ore RICHMOND PEANES RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
eM Sa ge ia W RN SOLEMN loge; eae, Ta
: Rg SS a ee ae, Se ees ed
‘ a ee — Be > Bees ot
+ SR ee eee ‘ ;
Ne meme gee ues eas fo St °
‘eB BSS Wee @. ne #
Boa S Gas BUA AG CE, _
ae rts ,
Pee a RO x EEG me eat
Rapttoc rere i en, 2 (2a * RE a
[ORES ees NA 3 a Nee
pmo Years i —— Sea,
_ SPRAIN R Coe Hey CHEN Sie ra TY eee, |
ES eas SSNS, ane ee
pee BeN — ae SE ape ee
ate ae Se, SB eee,
SE ee Ys =, Oe Fe
go Sct 2e ~~. fies
perm . sees
2 INS spr ttresm mmo secs SES
\ a incase
BS; eB eeee S 5 destas tS '
Rs 1 ba aa BREE carers
ba 3 pepe :
ef a oe pre
be Faken) fe F
6 on Shy RSS
SR Nf 7
CREE . * 2 AS paar .
TESST aOR RS :
woah oa WR ¥
“Ti Se NS
ey 8 |
+ SRS .
“SBR A-SI4 :
The above illustration Is in the case of a party who has been paying rent JO years,
amcunting to $3,000.00, and yet does not cwn a heme | want ya to think about this
and then ccme to see me. or | will call to see yeu Your business with me ts confiden-
Wal “PHONE, Monroe 588. : :
a B. A. CEPHAS,
Real Estate Agent, 602 Worth 2nd Strect
PEOVS9D94 4909996665 560646646666-546656660609606466660666066666606 6606600066048 000806
seatpel of the truth can be, made te
ot ae deems into the vite of ene
tien in the house of the race ax it
tes in other days been mate to cut
onto The Vsuts of theme In the house
of the fore of the race In the effort
te haid wy the bands of the race In
ity contention for Justice amd fale way
n (Murch and State
They who sil their standing In the
Rep ablean parts for aifiee or for
ach bring disgrace upon themselves
aval amity upon Che race Senthern
sult etare have teen autng that from
Ieee De Tr te tise te eat a
hat Pie Waters of the fer ih iegn,
Warts Turse get Cred of ayia: for
set color} de'eparen to National
Comsercoans att taving weeded Chen,
wnt on Ca canventions and separated
then fot Ue ough sonsideration
chet im new and for some voars pnet
have teen separating them from the
Federal offl@s in the Southern
Stats Politiclana refuse to. tives
Jonger In colored politiend merehar
Ave wpe refuses to atay purenped
after itis béngnt and patd for when
they have discovered the wins of
suck me rehandize
We have tie higheat regard for
Dr Cram He would sean to barter
bin tufluenss fur cash he should
scorn to be the sletin of a cowardly
deal which pleases Senator Tilman
and draseT publtern Administratton
Polley yute the nifre of ward polities
Philadelphia Pa Tribune
Your Home
Deserves the
Best Looking
Furniture
AND THE BEST FURNT-
ATURE THAT YOU OAN
AFFORD TO FURNISH
IT Wirt,
Tt fx in the home that you
and your family Uvo—enjoy
reat and recreation It {x in
the home that the children
art their ent and lanting tm
Dreanions.
CAN YOU APFORD TO BE
CARELESS ABOUT TUK
HOME FURNITURE—THR
HOSIE APPRARANOE?
From our mammoth stock of
the best FURNITURE and
CARPETS made, you can a
lect choice plocea at about
the price the mail storo is
bound to charge you far
mach Joss Acairable goods,
We have customern all over
the Routh. 4]
(Write ux for bio 'prints (pho
tographs) and prices.
Sydnor & Hundley,
Incorporated,
7OD11-10 KH, Broad 6,
Wchroond, Va.
ruserroan rom THR WOME AEAUTIUL.
Offer Prize For Thoutahd Mile Flight.
‘The Dally Malt of London, Rogiand,
offers a piize. of $50,000 for a cirtular
Aight of 1000 mites grer Ragland and
Beotland Tirta Aight Must take place,
wenther ‘permit.ing, “Ip ,tbe racond
week Jn July, 1811. .
Man Metts Stranze Ceats
James Maes aed © ”
joare Ensen atin te sere nt a
MA bs valae * was de vetes we neat
Watertert fe fhe mans mk and
bark ce ternem and Be Cod tim
Bova :
3..W WATKINS
JPL Mroadmoy, AC Odth Bt. N.Y
Heal Estate, Insurance & Investments
Since 1 have proven myself to be
f sucessful organizer and promoter
of corporations. why pot consult me
Wefare inventing. Twill adviay you
wud guarantes to make your money
farn & per cent for you, also ad
Laie cash on your stock in the
Workere Realty Ca Send for par
Utara Ieferencn, The Colonial
tank of New York
LUCIAN 1. WATKINS —The poetic
value of this aamo Is well ropre-
rented in the booklete, ‘The Sol
dier'n Home aud “Tho Old Lox
Cabin’ Beautiful Washington and
Lincoln editions Seo tor yourself
20 centa for both Address, Dox 67.
Fort Rifssoll W350.
VIRGINIA: qa
shill itietiiad a ee
In the Law and Equity Court, City
of Richinond, this 7th day of
Jue, 1910
Annie Moore + + +) Plaintit
yh se = In Chancery
Joe Moore, see Defendant
‘Tho object of:this suit {s to obtain
@ divorce, a vinculo matrimonii by
‘the plaintif ngainst the defendant.
‘And ‘an agidavie. having been. made
and filod that wligence’ has been
used by and on behale of the plain
Um to aacertatd in what county or
corporation the dofendant, Joo Moore
is without offect, and that tho plain-
tm don’t know pis whorcabouts, It
{8 ordered that tho said defendant,
Joe Moore appear here within fifteen
daya after the due publication of this
order and do whatevor is necossary
to protect his Intereat hereto.
A Copy—Tente 3
. P. P WINSTON, Clerk,
‘To Joo BMoure —
‘You'll tako notice that I shall on
tho 21st vay # auly, 1910, at the
‘office of Phil B. Shield, Room Num:
dered 60, Chamber of Commorce
bullding, sifiinted sduthwest corner
ot Ninth and Main Streots, in tbe
Clty 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 deponitiona of witnesses to
jbe tead as otidence in my behalf
in a cortain #uit in chancery, dopand.
ing in tho Law and Equity Court, for
tho Gity of Richmons, Va, wherein
you are defondat, and 1 am plain
‘Uff, and If. for any cause tho staking
of the eatd depositions be uct com
menced op that day, or {f, com
monced be not concluded on that day
{ie taking of the sae will be ad
Journed and’ contin from day tc
day, or from time to- time at thé
axme place and between the ‘anmt
hours siti the agtte ahall hav beor
concluded. ~ :
a Respecttdily, © *
ANNIE MOORS,
.. 4 BY Counsel
3. Henry Cratcnitéid, pas x
‘OMoe: 1326 Mant Brogd At, >
f Richmond; Va, *
VIRGINIA:
In the Law and Equity Court, City
of Richmond, this 4th day of
Sune, 1910
John S Stewnrt = = Plaintntt
ve In Chancery
Maggie Stewart, - = Defendant
7 OBJECT
The object of this sult ts to obtato
|@ divorce a vinculo matrimonst from
the defendant And an aildatit hav
Ing been made ant Bled that the de
fondant Maggio Stewart Ix a non
resident of the State of Virginia. {t
8 ordered that she appear bere within
fAfteen Anyn after tho due publication
of Unis order and do whatever Is
‘necessary to protect. her Interest
herein
A Copy--Teato
‘J Heary Crutchfield pq
To Maggie Stewart, —
| You'll take noticn that T shall on
the 2at day of July, 1949, at_tho
office of Phil B Shield Room Ram-
hered 50, Chamber of Commeren
bulldiog, ‘nituated_ nouthwest corner
Ninth and Main Streets in tho City
of Richmond. Va.. between the hours
of 8 aclock A M and 6 o'clock P
M of that day proceed to take the
depositions of witnesnes to be read
ag evidence 1 my bebalf in a certalp
suit In chancery depending In tho
Law and Equity Caurt. for tho City
of Richmond, Va., whereln you aro
defendant, and Tam plaintiff, and 3f
tor any cnune tho taking of tho sald
‘depositions be not commenced on that
day. or {if commenced, be not con-
cluded on that day, the taking of the
same will bo adjourned and con:
tinued from day to Way, or from time
to tlme at the samo place and be-
tween tho samo hours until the same
shall have been completed. —*
Respectfully,
JOHN 8 STEWART.
By Counsel
J Henry Crutehfold. p a.
OMco 1216 East Broad St,
Richmond, Va.
ee eee y
, 3
5. W. ROBINSON
19 & 21.N. 18rH St.
. Dealer in ‘
Fine Wines, Liquors, ‘
2 Cigars, &e
ALY, STOOK BOLD _ :
AS GUARANTERD.
PROMPT ATTENTION, |
Your Patronage is Rebpectially |
Botictted, a
PROSPECTS SOOO COO:
POPOL ETOSLODIOOODS:
were
Alpheus Scott
Church HM “
FUNERAL DIREOTOR AND EM.
BATMAN
ag OPED Ty and Night, -
and Warerooms:
‘al 808% P Street
Oui Thoie, ‘2037
Senta “Etiote, 6619;
+, $886 Bi. John wtrwet
y *' * | RICHMOND, VAL
Rei ee a ere ge
EUG POR OF TARTS FEST RP ONG le GL OTNRUN Same pape
panes: * ote. naeeees of . see eee: + shasesse et ne ne ee se :
sg eh ot eae Saha whee care
; Boling Hat ta behest canietey a TB eek poral ree a am 4
oun, he pull cbaon pet pRicans to wea try naa bee ait ef i
Shaner mcemerca ida eat ae
TT RRO En a DAIL RAR REA
ao Beene ie Ge eee
GUE ek See eae oe a
Re ae ee ee ee)
EON Cea emer
ees oe Te Waa en ene ie |
Peg Oe ee)
Si cA OE ae a tis ce ar RESTS n
[Sey ee eee ete caer eS
Fede Nae Rn eee ese rE
fe en ec ere
eee eee es See guiet cee
: Dormitory, Virginia bale ‘Ualweeye
- Va. Union University
Offers the Best Higher Education to
COLORED YOUNG MEN. :
| IT TAS A FINE ACADEMY coune {nclutiog mancal training’ tor thove who: hare
HA EGRLEGR, GORA Is bad and complete. te regdvents abd ‘etanting are
a Nah as thee of anh siege Tov while youth the iat, according to th etag
“tye UROLOGICAL COURSE, bas for many years been the sandant caw for colored
piece ou ini! Sater qt we an eel Sosa
ade an AT mn oe cen eg aro,
Chiterity to o8ct colored young wen 4s edveation equal to tat exayed by ibe tavered
OS fer tdorution, adder the Prat, ne
VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY.
peace pee sneenepeebesbasd ee eeanesesnesaannaanase
ee ee a ee eT ee
; DO YOU LIKE TO WEAR FINE CLOTHES
; But Hesttate Because You Think Yiu Cant Afford 3
: It. We Will Keep You or Your Wife Dressed :
: in the Height of Fashion on : 3
| .ONE DOLLAR A WEEK! }
eae aetna
; YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT UNTIL‘THE GOODS 3
} ARE PAID FOR—YOU CAN WEAR THEM |
; WHILE YOU ARE PAYING FOR THEM. ;
; The very latest style MEN'S SUITS made to your measure, 300 4
; Aifferent kinds of goods to select fron: You can have thein
: ‘made with fancy or plain huikets or cud’ full q
, pes, leg Pants, long Coats full padded 4
Shoulders and tull flare bneke 3
; FOR THE LADIES we havo Handsome Coat Sul's, Sik Dressed 4
: - ‘and Petticoats.
Don't hgsitate because you here ho mone, bat fonie In and |
; Jook un over, We Mke to show,our goods. 4
:
M. H hitehill
3
OM. A. Whitehill :
; * y ae
|. Clothing Company, © ;
; ‘ i
| 517 EAST MAINST., RICHMOND, VA :
, (BETWEEN FIFTH AND SLXTI) 3
: : ;
: . ee
Po" vee. ee: oe kcueeicc
Bands of Calanthe.
Constitute a Feature and persons cannot do better to let the little
ones join. Children received from Two to Twelve Years.
Benefits $1.00 to $1.50 per week when aick, and $30.00 to
$4000, at death, Matrons wanted to al! localities For reasiee
{on of new bands and all particulars. wr te MRS ANNA TAYLOR.
gw M. 120 West Hill Street, Richmond, Va.
3 4.454O46466566bb646Ob60060$64656055ObO$5OO566O5F6664.
;- ISHAM MANN &.Co.,
Undertaker, 9 E. Duval St., Richmond, Va.
Picst Clase Bervicn. High GraseCankete athe Loweet Prise.
am | All Onters Attenited Prompliy—iotthey Day oF Night,
SEhone, Meatoe B40,’ | Neotdienon, 118 B Letith Be
|
SEE _.® a |
WM. CAR _
|
TREN Seconn Sr.
For Correct Plumbing,
_ Steam and Gas Fitting.
; . ‘Phone Monroe 9742.
es
“CHEROKEE”
Blood Tonic,
“THE RED MAN'S GIFT TO BUF
FERING HUMANITY.”
An Invaluable Remedy for Serofala,
Rheumatism, Eczema, Tete, and
f All Diseases Arising From
Impure Condition ef Blood.
Can be found at \ ‘
JOHN G. SMITH,
1303 East Leigh Street.
—See our Biock: of Calendars for
1911, before placing your, order,
ee
If Jou want rdmulta, put your adv.
in The PLANET.
i
aplerive to The PLANET,
SI i
FORDS
WAT IRD S|
‘Weg ee
HAIRPO MADE
Eee
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aaa mies
ey bau 157s."
__ AGHTS¥ i a