Richmond Planet

Saturday, May 13, 1911

Richmond, Virginia

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THE RICHMOND PLANET THE TRUE REFORMERS. General Counsel Newsome Yet Active—Will Proceed Further—The Outlook Brighter. GRAND WORTHY MASTER HOLMES-ISSUES A CIRCULAR. The True Reformers' Hall at Lynchburg was put up at auction last week and sold for about thirteen thousand dollars. It is said to have been bought in for the Order. The proceeds of these sales will go to the receivers of the True Reformers' Savings Bank and be distributed among the depositors. All of the other buildings will be sold under the hammer before the year is out. The elimination of this property from the assets of the Order is what has worked. After J. Thos. Newsome and the Bureau of Insurance no little in their efforts to rehabilitate the Order. On the other hand, the depositors, who see a larger distribution for themselves are happy. It is impossible to tell just what proportion of the members of the Order have returned to the fold, and it may not be wise that it should be known if the number happens to be small. The friends of the people who have wrecked the Order are not talking so much now about alarming disclosures have been made to the public and the startling conditions portrayed in these columns, showing the manner and methods adopted to rob trusting and confiding people. open-door policy have been Floyd Ross, of St. Louis; W. R. Griffin, of Washington; A. Humbles, of Lynchburg, and John E. Moriweather, of Richmond, and other they being the leaders, while J. Thomas Newsome has made his position known to all men and has gone right ahead with the work before him. There is one other official who has insisted that the Order shall be put on its foot before durable action, which in the present condition of affairs means that the persons guilty will not be punished, and if a man can take thousands of dollars of other people's money and not reimburse the losers and not be punished other people will be induced to do the same thing, and the confidence of colored people in each other will wilt forever. FRIENDS ACTIVE. While the Order and its affiliated departments have lost heavily by bad management, it is safe to say that it has lost nearly one hundred thousand dollars by direct and indirect perceptions. It is the people and their friends in many instances who have profited by this monumental community was shrouded in sadness last Saturday and weeping as were announced that that lovable young woman, Carrie P. Archer, was no more. It had been only three days before since she was at her usual place, discharging them with her accustomed faithfulness and meeting her friends with that warmth of heart that has so often called forth. COLORED BUSINESS MEN OUT SPOKEN. Colored business men and those connected with the other large racial institutions in this city, who are doing an honest, legitimate business have been outspoken in their commendation of The Planet for its attitude in turning the search-light of public inquiry upon these surprising conditions. Information now at hand concerning the Reformer Mercantile and Industrial Association tends to show that when this department of the Order is investigated it will disclose a system of rottenness almost beyond belief. Even the ignorance displayed in the management of these stores is almost criminal, while the accounts past due and not yet settled will stagger those who had put their trust in the concern and who paid large salaries for its management. THE RIGHT TO KNOW There is another phase of the situation, and that is the assumption on the part of the officers in charge that not only the public did not have a right to know these things, but that the Grand Fountain itself and the members thereof did not have the right to know. Even the Board of Directors, which was supposed to know every detail of the work, did not know, and it was only after the most strenuous demotion made him determined memoir of that body and after The Planet had given to the public the information that could not be obtained in private that it was reluctantly admitted that the facts stated by this journal were true. GRAND FOUNTAIN DIDN'T KNOW. The last Grand Fountain met in this city after the True Reformers' Bank failed, and when it went away, so far as the official records were concerned, the members did not know any more when they left here than they did when they came. Cashier M. T. Hill was a defaulter then, but the members did not know it, and they were kept from knowing a great deal more. The leading officials were removed. But their colleagues were refreshed. It soon became aviolent to those people, were as reluctant to make admissions and to expose the wrong doings as had been their chiefs, and to this fact is that the up-hill work now confronting General Counsel J. Thomas Nowsome, who has had the time of his life convincing even the Grand Worthy Master that his course is right and proper. LEADERS OUTSPOKEN. The adage that "truth fears not- jog but concealment" was never more, happily illustrated than the distance. The champions of the open-door policy have been Floyd Ross, of St. Louis; W. R. Griffin, of Washington; A. Humbles, of Lynchburg, and John E. Moriwether, of Richmond, and others, they being the leaders, while J. Thomas Newsome has made his position known to all men and has gone right ahead with the work before him. There is one other official who has insisted that the Order shall be put on its feet before drastic action is taken, which in the present condition of affairs means that the persons guilty will not be punished, and if a man can take thousands of dollars of other people's money and not reimburse the losers and not be punished other people will be induced to do the same thing, and the confidence of colored people in each other will wilt forever. FRIENDS ACTIVE. While the Order and its affiliated departments have lost heavily by bad management, it is safe to say that it has lost nearly one hundred thousand dollars by direct and indirect peculiations. It is the people and their friends in many instances who have profiled by this monumental steal who are now endeavoring to bar the way to the investigation and exposure of these crooked methods which are now admittedly known to have existed. If the members will send representatives to the Grand Fountain in September, remain true to the brotherhood and slaterhood and support the policy now being inaugurated by the general council and the determined members of, the Board of Directors, much of the colum under which the colored people of Richmond are laboring as a result of the True Reformer failure can be lifted. GRAND WORTHY MASTER HOLMES LETTER. A bright day has dawned for the Grand Fountain of the United Order of True Reformers, and many thousands of people are now rejoicing throughout this country because the license of the Grand Fountain, B. O. T R., has been restored. I have been so very busy with the details of my office and looking after the general welfare of the Order in this critical period of its existence that I have not been able to take the time to write communications for the public. But now since a bright er day has dawned for our Ordea, I feel that it is necessary for me to say a word with reference to our past struggles and present status. A CHANGE OF HEAD In September, 1910, at a regular session of the Grand Fountain of the United Order of True Reformers, it was discovered that the Order was in a very bad condition and a demand was made for a change in the head of the organization Following up this demand, the Brotherhood unanimously requested that I would take charge of the Old Ship and pilot it on to success. I yielded to this request and laid myself, as it was upon the altar, to be used, for the good of the organization, having decided to either rise or fall with it. From that time I started out trusting in God and determined to do the right by all. THE FAILURE OF THE BANK. We had not gone very far down the road before a very heavy obstacle was rolled in our way, by the Savings Bank of the Grand Fountain of the limited Order of True Reformers going into the hands of a recoverer, and on the same day we were come fronted with a suspension of the licehouse of the Grand Fountain. This suspension came to us like a thunderbolt from a clear sky and shook us beyond our power to describe, and because of it many of the strongest and most loyal ones in our unfit host. Joined the St. Lukes. Rev. Z. D. Lewis, D. D., organized through his offers last Monday night at the St. Lukes Hall. Old Dominion Council, and among the members were Rev. Wm. L. Taylor, ex-Grand Worthy Master of the U. O. of True Reformers; J. C. Robertson, ex-General Council of the Grand Fountain, united Order of True Reformers, and United Order of True Reformers, Jr., ex-accountant of the Grand Fountain, and ex-secretary of the True Reformer"Old Folks' Home. OBITCARY. Carrie P. Archer. The community was abounded in sadness last Saturday and weeping oys were seen on all sides, when it lovable young woman, Carrie P. Archer, was no more. It had been only three days before she was at her usual duties, discharging them with her accustomed faithfulness and meeting her friends with that warmth of heart that has so often called forth the admiration of her neighbors. The deceased was born in the city of Baltimore in 1851. She received her education from the public schools of that city and went on to join an institute. Something like two years ago she was married to Mr. Thacker F. Archer, who was at that time manager of the Colored Reformatory at Innover Courthouse, Va. and she the matron of the same institution. A year or so later they both resigned their positions there and moved to Richmond, Va. to enter the mercantile business. It took them only a short while to build up a very profitable business at their home, on the corner of Moore and Harrison streets. Their success is very largely due to the charming manners and friendly disposition of this young woman. Decreased was a member of the Lechlah F. Church, from which the Inner service. The position on last Monday morning. The position of the church, Rev. Waters, offered and was assisted by Rev Lee, of the Presbyterian Church Rev Sommers, of the Episcopal Church, and Rev Smith, of Chula, Va. The remarks were carried to Baltimore, Md. for interment The pill bearers were Messrs J. W Johnson, B A. Cephas, Walter Jackson, Burrell Jackson, Warren Scott, Warner Carter, Drs J. C Carper and James H. Jackson. The deceased is survived by a husband, mother, one slater and four brothers. JOHN MORTON GONE. John Morton, a well known citizen for who many years was the leading cook at some of the finest hotels in the city and who served, ir that capacity on the Old Dominion Steamship Company's steamers for wellnigh a decade, passed away, peacefully Sunday, May 7, 1911 at 9:45 A.M. at the residence of his niece, Miss Marielle L. Chiles. He had been an invalid for many years. His age had obviously estimated from 90 to 95 years, and Mrs. Thus. P. Jeter, of Newport, W. Va., and Mr. C. Richard Chilien, of Washington, came to attend the funeral, which took place last Tuesday at the Frist Baptist Church. Owing to the fact that Rev. W. T. Johnson, the pastor, was out of the city, Rev. W. H. White, pastor of M. Carsel Baptist Church, officiated, assisted by Rev. S. C. Burrell. The choir of the First Baptist Church rendered choice selections, the first being "Lead, Kindly Light." Sideme Fannie P. Clarke sang a charm of the former sweetness and with all of the former and sweetness of other dips. There were many floral designs. The deceased was a member of Lone Star Lodge, G. U. O., of Odd Fellows. Rev. Dr. S. W. Bacoto Herc. Among the great Baptist diviners in attendance at the Virginia Baptist that 'State Convention' is Rev. S. W. Bacote, statistical secretary of the National Baptist Convention and one of the greatest pulpit orators among our people in the country. While in Kansas City, Mo., a few years ago we visited his large church; the Second Baptist, and we found that he was doing a great work in the middle West. He has a large congregation. His study is handsomely furnished and he has his congregation organized in such a manner as to excite the favorable consideration of the community. His wife is an accomplished pianist and a veritable mocking bird. We the recipients of favors at his hands, and we felt at home in his company, since traveled abroad, and his lectures have been a source of information and profit to those who have been lucky enough to hear him. He is welcome to Richmond, and it is hoped that he will prolong his stay here in order that his many friends may meet him and that those who do not know him may have the benefit of some of his highly entertaining and instructive sermons. Called to Baptist Temple, New York Rev. M. B. Huceless, D. D. formerly pastor of Pine Street Baptist Church, Suffolk, Va., has been called to the pastorate of the Baptist Temple, New York city, to be the successor of Dr. D. W. Wisher, resigned. Rev. Huceless has the collar under consideration. He was born in the city of Richmond, Va., the son of Nancy Poindexter. He attended the public, schools and the Richmond Theological Seminary, now the Virginia Union University. In Virginia he has pastored the Pine Street Baptist Church, Sucolk, Va. Macedonia Church, Sucolk, Va. Macedonia First Baptist Church of East Ridford, successfully, and has served as secretary of the Foreign Mason Board of the Virginia Baptist State Convention for ten years. He is here attending the annual session of the Baptist Convention and will leave this week for New York city, where he will preach Sunday. Bay Shore Hotel Opens May 22. Bay Shore Hotel, Hampton, Va. will open for the season May 22 with Mr. John Henry Robinson manager, who has been in charge of the hotel for two years. No posse will be spared to make this the best season we have ever had. Extensive regulations are now being made and many amusements will be added to the place. We are ready now to book excursions for the season. Many are being arranged for, since White City is closed, and no other posse shore resort is open to our people. W. T. ANDERSON, Secr Commencement Exercises at Virginia Union University An unusually harmonious and satirical factory year in closing at Virginia Union University. It is believed that there will be a larger gathering of former students and alumni than ever during Commencement week. All friends are cordially invited to the Commencement exercises, and it is especially urged that graduates of the classes of 1881, '86, '81, '01 and '06 attend their class reunions Wednesday afternoon in Pleasant Hill. The faculty of Commencement week are also follows. Sunday, May 14, 13 P. M., baccalaureate sermon before Virginia Union University and Hartshorn Memorial College in the Hartshorn chapel, by Rev. C. A Wooddy, D. D. Portland, Ore. Monday, May 15, 8:15 P. M., graduating exercises of the Academy. Tuesday, May 16, 8:15 P. M., commencement exercises and address by His Excellency Wm. Hodges Mann, Governor of Virginia. Wednesday, May 17, 10 A. M., meeting of Social Study Club. Paper Relations to the Public-School" by I. J. France, M. D. Portsmouth, Va. 2 P. M., class reunions 3 P. M., business meeting of Alumnal Association. 6 P. M., annual dinner of alumni, former students and friends. Miss Thereseila B. Chiles, of this city, war-union the graduates of the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute at Peteraburg. Va., yesterday. Va. Baptist State Convention Here. In Session at Fifth St. Baptist Church. Pres. Bolling Delivers Great Address. Re-elected by Acclamation--Other Able Pulpit Orators--Dr. Graham Scores Great Success. DELEGATES HOSPITABLY ENTERTAINED. The Virginia Baptist State Convention met in the forty third annual session Wednesday, May 10, 1911, and the Fifth Street Baptist Church, Rev Dr R H. Bowling presiding, Rev C E Miller, recording secretary. Devotional exercises were conducted by Rev L W Wales, Rev J C Carter and Rev M Robinson. The program was agreed upon. Rev W R Brown, Rev W B. Reed, B. D Rev Thomas H. White, D D, Rev H Powell, D D, were appointed a committee on enrollment. Rev Dr A. Gordon, of Philadelphia, Pa. extended the greeting and words of encouragement from the city Dr S. L. Morris, pastor of the Third Street A. M. E Church of this city, extended a coral welcome to the convention, as did also Rev Wm. E Blann. OFFICERS OF CONVENTION President--Rov. Dr. R. H. Bowling, Norfolk, Va. B. Browning, Va. Third Vice-President—Rev, Dr W. W. Gaines, Suffolk, Va. Fourth Vice-President Rev Dr J B Smith, Concord Recording Secretary Rev Dr C F Miller, Salem, Va Statistical Secretary Rev J, S St. Chair Drake, B D, Suffolk, Va. Corresponding Secretary Rev R C Woods, B D, Stunton, Va. Treasurer of Deacon A Humbles, Lynchburg, Va. ADDRESSES DELIVERED John Mitchell, Jr., president of the Mechanics' Savings Bank, and editor of The Planet, was present and on motion of Rev. W R Brown was introduced and delivered a forcible and enthusiastic address. The address of welcome was delivered by Rev D Webster Davis His effort was eloquent and timely. He convulsed the convention with laughter. Mrs Maggie L. Walker, R W G Secretary J O St Luke also spoke and told of her great work for the race. His attendance at the convent on is very large, and the delegates appeared to be well pleased with the arrangements made by Rev W F Graham, D D, his church and the corp of committees assigned to abl COMMITTEES APPPOINTED The committees which were ap pointed are Nonintials Revs J. S Minor George Washington F. C. Patterson J L Jefferson W H Callaway. R L Wynn and N+Jordan. New Bodles-Revs S A Moore S A. Garland, Prof G W Woody Rev L A Woody Rev L A Green T C. Curtis and Wm. Moore. Temperance-Rev C E Jones, M A Payne, Prof W H Johnson, Rev T. J. Jones, Wm Simms, Carrie Moss, Denon W Brown, Rw Moss, Sormona, Rw, W R Ashburn, J P. Huhbard, E Staples H. Stephenson, W. H. Mitchell, J C Austin and J W. Washington Auditing-Revs C H. Phillips, E C. Thompson, W. J. Johnson and J E. Philips OTHERS NAMED Sunday-Schools—Mrs. L. Tyrrell Prof G. A. Woody, James E. Carter R. J. Miller, J. G. King, C. C. Scott T. J. Johnson and Donon J M Chal borne. Finance—Reva. T H Shorts, R W Ashburn, G. B. Howard, D. C. Scott, A. S. Spencer and A. A. Galvin. Obituary—Revs. A. A. Apoençet. C. G. Cabell, J. G. St Clair Drake, Mrs. (Continued on Page Number) EIGHT. NOTICE! NOTICE The Board of Managers of the Pythonian Calanthe Industrial Association will most north night at 8:30 p.m. in the Castle, Canell, No. 727 North Third Street. BIG SHORTAGE IN BANK. Teller Accused of Embezzling Nearly 8145,000 of Funds. Cleveland, Ohio, May S — For all alleged peculiations amounting to nearly $115,000, Julius W. Hopkins, paying teller of the First National Bank, was placed under arrest today. According to the bank officials, Teller Hopkins made a confession to them three days ago. This was the first inking they had of any wrongdoing. Then Bank Examiner Williams was sent for. The officials claim that Hopkins, according to the alleged confession, had been taking small amounts for eight years, and that by juggling his entry accounts he succeeded in evading disclosure. He was in charge of the correspondence, and according to the officials, his accounts would show a certain amount of money in transit, whereas the actual amount was below his figures. INVESTED MONEY IN BUSINESS He handled $1,000,000 almost constantly. Most of the embezzled money, bank officials was invested in a manufacturing concern of which Hopkins was the head. Hopkins was arrested on a warrant issued by United States District Attorney Day. Which specifically charged him with the theft of $60, one from the bank. When arranged before United States Commission, Walker he waived a preliminary hearing and was bound over to the grand jury hound was fired at $60, 000. It is claimed that later Teller Hopkins confessed to District Attorney Day. Federal Bank Examiner Henry A Williams and officials of the bank that during the last eight years he had embezzled a total of $1114,500 of the institution's funds Hopkins was unable to give bail Hopkins is 37 years old and a witness. About a month ago his wife died and she then he appeared he and a great nervous strain Hopkins was unable to give bail Friends who saw Hopkins in his cell tonight say he told them he would plead guilty and "take his medicine without a fight." TREGAN AS A MESSENGER Horkins entered the old Park National Bank as a passenger boy 20 years ago and gradually won promotion, until he became teller. When the Park Bank consolidated with the First National Nine years ago he was made paying teller in the new institution. Charles E. Farnsworth cacher of the First National Bank made the following statement "The bank is fully protected by a blanket guaranty policy issued by London Lloyds, so that the loss of this defaulency will not fall upon the bank "The facts will be placed before the public officials for each action as they may deem it proper to take with reference to Mr. Horkins." ```markdown ``` Virginia Union University Summer Normal School. Announcements for the first Summer Normal at Virginia Union University are ready for distribution. This Summer Normal is a school of higher grade than any other for colored teachers in the State. Its special work will be for those who desire a professional elementary certificate, grammar or primary grade, for those who desire a summer school professional certificate, and for those who desire a first grade certificate. The school, therefore, bears the summer schools as the summer normal at the University of Virginia bears to other white summer schools of the State. Like the school at Charlottsville, it has a six week's PRICE, FIVE CENTS. state in Here. Baptist Church. Great Address. or Able Pulpit Or- reat Success. TAINED. session extending from June 19th to July 28th. Fine buildings and equipments, a strong faculty and excellent courses make the school very attractive to those who desire the higher grades of certificates. Last year the white public school teachers of the State attended the summer schools in far greater proportion than the colored teachers. We must see to it that we take as much interest in securing the best schools for our children as the white people do in securing good schools for theirs. Virginia Union University ought to be crowded this summer with the most ambitious and progressive of our teachers. Who to the director of the Summer School, Virginia Union University, for a year of information, and for a registration blank if you purpose to attend. New Grocery Store Just Opened. A complete stock of fancy and staple groceries. Just give us a call and he convinced Look at some of our prices for Saturday only. Best rib pork per pound 12 l-2c Best hog's bird 2d 25c Water ground meat per pk . 25c Cana Uncle Ned Tomatoes 25c Cana Uncle Ned, Corn. 25c Best Flour, 32c her bag H G CARTER & CO 629 North Third Street Odd Fellows to Celebrate Their 88th Anniversary. The several lodges, Past Grand Masters Council and Household of Ruth of the Grand United Order of Old Fellows, will celebrate the 68th anniversary at the Fourth Baptist Church Sunday May 15th at 2 to 4 P.M. Dr R O Johngen will deliver the oration The sisters of the several Households of Ruth will share equally with the Brotheren to commemorate this occasion. There will be a paper read by the District M N G. Mrs Mattie Tyler and a talk on the Household of Ruth by P M. N G. Mrs Hannah Johnson. The committee has arranged an interesting program for this occasion. The Household of Ruth will assemble in the basement of the church at 3:00 o'clock The Rohm and Patrolchare No 6 Captain C W Young commanding will lead the patrol to the church. The parade will leave Price's Hall at 3 on a clock prompt OFFICERS. M V P W H Jones, chiefman M V P Morton Deane master of ceremonies P N F Archie B Hawkint, sec retary general com P N F Oscar N Brown, corre sponding secretary M. V. P.—S J. Gilpin, treasurer Rev F. L. Hall, of Drake's Branch, Va., was in the city this week and called on us Mr Marks Funn and wife wish to thank their many friends for the kindness they rendered them during their brothers' Willie Funn, sleekness and death Mrs Margaret Wise, of Petersburg, Va., has just bought a very desirable corner property at Third and Duval streets. The deal was made by Mr B. A. Cophan, the well-known real estate agent. Corner lot in Jackson Ward, well located for nice residence, or will make good business site. Other property for sale all over the city. B. A. CEPHAS Real Estate Agent. 603 North Second St. --3€ The Honorable (Hy @ Senator gl ees) Sagebrush Two PAW eS. a Evan Hiount, son of “Boss” David Mount (“Senator Kagehrush 9, nas been rejected by Patricia Anners. Dick Oar try offers him a position with the Trane continental railway which ty fehting 10 father MeVickar head of thy rallroat and ‘Hioes™ Mount quarrel ‘The boss demands that the rallroas stop the tse of erokrd methods Coing wen to meet hia father Evan mecta a mun ‘whto taken him for a fereatry emptosee Evan ts kidnaped by a bag of men, ovt Aenuy tand corporation apent asl. We taken af aught ta mansion seemingly prealded over by a woman ‘The house tx Wartrace Mall Kenater Blount’s home ani the wuinan te kvans# Stepmother when he had never tet ‘Tre senator jurpeses running haan for attorney arnernt dest ite the Seung man 3 Fecent arrivit in the stute Pean. ws Sectm Mie hearn be father calling mpc year tetoKere? Be ickar devon wecater Mount 40 nem fnate Evan) Patria nnd her, grologiat father arrive at t 6 Sngrbrueh enpital TAU McVickars request kvan Joins the railroad x forees ax division counsel and political worger Ite favors clean poll cs, but Mads that his office Is made rallying point by mall polities! hangers 20 of, the Pond Tran has a disagreement with Gantry about the reads mizing in feillticn lia father pulln wires Unknown to him to have hin invited to apeax In a distant mining town Hathaway. who has been trying to do business with the Pug and With Senator Iuunt, tate Rave w talk wlth Mrs tlownt CIARTER NID N the totophone atation ae, the he- tel Blount tried wevecal umes, and alwaya Ineffectually, to get a ong distance connertion with Wartrace Hall Fatting tn this, he called up Gantry to otk if the trattic manager knew anything about the pur- ‘poser and movements of hix father Gantry did not know. but he knew something clea thing which proved tbe leakiides of the delerrayh Soper ment “Come down here and (oll me whit yoo mean by xending thewnliary tele Rraimn (0 the vico president” he com manded, with Jeating seterity over the phone Gnvtes wan busy with the rienosra pher when Eran entered, but the traf Qe mauager tmidiatvly jyortyaned the bulacss of the moment and di mlsted the clerk “There is nathing to tell more than Fou wom already to knw" sat Blount morosels in onawer'te Gantry x vient. “have wired! my: resizwathon that tn an” . “But why?" persinted Gantry “Recavae 1 ai nint keine ta two an accessory eltber before or after the fact not $C 1 kiwi tte” was the Prompt rejulndor “Ah uccemmry to what? “Ton criti .Misteenrl for the tes of thi sfate nnd of the uation Gantry, if son and wane Otte tad Four JuRt deserts yon would bw brewk Bog atone in the penttonthiry thle tens ed tntimte* Suffering Jebu, laughed the teat fle manuger “sometnndy rast bane doen hitting you pretty hard Who waw tt, Benn?” At another ume Tlount mbt have been leva anaes anil more de rret “it wae Mr Stinow P Mathaway president of the Twin Rutter Lumber company.” he afd Gantey drew n long hrauth, whieh ended 10 2 low whistle “So than what you were Jet In for wan 17" be exeiniint And then hy “checked himaeif abruptly und. went back to the prinelpinl contention “Dut Fou're not guing ty quit Evan You can't affont to dy that” “Why can't 1?" “Uecanne yon have committed your. seit right nid left No wnan enn walk out of Ure ranks ow the ere uf a bat Ue, You don't stow to consider the construction that will be put upon fuch hanty action on yoor part” “7 don't atop'4o consider anything, Dick, excrpt the fact that 1 wan eri: Geatly expected to connie at «crim fnal contempt for the law of the land, the law which, s/n member uf the Dar, T bave sworn to uphokl That eas cnough for me” “Bot it won't be enough for Mr Me- Vickar,” Gautry Interponed "If you can afford to drop out he can't afford to'lot you" Then, with sudden grnr- fty, "Tladn’t you better let ino old up that telegram of yours for n few ours, tran, until you ro had timo to think It over?* Blount apraog from his chair tn a webilto heat, “Do you mean to tell me that you sre alrendy holding it up?" he de manded. “I took the Iberts temporarily," natd the. trame man coolly, “There in no harm done Sr, MeVickar Is 06 his way west now, and be, will be hero to 4 day oF tio, Why not kill the mes- ange Gnd baye st out with him fn per- aon when he comes?" Eat Blount was aot to be appeased. rant a ee | Sb waw't have wy commmunfentions tampernd with” he raged “It you have given an order to have that tele: gram held eut you cum give anuther to have ft neat tiortintely ” OAM ight said Gates, “Just [you nny" And tie aude nn effort to detain the cursed ane when fount ‘harmed bis avk mud wtrodte assis But differ the aelf discharged polltieut man fer was gone the trafle may cbue ied quietly and turned up a faced oven paper webieh ina beet tying oD bis desk during the short and bellix erent tntersteve “Htutnphe he mised, cending the typewritten inex ever agin “Th Hite indy wan too fy for sou thi tae, Evan my boy Rhe wa Jost Prophetess ennui to grivea. where and bow sou would 0 off the hintle Great Wetle. wewinan Chat L bees wbe figures out mare than “bAlf of the fine moves In the honorable xenator game" Evan Bioaat walked a halt doren Diecks beyend the Inter Mountain ha tel efore tie tind coud down xu ctontly to determine what to da nest Beit chanerd the conting down. tno SNOAUEGUBS. UHi-aL Noh. eotrati pat the a9 PUbIE gakage patronized by bly futher Acting pou the UpUlse ef the me ment, fe sent tn and asked 10 any of Senator Honet «ost wetee dm the ells The garage manager pepe that the Mg towdater was in, and Touts de elslott eng Laken tjeth Cue Spur af tbe tyne nt ‘A few minates biter te was be had Whe serring whe | of Hh fast mas te HIKIng Is Was ont of toss Winuitt reas hed the enteyuce to the cottenwood shaded avenue at War trace Juxt to fore the dinner ben, anil ho was 0 fat texoverial from the at lack of right todignatien that he awat uble ty tie t hie father and the others with a far degra: of eyuantin hy Ta the tek parrt af Ms nai howe ever, he tiie he ttttags attimatany tn suspense AU (he diver tate thus pentensor eld forthe abn tat eats apo me attors Nertalniinr 66 tee femme ne nee ied nets ter Seared the tab ent versatton teste within sever at ttl Honia of cen ef the twenty et tury ted at te disp rast auth thors wat te diquess dt wae bie futher Who Teak thar wun te the dt ating roost nod po rae adeat Wanted at gee tee th planes HU somes tee wih the thhttng fete rnotectians th thee tek quirk of th bral rs ore vteench fo Ista ta Netieg and Be tas as interpreted by Vatrieks tit fie greater matter wan AU qutwelgineg the taser Later, when Mise Uutinrs tad payed horantt fut MH Fey Went Mauek fo the dines anurs ned the qsteroda tye and whe Evan Pie ut finntly went away. to buehe te at IC atone SOThe Wartuce dew wae nn nines to the diving: room amd thromgh tho loops tic wa tienes he coat ne the antuiated hum of the prehistoric contereitian tn wht ly Patel ta bad ROW Joltudd avn loval daughter Khonht Mopsiug ats uiist hope that the pro Testor Wau d some tive he to bed and that his fatter would come to the don for tis wedtime whit at tw tong ateumned pipe Blouee mwoked and Walled When hia pationes was nally Fewanled It wax nat the honorable senator who strew the portieres axide and entered the euzy atuoking rou Tt wan Patricia, anit abe wan alone. “L thought perhans T ahoutd find you heew," wtie nate eninuty, taklug (he easy chal at the opposite corner af the hearth “Did Wwe bore you to extine: ttow 7" “Not quite" Ww laughed “Tut alneg 1 hadn't Kot imyaelé born 600.000 Feara ago | éant anmehow neem to Eaitanize n rors aviive Interest In the dond and buried perloda Nor 1," ale confessed fraukly, “though for papa’a nnke 1 do urs to Rut for un wlw are sing today there aro so 'inaus problems of really ‘ital Importance, problems that the ptero- dactyls never knew ansthing about.” <I know,” sald the young toan, balf atscntly “I am up against one of Ujet right now, and T don't know bow! to meet tt" SWI dt Dear telling?” she askéa And he boped thit the symipathy ‘ her tone wae peryonsl rather than] conventional, if = THE RICHMOND PLANET; ‘RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. ae ee ee ae aoa. re ntl! It bes nv louger life oF breath oft with which to protest. Thereupon he told ber all that bad Banpened to him slnco the evening he bad left the sleeping ear at Aretas, concluding’ ulnwst sbamefacedly with the stury of the lumber magnates at: teapt at corruption, of which bo sup- pressed noting but the fact that the Droferaor'’s sine appeared in Mr. Hathaway's tint of ubarcuolders, When he made an end tier eye wore shining, elther with quickened aympu- thy or Sudlizuation, be could uot de- termine whth —” ° “What MAL sou dat whe asked, ree fereing to the tweident ef the after: noon “D didn't de bat enough.” he fumed rani ufeabl [et Hathaway get away Without iy telling bln plainly emote What a hop issiy Irreclatmable soon Url he ie 1 mide a mistake In not Harow ing him out bodtly “You made sour greatest mistake ta the very beginning Exan she anti dretstiely "You should have nude a confidant of your father" “S did try to at Bret.” he protested sue the game te evcrything, and everybody lasx it omy father, his Wife tte rattrunt attiethin and the pol Welous Surely seu wouldn't way that Tptisuit have We my father put me on the state theket aw a candidates SC rtality not, ven the quick reply. Snot univas you were convinced of the parity of Mie anotive But tf you have hoon tellin tne the truth and all the truth i sou awem thae you didn t aust Stair M6 Watt Clrat cutive MEE me Whint was the use of Anquleing? Me ts the bess uf Uhe machine He Would tate used the mincbine to put ne ee wee we att orig generat To other words P should Lave owed ms eles that tit to the watt af the people, Dnt the wet of ene inan, and that dhuw thy pearest kinsman Cader suet Hp tinstiiers wie 1 have been os Mie fot tne Gr aintutster the ollee Neha! feat ol favor” Taunt hess why put, abe return ed Your rearest insmaa, as you ent tan send base Gen the Inet Rion te interfere Wasn't thatthe Bers reisutn he gave for wantlng £0 Put soar en the th ket? SP knew * sakl Hientnt, whos matnd wis begtunirg to cloud again * But there ate me tiny ether mysteries L fm tot nore nt thas blessed moment That tay Comer hast consphred with Mr Me\E torte gee me gust where 1 am Ther stots wane getty reprome itil PH ions peter tutn Dyan that you dow Chat apices Lite your Cater ste sad Worse than that, yeu deat now fine Ti ttiat ty beside the prey cot iek at ctevents What ure you ole te da “T have ntready done tt 1 have wired fy resignation t0 Mr MeV te kar. rand te IME boca neeepst It She yeas looking blu fately tn the exon “That Ix the mecond unwise thing you have done Dera, you are fagty In need of a balanee wheel SP-knew tht a goal while ago” be Fejoluat Lap tied for ene, and tt was refused when sou sald Not" Stu blushed vere prenitis “1 can ely vou gow" she sald batt best tatingie (Peudy yan won € tee to drag mie ene tnte the Held of sentiment Tt Was fist a Lit of besish rage our funding that telegram ts Mir Me Vek ar Cau t yeu coral 7 “Not nn ne” . SThen yon met de the pet best thing tI him sou have ro onsidered © “Hot | eat wrtke hande with the corruptiay that fs gotng ow all nzound me, he ules tod indignantly: POF Gare you can't, anil yoo miata Mat the true refed eB wy anude ont af tine anate wher dre ms ud rine aw iy Yoh aust stay tend Nght uh Latdee than vot ever bare Ww fere Fan f6 tt for the sucker of the larger right thet for your ewe wake Ct wat sow the wide don that te wwe before gan * 1 enw ee aint tear aml feot when fhe deur 6 scathiand fe any finer qualited Tew can Ege om prea b fue Cie cept of eleanaiiness and falt denims whant F know Haat ail ths 0 a rupetets oud teh kery are gulis ot be ud aus Genie * Witat whl the jorge Hof this state aay te ane etd about mse Cwhetr the corrupt an ix exposed SOM ste ead that te Just whee Fert to grew one aided You ert por a free lias tlie gost, bat “Gut te ons half of your Anty |The “other bait is to tey to anake the Ohtng Htweif ogtow with the gospel E fully And frinly belleve Cit you toat your beat helper when you eefuted to fan bande with jour futher But that ts over and “dene, and now soon annie make the best uf the opportunities yan “have chusen* * —Patrieta, you are an insplration Uf 1 could only hase pon bestdu ine t give moe ws tattle word 1 shanidnt rind the odd ngatont me” “Now yuu are tempting me. ahe sald slowly. ‘and {t fxn fulr™ Yon know my weaknewe nnd pansion t help Yom mata t tempt me, Evan” fell what f know Ttuve been teal Shae every tinh thnt thts te te tn A campaign of publicity 1 shal keep any word" “On, Fou woul not do that!" protested Gantry, now — thoroughly alarmed. "¥ 01 know too much— f great deal too much!" Blount got up ee eee cas 2 eR, : Os AiR’ aS 7% 7 \g Ai wr Ses trou xxow 700 Mien A, ONEAT ee cae een DEAL TOO MUCHY nateh — taker from the traM@e manager's desk bor “It's op to you," he eald, with bi hand on,the doorknob. ‘(et into con munication with whatever ‘power that bo’ thero aro that can givo the necessary Orders gnd sco to tt that the ‘orders are given nnd that they aro put tn the way Of being carried out. Dirk, Tmenn what] say. It’s o clean shect of an exposurd that will mako a lot of you winh that sow bad mover been one : ! “Hold on—gne question béfore you ‘g0, Eran,” pleaded Gantry, “and givo mo a atraight anawor. Is this another moro of the honorablo~of your fa- thers?" * , Blount's puille wap as grim as any that ‘Gantry had over seen on the facn of the Honorable David. “My fattior Js much more likely to thko sides, with ‘you,-1 am sorry to say. a Dick; you've got only ono map fo dght, but you mustn't forget dint bis nme ‘Albo ix Blount, @o to ik and send me Wort and fet tho srat ‘Wort be that you bare scotclied the eh Ry QIN THES A ies ares eg Solid Rock Union: i ee - . ° rick: (20th Oontury Seoret System) = =~ - 2: THAT BENEFITS IN LIFE, HEALTH & DEATH, ¢ sar Salary and Commission to Deputies : Write Right Now for Full Particulars to the ons i i SOLID ROOK UNION,.1920 Dickinson St., 3 7 se PHILADELPHIA, PA. 3 ’ JOHN CLINTON, JR., President. i ‘ (DEPOSTORY—FEDERAL TRUST COMPANY. : 05 $6640000000000900000000006064000040000000000000c8 re re en ea eee ae eae tng mafl bud been boxy with bim also, ‘There were three foritations from ‘Widrly soparated citios In tue state, alt based upon the newspaper reports ‘of Nis @pbir apcech, and the, afternoon mail brought threo more. It was ovident that the campaign of education hud atruck a popular: chord, and the young potitical manager sayr what a miraculous opportunity was opening for the raiirond if only the “powers” that Gantry bad refused to name could be broad enough and bigh minded enough to selke tt. ~ After that for three weeks Blount scarcely naw" hin offlee In the capital. One appointment followed unother tn rapid succession, and everywhere there wan q repetition of the welconw ex. tended by the Opbtr miners—n contial wrelcome, generous applause and kia: ly hospitality at every (ura It was neg until be was deep Into the fourth week of the burryings to and fro that be began to admit a xuxpiclon whieh grew Ike a faggler'a rose when he bad once giren It place. ‘These in- Vitatlons, which were now coming from all parta of the state—could It be possible that ghey were all spoutane- ous? And if they were not— If they were so any subtle mores In the great game he could see no pus- alble eud to be subserved by them auve one—they wero effectually keeping him away from the cupltal, which was the nucleus and center of the cam- palgn wetivitien Was there something going on at beadquarters that “the powers” did not wisb bim to Ond out? OF one thingte won fatty well aswured—~ Gantry wae dodging bln, “wus ap. parently keeplag au accurate record of bis movements, for whenever the hurryingy to aud fro permitted a ay Ing viett to the capita! Gantry was al ways ont of town, With the awakentng suspicion came a rapld putting together of two an two Wherever be went there was al- ways the naine presaing hospitaltty, with many urgings to delay bis gatog. At the name time It became evident In many litte ways that be was fo reall- ty merely skimuilng over the surface fo hiv campatgu work, That a hot political Oght was going fon alf around him be could not doubt ‘Tho ucwépupers were full of {t, and In many xections of the state tho Nght had become acrimoulons and bitter But, although he was supposed to bo ju the fkbt, It began to bo apparent that be way little more than an, om tooker wheu §¢ came to the really vital struggle of the mument. Tt was ns If eversthing und been carefully prearranged, ike a sort of trlumphal precession "None the less the tavinibie barrier, the barrier which won shuttlig lim out from the tnver workIngs of the campaign, was there, nod he could nelther surmount it nor Push Jt aside © Notwithstanding the hard work and the bard triveliug be was doing be Aid not let the missionary effort out- weigh the sturdier purpose, which was to hold his principals rigidly up to the ulrror of a vigilant watehfulness, “Arguing that the opposition newspa- [pera woul be quick to sclze upon any SOMrRe of corruption Involving the tall Toad company. be read them falthful ly Aw yet there fad been nothing more than spiteful finucndoes and faking, over of paxt tolsdlecds, though many of the |iiters were charging a aceret nllinoee between bis father and MeVickar and warning thelr readers to look out for wtartiiug developments later on. Notcontent with mere wit@atulness howerer, Hlount got bls duger upon the pulse of occasions whenever be could On bis brlef atoporers tu the capital he kept his eyes and ear open for the cariiest hint of any charge of cbicnnery, and, though be wax un Fablo to get hold of Gantry perwounity, be kept up a steady Gre of lettera and telograms, all pointing to, the snine end--absolute and utter goo) falth and the upholding of bis hands in the public plen for a square deal To these the traflle manager repticd quardediy, but optimistically ‘The manogement was delighted with the ool work done and doing by the new division couvsel, public oploion was slowly but sarely «hanging, It wot be a landslide election, nnd Mount could take credit for his duc Tn all this Blount did not fall to re mark that there was never anything ald aboot the Hathaway bargeln, and the omtesfon inade him he more Watenful A Uttle Investigation un enethed other aud stivtteg bargatns inde In the past For example there waa a practical fad very effestive ferlgathon trust, an alliance, offonsive and defensive, of the big Irrigation companies, Control lng the water nler proprivtars Tights, ns most of tem dtl, these companies could Influence many votes among the benetclars farmers. Land deals ju the past with the ratirood company bad been the basis for cor- Tuption bere, and, with tho elcetric power people, referential freight rates had been traded for tho votes vt emplorecs, as with Liathaway. Se Ne Tee ee ee ee ee eee eee i Sands of-Calanthe. } i Constitute a Feature, and Porsons Cannot do letter to Let the Little . Ones Join. Children: received from Two to Twelve Years. BENBETTR—$1,00 to $1.59 per week eo sick and $30.00 to 2 3 $40.00 at death, Matrons wanted in all Localities. . For orgtal> =: zation of New Bands snd all particulars, write 3 MRS, ANNA TAYLOR, W.-M, 120 West Hill Street, Richmond, | SLEDSHPDEOSELODEPISO DOGO SHOE SOO HEROSEDFEOSOSOODESOIOOD ha ei le lc aed : Mme. T. D. Perkins —=xy SCIENTIFIC SCALP SPECIALIST. w= 4630 West 35th Ave., Denver, Col. Madam "’. D. Perkins, of Denver, Colorado, who has spent five years mn study of the sealp, 1s noyg unteresting: worngn all over the globe im the care of the hair and scalp% No matter how dark your skin is, Matlame Perkins’ matchless sealp preparations and scientific method of treatment for cultivating, beautifying and growing the hair will grow your hair sf there is nu physical ailment to prevent, Her treatments¢ have been successful where all others have failed. Have you writ- ten her? If not, and you want hair like her own, write her today. Be sure to enclose a four-cent stamp and write your name and address very plain if you expect a reply. Don't write unless: you mean bust ness, | No agents wanted. - a ed acd a a : : ioe Ba 4 Pein BAe rc ae ra EC ieccian Pes mee a Ree na ER See Oe 8 bi ae me ee aot eee Sa NANCIE Se ee ee THIS TELLS THE STORY. . ct Copyrighted March 24, 1910. 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Tam the only woman of the race growing hair today who can show the pubhe the real length my hair was when I first began treating it. Sand for booklet f yen mean business, Fou can secure these prep- arauons ouly fram me None like them made in the world. The T. DP Setentie Scalp Preparation, Madam Perkins, Sole Agent. Fe OO POV COU OOO COO COO STI OTF OOOO OOS OOS OCOOSO PHOTOS. ‘Wo offoe you, the Latest and Most Artistic Photos, at a More $ Moderato Figure than you cin obtain olsewhore.. * . Bpeclal Attention Fafd to Obildren, Enlarging and Copying Interlor Vicw Work, . ‘Wo will also bo Plossod to Quote you Prices on Exterlor and ‘from Old Photos;A Specialty, ¥ me Geo. ©, Brown, PHoTocRapuer, GO3 North 2nd St, = -~-~Richmond, Va. pbbbabhddddhdddsossbosbssosdsssdsbbbaaobsharnonasnn, bEBOSESSOOSESESELSOOEOSOSSOSEIOS: + + ‘Phone, 577. : Richinoad, Via A. D. PRICE, Funeral Director, Embolmer‘and Liverymon.. . All Ordora promptly ited at whort notice: by: telegraph: erste: gptone, Hella: rented, for meatings ‘and-nloe” Rntortainmente:. Plenty of-room with all, pecesary sunseiencet) Large, Piontotor'y Band Wagons for Hire at reasonable rates. aid nothing but:fnitclaes (| Cerslagee Buti, Re Keep soasianlly’ pe Send | fae Seated «tents Newt Dose) 6. 52H ts A | OPEN ‘ALD pay AMD YraEeE Aad ‘on Day (AN gh 9! eG RE SATURDAY. seeee se MAY 13, 1948 The Honorable Senator Sagebrush ‘| By FRANCIS: LYNDE Co; yt. 19190by Street & Smit Continued from 2nd Page. Fou've Kot an dameainte engagement fo go somewhere oF Kee womtubady “No, TF wish Thad" was the hearty admission “Say Evan, sou are got ‘Ung to ben perfect nightmare wlth FOUF lettore and telegeanis. You've Kot sue no Pm afrakd to open my. desk. Why can't yqy tet well enough alone? You hinven't tivard uf ans akttdudldery Antely, have sou” “Nothing new, no But a bouseetean Ing ts aupposed to take down all Use Old cobwebs ‘Those preferentials. foe nitet Ele trie and the Siwast Lond and Tmpresement’ = “Hewwens and earth’ You call your self Inwyer, and yet sou ask vy to set aside promises that are of ouzht to be ay binding ax so many writes contructs, with penal attaehnients' It ean't be done, Evan-that's all tere tot, trenn't be doue" “"Can't’ gora out of the window shen ‘must’ comes in at the door, Dick I've been digging into the records, uid T have erideaco enough to fur the People of this state {ato a mol that will tear up your tracks If 1 should publish it." a “But 1 tell you we can't withdraw the xpeclals, you wild eyed funntic™ “AML right, theo level down the pub- Hto’e rate to Ut them And do It quick Jy.” Dick The time ts growing fenr- fully short, and my patience tan't what tt used to be" “Anybody would think you owned tho Truuacontinental, lok, mock nnd barrel!’ Where, under heaven did. you get your nerve, Evan? Blestif {dou beltore you could outblut the old—er— Jour father bimsclt f you once ist the fool uotivn Into your bead, that tt ‘wan your duts to tes" Tole ime, Blount’s sulle wan rather sorrowful, find he shook hix bead “Come and heat me sek toniehe if you're stayiuR over that long ‘Then you'll kvow why 1 must have thr sold Fock of gud falta under ms fert. Gantry You spoke of my father just now Ibear the name, toa, Hick Don't od sre (at Ire got to wings guod™ Tt was during this hardwotking In: terval that Ilount aw, weit keen Te gret, the gradual widening of the broach between hin and his father That the long arm of the machine of which bs father was the acknow!: edged head was reaching out into all corners of the state there eax aimpte evidence, and that the machine eam palgn was a thing to be reckoned swith and fought ogoinst wos a cardinal principle with tho young reformer But it ts hard to Oght tn the dark Tho organtzation was wo perfect thit tts very existence seemed mythleal at mesa mere buxbenr wet up te be knocked down by the honest voter at the polls on election day Yet Blouvt kaew that 1 was no myth, Sometimes he fuucted that ft waa the wachine whieh was Inferpox tng the tnvisthle burrier beyond which ho was not permitted to pass With that thought came tho oldoubts aud fears thit bls father and MeVickur bod copsulted together to make bin tho feave behind which all the trickery of a rent campatgn could be safely screened, Sut while thin thought vis Sbly widened tho growing Drench It made tlm only more deteroined to Oght to tho bitter end. What one man could do to herald the dawn of a now political epoch for his native siate should be done, Tt was oni one of his short stopovers in tho capital city that Mount found imnclt seated opposite his father at a fable for two In thy Tnter-Mouutala cafe, The meeting was purely accl- ental, ax inust of thelr meotings bad come to be Inquiring for bis.fatber ft tho deak, Blount had beon told that tho senntor wns out of town. Hut an holt later, when ho had taken hin seac at, the dinner table, tho atipposed ab- rebteo bnd walked in to take the op- posite chair For. time thelr talk wan of tho do- ings at Wartrace Hall, of tho profes: ota onthuslatle dle fo fon.» ot Patricia's keen etjoyment of tho lifo in the open and—thts put with gentle hesitation on the past of tho nows veinger—of Mra. Houoria’s growing Jove for the young woman -whoro am. Ditlons reached out toward n “earcer.” “Working yon pretty bard there days, ‘gren't they, son?" wag tho friendly ro- mark that opened the way for more to follow.- “If you belonged to my generation inatedd of your own yon frouldy't bo cold shoutdering that young woman out nt Wartrace the way you do—not' for all the politica that ‘was ever hatched.” "ET have ty work to Go,” sald the aon gravely, “dnd Patricia Annern ‘ould 'bo tho Jaat person Jn the world ,t6"put obstacies in tho way of it.: 1 ‘wish 1 could ay aa much for other, ‘pgopte.” ie a <Ahe hoes Jooked ‘up quickly. “some. fa bows texto Block your = | VERA St ay tye, ae SAR Setting aye tet. OT “Bran Wiotiot met tho gaze of the shrewd gray exes without Ginehing, #1 dou't ‘suow of any good roason why Wo shouldn't be frank with each other, dad." be said, uslug for the Act thee sce bls return the old Loy hood father name. “You know better than any one else, I thiok, what the stambilug blocks nro and Who ta-put- tug, them tn ny way." * Instantly tho faraway look came Into tho gray eyes, “J know @ beap of thlogs that I can't tell—not Just yet, son. Has Me- Vickar beon calling sou down?" “No oue bas called mo down, but somo ono or something ts keeping mo out of (Go real ght. ‘Thoro ina’t any Agbt that 1 cau get Into. BreryWhero T ga there 4a the vame cut and dried welcome, the sumo pradetermined on: thoslanw. Sometini®e It seems as If all the people T meet bad been to- atructed to mnke things pleasnot and eany for mv." Tho sctiator’s chuvklo was barely audible. 7 “1 woulda't nd much fault with that If T were you, son," ho anid. “You'll ket enough of th real thing by aud by" Diouvt felt tis anger rising Ho way in precisely the right mood to be- More thit his father, fatling to make ‘lita a cog fn one of tho wheels In. the ‘machine, had gone abut In somo mss: terious Way to tonulate him, to make JA tinpossibte for hiun to get Hato. the Feat tide of affairs. But ‘be kept hls “tempe- : “IVs no use," he sald, with n tang af Abruptuess tn bis tone. “We are diametrically opposed to cach otber— you und 1, dnd. 1 stand for democ- racy, the will of the prople sud its faliest and freest expression. You stand for"— “Well, son, what do I stand tor?" queried’ the father, and the question Was accompanied by the quizateal sm that brought tle hot blood boslsbly to Blount’s cheek “It 1 should may what all men say— what some of them are frank enough {0 say even to mo"— Ho stopped abort ead then went on sgata with better sself control | MLat's keep the pence ft we ean dad ttn worry that you ure Muding 1 uee- essary to ght we ayd a thousand thnes xorrier tht I've got to ght you But TH tell you here and now that THE nover quit thi state~this native state of mine until te haw had at teuxt oue decently clean election 1 bave told Gantry to pase the wont that | shall show the ratirond up If tt doesa’t play fate, and I've got to hand the same thls out to you, dad 1 dont want fo Ujreaten, but Mt by only fate te aay that I 'baven't been golug about with my eyes shut Whether sou have authorized it or not, there i a lot of eroked work going on, nnd If Tam driven to M1 can print some things Usnt would change the political map of thin state xo If wow t be recogntzabte " For sume little Mme after tls son had left the cate the Hon Seuator Sagcbrunt ant nhsently taxing wi My Acaserisponn When he rose to £0 0 ‘tho battle Uzht In the Herve gray eye was the rigsiat which not even bis tost faithful henchmen could always Inter pret, but whlch most mea feared. (ro ae coxrerm.) pee ies Gens Slaual Ackbeusl. Captain John Ho Githbons,” who 18 now on duty tn Washington an mem ber of the general board of the navy, will Le detatled by Seeretary Meyer as superintendent of the naval acud- omy at Annapolis on May 16, succeed: fog Captain John M Bowyer, who wil do relleved herauso of M health Cap- tain Dowyer Jaw written a lotter to Secretary Meyer saying that he wishes to be relteved on that date Socrotary Meyer denied that tho re- Wot of Captain Rowyur wax an out- come of the recent affront to Miss Mary Hi Beers, daughtor of Professor HA Beers, of Yule uneverstty. for which Captain Rowyer apologized to Misy Neers and hor father ? Find Missing Man's Bones. Four years ayo on April 8 Gourgo Michael Fotzer mystoriourly disap- peared from hie honte tn HogEs (owt ship, near Helivfonte, Pa, and all of Torts to locate him proved futile FMonday the whitened bones of bis body were found by woe boys behlad a clamp of bushes not a half mile from hix home His discharged sun by his aide and a bullet hole Uirouxh tie akull told the manner of ix death, but whether necidental or suicide will probably never bo known Gc. tude Rainandd oa Oak }. Dr, BC Hyde, under a life aen- tence of Imprisonment for tho murder of Colonol Thomas 1 Byopo, was ro toaged fram the county Jall one writ of habeas corpus granted by the sovon Judgos of the elfcult court In Kansas wity, Bo. : In tho opinion of the court en bane tho majority of the evidence oh which tho physician was convictod waa clr cumatantial and thero was a reasot- able doubt of the prizonor'a guilt Plow Unearths Body. For tho xccund timo within two woekn Coverdale Reynolds, a farmer, living Wotween Seaford dad Brldgo- ville, Dol., has plowed up in hie Nala a buman body: : _ ‘This, time Jt wax tho body of a wmall Shtid, socurely nailed in a cot- fin, and quite n distance from tho drat ono plawod up. Tho sutborition will mdko on investigation. ad ta Ca) De on Deena ae” Roberto and Thoman Rourigan, two boys, wero drowned in tho Ito Grando poe Laredo, Tex .‘and their bodios wopt away. The bedloa wero rocor- ored, that of Hoberto on tho Mexican aide of the river.,To. bring the corpao out of Mexiro ao espart duty of $120 Mexican money was exacted. ‘Man, 119 Pounds, Takes Bride of 629. Difference in wolght, like differonges in social positions, can be oterconio by" that great equallzor—lovo. Miss Gortrudo May Davis, wolght 639 Rounds, wat married fo Wayne, Ww. ‘t. (o.M. C. MeGorty, who weighs 119 potmds. , oe DEATH LIST IN - WRECK ELEVEN Spreading Rals Cased Disas- “ter at Martin's Creek. ” AT LEAST 50 OTHERS INJURED Fragments of Bodies Removed From Ashen of Burned Coachet—Survl- vors Gent Home. # Eloven tives wero lost tn the derall- mont and burving of tho Utica teach- era’ spacial noar Martin‘a creek, elyht thllos north of Hastou, Pa, ou the Pennsytvania rullroud ‘Tho tratn, car. tying 188 achool teachers, was en route to Washtugton The rallroad gen them: solves say thot Uns most remarkablo feature of the wreck was that 100 wereat killed In the torrie sock and the sudden sweep of fire ‘The train had’ run by way of Scran: ton over the Lackawanna rullroad aud was taken in charge by tho Peurinyl vanla crow at Stroudsburg — ‘There wore three coaches Tho corps of ‘teachers were having a merry timo and looking forward to great tlmos durfog thelr stay {0 Washlogton, a featuro of which was to have Woon a reception by Vice President and Mrs, Sherman. Thora was a suden grind and Jar The merry party was thrown together fn hosps und vivlently Jorhed Into all vorty of positions, many of them buried under baxgaxe The on- ging had left the tracks, turned over dn {ts side und tho coaches were de railed Whilo the pante strl:ken (eachers were making frantle offarta to get out of the vars the flames Sroke out, acomlug te ensolop the whote trata at once and xweeping with frightful Tour upon the struggling women, none of whom had buen able to watch ony wraps or hanu" bugxage So HWUL wax the descent of tho Names that the six unfortunates who had been unable to Ket ont of the coaches Iu tine were cremated, ft fs supposed Another presumption fs that they fainted with fright and that tn tho panicky rush they were overlook: od ‘The of from the tank car inte which the passenger engine had crash: ed fed the furfous fumes and pract! cally every atom of Me coaches wera consumed Ja the flery furnace Tt ts kupposed that coals from the flrebox of the wrecked enxiny started the off to burp, while thames from the staves fo tho dining car did the mischtef to tho rear Of the dead there were three In the Kasten hospital Eleanor Rutherford a tearher, of Cen, Charles Mo Per non, the train conductor, of Stronds burg, and MW. Vanoy, the engineer, of Trenton There seems to be no reason to Moubt that others died In the fire From tho mass of ushos and twinted frop the wrecking crew removed frag: monts of four bodies Profestor A ( Lurton, president uf the Utena ‘Tea hers assoc tation, sald That he haul sent wort home thut these six tearhery all of Urlea, perished In the flames Suphw Kuoult, Mary Al len Sarah Janes Sosan Sesons, Bex wie Walker and Louise Lindsiman Stewart FoPny sertetary to Mayor Frederic Gilmore of Mea sont word to the mayor that after a tulk with the Penonylyanin railroad OMe tals be was convinced that no further hope could be held out to the relatives and frienta of the wtx Resides the alt tenchers four em ployee of the Pennsylvania railroad are dead Peron, the conductor; Vanoy, the engineer Harry Wilmer, the baggageman, and Joseph Bie knell, the tonrist agent, whoxe home was in Philadelphia All of the wurvivore xate the In Jured In the hostptals have been sent home by the Pennxylvanta railroad Many of thone who went back to Vilea carried Injurtex, some of them serious, but they were able to travel Tho investigation made by Profeseors Burton and Vincent Brown and Mins Marian Haskine, ono of the heroines of the wreck, determined definitely that at least MMfty of tite teachors were burned of cut or brulwed On board the special train thero wero thirty wo- men whose hands or facew were band- aged Some wore unable to ait up oR account of sprained backs ar dislocat- ed ankles. | Indict Railroads and Offictale. |The United Stator grand Jury In Cleveland, Ohfo, ha« returned indict ments agalnet the Lake Shore & Mich fgan Southern allroad company, charging It with conslpracy to, violate tho Elkin act oe Indictments also wore returned agninst tho Pennaytvanta, tho Lake Shore @ Michigan Southern, the Ros: somer & Lake Erlo and tho New York, Chicago & St Loule rallrosda, charg: ing them with rebating ‘Tho indictments will bo followed Immedintely by suite, tho United States’ intrict attorney, WoL. Day, who, with John H Mathie, attorney of tho Interatato commerce commission, and’C R Marshall, attorney of tho department of Justico, has boen con: dueting tho cnac, nald Tho finds in tha casa of conviction may aggregate millions of dollars, ‘ Indictmenta affecting severs) high railroad offcinin ware alo ratucnod, but names and tho naturo of tho In- dictmonts wore withbald pending, ar- rots: : In each cage the indictments wero for conspiracy to vininte the Elkins act and for rebating on tho transpor- tation ‘of tron ore. Afr. Day stated that tho-fedoral grand jury's report would form tho baats for “large and import ant aulte.” 7 Bloomer Woman ts Dead. Miss Busan P. Fowlor, the bloomer woman, diedat her. homo Jn Vineland, N. J. She was elghty-covon years old and she dounod tho bloomer costume ‘@xiyhine yours ago, whon It bid fale TETRA SLAIN: COV AAI * Dr’ Ea RAT |" Z FHMOND : PLANET, .RICHMOND,. VIRGINIA. re ' | become popular.onder the adyocecy 4 . jof’ such women ag Susantt,Anthony, j Esabots Cady Stantos ‘tadatuere ty The Best T. the Onelda community of Now York, although alo nover a¢gopted any of 7 the doctrines of that equimunit. a Merriago and motherhood a; known * Cos! today abe contended are a firce,innd oe ts One Hu ‘[all because the young men art not . jtaught the basic Iawitpt life, For over IT Trorty years she conducted a farm on } the outskirts of Vinoland and nevor - would bave & man around, Miss Fowler was highly oducated The cost of a go jand was tho author of sevoral books. , she average me ro is Several D | widow and seven Children Burn. Mra, J. 1H. Nunn aud seven children, And remember the ranging It ago from adults to au In: | most workor the best m |fant, wore burned to death tu a firo machine. which destroyed thelr home fa Sauth- Co r -}wost Roanoko, Va. mpare your out ‘Thro uthor childron eucaped by your outlay for theo | Jleaping from windows. Mra, Nunn was why It Is true econon ‘1a widow, hor busband having died a -| te buy the | your ago. . th ‘Tho doad Mrs. J. H. Nupn, Georgia . ¢{Nuon, aged twenty-two years; Sut | Remington < FHord, aged thigwen, Dillard, oleven, eT Lucille, aged six; Helen, aged Ovo, a Janotber child, under five, name not o {learnod, and auinfant, Remington Very ittle property damage resulted - ke "from the blaze, which was oxtinguleh- Typewriter ed soon atter the arrival of the fro Company a department (ncorporated) TRAIN KILLS, THREE Boys Stepped In Front of Expross Train to Avold Feexght. Three boys, each about tfteen years old, were rin down and killed at Devil a Mend, near Greens! urg, Pa, by fan eaxtbound Pennsylvania railroad express train + The boys wore roturning to thelr homes In Westmoreland elty from Jeapngite where they were employed in the bottle factory The dead wera Isaac Cook, Charles Rackley and Usher Lait ‘As the boys reaehed the bend In tho road they stepped from thy westbound teack to pent a weathe ind freight to pase A& they stepped om the euxt Dound track they were run duww by tho easihuund express No 94 Auto Scares Fine Mare to Death. A valuable mare owned by tha PBil adelptia Electele company becamn frutitened at a passing avomabite tn Chester Fa, fumped into the alr aud fell dead In the wtreet from shock. BANGOR, MF.. SWEPT BYSFIRE One-Third of City Burned by $3,000,000 Blaze. ONLY TWO LIVES ARE LOST Fe HERES? Cay See Se Residences and Seven Churches Were Destroyed. The fire whtch ravage | the business and residential xevtion ot Hanget, Me deateayed more than one thind af the city, entailing the lost of ws Ive: Bud a property lone of $° 00009, Those who lost thele Hvex “were Jobn No Scribner, un axed cobbler who was crushed to deat> by a falling wall, and George Abbor a fireman who was killed by a teppling chin Roy One hundred bustneas “ulblings, 59 per cent of tham mipall w soden store and shops, 275 realdenee and weven eburcbes were dextrosed A summartzation of te principal buildings destroyed the value of Which tn emtimated at als at $5.a0,00 and lock furnishings were worth bout $1,i01,n0H mare, Includes, be sides the seven churches, the busl tows Dlocka on Exchange atreet from York Wireet ta Fast Murket square and op State atreet, from the Merritt Trust company building avd T White to Broadway, Park attest, tts entire Jungth, and w large ett 3 of Coneral and Franklin atrcets 11+ residential portion of the cits om thy west alde of Broadway between St" atreet and South Park borween Ow anme lmtts on French street and fom Harlow street to the oust wile © Brondway, between State amt Sout Park Hlectele lights are ws" of commis: ston ant trolley cara ar: completely atopped for tack of pow: ‘Thero are several m ton dollage worth of wecurition In tt safety do posit vaults of the vartour “banks that bave been burned, and -+otrioa with tonded rifles are on gual! : Although the city hall han aot yet caught Ore, thirteen pr svners who ‘wore In cella at the 1 ico atatlon bavo been feleased by «ler of tho ‘mayor | The entire city wns jante-strickon, Men, wortien and chiltren early beran ‘to floo from the arene Many tried to carry thelr bousrludd effets ont of ‘the fire, hut It an Imposalile to we: ‘eure wagon for thie purpore, and no wheellacrowa ant baby cacriagos wore prowaed Into ervice Into thero ‘wore bantlly packed what valuables could ho thought of th womonta when the bravert would have hon at tholr wit's ond, and on every linnd could bo soen these peaplo makiux tholr, way {nto tho open country ta safety. ‘The frenion wer abrolutely help- Jona befor tha confiagration. Widon- Ing out on both sides, Mayor Mullen saw tat only a miracle could snvo the business soction of itangor, and he ordered tho chtof of tho dopart- ment to use dyoamite. Mon accus- tomed to using tho explorlve In tim- dorlbg operations were pressod into aorvice. They placed. Inrge quantities Of dynamite {n several bullding oppo- alto tho postafiico and blew thom Into amall debris, bat tho roaring element was not to be stayed by sch tigas- utes, Jumping oror tho oewly-mado spaces, tho Marios seized upon other prey. ” The Best Typewriter That Money ‘Can Buy _ ests One ‘Hundred Dollars and its name is Remington The cost of a good operator during x IEEE the average life of a Typewriter Cette treed is Several Thousand Dollars oaNa pues And remember that no operator can do the Lecce most work or the best work except on the best aS machine. a Compare your outlay'for the machine with r your outlay for the operato? and you will see. ‘ C why its true economy te buy the ee E ° CGO Vaso. ) oe eo Yn) Remington < S = \ Wy; } ae fh Remington Eva Chae in Typewrer al eR mm sean (Ui Company bern SES ui Bh! Cocoorues) SUCRE ie "4 v 6 f Ata st. SS ROA) JOHN POINDEXTER and Company j | Practical Houso and Sign Painting. Shop, 1812 N, Firat Street. All Work Guaranteed. THE ECONOMY, 303—5 North Third S: , SEIN EY TAILORING. CLEANING, DYEING AND REPAIRING. CHITMAN M. WHITE, PROPRIETOR. STRAUS’ SPECIAL Old Yacht Clob, Rea oleae "pr Be We Have Alb Grades of Good Lé quors, Cigars and ‘xobacco, Cal and Seo Us. ISAAC STRAUS & CO., 422 E. Broad St, Richmond, Virgins HF Jonathar | FISH, OYSTERS AND | PRODUCE. . fee 114 ‘N. 17th 8t, RIOHMOND, VA ALL ORDBRS WILL RECHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. Long Distance ‘Phone, Madison~75} _ BLACKWELL & BRO. ONE OF THE LEADING PAINTERS PRACTICAL HOUSE AND BIGN PAINTERS, GRAINING AND GEN ERAL CONTRACTORS. AN Work Guarantecd. Cards, Les tors or Orders, Give Us « Trial You Will Never Regret It. AppRess: 608 St. Peter Street, Richmond, Va Telephone, Madison-6088. | JURGEN'S SON dU making your purchase you would do well to call at the most reliable furniture house in the city aud, see the fine liné of _ REFRIGERATORS, _ MATTINGS, - OIL-CLOTHS : And in fact everything that i needed in house furnishings | RUGS AND | CARPETS Of every Gesertption, also the latest desigus in ROCKERS aud special CHAIRS ene for the price ané C,. @. JURGEN’S SON,. ApAMs AND Broap Street ene ; t The PLANRT'S Ad, Ree einen ote anewerlug them. ° ‘ DRUGS.. A REPORT fs in Circu. lation that Ricuarpson’s Druc Store, Corner 17th and Vena- ble Streets does not cater to the Colored Trade and Pre- scriptions written by Colored Doctors. 1 want to Contradict this and Say Most Emphatt- cally | Have Always Glven Colored People My Courteous Attention and Most Sincerely Desire Their Patronage. RespectFuLty, W. W. RICHARDSON. Bae eNO if Beier Fee ge lesvacs teensy Ream Hocreey PROF. D. D. BRUOE, M. D., Strange, Wonderful, but Trus are tho Awo Stricken Tests given by tho Great Australian Medium, PROF. D. D. BRUCE, M. D.. Too Only Living Apostle of Sconce ‘of tho Biysteries. $5000 IN GOLD TO ANYONE IN tho World to Compote with bic Possessing more Power than aay four Modlume combined No Card, Trance or Hand Humbug. GREATEST 11NDOO MEDIUM IN THE WoRLD. Bo Great Is his Power that be can tell fou while {a 4 Clairvoyant atate all you wish to know without a word boing spoken Come, all yo unde Nevors, scoffers ond foorors: bring all your scopticiam with you—bo- will open your eyes to the Privato Cham ber Mystery. Come, all yo broken: hearted wives, all with low spirits and lot bim lift the burden trom your aching and séalous heart He Ehallenges tho World to’ compote with bim In causing & speody ‘mar riago witb the ono you love: uniting tho separated and pring back the lost qno, ‘Traces font or atolon goods Unearths biddon treasures. Remover evil Influences, Crosses, Spells, 11) Luck, Curos Tricks and Conjurations. gives Luck and Success in all you undertake. Cures the Tobacco Hab its. Allows to captive to be sot froe Ho fa tho only ono that will give a Written Guarantes to complete your business or rofund your money, Aro you sick? Do you know what the trouble with yout Come, and Consult Naturo's Doctor. Rheumatism, Insomals, Hysteria. and all Diseasos curod, Polats stv en en Horse Racing and all Games of Chanco. No mattor what ails you, come and seo this wonderful man. Road er, havo you oticod that some peo ple havo a hard time to got sions no matter how thoy toll, while oth ers hao success? Many wealthy mon and women owo tholr success to this wonderful man.’ Ho will toll you whoni you wil marry. Will you be happy? He will tell you who your frionils and euerntes are, Can you toll? Don’t také a loap in the dark, but bo ad vised by this wond rful man. Groat est Phophet in Existonco. Tre always snccoods whea others fall. This is ho chance of a life time. Don't let ft pass you, OFFICD HOURS: 9 A. M. to 9:30 P.M, Sunday: 3:80 to 7430 P. N, B—Onr Consultation Foe ts 50 conte, sittings, $1.00. All tet vere containing $1,00 will be answor ed In full. All Letters Must Haro a Two-Cen Stamp. ‘ MAIN OFFICE: 510 8, Ath Strcot, Philadelphia, Pa, ‘Phone, Monroo-2686. Office Hours: 8 A. M. to 6 P, M.. DR. PB. B. RAMSEY, SURGEON DENTIST. OM1d6: Mechanics’ Savings Bank Butiding, Rooms 201-6, Id Floor, RICHMOND, . ‘VIRGINIA, THREB : Fret ERB gers ee Richmond, Frederieboyg & Potomac RB. 70 AND FROM WASHJNOTON AND BEYOND. Stare Histmad | Artest THEE RMSE cape aretate Pepa trai ere gtr TREE RMS HEE Baten BRE RICE be teh OEE ae nad SE Brae BUPo piace eure pate WEE etiutideel Sige Rate a ibe eerie) Taree Rete BEE ROE RE Toukeoiion Hale- weno pcbiaiatn agra re RUE RS eee slice (abr eceeuaN Arrive Hihedta 030 1.0 ,050F a. from anand, ere SES ree ate es V & q NORFOLK & s WRCTRRN ONLY AlLeRall, LINK TO NORFOLK. Rebetite ta Rect January Wy 18tL | teste “itsnd Stovet talon Itehimend, FOR PROS oo" aa ee u “tor LyNeunera AND THR west: *e-u AM yo AM, 30 PM OSD PM Atewe"Iehivonl” fren Norte AD A. wee as Penn 30D From, the, Weeks Sega Mao PM. UE IS Py 8.05 P My sv Fit Spety) “ately, ex. Suntay bSuntey ooly. Pallnan, Varlor abt Sleeping Corn Cale Ula ing Care ih noscer, Wa’ Bevin o PA. michond, Ye O, Fk Roasoks, Ves —— SSS ATLANTIC COAST LINE FeRreTIVE JuNtanY, 9. ont 2 TIMINS BRAVE RICHMOND DAIL ® For Flreia and South POD A Mes 13k, aan Pe San a Fue Soto 90 AM. Aw POM, Oo vot GTA N AW Tt Weat 615 8p 00k "San want oe Mot Feterure 1 AMO 81S AM. OD eS ul elo eS slat? fur Mae Pw pare ee Mt nen i Hor toblelura ant Fasetinitie 1619 2 ak, Tene arte Munson) cially 400 BACT 10a see AM. eto A Mee ara se nag AOU Ie kat ot bo Bae Heh M gmk M8 at Me ee Pw, oartew ona Pt SPaceyt Sutelae |S Beeept Munley "Bam: dae oat “Tome af antal and departure am coaane ten tot guarentee! Se 8 CAMEHELL, OR aw Se ee ee KX N—Tolbieing echetule tures published = Information. apt not Ruaeantord G10 AM. Dally Cawal for Damsilte Charlotta ‘Durham and airiah 194 A” M—Dally “Livnltedt, For alt, golem Stuth Braveing Rom Moftet™ Bleeping Car to Memphis, vin Asheville: ant Otay tanorea. 300P M—Fx Guntay Local or Durham ane Infermeliate- statfon. 600 PM Ex. Ruolay Keyevlle Local, Mb PM ally” Limited GF all polew South, Pullers tealy 9:59 'P AL YORK RIVER LINE * 490 M—Ex Baisley To West Polat, sow ‘orcting for Taltiinore Mon, Wed. & Fee 6A ee Sin ant 21S PM Mow Wel and Ft" Cacal te Weat Polat, TRAING ARKIVE RICIMOND. Prom the South 680 AM. ROG PM dullzy 40 A Me Ee Bootay: 1246 PAL Ee Boar : From West Polat, 9-38 4M, aang; 11m & M, Wot. amt Fete es Pw," En, Banday Be. ninckss, DP A. 220 Fast data Biyeets "han, iadlvon AR Cc. & ©. 260 A Dally Fast tralne to O11 Pott 100 B Ntutont Seas int Sortty 340 Ae thle poet to Sewer Sew iin Linus teat to ont sone Eh DIY aie att Chorin Ainge Petlnase NST tte St toe Chonge Soeet"t Failmane 828 Deny attests Were dares S141 Week dave Loral to Gortonavtlle, Yin § Wstie na bee? vores 218 B Niel ave ta ‘ip shunt sania Rinave feos Iveat fron Fart ie MN Fae Ae toate Ease 13 Ae ae Death” Went oR 0 A a eae kM hPa ; Tiaweh to AW fe Pe Fo tier tates 6 SS Se eae SEABOARD AIR LINE. fnthtonint trainee Nrtuled ts Tense leds quant ine Oe SMe walt Seria. Ti "Reeeen amt soactog Atlant Rimage fae secacnaht Sockgmetie ant Forite Peta SHE SAE Ponta honntel “dah teerye boas iy ‘ns Ba “sien xf acben Bars wih Uattarn ie “ailonte "iuetingttas od Men nti, “Serthtmyrhtrane seated to “a Me hinthmont aie 8a ews) Ae a Soothe tie Pa be < ‘The PLANET ts read all. ovor this couai-y aad tn foreign lente, Always Losing Wls Boat, A colored man calling himsolf, Captain John E Gimpaon” and ai ‘mes sailing under othor names has doen persistontly swiniling both white and colored people In Norfolk, Portsmouth, Nowport Nows and Phoebus Ifo plan bas boen to re- present that ho bas money tn a col- ored bank Io this clty, Ho gots his victim to write fo Jobn Mitcbell, Jr., Presidont and toll bim to send bio six bundrod and fifty dolisrs or sothe ‘ke amount at onco to tho person who ts writing the lotter or advanc- ing him a emall sum of money until he has gotten his monoy from Rich- mond. Ho allogos that bo is captain of a sailing vesxol, which according to bis lettora bas been lost noar Thimble SAght off Buckroo Beach anil as ho tas beon carrying on this kind of swindling fdr about two years, that pont [e-prosumably wrecked avery two or three works. Mo asks that tho lottor bo sont to him tn caro of tho person who ollvances the money He nover ‘comes back to see If the money comes ashe directs Wo bave written continuously to the people, who send theso letters, but wo bavo had quite « time to keep up with Bir, Koop olear of Captain John W. Simpson or anybody who looks itke him. ‘ a _ ~gubscribe to The PLANBT. —_ the result is a clear indication of the need. THE LETTER Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL, JR., at 811 N. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. JOHN MITCHELL, JR., ... EDITOR All communications intended for publication should be sent so as to reach us by Wednesday. TERMS IN ADVANCE. One Copy, per year $1.50 One Copy, six months $1.00 One Copy, six months $1.00 One Copy, four months $5.00 One Copy, three months $4.00 Single Copy $0.60 ADVERTISING RATES For one inch and insertion $ .00 For one inch and subsequent insertion $ .00 For two inches, three months $ 6.00 For two inches, six months $ 10.00 For two inches, nine months $ 14.00 For two inches, twelve months $ 20.00 Marriage and Formal Natures, one inch $ 20.00 Standing and Transient Natures, one line $ 1.00 POSTAGE STAMPS OF A HIGHER DEMONSTRATION THAN TWO CENTS NOT HIGHER ON SUBSCRIPTIONS. THE PLANT is issued weekly. The subscription price is $1.50 per year, in advance. There are four ways by which money can be received by the Post Office: by the Bank Check of an Amount Order, by the Bank Check of a Deposit of an Amount Money Order, and by a gift of these can be presented in a Registered Letter. You will receive a Money Order at your Post Office payable at the Institutional Post Office and will be responsible for its late arrival. BONUS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained at any time on the Amount Order on the United States Postal Service, and the World Fargo and Gate International Post Office. We at the program of the Fargo Money Order are in constant contact with your lot for financing money. INFERNATED LETTER. If a Money Order Post Office or any other place within your county is a Post Office, you will register the letter you wish to send as an amount of ten cents. If the letter is lost or of another type, you can well be sure in that manner at our risk. We cannot be responsible for money sent in letters in any other way than one of the money orders in any other way you not at our risk in any other way you not at our risk. CHANGE OF ADDRESS. In order to change the address of a property, you must not batter as well as the present address. Entered at the first Office at Franklin, VA. as second class matter The segregation law in force in this city is making some of the white folks cuss" The latest news from Africa is that the people in Africa are destroys of cohabiting to this country Colored folks should continue to be polite and obliging to colored folks, and especially go to white folks --- The Negro haters who are all the time studying some deviltry to aggravate and embarrass the colored folks had might as well 'go way back and sit down' We are here to stay, and we can live in most any kind of weather. THE TROUBLES OF A PRESIDENT Willur P. Thirkield, D. D., President of Howard University, is now the storm-centro of criticism because he dismissed two professors, admitted guilty of the indiscretion of taking their "drinks" in a barroom, cafe or restaurant, just as you choose to call it. We do not see that he should have expected anything but trouble when he went to Washington. That is a city closely akin to Killarney in Ireland, where the bounden duty of every Irishman is to strike the head of every other Irishman with a black thorn, just for the fun of the thing. The great mass of people through out the country will hardly feel dispossed to blame the President for at tempting to hold up the standard and in keeping it upon a high plane. If he exceeded his authority in his methods it seems to us that this was properly the subject for investigation on the part of the board that elected him. We are not advised as to the merits of the case further than those gentlemen took those alcoholic 'beavoirdges at one of the places noted. Whiskey drinking and beer drinking is now tabooed in the higher institutions of the country, although it is a well-known fact that --- many of the strenuous advocates of temperance drink their beer and toddles in private where their actions will not tend to lead others astray and where they can benefit nobody but themselves. Dr. Thirkield has had a hard job, and he has perform his duties creditably, so far as we are able to observe. We are not ready to take the side of the beer and whiskey-drinkers in this controversy to his discredit. There are things which should be done in private, and we are of the opinion that self restraint should have prevailed to the extent of waiting until they got to the private bottle rather than taking a dip at the public one, to the discredit of the institution and to the embarrassment of the President of Howard University. --- THE QUESTION OF STREET-CARS When the segregation ordinance was under discussion the advocates of the infunctious measure told about the smooth working of the "Jim Crow" street car law, dwelling upon the fact that it had eradicated friction between the races, and that it had done away with all trouble on the street cars. The following clips from one of our daily newspapers will be of interest. After he had pulled a conductor from the street car and then been shot at Walter Henderson colored employed as a porter by the Virginia Boat Club, was arrested last night on a charge of disorderly conduct or car No. 25 of the Clay Street Street. It is alleged that the negro, who is barly and tall refused to move his seat when requested to do so by Conductor R J Moore Worlds began at Pith and Clay streets, but the car had reached Fifteenth and Main streets before the negro was placed under arrest. Many women were among the passengers As Conductor Moore informed the negro that he was under arrest, the latter jumped from the moving car and pulled the conductor off with him. The car went on and it was not until several of the women screened to Motorman J E Henderson that the car was brought to a halt. Then the motorman went to his comrade a rescue. The negro broke away and ran with Policeman Warrimer, who had been called to the scene after him. The officer fired and Henderson halted He was locked up in the First Police Station, where he was later halted Conductor Moore was struck one in the middle but was not injured. We insist though that colored people should stay off the street cars except in cases of absolute necessity and when they are on these cars that they should obey the street car conductors as absolutely as they obey their mothers and wives. A colored person and a white one too for that matter, relinquishs all of their rights when they board one of their cars, and they should be prepared to take what is coming to them, contenting themselves with reporting any acts of insubordination or willful objection to the company officers. Such this does not eliminate the fact that this separate car law has not bothered conditions. It has put both races in the category of blacks. The only difference is that colored folks are generally arrested and white folks are indulged almost past the point of enurance. Colored folk obey the street car conductors or stay off the street cars. ____0____ EDITOR CHASE AND THE BANQUET. There is another war' in Washington, D. C., and all because certain citizens there did not want the Hon W Calvin Chase editor and proprietor of the Lee, to eat Later Editor Chase announced that he did not want to eat 'no how.' From our knowledge of the habits and proclivities of the gentleman, we are ready to testify to the fact that he told the truth. Moreover, he has always been able to feed himself at his own expense, and we know, too, that at times he is able to feed others, we having been the recipient of a magnificent repast served in the old Pennsylvania Defot at Washington proper persons. Editor Chase claims that this did not refer directly to the local committee, but as he had refused to contribute or recognize the effort in this direction, it was very easy for the committee in charge to draw an unfavorable conclusion, with the result that an invitation inadvertently tendered to Editor Chase was subsequently cancelled and withdrawn, and he was notified accordingly. Editor Chase gives the whole case away when he says that he would not have attended the banquet anyway. This indicates that the composition of the banquet committee was not altogether to his liking. affiliations, should assist in bringing about a condition of affairs which will enable us all to give "a corti- of having new ones with which to figure of health" to every one in this deal and that ultimately it will lead veteran institution and put our to a change of residence for the shoulder to the wheel, with the cot- short sighted merchant, who engages tainty of aiding honest people and in this kind of business. We hope, not in hiding from sight and thereby therefore, that the honest, hard- enabling a continuation of conditions working True Reformers will take which will provo a blot upon this courage. Go around ther on Soc- community as well as upon the or- street and clean out the estab- Moreover it would be well to note that Editor Chase is now a devotee of Dr. Booker T. Washington, at whose shrine Register Napier also worships. The fight now going on will be a source of amusement to the Hon Henry Lincoln Johnson crowd. President Thirkield will no doubt too appreciate the editor's position as it diverts attention from him. The truth of the matter is that the leading colored folks of Washington are never so happy as when they are in an intestinal row. If they cannot make the "fur dry" themselves, they will import some outside resident to do it. Fancy an invitation extended to Hon William Monroe Trotter, the ideal agitator of the age We have read the correspondence with amusement if not with profit and we find that Editor Chase is like a cat - he usually lands on his feet. What does he care about a "big eat" or a "big drink" for that matter? He has been doing both all his life, and it is nothing new to him. Those who expected to humiliate him and make him suffer evidently did not know their man. If he had been only in the newspaper business it would have been an ideal method of punishment for an editor dealing with the "dead heads" and dead-beats has a hard time in life to get even an ordinary repast, but to a gentleman who has another source of income it was like locking up the back door of a house and leaving the front one open for the inmate whom he as desired to retain with in Editor Chase said he didn't wait to eat and we believe him. In this respect we know this journalist years ago and we believe we know him now. ____ THE TRUE REFORMER OUTLOOK We have published much concerning the True Reformers and its officals or rather of some of them but if we are correctly advised, nothing that we have published will surpass in darkness and iniquity that which is yet to appear. The work of regeneration has not really begun on Attorney J Thomas Newsome and the Board of Directors and the Grand Worthy Master rests the responsibilities for the outcome. The colored people of this city State and country have been cruelly betrayed and a systematic plan of corruption has been in operation for years hushed by the bullybaby. Keep it dark don't say anything, you'll hurt the Order. If honest white and colored people intend to stand for this kind of thing it is time to know it. The innocent gophils and clerks around on Second street should be relieved of the column of associating with the guilty. The rottenness already disclosed is said to be but a sample of what yet remains. Is there enough honor and honesty and honor inside of the Order to bring the desired relief? Are the hard working colored people who had a child like faith in the organization which Rev W W Browne founded willing to stand by the General Counsel and the present man cement or that part of it that is in favor of an exposure of the walls the removal of the rotten material the substitution of sound timber in order to place this great organization upon its feet again? We hope so. There are but four persons who have direct power since the Board of Directors adjourned One is Grand Worthy Master—W Holmes the other is Treasurer John E Merl weather, the other is Grand Worthy Secretary Win P Burrell, and last but not least, the energetic and tireless General Counsel, J. Thomas Newsome. Include in the number as standing above them all Hon Jon Button who will not countenance unlawful actions or thievery, although the Order sinks into the sea of oblivion as a result of the exposure of existing evils. We believe that Grand Worthy Master Holmes has been besieged by the friends of persons, whose characters are involved. Whether he has yielded to their importunities, deponent sayeth not. The business men of this community though, especially those of the colored race, are mightily interested in the outcome for it affects the integrity of every race institution in this State. People are now pasking, "Whom can we trust?" An answer must be given. Business men who apologize for dishonesty will hardly be chosen to lead other enterprises among the race. This is a time when honesty is at a premium. "The snake of dishonesty and corruption has only been scatched" around on Second street if the reports now before us are to be relied upon, and this entire community of colored people, regardless of organizations or institutions, should act in being Send Name and Address To day— You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous. I have in my possession a prescription for nervous dobility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the follicles of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man who wishes to regain his many power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain ordinary sealed envelope to any man who will write me for it. This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men and I am convinced it is the aroust-acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together. I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what I believe is the quickest-acting restorative, upbuilding, SPOT-TOUCH ING Remedy ever devised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: DR. A E. ROBINSON. $896 Luck Building, Detroit Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary envelope. free of charge. A great many doctors would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but I send it entirely free. The True Reformers made an appeal to the public for help and the public has the right to know that the help extended is going in a way to better the condition of the Order and not to cover up wrong doing and corruption . SHOULD NOT DESPAIR. Colored people should not be discouraged by the financial outlook. They have no need to lose any of the confidence which they possess. In racial enterprises as a result of the failure of the True Reformers There are Negro organizations and business enterprises, especially insurance companies that are honestly conducted and are meeting every demand made upon them They are buffered by honest farseeing officials, who have set a premium upon square dealing and who will not compromise with wrong or apologize for those guilty of robbery They have merited and are receiving the confidence of the public If any of their officers are guilty of robbing the widows and the orphans or of despoiling business men of the race of their hard earnings they will be rigorously prosecuted and severely punished. They know that if it is to be sent forth that men of the race can rob the people with out fear of punishment that others will be tempted to do the same thing. One of the presidents of the American Bankers' Association was guilty of robbing a bank. He was known throughout his section for his acts of philanthropy, and he was reputed to be a millionaire. He has recently completed his sentence in the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas. Colored folks who are willing to imitate some white folks in robbins colored folks must be willing to take the punishment that some white folks mete to some other white folks. This is the only position we can take in maintaining the confidence of this people. To take any other course is to place ourselves in the category with dishonest persons and to throw the cloak of suspicion upon ourselves. The money of the people must be protected and persons in incorporated institutions depending upon the public for support must see to it that the money is not stolen The charitableness of the white people of this community in dealing with us has been due to the fact that they believed that the worst of the matter was due to the lack of knowledge to a failure to understand the business principles, the study of which has occupied the attention of white men for centuries. They did not think that it was due to systematic looting on the part of colored men who should have known better and who deceived the colored people of the country. A merchant who is a dead-bank and a thief cannot expect to build up a business which will prove profitable in the future. All shrewd business men know that it is only by determining to give each and every customer the full value of his money that a profitable business can be built up and success assured. The new STORE. The Fashion New Goods and Prices. 118 EAST BROAD STREET. SPECIAL SALE OF Millinery and Ready to Wear Garments. When we say SPECIAL We mean that the Bargains are exceptional, and would advise an early purchase. Sailors, $1.00 value ..... 59c. Untrimmed Shapes, $2.00 value ..... 49c. Trumped Hats, $3.00 value ..... 75c. Velvet and Ribbon, 50x quality ..... 25c. White Milan Shapes, $2.50 value ..... $1.69. Flowers—10, 20 and 30 cents bunch—value to $1.00. Ishment, if necessary, to secure information desired and then ascertain who the innocent are and who are the guilty, and at least let your members know, even if you do not desire to let the public know the result. When this is done confidence will come and with it the support of the public. An attempt has been made to drive the money-changers from The Temple. See if the work has been thoroughly done and regardless of the consequences, purge business Richmond so far as it is composed of colored folks, of the odium and the contempt now resting upon it. $100.00 ENDOWMENT PAYD. Portsmouth, Va. May 2, 1911 This is to certify that we have received from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court of Virginia, Order of Calanthe ($100 00). One Hundred Dollars, in payment of the death claim of Sister Harriet Johnson, who was a member of Mt Ararat Court, No 171, of Portsmouth Va. Signed -- their Mary and Eugene X Johnson. mark Beneficiaries Witnesses Mary Winston W Inspector Katherine Scott Mary D Daughtry S B Wright D D --- Newport News, Va. May 1, 1911. This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of the Pythian, N. A. S. A. E., A. A. and A. A. (£10,000) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars, an payment of the death claim of Brother Henry Johnson, who was a member of Newport News Lodge, No. 74. of Newport News, Va. Signed -- ROSA JOHNSON, Beneventy Witness - A E Drake R H Spring J H Ridley J C Allen, D. G C A Fatal Cutting Affray. George Williams a colored teacher, 15 years of age was stabbed and almost immediately killed Saturday night at about 10 o'clock, at 100 Polliam street (this being a questionable neighborhood), by Curtis Slater, who escaped. The story as told before the coroner's jury, the following being an extract from the records: City of Richmond -- to wit An inquisition was taken at 212 E. Leigh street, in said city, on the 6th day of May, 1911, before me, Dr. Wm. H. Taylor, coroner, upon the view of the body of George Williams, there lying dead. Josephine Page (colored) was sworn and accused I live at 104 Paulinam street. About half-past 9 or 10 o'clock night before last I was in my room with George Williams. He had taken off his clothes ready to go to bed, and I was about to go out, when Curtis Slater came and knocked on the door. I wouldn't open the door, and he broke it open and came in. BEGAN CUTTING. Without saying anything, he began to cut at me with a knife, but he did not cut me, but kicked me in the eye, after knocking me down. Then George Williams came to him and said: "You ought to be ashamed of yourself to take advantage of a woman like that." He told George that he would take advantage of him, and he throw his arms around George's neck, and the next I saw George was lying on the floor and blood coming from him. He died in less than half an hour. Curtis went away. I holiered and people came in to see what was the matter, and somebody sent for the ambulance. I had lent Curtis fifty cents, and he was mad with me because I asked him for it. Order Now 500,000 WILL BE SOLD. A WONDERFUL BOOK BY A NEGRO. "THE, BREAKING OF DAWN OR HOW LONG MAY WE LIVE IN THE BODY," by Rev. J. Andrew Patterson. Containing a Survey of the Teachings of the Great International "NEW LIFE" Movement. The Author especially deals with mental states that destroy life The power of thought and suggestion over the bodily functions How fear, worry, hate, anger, jealousy and a dread of diseases logically produce disease and death. Chapters are given to psychophysical culture in sleep, diet, air, sunshine, bathing and exercise. The use of distilled water Olive oil, fruit juices in the removal of old age conditions. How to avoid tuberculosis. Mr William E. Towne, 31 January "Nautilus," says: "Mr. Pat- terson covers the field of scientific research for the secret of long- life. The Breaking Dawn" is one of the simplest and best books along this line, that has been published." Through the kindness of the Health Culture Company of New York, we are making the following offer for a limited time "The Breaking Dawn" Svo. cloth 121 pages.....$1.00 "Why the Afro-American is Dying so Rapidly". .10 and 1 year's subscription to Health Culture Magazine 1.00 $2 10 For $1 50, money order or by registered letter, we will send prepaid the above named books, etc including certificate as life member of the I N L M W The greatest movement of the age "Do It Now" Address THE "NEW LIFE" PUBLISHING CO.. 31 Central Place, Dept. TE Orange, N J. CAN MAKE FROM $5.00 TO $25.00 A DAY. IT HAS NO EQUAL OR RIVAL. IT IS THE MOST COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE NEGRO RACE EVER PUBLISHED. It Has the Endorsement of the Virginia State Board of Education. The Industrial History of the Negro Race, a recent publication has been so largely in demand that a second edition has just been published. It is sold throughout the country to both white and colored. It has been adopted by the State Board of Education of Virginia, which consists of the Governor, Attorney General, Super- intendent of Public Instruction and Professors of the lending white colleges of Virginia, as a text book for the colored schools. Other states have strongly endorsed the book and are expected to adopt it. This is sufficient evidence to prove our claim that this is the greatest book now upon the market, and every colored person should have a copy in their library. * Agents are wanted in every State, County and Town to sell the * subscription edition. Write or apply to the INDUSTRIAL HISTORY. PUBLISHING COMPANY, 511 North Second Street, Richmond, Va. for terms and information. --- Residence, 1823 12 Bt. N. W. 'Phone, Main, 2824. PENSION AND CLAIM ATTY. NOTARY PUBLIC. Pension Vouchers Executed. 000 F Nt. N. W.—First Floor. Washington, D. C. WANTS TO LOCATE HER MOTHER I would like to know the whorbo-abouts of my mother, Beadie Allen. She went away in 1892 from Oberlan, N. C., two miles from Raleigh, N. C. She was last heard from last October. That was the first time since she went away. She has five children, and I am the youngest daughter that is trying to locate her. My name is SUSIE ALLEN, 913 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Danced Herself to Death. Mrs. Bertha Gordon danced all the evening at a house party given by Lowis Rose, at Furman Lane, Patchogue, L.. Then she complained of exhaustion and sat down to rest. Her friends noticed that she looked white and was breathing hard. Suddenly she fell to the floor, apparently in a faint. Friends led in vain to revive her and finally sent for Drs. W. Bonnett and Charles Willis. They found the woman dead. They raid she had succumbed to heart failure, the result o- physical exhaustion, that she had it rally danced herself to death. Lightning Scares Woman to Death, Mrs. Wilmot Moulthrop, of Kenzoa Lake, near Monticello, N. Y., was scared to death by a sudden flash of lightning. About two years ago her home was struck by lightning and destroyed, and since then she had been extremely nervous during any electrical storm. She was talking with a neighbor, when there was a flash nut she sank back in a chair, dead. --- Frightened by Ghost of Baby. The sixteen prisoners confined in the county jail at Fairmont, Va., are in a state of terror owing to their bollot that the place is haunted. For several nights, they say, they have been unable to sleep owing to the mysterious cries of a baby The source of the noise has not been ascertained. --- Five Children Burned to Death. Five of the six children of Sanford Davies, a farmer of near Free Union, Albemarle county, Va., were burned to death when fire destroyed the Davies home. Davies and his wife and an infant escaped. The dead children ranged in age from three to fifteen years. $87,000 For Mine Victims A total of $87,000 has been collected for the relief of the families of the Panacost mine fire victims, near Scranton, Pa. 'There are thirty-one widows and 110 orphans to be cared for. A committee of Scranton and Throop citizens will look after the disbursement of the funds. D SATURDAY MAY 18, 1911 The True Reformers (Continued From Page Number ONE. came disheartened and discouraged. WORKING AGAINST ODDS. For four months we worked on with odds against us and scarcely a ray of hope of recovery could be seen. Some of the leading newspapers published by men of our race were painting us in the darkest colors, and others were saying that it was impossible for us to "come back." Notwithstanding these things, we toiled on until the Special Session of the Grand Fountain was called February 21, 1911. THAT SPECIAL SESSION At this special session there were present more than 700 delegates (mostly men), representing the strongest men and women in the race in every walk of life—preachers, lawyers, doctors, business men and women. Feeling run high and all were enthusiastic in their efforts to save the Grand Fountain. Many drastic measures were adopted, new officers elected, and the work of retrenchment was started which has not ceased as yet. The promotion offered by the Insurance Commissioner, Col. Joseph Button, to raise $37,000 as the condition of having our license restored was accepted heartily, and the loyal members have done well in helping us reach the required mark. SATISFIED THE COMMISSIONER A few days ago it was our privilege as well as a pleasure to be able to report to the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Virginia an amount sufficient to satisfy him, and present evidences of the fact that there were large sums of money to be sent in to the main office from the various sections of the Brotherhood and along with the above facts there was a full statement of other assets of the Grand Fountain. After careful consideration of these things the Commissioner called me to his office, and after an important conference, in which some very interesting questions were asked by the Commissioners were answered by me he asked me to inform the Board of Directors that he, the Commissioner, had lifted the suspension of our license, and thus restored to us the right to do business GOOD EFFECTS IN EVIDENCE This brought sunshine and good news to the Board of Directors and the entire Brotherhood. The effects of this statement are being seen already, and applications for new members have come into the office. We have every reason to believe that thousands of others will come in before the next session in September DIDN'T LIKE THE CHANGE. At the Board of Directors' meeting in February, 1941, the Board saw fit to appoint an Executive Committee to assist the Grand Master, in the great work of the Order, but the Board in its meeting of April 24, 1941, being advised by our attorney that the Executive Committee previously appointed by the Board, would not hold good in the courts, notwithstanding the Grand Fountain had always had an Executive Committee, hereof托承, abolished the Executive Committee, leaving much more flexibility, than before. This happened at a time when I felt that the best avail able help was necessary, nevertheless I am fully determined to do my whole duty and squarely meet every issue that presents itself SOME COLORED WEEKLY PAPERS I am not unkindful of the great help that the friendly daily papers of the city have rendered us in our troubles, and how they have rejoiced with us in our time of rejoicing, for all of which I am exceedingly grateful. The colored weekly papers which have said kind things about us have placed us under a lasting debt of gratitude to them. I am thankful for all that our friends have done for us and I will try to trust the trust and confidence reposed in me. Yours for the uplift of the race. A. W. HOLMES, Grand Worthy Master. Nowport News Va., April 30, 1911. This is to certify that I have recalled from John Mitchell, JA, Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., B., A., B., A., A. and A. ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars. in payment of the death claim of Brother Andrew Parish, who was a member of Athletic Lodge, No. 113, of Nowport News, Va. Signed: MRS. MARY E. PARRISH, Donecary. Witness:— Nolle Clay, Barn Johnson F. J. Ellott, J. C. Allen, D. P., Q. C. NEGRO LOSES LIFE FOR SWEETHEART Joseph Williams Stabbed-to-Heart by Caller in Presence of Woman. (Times-Dispatch May 6, 1911.) Because he resented an attempt on the part of Curtis Slater to collect a bill of 50 cents from his sweet-heart, Josephine Page, of Pallium street, Joseph Williams, colored, lies dead at her house, with a knife wound through his heart and another in his right arm, while Slater, who is said to live in the neighborhood of Glater Park, is a fugitive from justice charged with murder. The affair occurred shortly after 10 o'clock last night, while Williams was paying a visit to Josephine. There was nothing to mar their happiness until a knock was heard at the door, and Slater was admitted. The woman's statement was that he immediately started a fuss by saying that she owed him half a dollar. She denied the obligation, and Williams took her side of the case. Slater, however, wanted the money, and despite the remonstrances of Williams' talks, she says, insultingly. The quarrel reached a crisis, and before Williams could do anything in her defense his opponent drew a long knife. Her sweetheart sank to the floor, while the other man took to his heels. When the ambulance, in charge of Dr. Turman, arrived, Williams was dead. Coroner Taylor was called, He viewed the body, and will hold an examination this morning. Detective-Sergeant Wren and other members of the police force were put on the trail of Slater, but up to an early hour this morning they had heard nothing of him. KILLED HIMSELF IN SUIT HE HAD STOLEN Colored Boy Drinks Poison, and Leaves Eyes for Man He Robbed Rexret over the fact that he had stolen two suits of clothes and fear that he would be arrested caused Percy Christiann. a colored youth, eighteen years old. living at 4 East Baker street, to commit suicide at 2:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon by drinking three ounces of carboic acid. Just before he swallowed the polis on he handed a farewell note to his mother to Jesse Brown a friend who was in the room with him, with the request that the latter bring him a glass of water. Though Brown is said to have read the note and to have known of Christiann's intentions he made no attempt to prevent the attack. When Brown returned to Christiann's bedroom the boy was gasping in the last agony his father rushed upstairs at Brown's call, and the empty vial was dashed from his hand. But 4 it was too late. The poison was already effecting its deadly work. TOOK POISON FROM PHYSICIAN Dr. Q. W Moor, a colored physician, of 806 St. James Street, was called, and the city ambulance was also summoned. The physicians worked hard to save the boy, but he died within a few minutes after their arrival. Christian was employed by Dr. Francis W Upshur, 1821 West Grace street. The suits of clothing belonged to B F Gay, who lives at the same place, and had been missing since last Wednesday Christian was attired in one of the suits at the time he ended his life. The body was turned over to the family, and the stolen suit was removed and taken to the Second Station by Detective Krengel and Bicycle Officer Bot to. It was also discovered that Christian who had evidently had self-destrction under contemplation for some time stole the garbolic acid with which he killed himself from Dr. Upshur. LEFT NOTE FOR HIS MOTHER. The note left by the boy for his mother is as follows "Dear Mother,—I am sorry I did like I did, but hope you and papa will forgive me. Tell Mr. Guy I am sorry for what I did, and could not stand R. Mother, give Jesse all my things. He is my only friend I have. So good by. (Signed) "From PERCY" Coroner Taylor viewed the body and stated that an inquest was not necessary—Times Dispatch, May S. 1911. BLAZE IN GARAGE CAUSED BY MATCH. Three Automobiles Badly Damaged When Somebody Ignites Gasoline. Three motor cars in the Foster Motor Company's garage on West Broad Street were badly damaged by fire last Sunday afternoon, when some careless person struck or dropped a match which quickly ignited gasoline. The blaze first, struck an automobile owned by I. T. Bentley and then spread to two brand-new cars, which were covered with heavy, tarpily. Boys employed in the garage used hand extinguisher, doing effective work. Mr. Bentley's machine suffered the heaviest damage, although the two new ones will probably be shipped back to the factory for repair. It was estimated that the damage would amount to $1,500, this being partially corroded by insurance. LEG FRACTURED IN AUTO ACCIDENT. Mr. Dodger Badly Hurt When Mr. Leigh's Car Dashes Into Ditch. Moying along the Cary Street Road at a speed of about twenty miles an hour, a big Packard touring car, in charge of W. H. Palmer Leigh a broker, with apartments in The Chesterfield, skidded at the foot of the Poor House Hill last Sunday morning at 11 o'clock and dashed headlong into a ditch. Mr. Leigh, Charles I. DoGeer, a teacher of French, who also resides in The Chesterfield, and a negro chauffeur, were thrown out. Mr. DoGeer sustained a broken leg, which necessitated his being removed to the Memorial Hospital, while Mr. Leigh and his driver was severely bruised. The car was badly amused by the accident. The wind shield was completely wrecked, the tenders torn away, and the machine generally damaged. The party was bound for the Commonwealth Club. The American Hat Wishes to Announce Their Removal from 404 to their N. 501 EAST MARSHALL STREET, CORNER FIL. Custom-made Hats, Stetson Styles, Hat Repairing N. Cleaned, Blocked, Etc. Full Line of Hats and Cap C. Kept on Hand at Rock Bottom Prices. Get Unc. MARSHALL HAT and Smile. MOORE SCHOOL Moore School, through its principal, Mr. H. G. Carlton, has reported to the superintendent, Dr. J. A. C. Chandler, the following roll of honor pupils for April. Sixth B Grade.—Andrew Walker, Richard Winston, Reginald Jackson, McKinley Mosby, Robert Perry, Rosetta Mines and Ruth Pemberton Sixth A Grade.—Viola J Brown and Leonard M. Carter. Fifth B (1) Grade.—Mildred Johnson, Louise Jackson, Lillie Dabney, Laura Johnson and Gladya Robinson. Fifth B (2) Grade—George Staves, Jessie Brown and Daisy Stokes. Fifth A (1) Grade—George Epps Fifth A (2) Grade—Carrie Randolph and Katie Seay Fourth A (1) Grade - Nattle Sa dle Carter. Fourth A (2) Grade --Arthur Randolph and Myrtle Priddy Third B Grade --Matthew Brown, Esther Johnson (2), Margaret Polndexter. Third A (1) Grade --Sarah Johnson (3), Lether Sallie (3), Harry Polndexter (2), Jennie Williams and Elizabeth Aycocke Third A (2) Grade Edna Johnson. Second B Grade John Fields, Washington Norrell Samuel Walker Sarah Anderson, Keggela Coles, Inez Greene Lilian Greene Jennie Venable and Louise Wilson Second A Grade --Eva Dassett Willmann Bradley, Blanche Smith, Arthea Walker and Thomas Johnson First A Grade --Joseph Brandon Arthur Kenney, Willie Minor and Ada Bolling First B Grade --Beverley Brave Della Haps, Jesse Heddon, Carole Toler, Andrew Johnson Pocahontas Whitely and Charles Tinsley THE TRUE REFORMERS (Charleston W. W. Advocate) Though they fell short several thousand dollars of the amount or initially required of them to re-enrage in business in the Commonwealth of Virginia, the State Insurance Commissioner has removed his restrictions upon the Grand-United Order of True Reformers and given the Order another lease on life. This intelligence will please not only the hundreds of True Reformers who have remained loyal to the organization, but many others, out side who are interested in it for real reasons. The strata in which the True Reformers found themselves were so wide spread in effect that it was reified by a racial calamity, but, like all calamities, their downfall carried with it a lesson. It showed that on by men of proved integrity should be placed in the seats of the mighty and that the widest publicity should be given to their every financial operation. The entire Reformer organization must share in the disgrace which has come upon it through the disclosures of Hill's embezzlement and the misappropriation of the Old Folks' Home funds by the Board of Directors. The organization is a partner in the crime in that it did not require full and verified accounts at stated intervals of its financial condition. It should have viewed with suspicion the building of large expensive houses and other evidences of wealth displayed by those handling its money, and inquired into their sources of income. This the Reformers failed to do. They were content to meet at Richmond annually and endorse the actions of the ring which held star chamber sessions in the meantime, reelected themselves to office and divided among themselves the surplus cash on hand. Happily, what money reaches the offices at Kitchend will be safe here after, at least as long as the present arrangement obtains, for a strict no counting must be made to the In insurance Commissioner's office. Those to whom the Order is indebted may now expect a settlement in full and that right speedily. But it is not to be assumed that time alone is necessary for the cure of the lily from which the Reformers are suffering. There must be a change in several executive stations principally at the head Grand Master Holmes proved himself unable to cope with the situation. He has displayed a lack of executive ability, of firmness which undoes him to remain longer at the old than is absolutely necessary. There are among the True Reformers several men who are qualified by experience, ability and honesty to get them out of the disgraceful mess in which they now find themselves, and the sooner one of them is placed in charge the quicker will the organization regain the confidence of those within and without their ranks Copy. May 2, 1911. Mr. W. H. Woolley, Victoria, Va.: Dear Sir,--Your favor of the 20th ultima, with reference to the Inti- national Liberty Union, received. This so-called fraternal association is not authorized to transact busi- ness in Virginia. It is a fake fraternal society, opposed for the bona- fitt of its own purposes. Critchlow, who summons it is reported to be an ex- punt. Its agents will be arrested by order of this Department whence ever located. Yours very truly, J. N. DRENAMAN, Deputy Commissioner of Insurance Wishes to Admirece Their Removal from 404 to their New Quarters 501 EAST MARSHALL STREET, CORNER FIFTH. Custommade Hats, Stetson Styles. Hat Repairing Nearly Done, Cleaned, Blocked, Etc. Full Line of Hats and Caps Constantly Kept on Hand at Rock Bottom Prices. Get Under a MARSHALL HAT and Smile. W. I. JOHNSON, Funeral Director and Embalmer, Office & Warerooms, 207 N. Foushee St. Cor. Broad. HACKS FOR HIRE. Orders by Telephone or Telegraph filled. Weddings, Suppers and Entertainments promptly attended. Telephone, 686. Residence in Building. Baltimore Segregation. Baltimore, Md., May 11—The third segregation measure has just become a law here. The first law was declared invalid by the courts, the second was roped and re-engaged, with several amendments, as the basis for the new law. The new measure prohibits colored schools, churches and homes from being located in exclusive white blocks, and vice versa. Houses to be built in color must be either of white or colored people, according as to the way the other property owners in a block agree. A penalty of $50 a day is provided for any violations of the measure. Philadelphia A. M. E. Conference Meets. Philadelphia, Pa., May 10 - The ninety fourth annual session of the Philadelphia Conference of the A. M. E Church opened this morning at Allen Church. Following a brief address by Bishop Wp-dey J Gaines, the conference was organized and the various committees announced. The closing session will be held on next Monday Baptist Church Celebrates 75th Anniversary. Baltimore, Md. May 10 The seventy-fifth anniversary of the incorporation of the First Baptist Church is being observed here with special exercises which will continue until the end of the month. The pastor of the church, Rev P Carter Neal, preached an historical sermon at the opening of the exercises last Sunday morning, and in the evening Rev Walter H Brooks, pastor of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, Washington, filled the pulpit, Rev Dr. Wm A. Credit, pastor of the Cherry Memorial Church, Philadelphia, preached tonight. The First Baptist Church was started in 1818 but its growth was very slow until Rev Moses Clayton, of Norfolk, Vn. assumed the pastorate in 1834. Two years thereafter the congregation was incorporated Rev Mr Clayton continued as pastor until his death in 1860 at the age of 77 years. Several ministers had charge for brief periods until Rev J C Allen was called to the church in 1872. The declining health of Rev Mr Allen caused the church to call Rev P, Carter Neal as assistant pastor in 1901, and when pastor Allen died in 1905 he succeeded him. He is a graduate of the old Wayland Seminary Lincoln University and the Hamilton Theological Seminary. New York. He has also received the honorary degree of Master of Arts from Lincoln University Rev Mr Neal is happily married to Miss Harriett A Jackson, one of his classmates at Wayland Seminary. --- Colored Vote Defeats Republican Candidate for House of Representatives, Md. Some of the small try Republican politicians are still hot under the collar because government thousand colored voters refused to support E Clay Timanus for Mayor, thus allowing the Democrat candidate James H. Preston, to till through by a majority of a little over 600 votes. Preston's candidacy was strongly opposed by many Democrats and independents and the Republicans were very hopeful, as they counted on full race vote. It when they woke up last Wednesday and found out that apathy and hostility on the part of several thousands of colored voters had allowed democracy to win, some of the whites declared that henceforth they would be dilafar chement advocates. The hostility of colored voters to Mr. Timanus was due from the fact that he unprotected absolutely no interest in the colored voter when he served as Mayor several years ago, and that he had caused the arrest some weeks ago of a colored man who had naked him to change a $50 bill. Despite the fact, some white Republican are now disposed to Zick against the Negro, the Republican organisation will work as hard next fall to encompass the defokt of the Diggs disfranchisement bills as they did with the previous two amendments. "While I deplore the fact," said Republican State Chairman Hann to your correspondent, "that several thousand colored men did not support the ticket, yet I remember with satisfaction that 12,000 did. The closeness of the vote by which Timmans was defeated will make us work still harder for Republican success in the fall, when the Governor and other State officials are to be elected. My only regrets about the election Tuesday was that, while the greater number of colored men saw the main issue, that those who did not support Timanus forgot that the Democracy is after curtailing their rights and that they should have for their own salvation swallowed Timanus so their hands would have been greatly strengthened in the great fight against distranchisement " City Councilman Harry R Cummings was again elected a member of the City Council. He received a larger majority than any of the few Republicans elected to the city's law making body. FRANKLIN F JOHNSON: 305 North Pine Street. Dr. A. M. Curtis Addresses Mary Land Medical Association. Declaring that disfurenceishment and other discriminations are but small blindnesses when compared with the ravages that tuberculosis is making in the race Dr A M Curtis, of Washington, in an address Friday night before the sixth annual meeting of the Maryland Medical Pharmaceutical and Dental Association, urged that the physicians of the race and others make a more determined effort to stamp out the disease. "I am not a pessimist nor an alarmist," said the speaker "but we must see and appreciate our weaknesses if we are to relieve ourselves of them. This crusade against tuberculosis is the greatest race problem before us today, as it is the reason we have today. Segregation, discrimination and chiselment pale into insignificance in comparison with the destruction an inhibition and mortality that this disease is heaping upon us. Drs H Stanton Mcard and Hur F Brown, both of this city, also spoke Dr Edward Short presided. $150.00 ENDOWMENT PAID. Richmond Va. May 8, 1911 This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A S A E, A A and A ($150 00). One Hundred and Fifty Dollars, in payment of the death claim of Brother George W Harvey, who was a member of Modella Lodge, No. 160, of Louisa, Va. Signed -- D J BRADFORD, Administrator. Witness John R Coghill $150.00 ENOWMENT PAID. This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythians, N A, S A, E, A A and A: ($150 00). One Hundred and Fifty Dollars, in payment of the death claim of Brother W T Howard, who was a member of Nansemond Lodge, No 31, of Suffolk, Va. Signed MRS MAMIE HOWARD. Beneventary Witness - Henderson Y, Williams, K of R. S C W Jordan, D. D, G C J C White, M of F Summer School and Chautauqua of the National Religious Training School, Durham, N. C. The National Religious Training School opens the Summer School and Chauquaitao July 6th and closes August 13th. Teachers and lecturers who are specialists in their particular lines will be in charge of the instruction and lectures. Rare advantages offered in theology, teachers' courses, literary, domestic science, business and industry. Many applications already filed. Last summer's success tells us we will not be able to accommodate all of our applicants. Fill your application with us now. Bulletin ready after March 1, 1911, announcing all features. For full particulars, address NATIONAL RELIGIOUS TRAINING SCHOOL, Durha 1, N C. Jas. E. Shopard, President. —Nelson's hair Dressing can be secured from the Agent, Mr. Joseph Evans, 2602 Webster Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. OLD PAPERS the por hpm PLANET Once. Send when in need. Cream of Grand Rapids FURNITURE IS KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND IN COMPLETE ASSORTMENTS HERE. YOU CAN SELECT IT IN PERSON OR ORDER BY MAIL AS YOU MAY DESIRE, WITH PERFECT RESULTS Sydnor & Hundley, Inc., 709-711-713 E. Broad St., RICHMOND, VA. Furniture For The Home Beautiful. OFFICES FOR RENT. WELL LIGHTED, WELL VENTILATED OFFICES FOR RENT IN THE NEW MECHANICS' SAVINGS BANK BUILDING. LIGHT, HEAT AND JANITOR SERVICE INCLUDED AT A RENTAL OF FROM $5.00 PER MONTH UPWARDS. THIS IS ONE OF THE MOST PALATIAL AND CONVENIENT STRUCTURES IN THE CITY AND THE SERVICE RENDERED IS FIRST-CLASS. Apply to the AGENTS, or to MECHANICS' SAVINGS BANK, 214 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia. Fine Funeral Supplies, Fine Hacks and Hearses, First Class Service. HIGH GRADE CASKETS AT THE LOWEST PRICES. All Orders Promptly Attended—Either Day or Night. Hall for Meetings and Entertainments. NO. 9 EAST DUVAL STREET. RESIDENCE—118 East Leigh Street. HAIR-VIM CHEMICAL COMPANY, INC. (Successor to Columbia Chemical Company, of Newport News, Va.) Manufacturers of HAIR-VIM, HAIR-VIM SOAP, LIQUID HAIR-VIM, BEAU-TE-VIM CREAM AND OWL CORN SALVE. Beware of Imitations and Imposters Advertising the Goods from Newport News, Va., the Old Home Office. Good Agents Wanted. Liberal Commissions Paid. Write to-day. MRS. J. P. H. COLEMAN, Phar. D., President-Manager. 643 Florida Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C. Long Distance Phone, North 8250-m. Is Your Hair Beautiful Soft, Silky and Long? Does it comb easily without breaking? Is it straight? Does it smooth out nicely? Can you do it up in any of the charm- ing styles, so it will stay, and make you proud of it? Is it long and full of life? If you cannot say YES to all of the above questions, then you need amount of oil. You will never have scalp disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handmade four-couple square tin boxes. like the lady holds in her hand Drugstore and agents everywhere all at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, and us 30 cents and we will mail you a full size box paid. Go and buy it now, we all right down and write us Address PENSIONS! PENSIONS!! If you ever served in any of the Wars of the U. S. You are Entitled to a Pension. If You are now Drawing a Pension of less than $12.00 per month, If You are over 62 years of age, You are Entitled to an Increase. If you are the Widow or Dependent Slater of a Deceased Boldier, Sailor, or Marino You are Entitled to a Pension of $12.00 per month. If You Want a Pension, or an Increase, Write me the Facts, and I Will File Your Claim and Secure Your Pension or Increase. HERMAN W. GILANT, "Atty", Room 600, F 8t. N. W., Wash., D. C. D. J. FARRAR, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. ALL KINDS OP CARPENTRY. OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405, MECHANICS SAVINGS-BANK BUILDING THE MONROE SQUARE RESIDENCE, 610 N. FIRST STREET—SHOP IN REAR Phone, Monroe—3166. Special Attention Paid to the Taking of Contracts for Building of Any Style of Architecture. Job Work a Specialty. --- The Convict Lease System Deplorable Conditions----A White Lady's Plea----Mrs Clarissa O. Keeler Makes Starfling Disclosures. SIX When John Howard that 'prime of philanthropists of Great Britain attempted to catch an inside glimpse of the French Bastille, where men who had incurred the resentment of the French monarchs were held in confinement for life he was refrained against. Neither the influence of the English Ambassador nor his British friends allowed to open the gates to that dark world of suffering. With intuition, he patterned the program a padded written by one who had an anecdote which gave him the ability to offer the affections of those confined in this huge fortress. He begged the priest and gave to the priest. The good key which refused to open the door of that notorious prison to be locked in a glazed room in Paris, he told them to see him in the toolbox of was made from, some of the original wall of the prison both of which were presented by Lafayette. SILENT WINESSES THE HARLE OF DEXIM The late writer says, Of late news it has been the fashion for him to fortune to deny the horrors of the Bastille. Other documents have to light confirming the old tales to all its horrors. Mr. Mead's sample letter says this same writer was written on scenes of terror on plains of France in the 17th century and in一定程度上 caused during his conquest of France it was to echo the horrors of the Revolution. The toast to the Bastille also served to show the horrors of the soldier as it may seem some of the means used for torture in that is recognizable fortress, are depicted here in the new twentieth century in Christian America. THE GREATEST PRISON RI FORMER John Howard the philosopher reformer the world we know now as a graphic account of the treatment of prisoners in the court of the ancient states some were held in chains rooms some were held in dungeons others were tortured in different ways. He found young thieves and hearty headed villains guilty and innocent tried and tortured often even male and female confined together with nothing to present their corrupting and demoralizing each other. Howard's historian says, 'He exposed to the shoulder sight of mankind the horrible barbarities the foul and abominable secrets of these dens of suffering and remolled these vast evil by exposure. ALL FAMILIAR The people of the United States have become familiar with the accounts of cruelties on the Congo they know, something of the horrible pionage in Mexico and Mr Joseph Bartt of the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines' Protection Society of Great Britain has told the American people of the terrible slavery in the Portuguese cocoa plantations, Mr Burtt's visit was welcomed by the American people, and may very likely result in a "joint action being taken by Great Britain and the United States to put a stop to the slave system in Angola and the Islands." The Great Britain Society has done nobly but it should not be overlooked that there is slavery under the Stars and Stripes' slavery in its most terrible form. Wherever convicts are sold bodily to heartless contractors there is slavery. There is also peonage slavery in some of the Southern States. There is abundance of proof that men women and children, including American both white and black, are well Russians, Italians, Greeks, Scandinavians and Swedes are caught in the dragged prey of men engaged in this new form of slave-holding. Many of the victims are worked in phosphate mines, on turpentine forms on railroad construction, and in lumber mills, the operators. It is alleged, being many of them Northern men. The treatment of these newly made slaves is horrible. PRISONS OF THE OLD WORLD During the last few years American writers have been giving vivid pen pictures of the Old Balloy, Newgate and other prisoners of the Old World, but the object of the present writer is, after more than a score of years of almost uninterrupted study and investigation of the conduct of American institutions, especially falls, peritentaries and convict camps, to call the attention of the sleeping public to the horrible abuses of prisoners worked under the infamous contract system—a system not confined to the Southern States alone, but can be found in any State where the idea provals that the possession of a convict's person is an Ip- portunity to make money. Politics controls the prisoners to a very large extent in both the South and North. Prison officials are often chosen with out any regard to their fitness, and are often given a durable or roughished over all or every law made for the protection of the helpless prisoner. NO PEN CAN PICTURE In some situations contact labor is sold to be taken under the true treatment of the Delinquent human chattel in the hands of guardians in such mode as to not be put into prison. Please contact the contact units should be taken to a type of court or not to a prison. If the person is housed so now he has been found in custody and is not in court as such. During the day he is cared for and cared for by his guardians who will be brought from the jail upon earth the next day. America has hard. Should someone else the blood be traced for the purpose are put upon his track and the chattel are that he will be brought back severely long and in trouble so severely as we VIVA NUEVA PLAY Few situations I give a few illustrations showing something of the results and demoralization caused by the use of the better strap. They are illustrated in two versions of their kinds of pictures. What is to be the effect of the use of the better strap when we are in a room with a few people who are not well known. We cross the corner and some of them are in a room with a few people who are well known. I will tell them the results which will show. Through photos I can a slightly bigger and more off-bounded but the life of one who must until death comes from the physical moral and mental effects of an inhuman whipping. N.L. DOURT REMOVED If doubts arise in the mind of the reader and the stories are demonstrated as yellow journalism I would call attention to the recent reports of legislative investigating prison committees whose accounts of cruelties on their respective States have sent a thrill of horror to the unsuspecting citizens. Perhaps fewer or more morally rubric accounts could be given than the ones told by the Texas prison investigating committee after months of investigation which ended in November 1909. One of the State papers declared The horrors of the Russian dungeon pale into insignificance when compared to the cruelty and infallibly practiced in some of our convict camps". And even then the man who has not been told the "San Juan" has been clared the "contraste on prisoners rivaled the horrors of the Inquisition. In addition to the means used to punish prisoners in Howard's time America has one product peculiar to herself. This is the whipping boss The dread and terror of the convicts is the strap in the hands of the whipping boss who is paid for the tol of applying it unsparingly to the bare back of the prisoner who fails in accomplishing his daily allotted task. THAT INSTRUMENT OF TORTURE A writer in a Georgian paper in describing this instrument of torture, such as is used in convict contracting prisons says: 'It weighs from three to six pounds. It is made of single, and for a portion of its length double thickness of leather It is more than two inches wide - say, one third of an inch thick, and its two feet in length is flattened to a club of wood. This instrument is not designed to break the skin, but at every lick the tissue beneath the skin are broken to a jelly. The sensation of pain can only be compared to a million needle points penetrating the stricken part at every blow. The pain is doubled every time the ' leather' falls. Now, then, the contract short on his task is stripped '夹住' an over a barrel, or sank into an object, and the convicts * * * * and the lash falls. There is a scream of pain. It falls again and there is another scream. The boots besotied warden (whipping boss) gets a certain kind of exquisite satisfaction - out of the writings and screams of his picture. The lash continues to fall. * * * Sworn witnesses have testified before an investigating committee that sometimes one hundred lashes have fallen before the victim becomes unconscious and is carried to the stockade or to his grave." miner to lie either on his back or side digging it. This boy, who had been there only a few days and had never been in a mine before, failed to produce the required three cars and had my host. God knows I did, but I couldn't keep up." "At last he said, 'I'll show you how to shirk your work'; and he knocked me down and whipped me THE QUIVERING FLESH. In another communication the writer says. "Of all the degrading positions, to our mind that of the whipping boss in the Georgia penitentiary system is the worst **** There is possibly more inhumanity in such a post than in any we can recall under the American system of government, and to successfully fill it a man must be callous heartless **** He stands over his pigtoned vintim and applies the hash on the naked guttering dish of a fellow man. Piles it hard enough to lace rate the flesh and send the blood coursing down the bruised back and sides from the gaping and wilted cuts and just think of the mercilessness the inhumanity the beastliness of the sentence that can drive the fists deeper and deeper through the cuts and gnaws on the body of a human being white or black **** just as a cool calculating business for a very biggy stipend REFINED QUALITY 10010 NO 10010 STAND As the war gave a rest to the cell, he laid aside his watch and led up to the office of the cell. After lunch he met the nearly six hours more waiting in all forty four hours out of the day when he was chained in an unlight position with his hands behind his head, he moved to the desk to let him down by the desk, he could stand it no longer and made desperate for the gift of a chair he climbed into and stood up to the desk, he stood up to the desk, and stood up to the desk, and standing to all him. If the great doctor having who entered it to be left chained to the still home and was the thief's duck and "his" hat put on him. More water was thrown into the room of the unconscious boy, then his wet clothing removed and a blanket wrapped around his body he was then carried to another cell and held on the floor. During the night he became conscious and asked for another blanket but was refused. With his back broken in three places the grenades he was allowed to throw from the console floor for twelve hours only a thin blanket around him. He died soon after. Two guards were discharged (See special dispatch to Inter Ocean January 29, 1908) Another mode of punishment used in some of the prisons is called the water city. A special prison in describing it says The contest is stitched blind-folded and placed about twenty of twenty feet in front of a hose. A two-inch hose is fixed 640 water inches in pressure of 250 pounds. Beginning with warm water the temperature is steadily lowered until it is cold. This freezing water thrown with terrific force on the contest's naked body puts him in such tightly agony that he is speedily willing to do any task required of him. Another kind of water cure which was at one time practiced in a Georgia convict camp was that of forcing water into the postrises of the prisoner which sometimes forced the blood from both his ears and nose. The St. Louis (Mo.) Post Dispatch of September 6, 1925, contains the following: Guthrie Ok Sept 5 That the Oklahoma convicts in the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing are being insufficiently fed and housed in cells insufficiently ventilated and cleaned and are subjected to the "water curse" and dungeon and the thunderstorm in the declaration of Miss Kate Bernard Commissioner of Charities who has returned from Kansas where she made a tour of Inspection of the Lansing and Leavenworth penal institution. * * * These are 53% Oklahoma convicts in the Kansas prison, and during her stay she heard many harrowing tales from prisoners, who notwithstanding the efforts of the guards not to leave Miss Bernard alone with any prisoner, were induced by her to talk of their conditions, which in many instances they did with tears flowing freely and often. "Miss Bernard visited the dungeon, or 'dark hole,' and found a sixteen-year-old boy from Oklahoma leaning against the wall, his hands chained at the wrists and suspended high above his head, his toon-hairy coat fluttering. "It is required that each prisoner produce three dumps of coal each day. Each voln is twenty-two tuches in diameter necessitating the mither to lie either on his back or aides digging it. This boy, who had been there only a few days and had never been in a mine before, failed to produce the required three cars and had been placed in the dungeon at 6 P. M. "He was allowed to lie down during the night upon the stone floor without covering of any kind. At 6 A. M. he asked that the warden be sent to him, expressing a willingness to do anything in his power to relieve himself from the torture. One of the ruples of the institution is that when a prisoner calls for the warden he shall be notified at once. The guard to whom this boy made his request answered. "No, you will stay here for a while, you have not been published enough yet. We don't improve the success of our prisoners second time." "Nine hours later Miss Bernard found him suspended by the wrists, which were blue and swollen, from contact with the chain and heard his story not just indicating the warm climates of the guard. Policemen are frequently joined by the guards * * * without the knowledge of the warden to whom a report is supposed to be made in each case of correction. The water are used in this farm. A prisoner is placed in a box resembling a prison, his hands tied beneath him, and a boss turned upon his face, as if in distress filling his mouth, as cars and moses with water. The water is played on him till it regains a point where he can bend his head to farther to keep it from submerging his mouth and nose and in the end he is left until he becomes costed and falls back under the water. Miss Bernard also inspected the coal mills and then in two more hours in mines bound in explosives and for red hot coal in puddles of cold water, a day with a visit to a mine with Miss Bernard taking them with them when Bernard had in one and absolutely stolon under deadly circumstances she penetrated the mines he would retreat to, behind the victors' limits, watched the men die they lay in treasured of drizzle in water the told of other men. Miss Bernard also the contract system was tested of many of the elections there now found the stable state of the countryside and seen at the low point with where the airport were well secured. A ward of the prison also worked in inspected the prison of prison Miss Bernard and the full particulars of all the hats The Old house were forcibly removed. The author is to be tasked with the potential of losing control The Kansas Injury says Working in coal mine is the most honest of the under conditions. It is the most difficult offer under this law system that it has a best and longest God. THENAS PRISONS AND CONVICT CAMES I will not attempt to give any thing but a powered account of the countries present in the Texas New York where occupied felons are wounded some important crimes and where the fight against theft is fought to the John W. Wiley's offices of the San Antonio Extrication fellow and after visiting pub- lic and private mounts, by which the prison investigat- ing committee. The annual number of inmates in the Extras of Jan- uary 1947 Mr. Briggs says. When organism found itself as assisted by the helix expounders of the Christian religion its cruel imitation conceived the direct tortures to inflict on the prophets of truth who tortured the compass of God and right * * * The stories told were thought to have been too cruel to be true now * * * So one might tink who does not know * * * But let him wander through the path and by ways of the Texas penitentiary system ascertain the types of cruels that have been inflicted upon oblivious constells by great, strong, cowardly guards by their brutal passion for sending their personal spleen and anger upon disliked prisoners. Let them to tales of discharged convicts by their brutal passion for discharged guards. Let him, see for himself * * * and the conclusion will dawn upon him that the Pagan foes of the early Christians must have been the prototypes of some of the villains that have found their way into the corps of petty officers employed by the Texas penitentiary system " Mr Briggs relates the following story told him by the chaplain: "The victim of the outrage was named Foster. He was sixty old years old when death occurred one year ago last spring * * * * He was on a contract (prison) farm and in curred the hate, of one of the guards. He was treated inhumanely by this officer and died several hours after the punishment had ceased in the arms of Dr Jake Hodges (chapalain), recently dismissed * * * * after he had condemned the system and urged a reform. "On one of his visits to the farm, where this prisoner was confined Dr Hodges found him in the hospital dying." Mr Hodges in recent theory. "The path of the victim is portrayed in the anguish expressed by the old man's words. * * * * The feeble voice, the sighs of sorrow and of resignation must be imagined—no pen can picture them: "Why, certainly," said Dr. Hodges, that's what I'm here for "Oh, they treated me no moanily, now they still will matter now what they do to me" "I'll tell you all if you just put your arm around me; I want to feel the support of a friend once more before I die." "Now, brother, tell me your story, I'm here to help you, and I will!" "I'm old," said Foster, 'and I can't work like the young man. I was always falling behind; I tried, oh, so hard, to keep up, but I couldn't. My arms and legs just couldn't work faster. ..." "The guard, rolled at me, curved me and struck me, and, doctor, I did my best. God knows I did, but I couldn't keep up. "At last he said, 'I'll show you how to shirk your work'; and he knocked me down and whipped me till I bled. He took sand and rubbed it on my back and whipped its cut ting grains into my back. I cried out and begged him to quit, and told him that he would kill me. But he whipped me all the harder. After whipping he dragged me to my bed, and a two that was infested with ants. He made me climb up to its forks, where I remained until the sants had covered my body. They stung me until I cried with pain and begged him to let me get down and die. He kept me there a long time, and at right I was brought here and put to bed. I know I'm dying, and am * * * glad to get away from this place of abuse and torture. * * * A few moments more the convict was dead in the chaplain's arms." The guard was discharged but recetted another position as guard over Texas convicts. The San Antonio Express of Jan. 1999, tells of a Mexican convict while being worked on a Texas cane farm who 'had a burning fever, but was worked by the guard until he fell. The Mexican was then whippe until he begged the guard to kill him. Finally, to end his suffering, the Mexican grose and taking a long cane knife which he was worked cane knife, with which he was working, he laid his left hand against a tree and deliberately cut off every finger of his left hand and shapped his body with the stumps in the face of the guard, said 'Now d n you still me, I can work no further.' A story is told in another issue of the San Antonio Express of a negro convict whose dead body was exhumed and examined, and it was found that the "deep stripes and their great number on the negro's back" had caused his death, and not "heart trouble." "Harrowing stories" were told to the committee which found their way into the Texas papers. The San Antonio Daily Express of July 22 says. Stories of the cruel indictment of corporal punishment on convicts confined at outside colonies transcribed in horror similar recitals that have been published in these dispatches. One convict testified that he had assisted in conveying from the field the dying bodies of two convicts who had been unmercifully beaten at one of the share faring within the last two years. This prisoner witnessed the cessation and surrender they were ad ministrated the same day. The victim of one was a Mexican called Antonio the other was a white man named Manuel. They were both over the dead bodies of these two men and upon the head board that marked their graves was inscribed "Death By Sunstroke." One of the guards compelled a convict to dance upon the grave of Dum in substitution of religious or ecclesiastical men. The witness told of the death of a German at this farm. The German was large and could not keep up with the higher convicts in the trot back to the building from the field. One of the guards threw his saddle trope around the convict's neck and put his horse to a gallop while another administered propelling power from the rear with a quirt. The German was dragged by the neck over a considerable distance and encumbered to the sever ties of the torture. The witness told of the shooting of a Mexican who had asked Permis son to step out of the square for a moment. The convict walked out and the guard shot him without the least warning. The witness said that in the five years he was on the farm he had seen 200 men whipped, apparently without permission being granted. A prisoner on one of the share farms 'swop that he had been struck ninety three blows by a former sergeant 'Blood ran from me to the floor.' said he, "and I had to be carried to my bunk. I can prove every word I say." The convict told of one prisoner being whipped an hour and a half for 'talking back to the guard.' The convict died in eleven days. Another convict testified "I saw a sergeant strike a Mexican ninety-eight licks with the leather. The Mexican's body swelled up to double its normal size and when he exerted himself blood and pus oozed from his back." He also testified that he had seen convicts suspended from the rafters by their wrists "until their arms were black." Other modos of punishment were described "At the male camp on the Eastman farm * * * a Mexican was whipped in the field and died shortly thereafter." (See Antonio Express, July 31 1909) The Austin Statesman and many other of the State papers of Nov 6, gave "heart sickening tales of brutality" which were given to the committee by oye witnesses. "Having grown heartache of the revolutions of the mitreatment of criminals, * * * the investigating committee were ill prepared for the revolting testimony which they received." Other evidence had substantiated the结论 in a large degree. The report said. "But the convicts who were most severely treated are now beyond the reach of the committee * * * they will lie in their graves out of the range also of the heartless employees of the State of Texas who sent them there." The convicts who gave testimony were, as others before them had been "in terror of punishment," notwithstanding they had been measured they should not be punished for exposing some of the horrible secrets. "One of the convicts carried an ugly scar extending all the way across his neck," he explained that he had attempted to cut his throat in preference to a whipping. "A very reliable witness" told the committee a graphic, blood-curdling story" of cruelly practiced on the convicts who gave testimony during the investigation the summer previous. (To be Continued) —We will send the PLANET to your friends for $1.50 per year. THE INDEPENDENT was founded in 1888 as a Weekly Magazine to secure the freedom of American slaves. In the sixty-two years that have followed, it has always been the friend and champion of the Negro Race. We have printed frequent articles from prominent Negroes and have closely followed their activities and successes. 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Enclosed find One Dollar for which please send me The INDEPENDENT every week for Six Months. Nothing on earth is so valuable as a human mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can offer. The best education is not good, but worse youth. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few cents when health is in danger! And who would choose an inferior school to save a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare ens for a larger usefulness! Dormitory, Virginia Union University. Va. Union Offers the Best H COLORED Y IT HAS A FINE ACADÉMIC course loca- completed common school subjects. THE COLLEGE COURSE is broad and co- as high as those of any college for white of the Carnegie Board. ITS THIKOLOGICAL COURSE has for man- Baptist Schools. Ubrow, Greek and all the are given here. One hundred students for tha- of the school. ITS NINE GRANITE BUILDINGS. Its fac- of 17,000-volume, its sole faculty and its University offer colored young men an col- of other races. For further information, address the Press VIRGINE JOHN M. UNION UNIVERSITY tars the Best Higher Education COLORED YOUNG MEN. THE ACADYMN course including manual training for school subjects. COURSE is broad and complete. Its requirements of any college for youth in the State, accord coach. NATIONAL COURSE has for many years been the standard abbrew. Greek and all the regular subjects given in it the bundled students for the ministry are enrolled in di- VINETTE BUILDINGS. Its fully equipped science labo- lisable faculty and its full courses of study make colored young men an education equal to that en- formation, address the President. VIRGINIA UNION UNI- RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Va. Union University Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN completed common school subjects. ITS COLLEGE COURSE is broad and complete. Its requirements and standing are as high as those of any college for white youth in the State, according to the rating of the Carnegie Board. ITS THIKOLOGICAL COURSE has for many years been the standard course for colored Baptist Schools. Hebrew, Greek and all the regular subjects given in Northern Seminaries are given here. One hundred students for the ministry are enrolled in different departments of the school. 1795 NINE GRANTE BUILDINGS. Its newly equipped science laboratories, its library of 18,000 volumes, its able faculty and its full courses of study enable Virginia Union University to offer colored young men an education equal to that enforced by the favored of other. For further information, address the President, VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Higgins, DEALER IN CHOICE GROCERIES, WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS. PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR THE MONEY. 1610 East Franklin Street. (Near Old Market.) 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Alpheus Scott Church Hill FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EM. BALMER Open Day and Night. Office and Warerooms: 8006 1/2 P Street Office 'Phone: 2387-L Residence 'Phone: 6619; 1224 St. John Street RICHMOND, VA. SEE WM. CARTER 721 N. SECOND ST. For Correct Plumbing, Steam and Gas Fitting. 'Phone, Monroe-1216. —Send in your Subscription for The PLANET to-day. S. W. ROBINSON 19 & 21 N. 18TH St. Dealer in Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars, &c. ALL STOCK SOLD AS GUARANTEED. PROMPT ATTENTION THE PLANET is the Leading Journal in the Country We Do Linotype Work for the Trade. We print CALENDARS. Our prices are as low as is consistent with First Class Work. We furnish Invitations for Balls, Weddings and Special Entertainments. We have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Writings, Manilla Paper, Envelopes. Card Board, Wedding Stock. in fact, Every thing in the Printing Line. Labor Leader and Alleged Dynamiter He Will Defend. ```markdown ``` Confession in Dynamite Plot. Epitomized, these were the important developments in connection with the bringing to Los Angeles, Cal., of John J. McNamara, James B. McNamara and Ortele McManigal, charged with complicity in the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building on Oct. 1 of last year: James B. McNamara, called to the office of the county jail, ostensibly to hear from District Attorney John D. Proderick's outline of his legal rigths, comes face to face with Mrs. D. H. Ingersoll, of San Francisco. She identifies him positively as "J. B. Bryce," a lodger in her house in that city last September. Dropping the mask he has been wearing for the benefit of his alloged accomplices in nuisorous dynamiting outrages, Ortie McManual practically has revealed himself as the star informer of the William J. Burra detective agency and principal witness for the prosecution in the trial of the Me- McManigal not only has been in close touch with Burns, but it is practically certain that he has received pay from Burns for serving him by playing his part in all the acts of the so-called "wrecking crew" to which he has confessed. His fear of the consequences should the McNamaras and their friends learn his exact relation to Burns, explains the elaborate precaptions taken to prevent the truth from becoming known until all were safely in jail. Not until Wednesday when the train which brought them to California stopped at Pasadena did John, T McNamara know of his brother's arrest and that information given by McManigal led to their apprehen alon Burns evidently learned enough about McManigal to compel the latter to go through with his part as commanded and tell Burns every move of the wrecking crew and the location of every dynamite plant. McManigal is said to have told in detail of a large number of dynamiting cases in other cities. The confession conforms closely to that given out in Chicago, the trend of which has been printed --- Easts For 26 Days. While loading lumber a month ago William T. Marvel, of Seaford, Del, stuck a small splinter into his thumb. The accident had joined on a Friday, and Sunday afternoon the pain was so excruciating that a doctor was summoned, and upon his arrival lockjaw had developed. Everything was done to relieve him, but without avail Fasting was ordered and Marvel was kept alive for twenty six days by hypodermic injections of morphine. Marvel has now recovered and he shows no ill effects from his fast and attack of tetanus --- Says Alfonso is Consumptive. L'Intransigant, a Paris paper, asserts that King Alfonso is gravely ill with tuberculosis, and that at a recent consultation of his physicians it was decided that urgent measures of treatment were necessary. It is also said that the physicians decided that the Spanish monarch should pass the coming winter at Lezing, Switzerland, where the climate is better adapted to his condition. Wants $10,000 For initiation Injury. A suit for $10,000 damages was filed in Newark, N. J., by John A. Hotzel, of Bloomfield, N. J., against the Bloomfield Camp, Modern Woodmen of America. Hetzel alleges that while he was being initiated into the order he was struck, while in a stooping position, with a "alap-stick" containing a cartridge. The cartridge exploded and entered his body near the spine. Elopera. Arrested. Frances Vanderworx, an eighteen-yearold girl from Codagrove, near Montclair, N. J., and Edward Earle, an electrician, of Orange, N. J., were arrested in Danbury, Conn., as elopers. Earle is accused of abduction. THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Bill-Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Envelopes, Business @ Visiting Cards, Policies, Medical Blanks, Insurance Blanks, Financial Cards, Lodge Books, Labels, Checks, Check Books, Minutes, Pamphlets, Whole Sheet Posters, Handbills, Placards. We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational @ Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection. Devoted to the Interests of the Citizens of Color. Pays $25,500 For Luther Letter. At an autograph sale in Lelpsle, Saxony, a letter written by Martin Luther to Emperor Charles V was bought by a Florence dealer for $25. 500. The purchase is said to have been made for J. P. lorgan. The letter was written in 1521 during the reformer's return journey from the Diet of Worms, and, describing the proceedings, defended his attitude. Dies In Pit of Hot Glass. George Dehaunt, a blower at the Fairmont Window Glass plant in Fairmont, W. Va., met a fearful death when he fell into a pit of molten glass. He was blowing a piece of glass, when suddenly it broke and he lost his balance, falling into the pit. In his fall he came in contact with a lot of broken glass that split his skull, tore out an eye, cut off an ear and almost severed one arm. --- GIRL SWAWHAS SAFETY PIN. Adeline Stevenson, the thirteen-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs John Stevenson, of Chester, Pa., awalowed an open safety pin while dressing. An X-ray examination failed to reveal the whereabouts of the pin --- House Passed Free List Bill At the conclusion of a ten-hour session the house passed the Democ ratic free list bill by a vote of 230 to 109, Twenty-four Republicans and Representatives Berger, the Socialist, voted for the measure Taft's Silver Wedding. Fifty members of the Cincinnati Commercial club are going to Washington to help the President and Mrs Taft celebrate their silver wedding anniversary on June 20. They will entertain the president at luncheon. GENERAL MARKETS PHILADEPHIA - FLOUR weak; winter clear, $25.50/30, city mills, $30.00/30, city mills RYE F.L.O.K firm, nt $4 40@4.50 per barrel. POULTRY Live firm; hons. 15@ 15%c; old rosters. 10%c; Dressed steady; choice fowls. 15c; old rosters. 11c. BUTTER steady, extra creamery, 23% per lb. PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)— CATTLE higher; choice, $1.15@6.35; prime, $1.90@6.16. SHEEP higher; prime wethers, $4.10 @4.25; culis and common, $2.50; spring limbs, $6.10; veal calves, $8.00, $7.68. FIGS higher; prime heavies; $6.20 $6.25, medium; $6.60 $6.65, heavy $6.65, medium; $6.65, light; $6.70 $6.55 $6.70; plugs; $6.65 $6.70; roughs; $6.50 $6.40. Mme McNairdee GIFTED CLAIRVOYANT Mme McNairdee GIFTED CLAIRVOYANT The gifted calvoyant, the great female wonder born with the double (caul) veil. She is one of the old ancient Southern Clair voyants of New Orleans. She is a living phrenologist and physiologist. She tells plainly what you are adapted for in life by reading your brain a mind. With a grasp of her hand she gives you a course of influence to enable you to overcome all bad luck. She has made thousands of homes happy. Read the fifth chapter, 9th verse of St Matthew: "Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God." She reunites the separated, makes peace where there is confusion. Your husband or wife or sweet heart will never forsake you, but will love you and marry you sooner if you will only heed this lady's consultation. Read what several ladies of your city say "Ye, we believe her a Godsend to us. My husband and I separated over a year ago, and just think, since I called on this lady, he returned to me. We are together and happy. This young lady says: The one I loved refused to call or write me. I called on this lady and we are now engaged. You can't afford to miss consulting this gifted lady. She is gifted to read characters. She challenges the world to excel her advice on love, losses, business, family and financial troubles. Reunites the separated, causes speedy marriages with one of your choice. No cards allowed in her place of business. No one's ill wishes filled; strictly a Christian lady, and tends entirely on her heavenly gift. If you are painful or ailing, think you have been withered, go to see her. She spent eight years in the jungles of Africa, and has traveled through 34 States doing good wherever she went. Read St John, 9th chapter, 33d verse "If this man is not of God, he could do nothing." "I, for me, as one in the midst. My heart ached from the cruel treatment of my husband and the way he would throw away his time and money until I consulted this wonderful lady. It will soon be a year. Through her he has been a loving husband, and today he presents me with a lovely lot on which he will build a home. Tongue can't praise her too highly. Thousands are flocking to see this wonderful lady daily. Her powerful consultation when headed has sent sunshine to the homes of all who called. 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CLIFTON FORGE, VA John N. Thomas, 30 E. Main. Harry Taylor. OKLAHOMA Jos A Jones, 906 S Robinson St. WINSTON, N C Lemuel Banks, 3267 12 St. DALLAS, TEXAS Gillmore & Baltimore. 717 Fairmount Street. CINCINNATI, O. H B Brooks, 510 Y. 6th St. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. M. G. Rutledge, Sr. 214 R. 8d St WASHINGTON, D. C. Thomas L. Leatherwood, 1516-14th Street. Columbia News Agency, 931-D St. N. W. SO. EMPORIA, VA. W. H. Weaver, Box 86. AGENTS FOR THE PLANET. W H White 501 W. Leigh Street. Peter Thompson. 422 E. Marshall Street R B Sampson, 523 N 2d St J J Nixon, 406 W Leigh St Wm H Scott, 221s E. Main St. Miss Ruth Cay, 1018 N 2d St Winton, 537 Brook Ave. J S M Singleton, 28th and 9 Mile Road Thomas Page, 815 State Street R. G. Booker, 619 N 2nd Street. A. Ferguson, 1500 N 29th St. Virgil Minlins, 532 N 2d Street James L. Stewart 426 Brook Ave. T D Brown, 914 E Cary Street A W Pace, $21 N 30th St David Page, Sr., $22 N 31st St. LONG BRANCH N J. Jesse W Shreaves, $& Liberty St. HACKENSACK, N. J. D H Hassell, R R Ave., Nr Clay St. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Charles Ludwig, P. O Box 1776. PITTSBURG, PA. Jos Evans, 2816 Webster Avo PHILADELPHIA, PA. W Schure, 1218 Pine Street E P. Mackens, 1116 Pine Street. James E Warwick, 254 S. 11th St. Mrs Lavinia Aldridge, 521 S. 12th Street. Young & Olds, 1606 South St. Rev. W Henri Robinson, 420 S 11th Street. NEWPORT NEWS, VA. Freddie Smith, 1358 29th St. O J. Harris, 1128 30th St. DANVILLE, VA. Harry A Clark, 117 Grangond St. George Thompson, 720 Monroe St. PROVIDENCE, R I. Douglas A. A., P A., 910 Westminster Street. NEW YORK, N. Y. E. A. Williams 200 W. 63d St J. E. Schmidt, 263 W. 35th St. Anthony Burrell, 131 W. 63d St John Dow, 75 E. 116th Street. LOUISVILLE, KY. Jesse E Brown, 1216 W. Green St. BALTIMORE, MD. Mrs. G H. Cartor, 502 W. Biddle St. BUFFALO, N. Y. A. Conley, 7 Petter Street. ST. LOUISE, MO. W. A. Price, 5 N. 14th St. HUNTINGTON, W. VA. Wm. C. Claybrook, 821 18th St. DRAKES BRANCH, VA. Clem Green. SATURDAY... MAY 13, 1911 * FROM BRAZIL Apologies to the Editor—Drastic Criticism of Dr. Washington. A Review of Past Conditions. Lives in the Republic Where Dark Men Control. Bahia, Bratlil April 4 1911 Mr John Mitchell Jr Editor and Publisher Richmond Planet Richmond U S A Dear Sir I see my error, sincerely regret my mistake and over sight, and admit to all concerned that it was a blunder unbecoming to me and for which I humbly beg your many pardons. This, though is my for what I said however but to whom it was said. And I further feel doubly rebelled by the sad mind you put upon my head in giving my homely remarks so much of your valuable attention. I say sir that your kinness has served me as a just objection. Now, if I have your pardon I shall proceed to thank you for the elaborate publication you gave me. And also to call attention again to other matters, which I consider out of reason DR WASHINGTON'S ADMISSIONS I note that in the Dr Washingt's statement he admits that he was close to Mr Roosevelt on the one of his committing his famous political crime against year and his race (Mr Washington's race) and that he tried to use his personal influence with him in persuasion to change his views on the subject. This very admission is incriminating to that gentleness in a population and verifies sentiments expressed about fifteen years ago when the Doctor was so anxiously perishing his people to keep out of politics. It was then discussed as to he impractical and a probable temptation to deceive the people, and to allow the poor Negro race. These talks were made or had by and among people neither of his race nor nation. But who could see farther into the matter than then even the Doctor could probably see. But even then he had his supporters. OTHER ERRORS I shall not proceed in quiet but shall point out some of your own errors as a people. Why have you been so loud in praising Colonel Theodore Roosevelt? Do you remember when you first began this song? And what then had Mr Roosevelt done for your race - do you remember? I will tell you, in plain words—nothing! Absolutely not Mg'. And even the editor of this journal cannot prove otherwise Roosevelt by certain people of ever more brains than himself, has been always marked as a dangerous character. And they go further, say that even in Washington geo political brains tried to curb the then young aspirant. If all you recall, he was an uninformed amateur. People like him are New York London and Paris are eagerly discussing the probabilities of the young cowboy police commissioner. And when he was in Washington everything possible was done to hold the young New Yorker in restraint without causing even rupture among Republicans. WERE WARNED AGAINST HIM Certain persons sound of whom have passed away were told to watch him. They tried to watch him, but he was not to be restrained without an open rupture. And that was not desirable after the country going through the great struggle under Cleveland's administration. War had been barely asserted with England* and the country had been at a financial stand-off* and the Republican party could, not afford trouble among themselves and Rome, sell it and took advantage of it and there among certain people gained for himself the name of a dangerous fighter. He wanted to have and he was determined to have. Now he was determined to control him, but not for the cowboy from New York*. He pulled wires he excited the people. (And who knows but that he had great aid from certain people who had great interest in the Central American products, principally sugar and tobacco. This remains for you to find out.) THE WAR CAME But you know the rest without my telling it. You had your war You went you saw, and you conquered In this war Roosevelt tried the trick of his life and fainted which was enough to discourage any ordnary man. But this was the cow boy from New York, full of dime novel prakhs. And he played them, and all the people (mostly) fell to them, and he brought fortune out of failure the most interesting thing of all his life which he did. Enough of this for the present. REFERENCES TO THE PAST. All this time Mr. Washington, from Tuskegee, Alabama, was both a conspicuous and suspicious character about Washington, D. C. It was in these days your Afro-American League was hatched; and it was not the work of Mr. Washington either! It was a pure political scheme to forever kill the Negro in his compiling against his treatment in the South. And you men hit like hungry 'hash. Remember, that I do not say here that Mr. Washington was guilty of wilfully misleading you to the full purpose which you have been. But he knew that it was to stop the North from saying to the South, "You mistreat the Negro." When the war was over and the world was singing praise Rosevelt was on his job. "It was me, who at the point of my sword and pistol, told those colored soldiers that I would kill every one of them if they came back without taking that fort." This he said, happened when he had been cut to pieces and had to fall back with his own men. Do you remember some such words from the Colonel during his campaign for vice presidency? Another office where he compelled the people to accept him. And he was only accepted after certain people had pointed it out as a political trap he had made for himself but some others did not. But it was proven that on his own birthday that he would be of the legal age for a President - every, very lucky for the now ex governor of New York and Colonel hero, erst while cow boy policemen. \ QUESTION OF CHANCE It had been in only one or two cases in your history where a vice had succeeded to the presidency and who had the foretight to know that McKinley was not going to live four more years? So on eps his fame as vice-candidate for the presidency. Now comes a new phase to his then very remarkable career. He had been the governor of color, man of the bride to B. Washington who came nearer having in his hand the balance of power as any one living man to elect a President on the Republican ticket and this was no sugar-coated pill either dealt out to the great political aspirant from New York. But he came from the Great City of Wonders, and no wonder was too great for him he swallowed the pill like a little man. Where can we identify this gentleman with Negroes before this? A POWERFUL FACTOR But Dr. Washington was then a very powerful man he was able to say that he could make a President and aside from this he was a very particular friend of the President McKinley and now than all he had the indigestent entourage of all the people white black and all phases of political opinion. Because he was the only Negro whom the South thought worthy because he was then taking and carrying out the commands of his Southern lotto. It remained for this great good man to Jap. the North and South and close up the great breach left by your Civil War. A wonderful work this would have been had everything gone smoothly. But there always are some hard heads who can never see an inch in front of their nees, and this was evident on both sides North and South. And all the killings and slaughtering the Negro voters the hard bonds could not see into the game. Then if we can remember that Mr. McKinley had tried to calm them by talking Southern matters to them. All this was too gross for those thick McKinley. They were not satisfied until McKinley had to show his hand plainly to them which he did if you remember On the memorable visit to the Tuskegee Institute after saying many pleas about things about monuments and Union etc. some smart gentleman in the crowd had to ask him in plain words. What about the trouble he tween the whites and blacks in North and South Carolina? (But I tell you he was named?) A DIPLOYATE REPLY The truth was I am not here to gather the question between the whites and blacks in North and South Carolina. But I have to try and write the whites a cover the land. And at this rework I believe that the wrath of glory was moved from his real and the good angel of peace left him to his fate. And it seems that even he left some misgivings for at the banquet given him that night they halled him as one of them. And when one of the festive tiffs of this kook took off his own badge and offered it to him he refused. But they insisted and we remember him as saving "gentlemen please do not do that. But finally I put it on with these words. I suppose I shall have to wear it." Bark men remember the judge of the City Whites, worn by the then chief of your Nation. Who had been the personal friend of this man for more than one year previous? Who was his assistant in his Western tour? Do you or can you remember? I almost fear to call his name in this place. I tell you friends it was no worse than the good Dr. B. W. Wiggley. And when I read veteran in the New York World I was very and need to see the fruit of his work, a swiftly felt to him. I have often wished that he might be as hardy as Frederick Douglas. But I am competed to doubt when I read where he was so badly beaten on March 19, 1911, mostly because he was a Negro, and further because he was at the door of white people. And the only charge they made against him was that he was looking into the keyhole. I wonder he has got his eyes opened or did that carpenter shut them completely up. Let us all weep for the greatest Negro educator of the world Weep, you children of Ham for your poor deluded, and disgraceed girl. But now we have wept and are still weeping both white and black. But there are no ways for you or us to find consolation? Let us see Who also should this have happened to? Who should die for the flock but the Shepherd? But let it never be with you as with the Jaws. Remember the Word of God and the Acts of David, and hurt not your Ruler. It was not his fault. He thought that he was losing right. Soy no unpleasant things to your chief. But soothe him; if possible, with the harp of the Shepherd! For God has not left you alone. Sing psalms to him while he is in his perplexity. Now, let us go on further. I say that it was your fault; why did you not do as did the prophet Nathaniel? The fault is not his own. It was the fault of his advisers. Who promised him liberty for him and his race? And I say to you that liberty is near at hand. Be faithful to both God and man. Dealing not to be questioned upon these matters but I ask that you search your records, I again ask knowledge myself your humble servant. Los Angeles (Cal.) News. Benefit > Success. The "SoJourner Truth Club" gave a concert at Elk's Hall on April 25th. The auditorium was crowded to its capacity when the curtain went up at 8:30 o'clock. The program was rendered by some of the best local talent in the city. The proceeds will go to the benefit of the Working Girls' Home. Great credit is due the committee for their nuttling efforts to make the concert a success. The directors were Mrs. L. M. Scott and Mrs. E. Saunders. COUNSEL TAKES A STAND At the last business meeting of the Afro American Counsel, hold on the 26th instant, it was learned that the said body had not pledged themselves to take part in the Union Lawyers' Strike and that they were not in sympathy with the movement. Thus it places Mr Whitley in a questionable position. Dr L. M Hagood former pastor of the Wesley M E Chapel, is one of the editors of the Pacific Coast Recorder "At present the Recorder is published in Los Angeles. We are glad to note the success of May's Ice Cream Parlor. For a refreshing drink and fancy fees of all kinds, give them a call at 747 San Pedro Street Mr M A has a new bachelor in the person of Mr John Baty of Pennsylvania, in which he is paying a visit to his old friend, D Lacey and it is hoped he will become a permanent resident of Pasadena California "congratulate you only" daughter, Mrs H Taylor, for the gift of an only grandchild a fine eight and boy Mr Taylor sees he is a master of the situation Los Angeles (Cal) News Los Angeles, Cal. May 7, 1911 Dr. L W Burry addressed a large adultee of the Y M C A Sunday afternoon at Y Lock P M April with all who had the pleasure of bathing but were greatly benefited. He was to be courageous in the distinction of his business for yourselves. Invest your money wisely buy homes and raise families and success awaits you. PROMOTED FOR GOOD SERVICE Mr Wm W Glenn who for eight years has faithfully and successfully filled a conspicuous place in working out some of the most difficult cases in the police service has recently been promoted from a patrolman to that of a sergeant. We have at present eight of Los Angeles' choice colored men acting in the service as plainclothes detectives and over this squadron Mr Glenn is sergeant. In spite of much unjust criticism he has kept himself abreast with the times and has quietly and gently performed his duty. Rev J Peek pastor of A M. E. Church will leave Los Angeles on the 25th to instate to the Foran Mission Board which convenes in New York City. MAY DAY FESTIVAL A SUCCESS In one out of about one thousand persons with used the annual May Day Festival at Elsas Hall May 1st, little girls and boys, ranging in are from two to fifteen years were a beautiful sight to see as they crowned and laid their due respects to their Queen. The I the folks were well trained and played their parts well and were made happy by the presentation of bouquets of flowers. In this Los Angeles owes to Mrs. George W. Warmer the prime master of the festivity much praises for her outing, efforts in making it a success. The result of a ten night revival held at Second High Church on Wall Street in the spelling over one boy by birth and two adults by better Rev. J. M. Motov is pas- FULTON PARK - - Seven Miles from Richmond, on the Seven Pines Car Line. The largest and best resort for colored people in Virginia Better than ever Season 1911 opens May 15th A most delightful place for a day's outing New attractions and amusements Large dancing pavilion Scenic railway Shooting gallery Swings Baseball field Minute show Rowing alley and various other amusements It only costs 5 cents car fare from Richmond to this park. Special offer to churches, Sunday- schools, societies, circles and clubs Excursions from other points in Virginia and North Carolina are welcome No admission fee to Park Arrange your dates now. Call or write MANAGER, 610 North Second Street. Richmond, Va ELLERSON (VA.) NEWS. Ellerson, Va., May 1, 1911. The missionary meeting held with the Pleasant Grove Church on the Fifth Sunday was quite a success. An excellent program was rended and much enjoyed by all present. Special mention is made of the very excellent singing by the V. W. W. Quaratte, and the addresses of Mr. Johnson b. V. W. W., and Miss M. A. Thora, who gave soul-stirring talks in mission work, both home and foreign. A free-will offering was raised for foreign missions. The meeting was one long to be remembered. Va. Bapt. State Convention Here. (Continued From Page Number ONE) Mary B. Hayne, Prof. B. H. Peyton Rev. A. Bloone and D. E. Williams Sunday Services—Revs. W. F. Graham, D. D., W. T. Anthony, D. W. Davis, D. D., E. D. Lewis. Enrollment—Dr. W. R. Brown Rev. W. B. Rold, G. M. A. Sull van. T. H White and Dr. H Powell MANY PROMINENT DIVINES During the afternoon session a number of prominent visitors were introduced and made short addresses. Among them were Rows, S. W. Bacotte, Kansas City Mo. statistical secretary of the National Baptist Convention; R. H. Bovd, D. D., of Nashville, Tenn., secretary National Baptist Publishing Board, L. G. Jordan, D. D., Louisville, Ky., secretary National Baptist Foreign Mission Board Alexander Gordon, D. D., Philadelphia, Ph. W. B Reed, Newport, R. H. Powell Brooklyn, N. Y., Granville Hint New York, W. W. Wines, Indianaapolis, Ind., Walter H Brooks, D. D. Washington, D. C. Heyron Johannes D. D., Baltimore Mt. J. F. Willis, Washington D. C. S. S. Morris, pastor A M E Church Richmond J. C Brown Flushing N. Y. Charles Stewart, the negro newspaper correspondent, and Wm T. Bland. Dr Brooks at the for member ship for the Ninth Street Baptist Church Washington and presented $10 for the work of the corporation. Rev R C Word of Stratton Nation of the leading young pastor in the state was presented to respond for the convention. His address was masterly. DR BROOKS JOINS Dr. Brooks said that he came to the convention it's time in a different light. He did not come as a visitor but seeking membership. His whole life was for the development and uplift of his people. Years ago the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church in Washington had held membership in an associate in Pennsylvania last year he applied for a letter of dismission in order to join this convention, but was refused because the members said it would look like a fire and they did not care to be he. In some talk they decided if they were on account of geographical that it would be granted, hence he presented himself for membership, and his church had sent along one hundred dollars for the work. THE PRESIDENT - ADDRESS The feature of the morning session was the annual address by Dr. Bowling. He did not come with a stereotyped prepared address, but discussed the work from a standpoint of careful study and direct interest and in this way was prepared to give the proper information and inspiration. He took up the work step by step touching every phase of it. He dwell largely on the Virginia Seminary and college. He spoke in terms of praise of the Negro Baptist church and forewrote those who desired that the Negro Baptist should do something and went to Lynchburg, purchased the property and planted the school. He was proud that the sons of those men were taking the work up and carrying it on, erecting a monument to Negro manhood. MUST DO FOR HUMSELD Dr Bowling thought the Negro should do for himself and not sit around and complain. He pointed out the many opportunities the race had for development. No time for conti- pants and waitings because they accomplish nothing but push, in disarray honesty and reliability." (concluding Dr Bowling told of the wonderful revival in Norfolk how it was conducted and how men and women were captured for Christ. In his description he waved eloquent and brought forth many shouts of "menen" Motion passed by which the rule was suspended, and Dr Bowling elected president for another year. He alluded to all the hardships H. D. Bell (R. Tyrrell D. L. Lunbury W. W. Gaines, Suffolk J. H. Smith, Concord, vice- presidents C. E. Miller Salein, recording secretary J. G. St. Clair Drake statistical secretary R. C. Woods J. B. Stanton, corresponding secretary Dreon A. Humbles, Lynchburg treasurer AN APPEAL FOR AFRICA There was much interest in the off-territory session. A number of visitors were introduced. The opening was conducted by Reeva E. Tarte. B Tyrell and S A. Mosca Rev L. G. Jordan D. D., delivered an address, in which he made an appeal for Africa. As he described the conditions in Africa he brought tears from my eyes and as soon as he had concluded there were many who gave liberally for missionary purposes. The following resolution was introduced by Rev. W. B. Reed, of Newport, R. G., and passed without debate. Whoreas, the bill as passed through the House of Representatives, calling for direct vote of United States Senators, if it passes through the House of Representatives, calling for direct vote of United States Senators, if it passed through the Senate unchanged, and adopts by the people of the United States, alludingly affect the political rights of more than ten million of the country's most loyal and peaceful citizens; Whereas, it would dangerously impede our progress and influence in every way; and Whereas, it would be giving Federal endorsement to the violations of the war amendments; therefore, be it Resolved, That we, the members of the Virginia, Baptist State-Convocation, with delegates from the District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania New York and Rhode Island, unquivocally endorse the Butherland amendment, leaving the Federal government with power of supervision. Lone Colored Resident Rises By Energy and Thrift. New York, May 9....The only new resident of Hillside, the smallest incorporated village in New York State, 20 miles from Manhattan up the Harlem Valley, is its registrar of vital statistics. He is also a member of the board of health, secretary of the village improvement society, and village trustee. He is F. O. Stratton, in business in, New York. He was born in Virginia of poor parents, and got his education studying at home nights while working to support his mother. Some persons may have wondered at first whether it was wise to select a negro for so many places of responsibility, but now the citizens are sure they did well in making this energetic negro in Boothbah of the city. In 2002 was elected a trustee for three years, so we found that for years the school children had to drink water from a spring so near a brook that, with heavy rains the spring was overflowed. The brook be found, was practically a sewer for the dwellers in the valley above. He called a meeting of the board of health immediately to make provision for pure drinking water for the children. The townsfolk are grateful to him for the discovery HIS NAME ARTISTIC. Stratton his his lbed at HIllside only a few years His bungalow call of Sunset is on the top of Sunset Hill and is one of the most artistic homes in the country, though the cost of the building and furnishing was not great It is a true bungalow one story high, with wide sun terrasas, and cool pretty rooms furnished in harmonious colors The parlor is full of books and art objects This hard working modest negro who diesums any praise for the success of his career has views on the negro problem that vary from those of others of his race It is not worse for the negro to colonize "especially in the North," he should be the young colored man families away from the cities and into the country Each should go quietly into some small community, if possible, where there are no other negroes gr only a few at least, and then by living a clean thrifty life and no quirting property, working hard at some occupation that he is fitted to do win the respect of his white neighbors WHITE MAN'S EXAMPLE A BOON. "The negro is always Tattered by living among but not necessarily in the same social set with white people and neither he nor the white man is bettered by the establishment of negro colonies. The best interests of the negro are advanced by the constant example of the white people's thrift and manner of living and not by the example of other negroes in large colonies. "It is not a special 'mark of distinction' that my neighbors, all white have made me an officer of their village. But I would be less than human if I did not appreciate their kindness. I am glad however, if the establishing of my little home shows in any way what a negro may do. "I came to the country to live because I wanted to remove my children from the unfavorable conditions of crowded tenement life and the violent lilers of my race." SHEKS TO BE GOOD CITIZEN "I came here with the idea of not being a discord in the social and political life of the new community, intending to be a good citizen doing all that a good citizen should to advance the best interests of the community supporting always the best man for office, regardless of politics. That they have elected me to office is perhaps due to the fact that others have been too busy to do the work. That I accepted was because I desired to be of service to my neighbors and repay them for the courtesies they have shown me. The improvement association is composed of practically the whole body of taxpayers. The settlement of the negro question "Stratton wail on" "lies in the colored men and women living their lives as negroes, being parties working hard at useful occupations that they are fitted for, always being unassuming and honest, respecting themselves and trying to bring their children up to be useful Christian men and women." --- Wants To Find His Sister. I have a sister living in the United States, just where I cannot say She married a man by the name of Henry Wright, from the South (Her name is Anna Z. Wright. During 1876 she lived on twenty-fourth street, between Seventh and Eighth avenue, New York city; the member of Rav. Spoolman's Church, of New York city. Any information in regard to her whereabouts would be very satisfactory to her brother. WM J. KELLEY, 26 Bruce Street, Port Jervis, N. Y. Base Ball. Fulton Park. MONDAY, MAY 15. RICHMOND ATHLETICS ROCK HILL GIANTS. Game called at 4:30 P. M. This is the first of the series of games to be played at this park this season. BOTH TEAMS ARE STRONG. The Rock Hill team will challenge any colored team in the State. Admission to game, 5 cents. Manager, -510 N. Second Street, Richmond, Va. (Richmond, Va., Evening Journal, May 6 1911) Enforced segregation under the Vonderlohr ordinance, recently passed by the City Council and approved by the Mayor, is contrary to the spirit of the Constitution of the United States and can be revoked under two decisions of the United States Supreme Court, according to Attorney Alfred E. Cohen, who has been retained to resist the enforcement of the ordinance and who called at the office of City Clerk August this morning to notify him to that effect. Even before the passage of the ordinance Clerk August has been a kind of storm centering call upon him to express their opinion of it—and to ask if in some way its provisions could not be owed. Mr. August has replied in every instance that the Vonderlohr ordinance had been enacted into law and would have to be obeyed to the letter until reopened. Attorney Cohen this morning cited two suits which had resulted from an attempt to enforce a "junk dealers" ordinance in a not distant city. The ordinance provided that junk dealers could not move into certain sections of the city, but those living there when the ordinance was enacted were allowed to retain their residences in the otherwise forbidden sections. On the ground of discrimination the Supreme Court declared the ordinance unconstitutional, and Mr. Cohen declares that the same argument can be used against the Vonderlohr ordinance of this city. Says He Has Found Weak Spot In Law. (Richmond Va., News Leader, May 6, 1911) While new protests against the operation of the Vonderlehr domiciliary segregation ordinance have been registered at the City Hall this week, none of the complaining property owners have evinced an inclination to bear the cost of making a test of the ordinance In the courts. The latest complaint is a white man who desires to move into a negro neighborhood. Lawyer Alfred C Eohen was at the City Hall today looking into the matter for his client. Mr. Cohen said that he was confident that the ordinance would not stand the test of the United States Supreme Court SUFFICIENT TO ANNEL "The clause in the ordinance known to lawyers as the "equality clause" he said, "is sufficient to annul the Vonderleih court Two cases that have been decided by the United States Supreme Court are precedents upon which I expect to base my contention as to the conflict of this ordinance with the Constitution of the United States. One of these cases was that of a junk dealer. An ordinance was passed by the council of the city in which he lived and did business. It prohibited junk dealers from moving into a specified district of the city, but permitted junk dealers already established in that district to remain. The Supreme Court decided that the ordinance was not sound and valid because it did not give equal rights to all the junk dealers. The Vonderleih ordinance has the same weak spot in that caused the junk dealers' law to fall. City Attorney Pollard did not know of this case when he gave his opinion on the ordinance as adopted." Mr Cohen obtained a copy of the ordinance from City Clerk Ben T August but did not indicate that he would take any immure steps in a fight to upset the domiciliary segregation on law. Y. M. C. A. NOTES. The Y M C A Literary Society rendered a special program last Friday evening and the officers of the Literary were installed. Mr C B Gaston the president, is making a strong appeal to the men for suc- cess. The class for the explanation on the Sunday school lesson was well attended last Saturday. Last Sunday was straight day's work. Everybody was busy. The worker's meeting was a live number at 9:30 A.M. The committee for the City Home work was hard at work at 10:30 A.M. and the results were many. One open air meeting was conducted with the regular indoor meeting. 10.20 the Jail Committee, by hard work, won 25 prisoners for Christ. General Secretary S. O. Burrell spoke 40 the women of the penitentiary at 10 A. M. Ten accepted 'Jesus Christ. The Boys' meeting was a good one at the building at 4 P. M. At 3:30 P. M., at the Fifth-Street Juntch庙, about 1,100 men gathered to hear Hon. Wm. Hodges Mann, Governor of Virginia. Dr. W. F. Graham, pastor of the church, nably introduced the speaker. Rov. R. Bocchor Taylor read the Scriptures. Mr. John S. Powell, president of the Y. M. C. A., offered prayer. As usual, Cohnel Thomas M. Crump-sang from his soul. The Governor made the plan of salvation so plain that every man was helped. Men were present who did not know Christ, and their hearts were touched. The object of the meeting was to help men, and all who were present can certainly say that the Governor knows how to lead the other man to Christ. Watch for his adress. Today at 5 P. M. the Y. M. C. A. building the class for the Sunday-school work will meet. Prof. J. W. Barce will be glad to meet every member. Comel Men, be on time Sunday ready for hard work—and bring the other man. THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINNY, OUR CURLY, HAIR, USE MUFFS STURBON, HARSH HAIR SOPTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY EASY TO COME AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH, WILL PENNIT, WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, MELING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY, BEST PONDA ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITching OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25 AND 50 BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY YOU WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED BOTTLE 25L LARGE SIZED BOTTLE 50L THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 216 LAKE S. DEPT. 10F CHICAGO, IL. AGENTS WANTED. Garden Lots For colored people are twenty minutes from Elba Station, and the reception fare is 12 cents. Inspect property now and buy at your leisure. The Tent Opposite the station is the resting place for colored people who are inspecting Glen Allen garden lots. A good plan is to take a leisurely stroll over the grounds without a guide. TAG DAY. League Hospital Tag Day Saturday, May 13, 1911 Don't forget to wear the cross and you will get the crown. 9 30 A. M. at the building, workers' meeting. 4 P. M at the Y. M. C. A. a special meeting for boys, Mothers, send your boys. 3 30 P. M at the True Reformers' Hall a great meeting for men The new man in town. Rev J. W. Waters, of West Virginia, pastor of the Leigh-Street Methodist Church, Richmond, Va. will address the men Subject "Men Needed." Special music in the Y. M. C. A chorus, under the direction of Prof E T Pollard. Be a committee for this meeting and bring the other man. Be on time Punched By Conductor, Jones Gets 8190 Damages. (Richmond, Va., News Leader, May 6, 1911) The jury trying the case of Frank P. Jones against the Virginia Railway and Power Co. in the city circuit court, today returned a verdict for the plaintiff, awarding him $300 damages. Jones sued to recover $2,500 damages on account of alleged assault and battery at the hands of a trolley car conductor. He said he boarded the car and gave the collapsed quarter. Receiving five nickels in change he dropped one into the box. Then he declined to accept one of the nickels, saying that it was not good. In the argument that ensued, Jones was struck by the conductor. Counsel for the railway moved to set aside the verdict. The motion was overruled, but the court allowed the defendant time to prepare bills of exceptions. COCK-A-DOODLE. DO: The first moonlight down the James, May 16, 1811, for bonhuit of League, Hospital. Good music and dancing. Boat leaves Old Dominion Wharf at 8 P. M. sharp. Tickets, 50. Boat leaves Old Dominion Hotel, Mt. Sallie Linden, Glacier. 612 North Second street, League Hospital and James H. Frysager. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Having been appointed executor of the estate of the late Nicholas N. Norman, notice is hereby given to all persons who have claims against his estate to present the same to me for payment, at No. 412. North Third. District. The estate also the estate anything will also, make payment to me at the same address. THORNTON R. SCOTT. Executor THE RICHMOND PLANET is the loading weekly, journal in the State. Send In your subscription today. It costs only $1.50 Per Year in advance.