Richmond Planet
Saturday, September 7, 1912
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
LEIMIDID PIANELEI
EDITOR MITCHELL IN OHIO.
Guest of the Ohio-Columbus Centennial Commission. Speaks at Central Park. Interesting Recital.
Scenes Along the Route. Meets Friends and Racial Discriminations. Amusing Happenings in Recorder Johnson's Office.
VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER 41.
EDITOR M
Guest of the O
Commission
Park..
Scenes Along the
Racial Discrimin
ings in Reco
I left Richmond Monday night at 11 o'clock via C. and O. R. R. and after bidding R. C. Mitchell good-bye at the station, it was not long before I was in the land of dreams. Awakened by the movement of the train, it was not long before I again relapsed into that state where the troubles of this world knew me no more. It was 6:30 Tuesday morning when I awoke. I felt somewhat unwell and was unable to do justice to the expensive breakfast which I had ordered on the dining car. Under the new system, each railroad furnishes its own dining car and the Pullman people no longer operate this hotel arrangement on the C. and O. R. R.
MET AT CHARLESTON, W. VA
The porters and waiters were not long in finding out just who I was and all of the courtesies which could be extended to me were forthcoming. Reaching Charleston, West Virginia at noon, State Librarian J. C. Gilmer met me at the train accompanied by Attorney Phil Waters. He had seen the announcement in the last issue of The PLANET and the taxicab was in waiting to convey me to the station of the K and M. R. R. He conveyed me to the Pythian Building and I was soon safely inside of the well furnished drug store and was being introduced to the proprietor. It may be well to state that Mr. Gilmer is the colored leader who was so highly commended at the National Progressive Convention which met at Chicago.
THE LATE REV. DR. WILLIAMS HOME.
Our party was soon at the station and a few moments later, the train left for Columbus. I waived an adlen to our entertainers. I was then on my way to Columbus. When the conductor came around, he informed me that I would change cars at Gallipolis, Ohio. This made me transfer to another parlor car. It caused me to spend an hour in Gallipolis. Here I found that I was in the city or town from which the late Rev. Dr. Henry Williams of the Giffield Baptist Church of Petersburg, Va., originally halted and the spot or location of the old homestead was pointed out. When I made myself known to the colored barber there, it was not long before the news had spread over the town that I was in the city. The porter whom I had left was Mr. J. E. Watts of Chicago..
A CAMP MEETING THERE.
Many had heard of me and it was not long before I felt myself at home I met Mr. J. H. Holmes, Mr. W. A. Cousins, Sir William L. Gee and Mr. Thomas H. Hill. I visited the post office there and met Sir Gee and others. This locality is a strong Roosevelt district. Attorney James H. Hayes, formerly of Richmond had made campaign speeches there.
Rev. Turner, the A. M. E. divine had a large tent stretched and under this, he was conducting a camp meeting for sinners. He announced by a flaming sign that services would be held at 3 P. M. each afternoon. There were just ten persons there including the pastor as I passed, but they were going on with the religious exercises, just as though there had been five hundred. The neigh born said that the attendance at the night meetings was large.
FLOODS DID MUCH DAMAGE.
This is a strong Roosevelt section and most of the colored people accepted the advice of the white people and leaned towards the Bull Moose Party. There were home though who opposed the Party and they spoke to me in whispers. I was seen on the Hocking Valley train for Columbus. I had telegraphed to Columbus notifying friends there of the change in my arrangements. Mr. Olmer had told me about the news on the K. and M. line, which
had put that road out of commission for several days. It was possible to go through but all the trains were running behind time. I had eaten luncheon at a restaurant for colored people at Gallipolin, but decided to try a supper at the station restaurant.
IN A WHITE RAILROAD RESTAURANT.
The train stopped 20 minutes for this purpose. I entered the dining room. White females served the passengers and I was assigned to a table all to myself, but did not lack for attention. Few passengers had come to luncheon. It was a good meal and I enjoyed it. The train was late getting into Columbus. My telegram had not been delivered. Col. W. H. Ferguson of the local committee Mr. William A. Burk and Mr. John C. Logan met me at the train. I was soon in a carriage enroute to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alexander's palatial residence at 186 Hamilton Avenue. The streets were crowded. Several efforts to get through met with failure for the reason that the parade was passing. It was a gorgeous affair.
GREAT CELEBRATION AT COLUMBUS.
It was the celebration of the hundredth anniversary of the founding of the city of Columbus and was known as the Ohio-Columbus Centennial. Gorgeous floats of every description were to be seen and thousands of dollars had been expended. The streets were jammed and packed with a mass of surging humanity and these crowds came from every section of Ohio. It took from two to three hours to pass a given point. I found our party halted and finally all of us got out of the carriage and looked at the procession. There was nothing else to do. When it had passed, we drove to the residence and then after a talk lasting over an hour, I did all adieu and was soon again in the land of dreams.
THE PARADE AND THE VISITORS
Morning came and with it, the added responsibilities. The parade in which I was to figure took place at 10 p'clock. Rev. Edward L. Gillam. Grand Chancellor of Ohio, who had been selected as Chairman of the local committee of arrangements for Fraternal Day came in the morning and I found him to be as sociable and joyful as they come. He made me welcome and later, the automobile came, and in company with District Grand. Master J. J. Lee of the Odd Fellows. I was soon on the way to the place of assembling for the morning's parade. The colored chauffeur seemed to be in good spirits.
A BALKY AUTOMOBILE
The Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias made a fine showing under the command of Gen. C. C. Caldwell. The Odd Fellows also made a most creditable display, while the colored company of the National Guard was approval by their military bearing. After much delay the procession moved off. I saw them pass and then our furn came.
Don't tell me about automobiles. The machine in which we rode would go backwards but it would not go forward. We ford ourselves back into the National Guard. "Give it a little push." pleaded the chauffeur with a militiaman. He compiled with the request and slowly, the machine moved off. But the line was moving slowly and we had to stop again.
CHAIRMAN GILLIAM HAD FAITH.
When it came time to move off, the automobile refused to respond and we had the mortification of seeing the last man pass by while the chauffeur with his coat off, worked frantically on the motor. I mildly suggested that we get out and walk and at least have an op-
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1912.
portunity to see the procession ourselves. Chairman Gilliam was not ready to agree to this and insisted upon "sitting tight" while the chauffeur declared that he would catch up. He succeeded at the last moment and, we whirled away and secured the position assigned to us. Then came moments of agony. The automobile was all right so long as it kept going, but when it stopped, then came the trouble. Chairman Gilliam was constantly telling the chauffeur, "Don't let her stop!"
A PECULIAR PREDICAMENT.
Sometimes, we barely missed the band in front in our effort to keep going.
Thousands of people had thronged the streets and it was estimated that ten thousand were in line. All three divisions were composed of white organizations and the fourth division was composed of the colored. The entire length of the line of march had been covered and the return trip had begun when the lowering clouds poured down torrents of rain. Our automobile top was hastily adjusted and a few moments later we were being whirled to Mr. Alexander's residence but little worse for our experience.
Mr. Harry Alexander and his accomplished madame occupy one of the best-furnished mansions in Columbus. It is tastily built of brick along modern lines and is finished in hard wood, the walls being of rough cast. It is heated by both hot water and natural gas being electrically lighted. In the attic, is a billiard room.
MR. ALEXANDER'S RESIDENCE
Mr Harry Alexander is a stenographer of note and his wife is a skilled hair artist. She has palatial quarters on a prominent business street where she is blessed with a large patronage, numbering some of the wealthiest white families in Columbus.
I had been scheduled to speak at Franklin Park, but Chairman Gilham was of the opinion that it would be called off. Col. W. H. Ferguson was to return and let us know. He returned shortly after 2 o'clock with a carriage and it was with a feeling of relief that all of us entered it. We would reach the Park. The clouds lifted and when we reached Franklin Park, there were but few signs of the heavy downpour of rain, which had drenched the city just an hour of two before. When we reached there, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney W. E. King was there. Impatient over the delay.
AN IMPATIENT ATTORNEY
"The judge has excused me for only 45 minutes," he said, "and my time is about out. I must return." Mr. King enjoys the unique distinction of being Assistant Prosecuting Attorney. He was prevailed upon to stay and introduce Chairman E. L. Gilliam, who is a power in this section. Then followed the speech-making, the prize drills. I met Mr. W. L. Anderson of Cincinnati, O. He visited Dayton before his return home.
Speaking over, another rain set in and we were soon enroute again to Mr. Alexander's residence, where the party enjoyed themselves until the time, for the reception to the speakers, of which I was one. As was there, the electrical storm with wind and rain raged on the outside and at one time the lights went out.
AN ELECTRICAL STORM
Mrs. Alexander was equal to the emergency and soon had candle burning. An hour later, the carriage came and we left for Linden Hall where a merry crowd had gathered and where sweet music was heard until late in the night. No
(Continued on Page Number)
Who is all right? Who is all right?
To Washington September 14, 1812
FARMVILLE (VA) NEWS.
Farmville, Va., September 2, 1912
—Notwithstanding the hot weather a large congregation turned out Sunday morning to hear Rev. G. H. Simms, D. D. of New York City Revs. C. H. McDaniel, Booker, Granville Hunt, and R. K. McWood son were on the rostrum. Dr. Simms filled the pulpit at both services. This man has accomplished more among our people in New York City than any other man. He is indeed a great man.
At 3 o'clock Dr. Granville Hunt and A. Humbles spoke on the Reformers. The people seemed to be glad to know that the order is back again and destined to reach the financial standing it once had. Rev. Adams after two weeks from home attending the State S. S. Convention at Alexandria, Va. and the Lott Carey Foreign Mission Convention convened at Portsmouth, Va. These conventions were the most successful in their history. The Lott Carey placed on the table $3,555.00, pledged $2,250.06 to be paid in by the first of January, 1913 to erect a chapel in Africa.
Rev. Thomas E. Bowling, 1421
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COL JOHN S. HARWOOD.
There are few Southern white men Washington and he is as popular among all classes as is to visit her once a year. Col. John S. Harwood, senior member to her a testimonial her of the firm of Harwood Brothers for her, and at present a member of the leg Col. Harwood is a fixture of Virginia. He had the and is a never fall unique distinction recently of having good humor. He is the position of Mayor of the city and has the faculty of Richmond tendered to him by a friends. We are majority of both branches of the portrait to the read City Council here and he declined and South as a type the honor.
He is of the higher type of Virginia and comes as a descendant of the old chivalric type of the Virginia gentleman which is rapidly passing away.
RECENTLY IN
THE BLACK MAMMY.
He was seen at one time on his way to Washington and asked as to his mission said that he was going to see his Mammy. His old colored nurse was now living in
LUCAS—KINNEY.
Rev. W. J. Lucas, A. B., pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist Church of Chesterfield county, Va. and Miss Blanche M. Kinney, for several years a teacher in the public schools of Henrico county, will be married on the morning of September 19, 1912 at eight o'clock. The ceremony will be performed at 1106 State Street, Richmond, Va. Friends are invited No cards.
Lost Money Found.
The person who dropped a bill of paper money in Mr. Bear's store. 216 East Broad St. one Sunday morning about three weeks ago can get the same by calling and paying for this adv.
W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va. came to our town last week and was taken very ill and is still confined to bed. Odd Fellows and K. of Pa. must do their duty.
Mr. Hewitt Coleman of Richmond Va. enroute to home, stopped over and spent Sunday with us.
Miss Alberta Bowling has been quite ill but is now convalescing.
Mrs. Rosa Brown of Virginia St. is still confined to her home.
Dr. Frisby of N. Y. City called to see Rev. Adams and gave him a cordial invitation to visit him.
Rev. Adams and Deacon P. H. Hilton left to attend the Hassadiah Association at Phoenix, Va.
Rev. P. M. Robinson left for Greenboro, N. C. to conduct a meeting.
— Did you hear about it? About what? Going to. Washington September 16. 1912.
—Wait, John. Wait for what?
For me. I'm going to. Washington
September 16, 1912.
1
Washington and he made it a rule to visit her once a year and deliver to her a testimonial of his affection for her.
Col. Harwood is of a joyful type and is a never falling source of good humor. He is tender hearted and has the faculty of making friends. We are presenting his portrait to the readers both North and South as a type of Southerner which colored men throughout the country can afford to trust, regardless of their party affiliations and under any and all circumstances.
RECENTLY INDISPOSED
Col. Harwood's recent illness was a source of anxiety to his host of friends and this alliment has been specified as one of the reasons why he did not accept the honor, which was so graciously tendered to him.
All aboard, for Washington,
September 16, 1912.
Rub-My-Tism will cure you.
Dr. W. F. Graham's Great Work.
Dr. W. F. Graham, pastor of the Holy Trinity Baptist Church of Philadelphia, Pa. has just closed his first years work as pastor of that great church. The church is in a most prosperous condition. 404 members were added to the church in the twelve months and the sum of $8137.00 raised during the year. This is indeed a great record, but only indicative of the worth and great work of the Doctor. God has certainly blessed him and we rejoice with him.
PERSONALS AND BRIEFES.
We met Funeral Director, Roberts of Los Angeles, Cal., at Column bus, O. and Judge W. R. Morris of Minneapolis at Dayton, O. The latter had recently wired his resignation as member of the American Bar Association, then in session at Milwaukee.
We return thanks to the Astoria Beneficial Club for an invitation to visit Chafemont. Via upon the occasion of their picnic and we are glad to note that it was a success.
Miss M. L. Chiles visited her sister, Mrs. Charles H. Gibson at Tuskegee Institute, Alabama. Inst week and had a fine time there.
Miss Pearl R. Rowe has returned from an extended Northern tour.
Miss M. Susie Dabney has returned from a pleasant trip to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore. At lantic City and other points North.
Mrs. J. Anderson Taylor of Washington, D. C. is the guest of Mrs. Lewis, 506 Buchanan St. She will be pleased to see her many friends.
Mrs. P. M. B. Hodge of Danville, Va. after attending the Stake Sunday School Convention at Alex andrla, Va. passed through the city enroute to Philadelphia, Pa., New York City and Atlantic City, N. J.
Mr. N. B. Blount of Raleigh, N. C. was here a few days last week.
Mrs. R. Eleanora Wesley is quite sick at her residence, 707 E. Franklin St.
Mr. and Mrs. Julina W. Ross of Washington, D. C. called on us. They are the guests of Miss Katie Robinson.
Miss Laura Coles of McKeesport Pa. is in the city the guest of the Misses Yancey, 217 East Clay St.
Mrs. Lucy Peters of Petersburg Va. and Mrs. Ata Jones of Stony Creek, Va. were in the city this week.
Mrs. Rachel Harris of the Hermitage Club will leave Saturday, September 10 to visit her husband's sister, Mrs. Rovana Cohy, of Cumberland Co., Va.
Lawyer William R. Blackwell of Washington, D. C. arrived in the city last Tuesday evening. He is the guest of his mother, Mrs. Charlotte Blackwell in East 12th Street Southside.
Mrs. Alvah Nelson Johnson and son of Hartford, Conn. are visiting the Southside the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nelson.
Miss M. E. Johnson and Master Reginald W. Bell have returned from a very delightful visit to friends and relatives in Mulberry Island. They were recently entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Roano and others.
We return thanks to Dr. Albert A. Tennant, Secretary of the Medical Society of the National Medical Association for a copy of the Sorryvenir Program of the Association.
The delegation from this city, under the management of Dr. A. Ferguson attended in a palatial Pullman specially chartered. The meeting was a success, although the attendance was not as large as usual. The treatment at Tuskegee Institute where the sessions were held was royal.
Messrs. John Berry, William and John Brown, Charles Robinson and John R. Cogbill of South Richmond, were royally entertained last Sunday by Mr. Thomas Brown at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ke Trewitt in Norfolk, Va. An enjoyable automobile ride through the streets of the "City by the Sea" was highly appreciated by the visitors.
Lleut. Isaac Bray is confined to bed in Peake, Va. We hope him speedy recovery.
Marriage Announcement.
Mrs. Annie Lomax Mickins requests the honor of your presence at the marriage of her sister, Rosa Belle to Mr. Spencer Harper on Wednesday evening, September 18, 1912 at nine o'clock, 929 West Leigh St. Friends are invited. No cards.
Reception September 25th, from eight to ten.
Miss Mamie Hairston Dice in New York.
Miss Mamie Hairston of Danville, Va. sister of Mrs. S. J. Holbrook
HARVARD COLLEGE ENGLAND
SEP O 1912
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
died in New York City last Monday after a short illness. Miss Hairston had attended the State Sunday School Convention at Alexandria Va. and left there to visit her sister in New York City. Her sudden death was quite a shock to her many friends.
The American Bankers Association.
Last Excursion This Season To
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Everybody talking! About what! Going to Washington! With whom? The Richmond Operatic Association and Usher Board of First Baptist Church. When? Monday morning September 16, 1912 at 9:30 A. M. vie R. F. and P. R. R., giving two days in Capital City.
Train will stop at all way stations going and returning and will give excursionists full time to visit points of interest in Washington and see one of the first depots in the United States and to see the great status of Christopher Columbus recently unveiled, also an opportunity to see the great Congressional Library and the great Zoological Garden.
The Richmond Operatic and Literary Association will deliver their Grand Opera in the Metropolitan Baptist Church, Monday night, September 16, 1912 of which the Rev. Dr. Norman is pastor.
Special accommodations for white people.
Plenty of cars and no crowding We go rain or shine. Refreshments will be sold on train at city prices. For tickets and information inquire at the Mechanics' Savings Bank. T. H. Wyatt.
Round Trip Farms—Richmond to Washington, $2.75; Richmond to Fredericksburg, $1.25; Ashland to Washington, $2.25; Milford to Washington, $1.75; Fredericksburg to Washington, $1.50.
Train leaves Bowe and Marshall Streets Monday morning at 9:30. Returning, leaves Washington Tuesday Night, September 17th at 11:20 o'clock.
Guest at Hotel Dale
The following is the list of guest at the Hotel Dale Spring week of August 31, 1912.
Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs. F. L.
S. Jackson, Mr. Jann. R. Brown
and Shaughen, Mrs. Emma Brown.
Mr. Oliver H. Hawkings L. A Hay
Lim. Mrs. J. B. Johnson, Mr.
Mrs. Charles Edwards, Mrs. George
H. Porter, Mrs. Hattie Howard.
Mr. George H. Briggs, Rev. L. E.
Smith, D. D. Dr. and Mrs. H. M.
Minton, Mrs. H. L. Whisenana, Mr.
George R. Mitchell, Mr. George
Caldwell, Mr. Norman L. Johnson,
Mrs. Holland and son, Eucene, and
daughters, Misser Helene and Edith
Holland, Mr. Dat Williams and wife
Mr. P. Smith Miss Mary Harris,
Mr. William Rash, Ardmore, Pa.
Mrs. W. H. Stanton and little
son, and daughter Wendell and
Janie Stanton, Mr. and Mrs. J.
H. Miller, Mrs. L. M. Miller, Mrs.
Emory F. Wright, Mrs. M. Showell,
Chester, Pa.; Mrs. A. E. Wormley
Mr. and Mrs. J. Maxwell, Washington,
D. C.; Rev. A. L. Gains,
Mrs. Thomas R. Smith, Miss Laurie
Wilson, Baltimore, Md.
New York City—The Hon. W. E.
Burghardt Dullois of The Crisis is
the honored guest at Hotel Dale;
Mr. and Mrs. Archer Branche, Mr.
Edward Bristol, Mr. John A Allen,
Mrs. James Rogan
Mrs. Margaret Avery, Bloomington, N. J. Mrs. A. W. Claphan, Catden, N. J.: Misa Rose Lee, Newark, N. J.: Rev. W. R. Gullion, Princeton, N. J.: Mrs. E. Gullford Whiting, Boston, Mass.: H. Cathay Wilmington, Del.
Everybody's goin' Goin where? To Washington. When September 16, 1912.
A Precocious Child.
Little Miss Anna Bertha McPher son of Newport News, Va. was in the city this week. She was accompanied by Mrs. Lizzie McPhergon This little girl was adopted by Mrs. McPherson after she had been aban doned by her mother. She is only 3 years of age and by her songs supports the other two children. She sang several selections at the Planet office.
---
"Perhaps he would; quite likely he would, and he would stay here himself." Then suddenly, "You may send the Nadia back to Copah on one condition—that you go with it."
At first he thought it was a deliberate insult, the cruelest indignity she had ever put upon him. Knowing his weakness, she was good natured enough or solicita enough to try to get him out of harm's way. Then the steadfast look in her eyes made him uncertain.
"It I thought you could say that realizing what it means"—he began, and then he looked away.
"Well!" she prompted, and the hand slipped from his shoulder.
His eyes were coming back to her. "If I thought you meant that," he repeated, "if I believed that you could displease me so utterly as to think for a moment that I would deliberately turn my back upon my responsibilities here, go away and hunt safety for myself, leaving the men who have stood by me to whatever!"—
"You are making it a matter of duty." she interrupted quite gravely "I suppose that is right and proper But isn't your first duty to yourself and to those who?"— She paused and then went on in the same steady tone: "I have been hearing some things today—some of the things you said I would hear. You are well hated in the Red desert. Howard—hated so, mercifully that this quarrel with your men will be almost a personal one. They will kill you if you stay here and let them do it."
"Quite possibly."
"Howard, do you tell me you can stay here and face all this without flinching?"
"Oh, no; I didn't say that!"
"But you are facing it."
He smiled.
"As I told you yesterday, that is one of the things for which I draw my salary. There is another reason why I want you to go away. When the real pinch comes I shall probably disgrace myself and everybody remotely connected with me. I'd a good bit rather be torn into little pieces privately than have you here to be made ashamed—again."
She turned away.
"Tell me in so many words what you think will be done tonight. What are you expecting?"
"I told you a few moments ago in the words of the prayer book—battle and murder and sudden death. A strike has been planned, and it will fall. Five minutes after the first strike abandoned train arrives the town will go mad."
She had come close to him again.
"Mother won't go and leave father; that is settled. You must do the best you can, with us for a handicap. What will you do with us, Howard?"
"I have been thinking about that. The farther you can get away from the shops and the yard, which will be the storm center, the safer you will be. I can have the Nadia set out on the Copperstete switch, which is a good half mile below the town, with Van Low and Jefferis to stand guard"—
"They will both be here with you," she interrupted.
"Then the alternative is to place the car as near as possible to this building, which will be defended. If there is a riot you can all come up here and be out of the way of chance pistol shots at least."
"Ugh!" she shivered. "Is this really civilised America?"
"It's America—without much of the civilization. Now, will you go and tell the others what to expect and send Van Law to me? I want to tell him just what to do and how to do it while there is time and an undisturbed chance."
CHAPTER XXIV.
MISS BREWSTER evidently obeyed her instructions precisely, since Van Low came almost immediately to tap on the door of the superintendent's private room.
"Miss Eleanor said you wanted to see me," he began when Lidgerwood had admitted him, adding, "I was just about to chase out to see what had become of her."
The frank confession of solicitude was not thrown away upon Lidgerwood, and it cost him an effort to put the athlete on a plane of brotherly equality as a comrade in arms. But he compassed it.
"Yes; I asked her to send you up," he replied, then, "I suppose you know what we are confronting. Mr. Van Low."
"Mr. Brewster told us as soon as we came back from the hills. Is it likely to be serious?"
"Yes. I wish I could have perused ed Mrs. Brewster to order the Nudia out of it. But she has refused to go and leave Mr. Brewster behind."
"I know," said Van Low. "We have all refused."
"So Miss Brewster has just told me, freewned Lidgwood. "That being the man, we must make the best of him. How are you sized for arms in the president's car?"
"I have a hunting rifle, a 46 magazine, and Jeffries has a small armory of rerofters—boylike."
"Hang! The defense of the car, if rust materializes, will fall upon you. Two, Judge Holmes can't be counted in. I give you all the help I can
Spare, but you'll have to furnish the brains. I suppose I don't need to tell you not to take any chances?"
Van Law shook his head and smiled "Not while the dear girl whom, God willing, I'm going to marry is a member of our car party. I'm more likely to be overcautious than reckless, Mr. Lidgerwood."
Here, in terms unmistakable, was a deep grave in which to bury any poor phantom of hope which might have survived, but Lidgerwood did not ad vertise the funeral.
"She is altogether worthy of the most that you can do for her and the best that you can give her, Mr. Van Law," he said gravely. Then he paused quickly to the more vital matter "The Nada will be placed on the short spur track at this end of the building close in, where you can step from the rear platform of the car to the station platform. I'll try to keep watch for you, but you must also keep watch for yourself. If any fire begins get your people out quietly and bring them up here. Of course none of you will have
anything worse than a stray bullet to fear, but the side walls of the Nadia would offer no protection against that." Van Lew nodded understandingly. "Call it settled," he said. "Shall I use my own judgment as to the proper moment to make the break, or will you pass us the word?" Lidgerwood took time to consider. Conditions might arise under which the Crow's Nest would be the most unsafe place in Angels to which to flee for shelter.
"Perhaps you would better sit tight until I give the word." he directed after the reflective pause, then in a lighter vein: "All of these careful prefigurings may be entirely beside the mark. Mr. Van Lew. I hope this event may prove that they were. Don't let the women worry any more than they have to."
"You can trust me for that," laughed the athlete, and he went his way to begin the keeping up of appearances. At 7 o'clock, just as Lidgerwood was finishing the luncheon which had been sent up to his office from the station kitchen, train 203 pulled in from the east, and a little later Dawson's belated wrecking train trailed up from the west, bringing the "cripples" from the Little Butte disaster. Lidgerwood summoned McCloskey. "I wish you go downstairs and see if Gridley came in on 203. If he did bring him and Benson up here, and we'll hold a council of war. If you see Dawson send him home to his mother and sister. He can report to me later if he finds it safe to leave his womankind."
The door of the outer office had barely 'closed behind McCloskey when that opening into the corridor awoken upon its hinges to admit the master mechanic. He was dusty and travel stained, but nothing seemed to stale his genial good humor.
"Well, well, Mr. Lidgerwood! So the hoboes have asked to see your hand at last, have they?" he began sympathetically.
"I beard of it over in Copab just in good time to let me catch 203. You're not going to let them make you show down, are you?"
"No," said Lidgerwood.
"That's right. That's precisely the way to stack it up. Of course you know you can count on me. I've got a beautiful lot of pirates over in the shops, but we'll try to hold them level." Then in the same even tone: "They tell me we went into the hole again last night over at Little Butte Pretty bad."
"Very bad. Six killed outright and as many more to bury later on, I am told by the Red Butte doctors." "Heavens and earth! The men are calling it a broken rail. Was it?"
"A loosened rail," corrected Lidger. wood.
The master mechanic's eyes narrowed.
"Natural?" he asked.
"No; artificial."
Gridley swore savagely
"This thing's got to stop. Lidger wood! Sift it - sift it to the bottom. Whom do you suspect?"
It was a plain truth, though an unintentionally misleading one, that the superintendent put into his reply.
"I don't suspect any one, Gridley," he began, and he was going on to say that suspicion had grown to certainty when the latch of the door opening from the outer office clicked again and McCloskey came in with Benson. The master mechanic excused himself abruptly when he saw who the trainmaster's follower was.
"I'll go and get something to eat," he said hurriedly, utter which I'll pick up a few men whom we can depend upon and garrison—the shops. Send over for me if you need me."
Benson looked hard at the door which was still quivering under Gridley's outgoing slam. And when the master mechanic's tread was no longer audible in the upper corridor the young engineer turned to the man at the desk to say, "What tickled the boes machinist, Lidgerwood?"
"I don't know. Why?"
Benson looked at McCloskey.
"Just as we came in he was standing over you with a look in his eyes as if he were about to murder you and couldn't quite make up his mind as to the simplest way of doing it. Then the look changed to his usual cast iron smile in the dirt of a dog's hand leg-at some joke you were telling, I took it."
Being careful and troubled about many things, Lidgerwood missed the point of Benson's remark: could not remember when he tried just what it was that he had been saying to Gridley when the interruption came. But the matter was easily dismissed. Having his two chief lieutenants before him, the superintendent ordered the op. portability to outline the plan of campagne for the night. McCloskey was to stay by the wires, with Callahan to share his watch. Dawson when he should come down was to pick up a few of the loyal engineers and guard the roundhouse. Benson was to take change of the yards, keeping his eye on the Basil. If the first indication of all plumbing he was to paint the wires
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
to Van Lew, who would immediately transfer the private car party to the second floor offices in the headquarters building.
"That is all," was Lidgerwood's summing up when he had made his dispositions like a careful commander in chief—"all but one thing. Mac, have you zero anything of Hallock?"
"Not since the middle of the afternoon," was the prompt reply.
"And Judson has not yet reported?"
"No."
"Well, this is for you: Benson-Mac already knows it: Judson is out looking for Hallock. He has a warrant for Hallock's arrest."
Benson's eyes narrowed.
"Then you have found the ringleader at last, have you?" he asked.
"I am sorry to say that there doesn't seem to be any doubt of Hallock's guilt. The arrest will be made quietly. Juddon understands that. There is an other man that we've got to have, and there is no time just now to go after him."
"Who is the other man?" asked Benson.
"It is Flemister, the man who has the stolen switching engine boxed up in a power house built out of planks sawed from your Gloria bridge timbers."
"I told you so!" exclaimed the young engineer. "By Jove, I'll never forgive you if you don't send him" to the rock pile for that, Lidgervor wood."
"I have promised to hang him," said the superintendent soberly—"him and the man who has been working with him."
"And that's Rankin Hallock" cut in the trainmaster vindictively, and his scowl was grotesquely hideous. "Can you hang them, Mr. Lidgerwood?" "Yes. Flemister and a man whom Judson has identified as Hallock were the two who ditched 204 at Silver
Brown.
"TELL ADD ONE MORE STRAND TO THE
BOOP."
"ILL, ADD ONE MORE STRAND TO THE ROPE."
Switch last night. The charge in Jud son's warrant reads "train wrecking and murder.""
The trainmaster smote the desk with his fist.
"I'll add one more strand to the rope—Hallock's rope," he gritted ferociously.
"You remember what I told you about that loosened rail that caused the wreck in the Crosswater hills! You said Hallock had gone to Navajo to see Cruikhanks. He did go to Navajo, but he got there just exactly four hours after 202 had gone on past Navajo, and he came on foot, walking down the track from the bills."
"Where did you get that?" asked Ldgerwood quickly.
"From the agent at Navajo. I wasn't satisfied with the way it shaped up, and I did a little investigating on my own hook."
It was close upon 8 o'clock when the two leeantens went to their respective posts. It was fully an hour further along and the tense strain of suspense was beginning to tell upon the man who sat thoughtful and alone in the second floor office of the Crow's Nest when Basson ran up to report the situation in the yards.
"Everything quiet so far," was the news he brought. "We've got the Nadia on the east spur, where the folks can alp out and make their getaway if they have to. There are several lit the squads of the discharged men hanging around, but not many more than usual. The east and west yards are clear, and the three sections of the midnight freight are crewed and ready to pull out when the time comes. The folks are playing dummy whist in the Nadia, and Gridley is holding the feet at the shops with the toughest looking lot of mymidons you ever laid your eyes on."
Once again Lidgerwood was making thirty squares on his desk blotter. "I'm thankful that the news of the strike got to Copah in time to bring Gridley over on 203," he said. Beenson's boyish eyes opened to their widest angle. "Did he say he came in on two-three?" he asked. "He did." "Well, that's odd—devilish odd. I was on that train, and I rambled it from one end to the other, which is a bad habit I have when I'm trying to kill travel time. Gridley isn't a man to be easily overlooked. Becken he was riding on the brake beams. He was dirty enough to make the green good. Hello, Freud—this to Dawson, who had at that moment let himself in through the deserted outer office. We were just talking about your boast and wondering how he got here from Copah on two-three without my seeing him."
"He didn't come from Copenhagen," and the drummers branied. "He came in with me from the west on the wrecking train. He was in Red Burton, and he had an engine, bring him down to River Swimch, where he could not fast as we were piling out."
Hawkins-Johnson MANUFACTURING CO., Hair Grower and Restorer,
616 R. 1st Street. Richmond, Va.
Will positively remove all Dandruff and cure the scalp of all impurities. It will restore Hair on clean Temples and Bald Heads where the Roots are not dead.
THE HAWKINS-JOHNSON M'f'g Co's Hair Grower and Restorer is now being used in this State and other States with phenomenal success. Its reputation for growing and restoring hair leaps into prominence wherever it is used.
MADAM HAWKINS-JOHNSON is known as the Hair Grower. Give her a fair trial and be convinced that she can do all that she claims, or money refunded. We are now in a position to sell the best hair for less money than ever before and can match all hair perfect. In ordering Hair, send sample. Transformations, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 to $20.00. Braids, $2.50, $3.00 and $4.00.
Please remit by Cash E.C. Morey Order or Express Money Order.
TWO WAYS·WITH HOGS.
Care Taken With Animals Repaired
Owner In Amount of Pork Yielded.
The results of different treatments
of hogs came to my notice last spring,
when a neighbor sold two average pigs
eight weeks old to a man who did not
have any other hogs, says a West Virginia correspondent of the American
Agriculturist. He bought the two hogs
to make pork the next fall and, of
course, wanted to give them a good
chance to do their best. They were fed
wheat middlings, milk and scraps from
the table, in addition to the pasture
they gathered. They were grade
Chester Whites, farrowed in April.
These two pigs dressed between 150
and 175 pounds each when about seven
months old.
The pigs that had not been sold and out of the same litter were allowed to run on pasture, and when corn was ready to feed they were fed enough corn to put them in pork condition, but when slaughtered at about the same time as the other two they only weighed sixty-five to seventy pounds each. There was a difference of nearly 100 pounds between these well fed hogs and their mates not so fed, and it was wholly due to different treatments. It is easy to see which was the more economical pork producer—the well cared for hog or the one which got enough feed to barely live until fattening time. The difference in value was almost $10, as pork sold at 10 cents a pound here last fall. The two well cared for hogs did not eat near $10 worth of feed from the time they were separated from their mates until they were slaughtered.
I SHALL BE WORTHY.
I MAY not reach the heights I seek;
My untidied strength may fall me,
Or halfway up the mountain peak ...
Where tempests may assail me;
But heights will never see.
This thought shall always dwell with me
I will be worthy of it.
I MAY not triumph in success,
Despite my earnest labor.
I may not grasp results that bless
The efforts of my neighbor;
But though life's dearest joy I miss,
There lies a nameless strength in this...
I will be worthy of this. The Wheeler Whose
THE ECONOMY,
316 North Third Street.
FTNE
TAILORING
CLEANING, DYING AND
REPAIRING.
CHITMAN H. WHITE,
PROPRIETOR.
STRAUS' SPECIAL
Old Yacht Club,
PURE WHISKEY
Will satisfy the Lover on the Night
Kind of Stimulation. Special Fees
We Have All Grades of Good Liquor,
Cigars and Tobacco. Call
and See Us.
ISAAC STRAUS & CO.,
422 E. Broad St.,
Richmond, Virginia
H. F.-JONATHAN. FISH OYSTERS PRODUCE
All Odds WB Reserves
Drafts Advice
Telephone, Madison-4601.
WE all Dandruff and cure the Hair on clean Temples and road.
GRANTED. PRICE,
JOHNSON M'f'g Co's Hair Grove and other States with phenomenal hair leaps into prominence where JOHNSON is known as the Hair that she can do all that she claim on to sell the best hair for less money. In ordering Hair, send 0.00 to $20.00. Braids, $2.50, $3.00. F. C. Mcney Order or Express
The Bay Shore
Open From M.
Situated on Chesapeake Fortress Monroe, Virginiaress Monroe, Hampton, and electric cars.
A good family hotel, having spacious parlors and broad paved bathing beach, good fishing, a delightful resting place there is always a breeze here. FOR TERMS ADDRESS
THE BAY SHORE
BUCKROB BRAC
PRICE. 35 CENTS PER BOX.
M'f g Co's Hair Grower and Restore states with phenomenal success. Its rise into prominence wherever it is used. BON is known as the Hair Grower. You can do all that she claims, or money the best hair for less money than ever be ordering Hair, send sample. 100. Braids, $2.50, $3.00 and $4.00. Currey Order or Express Money Order.
The Bay Shore Hotel
Open From May to October
situated on Chezapeake Bay, three miles Monroe, Virginia;—connects with Monroe, Hampton, and Newport by car.
A good family hotel, having twenty-twoacious parlors and broad plazzas. A fine long beach, good fishing, a large pavilion, delightful resting place with the best of thee is always a breeze here when sleeps.
FOR TERMS ADDRESS:
THE BAY SHORE HOTEL
BUCKROB BRACH, VIRGINIA.
Hair Grower and Restorer is now phenomenal success. Its reputation since wherever it is used.
Has the Hair Grower. Give her a she claims, or money refunded. Or less money than ever before and send sample. Transfor-2.50, $3.00 and $4.00.
Express Money Order:
Shore Hotel
from May to October.
Escapake Bay, three miles from Virginia;—connects with Fort-Impton, and Newport News by hotel, having twenty-two bedrooms, and broad plazzas. A fine and safe fishing, a large pavilion. A place with the best of everything to breeze here when sleeping time.
Address:
SHORE HOTEL CO.
FOR BRACH, VIRGINIA.
The Bay Shore Hotel
Situated on Chesapeake Bay, three miles from Fortress Monroe, Virginia;—connects with Fortress Monroe, Hampton, and Newport News by electric cars.
A good family hotel, having twenty-two bedrooms, spacious parlors and broad plazas. A fine and safe bathing beach, good fishing, a large pavilion.
A delightful resting place with the best of everything There is always a breeze here when sleeping time comes. FOR TERMS ADDRESS:
THE BAY SHORE HOTEL CO.
BUCKROB BRACH, VIRGINIA.
FOUNDED Oct.. 12,
1892.
The TEMPERANCE INDUSTRY COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE
Opens Upon Its Twentieth Year's.
On Monday September 30th, Lincoln building, 133 1-2 by 49 1-2 feet, and heated with steam and equipment at a cost of $49,000. This comes for the reception of lady pupils Sept. "Old Bagley Hall" lighted with elec and equipped with every modern imp reception of male pupils Sept. 26th, 2. The Temperance, Industrial and O within three quarths of a mile of the "Ancient James River" and is a climate delightful, with the best A from Malaria and Chills. One of the tions in the country. $9.50 must be pupils must pay $9.50 per month. B on September 27th, 28th and 30th sh at once. Those who make a remitt send all money by Post Office Order.
Pupils coming from the South, by N Steamer "Pocahontas" at Norfolk Saturday of each week. Those coming can take same steamer at the foot of mond, Va., Monday Wednesday and K land at the John Hay Wharf right up foot of the hill.
The Institution is non-sectarian at Moral, Religious and Industrial. St Farming, the Corporation's Trade; Hars and Fancy Sewing with Dressmaking, and general Domestic Science.
PERPERANCE INDUSTRIAL and COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. CLAREMONT
Upon Its Twentieth Year's Work September 30
Sunday September 30th, Lincoln Hall, a brick
building, 133 1-2 by 49 1-2 feet, 4 story lighted with
wired with steam and equipped with every mod-
e cost of $49,000. This commodious building
reception of lady pupils Sept. 27th, 28th and 30th
Gagley Hall" lighted with electricity and heated
with every modern improvement, will be
of male pupils Sept. 26th, 27th, 28th and 30th
temperance. Industrial and Collegiate Institute
recreations of a mile of the Claremont village
sent James River" and is seventy-five feet abo-
dely delightful, with the best Artemite well water
arms and Chills. One of the best moral, religio-
nous the country. $9.50 must be paid as an Entrance
tax pay $9.50 per month. Pupils desiring to e-
vent on 27th, 28th and 30th should send in their
Those who make a remittance for entrance
money by Post Office Order.
Coming from the South, by Norfolk can take the
"Pocahontas" at Norfolk on Tuesday. This
of each week. Those coming from the North bide
some steamer at the foot of Main (East Main),
Monday Wednesday and Friday of each week.
John Hay Wharf right upon the school group
hill.
Institution is non-sectarian and non-political,
religious and Industrial. Students are taught
the Corpse's Trade; Harmons and Shoe Maker
Sewing with Dressmaking, Cooking and Laun-
d Domestic Science.
THE INDUSTRIAL and
INSTITUTE. CLAREMONT, VA.
Seventh Year's Work September 30, 1912.
30th, Lincoln Hall, a brick, stone and co-
19-12 feet, 4 story lighted with electricity
and equipped with every modern improveme-
This commodious building will be opened
Pupila Sept. 27th, 28th and 30th inclusive.
and with electricity and heated with steam
modern improvement, will be open for the
Pupila Sept. 27th, 28th and 30th inclusive.
Artificial and Collegiate Institute is situated
mile of the Claremont village and fronts
" and is seventy-five feet above its lev-
the best Artesian well water and is free
One of the best moral, religious Institute
must be paid as an Entrance Fee, all
month. Pupila desiring to enter school
and 30th should send in their applications
is a remittance for entrance fees should
be Order.
South, by Norfolk can take the U. S. Mall
Norfolk on Tuesday, Thursday and
rose coming from the North by Richmond
the foot of Main (East Main) St., Rich-
day and Friday of each week. All can
rift upon the school grounds, at the
ectarlan and non-political, but strictly
artificial. Students are taught Scientific
trade; Harms and Shoe Making; Plain
making; Cooking and Laundry Work.
On Monday September 30th, Lincoln Hall, a brick, stone and cement building, 133 1-2 by 49 1-2 feet, 4 story lighted with electricity and heated with steam and equipped with every modern improvement at a cost of $49,000. This commodious building will be opened for the reception of lady pupils Sept. 27th, 28th and 30th inclusive. "Old Bagley Hall" lighted with electricity and heated with steam and equipped with every modern improvement, will be open for the reception of male pupils Sept. 26th, 27th, 28th and 30th inclusive.
The Temperance, Industrial and Collegiate Institute is situated within three-fourths of a mile of the Claremont village and fronts the "Ancient James River" and is seventy-five feet above its level, climate delightful, with the best Artesian well water and is free from Malaria and Chills. One of the best moral, religious Institutions in the country. $9.50 must be paid as an Entrance Fee, all pupils must pay $9.50 per month. Pupils desiring to enter school on September 27th, 28th and 30th should send in their applications at once. Those who make a remittance for entrance fees should send all money by Post Office Order.
Pupils coming from the South, by Norfolk can take the U. S. Mail Steamer "Pocahontas" at Norfolk on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday of each week. Those coming from the North by Richmond can take same steamer at the foot of Main (East Main) St., Richmond, Va., Monday Wednesday and Friday of each week. All can land at the John Hay Wharf right upon the school grounds, at the foot of the hill.
The Institution is non-sectarian and non-political, but strictly Moral, Religious and Industrial. Students are taught Scientific Farming, the Carpenter's Trade; Harrows and Shoe Making; Plains and Fancy Sewing with Dressmaking, Cooking and Laundry Work and general Domestic Science.
BOARD AND TUITION. PER MONTH. $9.50.
Extra charges are made for Music as their own laundry work. Boys can hire Institution's Laundry at $1.00 per month of Intoxicant Liquors, Making Debts inness, Impoliteness will not be tolerated students desiring rooms should write to student can work out from $3.50 to $4 must do some work. For further info PROF. JOHN J. SMALLWOOD, PH. Charleston, Virginia.
charges are made for Music and Elocution. Gis
laundry work. Boys can have their laundry on
a Laundry at $1.00 per month. Swearing, on
at Liquori, Making Debts in the Village; Idea
illiteness will not be tolerated once in any
reiring rooms should write to the President at o
a work out from $3.50 to $4.50 per month. A
some work. For further information write to
JHN J. SMALLWOOD, PH. D President, Lock
Virginia.
For Music and Elocution. Girls must do boys can have their laundry done in the 100 per month. Swearing. Smoking. use Debts in the Village; Idleness; Lack be tolerated once in any pupil. All old write to the President at once. Each $3.50 to $4.50 per month. All students further information write to BOD, PH. D President, Lock Box 164
Extra charges are made for Music and Elocution. Girls must do their own laundry work. Boys can have their laundry done in the Institution's Laundry at $1.00 per month. Swearing, Smoking, use of Intoxant Liquor, Making Debts in the Village; Idleness; Lackness. Impoliteness will not be tolerated once in any pupil. All students desiring rooms should write to the President at once. Each student can work out from $3.50 to $4.50 per month. All students must do some work. For further information write to
PROF. JOHN J. SMALLWOOD, PH. D President, Lock Box 164
Charleston, Virginia.
PRICE $1.00 SOLD & MANUFACTURED BY Hughes M'fg Co., 209 N. 3RD ST., RICHMOND, VA.
Bands of Calanthe
Conduct a Fretwork, and Puppets Concert, do Better to Let the Little Ones Join. Children received from Two to Twelve Years.
BENEPTIE—$1.00 to $1.50 per week when sick and $20 to $40 at Death. Minutes written in all Localities. For organization of New Bands and all percussion, wrist.
MRS. ANNA TAYLOR, W. M., 120 West Hill Street, Richmond, Va.
BECINS 20TH YR'S WORK SEPT.,30TH,1912.
RAILROADS.
Daily. Weekdays. Sundays only.
All trains to or from Byrd Street Station
soon at Elkview. Line of trains and departure
guaranteed. Read the sign.
N. & W. NORFOLK
WESTERN.
ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO NORFOLK.
Schedule in Effect May 14, 1811.
Leave Byrd Street station, Richmond, FU
NORFOLK: 8:10 A. M., 9:30 A. M., 8:50 A.
M., 4:10 P. M., 8:70 P. M.
4:10 P. M., 8:70 P. M.
Arrive Richmond from Norfolk: 8:10 A. M.
8:10:45 A. M., 9:30 P. M., 8:10 P. M.
8:10:45 A. M., 9:30 P. M.
P. M. From the West: 9:30 A. M., 8:50 P. M.
8:50 P. M., 9:30 P. M.
Daily. Daily except Sunday only.
Fullman, Parlor and Sleeping-Out. One
Bulding Cara.
O. H. BONLEY.
D. P. A. Richmond, Va.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
EFFECTIVE JULY 8, 2011
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY.
For Florida and South: 8:15 A. M. and
7:35 P. M. 1:00 A. M. Charlotte.
For Norfolk: 8:10 A. M. 8:00 A. M. *8:00 P. M.
4:10 A. M. 8:00 P. M.
For N. & W. Ry. West: 8:15 A. M. 8:00
A. M. *8:00 P. M. and 8:00 P. M.
For Peterburg: 1:00 A. M. *8:15 A. M. *8:15
A. M. 8:00 P. M. 10:00 A. M.
2:00 P. M. 4:10 P. M. *8:00 P. M.
P. M. 7:20 P. M. 9:20 P. M. 11:25 P. M.
For Goldsboro and Payetteville: *8:15 P. M.
Mina arrive Richmond daily: 8:20 A. M.
A. M. *8:15 A. M. 8:20 P. M.
A. M. *11:40 A. M. *11:45 A. M. 8:20 P. M.
*2:15 P. M. 6:00 A. M. 8:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M.
10:35 P. M. 11:25 P. M.
*Except Sundays on Friday only.
Time of arrival and departure and connection
not guaranteed.
C. S. CAMPBELL, B. F. M.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Premier Carrier of the South. TRAIN LEASE FORTUNE.
following schedule books published on information information guaranteed.
6:10 A. M.-Daily.-Local Charles, Durham bam and Ralgh. 10:45 A.-M.-Daily. Local ed.-For all points South. Drawing Room Bound Sleeping Our to Asherville, M. O. 8:00 P. M. Except Sunday.-Local for Durham and Interstate Atlanta and Birmingham. M.-Friday.-For Durham, Atlanta and Birmingham. Except Lighted Drawing Room Sleeping Car. 11:15 P. M.-Daily Limited.-For all points South.-Pallinum ready at 8:00 P. M.
PORK RIVER LINE.
4:30 P. M.-Pork River.-To West Point, connecting for Baltimore. M.-Wednesday and Friday. 8:00 A. M.-Except Sunday and Friday. P. M.-Monday. Wednesday and Friday.-Bound to West Point.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND.
From Pork River: 6:30 A. M.: 8:00 A. M. 8:00 P. M.; daily. Except Sunday; 2:00 P. M.; daily. From West Point: 8:00 A. M.; daily. 11:35 A. M.; Wednesday and Friday; 4:30 P. M. Except Sunday.
B. B. BURGAM. D. F. A.
907 East Kail Street. Phone: Medium-411
C. & O.
8:00 A. Daily - Post trains to Old Point.
8:00 P. Newport News and Norfolk.
8:00 A.-Daily. Local to Newport News.
8:00 P. Local to Old Point.
8:00 P. Daily-Lovellville and Clackam.
11:00 P. Palmman.
8:44 P. Daily. "St. Louis-Chicago Spread."
8:44 P. Daily. "St. Louis-Chicago Spread."
8:98 A.-Daily. Charlotteville. Work days.
Rites.
8:15 P. Work days. Local to Gordonville.
10:00 D.-Daily. Uborg, Lz. C. O. Purg.
10:15 P. Lz. Lz. Lyons.
TRAINS ARRIVE CROSSROAD.
Local from East - 6:28 A. M., 7:28 P. M.
Through from East - 11:28 A. M., 8:28 P. M.
Local from West - 9:28 A. M., 8:28 P. M.
7:28 P. M.
Through - 7:28 A. M., 8:28 P. M.
James River Lines - 8:28 A. M., 8:28 P. M.
ALPHEUS SCOTT
CHURCH HILL
Funeral Director and
Embalmer
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Office and Warriors:
8008 1/4 P Street.
Office Phone, Madison 8007-L.
Residence — 12004 St. John St.
Telephone, Madison 6919.
LADY ATTENDANT.
Richmond, Virginia.
OLD PAPERS
PLANET Office. Send when in print.
JOHN M.
Higgins,
DEALER IN
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
PURCH GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR
THE HOUSE.
1610 East Franklin Street.
(New Old Street)
Pebiiches ty JOHN MITORTELL,
rire sense
4OHN MITCHELL, JK. .. EDITOR
senna inanebennieion
spent oc
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1012
MOLTO CLIFFORD “AND Col
ROOSEVELT
*Our esteemed contemporary, Th
Froneer Prose of Martinsbrs, Wee
Virgintin, tie ito mene of he 2A at
saya: ;
ae
4 othe able editor of the Kichmor
Vianet— Joba Mitchell, lp.. te a fat
seeing man. Had he been in Ch
cago and. attendal the convention
heen andsneard all that wert on, he
would feel and neo some things alt
forwatly: however, ak be wees the
door of how closed (2) suxattint the
Southurn Negroes (7) it hax already
begun to Bave ood effect tu the
South, in that Negroes ure turniag
over to the’ Democrats, and they are
recelving them. Brothor Mitchel,
he logical, and if your prophecy be|
correct, be ke the old. woman to|
whom ‘bread wat throws down a
chimney tn aaawer to her prager,
and Jater Inarning nome tough boys
dbl ft, aafd: “Ged wont It any how,
and I thank Him for It."
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roaulta than alse was ag to the meana
by which whe obtained mom. This]
position Gough hax been he curso]
Of out latter day polities. fn our
mad rach for xueceas, money, coni-
merefalinm, great principles have
been forgotten.
It was the same during the greet.
oot pronperity of Greece amt Rome]
anid renulted in tho Anal downfall
of both Kingdome. When vature's
Jawx are violated some one must
yay the penalty. oft ix just an trio} ;
in the realin of political economy] ~
mul clvil government. At nome
ime, the ponalty shall be pald and],
he nation will bo the aufferer. AN §
reat roforma have Leen brought a+] C
mut by a minority bund of workera,| 2
yho with right on their ride ultl-
nately became the majority,
Inividualn may go “wrong but} 4
hen a party, a great political] p
arty "OCR wrong upon a haaie) bi
rinciple, the need of apeedy de-| P'
y and Weath fs Kowed within “4
n frime at ite birth. Still, we
Move with the Scriptures tat if] °
© mevement fa wrong it wt! comol
naught. a
The Plonéer Prees says: m
fn
TRet Southern Negro delegates | {0
ve begs purchasabie, tould hon-j th
t Yeho Shermas tostity, our ag) m
wertions would be dacked up iin
Heaven» “In June last, dozens of
Negro delegates (1) had-beon bought
and they wero. walked with and
watchod over by Southern whites—
& abameful “ategrifte. If thoy had
Rot been bought why were they
watchel? ‘The vory fact that Banks
favo hack $800.00 of the Taft funda
{x priof enongh that-others had {t
too. Ther are gullty—the buyers
aid the rellers and the day of elime
inatton ts at haut A
To aay that Southern Negro del
emates are purphasatte proven but!
Uttle. There are few’ political dul
egate fron the North, East, South
for Weat who are uot purchasable.
Ue is not x quested of raca or
color. 1 te a question of price.
Judke Skovn of Mrixtol, Va. has
Just completed the tavk of convleting!
about a sure of ettizens for welliag
thelr vutes at prices ranging from
one dollar aud upwards. AN wf tho
renvieted ee: aw white and one ef
hem was a white miniater of the
compet
Whatever evi! 8 sent then Ina.
elated man fh tet a aetection of
eat nists an some whtte mane |
Seatews care experted to Ie teamaen
we, They are tabaved sf they dol
ot benres all of the gam aualitiea|”
Fite whee man ant kicked ont of
he" Pragresstin Marty when they do
orn uth af the goad qutiitins at
newbie saath, fey do not Hye} |
P West Vig nite att the Norhern| >
1 eelered rae ure detanding a
ote than etait handeed dotlare anf
tlie selitag priee, ie gone ty show,
wotey pre lnermeine ta atsdon]
rt that they amet aeceanding es |S
“2 for gee mesons so when thos):
Patten Bind te wate tied avy te reefs
Moet Mase Neko ttdine. :
Teerett, Steceitan dine a seat etal 8
CoP e Dait and set a matortes|
He wl te eounermen whe are[ ss
Niet wh Latte eat ous haval te
Patent into for the same atten, [EF
Te tran the aeean tty af Cotune Is
oeltte poation ene hat arty alt
St eee oe. Gates |
fens 4 tee eeteanaw S66 aubteal
vie ates Y rid ge dieseat | Se
as Ae Sees an theotena | bee
ke eet Ba =) y
Ha eat te putetat henehten,| tre
renner rad that vou att senpel Nev
He tie: Pease: Pore. atigg htt &
w Mrogce ste Party. stay!)
Year time wet enme gant! Se,
Tbe sete tad te accnrelet 4
Ce Fete Mae want i
OFFERED TO SERVE LUNCH IN
(THE KITCHEN.
I folt ke cating luncheon and
fering the words “Laach Room” on-
tered & commonplace looking depart
ment of the station and sat at the
ach: counter, A white waiter fz
eisivens clothes came up tome and
without looking at me asked what.
Taret pose tat ae DP atnts
LUE retee Threw thy jot tet what
Patent i Sept de pga ge
i
S. F. CODY. .
a
Former American Captures
English Aviation Prizes,
i a
&
: ryw
\ me LAE hk 3
: Bo ag
o Redfaag 33
Prorat gee U4 3
EE
sgh :
waar _
nei
we
ar
i es
i
Scots, Aviator. Wien O5kena |
wie two leading prizes in Britian
jammy aviation wero awarded by tin
Briss usr vive in London to S. ¥
Cody, once aa American, but now a
Bauralizes Rritish aubject,
Cody won the principal axard of
the meet un Salisbury Plain, the frst
Brito of $24,000 tn the open compett-
thon. Hm aiwy won the contest, open 10
Rilish sujects only. flying machines
built in the United Kingdom. The
parte wae $50, In each erent he
Mod a biplane of bia own desiguing.
ante
bintbiced' ee Roce Vicks RR.
| Charged with unlawful rebypothecs
ton of warcheune receipts, George T
Gambrill, seventy-six years old, tar
mer president of & distilling company
in Baltimore, Md., waa sentenced
four years to, jail. “Tet ead that mor,
thin $200,000 was obiained. ta ti,
manner. . °
THE POET. . 7”
By Lucian B. Watkins, +
the poct serve the human race? “ 4
his mission in the world of men?
come the thoughts that point his chosen pen 3
yo such as Tite can ne‘er efface ? 3
> portion in the mighty case é
s salvation, where the wit and ken :
and cages aft are taxed? Ah! then ;
chy dost thon grant to him a place? i
the builders build, .the poet's light ;
‘ims to their souls. Ife fans the tire, ‘
to the heat of pire desire wt
he mind to steam of will and might; §
vith his heart and tunes his Iyre :
ruc of the heavenly ‘choir, . g
° By Lucian B. Watkins, +
Hf does the poet serve the human rice? :
What is bis mission in the workl of men?
Wheace come the thoughts that point his chasen pen
With beauty such as Tithe can ne'er efface?
What is his portion in the mighty’ case =
Of man’s salvation, where the wit and ken
OF seers and sages aft are taxed? Ah! then
Fame, why dost thea grant'to him a place?
Lot where the builders build,.the poet's light
Glows visions to their souls. fe fans the fire,
“Ambition, to the heat of pire desire .
‘That stirs the mind to steam of will and might;
He haters with his heart and tunes his Iyre
Vato the nmsc ef the heavenly choir, .
Editor .
._ Mitehell
_ ° in Ohio.
((Coontinued Frag Pace Numbet y
colutet penpie had been admitted to
EDULIS aie hares
Hoisinnc Hosa biti: Inctemtont
Ye prtone thie +8 Be nd Meena
fa rat koe pattie eat tid
Peon he LET Ae ant eapers,
Be De we fete te section
Te esphowe? fiat Le dest she Lita
pf te great Stiesard ant West of
fre eaten tears age, Wher
We bat eenpieted eae trip and
Ftd tented in co aver te Seri
fet oe Shae store bat Hentted whtett
ee EW UM Woevt ited te
(ve te Capa ef the. Relttien
jHe ferseny Hvet in Rtehinemd
pists, Martenty Reta fe tn charge
Fee ie Meander teansion and sell
Vite ste perfores the toxk, 1 teatned
Htor the tirt tine Mat Roe We Ba
Nock now of Richmond, Va. had
sergeests ined tn Columbur. 1
Wr went to the station in company
sath Mr Marry “Mexander. We
Pirekased Me Meket amb upon Dur:
Feiazn found Mr. Moxander cone
Verstugiagn two white gentlemen
He tnv'tmt me mp and thes T found
Hat they ware detestives.. One of
them had vistted Rirho:ond and.
hawle auary enaniries abont omecrs
ty thts city whom he met during
hin vistt there.
LOOKING FOR @\aninit ana. |
When ther Jaarned that Twas a
hanter, te af them lanehtnely te
warhed that was got the one thes
Mere looking for He cave a bod
desertion of Castor Ret. Tilt.
NUL tattst have votean out of the
coutntes,” he remarked "If he had
net, he would have been pleked up
Inne before this. :
Te tay be Nell to remark “that In
company with Mr, Atesander, Thai
visited the *Ohlo National’ Rank |
whlch had recently tnatalted a most
rectly hank tt. The buliding wan
secupied entizely by tha bank. and:
in it was a maralficent and conte,
routed door vault, of poltenes: re
wallt by thw’ Diebold Saf and Joc}
i af Canton, Ono. Gpe-belaR
ntroducet to the Prewident. Mr-
Pimll Kiesewetter, he stopped his
abars and gave his personal atten-
fon to ue.
A ROUND DOOR VATLT.
die showed us through the large
coufly and xpactoun vault, ona of
the largest ta that section of the
constry. It had an emergency
door, which barred agatnat lock-outa
The large steel round door had four
time locke. T was introduced. to
die xn. who Immediately told bie
father that-he had met ma at the
renalon af the American Raakern’
Awsocintion at Lox Angelen, Cal.
We -bidethe polite ofictain adien
deoply Impressed with what we had
seen and heard. 1 vialted the of
fees of Attorneys W. E. Kings 1.|
H. Godman and T. $f. Goode, meet-
ing Mr. Robert B. Barcus there. |
I met alto Mr. John ©. Logan and
found his accomplished madame {n
charge. I vinited the two printing
offices in the. bullding. When tho
lant word wan said, 1 was soon en-]
route to Springfeld. T want up to
Mra. ‘Porrin'n tenidonen and. thoy
next doar. to Me. J. H. Wilson's
“isidence. Tho¥ were out. I met
Major W. 1. Young anc also Mr. |,
uinenbury, who pleaded with us to,
pend the ‘night at hin reaidenco. "|
had promined though, to xo to |
Dayton that nicht and no after a',
Ieasant Shterriew, T went to. tha,
tation of the Obie Electric Railway’ \
o eet my JugRace and transfer it’)
othe station of the Big Four R. R.{)
cs
1 wanted, f told him, "Serv
you In the kitchen.” was hiv re
stinse, Tle dtd not look ap. I
bowed mywel{ ont. 1 had hot taker
Aseut at the tables, but only at the
iach counter and for the frat Unie
Ye my career had been denied ace
commiodations there,
T wanted to see Just what kind
ofa keehen he hat and in which
ke Nol offered to nerve me. TP went
aroutt to the wther side and saw a
PAE oned toon af about wie by.
even feet. In thte wan a gan range
And prosldizs here win a whiter fon
fate lenis. U half rextetted that
Phad or gut this Ohloan to the:
rear caul accented tee Invitation “to
he served in the hlcehon,” where fT
sovitd tie dealt eaves eaiuned much
se tuston and ne etl of embarranss
went fo thw Necrecdheting depart |
sent of the Oki tallway. station:
PECULI A CONDITIONS. |
t I showed the warring condition:
Ri OBin. Sects at Catainbage £ hee
f fren ehwert ity terved Ia a Fa:lroae
cP esthaeant. We at albus
pb bee pea sudiy taht that TD awas
hat eattnt Lotte! fora. white
Medi thee ceeet Sere and then wend.
tine eae a th any luggage tacthe
Itig Fons tation ‘whore 1 met Me,
(gerlese bets St wha, hy the, wa,
Mavdied a rar ut muy haeage with
Doster ig Mr. Jon Matiean,
son nl OME" unaiet 1 Mutmag
Me wns tin oe mage to Easton aed
te eRe edentte sae
Steud tay fo" athe aus ete ae
Var ty Were oe toe banat ae tee
Deeeted YS + Aeon ectat Ball that:
[" teht {
.
1, Hearne, 6 00 coment tatr|
Had Bet fot tate b wane at the
Sole ta Minny, SS
[Met sirot Teall eeenntly pon
farted frow the menting of Une
National Nears Musttiess Lanene at
Voter.” He has as large enrpet
fiean te spd renwvatiog plane aid
the Sen pe gae engine wag in
atten eonwtantiy during the day.
Ue owas tot very Jong before Mis fy
daughter. came down Staite Pree |.
are tor che tangiet of the coloréa |
Hike which was shiduted to take!
Hine at Memorial Hatt E wae ine
ttedisest to Misco Willa and Maled 1
Ihles ant was Seon on the war wien |
hen to she goloee of the evening's |
ratertainment. This wae Thursday} ,,
Wiehe. Auge 28th. ae
THE ELKS CONVENTION.
Many ad gathered there. The
Fis convention was still in Rossin
The white Jolie “of Elke lead ated
our an tajunction the day before
ipSratatnag the colered lotge of
KIns” from using the emblems op
hase of that organization and the
cave had heen set for a hearing the
ext imerning, The Grama Lodge
Murrielly: adjourned that bight and
when the cago was ealled the nations
ereaniratiqn and its delegates hed
left Davton
Attorne® Glee 1. Jackson of
Richmon!, Va. had heen In the elite
with a will for Tonal services. ‘age
dersatinz $2,600.90. “Is wax aot
pal and he lett threatening to anter
“ult for the: amount. Delogaten to}
he Ells Convention complained that
hee had been barred trom practi.
‘ally every aaloom in Darton. Mr.
janiew T. Carter of Richmond, Va,
a3 eleriod Tiler.
THE SHEATH cowx.
J inet many friends from other
States." Major-General RoR. Sack
won wae thare ax wan also Altornes
Francis J. Warren of Detroit, t
Met Attorney ‘Thomas Notria, fore
merly of Norfolk, Va. He te tar
ried and practicing law tn Dayton
Mr. Joun White of Richmond ‘bed
the iistortue to bo sick diting hia
tas in Daston and did not attend
meeting of the Elica. He wan one
fer the treatment. of Dr. Roe
tones ‘and ‘ent hdmo an invalid,
| met Mestre. Lowis Hall, Ang:
rom. Powell Wilkama and’ Col.
Archer Drew.
Two of the rolored. ladles prom:
naded the ball room Toor” and
fanced in sheath gowns with thelr
imba showing up tothe knee. ‘Thin
sax the Arat timo Z had necn the]
Yeneh innovation introduced in unt
‘merican ball room. |
AN atToMOonInF ning. f
Mriday moratng I enjoyed-an_au-
lomoblle ride over the olty of Das.
ton. 1 saw the homoatead ‘of Pasl
Laurenen Dunbar. I met Minn Ma
hell Clark of Xenia, 0. At Ht
oretock I left Dayton for Richmond
Va. The-mext morning found me in
Warhington Just 45 minutes Inte.
I went into thé lunch’ room thera
And was piloted around to an ond
of the lunch counter for colored
propia... T had not been adviced of
hin diicrimfuation even in tha city,
t Washington: =
I calle® om. Attorney W. Caivio
hase at the Bee Office and found
im at his Geek as foviel as ever,
ie, too had deen Ale victim of
actat-dinertmination. Hs had Deon
amed as Dae of the committee on,
otifcation of How: James 8. Sher.
man of his nomination as: candidate
for Vice Prealdent: on the Repub.
Ucam tleket. — Arrangetnents™ ha¢
Yoen made at the hotel io Utica for
the ontire party. .
ATTORNEY CHASE WENT HOME.
When ho presented himacit at tae
hotel at Utiea, New York, he’ wax
told that there was no room. The
shalrman of the committeo faflod to
‘adJuat the matter and Committeeman
Chase took the next train for Wash
Jngton. This showed the condition
of affaina in thin country at the
prenent time. * !
¥ ‘called on Rocordor of Deeds
Henry Lincola Johnson and found
him nurroundes by a number of col-
ored Jeatlers. Two of thom, includ
Ing a colored undertaker from New,
Jermey were there to convince ‘him
that the ouly hope was to follow the
fortunes of Col. Theodore Roonevalt
ani suport the Bull Moore Party.1
He declared ha would atraizhten Ro-
order Johnwon out. 1 taugbiogly
remarked that as the distlagulahed
Recorder of Deeds xhowed no signa
MC dioath. Ht would be necessary to
et him into a casker to de Ite i
COULD NOTSCHANGE iM. |
In the meantime. Recorder Henry
Lineln Jonnsos was tlrelese in hts
sudvecacs of the principles of the Re-
publican Party and tn praising Pree
Ment Tatt. “1 had but afew’ mo.
ments aml after greeting Mr. Johw
hon. bd hin adien and tured to
fake the 12:01 train to Richmond
Va. :
AY nie station. Tmiet Rex, Walter
Ho Brooks. 1. D., who had reeant
ty Jost Wik wife." He gave ine a
varkaxe for his sistorinclaw, Mra.
Sula Dawsin saying that he was
ino mach overcome by his troubles
to write. 1 reached Rletimond
Ify Saturday afternoon. ‘
FOUN MITCHELL, aR, +
oy eee .
LEESUURG (YA) NOTES.
ME thd Mex Joseph Fleteher ard
daaetie: ef Washiogten, Do Cy at
fer a month e stay with Mra, Mary
iHovert. remined to their hones Sun
Pav In the: afternoon.
| Mr. aad Mrs. John Edmonda of
Waehinston. D.C. spent Labor Day
Mie. Jana Walker of King St.
jwas walled to Alexandria, Vac to
the hedsite of her nephew. .
| dtr. aid Mra. Neleon Dove and
litt’ sou returned to thelr home i
(Mevandris, Va. Sunday in the af.
terneon
Mist Vtefen Butlor returned home
tet week after a pleasant star in
Visonit, Conn, with relatives
Miss sCharley Sine of Roval st.
AU on the viek Mint, but better
Mrs. Carrie Canper of Woa-tith
‘treet NOW... Washington, Doc
4 sbetding Kom time with Mr.
Rebect Willame of Waverly Helshta
Dsuturhe of Lootbure.
Miss Grace Pollant after success: |
“tly utdergetng an operation in the
isuerceney Howpital in Washington,
HC. bs rapidly Improving and will)
ww hiotnie soon. i
Mr. ©. E. Allen of Department *
4 Juntien of Washington, D.C. in’
sitios tte father Me. Alfred Allen’
IF Gleedsville, Va :
Meo Kobert Wiltlame of the tne |
erlor Department. of Washington, *
°C. $e spending hin vacation with”
ts faretly at Waverly Helghts in the. &
wiuehs of Leesburg, ite" antes
ates xpending many hours basa fish 1
X th the Potomar *
Mrx Mollie Moton of Hawt Mar. ©
ni St. entertalued at house party
Mt week. Out of town guest
ote Miswex Julla and Rosetta Jonon
Waxtigton. D.C. and Mina Tet
a Wrd of Washington, D.C. All
tf for their homes on Monitay. 4
The Thursday evomtog Ploasuro
lub of Leeabute gave a dunce In
© honor of Mrs. Moten's house 7
iy at the Odd Fellows Hall Fri. J
iy. August 20th. The hell wan
nutifully decorated with American ime
KN and patted and cut flowera. di
Mim Grayee Nooo of Mt. Clair;
J. dropped in town on Tuexday 09
call on her friend, Mrs, Mary So
Fry of Vingar Hill, after sponding
o weeks in the famoiis Summer 2°
‘ort at St. Louls, Va. we
Miss Tatura Jackson of Aritigton,
cath Mine Elizabeth Joiner of Pr
kansas left for tholr homes @un- head
rafter 2 protracted visit to Leos. ea
i 5 ss
Minn Margaret Green left for hor "¢¢
no at Ariington, Va. after a
yk’n winle at the homo of Mian er
hering Allen of Glecdavilie, Va. So"
frm. Nannie Hugtics haa returned eri
ne after a month's vialt to her the
er tn Southern, Va. She looks
tand her friends aro very glad 7
mod to wee Iner back, “10 |
{ia Clara Walker of Depot ber:
ante erent soveral dasa in Aah. bon
n V3. walting upon her sick thee
nd. Mrs. Ida Cravens. tee:
ftor two weeka’ tay in one of the
hoarding houses of St. Loutn, a0
Cleoloy Diggs has returned home 59
oudon St. . fone
r. George Pryor of N. J. and they
Katlo B. Mason of Gleodavilio, Out
ree ATntTed At tho Fealdence "hon
ov William Sidnoy op King Bt.1. A!
day morning. Rov. Sidney Ur
rmed the ceremony. The bride too }
Broom lett for Washington, D, one
or a short trip. The ceremony that
withered by Mr. James C.. 8nd
er of King Bt. |, burde
| SUSAN GLEANTNOS.
Bro. Jef Johnson, -ana of the
‘aged citizens of thin locality. wa
fonnd dead In bed Wednesday morn
ing. He was one of the oldest mem
beFs of Antloch Ohureh and the
firat committew. His funeral was
Preached Thursday afternoon by Rev
A. C. “Browaley and was largely
attended. An aged ‘wife survives
him. oe
Tho death claim of Sister Sarah
A. Smith, ($60) was pald ovor to
hor husband Suntay’ by the King
David Todxe, No. 205, G. 8, and De
of S.. Bro. Smith wishes to thaok
King David Lodge for the prompt
payment of the same. . |
The annual effing Sf the Chal-
iaens will be September 17 and 18th
Qn Monday night. Sentember 1¢th.:
Mea Wabster of the Weaver Orphan.
tome, Hampton, Va. will be pree-
mt.and give a talk in behalf of the
rork of the Home.It is hoped that
he meetiog will be largely attead-
d and that 2 liberal collection will
© raised. I
: REPORTER.
‘The Colored
Press on
Col.. Teddy
Fe gy
[Should AM Oppeve tim.
: (Boston, Mass. Guardian.)
Hence Rossoeelt, ralses tho. iste
of national weoial of color disfran-
chivement, He calls on the North
to, jolu him. Ho does this when.
even the National Democratic Party,
doce not do 40, aad colored wen ate
trying to Induco this party to use|
fix yoftuenco for n bettermont of
those conditions. Br. Roosevelt,
therefore ‘makes it Jmponstbie for
any colored man to support bim.
He xtands for Northern actiod a-
eninat the principle of ther 16th a
mendmett. Taft la objectionable.
Willson fa permissible and advar
aacour go piven Bod titers of
bettering conditionk tn the South.
Rconevell te Impouble. :
Tat all colored men now who have
vena with him quit bits Let alt
‘clored men drop. pant differences
i Join hatide to. make x suprene
rglted effort to onpone this Tuonster;,
alning the ery for the North to|
ree tO lease the colored cleigea of,
hey South the imerclea af hx white
Infranchiser £
< Insult to Colored Men.
Aehmond, Va. Roforpee)
Wo Took. upon hie volt fee an
lost to the Negroes of UG North
sind West and advise them to ateer
clear of the Progressive Party. Of
two evils tot tie choose the tesser
and remain where we are—-tn the
Republiean Party. Thhe trlok Ine
plain ax the noxe on the face. He
arte to get the Southern white
vote at the euyenes of the Negra,
and at the same time maintain hin
hoid upon the Northern and Western,
Negro sineo they hold the balance
of power in thelr reapective States,
Ingratitute ts the worse, sin ot
Which one can be Rullty. Col.
Roowwelt hae been proating all
Muse ynare by the Nesta vote anil
wat willite to recept tt tn order to
he novainated by the Reputiiean Con
vention at Chico, Int It waa rot
partes tite
The Reyatdlean Party, with the
Sento Inelnted, thouzh now corrupt
Kae atl rheht as long aw de wae
estow tar henory apan tli, birt ae
fon a ib dectized ta nominate him
wr a third teem ff hia committed
ny oNetarderante cn fer which tt
tnt fie est raved,
Can New See :
(Say Traccten, Callfornia Weetern
Ontonk
While the clatform makes an ap
Peat for the sake of linmantty, ye
ft fe for white humanity. and. we
mre ax much at told that it fsa
white man’s party. Let tt the sich:
we have no quarrel alone this Ine
for we believe that In the face of
what seem to he mfatrly soo?
launehing defeat surely awatta It,
And we friely heleve that those
rolored men herrabouts wha have
wen erving for the new party, a0
‘thn eampaten ‘advances And the
sales fall from thelr exew and reas,
in kete Into thelr hralze, will have
rane of I |
Ss
ft Newport Nowa, Va. Star.)
This week {1 Chicago the, Nationa
Trogtossive Varty howled Dy ex:
President Rooserelt. In whom th
Nexro* had placed inte last ray 0}
hone, has by Col. Roosevelt own
Aietatton salt $9 unmiatakabte
‘wards that the Nesta must hoo his
political row ax hest he can tn the
South
Tr fe no new thing to us. Lang
ago tare we heen eeeine the hand
writing on the wall and we have
heen endeavoring to show {t to our
People. Tatil we ran pat a people
to iredoratand. that all thelr future
poiltica) hopes are in thelr ben
hands they can't possibly hone -t0
accomplikh anything. -
‘We have friend among the het:
tor class of white people In the |
South and we should cultivate thet,
friendship in such a way an to galt:
thelr help and encouragement along
al Inox. '
‘Thas hesitate to reach out a hand
1 thone of ux who are <deaereing.
peeanss thay fear public opinion Ae
ont the Negro politfeal status, and!
hen so many of the very mon of
he race, who ought to atand for]
he honot and Sotegrity of the race!
re too mueh troubled with the iteh
ne palm, and Instead of helping |
aure for the ood there ts in It.
hey frequently demand a hand mo)
ut for ‘any mervica they nro called
pon to’ perform.
All the partion’ havo put us upon
br OWN renourceR and connider Ns
ear A hrden to eaery and ou,
26 lant hope In to show them all,
at a feel oqual to tho orenston’ °
id hereafter wo will ehonlder tha !
inden Ike men and prove that wo !
ow how to nepenrae the ehatt from! ¢
© Rraln nnd will not heaitate so. °
do. i.
Shonkd Not Fear Rooasvett,
(Columbia, S. C. Indicator.)
| The Repudlean Party did give
hin nome show as long aa he could
de ured to advantage. But, oh,
What a change to day! Ta can't da
liver the gooda now in tho Southern
States. Provident Tate Ahekofore
fan no particular feeling for him
And he doesn’t fall to kick him out
wheraver tho'chanco offers {tacit
Tho Negro ought not to. be fooled
by one or'two xppommtmonts here:
and there given for the purpose of.
snlving the many and mighty kicx#
rive. |
Connlded the leader of the Pro-
crenaive Party. | What was his re’
ord, Nhile Deraldent? Did ne” not)
in the face of alscost country wide:
rpposition take the atand. that the!
‘door of Rope" shoud nat he closed? |
Why then fear him sod talk soch.
eet as che Erosrentre Puy ta to
a white man's" letter
Of Gol. Roceevett eo Mar. ienrrie te
gether with hia’ manty’ia fearless
]focert, te. Broehdeatshoule glare
be Kept In miod.” Na Negto shou!
fear Théodore Rossevelt.
‘The Northern Negros can help
their ‘brothers of the Beath by gir.
Ing thelr support to the Progressive
Party. The notmlase of thad party
has ab understanding of the cone
| dition which confroats this country.
The ‘colored man's only chacco to
be counted for what he {8 worth lice
with the Progressive Party. The
Republican Party has already given
him too much taffy. Lot tho No-
Bro be a-maa, It Ie dma.
as acs
Can't Catch Enough of Them.
(Leahikton, Va. Weekly Nows.)
‘Tho Colotlel could not have Bit
upon a better plan to caten’ the
avorago Nexro-hating Southerser's
vote, but he wilt fnd that even auch
a pion will not catch eooush of
them to land him in the Wales
House again
eee pins
DRAKES BRANCH (VA) NEWS.
i Drakes Branch, Va.—Proaching”
and communion servicer were held
Lat Wheeler Presbyterian Church
Suntay where a large audience lis.
bined to Rev. $. D. Leak who
preached a Yery interesting sermon.
Mins Prancen Hodxe wan’ baptlzod
and taken into the church. .
The annual gathering of the Morea
held ot Charlotte C. It, last week
was largely attended.
Mr. T. EB. Watking, (white) Ate
torney for the Commonwoalth, and
Mr. W. G. Williams, druggist were
Vrevent and Rave very” {nteresting
addtensct. Some present from
Draken Branch were, Mr. Clon)
Green and Mign Lizzie .Cruteher,
Mr. and Mra. Georxo Watkins, Miss
Anan Barkedale, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Walton, Mr. and Mrs. Eve
ward Jackson, Mr. and Mra. If, C.
Gregory. Mr. asd Mrw. Seriey Wile
ime. Mr. nnd Mrx. ‘Tom Mohone.
Mr. aod Mrs. Qbartey Tasior and a
number at others, :
Mr. Pearl Searles of Chleago tm
‘siting her mother, Mrs. Martha,
irecory of Charlotte . If. She at
© attended the aonual gathering of
he Moses.
A fom and sox betonaing to Mr.
A. Proctor (white) were killed
Fldas. They Lad gone tad
Ax little Jatow Harvey went to
he Well Monday a eat that wan alte
Ins on the well platform aprang ats
fn and Me aud ctawed Mie hamd
ry uttfully. There reems to. bo
0 end “of troutde resulting from
ie mad dox that bit no many ante
at nome (le Knew. Thea eat
wv, before It wan whot bit a chicken
fa dos. Jame ta now under .
je treatment of De. Tucker and
ay be nent to Richmond to how
ta.
©. M. Shopperson, who has been
ry wick tu Improving under the
atment of Dr. Tackers =s
Mie Therowa "M. Brooks of 139° +
Ineo street, Broakiyn, N.Y. who
aduated (rom TP. 8. number Ave,
x stnond a dolightful time. with
F aunt tn Connecticut. She will
Tt to Tigh Schaal September 9th,
vie a xrand—daughter of Whit
ooks, Drakes Brauch, Va.
| RudMy-Tiem wil cure you,
as
FROM BROOKLYN, N. ¥4
Sunday was a very atormy day,
The churelim were well attenteds
ronsideritg the weather.
Dro Wo L. Hunter. preached a
Yory Intersting sermon Sunday
aMght, at Moly Trinity Baptint Chureh
They ‘expect the return of thelr pam
tor Rev. S. W. Timms from bin
vacation by next ‘Suntlay, which je
thelr cowdinunion Sunday,
Rev Moss of Concord Baptist
Church Aled his pulptt Sunday at.
ter a month's vacations
The Public Schools will opra
Moudas, September ath. .
COMMENTS ON TOPICS OF LAST
+ ISSUE. $
Tho: gentleman who wrote trom
Florence, $. C. seems to be himself
1 clone observer. He cortainly has
eon observing onr, or his people,
iamely, our short-conitngn, our fal
ire tO appreciate small things.
1ope ho may write again’ and that
there may also write of the evils
40 tho remedy’.
Deplorable tadeod (1) were the
rine and electrocution of the young
oman, Virginia Christian., Ss
———=————————
EVENT.
} Ad event has tranapired In the South
which prominen great things (or that
wetion and the entire nation. Sutton
-E, Grisgw, the famonx orator aod auth.
Or han brought to light an’ array of
facts and tine unfolied n tue of reann-
ing tat tm quietly: transforming the
thought Hite of the whites of the South
on the race ocala 7 ‘
Dr. J. G. Mert, _ox-Prenident of
Fle Matveraity xaye: ‘1 have hepd ao
much of Windom’ Call that I winh a+
Fons of It. Seetd It ta mo.
Hithop 1. FH. Scott of the M. E.
Church, nny: “T belleve it will chanee
condkionn In the South If it te read byo
Any conaidernble number of the lendere
cf that neetton."* :
Hon, Noah W. Cooper, one ‘of Tene
Dean's mont widely khown white Inv
verm, maga: "* © Tt in really a wonderfal
hook, fall of the finer ‘philosophy,
rholceat rhetoric and Chriatian ideas
Ror. Mr. Griztn Is manitertly a great
hiner, a GENIUS nnd a statesman.
‘The Chict of Police of Bartow, Fis.
958: “That hook hae changed my
Hows on the race queetton, I nee tbat
re white people have got to chaDRe
nr treatment of the Negroes.” .
Yon do yourself and the canne of hn-
anity an Infuntier when you nexiect
r delay to mend for Wiadom'a Call. |.
te price tx onty Afty cent, AGE are
nts for postage. at 8
~ THR ORION PUB.CO.
Kast Branton, Naewvines, Tat
---
TRUST VIOLATED OIL DECREE
Allege Dissolution Order Has Not Been Obeyed In Texas.
Government Charges Conspiracy In Plot to Destroy Business of Rival Firm—Archbold in Net.
The first move of the government against the Standard Oil Co. since it was dissolved last November under the mandate of the supreme court of the United States to its thirty-three component parts to restore competition, was brought when the federal grand jury for the northern district of Texas returned an indictment against several oil men as representatives of the oil trust.
Restraint of trade and commerce and unlawful compiracy and combination in violation of the anti-trust laws are alleged in the indictments.
It is charged that the individual defendants, the Standard Oil company and the Magnolia Petroleum company, conspired to destroy the business of the Pierce Fordyce Oil association, of Texas. The specific offense is alleged to have occurred on June 29, 1912. The names of the following persons appear in toe indictment: Calvin N. Paine, Tituxville, Pa.; John D. Archbold, New York; Henry C. Folker, Jr, New York; John Sealin, Galveston, Tex.; A. C. Elbe, Dallas, Tex.; E. R. Brown, Corseana, Tex.; W. S. Teague, Plainfield, N. J.; Standard Oil Company of New York; Standard Oil Company of New Jersey; Magnolia Petroleum Company of Texas.
At the department of justice it was said that the indictment was the result of a three months' investigation of charges that the decree dissolving the trust has been violated. The government, it was added, had not decided whether or not it would proceed on the question of the violation of the decree, which would involve contempt proceedings. The question was considered under the criminal feature of the Sherman law by the Texas grand jury.
Contempt proceedings would have to be undertaken directly before a federal court. Such action is beyond the function of a grand jury. The indictment, it is pointed out, will not bar the government from prosecuting for contempt of court in case that course is considered desirable. Officials of the department of justice believed, it was declared, that the initial move in the case should be made through a grand jury, and then if it developed that an indictment did not promise to satisfy the law's demands, they could resort to contempt proceedings as well.
The special grand jury which returned the indictment had been working on the case since last Tuesday, when it was convened to consider the government's allegations and evidence. The colority with which it concluded the inquiry surprised officials in Washington.
A fight between Standard Oil interests and the Waters-Pierce Oil company, now pending in the federal court at St. Louis, involves the faithfulness of the Standard Oil in carrying out the decree of dissolution. The federal government is not a party to this suit, which was brought nominally by the state of Missouri to compel the inspectors of the election of officers of the Waters-Pierce Oil company at St. Louis last February to vote the proxies of the Rockefeller and other Standard Oil interests which are said to have named Standard Oil men as officials of the company. The inspectors refused on the ground that it would violate the dissolution decree.
Gonfessed Killing Woman.
Norman B. McCleary, the young athlete, who is held in Hagerstown, MD, on the charge of murdering Mrs. Nandle B. Henry in her home on Thursday, Aug. 15, is reported to have made a voluntary confession in writing. The confession is understood to have been made in the jail soon after McCleary was brought from Washington, where he was arrested at the in stance of Miss Lupa Henry, his sweet heart, and a daughter of the murdered woman. On the night of Aug. 15 he went to the Henry home, and was told by Mrs. Henry that his visits to her daughter were unwelcome. He demanded to know where the girl, who had left the city, had gone, and Mrs. Henry refused to tell him.
McCleary left in a rage and later returned to the house, entering the rear and creeping upstairs, entered Mrs. Henry's room. The woman again refused to give him the girl's address, harsh words followed, and McCleary, it is said, grabbed Mrs. Henry by the throat and choked her, throwing her upon the bed. He searched for a letter from the girl, but failed to find it.
The following night he is said to have returned to the house and took money from Mrs. Henry's stocking. On Saturday night McCleary decided to make another search of the house and took the money that remained and is alleged to have found the letter containing the daughter's address.
Washington. The next day McCleary left for that city.
Raise For Rural Carriers.
By authority conferred by the post-office appropriation bill, Postmaster General Hitchcock increased the salaries of rural letter carriers on standard routes from $1000 to $1100 a year, thus affecting 30,000 men, with proportionate increase to carriers on the shorter routes. The order will become effective Sept. 30.
This will mean an increased disbursement of $4,000,000 a year. It is the second salary advance for rural carriers made in the last four years.
At the close of the last fiscal year, on June 30, there were 42,051 rural mail carriers, the aggregate pay being $40,655,740. When the rural delivery system was instituted sixteen years ago eighty-three carriers were employed at an annual cost of $14,800, the maximum individual pay being $200 a year.
The increase provides the rural carriers adequate compensation for the additional burdens to be imposed by the parcels post system, effective on Jan. 1.
Official Killed by Train.
County Commissioner Montgomery Christman, sixty-six years old, was killed in Pottstown, Pa., by being struck by a train.
Mr. Christman, while on his way, to attend the Pottstown fair at Mill Park, had to cross the tracks of the Cole brookdale branch of the Reading railway. He failed to notice the approach of a milk train and was struck by the cowcatcher of the locomotive and was hurled many feet.
He was alive when picked up and was hurriedly conveyed to the Pottstown hospital in an auto. His skull was fractured, several ribs were broken and he was internally injured. He died about one hour after he was admitted to the hospital.
Commissioner Christman was a Democrat in politics and was the minority commissioner of Montgomery county.
Millionaire Meets Horrible Death.
Solomon Luna, millionaire banker
and sheep grower, for sixteen year-
Republican national committeeman
for New Mexico, and who refused to
accept the election to the United
States senate at the hands of the first
state legislature, met a tragic death
at Horse Springs, Socorro county,
seventy six miles from Magdalena, N.
M.
He fell into a vat containing thousands
of gallons of sheep dip after
being attacked with heart failure.
Becoming ill during the night, it is
supposed that Luna went from his
room to the dipping vat a few yards
from the ranch house to get water
and was stricken with sudden heart
failure, falling into the mixture of
lime, sulphur, tobacco and water.
Rat Gnaws Little Girls
Cries of his two little girls, Mary and Anna, aged five and seven years, awakened Arthur Gething at his home in Nantucket, near Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Rushing to their bed, he found them bleeding profusely from wounds on the face and arms and fighting desperately the attacks of a large rat which was gnawing their flesh. He killed the rat. The faces of the little girls are horribly chewed and they will no doubt be disgusted for life.
---
Killa Her Three Children
Mrs Sarah Fycher quarreled with her husband in Brooklyn, N. Y., and later in his absence lay down on the bed with her four young children and turned on the gas. When Fycher returned three of the children—Muriel, five; Harold, four, and Edward, eight—were dead, and the mother was unconscious. A fourth child was revived. The mother has little chance of recovery.
Fifty-three blooded foxhounds, valued at $2000, in the kennels of W. G. Little and Al White, of Harmony, Del, were killed by State Veterinarian James R. Mahaffy. They were bitten by a prize foxhound in the same kennels and all showed symptoms of the rabies.
Kills Herself Over 20 Cents.
Following a quarrel with her brother, Thomas Howey, over the ownership of 20 cents, Mrs. Richard Hamilton, aged thirty-three years, took pot son at the home of her mother in Olyphant, near Scranton, Pa., dying an hour later.
Senator Perkins to Quit.
George C. Perkins, United States senator from California, announced on his return to San Francisco from Washington his intention to retire from political life because of falling health. Senator Perkins' term will expire March 4, 1915.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA -- FLOUR quiet;
winter clear, $4.10; 4.30; city mill,
fancy, $5.75;
RYE FLOUR quiet; per barrel, $3.90
@4.15.
WHEAT quiet; No. 2 red, 98% @ 98%c.
CORN quiet, No. 2 yellow, 90% @ 98%c.
OATS first; No. 2 white, 40% @ 40%c.
lower grades, 59c.
POULTRY Live steady; bens. 15¢
16c; old roosters. 11c. Dressed dress;
choice fowls. 17c; old roosters. 12c.
BUTTER firm; fancy candy. 30c.
EGGS steady; selected. 29¢ 30c.
Bearby. 27c; western. 60¢ 90c.
Live Stock Markets
DITTSBURGH (Union Stock Yards)
choice
$2.50
$5.00
pricing $6.65/10.
$10.00
BIFEED higher, prime wethers, $4.60
@ 4.75; culls and common, $1.50@2
lambs, $4.50@7.25; real calves, $10@8
@ 11.
DOS steady; prime heavies, $9.15
@ 9.25; mediums, $9.45@2.50; heavy
Yorkers, $9.45@9.50; light Yorkers,
$9.45@9.50; pigs, $8.75@9; roughs,
$7.50@8.25.
Watch for our new serial, "THE
THREE GUARDMEN" by Alexander
Dunn.
Declares Testimony of Archbold and Penrose Is Attack on Dead Man and a Reflection on Themselves.
Theodore Roosevelt gave out the letter which he has sent to Senator Moses E. Clapp, chairman of the senate committee which is investigating campaign contributions, before which Senator Penrose and John D. Archbold charged that Mr. Roosevelt had been a party to the soliciting and accepting of Standard Oil campaign contributions in 1904.
Mr. Roosevelt almost at the opening gives the lie in these words:
"As regards the statement of Mr. Penrose and Mr. Archbold that with my consent or knowledge Mr. Bliss asked the Standard Oil people for $100,000 or any other sum, or received such sum from them, it is an unqualified falsehood."
Further on Colonel Roosevelt compares Senator Penrose to a grafting policeman, and adds:
"His language is precisely the language that might be used by a blackmailing, police officer in a big city in advising the keeper of a law-breaking liquor saloon or a gambling house to contribute liberally, because otherwise he might 'incur hostility in certain quarters.' If this language were proved against the policeman he would be removed from the police force, and as it is admitted by the senator, he should be removed from the senate."
Mr. Roosevelt promises that there shall be full publicity of contributions in his primary campaign last spring.
"I wish $\phi$o emphasize the fact," he continues, "that the testimony of Mr. Archbold and Mr. Penrose in this matter is an attack on Mr. Bliss, who is dead, and is also unwittingly the severest possible reflection on them ourselves; but it is in no sense any attack upon me except in so far that they assert that the dead man said that I knew of his request for money from them."
"I do not believe that Mr. Bliss said this any more than I believe their accusation that Mr. Bliss deliberately tried to blackmail the Standard Oil. But please keep in mind that this is an assault on Mr. Bliss and not on me."
After a sweeping denial of knowledge or consent to any of the steps in the transactions as set forth by the two witnesses, he pays a glowing tribute to the memory of Mr. Bliss, but adds that of course he could not say whether Mr. Bliss had asked for or had received the money.
Further to prove that his skirt is entirely clean in the matter, although the skirts of others might not be so clean, Mr. Roosevelt quotes from what purported to be an interview with Cornelius N. Blisa, published in the New York Herald of Dec. 24, 1911. In this Mr. Blisa is quoted as correcting Edward H. Harriman's statement that in 1904 he received word of the desperate state in New York from Mr. Roosevelt. Mr. Blisa said that he conveyed that information to the railroad man. He discusses the situation and the steps taken to raise the $200,00. At the conclusion of the interview there are these questions quoted in the Roosevelt letter, which apparently further involves Mr. Blisa:
"Then the president had nothing to do with the raising of the money?" Answer. "Not once in the conference of the committee was there any suggestion that he was doing it. The only thing that Mr. Roosevelt had to do with such matters was to issue orders that money was not to be accepted from this or that persons. His orders were ignored; as it was recognized that this was something about which he must not interfere, and I brooked no interference."
The letter to Senator Chapp, which is about 15,000 words long, goes exhastively into his correspondence with Chairman Cortelyou, of Oct. 20 and 27, in which it is ordered that the $100,000 from the Standard Oil company be returned at once, although the sum is not mentioned, all of which was just after the time that Alton B Parker had first made his charge that the Republican nominee and his chairman were obtaining money from the great corporations in an effective way. It pays its respects to Mr. Penrose and tolls of the removal of a Penrose benchman of the name of Bunn from the Philadelphia postoffice, and then it sets forth in full the famous White House statement of the night of Nov. 4. In which Judge Parker is castigated for accusing Mr. Cortelyou and the nominee of holding up corporations.
The often printed Harriman correspondence is reprinted in full, and after announcing Collector Loeb, then private secretary, as corroborating witness, mention is made of Senator Jonathan Bourne as an intermediary for Standard Oil at about the time the auctions were to be brought. Incidentally a paragraph is injected to give the colonel an opportunity to praise William R. Hearst for his public service of high importance, and Mr. Hearst is requested to publish everything he has of the Archbold letter files. The colonel offers to supply anything he may have it data upon which he can search his letter files is forwarded to him.
DEATH LIST REACHES 40
Growing Crops Ruined by Floods in Western Pennsylvania.
The number of fatalities from the floods of Monday in western Pennsylvania, the Pan Handle of West Virginia and eastern Ohio was increased to forty when it became known that
HISTORY OF THE
AMERICAN
PEOPLE BY
WOODRUM
WILSON
John Domestel, his wife and two children were missing from the ruins of their home on Charters creek, near Canonsburg, Pa.
Fifteen bodies have been recovered from debris scattered through the valley of Harmon's creek, near Collers, W. Va., since being residents of Collers and six of Holiday's Cove.
Searching parties are working in the valleys of the stricken district, digging in the ruins of demolished houses in the hope of finding bodies, but in many instances the rush of water was so strong that it is believed the victims were carried far from the places where they met death.
The Charleston valley from Washington, Pa., to McKees Rocks, Pa., where the little stream empties into the Ohio river, is one stretch of devastation. It is estimated that 10,000 acres of growing corn has been ruined, while thousands of tons of hay floated away on the muddy current.
The damage done to manufacturing plants will be very heavy. In some instances it will be necessary to install new machinery and work will not be resumed for days, perhaps weeks.
The property loss is at least $1,500.
The property loss is at least $1000,
000, and probably will be much more.
Gems In Verse
OLD FAVORITES.
LABOR IS PRAYER.
LABORAIRE est orare.
We, black venerated sons of toll
From the coat mine and the anvil
And the delving of the roll,
From the arm, the wharf, the
warehouse
And the ever whirling mill,
Out of grim and hungry silence
Lift a weak volute, small and shrill.
Laborare est orare:
Man, dost hear us? God he will.
We who just can keep from starving
Bickly wives, not always mild,
Trying not to curse heaven's bounty
When it seems another child.
We who, worn out, doze on Sundays
Over the book we strive to read,
Cannot understand the parson
Or the cathedral and creed.
Laborare est orare:
Then, good sooth, we pray indeed.
We poor women, feeble natured,
Large of heart, in wisdom small,
Who the world's incessant battle
Cannot understand at all,
All the 45 stories of the churches,
All the stories of the state,
Whom child smiles teach "God is loving"
And child cuffs "God is great";
Laborate or ate:
We, 100, at his footstool wait
Who sit crouching at the threshold
While your brethren force the door;
Ye whose ignorance stands wringing
Hough hands, seamed with, toll, not
seamed.
Lift so much as eyes to heaven,
Lo, all life this truth declares.
Laborare eat orare:
And the whole earth rings with prayers.
—Dinah Marta Mulock Craik.
THE PATHEBLAND
WHERE is the true man's fatherland?
is it where he by chance is born?
Doth not the yearning spirit scorn
Is such scant boners to be spanned?
Oh, yes, his fatherland must be
As the blue heaved wide and free!
Is it alone where freedom is.
Where God is God and man is man?
Doth he not claim a broader span
For the soul's love of home than this?
Oh, yes, his fatherland must be
As the blue heaven wide and free!
WHEREVER a human heart doth wear
Joy's myrtle wreath or sorrow's
eyes.
Wherever a human spirit strives
After a life more true and fair.
There is the true man's birthplace grand.
His is a worldwide fatherland.
WHEREVER a single slave doth pine,
Wherever one man may help another-
Thank God for such a birthright, brothe
That spot of earth is thine and mine.
There is the true man's birthplace grand.
He is a worldwide fatherland.
James Russell Lomell
GOOD NIGHT.
To such a host of pierless things.
Good night unto that fragile hand,
All queenly with its weight of
rings;
Good night to fond uplifted eyes;
Good night unto the perfect mouth
And all the sweetness nestled there.
The story that will take them
I'll have to say good night again.
But there will come a time, my love,
When, if I read our stars night,
I shall not linger by this porch
With my adieux. Till then good night!
You will not blush to wish it so?
You would have blushed yourself to death
To own so much a year ago.
WHAT, both these snowy hands? Ah, I
I'll have to say good night again!
JAMES SMITH JR.
M.
SMITH SEEKS SEAT IN SENATE
Former United States Senator James Smith, Jr., the former foe of Governor Wilson, has forced the fighting to Governor Wilson by filing a petition in Trenton, N. J., and placing himself in nomination for the preferential vote for the United States senate and announcing that he will support Wilson and the whole Democratic ticket, and expects that the Democratic organization will support him in return.
This is an adroit move, according to the politicians of the state, for the friends of Governor Wilson have been circulating statements that if Smith filed a petition Wilson would go into every county of the state and oppose him.
It was also said that if Smith filed a petition then John W. Wescott, of Camden, who placed Wilson in nomination for the presidency, and Senator Gebhardt, of Huntedon, would withdraw their petitions and unite on the candidacy of Congressman William Hughes. These three had been the candidates favorable to Wilson. Means, Gebhardt, Hughes and Wescott held a conference over the situation with Governor Wilson several days ago at Sea Girt, but were then unable to decide which two should withdraw so as to unite the Wilson strength.
W. M. WOOD IS ARRAIGNED
Head of Woolen Trust Pleads Not
Guilty, While Annoter Surrenders.
William M. Wood, president of the
American Woolen company, the so-
called trust, pleaded not guilty in the
superior court in Boston to an in-
dictment charging him with conspir-
ing to distribute dynamite, in Law
rence during the big textile strike last
winter. His bail of $5000 was con-
tinued.
The identity of the third man in-
dicted with Wood and Dennis J. Col-
lins on the conspiratory charge became
known when Fred E. Atticaug surrer-
dered at police headquarters. He is a
member of F. E. Atticaug & Co., dyne
and color manufacturers.
Finds $3000; Reward a Cigar.
George Rogevoy, a musician, of New
York, found a wallet containing $300
in the roadway in Lenox, Mass.
Upon returning it to the owner he was met with the following expression of thanks: "Have a good five con cigar. Nothing's too good for you." Plough by Moonlight in Texas. Farmers in northern Texas are plowing by moonlight to escape the attacks of a fly that is causing the death of live stock in that section of the state. Horses and cattle are being driven blind by the pest and refuse to eat.
COLORED PEOPLES HAIR.
We are the Largest Manufacturers of Colored Peoples Hair.
We Make Wigs, Switches Braids,
Transformation and all styles of
Hair that can comb the same as
your own hair.
We Guarantee Satisfaction or money
refunded.
We also sell Straight Combs and
Toilet Articles. Our prices are lower
than those quoted elsewhere.
Send two cent stamp for catalogue
AGENTS WANTED.
HUMANIA HAIR COMPANY,
21 Duane Street, Dept. H.
New York City.
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD.
All Business Promptly Attended To
The PLANET circulates all over this country and in foreign lands. Read it and keep up with the times.
VA. BUSINESS COLLEGE AND
210 E. Broad St., Richmond, VA
Will open up in full Sept. 2nd, 1912
with its regular number of competen
teachers, who will teach the followin
grades.
Shorthand and Typewriting Couri
— shorthand, typewriting, english
penmanship, spelling.
Business Correspondence -general
direction, legal forms
Domestic Science and Music
For information all be write
Unusual Inc.
Are offered to Industrious Colored
Springfield, Mass. Women desiring
constitutes through the worthy h
to consider the opportunities await
women and girls who come to Spring
offers the advantage of its Social
its Night School of Domestic Scho
ment and facilities for instruction
housekeeping.
We will secure a desirable place
applicant. Traveling expenses arran-
ST. JOHN'S CHURCH, Depart
Hancock and Union Streets.
Van De
Colle
North 1st St., N
Reopens September
SEVEN DEPARTMENT
THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT
Will Prepare Its Students to
Medicine and Journalism.
THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Offers a Thorough Training
Law, Stenography and Typography.
THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
Will be in charge of the B
Minery, Housekeeping, Good
THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Will Embrace Vocal Culture, P
AUTOMOBILE INSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
Will fit a limited number of
THE PAINTING DEPARTMENT
Offers a Complete Course of
Hardwood Finishing and Free
SPECIAL NIGHT CLASSES
In the Grammar and Academic
men and women for a Prof
Service in our Night School.
For particulars and terms apply.
REV. CHARLES HA
709 North Fin
AUSUAL INDUCENT
To Industrious Colored Women in Hoe-
Mass. Women desiring to better
grow the worthy branch of技
the opportunities available in this
girl who come to Springfield, the
advantages of its Social Center for
School of Domestic Science which h
facilities for Instruction in New Eng-
land.
It secure a desirable place for every w
Traveling expenses arranged for if no
HINNS CHURCH, Department of Dom-
nage and Union Street.
Springfield
Jan De Vyne
College,
Hn 1st St., Richm
Opens September 1
SEVEN DEPARTMENT
EMERIC DEPARTMENT
Prepare Its Students to Take up the
cine and Journalism.
MERCIAL DEPARTMENT
A Thorough Training in Book-keen
Stenography and Typewriting.
STATIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
In charge of the Best Teachers
Library, Housekeeping, Cooking and Fin-
ISH DEPARTMENT
Embrace Vocal Culture, Piano, Vocallog
GE INSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
A limited number of young men an-
tending DEPARTMENT
A Complete Course of Carriage and
Wood Finishing and Prescoling.
RIGHT CLASSES
The Grammar and Academic Grades.
W and women for a Professional Coun-
ser in our Night School.
Cars and terms apply.
W. CHARLES HANNIGAN.
709 North First Street,
Unusual Inducements
Are offered to Industrious Colored Women in Household Service at Springfield, Mass. Women desiring to better their financial circumstances through the worthy branch of industry will do well to consider the opportunities available in this city. To all such women and girls who come to Springfield, the St John's Church offers the advantages of its Social Center for Working Girls and its Night School of Domestic Science which has superior equipment and facilities for instruction in New England methods of housekeeping.
We will secure a desirable place for every willing and worthy applicant. Traveling expenses arranged for if necessary. Address
ST. JOHN'S CHURCH, Department of Domestic Science.
Van De Vyver College, North 1st St., Richmond, Va.
Will Prepare Its Students to Take up the Study of Law,
Medicine and Journalism.
THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Offers a Thorough Training in Book-keeping, Commercial
Law, Stenography and Typewriting.
THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
Will be in charge of the Best Teachers in Dressmaking,
Minery, Housekeeping, Cooking and Fine Laundry Work.
THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
WITH Embrace Vocal Culture, Piano, Vocallon and Pipe Organ. AUTOMOBILE INSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT Will fit a limited number of young men as Chauffers. THE PAINTING DEPARTMENT Offers a Complete Course of Carriage and House Painting, Hardwood Finishing and Precoiling. SPECIAL NIGHT CLASSES In the Grammar and Academic Grades. We prepare young men and women for a Professional Course and the Civil Service in our Night School. For particulars and terms apply. REV. CHARLES HANNIGAN. President, 709 North First Street, Richmond, Va.
HAIR PARLORS.
To the Friends, Customers and the Pup-
MRS. ROSA E. WATSON invites
St. James Street. You can be supply-
formations and Pompadours. Combin-
on short notice. Straightening and d.
Straightening Combs, Ornaments
and preparations of all kinds for the
812 ST. JAMES STREET,
J. C. ROBE
ATTORNEY AND COUN-
OFFICE:—ROOMS NO. 1, 2 AN
508 N. 2ND ST., RICHMOND, VA.
Practice in all State and Federal Court.
Ms. Customers and the Public in General
OSA E. WATSON invites you to her H
Street. You can be supplied with Braid
and Pompadours. Combings made in a
piece. Straightening and Shampooing
ening Combs, Ornaments for the Hai-
tions of all kinds for the skin. 'Pho-
JAMES STREET, RICHMOND
C. ROBERTSON
KEY AND COUNSELLOR
VICE:—ROOMS NO. 1, 2 AND 3, SECOND P
ST., RICHMOND, VA. 'PHON
State and Federal Courts. Commerce
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in General:
MRS. ROSA E. WATSON invites you to her Hair Parlors, 812 St. James Street. You can be supplied with Braids, Puffs, Transformations and Pompadours. Combings made in Braids and Puffs on short notice. Straightening and Shampooing a Specialty.
Straightening Combs, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Greases and preparations of all kinds for the skin. 'Phone Monroe-3874.
812 ST. JAMES STREET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
508 N. 2ND ST., RICHMOND, VA. PHONE MON, 1881 Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Commercial, Corporation Insurance and Real Estate Law. Administration and Probate Matters. Estates Settled. Business of Foreign Clients given prompt attention. Well equipped Investigating and Collection Departments Legal Business and Correspondence Solicited. Local and long distance telephone service.
WONDERFUL RESULTS ON SHORT NOTICE
I have used your Pomade. Its the best thing I ever used for making curly hair lie smooth. I have not finished my first bottle, but can see wonderful results, writes Mrs. Louise E. Hayes of Pineville, S. C.
Try Ford's Hair Pomade for harsh stubborn and unruly hair and Ford's Royal White Skin Lotion for the complexion. Ask your druggist for them. Be sure and get the genuine (Ford's manufactured by the Ozonized Or Marrow Company, Chicago, Ill.
—Let The PLANET be your weekly companion. Only $1.50 per year.
Columbia, Va., March 19. 1912.
Mr. John Mitchell, Jr..
Richmond, Va.
My Dear Sir.
I see published in your valuable paper the letter of Consul General Crum May 1. 1911 stating the death of William Richmond any trying to locate John Richmond. I wish to say that I had a brother by the name of William Richardson, born in Cumberland, Va. and reared in Columbia, Va. He went to Richmond, Va. and lived there many years. He left Richmond, Va. on the 8th of September, 1896 and I have not heard of him since. I could not tell if he was dead or alive.
He had a scar on the right cheek and he had a scar under the right eye and one on the chin. All three of the scars are visible and will last him to the grave. He was about five feet ten inches and weighed about 175 or 180 pounds when I saw him last. I also send you the piece that I clipped from the paper or The PLANET. Please find him if you can, for me.
Yours very truly,
JOHN J. RICHARDSON
Address: Columbia, Fluvanna Co. Va.
If you answer any of these Ads please mention The PLANET.
THE PLANET has succeeded in putting THE THREE GUARDSMEN by Alexander Dumas, the great French writer. The first installment will appear soon. Watch for it.
reducements.
Women in Household Service at Springfield, the St John's Church of Industry will do well available in this city. To all such Springfield, the St John's Church Center for Working Girls and Science which has superior equipment in New England methods of service for every willing and worthy angel for if necessary. Address Department of Domestic Science, Springfield, Massachusetts.
DEVELOPMENTS.
To Take up the Study of Law.
BETTING in Book-keeping, Commercial Writing.
DEPARTMENT.
Best Teachers in Dressmaking, Cooking and Fine Laundry Work.
PLANO, Vocalion and Pipe Organ.
DEPARTMENT.
If young men as Chauffers.
OF CARRIAGE and House Painting, Decoing.
ENGLISH GRADES. We prepare young Professional Course and the Civil
ANNIGAN, President, First Street, Richmond, Va.
Public in General:—
As you to her Hair Parlors, 812
colled with Braids, Puffs, Trans-
ings made in Braids and Puffs
and Shampooing a Specialty.
Bats for the Hair, Hair Greases
the skin. 'Phone Monroe-3874.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
ERTSON,
NSELLOR AT LAW.
BUND 3, SECOND FLOOR.
'PHONE MON, 1881
Parts. Commercial, Corporation
Do You Know Him?
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FIREMAN'S ACT SAVED TRAINLOAD
Uncoupled Air Brake Hose of Speeding, Damaged Engine.
Engineer Was Disabled In Wrecked Cab, and Assistant Could Not Get at Throttle or Brake Valve, So He Set Brekes by Hand.
UICK wit in an emergency saved a triflehead of passengers on the Central Railroad of New Jersey on April 24, 1899. Percy R. Wooley was hiring a Mother Hubbard, a type of locomotive on which the engineer's cab is perched over the center of the boiler, while the fireman's is at the rear of the sprawling Wootten firebox. This arrangement places the engineer at the middle of the locomotive and the fireman at the end. A running board barely six inches wide is their only means of communication, says the Railroad Man's Magazine, in an article giving details of herotic actions performed by the men of the throttle and firebox.
The train was approaching Hamilton, N. J., at sixty miles an hour when Wooley heard a terrific clatter on the right side of the engine.
Feeling around the edge of his wind aibled, he saw a cloud of dust, steam and splinters. In the midst of it was Fred De Groff, the engineer, pale and evidently fainting, clinging to the rear door frame of the cab in a position which indicated that his legs were unlens. As Wooley looked the side of the cab fell from the engine, carrying De Groff with it.
Side Rod Had Shapped.
Wooley knew that the side rod had broken. The side rod is the steel beam connecting the front and rear drivers, through which power applied from the piston through the main rod to the wrist pin, on the forward driver is transmitted to the rear.
#
This steel beam had snapped in two, and the loose ends, whirling like steel flails, were smashing everything with which they came in contact. Not only was the locomotive "stripping herself," but Woody knew that the stripping
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
HE CLIMBED TO A LITTLE STEP.
process was likely at any instant to plunge the train into the ditch. Something had to be done quickly.
It was impossible to reach the throttle and brake valve, for the right side of the cab was gone. The levers could not be reached from the left side because the boiler extended to the cab roof. The locomotive was one of the largest used on the road.
The crash of anapping steel and a road of escaping steam told him that an injector check valve had been battered away and spurred him to greater efforts as he climbed over the coal in the tender. Down the ladder on the back of the tank he climbed to a little step a few inches above the rail with which all Jersey-Central locomotives are equipped.
Beized Air Brake Heel.
Grasping the handhold with his right hand, he reached down with his left and seated the air brake boose. Wooley throw every ounce of strength into the effort, and the boose parted. The end he held straightened so suddenly as the air escaped at a pressure of 110 pounds to the square inch that it almost throw him under the wheels. The sight of the air in the train pipe not every bake, and in a few seconds the train comes to a standstill.
Mian hurried back to look for the engineer. He was found in a dying condition. A messenger was hurried to
This Celebrated Classic of French Fiction
J.
THE THREE GUARDSMEN
Will Appear in This Paper
The captivating romance of military days long past, by the immortal Dumas, has charmed millions and will give YOU a treat of inestimable value.
the nearest telegraph station for assistance. Wooley, who is now an engineer, wears a costly gold watch which was presented to him by the general manager as an appreciation of his presence of mind and quick action.
DESTRUCTIVE APPLE PEST.
Lesser Worm Continues Its Evil Work Even on Fruit in Barrels.
In a bulletin on insects which do serious damage to the apple the United States department of agriculture treats of the lesser apple worm. The larvae, it says, do not reach full development as early in the fall as those of the coding moth and may find their way to barrels with the fruit, where they continue to feed, often doing considerable damage. The picture illustrates apples thus injured as found in barrels in the Washington market, in New York city.
The lesser apple worm is probably a native insect, and it infests other fruits, wild and cultivated, including
Photograph by United States department of agriculture.
INJURY BY LONGER APPLE WORMS, TO APPLES AFTER BARRELING.
apples, haws, plums, prunes, cherries, peaches and species of crataegus. It has also been reared from the black knot of plum and from galls on oak and elm.
Its life history and habits probably parallel those of the codling moth. It is known to be present quite generally in orchards from Canada south to Georgia and west to the Rocky mountain. It has been found abundantly in apples in the Puget sound district in Washington and is known also from British Columbia.
The schedule of treatments recommended for the codling moth will be effective in the control of this species. The treatment for the codling moth is limited almost entirely to spraying the trees with arsenicals, such as parsley green or arsenate of lead. The latter is now principally used. In the east the poison is usually combined with a fungicide. In some sections banding of trees is also employed and under special conditions is a valuable adjunct to spraying. From two to five spray applications are given, according to the section of the country and the season. Of all treatments the first is much the most important. This is given as soon as the blossoms have fallen and has for its object the placing of poison in the only cup of each little applia. This treatment may be successfully given during the sight or ten days between the dropping of the petals and the closing of the calyx lobes.
Gems In Verse
OLD FAVORITES.
TO THE PAST.
WONDROUS and awful are thy
silent halls,
O kingdom of the past!
There lie the bygone ages in
their pallas,
Guarded by shadows vnst.
There all is hushed and breathless
save when some image of old error fails.
Earth worshiped once as deathless.
There sits drear Egypt mild beleaguered
sanda.
Half woman and half breast.
The burned out torch within her moldering hands
That once lit all the cast;
A dotard bleared and hoary.
There Asser crouches 'er the blackened brands
Of Asia's long quenched glory.
Of saints and heroes grand,
Thy phantasms grope and sliver
Or watch the loose shores crumbling
slently
Into Time's gnawing river.
Titanic shapes with faces blank and dun,
Of their old goddess lorn.
Gaze on the embers of the sunken sun,
Which they misdeem for morn.
And yet the eternal sorrow
In their unmarmored eyes saves day is
In their unmonarched eyes says day is done
Without the hope of morrow.
O realm of silence and swart eclipse,
The shapes that haunt thy gloom
Make signs to us and move their withered lips
Across the gulf of gloom.
Yet all their sound and motion
Bring no more freight to us than wraiths of shipe
On the mirage's ocean.
Thy mighty clamora, ware and world, nosed deeds
Are silent now in dust,
Gone like a tremble of the huddling reeds
Beneath some sudden gust.
Thy forms and creeds have vanished.
Tossed out to wither like unsignify weeds
From the world's garden banished.
Whatever of true life there was in thee
Leaps in our age's veins.
Wield still thy bent and wrinkled empery
And shake thine idle chains.
To thee thy drows is clinging;
For us thy martyrse die, thy prophets see,
Thy posts still are singing.
Here mild the bleak waves of our strife
and care.
Float the green Fortunea tales
Where all thy spirits dwell and share
Our martyrdom and toil.
The present moves attended.
With all of brave and excellent and fair
That made the old time splendid.
-James Russell Lewell.
HOPE.
HOPE
THE wretch condemned with fire to part
still, still on hope relief.
And every pang that reads the heart
Bids expectation rise.
Hope like the glimmering taper's light,
Adorns and cheers the way.
And still, as darker grows the night,
Emits a brighter ray.
SHARED.
SAID it in the mendow path,
I say it on the mountain stairs.
The best things any mortal hath
Are those which every mortal shares.
The air we breathe, the sky, the breeze,
The light without us and within,
Life, with its unlocked treasures,
God's riches, are for all to win.
The grass is softer to my truss,
For rest it yields unnumbered feet.
Sweeter to me the will rose red
Because she makes the whole world
sweet.
Into your heavenly lovelliness
Ye welcome me, O solemn peaks!
And me in every guest you blues
Who rewarrant your mystery seeks.
And up the radiant peopled way
That opens into worlds unknown
It will be life's delight to say,
"Heaven is not heaven for me alone."
Rich by my brethren's poverty!
Such wealth were hideous! I am blest
Only in what they share with me.
In what I share with all the rest.
—Lucy Larcom.
THE NOBLEST ROMÁN.
THIS was the noblest Roman of them all.
All the conspirators, save only he,
DM that they did in envy of great Caesar.
He only in a general honest thought
And common good to all made one of them.
His life was gentle, and the elements
So mixed in him that nature might stand up
And say to all the world, This was a man.
—Shakespeare's "Jullus Caesar."
NEVERMORE
NO more, no more-oh, nevermore on me
The fainthousness of the heart can fall like a rock.
Which out of all the lovely things we 'see
Extracts emotions beautiful and new.
Hived in our blooms like the bag o' the
bee.
Thinkst thou the honey with those ob-
jects grow!
Also, "twas not in them, but in thy power
To double even the sweetness of a flower
—Byron's "Don Juan."
THE WORLD IS BRIGHT.
THE world is bright before thee,
Its summer flowers are thine.
Its calm blue sky is q'er thee,
Thy bloom pleasure's shrine,
And thine the sunbeam given
To Nature's morning hour,
Pure, warm as wheat from heaven
It burst on Eden's bower.
There is a song of sorrow,
The death dirge of the gay,
That tella are dawn of morrow
These charms may melt away,
That sun's bright beam be shaded,
That sky be blue no more,
The summer flowers be faded
And youth's warm promise o'er.
Believe it not, though lonely
Thy evening's home may be,
Though beauty's bark can only
Float pq a summer sea,
Though Time thy bloom is stealing,
There's still beyond his art
The wild flower wreath of feeling,
The sunbeam of the heart.
—Pitt-Greene Hallock.
Promotions In P. O. Service.
Acting under authority of the post office appropriation bill, Postmaster General Hitchcock has directed the expenditure of $1,000,000 in promoting clerks and carriers in first and second class offices and assistant postmasters. Most of these 7000 promotions were effective July 1 last. Promotions of railway mail clerks will be made on Sept. 1 and rural mail carriers on Sept. 10.
Saving Many Steps.
Can you hang a red through the door to open the door to let the cattle out the back way, closing the door with a lever? It will save you three miles a year. Think it over.—Farm and Fire side.
Gems In Verse
MYSELF AND ME.
I'm the best pal that I ever had,
I like to be with me;
I like to sit and tell myself
Things confidentially.
I often sit and ask me
If I shouldn't or I should.
And I find that my advice to me
Is always pretty good.
I never got acquainted with
Myself till here of late.
And I find myself a bully chum.
I treat me simply great.
6 talk with me and walk with me
And show me right and wrong.
I never know how well myself
And I could get along.
I never try to cheat me;
I'm as trustful as can be.
No matter what may come or go,
I'm on the square with me.
It's great to know yourself and have
A pal that's all your own.
To be such company for yourself.
You're never left alone.
You'll try to dodge the mansca,
And you'll find the crowds a joke
If you only treat yourself as well
As you treat other folk.
I've made a study of myself,
Compared with me the lot,
And I've finally concluded
I'm the best friend I've got.
Just get together with yourself
And trust yourself with you
And you will be surprised how well your
self
Will like you if you do.
-George M. Cohen.
THINK OF ME
FAREWELL, and never think of me
In lighted hall or lady's bower!
Farewell, and never think of me
In spring sunshine or summer hour!
But when you see a lonely grave
Just where a broken heart might be.
With not one mourner by its soul
Then—and then only—think of me
-Lettia E. Landon.
THE BYPATH TALENT.
THE talent of the bypath—
It weeks the winding trail,
The shadows of the woodland,
The fields where calls the quail.
For it no dusty highways.
No roads where mankind throngs.
And those who have such talent
Press forward with glad songs.
THE talent of the highway
Oft falters are the night
Serene the bypath talent
Turns to the fading light
The stars and moon are comrades
Unto the couchless one
The man who treads the bypath
Rests well when day is done.
THE talent of the bypath—
How such a prize uplifts!
How it must ever figure
Among man's greatest gifts!
For it no crushing vistas
For it frowning and stone
The lure of the bypath
Flowers—and dies alone.
—Denver Republican.
IF ALL THE SKIES.
IF all the skies were sunshine
Our faces would be rain
To feel once more upon them
The cooling splash of rain.
IF all the world were music
Our hearts would often long
For one sweet strain of silence
To break the endless song.
IF life were always merry
Our souls would seek relief
And rest from weary laughter
In the quiet arms of grief.
—Henry van Dyke
THE ONE GOLDEN PRIDE.
WHY should you be proud of the things you have done?
(Of course it is well that you've done them.)
Why should you be proud of
the wealth you have won?
The dollars are drows when you've won them.
There's little that others could not do as well.
If fate my poor power had stayed.
If only one thing my pride's too great to tell—
My pride in the friends I have made.
Why should you be great in your self biased sight
And spout of your deeds like a gyeser?
And why should you boast of your wisdom and might?
There'll always be some one who's wiser.
The pride in the doing is all very fine.
But, oh, do forget when it's done!
The one golden pride which unattornished must shine.
Is the pride in the love you have won.
—Detroit News.
THE BABY.
HE is so little to be so loved
he is the unbooted, ungarbed, un-
gloved.
Yet every one in the house bows down
As if the mandicant wore a crown.
HE is so little to be so loud!
Oh, I own I should be wondrous
proud
If I had a tongue
All swiveled and swung.
With a double back action, twin screw
lung
Which brought me victuals and keep and
care
Whenever I shook the surrounding air!
HE is so little to be so large!
Why, a train of cars or a whaleback
barge
Couldn't carry freight
Of the monstrous weight
Of all the qualities good and great.
And, though one view is as good as an-
other,
Don't take my word for it—ask his mother.
—Edmund Vance Cook.
Sorilla and Man Fight
A death struggle on the high seas between a huge gorilla from the wilds of Borneo and a brawny sailor, in which the beast was finally killed, took place on the liner Pathan, plying between Yokohama and Boston. The porter, Pedday, was the victim of the infuriated animal's wrath, and only because he was possessed of unusual strength did he escape with his life. The gorilla weighted 200 pounds. Pedday had teased the animal until it went into a frenzy. If tore out of its cage and with its gigantic, barky arms about the porter bore him to the deck. Pedday, by the exercise of almost superhuman strength, saved himself from being thrown overboard until a group of Malay sailors went to his assistance with belaying plan and crushed the armed animal's skull.
---
A colored Lan calling himself,
"Captain John R. Simpson" and at
times calling under other names has
been persistently swirling both
white and colored people in Norfolk
Portsmouth, Newport News and
Phoebus. His plan has been to
represent that he has money in a
colored bank in this city. He gets his
victim to write to John Mitchell, Jr.
President and tell him to send him
six hundred and fifty Alois or some
like amount at once to the person
who is writing the letter or advancing
him a small sum of money until
he has gotten his money from Rich
mond.
Why Not Now?
Eventually.
Imported & Domestic
LIQUORS
S. W. ROBINSON
Mail Order House,
Richmond, Va.
Reliable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is worth polishing much more is the mind of a boy of young man worth all the man give it. The best education is not too good for a provider in poor physician o save a few cents when health is in danger; inferior school o save a few dollars when a better school will character and of mind for life and prepare one for a larger
University
The Best Higher Education to
OVERDRED YOUNG MEN.
MY COURSE including manual training for those who have objects is broad and complete. Its requirements and standing are large for white youth in the State, according to the ruling.
SEE line for many years been the standard course for colored work and all the regular subjects given in Northern Seminaries students for the Ministry are enrolled in different departments.
ITS daily equipped science laboratories. Its library faculty and its full courses of study enable Virginia Union even an education equal to that enjoyed by the favored of children from the President.
He alleges that he is captain of a sailing vessel, which according to his letters has been lost near Thimble Light off Bunkroe Beach and as he has been carrying on this kind of swildling for about two years, that boat is presumably wrecked every two or three weeks. He asks that
SUBSCRIBE TO THE RICH
Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind polishing that the schools can give it. The best of youth. Who would choose a poor physician a surgeon and who would choose an inferior school a surgeon increase the strength of character and of mind and mindfulness!
Dormitory, Virginia Uni.
Va. Union Uni.
Offers the Best High School COLORED YOURS!
IT HAS A FINE ACADEMY COURSE including completed common school subjects.
ITS COLLEGE COURSE is broad and complete as high as those of any college for white youth in the Carnegie Board.
ITS THEROGOICAL COURSE is for many years Baptical Schools. Hebrew, Greek and all the regular are given here. One hundred students for the Mainments of the school.
ITS NINE GRANITE BUILDINGS, its easily equal to 11,000 volumes, its able faculty and its full course University to offer colored men an education equal to other men.
For further information, address the President.
Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not too good for a promising youth. Who would choose a poor physician or save a few dollars when health is in danger? Who would choose an inferior school or save a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a larger maturation?
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Va. Union University Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN
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.
NINE GRANITE BUILDINGS, its faculty equipped science laboratories. Its library of 12,000 volumes, its able faculty and its full courses of study enable Virginia University to offer release men an education equal to that enjoyed by the favored of other races.
For further information, address the president.
VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
PHOTOS.
Latest and Most Artistic Photos, at a More
you can obtain elsewhere.
Paid to Children. Enlarging and Copying
leased to Quote you Prices on Exterior and
PHOTOS.
We offer you, the Latest and Most Moderate Figure then you can obtain also Special Attention Paid to Children Interior View Work.
We will also be pleased to Quote you from Old Photos, A Specialty.
Geo. O. Brown, PH
603 North 2nd St.,
We offer you, the Least and Most Artistic Photos, at a More Moderate Figure than you can obtain elsewhere.
Special Attention Failed to Children. Enlarging and Copying Interior View Work.
We will also be Pleased to Quote you Photos on Exterior and Interior Old Photos. A Specialist.
We will also be pleased to Quote you Frices on Exterior and
Front Old Photos. A Specialty.
Female Director, Embalmer and Liveryman.
All Orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls resited for meetings and also Entertainment. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large Pieces or Band Wagons for Hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class Carriages, Duggins, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies.
D. J. Farrar,
Contractor and Builder.
ALL KINDS OF CARPENTRY.
OFFICE BOOM, NO. 406, MECHANICS' SAVINGS BANK BUILDING
'Thorne Mauree-2807.
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WHAT DEMOCRATIC VICTORY WOULD MEAN
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ICTORY WOULD MEAN.
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WHAT DEMOCRATIC VICTORY WOULD MEAN.
Clean out the chaff and hayseed on the barn floor and scatter it over bare places in the lots and pastures. This scattered seed represents good money value, and it should be put to good purpose.
If you want spinach for use in early spring, at the time when dandelion greens are ripe, sow seed in September or October. Frequently it does not winter well, especially if not protected by covering lightly with litter.
Where practicable the fruit orchards should be planted in autumn. Among the principal advantages are leisure time, better physical condition of soil and the early establishment and consequent earlier growth of trees. Owing to its less hardy nature the peach is to be excepted from the fall planting.
Every farmer should get enough pigs to make his own meat next winter. Bacon is apt to be high, and those who are raising crops to buy their supply are likely to regret it. The best plan is to raise your own meat and have plenty of feed to finish the porkera.—Farm and Ranch.
Toas those aggravating rocks from the wagon track before the freeze-up or you may just count on soiling over them all winter long.
It Frightens Them.
Do your chickens or your neighbor's fly over your picket fence into your garden? If so nail a little strip to
each post and stretch a white twine string about six or eight inches above the top of the pickets. The same plan will
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apply to woven wire fencing. A white swine string stretched along each panel of fence has all the horrors of the inquisition for a hen, and she will positively avoid it. The sketch will give you the idea (AA strips, B string) A. G. Humphreys.
Never mix sun slaked lime with ma-
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Consul General Crum's Letter.
May 1, 1911.
John Mitchell, Jr., Editor of Richmond Planet, Richmond, Va.
My Dear John Mitchell,—I have been trying to locate John Richmond brother of William Richmond, a colored American who died here about three weeks after his arrival of malignant malaria, called the black water fever out here. William Richmond registered in this office as an American citizen, giving as his nearest kin, John Richmond, whose post office address in America was given at Pembroke Store Postoffice, Campbell county, Va.
I addressed a dispatch to the State Department, reporting the death of William Richmond, requesting that they assist me in locating the brother of the deceased. The department acknowledged the receipt of the dispatch. I wrote John Richmond, sending the letter to the above address. The letter was returned marked uncalled for.
The property of the deceased, con-
sisting of traveling bag, clothing,
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money and bank book are in my possession. I am anxious that his effects reach his brother, or if he be dead, satisfactory proof of the same must be furnished in order that I can proceed in settling the estate. I know no one better qualified than yourself to whom I can turn for assistance. Will you help me find the heir of William Richmond? I take this opportunity to congratulate you upon the splendid showing of the Mechanics' Bank in its achievements in the field of finance. If industry, honest endeavor, perseverance, determination and intelegent management, are essentials of success (and they are) then your future and the success of the great financial institution of which you are the honored head is assured. Many Americans, white and colored, come out here and lead careless lives, disregarding advice as to the care of their health, and quickly pay the penalty in an early grave.
I am, sir,
Your obedient servant.
WM. D. CRUM,
American Consul General
Liberia, Africa.
ERSI BUTTONSI
BUTTONS, INC.
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ALIAI EMBLEMSI
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1912
From South Carolina.
From South Carolina.
several of less importance we arrived
at the city of homes. The novelty
of the trip enabled me to enjoy it
the home. That afternoon late
I walked up and down the beach taking
for the first time upon the Atlantic Ocean
Many years previous to that while studying geography at a coimtry school the desire was planted in my mind to see one of the oceans. As I looked out upon the snow capped billows of the mighty deep my mind drifted back to the time when I was quite young. The one thing I never will forget is that one day while, leaming upon my grandmother I mentioned to her what I would like to own "the world. She listened attentively to what I had to say and when I had finished she said "My son, first seek ye the kingdom of Heaven and its righteousness, then all of these things you so much desire will be given you by our Heavenly Father." I took her advice and found every word to be true.
I went down to the beach early morning when no one was seen but the lone fisherman. I carefully watched them place their fishing tackles in the boat and paddle off from the shore. I stood there until they hid themselves behind the waves. There are anxious wives and mothers who will watch for them at the close of the day thought I.
One Saturday night under a clear sky I left my boarding place and sat down by the seaside. In the darkness of the night I saw the light of storms as they gilded over the bosom of that great commercial "stream." Doubtless many of those sailing Northward were loaded with fruit from the pearl of the Antillean, teas and spices from the far east or manufactured articles from Europe. While the cargo of those steering Eastward may have consisted of agricultural products from the Mississippi valley or tolls of the Middle Atlantic States. Then again one of them likely to have had on board a minister plumpingiment to a foreign host or a missionary to heathen Miraa.
It was new growth 'the only here and there a light could be in the Village. These rosette waves continued to crumble at my feet while the picture of the building of the first Neroses at Jame's own vaults before me. They wasn't a sound to be heard except the ocean waves as they kissed each other at the water's edge.
.
As I look upon that peaceful life with my family, I look a little more with this strangest tremor. One writer said that the world is too severe than the North of Paris. The lower roads. My life, which she describes in her book, The teacher's book, is filled with teachers and students. With the staircase in the master's room, when he has no patient. The minister prepares his persons away from the conversation. All having the same purpose in mind, to wait
There was a beautiful young lady teacher at a certain town. A young man having visited her fell deeply in love with her. Two weeks later another young man came to her home and fell deeper in love than the first. But he was told that his affection for her was too strong to nothing as she really thought a great deal of John. Lover number two was not to be discouraged, but prepared for the conflict. He said there is no gain without pain. At last he married the young lady. Lover number two visited the home of this young lady to win.
We are all here to win. On a certain occasion I visited the Treasury Department at Washington and shook hands with the Assistant Treasurer. He said, "Mr. Webster I am very glad to meet you. You have a Southern expression on your face." I tried to win the confidence and host wished of the distin guished gentleman.
The Apostle Paul won in this world and gained an entrance into the New Jerusalem. In the conflict between the righteous and unrighteous Christ won a signal victory. Let each one of us examine our foundation and see if it will do to build life's structure upon. Each may expect disappointment.
While at the railroad station during the week I met a young man who had a beautiful basket filled with red mellow apples, shaded with a lovely bunch of flowers. He was asked for what purpose did he bring them. With a youthful smile on his face he looked at us and said, "I am looking for a young lady on the northbound train this morning and I brought this basket of fruit and flowers to great joy on the plane." But I asked the young man to
step to the board with me that we might see how his train was marked. I pointed to train No. 80, northbound (on the board) and read under the space time of arrival, the word, indelinite. His countance changed, his sparring eyes grew still and slowly he went back into the waiting room.
Miss Ora D. Weather of Troy,
New York info. us that she has
crawled home safe.
Miss Ora very
much enjoyed the trip from Columba,
S. C.
She spent a few days
in our city as the guest of Dr. E.
R. Roberts. We met her at the
station and had a few aides
talk with her. We found her to be
accurate in information, concise in
information and appropriate to those
who enjoy her attendance.
On her next journey toward the
station of Robert, N. C. also at
Duffin, E. T. Training Selgol and
Wash. on D. C. and she had the
died to be home soon after being
away from home. It with impaired
health. We congratulate her.
From New York
the Progressive Party and the Negro - Aftermath of the Chicago Convention - How the Exclusion of Negro delegates and the adoption of the Lily-White Policy causes great sensation in American politics - Negro excluded from the Progressive Party in the city where the great Lincoln spoke out against American prejudice.
Albany National News Bureau
252 West 53rd Street
The Progressive Convention, which terminated at Chicago August 15, 1912 was notable for its fight upon the matter of Negro rights. Every other policy as inaugurated by the new party was outlined in advance. Every principle upon which it was based had been decided in advance.
The Progressive leader dispensed by the action of the Republican Party at Chicago determined that a new party should be formed dedicated with high sounding phrases such as the equality of all citizens, social justice, and other motives that would appeal to the country. A number of Negro citizens immediately decided to enter into the plans and formation of this new party. Particularly was this true of a number of Negro delegates to the Republican National Convention who had bolstered the popular organization of their States and supported Col. Roscoe in the Republican National Convention such as Perry W. Hickard, Daniel W. Gatley William Loever of Mississippi, Win P. Andrews, Baytter and Wilson of South Carolina and other organized delegates from South Carolina and many others in the Southern and Northern states.
The Northeast and liberal white voters of the South oppose the Col. Riverside poll attitud in the Northeast, opposed these States thoroughly and sent regular delegates to the convention compound of white Progressive leaders of the South.
Those delegates from the states of Mississippi South Carolina Texas Virginia Georgia Florida and Alabama were thrown out by the Committee on Credentials. It was decided to make the party a white man's party in the South absolutely to the endeavor to catch the white Southern vote. To minimize this effect, however, Colonel Roosevelt gave personal instruction to a number of Northern States to add a Negro delegate, or two to hold the colored vote of the North and that a plank would be put in the platform which would be satisfactory to the Northern colored voters.
After the decision to exclude the Negro delegates from the convention it was decided by a number of the Negro's friends in the Convention to put the party on record as giving him some recognition.
A number of the Negro friends led by Prof. J. E. Springgain, chairman of the New York branch of the national Association for the Advancement of Colored People advocated the adoption of this resolution: "The National Progressive Party recognizes that distinction of race or slain in political life has no place in a Democracy. Especially does the party realize that a group of ten million people who have in a generation changed from a slave to a free labor system, re-established family life, accumulated a billion dollars of real property including ten million acres of land and reduced their illiteracy from eighty to thirty percent. deserve and must have justice and a voice in their government. The National Progressive Party therefore assures the Americans of
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
African descent of its deepest interest in his welfare, and in the gradual growth of his political power." Emboldened however by their success in throwing out all the Southern and elected delegates to the Convention the Southern phalanx declared that the Progressive Party must not record one sentiment in favor of the Negro, but must go on record nationally as a white man's party. Cool Lyons, the great Jilly white leader of the South who was defeated in his efforts to Jim Crow the Negro in the Republican Party in Texas by Hen. William McDonald the worthy successor of Wright Cuney, said: "I presume we will have to stand for these Northern Negroes this time in order to get in" but John N. Parker of New Orleans said: "If the is not a white man's party Louisiana withdraws," and Fridhoe of Mississippi in busy activities raising the old Democratic city of Negro domination said: Negro domination always ends in hibernation I never
These and other similar opinions on once precipitated a flight in the convention. Mrs Jane Addams of Chicago Prof J. J. Spinkarn of New York Prof Hays of Cornell. Mr Halden of Minnesota and other Negro pathologists of justice for the Negro demanded that we receive a separate deal from the Convention. Miss Addams said "I believe that our party should adopt a sound and consistent attitude in reference to the rights of the ten million Negroes of his country. What may we believe when we read in one column of a newspaper that the Negro has been discriminated against, and in another that our party is founded on the equality of all." We may not place this party in the position of taking from the Negro the right of citizenship given him by the Civil War. We realize there must be a balance of power in the South but we must consider our attitude carefully in view of our declaration of the equality of mankind.
Attorney Perry W. Howard, a national delegate elected to both the National Republican and Progressive Conventions from his state said "Am I to go back home and tell my children I was disfranchised by the party on the city and almost across the state where Abraham Lincoln fifty years ago made the fight which led to our enfranchisement? I had been given to understand and so had all of my race that this was a big humanitarian movement for the rights of all irrespective of race, color or race." The battle was totally drawn and resulted in a clear victory for the Southern forces. Their persistence efforts even prevented the Spinnaker resolution being adopted by the New York State delegation of which he was a member. The resolution was laid on the table because the allowed policy was to do nothing that was not in keeping with the demand of the Southerners to have withdrawn "the Crow" party.
So eminent was this Southern crowd in their victory that they demanded that General McBowell of the Confederate Veterans of Tennessee be allowed to second the Roosevelt nomination and that this man who had waged bloody war for four years to keep the Negro enlisted and to separate this nation was made the greatest hero of the Progressive Convention while the band played "DWLS."
Danville, Va.
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.
(1500.00) One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
dalm of Noah Williams, who was
a member of Golden Link Zelro, No.
83 of Davyville, Va.
$150 00' Erlowment Paid
Lynchburg, Va., 1912.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.,
Grand Chancellor, of the Grand
Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pytha-
nus, N. A., S. A., E. A., A., and A.
(4150.00) One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
claim of Brother James Holmes, who
was a member of Pioneer Lodge, No.
28 of Lynchburg, Va.
Signed—Fannie A. Holmes
Beneficiary.
Many Death Claims Paid by K. of P.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Staunton, Va., 1912.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.,
Grand Worthy Counselor of the
Grated Court of Virginia, Order of
Calamthe, $199,000. One Hundred
Dollars in payment of the death-claim
of Sister Jeanne Dickerson, who was
a member of Staunton Court, No.
76 of Staunton, Va.
Signed -- payment F. Dickerson,
Beneficiary.
George H. Brown
M. P. Harts, D. D.
$100.00 Endowment Paid.
Philadelphia, Pa. August 19, 1912
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counselor, of the
Grand Court of Virginia, Order of
Calanthe, $1100 out. One Hundred
Dollars in payment of the death-claim
of Sister Mgrtha Dorens who was a
member of Stanton Court, No. 75
of Stanton, Va.
Signed: Margie B. Walker
Beechcary.
Witnesses:
C. A. Scott
Mary Pissett
$100 00 Endowment Paid
Richmond, N. Aug. 24, 1912.
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counsellor of the Grand Court of Virginia, Order of
Calanthe, ($1000.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death-claim
of Sister Charlotte Codye, who was a member of Ivy Leaf Court. No.
No. of Richmond, Va.
Amanda Jackson
Anna Taylor
$1,000 00 Endowment Paid
Port mouth, Va., 1912
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Worthy Counsellor of the
Grand Court of Virginia, Order of
Calanthe, $1500 on the Hundred
Dollars in payment of the death-claim
of Sister Sallie Wynn, who was a
member of Portsmouth Court, No. 111
of Portsmouth, Va.
her
Sinnell: Mr. Parnell Wynn
mark
Benedictory.
Wynn: Mr. Sylvia Robertson
Winnor.
Mr. Sylvia Robertson.
$100 00 Endowment Paid
Lynchburg, Va. April 11, 1912
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grant Worthy, Controller of the
Grand Court of Virginia, Order of
Columbia (1811) and One Hundred
Dollars in payment of the death claim
of the late James Hobson, who was
a member of St. Paul Court No.
404 of Lynchburg, Va.
Signed: Father A. Holmes
Beneath:
Witness:
M. H. Colem.
Diana L. Hortonbeckton
Jennie L. Ward, D. D.
500 00 Endowment Paid
Baldwin L. Va. Apr. 19, 1912.
The Secretary of the I have received from John M. McMillan, Jr.
General Warranty Counsel of the
United States Virginia Order of
Calvary (1912) One Hundred
Dollars in payment of the deed-dealm
of Sister Arlene Eliza Browns, who
was a member of Wichita Court. No
lot of Baldwin, Va.
Signed Leen M. Bazile
Curator.
850 00 Endowment Paid
Portsmouth, Va. AUG. 24 1912
This is to certify that I have received from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Chancellor of the Grand
Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythagus,
N. A. N. A. E. A. A. and A.
410 600 Fifty Dollars in payment of the death claim of Brother Nelson
Douglas, who was a member of Mt.
Hepton Lodge, No. 108 of Port-
mouth, Va.
Sirrel - Mary E. Douglass,
Beneficiary.
Witnesses:
Henry D. Quinn, C. C.
Robt. A. Stanback, K. of R.
and S.
Archer Drew, D. C. C.
$150.00 Endowment Paid
Danville, Va., 1912.
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 deathclause of Brother Stephen Edmonds, who was a member of Morning Glory Lodge, No. 97 of Danville, Va.
William Cunningham.
Buddie Harrington.
B. J. Swanson.
$150.00 Endowment Paid
Orange, Va., Aug. 13, 1912.
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 Miles H. Hoard,
who was a member of Orange Lodge
No. 150 of Orange, Va.
Signed----George L. Browning
Executor.
Witnesses:
G. T. Willis, C. C.
Conway V. Taylor.
* 8150.00 Endowment Paid
Portsmouth, Va., Aug. 12, 1912
This is to certify that I have receded from John Mitchell, Jr.
Grand Chancellor of the Grand
Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A, and A.
(4150,004 One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
claim of Brother James Irvin Taylor
who was a member of Puritan Lodge
No. 101 of Portsmouth, Va.
her
Signed - Edna x Munden
mark
Beneficiary
Witness: Phiana Blunt
Witnesses:
John T. Fisher.
Robert Kemp, S. D. G. C.
George E. Rhodes.
Arneth Drew, D. D. G. C.
$150 00 Endowment Paid
Richmond, Va., Aug. 16, 1912.
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
chain of Brother Landon Baskerville
who was a member of Excelsior Lodgo
No. 22 of Richmond, Va.
her
Signed—Louisa x Baskerville
mark
Andrew L. Woolfolk
Robert Gray, D. D. G. C.
$150 (00) Endowment Paid.
Newport News, Va., 1912
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 Clathorne Boykin, who was a member of Newport News Lodge, No. 74 of Newport News, Va.
Signed—Hannah J. Boykin, Beneficiary.
Witnesses:
J. W. Larkins
C. H. Green
Major B. F. Jackson
J. H. Ridley
A. J. Drake
$150 00 Eralowment Paid.
Houston, Va. 1212
This is to certify that we have received from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge of Virginia, Knights of Pythia N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. (115a 00) One Hundred and Fifty dollars in payment of the death claim of Alfred Leigh, who was a member of St. Matthew Lodge, No. 99 of Houston, Va.
Signed: Arrie Leigh
Rebecca Leigh
Bennettartes
Witness:
C. C. Burke, late.
Storing Onions
Options to keep well must be stored in a cool and dry place. A little freezing does not necessarily hurt them if they are not exposed to frequent freezing and thawing.
Cash From Waste.
As soon as possible after the small grain is harvested turn the stock into the fields to glean the waste grain and clean up the fouce rows. A part of the money the land has produced still remains in the field after the grain has been harvested and removed. Animals can make available cash out of the waste crops.
Got It on the Land:
There is no month in the year when manure cannot be hauled and scattered on the fields to advantage. It is better on the land than in the stables and lots.
With the Feathered Folk.
Lack of grit, overfeeding and idleness cause liver trouble.
When alfalfa or clover hay is stored in the barn it will be easy to gather a quantity of the leaves that shatter off, and these are prime feed for all classes of poultry.
Dry feed has no place in the duck diet. Four parts wheat bran, oile part cornmeal and enough low grade flour added to bind the mass without making it pasty, about 5 per cent. sharp grit moistened with just enough water to be crumbly, is a good ration.
After the first few days a little soaked beef-brap may be added, though not necessary if the feed is moistened with milk.
Scaly legs in fowls are caused by a mite which finds its way under the scale and causes the legs to become diseased, rough and painful. These mites cannot survive grasse or oil. The remedy is the application of elther. Kermene will move the effect of destroying the natural color of the legs. The use of lard, meat fryings or velline will do the work—Kauan Farmer.
The best preparation for making Kinky, Coarse Hair soft and pliable and easy to put up in any style desired. LIBERAL SAMPLE SENT ON APPLICATION QUINACOMB To straighten the hair quickly, use in conjunction with Quinade our QUINACOMB a comb made of specially tempered metal, so as to retain the proper degree of heat. This comb can also be used to dry the hair quickly after shampooing.
SOAP
Sentry Drug Co.
79 East 130th St., New York
Cornwall
roughly cleanses the scalp
Before using Quinade my hair
was this and course and I was last
used in connection with
Quinade my hair began to grow
rapidly and is now thick, long and
The ideal shampoo soap thoroughly cleanses the scalp Before using Quinade my hair was thin and coarse and I was last and is especially adapted to be used in connection with Quinade my hair began to grow rapidly and is now thick, long, dense and
SEEBY DRUG CO., NEW YORK
HOTEL D
CAPE MAY,
This magnificent hotel replete with every m
distinction for its location; direct Sou
tive in construction, appointments, serve
Endorsed by leading representative citi
Concerts daily by the Abyssinia Orchestra.
tennis, etc., on premises.
Special attention given to ladies and childr
mation mailed upon request.
EL DALE,
E MAY, N. J.
ete with every modern improvement, claim
ion; direct Southern exposure. Superla-
pointments, service. and refined patronage.
representative citizens.
Sinia Orchestra. Garage, bath-houses,
es.
adies and children. Literature and infor-
quest.
THE HOTEL
HOTEL DALE, CAPE MAY, N. J.
This magnificent hotel replete with every modern improvement, claims distinction for its location; direct Southern exposure. Superlative in construction, appointments, service and refined patronage. Endorsed by leading representative citizens. Concerts daily by the Abyssinia Orchestra. Garage, bath-houses, tennis, etc., on premises. Special attention given to ladies and children. Literature and information mailed upon request. E. W. DALE, Owner and Proprietor.
Of every description; also the latest designs in ROCKERS and Special CHAIRS.
Our goods are the best for the price and the price is very low.
C. G. JURGEN'S SON
Adams and Broad Streets.
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE:
MAKES UNDER HAIR ON CURTY HAIR
GOODS, SOTTER AND MORE PLAMLE,
EASY TO GROW AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE
THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT, MULTICOLOR
FOR PREVENTION FROM FALLING OUT, MANYROOMS AND HOMES
OF SCALE DEVELOP OF INVOLUTION, GET THE GEMINI, PUT UP
25- and 50-BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON
EVERY PACKAGE.
TRY FORD'S ROYAL WHITE
SKIN LOTION FOR THE COMPLEXION.
MAKES THE SKIN WHITE INMEDIATELY
UPON APPLICATION. WILL NOT IRRITATE
THE MOST DELICATE SKIN. UNEXCEELED
FOR ECCEZA, SALT RHEUM, PIMPLES,
ROUGH SKIN AND FRECKLES.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT
SUPPLY YOU WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT BY
THE PULLED PIPES, SHELL AND BRIEWS.
THE OZONES IN MARROW CO.
822 MAKE STREET, 330
CHICAGO, IL
WANTED.
A. Hayes,
Office and Ware-Rooms,
727 NORTH SECOND STREET.
Residence, 726 N. 2nd St.
Educate! THE YOUNG MEN.
First-class Hacks and Caskets of All Descriptions. I have a Spare Room for BODIES when the Family have not a suitable Place. All country Orders are Given Special Attention. Your Special Attention is called to the New Style OAK CASKBETS, Call and See Me and You shall be Waited on Individually.
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DRUGGING
COPYRIGHTS & G.
A company selling a shuck and peeling machine
very widely, our creation gives whether or not
lives truly beyond the bounds of the machine.
We sell fresh, Ozzie brand of peeling machines.
We sell machines without warranty.
Scientific American.
A handsome magazine quality.
A collection of dry goods.
A collection of wet goods.
Moon & Co. 90 Broadway, New York
O. O. P. P. W. W. W. D. C.
---
Vancouver, B. C., July 8, 1912.
To Editors, Business Men, Clergymen
Teachers, Farmers, and All Whom
It May Concern.
Dear Sirs:—I am writing to ask
you to favor me with the names and
addresses of as many respectable colo-
red families in your district, that
you may know, who desire to come
to settle in Canada, province of
British Columbia.
Coming here from the States seven
years ago I have been very successful
in my several undertakings. I now
feel it my duty, as far as possible,
to try to be of some service to my
race. What I wish them to know is
that I have 400 acres of rich, black
loam garden land, all cleared, divided
in blocks of five acres. Will build
good, comfortable homes of two to
ten rooms, barns, sheds, etc., and
give them the greatest opportunity
of their lives to pay for them.
Only a small payment required,
balance to run five years; can be paid
off in two years from produce raised,
Railway and Electric lines pass
through the property; close to churches,
schools and post office. Maps,
plans, etc. ready August 15th.
Admit others who may be interested,
to write me at once. Thanking you
in advance, I am.
Yours faithfully.
Do You Know Him?
I desire to know the whereabouts of my son, Louis George Hannibal He lived in Detroit, Michigan for some time, but has disappeared from that city. I have been informed that he is in Richmond, Va. Any information concerning him will be thankfully received. Address.
F. Z. S. PEREGRINO, Care of The PLANET, 311 North Fourth St., Richmond, Virginia.
Pipe Organ for Sale.
For sale cheap, a seventeen stop
(Erbin) Pipe Organ, now doing good
service in an Episcopal Church
Address, ORGAN, Box 841, Richmond
Virginia. 2t
To have happy homes, good churches, strong societies they must have an intelligent head. The boys of today must be prepared to meet the responsibilities of the future. The AGRICULTURAL & MECHANICAL COLLEGE offers splendid advantage for practical training for young men Open all the year. For males only Board, lodging and tuition $7.00 per month. For catalogue and other information address.
JAMES B. DUDLEY, President,
Greensboro, N. G.
5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case of Chills & Fever; and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. Price 25c.
A.
JURGEN'S SON
Before making your Purchase you would do well to call at the Most Reliable Furniture House in the City and See the Fine Line of REFRIGERATORS. MATTINGS, OIL-CLOTHS And in fact everything that is needed in house furnishings. RUGS AND CARPETS.