Richmond Planet
Saturday, January 4, 1913
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
A Review of Past Difficulties and Present Achievements.
It is an open question as to just who was responsible for the insurance business activity of the colored people of this city. Col. Joseph T. Wilson, author of the Black Phalanx, in conjunction with Major J. B. Johnson of old Manchester were the pioneers. It is no reflection upon either of them to state that so meagre was the information of the colored folks upon this branch of business that the insurance tables of the standard white life insurance companies were free copied and modified so form essays for the work of this profitable branch of legitimate business endeavor.
EMPLOYED COLORED SOLICITORS
Some white insurance companies, too, began the experiment of employing colored solicitors for work among colored people. Mr. P. G.2 Roberts, now deceased, was one of the most export at this business and he finally transferred his efforts in support of the Galilean Fishermen's Relief Association. The discrimination by white companies against colored people aided vary, materially the work of these colored insurance companies and the large membership which finally came to the colored enterprises justified the expectations of the promoters of this branch of business activity.
THE TRUE REFORMER MOVE
MENT.
It is hardly possible too to overestimate the effect of the True Reformer movement under the leadership of Rev. William W. Browne, who with his organisation began experiments in the business world which attracted much attention and which tended to inspire other colored men to ventures along a similar line.
The fact that he reached the "zenith of his glory," blundered upon the advice of treacherous friends and died, is too well known to need further comment here. His successors did not understand his plans and "wrecked" the great enterprise which had he lived might have still been enjoying its meed of prosperity. But it was with reference to the insurance business free from the meeting, fraternal plan with which I desired to deal.
"MINE AND THINE."
The colored insurance companies were having a hard time of it, due primarily to lack of efficiency and ability and the management, which caused money stringency and which money stringency caused some of the officials of the struggling companies to "borrow" from the company and not pay back. This caused something of a handcap.
The most "ancient" of these companies is the Southern Aid Society, then located at 506 E. Broad Street, Richmond, Va. A sketch of its history and progress will prove interesting. For the present, I shall reserve further comment for our next issue.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.
A surprise Wedding
Miss Lilian Chilch, daughter of Attorney James A. Chilch of Lexington, Kentucky came to this city to spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. John R. Chilch. 316 W. Leigh A. She left last Tuesday night for home. It was afterwards ascertained that she was joined in wedlock during her stay time to Mr. Thomas Gilpin, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Gilpin. It is further reported that Rev. J. T. T. Mqby, pastor of the New Baptist Church performed the ceremony.
Rev. Dr. Anthony Called.
Rev. W. T. Anthony, D. D., pastor of Zion Baptist Church of South Richmond, Va. has been called to the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church of Philadelphia. It is not known whether or not he will attend.
Fifth Baptist Church Office a Pastor.
On December 29, 1619 the Fifth
Baptist Church opened a call to
Rev A. B. Bury of the University
University, Duluth, MN, and
unfortunately, closed prematurely
after closing the first Sunday of
early 1620. We pray, bless,
and before the congregation
hangs by our side.
Benjamin Jackson's grocery store 902 N. Seventh Street in this city was the scene of a "hold-up" last Saturday at about ten minutes to seven o'clock. It was dark and he had just gone into the next room with his wife after waiting on a customer. Hearing some one enter the store, he started out when a colored man stood in the middle door way and commanded him and his wife to throw up their hands and in the meantime, he saw another colored man of light complexion behind his counter in the store riffing the cash drawer. He wore a cap which was pulled down over his face.
IN WESTERN STYLE
When this had been completed, the robber ordered Mr. and Mrs. Jackson to turn their faces to the wall. He then quickly disappeared. The amount secured was between twelve and fifteen dollars. Miss Cora L. Bright was upstairs at the time and did not know about the affair until she was called.
Information was at once communicated to the Second Police Station and in about five minutes a bicycle officer was at the store. The robber who held the revolvers was of dark complexion. He had one of these revolvers in each hand.
ONE MAN ARRESTED.
The police arrested Frank Johnson of North Eighth St. He had a new revolver in his hand when arrested. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson-walle not being able to positively identify him, owing to the fact that the man like him was in the store riffing the money drawer state that he looks very much like one of the men who robbed them. They can Identify the one who held the revolvers if they see him again, but he has not as yet been apprehended.
Mr. Tate Grows Enthusiastic.
Mitchell, Va., Dec. 31, 1912.
Mr. John Mitchell, Jr.
311 North Fourth Street.
Editor The Richmond PLANET
Dear Sir: Since the setting apart
of Orange Lodge, No. 150, Knights
of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A.
and A. October 27, 1908, where I
had the pleasure of meeting you, and
listening to your able address and
counsel and where I subscribed to
your valuable paper, The Richmond
PLANET. I have been constantly
reading after you and studying you,
complimenting you, etc. until I shall
no longer withhold from writing you
a few brief lines.
Truly I am unable to confer upon you the praise and honour that is rightly due you; however I congratulate you on the noble work you have rendered in defending us an am humble and down-trodden race. While there are many of my race that is an integrable burden and by their dire and unwarranted deeds, hinder much the progress we would make; yet, notwithstanding all this, you make such logical, many appeals in our defense and throw, on every possible good deed of onna a light more brilliant than a "Planet," which proves well to the civilised world that a large percentage of the race are striving to advance in the highest ideals that can be accredited to any race or people.
I congratulate you on the noble adventures you are making in life. The establishing of the Mechanics' Savings Bank and the Anglo-American Finance Corporation, in Richmond, Va. is very praiseworthy to you indeed, to say nothing of the membership of the American Bankers' Association and the Royal Society of Arts of England.
I also present many bouquets to those of your coworkers, and trust that each of you may reach the summit of fame. When I think of how much energy and endurance you must have undergone to reach the stage on which you now stand as benoční light, second to none. I hastitate not to tip my hat once twice, three times to you, Brother John.
I trust that onward and upward will ever be your watchword, and that you may continue to lift up fallen and downtraced humanity in my race and every other race who may chance to find inspiration in your worthy perseverance. And when life's battles are finished, I hope to meet you in the Haven of Blench.
WARNER—A LIGHT COMPLEXION
of Matter. Must be deeper. Gear
must be 1440. I will send thither.
WARNER L. MIXLLE
V. Va. 75 miles
W. B. C.
Mr. Rison's Tribute.
A MOVING JOHN MITCHELL JR.
Let us trace him back for twenty years or more and see what he has been doing. First, Take The PLANET. a paper that has been wielded in the defense of the colored people as a two-edged sword in a fierce battle. Yes he wielded it manfully and fearlessly.
Second. We next find him at the head of one of the strongest institutions in this country, known as K. of P. He has held the position as Grand Chancellor for ten years or more, and has raised the Order to a higher standard, socially, mentally and financially.
We next find him as a President of one of the strongest colored banks in the United States. The building alone is a credit to the Negro race.
We next find him seated amongst the bankers and a member of the American Bankers' Association, a position no other colored man ever occupied.
Where will we find him now? Crossing the briny deep mingling and commingling with the Loyals. What is the result? Just a life member of the Royal Society of Arts.
The last but not the least we find him at the head of the strongest institution that ever was known among colored people. In a position to handle and to loan any reasonable amount of money. Yes, you can say $1,000,000 if need to be. Now where is there another John Mitchell? We have read of John the Baptist. Surely they must be relatives.
We next expect to see him going as Ellaba. If so, drive your chariot by her and let me get in because I believe you are right.
Farewell. John.
GEO. W. HISON.
Colored Man Killed.
Hampton, Va., January 1.—Lloyd Tignor, a building contractor here, to-day shot and fatally wounded John Lattimore, a colored barber. The colored man was shot at 1:45 o'clock and died in the Dixie Hospital tonight at 6:45 o'clock. The ball entered his abdomen and punctured his intestines in eight places. The shoot ing occurred in Curtis's saloon. Tignor claimed that Lattimore attempted to attack him with a pocket knife. Tignor is a member of a widely known family. He was arrested and balled on the charge of murder. Ball was refused him pending an investigation by the coroner's jury. Tignor has a wife and three children.
GREAT THANKSGIVING SERVICES OF THE NATIONAL IDEAL BENEFIT SOCIETY
At the Historic Cherry Memorial Baptist Church.—Supreme Master, Hon. A. W. Holmes Makes an Able Address and Pays the First Death Claim.
(Special to The Richmond Planet)
Philadelphia, Pa.—Dec. 29.—The National Ideal Benefit Society met in its first Thanksgiving meeting Sunday evening. December 29th at Cherry Memorial Baptist Church. The members assembled in the lecture room of the Church at 7 o'clock. At 8 o'clock they entered the main auditorium of the Church which was crowded, even the gallery, with persons anxious to witness the first public appearance of the Society in Philadelphia.
While the choir rendered excellent music the Supreme Master A. W. Holmes was escorted to the roostrum by State Deputy Mr. Lewis Thompson followed by Ideal Nursery children led by Miss Lucy A. Hall; female members led by National Ideal Lecturer Mrs. Rosa Thompson, followed by the male members.
Rev. W. A. Creditt, D. D., LL. D. pastor of Church, Master of Caramones, conducted devotional exercises and introduced the following speakers:
Prayer by Rev. Thomas Walker;
Address of Welcome, Hon. Lawyer
Charles H. Brooks, President of
Cherry Building and Loan Company
and Chairman of Trustee Board;
Response, Miss Lucy A. Hall, Secretary of Ideal; History of Organization, Mrs. Rena Thompson, Ideal Lecturer; Address by Supreme Master Hon. A. W. Holmes; Sermon by Pastor, Rev. W. A. Credit; Ideal offering lifted by Trustees, assisted by Miss Lucy A. Hall and State Deputy Lewis Thompson; Poem composed by F. L. Bryant of Midland was well delivered by Miss Harper Sheedy; Presentation to Pastor by National Lecturer to Stuart, M. R. Baldwin; to Supreme President by Billy Baldwin; to Congressman by Billy Baldwin.
B. Taylor, Sadie West, Dana Walker
D. Baldy B. Hammer
Too much concern should in praise of the pastor and members of the church for the health welcome and their endowment of the National Ideal Society. Philadelphia is surely on fire with the spirit of this organisation which can reached here a few months ago and more than 300 members to thank God for its advent in this city.
The Supreme Master remained in the city several days. While here he paid the death class of the first member of the organization, notice having reached headquarters just a few days before his leaving. Say the people of Philadelphia. Surely the National Ideal Society is a reality.
Washington Bank Messenger Walks Off With $0,000 when he is Trusted
Whobster Morton, colored, the defaulting messenger of the Washington and Southern Bank, 1413 G St., Washington, D.C., who yesterday ran away with $6,000 belonging to the bank, was captured at the home of his grandmother in Jackson ward early this morning, but escaped at a patrol box, after felling Detective Sergeant Wiley with a heavy blow on the back of the head.
Sergeants Wiley and Kellam had been detailed on the case directly after information came from Washington that Morton might come here. They watched the house of his grand parent through many long hours, and finally caught sight of Morton.
GET BACK $5,500.
They arrested him with little parley, and confiscated a suit-case he carried, in which they found $5,000. On his person they discovered $400. The man consented to accompany them and the two detectives took him to the patrol box at St. Peter and Baker streets. Sergent Wiley had his nippers on Morton, and as the patrol wagon came into sight Sergeant Kellam, as is the custom, called the signal operator to see if another call for the patrol wagon had come in.
No sooner had Kellam turned his back than Morton swing around and dealt Wiley a terrific blow on the back of the head, knocking him down on his hands and knees. It happened so quickly that both men were taken by surprise. Wiley recovered himself in an instant, and, with Kellam, started in pursuit of the fugitive
DISAPPEARS IN DARK
They called to him to halt, but he sped on, and the shots they fired at him did not take effect. He was soon lost in the distance, though the patrol wagon, with its large searchlight, followed as far as it could, and rendered every old possible. However, $5.840 of the missing money was recovered and was taken to the Second Police Station. Major Werner and Captain McMahon were apprised of the capture and the escape, and Washington was notified. The local authorities sent out teleographic messages to adjacent cities, and they hope soon to recapture the man. Both detectives who made the arrest were sorely disappointed that their man escaped from them and were much chagrined—Virginian, January 1, 1913.
Married in Danville, Va.
Saxe, Va., December 19.—Mr. Jefferson Jackson and Mrs. Catherine S. Brooks were married December 18, 1913 in Danville, Va. Mrs. Brooks the widow of the late Mr. D. B. Brooks went to Danville December 10, 1913 to visit Mr. and Mrs. George W. Rison and wait for the solemn ceremony on the 18th. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. R. Carr, assisted by Rev. Goode and Rev. Yancey at high noon. Witnesses were Miss Mildred Newton and Mr. Charlie Hammond. The party left for Saxe at 2 P. M. and was met there by 24 waiters and accompanied to the Henry Church for the reception. The march was played by Mrs. Mosley (white) and Rev. Lanke was also there. Mrs. Catherine S. Jackson is satisfied with marrying the good old farmer.
Sir George L. Coleman wished to be there but was not at home.
DRAKES BRANCH (VA.) NEWS
The sudden disappearance Monday of James Coleman has aroused the feelings of the people more than anything that has happened here for a long time. Had Coleman remained here until Wednesday, 26th inst. he would have been expected to perform a life long obligation which would have made Miss Geneva Marshall Mrs. Coleman.
The man had made himself busy in preparing for the occasion, prepared a house, bought furniture etc. Why the fellow's mind changed is to be wondered. That Mrs. Coleman, James' mother, drove from Eureka Mills to Mossingford Church to see the marriage shows she knew nothing of the broken promise. Remaining as it is, the way is illuminated for would-be rascals. There is a remedy for the wrong, but "is up to" Mr. Thornton Marshall. Will anything be done?
Rev. T. B. Daly, evangelist of Randolph, Va., preached at Charlotte Courthouse at Beautiful Plain Church Sunday from the text "Go and wash seven times in Jordan and be clean." Rev. Daly held his large audience spellbound for over an hour. The people are anxious to hear him again.
A social was given Monday night at the residence of Mrs. Lizzie Miles. Music was furnished by Mr. Isaac Hodge's string band. A pleasant time was enjoyed.
Some of those present were: Mr. M. M. Lee, Mr. Henick Reed, Misses Bertha Hodge, Eliza Hodge, Jennie Ellia, Julia Ellis, Jennie Roberts, Emma Dupee, Lucy Miles, Dora Hodge, McArra Nelson Lewis, J. J. Shepperson and others. A pleasant time was had. Mr. S. A. Hall and Miss Dora E. Hall of Hampton Institute and Thyme respectively are spending the holidays with their parents, Dr. and Mrs. Hall. Miss Eliza Hodge of Montclair, N. J. is spending the holidays with her mother, Mrs. Lottie Hodge. Miss Jennie Ellis of Richmond was tired of the noise of the city and is having a quiet Xmas with her parents. Mrs. Margaret Brooks and daughter, Miss Mossie of Sparrow's Polite are home for the Xmas. Mr. Charlie Turrell of Newport News spent Xmas with his brother in-law Isaac Hodge.
The public schools opened again last Thursday.
— Prof. W. E. B. Dullbos will lecture at the Virginia Union University Monday, January 12, 1913. He is regarded as the ablest citizen of color in this country.
— Dr. P. B. Ramney, who has been ill for two months was out for a drive New Year's Day. While still weak, he is looking as well as ever. He does not know when he shall be able to resume his practice.
— Miss Janie Scott of Washington, D. C. was here this week to attend the marriage reception of her sister Miss Sailie W. Scott whose marriage to Mr. Harry J. Williams took place June 24, 1912.
Stockholders to Meet
The stockholders of the Mechanics Savings Bank will hold their annual meeting next Tuesday night in the Concert Hall of the Pythian Castle, 727 N. Third St.
TEXAS TO TRY SOLDIERS.
State Will Get Six Troopers Wanted
for Shooting Agrary.
Austin, Tex., Jan. 1.—Announcement was made here today that mandamus proceedings in the Supreme Court of the United States to compel the surrender of six soldiers at Fort Clark, near Brackettville, to the civil authorities of Kinney county, Texas, will be withdrawn, on Gov. Colquitt's request. The soldiers were wanted in connection with a shooting affray at a Mexican dance at Brackettville. Gov. Colquitt has been informed the military authorities will turn over the troopers without a contest.
Pretty Marriage in South Richmond.
The marriage of Miss Edna Mc Kenzie to Mr. Floyd O. Hickmons was solemnized Tuesday day, Dec. 31, 1912 at the residence of the brides' parents, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Cuningham, Sr., 1701 Decatur Street, South Richmond, Va.
The license was brought in by little Miss Emilia Cunningham. The sisters were Miss Means. James McKenzie and Willie Harris. The bridal party marched into the parlor to the accompaniment of sweet strains of music, played by Miss Radio Mitten. The couple was united in the bounds of marriage by Dr. Dr. A. Hage, Jr. After the ceremony the couple received the congratulations of friends and reinstatement were served. The couple came and married
Tilt Over Troopers.
Texas Wants to Try Six Soldiers Held For Killing—Fort Commander Resists.
Six troopers of the Fourteenth United States cavalry, stationed at Fort Clark are wanted by the State authorities of Texas for "shooting up" a dance on the night of November 9, 1912, killing one person and seriously wounding two others. Jas. D. Walthann, the State's attorney general, yesterday filed a motion with the Supreme Court for a writ of mandamus.
After the commission of the crime proceedings were begun under military law and a court-martial ordered. When State warrants were issued on November 13, Col. F. W. Sibley commanding at Fort Clark, declined to surrender the men holding that under the county between the civil and military authorities, both had concurrent jurisdiction in the case, and that the military jurisdiction having first attached by the service of process, should not be disturbed until fully satisfied.
REFUSED ADMISSION TO HALL
The men indulge Iave Nicholas Andruzza, Booth Toregan, Harry Larson, Econ F. F. Von Rysin, Augustus Craig and Frank Corbene. They are charged with killing Pedro Ortega, after having gone twice to the hall where the dance was in progress and being refused a admission. The hall is not on the military reservation, and Gov. Colquitt of Texas has requested the War Department to order the release of the prisoners.
Bragg Brothers and Company
Brass Brothers Co. is a new company or co-partnership formed to conduct the Real Estate and Loan business in all its branches, with offices at 500 N. 2nd Street, where they will be pleased to meet property owners, prospective buyers, sellers and borrowers. The Brass Brothers, formerly proprietors of the Richmond Steam Laundry, which they recently sold at a handsome price, together with their own money have the backing of Richmond's largest financial institution. Hence they have a large sum of ready Cash for those who wish to borrow. Their integrity and pre-eminent success in their laundry business will serve them well in the Real Estate Business. Attorney J. R. Pollard will have legal direction of the business which will be private banking, brokerage and real estate.
---
Funeral of Mrs. Laura A. Johnson
Richmond, Va., December 25.—The funeral of Mrs. Laura A. Johnson, the wife of Mr. Simon Johnson, who died Monday, December 16, 1912 at 2:30 o'clock P. M. was preached from the Second Baptist Church, of which she was a useful and consistent member a number of years. Thursday evening, December 19, 1912.
The several organizations with which she was connected, L. e., True Reformers, Courts of Calanthe, St. Luke and Deborah's Industrial Union read beautiful and appropriate resolutions. Afterwards, the Pastor took his text from II Timothy, 4th chapter, 7th and 8th verses, thus, "She has fought a good fight. She has kept the faith, henceforth there is a crown laid up for you in heaven."
The beautiful and numerous floral designs showed the high esteem in which she was held by her many friends. She leaves beside her husband a devoted daughter, a sister and brother, with many friends to mourn their loss.
"Oh, for the death of those Who slumber in the Lord!
Oh, be like theirs my last repose.
Like theirs my last reward."
Rev. Allen Baylor Remembered.
Ruther Glen, Va., December 24.—The ladies of the Star of Bethlehem Club presented to their pastor, Rev. Allen Baylor of the Reedy Baptist Church, Caroline County, a morris chair as a Xmas gift at $25.00 as an appreciation of his labor in their midst. Praying that the Lord may continue to crown his labors with success,
R. R.
Card of Thanks.
Mr. Simon Johnstone and family return many thanks for the kindness shown his wife, Laura A. Johnstone in her last illness.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
BUCHANAN SOOKES DISPRAN-
CHISEMENT OF VIRGINIA
NEGROWS.
Supreme Court Judge Speaks at
Anniversary of Negro Business
League.
Bristol, Va., December 31.—In a
speech here tonight at the thirtieth
anniversary of the Bristol Negro Bus-
ness League of which Robert E.
Clay, the noted Negro leader, is
president, Judge John A. Buchanan
of the Supreme Court of Appeals of
Virginia, condemned the disfran-
chement of the Negro in Virginia.
He attacked the conduct of the offi-
cers in executing the provision of
the new constitution and not the law.
"The black man of Virginia had
better be worthy to vote and still be
disfranched than to be as the white
men who were given the vote and
sold it." said Judge Buchanan.
In Memoriam.
In memory of Deacon Philip Brown of Belona, Powhatan County, Va., who departed this life December 24, 1912. He leaves a wife, seven children, three grand children, two sisters and one adopted son and a host of friends to mourn their loss:
Dear husband and father, thou hast left us.
And the voice we loved is stillled.
A place is vacant in our home.
Which never can be filled.
By his daughter,
MRS. SARAH B. HARRIS.
911 William St.
2. OTICE.
It has been found necessary to buy and properly equip the home for homeless and dependent Colored chil dron, located at 1512 Taylor street, known as the Working Woman's Industrial Home and Day Nursery, moved from 516 Third street May, 1910. In order to make the perpetual and purchase it, we must appeal to the generous public for help.
All interested in this work can help by contributing freely through the Mite Boxes and envelopes already distributed, which will be called for by a committee wearing a badge containing the words "Children's Home." Contributions can be sent directly to Mrs. J. Calvin Stewart, 1031 West Grace street, who is the Treasurer of the Building Fund.
No fund can be too small to help. Please do not give money to anyone except those soliciting and wearing the "Children's Home" badge. This work is approved by Gov. Mann, Mayor Ainalle, Dr. J. T. Mastin, Rev. James Buchanan, Judge Richardson and a Committee of Ladles. The work is also enforced by the Colored Ministers' Conference of the City.
The following compose the Colored Committee for soliciting Funds: Mrs. Rebeker Violet Crawford, Manager of the Home; Mrs. Adelaide G. Thompson, Mrs. Mattle Hewin, Mrs. Harritt Page, Mrs. H. R. John son, Mrs. Anna Hunter.
Will you be one of the two thousand to contribute $1 or more? If as please forward it to Mrs. J. C. Stewart, 1031. West Grace street. We thank the Public School Children for $65 as an offering. We have heading our colored individual contribution list. Dr. R. E. Jones, $6.00 and Mr. Nelson Williams, $2. WHO WILL BE NEXT?
W. E. Burghardt Du Bois, the Flary's Foremost Scholar to Lecture in Richmond.
The people of Richmond will have the opportunity of hearing Dr. W. E. B. DuBols, the author of "The Souls of Black Folk," The Philadelphia Negro" and the "Quest of the Silver Fleece," at Virginia Union University on Friday evening, January 10 1913 at 8:15 o'clock. Dr. DuBols who is Editor of the Crisis was a delegate to the Universal Race's Congress held at London, England, and has achieved international fame as a student of sociology and as a writer.
Wants to Find Them.
I am very anxious to know if any of the family of Quivers still survive. My father Emanuel McPharron Quivers while yet a slave was Prueman at the Tredegar Iron Works on Belle Isle. Father had a sister by the name of Sarah M. Kemp. She died in Richmond, Va. about 33 years ago. My first cousin, Stephen Kemp was Postmaster of Glendale after the war. Any information that can be furnished will be gladly received.
EMANUEL QUIVEN
P. Q. Box 101
Stanford, Cal.
PROLOGUE.
This fascinating romance of society life, politics and the underworld, this problem of the ninety-eight pearls, this tragedy of the missing state treasurer and a beautiful daughter's search for him, holds the reader's interest from the very first chapter to the last and gives the author a high place among the creators of mystery fiction.
CHAPTER 1
I my criminal work anything that
wears skirts is a lady until the
law proves her otherwise. From
the frayel and slovenly petticoats of the woman who owns a poultry stand in the market and who has grown wealthy by selling chickens at twelve ounces to the pound or the silk sweep of Mamle Tracy, whose diamonds have been stolen down on the avenue or the stairly respectable black and middle aged skirt of the client whose husband has found an affinity partial to laces and fripperies and has run off with her-all the wearers are ladies and as such announced by Hawes. In fact, he carries it to excess. He speaks of his wash lady, with a husband who is an ash merchant, and he announced one day in some excitement that the lady who had just gone out had appropriated all the loose change out of the pocket of his overcoat.
So when Hawes announced a lady I took my feet off my desk, put down the brief I had been reading and rose perfunctorily. With my first glance at my visitor, however, I threw away my cigar and, I have heard since, settled my tie. That this client was different was borne in on me at once by the way she entered the room. She had police in spite of embarrassment, and her face when she raised her veil was white, refined and young.
"I did not send in my name," she said when she saw me glancing, down for the card Hawes usually puts on my table. "It was advice I wanted, and I—I did not think the name would matter."
She was more composed. I think when she found me considerably older than herself. I saw her looking furtively at the graying places over my cars. I am only thirty-five, as far as that goes, but my family, although it keeps its hair, turns gray early—a business asset, but a social handicap. "Won't you sit down?" I asked, pushing out a chair so that she would face the light while I remained in shadow. Every doctor and every lawyer knows that trick. Only too often the raising of a woman's veil in my office reveals the ravages of tears or ronge or disdain. My new client turned fearlessly to the window an unlined face, with a clear skin, healthily pale. From where I sat her profile was beautiful.
"I hardly know how to begin," she said, "but suppose"—slowly—"suppose that a man, a well known man, should leave home without warning, not taking any clothes except those he wore and saying he was coming home to dinner, and be—"—
"How long has he been gone?"
"Ten days."
"I should think it ought to be looked into," I said decisively and got up. Somehow I couldn't sit quietly. A lawyer who is worth anything is always a partisan, I suppose, and I never bear of a man deserving his wife that I am not indignant, the virtuous scorn of the unmarried man perhaps. "But you will have to tell me more than that. Did this gentleman have any bad habits—that is, did he—drink?"
"Not to excess. He played bridge for money, but I believe he was rather lucky."
"Married, I suppose?" I asked casually.
"He had been. His wife died when I"— She stopped and bit her lip. Then it was not her husband, after all. Oddly enough, the sun came out just at that moment, spilling a pool of sunlight at her feet.
"It is my father," she said simply. I was shameless relieved.
"He would have papers to identify him."
"His pockets were always full of envelopes, and things like that."
"Don't you think I ought to know his name?" I asked. "It need not be known outside of the office, and this is a sort of confession anyhow, or worse."
"My name is Fleming, Margery Fleming," she said after a second invitation, "and my father, Allan Fleming, is the man. Oh. Mr. Knox, what are we going to do? He has been gone for more than a week!"
No wonder she had wished to conceal the identity of the missing man. So Allan Fleming was lost! A good many highly respectable citizens would hope that be might never be found. Fleming, state treasurer, delightful companion, petalled gentleman and successful politician of the criminal type. Outside in the corridor the office boy was staging under his breath. "Oh, once there was a mill," he sang, "who lived in a mill." It brought to my mind the reform meeting a year before, where for a few hours we had blown, the fuble spark of protest against magazine denomination to a flame. We had sung a song to that very time, and with this white flood god seemed from its words come back with revolting truth.
Oh, there there was a night!
There are on a hill!
As we are laying on the ground
We probably there all!
Roxana
"I am more than sorry." I said. I was too. Whatever he may have been, he was her father. "After all, there may be a dozen simple explanations, and there are exigencies in politics"—"I hate politics!" she broke in suddenly. "When I read of women wanting to—to vote and all that I wonder if they know what it means to have to be polite to dreadful people, people who have even been convicts and all that. Why, our last butler had been a prizefighter?" She sat upright with her hands on the arms of the chair. "That is another thing, too. Mr. Knox. The day after father went away. Carter, our butler, left. He was not there that evening to serve dinner, but—he came back late that night and got into the house, using his key to the servant's entrance. He slept there, the maids said, but he was gone before the servants were up, and we have not seen him since."
"Your father has not been ill, has he? I mean recently."
"I cannot think of anything except that he had a tooth pulled." She was quick to resent my smile.
"You have not noticed any mental symptoms—any lack of memory?"
Her eyes filled.
"He forgot my birthday two weeks ago." she said. "It was the first one he had ever forgotten in nineteen of them."
Nineteen. Nineteen from thirty-five leaves nineteen.
"What I meant was this." I explained. "People sometimes have sudden and unaccountable lapses of memory and at those times they are apt to stray away from home. Has your father been worried lately?"
"He has not been himself at all. He has been irritable even to us and terrible to the servants. Only to Carter—he was never ugly to Carter."
"You have no brothers or sisters?"
"None. I came to you"—there she stopped.
"Please tell me how you happened to come to me." I urged.
"I didn't know where to go," she confessed. "so I took the telephone directory, the classified part under 'Attorneys,' and, after I shut my eyes, I put my finger uphair on the page. I pointed to your name."
"I am afraid I flushed at this," but in a moment I laughed.
"We will take it as an omen," I said.
"and, I will do all that I can. But I am not a detective. Miss Fleming. Don't you think we ought to have one?"
"Not the police?" She shhildered.
"Suppose you tell me what happened the day your father left and how he went away. Tell me the little things, too."
"In the first place," she began, "we live on Monmouth avenue. There are just the two of us and the servants—a cook, two housemaids, a laundress, a butler and a chauffeur. My father spends much of his time at the capital and in the last two years since my old governess went back to Germany at those times. I usually go to mother's sisters at Bellwood, Miss Letitia and Miss Jane Maltland."
I nodded. I knew the Maltland ladies well. I had drawn four different wills for Miss Letitia in the last year.
"My father went away on the 10th of May. He got up from breakfast, picked up his hat and walked out of the house. He was irritated at a let tor be had read.
"He took the letter with him. He did not come home that night, and I went to the office the next morning. The stenographer said he had not been there. He is not at Plattstburg because they have been trying to call him from there on the long distance telephone every day." In spite of her candid face I was sure she was holding something back.
"Why don't you tell me everything?" I asked.
Sheushed. Then she opened her pocketbook and gave me a slip of rough paper. On it in careless figures was the number "eleven twenty-two." That was all.
"I was afraid you would think it allly," she said. "It was such a meaningless thing. You see, the second night after father left I was nervous and could not sleep. I expected him home at any time, and I kept listening for his sleep downstairs. About 3 o'clock I woke me I heard one in the room below inside. I felt relieved, for I thought he had come back. But I did not hear the door fly, his bedroom clean, and finally I managed glimpse to the hall to the room. I had a glimpse floating before I moved on.
The light that there was some one standing close to me. But the room was empty and the hall too." "And the paper?" "The paper had been pinned to a pillow on the bed. When I saw the pin I was startled. I rang for Annie, the second housemaid, who is also a sort of personal maid of mine. It was half past 3 o'clock when Annie came down. I took her into father's room and showed her the paper. She was sure it was not there when she folded back the bedclothes for the night at 6 o'clock." "Eleven twenty-two." I repeated. "Twice eleven is twenty-two. But that isn't very enlightening."
"No." she admitted. "I thought it might be a telephone number, and I called up all the eleven twenty-two in the city. Annie said Carter had come back, and she went to waken him, but, although his door was locked inside, he did not answer. Annie and I switched on all the lights on the lower floor from the top of the stairs. Then we went down together and looked around. Every window and door was locked, but in father's study, on the first floor, two drawers of his desk were standing open. And in the library, the little compartment in my writing table where I keep my house money, had been broken open and the money taken."
"Nothing else was gone?"
"Nothing. The silver on the sideboard in the dining room, plenty of valuable things in the cabinet in the drawing room—nothing was disturbed." "It might have been Carter." I reflected. "Did he know where you kept your house money?" "It is possible, but I hardly think so. Besides, if he was going to steal there
P.
On It Was the Number "Eleven Twenty-two."
were so many more valuable things in the house. My mother's jewels as well as my own were in my dressing room, and the door was not locked."
"They were not disturbed?"
She beastified.
"They had been disturbed," she admitted.
"My grandmother left each of her children some unstring pearls. They were a hobby with her. Aunt Jane and Aunt Lettin never had their strung, but my mother's were made into different things, all old fashioned. I left them locked in a drawer in my sitting room, where I have always kept them. The following morning the drawer was unlocked and partly open, but nothing was missing."
"All your jewelry was there?"
"All but one ring, which I rarely re move from my finger." I followed her eyes. Under her glove was the outline of a ring, a polite stone.
"It does not sound like an ordinary burglary," I reflected. "Nineteen from thirty-five leaves sixteen, according to my mental process, although I know men who could make the difference nothing."
I believe she thought I was a little mad.
"We must find him, Mr. Knox," she insulated as she got up. "If you know of a detective that you can trust please get him. But you can understand that the unexplained absence of the state treasurer must be kept secret. I am sure he is being kept away. You don't know what enemies he has—men like Mr. Schwartz, who have no scruples, no principles."
"Schwartz" I repeated in surprise. Henry Schwartz was the boss of his party in the state, the man of whom one of his adversaries had said, with the distinct approval of the voting public, that he was so low in the scale of humanity that it would require a special dispensation of heaven to raise him to the level of total degradation. But he and Fleming were generally supposed to be captain and first mate of the pirate craft that passed with us for the ship of state.
"Mr. Schwa, is and my father are allies politically," the girl explained, with heightened color, "but they are not friends. My father is a gentleman."
The inference I allowed to pass unnoticed, and as if she feared she had said too much the girl rose. When she left a few minutes later it was with the promise that she would close the Montsouris avenue home and go to her aunt at Bellwood at once. For myself, I pledged a thorough search for her father and began it by watching the scarlet wing on her hat through the top of the elevator cage until it had descended out of sight.
Hawkins-Johnson MANUFACTURING CO., Hair Grower and Restorer,
616 N. 1st Street. Richmond, Va. Telephone, Madison-4601. Will positively remove all Dandruff and cure the scalf of all impurities. It will restore Hair on clean Temples and Bald Heads where the Roots are not dead. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. PRICE. 35 CENTS PER BOX.
THE HAWKINS-JOHNSON
being used in this State and other States
for growing and restoring hair leaps in
MADAM HAWKINS-JOHNSON
fair trial and be convinced that she can
We are now in a position to sell that
can match all hair perfect.
In mations, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 to $20.00
Please remit by Cash P. C. Mcr
JOHNSON M'f'g Co's Hair Group and other States with phonomenal hair nair leaps into prominence where INS-JOHNSON is known as the Hair that she can do all that she claims to sell the best nair for less money. In ordering Hair, send $6.00 to $20.00. Braids, $2.50, $3.00. P. C. Money Order or Express Mail
THE HAWKINS-JOHNSON M'f'g Co's Hair Grower and Restorer is now being used in this State and other States with phonomenal 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 P. C. Money Order or Express Money Order.
---
Eggs can be permitted only in moderate quantity. Other foods to be avoided are sorrel, spinach, string beans, rhubarb, chocolate and cocoa. Tomatoes, which were formerly forbidden, are now permitted, as it has been asserted that they contain only traces of oxalates and that this vegetable is rich in molasses and citrates, which alkalinize blood. For drinks pure water may be recommended. Nevertheless white wine diluted with water may be permitted on account of its diuretic action. In general, all fatty foods and sugar must be eaten in moderation. Condiments and spices should be limited to salt, vinegar and lemon. Coffee should be avoided, as also strong tea.
The moment that an attack of gout comes on the patient should be put upon diet. At the same time he should drink plenty of and cool drinks if needed—than of apples, turkey water, infusion of cherry stalks and of parsley.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Pneumonia is a dirty air disease. When the weather is mild and doors and windows are kept open there is little pneumonia. But with the coming of cold weather, when people shut up their houses, the pneumonia cases and deaths multiply with fearful rapidity.
She teoily—How did you come to propose to me? He-By street car, darling.-Boston Transcript.
The Black Bean Club.
One of the fantastic clubs of London is the Black Bean club, limited to forty members, each of whom pays an entrance fee of £10 and a similar amount as annual subscription. They meet only once a year, and then a bag is passed round, containing thirty-nine white beans and one black bean. The member who picks the black bean is compelled to get married within the ensuing twelve months, and the remainder solemnly vow to remain single until the next meeting. A house is furnished for the prospective bridegroom out of the funds of the club, which also bears the cost of the wedding festivities and of a three weeks' honeymoon.
D. J. FARRAR, CONTRACTOR
ALL KINDS OF OAK
OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405, MECHANIC
Thane Monroe
RESIDENCE, 610 N. FIRST STREET
Phone: Monroe-
Special Attention Paid to the Taking of
Any Style of Architecture. Job
Special Attention Paid to the Taking of Contracts for Building of Any Style of Architecture. Job Work a Specialty.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liveryman.
All Orders: promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and also Entertainment. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large Piece or Band Wagons for Hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class Carriages. Duggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral mancua.
Bands of Calanthe
Constructive a Furniture, and Personal Ornament to Better to Let the Little
Cousins Home. Children provided from Two to Fifth Years.
AMERICAN COUNTY, 1850, to $1,200 per work with cloth, and $200 per
of cloth. Hired women to all Longitudes. For organization
of New Kind and all prostitutes, only.
MISS. ANNA BAILLER, W. M., 220 Wash 222 Street, Midland, Va.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Resting Tired Eyes
Regular bathing with hot water before bedtime is said by one of the world's most famous oculists to be the best treatment that can be given the eyes. He also recommends: for tired eyes that have been strained by close application to work to look out of the window at a view that is distant—in other words, look at some distant point for ten minutes, so as to entirely change the focus of the eyes.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Treatment of Leckjaw.
If people only knew a little more about the tetanus bacillus, which causes lockjaw, says Dr. Charles O. Pabat, corner's physician in Brooklyn, N. Y., there would be fewer cases of it arriving at the hospitals too late for the antitoxin to do any good. They should remember first of all that the bacillus of this disease is one of the few that cannot flourish in the air, that can multiply only when abciided from the air. It can and does multiply within a healed wound, and that is why a surface recovery from a rusty nail thrust is so often deceptive. A boy runs a nail through his shoe and is less and less worried about his foot as the wound heals over. He ought to be more worried.
Now, the lesson is this: Go to a first rate doctor as soon as you can after a bad cut or wound. If you can't do that treat yourself. Open the wound with a silver probe and apply tincture of iodine. Keep it open for ten days and allow it to heal from the bottom instead of healing at the surface. It is the only safe thing to do.
The public ought to be educated in this. The trouble is that they rarely think of lockjaw in connection with a wound except in the accidents that surround the Fourth of July. They have been educated to greater care and first aid to the injured then, and it might as well be spread over the whole year.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Insomnia.
If you are troubled with sleep-
lessness try one of the following
simple remedies before going to a
doctor with the plen, that be give
you something to make you sleep:
Drink a glass of warm water before
going to bed instead of the
usual glass of cold water. Sip it
slowly and, if possible, eat a
small blacuit or cracker with it.
Avoid all mental exercise for at
least half an hour before re-
tiring. Allow the brain to rest
and become calm before you
attempt to sleep. Stand before
an open window and breathe deeply,
inhailing through the mouth
and exhaling through the nose;
then lie down and continue dozing
this until sleep overtakes you.
When chilly from exposure breathe very deeply and rapidly and the body will soon become much warmer, as it sets the blood to circulating more freely.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Gotty persons will act wisely in not eating meat offenses than once a day—at the midday meal—and also in abstaining in general from all foods likely to generate uric acid or vice versa in urine acid, such as burgers, sweet breads, liver and kidney, grass preserves and curd, and other foods mainly dairy.
PRICE, 35 CENTS PER BOX.
Hair Grower and Restorer is now nominal success. Its reputation is wherever it is used.
as the Hair Grower. Give her a she claims, or money refunded, or less money than ever before and send sample. Transform- 2.50, $3.00 and $4.00. Express Money Order.
THE E CONOMY,
316 North Third Street.
FINE
TAILORING
STRAUS' SPECIAL
Old Yacht Club,
PURE WHISKEY
H. F. JONATHAN.
All Orders Will Receive Prompt Attention. Long Distance Phone. Madison-752.
CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER.
HOOS OF CARPENTRY.
HOMICICS SAVINGS BANK BUILDING
Megroe-2687.
STREET SHOP IN BEAR
feet and meat jellies.
Pneumonia Weather.
The Way He Came
The Black Bean Club.
Some men's only idea of a good time is to see how much sleep they can do without - Washington Star.
Cute Dynamite: Loses Wings
By cutting at a stick of dynamite with a post-hole knife, John Curzula, of Tamaquá, Pa, a mine worker, caused an explosion which destroyed his eight, fractured his skull and crushed his left arm.
CANING, DYING AND
REPAIRING.
CH. M. WHITE,
P. ADR.
Will Satisfy the Lover in the Right
Kind of Stimulant. Special Prison
We Have All Grades of Good La-
quora, Cigars and Tobacco. Call
and See Us.
ISAAC STRAUS & CO.
422 E. Broad St.,
Richmond, Virginia
FISH OYSTERS PRODUCE
114 N. 177 W. RICHMOND, VA.
Schedule in Kempton May 14, 2011
Leave Byrd Street station, Richmond, PNW
NORFOLK: 8:10 A. M. 9:00 A. M. 10:00 R.
8:10 P. M. 17:00 P. M.
M. M. 8:17:00 P. M.
FOR LUNCH: 8:17:00 WEBT: 8:20:00
A M., 8:00:00 A M., 8:20:00 P. M., 8:20:00
Arrive Richmond from Norfolk: a11:40 A M.
b11:40 A M., 8:20:00 P. M., b10:30 A M., 8:20:00
P. M. from the Work: 8:20:00 A M., 8:20:00 P. M.
b11:40 A M., 8:20:00 P. M., b10:30 A M., 8:20:00
Daily, a daily menu, sleeping out, fullman, Parler and Sleeping Out, Oak Boring Cura.
O. M. BOLLEY
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
IMPROVATIVE JULY & SEP.
TRAINS LEAVE RHOND DAILY.
For Florida, and South; 0:18 A. M. 0:00
7:28 P. M. 1:00 A. M. Charleston.
For Norfolk; *0:18, 0:00 A. M., *0:00 P. M.
6:10 P. M., *7:00 P. M.
For N. A. W. Ry. Went: 8:15 A. M., 8:00 A.
M. 7:00 P. M., 8:10 P. M.
For Petersburg: M. 9:10 P. M.
A. M. 8:15 A. M. 8:09 M. 8:58 M. 8:49
*8:00 P. M. 4:10 P. M. 6:58 P. M. 7:28 P. M. 8:58 P. M. 11:48 P. M.
For Goldsboro and Paysetteville: *8:18 P. M.
Tulsa arrive Richmond daily: 8:28 A. M.
6:40 A. M. 8:28 A. M. *8:27 A. M. *8:26 A. M.
8:24 A. M. *8:26 A. M. *11:48 A. M. *8:28 A. M.
*8:18 P. M. 8:28 P. M. 8:58 P. M. 8:00 P. M. *10:28 A. M.
*8:00 P. M. 11:39 P. M.
*8:00 P. M. *10:28 A. M.
Time of arrival and departure and movements
not guaranteed.
G. B. CAMPBELL, B. P. B.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Premier Carrier of the South.
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND
N. M.-Daily-Local for Charles Bur-
baugh and not guaranteed
6:10 A. M.-Daily-Local for Charles Bur-
baugh
8:45 A. M.-Daily-Local for Charles Bur-
baugh
F-49, all
ad-For all palate South. Drawer Room Sleeping Car to adirville. 8:00 P.M. Room Sleeping Car to adirville. 8:00 P.M. Room Sleeping Car to adirville. 8:00 P.M. Intermediate station 8:19 P.M. Atlanta and Birmingham. Chartered Drawing Room Sleeping 8:19 P.M. Fullman sandy Limited-For all palate 8:00 P.M. M.
FORK LINK
4:00 P.M. M.-ek. day-To West Point, out-swing for Baltimore Monday, Wednesday and Friday 8:00 P.M. M.-ek. Except Sunday and 8:00 P.M. Wednesday and Friday-To West Point.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND.
From the South: 8:00 A.M. M.; 8:00 A.M. M.
From P.M. daily-12:56 Except Sunday: 8:00 P.M. West Point: 8:00 A.M. M.
11:16 P.M. Wednesday and Friday: 4:00 P.M. Except Sunday.
R. E. BURGESS, D. P. A.
807 East Main Street, Phone: Madison-678.
C. & O.
6:00 A. Daily—First train to Old Pole.
6:00 P. Newport News and Norfolk.
7:00 A.-Daily. Local to Poynton Town.
8:00 P.-Daily. Local to Old Pole.
9:00 P. Daily-Louisville and Ocknell.
11:00 P. Fullman.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND, M.
Local Train: 7:50 P. M.
Through Train From: 11:30 A. M.
Local from West: 9:20 A. M.
1:30 P. M.
Through- 7:08 A.M. 8:14 P.M.
Jones River Line- 7:20 A.M. 8:28 P.M.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
ALPHEUS SCOTT
CHURCH HILL
Funeral Director and
Embalmer
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Office and Warehouse:
9008% P Street.
Office Phone, Madison 6097 L.
Residence—1015 St. James Street
Lafayette, Madison 6090.
LADY ATTENDANCE.
Richmond, Virginia.
OLD PAPERS
PLANET OFFICE. Send when in need.
JOHN^M.
Higgins,
DEALER IN
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
PURE GOVERNMENT VALUE FOR
THE HOUSE.
1610 East Franklin Street.
(New York, N.Y.)
Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL,
FR., at BIL K. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., ... EDITOR
all communications intended for publication
should be sent as to read at Wednesday.
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THE PLANET is issued weekly. The subscription price is $1.60 per payee. It is available by mail at our mail-room or a Post Office Money Order, by Bank Check or Draft, or an Kipper Money Order, and when proof of these can be received, the Money ORDER-You can buy a Money Order at your Post Office, payable at the Richmond Post Office, and we will be responsible for the late arrival.
EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained at any office of the American Express Co., the United States Express Co., and the Wellesley Garry and Co.'s Express Company. All of these companies have the Kipper Money Order is a safe and convenient pay for forwarding money.
REGISTERED LETTER—Money Order, Post Office, or your Postmaster will Register the Letter you wish to send us on payment of ten cents. Then, if the Letter is lost or stolen, can be traced. You can send money in this
We cannot be responsible for money sent in letters in any other way than one of the four ways mentioned above. If you send your money in any other way, you must do it at your own expense. HENNEWALP, BTC. —U you do not want THE PLANET continued to; another year after your subscription has run out, you then notify us by email Card to discontinue your subscription to newspapers who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid and liable for the payment of the subscription up to date when they order the paper discontinued.
COMMUNICATION...When writing to us to
review your subscription or to discourance your
paper, you should give your name and address
in the otherwise we cannot find your name on
books.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS...In order to change
the address of a subscriber we must be sent the
former as well as the present address.
Interested at the Post Office at Richmond, Va.
as above, please matter.
PENNSYLVANIANS AND THE CEL
ERATION.
The legislature of Pennsylvania has passed the bill proposed by Hon Harry W. Bass and only colored member of the legislature making an appropriation of twenty thousand dollars for the proper observance of the fiftieth anniversary of the emancipation of the colored people in take country.
The celebration will take place next September in the city of Philadelphia. The work is proceeding with dispatch, but already, the tendency of our people to disagree and to disgrace themselves is now in evidence and the daily newspapers are being called into service to discredit the present management.
At this distance, we are unable to pass upon the merits of the charges and counter-charges. We do not know whether or not the money is being invested in the best manner possible. We do know that Attorney Harry W. Bass is a member of the Pennsylvania legislature and ranks among the great leaders of the race in this country.
It is inconceivable that he would be connected with any movement which would be open to question or that Hon. W. W. Crow of Uniontown would lend his name and support to a plan which would be discreditable or dishonorable.
We regret that this Pennsylvania movement was not made in unison with the Wright movement which is now pending before the Congress of the United States and asking for a large appropriation to fitingly observe this Centennial. Philadelphia might have been an ideal spot for such a display of our progress.
We hope however that the friction now alleged to be existing in Pennsylvania between contending parties will disappear and for once all of our people will work in harmony to make the grandest display ever seen on the part of our people in my Northern city.
FARMVILLE (VA.) NEWS
Farmville, Va., Dec. 30.—This look has been a full one, both night and day with entertainments of all India. Christmas eve night a Canada was given, at First Baptist church by Miss Pearl Hilton for the month of the Sunday School. The mourn of First Church were divided clubs, and several entertainments on night during the holidays.
Friday night was well filled. At First Church was "The Famous Southland Nightingales," a company of Negro Jubilee Singers. Our people were so delighted they were requested to remain over and sing on Saturday night. This troupe is the best of its kind ever stopped here.
There was given at the Opera House for the benefit of First Church S. S. a drama, "The White Line." Mr. A. W. Lancaster, manager. The participants acquitted themselves with credit. They were as follows: Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lancaster, Mrs. Annie Mae Brown, Miss Cassandra Branch, Messrs. Wesley Blind, C. S. Blue and Richard Young.
On the same night there was a reception given by St. Luke Lodge, "Appomattox Council" at their hall on Third St. It is reported to have been a grand affair.
On Sunday morning the pulpit of First Church was filled all day by Roy Adams.
Mr. Gilbert Mason of Virginia St. spent the holidays with his people in Reanoke, Va.
Mrs. Susie Foster and Little son visited friends in Blissfield, W. Va.
Mrs. Ophelia Spencer of Lynchburg, Va. is visiting Mrs. Ida Bolling of Ely St.
Mr. Page Lancaster from Hampton Institute is visiting relatives.
Mr. John W. Holmes, Bernard Blue, Miss Kate Hafeston, Mr. Nathaniel Miller and Thomas Branch, all students of Hampton Institute are at home during the holidays.
From Petersburg Institute: Misses Martha Hilton, Inez Ward, Gertrude Blue, Martha Blue, Blanche Palge, Josephine Hughes, Gladys McDaniel Viola Cousin, Messrs. Joseph Jordan and Richard Hilton.
From Virginia Seminary and College: Miss Cecelia Murrell, Lemuel Bland, Philip Bland, Arthur Jordan and Mr. Johns.
From Hartshaw Memorial College: Misses Mattle Price, Evelyn Hatrston and Brea Adams.
Keysville Institute: Miss. Lottle Redd and Taylor Redd.
Rev. and Mrs. Adams took tea with Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Scott on N. Street.
Mr. Perry Wood from N. Y. City is visiting parents on Main St.
Mrs. Mattle Matthew of Newark, N. I. is visiting relatives.
Mr. Joseph Madden, William Redd who spent the holidays with their families returned to their work in S. C.
Misses Lottle Paige, Estell Price, Cusanandra Branch, Eiffle Ward, Jesse Conn, Jessie Johns, Alberta Bolling Misses Hattie and Bettle Branch.
Mrs. Julia Wammock, Mogell Price, Mrs. Bertha Anderson and Rev. P. W. Price.
Mr. Willis Pettis of the Dental Department of Howard University is home visiting parents and friends.
---
$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 Pythian
N. A. S. A. E. A. A. and A.
Officer One Hundred and Fifty
Dollars in payment of the death-
claim of Brother Johnson Jones, who
was a member of Roman Engle
Lodge No. 19 of Danville, Va.
---
$100,00 Endowment Paid.
Richmond, Va., Dec. 23, 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 ($100.00) One Hundred Dollars in payment of the death claim of Sister Virginia Carter, who was a member of America Court, No. 14 of Richmond, Va.
Signed - Elizabeth Hewlett.
Beneficiary.
Witnesses:
Mary M. Ayles.
Harriet Blunt.
Electric Stock "Suspends" Life.
With "animation suspended," as the result of an electric shock, Warner T Vandegrift, an electrician, lies in the Merry hospital in Treton, N. J.
His case baffles all the efforts of the physicians to revive him or to induce any indication of the life they know is still in his body.
Vandegrift was sent to the old power house on Ingham avenue to repair a wire. He was oil off a car at work when a heavy current passed through his body. The man was hurled to the street and has lain since as one dead.
---
Mother Frozen to Death
It has just been learned in Mount Holly, N. J., that death had banished Christmas joy at the home of John Lowther, who lives in the pines near Clatworth, the body of his wife having been brought home, frozen to death, just before their Christmas dinner was ready.
Mrs. Lowther and her two daughters left Marris Station to walk home, a distance of four miles, and got lost in the woods. Realizing the terrible situation of her mother, Mary, aged fourteen years, picked up her younger sister and started for help. It was not long before they were overcome and were compelled to lie in the snow all night. Mary had her hands and feet badly frozen, but Dr. Haines, of Medford, thinks amputation can be avoided.
A resident of the Pines found the girls while carting shingles. Later he found the body of the mother. Unloading his wagon, he took the unfortunate ones home.
Right.
Teacher-Who can tell me what sailors live on? Willie Bright -Water, most of the time.
One Prisoner Given Seven Years, Eight Get Six Years Each, Two Four Years, Twelve Three Years, Four Two Years and Six One Year and One Day.
The thirty-eight labor union leaders convicted in the federal court on Saturday of conspiracy in connection with the interstate transportation of dynamite, were called up for sentence in Indianapolis, ind.
One prisoner received seven years, eight six years each, two four years each, twelve three years each, four two years each, six one year and one day each. Five prisoners were given their liberty through suspended sentences. One, though he pleaded guilty, was given a suspended sentence, making a total of thirty-nine prisoners disposed of.
Frank M. Ryan, head of the Ironworkers' union, was given the heaviest sentence, a prison term of seven years. Others were given terms ranging from one to six years. Olaf Tweltmoe, of San Francisco, convicted on charges of alking in plotting the destruction of the Los Angeles Times building, and Eugene A. Clancy, also of San Francisco, were given six years each, as was also Herbert S. Hockin, once secretary of the International union. Terms of imprisonment were imposed as follows. Seven years—Frank M. Ryan, president of the ironworkers' union.
Six years—John T. Butler, Buffalo vice president; Herbert S. Hocklin, former secretary and formerly of Detroit; Olaf A. Tyvletmoe, San Francisco co., secretary of the California Building Trades Council; Eugene A. Clancy, San Francisco; Philip A. Cooley, New Orleans; Michael J. Young, Boston; J. E. Munsey, Salt Lake City, Utah; Frank C. Webb, New York Four years—John H. Barry, St. Louis; Peter J. Smith, Cleveland. Three years—Paul J. Morrin, St. Louis; Henry W. Legeltner, Denver; Charles N. Baum, Minneapolis, Minn.; Michael J. Cunnane, Philadelphia; Edward Smythe, Peoria, Ill.; Murray L. Pennell, of Springfield, Ill.; Wilford Bert Brown, of Kansas City, Mo.; George Anderson, of Cleveland, O.; Michael J. Hannon, Scranton, Pa.; Ernest G. W. Basey, Indianapolis; William J. McCain, Kansas City; William E. Reddin, Milwaukee.
Two years—Fred Sherman, Indianapolis; Richard P. Houlihan, Chicago; Frank J. Higgins, Boston; Frank K. Palmer, Omaha.
One year—and one day—Edward E. Phillips, New York; Charles Wachtel, Detroit; Fred J. Mooney, DuLuth; James E. Ray, Poorla, IL; William C. Bernhardt, Cincinnati; William Shupe, Chicago.
Sentences on the following were suspended: Patrick F. Farrell, New York; James Cooney, Chicago; James Coughlin, Chicago; Birm R. Kane, Muncle, Ind.; Frank J. Murphy, Detroit.
On motion of the government, Edward Clark, Cincinnati, confessed dynamiter, who testified for the government, was given a suspended sentence.
One of the six men who were given their liberty by suspended sentences, Clark, confessed to blowing up a bridge with the help of Hocken. He appeared as a witness for the government. Ortle K. McManigal, another confessed dynamiter, was not sentenced at this time.
A remarkable scene in the struggle by the wives of the prisoners to reach their husbands attended the sentences. It was ordered that all the spectators be cleared from the room and the prisoners be allowed to talk with the members of their families.
The sentences of one year and one day were imposed so that these men might be confined in a federal prison. Prisoners with terms of less than one year are kept in the county jail.
Federal Judge Albert B. Anderson had many of the prisoners whom he said, he considered less guilty than the rest, brought before him to make statements. Thus, for an hour and a half the judge in a conversational way asked them whether they believed in dynamiting as a method of promoting a strike. All of them professed innocence. All the prisoners who received prison sentences were taken to the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan.
Murder Mystery Is Cleared.
The mystery surrounding the fatal attack made upon Miss Luella D. Marshall on the outskirts of Trenton, N. J., on the evening of Dec. 3 was suddenly cleared up when William Atzenhafer, thirty years old, confessed the crime after he had been placed in the power of the police by Miss Ida Capen, a trained nurse, and Dr. Joseph G. Denelsbeck, a physician, both of Trenton.
This unexpected turn in this now famous crime startled the police and the people of Trenton. The confession came when all hope of solving the mystery had disappeared and while the police authorities of Mercer county were discussing theories and motives for the assault.
The first intimation that Altenhafer was connected with the crime came to Miss Capen, whose suspicions were aroused by the man's aggressiveness to obtain information from newspapers regarding, Miss, Marshall's condition before her death and the movements of the police afterward.
Attenhafer and Professor William B. Crusader of the University, that he attended fellow Attenhafer, just declared he mistook her for another person and that he did not intend to kill her.
When questioned as to whom he thought he was attacking, Attenhafer said he had no reason to attack any one. Further questioning brought from Attenhafer the fact that the attack was made with the two and a half foot length of pipe found by the side of Miss Marshall. Unconscious form the night of the crime.
Attenhafer said he got the pipe from the rear of two houses in course of construction, near the scene of the crime. He added that after he struck Miss Marshall he dragged her body across the road, through a barbed wire fence and left her unconscious in the field upon the approach of two men.
Brutal Attack on Woman.
Following the sending of a Black Hand letter to Mrs. Harry Brooke, a matron, of Stowe, near Pottatown, Pa., a man attacked the woman as she was returning from a Christmas entertainment.
Mrs. Brooke was beaten into unconsciousness and her clothing was saturated with coal oil, her assailant probably intending to burn her alive. The woman screamed for aid, and her husband, armed with a gun, rushed out of the house to her assistance. Her assailant fled before he could apply a match to her oil-snaked clothing.
Mrs. Brooke had been knocked unconscious by a club. Her condition is regarded as serious.
For two years the woman has been receiving anonymous communications from some enemy who signs himself "The Black Hand." Various attempts have been made before on her life. Vitril was poured in her eyes a few months ago, and on another occasion she was ordered to meet a man in Mount Zion cemetery or she would be murdered.
---
Dying Man Coughs Up Tooth: Recovers
William Peck who has been operated on for lung trouble, treated by a score of doctors and given up as an incurable consumptive, went from a sanitarium to his home in Sayre, near Wilkes-Barre, Pa., believing that he could not be cured.
He was seized with a violent coughing spell at his home, and the cause of his illness was coughed up in the form of a wisdom tooth which for two years has been impounded in his lungs.
After he had coughed up the tooth he began to grow better at once and his speedy recovery now seems to be certain.
Two years ago Peck was in New York and had a wisdom tooth extracted by a dentist. He took gas and the tooth slipped from the dentist's forceps into the mouth of the patient.
Boy Shoots Sister Dead
While examining a new shotgun given him for a Christmas present, Vernie Lawrence, of Lookout, near Seranton, Pa., accidentally pulled the trigger.
The charge struck his seven year old sister Mary, who was standing a few feet from him. The child's head was literally blown from her body by the heavy charge.
It is believed that the shell was left in the gun by the dealer who sold the weapon. Both the boy's parents are prostrated over the affair, and it is feared that his mother will not recover.
Congressman McHenry Dies.
John G. McHenry, of Benton, Columbia county, Pa., who represented the Sixteenth district in congress, died at his home from apoplexy, aged fifty-four years.
McHenry had not been in good health for over a year. For years he was a power in the Democratic party in his section of the state. He was elected to congress in 1906 from the Sixteenth district and was reelected in 1908 and 1910. He was manager of a distillery and head of the Farmers Grange banks in several counties.
C. C. Kirk, a hotelkeeper of Quarryville, Pa., who was convicted of violating the state health law in polluting a stream, was found $25 and costs.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA — FLOUR quiet;
winter clear, $1.10 & 4.25; city mills;
fancy, $7.75 & $5.50;
FLOUR FLOUR quiet; per barrel, $3.60
& $7.75.
WHEAT quiet; No. 2 red, 97% 91¢
CORN at steady; No. 2 yellow, 54% 65¢
OATS quiet; No. 2 white, 40% 11¢; lower grades, 38¢.
POULTRY: Live steady; hans, 13¢
15c.; old roosters, 11¢11¢11¢. dressed
dress; choice towls, 16½¢; old roosters,
12c.; turkeys, 12c.
BUTTER steady; fancy creamy;
33c per lb.
nearby; steady; selected, 35 © 33c;
nearby, 32c; western, 32c.
POTATOES steady; 70© 73c bush.
Live Stock Markets
PITTSBURGH (Union Stock Yards)
—CATTLE steady; choice, $9.92;
$15.95; sheepskin
SHEEP active; prime wetbers, $4.80;
calls and commons, $2.50; jams,
$6.99; veal calves, $11.15; HOGB active; prime bovines, $7.70
HOGB active; prime cows, $7.70
Light Yorkers, $7.75; pigs, $7.75
7.80; roughs, $6.50; T.
Killie Himself Before Wife
Harry C. Cummings, thirty-two years old, who was president of a couch manufacturing company in Philadelphia until three yars ago, and whose mother lives in Pottsville, Pa., committed suicide at his home in Baltimore, Md.
Cummings rose early, and while he was dressing awoke his wife. When she asked what he was doing Cummings said he had been figuring on his accounts.
Then he called to her to look at him, and as she did so; he pointed a pistol to his head and fired. He died instantly.
Cummings confessed a grocery store and had been worrying over his finances.
I have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the fallen of youth, that has earned so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man who wishes to regain his meany power and virility, quietly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain ordinary sealed envelope to any man who will write me for it.
This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men and I am convinced it is the surest-acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together.
I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a copy in confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop dragging himself with harmful patent medicines, secure what I believe is it a quickest-acting restorative, upbuilding, SPOT TOUCH ING Remedy ever devised and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: DR. A. E. ROBINSON, $995 Buckling, Detroit Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary envelope, free of charge. A great many doctors would charge $3.00 to $6.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but I send it entirely free.
Coughs Colds
Hoarseness
And Why?
You Should Take Jeffries
No. I Cough Mixture.
TRADE MARK
No1
Because it is guaranteed safe, pure, efficient.
It will relieve your cough soon after taking. For throat and lung troubles it has no equal. You can depend on it—has been thoroughly tested and found to contain the best properties and produces the best results.
SOLD at all drug stores—see the trademark on every bottle. Price 25c.
If your druggist hasn't it write
THOS. TABB JEFFRIES,
214 East Broad St., Richmond, Va.
JURGEN'S SON
EVERYBODY BE COMFORTABLE.
Fine, Large, Strong, Solid Oak
Morris Chair, Upholstered in Leatherette, Tufted Back; Handsomely
Machine Carved, is a Bargain you don't see often at $4.08. See it In
our window. We have other Morris
Chairs as high as $54.
You Can Pay Your Bill February
5th and Save Your Discounts.
JURGENS' ANNUAL CHRISTMAS
$100,000.00 Worth of
FURNITURE AND RUGS
Reduced 20, 25, 33 1-3, & 50 percent.
Not only do you save big money
by making your purchase at this sale
but when you get your Christmas
presents of us you are giving something
sensible and useful. Our furniture
is noted for its leading qualities.
ADAMS AND BROAD STREETS.
COLORED PEOPLE'S HAIR
We are the largest manufacturers of colored people's hair. We make wigs, hairstyles, braides, transformations and all styles of hair that can comb the same as your own hair. We also sell straightening combs, hair nets and cut hair by the pound. Our prices are lower than those quoted elsewhere. Send two cost stamp for Catalog. Agents Wanted.
HUMANIA HAIR COMPANY,
Dept. A, 33 Duane St., N. Y. City.
SOAP
Sandy Drug Co.
79 East 130th St., New York
Cumberland.
Best using Quinasoap my hair
was then and course and I was
becoming bald. As soon as I used
Quinasoap my hair began to grow
gently and it was thick and wavy.
(Name on file at our office)
NEW YORK
10c. Quinasoap 25c. At all drug stores
De Vyver
College,
Richmond, Va.
September 16, 1912.
DEPARTMENTS.
MENT
Students to Take up the Study of Law,
Team.
MENT
Training in Book-keeping, Commercial
Typewriting.
DEPARTMENT
The Best Teachers in Dressmaking,
Cooking and Fine Laundry Work.
Culture, Piano, Vocallon and Pipe Organ.
DEPARTMENT
Member of young men as Chauffers.
MENT
Course of Carriage and House Painting,
and Frencoling.
Academic Grades. We prepare young
a Professional Course and the Civil
School.
S HANNIGAN. President,
North First Street, Richmond, Va.
Van De Vyver College, North Ist St., Richmond, Va
Will Prepare Its Students to Take up the Study of Law,
Medicine and Journalism.
TITLE: Oral Medicine.
Will 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 Frencoling.
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.
L. J. HAYDEN
MANUFACTURER OF Pure Herb Medicines. TO CURE ALL DISEASES, OR NO CHARGES.
If so, call and see L. J. Hayden
Manufacturer of Pure Herb Medicines,
220 West Broad Street. My
Medicines cure all diseases known to
mankind, or no charge, no matter what your disease, tion may be, and restore you to perfect health. The host and leading ones in the United States and B that I am one of the most wonderful healers of all world. I use nothing but herbs, r ota, barka, gums, seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicines. thousands that the most skillful physicians and the bclans in America and Europe have given up to die, a no cure for them.
My Medicines Cure the Following Diseases:—He sumption, Blood, kidney, Bladder, tricure, Piles in a Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung; Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Cmatism in any form, Palms and Ashes of any kind, Troubles, Sorres, Skin Diseases, all tching sensations, plants, La Gripe or Paneumonia, Wcer, Carbuncles, B worst form without the use of a kelp or instruments on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Diseases. My Medicines cure any die so, no matter of worthen and Syphilitic troubles a speciality.
Medicines sent anywhere. F r full particulars, n in person on 1
or what your disease, sickness or affliction perfect health. Thousands of people, United States and Europe will testifyful healers of all complaints in the rota, barks, gums, balams leaves, in my medicines. They have cured physicians and the best hospital physicians given up to die, and said there wasousing Diseases—Heart Disease, Conjucture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Episi, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumaties of any kind, Colds, Bronchial all tching sensations, all Female Combat, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in the kelife or instruments, Pimples idues or Bright's Disease of the Kidney, no matter of what nature. Gonasa speciality. For full particulars, send, write or call
mankind, or no charge, no matter what your disease, sickness or affiliation may be, and restore you to perfect health. Thousands of people, the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe will testify that I am one of the most wonderful healers of all complaints in the world. I use nothing but herbs, r ots, barks, gums, balsams leaves, seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicines. They have cured thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and Europe have given up to die, and said there was no cure for them.
My Medicines Cure the Following Diseases:—Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, triculture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinny, Sore Throat, Lung, Dyspnea, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Palms and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all tching sensations, all Female Complaints, La Grippie or Paumonis, Wier, Carbuncle, Bolls, Cancer in the worst form without the use of a knife or instruments, Eczema, Pimple on face and body, Diabetes of Kidsneys or Bright's Disease of the Kidneys.
My Medicines cure any dise se, no matter of what nature. Gonorrhoea and Syphilitic troubles a specialty.
Medicines sent anywhere. For full particulars, seed, write or call in person on 1
L. J. HAYDEN.
220 West Broad St., Richm
Richmond, Va.
RS.
the Public in General:—
invites you to her Hair Parlors, 812
supplied with Braids, Puffs, Trans-
ombings made in Braids and Puffs
and Shampooing a Specialty.
ments for the Hair, Hair Greases
for the skin. 'Phone Monroe-3874.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
WONDERFUL RESULTS
ON SHORT NOTICE
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in General:
MRS. ROSA E. WATSON invites you to her Halt
St. James Street. You can be supplied with Braids
formations and Pompadours. Combings made in Br
on short notice. Straightening and Shampooing a
Straightening Combs, Ornaments for the Halt,
and preparations of all kinds for the skin. Phone
812 ST. JAMES STREET, RICHMOND,
Agricultural
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.
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, written Mrs. Louise E. Hayes of Pineville, S. C.
Try Ford's Hair Pomade for hard 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 Ossenized Out Marrow Company, Chicago, Ill.
A. Hayes,
Office and Ware-Room;
727 NORTH GROUND STREET.
Residence, 725 N. St.
First-class Entries and Concerts of All Descriptions. I have a Spire 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 CASKETS Oval and Two Lite and You shall be Waited on Individually.
There, Medium-Stride.
---
A. B.
HAIR PARLORS.
OPEN ALL THE YEAR
ROUND. FOR MALES ONLY.
Facilities Unsurpassed. Strong
Faculty. Practical Courses. Board.
Lodging and Tuition $7 per month.
WINTER TERM BEGINS DECEMBER
2, 1912. Write today for
catalog or free tuition.
JAMES R. DUDLEY, President,
Greenbore, N. C.
DETECTIVE. Barn from $106 to
$200 per month. Bond References
and 50 coats for Full Particulate.
SIDNEY P. DONNE, 401 Central
Avenue, Los Angeles, Cal. 4t.
A Good Knew Gift—The Planet.
A
---
Gems In Verse
LIVING
To touch the face with eager lips
To woo friends and attract a
love and interest
To be with friends and joy yet
be happy
Least it be with friends and doing too
rights
To watch the sun on the west without
nightglow
To hold the sun on the west the night
forgiving
To empathize with her tears and grief
To hold the promise of not questioning
bereft
To have confidence to know the joy of life
To thrill with the spectra of life-in
living
THE OPTIMIST.
T
I will be a man who
wrote
Because the day was bright,
Because the light at night,
Because God gave him sight
To see the world all
Because will be the same
Because the sun will
Shine on the earth he smiled
He smiled at the sky
Wrote that you heed,
Because the sun was set,
Because the past was dead
He smiled with delight why
The Lord had bounded so
That all that he go
The wrong way here below
The overarching sky
He told and still was glad
Because the or was free,
Because he loved and she
That glanced he love and she
Shaped the cloud he saw
Because the grasses grew,
Because the sweet wind blew,
Because that he could hew
And he gave, he was glad.
---
Because he had be smiled
At did not look ahead
With bitterness or dread,
Put mightly sought his bed
As closely as a child
And people called him mad
For being always glad
With such things as he had
And shook their heads and smiled
—Unidentified
ASPIRATION.
THE desire of the moth for the star,
Of the night for the morrow.
The devotion to something afar
From the sphere of our sorrow.
-Shelley.
THE MARCH OF GREECE.
W
HOME face, whose on high
Lifts through the sky
That murrele?
Who over earth and sea
Cries victory?
Europe, thy soul
Comes home to thee?
Is it a dream, a cloud
That thus hath rent the abroad
To speak, sublime and proud,
Thy faith aloud,
Whose eyes make young and fair
All things earth and air,
The shadow of whose white wing
Makes violets spring?
Is it the angel of day
Whom the blind pray
Still, that their faith
May sleep sound by night?
Iyoye a white,
Berlisen, she saith,
Let there be light.
Whose are the composing eyes
That turn through those dark skies?
Whose is the voice that cries:
"Awake!" Arise!
If it areSpeak one word,
To shalt draw the award
Her nations on that day
Answer her Ye!
It is the angel of God.
Hun crowned, fire shield,
Hiding hate crease
My orphan is high
Hids darkness die
Her name is Greece
Or- liberty!
-Affred Henry Noyes in London Mall.
THE INDIAN RANCHER.
M fathers roamed the prairie
In the days when men were
free.
But a hundred and sixty acres
Is the home that must do for
me.
I must master the plow and reaper,
Nor look at the winding trails
And thousands there are to pour me
In case the red rain fails.
My fathers dwell in the open,
But I have a stitting shack;
I dream of the shirting teepers,
But the morn brings sharply back
The fences that clip one's freedom-
The ranch and the toll that waits-
And I say farewell to my fathers
When I open the barnyard gates
But visions still o'erhelm me,
In spite of my will to win,
And the fences and buildings vanish,
And the village comes trooping in;
The teepers gleam in the meadow,
The children about the stream,
But I wake at the clank of the harness-
'Tis only a red man's dream!
I WONDER
**WINKLE, twinkle, little star!**
*How I wonder if you are*
*When at home the tender age*
*You appear when on the street!*
*—Lippottica.*
THE STONE REJECTED.
FOR years it had been trampled in the street
Of Florence by the drift of head-
less foot.
The stone that Buonarrott made
that shone you know, that marble love
means.
You mind the tale—how he was passing by
When the rude marble caught his Jovian eye.
That stern man had dishonered and had flirted.
Out to the limit of the wayside dust.
He stepped to lift it from its mean estate.
And here it on his shoulder to the gate.
Where all day long a hundred hammer-
way.
And upon his chinis round the marble
Till suddenly the hidden angel shone
That had been waiting, prisoned in the
stone.
Thus came the cherub with the laughing
race
That long had lighted up an altar place
—Edwin Markham in Nautilus
Gems In Verse
OLD FAVORITES.
AN EMBER PICTURE.
AS I sit sometimes in the twilight
And call back to life in the coats
Old faces and hopes, and fantasies
Long buried. (Good rest to their souls?)
HEIR face shines out in the embra-
I see her holding the light.
And hear the crunch of the gravel
And the sweep of the rain that night.
"TIS a face that can never grow older.
That can never part with its gleam.
Tis a gracious possession, forever.
For is it not all a dream."
-James Russell Lowell
"MARCO BOZZARIS."
At midnight in his guarded tent
The Turk was dreaming
of the hour
When Greece, her knee in
appliance bent,
Should tremble at his power
In dream through camp and court
to bore
The troopers of a conqueror,
In dreams the song of triumph
heard.
Then were his monarch's signet
ring
Then pressed that monarch's throne
—a king.
As wild his thoughts and gay of
wing
As Eden's garden bird
At midnight in the forest shades
Bozzaria ranged his sultate hand,
True as the steel of their tried
blades,
Heroes in heart and hand.
There had the Persian's thousands
stork.
There had the glad earth drunk
their blood,
On the Hatea's day
And now there breathed that haunted
air
The work of area who conquered
there
With arm to strike and soul to dare,
As quick, as far, as they
An hour passed up, the Turk awoke,
That bright dream was his last—
He woke to help his sultate shriek:
"To arm it! You come!" The Greek:
The Greek!
He woke to the midst flame and
smoke
And shout and groan, and saber
stroke
And death shots falling thick and
fast
As lightning from the mountain
cloud.
And heard, with voice as trumpet
loud.
Hozzaria cheer his band
"Strike till the last armed for ex-
strike
Strike for your altars and your
fire"
Strike for the green graves of your
altars.
God and your native tank!
They fought, like brave men, long
and well.
They piled that ground with Ma-
lem slain.
They conquered, but Hozzaria fell.
Heeding at every with
His few surviving comrades saw
His smile when tang their proud
burial
And the red field was won.
Then saw his death his wounds close
Calmly, as to a night's repose.
Like flowers at set of sun.
Hozzaria, with the stained brave
Grace, purified in her glory's
Reat there! There is no provider
give
Even in her own proud clause,
She wore no funeral wounds for three.
Nor bade the dark hearse wave
its vitreus.
The heartless luxury of the tomb,
but she remembers the as one
long loved and for a season gone.
For the her portals it is wreathed,
Her marble wrought, her music
breathed.
For the she rings the birthday
hells.
Of these her babes' first lisping tells:
For nine her exending prayer is said
At palestine's door.
Her soldier, closing with the foe.
Given for thy sake a deadlier blow;
His plighted maiden, when she
feeps.
For him the joy of her young years,
Thinks of thy fats and checks her
And she, the mother of thy boys,
Though in thy eye and faded cheek
is read the grief she will not speak,
The memory of her buried joys,
One of the few, the immortal names,
That were not born to die.
—Ple Greenno Halleck.
SLEEP.
SLEEP that knits up the raveled sleeve of care.
The death of each day's life, sore labor's bath.
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course.
Chief nourisher in life's feast.
WARRIORS OF MONTENEGRO.
THEY rose to where their sovran engle sailk
They kept their faith, their freedom, on the height
Chaste, frugal, savage, arm'd by day and night
Against the Turk, whose inroad nowhere scales
Their headlong passes, but his footstep falls
And, red with blood, the creecent reels from flight
Before their dauntless hundreds, in prince flight
By thousands down the crags and through the vales.
O smallest among peoples, rough rock throne
Of freedom, warriors beating back the awakens
Of Turkish Islam fair five hundred years
Great Ternogora, never since thine own
Black ridge drew the cloud and branched the storm
Has breathed a race of mightier mount taunners;
—Tennyson
WHAT OF YOU AND ME?
WHAT OF YOU AND ME?
THINK when our one soul understands
The great word which makes a
things new.
When earth breaks up and heaven
pands.
How will the change strike me and you
in the house not made with hands!
-Brownin.
YOU will help THE PLANET. It
when answering our advertisement, you
will mention, our game.
Gema In Verse
UPON THE HILLS.
DOWN there in the valley the city lies a-calling-
Clear and loud I hear the call the wint bears up to me-
But, upon the hills the purple night is falling.
And breezes lull the birds to sleep upon the awaying tree.
DOWN there in the valley my unashaped work is lying-
Book and tile the life through the livelong day-
But, within the west the opal light is dying.
And from the upland meadow comes the fragrance of the hay!
DOWN there in the valley the world's work is a-stirring-
The air is thrilling with the noise of forges and of mills-
But, I hear the sound of the night birds' wings a-whirring.
And far away the blue-gray mist lies heavy on the hills!
DOWN there in the valley the city lies a-calling-
With weary feet and troubled heart the beaten paths are trod.
But on the silver lake the vell of night is falling.
And over hill and wood there lies the brooding peace of God.
-Izabella R. Hea.
TH18 18 MY CREED.
A dash in the dark—
Alla's done-stiff and stark.
No time for a lie;
The truth and then die.
Hide not thy heart.
Foesh with thy thought!
Boon 'twill be naught.
And then in thy tomb.
Now is air; now is room.
Down with false shame!
Reck not of fame;
Dread not man's spite.
Quench not thy light.
This be thy creed.
This be thy deed.
"Hide not thy heart."
If stolf for the made.
Sunshine and shade.
Heaven and hell.
This we know well.
Dost thou believe?
Do not deceive.
Boon not thy faith.
If it be a wretch.
Boon it will fly.
Thon, who must die.
Hoon not thy heart.
This is my creed.
This be my deed.
Faith or a doubt.
I shall speak out.
And hide not my heart.
- Richard Watson Glider.
HUMAN GENEROSITY.
THIS man who says he takes a pride
In honest talk which none should shrift
Will always kindly stand aside
And let you have his work.
Washington Star.
THE VESTIBULE.
"Banquet rooms" and "pictured walls"
And of "gardens cool."
Not to these our thoughts belong.
We would make a little song
Of the vestibule.
Unromantic little place,
Narrow, close and bare?
Not if we in fancy trace
All that happens there.
Welcome to the honored guest,
Little lips to mother's pressed
Are they start for school.
Lingering lovers last good night—
Love your fancy's flight
In the vestibule!
There shall Fancy contemplate
Bull a greater bliss—
When the good wife speeds her mate
With a morning kiss.
He who will the may
With this blessing start the day
Is a knave or fool.
Many cares are overthrown.
Many battles fought and won.
From the vestibule.
THE GOOD OLD WORLD.
THE angels are callin'-
'The well to believe it-
But the world looks too good
For a sinner to leave it.
-Atlanta Constitution.
THE UNLAUNCHED SHIP.
UNFINISHED and unlaunched,
upon the ways.
She stands, with the spray
that dances by.
Heartbeat forever from the sea the
cry.
"Come to me, break whatever spell de-
lays."
She sees afar white sails that seaward
turn.
She sees the motors' hum, the siren's
call;
She sees them pass the far horizons' wall
And feels the urge of winds upon her
stern.
She knows that some in far off seas will sleep.
Bome will lie wrecked on some uncharted far.
But gladly would she sail for lands after.
Daring all peril from the treacherous deep.
They will have known the water's clash and roar.
But she must die unlaunched upon the shore.
--Ninette M. Lowater.
OPTIMISM.
HAVE no faith, but this one fact finds.
That love is growing better day by day.
What we call sin is what it leaves behind;
What we call good attracts it on its way.
HAVE no hope. With God's love in my heart.
What is a selfish loss to care about?
In the world I've played my little part.
Let him who lit the candle put it out.
HAVE no fear, and so 'the day by day in sunshine or in storm, in weal or woe,
best I can I go along life's way.
To that vast future where all men must go.
-New York Tribune.
OPTIMISM
000.000 For New Year's Eve
New Year's day in France, generally observed with the giving of presents, a custom Americans observe very lightly. Boxes of candy take the lead. Paris alone it is estimated $800,000 is expended on candles for New Year's presents in 1912.
OLD FAVORITES.
THIS hold that sparrow makes us whine.
Yet why hold such wisdom steps we
should not hold?
A LIFE in civile action warm. A soul on highest mission sent. A potent voice of parliament. A pillar steadfast in the storm. —Tennyson's "In Memoriam."
A DROP OF INK. SMALL drop of ink. Falling like dew upon a thought, produces That which makes thousands, perhaps millions, think. —Byron.
THE HAPPY WARRIOR. [The favorite poems of President Elect Wilcox.]
W HO is the happy warrior? Who is he
That every man in arms should wish to be?
It is the generous spirit, who, when brought
Among the tasks of real life, hath wrought
Upon the plan that pleased his boyish thought.
Whose high endows the an inward light
That makes the path before him always bright;
Who, with a natural instinct to discern
What knowledge can perform, is diligent to learn
Abides by this resolve, and stops not
But makes his floral being his prime care;
Who, downed to go in company with pain
And fear and blisshed—miserable train!
Turns his nessy to glorious gain;
In age of three both exercise a power
Which is our human nature's highest dow-
er!
Controls them and abducts, transmutes,
beneath
Of the moral influence and their good re-
actions
By objects which might force the soul to
abute
Her feeling rendered more compassionate;
Is capable, because occasions rise
As tempted more, more able to endure,
As more exposed to suffering and distress;
Thence also more alive to tenderness.
Thence his law is reason, who depends
Upon that law as on the best of friends;
Whence in a state where men are tempted
and still
To serve a guard against worse ill,
And what in quality or art is best
Doth seldom on a right foundation rest,
He labors good on good to nx and owes
To virtue every triumph that he knows;
Who, if he rise to station of command,
Rises by open means, and there will stand
On honorable terms or else retire
And in himself possesses his own desire:
Who comprehends his trust and to the
Keeps faithful with a singleness of aim.
And before does not stop nor lie in
For wealth or honors or for worldly state;
Whom they must follow, on whose head
must fall
Like showers of manna if they come at
all;
Whose powers shed round him in the common strife
Or mild concerns of ordinary life
A common influence, a peculiar grace.
But who, if he be called upon to face
Some awful moment to which heaven has
joined
Great issues, good or bad for human kind,
Is happy as a lover and, attired
With sudden brightness, like a man in
inspired
And through the heat of conflict keeps the
least
In calamities made, and sees what he fore-
Or if in an unexpected call succeed,
Come when .. will, is equal to the need;
He who, though thus endued as with a
And faculty for storm and turbulence,
Is yet a soul whose master bliss leans
To home felt pleasures and to gentle
return;
Sweet love, which, wherever no be,
Are at his heart, and such Adelity
It is his darling passion to approve.
More brave for this, that he hath much to love
Tis finally, the man who, lifted high,
Conspicuous object in a nation's eye,
Or left unthought, in obscurity,
Who, with a toward, untoward lot,
Prosperous or adverse, to his wish or not,
Plays in the many games of life that one
Where what he most doth value must be won,
Whom neither shape of danger can dis-
man;
Nor thought of tender happiness betray;
Who, not content that former worth
stands fast,
Looks forward, persevoring to the last,
From well to better daily self surpass;
Who, whether praise of him must walk
the earth;
Forever and to noble deeds give birth,
Or he must fall, to sleep without his fame,
And leave a dead, unprofitable name,
Finds comfort in himself and in his cause,
And while the mortal mist is gathering forth
His breath in confidence of heaven's ap-
plause -
This is the happy warrior, this is he
That every man in arms should wish to be
-William Wadsworth.
WILLS.
WILL8
MEN dying make their wills, but wives
leave a work so sad.
Why should they make what all their lives
The gentle dames have had?
SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT.
SHIPS that pass in the night and speak each other in passing. Only a criminal shown and a distant voice in the darkness. So on the ocean of life we pass and speak one another. Only a look and a voice, then darkness again and a silence.
—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
DEATH SONGS.
SWANS sing before they die. Twere no bad thing
Would certain singers die before they sing.
Modern Philanthropist
Modern Philanthropist.
"Why are you sobbing, my little man?"
"My pa's a millionaire philanthropist."
"Well, well, that's nothing to cry about."
"It isn't, isn't it? He's just promised to give me $50 to spend at Christmas provided I raise a similar amount."
Eye Bornin
Eye strain is said to be largely a defect of civilization. To counteract it children should be encouraged to use their eyes at long range, and older persons should be trained themselves.
A teacher who has a surprisingingly small amount of eye strain among her pupils attributes it to her practice of having the scholars drop their work at the end of each hour and look out the window. There is a contest over who seem farthest. This rests and trains eyes and teaches observation.
A woman who does fine sewing for her living found her eyes strained and weak. She was advised to drop her sewing every half hour and look for a minute into space. Relief was quick and the eye strain disappeared.
Nearestighted persons who hold their book or work close will ease eye strain and lengthen their vision if they frequently remove their glasses and look at some object on the farthest horizon.
This long distance training will not, however, relieve eye strain that comes from astigmatism, reckless disregard of the eyes or from glasses that do not suit the eyes.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Two of the chief causes of insomnia are mental excitement and overfatigue. One of the best means of combating the first is a long tepid bath just before retiring. Meet overfatigue with some simple, warm, nutritious drink. Then do not make an effort to sleep. Make yourself perfectly comfortable, and even if you lie awake for a time you will suffer little harm from the insomnia. Never use artificial means on your own impulse.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Good teeth are necessary for the proper mastication of food, without which there cannot be perfect digestion. Impaired digestion soon results in poor health, lowers the vital resistance and therefore makes a person more susceptible to disease. Cleanliness of the mouth is the factor of greatest importance in the care of the teeth. "Clean teeth do not decay." Food particles allowed to remain in the mouth ferment with the production of the acid, which erodes the enamel of the teeth and results in decay. Children should be taught early how to keep their mouths clean, so that it becomes a fixed habit to be continued throughout life. The mouth should be thoroughly rinsed and the throat gargled at least twice a day with plenty of pure water.
The teeth should be cleansed with a toothbrush at least once a day, preferably after the last meal. The brush should be manipulated so that every part of the teeth is cleaned. This is accomplished by brushing up and down and across, inside and outside, and in between the teeth.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Diet.
List plays a great part in preserving health and therefore has a great influence on the complexion. All rich and greasy foods tend to make the skin greasy; therefore the simpler one's food the better, provided it is nourishing and well cooked.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Cold weather is here. The advent of cold weather always marks the rise in the pneumonia death rate. It also marks a general increase in the number of cases of the contagious diseases—measles, scarlet fever, diphtheria, colds, etc. Why? Because from now on people begin to close their doors and windows, and stagnant air diseases get in their work. When people are closely bound in, in poorly ventilated rooms, the four air lowers our vitality, and this, together with close association, makes disease transmission easy. What is the remedy? It is easy enough to locate the remedy. The remedy is simply a continuation of the first class ventilation we have been having out in the open air all summer long. But how can we get it in the winter? In winter we have to live in houses, to be sure, but we don't have to sacrifice all our fresh air. Get fresh air at any price, even if you have to break a window or two.
---
Dust and Consumption.
Dust is a threefold factor in consumption. First, it acts as a gaseifying cause. It is a direct physical irritant to the respiratory passages. By then irritating or inflaming the mucus
THE MAGIC SHAPER
AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER.
MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $1.00
POSTAGE PAID.
membranes it weakens their power to resist bacterial invasion.
Second, dust may carry infection directly by means of dried tubercular sputum recently discharged by some careless or ignorant consumptive.
Third, dust may aggravate an incipient or curable case of consumption and thus convert it into a rapid and virulent case because of the added pus producing germs.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
A Uniform Diet Beat
That digestion is daily adapted to the food eaten is evidenced by the fact known to all physiologists that when a patient has been for weeks on a special diet, as milk, it is necessary to change gradually to the ordinary diet. When there is no system, as in the case of one who eats all of the ordinary foods, there is a constant waste of vitality in continuous excessive adaptation. This is recognized in the mono-lectile treatment of the sick, which is constantly becoming more popular. Several years ago I proved by personal experiments that one can live very well and do average physical and intellectual work on many of the ordinary foods, eaten alone, which are commonly regarded as containing an excess or a shortage of protein, although it is, of course, best to choose a balanced ration. In abnormal conditions a high protein, a low protein, an alkaline or an acid diet may be beat, according to the "indications," for a time, but when the normal condition of nutrition is attained a uniform diet is best as we see in the lower animals, which we know do not require a great variety of highly spiced and seasoned foods. The abnormal conditions brought about by wrong feeding are hereditary, and this must be considered in adopting a diet, although hereditary conditions can be largely overcome — Dr. E. B. Lowry
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Bad Combinations With Meat.
Dr. Feeton B. Turck says that
"the use of meat has been shown to favor intestinal autointoxication; hence many advise total abstinence from the eating of meat." When meat is eaten alone or with a food that is nearly compatible, such as bread, the results are less undesirable than when eaten with a meal consisting largely of fruits, green vegetables, rice, or milk, since these foods, being digested principally in the intestine, hasten the passage of the meat from the stomach, where it is best digested. Pork, for instance, requires five hours in the stomach; rice, milk, apples, uncooked cabbage, toast, potatoes average less than two hours, so that such a combination would not be as good as a larger quantity of beef or pork with bread alone.
HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.
Children's Headaches.
"Children," says the noted English physician Crichton Brown, "have no business with headaches, and if these occur frequently at any school there is something evidently wrong there. The headache girl is not unlikely to grow up an invalid woman, and the unstable mental state may develop into epilepsy." New parents are fully alive to the importance of recognizing the signs of nervous breakdown in children during the school period and of taking steps to prevent injuries through overstudy and the anxiety that frequently accompanies study, especially during the high school period. It is better to consult a physician before it becomes necessary to discontinue the school work. It is more important that athletic exercises and games that will relieve the mental strain of severe stress be provided for girls than for boys in the high school period.
Every lady can have a beautiful and luxurious head of hair if she uses a hairstyle. After a shampoo or bath the magic dries the hair, removing the dandruff; and it will shine the curled head of hair.
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Why Not Now? Eventually. Imported & Domestic LIQUORS S. W. ROBINSON Mail Order House, Richmond, Va.
LOVE SONG
Down on the vast, deep ocean
The sun his beams doth throw
Till every wavelet trembles
Beheath their ruddy glow.
How like thou to those sunbeams
Upon my life's wild seal
They tremble all and glitter.
Reflecting only thee.
-Friedrich von Bodenstedt.
LEADERSHIP.
Life is not a game of chess, which is won by the man who can make the best calculations. Now and then a man like Alexander or Napoleon possesses such transcendent intellectual powers that he can treat life as if it were a game and can dispose of nations and armies as though they were mere castles or pawns on his chessboard. But neither a Napoleon nor an Alexander was able to leave an enduring empire. The men whose work has lasted best are those like Lincoln and Washington, like Cromwell and William the Silent—men differing greatly in intellectual gifts, yet marked out above all others by the habit of self command. Go back through the list of Christian heroes and martyrs, back to Paul, back to Jesus himself, and we find that the thing that counted most in their character and work was that they had risen above the distractions of success and failure into a command of their own souls and that this gave them command over the deeds and the souls of others—President Hadday of Yale University.
CIVILIZATION
Civilization is so general in its nature that it can scarcely be aided, so complicated that it can scarcely be unraveled, so hidden as to be scarcely discernible. The difficulty of describing it, of recounting its history, is apparent and acknowledged, but its existence, its worthiness to be described and to be recounted, are not less certain and manifest. Then, respecting civilization, what a number of problems remain to be solved! It may be asked, it is even now disputed, whether civilization is a good or an evil. One party declares it as teeming with mischief to man, while another lauds it as the means by which he will attain his highest dignity and excellence. Again it is asked whether this fact is universal; whether there is a general civilization of the whole human race, a course for humanity to run, a destiny for it to accomplish; whether nations have not transmitted from age to age something to their successors which is never lost, but which grows and continues as a common stock, and will thus be carried on to the end of all things.—Frabbie Guikot.
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES.
It is a striking fact that the greatest contributions to pure learning in the nineteenth century land, for that matter, to fine art have not come from those English and American universities which have closely avoided doing anything useful. On the contrary, in almost every department of pure learning all the world recognizes the aviruated leadership of the German scholar.—President Bryan of Indiana University.
HIGH GRADE JOB WORK
In Fact Printing of All Kinds Executed Promptly.
We print CALENDARS. Our prices are as low as is consistent with First Class Work. We furnish Invitations for Balls, Weddings and Special Entertainments.
We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational & Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection.
We have a full line of the Finest Stationery to be obtained anywhere in the United States. We supply Mourning Paper and Envelopes.
THE PLANET is the Leading Journal in the Country
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., 311 North Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. Long Distance Telephone, Monroe-2213.
We Do Linetype Work for the Trade.
We have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Writings, Manilla Paper, Envelopes. Card Board, Wedding Stock. in fact, Every thing in the Printing Line.
THE NEW YEAR.
A YEAR ago I stood in thought
And wondered what would come to
pass.
But now I stand and marvel at
The wonders one brief year has wrought.
SOME friends that were to me so dear
Have passed beyond the bourne of
life
And left a painful vacancy
To mar the record of the year.
THE ways I tred a year ago
Have changed their course, and, lo, I
pass
Through various scenes to broader fields
And enter realms I did not know.
NEW faces greet me everywhere;
New voices sound upon my ears;
New friends have made my life more
sweet;
NEW thoughts come often to my mind;
New visions greet my simple gaze.
Some things that I for years have sought
I now on higher levels find.
-Howard Phillips
LIVE DEEP.
BETTER a day of strife
Than a century of sleep:
Give me instead of a long stream of life
The tempests and tears of the deep.
-Father Ryan.
FULL happy is the man who comes at last
Into the safe completion of his year.
Weathered the perils of his spring that blast
How many blossoms promising and dear!
And of his summer with dread passions fraught.
That oft, like fire through the ripening corn.
Bright all with mocking death and leave distraught
Loved ones to mourn the ruined waste forlorn.
But new, though autumn gave but harvest night.
Oh, grateful is he to the powers above
For winter's sunshine and the lengthened night
By hearth side genial with the warmth of love.
Through silvered days of vistas gold and green
Contentedly he glides away, serene.
—Timothy Cole in Century.
NOTHING.
BELIEVE me, I am naught-yea, lean
than naught.
By naught and less than naught what can
be taught?
I tell the mysteries of truth, but know
Naught save the telling to this task I
brought.
—From "Lawall," by Jarol.
PUT ME AWAY FOR WINTER.
PUT me away for winter, somewhere out
of the blast.
Put me away till blimards and snow and
the snow are past.
Put me away till morning comes smiling
again to me.
Out of the valleys of April and over the
brine of the sea.
Put me away for winter, wrap me in com-
plex, too.
And let me lie in the dreaming of spring
with a wing of dow.
PERFECT PERFECTNESS.
SOME good folks can practice
What gifted ones can preach,
But, oh, to preach and practice
What perfectness to reach!
—Cora Lapham Hazard.
TEN GOOD RESOLUTIONS.
TEN good resolutions all in line;
One gets broken, and then there
are nine.
THE LIFE SONG
WERE my voice as the voice of the
fountains
That song in a garden, old
The mystical song of the mountains,
Its birthplace dim and cold,
I'd weave in my song the magic
Of distance vast and far
The longing forater so tragic—
The dream of the moth, for the star.
THE song that the river go singing
To the sound of the wind harp's reads
The lilt of a brook seaward bringing
The dew of the lush vernal mounds,
The murmur of pines recalling
Sea rushes of the long ago,
Wind dirges through ruins falling
And white with the moonlight snow—
THEEK in the song once blended.
Its songs would be those of Life,
Of pilgrims in search never ended.
The beggar's high hymn of writings.
His tears would reecho the longing
Of hearts of far goals dreams.
Who over the hills are throgging.
But love would be over its theme.
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LIFE.
We are born; we laugh; we weep;
We love; we droop; we die!
Ah, wherefore do we laugh or
weep?
Why do we live or die?
Who knows that secret deep?
Alas, not II
Why doth the violet spring
Unseen by human eye?
Why do the radiant seasons
bring
Sweet thoughts that quiggle
fly?
Why do our fond hearts cling
To things that die?
We toll—through pain and wrong;
We fight—and fly.
We love, we lose, and then are
long
Stone dead we lie.
O life, is all thy song
"Endure and-die"
—Bryan W. Procter.
L. Johnson,
NSON ST.,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
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Our palatial institution is at your service and we cordially invite you to make use of its many conveniences. We loan money on real estate and good negotiable paper. We are loaning money now. Call and see us. For further information, apply to the President or to the Cashier. The humble and the lowly; the thrifty and the unexcitable citizen will find this bank a veritable place of refuge in time of trouble.
Former Dictator of Venezuela Cut Short Hearing on Ella Island by Announcing His Intention to Leave For Hamburg.
After three departments of the government had individually and collectively told him that if there was any way on earth of keeping him from landing it would be employed, General Cipriano Castro, whom president and dictator of Venezuela, who got as far as quarantine at New York on the French line steamship La Touraine, became convinced that this government did not want him here.
As a consequence, just after a special board of inquiry had begun to ask him questions he announced that he will return to Hamburg on the first
THE BANK OF NEW YORK
liner he can catch and there need be no more trouble about it.
His announcement was received with favor on Ellis Island and in Washington, and so until Saturday, when the Amerika is to sail for the German port, General Castro will have the best the immigration bureau on the island can supply.
Commissioner William Williams made the announcement for the general in the following brief way:
"After a preliminary hearing at Ellis Island, General Cipriano Castro informed Commissioner Williams that he desired to return to Europe forthwith."
Although Mr. Williams would not amplify his statement, it was generally known that the resolution had not been extracted from the man who once prided himself on being the Diaz of the Andes, until the state department at Washington had made certain little representations that, no matter what the case might be, General Castro was not going to land on our otherwise hospitable shores.
The treasury department, operating through the United States public health service, had made very close examination as to the man's physical condition and had failed to discover anything which would warrant it in saying that he was suffering from a disease which is a bar to entrance for an alien.
Then the department of commerce and labor had tried it and failed, for the general could show sufficient
money to prove that he was not likely to beceive a public charge. That left only the state department, which has more leeway, particularly where a neighboring friendly nation or the ruler of it has lost its taste for a former citizen. When he understand it, General Castro, who has had some little experience along the same general line, bowed to the invitable and sent for steamship agents, through whom he booked his passage.
WALKS IN SLEEP;
STRUCK BY TRAIN
Track Walker Find Body of
Society Girl.
Walking in her sleep, Miss Mary Catherine Cullen, socially prominent and a noted amateur musician, was struck by a train on the Pennsylvania railroad at Tyrone, Pa., and probably fatally injured.
Clad only in her night clothing, Miss Cullen's unconscious form was found by a track walker. The left leg was cut off and there were other serious injuries.
Miss Cullen was taken to an Altoona
hospital and when she was restored to consciousness she could give no explanation as to how she got away from her home and wandered onto the railroad tracks. The accident occurred at a point opposite the handsome home occupied by Miss Cullen and her sisters, known as "Villa Maria." Miss Cullen is a daughter of the late James Cullen, for many years supervisor for this section of the Pennsylvania railroad system.
Arm Ground Off: He Dies
Not stopping the machinery, Clement Kern, a rich young farmer residing near Emaus, Pa., proceeded to adjust a belt that had slipped from a pulley. His glove was caught and his right arm was drawn into the feed cutter and macerated from his body. He had lost so much blood that he died in a few hours.
Miss Lizzie Barrett, of Pottaville, Pa., picked a pimple on her face and is now in a serious condition. Her finger nails polished her.
Workmen began the destruction of the 125 years old home in Washington of Benjamin Scott. Key, the author of "The Star Spangled Banner," where Key lived from 1808 to 1828. The Francis Scott Key Memorial association gathered in its efforts to raise sufficient money to preserve the structure.
INDICTED FOR FATAL WRECK
Three New Haven Railroad Officials Arrested.
REGLIGENCE IS ALLEGED
They Are Held In $6000 Ball on Bench
Warrants Charging Them With Man-
slaughter.
Criminal proceedings against officials of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad company for loss of life in the wreck of the Springfield express at Westport, Conn., last October, were begun by the Fairfield county authorities in Bridgeport, Conn., when Vice President Henry J. Horn, of Boston; General Manager Benjamin R. Pollock, and Superintendent Charles N. Woodward, both of New Haven, were arrested on beach warrants charging them with man-daughter.
They are held responsible for the wreck and loss of life because through
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alleged "gross and culpable negligence" they failed to keep the roadbed, equipment and service in such condition as to insure the safety of passengers. The specific allegation is that they "did kill and slay" one "Jane Doe." She was burned to death in the wreckage. The three railroad officials came to Bridgeport from Boston, having been notified there of the nature of the proceedings against them, and each furnished a bond for $5000. They were not called upon to plead. No date has been set for the hearing. After the legal formalities the accused men left the city. They declined to discuss the case.
Henry J. Horn is operating vice president of the railroad system. He came to Boston eighteen months ago from a western road to be assistant to President Mellen. Later he became vice president and assumed charge of the operation of the road. Mr. Pollock was promoted from general superintendent to general manager of the road on Dec. 4. At the same time Mr. Woodward, who had been superintendent of the New York division, was made general superintendent.
Fell ninety feet to Death.
Joseph Stovic, an employee of the Pennsylvania Steel company, fell ninety feet from the top of a blast furnace at Steeltown, Pa. He was dead when sicked up.
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AGENTS WANTED.
1913 JANUARY 1913
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