Richmond Planet

Saturday, February 22, 1913

Richmond, Virginia

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VOLUME XXX, NUMBER 13. --- Libel Suit in Norfolk. EDITOR YOUNG AND REV. DR MORRIS ARE SERVED WITH WARRANTS. William H. Thorogood Charges Editor of The Journal and Guide and the Pastor of Bank St. Bapt. Church With Libel. Editor P. B. Young of The Journal and Guide had a warrant served upon him Tuesday of this week, on the charge of publishing an article alleged to have been written by Rev. Charles S. Morris, which article Mr. William H. Thorogood, janitor at the United States Custom House, says miculously labeled him. The warrant sworn out by Mr. Thorogood, contained seventeen typewritten pages, and was served upon Mr. Young at his office at one o'clock P. M. by Officer W. T. Allen of the Norfolk Police Department. In company with his bondman, Mr. Frank E. Puryear, he went before Justice of the Peace Nugent, at the second precinct station, and was bailed in the sum of five hundred dollars, for his appearance in the police court Wednesday morning. When the case came to trial it was continued until next Wednesday morning at eleven o'clock. A WARRANT FOR DR. MORRIS ALSO. Mr. Thorogood had a warrant for Dr. Morris also on Tuesday, but he was not in the city, having gone to Claremont on Monday. Dr. Morris returned home Wednesday evening and on Thursday morning appeared before Justice Barron and gave hound in the sum of $500 for his appearance next Wednesday, with Mr. James P. Carter as surety. The warrant was not served upon Dr. Morris, his attorney, Captain Tazewell Taylor, having requested Captain Ford to withhold the warrant, stating that Dr. Morris would appear and give bond upon his return to the city. The warrants grew out of the publication of an article in the Journal and Guide of February 1st, under the caption, "Twenty Dollar Bill Getting Busy Again." Mr. William H. Thorogood's name was not mentioned in the article, but he says that it "miciously slandered and lingered him." OFFICER WAS CONSIDERATE Officer W. T. Allen, who served the warrant on Mr. Young, was very considerate and showed the Editor every courtesy consistent with his position. He remarked that "He knew how to treat decent people." Mr. Parryear was in his office at the time, which adjoin Mr. Young's and no delay was experienced in executing the bond. When the officer started to read the warrant which contained seventeen pages, he was told this was unnecessary and he only read the last paragraph. DR. MORRIS NEXT. Having done with the editor, attention was directed to the minister. "Now, come on with me," was Mr. Thorogood's command to the officer, and they proceeded to the Bank St. parsonage, but on their arrival found that Dr. Morris was in Clarmont on business connected with the Smallwood Memorial-Institute. The case created considerable strir in Norfolk, and when it comes to trial next Wednesday promises some live sentiments. A score of witnesses have been summoned and disclosures will probably be made that will be startling to the public. Dr. Morris and Mr. Young, are represented by Captain Taxwell Taylor, J. M. Harrison and R. T. Thorp, Mr. Thorogood's attorneys are J. Eugene Diggs and Captain R. W. Tomlin. The case will be heard Wednesday, February 19th at 11 o'clock by Justice Barron in the police court.—Norfolk. (Va.) Journal and Guide. --- Editor Smith's Congratulations. (Cleveland, Q : Gazette ) Mr. Jesse Binka of Chicago, well known and successful banker and real estate broker, is the first Afro-American to join the Illinois Bankers' Association, or that of any other state, although John Mitchell, Jr., President of the Mechanics' Savings Bank of Richmond, Va., is a member of the National Bankers Association. Slowly, but surely we are making progress in the business world in spite of tremendous barriers built by racial prejudice. We must who Mirage, Binka and Mitchell, and any of our other bankers, go then, and the Limestone position. Pres. Bowling's Call to Arms. Norfolk, Va., Feb. 1, 1913. To the Brotherhood of the Virginia Baptist, State Convention— Dear Co-workers: There remainath yet three months in which to make preparation for the Forty-sixth Annual Session of our Great Convention which is to meet in the historic city of Hampton, with the Queen St. Baptist Church, Dr. Thomas H. Short pastor, Wednesday after the second Lord's day in May, and it is hoped that we will be able to report the greatest year's work of our history but in order to do this it is necessary that we begin now an aggressive campaign, arousing the people and interesting them for the work of our Convention, is a work for the people by the people. First of all I thank the Blessed Lord for my present condition. I have passed through a terrible ordeal. He brought me as it were to death's door, but I waited patiently and he has delivered me from the grave. Physically I feel practically well. My greatest trouble now is from nervousness and this I think is well under control. The Star of Hope still hangs before me and I feel that the Lord will spare me to do further service for his Kingdom. The many letters of sympathy that I received from the brethren during my illness and the interest manifested were a source of much consolation and I assure you all, that they were greatly appreciated. CHANGES. I notice that several of our brothers have changed fields during this conventional year and I regret that some of them have left the State, but this need not work any ill to our Convention nor the principle for which it stands for we realize that neither membership nor interest in our Convention is limited to Virginia but we look with pride, to our brothers, both North and South who delight in the work that was dear to our Fathers. Two special features claim our attention this year, viz. Foreign-Mission and Education. Dr. L. G. Jordan, Foreign Mission Secretary, is continually making appeals for funds to further prosecute the foreign mission work. Let there be no falling off in interest. Our brothers and sisters across the waters are grazing in darkness, ignorance and sin hungering and thirsting for the word of life. Let's not forseth them. Our Foreign Mission Board has moved its headquarters from Louisville, Ky. to Philadelphia, Pa. and this should not only serve as a convenience to us but as an incentive to greater effort. EDUCATION Our school at Lynchburg is in splendid condition. Dr. Wood is indeed bringing things to pass. Its greatest need is more money not to bring the school up, but to keep it abreast with the times. Dr. Wood has injected in the work the progress we idea and this must be lived up to by the use of modern convenience and improvements throughout the buildings and grounds. I appeal, therefore, to the constituency of the Convention. Let's march on to Hampton prepared to meet the situation for we are well able. I write unto you fathers because you have known from the beginning. I write unto you young men because ye are strong and the word of God abideth in you, not only so, but providentially the Lord has so distributed you that you have become the special representatives of the State. Drake and others at Harrisonburg, Hubbard at Belford City, Wynn at Crow, Austin at Staunton, Boll at Lynchburg, Jones at Newport News, Moses at Danville, Brown at Petersburg and others at Roanoke, Charottenville and in the best city and country churches in the state and our big hearted Graham and Hall with their associates in the North will play their part as they have always done. Let the entire brotherhood rally to the flag. The Battle cry is Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000). Every individual who gives as much as one dollar will have their name appear in our minutes. Trusting that I shall see you all at Hampton I am as ever. Yours for the work. R. H. BOWLING, President. Per J. H. Aahby. AGENTS CAN MAKE BIG MONEY handling our New Dustless Clothes Line. It is an entirely new device. We are the sole agents for the State of Virginia. We handle hus- dreds of other articles. Agents are vaulted throughout the State of Virginia. For full participation address W.. M. APPERSON SUP- PLY CD. 418 Mishawaka Bank Building, Richmond, Va. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1913: Honor and Promoted. MORRE SCHOOL—Continued. 2.A GRADE, NO. 1— First Honors—Irma Hopkins, Ruth Albert, Ruth Carrington, Viola Richardson, Nellie Winston, Robert Dickerson, Mary Marrow. Others Promoted—Andrew Dudley, William Cooke, Vernon Turner, Marshall Nelson, Adela Churchill, Rosa Davies, Emma Gabbin, Aretha Greene, Janet Jackson, Maggie Lewis, Beatrice Nelson, Dhana Onoll, Gladys Smithers, Frances Wells, Ludie Rice Elma Jackson, Hattie Christian, Rosa Thompson. 2A GRADE, NO. 2— First Honors—Evelyn Brown, Gerteude Chiles, Lucy Davis, Olivia Fields, Inez Taylor. Others Promoted—John Branch, Josie Carrington, Maude Cheatham, Ernest Counell, Richard Crymes, Edith Green, Mary Green, Henry Hunter, Rosa Kenney, Hazel Lewis, Pauline Lewis, Helen Randolph, Samuel Randolph, Martha Steward, Alphonzo Turner, Willie Ward, Louise Wilkerson, Charles Bailey, Edward Jones, Jacollah Stroud. 1B GRADE-- First, Honors --Thurston Dew, Marlan Stewart, Mary Wood. Others Promoted --Richard Bland, Willie Buckner, Ralph Carter, Ellith Conway, Cammie Dabney, Gracie Dabney, Ernestino Ellis, James Edwards Willie Frazier, Rosa Goodwin, Mabel Harris, Rosetta Harris, Ruby Hill, Theodore Ivey, George Jones, George Kinney, Ruby Logan, Elizabeth Meal ey, Mary Peyton, Mamie Riley, Fortress Rodgers, Corinne Stoward, Leroy Thomas, Mary Vaughan, Elizabeth Washington, Olivia Washington, Mo- sas Washington, John Wilson, Inez Winston, James Vaughan, Ida Belle Green. 1A GRADE NO. 1-2 First Hohns—Hannibal Holmes, Virginia Harris, Laura Johnson, Warren Marrow, Sorena Mosby, Trent Russell, Clyde Smith, Helen St. John, Others Promoted—Robert Mason, Clarence Overton, Harvey Brewer, William Carter, James Davis, Hattie Ellis, Rosa B. Floyd, Cortine Garnett Isabelle Garnett, Fred, Harris, Julia Harris, Lille Harris, Ruth Harris, Alphonso Jackson, Catherine Jackson Floyd Burton, Florence James, Ella Jones, Josephine Jones, Thomas Low J. Josephine Mann, Bessie Morris, Thelma Mosby, Cornellus Norrell, Evelyn Parson, Willi. Preston, Harvey Robinson, Robert Robinson, Nathaniel Shelton, Clifton Thomas, Susan Tolley, George Turner. 1A GRADE NO. 2 First Honors - Ruby Bussett, Ethel Johnson, Benjamin Phillips, Geneva Randolph, Virginia Smith, Beatree Wyatt. Others - Promoted - Essie Barnes, Clarence Booker, Eulah Brooks, Aretha Brown, Mary E. Brown, Mary M. Brown, Gladys Carter, Joseph Carrington, Augusta Chandler, Alphonse Davis, Charles Gregory, Elzabeth Harris, Walter Harvey, Dotothy Hopkins, Fanny Johnson, William Johnne, Edna Jordan, Herman Kenny, Elissa Lewis, Robert Lyttle, Thelma Mimms, William Mitchell, Herman Phleen, Hamilton C. Smith, Ely Thornton, George Washington, Florie Wilson, Lewis Winston, Freeman Woodson, Edith Wyatt. NEWTOWN SCHOOL Mr. H. G. Carlton, Principal of Newtown School, has reported to the Superintendent, Dr. J. A. C. Chandler, the following list of First Honor and Promoted Pupils, for the term ending January 31, 1913: 2B GRADE--- First Honor—Sadie Q. Breck, Matte Ascocke. Others Promoted- Oliver W. Bank William Aycocke, Taylor Cooke, William N. Martin; William Parrish, Lille Gabbin, Alvin Robinson, Harvey Terrell, Levi Walker, John Richardson. 2A. GRADE First Honors—Margaret Thomas, Gladys Chatman. Others Promoted—Emma Aycocke, Lucy Briggs, Elizabeth Faulcon, Irene Hall, Sarah Simma, Clara Thompson Madeline Shores, Cornellus Charity, Eigle Lewis, Herman Mickens, John Simms, James Tinsley, Thomas Johnson. 1B GRADE Frat Honors—Pinkie Townes, Annie Frasier. Others Promoted—Hiwatha Harris, Randall Cokes, Junius Johnson, Bernard Johnson, Joseph Ricki, Willie Cooper, Mollie Aycocke, Maggie C. Davis, Lacy Graham, Rena B. Harris, Mamie Jones, Lumie Malley, Bouce Murray, Lacy Kille, Miread Kernan, Kernan Cutter. First Honors—Mattle Wray, Mary Hargrove. Others Promoted—Beaunon Cox, Mabol Fox, John L. Cox, Ernest Hall Forest Johnson, William Ramsey, Alma Carter, Lucy Crawford, Eva Epps Mabel Fox, Virginia Mickins, Iula Mobby, Rosa Randolph, William Scott, Naomi White, Molle M. Goodall, Gracle Charity. The Dunbar Society. The Dunbar Literary and Historical Society will present Mr. James M. Harrison of Norfolk in a dramatic ritual at the Third Street A. M. E. Church next Tuesday evening. The appearance of Mr. Harrison will be the second number in the Dunbar Society's Entertainment Course. Mr. Harrison, who is a member of the Norfolk bar is a writer of rare ability. His writings, especially his poems, have been widely published and received most favorable comment. He has been styled by the press the logical successor to the late Paul Laurence Dunbar. Mr. Harrison will be supported by local talent. Subscribers to the Entertainment Course will receive their tickets of admission from the secretary of the society. Persons not subscribers to the Entertainment Course will be asked for a silver offering at the door. The public is, certainly invited to be present. The exercises will begin at 8:15 o'clock. Installation of the Magnolia Social Club. The installation of the above named organization was held at the residence of Mr. A. V. Norrell, No. 1015 N. 7th St. Thursday, February 6, 1913. The following programme was rendered: Overture, Prof. Charlie T. Terry; Solo, Miss Lena B. Bass, Paper, Miss Rosa Moade; Recognition, Mr. John Dabney; Solo, Miss Goldie B. Norrell; Recognition, Miss Alice Holmes; Recognition, Mr. Leroy Rayland. The newly elected officers were installed for the opening year by Prof. A. V. Norrell as follows: President, Albert Vaughan Norrell Jr.; Vice President, Samuel P. Gran dorson; Secretary, Eddaboro A. Norrell; Assistant Secretary, Norval Vaughan Jones, Treasurer, Daniel Webster Davis, Jr.; Chapman, Clinton Mifford Dunn; Auditor, Joseph F. Harris. At this point the members and guest were served with a fine supper by Caterer M. A. Norrell, Mr. Richard S. Johnson netel as Master of Ceremonies and Prof. Charlie T. Torry furnished music for the occasion. The guest consisted of Misses Lena B. Riss, Rosa Maeade Alice Holmes, Pannie M. Morton, Charlotte Jofferson Goldle B. Norrell, Maude Groene, Ida R. Tomlin, Lacelle South, Dalsy M. Wright, Jags' Baker, Helena Tomlin, Pannie Haker, Lille B. Grey, Adeline Phillips, Coralase A. Norrell, Mattie L. Norrell, Mrs. Junita Peterson, and Messrs Edward Baker D. Webster Davis Jr., Clifton M. Dunn, Russell H. Grey, Samuel P. Granderson, Joseph F. Harris, Norval V. Jones, Richard S. Johnson, Freddie Manrum, Edible Morris, Albert V. Norrell, Jr. Edinburgh A. Norrell, George Robinson, Leroy Ragland, John Sparks, Louis Archer, Temple Thomas, Willie Petross, McCheffrey Henderson, John Dabney, Charlie T. Terry. Dr. Vajghan Improving Dr. J. M. Vanghan, who has been ill for several weeks at his residence corner 16th and Stockton streets, Southside, is slowly convulsing. It is hoped by his many friends that he will soon be out and resume his practice. Colorist Trained Nurse Appointed. Miss Blanche V. Bullock, a graduate of class 1907, Freedmen's Hospital, Washington, D. C. has been appointed a visiting nurse by the White Visiting Nurses Association of this city. She will assume her duties Saturday, March 1, 1913 and all physiicians who work among our people are requested to report all worthy cases to her at 1119 N. 5th Street. Phone, Madison 5671. A Magnificent Display. The marriage of Mine Edna Debreas, the accomplished and popular daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Millen C. Debreas to Mr. Robert Cole at the Ebenezer Baptist Church last Wednesday day night, is generally admitted to be the Most event that has ever taken place in this city among our people. The bride's business was elaborate and might have ground the remembrance of a woman. The True Reformers. Many Deaths-Raising More Revenue Over the official signatures of the officers and Board of Directors of the Grand Fountain, United Order of True Reformers, under date of January 15, 1913, it is announced that in keeping with the action of that body at its last session Class B was assessed $2.00 annually, payable $1.00 in April and $1.00 in October. Class B was assessed $1.00 the members of sold Class being required to pay 50 cents in April and 50 cents in October. THE REASON GIVEN. The reason given for this is that the dues which the members have been paying have been found insufficient to keep up with the death claims in these departments. It is further announced that on account of the death rate of the members in this Department being so high, the quarterly dues that members are now paying, together with the assessment levied last September is still insufficient to pay the current death claims which are now pressing for payment. Accordingly, the officers have further increased the taxation on the members of the Order by doubling the quarterly dues on each member. All members who have failed to pay this amount by February 15, 1913 are declared to be unbenefited. This assessment has caused much comment, but the officials hope by this plan to tide the Order through the financial difficulties which now confront it and to ultimately pay some money on the back claims. --- Good Advertising Medium Richmond, Va., Feb. 17, 1931 Editor of The PLANET. Richmond, Virginia. We are in receipt of a letter from a party in Cuba, West Indies, calling attention to the complimentary notice given in your issue of January 22th, concerning our "Washington Park" property, and requesting us to consider him a purchaser of two lots in "Washington Park." This not only shows the valued appreciation of your paper by our colored people, but its extended circulation to foreign countries, and the results it brings is a monument to your business ability and enterprise and a compliment to you, well worthy of appreciation to the editor of any newspaper. We congratulate you, and wish you continued increasing success. Yours truly WASHINGTON PARK LAND CORPORATION. By J. B. Blackburn, Pres. HARRISON—DREW. Mr. and Mrs. Archer Drew of Portsmouth, Va. have issued cards announcing the marriage of their daughter, Hattie L. to Mr. John M. Harrison. Tuesday, December 31, 1912. Reception Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1913 at their residence, 1520 County St. St. Valentine's Evening Celebrated by Y. N. and L. The students of the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute celebrated St. Valentine's evening on Friday afternoon, February the 14th. At 7:15 P. M. the bell rang for all students to assemble in the large dining hall. Each boy received an envelope containing a tie. The girls had on little aprons of different colors to match the boys' ties. After matching the ties and aprons the bell rang again. This was a signal for the boys and girls each to receive a heart. Each of these hearts was numbered and the numbers had to be matched. After the boys finding the girls' heart and the girls finding the boys' heart the bell rang for the contest of marching between the normal department academic department and the preparatory department. There were ten boys and girls from each department. The leaders of these departments drew from an envelope numbers which told them their time to march. The normals came first the preparatories second and the academies third. Mr. James Ferguson of Roanoke, Va. and Miss Alice Chiles of Richmond, Va. lead the normals; Mr. Lawrence B. Henry of Hampton, Va. and Miss Latilla Kyd of Finncelle, Va. lead the academics, while Mr. Henry Anderson of Newport News, Va. and Miss Lailah Bail of New York. N. Y. lead the preparatories. After each department had marchel for five minutes by the school band, lead by Mr. Ross, the judges decided that the academic department took first prize and the normal department second. Prof. Owens presented the prizes to the leaders of these two departments. Those who represented the academic department are as follows: Misses Lettia Kyd, Mattie Hayes, Maria Hughes, Jessie Only, Essele Cookie, Helen Ford, Mary Towens, Luey Brave, Rosana Ash and Sallie Ardle, Messra, L. B. Henry, C. E. Jackson, O. D. Dahney, W. H. Dudley, W. D. Payne, J. A. Oliver, J. D. Crockett, E. Sprayley, J. R. Spiceley and L. L. Fears, Manager. PERSONALS AND BRIEFS. Mrs. John N. Hall of Old Dominion St. Southside, is confined to her home on account of sickness. Mrs. Elinna Gray of East 16th St. Southside, is improving under the skillful treatment of Dr. J. Heyward Blackwell, Jr. Mrs. Mattie Reed of North Third St., who has been critically ill is now convalescing. Her many friends hope that she may be able to be out soon. William H. Robb, formerly of its city died in Philadelphia, Jan. 1912. His remains were interred in Caroline county, Va. He had been in poor health for some time. Miss Annie Mae Vann. Traveling Representative of the Journal and Guide, Norfolk, Va. is in the city in interest of the work. She is located at the residence of Mrs. Lucy Fields, 515 N. 2nd St. Dr. Reverdy C. Ransom of Philadelphia, the "Henry Ward Becerle" of the race, editor of the A. M. E. Review will deliver one of his famous lectures at Third St. A M. E. Church Wednesday, Feb. 26th. Public cordially invited. Birthday Party. On last Monday afternoon the house of Mrs and Mrs Robert P. Randolph of 100d I-2 N 7th St was a brilliant scene, the occasion being the 17th birthday of their daughter, Roberta A. Randolph. The little girls and boys were chlamydia attested by the occasion. Little Miss Randolph was notified in dainty blue, trimmed with gold and lace. She was asleep in recording by a few older friends. The pre ents were coolly and numerous. --- PATTENSON In loving remembrance of our mother and grandmother, Mrs Winnie Patterson (mother of Mrs Estelle Black) who died one year ago today, February 22, 1912. Do not ask us if we do this here. For we miss her everywhere. As around our lonely fire站. We still see her empty chair. Daughter and Grandchildren Thanks. We desire to take this method of expressing our profound thanks to Williams Lodge of Elks for their faithfulness to my husband, Randolph Miller, during his illness. He is much improved in health. His wife, LILLIE MILLER 1222 St. John St. Doucon's Conference. The next meeting of the Deacon's Conference of Richmond will be held in Fountain Baptist Church, MonDay, February 24, 1912. Public installation of officers. Let every deacon be present. BENJ. JACKSON, President. MORTON DEANE, Secretary. The Moving Pictures. The Educational Moving Picture Exchange of New York has been taking exposures of the prominent places in Richmond under the caption of "Moving Pictures of Richmond." These scenes included the City Hall officials, the Mayor, the Chief of the Fire Department, and the fire apparatus, the Chief of Police and his men, together with various places of business in this city. The Mechanics' Savings Bank was the only colored corporation shown in all of these many scenes. The pictures were shown last week at the Academy of Music and this week at the Box Theatre. FEB 22 1 CAMBRIDGE PRICE, FIVE CENTS. News From Leesburg, Va. Interesting Items—A Drunken Conductor—Colored Passenger Preferred Charges—Discharged "By the Company. February 29.—Mrs. Sallie Wilson, widow of the late Henry Wilson, our popular contractor and builder was married to Mr. George R. Jackson on Monday evening last, at 8:30 o'clock at the residence of Mrs. Margrotte Stanton on Baby St. Rev. Edward Tyler performed the ceremony. February 11.—Mr. J. L. Thomas has returned from Chicago. February 15.—Mrs. Julia C. Weems of Waterford, Va. has very ill with heart trouble at Hamilton, Va. where she had gone for a short stay. February 17.—Mr. Daniel Loe of Hamilton, Va. is very, vii with La Gripe. February 11.—Prof. Winston A. Walker had a thrilling experience with a drunken conductor of the Washington and Old Dominion R. R. After taking Prof. Walker's ticket he came back and told him the ticket was no good. (He has a book of tickets.) He then offered to pay his fare in cash; he refused to take it but proceeded to abuse aim for the rest of the trip. Noaring the end of the trip he pulled a 41 revolver on him threatening his life for the next mile. He happened to be the only person of color on the train. After reaching Leesburg he promptly swore out a warrant for him and policemen Jones and Whitmore landed him in the lock up for the night. He was tried and fined on Saturday by Mayor E. T. Adams. In the afternoon the Company notified the town gargent he had been dropped from service. February 16.—Cards are out for Mrs Lucy Thomas' birthday party tonight. Mrs. Josephine Washington, mother of Mrs. Daniel Freeman has gone to spend the rest of the Winter with the latter in Washington D. C. Mr. Calla B. Norris of Cycobee, Va. and Newport, R. I. in again able to be about after long illness in the Leeds Hospital, having undergone a serious operation. Mr. Wilson Townsend and Miss Messie Cooper, both of Leeds, were married by Rev. Wm. Sidney, February 12, 1913. The London Guard's have been ordered to report for duty tomorrow. Many heartaches are felt among the sweethearts, and mothers. I hope the campanion-wont be long in Mexico. Mrs Mayme L. Robinson has returned from a visit to Richmond, Va. to her sister, Miss Ione Robinson, attending Hartshorn College and her brother Mr. Lafayette Robinson of Charlotteville, Va. Mrs Clara V. Walker is again able to be about after five weeks illness. Mrs. Fannie W. West of Washington is visiting her mother, Mrs. Mary Waters. Mrs. West married Mr. West of Richmond on New Years Day Mr. and Mrs. William H. Valentine of East Market St. had for their dinner guest Sunday, February 16th. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Tollbert and her little daughter Edna, of Midway. Miss also Mrs. James C. Walker of Leeds, Va. Mr. Thomas Lee Robinson of Box- wood, one of our beautiful homes, paid his family a flying visit on Sunday. We are always glad to see our young men come home. Rev. Spot Brown of the Colored Primitive Baptist Church preached at 11 o'clock yesterday. The service was well attended. Rev. Washington Murray of Mount Zion M. E. Church preached at 11 and Sorrow. Both services were largely attended. Sunday School at 2:30 every Sunday. Prof. John C. Walker. Supt. All are invited. Mr. Augustus H. Valentine, Sr., son-in-law of Mr. Hillary Carrington was the Sunday guest of his wife. Mrs. Mary C. Valentine of this town. February 2. Miss Mary H. Valentine had quite a surprise last Monday evening when 45 of her friends called and gave a party. They spent a delightful evening and refreshments were served. Miss Mary says, call again. K. OF P. EXERCISES. The anniversary exercises of, the Order of Knights of Pythia, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. and the Order of Calanthe will be held at the First Baptist Church. College and Broad Site. Sunday afternoon, March 30th. All representatives to the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pyralis which will meet in Newport News, Va. In June, 1913, will please communicate with District Deputy Grand Chancellor C. G. Davis, 617-274 St., Newport News Va. or W. F. Clarkson, 753 Hampton Avenue, Newport News, Va., Chairman of Home Committee. --- --- Notice! The Window By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART SYNOPSIS Margery Fleming asks John Knox, attorney, to find her father, State Treasurer Fleming, who is missing. A paper with notes on it has been found planned to Fleming's pillow. Fleming, whose dishonest work drove Henry Hutter former state treasurer, to suicide, has been seen alive. Knox visits Lottie and Jane Maitland, Margery's cousin. Margery is engaged to Harry Wardrop. Lottie tells Knox ten of her pearls have been stolen. Knox watches for hurries. During the night Wardrop's value is robbed. Jane Maitland mysteriously disappears. Burder is suspected. In her poem is found another paper with it on it. Wardrop is under suspicion. Detective Hunter shows that Wardrop is lying. Time of the burder is found in a closet behind his foundation in Haiti. Knox is in love with Margery. He and Detective Hutter and Fleming what dead of the White Hat, a political figure, where he has been found. A note left by Flemer refers to him. Wardrop *Plimming's secretary*, in support of the murder. Wardrop abducts that Fleming thought he had taken hostage which was in Wardrop's vaults. Wardrop says he does not know what the figures ill mean. He also discovers that his value was carried away and another left in its place. Lightfoot, Fleming's cashier, tells Knox Fleming killed himself. Lightfoot wants Fleming's private papers. Knox hears an intruder in the Fleming house. Margery declares that her father was murdered. The police influenced by politicians, say Fleming killed himself. Burton, a reporter, declares that Ideas owner got part of the state money taken by Fleming. Henri Butler, widow of the former state treasurer, tells Knox's sister-in-law, Mrs. Butler, how she ill since her husband committed suicide. Wardrop pawns the missing paws. Mrs. Butler historically expresses joy upon hearing that Clarkson, Fleming's confederate, has committed suicide. Wardrop continues his of his innocence. Wardrop's white empty, is recovered in Boston. Buss's Schwartz's divorced wife claims to be Flamingo widow. She says Schwartz and Flaming hate each other. Margery and Mrs. Butter are chilped formed by Luntra's Lettle Mattheid, apparently retracts her statement that her pearls had been stolen. There is a secret staircase in the White Cat leading to the town where Flaming was shot. She then now patients to Buss Schwartz as the murderer. Apparently Mrs. Butter chloroformed Margery. From a warehouse upstairs the White Cat knew a woman attentive to kill Schwartz. CHAPTER XIX Measure For Measure. I WATCHED Wardrobe swing up the path with his head down. I saw the shadowy figure of the other man fall into the behind film. Then I caught the platform of the last car as it passed, and that short ride into town was a train of procession with the wheels beating time and singing. "It's all the same—the same to me—to me." I called Burton by telephone. We arranged to meet at a little Chinese restaurant, where at that hour, 8 o'clock, we would be almost alone. Burton listened attentively to War Burton estates automatically to War dropstory as I reported it. "So Schwartz did it, after all he said repeatedly when I described 'She a tame ending.' It tells the story of the unsmalted and it is a memorable into my ordinary life. A man man feud. The shaggy tail. We caught touch of Schwartz. "I thought the Times Post was lost after him." "Schwartz left the Times Post & broke this at the time." Buttress with repressed tears. "This will end." Tomorrow we must photograph Schwartz's life in Patterson, and the next day we will examine the ministration. I am going down the piler on an exposition box and write up the plap kit content of the union butcher's prose." "How is Mr. Butter's prose?" "Delthusse, shortly, is going to crook, Wardley, is going to Mice, to Schwartz, will I be good government, and Miss Malcolm, will I be found in a cistern. The whole thing has petalled out. What's the one of finding the murderer if he is called with ashes and lined with respect. Mice, I want some more tea to down my moustache. We called up the spirit about to 20 and learned the Mrs. Butler was sitting. Fred was there and, with much hope of getting anything, we went over. I took Burton in as nephew of the doing woman, and I was glad I had benefit. She was quite consolous, but very weak. She told the story to Fred and myself, and in a corner Burton took it down in short hand. We got her to show it about daylight sometime, and she died quietly shortly after Edith arrived." To give her story as she have it would be impossible. The rumblings of a slick mud, the terrible pathos of it all, is impossible to repeat. She lay there, her long, thin body practically dead, fighting the death rattle in her throat. There were pauses when for five minutes she would lie in a stupor, only to route and go forward from the very word where she had stopped. She began with her married life, and to understand the beauty of it is to understand the things that came after. She was perfectly, ideally, logically happy. Then one day Henry Butler accepted the nomination for state treasurer, and with that things changed. During his term in office he altered greatly; his wife could only guess that things were wrong, for he refused to talk. The crash came, after all, with terrific audacity. There had been an all night conference at the Butler house, and Mr. Butler, in a frenzy at finding himself a dupe, had called the butler from bed and forcibly ejected Florent and Schwartz from the house. When Butler had been horrified, sickened by what he regarded as the vul at the White Cat P. D. W. quality of the service provided. But here also to be said that the service was not better than the one before it. cited to 141 films, on the night Margery Plimming and found the paper on the pillow she had been in the house. She was not the only intruder in the house that罪犯. Someone else, presumably Plimming himself, had been there before her. She found a index document open in a small drawer empty. Interestingly, Plimming could to draw a check while in hiding, and needed really money. As to the jewels that had been deftened in Margery's body, I could only surmise the impatient that after prompting him to take these had fallen at the sight of his dead wife's jewels. Supplied by the girl's appearance, she had left to the upper floor and connected herself in an empty bedroom. It had been a night down before she got out. No doubt this was the room being to the bottom, Carter, who in Margery had reported an email that night. She took a key from the door of a door entrance and handed the door behind her when she left. Within a couple of flights she had learned that Winstop was coming home from Platt burns and she met at Redwood. We soon knew the mature of that meeting. She drove back to town, half minded to tell her to secure the letters that would have cleared her husband's mistypy, but the wiser by one thing. Winstop had their countryside told for where Penning was hiding. The travel itself she would to the Whitefield and tried to get in. She knew now but her level of the secret life of mass political meeting of the deepest impolite and had been to the inn. But the door was locked and the door was law. Amanda left the warehouse raised its wrist to touch, and it was not long be- fore she could see to see what she could see in the upper windows. She wrestled at the gate and felt her way, through the door to the windows. At that moment the gate opened suddenly and a man murdered something in the darkness. The shock was terrible. I had no idea that night of what my limousine stumbled into the water huge yard had meant to a half waved woman just beyond my range of vision. After a little she got her courage again, and she just open an unlocked window. The real of her progress must have been much as ours had been a few nights later. She found a window that commanded the club, and with three possibilities that she would lose and would see the wrong room, she won the fourth. The room lay directly before her, distinct in every outline with Fleming seated at the table, facing her and sorting some papers. She rested her revolver on the still and took absolutely deliberate amber hands were cold, and she even rubbed them together to make them steady. Then she fired, and a crash of thunder at the very instant covered the sound. Fleming set for a moment before she awayed forward. On that instant she realized that there was some one else. in the room a man who took an uncertain step or two forward into view, throw up his hands and disappeared as instantly as he had come. It was Schwartz. Then she saw the door into the hall open, saw Warfield come slowly in and close it, watched his slicking realization of what had occurred then a sudden paddle selved her. Armoured to stretch out from the dark mess befell her to draw her into it she used to get away, to run, even to service them she fainted. It was rayn dawn when she relieved her son and got back to the hotel room she had taken under an assumed name. By night she was quieter. She read the news of Fleming's death in the paper, and she glanced over it. But there was more to be done; she was only beginning. She meant to ruin Schwartz to kill his credit, to tell him with the club of police defender Wardrop had tool her trust her husband's letters were with other papers at the Monmouth avenue house, where he could not get them. Fleming's body was taken home that day, Saturday, but she had gone to stop. She wanted the papers before Lightfoot could get at them and destroy the mariminating ones. That night she got into the Fleming house using the key she had taken. She snapped the library, finding not the letters that Wardrop had said were there but others equally or more intimidating, canned notes, private accounts that would have ruined Schwartz forever. It was then that I saw the light act downwards. My unnayky stumbled gave her warning enough to turn on the light. For the rest, the cheek thru the back hall, the dining room and the pottery had culminated in the escape up the back stairs, while I fell down the dumb wafer chair. She had run into Leila on the upper floor. Bella, who had almost fattened and who knew her and kept her unmorning, putting her and soothing her and finally getting her into a trouble of sleep. That day she realised that she were being followed. When Kilda invaded someone she accepted it at once to the value of being herself and her persona until she was ready to use them. It had disconcerted her to find Margery there but she managed to get along. Her several days everything had gone well. She was getting strong, of agile ready for the second set of the play, prepared blackmail Schwartz and then expose him. She would have killed him later probably. She wanted her measure full and running over, and so she would disgrace him first. Then Schwartz must have learned of the cost of the papers from the flaming house and gaped the rest. She felt she had known from the first who had killed Flaming. However that might be, he had had her roses. entered, Margery choreoformed in the connecting room, and her papers were taken from under her pillow while she was pretending anasthesia. She had followed the two men through the house and got the kitchen door, where she had fainted on the grass. The text right when she had retired early, leaving Margery and me downstairs, it had been all excuse to slip out of the house. How she found that Sylvany was at the White Oot, how she got through the side entrance, we never saw. He had burned the papers to, she got there, and when she tried to kill him he had struck her head. At noon that day I telephoned to Mistress. "I come up," I said, "and bring the keys to the Montgomery avenue house. I have some things to tell you and some things to ask you." I met her at the station with Lady Gripp her trap. My plans for that afternoon were comprehensive. They included what I hoped to be the solution of the Aunt Jane mystery. Also they included a little drive through the path and a walk. I shall tell about that I am going to tell at the proper time. To play property, Edith met us at the house. It was still closed, and even in the short time that had elapsed it smelled close and musty. At the door into the drawing room I stopped them. "Now, this is going to be a sort of game." I explained "It's a sort of button, button, who's got the button, without the button. We are looking for a drawer, receptacle or closet, which shall contain, bunched together, and without regard to whether they should be there or not, a small revolver, two military brushes and a clothes brush, two or three soft bosomed clips, perhaps a half dozen collars, and a suit of underwear. Also a small flat package about eight inches long and three wide." "What in the world are you talking about? Edith asked. "I am not talking. I am theorizing." I explained I think Margery caught my idea at once, and as Edith was ready for anything, we commenced the search. Edith took the top floor, being acquainted she said, to finding unexpected things in the servants' quarters; Margery took the lower floor, and, for certain reasons, I took the second. For ten minutes there was no result. At the end of that time I had finished two rooms and commenced on the blue boudour. And here on the top shelf of a three cornered Empire cup board, with glass doors and spindle legs, I found what I was looking for. Every article was there. I stuffed a small package into my pocket and call ed the two girls. "The lost is found," I stated calmly when we were all together in the library. "When did you lose anything?" Beth damalem, "Do you mean to say, Jack. Knox, that you brought us here to help you and a suit of gandy pajamas and a pair of military brushes?" "I brought you here to and Aunt Jane," I said eagerly, taking a letter and the flat package out of my pocket. "You see, my theory worked out. Here is Aunt Jaunce and there is the money from the Russia leather bag." I laid the packet in Margery's lap and without ceremony opened the letter it began: My nearest niece—I am writing to you because I cannot think what to say to Sister Joan, who is running away. I am running away. We are going to write it all alone in this gallery. I have had a cup of tea out of your lovely cup and a nap on your pretty couch, and just as soon as it takes I am going to take the train to New York. When you off this I will be there. We are near that have read about and dreamed about I am going to realize a dream of four years more than three as long as you have lived. Your dear mother saw the truth before she died, to the truth she wanted have always been done to her and have not been done to her and not done to Sue. I am going to London and Paris to see if the money your father gave for the pearls will hold out. For you now I have been getting stained clothes, and I have taken a little time in a correspondence school to see what I always made you doing. You wanted to learn the art, I think I should do very well if could only sing my French instead. Little piece of paper with a number on it, and he said they followed him everywhere and were driving him crazy. Try to have him see a doctor. And I left a bottle of complete a cream in the little chest over my bed and I put it in my bag and I said that I mine. Please destroy it before your Aunt Linda was it. I should my dear sister. I suppose I am growing fastness to my old age, but I am going to love and things in my clothes not to be made. YOU IT LOOKING AUNT JANE When Marriage stopped reading there was an shared silence. Then we all three burst into relieved, uncontrolled mish. The dear, little old lady, with her new independence and her slavvy five year old romance, stared back. "Then we opened the pockets, which was a saddler business, for it had represented Adam Fleming's last clutch at his warning public credit. Rain ran to the telephone with the news for I need, and for the first time that day Margery and I were alone. She was standing with one hand on the library table. In the other she held JOANE PADLE "Margery, I want my answer, dear." Aunt Jane's letter, half tremulous, wholly tender. I put my hand over hers on the table. "Margery," I said. She did not sit. "Margery, I want my answer, dear I love you--love you. It isn't possible to tell you how much. There isn't enough time in all existence to tell you You are nine. Margery--mine. You can't get away from that." She turned very slowly and looked at me with her level eyes. "Yours," she replied softly, and I took her in my arms. I dith was still at the telephone. Edith was still at the telephone. "I don't know," she was saying. "Just wait until I see." As she came toward the door Mar- gery squirmed, but I held her tight In the doorway Edith stopped and stared, then she went swiftly back to the telephone. "You, dear," she said sweetly. "They are this minute." Subscribe to THE PLANET. A penny saved in a penny earned— Benjamin Franklin WHEN one is trying to economize in household matters and at the same time is of a hospitable turn of mind, saving the pennies becomes an irksome task. A hostess who has been obliged to cut down expenses recently solved the entertaining question delightfully by giving a poverty parry. The affair was charmingly informal and cheap, and the novelty appealed to the guests, who pronounced it the "best fun ever." The invitations were written on brown wrapping paper with a pen, and delivered by a boy dressed as a wolf. This is supposed to save postage for the spirit of poverty must be maintained in every small detail. When decorating the table and house this hostess used paper flowers girl ranged in the cans and fruit jars. Paper and woven dishes such as are sold for pluckling and tin cups were used, and instead of silver, tin knives, forks and spices graced the table. The room in which the party was held was cleared of all unnecessary furniture and furnishings, such as bride-haire, crystal and silver, and wooden bowls were used as chairs to seat the guests at table. The light was furnished by plaster white sperm candles in tin candles. The guests were requested to wear inexpensive costumes, the lingeringham or calico dresses "tattered and torn" for very much patched and the men blue jeans and flannel shirts. For refurbishments the following meal was served: Cottoned Mush and Milk Cold Meat Sandwiches The cornmeal mush was served in large cereal bowls with a generous supply of cream and sugar. It is toast delicious enough to please the most critical epiphane. The sandwiches were made from brown and white bread, and large dill pickles were served, as well as the small, sweet variety. Pumpkin and apple plops, old fashioned sugar cookies and doughnuts or crumbs if preferred constitute an appropriate supper for the pottery party. Large tinted pans contain the sandwiches, cookies and doughnuts. Oder is served from a diagonal with a dipper in lieu of flour or puff. A prize was awarded the guest wearing the most "poverty stricken" costume. Just after the awarding of the prize, some one replied "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse," while any one related "hard luck" stories, and to the narrator of the worst one person gave "Over Richard's Almamee." "Let the Poorist," "Over Twist," "The Old Curiosity Shop," etc. Old fashioned candy in sticks and molasses were handed on space-treat during the story telling. At an open fireplace the guests bedded in time old and starved fashion. This fire also served to pop the corn, from which popcorn baskets were made in the following manner. Together the ingredients used for the old fashioned molasses tuffy and before removing it from the fire star to enough popcorn to thicken it. Take the mixture out by the spoonful areas as soon as it can be handled roll it into baskets, then roll the cover and over again in kernels of corn until no more will adhere to the balls. How to Wash Door Panel Very frequently, the door panel skims, after washing them, making it impossible to use them again. To prevent this, follow these instructions: After removing the panel from the door, then down the glass. Wash and stitch the latch slip in the robe in medically and replace the panel on the door. Care should be observed to put the latch straight, tacking down the sides if necessary, to stretch the panel. Allow it to dry upon the door. The gives for better results than to handle the panel in the usual manner. How to Bake Gems on Stove Top. If the oven is hot and one whisk to bake gems, it may be convenient to know that they can be baked on top of the stove in an iron gem pan. When the pen becomes hot grease it will pour in the gems. When they have puffed up slip a knife around the edge and lift tightly to see whether the gems are browning. If they are brown from them and let them brown on the other side. Beauties can be made in a similar fashion in the frying pan. How to Make Vinegar. When you have tea left after meals put it into a jar and sweeten about the same as if you were going to drink it. Keep adding to it from time to time if you have the tea leaf, and when you pure a few apples for sauce or pie in the partings into the tea. If you have little vinegar plant put same in, but it will get good without. Let stand till sour and you will have a much more vinegar than that you buy in the stores. How to Revive Umbrellas. For a shabby umbrella take half a cupful of strong tea and two teaspoonfuls of sugar. Open the umbrella and sponge well with the mixture. Two revolves the color, and sugar stiffens. Luke McLuke Saye Every man has his price, but most of them make it too high. Cindelia Enipiree. Musical Note He—Are you musical? Abe—I play the piano. He—Well, that's not an ab notice dental.—London Mall. Can a woman make a man love her? Yes, often she can if she lays herself out to do it. The most important point is that he must not know it. The world's history gives us many instances of the love compelling power of even unattractive women. To compel love a woman must sympathize with a man. She must not often contradict him. She must flatter him, and let him think that his opinion is the only one that matters. She must put him into good context with himself. She must exert her powers of charm and never bore him. She must be bright and amusing in his presence. She must see a good deal of him, for absence generally makes the heart grow fonder—of some one else. HEALTH RULES. How to Keep Well as the Japanese Do In Their County. The following rules for the general guidance of the people in health motters have been printed and widely distributed by the Japanese government. First. Spend as much time out of doors as possible. Bask much in the sun and take plenty of exercise. Take care that your respiration is always deep and regular. Second. As regards meals eat only once a day, and let the diet be eggs, cereals and vegetables, fruit and fresh cows' milk. Take the last name as much as possible. Mastate your food carefully. Third. Take both every day and a steam bath once or twice a week if the heart is strong enough to bear it. Fourth. Early to bed and early to rise. Fifth. Sleep in a very dark and very quiet room, with windows open. Let the minimum of sleeping hours be six or six and one half hours. In case a woman eight and one half hours is visible. Sixth. Tight one day of absolute rest each week, in which you must refrain from even reading or writing. Eighth. Be married. Widows are widowers should be married with the least possible delay. Ninth. Be moderate in the consumption of even tea and coffee, not to say tobacco and alcoholic beverages. Tenth. Avoid places that are too warm, especially steam heated and body ventilated rooms. CARE OF REAL LACE. How to Clean These Rare Possession Without Injury. There are many women who possess among their treasures places of restace which have become so soiled that they do not know what to do with them. Of course, a good many women like the blue color of old face, thinking that it shows that it is real, great grandmothers, who learned the idea of wearing invitations of any sort would have been pretty astonished a hearing that real face would not wash. It was washed in their day just as we would wash our invitations, but as the always took infinite paints with the clear shining and bleaching, no doubt the face came in for some of this case. Some old faces in such a frail condition that it would be unwise to attempt to clean it at home, and it should be sent to a good face cleaner who would understand how to do it. Still, there is much of this that will come through the orbital quite safely. The best point if the face is not too soiled, is to clean it. Do not use naphtho or aglyph. For though this is very good, it has a tendency to weaken the airless frail threads. Instead, pressure the ounces of powdered magnesium. Place in a warm oven until very dry. Clean the oven door open. Lay a clean cloth on a table or flat surface, and spreading the face flatly on this, spike tibble with the dry powder. Fold the face taking care that the magnesium has reached every part. Lay a sheet of white, paper over and fold the cloth up over all. Place under a weight or between two matresses and leave for five days. Then unfold and slug out the powder. The dirt will come away with it. How to Clean Statuary To clean statuary or ornaments of white Varian marble put a small table spoonful of washing soda into a pot half full of tepid water. Soap yellow marble and should not be used. Scrub gently with a nail brush, after which rinse twice. Wipe dry with a clean towel. Be sure the ornaments are perfectly dry before they are put back in their places, for if not a moist ring at the base of each may injure the table or mantel on which they stand. ```markdown ``` To warm over the burns and have them as fresh as when first baked put them without wetting into the inner bottle of a double boiler. Have plenty of water in the outer boiler and let it boil for ten or fifteen minutes. How to Clean Painted Walls. Borax and boiling hot water applied with a stiff brush having a handle sooty painted walls will make them like new. Disconsolate Mrs. Highlow I feel so miserable. Mr. Highlow What is the matter? Mrs. Highlow Mrs. Shaw told me a secret and I've forgotten what it was. -Bt Louis Post Dispatch. Success. You may succeed when others do not believe in you, but never when you do not believe in yourself. The 'Maddening Joke Eugene Field Played on a Printer. When Eugene Field was city editor of the Kansas City Times he found great amusement in attaining to the point of distraction one of the characters employed on the paper. Ferguson was one of the "makeups" on the paper, and in Wyandotte, where he resided, just over the line from Kansas City, he was the leader of a local temperature society. For over a year Field, on coming down to the paper to go to work, would write a personal congratulating Ferguson, generally it can like the. "Mr. John Ferguson, the well known 'makeup' of the Times composing was appeared for work yesterday evening in his usual locality state of介文ation." This content fitting but Field would send down a tenure of copy, and the others of the compiling from what it did not say nothing. Doris Ferguson knew that this old personal was in their first and every night would go carefully over every gallery for the purpose of beating and killing it. It gave him vast trouble. Every new and then Pied would not write his personal about Ferguson and then the lowidered Ferguson was worse than ever. As long as he could not find it it might still be the it almost drove the poor man on the paper. Now and then it escaped the eagle eye and was printed. On one occasion Ferguson's burdens were to yound the power of even a Christian spirit to bear. True Bravery. To live on, even when life seems to a failure and the comfort of life is gone, to count patient living the resting, with or without comfort that is to be truly brave. Philips Bros. Lively Mowing. A noted English court case once stalled at the edge of the road wring for his home, and he was do- n in his most popular style for food colored riding seat. Aldh was and bought red the. A man who had evidently been in a happily hung round the corner of the street. He starred at the famous art for minute its silence then he touched cap and dressed in a tone of deep colour. "These people" gave Was your mountain for anybody? Equal to the Occasion The Countess Woodgrave was just rural of our times, once living she spotted at the opera in Dublin, dri her fourth husband's occupancy of the G. G. H. 一 FACE: THE AUDIENCE post of his service for Ireland. An ambassador of Cork, holding sight of her ladyship, bites one of the leaves, shouts out with a shout of temerity. "Ed Walshgrave, which of the four did you like best." The content was equal to the occasion. Without a moment's hesitation she rose from her seat, faced the crowd and answered with eloquent enthusiasm with a loud call, "Why, the man of course, returns, which is utterly down the house." An Unresearched Kipp King Ferdinand was twenty six old when he didnt task of ruler before. He had to contend with the further hatred that the European courts refused to recognize his race beyond the continual danger of pity and attempts at assimilation which had to face within Bulgaria itself. Of his external difficulties a good story is told. On one of his unofficial visits to France for Ferdinand did not recognize him for ten years. King Ferdinand paid a visit to the Bourbon Uni of Macedonia his uncle at Chantilly. The 10 d'Autumn was working in his library when his nephew, without provender, having been announced, entered the room. Surpiled at the interruption, which began to look extremely pungent with such an unrecriminalized voice when suddenly he burst out laughing. "My poor Frenchman, forgive me! I was like Europe. I did not recognize you!" A True Story A tall, thin man with one eye made his way into the office of Athos K. Klam, the prosperous banker. "Let me have $10,000, and I will repay you when you need it most," stated the visitor. With a sign of benevolence Amos K. Klam handed over the money. Ten years later Amos K. Klam was in dire stress. He needed just $10,000 to save him from disgrace. A tall, thin man with one eye appeared. "You are Amos K. Klein?" said the visitor. "Yes, you," exclaimed the banker. "Heaven has sent you." "Correct," said the visitor as he drew forth a great wallet. "I have here a work that will interest you. It is the History of the World, in sixty-nine volumes profusely illustrated, bound in monoure, edited by Professor Highrow. Our terms." But Amner K. Klims had flirted- Cincinnati Enquirer SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1913. DOLBY IN DUTCH. His Better Half Fully Intends to End It All. But— The Unexpected Advent of Ten Small and Downy Additions to the Deacon's Family Necessates Postponing That Interesting Event. By M. QUAD. [Copyright, 1915, by Associated Literary Press] A Beacon Dolly worked with anw and hammer at the barn, he board Mrs. Dolly in the house singing, "Rock of Ages." He smiled and he sighed. After singing the hymn seven times over Mrs. Dolly dropped it for "I Should Watch For Three." "She's getting ready," whispered the deason. After "watching" for a quarter of an hour, Mrs. Dolly took up the strains of "I've Got a Home Over These." "It'll be her night for it" whispered the deacon as he shook his head. And by and by there came floating on the air the words of the good old hymn, "With the Angels Up Above." "—it" announced the good man at the barn as he threw down some hay to his hungry cow. After supper that evening Deacon Dolby casually observed that he must DISTRICT COURT go down to the store and get a point of temperature to help in the hospice with on the matrow, and he left Mrs. Dolly shinging as she shored the dishes off the table. He was gone an hour and when he returned he was not lined to find the house in darkness. He entered and gifted a family, and as he passed the kitchen the sitting room he touched the woman lying on her back on the floor with her eyes closed and her hands based on her breast. He gave her the game and then sat down at the center table to read. At the post office he had received a circular relating to goose and their care, and it started off on an interesting way. Nrs. Dolby Revives. Deacon Dolly had been reading for five minutes and had got as far as to be told that a goose was capable of infection when there was a stir on the floor and Mrs. Dolly sat up. She coughed three coughs to hint to Mr. Dolly that she was not dead, but the circular bed all his interest. "Two minutes passed, and then Mrs. Dolly rose up and took a seat on the lounge and said, "Samuel, I didn't want to frighten you, but I couldn't help falling away." The deacon read from the circular that a goose had been known to go into a rage at the more sight of a red healed wound, and just then Mrs. Dolly said: "You had just gone out when Mrs Lamphere came in. She hadn't been over for a week, and she wanted to borrow a darning needle and ask me if I was going to put up any pickled peaches this season. We had talked for about five minutes when all at once she broke down and Sibbled like a child. Samuel do you want to know what she sobbed about?" He didn't. He wanted to stick right to that circular until he had devoured every line of it. He was fudging out that he had lived for forty five years without knowing the goose as she was The Cat Is Out "I at first thought that mobbed her sister in North Dakota was dead, but when she got over her sobbing girl she could speak she said it was because she felt such pity for me. Then—then, Samuel, I broke down and sobbed with her and—and"— And she sobbed and anuffied and sobbed again, and the deacon sat there and read that if a farmer could have patience with a goose he could teach her to jump through a hoop the same as a circus performer. "But I'm not going to cry any more. Samuel. The time for crying has passed. I am going to tell you what Mrs. Lamphere said and then end this life of curmil and trouble. I have known Mrs. Lamphere ever since she was a little girl; and I have never known her to tell a life, and she is not a tittle father. What she told me was from a number of dirty. She said it made her heart ache to know that I was living with a pirate and never suspecting it." The deacon prepared himself for the worst, but gave no outward sign, and presently Mrs. Bolly ceased sniffing and continued. "One morning six weeks into the cow kicked while you were milking her. You want over backward off the stool with a yell, and when you got up you pounded her with the milkstool and sore. Don't deny it, Samuel. Mrs. Gearing heard it, and she told Mrs. Lamphrey. Mrs. Carter also heard it, and she almost finished. Mrs. Gearing knows what sweating is, and she never heard the like. It made her blood run cold. She didn't get over shivering for hours. You whacked and pounded and swore and jumped up and down, and the poor woman flow into the house for her life. I noticed how pale you looked, when you came in, and when I naked you what was the matter you said you felt billions. Donceon Samuel Dolly, you pounded the cow, used profane language and list to me! What have you got to say to it?" The Deacon in Dutch: Not a word. That circular said that if a gown was always addressed in a kind and courteous manner she would reciprocate by extra work in laying eggs and attaching caterpillars and grasshoppers, and the information was highly interesting. It bear pounding a kicking cow all below. "Just three or four days later, Samuel, you want to see Barner Jones about buying a bag. He had half a barrel of old wine in the house, and when he invited you to take a drink you pitched right in. You know old elder was, and yet you drank a gallon of it. Mr. Jones did the same, and then you both began to jump around and have fun. You loved each other's hate, you wrestled, you jumped. And then both of you began to bring, and it wasn't long before you were calling each other lines. If Mrs. Jones hadn't rushed between you there would have been a fight. Think of it. Samuel! You, a daemon, calling folks flares and saying that you would kick them out of their boots with one hand that hibited you! Mr. Lambert there was going past and heard it all. Don't lie to me and say that you didn't do this." The demon didn't lie. He didn't come within forty feet of it. He simply turned to page two of the circular and continued the history of the goose. She Contemplates Death. "And one more thing, Samuel," continued Mrs. Dolby, through her tears, "only two weeks ago you were downtown one day and got into a talk with old Mr. Carpenter about Japan. He said that if we had a war with Japan he feared the worst, because they were much fighters and would soon have the larger navy. You replied that we could kick the sturding out of Japan in five minutes and that anybody who denied it was a bar. Then, when that poor old man still finished you offered to snap his hips and called him a traitor. Think of it! It was a wonder you didn't bring on an earthquake or something. I believe I did feel the ground trembling that day, but I thought it was a sawing rollling down somewhere. Are you going to deny what you did, Samuel?" Samuel was still. He would not bother deny nor all him. He was following that goose and learning that she could be made to act as the plaguemate of a young child if properly trained while yet a goose. "Well, this ends it. Samuel! I fainted away when I heard the news, but I'm going to do something besides fainted this time. You see, I have a rope here. I'm going out to the househouse and hang myself. I couldn't live with you another single day and keep my self respect. I can simply say goodbye to you and hope that if we ever meet in that better day you will have got over being a phantom. I'm going Samuel. Don't disturb yourself tonight, but come out to the meeting to cut my body down and tell the neighbor." Mrs. Dolly poked her way into the kitchen and lighted a candle, and the next moment the daemon heard the outer door close. He did not get out of his chair. He did not call out. He simply read that the bite of an old gander was equal to that of a year old dog and that instances had been known where it resulted fatally. Five minutes went by, then ten, fifteen. Then the door opened and Mrs. Dolly and her rope and candle appeared. She was smiling. She put the candle aid rope down and came up close to him and whispered: "Samuel, do you know why I didn't commit suicide?" He didn't know, but he didn't say so. "Because when I got out to the henhouse I found that old setting hen had hatched out ten little chicks, and I didn't want to be so mean as to disturb them—yes, ten little chicks, and they have come four days ahead of time!" Then the deacon hid down the circular, yawned, stretched, looked at the clock and said: "It's half past 9, and I'm going to bed!" "There ought to be only one head to every household!" shouted the ortor. "That's true," replied a man in the audience. "You agree with me?" shouted the speaker. "I do!" roared the man. "I've just paid for hats for nine daughters."—Minneapolis Journal. In Literature Author's Friend—Our baby enjoys your new book more than any of us. Author—How can the baby enjoy it? Author's Friend he enjoys it so look out of the window.—San Francisco Examiner. Malvern HNS From the top of the Malvern hills in England on a clear day the tourist may look into a spitron reverence. THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. THEY GRATIFIED Presidents. A new man came from the United States to take charge of the London office of one of our new gathering as sociations. He arrived at his new post at the King King Edward was 11. Naturally he wanted to know how the king was, and he called in one of his celebrated in one of bishops, also just over from A merica and said, "Skip up to the palace and see how the king is this morning." B. J. H. Being a new man and not knowing of the English newspaper methods and the hedges of president about royalty, this cub skipped up to the palace and sent "HOW'S THE KING?" skipped up to the palace and sent his card in to Lord Knollys, the king's secretary. Lord Knollys, much astonished, came out. "Good morning, lord," said the cub. "How's the king?" Whereupon Lord Knollys told the cub exactly how the king was and gave him a lot of interesting and important news about the royal patient, which was expeditiously cabled to the United States and back again to London, greatly to the consternation of the other news associations and the King lish newspaper men, and the cub didn't know, until the shocked Englishmen told him, just how many immortal and immortal presidents he and Lord Knollys had smashed between them. When love has gone out of your life And you have no more to give And you wonder why in this world of There are not more incentive to live Then the love that you thought looked very The love that you thought was dead And the sad that has long been felt Will revive, by sweet duty feel Beating the Record. An Irish athlete who was training for a mile race, which he had very high hopes of winning, went one day, accompanied by his man, Fat, to have a trial in a field equivalent to his own house. A man is giving a punch to a woman. "Now, Pat," said the athlete as he handed Len his watch, "muted that, you note the correct time in which, I start and finish." Pat, who, by the way, was very proud of his young master's prowess in the athletic arena, assured him that he would not too hide. Now, it happened that by some unlikely chance the watch stopped at the prowess moment in which he started to run. Having put his best effort into the face, the athlete almost exhausted. "The time, Pat," he shouted breathlessly. Pat immediately beat up the watch, and on looking at it for the first time since the start, an expression of surprise, mingled with pride, overspread his features. "boggly, sir," he answered, "you're a wonder. You have beaten all records, for you have done it in no time." What They Got Beaded. Dr. Akel was one of the Late General Booth's highest supporters. Once during a very severe winter Dr. Akel applied to his congregation for funds to provide poor children with breakfasts. A considerable sum was subscribed, and Dr. Akel argued that some themands of free meals should be provided at the Salvation Army barracks to the children in the neighbouring slums. After a little complaints began to reach Dr. Akel, "We provide the money, somebody grumbled," and the Salvation Army gets all the credit." "They may get the credit," retorted Dr. Akel, "but they also get the fear! If you want the first in this case you've got to take the second." After this there was no more grumbling. A Special Privilege There came a time in a certain camp camp when the managers on one side needed $20,000 and turned to a cor- poration source of supply. The need was explained by a banker who was interested in politics. The money man of the corporation listen- ed and said: "Well, I give you $20,000 but I don't want to make a check for it or a draft. Just set aside $20,000 in your bank and I'll get the currency in a few days and hand it in." That was satisfactory. In about eleven days the money man of the cor- poration walked into the bank with the $20,000 in cash, turned it in and start- ed away. "Hold on!" said the banker. "There's a little matter of $68 interest." "What's that?" roared the cor- poration man. "There's $5 interest due on that." The corporation man put his hand to his forehead and gasped: "Great Car, this is the limit! Here you got a contribution of $2,000 from us and then want us to pay $60 for the privilege of contributing it" — Saturday Evening Post. COMING ABOARD IN STATE. Jack Was Sublimely Happy In His Role of Admiral. Rear Admiral W. H. Brownson told with much amusement an incident of his last year of sea duty, when the quadrone of armored cruisers of which he was in command was in the Medi- carymen. At the Pincer, the port o --- Hawkins-Johnson MANUFACTURING CO., Hair Grower and Restorer. 616 R. 1st Street. = Richmond, Va. Will positively remove all Dandruff and cure the scalp of all impurities. It will restore Hair on clean Temples and Bald Heads where the Roots are not dead. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. PRICE. 35 CENTS PER BOX. THE HAWKINS- being used in this State for growing and restoring MADAM. HAWKINS fair trial and be convinced We are now in a posi- can match all hair perfect mations, $3.00, $4.00, $5 Please remit by Cas HISTORY OF THE WOR Add and subtract according to po- find out the first English settlement After you have done this find the Answer to yesterday's puzzle. Fo- Picture at bottom of tort face up THE HAWKINS-JOHNSON Mfg Co's Hair Grower and Restorer is now being used in this State and other States with payment 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. --- JAM + -N + -L+N=? Add and subtract according to place value, and you will then be able to find out the first English settlement Albums, shine like the crowns The most common those of money in Greece is the dhama. It is of the value of the French france of the Iran first, but it is almost always of perl like the old dhama. The set circles are a relatively course, and remains in use until cumulates in a most beautiful amount of dirt. Nowadays in the world, we be found anything in the way of money so slippery as an old, gross snow bank in dhama. "The strong boy the shipper who to sell away is old old old "Salt," one of the few remaining man of work of the old dhama, found himself of the landing of Djerson bay about half hour like the shipper's boat. He had enjoyed Athen, no doubt, and was a happy man! Holding a newspaper column who spied English dictionaries him what he would do that he himself off, "the dictionaries" was the correct reply. Jack ordered him to bring his heart to the hunging and then begin to search him self for the prize. He drew forth a one dictionary not, fifty and thirty, and then another and another, till he held in his hands ten pieces of rolled paper money. He looked at the stuff with utter disgust, and then he ordered the native to call another boat. That ranged along side, and then he ordered a third. The Greeks could not understand why he wanted more than one boat, but Jack kept on till he beheld of them in line. "Now," he said, "shove off and head for the Maryland. Keep in single columns if you want to get your money I'll bring on the rear to see that you do it right." Away they went over a sea of smooth as glass. Jack giving stewardian orders now and then through his boatman, who integrated for the others. On meeting the Maryland, Jack took his position at the head of the column and as he stepped aboard the gangway was heard to say: "There! By George, I've been the admiral of a boat for once! Here's your 10 drachms for your ten boats. Take the dirty stuff! I've got no money for. So long." Youths' companion Help Others: We probably derive more happiness from work for others than from what we do for ourselves. To work for others consecrates even the humblest labor—Lord Avelbury. The Man Who Barked. Writing of the queer old fashioned squirrel, who in the old days used to stay at Hatchott's or Long's when they visited London, Ralph Nevill, in "The Man of Pleasure" tells of one who made a great sensation in the coffee room when dining. He ate heartily and drank deeply. "Each time he emptied his glass he made a noise similar to that which a dog might if his feelings were excited. Asked, whether he had any reason for this eccentric behavior, he curtly replied. My doctor or does me to take port wine and bark." He Waa HI Two men were once travelling companions on a millyway train enterin' Bombaca. One was as Bombaca, the JOHNSON Mfg Co's Hair and other States with prominent hair leaps into prominence. NS.JOHNSON is known to need that she can do all that sheITION to sell the best hair for less act. In ordering Hair, set 5.00 to $20.00. Braids, $2.50. Irish P. C Money Order or Express. N-L+N=? RLD TWO-IN-ONE PUZZLE Handwritten text on a white background. A German if I had not passed to have inclined that the future would be another. If we were to wish for the hearted life of a woman. With a sudden overwhelming joy of friendship he beat his heart with both hands, and cunningly "Honored" I am it. In Los Angeles he died. One of Toolie's Jokes. One of the physical jokes of J. L. Toolie the famous English comedian, described in the descriptions of the daughter of the famous Hum Prawer. He and his brother, Lionel Toolie, dressed in great clothes, as they were peared in "Honored Then Life" were passing the torch of the most cruel laughter squares on their way a photo taken in D. J. FARRAR, CONST ALL KINDS OF OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405, MECHAN Phone Moor RESIDENCE, 610 N. FIRST Phone, Moor Special Attention Paid to the Takii Any Style of Architecture. D. J. FARRAR, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, ALL KINDS OF CARPENTRY. OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405. MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK BUILDING Phone Moore-2657. RESIDENCE, 610 N. FIRST STREET—SHOP IN REAR. Phone, Moore-2166. Special Attention Paid to the Taking of Contracts for Building of Any Style of Architecture. Job Work a Specialty. Phone, 577. Richmond, Va. A. D. PRICE, 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 Picnic or Bread Wagons for Hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class Carriages, Baggles, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies. No. 212 East Leigh Street. (Buildmaster Burn Dum.) OPEN ALL DAY AND MONDAY—then on Duty All Night. Ops of Toolic's Jakra PRICE, 35 CENTS PER BOX. Hair Grower and Restorer is now momental success. Its reputation is wherever it is used. As the Hair Grower. Give her a shoe claims, or money refunded. or less money than ever before and or send sample. Transform- 2.50, $3.00 and $4.00. Express Money Order. "Tell him that he brothers, the poor ter and the poor, cried and we'll come back to the afternoon." The Nearest Shade In unison with today's advertisement for Ellen, a dutty clock-taker in the city, she was applied for the work. When she was a group of some bright and cheerful men, her employer ordered all of the ladies to leave Ellen's. The letter said: "We're all in love" "But I don't like the city" "they are all different to us" "Yea, you see it's like the city" "My first landmark was black, like the city's second" was brown and the one I just saw he belongs to the fair row." Argument THE ECONOMY 316 North Third Street. FINE TAILORING CLEANING DYEING AND REPAIRING. CHITMAN M. WHITE. Proprietor. PURE WHISKEY Will satisfy the Lover or the Right Kind of Stimulant. Special Prices We Have All Grades of Good LS quora, Cigars and tobacco. Call and See us. Richmond. Virginia II. F. JONATHAN. FISH OYSTERS PRODUCE 114 N. 17th Street, Richmond, Va. All Orders Will Receive Prompt-Attention. Long Distance Phone, Madison-753. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, SON OF CARPENTRY. SCIANICS' SAVINGS BANK BUILDING Moore-2887. FIRST STREET—SHOP IN REAR. Moore-2166. Taking of Contracts for Building of Retreat. Job Work a Specialty. RAILROADS. ACCOMMODATION TRAINS - WEEKDAYS. Lease Bldg Nr. 6,400 F. M. for Frederickburg; Lease Bldg Nr. 7,200 A. M. 6,300 F. M. for Ashbald; Arrive Bldg Nr. 8,300 A. M. from Frederickburg; Arrive Bldg Nr. 9,300 A. M. 5,424 F. M. from Ashbald. Daily: 1 Weekdays, 5 Sundays only. Arrive from Bldg Bystreet Stables stop at Ebbi. To arrive from Bldg d-parturces not guaranteed. N. & W. NORNO ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO NORPOLE Schedule to Effect May 14, 1981. Levine Hybrid Street station, Richmond, P.O. NORTHWEST, A. M., b:20 K. M. 4:10 P. M., b:70 K. FOR LYNCHSCURG AND THE WEST: A. M., "10:00 A. M., 8:00 P. M., 9:00 P. M. Arrive Richmond from Norfolk: a11:40 A. M. P. M., "6:30 P. M., b10:25 P. M., "12:00 P. M. P. M., "6:30 P. M., b10:25 P. M. b21:15 P. M., "6:00 P. M., "9:00 P. M. "Daily adultly except Sunday, Monday only, Pullihan, Parlor and Sleeping Cars, Care-Bringing Cars. C. H. HORLEY, D. P. A., Richmond, V. D. P. A., REVILV, ATLANTIC COAST LINE SOUTHERN RAILWAY. information and not guaranteed. 6:10 A. M.-Daily-Local for Charlotte Bram and Kaleigh, 10:45 A. M.-Daily-Local Room at Kaleigh, 11:45 A. M.-Daily-Local Sleeping Car to Abertville Knapp Sunday-Local for the later stations: 6:00 P. M.- For Durham Electric-Light- Breaking Room and Hirringham 4:55 P. M.-Daily- Limited for all coin at 9:00 P. M. YORK GR LINK. 4:30 P. M.-To West Point, point sitting for Baltimore Friday: 4:00 A. M.-Knapp Sunday and Friday: 4:00 P. M.-Monday, Wednesday and Friday-Local to Washington TRANS ARIRE BICUMOND. From the South: 6:00 A. M.; 8:40 A. M. 6:00 P. M.-daily-12:55 Knapp Sunday; 8:40 P. M. Daily-From West Point; 9:00 A. M.-daily 11:00 A. M.-Wednesday and Friday; 4:25 P. M. Knapp Sunday. N. E. BRUNGEM, D. F. A. Kent Main Street, Flint, Michigan 4881 C. & O. 9:00 A. Daily-Fast trains to Old Polly. 6:00 P. Newport News and Norfolk. 9:00 A. Daily, local to Newport News. 6:00 P.-Daily, local to Old Polist. 7:00 P. Daily-Louisville and Clinton. 11:00 P. Pullman. MICHOND. Local from East -4:30 A. M. M. M. Through from East -11:30 A. M. M. 8:30 P. M. Local from West -7:30 A. M. M. 9:30 A. M. Tuesday 7:30 P. Through -7:30 A. M. M. M. SEABOARD AIR LINE Bourthound trains scheduled to leave Richmond daily: 8:30 A. M. - Local to Norliss. 11:30 A. M. - Sherbrooke and conchie, Atlanta. Hirsham, Hampton. Sherbrooke and conchie, Atlanta. 12:15 P. M. - Florida Limited, daily, shorthour day. 11:35 P. M. - Sherbrooke and conchie, Hirsham, Jacksonville, Atlanta. Hirsham, Hampton. Bourthound trains scheduled to arrive Richmond daily: 8:30 A. M. - M. A. stercroft Monday. 8:30 P. M. - M. A. --- ALPHEUS SCOTT CHURCH HILL Funeral Director and Embalmer OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Office and Warrooms: 9006 1/2 P Street. Office 'Phone, Madison 2897-L. Residence—1015 St. James Street Telephone, Madison 6818. LADY ATTENDANT. Richmond, Virginia. OLD PAPERS PLANET OFFICE. Send letters to JOHN M. Higgins, DEALER IN CHOICE GROCERIES, WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS. PURE GOODS, FULL VALUE FOR WHO WANTS. 1610 East Franklin Street. (No. 611 Brompton.) Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL, JB., at ELI N. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. All communications intended for publication should be sent so as to reach us by Wednesday. TERMS IN ADVANCE One Copy, per year ..... $1.60 One Copy, eight months ..... 1.00 One Copy, four months ..... 70 One Copy, four months ..... 56 One Copy, three months ..... 40 Single Copy ..... 18 ADVERTISING WATER FORTEST STAMPER OF A HIGHER DENOMINATION THAN THE STAMPER RECEIVED ON DESCRIPTION THE PLANET is issued weekly. The subscription price is $1.00 per year, in advance. There are four ways by which money can be sent by mail at our risk: in a Post Office order, by Bank (check or bank draft) or an keypad Money order, and when, and of these can be written. PROCESSING MONEY ORDERS—You can buy a Money Order at your Post Office, payable at the Post Office, and we will be responsible for its late arrival. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained at the office of the American Express Co., the United States Express Co., and the Wells Fargo and Co. Express Company. We will be responsible for money sent by any of these companies. The Express Money Order is a safe and convenient way of forwarding money. REGISTERED LETTER.—If a Money Order, Post Office or an Express Office is not within your reach, your Postmaster will send a letter to you with a form of ten letters. If the Letter is lost or stolen, it can be traced. You can send money in this manner at our risk. We cannot be responsible for money sent in letters in any other way than we have them. If you send your money in any other way, you must do it at your own risk. KENNEDALE, ETC.—If you do not want This PLANET continued for another year after your subscription has run out, you then must us by Postal Card and it will be the only way you can do so. If your subscription to newspaper who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid are liable for the payment of the subscription of time when they order the paper discontinued. COMMUNICATIONS—When writing to us to renew your subscription or to discontinue your paper, you should give your name and address in fact, to those we cannot find your name or address. CHANNEL OF ADDRESS—In order to change the address of a subscriber we must send the letter as well as the present address. Author at the Post Office at Minneapolis, MN, as subscriber mailer. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1913. The Instant Editor: H. C. Smith of the Cleveland, O. Genetic delivery in Chippewa address in Paterson, Burg. Pa Feb 12, before the Lone R Soil and Literary Club. We regret to learn of the death of the wife of Editor James W. Poor of the Referee. She died suddenly while attenting a reception given to the pastor of the Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion Church. Editor Poor later, peacefully laid in charge of the Referee. The Evansville, Ind. Cooper new comes to the front in the rapport of "Dr. W. G. Burkett, a leading in- fidential democratic worker who is a candidate for any diplomatic appo- ment in eight. In view of his back- ing, she should be able to stand" a job. --- The address of Assistant Attorney General William H. Lewis before the Massachusetts legislature February 12, 1613 is said to have been one of the oldest ever delivered to that distinguished body. The opportunity came to the distinguished leader and he made the best use of it. We have received an invitation to attend a Testimonial Dinner to Mr. James A. Ross, February 24, 1913 at Hotel Elwood, Detroit, Michigan. If boosting will land a job, then the next Recorder of Deeds of the District of Columbia will be James A. Ross of Buffalo, N. Y. He has a long load on all other Afro-American competitors. --- The Virginia Health Almanac for 1913 just issued by the Department of Health under the management of that able and skilled Health Commissioner Ennion G. Williams will be received with gladness by the people of this Commonwealth. It is one of the most useful publications as yet sent out from any source and if carefully read and its advice heeded will save human life. We congratulate the Department upon its latest evidence of its ability to "make good" along its chosen lines of endeavor. Ohio is once more in the illmellgat and an active committee from the F. and A. M., Cory Adams, G. M.; John H. Bowles, V. W. Anderson; O. U. O. of O. F., Joseph L. Lee, G. M.; A. T. Abbott, Thomas A., Triplett; K. of P., Edward L. Gilliam, G., C., Dr. William J. Woollin, Joseph L. Jones are sending circulars throughout the country urging colored organizations to protest to their congressional representatives against the passage of a bill offered in the House of Representatives by Congressman Roberts. This bill is intended to prevent the use by colored fraternal orders of the names used by white orders. It may be well for our colored friends to remember that laws passed that are retroactive are unconstitutional. That is to say that if the bill in question becomes law, it could only be construed to affect orders hereafter organized and would not apply to those now in existence. This is why we have expressed the opinion that the bill had offered is unconstitutional. Still, it would be well to prevent its enactment into law and save the expense of a contact to prove in the courts of the country in respect of its constitutionality. COLORID DEMOCRATS EMBAR RASSED. FEDERAL WORK WITH MONROE TROTTER OF THE PUBLIC MAJOR GUARDIAN JUSTIFYING HIS DEPARTMENT OF IT WITH THE DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT. THE APPROVAL OF THE GOVERNMENT LAW BY THE DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT OF MICHIGAN IS THE GOVERNMENT OF THE HARDWICK GOVERNMENT HOUSE OF REPRESENTATION WITHOUT EVEN REFERING TO A HOUSE COMMITTEE THIS HISTORY JOURNALIST Hon. Dr. J. Milton Waddison is active in the content but seems to be less active in the practical. To know more we have the more we know. The question now is: Will the home or office Paddy be treated to deal fairly and equally with the colored people of the country, North and South, East and West? We shall ask and DISCHARGED THRU 1. The image contains a series of lines with varying text lengths and styles. The text is not clearly legible due to the blurry quality of the image. It appears to be a document or a page from a book or a report. The text is too blurry to be accurately transcribed. Today morning the place were called by white women. That was the "change." Is it not true for the now colored customers who for years have traded at the store to make a "change" too? Does a colored face look any differently on either side of the counter? The tea company has been making many changes and additions in the store lately. Some of the firm rockers are one of the trogremens having all their servites the same color. The manner in which the "change" was effected was gross injustice to the women. It marked a blot on Lincoln week in the city of Boston. It would be well to ascertain the cause of this. Was it just race prejudice? War it incompetence on the part of the colored girls or was it in keeping with the demand of the public? In the face of all of this the colored girls who have been discharged doubtless do not fully appreciate the efforts the Guardian is making in their behalf and we doubt if that journal can find five of them on its paying list of subscribers. Our New Serial Story. "SHENANDOAH," the Great 60th Anniversary Civil War Story will appear on Page two. This thrilling novelization by Bronson Howard and Henry Tyrell, of the noted play of the same name is the literary sensation of the hour. RAILROADS AGREE TO ARBITRATE Grant Firemen's Plea tq Use Erdman Act W. W. Atterbury and Albert Phillips. Named by Roads and Men, Will Choose a Third. There will be no firemen's station on the fifty-four eastern railroads. The railroads yield and agreed to arbitrate under the Erdman net the controversy with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. The firemen had stood to a man for this method of arbitration ever since the deadlock began. The conference committee of railroad managers had pled firm for arbitration before a commission of six or seven men. Three men, acting under the law, will decide the men's claims. Their objection will be benign. The agreement to arbitrate was signed in New York immediately by both sides, through their proper officers. The Brotherhood men selected their representatives on the board of arbitrators so as to act at the railroad's decision was announced. He is Albert Phillips, of Sacramento, Cal., vice president of their organization. The railroad selected as their man W. W. Attterbury, of Philadelphia, vice president of the Pennsylvania railroad. Mr. Attterbury formally was general manager of the company and mainly was instrumental in settling the Pennsylvania van differences with its men about six or more years ago. Within a day or two these two men will select the third, or neutral member. Within thirty days thereafter the arbitrators will announce their findings. Where they will meet was not announced. Jacques Martin A. Knapp, of the United States commissary court, and G. W. Hatcher, of the United States comm. counsel of labor, acting as the hater under the Lochman act, at the firearms reg. commission, completed the negotiation which was to be in the agreement to arbitrate. Toward the conclusion of the product proceeding, the railroad insurance company asserted that on behalf of the wagon, upon the ground, that it was unfair to place so much property on the shoulders of the old man on the board. They demand the product in giving ground and declared. Now only reason for yielding was that the public would not tolerate a trade. The lieutenant therefore has a limit the defence of the Erdman actand, while the present dispute will be settled under the existing law, afterwards the filioe president, W. S. Carter, will meet with the heads of other railway labor organizations and represent a view of the railways to request comment on the law in certain respects. Mr. Hattersley and he cared that Mr. Paul and Mr. Averybury might be unable to treat the third man on the arbitration board. Under the law they are required to do so within five days; failure to do so, the commission of law and the chairman of the interstate commission commission will have the third arbitrator PASSES IMMIGRATION BILL OVER VETO The war had been a part of the Harvest Industry, and the field was covered ridden with the earth. The work was so difficult in purely manual labour that the men had to carry the load with the help of women. Some of the men had to work in the first place in the field, while the others had to work in the middle and the last in the back. The Black Hood and the White Hood had to work were both hard to find, and people who could not find them were forced to leave. "Who is it that is dead, who is passed away, who was committed their death, who is that arrested our work, who is that committed Stone, who is that committed have to work, who is that committed their death." Society is in the work of more than 100,000 public and professional com- munities. If the vet were not in the field, the society would not be in the field. The Society says, "the said, was only one branch of the new law. The more important provisions, he said, included the strengthening of rules against criminals, insane, diseased and other undeable aliens. Gets $12,000 For Breach of Promise. Miss May Wessel, a stenographer, represented as attorney by Mrs. Rogale Lowe Whitney, got a verdict of $12,000 against her former employer. Albert J. Schwartzler, a wealthy contractor of New York, whom she sued for $100,000, for alleged breach of promise to marry her. Excursion Bill Loat. The bill to provide $2,000,000 for government participation in the Pan-African exposition in 1915 at San Francisco was killed for this sensi- dation of congress by the action of the house on a test vote of 115 to 117 in a par- liamentary skirmish for closing debate. February 18.—Sunday, Feb. 16th was a lovely day and Antioch members turned out. At 11 A. M. the funeral of Sister Harriet Diggs was preached by Rev. R. H. Harrison. Sister Diggs departed this life Thursday night at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Sarah Tonkiss. She had been sick for a very long while but her death was unexpected at that time. She was one of the old citizens of the community. She leaves one daughter, five grand children and five great grandchildren to mourn their loss. At 3 P. M. the B. Y. P. U. service was conducted and quite a number of the young men who are at work down here were present. At 7 P. M. the pulpit was filled by Rev. R. H. Harrison who preached a very excellent sermon. On Monday night there will be an entertainment at Antloch Church presenting the steps in education. Each step will be exhibited in hallway. Admission, adults, 10 cts, children, 5 cents. REPORTER. REPORTER. Ladies!!! You can get all your toilet necessities by mail, better, easier, with Privacy. Don't Blush when buying what you have to have. I will give your needs my personal attention, no matter what they are. Booklet Free. GEORGE A. C. HICKS. S. W. ROBINSON & SON DEALERS IN HIGH GRADE LIQUORS. PHONE MONROE 233. 19 and 21 N. 18th St., Richmond, Va. EVERYBODY LUCKY. Bam, Sally and the Musica Had Nothing on John. A old farmer called at a roadside public house where he was well known. The lady asked him to buy a ticket for a lottery they had on there. "Oh, that's all right, John," she said. "Take the ticket and pay for it any time." Some time later John called again, and the landlady asked him if he knew who had won the lottery. "No," he said. "Who won?" "Well, I hardly durst tell you, but for Sam won. Won't be lucky?" "Yes," said John. "He was lucky. And who was second, then?" "I dirst hardly tell you. Who would you think now?" "I couldn't say," said John. "We'll. It was our Sally. Wasn't she lucky?" "And who was third?" "Well," she said, "you would never guess, and I might as well tell. I was third. Wasn't I lucky?" "You were," he said, "Tid I ever pay you for that ticket, misses?" "No, John, you didn't," she said, fawning upon him. "Well," said John, "ain't I lucky?"— Country Gentleman. Mean Dog. It was the early hours of the morning and not yet light when Brown woke up with a sense of impending dread. He had suddenly remembered that it was his wife's birthday and he had bought her no present. Mrs. Brown would want to know why. Ah, an almighty. Creeping stealthily downstairs he put a very large plate on the hall table and then, still silent, let the dog into the house. The preparations were complete. "Many happy returns of the day, my dear," he shouted. "As it is your birthday, I have got a little surprise for you. He quick and come downstairs and see it." Full of anticipation, the good lady followed him and was just in time to see him kick the dog out of the house and stage with amazement at the empty plate. "If that wretched dog hasn't eaten all the beautiful cake I brought home for you last night," he cried in well acted anger. But he had overlooked one little fact. The dog had worn his muzzle. It took a long time to explain the incident away.—London Weekly Telegraph. PHILADELPHIA—FLOUR "steady; winter clear," $4.10@4.30; city mills, fancy, $4.55. RYE FLOUR steady; per barrel. $3.60 per 7.75. GATS firm; No. 2 white, 41c.; lower grade, 38c. POULTRY: Live steady; hen, 18s @16½c.; old roosters, 12½c. Dressed arm; choice fowls, 17½c.; old roosters, 18c. HUTTER firm; fancy cremery, 33c EGGS steady; selected, 24 126c; nearby, 22c; western, 22c PATOATES firm; per bush, 7073e Live Stock Markets PITT-BURGH (Union Stock Yards) choice. $800 price $8.00 $10.00 SHEEP higher; prime wetters, $4.60@ 0.75; culls and common, $3.64; lambs, $5.50@ 0.25; veal calves, $10.60 @ 11; HOOG lower; prime heavies, $3.65; meddling, heavy Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs, $3.76; roughs, $7.50@ 14. It has been found necessary to buy and properly equip the home for homeless and dependent Colored child dren, located at 1512 Taylor street, known as the Working Woman's Industrial Home and Day Nursery, that moved from 516. Third street in July, 1910. In order to make the Home 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 Mitte 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 Ainalde, Dr. J. T. Mastin, Rov. James Buchanan, Judge Richardson and a Committee of Ladies. 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. Atelalde G. Thompson, Mrs. Mattle Howin, Mrs. Harriett Page, Mrs. H. R. Johnson, Mrs. Anna Hunter. Will you be one of the two thousand to contribute $1 or more? If so, 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 Hst. Dr. R. E. Jones. $5.00 and Mr. Nelson Williams. $2. WHO WILL BE NEXT? CURE YOUR COUGH The quicker you rid yourself of your cold, cough or grip the better.... because many times they are the fore runners of more serious illness. JEFPRIES NO. 1. NO.1 TRADE MARK COUGH MIXTURE. Get Jeffries' No. 1 Cough Mixture to lay. It's a guaranteed remedy. It never fails. Will relieve immediately. For throat and lung trouble it has no equal. A sure preventative for pneumonia. SEE the trade mark on every bottle. Price 25c. Sold by all drugists. If your drugist hasn't it phone, write or call Thus, Tal& Jeffries, 214 E. Broad Street, Richmond, Va. Artificial Flowers. Artificial Flowers. ALL KINDS MADE TO ORDER. MISC. ARTIFICIAL PALY AND BLOOMS, GRASS AND TERNS. MARY E. MOSBY, 400 N. Second Street, Rushwick, Va. JURGEN'S SON JURGEN'S SON EVERYBODY BE COMFORTABLE. Fine, Large, Strong, Solid Onk Morris Chair, Upholstered in Leath- erette, Tafted Back, Hangsomely 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 th and Save Your Discounts. JURGENS' ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE FURNITURE $100,000.00 Worth of FURNITURE AND RUGS Reduced 20, 25, 33 13, & 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 lasting qualities. ADAMS AND BROAD STREETS. FREE FREE FREE COLORED PEOPLE'S HAIR. We are the largest manufacturers of colored people's hair. We make wigs, switches, braids, 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 coat stamp and we will send you absolutely free our Illustrated Catalog. Agents Wanted. HUMANIA HAIR COMPANY. Dept. D, 22 Duane St., N, Y. City. 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 cat- atalog or free tuition. JAMES B. DUDLEY, President, Greensboro, N. C. - Subscriber to The Richmond PLANET. $1.50 per year. QUINADEN GROWS HAIR REMOVES DANDRUFF The best preparation for making Kinky, Coarse soft and phable and easy to put up in any style LIBERAL SAMPLE SENT ON APPLICATION QUINACOMB To straighten the hair quickly, use in conjunction Quinade our QUINACOMB a comb used specially tempered metal, so as to retain the prop gree of heat. This comb can also be used to hair quickly after shampooing. QUINASOAP The ideal shampoo soap thoroughly cleanses the and is especially adapted to be used in connection Quinade. INADE HAIR REMOVES DANDRUFF separation for making Kinky, Coarse Hair and easy to put up in any style desired. AMPLE SENT ON APPLICATION NACOMB the hair quickly, use in conjunction with QUINACOMB a comb made of metal, so as to retain the proper de- this comb can also be used to dry the shampooing. NASOAP soap thoroughly cleanses the scalp adapted to be used in connection with GROWS HAIR REMOVES DANDRUFF The best preparation for making Kinky, Coarse Hair soft and pliable and easy to put up in any style desired. LIBERAL SAMPLE SENT ON APPLICATION QUINACOMB To straighten the hair quickly, use in conjunction with Quinade our QUINACOMB a comb made of specially tempered metal, so as to retain the proper degree of heat. This comb can also be used to dry the hair quickly after shampooing. The ideal shampoo soap thoroughly cleanses the scalp and is especially adapted to be used in connection with Quinade. SEEBY DRUG CO., NEW YORK De Vyver llege, Richmond, Va. tenber 16, 1912. Quinade 25c. Quinacombs 50c. Quinas Van De V College North 1st St., Rich Reopens Septemb Quinacombs 50c. Quinasoap 25c. A an De Vyv College, h 1st St., Richmond opens September 16, Van De Vyver College, North 1st St., Richmond, Va. SEVEN DEPARTMENTS. THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT Will Prepare Its Students to Take Medicine and Journalism. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Offers a Thorough Training in B Law, Stenography and Typewriting. THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT Will be in charge of the Best T Millinery, Housekeeping, Cooking. THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT Will Embrace Vocal Culture, Piano. AUTOMOBILE INSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT Will give a limited number of young THE PAINTING DEPARTMENT Offers a Complete Course of Carri Hardwood Finishing and Precosing. SPECIAL NIGHT CLASSES in the Grammar and Academic Gr men and women for a Professional Service in our Night School. For particulars and terms apply. REV. CHARLES HANNIG 709 North First St. EMIC DEPARTMENT Prepare Its Students to Take up the 8th Line and Journalism. MERCIAL DEPARTMENT A Thorough Training in Book-keeping, Stenography and Typewriting. STATIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT In charge of the Best Teachers in Cery, Housekeeping, Cooking and Fine Lay. DEPARTMENT En embrace Vocal Culture, Piano, Vocallon and THE INSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT It a limited number of young men as Ch ING DEPARTMENT A Complete Course of Carriage and Hot ood Finishing and Preposing. RIGHT CLASSES Grammar and Academic Grades. We pr and women for a Professional Course an e in our Night School. and terms apply. V. CHARLES HANNIGAN. Pre- 709 North First Street, Rich MENT ents to Take up the Study of Law, m. MENT Training in Book-keeping, Commercial Typewriting. DEPARTMENT the Best Teachers in Dreammaking, t. Cooking and Fine Laundry Work. ATURE, Piano, Vocallon and Pipe Organ. DEPARTMENT of young men as Chauffers. NT oe of Carriage and House Painting, al Prescoing. Academic Grades. We prepare young Professional Course and the Civil School. HANNIGAN. President, North First Street, Richmond, Va. Will Prepare Its Students to Take up the Study of Law, Medicine and Journalism. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Offers a Thorough Training in Book-keeping, Commercial Law, Stenography and Typowriting. THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT Will be in charge of the Best Teachers in Dreammaking, Millinery, Housekeeping, Cooking and Fine Laundry Work. THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT WILL Embrace Vocal Culture, Plano, 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 Precoeing. SPECIAL NIGHT CLASSES In the Grammar and Academic Grades. We prepare young men and women for a Professional Course and the Civil Service in our Night School. For particulars and terms apply. REV. CHARLES HANNIGAN. President, 709 North First Street, Richmond, Va. BENNETT L. J. HAYDEN MANUFACTURER OF Pure Herb TO CURE ALL .DISEASES OR NO CHARGES. DO YOU LOVE HEALTH? If so, call and see L. J. Haydon Manufacturer of Puro Herb Modi- cines, 220 West Broad Street. My Medicines cure all diseases known to mankind, or no charge, no matter what your tion may be, and restore you to perfect healt the best and leading ones in the United state that I am one of the most wonderful healers world. I use nothing but herbs, rots barke seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medi thousands that the most skillful physicians clans in America and Europe have given up no cure for them. My Medicines Care the Following Dispac sumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, stricture, P Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung, Dysporosis, Indica matism in any form, Pains and Aches of an Troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all tearing ser plants, La Grippie or Pneumonia, Weier, Carba worst form without the use of a knife or inst on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Brat neys. My Medicines cure any disease, no mat orrhoea and Syphilitic troubles a specialty. Medicines sent anywhere. F r full part in person on 1 charge, no matter what your disease, skincare and restore you to perfect health. Thousands riding ones in the United States and Europe, the most wonderful healers of all come nothing but herbs, r ots barks, gums, bark flowers and plants in my medicines. The most skillful physicians and the best in Asia and Europe have given up to die, and a. New Cure the Following Diseases:—Heart Disease, Kidney, Bladder, stricture, Piles in any coat, Lung, Dysporia, Indigestion, Constipation, Pains and Aches, of any kind, Colitis Skin Diseases, all tching sensations, all nose or Pneumonia, Uter, Carbuncle, Bolls, but the use of a knife or instruments. Ecstasy, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Diseases, nurses cure any disease, no matter of what r hilitic troubles a specialty. ent anywhere. F r full particulars, sond. what your disease, sickness or affliction health. Thousands of people, United States and Europe will testify ful healers of all complaints in the rorts barks, gums, balsams leaves, in my medicines. They have cured physicians and the best hospital physi- gine given up to die, and said there was living Disease:—Heart Disease, Con- tracture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Rhth. Indigestion, Constipation, Rheu- leshes of any kind, Colds, Bronchial tching sensations, all Female Com- miser, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in the snife or Instruments, Eczema, Pimples days or Bright's Disease of the Kid- be, no matter of what nature. Gon- speciality. For full particulars, send, write pr call mankind nor no charge, no matter what your disease, sickness or affliction 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, rots, barks, gums, balsam 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 Medicine Care the Following Diseases:—Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, stricture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung, Dysperphis, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Pains and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Sorex, Skin Diseases, all tching sensations, all Female Complaints, La Grippie or Pneumonia, Ulcer, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in the worst form without the use of a knife or instrument, Eczema, Pimples on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. My Medicine cure any disease no matter of what nature. Gonorrhoea and Syphilitic troubles a speciality. Medicines sent anywhere. F r full particulars, send, write pr call in person on 1 L. J. HAYDEN. WONDERFUL RESULTS ON SHORT NOTICE A. Hayes, Office and Ware Rooms I have used your Pomade. Its the best thing I ever used for making curly hair lie smooth. I have not finished my first bottle, but can see wonderful results, writes Mrs. Louise E. Hayes of Pineville, S.C. First-class Hacks and Caskets of All Descriptions. I have a Spary Room for BODIES when the Family have not a suitable Place. All comfort Orders are Given Special Attention. Your Special Attention is called to the New Style OAK CASKETS Unit and Use Me and You shall be Wasted on Individuality. Try Ford's Hair Romade for hard stubborn and unruly hair and Ford's Royal White Skin Lotion for the com- plexion. Ask your druggist for them. Be sure and get the genuine (Ford's manufactured by the Omniseed Or Marrow Company, Chicago) Thomas, Madison Street. Marrow Court. Shot Himself Through Mouth. Albert M. Bochtel, forty-seven years of age, a farmer of near York, Pa., after squandering, it is said, several thousand dollars recently inherited from a relative, killed himself by sending two bullets from a rifle into his head. The first bullet was not fatal because it struck a set of false teeth, the broken pieces being found beside his body. He had wrapped blankets about the rifle and his head to prevent the discharge of the gun being heard. Both bullets entered the mouth. Legislature In Panic. Members of the Texas legislature in Austin are panic-stricken over the appearance of cerebro spinal meningitis among its members. The sudden death of two representatives from this disease and the serious illness of a third member of the house caused that body to practically adjourn until March 3 owing to the constitutional rule limiting the number of days that adjournment may be taken. Richmond, Va. P ```markdown ``` Scrap Book Her Japarance In a small college town there appeared in a picture store a photographic copy of a modern Madonna. It was a beautiful picture, and it so excited the admiration of a woman who frequently passed the window that at length she entered the store to ligature the name of the artist. As soon as she saw the salesman who approached she felt that her guest was hospice, but, having no other interest, she was obliged to proceed with her request. "Can you tell me," she said, "whose Madonna that is in the window?" "Why," stammered the clerk, "it's its own. It's for sale." "Oh," she answered blankly, "so you don't know who painted it?" He gave at her with mingled scorn and congratulation as he replied, "Don't a painter, it's a photograph!"—Lipin cott. Remembering. Fell down on the middle floor. How we will be born and forget. Know we will be known and remember. Only the name of Jesus! Begin in that apple quiet. We shall break sheath and climb. Beads of a single desire. In the heart of the apple time. We shall grow who are the flowers. And know what the blossoms song When the hands of the grapes unray The wind in the hollows of spring And out of the breathless summer The apple leaves will stir At your low sweet laugh to remember The imperfect things we were Very Economical. The families of two neighboring fathers were playing ten cent limit poker together. After the busting of a pot the opener drew one card, and the mistress of the flat where the ginnie was played also drew one. She held to start with the deuce, trey, four and five of diamonds and acquired the six of the same suit. The opener bet a dime, and the woman merely called. When the cards were spread her husband wept up in the air. "Why didn't you raise that hand?" he exclaimed. "Didn't you know it was worth it?" "Yes," answered the wife, "but I didn't want to break a quarter." Chicago Post. He Fixed Them. Corporal Tanner's favorite story is to connection with a presidential campaign of some years ago. The speakers were being carried through Iowa on their special train. The mayor of the last town passed always accompanied them to the next town. One of these municipal dignitaries remarked that they were a queer lot of Republicans, for he hadn't seen a card while he'd been with them. They assured him that they were all "regular and stanch," but had "strangled" to say, forgotten to bring along any cards or chips. His honor expressed sympathy and said he tried to supply the needful. Soon afterward the next mayor met them at a way station. After introductions and bidditions the two were served in close and interested communion. In the general buzz of conversation the details of the confab were lost, but No. 2 was heard to observe to No. 1. "No, they aren't any thing in any store in our town but" as a bright idea seemed to strike him "by encher. I can pull a house." Sure enough, when, after the speechifying at the town hall they returned to their car, there was a full array of gambling stuff, cards, chips, even a roulette wheel, which had been taken "in the name of the law" from some luckless gambler to meet the wants of the traveling politicians. - New York Tribune. A. Fine Recommendation. Hoke Smith, the big and bulky senator from Georgia, knew a governor of his state named Crawford, who went to Washington one of the highest recommendations of a man to office ever made public. The young man, not taking the trouble to read the letter, handed it to one of his senators. It read, as follows: "My Dear friend. This will be handed to you by my young friend-John. He has the greatest thirst for an office, with the least capacity to fill one, of any fellow you ever saw." - Washington Star. A Double Surprise. A good story is told of Sully; the painter. One day a gentleman came to him to say that it, would soon be his wife's birthday and he wished to make her a present of his portrait. Could Sully paint it in the time? The gentleman wont on to say that the gift must be kept a profound secret. A day or so later a lady called on Sully to say that her birthday would soon be here and she wished to give her husband a portrait of herself. Would Sully paint it? The gift, however, must be kept a profound secret. Sully saw that he was dealing with the wife of the other sitter, but accepted this commission, too, and for the next week or so had the greatest difficulty in keeping husband and wife from meeting in his painting room. On the day before the birthday the pictures, were taken to the house and hung in their appointed places, while the husband and wife, with extreme finesse, decoyed each other away. The next morning, as may be imagin- ed, each experienced a rare thrill of surprise. ALL THE SAME TO HIM: He Was Willing to Let Matters Take Their Regular Course. With Appointox only a few days off the Federal and Confederate forces were daily drawing closer together, and cavalry squads of either side now and then picked up a few stranglers of the enemy. A group of Confederate troopers one afternoon captured a Yankee infantryman who wore a spick and span new uniform with bright new buttons all in their proper places and carried a new, clean, shiny musket. After the custom of war in such cases, they started for camp with their prisoner and began to guy him gently by DICTED TO SCARE THE FRENCH. was of passing the time. To their great surprise, he could hardly understand them or they him. "What did you come from, Yank?" they asked. "Vom Prunossh," he answered stolidly. "How long you been in this country?" "Zwei monat maype diel monat." "And you came down here to fight us?" "Yah, for boundy," said the prisoner indifferently. The Confederates decided to scare the Prussian and have a lot of fun. "Look here," said their leader, "a Yankee soldier is all right, but a Dutch Yankee both." Say, do you know what we'll do with you, you — Dutch Yankee? Well stand you up over a cotton at sunrise tomorrow and fill you full of lead!" "Vell," said the German, with a placid shrug, "well, voterfer is der rwuhr!" -Harper's Weekly. Repair Your Friendship. If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advances through life he will soon find himself left alone. A man should keep his friendship in constant repair. - Samuel Johnson. A. Slight Misunderstanding. A man who disped had bought some pigs, and he asked a neighbor for the use of a pen a few days. "I have just been purchasing theme thwelve two thwelve and pigs. I want to put them in your pen till I can with a pith for them." "Two thousand pigs" explained the a thirteenth neighbor. "Why, my pen will hardly feed a dozen." "You don't understand me, Mr. Bent. I don't they two thirteenth pigs, but two thwelve and pigs." "I hear you," said Mr. Bent. "Two thousand pigs." Why, you must be crazy." I lay huge. The Last Straw. Colonel Henry Watterson on a recent visit to New York was reminded of this story by the reaction of some of the ampromissible inmates in dispatches from the Baskins. "Some years ago we had an old time (photographer) on the Corner Journal who liked his tippe a little more than was good for him. But no matter how hard it might be had he would always appear for duty, although frequently he would not over his receiver and wake up with a jerk just in time to catch the concluding phrase of a dispatch. He was often in hot water on account of this, but managed to escape disbelief until he sent in a apology that the home office simply wouldn't stand for. "It was during an outbreak of suspicion in Asia Minor, and the news of outrages had been extensive. The operator was asleep while his instrument was tickling out market reports or something similarly unsettling when suddenly there came what we call a "flash." With the peculiar instinct that instantly fuses news the operator awoke to resolve this: "Five thousand bashi bazouka massacred at Cappodocia." "He jetted it off on his typewriter and quick as a whisk ticked back;" "Rush names." "His discharge came by a special wire early the next morning." — New York Post. Not at All Lifelike. The old darky's wife had been ill for some days. As the doctor came out of the cabin her husband said: "Doctor—excuse me please, sab—but how is my old woman?" "She is worse. She has not said a word for two hours." "She aln't worse; doctor; she is dadd!"—Uncle Remus' Magazine. The Thorn on the Rose. In the old Bundesh of Zoronaster we are told that the rose grew fair and thornless until the entrance into the world of Ahriman, the evil one. According to this ancient narrative, the spirit of evil became universal and not only man suffered thereby, but in inferior animals, as well as trees and plants. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Care of Babies. Watch especially the nose and eyes of the child. If the child has a bad cough do not let it be neglected, but take the baby at once to a doctor for treatment. Symptoms of serious bronchial disorders are usually evident at the start, and much sickness can be avoided by proper precautionary measures. Give the babies plenty of fresh air, but do not let them become chilled. Watch the eyes and ears for any signs of soreness and have such ailments promptly remedied. Do not let a slight cold develop into a greater one that may lead suddenly to membranous croup or diphtheria. Cleanliness and scrupulous care of the baby's eyes, ears, nose and throat mean the saving of many hours of wortment for you and perhaps even the life of the child. Do not bundle up the baby too much simply because it is winter. Simply make sure the child is warmly clad. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY Household Liniment For a good all round household liniment which will keep and not require bottling the follow- ing is very useful: Bring one quart of clean soft water to the boiling point, add one pound of good white soap, shaved very thin; stir until smooth. Dissolve two ounces of crumbled cam- phor gum in one pint of turpentine. While the soap mixture is hot add the turpentine in which the camphor gum has been dis- solved; stir until cool. This may then be poured into glass jars. For about 50 cents a large quan- tity of good "solid" liniment may be made. When using rub well into the affected part. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Instinct In Eating. Appetite should be the guide to what to eat. Serious injury results from interfering with the normal exercise of the appetites in many respects. We should follow nature. We should allow the instinctive desire for food free exercise within the scope which reason teaches us to be beneficial. While harm may be done by the suggestion that we must be careful to avoid injury from wrong eating, much good can result from knowing that we can select food wisely and influence good nutrition by the exercise of reason-us, for instance, in restitution. One can decide to show three times as much as he has been in the habit of doing, and knowing that this will impure a nutrition is a source of good suggestion, though the practice should be restricted to a habit requiring no special effort. If we admit that reason should not control in the selection of food we must admit that it should not control in the selection of thought; that we should think what we like, good or bad. Sanity and success lie in the proper balance of the objective and the subjective, reason and instinct. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Cure For Headache. A nervous headache may frequently be caused by several slices of lemon in a cup of strong tea, and a billions headache is almost invariably put to rout by a table-spoonful of lemon juice in a cup of black coffee. The juice of half a lemon in a cup of hot water first thing in the morning is an excellent liver corrective. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Sugar Foods. The latest result of Professor Metchnikoff's experiments is that the injurious effects of autoinoxiation from the absorption of poisons generated in the lower intestine can be avoided by the use of sugar foods, the best for this purpose being, according to his tests, beets and dates. But he says sugar is so, quickly absorbed that it cannot reach the lower intestine, where it is needed. This is true when the ordinary method of eating is followed, taking the heavier foods with only a small amount of sugar fruits. But if the latter are the major portion of the diet, making the evening meal of prunes, figs, dates and raisins, or if rice and raisins in equal parts, the sugar, constituting nearly all of the meal, will reach the lower intestine. With acid fruits for breakfast a simple protein meal at midday and the supper of sugar fruits there will be little if any autoinoxication, and with the system adapted to it great health improvement is certain to follow. Encouraging Father. "I cannot understand how you have the presumption to think that I would permit my daughter to become your wife." "It does seem rather surprising. I suppose. But cheer up. You are not half so badly upset as I was when she suggested it to me."—Chicago Record Herald THE MICROSOID PLANET, BICEMOND, VIRGINIA. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The mouth is the most neglected and ill kept organ of the human body. Some authorities assert that our neglected and misused mouths are responsible for more human illness and losses of working efficiency than any other one organ in the body. Care of the teeth cannot be taught too soon. Children in school should be taught the care and proper use of the "human grinding machine." This is particularly true where children are not taught a few simple, regular habits about cleaning and brushing the teeth at home. Toothbrush drills are a regular course in some of our larger city schools. They should be in every school. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Hot Baths For Pneumonia. The method of using hot baths in pneumonia consists in im- fusing the body completely in water at 10 to 42 degrees C. and applying a napkin soaked in cold water to the head to prevent cranial congestion. Two baths of ten minutes' duration are given daily, and after each the patient is quickly died and returned to bed where he rests for half to one hour, after which a flannel shirt is put on until the next bath. Profuse sweating results, and, though the method is said to be painful, the results are excellent. The general condition improves rapidly, delicious patients are reusersd quiet, and the sleepless obtain soon after the bath. The method is unsuitable for children. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Rules For Aiding Victim of Electric Shock. Rest the palms of your hands on his bones on the muscles of the small of the belly, with thumbs nearly touching each other and with fingers spread over the lowest ribs. With arms hold straight, swing forward slowly, so that the weight of your body is gradually brought to bear upon the subject. This operation, which should take from two, to three seconds, must not be violent, as internal organs may be injured. The lower part of the chest and also the stomach are thus compressed, and air is forced out of the lungs. Artificial respiration should be begin before any attempts are made to lower the subject's clothing. This may be done by an assistant while it is going on. The artificial respiration should be continued without interruption for at least two hours or until a doctor arrives. No liquid should be introduced into the patient's mouth until he is fully conscious. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Prevention of Autoimmune Disease The germs which are always found in petroleum food material, inside or out of the alimentary canal, are the necessary compartment of putrefaction and the question may be raised whether more harm than good may not be done by preventing the growth of those bacteria which are in reality savengers. The natural way to overcome autoimmotoxication is not to produce it by eating bigger food and then correct it by the growth of bacteria in the intestines an ingestible to the injurious bacteria, but to adopt such a dietary and to eat in such a manner as to prevent the autoimmotoxication which follows wrong diet. In the prevention of autoimmotoxication the maintenance of a right mental attitude, proper exercise and other means affecting elimination, also through muscular, are important factors as well as diet. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Medicinal Value of Apples. People ought to know that a good thing is to eat apples just before eating for the night. Persons immobilized in the mysteries of the fruit are liable to throw up their hands in horror at the slaves of dyspepsia which such a suggestion may summon up, but no harm can come even to a defile system by the eating of ripe and juicy apples before going to bed. The apple is excellent brain food because it has more phosphoric acid in easily digested shape than any other fruit. It exerts action of the liver, promotes sound and healthful sleep and thoroughly disinfects the mouth. This is not all. The apple prevents indigestion and throat disease. "What is the mother tongue?" "The mother tongue is the native language of any given race or country." "Is there a father tongue?" "Yes. The sweet words are so classy." "Well, is there a child tongue?" "Yes. That's slang — Cleveland Plain Dealer." ```markdown ``` Economy Hints A penny saved is a penny earned. Benjamin Franklin. THE problem of how to lighten the cost of high living is a vital one today, and especially is this question, absorbing to the poor man's wife. Her household motto should surge be to make the best of everything. Ruskin says, "Industry without art is brutality." And that is justly so of the homemaker. Her duty is to make her home just as attractive as possible, and to do that she must keep in mind that "a penny saved is a penny earned" and that every piece of food thrown out is money thrown away. Here are four things that help much in lowering the cost of high living: They are buy in as large quantities as possible, thereby getting a reduction. Use things in season, when they are cheapest. When egg prices go search your cook book and household magazines for "eggless recipes." Make a systematic collection of economical intrifishes dishes. Egg Substitutes. When eggs are high in making dough nuts boil and mash a good sized potato beat it in with the sugar and make the doughnuts as usual without any eggs. In making pumpkin or squash plies in place of eggs roll crackers the use and as much of them in bulk as you would of eggs. You could not tell the difference if you did not know. When you want pudding for dinner and have no milk, try adding another egg and a few more raisins and use warm water in place of milk. Ways of Using Cheaper Cuts of Meat Beef beef is a fine dish In which the cheaper cuts of meat are never resquizized. To make it take one and one half cups of state bred broths or cracker crumbs, two pounds of ground beef, three teaspoonfuls of salt, seasoning to taste. Mix with water or water and milk, using as much as you can and have the meat baked together. Bake about one hour in a bread tin. Thicker the liquid left in the pan for gravy. Pork in batter is another good way to employ the cheap meat. Make a batter of one egg beaten with one third cupful of milk and enough flour to make the consistency of pancake batter. Fry some slices of salt pork until they look clear and are beginning to crisp, then dip in the batter until well covered. Return to hot fat until well done. Serve with baked potatoes. Lamb a la Croque. This is an attractive way to serve up cold lamb and is tasty and economical. Mince a green pepper after the seeds are removed and half a small onion and cook them together in two tablespoonfuls of butter for five minutes. Stir in four tablespoonfuls of flour. When it is well blended add a cupful of stewed and strained tomatoes and a cupful of the liquor in which the lamb was cooked, or, if it happens to be cold roast lamb use water or good grained flour a little. Cook till the mixture is smooth and thick, season to taste with salt and pepper and turn in two cupfuls of cold lamb cut into small pieces. Stir and cook for six minutes. Make a hollow in a mound of hot boiled rice and turn the ragout into and over it. Reef Liver Laymasale — Prepare about a pound and a half of beef liver slice it thin and lay it in a wide frypan, sprinkle with salt and pepper in two tablespoonfuls of olive oil. Whisk ready to cook, put the pan on a baskfire and brown the liver on both sides. Take the liver out and put on dish to keep hot. Add to pan two onions cut into thin shreds. Toss them over the fire till tender, then add a tablespoonful of flour and a tablespoonful of chopped parsley. Stir in mix well and add a cupful of water. When these are smooth and boiling return the liver to the frypan, pan and make it very hot. Arrange on a hot platter and pour the sauce over it and send to the table with a dish of bread potatoes. How to Fluff the Hair. Hair can be buffed and made to stand out well from the head, even without enlining, by brushing it with an outward twist of the wrist that lifts the hair up from the scalp. For this brushing, divide the hair into strands and go over the head in a circle, then begin further up and continue until all the hair has been lifted and lightened. If this style of brushing is kept up daily, or even several times a week, the straightest and stringest of hair soon becomes dry and easy to puff out from the face. How to Use Bits of Soap. The toilet soap ends of a household may be satisfactorily utilized if cut into thin gravings and dissolved in a small amount of warm water. Add to this soup mixture three tablespoonfuls of eau de cologne and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Then pour the mixture into any small moulds, such as the tops of baking powder tins. The liquid will harden into small, flat cakes. How to Add Flour to Cake. When liquid, as milk, is used in cake the milk and flour are usually added alternately simply because the flour is thus more easily incorporated into the mixture. If cake is too porous-probably too much baking powder or creme of tartar and soda has been used Very Simple. The graphic accuracy of the hero's remark gives this story from the Belief News high value: Aunty—So you took your first dancing lesson today. Did you find it difficult? Wee Nephew—No'm; it's easy 'nough! All you have to do is to keep turning round and wiping your feet. $1.00 Package Free To All Every Man or Woman Can Have A Beautiful Head of Hair By Using The Wonderful Foos, Treatment. Mall Free. Coupon Today. Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not too good for a promising youth. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few cents when health is in danger? And who would choose an inferior school to save a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a larger usefulness? Virginia Union University. Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN It has a Fine ACADEMY COURSE including manual taining for those who have completed common school subjects. Its COLLEGE COURSE is Broad and complete. 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NIA UNION UNIVERSITY. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. OZONO KING OF ALL HAIR DRESSINGS very Hair. Put up in 25c., 50c. paid Upon Receipt of Price. 30 days: to us with One Dollar and we boxes OZONO, one box PEERLESS PRITY SCALP, SOAP, one jar PEERLESS MASSAGE CREAM TEEL HAIR BRUSH. nice plainly when you send your BOSTON CHEMICAL COMPANY. 1 Governor St., Richmond, Va. D. L. IS A HOLIDAY AUGUST CHAPTER IX In December of 1931 Mrs J A Thompson Sworn in as lecturer $2500 for the beginning of a graduate college Among the conditions of the gift was the protection that the new college should be located upon grounds of the university. In the section of lectures through the Influence of Dean West, Mr William C Prender for the group offered $2500 for the group to be accepted, condition that whatever kind of college he raked. Mr Prender's letter would be imply that the money must be used in carrying out the house furnished by Dean West. It would be considered the sole choice for the education by the trustees. In lieu of better addressed to President Wesley Mr. Prender named two, which he would be never tabled to him. So long as Dean West's scheme for a graduate's job was a paper I am only, it had received no special examination. But when these two requests made its reason possible the plan was given so easily. It was applied to many of the trustees and faculty that Dean West's graduate plan was not one to which they were prepared to commit themselves directly. A special committee of the board of trustees reported against the unacceptance of Mr. Froster's gift. Mr. Froster's answer was a withdrawal of his offer. The withdrawal naturally caused a sensation and brought down upon the head of President Wilson all the wrath that had not been carefully emptied upon him. It was necessary to some in the board of trustees to a large number of the inmate and a portion of the faculty that a gift of $100000 carrying with it indeed the prospect of another $200000, for the had already been nearly subscribed, could be received on any consideration whatsoever. But in view of the perfectly clear position taken by President Wilson, backed at that time by the majority of the trustees, the passimate oath against them shown by some direction of general reports for intelligence and conscience does seem inevitable. It was a perfectly clear case. President Wilson and the trustees were no doubt infinitely obliged to Mr. Proctor; they were eager to accept his gift, but they simply could not abrogate the duties of their office—they simply could not surrender to any donor the right to determine the university's policy in so grave a matter as that of its graduate school. It was they who were charged with the duty of administering the university, not Mr. Proctor. Furthermore, the particular plan which unconditional acceptance of Mr Proctor's gift would have formed on Princeton was one utterly opposed to the principles in devotion to which the university under its president's guidance was now so happily advancing. To President Wilson his details were allogated to institutions. Since the subject of graduate studies he had up the deans and the faculty and moved in opposite directions one to wargrouping and exhortances the other toward an organ whose operative, shot through with a common motive and spirit and stimulated by a common life of give and take President Wilson had his own plan for a graduate school—a plan that sprang naturally out of the new system of studies and the preceptorial organization—but it was a plan that contemplated a corps of highly competent graduate instructors, proper laboratories, an adequate library and the practical essentials of study rather than the embroidery of fine buildings and excision. "A university does not consist of buildings or apparatus," he said. "A university consists of students and teachers." The fact of the matter is he didn't want a hundred nice young gentlemen to come to Princeton and five apart pursuing the higher culture. The no-nonsi visited the ideal of democracy, deliberately set about to create a school. WOODROW WILSON The Story of His Life From the Cradle to the White House early artist's introduction of a further element of the integration when what Princeton needed was the rhythm. He own thought was affirmed with the picture of a priest drama society of students in which under students and postgraduate students should meet and single. This was of the essence of the whole program which he founded. We had been permitted to teach it and to take on for departmental work. And now the university was ready to begin to a million. This is very good a point as any at will. But it is not that the rhythm. When we started we were for from general education. It was practically carried on by the rules of the cast in the board of the theatre from time to time as the theatre was developed. The study of rhythm was old. It is the study of rhythm, composed of the rhythm world we are usually continuous in that support of the professor's sound, solidly and these poems and entirely unstoppable them with the entire devotion of the dawn. As for the students in my noment did he have to be to doubt their careful wordiness. That were caught in the toils of a vast system, but they formidable the host of material for the development of a new American university as a democratic living. In view of the great need for school conservatives they were mistaken. Whom meth, the need of school powers to influence the result. C. Photo by American Press Association When the Going Is Rapid Wilson isn't the Man to Bother About a Shock Absorber. the rights of manhood and submission to the rights of property. It was an inheritable instinct in President Wilson and the man who supported him that the life of students must be made democratic. Those who were enthusiastic for a university in which social ties should be obliterated and a group of coordinate demographies set up were divided from those who were content to maintain and even accustomate distinction by a cleavage as deep as any that exists in the world today. No wonder that the partisans of the opposition, in the board and out, looked on Wilson as a dangerous man; no wonder that he, slowly aroused by their vilification, began occasionally to unplug the leash of his tongue. Renounce colleges and churches for yielding to "the accused domination of money" and make impassioned appeals for a declaration of college independence. When the going is rapid Wilson isn't the man to bother about a shock absorber. At Pittsburgh, addressing alumni, he poured out all his soul: The great voice of America does not come from seats of hearing. It comes in a murmur from the hills and woods and the farms and factories and the mills, rolling on and gaining volume until it comes to off from the homes of common men. Do these murmurs echo in the corpse of universities? I have not heard them. The universities would make men forget their common origins, forget their universal sympathies, and join a class, and so class ever can serve America. I have dedicated every sode that there is within top to bring the colleges that I have anything to do with to an undeniable registration in spirit. I know that the colleges of this country must be reinstated from top to bottom, and that I will demand it. While I am impressed in men and women and CCSK I hope that they will think on these things that they will foster tradition in the institution to see to it that the free class of America shall permeate every college. Will America abolish the college of graduation of college students set apart? Will America abolish the idea of having knowledge students set apart? Ahure, will tolerate nothing except in respect of deveror. Sestilde a man, separated from the rough and tumble of lives like from all the conditions of men and you have been in things which America will brand with its contemptuous disapproval. To an utterance like that there could be no reply. In an issue this clearly defined before the whole world (for the Pittsburgh speech got into the papers, and all America applauded) no living board of college trustees would have dared separate itself from the bold speaker. No reply? No living men to take issue? Indeed how the president of the memorial hosts with us? In the town of Salem, Mass., lived an old man named Jane C. Wyman. Jane had been graduated at the college of New Jersey one June day in 1848. During the fifty two years since that day he had never returned to Princeton. President Wilhelm Pittschmidt speech was made on April 17, 1715, was in 1810. A month and a day later, May 18, by the decess of Bessarole Wyman, the graduate of Princeton university bequeathe the legacy of his estate estimated at more than $100,000 bequeathed in the trusteeship of John M. Raymond of Salem and Andrew B West of Princeton. There is no quarring with the dead. At the June trustee meeting the Protoreferor was removed and accepted. The presidee made a public announcement of his magnus ante in the situation treated by the mayor whose fall. The gratitude is found uttered everything. Commissionment was a reason of careful observance of all onward amities. The president made the speech presenting M. Taylor Pyne, Esq., the leader of the opposition among the trustees, with a gold cup, celebrating the attainment of his twentieth year as a trustee. He attended a dinner given by Leo West in honor of Mr. Proctor. All that a man forged to conceive himself defeated by events could gracefully do he did. What it cost himself to not could guess. A moral defeat he had not suffered. The principle for which he had stood hard with a disheartened recipient of an award. The body had not unwinded by that result. Of course he has been admitted to the ed at every visit to the hospital to to regain if the patient should the unplug and put it down. He did him. The doctor of the ward Weson Will son was taken before the committee. There was a lot in the content of their following in animal treatment we being elected the year, and would, and it was the result of the work of the hit. Here was the doctor Weson Will pistol in a small room, and for five campaigns. After a meeting in the the rest was taken to the room the Wilsen, Mr. Johnson had been over who himself had. But the president himself to take the work of the was done. He was to prison, but not to ober- nity, even temporary. The country had not ruled out either what was posed on at Pigeon. The state had no waiting time. And now there came rolling up from the people—the people outside of the colleges, the citizens of whom colleges exist—a great about that that man was the sort of man that ought to be leading the fight for their cause out in the world of real affairs. Polliticians heard that call and shrewdly joined it. On Sept. 15, in New Jersey state convention—that of the Democ- cratic party—in session at Trentu- nium Hotel Woolwyn Wilson for the governorship. A week later Princeton university opened for a new term, with the reorganization of its president in the hands of the trustees, who in due time voted him all manner of complimentary resolutions, made him still another kind of doctor, inexpressibly regretted his re-formation, and accepted it on the part of a small majority with thanks unspoken, but infinite in their sincerity. CHAPTER X. HE state of New Jersey at the beginning of the year 1910 was in the case of many another commonwealth in this Union of States. It was in the grip of the politics and the corporations, and the good people resident within its borders had about as much voice in the management of their public affairs as they had in deciding the weather or determining the phases of the moon. For years the state government had been run by guests of the interests." Latterly it was the Republican or organization that had been in power a Trepton, not the system was really bipartisan one. The Republican bosses had come to be known as the "board of guardians" in which the public service, railroad, insurance and other corporation interests were duly represented. The Democratic organization was the private property of James Smith Jr., a politician who had made his way into the United States senate, and who had retired from that body under certifications connected with certain scandals incidental to the framing of the Wilson tariff. Ex-Senator Smith is a polished man of affairs whose business interests are identical with those of his friends on the Republican "board of guardians." His chief lieutenant was James It. Nugent, a typical representative of the old style strong arm methods in politics. However, the great moral movement which during the last five years has been abroad in the land had not left New Jersey unaware of its gathering power. The leaders of both parties were forced to hood it. In the Republican party Eyreett Colby, George L. PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Record and others altered up a dime gregous enthusiasm among "new idea Republicans." Somehow, somewhere by some one, there was suggested to Mr. Smith's organization a plan of getting aboard the reform wagon and riding on it into power. The fate against privilege and the championship of democracy to college life captured by the president of Princeton university had attracted the attention of the state and now suggested by a man who could lead a party to victory under the banner of political reform. President Wilson was a student of public affairs of authority through out the country. He was an accomplished and persuasive speaker, a man of lofty character and winning personality. Indeed, from outside the state from the press of many cities, had come the suggestion that the nation would be fortunate if it could place such man as Wilson in the president's chair. It is easy enough to see how the life of running Wilson for governor merely present itself to the imagination of a shrewd boss to become immediately congenial. The democratic leader doubt naturally imagined that a learned collegian would be as putty in the hands of an experienced politician, especially if his eyes were not stained, by the promise of a nomination for president. During the early summer of 1816 President Wilson was sold by a number of his friends that he could probably have the tombstone nomination for governor if he desired it. The infirmations he left in his innations and so related and were accompanied by so many insignias of the benefit the party and the state would derive from his acceptance that Mr Wilson was acquainted to and them a favorable And let the people remember we had just 15 percent. While sentiment among the best of voters through out the state was strong, the practicalities of life—the organization led by Stuart. Mr. Wilson was personally aware of Stuart's Smith's position in education and the way he knew what the other gang was going to be. Were they devoting themselves to those men that they knew was the leading destination of our politics was simply pose? Did Smith regard the school master as a simple soul who would hand out corporal favors without knowing? Did he expect to get a United States Senate through the Democratic legislature which Wilson's popularity was likely to elect? On that point Mr. Wilson made specific inquiry of the gentlemen who came to him on their probing errand. He required their assistance that Mr. Smith would not seek the sponsorship "Were he to do so, while I was governor," he told them, "I should have to oppose him. He represents everything repugnant to my courtship." They told him categorically that Smith had no idea of going back to the Senate that he was a man thought to be sick with a dangerous constitutional alliance and home down by domestic treachery and that he was definitely out of politics. On Tuesday, July 12, 1910, a number of gentlemen gathered in a private room of the Lawyers' club, 129 Broadway, New York, to impulse Mr. Wilson whether he would allow his name to be presented to the New Jersey Democratic state convention. On July 15 Mr. Wilson issued a public statement in which he said that if it were the wish of a desidered minority of the thoughtful Democrat of the state that he should be their candidate for governor he would accept the nomination. The announcement caused a sensation. It was received with enthusiasm by many men of both parties. Yet there were not lacking those who were so sceptious of Smith and his associate lessees that they could not believe the nomination was to be given on Mr. Wilson without plebs from him. Again, some of the best and most intelligent men of the democratic party, while they did not doubt the integrity of the proposed nominee, did fear that his experience in practical politics would make him an easy instrument of the gang. Mr Wilson had been assured that only his consent was necessary for his unchallenged nomination, but in fact opposition to it at least continued until the convention balloted. Three other Democratic, Frank S. Katzonstein, George S. Sitter and H. Otto Witton immediately entered the ring. After issuing his statement Mr Wilson went to the little town of Lymepton, where he has been in the hands of speeding his summers, and speed his summers. He moved not one of his ten lingeries in behalf of the nomination. Certain other people, however were moving everything movable to that end. The fact that the Smith crowd was policing him puzzled many others as he would have been his former supporters. It was only as Mr Wilson afterward learned to his amazement) by sharp dragonning that a majority sufficient to make him the choice was seated in the Treton convention on Sept. 15. The speech made in that body by Charles Cole, formally putting Princeton's president in nomination, was in interrupted by joes, catcalls and sarcastic questions. A few remarks made by Mr. Smith were, however, closely listened to. The big boss said that he had no personal acquaintance with Mr. Wilson. Mr. Wilson and he did not move in the same world. He had never conversed with him. Had conditions been different he should have preferred a candidate identified with the organization. But it was necessary to find a man who could be elected. These were significant sentences and had the incidental merit of telling the truth. On the first ballot, 700 votes help necessary to a choice. Woodrow Wilson received 740 and was declared the dominece for governor. Hastily sum- moned from Princeton, eleven mil- lion away, he appeared on the platform and made a speech of acceptance so ring- ing in its assertion of independence and so trumpeted in its utterance of the principles of progressive de mocracy that the convention was fairly carried off its feet. Few of the delegates had ever seen or heard Mr. Wilson. Had he made that speech before the ballot there would have been no ballot. Having made it, he became the candidate of a united and enthusiastic party. Now, this spory of Mr. Wilson's nomination is worth telling in some detail because, in the first place, it is a family story, in the light of its sope and because, in the second place, it has to do with the charge of "ingratitude" - the gravest brought against New Jersey's governor. After a few speeches in which it was apparent that the nominee had a little difficulty in bringing himself to ask anybody to vote for him Mr. Wilson developed unusual power as a campaigner. This candidate had things to say on which his convictions were so strong and his sense of their importance so great that he soon learned language that caught the ear and won the warm attention of the great body of the plain voters of New Jersey. He talked to them of the need of dragging public business out of private rooms, where secret interests and professional pollsters comprese into the open air where all might see what is being done; of the need of new po WILL APPE Illustrated With This thrilling novel Henry Tyrrell, of the the literary sensation THE FIGHT Illustrated With Actual Wartime Photos This thrilling novelization by Bronson Howard and Henry Tyrrell, of the noted play of the same name, is the literary sensation of the hour. Ideal: imagination that the people might resume the control of their own affairs; he looked at the vast social and industrial changes of the past twenty years, making necessary the renovation of all our old social and industrial ideas; of the need of new relations between workingmen and their employers, now that these are days of great corporations; of the need of regulating strictly those corporations; talked simply, straightforwardly, of all manner of specific public things in a way that brought them home to the individual voter with a new sense of his own personal concern in them and awakened in him a new realization of his duty, his power and his opportunity. He not only did this—he lifted political discussion to a new plane till at every meeting the audience was thrilled with the consciousness that the problems of today are gigantic, critical, big with the purposes of Providence, as they heard this man picture them on the broad background of history in the inspiration or a soul afame with love of common humanity and faith in its progress toward aplenid futures. One incident of the campaign was the candidate's reply to a list of questions, presumed to be embarrassing, asked him in an open letter by a Progressive Republican, Mr. George L. Record. Mr. Record put into careful form nineteen queries, requiring Mr. Wilson to declare himself on such subjects as a public service commission with power to fix rates, the physical valuation of public service corporation properties, direct primaries, popular election of United States senators, ballot reform, corrupt practices legislation, employers' liability for selects We offer you, the Latest and Most Artistic Photos, as a More Moderate Figure than you can obtain elsewhere. Special Attention Paid to Children. Enlarging and Copying Interior View Work. We will also be Pleased to Quote you Prices on Exterior and from Old Photos. A Specialty. THE MAGIC IS TWO TIMES LARGER THAN THE PIPE. IT IS 9 IN LONG STEEL HEATING RAR THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $100 SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER. LADIES LOOK! Every lady can have a beautiful and insurant head of hair if she uses a MAGIC. After a shampoo or both the Magic dries the hair, removing the dandruff; and it will straighten the curler head of hair. The Magic Heater will not burn or injure the hair, because the combs are never heated. The steel heat mat may be used on the hair, in stone, put into the flame of the alcohol or gas heater. The Aluminum Heater is also suitable for the heating bar, then after the bar is heat the comb goes back into place and is held in place. The Magic Heater is also suitable for curling hairs, has a cover and can be carried in a hat bag. Magic Shampoo Drier $10. Magic Alcohol Heater $10. Liberates terms to agents Write for literature (policy). The Great 50th Anniversary Civil War Story workingmen's injuries and finally his own opinion of the Democratic bosses - namely Smith, Negent and Davis. With instant readiness, with audacious glees, Mr. Wilson gave his anwers. He accepted the whole Progressive Republican program and asked for more; no Republican would satisfy a progressive Democrat's appetite for reform. As for Smith, Nagent and Davis, he would join anybody in denouncing them; they differed from Baird, Kean, Stokes and Murphy in this—that the latter "are in control of the government of the state, while the others are not and cannot be if the present Democratic ticket is elected." Mr. Wilson went further. He asked himself a twentieth question which Mr. Reward had been too polite to ask—What would he his relations with those men if elected governor? "I shall always welcome advice and suggestions from any citizen, whether boss, leader, organization man or plain citizen, but all suggestions and advice will be considered on their merits. I should down myself forever disgraced should I, in even the slightest degree, co-operate in any such system or any such transactions as the, boss system' describes." Election day was Nov. 8. On that day the people of New Jersey, for many years a Republican state, chose Woodrow Wilson for governor by a plurality of 49,120. Two years before Taft had carried the state by a plurality of 82,000. Wilson had changed the political mind of 68,000 out of 433,000 voters. On the same day the majority of those Democrats who took the trouble to mark their ballots in this particular selected James E. Martinez as their choice for United States senator. The total Democratic vote for senator was only 73,000. Martine received 54,000. Nobody voted for James Smith, Jr. James K. Martine was an honest and faithful Democrat with radical views, as genial and good hearted a man as ever breathed, but scarcely a man that would have been chosen deliberately for the dignities of membership in the august body that sits in the northern end of the national capitol. Regularly for years he had been put up as candidate for any old office to which there was no hope of election. It was a well-established rule that Martine was always to run never to reach anything. Ten days after the election James Smith, Jr. called on Governor Elect Wilson at his home in Princeton. The ex-senator is a gentleman of taste, of Chesterfieldian manner and delightful conversation, and his congratulations, we may descend upon it, were gracefully phrased. Equally graceful was his modest confession that he found his health now greatly bettered and his situation that he now indeed felt justified in taking into serious consideration the idea of asking reelection to the United States senate. Governor Elect Wilson, when he had satisfied himself that he had heard right, expressed the very great astonishment which he felt. He then said to Mr. Smith that he regarded the idea as impossible, and he begged him to abandon it forthwith. The ex-senator turned the task on Martine's qualifications or back of them, which Mr. Wilson refused to discuss. The house was not Martine but the party's faith. The HIGH GRADE JOB WORK In Fact Printing of All Kinds Executed Promptly. 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 Linotype Work for the Trade. We print CALENDARS. Our prices are as low as is consistent with First Class Work. We furnish Invitations for Balls, Weddings and Special Entertainments. We have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Writings, Manilla Paper, Envelopes. Card Board, Wedding Stock. in fact. Every thing in the Printing Line. primary had elected Martine, and there was nothing for the legislature to do but ratify that election. "The primary was a joke," said Smith. "It was very far from a joke," joined the governor elect. "But assume that it was; then the way to save from being a joke hereafter is to it seriously now. It is going to taken seriously, and there will be more jokes. The question who is to enjoy one term in the senate is of small consequence compared with the question whether the people of New Jersey are to gain the right to choose their own senators forever." Smith's candidacy was now made publicly known, and the party sharply divided, the organization declaring its purpose and its ability to carry the legislature for him and the decent rank and the denouncing the attempt to steal a senatorship for a discredited politician who dared not run in the primary. As a last effort to save Mr. Smith from the humiliation he was determined should overtake him if he perished Mr. Wilson called on Mr. Smith by appointment at his house in Newark. It was in the late afternoon of Tuesday, Dec. 6. The governor elect said he had come to say that, although he had as yet taken no public stand, it was his intention unless Mr. Smith withdrew from the senatorial contest to announce his opposition to him. "Will you be content in having thus publicly announced your opposition?" asked the aspirant. "No. I shall actively oppose you with every honorable means in my power," replied the governor elect. "Does that mean that you will employ the state patronage against me? Inquired Mr. Smith. "No," answered Wilson. "I should not regard that as an honorable means. Besides, that will not be necessary." The Governor elect then laid down this ultimatum: "Unless I hear from you by or before the last mail delivery on Thursday night that you abandon this ambition I shall announce my opposition to you on Friday morning." The last mail Thursday night brought no message from Smith, and Mr. Wilson by telegraph released to the morning newspapers a statement he had prepared denouncing the Smith candl dacy. It was a bitter fight. The governor did not wait for the assembling of the legislature. He appeared before large audiences in the chief cities and, making a clear statement of the case, asked the people to see to it that their representatives voted right. Among the legislators there was panic. None of them had ever heard of such a thing as this smiling defiance by a mere novice in the political field of a boss who had ruled twenty years. Not all of them had instant faith in the outcome. But there never was any doubt about the result. As Governor Wilson afterward told the story, he brought no pressure to hear upon the wavering members of the legislature. He merely told them to follow their consciences and tried to assure them that they would suffer no harm if they did so. He said to them: Do not allow yourselves to be dismayed. You see where the machine is intrenched and it looks like a real fortress. It looks as if real men were inside, as if they had real guns. Go and touch it. It is a house of cards. These are limitation generals. Those are playful things that look like guns. Go and put your shoulder against the thing and it collides. They took heart and put their shoulders against it, and it collapsed. On Jan. 28 the New Jersey legislature elected James E. Martine to the Unit- THE Mr. and Mrs. Wilson In Their Garden ed States senate, giving him forty votes. The organization mustered four for Smith. The most moderate and charitable account of the matter that any way reaches its pith is that which Wilson himself once gave: [TO BE CONTINUED.] Teacher-Johnny, have you an excuse from your parent for being late at school? Johnny-No., ma'am. I didn't have time to write it.-Baltimore Sun. THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA. Bill-Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Envelopes, Business @ Visiting Cards, Policies, Medical Blanks, Insurance Blanks, Financial Cards, Lodge Labels, Checks, Check Books, Minutes, Pamphlets, Whole Sheet Handbills, Placards. We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational @ Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection. Devoted to the Interests of the Citizens of Color. RICHMOND, VA. Mrs. Annie Walbarrow, 4th & Broad W. H. White, 501 W. Leigh Street. Robert R. Roper, 405 W. Leigh St. Peter Thompson, 710 N. First St. Street. Wm. H. Scott, 2218 E. Main St. R. B. Sampson, 523 N. 2d St. N. Winston, 537 Brook Ave. C. D. Griffin, 224 S. 2d St. William B. Smith, 3 W. Leigh St. Tom Bird. Thomas Page, 815 State Street. David Page, pr., 922 N. 31st St. Clarence Williams 1411 Rose Street. M. C. Waller, 1100 W. Leigh St. E. Dandridge, 107 V. Baker Street. LONG BRANCH, N. J. Jesse W. Shreavee 182 Belmont Ave. OAKLAND, CAL. J. W. Nuby, 1736-7th St. PORTSMOUTH, VA. J. T. P. Croms, 2621 Effingham 8t. NEWPORT NEWS, VA. J. C. Allen, 2107 Marshall Ave. Charles G. Davis, 604-25th St. CLEVELAND, O. J. E. Branham, 4401 Central Ave. E. F. Boyd, 2604 Central Ave. Frank H. Weaver, 3315 Central Ave BOSTON, MASS. C. Branum, 657 Saawmut Ave. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Mrs. L. Lanron, 516 Clamton Ave. John H. Ashby, 135 Steuben St. TARBORO, N. C. V. M. Howard. STAUNTON VA. J. M. Allen, 120 S. Augusta St. A. C. Mabrey, 182 N. Main street. You will receive courteous attention and your patronage is earnestly solicited. Out of Town Orders Promptly Attended. If our prices are higher, you can go elsewhere if you can better them in the same grade and class of work. If our prices are lower, we stand ready to accept the business. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Frank Brown, 41 N. Michigan Ave. Harold P. Douglas, 11 N. Kentucky Avenue. WILMINGTON, N. C. Wun, H. Moore. NORFOLK, VA. John DeBona, 610 Church 8t. Thomas E. W. Perry, 2 Joues Place. FARMVILLE, VA. Rev. R. O. Adams, 118 South St. Mrs. Pearl L. Madison, 502 Main St CHICAGO, ILL. J. Hamilton, 3220 State street. W. H. Gans, 25th and State street. A. D. Hayes, 3640 State St. R. M. Harvey, 3924 State Street. W. 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Promptly we a full line of the Finest Sta- to be obtained anywhere in United States. We supply Mourn- ber and Envelopes. the Country patronage is earnestly solicited prices are higher, you can go else- le and class of work. If our price ness. t, Richmond, Va -2213. We have a full line of the Finest Stationery to be obtained anywhere in the United States. We supply Mourning Paper and Envelopes. MUSKOGEE, OKLA. D. E. Woolridge, Box 432. PULASKI, VA. J. M. Ruford. GARY, IND. L. J. Phillips, 1648 Washington St. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Rollins Broso, 127 E. 9th street. BLUE RIDGE SPRINGS, VA. Roover Hunt. Special Correspondents and Agents F. Z. S. Peregrino, 121 Lopp Street, Cape Town, S. A. Prof. I. S. Moore, 26 Rua dos Capitaos, Bahia, Brazil. Mrs: Hannah 516 N. HAR PHONE MADISON 7165. BADGES AND REGALIA C Odd Follows and Household of In a Furnished Loages Endirely Mrs: Hannah L. John 516 N. HARRISON ST., TE MADISON 7165. 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LONG DISTANCE PHONE. MADISON—486. Finest Sta- nywhere in apply Mourn- entry tly solicited. u can go else- If our prices nd, Va. A Woman of Her Word. A woman was in a law court when she was asked her age and answered, "Thirty five." "But," obit toll the judge, "you were before me two years ago, and you said then you were thirty five." "Your honor," she loftily replied, "I am not one who would say one thing at one time and another thing at another time." - Ladies' Home Journal. Jealous. "A bandit held up a truss, and the Pulkman porter," single handed, overpowered and killed the robber," said the old fogy. "That porter was a real hero." "Hero nothing," remarked the grunch. "He didn't propose to stand for competition, that's all."—New York Sun. She Didn't Knock. He sat masquerade ball—That's a singular looking costume you're wearing. What do you represent? She Opportunity. He-Indeed. Then let mo embr you.—Boston Transcript. L. Johnson, RISON ST., RICHMOND VIRGINIA. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Ruth Badger A Specialty. Bare- Free of Cost or Obligation. ee iactciiniiatin JOAQUIN MiLiss PASSES AWai Poet of th: Sietras Succumbs io Oid Age BODY WiLL BE BURNED He Built a Funeea: Pyre of Stone, on When Mis Kerars Will, Be Cre mated: Beene ty ME Gee bce 0h Othe eee diet att z a te Mette oe Use, 8 Pherates, © laid at + teas | Ieatae tes we Be oo ak wat al Bete: ‘ iho at Pele aN oh akaPeate oF Moe Peek ger Ave aye a Benet Sect it ed ba Bie teed fo Wk amt Moabuas te Juagera ete Pier ae dae de ated uns : Mow eM Mather ect tales Met hes wife, We had oo + Lotee ftom nina fer genre ne Sty her hauihter to ett ede the ait pet Mee ees wig, Bet at wae ns Bass Joost nteabbed Ons dane aes wae Mo, Tanti a ee ee fev tinete + Rilgeh aemall werered tn Pout n peesewdies peat ace Move ei We Reeaeat qunags funeral gs Song whee low’ we webant | Neethp oe the mer AE we Rbegets [ether toate oth ire fe Wate Peel Erste ott # Bins at AL ed ey tb Ba Ba Me ea feted open Peen he gigas arriiet ar ra eee Ba ed tets ieee be ae roy tees a Ie tae oa wet at neo over wt ede uted ass pia RUEREE Seo, FAS Bee caine dances, ds ee And ote: + 2 Me etn cad Ole pores G, THN faniue ron Gambler Kilts Hen Own Daughter Dames Mogg ho eee ite whe tet soon ue commie oh fe oy pad sper fete fbewgere Bhatatcacaia se gawes sage Wite sEthe apart When ie crn ewe cel tani cron tee + ther tenteengeas PE dune Ng fawn yds nig Nove es a Ba ae Aiied bet "bide: don, oe Song tropes ed tet wena, Based sartentee Dittesedt tes tre pete We wae bee op. 5 Thon Pot er a ate fo Where |e leet ant fates + DIB revere gage Me et WY Ue grdee te rete fet te he Urtte er Mong te rock eka the ter Ps oe et : ean) ete tes thet cee ds cell ta sete te ba ean ag Sine by tediners neater oh teyatere: oar eb phe poe wae Re be ati gto ele tei he behest mhnthed yet foent yea ey ees Aad Sheeaites Bethe cone Leen fe wife Was g fic feo Kon ete anes morose, et, hot nat be quarceld “Tres wee oth we tt at dawn and an catie the st tine Student Rebbed the Deas. The my befinin te erie Ae The county meri at Bescanc, ia sete eNplaiiend when Lath Wolte, ase twenty year. strtent, Tonto set t Coroner Sues ot phat he hued tee: Tobbing the eet 7 Wolte tsa sciden? workin bis 9g through the Piaeraty of Pittstares He hay been rien extra werk ar in morgue, He told Cormner Jainison i took the maney te abd him in gettin an education, but that bis const tenes has made i! isjcothle fur bin aleep * Wolfe warn that when: the mores ditache, nore preparing 6 bis 401 the mortuary he would go Ueroughs the clothes taken from Use carpe, He gaye he got $Hi2 and a sold cate watch from the porkets of Joseph Van order. a Troy, N.Y, ealesman, why was Kills! on Jun, £3. Killed Himself Before Gir. George Wart, thirty twa years ot of Philadelphia, xhot and” tusta:t! KiNed himeeif In the “parlor of VM bomr of Anna Camila, 526 Cota street, Candra, N. J Ward was In love with the youn woman. He appeared at her home an found her talking with ber mothir § the dining roomn, He asked her to fato the parlor for a private conyers: tor. i = Once aloce with the young woma: Ward asked Ler to marry bim, She r fased to du 0, and Ward drew a 1 volver and fired, the bullet atelkt: Bhim just back af the rixht ear, M Camiin rin into the room and cave: Ber daughter a4 ue fell In a taint sNeightors’ vent word to’ the poi Ward way takes to Cowper nony: ‘at the homwial ; was agit that dee bad bees, insikmate cn, |} - JOAQUIN: MiLLca. a Famous Poet of the Sierras wig, Died In Calfornis, a : a " 7% sh - et Mergan, Better, to Stay In Eqypt. Jo Westpark Serena wo bas tee faftercie tr oo tubes fon beet: bec andr cee he fit the Uitte f she pha. ¢ Pee tnedd ine tndaun tos hin return fe Ctra, 0. 0 cn Satur das trem histo ote Oe Phe voyage en tact oe Adiates Rast net, kerio tas beth ovpected Bye Eopeans ner de porte gene the Noe tobe about tie cnprwetaent he hatscpe dies Par tiie dean deve ture fh) ete earier than he tad panes bdo : Mi Sh ocean moe feet oy ann het fer fet oe cae dee led be remain ia Boose 4: Slate te ete” bet will wasten Wort Me Aetsare ca atecund Amore 8 Siunnad nn gram Tae Lite Bore Deswatd: bite He ea tin tere etoe Pies te doy len thes frie thennih the Hos ean Kiter fate amd tia van et te one ote then italy a Dated om ler at toe Lene, alms ot Marie? hte Me ao geidied ot uncon: stab a plans ah wether win ts A heal tower Toate tie wore + Me . Phe vie one dbf. Peaster, sevens Mate Dona te rden, ten Tetted: ghurset deta he waters And tarent te eet the Tet, whe roril hot te te a ated When Dat Hew epsared tee fe gea toe baths bee te Gaone ever ett Sad the be beled Out. ASE a ta Stef pard were the tite Sad tee ber pester tatent Deut in Appendix Family. Jagf Menthe, of isvateld toy hihi Se deta the Min vfs ee wb ate Bay fem the toe gts tee Chad ta were treba ta ay gma hetie wath Int oe Sie: ie eeRR BRIGwa:: ; hee tot Grown a, NOY, thieers Vue ou RiP Sepa avons stp stated Usea ures na Be ba dyer 2 Perera Ga entep. rr : _ asibo 4 BU ae tin th mettone « : fewest we fee be oe tna at Arm ts hs OA hee g Mat doer Cie ge anaes ee owe | : SMOEIS For Weeste Howre Coates | Mette ds ae Ee eapegie of Mee ee mae more a trashy ear et tte gee toot total GV) wes da tie te cane te ss Tot Gar aby ott feat shim cercunitte ss the rene on trs chit apptene: Hats te the Beets Pe ttatats feet toe White He ate serrea et te $2 ynend ae a i a eae Veter a bet of cloth maturated with pean Daenent, Mre Calvert Card weil, of Che ter Bas threw tt In the stove when te bell eatied her ter the yor Ad stu eeberned sie found that her tac sear etd san Metort had taken the tas ftom tue ccove and fom It yee Die rock He tha Deteat “Free Tolls” Repeal. - Senator Roots Silty repeal the proven et the Panama eanal Inw Riving free passage to Ameritan const Whee’ Ripa Wan ropected by the senate Jcornmittee on fnteraceanle canale A -mttun to table it carried, 7 to 2, Sena tore Hrandecen, Page and Perey aup. porting tt Three Boys Orown. White they were playing on the vf eycombeit ce af the Nangituck river Gren drowned, the tee giving way be neath thelr welght. The déad ar Cupster ant Jos ah Groawk, brithere aged five ana four yoarn ronpectively end Frank Narachenky, azed als. EMR THE RICH MOERRANGT, . RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. a Sees 4 . , “$150.00 Endowment: Patd. a je s i eapo Charca, Va, San 8, 1933 ERO....0 GARE eo i + This In to cortity that I have re we . AJ Pubs bh colved, froin Johny Mitcholl, | Jr.. a G. W.' Counsellor of tho Grand ” , Court of Virginia, Order of Calautho, | ny, Wt 4 ($150.00) Une Ehudred and Pitty i é “! Vrotlure in payment of tho death- —_— 7 vliim of Brother Jamca Cabluess, a . “ ieee who wax a member of Cape Charles - —_ mos gamer or cue = Pam Huerta Provis- —=——— : Sikned- -M. C. Gray, NATIONAL 2 . Admiulstrator? Hy Pom | Higgs "|. tonal President. | |= j Vlotence Charen, . 1 Ole WW. Palwes, Wy Ins, pias : Where: Corsage + Muntele, Churet. . , Mexico j nia? nnesaane anaev . JeRIES: REUOODAED Sroanenera ettwaae EP oeanes. is Reanuae. Va. Jan, gu, 1973 | Pn as te certify Mat 1 have re coved fom, Jolin Mitchell, Jr. GOW. Connsélier ef the ‘Grang Court of Virsinia, Order of Catantte C8teaoe) One Thindred Dellare tn payment of tee deans elalae oF Sister Sallie Chirk, wha wat a member of Blooming Here Coart, Ne. 104 of Roanoke, Vi. Sined FR. Tinlett, Adulatstrater Witnesses Bettie Stinme.* $150.00 Endowinent Bald, Suffolk, Virginia, 1903. Vhis co to certify that L have re seved fom John Mitehell, Jr. Goat Chancellor ef the Grand Souter ae Virainta, Kitshts of Tythe tay Node SAL Ba A: AL and AL Feiler One Handed and Pitty Veitar: ja payment of the death chim of Tether Walltes Darker, Whe wot a men ber ar Sumuth Lodge Neo het seftath. Va Satu Vieterta fares Menetietary Wott Coe Jenteal ob 6. © Petes Powel, John Mo Howth Koen hoa xs Steno Mydownene Maka, Glace Va dak fa 1a, The dete loanty dat E have re tected fron. deh Mitehell, dr. Geatat Cheneeller ef tie Grand Taate af Vint, Kutstts of 2yte NOM VOID A amd A bee One Tandred Dotlars tn posteeht mf the death efiia of Wooeher JW, Chatman. witeysae a senher of Hine Ride Later Now Taf iis ean. Va Stebeet Htethe Chatmas Ver tietaey MOP Mine het Me agi Antes oon ites MOT \nthen: Pip Waatistie dr on 6 X150,00 Paden ment Mala, Mare, outers Valo dansare 2s, 713 fi Lite eertity that [tase rer eced fae febn Mbtehe hdr, Manet Claseciter or tie Grand Vieteg of Vora Kutente of Dyth NV SVE AOA ann. Fister One Hatred and Pitty Dothan ty payment of the death tain et Reother Walter \. Fields, Whack a femiet en Vireknin star Pedes Netti of Marrtentears Va Sieeet Mune Eb sharte Petts Tem boiary ‘ Atatessen Barthes 1G pV Newson Pe Doge Sts8.00 Undewment Pata. | Newpert News: Vacs Vane Spe bo te certify that T have te felved from fbn Mitebell. Xr. Gaited Chaticellar oof the Grand Saad, of Virentn, Katette of Dyth: NON ASS AHA AL and 3. TS1e0 Hey One Hanitred and Fits Rothe tm payient ef the death. Fhotce Heater datin W. sini, sho whee nentwr of Cavaller hadee No et Nea part News, Val ; . Srned Martha dane sath, : Hefetietury Wither ass BaP Athdiny ; VG Drake Nef. Scott. £150.00 Endowment Pali, Tekenond, va. Bob. 7, 1902. THO fe to eortityy wat T have rs lcrived fram Sohn” SMitehell, Iz Grand Chancollar of the Grand Lodge of Virginie, Knighta of Pyth fas, NOAL SA BL AL AL and A. (8150.66) One Hundred ond Fite Nollars tn payment of the death. claim of Nrother George Harrie, whe wae a member of Olt Domintor Ladke, No Sof Richmond, Va. her Stined Harriet x Harris, vomark : Renonelary. Witness? R. 1, Mek Witnesses: . Robert Gray. DP, D.G.£. Andres 1. Woolfolk. « 150.00 Endowment Vaid. Cape Charton, Va. Ian. 28 4913. This {* to certify that T have re cetved from John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellot of the Grand Todge of Virginia, Knights of Pyth- fan, No A. SALE. A. AL and A, ($150.00) One Hundred and Fifty Dollars In: payment. of the death- iim of Brother Jamen Cabinoss. who Wwas"n momber of Cape Charles Lodge, No. 174 of Capo Charles, Va. Rigned—M. C. Gray, Admisintrator, Witneanen: . James ‘Logan. . ‘Thomas P. Seith, © tf Jeffers. 7 MABERO J CABIN. IW JAIL; WAR IS OVER Gen, Huerta Provis~ (—Saisaceacce - ional: President. eer DIAZ COMMANDS ARMY People in Mexico city Cheer J... . Huerta and jaz. | ey TAME AFTER ALL NIGHT FIGHT. he Jouers In the uatloual capital Ia Mex! cy Clty, General Vietoruno Huerta | yeovtsfonal president of the repaplle piaeral Fellx Diaz, a conqueror afte tea days of civil war, Js commander dict thief of all the forces. The Madero government fell. an the revolution ended when the fed eral army deviated for Diez, Ding, de [em a mibtary man aed a wtrom Hyessomulity) at Uie head: of the Kov ernment, consented ta the senate’s ro “gue t that General Huerta acta pres ptdent ated Intestin, iieneral Mananet fumedigtely ar Frewd Maderw an tex private office tn the national paler amd imprisoned Mim under heasy maand, wit bie un (de, Ernesta Mader, other member os be famlly ated bie advisers, © Gen. cial Huerta artested the former peer dent's. Brother, Gaeraye Madero, the Hiaance miibeer, ia a restaurant neat ter national paler and fayrisoned him The army received the news of the coup Herat wets tremendeu¢ cheering. Tie peuple tibet Ga the streets and Bid the alr with thetr shouts of “Viva Diagt "Van Hnestat Genet Bye aster conterences: when General Bhieret and) Provaeenal Vreviient Mtyetas aed troops from the urrenal te tte national eap!tal, satis wth ie federal fare eencen trated there. Phe luster Maveristan ant the vie terion Pelieiotia atasiute 2 with thee nts mont good feckud ail united in cheer Ing for thecpes poverninent The capt tal fe bilarions sth joy ‘Phecr ts na doutder, but the streets ate betas sisetounly peter . Senate Prociarms Huerta Presigent, The fall of the guyerninest was bromeit about by the acces of the conaty In preiebha upoa General Huerta, whe tied heen the mainstay of the gaymrnment, The senate In eG traotdanary keestety Satoh to att Mae fer cmafttes was appointed to vonter wih General Mert, The COMMAIIE® Wake enthidtly La cessful. The feteral commandtrin chief left Hoo deputation atter glvlyr his prow Se te tetas pravisinat president. The ornate at Gaerne proclaiaet Gen rat ine tte as Beal "ef tie tavern: Mex cncets were sent to General hing, atiecapptored eb tee actlon tale rh, ‘The eel commander con ented: a Hiern apbaiuttient hewtely bee air tie dlestted alanilitary man gilaes Mb ah ouitlye and because ot his cont teen Un Hitertae telity to quiet dine kaer hag ordered tas traeps £0 eae tring An tteapt was made te persuade he pies ht fo reston, but Madero, nerily retook Hee was supported by US brother, Gustave, and bin uncle, Srivee \iter a conferene Davwreit innetate Herta am) Manquet, {be atten arteced Maderu and several of Bee abetet and put them in prisen. The pre deat was arrested white fescue dosing with bis cabinet a Nan th declare tha view presteney east, faplag thereby to appease ienerat Doar, General Manguet, are ompan ed by bis aMeers, smtdenty ene ere the porsident’n private office and Sitetled Mader abe Dis adviners that hes were prfemers Shetth aterward General Muerte Fie ted Gustary Madore, the flnaner pine ff, th a reatiwarant smear the ma: (ofl palae, and sent him to prison, ‘Thh gray Nasted the coup with wild heer: General Banquet visited ener teas Seon after General bit moves! troupe from the arsenal to venation palace, fe was mare mammandes fneisde€ of the army and We reneliion was offielaliy declared at n end ‘Lae rebel trospe and thelr former atarontets of fhe federal army tmin- ted teeely an Pexehaniged congratutas nts The onthe federal army: went ter te Disz, and the Gticerm had Ht ediheuy tn hetaging aut a change fulleianire. The atrenta were crowd: PoWeh Caeerint thouxinds and the ral was Rigirlousty Joy Cat. . The sfination of the goverment ees lerame Ko eritieal that one rong cetachment of federal troops ited trom tie eapital and marched J the diteetion of Cuernavaca, forty fer te tha apuitewtrd Soon acter is fire practically ceased for aomo puowt reason . A number of looters were canent nd muminarily xhot in the outlying |” suricts of the ety. A few amall pro- sion xtorer have beon sacked by unKry Mobs, but there bas been noth- K ike ayatematte looting, both fed-} ‘Al and rebel anidiers doing thelr ut-} ont to hold the populace in check, | Samy federal soldiers who tried to], In Linz were caught, diaarmed and{ arched hack to the national palace t hore they wero summarily shot. tal 10 instance moro than thirty: federal Idlers wete lined before the firing] , uad at the samo time. All tho Rorrord of a bombardment} j ve been axpectenced by tno reat | | mia of Sexire City tor many days | 2 Qe. thik Takk axtaet te exnertect NATIONAL PALACE, Where Carnage Took Place In . Mexico City. Fe ae rapes. TRF Bm Er 4 ji 8: : iS Ea: ee , so te bs wie i! Mm ‘ gg : my Ln Cane MED Fa streepe at a range sometines of les than 10 sande Scareely a district of tho capttr has eseaped injury. Over and throus every quarter at yeme tine shel have torn atid xereee tied and oxplee ed. Litthe rund sede from cue ante matte geunpete havecadded to the te ror ate de traction Hundreds of bucttings attest their Lule method sites amd wreeke Interiors ty the destructive qualitie Of ten terpi artistry : How fony leave heen falled an. wourtted’ ana question whlel tune es aneaer with ven esaetiiode Ith donbihil! even ts sovermment re Onde wif eer S veal the correct aun ver at ge ntl. Frond a ouree a malty eotisteleren careful und cabersatiie It bax beer Rated that the number of dead Ix ne Tess then gels, while’ the total of Che | secant atovesnt to ten Swe to. 1 [oe Phas creat aiadarity of thew are Prot soldier but tm ny women ane elites unite ta es ape the Hae ete : Tes ence was made after beu Ing. fe top ont saree af atteer OE Tae biter and Weed Cross xo berie and ot thee hosp rat Tee kell aterm fae thar deraet men et tits wen hase heen glans: tere tat Varsece Himes owner cuits In the uyeiw a trees and med down ty roactane gas Paris fade facets Wit earpeew have hoe ative be past wenttazy parit toa Hye tn thee ohatte nt the rity, ware the funties gave been burned Beery noetiang muy) he cee what Appear ia tie come ot tie aetial gant fo be geleSat teariny rabbt eh, Thess Bea ate $F the tuent part pithbetsh bat the dobar ot barton feeb tells am otter curs, : A piaeral thong grewsenie nie fiat hay bern atitznt in one place, The tas e+ agen: fron a braken gual has heen Le sted, and there In that steady (ace toys teen tupravicel a srewatery Int tow baseaent of ag apartment hon. a fex he ke from tue arsenal fa the ctaye ut Mes. EW, Holmes, one of Nye ter American women Rill ed early ih the Mehttng by) te en (rane dite ker heme of a abell, For three dass her fused stayed alone thers WEN Ge corpse, unable te re movie occu ake ttm te leave It per DApS to sufler tse ber mutation, Soldiers entered the apartment where he hep? siil and before hie exee robled tie piace He: managed to find Soar ts iad carpenter's tain and naile cn the ballin amd cote wtructed a colin, fate which he Lab the body of hic wite: Me carried It to tlie bastcuent and there dug and fled ber grave. zg Four Children Die In Fire. Four eiildzen of do epi Hattetd were burned to death In thelr bora at Santa I. near Broukville, Ky. when MIS hanse Qk. deatroyed by flee The mother bad genet a neighbor's home for water and locked tin /tit dren in the Neuse, When ate returned abe found the house ty dames, “The cehildtren ranged An age fram thee months to five years, “Robert E. Lee's Son Dead. George Wascineten Castle Lae, alt eat xin of General Robert Bo Ler, for merly an site ds cans ut the mint ot Jefferean Davis and prevideat emer tun of Wastinaton and Lee cindvers is sited tm Wayeusw att, ai, aed eh: years : Gives Satvation’ Army $50,000. - Announcement of a git of $50,000 to thy Sulvation Army wate made pub Me in New York city. Tht benefaction came from a wocnan In Detrolt, Mich, and 1s to ho ured for the Salvation Army teseue work {n that itty, It was preachted in the name of tho Inte General Hooth. ‘ Dewey's Dog Bit Him; Asks $20,000. _ Admiral Dewey's dog in Washing: ton-bft William T. Johason last July, go Johnson sued tho admiral for $20, 000. The dog wan in charxe of the ad. miral’s coachman, so Johnson made Bits w defendant, too. 2 J.C. ROBERTSON : a e = > : ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. * Office: Roonis 1, 2 apd 3, (4 Floor), 506 N, Sd St, Richmond, Va. : Practice in all State and Federal Courts.” Commercial, Corpor-: dation, Insurance and Real Estate Law, Administration and Probate { Matters. Estates Sottled. - Business of Foreign Cilents given ¢ prompt attention. Well equipped Investigating and Collection De ¢ partments, Legal Business and Correspondence Solicited...“ {Our Clients will bo givon the benefit of our experience of : 1% yearn continuous practice at the bar. “Local and Long Distance { Telephone Service, PHONE, MONROE’ 3851. : 3m WONDERENE BUST DEVELOPER—A superior treatment for the en Jargement and Uevelopment of tho Bunt in 30 days. Makes fabby buste firm and plump In the snmo lonxti.of time. Price 59 Cents. SILVERBNE HAIR TONIC will stop Dandruff, Improve the: grpwth and renler tho hatr soft. lustrous and glosxy. Price 60 Cents. 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Ladies combings made up In any denired atyto. “AN our products guaranteed undor the Government's ‘Pure Food and Drugs Act Serial No. 39893. All goods mallet (postage paid) on ro- relpt-of price to any address tn the United Statex. Sond money by reg istered letter (2-cent stamps accepted ‘Kame as cash) Atldrem: all matl, GOLDERENE MANUFACTURING COMPANY, — HORTLE Liberty Ktrect, : Plainfield, N. 2. i. Have Your Perscriptions Filled at : Vaughan’s ‘North-Side | | Pharmacy, 31 cance sts. | Cn HAIR PARLORS. — ie : : To the Friends, Customers and tho Publle tn General:— MRS. 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He wan tuviied (oat big wedding, At the appoluied thie he appeared nt the church, beartug an Iminense bundle in | bis arins, On the churehtateps he wan accovted hy a friend | “What have sou got there? asked ‘the friend. eT he wedding present." . “Why. you chump. You oughtn't to bring the wedding present to the chureh!" “That's all you know about It T got genni fot this affair, aud the card anyy ‘Present at church.’ "—Cleveland Plata Denter. A Shot at Human Nature, Tho moro a man hates to get vp promptly in tho morning the wore he will fie about how he doen it.—New York Press, | VIRGINIA—Ia the Law and Equity Court, City of Richmond, thia 17th dav of February, 1013. - Gertrude By Taylor..... 6. .Pisintitt vs . Melvin Taylor......-.+++Defendant In Chancory. ~ ‘The objoct of this sult fa to obtain a divorce from ded and board, . by the plaiatift from the defendant opon tho grounds of cruelty and Tesson- able grounds of apprehension of bodily hurt. And an affidavit having beon made and filed that the defend- ant, Melvin Taylor, {ea non resident of the State of Virginia, it 1s ordered that he appeer here within fifteen days after the due publication of thin order and do whatever may be necessary to protect hia interest here- in. = * ‘A Copr—Teste: 2 P. P. WINSTON, Clerk, GILES 'B. JACKSON, pq. + REAL HAIR GROWER FOUND AT LAST! GOLDERENE ‘the nowly atiscovered Halr Beau- tftcr ant Straightening Pomade. New ind differont from any and better than all others, Will positively grow balr in 30 days and wo can provo ft. Some of the most eminent Doctors consider Goldereae tho most wonder ful discovery of tho century, Price 50 Conte. VEL-Vo Skin Whitening Cream will whiten your skin and mako {t soft, smooth and beautiful, Prico. 50 Conts. Snow Drop Liquid FACK BLEACH, A harmless but efficient vinedy for bletching the »kin two or three ahades lighter. Price 50 Cents. $150.00 Endowment Paid. Norfolk, Va. Jan: 30, 1913. This Js to certify that I have ro- velved from John Mitchell, Jr., (GW, Counselor of the Grand | Court of Virginia, Order of Calantho, ($130.00) One Hundred and Fity Dollars in payment of, the death- claim of Sister Elizabeth Johnson, who Wax a member of Myrtle Court. No. 108, of Norfolk, Va. Signed—Frederick Lewis, Admitistea‘or. Witnoxxes: Emma Cherry. Emma V. Kelly. | Fannlo Cooke, D..D. G. W. C. —_—— | Attention! | That fing suite of rooms on the mezzanine or second floor of the Me chanics Savings Bank building is now for rent and may’ bo scen by applying to me. Admirable location for a professional man. Alry, ight and convaniont. - JOHN H. BRAXTON, 112 West Leigh St. Richmond, Va. te Sansa an FORD: Raioh Kan POMADE im RS RS RNY Ss ERT he 2] = seswwesans fp eeenie no en ce Seems Gunes Moos TRY, ye, vans ° Sor Mont SOUR Sih. CREA por BC ‘oie M ported Sor agers ate Se ee era