Richmond Planet

Saturday, July 26, 1913

Richmond, Virginia

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JAYEI BEYOND THE "ALPS." ("Beyond the Alps lies Italy:"—Hannibal.) "Beyond the Alps lies Italy":— That which we vain would do or be Awaits behind this mount of pain That we must climb to reach our gain. Though now our feet be bleeding sore No sorrow shall molest us more When we have scaled this rugged height And reached that land of love and light Beyond the "Alps." "Beyond the Alps lies Italy":— Ah, could our aching eyes but see The beauty of that world afar Beyond our highest guiding star! We tread this trail of blood and tears But, well we know these cruel years Can leave no hurt upon the soul That will not heal at that blest goal Beyond the "Alps." "Beyond the Alps lies Italy":— Our happy home of Liberty; Our dearest dreams are all a bloom Beyond this dark and threatening doom. Here we shall mock Death's deepest grave And keep our sinking spirits brave; We shall not swoon in faith to-night, Tomorrow's sun is golden bright Beyond the "Alps." "Beyond the Alpa lies' Italy"— O God, we faint and fall! To Thee We pray, for—oh, the way is long!— Our heart is far too weak for song! Too weak, alas! Our breath is low! Raise us again and let us go A little further in our quest For that eternity of rest. Beyond the "Alpa!" Resigns from the American Bar Association. 6 Beacon St., Boston, July 8, '12 Frederick E. Wadhams, Esq. Treasurer American Bar, Ass'n. My Dear Sir: As I cannot respond in the usual form to your reminder of my annual ydu, you are entitled to know my reasons. The action of the Association at Milwaukee and the conduct of the Executive Committee which preceded it, in trying to expel the colored mem- bers in open disregard of the Consti- tution, and when this attempt fail- ed, in drawing the color-line, by ap- plication of the rag, against all other colored lawyers equally entitled to admission under the Constitution, dissolved my relations with the Asso- lation. Of the various offences involved in that proceeding, color prejudice, contemptible as that appears to me, is perhaps the least. Conduct of which the prevailing elements are cowardice, hypocrisy, fraud and force is not the conduct of gentlemen, or of such lawyers as I am accustomed to associate with though I make no protensions to superior virtue. This is not merely my own opinion of it. The public press recognized its true character, and made the Association deservedly an object of public ridicule and contempt. Would you or would Judge Dickinson, the putative father of the bastard resolution, like to see the specifications, or the press comments in that part of the country where the press is free, collated and published? I was invited to join in the remonstrance of ex-President Storey and other Massachusetts members, but regarded it as inadequate to the case. Apparently that faint note of dissent is not likely to be heard or heard of again, though the action of the Association is peculiarly an affront to Massachusetts which is responsible for two of the three colored members. Undoubtedly the action at Milwaukee will stand, as anybody who saw the riot there would expect. There is at least one Massachusetts member who takes the metamorphosed Association at its true value. A handful of Southern colorphobes, with the help of the usual subservient Northern majority, have captured it, and turned it into a sort of Bourbon club, to which professional character and standing is not a title to admission, the first qualification now being one unknown to the Constitution and having no relation to anything professional. I never came into any such compact as this. The Association is no longer a Bar Association in any proper sense. As the Association which I joined, it has ceased to exist, and I am relieved from paying it the formal compliment of resigning my membership. Very truly yours. A. E. PILLSBURY. Captain Lowry Gone. Capt. Madison Lovry of Petersburg died at his home in the country last Sunday morning at about 11 p.m. He was well-known and his business is generally regretted. The True Reformers Richmond, Va., July 21, 1913. Editor Richmond PLANET. City. Dear Sir.: Please allow us a space in your valuable paper to tell the entire world of the wonderful progress that has been made by the Grand Fountain, U. O. T. R. with Hon. Floyd Ross, as its leader. We have just closed a sixty days' membership campaign adding to the order 2,309 new members. Confidence is being restored throughout the country and the old line organization given to the American Negro in 1881 by Rev. William Washington Browne, which met its Waterloo in 1910 is coming back to its glory faster than we had expected. God is in it and this being a fact, it cannot fail. In 1881 William Washington Browne, a Christian man from Georgia, founded this organization and named it the Grand Fountain, U. O. T. R. In one of his declarations he declared that it was self-supporting and could not be broken up by the hands of man or men. This has been clearly demonstrated, because the stumbling blocks that the organization met in 1910 did not break it up. The entire world is aware of the fact as to who were the officials of this order up to September, 1910 and who were the new officials elected September, 1910. One month after the election of the officials, great trouble came to the order by these officials applying to the court for receivership of the Savings Bank of the Grand Fountain, August 22, 1911. W. R. Griffin, the little hero of the murder of the Savings Bank, was elected Grand Worthy Master and at once began to restore confidence among the people. After being in office for a short period of five months and twelve days, he was killed in a wreck on the Norfolk and Western Railroad, February 5, 1912. Confidence was being instilled in the hearts of the American people both white and colored throughout the country, and then Floyd Rosas, the tall scymore from Missouri, who had been placed on the Board of Directors of the order February 22, 1911 under protest was elected to the office of Vice-President and Deputy General by the Grand Fountain August 22, 1911, was selected to the office of Grand Master by the Heavenly Master February 6, 1912 and finally elected Grand Master by the Grand Fountain September 24, 1912. Since that time the organization has made wonderful progress, having collected $280,000: added to its mem bership 30,000 members; paid in death claims $130,000; organized 160 new fountains; reinstated 80 old fountains and restored confidence throughout the country. This is a marvelous record made by the Grand Worthy Master, Floyd Ross, and is encouraging enough for every unbenefited True Reformer to return to the fold and help bear the burden that was caused by the former Grand Officers. The entire world was told in 1910 that the Grand Fountain could not live, but this has been proven to be untrue. If Griffin and Ross could have gotten hold of the organization before the bank was placed in the hands of Receivers and the $450,000 worth of real estate transferred they might have had an easy sail, but in spite of this, they have saved the organization without the bank and with out the $450,000 worth of real estate. This transfer no doubt was done for the protection of depositors of the bank, but unfortunate for them the property had been heavily mortgaged prior to this transfer by the officials who were in charge of affairs. This is plain enough for a blind man to see. Ministers throughout the country are returning to the order and rendering valuable assistance to Grand Master, Floyd Ross, in his glorious efforts to build up our race. The Grand Fountain, U. O. T. R. was planted in 1881 in the capital of the old confederacy, Richmond, Va. by William Washington Browne, God the Father, life Son and Holy Ghost was in the order and it will be impossible for any set of men or women to break it up. Anything that God is in will remain, as He has said. "What I have joined together, no man can put asunder." This is the marriage vow between God and in dividuals or whatever object it may be. Sunday afternoon, July 20th, 1913 Richmond Division of the Grand Fountain, U. O. T. R. had its Annual Saron premached at the Sharon Baptist Church at the corner of Leigh and First streets. The church was packed with members and friends. Much interest was manifested in this meeting. The rostrum was filled with ministers from different meetings of the country. Grand Master, Floyd Rosemond a report showing that the O organization for the first 19 days in July 1913 had collected $7,000, paid on death claims $2,100, paid on salaries $2,000 and organized 10 subaries dinate fountains in the states of West Virginia, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania together with old Virginia, the home of the Grand Fountain. Next was the report of Mrs. B. G. Cousins, secretary of Richmond Division, who reported that Richmond Division alone in the past twelve months added over 1,000 members, collected over $8,000 in United States Money and had 3,000 benefited members connected with Richmond Division. $546.00 was paid in death claims HON. FLOY Grand Worthy Master, Gr at the church and each of the ben enciaries expressed themselves as being well pleased with the success of the order and of receiving their claims. Too much credit cannot be given to the loyal men and women who remembered their obligations of years ago and for the loyal stand and assistance that they have given to Grand Master Floyd Ross in his work of redemption and rehabilitation of the Grand Fountain. While many who had been on the pay roll for years fell out and used every precaution to break the organization up, but they should have had sense enough to know that they could not break up the work that God had planted through William Washington Browne. Grand Master Ross, to our judgment is a safe leader. He leads with kindness backed up with the law and no man or woman who has the race at heart can refuse to follow him. The various newspapers throughout the country in their editorials as you will notice from the Reformer dated July 19th, wilt bear out this statement. The joining fee has been reduced from $4.60 to $2.60 in order to give the outsiders a chance. The 33rd Annual Session of the Grand Fountain will convene Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, the 23d, 24th and 25th of September, 1913. Every Fountain in the Brotherhood is allowed to send three delegates, said delegates must be benefited in the subordinate fountain and class department. We hope that old Virginia will have at least 500 delegates and the other states' 400, making a total of 900 delegates. The organization is climbing the ladder of success rapidly and its members are coming back faster than ever and in general the order is building on a solid foundation. In every mail Grand Master Floyd Rosa is receiving letters of congratulation on his success and the Grand Fountain is receiving letters of encouragement from professional and business men of our race and the white race. There is no such a thing as the Grand Fountain will be saved for she is already saved. We believe that every colored man and woman who loves the race will pay no attention to the freckers of the order, but will enlist in the army and help carry the work on to success. Christ said that men and women are his disciples as long as they continue in his word, but woe will become of those who forget Christ. The Bible plainly states that "men and women shall reap what they sow," Those who sow bad seed shall reap corruption. "When Grand Master Rosa took charge of affairs, he found $193,000 owed for death claims. The savings Bank of the Grand Fountain, the oldest Negro bank in America had been placed in the hands of Receivers October 25, 1910. He also found that $450,000 worth of real estate of the Grand Fountain, had been transferred to the Receivers and that the membership of the Grand Fountain had fallen from 50,000 to about 5,000. Confidence had been lost and old men and women 70 and 80 years of age, some of them blind and deaf, had been stricken with paralysis and died and were embolized by undertakers and placed into the ground, because of their money lost in the bank. You can judge from this whether the seed was good or bad. Our text is "Your sins will find you out." The saving of the Grand LOYD ROSS, Grand Fountain, U. O. T. R. Fountain is an evidence that these statements are true. With best wishes, we beg to remain. Respectfully yours Maurice Rousseille, James W. Poe, J. C. Stephenson, W. H. Roots, Virginia H. W. Giles, Dr. W. H. Smith, A. Beverly—Committee. Collected at the Annual Sermon, Sunday the 20th inst. Sharon Baptist Church, $30.50 which was presented to the church by Grand Master, Floyd Ross. Adv. Richmond to Have An Open Air Camp for Colored Children. The Fulton Social Settlement Workers under the direction of Dr. Anna R. Cooper are opening an Outing Camp for the colored children of this city from July 25th to September 15th. An ideal Grove has been secured, just one mile from the city limits on the Darby Town Road. Every effort is being put forth to have this grove fitted up with a number of tents, cots and covering, games, swings, hammocks and everything necessary to proof, sickly, cripple colored children, a chance to enjoy at least two weeks of fresh pure country air. Any one wishing to help these workers to carry out their plans by loading or giving any article for this work will receive a prompt reply at the Fulton Settlement House, 811 State St. Anna R. Cooper, Director, Mamio Dixon, Secretary; Rev N. B. Brown, Chairman Financial Com.; Rev. A. H. Jackson, Chairman of Recreation Com. P. S.—Camp Meeting will be held on these grounds every Sunday. Special speaking at 3 P. M. by some of the most prominent divines in and out of the city. FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. Great Opportunity for Colored Students. The Saint Emma Industrial and Agricultural College at Belmud, Va. is doing a great work. Free scholarships in agricultural training have been established and arrangements have been made to feed, clothe train and educate ten colored students. Trained farmers are in demand and agricultural courses will tend to increase the productive value of the soil. Applicants should write at once to BROTHREA GORDIAN, Saint Emma Industrial and Agricultural College Belmud, Va. JOHNSON ON PARIS STAGE. Colored Fugilist Offers $5,000 for Ten Round Bout. Paris, July 21.—Jack Johnson the colored pugilist, appeared in the revue at the Folles. Burgers to night to fill in the gap caused by the absence of Anna Held. Miss Held has gone to England. Yesterday she was injured in an automobile accident. Johnson threw a medicine ball about and boxed four exhibition rounds. The fighter announced that $5,000 had been deposited at the box office for a man who would stand up against him for ten rounds. The theatre was crowded, but few Americans were present. Johnson got a hearty welcome. Johnson, according to popular report, is to receive $1,200 a night, which is probably a good investment for the management. He will remain for the cloven nights until the theatre closes, when he will make a tour of the provinces. Johnson wore an American flag around his waist, which will need considerable reduction in size before he can go into a sorrowful ring battle. His white wife was one of the keenest spectators from a stage box until the final scene, when she joined the fighter on the stage. She wore a white evening dress and a straw hat. The couple did a turkey trot for a few minutes, and the audience seemed to enjoy this more than Johnson's previous exhibitions. There were some isolated hisses heard during the dancing, but they were nothing when compared to the applause which greeted the performance. Its success seemed to be great est with the women in the audience. Baltic California Oregon Idaho (Martinaburgh, W. Va.; Pioneer Press) It is Brigadier General John Mitchell, Jr., and the army of Pythianis which he commanded at Newport News, Virginia during the recent annual meet there, was a handsome body of men. Their behavior reflected great credit upon their commander, themselves and the race, and showed conclusively that John Mitchell, the noted banker and editor, is a military genius, and a disciplinarian who is beloved and honored by the men under his command. If we can get a second, we will say three cheers for John Mitchell, world figure, and if we don't well do it anyway. Guest at Hotel Dale. List of guest at Hotel Dale during the week of July 19, 1913: Philadelphia, Pa.; Mrs. Gertrude B. Mossell, Miss Mary Pierce, Mrs. Sara E. Butler, Mr. Peter L. Wood, Mr. Leslie Pollard, Miss Clara D. Lewis, Mrs. Walter Butler, Mr. Geo. H. Harper, Mr. Henry Slade, Mr. J. W. Walker, Mrs. E. J. Ringgold, Miss R. Alloopp, Mr. Charles B. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Greene, Mrs. L. R. Whipper, New York City; Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wilmore, New Haven, Conn.; Rev. W. H. Franklin and wife Principal Swift Memorial College, Rogersville, Tenn.; Mr. R. Baylor, Bala, Pa.; Dr. F. Brown, Mrs. E. R. Cooke, Mrs Susan B. Cook, Washington, D. C.; Mr. Floyd Robinson, Baltimore, Md.; Mr. Arthur Gooden, Cleveland, O.; Miss Mamie Bordley, Eslington, Pa. Unjust Discriminations. (Denver, Colorado Stateman) The barring of Negroes and Japanese from bathing in the lakes at Washington Park and Berkeley lake by the Park Board has brought about a vigorous protest by the Japanese, and while the Negroes have made no great demonstration in the matter, it is said that they, as American citizens and who pay taxes for the maintenance of such public places, will demand of the board why the Constitution is abridged in their case—"taxation without representation." It has been less than a month ago that we were deprived of such privileges from the public bath house, where we were allowed certain days of the week to ourselves. Is it not 'high time that we, an American 'citizens' and taxpayers should call a halt on such unjust discriminations? As long as we allow such discriminating orders to go unnoticed, it will be no long while before other discriminating orders will be heaped upon us. The Afro-American Protective Association, the People's Sunday Alliance and in fact, every organised Negro society in Denver should rise in a solid phalanx against all such discriminations. REGISTERED EXPERIENCED Drug graft wants position. HAY. 738 Cumberland St. Netford, Va. NATIONAL IDEAL BENEFIT SOCIETY The First Anniversary of the National Ideal Benefit Society A Grand Success—A Great Gala Day Answing the Members of the Society. On Sunday, July 20th, the National Ideal Benefit Society held its first anniversary at the Second Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. Z. D. Lewis, pastor. Promptly at 3 o'clock, a great throng of female members of the organization assembled in the lecture room of this beautiful church and awaited the arrival of the male members, who marched in a body from their hall, 527 N. First St. to the church, arriving there at 3:30 sharp. The line of march was marshaled by Bros. Alex. Hines and Albert Logan, with the Supreme Master, A. W. Holmes and his corps of officers bringing up the rear. The female and male members marched into the main auditorium of this magnificent and spacious church lead by the Executive Officers and members of the Board of Directors while the sweet music pealed forth from the grand organ. Mr. Thomas L. Beverly, Deputy of Richmond District, presided. After devotional exercises by the pastor, prayer was offered by Mr. John S. Powell, President of the Young Men's Christian Association, of this city and Right Herald of the Supreme Lodge. The remarks by Mr. S. W. Johnson, Supreme Secretary on "Some of the Accomplishments of the Society, were very interesting and instructive, giving a graphic sketch of the Society from its origin 12 months ago up to the present. The original poem as rendered by Mr. F. L. Bryant, was very much enjoyed by all, Mr. Bryant, who is one of the Directors of this Society has won for himself quite a fyme as a poet. Among the numerous poems written by himself is, "The Ideal," which is quite a favorite among the members of the Ideal Society. Just here, Mrs. M. E. Holmes should have appeared on the program to deliver an address, but having been called out of the city Sunday morning to Newport News to fill an important engagement for the Society, she could not be present. The next on program was a short but able address delivered by Supreme Master, A. W. Holmes. He was at his beat on this occasion. In his usual style and manner he told of the wonderful growth of the organization in this, the first year of its existence. Among the many things he said were: "In Richmond alone there had been organized 31 lodges numbering from 25 to 150 members each, and many other numbers in the adjacent counties and other sections of the state and other states. He also stated that the organization has had 12 deaths and that all claims have been paid up to date. The Supreme Master gave many encouraging statements which were very helpful to all members and friends present. His advice, especially to the young men along the line of thrift, economy and industry, was very impressive. His illustrations during his discourse are said by many to be some of the best ever heard, from public rostrum along fraternal lines. It is the object of this Society to meet promptly all of its obligations, and in doing this, there is nothing that we can expect for the Society but success. He concluded his remarks by introducing the speaker of the evening, Roy, Dr. Z. D. Lewis pastor of the Church. Dr. Lewis pastor of the Church. Dr. Lewis took for his text, 1st Samuel, 7th chapter and 12th verse: "Then Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpah and Shen, and called the name of it Ebenezer, saying Hitherto hath the Lord helped us." His sermon was a great one. It was unanimously decided by all present that it was one of the ablest sermons ever listened to. Dr. Lewis is noted throughout this city and country for his eloquence as a great gospel preacher. Words of encouragement and wholesome advice coming from the heart of this servant of God, will forever linger in the minds and hearts of the members of the National Ideal Benefit Society and others who were present. To sum it all in a few words, the sermon was a gem. The solo work rendered by the great basso singer, Mr. S. L. Johnson the sweet contralto voice of Mrs. Carrie Coleman Hawkins, the charm ing, thrilling soprano voice of Mrs. Ida. Glover Deanne, and Mrs. Rosa Hicks, one of the new stars of the city, captivated the audience. Other music rendered by the choir for the occasion, was heavenly to the ear to listen to such sweet strains from this large chorus of well trained singers. Dr. J. E. Jones, in a few bedding remarks, presented a token of appreciation in the form of a purse to Dr. Z. D. Lewis, complimentary of the National Ideal Benefit Society. Mrs. M. R. Johnson, in a few, well chosen words, asked for the offering for the church which amounted to over $22. She was assisted by Meadnesams Lucy E. C. Scott, Lizzie G. Brown and Mr. Joseph Charity, who also made some timely remarks. After a hearty vote of thanks to the pastor for his splendid sermon, the church, for the use of same and to all who took part on the program thus closed a very successful first anniversary of the National Ideal Benefit Society. Adv. All Day Picnic Grand All Day Picnic Thursday, July 31, 1913, Fulton Park, benefit Baptist Old Folks Home and Friends Orphan Aylum. Automobiles will leave the Aylum and Home with the inmates at 1:30 P. M. for the Park. The following named persons have kindly consented to the use of their automobiles for the occasion: Messrs. W. . J. Johnson, Bragg Bros.; B. I. Turner, Jr., J. Wilmer Turner, A. C. Washington and J. Cunningham. Committee: Mrs. Henrietta Hueckes, Mrs. Sallie I. Jackson, Mrs. William Miller, Manager. Admission 10 cents. Causeless "Ibn" on Bank. Chicago, July 23.—Rumors appear entirely started from nothing, caused a run yesterday on the Kenwood Trust and Savings bank, a small state institution on the south side. During the day the bank paid out about $100,000, but, according to A. K. Brown, the president, deposits equaled withdrawals. State Bank Examiner C. K. Rutledge said depositors in the bank had no occasion for alarm. Ideal Nursery Anniversary. Sunday, July 27th, at 3:30 P. M. the Ideal Nursery Children will hold their first anniversary at the Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church. An excellent program will be rendered by the children. All are invited to witness this grand affair. Rev. Dr. D. Webster Davis is still improving at Hot Springs, Ark. Rev. J. W. Hall, Assistant Pastor Salem Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa. passed through the city this week. He gave encouraging reports of his work in Philadelphia. Prof. James H. Blackwell, Sr. left the city this week for an extended Northern trip, visiting Washington, Baltimore and other large cities. He will be away about four weeks. Baker School to be Enlarged. The Committee on Finance of the City Council has recommended an appropriation of ($19,600) nineteen thousand, six hundred dollars for the erection of an annex to Baker Public School. Mr. W. C. Venable of Dantville Va. is a lifelong friend of the PLANET. He sends us $ 50 with the extra fifty cents to pay for the delay. Rev. Thomas' Mother Passes Away. Rev. A. S. Thomas, D. D., pastor of the Sharon Baptist Church, Richmond, Va. was called to Boydton, Va. this week on account of the death of his mother, Mrs. Henrietta Thomas who departed this life Tuesday, July 22, 1913 at 8 o'clock A. M. at Boydton, Va. DO YOU WISH TO INCREASE YOUR Present Income? Send for particulars of a Clean Legitimate Business. Our specialty is a big seller, Address, NOVELTY, SS West 134th St, New York City. For Sale—Cheap A first class colored Hotel and Cafe largest in the City, centrally located; up-to-date, newly built; all modern improvements, telephone in each room, located at 423-25-27 South 17th St. Philadelphia, Pa.; doing a business of $1,200 monthly. Will sell entirely, or one-half interest in the business. If desired will sell the building and business in its entirety. Reason for retiring from business, ill' health. Known as the "Hotel Woodson." Terms arranged to suit purchaser. Address John Woodson. 425 No. 17th St. Philadelphia, Pa. qo ! N an | wy A Noveiization by J. W. McConaughy of the Successful New Play by Harriet Ford, Harvey J. O'Higgins and Detective William ‘+ 3. Burns, in Which Robert Hilliard 1s Appearing. : — Gena WIE 6 ied Dee = James Arevie. wealthy and eccentric, 1 found shot dred in the Ltrnry of his New Fork tense Mie onty ante dirsee, an act fat, amt tin ward) Miwa Marys Maruret are sunset! Asche Kavten, 4 detective of repute © calied th He te xiven carte tlanche he oo erpenee md ced bers dwn te tes Geren The Bhrary where Me Argyle way shot Ie opened ‘ Kay ton wot nue nametant Mannie at Five wt the Arwote maneinn Tres a tien Fite tie Water art pwaren t Anger Vrgnte i the tiga a Shating he CHAPTER Iv. . The Acested Daughter, O the vetnitiated Manning's ac Bens In following out thin or det would bave teen fmugt with mystery He pushed the . table over to thy window and ited 1 on Us side, adjayting and radjurting 4€ ort! the Hehe struck ta pollatie~ surface at Just the richt nogle Ther be prodneed a amall bot powertui camera, part of the coutents of « amal Diack band satchel that be bad drup Ped near the dour and proceeded te take a oumber of photographs -Hr was arming bis chief with an Jofell! ble meann of ientifention. You probably kuow that, while on finger tina, with thelr countless One ‘concentric circlva’ und ovale and aweeping Mnea all appear about the eame, no two are identical, [nth various police bucenus of the ctvttizet ations there nre now thousands of the imprint of the finger prints of cou victed men. ond thoasands are adkted yearly. Yet of nll that vast number Bo two are alike When made necidentally, on furniture OF giana, for Instance, these marke are practicnily Invinthle to the aaked ese. Dut when the ruspected object ls tretied to a both of fine lizht dust they come, out all a dull gray akninat the back-| ground and may be photographed and | make an everiantiag record. While Manning was boxily absorbed tn thie work his cblefe mind was bne ; dy Gtresting and arranging what litte be had learned thus far. But Preveit-| ty he waa Interrupted by the bustling | entrance of Mra. Wyatt. “Mr, Kayton?” demanded the Indy. panting a Kittle harder than usual. nw ahe confronted the famous detectirr “Iw there anything you want to axk mer “Yea, "=. began “Kaston. with » Tush, but the voluble lady was not te be beaded off . “I wasn't bere when It bappened, ror know," she bubbled. “I mean to ay I don't know sos more about ‘it thar you do, but I uppone you know n gteat deal.” She beamed upon bin “You Gon't look at all like a detective Mr. Kayton, Do yoo know what ! mean?” : In spite of his impatience Kastor amiled and bowed. “Mra Wyatc™ be axket “when di’ Mr. Arsyle adopt Mixn Maxoret?™ “Mary7" exclaimed Mra. Wyatt, oper ing her eyes “Whe. 1 don’t know She wan Justa Nettle thing. { don't tx Neve abe wos more than ax, bat! cee! ly don't know much nbout it. 1 meas to.nny J wano't thera [t was Ip Sar. Francisco, sou know. Mr. Argyle ant Mr. Maroret were the dearest friends’ | - “What wax Mr. Mazuret’s fall name” Mra Wyatt bit her lipa and rotier her eyes in the effort of recollections. buldiog her breath the while, with th Feanit that ber reply was a nort of et plosion. “L think St was John—yes, J Know 1, war It wax John.” “What became ot her mother? tn | quired Kaston. ' “Ob, she died there.” ‘ vIn Ban Francisco?” : “Yeu” nodded Mra. Wyatt. “I reall; | | lon't know much aboot her. Hes) , maiden, name was Marah — Nellie}, Marsh. That's at! 1 enn tell you. 1f¢ ealls don't know bow 1 remember| j hat An | anid: 1 oerer beard much] ¢ bout the mother except that ther ras nome xcandni about her.” ‘ Kaytop couceaind a keen ang eager y aterent ander un assumption of thr} J aiid cartoxity of an Kile yosmlp. 7 “Kean?” be repiied “In wha] g ray t” : “1 realls enn't was.” replied Mm fy Wyatt “Mr Arusie never could tl ¢ erenadet to talk stent her, dt wads tires on nent uf Mr Mazure de pat be decane tnzeriated tn Mary.” A SYNOPSIS * “Entirely ™ murmured Kayston, “Oh, sea” Mra Wyatt sasured pin “Entirely?” “How long have you Hred here? b anked plemsautiy. —* 5 “Ob. aking. uinny yeare! LT tnend te aayait must be twenty —ever Stine tH herband died Pur mn widese a5 san know what {tent ft a very. hi frivnd of the futuily, aint when Mr, At gyle adopted Mary be felt that be sie bave n woman in the hetse | __Bagton neato aurd event tein Tell ae, Mrs Want wtett were th felations tetaenn Me Argyle and tn son?" Se Went drew a deep bevuth ap AwONUItoN for auother spewn Was lots Cite stitee tie tnd tied ay welling kid deltent huts Hstener : “Oh Mr. Kasten,” ete snd panting iy, “that's something 1 dent lhe tu talk pbont, It wae the only thing we ml to wake ux aphapps. Do son Mknow what I mean? truce apd bis |tather uvcer ected to agree about panything = Why. the tant time they Quarreledt’ he cut hit off nnd left erer¥- thing te Marr We dido't apy of us Rnow it unttl yenterduy. it'a tou bad to Jenré Kruce withent anything fhe's an artist. sou knew, and of course Artinta can't mnke mach with tbele Act I nena to mus If ther don't pare tones they necer get AnEwbere un- lone they're fnowus uF something, aud that devant happen cery often. Du! you know what 1 mean Kaston nodded «ympntbetienty, and Mra Wyatt, fortiqed be another breath that would carre her meveral Dundred words proceeded with het story: “Tint nlebt. Mars telia me. there had been reconetiiation, It's too had {t came too tate to have bin Ox over, Rin will Mr. Hutter anys be tallted ot] ft that vers duy. Mr. Hortes's bis! lawyer—I mien to any be'a deen st tending to bin affaten lately. 4 don't know ansthing about them He'll be| bere hituvelf 1 telephoned him and told him that Bruce bad put the ga in your bunds aud that you were bere. : = ae ‘=> Se + ka ea ‘5% ile E aa : a . blk 3 Pa aa 7 ‘ , Py i te ie 3 . Le SRE . “They might as well accuse me of mur ne der ae Mary.” You Nnow, things were getting tertt ble. Why, the newapapers—tDey don't eee to care at all what they aay. Do you know what {,meao? Mtary’s prostrated. Why. they. aight as weil accuse me'of tuurder ax Mary.” | Kayton noddet but pie manner dnd changed. Huring pumped ber dey, ov had no gore thine to wadte on a gat rulous woman. * 7 “14 Mike to sce Mise Masoret.” be eaid politely, but witb # certain ab- ruptnoss that amounted tv a command. It bad’ the dexired effect’ on Mrs. ‘Wyatt, who was st the moment med- Hating Gew Aights of oratury: 2 “Ok, well, 1, dunt know,” abe stam miered. “I mean to say—If you want to—1 suppose you must” I'll go right to ber now.” And abe swept out of the rom, der respect for Mr. Kayton vawty diminianet, _ 7 or wus ean Se See ‘When you're done there.” “Tea. povernen”: replied Mavete Without leokiag ep from bis work. gement tater Plaley returned with th Bugiieh fovtman Topp ta tow. Th Iatter looked even more distressed the Andy when be was dragged into th room of death. Andy was wounded 1 his superstitives—Tupp Io bie sepalbi ftlea.” He bad ever beard of murder fa well cegniated; bousebolds. Ther wap Do precedent for {t. Be stood at attention two paces int the, room while Finley Indicated hla with the str of a tosenm curator abuw ing off an ordinnrs xpecimen. — “S “Thin In Topp, wir” be anid to Kay ton, The detectire clinced at the fout map and the foutinn stored nt ti detective. “1 xuppese thle man’ had oo expert ence when be enue ty work here.” re taarked Kavton, uddeesning the butler “On the contrary, sir." retnrved In: oy. “be came wid rifrinces frou moive of the best fumities.” “Whe did they ail dincharse binT” demanded Kayton. Topp began te Quake vixtbly, but bia dignity was yut raged. . | *E doubt, str"— began Finley, when Topp by a mighty effort prupelted bi self forward apd interrupted. “If you balluded to me, sir.” be aald, addrvexing Kaston, “l kio ay for tiny self that Ivo a record tp servi thot any man might be proud of.” “How did you come to bY mized up Jo this murder?" demanded the detec Ure, his dark eyebrows coming togeth- er and his eyes darting baleful glances. at the netrant. Topp gnaped and grew whiter than hin xpeckleas collar. ‘ “g'elp me I'd no ‘an tn it! be cried excitedly. . i Kaston made nn inarticulate sound, Indicative of extreme unbellef. ‘That reanains to be seen,” be declar- ed grimly, while Finley ntared won- deringly from one to the Scher. “What were you doing that night?” “Me, airy? demanded Topp, with a sart. “uw a aan of early hours and quiet ‘abite, I'd read wo evenin’ paiper an’ wan {n mie’ bed by ‘alt paut 10." .. “Did you hear anything that night?” There wan nlnfet a mennco in Ray- ton'x tone, “1 go to bed to aleep,” returned the servant doggedly. “Ita not me platew to tee watehin’ nud latenin’.” Kaytou xbtugged hin whoulders as if to conclude the inquiry. “You're one of theao very heavy eleepers, E muppese.” “Ne. ale” returged Topps tm a rey Tight mlecper, nit:. Sod“kin watko me with a whinper.” “How dit it happen that you slept rough ma murder, then?” demanded Kaston quickly. “L didn't say 1 slept through a mur. fer,” protented the footmian, “You say you didn't bear anythtog. What did you do?” “Lad an unewsy night.” replied Topp eluctantly, with manifest uncasiness, ‘And at 3 In the mornin’ I gut hup and ixned me weludew." = “Dud you poticy éusthing vnunual Jetianded Kayton, The footmun healtated. “IT can't ay it Way UnueuAl,” ho wad uncer. ututy. “Noy? commented the detective, with neuneeaied fntvrent. “What wan i?" Topp drew timeelf up, remembering bat before all sise he wan a wervant, “Ith uot me platee”— he bern. oWhnt wax ity" snapped Kaston, ith un energy that made old Finley ump. “What's the matter with ye, man?” | einandted that worthy. “Out with 1tr | Topp mointened bin Ups. “I waw a ght.” he anid in a low rolce, “Where” Tho word ctacked Ike «| tstol shot. : Topp gulped and nally burat ont} | 2 dexperation. 1 “Well, sir.” be cried, gazing agcue- asiy ax Finley, “aloce you will ‘ave tt | § 4t was in th’ room below.” “What room 1a that?’ demanded | , ‘aston, turning also to the butler. | | “Why—why, sir,” stammered the old | , a0, aghast, “that’s Misa Mary’s room ot" — But Kaston listened to hear no more. | | “What did you do?" be auked Topp. | ¢ “I went back to me bed an’ I wae} jere when they wakened me.” a Kayton thought for a moment In st, nee, iis eyes on the floor. At inst | » raised them and nodded to the foot- an in sign of diaminual. ’ “Well, that's all for the present} ¢ opp withdrew hurriedly, wiping the} g repiration off hix forehead, and Kay-| 4 n asked Finley to got the mald, Kit-} . The old butler alowly moved over| 5 the bell and rang ft and then awift-| faced nbout. : “I might nay, air,” he anid, with af ixtore of deference and defiance, “If ¢ ink 1 would be nothin’ unusual for} ¢ isa Mary to have a ight n her rpoin. "re wanted by th’ ditective, girl,” be} «, Ged ne the maid entered.. She was} |- : eae Oe FPS Aha blo Bae ky peek ee Byte in es eo hae . Tea Ag ot. Eid Sg AP “BShe—she wouldn't let me in.” Kitty nextated «moment. “A quar ter pant 1." ebe roplied wore oruls. “You gut up to look at the clock, al your he demanded. - “Ob, ny, wir! exclaimed the girl, be alarm returning, “I sot up becaun Td-1'd, teft «window open down stairs.” “TAd Sou ce down to clone It? “Yon. replied the gir) falntly. | “Did son pass Mine Mazuret's FoomT “Fees “Wan there u light under the door? “Yeu” till more faintly, “Did you apeak to her? A prune, “Yes. [er—her maid bad gone away for the nikht, and | thought Perhapx T cout do something fur her.” “Wan abe 1" JShe—ahe lust a headache.” “She anid es" 7 Yea. alr. She aati ahe bad a heud: ache und contdn't sleep.” “Did you do anything for ber? “No, air." Kaston fltet bis gaze set more keen: ly on the girte fice and waited until ber eye met bin mquarely. “IMdn't you go into her room?” be asked! slowly. “No, elt.” Kitty besitated again, and be watted “Khe—she wouldn't let me in."* “Why not@he deminded Inetanty.s 28he said she'd be all right.” “Eid you come down to this floor? No, wir, Twent richt back to bed.” “Did you -mever anti.” CHAPTER V. To Find Out the Truth, AYTON broke off with a nod ax Mry. Heauregard, the cook, waddle Inte the room, She ac a eok a aT a at Oe wana reunl faced old pegtes with woolly gry nit, trong tuet! StH white, and a month of amazto, Dreadth, depth and construction, i build ahe followed the Iinw of a sane and badis constructed cylinder. 1 motion, rhe reeembled we renerabl Diack duck, She wore a neat blue cal fco drew and white apron, and abou her head wax the inevitable kerchte of the negro eerring woman. Bu Mire. Renuregard’s was a snowy white She rolled ber exer ponderounl; atont ¢he room and Qhally brough them to reat on the great detective who wan surveying ber critically. “Am yo" de gan'l'mam. wante to Fe met" she inquired heavits, her arn» akimbo and one broad foot advanced giving her a singularly trucolent alr Kitty hastily vantebed, and Kayton smiled upon the’old negress. “Are yon Mra, Beauregard?” he tn: quired. . : : “Yes. uh, AR am," ahe replied, toice and expression being by no meana en: Jcoumging, An" Ah's heah to any ‘Al don’ wanna see’ yo'. Ab’n neon wil ©” yon pileecemen. Ah obanhre etry — ebry time anythin’ bad occubs in this heah wuld yo" allus tries to put tt on to cnitud folke” “Flow long have you lived here, Mrx Beauregard?” tnqutred Kaston cour teousls, Ignoring thy armignment, of the pulice. ; “H'mf" aniffed tlie cook contemptu: ously. “How long hus Ab ibed bent” Lawd o° Inbe, Ab allun Ubed ean! Ab Uded heats eber slice Mis¢ Mary worn WP child. What bnxinean ts 41 0° go's trew long, Ah Mbed heah Aud abe glaret upon Kaston.’ 2 MWell." retarted Kaston, “If you're ved here so louz you inst have been rently attached to Mr. Argyle." ‘The old darky ‘wwotted with wrath “Don'-so' try to wish no scandal on me.” xhe warned bin, “Ab*wah'n no mo' ‘tacbed to Mr. Argyle dan Mr. Argyle war ‘tached to me.” Dere wah'n nobedy eine tn dle heah town could couk for him." * “And I suppose you ware juat as mach attached to Miss Mazuret?” “Doan yo" figger yo’ can make me ay nuffin’ ‘gainat Minw Mary!” storm- Mra. Beauregard, abaking her fiat at a eme ronn* heah tryin’ to work ap Mo’ Hex ‘gaingt Ant chile fo' de news- papers! Ah know’ nuff to koow she Aidh't dong numMin’.” g Kaston fit bis lip. “Young Mr. Ar gyle,” he anid gravels, “han brought me here to find out the froth. If sou know anyihing that will help to clear, Minn Mazuret you had Letter tell it." ‘The olf termaant wig {mprosaed bs oth wonle aad manner and regarded, nim -dogbttally for a moment. Thet he wheeint Benvils upon the butler. - “In dis hewn aan tyin' to meT* she mange fercels. tac. Bae ea ae at gar os. EC ie - ft % ~ 2X. eer” a toate me rac ae is? hs ae Pe Rar Fee ea tc SA aeRO Co ae Tk ‘ayer iy eee te Ree et een agce tone, ieee alah Catan aes “ee ne ‘Gee te os Ma i , he wrath wat: Mayten nodded. “Welt, what do you mewr “ah knew,” dectared the cook detant: ly, “Dies Mary bada't nulfin’ to 60 wi’ Gat "masinntion, ‘cause she was on Ge wppeh fod all de time” “How de’ you know that?” asked “"Qause Al done seo her Gere.” “Where were your’ s “Ah was crawila’ up dem klidben q#taibe, an’ deb was a light up deb, an" Ab look up an’ Ab see ber.” “What brought you upstatrs?* Are. Beauregard gathered up buge handfuls of her apron. and rolled ber eyes, swallowing yistbly beforo she replied: “Well, sub, Ab was waked up by 2 pow'ful row in de widdle ob de night. ‘Peabed like somebody must ha’ fell down de statha. Ab was acabed cobpee, cold. Ao’ den Ab walt an’ Iinsen an‘ liswen, an’ Ah don't heab nuffin’ mo’. Den Ab reckons Ah better ‘resticate dat commotion, An‘,” her eyes rolled, “Ab done it.” a 8 : “Did you speak to Mins MazuretT* interposed Kayton. “No, sub." retarned the olf woman, with a “violent bake of ber woolly’ bead. “Ah wasn't speakin’; Ab was jes’ i a: an, ‘ See h cad cd so F Pr z. 3 Kayton, ra lookin’. Den Ab cnl‘inte Ab mus dream- ed some ob dat note, a I goes back to bed an’ didn't beah npn mo till marnin’. An'*—sie took a long dreath—“It yo'lt ecuxe me, mistab, AD’ © right back to minh bakin’. Yo" all ‘pears to fo'xet dat folks gotta eat.” “AN right, geueral.” nodded Kayton. with va valle, thinging of-oneof- tho best genorale in thy Confederate army bo bure the name of the old negress: “go back to your commissartat.” ‘Mira. Benuregard bud atarted to wad- dle out, but she wheeled about in war- Mke fashion. “What's dat?" nbe demanded. “What's dat so" call me?" Kayton Inughed and waved bis band to ber. “AN right, Mra, Beauregard. If 1 want you again I'l'nend for you." Blowly withdrnwing her gnzo from his mirthful face, an If daring him ta say anything more, the cook departed, stumbling half aloud: “Yo don’ see no mo oh din aiseab. Come ‘roun’ heat snkin’ me all dem fool quextions, Ah get ao—so, mingled Ab dou’ know whet Ab’aat. Tope to-de: Lawd yo’ all clewt out of dix house an” leave hin heal fnmtly tn pence.” , SVhev Mev, Neauregard’s menacing growl bad dit away Iu the depths of the hall outvide Kuyton's expression instantly chongel, and be looked as if be bad never xtulled In bis Hfe. “L want to nec’ Mine Mazuret”” hig sad to Fintey, ; "Situe Marg, siri returned the. bot Jer. Tiibiy disturtied. “Ia It neces sary? Contd ve not let her be? Be waa almost pleading. “No.7 replied Knston curtly, “Will you plense co wo her at once and: tell her 1 want to see hort” . ~The old man xighed and shook bis head. “‘I will, wor,” he said in funereal tones, and be slowly departed. A eec- ona Inter Kayton was making a awift but minute Inventory of the contents of the big antlyne desk between the wladows. Manning Jooked up as bis chief xuppressel_ a low exctamntion. He wan xtunding at the other window with o Laudful of ensclopes, from one of which he awiftiy abstracted some thing. . 7 “What hnee yon got there, gorer nor?" inquired Manning, Kaston held op a blank entelope, “One of these hnd a now $100 Dill in tt." ‘ “In tho denk?" querted bin assistant Incredulounly. “Looks ns if It bad been pretty well xrarched too." _ Kayton shrogged bie shoulders and his ip coried! alightly. : s'Tea, Jor." he sald gently, “by the police.” Manning grinned as be bent over the little hand satchel and carefully packed away bis treasures. ~ ““Hle must have deen going to maf it to somebody,” he noggested at last | Kayton, was examining the find under] 1 pocket magnifyiox glass. That's ponaible.” be: muttered. 1 “I wonder what stopped hit,” re-| marked the other thoughtfully. Kay-| jon wan bolding the other enrelopes| , ap to the Iight, one after another, In| , apid succennion. He grinned, and with | . perfect imitation of Finley brogue} , replied: ° 1 “If yo knew that an’ had yee supper] pe could Ko to bed.” ” Manning langhed avd, righting the} , mvte, pushed It back to the center of} | fhe room and’ replaced cover aed} | yooti, Re 1 “Ive got ell these, governor.” be need, ¢ ' ’ start now with the servaner: seit. Jee, Get both | ' Boe le eee Ee Stn re fee : a Shy io s ain: ent Oe “Tm goer we her ew, ctr”. | “Well, dent Geley ony Wag.” o fered Kayton. with a tech of omen nese, “Fell Mr. Bertay to come is Joa.” be went ovrapidiy as Fiatay-teft “get-out your pad. I went to send ¢ telegram to the Ran Francie offtes Put this Gown tn cipher.” Jeo stood with pencil poleed “as his chief . die titted: - “‘Look up Mra John Mawuret matden, name, Nellie Marsh. Died in "Frinco about twenty years ago,’ Get that off, Joe?” a, “The girl's mother?” ventured the as sistant "Yee," nodded: Kaytou. “I want to know ‘about, that scanda}, ‘This thing ban happencd through the girl some way or another.” s Hastening out. Meaning ‘passed Mr. Horley in the doorway. The lawyer entered eagerly, stripping of his gloves and held out a band to the fa- mous detective with a cordial amaile, “Good morning, Mr, Kayton,"’ be said pleasantly. “I'm Mr. Hurley—Mr. Argyle's lawyer.” . “Yee.” said Kayton quietly, as. be sbook hands. -“I'mn glad to meet you." - “I'm glad you've come in on the case.” returned the lawyer, in a sit: cere manner that was in Strelf a,com- pment. “I don't doubt you'll clear {t alt up for un” “Well, L hope so, Mr. Hurley.” said Kayton movestly. This interchange of compliments was the frst trial of foils In which each wan was estimat- Ing the other, and each felt in the other an antagonist, though they were on the same nidé. Mr. Hurley fond a chstr and set- led binuself comfortably for a chat. Kayton mored about the room like a restivas bird dog as be tacked, but oc asionally confronting the lawyer and ixing him with a keen gaze. “I auppone.” sald the latter, “It will ake sowe time. There are so many wayn tho thing might possibly have pccurred.”” “As, for tnatance?’ suggested Kay- on instantly. : é Mr. Horley wan a trifle taken aback t thin xudden challenge, but he re- Hed promptly enough: “Well, let nn suppose that this crim- pal obtained entry either by the con- tvance of one of the servants or, pos- idly, one of them lost a key or to ome Way that the investications have ot set dinclmed, He in dincovered bY {r. Argyle. who threatens bim with a evolrer and in tho struggie that en- ges the wunler resnitn.” Kaston ninilen almost tmperceptibly. And how des sonr theory account oF the fact that throughoot this strug: le—a struggle, you'll notice, in which svéral blown wero exchanged, judg- ig by the marka on the face and best—how Wo son account for the fact at Mr, Argrle made no qutery?” “Tila outcsien may not have been card,” replied the tawyer readily. “Very true” nodded Kaston, “Of course.” continued Mr. Hurley.) he argument agninat thebubalar y In that nothing was stolen, although’ e burglar may bare been frightened way.” = “You're convinced, then, that It was burglar? anked Kaston. . “Well, nh—no,” confessed the lawyer ith nome bealtation. .‘T was merely nvansing that kien, ‘There ncems to y a Inck of motive otherwise. or, ther a Jarge discrepancy between the ture of the cnme and the character} | the only person who might. hare| « a motive.” 2 ' “Mins Maxuret?” sat Kayton in a utter of fact tane. * “Ob, it couldn't be Mise Maruret!"} < otested the lawyer instantly. “It's t credible that a xirl ifke bee could involved tn a thing of this eort. Be- jee, how wna she to know that if be x1 at that particular rooment sbe ld be the.nole heir under the will?” ‘Ob, the will was secret?’ inquired .yton, . Mr. Hortey heattated. “Well, now.| * . Kayton, I'll tell yoo about that.”| © weald slowly. “My cleat had an} > a that 1s not uncommon among mitt 9 naires. “He. bad an almost morbid) b prehension of his heirs waiting to! a ertt bis estate—a somewhat super Hous fear of the concentrated ex-| % stations of legatees. In fact, he! t n't want aby one to know who was, © a + “Oh, 1 couldn't be Mics Maruret.” to denefit by bis death Im the last few days of bis life, when he coates Plated reinstating bis. son, he wes par tiealarly {sistent on egcrecy. ‘The fhing was an obevesion, you under stand. . Kayton nodded. “Did, knew that be had been “E doubt {t" . “pat # yon allow, a way client's’ bare com that ft was a. to hte. sett to: kave. bie soa’ bbe wae Cisisberited. When, that Mr. Argyle waa a mew will at the time of a fer @ moment <tr tone @ maspicion mixht Aaatant Mine Mazoret.;.. . Awad. ie bead. “‘when you ‘vouncrue: are, Se Re 9 oe “Were you WEP the} war ja Wea ; eaetee ted. aie & 6 - ne ee St <7 ee i eisacr sn UR ity eats ts aS ) . bed tle, pe te aa | Sseqerepeton. “Broce Argyle burst —— , the ream with A bewepaper climghed im bie hand. Ele was plainly holding ‘bimeeif as be greeted the de tective courseousiy and apologized for Delng Inte. ‘ken he turned on the aseryer in a storm of wrath: “Look bere, Uurlesr’ he cried. “What do you go aud give out all that stuff to the uewspapera for—about fa- ther's going to change “his will and erart them up with all tis rot about Bary? Why. all these mocuing pa- pers are full of the meatext of xtnba. Lodi at this!” And he proceeded to rend A fow of the headlines that all plainly intimated the posslble connec: tou of Mr. Argyle's adopted daughter with the eid nrllUovaire’s murder. “That's unspeakable!" he * stormed. cIt'Mary pees that"— | “Now,” broke in Mr. Hurleg, nooth- fngly, “why pay any attention to that nort of thing?” : But Hruce wan not to be soothed. He wax white with anger. = “It wan tnd enovgh when thes fn- sinunted thine nome of father's atock market victiows came and ‘dled bin.” he went on, “or maybo some, fellow wanted to titrry Mary for bet money qnd had to get him out of the way: Dnt. Hurley, you've given them Jost what thes wanted to Dulld on!” “I'm very. sorry.” natd tho lawrer gently, but not apologetically, “but I didn't think we tnd anything to coa- ceal. 1 take st that If we are xping to get at the truth of this matter we nec? to be open and: bouest. Ixn't that #0, Mr. Karton?* “Why, of courxe, Mr. Hurles." agreed Kaxton readily, and before Bruce. pond open up A nese attack he mkith fully’ aiifted ttie ground of the conver: anton. “You understand. Mr. Argyle" be wid with dicnity. “that you are now he head of the family here. ard the exponaltitiity for the xuccene or fall: ire of thia Invextizntion will reat large y with you, I'll have to ask for your coperntion in everything, and Uli ex: ect that you'll consult with we be: @ J :. me” fore you make any move or exprena any oplilon or du anything thit bas # bearing on thin cnne.” “Certainly.” returned young Argyle. again completely the well bred. self contuined young man. “I understand that, Mr, Kayton.” . ' [ro as conrimume} Hew to Refinish Old Surfaccs. The fret thing to do in rednishing 014 W008 sarfaces is to remove all var. nish and palnt. Thies may be done ‘easily by the use of 2 good varnish re- mover. The varnigh remover may be bought at any pajnt store, says the Woman's World. It ts appited with a Deush and’ allowed to stand for a few minutes; then varnish and palnt are easily removed. If there are any burnt or stained places it may be neceseary to ecrape the surface with a piece of glass, Then the surface te thoroughly smoothed with sandpaper and is ready for.a new paint or varnish. If ft 1s de- sirable'to keep the color and grain of the wood as they are a clear varnish may Le uned which contains the desir oh anda . SAID HALIN. PASHA. New Grand Vizier of Turkey: Resumes Baikan War. Bi . a & OB a: ches, sae ot ll MT a 2 co ig : ee a Ra og c a BS fe ee oe? : fhe pied a GRIEVING HEIRESS TAKES HER LIFE Miss Margatol Hiner Orioks Polson in Haw York Hotel, | HER HOME IN POTTSTOWN he Had Been a Victim of Melan- - enolla Since the Death ef Her - tether Last Spring. Margaret Hituer, twenty-seven years old, whose home until recebtly was at 60 North Franklin avenue, Pottatown, ‘Pa., committed suicide ia her room at a hotel for women Im Kast Seventy-minth street. New York. She had been a victim of metascBolla since the death of her mother inet spring. ‘Miss Hitner, her brother, George W. ‘Hitaer, and a sister leased 2 house in Haatinge-on-thelludeon «few weeks ago. . It war the nope of the brother and sister that the change of scese would beneBt dites Margaret and that Tesult wae spparentiy obtained. But, the young wSoman thought she would feel better mentally and’ physically were she engaged In vome active work. She determined to become ap East Side sottement worker, and with, that object in view came to New York from Hastings and registered at.the Martha Washington botel. Her brother and an’ unmarried sister were ‘to have met her.. When she di¢ not appear he tele phoned the bote! and Milas Hitner's ‘body was found in her room. + The young woman had ended her Aife while {n bed” She was dressed [0 ‘a pightrobe Whon found by Mrs. Cath- ering Keegan, tho housekeeper. Man- ager Brown Immediately sent for Dr. Emler Williams, the bouse pbysician. ‘There were evidences that Miss Hit- ner bad died from polsouing, accord: ing to Dr. Williams, although no bottle containing the polson was found in the room. The sister was no overcome when abe learned of Margnret’s suicide that abe fainted. The brother, who holds a responsible position in Pottstown, Pa, where the family is well known and respected, at once took charge of the body. . : Mice Tittner, arrived atv ith Hotel alone on Sunday and was assigned to room 732. Acrording to the manage ment, ahe had never stopped there be- fore. The young woman was well Greased and had plenty of money. It won also learned that the dead girl] was heiress to a considerable part of her father's estate. = Blind Fifty Years, Bees Family at Last One of the humblest homes In Hills dale, Mich, wan made the happleat in the whole forty-eight staten when Mra Mary J. Welsh who bad been bilnd for Afty years, recovered her sight, When she was a girl of sixtecn her eyes’ failed unt!l she became entirely bitod. In that condition abe married and became the mother of elght chil: dren, whom she never saw-untlt Sat: urday. To make her burden doubly bard, her huspand became If, and despite her handicap sho waa forced to take fn washing to suupart the family. She struggled on until her children were able to earn some money for them- seltes.. Then things became a bit antler for hor, but her sightloas oyea still aches for a sight of tho children of whom sho.wax so proud. : ‘The years passed and the children grew to’ womanhood and manhood. ‘The sons brought the mother to Chi- cago, where she was taken to @ hos. -pital for treatment. The surgeons there examined ber and found that she was suffering from ‘a double Cataract, which had shut the aight from both ber eyes. She was discharged from the hospital, and two sons and a daughter greeted her. She was taken home to Hilladale, where the entire family welcomed ber. Her sight {s not strong’ yet, but she waa asanred St would be better after a time. Olt Trust Pays"$500,000 Penalty. The Texas $102.000,000. of! penalty suit was unexpectedly sottied when ‘the Standard Of Company of New Jersey, one of the defendants, paid $600,000 tn poualties in. the Eighth district court in Greenville, Tex. ‘The penalty was pald under an agresd settlement. Ry {ts terms Jobo D. Aschbold and H.C. Folger, Jr.. of New York, standard Oil men who are majority stockholders {pn the Magnolla Petroleum company, .of Corsicana. Tex., another defeniiant .agres that " thelr.stock {s to be held by « (rastes to be selected by Attorney General B. FF. Looney. . ; It fe farther agreed that the Mag. melita and the Corsicana Petroteum company, the other Texas oll concern ‘which {s a defendant shalt be operated wholly Independent of Standard O1) Aaterests -donne Reteaved in Lake Tragedy. ‘Phe Inaliif(y of the commonwealth te make ort a case sirong enough to hold the defenden: for the grad Jery. eeneed Jude Fuller-ia Wither Barre, Pa, to discharse from caatody Ber. bert Jonny, who bas desu contned fe Wh tbe murder of Ale Origa Bn ga ne ee ey aR cost in oe. Ps a Epes tics aos sce ier Rabe ake yr aaa * $ nip We Sperone neni yt Repwinenrmeeee te Se ee ket - = <n = ee ee on _ = _ Wase'-besy wea found tm Maryey's em'the morning of July 7. ‘al Sipitheagh the district ‘attorney. adetectives followed every clve and every witness tbat knew..any. about the case, including the ‘members who composed ‘the party at ithe Idke on the evening of July 4, n0 new evidence wax presented at the Bearing and the accused received bis Uberty on mozion of bis attorney, F. A. McGuigan, who held. that in the first fastance a murder bad not been proven, and in tho secqnd tustancy that dofendant had not been connect: ed a8 principal or acconiplice In ker death. ° Two of the physicians who ansiited at the second autopsy declared that death was due to drowning, and that they found novaing that would indicate foul play. Bo the case agatns: Johnn foil, leav- ‘ng the causes which led Alice Cris veil Into the Iake; waethor by aulctie, design Gr by forey, ac inuch a mystery aa ever. Whether the myatery will ever ve cleated ia uncertain, although the Satrict attorney matd tho Investigation would be continues If promising clues were found, - | Foc Roc«evelt in 1918. Michigan, the state that made It pos. sible for the country to know just Bow seldom Colonet Kousevelt tovk a mint Julep, bas now been churen wu the ground from which the colonel’s can: didacy for president on the Republican Ucket fo 1916 ts formcasted. In addreasing the stae bar ans ciation at Lanwing United -States Sen- ator McCumber, of Nort’ Dakota, de clared: “{ belleve that Colonel Roosevelt's frtends are planning to enter bis dame tm the primaries in the vartous states and be will become an active candi- date for the nomtnation for presfdent om the Republican ticket.” eet Stricken Blind by Shock. + W. Terkath, twenty-three yoars old, an electrician at Baldwin's Locomotire works, In Philadephia, lost the sight of both eyes through an accident 10 the Hamilton street shop. * He wan repairing a motor and bo accidentally touched a live wire with @ ateo! tool he held In bis band. Ho wan bending over the motor at tho time, and a showor of sparks and fre flew from the motor tw hls face. Ho wax stlnned aod after he was revived by other workmen he was un- able to sec. He wan taken (0 tbe Med- fco-Chirurgical hospital. The hysicians say bis sight hax been destroyed. | Girt Fined $25 For Bilt Skirt. The S. R. O. igo was hung out on Judge Crutchfield’s court room In Ricb. mond, ¥., on Wednesday, when Sins Flossy Brown appeared to tell all about how #he scandallzed Mayor Ainalle and other clilzens by wearing a allt akirt right out In public - Misa Brown's defense wax that the allt was a dresen:aker’n error—that It had been only basted Instead of Ke curely sewed, and that ft came un- fastened in walking. She paid $26 fine after Mayor Ainy'ie had testified that it revealad too much stocking. Wreck Victim Cuts His Throat. Pinned peneath an overturned to. comotive at Decatur, Als, Husto.s Fleming, an cnxineman, put an ond to bix tortures by cutting bls own throat when the spectators of bis plight refused his requost to kil! him, Fleming, with Floyd Hamlin, an air fnupector, was testing a how locomo- Uve in the Louisville & Nashville yards when {t was hurled from the tracks by a awitch engine and over turned. Hamlin did. Wieed te teehee Chine Wenkse: After an hour's desperate atruggle to tear a fourfoot viper from her halr, Mrs, Rachel Gilmore, aged forty- five years, of near Lims, O., was found unconscious on the floor of her farm homo by her husband. * She wax atill clutching the writhing snnke. The viper, which had lain coll- ed up on # lodge above a collar door: way, struck Mra Gilmore ae xhe de aconded to tho cellar and lodged (2 ber hair, 5 Four Oéad tn Mine Caveln, Four men were inscantly killod and two othera probatly fatally injured when, a mine drainage shaft caved in at Ernest, five milex from Indiana, Pa, Tho men were sinking a new nbatt, which was to Be used to drain water from the mines, The cavein took place while the men were at the bot- tom of the shaft, It required three hours to dig the bodies out. Rabu Hades Merce te Gu. Strangled to death in her crip, where she bad been placed to sleep but a few minutes .before, the ten-months-old @aughter of John Hallman, of Phoc- nfiville, Pa.; wan found by her father, The child bad: literally hanged her- self: . GENERAL MARKETS PHILADELPHIA — FLOUR weak: winter, clear, $3,7593.90; city mills, fancy, 95.255 5.90. “RYE FLOUR aqutet, at $3403.65 per barrel. —~ WHEAT firm: No.2 red, new, 90 ene. on CORN firm; No. 2 yellow, 714 G72c. OATS quiet: No. 2 white, 46@ HESS lower grades, 41. ULTRY: Live ignaye Dena, 18 Rise. ald roos‘ers, 12¢ 13c, Dressed We choice. fowls, "19e.; old roosters, oraR RR quiet: famey creamery, edbs steady: erlectes, 26 @ 28e.: nearby. fic: wortern, 21c. POTATOES tera. st Gbc@41.80 per barrel, E Live Steck Markets _FITTEBUKGH (Union S:ock Yards) TRUE wornily: cholee, $8.1069; P slow: rime wrethers, $5.25 3; sculls ‘and co:nmons, $273: = WSOG7: | veal calves, $110 308 stronz; p-lne heavics, $1.65 PROS Ere, pile, heavien, $2.85, Yor 7B APN pita, $10,059 10.107 a. Gutemibo @ Tho Fiala. - A Yeung Cynia eee SE : —Ziicse EF eos | rag...) eae WAY 4 (i 6 fl NM XY ar son \ \\ om—Thoy' nay that every woman ts Denutiful In ome one’ exes. Do yo dellere itt Jack—Certalnis—It you Include ber own,—Pbiladelphia Prena, ‘The Completed Work. it Tt | (3 | ae oe eg aan BS Ii ieee “Love Yor your daughter bas driven me half crazy.” “It Bax, eh? Well, who completed the Job?’—New York American. i‘ Legian. ~ +; i 1 ee i wo ra | oa aa t / Ang | 1 —# s ey | i > Tencher — Who'll tel! me what fs meubt by the toating population? Kid—People who live in houseboats. | —Kansns City Star. Feolish. ' 7 7 OS cs ys LESS Tt | 3 bor] fs" HH oleh ax 1 ES oy GFL Cy ey ¢@ 7 Loto LY] Set Poe jmoore) i CAVA T ) Pg FOES I & at. J “Dad, aren't washerwomen foollsh “Are they?) Why?" “Why, becatse they xet tabs to catch soft water when it foins hurd.”—Com- fe Cuts. Breaking tia Preciion: C4 Ris é Ls ae i APN Se css sas eee ee Oe ee Ses rege oe ‘A Compromise. ~ aii ZF oe ke oe me eee Private Secretary — 1 only want evough salary xo I can marts:and be comfortable. . B. B. Prenidont—What you ask te fmp- possible, but I'll give you enough money to marry on.—Chicago News. ‘Me nad molen 4 lock of her gotéen hair, ‘And, aione tn his room, he Biesed ‘Bet be had neught on the maiden there, Tor, alone in her room, ohe maawed it. ‘That boud nas been clipping my apitenr tie paid, Then guialed and poten, “Te can, ‘That took that be fancied ence grew on my bead 4 Came off of the bean oe See we a L ethieage News.” Geme In Verse . THE chen,” HE woman we walk with down the years, . Bharing her shadows and smiles ‘and teare: ‘The‘woman we walk with nand ‘and hand Over the rosil of the rurmed land, The quiet places, the mormy holzhte— Do we walk wilh ber, too, in her lonely aixhia? ° The woman we walk-Wilbcthink of her When you feel the rollicking tmnpulso afr, Bho has her right in our Iife each hour: She has her.abare and her part and dower In all that wo do and hope ad plan. Now, fan't (¢ true, ales, man for man? Tne woman we walk with and who sharon Our early atruxgtes and (inia and cares, Can we forset her and leave her beliad Aza voparate being, of sepueate mind. Of separate feating and heart and syui— The woman we wal< with, walk with whole? : : i The Woman we walk with sown the days. Ie outs to cherish and love always ‘ And oura to take Into parincrship Not oly in service of hand and lip, But service of soul and hope and droam. Do we fot her come into obr iufty gleam? The woman ye walk with#own the years flan borne ous-berden andawept our ieare It la only right that her life should be A part of the life that we Sirive to ace, Filed and owing, for eur own brave part, ! With light and sweetness and love and deart. . . (-Balumore Bun. - ESTRANGED. YVUEN daytignt diss and night comes down apace And little winds awake with tender sigha TH see the Aretight playing on your face, When daylight dis, MMT deere it waten you in my loving eyes, Intent, imploring, just that nok of grace Yer which my longing, vainly stified, crlen ‘When daylight dics QM let me potd your hand @ inttie ‘space! Perhaps my love will teach you In this wise cd bring your waywant. beart to my embrace When daylight diew . =Belocted. SONG. HORE. the arent exptorer; Love, whom pone can bind: Youth, that looke before her, Age. that looks behind: Joy, with Drow Ike aummar's; ‘Care, with wintry pate, Masquern aro and mummers At life'a gate. POWER witn narrow forehead: Wealth, with haggard palm; ‘Whedom old, whove haar heas ‘Vaunta a barren calm. Haughty overcomera In thelr pomp and atate, Masquer€ all and mummers ‘At death's gate, ‘William Watson, COURAGE. STE saggy to ne tm the toa Tide (White. yur brother putte en ours. ° “Tin say to We by the muuntale nde Ang watch the angio wong: otis cathe atch" entte the sun nines Sriane And to dance whiin the iaxptpe pays, But can you emilte when you, bear the airce Oe tauuh on the darkest days? The way itis binds sing sweet at morn ‘As they owing tidnt the dewy leaves, BUL the onl stuala forth inthe gloom of night een And screams ani moss throush the trees Bail we like the ow! moaa In the niet ‘Or sing like the birds at morn? Shalt we be fearful or emi and brave Tn eunahing and in evar? Lat us learn to be sturdy and strong itke the oar Through tempest and Ks! and anow And, iough we be crushed and broken and bent Bui always stronger Kro%, And, like the pine on: yor Jer hile, Though the storm bo will and fea, Let us upward strive with courage Fare ‘And strive the clouds to plerce, ‘ataud Le Johnson - doc tentaneeaee. a | YVUMEN 1 consider how my tight Is spent “Ere halt cay days tn thle dark worl and wide And that one talent which is death to ide, Lodged with me uscteas, though’ my soul more tent To serve therewith my Maker and pre: ent a My trun account. teat he, returning, chide, “Doth God exact day tater, amt dented T fondly wok. Dut Patients to prevent ‘That murmur, noon repsies. “God doth not need Either man's work or his own gifts, Who Dest Bear his mist yon, they serve bimn beat. His state Ie kdnety! thouannds at hla bidding apoed And post o'er innd and ocean without Test They'alno cerve m ho only stand and. walt” “Sotten. ROSEMARY. ITER as teare and emeat a9 love hoa are Thou sliver nerd, embalming ad the space ; ‘round thee Wtke sweet meinories in tho heart AAs tho dear thouxtt of one baloved face Breathes through my life, #0 thy mos fragrant breath ‘Bpreads perfume all about my garder waste, © aweet as love, © bitter sweet as drat Mow dagrer sharp thy soft leat Ie tanta!’ Dear memory of a face I shall not ee. Dear voice thot | ahail never hear again O'bitter parting, O teiowed paint O rosemary, © eray-ureen rosemary! sivostminster Onsatte: | A cat can lose ‘nine Ilvea, they way, ‘And yet IC tent in tt ‘With Mr. Prog. who any day Can croak nine times «minute, SCincinnall eguirer, First Urchin— Say, Tommy, would youse rather be x xebra or @ giraffe? Recond Urchin—A giraffe, er coarse, I¢@ be a cinch fer lodkin’ over de fence'at de ball,—Doaton ‘Transcript, molec. | ‘At tep he could read Greek But aow,hea twenty-five, and be Ia maxing ten pec week. ~ Gncineats Roeuieer: | Nell--fic hag the dadacity to say be was the light of: my life, ep turned. him down Fetie-I suppose he felt, qaite put ont abeat it.—Philedelphta Record. = COMBINATIONS. _ Combinations muy exist for a Rood puirpone. Juvt un they may exist for n Uad purpose; whet; ef among buxluer wen, among farmers, amos inborers, and, ax regamts call of them, our alm should be effectively to xuppresn cagitintionn that work evil ant nix to favor thone that do well, While neverthelose exerche - Ing over Mhew xueh thoroughgo- tug control ae te enable ux to be ure That UR In very fact do well “alike fo competitars, to wake workers nd te the gener: al pubic. Ha corporation or 8 combination makes for ctfl- cleney we favor It, provided the benetts are shured with rea: sonable equally among the em ployere ind enpltutisty, the workers sud the general pnblle, Af, however, the xo called tlt: cleney reprewnte ierely protte for the euployer obtulued by exploiting the workmen or mb treating hin clvate or «wludling the keneral publle. then one de Mee IS uot merely to Ktop. the practices, Wit to punish thone who take fit tn thety, It tx our aim fo tedp leettinate bustiens. We wish te see the business man prosper and nmke money, Dut Unless te does prower and tnake money be eau nelther per- Manently pay Kood wagon to bin employes nor permanently Fen- der goed service te the public— Colotiet Homevelt. FAMILIAR SAYINGS. vVurtety’s the xplee of life” and “Not much the worne for Went” were colned by Cowper, Edwant Young tells un “Death loves w ehintng tars" and “A fool at forty I 8 fool Indeet.”” “Of two evi 1 have chosen the texe” nnd “Phe end must Justify the ean" are from Matthew Urter, GEMS OF THOUGHT. ~ Beart ts the necotd blowing that we mortals ure capable of— a Diessing Mat tiepey cannot buy = feuke Watton, Only the ie tens of the Just 2 Stet weet asad Ghason tn the, dust : Father Shirley Ac the anetents Ray whely! Mave a care of tht matte chastien °s Aad look before yon lenp, For ax sau mow se ane Ike to reap. ~Sainuel Butler, Rinee knew tevtze ie but sorrow a are 5 Bt be not sate te know. Sir Willan Davenant, From ‘tenormnce our comfort flows —Irior, . 4 HOTEL DALE hits fas on Pa ‘ a ae : 3 : 3 ne — i - 3 vee a —_ —- cae = = ec ad eee j | ee ee : SON eR | : CAPE MAY, N. J.. This magnificent hotel, located in the heart of the mos eautiful seashore resort in the world; replete with every mod rn improvement, superlative Im construction, appointments ervice, and refined patronage. Orchestra dally. Garage 4th houses, tennis, etc., on premises. Spécial attention glv- n to ladies and children. Send for booklet. ‘ E. W. DALE, Owner This magnificent hotel, located in the heart of the most beautiful seashore resort in the world; replete with every mod- ern improvement, superlative im construction, appointments, service, and refined patronage. Orchestra daily. Garage, bath houses, tennls, etc., on premises. Spécial attention giv- en to ladies and children. Send for booklet. ‘ E. W. DALE, Owner D. J. PARRAR, Contracrar AND BuitDeR. - ALL KINDS OF CARPENTRY. - OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405, MECHANICS’ SAVINGS BANK BUILDING "Phone, Monroe—2637. RESIDENCE, 610 N, FIRST STREET—SHOP IN REAR "Phone, Monroe—2166. Special Attention Paid to the Taking of Contracts for Building of ‘Any Style of Architecture, Job Work a Specialty. BE neg Ae PR cet nrc centage pete aestuarii aa as tpn eco mee me "Phone, 577. ‘Richmond, V. A. D. PRICE, Funeral Dicector, Embatmer and Liveryman. AU Orders Promptly Filled at Short Notice ty telegraph er wphese. Halls rented for mettings and nice Matertatnments.| Pleaty of reom with all nécessary conventences. Large Pienlc Band Wages Ser Hire at reasonaiie rates sad sothing bat a Bugstes, pete. a constantly on tne a ——wup No. 212 East Leigh Street. , OEM ALL DAY AED XPUNE ime on Dewy AR Mighs, . “A life partnership. my boy." gossip ed the old chap brighty+"xo that's what you contemplate with Miu {ieb bird: “Tur are you suMctently well off to take auch n nerioun step?” +> “Oh, that's all right!” replled tho FOUL ubrlig, “We shall rub along. well enough, You ew, her pa will give ua a house and some garden, her uncle 14 Eolng fe part ap with 8 corpulent ebeck, and she owns # Hive money of hve own “And.” biqwited the oll gent. “mas LE tnquiee what sou conuibate te the partanehtpes* = Tie yetins man Bltahed, mpd” toe twlukle tn the etd tums ere grew atti Biore natives Well -er” ndinitied the bridegroom, “mers qaiweipally the ime" Bostun, Glut Thweinoon fs up dn splendor, And zerden xtane attend ber: ‘The beatens are cal and Ualghey, Troes vive’ a deepening ahadow, And slowly off the mendow . A tulet bs rising sliver white, Nizht's curtains uow are closing Kounst half a world, reposing: Ts cuits nad oly truat. AGL yom one vant, xtlll chamber? Where weary heurte remember Nemmre the sorrows of the ust + Matthiaa Claudivn, THE ECONOMY, 316 North Third Street. SETIN EY TAILORING. . CLEANING DYEING AND REPAIRING. CRITMAN M.- WHITE, Proprietor. . en STRAUS’ SPECIAL | Old Yacht Cle, We Have AM Grates of Geed Ls queers, Cigera am4 febnews, Call and See Us. ISAAC STRAUS & CO.. | 422 E. Broad St., ! Richmond, Virginia j ‘Am Cheap Previsien. NIGHT’ BONG, TO 400 FROM WASHIMOTON ANG BETORS. ToAne rhea wasniesron ane strees, daave Bokmend | ve Bichmowd, Spiresi = REE REE tel ear amare bce a Las Ree SBE Rot toytia Ae eee HERESE Gy Sere eS Frayed ae Saad soae Fo. ayrane SRFPEAE ES Sere ae Peer ic mie ay Fe Rares PAPERS Shin CA pate SUCEESE iehien tame ACCOMMODATION TRANS — WEEKDAYS. Laren tenet her eee ea aeeneiaice Snacks ti es eek Alttrales test fram Mind street sation itl Ieee ae ts pals trae eer N. & W. *ORPoWL go SO ene ge ee | eee nr ee Te Schedule ja Effect September 90, 2912) Leave byt Brat Belion, Riceacsty pom NORPOLE! Soa0'L: Mesate Piste Fae FOR LYNCHBURG AD THEN WHT) Was’ A: M50 A, 800 Fe Mo Ae Arrive Richmood from Norfolk: "11100 A. M, ss eae ae Pe Pro the weet 30 Are athe PB. Won bane P.M, So spaliy.” sbeliy it, Sender. ‘SMomdey Only wa mevite penty, ee W. S. SAUNDEER ©, Pr A imnsbe, Ta, C. H. BOSLEY, D. P. A., Rishmesd, Vo. — SPECTIVE FORT 6, wet. TRAINS LEAYR BiOCewON Barr | Se iets ent! Gente Bae a Foe, Vicia oud feos 40° A me ne P.M 18 A CBesrtertna. For Norfolk: "81s, 0:00 A ML, “ere vr. Sree For N. & W. Ry. West 0:5 4. Mt. orm we oe FP Vor Petersrarg: 1:00 4. Mi, 6:6 A ML, Moen CUE ae be OF re Fiaks tit Sat Etat Se we ce eae Be Roy are at hs veo A.M. 6:08 AM, UT AM, i a ea ie Gee 2:18 P.M, 6:08 P.M. O08 P. id, one Fm, eee hem P. , Dee Po » cate” BS! Eye Sam ce ume | SOUTHERN RAILWAY. | Premier Carrier of the South, TRADCS Laate RICHMOND. eee ck Bete Mepally lec Sct Oheetatty te 3 uM gm, 0d, Raleted. 10:30" 4. ‘Dally— Land eosing “ne te heer ead Except Bunday—tocl for Dasha ant fetermes- tte pintion 6:00 PF. M— _ fer Baavete, Drawing Room Botpng Car. 3:5 epee Linttel oe all peste Soothe Palins oa sto S 00 P.M ak Peat, so sae tear, ea Er eee, Wei oer Man ae an TRAIN’ ARRIVE RICHMOND. a0 Me cele ta gt da, Sas! x datiy. Pree ne eect 1:08 AM Wednesday aad Friday; 4:5 7. meet ark. soome_» >. 4 : 7 eet tata wets Phen Nba a Cc. && GS. Li A—ocl—Dallp—Newport Kewe, #35 A —Local—Dallp—charleteaere. aeagt fecey Taos ee $9:00 £.-AExpreme—Dally—Norfolk, O14 Polat. slows AComtm pata yackiate, “ESehetate Gites Forge, EE Neog Repel vette ou ote ie Beep tae ee ae ‘Sie rece Dag ea ae ng Pe ee oro eg iy EET for ron a org rei 5 Eicon oe Ee are mee tian Po—Expree—DaeGae _—., el eo THAIS, RAI “RICHNOND—tocat trem eat ats SE eNO tomtom Een: Sits cA, Me, aes. ie, eee a Lenk fon wets 8 oes Oe Spe hoa) Fr, Me nTwecgh: 4200" as ke tis Post ister Theor Line: sacs A. ue, tae Pe. Sly Riowpe Sanaa as SEABOARD AIR. LINE. Routbbount trains echefaled to leave Rick mesh delly! boo An att lait Tie P W-mereee wed cette ae mina, favasiany Juctaseeiien ae ee dieepen th conch, Aiton’ piemitetae, ea pale. 1:00 A.. M.—Sleepers aed coachen, “Jack- Searie, Naribheced thes Saedeies ts aase - in" Bichmond dalige O38 A OA Sree PMs 688 >, O° ta CRURCH ELL Funeral Director and. Embaimer | ‘ OPEN DAY AXP "GET. Office, 3006 P St. Phone Mad. 2337, Residence, 1015 St. James &., Phone, Mad. 6619 Parapbernalia, Material and’ Service of the Best, Reliable, ‘Gerrice, Moderate Rates. MADAME SCOTT, Embalmer for! for Women and Children and im: Attendance at funerals. Bac ccaecee eas 3c . OLD, RAP HERES JOHN Mm. if e e Higgins, DEALER IN * | CHOICE GROCERIES, | WS CIGARS. PURD COODS, FULL VALUB FOR 1610 Bast Freakita Stroct. (Hone Oak Were? : be Published every Saturday by JOHN MITCHELL, JR., at BAL H. Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. JOHN MITCHELL, JR., ... EDITOR All communications intended for publication should be sent to an to reach us by Wednesday. 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MONEY ORDERS—You can buy a Money Order at your Post Office, payable at the Richmond Post Office, and we will be responsible for its arrival. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained at any office of the American Express Co., the United States Express Co., and Co.'s Express Company. We will be responsible for money of all these companies. The Express Money Order is an easy and convenient way for forwarding money. REGISTERED LETTER—If a Money Order, Post Office or an Express Office is not within your reach, your Post Office will register the Letter you send. You will be an payment of ten cents. Then, if the Letter is lost or stolen, it can be traced. You can need money in this manner at our risk. We cannot be responsible for money sent in letters in may or may not be paid by the four ways available shortly. If you send your money any other way, you must do it as your own effort. RENEWALS, BTC.-You do not want THE FLANET condition for another year after your subscriber has run out. You the seller have Feesal Coal Inc. paid to you. The seller may not allow subscribers to newspapers who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid and hold liable for the payment of subscription up to date when they order the paper discontinued. COMMUNICATIONS—When writing up to renew your subscriber or to discover your password, you should give your name and address in call otherwise we cannot find your name on our books. CHANGE OF ADDRESS—In order to change the address of a subscriber we must be met the timely as the present address. Referred at the First Offer at Richmond, Va. preceded more closely. SATURDAY.....JULY 20, 1013 Colored folks can help the race by helping themselves. Laziness is an abomination and quareltability a curse. If we do not trust ourselves, how can we expect other folios to trust us? Now comes the information that the colored folks who need bathing most are to be deeded access to the beach at Atlantic City, N. J. Mr. George H. Walls, who owns the only bath house on the beach for colored people is said to be in a legal tilt with the owner of the property and is in danger of losing his lease on the same. These white folks are discriminating against us on the land and they are now barring us from the water. There will certainly be a reaction and God will bring all things right in His own time. THE NEW YORK SITUATION. The reports of the disagreements now existing between members of the Emancipation Proclamation Committee which has the disbursement of the twenty-five thousand dollars appropriated by New York state is emphasized by the announcement that Chairman Robert N. Wood has been notified by Gov. Sulier that he is greatly displeased and disappointed over the slip-shod way the business affairs of the Commission have been conducted. He deemed it necessary to go so far as to threaten with removal the members of the Commission unless his orders are obeyed. This means that patience has ceased to be a virtue. It is indeed unfortunate that such a condition of affairs should obtain among the colored people of that state. We hope that this caustic rebuke may produce results and that the colored people of the great Empire State may not continue to be the object of ridicule among the people of the country at large. MR. BRYAN AND HIS CRITICS. Hon. William Jennings Bryan seems to be dealing with a most embarrassing situation from the wrong angle. After announcing that one thousand dollars per month are insufficient to support him and his family, he proceeds to increase his income at the manifest expense of the government instead of reducing his living expenses, to the slight inconvenience of himself and those dependent upon him for support. It will appear to the average citizen, legislator, member of Congress, and United States Senator, Governor and the like that (£33.15) thirty-three dollars and fifteen cents per day including Sundays and holidays is "pretty good" pay. He was quoted by the telegraphic reports as follows: Mountain Lake Park, Md., July 17 Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan delivered his lecture, "The Making of a Man" before an audience of 2,000 persons at the Chauantaqun here today. The Secretary in his address made no reference to recent criticism of him for devoting a part of his time to the Chauantaqun platform, other than to say at the opening that he was not worried by criticism which came in the life of a man in politics, and that he always gladly answered his critics. Subsequent to his lecture, however, when asked if I 12,000 was not sufficient to maintain his family, would he advocate an increase, Mr. Bryan replied that he would not. The salary, he said, was sufficient to meet all expenses when these are confined to the home and official life. This, however, was not true in his case, for the reason that there were certain fixed charges that must be met. "These charges," he said, "with my living expenses and expenses incident to my position, exceed my salary." Asked whether his farm did not yield an income the Secretary replied it was a liability and not an asset. yield an income the Secretary replied it was a liability and not an asset. Continuing, he said: "When a man leaves his home to take office he must must certain expenses he cannot avoid. Every man in public life knows I am not delivering lectures with the view of adding to my store. I must keep intact whatever money I have accumulated for my old age and my family. I cannot expect to be a broad-winner when the infirmities of age overtake me. The public will suffer no injury. I will always be in touch with the National Capital and my engagements are such they may be canceled at a moment's notice. Col. Bryan was introduced at the Chautauqua by Col. John T. McGraw, Democratic national committeeman from West Virginia, as "the greatest statesman since Gladstone." Further than to say that Mr. Bryan was paid a guarantee of $250 for his appearance at Mountain Lake, the Rev. Dr. Rex, superintendent of the Chautauqua refused to discuss the financial end of the lecture. It was however, authoritatively stated that Mr. Bryan was to receive, besides the $250 guaranteed, one-half of the receipts above $500, and the association was to meet all expenses. Supt. Rex, said: "It was a most profitable day. We are well satisfied and would be glad to have Mr. Bryan for a return date." Several delegations were on hand from different points to engage Mr. Bryan to lecture but he turned a deaf ear to all. Mr. Bryan refused to permit the selling of tickets at the gate. It may be though that there is method in Mr. Bryan's "madness" and he is taking this means of acquaintng the country with the fact that in order to properly reward and satisfy him it will be necessary to recite for him a position paying in excess of forty thousand dollars per year. An accommodating public should take the hint and assure him of a nomination and an election as President of, the United States three years hence. He would then receive ($25,000) seventy-five thousand dollars per year with ($25,000) twenty-five thousand dollars per year extra for traveling expenses. Mr. Bryan evidently realizes or believes that he should sit at "the head of the table" with Hon. Woodrow Wilson in his cabinet. Judging by his language, this change would insure his retirement from the lecture course and guarantee all of his time and services to the government. Our personal experience has been though that a person who will not render faithful service on $5.00 per week after having agreed to do so, will not render faithful service on $25.00 per week. The "milk in the cocoanut" is that Mr. Bryan knows that he should be discharging the duties of President of the United States and drawing the salary, and he is certainly advising the American public that a difference of ($63,000) sixty-three thousand dollars per annum in his financial accounts and those of Hon. Woodrow Wilson is not appreciated by him. After all, Mr. Bryan may have a just cause for his grievance and his expressions of dissatisfaction. - Subscribe to The Richmond PLANET. $1.16 per year. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. A Milk Diet There are beauty and health in every glass of milk. It is a sovereign remedy for many ills. For the thin girl a glass at midtime is not enough to give her the beautiful arms and shoulders she desires, but glass after glass must be taken until three, four or even six quarters are the daily portion. The more nervous and run down the condition the more milk is needed. It should always be slipped slowly and never drunk when in a dried or overheated condition. HEALTH·HINT FOR TODAY. A healthy person should always eat fruit in the raw state. For those who are ill or delicate the fruit should be stewed. The acids which are sometimes present in very large quantities in apples—especially the sour varieties—render them rather injurious for the stomach, and the sweet and juicy varieties are more easily digested. Apples are also beneficial in diabetes and are more digestible when stewed. The juice of the apple is a very beneficial drink. In general, pears are not easily digested, as they contain hard, grity and indigestible granules. They are more digestible by cooking. Apricots and peaches should only be eaten when perfectly ripe, in which manner they are easily digested. Among peaches the free stone varieties are best digested. The cling stones are not to be recommended for weak stomach. Fresh raw plums, prunes and green gages are well digested when they are ripe and tender. However, plums and prunes, even when taken in large quantities, are more beautiful than green gages. Cherries and grapes, too, are two of the most beneficial fruits, and both may be freely partaken of in season. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The Value of Chocolate. Chocolate is one of the most wholesome of foods. But it should be reserved for eating after meals. Nothing can be worse than chocolate eaten before a meal, for then it ruins appetite. Chocolate should consist of equal parts of sugar and cocoa. When it contains, as most of that sold in the cheap candy stores does, more sugar than cocoa, it loses much of its real food value. Chocolate and cocoa are almost as stimulating as coffee and tea, but have none of the injurious effects upon the nervous system which are for many people the great drawback to these drinks. Chocolate is best when made overnight and allowed to stand. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Stopping Noisebleed. There are two little arteries which supply the whole face with blood, one on each side. These branch off from the main arteries on each side of the windpipe and, running up toward the eyes, pass over the outside of the jawbone, about two-thirds of the way back from the chin to the angle of the jaw, under the ear. Now, suppose your nose bleeds by the right nostril, with the end of the forefinger feel along the outer edge of the right jaw until you feel the beating of the artery directly under your finger, the same as the pulse in your wrist; then press the finger hard upon it, thus getting the little follow in a tight place between your finger and the jawbone. The result will be that not a drop of blood goes into that side of the face, while the pressure continues; hence the nose instantly stops bleeding for want of blood to flow, and the ruptured vessels in the nose probably by that time will contract, so that when you let the blood into them they will not bleed. Bleeding from a cut or wound anywhere about the face may be stopped in the same way. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The summer days are here. Take good care of your leeches. Keep it clean and sweet all the time. A good way to dolels is to wash it, pay, once a week with boiling water containing a little soda. Also be careful to keep it free from stale and decaying foods of every kind. Scrupulous cleanliness is the only way to avoid the danger of ptomaleus (possonging and even the lesser intestinal disorders that are caused by eating sour, stale and partially decayed foods. His Year. "Well, Claude," inquired the county clerk, addressing a young negro who had percolated into the office and stood nervously fingerling his hat in both hands, "what can I do for you?" "Wy - w-y, sah. I wants - dat in. If you seriously please sah - wants to get a license to practice mat-imoan, sah." And This From England And From England. Smith was a constant worry to his friends. They never knew when to and when not to treat him sectionally since as he frankly admitted, he delighted in pulling other people's legs. The day he and Brown met usually in the street and stopped, as friends often do, to gossip for awhile. "Big blazes—that fire at the factory on Johnston street last night wasn't it?" asked Brown. "Yes," replied Smith. "I went down to have a look at it. And, my word, there were several mighty narrow escapes there too." "Excuse me!" cried Brown excitedly. "But the morning paper said that there was no one in the building." Smith nodded. "Oh," he said, "the dremen brought the escapes down with them! Be long, old chap!"—London Answers. Just Deliver, the Goods. A slang expression's going around That's about the best motto I have found Although it hasn't a lofty sound— Just deliver the goods. We hear so much fine talk these days Of schemes to set the world alaze. But we ought to say before we praise. Just deliver the goods. There are plans to bring reforms about. To kick the trusts and grafts out; But, son, before you raise a about Just deliver the goals. Don't talk about what you can do. For other folks can sputter, too. But if you cannot something through Just deliver the goods. Their Lary Neighbor. Mrs. Dingbat-our neighbor, Mrs. Grimes, is the laziest woman I ever saw. Dingbat-Why do you think so? Mrs. Dingbat-Well, all this afternoon she sat in her window watching Mrs. Jones hanging out the wash. Dingbat-How do you know? Mrs. Dingbat-Gracious. How could I help knowing? I sat in our window watching her! - Springfield (Mass.) Union. Cugid in Fandom Fair patron of the nation's game. If I'm a fan you must be "Fanny" I've often seen you in the stand, and so I take my pen in hand. I do not know your proper name- To let you know you've got my nanay. You know I've seen you surely tried When, as the victors seemed winning, You stood amid a storm of jeers And rooted while a shedding tears Until our top the score had tied And won out in the seventh inning! And so, Fennette, my female fan, I know you would help me be a winner Or amshow you would not scold If I the truth about it told, Just as I would to any man, When baseball made me late for dinner. —Los Angeles Express. Lost Opportunity "It's a great pity," said the convicted burglar to his counsel, "that you couldn't have made that closing speech of yours at the opening of the case." "I don't see how that would have improved matters," said the advocate. "It would, though," explained his client; "then the jury would have been asleep when the evidence came in, and I have stood some chance."—Fun. The Income Tax: This levying an income tax May fast the nabs, none. But most of us, quite unconcerned, Think calmly, "Let it come." For income of four thousand per Around here are quite rate. And if they soak the nabs, why, The rest of us don't care. But if it were an outrage tax That congress had in mind The public feeling then would be Of quite a different kind. So many live beyond their means, By practice inside expert. The levying is a stupidity By lance that would hurt. —Namerville Journal. They say that jokes are never new. Let us admit with sad surprise To some extent the same is true Of things purporting to be wise. We'd cheer with general consent A man equipped to come before The public with an argument "How splendid it was of Mrs. Willoughby to leave $20,000 to the old ladies home! I never supposed she would do it." "It was nice of her, wasn't it? But she left me something, better than that." "Oh, did she? I hadn't heard about that. What did she leave you?" "I inherited her cook."—Chicago Record-Herald. He couldn't beat the rug, not he; He couldn't water flowers; He back was very weak, you see. But he'd dig ball for hours. —Ciccadian Enquirer. "What's the trouble at your house?" "Hunger strike for a new bonnet." "Your wife refuses to eat?" "No; she refuses to cook."—Kansas City Journal. "Man's a man for all o' that, Honest, crooked or shady, But neither post nor Bible Tells us what about a lady. -Higal Green Herald. ```markdown ``` mankind, or no charge, no matter what your disease, stenosis or infiltration may be, and restore ye. to perfect health. The thousands of people the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe will satisfy that I am one of the most wonderful healers of all complains in the world. I use nothing but hartn, a oz bark, gums, behanen leaves, seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicines. They have saved thousands that the most skilled physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and Europe have given up to die, and said there was no cure for them. My Medicines Owe the Puffer Bay Diseases—Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, tristure, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinny, Sore Threat, Lung, Dyspnea, Indigestion, Quantification, Rheumatism in any form, Palm and Arise of any kind, Cordia, Bromeliad Troubles, Sore, Skin Diseases, all taking connections, all Pneumonia Complaints, La Gripe or Pneumonia, Wear, Carbunosis, Bede, Owner in the worst form without the use of a knife or instrument, Bede, Pimples on face and body, Diabetes of Kidney or Bright's Disease of the Kidneyy. My Medicines cure any die so no matter of what nature. Gonorrhea and Syphilis troubles a specialty. Open All the Year. For Makes Only. Supported by North Carolina and by the National Government. Fall Term begins September 1, 1913. Board, Lodging and Tuition $7.00 per month. Write today for catalog and free tuition. --- The Great Gatsby A Chicago lawyer found a new man of therapeutic treatment. His instinct or told him that if he retired into the silence, breathed rhythmically and said certain words he would be able to stent off all his bodily allurems. He tried it, and it worked. Then his three-year-old child got measles, and he worked it on him. He was all puffed up. Later his prize setter contracted the mange. He summoned a veterinary. Then a friend exspatulated, "Your system worked with yourself, and it worked with your child," he said. "Why don't you try it on the dog?" "That dog cost me $100 when he was a mere pup." The answer, "and I can't afford to take any chances." Argonaut. True Charity. Every good act is charity. Giving water to the thirsty is charity. Removing stones and thorns from the road is charity. Exhorting your fellow men to virtuous deeds is charity. Smiling in your brother's face is charity. Putting a wanderer in the right path is charity. A man's true wealth is the good he does in this world. When he dies mortals will ask what property has he left behind him, but angels will inquire. "What good deeds must then sent before them?"—Melanthus. FREE FREE FREE $5.00 CASH will be paid to the person sending us the best 20 word advertisement for the facinating and beautifying AMOUR DORE'. Only users of the Facinating AMOUR DORE' are entitled to enter this competition therefore all answers must be accompanied by the envelope that comes with a 20c package of AMOUR DORE'. You can get it from your druggist or direct from the manufacturers. 20 Cents. THE DON GRAVE CO. Perfumers THE DON GRAVE CO., Perfumers 1711 Bergen St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Content closes July 31, 1913. Do You Know Them? The Richmond PLANET. Dear Sir: Will you kindly inform me of the whereabouts of my brother Alfred Hill, or his daughter, Mary Hill. When I last heard from my brother, he was living at No. 16 Haven Road, New Richmond. Since then I have written three letters and can't get an answer. I am an old pension veteran and my brother is all I have living and I wish to hear from him. Yours truly. RICHARD HILL Answer in care of Mrs. M. L. Lawrence, 36 Ruggles Street, Suite 2 Roxbury, Mass. Do You Know Them? I desire to know the whereabouts of Beattie Giles, the mother of Susan Green. She lived in Petersburg, Va. she belonged to Billy Moody. Her husband's name was Henry Giles. She had four other children. Their names were Joshua, Rachel Jane and Martha. Any information will be thankfully received. R. D. DAVENPORT, Newberry P. O., S. C., R. F. D., No. 4, Box 37. Do You Know Them? I desire to know the whereabouts of my four brothers. I left there 25 years ago. One of my brothers was named Thomas Jefferson and another's name is Mencer Thomas. Any information will be thankfully received. ROBERT COLE. P. O. Box 1025, Marquette, Mich. JURGEN'S SON EVERYBODY BE COMFORTABLE Fine, Large, Strong, Solid Oak Morris Chair, Upholstered in Leath- roette. Tufted Back; Handsonely Machine Carved, is a Bargain you don't see often at $4.99. See it in our window. We have other Morris Chairs as high as $54. You Can Pay Your Bill February 5th and Save Your Discounts. JURGENS' ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE FURNITURE ALM $100,000.00 Worth of FURNITURE AND RUGS Reduced 20, 25, 33 1-2, & 60 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. Agricultural & Mechanical COLLEGE. Send $1.00 and secure lodging accommodations. COMMISSIONS. JAMES R. DUBLEY, President, A. B. M. COLLINS, Grundy, N. G. A bank poised to demand at the end of the government currency note that Philadelphia contained many tiny houses of brick and several fine aquariums and cewns. Between the principal towns the "watermen constantly ply their whirrers." There are no bug gars to be seen, nor, indeed, have any the least temptation to take up that scandalous life. "What do you want with this immense knife?" "That's a hunting knife. I'm going camping. Want something suitable for skinning wild animals." "Better follow in advice and take something suitable for skimming potatoes."—Louisville Courier Journal. Lady of the House—Deen out of work for six months? Dear mel How were you employed before that? A Jaded Junner—I posted a letter for a gent.—Exchange. Female Embalmer. MADAM LUCIE CHRISTIAN SCOTT is associated in business with her husband, Mr. Alpheus Scott. Madam Scott claims the honor of being the only Negro woman in the State of Virginia—holding a State license to practice Embalming, and is indeed, one of the few women in the United States, Embalming and Conducting Funerals. She ranks with the best in her profession. She is prominent in fraternal organizations, namely: Courts of Celantha, I. O. of St. Luke, I. O. of G. Samaritans, Household of Ruth, Tents, Sons and Daughters of Richmond. Shepherds of Bethlehem and Ideal Benefit Society. Your Patronage and Influence will be greatly appreciated. Please remember that she is always at your service. OFFICE: 2006 P Street, 'Phone, Madison 2337. RESIDENCE: 1015 St. James St. 'Phone, Madison 6619. Van De Colle North 1st St., K Reopens Septen Van De Vyver College, North 1st St., Richmond, Va. Reopens September 16, 1912. SEVEN DEPARTMENTS. MULTI DEPARTMENT Will Prepare Its Students to Medicine and Journalism. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Offers a Thorough Training Law, Stenography and Typography. THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT Will be in charge of the Battery, Homekeeping, Cooking. THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT Will Embrace Vocal Culture, Playing Automobile Instruction DEPA. Will fit a limited number of Piano. THE PAINTING DEPARTMENT Offers a Complete Course of Hardwood Finishing and Frost Special NIGHT CLASSES in the Grammar and Academic men and women for a Professional Service in our Night School. For particulars and terms apply. REV. CHARLES HAN 709 North Fir Will Prepare Its Students to Take up the Study of Law, Medicine and Journalism. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Offers a Thorough Training in Book-keeping, Commercial Law, Stenography and Typewriting. THE DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT Will be in charge of the Best Teachers in Dressmaking, Military, Housekeeping, Cooking and Fine Laundry Work. THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT Offer a Complete Course of Carriage and House Painting, Hardwood Finishing and Frescoing. 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. JOHN H. mankind, or no charge, no matter what condition may be, and restore ye, to perfect the best and leading ones in the United that I am one of the most wonderful he world. I use nothing but harm, r eats seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my thousands that the most charitable physicians in America and Europe have given no cure for them. My Medicines cure the Pestilent bug, Dumption, Blood, Kidney, Matter, triste Quisay, Sore Threat, Lung, Dyspnea, I malaria in any form, Pneum and Adenoid Troubles, Sore, Skin Dissension, all tinnitus plants, La Gripe or Pneumonia, Wear, worst form without the use of a hut or on face and body, Diabetes of Kidney or Meyg. My Medicines cure any disease in any person and Syphilis troubles a speedy Medicines not anywhere. P. V full description on 1. The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a black-and-white photograph of a wall with a large, dark area that could be a shadow or a hole. There is no visible text or any discernible features that can be read. Embalmer. The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or partially obscured document. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image. e Vyver lege, Richmond, Va. September 16, 1912. ments to Take up the Study of Law, MENT Training in Book-keeping, Commercial Typewriting. DEPARTMENT The Best Teachers in Dressmaking, Cooking and Fine Laundry Work. Sure, Piano, Vocalion and Pipe Organ. DEPARTMENT of young men as Chaufern. T Use of Carriage and House Painting, Frecoiling. Academic Grades. We prepare young Professional Course and the Civil School. HANNIGAN. President, North First Street, Richmond, Va. L. J. HAYDEN MANUFACTURER OF Pure Herb Medicines TO CURE ALL DISEASES, OR NO CHARGES. DO YOU LOVE HEALTH? If so, call and see L. J. Mayes Manufacturer of Pare Herb Medicines, 220 West Broad Street. My Medicines care all diseases known to what your disease, stagnum or afflicted health. Thousands of people, United States and Europe will testify healers of all complaints in the erotic bark, gums, balances leaves, in my medicines. They have cured diagnoses and the best hospital physicians up to die, and said there was a big Disease:—Heart Disease, Constriction, Piles in any form, Vertigo, India, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism of any kind, Oedema, Brennishalting sensation, all Pneumonia, Carbunosis, Bells, Owner in the life or instrument, Bursitis, Pimples says or Brights Disease of the Kidney, no matter of what nature. Specially, or full particular, send, write or call CRISIS NEAR IN MEXICAN AFFAIRS Administration, Firm Against Recognition, is Awaiting the Arrival of Ambassador Wilson. Alarming reports of an approaching crisis in Mexico have been received in Washington by high government officials. It was authoritatively stated upon unimpoachable authority that the developments of the coming two weeks are regarded as fraught with tremendous importance to the Huerta government. So delicate is the information they contain that an intimation of the advice became known only with the stipulation that it was unofficial and that it should not be represented as being the view of any official of the United States government. Authoritative publication of the nature of the advices, it was said, probably would precipitate the very crisis the dispatches forecast. The means by which the predicted events were to be brought to pass or what was to follow were not blinded at in the reports, which, so far, have found no reflection in military or naval preparations by the United States. Moanmble the administration is marking time, on the Mexican problem; pending the arrival of Ambassador Wilson from Mexico City. He is expected by Thursday or Friday. President Wilson finds himself in the same state of doubt as to actual conditions in the rebellion-torn republting at the facts, he summoned the ting as the facts, he summoned the American ambassador to the capital. He realizes that even the Americans scattered throughout Mexico individually are unable to get a comprehensive view of the situation in the whole country, their judgment being affected, by purely local events. From the Mexican capital come reports that have turned every engagement into a federal victory, and so far the administration has heard absolutely nothing, except through press reports, from the Constitutional side of the case. This has led to an intimation that information of reliable character, would be welcomed by the administration. At the request of Secretary Bryan Surgion General Blue, of the public health service, has ordered quarantine officers at Havana and Key West to expedite the passage of Ambassador Wilson. Official advises have been received by the state department from the American embassy in Mexico City that the projected pro-Japanese demonstrations in that capital would not take place. This news is regarded as of great importance, as it indicates a realization on the part of the Huerta government that those demonstrations might have an effect, so far as the United States is concerned, different from that intended. President Wilson, Secretary Bryan and other high officers of the administration are convinced that much of the anti-American sentiment in Mexico City is artificial. A government official said that the president, after careful inquiry, had learned enough to convince him that a group of persons in the Mexican capital was responsible for demonstrations that had taken place and that those affairs were not due to any popular feeling. LABOREB KILLS FOREMAN Says Vision of Satan Prompted Him to Cut Off Man's Head. Thomas Hutchins, forty-five years old, foreman for the Spring Rock Water company, was killed by a laborer in Plymouth township, near Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The water company is laying a line of water pipes there, and employs a large number of laborers. Hutchins was in a stooping position, arranging some levels, when Mike Brehls came up from behind and struck him a violent blow on the head with a shovel. Hutchins was rendered unconscious. The laborer then took a hatchet from Hutchins' hand and hit him a powerful blow on the neck, severing the head. Brehls then fled to his boarding house. He returned in a short time dressed, in his best clothes. His few countrymen obtained a rope and would have hanged him to a tree had not the American workmen interfered. It is not known that the foreman and the laborer had ahy quarrel. One report has it, that the man went suddenly insane. Brehis was locked up. He declared that the devil prompted him to do the deed and that he saw his satanic majesty crunching on the shoulders of his victim. Brothers Die In Fire Clasped in each other's arms, Gordon and Emmet Von Komme, respectively four and five years old, were buried to death in the room in their home in Balkanore, where they were清洗. Fire started from a gas stove College Woman Dead at 114, Mary Murray, colored, 114 years old, Dead in Mt. n. G4. She was the oldest woman in Georgia. Who Wedded Rich Widow In San Diego, Cal. ```markdown ``` Dinner to Celebrate Wedding Had to Be Abandoned. U. S. Grant, Jr., who recently married Mrs. American Hill, a young widow, in San Diego, Cal., issued invitations for a dinner to celebrate the wedding. Many of the invitations were unanswered and the dinner was abandoned. Mr. Grant's own children refuse to recognize the bride, and the only one who appeared for the dinner was the youngest son, who is an undergraduate at Harvard. Mr. and Mrs. Grant left on the steamer Yale for San Francisco, from where they will sail on a tour of Australia, South Africa and South America. Mr. Grant said before his departure that he would probably never return to San Diego. He feels very keenly the position in which his marriage has placed him. 35 NEGROES BURN IN PRISON GELLS Mississippi Convicts Cut Off From Escapa. Trapped by flames in the second floor or an antiquated convict cage, thirty-five negro prisoners were burned to death at the Oakley convict farm, twenty miles from Jackson, Miss. While the flames rapidly ate away the only stairway leading to the second floor, the prisoners frantically toro at the heavy bars that covered the fall windows, but to no avail. Their screams brought guards and other prison attachés, but the flames drove back members of the rescue party each time they attempted to liberate the negroes who one by one fell back into the flames and perished. Everything was in the fire's favor. The building was constructed ten years ago of lumber (taken from a discarded penitentiary); there was no fire fighting apparatus at the farm, and the first floor of the building was filled with inflammable material. Farmers living nearby hurried to the fail to help the fire fighters, but they were no assistance, as the fire burned too rapidly. The convicts all were worked in the cotton fields of the state farm and were housed in the "cage", at night. Among them were some desperate criminals serving long sentences. PROVIDES HOME FOR WOMEN Will of York Woman Leaves $40,000 For Institution. Four hundred thousand dollars has been set aside for the erection and maintenance of a home for aged women in York, Pa., by the will of Miss Anna L. Gardner. The will provides that $150,000 shall be expended in the erection of the home and the balance is for maintenance. The home is to be erected for "worthy aged and unmarried women of good character and habits, of Penn- sylvania, not less than fifty years of age." BOY BLOWN TO PIECES Dynamite Stick Explodes While Youngster is Wrestling With Brother. A stick of dynamite in the hip pocket of Martin Funk exploded and blew him to pieces when he fell during a playful wrestling match with his brother. Rowland Funk, the brother, had his left hand blown off. Martin was eighteen years old. Both boys resided in Hudson, N. Y. The accident occurred in a tent where the Funks were camping near Germantown, N. Y. Buticagettes Burn Menalon A militant suffragette "arson squad" set fire to a large unoccupied mansion at Perry Bar, near Birmingham, Eng., and burned it to the ground. Picardas were posted in the vicinity bearing the words "Asquith I sto blame." Release Mrs. Pankhurst! $10,000 Fire Destroys Dairy Barn. The large dairy barn and its equipment, owned by W. L. Gladfelter, at Spring Grove, eleven miles from York, Pa., was burned to the ground. The loss will be about $10,000. The cause of the fire is not known. The cattle were saved. Subscribe to The PLANET. $1.50 per year in advance. Washington Attorney Head of New Arbitration Board. 9 Copyright by American Press Association. Hands Off in Mexico. Consideration of the Mexican situation took much of the time of President Wilson and his cabinet, at the regular session. Secretary Bryan had a long conference with the president before the other members arrived. Although reports are coming in from various sources the administration is looking forward to first-hand information from Ambassador Wilson, on his way from Mexico City. It was again authoritatively said that the attitude o the administration still was unchanged. It was reiterated that the cabinet unanimously was in accord with the president in waiting a return to stable conditions before extending recognition. Several officials said the cabinet had from the beginning been of the opinion that the changing conditions of Mexican politics warranted the "hands off" policy for some time to come. Secretary Bryan authorized the assertion that he would cancel any lecture engagement which would conflict with the conferences next week he and the president will have with Ambassador Wilson. Some of the members of the cabinet were not inclined to think any action would be taken following Ambassador Thomas' conference, and reiterated the belief that until elections held in Mexico and an appearance of peace was in sight formal recognition probably would be withheld. Woman Bitten by Snake in Bed. When Mrs. Buscher, of Branchville, N. J., with a cry of pain awakened her husband during the night, he told her to "target it and go to sleep again." She did so, but shortly afterward started again and was wide awake, with a stinging sensation in her knee. The first pain had been in her feet. Buscher lighted a lamp and found that a copperhead snake two feet long had bitten his wrist twice. Buscher killed the snake and sent for Dr. Edward A. Ayers, of Branchville, who said that the bites would not prove fatal. Buscher believes that the snake had been in the house some time and that while the bed was open it crawled into a fold of the sheet. --- Crackamen Get $25,000 Four safes in the jewelry manufacturing establishments of Rosenberg & Daniel, 203, 205 and 207 Grand street, and 97 Elizabeth street, New York, were blown open by robbers, who corraled $25,000. One of the safes contained jewelry valued at $50,000, but the robbers were scared away before they got into the compartment holding the treasure. The robbers were fastidious, for they wore overalls while at work, so as not to soil their clothing. Boy Trampled to Death. Paul, the seventeen-year-old son of Abram Shelly, of Mastersonville, near Columbia, Pa., was fatally trampled by a horse in the barn on his father's farm. Paul fell through the loft floor and landed in a stall under a horse, which became frightened and trampled the lad in a terrible manner; his face being crushed beyond recognition. Osborn, Erle Author, Dles In Prague. Albert E. Osborn, a well known author and lawyer, of Erle, Pa., who arrived in Prague, Austria, on July 11, died at his hotel from apoplexy. Mr. Osborn had been in ill health for some time and had sought relief in travel. Freezes to Death in New York. Hugo Moller, a young helper in a Brooklyn ice plant, was found frozen to death in a compartment which he had entered to adjust the machinery. His body was stiff and stark. The temperature on the stret at the time was nearly 80. Mangled to Death by Reaper. William S. Walker, superintendent of the E. V. D. Skillman stock farm at Ewingville, N. J., while at work on a reaper and blinder was stricken and fell inside the machine. His head was terribly mangled and he died instantly. Flight Parcel Post Plane Postmaster General Burleson was summoned to appear before the senate postoffice committee to explain by what authority he proposes to reduce parcel post rates. The summons is be lieved to be the start of a fight to prevent the extension of the parcel post system, as proposed in plans recently announced. To the Friends, Churches and the Public in Communion: MRS. BOSA E. WATSON-lavies you to her Hair Parlors, 912 St. James Street. You can be supplied with Braids, Puffs, Transformations and Pompadours. Combings made in Braids and Puffs on short notice. Straightening and Shampooing a Specialty. Straightening Combe, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Greases and preparations of all kinds for the skin. 'Phone Mouncer-3874. 812 ST. JAMES STREET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Virginia Theological Seminary & College. Lynchburg, Va. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS, Course. Scientific Course lea Science (B. S.) THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, with degree Bachelor of Divinity Sociology and Social Psycho- ACADEMIC COURSE, which prepa- fessional schools. NORMAL DEPARTMENT, offering ing extensive work in Pedag- Three hundred and five stud States, So. and W. Coast Africen. S Strong, efficient experienced f SPOILED THE TABLEAU. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS, standard Bachelor of Arts (B. A.) Course. Scientific Course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science (B. S.) THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, with full theological course leading to degree Bachelor of Divinity (B. D.), including Greek, Herd, Sociology and Social Psychology. ACADEMIC COURSE, which prepares for college, teaching and professional schools. NORMAL DEPARTMENT, offering special training to teachers. Doing extensive work in Pedagogy and Education. Co-Educational. Three hundred and five students last year, representing fifteen States. So. and W. Coast Africa. So. America and British West Indies. Strong, efficient experienced faculty. Just Because Some of the Actors Made a Heaty Exit. They were going on a round the world tour with the opera "Dorothy" and were billed at Malta. This was no stop company by any means. The tenors were plump, the baritones well fed and the sopranos and contralto becoming beautiful. The outfit carried also a pack of adipose foxhounds, which is essential to this particular show. When the ship arrived at Malta the port officials promptly put the bounds in quarantine for twelve hours, whereupon the manager went behind the smokestack and anathematized Malta, Goza, Comino and the rest of the neighborhood. "Darothy" couldn't be played without a pack of cannies. He then went ashore and explained the dilemma to the local manager. The latter hade him cheer up, for Tommy Somebody-or-other would supply the deficiency all right. Tommy was accordingly interviewed and rose to the occasion. He would gladly supply twenty-seven dogs. That evening the theater was packed. Tommy was in the front row of the orchestra to see that the dogs behaved themselves. The opera went A WITH A BOUND THREE DOORS WERE OVER THE ORCHIDES magnificently till when approaching the finale of act 1 Dorothy brought on the dogs in leashes. To all appearances Dorothy was going hunting with a pack that included greyhounds, whippets, spaniels, fox terriers, bull terriers, dachshunds, Dandie Dinmonts, two great Danes and even a Pekingese Pom. And when their eyes rested on Tommy in the front row there manifestly wasn't a stuffed dog among them. Tommy was no delighted that he thought he would go out and celebrate. He stooped down, drew his hat from underneath the seat and started. Twenty-seven pairs of canine eyes duly noted the action, and twenty-seven pairs of canine lungs sent up a concerted bowl of surprise that their master should go without them. With a bound those dogs were over the orchestra, putting the leader, the violinists, the first and second trombones and the big drum out of action, and after Tommy. The actors pulled the rest of the show through somehow, but the local critic had the effrontery to say the following morning, that the hunting tableau was "as cold of realism as the wooden animals in a child's Noah's ark."—New York Tribune. Every piece of work that we do which is well done in so much help every piece of pretence and half heartedness is so much hurt.—William Morris In front of one of the large cages at the zoo, where the sloth bear was stretched on his back in the sunshine, almostly waving his legs in the air, stood a woman and a little girl. Bystanders, overbehind the child remark, "Oh, mamma, see those — hazy bears!" Turning, they waited expectantly for the mother's reply. Judge their supplier when they heard her Do It Well. Her Rebuke. TS, standard Bachelor of Arts (B. A.) leading to the degree of Bachelor of with full theological course leading to city (B. D.), including Greek, Hebrew, technology, prepares for college, teaching and pro- doring special training to teachers. Do-lagogy and Education. Co-Educational. students last year, representing fifteen A. So. America and British West Indies. 1 faculty. ROBERT C. WOODG, President. "Ethal, how many times have I told you not to point"—Everybody's. Many years ago an indignant citizen complained to old Mayor Quincy of Boston that the street sweepers were an ungentlemanly lot. "I know it. I know it," acknowledged the old gentleman sadly. "I've tried to induce the members of the first families of Commonwealth avenue to handle the brooms, but they won't do it." A Blaat From the Cyclone. Ex-Senator Chauceau Depew has lots of fun with folks when he officiates as chairman or toastmaster at a banquet. But he met his uncle when he introduced a speaker guest, a Minnesota college president, as "the oratorical cyclone of the west." The Minnesota was there with the goods. A tall, dignified man, he rose solemnly, glared at Depew through his spectacles and said: "Coming from the greatest known authority on wind, that cystone characterization is the highest compliment I could possibly receive."—New York World. ALONG THE ROAD. I walked a mile with Pleasure. She chattered all the way. But left me none the wiser. For all she had to say. I walked a mile with Sorrow. And neer a word said she— But, oh, the things I learned from her When Sorrow walked with me! —Robert Browning Hamilton. THE NEED OF A NAVY. We see before our eyes at this moment a great and populous empire, now a great and populous republic—China, which has suffered partial dismemberment purely because she has permitted herself to become impatient in war, so that she has no navy and not an adequate army. In consequence Russia, Japan, Germany, England and France now hold Chinese provinces, some of them themselves the size of empires. If the American people deliberately chose to follow in Chinese footsteps, doubtless some decades would pass before we should suffer to the extent of China, but long before that time had come we should have had to abandon all pretense of upholding the Monroe doctrine, we should have had to abandon Panama and Alaska and every insular possession, and we should have had to surrender all right to say what immigrants shall and what immigrants shall not be admitted to our country and the terms upon which they shall come here and become citizens or hold land. Let it be understood that every man who votes to stop building up the navy or stop fortifying the canal is voting to put us in a position where we cannot even resent insult, let alone ourselves insulting others with impunity. Let us remember that the policy of uniting the unbrilled tongues and the unready hand is a policy of criminal folly. The most dangerous of all positions for any nation is to be opulent, aggressive and unarmed. — Theodore Roosevelt. In the street you'll find him, On the corner--anywhere Boasting he's still hanging on To his winter underwear. —Philadelphia Press. Matrimony will not always reform a man, but it will make him more cautious—New York American. Some women love men with a past. Some love them with a future, too. But the man with a present is always sure To be looked on with kindly view. —New York Sun. Medical Officer (at maneuvers)—What did you do first of all? Ambulance Man—Gave 'im some brandy, sir. Ambulance Man (preemptily)—Promise I'm some—Punch Uppatriotic Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human Mind. If a discerned worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much value is in the mind of a boy or young man youth all the polishing that the subject can do. The best education is not too good for a preschool pupil. You would choose a peer physician to give a few hours when health is in danger. And who would choose an inferior school to give a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a larger usement? ```markdown ``` Virginia Union University. Offers the Best Higher Education to COLORED YOUNG MEN. It has a Fine ACADEMY COURSE including manual training for those who have completed common school subjects. Its COLLEGE COURSE is Broad and complete. Its requirements and standings are as high as those of any college for white youth in the State, according to the rating of the Carnegie Board. Its THEOLOGICAL COURSE has for years been the standard course for colored Baptist Schools. Hebrew, Greek and all the regular subjects given in Northern Seminaries are given here. One hundred students for the Ministry are enrolled in different Departments of the school. Its NINE GRANITE BUILDINGS, its nearly-equipped science laboratorie, its library of 12,000 volumes, its able faculty and its full courses of study enable Virginia Union University to offer colored men an education equal to that enjoyed by the favored of other races. Right on the Beach THE BAY SHORE HOTEL. The best summer hotel with the most delightful surroundings. Situated on Chesapeake Bay, RIGHT ON THE BEACH, three miles from Fortress Monroe, Virginia. A charming location, a fine and safe bathing beach and good fishing. Thirty-two bedrooms, spacious parlor, broad prazas and a large pavilion The hotel has just been greatly improved by the addition of several bedrooms, baths, porches and an up to date kitchen. rooms, baths, patches and an up to date kitchen. Our patrons will be delighted with "Dear Old Bay Shore" enlarged beautiful. No restless nights here for the braces blow while you sleep. TERMS MODERATE. Address The Bay Shore Hotel Co. P. O. Box 301, Hampton, VA. J. HENRY ROBINSON, M.G'R. Good trolley car service between the hotel and Hampton, Fortress Monroe and Newport News. Do You Know Them? Denver, Colo., Jan. 24, 1913. To Wom It May Concern, pr the Pastor of the Church: Dear Sir: I am trying to locate a Mrs. Vicky Powell or some of her children. I wish to inform them about her son, Daniel Laurence Powell. If you can find any relatives of Daniel L. Powell in Richmond, Va. please let them communicate with me immediately. I know his relatives live in Richmond but I don't know their addresses. I wish to inform them of something important. I am respectfully yours. DANIEL LAYTON. 3526 West 6th Ave.. Denver, Colo. NEW 1913 CATALOGUE. We are the largest importers and manufactures of cotton people's hair and the most reliable in this line. We make wigs, switches braids, transfer notation and all styles of hair that can touch the same as your own. We also sell strengthening combs, hair notes and cut hair by the pound. We guarantee all our hair and our prices are lower than those quoted elsewhere, but two-cent stamp and we will send absolutely free our illustrated catalogue. Agents wanted. HUMANIA HAIR COMPANY. Dept. D 21 Dwane 64. New York City. A. Hayes, Office and Ware-Rooms. 727 NORTH SECOND STREET. Residence, 725 N, 2nd St. First-class Hacks and Caskets on All Descriptions. I have a Spare Room for BODIES when the Family have not a suitable Place. All country Orders are Given Special Attention. Your Special Attention is called to the New Style OAK CASKETS Call and See Me and You shall be Waited on individually. TEACHERS WANTED! We have a great demand for Colored Teachers for both Public and Private Schools in this and other States. We are making a specialty in securing teachers for Virginia Schools. Those holding certificates in force will communicate with us at once. VA. TEACHERS' CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION 14 East 13th St, Bo. Richmond, Va. Branch Office, 718 N. 3rd St. VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. on the Beach SHORE HOTEL. MAY TO OCTOBER: bel with the most delightful sur- like Bay, RIGHT ON THE BEACH, three Fatress Monroe, Virginia. and safe bathing beach and good fishing. its pariors, broad pizzas and a large pavilion improved by the addition of several bel- and an up to-date kitchen. with "Dear Old Bay Shore" enlarged houses blow white you sleep. TE. Address Shore Hotel Co. J. HENRY ROBINSON, M.G'R. between the hotel and Hampton, Fortress NO. 4. H.M.WILLIAMS.JR. So, Just Ask Others About Our Service. Nothing Succeeds Like Succes- WE SUCCEED. OUR MOTTO—"A Satisfied Patron Means More Patrons." Eyes Tested. Glasses Fitted. The best of everything—Optical. Private visits made upon request. HOURS—From 7:30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M.; from 3:30 P. M. to 7:30 P. M. THE H. M. WILLIAMS OPTICAL CO., 508 N. Second Street. (Bet. Leigh & Clay St.) Phone Mon. 2755 Richmond, Va. S. W. ROBINSON & SON DEALERS IN HIGH GRADE LIQUORS. PHONE MONROE 2113. 19 and 21 N. 18th St., Richmond, Va. WONDERFUL RESULTS ON SHORT NOTICE I have used your Pomade. Its the best thing I ever used for making hair file smooth. I have finished my first bottle, but see wonderful results, writes Mrs Louise E. Hayes of Pineville, S. C. Try Ford's Hair Pomade for hard stubborn and unruly hair and Ford's Royal White Skin Lotion for the complexion. Ask your druggist for them. Be sure and get the genuine (Ford's manufactured by the Ozonised Or Marrow Company, Chicago, Ill. CHAIRS CANED NEATLY. Call up LEONARD CEPHAS, Phone. Madison 1687, or Leave Orders at 612 NORTH FIRST. 912 NORTH FIRST ST. Va. Satisfaction Guaranteed. f | BATURDAY : sees ux 26, 1913 oo The — Scrap Book ce aa the plac, follow: otis hie pom rete footie te Tsaetrt hverY, wire gelug from ntall tu stahi, wpending his woney freely. “Ah Me. Fits- Drendon” sald a Teaily weet and chirming Indy at ene of the stalts, “and what are zou kolug to boy? Dear old auntte nid 1 are running This table, and yea have hamemade cakes, + aprons, Tae) SH" feeeee, TONOM - BG) ore ie pom OMB oo ootaia te SSuirt deed, wa gelug from xtal Qi vo stan, mending Ps AMIE vis woney trvely. Bae PME ecco. nal © si , rently sweet and Bad chuirintns lady at Be QW one of tie stats PRE cand oat are you \ ERA] soing to bay? Wis itear old auntte —~ <n 1 ate running hes \ thie Cable, and we CF Cee have hamemado amon cane: CP MES “aprons ee OER TARY pony ieee and” bie vYes amid F., “amd PHL bus Just owe of each. But eo you sell kisses at your scule Sok, certalily 2 enme the rendy ‘re ply. “One guinea exch! . “Hight!” repted the autoceat, “Then TH bake n couple and good meanure, easel “Sant.” remarket the falr and gataty daniel, “forward, please! Two klswea for Chie gentleman” ‘The olf tudy dew near, ant for a sremuent Che man of meas wns non: gluse Get enty fora meinelit Thea hee teu tye bin servitor sdames" be aod coolly, “Just take (its jrevhien, please?” 7 The Past. 7 RAN aball tie sent aroear dit cath The shots hte eater Rete, Andy pvthtecd soy tie tetrad wally The pant tilt reappear Think s0 the nates nf holy: none On Mister toneful eat have dial? Think ye tht Wipeaels ated (SPOOR, Mas Sanisted fromm hie enie? OR, bat We tte one Mite asin, Gr, warily (usted ar costs. Atm, The bi tures of Mie pant temenin “Man's Wort sai! folie tien ~Wwhttttee. A Starthag Event. : Two drtshawen fresh from Ireinnd hnd fost landed In New York and en: nae! a rooms fn the top xtory uf a Bo- BE Silu: hens ‘was she: Ge Binwelf on the bred nad wats moots fast asleep ‘the Rights Were me new mid arcane fo Pat that be sit fe othe windows Inks ant Svent mu alia of ter wan rung tu. shit note enede rushed by tirtw: Ing. up sparks of fire unl ectouda of nuioke ‘Tits stent: Jy excited Mat who ented tee him curnide feet ap nud cota to the whew, but Mie was fast aston Another engine i Laat ee iS pte ig aw! SER, ae | wz 4 ih ey d “COME QVICK AXD tr. speatiog ARIES bho feud tlre Uke the former, This Woe tem bineh for Pat, who ruxhed ex: Costs te the bedside att, wticklng bis fren, ented tondly: Mace! Mike! Wake up! Come anh amd took! ‘They are moving bell, seal two louds have gone by wlreudy?” =Phlladepbia Leer No Wondor It Was Cold. The nleutnisitetiows of the true hebolar Is well {Hestrated by this wtory?: “My dear.” ald, the profesxor om en- teriug the dining reein one cold day Jnat Winter, “don't alarm youraelf, bat a alight palyy has manifested Itself tn my left foot tn spite of the fact tbat the glass fa 22 degrees above zero my Hight foot feels more than pormally weir. wheres the left In quite rigtd aint SUP nnd cold, as tee” Upon the directions of the faintly phystclan, whe was summoned without delay, the professor was pat to bed, whyn ft wan ‘discorered that be bad tef wockw wn his tight foot and pote wa iy left font! Pinaud Me Wada Bute Geeork At a purty the bustese suid) to 4 kuest Do want you te entertain Mt Honk a Mitte | He tooka bored. t Geath 1 will Introduce him, and yor iust try to nsiuxe bim. You know bi atroug polnt Ix butter, on which be bas written a book.” : The tndy xuest_gractounly undertook the task of enieriatulng the man, I wardly wondering that he should be ® interested in buiter—of ‘which abi knew very littie—when hia face ind! cated a ming given to much profouns thfoking, € : However, with butter in’ view, shi began on the weather, gradually got t the country. then on tq a farm. from that to cows wad at.tant to butter. Th roan looked miore bored than ever, th magic word butter prodocing not th slightest effect. and he left her some what abraptly and soon withdrew fron ‘the honse. "1 did my best.” she explained to th beetess. “I went through agonies & prove that I was deeply interested {1 Wetter, bot ft ora all In vain.” | “Botter!. exclaimed the cuatem “What porscssed you to tale to: tha wep, of all men.on batter? 1 fold re be bad fuer written # book on Ruddba and 1 knew how deeply sou tito wen fnterested In the seme mnbject.” And thes sald in chorus, “Qrackons!" Strand Mnanaiies va os gincame wcpieceet RG oie: St PE BORE HIS HONORS MEEKLY. en. Neri entre tN ae That Wogt With Them, Whiie be was “tia he of the Brithst emixtxy ta Wantdnzton the late Henry Labonchers, when a yeni mun. tirned uy iy New .Yerk one day hungry aud ponatiess, At bow, Witll tis nsual reckless dar. lng. hy catered a Lvadway chop. house. wie Multeon'x and: ortered. a modest tneat, Hut be'had no tea bow he would yay for this meal Perhaps ho would leave tls bat or Ywots In Pledge for-It, Ax be “pondered the Tuntter he veticed that the walters who were staring nt hia oddly, were all’ Irivimen, Were the walters aware of bis lick of funds? Hip Tonebeon swe strangely long th coming, Hut just then a walter bent oer Lim ntul Whispered SOME beg pardon, sir, but are you the patriot Meagher?” 4 Now, Meaxher, Labouchere “knew, had aided Smith O'Hrten tn bia Irish fining, bad heen deported tO Australia jand had excapel thence to New York. ‘The reads young an, in answer to Ke water's queation, put his forefinger Spon bia ity. “Hush.” he murmured. ‘And be looked around the room cau- ously. It was at once fult that Labouchere was the patriot Meagher. Aud no the cholccet wiben were sot before him, and. 1p place of the modest chop be bad ordered, n luncheon of nine oF ten elaboraie cours was brought on. At the end, Nshting one of the eatqb- linhment'n thiest cligars, Labouchere de- ninnded bie bil Hla waiter amiled, retired nnd sson came tack with @ Ble, bamdweine an the proprietor Miniself, ‘The proprietor, bending over the youth, sald! Fahy “Prom due lke sen, a <nfferer ty the goed came, Fran tke no money. It bar been w pelyieze to serve you. mM. Peemtt a brother patriot to whake sou by the hand” And Tateuckere shook hande with the proprietur met with the dozen Walters nd stated forth trite the cob world with he tert, cut, but dndeml tablis took whtete Ht siete, toy him that AG exiled patelot shoud wear, t Aspiration, Did yon ever hear af a suan whe Aad striven au hte Mfe tulthfaliy and ringly toward an object mud th ae mensire eutaliel 10 If a man con: MANUS Ampites Is be nit’ elevated = Thorwn, . : Willis Is Barking. Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens, the YOURKENE non of the uavelint, cnsisrated to Australia aud died In Sydney nt thy age of fifty one. He represented a con: atituenes in the pariiament of New South Wales for nlx yearn. Once when he wan addressing the house in Sydney be wae again and agnin anappinhly fo terrupted bP a niember nmcwed Willis AC‘axt Mr! Pickens atopped to remark: “Mr, Speaker. my father celned a fa- mus phrase, “Harkis fa willin’.’ Ua- dor present eleeumatunces Lam strong: Ie tempted to reverse Jt amd say. ‘WHE ie tx barking The house Inughed. and the taterraptiotn cuased = | DieReurement Exclacned. ' One day an EI Derade man met up with a citlzen who evidently hat bad trouble. ils tp was aplt open, and two of hin‘ front: teeth were mining Hite left eye wan entirely clove, ani Bix right orb of vision was surrounded by a deep banter of bine black color. “Reon fooling’ around a muley" cheer: fully anked the E Dorado man. i “Nopes' glemtly replied the man with the split Ip. “IE aay a man yes- terdas, nud we got to talkin’ about aonsg Tas = ea aS ol Oe Gay i 7 i a oe A Fl 2 fi 1 \ The A ct \ |E oe i 2) Kanaas ay other states. He said to me that Kansas {sno good; that any man fsa fit who will tve In this state.” : The Et Derado man fared ap at once. “The man tsa Har.” “Yer” sald the di<figueed man sadly; synatia what ted Wlua"=Kausun City Star. Well Countered. Andre de Fouquteres. the cotiition Jeader of Parts. 14, tke most cotililon leaders, vers gentle and ‘mild of man- ner. sae + During M. de Fouqot to New York @ well known er talking to him for some P minutes at dance, sald: .-; * ee “Now, tmnt along. M. de You're altoxether too lady! g ‘The young Frenchman, a were’: me “Tm worry 1 con't my’! wn fer yea. madam.” Exchange. “in —eubecribe to Tus PLaNnT. | HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. ‘The Art’of Keeping Coot. 6 se BBs ont th oath ae ihe .wyrrying you can do will net wake, funy cooler, Reoonche yourself to bot wenth-” er and nearly halt the barge Ls ‘The nest thing te de tx to drew for het weather, Wear Nebt color), Hebt welght, por ous Clothing, ‘Tisttt clotting aud ‘al They ttre bith unesterta: “vle and winhy giente. Plenty of water ty realty the Dest Ching Rieu fer tet weeths a nse ie an te Hate Sourmelf in it Mustde cmd ont. Drink until you portie tevly, ree re fort, Penyptration on your skur Lis nature's own way ef Beoping | HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The Abdomen.» If you wish te avold having A protubernut abdomen, exereise freely und avuld an exeres of aweets nid stareby: fous, Ln bending, stooping, ellnbing ad squatting the abdomlnul mitscles are brongbt inty play and kept th good condition ‘ Whenever pasible exerctar tnt the open alr. Walking, runntns, axwhmming md mountain rlimb: Jug will develop the lungn, chest ‘nid heart and put en mnecle 10: xtend of ugly, nlipertuous tnt. One great advantage about these exercines Ie tet thes wre: free and ean be enjoyed by the poor fg well aw the wenlthy, HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Sere of the Hates More tipertant, perhape, than the washing fs the drying of the bil, ‘This should be done with warm, soft tawels , Never me Turkinh Wawels, as they are very apt to tanste the Mir and eatel In thelr mesties, tity pullins tont, They are mere apt alse te leave dit on tte hur than are towel WHE a Sueoth surface Always dry your hate In the win, AS this given gtogs and xheen, that can te ubtained In no other was, Let tine direct ratyn nhine upon (tnd never put it up until ACIy aw dry ne It was before you washed tt Wetting the tnd to make tt aint ie very, apt t-eause: de composition nt thie rvote and is no sery bad practic, Water fy not u gon devsring for the bate, In drying the hate It ie well to granp a+ ly the ends and nbake ft In thf way the motvture tn more quickly evaporated, Mas: nage of the nealy durigg the prurese of deylig 1 alo Benet! fn : If your bait $s Inclined te be very dre rite tte he neat a ite Ue bland elf, net ae ott of al mend ‘This inst be perfectly weet, we rauctd oll be Infusions, HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Black Coffee Harmful «There te one form In whieh coffe ‘In very barmful. ‘That ty fn the form of black coffee. When taken fn thin form It cer. tainty causes Indigestion ax well an Dillousnews. Seme of the mont persitent cnuses of dyx- pepala, enpectally that whteh fs most pronounced ou waking up in the morning, are due entirely to the habit of drinking black coffer after dinner In the even: ings. And the taste {6 evidently a acductive one, for there fs 20 habit, not even tint af alcohol, more dillewt to erulicate, Yet UBIN the tise af cote Inn thie forin ts gtven up the dyxpep- sla WIL most surety pervtnt. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. The Summer Coid. | The ordinary. xummer cold x nothing’ more thin the ordinary cold tn the head. The bydre pathic treatment of a cold In the head fs more retfable than any other, amt che whch scarcely Fequltes the wkd of physielan, Tein ns follows: Tu the terns After rising atnl at night before Petirins wash tne Geet ati lean na Deh ye ae the knees Ine cold Lavater, Chen oral theme with rough towel dint mnissage then til) the skin ts cel aid glowing. Incaddition to this sunt tepid water up the nose frequently durtog the day and slp with a teuxpoou a glassful @s hot as cap be borne an hour before eh inca! and st Bedtiae. AL. few dayn (4 often quifte sutictent® for almple cases, aad obstinate ones yield Ht the guyatment ta prolonged. Ro me are re- quired, If takew?: orat taxes of she: QhagigpReicold tx broken. vp whicb: } other- whee be-ome severe, Isating many day or weeks. a a nr ene RECOMPENSK. B27 to ralse the. drooping heart, In every sorrow share a part. Lo rains the fallen, checr the way" “Of earth's poor lone enon white I stay, I ASK no other boon ‘than this, Remore all sorrow and give bites. Rag time thur spent wfll well repay, Whe ile} meet on ttfe's rough way, “Mary A. Coffin Ashley. FASHION HINT By SUBIC CHOLLET $$ $$ ‘The loose dressing jacket te always a favorite one, It 1s so vasy to slip on am! so thoroughly comfortble. This ono can hang quite loose in kimono style or tt can be worn with @ belt It ts Anished at the front and zeck ‘edges With ao bam, but this band ts r Ay £ pig: Ho I of fe mene / Tne Hy a> ff s AN ly Ne LOBE DIKING JACKRT. felled over in Limone fashion. tn the Muatracion the material ly tgured to- in afk trimmed with plain wilk. Jackets of thin wert are churmlog made from single Waslinble materials, Albatross bx attractive Mined with thin sk 1 a datuty color For tho medium atze the jacket will require three yard« of tnterial twen- ty-aeven tuches wide. with three yards of ribbon Ove inches wide for bands This May Micton pattern ta cut tn atend from 24 42 Inches bust measure, Rend 10 conte to tity wir, wiving number, EER and it mill be promptly forwarded to you by malt. IC 1s haste: send an additional two cent atanit: for letter postage, Whea npdertng Ure cowpea ABdrone woe... — By JUDIC CHOLLET | Mh the fllnatration4é nhowf'a double Dreauted Dlouxe cnrried out In one of the pew broche cotton trimmed with alk, A smart Itte blouse could be made from crepe de chine or from Dongee of foulaed, with xkirt to match. For a miinpler costume cottod rape OF epense would be pretty or ove of q : {fF SF | ! S74) Tm eo iy : % i j 4 ‘i idl ae the lawns of pousers that are always charming Crepe de chine or mess: Ite natin Ina golden color Ia worn with whIte Ince frill« and white lace rent. apd perhaps # fall of lace uver the Col- lar would make an exceedingly vaud: some Walst to be worn over a white AKI. | Whether the sivevos be tong of abort in eitirely a cnittee of tndividaal Shute For the aedinn slze the blouse wilt require threg nnd a half yards of ma- terial twenty-soveir aches wide, with peeeteuti for collar, cuffn nad belt. This May Manton’ pattern tn cut tn stzes trem H to # Inches bust measure. Bend \B cents to this office, xiving Timber, 7, sed It will ta prompily forwarded to You. By mall, IC tn baste send an additional feo cent stamp for letter postage When exdering ure coupon MMBC open sssceneesssnersesanesassetiscensseese ewenssbcaate cadkotstbvndatbabessinacaseanssvone Church—According to « German medica) authority, Ofteen minutes’ ex- posure to the sun’svrayn during an alr- jahép fight at’bigh altitude will kil! all the tuberculosis germs in a man's agstera. Gotham—To tumble out of the air ebip at n high altitude we stipposs would only jar the sitcrobes.—Toakers Statesmin. oz FASHION HINT | « S S. - By JUDIC CHOLLET The ovightgown made with round peck tlftt wllpm on over the bead ts an andoubted’ favorite. This ono ts ex- tremely pretty and ix mado quite novel by the little Stted yoke. It ts to: two pleces, with the sloeves sewed to the | armboles, and these slecves cap be. made longer aud gathered into banda The Ouish of xcatlopd edges oud embroidered dote Ix nu attractive one. In the small vtews the gown fy shown with an empire trentment, and many For the uneium size the gown will Tequire feur surds of material thirty- | four yurds of material thirty l rea fe fs i i fie | b a . a) b ‘ Hit pis | f i ote ‘ he J BY i i wo OR . ; “& nif q : a it Mf ie ae wee P| ey OT 2 : BY \- ‘ i \ + Yi S\. | Be | a \ TES NT Sc : : | * pork roRE siuirtiows. etx or forty-four tucties white, with two yanis of baniling for the euplre effect This May Santon pattern te cut In three Scr "a inetcn’ cost masturer” Sea nts. to this ammce, avin wumber,, 3. cha tt will be promptty forwarded to you Dycmall, If ta hatte tend an additional (wo cent stamp for Wtter postage. When crdering Use coupon ee By JUDIC CHOLLET Almont gvery week brings forth some ‘new destcn in draped skirts, The one pictured hax # distinctly new shaped front, and the folda and plait are sin- wuarly woll arranged. Women with slender figures will ttke to gather the skirt at the upper edge, Dut those who find tt necensary to die Denne with bulk may ned darts In ope rlew the left alde {a nbown with curved due, and there tn tho least suggestion of an upening without be ing objections dir. For the taediuin stze the wkirt will require’ three and three-quarter yards vi ! i Poni ik | 7 i Ni : | HOSE | | se ig iM rE oatib- BN =! ny iN : ; Vid sy I H : i ane. 1 Hid t | q A 4 i \ i yy f.\S i Ps y \ i i : Pi yat | od go Nd A Vb ay iN, pb ce 7 aN pe ce gy St Rew bret I. DHARED MKT. of mpaterint twenty-seven Incties wide, | The widih wt the tower ede fs one yard oud cleyen Inches Thte May Manion pattern te cut In atten from Z to 2 Inetven maint tirasure.” Send Wcente to then whee giving husber, set nd Mt will ie prompily forwarded t6 yOu by mail, Lf in haste send wa additional two cont stamp tyr letter portage, When Ordering Ube coagon BMATOIE oerereerecreseecssserentsncnsessesasbones Arthor was spending a day with his sunt a “I am going to do something to please you on your birthday,” she said jo ubé little boy, “bot frst 2 want to sek the teacher. how you behate Ip hoo). “If sou tenily want to do something 0 pleame tne, auntte.” said tha boy, Goa't nak tie tracher.”—Lipplacott’s. : ts east sr ien cena aes eee nn 3 Geo. ©. Brown, -toTogenpnes; _ $603 North 2nd St., - . Richmond, Va. 3° ‘ ear B pms 5 = aoe Ee? Reo ae Pee SRREMEN UU wapenenaprautee a eS a op hgeithot eter Lara = py apo ‘not to mdeeduole Le 5 A BRAUTIFUL SRAD OF AIR BS A LADY'S CROWNING GLORT—And every Indy com have [t (febe will uss the Magis. The Bingte will dry the halr aftcr s shampoo'or bath, and ctretrhten the corfiest bund af bets. It will aise othealate he growth The Ajuminine Com oam- met injuse the hair, boummes it bs mover hentad diwest, but takes its beat from the beating bar which be heated on our Alsbohel Mentat, or any other heater. We advise the use of Mayes’ Bisir Pema fa. Becton the market, Price per box, 00, Alccbol Heater, price Ate, Liberal terme to agents. 2 ‘Write ter Inerature today. MAGIC SHAMPOO DSIER COMPANY, MINWEAPOLM, MDOESOTA CHEAP LABOR PERIL. . Many large employers of labor would be delighted to bare the federal government. ,through Ita trenty making ewer, hold down the bare am fet in the allen. What would Gewome of -the Amerienn farmer {f the great corporations of the country should enter the land market, buy all. of the bext-Innds of the country and then cultivate them with Mouxollan, Chinese, Hindu, Japanexe and other cheap alles Intor? The rich and the pow- erful will have thelr fortunes vastly Witreaxed by having all barrier to cheap Inbor broken down, They know tbat the ‘quickest nnd surent route Ix thryush the treaty making pow: er, Uecnitee they only dead first with ene man, the president, and one bedy, two-thirds of the wennte, — Repreaentative Shaw - Of Mlsatuxtpopt WHAT COUNTS, + Ut tsn't the Briiae a mun tits In his head OF the skill that be tine in tis hand, It tan’t tho books bu bax stud: ted or tend Or hin fortun in money oF land That takes @ man Hkable. tore -ble here, For many 6 mixer i xmart” It’s not what a brother can do we hold dear, But Just what he te in tls heart. It fant the avenderful hetishts he | han nented, It ton't the medal be wears. It fsn't the foet that by many + bets attied With appiinse for the deeds that he dares That makes oman welome Wherever, he gore 4 leader, untmourned, may do- Part, * * For the thing men revere’ Inn't Rory that hess, But the glory that bid In the heart. Ealgur A. Cuca, “ THE INCOME TAX. L regand as tive dangervu at the prevent me the dixposition Of letxlative bodles to rans lawn whieh are culeulated to prxtuce clanwen, 1 tithk, for fhntance, the propoxition to axsesa the tn. comés of men.who are recel¥- Jog more than $1,000 und to ex: OMY the IncoLien of those who Fecelve lese Le one of the worst Ahlngs that have ever happened etn thix country, because it im inediately arraya {7 percent of the: people ugainst 3 per cent T have no objection to an income tax when and an needed. I have hotting to way myniiint an toe vomy tax nx a principie. But to make 97 per cent of the peo- ple lutersted 41 favor of an ip- come tax which exempta them and whirh compela the 3 per cent to pny thexe Innge sume of money It w very Janse mistake. 1 cannot look upon If except os the begiuning of forcible dia. usbutlon of wealth, however hongstly nequired—Judge BE. H. Gary. HAPPINESS. ‘The happiest wonpen, Mke the happiest nations, have no hls- tory.—George Eliot. Happincas conslxta in activity. Tt fe a running stream and not) & ptagnant poul.—J, M. Good. The raya of happtotia, ike those of Ught, are coloriens when wnbroken,—Lougtellow. AM who would win Joy must abow It. Happlicss was born a twin,—Byron. 7 . Consider plennuren as thoy de ° Pact, not ax they come—Arie totle. + Little Mine Muffet + fatonatune - _ Being ner eweetheart would stay, Te: atone ame ber motker, Hes father and brother And (tightened ber suitor Sway. “etgn BYRON ON LOVE. Farewell! If ever fondest pray- er For other's woal avalted on hit, Mine will ont all be loxt.in air, But waft thy numé beyond the ky. " Maidens ke moths, are ever cauzht by sinry, And Mammon wins tix way where serinba might dexpalr. Man, our younz affections run _ t0 wuate Or-water but the dexert, Yes, love Indes! is Nght trom heaven, A npark of that immortal Gre. With angels shared. by Allab xiten, ‘To Nre from earth our tow desire Bhe woe his Ife. a +The ocean to the fiver of pie | thovents, Which terminated all. . | r ee crete Rev. Jownb Gravely Giving bis views of the eriis of card playtag dur- {ng x pastoral cath—Ae 1 wan aaying, Pam tn donpt— Parrot docerrupting caxerty>—When you nre in duuht play trumipe! And hw tuetnber of that family bas been able ty account for the parts Uttermiee te the xatisfuction of the gaator.—Landon bunch, But you will not get work that is 80 good, z But you will not get work that is oe better. e Theeo statements refer to job printing, Our facilities are eom- plete. We use only tlie best ma- terial, and our prices are based on a living pgofit’ for. first class ork, ‘We stft do no other kinds Their Measada. ‘The erenins callers were chatting with their bostx when there came e Patter of little fret along the ball, “Tluxb.” whixpered the bosteas, rate. Sng ber hand. “The children are com- Ing with thelr good night meassge. It alwayn.cives me a feeling of rever: ence to hear then, They ate, no much Dearcr to henven than we. and they | FRO 1 NS ‘a £ al a & eanety ‘FRR MEMBAOE CAME IN 4 SERTLL WEEP speak from the fullness of thele, tte hearts never eo freely as whem the dark bas come, Listes - | Thery wan a mowrat’s pase, amt, teG the jewevur came ina sr whte- pet. “Manin.” it ma, “Wie teond 2 cockrinch in the lathtal,”—Ladlew leome Jouraal = 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. BILL TO PREVENT STRIKE A LAW Congress Rushes Measure to Prevent R. R. Walkout New Act Signed by the President Provides For Either Three or Six Arbitrators. The Newlands bill, revising the Bardman law to provide arbitration of wage disputes in a manner satisfactory to railroads and their employees, passed the house without a roll call. The bill was then hurried to the senate, which was waiting to pass it for President Wilson's signature. The senate passed the bill without a roll call and it was hurriedly prepared for transmission to the White House. Later the bill reached the White House and soon afterward this statement was issued: "The president signed the Newlands act as soon as it reached the White House and announced through his secretary; Mr. Tumulty, that he would proceed as soon as possible, consistent with the importance of the appointments, to the selection of the commissioners of mediation as provided in the act." Chittman Clayton had no difficulty in securing unanimous consent to take up the Newlands bill immediately after the house had finished opening business. "Investment of this law will avert the greatest industrial struggle that has been threatened in our history" said he. The senate took the bill up at once for passage. No objection was made to Senator Newlands' request for immediate consideration. One amendment aims to make impossible any construction that would authorize courts by injunction or otherwise to compel an employee to labor. The other was to provide details for filing the awards with district courts. In its perfected form the new law would furnish machinery expected to open up the possibilities of arbitration and federal mediation. The new act would establish the United States board of mediation and conciliation to consist of a federal commissioner of mediation and consultation and two other officials of the government, to be designated by the president. This board would be appealed to to intervene on a railroad labor dispute by either party and would first use its most efforts by mediation and conciliation. lion to bring' the disputants to an agreement. Failure would be followed by an attempt on the part of the board to "induce the parties to submit their controversy to arbitration," and in case arbitration was agreed to special boards of either three or six mediators would be chosen by the railroads and the employees. Arbitration under the new law would be undertaken only after a definite agreement had been made, by both parties to abide by the decision of the arbitration board for a fixed period. The argument made by the trainmen's and conductors' representatives for an independent tribunal to settle labor disputes also became known. Mr. Garretson, head of the Order of Railway Conductors, said the demand for an independent commission had been begun before the department of labor was created and therefore his association meant no reflection on the secretary of labor in opposing the proposal to have the mediation board under the jurisdiction of any government department. The railroad presidents, it was said, had little to say at the White House conference, but acquiesced in the desire for an independent board. HEALTH HINTS FOR TODAY The regular use of the toothbrush is necessary not only to remove the acid incrustations that eat holes in the teeth, but also to sweep away the germs of many diseases. These find the necks of the teeth an ideal nesting place. They multiply a millionfold in a few hours unless washed away, then they go down the throat, enter the lungs, the stomach, the eustachian tubes and the passages behind the nose. There they cause consumption, diphtheria, carne, catarrh, bronchitis, tonsillitis; in fact, it would be difficult to say with certainty what diseases may not arise from the germs that have grown upon the teeth. It is now considered almost certain that many cases of appendicitis have this as their origin. Hence there is no process of the toilet so important as that of brushing the teeth. It Often Comes. In a Scotch Sunday school the lady teacher, after speaking on the subject of death, asked, "And what comes after death?" Instantly a bright little girl called out eagerly, "A fight about the money." A Place of Lease. Host—That is the word of my great uncle. He lost his arm at Waterloo. Guest—Yes. It's a terrible place for losing things. I lost a bag there only last week! London Ontario. 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. Devoiled to the Interests of the Citizens of Color. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. A very common form of backache is lumbago. The sufferer must be somewhat careful in his use of sweet foods, meats and alcohol. He should also avoid wearing damp clothing, staying out too long in his garden digging or of remaining for too long a period in a bending or stooping posture when planting, etc. If he be he wise he will always wear a warm woolen undershirt next to his skin during the winter season and until the warm days of summer are in full away. Then he may safely don a thinner woolen garment without fear of taking a nasty pain in the back. It is far more sensible to take a little extra care to avoid lumbago and other back troubles than to be careless and, as the result of such carelessness, to be compelled to suffer as so many people do. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Suggestions For Sleep. The bedroom should be well ventilated, a window being kept open all night, if that can be managed without a draft playing upon the sleeper. Where there is a chance of drafts ventilation may be safely accomplished by inserting a board six inches broad so as to raise the lower ash and fill the gap completely. Air then enters between the hashes in an upward direction and becomes diffused in a harmless fashion. About this bed, bedclothes and pillow the sufferer from insomnia must not dogmatize, but try experiments. Sometimes an extra high pillow does the trick. The covering should not be excessive, but the feet must be kept warm—by an elderdroom across them, a hot bottle or bed socks—since chilly extremities are fatal to sleep. The same latitude must be allowed in regard to supper. Sometimes no supper is best, sometimes a light supper rather more than an hour before retiring, sometimes a glass of hot milk or hot gruel when one is actually in bed. A short, smart walk before bedtime enables many folks to slip into dreamland. For others a hot footbath is better. Still more obstinate cases will yield to the soothing effect of a complete hot bath, with or without some mustard. We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection. 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. Pooisoned Cabbage Rings. Poisoned cabbage is attributed as the cause of the death of Mrs. Minnie Berger, the wife of Erwin Berger, of Pine Grove, Pa., the latter having had a narrow escape. The vegetable had been frozen and is supposed to have become infected from that source. The husband was first taken violently ill, but he recovered in a short time. The wife ate more heartily than her husband and her entire system was poisoned. Physicians were unable to do anything for her and she gradually sank until she died. AGENTS FOR THE PLANET. RICHMOND, VA. Mrs. Annie Walbarrow, 6th & Broad. W. H. White, 501 W. Leigh Street. Peter Thompson, 710 N. First St. Street. Wm. H. Scott, 2218 E. Main St. N. Winston, 537 Brpk Ava. William B. Smith, 8 W. Leigh St. Tom Bird. Thomas Page, 315 State Street. Clarence Williams 1411 Ross Street. M. C. Waller, 1100 W. Leigh St. E. Dandridge, 107 W. Baker Street. SO. RICHMOND, VA. Walter Roberson, R. F. D. No. 8, Box 34. LONG BRANCH, N. J. Leece W. Shreaves, 183 Bolmont Ave. OAKLAND, CAL. J. W. Nuby, 1786-7th St. NEWPORT NEWS, VA. J. C. Allen, 2107 Marshall Ave. Charles G. Davis, 604-25th St. CLEVELAND, O. Reuben Neal Mitchell, 10709 Frank Ave., E. C. J. E. Branham, 4401 Central Ave. E. F. Boyd, 2604 Central Ave. Frank H. Weaver, 3215 Central Ave. BOSTON, MASS. 11 Journal in Citizens of Color. receive courteous attention and own Orders Promptly Attended you can better them in the sa- we stand ready to accept the North Fourth S. Long Distance Telephone, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Mrs. L. Langon, 516 Clamson Ave. John H. Ashby, 185 Steuben St. TARBORO, N. C. V. E. Howard. STAUNTON VA. J. H. Allen, 126 S. Augusta St. STEUBENVILLE, O. W. H. Greene, 752 N. 8th St. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Harold P. Douglas, 11 N. Kentucky Avenue. WILMINGTON, N. O. Wm. H. Moore. NORFOLK, VA. Walter R. Henry, 19 C Avenue. Huntersville. John DeBona, 610 Church St. Thomas E. W. Perry, 3 Jones' Place. FARMVILLE, VA. Rev. R. G. Adams, 313 South St. CHICAGO, IL. A. D. Hayes, 3640 State St. R. M. Harvey, 3924 State Street. W. Gaughan, 3636 State Street. F. Bishop, 8 W. 27th St. WASHINGTON, D. C. Columbia News Agency, 921-D St. N. W. C. L. Battle, 1020 You St., N. W. RALNIGH, N. C. Union Post Card Co., N. E. Corner 16th and South St. E. P. Mackens, 4116 Pine Street. Joseph H. Warwick, 264 S. 11th St. J. A. Stokes, 1411 Pitswater St. Quaker City Advertising Company, 1221 Pine Street: DANVILLE, VA. Harry A. Clark, 117 Orghead St. PROVIDENCE, R. I. Douglas A. A., P. A., 916 Water Street. We Do PressWork for the Trade. We have a full line of the stationery to be obtained in the United States. We supply Paper and Envelope. and your patronage is earnest. If our prices are higher, your grade and class of work will be the business. Street, Richmond Monroe-2213. NEW YORK, N. Y. W. E. Hill, 244 W. 18th St., Bainmont. Cleveland G. Allen, 252 W. 63d Mrs. Leanna Hamilton, 263 West 134th street. Samuel Hobbs, 328 M. 127th St. E. A. Williams, 200 W. 63d St. J. E. Schmidt, 268 W. 35th St. LOT, VA. Rev. R. J. Langston. AMBURG, VA. J. H. Walker. Promptly. are a full line of the Finest Sta- to be obtained anywhere in United States. We supply Mourn- er and Envelopes. the Country patronage is earnestly solicited. prices are higher, you can go else- me and class of work. If our prices ness. t, Richmond, Va. 2213. NEW YORK, N.Y. H. 244 W. 18th St., Base G. Allen, 252 W. 63d St. Anna Hamilton, est 134th street. Jobba, 328 M. 127th St. Glams, 200 W. 62d St. Idt, 268 W. 35th St. LOT, VA. Langston. AMBURG, VA. Ker. PITTSBURG Mrs. Charlotte Penn. Avo. E. K. Thumm, HARMONY Deacon Carr G. SAL Deacon W. H. YONKE John W. Adams. We have a full line of the Finest Stationery to be obtained anywhere in the United States. We supply Mourning Paper and Envelopes. ASBURY PARK, N. J. R. Bell, 102 Springwood Ave. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Charles Ludwig, P. O. Box 1776, LOUISVILLE, KY. Jease E. Brown, 1216 W. Green St NEW ORLANDS, LA. World's News Co., Box 1124. A. C. Smith, 202 S. Rampart St MONESSEN, PA. Smith & Williams, 603 Sixth St. LEESBURG, VA. Miss Cora L. Wright. FLORENCE, S. C. E. B. Webster. SUSAN, VA. F. S. Brown. LORENCE, S. C. ter. SUSAN, VA. Prof. I. S. Moor 26 Rua dos Ca Bahia, Brazil Special Correspondent F. Z. S. Peregrine 121 Lopp Street W. I. Johnson, 10 West Leigh Street, Richmond, Virginia. LARGE CAPACIOUS WARE-ROOMS, FILLED WITH THE LATEST DESIGNS FROM THE BEST MANUFACTORIES IN THE UNITED STATES. PROMPT AND POLITE SERVICE. ORDERS RESPONDED TO DAY OR NIGHT. Determined to furnish the very BEST service at the LOWEST Rates possible, the Patronage of the Public is Sollicited. LONG DISTANCE PHONE MADRID—486 ply. The Finest Sta- nywhere in apply Mourn- ntry stly solicited.. you can go else- If our prices nd, Va. PASSAIO, N. J. W. J. Smith, 414 Main Ave. PITTSBURG, PA. Mrs. Charlotte Brightwell, 3151 Penn. Avo. E. K. Thumm, 1402 Wylie Avenue. HARMONY VILLAGE, VA. Deacon Cary G. Laws. SALUDA, VA. Deacon W. H. Banks. YONKERS, N. Y. John W. Adams, 231 N. Main St. LOS ANGELES, CAL. William S. Brown, 1204 E. 9th St. DETROIT, MICH. New York Book and News Co. 492 Antoine St. BLUEFIELD, W. VA. Richard K. Watkins. PULASKI, VA. J. M. Buford. GARY, IND. L. J. Phillips, 1648 Washington St. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Rollins Broso, 137 E. 9th street. Special Correspondents and Agents F. Z. S. Peregrino, 121 Lopp Street, Cape Town, B. A. Prof. I. S. Moore, 26 Rua dos Capitaes, Bahia, Brazil. SATURDAY.....JULY 26, 1913 25 GIRLS PERISH IN FACTORY FIRE Soon Swept by Flames; Mary Jump to Death. "PUFF" AND ALL WAS OVER Fifty Injured Were Rushed to Hospital After Binghamton Holocaust and Many Will Die. A wisp of smoke and a spurt of flame swept up the Wainway leading to the second floor of a four-story brick building at 17 Wall street, Binghamton, N.Y., and twenty minutes later twenty-five lives had been lost and fifty persons had been injured, many of whom will not recover. The building was the factory of the Binghamton clothing company, for merely the Freeman Overall company, employing 125 girls. There were heartrending scenes when several girls clinging to fire escapes were swept by sheets of flame or jumped from the factory windows. Exactly how many were pinned in side was hard to determine in the panic. E J Lawrence, bookkeeper of the company, said that he was working in the office when the first alarm was sounded. The flames were under the front stairway. There was also a rear stairway and the fire escapes at the south side of the building. Most of the women were employed in the machine operating room on the fourth floor. They made no attempt to hurry from the building at first, timing the alarm was a fire drill. Messengers were rung through the building to drive the women out. "Just then," said Lawrence, "the whole building burst into flames. I was of the ordinary factory construction, with timber supports and brick walls. But it went up like powder—a puff and all was over. When the flames rushed up the front stairway it was awful. "The women were in a panic in an instant. They rushed to the fire encapses and many of them leaped from the windows. "I had 125 names on my pay roll but some of the employees were gone on vacation. The lists are all inside the burned factory. I didn't have time to put them away or close the safe. It is impossible for the present to call the roll or get an accurate line on those who are missing." Most of the injured, including those who had been overcome with smoke or fright, were carried into the Knickelborger bocker, a few hundred feet away. Here all the available physical clans in the city were gathered. The injured girls were wrapped in blankets, given first aid and were then rushed to the city hospitals as rapidly as possible. Meanwhile the firemen had been stirring to stop the advance of the flames. Their efforts were gradually successful, but every building on the west side of Water street, between Spice alley and Henry street, was more or less damaged. During the fire two explosions occurred. Pieces of iron and brick were blown through the windows of the Automatic Music company's factory nearby. Twelve girls were rushed to the hospital within half an hour after the fire started. They were nearly all so badly burned that identification was impossible. Ruth Prouty, aged seventeen years, whose back is broken, was the only one of the twelve who was conscious. The physicians said that she will die She jumped from a fourth-story window a few minutes after the fire had broken out. Two sisters of Miss Prouty, who were also employed in the factory, failed to escape. As the front of the building fell in a human body was plucked from the stairway by a daring fireman and brought out to Wall street. He laid his burden upon the ground and covered it with a blanket. It was the body of a girl and was burned beyond recognition. The fire spread to the postoffice, the rear of which was burned off, and to the buildings of the McKaller Drug company, Simon O'Neill, the Binghamton Motor Car company garage and Christ church. The property loss will be between $100,000 and $200,000. Killed on His First Visit to Big City Paying his first visit to a big city Lewis Knaster came from his home in Pottstown, and was killed by an auto truck in Philadelphia. Knaster, who was fifty years old, left the train at one of the busiest corners in the city. Becoming confused in the middle of the street, he was run down by the truck while dodging a horse-drawn vehicle. Plenty of Practice: "I met your friend Dubley today." "Yes! I haven't seen him for a long time. I suppose he stutters as badly as ever." "Oh, no! He's quite an adept at it now."-Pilladelphia Press. NEGROES OPTOSE SEPARATE PARKS Fear That Grounds. Would Become Meeting Place of Rougher Elements. The proposal to establish one or more parks for the exclusive use of the colored population received a set back yesterday when a delegation of representative Negroes, headed by Rev. William Stokes, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, called upon Mayor Almelle to protest against the project. Attempts to solve the open-air problem by providing separate parks for the colored people, according to the delegation, would end in failure because they would become the meeting grounds of the rougher elements. The better classes, the men thought, would stay away, leaving the parks to become new recruiting grounds for already well-established cells. The conference yesterday followed by appointment after an interchange of letters on the question between the Mayor and Rev. Stokes. The latter requested an opportunity to be heard on the plan. Mayor Muslie suggested at the conclusion of the meeting that the delegation place its case before the Council Committee on Public Utilities which has the colored pars question under consideration. Besides the Baptist minister the delegation included J. J. Carter, John T. Taylor, N. B. Brown and E. Payne. The protest was regarded with pride yesterday by white advocates or separate park facilities. These were included to minimize the danger of monopoly by the tougher elements and thought that with the proper police regulation parks reserved for colored people exclusively could be made as decent and law-abiding as those provided for the exclusive use of the white population - Times. Dispatch. Causing Run On A Bank Oregon Evening Journal July 27 The virtue of a bar is as sensitive toandalic the cool name of a woman and the other care should be avoided by all persons in the county not to impair the security of one in the other. The nature of the law was directed from the New Haven Suffolk Bank the week preceding as one of the strongest banks in Connecticut. In an all day run on that bank, care was required remark. Just before the annual closing hour the effects in front of the bank were attained with no doubt Benjamin Stale a local lawyer made what he said was a voluntary statement to the crowd to the effect that he was convinced that the bank was sound. He had he was one of the largest depositors, and that during the day he had offered to make a deposit of $50,000 but the offer was refused by the bank officials saying they had ample funds on hand. Mr. State said further "The rumor affecting the bank started in an unfortunate manner, as the result of overzealousness on the part of solicitors seeking deposits for a bank that has started a savings department. Its solicitors stated that national banks are more solid than New Haven savings banks, and the public cut off the letter "N" and construed the statement to mean that the New Haven Savings Bank was not solid. His remarks apparently had considerable effect, for the crocod, most of whom were foreigners soon dispersed. The bank was ready to pay every depositor, and proved itself strong enough to defy any run on it. Fortunately the laws of Virginia require statements of the standing of its banks at short periods and simulaneously with the reports required by the Federal Government of national banks, and under the plan of periodical inspection there is little danger of any bank in Virginia encoaching upon its capital and reserves. Failures of banks in Virginia are rare, and under the present system nearly impossible. Notwithstanding the protective laws and the splendid integrity of Virginia banks there is no way to prevent loose talking, and a run on the strongest institution may be created by a rumor handed around, creating a wrong impression. Persons cannot be too careful in their statements about the conditions of a bank. JACK JOHNSON FINED 81 25. Drove Auto in London Without License Number. London, July 22.—Jack Johnson the colored pugilist, was fired five shillings ($1.25) and costs by Alderman Sir William Trolor at the Guidhall police court to-day for automobiling on the Victoria Embankment on July 12 without a license plate. Levi. Johnson's secretary pleaded guilty, on behalf of the pugilist, who, is in Paris. He explained that the license plate had been left on another car, which had broken down. Resolutions of Condolence from the A. and M. College Faculty. Whereas it has pleased an all-wise and benevolent Providence to remove from among us Mrs. Annie Dudley, the mother of our friend and President, Doctor J. B. Dudley, who departed this life at the home of her distinguished son on the evening of July 16, 1913 in the eighty seventh year of her age, and Whereas she was a woman of a remarkable personality, a true friend, a loving mother and a consistent Christian, and Whereas the influence of her life has been far reaching and helpful in its effects upon those who have been associated with her as well as through the life and labors of the children whom she has given to the world, therefore Be It Resolved That while we, the members of the A. and M. College Faculty, bow in humble submission to the will of Him who is too wise to err and too good to be unkind, we would hereby signify our gratitude for the example of her life and our sympathy for the bereaved and sense of personal loss in her taking away. Resolved Further. That a page in the minute book of the Faculty be inscribed to her memory and, that a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family and to the public press. Respectfully submitted. D. J. Jordan, A. D. Watkins, F. D. Bluford, J. H. Bluford, Committee. Blackstockings Beat N. Y. Giants. Blackstockings of Newport News played three games with New York Giants of New York city. The Black stockings shut out the Giants in two games. The first game was 7 to 0, second game 7 to 0, third game 4 to 3, all in favor of Blackstockings. First Game N. Y. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 B S. 2 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 x - 7 6 1 Batteries, Johnson and Jackson, Monroe and Grant, Time, 4:55—Attendance, 100—Umpire, Mr. Flemming. Second Game N. Y. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 B S. 2 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 x - 7 6 0 Batteries, Brown and Jackson, Jones and Grant—Time, 1:58—Umpire, Mr. Flemming. Third Game N. Y. 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 5 1 B S. 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 x - 4 6 1 Batteries, Jefferson and Jackson, Rixey and Grant—Time, 2 hours—Attendance, 700—Umpire, Mr. Flemming. C. C. Cunningham, Manager; J. E. Jones, Secretary, Office 615 234 St. Where the Blame Rests. (Clayland, Ohio, Garrett) (Cleveland, Ohio, Gazette.) recent Writer-force commencement ad dress, "The Noachian Curse," Editor John Mitchell of the Richmond, Va.) PLANET, pertinently remarks: "He (Rishop Smith) advocates the need of a new paper of national scope that will be to our race what the London Times is to the English people. He forgets though that the fun damental steps in this direction must be the support of the race journals now in evidence, that we cannot leap into the air upon a moment's notice: that a people who will not support and read a journal at $1 and $1.50 per year, will not support and read a paper at $8.50 per year. "If the leaders, the ministers of the people, the lawyers, the physicians, the dentists, the professors and instructors of the country, the businessmen declare their financial inability, to take over one weekly journal in their homes and pay for the name, how can the rank and file be expected to do it". "Tell it, brother; tell it" The truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth. There is not one publication in this country that our people are supporting as they should, and what is more, there never has been one. We have not better papers, weekly or otherwise, simply because enough of our people are not yet able to appreciate the need and value of monthly, weekly or daily news papers that plead their cause, defend and encourage them, and fight their battles. Our papers are just what our people make them. Leesburg Locals The funeral of Mr. Joseph Alsop took place at the M. E. Church of which he was a member. Rev. Dotson officiated. The Odd Fellows turned out in full. Don't say they didn't look nice. Remains were laid to rest in the Leesburg cemetery. Sleep on. Brother Alsop, take thy rest. We will soon meet you in the great beyond. Mrs. Arch Wellington, who died so suddenly Sunday night was laid to rest at Waterford. Funeral was held at the M. E. Church there. Rev. Dottow officiated. Mr. Joseph Richerson of lower Virginia and Miss Mamie Roberson were quietly joined in wedlock at the home of the bride. Reception was held in Washington. We are told she paid her mother a flying visit during the week, returning to Leesburg Saturday. Rev. Dotson left this morning for Hamilton, where the Woman's Day is in season. Great Union Meeting at the Primitive Baptist Church today. Rev. Spotts Brown is in charge. Mr. Thomas L. Robertson of Washington is in town today. Kisses are very costly in this section. A young man attempted to hug and kiss one. It cost him $4.10. Look out boys. Mr. Amos Randall of Washington is visiting his parents, Mrs. Charles Randall, week end. Mr. John N. Johnson left this morning for Washington where he is emplored. Mr. Andrew Mason left this morning for Washington. In a game of base ball Friday he tween Leesburg and Harington, the game stood Leesburg 16. Harington 8. Mr. William H. Roberts, our contractor and builder is a very busy man nowadays. He is erecting a very nice residence out on Waverly Heights for Mr. Henry Ashton. Mrs. Howard Turner and Miss Alice Thomas left Saturday for Washington, shopping. They will spend several days with friends. The second reception of Joseph Richerson, was held Sunday evening at the home here in town. The little infant, of Mr. Frank Twymans was interred in free burying ground. The Baptist picnic will take place on the Stat of July at Clark's Gap. Miss Lucy Lee of Washington is visiting Miss Charlotte Randall for a few days. The Bank of the People BECAUSE The People are Supporting it. THE MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK OF RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Is second to none of its size in equipment. Safety brings Confidence and Confidence brings Business. WHEN WE WERE BUYING A VAULT, WE BOUGHT THE BEST FOR THE REASON THAT WE BELIEVED THE BEST WAS NONE TOO GOOD FOR OUR PEOPLE. If our people had failed to patronize the Bank, it would have been their fault and not ours. When we were selecting a New York Correspondent, we chose the National Park Bank of that City. Our actual assets, based upon the present value of our real-estate holdings are over fifty thousand dollars above the amount on deposit with us. This guarantees the safety of every dollar on deposit with us. We invite correspondence and urge upon every one to bring us their money for safe keeping. Amounts in sums of ten cents and upwards received. Interest paid on sums of $100 and over. Our President is under Bond. Our Cashier is under Bond. Our Vault, although Burglar-proof is insured against loss by burglars. Our Building is insured and the bulk of our funds Invested in desirable Real Estate. Our Tellers are under Bond. Our Banking Hours are from 9 A. M. to 2 P. M. and Saturdays from 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & CLAY STS. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Montown Lodge Installs Officers The officers of Ziontown Lodge, Knights of Pythias were installed last Tuesday night by District Deputy L. J. Morris. After the installation, a nine repast was served. The following officers were installed: C. C., Ben Carter; V. C. John Lewis; P., James Norrell; M. of W., Edward Norrell; M. of Ex., John Carter; K. of R. and S., Arthur Price; M. of F., Albert Carter; M. at A., Wilton H. Crump; I. G., Charles Brooks; O. G., John Harris. Mr. Thomas Thompkins of West wood died suddenly last Tuesday even ing. His funeral took place from the Westwood Baptist Church last Friday. Rev. E. J. Smith will preach at the First Baptist Church, West Point, Va, at both services, tomorrow. VIRGINIA—In the Circuit Court of the County of Henrico, the 18th day of July, 1913. Minnie Young.....Plaintiff vs. Calvin Young.....Defendant The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce, a vinculo matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant, on the ground of desertion. And an affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant is a non-resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that he appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this order and do what may be necessary to protect his interests herein. A copy—Teste: SAMUEL P. WADDELL. Clerk. HAVE YOUR HOUSE PAINTED. We will paint your house and walk for the money. You only pay one third cash and a little each month, thus giving you a plenty of TIME to FIND out as to QUALITY of MATERIAL used before paying for same. COLGIN COMPANY. 1430 Floyd Avenue. Phone, Monroe-4513. International Bible Students' Association Convention, Asheville, N. C., July 20-27, 1913 For this occasion SOUTHERN RAILWAY will sell tickets from all points on its lines to Ashoville, N. C. and return at greatly reduced rates. Tickets on sale July 17th, 18th and 19th. Final limit returning July 30th, 1913. For tickets by any further information call on nearest Ticket Agent, Southern Railway, or write S. R. BURGESS, D. P. A., 907 East Main St, Richmond, Va. $28,675.00 Paid out from January 1,1912 to June 2,1913. FINE SHOWING FOR BOTH BRANCHES OF THE KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS—READ AND CONSIDER—VIRGINIA DOING GRAND WORK FORD'S HAIR POMADE MADE SINGLE-OWNED ON CHEY HAIR GROOM, SUPPEN AND DRESS POMADE. LAY TO GOOD AND PUT IN ANY THE LOWER TAIL FORM, UNDERWEAR FOR PACKAGING FROM POMADE FORM, DRESSING AND TEXTURE OF SCALE RETOUCH OF INSTITUTION, GET THE GUIDEMENT UP TO 18 26- and 30-BUTTERS WITH CHARLES FORD'S GROOM OR EVERY PACKAGE. TRY FORD'S ROUGH WHITE SKIN LOTION FOR THE COMPLEXION MAKES THE SKIN WHITE INMEDIATELY UPON APPLICATION, WILL NOT INHITATE THE MOST BILICATE SKIN, UNDERCLELL FOR ECCERNA, SALT RINALN, PRIMPS, ROUND SKIN AND PRECLELS. • • SAIL BY DEMAND. IF YOUR BROUGHT LABEL SUPPLY YOU WILL SEND IT TO YOU IN THE CITY OF CLEVELAND. • • THE GODDIN OR MARROW CO. 221 LAKE S. DEPT. 800 AGENTS WANTED. • • CHICAGO, IL ```markdown ``` 'Phone, South 1845—M. MRS. & E. JONES EMPLOYMENT Wants First Class Cooks (both sex) Male and Female Waitresses, Chambermaids, Housekeepers, Laundress, Farm-hands, and Laborers. Apply at West Point House, $9 E. Lee St., Baltimore, Md., 1-2 square from Richmond boat landing, where you can also get Boarding and Lodging at Reasonable Rates by Day or Week or Month. A. JONES. Proprietor. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` Jan. 15—Elizabeth Johnson, Myrtle Court, No. 108 Feb. 8—Emma Lee Marable, Fearless Court, No. 143 Feb. 19—Rachel A. Burns, Staunton Court, No. 76 March 7—Martha Branch, Arnaea's Court, No. 72 March 22—Charlotte Yearby, Pride of East Court, No. 56 April 4—Courtney Booker, Planet Court, No. 187 April 9—Carrie Martin, Victoria Court, No. 52 April 17—Emily Allman, Narelus Court, No. 229 April 21—Matilda Hall, Unity Court, No. 132 April 22—Tahlien Skinner, Golden Rule Court, No. 86 April 28—Elizabeth M. Robinson, Unity Court, No. 122 April 28—Minnie Johnson, Sarah's Court, No. 246 April 28—Cora Preston, Fulton Court, No. 244 April 28—Maggie Mooby, King's Daughters Court, No. 70 April 28—Margaret Leftwich, Old Dominion Court, No. 114 April 28—Ella Shepherd, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 85 April 28—Sallie Taylor, Fulton Court, No. 244 April 28—Rebecca Banks, Blooming Lily Court, No. 142 April 28—Sarah Burwell, Suffolk Court, No. 63 May 2—George Bolling, Old Dominion Court, No. 114 May 10—Celia Brown, Pride of Farmville Court, No. 144 May 24—Margaret Scott, Venus Court, No. 47 May 24—Loxie Ann Prunty, Jupiter Court, No. 50 May 24—Annie Johnson, Pride of the East Court, No. 56 May 24—Emily Allman, Narelus Court, No. 229 SUPERIOR TO COPAIBA & INJECTIONS SANTAL MIDY RELIEVED IN 24 HOURS SUBSCRIBE TO THE RICHMOND PLANET.