Richmond Planet
Saturday, September 13, 1913
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
PLANET
COLORED GIRL'S $112,000 A YEAR
Ten-Year-Old Will Pay Biggest Income Tax in Oklahoma.
Muskogee, Okla., Sept. 7. — A colored girl 10 years old will pay the largest income tax in Oklahoma.
Sarah Rector, who lives just west of Muskogee, has an income of more than $112,000 a year.
It is the old story of the lucky allottee and the oil well. Sarah is the descendant of a Creek freedman. She had nothing to do with the selection of her allotment and probably has never seen it and does not know where it is. But it is 160 acres of land and upon it has been drilled the biggest producing well in the mid-continent field. This is what is known as the Jones Ginsher, near the town of Cushing. The well is producing more than $2,500 a day and Sarah got one-eighth as her share.
This is just the beginning. Art
rangements are already made to drill
other wells. There is no doubt but
these will also be big producers.
The Law Incarnate.
Joe McNeely; a Negro, who lay wounded and helped in a hospital in Charlotte, N. C. was seized, carried outside and shot to death by a mob of thirty-five men Tuesday night. He had assassinated a policeman, who still lives. Not one of his murderers has been identified.
It was the first time that lynch law has been invoked in either Charlotte or Mecklenburg County. It was the first lynching to displace North Carolina in years. The lynchers set the mitted suddenly and swiftly. It shocked a horror-striken community into unaltering determination to bring to bar the mob who brought shame not only upon the community and the State, but upon the South as well.
The newspaper accounts declare that two policemen, stationed in the hospital, drew their pistols on the mob and were "overpowered," but public opinion must sustain the statement of Judge Shaw, who is holding court in Charlotte, that "two big pistols in the hands of men who were not diligent as to their duty were as harmless as a toy pistol in the hands of a child." These awn defenders of the law assert that they recognized not a single member of the gang of gunmen who "overpowered" them. Lynch law survives only where those awn to protect and preserve justice violate their sacred oath. The majesty of constituted authority can not be maintained upon a foundation of fear. There is but one way to recall Judge Lynch. Establish in office such men as gerrif White, of Spartanburg, South Carolina, whose example has been commended to the officers of law of North Carolina by Governor Craig.
A fortnight ago a mob in that city determined to knight a Negro who had been sent to jail to await trial for the usual crime. Sherif White mot the mob at the gate of the jallyard. Sticks of dynamite were exploding near him and the human vultures outside thirteed for blood. The two sons of the sherif lay ill in the prison. "Gentleman," said Sherif White "I hate to do it, but, so help me God, I am going to kill the first man that enters that gate." Then came a voice from the mob: "He means it, boys!" and no man entered. Before the rightcourness of the law, embodied in its intrepid defender, the mob qualified and melted away.
Lynch law would be blotted from the face of the earth forever if the fidelity and the courage of a White flamed in the souls of all those who have sworn, with the help of God, to maintain the law of the land
—Mrs. Susan Johnson of Atlee, Va. has been visiting friends here.
—Mrs. Nannie C. Johnson is disposed at her residence, 819 St. John St.
—Mr. Royal Puryear, Painting and Decorating Contractor of Winston Salem, N.C. was in the city on business this week.
—Miss Bernetta Young has returned to the city after spending the Summer attending the "Columbia University of New York.
—Mrs. John Bland and son, Master John Bland, Jr. returned to the city after a pleasant stay in Washington, D. C. the guest of Mrs. E. D. Hardy.
WANTED - LIGHT COMPLEXIONED Colored Barber. Guarantee $10. Will send ticket. Must be about 75 miles from Washington, D. C. Address GEORGUS L. MOXLBY, Mortonburg, W. Va.
Negro Pugilist is Warmly Welcome
at Two Big Music Halls.
London, Aug. 25.—The man in the street showed to-night in an emphatic manner that he does not share in the hostility to Jack Johnson the Negro puglist. He regards the colored man as the victim of persecution, which is due to color prejudice. Notwithstanding the announcement that Johnson's appearance had been postponed the Euston and South London Music balls, where he had been billed to appear, were densely crowded to-night and there were great mobs outside of each.
Johnson's first turn was at the Buson. Here there was a great up roar from the moment the curtain went up. The audience was determined to have Johnson and stood up and shouted for him. They refused to listen to two comediennes who had refused to appear if Johnson did, but in consequence of the announcement of the postponement of his appearance had agreed to go on. The audience drowned the efforts of those two young women with whistles, cat calls and hisses. They were obliged to retire and the whole show was held up. Presently a roar of cheering outside the hall announced that something was happening. Johnson's car had arrived with the big Negro, who was all英寸. The crowd yelled with delight at Johnson's appearance and climbed all over the car in an embrace with him. Johnson was almost smothered by the mob that got on all parts of the car and the police had great difficulty in clearing a pathway for the pugilist to the entrance.
Johnson and his friends marched in under the leadership of Manager Loxer of the hall. The lights were down but the audience got a glimpse of Johnson, and cheered frantically for several minutes. They also shouted words of encouragement to the pugilist, a few distendants valiantly protesting by hissing. Johnson stood smiling and bowing for several minutes. Then he left and tried to escape the crowd by taking a tacitaxe at another entrance. This was useless, however, and the police had another job in ridding the car of those who were clinging to it. When at length the car was free and started hundreds ran alongside for some distance.
There were similar scenes at the South London Music Hall. Here Johnson made a speech, in which he said among other things: "My only crime is that I beat Jeffries." When he left there were similar scenes to those witnessed at his departure from Euston Hall.
Alexandria District Conference.
Saturday, August 20th devotion was conducted by Rev. J. G. Grant, Rev. C. E. Hodges in the chair. The question relating to the renewing of local preachers' and exhorters' licenses was taken up. Revs. S. A. Virgil and C. M. Morton were elected as the choice of the conference to attend the Great Men's Movement Meeting which convenes in Indianapolis, Ind. in October.
Dr. I. L. Thomas was here introduced and addressed the conference. The report of the executive committee was read and approved.
Sunday, August 31st was a great day. Revs. F. E. Nicholas and P. R. Vaula conducted a general testimonial meeting. Dr. I. L. Thomas Field Secretary of Board of Home Missions and Church Extension Society at 11 A. M. preached a great sermon from John 9:4.
Great platform meeting at 3 P. M. in which the following speakers took part, Drs. W. C. Thompson, I. Garland Penn, I. L. Thomas and D. Webster Davis.
At 5 P. M. the Rev. C. S. Briggs, pastor Jackson' St. Church Lynchburg, preached. Final word from Drs. W. C. Thompson and I. Garland Penn.
After hearing report of committee on resolutions expressing gratification to pastor, members and friends for the splendid entertainment and kindness shown, conference adjourned to meet at Harrisonburg, Va.
Rev. J. H. E. Carter, Sec.; Rev. J. H. Johnson, Reporter.
President John Mitchell, Jr. of the Mechanica' savings Bank has arranged to attend the sessions of the American Bankers' Association. Oct. 5 to 10. 1913. Upon his return he expects to step over at Springfield, Mass., Providence, R. I. and New Haven, for a brief stay, providing his home duties will permit.
The Supreme Lodge and Its Past History
STATE'S RIGHTS AND ITS BENEFITS.
The present clash between the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A., E., A., A. and A. and the Grand Lodge of Virginia. Knights of Pythias brings to mind the fact that the disruption of the Office once and Alabama have been before was over state's rights. The, along similar lines.
Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias. The legal sight on the Eastern and Western Hemisphere was the result.
THE OTHER SIDE
Attorney W. Ashleigh Hawkins, of Baltimore, Maryland is now Supreme Chancellor of that side and their Supreme Lodge was in session during the week beginning September 1, 1912. Subsequently states rights in the matter of endowment was granted to the several grand jurisdictions or states and this has been used as an argument why the Eastern and Western Hemisphere people should return to the mother Order.
It may be well to state that the Supreme Lodge, originally controlled the endowment department in every state in which it had grand or subordinate lodges. But it failed to pay its death claims promptly, and finally did not pay them at all. It was then that a revolution took place and the several states were permitted to take charge of their own endowment department.
SECURED OTHER CHARTERS
Many states secured independent state charters and thereby became legally independent of the Supreme Lodge. Virginia was one of those states and holds two charters, one from the state of Virginia and one from the Supreme Lodge. It has been the persistent effort of the Chicago and New Orleans "rings" to change all of this and orders were issued that all Grand Lodges should rollnish their state charters and re-incorporate in the name of the Supreme Lodge.
WANT PROPERTY, TOO.
This would result in the virtual
Died From Wound.
Isaiah Moody, colored, forty-two years old, a writer at the Common wealth Club, who was shot with a pistol by Caleb Ingram, colored, last Monday night, died Tuesday morning at 5 o'clock at the City Home.
Ingram escaped and has not been captured. He is thirty-two years old with brown complexion and is a line man by occupation. Moody lived at 533 Brook Avenue. The two men engaged in an altercation and Ingram went away. According to reports furnished the police, Ingram returned in ten minutes and shot Moody through the stomach.
---
Miss Fannie Cowan Laid to Rest.
The funeral of Miss Ida Fannie Cowan took place from the Second Baptist Church. Wednesday, September 3rd, Rev. Dr. Z. D. Lewis preached a most impressive sermon. The floral tributes were excaptionally beautiful, attesting the high esteem in which the deceased war held.
The following acted as jail bearer: Honorary, Messrs. J. C. Smith, H. G. Lewis, L. Peterson, J. Bolling, S. H. Shackleford and Emmanuel Stewart. Active, Messrs. George Green, Frank Glangow, John Gatewood, Benjamin Watkins, Ira Fry, William Smith.
Miss Cowan was the beloved daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Walter S. Cowan of North Third St. and was a well known school teacher, beloved by all who knew her.
Accidently Drowned
Swansboro, Va., Sept. 9, 1913. The funeral of little Joseph Woolridge, who was accidentally Arowned Thursday, the 4th last, while bathing in the James River, near the pump-house, took place last Sunday from the Second Baptist Church, Rev. D. W. Davis establishing. The scene was a pathetic one and the many friends extend their sympathy to the beloved father and mother. The interment was in Mr. Clovet
passing up to the Supreme Lodge and the present management all of the property of the several grand lodges. Missouri and Virginia have ever been forward in refusing to do this and Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Alabama have been outspoken along similar lines. The legal fight on the name Knights of Pythias afforded the excuse to the ring that they had long sought. The life of the Order being at stake, the states were not dispossessed to consider seriously the constitutional prohibition against the levying of the unconstitutional tax of twenty cents per member.
CALLED FOR MORE MONEY.
With the conclusion of that suit, other taxes of ten cents per member were levied upon first one excuse and then another. Finally at Baltimore, August 25-30, 1913, the mask was thrown aside and the tax levied wholly and solely to pay salaries. Instead of retrenching in the matter of expenses, they were increased and angry Supreme Representatives have returned to their states to spread the news of the Supreme Lodge "wringing" deception and the Supreme Lodge's degradation.
PAY THEIR OWN WAY
The Grand Lodges pay their own
sick and death benefits. They pay
their own endowment and yet a tax
aggregating ($15,000) fifteen thousand
and dollars per year has been levied
for the purpose of paying salaries.
The only return for this money is a
pass word issued by the Supreme
Chancellor.
WOULD NOT SUBMIT.
Self-respecting representatives of a confiding knighthood in this state refused to be a party to this transaction and Virginia is unanimous in maintaining them. It may be well to state that if this money demanded by the Supreme Lodge is to be paid, a tax of from fifty cents to $1.00 per member would have to be levied upon every member in this state. It could not be taken from the treasury as it is a special tax.
DEPOSITORS RUSH TO RECEIVE
CASH.
Creditors of Defunct True Reformers' Bank See Ready Money Mirage.
Under the impression that the commissioners in charge of the liquidation of the defunct True Reformers' Bank, were ready to pay all claims, about 500 depositors of that bank, holding claims of from 50 cents to $700, swamped the office of G. Carlton Jackson, in the Travelers' Building, yesterday morning in the hope of getting their money.
The rush followed the publication of an announcement by Mr. Jackson, one of the commissioners appointed in the case by the court, calling for all depositors entitled to dividends of $2 and less, to call at the office and leave their names. The classification was made necessary because of the expense involved in satisfying individually claims of this size, many of which were for as low as 50 cents.
The advertisement caused the spread of the report that, all claims would be adjusted, and colored depositors responded in force. When Mr. Jackson arrived at his office yesterday morning, 200 were waiting and more were coming on each trip of the elevator to the eighth floor. Before Mr. Jackson could explain the situation, about 500 depositors had visited the building. Richmond, Va., Times-Dispatch, Sept. 11, 13.
I am offering some big bargains in Real Estate, paying anywhere from 10 to 14 percent. You should see these before buying. B. A. CEPHAS, Real Estate Agent, Cor. 2nd and Leigh St.
Card of Thanks
September 10, 1913.
We take this medium to thank the many friends for their kindness shown to us in the death of our daughter, Ida Pannie Cowan and the beautiful remembrances sent.
May God's saintest blessings attend all.
Very gratefully,
CAPT. & MRS. W. S. COWAN.
Another Court Organized.
Orange, Va., Sept. 9.—Special Deputy Grand Worthy Counsellor Miss Marietta L. Chiles and Dr. E. R. Jefferson of Richmond, Va. arrived on the afternoon train today to organize a Court of Calanthe. The ladies to be made were dager and expectant as this is the first Court of Calanthe in this section and were highly delighted to see the Richmond. Grand Court representatives for that purpose, though all regretted that the G. W. C. Mr. John Mitchell, Jr. was not one of the distinguished guests.
As it was the regular meeting of Orange Lodge Dr. Jefferson had the pleasure of addressing this strong lodge of 65 members and explaining in detail the Supreme Lodge session as he had been a Supreme Representative with Grand Chancellor, Ion. John Mitchell, Jr. for the past twelve years and knew every phase and every step that the Grand Lodge of Virginia had taken in alighting to get justice from that department, and to get the financial affairs to be managed along business lines in keeping with its own constitution in dealing with the Grand Jurisdictions, before taking the final move at Baltimore, Md. The lodge members were jubilant to have the chance of having one of the Supreme Representatives with them.
The Court of Calanths, known as Orange Court was then instituted by Miss Chiles and Dr. Jefferson and the ladies were equally an enthusiastic at the beautiful initiation ceremonies and also the explanations of the benefits of the Order and all other information that was so freely and pleasantly given them.
Mr. Benjamin F. Bowler formerly of Richmond, Dr. I. A. Jackson, Sir G. T. Willis, Chancellor Commander, of Orange Lodge were allowed to join Orange Court and each made timely and well-received remarks relative to the progress of the K. of P. order in Virginia.
A bountiful repast was then served the guests after which all retired to their homes well-placed, with the affairs of the evening. This Court was gotten up by Sir Ben P. F. Bowler and Mrs. Cordella Braaton who deserve much honor for the same.
The following are the officers of Orange Court: W. Inr, Mrs. Lula Kemper; W. C., Mrs. Cordella Braxton; W. Inx, Mrs. Mary Adams; W. O., Mrs. Inez Taylor; W. R. of D., Mrs. Lille Bowler; W. R. of A., Miss Helen Reid; W. R. of Dep. Mrs. Mary Steen; W. S. D. Mrs. Lille Taylor; W. J. D., Miss Nancy Ellis; W. Con. Mrs. Lucy Washington; W. Asat. Con., Mrs. Mary F. Adams; W. Escort, Mrs. Evelyn Hill; W. Herald, Mrs. Little Lee; W. Pro. Sir Benjamin F. Bowler, Trustees: Mrs. Alice Derritt, 15 months; Mrs. Patsy Wore, 12 months; Mrs. Ora Davis, 6 months.
Miss Chiles was the guest of Mrs. B.. F. Bowler during her stay in our midst, and Dr. Jefferson was Sir Staff's guest. They left for Richmond on the morning train of September 10, 1913.
Better Than Expected.
The plentic given at Washington Park by the Ushers Union of Richmond on Labor Day for the benefit of their charitable fund was largely attended, in fact the crowd numbered from three thousand to five thousand people, it was very much larger than expected, and some difficulty was experienced in handling them to the satisfaction of all parties. This be attiful and highly improved home place for colored people was extended to the Ushers Union on Labor Day free of charge by the Washington Park Land Corporation for their entertainment and we understand that a great many lots were sold by the Company in consequence of the effort put forth by the Ushers and their magnificent success in drawing a large crowd, and while justly merited property was well advertised on that day.
At the same time the Ushers Union should dply appreciate the free contribution and use of the grounds given by the Company which doubtless was the means of contributing very largely to their charitable fund.
Who said Mrs. Satterfield, organist of the 5th St. Bapt. Church would win at the Ebonzer Church on the 22nd? I say Mr. Andrew Woolfoll of the 6th Mt. Zion Baptist. Thou sayest Mrs. Nannie Cobb of the 1st Baptist. He says Mrs. Susie Dahney Scott of the 4th Baptist. We say Mr. Charles Bland of the 2nd Bapt. You say Mrs. M. V. Nelson of the 1st Baptist. South Richmond. They say Mrs. M. G. Waddell of the 1st Presbyterian. Come and hear who the judges say.
WANTED ANOTHER GOOD LINETYPE Operator. Apply at The PLANET GAME.
First Annual Grand Session
The Supreme Lodge of the National Ideal Benefit Society, Inc. Holds Its First Annual Session at Mt. Carmel Baptist Church—Meeting a Great Success.
Tuesday morning, September 2nd, 1915 marked a new epoch in the fraternal world when the Supreme Lodge of the National Ideal Benefit Society met in its first annual session. The church was attractively decorated with palms and cut flowers.
Precisely at 10 o'clock, Mr. A. W. Holmes, Supreme Master called the large delegation to order. Roll of Supreme Officers and Directors was called by the Supreme Secretary, S. W. Johnson, after which Devotional Exercises were conducted by the Supreme Chaplain, Dr. Dr. W. T. Johnson, assisted by Rev. C. H. Phillips and Rev. R. F. Richardson of Washington, D. C.
The Supreme Master set the keynote for the work of the Convention in his annual message which was listened to attentively and was well received. At the conclusion of the report of the committee on credentials an address was delivered to the delegates by the Supreme Vice Master, Rev. W. L. Anderson. The report of the Supreme Officers shows that the Organization is rapidly advancing.
Tuesday night at S o'clock was a large public meeting at the First Baptist Church. Mr. A. W. Holmes, Supreme Master, presided over the meeting. Welcome on the part of the church by Rev. Dr. W. T. Johnson, pastor; while the welcome on the part of the Society was delivered by Prof. J. E. Jones of the Virginia Union University. Mrs. M. E. Holmes, National Lecturer of the Southern District was at her best in introducing Mrs. Rosa Thompson, National Lecturer of the Northern District who responded to the Welcome Address.
Mrs. Rosa Thompson, who is well known as a powerful speaker, and one who can easily carry her audience at will, on this occasion seemed to have excelled herself in that, it is said by those who heard her that this address was one of the finest ever listened to.
At the close of this superb address, she was presented with a most beautiful bouquet of flowers by Master Ellis Booker of Golden Sunbeam Nursery, No. 17, on behalf of the Ideal Nursery Department of Richmond District. She was also presented with a token by Mrs. Eva M. Robinson of Friendship Lodge on behalf of Philadelphia District.
The National Ideal Choir under the direction of Mrs. Ida Glover Dume and Mrs. Carrie Coleman Hawk kings rendered choice music for the occasion. Closing remarks were made by the Supreme Master.
Wednesday was a very busy day for the Convention, being the selection of officers and the reception of reports of the various committees.
At 8:00 P. M. was the "Ideal Union" at which time discussion on Friendship, Love and Peace led by the Supreme Master was the main feature of the evening. At the conclusion of these discussions a most able address was delivered by Rev. J. E. Wright, Missionary of the Va. Baptist Sunday School Convention, after which the guest were led to the banqueting hall by Mrs. M. E. Holmes, that man where her abl committee most beautifully served the guest, for which they have the hearty congratulations of the delegates and visitors.
A most impressive Memorial Service presided over by Mrs. Rosa B. Brooks was held in memory of our dead, at which time the principal oulogy was delivered by Mrs. M. E. Holmes.
Thursday was known as the Ideal Nursery Day and well did the women headed by Mrs. Rosa Thompson and Mrs. M. E. Holmes plan for the advancement of this department. An Auxiliary to the Supreme Lodge was formed to be known as "The National Ideal Guardians' Convention," to hold its first annual session in Philadelphia, Pa.
At 3 P. M. the Nursery workers of Richmond, District presented the Ideal Nursery children who rendered an excellent programme, for which the workers were loudly applauded by the delegation.
At 8 o'clock the climax was reached when the National Ideal Choir gave the public a musical treat at the City Auditorium. Fully three thousand people were present.
Mr. T. L. Beverly, Deputy for Richmond District: Mrs. Rosa Wilkerson and Mrs. Willie P. Tinsley. Lecturers, are some of the most tireless workers of the Society.
The Convention was pleasingly surprised when it learned from the Supreme Master's report that the following named persons: Mrs. C. C. Hawkins, Mrs. Rosetta G. Arrington, Mrs. Ida E. Charity, Miss Lillian H. Holmes and Miss Alice Brown were among the first to work up Lodges and Nurseries, and are leading them successfully, as well as serving as employees. Mrs. Rosetta G. Arrington is one of the most
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
proficient stenographer of the State showed her rare ability in handling her part of the work of the Convention.
The following officers were installed by the Rev. J. H. Blinford, with a most impressive ceremony: Supreme Master, A. W. Holmes; Supreme Vice Master, Rev. W. L. Anderson; Supreme Mistress, Mrs. Rosa Wilkerson; Supreme Chaplain, Rev. C. H. Phillips; Supreme Secretary, Mr. S. W. Johnson; Supreme Treasurer, Dr. A. A. Tennant; Supreme R. Guide, M. T. Robinson; Supreme L. Guide, Mrs. Louisa B. Jones; Supreme L. Sentinel, James Richardson; Supreme O. Sentinel, A. C. Hines; Supreme R. Herald, Rev. R. F. Richardson; Supreme L. Herald, Mrs. Lucinda J. Carter.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
A. W. Holmes, W. L. Anderson,
D. L. Vest, Mrs. Rosa Wilkerson,
T. L. Beverly, S. W. Johnson, William Ronne, J. E. Wingo J. R. Hicks F. L. Bryant, Joseph Charity, Alphene Scott, John S. Powell, Dr. A. A. Tenant, Rey. W. T. Johnson.
OFFICERS FOR THE GUARDIANS' CONVENTION.
Mrs. Rosa Thompson, President:
1st Vice, Mrs. M. E. Holmes; 2nd
Vice, Mrs. Dolla R. Dove; 3rd Vice,
Mrs. Charlotte Brown; Prelato, Mrs.
Mary E. Watta; Secretary, Miss
Lucy A. Hall; Asst. Secretary, Mrs.
Susie B. Williams; Treasurer, Mrs.
Eva M. Robinson; Asst. Treasurer,
Mrs. Virgile S. Minor; Conductress,
Mrs. Emma Wingo; Asst. Conductress,
Mrs. Susie Robinson; Directress,
Mrs. Sallie M. Stockton; Past
President, Mrs. Willie P. Tinsley;
Inner Herald, Mrs. Inabella Rooke;
Outer Herald, Mrs. Annie E. Rooke;
Chlorister, Mrs. C. C. Hawkins; National
Honorary Past President, Mrs.
Amy Pratt; Advising Counselor, Deacon Wm. H. King; Secty, of the
Advisory Committee, Mrs. Sallie B. Cogbill.
Next Convention of the Supreme
Lodge will convene at Newport News
September, 1914.
Grand Musical at the City Auditorium
Last Thursday evening, Sept. 4, 1913 the City Auditorium was almost filled with spectators, there being over 3000 people present to witness the Grand Musical given by the choir of the National Ideal Benefit Society of which Mr. A. W. Holmes is Founder and Supreme Master. This entertainment was one of the finest ever given in this city. Every number was well rendered and brought forth loud applause. In addition to the singers there were seated on the rostrum the Supreme Officers, Board of Directors and other representatives. The National Ideal Band and the Execsior Orchestra enlivened the occasion with their beautiful catchy selections. The choruses were good and showed they had been well trained.
"The following is the programme: selection, National Ideal Band; selection, Execsior Orchestra; chorus, "Longing for Summer," National Ideal Choir; solo, Mr. S. L. Johnson; duett, Misses Ada Ferris and Nellie Fisher; solo, Mrs. Minnie Jones; quartette, "The Parting Kiss,"—Mendames Minnie Jones, and Carlo C. Hawkins, Messrs. George Wickerson and S. L. Johnson; solo, Mr. Joseph Matthews; recitation, Mrs. Louiso Tilton Deane.
Part Second: solo, Mrs. Ida Glover Deane; quartette, National Ideal Male Quartette—Messrs. Joseph Matthews, George Wilkerson, Jr. S. W. Jackson and S. L. Johnson; recitation, Miss Minnie Coleman; quartette National Ideal Female Quartette—Mesdames Ida. Ida G. Deane, Minnie Jones, Louise T. Deane, Carrie C. Hawkins; chorus, Inflammatus, National Ideal Choir; solo, Mrs. Lizzie G. Brown; quartette National Ideal Female Quartette—Mesdames Ida G. Deane, Minnie Jones, Louise T. Deane, Carrie C. Hawkins; solo, Mr. Benjamin Deane.
Officers: Mrs. Carrie Coleman Hawkins, President and Manager; M. E. Holmes, Vice Pres.; Vigile S. Minor, Secty.; Sarah J. Ward, Treas.; Julia B. Holmes, Chap.; Ida Glover Deane, Musical Directress; Louise Tilton Deane; Planet.
Anniversary of the Bands of Calanthe
The Bands of Calanthe will celebrate their anniversary with appropriate exercises at the New Baptist Church, Sunday, September 14th, at 3 P. M.
Committee: East End—Mrs. Mary E. Crump, Mrs. Sarah A. Stewart; West End—Mrs. Sarah Dunnivant. Mrs. Sarah Taylor, Miss Mary E. Taylor.
Members of the Order and friends are cordially invited to be present. Children are requested to meet in the basement of the church at 2 P. M. We expect the Cadets to be out as usual.
Mr. A. B. Graham of High Point, N. C. was in the city this week the most of his own. W. H. Dunnett.
THE ISLAND OF THE STAIRS
Being a True Account of Certain Strange and Wonderful Adventures of Master John Hampdon, Seaman, and Mistress Lucy Wilberforce, Gentlewoman, In the Great South Seas.
By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY
5YNOPSIS
The body of Sir James Wilberforce, ruined garrison of the town, is found by Hampton, a town in Hampshire quarrels with the Duke of Auster.
Hampton breaks the news to have Wilberforce and delivers a letter found on her father's body.
It contains half of a tray of a treasure island. Lucy already has the tray. There are directions for finding the treasure.
"How could we get the 'If you had a ship' commanded and found you could reach the spotility."
"How much would it Well, I quickly and mated in my mind the lay. Such a vessel as quite might be bought (2,500 or 16,000)."
Wherein We Decide to Go Voyaging.
"LET'S put the two places to gather and take them to the light and see if we can decipher what I said." Writerforce. I continued to look at the sailor's presentation that we watched the track of something that will greatly better your journey. And I wrote.
"In ye yeats of oure Leste Leste Leste I
Philip Wilberford Leste Leste Leste I
Devon, being ye captainte of ye
good shippe Squiree of Wallee, dalle
take ye grate Sparee of galleen Nau-
estra Senora de la concession, after
a blondie encounter, where mine
own shippe was sable. Ye sailing of
ye galloon was worth the monde
milliones of pounds settling. I take
ye. With the manne gwelles and stones
of price, plesses of eight and tellones,
together with sikes and spicerie. Be-
ing blowne to ye sounthe and westhe
manle days in a grate tempestee ye
galloon was caste away on Ye landee
of ye Stalear. Wee landee ye treser
and blidde yin ye walle. All my neme
meene being in ye ende de ye natives came over ye seas in their grate
canoes and toode me, being like a
YELAT. 21°-40'S
ye Cave
ye STAR
ye Walle
ye SMOOTHE WATER
WITHIKE ye CORY!
One Half of the Map of the island.
maddie manne. Goddie mercifully preserving my life. I escaped from themm, and at last am comme safe intoe mine owe sweet lande of England once more. Toe find my mouette of ye treasor cave, take a bearing alonge ye souther of ye three Goddes on ye Altar of Skilies on ye middel hile of ye lande. Where ye line strykes ye knilke in ye walle with ye bigge pamme tree bee three hoasis. Climbe ye stones, enter ye center one. It is there. 'Lette him that wille seek and finde.'
When I had finished reading we both stopped and stared. There was much in it. of course, that we could-not possibly understand. We could only comprehend it fully if we were lucky enough to stand beside the "Stone Gods" on the island itself. Still the general purport was sufficiently clear. Sir Philip Wilberforce had evidently concealed a very considerable treas-
are there. If we could find it our fortunes would be made, or hers, rather, for I swear I never thought of myself at all.
"Think you," my little mistress began at last, her pale face flushing for the first time, her bosom heaving quickly. "that the treasury may still be there?"
"Who can tell?" I answered. "The island may have remained unvisited since Mr. Philip's day."
"But would treasure last no long?" "Shamed in a cave gold and silver that forever. Everything else would have saved away probably."
SYNOPSIS
CHAPTER IV.
"How could we get there, she asked?
"If you had a ship, you'd!" "Well commanded and found, and trained you could reach the spot without difficulty."
"How much would it cost?"
Well, I quickly and roughly estimated in my mind the necessary outlay. Such a vessel as she would require might be bought 75 perch (£250 or 16,000). Providing and outfitting, together with the pay of the officers and the crew, would require perhaps 1,500 or 2,200 more, or a total between five and six thousand pounds. And she had but two I was about to tell her the problem: truth when the solution of the problem in society came to me. In one way or another I had been a fortunate boy, and I had saved up or earned by training one or two adventures in which I had taken part something over 14,000 which was safely belonged to my credit in a London bank.
"I should think, I am slowly, that £250 would be enough to cover everything."
"Ah, she said, exactly the sum that Master I amoon and was left of my mother's estate."
"Yes, I said I and then I added in duty temp." But you surely would not be so foolish. Mistress Wilberforce, as to ask your all in this wild goose chase:
"If you were in my position, Master Haundor, what would you do?"
for I know what you do
"I am a man." I answered. "I
cassumed to shift for myself. I might
take a job where I would not advertise
you to essay."
"I must shift for myself, too."
YELONG. 151°30W
N
W E
S
S OF YELACONE
RECIE
VE OPERNE
OCEANE
Other Half of the Map of the island.
said, her eyes sparkling. The Goddess Chance, which had ruined her father, was evidently jogging her elbow. "Indeed, I shall take the chance," she persisted.
"But you could easily live on £2,000 for a long white." I urged, against my wish, for I was keen to go a treasure hunting with her for a challenge.
"Not such life as I crave. If I cannot have enough for my desires I would, be worse off had I nothing."
Well, I was arguing against my wibes from a sense of duty, so I at last gave way. After all, the treasure might be there. If so, it was hers, and it would be a shame not to get it. The pulse of adventure leaped in my reins.
"So be it," I said.
"Will you help me to make my arrangement? You are accustomed to the sea, and—"
"I will do more than that," said I.
"With your gracious permission I will go with you."
"To the island?"
"To the end of the world." I repiled
Whereout she stared at me a moment
then looked away.
She extended her hand to me and
I tried to kiss it like a gentleman. I
made, no doubt, a blundering effort,
but at least it was that of an honest
man.
"I must go and get ready to go to
Master Fickling in the town," she
said softly. "You know the house."
I nodded.
"Come to me there tomorrow and
we will talk further about the project."
When we broached the subject to Master Ficklin the next day at his house, he would not hear of it. He examined the parchment with interest, but poochooed the tale because, for sooth, it had no legal backing and was couched in the phraseology of the sea rather than in the dry verbiage of the law. He pointed out that he had only succeeded in saving this last £2,000 of lady's fortune because he had skillfully concealed its existence from Sir Geoffrey. He asked pertinently what would happen to her when all was gone and she had found no treasure, the very existence of which he affected to diabolice.
A very hard headed, practical person was Master Ficklin. I had stern ideas of duty, too, and Master Ficklin's good sense ever appealed to me. Yet when did mere good sense ever appeal to a woman against her wish? My lady had the gambling instinct, too-I wonder she did not have it stronger, since 'twas in her blood—and she would fail challenge fortune.
The end of it was she made over her 12,000 to me without requiring me to give any bond, which Master Fickla would pain have insisted upon and, which would have been embarrassing indeed for me, for my bond would have been my own capital, which I was going to embark in the enterprise in secret. I had saved up that money with no one knows what foolish dreams. I realized those dreams would come to naught. I had no one dependent upon me. Brother or sister I never enjoyed, and father and mother were both dead. What good I for money? Let her have it whose need was great and whose desire was greater. I might have bargained for a share of the treasure did we find any, but I seemed so do it. I would give all and expect nothing for it.
At any rate, not being in any hurry, although I was frantically urged by my body, who could scarcely possess her soul in patience before she began her treasure hunting. I looked about a good deal in order to get just what I wanted. Finally from a merchant of Plymouth I purchased a stout little skip of three hundred and fifty tons burden called the Rose of Devon, which had been engaged in the West Indian and the American colonial trade.
It was my first design to have gone as master of her myself and my lady would fare have had it so but after烈踢 it I decided it were better to have a man in other man than I to commend long as she went as a passenger and so I engaged a worthy servant, one Samuel Matthews, old enough to be my father, with whom I had often sent; in fact, the man master of me made my first cruise. I loved myself as mine, however, and I loved myself in vain to influence Master I learn and his sister to go with us.
It caused proof in venturing among islands filled according to common report with savvy people to provide for Rating. Therefore, after consulting with Captain Matthews, whom I fully recognized with the entire project in all its details, I shipped a crew of thirty men and I provided in the equipment plenty of muskets, pistols and cutlasses, with the necessary powder and ball, and in addition a small brass cannon which I mounted on the forestele. Nor did our cargo back means for friendly trading and barter should such be found practicable.
Naturally the unanimous of these preparations attracted attention, and Captain Matthews and I were overwhelmed with applications from adventurous men who desired to make the voyage, surmising that it was after treasure of some sort.
I left the work of engaging the crew to Captain Matthews. He had as boat-awain a seaman named Pimball, in whom he placed great confidence. He was a gallantous looking man with a white scar running from his left eye across his cheek, caused by a cut he had received in some fight, and the line of white showing against the bronzed, weather beaten 'cheek he sported did not improve his appearance. But that he was a prime seaman was evident. Captain Matthews seemed to have great confidence in him.
To anticipate, when we boarded the ship I liked the crew not much better than the boatswain. I will say this for them, however, that a smarter, quicker set of seamen never laughed on breeze or laid on yardarm. It was not their skill or strength or courage that I did not like, but they were not the kind of men I would have sought for a ship of my own, and the presence of my lady and her maid, a worthy woman, a long time, servant at the castle, who had elected to follow her fortunes, made me timid, yet I was not unusually apprehensive. I had a sublime confidence in my own ability to deal with any man or any group of men.
I did not stint the outfitting of the ship, and when I finished, having left nothing out that either my own or Captain Matthews' experience or imagination would suggest, there was left of our joint funds enough to pay the wages of the officers and of the men out and back and no more that is, allowing a year for the round way age. The lines of the Rose of Tewen were unusually good. She had a reputation for being a speedy boat, and that was more time than enough. It was my purpose to go around the world with her rather than retrace our course about Cape Horn after we reached the Islef. If we ever reached it, so we staked everything we had or the future. If my only bad had the least knowledge.
THE ECONOMY,
316 North Third Street.
FINE
TAILORING
CLEANING BUILDING AND
REPAIRING.
CHITMAN H. WHITE.
she would have seen how little she was her 12,000 had gone, but she was an gullible anny any other woman on that subject, and Master Ficklin was not much better. I lied to them both with a good grace and with an easy conscience. It was for her sake.
BUT one striking me as worthy to be chronicle before we embarked. When all was ready and everything aboard, I went back to Master Ficklin's in Turnstock, which was an easy day's journey from Plymouth sound, where the Rise of Devin lay, to fetch my lady and her mould. Master Ficklin's house was a somewhat large one and was surrounded by a walled garden, perhaps two acres in extent, which ran back from the house to a little brook which bounded the village. Master Ficklin was at his office, although it was yet early in the morning when I called, intending to fetch my lady to Plymouth by conch, a special coach which I had engaged, by the way. His sister said that Missress Wilberforce was in the garden and that she had company. She offered to show me to her presence, but I said I knew the way and could go myself. I did not like the word company overmuch since her fine friends had more or less forgotten her.
I passed through the hall, out of the back door and into the garden. I stood a moment, hesitating, wondering whether after all I had the right or the privilege to break in upon such company as she might be entertaining, when a person which came faintly from the end of the garden decided me. I broke into a tun and in a few moments came upon my lady struggling in the arms of a man. What man, you ask? The Duke of Arrestor! He had his arms around her, and although he was so great shakes of a man, he was much stronger than the slight girl he was grappling with. He held her tightly by the waist with one hand and with the other was trying to turn her head so that he could kiss her.
I was upon them before they realized my arrival. I grasped the duke by the collar of his coat with my left hand and with my right I fairly tore him away from my loye.
"Thank God, you have come!" she哭ed, teething and staggering, her face thinned, her hair disheveled, her dress in disarray.
I heard that much and then the duke was upon me, writting his teeth and sweating faintly, settling he got to his feet. I had thrown him prone—dragged out his sword and rushed at me.
"You dog!" I哭ed. "You have balked me before, and you interfere now. I have lost enough of you and the world now."
He did not intend to give me any chance to defend myself apparently. My little mistress screamed. I heard her call my name and I suppose she thought I was doing for, but sailors are proverbially quick witted, footed and handled, and I was not the least alert of scissors. I was wearing a hanger, a heater weapon than the duke's dress sword, but its weight was a matter of no amount to an arm like mine. I stepped aside as he lunged at me, drew it, and the next moment our blades clashed in earnest.
Now, I am a good fighter and so mean foe. I can cross blades with any one on earth. My swift play must have looked to the duke as if I were surrounded by a wall of steel. Therefore he realised at once that his only chance key in the energy and rapidity of his force. Lunge succeeded lunge with lightning-like speed. I will admit that I was hard put to it for a time. It was with the greatest difficulty that I perished, but my tord was not built for the continuance of such violent exercise. Sweat came into his eyes, his thirst grew less swift, if not less venous in their intent. After a few moments I saw that I had hurt. It was now my turn to attack. Something of the turgor of my Saxon ancestors suddenly filled my veins. I beat down his defense by a series of terrific blows and finally shivered his sword. He stood before me painting, weaponless, yet, to give blim his due, more or less unimpeded. I failed my own blade. "Would you strike a defenseless man?" he cried laughily, still not blanched.
"You had no people in attacking a defenseless woman." I replied. "Nay," I thundered as he made a sudden motion, "stand, where you are. What I shall do to you depends upon what I hear. If you move, I swear to you that I will hear you down like the dog that you are."
I was amazed afterward at my temerity in thus addressing a duke, but you will understand my feelings. Without taking my eyes off of him I next addressed myself to my lady.
"Will you tell me now, Mistress Lucy," said I softly, "what this man purposed or said? I can see what he tried to do, but what was his meaning and intent?"
"He—wanted—me to go with him," faltered my lady.
"He renewed his offer of marriage?"
I asked, with a sudden sinking of heart.
"No," whispered the girl.
"My God!" I cried. "Did you dare to—"
"Why should I marry a 'peniless baggage?' he answered.
"I shall insure that you will remember," I said quietly, although I was blazing inside, "all the liyas of your life what you tried to do—the insult that you put upon this lady."
"Would you kill me?" he cried, as I stepped nearer to him.
"No," said I. "that would be too quick and easy an end to your punishment. I will put my mark upon you, her brand as a coward. Everybody who sees you will ask you about it, and you can explain it as you will. Two persons at least will know what the mark signifies, my lady and myself."
"He stared at me absolutely unpreprehending, but before he could make a move I caught him around the breast, plouched both his arms to his side and then I deliberately shortened my
Word, holding it by the blade, and cut two long, deep gashes in his left cheek. He struggled had thirteen horribly as I did so, and my lady screamed as well, but I held him close until I snatched.
"Now," said I to Mistress Lucy, "before I release him, one more question. Did—did he kiss you?"
"No," answered Mistress Lucy faintly.
"Good!" I continued grimly. "Had he done so I would have marked the other cheek.
He was a handsome man, but those two scars roughly erased would never be collated, for I had cut deep with deliberate purpose. After that I released him, and he staggered away splitting blood, his cheek bleeding, a horrible looking object.
"That will be a lesson to your grace," said I, "not to insult an honest woman. I have no doubt there are many who would rebel to see you now."
"I will have the law on you. I will have your life," he snuttered out.
"You can have anything you want,
and I recklessly. I am your master
DAMM
with the sword and with everything else. Now, go."
He turned staggered away and that was the last I saw of him. I heard later that he had the devil's own time explaining those marks. He proclaimed that they had been inflicted by a madman, which was nearly the truth, but in some way the story leaked out, and I should judge that my vengeance for the insult to my lady was as adequate as anything could be.
"I am come to take you to the ship," I said to her. "We must get there tonight to sad with the beginning of the ebb tomorrow morning."
"I am ready," she said, putting her hand upon my arm.
We went into the house and from there to the coach, with her maid and her bargeage, after making her farewell to her kind hostess. In the evening we got aboard the ship, where I saw her safely bestowed in the comfortable cabin I had arranged for her and for her woman. When day broke and she came on desk we were under way for the island of the Straits. The great adventure had begun.
I pass over the events of the next six months, but not because they were uninteresting. Oh no. One could not sail from Plymouth, England, to the south seas, touching at Madeira, the Canaries, Rio and Buenos Aires and rounding the eighty and foursome Cape. Without seeing many things of interest and participating in scenes as daring as they were exciting. But I can not writing a book of travels.
We were diving near the island we sought, so coming to the calculations of good captain Matthews and myself, when something happened.
I had brought it on myself I realized, but that made it no more bearable indeed. I was good, and all through outrage in dignity, hounded in self respect, and care it not foolish to speak so of a man of my years and sturdiness. I should say I was broken in heart.
My distress and been so kind to me that I had given in a fool's paradise, I awoke to realize that she had not forgotten the difference between our stations. I had forgotten it in these long months at sea. By heavens, the sight of her was enough to make a man forget anything if he loved her as I
There. The secret is out, but I make no doubt you pressed it long before. But she had not. There was no mirror in the cold but I could well guess that the sight of me was not sufficiently propossessing to make any woman forget. Yet she had been so kind. I was her only confidant or companion in the ship. I had forgotten. I had endured to leap the gap. I had fondly hoped that the one thing in me that was truly great-my passion for her-would land me safely by her side.
I did not see how she could fall to comprehend it, though I did try to disguise it.
Well, that love of mine, it had not brought her nearer. On the contrary, it had put me under lock and key. And he help I was, shut up like a criminal in my own cabin in her ship, or mine, for that matter. Come to think of it, that moment I believe love had completely disappeared. I could recall—and cum to this day, for that matter—the fierce, burning rush of color to her cheek where I had kissed it; the fire of rage and surprise mingled which sparkles in her eyes. The Duke of Arcelor I had marked for life for less than this, I recalled in shame. I hardly recollected the fierce blow of her hand upon my face. That was nothing. But I was indoors. All the patient devotion of years, all the re
studies of the long voyage, had made
its mark.
There was plenty of bright starlight on deck. She had stepped out from the dark shadow of the apenecer, and I had followed on her heels. The first night watch had not yet been called, and the men, killed about the decks waiting the bontwain's shrill whistle, had noted it all. I can see their anering laughing faces even now.
As it was, I drew myself up and waited while she sent for good old Captain Matthews and, vouchsaving no explanations, imperiously bade him stow me below as a prisoner in my cabin. He didn't roll the job, but wout about it forthwith. Indeed, I did not wait for further orders, after her look and glance. I stalked below as haughtly as you please. It was her ship, as she had said and as she certainly believed, and had it not been, who could deny her anything? Not I, forsooth. I could steal a kiss, but not balk her will. And here I was the mate of the Rose of Devon, and but for my own renunciation I had been her captain, engaged in this wild goose chase, this foolish search for treasure, for so it seemed to me then, locked up below like any mutilous dog at the height of a woman that I could have broken between my thumb and finger. And after all I had done and sacrificed for her too.
Come to think of it. I had always loved her, ever since those days when I, the gardener's boy, had been her faithful and devoted slave. And through the long years when I had been far voyaging in distant seas I had kept her memory fresh and sweet and true. Although I had been in many rough places I had seen life from the seamy side, and the common lot of a sailor of my day had been mine.
There are no better seamen in narrow seas or broad thim. I had worked my way up through the forecaste to the quarterdeck. I had a natural gift for figures. I could take a sight and work out a position as well as any book taught navigator, and I had been a great reader too. My private cabin was ever crowded with books. Much of my earrings were spent that way. I had wit enough to choose good books, too, and perseverance enough to study them well.
I knew more than she—oh, much more!—about everything but the usages of good society, and I had at least learned something of good manners in her company since her father's death. My shipmates used to laugh at me for being a book deliverer, a worm, they were wont to call it. Well, they didn't laugh very long. There was nothing physical for which I need stand aside for any man. I was over six feet high and built in proportion. I could, unadvised and alone, hold the wheel of the best ship in the forest storm.
CHAPTER VI.
Wherein My Lady Is Placed In Great Poril.
NOW I was a prisoner. I said I didn't feel that blow on the cheek, but as I thought on it it fairly wore me. I hated her. I hoped that no- I might as well be honest with myself. I didn't care how she treated me, how disdainful were her words, how unjustly she punished me. I loved her. I couldn't help, I didn't want to help it. I would kiss the desk plank she hallowed with her footsteps.
There was another side to my confection, and I presently took thought on that. I swear that I was not thinking of myself, but of her. I was ever thinking of her. I could see dangers that beset her as perhaps no one else could, and my confection added to her peril. She didn't realize that; nobody art on the ship realized it. There was a peril, imminent, menacing, about to break, I feared.
You see, the fact that we were treasure hunting had got about. I had not thought much of the crew, including the villainous looking boatswain, Pimball. We had shipped a lot of smart seamen, about the average in quality and above the average in smartness. I desired as the days had passed with nothing happening, but Pimball had signed some I could wish had been left ashore.
Her presence on the ship, too, was a mystery. Alone in the little Rose of Devon with thirty men. By cell mishap the maid she had brought with her had died after a brief illness two weeks out. Captain Matthews and I were for turning back, but she said no, she would go on. We had lost too much time already and her all was embarked. We were now now plowing the blue waters of the Pacific, and I mate of the ship and the only other officer to be trusted, locked up!
We were hearing the latitude and longitude of the island. Suppose the men rose in mutiny! I ground my teeth in rage. The men liked me well enough, and I had been particular to keep them in good humor, passing over many a thing for her sake that I would have followed with a blow she had not
been there. Captain Matthews had complained once or twice of my laxity, but I knew things that he didn't, and I had done what I deemed best for her. I pledge you my word that I didn't care a furthing for the treasure. I had never given it much thought. I grew to believe in it less and less as we got further from home, and if I had been stronger for my duty and weaker in my love I would have dissuaded her from the voyage, following Master Ficklin's lead. Now, that she was poor, and alone, neglected and forgotten, I had enjoyed a foolish dream that I could be a companion to her—a life shipmate—for the captain was a rough, plain old sailor. What a fool I was! And yet it had worked in some way as I had intended. We had been thrown into closer intimacy by the loneliness of her position and my faithful and, until that night, most unobtrusive, self-effacing devotion.
I suppose it never entered her head that I could presume to love her, consequently she was less careful than she had been otherwise, and that very night when I had poured out my declaration to her she had had no words with which to meet it. I thought her silence was consent. I see now that
I was assessment. I missed her in my arms like the brake she is using. have thought me, lifted her up and kissed her fair on the lip and then on her averted cheek. Arcester, the black-guard, could have done no worse. I will never forget how she stigmatized me—bruise, coward, lowborn. I don't believe she had railed at that second-duel duke so fiercely.
Well, I didn't care what she had called me. Her safety, her life, her honor demanded that I be released. That was the purnament concern.
I listened. I thought I heard a foot fall in the outer cabin. Could she be there? I suppose that I had been locked up for perhaps an hour. Aye, on the instant the bell forward struck three. We kept man-of-war customs at her fancy. The sound came to me faintly as I listened. Half past 2. She could not have gone to her berth yet. She must be there in the great cabin. I ventured to call.
What it cost me any man can imagine—and to humble myself to ask her mercy too. I am a man of fierce temper, as you have deceived, but I can control it on occasion, and I did at now. I shook the door of the cabin gently at first and then vigorously and called once and again. There was no answer. I bead upon it. I missed my voice. I rearedly thought I could be heard on deck. The wind was blowing, the sea was heavy, and the ship was pitifully flying. The strutting the creaking, the grounding of the timbers would have prevented such a noise as I made from attracting attention unless some one were in the cabin. But all in vain. No heed was paid to me, and yet I could swear that somebody was there. I don't know how exactly, but I was conscious of his presence. Forthwith because I was so in love with her that I could always tell whether she was about. I came to this day.
It made me madder than before to go then unsealed. I was on the point of glaring over my endeavor, but I thought of the peril in which she steel
"Madam." I whispered softly, and then more locally, "Madam."
I did not venture to say any other
D. B.
I Called Again, and Yet a Third Time,
name, I called again, and yet a third
time, and then for the last time with
the full power of my voice. I heard a
movement outside and then a voice-
beloved, blessed voice, even when it
rated me.
"Well, sir?"
The words came to me through the
partition. She was there, then, as I
had divided. She had been there all
the time, trying me.
"I would fain have a word with
you." I answered, putting everything
else by and speaking most entreatingly
and with a humility I did not altogether feel.
"I desire no speech with you," was
herdship and measured answer.
I could hear her turn as if to move
away.
"Think of my long and faithful service."
I urged, "and of your gracious
friendship for me, often expressed."
"You yourself forgot it to smile."
"For God's sake," I cried desperately as I heard her go, "just one word."
"An apology? Do you do beg forgive-peas?"
"No—yes—anything!" I finished in confusion.
"I will not listen. I wish to convince you of the enormity of what you have done, the grossness of your presumption. I will give you time for quiet reflection, alr."
"I am convinced already," I urged hurriedly.
"So easily?" she mocked.
"Midam, if you love life and honor
I pray you hear me. It is not, of myself
I think, but of you. You are in grave peril," returned I with the utmost seriousness.
"What peril?"
There was a note of alarm in her voice in spite of her effort to be indifferent. I seized upon its promise eagerly.
"The men of the ship—they are not what they should be. Captain Matthew is alone. Pimball is a villain. I trust no one but"—
"And is this the plea on which you seek enlargement?"
"That is the only plea."
"You did not discover this danger until I looked you up, did you?" "I tell you that it is not for myself I fear, but for you." I persisted! "And was it for that you insulted me on the quarterdeck before the men? I will hear no noise. It is a foolish plan. The men are devoted to me and-" "For God's sake, Mistress Lucy," I tried, but this time she was gone. I heard the door of her cabin shut doently. There was no help for it. Well, I must devise a way unrailed, for I must get out for her sake. The door was locked by an air port closed."
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‘ _ today Cavtander of the District of}citizens of the country wil come}MSs from the best but the most the Jooms.” ” aeecate ce
Sree thet 1, SEEN] Cottimbia, rave emphatic denial 10 unto thelr own again. God bless] er Siar and iat betore the publics || =" AMPS | thing somalble aad use
‘ reoorts, publlahsd thle mere ae National Commander George Russell = a 7 tture ta noted for ite La
ee nmimmmnd fe tends aa effort yesterda: ie ine tase fs : .
& amiss eer deatened. owns, of the Army and Navy Union} There Is no doubt but what the; —The Athletics put a gloam over
Lent gemame me aprancn, “APT [Ureduce 8 centred members of the|and may he bring confusion to the| Messoiger ts correct In Sts statement (the Indeyendents, at Broad’St. Park| ADAMS AND BROA!
eee Coe, par peat esocesnceeeeneenees BE UBIOD. ates, |oRDES, Of Neerorhatinn miosvSack}as to the existence of thin-clase at | ueeey 22d Te ee
re BT eaiba iccscccccstnsese “m my report." sald Capt. Daley.| pourvons of the Capt: John C. Daley | cok te. , {proven who La wi
SS SSF SSRI. “Slr was roterfing to tho altuation du{vene on Os tue COPE Jone ex |eolored people. Our only urprize-iby copping both games. Of course, ,
Se es cccitceeanas UTE Mae Peter ae oo ae ate ere we) Pe which Ia added to gfftvMossengor’s the “Jink™ lw tho only allb! for the .
See Cog, Merwe mente SSIES catlnave two white Karrisons and one surprise, secms to bo the fact that! Iudependents but the fact fe it was
ee Shave two white Karrisons and one sauecigaaba ‘thie race fouraal hes apeetentty a-(t2o much Athletics. ema
fot one Sack, ome taerttion. sesso
Bee Sa Se ae caer taeertion oe
IR te teen eis meoethesccccceeeees RS
Be a ale Costa icccecccs 1e
ee fre (eehen twelve moetie.cncciccg> AS
Feet Eee roweral Notices, cae tans
RETIREE Sd Tresarat Notions, por Use...
eemta0k, ST2078 OF A HIGHER, DENOMIN A:
TOs THAN TRO CENTRE NOT RECEIVED
‘Os SURSUKIPTION®.
THE PLANET fe toad woekly, The snbscrtir
cg gery BS Pe Tee SS ae
Toke ee tot ware 7 whch Ome
wee Oy oul) et oa rab: ala 8 Poet OBce Mowe,
Bone pine “Caeak_ or Draft. “or as apres
eS Unters amt when woos of theer eno Ds
idee te a nites Later.
MONET KMERS—Tou can buy « Mooer Order
ence hat Core, payable at ibe ichinves
Fae Dae nar ae iTS evan e
Qxpnrae MONET OXDERE con we setained
eee ce ut tor aerican, Exprom Co. the
Tlatted Santee ‘steven On. and the Wella Farus
Se Co Taber Capen. We wilh be repos:
S Te tes chomsy ett uy aay ot tseor CUR
FEE Eee ileery ‘Oniet ia» eale and eoavem
wat way toe Carwarding cers.
RBOWTERED LETTER—Ii «Mears Order,
cee Omen or o> Raycom Ofice a ack ital
FSS Rea. Four, Pommaaner will “Mratee te
[lttec""Foa' wlan to temd ww om paymant of tas
Se RM the “Loewen us tod of olen, it
Sati Tet Toe eae wad money the
Slee oar tee
We cancot we reqoedble for mower wat, te
techn “ta soy cher way, taas oon of tht tows
Sapo tecatloned aber. Wh 7we oaed your museny
Meant aaj, fou oat Ge ok yom Owe
- é
AEXEWALA, ETC.—t you go wot wast THE
PLAHET coclivord lor smother, Jour fut yout
cexcoptce nas rue ont, vow new woilly we 07
PERS TGTG UE cersetinne th The emerla bare
Slound tat ‘maerivers to sewngapem who So
De ctsee, tac payee Siacoatinens at tte oh:
Setutiom "ot ‘Uine for nica it pes bee, paid are
CHa note tor whe papaeat * tne sabecription
co eo cake wien tay meine ne taper Sitcom
met
COMMUNICATIUME.-Waen wneing Wom te
care Tor eamectipuce or te dinacnce Out
SRT, For ea eive oe “uae ai arom
tien we maak Ook Tour Meat Om
CHANGE OF ALUERSR.—ite oruer te chance
ESAS oa ‘eeeentines we mame Oe at Oe
Grose we wall oo ths prevent sure
atered oi the Fost Ofier ot Ristmond, Ve.
nee onan atlae
a
KATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1013.
The Baltimore, Md. Afro-Ameriran
Lodger, one of the newar=-t and best
edited race Journals In the country,
bas sized un up correetty
It im aswerted Mat the objection.
able race -acgreration signs in Wash.
ington, xo far ax they affect the
government buildings have brett oF
dered down, bus that the colored ent
Moyes have been votited to observe
them just Che same.
Our esteemed coutemporary, the
Gt. Loutx, Mo. Argus sums np the
situation exactly relative to our fght-
ing prociivitles. Ovr motto bax al
ways been, “If wrong. et right. If
right, fight on regardless of the
length of time or the consequences.”
Tho action of the Supreme
Lodge, Kulphta of Pythias, N. A.
S.A. BE, A. As amd Ati levying
fan unconstitutional tax of ten cents
per member throughout thty country
for the purpase-vf paylug high sal
aries to Its officers and the forcing
out of their own Supreme Koeper of
Records and Seal, who had the
temerity to warn’ them of the danger
in attracting much attention.
Tho trouble with some of our col
ored folks tn that they cannot stand
proaperity. ‘They become “puffed up
‘with their own Importance” and. by
weinah drafts upon the confidence ant
finances of the people “sink down
to rise ‘no more."
‘Tho Republicans were successful
th tho Third Congressional District
‘of Maing last Monday. much to the
chagrin of the Democrats in geweral
and tbe national administration fs
particular. Hoo. John A, Peters won
‘by a plarality of over five hundred
votes, ‘This fe taken to be an fodt
cation of the @rit-af the suntienm
in the county,‘ bpsesctaile
pteralty te tite Gpiitet Met Hoven:
ber was 1667. eumeek te
eeereging 084 the prospect for 3
ively. compalgn ftareagnont the
‘eeamtsy was never brighter. These
‘who seemed to think thut the Re-
publican ‘Party was dehd and buried
Gre awakealng to the fact that they
are'on the eve of 2 grvat resurrec-
ten. 3
eee AA
CAPT, DALKY's DENIAL.
Capt. John & Daley of Washingtor
D. ©. has evidently becn affected b3
the storm of disapproval of the sug
restion to draw tho colorilue In th
‘Army and Navy. Union. The fol
lowing telexrapble report 1e“gratity
ing to lovers of Justice overs where:
Philadelphia, Sopt. 9.—At the acs
sion of the Arniy and Navy Unioz
Today Capt. Jol C. Daloy. depart
mont coninander of the District o
Columbia, ‘kave emphatic denial to
reports published. this morning that
he made an effort yeaterday to 10:
troduce a reeolution deslgoed to 0-
Krerate the colored membors of the
Salon.
“In my report.” ald Capt. Daley,
“L was Tofetting to the altuation 10
the Dintrict of Columbia, whore we
havo two white garrisons and one
colored Rurrivon. The laser body
bad refused to recoxalze, wo as de-
partment commander, and what I
fd nay wan that the colored Karriton
apparentiy wanted to cut off relations
There tas been no act of ming that
could be construrd as drawing the
color Hine.
“It In alo untrue that, 1 was de-
ciureg Gut of order, and it in only
fair to National Commander Downn
fo say that he win misquoted, and
that he did not” order me to ait
down.” :
We take pleasure In reproducing
his explanation and we hone that be
will lead his efforts to the climiaa-
ton of there obuoxioux rexrerattion
rentrictions, which should be confined
to the vicioux elements of both races
and not to the self rexpecting ele-
ments of elther
DRASTIC PUNISHMENT
ADVOCATED,
One esteemed contemporary, Che
Norfolk, Va. Journal and Guide has
evidently been suffering from a tem.
porary aberration of the mind If we
are to judge from the following ed:
Htorlat utterance in its lant {ssue
John Mitchell, Ir., the Incortlatble
editor of The Kichmond Planet’ and
W. Calvin Chase. the unspeakable
mogul of The Washington Bee don’t
ike the National Negro Press Arno:
ciation, as if the men who compose
that organization whould worry and
eta lot of wringlen. Brother Mit.
chell hax committed... unpardonable
treason by referring to the @oRant-
zation an'"The National Nero Bur.
inenn League Prens Association.”
Scandalous Ubeb and slander! We
move that ha be hanged by the neck
until dead. As to Chase, well, the
fellown can xet along better without
Mm anghow, .
Thin ix a plain, unequivocal sil:
voracy of Iynchitig, of an execution
without a trial, We are charged
with designating the National Negro
Presn Ansoctation. an adjunrt and
nn auailiary of the Nutlonal Negro
iustners League ay “The National
Negro Business League Press Aso:
lation.” We told the truth and wa
would Ike to know wherein we have
tranagroned? Tx our esteemed con
temporary ashamed of fits tonter
parent? The National Negro Burt-
revs League ant tts distingatened
orsantor and fonsder, Dr. Borker T.
Washington are second to no organ-
ization of the kind in the country.
We hall he present at our own
funeral and we shall have something.
to say and do, before the execution.
as the Supreme Lodge, Knights of
Pything, at Baltinore will be able Co
entity before the nervices dexiznod
for our state are coneinded.
Aa to Editor Wilifam Calvin Chaso
of Washington. 1D. C.. he ts able to
take care of lilmaclf and bis porcu-
pine peeullaritien have Ted othera to
do ax aur Norfolk contemporary has
decided to do—leave hii neverely
alone. : :
NO COLOR LINE THERE.
It Is gratifying to see and know
that the lovers of Justice and the
advocates of right may bo ailenced
for a time, but that they atti! lve.
7 telegraphic report is as follows:
_ Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. $.—Declar-
Ing that the Constitntion of the
United States had no color line fn it
‘and that ueither had the constitu-
tion of the Army and Navy Union.
‘National Commander George Runacll
Downe declared Capt. John.C. Daley.
department commander of the Dir
trlet of Columbia, oat of order this
Afternoon when the latter attempted
‘to introduce a resolution which it
‘wan aald, wan designed to sexrerate
tho white and colored members ‘of
ee uaton. 3
|. We hope that the ex-Prosident of
Princeton University and now Preal:
dent of the United States, Hon.
Woodrow Wilson will find the time
to commit to mémory the rioxing
Jdeciarastons, of National Commander
George ,Rusecll Downs. The repor!
continues:
Capt. Daley, who Is captain of the
poitee in Washington. took the #oc
at the business session of the om-
compment, and waa about to offer
an ia’ fren varkous eeotton
vi
tn0 Teed Bates rofcond to baten
(“Bi down'” “Out of order”
lend ether remarks wore seaSe,.whes
Bitten el Commander Dewees paul al
ond te thg epbeee by stpereanty. Wa
ce an ele batman ie righ
to be tn the ranks of the army, and
navy,” sald Osusmander Dowss, “by
monding up with us shoulder te
shoulder and. Aghting fer the preser
vation of the eountry.”
‘This ringing declaration emphasis
es a fact -which seems to-have bees
generally forgotten.’ It also show:
that while tho Negro-haters have
been baving. thelr innings, .tha
‘there are thousands and tens of
thousands of white men fn this coun.
try who do not subscribe to thelr
dogmas.
We have beon ,humiltated and tn.
sulted. Wo have been treated as
aliens and outcasts, but the sober
second sonse of the American people
fe,abroad in the larid and the colored
citizens of the country wi come
unto thelr own again. God bless
National Commander George Russet
Downs, of the Army and Navy Union
and may he bring confusion to the
camps of Negro-hating mosrback
vourbons of the Capt: John C, Daley
type.
JOCAL WEEKLY JOURNALS.
The more wo observe humar
natur In different’ kinds of people
the more we are convinced that col
ored folks ary Just Ike white folk
In referring to weokly Journal
devoted to the Interent of white peo
ply, The Richmond, Va. News Loader
nis: °
The News Leader hus been dis
treased to observe during tho last
fow weoks the suspension of one
Virginia weekly and tho sale of -twe
others, Along with theac afgns o!
trouble wo, have been concerned to
note that a number of othets are fly.
ing the flag of distresn and ato call:
ing on their xubacribers to help oF
tiny perish, The trouble seems to
be that the average mbreriber to the
counts weekly dors not give his pa-
ber {tx.proper valite,
He Inelnte on comparing the coun-
ty weekly with the nietropolitan
diat}y, and hecauna the compatinon I
unfavorable to the home paper. he
dock not xupport hix focal weokly.
He neoinn to overtook the nil-Import-
ant fact that the dalty and the week-
Ty have acdifferent mission: and a
diferent Held. He doen not appre-
finte that the weekly [x necessarily
and avowedly local tn Its appeal and
altix to kive him the news of bis
helghhore—news that he wants and
Zannat Ket clnewhere.
Parmer a caremerremoreer «
Thin explanation would apply to
every colored Journal In the United
‘State. How many Afro-American
publiehora are confronted with the
ntatement from some of thelr sub-
seriters that they can et thin or that
white weekly Journal for this or
that price or that they can get A
Richmond, Washington, Philadelphia.
New York. Chicago or some other
large city's newspaper, coptaining
much more matter at a cheaper prico?
The Richwond, Va. News Leader has
inet these objections in the proper
spirit and with the actual facts,
The Rehwond paper clinches sex
explanation whea {t concludes as fol-
lows:
Then. too, It appears that the aub-
rertheg to the weekly paper taken the
arrival of the paper as a matter of
course, und, because he knows, tho
publinier, feel that his failure to
pay his aubseription will not embar-
raxs the owners. Many a man who
would not think of repudiating & debt
or of impairing his credit will,becomo
delinquent {n his subscription to
the connty paper and will rosent any
rominder of hix tndebtedness. » The
renult ts that the focat editor has to
entry nubseribera for years or olxo
forfeit their friendsh{p and pxtron-
age altoxether.
‘All of this Is to be regretted. The
loca) weekly: has a place In the life
of the people and hax a mission to
perform, It can do what the met-
ropolitan daiiies cannot pretend to
aecomplinh, and it mirrors the sen-
(iment -of Ite constituencr with an
necuracy that roaker it {nvalunble.
It can unify the community and give
exprexsion to those movements that
make for the Rappinens of the com-
munity, Our Virginia county papers.
in particular, with their long and
honorable: history, are a power for
righteousness. With all our hearts,
we hope they will weather the storms
that thronten and will gain that
patronaxo and enteem to which they
nro entitled.
Wihife not 'no Intended, the Rich-
mond, Va. Nown Leadgc bas furn-
inked tho facts and tendered an ox-
planation which will serve its pur-
poso in erery section of the United
tatescorhere weekly journal” for
colored™people are published. Thexo
cords Will have addod cbect, too, with
pore of these back-xround colored |
folks, just because “the white folks
ensd ft." .
A WORD ABOUT THE AGITATION.
‘The Charleston, S. C. Messenger
under the ception of “The Criate
Condemned” says:
‘To our surprise some of the ery
bent colored estirens condemn the
Crisls and {te editor, as doing moro
to Kindle raco hatred than any other
agent at work. We quickly inquired
as to what they meant. The reply
was, that the Crists and Guardian do
nothing, but hame up-all the mean:
nesses, ihe white man practices a-
gainet the Negro and ‘publish it. Wo
asked what was wronx about that?
A very well-informed, educated lady
replied. while ft fs true that. there
are many bitter Negre-Maters that
de and say, tecan thiags adost the
Negro, bat on the other hand there
are some very good, conservative
ones, dealing fairiy with their col-
ered chiens and for them to reed
these wild articles would only make
ane Cuhem
Weegee wrought up liner
{than thay would It they bad net been
tafinined tty these tafrible artleien
‘thet wane nothlog bat evil. They
jqondemhn those who help to: ssatter
= ‘these papers sad mage-
‘Now. these discussions have put
ws to to thinking in many ways wo
Rave never thought before. It ts
Guite true that the first impression
fa mostly listing. Whea kultw a
umber of our people read of theso
= iyachings and the cruel treat
meat to thelr race by the white
‘people, it has the very same’ effect on
them’ as the general betiavior and
make up of the Negro have ow the
‘white man. Nine white persons out
‘of-every ten judge the Negro by the
lowest clement; but they never judge
the race by tho boat: so it fa with
the Nexo, he.nover Judges the white
man from the best but the most
cruel. The best of any race should
be Brat and last before the public.
‘There is no doubt but what the
Messenger 1s correct In its atatemeat.
as to the existence of this. class of
colored people. Our only surprise,
which Is added to gfffyMessengor’s
surprise, seoms to bo the fact that
this race journal has apparently a-
greed with thia contention.
During tho stormy dayx of our
earlier lite, when wo “Cried aloud
and. spared not” wo met many of
tho colored people of this type. Thoy
unually reflected the sentiment of
the white people with whom they
caro in contact and usually profited
Qnancially from that class of reese
Thoy did not support raco enterprises
of any Kind and pfter roading a
free copy of colored Journal were
fret and foremost In tontifying as,
10 tte worthlesancss. These poople
aro usually ready and willing to
sacrifice any richt pinciple in order’
chat they and thelr kind may not
be disturbod In the financial bonofite
hat they werive from thelr white
neighbors. :
They are evady and willing to tes-
Sty to a blick man‘s-short-comings
ind a white man’s virtues. For
yearn, we have purened a policy of
etting them: alone, Agitators have
een known {1 all agew and the vary
berty which wo enjoy today fn the
rect result of thelr efforts. © Love.
joy, Garrion, Sumner, Phillips.
Jouglass and a host of other wero
ubjocted:to a similar erittelym.
‘This Ie why we hare looked with
avor upon Harry C. Saufth of Clove-
and. 0.; William Montoo Trotter
yf Bostor; Mass, J. R. Clifford of
fartinspirx, W. Va., Robert Jones
¢ New Orloans, T. Thomas Fortune
yf New Jersey, W. Calvin Chaso of
Vashington, W. F. B. DuBola of
Sew York, [da Wells Barnett of
Uinof x86 n host of others that we
night amine. i
Sometimes. they ‘have been too
adical, Bat this hax doom offect by
he hundreds of us, who hare been
oo consetvatire, Still tt ts well
o Keop.tn the foreground: our white,
riends and there aro hundreds of
hem in the Sontbfand, but fo bell:
le or attack thore nelf-acrifcing
aco lealers and journalists who are
peaking In Behalf of those who can
ot apenk for thomaelves ts aking |
20 mitch.
Wotgh these eriticn tn the scales |
fractal mupport, that ther are ten:
ering race enterprines and ‘you WM
oon find out that n feather will |
oginter a atmilar amount of density «
n the equation. {
ie iia 1
BARKING OCT COLORED FOLKS.
Te ts a aurprising thing that dur.
ing thin day of twentteth century
progress that Ure executive commit
tee of the Girl'a Homo and Tidustrin
School in Chesterdetl county, with
the poxitive command of the Scrip
tutes and thy disine teachings of
the Holy Manter ringing in thelr ears
should have decided at a meeting
hold Saturday, September stn, 1912
that all Nexto employes shalt be
eliminated from that thatitutton.
‘The jontlamen reeponsible for tlds
actlon are Rev. Dr. H. D. C. Mactaeh
lan, Rox. Dr. G. MeDantel. Rev. De.
Jamot Buchanan and Robert Lecky.
Wo have read and reread these
namea and wo cannot understand bow
Vitginiana of thin type and calibre
can bow to the presulices of the axe,
turn thelr Ducks upon the teachings
of the Saviour and ostracise and dis-
charge not only‘a colored man who
han‘ntood’ the test and whore record
fs a» white and as puro an the Win:
‘ter's snow, but alap all other colored
people. . .
| Beverly Banke had boon tp-ern-
ployed as a. Inborer’ becauso his
serves were needod, hin waxes lower
and bls conduct oxemplary. “We
‘have been wondering if any of these
gontlomen twhoas names are cited
delotig to the ante-dellunz. type of
xinrmowners, tule
‘Well, we will lave those rentle-
mon In the hands of a rood God, as
the wld colored folks would say.
feallzing that He can maké the
rough roade smooth and the crooxed
ways atraight. Death will bring a
murcease of our sorrows and that
mighty Bye, which neither-slumbers
nor sleeps will bring. retribution to
these people who 20 needlessly op-
press us and who drive deep the
spikes of racial oppression.
pee to the |
Richmoid Pta~ct.
Be Nal al ial it sy
‘These wes quite an dapyrabio
ing apent. at the reubienss. of:
Yireiae ose, 613 14 BI
‘ ‘Those present were, 1 eee
son nnd let: Octavia Sebinasa 267
Harry Brint and Btea Liasie
Mr. Charles Watkine and Mies Ber:
teuse Wood, Miss Mary Wood. Rev.
EB, J. Smith and Mtse Virgiata Wood.
Refreshments were served.
“
A Fine Plott, |”
‘The “Old Foiks’ Outing” to No.
12 on the Petersburg Pike last
Wednevday was voted a- success. by
all who attended. Much praise ts
given the socléty of the First Bap-
tist Church, ‘Southside for holding a
Gay of pleasure and enjoyment-among
the cedars and pia-s Old Chesterfsid
for the aged folke of the “city across
the Jooms.”
RATS,
| 4 . a“
| —The Athletics put a gloam over
the Indvpendents at Broad’ St. Park
Monday and Tuesday when It’ was
| proven who is who around Richmond.
}by copping both games. Of course,
the “Jink" Is the only alld! for the
Independents but the fact fe it was
tee much Atbletin.
ee
$3.50 Recipe Free.
‘For Weak Men.
Send Name and Address To-dey—
You Can Have It Free and De
Strong and Vigorou,
We have tn our possession @ pre
scription for norvous debility, lack ©
vigor, weakened manhood,” failing
memiory and lamo back, brought o1
'by excentes, unnatural drains, or the
rollin of youth, that has cured a
‘many worn,and servous men right 1
thelr own homes—without any add!
ditional help’ or medicine—that we
Mink every man who wishes to rexals
his manly power and virility, quickly
and quietly, should bave a copy. Sc
wo Nave detertitacd to send a copy
of the prescription free of charge. 1b
a plain ordinary sented envelope tc
apy man who will write us for It
‘Thia prescription comes from 2
physician who bas twade a ppecial
ntudy of mien and we aro convinced
it ts tho surest-seting combination for
the curs of defictent manhood and
vigor failure ever put together.
‘We think we ove ft to our fellow.
men to send thom a copy to cond-
dence 60 that any mau anywhere who
in weak and discouraged with repeat.
ed fajlures may stop drugging himeelt
with harmful patent medictoes, %6
cure what wo believe ts the quickent-
acting rontorative, upbullding, SPOT.
SOUCHING Remedy ever devised, and
co cure bimscif at home quietly and
quickly. Just drop us a ling like
this; INTERSTATE REMEDY CO..
3895 Luex Ballding, Detroit, Mich.,
and we will send you = copy of this
aplendid recipe in a plain ordinary
envelope, free of charge. A xrost
many doctors would charge $3.00 to
$5.00 for merely writing-out a pre
scription Uke this—but we send It
entirely free.
WHERE SMALL 1 SEND MY BOY
Parents are asking themeelves thal
question nt thin time and, perbaps
a few noggestions may be appropriate
here.
Firrt, you want to aclect a schoo
where Ia a healthy moral atmosphere
_—ona where no effort fs made to {n-
Suonee the“«tudeat’s rellgious opta.
fon for or agninst any denomination
but where.tho bighest Christian stan-
dards are matntained—whero the
study of thr Bible, and divine service
aro a part of the student's daily
fe. tl
Second,’ you want to make sure
that the nchool to which you send
you child ts up to standard in tts
Academie course—that the time a
doy spends there In Koing to be
worth while and that the course of
atudy and {nstructora are atrictly firat
clare. .
‘Third. you want to make wuro tbat
the school ‘s prepared to teach some-
thing mote than what fs found fn
books, in other words. to teach a
boy a uneful trade so that he may
Decome & preducttre member of
society. is.
‘The above threo’ thinks aro abso-
lutely exscntial tn a acbool of today
Decause thoy are the very base of
our concention of what education
mast 0 for the Individual of thts
generation—Training «the head to
Know, tho hands to skill and the
hoart to respond te right motives,
Having settled the above points in
your ming, you vill want to know
next, how much will ft cost? Clearly
ove must select @ scheol where the
cost is within the Mmits of one's
moans. And ta this connection it
you ean find where provision is made
for w student to hetp himeelf by
working out a pait of his expenses
you will naturally want to do #0.
‘We nuggest that you write to the
Prinelpal of the Christiansburg In-
dustrial Inetitate, Carabria, Ve, This
school has the foilowing things to be
said of it which should claim your
consideration:
1. It fe noneectarian, but fs
thoroughly christian. Matatained
and managed by Quakers, which fs
a guarantee that it has high ideals.
2. It xives a thorough academic
courve from grades throngh the Nor-
mal. * . ens
3. It has {8 active operation the
following industries with = competent
instructor -for each: printing, car
pontry, shoe-mending, agrice}tare,
sewing, cooking and millinery. Each
department folly equipped.
4, All students may work out
some of their expenses,-and some
Stufents can" work cut all’ of thelt
enmgases.
ite t6 the Principal for terms
bt {dmiseion. Catalogue seat on re
ia Address
B. A LOND,
. oe Prinetpab
burg Industrial Inetitate,
_ Camiiria, Va...
Female Embalmer.
OE EIS TOE eG Me
y :
° °
-*-College,-s-
7" ae
North Ist St... Richmond, Va:
Snes eriaeeneenieniee tees
Reopens September 15, 1913.
NIGRT SCHOOL—SIX DEPARTMENTS.
THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT . =
Includes Lessons iz Spelling, Grammar, Arithmetic and Hygleno.
THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT .
Offers.a thorongh tratning in Book-keeping and Commercial Law.
THE DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT
._ Embraces Sewing. Cutting, Making and Fitting Dresses.
' THE AUTOMOBILE DEPARTMENT
Given tastruetion fn Driving and Repairing Automobiles,
THE STENOGRAPHIC AND TYPEWRITING DEPARTMENT
Fits tta Students to Mil the position of Stenographer & Typewriter.
} THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
y Embraces Voice Culture, Plano and Organ-Lemohn.
}_ GLASSES: MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS,
a ‘AT. 8:00 O'CLOCK.
For particulars an@ terme apply :
; REV. CHARLES HANNIGAN. President,
E 709 NORTH FIRST STREET, RICHMOND, VA.
; DAY SCHOOL: DAILY, 9 A. M. TO 2:30 P.M. -.
Jacludes Primary and Grammar Grades and Sewing. Music
) Extra. Kindergarten 9:00 to 12:30. Apply to
; MOTHER EVANGELIST, 715 N. tet Street, Richmond, Va.
mankind, or co charge, nO matigr Whet your diseses, siekness or afftic-
HR Saas Des ane eustare: ren te pentose Deaith. ‘Thousands of peuple,
the best and leading cues In he ited States ond Merope. will testify
thar T am one of the most comperen! healers of ell comotetnas ta the
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Be Meqeee Cure tee Bete tog Plscness1— Beart Disease, Ose-
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piatute, La Orippe or Pueamenta, oer, Carbuncies, Botte, Cameer fa the
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on face and bedy,. Mabetes of Kiiurvs ov Bright's Dicssss of the
neve. My Medicines gate ony Gite os. ne matter of whet aeture. Ose.
cen and Byphltiitie tresktes » specialty.
— Medicines sent anywhere. ¥ 7 full partionjars, send, write pr anit
fa person en ty :
. LJ. HAYDEN, -
220 Wesi-Broeé St.3.:- Richmend, Ve. -
A . 4 :
Hi P a.
| ba tied stags ad
. eat
| ae~ Si ame gr
| Seve nce ‘ots a paceue = vs
oar window: | We pare her
Crates 00 igh 0. :
-You Can Pay. Year BU) Pebraary
Sth and Save Your Disrounts.
JUROmNe: ANNUAL CmRapTNAs
aa
$100,000.09 Werts of
CLEARANCE YOROTEURS
URN snp RUGS
Reduced 10, 35, 351-3, & Se porecat.
i tiaras kee aaees
Wut when you get year Obrietnas
Drees: siving some
thing seastble abd usetal, Our fara
ture ta noted for ta lasting qualities
ADAMS AND BROAD STREETS |
eee NRA te
Se
ah i aaa
MADAM LUCLE CHRISTIAN SCOTT
te asecclated im business with her
husband, Mr. Alpheus Boott. Mad-
am Scott claims’ the houor of being
the only Nexto woman inthe State
of Virginia—bolding = State license
to practice Embalming, and ts indeed.
‘one of the few women in the United
‘States, Embalming and Conducting
BDunerals. Bbe ranks with the best
in her profession.
She is prominent tn fraternal o»
wanizations, namely: Courts of Ca-
Janthe, I. O. of St. Luke, I. 0. of
G. Samaritans, Houschold of Ruth,
Tents, Sons and Daughters of .Rich-
mond, Shepherds of Botbiehem and
Ideal Benet Soctety:
Your Patronage and Influence will
be greatly appreciated. Please re-
member that she {4 always at your
service.
Reliable Service at Moderato Rates.
OFFICE: 3006 P Street, *Phone,
Madison 2337.
RESIDENCE: 1015 St. James at“
"Phone, Madison 6619.
: 2 .
?
ER ree Ramet: Te “dn
Sa cael on ee’
Poe vat a::
ae Se
er cae eS
pes
SE Seeee ee eee
TH LeGe.
| | OPEN ALL THE YEAR.
Fall Term begins September 1; 1913.
Best Opportunities. for Negro Youth.
Board, Lodaing and Tuttlon $7.00
per month. 7
‘Write today for Catalog or free
| tuition, Address. :
| JAMES B, DUDLEY, President, .
_ AL AND M. COLLEGE,
7 Greensboro, N. 0.
;
|
L. J. HAYDEN
ee
MANUFACTURER OF ~
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All the Features for Which President Wilson Has Contended Are Carried by the Bill, Including Free Wool, Free Sugar and Free Meats.
The Underwood-Simmons tariff bill passed the senate by a vote of 64 to 37.
It went through carrying all the features for which President Wilson has contended—free wool, free sugar, free meats and greatly reduced duties on all of the necessaries of life. The result was a great personal victory for Woodrow, Wilson, and he was showed with messages of congratulation.
The bill now goes to conference between the two houses, and ten days it is expected will see final action on this important measure, which already has dragged itself along for five months.
The vote in the senate was big with political possibilities.
Two Republicans, La Follette, of Wisconsin, and Poindexter, of Washington, voted for the Democratic bill.
Only two Democrats, Thornton and Ransdell, of Louisiana, failed to stand by the caucus pledge. They voted with most of the Republicans against the measure.
Many Republicans contended that by his action La Follette had removed himself from the Republican party and had forfeited any chance he may have had for nomination for the presidency. Nobody was certain what La Follette's plans were. Some Republicans believed his action meant that he is preparing to lead an independent fight of his own, while others were confident that he was getting ready to jump into the Democratic fold. His isolation was still further emphasized by an obvious break between him and Senator Cummins, one of the Republican progressives. The Democratic leaders obtained a larger majority for the bill than they had expected. This was due not only to the votes of La Follette and Polindester, but to the absence of three Republicans, two of whom, Senator Burton, of Obito, and Senator Grouna, of North Dakota, released their Democratic pairs on the final vote in order that they might have the satisfaction of recording themselves in favor of the party measure.
So intense was the interest in the proceedings below that when the vice president announced that the bill had passed applause broke on on the floor of the senate on the Democratic side, and the occupants of the galleries plucking up courage at this example violated a time honored rule forbidding such demonstrations.
On the door Senator John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi; Senator Thomas, of Colorado, and other members of the finance committee sat up and clapped their hands in exultation, while some of the older senators, like Bacon, of Georgia, looked on with more or less astonishment.
Immediately after the announcement that the bill had been passed, Senator Gallinger, chairman of the Republican caucus and by virtue of that office nominally leader of the minority, arrose, and in a brief but felicitous speech expressed his appreciation of the treatment that had been accorded to the minority side by Senator Simmons, chairman of the finance committee.
After the announcement that the bill had been passed Chairman Simmons asked for the appointment of conferences on behalf of the senate, and another big surprise was afforded when the vice president named Senator La Follette, of Wisconsin, who had just voted for the bill, as one of the Republican conferences. Senator La Follette was not entitled to the place on the ground of seniority, as he is the last member on the list of Republicans on the finance committee.
The seven senators named to represent the senate on the conference committee of the two houses that will perfect the bill were as follows: Chairman Simmons and Senators Stone, Williams and Johnson, Democrats, and Senators Penrose, Lodge and La Follotte, Republicans.
The last day given to the tariff bill in the senate was consumed mostly by speech making. Senators La Follotte and Cummins made the principal speeches, and one of the diverting incidents of the debate was an open manifestation on the part of Mr. La Follotte of his ill-feeling toward the senator from Iowa, which dates back to the last presidential campaign.
Senate Tariff Changed
The principal changes made by the
separate in the Underwood tariff bill as
it passed the house are:
Income tax exemptions reduced to
$2000, with allowance of $1000 for
husband or wife and $1000 for two or
more children.
Tax on cotton futures of fifty cents
a bale, effective after Sepul 1, 1814.
Senator Simmons Guided Destiny.
La Fellette Made Last Speech.
Photos by American Press Association.
During the long debate in the senate measure, the official opinion of the measure has been guided in a large degree by Senator Simmons of North Carolina (bottom) chairman of finance committees. When the end of the struggle was in sight Republicans were equally as anxious as the Democrats to get the bill out of the way. Senator La Follette delivered the speech, and the senate elaborate comparison between the pending measure and the Payne-Aldrich act.
wines, heretofore free, taxed $1.10 a gallon.
House anti-dumping provision requiring goods to be sold in the United States as cheaply as in home state of producers stricken out and the prohibition on convict made and child labor goods modified.
Creation of a joint committee to revise administration features.
House provision for a countervailing duty on wood pulp stricken out.
Free art provision of house bill made more restrictive.
Average ad valorem rate is decreased twenty-eight per cent from existing rates.
New tariff rates will cost government $44,000,000 loss in revenue.
The worst of the numerous disasters which have overtaken Germany's airship fleet happened when the new naval Zippelin ship L1 was wrecked while on a voyage from the mainland to Helfgoland, twelve miles away, and sixteen of the crew of twenty-three were drowned. This is the twelfth accident to be fell as if the world alone.
This is the twelfth accident to be fall the Zoppelin airships and the first to be accompanied with loss of life. It had been previously announced that the L-1 was going on a fifty-four-hour non-stop trial trip from Friedrichen to Wilhelmshaven, where she was to be joined by two waterplanes. The ice she was to proceed with the waterplanes to Helligoland, from which place she would cruise across Schleswig-Holstein to Danzig, returning from the latter place to Friedrichhaven by way of Potadam and Hanover.
It is understood that some officers of high rank were aboard the L-1, but the only names mentioned in the early reports are Lieutenant Hanne, the commander, and Catinain von Metzling. Both of these are said to have been drowned.
Thlexes Got $500 In Store
Burglarrs ransacked the cigar store of John H. Jones, Market and Sixth streets, Wilmington. Del., and got away with $500 in money. The store is just across the street from the police station.
Wigs Champagne Stakes
The Champagne stakes of $5000, the feature of the first day's racing of the four days' meet at Doncaster, Bag. was won by Tetrarch, with Stormway second and Bulyology third.
There are some 60,000 costumers who carry on business in the streets of London. Their capital is supposed to be $200,000, while they are said to do a trade during the year of $15,000,000.
That. No Lives Were Lost in Wreck is Due to Fact that it Was an All Steel Train—Locosened Rail Blamed.
The New York-St. Louis flyer, on the Pennsylvania Railroad was derailed at Wyles station, four miles west of New Madison; O., injuring forty-five of the seventy-five passengers and fatally injuring three of the crew.
Six coaches went into a cornfield on one side of the track, the engine and tender striking a bridge abutment on the other side of the track and turning one span of the bridge into the air.
The rear coach remained on the rails, and the next coach, though off the track, did not overturn.
The following is a partial list of injured:
L. E. Reeber, New York; Mrs. Johanna E. Casey, St. Louis; H. C. Swayle, Indianapolis; W. Somerville St. Louis; A. W. Gelster, Baltimore; W. B. Foriss, New York city; A. T. Hackworth, Kansas City; C. W. Ewing, dining car steward, Columbus, O.; R. Rodgers, engineer, Columbus, O.; J. W. Tharp, fireman, Columbus, O.; R. J. Rector, stoker, Columbus, O.; M. H. Specker, Brooklyn; Jesse Porter, Jersey City, N. J.; R. M. Goodman, Washington, D. C.
Two firemen were so badly scalded and crushed it is believed they will die, and a chef in the dinner was seriously scalded.
The engineer suffered a severe scalp wound.
The wreck occurred on a sharp curve where the track was weak and the train was travelling at high speed.
The injured were taken to Richmond, Ind., on a relief train sent to the scene of the wreck from that place.
Because of absence of telegraphic communication with Wylies, it was not at first known how many persons were injured, but some of the farmers living near there sent an urgent call for doctors and nurses, saying that many persons had been hurt.
The train passed through New Madison about six minutes before it was wrecked, and its speed at that time was about fifty-five miles an hour.
The train was composed of a mail car, baggage library car, four Pullman sleepers, diner and observation.
It was an all steel train, and the fact that there was no loss of life is attributed to this fact.
The train was known as the New York-St. Louis flyer. It left Columbus fifty minutes late. It was one of the finest accommodation trains on the Pennsylvania lines. There is no telegraph station near the place where the wreck occurred.
Because of this, news of the wreck was some time reaching New Madison and Bradford.
The train was in charge of Conductor F. L. Fallon and Engineer R. E. Rogers, both of Columbus.
The engine left the track on one side, and two coaches immediately in the rear of the engine jumped to the other side and plowed into a cornfield, according to reports reaching the Pennsylvania offices.
Relief cars, carrying doctors, were rushed to the scene from Richmond, Ind.; Greenville, New Paris and Bradford. Wreck trains were sent from Columbus, New Madison and Richmond.
The cause of the wreck is not known yet, but it is supposed to have been a loosened rail. The officials said the train was travelling sixty miles an hour at the time of the accident. The latest report is that all the cars but one went into the ditch. General Manager McCarty said that he attributed the fact that no lives were lost directly to the all steel equipment of the train.
COATESVILLE Y. M. C. A. BURNS
Building and Contents Destroyed With Loss of $40,000.
The Young Men's Christian Association building at Coatesville, Pa., was destroyed by fire entailing a loss of $40,000. The directors carried $30,000 insurance on the building and contents.
The entire business block was threatened, and nearby towns were in readiness to offer assistance, but with four lines of water hose and two chemicals the volunteer firemen, after an hour's work, had the fire under control. The fire, the origin of which is a mystery, started in the physical director's room, on the basement floor, adjacent to the gymnasium.
Poe's Biographer Dead.
Eugene Lemaine Didier, biographer of and one of the world's recognized authorities on Edgar Allan Poe, died at his home in Baltimore of a complication of diseases. He was seventy five years old.
Albert Goldenburg, his wife and four children were burned to death when their home at Bridgeport, Ill., was destroyed by fire.
Mountaineer a Father at 28.
O. P. Grant, a mountaineer who lives north of Spartanburg, S. C., is a father at eighty-eight years old.
Chinese Kill Priest:
Advices from China to Catholic officials in San Francisco, Cal., tell of the death of Father Francis Bernet, a Franciscan missionary, at the hands of Chinese fanatics, in a remote region of North Shore on June 12, 1877.
Cut This Out Paper. ATTENTION
NATIONAL PETITION AGAINST JIM CROW AND COLOR SEGREGATION BY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
To the President of the United States, Hon. Woodrow Wilson, White House, Washington, D. C.
Str:
This is to certify that we, the undersigned, are surprised and indignant, that under your administration there should be any rules made by members of your cabinet to segregate employees of the national government by race or color. We protest against this as a plain insult, public degradation, and insufferable injury to Colored Americans, the establishment of caste in this free republic. We petition you to reverse, prevent and forbid any such movement by your bureau chiefs, in accord with your promise of fair, friendly, just and Christian treatment of your Colored fellow-citizens.
Address
N. B.—By pasting on sheet of paper any number of names can be put on, can be used in churches, lodges, societies, etc.—Sign on one side of sheets only.
Return to THE PLANET, 311 N. 4th Street,
RICHMOND, VA.
Woman Aviator Who Made Record Flight
```markdown
```
Photo by American Press Association.
Miss Ruth Law, sister of Rodman Law, the astronaut, in a plane, carrying Mary Richard R. Sinclair and Miss Pearl McGrath, made what was probably a world's record flight for a woman aviator carrying passengers at Garden City, N. T. She made a flight of about ten minutes duration at an altitude of about 800 feet.
White House Wedding Nov. 25.
The long-looked-for date of the wedding of Francis Sayre and Miss Jescio Wilson has been announced by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, through her secretary, Isabella Hagnor.
The date will be Tuesday, Nov. 25, and the ceremony will take place in the White House in Washington.
Mr. Sayre has been at the summer White House in Cornish, N. H., for the past week, and is probably doing what ever he can to assist in the plans for the wedding day. He and Jessie Wilson are now quite familiar personages upon the streets of the little village of Windsor and likewise upon the country roads leading in all directions from Cornish. They ride in the electric automobile on some trips, and upon others are seen together in a cute little parasol rig, which is about as unique a turnout as one would find anywhere, either in the romance of Europe or America.
Three Women In Air Flight
It is believed that Miss Ruth Law, sister of Rodman Law, the acronym established a world's record for women passenger carrying. She made a flight of 800 feet in altitude about ten minutes in duration in a biplane at Garden City, L. I., carrying Mrs. Richard R. Sinclair and Miss Pearl McGrath. The latter sat on the lower wing. She is a New York debutante of last winter. Mrs. Sinclair as Miss Helen Martin was a Baltimore girl. She resides at Nassau Boulevard, L. I.
William Beldleman died in Harrisburg, Pa.; after a fast of almost fifty six days, during which time he ate but two pieces of toast.
Mr. Beldleman was close to ninety-six years of age. His fast was due to grief at the death of a close relative, and he declared when asked why he did not eat that he had no desire to take food.
Mr. Beldleman spent most of his life in Harrisburg. He was the grandfather of Senator E. K. Beldleman.
Window Glass Plant Burns
Fire destroyed the plant of the Buckeye Window Glass Company, in Columbus, Ohio, entailing a loss of $150,000, with but little insurance.
The fire started from a locomotive spark. The fire was two miles northeast of Columbus, and as there was no water the firemen were of no use.
Make Child an American.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman H. Harjes made a hurried trip from Paris to New York so that their son, born Tuesday night, might be beyond the shadow of doubt an American citizen. They arived on Monday with just six hour to spare.
---
Fire Destroys Historic Church
The Bulldog Ile in station Church
one of the old edifices in Poston
was swept by fire, causing a loss
of $50,000. The blaze looked so
serious for a time that the guests
routed from their beds in West End
hotels.
---
Fine Woman Smuggler $3500
Mrs. William Ville, wife of an autobolle manufacturer of Moline, Ill. arrested August 19 on a plier in Hoboken, charmed with smuggling, was fined $3500 in the United States district court in Trenton.
Employees Get $150,000 of Estate.
A total of $150,000 was distributed among the 150 employees of George Wyman & Co., in South Bend, Ind., and several close friends as an appreciation of their worth, from the late George Wyman.
Railroad Men Want More Pay.
Locomotive engineers and firemen on the railroads west of Chicago have decided to ask the companies to revise their schedule of wages. Ninety-five thousand men will be affected by the proposed move.
Lagerfee Khraser
Thomas Tasser, a writer of the six-
fourth century, said: "It's an ill wind
turns no good." "Better late than
never." "Look ere you leap!" and "The
stone that is rolling can gather no
moss."
Asks $25,000 for Loss of Big Toe.
A new valuation for feet was set
when Paul Ward, a chauffeur, auded the
Baltimore and Ohio railroad for $25,
$00 for loss of his big toe.
Father of 29 Is Dead
Riley Shepherd, ninety-four years old, father of twenty-nine children, is dead at his home in Noblesville, Ind. He is survived by twenty children, 126 grandchildren, sixty-eight great-grandchildren and four great great-grandchildren. He was born in North Carolina.
Hen's Trade Mark on Egg.
A Cophin bantam hen, which has taken first prize for the past two years at the big Madison Square Garden Poultry Show in New York, has mystified chicken fanciers in Coatonville, Pa., by buying eggs with a perfect-"C" on the shell.
Charges Deputy With Forgery
Deputy Sheriff Robert Conahay was arrested at Easton, Pa., on charges preferred by Sheriff Henry Meyers of forgery and larceny.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILA. ADEL. PHIA — F. IOUR. f.m.
city mills,
(anry) $2.25 f. 70. 80.
CORN firm; No. 2 yellow, 85% @ 85°C,
OATS steady; No. 2 white, 48% @ 48°C,
POWER condens, 47% c.
FOTATOES steady; per barrel, 85c.
J 180.
POULTRY: Live steady; bens. 16¢
18¢: old roosters. 13¢. Dc裁 firm;
chop roosters. 18¢: old roosters. 13¢.
BUTTER: firm; fancy croesme.y.
23¢. per kc.
EGGS greedy; selected, $2 @ $5c; nearby, $1c; western, $1c.
Live Stock Markets
CHICAGO — HOGS weak; light,
$7.95$ 8.65; mixed, $6.25$ 8.50; heavy,
$7.15$ 8.30; rough, $7.15$ 7.45; plga,
$8.25$ 8.10
CATTLE steady; beaver, $6.90$
$8.15$ texas heeler, $6.75$ 7.75; stock-
horse, $5.50$ heeler, $5.50$ heeler,
halfrains, $6.90$ 8.60; calves, $12.50$
SHEEP weak ad lower; native, $3.90$
$6.75$ yearlings, $5.55$ lambs, native,
$6.40$ 7.65
HAIR PARLORS.
To the Friends, Customers and
MRS. ROSA H. WATSON
St. James Street. You can be
formations and Pompadour.
on short notice. Straightening
Straightening Combs, Orn
and preparations of all kinds
512 ST. JAMES STREET.
Virginia T.
Seminar
Lynchh
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS,
Course. Scientific Course le
Science (B. S.)
THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, wi
degree Bachelor of Divinity
Sociology and Social Psych
AGADEMIC COURSE, which pre
fessional schools.
NORMAL DEPARTMENT, offeri
ing extensive work in Pedag
Three hundred and five stu
States. So. and W. Coast Africa. S
Strong, efficient, experienced
Pla. Customers and the PORSA B. WATSON invites street. You can be supplied and Pompadour, Combe. Straightening and cleaning Combe, Ornamentation of all kinds for the JAMES STREET.
India The Seminary Lynchbury
N LIBERAL ARTS, stand Scientific Course leading (B. S.)
AL SEMINARY, with full master of Divinity (B. S.) and Social-Psychology, COURSE, which prepares schools.
PARTMENT, offering active work in Pedagogy and hundred and five students in W. Coast Africa. So. Ancient experienced faculty. ROE
and the Public in General.—
WATSON invites you to her Hair Parkson, and
you can be supplied with Brush, Puff, Tissue
headour. Combina made in Brush and Puff
straightening and shampooing a Specialty.
Jambas, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Grooming
all kinds for the skin. These measures will
STREET. - RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
A Theological
Primary & College.
Synchburg, Va.
SAL ARTS, standard Bachelor of Arts (B. A.)
Course leading to the degree of Bachelor of
NARY, with full theological course leading to
of Divinity (B. D.), including Greek.
Special Psychology,
which prepares for college, teaching and pre-
NT, offering special training to teachers. Do-
k in Pedagogy and Education. Co-Educational.
and five students last year, representing fifteen
North Africa. So, America and British West Indies.
perfenced faculty.
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in Queens
MRS. ROSA B. WATSON invites you to her Hair Perk, 520
St. James Street. You can be supplied with Brushes, Puffs, Groom-
formations and Pompadour, Combains made in Brushes and Puffs
on short notice. Straightening and shampooing a Specialty.
Straightening Combs, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Groomers
and preparations of all kinds for the skin. Phone Moore 546-
512 ST. JAMES STREET. RIOMSOND, VIRGINIA.
Virginia Theological Seminary & College Lynchburg. Va.
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 ... Sociology and Social Psychology.
AGADEMIC 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.
NEW 1918 CATALOGUE.
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ed to the New Style OAK CABKETS
Call and See Me and You shall be
Waited on Individually.
valuable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is
trouble and evil, much more is the mind of a
all the polishing that the schools can give it,
too good for a promising youth. Who would
no save a few study when health is in danger?
in inferior school to save a few dollars when a
the strength of character and of mind for
a larger usefulness!
LEOTURNE HALL.
Union University.
Best Higher Education to
ORED-YOUNG MEN.
COURSE including manual training for these
men's school subjects.
is broad and complete. Its requirements and
possess of any college for white youth in the
ing of the Carnegie Board.
REHE has for years been the standard course
in Hebrew, Greek and all the regular subjects
ties are given here. One hundred students for
in different departments of the school.
EDINGER, its finely equipped science inperator
columns, its able faculty and its full courses
on University to offer colored men an
advised by the favored of other races.
address the President,
*Phone. Madison-8778
Nothing on earth is so valuable a worth polishing at great trouble a boy or young man worth all the The best education is not too good choose a poor physician to save a And who would choose an inferior better school will increase the strenu life and prepare one for a larger
WORTH is so valuable as a landmark great trouble and ode to worth all the polishness is not too good for a bystander to save a few more choose an inferior school to increase the strength of one for a larger usefulness.
ia Union is the Best Higher Colored YOUNG ACADEMY COURSE included common school subjects such as those of any color in the rating of the Carral COURSE has for year Schools Hebrew, Greek seminaries are given by paralleled in different departments BUILDINGS, its size 112,000 volumes, its abbreviation Georgia Union University that enjoyed by the faculty, address the Pro
Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not too good for a promising youth. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few small health bills in danger? And who would choose an inferior school to save a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a larger usefulness?
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or heavily pixelated area with no discernible content.
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 standing 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 finely equipped science laboratories, its library of 13,000 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.
For further information, address the President,
VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY.
BROOKLAND, VIRGINIA.
not on the BAY SHOW FROM MAY TO mer hotel with theings.hesapeake Bay, RICH from Fortress Monro
on the Beach
SHORE HOTEL.
M MAY TO OCTOBER.
tel with the most delightful sur
ake Bay, RIGHT ON THE BEACH, thrae
fortress Monroe, Virginia.
The best summer hotel with the most delightful surroundings. Situated on Chesapeake Bay, RIGHT ON THE BEACH, three miles from Fortress Monroe, Virginia.
The Bay Shore Hotel Co.
ROBERT C. WOODS, President.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE
RICHMOND PLANET.
S. W. ROBINSON & SON
DEALERS IN
HIGH GRADE
LIQUORS.
PHONE MONROE 2' 3.
19 and 21 N. 18th St.,
Richmond, Va.
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. So. Richmond, Va.
Branch Office, 718 N. 2nd St.
TEACHERS WANTED
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SUNDAY SCHOOL.
Lesson XI.—Third Quarter. For Sept. 14. 1913.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Ex. xx. 12:21.
Memory Verses, L.17—Golden Text.
Luke x. 22—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
Continuing our study of the two tables given to Moses, we will look first at the six restful commandments and then at what is written concerning the relation of the white to the sinner and the saint. The fifth command is repeated and repeated to believers today in Eph. xi. 11, in response to the sixth, "Then shall it kill" our Lord caught that it was of sins even to be angry, and to do harm. In we read that "whoever tortures his brother is a murderer." In reference to the seventh Matt. 25, twohes that it may be broken to even a look. As to the eighth, the question is asked in Mal. lii. S. "Wal a man nash God!" and the answer is, "We have rebelled Me in tithes and offerings."
Many a man who would not be guilty of stealing a time or a nickel rob God of His Sabbath day by finding his own pleasure in it and is meaner than Jacob in refusing to give back to God at least a tenth of that which God has so bountifully given to him. A good comment on the ninth is found in Zach. vtl. 10; vtl. 17, where we are forbidden even to imagine evil in our hearts against a brother or a neighbor. If any testify falsely against us it gives us fellowship with the Lord Jesus, against whom false witnesses were hired to testify, even as it had been predicted, "False witnesses did rise up; they laid to my charge things that I knew not" (Pa. xxx. 11, Matt. xxx. 506).
As to covetress, it was on that point that Paul saw his sinfulness (Rom. vii, 7) and afterward wrote that covetousness is idolatry (Col. iii, 5). Our Lord said, "Take heed and beware of covetousness, for a man's life consists not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth" (Luke xi, 15). From the voice of God and the thunderlings and the lightnings and the noise of the trumpet the people removed and stood off after, and Moses alone drew near (verses 18-21). The law is holy and just and good (Rom. vii, 12) and sets forth the holiness without which no man can see God. It is so holy that no more mortal man ever keeps it or could keep it, for it brings us all in guilt before God and shuts every month, for by this we is the knowledge of sin (Rom. vii, 12).
"If there had been, and given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the law" (Gail III, 21). But it is evident that no man is justified by the law in the sight of God, for as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse; for it is written, "Cursed is every one that continues not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them." But Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us. The law brings us all in guilt and leads us to Christ
that we might be justified by faith (Gal. III. 10:13, 24, 25). He alone of all men kept the law perfectly in thought, word and deed and became the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth, but there always have been and still are those who, being ignorant of God's righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God (Hom. x, 3, 4).
Such are all those who talk about salvation by character and the Golden Rule as their creed and the Sermon on the Mount good enough for them. They have not notched that the first utterance of Christ on that occasion shuts their mouth, for where is their poverty of spirit while they talk of how good they are and how much good they do?
Let us consider the giving of the law more fully, for in this series of lessons we have nothing in connection with the tabernacle, every whit of which uttered His glory and speaks of Him who is the true Tabernacle (Ex. xxix. 9, margin; Heb. vill. 2). The principal vessel in the tabernacle was the ark of the covenant, and it was made to contain the law, which Israel so quickly broke, as we shall see in our next lesson. Moses and Aaron. Nadab and Abihu and seventy of the elders of Israel went up into the mount, and it is written that they saw God and did eat and drink (Ex. xxix. 9-11). This, in the light of John 1. 18, tells us that they saw the Son of God.
Johann seems to have waited somewhere, for we do not read of him again till Moses comes down from the mount, after forty days and nights, with the tables in his hands. He had received full instructions concerning the other nucle and its furniture. As they came down from the mount the people, who had promised to do all that God had said are seen worshiping the golden calf and Moses, to impress upon them what they were doing, threw down the tables and broke them.
By the command of the Lord he made two tables like the first, went up into the mount again and remained another forty days and nights, while God wrote the ten words, but this time he
was told to put them in the ark that
they might be kept unbroken (Ex.
xxiv. 0-18; xxix. 14, 28; xxii. 17;
Deut. 1x, 10, 11, 17; x. 150. What the
people could not do the ark did. Christ
is our ark, and our mourn seat, and our
priest, and our sacrifice.
FASHION HINT
By JUDIC CHOLLET
Here is one of the latest things in house gowns boasting a Ribbon snash. The waist line is slightly raised, suggesting the empire effect, and the deep pointed frills of the sleeves seem to belong therewith.
The three piece skirt and the simple blouse are joined one to the other and lapped and closed at the left side. There is a chemisette that can be made low or high.
For the medium size the gown will take seven yards of material twenty-
M.
DAINTY HOUSE GOWN.
seven inches wide, with two yards of
have nine inches wide for the bleeder
frills and one half yard of silk for the
bands.
This May Manton pattern is cut in sizes
from 24 to 42 inches bust measure. Send
10 cents to this office, giving number, 792,
and it will be promptly forwarded to you
by mail. If in haste send an additional
two cent stamp for letter postage. When
ordering use coupon.
FASHION HINT
8v JUDIC CHOLLET
Fancy collars and pretty fuchsia make an important feature of the season's fashion. Fuchsia take every possible variation of the familiar form, and collars appear in constantly increasing variety.
The wired collar suggests the medic idea and is combined with pretty shaped reverses. If a simpler effect is wanted the wired or medici collar can be used without the flat one over the shoulder, or the flat collar can be used without the wired collar. Either of these collars will at once transform a plain blouse. Every woman knows the value of such an accessory.
To make No. 1 will require three counters of a yard of material twenty-
1
2
FASHIONABLE FANCY COLLARS.
one inches wide; to make No. 2, two
and three-quarter yards of lace or
embroidery five inches wide and one yard
of plaited ruffling.
This May Manton pattern is cut in one
size only. Send 10 cents to this office, giving
number, 789, and it will be promptly
forwarded to you by mail. If in haste
send an additional two cent stamp for letter
postage. When ordering use coupon.
The new shirt waistbands are sure to be interesting at the beginning of the season. We all need them, and it is interesting to know that new and attractive ones are offered. Here is a model that is very smart with tucks that give the
1
ONE OF THE NEW SHIRT WAINTS.
fashionable "bloom" effect and with one tuck over the shoulder to give breadth.
The back may be either plain or have an applied yoke, so that both the long and short waisted sisters can be suited.
Linen and madras always suggest themselves as a material for the tailored shirt waist, but today satin and silk are as much used for this purpose as the wash materials.
The soft rolled over cuffs or the straight ones are equally fashionable on a waist of this kind.
For the medium size the waist will require three and one-half yards of material twenty-seven inches wide.
This May Manton pattern is cut in sizes from 24 to 42 inches bust measure. Send 10 cents to this office, giving number, 7603, and it will be promptly forwarded to you by mail. If in basic send an additional two cent stamp for letter postage. When ordering use coupon.
No..... Size.....
Name.....
Address.....
FASHION - HINT
By JUDIC CHOLLET
Mothers are constantly on the lookout for new and pretty designs, for little children. There is a frock with decided charm that is both easy and simple to make. The skirt portion is straight, gathered at the upper edge and joined to a
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MODISH FOR LITTLE MIRA.
plain body, and over this body is arranged the shaped one with a sash of ribbon slipped under the lower edge.
Most mothers will like the short sleeves, for nothing is prettier than to see the dimpled arms of childhood. Nevertheless long ones are included in the pattern.
For the four-year-old size will be needed two and three-eighths yards of material twenty-seven inches wide, with one yard of ribbon five inches wide for the sash and three yards of padding.
This May Manton pattern is cut in sizes for children of two, four and six years of age. Send 10 cents to this office, giving number, and it will be promptly forwarded to you by mail. If in haste send an additional two cent stamp for letter postage. When ordering use coupon.
No. Size
Name
Address
Burleson Has Named 5765 Postmasters
In the 176 days since Postmaster
General Burleson took office he has
appointed 5765 postmasters. This
makes his average something over
thirty-two a day. Of the number 2203
were presidential postmasters, whose
appointments must be confirmed by
the senate.
A Copy of Supreme Keeper of Records & Seal C. K. Robinson's Timely Report:
To the Officers and Representatives to the Sixteenth Biennial Session to be held at Baltimore, Maryland, August 25th to 30th, '13. Greeting:
St. Louis, Mo., July, 1913.
Dear Sir and Brother—As the time approaches for the next Supreme Lodge Session, I feel that the representatives and officers should know our true financial condition. In order that they may think and plan for the betterment of those conditions. The very short time allowed at the Supreme Lodge Session for the consideration of vastly important questions, is not sufficient to permit the members to become thoroughly familiar with conditions as they really exist. At this time I feel it highly important to lay these matters before you, believing as I do that the hearts of the majority of our members are true to the principles of our great institution.
Dear Sir and Brother—As the time approaches for Supreme Lodge Session, I feel that the representatives should know our true financial condition, in order that think and plan for the betterment of those conditions, short time allowed at the Supreme Lodge Session for the amount of vastly important questions, is not sufficient to members to become thoroughly familiar with conditionally exist. At this time I feel it highly important matters before you, believing as I do that the hearts of all of our members are true to the principles of our great During all the years that I, by your trust and confidence as S. K. of R. and S., the desire nearest my heart to see our beloved Order established on a firm financial attain this end, the records will show that I have time called your attention to much needed reforms in the harbursing of the funds, but as stated above, the shortest in which to carefully consider my suggestions and investments has caused the representatives to look lightly and no doubt has brought about the present crisis. In the face of the record of my frequent efforts standard of our financial system, as well as to add to our revenue, no honest member of the Order will dare accuse motives.
the time approaches for the
that the representatives and
condition, in order that the
of those conditions. The
Lodge Session for the con-
s, is not sufficient to per-
familiar with conditions
it highly important to la-
l I do that the hearts of the
principles of our great insti-
by your trust and confidence
to desire nearest my heart
based on a firm financial ba-
ll show that I have time and
needed reforms in the hand-
stated above, the shortness
my suggestions and investi-
tatives to look lightly upon
the present crisis.
If my frequent efforts to re-
as well as to add to our so
the Order will dare accuse
During all the years that I, by your trust and confidence, have served as S. K. of R. and S., the desire nearest my heart has been to see our beloved Order established on a firm financial basis, and to attain this end, the records will show that I have time and again called your attention to much needed reforms in the handling and disbursement of the funds, but as stated above, the shortness of time in which to carefully consider my suggestions and investigate conditions has caused the representatives to look lightly upon them and no doubt has brought about the present crisis. In the face of the record of my frequent efforts to raise the standard of our financial system, as well as to add to our source of revenue, no honest member of the Order will dare accuse me of impure motives.
CAREFULLY STUDY.
I sincerely trust that you will take the time to care
for the figures given in the following statement before di-
rect with any one in order that you may be fully familiar
with my blemish report submitted to the Supreme Lodge
Police, Ind. In 1911, I presented to you a very careful
statement showing your general expenses; salaries alone
to be $15,200.00 for the term of two years ending August.
The following table which will be found on page
101 minutes shows the amount of salaries paid to or
out of what funds they are payable:
Salaries of Officers. Out of What Fund Pay
S. L. Fund. U. R.
C. per term $5,000 $1,250
Clerk—S. C. per term 2,400 600
K. of R. per term 3,000 1,500
M. of Ex. per term 600 600
Ap. Atty. per term 1,200
Aj. Genl. per term 2,000 2,000 1,000
Totals. $15,200 $5,950 $1,000
The above table shows the proper divisions of ex-
salaries and expenses of officers as recommended by the
committee and adopted by the Supreme Lodge at Kansa-
009.
will take the time to carefully
ing statement before discuss
may be fully familiar with
to the Supreme Lodge at
to you a very carefully p
expenses; salaries alone am
o years ending August, 191
will be found on page 146
of salaries paid to office
role:
Out of What Fund Payable
S. L. Fund. U. R. En.
000 $1,250
000 600
000 1,500
000 600
000
000 2,000 1,000
000 $5,950 $1,000
Proper divisions of expen
as recommended by the F
Supreme Lodge at Kansas C
I sincerely trust that you will take the time to carefully study the figures given in the following statement before discussing it with any one in order that you may be fully familiar with them. In my biennial report submitted to the Supreme Lodge at Indianapolis, Ind. in 1911, I presented to you a very carefully prepared statement showing your general expenses; salaries alone amounting to $15,200 for the term of two years ending August, 1911.
The following table which will be found on page 146 of the 1911 minutes shows the amount of salaries paid to officers, and out of what funds they are payable:
Salaries of Officers. Out of What Fund Payable.
S. L. Fund. U. R. En. Fund.
S. C. per term $5,000 $1,250 $3,750
Clerk—S. C. per term 2,400 600 1,800
S. K. of R. per term 3,000 1,500 1,500
S. M. of Ex. per term 600 600
Sup. Atty. per term 1,200 1,200
Maj. Genl. per term 2,000 2,000 1,000
Totals. $15,200 $5,950 $1,000 $8,250
The above table shows the proper divisions of expenses for salaries and expenses of officers as recommended by the Finance Committee and adopted by the Supreme Lodge at Kansas City in 1909.
FURTHER EXPLANATION.
$5,950.00 of this amount, according to your law, is pay
the Supreme Lodge fund $1,000.00 out of the Unifor
fund, and $2,500.00 out of the Endowment fund. The
amounts do not include the general expenses for office re-
gistration, traveling expenses of officers, etc., while
the term amounted to $13,203.39 to be paid from the
lodge fund. The receipts for the Supreme Lodge fund,
1911 amounted to $5,272.02, which left your Supro-
cessary as follows:
Disbursements $13,203.39
Collections 8,272.02
Deficit in S. L. Revenue $4,931.27
I believe that Uniform Rank Department should be
binding. The Receipts in that department now equal it
as the Supreme Lodge receipts, so Major General's repo-
here is no reason why the Supreme Lodge should be burd-
ying the salary and carrying other expenses of that de
bordling to your law, is paya
$000.00 out of the Uniform
Endowment fund. The for-
mal expenses for office rent.
of officers, etc., which f
19 to be paid from the Su
the Supreme Lodge fund to
which left your Supreme
$13,203.39
$8,272.02
$4,931.27
Department should be se
department now equal if no
noe Major General's report.
Lodge should be burdened
her expenses of that depar
$5,950.00 of this amount, according to your law, is payable out of the Supreme Lodge fund, $1,000.00 out of the Uniform Rank fund, and $8,250.00 out of the Endowment Fund. The foregoing amounts do not include the general expenses for office rent, printing, stationery, traveling expenses of officers, etc., which for the last term amounted to $13,203.39 to be paid from the Supreme Lodge fund. The receipts for the Supreme Lodge fund to July 31, 1911 amounted to $8,272.02, which left your Supreme Lodge treasury as follows:
Disbursements ..... $13,203.39
Collections ..... 8,272.02
Deficit in S. L. Revenue ..... $4,931.27
I believe that Uniform Rank Department should be self-subs taining. The Receipts in that department now equal if not surpass the Supreme Lodge receipts, see Major General's report. And there is no reason why the Supreme Lodge should be burdened with paying the salary and carrying other expenses of that department.
THE ENDOWMENT DEPARTMENT
The disbursements and collections of the Endowment
ment of the Supreme Lodge, were as follows:
Endowment expense disbursed.....$26,981.00
Endowment collected.....14,550.00
Deficit in Endowment Revenue.....$12,431.00
is left the total deficit as follows:
Deficit in Supreme Lodge.....$4,936.00
Deficit in Endowment.....12,431.00
actions of the Endowment D
as follows:
buried..... $26,981.00
14,550.00
revenue..... $12,431.00
wes:
$ 4,936.00
12,431.06
The disbursements and collections of the Endowment Department of the Supreme Lodge, were as follows:
Endowment expense disbursed.....$26,981.00
Endowment collected.....14,550.00
Total Deficit in both.....$17,367.00
This enormous deficit was met by the Emergency fund
does not permit the expenditure of more than 25 per
Endowment fund collected annually for operating
our collection, you will observe for the last term was $1
the expense incurred against that department was
General expenses.....$ 2,807.81
Salaries.....8,181.00
Rent.....337.50
Legal expense.....5.00
$11,331.31
Death claims.....15,650.00
Total.....$26,981.31
There is no emergency fund now from which the defic
met. $5000 was loaned out of the Pythian Temple fund
pose this term.
set by the Emergency fund,
core of more than 25 per cun-
annually for operating expense
for the last term was $14,500
that department was
$ 2,807.81
8,181.00
337.50
5.00
$11,331.31
15,650.00
$26,951.31
now from which the deficiency
the Pithian Temple fund for
CRISIS.
you of the conditions which
were to meet the crisis. The
saw the impending danger,
remedy after remedy, all of w-
to offer as to the action o-
my solemn duty to again call-
on of your treasury at this
supreme Lodge have not been
the session convenes at Balthus
that can only be met by
of expenses.
is been forced to protest ag-
tain remains for the Representa-
tors their very best wisdom in
well as the question of
calling our finances, either
ceasing our revenue by
several departments of
sinking. There is no other oport-
ity that is successfully oport-
ed by our Supreme Lodge.
Informers should be a sum
This enormous deficit was met by the Emergency fund. The law does not permit the expenditure of more than 25 per cent of the Endowment fund collected annually for operating expenses: your collection, you will observe for the last term was $14,550.00, yet the expense incurred against that department was
There is no emergency fund now from which the deficiency can be met. $5000 was loaned out of the Pythian Temple fund for this purpose this term.
FACING A CRISIS
At the last session I warned you of the conditions we wanted you, and urged you to prepare to meet the crisis. A native men of the convention saw the impending danger to correct it by presenting remedy after remedy, all efforts failed. I have no criticism to offer as to the action priority at that time but I feel it my solemn duty to again mention to the deplorable condition of your treasury at the salaries of the officers of the Supreme Lodge have not been September 1912, and when the session convenes at Belfast will find an enormous deficit, that can only be met insulation, and proper regulation of expenses.
Already one Grand Lodge has been forced to protest at it terms unjust taxation, and it remains for the Repressor the Baltimore session to exercise their very best wisdom with this question as well as the question using the manner of handling our finances, enlacing our expenses or increasing our revenue in relation, in order that the several departments of the Supreme Lodge may be self-sustaining. There is no other option in this broad country today that is successfully offered on the loose financial methods used by our Supreme Lodge on experience of the True Reformers should be a fitting to all.
At the last session I warned you of the conditions which confronted you, and urged you to prepare to meet the crisis. The conservative men of the convention saw the impending danger, and sought to correct it by presenting remedy after remedy, all of which efforts failed. I have no criticism to offer to the action of the majority at that time but I feel it my solemn duty to call your attention to the deplorable condition of your treasury at this time. The salaries of the officers of the Supreme Lodge have not been paid since September 1912, and when the session convenes at Baltimore, you will find an enormous deficit, that can only be met by wise legislation, and proper regulation of expenses.
Already one Grand Lodge has been forced to protest against what it terms unjust taxation, and it remains for the Representatives at the Baltimore session to exercise their very best wisdom in dealing with this question as well as the question of adjusting the manner of handling our finances, either by reducing our expenses or increasing our revenue by wise legislation, in order that the several departments of the Supreme Lodge may be self-sustaining. There is no other organization in this broad country today that is successfully operating upon the loose financial methods used by our Supreme Lodge. The recent experience of the True Reformers should be a sufficient warning to all.
ORDER TAXED AND OVER-TAXED
The Order has been taxed and over-taxed, until the pay membership has almost reached the breaking point, and our attention to page 292 of the minutes of the 1911 session bears the following resolutions presented by Sir F. Freeman, D. D. S. C. of Michigan to be acted upon by the 6th degree at the Baltimore session this year. "Paragraph 6, or to be amended. To provide a revenue for the Supreme Lodge of a tax on each member of the Order, and charges is furnished by it, and taxes from Subordinate Lodge immediate jurisdiction." Article 10, to be amended to read as follows: "Each of the Order shall pay to the Supreme Lodge, by and through and Subordinate Lodges thereof, a tax not to exceed one annuum, and each Grand and Subordinate Lodge shall pay all such sums as may be fixed in the by-laws of the Lodge, and all work or supplies so ordered must be paid for, or on date of delivery."
over-laxed, until the patient
and the breaking point, and I
the minutes of the 1911 ses-
sions presented by Sir Francis
be acted upon by the Sup-
year. "Paragraph 6, of An
venue for the Supreme Lodge
the Order, and charges for
from Subordinate Lodges u
read as follows: "Each man
male Lodge, by and through
a tax not to exceed 10 of
subordinate Lodge shall pay
in the by-laws of the Super-
ordered must be paid for w
The Order has been taxed and over-taxed, until the patience of the membership has almost reached the breaking point, and I call your attention to page 292 of the minutes of the 1911 session, which bears the following resolutions presented by Sir Francis H. Warren, D. D. S. C. of Michigan to be acted upon by the Supreme Lodge at the Baltimore session this year. "Paragraph 6, of Article 1, to be amended. To provide a revenue for the Supreme Lodge by means of a tax on each member of the Order, and charges for supplies furnished by it, and taxes from Subordinate Lodges under its immediate jurisdiction."
Article 10, to be amended to read as follows: "Each member of the Order shall pay to the Supreme Lodge, by and through the Grand and Subordinate Lodges thereof, a tax not to exceed 10 cents per annum, and each Grand and Subordinate Lodge shall pay for supplies such sums as may be fixed in the by-laws of the Supreme Lodge, and all work or supplies so ordered must be paid for when ordered, or on date of delivery."
THAT PROPOSED AMENDMENT.
The above resolution proposes to amend your Supreme
on, and seeks to relieve our financial straits and give
to amend your Supreme Court financial straits and give to
The above resolution proposes to amend your Supreme Constitution, and seeks to restore our financial grants and also to the
PHOTOS.
We offer you, the Leagus and Mint Acadia Photos, of 6 More Minute Pictures than you can obtain elsewhere.
Special Attention Fold to Children, Babies and Swinging Indoor View Work.
We will also be pleased to Quote you for an Instructor call from Old Photos, A Specialty.
Geo. O. Brown, PHOTOGRAPHER,
603 North 2nd St., Richmond, Va.
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Address all letters to Mark Shampoo Drier Co.
Minneapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
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MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
Supreme Lodge its proper authority to receive a Per Capita tax upon the membership.
If this resolution prevails there will be no further need of extra taxations. It will produce a revenue of about $15,000 annually that with the sale of supplies and the control of a regalia and printing plant, with proper regulations will place the Supreme Lodge on a sound financial footing. Article X of the original laws as adopted, amended and published in 1880 in 1886 read as follows: "Each Grand Lodge shall pay to the Supreme Lodge the sum of $125 annually for each representative to which they are entitled, etc. and to make annual returns to the Supreme Keeper of Records and Scal with same." The collection of $25.00 biennially, is inadequate and there should either be an increase in representative tax or a new law enacted creating a per capita tax upon the membership as outlined in the foregoing paragraph.
Since I have been your Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, I have built up a splendid revenue from the supply department, and made several efforts to direct your attention to the advisability of operating a National Supply and Regalia House, and I again urge here, there is no good reason why certain officers should be operating Regalia Houses for their personal benefit when the Order needs the revenues from sales for its maintenance; that if you are not in a position to start a plant equipped and owned by the Supreme Lodge, you should at least control the sales of supplies and regalia to Grand Lodges and members of the Order, through the office of the Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, in order that the Supreme Lodge may receive its just portion of the revenue derived from its influence and membership, by private concurra, as is the case at present.
FINANCIAL SYSTEM SHOULD BE ALTERED
There should be some alter-
largest amount of revenue com-
mitted the Endowment fund, and if the
handling this fund as at present
will, it is certainly not good busi-
ness. A Finance Committee to a
not independent, and subject to
of course unit them to render
service. This is a burning issue
Officers came to the last session
books and vouchers missing, ac-
failure to make proper reporta-
Committee, overlooking all these
losing time attempting to find
the Supreme Keeper of Records
forced to admit were properly
previously shown.
If the Supreme Lodge owed
which to pay it, and it was pai-
money came from to pay it with,
as a man and honored officer of
and shall continue to perform m
wisdom to see the right.
There should be some alteration in your financial system. The largest amount of revenue coming into the organization is through the Endowment fund, and if the Supreme Chancellor is to continue handling this fund as at present, collecting and paying them out, at will, it is certainly not good business sense to permit him to appoint a Finance Committee to audit his own accounts, as they are not independent, and subject to removal by him at any time, which of course unfit them to render the Supreme Lodge honest, efficient service. This is a burning issue and ought to be remedied at once. Officers came to the last session without reports, some with their books and vouchers missing, acknowledging their carelessness and failure to make proper reports for two years, while the Finance Committee, overlooking all these flagrant violations of the law, were losing time attempting to find flaws in the books and accounts of the Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, which after all, they were forced to admit were properly kept, as examination by experts hardly previously shown.
If the Supreme Lodge owed $13,000 and had only $8,000 with which to pay it, and it was paid, my books must show where the money came from to pay it with, if I am to live up to my obligations as a man and honored officer of the order. I refuse to conceal it and shall continue to perform my duties fearlessly as God gives me wisdom to see the right.
SHOULD BE FREE TO ACT.
If your Finance Committee could not possibly exist and you a position to enforce the law and mittee whose duty it is to rigidly the expenditures without fear or in the Officers and The Supreme believe the above suggestions if the laws to meet the present demand.
With the facts I have plain rise to the full stature of your and assist in taking such steps beloved organization, and thus their interests to say: "I shall r
If your Finance Committee was free to act, the above conditions could not possibly exist and your Supreme Chancellor would be in a position to enforce the law and the recommendations of the Committee whose duty it is to rigidly examine the books and determine the expenditures without fear or favor to any one, then Confidence in the Officers and The Supreme Lodge would soon be restored. I believe the above suggestions if approved will sufficiently amend our laws to meet the present demands.
With the facts I have plainly put before you, I trust you will rise to the full stature of your manhood at the Baltimore session, and assist in taking such steps as will secure the future of our beloved organization, and thus enable those who trust you with their interests to say: "I shall not fear."
He holds no parley with unmanly fears.
Where duty bids, he confidently steers;
Faces a thousand dangers at her call.
And, trusting in his God surmounts them all.
Yours in
C.
LIVE STOCK NOTES.
Yours in F. C. & B..
C. K. ROBINSON, S. K. of R. & S.
The rest at noon goes a long way in keeping the team in prime condition for hard and constant work.
Of all animals on the farm a sheep want pure water most. They will not drink impure water if they can help it. Why make them do it?
The large pasture is not always best. It does not pay to make a cow walk a long way to find her feel.
Remember that a colt between ages of two and one-half and three years gets twelve new teeth. See that the old ones are properly shed. Have a veterinarian examine your horse's mouth once a year.
It is a good time to fatten old and faulty ewe before cold weather comes.
The most urgent need of stock this season is plenty of pure water, and in many parts of the country this is one of the most difficult things to obtain.
FLOCK IMPROVEMENT.
None but Vigorous Ewes Should Be Used For Breeding.
Breeding ewes that are in any way diseased should not be kept in the breeding stock, for their progeny. are apt to inherit such disease and transmit it to their progeny, says W. M. Kelly in the literal New Yorker. There is plenty of difficulty with disease in a stock of sheep without inviting and fostering the very elements that will destroy the results of systematic selection. None but the best and most vigorous individuals that are free from all hereditary diseases should be selected for breeding purpose if we aim to build up a good uniform and profitable stock. Great regard should be paid to the
Great regard should be paid to the lake and general contour of the creek
that is selected to head the flock. His structure should be firm and massive, with a broad and capacious breast, without a disproportionate length of leg, well formed and fully developed quarters, especially the blind quarters. His loin should be stout and well knit, his features bold and masculine. A firm, muscular neck, with a bold, courageous eye, is indicative of spirit and vigor. The head should be long, but rather small and finely molded. These appearances denote excellent qualities in rams of every breed. I do not believe in selecting an extremely large ram nor those that are weak in one point and strong in another.
Study the breeding even and select a ram that will have a tendency to correct any weaknesses or defects that they possess. In the purchase of the ram great care should be exercised as to what his appearance would be when in a normal condition, for it is unsafe to rely upon the form or appearance of sheep when these have been created by high and unnatural feeding or external applications. It is more than likely that their progeny will be injured rather than made better by such methods.
While the selection of the ram is of great importance, yet I do not believe he represents as large a factor in the improvement of a stock of sheep as many writers would have us believe, especially when the stock is well bred and the even nearly as good in quality as the pure bred rams that are used to continue the work of further improvement.
Mixing Grain For the Cows.
A good, tight, clean barn floor is a good place to mix the grain intended for the cows, emptying first the light, bulky feeds, such as corn and cob meal or distillers' grains, spreading these out five or six inches thick, pouring on the next lightest, etc. Then begin at one edge, shovel the food back into a pile a couple of feet to the right or left. Under ordinary conditions, when turning over and the final shovel into the bin will afford a uniform
FRETS igi dbo SBA g haben SMB ERY ae ONS a Se a . a Hg “mg
Be Boers aia BM a ie tg Oe ee * +. ae ’ Se * ote = , : : *
sessile ss ne endl ' J . . *RB_BIOWMOND FLANMT. RIOMMOND. VIRGINIA... os oo:
SSS “OD SSS
We Do Linotype Work | Bill-Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Envelopes, Business @ Visiting Cards, We Do PressWork
for the Trade. ~ Policies, Medical BlanKs, Insurance BlanKs, Financial Cards, Lodge for the Trade.
eS ~--"s5, Labels, Checks, Check Books, Minutes, Pamphlets, Whole Sheet Ss
5B » 3 >, Han@bills, Placards. be YS
. - s u “@: eo. . : 1 e = : . oo 3 .
_- In Fact Printing of All Kinds Executed Promptly. .
a TCE :
We print CALENDARS. Our prices |_ 4 We have a supply of Fine Commence- | We have:a fullline of the Finest Sta-
are as low as is consistent with First : ment Folders for Graduates of eur at tionery to be. obtained anywhere in
Class Work: We furnish Invitations . . a : , ; .
for Balls, Weddings:and Special En- Educational .& Hospital Institutions. the United States. We supply Mourn-
tertainments. They are here for Your Inspection. ing Paper and Envelopes. . i
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* ——=" Devoted to the Interests of the Citizens of Color. ==—— _ ,
we have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Mod will renee comcens ain and your patronage is famestly salicline.
ce 5 ; : : ut of Town Orders Promp ended. [four prices are higher, you can go else-
Writings, Manilla Raper, Envelopes. Card Board. Wedding Stock. in fact, Every! | whore if you can better them in the same prade and class of work. If our prices ~
thing in the Printing Line. , are lower, we stand ready to accept the business. co
JOHN MITCH ELL J R 3t1 North Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. |
; : 3 sy Long Distance Telephone, Monroe-22135. ——emie -
VISCOUNT HALDANE. . :
aoa
| Britlsh Chanceltor Who Addressed,
| Bar Association at Montreal.
5
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ae)
:
AVIATOR FLIES -
UPSIDE. DOWN AGAIN
Dapllcates Darieg Feat Fo
~ Denatit ot Army Wen.
Aviator Pegoud repeated his dare
devil feat of looping. the Joop in a
monoplane at Juvisy, France. Thig
‘time his exhibition was for the beneat
of » commission of army offcers be-
Jongitg to the aviation corps, and
again Pegood flew for an eighth of «
mile with his machine taraed tartle,
his bead hanging down. ,
“Nt was a marvelous exhibition, but
not im any pense a foolhardy ope,” M.
Bieriot, maker of the mesoplane used
by Pegond, paid. “It deqredsteated that
we can balld am aeroplane “thet wil
not capsize, that will matetaia ite
equllibrinca in’ any-wind apd thet will
Fight iteait wenger almost any etrcam-
ateuces. We bare redeced the @umgers,
of aviation fully 75 per comt in my
jadaqment.” .
Ae am’ the first occpaton, Pegond -
eended to.a height on ee i
gunight te earth, derting Gone Hho a
apeed. He dropped to an altitude of
1300 fect and then steered a sudden up-
ward course, The machine turned over
and flew along upstde down for @ fow
aeconts, when Vexoud righted the
planc and landed. He wan warmly
congratuinted by the army men.
WOMAN LEAPS INTO OCEAN
Two Bathera Swimming Nearby Drag
Her to Shore In Safety.
Leaping from the ond of the Hein:
pler,.Atlantic City, N. J, an unfdent!
fied womamgmade ‘a dramatic attemp!
to end her life, but was saved by the
daring of two bathers, who were swim
ming near the plor, and-got to her bo
fore the life guards arrived in thelr
boat.
The pler was crowded at the time,
and there were hundreds of people on
the boardwalk and beach, watching
the bathers. Suddenty there came a
piercing scream, and the startled
crowd naw a woman's body hurtling
through the air from the end of the
pler., Dozens of chnirs were tossed into
the sex by persons who belloved the
woman would save hersalf, E
Two men who wero within 100 feet
of the spot’ where the woman went In:
to the ater, stroked frantically to her
aide, and after a battle overpowered
her and got her safely ashore. ;
Dr. Charles Sinkinson, who nas
charge of the hospital tent, mmediate
ly started worklng over her and grad-
nally revived her. She wag In a highly
Rervour- condition and appexted to be
crared.
WOMAN MADE HIM STEAL
Olf City Churchman Sent to Peniten
tlary After.Confeseing Her Infivence.
J. Garfield Lytle, a inarried man o}
yood faimly, and a member of th
Preebyterian church of Oi! City, Pa
confessed in court that, blackmatle:
by a woman, be bad stolen $10.20
from bis employers. . © a
Lytle was sentenced to not lean than
ome year in the western penitentiary
‘The story as tolé by two attorneys
was that be had fallen undor the In
fivence of the woman, who demanded
thet he steal. By padding the payroll
he took from $25 to $60 a week, but
finally his peculations amounted tc
$200 a week. In loss than two years he
stole $10,200. .
‘The defendant's aged mother offered
everything sbe had to make good the
theft, but tue company would not per
mit ber to make the sacrifice.
Se ee ee a ea
Mies Alice Z. Unéerwoad, seventeen
yeers olf, committed suicide at ber
home in Lewistown, Pu, “py. taking
potwon. Mra. J. Hf Hillman, of Brook:
tyn, N: Y, forty-sine years old, recetr
04 wfractared atull in a repaway acct
Gent st Lewistown when she . was
threwa from tho buggy. Spe clad fe
Reodavitle, where sbe hed come Ww
Wish fviends. - ae! Ron
THE IMPERATOR FIRE.
Vessel Was In Command of
Capt. Ruser at Time of Blaze.
- op
a“ wend Ly EN
BY. BSS
FP. fee has
ee ys ae a
0 ge oe
4 gasp p
N
‘ a ae
Cen Cee
,
+ Phote by American Press Association.
‘The Imparator, the largest veseel In the
World, which was soriduaty damaged by
a fire, in which two men were epffocated.
fea new ehip {t (9 #19 feet long and nine-
ty-aix feet at the beam. Commodore
Hans Ruser, veteran captain in the em-
plog sf the Hambure-American line, was
im command of (he vease] at the thme of
the fre Fire boats from New York oty
and the. Hoboken firs Sapartment respend-
ed promptly to the alarm and fought the
ames for four hours before it was an-
nounced that the blaze was unde? control
It wae expected to burn all day, however.
Thaw Lawyers Win First Fight.
Hairy Kendall Thaw, the Mutteawan
fugitive, who is Sighting deportation
from Canada, was a decided victory
ia Skerbrooke whey Judge Globeneky
granted the plea of Thaw's lawyers for
& Qdatinawace of the habeas corpus
writ amd remanded bim to jail. inded.
itely, to de “dealt with according to
the taw:” .
| The cort ruled that Canadian coun-
eet represesting New York state could
tabe no part ia ibe proceedings. AR
Gorton the part of. the Mew York
ferees: la'gr to ‘persuade . Mazistrate
Dupulx, of Coatleook, who originally
held Thaw for court, to consider mo
tlona to quaxh tho churge on whic
Thaw was held were met with fallure,
the magistrate declining to act. Thaw
will probably come up for trial by Jury
on Oct. 14.
Two Sailors Drown. *
| The three-masted schooner R.
Rartley was driven asi ore In a Kquall
eighteen miles south of Nodle’a Inland
on the Virginia const near Norfolk.
and two of her crow wero drowned be
fore lire aavern could reach the wreck.
Five were rescued. &
————_——
AGENTS FOR THE PLANET.
RICHMOND, Va.
Mre. Annte Walbarrow, 4th & Broad
W: H White. 601 W. Lath Street.
Poter ‘Thomson, 710 X. Firat st
Street.
Wm. R, Scott, 321% = Maio St
S. Winston, 637 Broor Ave, *
Wittam B. Smith, 3 W. Leta Bt
Tom Bird.
Thomas Paxe, $15 State Btrest.
Clarence Wiltams .
: 1411 Ross Street.
‘M,C. Waller. 1100 W. Letzh ft.
B®. Dandridge, 107 ¥. Baker Street.
“> $0, RICHMOND, VA, .
Walter ‘Roberson, R. F.D.ND. 8. -
Bor 34.
; LONG BRAKCH. X, J.
tesco W. Shreaves. 182 Beimoat Ave.
GaKLAND, CAL. :
3. W. Nuby. 1786-7th St”
NEWPORT. NEWS. Va.
). C, Allow, 2107 Marshall Ave.
Charlee @, Davis, -00¢-26th Ft.
-" CLEVELAND, 0.* ~ |
Reuben, Neal Mitchell, 10709 Frank
ave, BC.
J. B. Branham, 4691 Central Ave.’
EY. Bova, 3606 Ceatral Ave.
Proak H. Weaver, $118 Ountral Ave
ee LL. Langon, 616 Claseon Ary
Vobo H. Ashby, 136 Stoubem Bt.
TAKBORO, NC,
V. B. Howard.
STAUNTON Va. -
JH Allen, 126 3,,AuRgueta at
STEUBENVILLE, oO.
W. .t Greene, 752 N. Beh St.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
Harold ?. Douglass lt N. Kentocs
Averye. :
| WILMINGTON, N. ©
is wn. H_ Moore
NORFOLK, Va
Walter R. Henrs, 19 © Avenue.
Hunteraville.
Joho DeBong 610 Church st,
Thomas E W. Perry, 2 Jores:
Place.
, ;
FARMVILLE, VA.
Rev. R. G, Adama, a8 acct
CHICAGO, ILL.
A. D. Hayes, 3640 State 8t.
R. M. Harvey, $924 State Stree,
7. Gaughan. 2636 State. Street.
P. Bishop, 8 W. 27th St.
_ WASHINGTON, D.
Columbia News Agency, ®21-D tt.
N. Ww,
>, L, Battle, 1020 You 8t, N. W:
| RALEION, ©.
¢. B, Blount, 32 W. Worth me.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Jaton Post Card Oe, - :
N. BE. Corner 16th ead South Sta,
B. P. Mackens, 1116 Pine Street.
ames W. Warwiek, 2666. 1100 oy
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Juaker city Advertising Company,
1231 Pine Street. . "I
. DANVILLE, VA.
ferry A. Claris, 117.GFoghend St
_ PROVIDSWOR, Bo
jobetans “A. A. P. A. 910 Westmtng
cer Gavect.- ~
W.I. Johnson,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND
10 West Leigh Street, -. Richmend, Vingiais.
ee pee ee |
ie Hae aS eee eee
Detarmined to farnlah the very REST servise wt
NEW YORK, N.Y
OW. EL MM 244 W. 18th St, Bane
ment, .
Cleviand © Alten, 262 W Bad St
"Mra, Leanna Hamilton,
‘ 2h3 Went as4tn atreer.
ia Hovbn, 228 BW. 127th BL
i* A. Williama, 200 W. 634 4.
{Jd FR. Sebinidt, 263 W. 86th Bt,
| " .LOT, VA.
Rev, R. J. Langston. ;
AMBURG, VA.
J. UM. Walker,
4 ASBURY PARK, XN. J.
R. Rell, 102 Springwood Ave,
BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH.
Caries Ludwix. P.O. Bor 1776.
LOVISVILLE. KY. |
Jesac FE. Brown. 1216 W Green Bt
NEW ORL@ANS, LA
World's News Co., Bor 1126,
A. © Rmith, 202 S, Rampert
MONESSEN, PAL 7
mith & Williams, 607 Sixth a.
“LEEABURG, Va:
Mise Cora Wright.
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E. B. Webster, -
i SUBAN. VA. |
F. & Brows, . |
wae
PASBAIC, N. 2.
W. J. Smith, 414 Mate Ave.
| PITTSBURG, PA.
Mra, Charlotte BrightweM, 3162
| Penn, AYO.
%. K. Thomm, 1403 Wylie Avwaue.
HARMONY VILLAGE, VA.
Deacon Cary G. Laws.
+ SALUDA, VAL *
Deacon W. H, Banke.
. YONKERS, N.Y.
Jolin W. Adams, 231 N, Mata 8t
| 108 ANGELES, OAL.
Wiliam 8. Brown, 1204 B. $tm S8.
| DETROIT, MICH.
Now York ‘Book and News Op
492 Antoine St.
BLUEFIELy, W. Va.
Richard K. Watkins. .
PULASKI, VA.
3. M. Bofosd. .
GARY, IND. .
L. J. Philtpe, 1648 Washington ®t,
CHATTANOOGA, THN,
Rollins Broso, 237 B. stm street.
gpectal Soc ieepentonte ond Aguats
121 Lopp Street, "
Cape Tews, @ A
Prof. I. 8. Moore, re
26 Ros Gos Capttaes,
Banis, Brest. Enemas
```markdown
```
The Nation's Metropolis.
Motion Pictures of the National Negro Business League shown at the Lafayette Theatre—White South errors tried to discriminate against Colored Passengers Returning from Abroad—Mrs. W. D. Crum in the Metropolis—Dr. L. Garland Penn dashes through the city—General Notes.
(Allen's National) News Bureau
252 West 53rd Street.)
At the Lafayette Theatre last week motion pictures of the National Negro Business League which recently held its session in Philadelphia were shown for the first time in this city. The pictures being shown are by the Afro-American Film Company who are making a specialty of pictures dealing with colored Life in America. The announcement of the pictures created wide interest and many awed themselves with the opportunity of seeing the depicted action. Various group pictures of the delegates and fro to the League headquarters and other incidents of the Convention were shown.
Among the pictures seen were Dr. Booker T. Washington, Hon. J. C. Napier and Emmet Scott leaving their hotel enroute to headquarters, the arrival of Dr. Washington at Convention Hall, delegates eight-sewing in Fairmount Park and the delegates to the National Press Association enroute to session in the Cherry Street Baptist Church. The colored quill pushers were an energetic and capable looking body of men. The arrival of Dr. Washington at Convention Hall, an occasion for a demonstration, and many were seen saving the hands at the arrival of Dr. Washington. The pictures on the whole were interesting and were much colored.
The Lafayette theatre continues to be the mecca for lovers of high class amusement at "movie prices." It is one of the most beautiful and well appointed play houses in this city, and holds the banner for the rendezvous of our race in this city. The weekly bills at the Lafayette present a variety of high class acts. Mr. Nibur, manager of the house is one of the most proficient theatrical promoters in the country, and deserves credit for his readiness to advance the interest of the race.
Dr. Roberts Back from Trip Abroad.
The white Southerners are bound to show their prejudice to the coloured man, and even when they so abroad, where every man has a man's share, the antipathy of the Southern white man is bound to crop out. This was made known last Sunday afternoon by Dr. E. P. Roberts in an address before the Y. M. C. A. Dr. Roberts, who is one of the most prominent physicians of the race, and who stands high in the medical asociations of a high city has just returned from a six weeks' trip abroad, telling of his experiences when he related the incident of how he and Dr. William L. Bulkley and his family were insulted by white Southerners aboard.
"The only unpleasant incident we had on our trip was when we were returning we chanced to meet several Southerners who tried to impress upon us their nativity, and that we were not particularly desired as fellow passengers. To make us feel their presence, they spoke of President Wilson as being the most desirable president, and that they policy the thee, we were deferred. Dr. Roberts said the word "nigger" was used several times. Speaking further of his trip Dr. Roberts said Marcellies, Paris and Switzerland and other points he visited he saw many colored people and was impressed with their orderliness. "From an economic viewpoint conditions are as favorable for the Negro as in America. I saw in the streets of Paris horse meat sold for food. Wages are very low in France. The women dressmakers go only a day, and they must be themselves. If the Negro is sensible and level headed a trip abroad will help him."
Dr. Roberts is the chairman of the colored Y. M. C. A. of this city, and is an inspiring figure in the professional life of the race in this city. Although Dr. Roberts has reached an eminent place in the medical profession of this city he never falls to tell of the hard struggle he met with in his rise upward. Mrs. W. D. Crum in the City.
Mrs. W. D. Crum, wife of the late Dr. Wm. Dr. Crum, former Collector of the city of Charleston, S. C. and at the time of his death Minister to Liberia, is spending a few weeks in this city the guest of Mrs. Lella Walters, wife of Bishop Walters, at their residence.
Mrs. Crum is one of the most interesting women of the race, and is a brilliant conversationalist. Since the death of Dr. Crum, Mrs. Crum has been traveling visiting her many friends in various sections of the country, and had been visiting Buffalo when she came to this city. When seen by your correspondent last week at the residence of Bishop Walters, Mrs. Crum talked interestingly of the many problems confronting us as a race. The spoke of the centennial celebration of Perry's victory at Lake Erie, and said it was the courage of the block war cars that made the day possible. She told of how sentiment was changing in the south especially Charleston, against the town she said wished the past year.
a great change has come about in Charleston showing much feeling against the race. "We have now the Jim Crow cars which are most horrible."
Mrs. Crum will be in the North for several months and will then proceed to her house in Charleston. It was pleasant to that with this loyal race woman, who is the widow of one of the thru-horse producers. Mrs. Crum should serve as an inspiration to young colored womanhood and manhood.
Dr. I. Garland Penn Hurtles Through the City.
Dr. I. Gortand Penn, corresponding secretary of the Freedman's Aid Society, and one of the most prominent Negro laymen in America passed through the city last Monday like a thunderbolt. Dr. Penn, a much business training to his office and a lover to this city was strictly an officer of business.
He arrived in the city early Monday morning and went to the home of Dr. W. H. Brooks, pastor of St. Marks' M. E. Church. Dr. Penn then started out to do official business in connection with the office and early Monday at Philadelphia. He moved to New York for Philadelphia. He met an correspondent enroute to Philadelphia, expressing regrets at not being able to see him.
Dr. Penn is one of the most noted churchmen in America and stands high in Methodism. In the opinion of many of the prominent whom he印象深刻, the selection of Dr. Penn to his present office is a happy.
General Notes.
Your correspondent will present the programme at the Mt. Olivet Baptist B. Y. P. U., Sunday after noon.
Landreth H. Jackson, one of the deacons at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, who has been spending the Summer at Thousand Islands is in the city. He will leave for Virginia soon to visit relatives.
Among the old Virginians redding in this city is Isaac Moseby, who was born in Powhatan, Va., Mr. Moseby came to New York in 1871. He is a deacon at M. Olivet Baptist Church *Readers of this paper who desire calling cards at a reasonable rate will do well to write to Joseph R. Brown who conducts the Novelty Printing Company at 241 West 53rd St. Mr. Robinson announced to your correspondent that he is offering 100 meat and up-to-date calling cards for 25 cents. The cards will be delivered to any part of the country on receipt of postage. Mr. Robinson is a young business man, and is conducting a first class printing shop in the Metropolis. Dr. W. E. B. DuBois in the current issue of the Crisis writes interestingly and particularly of the great North West. He points it out as the land of opportunity for young men of the race with brains and ambitions. The quartette of the Fort Valley High and Industrial School is in the city.
Jack Johnson Injured.
London, Sept. 4. — Jack Johnson, the negro pugilist, was thrown out of his automobile early to day when a taxi driver can into his car and it is feared that spike has been injured. Following the collision the chauffeur of the taxiah was arrested, Mrs. Lattie Cameron Johnson, the neo-white wife, appeared against the chauffeur and said her husband was confined to bed with injuries to his back. The physician, Mrs Johnson shi, feared that Johnson's spine was seriously injured.
At the conclusion of the arrangement the chauffeur was remanded to pal without but to await the outcome of the pugilist's injuries.
Liesburg (Va.) Items.
The funeral sermon of Rev. Dr. S. P. Fisher on Wednesday at Lincoln, where he had pastored for many years was delivered by Rev. Dr. Powell of Falls Church. Subject "I have fought a good fight." Ministers present, Drs. M. B. Strother, R. P. Dorson, Dockett of Hamilton, Gun of Washington and the minister of that charge, we didn't learn his name.
A great man has fallen. He leaves a loving wife, one daughter and three sons and a host of friends to mourn their loss.
Secretary of State William J. Bryan was in our town to attend the heavy draft show at the fair grounds. He spoke for one hour to one of the largest crowds we have witnessed for years. He was quite a drawing card.
The Odd Fellows' turn-out at Middlebury Friday was quite a success.
Miss Lizzie Blue of Washington, who has been visiting her parents returned to Washington a few days ago. While here she and Mr. R. E. Grey were entertained at S. S. plenix, Mr. Grey was very low-spirited to see her go. Mr. Gus Valentine, late of Washington, is taking his vacation with his madam, Mrs. Mary Valentine.
Rev. J. E. Dotson is holding his own. He got the gospel switch after his people Sunday.
Miss Philip Harris entertained her step-father, Mr. Berk of New York, last week.
Rev. Dr. E. D. Tyler will preach at his charge next Sunday at Lecsburg.
Miss Edmonia Manley of Pittsburgh is visiting her brother Mr. John Manley in Loudown St. W.
Mr. Gus Valentine left Saturday or Sunday for Philad Iphia, for a few days.
W. L. JONES.
DO YOU KNOW THEM?
Died in Oklahoma.
A. B. Johnson, formerly of Mecklenburg county, Va. is reported to have died at Nowata, Oklahoma. Sunday, August 24, 1913. He was 76 years of age and it is desired to know the whereabouts of his children. He had not heard from any of them for many years. He spoke of one of his children as Bita Johnson. He left some property. Good information to J. J. Boon, Nowata, Oklahoma.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Evangelistic Services Conducted by New Gypsy Smith of Cambridge England, Sept. 14-20, 1918.
For this occasion SOUTHERN RAILWAY will sell round trip tickets from stations on its line within a radius of 150 miles of Danville, also from Norfolk, Va. and intermediate stations to Danville, Sope, 13, 15, 17, 19, 20, 22, 24, 26 and 27, 1913, final limit, three days, including date of sale.
The Gypsy Smith Meetings will be held under the auspices of the Ministerial Association of Danville.
Call on nearest Ticket Agent, SOUTHERN RAILWAY, or write S. E. BURGESS, D. P. A., Richmond Va.
VIRGINIA-On Vacation:
In the Clerk's Office of the Law
and Equity Court of the City of
Richmond, the 25th day of August
1913.
Mattie Sims.....Plaintiff
vs. In Chancery
Jacob Sims.....Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain
a Divorce, a Vinculo Matrimoni,
by the plaintiff from the defendant up-
on the ground of desertion. And an
affidavit having been made and
that the defendant is not a resident
of the State of Virginia; it is ordered
that the said defendant Jacob Sims
appear within fifteen days after
the due publication of this Order and
what may be necessary to protect
his interest herein.
A Copy.
Toste P. P. WINSTON.
Clerk.
J. BENYR CRUTCHFIELD, pq.
To: Jacobi Stime;
TO Sueco Sibs
You'll take notice that I shall on the 23rd day of October, 1913, at the office of Day B. Shield, room No. 402. Travellers Insurance Building, situated on the North side of Main street, between (11) Eleventh and (12) Twelfth streets in the City of Richmond, Virginia, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. of that day proceed to take the depositions of Witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit in Chancery depending in the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond, Virginia, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if from any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded on that day the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been concluded.
By Counsel
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, pq.
Office: 1215 E. Broad Street.
Richmond, Virginia.
VIRGINIA-In Vacation:
In the Clerk's Office of the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond, the 25th day of August 1918.
Mary Harris.....Plaintiff
vs. In Chancery
James Harris (sometimes called James Parker).....Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain a Divorce, a Vinculo Matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant, upon the ground of Desertion. And an amdavit having been made and filed that due diligence has been used by and on behalf of the plaintiff to ascertain in what County or Corporation the defendant James Harris (sometimes called James Parker) is, without effect, and that the plaintiff does not know his whereabouts; it is ordered that said defendant James Harris (sometimes called James Parker) appear within fifteen days after the due publication of this Order and do what may be necessary to protect his interest herein.
A Copy.
Toste. P. P. WINSTON.
Clerk.
J. HENKY CRUTCHFIELD. pq.
To James Harrison. (sometimes called
Barkley.)
James Parker)
You'll take notice that I shall on the 30th day of April, 1913, at the office of Phil B. Sheil, room No. 402. Travellers Insurance Building, situated on the North side of Main street, between (11) Eleventh and (12) Twelfth streets in the City of Richmond, Virginia, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. of that day proceed to take the depositions of Witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit depending in the Law and Equity Part of the City of Richmond, Virginia, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if from any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded that day the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been concluded.
By Councer.
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, pq.
Office: 1215 E. Broad Street,
Richmond, Virginia.
Female Colored Agents Wanted
Wanted—Live Agents in every town to sell Dr. Hall's Hairline, the better kind of Hair Dressing. If you are interested write at once for particulars and secure your territory. Also want agents with business ability to handle crews. HULCHER DRUG COMPANY, 620 N. 4th St., Richmond Va. 4t
Subscribe to the Richmond Planet.
The Bank of the People
BECAUSE
The People are Support
THE
MECHANICS
SAVINGS
OF RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Is second to none of its size in equa
Safety brings Confidence and
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MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK
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WHEN WE WERE BUYING A VARIOUS BOUGHT THE BEST FOR THE SON THAT WE BELIEVED THE BEST, WAS NONE TOO GOOD FOR OUR PEOPLE.
If our people had failed to patronize the Bank, it their fault and not ours. When we were selecting a New ent, we chose the National Park bank of that City. Or based upon the present value of our real estate holding thousand dollars above the amount on deposit with us.
This guarantees the safety of every dollar on deposit, invite correspondence and urge upon every one to bring for safe keeping. Amounts in sums of ten cents and ten Interest paid on sums of $1.00 and over.
Our President is under Bond. Our under Bond. Our Vault, although Burg- insured against loss by burglars. Our insured and the bulk of our funds invest- able Real Estate. Our Tellers are under
Our Banking Hours are from 9 A. M. and Saturdays from 9 A. M. to 8
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President.
THOMAS H. WYATT, Vice-President.
WALTER T. DAVIS, Cashier.
THOMAS M. ORN.
NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & C
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
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 the United States. Our actual assets, the 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 $1.00 and over.
Our President is under Bond. Our Cashier is under Bond. Our Vault, although Burglar-proof is insured against loss by burglaries. 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.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President.
THOMAS H. WYATT, Vice-President.
WALTER T. DAVIS, Cashier.
THOMAS M. ORUMP, Secretary.
NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & CLAY STS., RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
WIGS, PLATS, BRAIDS, TRAN-
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All Kinds of Straightening Combs,
Pomades and Skin Preparations.
Send two cent stamp for new 1913
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We will paint your house and wait 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,
1436 Floyd Avenue.
Phone, Monroe-4513.
SUPERIOR TO COPANBA & INJECTIONS
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This Watch FREE
In order to introduce our Remedy,
we will positively give Free a
new face. We made sure that
Remedy made sure旺旺, resumes
and new year, for arriving at the
Riisai and Riisai Blindness Center.
We will also give Remedy the watch. Under the menu
Let To-Day, Send money.
Let To-Day, Send money.
The Chicago Hilton Records Co. Springfield,
Please mention the PLANET.
NATIONAL CONSERVATION EXPOSITION.
Knoxville, Tenn., September 1st to
November 1st, 1918.
For this occasion SOUTHERN
RAILWAY offers extremely low
round trip fares to Knoxville and
return. Convenient train service,
Sleeping Cars, Dining Cars.
For fares, reservations and other
information, consult nearest SOUTHERN
RAILWAY Ticket Agent, or
write S. E. HURGESS, D. P. A.,
Richmond, Va.
Saturday at The Richmond
Plaza, $1.90 per hour.
$31,000.00 Paid out from January 1, 1912 to July 29, 1913.
FINE SHOWING FOR BOTH BRANCHES OF THE KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS-READ AND CONSIDER-VIRGINIA DOING GRAND WORK
1918
Jan. 16—Elizabeth Johnson, Myrtle Court, No. 106.
Feb. 8—Emma Lee Marable, Fearless Court, No. 142.
Feb. 19—Rachel A. Burns, Stanton Court, No. 76.
March 7—Martha Branch, Arneta's Court, No. 72.
March 22—Charlotte Yearby, Pride of East Court, No. 56
April 4—Courtney Booker, Planet Court, No. 137.
April 9—Carrie Martin, Victoria Court, No. 52.
April 17—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229.
April 21—Matilda Hall, Unity Court, No. 132.
April 22—Tahleh Skinner, Golden RULE Court, No. 86.
April 28—Elizabeth M. Robinson, Unity Court, No. 132.
April 28—Minnie Johnson, Sarah's Court, No. 246.
April 28—Cora Preston, Fulton Court, No. 244.
April 28—Maggie Mosby, King's Daughters Court, No. 70.
April 28—Margaret Lettwich, Old Dominion Court, No. 114
April 28—Ella Shepherd, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 35.
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 3—George Bellings, 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. 86.
May 24—Annie Johnson, Pride of the East Court, No. 56
May 24—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229
June 11—Lula Lewis, Zion Traveler's Court, No. 96
June 12—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229
June 12—Jane Wingfield, Martina's Court, No. 138
July 23—Martha Douglas, Arria Court, No. 42
July 29—Laura Johnson, Violet Court, No. 152
July 29—Caroline Clemente, Josephine Court, No. 228
July 29—Bettie Powell, Venus Court, No. 47
July 29—Alice Burrows, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 86
re a ns
(OF THE STA RS
bd Wie) RN ,
: ' 4 if 4\
a ew’ A) i) \
wai Gi N\A 2,
Sal , PY FA etn
S| ee
* yg as esi.
mn ik
lily sodas toe
i ee
I Wilberforce, Gentlewoman, In
: : the Great South Seas.
‘Copyright. 1912. by Cyres Townsend Brady
SYNOPSIS
The tv of Sir Gesttrey Wiberforee
ruined gant ier aed auiile, Is found. By
Fismrten a maitre“ Slampeton quarrel
SEIU the Fouls UF Areoater
Mazordin Weve the newa to Lucy Wot
derfrte ail Jers a letter found on bat
ener
Tt contutna | OMRyt a map of « treasure
Amand Luey alr Sve haw the other hale
There are ditections for Bnutine the treads
Danpton pinietee the done for Ineulte
tag Lucy Tacislon ated Lucy atart tn
nip for the Taian of te State
Mamivten steude a kin and Lucy has
Bim Imprivonet tn a cutin Desperate
men ‘in the crew mnutiny
Pimda:t and Giitoy demand the mag of
the teint at Managetone whos pretend to
Join the mutiny Tampeten demande poms
arestan of Lue
— * ohaprer vin
Wherein | Bargain For « Woman.
wel Sate sie She eee tao
oo oer tae eee
Roe eee
® crixix, nnd surely this was one I
eater eee
Seithon an sovey sok aos ea
wi ee yes Sacte
me for whatever purpose they might
fe Min wie oo ettae ee oe
Sa eters Le
am
Pl
Sy
athe must have bern In 4 xcand sleep.
Andecd. for the doar did not open. Ext
dently ate bad heard nothing, 1 walt:
ed It wae nyt ap easy task, but T
Sadced tt best. =
Fortupately 1 had not long to walt,
for to lem Ume by far than I bare
taken to tell it tho hatch waa opened
and the heavy Looted men clattered
down the companionway. The key was
fm the lack’ ootaide, pnd 1 conld bear
them turn it I leotened my stunk
which I bad slong by itn belt around
my walat, picked up the two pintole,
weot toy hack up agatnnt the side of;
cde abip and made rind for whatever
ame.
‘The door van’ pushed open abraptiy,
ed I saw tho cabin was crowded WHS
wea. At feast heif the crew were
Btbered there. end ft. was a little
tbtn, tbe Bose of Devon being bat «
Ral! abip. ‘The reat. I quenced. were
{watch I coold not se the boat,
vata Evidently be und the deck
te resnel couldn't be teft unwatchod
\ameh aright as sbi and In wach
as, and he was the Gttest alan -to
We ehgrge of ber, The steward bed
Bibel the ratin lights, sever! of the
mm carted funterna whjch thes bud
Dromeht fron the foespents, wand tbe
taut drawn their storatt Salve, The
Wan plenty of Elanslation te sho
thelr Viticlnads faces
Twy were surprised te Ord me »
prepared, and Txave them ny tthe t
feeover.
“The flrxt man." Ehlert ot. “tha
Step aero that ttirestild withon
pergnteston geben bullet theses bin:
“We mean you ne harm, slr apok
fut one whe xeomiAd tbe a tog
leader, a iy Fated x verte
mate, Whom name was Gibby
*What age you dulne here?" 1 amk
shy the eubin at this tive 0
ghee
Softly, noftly, sn" evpllest GUiby
swe ure here to ask questions, not t
anywer “em.”
“What de sou wean?” 1 ered
We are minstersof the hp,
Captain Matthews?"
“He will eaptaly bo more ships on
thin or any other swan.” nnswered
Githds, with trveulent etnptiastn
Now. 1¢ rove in my mitud to boot hm
then and there. engderons brute that
be was, If TD had been alone perhaps
T would have done §€ without reckon:
tng the consequences to tseclf, but I
had anvther tu think of. Unlens.cratt
stood me in gol atoad ber case was
hopeliw, And bad aa Gitbby was,
Pimboll wax the chiaf riiinin.
“Serves bim rebt!" I broke out with
well simulated hent. “He dixtates me
and locks me up here suxt for stealing
2 Kise from a mah, and™—
“Spoken ke a man of spirit, Mister
Hampton cried Gilby “What did
F tell ve, mater; he's with mn?”
SAWith you!" sald fo lementng my
bold on the piste, liot taking good
caro to kevp rends “Tans with you,
ni) right. What do yoo prope? I
mm nick of the treatinent { recited.
ant"
Woe want Ghat (reauure for our
nates
“Ani sou rhall-have It. provided 1
get my share with the wther:men,” T
answer, scarcely Startind by thelr
worn, for this 1 had exymetest,
“We will share and sbaro allie in
Serything.” mwered GUD, “Am
rishi, taaten?™
*HGbstit yon ate" came from the deep
hewn of the tied =
Mow f lotucet to chute aim by bie
hroat amd choke fie? My) temper
ne EAI, Wut thin Tine, an before,
managed ty kerp 1 down, but with
mivense dittieuty, ax you may sus
ct
“Come Into the cabin, Minter Hamp-
op" sald Gibby, “and ww will talk
oer.” 2 ge
“Walt” sald 1. “Who fa tn com.
and of sou?"
“Why, Mister ‘Pimball, tho bo'e'n.”
pnwered GItbbs.
“Very gin." aad 1 ““T must talk
{th vbim about the fature. Do Fon
yon week, Gibhy, aud aend Pimball
How, anit he uit f wtth the revt of
a6 WHE noon wettle this matter.”
“All right.” annwered the boat:
rain’x mate, tnening t0 the compan.
away. “Pinball can tak, hin and
mL can come to terms, 1 wake 29
abe :
Now I covla'’t allow myself to hest-
te for the thousandth pare OF x
cond, Ostentatiously 1 shored onp
ntol Into the belt that hung et may ||
she side, the other £ dropped care |)
ely Jute the forket-of, my coat, and ||
Gilby cluttered up "the ladder, 1 |
iiked fentiessis, to all appearances,
t of the berth ant Into the cabia, |
¢ men giving back respectfully |
ough to leave tie. gangteny. :
‘Nowy whut Is fe that Fou propose. |
wster Bo'cun"-} began, sitting down |
tho cabin table, while the gfest |!
need theuncelvis “about tt Some
ndfog, auine sitting on the transome |
the sles, ax Pimbatl cuine Jumber-
inte the cabin, > 1
We know, began Pimbail insolent. | *
without further preliminaries, “that
é allp's cruisio’ for treasure, Wo
>w all we'll git out of the cruise ia | *
at we aigoed for au" nothin’ else. '
"vo made 8 good guces that the
axore fs Doreabouts, and we meen |*
bave moro than our wages, We're |”
n' to bare our share of whatever's |.
nd that we're after.” 7
Bo you sball.” { said, “I am with
1 in that. 1 wiot something more
m my wages too.”
What's sis woman anyway?"
Ke out another. “Why sbgald abe |
4t all? Sbo's a-mere gtr.” -
Yeu have sald right, mate; who
| why todowd" {answered mnoeth-
marking him down for my veo
ace wheti\gy turn came. “Now,
mie ange are
ee
Bees. | reached Gown, pulled out &
ag, wok the tora.parctnaeat frow |
fud threw it om the tablo, There wa
Ret the least nee in my pretending ig
‘Reraace or in refusing to give it oF
‘Trey cold kill me and take it an
way.
“There,” sald 1 coolly. “sou bave it!
Pinball picked {t up.
“I cam make but little out of It" bh
eald, and 1 doubted if be could read.
“You-.can at least sce the latitud
and longitude ou {¢ in the upper cor
‘ners, can't you?" I avked, bardly sup
breesing iny contempt for (ho man.
age, that's pluln enough,” be.an
swered dublously. x
“Amd you sce that Utde wavy Uo
that rans up from the lagoon over th
top of what Woke lke a wall to at
opening in the aide?” T coutlnued, de
tweealuing suddenly, to Indame thet
milpds with the trexsure 90 that they
would give leas beed 10 otber things
more Important to we.
“Yeu. Lean uiake tbat out too."
“You nee that Ite croen there?”
Phudalt turned nround and faced the
J others crowding about Bim in great
| and growing excitement.
“Herelight here™ be growled.
Tho mien pearont him shoved for
|. Ward with thelr lanterns ilaminsting
the torn sbevpakin.
“Ayo. can minke tbat out too.
What doen tt wenn?” be asked, after
long ‘wtare. :
Te menu, {¢ there iSany truth about
4, that the ineanure In therenboute.”
“what treawitre tm 10"
“Tho plunder of a Spaulab gatleon by
a pleste ship
“Ant how camo 1t to be there’ on
tmaat Inland”
“It seas buried In that cave there @
Bundred and tty year azo by oe
Philip Wilberforce, an Hex bucea-
peer.” Z
“And bow camo thia girl by news
of ite “
Flow mucb of the story tes under
stood I could got tell. Probably but
Ute, set.the idea of the trensure was
real chouch undoubtedly.
“Ad you think there Ja treasure
hero?” naked Puaball
Now, of late bad changed my mind,
why. i knww vot, but T bad, yet tt
would wot do to tell chem thay.
“Pam sore of I" L etied, “gold, ate
ver, Jewels. Godt known what. Bvery-
thing fo minke un Heb forever.”
Aru what do you reckon the valve
of Mt nll 40 be?” .
“OD, several ailltlons of pouuds” I
snavwered lightly an If the treasure was
ro reat thre x oillilon more oF leew
was of No moment.
“Ture!” cried out one old seatnan,
tnd the cabla of the lontant wae alled
mith wild crlex, bestial, ruta! shouts.
Ax the sind partially dlet away
pean the door back of te upen. Now,
[hed purpwmely wo placed wraelt as
0 be between the crowd utd the Moor,
The door wna opened but a little way.
| wean conacioun that be wax awake
cod at Teast tena tatentn, A
“You are the only navigator among
D. Mister Hampton.” beenn Pinball
sfter Tha ten pot measurably quiet
veata, “and if fou aro with us, SoU
rill take the hip there to that tater. ||
Fell etC the theamure aboard. mall
bwhy aDd dlok ber‘on tbe South’ Amen| |
a coast and then every man for bim-| |
elt with all be wan carry.”
“Aw 1 to be captain?” | asked.
“There'll be no captnis. Every man} ‘
or blinaelt, 1 say, Lot me and the
v's'n’s mate, Giibby, will take the
ratcbes ip turn, You'll navigate che] ,
hip and whatever ts necessary for our
afety we'll do at sour order. In it],
derstood > :
“Yea” anid 1, under one condition."
“We make no conditions.” anid Pina »
ail darkly, “Wwe aro masters of the] c
hip, remember, and this ta oor last} f
ord.” ;
“It a pot mae.” said 1 composadty,| »
oF 4 bad yet tho Dardest.part of the
arguin to drive.
“Well, {t's got to be” sald Punball| c
coacingly. starting coward me with} 5
ye iarlinnpike be earricd. z
“Now. my frlood.” eald 1, “we might] fi
tas well understand each other | ty
ou can kill me if you want to, It
ould be gary enough, but when you
1¥0 lied me you hare Killed your
at cbaiice at tbe treasure. Yon don't] W
jow what latitude or Jongitode wel -
ein now. ‘There is not one of uu
nt knows enough to take a aight oF
vail tho ablp to the taland. You are
mplotely helpless. Sty life means |
0 difference between treasure and no} Tt
sanuro to you. You ate emiars enough |g
‘seo that” as
“Ho speake right.” sald as old sae} pyr,
1B at the back of the crowd. pe
“Ther spoaks a man of pense,” anid] o.
“Therefore you wits bear wy condl-| ™
na and accede fo them.” Pi
THeave abead.” sald Pimball roogt-|
qnough. evidently not liking the sit-|
don, Lut failing piterly co ee Bow |.
could BE atetided singe T complete |
beld the whip baod of them all. in "
‘What I atipainte is: very simpte. | [4
rst of all, 1 am to bare my full and t
pal share of the treawure with the} '26
t. Via to tw treated exactly: like | 8
y others in thie division. and my life | O*
d lberis. which are Juve pw eabunble| A
Be oo hanpar ricaee co ue Geer [OS
ge Be ae
316 Nosth Third Street.
aE Ew
TAILORING
CSITHAN &. WHITE,
a ‘Peeper. m
GREER Sn ghee cae as wits ee as het . .
US Seay : . See : .
le eas : ‘ o
“ Si nen - a pth, E, Z
maf MEE a 4, ete os —
ah ae a wn , ek vee i r 7 ar
. fae A ak eae ~ MAnd WA ‘you Genyten we, tob-mav-| ap toe opens In shout
wo | bet =e Miia, cod re oe aan ee : Nneeaeed yon?" abe eukad plnoe | twenty ten once tte Die 208 5
tee WE Ger Rihpn) never looted as sth! ae oj mediately igoite tho Ls
1 | amr RR Ant aneety Wald mf, eee, SO one Sow Nyx f “cao : Brera vo igbeing the, oh, SF
roa | heel A ee ‘menpon,”. F imaged. WO | 700 badd: cm M then” whe maid, | Mghter orm match raced In the ers
ep i ip oo were naa} Oe tte cat ene Ginter "| sstian cot ber Bite pate which Z| arfoag atick shoald de used. The =
op. | Bot 60 SORE Glpat sven to-be done | Fe tenew apes Whe ‘ef the cub | iyallowed wp ity my large one on the| will bura for 8 few soni a he
ay | wich Sen, Aaa tay Dave | Was Hh Wore of a mieete ‘Thave | fistant standing silent as usual, bolt: Ht wilt back Gre in the bole. Thete
ee eats edvantegs, there anes Howat: . Se ng oueethe names. bad Ing 1 the, white. - Be no more trouble frum the mule
it | fore, of Cnty ‘ant poshed the] of % rope est ebeets whien obo} “And are you net. sorry that you~ | Popular Mechanics
matter tos. ‘conciecion.— *- .| BAG Dawtfly 2een'up. Mer purpese wes | you—isiewed ine?” be faltered at last. —
be] “Welk” 1 and quickly. “I want hee] Dita. Ste bed! inten@ed to ond her | “No,” | answered bivatly enong>— ee a
1. | for mgeeie” Ab 1 beer a groan in| Htfe by Banging bevestt from the Rook } being # pigin wen { have always felt
wae | the cabin back of met If I aid, I could] Im the deck beam ubeve te which eve |compelied to tell the trath—except FASHION I
or | B6t a@erd te icate, I could not jet | OMA Of ber rope was secured, snd sbe | perbapa. when ber Interests were at |”
ip. | them Rear, “You maw haw abe treated | Weld bave dove i, too, tf I hed wet | take“! am not sorry.” Bat as abe —_
Ta" tered. refing my voice end] come in in the nick ef time . ° [ewiftly tried to draw ber: hand away
co. | banging on the Gable’ “She struck me] 1 eared at ber for a meaeaf: and | added, “! promise you | won't do it By JUDIC CHOLLET
‘She had woe twpriewwed, 1 want ber 10] 0 reached forward: and, tore the] apain, and you will forgive -me, 1 | _-
9 Ede xivem ever to me alone.” plalted strands out of ber ‘Gated aad:|koow. Meanwhile we®bave tueh tof os nutations uses t
2 Ee Bote hagan Plmaball, oot relishing | 0m around ber neck and threw tiem | pian We may be ‘interrupted any} Tiere 4s ARE eee Oe pot
ne {tho abandonment of this: prite which] % the deck. It was evidence to mia | ting snd we bad best get at it” which a coat of this kind tony Ve fil
2 | he bad evidently marked for bis own. [OF the deepaena'of ber despair that] I released ber band and sbe faced me It Is well adapted to Reseral were a
ir] “2 tell you what tr fs, mates.” said 1,|22* bad attempted such « thing. Ie | calmly enongh. ts easy'to alido on an of. ‘i
<f| aurcearding Bim and addressing the | Sbowed me for ome thing the excel} “You dont know bow moch safer 1 Many uaterials are wittablo for 1M
°Y | eat directiy. “t nm n'poor men and tne W0ce Of My acting. I had convinced | feel when I have yon to depend upon.” | foal eel wees ‘relay woo! chet
treasure, of my share of it, means af e762 Der Of my villainy, I realised | she said fot.end eponge. Srotct tweed unt 0
great deat to me, bet revenge means} With 8 sudden pang How my beart leaped at that assur. | be forrotten. for It fe excevelltacls ama
Mhsevddenpane . | How my beart leaped at that sever.) es acrabie. «
Le
A «4S
ro +
NO:
RRO NT 7)
NSD ass Wy.
[So
much more. You give the woman t
me apd I wilt Glvide my ebaro of thi
treavure ainong the crew.”
“Well.” began Pinball oncertataly
but the sentiment of the crew, wal
Palpubly agatuat Din.
“Don't be w foul, man.” erted the mar
who bad spoken before. “Give im the
wench.” : :
“Aye. et him Deve her.” cried 9 eee
ond,
“fell Dring her to ber, knees,” satd
‘a third,
“Stop It.” 1 erted, doubling my Bat—
tdia wae no ameamed race either, for
tay Ulood wae bulling “This le my
owoatair”
Themen fell back They forgot for
the moment thelr udrantage te sear
Der,
“Well, shat ta agreed at Inet” sata
Ptobatl. reluctantly envagh “You take
the woman, wr take the Creamure”
agreed.” wat L =
“Iv that right. maten?” ho asked of
the reat.
“Right-o." wan the answer, ~
“Ite alt wetted. then,” aid 1 “bat
no"— -
“Bettys out the youl, feo, and tet os
see ber.” auddenls begun oue of the
mien, atepplug forward,
‘The door back of ine wus thrown
open wide aud nile stepped out into the
cabin. How I thrilled tw nee her, erect,
fearlers, more beuutlful than ever. The
men recoiled, aud I stepped back my:
cele,
“I have heurd all.” ahe erled, “You
murderous villuing, to have Killed my
captain and xeired my xhip, and you~
Fou"—ebe turn! (9 me. “Wo bare bar-
eUned for we aud to have boukht me
Ike un aulmal, w borse, a dog—ob. tf 1
pad a weapon”
CHAPTER Vii.
ee ee eee Soe: ete Sen
= Mictreas.
¥ pivtol waa still tn my band
and ube made a cluted at it
bur I was too quick for ber
" L-cauxht ber by the wrist
The spell she had cast opon us by ber
sodden entrance, ber Beautiful pres.
fence. her proud. brave demeanor, was
broken by tbat touch. Tho men laugh
eh. The remembmace of that laugh
makes my biood boll erep now.
."L wish soo Joy of her," sald one,
“You mill haty a ume taming ber,”
ctted 0 second: :
“Ab, yoo think so!” 1 cried deter
miniug to carry ot the deception to
the bitter end and to leave-no chance
for the least suxpicion to arise { sel
ed her by the shoulders, secretly pray-
ing God to forgive me for what I was
about to do, nnd shook her violently
back and forth. It was easy enough
|A baby In my bands ‘would not have
been ture “helpless. “Silence, you
fooint™ 1 cried as the mop ‘began to
laugh again. end ‘then to ber: “You
belong to me woman. . Do yoo heart
I've bonght you. | am your master.
Get back {oto your cabin. I wif have
speech with you later.” Helpless, she
could do nothing 1 ¢hrast her toto
the cabin, abut the door pod faced the
men. “Will you gentlemen’ leave me
alone to tame this she devil for a Iit-
Ue while, apd I, will be on deck pree
ently.” I panted oat.
“Very, well,” sald Pimbell, “bet be
fore we xo"—-be pointed to s Reavy
bottle tn the rack="I propose thet we
drink the bealth of the Hew savigetor
and bis lady.” 5
=Right-o!” wld L _
1 reached for the glasaes that were
tm the rack and poured out s sti
dram ‘for each nae bed added mignty
little water to it The room wad soot
Alle’ with mocking. Jooring toasts te
my bealth and bapptece .{ @ranth
with the rout. although | weeld miher
pare qwalluwed polrop. They wont
1 2 ae ee ep a
taper oes eG
sie Si ane Sow. ih die bw
agape”. tangs. ab .
fg Ran eae en eames,
|] Fe tanew pan tao door of tbe cet
5] tn wae the wort of a mainma ‘Than
| nhs stood. . he hed teteted same ied
of & repo est of the chests which she
‘had hawchy aeen've., Ror purpese wes
|| pinta. She ped’ etended to end. hee
| Hie by Ranging bewvalf fromm the Rook
|] im the deck beam Ebeve te which ove
| ond of bee rope was secured, und ede
|| weald have dows , too, tf I hed mot
|} come im in the nick of time, “
J etared at ber for a meweng. and
chen reached forward: and. tore , the
plaited strands ont o€ ber ‘Gad and
from arovnd ber neck and threw them
to the deck. It wae evidence to me
of the deepaees' of ber despair that
Jabe bad attempted sech a thing. It
showed me for ome thing the excel
‘lence of my acting. I bad convinced
even ber of my villainy, I realised
with s sudden pang.
‘Bard as | stared at her, the glance
thag she ebot back at we in intensity,
Mf pot expression, matched my own
1 never. want to see such loathing,
sroch contempt, such scorm on & human
countynance again. It cut me to the
beart
“A-moment” abe sald wildly, “and
I bad Gone it, traitor”
“Nay. nay.” 1 protested, “I am a
trueman™ 5
“You bargained for me: you deaght
wel”
I was not {0 earnest.” L eried, but
she toterropted me to a perfect tem
Dest of outraged feollog.
“My God!" she burat out “Why
@dp't you stay away a litte longer?
You dog! You rile, jow’—
Bor at that I found volco ngain, for
1 was geiting ansry myself, ny tet
per naturally being ‘none the sweet.
eet save ordinarily when ho wan com
terned.
“Bear me.” interrupted Io turn.
“Not a word.” we
“But indeed soo must” 1 persisted,
stepping within ber cabin and careful
17 clonlog the door after ae. “It, ls
your weltare alone that I acek I
think you abould bave known that.”
“After the loxalt op the quarterdeck
ant ovehing?* abe anked cuttingly. _
“Madam,” sald L, controlling myself
yealn, Dot witb added Aldiculty, “oor
roncern ia not with Kinses, bat with”—
“what? . .
“Lite and—
1 beettated.
swhat cine? peak ont”
“Your honor.” I sald slowly, wbereat
he stared at my fuce. doubtless stern
ouch 10 alt cousclence.
What 1 had to sar concerned us both
o deeply that { cared not-what abe}.
eid, and perhapr tbat closed cabin |!
nto which I had penetrated waa the
iketiest place for privacy In the whole |
bip. I cookd by no menue be over [7
eard. so J determined to apenk freely
ba way Dot fo be misunderstood. .
“I wear sou no barm Can yoo not ft
ee 1t?” 1 burst “oot “It waa all a
ray.” 5 Fe
“A playt abe panted. “the néeader | 1
f the captain, the mutiny of the mes, | r:
ye seizure of tho sbip, the siriog Up
ie chart, your purclaso”—eho drew |
eevelf Ujy—God,'nbe was a brave Ute | n
ag—of me” abo continued, “with [bh
nue sary of the trogsure—was tat a
ore «
“Pact of it, adam. asta 1, atuog |
y ber mmr and stunoed gata by.
fe thought that abo could erer bare {o
ered mie capabte of auch Dascneas, fb
no lad loved bet. worshiped her and [T
but for that fevting moment when {IC
had kisael tiet—had ever treated Ber | ©
ith auch buuible conalderauon. “T
WuELE aot’ Sou."
“What then? 7
“Tbe rigtit to tive-and serve your], |
e Aemt for you to Wve unbarmed {it
an .
And what?” fen
“And be nerved by me xb no] ®
ouabt but fur your safety and bap |
cue-atarl at te 1a det) cousterna- | “%
a. ter brow furrowed 1 had wie |
ough to be allent and Ket the ¥
Si fo ta tent aid Yet te ape |
Have 1 wronged yous" abe asked | 7:
rings mt lant : ;
Wnt would your fate de Hf 309] »,
re lett to that urdcrous rabbie on | 2
geek soniier?= es
he whuiddeced ant preased the] 2°
might homme To ber
You uhwuld have known mo bet-] 22
°F continved reproachtully, than |
hate wusnectal"— te
thot your tnavit to imo thie Yer7 | eg
ht on the quarterdeck 7” te
Is a man to be condemned deyond | F §
Jon why haa served sou truly de | ad
v6 be sontcbes kisa in a moment | OM
maadness and forgets ft when sour | Fi
and honor tremble in the bal-|
er 7
I do not think even you could for
“that ever.” abo asld, and If conid
[Fed minfeGged yeet” she seked plend
1 x en Be
‘| vetdtan eet ber. Rive’ pan which
inyallowed wp ity my large one on th
| ristant, standing sllene as urual, bold
tng it the whila -
} “and are you net: sorry that yos-
you—kleoed ie?” be faltered at lax
*No.* I:anawered, biwatly enoagh—
doing'a pigin men { bave always fel
cotapelled to toll the trath—except
perbapa, when ber interests were 1
atake—"L am pot sorry." But as ab
swituy tried to draw ber bend away
added, “t promise you | won't do it
again, and you will forgive -me, |
know. Meapwhile we have much’ tc
Dian, We may be ‘interrupted any
thoy and we bad best get at it.”
T released ber band and sbe faced me
calmly enoogh.
“You dont know bow much safer 1
feel when I have yon to depend upon.”
he eald.
Blow my beurt leaped at that asvar-
ance and [ saw that abe had indeed
forgiven me -
“T shall teave everything to yon, Mas-
tor Hampdon.” sbe conunued. “Do you
tell me what to do, and I will do it”
“1 know you. will. I could not ask a
braver. better second.” I answered
beafttly. :
‘At that momént I beard a step on the
adder. Somebody wan coming. Quick
as a-Dasb I realized the part we bad
to play tn public. [balled my fst and
atrock the bulkbead savagely, 1 up
Howe count bave changed my expres
won as well. for in her surprise abe
screamed fatptly. :
“That's It." 1 whispored, “scream
agalu, louder, touder.” -
“Wht do Fou mean?” abe akéd to
Incampretpuaible amarement, in this
crida my wits working quicker than
bers.
“There ts nomebody outalde, We bare
© part to’piny.. I nm aburlag you and
you ate Ogbting.” I whispered awittly
Then looder, fairly shouting at bor 10
deed. 1 cried. “Down on your knees,
wench, Yoo will fod that you bave
met sour inaxter.pow." _
1 wade spay sound of scafle and abe
tid tnueed scream loudly. Sm the mldnt
af tbe commotion thé door was tried.
but fortunately I had tornod the key.
“Who's there?” I sbonted, and to my
may whispered. “Bes for betpr
Entering Into the spirit of the esme
nod smiling at me, since there was
gobe but I ty nee, albelt whe Infused
itringe terrur ia ber solce, #0 that t
ean amazed myaclf, she cried at the
op of her voice: |
“Help! Belp™ .
1 tn tarn called toner yet:
“silence, woman!” anf ‘track the
olkbead again,
Finally turning to the door f opened
a bit, and ,there stood ope of the
unger eamen.,
“What want you?" I becan sternly
nd stormtly. “I don't care to bo die
srbed Just now.”
“You ore wanted on deck. It ix just
awn Land bas beep algbted, and | |
eres a Deary vee runnin’. Pimball |
1" Gitbby want your counsel and ad- | |
ce what's to be dove.” .
“Goods” sald L “TE wiit be with yo |
a moment Tell thei T bare yet «| |
onl or two to say to this woman | «
ro :
The maw tured on tiie heel, passed | f
ruuxtr the- eatin and climbed the tad-
F to the deck, >
“Now.” | aid quickts, dhrusting one
my pletolu Into my Mttle catatreas’ | 2
nd, “we cun tatk nw longer thin time.
am golng to du ms best for you, and | A
T fall bere tan weapon, You know
pat to do with Ie”
‘Shall Puye (ton them
‘No, Ina: 1 answered gritols, “on | ~
urself If ft comes to the Worst”
i oaaton sek Tae «| f
le
‘Lock the door when 1 £0 out, and
by uccount open te aus voice but
Y aba remember.” 7
‘And keep up the acting,” T xala.
‘Mimper and cower away whenever
areacen tugetber.” *
Taball not forxet.” abo sald, stand | ©
very atrulght. looking at mo brave | &
ber esex abtning a
And now gooduy!” T
turned away, bot abe caoght me] >
the shoulder. She extended ber | ¥
a rather bigh. 1 was not toodumb
; fo ‘understand what abe wanted, | ™
no I bent and kissed it, and it was |
Ught kiss of gallantry, but { presse
my lps passionately acainst the | &
lo bend.
May God keep yon,” abe sald as I
Ded away, breathing the “Amen”
are-not xpeak.
heard the key torn in the lock be
4 me, and with a beart fol) of mix
jogs in xpite of my aterm and reeo-
purpose, I came opt on deck,
In :
To Bo Continued.
+. Bertha Hummel! Acquitted.
Bertha Hummel,.of Tower City, was
acquitted at Pottiavilie, Pa, of the
charge of kliling her father after the
fury deliberated Jess than two hours.
She was overjoyed and shook bands
with the members of the Jury and ber
‘counre) and friends In the court room.
She ‘wan charged with shooting hor
father through the heart March 28. It
wan at firet thought to beaulelde, but
augpicion rested against her. ‘The ov:
dence submitted wer purely clreuns
stantial.
._Lake Beacon World's Largest
Engineers of the lighthouse bureau
have.Gnisbed tnevalling new appare-
tos at Whitefah Point, near Duluth,
Minn. and mariners will be guided by
one. of the Iargeat Tights in the world.
Tt has ,000,000 candle power. The
increastd intennity was obtaine! by
changing from ofl to incandescent oll,
vapor, ‘Tho-new light can be seen
seventy-Avo miles, except during
storms,
‘Rasy Way to Kill Meten
Am excellent way to exterminate
moten ts as follows: Procere « email
can of cakium carbide, whlch can be|
Purchased from an antomobile. or bicy-
cle. dealer, open tho Sole where the
mote bes bern digging and place sume
of the cartide ta i. Pour two or three}
galiees of water inte the bate ead elses |
‘& the opening, In sbout Bleed &
tweaty einater open tho hole and 1s
Bodlataly ignite tho gas cormel. Be
Garefol fo lighting -the cat A EBs
Marbter of a match placed In the erd of
a Pong atick shook be use). The es
Sil born for n fo syconds stat then
Me ipace dre in the ble. Thete wil
be no more trouble frum the mule—
Popular Mechanics.
ea :
By JUDIC CHOLLET
——
‘Tere are almont nunteetiess vers (0
whieh a cont of this kid! aay be Pat
Tt fo well adapted to generat wea and
{a easy to alldo on an of
‘Many tantertals are wiltable for thls
coat, wool serce ns ivell ay wool cher
fot.end eponge. Sroteh tweed munt not
be forgotten. for It Ix excerdiukly xmart
and durable. -
For the cedium size wit) be requir!
seven yards of materia! twenty-seTed
7 )
Gi2/s
_
Z
KEL SRY)
5 ff
As JI \
i dM.
4 oi
be NV tex
es Ee S| if
AN
mel
tees
ee Ey.
eed. {
Rc APY be
ob A
RAL
ya oe
% ie |
s a te
ae EE.
ues
Tas
DREPET, Lona cour.
Inches wide, Ove and # quurter of fab
re thirty-nx lochen wkle oF thee ned
a half of forty-four inch wide material,
Tate May Manton pattern te cut we Aer
reed Bt Se Ge tnchra baat mean” eel
conta to thie ocr eiving number. 32
08 wih be prompily orwarden Cs ce)
oF talk HE" haste send a ase
rdefiag woe coupon
a
By JUDIC CHOLLET
Hero is one of the newent and smart
est developments of the two piece dray:
ed skirt. The front ts narrow, forms
almont a. panel, and sides and back
are cut 1m une, but draped gracetully:
There is a pintt at each alde of te
Pane! below the drapery. which peu
idea freedom for walking. 7
1p tho Nlustration a checked woot
materiat tx trimmed with plpings of
plain vinck allk. *
For the medium sizo Gve and three
eighths yards of matertal tweaty-eereo
fia
Bia aed
ai HEUER:
Pein
Pee
mee
Bees
; sey
a ae
Smaart a
fame
amare tre
Pome tty
- eee
eee
Peed
; earns
Fetes es)
Bey
= eae”
~ PRAFRD TWO Pince earet. *
taches wide will be needed. The width:
at the lower edge Is one yard and tweu-
ty foar inches.
Thie May Manton patiera te cut (0 sizer
trom 2 to t haches Waitt measure Bend
Bicones to thie omen: siving numer. are
28 it wil be prompuy forwarded pos
Seimei utih pette oond an soins
fo cont starop for liter posture. Wino
Sicemrcea
Interesting Career of New York City's Chief Executive. His Attempted Assassination - Planned to Run For Mayor Independent of Tam many-Farmer, Lawyer, Judge and Philosopher.
Photo copyright by American Press Association.
THE LATE MAYOR GAYNOR AT HIS DEK.
WILLIAM J. GAYNOR, mayor of New York city, who died on board the steamship Baltic while on his way across the Atlantic on a short vacation, was a man of great force of character, honesty of purpose and fearlessness in the discharge of his duty as he saw it. Judge Gaynor was born near Griskany, in Quebec, county, N. Y. He was of mixed Irish and English ancestry. One of his ancestors on his mother's side fought under Magnesium in the war of the Revolution and was killed in the attack on Quebec. The neighborhood in which he was reared was called "Stoneboro." His was the usual life of a boy on a farm in a poor country. He worked in the fields and woods and did the chores. He went to the little district school each winter for a few weeks. He afterward went to the village school and the secondary and afterward taught school and finally achieved a good education.
He settled in Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1875, at the age of about twenty-four. He did newspaper work. Then he practiced law. His rise in his career
Photo copyright by American Press Association
THE LATE MAYOR GAYA
alon was steady. He was a student and was careful in his practice. He settled all the cases he could, but when he had to fight in court he was a formidable antagonist.
He early began to take an interest in ppublic affairs, but not as a parishion. He at first lived in the town of Flatbush, adjoining Brooklyn. Its population was about 10,000. Its government was dependent on two political bosses and was thoroughly bad. There were much waste and peculation. All sorts of favoritism existed. There were forty saloons, only one with a license. There was a colony of roadhouses frequented by drivers to Coney Island and the beaches. Gaynor was then a silent young fellow. But he had tried several law cases at the town hall with great ability. He said one day that the government of the town was a diagrace and the people should not suffer it. People thought of the two opposing bosses and smiled, for whichever was in power the result was the same. And many even said that they had an understanding and worked together. The next thing was that every one received a printed circular from Mr. Gaynor inviting him to a public meeting in the town hall to select candidates for the approaching election. The hall was packed. Both bosses were there. The chairman was a tool of theta.
Mia Early Political Creed
A motion was put naming candidates. Young Gaynor quietly handed up a resolution as a substitute, naming a new set of men from top to bottom. The chairman refused to submit it to a vote. Mr. Gaynor got up on a bench in full view, and the whole town learned that he was not as quiet as he looked. He reviewed the condition of things in the crispest words. He demanded that the chairman put the substitute to a vote and told him that if he did not do so it would not be at all difficult to put him out of the window and put another in his place. The whole meeting broke out in cheers. The chairman lost his nerve and put the substitute. It was overwhelmingly carried. Two days later the two opposing banners, combined on a ticket, but were beaten three to one at the polls. Gaynor had been asked to run for the legislature, but refused. He said he wanted no office. The newspaper accounts of that time show that in his speech he declared, as he often has since, that "turn is a government of laws and not of men." He cried out that famous passage to that effect from the Massachusetts hall of rights.
the town board finished on appointing Mr. Gaynor police commissioner, and he was prevailed on to serve. He went quietly and systematically to work, and everything was done in a strictly lawful manner. No lawless police raids were made, but in a few months the colony of civil places was empty, and every botel and saloon had a license, and they were made to respect the Sunday law. The town was "cleaned up." In a year Mr. Gaynor resigned his office. His work was done. He made the police force respect the law and not do as it liked. He tried to teach the same lesson to the 10,000 policemen of the city of New York. They were not permitted to do any unlawful
violence. He taught them and the community that "the way to enforce the law is the way prescribed by the law itself," as he had so often declared. When a distinguished citizen once said to him that that way would not detect and punish crime he answered dryly and drolly, "Then don't."
Fights Bee McLaughlin.
Boon afterward Mr. Gaynor moved
Association.
AYNOR AT HIS DEK.
into Brooklyn, then and for many years under the control of Boss McLaughlin. The politicians distrusted him. He did not court them, but went his way. The ring quietly bought up a private water company which supplied a part of the city. They paid about $200,000 for it. Boon after they made a contract with the mayor and comptroller and auditor, selling it to the city for $1,500,000. By this time Mr. Gaynor, had accumulated some money in his profession and could spend some. He brought a taxpayer's suit to prevent the carrying out of the contract. He gave all the facts, showing it to be, as he said, "a spoliation of the funds of the city." The court contest aroused the public to the highest interest. Mr. Gaynor won through all the courts. It was a year of hard work, with every powerful political and financial interest against him.
First they laughed, at his suit. But he only grew more albeit and grim and worked harder and harder. The fraud was killed, and he paid all the expense, amounting to $14,000. He next took proceedings and compelled the city officials to collect the millions of arrests of taxes from the elevated railroads. The members of the ring had large holdings in them, given for their influence, and protected them. He took similar proceedings, to expose the so called Columbian friends and prevented the fraudulent bills from being paid. He did other similar things. His activity was marvelous. The common saying was that he heard every fall in the city and that nothing escaped his attention.
A mayoralty election was now coming on In Brooklyn. Every one turned toward Mr. Gaynor. Hosent people wanted him for mayor. The politicians meered and said: "That is it. That is what he has been after all along. We will see him as a self-seeker." A great meeting was held in the Academy of Music, which hamed him for mayor. But he would not run. He said no one would ever be able to say that the public services he had rendered were with a view to get into office. He was even touchy about it. And that characteristic manifested itself in the many times he had been asked to be a candidate for governor and mayor. Another was nominated instead.
Later he was nominated for justice of the supreme court. He wrote, declining. But leading citizens induced him to run to help the city ticket, the city being part of the ten counties making up the judicial district. There was a majority, the other way of about
THE MISSING MEN
Photo copyright by American Press Association
SCENE WHEN MAYOR GAYNOR WAS SHOT IN 1910.
Reverend and Dear Sir--It seems to me that this work of proselytizing from other religions and sects is very often carried too far. Do you not think the Jews have a good religion? Have not the Christians appropriated the entire Jewish sacred scripture? Was not the New Testament Jesus also born of the Jewish race? I only speak of it with deference. Did not we Christians get much or the most of what we have from the Jews? Why should any one work so hard to proselytize the Jew? His pure belief in the one true living (God comes down to us even from the twilight of fable and in the one world of the world) would be good. I do not think I should give you a license to preach for the conversion of the Jews in the streets of the thickly settled Jewish neighborhood which you designate. Would you not annoy you and do more harm than good? How many Jews have you converted so far? Very truly yours. W. J. GAYNOR, Mayor. Perhaps this letter also displays the mayor's own profound belief in God, which seems to be his whole creed. His use of puro Anglo-Saxon in his oral and written speech is remarkable.
In August, 1910, a discharged city employee tried to assassinate Mayor Gaynor. He came up behind the mayor on the deck of an ocean steamer, where the mayor stood talking with friends who had come aboard to see him off to Europe, and, placing a pistol close to the back of the mayor's head, fired. The bullet entered back of the right ear and, changing its course two or three times, passed through his throat. It was never extracted. At first it was thought that the mayor's voice was permanently gone. But it came back by degrees, and during the past two years he made many public speeches.
This assault on the mayor revealed a new phase in his character, a most unusual physical as well as mental courage. The concussion rendered him unconscious momentarily, but he struggled to his feet and kept perfectly cool. He did not manifest the slightest fear of death, although he and every one thought he was dying. He never spoke of the matter.
In the fall of 1910 the Democratic party called on Mayor Gaynor to run for governor. He carefully considered everything and then sent a letter to the waiting convention saying that as a matter of duty to the people of New York city he could not resign as mayor to accept another office. He had since often said the office of mayor was larger than that of governor and second only to the presidency. Considering the immense powers vested in the mayor of New York, this is true.
The mayor had all along taken a deep interest in national politics, and nothing in that field escaped him. His speech on the tariff when Cleveland first run for president was widely circulated. It was one of the best. He was a close student of national questions. For years he spoke of favoritism in freight rates as the grossest wrong of the age.
Fond of the Old Farm.
Every year Judge Gaynor used to visit his sisters, Miss Mary C. Gaynor and Mrs. A. V. Lynch, who live in Utica. From Utica he used to trolley to Orkidany and then walk four miles into the country to Skesterboro, to visit the old farm on which he and his brothers and sisters spent their childhood.
There were thirteen brothers and sisters raised on this farm and "schooled" at a quaint little one story schoolhouse a long mile from the farm.
This little schoolhouse remains just as it was forty years ago, except that it is now annually painted and kept in repair, whereas in former days it was innocent of paint, and not infrequently the snow and rain fell upon the heads of the pupils or upon their old fashioned desks because of a broken pane or leaky roof. There is only one room in the schoolhouse. Today the children of Ed Herthum, present owner of the old Gaynor homestead, are pupils of the old schoolhouse. Ed Herthum's father bought the farm buildings, stock and 100 acres of land of Mayor Gaynor's father forty odd years ago.
To the old place Judre Gaynor paid a visit every summer, spending three or four hours talking over his boyhood lays and invariably doing a certain bit, he stunt as gleefully as a child. There stands in the farmyard a huge bewilderment upon which the Gaynor children need to crack nuts and play "Indian squaw," hands shading eyes which pooled into the far distant Mackenville valley, or dug a "virus act" on one big and with unstoppable arms.
30,000 in the district, and the ring majority in the city was about 20,000 in past elections. But Mr. Gaynor was elected by a majority of over 30,000, and the ring was as badly beaten in the city. It never again got back into power. It was broken for good, and Brooklyn became a part of New York city a few years later.
Notable Career as Judge.
The career of William J. Gaynor as a judge is well known. He was an immense worker and set a new pace. The number of cases he tried each year was beyond anything therefore known. The legislative committee on the law's delays reported all
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Photo © by American Press Association.
MAYOR GAYNOR, FROM PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN
A FKW MINUTES BEFORE HE WAS GOT.
this several years ago. His opinions on the rights of the individual, on immunity from unlawful arrests and police interference and on libel and other kindred things became read and known all over this country, and some of them are legal classics. It was not thought he would remain long on the bench, but he refused to resign to run for governor, for mayor of Brooklyn and twice for mayor of Greater New York. At the end of his term he did not seek renomination or say a word on the subject, but all of the parties without an exception renominated him. He served only two years of that term. The last four years as a judge he served as a member of the appellate division of the supreme court of the state.
Only Winner on His Ticket
But in 1900 he was induced to resign to run for mayor of New York city. Every one on his ticket was beaten except himself. He had a majority of 73,000.
His career as mayor is known to the whole country. He made no promises or alliances to get the office. He selected men to hand all the twenty-eight departments of the city to suit himself. The knowledge and insight which he manifested in the workings of the city government were an object lesson to every one. Nothing escaped his attention, and he knew the way to do everything. He cut off millions of expenses. He abolished boards and bureaus that every mayor before him had supposed to be legal fixtures. The story has been so often written and told that it need not be repeated. He made the government of the city an object lesson and pattern for the whole country. He drew the eyes of Europe even upon the city.
The departments have been raised to the highest efficiency. The mayor caused all appointments and promotions to be made in numerical order from a competitive list. No money or influence was permitted to interfere with this. No one was able to make any charges of fraud, ring rule or political favoritism in the government of the city. Under this man they simply vanished. Of course a man like this had enemies, who growled and abused him. But the mayor kept right on.
Gaynor as Philosopher.
The philosophical turn of the mayor's mind endeared him to the community. He displayed it throughout his whole career, but it became more apparent in his wider field as mayor. He was called upon to make addresses all the time and had made more than any mayor. If not more than all the mayors, who proceeded him. And he always had something thoughtful and often witty to say. The same is true of the many lieutenants he wrote. He seemed to have no desire to consult his thoughts or opinions, so in the age
with many politicians. Soon after he became mayor the public was attracted to one of the long series of his public letters. A young minister of the gospel wrote to him for a license to preach to the Jews in the most congeated Jewish quarter in order to convert them. The mayor answered as follows:
Attempt to Kill Him.
Fond of the Old Farm.
"The judge never came here but what he climbed on that bowler and old some of the old stunts for the amusement of my kid," said Mr. Herthum. "He never came to the old place without something in his pockets for the kid, and he roamed over the farm where he declared the happiest of his days were spent. "None of my present neighbors remember the time when the Gaynors lived here, but one of the judge's old schoolmates, James Mahar, moved to Whitesboro some time ago, so that it is the farm and not the neighbors the judge came to see.
"I never saw a man so stuck on his old home as Judge Gaynor was, and to see him cracking nuts and prousting on that old howdler was as good as a circus. There is no church within miles of here even now, and there wasn't In the Gaynor days, so, although the Gaynor children got their schooling near here, they had not the advantage of church or clergy unless they drove to Oriskany."
Made His Debut In Boston.
Mr. Gaynor made his debut as a lawyer in Boston. At that time he was just twenty-one years of age and had gone to Boston from his father's farm in New York. There he had educated himself and had started teaching school when he was only nineteen years old.
Meanwhile he was studying law, and he finished his law studies and passed the Massachusetts bar examinations soon after arriving in Boston. His office in 1873 was at 8 Pemberton square. Edwin E. Snow of the Ancient and Honorable artillery knew him at that time.
"I remember William J. Gaynor very well," said Mr. Snow, "for he lived on the third floor of the house at 00 Waltham street, and my wife and I also had rooms on the same floor. At the time I did not know where Gaynor came from, but somehow I got the impression that he came either from Pennsylvania or Nova Scotia. He was a hard student, and often worked over his books into into the night. Nevertheless he was the sort who could and would take time from his studies to indulge in a social chat, and many an evening I dropped into his room to smoke a pipe and talk things over wit him.
"Although he struck me as a young man of strong personality and more than average ability, I never imagined of course, that some day he would be mayor of the greatest city on this hemisphere. But as I look back on it now it seems that I might have guessed something of the sort if I had been anything of a prophet. For example one thing that remains in my memory is the way in which young Gaynor always talked of big things, of great achievements. He was then pretending law, and it seemed to me that he had a better clientele, a more profitable business, than the average young lawyer fresh from the country. Still he wasn't satisfied, and he seemed to think that his energies were cramped and confined in Boston. He was always talking of New York and of the opportunities he believed were there for a young man of energy and ability.
"As well as I can remember it was
the latter part of 1873 that he called me into his room one night and pointed to his trunk that was already half packed. 'Well, Ed,' he remarked, with a smile. 'I'm getting ready to leave Boston. I'm going to try my luck in New York or Brooklyn.' At first I could hardly believe it. I wanted to know why he was going away when his affairs were beginning to prosper. He waved it all inside airily and said, with a certain tone of resolution, that he felt sure he could make a greater success in New York and that it was high time he should be going. Every year was precious at his time of life, he told me, and he felt that it was then or never for him to make the change.
"Well, we gave him a sendoff at the old boarding house on Waltham street, and we wished him all the luck in the world. None of us guessed what he was going to accomplish, but I know that for my part I felt he was destined for big things—how big I had no conception. As the years have passed by I have followed his career with a strong personal interest."
Turned Down by Tammany.
Up to as late as August it was thought that Tammany would renominate Mayor Guynor, not because the organization liked him, but because of expediency. Then came the announcement that Edward E. McCall, former supreme court justice, was Tammany's choice.
Then friends of Mayor Gaynor, including Jacob H. Schiff, Herman Rid-
THE LAND OF THE
FLOWERING
WATER
er, editor of the New York Staats Zeitung, and more than 100 other men prominent in the business life of the city, formed the Gaynor Fusion and Nominating league and at a mass meeting held in City Hall park named him as an independent candidate for mayor of New York city. Mayor Gaynor accepted the nomination in a characteristic speech and shortly after took passage for Europe on the steamship Baltic, a voyage from which he was destined never to return alive.
A Leng Boeld.
Brewster, who was returning late from his club, was received by his wife on entering the bedroom with a well rehearsed curtain lecture. Fortunately he had not turned up the gas, and as the door was not closed he quietly alispal out and rejoined his friends at the club. Two hours later he again wended his way home and picked up his cars on reaching the bedroom door. "Hi! She didn't notice it!" said he, chuckling to himself. "She's still scolding."—Glasgow Herald.
HORSESHOEING SCHOOL
Cornell University to Give Instruction in Practical Farriery.
It has been announced that beginning next winter instruction in horse-shoeing will be given in connection with the veterinary department at Cornell university, Ithaca, N. Y.
This will be the first school of its kind to be established in America. In most all countries of Europe the horse-shoe, before being permitted to engage in business, must give some time to the study of anatomy of the foot and limb so that in his practice the horse may be better safeguarded against inferior practice and knowledge of foot structure and assurance given the owner that his animal is being shod by a fully qualified man.
The school to be opened at Cornell will be under the direction of the head of the veterinary department, the assistant being a graduate shoer of the German schools. At first only residents of New York state will be asked to make application for admission to the course of studies, which will include anatomy, locomotion, conformation, the treatment by shoering of diseased hoof condition, etc.
The importance of this movement will appeal to every horse owner. This school at Cornell should stimulate efforts along the line of placing the shoering of horses upon a higher plane than it now occupies.
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"JOHN MITCHELL, JR. AND THE SUPREME LODGE."
No one deeply regretted the "break" with the Supreme Lodge more than did the Supreme Representatives from Virginia. As an evidence of this, we cite the fact that everything that was honorably possible was done in order to prevent the publicity which must necessarily follow the drastic action of the Supreme Chancellor S. W. Green and his corp of followers.
He issued an order, not only suspending the Grand Lodge of Virginia, but every member of the Order in the state, including the Uniform Rank and even knights in good standing in the Order of Calanthe. This was done in direct violation of the Constitution and Laws of the Order, which he was sworn to support. Virginia has labored under this handicap since July 20, 1912.
Moreover, the Supreme Chancellor published this fact in the public press of the country. During all of this time not a line has appeared in these columns relative to the controversy and we studiously avoided any reference to the disagreements.
It may be well to state for the benefit of the public that there are but two ways by which a living member of the Order can be suspended from the Order. That is by becoming non-financial by refusing to pay a constitutional tax levy and by a trial at which the member was duly found guilty in accordance with the laws of the Order.
Virginia and its members had paid its lawful taxes and had committed no offense against the laws and usages of the Order. The real cause of her suspension was a demand for the investigation of the financial affairs of the Supreme Lodge and the consideration of the charges that the books and accounts of some of the Supreme Lodge officers had not balanced in more than four years and that the Finance Committee of the Supreme Lodge had not been able to make a proper report.
It was openly asserted that Su-
preme Chancellor Green's report had not balanced for that length of time. This then, together with Virginia's contention that the Supreme Lodge under its present Constitution and By-laws had no lawful authority to levy a tax upon the members of the Order in states having Grand Lodges constituted the sum and substance of our offending.
We read with much interest, then the well written editorial utterances of the Birmingham, Ala. Reporter. Under the caption of "John Mitchell, Jr. and the Supreme Lodge," it said:
It is to be regretted that such conditions prevailed in the Supreme Lodge of Knights of Pythias as has been variously reported in the weekly press since the adjournment of the body. Charges and charges were made at that session that it appears to us it would have been better if they had not been made. The most grievous matter before the Supreme Lodge was the proposition coming up from Virginia, in which John Mitchell, Jr. and the Supreme Chancellor, were contending over a point of law.
It continued:
Perhaps Mr. Mitchell's case would have appeared at a better angle had he submitted to the rule of the Supreme Chancellor, paid the levied tax over a protest, and then made his fight before the convention. With so many other states belin in the same predicament as Virginia, it appears to us that the Supreme Lodge might have taken a different position.
For the information and education of our contemporary this is just what we did at Indianapolis, Ind. in 1911. The Grand Lodge of Virginia paid $690.20 under protest and the Grand Court of Virginia paid $260.00 under similar conditions. The Supreme Lodge and the gentlemen controlling it did not take a different position. The money paid only whipped their appetites for more money and the leaders of the machine had the effrontery to demand that the Grand Chancellor of Virginia become personally responsible for the money that should have been paid by every subordinate lodge member and that this amount be paid by July 1st, 1912.
At this time Virginia had paid every dollar it owed the Supreme Lodge under the Constitution and Laws of the Order and this money was wring from her members by political methods, which were a disgrace to Pythianism and which have now become to be known as "Illinois politics."
The suggestion to again pay money under protest reminds us of a society meeting said to have been held in this neighborhood. One of the members arose and said, "Brother chairman, I move that Brother Bill Jones hold the money of this society until next meeting." Just as the chairman got up to put the motion, another member arose and said, "Brother chairman. I am not ready for that motion until I know who is going to hold Brother Bill Jones."
With the statement of Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal Robinson that the Supreme Lodge officers had expended our $950.31 without anything tangible to show for it, is there a man in the United States who would think that the Supreme Representatives from Virginia would "cough up" twelve hundred dollars more under protest, with no one in sight to hold the "Bill Jones" who holds the money. Not much.
It may be well to remark here that every state in the Order was deficient in paying this unconstitutional assessment, including Supreme Chancellor Greene's own state, and yet Virginia was singled out as a target because forsooth it demanded an investigation of the financial affairs of the Supreme Lodge.
The days of slave-driving are over hereabouts, by the white folks, who do not try it and certainly by the colored folks who should know better even though they may live in Illinois or Louisiana.
How did Virginia's Supreme Representatives meet the issue? They offered to put up every dollar of the money claimed by the Supreme Lodge officials in es crow, that is, in the hands of a disinterested third party, whether the amount claimed was twelve hundred dollars or three thousand dollars and to bring a friendly suit to determine the legality of the tax levy. If the Supreme Lodge was right, it could take the money. If Virginia was right, she would have the money returned to her.
The Supreme Chancellor refused to permit the Supreme Lodge to receive the biennial tax, about which there was no contention and by the payment of which the Grand Lodge of Virginia was entitled to the pass word.
The Reporter said:
Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Green, both as individuals and in their official capacity, have done much good for the people of the Negro race. In their official capacity they have been the means of building the great Pythian Order up to remarkable heights in their respective states. They stand too well, are men of too much brain to differ so radically on a point of law, and to maintain their contensions to such a degree that thousands of their fellows would be denied the rights and privileges of the Supreme Lodge anywhere within the jurisdiction.
It seems to us that the above statement is calm, conservative and helpful. We hope that Supreme Chancellor Green will read it with
It may appear to Mr. Mitchell now to be necessary to go into the courts to conserve his rights. This expedition could have been avoided if all parties concerned had been disposed to take a justifiable course with reference to those matters before them.
The above is the gospel truth. We subscribe to the following, too:
The race is not far enough advanced in its efforts to build up constructive enterprises and organizations to have any of them hampered by unreasonable fights between the leaders; that might be solved by a little-judicious handling. Somebody must stoop to conquer. Somebody must stifle ambition and look forward to the protection of the people. No organization can stand two leaders at the same time.
It lily betides any of us to preach from our pulpits and in our race journals unity of action for the general good of all if we will not observe this wholesome principle ourselves. Let us be fair to ourselves. Let us be fair to the people whom re would serve.
It is true that no organization can stand two leaders at the same time and it is also true that no organization can stand one Czar at any time and maintain its self respect and protect its usefulness.
Virginia demands her rights. We exhausted all remedies within the Order before we made an appeal outside of the Order. When citizens like Col. Thomas M. Crump, Secretary-Manager of the Southern Aid Society, one of the largest institutions of the kind among colored people in the United States, E. R Jefferson, M. D., a leading practitoner of this city; Col. Thomas H. Wyatt, senior member of the firm bearing his name and Vice-President of the Mechanicians, Savings Bank, together with a large number of other leading Virginians, including I. D. Burrell, M. D., one of the wealthiest colored citizens of Southwest Virginias, are insulted and kept out of the Supreme Lodge for no just cause whatever, it seems to us that "patience has ceased to be a virtue."
Our contemporary delivers a lecture upon preaching unity of action for the general good of all, but there is something more than this. Race enterprises and organizations must be built up upon sound foundations of honesty and square dealing and not upon corruption and deceit. Men who are "wolves in sheep's clothing" must be exposed and a standard of official life demanded that will "square" with the teachings of the Holy Writ.
C. K. Robinson's charges are not answered. He is guiltless, so far as we know, of any crime, but because he exposed disgraceful conditions, he has been punished, forced out of a lucrative position and the empty title "Past Supreme Chancellor" handed him as a balm for his injured feelings.
Virginia demanded an investigation and with charges in her hands against the Supreme Chancellor, admission was denied.
An unconstitutional tax had been levied. Was it to defend the name of the Order? That suit had been settled. Was it to pay endowment or sick benefits to the distressed? No. Other funds were requisite for this. For what purpose then was this special unconstitutional agreement made upon a reputed combined membership of over 150,000? Simply to pay salaries, which instead of being reduced have been increased.
What is the pass word? It is a
the unconstitutional mandate of the Supreme Chancellor and his supporters, would pay from the several grand jurisdictions, or states, in one year $10,790.50. For information concerning these figures, see Page 262 of Supreme Lodge Minutes of 1911.
Who can justify this species of financiering? Can the states afford it? Can the Southern states, the Grand Lodges, afford to put out of the Order and thereby annul the policies of the members who refuse to pay this unconstitutional tax? We shall see. Certainly, we are facing a crisis.
For our part, we are unwilling to be identified with methods and practices herewith disclosed. A reputation of a lifetime is too much to risk in such questionable proceedings. As to threats of personal and financial injury, we may well reply in the language of Shakespeare:
"There is no terror. Cassius, in your threats.
For I am armed so strong in honesty
That they pass me by as the little
winds.
Which I respect not."
ANOTHER SEGREGATION ORDINANCE.
The Negro-hating white elements in Baltimore have not given up the struggle to segregate the colored people in that city. On last Monday another segregation ordinance was reported to the Second Branch of the City Council by Councilman Curtis, on the part of the Second Branch of the Committee on Police and Jail. It is stated that the new measure is made to conform to so much as is known of the Court of Appeals' decision holding the West ordinance invalid, and also to fully protect the rights of all citizens, irrespective of color.
This measure while professing to do one thing actually does another. It is a pactet, adjustible ordinance which virtually gives the Police Board and its representatives and employees the power to do as they see fit in the location of white and colored people. While professing to protect property rights, it practically confacates these rights. The ordinance provides that a citizen may be denied the right to occupy his own property.
The language used is as follows
After prohibiting the occupancy of any house in a "section" of any block by either a white person or a colored person, if the remainder of the "section" is occupied by persons of the opposite race, and denying a block as both sides of the longitudinal part of any street of the city lying between the two nearest streets completely crossing it at each end, and a section as either side of each block, the ordinance provides that:
"No new residence shall be erected in any section of the city unless a declaration be made in the application for permit to build stating whether said residence or residences shall be occupied by white or colored people, and that a permit shall not be issued unless at least a section occupied nearest to one end or the other of the section desired to be built upon shall be occupied partly or entirely by the race the building or buildings are to be occupied by."
Violations of the provisions of the ordinance are to be punished by a fine of from $5 to $50 for each day the violation continues, or imprisonment in the city jail from 30 days to a year. It is expressly provided in this connection that the owner or agent of a building who shall permit it to be used in violation of the ordinance shall be deemed to be equally guilty of a misdemeanor with the person occupying the building and shall be subject to similar penalties.
It is also provided that whenever a majority of the leasehold owners resident in any block shall declare in a written and signed statement filed with the Police Board that they desire their block to be relieved of the preventive provisions of the ordinance then such block shall be open to the occupancy of both white and colored persons and shall so remain until the residents of that block shall be constituted entirely of white or of colored persons, when it shall again be subject to the preventive sections of the ordinance. The ordinance is to take effect as soon as passed and signed by the Mayor. The report submitting it to the Council was signed by all the Democratic members of the committee which had it under consideration but it was not signed by the Repub-Healn members.
We are at a loss to understand why it is that the colored Democrats of Baltimore and vicinity, were not able to bring to bear enough influence to at least split the Democratic vote upon this question, even if not able to defeat it.
The records show that the Republican members declined to sign the measure. We cannot for the life of us see wherein this new ordinance is less objection than the former or wherein it is constitutional. To deny to one the use of his property is to confiscate the right to peaceably occupy it. Race prejudice now is everywhere rampant in this country. Let us hope that with the lapse of a
Despite the wrong-doing in some quarters and criticisms by racial oracles in some others, the indications are that colored people are not losing confidence either in their industrial, fraternal benefit and insurance enterprises. Honesty in dealing and straight-forwardness in management have done much to give to reliable institutions the confidence that they now enjoy
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Bandit Gets $1999
Morris Council, a clerk in the office of the Wilmington and Philadelphia Traction company, was held up in his office in Wilmington, Del., by a lone highwayman and the thief procured a satchel said to contain $1989.
The man backed out of the office with the gun pointed at Council and then made his escape.
At the time of the robbery Council's assistant, Harry Short, was in another part of the car barn, and the robber, who wore a short mask across the upper part of his face, entered the office. Pointing a gun at the clerk, he commanded him to "open that safe and hand out the money."
The clerk heitelted, but when he was threatened with death complied, and the man, who was evidently left-handed, because he handled the gun with his left hand, ran from the office with his loot.
No trace of the man could be found, although within three minutes after he left the car barn employees were summoned and notice was sent to the police station.
An automobile was heard moving on Delaware avenue westward about this time, and it is supposed the man left in this machine.
Coatesville Y. M. C. A. Burns.
William F. Haveneyer, who was a member of Havemeyer Brothers, sugar refiner, at the time that concern was absorbed by the American Sugar Refining Company twenty-five years ago, was found dead in bed in 11 East Forty-fifth street, New York, in the apartments of his son-in-law, William R. Willcox, former chairman of the public service commission, with whom he lived.
Convicted of Killing Wife
Frank F. Schanabel, who was tried before Judge Wagner in Reading, Pa., on the charge of murder, was found guilty in the first degree. Schanabel shot and killed his wife about six months ago.
Motor Killa Editor.
Samuel A. Van Ormer, editor and owner of the Bedford, Pa., Gazettts, was found dead beside his overturned automobile near Schellisburg, nine miles west of Bedford. He was driving alone and the cause of the accident has not been determined.
Babe's Sixth Fingers Cut Off.
When the tenth child was born to
the family of Charles Smith, a section
laborer of Findlay, O., it was found to
have six fingers on each hand. The
extra digits were clipped off by a physician a few hours after birth.
Congressman Wilder Dies.
Representative William Henry Wilder, of the Third Massachusetts district, died at his apartments in Washington after a lingering illness.
Overdose of Drug Kills
Suffering from nervous headache, Monroe Beer, 41yrs. old, a farmer of Little Gap, Pennsylvania, took an overdose of a drug, and died several hours later. Beer was strong and robust and thought he could stand a large dose of the drug.
Female Embalmer.
Van De Vyver College, North 1st St., Richmond, Va
Reopens September 15, 1913.
mankind, or so charge, no matter what your disease, stigma or addiction may be, and restore you to proper health. The thousands of people, the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe will surely that I am one of the most wonderful beasts of all mankind in the world. I see nothing but herbs, or herbs, guarn, balmwood leaves, seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicine. They have come thousands that the most skilled physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and Europe have given up to die, and sold there was no cure for them.
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She is prominent in fraternal organizations, namely: Courts of Calanthe, I. O. of St. Luke, I. O. of G. Samaritans, Household of Ruth, Tents, Sons and Daughters of Richmond, Shepherds of Bellehem and Ideal Benefit Society.
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RESIDENCE: 1015 St. James St.
Phone: Madison 6619.
Van De Colle
North 1st St.
Reopens Sept.
NIGHT SCHOOL—
THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT
Includes Lessons in Spelling, G
THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Offers a thorough training in B
THE DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT
Embraces Sewing, Cutting, Mait
THE AUTOMOBILE DEPARTMENT
Gives Instruction in Driving and
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Embraces Voice Culture, Piano
CLASSES: MONDAY, WEDNES
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For particulars and terms apply
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DAY SCHOOL: DAILY, 9
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The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or heavily blurred document. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image.
Le Vyver
College,
Richmond, Va.
December 15, 1913.
BIX DEPARTMENTS.
T.
Grammar, Arithmetic and Hygiene.
ENT.
Book-keeping and Commercial Law.
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Kinking and Fitting Dresses.
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PREWRITING DEPARTMENT
ation of Stenographer & Typewriter.
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SCHMIDT AND WALTER
Priest and Ammuller and Whig
He Confessed Mattering.
Mana Schmidt an assistant priest at St. Joseph's Cathedral at 68 West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, New York, has confessed murdering and dismembering the body of Anna Annabelle and depositing the parts of the torus in the Hudson river. The girl was a servant in the house of another priest. Mystery surrounding the hiding of parts of the body behind the locked confinement of tub citizenship, but New York officers were successful in finally running down one claw and after loading Schmidt obtained a complete confession from him.
PRIEST ADMITS
KILLING WOMAN
Says He Hacked Body With
a Knife and Saw.
LIVED WITH HER IN FLAT
New York Clergyman Tells How He
Wrapped Up Portions of Body and
Drapped Them in River From Ferry-
boat.
The most growsome murder since the killing of Guldensupps was revealed when Hans Schmidt, a Catholic priest, 32 years old, of New York confessed to the slaying and cutting up of the body of Anna-Amuriel 21 years old, in a flat at 68 Broadhurst avenue, where he was living with her. The plain girl had been employed at the parish home of St. Boniface's church. Forty-seventh street and Second avenue, where Schmidt became acquainted with her some time ago. She disappeared about two weeks ago. She was about to become a mother, and when this was discovered, "she was ordered to leave immediately. She went at once to the priest, who placed her in the suit. His confession clears the mystery of the torso found in the North river a week ago sowed in a pillow case, the identity of which has been a puzzle ever since its discovery.
Schmidt, who lives in the parish house of St. Joseph's church, at 606 West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, with other priests connected with the church, was arrested by Inspector. Fauret and charged with the murder.
He broke down and in a wild frenzy of fear made a complete confession no horrifying in its details that the inspector could only compare it to the ravings of a madman. The young priest told how he had fallen in love with the pretty girl, who had been in this country only three years; how he had rented a flat, and furnished it; how he had previously married the girl with a cormony self-performed, and how finally he had entered the flat at midnight August 31, armed with a new butcher knife.
"Anna was cold, " he cried pacing the floor and wringing his hands. "I enforced satty and she awoke and recruited pea. "Anna, I said, I love you deeply. I am now going to prove it."
he kept aboard the bleeding body
of the three brothers and taking a
sure chance he had purchased
on the basis he presented to de-
velop the hell.
"Fled," she move in his confession. "I
will all her wrims, and having laid them
on, all off her legs close to the
wrist, and in all, I made five bundles
of the hair."
Having out up the body, the shy man was asked with the terrible fear of discovery. He ran about the apartments like a madman trying to think how to get rid of the bloody witness of his death.
All night he considered then he decided definitely on his action. He wrapped the portions of the body in sheets and pillow slips and determined to throw them into the Hudson.
On the following evening he carried the torso from the apartment, carefully wrapped in a pillow slip and waited until he brought the coast was clear before descending the three flights of stairs with the heavy bundle. Having reached the street unseen he made his way to an Eighth avenue car, boarded it, rode to One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, transferred to a crosstown car and proceeded to the Fort Lee ferry.
Standing on the rear end of the boat he waited until it reached midstream, and then, leaning over quietly dropped the bundle into the river. Five distinct times he made the trip from the Broadhurst avenue flat across the Hudson, each time bearing a portion of Miss Aumuller's body, and each time dropping it into the water. Having cleared the apartment of the most damming evidences of his crime, he was still confronted with the blood-stained mattress on which he had killed his victim.
For some time he was puzzled as to how to dispose of this bulky witness against him. Finally he carried it in the dark vacant lot at One Hundred and Forty-fourth street, between Seventh and Eighth avenues, and there it on fire. A portion of this mattress is now in the possession of the police.
German Airships Wrecked; 16 Dead.
Two soldiers were killed and another dirigible Zeppelin balloon narrowly escaped destruction when the great German military airship Z-2 was wrenched from the hands of 150 men and carried aloft by a sudden ust of wind near Berlin.
Torpedo boat destroyers, with their searchlights, remained all night at the scene of Tuesday's airship catastrophe in which only seven of a crew of twenty-one were saved, when the Zeppelin airship L-1 was wrecked by a hurricane in the North sea of Helgoland.
One body was recovered Tuesday night and six more were found Wednesday, including those of Captain Metzing, chief of the naval airship service, and Captain Hanne, commander of the wrecked dirigible.
probably in the cabin of the airship, which lies at the bottom of one of the deepest parts of the North sea. The hurricane, which destroyed the airship turned into a steady gale and it has been impossible to locate the wreck. The L-1 was on a voyage from the mainland to Heligoland, twenty-eight miles. This is the twelfth accident to befall the Zeppelin airships and the first to be accompanied by loss of life. The voyage was apparently without incident until the disaster came, when the L-1 was struck by the hurricane eighteen miles north of Heligoland. The great airship was hurled to the surface of the sea, where she was soon pounded to pieces by the wind and the waves. According to the incomplete reports the big ship floated for about an hour and then buckled in the middle before she sank.
Fifty. thousand dollars, in transit from the Chase National bank, of New York, to the Savannah Bank and Trust company, in Savannah, Ga., was stolen from a portable safe on an Atlantic Coast Line train between Jersey City and Savannah. It should have reached Savannah on Wednesday.
Another package containing $21,900, from New York to banks in Valdosta and Brunswick, Ga., also was robbed on the same train. The seals of the $50,000 package seemed undisturbed when the robbery was discovered.
Express company officials refuse to talk. W. F. McCauley, president of the Savannah Bank and Trust company, confirms the loss of the $50,000 and says it was shipped out from New York Monday on train No. 9 of the Atlantic Coast Line and should have reached Savannah on Wednesday at 6 a.m.
The Southern Express company has hurried detectives to Savannah, W. J. Hockaday, general manager of the company, and a representative of a detective agency from Atlanta, reached Savannah and began work on the case. The name of the express manager was not made known.
Killed For Old Attack on Woman.
Hugh Hera forty years old, of Sayra, Pa., was killed by John Samonski, a shoemaker, of Sayra, Pa., as the result of a confession made by the wife of the man who did the shooting, who said the victim lured her into the woods twenty years ago at Waverly and attacked her.
The confession of the wife after twenty years of silence seemed to turn Samonski into a maniac. Horn was employed as a clerk in a grocery store Mrs. Samonski involved two other men highly respected, in Waverly, with complicity in the crime to ruin her, when she was but a slip of a girl. She is not yet forty years old. Samonski attempted to escape but was caught. He said, "I intended to kill all three of the men, who accomplished my wife's rule."
Painter Falls From Pole to Death.
Evan Williams, a painter, was killed by a fall from the top of a trolley pole at Stington, Pa.
$650,000 PEARL
NECKLACE FOUND
Picked Up in London Street
by Workingman.
A mysterious package found in a
street in London was found to contain
fifty-eight of the fifty-nine pearls com-
posing the $650,000 necklace that dis-
appeared mysteriously last July while
in transit from Paris of London.
Scotland Yard admitted that the pearls have been positively identified as those that made up the costly neck face, but the police would say no more about the matter.
The pearls were found by a workingman on his way from home. He turned them over to the first policeman he saw. Two weeks ago five men were arrested charged with complicity in the theft of the pearl neckface, and in the Bow street police court were remanded without ball for trial. Police detectives continued to work on the case, and it was alleged that evidence was found involving postal employees in the theft.
The costly neckface was assembled by Max Meyer, a Paris jeweler, and he sent it to London in July by registered post. It disappeared en route, the jeweler told the police.
INFERNAL MACHINE FOR OTIS
Explosive Contrivance Sent to Owner of Los Angeles "Times."
An infernal machine, which failed to explode, was sent to General Harrison Gray Otis, owner of the Los Angeles "Times."
The "Times" is the newspaper whose plant was destroyed as part of the dynamiting activities of James B. McNamara and Ortio E. McMmalgal.
The mysterious package was sent through the mail. The package, was about four by five inches. When it was set on end it clicked like an alarm clock. Burgess and Shy, detectives, went to General Otis's home, got the box and took it to police headquarters. A powder expert was sent for and, after an examination of the package, advised that it be taken to the river where is could be opened without damage to any one.
Took Laudanum by Mistake.
Robert Harrington, of Whittings, N.
J., swallowed a dose of laudanum in mistake for a cough mixture, and his family kept him walking for two hours until a stomach pump could be had.
Congresasman Elopes
Captain George Curray, rough rider governor of New Mexico and member of congress, cloped from Washington with Miss Martha Cora Gans, of Un with Miss Martha Cora Gans, of Untown, Pa., to Rockville, Md., where they were married by Rev. Samuel R. White a Baptist minister. Captain Curray is 48 and Miss Gans 21.
Lutherans to Raise $10,000,000.
As a part of the celebration in 1917 of the four hundredth anniversary of the Reformation, the General Council of the Erangelical Lutheran Church in session in Toledo, O., adopted a resolution to raise $2,000,000 for the minister's pension fund and missionary work. The Jubilee Committee of the council will co-operate with other general Lutheran bodies in this country to unite in making a total fund of $10,000,000.
Sticka Head In Flywheel.
Broken in health and tired of life at the age of 63 years, Wallace D. Richardson, stock man in a Bleecker street hat factory in New York stuck his head into a five foot flywheel making 200 revolutions a minute. His body, with the head badly crushed was found near the flywheel shortly afterward. Letters on his person told that he intended to seek death to end his troubles.
Farmer Robbed and Slein.
James Luscomb, supposed to be a well to do farmer of Canaseraga, N. Y., was murdered near the entrance to the yards of the New York Central Railroad in Charlotte near Rochester, N. Y. Robbery was the motive, as Luscombe's pockets were turned inside out. A note for $2,100, payable to Luscombe in one year, was found near the body.
Man Killed By Wife in Pistol Duel. William Evans, a restaurant keeper, thirty-five years old, was killed and his wife was probably fatally wounded in a revolver fight between them in front of a rooming house in Sedalia, Mo. The shooting iscribed to jealousy on the part of Mrs. Evans. Witnesses say she called her husband from the house and fired five shots at him. He fired twice before he fell dead.
GENERAL MARKETS
FOULTRY: Live standy; beans: 16¢
18¢; old roosters; 12¢¢; Dressed sheep; swine; 18¢; old roosters; 12¢¢;
BUTTER firm; fancy creamery;
BOOSE steady; seqluted. 24 @ $3c.;
nearby. $2c.; western. $3c.
Live Stock Markets
CHICAGO-HOOS 15:25:30 lower
hull 15:25:30 light 18:29:30 mixed
mixed 19:29:30 heavy 19:29:30
roof 19:29:30 light 19:29:30
CATTLE stoway to 10c. higher
hull 19:29:30 lower 19:29:30
hull 19:29:30 lower 19:29:30
flooders 19:29:30
calver 19:29:30 11:25:30
BULLFIELD stoway to 10c. higher
hull 19:29:30 lower 19:29:30
hull 19:29:30 lower 19:29:30
flooders 19:29:30
calver 19:29:30 11:25:30
NATIONAL PATRIOTION AGAINST JIM CROW AND COLOR SEGREA TION BY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
Read Obituaries, Sign Your Name and Address and Mail to the Editor of This Paper. Get several names. Return At Once.
PETITION!!
To the President of the United State
House, Washington, D. C.
Sir:
This is to certify that we, the
dignant, that under your administration
by members of your cabinet to so
government by race or color. We
public degradation, and insufferable
establishment of caste in this free
prevent and forbid any such move
with your promise of fair, friendly
your Colored fellow-citizens.
Name ...
Address ...
Name ...
Address ...
Name ...
Address ...
N. B.—By pasting on sheet of
put on, can be used in churches, b
side of sheets only.
Return to THE PLAN
RICHMO
To the President of the United States, Hon. Woodrow Wilson, White House, Washington, D. C.
Sir:
This is to certify that we, the undersigned, are surprised and indignant, that under your administration there should be any rules made by members of your cabinet to segregate employees of the national government by race or color. We protest against this as a plain insult, public degradation, and insufferable injury to Colored Americans, the establishment of cast in this free republic. We petition you to reverse, prevent and forbid any such movement by your bureau chiefs, in accord with your promise of fair, friendly, just and Christian treatment of your Colored fellow-citizens.
N. B.—By pasting on sheet of paper any number of names can be put on, can be used in churches, lodges, societies, etc.—Sign on one side of sheets only.
Return to THE PLANET, 311 N. 4th Street,
RICHMOND, VA.
MAYOR WM. J. GAYNOR
Who Died of Heart Disease on Liner on Way to Europe.
Photo by American Press Association
MAYOR GAYNOR DIES AT SEA
New York Executive Stricken With Heart Disease.
SON SEES FATHER DIE
Fallowing His Re-Nomination by Great Town Meeting of Citizens He Sailed For Europe in Search of Health.
Mayor William J. Gaynor died on the steamer Baltic in mid-ocean at 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, according to a dispatch received in New York from Rufus W. Gaynor, his son. News of his death we received in a message sent by wireless and cable to Robert Adamson, his secretary, by Rufus Gaynor who sailed with his father. The message read as follows: "Father died Wednesday at 1 o'clock due to heart fatigue. Notify mother." Mayor Gaynor sailed from New York a fast falling man on the morning of September 4. An hour before he sailed only one man, his secretary, knew of his plans outside of members of his immediate family.
The Mayor's announced purpose was a brief vacation on the ocean. He felt that the tonic effect of the salt air would restore him to some measure to health. The Baltic was due at Queenstown about 2 A.M. Friday. He expected to call for New York from Liverpool September 18 and to reach New York a week later. Word came from London that Mayor Gaynor's body would be sent to New York on board the Canard Hite steamer Lusitania, which sails from Liverpool on Saturday. The mayr died as the Baltic was nearing the other side. The news of his death was sent by wireless to Crookhaven by Rufus Gaynor and relayed from Crookhaven in New York by cable.
The mayor's secretary received the cablegraph, announcing the Mayor's death, while he was at his House in Brooklyn. Mr. Adamson notified Mrs. Gaynor at the mayor's home.
---
the undersigned, are surprised and instruction there should be any rules made to segregate employees of the national protest against this as a plain insult, male injury to Colored Americans, the republic. We petition you to reverse,iment by your bureau chiefs, in accord by, just and Christian treatment of
If paper any number of names can be lodges, societies, etc.—Sign on one
NET, 311 N. 4th Street,
COND, VA.
At St James, and then endeavored to reach by telephone Ardolph L. Kline, the acting Mayor, who will be New York's chief executive until the inauguration of Mayor Gaynor's successor, to be elected in November. In this he was unsuccessful Mrs. Gaynor, with one of her unmarried daughters is at St James The other two unmarried daughters are at boarding school up the Hudson The mayor's other son is at the mayor's Brooklyn home. The mayor had two married daughters, Mrs. W. Seward Wobb and Mrs. Harry K. Vingut.
Before the mayor saluted his secretary issued a statement denying reports of the mayor's serious illness. The recent attack of the old throat trouble due to the wound inflicted on him on August 9, 1910 by James J. Gallagher just as he was about to leave for his brief vacation in Europe, had entirely disappeared according to Mr. Adamson and the mayor expected to return and enter the campaign with his id time vigor. The mayor himself just before leaving, spoke of his condition as follows:
"I have been nearly four years mayor and have not yet had any vacation. I suppose almost everybody will concede that I have one now. I have been laid up a few days with one of the sharp attacks. I occasionally have from my mishap of a few years ago, but I am now over it, and hope I never shall have another."
Mayor Gaynor's sudden death completely overturns the municipal political situation. It removes from the field a candidate for mayor who was expected to cut heavily into the vote of the fusion nominee, John Purrey Mitchel, and leaves only the tickets nominated by the Democrats and the Fusionists. The former is headed by Edward E. McCall, former chairman of the Public Service Commission of this district.
Mayor Gaynor was placed at the head of the independent ticket after Tammany Hall has refused him a renomination. He was to lead those who opposed the regular Democratic organization and yet were unwilling to join the fusion of Republicans and Progressives. His standard was the shovel, reminding voters of his efforts to hasten the building of the new subways. The Mayor also said it was emblematic of his intention to "clean the graffers out."
Foss Stay Each Other.
State Senator: H. F. Broyles and E. F. Hendricks, a liberman of Selma, Tennessee, killed each other in a fight in Aberdeen, Mississippi, the result of a quarrel of a year's standing over a sale of timber lands. The men met and after a fe wwords Hendricks drew a pistol and shot. As the bullet struck Senator Broyles near the heart, he drove an axe into the head of his assailant.
Wilfred North while taking part in a moving picture drama at Sea Gate N. J. was badly injured by the prema-ture firing of a cannon. He may lose the sight of both eyes.
R. W. Hastings of Boulder, Colorado is living without a stomach. He was operated upon for cancer, had his somach removed and returned home apparently completely cured.
Murdera His Wife's Family.
Edward Baxter, 25 years old, of Memphis, Tennessee, whose wife Jessie Smith Baxter, had left him, went to the home of her father, Henry Smith, and on being told that he could not see his wife, shot and killed Mr. and Mrs. Smith and their son, Oscar Smith, 10 years old.
Mrs. Baxter, who faced death for five minutes, finally escaped from her half crazed husband and ran through the building to the backyard and found refuge with neighbors.
After the killing Baxter reloaded his gun and walked north to the Belt Line Railway tracks. The police began a search for him as soon as they were notified.
HAIR PARLORS.
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in Queensbury
MRS. ROSA H. WATSON invites you to our Hair Parlor, 529 St. James Street. You can be supplied with British Fuchsia, Transformations and Pompadours. Combings made in Brussels and Paris on short notion. Straightening and Shampooing is especially. Straightening Combs, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Grooming and preparations of all kinds for the skin. Phone Number: 5274, 518 ST. JAMES STREET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Virginia Theological Seminary & College
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. Sociology and Social Psychology. ACADEMIC COURSE, which prepares for college, teaching and professional schools.
reliable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is trouble and cost, much more is the mind of a all the polishing that the schools can give it. too good for a promising youth. Who would have a few coins when health is in danger? inferior school to move a few dollars when a the strength of character and of mind for longer apprehension?
MOTOR HALL.
Union University.
Best Higher Education to
RED YOUNG MEN.
COURSE including manual training for those on college subjects.
We broad and complete. Its requirements and one of any college for white youth in the ring of the Carnegie Board.
It has for years been the standard course. Mahow, Greek and all the regular subjects are given here. One hundred students for a different department of the school.
DENOM, its family, equipped minute laboratory men, its able faculty and its full course University to offer colored men aged by the favored of other races. Address the President.
Nothing on earth is so valuable as a Human Mind. If a diamond is worth polishing at great trouble and cost, much more is in the mind of a boy or young man worth all the polishing that the schools can give it. The best education is not too good for a promising youth. Who would choose a poor physician to save a few cents when health is in danger? And who would charge an inferior school to move a few dollars when a better school will increase the strength of character and of mind for life and prepare one for a higher endeavor?
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or heavily pixelated area with no discernible content.
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 standing 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 finely equipped science laboratory, 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.
For further information, address the President,
VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY.
BROOKSBURY, VIRGINIA.
n the Beach
RIGHT on the Beach
THE BAY SHORE HOTEL.
OPEN FROM MAY TO OCTOBER.
The best-summer hotel with the most delightful surroundings.
Situated on Chosapeake 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 parlors, broad plazas 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.
Our patrons will be delighted with "Dear Old Bay Shore" enlarged and beautified.
No restless nights here for the breezes blow while you sleep.
TERMS MODERATE. Address
The Bay Shore Hotel Co.
P. O. Box 364, Hampton, Va.
J. HENRY ROBINSON, M'G'R.
Good trotley care service between the hotel and Hampton, Fortress Monroe and Newport News.
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Dept. D 23 Duane St. New York City
E. Hayes,
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Residence, 725 N. 2nd St.
First-class Backs and Caskets of All Descriptions. I have a. Spurs Room for BODIES when the Family have not a suitable Place. All country Orders are Given Special Attention. Your Special Attention is call ed to the New Style OAK CASKETS Call and see Me and You shall be Waited on Individually. 'Phone: Madison-Str.
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., So. Richmond, Va.
Branch Office, 718 N. 2nd St.
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SUNDAY SCHOOL.
Lesson XII.—Third Quarter, For Sept. 21, 1913.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Ex. xxxii, 15-20; 30-25—Memory Veres, 19, 20—Golden Text, I John v. 21—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearna.
We may summarize Ex. xxx to xxxl, inclusive, as the Lord's instructions to Moses concerning the tabernacle, of which the principal vessel was the ark of the covenant containing the two tables of the law. We cannot think of Israel as a nation without a tabernacle or temple, and when finally restored we shall see a fulfillment of Ezek. xl to xviii.
The reason why of the tabernacle is seen in Ex. xvv. 6. "Let them make me a sanctuary that I may dwell among them," and concerning the temple that is yet to be we read in Ezek. xiii. 7. "Son of man, the place of My throne and the place of the soles of My feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel forever, and My holy name shall the house of Israel no more doff." Compare Rev. xx. 35. The section concerning Moses with God in the mount ends with these words: "And He gave unto Moses when He had made an end of commining with Him upon Mount Sinai two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God" (Ex. xxx. 18).
Today's lesson gives us the sad, sinful, earthly side of the story while Moses was almost entirely six weeks. The people who had seen the love of God to them and His power on their behalf in Egypt, at the Red Sea, in the giving of the mumma and qualls and water from a rock, and had heard His voice out of the mist of the fire, could not live an ordinary, uneventful life for forty days without wondering what had become of God and of Moses, their leader.
If we are special providences, special indications that God is working for us, handfuls of purpose dropped for us (Suth II, 10), manifest tokens of Ils living care, we are ready to sing and praise; but if weeks or months or even days come and go and there is nothing out of the ordinary, do we give Him occasion to say of us, "Lleased are they that have not seen, yet have believed," or "O ye of little faith?" When they came to Aaron with their complaint concerning the absence of Moses and their request for something visible to worship, what a splendid opportunity Aaron had to stand for God to remind them of the command they had just heard out of the midst of the dre—not to bow down to the likeness of anything, to call their attention to the daily manas an evidence of the constant care of Jelovah and to insist that they worship the Lord their God and serve Him only.
It seems as if Joshua would have done so, or a man like Daniel or his friends. How can we account for Aaron's listening to them, asking for their gold earrings, melting them into the form of a calf and deliberately fashioning it with a graving tool? (Verse 40) When Moses rebuked Aaron for his great sin, hear part of his reply: 'Thou knowest the people, that they are set on mischief, for they said unto me, make us gods which shall go before us. * * * I asked for their gold, so they gave it to me; then I cast it into the fire, and there came out this calf' (Verse 24)
But what shall be said of preachers who, to please the people and keep their position, either keep back the truth or teach what is not truth? All who stand before others as leaders should remember Gal. 1. 10; I Thess. 11. 4.
Notice how Moses stood with God in his showing them by a most striking object lesson how they had broken the law, in his grinding the calf to powder and making them drink it, in his call for those on the Lord's side to stay even their own kindred if guilty of worshiping the idol. The response of Levi is referred to in Mat. 11. 5-7, some of the words being "the fear wherewith he beared Me and was afraid before My name; * * * He walked with Me in peace and equity and did turn many away from iniquity."
Their faithfulness that day is referred to by Moses in these words: "Who said unto his father and to his mother, I have not seen him; neither did he acknowledge his brethren nor knew his own children" (Deut. xxill. 9). This is part of what it means to be on the Lord's side, not simply giving a testimony in meeting, but standing against our greatest ones if they stand against God, even as our Lord said, "He that loveth father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me, and he that loveth son or daughter more than He is not worthy of Me" (Chap. 3, 57-58).
Consider the pleading of Moses with the Lord before he came down from the desert; for there the Lord told him of Israel's sin and how they had
Affirmed themselves and turned made quietly out of the way (verse 7-14). Counselor also his request to be blotted out of God's book rather than not have Israel forgiven (verse 31. 32). God think of the Lord Jesus being actually made sin for us.
FASHION HINT
By JUDIC CHOLLET
The design shown is particularly good for use on a sofa pillow top or for a small table cover. The embroidery may be done in outline stitch, chain stitch or in the long and short stitch, or the design may be braided with fine suture braid.
To outline take short stitches, keeping the needle toward the right, and
FOR PILLOW OR TABLE COVER
work upward. Chain stitch is a form
of outline stitch and resembles the
stitch made by a single thread machine
if done evenly.
First fasten the thread on the wrong side and then take a straight stitch on the stumped line, throw the thread around the needle, pull it all the way through, thus making a loop. Put the needle through on the wrong side again as near as possible to the spot where it was brought up, make the second stitch like the first one and outline in the same way.
For the long and short stitch take short, irregular stitches close together, working alantwise from the center toward the outer edges of the pattern. No padding is required.
To apply the soutache braid make an incision in the goods at some point of the pattern, insert the end of the braid, fastening it on the wrong side; then follow the design, turning the curves carefully, and saw by machine either in the center or on the edge of the braid, but avoid cutting more than is necessary.
This May Manton embroidery design
comes in one size only. Send 10 cents to
this office, giving number, 220, and it will
be promptly forwarded to you by mail.
If in haste send an additional two cent
stamp for letter postage. When ordering
use coupon.
No..... Size.....
Name.....
Address....
FASHION HINT
By JUDIC CHOLLET
The important features of the fall fashions are all shown in this bodice—the pretty girdle, the soft, semi-draped effect, the open neck and the medical frill. In the cut two materials are combined, plains and figured, but it is smart
1
THE LAST IDEA IN BLOOMS.
when made entirely of one fabric.
Fashion is generous in the matter of sleeves.
For the medium size the bodice will require one and seven-eighths yards of material twenty-seven inches wide, with seven-eighths for the trimming, one and a half yards of lace four inches wide for the neck frill, one yard of lace for the sleeve frill.
This May Manton pattern is cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure. Bent 38 cents to this office, giving number, T&L, and it will be promptly forwarded to you in its master's addition. Two cent stamp for letter postage. When ordering use coupon.
M
She--Yes. I've been thinking of taking another dollar off the cook's wages. Chicago News.
The Living Cook.
The Old Hand—This'll give you an idea of wot things is comin' to. Why, a few years ago a tin like this would 'ave ad a couple of sardines in; prapa three.—Punch.
Finding Out.
"This is your first experience in farming?"
"You."
"What did you plant first?"
"Money," replied the novice feelingly.
Egbert-Lath evening Marion treat ed me very thweetly. Waille—with the chocolate I bought the night before—Chicago Newa.
The Costume Ball Mania.
How Mr. and Mrs. Stoney Browse rang the changes on a n-gut-dr-as and suit of p-j-m-a.
So He Did.
He--What do you consider the best way to propose?
She--Promptly--Brooklyn Citizen
Hoge Like Greens
A box is a box, with queer ways and stuttiency, but he will never refuse green food nor fall to pay for it. Have the green food near the yard, so that it will, be no trouble to throw it over every day if you do not expect to turn his piggin into the field.
A Copy of Supreme Keeper of Records & Seal C. K. Robinson's Timely Report:
To the Officers and Representatives to the Sixteenth Blennial Session to be held at Baltimore, Maryland, August 25th to 30th, '13. Greeting:
St. Louis, Mo., July, 1913.
Dear Sir and Brother—As the time approaches for the next Supreme Lodge Session, I feel that the representatives and officers should know our true financial condition, in order that they may think and plan for the betterment of those conditions. The very short time allowed at the Supreme Lodge Session for the consideration of vastly important questions, is not sufficient to permit the members to become thoroughly familiar with conditions as they really exist. At this time I feel it highly important to lay these matters before you, believing as I do that the hearts of the majority of our members are true to the principles of our great institution.
Mr Sir and Brother—As the time appro-
sure Lodge Session, I feel that the representa-
tors show our true financial condition, in ord-
nance plan for the betterment of those con-
duces allowed at the Supreme Lodge Session,
most important questions, is not sufficient
to become thoroughly familiar with con-
st. At this time I feel it highly import-
before you, believing as I do that the heart-
members are true to the principles of our
all the years that I, by your trust and
as S. K. of R. and S., the desire nearest
our beloved Order established on a firm
this end, the records will show that I have
our attention to much needed reforms in
of the funds, but as stated above, the
to carefully consider my suggestions and
as caused the representatives to look
oubt has brought about the present crisis
the face of the record of my frequent ten-
of our financial system; as well as to add
no honest member of the Order will do
notives.
the time approaches for the
that the representatives and
condition. in order that the
cost of those conditions. The
Time Lodge Session for the con-
cous, is not sufficient to per-
familiar with conditions and
it highly important to la-
do that the hearts of the m
principles of our great instr-
by your trust and confidence
to desire nearest my heart
hished on a firm financial bas
will show that I have time and
needed reforms in the handi-
stated above, the shortness
my suggestions and investiga-
tives to look lightly upon
the present crisis.
of my frequent efforts to ra-
ks well as to add to our so-
the Order will dare accuse
During all the years that I, by your trust and confidence, have served as S. K. of R. S., the desire nearest my heart has been to see our beloved Order established on a firm financial basis, and to attain this end, the records will show that I have time and again called your attention to much needed reforms in the handling and disburring of the funds, but as stated above, the shortness of time in which to carefully consider my suggestions and investigate conditions has caused the representatives to look lightly upon them and no doubt has brought about the present crisis.
In the face of the record of my frequent efforts to raise the standard of our financial system, as well as to add to our source of revenue, no honest member of the Order will dare accuse me of impure motives.
CAREFULLY STUDY.
corely trust that you will take the time to
pass given in the following statement before
one, in order that you may be fully faxed
annual report submitted to the Supreme
d. in 1911. I presented to you a very c
showing your general expenses; salaries
6.00 for the term of two years ending A
following table which will be found on
notes shows the amount of salaries paid
at funds they are payable:
Files of Officers. Out of What Fund.
S. L. Fund. U
per term $5,000 $1,250
C. per term 2,400 600
& S. per term 3,000 1,500
Ex. per term 600 600
per term 1,200
per term 3,000 2,000
Totals. $15,200 $5,950
above table shows the proper divisions
and expenses of officers as recommended
and adopted by the Supreme Lodge at
will take the time to carefully
ing statement before discuss
may be fully familiar with
t to the Supreme Lodge at the
to you a very carefully pr
expenses; salaries alone amo
two year ending August, 191
will be found on page 146
t of salaries paid to officer
:
Out of What Fund Payable
S. L. Fund. U. R. En.
000 $1,250
000 600
000 1,500
000 600
000
000 2,000 1,000
000 $5,950 $1,000
proper divisions of expense
as recommended by the F
Supreme Lodge at Kansas C
I sincerely trust that you will take the time to carefully study the figures given in the following statement before discussing it with any one, in order that you may be fully familiar with them. In my biennial report submitted to the Supreme Lodge at Indianapolis, Ind., in 1911, I presented to you a very carefully prepared statement showing your general expenses; salaries alone amounting to $15,200.00 for the term of two years ending August, 1911.
The following table which will be found on page 146 of the 1911 minutes shows the amount of salaries paid to officers, and out of what funds they are payable:
Salaries of Officers Out of What Fund Payable.
S. L. Fund. U. R. En. Fund.
S. C. per term $5,000 $1,250 $3,750
Clerk—S. C. per term 2,400 600 1,800
S. K. of R. & S. per term 3,000 1,500 1,500
S. M. of Ex. per term 600 600
Sup. Atty. per term 1,200 1,200
Maj. Genl. per term 3,000 2,000 1,000
Totals. $15,200 $5,950 $1,000 $8,250
The above table shows the proper divisions of expenses for salaries and expenses of officers as recommended by the Finance Committee and adopted by the Supreme Lodge at Kansas City in 1909.
FURTHER EXPLANATION.
According to your law, is payable
000.00 out of the Uniform
Endowment fund. The fore-
nial expenses for office rent,
of officers, etc., which for
19 to be paid from the Sup-
reme Lodge fund to
which left your Supreme L
$13,203.39
8,272.02
$4,931.27
Department should be set
department now equal if not
see Major General's report.
Lodge should be burdened
other expenses of that depart-
$5,950.00 of this amount, according to your law, is payable out of the Supreme Lodge fund, $1,000.00 out of the Uniform Rank fund, and $8,250.00 out of the Endowment fund. The foregoing amounts do not include the general expenses for office rent, printing, stationery, traveling expenses of officers, etc., which for the last term amounted to $13,203.39 to be paid from the Supreme Lodge fund. The receipts for the Supreme Lodge fund to July 31, 1911 amounted to $5,272.02, which left your Supreme Lodge treasury as follows:
Disbursements $13,203.39
Collections 8,272.02
Deficit in S. L. Revenue $4,931.27
I believe that Uniform Rank Department should be self-sustaining. The Receipts in that department now equal if not surpass the Supreme Lodge receipts, see Major General's report. And there is no reason why the Supreme Lodge should be burdened with paying the salary and carrying other expenses of that department.
THE ENDOWMENT DEPARTMENT
disbursements and collections of the Endowment Supreme Lodge, were as follows:
Endowment expense disbursed.....$26,9
Endowment collected.....14,5
Difficit in Endowment Revenue.....$12,4
the total deficit as follows:
Difficit in Supreme Lodge.....$ 4,2
Difficit in Endowment.....12,4
Total Deficit in both.....$17,3
Innormous deficit was met by the Emergent Trust permit the expenditure of more than a month fund collected annually for operation, you will observe for the last term we cause incurred against that department with:
General expenses.....$ 2,8
Salaries.....8,1
Intent.....3
Legal expense.....$11,2
Math claims.....15,6
Total.....$26,9
Is no emergency fund now from which the 000 was loaned out of the Pythian Temple term.
ations of the Endowment Dollars follows:
Cursed ..... $26,981.00
..... 14,560.00
Revenue ..... $12,431.00
Raised ..... $4,936.00
..... 12,431.00
Received ..... $17,367.00
It by the Emergency fund.
There of more than 25 per cent.
annually for operating expense
for the last term was $14,550.
What department was
..... $2,807.81
..... 8,181.00
..... 337.50
..... 5.00
..... $11,231.31
..... 15,650.00
..... $26,981.31
Now from which the deficiency
the Pyrian Temple fund for
CRISIS.
Now of the conditions which
we are to meet the crisis. The
law the impending danger,
remedy after remedy, all of which
to offer as to the action of
solemn duty to again call
on your treasury at this time.
The supreme Lodge have not been
a secession convene at Baltimore
that can only be met by
expenses.
We have been forced to protest again
remains for the Representatives
their very best wisdom in all
as the question of
fining our finances, either
saving our revenue by wishing
several departments of
fining. There is no other order
that is successfully operated
by our Supreme Lodge.
Informers should be a sufferer.
The disbursements and collections of the Endowment Department of the Supreme Lodge, were as follows:
Endowment expense disbursed.....$26,981.00
Endowment collected.....14,550.00
Deficit in Endowment Revenue.....$12,431.00
This left the total deficit as follows:
Deficit in Supreme Lodge.....$4,936.00
Deficit in Endowment.....12,431.00
Total Deficit in both.....$17,367.00
This enormous deficit was met by the Emergency fund. The law does not permit the expenditure of more than 25 per cent of the Endowment fund collected annually for operating expenses; your collection, you will observe for the last term was $14,550.00, yet the expense incurred against that department was
General expenses ..... $ 2,807.81
Salaries ..... 8,181.00
Rent ..... 337.50
Legal expense ..... 5.00
$11,231.31
Death claims ..... 15,650.00
Total ..... $26,981.31
There is no emergency fund now from which the deficiency can be met. $6000 was loaned out of the Pythian Temple fund for this purpose this term.
FACING A CRISIS.
At the last session I warned you of the conditions which confronted you, and urged you to prepare to meet the crisis. The conservative men of the convention saw the impending danger, and sought to correct it by presenting remedy after remedy, all of which efforts failed. I have no criticism to offer as to the action of the majority at that time but I feel it my solemn duty to again call your attention to the deplorable condition of your treasury at this time. The salaries of the officers of the supreme Lodge have not been paid since September 1912, and when the session convenes at Baltimore, you will find an enormous deficit, that can only be met by wise legislation, and proper regulation of expenses.
Already be Grand Lodge has been forced to protest against what it terms unjust taxation, and it remains for the Representatives at the Baltimore session to exercise their very best wisdom in dealing with this question as well as the question of adjusting the manner of handling our finances, either by reducing our expenses or increasing our revenue by wise legislation, in order that the several departments of the Supreme Lodge may be self-sustaining. There is no other organization in this broad country today that is successfully operating upon the loose financial methods used by our Supreme Lodge. The recent experience of the True Reformers should be a sufficient warning to all.
ORDER TAXED AND OVER-TAXED
er has been taxed and over-taxed, until the ship has almost reached the breaking point to page 293 of the minutes of the following resolutions presented by the D. G. C. of Michigan to be acted upon by Baltimore station this year. "Paragraph 40. To provide a revenue for the Supreme Court on each member of the Order, and charged by it, and taxes from Subordinate and Jurisdiction."
10, to be amended to read as follows: "We small pay to the Supreme Lodge, by and Subordinate Lodges thereof, a tax not to be paid and each Ground and Subordinate Lodge same as may be found in the by-laws of all work or supplies no ordered must be paid in a date of delivery."
THAT PROPOSED AMENDMENT
over-taxed, until the patience
of the breaking point, and I
minutes of the 1911会议
was presented by Sir Francis
be acted upon by the Super-
year. "Paragraph 6, of Art-
tuee for the Supreme Lodge,
the Order, and charges for a
from Subordinate Lodges, an-
and as follows: "Each mem-
mee Lodge, by and through
a tax not to exceed 10 c
subordinate Lodge shall pay
in the by-laws of the Supreme
ordered must be paid for whi
The Order has been taxed and over-taxed, until the patience of the membership has almost reached the breaking point, and I call your attention to page 293 of the minutes of the 1911 session, which bears the following resolutions presented by Sir Francis H. Warren, D. D. S. C. of Michigan to be acted upon by the Supreme Lodge at the Baltimore session this year. "Paragraph 6, of Article 1, to be amended. To provide a revenue for the Supreme Lodge by means of a tax on each member of the Order, and charges for supplies furnished by it, and taxes from Subordinate Lodges, under its immediate jurisdiction."
Article 10, to be amended to read as follows: "Each member of the Order shall pay to the Supreme Lodge, by and through the Grand and Subordinate Lodges thereof, a tax not to exceed 10 cents per annum, and each Grand and Subordinate Lodge shall pay for supplies such as may be fixed in the by-laws of the Supreme Lodge, and all work or supplies no ordered must be paid for when ordered, or in time of delivery."
The above resolution proposes to amend your Supreme Constitution, and seeks to relieve our financial stress and drive to this
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Supreme Lodge its proper authority to receive Per Capita tax upon the membership.
If this collection prevails there will be no further need of extra taxations. It will produce a revenue of about $15,000 annually that with the sale of supplies and the control of a retail and printing plant, with proper regulations, will place the Supreme Lodge on a sound financial footing. Article X of the original laws as adopted, amended and published in 1880 in 1886 read as follows: "Each Grand Lodge shall pay to the Supreme Lodge the sum of $125 annually for each representative to which they are entitled, etc. and to make annual returns to the Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal with same." The collection of $25.00 biennially, is inadequate and there should either be an increase in representative tax or a new law enacted creating a per capita tax upon the membership as outlined in the foregoing paragraph.
Since I have been your Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, I have built up a splendid revenue from the supply department, and made several efforts to direct your attention to the adaptability of operating a National Supply and Regalia House, and I again urge here there is no good reason why certain officers should be operating Regalia Houses for their personal benefit when the Order needs the revenues from sales for its maintenance; that if you are not in a position to start a plant equipped and owned by the Supreme Lodge, you should at least control the sales of supplies and regalia to Grand Lodges and members of the Order, through the office of the Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, in order that the Supreme Lodge may receive its just portion of the revenue derived from its influence and membership, by private concerns, as is the case at present.
FINANCIAL SYSTEM SHOULD BE ALTERED
There should be some after
largest amount of revenue com-
the Endowment fund, and if the
handling this fund as at present
will, it is certainly not good busi-
his own Finance Committee to
not independent, and subject to
of course, unit them to render
service. This is a burning issue
Officers came to the last sessio-
books and vouchers missing, as
a failure to make proper reports
Committee, overlooking all these
losing time attempting to find
the Supreme Keeper of Records
forced to admit were properly
previously shown.
If the Supreme Lodge owes
which to pay it, and it was pa-
money came from to pay it with
as a man and honored officer o
and shall continue to perform n
wisdom to see the right.
he should be some alteration in your financial syst-
mount of revenue coming into the organization in-
ment fund, and if the Supreme Chancellor is to-
this fund as at present, collecting and paying the
certainly not good business sense to permit him to
finance Committee to audit his own accounts, an
indent, and subject to removal by him at any time
umit them to render the Supreme Lodge honest.
This is a burning issue and ought to be remedied
some time to the last session without reports, some w
vouchers missing, acknowledging their careless
make proper reports for two years, while the
overlooking all these flagrant violations of the
attempting to find flaws in the books and ac-
the Keeper of Records and Seal, which after all, a
admit were properly kept, as examination by ex-
shown.
Supreme Lodge owed $13,000 and had only $8
pay it, and it was paid, my books must show
me from to pay it with, if I am to live up to my
and honored officer of the order. I refuse to o
continue to perform my duties fearlessly as God
see the right.
There should be some alteration in your financial system. The largest amount of revenue comes into the organization is through the Endowment fund, and if the Supreme Chancellor is to continue handling this fund as at present, collecting and paying them out at will, it is certainly not good business sense to permit him to appoint his own Finance Committee to audit his own accounts, as they are not independent, and subject to removal by him at any time, which of course, unfit them to render the Supreme Lodge honest, efficient service. This is a burning issue and ought to be remedied at once. Officers came to the last session without reports, some with their books and vouchers missing, acknowledging their carelessness and failure to make proper reports for two years, while the Finance Committee, overlooking all these fragrant violations of the law, were losing time attempting to find flaws in the books and accounts of the Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal, which after all, they were forced to admit were properly kept, as examination by experts had previously shown.
If the Supreme Lodge owed $13,000 and had only $8,000 with which to pay it, and it was paid, my books must show where the money came from to pay it with, if I am to live up to my obligations as a man and honored officer of the order. I refuse to conceal it and shall continue to perform my duties fearlessly as God gives me wisdom to see the right.
SHOULD BE FREE TO ACT
If your Finance Committee could not possibly exist and you a position to enforce the law and mittee whose duty it is to rigidly the expenditures without fear or in the Officers and The Supreme believe the above suggestions if laws to meet the present demand. With the facts I have plain rise to the full stature of your and assist in taking such steps beloved organization, and thus their interests to say: "I shall
or Finance Committee was free to act, the above can possibly exist and your Supreme Chancellor would to enforce the law and the recommendations of the duty it is to rigidly examine the books and documents without fear or favor to any one, then customers and The Supreme Lodge would soon be rested above suggestions if approved will sufficiently meet the present demands.
The facts I have plainly put before you, I trust full stature of your manhood at the Baltimore in taking such steps as will secure the future organization, and thus enable those who trust me to say: "I shall not fear."
If your Finance Committee was free to act, the above conditions could not possibly exist and your Supreme Chancellor would be in a position to enforce the law and the recommendations of the Committee whose duty it is to rigidly examine the books and determine the expenditures without fear or favor to any one, then confidence in the Officers and The Supreme Lodge would soon be restored. I believe the above suggestions if approved will sufficiently amend our laws to meet the present demands.
With the facts I have plainly put before you, I trust you will rise to the full stature of your manhood at the Baltimore session, and assist in taking such steps as will secure the future of our beloved organization, and thus enable those who trust you with their interests to say: "I shall not fear."
He holds no parley with unmanly fears,
Where duty bids, he confidently steers;
Faces a thousand dangers at her call,
And, trusting in his God surmounts them all.
Photo copyright by American Press
MAYOR GAYNOR
Yours in F. C. & B..
C. K. ROBINSON, S. K. of I.
ht by American Press Association.
MAYOR GAYNOR, AND HIS COW.
Yours in F. C. & B..
C. K. ROBINSON, S. K. of R. & 6.
Photo copyright by American Press Association.
Advice to Lady Gardeners.
Make up your beds early in the morning, now buttons on your husband's clothes, do not rake up any grievances, protect the young and tender branches of your family, plant a smile of good temper on your face, carefully rose out all angry feelings, and you may expect a good crop of happiness.—Exchange.
---
ation in your financial system. The law into the organization is through the Supreme Chancellor is to continue collecting and paying them out at a sense sense to permit him to appoint audit his own accounts, as they are removal by him at any time, which the Supreme Lodge honest, efficient and ought to be remedied at once without reports, some with their knowledgeing their carelessness and for two years, while the Finance Magrant violations of the law, were laws in the books and accounts of and Seal, which after all, they were kept, as examination by experts had $13,090 and had only $8,000 withd. my books must show where the if I am to live up to my obligations of the order. I refuse to conceal it my duties fearlessly as God gives me
was free to act, the above conditions or Supreme Chancellor would be in the recommendations of the Com- examine the books and determine favor to any one, then confidence Lodge would soon be restored. I approved will sufficiently amend our is. I put before you, I trust you will manhood at the Baltimore session, as will secure the future of our enable those who trust you with not fear."
association.
AND HIS COW.
One of the briefer and less
wills on record is that of an old
western farmer who, though repoused to
be rich, died penalty. His will read:
"In the name of God, amen. Thou
only one thing I leave—I leave the
earth. Myrentous have always waged
that. They can have it."—Broadhill
Transcript.
HIGH GRADE JOB WORK
In Fact Printing of All Kinds Executed Promptly.
THE PLANET is the Leading Journal in the Country
---
We Do Linotype Work for the Trade.
We print CALENDARS. Our prices are as low as is consistent with First Class Work. We furnish Invitations for Balls, Weddings and Special Entertainments.
We have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Writings, Manilla Paper, Envelopes. Card Board, Wedding Stock. in fact, Everything in the Printing Line.
After Dining at Hotel Gotham, New York, With His Son and Daughter In-Law, He Had Retired to His Home in His Usual Health.
William F. Havemeyer, who was a member of Havemeyer Brothers, sugar refiner, at the time that concern was absorbed by the American Sugar Refining Company twenty-five years ago, was found dead in bed at 11 East Forty-fifth street, New York, in the apartments of his son-in-law, William R. Willcox, former chairman of the public service commission with whom he lived.
Death was ascribed to angina pectoris. Mr. Havenmeyer had enjoyed comparatively good health, and his sudden taking away was a great shock to the members of his family and his friends. Mr. Havenmeyer was a son of Mayor William F. Havenmeyer, of New York. He dined at the Hotel Gotham on Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Havenmeyer, his son and daughter-in-law, and with Mrs.: John J. Hershak, the latter's mother. He returned home at 9 o'clock.
After retiring to his room he called in Arthur Clinton, a negro butler, who has been employed by the family for thirty years, and complained of a pain in the chest. He supported that a suspicious plaster might give him relief, and the butler helped him put one on. Then he went to bed.
As I clock in the morning the butler went to Mr. Havenmayer's room and stepped in the door. There was no response. He again knocked at 4 o'clock, and hearing nothing decided that Mr. Havenmayer was sleeping.
and also o'clock in the morning Mr. Thompson, who was at her summer home in Mount Valley, telephoned the butler and asked how her father was footed. The butler hurried to Mr. Havemore room, where he found Mr. Thompson dead in his bed.
York on March 31, 1850. He was marrier in 1877 to Mrs. Josephine L Harmon, a daughter of Alexander Harmon, of New York. Mrs. Havemeyer died fourteen years ago.
Mr. Havemeyer engaged in business of refining sugar with his brothers as a young man, but had no connection with that industry after his firm passed into the control of the American Sugar Refining Company. The Havemeyers now connected with that company are Mr. Havemeyer's cousins.
"Corpse" Comes to Among Mourners Laid out for burial and ready for the undertaker. "Aunt" Harriet Law, an aged colored woman of George town, Del., astonished her family by rising from her bed and demanding to know what the trouble was.
Undertaker John Carey, who was ready to embalm the woman, was compelled to postpone his work, and it was not until late at night that the colored woman died.
"Aunt" Harriet was supposed to have died Saturday night, and the family "lald her out" and then sent for the undertaker. He had arrived with his embalming tools and was getting ready to go to work while several white persons who had known "Aunt" Harriet had come to the house.
The visitors had entered the death chamber, ushered in by the weeping colored people, when a gust of wind blew the door to with a slam. Before their astonished eyes "Aunt" Harriet suddenly rolled her eyes, turned her head over and then sat straight up or the bed on which she had been prepared for embalming. The colored folks ran. Medical aid was summoned and the old woman was kept alive until later, when physicians proounced her dead beyond doubt.
Woodrow Not "Nice" Name.
The name "Woodrow" will not grace the map of the state of Illinois
The name "Woodrow" will not grace the map of the state of Illinois. Women of Villa Park and Springroad two suburban communities twenty miles from Chicago, voted down a proposition to unite the two suburbs into a village bearing the first name of the president.
The official canvass showed that "Woodrow" was defeated 139 to 76. Ninety-two women went to the polls and voted almost solidly against the proposition.
"I am a great admirer of the president," said Mrs. John R. Stevens, of Villa Park, "but Woodrow isn't a suit able name for a town. Woodrow makes one think of a lumber yard Villa Park is a list protruer."
Boy Born to Rentburgan.
The Duchess of Rentburg, who was Miss May Goetel, of Newport, bequeat her marriages, has given birth to a son in London. The baby was born at the London residence of the Bishops' Hospital.
Bill-Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Envelopes, Business & Visiting Cards, Policies, Medical Blanks, Insurance Blanks, Financial Cards, Lodge Books, Labels, Checks, Check Books, Minutes, Pamphlets, Whole Sheet Handbills, Placards.
We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection.
youngster and that the mother is doing nicely.
The child born will become the ninth duke of the line. The title dates from 1707, although the earldom ranks from 1616 and the barony from 1600.
May Goelet was twenty-five years old when she married the duke at St. Thomas' Church in New York Nov. 10, 1905. She had passed eighteen of her twenty-five years in Europe.
The birth of an heir to the dukedom has caused widespread joy in the border county, where the family wields immense influence. Bonfires will blaze from the hilltops, ad all kinds of festivities are being prepared by the people of Haddingtonshire.
Sits on Trunk; Solves Theft
After an hour's search for the thief who had entered the residence of Chauncey F. Black, near York, Pa., and broken open a safe, Chester E. Glatfelter, twenty years of age, was found hiding in a trunk in the attic. He was committed to the York county prison. Glatfelter, who was married about five weeks ago, had jimmied his way into the house and taken a number of articles of value. He was interrupted by members of the household, who returned unexpectedly. Search was about to be anbandoned when Mr. Black sat down upon the trunk. Frantic for lack of air, the hidden youth was forced into making a noise which led to his detection.
Death of Rev. S. T. Leopold
Relatives in Allentown have received a telegram announcing the sudden death of the Rev. Sylvester T. Leopold, aged sixty-two years of Lebanon, Pa., in Omaha, Neb., where he was visiting his only child, the wife of Captain F. G. Stritzinger, U. S. A. He was a clergyman of the Evangelical Association, was ordained in 1876 and served charges in Bethlehem, Norristown, Tamaqua, Mahoney City, Allentown and Lebanon. He left a widow.
Bends Dead Baby by Mall
Sends Dead Baby by Mail
Officials in the coroner's office in
Philadelphia are trying hard to discover
the person who sent the body of a
newly-born baby by parcel post to
David H. Schuyler, an undertaker.
Inclosed with the body, was a $1
bill and a note which read: "This is
from a poor mother. Please bury this
body and accept the inclosed $1 in
payment for your services."
Places for Thirty-five Days
Wright Keeble, a visitor in San Jose, Cal., from Tennessee, has been asleep for thirty-five days at the home of his uncle, R. P. Keeble, and many doctors have tried to awaken him. Keeble was missed August 1, and after a search he was found sleeping with boards for comfort, between bales of hay on his windows.
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.
"Yes, you told me that," the young man admitted, "but at another time you told me never to become the slave of a habit."
AGENTS FOR THE PLANET.
Walter R. Henry, 19 C Avenue
Hunterville.
John DeBona, 610 Church St.
Thomas E W. Perry, 2 Jones Place.
FARMVILLE, VA.
Rev. R. G. Adams, 318 South St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
A. D. Hayes, 3640 State St.
R. M. Harvey, 3924 State Street.
W. Gaughan, 2626 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.
RALIGH. N. C.
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LONG DISTANCE WORK, MADISON—400.
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THAW LAWYERS OBTAIN DELAY
Has U. S. Habeas Corpus Writ to Fall Back On.
Attorneys are Granted Delay and Judge Says There is no Law by Which Thaw Can be Extradited.
Littleton, N. H., Sept. 17.—Judge Aldrich, sitting in the United States District Court, here, granted a suspension of the Federal writ of habeas corpus procured by attorneys for Harry K. Thaw, fugitive slayer of Stanford White, on the plea of Thaw's counsel. The decision was made despite vigorous opposition by William Travers Jerome, special attorney for the State of New York.
In an open discussion with Jerome after announcing the suspension of the hearing, Judge Aldrich said that search of the statutes had failed to reveal to him any law under which a man in Thaw's position, a lunatic charged with a crime, could be extradited.
The action of Judge Aldrich is a notable victory for the able lawyers directing Thaw's fight against return to Matthewan, whence he escaped on the morning of August 16. The victory lies in the fact that Governor Felker is to hear arguments in Concord next Tuesday by counsel for and against the extradition of Thaw, and, should he decide to sign the extradition papers, Thaw's lawyer may, under the writ of habeas corpus have the extradition held up. This will delay the matter for some time, and possibly will result, in Thaw's freedom.
The first argument in the case was made by William Shurtleff, for Thaw who pointed out that the extradition hearing in the Thaw case was to be held in the near future, and asked that the habeas corpus hearing be postponed. Jerome objected.
"There is no Federal issue involved here," he said. "I feel constrained to say that this writ has been obtained under circumstances which approach very near trifling with the court."
Here he introduced an avidfairy by Lindsay Dennism, a newspaper writer setting forth that Thaw's counsel had told him that the writ had been obtained, not to bring about the fugitive's freedom now but to safeguard him, in the future against sudden removal should extradition be granted.
"This writ," he concluded, "presents no serious question of law or fact, but was obtained for no other purpose than delay."
George F. Morris, one of Thaw's New Hampshire lawyers, answered Jerome. The application for the writ was entirely regular, he said, while the warrant on, which New York sought to get Thaw was a mere subterfuge.
"It is an honest endeavor on our part to get this matter before the court," he said. "We have had no assurance that Brother Jerome would not take Mr. Thaw at once if the extradition warrant was signed." The court declared that the New Hampshire statutes prevented him from holding a hearing upon the writ while the Governor's extradition inquiry was pending.
"The immediate question," continued the court, "is whether the proceedings shall go on or be suspended. It is the judgment of the court that a suspension would not menace the interests of either side and in view of the fact that the Governor hesitates to proceed with the extradition hearing until the status of this matter is assured, I suspend it. It is not adjourned, but suspended, and I suggest that either side notify me within six days when they are prepared to go on with it."
Thaw sat with his eyes riveted on the court. His lawyers were grinning. He was remanded back to the joint custody of Sheriff Drew, of Coos county, who arrested him after his recent deportation from Canada and United States Marshal Nute.
THIS MAN IS SOME EATER
Railroad Clerk Eats Fifteen Ice Cream
Cones in Twelve Minutes.
Frank Toland, a yard clerk in Har-
lburg for the Pennsylvania Rail-
road Company, bet Harry McIntyre,
another yard clerk that McIntyre
couldn't eat fifteen 5-cent ice
cream cones in fifteen minutes. The
sager was 85.
McIntyre won the bet, and Toland not only had to pay it, but had to pay 75 cents as the price of the delicacy.
Louis Molnham, thirty years old, believed to be the biggest man in the world, died in a Hancock, Mich. hospital after an illness of a few days. He was seven feet eight inches tall and at one tie traveled with a circus. He became tired of that life and escaped to morning.
Use the Telephone
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When you need Job Printing. Just let us know and we will send a man to see you to talk prices and show samples. No job is too big, none is too small for us.
Use the Telephone We Will Do the Rest
Use the Telephone We Will Do the Rest
VACATION WORK AT HAMPTON.
Students Profit by Special Course In Music Under Mrs. Haskley.
Hampton, Va.-The class in oratorio conducted by Mine. E. Azalla Haskley at the Hampton institute for a month the post summer*was a most creditable feature of vacation work at the institute. The oratorio concluded with a demonstration which included a musical "ing of war" between soldiers, officers and prisoners.
There was also a musical "spell down" between the boys and girls on the orations "The Creation" and "The Messiah" Mrs Hackley made six foot charts of the music and master to be taught, which enabled the students to obtain much information with little effort. As the study of arithmetic cultivates habits of thought so the intelligent study of music for the Negro, as well as other races, cultivates abstract mental habits which will control thought and emotion, to say nothing of the employment of the blue hour.
There is no people so completely under the power of music and no people who could be so molded through the power of music as are the Afro-Americans. Mrs. Hackley recommends the study of oratorio especially because the religious character or oratorio music appeals to the masses of our people. They sing this class of music with unrighteous feeling when they have absorbed its beauties and conquered its difficulties. An intellect is put into the construction of good music, so intellect must feel its reception, and to appreciate this music it must be studied intelligently.
In the future Mrs. Hackley will devote her energies and time toward educating the masses of colored people in music. She will have a memorial normal school voice culture institute in Chicago especially to train vocal teachers for the colored schools, and she will hold vocal institutes in various sections of the country.
Nearly the whole of 1912 was given to her musical mission. She instructed nearly 64,000 in her method of voice culture, in one day teaching 8,000 school children lessons in breathing and the elements of voice culture. Even in the rural schools the children grasped every point that she presented, and the teachers report that the lessons will never be forgotten.
Matches.
It takes the constant labor of 60,000 persons to make matches for the world.
HAVE YOUR HOUSE PAINTED.
We will paint your house and wait 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.
1498 Floyd Avenue.
Phone: Moore-6512.
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In order to introduce our Browdy,
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Please mention The PLANET.
BILIPRISOR TU ESPAÑA & MJTOTHAS
For this occasion SOUTHEEN
RAILWAY will sell round trip tickets
from stations on its line within
a radius of 150 miles of Danville,
also from Norfolk, Va. and inter-
mediate stations to Danville. Sepe:
13, 15, 17, 19, 20, 22, 24, 26 and
27, 1913, final limit, three days,
including date of sale.
The Gypsy Smith Meetings will be held under the auspices of the Mineralateral Association of Dansville.
Call on nearest Ticket Agent
SOUTHERN RAILWAY, or write S.
E. BURGESS, D. P. A., Richmond
Va.
VIRGINIA-Ja Vacation:
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD. pq.
To Jacob Sims:
To Jacob Shim.
You'll take notice that I shall on the 23rd day of October, 1913, at the office of Phil B. Sheild, room No. 402. Travellers Insurance Building, situated on the North side of Main street, between (11) Eleventh and (12) Twelfth streets in the City of Richmond, Virginia, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. of that day proceed to take the depositions of Witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit, in Chancery depending in the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond, Virginia, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if from any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded on that day the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been concluded.
By Counsel
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, pd.
Office: 1215 E. Broad Street.
Richmond, Virginia.
In the Clerk's Office of the Law
and Equity Court of the City of
Richmond, the 23th day of August
1913.
Mary Harris.....Plaintiff
vs In Chancery
James Harris (sometimes called
James Parker).....Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain a Divorce, a Vinculo Matrimonii, by the plaintiff from the defendant, upon the ground of Desertion. And an amdavit having been made and filed that due diligence has been used by and on behalf of the plaintiff to ascertain in what County or Corporation the defendant James Harris, (sometimes called James Parker) is without effect, and that the plaintiff does not know his whereabouts; it is ordered that said defendant James Harris (sometimes called James Parker) appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this Order and do what may be necessary to protect his interest herein.
A Copy;
Teste, P. P. WINSTON,
Clerk.
J. HENKY CRUTCHFIELD. pq.
To James Harris, (sometimes called
James Parker).
Youll take notice that I shall on the 30th day of October, 1913, at the office of Phil B. Sheld, room No. 402. Travellers Insurance Building, situated on the North side of Main street, between (11) Eleventh and (12) Twelfth streets in the City of Richmond, Virginia, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clock P. M. of that day proceed to take the depositions of Witnesses to be read as evidence in my behalf in a certain suit depending in the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond, Virginia, wherein you are defendant and I am plaintiff, and if from any cause the taking of the said depositions be not commenced on that day or if commenced be not concluded on that day the taking of the same will be adjourned and continued from day to day or from time to time at the same place and between the same hours until the same shall have been concluded.
J. HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, pq.
Office: 1215 E. Broad Street.
Richmond, Virginia.
NATIONAL CONSERVATION
EXPOSITION.
Knoxville, Tenn., September 1st to
November 1st, 1918.
For this occasion SOUTHERN
RAILWAY offers extremely low
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return. Convenient train service,
Sleeping Carn, Dining Cars.
For fares, reservations and other
information, consult nearest SOUTH
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write S. M. BURGESS, D. P. A.,
Richmond, Va.
Phone, Madison 83. Madison 84.
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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.
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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 Houses are from 9 A.M. to 2 P.M.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President.
THOMAS H. WYATT, Vice-President.
WALTER T. DAVIS, Owner.
THOMAS M. ORUMP, Secretary.
NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & CLAY STS..
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April 28—Missetha M. Robinson, Unity Court, No. 123
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May 24—Bemily Allman, Nardus Court, No. 229
June 11—Lala Lewis, Eion Traveller's Court, No. 96
June 12—Bemily Allman, Nardus Court, No. 229
June 12—Jane Wingfield, Martha's Court, No. 128
July 23—Martha Douglas, Arrie Court, No. 42
July 23—Laura Johnson, Violet Court, No. 182
July 23—Cafeline Clemente, Josephine Court, No. 228
July 29—Bettie Powell, Venus Court, No. 47
July 29—Alice Burrows, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 85
August b—Emily Mosby
August 7—Matilda Jones
August 18—Lola C. Hall
August 23—Susan Dobson
HUMAN HAIR STORE
712 7th St., Washington, D.C.
Established 1856. Oldest Hair Store in the South.
YOU CAN HAVE STRAIGHT HAIR. IF YOU WANT IT.
This $1 sale "Queen" Hairdress mailed to you for $60 in its stamp.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
CORONET BRAIDS—Black or Brown. 36 inches long—made from Real Fine Human Crimp Hair. We pay the postage—Special. $90.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
TRANSFORMATIONS—In Black Only. 15 inches long. Made from Fine Crimp Human Hair that is 18 inches long—Special. $26.
DO YOU KNOW THEM?
Bend in Obligation.
A. B. Johnson, formerly of Mecklenburg county, Va. is appointed to have died at Nantucket. (Obligation, Sunday, August 24, 1858.)
76 years of age and it is desired to know the whereabouts of his children. He had put heard from any of them for many years. He spoke of one of his children as Bita Johnson. He left some property. Good information to J. J. Ross, Newton, Nantucket.
—In writing to the PLANET.