Richmond Planet
Saturday, January 3, 1914
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
VOLUME XXXI. NO. 6
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1914
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
Corner Stone Laying, Va. Theological Seminary and College, Monday, December 15th.
Monday, December 15th, was a notable day in Negro Baptist Church history, and especially in distinctive educational history. The occurrence that made this day notable was the laying of the corner stone of the new dormitory for girls at Virginia Theological Seminary and College.
The weather was simply adapted to the occasion. Our blessed Lord, whose on impatient hand has guided this work during the years of its existence, gave us perfect weather. It was charfurful, soul satisfying and delighting to every friend and well-wisher of Negro education to see the forces of nature compete to add their share of the glory to this splendid, auspicious occasion.
The many friends who gathered on the historic hill from other cities leisurely strolled the beautiful campus, gladly awaiting the hour for the special service. At three o'clock P. M. the Ancient, Free and Accepted Masons, led by the Samaritan Band came in upon the campus with excellent procession.
Hundreds of spectators had gathered to witness the performance by the Masons, ceremonies led by Grand Master Dr. Philip F. Morris, the three lodges of Masons, participating, laid according to their ancient rites, and due form in a most impressive way, the corner stone. The three lodges participating were the Star of the West, Roman Eagle and Lynchburg Lodges, all of the city.
After the ceremonies by the Masons, a programme was rendered as follows: Scripture lesson by Rev. William "Morro," of Roanoke; prayer by Dr. W. T. Anthony. President Woods, in brief words, outlined the efforts and purposes of the administration, concluding introduced Dr. J. H. Burks, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, who in a strong address urged the co-operation of the friends and well-wishers in money raising to meet the financial needs of the new building.
Dr. W. R. Brown. Secretary of Board made the principal address of the evening. It was a great speech of Dr. Brown, which is characteristic of him. He took occasion to compliment the work of the school on its progress and the two Conventions of the State supporting this work on their great work, paying an especial tribute to the women.
Deacon Adolphus Humbles, the financial king, among the Negroes, made a strong, spirited speech, assuring the hearers of his loyalty to the work and further assuring them that the work would be rushed to completion as rapidly as was possible and advisable. Mr. Humbles is Superintendent of construction of the new building and general manager of the school.
Mrs. Eliza P. Fox, president of the Women's Convention, next spoke, stating in well chosen words the work of the women in connection with the new building. More than five hundred dollars were realized during the day for the work.
At night a Mass Meeting was held at Court Street Baptist Church. This meeting was addressed by Dr. A. A. Galvin, President of Virginia Baptist State Convention; Dr. J. C. Austin of Staunton, Dr. W. R. Ashburn, President of State B. Y. P. U. Convention; Dr. J. H. Burks, Dr. Nelson Jordan, Moderator Hassallah Association; Deacon A. Humbles.
All of these addresses were forcible, eloquent and inspiring. 'Among others attending the occasion were Drs. S. A. Mones, W. B. Calloway, R. C. Pannell, W. D. Wooda, J. C. Drake, C. E. Miller, B. Tyrrell, L. R.-W. Johnson, C. D. Henderson, A. O. Bell, C. G. Cabell, L. O. Lowley, Crowds witnessed these services and enthusiasm ran high. One hundred dollars were raised at Court Street Church for the work.
The name of the churches and friends contributing will be published in the next issue. Contributions are still coming in. When this building is complete, it will add greatly to the facilities of Virginia Theological Seminary and College. Its cost will be twenty-five thousand dollars. This money is raised among Negro Baptists who maintain this work at an annual cost of more than twenty thousand dollars.
Rev. Dr. I. L. Thomas To Lecture and French at Anthur M. E.
The Rev. Dr. J. L. Thomas, Field Secretary of the Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the M.E. Church will preach at Asbury Church, Sunday evening and Lecture subject, "Mountains to Climb," Monday, January 5th to benefit said Church. The public is invited to hear him.
Against the Jews
HEBREWS CLAIM DISCRIMINATION.
Protective League Denounces Treatment of Race in State and Country.
(Newark, N. J. Star.)
Strong denunciation of discrimination against the people of the Hebrew race in this State and throughout the country was made by speakers at the meeting of the Hebrew Protective League, at 191 Market Street, last night, and Freeholder Richard E. Mattin even went so far as to suggest that organized effort should be made by all races to offset and break down this discrimination.
Dr. Nathan J. Albert openly stated that the months ago the members of the New Jersey State Board of Medical Examiners refused to honor a certificate from the University of Moscow because the man holding it was of the Jewish faith. The speaker added that the physician was still living in this city and could be found at any time. Continuing, he told of discrimination in the renting of apartments, securing accommodations in hotels, and in many other ways. He also registered a protest against the American Federation of Labor seeking a restriction of the Immigration laws.
Mr. Matta stated that the Jews, Italians and Negroes were the three races most discriminated against and they should organize for their own protection. He also suggested the organization of a commission to meet all trains coming into the city and take care of the immigrants and see that they were not taken advantage of by the usurpulloys.
Other speakers were Louis A. Fask,
Louis Rich, president of the organization;
Benjamin Yawitz, Max A.
Cohen, Morris Meyer and Hyman Davidson, president of the Hebrew Citizens' Union.
St. John's Night Observed
Hosson Lodge, No. 23, A. P. & A. M. celebrated St. John's Night last Friday night, at their Temple on West 12th Street, South Richmond, Va. in fine banquet style. The ladies were handsomely gowned in evening attire while the gents were the usual conventional black and their shining high hats were in great evidence. Mr. Charles Robinson, who acted as master of ceremonies had arranged a short program for the occasion. Among the speakers were Prof. C. L. Wintree, Lawyer J. C. Robinson, Dr. Q. W. Moon and Mrs. Sarah Edwards. All spoke in glowing terms of the nobleness of the oldest organization on earth. On the dining floor two tables had been arranged in the form of a cross and they were heavily adorned with the delicacies of the season. The committee was Messrs. John Holmes, William Lewis, Robert Branch, W. E. L. Smith, W. L. Deane, and Orkin Deane.
Attorney Newsome Secures Commu-
tation.
Attorney J. Thomas Newsome was in the city December 24th and carried home with him from Hon Ben, P. Owen, Jr., private secretary to Gov. William Hodges Mann, the grafting information that Gov. Mann had commited the sentence of death for his client, John Jennings, to imprisonment for life.
Jennings killed a boy, named Willie Taylor and was sentenced to be electrocuted. Lawyer Newsome made a determined fight for the life and he has finally succeeded, thanks to Gov. Mann and the court officers at Newport News, Na.
Housekeeper Wanted.
Wanted. A Housekeeper to take charge of my home, my wife having died. My house is brick and lighted with natural gas. I have horses and pigs. A good home for the right party. Address, REV. C. THOMPSON Roudreau Ontario, Canada.
Church Notice.
Special services at the First Presbyterian Church, corner Catherine and Monroe Streets, Sunday, January 4th. A special sermon will be preached at 11 A.M. by the pastor, Rev. J. E. Harper. Communion services at 4 P.M. Special music. All are invited.
For a NEW YEAR Resolution, let Cephas be your Agent. Property Bought, Sold and Exchanged. Real Collections a Specially.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1914
Not Dead Yet Lives
ROSCOE SIMMONS ALIVE AND WELL IN MEMPHIS.
Rumor of His Death, Started by Chicago Paper, Branded as False
(New York Age)
The report that Roscoe Conkling Simmons formerly of New York, and now a resident of Memphis, is dead proves to be a fabrication of the rankest sort. In response to an inquiry asking for definite information regarding Mr. Simmons The Age received the following telegram denying the canard:
To the Editor of The Age:
Roscoe is not dead, but is very much alive. He just asked me to send Christmas greetings to you. (Signed)
ROBERT R. CHURCH, JR., Memphis, Tenn.
The rumor that Roscoe Conkling Simmons was no more was first put into circulation by the Chicago Defender, a weekly paper, which published the following sensational and misleading article:
"Roscoe Conkling Simmons, the brilliant young journalist and editor of the Memphis Sun, is dead and will be buried on Sunday, December 21, at 3 o'clock, from the Beale Street Baptist Church. It is expected to be the largest funeral service ever held in that city. He is now lying in state at Undertaker Hayes mortuary church. Poor to his ashes."
"When the young editor left Chicago last summer he declared that if he should not return to Chicago within six months he would be dead. He left from Chicago to deliver a dedicatory speech at Mound Bayon Mills, Mound Bayon, Miss. Simmons traveled in the South as a representative of this office. He collected subscriptions and has never turned in a dollar. Seventy-five letters have come to this office stating that money had been given Simmons, but no papers received! Since that time he has founded this Memphis Sun. Let us hope and pray that he will rest calmly in the arms of his Maker here forth and forever."
---
The "Lynching" of Simmons
We are not familiar with the underlying motives, that actuated the Chicago Defender in publishing an article that Rosemey Conkling Simmons was dead, nor are we acquainted with its methods, of receiving and verifying its news. We do know, however, that to circulate a false report of a person's death, even though an enemy, is a rank piece of yellow journalism which out-hears Heart. Newspapers, one and all, should be made to pay the penalty for resorting to such a vicious practice. Fortunately the law gives the injured party the alternative to recover for malicious libel. In this specific case we do not pose as "the brave and fearless champion" of Rosemey Conkling Simmons, whose faults we know as well as his virtues, but our position is that, whether due to malice after thought or downlight carelessness, the practice of lynching in cold type should be stopped. This kind of journalism is most reprehensible.
---
WHITE- Died at his residence, 201 W. Leigh Street, Tuesday, December 30th, at 4:15 A.M., WM, HWITE, in the 73rd year of his age. The deceased was one of our oldest and most respected citizens, and his death will be a great loss to his church and the community. He was a successful merchant and known for his generosity and philanthropy. He was chairman of the Deacon board and Treasurer of the Sunday School of the Second Baptist Church, Director of the Richmond Hospital and member of the St. Lukes and True Reformers. He leaves a widow, sister, brother and a host of relatives and friends to mourn their loss. His funeral took place from the Second Naptal Church Thursday afternoon, 2:30.
For a NEW YEAR Resolution, ice
Cophes be your Agent. Property
Bought, Sold and Exchanged. Rent
Collections, a Specialty.
B. A. CEPHAS, Cor. 2d & Leigh Sta.
Baby Wanted.
Wanted—A Girl Baby, between the ages of 3 and 6, to raise. Light complexion. Send picture of child to JAMES PURNELL, P. O. Box 23, Moylan, Del. Co., Pa.
Jack Johnson
Jack Johnson
DEFEAT WILL COME SOME DAY
But His Conqueror Will not be Acclaimed the Hero He would have been had he. Turned the Trick When Big Black was in his Prime. Some other ring goes.
(Scout, in News-Letter.)
Some day some hard-hitting fighter with the right kind of a wallop in his mitt is going to knock Jack Johnson from the high seat of punishment he has occupied since that Reno flasheo when Jim Jeffries was the receiving end for the big black trihammer-punches that take a sad spectacle of the once formidable builder-puncher. And, whether the new champion he black or white, there will be much rejoicing in ring circles, for Jack Johnson today with standing his cleverness, as a bower is in bad repute with followers of the ring the world over
He is practically an exile from the United States and never again will be allowed to enter the ring in this country. If he ever fights again, it will be in a foreign country. Yes, great will be the rejoicing when Jack Johnson has been dethroned, but the man who succeeds in lifting the crown from the dusky brow of the burly Texan will not be acclaimed the hero he would have been had he turned the trick when Johnson was far from him and Johns today is far from being the king of Johnson, who beat Jim Jeffries into a pulp. Riotous living and the lure of the white lights has sent him well along on the road to the finish, and it will not be long before Jack Johnson will have passed on as master of the ring.
A CHAMPION BY LUCK.
Johnson dashed across horizon when there was first-class fighters. "To whom he defeated in Aby getting a chance to be was never regarded in the Sullivan, Corbett, and Jerries clips when title away from the fratern, and Jerries saw of his former self Johnson in the ring at Johnson became a back, and a champion of the first-class fighting weight division. And state of affairs, fortune him Jack Johnson wring history as one of pugilists the game has despite the fact that I whipped a really formidable
SOME OTHER NEG
And in speaking of the plon it reminds the Johnson is not the first to win fame in the Three colored men have champions—Joe Gans, I and Jack Johnson. Ganson won their titles and by meeting the best time—and those were the we had real fighters.
more than
before that
of his race
and arena
in world's
Jackson
and Jack-
field them
of their
days when
Corrbitt.
Joe Choynski and other.
Peter Jackson was the first black man to win a championship. He was in his prime when John Sullivan held the heavyweight title. John L. Steadfast refused to put Jackson except on the condition that the two he turned loose in a rook, the door locked and the keys thrown away.
Jim Corbett met the Nato and was pretty lucky to gain a dry, after fifty-one rounds of terrific fighting, in which "Gentleman Jim" facial geography was considerably changed by the bullet-headed pug. Jackson also gave Joe Choynski a terrific beating, and the Hebrew was never to be ridiculed.
Joe Gans, the clever boxer, the greatest ring general of all time, held the lightweight champion for six years, finally losing it to Bettling Nelson in 1908, when tether loses had pretty nearly finished the fighter. Gans was rightfully called the master of the ring. He now how to punch with the steam that scores knockouts and experts say that no fighter knew the art of defense quite so well as this colored man. Here was a black man holding the esteem of everyone—white and black—connected with the ring.
Another great Negro : illist was George Dixon, who fought everybody who could be indicted to meet him. The worst thumping he could got was administered by Terry Governor, who stopped him in eight rounds. Then there was Joo Watt, considered a wonder in his day. Walcott stood five feet eleven and one-half inches high, welghed; but 145 pounds and barrow to one meeting heavyweights as roadly as the walters, and he has to his credit: a knock out over Choynski.
Of all the Negro fighters, however, the greatest of them all was old Joe Gana. The greatest "four-fisher" of the bunch is Jack Johnson, and some slugger is going to get him bye and bye.
Professor Spingarn
READY FOR LONG TOUR.
Will Make Strong Campaign Against Race Segregation.
(Amer. Press Ass'n Afro-American Press, 51 Afro-American 1913)
By N. Barnett Dodson
New York, Professor J. E. Spingarn, formerly of Columbia university New York, and now president of the New York branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, will begin a tour of the middle west January 6, in the interests of that association, for the purpose of protecting against the segregation of the races in the federal bureaus in Washington and of stimulating the uplift of the race in other ways.
Dr. Spingarn is one of the most ardent and uncompromising white champions of the civil rights of the American Negro, and his western tour should certainly help to crystallize the national conscience against segregation, Jim Crowism, lynching and all other disadvantages under which colored people in this country now suffer.
Professor Spingarn's first speech will be delivered at Detroit on the evening of January 8, and he will then visit Indianapolis, Quincy, Chicago, Kansas City, Topaek, St. Louis, and other cities. He will make the entire tour at his own expense.
He has had a distinguished career as a scholar and publisher. For 12 years he was professor of comparative literature in Columbia university retiring in 1911. He is the author of numerous books, some of which have been translated into foreign languages, and he is also the author of a volume of years. "The New Herperides and Other Poems," which has attracted much attention in this country as well as in England. He has been interested in public affairs for many years, having been the Republican candidate for member of congress in the Eighteenth New York district in 1905, when he received the highest interment from President Roosevelt. Secretary of State Ellen Root and other district officialsmen. His services to the cause of the American Negro have been especially important. He is an ardent exponent of the new abolitionism, which aims to bring to the cause of the rights of colored people the sacred devotion of empathy which characterized the other abolitionism, of William Lloyd Garrison and Wyndham Phillips. As a delegate to the First National convention at Chicago in August, 1912, he attracted national attention to this new movement by his gallant effort to commit the party to a plank in its platform which would open the door of hope to the indigenous colored people of the United States.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 62 which Professor Spinning will be the personal representative during his western tour, is an organization composed of members of both races, with headquarters in New York and with branches in over twenty cities, including Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Kansas City, Topica, San Francisco and Taorma.
The president is Moorfield Store, the distinguished Boston lawyer, and among its directors are Oscar Garrison Villard, Jane Addams, Dr. C. Bentley, Mary White Ostrinton Professor J. E. Spinning, Charles Edward R. Sell, Dr. W. E. R. Du Bois, Roy John Haynes Holmes, William English Walling and Aristold H. Grimke.
The official organ of the association is the Crisis, a monthly magazine edited by Dr. Du Bois, which now has a circulation of 25,000 copies distributed in every state of the United and in over ten foreign countries. About 20 per cent of the readers of this paper are white and 50 per cent colored, although, of course, no exact figures along these lines are possible to ascertain.
Information Wanted.
I would like to know the name of the tribe of Indians that inhabited the region around the Chautauqua River in South Carolina. Any information will be thankfully received by J. P. LEACIT, $9 Wilkerson St., Putnam, Conn.
For a NEW YEAR Resolution, let
Cophaa, be your Agent. Property
Bought, Sold and Exchanged. Rent
Collection, Sale and Payment.
B.P. Cophaa, Cor. 34 & Lightha St.
Personals & Briefs
Mr. Samuel Bell is visiting friends in the city.
Mr. Levi Ellis of Atlanta City, N. J. is visiting his relatives and friends of this city.
Miss N. Jewell Sliver of Smithfield, Va. is the guest of Mrs. Alice Chiles.
Miss E. L. Jackson and S. H. Shorter of Washington, D. C. are visiting Mrs. Louisa A. Smith.
Mrs. Maude Hilton, Lone of Hampton, Va. spent the holiday in the Southside visiting her parents and friends.
Mr. J. P. Hatree, Cascades, Mass. visited our office in company with Mr. John Fowel.
Prof. J. H. Hill of Washington, D. C. spent the holidays in the city visiting relatives and friend.
Miss Minnie Jasper and Mamie Nelson, teachers in the county spent the holidays in the Southside.
Mr. W. H. Isham of Bardin, O. S. in the city. He was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Isham, No. 9th St. He left this week for Hamp
Mrs. Hattie Blackwell Carter of Petersburg attested her parents' Prof. and Mrs. J. H. Blackwell during the holidays.
Mr. John E. Rolanson, Assistant Editor of The Amsterdam News of New York was in the city and called on us. He left December list for home.
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Dempstrey of Wildwood. He passed through the city the week before to New Jersey to spend the Holiday.
The Rev. L. F. entertained the strangers in the city at their annual holiday entertainment of Monday night December 29th. Light motor vehicle was rented and all well taken care of.
Mr. M. Trost and wife of Highland Springs have returned home after a vacation and went to Pittsburgh. Pa. Mr. Trost formerly resided at Pittsburgh. Pa. Mr. Trost recently resided at Pittsburgh. Pa. Mr. Trost purchased a home at Highland Springs and is a member of New Bride Baptist Church.
Mr. Margaret Bowman of South Boston. Va. is visiting her mother. Mrs. Sarah Ann Bowman. Ms. Bowman is teaching at Sapleo Va.
Mrs. Mollie Robinson Booker of Philadelphia. Pa. visiting the South side of her parent. Mr. and Mr. Henry Robinson of Doctor Street. She is looking the picture of health.
Mrs. Belle Holde and Mr. Thomas A. Johnson of the National mother and father of Dr. A. A. Tennant respectively are in the city the ruins of their own and brother Zinsetown Lodge, Knights of Pythia was celebrated its anniversary Friday evening, December 26th at Zeontown Hall. An enjoyable time was had by the Knights and their friend
The marriage of Mr. Anne Hayden to Mr. George Robinson was celebrated Tuesday night, December 2nd, at the home of the bride. The reception was held at 118 W. Loreal Street and a event was given by all present. We wish them much success in life.
---
George Bison Entertains Poor
Colored Children.
George Rison played the role of Santa Claus very acceptably to a number of the poor colored children in the city on Christmas day and yesterday and any number of little hearts were made glad, that other who would have known only the plight that infests the poor and needy during the holiday season.
On Christmas day Mr. Rison was the means of furnishing Christmas cheer to 204 of the children and on yesterday he went out and found 67 others that had lacked the good things that are so desired at Santa Claus time. Besides the children that were furnished with toys and good things to eat, Mr. Rison felt some eleghteen or twenty of the old and needy, including the inmates of the poor house.
Mr. Rison has requested that all of the people who so willingly contributed to the fund to help gladden the hearts of the poor accept his thanks and the thanks of those that benefited from the Christmas contributions.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
Leesburg Personals
Mr. Richard Harris of Bethlehem, Pa. visiting his parents the week end, Mr. Lewis Harris.
Mr. Ranus Edmonds is visiting his parents the week end, Mr. James Edwards, East Royal Street.
Miss Cora Wright is convoking.
Rev. Dr. E. D. Tyler has been called to officiate at the funeral of Mrs. R. Powell late of Washinton who died Friday. She was a member of the Battist Church. The funeral took place Monday at two o'clock at Providence Baptist Church.
Rev. W. R. Minley left this morning for North Carolina, where he will spend a week or ten days visiting his parents.
The Xmas tree at Providence Baptist Sunday School on Xmas Eve was quite a success. The children performed their parts nicely. Many hearts were made glad.
The Cantria at the M. E. Church on Friday night was a grand treat, we are told.
Mrs Sarah Whitting entertained at dinner Friday, December 26th in honor of her 41st anniversary of her Christian life. She had as her guest, Mr. Frank Gallagher of Washington, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Williams, Mrs. Leanna Washington, Miss Fanny G. Washington and Mr. Stephen Warl of Leesburg, Va.
Mr. Frank Gallagher spent Thursday and Friday with his sisters, Mrs. Sarah Whitting, Mrs. Lacy Williams and Mrs. Leanna Washington.
Rev Dr E D. Tyler arrived in town Wednesday, preaching morning and at 11 o'clock he took for a test, John 106. "The way of truth and life." At 2:30 our Sunday lead a sermon with our fellow pastor William Robert, as Superintendent. He reviewed the lection to be followed next. At 7:20 Tyler was again on the recitation. Charles Randall our Honorate he took as his lection, 11th chapter of 11:20. The return of lepus to his house and he took up.
Rev. Price of Alvanilla. Named in to be the installation of the Marjorie Leake. At the close of the service he offered prayer. Ben Clinton in the payoff. A general service.
Mr. Charles Headley on the door.
Name has come and gone. We are about to enter in the new year
1914. May the Lord be with us.
Amen. W. L. J.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MELTING.
Mechanics Savings Bank of Richmond
Va., Banking House, 214 East
Clay Street.
Notice is hereby given that the
first regular meeting of the stockhold
ers of the Mechanics Savings Bank
will be held in Richmond, Va., 757
North Third St on Tuesday night,
January sixth, 1914 at 8:20 o'clock
short, for the purpose of electing the
Board of Directors of receiving the
annual reports of the President and
other officers of the Bank, and taking
each action respecting the matters
therein as may to the Stockholders
from best, and for the purpose also
of transacting any and all other busi-
ness that may properly come before
such an annual meeting.
By order Board of Directors
JOHN MITCHELL JR., P.N.
THOMAS M. CRUMP, Secty
Colored Man Saves Score in Fire
Cleveland, O. Dec. 27 - To the prompt action of John Caldwell, a colored man, thirty families, and eighty guests at the Perry Hotel Woodland avenue and East Twenty second street, owed their escape this morning from a fire which did $1,000 in damage to a three-story brick building that housed the hotel, the Perry Theatre, a bank and several stores and family suites. Caldwell was sleeping in the rear of the building and when the fames started he aroused the occupants. Several women and children were carried out unconscious. One hundred and fifty persons clad only in their night clothing.
-Ouy new serial, "THE WHIP"
starts next week on Page two.
WITHIN
THELAW:
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“Take the ethilrs anit of tie alee,
Dan” he dicots, Ceteopt nine and
hie ther=that nett Me tiullented
chair standing # tithe way from one
emt of hie desk “Now, have all the
ante ue Heth ke we he
“Thm Turner woman navel sou the
trouble with one
~The ceturned to hie cuir, art when
the door opened he was to all appear]
anges busily Sngaced in writine.
. “Here's Garon, ‘chtef." Cassityan-
nounced, * Mw
“Hello, Joe? Burke excinimed, with,
a seomim: alr of carclens frienlllness,
as.the detective wentmt, and Gann
stood’ movanlers just within the dour,
<"Bit down a mianté, won't yout" thet
Yorpector ecntinued aftauis. te did
Rot Wok op from his welting an he
spoke, ¢.
=,Garon's unnally <atenz face wad,
showing weak with fear. Ile chin,
whieh san commonly vert titm. niece
a little from aneany twitchines of Yule,
lie. Mie clear eyes. were xiizhtls
clouded to @ look’ of anprenension av
they roved ‘the room fartively.*: He.
aaade po answer to the Inspector's
2B ster esaheintt ated ake ‘aig breathes
"potest aterthy ae if seumting nome cot
[ caated peril, Finally, however, Ul
{ gastey fom expreton In. went
Jills tone wax pregnant sith’ tara
‘though he atreve fe cmnke it more!
jconiptatnine. * ° 5
| - Say. what ath f avrented fer?" h
protestol “Latter dene anytbine.”
fo durk6 athte not hei up! ated fis per
Pconvnied w hurry ober the paper.
J, "Whe thd yo yon were arenteatY
The renatked cheerfully ti pik bitudes
vote
| _ Gaon utterat an ejucdtation af At
sunt.
1D don't baye t9 be tele? tin retorts
Bins. “M8 te eolege pesitent, tnt
when a cep erales we stad Urines tn
own here Pye gat sense whan th
Anaw. Pin puncte .
MHS that What wey de to got, Jew!
PH Mave to seal te Casgily salut
thar, Now. Just jet sit teow, dow
wow't fou’ Dwar t tet ose pitty
fad with sor Fb te sheet tere te
Beem" He Monten watt Bw werst
| snus ae,
| Giron imeset forward, sakhtty to
Mthe single star near tte end of tw
[desk aint there seat ttself mes thai
pleats Wis fae ste. was tanned te
ward thi awindows thot were ty the
euttiiet, sank ko ene gre yet att
J Clomted ie thes testi cate “Uke ete
Moers af thos cedis he yeittied am be
Petuiie, suds gaze seosiped Fromm thy
cos te the tepiere Haan of Me
Fant tt tlie desk Nowy Hee tegdcer's
Aerviaistans fapesen diet nhartiy, Ht
Hawerpt Lapa Mceen ne he EE ag sand
Gein he Spare gage weal coped hae te
the weepetoe .
Sxay tte saaloans shy sete Sha
Bike Ta Ble tee aves cays
AWhat’S tel matter watts goat tent
Mae Wispeeie teturueh always with
(hat lngertuetitor sin fated wathent
Futsing Lis tiead fia the woth teat
Breet edl fos tents Set
Anow.'yon're dot arrstel dove Mayle
Sam necer wilt be New, fo thee Rave
SE Mileo ewp steth vunt int te tens
fits totter” .
Sows. very hectotnctys Garson
Went Wek to Che ete. sad Sank eer gy
on Mt I a Hats stttitinte ot sheer tieen
wholly unite BIS erat eeaew postion
of strength Vee tis te tasetnatod
oped wane Woithe init Gh seats rac eoeet|
silently nienine ts an the wothor ste of |
thie corrtsier baeyiitet thie sertidews HE
fare wav tineed wish erat, A parent
sleharey ete eh SUIT |
hin, ae his thonshi= felt tustetentty |
to tthe eatangrogte Heat Httvcatenen Ly
Intelliigenees wits toe kewts to pormtt m |
Weller that Burkes acvttien wf actos,
fulwnne Kitties id tttinag anit!
ups viminens with a tent of aleath for
pte tty reetuees for tae stout Ne tel
wrmeht “|
The, terver erscratived Mis ayes
were CAMEME Ty 4 foarte, te eee of
Catsidy, aidicinccte atere an ota, eu:
Fiber Ntwt Gouths thee dates tenes went
IAN Mose LE Wace Slitdhites, FANE
Ned shear sw uitig apoete, He porlsetter ¢
topped Witlane Hae done ehuscent te
ive Beats Sti ites thoste searhets widely
Gausen gai heuhtendssteteken for he
post Foc tread the vtetitn rast fates
heat before leeges 1 Wes Paces,
tie of Bs eine tentes itt orl
ieey, Wiles thee ight Fowfetee, Raed Seen
pen RUT Lathe Feiteze Phuete wis f
mie ated cote totes Mitester te Gar |
att ik Use fet ut Unwegs prewence ||
Ieree 3) the outst, Bt
Ofc sutten He teezge eetent ont rant |
vist «i ‘
SSay. tespevter at sseatve aw ang bh
Wing or ne DP Menad the ery |
roppeed tate naatetebtattdgstiinbnes 4!
Banke ret eed duis neanner of serene |
Mifeceten fe the other's agitation,
EH tds pes hired over theespaper, [I
tit dae att test Yearatcee toe toe py ioe |
eegpestn sted, teh tasteringty. *]
SNe tens) What's the matter with |
ry oes ag rete Soon thine” wruntent to
sk Scotty few questions. That's all
Hints eter a mement. Garsn’s ene.
eth Feotooed fie tor mating tps
PSuy Meeteecter os Bae twat h
Thess, ater pty. tie wie stent, tls
IT Weenie tet Thee ark hy hero,
ents. he saw tHe vdebetive walt
srwatat, antl Cheetos atthe sarFtebor, Aaie [0
Wh ttn, os before, was a seven oe |
rect te adeatticed <itnhlnly. c
Afihn the door swuigs while, the pre 12
er Sly peat within the deer ciapged {t
ist, the tweity clattered notsits tuto |
ete socket ihe -{t
And. in the wateher, terror grew. 9d
fim tnd aeoth thoy face pf Chilean [o
ret anntwet oof his fails, sugthier whey
fl seeds Hale MIN Gries Ae tact he
The fie ete Hibs, cand hs vets take oD
A throaty Whisper. Re
“Say. dustee ter, I sun's got” ang. 1%
bing against me, why", fe
AH” soci thet aes anything [af
iiitet Soni, Bowe!" Borie rejutteed, tn Uh
Yolor thak was cenbally’ ebhting. |
fleas ta
oS =
. ee
ws = 4
wT A
‘
“Bay, irfepector, if you've gSt anything
“What's the matter with you" today,
Joe? ‘You scem nervous.” gtill, the
Oftictai:-kent on with Dix writing. -
“No, 1 ain't nervonn.” Garson cried,
with a fereriah effort to appear. cals,
“Whs, what makex you ‘think thatt
Mut this ain't exactly the place you'd
Pick out asa pleurant one to apend the
morning.” * fle .wan afleut for's Nite,
Uylog with all hix strength to regain
bis self controt, but with wmall siccess,
“Burke believed (Lut. bie opportualty
was come. His band: slipped -tnto the
pocket where was the. matol. and
. . sg es
| Clutehed It. Me atiged at “Garson
| Gercely, aint spoke with ‘no rush of th
| words: * .
P Why did yeu kil Eddie Griggn?
A dida’t KUNE Tins” The reply sar
fquick enough, ut i came wenkly.
Agalu, Garon wae, forved to wet hls
Ape swith a dey: gorse, unt Gr wallow
painfully, “le tet you, P dida’s kin
him!" he repeated at last, with more
fore. = ‘ G
You killed hia hast ghsbt—with
this!” Burke cried, vielousty. “Ou the
fnataut, the gistel leerat tuto vlew,
[pointed stenizur at Carson. WHS
the fispectur slanted, "Crane on, new!
why? 3 os
| SAL dplu'ts 1 tell youl, Garsou wn
Krowing stronger, sine® ot lust he
Crisis wan ghoul, He xut-te his
feet with Ute swiftness ef mesement
Pune sprenig cise to the ek, He bent
ye heatel forward ehalensingly, to met
the hire nf Mlstareuser’s wy 0
Phere passed many sects, while
the tee tien Banttlead diy siete, witl
j warrins digulyer Wit fw the end
Fens the mniyiderer whe telvtuphed.
| “Siuidradys Futke dioppeat ttn pst
Antes line fet, sate lle tae: tnt ke
chate, Mes gaze fell away from the
“guam cenfenutiong Mins, Yi the sone bi
Mant the resubity wf Carson's. form
Feluxel, stat he stratchtened stewly 7
phan, eB Biethe waclaanial ight
ably. hating cents Caank son alld, bit
Do wasi't ste oe Po tat Ge take a
chance You understand, obea't yon,
dee .
ire, Pesteretane ebassan pop
Fatih ane aitcsctenty qegeeed tee thee Inspes
tors own :
SC Mgies pressed they Marten ta. thie
Aiton sient tet essats Where did
SO see Mats Poeuer eg test bette
At the epi thats alt teoteat’s fears
for tlie swe cats tetstivnt Toth gon, tg
hy spte:ting ftw. :
ML dae t bron Sutiete Stat wite etek
elatneet sheaths tle reantet hte
Miniter overs tte tuotats tort ts Mn
fing svanche fe everest Hos Best tee
RHEE ATES ses. Cadel, tee ee wet
On, wm Af sineallend ey Sanehtore riory:
“I dropped inte ber place kind of
bite. msid they attht stil tie foe bed
heatiehe, Pxivss Ves, sli wave home,
et Course, Ste attdtct Be out uf the
house ill whzhe Ils nsisteneeou the
pittat Way we igseld suspeesiate, tit
risertane to pitteet her anita hh
nits
“Kpaw ansthing about cider?
Iturie totnintstest
PNeet fli, sons the enrtent ane
wer
The baer chow opened, and Marg
Portier enters! the athee, Gatean with
Lutloutty siqiressed the ery of intrest
taste tice ter Bile ts” Par a fee me:
pitts ad enue woaaneonan. hes
nimently Ite by a gentuce directed
he aie tw advance toward the-center
iF tfee tut, As std abweyead es Bittinele
Rent Mithe suivant the doog, and
Mot tt opened agate ad Bick Glider |
Peeated he interest te etieck! the
wiied tates rush Gatward a Oe Rize
vit ate lis berlste, wlio nto rekarligg |
fits NOT set eyes Sete
‘Then, Whge stil that curious, dys
ini stent wavtiredd. Casaity canna |
isles Heetee thie otha
PNos. ehiet the eceottye nibh mae |
By, "Hoey he Sipe el”
wqneaiad, ob fo they tell the |
ie sity! Ait then wien the de
tive hail anawWermd tithe -attirina. |
he tie sent ann speiatling fn tones pons
outa WHR self complncens, 1
“Eo war rlistt. then, wfter.all—right an |
We tlw, Geol enough.” Of n xudden 4S
IN volce fewthed somberty, “Mary |!
urner, T want son for the munier |!
co oe
Gara’ rush tuttt ‘the sentence. ||
je tad leaped forward, Hix face was | !
gil. Ile broke on the ‘inspectors |”
ons with gesture of furs, He]!
seg emane Inn hina ‘ n
bate We Met Yb at t
CHAPTER XIX,
peeaeeek oe titan:
| ZOWERSON xtroutest tin conferston
withont a second of reflection
the same Ind he taken yean
of thotebt, “fetween im md her a
the seth wf the Lew, there could be
te: hexttation Gor choice, ‘The prine
revtesstty was’ tu save her, Mary, Trott
the folie of the kiw that Were closing
uromul ber. For himseif, lar thie days
to coum, there would be a xhaxtly
dread WUE there would never becrexte
focer the cost of saving “her, He ttn
Haved her feo the waters he would
eave her whtit the end, as far ax the
sotcer I lm mfsht tle. :
‘The smbdenness of nil held Mars
Volreless, for- bong xevontls, She was
frozen with horror of the event, When,
at Inst, words came, they ere a frat:
Me praxer.of protiat
SaNo, doe? Not Don't tntk -don't
talkie s
“doe hax titked." Burke sli, stent
feantiy. : 3
‘ae id, It te poroteet mie,” she stated,
Jearneatly. Z :
‘The Inspector disitained suet futile
argument. Ax the deerman gpreared
fn answer to the baer. he direted
that,the,xtenoseapher tw summits at
once.
Weill have the confession tn due
form” he renmrked, gexing pleasedly
fon the three befare hin,
*Me'n not xetas.te cvufens. «Mae
Angistey). with wpsrit. E
Hine itarke disrecariet.her cimplete
Jy, and xpoke nieehiantentis: to Caen
the formal warning: rejuiret OY the
law. : ee
“You are hereby cautioned that.any-
thing you ray may te. used against
Joo." “Then, ix the xtenngrapher en
tered, he went on with Hvely Interest,
“Now, Joc!” . - .
Yet once again, May protested, =
ttle wildly. eee
* Don't npeak, Jos, Don't aya word,
i’ we ran get h laser for your”
‘The man intt her. pleading eyes
steadily, and shovk hix Niead in refusal.
“It's no ose, my. girl,” Rarke broke
to harshly. “I told you,t'd get you.
E'm going to try you and Garson. and
the whole garg for murder—yeu. every
ong of Jou. And you, Gilder.” he con-
tinged, lowering on the young man
who" bad defied him no abstinately,
“Jou'll go to the fousy of detention
pe material witnenn”: Me turned bis
TMS MUL COND PLANWR ICHMOND. 'Vitinta,
ph ges toe a Syacdtt ons
pA een eae ee meee OO ee
*Jiborttttvelys sCome ou news toot”
Garyon went'a xtep toward the dev
Jani stoke dectatvels,
“sit 1 chine ‘through, you'll let, tet
pRomind lim he added as au after
]ehought, with a’ nod toward Dick Gil
‘fader. : ‘.
[| cWeit get the best ingyess In the
leoungry.” Mary verutated desperately,
We'll anee you, Joe—we'lt dave you!"
| Garson rexurded the alsteaucht ir!
with wistfil exes, But there war no
truce of stelaug Ins tle velco un be
Tepllial, thauga he spoke very: sorrow.
fully.
“Xu, son can’t help, me. bw wale sto:
ply. “My me hax.conie. Mary. And
Tean sive you 9 lot of troubte.”
site's right there,” Burke dacmlated.
sWe've sh hha cold. Se what's the
nse of drageing yeu twa tate 1
“Then they, Zo cleats arwon ex:
Letitnst, eagerly, Thies ait even to
Hine valtent am, welt menses
You're wit” Burke meted”
Ser hein, here goeet™ Hin: <n arte, ad
defhieked expectuntly tavard ” the
drehegrapher. : :
S My nite WW di Garson.” .
wMilas?” Burke suggested. 7
+All nota!” extee the sharp "re:
tort. Garson's ny menaher, 1 wht
Suet Eade. fees toe wan a
shih anh a sien pfseur crit he got
Pig whet was eon te Bin Vite
febitlon baste thar geet wurde best
Ji tes velew ne,
Nea! OWT Hutter et feltegd, sewer
BSW ent tite a con teseten Mike
that" *
Hursitiesbook fils teat spoke with
torcor hatte a“ g
STecawe he wae nostri ind 9
ool pigeon be coy ented “Have Jou
Bet IEP And thea, ws t+ stenazraph:
fee padded mswent tie sett on, hve ¥lo-
fenghy: Teron bon just aw he Was
eahE to eal the bos wie police
Whistie, DP umed essn with sinokelens
fender Tt hud.‘ Mitihe silencer on
Bho See UE AE db tie tke ay “nolo.
Gatwar paused, att the set despate,
of tis features tightened a tte: Inte,
ifs Verfew enmme i tote wf extitation Ine
degritalds ghustty it wae born of
lit eternal exotten: of, the erlintnal, fate
telng Maunlts tu xiotiing ever hfe tn.
semudty for evil He Stared at Burke
wiih w quizzical gen erookians hie ps.+
Say." he exelsted, “PI bet ft the
Nest tlle soy Nos ever efoaked with
he of them thinzs’ Mint It?"
‘Phe hispeetor need aflenintion,
“sume cline to Guat, eb Garson dee
finde, nti witie that grewsome ale
wt toasting. SF got thee ann and the
Muxiin sloncer tains otf a fence dn
Het he expidied, “Say, thet
Eling woot tte S024, nud Ia worth every
cent of the mines Why, they'll re
inetntner ne itp th first to spring one
wf thot things, won't thes 2
Mrhey xure wei, doe! the Inapector
conwedtenl. “
Notanty kuew.t teal 1g" Garson con:
tlt, droppli bhehedtzart manner
abruptly.
AU the words, Moire startesd, ant fer
INN ranged tis If ste were About to
xpwak, 7
“Soles Siew, | hai thaagshedy tn
Ue workte” aie “ibs tare Stl no.
jedy fated snag tM toy oles wdthe thie alle
nig ut mie"
Was there nny boil fowtin betwegn
yon nine Biabtbe Gle .
“Never till that very mimate, ‘Then
Hearne the tts silent what hed
ramied tip with seit” ‘The speaker's
lee revertyad tu fis former ferent
a recollection of the iMcaehery of ane
chow te badd trustest .
“He Was nm stout ptzcon, andl bated
umn That's ah, wt fe’ enomsts, Aunt |
Ue Il Unie, se rele tee Go
The nsjeater nwikted attsartount so |
he ntonoztapher. with an alr of rettefs
eptint’s al, Wiltkatns,"” he sabt hee: |
pH wl 1 ns sane ain youve
ranncribest the tiytes.". :
Then as the stenutranher ttt the
som Burke turtind bis xnze ba the
reanan, why, stoma tonto ftv ae poster |
F catuplet defeetion, ber white, an
uinhisd fave downesst, ‘There was | '
dup i the Inspertwrs vate me te f
Mes tier, for his professtonal |!
ride was fall ford by its Stetory over |!
14 foes," : '
“Yours woman,” Rurke xald briskly, |
te Just ike F tet you.> Yon ean't [3
eat the tow. Garson thought te |!
pulilectind noes Hee brbke off, with
Mave of hte Rand towant the mag !!
he tied Mist sentenived himself to
ratty Iu the ele trle-chite. '
Srhat's chsht.” Garwon nereed, with | §
anber Intensles. Cts eyes were grown | *
janldesd sual how. cated his wolew drag |!
at Wauten, That'a eieht, Mars. tw | ¢
wate daily, atter a Tittle pause, | f
Yon esnt beat the Inw! te hex | f
ted Hele, then went on, with a | %
tain enrlous embarraxstnent, “And |!
Hy snine atd-lnw sags wernan must | 3
irk te hee man” *
The gis’ eee met his with paxdtone | |
e nore tn ftir intaty Heep. Gar
nm oRave matgniticant sinnee toward | f
irk Gideon, then hls gaze returned to | 4
ir. There wae 0 amoldering dexpatr | &
‘that took. ‘There were, de well, nn [2
treaty nnd A command, : i
Spector. “4f Ure“ repurters: ‘waut | any
Hilctures-of me vonkd T have some'new
onen tuken?” The one Fon've Robot ine
fo the gallery. tx over ten yeare ald,
Tro taken off my beard xlnce then.
Can havea new one?” Te
“Siro you enti, Joe, TH xend you up
to: the gallery-rlght now.” ;
* SIninienne!” Garson erled bolxterous.
Jy. . He moved towant Dick Glider:
walking with a ‘faint xuxsestlon of
swnEcer te cover {he nervoux (remor
that hind selzéd-tim. * :
“So long, young fellow." he exclaim:
wed and held ont hix hand. + “You've
been on the square, atl T cueKy you
always will be." *
Dick had tio xérupte tn clasping that
eXtende) hind very’ warty fit hiK
own. :
SAVE do whut wé' can for sou," he
ald slinply. 8 Net
“rhat's. all" right." Garson replied,
wlth uch carelessness of uNMnEr a8
sho could contrive. ‘Then at Inst -be
turns! te Mary. "This parting muxt be
Bitter, and he braved ulmyelt with all
the visor of fie Sell 16 combat the
wenknexe that Werped front bf xonl,
Ax he came near the gtrt could bold
hermelf ty teaxh no longer, She threw’
herwif on hin rest, Mer arms
Wrenthed about hin neck. Great sot.
Tucked ber. a:
“Oh, Joe, doc!" “The gasping ery wan
of utter dexpatr. 7
Garant'x trewbling ated patter the
Rls "shounler very softly, a carom of
LaAlyite totider ness,
Fbate all rights’ he, uitrmured
buskily. "That's all ritht. Marys
There was u short silence, wat then be
went on syeaking more firmly. "Yon
know, hel tok after sou.”
He Tooke! apy aver the’ ita khout:
Aer ant beckonst with ily bend “to
Dek, who eau forwank 6
vTake god cate of her, woa't sour"
He disengage! hnself. gently from
the lela embrace and set her within
the ania af her Inistend, where she
: aa 4
Ss
H
| i
| |
- . Ai
. im
eThatte oll eight Thats al toh
Sect
restef autetly, ax If unable to Ogh!
longer-asilast fate'n decree.
Well, see fans.” ,
He dhirot wot ytter “another wort
Wut tuned biludly, and went, xtom
Diing a little, -tewand the doorman
whe tnd appeared fa annwee to th
taapeters eat
“To ‘the sallery." Burke ontered
curtly. .
Garson went on without ever
Rlnuice thick. .
There wax a long silence In the room
after ‘Gamon’s pursing. Tt whe bro:
ken at last by the hispector. who got
up froin his chale and advanced to:
ward the huishaud mut wifes In tis
hand he carried « sheet of paper, rough:
ly acral, AS Li stopped before thie
two tind cleared fils threat, Mary: with:
rege herself frou Plek's erty anil re:
Kanda the affictal with browsing exes
from emt ler white face.
Rourke extendest the sheet af paper to
the bustand. + fe
There's a document” he sabt ern
IN eS a letter fan one Helen More
FIs. Iie whitelt she sets forth tue Inter:
estos fart that she pulled off a theft
Hn the Eujeriit, for whieh Sour Mr.
Cillder here did tine. You know, your
father got your Mrs. Glhter xeut mp
for threw Sears for that xime Job--
Which sue did't do. ‘That's why she
bad sneha grudge figalust your father
and neultest the Inve too!"
Burke ebticktesl, ax *the young man
tows the poe, wonderingly, .
ST don't kuow that T blame her much
for that grudge, when alle xd and
done. Yun kive (hat ducument to your
father, It seteher right. Te's a just
mati acconting to bie lights, your fa
‘ther. He'll do all hé ean to mako thingy
right for ler. now he knows. Now,
Jou two Ilmien. I've Rot to Ko OUL A
minute. When I get back, .1’ don't:
want to-nd anybody here—nat any-
body! - Do you get mez" |
When the omficfal wan gone, the two
stood staring mately ench at the other
through long xcconix. What abe read
fo the minn’n eyen net tho woman's
heart to beating with a neve’ delight.
What he read in her eyes set the bur
band's polnes to bounitlag. . He opened
bis arms in ant appeal that was a com
mand. Mary. went forward slowly,
without hewltntion, ina Dilkn that for-
got every norrmy for that blensed’ m0
ment, and cavt hiernclf on bia breset.
st. MR exe
. Musto In Portugal, *
Portugn! hax only one, connervatory
of music. located at Lisbon, . The bigh
‘eat antary’ pakt ts $300 = year... As
sistant teachers get $150. Orchestra
‘players, though they have a. onion, an
paid at-the Ran Carlo thetter bo more
than $40. to $80 a mouth. st vende
Villes’ apd mnaical comedian. they get
@0 cents (9.31.20 4 performance.
lt the.
‘Little Farm Paw
“By-C. SS
OR Seek
money mak:
ing, with
‘small: tovestment
and casy work,
.no branch. of
‘farm. Indusuy
‘surpaissea, bork
sratxing.” No fea-
ture can Ot bet-
ter thto a itde
farm program,
apd-no Ine ce
production Is
aafer nil yore
profitable oy a
Inrge ince. -
eteaneas mans
a x
: x
eee ;
i Agee
gre
‘ ee
a - aparece aca:
| be of the most inexpensive kind, bi
they must-be kept chan, ‘Thay need
to be proof nzninnt drafts ani storing
Clean promis alvo nee exsentint fh
Euardlns ayalust diceake, ‘Swe of
three meres of: nije and an acre of
anlchokie will. provide practically al
the fuatder required by twenty-five px
from weantuz Ul fattening tie,
Af 9 supply of sklingnllk ur whey’ ty
acaflatle {ewlll pay to use ft, and a
Hehe ration of earn oF peax once m day
WHE be a shedp. The rape aul arth
chokes nay te depended on t0 belo
the antiuly on at w fale rate of seowth
alt suidiner. . Liberal feedhiis of corn
for thres ur four weeks before ane
keting wil asalst Welzht and quallty
of dest Any amateur can grow the
ces mined and manage a drove of
phew: 2 "
There ts a dtetthet public deinand for
the meat of Hetewelsbe bose Fanging
frou 40 to. 300 pounds, ‘The tnost
proftable pork Ix that grown in eight
to ten months, or trom Aptit to De
cember, xo thine there tn little winter
feeding, ‘nnd “most of the growth I
obtained from fetid” forage. °
Perhapa ax good 4 plan as any tn to
market twenty out of twenty-five hogs
late tn the fall and carry over the re
maining five until they aro sixteen (0,
eighteen monthy‘eld. ‘The bacon mai
ket calix, for the targer-anian!, and
Prices.are upt to be higher tn the late
winter mooths than in the fall, |,
2All the breeds of hor have thele.nd-
Yocates. For seer! purposes notlilng
ts better thin to une damn-of Cheater
White, ‘Tamworthor Duroc type.
cromed with malex of the Poland:
Chinn or Herksbire sarlety. ‘This kia
of brewting will give inne Itere and
Rood wlzest-atstinate, x
Tn this’ country the ‘most popular |
bret fing town thie Foland Chia. ‘This |
breed tine many Kod charicteristten,
It ix mo ruptd rower, makes good uxe
of food sarpptied nual can be kept rowdy
for market at ans Une, elther ox x
augher, jmrker ur baconer. “the Utter
are rather xinall, howgeer, ail for tila
Fenion, ax well sm to Ket @ tunte raMEy
anil for cegeral purpedes. farmer
areilegroseed ter crows the brewlt,
Thy xelovtion Of the male te of great
Impurtines, ax tv atreetly tntluences
every Phe one may have {0° fattep, and
t depeniis on hts brooding Vary Inecely
Shetline OF not the filgw can unke
pruiltable use af the food etren them,
Ax in the ese of all sires, the tale
hould te ‘qire bred, of approved *
tralu, th with regnnd (0 enpachty fo
Nut op tlexh rapidly and to Influence
he sow In the production of Inrge Ite
crs :
oThe dam newt oot necessarily be
Wire beet, provided she Ix of A Rood
Yde. She should be 'xelected from a |
wrolifle mother,.ax fecundity Ix hered-«
tary. ‘The teats should number ,at
eaut.twelte, fully developed. vet well
‘part, even In vize, and the front teate
voll forward on the body. ‘The nuin-
er of tents does not Indicate nlwayx
he number of pigs. whe Is Ikely to
ave. Sometimes wows sith ten or
leven tentn will bare Ineie Httore
Whether on rance: or In pen, hoss
hould have n medictnit ration made
Dov follows: One pound each of
rool charcoal, satphur, alt, bakin: |
oda and xiiphide wf antimony, Pal}
erfze und mtx thorwughly. , Gre ‘a
ablespoonful daily” for each pig from |
he tlie they Fe old énonsh to run In
be fled Add a taltespoonful of bores |
weal for each untinal and. wlx the |
‘hole fot with enough motstenet ment |!
r brut ty myke, a palatable mess. |
Hea water and xhade nre essentials, |
Inning nlvo is advisable, Ta cases, of +
cknew keep thore affected away |
om the ~ounil ones and take prompt |
tlon to prevent the wirend of dleeate |
. 7
The following formula for white
warh baw been eecomtenied by the
United Statee deyurtinent of agetent
ture: :
Take yalf n bushel of ansinked tine.
tinke it with bolling water nnd cover
during ttid process to Keepin xtentn,
Strain the quid chrouzh 'n Ane-slere
or nteniner and Add to-tt A peck of walt
previously dixsolved In warm water
three pdunda of gronndl, rice balled to
thin- paste and xtirred In while het
faaft ‘pound of Ssinnian whiting ant
ote pound. of, cleay gine prevlousts
dixsolved hy naklns to cold’ water
Jand then hanging wer n slow fre tn 2
Jamal) pot hung In, ieger one Mlted
with water. Add fie snilooe of hut
water to the mixture, atir well and tet
ie atid w few Wtnyy covered trom dirt
fe-abonid te ‘upplied: not, for when
purpowe It can be Kept In m kettle w*
a portale Carnie, Coloring matter
may be added nw dexined. Where
test durable whiternsh sill ansteer
the above my te ovelitied by lenvins.
out the whftinus mud itve. L
‘No Usé Buying Out of
——-~ Town —___.
Our Merchants ‘Have It
SS
“0 Five Minutes =
_,The'reanon-t deat tho Austriens is,
‘they. did not know the value of Sire
minutes.—Naroleon. al
WILSON:SIGNS..
diced ati Ane
eORRENGY BLL
Approves Measure in Presence
~ “of Democratic-Leaders,
I 1S NOT YET EFFECTIVE
, Now System of Banke Must First Bo
| organizes and - Board Appointed.
“Provisions of Measure, © a
| ‘Tho new currency bill, over which
[Conerens hax haggled and quarreled
{alte April 7, to extra xeaston, became
Vatnw when it wax formally signed by
| Proxtdont Wifson.
|. ‘The;dIN does not vecome effective,
chowover, until the - new system of
‘banks Wink been organized,
|The DIT was/powed by the senate
after vitglolle debate, rusbed over to
[the house, where Speaker Clark at
Ltixed tle ‘signed approval, and wiis
(then hurried tO ithe Waite | House:
tThererTiowaver, Wt Wax held up tn or-
Fader tit the president's xdanature
| ment be witnessed by the Democratic
jtraudete, The majority’ of the members
Jot the cabinet, membera ot the senate
und house committees on banking and
currency, Mrn. Wixon, the Stinyes El:
canes abd Margaret Wivon and Ma
Owen were proxent at the esremony.
| Lens than five ininutes after:the Dit
Jha been paxsed hotiMiourer of con:
[ere tind nflowrmed ntl Jon, 12.
Later President Wilson teft for Pass,
Chrlatian, Miss, for a three weekw”
vacation. . .
Following aro thei finportant features
of the now banking and Currency Lilt:
Authorizex al leant veleht reglounl
Femirve associations, each with @ te-,
xfonal bank. Will probably be twelve.
Conatitutes. necretary of thy trean
‘ury, aueretary of sigeleulture and tho
coniptrolter of the etirrency an organi
zation commission .to tix boundaries
of dintricts and regerve cities.
Entire nyetem under control of fod-
oral reserve bourd of neven members,
secretary of the treasury and comp:
troller of the currency, exottletd, ‘anit
five: others, appointed by the prent-
dent.
Natloial hark munt ‘nignify foten-
tion to Jain axwoctation wtthin xtxty
days or they’ cannot act ag reserve
agente thereafter, . :
Munt come within a year oF forfeit
charters.
State bank’ “may join by meotine
requirements for federal inspection.
Capital stick of regtonal reserve aA
noctattons, #10¢,00,000, of f per cent
of capital and surplus of ‘all national
banks.
Stock open to the nutional banks
Aint and then to public, -
Dixidends on restonal bank stock 6
per cent, >
Advantages bf new ayatemi wilt give
expansive a relaxtle euirreney, fell
tates By the rendy mobilization of re:
nerves.” a .
WA provent antes, .
Authorizes government, theqush tel
eral renerve banks, to issue collateral
approved by federal reaerve board.
redeemuble at treuxury in old and
at regtonal binky dn ‘old or lawful
money, at election of bunks.
Requires gold reseryex of 40 per
rent In treaxury department agatant
putstanding. renerve notes; provides
ax axainut depletion,
Regional reserve banks -eneh. man-
ged by nine directors, three vhosen
y fedetg) reserve boat, #lx elected
xy member banks, but three of whom
hall. sot be hankera. 4
, 2: oN
CONFESSES HE KILLED CHILD
After Admission. Jury Finds Man
Gullty of Assault and Battery.
“Bernard Eagan, who two years ako
an for plierman in frooktyn aKainat
Adotpt Kitne, prexent mayor of New
York, admitted -on tho witness stand
fm court tn Jersey ‘City that on the
nleht of Oct. 21 he shot eizht-yoarold
oxen Crowley to death.
The child was xhot down whilé ho
‘and ather boys were playing ‘about a
bonfire, and for a time it was thought
he had’ been xlain’ by a madman. ,
“Yes: [shot that boy,” sald Fagan,
“and T have been-sorely grieved over
since. | own Valuntle proporty in, that
neighborhood att have suffered heavy
Joss becaure of the pranks of boya.”
"The jury returned with a verdict of
assault and battery. Judgo Tennant
thought some mistake had been malo
and asked the foreman to repoat the
Jury's findings. ses a
“I never heard of such a Hdlculous
verdict,” anld tho. judge. “Flow twelve.
intelligent men could have come to
such an agreement Im beyond mo. It
$e a travesty on, Justice. This jury ts
digcharged without tho thanks of thé
court and excused from further ser:
vice at this term.” .
* . Malays KI U. 8. Botanist.
C. B. Robfanon, s botanist in the
science fection of the department of
the interior of tho Philippine Islands,
has been put to death By the natives
of Ambozna Inland, in the Malay Ar
chipelago. Mr. Robinson was éneaged
in botanical researches of the Inland.
<< Nifwiéen Cae Oe Cette 8%
| Fearful that she was going bitcd,
Miss Annio Schaefer, a companion of
‘Miss Tosa Skonley, n, wealthy woman
Tealding in a fadblonable apartmcint
house in Now York, leaped to her
death from: window’ om the eloth
floor, 7+ + of
Dear Doctor,
. Friend Lawyer,
Ths‘ Paper. Would "Increase Your:
Gigi ee UE, PL leer
SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1914.
DEATH REVEALS LAWYER'S SECRET
Monticello, N. Y., Started by Discovery of Melvin Couch's Strange Companion.
The death of Melvin H. Couch, a former district attorney of Sullivan county, N. Y., revealed that, unknown to his family and friends and to his clients, a woman had lived for three years in a secret room connecting with his law offices in Monticello, N. Y. Couch was found lying dead on his office lounge.
Death was due to rupture of a blood vessel near his heart. In the next room crumbled a frightened woman, who admitted that she had seen him die, but insisted that she was not responsible for his death.
She said that she was Adelia M. Brance, of Goshen, N. Y., and that the secret room had been her only home for three years.
Mr. Couch was sixty-five years old, and was formerly partner of Alton B. Parker, Democratic nominee for the presidency in 1994. The door that led from the office to the living quarters of the woman was always locked, and no one saw Couch and his companion passed through it. She seldom left her quarters. Although Mrs. Couch was a frequent visitor at the office of her husband she never suspected what the adjoining room contained.
In the excitement attending the finding of Couch's body some one climbed upon a chair and peered through the transom into the secret room. There he saw a woman huddled up on the floor beside a plain iron bed. Her clothing was poor and ill-fitting, her face had the look like that of a drug user, and her disheveled hair was streaked with gray.
The room she occupied was sparsely furnished, containing beside the bed an old cook stove, a table and two chairs. The woman, who is about forty years old, said she had lived there voluntarily and had never gone out in the daytime. At rare intervals she went for a walk at night. Mrs. Couch, who was present when the secret door was opened, fainted at the sight of the woman. After Adelaide Brance had been quieted and assured that no harm would come to her, she said: "I came out of the room to waken Mr. Couch, who often slept in his office. As soon as I saw him I knew he was dead. I knew that Dr. J. F. Curlette was his brother-in-law, and I telephoned to him to come at once." She said she met Couch three years ago, when she called at his office to sell books. The lawyer's friends remember that about this time he had the room where she was found cut off from his office by a heavy partition.
The woman was held on a technical charge, but the coroner's verdict as to the cause of Couch's death supported her assertion that she was not responsible. The attorney, she said, died of a ruptured blood vessel on Sunday morning. The autopsy brought the verdict that death was due to the breaking of the ascending aorta.
Mrs. Couch had not the slightest idea of her husband's double life, nor had his son or his daughter, said to be engaged to a young professional man of Monticello.
Mrs. Couch knew that her husband had forbidden her the locked door in his office, and that he often slept there, alleging insomnia, but she had no suspicions.
Takes Map on Standing Roof.
Henry Surman, a thimself, of Burlington, N. J., naturally felt pretty sleepy after he had worked for forty hours without so much, as a wink.
That was why he scared a half hundred spectators and nearly spelled his own destruction by selecting the edge of a standing roof as a couch.
Surman was, working with several other thimselfs on the roof of a building at Broad and Stary streets. He was doing some soldering along the edge, and the job required him to stretch out. In such a position he dosed and his soldering iron rolled off and nearly hit a pedestrian below.
For several minutes Surman slept. Soon he began to get restless. It was then that one of the other workmen saw his predicament from ten, to fifteen feet away. He was afraid to yell for fear the unconscious man might start enough to roll him off. Also he knew the worst might happen any moment and mean not only the death of the sleeper, but perhaps to somebody below.
Throwing a handful of gravel to the pavement to attract attention, without shouting, he waved and pointed in a way that made those who looked understand the danger. They fell back in hushed suspense, while the workman, John Tighman, worked his way along the edge and effected a rescue.
Surman ralibed his eyes as the
crowd cheered, and then looking about him, he nervously breathed a heavy "Phew!"
Communicated With Dead Husband.
"Mrs. Abby Miller, widow of Joanith Miller, "Poet of the Sierras," declared in San Francisco, Cal., he had communicated with her from beyond the grave. She is corroborated by her daughter, Banita.
This is the strange tale which rivals the psychic revelations of William James and W. T. Steel and all pears to corroborate the belief of Professor Hyslop and other leading psychological research leaders.
By some the ghost of the poet is said to have been seen about the calm he built on the "Heights" as his monument.
Mrs. Miller also declared that when Joaquin was alive he used to frequently communicate his thoughts to her across the continent. She lived in New York because she had asthma. She added:
"Especially in one case was this memorable I became so sorry about my husband, too, ill with fear that he was about to undertake a dangerous mission, that I sent a telegram to inquire about his plans. Back home the answer that he was ever then setting off for Macka's trip was a terrible strain on a pain of tears, but he could not be permitted to give it up.
"If we recollect what he does in life there is no reason why he cannot receive them after death. Even the soul may be clothed in a Nite of spirit."
Bible Sayas Preacher's Life
Rev. Dr. R. E. McClure, factor of the United Presbyterian church and president of the Indiana County Anti-Saloon league, o. Hattersville, Pa. owes his escape from death to a Bible carried under his arm.
Returning from a sleek call, Dr. McClure was passing a dark spot when he noticed two men, and at the same time heard a whistle. At the signal one of the men fired at the minister.
The bullet struck the Bible, perforating it and passing through Dr. McClure's clothing, struck his skin, without breaking it. Picking up a brick, he hurled it at his assailants, who fired. One of the men lost his hat, which the minister turned over to the police.
Dr. McClure has been unrestling in his prosecution of liquor law violators, and to this it attributed the attempt to murder him.
---
Girl a Needle Victim.
Miss Esther Keller is lying at her home in Reamstown, Pa., in a serious condition and the entire country side is aroused over an attack on her by a masked highwayman, who jabbed a hypodermic needle into her arm, robbed her and left her senseless by the roadside.
The young woman was returning from her work. At a lonely point near the town the highwayman jabbed from behind a tree and ordered her to halt. He grasped her arm, and when Miss Keller courageously tried to fight him off, jabbed her with the needle.
Miss Keller fainted. She had just received her $25 of $12 a week, and the highways made of with this.
---
Girl Gets $20,000 Damages
Miss Annie L. Eckert, aged fifteen years, was given a verdict of $20,000 damages against the Public Service Railway company by a jury in the circuit court of Hudson county in Jersey City, N. J.
Miss Eckert was riding on a car of the defendant company bound for the Wewahken ferry on April's last. An oil signal lamp at the rear of the car budat, and in the scramble to get off Miss Eckert was thrown down and off the car. Besides other injuries, she sustained what is said to be a permanent injury to her spine.
Bank In Elizabeth, Pa., Closed.
The Elizabeth, Pa. First National bank did not open its doors, under orders from its board of directors, according to a message received by Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane in Washington. Appointment of a receiver was requested, but no reason for the shutdown was given. Kane or ordered a bank examiner placed in charge.
Would Fence Off Mexico
Senator Ashurst, of Arizona, introduced a bill into the senate providing for the construction of a barbed wire fence along the Mexican border from the Pacific to where the Rio Grande becomes the boundary line. The fence is to be of five strangles of 12 gauge wire and must not cost more than $450 a mile. The bill carries an appropriation of $350,000.
Recess of Supreme Court.
The supreme court of the United States recessed to Jan. 5, when decisions in several important cases are expected.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADEL PHIA - 2 FLOOR quiet;
1200 S. 20th St. - city mill, fan
city, $9,905.12
RYE FLOUR firm, at $350 at 3.60
per barrel.
WHEAT steady: No. 2 red, new.
92 69 68
OATS firm: No. 2 yellow 75 67 68
OATS firm: No. 2 white 4d 64 47 68
lower grades: 4d 64 47 68
POTATOES steadily, at 70% sec. per bushel.
Live Stock Prices
CHICAGO HOGS unsettled, one
fancy load sold at $7.90, bulk of sales.
$7.55/7.80, light. $7.35/7.70, medium.
$7.15/7.40, medium. $7.05/7.40, rough.
$7.45/7.55, plies. $6.50/7.45.
CATTLE stenly, beaves. $6.75/
9.70; Texas stenly, $6.70/7.75; wrecks
and freeways. $6.75; roads and
railways. $6.70; calves. $6.75;
SNEEK. $6.70; $4.00/6.75;
yearliner. $7.50/6.80; l.m.
native. $4.00/7.
ADMIRAL T. B. HOWARD.
C. W.
Arrest Grandson in Death Mystery.
Word has been received in Harrisburg, Ia., of the arrest in Pittsburgh of Edward Smith, wanted in connection with the death of his grandfather, John E. Bush.
The body of the old man was found in his farming house a few miles north of Harrisburg, last Thursday night. There was a bullet hole through his head, and phyllobians estimated that he had been dead at least twenty four hours.
Bush kept considerable money in the house, where he lived alone. Police all over the country have been searching for the grandson ever since the murder.
He is a son of Constable Charles E. Smith, of Harrisburg. He was known to have spent some time with his grandfather just before the latter was killed.
County Detective Walters left Harrisburg for Pittsburgh to bring the boy back.
Becker's Mother Dead.
The mother of former Police Lieutenant Charles Becker, who is in the death house in Sing Eing awaiting execution for the part he played in the murder of Herman Rosenthal, died at her home in New York.
Mrs. Becker had been bedridden for years. She died in ignorance of her son's plight.
For more than a year she had not been permitted to read a newspaper. When her son Charles ceased to visit her, another son, John, told her that Charles was suffering with rheumatism and had been sent to a sanitarium. This explanation satisfied her.
Clothes After: Leap to Death in River
Frank Keller, twenty years old, was drowned when he jumped into the Delaware river at "Crums" shipyard in Philadelphia with his clothing ablaze. Keller was working inside the torpedo boat Parker, which is nearly completed, when his clothing became ligated by a lighted candle. He ran to the deck and jumped into the river with his clothing in flames. He did not rise to the surface, and it is believed that the shock of plunging into the cold water rendered him unconscious. His body was finally recovered.
Burglars · Murder · Farmer
John Harrett, a farmer, was murdered, and his daughter, Helen, was knocked unconscious, bound and gagged, in their home at Spraker's Station, near Amsterdam, N. Y. Their assailants escaped and so far have eluded searchers who have worked with bloodhounds. Harrett was known to keep some money hidden in the house, and this is believed to have been the motive for the crime.
---
Killed Carrying Home Xmas Tree.
A Christmas tree that Michael Mahorcie, of Snellton Pa., was carrying over his shoulder obstruction his view of the railroad tracks as he was crossing them, and he was struck and instantly killed. The accident took place almost in sight of his home Mahorcie was fifty years old and leaves a family.
Oscar Wilde's Son to Marry
Vivian Holland, the younger son of Oscar Wilde, be to marry in London, Eng, next month to Vivet Caughe, the daughter of an other of the Royal Dragons, now dead. Vivian changed his name after his father's conviction. At the same time Mrs Wilde used for a divorce.
Two Seasons Murder
Joseph Rostsky, no actress, and George Amerian, night fireman, held by the state police at Serraton, Pa. on suspicion, have confessed the murder of Stephen Legas, the aged watchman at the Central breaker at Avoca, a week ago. Lucas was murdered for his wagers.
Armours Fined For Bad Chicken.
For having in their possession 825 pounds of decayed chicken unit for human consumption, Armour & Co., were fined $300 in New York. The company pleaded guilty.
GOING TO GET MARRIED?
Let Us Design Your Engagement Cards and Wedding Invitations.
Our Blushes.
We do most of our blushing for the mistaken of our friends-Philadelphia Recon.
LANE R. MUILSON, VIRGINIA
An amazing and good
Great South America.
Plummer L. Elder or
lombona." The incline
Pombo, the poet, is told by volume "He happened in a New York literary firm presided by a distinctions Argentiney. Pombo, was a small very homely, been present to her, and she him with it enthusiasm was the anomalous postess, famous Edda Elogastia.
"BPKAK, MAN." CHILD HIS BOYFRIEND.
"Worth reading! with the deepest pani's soul, so re-verses, too, explain the adoration of a S you men! Who am such verses?"
"Well," said Pammy
New York, and if you
are acquaintance-
"Speak, mate," said
outloudly. "Where
what's her name? I
know. I will cover her
when begin, setter
the Pammy."
Believe, for they are great. Those vicious pigs and high. Purse of the idea. Fits men to live at the John G. Galtley Gregory.
Couldn't Fool Her.
This story of Gibbon, the famous historian, was told by an contemporary: "Gibbon had a small face, almost lost between a high forehead and a big, double chin and a curvature of a nose which was crushed between the encroaching slopes of a pair of baggy
cheeks. One day he was introduced by M. de Lauzun to Mme. du Delfand, a blind lady, who was in the habit of passing her hands over the features of her renowned contemporaries when introduced to her in order to get an idea of their appearance. Gibbon received these marks of attention, offering his face to the exploration of the blind lady's fingers.
```markdown
```
blind lady's finger with a delightful trifleiness.
"Mine, du Defiant! passed her fingers over his chubby face carefully. She did her utmost to recover some other outstanding trait than the pair of abnormally developed cheeks, but all to no purpose. During the examination expressions of doubt and bewilderment chased each other over the face of the blind woman until last, in an outburst of anger, she set her hands falls by her side and cried out, 'Bah! this is a bad joke!'
He Was No Scot.
On one occasion Sir Henry Campbell, Hammerman and Taylor, the golf champion, were at Bristol together. A Scotch relative of Sir Henry's earnestly contended that Taylor was of Scottish birth, a claim which Sir Henry was inclined to support one of the guests then intervened. "Well, all I know about Taylor is that he is a very nice man; my golf club engaged him to play an exhibition match at a fixed fee. Taylor duly came. But the weather was so wet that no golf could be played, and when we offered him payment he refused firmly, only taking his bare traveling expenses. Whereupon Sir Henry turned to a captain and said, 'I'm afraid such a fact is quite fatal to our contention.'
A. Matter of Course.
A famous skier who had always pretended to regal golf as "a game for old men and a lady women" was once persuaded to hit his luck at the sport. Almost the whole club went to the first tee so heIMP drive off. "What have I got to do, daddle, my old friend?" he re:rked, in langual tones.
The caddie moved and the cricketer, with proper decoration, drove off by an extraordinary stroke of luck, he drove a beautiful l, which landed just on the edge, the green and slowly tucked down into the hole. The caddie, wild with excitement came dashing back, shouting, "You down in one, air-the ball's in the hole." "Oh it is! I'm gutted of that," replied the mother in reply, "At first I was afraid I must have missed it." Badminton's career
GOT RID OF THE BORE.
The Method. Though Was Less Tactful Than Clemenceau Intended.
M. Commutant, the French states-
man had for many years an excellent
and faithful servant, whose education
and information is somewhat neg-
tled. In part of fact, he could not
retrieve from writing.
W. I. Johnson, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN.
10 West Leigh Street, Richmond, Virginia. LARGE CAPACIOUS WARE-ROOMS, FILLED WITH THE LATEST DESIGNS FROM THE BEST MANUFACTORIES IN THE UNITED STATES. PROMPT AND POLITE SERVICE. ORDERS RESPONDED TO DAY-OR NIGHT. Determined to furnish the very BEST service at the LOWEST Rates possible, the Patronage of the Public is Solicited.
D. J. FARRAR, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. ALL KINDS OF CARPENTRY. OFFICE ROOM, NO. 405, MECHANICS' SAVINGS BANK BUILDING 'Phone, Monroe----2637. RESIDENCE, 610 N. FIRST STREET----SHOP IN REAR 'Phone, Monroe----2166. Special Attention Paid to the Taking of Contracts for Building of Any Style of Architecture. Job Work a Specialty.
A. D. PRICE.
Funeral Director, Embalmer and Liveryman. All Orders Promptly Filled at Short Notice by telegraph or telephone. Hails rented for meetings and nice Entertainment. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large Piano or Band Wagons for Hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class Carriages, Buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies.
venerable senator who was also a venerable bore called on M. Clemenceau and asked to see him. The latter replied through the faithful servant that he was exceedingly busy and would be much obliged of the senator could and time to call again next morning. But the senator insisted. It was he said an affair of the utmost urgency, and tomorrow would be too late. So he scribbled the object of his visit on the back of his card, which he gave to the servant to take to his master. M. Clemenceau, somewhat annoyed by this persistence added a second line to the card and gave it to the servant to take to his secretary. M. Clemenceau, now, the second line ran thus "Consol, get rid of this old feel in five minutes."
The servant went to look for M. Cussol, but M. Cussol was not there. What was to be done? He had not the courage to disturb his master again, so he took the card to the expectant senator, and "Worry sorry, sir," he told apologetically, "M. Clemente is boss, and M. Cussol is not but my master has written the reply here if you would care to read it, sir." The servant read and left the house, and since then M. Clemente counts one supporter less in the upper chamber.
Good Cheer.
After every storm the sun will shine,
for every problem there is a solution,
and the soul's indescribable duty is to
be good cheer. W R Alger
An Eratic Echo:
The late Sir John Long had travelled in most quarters of the globe. On one occasion when visiting Spain he was asked at a courtship by a traveling companion to test the powers of what was desired to be a wonderful eagle. Sir John, slowly and deliberately, in ruffled tongues uttered the words "Dunce Adversus" of the name of the paper he owned "Dunce Courier and Argus"; the name of the opposition paper, came back as the eagle. Sir John's friends had played him a trick
Don't Give Him a Chance.
"Say, man," poised up little Johnny after the minister throbbed his call and taken his departure "when Mr. Moeder was here every time you stop ped talkin' he would start in to say something" and "gift as for every time as 'dare say' an' then you would start goin' agin' on talk a lot more' an' that is the way it kept on right along' an' the only thing he said all the time he was here was 'I dare say' 'I dare say' every few minutes."
"Well, what of it?" I am not to blame for Mr. Moeder's poor ideas of ideas, am I? demanded Johnny's mother, some what imitation.
"I dunno 'bout that," said Johnny doubtfully, as if not exactly sure what was meant by plenty of ideas, "but anyhow, if you order give him a clutch. When he started to with it I dare say, why didn't you keep quiet just once, but let him go ahead say what he was sent to an have it over with?" St. Paul Pioneer Press
Playing House.
Little Sue Let's play housekeeping
You be the paper and I'll be the
mama. Little Harold Aw, what
the use? We won't get started good
before you'll commence crying. Little
Sue No, I won't. Just you play
like Harold and don't bring the table
and slam the shoes. St. Louis Republ.
ONE ADVERTISEMENT WILL
NOT MAKE YOU A FORTUNE,
BUT IT, WILL SERVE AS A
STONE IN THE FOUNDATION
OF BUSINESS SUCCESS ::
THE ECONOMY,
316 North Third Street.
FINE
TAILORING
THURSDAY LEAVE RICHMOND
For the Thursdays, M. ex. Local
10:30 A.M. M.-Express: 6:00 P.M. M.-Express
Electric Lightshed Sleeping Care for Atlanta and
Birmingham 14:50 P.M. M.-Express Work Days:
5:00 P.M.-Local YORK RIVER SERVICE.
4:30 P. M.-Daily-Local for
West Point. 5:30 P. M. ex. Sunday
(Steamer Train)-Limited for West
Point, connecting with York River
Line for Baltimore, Philadelphia,
New York and the East. 6:00 A.
M. ex. Sunday.
TRANS. AMRIY RICHMOND
From the Thursdays 6:50 A.M. M.-Ex.
2:00 P.M. M.-Express: 12:50 A.M. Ex.
From West Point: 8:30 A. M.
ex. Sunday (Steamer Train) and 9:30
A. M. daily: 4:25 P. M. ex. Sunday.
H. L. BISON, D. A. M.
Richmond, Virginia
Johnson,
, EMBALMER AND
MAN.
Richmond, Virginia.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHIDON>Local from East: 9:55 A.M. 7:40 P.M. Through from East: 11:30 A.M. 1:55 P.M. 8:30 P.M. Local from West: 8:15 A.M. 9:18 P.M. A.M. and 7:50 P.M. Through: 8:15 A.M. 11:58 A.M. and 8:55 P.M. Through: 9:55 A.M. 4:55 P.M. week days: Sunday 9:55 P.M. little安格斯, Butler
SEABOARD AIR LINE
Northbound trains scheduled to leave Richmond daily: 9:00 A. M.-Local to Norfolk. 1:10 P. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Atlanta, Birmingham, and coach. Jacksonville, 11:00 P. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Atlanta, Hammond, and coach. Nashville, 1:00 A. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Jacksonville. Northbound trains scheduled to arrive in Richmond daily: 8:00 A. M., 7:00 A. M., 8:05 P. M., 8:50 P. M. Local.
ALPHEUS SCOTT
CHURCH HILL
Funeral Director and
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Office, 3006 P St. Phone Mad. 2237
Residence, 1015 St. James St.
Phone, Mad. 6619
Paraphernalla, Maturl
Service of the Best.
Service, Moderate Rates.
MADAME SCOTT, Embalmer
for Women and Children, and
attendance at funerals.
JOHN M.
Higgins,
DEALER IN
JOHN M.
CHOICE GROCERIES
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
PURM COODS, FULL VALUE FOR
THE MONEY.
1610 East Franklin Street.
(Near Old Market)
ton repaired in New York. He said,
"The secret of animal training is gentleness. Nothing sudden or bequeath must be done. An unposted lateness may anger an animal more than a kick in the ribs. Sudden bequeath, unposted things never do no matter how well they are treated. Once I was showing in S. Oxford, West things supported night with a S. H. admirer. The old man was the one of hospitality, but I admit I was rather startled when he leaned toward me and said,
"Stick in, man! Gender stock in. Yet
friend! Coats! Two muffins, abode'd 'ye.""
— Exchange
Bear In Mind
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That you can always depend on or when you need printing in a hurry
We'll do it right at prices that are right.
Subscribe to the Richmond Planet.
CLEANING DYING AND
REPAIRING.
CHITMAN M. WHITE.
Proprietor.
Old Yacht Club.
PURE WHISKEY
Will Satisfy the Lover of the High
Kind of Stimulant. Special Prices
We Have All Grades of Good LB
querc, Cigars and Tobacco. Call
and See Us.
ISAAC STRAUS & CO..
422'E. Broad St.,
RAILROADS
N. & W. NORFOLK
ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO NORFOLK.
IN EFFECT September 30, 1913.
Leave Imperial Northern Railway to NORFOLK.
9:00 A.M. 12:00 P.M. 14:10 P.M.
FOR LYNCHBURG AND THE WEST: 9:20 A.M.
9:00 A.M. 9:20 P.M. 9:20 P.M.
For Richmond from Norfolk: 21:10 A.M.
9:00 A.M. 9:00 P.M. From the West:
9:00 A.M. 9:20 P.M. 8:10 P.M. 9:20
P.M. 9:00 P.M.
Please ally at K. Sunday, Sunday Only.
HWVIL, Canyon, Tail, Mgr.
W. G. Canyon, Train, Mgr.
W. G. HONKY, Train, Mgr.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY
For Florida and South: 6:17 A. M
7:28 P. M. 1:00 A. M. Charleslou.
For Norfolk: **11:10 A. M. 10:00 A. M.
4:10 P. M. **7:20 P. M.
For New York: **11:00 A. M. 10:00 A. M.
4:10 P. M. **7:20 P. M.
For New York and South: 6:15 A. M. 10:00 A. M.
4:00 P. M. 1:00 A. M. and 6:15 P. M.
For Petersburg: 1:00 A. M. 6:15 A. M.
4:15 A. M. 8:00 A. M. 10:00 A. M.
4:00 P. M. 4:10 P. M. 8:05 P. M.
4:00 P. M. 8:30 P. M. 11:45 P. M.
For Goldsboro: 8:30 P. M. 11:45 P. M.
Trains arrive Richmond DAILY: **11:10 A. M.
6:40 A. M. 8:55 A. M. 8:77 A. M.
A. M. **11:45 A. M. **11:45 A. M. **10:00 P. M.
A. M. **10:00 P. M. 8:58 P. M. 8:58 P. M.
8:00 P. M. 11:00 P. M.
*Except Sunday, *Except Sunday only.
Time of arrival and departure and convenience
not guaranteed.
G. R. SAYFIELD, G. R.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Premier Carrier of the South
N. II - Following schedule figures published as
information and not guaranteed.
Embalmer
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JOHN MITCHELL, JR. EDITOR
TERMS IN ADVANCE
One copy, per year 8152
One copy, eight copies 1722
One copy, six copies 1722
One copy, four copies 1722
One copy, three copies 1722
Magazine copy 8152
BANK CLAPS OF A HIGHER BENEFIT
THAN TWO CENTS NOT RECEIVED
ON SUBSCRIPTIONS
THE CLAPT is issued weekly. The author
The year is 1865 per year in advance.
There are four ways by which money can be
not be mail at our premises. In a Post Office Mail
Order, by Bank checks or draft, or an Amount
Money Order, and when none of these can be
received, in a Registered Letter.
MONEY ORDERS You can buy a Money Order
at your Post Office, perate at the Richmond
Post Office, and we will be responsible for its
arrival.
EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS can be obtained
at one of the American Express Co., the
first branch of the American Express Co., the Wells Fargo
and the Express Company. We will be respon-
sible for money sent by any of these companies.
The Express Money Order is a safe and secure
way for forwarding money.
**REGISTERED LETTER** If a Money Order, Post Office or an Expense Office is not within your reach, your Postmaster will register the Letter you wish to send us on payment of the note. Then, if the Letter is lost or not received, you can send money to this address at your risk.
We cannot be responsible for money sent to letters in any other way than one of the four ways mentioned above. If you send your money in any other way, you must do it at your own risk.
RENEWALS, ETC.—If you do not want THE PLANET continued for another year after your subscription has run out, you then notify us by email (and to discontinue it). The source have decided that subscribers to newspapers who do not order their paper discontinued at the expiration of time for which it has been paid, should file for the payment of the subscription up to data when they order the paper discontinued.
COMMUNICATIONS—When writing to us to know your subscription or to discontinue your subscription, you should give your name and address a full otherwise we cannot and your name or address a CHANGE OF ADDRESS in order to change the address of a subscriber we must be sent the order as well as the present address.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Va.
as commission matter.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1911.
The Democratic Party is the party of
adherents of the Democratic Party.
Women have made the most
and women will do the most
in the good opinion of the
country. It has a good
observive force which promotes
the improvement of the public and
national interest of the country.
The question that I ever present is whether How can the Potter's Party be held together for a common purpose when it known that it is one of dismemberment. With the Income Tax, the Tariff and the current Measures out of the way applied with a slight fear of leadership of the House, how does with the wanting elements be made to obey the all of the Master in the White House and the corps of party Associates? Upon the corress an answer to the question will depend the return of the Roy of all Party to power. The Roy of all Party to power that they have a hard time to observe the evident
The present member of the Nation is
publican, the citizen, observed that
of the faith, and in the hope
an organization and a large pro-
portion of former members of that
city outside of it are ready and
there to join their integrity and
more harmony within the rate.
fundamental principles of the
progressive Party, and nominate a
attual presidential candidate there
or it must adopt the principles of
Progressive Party and nominate
Theodore Roosevelt. If Col
Sebastian is nominated, the crime
threaten as the Progressive term
will have been "wiped out"
there is another place to the act
ion, the opposition of the "old
and" This element will oppose
Roosevelt to the bitter
be that the Democratic Party
remain in possession of the party. Sambo-
ment for eight years. To do so, too an
must renominate Woodrow Wilson,
he is pledged to serve but one
from the outlook is bright for he-
dicanism, but it is brighter for
nocracy.
Let us hope for the best, that the
entry may enjoy an era of pros-
Why
perity, regardless of whom may occupy the chair in the White House.
"IS RACE PRIDE DEAD"
Editor W. Calvin Chase of the Washington H.C. Bee wants to know if race pride is dead in Washington and if it is not dead, he wants to know what has become of it. We have read the editorial deliverance two for three times, and we are to be sure that our own experience does not detract from what we have learned.
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of the fact that the state, instance of
these works is a controlled printer, turned
into a print and fault with a col-
lection of the rights of those who
that owned stockholders are oper-
ation of the indicative are that as
one of our colored relations
establish the fact that Jesus
these works will find fault
with rich and seek a new form of
collection.
Many of the associations in insti-
tutions place the very hands that
they are and condemn other. The
only reason that white undertakers
the test is to be the only one who
can be the only one who can be the
white test the only one who can be the
not offer to handle the altercation of
white test.
that this is the best of shadows firmly gratified to the life in the adverse colored person. Have bedridden have done much suffered and suffered the evil and so will creep into the face on terrible occasions all over the South korea all the people have improved the condition of the people having so the people told these people that they do not want the life The examined the life in the face
The late Scott Town out of their cremator, parlor, their churches, their private lot, their places of enjoyment at local of appointive places in the United States government. Still some members of the Sambo race and related ones at that too are ready and willing to cut humble pee and look for a sign from the hired conduct folk showing them where they are in the back way and put first one person for first class or second class goods with the first class service eliminated.
Why the availing colored person of
intelligence cannot understand that in the building up of business enterprises supported by themselves, whether that business be clothing stores, millinery establishments, restaurants, jewelry stores, printers, real estate offices, confectioneries, they are making openings where their own children may ultimately be employed, is a mystery to us.
Not to understand this is the same substance of ignorance. And yet colored men are other prominent colored men violating this insultation at rule of business for a little personal advantage or statistic that they have a little additional advantage. Whether it is because they claim the people of the world
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We have been doing stories where our wives and daughters may no without being insulted. Such pictures by J. W. Murs, Dr W. L. Smith, in Leighton Park, Dr Murray, in South Waltham, and others. No, many of us would rather attempt to be so a worthless story, where you will be charged with a waste of time.
"We have our own store in the property of Mr. Ware. The last shows that will be opened or perhaps in the next. But we are going to go to a white store where the clerics will be sent to watch back, or be dressed in a white coat or a suit in the door. So the old people are more likely to see they are patronizing the institution.
Now we are going to have another
theatre where high class
and high play will be introduced.
The theatre is good, but that theatre
is not good, and that people who
are not good are not in the theatre
who are not good are not in the theatre
who are not good are not in the theatre
who are not good are not in the theatre
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Accidental Killing, Collision of Old Quarrel.
Gardenville, N. Dec. 22. William Johnson was shot and killed by the first cousin, Henry Washington, at an entertainment at Old Fellow's Hall in the colored settlement here at 11 o'clock on Saturday night. The shooting was the culmination of a difficulty between Washington and Tom Scott, which occurred about two years ago, in which the former was shot.
Both parties, who had apparently become reconciled, met at the entertainment, when some words again passed between them. Washington, claiming he thought Scott would again attack him, took out his gun, a Seal-cathe Colt's automatic revolver, and kept it in his hand. Several of his friends, among whom was Johnson, wishing to avoid any further trouble, attempted to take the gun from Washington, and in the struggle the gun was discharged, the ball penetrating Johnson's face near the left nostril and lodging in the base of the brain, killing him instantly.
On Sunday morning Acting Coroner T. W. Ross, with Dr. John W. Scott, as attending physician, held an injured over the body, and a number of witnesses were examined. The boating having been proven entirely accidental, Washington was exonerated by the jury. He was immediately brought before Police Justice Ross and heavily fined for carrying concealed weapons. All the parties involved are colored.
HINDOO SALVE.
The world wonder hair preparation. Cures Dandruff and Grows Hair in abundance. It has been used by the Hinders for centuries. Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906. Serial No. 55666. Price 500 per jar. Enclose 100 in stamp for sample. Agents wanted.
HINIDOO SALVE CO., 2515 Lawton Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 40
A very careful British tourist, arriving at an old fashioned German hostelry, bid the invitation to order a hard-boiled tea for the next morning. The hostess awakened by a sound where orgranted, and moved much bumping to the side, and being brought outside his staged room, di-
Feminine Finance.
A woman who has some rental property, but not much business ability, had been asking $30 a month rent for a house that had been vacant for several months.
Finally a prospective renter called and inquired about the place and the amount of the rent.
"Well," replied the owner "I have been asking $30 a month, but the house has been vacant so long I will have to ask $30 a month."
Spiteful.
Mrs. Earleth. My wife. I loves me deeply.
He says that when I am away the house seems empty. Mrs. Slim.
That isn't love leaves. He may have taken the money to our size.
Boston Pier that.
Sacrificed to the title.
Mr. Hempsk was a supporter of Mrs. Hempsk's campaign. She just stood for the polls and one of the polls did not close for the vote and they wouldn't let me vote. She said Mr. Hempsk was the New York Tribune.
In the Wrong Shop.
An old gentleman waved up to the pretty girl attendant of the counting room of a daily news office and said, "Miss, I would like to get copies of your paper for a week back." "You had better get a parson plaster," she abstractedly replied. "You get them just across the street." Philadelphia Lodge.
Mercenary Love
Two little cousins had quarreled, and the mother of one of them tried to make peace.
"Alny," she said, why did you tell Bobbie you wouldn't be his little sweetheart?
"Cos he didn't ask me," replied Amy indignantly, "and he knew I had a new sixteen." London Telegraph.
Names of Cities
Boston is not the only city that has difficulty in the pronunciation of her name. Outsiders consider Boston quite easy. It is St Louis. New Orleans, Los Angeles, Spokane, Louisville and Houston that are difficult. El Paso it self has two more or less correct pronunciations. Valetta gives several syllables in the mouths of strangers, and our bereavers' sister city a rose the border has to suffer being called Jowwar reezz by tourists who past -El Paso Hernald.
A Metaphor With a History.
To "know a hawk from a hornshaw" is a metaphor with a current history. It is a comparison drawn from falconry. "Hornshaw" is a corruption of "beronshaw" or going horns, a bird which was a common prey of the falcons. To know a hawk from a hornshaw is therefore to be able to distinguish the falcon from its prey. A further colloquial corruption crept into the phrase "to know a hawk from a handsaw," a form used by Hamlet in one place. Possibly the distinction between a hawk and a hornshaw was found not to be strong enough for the purposes of the proverb. Manchester Guardian
His Queen Doctrine.
Two centuries have passed since the Scottish judge, Lord Montello, was born. In his origin and progress of Language" he argued that human beings should be studied. The other animals, but this doctrine seemed to the contemporaries of Dr Johnson so ridiculous that the wigs based of many a jest upon it. His belief that men had rid of their tails by sitting upon them would now surely take a smile among authorologists. Among blas more stunting propositions was the earnestly maintained one that the eruing outung "was a class of the human species, and that its want of speech was merely accidental."
A Sensitive Soul
Owen Mudge was a very sensitive man. More than once of a bursh word he had forsaken profitable work and gone home for sympathy to his wife. One morning Owen started out to help Glenn Butler, who had bought a new stunts pulling machine and was preparing to clear a field. Toward noon Owen came back. Mrs Mudge sighed and waited sympathetically for the explanation.
"I just couldn't stand it," said Owen, rubbling his law. "When I see that stump puller twist them roots out it reminded me of the times I got my back teeth extracted. The first thing I knew I was limp as a tag, and I just ached all over and had to quit."
A Few Bufficed.
Air James Crichton Browne was sent on a mission to Jamaica in connection with the British colonial office. While at Kingston he had an encounter with a colored but very humble official. Sir James, a strenuous sanitarian and an ardent Scot, was keenly interested in the Scottish population of the island. "Do you have many Scotsmen in these parts?" he asked of the official. The darky thought for a moment and then answered. "Not many; just a few, but enough." Sir James collapsed.
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
THE MERRIAM WEBSTER
The Only New unabridged dictionary in many years.
Contains the pith and essence of an authoritative library.
Covers overy field of knowledge. An Encyclopedia, in a single book.
The Only Dictionary with the New Divided Page.
400,000 Words. 2700 Pages.
6000 Illustrations. Cost nearly half a million dollars.
Let us tell you about this most remarkable single volume.
Write for sample pages, full particulars, etc.
Name this paper and we will send free a set of Pocket Maps
G. & C. Merriam Co.
Springfield, Mass.
The Panama Canal Is a Big Job
THE BAY OF THE RIVER
We can't handle them so big. But printing jobs, big or little, is our business.
When you need printing, see us first.
The Flying Dutchman.
The legend of the Flying Dutchman is the explorer in a work entitled "The Search for Atmospheric Phenomenon" by William Lester. The story runs that or omen in time a certain Dutch sea captain swore such a fearful oath that he was condemned by the higher powers to beat about the seas until the day of judgments. His vessel is never known to get into port and is seen at unmortal times sailing at an immense rate before the wind under full press of storms. In very stormy weather he sails about the Cape of Good Hope. The exploration is probably found in the waterspout or in some storm driven mist
Do You Know Them?
I am very anxious to get in touch with some of my people. I left my home, Ashoville, N. C., in 1896 and for three years kept up a regular correspondence. Since then I have heard nothing of my people. My mother, Martha Ross and step-father Brooka Ross were living at No. 10 Ann St., Ashoville, N. C.
My mother had two brothers Frank and Henry Swanson and one sister by the name of Hattie Alexander, whose husband's name was Julius.
Any information concerning them will be thankfully received. JOHN ADAMS, Box B, Dannemora, N. Y.
Karle's Princess Hair Oil
For Hair and Scalp. Fifty Conti
(50c.) Per Bottle. Agents Wanted.
Write for Price List.
JAMES T. EARLE, P. O. Box 390.
Newport, R. I.
WANTED—ANOTHER GOOD LIN
otype Operator. Apply at The
PLANET Office.
SUPERIOR TO COPAIBA & INJECTIONS
SANTAL
MIDY
RELIEVES IN 24 HOURS
---
N. A., S. A., E. A. & A.
Corporated under the Laws of the State
IT PAYS AN ENDOWMENT
ADDUATED ENDOWMENT of $3,000 per year. It Pays From $3,00 to $4,00 per year. BURIAL BENEFIT of from $25,000 per year additional. It has a STRONG Much Property.
District Deputies and Special Deputies will mark the organizing of New Lodges in V.
The Female Department is KNOWN COURT, ORDER OF COURT.
PAYS $150,00 ENDOWMENT. One Year. It Pays SICK DUES of $3,000 per year. BENEFIT of from $25,00 to $50. For further information apply to MITCHELL, JR., Grand Chancellor, t, Richmond, Va.
AS M. CRUMP, Grand Keeper of H. North Third Street, Richmond, Va. or to M. L. CHILES, Grand Worthy Registrar, West Leigh Street, Richmond, Va.
Incorporated under the Laws of the State of Virginia IT PAYS AN ENDOWMENT.
A GRADUATED ENDOWMENT of $30000 for Only $300 Per Year. It Pays From $300 to $400 per week SICK DUES and a BURIAL BENEFIT of from $500 to $5000 for Only $000 per year additional. It has a STRONG TREASURY and owns Much Property.
District Deputies and Special Deputies will give information concerning the organizing of New Lodges in Virginia.
The Female Department is known as
GRAND COURT, ORDER OF CALANTHE
IT PAYS $150.00 ENDOWMENT. The Cost Is Only $3.00 Per Year. It Pays SICK DUES of $3.00 Per Week and a EURIAL BENEFIT of from $25.00 to $50.00. For further information apply to JOHN MITCHELL, JR., Grand Chancellor, 311 North Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. THOMAS M. CRUMP, Grand Keeper of Records and Seal, 511 North Third Street, Richmond, Va. or to MISS M. L. CHILES, Grand Worthy Register of Deeds, 114, West Leigh Street, Richmond, Va.
Female Embalmer.
MADAM LUCIE CHRISTIAN SCOTT is associated in business with her husband, Mr. Alpheus Scott. Madam Scott claims the honor of being the only Negro woman in the State of Virginia—holding a State License to practice Embalming, and is indeed, one of the few women in the United States, Embalming and Conducting Minerals. She ranks with the best in her profession.
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, Shopheads of Bethlehem and Ideal Benefit Society.
Your Patronage and Influence will be greatly appreciated. Please remember that she is always at your service.
Reliable Service at Moderate Rates.
OFFICE: 3006 P Street, 'Phone, Madison 2337.
RESIDENCE: 1015 St. James St.
'Phone, Madison 6519.
MANSFIELD
mankind, or no charge, no matter what condition may be, and restore you to perfect the best and leading ones in the United States that I am one of the most wonderful people in the world. I use nothing but herbs, rots seeds, berries, flowers and plants in thousands that the most galliful plant clans in America and have give no cure for them.
My Medicines there the following symptoms, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung, Mismism in any form; Poison Troubles, Sore, Skin Disease, all ticks plains, La Grippie or Pneumonia, Worst form without the use of a knife on face and body. Etiologies of Kidneys neys. My Medicines cure any disease ororrhoea and Syphilis trouble a special Medicines sent anywhere. For further person on 1
mankind, or no charge, no matter what your disease, sickness or affliction may be, and restore you to perfect health. Thousands of people the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe will testify that I am one of the most wonderful healers of all complains in the world. I use nothing but herbs, roots barks, gums, balances leaves, seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicine. They have cared thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and have given up to die, and said there was no cure for them.
no charge, no matter what your disease,
and restore you to perfect health. Thou
reading ones in the United States and E
of the most wonderful healers of all o
nothing but herbs, rots barks, gums,
flowers and plants in my medicine.
If the most skillful physicians and the be
fica and their have given up to die, an
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Bed, Kidney, Bladder, Picture, Piles in an
Throat, Lung, Indigestion, Oc
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Body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Dis
dicines cure any die so no matter of wh
yphilitic troubles a specially.
sent anywhere. For full particulars, see
My Medicine Care the Following Discises:—Heart Diseases, Consumption, Blood, kidney, Bladder Picture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinay, Sore Throat, Lung, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Pleurisy, Adhesion of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Sorea, Skin Disease, all tching sensations, all Female Complaints, Gripe or Pneumonia, Bicee, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in the worst form without the use of a knife or instruments, Edema, Pimples on face and body, Labels of Kidneys or Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. My Medicine cure any disease no matter of what nature. Goorhoe and Syphilitic troubles a specially.
Medicines sent anywhere. F r full particulars, send, write for call in person on 1
L. J. HAYDEN.
220 West Broad St.
The Planet for or excellent gift...
Planet for one year
ellent gift--only $1
220 West Broad St. Richmond, Va.
The Planet for one year is an excellent gift--only $1.50
THE Laws of the State of Virginia
IN ENDOWMENT.
EDWMENT of $300.00 for Only $3.00
$3.00 to $4.00 per week SICK DUES
of from $25.00 to $50.00 for Only
It has a STRONG TREASURY and
Special Deputies will give information
of New Lodges in Virginia.
Department is known as
ORDER OF CALANTHE
EDWMENT. The Cost Is Only
SICK DUES of $3.00 Per Week and
from $25.00 to $50.00.
in apply to
Grand Chancellor, 311 North Fourth
Grand Keeper of Records and Seal,
Richmond, Va. or to
Grand Worthy Register of Deeds,
Richmond, Va.
Embalmer.
The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or partially obscured image. Therefore, no text can be extracted from it.
L. J. HAYDEN
MANUFACTURER OF Pure Herb
TO CURE ALL DISEASES OR NO CHARGES. DO YOU LOVE HEALTH? If so, call and see L. J. Hayden Manufacturer of Pure Herb Medicines, 220 West Broad Street. My Medicines cure all diseases from
at your disease, sickness or affliction health. Thousands of people, United States and Europe will testify all healers of all complaints in the roots barks, gums, balances leaves, my medicine. They have cared physicians and the best hospital physicians up to die, and said there was living Disease:—Heart Disease, Conducture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatics of any kind, Colds, Brennishalching sensations, all Female Comicer, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in the life or instruments, Eczema, Pimpledays or Bright's Disease of the Elder, no matter of what nature. Geo-specially. For full particulars, send, write or call
Richmond, Va.
one year is an
only $1.50
Medicines
HIGH GRADE JOB WORK
In Fact Printing of All Kinds Executed Promptly.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., 311 North Fourth Street, Richmond, Va. Long Distance Telephone, Monroe-2213:
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READ OUR GREAT SERIAL THE WHIP
We Do Linotype Work for the Trade.
We print CALENDARS. Our prices are as low as is consistent with First Class Work. We furnish Invitations for Balls, Weddings and Special Entertainments.
We have a Stock Room here in which we carry Book Paper, Bond Paper, Flat Writings, Manilla Paper, Envelopes. Card Board, Wedding Stock. in fact. Every thing in the Printing Line.
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THEY ALL BIT.
And It Was Those Who Were In the
Joke That Got Stung.
Dr. H. A. Lawton, whose prowess as a fisherman is sung wherever the name of tarpon is known, several years ago persuaded two Englishmen who visited the Florida coast on the hunt for the big fish that the proper way to catch tarpon was to find where they came up to blow, then sprinkle snuff on the water and but the fish on the bead when they came up to sneeze.
In a reminiscent moment the other day, Dr. Lawton referred to his joke on the two Englishmen and then recalled how an English visitor to Florida had unwittingly turned a trick upon him and another practical joker last winter.
"I had been telling one Englishman about my trick with the snuff," he said, "and, by Jove, he decided he would play a trick upon a compatriot who was a more recent arrival than himself. At the time we were at Key Largo, after Spanish mackerel.
"The newcomer was a bit of a boaster, and when he kept telling us how he was going to put it over us in the matter, of a big catch we smiled knowingly at each other and took his measure. It was the other Englishman who fixed up the trick we played.
when the other Englishman had his attention distracted he fastened the three ends with a slip noose upon the other man's line and filled the bucket. Of course the bucket sank, and the Englishman, feeling a sudden weight, began to pull. As he drew in the line of course the bucket slipped down. Finally it reached the hook, and then the fisherman felt a sudden terrific yank.
"Now I'll show you bloody Yankees how to get a Spanish mackerel, he shouted in triumph. We said nothing, but grinned at one another. We knew the bucket was all he had on the line. "Well, he pulled and pulled, the
bucket jocking from side to side, until finally, with one yank, he landed his catch in the hont. And, bless my eyes," added the doctor, "if it wasn't one of the finest and biggest mackerel I had ever seen. There was no sign of the bucket.
"You see," he went on in explanation, "when the Englishman felt the first pull he really had only the bucket on the line. But the sight of that gleaming tin bucket travelling zigzag through the water caught the attention of every Spanish mackerel in the neighborhood, and they all made for it. Only one could get the hook. The others bit at the bucket. They couldn't make an impression on the bucket, so they bit at the strings that held it and cut them in two. So it was that while the Englishman bit on the bucket, the fish bit on his hook, and after all it was we who were in the joke that were stung"—New York Times.
Man Supreme Over Self.
In the moral world there is nothing impossible if we bring a thorough will to it. Man can do everything with himself, but he must not attempt to do too much with others. William von Humboldt.
A Telephone Opiate.
The elder's wife was seriously ill, and the doctor advised rest and quiet. But the lady was very devoted to church work and worried herself into hysteria because she could not attend services and hear her favorite pastor preach.
"She must not leave the house," warned the doctor, "but you can easily arrange to have her hear the sermon by telephone."
The elder gramped the suggestion and made the necessary arrangements for transmitting the sermon into his wife's room.
At noon on the Sabbath the doctor called and asked, "How did it work?"
"Fine," declared the elder, rubbing his hands gleefully. "Ten minutes after the sermon began she fell sound sleep." -Philadelphia Ledger
Bill-Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Envelopes, Business & Visiting Cards, Policies, Medical Blanks, Insurance Blanks, Financial Cards, Lodge Labels, Checks, Check Books, Minutes, Pamphlets, Whole Sheet Handbills, Placards.
We have a supply of Fine Commencement Folders for Graduates of our Educational & Hospital Institutions. They are here for Your Inspection.
Devoted to the Interests of the Citizens of Color.
The Seat of Authority.
It is an unwritten law on shipboard and especially on men-of-war that the quarterback is for the exclusive use of officers, and all good seamen remember it in spite of their ambitions. It once happened that an ancient mariner, a "the stripper," white on shore leave captured a man. Not without difficulty, he mounted the animal and perched himself as near the tail as possible. The male objected in every way
Mauy
known to a mule and to ways several and unexpected.
"Juck, sit more undisships," called out an engineer officer who happened past. "You'll ride easier." "Captain," grinned the idle golf, "this is the first can. I ever commanded, and it's a pity if I can't stay on the quarterback."
Robert Banns belongs in the very front rank of the work, great men. As a song writer he stands along with Goethe, Helme and Strenght; and as a gatrist he ranks well up with Juvenal and Pamela. His "Saturday Night," his "Tin," and his "Holy Fair" are slays.
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.
great in their line as the most con-
summate masterpieces of the world's
greatest writers. Born was original
in the best sense of that word, and his
songs, satires, epistles and many of
his more serious productions stand
forth unique and fresh and powerful
as the tits of Titan of the chiseling
of Phidias - New York Journal.
Driven to Drink
Artist My next picture is the need; emy will be outfitted "Drive to Drink". His Friend Ah, some powerful per-trayal of boiled passion! suppose? Artist Oh, not it's a horse approaching a water trough!
Knew Mother's Ways.
Ministerial Friend (on a visit) — I wonder what makes your maimma so happy today. She is singing all over the house.
Little Mary I less she's thought of something, to speak to about when he
AGENTS FOR THE PLANET
RICHMOND, VA.
Mrs. Annie Walbarrow, 4th & Broad.
W. H. White, 501 W. Leigh Street.
Peter Thompson, 716 N. First St. Street.
Wm. H. Scott, 2218 B. Main St.
N. Winston, 537 Brook Ave.
William B. Smith, B W. Leigh St.
Tom Bird.
Thomas Page, 815 State Street.
Clarence Williams
1411 Ross Street.
M. C. Waller. 1100 W. Leigh St.
S. Dandridge. 107 W. Baker Street.
We Do PressWork for the Trade.
Promptly.
are a full line of the Finest Sta-
to be obtained anywhere in
United States. We supply Mourn-
er and Envelopes.
the Country
patronage is earnestly solicited,
prices are higher, you can go else-
e and class of work. If our price
less.
t, Richmond, Va.
2213:
tly.
the Finest Sta-
anywhere in
supply Mourn-
s.
ntry
restly solicited.
you can go else-
k. If our prices
ond, Va.
We have a full line of the Finest Stationery to be obtained anywhere in the United States. We supply Mourning Paper and Envelopes.
Cleveland G. Allen, 262 W. 634 St.
Mrs. Leanna Hamilton,
263 West 134th street.
Samuel Hobbs, 228 B. 127th St.
E. A. Williams, 200 W. 626 St.
J. E. Schmidt, 263 W. 16th St.
LOT. VA.
Rov. R. J. Langston.
ASBURY. PARK, N. J.
R. Bell, 102 Springwood Ave.
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH.
Charles Ludwig. P. O. Box 1776.
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Jeane E. Brown, 1216 W. Green St.
NEW. ORLANDS, LA.
World's News Co., Box 1134.
A. O. Smith, 202 S. Rampart St.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
St. Card Co.,
Corner 16th and South Se.
Berkens, 1116 Pine Street.
Warwick, 264 S. 11th St.
Oce, 1411 Pitswater St.
City Advertising Company.
Pine Street.
DANVILLE, VA.
Clark, 117 Grapehead St.
OVIDENCE, R. I.
A., P. A., 910 Westminster.
MONROE
Smith & William
L. PESB
Miss Cora L. Wr
FLORE
E. B. Weeter,
PASSA
W. J. Smith, C.
PITTSB
E. K. Thumm, N.
YONKE
John W. Adams,
LOE ANGEL
William S. Brown
BLUEFIELD
Richard K. Wat
PULAS
J. M. Bufard.
MONESSEN, PA.
Smith & Williams, 602 Sixth St.
LFESSBURG, VA.
Miss Cora L. Wright.
FLORENCE, S. C.
E. B. Webster,
PASSAIC, N. J.
W. J. Smith, 414 Main Ave.
PITTSBURG, PA.
E. K. Thumm, 1402 Wylie.
YONKERS, N. Y.
John W. Adams, 281 N. Main
LOS ANGELES, CAL.
William & Brown, 1204 N. Pkw. St.
BLUEFIELD, W. VA.
Richard K. Watkins.
PULASKI, VA.
J. M. Bafard.
Special Correspondents and Agents
F. Z. S. Ferguson,
121 Loop Street,
Oxpe Town, R. I.
Prof. I. S. Moore,
26 Rue Gay Coulomb,
Boble, Boulon
THE PLANET
WILSON REBUKES CARABAOS"FUN"
President Peters That a more Commune the Society Security Appriminate for Our Service.
Secretary Gatterson and Secretary Dunn attended that day, and decided that the reprimand which the president directed to should be limited to those responsible for the features of the dinner, regarded by the president as offensive, should take the form of sending each member of the dinner committee a copy of the president's letter. The Wilson letter was addressed to the two secretaries in response to their report on the Carabao dinner, made by direction of the president.
As a matter of regulations it is likely that the fact of their being reprimanded will be entered upon the record of each officer who is to receive it.
It is felt that the severest punishment of the officers held responsible for the objectionable features of the dinner lies in the publication of the president's letter with its laudest rejections.
The officers who will receive the reprimand are the members of the committee which arranged the Cara bao dinner, held in H. I. The committee tee ad as members many of the highest army and navy officers in Washington, including Rear Admiral Thomas B. Howard, Major General W. P. Biddle, until recently common command of the Marine Corps, Brigadier General Frank McIntyre, chief of the insular bureau, and Colonel H. C. Hobland, adjutant general of the army.
In the president's letter addressed to Secretary Garrett and Daniels the president says that the officers who were responsible for the program deserve a serious reprimand and asks what is to be the thought of officers of the army and navy who find it good form to bring their official superiors into discipline and the policies of the government. He adds, if this is their idea of fun, what is the reason of duty? If they do not hold their loyalty above allly offers one of childish wit what about their profession do they hold sacred?
What seems to have been the features of the officer program held most objectively by President Wilson were the song "known as "Damn, Damn, Damn, the lieutenant," and the natties on Mr. Bryan.
HUERTA HALTS BANK RUN
Proclaims Holidays to Prevent Withdrawals of Deposits.
By a presidential decree every day until the end of the present year is made a legal holiday in order to check the run of the banks in Mexico City, Mexico, particularly that on the Bank of London and Mexico.
On the pronunciation of this decree the Bank of London and Mexico which has closed a few hours earlier reopened its doors, but refrained from paying deposits.
Provisional President Huerta says in the decree he deems such action necessary to protect the banks until public confidence is more nearly restored. By the decree the banks are absolved from meeting any obligation until Jan. 1. It applies to all banking houses whether a bank of issue or not.
With the exception of the Bank of London and Mexico and the Central bank, none has yet taken advantage of the degree, and business at the other institutions is being conducted as usual. Crowds gathered about the doors of the two banks mentioned, but there was no disorder. Both banks are being strongly guarded by police. The elimination of General Huerta by Jan. I is the only thing that can thwart the complete financial wreck of Mexico, in the opinion of business men in Mexico City and throughout the republic.
It was learned from a semi-official source that the business men of the capital, acting with those in Vera Cruz and elsewhere, are planning to lay the situation before General Huerta, asking him to get out, on the ground that a crash of all banks is inevitable if he remains in office.
Wilson Retains Clemente
President Wilson reappointed Jud
son C. Clemente, of Georgia, to suc
himself as a member of the later
Woman Fatally Burned.
Mr. Higgitt & Pattie was born
to the family of the former at Clayton, Del
has a result of being lowered with
a burn in her body.
POULTRY OPPORTUNITIES.
The Farm is Most Conductive to Successful Poultry Raising.
The farm is the best which all successful poultry farmers rest in, connotational vegetation according to poultry experts of the district of agricultural Without a slight degree of health it is utterly impossible to progress in poultry water and there is no other place where conditions are so conducive to country success as they are on the farm. The farmer has the advantage of keeping free range of his birds, which means an ample supply of the highest quality food and graft as a food source.
For the purpose of obtaining more high quality for the poultry population of poultry stores. It is prudent to keep free range of the farm from than those stores for the farmer has the highest quality for poultry stores. Where have you seen these
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POULTRY HOUSE AT GOVERNMENT POU
TRY FARM, GELENVILLE, MN
considerable amount of grain dropped
upon the ground which could not be
utilized other than by poultry. This
grain in most cases would be a total
loss to the average farmer unless eaten
by the fowls.
On most farms pigs is available for
feeding. Its value as an egg producer
is not exceeded by any other one feed
in existence. Chief from the barn loft,
containing many feeds that are readily
consumed by poultry, can be used as a
bod or litter in the poultry house in
stead of being wasted.
It is essential to successful poultry raising to know at all times the ages of your fowls. This can be readily done by the punching chicks as soon as hatched, which will oblate the killing of the young hens and pullets before their days of usefulness are over. To do this use a small harmless punch, performate the outside way of the right foot between the toes, and the following year punch on the visible web of the right foot. The age of the chick can thus be told over by your.
As soon as the hen starts to molt offer the second living season it is advisable to market her, as in meeting she will produce very few eggs, and by keeping her through this period, which hats about thirty days, there is little to calm and often the fowls the during this time.
The time is at hand when young apple trees must be pro tested or the owner will find that he has provided a very expensive winter food for the rabbits
CUTTING SILAGE CROPS.
A Great Deal Depends Upon Choosing of Proper Time.
Corn and various sorghum crops will most generally be used for slage crops. Corn should be cut for the silo when the grain has begun to harden. There should still be a sufficient amount of green material in the plant to make it pack solidly in the silo. It is oftentimes very difficult to harvest a crop in this ideal condition.
The use of water in milling is almost a necessity where dried out corn is placed in the silo. The exact amount necessary cannot be stated in positive terms. Though water must be added so that the material will pack solidly and pass through the necessary fermentation. The most satisfactory way to apply this water is by directing a stream into the lower
The Kaitlin and sorghum should be allowed to become well matured like wheat in order to make ideal allage. These crops as a rule remain green much later in the season, and the period in which they can be properly placed in the soil is longer than it is with corn. It is especially important that the sweet sorghum allowed to reach full maturity before being placed in the soil. These crops have shown themselves to be very valuable as allage crops. These crops sometimes become frosted by an unseasonable frost. It is then necessary to place them in the soil at once whatever the stage of maturity. If left in the field after the leaves have been frosted a considerable portion of the fiber, part will dry up and be lost.
ORDER THAT JOB PRINTING TODAY And Give Us the Time to Take Pains With the Work
Keep your fears to yourself, but
share your courage with others.—Rob
ert L. Stevenson
"My wife and I came nearly having a carried in where we should spend our holiday," said the young man who had not been long married. "But it was settled by amic the compromises just as I hope all our trifling disagreements will be settled.
"You see I could get only a month off. She wanted to go to the countryside and I wanted to go to the mountains. Finally I consented that we spend two weeks at the shore and two in the mountains. She thought it for a holiday and then gave in very sweetly. And I now says it was a positive experience. She was having a lovely time at the shore, but she refused to stay after our time was up."
"How was it that we had in here and we had to stay after our time was up?"
Someone in Golden Deer
What's In a Name"
Corporal Mozyzslaw Smialkowski formerly served in the quartermaster corps at the Presidio of San Francisco under Major K. J. Hampton.
One day Major Hampton had a tool cold and squeezed frequently, and that day Corporal Mozyzslaw went into Major Hampton's office about ten times and asked that officer if he hadn't called him when he hadn't.
A man with a bad cold isn't apt to be in the best of humors, and the eleventh time the corporal appeared without being called the major was mad clear through.
"I do come it, corporal," he snapped. "I've got a body terror of cold, and if you persist in coming in here every time I sneeze because you think I'm trying to pronounce your food name I'll have you up before a summertime court if it's the last not yet left before I sneeze myself to death." San Sam's bride brought
His Card.
About a dozen years ago a London contender who had saved a holy sum of money went into the carting business on his own account. Finally he secured a big contract for moving and deposing ofashes, out of which he made a fortune. Then he made a venture, and having invested part of his money in house property in the east of London, he wished to rise, like a phoenix, from his seas into some sort of society. He gifted his applied to the college of its professors aristocrat opened the war.
His new friend coming other things, advised him that visiting cards were a necessity, and as a guide to drawing one up ready for the printer handed him one of his own which road. "Hirad do the Vere long House, Portsmouth Square, W."
Two days later as he Vere was sit-
ting in his dressing room at breakfast
a servant brought him on a silver a vi-
siting card bearing the following
Ephratim Newish. I Own 23 Houses,
London, E.
A Noisy Comet.
There had been 'great excitement over the coming of a comet, and five-year-old Bobby had been eagerly watching for it. 'One night his father roused him from sleep and took him in his arms to see it. "Wake up, Bobby, wake up!" said his father. "Look, Bobby. Do you see the comet?" Bobby looked sheeply up into the sky. Then came the long drawn braid of a donkey. Bobby's head sank down on his father's shoulder. "Oh, Bobby," said his mother. "wake up and see the comet." "I need it," murmured Bobby and refused to look any more. The next morning, Bobby was playing in the garden when he heard a sound that made him raise his head. He listened attentively. It was the braid of a donkey. Bobby rushed into the house. "Mother, mother," he shouted, "there goes the comet again."
His Descent
"When ambition led me into an necidental seat, in congress," says Henry A. Barhart of Indiana in the Chicago Record-Herald, "the congressional directory carried a ten line biographical announcement tilt a new member from Indiana had first been a farmer, then an editor, incidentally a prison director and state insane hospital trustee and then a congressman.
"One day Uncle Joe was philosophizing in the clink room, and he said: 'I see a new member from Indiana has had a remarkably consistent career. He was first a farmer, from there he stepped down to the editorial chair, thence to the penitentiary, thence to the insane hospital and thence in the very nature of consistency to congress.'"
READY AND WITTY.
The Emperor Told the Truth and Preserved His Incognite.
"By the grace of God I was born a gentleman, but I not the prince as little as possible," was a favorite saying of Emperor Joseph II. Whether his humility was shrewd, or not, he certainly held inside his dignity of station
whenever he could also lay aside his duties as ruler.
In "Au Couchement de la Monarchie" the Marquis de Sogur teels of one occasion when the emperor went to France to visit his sister, upon Marie Antoinette. The Parisian was customed to the luxury and marvel of the court at Versailles, was established at the extreme simplicity that Joseph II affected.
He preferred not to be recognized as emperor at all and with one or two gentlemen of honor, under an assumed name, the quick wett none preserved his title.
He had stopped to the night at an inn and in the morning was shaving
WHY, SELINA'S DAIRY GIRL."
before a shriek, while the landlord's daughter, to the bosom of water for him. Someone, off the man or his belongings, lensed the girls' embellies and seized for the present asked an appointed wife. "Are you not interested with the court or in the service of the emperor?" Joseph, who was what her questions might lead to, replied quickly. "Why, certainly, my dear girl, how did you guess that I shaved him."
His ready arsenal will did not pass
the bounds of contemptible the girl's
suspicious—until the girl's suspicious
completely.
Everyday Life.
It is well to have visions of a better
life than that of every day, but it is
the life of every day from which
elements of a better life must come.
Momentous Question:
It was in the cyclone season, and a bad storm haying come up in the night. Mrs. Hall rescued her family, and they burried into their clothes preparatory to retiring to the collar. The thirteenth-year-old daughter, who was just beginning to be particular as to what she wore, hastened before dressing into her youngest skirt room and, although half crying, required anxiously, "Aunt Nellie, would you wear your hobble skirt if you were me?"
A society woman who was spending the summer in the country, motorized over to a neighboring farm one morning to call on the farmer and his wife, with whom she had been acquainted the summer prior.
"I hear that your daughter Emily has gone to Europe, said the caller. "Woman" drawn to the old farmer. "She's been crazy to go ever since she left school, and so since ever since you wuz here last year and talked so much about it. These here female colleges drew pet frogs, frown girls' heads. Her mow as we can't celebrate why she should be so set to go to Yurrup. She don't know a soul-thar." — Everybody's
A One Legged Route.
Strickland Gilliman, the post and lecturer, was on his way from Galvanville, Tex., to Oklahoma City one night last summer. The porter on the sleeping car. Gilliman says, had an overdose of both gln and hookworms. When Gilliman awoke in the morning one of his large and ornate shoes was by his berth nearly shinned. The other shoe was missing.
"He called the pickled porter and asked, 'Why did you shine one of my shoes and not the other?'"
"Boss, didn't see but Jes' one shoe."
"Well, you must have known there were two."
"No boss; I didn't know you all had two shoes."
"Come off; you did know it. You must have known it."
"Honest; boss; I didn't know it. They's a right smalt ob og legged gemmine travels on its byah line"—Saturday Evening Post.
Patsy and Tom were working near where there was a beehive and a bed of onions when the following incident occurred: A bee stung Tom on the wrist, when Patsy explained, "I at ways told you when could get a sting of a bee to sting it and then rub in onion juice." After a very short time a bee lodged on Patsy's neck, when he shouted: "Oh Tom, there's one on my neck. Oh, it's gone down between my shoulder. Oh, I'm stung!" "Suck it, Patsy!" ordered Tom. "Suck it and I'll rub in the onion juice."
Will be Realized If They Are Backed Up by Advertising.
Let Us Quote Prices For Printing Your Stationery.
Everyday Life
Puzzling.
Acrobatic
Farm and Garden
Important to Obtain Combination of Grasses With Long Season.
Providing permanent pasture is one of the matters that furnish much material for thought on the part of the farmer.
It is not possible to give any set rules as to what kinds or different sorts of grass should be sown for a permanent pasture. Certain combinations of grass furnish better pasture than others, but the conditions may be such that a good catch is impossible. A combination that will furnish pasturage during a long period is desirable.
Under ordinary conditions a combination of red clover, alfalfa, timothy, orchard grass, meadow fescue and tall meadow out grass will form a pasture
THE LION
that is good for all summer usage. It may be, however, that some of these grasses will not do well under the local conditions and must be omitted in favor of others. How much seed to use is a matter that must be fully considered. Some may put on plenty of seed, which is a very good rule to go by, but it is a needless expense to use more than is necessary. The proper amount to use will depend to some extent upon the kind of soil. Under average conditions I would use about four quarts of clover, two quarts each of timothy and alfalfa and one peck each of mendow fescue and tall meadow oat grass on each acre. Some may think this too great a quantity, but remember that it is better to get a full stand at once than to wait two or three years.—Farm Programs
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The foolish virgins were as good as the wise ones, and were only foolish because they did not provide surplus oil for a possible emergency. He prepared for the unexpected thing to happen. Of such is wisdom on the farm.
THE USE OF WINDBREAKS.
They Afford Protection at All Sessions in Certain Localities.
The windbreak has and little attention in the southwest for the reason that it has been little used, and, in fact, no great demand has been felt for it. But there are many sections of the plains country and the northern Panhandle in Oklahoma and Texas where windbreaks would afford considerable protection to trees.
Briefly stated, windbreaks afford protection in three ways—winter protection, summer protection, protection during harvesting time with such fruits as apples. Where there are heavy winter winds the windbreak protects the soil by retaining leaves and other vegetation so the snow will form a cover. It reduces winter killing of birds in such tender fruits as peaches, cherries, etc. In summer the windbreak may save the trees when heavily loaded with fruit; it reduces evaporation in some instances; keeps sand from blowing where the soil is very sandy. It may prevent fruits from being blown from the trees in harvest time.
The trees suitable for a windbreak will depend upon the locality, the purpose for which the break is used and the soil. Some of the trees commonly used as poplars, willows, privet, cottonwood, bola d'arc, pimò, etc.
In cold climates the bees are now in a state of repose, and it is little short of criminal to disturb them, as it will only do them more harm than good.
All progressive bee men know that where the bees were properly prepared for winter there need be no concern for them now. And even though the snow may cover the apiary completely, no harm need be feared, as the snow adds to their warmth.
Late in the fall, after the close of the honey flow, bees cluster in a compact mass for the winter, usually on the central combs, and so remain until settled weather in the spring or until brood rearing is well established.
If the beekeeper tries to winter bees on the summer stands in any form of a hive other than a chaff or double walled hive, he will probably lose more in the value of bees than the extra expense he would incur in making shaft hives of some kind.
"Jibway seems to be an unusually modest man."
"Indeed he is. Why. Jibway can climb down from a Fullman-car while his train habitats at a little country station and walk up and down the station platforms without looking as if he owned the railroad." — Birmingham
FREEP ON FASTURZ
Bees.
PHOTOS.
We offer you, the Latest and Most Artistic Photos, at a More Moderate Figure than you can obtain elsewhere.
Special Attention Paid to Children. Enharging and Copying Interior View Work.
We will also be Pleased to Quote you Prices on Exterior and from Old Photos, A Specialty.
Geo. O. Brown, PHOTOGRAPHER,
603 North 2nd St., Richmond, Va.
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANY WHERE IN U.S. $100 POSTAGE ORDER
SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
address all letters to Magic Shampoo Drier Co.
Minneapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY'S CROWNING GLORY.—And every baby can have it if she will use the Magic. The Magic will dry the hair after a shampoo or bath, and straighten the curliest head of hair. It will also eliminate its growth. The Aluminum Comb cannot impure the hair, because it is never heated direct, but its heat from the heating star which is heated on our Alcohol Heater, or any other heater. We advise the use of Hayes' Hair Poms to Best on the market. Price per box, $5c. Alcohol Heater, price $6c. Label terms to agents.
Write for literature today.
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
THE END OF THE HARVEST.
The harvest of harvests is within the mind of the man who viewing his crops and the gardner and shaping against the winter's needs is a just return for his labor. Whether the year has been full of lean whether or not the promise of seed has been fulfilled by the bounty of the reaping, the end of the harvest brings its own reward. If he has realized contentment in moderation he comes to the end of the year without regret.
Let the countryman be thankful that his work is a life, not merely a craft or form of toll. It is a vital, throbbing existence in the midst of a world of living things. It is a God made vacation.—Country Gentleman.
RODENT PROOF CORNCRIBS.
Old Fashioned Sort Give Way to Steel Structures.
Every farmer knows that corn stored in the ordinary crith is exposed to more or less damage from rats, mice, birds and chickens, and he makes allowance for this loss. The extent of the damage from these sources depends upon the kind of crith used and the length of time the corn is in storage. In the old fashioned rail crith, which is now virtually out of date in the older states, the loss was very great.
During the last few years the steel crib has come into use as a rodent proof structure. There are several makes and styles of these cribs upon the market, but the principle involved in each is the same. A description of two steel cribs in use on the Ohio State university farm may be of interest to farmers who are unfamiliar with this method of storing corn. They are made of perforated galvanized steel, circular in form, and stand on concrete foundations. The perforations admit air, and further ventilation is provided by a perforated steel tube extending up through the center of the crib and out the top. The roof is of steel. These cribs have a capacity of 600 bushels each. They cost $150 aplece, not including the foundation and the cost of erecting.
In laying the foundation for the steel crith the excavation is made, and a foot or so of childer is put down. On top of this several inches of cement are laid, then a layer of steel sheets and finally another coat of cement. The steel sheets prevent the moisture from rising from the soil. The floor is raised slightly in the center, so that if water should gain entrance it would immediately run out of the crith.
These criths have been in use over three years and have proved entirely satisfactory. They are absolutely nut, mouse, bird and chicken proof and, with the aid of a good padlock, are thief proof. Weights were kept of corn stored in them for over a year, and the only loss was due to evaporation of moisture. The steel crith then appears to be the safest place for the farm storage of corn.—Country Gentleman
Movable Next Boxes.
It is frequently desirable to have nest boxes which are readily removable from each other. Snails on arrangement is shown here. The frame pieces are strongly made of one inch stuff, firmly mould together. The wire-support the boxes and are firmly attached to the two ends and middle.
NEST BOXES TO BE TAKEN AFTER.
boards. Nitrils may be used in place of the wires if necessary. The next boxes are made of half inch lumber and are eleven inches wide, twelve inches long and five inches deep. The bottom is made to project, six inches, leaving a step for the hens to light on. A space of twelve inches should be left between the wires so as to give sufficient room for the hens.
CARE OF THE DUCKS.
Plenty of Drinking Water is an essential.
Water in abundance for drinking purposes is a necessity, and sometimes sometimes make a great mistake.
Gutenberg Was a Good Printer
L. KORNATY
He was the first in his line.
WE'RE FIRST IN
THIS TOWN.
Don't you need circulars or new letterheads?
Tailing to recognize that fact, says the Farm and Fireside. Ducks fed on soft mush must have a chance to dip their bills in water to wash out their nostrils or they will be in danger of anothering to death, as the mash gets into their nostrils. Indeed, they sometimes get their nostrils filled with mud and rush to the water dish. It will be seen that the dish in which water is given must be deep enough so that the ducks may bury their bills in the water. Self-feeding fountains are best for young ducklings, as they prevent the youngsters getting their feathers wet, something which must be carefully avoided.
On large duck farms the ducklings are always driven to the houses on the approach of a storm. It is well to have the water dishes in the duckhouses all night, as they frequently drink. Many growers keep a lighted lantern in each house at night in order to keep the ducks from becoming nervous or alarmed and piling up in a corner.
ADVERTISING IS THE
A B C
OF BUSINESS, AND IT
BRINGS SUCCESS TO
Y O U
Buggins—Have you heard that Bul-
lon, the millionaire, is dead.
Briggs—Yes. I'm awfully sorry.
Buggins—Why, he's no relative of
yours. Is he?
Briggs-No: that's why I'm sorry—
Pittsburgh Press.
Gettina Back.
"Why do you insist on trying to sell me beefsteak and beans and buckwheat (caken)" demanded the barber. "I told you all I wanted was two fried eggs."
"Well, I was in your shop yesterday," retorted the restaurant man. "All I wanted was a shave, but you buildozed me into a shampoo, a foam fan and a tonic rob."—Pittsburgh Post.
True Love.
When love translates itself into action that action will always be unselfish. It must be so. A selfish love for others is a contradiction in terms. It does not exist, for where true love is there is always found self-affirming.
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SWEETHEARTS PART AT SCHMIDT TRIAL
A morbid interest in the trial of Hans Schmidt in New York for the murder of Anna Annuller brought an emotional tragedy to the door of the court room, and as a result one fashionably dressed young woman, who has never missed a minute of the trial since it started, was absent from her seat.
Shortly after the trial was resumed, while Dr. Smith E. Joliffe, the leading ally for the defense, was under cross-examination by Assistant District Attorney Ibelahanty, Thomas Flanagan, captain of the court officers, told the young woman, whose regular attendance at the trial has created some comment, that a young man desired to speak to her in the corridor. The girl turned pale and left the court room. At the door she was met by a clean cut young man.
"You lied to me, Helen," he said, "I've caught you at it. You said you were not attending this trial, and now I've found you here. Give me back the engagement ring. Our engagement is broken."
The girl wept hysterically and pleaded that she had done nothing wrong, but the young man refused to be placated.
"No, I will have nothing more to do with you," he insisted. "You may keep the ring if you wish, but our engagement is broken. Any girl who would come to a trial like this day after day and fill her mind with the fifth of such testimony as is offered here is not fit to be any man's wife."
The girl plunged in pain for a reconciliation and begged that there be no scene there, but the young man left the building, the girl following.
XMAS GIFT EXPLODES
Woman Hurls Bomb From Her In Time to Save Her Life.
A peculiar rattle from the inside of what appeared to be an innocent Christmas gift, alarmed Mrs. John Taranto, of New Orleans, and she dug the package away from her and ran.
A moment later it exploded. Somebody had sent her a bomb through the malls, and she released the percussion mechanism when she removed the outer cover. She reached another room in safety, but the explosion did much damage to the house.
Mrs. Taranto told the police her suspicions as to the handwriting on the wrapper, and they are looking for the husband, from whom she has been separated two years. A similar package, sent by messenger last year, Mrs. Taranto refused to receive.
GIVES MILLION TO CHILDREN
Texan Will Distribute Wealth to Heira
at Family Reunion.
The children of William Maverick
had a reunion in San Antonio, Texas,
on Christmas Day, when Maverick
gave to them more than $1,000,000 in
income-bearing property.
He will keep for himself just enough
to maintain him in comfortable circu-
matances for the remainder of his life.
The children are William Maverick,
Jr., of Berlin, Germany; Robert Maverick,
Mrs. Carl Hahn, a singer, of
New York; Mrs. Augustus Maverick
and Lewis Maverick, of San Antonio.
WEDS MAN SHE NEVER SAW
Easton Girl Marries Man Who Advertised or Wife.
Without having seen the man she was to west, Miss Emma I. Wagner, daughter of Mrs. Sarah Wagner, of Easton, Pa., was married to Thomas Jackson Marley, of the state of Washington, at the parsonage of St. John's Reformer church in Nazareth, Pa., by Rev. Dr. W. H. Wotring.
Mr. Marley, whose first wife is dead, has three sons. He advertised in the newspapers for a wife, Miss Wagner replied, they exchanged photographs and the wedding followed.
Youth, Invents, Aeroplane.
George Cline, a Waynesboro, Pa. youth, who has been experimenting with a "gilder" aeroplane, has produced a machine that is proving effective. He has flown about 300 yards at a height of thirty feet.
Booster by Parcel Post.
A big Rhode Island rooster was shipped from the Marietta, Pa.; post office by parcel post. It was carefully crated and was labeled as a Christmas gift for a resident in the first zone.
STORING WINTER APPLES.
Essential to Be. Borne In Mind In
Storing Apples and Other Fruit.
In storing fruit for winter, says Better Farming, the three essentials to be borne in mind are good ventilation, a proper temperature and moderately dry atmosphere. Unless they can all be kept it is better to dispose of your fruit at prevailing market price rather than take the risk of loan by rotting. The cellar in which the fruit is kept must be well drained, with double walls above grated. Double walls age
Seller nonconductors than single walls. An outer entrance to the cellar is indispensable, as are also small double glass windows placed at least on two sides of the cellar, preferably on north and south sides. On warm days they can be used to good advantage in regulating the temperature. So storage cellar should contain a furnace, even when there is a partition wall between it and the fruit, as undue warmth cannot be prevented. The right temperature is a few degrees above the freezing point, about 30 degrees F. The temperature may vary considerably, however, without serious damage, but in very cold weather it is well to keep a thermometer close by and apply artificial heat if necessary. Barrols and crates or hanging bins are the best utensils for storing. Hanging bins are very convenient, as the fruit gets the full advantage of free circulation of air from beneath and through side slats, besides it can be easily sorted from them. Whatever utensil is used fruit should be raised up enough
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WINTER APPLICATION ON A SPRAYED TIME
to allow air circulation beneath as this causes against dampness and mold.
There is much advantage in knowing of the keeping qualities of the different varieties. The Rhode Island Greening is not so good if keeper in cold storage as the Faldinbj, but it will keep in the cellar if placed in a dry location. Talmon Sweets keep well in cold storage and also in cellar if stored in barrels and are at their best during February and March, when they have a fine flavor. Rumbo and Fallowwater are also excellent keepers both in cool and cold storage, but the Rumbo is not a late keeper, being at its best in December, while Fallowwater is most excellent late in winter and early spring.
Pears have much the same keeping qualities as apples and are stored the same; but, as a rule, they do not keep so well.
In storing fruit either in the cellar or cold storage there are two objects to be accomplished; one is to preserve it, the other to retain the flavor. Storing vegetables, especially cabbage, in the same cellar may be detrimental to the flavor of cabbage. Damp, ill smelling cellars will very likely render fruit less palatable too.
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Farm profits will be increased more substantially by increasing increase yields than by increasing acreages.-Farm and Fire side.
Orchard and Garden.
Trump the snow well about apple and plum trees to prevent injury by mice.
One of the winter tasks that is too often neglected in the family orchard and vineyard and oh ornamentals is judicious clitting back and thinning out of the new growth and of such of the old wood as can advantageously be removed.
There is probably no better covering for the strawberry bed during the winter than a layer of good, clean straw of some kind, though some growers prefer to use a mould of strawy moisture. Whatever material is used, it should be as free as possible from the seeds of grass and weeds, otherwise they will cause trouble, when they come up among the plants in the spring.
The main reason for covering strawberry plants is to prevent the alternate freezing and thawing of the soil during cold nights and warm days. When plants are not protected they are likely to have their crowns and roots injured and may die. In addition to preventing this, the mulch will help retain moist ture and may retain the blooming period for a week or ten days. The latter is advantageous, since the killing of the blooms by the late frosts in the spring may be avoided.
Striking an Average."
"How much money do you think he's worth?"
"I don't know, but it's probably some what less than he claims and more than his neighbors adult." — Detroit Free Press.
Suitable Motto.
A newly rich Englishwoman once consulted a friend about having a coat of arms. She explained that her husband was a pork butcher, but he had royal warriors among his ancestors. "Well," said the waggish friend, "how would you, like the motto 'The pen is mightier than the sword'."
Welcome Stranger! Want a Sample Copy?
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
A
I
A
CHIFFON SCARF WITH OS-
TRICH BORDER.
The Biggest Family
In This Town Is the
Family of Readers of
THIS PAPER
Only Live Fish Swim Upstream
Only Live Merchants Advertise
A Moose or Discretion,
Knicker-Is Jones a wise politician?
Bocker-He won't even open his mouth
to an ear of corn.-New York Sun.
QUINADE
GIVEN
REWARD
QUINASOAP
THE
QUINACOMB
SEEEL DRUG COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, N.Y.
Come to see us in our New Home No. 310 E. Broad St. (Next to Weisberger's.)
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in General: —
MRS. ROGA E. WATSON invites you to her Hair Parlors, 812
St. James Street. You can be supplied with Braids, Puffs, Transformations and Pompadours. Combines made in Braids and Puffs on short notice. Straightening and Shampooing a Specialty.
Straightening Combs, Ornaments for the Hair, Hair Greases and preparations of all kinds for the skin. 'Phone Monroe-3874.
812 St. JAMES STREET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
WIGS, PLATS, BRAIDS, TRAN-
formations, Puffs, Etc.—All Shades.
Guarantee to Wash and Comb.
All Kinds of Straightening Combe,
Pomades and Skin Preparations.
Send two cent stamp for new 1913
Catalogue.
The Largest Manufacturer of Hair
Goods in the United States.
BAUM'S HAIR EMPORIUM.
(and 85th Street) New York City.
July 30. William K. Thoroughgood, Conway Lodge, 25
July 30. W. H. Smith, New Light Lodge, No. 155.
August 4. James A. Hill, Planet Lodge, No. 23.
August 2. Thomas Frayer, Rivanna Lodge, No. 146.
August 4. John J. Smallwood, Venus Lodge, No. 46.
August 8. Samuel Jackson, Brotherly Love Lodge, No. 78.
August 16. Norman S. Mitchell, Blue Ridge Lodge, No. 120.
August 16. Edmond P. Jones, Langston Lodge, No. 182.
August 16. George Royd, Pyttila Lodge, No. 21.
Sept. 2. James Barnett, Rising Star Lodge, No. 106.
Sept. 10. W. E. Garris, Rose of Sharon Lodge, No. 63.
Sept. 12. John Brown, Damon Lodge, No. 12.
Sept. 12. John Jackson, Lily of the Valley Lodge, No. 40
Sept. 12. Thomas Stokes, Flying Eagle Lodge, No. 130.
Sept. 12. Thomas Delcher, Midway Lodge, No. 178.
Sept. 30. Samuel J. Penn, Douglas Lodge, No. 69.
Oct. 1. J. D. Willis, Cascade Lodge, No. 99.
Oct. 4. James Brown, Royal Lodge, No. 26.
Oct. 4. Alexander Ferguson, New Era Lodge, No. 36.
Oct. 4. Lowis Stewart, Natural Bridge Lodge, No. 124.
HUMAN HAIR STORE
Established 1856. Oldest Hair Store in the South. YOU CAN HAVE STRAIGHT HAIR IF YOU WANT IT.
YOU MUST
Come to see us in our No. 310 E. Broad (Next to Weisberger's.)
FASHIONS ITS ABRICKS BETTER
We Make Your Clos AND TAKE Your Promise to Popular Price Tailoring 'Phone Monroe 102
HAIR PARLORS.
To the Friends, Customers and the Public in General,
MRS. ROSA E. WATSON invites you to her H.
St. James Street. You can be supplied with Braid
formations and Pompadours. Combings made in B
on short notice. Straightening and Shampooing a
Straightening Combs. Ornaments for the Hats
and preparations of all kinds for the skin. "Phone
812 ST. JAMES STREET,
Colored People's Hall
WIGS
WIGS, PLATS,
formations, Puffs,
Guarantee to Was
All Kinds of St
Pomades and Skin
Send two cent st
Catalogue.
The Largest Ma
OUR SPECIALTY Goods in the Unit
THE OLD RELIABLE MOE, BAUM'S HAIR EX
486-8th Avenue. (between 24th and 85th Street) N
HELLER'S HUMAN HAIR
712 7th St., W
Established 1856. Oldest Hair Store in
YOU CAN HAVE STRAIGHT HAIR IF YOU WANT IT
This $1 size "Queen"
mailed to you for 60c
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Creole Transformation
Pompadour or parted styles Real
Human Hair in Brown, Black or
Sandy—a real $3.50 value.
Special—We pay portage. $1.50
Other People
Judge You by-
Your Furniture
Now
Agric
& Mech
When you can get FURNITURE and RUGS from an old established house like JURGENS—that's known to sell the best quality goods, just as reasonable as elsewhere—why not give your friends a good impression; It will give us the greatest pleasure to show you our wonderful stock of home-making comfort giving Furniture and Rugs and—don't fail to ask our salesmen about our banking plan which gives you 5, 10 or 15 months in which to pay for any purchase CHAS. G.
JURGENS SON
BSTABLISHED. 1880. ADAMS AND BROAD.
S. W. ROBINSON & SON
DEALERS IN
HIGH GRADE
LIQUORS.
PHONE MONROE 2113.
19 and 21 N. 18th St.,
Richmond, Va.
$37,025.00
Paid out from January 1, 1912 to Nov. 29th, 1913.
·FINE SHOWING FOR BOTH BRANCHES OF THE KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS--READ AND CON SIDER-VIRGINIA DOING GRAND WORK
Brought Forward..... $ 6,900.00
1913
Jan. 15—Elizabeth Johnson, Myrtle Court, No. 106.
Feb. 8—Emma Lee Marable, Fearnall Court, No. 142.
Feb. 19—Rachel A. Burns, Staunton 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 19—Carrie Martin, Victoria Court, No. 52.
April 17—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229.
April 21—Matilda Hall, Unity Court, No. 132.
April 22—Tahilon 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—Margie Mosby, King's Daughters Court, No. 70
April 28—Margaret Leftwich, Old Dominion Court, No. 114
April 28—Ella Shepherd, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 85.
April 28—Sullie Taylor, Fulton Court, No. 244.
April 28—Rebecca Banks, Blooming Lily Court, No. 142
April 28—Sarah Burwell, Suffolk Court, No. 63.
May 2—Georgie Bolling, Old Dominion Court, No. 114.
May 10—Celia Brown, Pride of Farmville Court, No. 144
May 24—Margaret Scott, Venus Court, No. 47.
May 24—Loxie Ann Prunty, Jupiter Court, No. 80.
May 24—Annie Johnson, Pride of the East Court, No. 56
May 24—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229.
June 11—Lula Lewis, Zion Traveller's Court, No. 96.
June 12—Emily Allman, Narcissus Court, No. 229.
June 12—Jane Wingneth, Martha's Court, No. 138.
July 23—Martha Douglas, Arrisa Court, No. 43.
July 29—Laura Johnson, Violet Court, No. 152.
July 29—Carolina Clements, Josephine Court, No. 228.
July 29—Bettie Powell, Venus Court, No. 47.
July 29—Allie Burrows, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 85.
August 4—Emily Mosby, Friendship Court, No. 143.
August 7—Matilda Jones, Planet Court, No. 137.
August 15—Lella Jam s., Julia's Court, No. 235.
August 16—Lula C. Hall, Bristol Court, No. 162.
August 23—Susan Dobson, Planet Court, No. 137.
Sept. 2—Mary Gaines Keys, Star of the Valley, No. 87.
Sept. 10—Pattle Carter, White Rose Court, No. 118.
Sept. 10—Rosa Stratton, Victoria Court, No. 52.
Oct. 1—Anna Archer, Mildred's Court, No. 242.
Oct. 4—Ella Lightfoot, Lily of the Valley Court, No. 247
Oct. 4—Louisa D. Myers, Martha's Court, No. 138.
Oct. 4—Sarah Brogdon, Mossingford Court, No. 166.
Oct. 4—Bettie Thomas, Golden Crown Court, No. 132.
Oct. 28—Mary Graves, Olivet Court, No. 83.
Oct. 28—Christian A. Williams, Mechanics Court, No. 45
Nov. 1—Marinda Fitzgerald, Evening Star Court, No. 77
Nov. 21—Carrie P韦尔, Vernon Hill Court, No. 154.
Nov. 21—Florence Christian, Beulah Court, No. 49.
Nov. 26—Henrietta Dawson, Venus Court, No. 47.
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A Timid Bull Fighter.
Gluseppe Campanari, baritone of the Metropolitan Opera company in Grau and Corrieday days, now spends his summers at Slasconet, having been invaded there by his friend, former Justice Flammer of New York. Of all the baritone's parts his favorite is that of Ecumilio, the torader in "Carmen." Judge Flammer, who is an enthusiastic golfer, perused Signor Campanari to undertake to learn the game on the Slasconet links. The baritone drove off. His ball executed a parabolic left hand curve and landed gracefully between two cows grassing on the outskirts of the links. The baritone gazed wistfully at the ball, but did not move. "Your ball!" said the former magistrate. "There, it is between those two cows. Go and get it." Signor Campanari took a few steps forward and then a step back. "They look dangerous," he said doubtfully. Mr. Flammer looked at him for a moment in a palmed silence. "Campanari," he said at length, "excuse me, but you're a — of a torader."
"Yesterday"
Something spoke in hallowed hush,
Dirigible, gray and cold.
No one listening to its wall-
Yesterday grown old.
Something spoke in iron voice:
"Do you mind my will?"
Look ye not at me askance.
Today may bring ye ill!
Something drifted down the stream
Of memory grown bright.
Full with tears of long ago.
Not knowing this day's light.
Something hidden, something sad,
Of human love and strife.
Laugh ye not at yesterday.
For yesterday was life.
-Julia Cook Watson
Painful Experience.
"After I had written 'The Wake of the Sun' I sold it for $50," writes Mr. Murley Roberts in "The Private Life of Henry Maitland." "When this bargain was finally struck Mr. Jones Brown said to me, 'Now, Mr. R., as the business is all done, would you mind telling me quite frankly to what extent this book of yours is true?' I replied. "It is as true in every detail as it can possibly be.' Then you mean to say, he asked, 'that you actually did starve as you relate?' I said. 'Certainly I did, and I might have made it a deal blacker if I had chosen.' He fell into a momentary reverie and, shaking his head, murmured, 'Ah, hunger is a dreadful thing—I once went without dinner myself.'"
Very Medeat.
The following paragraph appeared in an advertisement sent out by a manufacturer of patent medicine in Calcutta:
"My humble self is the grandson and pupil of that greatly renowned hakim, late Galeb All Sahib, whose wonderful treatments created wonders and astonishments all over India. Therefore my humble self can take pride that I have become well versed in all that great Unnail system can teach us. My humble self can boldly say that medicines prepared by me are all genuine and infallible. My humble self has been practicing in Calcutta since the end of the last century and holds testimonials of the beat men of the country certifying innumerable wonderful curves performed by me in absolutely hopeless cases. One should not speak much about oneself."—Everybody's.
They Called Him Vanus
It is curious how inconsistent are the prejudices of people in regard to the use of heathen names. Mr. Payn, in his "Glems of Memory," tells an amusing story of Dean Burton, who objected to the name of the goddess of beauty, but found no fault with that of the god of the woods.
An infant was brought to the church for christening, and the name proposed for it was Vanus. "Vanus?" repeated the dean. "I suppose you mean Venus. Do you imagine I am going to call a Christian child by that name, and least of all a male child?"
The father of the infant urged that he only wished to name it after his grandfather. "Your grandfather!" cried the dean. "I don't believe it. Where is your grandfather?" He was produced—a poor old soul of eighty or so, bent double and certainly not looking in the least like the goddess in question. "Do you mean to tell me, sir, that any clergyman ever christened you 'Venus,' as you call it?" "Well, no, sir. I was christened Sylvanus, but they always calls me 'Vanu.'"
Mark Twain's Feat
Mark Twain about the time that he was working hard upon one of the earlier books that brought his fame called for a tour of Europe with his family.
He kept up his writing on shipboard and only left it at intervals for brief moment.
One day an approaching storm drove him inside the cabin, and he went back to work, leaving word with his daughter, then a very little girl, to explain his pleasures.
"If they set for me," he said to her "may that I won't be long. I am only going to write an anecdote."
A little later the child was sequestered
"Where has your father gone?" was the inquiry. "He won't be long." Hoped the child "He said he it only going to ride a canopy boat."
· HIS OWN LAST WAGER.
Even Though It Wan a Sure Loser, He Was Perfectly Satisfied.
They were talking in the smoking room about stochastic sharpers, and Alf Hayman, the impressor, said:
"I'll tell you a story about an American easy mark.
"Mr. Easy Mark, on the way back home from a summer tour of Europe, shared a satirical with two men who he had reason to believe were sharpers.
"He believed they were sharpers because they were continually proposing the most tempting bets to him—bets where it seemed impossible for him to lose—but yet, as soon as he put up his money, the two men took it away from him.
"So he came to believe that the bets were crooked. Nevertheless they were also so tempting that he couldn't resist them, and finally his funds got down to $3.50.
"On the last day of the voyage he
salk to the two men:
"Well, follows, you've cleaned me
out of everything but my honor and
$8.50, and I'm willing to risk the $8.50
on a last bet with you, provided you'll
let me decide what the bet is to be."
"They agreed, for they were curious,
and there was little to be lost."
"Well, fellows," he said, "this is the bet. I'll bet you $850 that as we sell up the bay I'll yell louder than the ship's steam whistle."
"He looked in their astonished faces and added:
"Of course, I'll lose, but, by gosh, I know the whistle can't be fixed."—Washington Star.
Strike Hard
The world is no longer clay, but rather iron. In the hands of its workers, and men have got to hammer, out a place for themselves by steady and rugged blows - Emerson.
Life and Love.
In the Democratic cloak room of the house not long ago a statesman, having discussed at length the tariff, currency reform and the Central American situation, announced kindly:
"Now, I give you fellows the difference between life and love."
Everybody immediately expressed interest to know the difference.
"Life," he said, "is just one fool thing after another. Love is just two fool things after each other."—Popular Mugnzine.
Right In His Line.
"If I ever have to choose a disease," said Weary Walker, "I'll pick neurathein."
"Wot's good for it. Weary?" "Complete rest." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
"Yes, but I don't think to ask Tom the price of the tickets."-London Stray Stories
GOOD DEEDS
A good deed is never lost. He who sows courtey reaps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love.—Basil.
Taking a Tip.
"Don't you think that a man forfeits his self respect by taking a tip?"
"Well, I never take one on the market that does not cause me to lose respect for my judgment"—Buffalo Express.
Second Hand Layer
"Dobbs tells me he is a great lover of nature."
"Yes. I don't know of any man who enjoys seeing the picture of a sylva-dell in a magazine more than Dobb-doe."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
$3.50 Recipe Free. For Weak Men.
Send Name and Address To-day—You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous.
We have in our possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, falling memory and lame back, brought on by excess, unnatural drains, or the follies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes—without any additional help or medicine—that we think every man who wishes to regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So we have determined to send a copy of the prescription free of charge, in a plain ordinary sealed envelope to any man who will write us for it. This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men and we are convinced it is the surest acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together.
We think we owe it to our fellowmen to send them a copy in confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop dragging himself with harmful phantom medicines, secure what we believe is the quickest-acting restorative, upholding, SPOT-FOUCHING Remedy over devices, and so care himself at home quietly and quickly. Just grasp as a like like this: INTERSTATE REMEDY CO., 3095 Leak Building, Detroit, Mich., and we will send you a copy of this upended recipe in a plain ordinary envelope, free of charge. A great many doctors would charge $3.99 to $4.99 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but we send it without charge.
E
Keep your business on the move.
Let us help you!
Your stationery must be done in the best possible form.
We will print it.
We do Job Work of every description for the progressive merchant.
Cards, Letterheads, Billheads, Everything.
Van De Vyver College, North 1st St., Richmond, Va.
Now Open
Includes Lessons in Spelling, Grammar, Arithmetic and Hygiene.
THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Offer a thorough training in Book-keeping and Commercial Law.
THE DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT
Fits its Students to fill the position of Stenographer & Typewriter.
THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Embraces Voice Culture, Piano and Organ Lessons.
CLASSES: MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS,
AT 8:00 O'CLOCK.
REV. CHARLES HANNIGAN. President,
709 NORTH FIRST, STREET, RICHMOND, VA.
DAY SCHOOL: DAILY. 9 A. M. TO 2:30 P. M.
Includes Primary and Grammar Grades and Sewing. Music
Extra. Kindergarten 9:00 to 12:30. Apply to
MOTHER EVANGELIST. 715 N. 1st Street, Richmond, Va.
Puneral Directors, Embalmers & Liverymen, RICHMOND, VA.
Warerooms, 330 N. 17th St. Residence, Cor, Poll and St. John St. Hall For Rent, $1.00 Per Meeting. Place for Storage of Dead Bodies. Hacks for Balls, Marriages and Christenings, Day or Night. Residence Phone, Monroe-847 J. Office Phone, Mad. 2478. Man On Duty All Night.
For particulars and terms apply
REV. CHARLES H.
709 NORTH FIRST ST.
DAY SCHOOL: DAILY,
Includes Primary and Gran
Extra. Kindergarten 9:00 to 10:
MOTHER EVANGELIST, 711
BROWN B.
Successors to:
Puneral Directors, Em-
RICHMO
Warerooms, 339 N. 17th St. Re-
Hall For Rent, $1.00 Per Meeting
Jes. Hacks for Balls, Marriages
Residence Phone, Monroe-847-J.
Man On D
Australian crayfish. The crayfish, which may be described as a fresh water lobster, usually lives in a purely aquatic life and keeps to the river bed. Some of the crayfish found in Australia, however, have foraken the water and excavate burrows in damp soil. The tunnel leading to the heart of the taurow is free from water, but water is always present in the chambers at the end where the crayfish lives. They do much damage to artificial water courses in the mining districts by riddling the banks and dams.
Such [ngratitude]
Briggs--So Mudge is getting better!
Bragg--You. He will soon be all right now. But, talking about sells, you know we had nearly $100 raised to put up a nice monument for him, as no one thought he could recover. And now he comes around and wants to borrow it to help pay his doctor's bill. What do you think of that?--Gray Stories.
The teachable, tractable horse is behead and flat between the eyes. The bony ridge of his face dishes slightly from the point where the face narrows toward the nostrils. His ears are well out, sensitive and far apart, with a well-demanded ridge of bone extending across the top of the head between them. Always feel for this ridge in
Judging a horse. The eye should be large, clear and bright, with a prominent ridge of bone along the inner and upper edge of the socket—London Answers.
DECEPTION
The essence of lying is in deception, not in words. A lie may be told by silence, by equivocation, by the accent on a syllable, by a glance of the eye attaching a peculiar significance to a sentence, and all those kinds of lies are bower by many degrees than a lie plainly worded. No form of blinded conscience is so far sunk as that which comforts itself for having deceived because the deception was by gesture or silence instead of utterance.—John Rushin.
In the Dark.
The late professor Jebb once asked a student to construct a passage from the Greek. The undergraduate, who was unprepared, began, "The dawn—the dawn"—"Yes, yes; go on!" "The dawn—was beginning to break." "Yes, sir; go on!" But the student knew no more, and he began again. "The dawn was beginning to break."
"Mr. sit down until you see Day-
light" and the profuser.
R. H. Macy & Co., New York.
Greenhut Slegel Cooper Co., New York
Onell Adams Co., New York.
Acker Merrall, Condit, New York.
Charles & Co., New York.
14th St. Store, New York.
Abraham & Straus, Brooklyn.
Park & Tilford, New York.
JEFFRIES NO. 1
COUGH MIXTURE.
THE WINNER.
NO.1
TRADE
MARK
Excellent for Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Le Grippe, Bronchitis, Sore Throat and all affections of the Throat and Lungs. You can depend on it—guaranteed. If coughing at night one dose will relieve you and enable you to rest and sleep well. Three doses, $30, $36, $41.69. If your dealer hasn't it write to THOS. TABB JEFFRIES, Manufacturing Chemist, 214 East Broad Street Richmond, Va.; and enclose 250 in stamps and the goods will be sent to you by parcel post.
COME AND SEE US.
Its Free to Every Customer. Come and see us for REAL HAIR Wigs, Transformations etc. and KINK O LINE
the only guaranteed remedy in the United States as a Hair Grower. It has no equal.....25c bottle.
WE MAKE WIGS at any price desired also, TRANSFORMATIONS;
POMPADOURES 8WITCHES.
CHEGNONS Inc.
We sell Straightening Irons, Electric COMBs
ELECTRIC BRUSHES
for Straightening and Beautifying the Hair and Stopping its Failing Out. Come and See Us. We sell so Cheap and we give a bottle of Perfume Free to every Customer.
THE ROYALLE
607 East Broad St—Upstairs.
all Orders Receive Special Attention
High Finance.
An amusing story comes from Paris in connection with M. Jules Claret, the famous manager of the national theater, the Comedie Française.
One of the "supers" failed to appear at a performance of "Phedre" the other evening. He had only to walk on with the crowd, but M. Claret keeps an eye on all these details, and next morning the "super" received a letter signed by M. Claret saying that he would be fined two francs for having been absent without leave.
The resourceful "super" promptly went to an autograph collector and sold M. Claret's letter for 10 francs, thus making a proof out of his own magnificence—Philadelphia Lodge.
The Hyproduata
Coogan, the Customer — There's as much nourishment in a pint av peanuts as in two pounds av thot steak. Grogan, the Butcher—But there's no gravy an' nothin' for th' cat an' no hash the nix day—Puck.
What's in a Name.
Tommy—Pop, what is the difference between a situation and a job?
Tommy's Pop—A situation, my son, is generally what a young man asks for; a job is what he gets—Philadelphia Record.
Opener—Why is it?
Pearson—My publishers have sent it to 200 Harverson, and not one has hurried it from his shelves—Denver Republihan.
Glimbell Bros., Philadelphia.
Mitchell Fletcher Co., Philadelphia.
Thos. C., Fluke Co., Philadelphia,
J. J Pletcher & Bro., Germantown.
Siegel Cooper Co., Chicago.
Aaron Ward's Sons, Newark.
Chas. M. Deeker & Bros. Stores, Orange,
LADIES' LIST
as follows: Mirrors from 25c up to $3.00; DOMIZERS, Latest Desk Cup and Saucer, Special; Cuff, Collar and Hat, Fine Line, Box Cand Soap in Boxes and other
- Xmas Suggestions as follows: Mirrors from 25c up to $3.00; Brushes and Combs from 25c up to $3.00; PERFUMERY in Xmas Boxes; PERFUME ATOMIZERS, Latest Design; Fine Box Writing Papers. Xmas Styles; Cup and Saucer, Special Design for Xmas Gifts; Ladies' TOILET SETS; Cuff, Collar and Handkerchief Cases Combined; Manicure Sets; Fine Line, Box Candies, Especially Put Up for Xmas Gifts; Toilet Soap in Boxes and other things not mentioned.
GENTLEMEN'S LIST
Razors, Strope, Lather Brushes, Lather Mugs, Safety Razors, Shaving Outfits with Mirrors Combined, Pocket Knives, Fountains Pens, Match Safes and Clipper Combined, Gentlemen's Cup and Saucer, Special Design, Military Brushes in Cases, Pipes, Cigar Holders, Cigarette Holders, Cigars in Boxes, Large Jars Pipe Tobacco and other things not mentioned.
From now until after Xmas I will give to each purchaser of $5.00 worth of Xmas goods at one time, a beautiful bottle of fine perfume that retails for one dollar. Call early and inspect our stock. We will take pleasure in waiting on you.
Thos. T. Jeffries, Druggist.
Richmond, Virginia
The Bank of the People BECAUSE The People are Supporting it.
Is second to none of its size in equipment. Safety brings Confidence and Confidence brings Business.
WHEN WE WERE BUYING A VAULT, WE BOUGHT THE BEST FOR THE REASON THAT WE BELIEVED THE BEST WAS NONE TOO GOOD FOR OUR PEOPLE.
If our people had failed to patronize the Bank, it would have been their fault and not ours. When we were selecting a New York Correspondent, we chose the National Park Bank of that City. Our actual funds, based upon the present value of our real- estate holdings are over fifty thousand dollars above the amount on deposit with us.
This guarantees the safety of every dollar on deposit with us. We invite correspondence and urge upon every one to bring us their money for sale 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 burglar. Our Building is insured and the bulk of our funds invested in desirable Real Estate. Our Tellers are under Bond.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., PRINCESS.
THOMAS H. WYATT, VINC. PENNESEN.
WALKER T. DAVIS, CURRY.
THOMAS H. GROUP, SUPPLIER.
NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & CLAY ST.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.