Richmond Planet
Saturday, August 15, 1914
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
By right of honor, for all men; Who labor under God's own plan. And to his dictum humbly bend. Through all the years of stiffed Law, And kindred grievances combined: "ONWARD!"—the cry, thro' batter'd
Rings out of burdon'd heart and mind.
I am a seeker after 'PEACE';
Yes, question not my right to go.
And find the long-sought promised land.
Along this way of weal and woe!
Give me one part —not all the road.
I'll find the way with courage bold;
The sweat—drops falling from my brow.
Are bitter weepings of the soul.
"The Promised Land!" A glorious sight
With all its hope; when shall I see
Its awaying vineyards, blooming trees
And tread its fertile soil care-free
And taste its fruit of MANHOOD RIGHTS.
While ripening yea, on every hand!
O. what a hard and tedious flight—I LONG TO SEE THE "PROMISED LAND!"
—Hey! Mister, save me a ticket for Buckroe, August 18.
LOTT CAREY BAPTIST FORGE
MISSION CONVENTION.
The eighteenth annual session of the Lott Carey Convention will convene at Raleigh N. C. with the First Baptist Church. Rev. Askew, D. D. Pastor. The session will open Tuesday. S.P. M. when the addresses of welcome and responses will be made. The meeting will continue through Friday, when a great mass meeting in the city's Auditorium will be held and when distinguished speakers will make addresses. Persons wishing to attend the convention will add to their entertainment and enjoyment by informing the pastor of the church at Raleigh at once. The amount of money the convention is pledged to raise this year is $10,000 and the churches and organizations in affiliation with the convention are urged to report liberal contributions. The convention has five missionaries at work on fields in Africa to whom it is responsible to pay salaries and square up with them at the annual meeting. It is therefore important that the churches and organizations respond liberally.
Recent reports from the field in Liberia are most encouraging that the buildings are in course of erection and that the missionaries have every reason to be encouraged. The work in S. Africa, according to Rev. Midodona's report, is having its usual prosperity. It is the hope of the board of the convention to make this year the banner year of our foreign mission work, at the coming meeting in Raleigh N. C.
In Christ's service,
W. M. ALEXANDER,
Corres. Secretary.
—Man, if I don't carry out gal August 18 to Buckroe, I can't stay on the place.
WHAT DOES IT MATTER?
While I lay claim to having no authority to speak for other than myself, yet I do feel that I be speak the sentiment of the overwhelming majority of my race in Virginia when I say that we admire and appreciate the ability, fairness and justice of our white representatives both in the State Administration and in the Senate of the United States; that our civic pride in Richmond is as great as as stamach as in the civic pride of any race; that we rejoice with ardor and enthusiasm over the annexation of sixteen square miles of new territory to our city; and that the colored people are as truly proud of a Greater Richmond as are other people.
Since this is true, what does it matter if because of greatly increasing numbers we must encroach upon what has formerly been known as white territory? What does it matter if the white people in the vicinity of Leigh and Fifth Streets are crowded out? They have everywhere to go while colored people have nowhere else to go. We are not only segregated in Jackson Ward but segregated in certain sections of that Ward, confined to the narrow limits of the blocks and even half blocks. Here we are cooped up like fowl in a crate, packed together like sardines in a box, piled upon each other like rate in a trap. Not alone must we live in houses built for us in blind alleys, but we must live in houses built for us in the rear of other houses where there are no alleys, blind or otherwise, and where entrance andgress for the family in the rear house are to be gained only through the actual living rooms of the family in the front house.
There is located in Jackson Ward no public play grounds for children, no public park for adults, but in their stead is maintained a cemetery a public dump for the city's refuse matter, a crematory for diseased, dead and putrifying animals. In this Ward we must live, move and have our being. In this Ward we must erect our churches and build our homes. In this Ward our children must be born, oke out a miserable existence and finally die. For this congested, unanitary and unhealthy manner of housing we must pay fifty percent more rent than other people pay.
What does it matter that the death rate in this black Jolt is 36, percent while among the white people of the same class, but better housed, it is only 14 percent? Wha does it matter that the undertaker is the most popular business man and the grave digger the most over-worked individual in our community? What does it matter that we must ruthlessly sacrifice 22 percent. of our kith and kin; that 22 percent. more of human lives is the extra toll we must pay for the privilege of living in Jackson Word? What does it matter that 22 percent of colored people are by law actually murdered; that the separation of the races may be an unqualified success?
Since segregation is interwoven with everything in life, since it bears upon every question, permit me to call attention to an article in the daily press of this city, July 29th, wherein it is reported that a delegation of white Christians called upon the Mayor, the administrative board and concil, to protest against the purchase of a church by colored Christians at Leigh and Fifth Sts. For white people to protest to the Mayor before whose honor colored people are as dumb as sheep before their shearers and can open not their mouths; for white people to appear before the administrative board, a body that regards not the wants, wishes nor prayers of the Negro; for white people to appeal to a white council in whose election the masses of colored people have neither voice nor vote, is a contest of the strong and mighty against the weak and helpless. This is a struggle in Richmond, manifestly as unequal as has ever taken place since Grant threw his mighty legions against the broken and wavering ranks of that small but valiant army of General Lee's.
It is obvious that God in his goodness has bountifully supplied Richmond with air, space and land, available for every human need, so that none may suffer or die because there is not enough for all and to spare. Hence on the oye hand these natural resources are infinitely greater than is the demand of the white people for them. On the other hand there is a great unsatisfied need, a crying want due to a neglect of the council to widen the segregated district for our people. Under existing circumstances we feel that our white friends should see to it that every citizen without regard to race changes in the blessings and advantages of communism; that a Greater Richmond must move room, better living conditions and happier homes.
those who embody all that is highest and best in Virginia manhood and womanhood: We ask for methods of improved housing: for an opportunity to get a greater abundance of God's free air; for the means of better health; and for a diminution of the awful death rate among the colored people of the great and historic city of Ridamond.
THEODORE W. JONES,
730, North Fifth Street.
—The Astoria Beneficial Club will run its usual select excursion to Claremont, on August 31st.
Hey, mister, what price of dem spring chickens? Bring me four, cause I go to go August 18, to Buckroe.
Elks to Meet at Norfolk, Va.
Norfolk, Va., August 9th.
Already this city is at work preparing to entertain the grand lodge of Colored Elks, which is to meet here the last week in this month. Norfolk's hospitality will be taxed, judging from reports of the number that will be in attendance from the various states. Information received is that New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, the District of Columbia and Virginia especially will send large delegations. Ample provisions are being made however to properly take care of all, and excursions on water and other amusements are being arranged by the committee on arrangements. The contest promised for the position of Exalted Grand Ruler, between Theos. Nutter, of West Virginia, and Armand W. Scott, of Washington will swall the attendance. Mr. Scott has already reserved headquarters at the Brighton hotel, and his campaign, backed by New York, Penssylvania, Maryland, Washington and Virginia is being pushed with vigor. Mr. Nutter is prosecuting his campaign with vigor also. At the last annual meeting Grand Exalted Ruler Nutter won by the narrow margin of 4 votes Mr. Scott's supporters enthusiastically predict that he will win this time by a good margin because of the resolution passed committing the order to one term for the Grand Exalted Ruler. In order that the honors may go around and thus maintain greater interest and enthusiasm. The other officers have been lost sight of because of the context on for the Exalted Ruler.
It is Norfolk's intention to give the visiting Elks a reception and entertainment exceeding any previous meeting. Citizens, without regard to their connection or not with the order will vie with each other in properly entertaining the Elks. Private homes will be thrown open, and no stone left unturned to make this the greatest meeting in the history of the Elks. It is reported that a boat load of delegates and visiting Elks will come from Washington and Baltimore, and an effort is being made to bring the New York and Pennsylvania Elks here by boat, they meeting either at Baltimore or Washington to take a steamer.
Don't forget, the boat leaves for Claremont at seven o'clock on August 31st.
NOT GUILTY
No evidence upon which to hold Charles Robinson, colored, ten years old, responsible for the death of his aged grandmother was adduced Friday morning, 7th inst., when the child was arraigned in the Juvenile Court on a technical charge of murder. The boy will be kept in custody, however, until provision for his future can be made.
The Robinson woman was found dead in a closet in her home. 2 East Federal Street. She was nude and her hands and feet were bound tightly with heavy cord. Doctors pronounced death to have been caused by starvation.
Do You Know Them?
My brother and sister Thomas Jones and Matilda Jones were sold out before freedom was introduced She was a Miss Jones but she married a gentleman by the name of Mr. New man she was taken from her husband and sold by Colonel Miller and Jane Miller. Their parents were named Alfred Jones and Ellia Jones belonging to Edmund Perry. They had a sister named Sarah Ann and brother named Alfred Jones This is your youngest sister, inquiring for you name Mrs. Julia Price Hill Top Chen, Co. Md.
. BOYS' AND GIRL' CONTEST.
The Dixie Theatre management has had some misunderstanding with the Dunlap Pony people and accordingly, the pony price has been discontinued. They were offering this price and not The PLANET. For this reason the advertisement has been dropped.
We have decided however to substitute prizes for those who have voted at The PLANET Office and all ballots deposited here will count.
We are extending the time to November last and the prizes which, will be given to the boy or girl receiving the highest number of voices will be as follows:
FIRST PRIZE .
Diamond Ring, Gold Watch or Boy's or Girl's Bicycle. The winner can choose any one of these prizes.
SECOND PRIZE
Moving Picture Eastern, Large Doll, Doll Carriage or Child's Automobile. The one receiving the second highest number of votes can choose any one of these prizes.
THIRD PRIZE
Mil. Ball and Bat; Roller Skates or Football. The winning receiving the third highest number of votes can choose any one of these prizes.
FOURTH PRIZE
Hand Satchel, Automatic Toy or Engine. The winner of the fourth highest number of votes can choose any one of these prizes.
FIFTH PRIZE
Electric Search Light
Votes will be published in The PLANET. Votes may be obtained for each penny paid on subscriptions or job work or for PLANETS sold. These prizes are guaranteed by The PLANET. Ballots obtained at Dixie Theatre will not be good in the ballot box at the PLANET Office unless they were cast prior to July 15, 1914.
Colored Y. W. C. A.
The Colored Y. W. C. A.. 22 West Lough Street offers cool and comfortable rooms to respectable girls and women from 50 to 75 cents per week. Those traveling alone will find protection in our home, and any assistance will be cheerfully given. Let us direct you to safe employment. Music scholars wishing practice hour can find a first-class piano on which to play for 50 cents a month.
Mrs. Lucy B. Lewis, President;
Miss Mary M. Scott, Secretary.
—Billy. I think you would look so nice going in one of those Palm Beach suits to Buckroe. August 18.
Yes, I'm going to Claremont. August 31st with Astoria Club.
In Memoriam.
In sad but loving remembrance of our devoted classmate, Loroy C. Bolding, who departed this life, June 1914, at his home in Petersburg, Va.
Ah, broken is the golden bowl. The spirit flown forever.
The bell was toiled, a saintly soul
floated 'oer on Jordan's river.
See in yon cold and rigid 'grave, low
lies any dear Lotor.
Avaut. Avaut...from flands below
the indignant ghost is risen.
From hell unto a high estate, far up
with-in the Heavens.
Oh, dream too bright to last. Ah,
starry hope that didst. Arise
But to be overcast—A voice from out
the future cries.
"On, On!" But o'er the past our
spirits hovering lies.
Mute, Motionless, Agitat.
E. F. B. Class of Jan. '14.
Roanoke, Va.
Rev. Dr. Brooks To Be Here.
Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D. D., the able pastor of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, Washington, D. C. will preside all day Sunday, September 15th of the Fifth St. Baptist Church. This will be a rare opportunity for the public to listen to the personal witness of this great
REV. DR. PHILLIE FUNERAL
The funeral of Rev. Charles H. Phillips, D. D., who died suddenly at his residence, 814 1-2 N. Fourth St. Tuesday night at about ten minutes to eleven o'clock, August 4th, took place Friday, 7th inst. at the Fifth Street Baptist Church. Rev. W. F. Graham, D. D., pastor of the Holy Trinity Baptist Church, Philadelphia Pa., and a bosom friend of the deceased had been chosen by the family to conduct the funeral obsequies and right well did he perform the task.
MANY MINISTERS PRESENT.
Prominent divines from all over the State were present. Rev. Dr. Phillips was an evangelist with a national reputation. Among those present and on the rostrum were: Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D. D., pastor of the Nineteenth St. Baptist Church of Washington; Rev. R. C. Woods, President. Virginia Theological Seminary and College, Lynchburg, Va.; Rev. C. E. Jones, of Newport News, Va.; Rev. W. H. Ford First Vice-President of Mattaponi Baptist Association; Rev. A. S. Thom as, D. D., Rev. J. J. Nickerson, of Williamsburg, Va.; Rev. Z. D. Lewis, D. D., Rev. W. H. Stokes, D. D., Rev. Thomas H. White, Clifton Forge, Va.
THE PALL-BEARERS.
The honorary pall-bearers were J. Thomas Hewin, Esq., Thomas H. Wyatt, E. C. Burke, Rev. Thomas H. White, Thomas M. Crump, B. H. Peyton, A. V. Norrell, A. W. Holmes. The active pall-bearers were: Rev. J. J. Carter, B. A. Graves, Peter Rilley, York Harris, T. G. White, Rev. Lee R. Frayer.
King Solomon Lodge, No. 27. Masons, Samuel W. Turner, Master; Sydney Jones, S. W. A. W. Holmes represented the National Ideal Society of which Rev. Phillips was the Supreme Chaplift.
HIS COUNTRY CHURCH
Rev. Phillippe was pastor of the Union Baptist Church, of Beaver Dam, Va. and a large number were present to attend the funeral. The deceased present were: William Miner, Alick Marshall, P. H. Robinson, Isaac Jones, Allen Haines and George Berkeley.
Rev. C. E. Jones lined hymn, "Servant of God, Well Done." Rev. Dr. Brooks, read the 10th Psalm. Rev. Marshall Payne offered prayer. Resolutions were read from his Church, the Union Baptist, King David Lodge, Twilight. No. 1, N. I. B. S., Board of Directors, Philadelphia District of the same, organization. Baptist Minister Conference of Philadelphia, Foreign Mission Board. Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, of Montgomery, Ala., Rev. R. C. Jodkins, pastor, State Foreign Mission Board.
THE BEREAVED ONES.
The Fifth Street Baptist Church choir sang, "My Days are Gliding Swiftly By." The letter from his wife was read by Rev. W. F. Graham. He left a wife, two stepsons, a sister and a brother. Rev. Dr. Graham made sympathetic references to the family and also announced the serious illness of Rev. Dr. G. L. P. Tallafrore of Philadelphia, who was then ill with catarrhal hemorrhages.
He reviewed the life of the deceased and told of the many he had brought to Christ. He gave practically a biographical sketch of his career and pronounced him to be one of the greatest evangelists before the public. His devoted wife had done all in her power for him, but earthly help was of no avail. His present illness extended over a period of three years.
A FINE EULOGY.
The eulogy was one of the best ever heard in this city and the services were managed with consumate ability, well worthy of the occasion. Rev. W. H. Brooks, D. D. Rev. W. H. Ford, Rev. R. C. Woods, Rev. Z. D. Lewis, D. D. and John Mitchell, Jr. also spoke.
The deceased was also an ardent member of the I. O. of St. Luke. He held membership in Venus Lodge, Knights of Pythias. Funeral Director A. D. Price officiated. The floral designs were numerous and costly. The casket was black cloth on cedar shell and was a massive affair.
Stay, Jim, if my boss don't let me get off to go to Buckroe, August 18, I is gwine to sing job up.
LULLABY
Darling, sleep and stop your crying,
Sleep and dream of gnomes
and fairies,
Dream of giants, and little Brownies.
And the Golden-bird that carries
Messages to frogs and crickets
Telling them of darling's joys.
That he's tired and must be sleeping
And to please to hush their noise.
Darling, sleep while I am crooning
This sweet lullaby to you:
Close our eyes and wake in dream-
land
Where the fairies wait for who?
Wait for you, my precious darling.
With your little tired head:
Let your mind roam round in dream-
land
While your holy rests in bed.
Darling, sleep while darkness hovers
Over all the beauteous night.
Soon to pall it and to wend it
Into dark mysterious night.
Sleep and linger in the blessed
Land of rest and joy and mirth;
And mayhaps to-morrow's living
Will be better by your birth.
—C. LESLIE FRAZIER.
The Great Evangelist to Come.
Rev. Wm. H. Skipwith, the noted evangelist will conduct revival services at the Fifth Street Baptist Church all day, Sunday, September 6th. This means that the people of this city will be able to hear him during a period that will give them food for thought and time for meditation. Dr. Skipwith's work nation wide and his reputation has been so well established here that to announce his coming is to ensure a large attendance.
$25.00 Reward for Information.
A reward of $250 is hereby offered to the first person giving information leading to the whereabouts of Mr. Joseph B. Louden, who left his home here in the Spring of 1905.
ATTY. GEORGE W. MILFORD.
171 Florida Ave. N. W. Wash. D. C.
---
BIG DAY AT THE FIFTH STREET
BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday Aug. 15th, 1911
Sunday School at 9:30 A.M.
11:30 A. M. Rev. J. H. Greene of Patterson N. J. will fill the pulpit. 1:00 P. M. Everiss known as Convention Day of the B. Y. P. will be held. An excellent programme will be rendered. Newly elected officers will be installed by Rev. J. H. Greene All B. Y. P. Us. and Christian Endeavor Societies are invited to be present. A silver offering will be appreciated. 9:00 P. M. Rev. J. H. Green will again fill the pulpit.
On the fourth Sunday, the pulpit will be filled by Dr. W. P. Lawrence of Orange, N. J. On the fifth Sunday, Rev. Boykins, of Camden, S. C. On the first Sunday in September, by Rev. W. H. Skipwith and on the second Sunday in September by Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D. D. of Washington, D. C. All friends are cordially invited to these services.
3rd St. Bethel A. M. E. Notes.
Presiding Elder O. T. Day of the Richmond District will hold his quarterly meeting Sunday.
Rev. S. S. Morris, Mr. E. J. Johnson, Mrs. Amanda West and Miss Rosa Liggins have returned from the District Conference, which met in Handsome, Southampton county. They report as having had a splendid meeting.
Rev. Morris will leave Thursday for South Boston to attend the Roanoke District Conference.
Mrs. Mary E. Williams and Mrs. Mary F. Lawson, of Danville, who have been the guest of Rev. and Mrs. S. S. Morris for the past three weeks have returned home. They attended the rededication of Third Street Bethel A. M. E. Church.
A: Card of Thanks
The Pastor and Trustees of Third Street Bethel A. M. E. Church take this means of publicly thanking each friend of the church who contributed money, presence or in any other way to the success of the rededication of their beloved, Bethel. May Heaven's chosen blessings rest upon each and all.
HARVARD COLLEGE
AUG 17 19
CAMBRIDGE, N.Y.
3
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
PERSONALS AND BRIEF'S.
Mrs. Elizabeth Pierce, of West 20th St. continues very sick.
—Rev. Thomas H. White, D. D., of Clifton Forge, Va. called on us.
—Wake me early on August 21st as I may go to Claremont with A. B. C.
—Dr. A. A. Tennants, and wife are spending their vacation at Newport, R. I.
—John, I want all the washing I can do betwixt this and August 18, for Buckroe.
—Mrs. Nannie Stovall, of West 22nd St. is out again after two weeks' sickness.
—Mrs. Cora Epps Hill is visiting in Atlantic City, Philadelphia and Washington, D. C.
—Deacon Ed. T. Coleman, of 5th St. Bapt. Church who has been sick for the past few weeks, was out last week looking much improved.
—Miss Annie Mosby, accompanied by Miss Helen Harris left the city August 5th, to spend a month with Mrs. L. D. Byrd, of Newport News, Va.
Mrs. Bertha Wilson and Miss Mary Harris are spending their vacation in Atlantic City, N. J., Philadelphia, Pa. and other Northern cities.
Where, you gwine, Sam? I gwine wid the Old Rellable Boys and Circles 7 and 9 of the First Baptist Church, Buckroe, August 18.
Rev. J. J. Nickerson, of Williamsburg, Va. was in the city last week in attendance at the funeral of Rev. C. H. Phillips.
Mrs. Hawkins-Johnson, of 616 N. First St. left the city Monday, August 10th for New York City to visit her sister, Miss 'ora Montague and also to respect her branch offices in Trenton, N. J. and New York City.
Mr. Orbia Deane spent Sunday and Monday visiting in the Tidewater section. He was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Romoo Hall of Phoebe Virginia.
Mrs. Sylvia L. Mitchell returned to Montclair, N. J. last Sunday, after spending a month in this city with her children, Roscoe C. and Rebecca T. Mitchell.
Mr. B. G. Fitzgerald has been given a strong backing in his candidacy as Freeholder from his ward in Atlantic City N. J. We hope he will win
Rev. Junius Gray, D. D., pastor of Psalmist Baptist Church, Baltimore, Md. has been visiting in the city. He preached at the Zion Baptist, 2nd Baptist Church, South Richmond and also at 6th Mt. Zion.
Lucinda Wilson well known as a domestic in Brooklyn N. Y. and in Springfield Ohio has been confined to her bed since March, and is dangerously ill. Her many friends may communicate with her at 1010 Tenth St. Lynchburg Virginia.
Our good friend G. Grant Williams announces that he is still with the Philadelphia Tribune and that he has no idea of quitting that position. We noted in the Baltimore Tribune that he would serve that journal and accordingly drew this erroneous conclusion. We tender him an apology.
Editor William Monroe Trotter of Boston announces that the National Independent Political League will meet at the Bethe A. M. E. Church, New York city, September 7-9, 1914. This will be a good place to meet and there should be a large attendance. We are reminded of the fact that Col. Theodore Roosevelt lives in New York.
Mrs. Martine A. Hughes who is with her daughter, Mrs. Truly Hatechell of Baltimore Md. still remains quite sick.
Dr. William H. Hughes, accompanied by his little daughter, Helpen, of this city visited his mother last week on account of her illness. Mrs. Hughes has many friends here and all wish for her speed recovery.
A delightful hay ride was given Thursday night. August 13th by Mr. Leroy Thornton in honor of Miss Martie Holmes, of Winchester, Ky. The party assembled at the home of Miss Lillie Burrell in North Fourth street and indulged in dancing and other social pleasure, after which, they were conveyed in two large auto trucks to the residence of Mr. Beaty on the Winsthampton Line. An enjoyable time was had.
Dance and Hay Ride.
Copyright: 1914, by Little, Brown & Co.
"DOE YE NEXTE THYNGE."
From an old English parsonage, down by the sea.
There came in the twilight a message to me.
Its quaint Naxon legend, deeply engraven.
Hath as it seems to me, teaching for heaven.
And all through the hours the quiet words ring.
Like a low inspiration, "Doe ye nexte thynge."
Many a questioning, many a fear.
Many a doubt, hath its quieting here.
Moment by, moment, let down from heaven.
Time, opportunity, guidance, are given.
Fear not tomorrow, child of the king!
Trust them with Jesus, "Doe ye nexte thynge."
—Anonymous.
SYNOPSIS
James Montgomery, an innocent country lad, is arrested for killing a bank watchman. His finger prints are taken by the New York police.
His old mother pleads in vain for him with Detective Michael Kearney. Montgomery is placed on trial for his life, charged with murder.
Convicted of murder in the second degree, he is sent to Sing Sing as a life prisoner and enters the machine shop.
His collate, Bill Hawkins, a burglar, plans to aid Montgomery in escaping from the prison.
Bill makes Montgomery a suit of clothes. It is seized. Montgomery craves into a box of machinery that is to leave the prison.
Escaping, he hides in the New Jersey marshes and changes his clothing for that of a drowned man.
CHAPTER VII
Help From the Dead
THE long ride on the breakbeam had covered Montgomery's face, hands and clothes with dust and grease must he sooamed a part of the bog in which he had sought shelter from the hounds at his heels. Moving cautiously and always fearful of a pit of quicksand, he sought one of the high and dry bunnocks Bill had told him of.
He needed sleep and rest, for he had worn out his feet and legs in the race from Sing Sing to North Turpytown and his arms in the swimming of the river. Clinging under a freight car for the rest of the flight had racked over nerve and muscle in him.
Montgomery came to a little cottary of the bay pleasing the marsh grass. On the other side he could see as he peerled through the dunt he made in the green wall a rise in the marsh javel and, topping it, a cluster of wild flowers. He recognized it as his refuge against high tide and a place where he could lie down and sleep. No bed ever felt so soft and alluring to a worn creature.
The sun at meridian beat down in a straight shaft upon the sleeping man, and gnats and mosquitoes fed upon him, but still he slept. Only semi-conscious of the act, he pulled his gray blouse over his head and face and stuck his hands under it when the torment became too great.
In the afternoon the breeze from the sea increased to a gale as the tide reached the flood and the skies became overcast. A great clap of thunder awakened the sleeping rugidue. The water was lapping at his feet. The wind had sent mosquitoes and gnats to cover. He stripped and washed himself clean. A glance at the heavens told him, that soon the rain would fall. He had been twenty-four hours without a drink of water or a particle of food. Bill had warned him about the tortures of thirst. He placed the felt bat given him by the burglar so that it would catch the rain. He followed Bill's advice and of his blouse made a little cloth reservoir supported on sticks of driftwood. The fall of the rain on his naked body and upturned face would reduce the fever set up by the stings of the pests, and he would board as best he could what rainwater he could catch in blooms and hat.
The rain began to fall, and the first splashing of it against his body was as a sow of ointment to the sores of job after a food of stale woods from his comforter Mildad, the Shahula. Up from the distant ocean the chops rolled in great black fields, ripped riggedly in white streams as the lightning played and as the thunderous voices proclaimed that a hot sky and a smiling sea had brought forth a summer's storm.
The sale increased as the afternoon waned, and as his cloth reservoir filled he squatted beside it, making that the sticks that held the corners and carefully guarding it. Twice he leased ever and drank thirstily when it filled and began to overflow.
He was grapping for more sticks of driftwood to strengthen his reservoirs support when a white object in the main ash grout struck his eye.
In the gleaming of a stormy twilight he could not make out just what the object was, and he parried the game and learned more. He paused with
a little cry of horror. He had leaped upon the face of a drowned man!
For several minutes he stood maked and alivering, awed but not frightened. Then he parted the grass again, reached down and dragged to his little hand the abandoned tenement of a man's soul.
James Montgomery knelt beside the body and prayed. And as he prayed there came to his mind the thought that none other, than his merciful Father in heaven had sent to him this outcast of life. He had brought with him an offering of a suit of clothes. In the pitch black of a night of storm the fugitive put upon the dead man the blouse with the white disk and white star of honor and the baggy trousers. In the soaked and muddled suit of working clothes he took in exchange Montgomery knelt for a final prayer in part with the dead and then disappeared in the marsh grass toward the nearest shore lights.
As the men directing the bands of hunters reported by telephone from hour to hour that no trace of the escaped convict had been found the warden of Sing Sing extended his son of search. Inspector Ranscombe was reached by telephone at his New York home. He gave orders for a search of all railroad yards, and the Oak street police station was instructed over the telephone to send a man to the little flat in Oliver street and rout out Mike Kearner.
At headquarters the lieutenant in charge of the detective bureau informed Kearney that there was no reason for haste.
"The inspector just telephoned for you to wait here until he comes," he said. "Jim Montgomery, the yegg you sent up for life, escaped from Sing Sing last night and"—
"What?" gnashed Kearney.
The tone of his voice was that of a man who had been deeply aggrieved. "How'd he get out?"
"Here's a morning paper. It will give you all the details."
Kearney read the story carefully and then went to the identification bureau and secured all the records in the case of the police against James Montgomery. The Inspector arrived at 0 o'clock, and Kearney was summoned before him immediately.
"Well, Mike," hailed the inspector, "what do you think of the departure of Mr. Montgomery?"
Kearney shrugged his shoulders. He didn't the first year to get out," he said. "They got plenty of money and don't mind spending it. The papers say he was the best machinist in the prison. I guess he'll be using electric drills on safes around the country."
"He was only a boy as I remember him," suggested the Inspector, "and somehow he impressed me as truthful, although the evidence convicted, him of the crime."
"There's lots of boy wonders among the crooks," replied the detective. "There's the Boston Kid, Little Jimmie Moran, Baby Hermelin and a whole raft of them that's just out of short pants."
"Well, everything is pretty quiet now," said the Inspector, "and we might just as well spend a little time on the Montgomery cage. Do you think you can find him?"
"I gotta good start on the job."
Kearney replied. "We got his record.
He can grow whiskers, change his
name and hide where he wanna to, but
if I ever get the print of one of his
fingers and check up on it he comes
back to Mulberry street with me."
It is only a part of an hour's journey from the Grand Central station,
in Fort-second street, to the prison
village of Ossining.
Detective Lieutenant Michael Kearney presented himself in the warden's
office at Sing Sing at 10:20 o'clock the
morning after the escue, of convict
No. 60,105.
He showed his authority to the
warden and said abruptly. "We put
him in here for life, and we want to
get him back here and keep him here."
The warden flushed, but controlled
his anger.
"Well, this isn't exactly the place to
hunt for No. 60,108," said he. "He left
here about 11 o'clock last night."
"Did he have any help from the outside?" asked Kearney.
"None that we know of. He managed to slip out in a box with a lot of machinery."
"Did he get any inside help?"
"None that we know of."
"Did he have a cellmate?"
"He did."
"I'd like to talk with him."
In a few minutes the great hulk of Bill Harkins showed in the door of the office.
Kearney had taken a cheft with his back to a window filled with sunlight.
The old convict saw him, but could not make out his features because of the giarro in his eyes. He sensed the human bloodbound in him, however.
He recognized the big feet and droopy form of the plain clothes man and was fully acquainted with the old trick of sitting with the back to the light.
Bill nodded to the warden.
"Hello, Bill," was Kearney's greeting. The detective had recognized him as an old offender. Bill turned to him and walked so that the light would not be directly in his eyes. From a better position he studied the detective's face a moment.
"Ten years and then some," was the answer.
"Marks against you?"
The old burden, besitched.
"He ain't got no stripes on his arm, warden," said Kearcy. "Would you mind finding out what the prison charges were against him?" The deputy warden furnished the record. It showed that on his own confession he had been found guilty of planning to escape and had suffered the addition of more than two years' extra time to his sentence. A suit of clothes had been found in his cell, the report of the conviction related. "You got the suit still, warden!" asked Kearcy.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
The deputy was sent for it.
"Try on the coat, Bill." ordered Kearney when the clothes were brought him.
Bill, a mothered volcano of anathemes, did as he was instructed. The eleven of the coat reached barely beyond the elbows of his gorilla-like arms, and so tight was it that buttons and buttonholes were a good six inches apart.
"You didn't expect to escape in that?" asked Kearney.
The convict ignored the question.
"You made it for your cell mate who did escape," the detective said sharply.
"What are you kicking about?" demanded Bill, his sunken eyes flashing hate as he spoke. "Ain't I taking the extra time?"
"But you don't have to. Bill," coached Kearney. "You can get that time taken off, and then, some of the original sentence, too. If you will help us out."
The bribe was offered.
Bill sneered and looked to the warden as if in supplication that Kearney be kicked from the room.
The warden had no sympathy with the class of work his detective visitor was indulging in. He made a motion with his hand to the convict, a sign to him to control himself.
"Nothing doing," said the old burglar to Kearney.
"You've served a good part of your sentence," suggested Kearney. "Now, suppose I get a pardon or a parole through for you, will you help?"
"I don't know nothing." Bill choked out.
Kearney sat quietly for a moment as if deciding on the size and quality of his next bride offering.
"Bill," began Kearney slowly.
"What?"
"I saw your old girl one night last week—Hosie."
The heavy jaw of Huskins dropped.
Rage Had Blinded the Convict,
and he felt as if the talons of a great
eagle had grimmed his heart.
"She was pretty hard up," added Kearney. "She had changed from Broadway to Third avenue and then to the Lawry."
Bill's tongue was protruding over his yellow lower teeth. Rage was choking big.
"She was a pretty girl when I was a kid on the cops," continued Kearney.
A coughing sound, such as a tiger makes when he swallows a sharp silver of bone, came from the convict. A cloud swept by the warden in his chair and fell upon Detective Lluentant Michael Kearney of police headquarters, New York.
For a moment Mike Kearney was close to death, but rage had blinded the convict, and he fumbled in his ranch for the throne of his enemy. A dozen prison attendants were in the room at the sound of the crash, and Bill Hawkins was dragged from his prey in time.
The detective struggled to his feet and straightened out his rumpled clothes. When he got his wind he turned to the convict and said, "I guess that means a little more time for you, Bill."
The warden had had enough of the practice of the third degree in the office.
"One minute," he said to the attendants holding Bill. He turned to Kearney. "Have you finished?" he asked.
"Yes."
He turned to the livid old prisoner before him.
"Bill, was this woman he told you about your wife?"
"She's my wife," he papted. "She's got the certificate to prove it. If she's on the Bowyer it's because she didn't have nowhere else to go."
"Go back to your cell, Bill," said the warden.
Working on the trite axiom that chickens-come home to roost, Kearney looked up every friend of the Montgomery family in Nyack and the country around. He impressed the town police with the necessity for alertness and patience in adding in the recapture of the escaped convict.
Montgomery would come back some day to the place of his birth. When the exile years grew stale and profiled the bedmwhew would get him and he would succumb to it. Kearney arranged with the postal department to put a watch on all letters sent to the immediate friends of his quarry and his dead and buried mother.
All this carefully attended to, Kearney had the printer of the police department spread on his form photographic plates showing Montgomery's face in profile and in full. A reward of $1,000 for information leading to his recapture was announced in black type above the pictures. Below was given a minute description of the convict taken from the police records. These circulars were printed and sent to every police center in every city and town in the country.
It was not ending detective work.
but Kenssey went at it as if he whose career depended on its mechanical accomplishment. With the aid of a camera and a micrograph, he sent special letters to the heads of all big firms employing machines. This narrowed the search to a considerable extent.
CHARGER VIII
ONTGOMENY traveled all night
and with morning dropped off
on the 'outskirts of a little
blow. Jawson willle. He's
Montgomery traveled all night and with morning dropped off on the outskirts of a little New Jersey village. He remained in the woods all day, determined that the road start, so providentially given him, should not be lost through any lack of caution on his part.
At a brook he cleaned himself and the muddied garments he wore, and at evening of the second day of his escape he felt that he could present him self among his fellows again. During this time he had appended his hunger with carrots, radishes and turnips from the edge of a truck farm.
He craved a warming drink and more substantial food. After dark he entered the village and found a lunch wagon near the milford station. It was while eating in this roadside caravanary that he overheard two men gossiping about the $1,000 reward offered for his recapture.
"It was a dark escape," said the man next him. "The newspapers all wrote it up in fine style and announced that the police would pay the reward. I asked Constable Mikkeljohn about it, and he told me that soon a description and his pictures would be in the hands of every police office everywhere."
Montgomery finished his meal in silence, paid for it from the money he had brought with him from prison and departed.
He realized that within a week of ten days he would not dare show his face to a police officer in city or village. He would have to get beyond the police net if he could. It would take time for him to grow a beard and change his appearance. He would seek refuge in a part of the country where villages and towns were not so closely crowded together. In some remote corner he could, perhaps, secure for himself some little social standing, just enough to feel as if he had some identity other than that written in the police records. He would willingly work his hands to the quick in any form of honest toll for this boon. He secured a time table at the railroad station and, finding that a southern express paused there, bought a ticket to Richmond, Va.
On the train he secured copies of the New York newspaper and read the accounts of the search for the escaped convict. In all of the stories reference was made to the fact that he was an expert machetlist, and he felt that the police would surely look for him among those of his craft. His heart sank in him. His craft was to bring him the means by which some day his name would be cleared so that he would have the inestimable boon of moving without a police shadow at his heels, of living in the open and of doing his best in the struggle of life.
Montgomery fingered in Richmond for several days, taking a humble lodging in a cheap boarding house and gradually equipping himself with a modest wardrobe. He lived with a strict economy, boarding his scanty supply of money. He yearned for a chance to work with his hands, but he feared to show himself in the daytime as yet. At the end of a week he learned from an afternoon paper that the local police had posted circulars offering a reward for his captures. He saw his own picture on the front page of the paper and under it a close and accurate description of himself. He would have to move on.
He did not return to his lodging house for the little supply of clothes he had gathered, though he had paid for his room in advance. He knew that every other city in the country would soon be added to the police mesh, and he determined to leave the paved streets for the quiet and exclusion of country roads. In a section of the city where the poorer people did their shopping he bought a tin of meat and a box of crackers. He still had $25, and he would have spent the most of it for a kit of tools, but he did not dare run the rink. He managed to pick up in a small shop a soldiering outfit, a light hammer, resin, a spool of wire and a few other essentials for a tinker's outfit. He made a light pack and as night was falling found his way southward out of the city. It was summer, and he could sleep in barns and stables or in the open during fair weather. He determined to travel on foot by night and sleep by day until his beard was fully grown.
Into the lower bay of New York came welling one of the highest tides of the early summer. Higher and higher the water rose until the nests of the much fowl floated away and only the top of the New Jersey sedge was to be seen. The highest of the hummocks in the meadow was covered. With the turning of the tide their gatherings of spindrift were returned to the waters whence they came and the dead friend of Montgomery floated from Newark bay through the Kill von Koll to the barber of New York.
Among the scores of telephone reports from Harbor Square A at Pier No. 1, North river, during this busy season of the year for the men on the police boots, one read, "Body of convict found fording near Tompkinsville, Staten Island." Sent to morgue.
This report was made direct to central office. Mike Kearney, was preparing a new circular to send broadcast and stimulate interest in the recapture of James Montgomery when the desk侍ante called him and showed him the slip, from Harbor A. He read it carefully and handed it back, then put his unfinished composition in his desk, printed up his weathermart dirty and left headquarters for the morgan.
He asked the morgan to show him the clothes taken from the body of the convict brought in by the barber patrol. He examined them and found no written description of the crime.
had won by five years of exemplary conduct. This would have earned a careless worker that the body was that of the man who had escaped only recently from Sing Sing. But Kearny was no careless worker. He asked to be shown the body itself, but because of the wear of the elements he could make no satisfactory identification of the features. A month had passed since his quarry had slipped him. "Just a minute," he said to the keeper.
From one of his pockets he produced a little tin box, a sheet of white paper and a brush of camel's hair. The box contained "charcoal powder. Kearny reached into the receptacle of the dead body and pulled out the right hand. He dusted the finger tips with the charcoal, and pressed them against the paper. With this token as to the identity of the dead man, he returned to police headquarters.
The Bertilion records gave up the tallying card for the finger prints of James Montgomery. Kearny studied the official record and the print he had made at the morgue and then smiled grimly.
The charcoal prints were of the fingers of a different man!
He went back to his desk and continued the composition of his new circular.
After the fourth night of lonely journeying beneath the stars and three days hidden in forest nooks, drinking from brooks and eating sparsely from his little stock of food, Montgomery found that he would have to change his plan of flight. He was now far enough from the capital of the Old Dominion to feel a degree of safety. The leather he got from civilization on a large scale the deeper became the conviction that he could now afford to travel by day. Farmhouses were far apart, and for the better share of each day the streets of little hamlets, where the country people did their trading, were deserted. He abandoned living in the woods under shelters knocked up hastily with boughs and leaves and took the road at daybreak one morning, his tinker's pack over his shoulder, ready to be dropped and put in at the first job that offered. The whole summer was spent atop on the highway. In many a pleasant farmhouse he found welcome in the evening after a day of usefulness. Frequently the warm bed under the shingles and the hearty meals offered him in return for his labor he felt to be wages as great as any man might desire. He met kindness and godliness at every hand.
Sometimes he would find a host who would keep him employed for a week or ten days. In every thy farm settlement he found a little white stelepe of a clapboarded church topping the oaks and pines, and on Jabbath days he joined these little congregations, offering up his constant prayer of gratitude for his deliverance.
The last sickly trace of the prison pallor had left him quickly. A short brown beard and mustache had grown to old the change of his appearance. The large brown eyes in the bearded face gave the suggestion of one who had suffered much and who had gained the essence of divinity.
In every farmhouse he found a bible, that book which is a library in itself. Being a tinker, a creature of the highways and byways, he could glimpse and cherish the beauties of the poetry written by Isaiah and Amos and Alcea. Then, too, he gained access during the long, quiet evenings to other books in the houses where the stranger was made welcome.
This wholesome, if itinerant, life gradually shaped his character to a wonderfully fine combination of saintliness and vigor. The dust and turmoll of a city street again would have made him reel and become faint. The rush and confusion of a crowded habitation of men would have been to him a veritable court for dragons.
Occasionally he would feel that the police net from Mulberry street was thrown too closely to him. Going into villages for supplies, he would hear about new efforts to recapture him and of new circular sent out by his hunters. On such occasions he would hasten back to remote roads and farmhouses. Would he ever be able to get far enough away from his impulse purchasers to again take his work with
He Applied For Work In a Cotton MIL.
machinery? He had taken the name of John Nelson and had saved every penny that he had earned with his little handful of tees. After making long stops in various farmhouses during the autumn and the first winter of his regained liberty he found himself on the boundary of Virginia and North Carolina.
Ahead of him were the great cotton mills of the south, with their myriad workers and with their great images of the most modern machinery turned and by machines by humans.
great mountains back of his laboratory in that he would build his future work.
One day he got inside his little minker tinker kit and applied wool in a cotton mill in a machinehunt. A year had passed since his escape from the prison on the Hidogen.
John Nelson had advanced far beyond the circle of the ordinary man of his craft, and he could have pushed rapidly ahead of many of his fellow employees in the first cotton mill where he obtained employment. But he was content, with obscurity for awhile yet, and he knew that the time would not be wasted, for every hour of it would give him a better group of cotton mill work.
He lived in a mill town that soilders saw the coming of strangers, and he made his habitat among the poorer class of employees, preferring to spend his board money as a means of help where it was most needed. He made no intimate friends among the people, concentrating all his effort of mind in the study of mill machinery and in reading works on mechanical engineering, which he borrowed from his superintendent.
Despite his effort to remain in the background of workers, he was quickly recognized as an expert and was advanced in wages as well as in the importance of his tasks. By sheer force of ability he had attained the degree of mechanical engineer and was already at that point of bonest attainment when at any moment he might be called to strip off his overalls and step to the desk of a ten thousand a year man.
Nelson did not feel that his first mill was the place for his ultimate effort to reach the top. He had come whence no man knew. He had no past to offer. He could give no reference of any sort as to his life or character. He could never tell truthfully where he had gained the working foundations for the knowledge he possessed.
He prepared to move on and made his first request: for a letter of recommendation, which was gladly given by his superintendent. With this bit of paper, in his possession he had established a past. He had something by which he could identify himself as John Nelson, mechanic. No one would have, to take his word, only he could offer this reference. The few kindly words of praise written at his request were more precious to him than alver or gold.
The garments of a laborer were no longer suitable. He patted with them for clothes of better texture. His old pack was cast aside forever, and in its place was a heavy trunk, big enough and strong enough to carry his wardrobe and the books he had begun to buy with his savings.
He said goodbye to his first mill and took the train south, crossing the North Carolina state line into the Piedmont section of South Carolina.
His objective was the mountain city of Greenville and the great plant of the Reedy River mills. These mills were situated outside of the city and were famous not only for their superb equipment and product, but also for the administration of their labor and social affairs. They made a community by themselves, a community governed by the president of the company, a humane, wealthy and capable man. Montgomery had every reason to believe that he would be safer employed with the Reedy River company than he would be elsewhere in the cotton belt. He sought that of all cover from his pursuers.
He left the train at Greenville and found it a thriving little city resting in the deep, cool shade of the Blue Ridge mountains. He looked toward the distant giant tumult; they seemed to him a wall that God had funged against his pursuers and as a mighty stockade against the evils and miseries of the outside world.
He ordered his baggage sept to the hotel near the station and took a trolley car to the mills. He found the superintendent, Howard Lansing, anxious for just such a man, satisfied with the letter of recommendation, and was employed at high wages immediately. Here, among the mountains, he would make his stand and his fight. Here was the home of John Nelson. James Montgomery was dead.
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
CHIVALRY.
Be chivalrous. In nobility of spirit, high courage, magnanimity and gallantry there dwells chivalry. Exercise it. Wherever a child can be helped, wherever a stranger can be guided or a friend who is shy set at ease, wherever a weak brother can be saved from falling and shame, wherever an old man's step can be made easy, wherever a servant's position can be digested in his eyes, is the chance for chivalry to show itself.
A Woman Executioner.
It will be a surprise to most people to learn that there has actually been a woman executioner in this country. In old times few cared to undertake the office of executioner, and occasionally death sentences were repelled on condition that the criminal should perform this office. A case of this sort occurred in prerevolutionary days, when a woman was sentenced to death for a murder she had committed in Virginia. The death sentence was repelled on her offering to become public executioner, and, known as Lady Betty, she performed these duties for many years, like officiated on the sofa fold without any mask or disguise and flogged criminals through the streets with vigor.
THE STREAM OF LIFE.
Keep yourself in the midst of life. Do not violate yourself. Be among men and among things and among troubles and difficulties and obstacles. You should remember Goethe's words, "Tellt developers hard to estimate, character in the atmosphere."
GENERAL OFFICE
Chief of Staff of Engineer/Army
Fighting on Fratern.
Canadian Bride Blown Up by Spy.
The railroad bridge on the Lake St John railway, north of Quebec, Can. at Lake Bouchette, was blown up.
According to a report received at the war ministry, three railway employees were killed, and a treasurer, understood to be a German spy, was shot. This report has not been confirmed.
The war minister says that the bridge was apparently blown up to embarrass Canada's mobilization. As a result, orders were issued to guard all Canadian bridges with militia or special police.
One million bags of flour were contributed by the people of Canada toward the defense of the British empire. The Duke of Connaught, governor general of Canada, sent the following cablegram to the British government in London:
"My advisers request me to inform you that the people of Canada, through their government, desire to offer one million bags of flour as a gift to the people of the United Kingdom, to be placed at the disposal of his majesty's government for such purposes as may be expedient."
The gift, which represents a value of $3,000,000, was eagerly accepted by the British government and will be shipped to Liverpool in a few days on merchantmen which will be convoiced across the Atlantic by British cruisers.
Japan Is Ready to Strike.
An official at the Japanese consulate in Shanghai, China, said that upon the first receipt of the official news of the beginning of the clash of arms between England and Germany, Japan would send a fleet with 10,000 men to attack Tsing-Tau and 10,000 more to relieve the British garrisons at Tien-Tsin and Pokin. Preparations for such action, he said, were now under way.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA - FLOUR firm
$3,75.49*4; city, mills, fans
Oy, $62.20
KYE FLOUR firm, at $3.85/4 per
bread. WHEAT firm; No. 2, red, 91/96
CORN firm; No. 2, yellow, 94/96
CORN firm; No. 2, yellow, 94/96
4/1c; lower grades, 41/96
POTATOES steady, at $173 per barrel.
POULTRY: Live steady; hone, 17½
18½; old rooster, 12½ to 13½. Dresse-
firm; choice fowls, 20½ to 24½. old rooster.
BUTTERFIRM; fancy creamy, 32¾.
EGGS steady; selected, 31½ to 33¾.
nearby, 28¾; western, 28¾.
Live Stock Prices
CHICAGO--HOGS hither bulk of
mixed, $9.15 to 10.15; heavy, $8.65 to
rough, $8.85 to 9.10; pigs, $8.25 to 9.80;
CATTLE hither; sheaves, $7.25 to
and feeders, $5.50 to cows and heifers,
$8.80 to 9.40; calves, $5.50 to 11.75;
SHEEP steady; sheep, $3.00 to 6.15;
wings, $6.10 to 7.05; lambs, $6.75 to
88.
All Scandinavia United.
Much satisfaction is expressed over a statement issued by the president of the Norwegian storthing, in which he said that Denmark, Norway and Sweden had agreed that, whatever happened, they would live in mutual peace.
Arrest Crank at White House. Louis Vanas, a Hungarian, believed to be insane, tried to gain access to the White House grounds in Washington. He declared that the American people wanted to kill him and that he wanted to talk to the president. He was arrested.
Mediation Offer Acknowledged. President Wilson's offer of the good offices of the United States government in the European conflict has been acknowledged by four governments—Great Britain, Austria, France and Russia. The responses are under stood to be non-committal.
German Spy Smit in England. A German spy was challenged on the Tyne bridge at Newcastle-Tyne line, and refused to step on the side of the country as ground-truthing on the bridge was deemed to be unacceptable.
---
CZAR'S ARMY IS WORLD'S BIGGEST
Five Million Men Could Fellow Flag In Time of Need.
BRAVERY PROVED IN WAR.
Obey Orders Willingly to Prove Devotion to Country and. Emperor, but Fall Below Troops of Spme Other Countries in Intelligence and Adaptability—Officers Well Educated and Taken Entirely From Upper Classes of Population, but Not Always Devoted to Dutina.
UNQUESTIONABLY greater in numbers than any other army of ancient or modern times, the Russian army, called into action by the war of Austria-Hungary on Servia, protege of Russia, is one of the greatest of the world's fighting machines. Over 5,000,000 men follow the colors in time of war. Individually the Russian soldier is not ranked as high in intelligence and adaptability as the soldier of Ger-
RUSSIAN SOLDIERS
many or France, but his devotion to
his fatherland brings out his fighting
qualities.
"Sincere and unaffected love for his monarch, profound religious piety intimately united with the idea of the czar and of the fatherland, attachment to the fatherland, unlimited confidence in his chefs, strong esprit de corps and a faculty of enduring gayly and naturally the greatest privations—such are the most marked characteristics of the Russian soldier," says a Russian general.
"To these traits must be added remarkable bravery and a rare contempt of death, combined with naive kind-heartedness and a gentle and indulgent disposition. The Russian soldier is distinguished by a good humor that never abandons him even in the most difficult moments, by his brotherly understanding with his comrades and by his gay and contented way of facing all the decrees of fate. Obedience is so deeply rooted in the mind of the Russian soldier that during my thirty years' experience in the army I do not remember to have witnessed one single case of insubordination, either in times of peace or in times of war.
Willing to Die at Pasta.
"The Russian soldier dies at his post, I have seen him in winter on sentry duty on the heights of Shipka die standing, surrounded with snow, and transformed literally into a statue of ice; I have seen him die on the march, striding over the sandy desert and yielding up his last breath with his last step; I have seen him die of his wounds on the battlefield br in the hospital, at a distance of 3,000 miles from his native village, and in those supreme moments I have always found the Russian soldier sublime.
"Although a child of the plain, where his eye rarely descries the most modest hill, we see him boldly scale the topmost summits of the Caucasus and climb the rocks and glaciers of the Thianahan, fighting all the time. He feels at home everywhere, whether in the steppes of the fatherland, in the tundras of Siberia or the mountains and deserts of central Asia. He has an exceptional faculty of putting himself at his case wherever he may be, even in places where others would die of hunger and thirst.
"I have seen the Russian soldier at home in time of peace or during truces in the enemy's country, rocking the peasant's child in the village where he was stationed; I have seen him bivouacking in the desert, with his tongue parched and burning; receive his rations of a quarter liter of salt water; I have seen him in heat and in cold, in hunger and in thirst, in peace and in war, and I have always found in him the same desire to oblige, the same abnegation of self for the safety and the good of others. These special characteristics of the Russian soldier—his self dental, his simple and natural self sacrifice—give him peculiar powers as a warrior."
New Army Is Organized.
So much for the individual soldier of the war. As to his numbers the following figures are accepted as correct: The Russian army numbers 1,200,000 on a pane footing and 5,800,000 on a new footing. This includes positions 10,100.
Auretum of all classes. The first line
army, numbers 1,500,000 men. Russia
becomes the world in point of numbers.
There are a total of thirty-six
army corps in Russia, each of which
in time of peace numbers a little more
than 20,000 men, but which is more
than doubled in war times. Each corps
simulates of eight regiments of Infantry.
Eight thousand men in each corps
are divided among cavalry, artillery
and engineers.
The European division of the Russian army consists of twenty-seven army corps. In addition to these there are fifteen line divisions of cavalry and two mixed divisions of cavalry composed of Comsacks and dragons. There are also some rifle brigades not connected, with the army corps.
There are three army corps in the Caucasus division, with two rifle brigades, three divisions of cavalry, three divisions of Comsacks, one line division and one regiment of Musulmana in addition.
In the Siberian division there are ten army corps besides eleven brigades of Siberian rifles. Connected with each of these are six batteries of eight guns each.
Russian Officer Well Trained.
The Russian army officer is usually a well educated man and widely read in his profession, but the limited circle from which he is drawn necessarily brings down the average of talent in view of the number of officers required for so vast an army. A ousted in the Russian service must come from a noble family, from an official family or from a wealthy and influential commercial family whose head "has never kept an open store."
The instruction given in the Military academy and Cadets' school at St Petersburg is considered by military experts to be as good as any in the world, except possibly that of West Petat and that of the Military academy at Santiago, Chile, which are supposed to be unquestionably the best. Great attention is paid to physical culture and to the education of the cadets in the military ideals of honor and loyalty.
After they pass out of the training institutions, if they are keen and enterprising young fellows, they contrive to be sent to one of the Turkestan regiments or to some lonely outpost in the Caucasus, in Siberia or in Manchuria, where they may reasonably look forward to a chance of active service. In these regions they get the finest training for actual warfare that any officer could receive, for they are always hunting down brigands, suppressing small insurrections, fighting in little wars or at least hunting big game. There are no keener sportsmen than the Russian officers in Siberia and central Asia. Their quarters are always adorned by such spoils of the chaso an tiger skins, bear's heads, bison tusks and wolf skins. It is these men who will bear the brunt of the Russian campaign in the near east, and nearly every distinguished officer in the Russian service has gone through this stern training.
Officers Get Tired of Life.
If, on the other hand, the cadet be comes attached to a regiment in St Petersburg, Moscow or one of the other numerous garrison towns in European Russia he may receive a good theoretical education in military science, but his environment is the worst possible considered as a preparation for the practical business of war. In Russian garrison towns social life nearly always takes precedence of military duty, and the officers are glad enough to delegate to noncommissioned officers the tiresome work of drilling and looking after their men. While discipline is rigidly maintained, there is a general atmosphere of tiredness which astonishes the foreign visitor. Nobody
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COBLAK OF THE INMIRAL GUARD
neems keen for duty. The officers appear to take little interest in the general welfare of the men or in the efficiency of the regiment. They spend most of their time paying calls, attending other social functions and making merry at their mess.
The monotony of the life is intense in small towns, where the social circle is limited. Sooner or later it inevitably tells on an officer's spirit. A former captain of the Russian army told me of a friend of his who lived for years in one of these small towns and was then ordered, away to St. Petersburg. In less than six months he received a command to return and promptly blew his brains out.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
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THE CZAR, COMMANDER OF RUSSIA'S ARMY.
THE NEW YORKER
The collated men in the Russian army are not so ignorant, dull and wooden as they are sometimes assumed to be. Conscription, of course, brings all sorts of men and all kinds of intellect into the service, but every effort is made by the officers of most regiments in Anatolic Russia to develop the intelligence of the rank and site.
The Cossacks. Russia's horsemen from the south of the European part of the empire, are numbered among the famous cavalrymen of the world. They are splendid horsemen and good fighters, but their amenability to discipline is doubted. The average "totals" or troop is more like a happy family than a military organization. The Cossack can be led with ease, but he is hard to drive. During the Boxer outbreak in Manchuria this fact was discovered by Russian generals unfamiliar with the handling of these people only after they had sustained some serious reverence.
"It is a mistake to make the Cossack a landed proprietor," said a Russian officer. "As he becomes more and more prosperous he loses his military qualities because he naturally does not care to leave his farm and perhaps never see it again. A Cossack should 'be allowed to own nothing except his horse, his saddle and his weapons."
Cxara's Men Good Campaigners
If there is one thing in which the Russian army excels it is marching. Lord Roberts' famous march to Candahar has been equaled over and over again by the czar's troops in their Central Asian campaigns. When General Kouropatkin marched a force of Turkestan troops to join Skobleeff in an attack on the Turcomans he and his nien were swallowed up in an unknown trickless desert for twenty-six days, yet they covered over forty miles a day and marched in at the end of the time in perfect military order without a single mug slick or fallen out. It was a wonderful feat, but it was not regarded in Russian military circles as being anything extraordinary.
Although the Russian soldier is said to be brutal and has a tendency to commit massacres like that at Blagovestcheensk, in which thousands of defenseless Chinese neutrals, men, women and children were brutally slaughtered during the Boxer troubles, he is nevertheless a good fellow, who gets along admirably with the people among whom he is campaigning or is quartered. If he does not kill his enemy he makes a friend of him by his rough camaraderie and overflowing good nature.
Money Appropriated For Army.
In recent years, after the Russo-Japanese war, the government has paid close attention to the matter of equipping the army for war. In a speech before the duma in 1913 M. Vergini, chairman of the committee on armaments, did not hesitate to declare that "the uncalled for and unexamined efforts which a friendly neighbouring
state is making to develop her military strength" demanded an explanation to be made to the duma, and he called upon General Mikhnevich to explain to the deputies what steps Russia was taking to restore the disturbed balance of power.
General Mikhnevich stated that the activity of the military department was now, an ever, directed to maintaining the army's readiness for war. During the last few years they had given evidence of their care by the lavish building of fortresses. It had been decided to provide the howitzer divisions of the army with new howitzers and the infantry with machine gun.
Proceeding, the chief of the general staff announced the measures which the ministry of war had taken with the object of facilitating the rapid mobilization and transport of the army as well as of perfecting the intelligence and aviation branches. The ministry had, in accordance with the wishes of the duma, gone into the question of the building of reads on the western frontier of the empire, and a plan for the construction of a network of railways for strategic purposes was being elaborated. This had been affected by the happenings in the Balkans, which had forced all nations to test the condition of their military power.
The ministry, said General Miknevich, had taken measures to provide everything necessary to secure the army's readiness for war. The military department had already drawn up a bill providing for a considerable strengthening of the Russian military forces—the formation of new bodies of infantry and cavalry and other arms as well as the reorganization of the field artillery in the direction of the increase of the number of guns of the field artillery of the army corps.
These measures and others, added the chief of the general staff, imposed great sacrifices of men and money on the fatherland. The military department was thankful to the duma for granting its demands and for giving the means to meet the fresh demands.
In the future, however, yet further and greater grants would have to be asked for. The ministry for war boped that the duma would co-operate with the military department in strengthening the army so as to enable the whole strength of the country, to be developed for the defense of the fatherland and the protection of peace.
In reply to specific questions asked in the course of the debate General Mikhnevich said that an aviation department with dirigibles and aeroplanes had been attached to every army corps. Designs had also been accepted for Dreadnought dirigibles, each provided with machine guns, bomb throwers and wireless apparatus.
There were to be six of this type of ship, which, he added, would surpass anything in the world.
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Special Attention Paid to Children. Enharging and Copying Interior View Work.
We will also be pleased to Quote you Prices on Interior and from Old Photos, A Specialty.
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603 North 2nd St., Richmond, Va.
HIGH GRADE LIQUORS.
PHONE RANDOLPH 2313
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FOGADTY
FOGADTY
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HE FIFTENTH ANNUAL SESSION OF THE STATE SUMMER SCHOOL FOR COLORED TEACHERS OF BOTH SEXES AT THE
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W begin JUNE 29, 1914, and continue five weeks. In addition to the regular work, an attractive lecture course has been arranged, in which will appear some of the most distinguished white and colored educators in the country.
Board and lodging for the entire session $12.00. Tuition 25 cents per subject unless other arrangements have been made.
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Other People Judge You by Your Furniture Now
When you can get FURNITURE and RUGS from an Old established house like JURGBNS—that' 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.
ESTABLISHED 1880. ADAMS AND BROAD.
E. Hayes,
727 NORTH SECOND STREET,
Residence—725 North Second St.
First-class Hacks and Caskets of
All Descriptions. I have a spare
room for Bodies, when the Family
have not a suitable place. All
Country Orders are Given Special Attention. Your Special Attention is called to the New Stylo OAK CASKETS. Call and see me and you shall be waited on individually.
Phone, Madison-2788.
CHILD.
If you are going to the
NATIONAL BAPTIST
CONVENTION
Sept. 9-16, 1914
and you want a home, you better
send your name to
Rev. H. B. Tischman
6045 10th Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pray for the meeting.
4000 will attend.
You better go.
Vanity.
There is a stirring of the spirit captive in the work mesh of the body. People are breaking down under the tyranny of material possessions. There was never a time when women's intelligence was so eager and inspirational; never a time when men were so weary of metal and meals and miles. It is all clear to a prophetic understanding that we are nearing the end of our lessons in three dimensions and five reuses. Witt Levington Comfort.
THREE
ACCOMMODATION TRANS—WEEKDAYS.
Loews Bld. St. Sq. Ben. 6.00 P.M. For Frederickshire
Loews Bld. St. Sq. Ben. 6.00 P.M. For Anchorage
Artrite Bld. St. Sq. Ben. 6.00 P.M. For Anchorage
Artrite Bld. Sq. Ben. 6.00 A.M. .5.00 P.M. From Anchorage
*Daily, 5 Weekdays. 5 Sundays only.
All trains to Anchorage depart at stop at Kite. Time of arrival and departures not guaranteed. Read the signs.
N. & W.
ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO NORFOLK.
Schedule in Effect December 1, 1913.
Leave Byrd Street Station, Richmond, FOR
NORFOLK. *8:00 A. M. *8:00 P. M. *8:40 P. M.
FOR WORK AND THE WEST: *6:15 A. M.
*8:00 A. M. *8:00 P. M.
Arrive Richmond From Norfolk. *8:40 A. M.
*8:35 P. M. *11:00 P. M. From the West.
*8:50 A. M. *8:20 P. M. b1:40 P. M.
P. M. *9:00 P. M.
*Daily*, *baily Ex*. *Bunday*, *Bunday Ouly*
W. B. *BENKILI*, *Passenger Traffic Managew*
W. C. *SAINDERS*, *G. P. A.*, *Ronanova*, *Va. C. H. BOLGIL*, *D. P. A.*, *Richmond, Va.*
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
EFFECTIVE APRIL 12, 1914.
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY.
For Florida and South: 8:15 A. M. and 6:00
P. M. 12:50 A. M.
Foer-Norfolk: 9:00 A. M. 8:00 P. M. 4:10 P. M.
1:00 P. M. 8:15 A. M. 9:50 A. M.
2:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M.
For Petersburg: 12:50 A M, 6:15 A M, 8:18
A M, 9:00 A M, 9:50 A M, 8:08 P M,
4:10 P M, 6:05 P M, 6:35 P M, 9:20 P M,
11:45 P M.
For Gollomb and Favretteville: *4:10 P. M.
Trains Arrive Richmond Daily: 5:55 A. M.
10:15 A. M. 6:50 A. M. *8:37 A. M. *10:19 A.
M. 6:50 A. M. *10:19 A. M. *11:40 P. M.
6:40 P. M. 6:55 P. M. 8:00 P. M. 9:00 P. M.
11:30 P. M.
*Except Sunday* *Sunday only.
Time of arrival and departure and connections
not guaranteed.
C 8 CAMPBELL, D. P. A., 639 Main St.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Premier Carrier of the South
Train Leave Richmond - Main Street Station
published as information and not guaranteed.
1:30 P. M. -- Steamer train (parlor car), except
Sunday; no local stops, and 1:45 P. M. -- Daily,
local -- Connecting to Baltimore, daily, except
Sunday; no local stops, except Sunday
TRAINS ARRIVE (HOUNDSTOCK)
From the South: 7:05 A. M. and 8:45 A. M.
1:25 P. M. 2:00 P. M. daily; 1:00 Kr. Sunday.
From West Point: 8:45 A. M. (steamer train),
daily except Monday; 8:00 A. M. daily; 8:00
P. M. parent HIPOP, P. P. A.
9:27 P. M. Main St., Phone 777-2222
C. & O.
7:00 A.—Local—Daily—Newport News.
7:01 A.—Local—Daily—Charlottsville. Receipt
Bunlay Thurmond.
7:01 A.—Express—Daily—Norfolk, Old Potts.
7:03 A.—Local—Daily—Lynchburg, Lexington,
Citizen's Journal.
*12:00 Noon—Express—Daily—Norfolk, Old Pole.
0:00 P—Express—Daily—Norfolk, Old Pole.
1:00 P—Local—Daily—Newport News, Old Pole.
1:15 P—Local—Accept Sunday, Charleston, Va.
1:15 P—Local—Accept Sunday, Charleston, Va.
1:20 P—Express—Daily—Cincinnati, Louisville,
6:00 P—Limited—Daily—Cincinnati, Chicago,
St Louis.
*12:00 P—Express—Daily—Cincinnati, Louisville,
Sterling, Sharp Corp.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND—Local from Bristol
9:20 A. M. 8:10 P. M. Through from East: 11:58
A. M. 2:04 P. M. 8:30 P. M. Local from West:
8:30 P. M. End and 9:00 P. M.
Through: 8:30 A. M. 11:58 A. M. and 8:50 P. M.
James River Line; *9:36 A. M. and 8:58 P.
Daily.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
Northbound trains scheduled to leave Richmond daily: 9:00 A. M.-Local to Norfolia. 1:18 P. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Atlanta, Birmingham, Savannah, Jacksonville. 11:30 P. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis. 1:40 A. M.-Sleepers and coaches, Jacksonville.
Northbound trains scheduled to arrive in Richmond daily: 8:35 A. M., 7:40 A. M., 8:06 P. M., 6:50 P. M. Local.
Subscribe to the Richmond Planet.
ALPHEUS SCOTT
CHURCH HILL
Funeral Director and
Embalmer
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Office, 2006 P St. Phone Mad. 8887
Residence, 1015 St. James St.
Phone, Mad. 6619
Paraphernalia, Material and
Service of the Best, Reliefs
Service, Moderate Rates.
MADAMN SCOTT, Embalmer Bar
for Women and Children and the
attendance at funerals:
Higgins,
DEALER IN
CHOICE GROCERIES,
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
FARM CROSS, PARK, VIEW AND
WEST MARKET.
1610 East Franklin Street.
Glen Old Manor
| HENRY PECK’S COUSIN SALLY - - - - By Gross
‘ : YES, SAU, WL Love we! Yow! \- “y). fem oe oe , “YE
+ ee _ MZow te! Be! oS a, /-_ a (. Sraversei_)
I eS ‘a a 5 i ff iN INA / LES
6 Beas GE OS No
' Me eo ip Ae
: cn, , Ng 4 Sis 4 | Key,
a a 4 s, wr 7 | ‘ g - , , - as? : “<A: ‘ 1] : |
Gia =F ee A\\ Re i ie ee S t. * :
RUSSIAN NAVY —
“WOEFULLY WEAK
Only Four Battleships Capable
‘ot Effective Work
OTHERS ARE OBSOLETE.
Handicapped Ales by Inexperienced
Baillere—tHae Never Recovered From
Japanese We—New Building Meny
New Ships In All Chasepe—Arma-
ment te Peer,
VE xluce the disastrous war
with Japan the Russlan -navy
‘bin bevir cobsldered to be’ of
little value by the other pow-
em Until revently very tte was
dove tuwnnt building up the sea de-
Tenses of the ezare empire, but wt the
Present thne there are four super
Dreadnougsbts building, seven Dread-
honghta, elsht armoured cruise, als
crulmers, forty-five deatruyom * and
edghteen submarines, ab total of elgbty-
eight teaein tn cuure of cunstructien,
ve abhest Tate as many un any othe
er country bas plannet.
: Ships Ready For Use.
The vctual number ef bowte gow tn
pest hieccccsac! Hiaeercca: Hesse, Bacbbioucer
Bunt ei itecctie Getto ccee cee eeeeeeees Ol
Dieasteoncn eeepmsettsuesstesteeee iN
Other battleniie oigecia eee
Alsielnes Ueland 8
Cruinete: sa: 4 savestesdl essay enester
Derttnyers 0 ARNLITY
Torprrhe torte eee, teeeeesencers ae as
Bubrrwrine ne sasrensesdess atasestusers ob
c=
Wi cecee, ceva cxdwagt™ wea Decwaccscteiee
The beste are tired by Soe
pallets, the ane gents ef when are fa
caper suerd jandsis a wile bow very
Uttle of qeesent day uotas warfire
Russia has a tests lara teserte Lest
which fs drewn as fotos
FING AL the resorsiats of twents
three whole, gevernunents sant of sev
enty-one distrters ly fonrteen other
gorerninents,
Becordty-Part of the reserviits of
nine districts of four governments
Third.—The naval reservinta tn wixty
four districtn of twelve Runaan gor:
ernments aud ong Finnish government
Fourth.—The tine expired Coaxacks
of.the territortes of Don, Kubun: Terek,
Astrakhan, Orenburg and Ural.
Fifth.—A corresponding number of
reserrist Meer of the mevical and
veterinary services, in addition" to
Beedful, horses, waguns and transport
nervices ae severninents and dis
tricta thus TMi zed,
Guns of the Navy.
The xtaniiind gine inthe Rusatan
fect are as foiluws: :
The, twelve inch of 400 caliber:
welght. dfty-nine tonx; marzle velocity.
2500 foot mevords: muzzle energy, 32;
000 four tons This plece bax a nom:
tual penetention of fifteen and onebalt
ines Keepy cemented at 3000 yards
with capped A. Pf xhell, the aame as
thar af the Cufted States Mark IT. |
ten fuch, bullt for the Wasbington
‘olaxs, It te nonutedt tn the old battle
sbip Canreviteh For thé Bomdino
clase a stxty-four ton twelve Inch has
deen dénisned "Gut if ta doubtful
whether It vxitts an yet It bas the
anme velocity (servies. but Ores a
1.200 ponnd projectile instead of a TH
Pound une. und It has a corresponding:
ly increta) energy The nominal ve.
locity ta 8.000 font xeconds.
The Poltava Class,
The Poltavn Gluss, the Stavot Veltky
and wll other “bustlesbips’ carrying
Cwelte net vans, doven to and tnetud:
ing the Siuupe, carry mn 3S enllber
tweve Inch gan Ite welght ts fifty
six tuna: Hts futlat veluetty, LOZ toot
necund (ervicer: energy. 19,200 foot
tons: xed, T32 ponds, If, of coure.
ap old type: cin Ets: peuetratyn te
for n twelve teh gun ery sinnt) The
= = Tee ee eee >
toe ee aia gk ma
oe Are yoy co eesieriiamesl pons : “ ee
Sempesee ts PE: . aN
= te ee * i
et
, ot
ey : Bee axe J
eat Nee ee ek 5 ial ie
vt eee Sn
Photo by Amertoan Préeas Agsedinticen, _ .
_, RUSSIAN: SOLDIERS ‘ON THE MARCH.
Sydnee neem
eee te Pere oe
> ae Pe a 3
See aa oN
a
ic 4 aa E > Bo
mers, i Pe
ee
[ cae
a Cia .
<i SET ie Tp’
PORTE AVE :
pe Ls a
oe
ha wo :
PART: OF RUSSIA’S BALTIC FLEET.
‘Y¥ewoctty In puor. and the plece is con
alderobly infertor to the twelte inet
Runs of ether powers, The rtg of fire
of thin piece js low,
| A more powerfnt plece and a better
| gon tn'the ten tneh of 4% caliber, car
Ted by the Bervaviet clans and the
| Aprakain and Rowivine
The Gangut Claas,
The only realy effective tits now
fn service are the four battleship of
the Ganget cise They are the Gan
ut, Sevastopel, Petropaviossk snd
Poltnva, These bante ane fish feet
tong and) Dave nm displacement of 23.
OW tom, The armament ts as fol
tows: Tweive 12 theh gis tn pate in
sia turrets. sixtewn 4.7 tneh 50 enlier
gunk. eet: machines guns, Torpedh
tubes, fone, subunerget, ine on elttet
team and one forward and one aft.
The next cliaw of battleships are
very much xmaller, poorly armed wnt
equipped and generally Inefictent and
ineffective. In the next clans are
rome of the bonts which aaw rervice
fn the, Japanese war find -have been
rained. done over and lightly modern.
ized. The fact that these boats wer
in nervice nearly ten searm ago and
tre ati being used shows the demor
Alized. condition of the Roxaian nary
One of the Intereating rhtpa in the
Raltte Seor ts the Czareviteh, whieh
escaped from the Japanese Geet at Port
Arthur by running Into a Chinese port.
from whik- ste was lensed after the
Rusao-Japanene war’ waa over. Rear
Admiral Withoft, in command of thy
Roraian fleet. was killed by a Japanese
abel which atrick the bridge of the
Cxarevitch. During the carly. part of
the fight the main fire of the Japanese
was centered onthe Crareviteb,
Am Important Point. , of ab
“Seems to me there stockings are’ “W
rather filmay.” naid the man who xen Aultat
abopping for bin ‘wife. “WIN they mothe
stand much. strain 7 a Oh
Well, I don't know.” responded the clothi
“clerk duptounty,- “WI! they—er—be ex- don T
tra well filled ?"—Kapsna City Star,
A aii '
Ought to Keep Up. ‘Mar
“By the ald of electricity, It magn here. luck,
$000 photoztaphs can be got oUt per to see
second.” Mec:
“Well, this ought to be fat enough to MA
sattafy the average stage beauty.- broke
Florida Times-Unton. Jinixe
pi
Se
PECK’S C¢
rs
Ye! Yow!
ow te! Bader
|. Bethichem Steel Lays Off 2000 Men.
Tho inabiiity to get ready money
on account of the preexnt unsettled
financial condition han caused — the
Bethlehem Steel company, at South
Bethlehem, I's, to adopt a retronch:
ment policy.
Nearly 260 workmen, for the mos!
part Inborers, were lafd of at tho
Bethichem Steel’ works.
According té President Eugene G.
Grace, the tay was due to the fact
“that the company felt constraiped at
thig, time sn account of the unrer.
tainty In commercial conditions, occn-
sioned by the general state of war
throughout Europe, and tha continued
Aepresned conditions at home, to .tn-
mugurate a retrenchment poltcy.”
| Thin retrenchment policy “ia Mkely
to extend to all the aubaldlary con-
cerns uf the steel corporation, namely
those of the Fore River Shipbuilding
company, at Quincy, Maas.; the Union
Iron works, at San Francisco; Harkaa
& Hollinesworth, at Wilmington, Del.,
and a? itxth, Me.
Berause of the fallure of the com:
pany to get any Bf the work caHed for
under this year's army, appropriation
DIN, it Js HHkely Mat the big machine
shop may have to close down, throw
Ing nevers] hundred expert machia
ists out of work.
Appropriate,
A family of children, after the usual
Satuniny nicht romps, gathered In, the
dmwing room for muste and aftsing.
As bedtime woe dmwing near, the
mother wxfd:
“Now, children, choowe one hymn to
Snish up with, and then you must all
Saas (Gord mbght! 7
TALS hinte “Ere Again Our Sabbath
Closes" wuggested a bright Mtue git
of about seven years of age,
"Well, think that would te more
aultatle tomorrow evening.” replied the
mother.
“Oh, but you always alr our Sabbath
clothes -on Satundays, rimmeny! = Lea
don Tatler. + Ro
The Application.
Mary—Love never dit tring me ans
luck, mum. Mra. Sintth: Really 1 fail
to see bow that ern cuncert tue, Mary
Mary-No, forleed, tnum; eniy now Dre
broken the statue of Venus, mum. —
Indice
LASS xg iy i] a
{ Pe SS be a y ;
tea) 9 ‘.
SS a Bacal a
BE aomies wR Lo
aa. Pare
‘on Pe 8 od
’ 7 en ; ff % |
-_ m a J ‘
aaa eT er Ten
, ees tay Ke WZ rary.
| g hAapeaey -«* eee ge. Pe: sf
\ 1 dy tate cs ie eet NER
MeO PEE Re Se Pee Saas
GN SS ESOT EK pat oR Se
Russian Cossacks Are Formidable Foes
The Russian mivy bas never been considered a very tmportant factor tn
the nation’s luferns. int ise se Httle of tue country faces the ret. However,
Russia beasts of ene of the best armies in the world. The Russlan Cossacks
are known ever: vivre ord are formidable fighters. a
The Bank. of the People
a BECAUSE
The People are Supporting it.
MECHANICS _»
S ~» SAVINGS BANK
; OF RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Is second to none of its size in equipment. -
Safety beings Confidence and
Confidence brings Bosiness. ~
, Fu
y i
WHEN WE WERE BUYING A VAULT, WE
. BOUGHT-THE BEST FOR THE REA-
SON THAT“WE BELIEVED THE
BEST WAS NONE TOO GOOD Y
' FOR OUR PEOPLE.
Hour people bad failed to patronize the Baok, it would have been }
thelr fault end not ours, When we were selecting « New York Cortespond:
“gat, we chose the National Park Dank of that City. Our actual atscta,
based upon the present value of our real-estate holdings are over fifty
| Chowsand dollars bore the amount on deposit with us. : — |
: This guarantees the safety of every @vllar on deposit with us, We
| tavite correspondence and urge upon every one to bring vs their money §
for mae keeping, | Auiounts it wume of tell cents and upwards received. §
} Interest paid on sums of $1.00 and over. / :
| Our President 1s under Bond. Our Cashleris
| under Bond. Our Vault, although Burglar-proof is" &
| {insured against loss by burglars. Our’ Building Is
insured and the bulk of our funds Invested tn desir- 8
able Real Estate. Our Tellers are under Bond. e
_Oor Banking Hoors are from 9 A.M. to-2 P.M. }
and Saturdays from 9 A, M. to 8 P. M iS
JOHN MITCHBLL, JR.. Presideat.- . A *
THOMAS H. WYATT, Vice-President. is
: WALTER T. DAVIS, Cashier. é
- THOMAS M. CRUMP, Recretary
~ NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD & CLAY STS., j
~ RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
EILEEN EXER pire gs ee me erp ee ae ager eS
_
——
. Photo by. Amertean fveus Association. - | am .
British Army Officers Locating the Enemy
Engtand bas the greatest onvy tn the world, but Its army from a no-
merical standpoint rinks @fth. Germany, France, Buesia sod Austria-Hun-
gary rank, in the order mamed. atwre Great Britain. In thme-of peace there
are 254,500 men in the army. There, are 470.500 ‘weerves, or a total war
etrength of 780,000 men. However, there are available for duty 2,000,000 men.
EY ~
eto rs B > 2. ;
Be OS Pi 7 a Lm
ae RA a ; aca
a n Fy i
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% a fi
P ar ae | 2
» 3 ‘ oa:
& oe ee :
4 , ba PM
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—-:)[ =~
eget s 7 ; we. Tbe Pel i
: : Sty ieee all hy |
he os ae . Te eee
a sg ISS MP ei ss
Grats _ t ek ee ee
Proionded Applause. ~—
Photo by American Pr -» .A\naociation. ve
. Servian So'diers Are Brave Fighters
Servin maintains only Soc men Jin times of peace, but she has mobtiized
aD of ber male populatien trained to beat arms, and the number tn 324,000
men. The Servian aimy tx largely composed of veterans with a splendid
morale anda recund ol Sst rate achievement tm the Balkan ware,
It wan nt the end of the sevond act
of the worst musical comedy of the
Reason —Obsulutely Che wort,
“What are yeu applauding fer?” xald
the thin man te the stout permoy at bis
mide. : :
“To show how thankful [am that the
curtain’s down at best,” tepled the
Aout person as he reached for Mis hat,
—New York Post.
An Advertisement Is More Fortunate,
ts It Lins Gereral Hundred or Several
Thousand. In Fact, It Has So Many
That It Never Really Dies.
| A Billion.
. Great Britain cliaga to its own nv.
merical system avd regards s billion
les a million timer a milton, Bot
America differs, a.billion tn the United
States bolng gals a thousend millions.
‘This ia pertiapa tho only taatance fn
which a thing ts bigger in the old
country than in tho new. One has to
go only a Iittle way from England—to
Calais—to find the billion lessened, for
France dignifies a thousand millions
with the name of billion, They are
wanting a wont In Franco fa this con-
nection, bowever, Inasmuch an there ts
already a word, millinrd, which 1s used
to designate thls number. — Chicago
Herakt. :
—Now, Mr. Thompson Brown, I
Just can't pay you a cent for rent
today, cause I got to go August 1S
to Buckroe.
FIVE
Sallie, call ‘me when you come
by to go August 15, to Buckroe.
WANTED—A RELIGIOUS LADY,
with moral principles. that will
taxes charge of everything as her
evn. I hare a good home. My
touse if brick, a story and a half
high anc! useq all natural gan. For
any information apply to REV. C.
THOMPSON, Rondeau, Ont., Can.
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Readers of The Richmond PLAN-
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Gosu | 7
; 8 = :
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THE-TRIPLE ALLIANCE | THE TOILE Parenie =
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All OR EMMANUEL|| EMPEROR FRARCIS JOSEPH || EMPEROR WILLIAM
AMD ITALIAN SOLDIERS. ARD AUSTRIAN CAVALRY. AND GERMAN CAVALRY,
ARMY WAR FOOTING WAR STRENGTH ARMY WAR STRENGTH
1 ° 200,000. 2.000.000 53.2 00,000
The Triple Alliance
Germany, Austria and Italy Joined In
Strong Bond For Offensive |
‘and Defensive. War
By ERNEST WELLECK.
SCOPSTIER’, 1914, by American devas Age
eitan]
IF triple alilanee at present ex.
tating between Gerumny, ADs.
tro Mangary and Italy wens
originaly formed ‘on May 20
1885, and renewed from thine te tme,
the Inst thine on Dec, 7, 1912 It was
the crowning masterplece and, next ts
the unifention of Germany, the great
eat diplomatic achievement of Prine:
Bismarck, Geriaany'e great “tron chan:
cellor.” It was really (be outgtowth of
the dual altiince between Germany
and Austria concluded on, Oct T, 1870,
and aligned at Vienna by Count Antran.
ay, then AuxtroHungarinn minister of
foreign affairs, aod Prince Reon, at
that time German aibsnsador at the
‘Austrian court. .
In hin “Remipincencen” Prince Bie
marck with remarkable candor explain.
ed fhe considerntions which prompted
him to form the alliance with Austria,
Te realized the necenaity of protecting
Germany against aggression by an al-
Mance with another grat power. An
alliance with France, for obvious rea-
sone, was out of the question The
choice was between Russia and Ans
tia-Mungary. Bismarck did not bes.
‘tate long with bis decision in favor of
Austria, .
» He knew that Russia would be «
mibre powerful ally but with his useal
acumen and almost prophetic foresight
be roklized that such an alliance would
tn the end be fata! to the national and
racial Interentx of the Teutonic ppopies
of Europe. He foresaw the tremendous
growth of panSlaviam so carefully mar
tured and disseminated by Russia and
aiming at the supremacy in Europe of
the Slavs, with Kun«ia as the ruling
power. Bismarck knew that Austria,
in o greater mensure even, was threat
ened by the rscendancy of the Slavs
and. bad eren more reason than’ Gee
many to fenr Russian aggreaion and
interference, particularly in the Balkan
peninauta. :
. Aveteia as 2 Bulwark.
‘The preservation of Austria as «
Dolwark against pan-Slaviem was cone
sidered neceansry by Bismarck to main.
tain the balance of power to Europ |
and tnsure the continuance of peace. |
Racial kinship, nation! tmditions and
common interexts strungly favored
‘Austria as the nator ally of Germany,
and these considerations indurtd tho-
etancellor ta,cemelude the defensive al-
Mance of 187%, * a
Under the terms of the ortginal
trenty the two powern were to combine:
their entire military strength for mu
taal support tn cane either of the two
Dowers nbould te attacked by Ruane
Bboald one of the two alla’ powern be
atuncked by nome other power the oth- |
er agreed not to support the attacking
power and ty [reserve at least a peu
tral atate fHendly to the allled power.
Bhould Rusia. support the attacking
power, however, the two allfes should
Make common cause agninat the enemy
ax if Rossin had been the aggressor,
‘The terms of the alliance’ were rath:
@r one side! and lacked the element
of reciprocity, Under the agreement
the two allied powers were bound te
aupport'one'the other only against Ras-
gia, But on): Austria wes in imminent
@anger of being attacked by Russia.
Germany's most dangerous enemy was
Fravce and hot Russia." Yet, under
the terms of the alliance, Acetria was
bound only to preserve a state of
friendly neatralty should Germany be
attacked by France. To protect the
tatorosts of Germany Rismayk ar
ranged in 4987 « neutrality treaty with
Russia, which was canceled, however,
a few. years later by ‘his woccessor,
Capetvi.
Hate Wetien Reena
Italy enters! the triple nlfianee tr
ISNZ, “seen utter the Preéete Invagion
of Turks had rotised the Itallan people
tow pant of wrath nnd Mtterneas
whitch for the nenert atte evtingalsh:
+4 AIL onctent graedces towand Auntrin
and ever temporarily quteted Che agt
tation for: the “restemption of the
‘Trentino amd ‘Trtest ‘
‘Thi Iain bitterness toward France
lasted unt! TNs fn tts slervest mo:
mente It provokes m tariff war which
cont Italy many mitioun, The auttttary
expenditure te esnary to keep Tualy
Up to hee euzagemente with Nee allies
coat Mt tuere AN for Tunis, it re
rontned French, and ia 1Nv8 and 1002
France nit Itaty recognize! France in
Tunin nnd Morwern as well. Frapey
agteed to nn tiltimate: Italian protes-
torate In Trijeslt,
With hone treaties the Italian enthn-
stanm for tie Auntre-German alliance
cooled vinitly. The Uallan dextre to
include in the kingom the Italien
speaking territories of Aintrin roanaert
ed Iteelf. F nally the Austrian annex-
ation of Mornin and Tersegovina
‘drought Jtay face to face with the
powibilty of a future Austnan expan-
alon along the Adriatic in Albania, and
the increasing strength of the Austrian
fleet rained quentions concerning the
masters of the Adriatic which pro
foandly stirred the whole nation.
Italy’a Army Divided.
With the Tripolitam expedition the
last sentimental connection with Ber
Mio and Vienna vanished. tf any still
survived. From Berlin enme x denon.
ciation of Italian aggrearion which
fafrly astonnded the Italinns, While
Parix Journals viewed with calmness
and even with .a certain meanare of
sympathy Italinn .expansion, whioh
French agreements had legalized, Ger
man newsp=pera denounced Ttaly 2a 8
worthless and pertitious ally and gave
ready currency to repurts of the brata:
ity of Tealian troop, |
To all thene xources of Italinn bt.
terneas thers tn now added the nerlous
change tn conditions the Tripolitan an-
nexaiion han brought. Henceforth for
many year a large Itallan army will
hare to be kept in Tripoll, But in the
erent of a war between the triple alll-
ance and the-triple entente British md
French fgets would cotnmand the com:
manteation with fhe Italian peninanla.,
while Exypthin aud Algerinn armies
would be able to invade ‘Tripoll Itnelf |
By her African expwuiition Italy haa in
A meaxury given bostaken to te “sen
power,
Weakened as an Ally.
An for the Gerinan aspect of the
cawe. the Halt course toward Pur
key wenkened Italy manifestly oy an
Ys mince ft Aiminished her Eumpean
army aud inerensed bet vulnerability
to Angle Frenty attack, Dut. what
was efen more nerinas, I shattered
the bonds between Germany and
Torkey becanve, although Germany
had asgomed the position of 2 protec: |
tor of. Turkey and in return counted
upon the Turkinh army aa a reen:
forcement to the armies of the triple
alliance, the wns: obliged to stand
amide and permit her ally to attack
and dismemter her. friend. é
‘As for Austria, for nearly a dozen
Sears the statesmen of the dual won
archy bave perceived the ebsnge tu
tbe direction of Italian. “ambition.
Trieete, the Trentino, the Roantan an
pexation, the fntute of Albania~ull of
theae are penis where Italian and
Avstrian “devigua confileted,' and for
several years Auntrin hag been bulld |
ing forts from the Tsrol to the gulf!
of Cattero and preparing for a con
fet vith Itaty . ,
Based on Three Treaties,
‘The original triple sililance of 158
was concluded for a term of five years,
apd when it expired in 1867 the Irre
dentinte nnd other radical factions in
Ltaly strougly oppomed the-renewal of
, the agreement. It required all the tn-
: Buence and political persuasion of
Premier Crisp! to bring Italy into
Moe. In 1801 tho treaty was agiin
renewed, an it was in 1892, but with
added distrust and opposition on the
part of Italy, ‘The :ast renewal
wan for n term of twelve years, apd
in 1904 the alliance, somewhat inddi-
fled In {ts terms, wan renewed for ten
Years, with the provision that any one
Of the contracting powers bad the
right to cineel tts adberence tw the
alliance by giving notice one year be
fory the expiration of the truaty.
‘The laxt Yenuwal of the allisuce was
inade on Dee. 7, 1012, two years be
fore the expiration of the agreement,
and it ix understood that this prema:
tury renewal wan duo to tbe fact that
certain ctingen In the treaty were nec
qauiry 6 sto make the alllunee wore
binding In view of the expected com
pilcutions In the Bajkan peninsula re
sulting from the annexatiun of Bosnia
and the Herzegovina y Austria and
the war Iu the Balkans,
Tne triple elllanes lu based upoa
three traties; the frat betwoed Ger
wany and Austria, the accund between
Germany and Italy, and the third be
tween Austria and Italy. The terms
of the treaty between Germany and
Auxtria are practically the samo as
thowe of the original treaty of 1870
and are directed against Rusia The
German-Italian treaty provides for
motna! amaistance in case eltber of the
two powers should be attacked by
France By the’terms of the treaty
between Austria and Italy friendly
neatrality te assured by. Italy should
Austria be attacked by Russia, and by
Avatria, should Italy be attacked by
France. The terns of the treaties be
tween Germany and Italy and between
Austria and Italy have never . been
made pablic. The German-Austrian
agreement, however, was publisbed on
Feb. 8 1888, at the instigation of Bis-
marck, te pnt a stop to Rasela’s war
ike preparationr. = - :
‘The Fleet of/italy.
Ostensibly the tréatics upon which the
alliance ia based provide only for the
conduét and attitude of the contract-
Ing powern in the event of war with
Ruasta or France.
‘There tn 'ittle doubt, however, that
under these general terms specifica-
Ulona were made na to the conduct of
each of the powers Interested in time
oftpeacy. It thua became evident soon
after the rearrangement of the treaty
by Blamarck and Crispi at Friedricha-
rob. In the spring of 187,-that Italy |
had usdertaken.to maintain a for |
miinble fleet on the Moditerranean,
while as a qnid pro quo Jtallan agricnl-
tural products were to have convenient
accena to Germany and Austrin, It te
nino erktent that wince Germany ban
begun to construct n mufern fleet, Italx
has not maintained the tleet Of the Inte
eighties in fist clney onter or ang;
mented It by distinctively modem
craft.
Will Cure Most Anything.
Buturban Life quotes Dallas Lore
Sharp, the naturallxt, aa giving “a pre.
eeription to cure mont anything,” as
follows:
“A ninall farn—of an acto or more,
“A xmall income—of.a thousand or
more.
“A sinall, family—of four boys of
more.
“A real love ef nature. .
-" Siz. Morning and evening chores
The Gose to be taken dally, as Jong as
life taste.”
% An Unfair Werle
“What's the matter now?”
“Pop-pop-paya mp-panked mor”
: “What for?” * .
“F-t-tor calling hia.”
“What did you say?”
“T called him just wh-what you called
him this morning when he woulda’t
g-atve you a ¢-dollar.”"—Cleveland Plata
Dealer, - a
THE TRIPLE ENTE NTE
arihlilitniitanunssinainpinnsesltal el Soehieesichaniiteticll Nl i Senha
; aR RES Be
, i ae
| Ce Pa =]
igs A aoe
st 5 x ="
4 a eee
a er OP amon
cs in ty =.
r 1 ul | See 2
ag ¥ : haw 4 :
oo 2 gi. g =
x mt Oo, *, qe . _
CZAR NICHO KING GEORGE || PRESIDENT POINCARE
AND COSSACKS. || AND BRITISH ARTILLERY, .|| AND FREACH WIFANTRY.
TOTAL WAR STRENGTH ARMY WAR FOOTING — j| ARMY WAR STRENGTH -
5,500,000 ' 730,000 '4.000,000
The Triple Entente
Great Britain, Russia and France Allied
_ For Joint Armed Action to Pro-
-. tect Common Interests :
ly CAPTAIN GEORGE L. KILMER.
einem
HE triple. entente, a friendly
Dott becween Musstn, Engktne
and Utinee, en legaey whiel
Edward Vil wf Euglind lef
to peesterity. He wan the moving spirit
th itw formation. It bexan with as
ogrevinent entered tnty between Crea
Britain and France and wan completed
by a inter agreement With Rural apd
the two ethers In OT»
It» fortaution wan ‘uctunted by nev
eral Chinie, but ciety by the growth
of Germany's naval, power. That
could be interpreted only nya menace
te Enghind, for England tn the a:
prety lent of the sens
Englant's ndulttanee tuto the ander:
standing between Rowda and France
made the triple enteute a formidable
forve to reckon with (f united tn ac
ton,
Anglo-French Agreement of 1904,
The Anglo-French agrwemerit, 20 call:
ed, of 1:04 wan rather # diplomatic
comproinise than an agreement. France
conceded certain rights claimed oa the
“French sbore” of Newfoundland for
an indemnity, . England .on her part
recognize! the claims and ambitions of
France tn Morocco, 1p other words 8
free hand in that sphere - France
agreed not to fortify opposite Git-
raltar, accepted British occupation of
Eqspt, and Engiand guaranteed the
neotrality of the Sgex canal. Other
agreements covered thirty years free
trading in Egypt and Morocco and
minor dispated boundaries,
“Anglo-Ruseian Agresment of 1907.
‘The Anglo-Russian, convention of
1907 regulates the intereata in went
and central Aaia, and amoonted, when
made t» practical abandonment of the
traditional hostility of “England te
Rusaii; also removing the chances of
collixion fa Asia, where the two ne-
tlons tat tong been inva state of an
tagontxie contact, in Persia, Thibet
and Afshaniatan, England ogreed net
to mk wonceautons tn certain parts of
Pern, and Rorets to obserre the
snipe mie in other.partn In their re-|
Epectvs spheres of Infloence sige
power migbt Unc force to collect deter.
Afghes:stan Rursia decinred outside |
of hier sphere, and both powerw agrend
to nestinte. ay to Thibet, through
china ‘ ‘
The Triple Entente tn 1914,
‘The arrangement and termn of the
triple entento hinve been formally net
forth a. follows:
The ima of the triple entente, #9 |
rallod, sinege Britatn, Franco and Fos:
Fla, re 2
First The balance of powsr.
Koo: .—Burengthening of the treaty
law in the interests of peace and the!
statain ju0,
‘Thin! —Disarmament.
In A;ril, 1904, the ¢ntente wan mado
betwuen Fiance and Engiand. This
year when’ King George of. Engiand
ristte! Paris in April there wan mach
speciation among statenmen and*pub-
lictatx about the poasible transforma:
tion f the entente into an alitnce,
This rwtwithetanding the. fact that tn
1907 Itnmaia had become a member of
he entente, making « tHplicate.
‘The difference between an entente
1nd an alliance Je said to renembie on
tu face that between tweedledam and
weediedee, bot io fact it may be very
much more. AD alliance may be just
"much streuger than an entente, as
Hh entente fe strqnger than’ no rele
som whateeever, The ite extents at
ye ta a series of dual understend.
between three powers.
Ls fact, W may be_onld of all these
Pthat they are entered into with great
cuution and’ a determination on. the
port of the rtateamen-not to gv too far,
not to commit themselves to alllances
which may entangle them In brotis
with nations with whieh they really
have no quarrel. An instance of this
caution $s found in the wo called en-
trance of Groat Britatn fn 1907 tn the
aphere of the triple alliance. Friend:
ship betreen Italy, A party to the
triple altauce, and England tn tradt-
| tonal. The triple alliance wan alleged
| to be hostile to Great Rettntn, ret Italy
could but fect that In nome mpberes
[nde bad, with renpect 40 Great Britain,
2 common polley.
Wile this was for nome time a mere
understanding, {t wan of such tmpor-
tance that Lont Lansdowne raid on one
oceanton in the house of lords, “If
the rtatux quo in the Mediterranean
should be disturbed, thix country might
find tuwit acting tn co-operation with
Italy.” The bearing of that remark
spon the Italfan relations with Ger-
many and Austria, the otber two
Dartice to the triple alliance, was made
plain by the Italian prime mintater in
1908, when he said thet “Cordially
feithful to the tripte alliance we shall
maintain oar traditional intimecy with
Great Britain and our sincere friend.
ahtp with France, thus continuing the
Dolicy which in carefully fostectng the
harmony of interuational relations,
Permits us to exercise @ rule of con
cord am@ peace in the counci of na-
toes.” :
‘The ‘Entente’e Rival
‘The triple untente appears to bave
sprang from a desire om the part of
England to check Russian and Freoch
axxressiveores—that ts to say, by ally
ing iteelf with these two powers and
securing balance of power in the
entente tt might be able to bold its co-
partners within bounds. For Instance,
In any quarrel in which eftber France
er [rusain, or both combined, might
engnse, Engtand wootd not consider it-
self bound to join with them, bet
woold as a matter of Justice or policy
seek to restrain them. For this reason
the position that the triplo entente an
a whole may take, or that the indl-
vidual powers to the agreement may
take in avcrinia Itke that of m quarrel
between a member of the triple alll.
ance and a petty power, ta uxnally 9
matter for slow deliberation.
Hpwerer, in any event the attitude
of the.two combinations, the triple
alliance and the triple entente, toward
cach other, in a crisie makes impor
tant the relative atrength of each. It
Is catimated that the war footing of
the triple alliance—that 1m, Austria,
Gerenany, Italy—tn 8,000,000 men «in
romnd nombers. To offset, thin mill-
tary atrength ‘of the nations which
Auntria may ca!l to her asnlatance in
axe of aggression by any one of the
three powers in the triple entente
there are approximately 10,000,000 men.
‘The troops of the Balkan stated, Ber-
via, Roamnnia, Montenegro and Bal
aria, as well a2 of Greoce, are trained
veterans today, having emerged ‘re
senuy from arduons campaigns against
Turkey. i :
“Relative Fighting. Strength.
Assuming thes the war most sproad
from the ‘local field to other strategic
points, the strength of the three great
powers of the entante ts of vital mo-
ment. Russia je believed to have at
jeast 5,500,000, soldiers in its army
when the fall war strength of its es-
abiiahment ts calicd oct. The eat
mate tpr France ta 2000000 to 4,000
p00, that of Grest Brioni ta lees
than @ fifth of that of Russia and less
pan deehalf, of the minimem. of]
$47,175.00
PAID OUT FROM Jan 1, 1912 to Joly 8, 195
FINE SHOWING FOR BOTH BRANCHES OF THE
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS— READ AND CON-
SIDER—VIRGINIA DOING GRAND WORK
Brought Forward... 2.00.22 0 tees ee ee esee esse dees $36,800.00
19 i
January 19—John Adam Bheffey, Summit Lodge, No. 80.8 59.00
January 19—Joseph Logan, Ebenezer Lodge, No. 116.... 180.00
January 19—John H, Kidd, Rescue Lodge, No. 4........ 160.00
+ January 26—Joe Fountain, Douglass Lodge, No. 69..... 60.00
Fed. 3—E. H. Armfeld, Frieudship Lodge, No. 2.2... 150.00
Feb. 3—William Kee, Lovely Mt. Lodge, No. 67...... 160.00
Feb. 4—Dantel Refi, Jonathan Lodge, No. 20........ - 160.00
Feb. 7Andrew McClannan, King David Lodge, 193.. 50.00
February 16—D. W. Davia, Planet Lodge. No. 23........ 150.00
February 17—Andrew William Jackson, Pride of Dante, 187 60.00
March 6—Henry Williams, Venup Lodge. No. 46........ 150.00
March 7—Alexander Brown, Benevolent Lodge, No. 34. 100.00
March’ 10—James T. Brown, Myrtle Lodge. No. 17...-... 180.00
March 16—W. 8, Walker, Flying Eagle Lodge, No. 130... 150.00
March 17—R. A. Shelton, Moravian Lodge, No. 13..... 150.00
March 17—Thomas’ A. Richardson, Golden Seal No. 39. 1650.00
March 31—D. D. Weavor, Nowport Nows Lodge, No. 74.. 100.00
March 31—Champ Weat, Crescent Lodge, No. 151...... 160.00
.Aprit 4—David Bullett, Rockingham Star Lodge, No. 72.. 150.00
April 4—Dalon Smith. Charity Lodge, No. 32.......... 180.00
-April 9—Edward J. Evans, Blooming Lily Lodge, No. 18 150.00
April 22—Anagian Stmpson, Lily of the Valley, No. 40.. 150.00
April 25__lames W. L. Carter, Natural Bridge, No. 124... ° 50.00
April 29—Matthew Foster, Manchester Lodge, No. 11.... 150.00
April 29—Wiliam H. Robh, Venus Lodge, No. 16:... 22.5 15,00
May 2—Lorenza Fasloy, St. Pride Lodge. No. 138....:.° 100.00
May 2-—Patrick Woolridge, Wintorpock Lodre, No. 132. 150.00
May 4-—Samuel Hopson, Crystal Lodge. No. 156....... 50.00
May 16---Martin Ruasell. "Vernon Hill Lodge, No. 15i.... 150,00
Muy 2%.--Nat Hooper. Golden Link Lodge, No. 83........ 1k0'60
May 30 - Chuflen Hogue, White Oak Lodge, No. 67... 0-. 130.00
dune S—Wentey Hendrick, Now Light Lodge, No. 155... (159 00
dune §..-Eugtace Shelton, Nightingale Iodge, No. 45.... 150.00
dune-24—J, R. Grit. Crispus Attucks Lodge. No, 1i7.. 140.00
June 29---John W. Miller, Staunton Lodge, No. 62-....). 150.00"
dune 24.—Herbert Matthews, Covington Lodgo, No. 60... 150.00
July “1:—Albert Hughes, Macedonia Lodge, No. 59....... 150.00
daly 1. Christopher Archer, Magic City Lodge, No. 181... 100.00
July S--John A, Walker, Capital Lodge, Noo s1.....5 160.00
Petal omassaengaarancsmmememesanaaerccwae§$R4 86008
Brought Forward. ....0esseecsee esse ee ceee eee esces $13,476.00"
1914 a >
January 26—Clarkie Bell, Victoria Court, No. 527......8 100.00
Jan. 31—Josephine Western, Christian, Light, No. 167 150,00
Ped. 3—Oin Wagstaff, Zion Travellors Court, No. 96.. 160.00
_ Fob. 3—Franves Cartor, White Rose Court, No. 118... 100.00
Fob. 3—Annie Clegg. Magic City Court, No. 83..... . 100.00
Fobtuary 17—Bettle Stewart, Randolph C urt, No. 150... 100.00.
February 17—Carrie Ridley, Silver Key Court, No. 75..-- 100.00"
February 17—Maggle Riddick, Victotia Court, No. 62..... 100.00
February 18—Henrietta Brown, Pleasant Grove Court, 161 100.00
April 6—Ida Levi, Shiloh Court, No. 110.0...0..++2. 150.00
April 14—-Martha Brown, King’s Daugatera Court, No, 70 100.00
April 15—Anna Washington, Queen Victeria Court, No, 115 100.00
April 18—Baura J; Minor. Salem Court, No. 81......--.. 100.00
April 18—Robecca Mitcholl, OM Dominion Court, No, 114 150.00
April 23—Mary A. P. Grey, Venus Court, No. 47...:.... 100.00.
April 29-——Mattlo Lane. Star of Hope Court, No. 93...... 150.00
May 2—Eatelle Morris. Friendship Court, No. 143...... 100:00
May 18—Winnte Holmes, Ivy Leaf Court, No. 85........ 100.00
May 23—Annio Robinson, Georgetown Court, No. 152... 100.00
. May 30—Sylvia Randolph, Georgetown Court, No, 152... 100.00.
July 1—Mary Nash, Elieabeth Court, No, 210........0. 100.00
TORT. eee ee ee eee reeset ener eee tp OLB, 825.00
AMOUNT PAID BY GRAND LODO. .1!1/$31,380.¢0" .
AMOUNT PAID BY GRAND COURT. :.... 15,826.00
: OPAL oo eee e ete e none s CAF ATRCO ~
France, being about 760,000 mien.
a clash between the three great powers
of the triple alliance and the three of
the triple entente the paries must nec-
ersarily, play a great part, {f not the
chief part.
Just what the objective will be when
the great forces are inunched forth
upon foreisn soll can vuly be deter.
mined by the exigencies of the cam-
patso, If it tm a seacoast or port
then the navy may virtually decide the
struggle “before the army getw to the
fheld to ntrike tte blow, «
Navies-dn the Entente.
Rosata’e naval complonwnt, today. ts
approximately Zou vesagls Of this
qumint thirteen are battleships, alx
armor) crmisers, etzht erulser, nine:
eeDve destroyers, forty two torpedo
bedts, thirty ene silaaaciies Aiming
| WE Seytay an. encmgyh ‘gevy ‘ang ‘pre
See a cetmnep yates of
creas ot
power, the centaery' 2
ouniliary . vesssin. would be Able we do
weeds work, fae ay
‘The naval strength of Freace ts near-
ty three times that: ef: ber ‘copartecr,
Bescta, France already bas two Dread-
noaghts AGoat, twenty-seven ther bat.
teabipe. twenty-two lirmored creteera,;
Bfteen craisers, eighty-four destroyers,
three hundred and tweilty-four torpe-
|. + buat mod seventy-elght. sabme
vines, Thus Prance alone would make
4 veey good showing against Germany
alone on the wea. Germany having few-
er vessels in number than France. of
againet Austria and Italy combined,
the two navies of which number but
three fiundred and four vessels against
the Qve hundred and Sfty-two of
France Germany {s strooger in battle-
abipa tham France. but not-so strong
tm armored crolsars nor tn torpedo
boats” ow
Great Britain's Sea Power.
A great European confikt is almost
wmithinkable unless the tremendous sea,
Dower of Great Britain would play a
part. Engiand’s naval force ie greater
than that of France, If the number of
Vessels tn a. onvy fs to-be taken as an
indication of in offective strength. Eng-
land bas thirteen of the class of super
Dreaduvushts, of which ciass no power
is the triple alllance bas even one
afoat today. although Germany bas
three in the process @f batdiae: As
for Dreadnoughts, of which
has serenteen. Great Britain has stx-
teen to supplement her thirteen super
Dreednoughts and forty-eight otber
battleships as sgainst the thirty of
this Class in the German navy. In
rruieers and destroyers, torpedo boats
und submarines, vessels for speed and:
rapsd action, England iz agaih the
superior of Germany. .
Great Britain's destroyers number
wo hundred and fifteen, Germany's
jentapyers ove hundred and forty-one;
reat Britain's torpedo boats oumber
we husdred and elghteen as against
Jermany's forty-seven, and Great Brit-
n'a submariues number soventy-seven
0 offmet twenty-seven in the navy of
he kaiser. 2
; + OuP Lumber Production.
About 45,000,000,000 feet of lumber
Of all kinds 1 tbe.annual production
in the Unitud States. Of thin nearly
25,000,000,000 feet, board measure, are
further manufactured. the other por
tion remaining for rough construction
lomber nnd,for similar purposes. ‘This
fx axcluxdve of innterial which reaches
ft final use fn the form of fuel, rail-
Fond tles, poxts, poles, pulp woud, coop-
erage, woul distillates and the barks
and extracts dimnnded by the tanning
todustry.
~ MIVANCE ON FRENCH
Forced to Evacuate
~ Mushlhavsea,
FIGHTING IN BELGIUM
Allies Preparing te Meet the
Kalser's Troops. |
SAPAN-MAY WAR ON GERMAN)
Italy Expected to Begin Hostili
ties. Against Austria,
polled to withdraw from the town ¢
Muehlhausen, in’ Alsace. :
This: town had been occupied by th
French on their advance into Alsacc
_ amd.on Monday {t was reported ths
they bad repulsod a force of German
despite the fact that they were ou
aumbered*
Later ft was announced from Pari
that, in the face of the Germans, «
vancing in forco, the French had rm
tired to high ground -to the south o
the city, where they successfully re
Wolsed all attacks,
The French war office announce
‘that the Germans and French were er
gaged for a distance along the fron
tier, being in contact at Longwy, Lao
guyon and Marville, in France, and a
Virton, in Belblum. .
French forces have defeated tht
German invading army in the firs
battle on French soll, according to th
war office in Paris. This was at Spin
Aourt, in the department of the Mouse
There was a luM tn tho fightin
throughout Belgium following = bom
bardment of tho forta around Liem
fn a deaperato effort to carry thes
obstructions in tho Germans’ path ‘tc
the nofthern invaston of France. Gen
eral Von Emmich's forces wore report
ed to bo reforming to renew the ad
wvance. » °
Berltn's vernion of tnere activittor
has not been recetved, and might wel
put a different anpect on tho situa
ton,
Neverthelens, dispatches from Brus
seln and Paris indicate that a con
siderable German force has moved
or Is preparing to move, around Liege
and against Huy and Namur. Cavalry
outposts have clashed in- that direc
tion, and the allies, presimably includ
fog British as well as French and Bel
xian forces, nre reported as having bo
gun their advance to check the Ger
mans before Namur or Huy or to at
tack them around Liege. :
The tatest nttack upon tho Bolgiat
forts around Ilege began a’, dawn or
Monday. The forts held out, despit.
the heavy fire concentrated on them
‘The German’ losxea so far in thé
Liege campaign, according to Belsiac
oficial statements, are 2000 dead, 20,
000 wounded and 9700 prisoners. Even!
if this is not exaggerated, as many
military. experts believe, the figure:
would show that the tales of slaughter
fo which whole German regiment:
‘wero swept to death, have been very
much overdrawn,
The recent fighting at Lego bat
deen described as tho flercest. Among
those reported slain aro Prince Wil
Mam of Lippe and his non, who Joc
the van of one German attack.
It Is admitted tn London that aae|
Germans have captured Tongros, tot!
milos north of Liege. Ono Hundred
Germans have been shot as spies ic
Belgium. se
John Clarkaon, of Chicago, who hat
reached London from Belgium, said)
the number of Belgians woundod fr
the fighting at Liogo is vast. Ho sal
the horpitals in Brussels, Ghent .an¢
other cities aro filed,
Great Britain evidently has landec
| considerable force in France an¢
Belgium in the effort to stem -the
German fovasion there. This was indi
cated by another call for 100,000 vol
unteers. This {s taken to indicate that
all available troops have beon sent f
the Continent.” The London Times
says Great Britain now has botweer
600,000 and 600,000 men under arms
not including the national reserve,
Japan is expected soon to align her
self with-Great Britain, It {s report
ed that the Tokio government ts pre
paring soon to declare war. on Ger
many, because of the activity of the
alser’s warabips fn Far Eastern wa
ors.
‘The slivation involving Austeta an¢
italy also ts growing atill more acute
and a declaration of war that wil
place Italy-tn the ranks of ‘the Ger
man and Austrian foos ts, expectes| |
shortly.
Beiginm has announced that she
onsiderg heresif in a state of was
with Austria. Two ‘Austrian: shipr| |
were selzed at Amsterdam. 4
‘The Notheyjands has aanoances| |
wwain that she ii prepared to maltotair
wet neutrality fa any eventuality, ans
sha declared a “state of war,” or mar
fal law, im several provinces. =~
The.Cerman troops engaged tm tho!
attle at Bpinccert, tn which Frees} |
laims a victory, were mostly eavalyy, |
hey ‘farmed the advance gunyl “of
bo Genman invading forces concen |!
abe6 at: Wve, in tie gread Gutiy of
pot ee tte ee
ne teed. war. cllan® Getered: F
temas bess”) aad tei, the
eee aah
COUNT VON MOLTKE.
tee
Chief of Stan. of the Gorman
Army. eT
e
re
EAR
Pheto br Amerhan Prese Assegtagiem
Btraseburg statue in the Place de Is
Concorde, Paris, which has bees
raped in mourning ever since th
loss of Alsace, forty-four years ago
has been unveiled once more.
‘The third concentration point of the
Germans appears to center on Mets
but they have not taken the offensive
there. French aviators report that the
Germans aro fortifying the city of
Laxemburg, in the grand duchy of the
same name, and the land to the south
of Metz. Tho Germans also are active
at Gerolstein and Thionville,
London recered a report that a
German dirigible was riddted by Rus
sian sharpshooters near Czenstocho
wa, Ruseian Poland, and four German
omicers wero killed when the elrshiy
toll. : .
‘A dispatch to London from Vienna
said tho Austrinns had occupted Mie:
show, ten miles within the bordor of
Russian Poland, after defeating a:bédy
of Cossacks., The Cossacks lost 400
Killed or wounded and tho Austrians
140 wounded. .
Fighting ‘has evidontly occurred on
the RusrdGerman frontlor, as six
carloads of German prisonors wore
reported to have passed through Vilna
oa their way to tho Russian interior.
Russian funds seized in the Berlid
banks by Germany amounted to $26,
000,000. - *
‘Tho looked-for big naval: battle on
the North Sea bas not como yot, or
at least no news of it fs forthcoming.
That ono speedily is oxpected ts ovl
dont from the fact that the Holland-
Amerika steamship Uno has turned
over its premines at the Hook-of-Hol-
land for use asa hospita).
It 1s reported-that a British warship
has captured tho HAtnburg-Amortcan
ner Ortegal, with $5,000,000 in gold.’
of Oporto, Portugal. *
From the original seat of war'came
tho report that tho Servians, under|
Princo Alexander, had attacked the
Bosnian city of Vieegrad,
Tho Servian legation in London as:
sorted that got an. Austrian aotdier
was on Servian soil and sald the Scr-
rians were taking the offensivo.
; a
JAPAN TO WAR ON GERMANY
Report Hostilities Are to Be Declared
In Twenty-four Houre.
Rumors are In circulation In Tokto
that Japan will declare war on Gor
many within twenty-four hours. Ent
peror Yoshihito {s hurrying to. Tokio
from his: summer home.
‘The war rumors received additional
circulation when {t became, known
that the gorernmont had requisitioned
several adidtional transperts.
FOUR GERMAN AIRMEN KILLED
Russians Riddle Scoting Dirigible With
Shots and Officers Meet Death.
‘A dispatch rocetved bythe London
Standard from St. Petersburg says
that a small German dirigible atrahtp
of thé Parseval type was riddled with
shots and brought to the ground near
Crenstochowa, Russian Poland. Its oc
cupants, four Gorman officers, wero
killed. They werevscouting over Rus:
sian Poland.
Wee Medal For Kina Albert.
Franco has conferred a military
medal om King Albert of Bebsium. At
Liege the Germans appeer to be re
govering and reprovistoning. A large
umber of German squadrons that had
yielded ground to.the French are Dow
if the vicinity of Tongres. :
Montenegro Ware on Austria. *
‘The Montenesrin government hee
informed the Austrian minister that
Montenegro considers itself in a state
of war with Austria, As a conse
quence the Austrian ministpr has left
Cottinge, 5 |
Denmark Mebelizine. :
‘Fhough it ta believed that Denmark
‘wit be able to remain strictly new
tral, partial mobilization fe proceed.
fag. The exportation of foode was
wonthices. .
z “The Deities, | prrermeaens eageee
soe Se oes oe Caled me
“THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND,, VIRGINIA.
“ATFORTSERAING] Bali Men Admire
—ermmen j “ag * a Seah ao?
Hagen tack ma Fatieations| ’ Beautiful él
“at Coge oe" N Hair £4
600 REPORTED KMLED) fF ered eno
Beigians Blew Up. Bridge as German
Attempt te Croes River During Dee
porate Fight -
‘The Germans made a desperate at
tack on Fort Seraing, south of Liege,
and were repulsed with heavy loss.
It fs estimated that $00 Germans
were killed. within an area of half a
square mile. A bridge which the Ger
mans wére crossing was shattered by
the fre of the fort, which had an ex
act range. : a
Tho Germans attempted the assault
with great courage. Some. of thelr
dead were found directly in front of
the barbed wire fence that surrounds
the fort. It'is reported that Prince
William of Lippe and his son, who
were killed, were charging at the head
of 100 German soldiers, Their bodies
‘Fore buried noar the fort.
All reports recelved agree that the
struggle for possession of the forts at
Mege was going on continuously and
giving rise to terrible scenes of blood:
hed and of herolsm. Soll
‘The dispatches say the Germans
were making flerce efforts to silence
the forts nearost the city proper and
the defenders were gallantly holding
out against almost constant bombard:
ment.
It is reported that the German oft-
cers are suffering from hunger, and
that two German officers of bigh rank,
captured on the-French frontier, said
that they had nothing to eat for threo
Says.
Tt 4s offictally apnouticed that te
German loss’ in Belgium in tho recent
fighting was 2000 dead, 20,000 wound:'
ed and 9700 prisoners, *
‘An official statemont insued by tho|
Belgian war office states that the Ger-.
mans havo dispatched sonic forces tn
& westerly direction from tho north
of the River Meuse. Tho detachments,
it fs sald, did not appear vory strong,
and it wan expected that teh allied
army would drive thom back.
Some outpost engagements were re
ported, in which the Germans were ro-|
pulsed. {
‘Tho feoling among the allfod troops
is very cheerful and thelr equipment
is excellent.
A secret wirclons apparatus was dis-
covered, concealed behind a statue oo
the roof of a German store in Brus,
soln, The antennae wero shrouded by
axe. “4
‘One of the spies arrested’ by the
Belcians.in Ovtend had in his posnos-
sion plans Indicating the ‘halting potote
of the German army on tho march to
Party. According to these Brusscis was
10 be reached Aug. 3 and Lille, France,
Aur. 6. . 7
BRITISH LOSE CRUISER
_ OFF PACIFIC COAST
Germans Belleved “0 Have
Sunk the Rainbow.
That a British warnhip was torn ta
‘pleces by an explosion off the near
California roast fs the conviction o!
persons who carefully examined fot
sam cast upon the beach’ near San
Francisco. “Vancouver naval officials
way tho wreckage {s from tho Cana
dian crulser Rainbow,
Bolta and fittings were not only torn
from their seats, but In one instance
the brass runner on a sliding door
hbad.been twiated Into a tangled knot.
An fron ‘e{nforcement, two inches
wide. by a qharter of an inch thick,
had been snapped in two. -
Portions of tho woodwork had been
splintered and the general offect of
the damage dono was dinsimaliar to
what would have been the work of
even the Imatient dismantlement. Ona
door panel bore tho appearance of
having been plorced by a hol! or
somo other fragmont of flying metal.
Tho flotsam consisted on three
whilopainted pannelicd screen doors,
with slide and weather screen ovor
foot grhlx; ono havy hantwood panel,
with glasn doors. intact, Dearing tho,
inscription: “Shjp’s Ubrary;" alghr’
sections of hardwood? shelves and
twenty-six other pleces of miscolla
neous woodwork, all painted white.
Explosions also were hean! off Sal
ada Boach, twentyodd miles south, af
the same time, but it was delleved te
have been binatinx.
‘The German cruiser sighted off the
Gelden Gate muat be elther the Num.
berg oF the Laipsig. Best formation
would indicate the latter. 1
Watch Ships Por Cholera.
Cable advices from Vienna, stating
that cholera had developed among the
Sorvian and Austrian troops, has re
sulted in precaptions being taken by
the bealth officera in New York.
Fermar Mre. Cleveland Sate.
Word. reached the atate department
that irs. Presten, formerly Mrs. Oro
ver'Cleveland, is safe at St: Morits
Switsertand.” -
King George IV. of Engiand has re
gigned his commission as ‘houorary
eommander of the First Pressies: Dre
goon Guards of the German army,
% wes stated that Bmperer
fe still henorary colenel of the
Co eee ee
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ue \ Hair £4 ral
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a 1 will make you proud of your hair
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[NELSON J Forces RICHMOND VA.’
is FEY Cie ot AE YD Li.
: HAIR PARLORS. — wee
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MRS. WILSON DIES
~IN WHITE HOUSE
The Presfen'- Wl ul sk
_ Months, di :
DR WILSON HEART a
A Nervous Greakdown, Aggravatec
by Fall and Bright's Olscase, Wai
Cause of Qeath.
Mrs, Woodrow Wilson, wife of the
Prexident of the Uulted States, died
at the White Houxe. In Wasbington
Thursday afternoon,
| The end come after two serious
flnking «pel. The presitent and bts
three daughters and Francs Bowes
Sayre, a sgnindaw, were at“the bed:
side at the end.
| The news was announced by tho
secretary to the presitent, Mr. Tu:
multy. He stated: "Gentlemen: Mrs,
Wilson died at five o'clock this after:
noon.”
‘A minuto later Mr. Tumulty said:
“Tho president ts hwarttroken.”
Months of constant iiweas, which
began with a nervous breakdown, duo
to overwork, aggravated by a fall on
the White House floor with an injury
to her, spine, and Bright's disease, had
80 weakefied tho patient and’ gapped
her vitality that the White House phy-
sictans reluctantly admitted that ‘they
had little hope and feared it was but
& question of days aud probably of
hours. .
Fanoral ,nervices, attended by the
family and {ntimate friends, were hold.
in the White House on Monday. A
apecial train was then taken for Rome,
Ga, whoro intorment was made.
Mra. Woodrow Wilson was born in
Savannah,’Ga, Her maiden name was
Ellen Loutse Axyon, Sho was the
daughter of Rey. Edward and Mar-;
gurot Hoyt Axnon. She came of
race of preachers, her paternal grand-
father being a, distinguished clergy-
man in Savannad, and hor maternal
grandfather, Rev. Natban Hoyt, for
many years- pastor of tho Presbyter-
lan church fn Athens, Ga, She was
educated in the public schools of Geor-
ria and later in tho Art Students’
League, New York.
At the timo of ber marriage to Mr.
Wilson, at Savanaah, June 24, “1885,
ho wan a typical southern beauty.
That year her hunhand accepted. a pro-
eesorship at Bryn Mawr, where as
is wife she attracted much attention
yy hee charnt and roady wit.
‘At one time abo aspired to be an
itst, and was rapidly making a name
or herself asa portrait painter when
he married. Her art studies were
argeby given up" twenty-cight year
0, when Margaret Woodrow Wilson,
vas born at Galnesville, Ga Later,
jowever, she turned ts landscape gar-
ening and the attractive English
ome of . the Wilsona at Princeton
hewed evidences of her skill, Mrs.
Vilsom summed up the keyaote of her
fe shortly before Mr. Wileom was
ominated at Baltimore in.thé words,
husband, home and children” At that
me she described true happiness as
yarriage with & pernon of sympathette j
satea and temperament, ontlined ‘wo. J
aa's rue: aphere as the heme
waded the awakeniox spirit of Amert {,
m wemenheot. Shracver.bad a fad. ;
w.eiea elleved thet the “nerves” of
MRS. WOODROW WILSON.
President's Wife, Who Dled In
Washington. +
| e
) |
| A. s
| Jee =.
many Interests
(Severdl of Mrs. Wikwon's eanvannes
Were tisptayed in New York last year
and tn Philadetpita the yrar before,
Spt attracts (auch favorable atten:
ons Witte at Trenton, when her bust:
band way governer of New Jersey, and,
at Wastiagten sve rematned modestly
In the hacksround,
Reservists Stranded In New York.
In New. Yurk ety at the ‘present
time are T2te" abledodled men seek:
Ing transportation to Europe for ser:
vice fu the armies of the warring
powers. Z
Another army of denn ts registered
on the books of fie general consulates
of the’ nations Invelved in the war,
and still other taousseds have signt
fled by telegraph toetr intention to
volunteer Whenever called upon oF at
auch Utne as transportation ts fur
ished (hem to Eurépe,
The matority of tie reservisté and
volunteers froin out of town aro with:
out funds; ten cannet retorn to thelr
homes In thie country beeanse other
men have taken (help Joba,‘and they
can't co to war be aise their govern:
ments are cule to provide transpor-
tation. .
e
. eee Oritiina
At atterbin seth at Sh Tels wan
Arties) teem depth of BV feet At
Wheeting a bore of aleut 5,000 feet
and at Pittabarch one of KS" feet
were mink for the purpose of exploring
the undertylng coal and petruleum for-
mations. Bor uwre gewral purpones
of gvological exploration Geemany has
gunk the ‘two: devpest bores In: tho
world, at Leipeig to the depth of 0,205
feet:and ‘at Parvschowkz, in- Silesia,
@700" fort. In the goldfields of South
“Africa ocreral drill havo reached
4,000 to 6,000 feet, Tho two German
Dores alone bare bec:: mink epprecta:
bly below tho mile limit-New York
Bo. :
——__-—__
Applying the Rule.
_ Emphoyer—Why did you takea whole
day off. yesterday? You only asked for
hale a day. Clerk—i rémembered, sir,
thet you yonreeif told me nivér to Go
anything by halves. - Scefon Tran
Sales’: ‘Rentals . ; Loans
$ «BRAGG BROS.&CO. 3
. REAL ESTATE AGENTS & BROKERS. >
506 N. 2nd St. ‘Phone, Mon. 4569-3
HOTEL DALE.
, ’ CAPE MAY, NEW JERSEY.| :
This Magnificent Motel, locati ed 11 the heart of the Most Beautiful Sea-
shore Resort in the World; repleto with every modern improvement,
auporiative in construction, sppoin ments, service and refined patronage,
Orchestra vally. Gurage, Bath Hou ex, Tennis, Ete.. on premines, Speo-
fal _attention given to ladies and children, Send for ‘booklet. °
eis ~ aT + E. W. DALE, Owner.
FemaleEmbalmer
my | L. J. HAYDEN:
0, 7 | MANUFACTURER OF
% eg
t é 3} Pure Herb
: a): Medicines.
ee : TO CURE ALL DISEASES,
é
ve OR NO CHARGES. :
> DO YOU LOVE HEALTH ?
If so, call und seo 1. J. HAYDEN.
+ ManutSrturer of Pure Herb Metl-
ines, 220 Went Broad Street. My
— Medicines cure all diseases knpwn to
mankind, or no charge, no mattor what your direane, sickness or afilic-
Uon may be, and .entore you to perfect health. Thousands of ' peoplo
the best and leading ones fn the United States ant Europe will testify
that Iam one of the most wondorful healers of all complaints in the
world. I use nothing but horbs, roots, barks, gums, Laleams, leaves,
seeds, berries, flowers and plants in my medicines. They have cured
thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physt-
clans in America and Europe have givon up to die, and sald there war
no cure for them, . a
My Medicines Cure the Following Diseases:—lHeart Disearc, Con-
sumption. Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Stricture, Pilea In any form, Vertico,
Quinsy, Soro Throat, Lung, Dyapopsia, Indigestion. Conadpation, Rheu-
matism in any form, Pains and Aches of any xind, Colda, Bronchial
Troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all Itching sensations, all Femalo Com-
plaints, Ta Grippo or Pnoumonia, Ulcer, Carbuncler, Holls. Cancer in tho
worst form without tho use of a kpifo or inxtrument. Eczema, Pimplea on
Face and Rody, Dinhetes of Kidneys pr Bright's -Diseano of the Kid-
Reys. My Melicines eure any disease. no matter “of what nature, Gon-
orrhoen and Syphillitte troubles a Specialty.
Medicines sent anywhere. For full particulars, send, write or call
in person on . . * .
>. LJ. HAYDEN,
220 West Broad St.. - Richmond, Va.
88888888 ee ee eS a
|"Phone, 577. Richmond, Va
A. D. I RICE,
Funcral Director, Embelmer and Liveryman,
<All Orders Promptly Filled at Short Netice by telegraph or tly
phone. Malle reated.fer meetings and nice Matertaigaments.
Vienty ef reom with all necessary conveniences. Large Pleats op
‘Band Wagons for Hire at reaeveadic rates ang nothing but Srvecteay
"ep No. 252 Rast Leigh Strest..g—
af Cnetteass Bat Boor.) .
. OPEN ALL DAY AND WIGHT—ste on Dety AN Wight,
SEADAM LUCIE CHRISTIAN 800TT
{a associated in business with her
husband, Mr. Alpheus Beott. Mad-
am Scott claims the honor pf being
the only Negro woman im the Btate
of Virginia—holding a Gtate loense
to practice Embalming, and is indeed,
one of the few women inthe United
States, Embalming and Conducting
Munerals. Sde ranks with the dest
tn her profession.
She ts prominent tm fraternal or
ganizations, namely: Courte of Ca-
lanthe, I. 0. of 8t Luke, I. 0. of
G. Ssmaritans, Housebold of Ruta,
Tents, Sons and Daughters of) Rich-
mond, Shepherds of Bethlehem and
Ideal Benent Society. : .
Your Patronage and Influence will
be greatly appreciated. Please re
member that she ts always at your
wervico. +
Relladle Sorvice at Moderate Rates.
OFFICE: 3006 P Street, ‘Phone,
Madison 2337. -
RESIDENCE: 10) Bt. Jamos st,
‘Phone, Madinon 6619. |
‘SEVEN
|
PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES
THE PLANET 10-Offers Ten Prizes-10 "IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO VOTE."
PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES PLANET PRIZES
FIRST PRIZES.
We Offer a Suit of Clos Cup or a Gold Watch to the number of votes.
We Offer a Suit of Clos Cup or a Gold Watch to the Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Suit of Clos Cup or a Gold Watch to the Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Round Trip San Francisco to the Lady
Suit of Clothes, made to order, match to the Minister who received it.
Suit of Clothes, made to order, match to the Physician or Dentist of votes.
Suit of Clothes, made to order, match to the Funeral Director, who received it.
Round Trip Ticket to the Panama to the Lady receiving the Highest
us Blank in sending in subscription
SUBSCRIPTION VOTING BLANK.
We Offer a Suit of Clothes, made to order, a Silver Loving Cup or a Gold Watch to the Minister who receives the Highest number of votes. We Offer a Suit of Clothes, made to order, a Silver Loving Cup or a Gold Watch to the Physician or Dentist, who receives the Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Suit of Clothes, made to order, a Silver Loving Cup or a Gold Watch to the Funeral Director, who receives the Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Round Trip Ticket to the Panama Exposition at San Francisco to the Lady receiving the Highest number of votes.
Use this Blank in sending in subscription SUBSCRIPTION VOTING BLANK.
THE PLANET,
311 North Fourth Street,
Richmond, Virginia.
Find enclosed $ . . .
months to
for which send The PH
State
Rev., Dr., Fun. Dir. or Lady
PLANET PRIZES PLANET I
Find enclosed $ . . . . . for which send The Planet for months to
THE BICYCLE
British Rapid Fire Gun Drawn by Bicycles.
One of the novel features of the British army is a machine gun division consisting of rapid fire guns drawn by bicycles. Three bicyclists draw each gun, but the photograph shows only one.
Died by Lawsmen Farm Association
The artillery arm of Sorvia, like the remainder of her military force, is in superior condition, having recently played a most effective part in the Balkan war. In this respect, Sorvia has the advantage over Austria.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1914.
iss, made to order, a Silv
minister who receives the
iss, made to order, a Silv
physician or Dentist, who re
iss, made to order, a Silv
general Director, who re
acket to the Panama Exp
receiving the Highest number
holding in subscription
VOTING BLANK.
which send The Planet for
State
Fun. Dir. or Lady
PRIZES PLANET PRIZES
Didn't Believe In It.
The Squire—That's a splendid horse, Giles. I suppose you feel it daily with punctuality.
Giles—Naw, zur. None o'er nor noo-fangled foods fur me. Just 'ny and oats—oats and 'ny.—London Mail.
Kaiser Defies "World of Enemies."
A proclamation by Emperor William addressed to the German nation, was published in the Official Gazette in Berlin. The text follows:
"Since the foundation of the German empire it has been for forty-three years the object of the efforts of myself and my ancestors to preserve the peace of the world and to advance by peaceful, means our vigorous development.
"Our adversaries, however, are fearous of the success of our work and there has been latent hostility to the east and to the west and beyond the seas. This has been borne by us till now, as we were aware of our responsibility and our power.
"Now, however, these adversaries wish to humiliate us, asking that we should look on with folded arms and watch our enemies preparing themselves for the coming attack.
"They will not suffer that we maintain our resolute fidelity to our ally who is fighting for her position as a great power and with whose humiliation our power and honor would equally be lost.
"No the sword must decide.
"In the midst of perfect peace the enemy surprises us. Therefore to arms:
"Any dailyling and temporizing would be to betray the Fatherland.
"To be or not to be, is the question for the empire which our fathers founded. To be or not to be, is the question for German power and German existence.
"We shall resist to the last breath of map and horse and we shall fight out the struggle even against a world of enemies.
"Never has Germany been subdued when she was united.
"Forward with God who will be with us as he was with our ancestors."
Russolan Minister Abused.
The Russian ambassador to Germany, S. N. De Sverbew, while phasing through Stockholm, gave an interview, in which he confirmed earlier reports of the scenes attending his departure from Berlin. He stated that he and his staff were brutally treated by a mob in the German capital.
We Offer a Gold-headed Cane to the Minister receiving the Second Highest number of votes
We Offer a Gold-headed Cane to the Physician or Dentist receiving the Second Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Gold-headed Cane to the Funeral Director receiving the Second Highest number of votes.
We Offer a Silver Service to the Lady who receives the Second Highest number of votes.
(State whether a Minister, Physician Dentist, Funeral Director or Lady.) This Coupon is good for Five Votes and will not be good after Sept. 1, 1914.
THE MOST POPULAR MINISTER.
Ballots reaching this Office by Thursday, 9 A. M. will appear in The Planet of the following Saturday.
Rev. L. J. Morris. 20,400
Rev. W. H. Skipwith, Phila. 17,695
Rev. W. F. Graham, Phila. 7,555
Rev. S. C. Manuel, Springfield
Illinois. 1,780
Rev. W. T. Johnson. 560
Rev. E. M. Mitchell. 325
Rev. S. S. Morris. 180
Rev. J. Gray Grant, Char-
lottesville, Va. 180
Rev. W. I. Curl, Norfolk. 175
Rev. R. G. Adams, Farmville. 175
Rev. A. S. Thomas. 145
Rev. Irving, H. Carpenter, Har-
rlsburg, Pa. 100
Rev. W. H. Stokes. 95
Only the names of those who have
had more than 25 ballots cast for
them will be published in the voting
Do You Know Them?
I would like to locate, my aunts Mrs. Lucy Byrd and Mrs. Kitty Robertson, also Miss Sadie Roberta. Mrs. Byrd lived at one time at 928 West Leigh St., Richmond, Va. and Mrs. Robertson at 1134-1-2 W. Moore St. Miss Sadie Roberts lived near Second and Byrd Sts. In 1899, she lived in Newport News. Va. I think she married a Mr. Frank Sampson, of Newport News, Va.
I was born and reared in Richmond, Va., attended Baker School. Miss Lillian Harris was my teacher. Having served a long time in the Army of the United States, I have lost all traces of my kindred and friends and would be very grateful for any information concerning them. Address
ROXY, GARNET,
Co. G. 25th U. S. Inf.
Lolishua, Oahu,
Hawaiian Islands.
WANTED—FIRST CLASS SODEX
Barber wanted. Guarantee of $10
per week. 80g. over. $18.00.
JESSM M. TURNER, Harrisonburg
Virginia.
SECOND PRIZES.
COUPON OR BALLOT. FOR THE MOST POPULAR ONE.
for
whether a Minister, Physician upon is good for Five Votes a
PLANET PRIZES PLAN
THE MOST POPULAR LADY.
"It Costs You Nothing to Vote."
Ballots reaching this Office by Thursday, 9 A.M. will appear in The Planet of the following Saturday.
Mrs. E. V. Kelly, Norfolk... 18,396
Miss Marietta L. Chiles... 17,575
Mrs. Ella O. Waller... 1,755
Mrs. Eva H. Evans... 1,070
Mrs. Patsy Whitenburg, Pulaski, Va... 900
Mrs. Floyd Rose... 150
Minister, Physician Dentist, Funeral Director
for Five Votes and will not be good after Se
PRIZES PLANET PRIZES
ST POPULAR THE MOST POPULAR
ADY.
You Nothing PHYSICIAN or DENTIST
Vote."
reaching this
Thursday, 9 A
"It Costs You Nothing
to Vote."
Only the names of those who have had more than 25 ballots cast for them will be published in the voting contest.
—What's Carter and Tharps fighting about? Who shall sell that ticket. What ticket? Buckroe, Aug. 18.
AVOURNEEN.
the sense of honor
to inspire thee
hospitality leaves
more.
tions that know
or admire thee
inourneen. I'll
more.
Children's Free
TO EACH CHILD
Presenting ONE of the
OFFICE will be given
Saturday Matinee.
DIXI
ERIN. MAVOURNEEN.
When the pure sense of honor shall cease to inspire thee
And kind hospitality leaves thy gay shore.
When the nations that know thy longer admire thee.
Then learn myourneen. I'll love thee more.
When the impact of fame shall cease to be bound in thee.
Of woe the nurse in thee's future.
When the nurse and the record of good wills shall cease.
Then learn myourneen. I'll love thee no more.
When the brave sons no longer are generous and witty.
And come to be loved by the fate they make.
When thy death is no longer are likewise and pretty.
Then learn myourneen. I'll love thee no more.
Anonymous.
Goods shipped by return mail.
JAMES T. BARRIL P. O. BEN MA.
Milwaukee, W. I.
Children's Free Matinee Ticket.. TO EACH CHILD Presenting ONE of these COUPONS at BOX OFFICE will be given a FREE TICKET to any Saturday Matinee. DIXIE THEATRE.
(Name)
Ballots reaching this Office by Thursday, 9 A. M. will appear in The Planet of the following Saturday.
Dr. Albert A. Tennant.....4,180
Dr. E. R. Jefferson.....2,230
Dr. George R. Ferguson. Charlottesville. Va.....2,105
Dr. James E. Jackson.....230
Dr. J. O. Dawson.....125
Dr. R. O. Mundin.....160
Only the names of those who have had more than 25 ballots cast for them will be published in the voting contest.
Marie's Princess hair Oil
Madame. On receipt of $1.00, I
will mail you.
A Bottle Barie's Princess Hair Oil.
B Bottle Barie's Violet or Lime Water.
A Jar of Barie's Princess or Cold
Cream.
Ballots reaching this Office by Thursday, 9 A. M. will appear in The Planet of the following Saturday.
Robert C. Scott.....410
E. W. Murray.....335
Isham Mann.....225
G. W. Peace, Waverly, Va.....115
W. I. Johnson.....60
A. D. Price.....55
UNOFFICIAL LIST.
Lawyer J. Thomas Hewin..... 150
Only the names of those who have had more than sixholes cast for them will be published in the voting
Matinee Ticket.
these COUPONS at BOX
a FREE TICKET to any
IE THEATRE.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE RICHMOND PLANET.
W. M. Robinson
WORLD MARK & MARK MARKET
Fish, Oysters and Snails