Richmond Planet
Saturday, December 4, 1915
Richmond, Virginia
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Spicy Tilts Between Counsel.—Messrs. Mitchell and Crump on the Witness Stand—Rigid Cross-examination.—Messrs. Green, Watkins and Underwood Sent For—Virginia Scores
VOLUME XXXIII. NO. 3
Supren
Co
SUPREME LODGE
Spicy Tilts Between
Witness Stand—
Watkins and
The long delayed suit of the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, N. A. S. A., E. A., A. & A. against the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias, N. A., S. A. E. A., A. A. & A. was called in Equity Division, No. 2 of the Supreme Court, District of Columbia, Monday, November 29, 1915 at 10:40 A. M. Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., Grand Keeper of Records and Seal Thomas M. Grump, Supreme Representative E. R. Jefferson, Supreme Representative Alternate Roscoe C. Mitchell, Past Chancellor John T. Taylor, Past Chancellor L. J. Morris were there.
AN ARRAY OF LEGAL TALENT.
Attorney Clarence Wilson, former United States District Attorney for the District of Columbia, Attorney Paul E. Lesch, both of the firm of Wilson, Huldekoper and Lesch and Attorney James F. Minor, of the firm of Smith and Gordon, of Richmond, Va., represented the Grand Lodge of Virginia, while Attorney Henry E. Davis and Attorney James A. Cobb, of Washington and Attorney William C. McCard, of Baltimore represented the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias.
SUPREME LODGE OFFICIALS
ABSENT.
The latter attorneys also represented S. W. Green, S. A. T. Watkins, Esq., D. E. Underwood, M. D. and R. R. Jackson in the contempt proceedings. None of the defendants was present. Grand Chancellor John G. Johnson; of the District of Columbia was an interested spectator and was at times in consultation with the Supreme Lodge's attorneys.
Mr. Justice McCoy presided. Attorney Clarence Wilson arose after the preliminary document had been completed and proceeded to introduce Attorney James F. Minor of the firm of Smith and Gordon to the Court; stating that he would assist them in the case.
A STATEMENT OF FACTS.
Attorney Henry E. Davis arose and made similar remarks, concerning Attorney William C. McCard, who would assist him in the case. Attorney Minor proceeded to review the case. He told about the session at Kansas City, Missouri, when the Emergency Tax was levied. He related the history of the Pythian Temple and Sanitarium Commission of the appointment, of this Commission with the power to act, of its action in levying a per capita tax upon the members of the Order in States having Grand Lodges and he declared that this was unlawful and in violation of the Constitution of the Supreme Lodge.
THE PAYMENT OF TAXES.
He related about the action of the Supreme Chancellor at Indianapolis mission in 1911, when, the Grand Lodge, K. of P. paid $690.30 to aid the Supreme Lodge in the litigation with the Supreme Lodge of the World. This money had been levied by the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, in its own right. He told of the treatment accorded the Virgin in delegates at Columbus, O. and of the dental of representation in violation of the order of injunction issued by the Supreme Court of the District
THE COLUMBUS SESSION
Attorney James F. Minor read from the notice filed by the Virginia delegation with the Supreme Lodge officials before, leaving Columbus last August and delivered that every effort had been made to comply with the legal requirements of the Supreme Lodge. He showed a through knowledge of all of the facts in the case and explained that he reprinted him for the limited time provided he gave into the墩 in making the claim in connection therewith. He communicated upon his
statement of the facts by his client
ATTORNEY DAVIS EMPHATIC.
Attorney Henry E. Davis then stated the case of the Supreme Lodge He claimed that the Grand Lodge of Virginia had been suspended for improper conduct in sending out that "Shocking Conditions" circular. That the officials of that body had been guilty of gross misconduct. He set up the plea that the failure to pay the Emergency taxes was only incidental thereto. He cited parts of the circular in question and insisted that nothing prior to 1909 should be considered in the case.
MANY LEGAL TILTS.
During the statement by counsel of the position of their respective sides there were many legal tilt between Attorney Clarence Wilson and Attorney Henry E. Davis. Mr. Justice McCoy in most of the contents sustained the counsel for the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias of Virginia, upon the ground that upon a strict ruling, the counsel for the defense might be correct in their contention, but as the charges of contempt had been consolidated with the case in question, all of the facts should be known in order that he might arrive at a proper conclusion.
WHY HE WANTED TO KNOW.
If after the case had been submitted, he should find that anything that was improper had been admitted he would discard it. Mr. Justice Gould had issued the injunction and he did not have before him any written opinion submitted by him, and therefore, it was necessary for him to investigate the evidence.
It was thought at first that the case would only consume one day, but it was not long before it could be seen that it would take a longer time than that. Court adjourned at about 12:45 P. M. to meet again at 1:30. Before that time, John Mitchell, Jr. Grand Chancellor of the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias had been called to the stand. Mr. Mitchell was then piled with questions by Attorney J. F. Minor. He explained the cause of the trouble between the that the action of the Supreme Lodge. One of the points emphasized by Attorney Minor in his statement was that the action of the Supreme Lodge in appointing a Pythian Temple and Sanitarium Commission with power to act and which action was construed as power to levy per capita taxes upon members in the jurisdictions of Grand Lodge was unconstitutional. During the cross examination or the witness, Attorney Minor brought this fact out in the face of the objection of the counsel for the Supreme Lodge.
After the recess, Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr. resumed the stand. He had in answer to questions brought out the fact that he and other members of the Virginia delegation to the Supreme Lodge had protested against the levying of taxes upon the individual members.
THE SUPREME CHANCELLOR'S
The Supreme Lodge, over his protest and under the ruling of the Supreme Chancellor had levied the tax. The position of Virginia was that a tax could be levied upon the Supreme Representatives to the Supreme Lodge, and the Grand Lodges but that after the Supreme Lodge had given to the Grand Lodges of the Order the exclusive, original jurisdiction over the subordinate lodges and the members attached to the same and this grant was in the Constitution and By laws of the Supreme Lodge, it could not move any authority or general over these members until it had changed the constitution of the Supreme Lodge.
and taken back to itself, the exclusive, original jurisdiction that it had granted.
THE COMMITTEE'S ADVERSE
REPORT.
He showed also that the Committee on Law and Supervision had made a report that the tax levy upon members of the. Order in States having Grand Lodges was unconstitutional and that the Supreme Chancellor had refused to permit the report to come up before the Supreme Lodge.
Under a rigid cross examination, he showed that Virginia had purched one thousand dollars worth of the stock of the Pythian Temple in its own right and that it had denied the right of the Supreme Lodge to force it to make such a purchase. He also showed that the Emergency tax paid by Virginia had been levied by the Grand Lodge in its own right and not on account of the resolution passed by the Supreme Lodge.
UNCONSTITUTIONAL TAX LEVY
He went on to show that the tax law of the Supreme Lodge upon individual members was effective only in States without Grand Lodges. He pointed out the section of the law bearing upon this subject and when Attorney Henry E. Davis asked him questions as to other points of law, he readily turned to the pages and read them.
Attorney James A. Cobb undertook to cross examine the witness, Attorney Henry E. Davis being called into another court on an important case. Mr. Cobb is one of the most brilliant colored practitioners at the bar of the District of Columbia and for a long time hold the position of Assistant United States District Attorney.
RIGID CROSS EXAMINATION.
In the matter of cross examination he fully equalled his colleague Attorney Henry E. Davis. At times he started forward to drive home a point, but at no time could he embarrass or exasperate the witness, who smilingly answered his questions and assured him that no insult was intended when he did not answer them to please him.
At one time, the contention on this point was so spirited that the witness was asked to answer question either yes or no. At times, proper explanations could not be made by this procedure and the court was surprised when in reply to a question Mr. Mitchell answered, "Yes and no." This caused opposing counsel to ask him what he meant and then he had the opportunity to make the explanation in his own way, without being hampered by the laconic. "Yes and no."
THOSE TROUBLESOME TAXES.
He told of the experiences of the Virginia delegation at Indianapolis in 1911. For the first time, this delegation was denied representation unless it paid the taxes upon individual members, which tax the Grand Jurisdiction had levied in its own right and not by virtue of any action of the Supreme Lodge. $690.20 was paid over. The Supreme Lodge passed a resolution requiring that the remainder be paid in four quarterly installments the year following.
The Grand Chancellor of Virginia had promised to send the amount if it were collected. He also showed that the Grand Lodge of Virginia was acting upon the report of the Supreme Representatives and upon the report made to the Supreme Lodge by the Supreme K. of R. & S. when it analyzed and examined the right or position and protest in passing the resolutions of which complaint was made.
(Continued on Fourth Page.)
EDITOR MITCHELL TRAVELS
MORE ABOUT THE BANKERS' MEETING—A BRUNKEN MAN AND A POLICE OFFICER—RACE PREJUDICE IN SEATTLE
PRESIDENT LAW OPENS MEETING
The American Bankers' Association met Wednesday morning, September 8, 1915, in Moore Theatre with President William A. Law presiding. He is an impressive figure in the chair. President Fred E. Farnsworth is master of his position as Secretary, while Mr. Fitzwilson, his competent assistant, is as well known as the distinct-guished colonel himself. Hon. Ernest Lister, Governor of the State of Washington, delivered the address of welcome. He is an able orator. Hon. Hiram C. Gill, Mayor of Seattle also delivered an address.
INTERESTING INFORMATION
President Law's annual address was one of the ablest ever delivered before the body. The annual report of Col. Frederick E. Farnworth was able and exhaustive, containing valuable information for the benefit of the Association. The estimated membership for this year is 15,010. The amount of money collected on dues was $225,508.90. The annual income of the American Bankers' Association was $246,038.90. He reported 246 members of the Association in Virginia. The afternoon session took place at 2 P.M. Routine business was transacted, and many able addresses were delivered.
THE FALLING RAIN
I wandered about the principal streets of Seattle during the recess hours and on this particular day, a drizzling rain had changed into almost a down.pour. I had just gotten under a friendly awning, not having brought an umbrella, when the rain came down. I went into a store and secured an up-to-date combination strawberry milk-shake. It separated me from just 15 cents. I was waiting for the rain to cease, but it continued to come down and I walked out again and stood under that friendly awning.
THROWING AWAY MONEY
A traffic officer was in the street, directing the moving vehicles. Suddenly a white man walked out in the middle of the street and yelled, "Money is no good. I don't want any money." He threw several silver coins down upon the stone thorough-fare. Another white man darted to the spot, put the money into his pocket and disappeared. A street-car was approaching and this wild man barred its way, still yelling. The traffic officer in a kindly, but emphatic manner waved him to the side. walk. He just got out of the way of the street-car, for the fender touched him as it slowed up, but when it had passed, he was in the street again.
AN AMUSING SCUFFLE
Then he threw down another assortment of silver, and white men rushed out and picked it up. The police officer attempted to carry him to the sidewalk, but he resisted and struck the officer. Then the fun began. That officer grabbed him and he showed himself an adept at wrestling for it was only a few seconds before the man had struck the wet cobble stones. His head struck with a thud and he lay motionless in the middle of the street. A crowd had gathered and others came to the aid of the officer and carried the helpless man to the pavement, where he laid stretched out until the patrol wagon came upon the scene.
THE PATROL WAGON.
A telephone message had been sent and a few minutes later, the strangers had been bundled into it and all went on as before. The officer was evidently clearing the mud from his uniform for in about twenty minutes, he was there waving to the teamsters as before. The next day, when in the neighbor, hood, I saw the officer and laughingly congratulated him upon his pluck and forbearance in dealing with the unruly citizen. I thought perhaps he knew the man. He said that he did not. He had never seen him before. The Judge fined the man ten dollars and cost. As for the men, who picked up the money, they had gone rever to return unless this man or some other equally foolish had any more money, to throw away under the mistaken impression that money is no good.
MR. LEWIS' ADVENTURE.
When I went home that night I was tired. Mr. John O. Lewis had been anxious for me to see the stairs of Seattle after nightfall, but knowing that, he is able to go a "top-down" speed after the sun goes down, I hesitated to accompany him. Here I was near the northern border line of the United States and in the West, and he was dwelling as to whether he
would meet a rebuke of a refusal at
the place he wanted me to go. He is
fair enough to be taken for a white
person. I might get through too all
right, provided a guarantee was given
that no one would look at my hair.
A WHITE CABARET HALL.
The first place we entered, there was no objection. We sauntered to one of the tables and sat down listening to the singing maiden upon a raised plat. form. A waiter came and Mr. Lewis gave the order. It was promptly filled. I was in a cabaret hall. White couples were there. There were young women lounging with the men. When we had remained long enough, we passed out. When we got out, Mr. Lewis breathed a sigh of relief. "I wasn't sure that they would serve us ther," he said, "I am going to try this place." We passed in. A police officer was talking to a man, who seemed to be the manager or proprietor.
A WAITER'S GREETING
Both places were located in the basement. Singing was going on and a white man with a rich tenor voice was entertaining the white loungers. Mr. Lewis got impatient. No waiter had approached him, so he called one and gave him an order. He disappeared for the time being and then returned. "No service tonight," he said simply. He moved on. He did not request us to leave the place. He just declined to give service. Mr. Lewis' face was a study. He was crest-fallen and angry. What he was seeking, he had found and yet he was angry "clean through."
FIRST-HAND INFORMATION
As for me, I was finding out for myself. Here I was in a far northern and western city, meeting with conditions more embarrassing than those existing in my home city in the Southland, where I would not have been required to undergo such embarrassment. I knew exactly where to go and what to do when I got there. I found out that one ounce of discrimination on account of race and color in a northern city is worse than ten ounces of the same kind of treatment in a southern one.
This ended our night's experiences. I went to the Lewis bungalow, satisfied in having observed a condition with him that I could not observe or find out, without him. Everywhere I had been alone, I had been accorded proper treatment. The white people recognized me as a visiting banker, but when I mixed with the home product, well, "those we are."
The record of gridiron events of this season proves that Virginia Union University is in full accord with the slogan of the twentieth century—"Progress." The more modern method of employing a physical director rather than a hired coach has proved a decided improvement, contrary to many predictions. One of the best products of this new system is the splendid discipline Prof. M. P. Robinson, the Physical Director, has instilled in this year's squad.
Not only does Union exhibit manifestations of progress in reference to coaching, but also along a line which is probably more tangible, at least something which will convince skeptics. Union played exceedingly close games with member teams of her association. This association, which is called the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association, comprises the following institutions: Hampton, Howard, Lincoln, Shaw and Union. The last contest-with Howard resulted in a 30-0 victory over Union; this year the score was reduced to 18-3. In Howard's favor. Last year's score with Hampton was 42-3, Hampton's favor; this year, Union held the Champions to 13.0.
A complete list of all games played and resultant scores follows:
Union, 29; St. Paul Institute, 0.
Union, 27; Virginia Theological Seminary, 0.
Union, 2; Howard, 18.
Union, 0; Hampton, 18.
Union, 9; V. N. L. 1.
These statistics demonstrate conclusively that Union can no longer be considered of small importance or a "finch," but a real factor in football in Eastern Colored colleges. The attendance at our games is far from being satisfactory. And just why the people of Richmond fail to attend them is a source of great disappointment and discouragement to the Faculty and student body of the University. Richmond, citizens have the disjunction of having the largest and best, equipped college athletic field in the United States. And no colored school in the East can boast of such a large fenced-in park in Hovey Field. Three or four years ago, the arena might have been offered that Union made too poor a showing against big teams. But such rousing would be fallacious now, when only two defenses were suffered this season, and these from Howard and
Hampton after exceedingly close struggles. If the people of Richmond desire to be represented by a college team, and wish to see big teams in action here, they should at least patronize the games.
IDEALS OF BICHMOND DISTRICT
HOLD GRANTS AND KNOWLEDGING
SEMINAR
Sunday, November 28, was the 4th annual Thanksgiving service of Richmond District of the National Ideal Benefit Society. The members and their friends filled the spacious auditorium of the Calvary Baptist Church, Fulton. On the rostrum were Rev Wm. Harris, D. D., Pastor; Rev J. C. Stevenson, D. D., Rev. Bolling, Rev Pittford, Mr. A. W. Holmes, Supreme Master; Mrs. I. E. Charity, Sup. Secretary; Mrs. Rosa Thompson, Sup. National Lecturer, and Mrs. W. T. Johnson, President of the Woman's Missionary and Educational Convention of the State; Dr. W. H. Dixon, Master of Ceremony.
Devotional Exercises, Rev. Pittford;
Welcome Address, Mr. Jeter, Graduate of Hampton School; Responding, Address, Mrs. Rosa Thompson, setting forth the plans upon which the Society was founded. Statistical Address, Mr. I. E. Charity, Sup Secretary, was superb. At the close of which she introduced the Pastor, who preached the Annual Thanksgiving Sermon.
Offering: Mrs. Susie H. Robinson, Mrs. Alice Brown, Mrs. Pannie V. Robinson, and Miss Abbie Neal. Special Address by Mrs. W. T. Johnson, Rev J. C Stevenson and Mr. A. C. Hines. Mr. A. W. Holmes, Sup. Master, in making his closing address, was at his best. He explained in a humorous vain, how the many I represent, tions against himself in the origin of the Society had been adjusted, and he had in his possession a letter to that effect, which he read to the great con course present. This is one thing we should be thankful of, if nothing more, he said.
Ushers: Madam Pearl Mayo, Susie Carter, Frances Morton and Mattie Hubert.
The charming Ideal Choir was there, you know the rest.
The National Ideal Lecturer, Mrs. Rosa Thompson; Director J. Charity, Sup. Secretary, Mrs. I. E. Charity, and Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Beauford, were invited to the hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bolling, 1223 W Leigh St.
0
CARD OF THANKS.
My Dear Mr. Editor:
Just a word of thanks to the kind members and friends of the Fifth Street Church, who made Thanks, giving Evening such a pleasant one for me and my family. About eight o'clock the Honorable John Mitchell, Jr., called at our home at 207 East Clay Street, and while he enchanted us with his usual conversational ability, between one hundred and fifty and two hundred people came pouring into the door, led by Deacon Page, and followed to the door by an express wagon. The ladies chanted sweet music while the gentlemen packed the pantry, after which, Mrs. King and myself were invited to inspect the changed situation.
We could scarcely recognize it as a part of our residence. There was everything imaginable, from a box of Unedna Biscuit to a barrel of flour and from a necktie to a cord of wood.
Breath and speech were scarce with us about that time, so we take this opportunity to express our gratitude to you, kind friends, for making our Thanksgiving such a pleasant one:
This is a great spirit evidenced by a great people.
COLORED MEN AND WOMEN
disirous of Good Wives and Husbands
some with money and land, write
MANAGER B' Box 207, LaFayette,
Alabama.
DO YOU KNOW HIM?
I would like to know the whereabouts of Harrison Hurbert, who was discharged from the Petersburg Innae Asylum in the year of 1913 as cured. MRS. C. GOODLETTE, 131 Main Street, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Rev. A. C. Skinner, of Philadelphia, Pa. is in the city, and has delivered several able sermons during his visit here.
WANTED—Two Colored Butchers,
must read and write, be of sober
habits, and well recommended.
Will consider, partnership with
right party in old established
business, located in growing city of
30,000. Address C. Care Richmond Planet.
A DENIAL FROM ARKANSAS
We are prompted by what we have seen in the Naahville Globe, which purports to be a "special" from Little Rock, Arkansas, concerning the Arkansas Baptist State Convention, and which false reports will in all probability be reproduced by such papers as can be induced to publish it, to say, that every word of that article is without foundation whatever.
First—It is not true that the president of the Convention refused to allow the Charter of the National Baptist Convention to be read, but to the contrary, it was read by Dr. S. E. Griggs upon request of Dr. J. P. Robinson, and the president of the Convention explained that it had not been adopted by the National Baptist Convention.
Second—It is not true that any number of persons walked out of the Convention after organization, and those who walked out of the Convention before the organization were Revs. D. B. Gaines, J. S. Ladelle, R. B. Porter and W. O. Davis. The latter (Rev. W. O. Davis) returned and saked pardon and enrolled his church.
DID NOT LEAVE
Dr. J. P. Robinson did not leave the Convention, but to the contrary, was elected 1st Vice-President and acted in that capacity from the organisation to the close of the meeting, declaring publicly that he was with the State Convention and the Morris administration, and that he was a friend to Morris, though they had differed on National issues. Third—We do not, know any man in Helena by the name of Small, who it is said in the Globe, was elected Recording Secretary. In fact, there is no such person in the city of Helena. The Baptist State Convention which convened in the city of Little Rock was the largest in point of attendance of any held in twenty years. There is no division among them, and there was no confusion among them except as was raised by the three persons named above.
SHOULD NOT BE DECEIVED.
Don't be deceived by what may be said in the papers. Arkansas will lead in proportion to her numbers all the States in the Union in its support of the New Publishing Board, and in the numbers which will show up at Savannah, Ga., next September. There is not enough ground covered by those who are trying to make the public believe (that a split has occurred in Arkansas to build a shanty on. E. A. Morris. Convention Editor. Helena, Arkansas.
BROOKS—SWANN
Reg. Walter H. Brooks, D. D., pastor of the 19th Street Baptist Church, Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Florence H. Swann were married Saturday, November 27, 1915, at 6 o'clock P. M. They will reside at 1134 22nd Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
Don't spend all your year's saving by buying presents for the Holidays. See us and save from $10.00 to $15.00 this Xmas. There's nothing more appropriate for a Xmas present than an artistic portrait of yourself, made at the French Art Studio, 534 N. 2nd Street. Besides making special reductions, we also give hair dozen portraits free with every order for a dozen. Have you made before the rush.
Phone Randolph 5933 for appointment. Stuido open 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. PERCE TAPPIN, Prop.
(Please mention paper)
EVANGELIST SKIPWITH HERE.
First Baptis Church; South Richmond, Dr. A. Binga, Jr., pastor. The Rev. W. H. Skipwith, our great international preacher and singer, will speak Sunday morning next, at 11:30 A.M., from the subject, "Some Reasona Why the Church and Sunday School Should Cooperate." Everybody enjoys hearing Rev. Skipwith, so you are invited.
Miss Irene Larronge Hodges departed this life November 18, 1915, at quarter of ten o'clock. Her funeral took place from Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church. She leaves a mother, sister, two brothers, and a host of friends to mourn their loss.
WANTED-An Jaillegent house
keeper. Address in own hand, writ-
ing. The Industrial Union Of
America. P. O. Box, 286. Southern
Pines, N. C.
ON TRIAL
Novelized by
Charles N. Lurie
From The Great Play
by Elmer
Relgenstein
Copyright, 1915, by American Press Association.
SYNOPSIS
Robert Stirkland is on trial for killing Gerald Trask in the latter's library at night. District Attorney Grey declares Stirkland killed Trask, who was on duty for the sake of $1000 in cash, which Stirkland had just repaid to Trask. The defendant and Trask were the only two who know the combination to the safe. Important ingenuity and alertness, as well as the defenses and theories, who was Trask's secretary.
Stirkland would not make defence, but law compulsory to do so. Mrs. Stirkland disappeared after the shooting. Mrs. Trask, in stand, tells of telephone calls he had heard, on the night of his death, by a woman who would not give her name.
HERE was contempt, express and implied, in the manner in which he turned toward the door. But the only reply which he voucafished to her was "Good night" delivered with more than the usual emphasis. Now she held him by the vigor of her tone. She would not dismiss the topic thus. Perhaps there had been something in "the other woman's" voice as she had demanded speech with Trask which had aroused the tigress which is latent in every woman scorned, even the meekest. Perhaps it was the contemptuous, wormful manner of Trask himself which roused her. It was not simple jealousy. The time for that had passed years before. Perhaps it was the feeling that now she must insist on her conjugal rights, so long haunted. To his "good night" she replied: "No! I want to know who she is." Trask's irritation now broke out openly. His speech was rude as he answered.
"What's the good of raging me like this? I tell you I don't know who she is. I suppose it is some business matter."
"Notably would you call you up at this time of night on business. You know very well it's not business."
"Well, what's your theory?"
And John Trask, seeing that it was hopeless to pursue the former line of questioning, tared out at him with:
"Aren't you ever going to change?"
"Am I never going to have a minute's page? You're as jealous as a schoolgirl. You're forever raising a racket about something. If I look at a woman or a woman talks to me you're ready to fly at her throat."
Again the wronged wife spoke.
"Don't you think you give me cause, the way you conduct yourself? You seem to forget that you have a wife."
It was the obvious retort, the cheap wit that replies, but does not answer, which prompted him to say: "You never give me a chance to forget it. Every time we're alone it's the same thing." "Then why don't you treat me as your wife?" His tone was querulous and rising as he said: "I don't see what you're complaining about. I don't beat you, do? You get everything you want. You go where you please and when you please. I allow you more money than you can possibly spend, and your time is all your own. Do you think there are many women who can say the same?"
It was the old, old argument addressed to the woman who is "bought with a price." Almost since the time of Adam men have believed that they could buy women with maintenance, with dress, with jewels, with social position. Always the real woman; the soul that is beyond all price, that can be kept only by affection, genuine love, has eluded them. The husk may be bought; the grain is given free. The woman's soul of Joan Trask, more priceless than any of her diamonds or pearls or rubles, was not to be purchased by the things of which her husband spoke. It had been given to him freely in the beginning. He had dragged it through the mire of his indifference and unfaithfulness, and she had taken it back and cleansed it and nursed it in secret. It might yet be his, but he must earn it anew. It was her soul which spoke in the words:
"Do you think that's all I care about?
Don't you suppose marriage means anything to me but spending money and amusing myself? What good is it if I haven't the companionship of my husband?"
The words struck a chord of coarseness in him. "Companionship of my husband?" It was not in that vein that the women spoke with whom he composed. He seated himself again. For a moment he stared at her in amusement, then he recovered himself and said blasphemously:
"My God, are you going to get sentimental?"
"I've never known what it meant to be really married," said Jean "Trust easily." "For six years I hid myself away because I didn't have to mutilate."
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"For six years I hid myself away."
Your family.
"Well, you didn't lose by it," said the man to whom money was all or nearly all. "If my father had cut me off you wouldn't be living in luxury today."
"All your money hasn't brought me happiness. No other woman would have borne what I have for fifteen years. If you had a spark of manhood in you you'd lead a descent life—if not for my sake, then for your children's."
His mother changed from the froncical and contemptuous to the arcasite.
The mention of children, which brings the light of joy and hope to the eyes of the true father and the gladness of life to his heart, wrought no miracle in the soul of this man, so hardened to all true feeling. With a sneer he replied to his wife, the mother of his children.
"Oh, now we're around to the children again."
"You never consider them. They'll soon be old enough to understand."
be old enough to understand:
It was in an aggrieved tone that he responded, as though he had been accused unjustly:
"They've got everything they want too. They're getting a good education and a liberal allowance. That's all they have a right to expect of me."
Oh, shortsighted father:
"You're sending them out into the world with a sigmum!"
"Oh, sigmum be hanged! I lead a pretty straight life. You don't expect me to sit by the fireplace twirling my thumbs, do you? I've got time for that thirty years from now."
It was with a sinking heart that Joan Trask recognized the futility of her arguments and her appeals to her husband. When reasoning falls fear and self interest will prevail sometimes. She decided to adopt a different course with her sneering, cynical husband. Wishy devotion had failed, appeal to parental love had been in rain. She would try compulsion.
Her voice lost its appealing quality and took on the tone of indignant womanhood, conscious of its rights, as she said:
"I won't stand it any longer—I'll get a divorce!"
This threat failed of its effect.
"Well, go ahead; I won't attempt to prevent you," said Trask.
"No, you'll be glad, I suppose."
"I won't be sorry, you can wager oh that."
Again the tone stung her. But this time in her reply there was something which had been absent therefore contempt for the man whose name she bore.
"And I've been living with you all these years!" she flung at him. But again her words and tone failed to hit his mark. If indeed they were intended to rescue him.
"Well, why have you?" he asked.
"You know why—he keep up appearances on account of the children—he give them a good name."
to the room, and found it to be
warm and moist, and her indulgence
then, which he opened steadily, and
furred it in volcanic paper. The space
at length, for some time brooking no
interruption:
"You talk as though, you had been bribing me to throw away my self respect. I won't take any more of it. I'll bring suit against you tomorrow. I should have done it years ago. I did not because I always took your word. I always deluded myself into the belief that you were going to change. I've waited just thirteen years longer than I should. I might have known, after that affair, of Great Neck"—
He had been listening to her quietly; making no effort to stem the rising tide of her wrath. At the words
```markdown
```
"What's the use of kicking up a row?"
"Great New York, however, he stiffened in his chair his hands gripped its edge tightly and his face took on an aspect of ugly hardness as he checked her with:
"Now, see here."
In her voice there was an added note of sorrow as she went on:
"Oh, I haven't forgotten it, although it is thirteen years ago. That little Miss Denee, that innocent child—and to think that I have lived with you after that."
At the beginning of the interchange of words, when Glover left the room, she had been seated. As her feelings mounted she had risen and had moved unsteady about the chamber, as though the spirit that possessed her would not let her rest. But now, with the mutation of the "Miss Deane," whose name seemed to stir her so deeply, she seated herself in an armchair and sat there right, with clenched hands. She did not look at Trask. Whoever Miss Deane had been or was said no matter what emotion the memory of her awakened and stirred in the breast of Joan Trask it did not seem to affect Gerald Trask, save that he now seemed possessed of a wish to have the painful scene over with. Perhaps it was with a desire to reach the end that he now said, "Never mind digging up the past."
"I will dig up the past!" said Mrs. Trask. "I'll tell the whole story to the world and let it see what manner of man you are and have been."
Was it fear that now possessed the heart of Gerald Trank, insensible to other, higher motives? After all, despite his cynical disregard of his wife's marital rights, she had aided him in maintaining the place in the social world to which he had been born. If, gouged beyond endurance, she had bare to the world the tale of his indelicities—and worse—she could do irreparable damage to his reputation. Had he any friendships which could stand the strain? Could a man such as he be have any real friends? In an instant, with the incalculable rapidity of thought, his mind ran over the list of acquaintances. At the end of the list came Strickland. Strickland
His thoughts swung back to Joan sitting, fearful and indignant, before him. It was plain to the man of the world that now he had "gone the limit." But little more was needed to force his wife over the precipice to which their steps had been converging for years. He knew her well enough to realize that, her resolution to divorce him once taken, she would not turn back from the bitter road, whither-over it led. Not even the thought of the children, so much dearer to her than to him, would deter her, he knew. Plainly he saw that the conjugal affairs of the Traks had reached a crisis and he must avert it. His words were conciliatory.
"Look here, Joan, what's the use of kicking up a row? That divorce idea is all nonense. There's no reason why we can't go on together."
"No, I'm through with you," she said. "Tve forgiven you a dozen times, and it been the same thing over again."
There was no sign of weakening in her ione. He knew now that he could not afford to argue with her further. It must be as a suppliant he must approach her. The woman who had yielded to his will all these years, had condoned his offenses "for the sake of the children" and for the sake of appearances before the world, revealed herself at last as willing to be the mistress of her own fate. More strongly than before the desirability—may, the necessity—of conciliating her impressed itself upon him. He plumbed with her, rising from his chair, going over to her and bending over her. "Make this the last time," he begged. "What do you want to do?"
I was with the family, but the
counselor of the blood may, of the long
wholeness of the family, of the long
wholeness of the family, and
wont stretch back to the time when
the man before her had taken upon
himself the solemn obligation to "love,
cherish and honor," clouded her face
again.
"No," she said dully, "it's do use.
It'll be just the same as ever."
"I tell you it won't," he said. "What
more do you want? I give you my
word. I know that I've broken it
before, but this time I'm in earnest."
There was solemnity in her tone as
There was solemnity in her tone as the said:
"Gerald, if I do this it is the last time."
It was with genuine relief that he exclaimed: "Good! We'll begin all over again!"
He kissed her. Oh, trusting heart of womanhood! She took his words at their face value and rethined the kiss. But there was still misgiving in her mind that was not stillied by the wild, glad beating of her heart.
"Gerald," she said, "you'll keep your word?"
"I've said so," was his reply.
"Then promise me that you'll break off with this woman."
"What woman?"
"The one who called up."
"Oh, putawu!" he said. "There's nothing in that. You're wrong. You've misjudged me this time."
They kissed again. With a parting good night Trask switched off the lights in the library, and the two went to their respective rooms. Such was the last talk of Gerald and John Trask. The woman went to her room with the joyous hope that she had regained her husband as he was in the first few months of their wedded life. She had recalined him!
And the stars sang to her as she peered from the window of her room, and the voices of the city, stilled in the night, spoke only of the happiness that was to come to her at last after years of suffering. Gerald was to be here again, and all was well!
And the man? He left his wife with a lie on his lips and in his heart. Not love, but fear had prompted, the reconciliation. The storm had blown over for the time. He would live quietly until Joan had time to forget a bit—Forget? Joan forget? He laughed a little bitter laugh. Curse it! Her memory was too good. Thirteen years since the Deane affair at Great Neck, Jove, how lucky he had been! Why it might have brought him a penitentiary sentence? Joah had remembered every detail of the affair, it seemed, and had flung it into his face that night. Women remember some things much better than men. But there, it had passed, fortunately for him, and he had "quured" Joan this night. So what was the use of remembering one affair in many?
Besides, he was dog tired and must rest. Tomorrow he would plan how to get around Joan. Thus Gerald Trank went to his rest on the night that was to be his last on earth.
Other persons are natir with the af-
sairs of the Trasks this night.
It was but a few minutes after Mr.
and Mrs. Trask had left the library.
All was in darkness, but the quiet of
the place was broken by a queer grait-
ing sound from the alvee in which
attested the safe. It was metal moving
upon metal, a silithering and scratching
notice. To the nerves of John Trask,
tautened and thrilled by her talk with
her husband, all sensation is imag-
ified, and she heard the sound. She
moves toward it, entering the room.
The figure of a man rises from before
the safe, seizes a scarf from the library
table and glides to where the hesitant
figure of the woman stands. Before
she can give voice to the words of in-
quiry on her lips he has sprung up
her, strangling her as he envelopes her
head in the scarf. He forces her to
the floor, but as he does so another
man enters the room at the rear.
It is Robert Strickland, come to the home of his "friend," for a purpose. In his hand is something bright and strange of shape. The man who is choking Mrs. Trask hears him and looks up, desiring from his terrible work. Joan is too far gone to scream, however. He has succeeded
1914-1915
He Aime His forever at Track and Pine.
in his aim of silencing her. But as Strickland enters the room the stranger glides off to one side and leaves the newcomer looking down in bewilderment at the figure of Mrs. Track on the floor.
Then, for the second time on this fateful night, the telephone bell rings. A moment more and Gerald Track in his shirt stands stamble into the dark room. With one hand he reaches for the telephone receiver, with the other he switches on the electric light.
His eyes are turned from the other two occupants of the room, and he does not know of their presence. Mrs. Track cannot call to her husband, for she has but little breath left. He closes her eyes are fixed in fascination on the reviver which Strickland has
the woman on the floor. And the woman
shyly by the golden plane of light, seems
bwildened by the sight of the woman
living on the floor.
The voice of Trank breaks in the silence.
Yes, this is Trank. Is it that
you, MRV?
The words galvanize Strickland into action. He rises from the crouching position he has assumed, almost his revolver at Trask and fires. The shot hooves Joang and she screams. The two sounds are almost merged, and they startle Trask, so that he drops the receiver and turns in time to see whence his fate has descended upon him. His last earthly utterance is:
"Strickland!"
And with that Robert Strickland fires again. It is the end of earth for Gerald Trask, for the bullet lodges in his heart.
From the rear of the room rushes in Stanley Glover, bearing in his hand, a heavy stick. He dashes at Strickland, and the stick falls heavily on the slay.
THE
"My God, he's killed Gerald!" er's uplifted right arm. With a groan Strickland drops to the floor, the revolver falling from his hand. And then Joan Trask, widowed by the shot, staggers to her feet and screams: "My God, he's killed Gerald!"
It is Glover who takes command of the situation. Standing guard over the fallen Strickland, he urges, the moaning woman to telephone to a doctor. So run the story of the widow of the slain man. It was not told connectively, but find to be elicited by the questioning, at times insistent, but at all times considerate and gentle, of the district attorney. It was his duty to bring out the facts, to invoke justice upon the man who had invaded his friend's home at night and had shot him down. The fact of the shooting by Strickland was established by the testimony of Mrs. Trask. Trask lay in his grave, and Strickland had done the shooting. It was not denied. Had he not been willing to plead guilty? Had he not in open court protested against the continuance of the legal proceedings, which might send him to the electric chair, asking only that his little girl his Doris- he spared the ordeal of the witness chair?
Throughout the appearance of Joan Trask on the witness stand her testimony had been followed with the closest attention by judge and jury, by counsel for both sides and by the throng in the courtroom. It made the deepest of impressions. Especially when the money was mentioned, $10,000 in cash, a large sum to the great majority of the audience, it was noticeable that Sirb. Trask's audience leaned forward in their chairs.
Here, it seemed to their minds, as the district attorney had asserted in his opening address to the jury, might be found sufficient motive for murder. Strickland's financial difficulties, settled so short a time before the shooting, if really settled at all, his贪婪ness to pay in cash; his possession of the combination to the safe; his dramatic appearance in the Trask home only a short time after he had seen Trask in his own home; the elusive accomplice, who had disappeared—all pointed in the minds of the hearers of Mrs. Trask's testimony, to willful, deliberate murder, only to be explained in the chair of death.
Having told her story of the shooting itself, Mrs. Trask was retained in the witness chair to tell of the subsequent happenings in her home on the fatal night and to undergo cross examination by the attorney for the defense.
A few minutes after the shooting the police arrived, she said, but her husband was dead by that time. He died instantly, the doctor said.
"Now, Mrs. Trank, did you observe the safe before the police arrived?" asked District Attorney Gray. "Yes; the safe was opened." "Did you notice if any of the contents were missing?" "Yes, sir; the $10,000 were gone." "That's all, Mrs. Trank." And Mr. Gray turned to David Arbuckle, chief counsel for the defense, with, "You may cross examine the witness." Then the district attorney, his militant air giving way to a relaxation that told of relief and satisfaction with his witness, settled back in his chair to watch the proceedings closely. He was a faithful prosecuting officer, intent on safeguarding the rights of his client, "the people of the state of New York." It was now the turn of the defense. "Mr. Trank," said Arbuckle, rising, "did you recognize your assistant, the man who opened the safe?" "No," replied the witness. "He came upon me so quickly. And the room was in total darkness."
"Are you sure that no one but Mr. Trusk knew the combination of the警笛?"
Was there a momentary pause by the witness? Did it enter, her mind for a brief fraction of a second that the question and answer would be marked "important" in the minds of the jury?
The answer came. "Mr. Strickland
know it
"I move to strike out the answer as
"I move to strike out the answer as not responsive," said Armklein. With that the district attorney sprang to his feet. "The point made by Arbuckle was too important to be permitted to go unchallenged to the jury. "I—your honor" he exclaimed. In the cold, quiet manner which marked him throughout the case Judge Dinnmore made his ruling.
"The motion is denied."
"I respectfully except," said Arbuckle, and he turned again to the witness. "Mrs. Trask did my words pass between Strickland and your assistant."
"I can't be sure. There was a ringing in my ears. He almost strangled me."
"But to the best of your knowledge they did not speak to each other?"
"I can't say one way or the other."
Dropping this line of questioning and taking up another, Arbuckle asked the witness:
"Mrs. Trask, do you know who May is?"
Up, to this point the manner of the witness had been calm. She had suffered much in the months which had intervened between the killing of her husband and the trivial of his agonilant, and the first fire of her grief and shock had burned down. With the loving kindness of a good woman she had forgiven the offences of the erring husband who lay in the grave. He had wronged and insulted her grievously, and no effort of the will could erase the memory of his wrongdoing, but he was dead now, and she was not a woman to carry even justified anger beyond the grave.
But now—
The simple question of the attorney aroused her. Her lips tightened and her eyes flashed as she answered with emphasis:
"NO, SIR, I DO NOT."
This ended her testimony. Both Gray and Arbuckle signalled that she was not to be questioned further, and she stepped down from the stand.
At this point there was a night hitch in the trial of Robert Strickland. District Attorney Gray called for Dr. Morgan, but he was not at hand. Explaining to Judge Dinnamore that Dr. Morgan was the physician who examined Mr. Trask's body, and that Dr. Morgan had said he might be detained, the district attorney asked and obtained permission to call Stanley Glover to the witness stand. From a waiting room entered, in response to a call from an attendant, the dapper young man who had been the private secretary of Gerald Trask. He had been present on the fatal night, and he was convergent with all or nearly all of the details of the case. It was he who had taken the money from Trask for deposit in the safe whence it had been removed.
LOVER entered the courtroom with an air of assurance that might almost be called jaunty. He did not glance at the prisoner as he walked quickly across the courtroom, and Strickland did not change the attitude of dejection which had marked him for many hours. Only rarely did Strickland raise his head to listen to any of the testimony. Since the outburst in which he had protested against the proposed calling to the stand of his little daughter Doris he had seemed indifferent to his fate. The spectators who had known him as a happy, active business man, ablit one upon whom the sun of prosperity had not shone of late, noted and commented upon the change which acute mental and physical suffering had wrought in him.
"Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you are about to give will be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?"
Glover nodded, and the clerk asked:
"What is your name?"
"Stanley Glover."
Then the district attorney began his examination. The first question was, "Mr. Glover, you were Mr. Trask's private secretary?"
"Yes, sir."
"On the night of June 24, after you left the library with Mrs. Trask's books, what did you do?"
"I went upstairs to my room."
"Describe what occurred then."
"I began going over the books. About half an hour later I heard a shot; then I heard Mrs. Trask scream and another shot fired. I picked up a heavy cane I had in my room and rushed down stairs to the library. Mr. Trask's body was on the floor, and Strickland was
Mr. Trask's Body Was on the Floor, standing at the other side of the room with a revolver in his hand. I dashed at strickland with the cane and struck his arm. He dropped the revolver and fell to the floor."
"When you entered the room did you see any sign of the other man?" asked Gray.
"No, sir; the French windows at the back were open, and be must have escaped, that way. While Mr. Trask was telephoning for the police, I kept watch on Strickland. Then I happened to remember what Mr. Trask had said about giving Strickland the card with the combination to the safe on it, and I thought he might have it on him and that if he did it would prove of value to the police."
More Arbuckle, ever watchful of the interests of the client who did not wish to be defended, interrupted Gervais's testimony. A witness must just what he known of the case, but he
must not commend on his life, or draw conclusions thereof or should inferred, which may affect the minds of the jury. The law makes the jury arbitrators of the facts in a case, not the witnesses. Therefore Arbuckle interjected: "I object to the witness stating what he thought." Judge Dinmore sustained Arbuckle in his objection and directed that that part of Glover's answer be stricken from the record of the stenographer and informatively from the minds of the jurge. "Then the district attorney admonished the witness.
"Just tell what you old and new, Mr. Glover," he said.
"Well, I began to search Strickland's pockets."
"Was that before the police arrived?" asked Grey.
Again Glover's engentness to volunteer information became apparent, and he answered:
"Yes, I was afraid he might destroy the card."
This time Arbuckle made more vigorous objection. Springing to his feet, he shouted:
"Your honor, I ask that the witness be instructed to answer the questions and no more."
"Yes, strike out the answer," said Judge Dinsmore. And then, with all the stern dignity of the representative and embodiment of the law, in cold, measured tone he said to Glover:
"You must confine your answers to the questions which are put to you. You are not to volunteer and you are not to tell what passed through your mind. Is that clear?"
"Yes, your honor," said Glover, and the judge instructed Mr. Gray to proceed with the examination.
"Did you find the card in Strickland's pocket?"
"Yes, air."
Gray passed a card to Glover, naking, "In this it?". Glover examined it and, said, "Yes."
Gray took the card from the witness, said to the judge, "I offer it in evidence, your honor," and to the jury and the crowded courtroom, intently following every development of the case, be described the card as follows:
"This people's exhibit A is a visiting card. On the face is engraved in Old English type the name of Mr. Gerald Trask. Below that is written in pencil 200 Henderson place, Long Branch. On the other side is written in words and figures 14 right 2, 27 left 3. Is there any question about the handwriting, Mr. Arbuckle?"
"You'd better prove it," said Arbuckle.
Glover proved to be a competent witness in this respect, being perfectly familiar with Mr. Trask's handwriting. And the financier's secretary he had seen it hundreds of times on letters and documents. The inscriptions on both sides of the card, he testified, were in the handwriting of the dead man. There was absolutely no doubt in his mind about it.
Gray then asked:
"Do you know the significance of these figures, '14 right 2, 27 left 37'? "
"Yes, sir," said Glover. "It's the combination to Mr. Trask's safe."
Here the fact that no one but Trank and Strickland knew the combination of the safe, a fact already testified to, imposed itself on the mind of every one in the courtroom. Mr. Gray asked:
"How do you know?"
"When the police arrived I gave them this card. We locked the safe and opened it with this combination."
Here Gray held up the card so that judge and jury, court attendants and counsel for both prosecution and defense and many of those further removed from the scene of the examination could see that the card was torn. The card was passed to the jury for examination. Then Gray said: "Now, Mr. Glover, I call your attention to the fact that the card is torn almost in half. Can you explain how that occurred?" "Yes, sir," said Glover. "As I took the card from Strickland's pocket he matched it out of my hand and started to tear it in half. Before he had torn it all the way I managed to get hold of it again."
With this testimony of Stanley Glover the proceedings in the case of the people against Robert Strickland paused for a day. The examinations of the widow and the private secretary had consumed much time, and the hour of adjournment had arrived. Judge, attorneys, attendants of the court, witnesses and spectators went to their homes. The prisoner was taken back to the Tombs, since in capital cases no bond is accepted. "All that a man hath will be give for his life," the law agrees with Holy Writ, and no bond can be fixed so high that a man who knows that the stands in danger of conviction on a murder charge will not forfeit it. So Robert Strickland went back to his cell to think of the wife who had disappeared and the daughter against whose appearance in court he had protested so earnestly. Whether he be pondered over the testimony given against him on that day was not reeled out.
Reading in the later evening editions the testimony of Mrs. Trask and Glover, the city buzzed that night with discussion of the case. It was the leading topic, overshadowing even grave international complications, acute political matters, revelations of "grant" in high places. High and low milieu of the Trask murder case, the former interested because some of its own people were involved, the latter with the avid curiosity with which each detail of a sensational murder trial is followed by the multitude.
All of the newspapers, even the stale old Evening Star, a stranger to big type and faring headlines, featured the case. On the "yellower" journals the "sob water" spread themselves over many columns, with bold tone and like illustrations, in reporting and commenting upon the tendency of Mrs. Trick. All agreed in commending the quiet dignity of the women in white words who had taken the stance to tell the secrets of her life, and they affirmed much sympathy among it.
Bye: EL aes
t ag
‘ a
6 t
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1916
maudllu=-with the bereaved, woman,
‘The cave wax meat nud drink for the
scusatlonal weltery, and they availed
themuelves of It to the full.
Rut Joan Trak kiew nothing of al
thin, Sho did nut read the papers. and
abe danted herself to Intertlewers. ‘Sho
bad told her xtory on the ntdud, Bhe
‘would ndd nothing’ to It for (he nake of
spreading the sensation, Ouly a few
Jatimate friends did whe tell how mnich
of an ontent the giving of texthmony
bad been to hér.
In passing from tho: courtroom he
had neared the grixoner. and he bad
raised bia head fort to time to cated
her exc. For a moment he hind forsut-
ten hia own misery. and In his coun-
tenance Khe rend commixeration for her
nd xympathy with her tn her ordeal,
brought about by his own dreadfal act,
Despite her horror of the man who had
shot Ler busband. whe felt n momenta:
Fy pang of worrow for him and tegret
that perbaps her testimony would nid
fo the thking of bin life by the tnw.
Bot the Inw had called upow ter for
eb)
at ar
asalstance in upbolding {t+ majenty~
aad abe must obey.
When the trial of Kebert Strickland
Was resumed the frst witness to be
<alled Wa» Dr. Morsan, the physician
who bad been summoned to examlue
the body of Gerald ‘Trask after the
abooting. “Me tuld of the summous and
of baying extablinted the-fact int the
pistol bad been alwed (fuly, the bullet
Pulling Trask beyoud the fawdbility of
human aid.
“DE. Moran, ty what cundipen ai
You find Mr. Trusk’s bly?" asked Din
trict Atturuey Gray
“L found tse bullet, wounds, One
was a slight dexh wound In the right
aboulder caused by a xraziog bullet
- The other bullet entered the body Junt
above the left breaxt aud lodged tn the
heart.” sl
“That's all, De. Morgan.” sald Gray,
and Arbuckle siznittey! ty the Gonet thai
he did not desire to Ctoss excipine the)
witness.
With the testlinony of Dr. Morgan’
the ense for the proxecution wan cloxed,
and Mr. Gray rexigned the leading!
Flace fo the proceediugs to‘ his oppo
ment, David Arbuckle, ‘To we latter
Judge Dinsmore said:
“Proceed with the defense, Mr ar
buckle.”
To thig™Arbuckle replied, “LN call
Miss Dorin Strickinnd.” .And an at:
tendant left the. courtroom for the
young daughter of the defendant.
Again the orderly proceedings of the
law were Interrupted by Impulalve ac.
don by the prisoner at the bar. To,
ejection which had murked him gave
way to dexperation mouutjng almost,
to frenzy. Predominant in his nature}
‘was the love of a father for bis daugh-
ter, the love’ which an eminent pro-
fessor, learned in literature and psy:
chology, bas declared is tho purest,
moat disinterested #ffection known to
human beings. |
With a ery Strickland sprang to his,
feet. ~
‘Hils tones were broken as be address
4 Jadge Dinsmore. :
“No—your honor—don’t let her testify
—abe's my little girl—she's all I've got
left—don't let her testify.”
‘With the same cold, grave, Jodiclal
severity that had marked his admoni-
tion to Glover not to volunteer opinsong| |
Judge Dinsmore addressed ‘the pris-|.
onert .
“You mnst leave your case In the} '
hands of your counsel. He will protect|
your intcrestx.”* ¢
“I don't want to be protected; pro-}
tect my Utde’xirl. Dolh't bring hee fr] !
pere!™ said tha unbappy father. "|
But his voice wae stiiled by the sight! |
of little Doris entering te room. ‘The:
child's face brigitened aa ber eyen fell, ‘
mm cher father. Crying “Daddy!” abe ¢
earried to bis side and put her arms}
round him before Arbackle could
make geotie interposition and take ber
way. As be separated the two Strick-| .
and said ta a broken voice:
Ne, Wer take her out of here. she's
i I Rave left to me.” a
His words ‘went unheeded. “Ur!
here, Doria,” saki Arbuckle to the lit:' ©
Past eae BG eek et 86 aa wrtnee
——
Again Mrittiad made a futile at-. ©
smpt to spare hin little girl the ordea!, ®
Cestyms. - - " “ly
“TYeur hewer, J want to herp her ont
€ ets; tr the only rogue I've made ©
& men. year bener, 0 father. .5
Ritep Ctneinggee’ Yeice best}
as 2" fe nemned
Mii” SE Fheomes 28
‘ef (tte 5 2 ne ae,
PORIDY 6 hie oe ea Fe Ly pronoueT ans
abl: . :
21 AW pow giles to hey you, Far
werely un luxtrusient uf the lave while.
Will icte gut furti © to you. Thy lav
smnat be permite to take {tx coune
Proceed. Mr] Arcekte."
Ani’ theo Siri tuand rcemed to reat
at perhane-ter the Ore cme alive bt
reat, (hit Ae was but an ater hte
eyes of the kiwa-not so much a per
won with Lutuun Céclinge to bo consid.
ered as a member of the contmunity
with rights to be safeguarded and weith
Deniitics to pay if be transgressed
against any of the rules which sockety
has set up for itn own protection.
‘With a ganp he sank into hin chatr
and buried bis face in bis bands, per-
mittlog the examination of the child
to qo on Without uterruption.
TO RE CONTINUED. Z
ITALY SENDS
MEN TO BALKANS
Amy Is badly, on Nbanian
TEUTON “ADVANGE _
audi
‘The long expected participation o
Italy io the Balkan’ campatgn scent
at Inst to be under way, a4 [astan
troops hava, bezun landing on Alba
nian territory, according to wu Chiarss
dexpatch to thy Journal ta Sulssa
lorwarded by ‘the Central News cor
Fespondent at Zarteh. 7
It fy believed that the retreat of
the Serbians and advance of the But
garlans westward hax aroused Haly
to the danger it Invelves to her pre
tentlons to domination of the Adrtatie
sea and that xhe realizes she must
aid tho allier with anned forces if
she is to maintain her position.
Although the AustroGerman ad-
vance is pressing the Serbians hard,
driving them towards the Kossovo
plaio, a defeat ‘of Bulgarians by the
Berblans in a battle in Central Serbs
fa announced in an official crm
cation given ont at the Sorbian 178:
tion in Parin. Five Bulgarian cannon
were captured. .
The communication which gives
Partial confirmation of recent reportr|
that the Serbiana had axcumed the,
offenaive and defeated the Rulgarians,
follewn:
“Battles occurred recently. on the
old Serbo-Turkish frontier. ‘The most
{mportant encounters were fought to
tho west of Vellka Plana and Mount!
Zetovatr. We Inflicted'a defeat on
the enemy at the latter point, captur
ing five mauntain cannon.” 1
Vellka Plana ix twenty-five miles
Went of Ninh, and thirty-five miles
northwent of Leskovats, fn the reston
of which an {mportant Serbian victory
hax dren reverted unoMelally.
According to ap announcement of
Austrian army headquarters, General
ron Gallwits’s army pushed back the
Serbians fighting northward of V'rls-
ina to within about thirteen miles
of the city and took Sunday and Mon:
day 12,0n0 prisoners |
Kastvinet and xouthenstward the, |
Serbians are stil tenaciously resist:
ng the Rulsarians, {
Avatroduncurian forces In the
bar valley aivancing on Mitrovitea
Puerday stiri! powerful positions |
nthe north side of the valley and
me to the south, and gained full pow!
exston of the vgdley. af
Acrardinz to diplomatic advices ro)
cive} in Athens the Serttan govern: |
nent Has been removed (rom Mitro{
ftza to Prizrend, Ip western Serbia, |
ear the Afbaatan border. Thextipto J
ratle corps has gone to Petch, Monte ¢
exto. 2
Notable progress for the Rutgariane) *
a the resion wautheaet of Pristina, ta]
erbia, with the eapture of Sunn Ser. f
tans, forty-fcuir eannon and twenty-, £
Wo machine gins, was annosnced by) t
erman arm: heaiquarters. The Tea | t
nie troops have.taken 1500 ad | a
onal prixoners and capturetadtx can
on. ls y
GERMAN DREADNOUGAT. SUNK
Big: New Battleship Destroyed by
Mine In Baltle;
A “despatch to the London Daily
Mail from Rotterdam says:
“One of Gormany® newest droad
poughts struck a mino Frid3y in tho
Baltte sea snd went to the bottom
All the membera of the «crew. were
saved except thirty-three, who were
drownod.” =
‘A despatch from Copenhagen says
the German ship Markgraf has been
aunk, and it {x belleved this vessel
may be the dreadnought referred to
by the Amsterdam correspondent. _|
The'-Markgraf bas been placed in
commission since the war began. It
displaced 25,375 tons, was 530 feet
long and carried 1100 men. |
BLOWN TO PIEGES IN BOAT
‘Twe Mon Killed When 150-Pounds of
Onynamite Expiede Of Shore.
‘While dynamiting the piling of the
figh pond of Hoty E. Davis a mile
@@ sbore and. six miles south of
Oveas. City, Md., 150 poumdu of dyna
mite ta the supply boat exploded, tn-
steatly wilting Harry Pattey and Sam-
tel Monkhouse. Soke
‘The men. and boat were literally
blows ‘te pieces. The cause of the
explosion is eoknown, .0g the beat |
Was ot 5 sole distance ‘, the work,
Beth. men leore ‘uote’ Z
Pa : +
A deapetsh tv. the. London Pull]
eee Nd a
1916 Calendars Wow Ready
le THE LINE 15 ATTRACTIVE AND THE
_ DESIGNS ARE NEW, AND) SURPBIS-
INGLY BEAUTIFUL. : THE d. W. BUT-
LER PAPER CO., OF CHICAGO, ILL.
HANDLES THE FINEST LINES OF
CALENDARS, COLLEGE COMMENCE-
MENT PROGRAMMES AND FOLDERS
OF AY HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY. ‘TQ
SEE THEM 15 10 REALIZE TO THE
FULLEST EXTENT THE FORGE OF
THIS DECLARATION, =
————GALLAT. THE PLANET OFFIGE,
at A 4TH ST., (BET. BROAD AND MARSHALL STS.) RICHMOND, Ving
Out of Town Orders Solicited. - oe
Mall Gazette from Teme xayn
“There 1k declared to be undoubt-
ed foundation for the report. that
Emperor Willan will make an
open offer" peace through Pestient
Wilson” after the emperor's coming
state entry Into Constantinople."
Hane Schmidt Must Die
Manx Schmidt, the former priest
who murdered Anna Amnulter and
thraw her dismembered body Into
the Hudson river at New York
fo September, 1913, must explate
his crime ta the electric chair at
Sing Sing. The court of nppealn re
fared ta ret aside the conviction,
RUSS WIN SOUTH OF RIGA
Companica Get Another Month's De
lay In Enforcement of Order.
| Renewed activity tn the rexlon to
the south of Riza ta reported in tho
Russian official xtatement insucd by
the war office in Petrograd,
| It fe apparcat from the statement
that the Russians have begun a cam-
paign to wear down the Germans op
erating on’ thix front, the tavgders
Joaing ground in tho fighting Fefor
red to,
There, Is a renewal of the Mgbting
4a Galicia, on the vastern bank of the
Stripa river. The war oMce admits
the enemy has crossed this stroam,
but says the Runaiang bavo repulsed
all attempts to advance.
Kovel, west of the Styr river to
Vothynia, where the Russians have
Fecently reported successes ovor the
Teutonic adversarics, ts being pre-
pared for the possibility of an ot
vance of the battle line woatward, ac
cording to refugces from that city.
The Germans are declared to havo put
enforced labor rules Into effect, press
ing the work of constructing strong
fortifications. '
. Military stores have been removed
and the ablebodied population bas
left the clty in the expectation of
heavy fighting, the refugees state. A
food stortaxe in thé city 1s reported.
STUDENT DIES UNDER AUTO |
jured se Car Upsets.
George V. M. Jones, of Dover, Del.
& Lafayette college student, was in-
stantly killed, and Alvan Smith Hut-
chinsdn, of Oyster Bay, N. Y. one
of Jones" classmates, was injured
palnfully when their automobile
Overturned on a curve near Reigels-
ville, . about. twelve miles from
Easton, Pa. Jones was pinned under
the "car and hia neck fractered.
‘The young men had attended the
Lahigh-Latayette foot ball game on
Satertsy and afterward had driven
to Philadelphia with Hatchinsoe’s
stiter. They were om thelr way beck
to Easton when the accident .ccour
ree. ;
TABLE KNIFE WI STOMACH
Women Guellewed White ino
IGNATIUS T. T. LINCOLN
German Spy Likely to be Given
by U.S. to Great Brain,
“6 Oo aia
fee's Tay Be bs:
me ec. pie
Py. ae ey
eg ae ee
td A Pa.
eg 5 ie
fa _ ae
oa ty
hed Bes.
a
i aon’,
: Renee
ak
b eet
BE
aa,
A
tlech]
ek
a L. * on
Photo by Amaricen Pree Association.
Fedora! judgo bas denied a habpas
sorpus writ to Lincoin, who is a self
confessed German spy. and-unless ab
appeal is takon he witl be turned over
to the British authorities on an extra
Altion for torgery.
Bilzabeth Hochsberger, of Cilcago,
finally porscaded surgcons she had
swallowed while In-a delirium due to
Miners elght months ago, wan taken
from her stomach by an operation at
the Went Side hospital.
+The knife was corroded and saw-
pedned from. the action of stomach
acids, and physicians said (hat nature
bad made heroic offorts to digest the
Implement. :
|. ‘The woman ‘rallied well trom the
operation. Several dozen doctors and
medtcal atudefitn ,watchod the oper
ation. : ori
Paris Fire Loss $8,000,000” !
The toi i -the fire in the
annex of, the Bon Mache, one
of the lsrzest department stores
ot Paris, ix estimated at 30,000,000
drancsy ($4,060,000). Firemen contin
wed to soray the burning Yuiee-a®|
Bight. Te, flames broke" owt afresb
after ft was hellevet thay had deen,
@xtiacul-t1-sad tho amex was. ab
most Gerireved. + He .
5 oa, gi Reencrenmnarane 2,
“Tee ‘wealth «of the BI
rite ts. $120,e00.evRsen ” Wedt
MeKeene, the chaneciior’ of.
YOU CAN FIND HERE ADVERTISING
CALENDARS SUITABLE FOR ALL LINES
OF BUSINESS AND AT PRICES THAT
WILL SURPRISE YOU,
~ THERE 1S ALSO ALINE OF “LEFT
QVER” 1915 CALENDAR BACKS,
WHICH CAN BE SOLO ATA SACRIFICE
‘TO LARGE PURCHASERS, WHO DE-
SIRE TOSAVE MONEY.
exchequer, annotree$ fe eomnene
fn reply to a arectey ne to the nn
tlon’n rerources ‘The yearl tneome Ix
$20,009,900,000,
Cossacks Rovted at Tekeran
Meavy loss of ire has tex “tet fram
Aghting between nroGerman forces
and Corsacks at Teteran The Cow
fackn wege attached. by cendarmen
and “Gerikan tireines” ant compe!
led ta retire
“BATTLES WITH WILD CAT
Two Men Kill Catamount After Close
Encounter.
M.A. Millron, a member of the
state lextslature, and Clarence Walker
Feturned from a hunting trip and re
ported Killing a big wildcat after a
desperate Battie twelve nitles cast of
Kittanning, Pa, .
The men. armed only with shot
KUNA, cticointered the animal on a
ridge near Gray Furnace. It sprang
at Milliron, who xhot at ft, Indicting
only a slight wound.
An the cat leaped again Walker
struck {t with the butt of his gun,
It fel to the ground, an@, before tt
could recover, Milliron fired a charge
through Its heart.
Teela Hite Mourners’ Autos
Five persons were {njured, two
serfounly, when a Pennsylvania
railroad passenger train” struck
an automobile near Mercer, “Pa.
The condition of Joha Chadderton and
Mra. Minnie Parker aro critical. The
party was en route to attend the
‘tuneral of a relative at the time of
the’ accident.
Now German. Army for West ,
‘A denpatch trom Zurick says Ger
‘many bas completed a new concen:
tration of troops estimated at eats
'It ts belleyed they will be seat to
Western front. |
Postal Deposits Grow
Postal savings deposits last month
tucreased $2,150,000 over the preceding
month, giving, accérding to postal off.
clals, “a clear reflection of the great
tide of prosperity and commercial ac
tivity that {s sweeping over the coun-
tay.” - Savings on deposit on October
ML aggregated $71,500,000.
Bull Gores Chita to Death |
‘The threeyearold deughter of
Yreak -Borton, a farmer, living near
Woodstown, N..J. was gored to death,
by. boll on her father’s farm. Farm
bends had to fight the maédened
Desst Uefore they could’ recover the
@hila’s mangled boty. . :
‘Witttam Rapp, of ~Chambersbarg,
Pe, an fomate of the ew
gta) for the insene a was
is
Sno. batty “Cortina wae 8 &
wes }.
Detived be was ied by J. W. Greet
Dpreseess gig gsizra7' yD
JOHN M. HIGEINS
7 ‘DEALER It x
Choice Groceries, Wines
Liquors and Cigara
re eet meyO®
1610 East Frankin St,
RICHMOND - - VIRGINIA
A. HAYES,
OFFICE AND WAREROOMS:
727 N. Second St.
RESIDENCE—T36 N. SECOND 8T>
Firstilass Hacks and Caskets of
all descriptions. I have a spare room
for bodies, when the famfly have not
} wuftable place. All Country Orders
piven Special Attention.
Your special attention is called
0 the New Style Oak Caskets. Call
nd see me and you shall we waited
m individually.
‘Pwowe, Manson 3783
4600000000
ian BSOeIs June
yeu by your Furniture now!
‘When you can get Farniture and
Rogs from ap Old Eetabliehed howe
lke JURGENS—that's known to cell
the best quality’ goods, just as ressoe-
abie as clsewhere—why not. give your
friends a good tmpresston. It will
give us, {he greatest pleasure to show
you cur’ weederfal etock ef heme-
making comfort giving Furniture sad
Rugs ané—éou't fail to ask our sales,
men about our benking plan which
gives you 5, 16 of 15 menthe tn whieh
0 pay Ser aay purchess, ry
PWS. 6. JURGENS Sal
_ ADAMS AND BROAD
peed meer tw ey HS
SLIT E ATELIER TS
: Pay hy
WANTED.—Firet dds | bitter ot
re ee
once to BB Mewart, 7 Thames
Btrest, Newport, R. 1. TS
PIGIWANT Dr Aarom
PA CIRTIONE OE EE
. —_—_—o—
Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac R. R.
Hn rm Wott st ern
ee i er
» rm 7 ?
fei}ue So isue firatee Reitees lene gate
Tin re Te OS Be
“id es wea Tas 18 OCT 15 PRE
fevtat hs My S, frgnhty k t o
WeHCS0 rasa iH 15 tr eae CET aE PAS
Mien Se Napa ao eh te
ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO NORFOLI.
Achntule te effect. April 5, 1015,
Trare Tiynl Street Minion, litchmond, fee
SOP OLN! 90 RM OND. Me tees Pa
Yor LYNCHBURG: aNiy THE WENT: *8:1B ae
M90 A.M. to Be om Pe
ENirive dtichmond from Noetole. 11:40 A. Me
S03. Me PTO P.M. From the Wet: 26:86
AM. write PLM. na P.M, 8000 Pe
ao ae
Spatty tinaity except Suntay. *eRuntey only
wr vite, Wg. YAU NURI
POT ieamike GUA, Roanote
Co WOSIEY, Bo Pas "Richmond, Ver
FFEFCTIVE APnL 6, 1915,
THAINS LIP tuciiwest DxeE
Ver Ponte ant the South: HS AL Mi, Oi
vO a ae
Foe Nugtolks Wa A ML, 20 PO,
ees eo, <
Wor SN, e W. My, Wet: 826 AL Oh, oe
AM se Boar
Hor “Peterataine: “bra AL Mo Ob A, Bk
RIAL MOO AM, 880 AM, 200 P.M
Sen Be at6 PM ots PM, aie
Mov PM, Ute :
For Gobisturo amt Fayrttenitte: *3:00 Pik
TRAINS LEAVE RICUMOXD—DAILY:
SOA MONA M8200 a. Ms BT
Meta MS ACM rig Ps
silo Pe Mi. Git P.M. oss P.M, 8
Pe, won BM. ania
SENCut Bumiag. “tuning only,
Tine of arrival amd departure and connections
hk guaranteed
CAA CAMPDELL, D. P. A, aoe Male
SUTIN
“gS oy
PUES THe <)
Traine, rave. Richced, Male Beret Bitian,
Nib, UFoliceing” cchrhle teres pense et
ifort aa nck panrtnteese
9.50 A: MOS imu -or Ot tate ee
ase Bit Bttepe teatay teal tee Oe
35 PAE Ba Oy ang
firiningbam, with Pullman “chmrvation cleseang
jouth, "Fotlsaa aly be hee tae.
YORK RIVER LINE.
wont To Wink Foe, Saas See
any crnge Ree
Fe ETO Local te Wet Podae,
‘TRAINED ARRIVE RICHMOND .
OP. Se aod t ea aii: iM
‘eit Wee” ret: eno Me Pom
“a H. L. BOSHOP, D. P. A
ram ula “’ Fi, tae
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO,
oats oat tng Poste: aes Fe
Aten Wer Big re ah Ry E
NR ages Gas heat Sat 3S a
whem ee at Shas,
ea ieee eS
7:16 P. Daily. **Reenge Sanda.
SEABOARD, AIR LINE.
THE PROGREMEIVE RAILWAY OF THE SOUER
fete eet a amen
slots at pitino me
fol Sin ee ee
cee A oe
age ieee ry
ret, a. hapa
peel Tyee pal.
ag Rr Mig
* ite tan -
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werner re
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All communication intended for the publication should be sent so as to be read by Wendy. Entered at the Post (three at Richmond), as second class matter.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1915
Colored people should be careful to make friends with their white neighbors, provided they will permit them to be friendly with them. Our present condition is improving financially and this causes us feeling on the part of those white people whom we are out-stripping. We should not seriously regard this however, but continue to make friends even among this class.
---
We are very delightful of knowing what became of that agitation for better streets in old Jackson Ward. The present city management seems to find out just where there is a lack of improvement in the colored section of the city and then send the street-building squad in another direction.
CHIEF HEALTH OFFICER LEVY informs the Committee on Charter changes that he was desirous of having his department under the absolute control of the Mayor of the City of Richmond, and then the Committee processed at once by a unanimous vote to put IMMORAN LEVY's department under the Administrative Board. The old indictment "Find out what your enemy wants you to do and then don't do it." Did the Committee on Change of Charter consider DE. LEVY an enemy?
PRESIDENT KEITH'S RETIREMENT.
No event or happening within a period of twenty years is so much to be regretted as the announced retirement of PRESIDENT JAMES KURTZ of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia. He is a Virginian of the old school. He is as placed in his manner as the waters of a mountain lake, as gentle as a child, as fearless as the king of beasts, as diplomatic as an ambassador and as just as the blinded goddess of liberty. All of the people of the State who love righteousness, and catholic will love mourn over his retirement.
it seems now that this is an age of men with small minds and little judgment, men who live in an atmosphere of fear and who shrink at the clamor of the mob on the outside and accordingly hostile to mere equal and exactingly hostile to mere equal and exact nation's decay. We hope that the American Republic is not following in the footsteps of Greece and Rome, when its ablest statesmen and greatest philosophers had to seek repose in death or flight.
But we were discussing this truly great jurist, Ms. Justice Kern, who worrying of life's legal struggles in the midst of his greatest mental brilliance is going into retirement never to appear again. He has made a great financial sacrifice in seeking honor and serving the people. In the courts, he could have trebled and quadrupled his present salary, but he preferred to serve the people. We fear that we shall not look upon his like again.
PROMINENT NEGRO CITIZEN IS DEAD.
George S. Williams Dice at His Home
in Savannah.
George S. Williams, well known
Nogro citizen and native of Savannah
died early yesterday at his home, No.
414 Duffy street, west. He was about
fifty-two years old. He had been
closely identified with movements in
the interest of the colored race and
was accorded the friendship of many
white people.
Williams was educated in the public
schools of Savannah and in
Atlanta University. Following grad
ation, he became a teacher in
Savannah. For twenty years he was
engaged in the railway mail service,
and in the area of the foraker clerk
at the Savannah postoffice. He superseded this work on account of impaired health, and was publicly commended by officials over him for the meritorious work he had done.
Williams took a prominent part in the religious and fraternal activities of his race in Savannah and in the state. He was a member of the First Congregational Church and affiliated with the Colored Odd Fellows and Knights of Pythias and among other fraternal bodies. For six years he had been supreme representative of the Grand Lodge of Georgia. He was representative also of the International Sunday School convention. His interest in whatever affected the advancement of the Negro or the city as a whole was always manifest. As one of the original treasures of the charity hospital, he had become president of the hospital time ago. In business Williams had succeeded and he became a steward.
HELLER'S HUMAN HAIR STORE
712—SEVENTH STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C.
ESTABLISHED 1886. OLDEST HAIR STORE IN THE SOUTH.
You Can Have Straight Hair, If You Want It.
This One Dollar
Brass Comb will be
sent to your address
prepaid for $0.00.
The Comb that will Give Satisfaction. Send Stamps or P. O. Money Order.
Send $1.45 for our Special Creole
Sand $1.60 for our Fine Granite S
Transformations—soft heavy and
steel Stright, Made from Human
waxy—will go around the head and
Hair-Pull and Fluff, in Black and
brown.
THE SUPREME COURT CONSIDERS CASE
He brought out the fact under cross examination that the circulars distributed were distributed in the same manner that the Supreme Chancellor distributed his circulars through the mails and that they were sent only to members of the Order. Attorney Metcard wanted to know if these circulars had not been printed in The Planet. Mr. Mitchell answered in the negative. Mr. McCard said that he was under the impression that he, Mr. Mitchell, had印发了 him that this was only after the suit had been entered. It then of course became public property. It was a after three o'clock, when Court adjourned. The Virginia represent tatlers were elated over the result of the day's work.
ATTORNEY COBIN COMMENT
Attorney Cobb smilingly said that Mr. Mitchell was the toughest proposition that he had ever tackled on a witness stand. He had actually made him tired. This was regarded with some amusement by the diplomatic Virginiaan, who had learned to respect the questioning powers of his legal practitioner at the bar. The night, the Virginiaans spent the time at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Stolby J. Davidson, 13th St., N. W. where a fine dinner previously served. Mr. Davidson is a practitioner at the bar and his accomplished Madame is thoroughly qualified to discharge household duties. The next morning at 10 o'clock, all were seated in the court room when Mr. Justice McCoy entered.
WHEN HIS HONOR ARRIVES
At the sound of the gavel, the court official commanded all to stand and the learned jurist proceeded to the bench. His Honor wear a costly judicial robe, which lends dignity to the position. When he is seated, the crowded court room is a study. Conduits were there prepared to try their cases and the response, "Ready! was heard. Persons were there to apply for writes of habeas corpus, special deserves, adoption of children. Two Roman Catholic "sister" were there with two or three little tots in their charge. It took nearly forty five minutes before the Virginia case was ready again for trial. The various litigants had disappeared, while the Virginia delegation occupied seats drinking in every word that fell from the lips of the judge, counsel and witness.
NOTICE GIVEN
Attorney Henry E. Davis had given Mr. Mitchell notice that he proposed to give him a hot time on the witness stand and Mr. Mitchell had smilingly accepted his assurances. There was a meaning in that smile and he found it out in a short time after the Grand Chancellor of Virginia had ascended the witness stand. He appealed to the judge, arguing that Mr. Mitchell should not be permitted to answer certain questions. Attorney Clarence R. Wilson insisted that he had a right to ask them. Mr. Davis contended that he should be confined to the Grand Lodge and not to subordinate lodges, to happenings since 1969 and not to events prior to that time. Mr. Wilson insisted that it was a chain which could not be broken.
TAXES THE CAUSE
He wanted to show that it was the Emergency tax and the Pyritah Temple tax, all unlawfully levied that caused the suspension of the Grand Lodge, of Virginia. He also wanted to show that the Grand Lodge representatives had always protected against the tax levy and did so an Indianapolis. Mr. Justice Metoy heard the argument and then ruled that Mr. Mitchell might proceed. Attorney Davies noted an exception. Attorney Wilson insisted that subordinate lodges were, specifically referred to in the injunction. He read from Mr. Justice Gould's injunction order to sustain his point and that subordinate lodges had violated it. Attorney Davies said that the Order must be read in the light of the context, which specified that as he alleged that none of these things could be done upon the pre-sumption that the charter of the Grand Lodge had been revoked.
NOT LAWFULLY REVOKED
Mr Mitchell explained that as the charter of the Grand Lodge had not been revoked lawfully and the Supreme Court had ruled accordingly the Grand Lodge was in possession or all of the rights and privileges thereunder. He asserted that charter rights could not be vitiated, suspended or destroyed by a mere proclamation of suspension, but only after a trial of the Grand Lodge and a legal conviction. He declared that the Supreme Court could suspend more privileges, but that he had no power to suspend constitutional rights. The Supreme Lodge itself did not, possess this power. Upon the demand of Attorney Davis, he expounded the law and read it from the Constitution and By-laws of the Supreme Lodge.
WOULD PRODUCE RITUAL.
When Mr. Davis wanted to know more, he notified him that the information desired was in the secret work of the Order. He would produce it though. If His Honor directed him so to do.
The answer or the Grand Lodge of Virginia to the summons to appear at the session of the Supreme Lodge was also a feature and the fact that Supreme Representatives from Virginia were present, legislation, in violation of the injunction, and in a heated argument between counsel. On one side was the very able United States District Attorney Chance R. Wilson for the Grand Lodge and Attorney Henry B. Davis for the Supreme Lodge.
DOUBLE REPRESENTATION.
Mr. Michael stated that the Grand
Lodge of Virginia was represented
by Johnson for five days of the
modern day by George R. Brown
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summative and by counsel. They had made application for ocrensional blanks and the manuscript and for the rights and privileges of deeds. All of these had been refused. Attorney James F. Minor had impressively submitted to the witness one letter sent to Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal E. E. Underwood which had been sent with a certified check for supplies and Dr. Underwood had declined to honor the same on the ground that the Grand Lodge had been given although the injunction restrained him from so doing. Mr. Mitchell identified the letter.
THE WRITTEN EVIDENCE
The same course was pursued in the production of a letter with a certified check, which had been sent to Major General K. R. Jackson and had been returned by him. This, together with telegraphs sent to Supreme Chancellor S. W. Green, Supreme Keeper of Records and Seal E. E. Underwood were admitted by the Court. After having been on the stand a day and a half, Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., was permitted to vacate that position. Counsel congratulated him upon his excellent showing in testifying for so long time. The Thomas H. Crump, Grand Keeper of Records and Seal was put upon the stand to corroborate the vital points in Mr. Mitchell's testimony. He made a good witness. Attorney Davis tried in vain to entrap him into vital admissions, but he failed. When he concluded Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Justice McCoy enquired of counsel how much more time would be required in the case.
MORE TIME WANTED.
Attorney Wilson was the opinion that it could be completed the next day. Upon enquiring of counsel for the Supreme Judge if they had any witnesses, they held harried consultation, and then Attorney Davis arose with a thoroughly dejected look and said, "If your Honor please, we have been taken completely by surprise, due to the attitude allowed in this case and the testimony admitted. We had expected to submit the case upon the facts as presented. This is the number and time we are necessary for a pair of two witnesses. It will take possibly forty eight hours to get them here. One of them lives in Louisiana." His Honor smiled and remarked that he thought he knew about the one warrant, the one who keeps the
SUPREME LODGE COINSELS
PREEMBENT
Mr. Davis told him that it was not but it was S. W. Green of New Orleans. He thought he could locate him. The other one was S. A. T. Watkins in Chicago. It was proposed to adjourn the case until Friday. His Honor said Monday and finally said Tuesday. Attorney Clarence R. Wilson immediately arose and stated that while the suggestion was unusual, he would not interrogate any objection as he was anxious that His Honor should have all of the facts before him. The counsel for both sides and the wit poses them retired.
florence, S. C., Dec. 3, 1915--Miss
D. Theresa Bacote, of Society Hill, will
be married to Mr. Cyrus Robinson, of
a Newport News, on Wednesday, December
15, nt 1 o'clock P. M.
The bride, a charming young lady,
invited me when seen at Darlington
a few days ago. I expect to be presen-
t and give them a fine write up.
Rev. H. R. Bacote will offerl.
Mr. N. D. Bacote, a first class mer-
chant tailor of Dillon, passed through
the city recently en route for home.
N. G. C. Young, a prosperous farmer
of Darlington County, passed through
the city reception in route to Norfolk,
Va. to spend some time with friends.
Messrs. Harry Skinner and Clea-
land Benjamin, of Bath, and Lewis,
Maine, respectively, returned
home on train 25, November 26.
Mrs. G. A. Gurder left Sunday morn-
ing for Sanford, Fla., after spending
a few days here with relatives.
Miss. Florence Peak, after spending
awhile at Wilmington, N. C., passed
through the city recently en route for
Spartanburg, S. C., her home.
Mr. Jas. Young and soft. John L.
6
Wynn, Jr., passed through the city on route for Richmond, Va. to spend a short while.
Mrs. Joanie Boebee Saunders, of Washington, N. C., Grand Matron Lady Knight of Daughters of King David, passed through the city recently, returning from Charleston, S. C., where she had delivered an address at Emmauel A. M. E. Church. Subject: "Conservation of Fraternities." She reports a grand reception and banquet given in her honor.
Mrs. Saunders is the oldest daughter of the late Bishop J. H. Boebee, and a teacher in the graded school at Washington, N. C.
Mr. Rufus Reid, of Charlotte, N. C., is engaged in roofing the Catholic Church. Quite an undertaking.
Mrs. Annie Williams, an esteemed lady of Timmonsville, S. C., passed through the city recently, returning from Cheraw, S. C., en route for house.
Mrs. Williams is a member of Mt. Carmel Baptist Church.
Send 25c, silver or postage stamps and we will send postpaid a dollar size box containing 189 tablets. Take one tablet a day for 20 and if it doesn't do you more good than any medicine you ever took, send back balance of tablets and we will return money.
Wanted a Deputy to work the State of Virginia for the attithe Fire and Ladies of Harmony. A good inducement for a good and faithful worker. For further information write, GEORGE R. PAXTON, 914 N. East, St., Indianapolis, Ind.
REAL ESTATE.
Our clients boost our business that's why you are so grow.
From your Real Estate business with us and you will find our services better than others.
R. A. GUFFMAN,
200 L.S. North End Street.
Room in Drawing and Apparel.
Miss Lillian Jenkins, of Wilmington,
N. C., passed through the city recently
en route for Palatka, Florida.
Rev. J. M. Jones, of Maxton, N. C.,
has accepted a charge here and will
preach the first and second Sunday
in each month.
Prof. S. W. McCottry, principal of
Fulton Graded School at Kingstreet,
and recently elected State Grand
Deputy of the joint stock company,
passed through the city recently en
route for Lamar, S. C., on official
business.
Mrs. W. M. Lane, an old Florintine,
not living in Wilmington, N. C., after
spending few days here visiting her
sister, returned home recently.
Mr. Daniel McCastill, a foreman of
A. C. L. Railroad Company, was
accidentally killed at Wilmington
recently. Mrs. Alice McCastill has
shipped her household goods to San-
ford, Fla., and will soon return there
herself.
The following ministers of the Gos-
pel died here recently:
Rev. J. R. Brooks died Sunday,
November 21. He was treasurer of
Pee Dee Baptist Association.
Rev. A. J. Streecter Baptist minister,
died November 16.
Rev. J. E. Wilson, Methodist minister,
and expostmaster here, died Sunday,
November 21.
Rev. W. A. Young, of Tuskaloosa,
Ala., an evangelist of the Presbyterian
U. S. after a week's visit here left
for Timmonsville Monday, November
29.
Let every Negro leader sound the
appeal and contribute.
PYTILIAN 'CADETS' OF NEWPORT
THEIR
NEW-ENGLISH
ANNIVERSARY
Brigadier General John Mitchell, Jr.
Deliveries Able Address
Newport News, Nov. 28.—The first
anniversary of the Newport News
Cadets was celebrated here at Zion
haptist Church, Rev. C. E. Jones,
pastor. An excellent program was
the one of feature of which was
an address by Brigadier General John
Mitchell, Jr., of Richmond,
On the rostrum were General
Mitchell, Rev. Jones, Prof. J, S.
Lee, Col. R. T. Stewart, District
Deputy A. C. Jennings, Rev. Rich-
ard Axhe, Col. T. J. Pree, Capt.
John Stewart, Col. Roscoe C.
Mitchell, of Richmond.
General Mitchell and party, with
three companies of Pythian Cadets
were escorted to the Church by the
Second Battalion of the Second Regiment
of R. F. under command of
Major R. F. Jackson.
The companies participated in the
Maco Guards, Roanoke and Mitchell
Reserves. Arriving at the church,
the following program was rendered:
Devotionals, Rev. C. E. Jones;
Deacon, Deacon Briggs; Selection;
Choir; Paper, "Knighthood," Cadet
Albert Johnkin; Instrumental Solo,
Miss Costin Flint; Paper, Capt. Leroy McCanky; Music, Cadet Quartet;
Paper, Matthew Banks; Introduction of
Speaker, Col. T. J. Pree, Address;
General John Mitchell, Jr.; Muscle,
Macro Quartette; Committee on
Finance, Major B. F. Jackson, Dea
W. H. Sayles, Chester Hillory;
Music, Pearly Gate, Quartette; Instrumental Trio, Gate, Finley, Wood and Crawley; Recognition, Roy
W. H. Sayles, Cadet Nooovell
Turner, Master of Ceremonies;
Capt. John Stewart is in charge of the Pythian Cadets in the Tidewater District and is making much success in that line of work.
We will commence a Baby Votiv
Contest, open to all babies of two years
and under at the time of entrances.
The ballots will be printed weekly in
The Planet and no baby will be eligible
for a prize that does not poll thirty
thousand votes. All that is necessary
to enter the contest will be to file the
names in The Planet office with 100
names. These ballots must be cut out of
The Planet. The same rules will
govern in the manner of securing sub-
scriptions to the Planet asheetofers.
We will publish the names of any
baby who enters, before the conclusion
decided, upon the payment of $2.50,
together with the photograph. Joyous
mothers and happy fathers can now
come into the timelight.
CHRISTMAS MONEY
Ladies, Men, Girls, Boys & Students
EARN $4 to $6 per day or evening.
At home or in spare time or at other
school hours. No canvassing or
interference with the other duties. Be
independent of the work and poor
pay. Get out of the booklet Writ to
day for free booklet to the
IDEAL CO., Box 70, Station G.
New York City
JEFFRIES NO. 1
NO.1
TRADE MARK
Cough Mixture
GUARANTEED
RELIEVES QUICKLY COUGHS
COLDS, HOARSEENESS, CROUT,
SORE THROAT.
and All Affections of the Throat,
Cheft and Lungs. Stops your Coug
soon after taking. Especially reco-
mended to Speakers and Singers. It
relieves the Throat and strengthens
the Voice. Has been tested and
found to be the best and purport
Cough Remedy on the Market.
All Drugglists, 25c, 50c, $1.00.
If your Drugglist hasn't it, call,
phone write to,
THOS TABI JEFFRIES
Manufacturing Pharmacist
214 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
Goods sent by parcel post or ex-
press, upon receipt of price, stamps
or money order.
```markdown
```
COLORED MEN
Wanted to prepare
as SLEEPING CAR
PORTERS and TRAIN
PORTERS. No
experience necessary.
Positions pay from
$50 to $80 month.
Southern, Northern
and Eastern Roads.
Age limit 20 to 35
years. Railroad
passes from your
home to your position
and uniforms
arranged for, if necessary.
Write at once.
INTER' RAILWAY
Cleanse the inner man, restores the tired glands and organs that have long been unable to perform their full duty. Take a full box of Herb Renovator and you will be healthier, happier and better looking.
SPECIAL OFFER
DEPUTY WANTED.
WE DO REAL ESTATE BUSINESS
Place, your Business with Us, and we will Please You. B. A. CEPHAS, 5351/2 N. SECOND ST.
A
Mrs. Julia Luffett, 138 St., N. Y. City
Traveling Agent
Serial No. $2555
ROYAL CHEMIST
P. O. BOX 81, STATION E,
NEW YORK
FRENCH ART
"ALER APLOTEVEH"—
The Only Thing Missing Above
Having Skilled Artists, we
branches of the P
Special Rates for the
Phone Randolph 592
PERCE TAPPIN, Proprietor
WE DO REAL EST
ON THE Square
Place, your Business with Us.
B. A. CEPHAS, 53512
WHY LET YOUR EYES WORRY YOU?
When you can obtain service and quality to fit your pocket book at
ELLIS RAY FISHER, O. G. place of business at 502 N. 2nd St. and dont fool with the people ravelling around with a grip or heap glasses, because you can sell lenses yourself. Here is an ad. cut out of a tape where a lady in Pennsylvania was mistreated. Read it for yourself:
OPTICAL FAKERS BUST IN PENNELVAN-IA'S CAPITAL-WILL THE GOVERNOR NOW RAZLIZE HIS MISTAKES?
A news report from Hamburg, Pa. under date of publication, Police Captain Thompson last night night warned to residents of the city requesting that they travel from door to door and swindle people. The men represent themselves as opticians, and an unidentified woman was forced out of the house.
When this woman answered the bell the men told her they were "informed she was not a doctor, she admitted it. The men examined the woman's eyes and after telling her she is not, she presented her to purchase a pair of glasses. They told her that the lenses in those glasses are the only one that would fit without them. The woman took the glasses, for which the men charged $20. These were later examined by a real optometrist and found to be ordinary window glass. Optometrist who have been reading reports and other cities wonder if the Governor will now realize his mistake in voting optometry bills.
We are fighting for a bill in the State of Virginia in February. Help us to get it through for the public's benefit. It is just a bill we needed as our physician's bill in the Governor's bill just a few years ago. Come, see us and get service who it enlist and stays always. Eye tested by a graduate and glasses made in our manufacturing plant.
BOARD AND LODGING.
BY THE DAY OR WEEK.
Family Service in Good Locality.
Terms Reasonable.
MRS. BOOKER T. LEFTWOH,
16 N. Second Street, Richmond, Va.
S. W. Robinson
Mrs. Lufferts writes: "After having used every known advertised hair grower for years' with no. results I tried Hair Root Hair Grower and continued faithfully for 16 months, now my hair is 29 inches (it was 4 inches when I started.) I believe every woman can grow her hair one-half to two inches a month by using Hair Root."
HAIR ROOT GROWER IS 50n. A BOX
Agents Wanted Everywhere. Make Big Profits. Address all mail and money orders.
COLUMBUS, OHIO
VIRGINIA
ART STUDIOS
—"TO EXCEL ALWAYS"
about Our Pictures is the Voice.
we make a specialty in all
photographic art.
the Christmas Season
1933 for appointment
or 534 N. SECOND ST.
STATE BUSINESS
THE YEAR
ROUND
s, and we will Please You.
½ N. SECOND ST.
FREE TO COLORED WOMEN OUR
1916 STYLE BOOK.
We are the l l a r g u e t
manufacturer of
colored w o m e n s a
bailer, and
in order to
fatroche,
w o m e n s a
and i g
free a l l a r g u e t
book, show
ing style for
w o m e n s a,
in the l a r t e s t
b i n d i n g.
Everry
colored woman should have one. We guarantee every article we sell no money refunded. All make us stand combing and washing the same as our own. We manufacture a STRAIGHTENING COMB of extra heavy back, absolutely the best and most serviceable, made fully guaranteed. With each ccomb we sell at 20 cents, give a lamp cup free. Feed your order for the straightening comb today. Postpaid so Couta.
Borrow is published the names of the different organizations, churches, and educational orders that have been nominated by some of their friends. They want to see you, the winner of the $50.00 in cash that the Lincoln Salem Co. Dept. is going to award at the close of the contest to the organisation, chapel or fraternity order securing the largest number of votes by saving the labels and cash tickets as shown below. It is easy to increase your vote standing daily by using these products, and saving the labels and compass.
Don't disappoint your friends, get right in from the start, and show them that you can successfully carry out anything that you take up. Remember that this is not a content that you have to get subscription for a newspaper, and spend a lot of money for nothing, all that is necessary for you to do in this contest is to use the products and save the labels.
That above applies to the Individual and Children who have been nominated in this contest. The individual prize is worth consideration, you have your choice of a $125.00 Motorcycle, or a $125.00 Diamond Ring, or $100.00 in cash. The Children's prizes are great, $50.00 in cash first prize, $25.00 Bicycle second prize, and three gold watches to other children. REMEMBER AT ALL TIMES THAT THIS CONTEST WILL NOT COST YOU ONE CENT TO WIN.
ED WOMEN
N. Second Street
IZATION
T CHURCH
CHURCH, Broad and College
ACH, Clay Street
CHURCH, North Third Street.
TIST CHURCH, N. Fifth Street
AL CHURCH, Fifth and Leigh
Leigh Street.
AND Leigh Streets.
CHURCH, Byrd Street.
OPAL CHURCH.
CHURCH, St. John and Duval.
AN CHURCH, Catherina Street
AGUERRE O. E. Leigh Street
DED KGS
BPITAL, Baker Street.
T CHURCH, 25th Street
T CHURCH
TIST CHURCH, Leigh Street
ST CHURCH, First Street.
CHURCH, Sydney
CHURCH, 28th Street.
INDIVIDUALS NOMINATED
CHILDREN NOMINATED
St. John Street
Marine Street
W. Leigh Street
W. Duval Street
922 1-2 Jacquelin Street
Norton Street
1100 E. Leigh Street
1102 E. Leigh Street
100 N. Fifth Street
North 26th Street
W. Leigh Street
123 N. First Street
6 W. Leigh Street
E. Leigh Street
E. Clay Street
Price Street
Second Street
Duval Street
Leigh Street
ATE YOURSELF TO
FROM PRODUCTS AS SHOW
GEORGE LOMAX, 1223 St. John Street
George Evans, 410 Catherine Street
ETHEL ROBINSON, 18 W. Leigh Street
JONEPH TAYLOR, 425 W. Duval Street
DEGORA WILKINS, 1602 1-2 Jacquillon Street
JESSE HERNDON, 505 Norton Street
THELMA SMALLWOOD, 102 E. Leigh Street
ANTOINETTE BOWLER, 112 E. Leigh Street
CAROLYN CARTER, 700 N. Fryd Street
MARY WASHINGTON, North 26th Street
EVLYN ROBINSON, 18 W. Leigh Street
MELTON RANDOLPH, 523 N. First Street
MARIEFTA CHILES, 316 W. Leigh Street
IRMA PERGUSON, 107 E. Leigh Street
JANNIE MORTON, 201 E. Clay Street
MADOLIN DIGGS, 610 A Price Street
DAVID CROSS, North Second Street
THELMA EVANS, 10 E. Duval Street
ETHEL HARRIS, 115 E. Leigh Street
NOMINATE YOURSELF TO-DAY!
SAVE LABELS FROM PRODUCTS AS SHOWN BELOW
BROWN'S CLEANING & PRESSING COMPANY
932 West Bread Street. Save Coupons. 10 Votes for each Cent paid.
MADAME HAWKINS—JOHNSON BEAUTY PARLOR
632 1.2 N. Second Street. Save Coupons. 10 Votes for each cent paid.
WHIP AND QUEED SMOKING TOBACCO
Save Cartons, 60 and 100 Votes each.
King's Court Cigars. Save/Bands, 60 Votes each. Life Panillas Cigars.
Save Cartons, 156 Votes each.
NOAH'S LINIMENT
NOAH'S HAIR DRESSING
Save Cartons. 250, 500 and 1000 Votes each.
JENNING'S FISH COMPANY
Second Market. Save Cash Register. Recceipts. Good for 10 Votes for each cent paid.
BROWN'S PHOTOGRAPH STUDIO
603 North Second Street. Save
Coupons. Good for 10 Votes for each
cent paid.
THE DICKIE THEATRE
Save $1.00 Book Covers. Good for
1000 Votes if bought at Content Head.
quarters. 612 N. Second Street.
Tablets, 30 Votes each;
The Flag and Exemination Tablets,
Soul of Virginia. Tablets, Jefferson
Exemination Tablets, John Rush
High School Tablets, Lennon Hair
Nora. Save Wrappers, 100 Votes each.
INDIRECT PURCHASING COMPANY
300 West Broad Street. Save Our
pens. Good for 30 Votes for each
court panel.
BROOKLYN FURNITURE COMPANY
500 West Broad Street. Save Our
pens. Good for 30 Votes for each
court panel.
ORGANIZATIONS
N. 1000 Vo
Street 1000 Vo
L 1000 Vo
D and College 1000 Vo
Street 1000 Vo
4th Third Street 1000 Vo
ARCH, N. Fifth Street 1000 Vo
ARCH, Fifth and Leigh 1000 Vo
Set 1000 Vo
Streets 1000 Vo
4th Street 1000 Vo
ARCH 1000 Vo
John and Duval 1000 Vo
ARCH, Catherino Street 1000 Vo
100 E. Leigh Street 1000 Vo
AG 1000 Vo
Walker Street 1000 Vo
12 25th Street 1000 Vo
L 1000 Vo
ARCH, Leigh Street 1000 Vo
ARCH, First Street 1000 Vo
Money 1000 Vo
4th Street 1000 Vo
No. Vo.
Old Street. 16 E.
Clay Street. 1.0
Boultas Street. 1.0
12 E. Baker Street. 1.0
Third Street. 1.0
First Street. 1.0
Second Street. 1.0
4. Seventh Street. 1.0
Ellen Street. 1.0
Lolgh Street. 1.0
... 14 1.2 W. Lolgh Street. 1.0
Lolgh Street. 1.0
College Street. 1.0
Lolgh Street. 1.0
2 Street. 1.0
Ball Street. 1.0
N. Ninth Street. 1.0
Fifth Street. 1.0
Leigh Street. 1.0
3 Street. 1.0
First Street. 1.0
St. Peter Street. 1.0
B Street. 1.0
Fourth Street. 1.0
W. Leigh Street. 1.0
Mininary, Burkeville, Ya. 1.0
1.2 W. Lolgh Street. 1.0
Kako Hall. 1.0
Leigh Street. 1.0
15 N. Seventh Street. 1.0
Leigh Street. 1.0
Leigh Street. 1.0
Second Street. 1.0
N. Second Street. 1.0
Poter Street. 1.0
University. 1.0
Dewal Street. 1.0
106 Decatur Street. 1.0
V. Franklin Street. 1.0
Franklin Street. 1.0
Street. 1.0
TIP TOP & BUTTERNUT BREAD
Save Wrappers and Labels, 50 Votes each.
Nolde's Pound Cake. Save Wrappers--250 and 500 Votes each.
SILK VELVET CORN SYRUP
CAPITAL PORTO RICO MOLASSES
Save Wrappers from Cans. 100, 250 and 500 Votes each.
E. P. MURPHY & BON
Coral and Wond.
Save Bags, 100 Votes each. Save Coupons, 1000, 2000, 8000, 4000, 5000, 6000, 7000, 8000 Votes each.
502 North Second Street. Save Coupons. Good for 10 Votes for each cent paid.
PIEDMONT, CHESTERFIELD AND FATIMA, CIGARETTES Save Coupons. 56 Votes each.
KOINER'S VIRGINIA CORN MEAL Save Cartons. 100 Votes each, and 96 Pound Bags. 2000 Votes each. Koiner's Self Raising Backwheel Flower. Save Cartons. 100 Votes each.
SWIFT AND COMPANY
Soap Products
Save Labels as shown: Swift's Pride Washing Powder. Save Cartons. 50 Votes Bach. Arrow. Borax Soap. Save Wrappern. 50 Votes Bach. Swift Pride Cleaner. Save Cartons. 50 Votes Bach. Swift Wool Soap. Save Cartons. 50 Votes Bach. Magnet Magnetizing Soap. Save Wrappern. 50 Votes Bach. Maxine Blissett Tetral Soap. Save Wrappern. 100 Votes Bach.
THE PRESTOFO LINE OF SUFF BRINES
Manufactured by the Southern Brew Company. Save Company. 50 Votes Bach.
K. LEEKER, 800 W. Brand St. Bock. Brewmaster. Ready & Tasting Grade Stale for Leather. Grown in the Southern Brew Company. Save Wrappern. 100 Votes Bach.
Nothing will please the "home folks" so much as something for comfort and home adornment. Here's a big storeful of happy suggestions from which to pick and choose. Just a
Closing out our line of Sheet and Cast Iron Heaters. Discontinued styles at great price reductions. Splendid heaters at $2.75 to $10.50. COMET QUALITY
Have your Furniture insured in the Southern Mutual Fire Insurance Co. and save the coupons good for 10 votes for each coat paid
Useful Gift
Alway
Nothing will please the thing for comfort and home a of happy suggestions from wh few seasonable items below:
ROCKERS
Every style, every wood and finish, with wonderful values in Oak and Mahogany, at from $2.75 upward. Special for next week, Golden Oak, shaped sad the seat Rocker, angle back at
$2.75
HEA
Closing out our line of sheet and styles at great price reductions. NOW COMMIT
Self Feeder—burns hard coal. Requires little attention and produces quick intense heat with little fuel expenditure.
$18.50 to $22.50
Come in and let us help economically and satisfactorily.
Rountree-C
"The House of G
111-113-115
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISING
RALEIGH COUNTY NEWS.
(By Wm. F. Denny.)
The Workman's Consumers Association with headquarters at Bockley are causing onlookers to wonder what they will do next? The president and general attorney made a trip over Fayette County last week proaching and speaking in interest of the Association they now plan to open a store at Hill Top on Xmas day, where there is a large population of colored people. They have opened a baker's large grocery store in Bockley, built by Miss Bettie Estes, the sister of Mrs. Albert Rodgers, as book keeper and Mr. John Fox and others as clerks. They have also opened a first-class restaurant and boarding house, with Mrs. K. C. Phillips as manager. They have also opened a Building and Loan Association and a Burial Association. The officers for the first year are Rev. C. W. Coffey, president; Mr. John Price, treasurer; Rev. G. L. Callaway, secretary and the F. R. C. Coffey, some of Ralough's best business men, hence the business must grow under the present management.
Rev. C. W. Coffey, formerly pastor of Second Baptist Church, Frankfort, Philadelphia, Penn. he tendered his resignation to take effect forthwith, and he has accepted the presidency of the workman's Consumera Association of Raleigh County. The good people of Raleigh County welcomes Rev. Coffey. He is a scholar, and a preacher of ability.
Thanksgiving Day at Ecclesia will come, remembered, Rev. C. H. Rawlings, the pastor of the Baptist Church, preached at 11:00 o'clock to a crowded house, and the. Sunlight Lodge, K. of P., gave an entertainment in the evening, by rendering the following programme: Address by M. of F. Scott, recitation by Miss Bertha Board, solo by Mr. William Penn, address by Attorney Wm. F. Denny; subject Damon and Pythias, recitation by Miss Josephine Wright, of Beckley, and Mrs. Alberta Anderson, of Ecclesia. Banquet was, served by a committee composed John Wilson, George Cunningham, Chas. Wilson, and Henry Ryan. Rev. G. W. Meade, master of ceremonies.
The New River Collars Company at Eccles offers employment to 150 colored men. Good pay, good houses, good church, good school and regular work. Several men have taken advantage of this opportunity. Messrs. W. T. Merchant and Will Trent moved in from Herberton last week with their families, and several more will come here. Mr. J. S. Butts, the young attorney from Detroit College of Law, is making quite a favorable impression on the good people of the Lehigh County. Mr. Butts is a lawyer of high standing and scholarly ability. We bespeak for him great success at the bar. Messrs. Bliekey and Payne have moved their restaurant from the old George Building to the Blakey stand and have added a line of groceries to their menu. Mr. Bliekey Institute, in charge of the business, Mr. Payne is quite a hunter, and a polite young man.
New. John Q. Hutchinson, of Booker, who is now prosecuting attorney for Burlington County, has almost the unanimous endorsement of the Republican party for State Senate. Mr. Brown W. Puryear, a colored lawyer, has been Mr. Hutchinson's assistant attorney. July 18, 1944, and in new dating custody available quiet at office.
the EASLEY'S ICE CREAM
Co 615 N. Second St. Save tags and
paid bills. 10 Votes for each
cont paid
fts are
days the Best.
the "home folks" so much as some-
e adornment. Here's a big storeful
which to pick and choose. Just a
w:
BLANKETS, SPREADS,
COMFORTS
Now arrivals in warm bed coverings. Blankets, $2.00 to $2.50; Spreads, $1.25 to $3.50; Comforts, $1.25 to $6.00. SPECIAL—Full size extra heavy Wool Nap Blankets, $2.75 value
$2.00
HEATERS
and. Cast Iron Heaters. Discontinued. Splendid heaters at $2.75 to $10.50.
Hot Blankets—burns hard or soft coal. Keeps fire for 24 hours. One of the most satia factory heaters on the market. $14.50 to $18.50
help you solve your gift problems
sarily.
Cherry Corp.
Of Quality Furniture."
5 West Broad St.
ERTISE—
ERTISE IN THE PLANET
for the State of West Virginia, and a son of Raleigh County, announces himself for nomination for Governor of West Virginia, and the people of Raleigh are a just uncertain about "Uncle Abe" for now Judge Ira Robinson, late president of the Supreme Court of Appeals, has come out and said, "My hat is in the ring for Governor," both good men. Let's see who will win.
Apply to Wm. F. Denny, of Eccles, for the Richmond Planet and the McDowell Times.
Department of the Industrial Union Institute, Southern Pines, N. C. Music, Elocution. Languages. Latest Conservatory Methods. Terms very reasonable. Winter term begins Dec. 1, 1916. Terms very reasonable. For particular address, INDUSTRIAL UNION INSTITUTE P. O. Box, 305. Southern Pines, N. C.
WAINTS TO FIND HISI.
If Mr. Robert Steward will com-
municate with Mr. J. P. Leach, S9-
Wilkinson street, Putnam, Conn. he
learn something of interest to
him.
WEST POINT, VA.
WEST POINT, VA.
Mrs. Mary Lee of Pinners Point,
is visiting friends in West Point.
Mrs. Lucy Edwards is visiting
relatives in Newport News.
Mr. Clarance Walker of 12th St.
is on the slick list.
Master James Roy, Jr. has returned ed from Capo Charles, Va.
Mrs. Addison Tyler and Mrs. Samuel Walkor of Plum Point were the guest of Mrs. Mary Johnson, Sunday.
Miss Dell Taylor, of New Kent, was the guest of Mrs. Anna Brown last week.
Miss Sophonia Walker; also Miss Marla Vaughan are out again.
Rev. W. W. Harris spent several nights in town last week attending revivals.
Mrs. Florence Morris spent Thanks giving with her mother in New Kent. Whenever you want a hot lunch, call at Mr. A. C. Allen, 7th Street, Ridgway Building.
M. L. B. Club will meet Monday, December 6, at Plum Point, Va. All members are requested to be present. Thomas Johnson, president; G. Coleman, secretary.
His Question,
Said Little Lester Livermore:
"What I should like to know,
In where the breeze rest themselves
When they're too tired to blow"
-Judah
Look to Yourself.
There is an idea abroad among moral people that they should make their neighbors good. One person I have to make good—myself. But my duty to my neighbor is much more nearly expressed by saying that I have to make him happy if I may—Gottweiler.
NATIONAL BAPTIST PUB LISHING BOARD'S SUCCESS
What has been accomplished by an ex-slave for the Negro Baptists within less than a decade. A constructive genius and his contribution to race development. Baptist churches and Sunday schools giving patronage where members of the race have made good as skilled artisans.
Gigantic Printing and Book Making Plant at Nashville, Tenn., Employing Scores of Members of the Race. Sending Out Millions of Copies of Religious Literature Annually-Marvelous Success Achieved by R. H. Boyd.
Were some one to put the National Baptist Publishing Board's plant at Nashville, in a moving picture which would show the wonderful achievements and the accomplishments of that gigantic institution that has been built up for the Negro Baptists of the United States and for their posterity, it would take a film hundreds of yards long which would entertain thousands of people. The National Baptist Publishing House has come into existence within the past nineteen years and today towers magnificently over anything which has been accomplished by the race, whether it be in the religious, educational or in the business world.
It has furnished and is furnishing employment to scores of Negro boys and girls that hitherto were about out of what: it is commonly known as the Art Preservative among printers and publishers. It has given a rating in the commercial world to the race and denomination that has no parallel. It has put the Negro Baptists on an equal footing with the denominations of other races because of the creative genius displayed in operating and maintaining the institution. It has forced a link in racial pride that has brought together more support for one institution than has even been attempted before. It has outstretched Jack's Ink Stalk story in its growth and development. It has served as an opening of the "door of the amphibian and deserving members of the church" closed to them by labor unions, which refused to allow members of the race to acquire certain knowledge in printing and book binding. It has put the race on the map in the theological world as producers of a religious literature distinctively their own. It has installed and is operating printing machinery of the most complicated and intricate designing and this, too, with the untrained help that has been picked up in the race. It has helped to make intellectual insights out of what has been regarded as a race of flowers of wood and drawers of water.
this institution was founded by an ex slave, the Rev. R. H. Boyd, who still lives and who is secretary and manager Many say that Rev. Dr. Boyd saw the invisible in his early Texas pioneer days and that after operating on a very small scale in his Texas home, he went to the Negroes to see the wisdom of supporting a plant on a national scene. It was the latter part of 1856 when he began his pilgrimage to Nashville, Teen, after having looked all over the United States for a location that would be suitable for his work. It has been said that he was directed by God from his Texas home like Abraham of the Bible, the God of Israel. "Get out thee of the country and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee." Whatever way it was, it is a known fact that the Negro Baptists'
SHOCKING- TRAGEDY AT INGLE
SEMINARY- ONE STUDENT
DEAD, TOO.
HEAD- Provision (Campbell Killed.
Sub. Headache- Shocking Tragdey at Ing.
Inside Seminary- Two Students Dead.
Too.
---
Burkeville, Va. December 2, 1915.—Professor Graham C. Campbell, sixty-nine years old, who for twenty-three years had been president of the Ingleside Seminary, an institution for colored girls, was instantly killed here this evening by an explosion of the school, which the school is supplied with light, girl, girl, Nora French, of Amelia, also was killed, and Noriam Scott, of Chula, was so badly injured, that she is expected to die. Both of the girls were colored.
A DANGEROUS GAS PLANT
The accident happened about 8:30 o'clock. The acetylene gas plant which was in a small building apart from the main school buildings, was working badly, and Professor Campbell, accompanied by the two colored girl students, went to investigate, and, if possible, to repair it. He carried a lighted lamp, and as he approached the building, the fire exploded by the flame and exploded. Professor Campbell and Nova French were killed outright by the force of the explosion, and the Scott girl sustained fatal injuries.
BUILDING ON FIRE
The small building in which the plant was housed took fire and was destroyed, but the loss is not heavy. The fire was prevented from reaching the main school buildings. Professor Campbell was a native of Nova Scotia, and had devoted his life to education.
He is survived by his wife and five
CENTRO DE LOS NIÑOS
had no publishing plant and were preparing and auditing out no Sunday school literature; they were giving no employment to the Negro boys and girls, doing nothing tangible until Dr. Boyd came upon the scene. His book, The Story of the Pub.
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Rev. R. H. Boyd, D. D. LL. D. Secretary-Treasurer and Manager of the National Baptist: Publishing Board, Nashville, Teen.
Hishing Board, which has just been issued and is now in great demand has proven one of the most interesting narratives that has come from the lips of any man. Stranger than fiction, and yet as real as the gospel
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The National, Baptist Publishing House Plant, located at the corner of Second Ave., North, and Locust Street, Nashville, Tenn.; operated, by the National Baptist Publishing Board. The institution occupies several brick buildings, generates its own electricity, hosts its various buildings and departments by steam, employs scores itself, the story is told and then the thousands of wheels that revolve at the plant and the millions of copies of books and publications that are sent out each quarter together with the magnificent institution, standing like the pyramids of Egypt, attest the substantial part of the story. The founder of the institution has often been referred to as a giant oak in a forest among the Baptists of the United States. His far-sighted bus
children. They are: Graham Campbell, Jr., who is a student in the UConn Theological Seminary at Richmond, G. Campbell, a teacher at the Hampton School, H. Campbell, a Campbell, of Chatteroy, W. Va. Campbell, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Mr. Ester, of Chatteroy, W. Va.
RALLY AT NAZARENE CHURCH.
Peake, Va. The members of the Navarro Baptist Church, Rev. Thos. Smith, pastor held a rally on the third Sunday in November and raised $61.00. This amount goes to the fund for remodelling the church. Mr. Charles McClalborne of Richmond, Va. was present and assisted. The club led by Mrs. Elizabeth Bray led in the fight.
Mrs. Ida Walker Jackson was called from Brooklyn, N. Y. to gift the funeral of her father's sister, Mrs. Emma Walker Deane. When she arrived she was too late to see She was returned to her home in Brooklyn. She lit the grave of her deceased aunt before she left for home.
ADVANCED TWO DAYS.
Philadelphia, Penn, Nov. 26, 1915.—The joint local committee of arrangements for the National Equal Rights Convention at the 8th annual meeting of the National Independent Equal Rights League and National observance of the Semi Centennial of the 13th Amendment observance. This is December 12 and 14 for the League's convention and December 15 for the 12th Amendment observance. This is two days earlier than the original date set. The sessions will all be in the Allen A. M. B. Church, 19th and Bain Bridge Streets. A big convention案 occurred. Every city is asked to send delegates which are not confined to members of the League.
ncess tact in building up the institution has attracted the attention of the entire business world, as well as the entire race to which his denomination belongs and who feel indebted to him and are standing locally by the institution which has been built up for them and which will stand for ages to come by the support that is being given from every quarter of the year, that is, the third year. Dr. Boyd showed in his report the work of the institution for the past eighteen years. The figures themselves are staggering. In this number of years the institution has written and circulated one hundred ninety-four thousand, three hundred ninety-nine copies of religious literature, which does not include the thousands of volumes of books which have been made up and distributed throughout the civilized world. They have been made up and distributed three million, six hundred eighty-four million, one hundred forty-nine letters and it is said that sometimes as high as two thousand letters are received in a single day.
It develops that the National Baptist Publishing Board furnishes employment to more Negro men and women, boys and girls, than any other institution of a commercial nature operated in the race. Very little is said to be known of Dr. Boyd, who has refused all along to allow anything to be written about his life. He knows that he was born a slave and he was forty years old before he went to school and that his mother who died only a few months ago, was over ninety-five years of age. The Publishing House, his life's work, is looked upon as a monument
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members of the race. Within its walls are written, printed and sent out more Sunday school literature and religious hope than from any other denominational house of the race; has one printing press that can print ten thousand Sunday school quarteries per hour. A monument to the race.
that he has built as an humble worker in his denomination and as his contribution to the race as a constructive genius. Nashville, Tenn., the home of the institution, is now as well known as a religious publishing center as it is an educational center, having been made possible by the millions of religious tracts and literature that have been issued from girls' scantle religious and commercial business institution.
ADELPHILIS BATTLE WITH THE
EAGLES TO A DRAW
On Thanksgiving day the football season closed here with one of the best games ever witnessed between city teams. The game marked the last trial of local teams to wrest the championship title from the A. S. C. boys. The game was interesting in many respect. Ward saved the day for the Adelphias when he pulled down Half Back Smith as he was about to cross the goal line. The game ended in a 0:0 tie. R. S.
LEESBURG, VA.
Mr. Frank Gallagher, of Washing ton was the welcome guest in town this week to visit his parent and friends. He was looking the picture of health.
Brother Lane Daw prescheduled a very acceptable sermon last night at the Baptist. Church, in the absence of Pastor Taylor.
Rev. W. R. Manley was at his charge Sunday.
Rev. J. E. Dotson was at Gleedes ville, where he is bringing things to pass.
Mr. Guss Valentine is on the sick list with Pneumonia
Mr. M. W. Roy is on the sick list.
Mr. Will Jones lost their little child Saturday.
Our other sick are improving.
—W. L. J., Reporter
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4. 1915
The
Scrap Book
In the Sirup.
During the maple sugar-making season the teacher of a rural school received the following note:
"Dear Maunt -- Please excuse Cyrus William for not coming yesterday which he would of done only he was down to the sugar lot and he fell into a pan of strap that had just been boiled down and which was still some warm but not enough to kill him. But he went in all over and such a mess you never did see hate and all. He had to go through three tubes of water you remaine in bed while I was up up up things. So kindly excuse and he would some rather you wouldn't tell if that he fell into the sap for the other boys would be not to tease him about it and he is sensitive to teasing. Please find enclosed by Cyrus William a small bottle of our strap for your own use."
Hoping that the strap "inclosed by
Cyrus William" was not a part of that
he had fallen into, the teacher accepted
his "vacuum" and maintained discreet
skype regarding his absence -- New
York Post
Stoadfast.
By having made with somewhat of good grace.
For do not brave them than I decline
To how to trouble graver far than
mine?
Pain twiste this body? Yes, but it shall
not
Shall be an empty one! Whatever my lot,
My banner, ragged, but nailed to the
mast.
Shall fly triumphant to the very last!
Others so much worse off than I have
fought.
Can I ignore the lesson they have taught?
Strike hands with me! Dark is the way
we go.
Do the courageous line it—that I
known.
-From "The Quot Courage," by Everard Jack Appleton
Wanted No Extras.
An auto dealer had a second hand car he wished to sell, so he set it out in front of his store with a card attached and the price $7.50 on the card. The hand made priceing was executed carefully, as such things sometimes are. A very "close" old farmer who had been wanting to buy a car for years, but who didn't like to spend much money, came along and glanced at the card—an auto for $7.50! He did think he might be willing to spend a couple of hundred for a car, but here was one for $7.50. He went home and wrote out a check and sent it to the dealer.
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The dealer wrote back saying that the "£5.50 check included would not buy the horn."
The next day he got a letter from the farmer, and this is what it said: "Will buy the auto without the horn."
-Indianapolis News.
'They Penged the Hole.
Lord Coleridge was once the visting of the varsity men at Oxford. He was addressing a large audience there when he used the phrase: "We must remember not merely the beauty of the individual colleges, but the beauty of Oxford as a whole. And what a whole it is."
"Hear, hear!" yelled the varsity men.
"Yes, what a hole!" they groaned.
"What a beauty hole."
Then it dawned upon Lord Coleridge that this was a thing he would rather have expressed otherwise -- London Tit-Bits.
It Was Hopeless.
"I have come to ask you, sir, how I can get out of marrying your daughter."
The earnest young man who a moment before had entered the office of his future father-in-law sank objectively into a seat. The elder man gazed at him not unsympathetically.
"How did you come to say you would marry her?" he asked.
"It's the old story of a man's too trusting heart. I am unable. I assure you, to support your daughter in the style to which she has been unacustomed, which is the only way to marry nowadays. We are not fitted for eachother. But one evening my sentiment got the best of me, and I used foolish words to which she now holds me. I am coming to you to ask you to help me out."
The elder man clasped him by the hand, his voice filled with deep emotion.
"My boy," he whispered, "it's no use. Better marry her and get it over with. I can do nothing. Her mother did the same thing to me."—Life.
His Authority..
General Winfield Scott, the hero of the Mexican war, used a secretary for all his correspondence, private as well as official. Once, in the absence of his secretary, he undertook to write an order for the transferring of some previous and spelled "wagon" "wagoon." Later the secretary in looking through the various memoranda, etc., found the order and defected the serror.
"General," he asked amably, "by what authority do you spell 'wagon' with a double a?" Scott never turned a hair as he replied without a moment's hesitation: "By what authority? By the authority of the major general commanding the armies of the United States, sir! What better do you want?"
LOGIC OF A LUNATIC.
The Crazy Man Knew Where to Draw
the Line on His Contract.
Orville L. Kiplinger, chapman of the Michigan City (bnd.) reformatory, tells the following instance of a scrupulous conscience:
Some years ago an insane patient was given to the immodest, not to say expensive, habit of tearing his clothing from him and converting jeans, ticking, denim or whatever the clothes were made of into carpet rags.
The person physician demonstrated with the shredding nut as follows:
"Say, old man, you're certainly making a lot of unnecessary trouble for us. We don't think it's fair. Wouldn't you like to make money?"
The insane man emphatically averred his willingness to earn reily cash.
"Well, I'll tell you what I'll do," resumed the doctor. "I will give you to cents for every day you don't tear your clothes or chl?
The offender assented eagerly and started in to make good. Tuesday his clothes remained intact; Wednesday ditto; Friday and Saturday the same. His information was the talk of the institutional.
But on Sunday morning the garment the crazy man had worn all week were torn into strips and thrown to the four wards of his cell.
"What does this mean?" asked the indignant play a man. "I thought I had you hired to keep your clothes on and be good."
"Weil," said the prisoner immediately, "you didn't suppose I was going to work on Sunday, did you?" Judge
Anxieting Trouble
A great part of the happiness of life
could be in fighting battles, but in
avoiding them. A masterly retreat is
in itself a victory. Longfellow.
Had the Laugh on Dow
Neal How was once rolled into the Portland police station on a Saturday night to confront a tips' leak agent who insisted that they drank brandy and water together on a Sound boat. When the trade apostle of temperance got there the fellow explained that he drank the brandy and bow the water.
A. Dual Reputation:
An Grantfield Rowe tells the story, a certain distinguished English actor, whom we may safely call Jones. Brown, plays a persistent but horrific game of golf. During a recent visit to this country the actor in question occasionally visited the links of a well
C. C. D.
"A WOOK PLAYER THAN YOU ARE."
known country club in Westchester county, near New York.
After an especially miserable show of impatience one morning, he flung down his driver in disgust.
"Caddy," he said, addressing the silent youth who stood alongside, "that was nwful, wasn't it?
"Purty bad, sir," stated the boy.
"I freely confess that I am the worst golfer in the world," continued the actor.
"Did you ever see a worse player than I am?"
"No, sir. I never did," confessed the boy truthfully. "But some of the other boys was tellin' me yustidly about a gentleman that must be a worse player than you are. They said his name was Jones-Brown." Saturday Evening Post.
Cast Besides the Waters
A lady who lives at Oyster Bay, on going to her front door the other morning, was startled to find a burly police-man preparing to ring.
"What do you want?" she asked.
"I'm sorry, marm, but there's been a man committed suicide down there on the shore."
"Oh, horrible!" broke in the lady, trembling.
"And I'm noighty sorry to tell you that the coat he left behind him has your husband's name in it."
"Oh, oh!" shrieked the lady and promptly fainted.
But her Irish maid, who had a good head on her shoulders, even before she tried resuscitation, called up her master's town office and got the reassuring news that he was there safe and sound and doing business as usual.
And the lady speedily recovered from her swoon.
"Yes, I do," quoth Jane. "only I cut the name out of the Naming Stro."—New York Post.
She looked Beauty, but she Had a Fine Song of Humor. There is on the Breton coast a little必备 resort needed in an admirable setting of rocks and groves and equipped with a Grand hotel of the beach which has been transformed in these sadly changed days into a hospital for the wounded soldiers of France; for all that there are other people on the sands besides the convulsive heroes and especially any number of pretty women always ready to lend their help to the doctors in charge. Among those a charming 'actress was particularly lavish with her attentions to the soldiers. One day when she was present a big dark follow manifested an invitingly repgrunce to a bitter dose which by the doctor's orders he was to drink.
"If you are a good boy and do what the doctor tells you," said the doctor "you may kiss me."
Instantly and with one grip the big fellow swallowed the stuff, wiped his
D. B.
great mustache he and claimed his reward. It was all done so pretty that even the head surgeon permitted himself to smile.
But the real comedy began when the head nurse, a homely matron turning fifty, appeared the next morning and announced.
"Every one of you who takes his machete will be allowed to kiss me."
The effect was immediate. Each and every patient made a face and put down on the table beside him the dose which he had been about to swallow.
Now the head nurse is goodness it, and her goodness is well spiced with wilt. She was the first to laugh at the result of her invitation. Then she pretended to be muggy.
"Very well!" she cried. "Every mother's son of you that hasn't taken his medicine in five minutes will be condemned to kiss me."
The soldiers launched in their turn,
and every glass was hastily packed up
and promptly emptied. New York
Post.
Mistiko.
Neither it nor class nor wrong directions discourage these. There is precious instruction to be given by finding we are doing. Carlyle.
No Reciprocity
Karl Weilman pitches for one of the St. Louis teams in the big leagues. As might be guessed from his name, he is German.
"Say," demanded an opposing butsman "one day last spring, "why don't you go back to Germany and fight for the fatherland?"
"Who, me?" demanded Karl. "Not on your life! Did the kaiser send anybody over here to help me last fall when I was pitching in all those tough double headers?" - Saturday. Evening Post
A. But of Correspondence.
The following correspondence, ending in true Irish fashion, actually passed between two men in England some years ago.
"Mr. Thompson presents his compliments to Mr. Simpson and begs to request that he will keep his doggs from trepassing on his grounds."
"Mr. Simpson presents his compliments to Mr. Thompson and begs to suggest that in future he should not spell 'doggs' with two gees."
"Mr. Thompson's respects to Mr. Simpson and will feel obliged if he will add the letter 'o' to the last word in the note just received, so as to represent Mr. Simpson and lady."
"Mr. Simpson returns Mr. Thompson's note unopened, the imperfine it contains being only equaled by its vulgarity."
The Crucial Test.
At an adjourned,town council meeting a member casually mentioned that a person could not enjoy or even (listinguish between drinks in the dark. A worthy bailie denied this and offered to bet that, blindfolded, he could name any drink given him. The bet being accepted and the bailie blindfolded, the test commenced. The bailie drank everything submitted, amached his lip and correctly named the drink until the taker was in despair. Then "try him wi' water," whispered a counselor, and the hint was taken. Bip—smack—sip—a shake of the head—I cannot just mind the name o' this, but I mind o' tastin' it when I was a wee liddle.
His Choice
She always praised the book.
But he really missed it.
But she knew how to cook.
Disappointing.
Ji her book "The Story of a Princess"
Dr. Anna Shaw tells of her first position as a schoolteacher when she
was fifteen and the salary of $2 a week not to be paid until the dog tax was collected in the spring. With the $26 for her first labor of thirteen weeks she went "outside" to the nearest shop and bought a beautiful party dress—her first. It brought her her first proposal, made by a youth of twenty, "whose costume, like himself, left much to be desired." On the night of the proposal he wore a blue flannel shirt
O
HER FIRST PROPOSAL, and a pair of treasurers made of four bags. His mother had thoughtfully selected a clean pair of sacks for the purpose, as one leg of the treasurers bore the words "A. & A. Green," and on the rear of the garment was the legend, "Ninety six pounds." To a negative response to his proposal the youth exhibited: "That's darned disappointing to a fellow."
Somehow Good
Oh, yet we trust that somehow good
Will be the final goal of ill.
To pangs of nature, sighs of will.
Defects of doubt, and tails of blood;
That nothing waits with agonies feast.
That no one life shall be destroyed
Or cast an enbust to the void.
When God hath made the pule complete
That not a worm is shown in vain.
That not a moth with with desire
Is abloved in frustures fire
Or but subsist another's gaze.
Hebold, we know not anything;
I can but trust that good shall fall
At last fatten at last to kill.
And every winter change to spring
So runs my dream, but what am I?
An infant crying in the night.
An infant crying for the light.
And with no moaning but a cry.
Only on Approval.
At the Wednesday evening service in the church parliars in a certain New York parish the minister chose honesty for the subject of his brief discourse. In less than a quarter of an hour he found time to lambaste nearly everybody who had ever deviated from the narrow path, but he was particularly hard on those persons who order things, on approval. After the sermon everybody enjoyed himself socially. There were some big guns there from other parliates, and the parliars had been done up especially for the evening. There were two lovely new red velvet chairs that the minister found particularly comfortable. He complimented the head of the furnishing committee on her thrift and taste. On Friday evening there was an other meeting in the parliars. The minister looked around first thing for those velvet chairs.
"What have you done with them, Mrs Blank?" he said to the head of the committee. "Oh," said she serenely, "they went back yesterday." The furniture store just sent them up for Wednesday night on approval."
Paid Her Back
"When I was in America," writes Dennis Slaten in "Twenty Years of My Life." "Eugene Field edited one of the great Chicago dailies and was the principal author of the west. My first meeting with him was a character little one. I was at an at home in New York, talking to the editors of a fashion paper who had also written books of twaddly gush about travel. The hostess brought up Field and introduced him to the editors.
"Very glad to meet you, ma'am," he said. "I think I may say that I have read all your books with the greatest interest."
"Are you a writer, Mr. Field?" she asked. "I am sorry to say that I have never heard of you."
"Nor I of you, ma'am, but you might have pretended, name as I did."
Fitted In Nicely
There was no mistake about it, the judge was asleep. The embarrassed lawyer, who had reached the telling point of his argument, spoke in a higher key and then raised his voice until the walls of the room reverberated. Bus the judge slept on.
The court officers were blind to the young lawyer's blinds. At last in desperation he turned to his opponent. "Now, Mr. Grubber, you see the delicate situation I am in, and there's only one way out. Unfortunately I haven't any books with me, but if you don't mind I am going to knock over that pair of yours."
With well directed gesture the young lawyer struck the books, and they, as well as the chair on which they had been standing, went down with a terrific crash just as his astonished opponent leaped to his feet and exclaimed:
"But I do most emphatically object! And the judge, without raising his head from the position it had been on, copying for the last fifteen minutes, replied with all his wonted dignity: 'I Jeopardy outruped!'
The Robert Courteous
An Irishman was one day looking at the notice, "Your King and Country Need You." A delicate looking Englishman happened to be peasing by and, thinking to have a joke at Pat's expense, started the following: Englishman—Well, Pat, will you vote unteer for the front? Irishman—Begob, I will if you come Englishman—Why do you want me with you? Irishman—fure, when the bishop sees you be will lose his peace. He'll think the British are going from the dead—St. Louis Globe-Democrat:
The Protective Law of 1912 Has Done More Than Was Expected.
That the fur-scales of the Pribilt islands have so increased since the passage of the protective law of 1912 that the resumption of limited commercial scaling is advisable for the welfare of the seal herds is the conclusion of the special commission sent to the islands last summer by the bureau of fisheries of the department of commerce.
The law of 1912 provided that the killing of all seals, with the exception of a few needed by the native of these northern islands, should be stopped for five years and that 5,000 three-renew-old males should be maintained as an annual breeding reserve during the life of the treaty suspending pelagic scaling which was concluded by the United States, Russia, Japan and Great Britain in 1911.
The commission finds that the law of 1012 has fully done what was expected of it, the annual herd of pups during 1014 being almost twice as large as it was in 1000. The commission has reached the conclusion that there is a considerable overstock of male seals and that "this constitutes the principal undesirable feature of the herd as found in 1014. The welfare of the herd demands that some of them should be killed in 1015." This year there are available to be killed $1,754 males, from whose skins the government could, get $1 revenue amounting to $2,715, whereas the combined suspension of sealing will bring about a useless and even harmful excess of males and a minimum loss in skins of $2,756,000 to be divided among the workers in Outlook.
Not Too Strong - Hint
Mrs. Morgan had a colored maid named Sarah. One Sunday afternoon the mistress saw Sarah's lover leaving the house and in a suit of white dress. A little later, when the maid appeared, Mrs. Morgan said:
"Sarah, that been of yours should never wear white. He is so very black that white clothes make him appear all the blacker. Why don't you give him a blazer?"
"Why, Miss Morgan," said Sarah with adulation. "I done give him or let ob blasts, but he jes' matterly isn't got no sense an he didn't take 'em."
"I probably you don't make the hints strong enough," said the mistress.
"Well, no, I'm, data 'jes' what I think myself," agreed Sarah reflectively.
"I don't believe I did. I just looks at him right behind me." says Nigah, yo' abo' do look like a black snake crawl' out ob cream, you do." Theys' jes' all I says to him, Miss Morgan."—Everybody's.
AGENTS FOR PLANET
You Can Secure The Planet Any Week From These Agents In Various Cities.
J. M. Buford, Pulaski, Va.
W. H. Green 752 N. 8th st., Stepbenville, Ohio.
Columbia News Agency Inside mall, Washington D. C.
M. C. Walter 1100 W. Leigh St. city, Clarence Williams, 1411 Rose St., city.
Charles W. McGillis, P. O. Box 1776
Salt Lake City, Utah.
William H. Moore, Wilmington, N. C.
E. P. Mackens, 1116 Pine St., Phila.
Pa.
Harry A. Clark, 117 Craghead St.
Danville, Va.
C. Branum, 6*7 Shawmut Avenue
Boston Mass.
Douglass A. A. P. A., care F. R. Purnell,
Providence R. L.
Thomas E. W. Perry, 2 Jones Place,
Norfolk Va.
E. A. Williams, 200'W. 63rd St., New
York City.
J. E. Schmidt, 262 W. 35th St., Now
City,
Jesse W. Shreaves, 99 Lippincott Ave. Long Branch N. J.
John S. Ashby, 212 Walworth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
A. O. Smith, 717 St. Claude St., New Orleans La.
Peter Thompson, 713 N. Second St. City.
J. H. Allen, 12 B. Augusta Street Staunton Va.
Wm H. Scott, 2218 E. Main St., City N. Winston, 587 Brook Ave., City J. A. Stokes, 1411 Fitzwater St., Philadelphia Pa.
Frank H. Weaver, 2815 Central Ave., Cleveland Jake.
J. W. Nuby, 1728 7th, st., Oakland Cal.
J. C. Allen, 2107 Marshall Ave., Newport News Va.
J. E. Branham 4401 Central Ave. Cleveland Ohio.
A. D. Hayes, 2640 State St. Chicago Ill.
B. B. Webster, Florence S. C.
B. K. Thumm, 1402 Ytle Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Quaker City Adv. Co., 1231 Pine St. Philadelphia Pa.
RENDENCK—610 N. First St.—Shop in Rear. 'Phone, Randolph 2166.
Special Attention Paid to the Takking of Contracts for Building of
Any Style of Architecture. Job Work a Specialty.
ROBERT C SCOTT, Funeral Director
FIRST CLASS LIVERY. OFFICE 2220 E. MAIN ST.
TELEPHONE, RANDOLPH 2073. ALL NIGHT
AND SUNDAY, CALL RANDOLPH 2703.
RICHMOND, VA.
CHARTING BY THE MAGIC IS 9 JULY 1909
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANY WHERE IN U.S. 120 SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY OR ADDRESS ALL LETTERS TO Magic Shampoo Drier Co. Minneapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY'S CROWNING GLORY. And every lady can have it if she will use the Magic. The Magic will dry the hair after a shampoo or bath, and straighten the curliest head of hair. It will also stimulate its growth. The Alandstein Comb cannot injure the hair, because it is never heated direct, but takes its heat from the heating bar which is heated on our Alcohol Heater, or any other heater. We advise the use of Hayer Hair Pens 5x. Bert on the market. Price per box, $64. Alcohol heater, price $84. Liberal terms to agents.
Write for literature today.
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY. MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
PHOTOS--We Offer you the Latest and Most Artistic Photos at a More Moderate Figure than you can obtain elsewhere. Special Attention Paid to Children. We will also be Pleased to Quote you Prices on Exterior and Interior View Work.
ENLARGING AND COPYING FROM OLD PHOTOS A SPECIALTY.
GEORGE O. BROWN, Photographer
603 NORTH SECOND ST., RICHMOND, VA.
L. H. Walker, 2003 Wythe Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa.
James Evans, Box 28 Stewartsville,
Ohio.
Thomast Johnson, Box 212 West
United News Agent, 206 Market
St. San Francisco, Cal.
C. F. Graves Elizabeth City N. C.
John H. Williams Box 103 New
Oriental La.
Hurbert Gross, 674 Broadway, Albany
N. Y.
H. L. May, 435 St. Antoine Street,
Detroit Mich.
J. J. Amos 1063 N. 7th St., Paducah,
Ky.
W. L. Staggs, Suffolk, Va.
W. B. Trevillian, Outside Mall Charleston West Virginia.
Willie Tolliver, 707 Depot St., Winston, N. C.
Madison Stanfield, 153 Wells Alley, Rosnoke, Va.
J. C. Boyd, Urbanna Va.
C. J. Taylor, 75 W. 135th St., New York, N. Y.
Warren W. Lee, Fredericksburg, Va.
A. Eichotburger and Co., 142 Lenox St, Boston, Mass.
Wilmer G. Fox, P. O. Box 339 Phila., Pa.
Austin Rouse Lexington Virginia.
D. J. FARRAR, Co.
Office: Room, No. 405, M.
PHONE, RANE
RESIDENCE—610 N. First St—Shop
Special Attention Paid to the Tak
Any Style of Architecture
ROBERT C. SCOTT
FIRST CLASS LIVERY. C
TELEPHONE, RANDOLPH
AND SUNDAY, CALL
RICHMOND
BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY
have it if she will use the Magic. The Magic will straighten the earliest head of hair. It will also stiffen not injure the hair, because it never heated directly, is heated on our Alcohol Hater, or any other heat. Best on the market. Price per box, $4. Alcohol 10%.
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY
PHOTOS—We Offer you the Latest
More Moderate Figure than you can
Attention Paid to Children.
to Quote you Prices on E
View Wo
ENLARGING AND COPYING FROM
GEORGE O. BROWN
603 NORTH SECOND ST.,
```markdown
```
or no charge, no matter what your diet
and restores you to perfect health. The
leading gene in the United States and
of the most wonderful bounties of all con-
nents but herbs, rocks, burds, herbs,
fewers and plants in my possession. I
most skilful physician, and the best in
Europe have given up to do, and said
My husband Oro the Pulvering-
ation, Blind Kidney, Bladder, Styrene,
Two Throat, Lute, Dyspnea, Nausea,
Fum, Pulp, and Acting of my Bone Gum
Disease, All Intestine Gastrointestine, all Pleura,
Hue, Gastrointestine, Bone Gum, Cancer
of a mole in an intestine, Mucus, Pleura,
Kidney or Bladder Disease of the Kidney
may no number of which nature. Good
specifically.
We recommend and encourage. For your
praise up in A. B. Kidney, the King
Harry Jackson, 121 Willoughby St. Brooklyn N. Y.
Owl Drug Co., Boynton, Okla.
Miss Pearl Woodson 2351 5th Ave. New York N. Y.
Claybrone Shelly, 2319 Market St. St. Louis, Mo.
Chas. F. Wall. Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tenn.
C. Ford, 1318 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal.
Rev. C. H. Harmon, 139 Mt. Vernon Ave., Camden, N. J.
Mrs. A. D. Bordon, 274 N. Main St., Cambridge, Mass.
D. Collins, Post Office, Newport R. I.
THE ECONOMY
327 N. FIRST ST.
Fine Tailoring
Cleaning, Dyeing and
Repairing
CHITMAN M. WHITE
• Proprietor
Contractor & Builder
Mechanics' Bank Building
RANDOLPH 2627.
Shop in Rear. 'Phone, Randolph 2164.
Taking of Contracts for Building of
furniture. Job Work a Specialty.
TT, Funeral Director
OFFICE 2220 E. MAIN ST.
RANDOLPH 2073. ALL NIGHT
ALL RANDOLPH 2703.
MOND, VA.
THE MAGIC DRIVER
HAIR STRAIGHTENER
AILED ANY WHEN IN U.S. 100
PORTAGE PAID
HOLD MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
address all letters to Music Shampoo Drier Co.
minneapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
ADPT'S CROWNING GLORY.—And every lady can
will dry the hair after a shampoo or bath, and
estimate its growth. The Alandheim Comb can
stret, but takes its beat from the heating bar which
heater. We advise the use of Hayer's Hair Pens in
col Heater, price $80. Liberal terms to agents.
literature today.
ANY, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
best and Most Artistic Photos at a
can obtain elsewhere. Special
We will also be Pleaseed
Exterior and Interior
Work.
OM OLD PHOTOS A SPECIALTY.
WN, Photographer
RICHMOND, VA.
L. J. HAYDEN
MANUFACTURER OF
Pure Herb Medicines
To Cure All Diseases or no
Charges.
DO YOU LOVE HEALTH?
ee ee IGM wetaien Gated (ee :
eres ee nce, FECES VINE " : ve
ee eer WS st Bee? 22 ee eae mare. 6h TU PT Pe ee: Chee a i a
ARBEST-FATHER
OF GIRL CAPTIVE
Mn Wit Up. doen
AEE Without Bail.
WARRANT. OUT 6A WIFE
ee eg ee Reet
With Integt to Murder for Impris
ontng Girt Eleven Years.
Frank Marshall, the St. Michael’
farmer, Who {s' accused of impris:n
ing bis daughter, Grage, twenty-cigh!
vance off in anallle room et bk
farmboufo. for olevon yoars to break
up a achool girl: romance, was held
without ball by Justice of the Peace
‘Tharp, in Easton, Md, for a furthe!
hearing.
Marshall wag arrested at the howe
of a’ brother, W. O, Marshall, ness
Kirkham, about six mites from East
on. Sheriff Stophenn and a half dor
en constablos:had beom searching fot
him. “Marsball teft bis farm house
after telephoning a challenge to the
uheriff to come and get him. He
threatened to shoot any one whe
came on the farm to-serve warrant
~? Marshall accompanted the sherif
, withput a word. He frst was taken
fs m* motorcar to the farm houses
~WEre Be" apORS “10 hin wife, “Rowe;-a
few minutes. “You had better wall
for some money,” she sald to him ar
Re stepped In the sheriff's car.
“T™aon't need any to get out of
this,” replied the farmor.
A large crowd awaited the arrival
‘ot the machine, -bat there was nc!
demonstratian as‘tte prisoner walked
fato the juntice’s office, and a minute
later ‘was encorted acrosn the street
to tho: Tslbot ‘county ‘jall, Maraball |
who {a charged with assault with: i |
tent to murdor, may not be given his
further hearing fora week.
White Marshall wan’ arraigned be
fore Justice Tharp,'a warrant was is.
sued dy Juxtice | Dolson, of St
Michacls, fof the arrest of hie wife
the stepmother of Grace, on the,
charxe of assault. The complaint
was made by Miss Emma lL. Davies
agent gf tbe Children's Aid society
‘Tharp tarlior hax fssued a writ for
Mrs. Marshall, but. after conferring
with lawyers, refused to permit It-te
be served. Hé declared the “wife
could not be arrested an a co-princi
pal with her husband.
Grace Marshall, {gnorant of: the out
barst of indignation ~.sproading!
thronghout the Eastern Shore because
of her {mprisonment, fs lying at the
home of Mra, M. H. James, an aunt,
and Is responding rapidty to nursing,
Marshall denied ‘he had imprisoned!
the girl to break up a school girl ro,
mance. At the same time, restdente}
recall that her sweetheart was John}
Yowall, a farmband, twice ber age].
who died Svo yearn ago, Yowall’sy
death was sald to be hastened by an},
impression that the girl was dead. |:
‘Tho Marshalls, the’ authorities say,] .
annionnced about that time that theit| ‘
danghter was dead. They say they!
karo out thin news when another.
daughter, much younrer, died of diph-|
theria., School chums“of Graco Mar}:
shall were footed by the assertion, {1}
a declared, and @ group ef her class
mates sent Sowers for the funeral. s
The farmer, who fs fifty years old} |
nd fa a tonant on the farm of for|
ner State Senator Richard 8. Dodson,} §
. Democratic power in Talbot county,|
leclared that he did-not pen up ‘he !
irl on account of tho romazce, but
ecause she was insans, This state
nent, towerer, {8 contradicted by
enator Dodson, who recalled that
bout eloven. years ago Marshall went} 1
o hisshome and sald he inteaded “ta| 4
hoot a mah bothering bis daushtet."|
“*It’s all a Mo about me treating my
aughter brutally,” shouted Marshall 9
She is crazy and wo hopt her at the] ,
arm to givo her kind treatment. We
ould not bear to have her taken to| 4
‘hospital, where she would be away.
rom us.” ‘Mrs. Marshal! said she| 2
exsonaily attetided Grace daily. t
Chariton is Free
Porter Chariton, the Americas
who recently was tried in Como,
Ttaly, oa a charge of murdering his
wife and who was fowsd gufity asd
wentenced to six years and eight
months’ imprisonment, was relensed.
He is in good health and spértts.
By reason of the time thet Chart
tom had been under restraint. and sa
‘additions! one year taken from his
eontence under su amnesty, Chariten
was compefied to serve.oaly tweaty-
ve days. ip ptizvon ‘after his convio
ten and beatence.” Chariton’ killed
Bete wide tn 1910 and placed the body
fm 9 trenk asd threw it ato lake
Come. ea a
Roasts wnere'He Fate,
Muthes - Everitt, the proprietor:
the Wetdipert 9itk mill nad the own
F @ tntther Norge otk will ot Kaw
Pa, wes found dead in? his
2 ore oa mage, gt ‘es. Oe
$00 teem: miecing for twesty-foar
i Sass Saat that. be 2
Sa Sk ee
a ibe furnace. il aight,
‘feet wall Captein slain
Wiliam Parker, aged twenty, cap
tala of the ,Wheeling Hist school
ope belt Seas as Satay de
3 ima game at Buckhamnoa,
W. Va. Parker's hoad was’ hurt
fa, the frst play, but he remained {2
the game unt!l near the close of the
iret half. Ho died an hour later from
hemorrhage of the brain. |
GENERAL: LEWIS HALL.
Heads Gritish Air Scouts In
A] France; Gets Aviators License
z
| Mr. Barner went with bis son to
the place where the boy found ‘the
explosive and unearthed a loox fuse,
partly burnt, leading to. the middle of
the road. Digging deeper, the father
Gacoveted a stick of dynamite. The
motive for planting dynamite in the
lonely country road l# a mystery to
the authorities. .
fun For the Tar.
& Now Jersey ben spying a barrel of
fine, noft tar, alighted thereon and laid
an ce& Thero resulted a firmly bound
sandwich, tar. cgg and chicken In the
oréer named. “A woman and a man,
who went to the rescue, were also
held fast by the bands until the po-
Ice were enlled and effected a rescue:
Exchange.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
> Mase Wae'la te Cae.
sImpacted cerufien In the eare
interferes with hearing. Some
canes of seafness are due wholly
to the external atiditory canal
y belng Oiled up with hardened ce.
Fumen, and’ nftet this bas been
y remove! the hearing Is restored.
) Wheres ft tx not convenient oF
possible to call upon a physician
to have the wax taken, out of the
} canal some one at home may
| give the necessary treatment,
which fs quite simple. Buy an
ounce of glycerin and a medicine
dropper. At bedtime drop fire
dropn of the glycerin in the ear
“when tying down, with the af-
Mlcted “ear uppermost. After
dropping in the glycerin Io still
in the same ponltion for ten mtn-
uter, Then treat the otker ear in
tho name manner if it needs at-
tention. Continue Chis treatment
for three consecutive nights, The,
morning of the fourth day ayr-
Inge out the affected car or ears «
(uke a noft rubber car syringe) |
with warm water, a tumblerfal,
io which ove teaspoonful of phe _
nol nodique has been attrred. |
This wilt Wring away the wax, |
which hax been softened and dis. |
lodged bs the glycerin applica. :
tions, ¥ ‘
GENERAL_MARKETS.
PHILADELPHIA.—FLOUR quiet;
pingg clear. $4.90@¢5.10: clty “mis
UYe roun—aatet: per barrel
near quiet: No. 2 rod, new
Freon quiet: No. 2 yellow, 74%@
ATS quict: No. 2 white, 44%@
Bic. lower Fates, 43c,
ae ULTRY: Live steady: bens. 140
3, 01d, Dress
Heaiz? enoice fowls, 19¢.; ol ros
ieee ER firm: “Fancy creamery,
pady; selected s5@47C.;
ee ee Soo
Live’ Steck Quotations
eeTTIGAGO.—HO08 “tends. Mixed
end beichers. $6.2004.75: toot. Reavy,
Ee sea aarti 3
‘LE—steady. Beeves, $4400
36: cows and hellers, $398.30;
Hepes, Pesoghao: lie. PRs
ee teady, '10e:" lower, Na-
Bits, Tere ere: lamas,
‘That New York trock driver with an
lepers voice and style might well .ex-
‘ebange jobs with some 20 called sing:
90 new superfvces on the stage. * |
Apple, pie fs an tastitution wBich
mover seeds sm introduction, a revival
Rev a’ higher op certificate that it’ fe
the find mother weed'to mabe, -
CT eerie
& year dooce we will sot be able.to
ane anything se retatively unimportant
an 6 Werld wer. watt] election fo over
| He fe
Si. ret coos nad “seer
i +R ABR
mere
+t. THUROOAY.
< Naly- has landed an. expeditionsry
force-at Salonika: to aid the Freach
‘nd English forces in Serbia. Bub
garians in. the meantime, have cap
tured Prilip, and are moving wpos
Monastir: ~The Serbian force which
was dislodged at Babuna pass ‘1s sup:
posed to havo yeen driven Into Al:
Dania. In & new offensivo the Brit
tah have gained 280 yards of Turkish
trenches on Qalltpol!. peninsula;
Potroxrad oMictal reports “aly the
Russias aro pushing thelr campaign
in Courland, that they have captured
trenches south of Dvinsk and ‘thal
thoro {s heavy fighting along the Styr
river. The Russian council of mtats-
ters has clovod down 1000 industrial
plants owned by aliens, throwipg 30,-
000° mon out of work. 7
Violent cannonading fn thd forest
of Glvencby, and artillory ongaxe-
ments along’ the Aleno and Somme
rivers, are reported by the Parts war
oMce. Berlin says a British surprise
attack hotween Mcssines and Armen-
tleros failed. x
FRIDAY.
Germany announces the conquest o
af Sorbin, as she existed bofore the
Balkan war. Bulearian troops sr
pressing on toward Monaalir, in south
Serbia, -
| Berlin announces that German sub
marines have sink two British sub
mariner and a British auxillary crots
er off tho north coast of Africa.
A bitter xtrugelo tor Gorz, Austria
f= In progress, and Italy In said to be
preparing to hurl 600,000 men against
ite fortifications.
Aumslan alrmes setin Have ruled
Venice, cid German air Yalds against
Poperinghe and Luncville, on the
westerm front, also are’ reported.
Potrograd officially announces the
Germans have been driven back,
south of Riga, and répulscd fo thelr
offensive efforts, near Dvinsk. © The
Germans are said to have lost 200,000
men on the eastern front during Oc:
tober. :
BATURDAY.
' Monaatir, in southern Serbia, is re
portod.captured by the Bulgars. Fer
ther north, the main Serblan army
has been forced back nearer to the
Montenegrin frontier. Berlin an
ounces the capture of 2800 Serbs.
| Genova hears that Austrians admil
the capture of Gorz by the Itallans 1
{novitable. * Auntrian armen have
m@ed Udine, Verons, Vicanza and
Grado, in the Province of Vonetta,
killing twelve persona.
Petrograd reports that 700,000 new
Russian troops will bo ready for tho
front I a mfonth, and that by spring
2,000,000 new and well equipped men
wih be prepared to tako.the field.
Snow and cold weathor favo interfer.
e4 with operationx in Russia, Lon-
don hears the Russians havo retired
to the east hank of the Styr, tn Gall:
cia,
SUNDAY.
The Austrian forta at Gorizia have
Deon smashed by the Italian guns, 1
Genova despatch says. Italtan gains
also are abnouncet tn the region of
Oslava and on Monte San Michole.
Five hundred delegates of British
trade unions passed a resolution
pledging resistance by revolt {f neces
sary of the regulations shortening the
hours for the xale of Iquot.
Join the allics or demobilize ts the
demand made by the entente allies
to Greece, saya an Athonn report. A
commercial blockade of Greece also
has been proclaimed, the despatch
also doclares.
By Mereety opposing the Auatrian
advance, Montenegrin troops have ap-
parently saved the retreating Serbian
army, giving {t time to escapo the
quickly closing net drawn about it by
the: AustroGerman and Bulgartan
forces, :
* MONDAY.
* The allies have dociared a block
ade agatoxt Greece, in an attempt t
compel axaurances ‘that Serb troop:
will not be interned 4 driven beyonce
thetr own borders. as the Germant
powers Insist they shall. be.
Serb: successes aro reported from
Macedonia, where it in said the Bul
garlans have been forced from Prilip
English troops havo reached Monge
tir, Sorbla, and Serbian forces arc
moving to form a Junction with them.
‘Berlin reports the capture of 2000 ger
Diana fn north, Serbia,
Italian operations: agalost . Gorz
Austria, progress, aad {ts fall ts ox
pected momentarily.
Operations along the Riga-Dvinsk
front, fo Rossia, temporarily are is
abeyance. Petrograd reports heavy
fighting along the Styr river, and the
recapture by the czars troops of
‘Tebartoryak, in that region.
Heavy artillery action by the allies
along the battle front in France is
Tegarded by the Germans as a pre
Inde’ to another general offensive.
| -
U-Boats Bink. Two British Shipe
‘The British steamships Hallam.
shire, 4420 tons gross, and Mergan-
ser, 1905 tons, have-been sunk. Their
crews were saved. The British steam:
ship Salsette, from London for Bom:
bgy, ts Ashore south of Ras Abu Bo-
fo the gulf of Suer. She has
signalled for assistance. ¥ {
‘Generals Daughter Diss
Mrs. Joho: T. Wilson, daughter of
General Wayne McMahon, of the Coa-
federate army, died suddenly at the
Rome of her‘danghter tm Huntington,
W. Va, of acute indigestion.
Bey Hammers Dynamite”
| Tanne, twelveyearold son of New.
‘tom Barner, residing noar Setine-
Breve, picked wp .a dynamite cap ly-
a Sige the Mate highway.
1@ boy tried to ‘fatten the cay by
posting ‘K with 2 steno, when ®
exploded, tearing away his two Se
gave and thamd of his left head.
1)o YouWantanUmbrella? ;
' _ Well, hereat is. The Hull Bros: Umbrella Company will guarantee them. .
+ The Detachable Handle enables you to reduce its length and put it into your
traveling bag or.trunk without injury to the Umbrella. We‘ have ordered a
~ consignment of these Umbrellas, all of which are excellent quality.
¢ Twenty-five Dollars worth of Umbrella Coupons entitle you to one. Um-
€_ brella, lady or gent. Specify the-kind you want and we will send the Umbrella .
$ upon receipt of the Coupons. ,
. How ToGet One. -
For every cent paid on a subscription or job work you are ‘entitled to a
coupon for that amount. Our customers who pay for their work can get
Coupons and secure.an Umbrella. Wedo not allow Umbrella Coupons and $
Voting Cotipons, too. You can‘get the one or the other. Call at The Planet $
> Office and inspect the Umbrellas.
When you purchase a copy of The Planet for five cents, this gives you five
cents worth of Coupons. When the number you have equals $25.00, bring
a Planet Office and get a Ladies’ or a Gent's Detachable Handle’
im! ‘
_ _ The Plaiiet will be sent to you four months for fifty cents; six months for
eighty cents; one dollar and fifty cents per year.
‘We Print Bills, Tickets, Letter-heads, in fact, everything. We do Linotype 3
Work for the Trade, at the Lowest Prices. -
THE PLANET _ ||\MBRELLASOUPON
311 N. Fourth St. - Richmond, Virginia | f(D FOR SCENTS
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z, Na a eek aaa
q *
HILLSTROM SHOT
| IN UTAH PRISON
Stayer Is Put -te Death by
| Firing Squad.
——
HE GAVE ORDER TO SHOOT
re an brent win sats 988
| Joseph Hitlstrom, condemned mur
dorer, whose case attracted attentlot
throughout the country and prompt-
€d the Intercession of President Wil:
son, the minister to the United States
from Sweden -and the American Fed:
jeration of “abor, wax put to deatb
by a firing squad in tlie state prison,
at Salt Lake City.
| Hfllatrom was convicted of the mur.
der of John Q. Morrison, a grocer,
and his son, Arig, January 10, 1914.
Under the Jaw, he was silowo) to
choose bet@ern shooting and. “hang:
tem. He wan tho nineteenth person to
pay tho denth ponalty in Utah and the
fifteenth to chocse shooting thatead
of hancing.
President Wilso1 twice appealed
for further respite for Hilistrom. The
president's second request, made
‘Thursday, wan denivd by Governor
Spry as not based on any new facts.
Although scif-posntessod, “when be
faced hie executioners, Hilistrom had
@ sensational nervous collapse just
Previously. He ited the door of Bia |
cell with etrips tora from hié blankets
and fought wpe uards fiercely with
the handle of = broom be had snatch-
e4 from an attendant In the corridar.
The outburst wes unexpected.
He arose and began t6 shake the
gell door, shrieking as {f in a night-
mare. The noise sesched the outelde
geards who turned {a a gen
The prison physician tried wi stint
patcess to quiet the man. It.was ée
cided not to interfere with him anti!
mecessary and he was not distarbed
watil the time to take him to the
scene of execution.
‘Whea the: guards arrived for this
purpose Hillatrom attacked them eay-
agely with the broomhandle, which he
bad broken in two,’ evidg & abarp
potat om one piece. - .
‘The depaty warden, A. 0. Ure, re.
estved a slight wound te the arm’
trom Hilletrom’s weapos. Wilistrem,
jaght stlentiy uatfl Sher® Corlene
arrived and appealed to him:
“Jee, this {a all: noacense a
Deriess.. “What do you mean? You
promived to die Hike a men.” HE}!
rom Desttated a moment and then!
Males. “Well Tm thewagh” Do aeie:
mmm: «
(“But you can't Mame na man for fieht
fng for nie ite."
} The firins “quad consisted of five
men, who were palit $49 orch for the
work. They «elected their riflen by
lot, one of the Weapons containing a
blank cartel tee,
The chair ror Hillstrom was pinced
against the Inner wall of tho prinon
facing a Larricade to conceal the fr.
$og quad ‘rom the condemned man
and the sretators, After he was
nented ativndants asked {fhe hind ans:
thing ty say. Herald:
“Genttonten, T dle with a clear con:
actence. never dil anything wron?
fo my Ifo. T die fighting, not Nke a
coward. Well, I'm gning, Rood-byo.”
Hillstronestaecered to the chatr and
his head droped as he waa atrappoi
fn, HMirin's collapse was attrib
uted to an uplate admintatercd after
he had offered reaistance io his coll.
‘The prison physiélan placed ® pa
per target directly over Hillatrom's
heart to gilde the members of tho
firing aquad.
‘When tho officer started to givo tha
command to firo Hiliatrom yelled:
“Let her go!" Tho squed -fred, and
four bullets plerced his heart.
Bye ee pea |
|} Orvis Walzer, of Rebersbuarg, Con
tre county, Va., han heen xo success
ful an a breeder of black Minoren
ebickenx that he fs trying hia band
at nnake hatching. a
Wednenilay he uncovered five doren
snake cgs: under & rock along the
new State roa:t he is helping to build
He collected the whole nest and car
ried ft home in his pocket.
Walker put the ogs iD a fruit Jar
and <‘set his {improvised incubator
tn the warm rays of the nun, He ex
pects to walt thirty days for the hatch
to come out, and saya if he has ocd
Tuck there will be about a quart of
Mule copperheads in the jar.
Fure Give Gict Anthrax
‘ Miss Sophia Rosen, ‘seventeen
yeare 1d, the third anthrax victim
in’ Now York within the last few
months, dicd there. 7
‘Tho girl ts belleved to have con
tracted the dinense, which {9 common
among ankmals, by weariox a far
neckplece, the skin of which bad not
been. propérly treated. :
‘When the xitl was admitted to the
hospital Wednesday: her caso,, was
diagnosed as drog potsoning and acute
nephritis. Threo houre later she be-
came unconscious and died. A cal:
ture taken from her neck showed ap
thrax bacilli, 3
g aemeaen 5) |
s Taking Ne Chances. 7
|, Officer—What ste you hiding bere:
‘for in your condition?
Gord Fellow—I'm ‘frald thie) some-
body. take me home—Indianspotie
Kews, :
ieee
An Epitash *
Here lies a eh -
‘Whove car had pater.
Medeaat Me
uty miles ee byer. >.
er oe
e—- The ——«
Scrap Book
| Eugene Mielf knew that Mr. Cleve
land prided himself on having a re
markably tne collection of the One
editions of Field's books, One day
Field watintered lazily inte Mr. Cleve
land's oitlee, z
“You think you have everything I'v
ever written, don't you, Cleveland?"
“Yes: certainty [ have,” wan the em:
phatic reply.
“Well, you're w Mar; you've nothing
of the Kind.” contcadicted Field coolly
as be pulled out of bin pocket a Trib-
une Primer. This wan his first book.
It wasa real paper covered pamphiet
of forts-elzti@pazes, published in Den
ver {n 1883 and very rare, even then,
and much coveted by collectors.
“There are only three'or-four coples
of thiy in the world,” suid Field. “I
have teen after the book for months
for Francis Wilson, but you can bare
it if you want It.” .
“Rut why let me have it tf you fn-
tended It for Mr. Wilson?" asked Mr.
Cleveland, puzzled.
“Just to bear him cuss," chuckled
Field. “You can have It for #25. . It
cost.ine $15, ands! want $10. for tho
trouble of bringing it up in the cle-
vator,” and Field departed well pleas-
ed with the auccesy of hin mission.—
McBride's Magazine. -
Make the World Bright-
When you hear of good tn people—tell 1t
When you hear & tale of evii—quell 1.
Lot the coodness havo the light,
Put the evil out of aight.
Make the world we live tn bright
Like ta heaven above.
iz, 3 Selected.
es
Didn't Appgal to Him.
‘Uncle Josh, who lived far back in
the criméon clover sone, happened tnto
the big city one day and foand himself
standing before a woman's exchange.
‘That was a now one on Joak, and for
a long while be stood there and
thoughtfully pondered., Finally he en-
tered the’ building. q
“T ‘pose, ma'am,” said be, addrese-
ing one of the attendants, “that this
is the woman's exchange?”
“Yes, this is the woman's exchange,”
replied the attendant. “What can we
60 for you?” .
“I s'pose.” continned Joab, glancing
alternately at the two or three ween-
ea in the office, “that you are the onty
woman folks here?”
‘There are no others.” was the won-
Gering reepones of the attendant,
“Um.” thoughtfully observed. Josh,”
eertiog toward the door, “then I gnere,
keep nner.”"—Pailedeiphia
Telegraph. mee
“Wolseley “conquered ¢
wayo,” said an Kaginh officer, “be
taok pearls all his. wives away -frim
2: - -
‘Jhim. 1 belleve he left the aionarch
only a half dicen or thereabout, Cote:
wayo day after day: sent plteoux mes
nages to Wobsley pleading for the rext
of bis wives: hot the Britinh soldier
refused sternly, When Wolxctey camo
to leave the commtry Cetewayo, to de-
spur, peut thie mgsstge to Bim:
“If you will not send me aby more
wives Will yun not-ut least be enough
of 1 genticman to exchange the six}
have for six others?"
Pe ee
| When Rezenan Hutger ved in Bir.
wniugham, Als. that clty bouated of
two Jully-u small elty Jail, commonly
known ax the Little Red Hrick, apd a
county Jall, which way called the Big
Rock. In Birwingham at that Ume
waa n lawyer who made a apevlalty of
defending darkeyx,
Acconting ta Rulger, an nged negro
xtumped inte tht pricttonera office
one morning. “Hix son was tn fall, and
he wanted the white man to get Dim
out.
The lawyer Uguced from the old ne-
grok uppentance that he could not
count pan an expectally —afligent
client.
“AN right, uncle,” be said, “1 reck-
on I ca tike the case and get yoar
bey out for about—tet me see—for
about $10, Got the money with you?"
“I nuttlnly las," apawered the old
man, and lic prodaced a rolt of bitin
big cnotigh to choke a calf. The coun-
selor took ond look at that delectable
Gark green bundle. .
“fold on, uncle,” be said. “Is that
boy of yours locked up in the Little
Red Brick?"
“Naw, sub.” anid the old man, “be's
in de Big Rock.”
“Oh, I thought be wan to the Little
Red Brick." naid the lawyer. “To get
him out of the Big Bock will cost at
least $50."—Raturday Evening Post.
“Accused of $242,000 Theft -*
' Harry Hartley, of Smilkensburg,
was arrested by detectives’ tn New.
York, upon informetion trom the
Pittabureb ‘police that he Sa wanted
fm his homo town for the thaft of
$62,000 cash and $200,000 in negoth
able contracts. :
| The complainant 1s George Merta,
of Smilxensburg. It ts alleged the
Property was taken October 15.
Boy Accused of -Areen
Victor Webb, seventeen years
Ov, was arrested tn Lancaster, Pa.
charged with arson. It’ fs alleged he
entered an untenantee” howse of
Frank Sprecher on North Christian
street ‘and fired ft, The timely ar
rival of the firemen saved the built
fag. Webb was sven in the building
shortly before the fire,
ft Misundereteed.
“Weold you like to take a nice long
pwalk 7° *
“Why, I'd love ta”
“Well, don't let me ‘detaio youn--_
Colembia Jester.” s
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AT THE NATION'S METROPOLIS
Sylvester Russell Makes Unjust Attack Upon Lafayette Theatre - Crítica ces Management Unfairly For Condition He Does not now - Shelton Stevens a Benedict - Young Ohio Man Sends the News to Friend Here- Makes $30,000 As Hair Manufacturer - Joseph J. Ferguson In Six Years Accumulates Vast Fortune In Hair Goods - Rev. H. Loe Jones Conducts Theological School - Rev. Johnson Making Good As Episcopal Rector
(Allen's National News Bureau,
321 West Fifth Street
New York, N. Y. Nov. 29, 2015)
Sylvester Russell writing from far away Chicago made an unjust attack upon the management of the Lafayette Theatre in the issue of the Freeman of November 30
Mr. Henson takes the management of the theatre to task for dismissal for ethical reasons the Billy King Company which was scheduled to play the house a few weeks ago. In his attack upon the theatre he claims that theatrical critics have been violated, and that the theatre as the result has loss prestige. In his attack he induces in language hardly becoming to the writer who values his reputation, and blames Mr. Morganstern for being a Jes. Your correspondent feels that an unkitted attack has been made upon the Lafayette theatre, and without knowledge of the management, your correspondent is venturing to determine the theatre. In the first place, in writer unacquainted with a situation several hundred miles away should attempt to criticize conditions of which he does not know. The Billy King Company was under the direct supervision of Mr. Morganstern and had a better chance to judge the fitness of the act than Mr. Russell. Because a company in the first or second act please the management, is not argument that it will continue to do so. If Mr. Morganstern felt that the performance was not in keeping with the policy of the house (which is a high one) that is his privilege to cut the act. We do not know the Billy King people, but we have the utmost confidence in the Lafayette management, and venture to say that the show was prohibited from going further because it was felt that it was injurious. Your correspondent has made a study of this house and has always been impressed with the high characters of the show, and the sincerity of the management to keep up a respectable tone.
Before the present management your correspondent would not enter the theatre because of the low tone of the show that played the house it was the character of the shows that closed the theatre, and condemned it as a play house, before the present management took hold. When Mr Walton and his partner came to the theatre the sheriff had closed it up and any attempt on the part of anyone to open it was scouted at. The present management set about to relently conditions that soon opened the eyes of the most apprehil and which revealed the genius of the management. Today the Lafayette theatre is a new theatre and is meeting the conditions of the sections in which it is located in a most pronounced manner. Never before in the history of the theatre has such shows played the house. The tone of the house is rightly enforced, and is evident in the large number of mothers and their children who can be seen at the theatre at almost every performance. The house is the favorite for the young people in the city, and it is a familiar sight to see a group of school children attending some of the afternoon performances. The parents have confidence in the house and readily trust their children to attend performances.
This is the best test of the sincerity of a theatre to keep up a respectable tone Mr. Russell claims that the present management is inexperienced. This is a weak charge and without foundation. An inexperienced management could not take a house found in the condition of the Lafayette and make out of it a paying proposition.
Over $400,000 per week is paid out in salaries, going for the most part to colored men and women. I venture to say that there is no theatre in the country that employs more young colored men and women than the Latoyette. The ticket seller, ushers, the major picture operator, stage manager, porters, etc., are all colored men and women. The theatre employs an orchestra of young colored women, thereby assisting in opening up a field for these young women. No writer should take serious objections to a management that tries to maintain a decent policy. Few men in the theatrical world are better acquainted with the ethics of the profession than Mr. Walton and to those who know the sincerity that the present management is evidencing in making the house a decent one, will put little credence in an unjust attack.
SHELTON STEVENS A BENEDICT.
Shelton Stevens, of Oberlin, Ohio and who will be remembered as the brilliant young man who graduated from the New York School last spring, has sent word to Mr. W. M. McCarthy of 146 West 64th Street, where he lived while here, that he has recently become a benefactor. The Invitation to Mr. McCarthy stated that young Shelton had married Mrs Christie Grace Fields, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Fields, and one of the most prominent young women in Oberlin. Young Stevens stated that she was
dolg well in his work as plumber, and saw before him a good future.
While in this city attending school Mr. Shetton made his home with Mr. McCarty and grew to look upon him as a benefactor. Mr. McCarty, who is interested in young men acquiring education did much to encourage Mr. Shetton, and for this Mr. Shetton has always been grateful. In talking to your correspondent last week Mr. McCarty said that young Shetton was a one young man and that he is glad to see that he is making a success.
Mr. McCarty is one of the best known hotel men in the race and in this direction he has done much for young men.
The present secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in this city has been encouraged greatly by Mr. McCarty.
Mr. McCarty has worked at some of the leading summer places in the country. He is a prominent member of St Mark's M. E. Church. Young men coming to this city desiring a safe place to stop will do well to write Mr. McCarty.
MAKES $50,000 AS HAIR MANU
FACTURER
Six years ago Prof. Joseph Ferguson, who conducts a hair dressing parlor and manicuring shop at 112 West Lafayette Street, had fifty cents in his pocket, but by persistence and pronounced genius he has made over $0,900 manufacuring hair goods and preparations. Prof. Ferguson conducts one of the most imposing hair goods comportium to be found anywhere in this country and is making wonderful success in his line.
Your correspondent called at the shop last week and was ushered thru the magnificent establishment of Mr. Ferguson.
He found a complete establishment containing every facility for the manufacuring of hair goods, together with the various preparations for the face, hair and toilet in general. The establishment contains a laboratory, reception room, office and store room, etc. Together with manufacturing goods. Prof. Ferguson conducts a hair dressing school, where a complete course is given in hair dressing and manicuring. Miss Shookley is in charge of the manicuring parlor. The preparations made by Prof. Ferguson are used in most of the drug stores of this city, as well as throughout the country. Your correspondent was shown a list of the drug stores that are supplied by Prof. Ferguson and the list included some of the largest drug places in the country.
The success that Prof. Ferguson has made in this field shows the great economic possibilities that this field offers. Prof. Ferguson was born in Fairfax, Va. He was educated in the public schools of that city, and as a young man began his career at Mamasus, Va., as a barber. He became the leading barber in that city. He the leading barber in that city. He then went to Washington and became clerk with the firm of P. D. Watkinson & Company. He made a thorough study of chemistry. He graduated from the Beauty Culture School of Madame Thompson in Philadelphia. Several years ago, he came to this city and opened his present establishment.
REY JONES CONDUCTS THEOLOGY
REAL SCHOOL
A movement in this city that is filling a long felt gap is the Theological School, located at Lloyd West Edge Street, of which the Rev H. Leg Jones is dean. The aim of the school is to give young men with limited means an opportunity to prepare themselves for the ministry at limited cost. The school is meeting the needs of the young men in every pronounced man, and should do much to strengthen the ministry. The school is run three nights a week, and besides a course in the elementary branches, it gives a full theological course. Rev. Jones the dean, is well equipped for the task. He was born in Richmond and in a graduate of the Normal School in that city. He took his theological course at the Amity Theological School in this city. He was of interest in poetry and has pastored some of the leading churches of the connection. He has had large experience as evangelist.
REV JOHNSON SUCCESS AS
PRESIDENTIAL RECTOR
Rev J W Johnson, pastor of the St Jrphan P.E. Church in West Chest Street, is meeting with much success in his work. He is one of the most successful pastors in the church and his work in this city is showing him up as a great force for good. The St Crippan was among the churches of the face to begin the institution work, and in this direction it has made success. Among the institutional features are club rooms for men, Girls Home, Printing Department, Shoe Making Department, Cooking Classes. One of the features of the work is the Model Flat, which trains young women in domestic science etc. The church is also the center for many civic organizations and other movements.
Rev Johnson was born in Petersburg, Va., and is the first graduate of the Payne Divinity School in that city. He was formerly instructor of church history in that institution. The St Crippan Church is one of the most Bourishing parishes in the New York City. It has a membership of 600 members.
Thanksgiving was a great night with the men of Richmond at the Y. M. C. A. Building. The Women's Auxiliary, under the direction of the President, Mrs. Louthera Blahvel gave the men a very happy hour. The table was laden with the good things of the season and every man was well satisfied. The fun around the fireplace added much to the occasion. We were glad to see Dr. Walter II Brooks, of Washington, D. C., Dr. W. T. Johnson and many others.
The explanation on the Sunday School Lesson was extremely helpful last Saturday at the Y. M. C. A. Many were present but we did not see you. You are invited. Come and bring another friend.
Last Sunday was a high day with the Y. M. C. A.
Meeting for the workers 9:30 A. M. at the Building was good.
The closing of the 26th Anniversary Exercises of the Y. M. C. A. at the
6th Mt. Zlion was the climax. Dr J. S. V. Peyton made a strong appeal for the work as other pastors have done. Subject: "Holes In Your Pockets." We believe many of the holes will be stopped after hearing the Doctor. The chair of the church was at her host. The Bible League of the church adores much to the occasion. The audience was very large. Subscriptions and collection were excellent. We thank everybody. Watch the work and give us your support. Come to the Y. M. C. A. today, 5 P. M., to hear Prof. J. W. Barco of the Virginia Union University.
Men be on time Sunday, ready for hard work and the other man.
Special meeting for workers 9:30
A. M. at the Building.
Committeemen C. B. Gaston will conduct the boys' meeting, 4 P. M., to the Y. M. C. A. Mothers send your boys.
3:30 P. M. a great meeting at the Y. M. C. A. Building. Rev. E. M. Mitchell, pastor of the Leigh Street Methodist Church, will sing and speak. Let no man miss this meeting on time.
Watch for the date when Dr. D. S. Freeman will speak and the Euterpa Quartette will sing.
We are getting ready for the Great Evangelistic Meetings with the pastors.
Every home is asked to have special prayer for the Y. M. C. A
LOOKS LIKE CLIFFORD IS DEAN.
"With a recent issue, the Afro-American Ledger, with appropriate ceremony entered the year that brings it within touching distance of a quarter century of its existence, on July last The Cleveland (O.) Gazette celebrated its thirty-second birthday and remarked that having been in the editorial harness so long, we feel like the dean of the Afro-American press."
"If the deanship goes to age, (this paper was established March 2, 1851) and entered upon its thirty-fourth year last March it belongs to us" remarks the Martinburg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press, which, however, is willing to cast the first vote for "deanship" not for age but for better service rendered, in favor of its (O.) contemporary.
To this The Gazette replied modestly that the pain undoubtedly belongs to the "Pioneer Press" and the Afro-American Ledger was on the point of casting the second vote, when a glance at the presided there are three contemporaries older than either of the two mentioned, and one more which is just as old "The Christian Recorder of Philadelphia," is sixty-three years old; the Charlottie (N. C.) Star of Zion thirty-nine, the Louisville (Ky.) American Baptist, thirty seven; and the Robinson (Va.) Planet, thirty-two. Now who is dean? Baltimore (Mt.) Afro American Ledger
The editor longest, continuously, in the editorial "harness" is the dean of the Mro. American press. The question therefore is, has Editor Stewart of the Louisville (Ky.) American Baptist been in the editorial "harness" thirty-seven consecutive years? An answer, in the affirmative, from him, will settle the matter. The Cincinnati Gazette:
This question of who is the dean of the colored press has been up several times, and without any claim to the honor the statement of the service of the editor of this paper has been given upon several occasions. The Baptist Herald was established in Paducah, Ky., in 1855 of which Rev G W Dupee was editor and Wm H. Stewart, associate editor. This paper was merged into the American Baptist, Jan 1st, 1855, with Rev A C Carpenter, editor, and Rev G W. Dupee and Wm H. Stewart, associate editors, and Brother Stewart has been connected continuously with one or the other of the papers since 1855 as associate editor or editor. This information has been published before and it is a source of pleasure and pride without any regard to the reason which has caused it to be repeated at this time. Louisville (Ky.) American Baptist.
H Rev A. C. Carpenter is editor, and Rev G. W. Dupee and W. H. Stewart, associate editors of the American Baptist, of the foregoing makes clear, then Editor J. R. Clifford of the Martinsburg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press is the dean, providing of course he has been the editor of his paper for the past thirty-three consecutive years "Speak up," Brothers Clifford and Stewart" (Cereland (O.) Gazzetta. Dorothy Gish, one of the most lovely little stars of the Griffith Triangle Studio, together with other excellent Griffith players, will be presented in Chester B. Chapp's adaptation of the German student idyll, "Old Heidelberg." This is the play made famous in this country by the stellar appearances in it of Richard Mansfield and Aubrey Boucleault. In the original German it enjoyed extraordinary popularity on the other side, and that popularity has been duplicated here. It is said to show many significant touches of D. W. Griffith's personal supervision, particularly in the battle and mob scenes. Those who admire Griffith's wonderful full battle pictures in "The Birth of a Nation" will find here, it is said, the same sort of pictorial beauty and dramatic effectiveness.
Once in a lustrum or a deside comes in play fashioned according to the classic model of great character, straight forward unity of plot, terrific emotional power, truth to life and art. Such, say many who have been it in New York, Chicago and Philadelphia, in Thomas H. Ance's new civil war play, "The Coward," starring Frank Keenan. It has undoubtedly excited greater interest than any other recent offering whether in the film of the regular stage world.
The scenes of "The Coward" are held in the Valley of Virginia in 1861. For the battle scenes between the Federals and the Confederates, Mr. Ance massed his resources in even more spectacular fashion than he did for his spectacular production, "The Battle of Gettyburg." The far maritime line of soldiers is thrown over mountain and valley. The clouds from exploding shells half cover, half disclose the landscape. The furious onrush of foot soldiers and cavalry is exhibited. But the most startling scene of all is the fall with his horse of the young actor from a bridge into the river. The feat caused spectators in New York at the initial showing of the play to grasp with astonishment.
OF RICHMOND, VA., LOCATED AT RICHMOND, IN THE COUNTY OF MENRICO, STATE OF VIRGINIA, AT THE CLOSE ON BUSINESS, NOVEMBER 10TH, 1915, MADE TO THE STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION.
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts... $101,371.64
Overdrafts, secured, $409
unsecured, $925.70... 1,334.70
Bonds, securities, etc., owned, including premium on same... 1,630.00
Banking house and lot... 41,053.99
Other real estate owned 51,185.75
Furniture and fixtures... 4,792.53
Exchanges and checks for next day's clearings... 1,688.99
Other cash items... 116.79
Due from Nat'l Banks... 16,068.55
Paper currency... 4,071.00
Fractional paper currency, nickels and cents... 59.10
Gold coin... 4,725.00
Silver coin... 1,890.00
Total... $229,988.04
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in. $338,10.00
Surplus fund. 3,000.00
Undivided profits, less
amount paid for interest
expenses and tax. 270.73
Dividends unpaid. 257.10
Individual deposits, includ
ing savings deposits. 173,562.78
Certified checks. 200.00
Cashier's checks outsid
ing. 33.25
Hills payable. 10,000.00
Reserved for accrued inter
est on deposits. 1,212.00
Reserved for accrued taxes. 220.00
Unearned discount. 7,315.88
Total. $229,988.04
1. Walter T. Davis, Cashier, do
solely swear that the above is a
true statement of the financial con-
dition of Mechanics Savings Bank,
of Richmond, Va., located at Rich
mond, in the County of Henrico,
State of Virginia, at the close of
business on the 10th day of Novem
ber, 1915, to the best of my knowl
edge and belief.
Correct—Attest:
WALTER T. DAVIS, Cashier.
THOMAS M. CRUMP
JOHN T. TAYLOR
R. W. WRITING
Directors
State of Virginia, City of Richmond
Sworn to and subscribed before
me by Walter T. Davis, Cashier, this
27th day of November, 1913.
ALBERT V. NORRELL, JR.
Notary Public.
My commission expires 21st day of
November, 1919
BIJOU Triangle PLAYS
A THREE HOUR Entertainment.
Change of Programme Weekly.
All Reserved Seats. 10cts. BIJOU Theatre
MAUDE BALLINGTON ROOTH, THE
WORLD'S FAMOUS WOMAN OR
ATOR, DEC. 6
CONGRESSMAN SLAYDEN, OF
TEXAS, LECTURER, DEC. 16
RALPH PARLETTE, OF CHICAGO,
ILL, NOTED LECTURER, JAN. 10
BOSTONIA SEXTETTE CLUB,
STRING MUSIC, FEB. 1
DUNDAR QUARTETTE AND BELL
RINGERS, FEB. 11
GRAND OPERA SINGERS, FEB. 17
HETTIE JANE DURAWAY, IN
DADDY LONG LEGS, FEB. 25
BRUSH, THE GREAT MAGICIAN,
MARCH 23
A Season Ticket to this Wonderful Course in Balcony, only 50 cents. Tickets on sale at Single Night Admission, 15 cts.
SATURDAY IS
CHILDREN'S DAY
DON'T SEND THE LITTLE ONES
TO SCHOOL HANDICAPPED
WITH POOR EYESIGHT.
Clear vision means quick thought
and to think quickly brings success.
Parents, who realize their resor-
sional ability for the future success of their
children, will not delay in having
this very important question decided
at once.
THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR
POOR EYESIGHT WHEN IT CAN
BE PREVENTED. For the benefit
of School Children I shall examine
the eyes of every child who comes
to my office, every Saturday, between
10:00 A. M. and 4:00 P. M. Free
of Charge. DR. M. M. SPIGEL.
Eyesight Specialist and Optometrist.
114 N. Fifth Street, Professional
Building.
YORK RIVER LINE to BALTIMORE
NEW STEAMERS
"CITY OF RICHMOND"
"CITY OF ANAPOLIS"
Leave Richmond.....5:10 P. M.
(Main Street Station)
Arrive Baltimore.....7:00 A. M.
SPECIAL AND EXCELLENT
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR COLORED
PEOPLE
Staterooms—Men's Smoking Room—
Women's Saloon—Spacious Deck.
Splendid Meals—Table D'hote and
A la Carte.
$2.50 First Chas—$2.00 Second,
Richmond to Baltimore.
For information, tickets, staterooms, etc., communicate with
MAGRUDER DENT, District Passen
ger Agent; S. D. KISER, City Ticket
Agent, Phone Madison 272, 907 East
Main Street, Richmond.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
TEXAS CITIZENS ASK HELP
To whom it may concern; We have not received any aid on account of Texas City Storm. We need help. We have no money to fight the case in court. WILL THE, RACD LOVERS HELP US?
E. C. BRANCH 2705 Ave.
G., (Rent) Galveston Texas.
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SIXTEENTH ANNUAL SESSION
WILL BEGIN JULY 6, 1915 AT THE
AGRICULTURAL AND
TECHNICAL COLLEGE
(FORMELY A. AND M. COLLEGE)
AND CONTINUE FIVE WEEKS.
Write for catalog. Secure lodging
in advance. Address, J. H. BLUFORI
Director State Summer School, Greens
boro, N.C.
JAS. R. DUDLEY, PRESENT.
FemaleEmbalmer
MR. LUCIE CHRISTIAN SCOTT is associated in business with her husband, Mr. Alphonse Scott. Madam Scott claims the honor of being the only Negro woman in the State of Virginia—holding a State license to practice him balmaging, and is indeed, one of the few women in the United States, Embalming and Conducting Funerals. She ranks with the best in her profession.
She is prominent in fraternal organizations, namely: Charts of Calantha, I. O. of... L. O. of Good Samaritana, How Ruth, Teats Sons and Daughters or Richmond, Shephards of Betsiehem and Ideal Benefit Society.
Your Patronage and Influence will be greatly appreciated. Please remember that she is always at your service. Reliable Service at Moderate Rates.
OFFICE
2006 P Street, Phone, Madison 2287.
RESIDENCE
1015 St. James St., Phone, Mad. 6619.
A. D.: PRICE, 2121
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
LIVERY
All orders promptly filled at al
ephone. Halls rented for meet
Plenty of room with all necessary
or Band Wagons for hire at rea
first class Carriages, Buggies, ete
fine funeral supplies.
Open All Day and Night
PHONE, MAD. 577
CE, 212 EAST L
DIRECTOR, EMBA
LIVERYMAN.
apply filled at short notice
printed for meetings and
with all necessary conveniences
for hire at reasonable rate.
Buggies, etc. Keep
day and Night—Man or
D. 577 RJC
A. D. PRICE, 212 EAST LEIGH STREET.
A. D. PRICE, 212 EAST LEIGH STREET.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN. All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large Picnic or Band Wagons for hire at reasonable rates, and nothing but first class Carriages, Buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies.
Open All Day and Night—Man on, Duty All Night. PHONE, MAD. 577 RICHMOND, VA. (Residence next door.)
SALES RENTAL
BRAGG BRO
Real Estate Agent
Accuracy in Statement, used
to Buyer-to Seller-to L
506 N. SECOND ST.
THESE STEEL
for YOUR PR
Our Banking
Are Based on
of Exper
THE MECHANICS S
NORTH-WEST CORNER THIRD
RENTALS
AGG BROS. &
state Agents and
statement, under All
Seller-te Borrower
ST.
STEEL WATER PROTECT
Banking Men
based on Year
Experience
ANICS SAVING
OVER THIRD AND C
Accuracy in Statement, under All Circumstances to Buyer-to Seller-te Borrower-te Lander. 506 N. SECOND ST. Phone, Ran. 4569
THESE STEEL WALLS ARE for YOUR PROTECTION
J
Our Banking Methods Are Based on Years of Experience
to secure a home—modern brick
Lehigh Street corner, between 1st and
4th streets. It's cheap.
BRAGG BROS & CO. 505 N. 24 St.
To buy or rent, borrow or sell, see us. We have the tenant for you and the money to loan on good security. BRAGG BROS. & CO.
MARRY—Many respectable colored people anxious to marry. Don't send money but your description. JT. AGENCY, 453 Burl Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio.
SALES
A RARE OPPORTUNITY
IF YOU WANT
506 N. Second Street
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212 EAST LEIGH STREET,
VECTOR, EMBALMER AND
EVERYMAN.
d at short notice by telegraph or tel-
meetings and nice entertainments.
necessary conveniences. Large Picnic
at reasonable rates, and nothing but
es, etc. Keep constantly on hand
Night—Man on, Duty All Night.
RICHMOND, VA.
RENTALS LOANS
BROS. & CO.
Agents and Brokers
at, under All Circumstances,
-te Borrower-te Lender.
Phone, Ran. 4569
EL WALLS ARE
PROTECTION
ing Methods
d on Years
experience
SAVINGS BANK,
MIND AND CLAY STREETS
WANTS TO FIND THEM.
I would like to locate some of my people. My father's name was Ryland Jones, my mother's name was Jones, before she was sold, and after she was sold, har name was Mary Carter. My sister's name was Janie Stokes, her brothers were named Richard and Henry Jones. Mother belonged to Mr. Charles Ebell, of Richmond, Va Mary Carter and Andrew Carter belonged to the old Baptist Church. Any information will be gladly received. Richard Trowerow.
SPECIAL BUSINESS COURSE
Van de Vyver College will give
ing beginning November, 1st, 1915.
For particulars apply to
the Francisco Historic T15 N. 1st St.
Richmond Va.