Richmond Planet
Saturday, February 5, 1916
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
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EDITOR MITCHELL
TRAVELS
Methodist Church Troubles—The San Diego Exposition—Colored Cook as a Gardener—A Panoramic View—Amazing Condition.
I vaulted into Mr. R. C. Owens' automobile that night. His family was with us. I found the spacious, modern church packed from the rostrum to the doors. It is located at the corner of 8th and San Julion Streets. The occasion was inspiring, for there was a great contention in the First A. M. E. Church and the former pastor had decided to preach at this church, which is known as the Wesley M. E. Church.
AN ENTHUSIASTIC GATHERING
Rev. E. W. Kinchen, the able pastor, had given Rev. an opportunity to speak to the members of the A. M. E. Church, who had flocked to hear him. The congregation of the A. M. E. Church would not accept Rev. F. Jesse Peck, the pastor designated by Bishop Parks to take charge of the church and had openly defied him, locking the doors of the church against his appointee. There were hot times in Zion. I found myself in the midst of the turmoil.
PRESIDING ELDER POWERLESS.
Rev. J. H. Wilson, the presiding elder, seemed to be absolutely powerless in the matter. I was called upon to speak, and I spoke. I went from the church to the Owens' residence and then to the train, for I had found out that I could take the sleeper for San Diego, California, spend the day there and be back in Los Angeles Monday afternoon, at about six o'clock. When I arrived there, I soon made arrangements for the short journey, which would take only about two hours time.
IN THE WRONG BERTH.
Passengers were permitted to remain on the sleeper until 7 A. M. A long line of cars were there. Finally I was located. The porter showed me to the berth. There was some consternation when he said, "This berth is occupied." He aroused the sleeping white, passenger. An examination of his berth check showed that he was in the wrong car. He had been sleeping peacefully in the berth for which I had paid. The porter began to think.
HAD NO OBJECTION
"If you have no objection, sir, as he has gone to bed I will take you to the berth in the other car." As it was only a case of swapping berth, I readily consented and a few minutes thereafter, I was in "the land of Nod." When I awoke the next morning, there was no moving train, no noise, no commotion of any kind and I soon was in the laboratory, preparing to see the sights of a city of which I had heard much and had seen little.
PARTED WITH THE OVERCOAT
I went into the railway station. I was a neat affair. My overcoat was more a burden than a blessing, and I parted with ten coins to have it checked. When I went up the main street to see the sights of a city in which I had come unknown and unheralded. A colored man had hailed me and he had put into my hand a card telling about an eating house, operated by colored folks for colored folks. But I was not hungry and I soon reached the business section of the city.
FEW COLORED FOLKS THERE.
After having left such an attractive city in Los Angeles, there was little to attract my attention in San Diego. It is near the extreme south-western portion of the United States and only about fifteen miles from the Mexican border. I went to the wharves here and saw many ships. I saw some colored men, but they were few, and they appeared to belong to the good-time crowd. They partook of the nature and characteristics of crayfish, so well-known in the States. everybody seemed to be attending to their own business. I saw no school classes or churches for colored folks.
THE SAN DIEGO EXPOSITION.
We walked until I got tired and then thought it would be a good idea to go to the Exposition Grounds. A branch of the Panama Expositor was being operated here. Upon arrival, I was told which street we were and I took it, arriving at the entrance to the southern California
exposition. Once inside, I found that the buildings had not been opened and so I strolled to the outskirts of the grounds, where I saw the Burbank Garden.
A COOK AS A GARDENER.
A colored man was watering the flowers. I spoke to him and soon became engaged in conversation with
(Continued on Eighth Page.)
MR. BOOKER SECURES A HIGH
RATING AS A DIVER.
Sergeant W. C. Booker, of Norfolk, Va., has scored in the examination held by the United States Civil Service Commission held recently. The Notice or Rating bears date of January 13, 1916, and shows that he was rated .30 per cent, and makes him eligible to appointment as a diver in the regular service. The following is a copy of the notice:
Notice of Rating. United States Civil Service Commission, Labor Board, Navy-Yard Service.
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 13, 1916.
William C. Booker,
252 Queen Street,
Norfolk, Va.
Sir.-The average percentage attained by you in the Diver examination is 90 per cent.
The names of competitors who obtain an average percentage of 70 or more (or, if preferred, solders or sailors, an average percentage of 65 or more) are entered upon the register
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of eligibles in the order of ratings obtained; but those whose average percentages are below 70 (or 65, if preferred soldiers or sailors) are not eligible for appointment. Only those persons have right to a claim of preference who have been honorably discharged from the military or naval service by reason of disability resulting from wounds or sickness incurred in the line of duty.
The period of eligibility is one year from the date of entering the name on the register. Entry on the registry is made on or about the date of the notice of rating.
Very respectfully,
FRANK C. KNEDLKE,
Recorder, Labor Board.
Returns Thanks.
Mrs. H. B. Page wishes to thank her many friends for the assistance rendered and the sympathy expressed in her bereavement over the death of her husband, Mr. L. C. Page, who departed this life January 19, 1916.
Don't make any engagement for Friday, March 17th, but hear the Williams Singers at the City Auditorium.
Sunday, February 6—11 A. M. Preaching by Dr. A. M. Tate; 1:00 P. M., Sunday School; 8:00 P. M. Special Sermon by the Pastor, subject, "Two Ways for Man." Mrs. R. L. Jones will wing. Charles H. Jones, Pastor.
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The Question of Race Leadership
The Selection of One Man
Not Practicable.
Buckner, Va., Jan. 25, 1916, Editor of The Planet:
Much has been said in the columns of your great paper, respecting the successor to Dr. Booker T. Washington and as to whether or not the gentleman, who is to succeed him as President of Tuskegee Institute is to succeed him as leader of the Negro race. To my mind, the first thing to be decided is whether or not Dr. Washington was the leader of the Negro race.
No one can deny the fact, that he was a great man. Great, because he had convictions of his own and stuck to them. Great, because he had the ability to thunk and to put said thoughts into actions. The great school, Tuskegee Institute, will ever stand as a monument to his greatness. But to argue that he was the leader of ten million Negroes, to my way of thinking, is absurd.
First, because among these ten million Negroes, there are men, who like Dr. Washington, have their convictions, and reserve the right to stand by them. In the next place, I fail to see why anyone should seem to be so much disturbed about selecting a leader for the Negroes any more than for any other race. I grant that like all other races, we need men, who are leaders along their particular line, as Dr. Washington was along his line, or in his chosen field.
A POINTED QUESTION
Does any one pose as the leader of the white race. They have political leaders, leaders of business, religious leaders and the like, but not even Mr. Bryan, Mr. Wilson or ex-President Roosevelt. I think would claim to be the leader of the white people in this country. Then how could any one man be a leader of all the Negroes? To be a leader of a people must mean that a majority of those people are following said leader and in this race of ours, we have men of such varied opinions—from the man who believes in the highest attainments for the Negro to the man who doesn't believe that a Negro's corn will ever grow unless, some white man may chance to pronounce a blessing upon it. Can any one man harmonize all of these differences and have them all follow him?
When it comes to conservation, I have observed that a real man, he be white or otherwise, living in the North or South, will respect a Negro in proportion as that Negro believes in himself and whether he admits it or not, all real men, down in their hearts respect other real men. Theother we, as Negroes, learn this the better for us as individuals and a race. Hoping that the question of appointing a leader for the Negroes will not worry any one except leaders along certain chosen lines, I beg to remain.
BANKING OPTORTUNITIES IN
SOUTH AMERICA.
Washington, D. C., Jan. 25, 1916. If you are engaged in the banking business you are interested in the establishment of American banks in South America and you are therefore in a position to appreciate the value of "Banking Opportunities in South America," just issued by the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.
This report was prepared by William H. Lough, a well-known New York banking authority, and is based on his personal investigations in South America. It is the most up-to-date work of its kind, and it is above all practical. You won't have to wake through pages of theorizing that you could have written yourself without moving out of your office.
You will be glad to hear that Mr. Lough is rather optimistic about the prospects of establishing banks in South America. He thinks there are opportunities for many more American banks down there, if they are properly established and managed. As a banker you will appreciate his views of proper management.
The booklet is being distributed, at the nominal price of 20 cents by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, and by the District Offices of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. It is designated Special Agents Series No. 108.
WANTED—ambitious agents to sell
THE MEMORIAL EDITION OF
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON.
Write at once for information
STANDARD SALES CO. 112
Parkwood Street, Philadelphia
WESTON—COLLINS
One of the prattlest and most elaborate weddings that the elite of Eastville has ever witnessed occurred Saturday evening, January 29, in Eastville Baptist Church, when Miss Bessie Collins, the popular and accomplished daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Southey Collins, became the bride of Mr. Benjamin D. Weston, formerly of Darlington, S. C., now residing in Philadelphia. He is a graduate of Hampton Normal Institute and now a small clerk in Philadelphia.
Promptly nt 7:30, to the strains of Loghern wedding march, sweetly played by Mrs. Bossie Coston, accompanied by Mias Olga Carter, of Norfolk Va., and Mr. Cleveland Thomas. The bridal party entered the church. The bride was beautifully gowned in white brocade satin trimmed with pearls and valencene lace. The vell was daintly caught with sprays of orange blossoms.
Mrs. Della White, of Darlington, S. C., sister of the groom, acted matriarch of honor. She wore a lovely gown of poach satin mossaline trimmed in silver head net. The bridesmaids were Misses Joana Whitted, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Edna, Collins, of Keneil Grove, Va., and Besale Whitted, of Greenboro, N. C. Miss Joana Whitted was gowned in blue silk trimmed with sprays of Rosebuds and valance Miss Edna Collins was gowned in plush taffetta with shadow lace. Miss Bess A Whitted was a blue satin trimmed with rosebuds and shadow lace. Miss Olga Carter was dressed in canary charmeuse trimmed with flat lace. The ushers were Mr. Augustus Digges of Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. Nelson Notingham, of Cape Charles, and Mr. Amoon Turner, of Bridgetown, Va. The best man was Mr. James S. Glimore of Philadelphia, Pa. The two flower-girls, train bearer, and ring bearer were well dressed and acted their parts well. Miss Carter rendered a violin selection during the ceremony. The bride comes from one of the oldest and most respected families of Eastville. She is a graduate of Norfolk Mission College. She was for three years supervisor of schools in Hunterville, N. C., and has been engaged in teaching Domestic Science at Dowlington Institution Pennsylvania for the past three years.
After the ceremony the bridal party went to the bride's home where they were congratulated by many guests who attended the reception. The presents were many and they were very valuable. They estimated to about three hundred dollars in value. The bridal party left January 30th for 1009 Eichhild Avenue, Philadelphia, their future home. We wish them much joy.
Marriage Announcement.
Mr Richard L. Harris and Mina
Luice A. E. Smith were quietly ma-
ried at the residence of Dr. W. T.
Johnson on January 27, 1916, at 7
o'clock. Reception at 114 W. Baker
Street February 10, 1916, from 9 to 11
o'clock. Friends are invited. No
cards.
John F. Moore and Dr. Munn Address
Large Y. M. C. A. Meeting.
The great Y. M. C. A. evangelistlst
meeting came to a climax at 3:30 P. M.
at the Priat Baptist Church. Munn
were present from all parts of the
city and out of the city (a large
crowd). Dr. John P. Munn, presidee
of the United States Life Insurance
Company, and the Chairman of the
Railroad Work of New York, gave the
men an address that lifted every man.
The senior railroad secretary. Mr.
John F. Moore, went right after the
men from the shoulder. Subject:
"Nothing to Surprise the Christian Religion." Rev. E. M. Mitchell, accompanied by Mr. Walter Mayo, sang from his soul. Mr. Robert Coles knows how to catch the men with the song, accompanied by Mr. Russell Walker. We were happy, to see the interest manifested by the pastors, many being present. The churches and the Y. M. C. A. have worked together, thus the great success. Benediction by Dr. M. B. Hucceless, of New York. We thank everybody.
Dedicatory Services First Presbyterian Church, Tomorrow.
Special dedication services will be conducted at First Presbyterian Church, corner Monroe and Catherine Streets, on Sunday, February 6th. The pastor, Rev. A. A. Hector, will presch. The electric lights will be turned on at the close of the service. At 2:30 P. M. of the same day a musical program will be rendered by the mail carriers of the city of Richmond and vicinity. This offers to be the best program yet rendered in this church. Special addresses by prominent citizens. You are cordially invited to attend.
Departed this life, Wednesday, February 2, 1916, at 11:30 o'clock A. M. Mrs. Alice Smith, at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Mary Harrel, 622 N. 6th Street. She is survived by four daughters—Mrs. Mary Harris, Mrs. Martha Pollard, of Roxbury, Va., Mrs. Edinonia Parsons, Mrs. Abbie Roane, and one sister, Mrs. Mattie Johnson.
Funeral services Friday, February 4, 1916, at Union Baptist Church, Roxbury, Charles City County, Va.
"Sleep on dear mother, sleep and take thy rest.
We loved these well, but Jesus loved the best."
—HCR CHILDREN.
In Memoriam.
In sad but loving memory of my dear husband, Mr. John H. Johnson, a distinguished headwaiter of various hotels, who departed this life one month ago—January 3, 1916.
He has passed the vale of shadows.
He has crossed the narrow sea, And beyond the vale of shadows.
He is waiting there for us.
His busy hand are folded;
His work on earth is done;
His trials all are ended;
His heavenly crown is won
—His Wife and Son
Let of Bodom.
500 Men, 500 Women, 500 Boys
500 Girls wanted at the First Baptist Church, College and Broad Sts.
Sunday, February 6, 1916 at 3:30
REV. W. H. SKIPWITH
P. M. to hear the Evang. last. Rev. W. H. Skipwith discurses the subject "Lot of Sedom." The 100 video chorus will sing. The public is cordially invited to attend. Rev. W. T. Johnson, D. D. Pastor
The Endowment Board of the O. E. S. met in the office of Dr. H. L. Harris, Richmond, Va., Saturday January 29, 1916 at 12:30 A. M. in their semi-annual conference. The reports from the President, Secretary and Treasurer were read, showing quite an increase over last year, in membership and finance. The board members present were: President W. Henry Jones, Secretary Mrs. Ida R. Harris, Treasurer Mrs. M. C. Steward, Superintendent H. L. Harris, M. D.; Mr. W. S. D. Lofland and Mr. J. W. Barnes.
Welfare League Whips Union
The Richmond Negro Welfare League quint defected that of Virginia Union University last Saturday evening by the score of 20-17. The match was played before a large and appreciative audience at Johnson's Auditorium. Union played under a disadvantage through every stage of the game. With heavier and taller opponents, she was compelled to play almost entirely on the defensal.
The team work of the city aggregation was much in evidence. Shelton was designated to look out for the welfare of the Welfare quint, in respect to goal throwing. In this, he succeeded, with a little too much efficiency for Union's comfort. Moore and Walker also deserve especial notice for their excellent work in guard.
The line-up:
Welfare—Shelton, c; Harris, l.
g.; Moore, r. g.; Johnson, r. f.
Walker, l. f.
Union—Taylor, c; Hall, l. g.
Gregory, r. f.; Hucas, l. f.; Tolson, r. g.
IS WAYNE SATISFIED?
Have the law-abiding citizens of Wayne County made sure of their ground? Are they certain that they exhausted all other means of keeping their county in order before allowing a resort to lynch law? For after all it is the good citizens who are responsible; the raygad and bobtail may have fastened the rope and fired the shots, but they would not have done it had they not known that they were safe from the wrath of the best element. It is a fearful thing for the trees of any county to bear such fruits. Everybody admits that, but the better element in Wayne seems inclined to shrug its shoulders and dismiss the lynching as a necessary evil. Is it no certain?
Remember this, people of Wayne-
lynch law is the most powerful narcotic than can be injected into the body politic. It is a habit-forming drug of the most tremendous potency. We began the habit here in the south as an alleviation for the most exquisite agony that can rack the perseys of a sensitive people—the outgrowing one of our daughters. That was the commonwealth's angina pectoris, "the pain" at the heart? to relieve which we thought no drug too strong. But look. Already we are taking it for more murder, murder of a man, at that—in the eyes of every decent man a far less infamous crime. In Charlotte we took a done for assault with intent to kill. Every indulgence weakens our power of resistance. How long will it be before we are in the condition of Alabama, for instance? There they resort to lynch law when their mules are poisoned. They are slaves of the drug.
But aside from the sapping of our moral strength can you people of Wayne believe that lynching does any permanent good? Look at South Carolina, where the habit flourishes. Her homelife record is worse even than our own fearful one. Look at the effect on the Negroes. It makes no difference how good a black man's record may be, nor how earnestly he may have striven to make himself a credit, instead of a menace to the state, let unanticipated evidence paint strongly toward him and he is at the mercy of the mob. Every Negro knows that, is it any wonder they hang together? Let the white men of Wayne consider this. If Richard's had been a white man and one of them knew his hiding place, and if the Wayne County man knew that by speaking one word he could deliver the fugitive to such a fate as Richards met, would he speak that word? That is what the law adding Negro of Wayne, and every other county where lynching is the fashion, is up against. While lynching is in no way how can we expect him to lend active support to the law.
The people of Wayne claim that they have been severely tried. Those who condone the lynching say that it was a case of the people taking the administration of justice out of the hands of the courts where they, their selves, had placed it, because the courts had so often failed in their duty. They seem to think that if the courts had sent the murderer of Beatty to the electric chair, the murder of Gurley would never have occurred, consequently, the lynching would not have been necessary. If that is true the courts are at least as much to blame as the dead Negro, and the work of the mob is incomplete. Judge, lawyers and jury should have received its attention before Richards. If lynching can hold one element of the population in order it should be equally effective on all. If it can scare Negroes into obedience to the law, why cannot it also genre juries and judges and lawyers into doing their duty?
The difference is that there is an element of danger in lynching white men. White men have friends, powerful defenders. Negroes are at our mercy. Therefore we will string up guilty Negroes and shoot their bodies into dripping shreds. But we will how and scrape to guilty white men, and allow them to hold positions of trust and profit, because, were we to lay a finger on them, our own skins might be in danger. A sentiment worthy of a brave and chivalrous race!
The men of Wayne may not look on it that way, but they may rest assured that that is the attitude of the rest of the world. Lynching Negroes because white courts have failed to discharge their duty is the quintessence of cowardice; and cowardice is the mother of injustice, as well as cruelty. Richards may have deserved, doubtless did deserve, his fate. But surely Wayne County does not deserve that stifra.—Greensboro (N. C.) Dally News.
HUSBAND WANTED!
We have a good opportunity, for a man from 20 to 52 years of age; must have good traits, of a religious temperament, fond of children, possessing common sense. Anyone feeling lonely and in need of a good, educated companion, one who has attended Tuskegee Institute and is now a widow, would do well to address a letter to this office. A farmer will also "fit the bill." The lady in question is 26 years of age and now resides in Pennyville.
FEB 7 1916
CAMBRIDGE
PRICE, FIVE CENTS
There are two rather remarkable paper carriers in this city. One is "Tom" Byrd, who is blind, but who makes his way through the streets of the city in all kinds of weather. Kind-hearted people make him presents of clothing and shoes to shield him from the winter's cold, and he makes his money selling the daily and weekly papers. The Planet is a favorite with him and he has it read, in order that he may be able to tell his customers just what it contains.
The other one is J. I. Robinson, who has succeeded in securing something of a monopoly in handling the Times-Dispatch. He has but one good arm and hand and he drives sometimes a mule and sometimes a horse. Both animals move with almost human intelligence from one side of the street to the other as Mr. Robinson throws the papers at the doors of his many customers. In speaking to him about it, he said that it takes about six weeks to train an animal and something more than a year to train a boy to do about the same thing.
We wager that no two armed man can handle as many papers in a given length of time as this remarkable paper carrier for the Times-Dispatch.
Harris' Hall No More
The old structure, known for many years as "Harris' Hall," is now being torn down to make way for a garage to be erected by Mr. John B. Billy. It is located at 412 N. Third Street. It was used for years as the Women's League Training School and Hospital.
A Birthday Party
Mr. Charles Robinson, of 215 Nass
17th Street, South Richmond, celebrated his birthday Friday night, 25th nit. His many gentlemen
friends gathered at about 8:30 o'clock and a grand time was had. Minor parlor games wore the pastime of the evening. Hoffmanonte, both "dry and wet" were served abundantly and the song, "We Won't Get Home till Morning," was heard from many of the old boys.
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DEAN MOORE LECTURER AT
VIRGINIA UNION
Prof L. B. Moore, Ph.D., Dean of the Teachers' College of Howard University will deliver a lecture on "The New Science of Matrimony in Relation to Racial Development," in the University Chapel, next Friday evening. February 11, at 8:15 o'clock Dean Moore is a recognized leader of the race, having been connected with the Howard faculty for several years. The slated lecture is the latest and most interestingly instructive discourse Mr. Moore has presented the public in many years. The entertainment is under the auspices of the Young Man's Christian Association of that school. Tickets on sale at Brangra Real Estate office. Admission, 15 cents, reserved seats, 20 cents.
Mr. H. Jones arrived in the city this week from Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mr. W. Boisey Glenn, of Philadelphia, Pa. 18 years of age, has joined our Christmas Savings Club, paying eleven weeks in advance. This is indeed a good beginning.
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We have received an invitation to the 36th marriage anniversary of Bishop and Mrs. J. S. Flipper, D. D., LL. D., Thursday, February 24, 1916, at Allen Temple A. M. R. Church, Atlanta, Ga., from 12 noon to 11 P. M. The indications are that there will be "a big time in Zion."
Prophet Jeter Speaks.
Look for the sun 8:30 A. M. beautiful day—world-wide. At God's command, calling the Ivy Avenue military to join in the battle, containing 8 hundred million camriche needle rifle guns to join in with the City Hall military at 12 o'clock by hall time at Newport News to hurry in sight the blue sky. —Prophet Robert J. Jeter.
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that I have qualified in the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond as an executor of the estate of the late Arthur W. Hayes, and all persons who may owe him anything, will make payment directly to me, and all persons who have claims against his estate will present the name to me for payment. R. T. HOWARD BROWN, Attn.
WE ARE OFFERING YOU EVERY OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE. Our Christmas Savings Club
WILL GUARANTEE YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR. IF YOUR WANTS ARE UNDER THE AMOUNT OF YOUR CHRISTMAS CHECK, YOU CAN DEPOSIT WHAT IS LEFT IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT AND GET A SAVINGS BANK PASS-BOOK.
WE ARE PREPARED to start you in any amount from 1 cent to 50 cents. You can start at the big end first by paying 50 cents on the 1 cent card. The last payment will be 1 cent. On the 2 cent card, the big end starts with $1.00 and ends with 2 cents. On the 5 cent card, the big end starts with $2.50 and ends with 5 cents. 25 cent and 50 cent cards are the same each week. You pay the same amount until the last week in November.
OUR VACATION CLUB.
You may want to save money for the "GOOD OLD SUMMER-TIME." The Vacation Club is here, too. You can pay 25 cents per week and have a Check for $6.25 in July or you can pay 50 cents per week and have a Check for $12.50 in July. By taking out four of the 25 cent cards, you can have $25.00 for your vacation in July and by taking out four 50 cent cards, you can have a check for $50.00 for your vacation. In addition to this, we give you interest if you have kept up your payments.
For further information, call and see us. Bring us your Deposits. Try our Safety Deposit Vault Boxes. They cost you only about six cents per week and your Money, Jewelry, Private Letters, Insurance Papers and even your Pass Book will be safe from prying eyes.
N. W. CORNER OF THIRD AND CLAY STREETS, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
PAGE TWO
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REMEMBER, a 1 Cent Card paid up regularly, either ascending or descending, will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $12.75 with interest.
图 2.2
REMEMBER, a 2 Cent Card, either ascending or descending, if paid up promptly each week will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $25.50 with interest.
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REMEMBER, a 5 Cent Card, either ascending or descending, if paid promptly each week will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $63.75 with interest.
You may want to save money for the per week and have a Check for $6.25 ing out four of the 25 cent cards, you have a check for $50.00 for your v
For further information, call and see us week and your Money, Jewel
MECHA
N. W. CORNER OF
OFFICERS
JOHN MITCHELL, JR., President
THOMAS M. CRUMP, Vice-President
WALTER T. DAVIS, Cashier
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
FFFERING YOU
A Y OPPORTUNITY TO
Christmas Savings
AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR. IF YOUR WANTS ARE UNDER T
IS LEFT IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT AND GET A SAV
in any amount from 1 cent to 50 cents. You can
payment will be 1 cent. On the 2 cent card, the big
starts with $2.50 and ends with 5 cents. 25
until the last week in November.
VACATION C
"GOOD OLD SUMMER-TIME." The Vacation C
in July or you can pay 50 cents per week and ha
can have $25.00 for your vacation in July and b
tion. In addition to this, we give you interest if y
Bring us your Deposits. Try our Safety Deposit Vault
Private Letters, Insurance Papers and even your Pass
NICS SAVINGS
THIRD AND CLAY STREETS, RICHMOND, V
THE BANK OF NEW YORK
IF YOU SHOULD FAIL IN YOUR PAYMENTS. YOU WILL RECEIVE A CHRISTMAS CHECK FOR ALL THE MONEY YOU HAVE PAID. BUT WITHOUT INTEREST. WE HAVE MAILED CHECKS FOR AS SMALL AN AMOUNT AS 5 CENTS.
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REMEMBER, a 10 Cent Card, if paid up promptly each week will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $5.00 with interest
REMEMBER, that a 25 Cent Card, if paid promptly each week, will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $12.50 with interest.
REMEMBER, that a 50 Cent Card, if paid promptly each week, will guarantee you a Christmas Check of $25.00 with interest.
LUB.
is here, too. You can pay 25 cents
a Check for $12.50 in July. By tak-
aking out four 50 cent cards, you can
have kept up your payments.
s. They cost you only about six cents per
will be safe from prying eyes.
BANK,
GINIA
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
John Mitchell, Jr. Thomas M. Crump R. W. Whiting
John T. Taylor Thomas Smith A. D. Price
W. F. Graham E. R. Jefferson J. J. Carter
1
SYNOPSIS.
Mary Page, actress, is accused of the murder of James Pollack and is defended by her lover, Phillip Langdon. Pollack is implicated. Shale, a crick and tool of Pollack, on the fire escape watching for Langdon.
THE DRAMA OF THE LAW
WITH the entrance of the judge the turnout of the vast crowd that filled the courtroom almost to suffocation subaided into a tense whisper of expectancy. The atmosphere was vibrant with it—faced as a violin string which snapped and brought the throng surging wildly to its feet when some one shrieled:
"Here she comes!"
At the back of the room men and women fought in a frenzy for foothold upon the seats of chairs, drowning the thunder of the judge's gavel with their clamorous hysteria, while those nearer the front were flung bodily against the steady wait of police beyond which stood Mary Page, framed by the grim shadow of the prisoner's door.
Mary was waiting, breathless, terrified, for "some one" to come. The judge looked at his watch and then at
THE FEDERAL MARSHALS
Mary Stretched Out One Slim Hand. the door, and another whispering wave of sound too intangible to be called words swept over the room. Almost before it died, however, Philip Langdon, the brilliant young lawyer who was defending Mary Page from the charge of murder and who in his battle for her life was also battling for his own happiness, came in. At sight of him Mary rose to her feet with a little childlike sob of relief and stretched out one slim hand with a quivering smile that was more polignant than tears and more pittiful than an outburst of grief. "Poor little thing!" said some one and was instantly hushed by a burly policeman whose own eyes were suspiciously damp as Langdon, with a smile as brave as Mary's own, took her hand and bent over her with a whispered word of hope and greeting.
The judge rapped for order, and Langdon put back his shoulders with the gesture of one ready for the battle. Another day in the great trial of Mary Page had begun!
It was a trial which was engrossing the whole country. The victories and defeats of the great war and the fluctuations of Wall street were unceremoniously thrust into inside pages of the daily, papers that the whole front sheet might be devoted to photograph after photograph and story after story of the lovely young actress, who was either a tragic victim of the law or—a murderess.
Column after column had already been printed about this young girl, who on the very edge of triumph as a star had been sucked into the malestrom of law beneath the shadow of the gallows. The story of her youth amid poverty and suffering, of her first stage success and her wonderful ability, had been told over and over, while woven through it, like a shimmering thread of gold, was the story, half hinted, half bodily detailed, of the love of Philip Langton for Mary, whom he was now defending in the face of overwhelming evidence and inexplicable mystery. There were stories, too—more guarded of James Pollock, who had been dead with Mary's unconscioned form on the floor beside him—stories that hinted at a dissolute life and of other girls whom he had led to tragic
dry, mortars of his wealth, his strange ambitions and his life of glided ease, but at best in the eyes of the world, he was only a lay figure—a bit of denim cloth which being the vibrant living tragedy of Mary herself. The journal routine of the opening of court was hurriedly gone through. The court attorney and London habit had all spent college with us.
The Strange Case of MARY PAGE
The Great McClure Mystery Story, Written by FREDERICK LEWIS In Collaboration With JOHN T. M'INTYRD, Author of the Ashton Kirk Detective Stories Read the Story and See the Bizarre Moving Pictures
Judge, and then the first witness of the day was called.
"Mary Page"
At the sound of her name Mary rose unsteadily to her feet, her eyes turned appealingly to Langdon, one trembling hand crushing back the little cry that rosa involuntarily to her lips. But HER agitation was no more than an echo of the excitement that swept through the crowded room. Somewhere, a woman caught her breath in a stifled sob, and at the back the spectators clambered upon their chains, crowding forward in spite of angry whispers of "Sit down!" and the sharp rap of the judge's gavel augmented by the official, "Order in the court."
To Langdon alone the calling of Mary came as no surprise, and he was at her side in a moment, whispering reassurance and urging her to answer as simply and clearly as possible the questions she was asked. His calm gave her back some measure of her own serenity, and her voice was low but clear as she took the oath and, stepping up into the witness stand, looked down upon that sea of faces. For a moment they swam before her eyes, and with a catch in her throat she remembered the last time she had looked down upon crowded faces; looked down across the footlights upon thousands of smiling lips and friendly eyes above a snowstorm of applauding white gloves. How long ago it seemed, and yet how short a time! And now the faces that stared up at her were void with curiosity, some hostile, some sympathetic, but all palied with the cornicity of the sensation secker.
Then her eyes, traveling beyond them, met the tear dimmed ones of her mother cleaning forward yearningly from the witness bench, and because of the suffering on that face Mary smiled. Her first answers to the questions of the District Attorney were spoken with quiet dignity.
"Miss Puge, isn't it true that James Pollock wished to marry you?" "Yes." The answer was lower now, and a hot flush crept for a moment into Mary's pale cheeks.
"And you found his attention unwelcome?"
Something in the tone brought her head up sharply.
"I had told Mr. Pollock that I could not marry him," she said firmly, and with a hauteur that wrong a little whisper of admiration from the spectators.
Abruptly the prosecutor changed his train of questioning.
"Now, Miss Page," he said harshly, "please tell the court exactly what happened just previous to the time when the resolver was heart and Mr. Langdon found you unconscious beside the murdered man. Begin with the moment you left the banquet."
With a sliver of attention Mary closed her eyes for a second; then, gripping the edge of the witness stand, she began speaking slowly and with an obvious effort.
"When the boy brought me the message—I was glad to go. They were drinking and were very noisy at the banquet—and I was tired. The boy meed the door of the suite, and I went in."
She paused and covered her eyes as if to shut out something terrible that she saw.
"Mr. Pollock was in the room," she said at it. "He he had been drinking—he wasn't himself—the could hardly stand. He—he said he wanted to talk to me alone for five minutes—and he wouldn't let me out, though I was afraid and begged him to."
"Did you try to get out? Was there a struggle between you and Mr. Pollock?"
She shook her head. "Not then," she said, with a little sob. "But—I was very angry—I told him he had tricked me—and I wouldn't listen to him. We—we quarreled over his being drunk, and—be tried to make me take a drink of the whiskey myself."
A shudder of repugnance swept over her, and her eyes grew wide and staring, and she aided for a moment like a flower in a storm; then, with a tremendous effort, as one called back from the borderland to consciousness, she added horrily:
"I remember striking at him—and knocking the glass out of his hand. I heard it break—and then—I must have fainted!"
"Miss Page," came still another question, "if you had refused James Pollock—if you feared him—why did you grant him an interview late at night in a private room at the hotel?"
"Grant him an interview," her voice rose in startled protest. "I didn't. That was why I was so angry—I had expected to and Mr. Langdon in that room!"
"Oh! You had made arrangements then to meet Mr. Langdon there? Again the satiric note crept into the harbah voice, and a crimson tide rushed to Mary's pale cheeks.
"The boy told me," she said with dignity, "that Mr. Langdon was waiting to speak to me. I thought he had come to take me home."
"The boy—what boy?" The question leapt sharply now.
"Why, the bellboy who brought the message," she said in surprise, and, turning, pointed toward the group of witnesses where the small bellboy covered, half covering his face with his shaking hands.
For the message at least every eye gaze upon him, and some of the bellboy
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Copyright, 1915, by McClure Publication
My vanished from those watching faces as a wave of surprised comment slipped from lip to lip. For after all, if Mary Page had indeed gone into that room expecting Lamdon and not Hollock, it roiled the murder of the infamy of cool deliberation.
Mary herself was both surprised and confused by the sudden turn of events and, dismissed from the witness-box, returned to her own seat bewildered at the seeming importance attached to what had heretofore appeared so small a detail.
But it was anything but small in the eyes of the district Attorney and Langton, and there was a gleam of triumph in the latter's eyes as the whimpering boy from the hotel took the oath. Before he went into the witness-box, however, the judge leaned forward and frowned down at him.
"Do you understand, Joe," he said harbly, "that what you have just taken is an oath? And that the law can put you into prison for perjury if you do not tell the exact truth after taking that oath?"
"Y—Yes, sir," stammered the boy. "I tell the truth, help me Gawd." Light laughter ran through the room, but the court attendant immediately called for order.
"Tell us exactly what message you carried to Miss Page in the banquet room," said the District Attorney, when quiet reigned. "It was Miss Page you took the message to, wasn't it?"
"Yes, sir. It was her. And the gent in the gray suit he says, 'Tell Miss Page Mr. Landon wants to see her here at once.'"
"And you delivered the message just that way to Miss Page?"
"Yes, sir."
"Why didn't you testify to this at the Coroner's request? It was the judge this time, stern and impacable, and the boy in the witness box ringed and burst into tears.
"They they—n never asked me wet the message was I was taken' to her. I—I didn't think it mattered."
With an exclamation of exasperation the prosecutor sat down, turning the email witness over to Langdon, into whose tired face fresh hope had now come. His voice, as he spoke to the boy, was gentle and friendly, and the snuffling had widened his eyes with the back
1930
"Do you understand, Joe, that what you have just taken is an oath?"
of his hand answered him eagerly. He soaked glad to find someone who didn't frighten him.
"Joe," said Langdon, his voke full of kindness, "that night wasn't the first time you had seen Mr. Pollock, was it?"
"No, sir," said the boy in his whirl young voice. "Everybody knew James Pollock at the Republic. He came there a lot—him and Mr. Slade."
"And he was pretty generous in his tips, wasn't he?" The question was quiet, and the District Attorney, who had made a move to interrupt, sank back without speaking as the boy answered:
"Oh, so so! He could afford to be."
"And so, on the night when he asked you to take that message to Miss Page, he gave you a good tip, didn't he?"
"Yes," said the boy, beginning to whimper again. "But I didn't do it for that. I didn't think there was any harm in the message. He says to me, says he, 'It's just a joke I'm playin' on her, Jon, he says, 'I want to fool her.' And he gimme five dollars—and laughed—and told me to beat it—and I did." "That is all, I think," said Langdon with satisfaction, and the boy crept back to the witness-bench, striving in vain for some of the jaunty assurance that had marked him in the earlier hours of the day. He had thought he would be a little hero after his testimony and that he would enjoy the feeling publicity; but he was ashamed of the laugh he had made.
The prosecutor himself was almost equally discomfited, for it had been his plan to build up stone by stone a towering temple of evidence to prove that Mary Page had in cold blood plotted and carried out the murder of James Pellock, and now the boy's testimony had in a minute undermined the whole structure. It forced him to play his trump card at what he feared was the wrong moment, but except for a harrow sound he showed little sign of his disgagement as he again called Mary to the witness stand.
THE MUSICIAN
"Have you ever seen this receiver be
- fores, Miss Page?"
"Have you ever seen this revolver before, Miss Page?"
She came more willingly this time it seemed somehow less of an ordon for she seemed that things had gone in her favor for a moment, and she did not even clink when, with a flourish, the District Attorney took up the revolver (lying with the other exhibits of the case before the jury) and thrusting it toward her, asked sharply:
"Have you ever seen this revolver before, Miss Page?"
"Yes. It belonged to Mr. Poll."
"Was it in his possession on night when he was murdered?"
"No." Her voice broke now and fell.
"It was in my possession then."
"And was it your habit," the prosecutor's voice was satirically mocking, "was it your habit, Miss Page, to attend banquets with a revolver in your handbag?" Mary flushed angrily.
"The revolver was lying on my dressing-table at the theater," she said, "and I put it into my bag, intending to give it to Mr. Langdon, but I forgot it."
"It was an unfortunate loss of memory for Mr. Pollock," said the attorney dryly, with a glance at the jury. "Then he abruptly waved the whistle away, as though it would be a waste of time to question her further. Langdon halted her.
"Will you explain to the court," he cried, "how that revolver came into your possession, Miss Page."
Gaining courage at his tone, and the smile that accompanied his words, Mary turned toward the jury and in that beautiful modulated voice that had held so many audience spell bound, she told rapidly, but in detail the story of Pollack's visit to her dressing room on the afternoon of that fat day. She faltered a little over the recital of his abrupt proposal and, we manlike, put in the world old apology for his brutality by the simple state ment:
"He was drunk, you know."
Then, vividly, her slender hands gesturing and her voice rising with polgen ant memories and pride of London she told of the latter's entry in response to her screams and of his but he with Pollack. Tense silent, but with every nerve alert, the crowd his tened as she described how Pollack had pulled the revolver out of his peek et only to drop it.
"He tried to pick it up again," she said, unconsciously visualizing for them the picture of the struggling man, "but I crawled close and snatched it up before he could reach it."
She paused, and when she would have taken up the thread of her story again, Langdon's hand stopped her.
"That is all, thank you, Miss Page," he said, and the District Attorney, surprise on his face, but with a new glint in his eyes, got quickly to his feet.
"I crave the court's permission to ask the witness one more question," he said, and as the Judge waved as he asked slowly, knowing the sensation his question would create.
"Miss Page, was there anyone else in the room at the time this struggle was going on?"
"Not—not exactly in the room," said Mary, after an instant's hesitation. "There were people outside the door, and—and my maid, who had been out, ran in during the excitement."
"Is your maid Janet or Jeannette Beauchamp?"
"Yes." Mary's voice was uneasy now, and her eyes met the frightened ones of the maid, who had risen with the apparent intention of leaving the room. But before she had reached the door the prosecutor had waved Mary from the stand and the clerk called loudly: "Janet Beauchamp!"
There was a startled cry of "Oh, mon Dieu!" and the Frenchwoman paused, wringing her hands, the center of attention. She made a half movement as if determined to escape anyway and defy the law, but the sight of the police that guarded the exits and the stern repetition of her name brought her reluctantly back. She murmured a little prayer and crossed herself as she took the oath, and the cool friendliness of the prosecutor's voice reassured her. "Janet, how long have you been in the employ of Miss Page?"
"Two—no, tree years ziz season."
"And was it usual for you to leave
the dressing-room when your mistress
was getting ready for the street?"
"No, monstieur—air?"
"But you had been told to leave her
on this particular day?"
"Told to leave." Janet's voice rose
in Gallic excitement. "Mati now! I had
but gone to so petite milliner, for so
new floweraire for so blue gown."
"Who told you to go?"
"Monster Daniels, he come in, and he and made motocycle, they talk, and he say posquoi could I not go to get to new dawaires—as orchids, since so shops would not be close for one half hour yet. And Miss Page she may, contemnt that I should go then, for she could switch to dress by herself for once."
"How long were you out?"
"Oh, je ne sais pas—I mean, I do not know. Maybe fifteen, maybe twenty minutes. I come back quick parceque there are two kinds of orchid at ze shop, and I want mademoiselle to see them both."
"And isn't it true," shouted the District Attorney, suddenly leaning forward and fairly hurling his words at the witness, "isn't it true that when you came to you saw Miss Pauz threaten en Mr. Pollock with this revolver?"
He caught up the weapon as he spoke and thrust it under her eyes. The maid, with a quivering little scream of horror, shriek back and a murmur of sympathy from the crowd. She could not speak.
"Isn't it true?" persisted the prosecutor harshly. "Answer my question—or tell us just what you did see when you came into the theater upon your return from the orchard."
Bursting into a storm of tears, Janet dung out her arms in a wild gesture.
"It is true," she sobbed. "Mess Page, my mademoiselle, she was standing and she had ze revolver pointed at Mr. Pollock and he he ran out of zero room."
At the words, Mary, whose hands had been twitching nervously throughout the malfunction, rose to her feet with a little gasping cry as if she would speak; but before the words came she swung suddenly about and crumpled into a little heap on the floor.
In an instant the whole room was on its feet, swaying forward toward the dock, and the soils of the maid were ejected by more than one woman
an outfitly with a derivative laugh: "She's a good actress, is Mary Page." But the judge's gavel quolled the excitement and the dire threat back of
THE FEDERAL NATIONAL HISTORY SOCIETY
"Was there any one else in the room?
bly curt words that unless there was order in the court he would clear the room, was like oil on the troubled waters of the sea of obliviousness, and they sat in blind silence as Mrs Lage and Langdon knelt beside the unconscious form of the slim young prisoner, building her temples and caffering her wrists until the momentary respite of mildly forcest her and she opened her eyes to the suffering of reality.
At the sight of the fear on both Langdon's and her mother's face, however, she struggled bravely to regain her self-control and when the clerk called the next witness she was again in her chair. Very white and wan, but erect her pallid lips not firmly to hold back the threatening tilt of emotion and weariness that were sweeping over her.
The drumming in her ears and the little waves of nausea that are the aftermath of a fatting fit made events blurred to net for a little time, and it was, with a start of surprise that she recognized in the new witness her gratitude leading man.
The mere sight of his graceful figure and his boyish face; that handsome juruncle expression that was his stock in trade brought a flood of memories surging over her, and the shocked pity in his eyes made her realize keenly the difference that lay between Mary Page the prisoner and Mary Page the star.
His testimony was to a great extent a repetition of what had gone before. He had been at the impromptu, had seen the boy bring the message to Miss Page and had hidden her good night when she left. A few minutes later the sound of the shot had taken him down the hall with the others and into the room where Pollack and Mary lay—the one dead, the other unconscious.
"It was I who first urged that some one call the police," he said in his well trained, youthful voice. "I would have gone myself but I wanted to be sure first whether I could be of service to Mirna Page."
"Was that the reason you refused to leave the room when ordered to do so by Detective Farley?" The prosecutor's voice was dry.
"I resented his tone, sir," answered the young actor. "And beaded, fushing. "I was her leading man and I felt that it—it was my place to be with her rather than that a lot of strangers should hang about."
"An involuntary smile crossed Langdon's lips, but they grew grave again at the next question."
"After your ejection by Detective Farley and Mr. Langdon did you leave the hotel?"
"No, sir. I waited in the hallway in case I was wanted."
Did you receive a toll call?
You, not I, not me, but when I hear the creature of voices following the re-entry of the house detective and Mr. Landon."
THE NEW YORKER
Langdon's Lips Grew Grave Again at the Next Question.
Langdon's Lips Grew Grave Again at the Next Question.
"Could you hear what was said?"
The actor flushed and hesitated, and then answered slowly.
"Yes, sir—in part."
"Will you please repeat what part you heard?"
"I heard Mr. Langdon say, 'But good God, there's only one door, she must be some place in here,' and the detective said, 'Well, she's not—you can see that.' Then Mr. Langdon said, 'There's the window—perhaps she's out there—I'll see.' And his voice sounded quiet and excited as if he were frightened, and the detective said, 'No, nothing doing on that, sir—just remember, Mr. Langdon, that as yet I've no way of knowing whether that shot was fired before or after you entered this room.'"
"Did Mr. Langdon reply?"
"Yes; he said. You did — food, what do you mean?" But just then the police came up and ran in, and I went on in with them, and the deter- tive shouted, "Some of you go down that these capes and hunt for a girl in an evening gown without either cloak or hat—and one of you keep your eye on this man Langdon he was either in this room or at the door when James Pollack was murdered!"
[Next installment, "My Time Will Come!"]
Mr. Wilson's Speech Plans.
President Wilson plans to speak in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, St. Jo- ceph, Des Moines and Davenport on the first trip he will take to lay his defense program bet- on the country. He expects to leave Washington January 25, and will be away early.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA - FLOUR 6m
winter deer $5,000.00 city mills.
$RYE FLOUR Steady, per barrel.
$5,004.66.
WHEAT steady. No. 2 red, $1.30
¢1.37.
CORN quiet. No. 2 yellow, $48¢86c
OATS steady. No. 2 white, $57
¢58c.
POULTRY live steady; hens, 16¢4
18¢c, old rooster, 12¢12¢2c, Dresser,
steak, large town, 20¢2c, old rooster
steak, large town, 14¢2c
BUTTER firm Fancy creamery,
36¢ per lb.
EGGS steady. Selected, 33¢35c;
nearby, 31¢, western, 31¢
CHICAGO. HOGS — Slow and steady. Mixed and butchers. $7.10/kg. Heavy hoes. $7.15/kg. Heavy hoes. $7.15/kg. Light. $7.75/kg. plgs. $5.00/kg. bulk. $7.20/kg. lower CATTLE. Steady. 10c lower Heaves. $8.30/kg. cows and heifers. $3.20/kg. Texas. $6.40/kg. Texas. $7.50/kg. lower Sheep. $7.00/kg. lee, lower Native and western. $7.60/kg. lambs. $8.50/kg.
you by your Furniture now
When you can get Furniture and Rugs from an Old Established house like JURGENS—that's known to sell the best quality goods, just as reasonable as elsewhere—why not give your friends a good impression. It will give as the greatest pleasure to show you our wonderful stock of home-making comfort giving Furniture and Rugs—and don't fail to ask our salesmen about our banking plan which gives you 5, 10 or 15 months in which to pay for any purchase.
RAILROADS
Richmond, Frederickburg & Potomac R. R.
NORFOLK & WESTERN.
ONLY ALL EAIL LINE TO NORPOLE
Schedule in effect, April 5, 1818.
Lewis, M. A., 7:00 P.M. *4:00 P.M.*
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For LYNCHBURG AND THE WEST: *9:15 A.M.*
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ATLANTIC COAST LINE
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TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY—
For Florida and the South: 8:15 A M 6:00
P. M. 12:00 A M.
For Norfolk: 8:00 A M. 8:00 P. M.,
6:00 P. M. 11:00 A M.
For N. W. Ry. West: 8:15 A M. 8:00
A M. 8:00 P. M. 8:30 P. M.
For Peterburg: 12:00 A M. 8:15 A M.,
6:00 P. M. 8:30 P. M.
For Petersburg: 12:00 A M. 8:15 A M.,
6:00 P. M. 8:30 P. M.
4:00 P. M. *4:10 P. M. 8:00 P. M.,
6:00 P. M. 8:30 P. M.
For Goldsboro and Fayetteville: 8:00 P. M.
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND DAILY—
6:30 A M. 8:18 A M. 6:30 A M. *8:18 A M.,
8:18 A M. 11:60 A M. 8:18 A M.,
11:60 A M. 8:18 P. M. 8:18 P. M.,
8:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M. *8:00 P. M.,
8:00 P. M. 11:50 P. M.
Except Sunday. *Sunday only.
Time of arrival and departure and accommodations
not guaranteed.
O. M. OAMPELL. D. F. A. 688 Main St.
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SR
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Firmingham, with Palmette observation
out.
11:15 P. M.-Daily-Limited-For all South.
Bouth. P. Mullan ready 9:00 P. M.
YORK RIVER LINE
6:10 P. M.—Seasonal train (Porter car) arrives local to West Point, connecting for Baltimore daily; street Sunday.
7:36 A. M.—Daily—Local to West Point
TRAIN ARRIVE ECHOSOND
From the South: 7:06 A. M., 8:09 A. W.
8:09 P. M., and 8:38 P. M., daily; 8:48 A. K., except Sunday.
From West Point: 8:18 A. M., 8:38 P. M., daily.
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007 East Main St.
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Northbound train scheduled to arrive in Baltimore
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ROANOKE, VA.
Roanoke, Va., January 28, 1916. Roanoke Lodge, No. 51, had the honor of having present at its meeting Friday night, the District Deputy G. C. Sir Knight W. B. F. Crowell, installing and giving the P. W., and such other instructions as would foster and further the best interest of society, community, city, and the homes of all who will accept his worthy advice for their life motto—"Straight-forwardness in Every Transaction of Life." The Lodge adjourned after a most enjoyable meeting. Recolpts of the evening $54.50. Thomas Jones, C. Commander of said lodge.
Mr. J. R. Mitchell, of 7th Avenue N. W., is quite indisposed at his home, the result of an injury received in a fall from a freight train during November. He is one of the strictest members of Roanoke Lodge, No. 51, and a faithful Pythian Knight.
The Rev. G. P. Miller preached a very, soul-stirring sermon from the pulpit of the Mt. Zlon A. M. E. Church Sunday morning, which was entire satisfaction to all who heard him. He spoke of how necessarily important it is for every man to use all the power in him for good and the uplift of those around him, especially those spiritual gifts. All who listened were benefited and helped having heard this wonderful discourse. May he long live to tell the wonderful story of Jesus and His love for man.
There is a week of rallying at St. Paul's M. E. Church, beginning Sunday, January 30, 1916, and continuing the following week, for the trustees' department of said church. Ex-Pastors Rev. Williams and Rev. Virgil being present to give impetus and good cheer to the work of the church; also giving gospel encouragement to the congregation in general. Many were delighted to grasp the hand of the two divines.
The aim of the church is to raise $1,000) one thousand dollars. May their aim be reached and the name of the Lord glorified. Rev. Dr. Brown is in good spirit, hoping that all things may work together for good.
Sr. Knight G. T. Leftwich, of 57 Avenue was taken to Burrell's Memorial Hospital and operated on for serious stomach trouble on Friday last and is reported as getting on nicely. We hope for him a speedy recovery. He is a staunch member of Roanoke Lodge, No. 51, K. of P. and one we are proud to have controlled on our roster.
Mrs. Catherine Stanfield is continued to her bed at her home 153 Wells Alley, N. W., Roanoke, Va., under the medical care of Dr. George E. Moore.
Mrs. Bossie J. Curtis, or 218-75 Ave., has been sick since she returned from Raleigh, N. C., attending the funeral of her uncle, who passed away early during the month of January.
Prof. M. Traynham, who sustained a painful injury from a unashed foot, is getting along fine and expects to report soon for duty in the foundry department of Roanqke Machine Works.
Miss Hallie B. Traynham, of 10th Avenue, N. E. and one of the very efficient teachers of Ginsbhoro Avenue Public School has been confined to her bed since Saturday, January 29. We hope soon she may be at her post of duty.
PERSONAL AND BRIEF
Editor John Mitchell, Jr. visited Danville, Va. last Tuesday. He returned home Wednesday morning.
Mrs. L. J. Moris is still indisposed at the residence of her brother, Dr. E. R. Jefferson.
Dr. E. R. Jefferson has been appointed Grand Master of Exchequer of the Grand Lodge K. 6 P. of Virginia vice Benjamin H. Peyton, deceased.
Rev. T. J. King, D. I.) had a rather severe fall last Tuesday night while visiting some of the sick members of his Church. He was considerably bruised, but has been able to get about, novertheas.
More than 7,000 people joined the Christmas Savings Club and the Vacation Club at the Mechanics Savings Bank.
Mr. W. Isaac Johnson continues to improve slowly, but his physicians do not permit him to receive company, as he is not able as yet to sit up.
Rev. R. H. Boyd. D. Iy and Mr. Henry Allen Boyd spoke to a large audience at the Fifth Street Baptist Church, Thursday night, January 27. They were much pleased with their reception here. They left for Newport News, where Rev. C. E. Jordan arranged a successful meeting, Friday night. They apoke to a large crowd in Danville, Va. Sunday afternoon.
Col. Willis Wyatt has greatly improved and is able to go about again.
Dr. J. Mercer G. Ramsey has decided to remove his family from their country villa to the city, so it is reported.
Good class of Girls, who can do all kinds of home-work, are always in demand. Good wages. Apply to MNJ. J. N. RIDDICK. 1420 Lombard Street, Philadelphia, Ph.
Vessel Given Up for Lost Reaches
Hampton Rhoads, Flying Kalser's
War Flag, in Charge of Prize Crew
The British African line steamship
Appam, which had been given up as
cost at sea, steamed into Hampton
Roads flying the German naval ensign
and in charge of a German prize crew
of twenty-two men.
The Appam was captured off the
Canary islands on January, 15 by a
German raider four days after she had
sailed from Dakar, British West Africa,
for Plymouth, England.
She brought in a tale of seven vessels
destroyed by the sea raider of
the African coast. The names of the
steamships sunk by the raider are
given as the Trader, Arthur, Cor
bridge, Arladne, Dromonby, Farrington
ford and Clan MacTavish.
On board the Appam, in addition to her original 106 passengers and crew of 134 men, were 138 persons said to have been taken from the other vessels sunk by the commerce raider.
Out of a mass of conflicting tales told by the passengers and officers of the Appam and the few admissions of Lieutenant Oscar Berge, commanding the prize crew, this much seems clear:
That the Appam was overwhelmed by a trump German raider off the Canary islands; that there was a fight before the surrendered, and that the raider assumed her business of attacking British merchant vessels again, slaking at least one in view of the Appam.
The vessel sunk, all accounts agree was an Australian freighter (probably the Clan MacTavish) laden with meat. The freighter showed fight, and several of her crew were injured., The German raider put the injured aboard the Appam, took cargo of meat and steamed away, leaving Appam to proceed to Norfolk, in charge of the prize crew;
Just how much of a fight the Appam put up before surrendering is disputed. Captain Harrison, of the liner, says surrender was immediate, since he had only one three-inch gun with which to resist the raiders attack, and that the gun was unmounted. Some members of the prize crew say the British liner opened fire in answer to the first shot across her bows. The United States government will have this point to settle.
There is the widest speculation as to the identity of the mysterious raider. Many think it is the Will'o the Wisp boat reported several times in the Gulf of Mexico, just after the escape of officers from the Prinz Eitel Friedrich aboard the yacht Helpspee Captain Harrison the raider probably was conveyed by a German submarine.
It is reported that the raider was the cruiser Mowe, although this is not confirmed. According to Lloyd's register, there is a German merchant ship named Mowe, commanded by a Capt Bainge, which is the same name as that of the commander who brought the Appam into port. There is a German torpedo boat by the name of Mowe.
The Appam carries a large caro. in oluding a quantity of cocoa and other African products. Among her passangers are twenty-two women and five children. The vessel is in excel lent condition.
WEDS AS BABE LIES DEAD
Woman Unwilling to Postpone Marriage and Financial Fertility
Hage and Funeral Follows.
In order not to disappoint the invite of guests and unwilling to postpone her marriage to Stephen Gutchman, Mrs. Annie Krokus, a widow of South Bokleham, Pa., decided to have the ceremony performed, even though her three-month-old babe lay dead at her home.
Accordingly the wedding ceremony was performed at Allentown, and then Mr. and Mrs. Gutchman returned home, where a little later the funeral of the child took place. The woman became a widow on October 24 last, and five days later the child was born.
No More Canal Slides, Says Goethals
Major General George W. Gee
thalis, governor of the Panama Canal
pole, arrived in New York on his
way to Washington to appear before
the congressional committee on canal
appropriations. General Goethals said
he was unable to find any definite date
as to when the canal would be opened,
but was confident there would be no
more slides.
Notices were posted at the plants of the H. C. Frick Coke company at Connellsville, Pa., through the Connellsville region, that, effective February 1, the wages of all employees would be increased ten per cent. The advance will affect 20,000 workers and is the highest ever paid in the coke region.
Conscription Begins March 2.
The conscription law recently passed by the British parliament will be come effective on March 2, the Loon Evening Star announces.
French Leagues 2,500,000
M. Leauquet, a French Socialist's deputy, who addressed the British labor conference in Bristol, England, on being questioned regarding the French lesions, said that 200,000 soldiers had been killed, 1,000,000 had been wounded and 200,000 had been taken prisoner.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
NEW GUNS FOR DEFENSE
Proposed Movable Artillery for Coast Defense.
54 KILLED IN AIR RAID
67 Others Hurt in Zeppelin Attack on England.
Fifty-four persons were killed and sixty-seven injured in Monday night's raid by Zeppelin's over Derbyshire, Staffordshire, Lincolnshire and Leicestershire, it was officially announced in London.
The number of dead and wounded may be increased in later reports, it was indicated. The official statement said that reports from cities bombarded are still incomplete.
The Zeppelin feet was the biggest that has yet attacked England. The raiders were hampered in their operations by a rust which made it impossible to hit down bombs accurately or to gauge their surroundings.
The following official statement was given out:
"An air raid Monday was attempted by the Germans on an extensive scale, but it appears the raiders were hamphed by thick mists. After crossing the coast the Zeppelinia steered in various directions, dropping bombs on several towns in the rural districts of Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Staffordshire. Some damage to property was caused, but no accurate reports were received until a very late hour. The casualties enumerated up to the time of the issuance of this statement were fifty-four killed and sixty-seven injured."
220 MIDDIES FAIL
One-Fourth Annapolis Students Must Quit for Deficiency, is Report.
Notwithstanding the particularly serious need of naval officers at this time, 220 midshipmen, about one-quarter of the whole number at the Naval academy, at Annapolis, Md., while in the regular course, will be asked to resign within the next few days, owing to their failure to pass certain subjects at the semi-annual examinations, which have just ended.
As the academic board has not passed upon these cases as yet, the academy officials are not ready to make a definite announcement as to the number and class distribution of the deficient, but it is asserted or absolute authority that the number is about 220, and that the number, in each class is about as follows: First, or graduation class, 20; second, 60; third, 60; fourth, 50.
Failure to attain a mark of 250 out of a possible 400 constitutes a "deficiency" at the academy, and in the usual course a deficiency in any branch is sufficient to bring a request for a resignation.
DUPONT SAFE STOLEN :
200-Pound Strong Box Carried From Home by Burglar.
Thieves carried a 200-pound iron safe containing $2000 in money and valuable jewelry from the residence of Mrs. Lammot Dupont in Wilmington, Del.
Mrs. Dupont had taken a valuable necklace from the safe, which she wore to dinner, but when she returned to replace it the safe had disappeared from a second floor room.
The house was searched but there was no trace of the missing strong box.
SMALLPOX AT HAGERSTOWN
Six Cases Found In One House, Which Has Been Quarantined.
Smallpox has again broken out in Hagerstown, Md.
Dr. Caleb Rohrer, of the state board of health, who is here making investigations, found six cases in one house, which has been quarantined.
The disease was brought from near Roanoke. For days the victims, little suspecting the real nature of the disease, went about the city, appearing at motion picture theatres and other public places.
Oppose Votes for Women.
Paul Littlefield, of Philadelphia representing the Anti-Woman Suffrage association of Pennsylvania and Franklin Carter, Jr., of New York, representing the Man Suffrage association, opposed the proposed constitutional amendment for woman suffrage before the house judiciary committee.
Air Raider Attacks Salonika.
A German airship has bomberded the allies' ships and stores at Salonika "with great success," the war office announced.
Governor Brumbaugh Weds.
Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh and Miss Flora Belle Parks, his ward, were married in the Germantown church of the Brethren in Philadelphia after extraordinary but futile pre-attacks had been taken to keep the wedding time and place a secret.
The governor's marriage comes as a
completed surprise to his friends and
to the public generally. From time
to time he had been reported as en-
gaged, but Miss Parks' name had
never been mentioned in this connec-
tion. She is a distant cousin of the
governor's and has been a member
of his household for more than twen-
ty years.
The wedding ceremony was per-
formed according to the curious Bunk-
hard rite by Rev. George Dilling Kuna,
pastor of the First Church of the
Brothren, of which the governor is a
member, assisted by Rev. Milton-C
Swigart, pastor of the Germantown
church. Neither the bride nor the
bridegroom had any attendants.
Train Killa Three In Auto.
Three persons were killed and three injured when a wrestound milk train on the Reading railway struck an automobile on a private crossing near Grantham, Cumberland county, Pa. The dead are: Mrs. Daniel Wingert and Mrs. John Harbaugh, Chambersburg, and Mrs. John Myers, Green Castle, and the injured, Daniel Wingert, Anna Myers and Norman Wingert.
Mr. Wingert, who was driving, had changed gear to go up grade, and the vehicle slipped back on the track in front of the approaching train. The rear of the car in which the women were seated was demolished, and the front part hurted twenty feet.
Mrs. Myers died soon after being picked up. The other two were killed instantly.
Fell 125 Feet; Will Recover.
C. H. Ice., a painter, of Donora near Mongolahela, Pa., fell 125 feet from a scaffold, sustaining a broken arm and leg and a slight concussion of the brain. Physicians predict he will recover. Ice, it is said, owes his life to the fact that he fell into mud.
New Malne Bishop
The Right Rev. Benjamin Brewster, of Glenwood Springs, Colorado, was elected bishop of the Protestant Episcopal diocese of Maine, to succeed the Right Rev. Robert Codman, who died recently. Dr. Brewster is missionary bishop of western Colorado.
Girl Gored by Bull.
Attacked by a bull while walking on the Cherry Lone road, near Stroudsburg, Pa., eighteen-year-old Rosie Young was saved by men who heard the shrieks of seven terrified companions who had taken to trees. Though gored, she will recover.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA. - FLOOR quiet
clear, $5.65/hr, city mills, $7.50
$7.60
RYE FLOUR—Steady. per barrel.
15 5006 6
WHEAT steady: No. 2 red. $1:37¢
139.
CORN quiet: No. 2 yellow, 84¾¹⁶
OATS steady: No. 2 white, 59¾¹⁶
POULTRY: Live steady; hens, 14¾¹⁶
18¾¹⁶; old roosters, 12¾¹⁶; Dresser
steady; choize fowl, 20¾¹⁶; old roost
fowl, 14¾¹⁶
BUTTER firm. Fancy creamery
34¾ c. per lb.
Eggs steady. Selected. 35¾ 31¾ c.
nearby. 34¾ c.; western. 34¾ c.
CHICAGO- HOGS - Bee, higher
Mixed and butchers, $7.65/8.90; good
heavy, $7.80/9.10; rough heavy, $7.45
$7.75; light, $7.80; pigs, $6.40/8.90
$7.10; light, $7.75/8.90
$7.50; higher, Hooves,
$5.50/8.90; cows and buffers, $3.65/8.90;
Texans, $9.50/8.90; calves, $9/10.60.
SHEEP - Steady. Native and west-
ern, $4.50/8.90; lambs, $7.50/10.86.
1916 FEBRUARY 1916
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29
P.
William G. S. Star, the Unite. St. ambassador to France, reported to the state department on the Zeppelin raid on Paris Sunday night.
He said none of the bombs dropped by the German air machine fell near the American embassy. Ten persons were killed and twenty injured, the reported.
Paris was raided on both Saturday and Sunday nights by Zeppelins. Official reports gave the number of those killed Saturday night as thirty-four; a French official statement declared, regarding Sunday night's raid: "Lentate rep's show that no damage was done."
Bitter Fight is Expected in the Senate on Confirmation of Noted Trust Buster.
President Wilson selected Louis D. Brandles, of Boston, to be associate justice of the United States, to succeed Justice Lamar, who died recently.
Mr. Brandles' nomination went to the senate. It was a surprise everywhere in official circles. Mr. Brandles had not even been mentioned for the recency.
No sooner had the nomination been received than the senators began discussing informally the prospects of his confirmation. A bitter fight is expected. None of those who said they were opposed to the appointment were willing to be quoted to that effect, however. Senators on all hands said freely they were taken by surprise. The nomination goes to the judiciary committee, where, if there is a fight, it will first develop.
Louis Dembitz Branditz was born at Louisville, Ky., November 13, 1886, and was educated in the public and high schools of that place and at Annen Realschule, Dresden, Germany. He was graduated from the Harvard Law school in 1877 and received the master's degree in 1891.
On March 23, 1891, he married Alice Goldmark, of New York city. He was admitted to the bar in Boston in 1878, and has practiced in that city ever since.
He has taken a prominent part in legal cases of a public nature and has been regarded as a man of ultra-radical views on many subjects. He has been independent in politics, acting freely with radical elements in both parties.
In the Ballinger controversy during the Taft administration he represented Glavis, one of the chief witnesses for the former attorney general's opponents.
He was counsel for the people in the proceedings involving the constitutionality of the Oregon and Illinois women's ten-hour laws, and chairman of the arbitration board of the New York garment workers constituted after the strike in 1910.
As counsel for the shipppers, Mr. Brandies in 1910 and 1911 made a determined fight against the granting of the freight rate increase asked by the eastern trunk line railroads. He caused a stir by declarations made in November, 1810, that the railroads of the country were wasting a million dollars daily and that he could show them how to save that sum.
He was appointed special governmeat attorney in the New England railroad inquiry before the interstate commerce commission last year.
Mr. Brandies' name last came prominently before the public when he was appointed special government attorney in the Riggs National bank suit against Comptroller of the Curency John Skelton Williams.
Mr. Brandies is regarded as an au
authority on public franchises, life in
insurance, wage earners' insurance
scientific management, labor problems
and the trust question. He has writ
ten largely on these topics.
Mr. Brandies is the first Hebrew to
be named to the supreme court. He
has taken an active part in the Zion
list movement.
Supreme court justices hold office
for life. Associate justices receive
$14,500 a year.
British Losses 549.467.
Premier Asquith, in a written reply to a request for information, says that the total British casualties in all fields of operations up to January 9 were 549,467, of which 24,122 were officers and 525,345 of other ranks.
RECORD PENNSY EARNINGS
The Gross Return for 1915 Totalled $195,528,170.
Gross earnings of the Pennsylvania Railroad company. For the fiscal year ended December 31 were the largest ever reported for on year, being $196,628,170, an increase of $2,250,318 over 1914. The previous high record in gross earnings was in 1913, with $197,501,490. The net income applicable to sinking fund requirements and dividends was $40,478,681, an increase of $8,173,458, and is equivalent to more than 8.1 per cent on the stock of the Pennsylvania railroad.
In 1914 the net income was equivalent to 6.53 per cent. The dividend rate is six per cent, so that in the past year the dividend was earned and with a surplus of fully two per cent over, although this figure will probably be lowered by deductions for sinking and other reserve funds, and possibly appropriations for other corporate purposes.
Begin Uniontown Bank Probe.
The federal grand jury began an investigation into the causes leading to the failure of the First National bank of Uniontown, Pa. Many officials of the institution and prominent Uniontown business men have been subpoenaed.
Governor Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts telegraphed the secretary of state of Minnesota asking that his name be withdrawn as a candidate in the Republican presidential primaries of that state.
Investigate this Free Offer
Major's Oxford Hair Treatments are being discussed the world over. Each and every woman is given an opportunity of securing this System for treating the scalp and hair Free (Course ordinarily $25) Time for this offer Short. Matters not where you live, we can teach you in your spare time—after completion of course. Diploma is given each student who is under our direct supervision which means protection. Write for History and Illustrated picture of College. Major's Oxford Hair Grower, 50 cents per box—Oxford Menthol Mint Bleach Cream, 25cts.
MAJOR'S OXFORD COLLEGE
OF HAIR CULTURE
4210 W. Belle Place St. Louis, Missouri
(Owned by one of our race)
S HUMAN HAIR STREET, WASHINGTON, OLDEST HAIR STORE COMB that will give you Stamps or Post Office Mon. 19 is the Best Hair Pomade, the purest ox marrow, hair straight. It makes the One bottle will make the PREPAID FOR 35 CENTS.
MY YOUR COMPANY
our Scientific Face Lotion made it to do. It whitens perfect tint, purity and cleanliness will surprise you. yourself its wonderful pail for quick and positive agents Wanted.
BARD SUPPLY CO.
E. ROOM 25, DEPT. C
CE, 212 EAST LANE
DIRECTOR, EMBA LIVERYMAN.
Applied filled at short notice for meetings and with all necessary conveniences for hire at reasonable rates. Buggies, etc. Keep us.
May and may and Man on D. 52 RICH
ANCE Advertising Agency, 1706 Goode Avenue.
HUMAN HAIR STORE
STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C.
OLDEST HAIR STORE IN THE SOUTHE
COMB that will give you Perfect SATISFACTION
HELLER'S HUM
712—SEVENTH STREET
ESTABLISHED 1850. OLDEST
Here is the Straightening (OMB the
Send Stamps or P
"TAKE OUT KINK" is the Best
the purest
stubborn and kinky hair straight,
druff, Scalp Diseases. One bottle
SENT BY MAIL PREPAI
BEAUTIFY YOU
in 30 days by using our Scientif
that does what we made it to do
skin, giving it a perfect dint, p
ite. The first application will
a bottle and see for yourself it
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STANDARD SU
MAFFITT AVE., ROOM
A. D. PRICE, 21
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
LIVER
All orders promptly filled a
ephone. Halls rented for m
Plenty of room with all neces
or Band Wagons for hire at
first class Carriages, Buggies,
fine funeral supplies.
Open All Day and
PHONF, MAD. 51
Arranged by the Fearance Advertising Agency, 1706 Goods Avenue.
HELLER'S HUMAN HAIR STORE
HELLER'S HUMAN HAIR STORE
712—SEVENTH STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C.
ESTABLISHED 1856. OLDEST HAIR STORE IN THE SOUTH.
Here is the Straightening COMB that will give you Perfect SATISFACTION
This One Dollar
Brass Comb will be
sent to your address
prepaid for 79c.
Pumps or Post Office Money Order.
Is the Best Hair Pomade made. It is made from the purest ox marrow. It will make the most straight. It makes the hair grow. Cures Dan-the bottle will make the hair Soft, Flue and Silky.
PREPAID FOR 35 CENTS IN STAMPS.
YOUR COMPLEXION
Your Scientific Face Lotion, "PLEXOLA." One made it to do. It whitens and beautifies theect tint, purity and clearness that is exquisition will surprise you. Send 50 cents for yourself its wonderful properties. For quick and positive results. It will not nata Wanted.
RD SUPPLY COMPANY
ROOM 25, DEPT. C., ST. LOUIS, MO.
E, 212 EAST LEIGH STREET,
DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN.
Filled at short notice by telegraph or tel-eder for meetings and nice entertainments. All necessary conveniences. Darge Picnic hire at reasonable rates and nothing but Buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand.
Man on Duty All Night
RICHMOND, VA
"TAKE OUT KINK" is the best Hair Pomade made. It is made from the purerot ox marrow. It will make the most stubborn and kinky hair straight. It makes the hair grow. Cures Dandruff, Scalp Discases. One bottle will make the hair Soft, Fine and Silky. SENT BY MAIL PREPAID FOR 35 CENTS IN STAMPS.
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skin, giving it a perfect tint, purity and clearness that is exquisite.
The first application will surprise you. Send 50 cents for
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It has no equal for quick and positive results. It will not
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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. Darge Pjenic 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
PHONF, MAD. 51
RICHMOND, VA
(Residence next door.)
Female E
e Emb
Embalmer
Female Embalmer
ME. LUCIE CHRISTIAN SCOTT
Is associated in business with her husband, Mr. Alphens Scott. Madam Scott claims the honor of being the only Negro woman in the State of Virginia—holding a State license to practice Balming, and is indeed, one of the few women in the United States, Embalming and Conducting Funerals. She ranks with the best in her profession.
She is prominent in fraternal organizations, namely: Courts of Cala-
the, I. O. of - I. O. of Good Samaritans, Hoe Ruth, Tents Sons and Dangers or Richmond, Shepherds of Bornlehem 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
1004 P Street, Phone, Madison 2237.
RESIDENCE
1015 St. James St., Phone, Mad. 6619.
RENTALS LOANS
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
PAGE FIVE
This One Dollar
Brass. Comb will be
sent to your address
prepaid for 79c.
WOMAN AN ETERNAL
AM
ee ae aay ee ee eer ee
New York. Jan 22° Wena oe a
eternal enigma, Man never guesses
her. but he never gives her up
Tee opigram came from an carn
sbair in the Hotel Wiehwend. In its
velvet depths waa M. Gabriel Nioter,
French artist, horn concours in very
nalon, chevalier of the Legion of Me
or, member uf the Royal Society ef
Portrait Mainters and wearer of many
other hovora which the cont ef white
paper won't permit me to enumerate,
M Nicolet waa oxtremely depresned
yenterday, but i ovwns not hiy becors
that worrled him. The veyake en th
Leefayette had been dreadful, te toot
een ne neantok Uiat he wan alien t
sarried of the ateamer, be natd Hut,
Stfue aon of Gaul that he ts, he brit
coed Instantly when 1 remarked
VALLS IT “RHE ENIGMA
M Nivolet, one of your tent tare
ous panting of women Is called “The
Kntxma” Do you believe i. or did
yen merely paint (tT
“D painted At and Fo believe 1t.° the
painter answered, “The mest siuple
et wetnen Id an enigma te the tet
learned man. A man may study yer
all hts fe, and at the end what dee
he know? The riddle is mere puschitae
that ever
"Mayle beeatme there sont ang) f
sugceted "You knew, Osc Wo
satd, “Wanten are spiinies actos
radeon."
Tt may, be that here tare 0 ot
wtbent Fddies, Dat fo have ners”
sautnted thet,” he answered. 1
GRuAT PAINTEICORwomex
Yet M Nicolet han painted ever.
type ef wetnan, from Mie preat bess
Pex of the Engin court te tee as
ut: rably charming women of hire 10
land, who Kevin te mare With at feos
natural advantages ax possible, Just th
shuw than what Mey ean de AN the
eehabltton of hie patntinngs, atte tw tt
open tn New York on January
every Ope nf feminine loveless ws |
he represented “There will te "Este
ti” Muttertty” "The Eternal be
at & portrait et a lovely Atrio
girl ing Hed Crome uniform wit
Hie PURE completed Just hetire leas
te France for bin test visit Gr the
Vuitet Staten
‘Phe abyinux, the Mupertiotai, on
Reman, Nas never futerestet tte, M.
NiesJet told me “Lda tot care te
bant wenien who are merely pretty
hittle antinaln. In “Entgma’ thas
fried ty mugkent Che utixpohet thes =
The speculations, of the young wots.
vonfronted with Ife, What ts ste
think about? What fe nhe deettin
Perhaps nko te debating a ps
posal af marriage: perbaim a pre
poual of a different nort. 1 have under
taken (oO prevent ber Indecialen. her
uiystery, ber dificulty, For punt to be
< wotian I a difficulty, fn it not™
“UC ty more than a diMcuity: finn
raredy,” 1 replied.
MORE THAN DIFFICULT
“Don't you make ft more of 4 truy
edy than ft needs to be," M. Nicole
anked. "Coming over on the Lut
‘ius there were many who tremble
with fear of torpedos because we had
bon warned that we would be de
atroyed by thom—yet here we are!
Nothing worse happened to mr (hn
dreadtal sossickess and I should have
been pared that, If T had been a"go0n
rallor, Now it soomn to me that thy
voyage Of Ife ig Uke thateven for
women. Tho Important thing tn t
et as much joy out of your trip 4:
you can—to be a good sallor—and not
to be afraid of torpedos. After ail.
they do not happen very often, and
why spoll a pleasant occaston by wor-
rying about them?”
Never having been the least bit
afraid of torpedos, T did not dispute
M. Nicolet. T'anid tnxtoed:
ALL BEAUTIFUL WOMEN Goob. :
"A while ago you remarked that
yiu do not care to paint pretty Ilttle
animals. Yet I read the other day in
W.S Ocorge's monograph on Anatol:
France. that your great katirint atid
every other Frenchman would express
hin real views of love and women if
he said. ‘One beautiful woman tn as
nod as another one.’
“Intereating.” commented M Nir
lot. “But ta tt trae?” 1 doo't ting
so. For. me the merely teautt(ul
woman bas little value. 1 prefer tn
Aaltely to Converse with the woman?
who in ugly, Dut intelligent.”
“Today. of course.” 1 interpolate,
“becaune you have roached the ace af
fearon, but—when yul were 267"
“When T was 25 1 wax nothing hut
veal, ike very young man of 2%,"
was the artist's anawor. “A man's
npinions of wofmen are of no value
until he ts 36. “He dors not under-
stand, Betwoon 35 and 60--60 even--
js man’s golden age.” - -
SPRING CHICKEN AT 25,
“And woman's? [s ahe. "too, veal at
252" T asked.
“No.” M. Nicolet answered. “She in
spring chicken.” He spoke in French,
so he did not know that he was using
the phraseology of Broadway. “But
wring chicken ie not very g00d, is #7
After all, {a it so very different ‘trom
vealr” *
{ thowgnt, bet I aid not say 20,
fearing such lore wonld~pat interest
we inechiaitee tagt they ave insted
- a are
0 ee or eS of
commerce. & -*
“Woman 1s moat’ interesting after
20," tho artist continued: “Sue has
rained to distinction, fn Individuatty,
in’ mystery. , The. enigma in more
wrofound. Ono day a mat thinks be
understands her, he belloves that she
fo utterly sympathetle with his every
thought and wish. und the next day
abe Ix cold, cynical. unreaxonable, He
wonders where It Nas gone the nym
pathy ated underntanding--but he ts
fuerested nevertheless. He wonders,
he xpecutates, A aman axpeculates al
Maye RbOUE the ‘WoIkUN Whe duteTeRts
Kun. He 'xtudien her. He nays to bitte
self, What in there very special ts
(ude Mette waenan that P tover! She
ts ne casapitivated, xt myAterioie to
hint 5
“Are men enisinas, foot asked
“How abe su eapeet woman te at
ewer that Are they ents to
weatnen Ts
“Ni Doraunt, “antes we make thet
pe TP believe all our difficulties sume
from obr trying to make tiddles ot
yew When jeu wre An Feality very
sample Wes bass muiserable haut
Saying te ourselves 7 What tad he |
Chink mbt that” «Hew diab thas ates t
hit? Did be bhe tay dren? Bors
he approve of the way ode my bat? |
What did be ava yesterday? ts ta |
Hamknas astomt me? Ise he angry
when the por sanphe oxowt Ie not |
(inking about us atoall, but about |
erwthing. really Mapartant, sete 4
ring, vith theriiiiine. panntenate, ihe |
Whe Prec af war stacks or what Mr |
Vath Uuitths.” 2 :
“Men are sitipie wien eotupared |
with women. Tait? Mat” Mo Ntewet
et answered “Hut, after ati, man}
Qioen hot faye tee bee ie emantna Wr
fot iss biistiess fa be etuetiye tt
R woman whos tust plea Wan p
Sevause, of foe deneneraes 68 tle
humah races Danterrupted, 7308 wt
Wit that the pease k tust be sede
Ie. ado Sout niet “
SYeu, Bat wattyt fave Hae dere
wututiful feathers. they reverse Mee ay
dee wf ature, Mo Nieowies sant
“Heauttfut borrewed feathers, ands
hey buerew thets (Pots oe thade bape
Iaieweted Seo we fell tor dis tee ste
hee Pelatiess beauty asf traatz antl 900
atic cath thes abttst sated Eo sucreent Ut
jrare ta duetes beautiful tte tiation att
sittin Ak Pepene “
Cfo edger weniian aaiot bate ware
han teats Me Xnedet concluded 0
Vharin es ioete that, beauty. Mystery t
STquere than eharnt Reanty: fades 1
hatin rows fatscliar Mat tuystery:
Perera! UL is. wemnatys mystery
Thee real peti wt 1
sch hae of Het th peti
ocaaaeages tm
HABEES REPORTED IN SEN OVA.
COUNTIES.
“Patients Seas Cader “Prearment ty
ae icaesGverinn Wtitenont Caweilleles;
Voqawgmeona Maca ce tie The
ee ace hit feta, Pace inate tes tees
the anterabae Peeatates? deren s
Siu Ghae fomtcbet teen srdeh Beate
Mid rarwe te a Bae tamiter the ds
Teo te trons whit rates tate teens
seth Fegwortod
Phe waves hese utter treatment ar
Phy utters of the State Board
Tieaith te ciaetrate very teary: te
face With whtefe Rabies i: Getetil Wher
Wrecauitiens anastet i ate neal taken
Fret are has. wtih of ete abe rite
cog teed Liwtary ©
Mites patient ve frets an patty hankate
peunthewatel ba Waketh, oaEE Si a et «
Gevelepet opmptities 6 Eo tnadzee Wt
Snes isf the party ace thiek dsageatee
Hie Beedy Wate hot reonered tet
ds Rnnwn few tinny ether atctial
AP amy. were batten by bigs :
Anetier qavivtt treme the Witty of
Veeder hatiity as Lhewine the ve
tine et Wer ent eat Utter untsth al
Citeutustagees ‘Phe family an dues
tot, 1 appears. tive tng tent sand
that tae dose oot Thoth ati tne
iuall fagediae whe heather a gsait
eed lousd One might Use fainily ws
atauned by the presence tn the tent
bt a ntrange dng whieh attempted co
bite the lapeos ‘The man of the fan
Hy at onee wet the grey hesumed oie the
intruder and had te beutd hokt the
range dag until We could feave the
ent ait KUL tt The grey hound ait
His duty bat was evygensiy bitten in
ne fat Thirty days afterwards
white belng fed. at snapped at the
woman of the family and mhowed sigue
Modistrens Ht wan killed and way
wand to le suftering from ydropte-
na. :
A Mera cane qu bitten” by eat
ehieh contracted the dtxease te a
hanner that could net be determined;
fourth wis Bitten by a enlle whieh
tkewhw wax Hot suxpected ut bein,
and
SUM another patient was bitten by |
rabid anima in it most unusual
panner. The patient wan working at ,
Heit in a powder-plant on the Routh ,
ide when he wan nudenly attacked:
ym bulldog. The animal wetred the j
and of the man before the latter |
ould afm himaclf and inflicted pain: |
al tnjuries ‘The man at length had ,
yortrangle the aniinal and throw him
nm atream to be rid of him The |
oy of the dog wan not Forovered but
he nyInptomny were MU typleal that
nthrable treatment waa deenied net
nary, f+ ‘
“AIL the casea.” anya the hourd 32 ¢
x weekly bulletin today.. “Aluatrater
ice more the truth we have empha §
ze again and again. Animale thet
wow onion of xuapictoun picknens
ould te aecurely chained until the 4
ature of thelr complaint ts certaln |
thin in done tn every instance, ratte
ttinkia’ WHE iat ae 04 Jaree” 7
GEIPTE WARNINGS IN PUBLIC
PLACES.
Michmond, Va,, Jan. 26, 1916.--Té
State Hoard of Health tn sending ou:
today to all the railroads and to nuay
ot the county superintendents of
snools brief printed warnings against
the npread of bad colds. gripe an.J
pneumonia. tn an effort’ to acquaint
the public with’ the means by which
thene diseases are conveyed.
Mont of the railroads of the State
have already agtacd to have warnings
ported in all thotr wtattonn, waiting:
rooms and passenger trains, The
board has Ukewlso written ‘to ceca
county nuperintendent a request thrt
he will notify the board how meny
placards he wants in order that one
may be posted in each school. Maay
of the superintendents have already
repited and have promised to see that
the pincards are distributed. Copies
will be nent other superintendents a+
soon aa they will inform the board of
choir Willtognees to co-cperate:in pre-
venting the spread of these diseasen
ROOSEVELT NOW CALLS
WILSOR'S STAND
COWARDLY
HO ENSPRESIDENT SAYS, “WE AIC
® ASKED TO KISS THE BLOODY
w HANDS OF TRE MURDER
ot ERS OF OUR WOMEN
AND CHILDREN"
% rhe 3,000 pernunia wite crowed ft
the Academy ef Muste in Drookly
sestefday afternoon to hear Col, The.
8 dure Koosevel!peuk before th
“ tostitute of Arts and Selene on th
A apie Of “Promise att Perfurmanes |
‘international “Relations” expects
rtreng Iamguaxe from the Colonel at
were not dinappotated
Hi nope of hts utteratees regardtn
Fhe event of the war, the weaktiess
‘feo Rue polkt af vlew, of the presen
Admintstenttat, the Jushare of th
J Uritted States to step forward cour
Fageollsly cas x. champion of the op
preswd Hitle ations, general etoun
Stine of the Teutonte Bowers, hax Col
Koonevelt ever exprened — himsel
Quite me savagely. ‘There were wen
feneox of bbe long speech that hut:
smered nite the ears of hin audiences
hike the beat of a drum, Conceraing
Me attlind) af the Wihwn Adminis
tration toward the Germante Powers
he nati
“We ure asked te kisn the bloody
hands of the murderers of uur women
aad ebfldren ated to nerye as. the tool
eof theae men agatist thaw nations
Whteh ave behaved tore Valtantly
ard righiteamsly tluat we dave”
SEES ADMINISTRATION
COWARDICE
fle wesused the Aduanatration af
Fowardice, nayttie
“Unfortunately i ie evident that
many of eur pulitie men are afratd
ff Gertmny, afraid of the prafeatonal
Gertuan Anieriean wate and are. wil
Sing to naerities the honor of its enun
try to thelr fears."
Such detiunemtions fairly leaped
from the long cufitress Hie beltevet
Mat Qe Wilson Administration biel
Mrought the nation te the lowest potnt
wf dishoner and Inmiltatien, atl he
AbD nee th characteristic Rooweveltaa
Berets. UH speerisy, etupldity, weal
Hees were the anlldest tertia he en
loved inh staractertaius the attitude
Mi othe Gaverntnent toward mteria
Henal probletes ‘The sttuatins am re
paride Meteo dteagisted him
Por tive sears. he slonted, owe
have purnued a poltey of beth coward
lee cant tyfamy ty the facie of aur duty:
owsard Meateo!®
Our positien toward’ Europe renin
eh tit of the New Testament parable |
i ee nian whe fell amen thimves on |
as way to Jerieho. . '
“Thee Allies.” thundered te Colonel, |
‘hate played Mae part of thie smal Sa |
carton toward Belgian: This tatene
os plage the putt of the Levite that |
ste sed atl the ther stds wittwut tes
fe te help the man.” x '
The poate of the Cotonels atepeet
hae sme h whieh suet giterested his |
waters atnt cclte tor tive badest ap)
Wause were Lis argiduents that the
ited States was ae cmitly bona bee!
he Harte car senthiene Ga peteteet Del |
cases hentrality, that it wee aa eet §
Pye te fal x sear and a halt age *
sstutel ferward in defense of titer
aitebal Vteallean. tt Germany te,
layin te ortye the Malted States a
Hater te craw) att ot anaktng good!
Shue words by affering a decsiteat ©
MUement of the Lasdtanty atractty in
urn fur un embargo on the white
wot ef munitions to the Allies: that
reparediess must be had in the full. ©
tosenise, atid that universal military ™
ating tnunt be adopted. s
Stertia of applause beat againet the
ais of the Academy auditorium aw ©
ww Colonel flervely set forty hin down
kt ophitone He spoke, am nual, ™
Yh tremendour vine und vigor eyes
eaning, Jaws napping. clenched
wus Tipping the aff aw dramatic aes ¥
nipantment to the spoken word a
At the outwet tie took up hin famtiine ©
rument that the United Statex wan
J honor bound te xtand by the Hague ®
inventions to Interpore in behalf of ¥
ctglum ‘the instant Geritian soldiers ™
‘oke over King Albert's froutter, and!
at it wax divhonorable conduct on™
part of the United States not to?
ve taken action. =
“A year and a half ago." said the
fonel, “the United States had a
Kuve to show Its devotlon for inter:
ionul Sdealiam much ax had aot {!
cvlounly occurred during the cen. 1
ry and a quarter of our national ©
c. We failed to take advantage of is
In chance e
MILED, HE SAYS, ‘Se
WHEN PUT To TEST. S
"We fulled becuuse, among other 4
Inge, when put to the tert we as At
ned to make god our International ¥!
ctulne by our spternational perform.
ce That wan an ovil thing on our
rn my
Now, Col, Roosevelt went on, there Ma
* berhona in the United States who It
+h ux {0 ald actively those who be
onked. Belgtum by taking action P?
ninat those who are seeking to right 4
r vrongn of Belgium. He referred
tie demands than an embargo be 19
ced upon the wbipment of war mu- th!
fons to the enomies of Germany. £0!
veloping his theory ‘of the legality Df
d righttulness of such shipments, ¢!
1. Roosevelt said: ~ Des
2 bs reel. ate. Bagi:
ic intertore on Debalt &F Bagh,“
should ‘voncretely interfere sgatust
her. :
“The export of munitions to the bel
Hgerents is moral or immoral accord
ing to ithe purpose ‘which ts to bo
worved. It te. ihimorat to export munt-
Uons or materials out of-which muni.
tion can bo made in order to prevent
Belgium from freeing’ herself. It 1s
highly moral to ‘export munitions
which wit help Belgium io frev bor-
self, It ts ap act of gross intamy on
the part of this Government and this
people to “take, any step which will
help the wrongdoer against tho
wronged, and such stop would be
taken If we imposed an embargo in
the Interest of Germany against the
Allies
taken If we imposed an embargo |
the Intereat of Germany against th
Altes
a CALLS IT CONTEMPTUOUS
x DEFIANCE.
‘ “A year ago this Government not
, fied Germany that it would bold te
1 tO 4 strict accountability If rhe sun
| Passenger ships and thurdored wones
Sand children, Agnin and ogetn an
_ Skin Ih contemptuous defauce of thi
‘warning Germany hax sunk then
S sttps and killed non-combatants unt!
| the number mdunte up into the tho
sande, :
7 “Whether the acts were done’ by
Gerian submarines or by Auntriat
nubiuarines of, an ix now clalmed, bj
Turkinh submarines or, an may poral
bly be claimed tn the future, by Bul
karian submarines, represents merety
the contemptuoun dexire of Germany
the directing and-diectating milnd of
the Central Powers--to give thin Gav.
ernment a chance to craw! out of mah.
Ink Kood tts fine words.
“We took no effective action whut:
fver to stop these repeated murders
They were flnally ntopped simply be
caune the British feet dextroyed 49
many submarines that (he warfare
“conned “being profitable to Germany,
Now, ft tn announced tn the press that
tte German Government and our Gor-
ernment ate actually huggling over
the number of doliars whieh tiyy
thduk the Ateriean people will pocket
ax payment for thelr murdered
swemen and children, Mee thone whos
Thetoxraph [now hold before you, a
Phihotetphic woman-aned het aly (ht
Uren who were on the Lusitania when
a wae mnnk, .
“Mt the name Ume the German and
Austriin Keverniments through heir
uweretited representatives inthe ett:
Beonies here have carried ut a ean
aki of the tomb and the ore
aatalnst our fndustries the action
our Governtent should hase taken 9
Mew of this campaticn wee net merely
aetion akalnat Dada, Ven Papen am
Hoy Ea, but the holding of the German
iid ANSIFlan goveRnMehts themselves
Tespousitie Gor every munition phat
that sax blown up er danced
ASKED TO KISS HLOODY HANDS >
‘Yel new Wt de annontved that we
are te acenpt moneys for the death of
our wenen and htldren and in retur.s
are te play the gate of the murderers
Ht these wpmen atid chilitren by: aetine
a theit interest aquiint Che allied 1+
Hons whe are trytig te free Heletute
Weare axked to hint the Mloouy hunde
oC the murderers of our women! ant
titer and to nerve an the foul ot
Hhese sen again: those nations white
vive behaved more valluntly and “ght |
east) that we tue IC IN a prepa
ston ef sordid bamciess Th ashe t
“put dothies above fives and te con |
AU ate sawn cownndien and weakten . |
aistead gof adhering to the eternel J
rinetwiss of jumtion I we fallow 4
Meh a woAT re, We WEL Cover aursclyes
ith rverlusting Infamy : :
“Our governmental uutherities by f
reaty. tint It by the action of the |
‘revideait aud the Senate together, by. ¢
he action of the Executive and the t
‘elslative powers In conjunction wit ¢
ne another, concluded treaties with U
agian. France and Runaia a enuple
(years ago, in accordance with which
anit they nereed that If uny tenue
rone between them and ua of any
ind we ntould appoint a comminetoa 4
stalk over the matter for a year «
fore warltke action was taken, This 0
an a definite promixe on our part, tl
“I do not bellove in this kind ‘atm
eaty, 1 thin kind of promise. But
tlesx the treaties ure denounced they ai
ust be kept, and ft fa not honorable
walt before denouncing them until 0
me rireumatance arinea which W
akes the denunciation agreea..e wv Ti
sat the moment. The present Ad: ¢
intatration made theso — treathoa,
ene promins, These promises mur!
kept at thin fime, unlenn we would of
vur shame and dinhonor. 1
TTACKS EMBARGO AS IMMORAL. oF
“
“An embargo would bo a flat viola tu
on of the promise’ Ax to the Krona Dt
morality of pasalog an embargo, tts #'
wardice and weakness, I bave al- co
ady spoken, and in additton I would (&
for you to the capital speoches in be
© Senate of the United States by &
untor Lodge of Massachusetts and ™
nator Williams of Minaiaalppi, who th
th set forth in this matter the only th
ctrine to which self-respecting Dr
nericana who possess courage anJ sh
sh the nation to observe its plightod Fl
ith muxt adhere. ° £0
“The geeat war of the Inst elghtecn #8
mithe haa been marked by the mont {1d
stant violations of internation! tb
s und tho worst horrora that have st
en noon since the tlose of the Na- na
leonte contests, and some of: tha les
ts Nave been worsa than what M1
‘urred in the ‘Napoleonic ‘contests.
other words, it 1# plainly evident
we have gone backward and not
ward, and that all the beltef ox
“ared by the professional pacifiats
‘3 these had been Sromrem towars Mi
eqeare ovr performance with . our
promise, has made us partly respon-
aible for thess criginal mtedeeds.
“If we bad in effective fashion inter-
fored when the righta of Belgium. were
violated by Germany) and Germany’>
nolomn promise to ua broken it would
then have been proper and necessary
for un to bave interfered tn similar
fashion in reference to bubsequont and
minor violations of the lawn of intor.
national ‘condact and the rights ot
neutrals by other Powers, But when,
whether because of cold selfishness, or
of sbeer timidity on our part, wo
‘hirked our duty as regards tho frat
and groatest offonse and the most for-
uldable offender it would be an act of
abject basenean to act against ican
rormidablo ‘offenders who ‘were guilty,
of infinitely lesa serious offences.”
CHARGES FEAR OF GERMANY.
“Unfortunately ft Is ovident that
juany of our public men are afraid o
Germany, afraid of the professional
German American vote and are will:
ing to xacrifico the honor of thin-coun-
try to thelr fears, There ts practically
to French American or Engliih Amer.
fcan vote, and these politicians there:
fore. feol that they can act oxatnn:
England and France with sufety—and
thelr motto tn safety first.”
The Coloiel nt thin point apoke of
the citizenn of German birth or de:
rent. He believed that the great
Mavs of them were stralghtont “Amer!
cann,
“ask Americans of English deacent
to stand uxainst Englaud when tt 1%
wrong,” said Col. Roosevett. “I ask,
Amoricans of German deacent to ntand
akuinat Germpny when It ts wrong.
Pank that all aitke stand an Americans,
and nothing ene. «
Lol. Rooxevelt xpoke of the pro:
posaln recently made to establish a
world league for thy enforcement ot
peace. He heartily approved of the
project, but only on condition thut
thik country keep Ite promines and
chat St Ket Feady to take tls promises
Mectlye by action. No nian, he nald,
could exeape the accusation of hz:
pocriay who at thig tine apeakn in
favor of a world peace league unten
We has actively demanded that we Hye
1p to oUF duties to Belgium under ti
Hague conventions
The Colonel struck at both ex Prest.
font Taft and Mrestdea: Wiles wine
ie Came Cow CINK aston Of the Myvi
0 stn
BENDS “COWARDICE IN atExico
: TOO.
AK regards Mexieas te guild, “eur
)Andignation must tw dizecied acatnt
S the men of both partion wine ave
Sheen resonate fur one shirking our
duty during (he last tive years Ber
Ave eure the representatives of one
peuple in Washington huve submitted
to every spectex of Infamy In Mexien,
having allowed our men (ote killed
our wenn to Ite outraged, oUF prop:
erty to be destroyed, nat ouee, tea]
uxatn abd again in many bandreds ot
casen, and no effectlye® atepn at at,
Kind have been taken by eur repre |
wentatives during these entire the]
yeare Que polley has meant untuls
sufering aud bloodshed not only tae
aur people but for omer fereiuer
in Meatee, For five years we hive
purmied a policy of both coward
amt infamy be the fare et war dary,
toward Mexiea” + i
Tuking up thy tople of preparedness
Col Roosevelt sald that 16 wae foolist,
te may that preparedness brings ga?
Vad net any more Hoan tire tse
ance being on tres
The profenstonal pacihsts sho arg
agaiumt Vnele Sau preparing himsest
for malflefonne,” aid the “Colored,
‘take the view that Chete Sam moral
character Won a par with that of Gi
Individual who tosures hin bause fer
the purpose of burning 1 down py xe
Te -dnmuranen
STRIKES AT CONTINENTAL ARMY.)
As (0 preparednens tie sald thst ths
Frat requiaite wan 10 hinve a navy
either equal to or second only to the
navy of any other Power, and that
tho necond requieite war to have a
mobile army of at leaxt 150,000 nen,
which would meun a total regular
army of about £50,000, Halt war
measures were bad, he went on, and
the proposal for a’ continental arniy
‘was a proposal to arm Unele Sam with
muzzle loading .22 riftes, not with welt
cocking 46a,
“The men who advocate the secatiot
continental army are the real enemies
of preparedness,” zald Col. Roosevelt.
It would be thoroughly undemocratic.
{The profesatonal pacifiat who clant
ors for a peace which will consecrate
nuccesaful wrong fs an ignoble crea.
ture unnt for citizenship in thin r+.
publit," he added, “Tho materialist
who for the ako of selling cotton or
copper or beef wishes this country to
take action that would hinder Beleiuin
being restored to {ts own peoplo i
Alne to overy principle of, the great
men of this republic's paat. 1 asx
that’ we stand for property rights, but
that we put human righta ahead of
property rights, and finally that we
show that we havo it {0 ux to dare to
risk something and to suffer some din
comfort and .#omo lors, and if necen-
sary some danger, on behalf of a lofty
ideal, {t 12 by 20 moans necessary
that a great nation should always
stand on the hérole level, But no
nation can be called really groat un-
jens 1t.cap sometimes rine toa herole
ae
WEST POINT, (VA.) LETTER,
West Point, Va. Jan. 21, 1916.—
Mrs. Luetta ‘Tuppence and Mies Ev:
Dhrates Coleman. of Richmond, spent
Sunday hore with their parents and
friends.
Mr. James Allen ia improving
slowly. :
‘Mrs, Sarah Troutelroy is on the sick
Mat.
Mr. Charile Clarke, Sr., 1s somewhat
Miss Lizzte Jobneon ts on the sick
list.
Mre. Sarah Wynti -ts still confined
to her bed. A B
Mies Marta Walker 15 on the sick
Niet; aloo Mr. George Edwards,
Nira, Waate Wright, of Seventh St.
ts om the sick liet. -
Ber, Art Marrs Yett nore Monday
for Newport News. .
Mr. Malery 8. Walker, of 12th Street,
feft here Satteday for Nerfk Mission
Cettege, Hartt, Va.-
Oe en D ERED PLES OCOD OOO OOOO DS OBO O OOO SOOS:
D. J. FARRAR, Contractor & Builder
$ Office: Roem, No. 405, Mechanics’ Bank Building
"PHONE. RANDOLPH 2637.
Reawwexce—610 N. First 8t.—BShop in Rear. ‘Phone, Randolps 3166
Special Attention Pald to the Taking of Contracts for Building of
Any Btyle of Architecture. Jeb ‘Werk = Specialty. =
et ee
SSR a
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. ;
[theming Be TERMAGIC 13.90.1008 :
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(TS SHORE Oe POC Behe won Case
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A REACTIVUL EAD OF HAIR 18 A LADY'S CROWNING CLONT~And every tty cia
have tithe wth oor Or Magic ‘The Baghe wil Sey Se Balt after © emoet er Me sot
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met injure the hair, Mecemes it le mever heated dize(t, bot tale (ts boat from the heating ber wich
intreta'on car Aisbahit lomse; se nayoshor keer’ Welctnios thatos af Renee’ ale Rosse
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i L. J. HAYDEN
- MANUFACTURER OF
_ |g) Pure Herb Medicines
: > To Cure All Diseases or ne
} Charges. -
DO YOU LOVE HEALTH?
. If 00, call and eee L. J. RAYDER,
Manufacturer of Pure Herd Medicines, -
: | | $20 West Breed Strest. My Medicines
oe a eT Re ate ev tee is Gea nec eee
t a -
ad restore Fou to arte bealth Tasnenst ee pee — =" ent
leading nae in Se Uatied Mates and Burepe will testify I om.ene
pall Bon] eg og I)
, Carope hay sgiven up te die, and anid there was ne cure fer them. .
‘Cure the Futlewing (lssnees:—MBeart Disessa, CRE
form, Paina tod Seben ef any Kind’ Osies Brocekaal Treckten Seca sane,
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L. J: RATER 270 WB
Take ft'Triy the prestt abesever,
-taerws altoivtber-/too mech . “Papa
dole” and {iteciver oft in Ue war
news and not cuouch “How we amash-
| ed the Teatons™ 10 antisty the allies.
| Naturally the War college aaks for
everything ti wiht fa the way of are
my snerease. Probably, however, it is
Ktself prepared iv be xatinfled with a
half or eveu quarter loat. :
, Other wy "make a hit by carly
shopping are (he onex who buy the
right stocks ut the right (me add
know the right moment to unload upon
late comers. |
The chulee of Carranza as the bosa
of Mexico was followed by Weeks of
peace, answay. Cor this lot us give
thanks
A Ulsger vutput of locomotives and
care dn place ef ol) thay war ammuut: |
Hon woukd sso boost one jyroxpertty.
Maybe December was simply band-
ox ont Jant.wiuter'x “hung over.”
Unele Sam may yet be lured for “the
qwemlee be bas ude.” .
AN AID TO MEMORY.
Hew to Make a Calendar That Just
Fits the Kitchen,
.& usstul and unique calendar that ts
indispensable to every systematic
housekeeper can easily be made with-
wat expenne. A very light colored
cardboard can be ured, but light gray
e@ white js the” mest; sMestive: The
cargbeart should be. sbsut 14 by 8
inohes dnd should bare smecth edges.
Finwt ofall, rele off & -berder .abowt
enethind of an ‘inch and 411 it in with
sit. Take bot very little om the tip of
your brush’and ruo, it aloug carefully
0 a8 not to ron over the edgve, ‘Then
you should obtain a pad 2 by-4 inches,
containing the dates This may be de-
tached from dome cheap calendar
which you hare pr can purchase at
any bookstore. Holding the cardboard
lengthwise, attach this pad so that Ite
bane will fall along the edgo of the
border on the base of the cardboard.
fo the space above the pad containing
the dates form twe columns. In these
print neatly in alpbabetical order a
complete list of. articles which you are
accustomed te purchase from your cro-
cer, After giving thexo a cont of gilt
you will bave an attractive dally re
minder for your kitchen.
THE ECONOMY
927 N. FIRST st. |
. Fine Tailoring
Cleaning, Dyeing and
Repairing
‘OBITMAN M, WHITE
Preprieter
SATURDAY.....FEBRUARY 5, 1916
JAMES R. MANN “|
Republican Leader In House |
fl > Urges U. 8. to Arm. {|
. i
fe FOS
. & ee: ae
age
” he
‘ Sigs eae
cd
MONTENEGRIN ARMY QUITS
‘The Austrians Now Oceupy the Whole
wockee Tok
aoe Ey eRe
The main Montenegrin army ha:
surrendered to the Austrinna an‘ th
wholo of Montenegro’ fy now held 3
the Invaders, according to dexpatche:
recetved fa ferlin,
Reports that King Nicholas and the
Montenegrin government withdrew
thelr request for peace wero axain
deniod {n despatches to the Berlin
Rewapapern. ft wan stated that King
Nicholas lett for France under pres
eure of the allles, especially of te
Italian king, because of the effect
Montenegro's surrenior had had-upon
the pooples of these countries.
“King Nicholan’ travels and utter
ances arc now of leas fraportance than
the fact that all Montenezro In now
occupied by Austro-Hungarian troops,
who nowhere havo found resistin ¢
on the part of the population.” one
despatch read.
“The on'y rioting occurred at Po!
goritza, between the Albanians and
Montenegrins, who fought in thy
atreots until Austrian troops, calle.
by tho-Inhabitants, arrived and pit
an end tothe disturbances, The mir
Montenegrin army that oceupled th
Me of Neb Oantloverat-Podgoritan
Seatar! tx in Austrian hands.”
WINS SUIT AGAINST SALUON
Proprietor Who Sold Man Drink Must
Pay $2500 for His Death.
The Wrst “ease in Philadesp ia
county In which damuges were
granted asatast a sflocnkeeper for
the death of a patron due to ex
cennlve uxe of quer pupchased tn tin
catabllahment wax decfded In Judge
Patterson's churt, when a jury return
ed a verdict of $2500 In favor of Mrs
Virginia. Alexander against Jncob
Borch, the proprietor of @ naloon at
2521 North Twenty-seventh street.
Mrs. Alorander nued torecover for
the death nf her husband, who, ade
claimed, died In March, 1914, after two
years of exceanive use of intoxbants,
the majority of which sho proved hat
been sold to him by Boach,desplte her
pleadings and requests.
Several cascn fn which similar
claims were made are recorded in the
loxal annals of McKean, Lobanon, Al
legbeny and Braddock counties, but
tbe Philadelphia county files contais
no mention of an instance where ®
plaintiff hes obtained # verdiet.
ACCUSER GETS AFFIDAVITS
ee ee Nene ee ene ae
claiming Allegiance to U. 3.
Maurico Zeigler, who bas charge
Dr. D. C. Mebane, candidate for th
postmanterahip in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
with disclaiming allegiance to th
Stars and Stripes, declared thal
he had fumished federal inapector:
sent here to Investigate his charge
with affidavits from William Zeiger,
hte brother, and Edward Phillips, an
employe.
‘Witllam Zeigler and Philitps, tn
thelr aMidavits, claim that Dr. Mebane
entered the Zeizler store and when
asked by Maurice Ziogter to subscribe
to @ fund to buy a flag for a public
sobool building mnde this reply:
“This {a not my flag, | am a South
erner.”
AIRMEN HIT BULGARS HARD
Lease 100 Killed and Wounded In Lat
est French Rald.
Monastir smd the Bulgar cam
at Glovgell hava again been a’
tacked by a squadron of French,aero
planes, sixtoen in ‘number, the Ath
eas correspondent of the Havas
agency telecrapha.
Tt {x estimated that 100 persons
‘were killed or: wounded at Glevgell
All the French aeroplanes returne!
fa safety. In same caso they cover
eds distance of. 190 miles.
Fire, resuitiag from (he allies’ pre
vious air attack, has-partly destroyed
Monastir, according to Salonika ad
Goed Reade Bill Passes.
By a vote of twenty-eight to cich'y
@me, the houte passes the Shack.
itera good rotds bill, authorizing the
= Of $25,000,000 to extend
ald fa the coastraction of pos
INCOME TAX:
LAW UPHELD
Supreme Court Deeares Ac
Constitutional :
SOUND ON EVERY POUT
Sweeping Decision Handed Down by
Chief Justice Sustains Government’
Interpretation of Measure.
| ‘The supreme court upheld tho in
come tax law in & docision given by
Chief Justice White, which - swep!
aside all the many objections to ti
constitutonrtity ta whole or in part
Chief Justice White announced tne
Gecinion tn’ the case of Frank R. Brust
aber, stockhulder of the Union Pactic
rallroail, who sought to enjoln tac
company fro‘ paying the tax on the
ground that {t was unconatituttoual
Moat of Justice White's opinion was
directed toward overrruling the con
tention that the incomo tax amend
ment provide a abtthorto unknow:
power of taxation, Going far Int.
the bintory of the income tax. loxisls
tion, the chief Justice concluded th
argument was without merit. Advaac
ing to other pulnts, the chief Justlc:
Wold that the tax was not unconstit:
tonal becaune ft wae retroactive.
+The argument that the law was UD
conatitutioual because labor, agrictil
tural and horticultural and aucn or
ganizations were extmpt, the cbiv
justice hold, was answered by deci.
fons under the corporation tax law
He sald the point was only anotiie.
Blustration of an erroneous assump
tion that the tax was imposed urder t
Row powcr conferred upon the govern
ment by the alxteenth amondment
whereas It was a power recognized t
exist from the beginning of the gv
eroment, and thus decistons defini,
tho taxing power previously rendere
wero applicable to It.
Then grouping a number of othe:
contentions against tho law, all base.
on the clause of the constitution ze
quiring uniformity in taxation, Chic.
Justice Whit pronounced’ them. a!
lacking tn merit, because of previous
deciatonx which determined thateth
clause exacted ouly a gcographica
aniformity. .
Bridal Couple Dead In Garage.
Married lew than a week, +
Bellefonte, ia, couple met trai
death when atout to start on at
automobile rife’ from their home,
The,coupte, Willtam Notl, proprietos
Of futney auto wervice, and his wite
Mt 1s Dellewed, were killed by excapin.
gasotino fumes from the car they we |
about 19 nae The bodies wore foun
fm the xarage located in the rear 0:
thetr home. Phyntcians stated tha!
they had bern dead about nine hour:
and had smothere! to death.
Mw. Noll war sitting in thefr auty
mobile, and the husband was stand!ns
alongside the car, leaning over thr
door. :
Miners Oppose Taft,
A revolu:!n protesting against th:
appointinent of Willam Howard Tait
to the supreme court beneh to auc
coed Juaticn Lamar, was unantmounls|
adopted by the Untied Mine Worker:
of America ta Indianapolia.
A committe wax named to see tha’
& copy was sent to President Wilsor
at once.
The resolution sald that Mr. Tafl
wan unfair {0 labor: knew nothing o!]
the working vonditions of the masse:
and was unsympatheti¢ with thelr ia
terests.
German Losses 2,535,768,
The total German casualties tn te
war up to date are 2,535,768, in wa
announced in the house of common:
fn London by H. J. Tennsat, unite’
Secretary of state for war.
Of thix number, Mr. Tennant said
the dead are 558,986.
The wirended total 1,566,549 and the
Prisoners ant missing 356,153. Of the
Privonprs 2180 have died of wouni:
pand sickness since they fell inte the
hands of the ailles. Theso Mmures are
compiled from the Berlin casualt:
Mats,
Bethlehem Dividend $30.
The Rethieiem Steel corporation de
clared = dividend of $30 a share or
ita common stock, out of earnings of
the year 1915, payable in quarterly
instalments.
.The corporation also announced an
{ocrease in wages of ten fer cent for
Ite unsk{Ned labor, which went inte
effect, ft was sald, on January 16.
The divt*ene represontn.a distribu
Mon of ap.roximately $4,590,000.
Wall xt ect estimates an to the
cmnany's’ curcings have ranged from
16 to.150 per cent,
Plunges 16 Stories: and Stil! Lives
Miss Minnio B. Werner, twenty:
four yoars old. a stenographer, plung
ed from the aixteenth floor of the
transportation building, {2 Chicaxo,
but still ives, Her fall was broken
dy a motor track loaded with pager
doxes, but bor skull was fractured
and sho was internally injured. The
police aay she Jumped from & window.
She ts expected to die.
; a.
A Different Mil,
“Great-reel I saw last night.” *
What was it?” *
‘“"The Mill on the Fioes.’”
“I thought prisefight filme were
barred.”—-Pittsbargh Post, 2
; + Te Mies Jey. .
“Yow're & charming demeanor, & veice
1 ike @ flute,
But alas, you're toe merry by balft
Tosrtitaty: Roped you woeld amile on my
te are
Wat I 4 not expect you.te tenant”
ee aes:
“Ti! RICHMOND: PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
| Pi ne OO
| eISS TREHAWKE DAVIES |
Woman Fillers Death Revealed
by Sale of Property In London,
: nae)
Photo by Amertoan Press Association.
Miss Davien was the first woman to
loop the loop and had in 1912 mado a
peeesneer record- between Paris and
adon.
Mes. Elsenderger Acquitted.
After bei: out almost forty-five
hours, the jury in the caso of Mrs.
Annie Elsenberger, chargod with the
murder of her buxband, In Lancaster,
Pa, retumed a verdict of not guilty,
In the trin] a confexsion, declared to
have been made by her was introduc
ed, but sbe repudiated it om the stand.
The commonwealth asserted sho shot
ber husband to obtain the fosurance
on bis life.
“FORCET PARTY.
AND ARM U. S.”
1 e
Wana Makes Plea For Nan-
Potifical Preparedness.
SAYS WAR DANGER IS REAL
SSE SOE CreES OF ee eee
Now Than Unguessed “Biltiont
Later.” Declares Republican House
Leader.
Vnqualiti..t, nou-partixan suppor
of military “preparedness was urK
ed bys Coalesman J. R. Mann
of Mlinois, in a ringing speech
on the fesr of the house, He
wan heartily and repeatedly npplaudee
by both ate. af the chamber.
White tt has been understood that
moat of the ikepublicans favored army
and navy In reases, none of thet
loaders had spoken ot Ute aubje
Conseqnent!s, cuming as {t dhs on the
ere,of the presidente departure on
preparedness xpeaking tour, Mann's
address was recarded as particularly
significant. He remarked hinaself that
he always hax heen known as a
“amall” army und’ navy man.
Mann baned his plea on the ground
that 1 behooves the United States
now to prepare for any eventualities
that may come as a result of tho Euro
pean war. He sald he saw no imme:
diate danger of war and heped peace
might provatl, but that the dmngor of
the United Staten being drawn inte
the present canfilct, or one that might
Pesult from tt, was too great to be
disroxarded. - + |
“L have much more fear in the ond
of war with England than { bave of
war with Germany,” ho sald This,
wan his only comment on this phaxe
of bis subject. Later he dectined te
elaborate on his remark.
Mang urged no particular prepared
ness plan, Ho satd he favored #
standing army of 259,00 or 309,000,
or even half a mittton men, better
coast efences and nm “navy which
will be able to defend: ux on the
sea” He promined to go into these)
Getailx at greater length tater.
“I think we ought to provide these
great forces.” xald he, tn pleading for
& non-part'san riew of the question;
“that I ouxht to be considered a0
emergency matter, entirely apart from
the ordinary routf{ne or expense of
rovernment.- without rogard to part!
sanship, or party.linea.” :
Touching on the coxt, Mann sald
ft would be miflligns now, but better
than millions later.
“We can better afford,” he safd, “to
spend hundred of millions of datlars,
or a few biilfons of dollars in ample
preparation for trouble and avoid it,
if possible, than we can to watt for
trouble and then spend untold bil
Hons before (we ara finally victors,
as we would be.”
He sald the world was in the worst
pondition In which any Iving person
had over seen’ it, and prodicted ft
might be many years “before tt {f|
lefpitely determined whether one ot
he other, or neither side can become
aster." Ho also scouted the per
manency of a paper peace.
LODGE WILL ADOPT BABY
Knights of Khorassan Will Turn Out
“Goat” and Ralee a Child. ©”
Zameri Temple, dramatic order
of Knights of Khorassan, of Al
toona, Pa. an organisation compose:
of Kolghte of Pythias, ts looking fot
@ baby to adopt. :
‘The committees appointed by the
‘Temple ts composed -of County Com
misstoners Robert F, Bankert, Ald-r
men Welford. &.“Crampesy and Wit
tam: C. Shut aad N H. Nicodemus,
Trey are reaty. to recetve exhibita of
Do You WantanUmbrella?:
Well, here it is. The Hull Bros. Umbrella Company will guarantee them. ‘
The Detachable Handle enables you to reduce its length and put it into your ;
y 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 ot gent. Specify the kind you want and we will send the Umbrella
upon-receipt of the Coupons. —- .
- How To Get. 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 Coupons, 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
» them to The Planet Office and get a Ladies’ or a Gent's Detachable Handle
» Umbrella.
- The Planet: 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
- Work for thie Trade, at the Lowest Pr'ces. a
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| Phone, Randolph 2213 __ The Planet, 31] W. 4th $t._j
children, —psctegrayon, tenertptton +
and pedisrees ‘
The baby sixcestion was*made at
the fnstatlation oy Grand Viger Rob
ert W. Smith, amet was tnatantly act
ed upon.
He watt “het Zamert Tempte take
time by the forefoek. Why not turn
the temple neat out to xtans, send the
temple ma ot to the aretion block
aad buy n temple daly? Thirty cent
Bday, er moot $1le a year, will suf
fice to pive a well trained ehtid toa
Sronter Attra, If Zamer! Temp'e
adopts a tenple ehifd Atty other fra.
ternal neeieres In Altoona wil go and
do Mkewle ” |
Pinatured a0Ne Yorks j
Four thousand Turks, Including Af}
oMcer, were captured by Russlans 1
the recent battle fn the nefghborh. «
of Erzerum, according to a dexpat !
from Vetrosrad to Reuters Telesrin
company. The Russians are aise <0
to have captured scores of machiae
guns and enormous quantitles of mu
nitions.
The Reuter despatch nays:
“The rout of the Turks in the batt¢
which rested in them being .dslve
Hin Erzerum appears from later a
ecounts to have been even more ce
claive than shown in the first reports
The Russtars tovk secres OF machine
guns and enormens quandtes of ma
Bitionn, .
The influx of itee Torks In ex
orum {4 cen dered to reduce the de
fapaive power of Le corteesn.
Girt, 10, Cet Verdict Against Boy.
Buing for $1.9, through aru rl
fap, Flerenee Mile-, ten years df,
won from a j ry In Readins! Va,
a verdict for S4iic1 tur the Dea of
her arm. = Qsear Lenhart, fourteen
years old, xaiJ.to Lave struck Ha play.
mate in An Albany toweahlp school
Because ahy “twitied.” was the de
fendant. The boy ts an orphan pos:
hetr to a large entate. wil
Advances Pay Ten Per Cont. -
Allentown, Pa,, Jah. 26.—An in
crease in wages of ten per cent of the
@mployen of the Bryden Horseshor
company, of Catasauqua, will become
@lective February 1, tt was annpuac
ef. The concern, which employs
about 740 hands.
Belisve Twelve Fishermen Drowned.
Twelve fishermen who left Mount
Pleasant, 8. C., ‘Friday, in the- row.
Boat Dart, aro still missing. ‘Tt wat
said all were negroes, It’ is delleve'
they were drowned. we
«oL BFRENS VENCY MINTS Cerne.
Between 700 and 00 miners refused
te work at the Lykens Valley mines
6f the “Besquehaana Coal. company,
meer Harrisburg, Pa, because ‘of
the refusal of seventy-five miners ts
pey union dues. . a
©0000000000000000'
°
© PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT, |
° ms
° . Preventing Colds,
O Colds frequentiy pesait where |
© there ts on deformed or diseased |
© nme or tonsil or where there ure ¢
© adenoids. Preyuently the bac
© teria get a etter or easier hold ¢
©. there than fn the eave uf peaple ¢
O with ged neses und Mirents. ¢
© Living nd weeping fy gyn front,
© alr fieteace anes Teatetanes ¢
© agulnst swids, ‘Taking aw cotd «
© gwaite bath about the neck, Arma.
© and shoulders each moridng also ¢
© helpa ttnuiensely .Constipation ta ¢
O very frequentiy wn indirect cnune ¢
© of colde and xhoutd be phggnu- ¢
O: cualy gunnled scala Werreat ¢
© tng, overheating, expectally dry ¢
O kteam or stove beat In winter, ¢
© and ‘nudereverctaing ate potent ¢
© couses of coils. Last of all. one ¢
O should nveld close rxsoctution 6
O with other people having colds, ¢
O coughs or grip @ tics who o
© cough or encezo witNout hoWting ¢
© handkerchicfu before thele faces. ¢
© Keep a good bunch of fresh air 0
© between yourself and the cold ¢
O viet, aud yon will be much 0
O anfer, °
° °
; PLAYED THEM BOTH WAYS.
Magical Qualities of the Pyrenees Min-
eral Springs.
The Freneh cometian Petit was et
traordinarily thin. A phy st lin rece
meniled Bim to try xen bath fa tte
Pyrenees, a0 be betook hinnelf to the
mineral epruezs, where be bathed: ut
remittingly, but all iy vain: he gig net
lncreaxe th vice. “Patience.” urged the
doctor. “There I nothing ike “our
baths for mating people fat” =
One day while Verlet wax waiting
philosophically hy bis bath for an em.
bonpolnt which never nme he heard a
conversation In the next room, from
which his own was divided by only a
hin parution and which was occupied
by an enormous woinan, fot o8 the
Wottentot Venus. .
“Doctor,” sakl sbe, “I am getting.
tired of this.” “Why?" naked tho Acs-
culapiun. “I bare been here two
months.” “Well7” “Wel), | am as
enormous aa 1 was when J, came.” “A.
Hittle patience, madame,” orged the
doctor. “There is nothing ‘ike ovr
baths for making people thin.”
Perlet, hearing these words, apraug
out of bis bath. dressed, rusbed tome
to bis hotel, ordered hie bill and tert
for Paris by the next train,—Argonaut.
‘Weman's Back Hair. :
I recollect the Payche knot. .
Of devotees {t had no lack.
It used to be ensployed a lot 2
‘A tow yrare back
But. now, as through the town yoo hike,
Tou ssc a new-twist on the $b,
Asa vome Geinte It lope, jose ike
“ha old doorknob
tee -aneas City Jodmet.
1 fefited, 2 Dying in Church Riot.
One man wis kitted, twa, tneludins
aomtate trsper, ape dylag, reven, de
cluting Cactaly Pitcher, Corporal
Carlen aid: Trooper Stevensen, ot
the state castabulary, were tnjae
serlmsly, and scares of otbers batter:
@d and brated Ina clash at Pap. nt,
pear Pittston, fa, Metweea te
troopers and mob ot over a thus. t
persone, member of the Bolles Cath
Ho chureh,
The dead, Gootke Grelzer, aged 1
ty: dled Ave hours afterward with bit
Jet wounds In the thigh and atdenen
‘The Injured: Rott Huner, of Carts e,
state trooper, unconscioun, dyin: of
a compound fracture of the akull. Jo
aeph Visch, marrivd, wife and ‘atx
dren: in critieal conditton with a til
Jot wound In his arm. Captain Pt ee
oF, Of state constabulary: face badly,
battered and head vut, Corporal Carl
non, of Kingston, atate trowper, ara
broken. ira Steveosun, of Bethe,
atate trooper: fractured sheulder
blade, Robert Picton, Robert Met
catfe, Albert Meath and Thomas Itette
ner, cut and bruised about the face
and arms. .
The rot grew ont of sectional atrife
at the Dupont Pulls Carholle cure,
ono factlun of whieh ARhting Mis op
Hoban's appolument of Rey. Frances
Sowsnuwsh), aa faster about a m.cth
aZe. 3
Classifying Him.
Fae ey,
Bae Whe
a
hike wey
fae
| ee
i
oe 4 ie
‘The Social Director—is be a high
brow ora! whrow?
‘The Muxiea! Critlo—Nelther. ffe's «
sort uf mezeobrow.—New York Globe. |
Medern Magle.
‘Trare was a litle gird :
‘Who hed o tittle curt
‘That hung right down on ber shoulder.
‘That Uitle curl was brown,
‘Which Thade its owner frown;
‘“Pwas gold ore she grew much older.
Richmond Times-Dispatch.
Too Thin an Excuse.” Bs
When Shimmerpate arrived home an
hour later than’ usuef be was nibblipg
acore = * Se
“1 atopped, tn concert bail for a
few moments,” be observed. “The
mosaic was Iptoriatiog.” *
oThat's rigbt© exclaimed bis better
haif, “Blarce ft on the muste.”"—Stray
‘tories. 7
‘PAGE SEVEN
@
Who Was the
Murderer ?
MARS ae
the crime. . =
James Pollock, chukard
man-about-town, pursuer o}
Mary Page, is d 's
saci bs ae Lee
Did Mary Page kill James
Pollock? =
Look For the Answer
In Our New Photo
“Play Serial
The Strange Gase of
This gory has been veriten by
the editée ‘of McChure's Mags-
zine, under. the nom de phme
of Frederick Lewia, collabora-
tion with Mx. Joha T. M'lative,
_ who ia best knows for hia Ashioa
Kirk Detective Siorica
, Read’ the Story
_ Seethe ~*
Essanay Company's
_ Moving Pictares /
Py
‘ ic
SATURDAY...,.FEBRUARY 6, 191¢
Reception Tendered Major It R. Mo-
ton—Btory of How F. Q. Morton’
Reached the Dintrict Attorney's
Ofice—Capt, H. Herman Haat
Appointed Military Instructor for
Boy Scoate—J. C, Thoman Do-
Rates Memorial Pow at Bethel tn
Honor of Mrs, Luvinia Nash—
eked Been, .
a
(Atton's Natl. Sewn Mareaa, 321 W
Fitty-ninth Street)
New York City, Jap, 31.---Major
R. 1 Moton, for twenty years Com:
mandant of Cadets at Hampton Insti
tute, and who a few works ago was
appointed principal of Tuskegee Iu-
siftute, to muccesd the "lamented
Booker Washington, wan tendered
Toception last Sunday afternoon nt
The Musleal School Sottlement tor
Colored People at G Wost 13ist’St,
The reception was arranged pri-
marily to give tho many friends of
Major Moton in thin elty a0 oppor-
tunity to wish him sell at bia new
post, and to pledge to him tholr
allegiance tn the work that lias come
to him to perpetuate the momory
of tho late educator.Dr. Eldridge
‘Adama of Hampton Association and
the daughter of tho founder of Hamp
ton, General Armstrong. :
‘A feature OF the mecting was the
singing of many of the familiar Ne-
gro folk songa led by J. Romamond
Fohnron, “director of the Muntcal
School Settiemont and Major Motan.
“In Bright Stannlone Above” Major
Moton's favorite Jubilea wae led by
him. | Proceding addresses thats wan
4 munical program in while George
it. Jones, Jr. Mrw, Lala Robinson
Jonon and Manter Willle Butler jure
Uetnated.
De. Bldridgy Adama, fone a frlewd
of Hampton, .wan prexented by Mr
Sohason, Dr, Adamm tot how for:
tunato It was for the Negro race chat
Tenad wach an able leader to take
up the Work of Doctor Washinston
Ho told of Major Moten's fitiens for
the teak that hay cone to hin and
pledged hix contluged xuppert te the
work. He then called, on Charles W
Anderson, the forme: wiltectar of 1
ternal revenues 15 108 ey. U0 bre
rent Major Moten. 5
Mr caderwon sand, oT renne at
among the fortunes of tits race that
Rhenever we nerds baiter God al
Raye tnd soni ane te tabs sige the
Sark Wien sear teat dealer fell
Seley the anther days Chere sted Wie
eee qrtend Major Motun te taker
hh see OPK. Leere he ett off
Wien Marne Sian ree. be a
sreetuad by Hie ehientanaita cate bot
hy Chovelana 4s Allen, Sie measzadee
Pherespondest
Magne Meta rave an tnter ma!
tale tne Whiet, be peated thee Work of
Hie Washingtan. ott exerted da
srarege te sbedbestie: Une vive art
HO Ye great tRsk tte oe Netara as
ite nantledd atdenstlons ter Woe sae fle
Wp Woastangton qmaite ter toe rave
Diwite fiat tie ners af De
action, oe Mids et wes harwad
Maser Metin, ant if ie for we
aguel an pois aati hes mesior
Vide tind ter Hat Dany 22 Mds goatee
Ie anit aber the wind wf the Tare
te do the warn of De. Mac nanston
Mayor Maton fob} fuse tard i wats
tor lin to break away frees Mat
ta ettetes Bae as aperht Me beet
seats ah bie hfe Me prased the |
front belne made Throws inet
Saino contere to nave the anus of
Tie race ashd to place Wowkete at
rogers belonen
Nt the’ cutiefnaton of the adidress
an tutorial reception follower! wid
faty Dye hundeed people shovk Ue
Major's hand
The he of a Young Negry Lawyer:
Lannt work sour cdrfejamdent
called at the Dintriet Attorney's of
Ales to Interview FQ. Merton. the
fritiiant young Negro lawyer. who
sie Appointed «tthe besinning of
foe sear, tie of the deputy tunalat=
ants in that office, Your” carrea:|
unment fwind the young attorney |
iuay looktax over lexan? documenta In
preparation for the many caxen that
Come up dally In tint large Inw office.
Mr. Morton greeted Sour cortex:
pondent cordially und. reluctantly
talked for publication. Your oor-
reapondont assured hig that there
were many RtrURRIIR younK lawyers
hroughout the country, who would
he «ind to Ket a word an to hin curcer
nnd the aucceea that has come to him.
‘Mr. Morton, who ta sine of the-beat
ytepared young lawyern of the race,
fold your correspondent that what:
ryet success han come to him ts due!
jo clone application and hard work,
“Whatever success hag come Co me."
ye sald, “I ay proud for the sake of
he race.” He anid that the treat-
mont he wae receiving at the banda
ot hls chief and the other assistants
st the office was exprenivo of a
rlendly attitude ¢o him. :
Mr. Morton has a fine background
or hin work, and te well prepared
o handle the dimcult casen that will
we anaignod to Bim. He is only 34
rare of ago and wax born in sis:
fertpp!. ‘He bas Hvod in Washion-
on moat of his life and {9 a graduata|
tthe famous M Street Hixh School.
le wont from ghere to Philips, Ex.
wer Ac:demy, where be prepared for
tarvard University.
‘While at Exeter and Harvard ho
ange a brilliant record for scholar-
Rip. While at Harvard be was es} 4
peciaity prominent as a debater. |
fe took his law course at Boston
inivereity. Wa came 60 this ctrl”
Aimself with the Democratic Party
‘His rive in that party was rapid
fund ‘ne soon attracted iho. attontlor
Of the mon higher up. \A fow weok
“Jago: be was civctod to the presidency
Of the ‘Vulted ¢alored Democracy
one of the most potent organizations
famong colored men In the country
“The office to which he hus been ep
pointed carrics u salary of $2,500 und
fords fine opportuntty tor experienc.
and contact. The office carriew. wit"
ft much prostige, and tx an wfc ts
which abiltiy and inuch tact mont
Agure. x
ry Morton-comen frum a tine fauntty
ils. parents, Mr. and Mra. Hlward
Vorton, renide at 1032 Irving Stree,
iN. We
Hie father has eon a clerk ia the
Irreaeury department for many year
Iie brother Frederick D. Morten i+
the principal of the Maboasay, Testu,
at School ut Mntinanas, Va.
‘The leo te such eminence bya
young than of thy race sbould furnish
Mtitautue for all young men why are
atrugaltug for ws place in the world oF
faire. = |
‘
CAVTMN BLUNT avroisteD
MILITARY INSTRUCTOR.
Captain 11, Merman Blunt, one of
the most experienced military men of
tho race was appolated laxt week Mil-
Mary Inatructor of the U. S. Boy
Scouts of tho 33d Battalion by Major
General E. A. Mealplo. Tho 33d Bat
talion of Boy Scouts fs ono of the
largest troops Ja thie city, and te
made up of boys of both races. The
election of Captain Dlunt to this ofce
will moan much for tho succes of thn
work, Captain Blunt is one of the!
best known wallitary men of the raco
and haa Nad a long record and dis.
tinguinted record ns a roldier. He
dlatingutated.hiimaclt with tho Ninth
Immuno regiment during the Spanish-
AnicHenn war. Ho te tho Drat, mot
of the race to bold a separate oaice
fo command @ post. Io'1898 he want
2 tho Pilipino Inlandy with the 49th
infantry volunteers, and way appointed
10 the place of a capthin Io that rogl-|;
meat, ‘While in the Philipines bs]
yan the diatinction of having captured |
Acquilnaldo's secretary. |
Captain Blunt wax orn In Now Or
cane, Ho is graduate of Now Orieava |
Fulversity. "Ifo is one of five colored |
adtin that atwoded Loutalana Unt-|)
rernity, While at that, untverstty he |"
fected over five whice competitors
aptain of one of the wchool troops |!
Saptain Llunt t® well-known fn thin ‘
ity. : \
Vee bina been active ty many direc
tox thing for the iste uplitt ot |
he rave i thin tity. ewan one at |
he! moving spirits In. the ‘wrauin
fon of colored reginient im tna 2.
nd 1h 185s soe we teading part tn te |
ort ta west wolorwd. tant the |
fom af Alerisam Tis ate wat
Be Went Lath Street 1
UNDERTAKER THOMAS DONATES
MEMORIAL PEW
GMP ound Mea JC. Thoman, welt
kBown exttzenn nf thin city dit tbls
nerehe tamt week by duaatitig a tHe
iuorlal pew at Hottie A.M. Chur:
ti howe of Mea, Lavinia, Nash, one of
the oldent stewardouncs of the ehure
wig died at the old folky” heme it
Putiatetphia January 10 he was 7
yearn of are a
Me Viwatiay whe Nand ediarser of the
Feituattin lreeaght th beady tron Tita
Melba to Ube clt9, ath) prevblet ae
splendid burtal for thi deceased Mes
Thanas, whi ty the president af the
Stewardess Moar nf Hethet Chutsh.
Uhoueht What teething mere teine
cunt tes done that te sb sand bae
fa yuretaate the meners nt thes
sattted wot, Hath to shunaten a twow
Me the eared “Pegetiser watt Me
Uetin they dented £188 Te yor
watt be Rien ae Tat Cuisine Nao
few "Mem ‘Thtnats, wl te eves atin
AE the deswitsedd estate, Kat provided w
Spuetndant testinieny. ta ths nersiee ot
Hits hobie woman Mex. Nawh sew
vie af the aidest members wf Mette d
Chureds Siw vate tie thie sity. forts
Sears amie ftom Virgie tad ith
fuentes Juined Mettiel Church
A the fines) servis 9 ittine trot
wr wae fut er hy the: pastor, fe
NW Athet?
A Stuatt Flest rasment Win
Le
aeotnteerats
HITCHEN CABINET
IN Your HOMES Now!
oh ee ene Ie
sake smontane ss (pk at
Mag une Mea
AAR
9g
eb eu]
fie, Gl}
GS 8 re
ag eae sk
er Tt = |
i te Led
ib PPK 1
aot 32S h, ;
There are noveral atylon to,
see ae Se ee te
every Ume and Inborwaving fle
Te eas are tie ee
Se oe oe eee ae
See une Cees
Sere Uo paris soaeeae
Fe tee Seas
Taiyo coeall Are pare
Sar eee oe et
i eicectleadliinie rome |
‘The House of Quality orate
111-118-118 W. BROAD #7.
" Subscribe to The Richmond Pinnet.
Only 1.60 per year in advance. |
JR. watting-room. Each of ther
aeemed to bo around ubyut lst
Seare old. The old. lady. leanin
towards tho old man with oyes fixe
on hin, wag apenking:Muently.
“Itty aainet the rules of th
company for one to, court in th
Footy” anid 2
“HS gene “bout your Yualnens, sir
“This Is my pastor.” ald the old ads
“sl san't bok that” P anid, Ds
had Hite experience and come nes
two Rus What courting In
“Then boii mophed Wake sm
Jooked at ine “aedioualy Tae ol
Judy pointed her Duger iT my fac
ahd xnid, “Young min, Kiowa
yor do?! GH nish ty oie) Master
Ger tans F
Tt wan quite amusing AC w glance
but wince then D have thought of the
oxpression in connettion with athe
thoughta Yes, when Face owe tritn
cd ¥HH publle: affairs, ‘eting ax I
it was an Individual matter, “borsins
the Jod." to myxelt Tauy. he mlould
“Get™nigh the Master.”
When 1 ace x elnirch ofeial lag:
ging behind the crowd that asked
Bim to load’ them, 1 nay. Hrotlier
think of your prowl gnd git nixh
your Master. :
When Dace a youn man“keeping
Inte hours and spending hla money
for that that in. not guod, contrary
to advico nnd wishon of, hin parents
and friends, I say, Stop sind consider
young man and’ git nigh to the
Master. Got Run!
When 1 sco crowds of able-bodied
men sanding ob the atreatx during
work hours, 1 say, Men, soy und
chink, Ko Rot olgh your Master.
Read what Ho sald, Work white 1¢ tn
dny for the night cometh when no
man can work. !
When Torre m youns Indy bowed
Jown at the feet of a dude to wor-
whip him T nay, Desir Minn, ket nbs
dhe Mantor and read, Vhow whall have
nv ather God before me
When Tonee fattiors agd_ mothers
cimply ferding and clothing. Chett
ciiidren, 1 say. Brethren and winters,
Ponder your ways and conaider
et teh the Master and erat. The
jrunkard and the glutton wilt come
ae poverts. and “drnwstness | will
ott a nwa HER ek
AC the ALM. B Chnreh on Sunday
notin, dantiary ath, Wishop We
PCheatipmite: pemactd an able wer.
won. ste aR m text, part Gf the
Hat abd vieventhy Nepsen of the
ruieth shanter, of the book af Gi
mit He was fntroducest by the
mator Tew tacknon
pastor pevached a able nermen at
‘unberiund MoE Churets |
Mise DA Carimichacl, of Intten.)
UT React sisting br. “Galant
ental parton felt fur home on teak
Mr 4 F Lame. of the Potton |
ompany lett Thiradny, January 23 |
on cobumeia, $C I
Mr M. Gerald, of Columbia re
preampting Ansueiated Charition |
mec throngh the ety today for!
Sultana, Suet nn heer tutwstons
ent Saturday tanuary 20th 1
Nhoreeve et) tintin i
Gas Sanday danars Zien 1 very!
ach enjweed Me mer eters at Mie |
cniateriagd MOOK Gaurety Weak |
pactur, gastor TL oitate x shert |
tare: = Fedatives tow Neston Feadians |
Hibs lew tMeratere 4
Mrs eta Nelson of Suvannal. |
age vstanae her fatten ik Gees
reat Bast Plager ‘
Mf Wethams ot Paton |,
ite Se ateett Phaurday, tie 2ete |
ofa the ty on bumien OMe
iano. ova premment farmer ant |
Ditws tian at cCinstweties ie tte !
ia Hie ty WoW af the Hones}
Peg Rath and oS atthe Ott 3
Stes «
Sh korieme Seabentan otis |
ls a
Mir Cem boitihes of Martosthe !
seinairied there Dtesdas thee 2th
se \
i
Aine Mannie Marvin trates pais b
feveh the elty January ath, en ©
Hie for Phakatelstla ta Mise
Marie taugie ti tae eraded soto a
Mount for eieht years atl ta
went the, tneat teachers fe Sout?
tralia athe Iya awe woman aiid
Pits ested at home Our
ayer is that Hoth atin and hee iin
fit tay. Hye fens atid rosper
Kew S$ Gitbert hax purchased for g
Row ume a One turnout. Me wan |
che tine can efielont mperintens 4
nt of Mi Makan Naptist Church 4
riday School i
Mien Laura ¥. Roberta, the suppl
acher of Whxon: Graded School ty
ted an wubatitute for Mex Howe,
0 wan quite {IT during the paw
ok. a
Mrs Dr. L. Brugg Anthony, super §
of of Sumter county rural schools ©
South-Carolina: Mré. Julla B. Di
J. nuiveeviaor of Yee county rural
looks; Mies Bltzabeth XS. Johnson, 2h
pervinor of Chadburn. X. C.: Miss th
ian M. Reed, suportisor of Marion I
inty rural schools and Prof. R. C, th
ier. supervisor of Sition county at
‘al achools, pashed through. the co
jy Tueaday A.-M. enroute to the
porvisors’ Conference at Winston: w
em, N.C Gr
. ae
LEESBURG Vi.
Mra, Frank Collins left Friday
28th Inst. for Richmond, Va. wher
She will viait’ hor slater,
MrJonoph Sowell of Wanhingtor
wap a visitor in our town Sunday
Thore have boon two souls Aaved
In the two weeks mootings at the
MoE. Church. That, ix bottor than
hone. All alanera aro Very hard fu
there parte, : .
Mrx. Martha Edmons tn still con:
tnwd to her room. Wo pray for her
curly recovery,
Mrn -Junte Davin made a tying
(rip to. Washington Tuesday, return:
hig, Wednesday evening with her
nicce, Mie *Mary I. Stehnn, who
had been viniting (rlenda thece
STUDENT GRIMSLEY AT CAPITOL
FEW MINUTES BEFORE 1L-
NESS OVERCAME HIM.
A coroner's Jury tuday decided chal
the sudden death Inst Friday of Wit
Mam M, Grimsley, 30 yeara old, a atu
dent of Willlam’ and Mary College,
which was surrounded by featur
puizled the police, was not the resuit
of violence.
‘Tho jury returned a verdict that
Orimaley dled “from a hemorrhage
of tho brain, but the evidence avail:
fable doce not enable them to deterinine
with cortataty the cause of the hom:
orrhage. They arc, however, of opin
fon tbut-ft was duc to a dincane, and
not to violence.”
Detective-Sergeant Wily, who wus
the Inst witness nt the inquest, de
elared the police “had nut the least
reason to belleve Grimley was a
aaulted.” He sald Grimutey'x prenerer
in Mayo Street when he was stricket
could be accounted for on the grout
that he was on bis way to commercial
hovnes in that acetion of the city op
buniness In connection with the atu:
dent “publication of which he wen
business manager.
VISIT TO THE Capitol.
jury of Grimaley'n vinit to the nue
SWily said that Grimstey entered t+
| Others who mew Grimetey Pricey,
‘aeearditig te Wily, were LIL Fal
manager of the Purity Tee Crensa
Ceangany, who” bad nw talk with “the
student on a buaihess matter ite tas
Mies about noon, and the treasurer
St the Medtead College of Virgins
who pail Grinsley an advertisiug bt
of $1250 about 9:20 4M
The polive, Who ARTE! WIth Coranes
‘Taylor that Grimsley wie net a vier
wf foul play, were Mt inivestisatting
teday in an effert fo verife a repurt
that the student wave stricken ths
Rew about ten gears age, whlle et
an egegeston fo Niwport New
Grhnsiey died from a cerebral heme:
Phage sta i was nusested that thot
Fonditiee, tight Mave resulted font
Si ata ht injury te bbe beat ‘this
far there bgt bees na setitieatfon of
the story *
‘Uhsit Grimsley: euftered “from a ute
len? headache the Sunday precebas.
is deh while at ecotbege at Waittstne
burg was another gece uf informatio:
tetilveted by Waly, ‘Thee dete tive: far
ther ected that “Grinistey underweet
an Oberation on his nose 9 fo%: montis
wage ated Med prafusety, fiutfenting
Heat ke suffered from ah evens +
blood ite Bite Bead,
1a. WHEN HE APPEARED
The ties withoes wt the manos wa!
Josephine Garrucel, who restden a
125 Maga Street, She tald of anawer
tig the door bell. Friday afternonn
and finding Grimfley, who xtaggerest
into the house, naylng he’ wan-ttl and
aking for belp. Sho sat Mx arms
kept drawing up and that he fell on
the Moor, foaming, at the mouth. With
the axaintance of others in the house
she Intd the atudent on x couch, te
moved hin coat and tried to admta-
inter ammonia to him. The woman
cout nat force hin mouth open, how:
ever.
After unsuccessful efforte had been
made to wummon a private. phyateinn
the ambulance from the Virginia hon
pital was callod and ho wan taken
there., Grimaley died at the hospital
at 9 o'clock without having rexained
conactoasness. f
Tho Gartacct’ woman: sal} there
wero no men in the house, and that
Grimsley waa @ siranger to her and
the other women.
Hortense Blair’ followed her on the
witnean stand, Sho was cated at an
open window on the second Noor ‘and
naw Grimsley walking down Ross
Streot-toward Mayo Street. He ture!
Inta Mayo, sho sald, and sfter walking
coward Franklin Street a abort dis-
lance croased the strect and waved at
ner with s magazine, which ho held
in hin band. She took the. gesture
to © & signal for-her to go down ‘>
ho door. She was summoned down.
wtairn a moment Inter by the Garracct
woman after the latter had admittet
Arimaley.
Dr. 8. W. Badd, who was in charge
of the autopsy performed on Grim»
ey's body Saturday, wae the next wit-
ees. He described mm detail the
esults of the postmortem. There
ras 20 mark, be said, of viclense 0
he student's scalp, sirall-or eleewhere.
Death wae dee to 2 bervted blood
eee! in the breiz.—Richménd (Va)
‘ows Leaéer—Jaa. 31, 1916. {
“WROY, N. ¥. NOTES.
Tron’ N. Y., Jah. 31.—Tho A, M
%, Chuzch on Hamflton street, Al
dann, N.Y, cloged its doors somo
_ time in Deegmber, 1915. No treach
Ing, Sunday School or prayer moet
‘Ings were going on there. Th
pantor Jeft for parta anknown to the
Church’ and did not ay when o:
where ho was going nor when he
Wound Yo back.- Rev. J. Ac Tastor
offered hls pervicoy to opm the doors
fon preachlug as soon as ho knew o}
4. He preached there January 10
and 2] apd Inet Sunday. January 20,
thy pastor was on baud.
Sunday, January 30, was'the Rev.
3. A. Taylor's day tn Solkirk N.Y.
where ho preached all day and gave
the communion and had a good time
in serving the Lord all day.
The peoplo in Selkirk aro all very
yrell, eacent Mr. and Mra. Foter Vai
Dozenm, who aro not well on account
of bad ‘colds.
‘The American Independent League
of 1292—3rd avonuo, Watervliet...
¥., meets overy Monday evening and
overy third Monday evening overy-
body who can come fs made welcome
On the third Monday night In thie
month tho boyn had a good time. Rev.
L. HL Taylor trom Troy made a
speech on, “Tho Negro aa x Man.”
We hope fo hare a full house Non-
day night, Fobrusry 14.* Let ns
many boys’ as possible. from Troy
and North Trey, Afuany wad Schenuc-
tady. come and bring their frionds
and ict us talk over tho matter, why
is {t that Lynch-law-fw on the in-
croase and fe killing so many of our
American citizens. Ip there no way
to ntoy it? Let un ave, Let each
man Rive Kis view on the matter.
Me. Jamies H. Wilson cand Misn
Uranle “Adams, both of Watervitot.
N.Y. were married from the Dutel
etorm Church. ‘Thuraday, January
26, 1916, seven P.M. 10 the city
nt, Watervliet. No ¥. Tho” will
make thelr homo tn Watervitet
Mr. Richard 8. Harder of Troy und
Mrs. Emily J. Johnson, daughter of
he late Thomas H. 3. and Inabelln
J. Pennington, of Saratoxa Springs.
N.¥., were married in the city of
Albany, N. ¥., Saturday.at five P.M.
january 35, i918, from the St. Ca-
hedral of All Saints by Dean Brook-
nan.
‘Mr, Edward J. Vanburen, of Troy
eho bax deen employed for a lonx-
ime Uy Mr. Lynch of thin city, wax
akon to the Troy Honpital, Tarwday.
january 25, on account of being 1
th Vneumonta, He died in die |
ronpltat Sunday. 2:45 2. Mo. January |
on Nive wan 49 yours of age Hin
aug wus taken to Chatoon, NY.
fonduy, January 31, where be will
eo buried from the A. M. 2. Zon
hwurch Wedneaday. February 2, two.
LM. He! Teaver behind. mother. |,
‘ite, ‘three brothers atid a host of |
Heide. Hie wife In Mra, Eva Van |i
dren, mother, Mrs. Surah Vanturen.|>
rothers, Peter, Joseph and Tenja- |
nin J) Vanburen.
Mra Harriet Goldman tax been |,
ick in the Samaritan Honpital of [5
hin city for three, wecks and ty ctl
ery nick. P
Mra. George Vanderpool. of 1/4
FaUKLIN nteeet fu Very alck :
Mr Mf. Clifton nf tau Congress |.
ereet te very Il '
> EDITOR’ MITCHELL'S
sia Ca
ine aie 1
set rare on
coe cutee
Me eae tat
ey ores iat
SPO at
dale ear, an
ee eget) oe oe
Seep
Beers Gene
Bi ennai
Fart
nce a ERT
cada
nym errs
Leet Ere ae
oo ae ae eee
oe ero
Cee
eae
Be ee
ee ee
fue bout the vate nl of tH methods
eee
oe ae
eae
ee ee
in the heawens. é -
Se
Tt was a peeuliar splendor, and
these guards wore pecullar uniform
that roomed to be of Spanish or ot
Mexiean origin. 1 had not olwervet
any Taco prejodire. I want in to a
Gopartment net. aside for the United
Staten government. Hero wan shown
the methods adopted (a locate ant
extinguish forest fires, T gave the
pollte offal in charge my card and
ho took pleasuro in yhowing me how
the government uned ite oMclal ma-
chinery (0 protect the mighty foronts
and tho lumber interest of the
Pacific’ Coast.
WELL, TREATED, THERE:
Tk seemed to te that st was cating
time and I entered one of the palatial
edifices ant walked up (0 @ lunch
counter. I called for what I wanted
and I was politely invited to take «
seat out on the piarza. where a white
lady waited on mo. I enjoyed tho
Fopast, and the proprietor seemed, do-
lighted with tho pretse and the money
I beatowed. I was now ready fur
farther service and I went out to the’
promensces. 7
. AREMARKABLE SCENE. |
T witnessed a wondettal alght there.
A peddler wold wood to the visitors and
thay -soattered them sbout only to be
sarrounded by a flock of pigeons that
were so tame that they. would alight!
on the baat and aris of the vieltor |
und would feed from the hand, to the
delight of the many children who om.
thusiastionily engaged ta thie kind of'
pestis, "I was much plese’ with
the dimpeny in the bafidings. This
‘hor at ama te Ghar Sonia ceden'e cme tea ae
dy the one at San 'Frihetqto.” “ht 'vas)
. be woll to state’ that the‘white troop.
* statloned here: were “of the *Becond
- Battalfon, United States Marinos
; They bad seen’service:in Medco,
2 | OLD AGE'AS AN ASSET.
Pad
"In one of the bulldings wore the
) death nnd life masks of al) nations
"of the world, together with the age
F of tho mubjocts. » A ‘colored wolnan's
' fontutes wero dtaplayed there, Her
namo fe Mahala Ayers and sho was
Alive at 114 years of age. ‘The othor
wan Mary: BprleRs and sho war-allve
At 104 Sara of ago. I. purchasod
gome trinkots and thon ctlmbed up
“Into the California buliding. Rolng
1) the top. up narrow ntatrwayn until
1 found tnyselt ‘throw hundred feet
Above the Ero below
LOOKED LIKE A MAP.
J vould see all of San Diego apread
out ike a map. Away out upon tho
Pete 1 could nee versels, ft could
fee San Dicgo Bay, with tho United
Staten war-ahipa lying at anchor with
thelr dull gray bodies motionlons in
the Southerx California sun, For
nonrly an hour J looked at tho sur-
rounding country. while the Exposl-
ton Itself looked ike a. child's
Maything hundreds of feet below.
EMDARRASSING SOLITUDE,
1 wan all alone, a stranger amongnt
strangers. Sometimes 1 thought of
the Hkelhtiood of a person's dlaap
pearlag away out hore In this far-
away country, among theso atrango
people and who would be any winer
a to that person's taking off. What
Tdoacenided, I naw a tow colored mon
lo menial employment. — Oue of them
carried a atick with a sharp pointat
the end: With thin he pleked up
Acraps of wante paper. Dut Ia thin
Yant collection of exlitbitn, this migh-
ty axsembling of buildings, T did not
mee'n doren colored pooniggat work.
TIED OUT AT LAST. 5
‘Then 1 went down the Zone, whero |
all Kinds of amusements were muy
pored to be in wvidence. But the /
amurement department did not open |
until 2 o'clock and T was anxious to !
return to Low Angeten in the early <
evening. I lind een: rauch, Thad !
covered woll-aigh every partion of «
that Inree renervation and now tired «
nnd xomewhat faded T atarted to the 3
ate-way, Lhrowsh which about four t
pours previounly 1 had entered ,
c
THOSE MOVIE SOLDIERS 1
°
The wtreet-ent noon carried me
rkaln to the heart of the city. 1.
ww’ what apyeared to be United
Staten officers {nan avtomobiie,
heir facen were painted. I after:
watds learned from smy amiling
relendn in Low Anxelex that they
kere {mitntion xolliers, Juxt movie
Metues actors out for the portrayal
Mf ncenen tobe thrown won the
nnvas. then thought of the ent-;
ig houre, which a colored man lad
urgenied to me by meann of that
ard, which he had ciruat Into my
usnid
‘OLORED VAUDEVILLE ARTISTS |
1 found ie place after rome en
niry. Oh the front porch was alt.
ing a colors woman, who alpearod
o be on the vaudeville Ataxe. She
at inetraments around her in thelr
anes. A party of them had come to
an Peo. 1 pressed that thes
ere engante te the Zone at the San
Neco Extwrition The man 1 met &
Md me hat inner would be ready
won. I atrolled around, xtaod On 4,
he forehand finally wat down at a 4)
te while a repant wun kerved f
Th conversition with the youns |
jan, T told fitn Powis from Tete t
wand. He anhed about the Mechan~ 4
sSavings Bank and to my sureeine |
ated that tee had the pleture of thie
unk which some of the ratleaad ot
en had given Iuttn fa
MIENDS GREET ME a
[hid him koodday and went te
Falleoad station, where Dsecited =
parlor car teket and later was on:
Sreturt trig to Lon Ankeles Tare A
ved there a. Metle late, but found
F dtobert C. Owens, Mr. Eaiene
alker, Attorney Durden and others!
euiting met wax soon at: the!
wey arealderice, and after a hearts |
pwr. T went ty my room and al
ont while afterwards {war wiatn | =
the “hand of deeame.” + ¥
JOUN MITERELL. 31
WEST POINT, VA.
Rev, Cobb of Union Univernity,
Richmond, Va. preached a very, tn-
terenting sermon Sunday. A large
crowd wan presont.
Mr. C. W. Robinson doparted this
Ute Thuraday aight. Ho. haa ween
nick all Winter, but wan till walking
around, He was buried in Weat
Point: cometary Saturday morning.
Mrs. Aggie Allen died in Baltimoro
Friday night. Her. remaina wore
brought here and laid to rent In Now
Keot. Her funoral wax held at Mt.
Nebo, New Kent, Sunday.
Mra:'Jano Sheppard and children,
Miss Ellen Allen, Mra. Ana Tyres
and children, Mr. Alva Richardadn
and Misa Joslo Alien’ attended the
funeral.
Mr. Wray Carter fe on the nick Ilet,
Mrs. Manto Wright fs tery slek at
her mother’s: Mrs. Sallle Dunger, on
Seventh atreat. *
Mr: James Jackson fs on the aiék
Itet.
Mr..C, H. Clarke, Sr. is out again.
Mr. and Mra. Jack Johnson spent
Sunday with Mrs. Johnson's father,
Mr, John Coleman, who is vory slck,
in Plum Point. is :
Mr, Thosag Hill fs on the etek Mat.
Mr. Andrew Tabb fs sick at the
home of his sifter, Mra. Bettle Brown
-Mrs, Sarah Wan ‘improves very
owly., r .
CARK OF THR, RABY.
bi baby's weight ki parkage. the
, ‘beat tage ‘the mother has of Big con-
| dition, ‘The average weights of Rabies
of given ages are now pretty: w
catabliqhed, and. a waight” noticeably
lower than: the average indicates 4
Jack of development due elther to de-
) Actent dit, oF to Hines, while an ox-
} ccs of fat may polnt’ to Improper
| feeding. if the baby's weight olther
| remains stationary for any consider-
ablo tine, or poaiea: to fall off it Ina
sign: that somettiing’ {8 wrong; ani
the'mother should neok tho help of a
Rood doctor, without delay.
Tho averngo Kirl wolghs 7 pounds
at beth, whitey boys nvernge halt a
pound heavier. *
During the frst four days the baby
may loo from one or twe uunces to
& pound, while waiting for the moth
er'n milk to bo extabliahed; but ax noon
as he begin to nuree fegulncly. he
should quickly regain (itn lone. During
the Hirst month he should gain about
three-quartorn, of an ounce onch day:
then up to the sixth month, from four
to elght ounces a week, and trom the
sixth to the twelfth month two to
four. ounces a week.
‘At three monthn the average baty
woighs from twolve to fourtern
pounds; at sfx months, Afteen to #lx-
toen pounds; at nine months, scventeon
to eighteen pounds: and at ono year
twonty, to twenty-two. pounds. The
baby thus usually doubles his welght
At five or six saentis, and at the end
ot iq first year weigha threo timer
as much as at birth. Most bables do
not Rain Quito steadily, week by week
During short porlods, owing to excens:
ive heat, when the food in reduced,
a baby may show no gain, and may
oven fall off @ little, This condition
should be temporary and be ought ‘to
begin to gain as scon as the disturl.
ance subeldes. %
Bottle-fed infanta do mot. gain n+
rapidly during the first months as do
breast-fed bables, but after the ninth
month they are apt to ain more ntea!
Ny because they do not lore welght
mu broaat-fed babies usually do at the
Ime of woanlag.
A vory fat baby in not to bo desire!
Although 1others aro prono to believ--
hat a fot baby ts a healthy one, thi
i not necessarily true. An exclunive
Mot of certain of the proprietary '
wnt foods, conaiating largely of nugAr
oF Of tarch, Is very apt to produce
sxceanlvo fat. and givo a faleo” {in
rension of abounding health, since
jones and muncles may thus be d>
rived of their propbe nouriahmea:.
Dverfat ables are very uncorfortaiie
n the summer from prickly heat anc
cher ills.
| | q |
Yi
:
E. J. CRANE
ety Colored Sian inv the Sun
one SUE AE rant
Sees Mane A Wace
Sith, CANE Soe fa tebe boars
Pr ge arn rere
SA Pe ee ie
421 BROOK AVENUE
old customer and friends. Phone
#5, ial nore seo gee Sah ad
foe ciee eates, eee ae,
Bd. CRANE, RICHMOND, VA,
Se eee
AGUNTA WANTHO—To sh Raliioe
aa tes eee a een
Core. oY
ee Table WU Not Re Complete
Without Am Amorunent . of
‘Thee ‘Menows brasas
1. W. Barper, Crephate. Cascade,
Robinson's AAA Private Btock
Bargardmer Mouptaia Rye. per qt, 81
Your Appetite Will Be Improved
‘Bhould You Use
Pedro Gheery (Imported) per qt. 9.75
Tokay, Catawba, Port, Sherry and
Blackberry (finest domestic) per
AN Goods Delivered Raw. 9813
&. “W. ROBINSON @ SON, INC.
Mrs. Eva B. Evans
SCALP SPECIALIST
-10 EAST DUVAL ST,
"Phone. Madison 6943-J
Mme. C. J. Walker's Improved
Hair Culture System Used.
A recent graduate from Walk-
er’s Hair Parlor and Lelia Col-
lege of New . York City.
tay Engagements strictly . by
: Appointment. | - ‘
| LEARN THE S. T. TAY-
LOR.SYSTEM of Garment
Cutting, Dressmaking, Ladies’
Tailoring. Millinery and
-PREPARDT YOURSELF TO EARN-
a Large Salary. We sive d{piome
Terms reasonable, Write for cat:
siegde. ee
& 7 TAYLOR SCHOOL asp
“PATTERN PARLORS |.
awe Aye ‘Cctembas,'O. |