Richmond Planet
Saturday, July 21, 1917
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
VOLUME XXXIV, NO. 36
THE BAPTIST JUBILEE A TREMENDOUS SUCCESS
STATE BODIES RAISE NEARLY FOURTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS IN BIG RELIGIOUS CONVENION IN CITY OF LYNCHBURG
Lynchburg, Va., June 15.—The largest religious convention ever held in this city was in session here all of last week. It was the celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the organization of the Virginia Baptist State Convention and in honor of the educational work done by the Baptists of Virginia, which work was planted by the fathers shortly after coming out of slavery. This work represents what the race is doing for itself. Four state bodies were in session, thereby representing every phase of work being done in the State.
Tuesday morning, July 10, was the opening and the four bodies met together. The Virginia Baptist State Convention, Rev. A. A. Galvin, D. D. of Danville, president: The Women's Educational Convention, Mrs. B. F. Fox, Salem, president: The State Sunday School Convention, Prof J. S. Lee, Newport News, president; State B. Y. P. U. Convention, Roscoe C. Mitchell, president. A chorus of one hundred voices furnished music during the entire week.
The opening was indeed impressive Dr. Galvin called the joint conventions together and after devotionals that he "made a short and forceful address and presented Dr. R. C. Woods, president of the Virginia Theological Seminary and College, who presided during the delivery of the welcome addresses and introduced to the convention, Mayor Royster Jester Jr., as the mayor of all the people. As the mayor arose to deliver his address, led by Dr. W. F. Graham, of Philadelphia 1,500 people sang "America." The address was indeed practical and the Mayor was loud in his praises of the race. Other addresses of welcome were delivered by Rev. G. E. Curry, of the Methodist Episcopal Church; Rev. C. G. Cabell representing the colored Baptists; Dr A. B. Conrad, representing the white Baptists; Mrs. Autentette A. Mason representing the local Woman's Educational Circle.
The addresses were responded to by Dr. J. C. Austin, of Pittsburgh, for the B. Y. P. U.; Mrs. Christiana Philot of the Woman's Convention; Prof. W. A. Gilliam, for the Sunday School Convention and Dr. Alexander Gordon, of Philadelphia.
In the afternoon, Dr. A. A. Galvin delivered his annual address to the convention, which was full of thought and inspiration. He was elected for another year. Prof. J. S. Lee was elected president of the Sunday School Convention; Roscoe C Mitchell, president of the B. Y. P. U. Convention and Mrs. R. F. Fox of the Women's Convention.
Each session was full of inspiration. The semi-centennial sermon was preached by the Rev. W. F. Graham D. D., of Philadelphia, from text, "The Lord hath done great things for us whosoof we glad." This was indeed a practical sermon, and was followed with the presentation of $300 for the religious and educational work.
Among the speakers from out of the state were Rev. G. H. Slims, New York; W. H. Jernagin, D. D., Washington, D. C.; R. C. Judkins, D. D. Jersey City, N. J.; C. C. N. Harris, W. Va.; G. B. Howard, Pittsburgh, Pa; W. W. Brown, D. D., New York; W. R. Brown, D. D., Pittsburgh, and others.
On Wednesday night Hon. John Mitchell, Jr. of Richmond, thrilled his audience with his powerful oration on "The War and Its Lessons." Thursday night. Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, of Washington, D. C. delivered a superb and eloquent address on "The Currency of the Kingdom." A unique and powerful missionary sermon was preached by Dr. W. W. Brown, of New York. The sermon covered the main revolutionary events of new world conditions and made a profound impression.
The great jubilee is now passed into history and the centennial is already on its way. The Colored Baptists of Virginia never experienced such a great celebration as took place on College Hill, Lynchburg July 10th-15th. While it was the celebration of the Semi-Centennial of the Virginia Baptist State Convention, the celebration was very widely representative. Delegates and visitors were there from Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island and other states. The quartette of conventions sang the historic ode of fifty years achievements with a har
mony sublime and every heart present caught fire with the spirit of jubilee From the moment President Galvin by the first fall of his gavel signaled the opening of the greatest convention ever held among colored Baptists in the state so Va., until the final benediction, every heart beat with divinest gratitude and every voice rang with the music of joy. Never before have the white friends shown such a kindly spirit, such open heartedness and such readiness to help. The City Auditorium was opened to us free for any or every night during the entire session. Chairs to seat the tents were supplied by the various white churches of the city and the Mayor, Honorable Royster Jester, Judge Christian and Mr. Ryland not only made great speeches such as are not commonly made by white gentlemen to colored bodies but offered their services and any aid the city of Lynchburg could render to make our stay comfortable and our convention a success. The newspapers gave unstinted space to the publication of the doings of the sconvention, mural of which was front page space.
There is no doubt about it, the dignity of the session throughout was such as would do honor to kings and princes. One of the Daily newspaper men in commenting remarked, I have never met a more intelligent set of delegates nor sat in a convention of higher dignity than is this one. There was no bickering, no strife but working, exulting over work already done and praising and thanking God. There were sixty-five addresses, twelve sermons, nine lectures, two original poems and all well seasoned with good music, and ably delivered. It was a school of education and inspiration calculated to break down the prejudices of the most prejudiced, soften the shell of the tightest hidebounds and prepare every one for higher service. As I sit at my desk, I can hear the voices of the emighty multitudes as they thronged about the coegie campus shouting, Jubilee! Jubilee! Jubilee! Yes I see them as they spread the drapery of golden glory about the deeds done, and the miracles wrought by our fathers in the name of our God; some of whom had fallen in the fray and others blessed to see the travail of their souls while yet in the flesh, help the souls recount the deeds golden and mir aides divine and lead the chorus of a thousand and more voices singing the songs of jubilee.
Dr. Wesley P. Graham never received more landmarks from the loyal songs who delight to do him honor. It was he who set the jubilee pace, closing the jubilee sermon by placing into the hands of President Woods three hundred dollars in gold; at this point a shout went up from the camp. Then followed that matchless preacher from Pittsburg, Dr. J. C. Austin, gathering about him that large and splendid delegation, placed upon the table three hundred dollars in gold and three hundred and twenty-five in paner. Here comes Danville; Dr. S. A. Moses reports the highest amount of money per member and took away the banner and gold medal as the prize; but wait, behold there comes Fifth St., Richmond, Pastor T. J. King gathers about him a large and fine looking delegation and places on the table seven hundred and twenty-three dollars in cash; thus taking away the banner and gold medal given the church and pastor bringing up the largest amount of money in bulk. Dr. Austin and Ehenezer received a special banner of she largest amount from outside of the state. Total amount of money raised in cash on the convention table was $13698-31.
There are some characters who figured so prominently in and contributed so largely to the success of this mummoth celebration we must make special mention of a few of them. I dare say every delegate and visitor was justly proud of our able, cultured and faithful President Dr. A. A. Galvin. The peole of today while they greatly admire and appreciate the ability of this great character, have not fully awakened to his supreme worth. The major part of the credit for the high class dignity and commendable order of this body, as well as the prompt way in which they scary out the program of work, is due to the masterly ability of President Galvin. He is a cool headed, self possessed, Prince among Presidents.
The second character is that other Roman, that prince among educators, Prof. R. C. Woods M. A. I don't need to relate the story except for those who are uninformed as to how he has brought this great school to the years of its glory, hen the sword is freed to admit its glory, when the world is forced to admit its greatness. His report on the work and that masterly address on education, just swept the audience from their feet and in joy the multitude cried, "What hath God wrought?" President Wood is at once an orator, logician, a teacher and business manager. He with his staff of teachers entertained this convention in a way that highly pleased the most critical.
One other compliment and we close
for we cannot tell all in one article.
Jubilee committee presided over by
Dr. S. A. Moses and the Correspond-
ing Secretary, Dr. T. H. White are due great praise and rare encomiums for the great work done in bringing about such an unprecedented success. Thirty four new churches joined the convention. We shall say more further on about the great part played by our brethren out of the state.
PYTHIANS ENTER CITY POINT
Grand Chancellor Organizes Lodge There With Bright Prospects
City Point, Va., July 16, 1917.
EDITOR POE IS MYSTERIOUSLY INJURED
Editor James W. Poe of the Reformer was found Saturday afternoon in the toilet of the True Reformer Building unconscious, suffering from blows on his head, all of which seemed to have been made with a wooden mallet of the kind used in printer's flies. It was thought that he had taken either internally and the report was circulated that he had attempted suicide, due to worry and other troubles. He was removed to the Richmond Hospital. He repudiated the idea of his having been attacked by some one and professed an absolute ignorance as to how he was injured.
The detectives working on the case reached the conclusion that he inflicted the injuries upon himself, during a period of mental abberation. He that as it may, he maintains silence upon the subject and at present his mind appears to be normal. His friends were of the opinion that he had been the victim of foul play as the letters and communications that he has been writing have been condemned in some quarters. He is steadily improving and the indications are that he will soon be able to be walking about again.
A PLEASANT SURPRISE
There was a very pleasant surprise social tendered the children of the Friends Orphan Asylum on Friday afternoon from five to eight by a number of lads and lasses Numerous games and athletic sports were indulged in after which refreshments were served on the picturesque lawn. Alt seemed very happy and expressed desire to have another. The unique affair was originated by Masters Coleridge D. Davis; W. Hugo Jackson and Emnitt M. Burke who are very grateful to all who rendered them any assistance.
Mesdames Lizzie E. Davis, Anna E. Jackson and A. B. Burke chaperoned the party with Misses Jeanette Jackson and Lottie Davis.
In Loving Memory
WILLIAMS—Sacred to the memory of my devoted mother, Mrs. Olive Williams, who fell asleep one year ago, July 17th, 1916.
Her beautiful soul, like a ray of light
Has gone to the realms above.
Where never was.
Where never again comes sorrow and pain,
pain,
In the land of celestial love.
By her son,
ELLIAH B. WILLIAMS
Leigh St. Memorial M. E. Church.
Rev. C. C. Gill, B. D. is having marked success in his new field of work, both spiritually and financially He was at his best Sunday, preaching morning and evening two of the best sermons we have ever listened to. Sunday, July 22nd, the District Superintendent, Rev. E. J. Ruddee, B. D. will preach at 11:30 A. M. and the pastor at 8:30 P. M. A big day in Zion. All are welcome. Come praying that a shower of blessing may be bestowed upon us.
Doctors Hold Annual Meeting
The Old Dominion Medical Society held its annual meeting at Bay Shore Hotel, Buckroe Beach, July 11th and 12th 1917. Quite a large number of physicians from all parts of the state were present.
Medical and surgical clinics were held at Whitaker Memorial Hospital, Newport News, Many scientific papers were read.
The Society will meet next July at Buckroe Beach. The following officers were elected for the ensuing term: President, J. B. Darden, M. D. Petersburg, 1st Vice President, F. R. Trigg, M. D. Norfolk; 2nd Vice President, J. H. Roberts, M. D. Roanoke; Secretary, J. H. Blackwell, Jr. M. D. Richmond (re-elected); Recording Secretary, R. A. Deane, M. D. Victoria (re-elected); Treasurer, A. B. Greene, M. D. Norfolk; Executive Committee:—D. W. Byrd, M. D., Norfolk, Chairman; C. J. Bowen, M. D., Norfolk; C. W. Francis, M. D., Norfolk; R. E. Jones, M. D., Richmond; A. A. Tennant, M. D., Richmond.
PYTHIANS ENTER CITY POINT
Grand Chancellor Organizes Lodge There With Bright Prospects
City Point, Va., July 16, 1917. A lodge of Knights of Pythias was organized here last Saturday night by Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr. He metored down here from Richmond, with Robinson Davis at the wheel. With him were Col. Thomas M. Crump, Grand Keeper of Records and Seal, Dr. A. A. Tennant, Grand Medical Register, Dr. E. R. Jefferson, Supreme Representative. They arrived before dark and then returned to Hpwell, where they were serv'd luncheon eat Byrd's Hotel. A violent electrical storm came up while they were there, but they soon returned to the Masonic Hall, where the candidates had assembled
Later, Sir W T. Stokes, Grand Inner Guard and Deputy Grand Chancellor and Sir J. E. Wyliamson and Rev L. J. Morris arrived. The initiation was spirited and interesting. Later Sir Albert V. Norrell, Jr. and Sir M. Alphose Norrell, both of whom had also motored to this place with Clarence Smith at the wheel arrived telling of their terrible experiences, having been caught in the worst of the storm, between Richmond and Petersburg. They had a puncture, but this was quickly repaired.
It took them two hours and a half to make the trip. They had to stop on the road-side to wait until the worst part of the storm subsided. After the initiation, the following officers were installed, Chancellor Commander, R. L. Weeks; Master of Work, Eugene Jackson; Vice Chancellor Robert H. Epps; Prelate E. J. Hill; Master of Finance W. H. Jones; Master of Exchequer W. H. Harrison; Master at Arms H. L. Steptoe; Inner Guard, William Short; Outer Guard S. H. Bailey; Trustees George Quick, N. H. Lansford, Chas. Richardson.
The new body will be known as James River Lodge No. 212.
The visitors present were A. V. Norrell, Jr., M. Alphose Norrell, G. W. Gilliam, John Thos. Cook, District Deputy E. W. Wood.
The club was organized through the efforts of Sir W. T. Stokes and Sir J. E. Williamson. It was shortly after 1 o'clock when the visitors left for Petersburg, Va. The rain was falling and the car in which the Grand Chancellor was traveling was poorly lighted owing to the rain having put the electrical equipment out of commission.
Grand Chancellor Mitchell praised Sir Stokes and Williamsom highly as he had been endeavoring to secure a lodge here for many years. He was surprised to find Mr. Charley Campbell enraged in the torsorial business here.
Mr. and Mrs. William Dandridge of New York City are spending some time here the guest of their niece Mrs. Mary Smith 1013 St. John St.
Mr. Thomas Tinsley of Baltimore, Md., an old resident of Richmond spent some time in the city this week.
Mr. Wm. R Knight of Forest Hill was called to Tarboro, N. C. July 11th on account of the death of his stepfather r Jno. M. Houston. He returned Saturday, July 14, 1917.
Mr. John L. Rogers, cousin of Mr. John W. Moss is in the city. Re resides at Mt Clair, N J
Dr. J. H. Blackwell, Jr., of South Richmond, attended the annual meeting of the Old Dominion Medical Society at Buckroe Beach, Va., July 11th and 12th.
Miss Gertrude Lee underwent an operation at the Memorial Hospital Monday, July 16th, upon her throat, which she has been having trouble for some time. She is improving very nicely under Dr. Blackwell. Her father, of Sutherland, Va. is at her bed side. She is desirous of her friends calling to see her during her illness at her residence, 1401 West Leigh street.
MEMORIAL SERVICES IN HONOR OF DR. W. T. ANTHONY.
A Memorial Service to the memory of the late Pastor of Zion Baptist Church, Dr. W. T. Anthony was held in Zion Baptist Church, South Richmond, Sunday, July 5, 1917, at 3:30 P. M. The following program was rendered: Hymn, lined by Rev. J. S. Clatborne, D. D.; Scripture lesson, Rev. G. W. Carrington; prayer, Dr. R. C. Williams; Solo, Rev. W. H. James, Jr.; reading resolutions, Prof J. H. Blackwell; Memorial Sermon, Rev. T. J. King, D. D.; solo, Bro. Richard Beverly; short addresses, Rev. M. H. Payno, Rev. L. A. Green, Rev. W. H. James, Dr. R. C. Williams, Rev. J. J. Woodson, Rev. A. Kent, Rev. G. W. Carrington, Deacon Daniel Glenn; offering, Rev J. B. Braxton, L. C. Garland, D. D. was master of ceremonies.
A SHOCKING TRAGEDY.
Something in the nature of a sensation was caused when it was reported that a double tragedy had taken place at the fashionable Odeon moving picture theatre on Sixth St., between Broad and Grace Sts. Monday afternoon, Mrs. Adel Etoh of the Syrian colony was the central figure. She was found in the theatre with Albert Kaleel another married man. Etoh is alleged to have ordered him to keep away from his wife. Kaleel in the struggle fired and seriously wounded Etoh. After an examination by the surgeons, little hope was entertained for his recovery.
Kaleel started out of the theatre hurriedly when he was intercepted by Detective Police Officer J. H. Ridgeway, who fired at the man twice. He dropped dead. Later developments are alleged to show that Kaleel also shot himself. The Coroner's Jury, however left this matter open. The officer is under arrest, but out on bond, charged with murder. The body of the man was shipped to Goldsboro, N. C. At this writing Etoh was still alive but hovering about death's door.
AN APPEAL FOR AFRICA
My Dear Brother Editor:----
The case against Brother Payne and wife in South Africa is very acute, and as I write you he may be already adrift in the ocean somewhere. The lack of sufficient money to take care of your work is one of the greatest handicaps with which we are perplexed. There should have been a thousand dollars placed at Brother East's disposal two months ago to take care of this Payne matter; but this could not be supplied because we do not have the money.
We wrote the State Department on June 15th, sending the data in hand, touching the matter of not allowing our missionaries to land in South Africa, and received a letter under date of June 20th from the Secretary of State, in which he said:
"In reply you are advised that the American Consul General at Cape Town has been instructed by cable to investigate the matter and to render such assistance as may be proper in the premises."
We are calling upon every Baptist church in sympathy with kingdom building in all parts of the world to hold some kind of missionary service on the Fifth Sunday in July, the 29th take an offering and send it to the board. Our books close with July, and such an offering would furnish great relief for our workers and enable us to go to the convention at Muskogee nearer out of debt than last year. It would be a beautiful sight indeed to see ten thousand pastors of our churches preaching on "The Great Commission" on that day and taking an offering from their flocks for the cause to which our Lord gave His very life. Surely, all heaven would look on such a scene with great joy.
Though I spent nearly four months from the office visiting Africa, yet I am glad to say the average giving of churches this year, in some cases, has been higher than ever before. One of our large churches in this city during this year has given $104. One of our smaller churches has given $42.45. A small church in western Pennsylvania has given $22.50. A middle-sized church in New Orleans has contributed $25. This has been done on the plan of monthly giving. One layman in South Carolina has given monthly amounting to $11.
This matter of evangelizing the world is laying hold of our pastors and churches as never before in all the years gone by.
Brother Pastor busy as you are as
as many needs as confront you, your
board most earnestly requests and in
the most brotherly way insists that
you hear us for this cause on the
day. Not for us, but for His sake, we
urge it.
Yours in His service.
L. G. JORDAN.
Dr. Gray Visits Us
Dr. Junius Gray pastor of the Psalmist Baptist church and Manager of the Maryland Voice, toured from Baltimore, to Richmond in his gospel car, Monday, July 16, 1917 in twelve hours, finding the roads extremely bad for twenty mile. He was accompanied by his wife Mrs. Fannie Gray, Rev W. J. Jackson and Miss Ida Jones, the secretary of the Psalmist Church Sunday School. Dr. Gray visited his sick mother Mrs. Sarah Gray in South Fourth St. Dr. Gray is an "old Manchester Boy" and the people here welcomed him and his guests with open arms. While here the entire party paid a flying visit to Tho Planet office.
Mr. F. M. Bruce, of Charlotte, N. C. is now employed on the Planet's linotype battery.
TROOPS IN REVIEW FOR LOCAL VISTORS.
Col. Ballon Entertains Members of the Chamber of Commerce.
(Des Moines Register, July 11, 1917.)
Des Moines formally visited the Negro officers' training camp at Fort Des Moines yesterday afternoon, was entertained by the officers and their wives and witnessed the ceremony of retreat and a regimental review of the thirteen companies.
Forty-five automobiles, carrying members of the Chamber of Commerce, their wives and families, started from the Shops building at 4:15 for the fort, where they were joined by as many mere who had driven out separately.
The visitors, headed by directors and members of the military affairs committee of the Chamber of Commerce, paraded around the grounds of the fort, inspecting buildings and then were received at Clayton hall by the officers and their wives.
Light refreshments were served.
SEE METHODS OF TRAINING
They were also given an opportunity to see methods employed in the training of the candidates for commissions in the execution of drill maneuvers and the manual of arms before the entire thirteen companies were marched into the formation for retreat.
Promptly at 5:50 o'clock the gun was fired, and the colors lowered as the First regiment band played the "Star Spangled Banner." The review following the ceremony was a revelation to many of the visitors who yesterday saw the Negro soldiers in action for the second time.
In the few weeks of training they have made extraordinary progress and as they marched by Colonel Ballon in column of companies yesterday there were straight lines, uniform steps, well poised arms and erect bearing throughout.
The visitors stood behind the reviewing officer on the north side of the parade grounds where they were able themselves to review the soldiers as they passed him.
COLONEL, BALLOU PLEASED
Colonel Ballon expressed himself as pleased with the courtesy of the Chamber of Commerce and other visitors and as being especially gratified at the excellent showing made by the men. Only 250 of the men now candidates for commission have had previous military experience. These were selected from the most efficient none commissioned officers of the four existing colored regiments of the regular army and are assisting materially in the training of the raw recruits most of them taken from the ranks of professional men, school teachers college professors, lawyers and business men.
RESOLUTION
Adopted by the U. S. W. V. July 1th, 1917. We the members of the Department of The Potomac, U. S. W. V. in convention assembled on the 4th day of July 1917, in the city of Petersburg, Va., desire to express our confidence in the ability and wisdom of our comrade Lt. COL. CHARLES YOUNG, U. S. A. His unblemished character as a gentleman and a soldier, his valuable service to his country and nation, at home and abroad, his devotion to duty, when put upon him, has marked him as a fit and suitable officer for a larger and a more extensive field of operation.
Therefore he it,
Resolved. That we doubt not, that
he is worthy of the confidence of the
COMMANDER IN CHIEF of the ARMY
and NAVY of the United States of
America, and that he given an op-
portunity to do further service for his
country, THIS WE RESPECTFULLY
ASK,
W. H. ANDERSON
Rev. Dr. Goodall Weds.
Rev. Dr. L. B. Goodall, the brilliant pastor of Shilah Baptist Church at Waynesboro, Va., was married to the accomplished Miss Bertha Louise Early at Harrisonburg, Va., Thursday night, June 21st. Rev. J. A. Jordan, D. D., the bride's pastor performed the ceremony. A Waynesboro special committee conveyed the happy couple to the parsonage. A fine program was rendered at the church. Mr. Wm. Hobson was master of ceremonies. Rev. Dr. Goodall is much beloved by the devoted congregation.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS
INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS OF
LOCAL PYTHIAN AND COURT
ORGANIZATIONS
Notwithstanding the threatening storm and occasional showers of rain, there was a large gathering present at the Fifth Street Baptist Church, Tuesday night, July 17, 1917, to witness the Installation Exercises of the officers of the courts and lodges of the city of Richmond. The exercises opened with the congregation singing "God Bless Our Knightly Band." The names of the officers of the lodges and courts, as filed in the office of the Grand Chancellor were read by Col. Roscoe C. Mitchell.
Music for the occasion was furnished by Prof. Joseph Matthews, who with his usual grace and enchantment sang to the delight of all present. Mrs. Mary Satterfield presided at the organ and rendered excellent service. The roll of Grand Lodge and Grand Court officers residing in Richmond was called and absentees noted. The officers were installed by the Grand Chancellor and Grand Worthy Counselor, John Mitchell, Jr., assisted by D. D. G. C., L. J. Morris; D. D. G. W., C., Mrs. Lucy Cross, State Deputy Mrs. Anna Taylor and G. M. at A., Col. W. H. Willis.
The Grand Chancellor gave a brief report of the Supreme Lodge case and of the Grand Session just closed at Staunton, Va. Rev. L. J. Morris, District Deputy Grand Chancellor prayed the opening and closing prayer. The committee of arrangements Miss M. L. Chiles, chairman, had beautifully decorated the church in the colors of the Order and a profusion of cut flowers.
LAWYER WARNS THE CHICAGO
NEGROES TO ARM SELVES.
Chicago, Ill., July 5.—The following is an extract of an article which appeared in the Chicago Daily Tribune, issue July 4.
"Arm yourselves now with guns and pistols," said Ferdinand L. Barnett, a former assistant state's attorney, in speaking to 100 Negro men at a mass meeting hold last night to protest against the riots and bloodshed in East St. Louis. The meeting took place at 3005 South State Street.
"Don't buy an arsenal," continued Barnett, "but get enough guns to protect yourselves. You may be victims in Chicago within a fortnight of such murders and outrages as have taken place in East St. Louis. And when trouble starts let us not hesitate to call upon our Negro militiamen to defend us."
CONDEMNS STATE OFFICIALS
Barnett and A. H. Roberts, another speaker, sponsored resolutions condemning Gov. Lowden and other public officials' "laxness of duty" because the riots took place, and demanding punishment of the participants in riots.
"The fact that the governor let this mob run its course is forever a black spot on the executive record of the state," said Mr. Barnett. "The officer who told the militia not to shoot should be court married and be married a traitor and murdered. I don't know who is to blame, but a mob is a mob, and ought to be dispersed or killed.
"We are going to rectify this in some way. The 10,000,000 of our race will not stand for this massacre.
"Behind an army go the guerrilla—looters, cowards and thieves. Behind this riot is the public defense council, whose caiminations are written without consulting a single Negro. They breathe the same spirit as the mob of East St. Louis did."
HOLD ON TO YOUR GUNS
"Get guns and put them in your homes. Protect yourselves. And let no black man permit a policeman to come in and get those guns."
Roberts told his audience that he hoped "God would demand 100,000 white lives in the war for each Negro slaughtered in East St. Louis."
"I love my race better than my country," he shouted. "This country, under Woodrow Wilson is asking us to carry the flag of democracy to Europe. God forbid that we take across the Atlantic any of the democracy of East St. Louis."
TELLS NEGROES TO ORGANIZE
L. W. Washington, another speaker told the Negroes to organize.
"The the governor that every Negro in Chicago and Illinois is behind these resolutions," he said, "and if we don't get justice from him, then sent to the President of the nation."
John Douglason told the audience to prepare for similar plots in Chicago. The applause was loud while the speeches were being made. A plea was made for contributions to pay travel expenses of Mrs. Ida Well-Barnet to Springfield to present resolutions to Gov. Lowden.
Wa 3 ke a
RADICALS CLAIM
NEW CHANCELLOR
‘The Majority “Bloc” Plans to
Continue Fight,
ROW OVER FOREIGN OFFICE
Retehtag Majority to Demand ‘That
Michaclle Accept Thelr Statement of
Tho new chancellor, Dr, Miohacits,
4s described In spectal despatches from
Bortin as working night and day on his
Program speech and the solection of
Rew material for the Prussian Imper!
41 administration,
‘The Lokal Anvelger says tho chang
es have been co apleted and the Chan-
eollor will appear <n tho reichstag ac
gompanied by all hts new colloxguos.
‘The Tageblatt says Horr Michaelis
45 roticent on his polley,
The rotchstag 1s expected to adjourn
on Friday until September, first voting
the War credits almost unantmourly.
(espatchos ald Dr, Miohaclls
would make his maiden speech on
Thursday.)
A depateh trom Horlin says the ma-
fority “bloc” plans to prosent pence
torma in a resolution to tho retchstar
on Thursday and to demand from Dr.
Michaelis n statement that he accept
{t In principle, otherwise co-operation
4s tmpossible. | Meanwhtlo the exec:
tlon of thin plan depends upon the
extent to which the “bloc” holds to:
gother.
A late odition of the Lokal Annolger
asserts that the new chancellor In for
the forelen palley and peace terms ex:
pounded by Meld Marshal von Minden.
Durg and the ‘pan-German camp, I
quotes conservative and national” Mb.
eral membors of the relehstag who at
tenddod a conforence with von Hinden
burg, General von Tadendorff, first
Quartermaster General, and Dr. Mt
chaclls as boing most’ favorably Im:
Pressed with the results,
The Lokal Anzelxor aggerts of tts
own knowledge that Dr. Mfchaotts al
ready has oats’ “etl relations of ub
toliteynante ad go-nperation with
those military-potttical chioftains. ‘The
newspaper strongly recommends to Dz.
Michaelis and parliament the postpone.
mont unt!l the ond of tho war of the
settlement of nll contentious tntornal
questions, ncading, naturally, Prus.
alan suffrage reform, thozeby properly
rohuking what It terms impertinent fn.
terferonce from enemy countries tn the
fnternal Gezman affairs and domon:
strating the harmonious unity of the
country.
The selection of a successor to the
foreign secretary, Dr. Altre’ Zimmor.
mann, ts still unsottled, Prossuro ta
being brought from two directions to
block the proposed nomination of
Count Brockdorft-Rantzan, the German
minister at Copenhagen, and to substh
tute Admiral yon Hintzo, miniator to
Norway, or Count von Rernstorft, for
mer ambassador to Washington,
‘The present minister to Christiana Is
greatly desired by pan-Germans and
advocates of a super-vigorous polley
not only on account of his high diplo
matte qualifications, but chiefly on ac
count of his antecedents.
Apparently it Is felt that a former
naval officer, particulnrly one who
played such ‘a prominent role at Ma-
anita in the events of 1898, will: offer
the necessary guarantee that the Ger
man forlgn policy in regard to peace
negotiations will be afterwards con:
ducted along destred energetic lines,
‘Tho emperor Js sald to favor yon
Hintze.
‘The ‘Tageblatt, the Mittags Zeltung
andthe Socialist organ Vorwaorts
unite In declaring that the candidacy
of Admiral von Hintze for foretgn min.
Sater ts a move of the super-annexa,
tHoniata.
‘The Tagebiatt and Vorwaerts warn
Dr. Michaells that he cannot accept
Yon Hintzo without compromising tho
aministration with a pan-Gorman
taint. ‘The Deutsche ‘Tages Zeitung,
(Reventlow’ s paper) supports yon
Hintze's candidacy.
ORDERS SUPPLIES FOR ARMY
Requisitions Percentage of Output
From Every Canner In Country.
To bo able to Insuro an ado:
quate supply of canned goods for
the army and navy, the defense coun:
cll's supply committee asked all the
gountry's canners to reserve tho fol
Jowing portion of thelr output:
Twelve per cent of each canner's
Yack of peas, 12 per cent of corn, 18
Per cent of tomatoos and G per cent
of salmon.
‘The canners already havo agreed to
accept a fair price to be established
by the government.
Rallrogds to Ald Hoover,
Herbert C. Hoover has received
resolutions adopted by tho Ameri.
ean Raflway association's war board
pledging the board and Its Indl
‘idual_ members to put into offeet
tho rules for the conservation of food
on dining cars. The plan wae worked
Out between Mr. Hoover and represen.
tatives of tho commissary departments
‘ed the ratlroada.
Pikinanpepepupapiipapedabeh
POLLS IOP OO DSO SOHH
ALEXANDER KERENSKY
Russla’s War Minister Guarded
From Assassination,
LEER.
Re Oe
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Pe wa
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Se eS y
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Rat el
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OUR NR aie
Arica inte 8 %
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ESR ee Serene
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Photo by American Prean ‘Avasaatton.
Roports {rom, Petrograd tnidteato that
War Minister Kerensky's life is sous
by accaseing, and iy is ow heavily
Fince his return "trom the. Galtelae
Front, wiioro We Inepired the troops. te
front, where he ins
SUFF PICKETS GO TO JAIL”
to Pay Fine,
‘The sixteen members of the wo
man's party arrested on Saturday tn
an attempt to “picket the White
House In Washington, were sentence’
to pay a fine of $25 or serve sixty days
in the District of Columbia workhouse
at Occoquan, Va.
‘They decided to take the sixty-day
sontence. An appeal will be taken
Horetofore the militant _ suffragist:
have gotten off with three-day jnil sen
tences.
Dudley Field stalone, collector _o
the port of New York, who saw the
arrests Saturday, and was a witness
in behalf of the women, will ‘net as
their counsel.
It was reported that Mr. Malonc
would resign lils post ab New York te
take charge of the work, Mr, Malone
would not disenss this,
‘Tho women sentenced were: Misi
Mary Ingham, Philadelphia; Mrs
Flofence Bayard Tiilles, Wilmington
Dol.; Mies Minnfo Abbott, Atlantt
City; Mrs. Eunice Dana Brannan, Now
York; Mins Jeanette Fotheringham
Buffalo; Miss Pleanor Angola Cala
many Methaun, Mass.;.Miea Anne Mar
Un, Reno; Mrs, Beatrice Reyndlds Kin
kead, Mt. View, Cal.; Mrs, Ameite
Hines Walkers, Baltimore; Miss Jul
Hurlburt, Morristown, N. J.;. Mra, Bet
sy Graves Releau, Detrott; Mrs. Aller
‘Turnbull Hopkins, Morristown, N. J.
Mrs, Matilda Gardner, Washington:
Miss Doris Stevens, Omaha; Mis:
Loulsa Parker Mayo, Farmingham
Mass.; Miss Eilzabeth Selden Rogers
New York.
VOTE PORTO RICO DRY
Prohitition Majority Blg—Unloniete
Candidate For Commissioner Wine.
Porto Rleo voted for prohtbition by
a dig majority at the election,
With four untmportant towns miss
tng the returns show 99,775 votos fo
prohibition and 61,295 agninat,
Fitty-one muntetpalltles voted for th
prohibition measure, twenty-one _ op
posed ft, San Juan's vote wns Bit!
for, and 2255 against. AM the otha
large elties wore strongly on the dr3
alde.
Follx Cordova Deavila, Untontat, wat
chosen resident commisstonor‘at Wash
ington. ‘The Unlonist carried five ow
of seven senatorial dintriets, Tho Un
fonists will have a majority in the low
er house, ‘Tho Socialint gains thal
were cored were chiefly at Republicar
expense,
Santigno [glosins, the Socialiat ‘ean
didate for senator-nt-large, althouxt
falling of etection, polled 23187 votes
this showing comparing with tho par
ty's vote of 4300 in 1914, ‘The Unton
fats potled 88,750 vote and the Ro
publicans 57,629,
Irish Convention Plane,
‘The national convention will as
somblo on July 25 in Regent hous
of Trintty college, In Dublin, ne
cording to official announcement. ‘The
ehfef secretary for Ireland, 1. 9. Duke
will preside until the convention choos
6s its own chalrman. Tt Is expected
the proceedings will bo private, bu
probably an offical record will be
aca.
Crown Prince Lauds U-Boats.
A copy of the Mustrite Zettung
of Lelpste, recelvod in Copenha
gon contains antographod common
tarles upon tho exploits of U-boats by
German naval and military leaders
‘The crown prince lands the ruthtest
U-boat war against shipping as the
“Inst argument of kings.”
Shoots Way to Freedom.
White being tried for theft’ before
a magistrato at Millsboro, Del.
Raymond Wost pulled a revolver
‘and shot ls way — through’ ¢
crowd, serlously wounding Lorenz<
Drittingham, He eseaped in an auto
mobile.
U-Boat Sunk by Canadian Freighter,
Tho Canadian froight steamship
Meaford sank a submarine In the Meal
torranean on June 12, ‘The oMetal sn:
formation comes from the marine de
partment fn Tondon, conveyed to the
Farrar Transportaition company, Ltd.
of Toronto, owners of the Meaford.
THE RIOHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
RIOT AND CABINET
ROW STIR RUSSIA
Tay Ministers Resign fr
— Eitain Conteeary
MANIFESTANTS IN A PANIC
| Demonstrations In Petrograd—Mobs
Fired on Each Other,
‘Tree members of the Russian abl
net have resigned. A special session
fof the counell of ‘aiulsters. has, been
convoked ‘n sn effort to avert a crisis,
‘Two demonsty tons against the gov:
erument rested In the firing of shots
In the Nevsky Prospekt at midnight
Sunday. A number of persons were
[killed or wounded,
~The firlig apparentiy was the result
jot stray shots which breweht on A
panic, in which the demonstrators
turned rifles and machine guns on
each other, Quiet was restored after
A few minutes
| The demonstrations were organized
by the Bolshevikiy the mafority. fae:
{lon of the Social-Democratte party.
‘The men resigning are A, 1, Shingar.
off, minister oc finance; Professor
Manuiloff, minister of education, and
Prince Shakovsky, head of the de
partment of public’ ald.
(A later despateh reports that M.
Stepanoff, acting minister of com
mereo, also hag rovlgned.)
The resignations of there cadet vin
fetors followed x sharp disagreencn:
over questions tnvolving the Ukraine
an extensive region In Russla, ombrac
ing part of the territories of the old
Kingdom of Poland.
Prince Loft, the premier, has re.
quested the mintsters to meet at his
private residence when the cause of
the dispnte wilt be considered. It Is
Known he will attempt to prevail on
them to withdraw thelr resignations.
‘The split In the ministry occurred at
& conference called to consider a re
Port submitted by M. Teraschtenko,
minister of forelgn dffatrs, aml M.
Tsorcteill, minister of posts and tele
graphs, as a result of thelr negotia:
tons coicerning the Ukrainians.
The cadet ministers took oxception
to the form of a declaration drawn iy
by Mm, Toresehtonko and ‘Tseratelll
‘They awiorted that these ministers
without anshorization, took {ton them
selves to commit the government to a
defitic polley regarding the Ukraine
‘Thoy also critlelsed tho toxt of the
Urratue declaration, fitnt, hecanne fi
abolishes all power of the temporars
government tn the Ukraine; second
Decause tt did not specity of what
territories {he Ukraine constsks 0}
mike clear how tt shail be governed
In order to maintain the combative
unity of the army, the govérnmertt will
not countenance measures which mighi
{nfure the military organtzatlon and
command, although tt does not objec
to the creation of army units composes
exclusively of Ukramtans, aubject te
tho approval of tho war minfstry. Tu
order to permit settlement of this prob
Jem, special Ukrainian delegates ma3
bo attached to tho war cabinet, the
goneral staff and the staff of the com
mandarin-chief.
RUSSIANS LOSE KALUSZ
Forced to Quit Recently Captured Tew
ton Meadnuarters In Galicia.
RS Pee RS MAES SED TH SANG.
Tho Russian forces which re
cently captured the Galtcian town
of Kalusk, tho headquarters — o!
tho Austro-Gorman army, evacuate
that town, nccording to the official
statement issued by the German hend
quarters staff,
Rbfmelend regiments, # tg vadd, coy
tared the woodinnds te the norte 0
Kalusz. Aa the Germans were ap
proaching from the went the Russians
retreated to the southern bank of the
river Lomnien,
Tho Petrograd war offlee an.
nounces that Russfan troops have
abandoned Kalusz, in eastern Galicia
Dut have secured the crossing of the
Lomnica rivor.
‘The Russians drove the enemy from
the village of Novica,
DISTILLERS MAKE POTASH
Utilize Waste In Getting Aleohol From
‘Molacess,
Announcement was made by the
Jetferson Mistiiling and Denatuzing
company, In Now Orfoans, that It
has évolved a process for’ tho utill
zation of former waste In dlstiliing
alcohol from molansos, by which its
plant now produces twenty tons ot
potash a day.
Prior to the war potash which was
obtained almost oxclusively from Ger
many, wag worth $8 a ton fn this goin
try, and now it sells at $400 a ton.
iNew Alr @ald on Essen,
‘The'German industria’ town of Bs
son, whero the Krupp gun works aro lo
cated, wae again ralded by allied air
mon.” This Information was contained
Ina despatch from the frontler. ‘The
totegram added that the bombardment
was followoil by a sorlos of tremon:
dous explosions,
York, Pa., Man Wounded In France,
‘The Canadian casualty et eon
tains the following names of
Amerleans: Wounded, F. ©, Pree
man, Minneapolis; Acting Captain Co
wan, Providence; J. 8. Potts, Fatt
Muff, N.C. H.W. Hilihouse, York,
Pa,: 'P, Pink, Detroit. Shell shock, J
Bolton, Detrott,
Harrisburg Mayor Dies,
Charles A. Miller, elected” mayoy
of Harrisburg, Pa., tons than twe
months ago, to Mil tho unexplred term
of Dr. Ezra S. Meals, who dled Apri:
18, dled at his home. Mayor Millet
was for more than twenty-five years
efty clerk and had a reputation ag an
‘authority on munteipal law.
AMERICA’S WAR MEDAL
a of Gold Token Being Sold
Tin 32 >on ma ax
Cc
SARIN
VAN NRE eee as,
ATL
RAE AS
‘ CNT
SS)
SRA
BEC.
ite S| Se NN
y ess ce 4}
i a x A y
YSPC
tie”
Fate by American Trecc Accountant
Tho Arst three of thoxe raedale
Perec deol chal een coun
iss Anne Morgan, where they. wore
Prgsented to Mazshal Joftre, Prea!tent
‘olneare and former Premier Vivianh
Goples are hetny sold here anit abroad,
the money going to war rellet,
Gas Masks For U. 8. Men,
Army orders disclose the faet that
the government and clvilien experts
are hard at work on tho production of
an effective gas mask for Amorlean
troops.
Major 1. P. Williamson, of the mot:
cal corps, has been ordered to Pitts:
burgh, Baltimore and New Haven to
inspect laboratory work being dono
there.
Fyery American destroyer or other
naval vessel which sails for the wat
zone carries a full equipment of gas
masks,
Gas shells haye been used by the
German naval gunners and it was
deomed necessary to gaulp Ame ‘ean
boata azalant much devizes wher tht
frat were deapatchat
U. 8: Ship Kanean Sunk,
The American steamship Kansan,
carrying a crew of fifty men, has been
sunk, presumably off the French coast,
A cablegram to thts effect owas. re
eolved by the France and ‘Canada
Ssteamship company, which chartered
the vessel. ‘The fate of those on board
{8 not known,
‘The Kansan was valued at $3,000,000,
She carried a cargo of four and other
foodstuffs, tozethor with 4000 tons ot
atecl. This, valued at $2,000,000, was
consigned to the French government,
A majerity of her crew was Amorleans,
State department despatches an:
nouncing the destruction of the Kan:
san by a German submarine sald four
members of the crow are missing, AM
of the armod naval guard are safe,
Woman Must Die on Gallows.
Mrs. Amy 1. Archer-(iillingham
was found guilty of murder tn tho
first degree in tho superior court at
Hartford, Conn, She was convict.
ed of the murder by poison of Prank-
Mn R. Andrews, May 30,1914. Andrews
was ar: irmate of Ler heme fer olderly
peor: at Wladsoc, Khe was ceatonstd
to be hanged November 6, 1917.
Chamberlain Quits Cabinet,
Austen Chamberlain, secretary
for India, has resigned. Mr.
Chamberiain's resignation is ap.
parently duo to the Kut-el-Amara
scandal. Fis connection with the fas.
co has been regarded as technical, the
plans and conduct of the expedition
having been in tho hands of milltary
commanders of the India service and
Lord Hardinge, the viceroy.
$1.000.000 Elke’ War Fund,
ee Ee ae eae te Cer en
A fund of $1,000,000 for war rellet
work was appropriated by the Bene-
yolent and Protective Order of Biks
at Boston. j
GENERAL_MARKETS |
PHILADELPHIA—FLOUR — Firm,
Biralghl,, $o-tsarin.26;" etty mis
2.5000 12.75.
RYE MLOUR—Quiet; per barrel, $10
Oita Nominal. |
2. GOHN—Aulet; No. 2 yellow, $2.02@
E1QATS—Qulet: No, 2 white, s1@
POULTRY—Live steady; hens, 20¢|
2ie: ald roosters, 16@176, “Dressed,
steady: choleo f3wls, 26e; old ros
ters, 1c.
BUTTER— Firm; fancy croamery,
42¢ ner Mh.
WAS —~ Firm: selected, 42@43e;
nearby, ac; western, 30¢,
Live Stock, Quotations,
cricado.110GS~" Siow, steady,
Mixed “and” butchers, S1445@15.80;
good heave. sv4.25q0 14.452 rough heavy
$24.650015.9%:“Hlseht,” ” $IR4RcO IS O8F
DUES, $5015.25; Hulk, $14,801.75.
CATT Steady "to I6e" lowor,
Peeves, $8.25013.90: cows and heifers,
$8259 11.80; stocker "and fedora,
93 4 10: "Texans, $10,250 12; calven,
$9,500 14.50,
SHEEP—Steady, 2070360 lower. Na.
five and wostern, $7.75@10.80; tambs,
$8.00 15.40.
Avtaalan Wena,
For over 1,000 years the Chinese hav
obtamed water (urough means of arte
stan wells. Ono of the most famon
wella In existence Is that at Grenell
on the outskirts of Parts, where (1
water ts brovght from a depth of 1.7%
feet. A well In Pesth was sunk to th
depth of 3,160 feet in the Keventies,
WEDNESDAY.
Just as the Russians have torn a
big gap In tho Auatro-German Hines in
Galicia, capturing Hallez and pressing
on' tow wy Lemberg tho Gormane Paw
eC ( menacitg ofecstre E+
Belgian const.
The Germans succeeded In their int-
tial push by leveling the dofenses
throtigh an Intensive donibardment for
twenty-four hours’ and then attacking
over the devastated ground. The
bridges across tho Yor wero destroy.
ed by the heayy fire and the sending
up of reinforcements was found. Im
posatbte.
In the French front in northorn
Franco an attack was made by the Ger
mans In the Woevre district, near Fil
roy. They were elocted’trom a portion
of the trench In which they tentporatl.
gained a footing,
einem:
General Brustloft's offensive in Gall.
cla Is developing into a drive with It
Jo let up, at least so far aa the
Korniloff armies aro concerned. News
of the capture of Haller was followed
by the announcement that Genoral
Kornllof’g troops had pushed on be:
yond Lesitivka, southwest of Stautslau,
‘and reached and occupled Kalusz, sev:
en mites to the west of the Stokit rly.
or. ‘The AustroGerman headquarters
In this sector was situated here,
‘Tho German attack on Monday on
tho Relgtan coast ceased with the cap:
ture of the small seotor east of the
Ysor, which they had devastated with
thelr Intensive gunfire,
On the Verdun front the Germat
crow prince made # number of af
fests en bith Danks of the Pexe
AM then nosanite, deltvered fi th
viotalty of IM 204 on the side of tha
stream and north of the Hardamont
works on the other, were repulsed by
tho French, as were attacks on. the
Alsne front south of Juvincourt,
FRIDAY.
Korniloff's aggressive Russian ar
miler, whlch already havo driven. 1
wedge tnto the Teutonte Hnes in east
em Galicia, appear to be at the cra
cal point of their campaign for Lem
berg.
Having crossed tho river Lemntea
behind whieh the Austro.German fore
es planted themselves in thelr retreat
from the Mallez. region, the Russtans
have onened up the posalbillty of turn
Ing: the wholexfentonte line northwari
along the Zlotl.Ipa,
‘The statement from Petrograd show:
that In Wednesday's fightin, whleb
Fosultod #1 the capture of Kalusz, tht
Runstans took 940 pyisemers, clad:
Geemanr end five hows eane
SATURDAY.
Germany's Internal cris oversint
ows military operations in the yews
Reports ftom Berlin. show that hy
relchstag has gone on “strike” aga’
the crown and the military patty, an
pazontly th the Interest of a garllewnen
tary aystem of kovernment. ‘The {
even a rumor, Ittle credited, (st 1
peror William has abdleated In fav
ot Prince Jouchtm,
‘The Tusstan revolutionary asmte
are still sweeplng forward. Appa n
ly there Is ttle to stop them tourn
through the breach In the tines fn «a8
ern Ga'tefa opened by Korntott. ‘The:
are puhtng north of the Dniester an
west of the Lomnica,
On the FrancoRelgian front a wet
ing polley tx being pursued by Genera
Sir Donglas Halg and Genoral Pet stn
There ha been only local Aghting b
‘giver even:
SUNDAY.
With somewhat a slackening of the
Russian offensive in Gallela, owing
to bad weather, the French and the
Germans along the Chemin des Dame
and in Champagne have come toge!he’
fa 6 mizdty sltageis, tr whieh the of
Yaatage rested mainly with the force
of General Petain,
In Champagne, to the north of Mon!
Haut and northeast of the Teton, the
Fronch in a violent attack captured
powerfully-organized German trencl
elements on a front of more than 80t
yards, and to a depth of more than
300 yards, and held and consolidated
tho positions, nothwithatanding heavy
counter attacks, In which the Germany
suffered heavy casualties and lost 11
addition 360 men made prisoners,
Tn Flanders at various points the
British and Germans continue to carry
out intensive artitiery duole and the
British to make successful ralds of
Gorman positions.
‘Sacwaruny:
Although Korniloft's big offensive {1
Eastern Galicia ts being hampered b:
bad woather, tho cossacks apparent
have beon able to keep up their dash
ing tactles. ‘This {8 Indleated by ;
Teport from Petrograd through Rom
that Dolina has been occupied by Rus
slan forces,
If this announcemant fe confirme:
{ means an advance of more than thir
ty miles for the Russtans since th
opening of the drive south of Dniester
A week ago. The offical reports hav:
Placed them nearly two-thirds of tht
@istance from thelr starting polnt, a
Kalusz, taken last week, ts (went
miles from Stantslay, which virtually
was the place of departure,
Hard iighting that marked the tas
fow days along the French front. tn
north France continues. ‘The German:
mado an attempt to regain the im
portant observation posts they lost or
Saturday nighe in the vielutry of Mon’
Haut and the Toton in the Champagne
On the British front only ratding op
erations and artillery and alrplane 80
Hvittes are reported,
Harper Heads the Elke,
Fred C. Harper, a lawyer of Lynch
burg, Va.. was clected grand exalt
ed ruler of the Benevolent and Pro
tective Order of Elks in Boston. At
lantle City was unanimously named a
the next convention elty, Harper re
celved 1208 votos against 308 for Joht
W. Steverson, of Fulton, N. Y,
MAN, WIFE, SON
SLAIN ON TRI!
Tr vered Near Garaton, Pe,
anc Companton Held.
TOLD CONFLICTING STORIE
ae Ne ee
Traces of Highwaymen,
Edward Humphries, Mrs. Carri
Humphirles; his wife, ‘and thelr sor
Edward, Jr, aged fifteen, wore she:
to death on the Ehonsburg-Carrolltow
Fond near Johnstown, Pa, while o”
their way to Cresson and Philadelphi
in the Humphries automobile wit
George K. Tomplcins, Jr., of 6043 Rac
street, Phitulelphis, who says maske
Aighyaymen did the kliling.
Aftor a hearing before a coroner's
Jury, Tompkins was locked up in the
Ebonsburg Jall until his story ean be
further Investigated,
‘The killing occurred on a main rond
‘The party had loft Carrailtown, whore
Humphries and Tompkins wero Inter
ested In a coal company organized stx
wrecks ago by John K. Newborn, Dr,
B. F. Arble, Humphries and Tompkins
with Tomplins as treasurer. ‘Tompkins
relurned to Carrolltown with the bod
Jos of Mrs. Humphries and the boy
tho woman having beon shot throng
‘the head and the boy through the face
&t close range, powder burns showing
Tass cold three meaken mo-
fad stepped suédenty from a. grain
‘flold and potnted revolvers. Mrs, Hum
phries stepped ont of the car and
Sereamed. One of the masked men
shot. ‘Then the oller Humphries, whe
had been driving with hls wife on the
front seat, ran, while ‘Tompkins crouch
ed in the tonnean,
‘The masked men ceased thelr at
tack and Humphries came back and
helped place his wite in the car, ‘Ther
the masked men returned and pene:
fire again. ‘Tompkins ran and fell
When he arose and looked about he
saw. Humphries ranning with a mar
followt- him, All of the shots wer
fired from tn front of the er, ‘Tamn
Idng insists, at a distance of shou
Boventy feet.
rolltown and searching paritos sigrt»
In every direction. ‘The hoy of the
elder Humphries was found tn a fete
several hundred yards from the eas
“Ho was shat three times, onc butte
passtag hraueh Nis shoulder from the
back. Near him was a steel aprine
and a clip from an aitomatie revol
ver.
Miners passing that way reporte’
that they heard shots and that thes
Saw one man pursuing another, ‘They
aiso sald tho car had been. run off the
Fond non comiflelh A Wethe Tap top
delonging to tho Humphries family
was pleked up by them, badly fright
ened and covered with blood. ‘Thos
saw the woman and the hoy, dend, fr
tho car and hurried to Ehonsburg tc
got holp. ‘They saw no signs of ans
Dandits,
Sheriff W. F, Muthollen and Counts
Detective Roscoo Custer gave up. th
search for highwaymen after the con
Yieling statoments of ‘Tompkins hac
boon Investigated, Several huhdre¢
farmod men were searching the woods
and guarding roxds and railroads, alsc
Teturned to thalr Nomes,
Soldiers Deport Italians.
Over thirty Malan laborers, whe
trled to chase a group of negro work
men from Camp Mende, the nattona
army encampment at Admiral, Ma.
wero themselves ousted by a detach
ment of regulars on guard there, an
pat ea beard a Malttmore and Ohi
trate for Taltimore, Md., and told
that If they ever came back they would
be severely dealt with,
The deportation was supervised by
Major Ralph F, Proctor, U. 8, A., whc
has charge of bullding the cantonment
So quickly war the coup carried ow
the Itallans did not have a chance t
Temonstrate. They looked at the sol
dlers and at the guns and boarded ¢
train,
Major Proctor learned that tho Ital
fans, who wore helping to lay tracks
for the Raltimore and Ohio, had band
ed togethor and told the colored work
men that they would have to get out
of tho camp. ‘The Itallans, {twas
anid, feared tho colored men would
work for dess money,
Uahtalnn Kille ether sid fin.
John King, seventy-five, and his son
Lloyd King, twenty-seven yenra of age
doth of Weat York, Pa., were struck bs
Gightning and instantly killed wht
Ashing along the Big Conewago, neni
Creager's Mill, ten miles from’ Han
over,
‘There were six mon In the party wh«
@rovo from Yorke in an automobite fo1
& day's outing. ‘They were preparing
to go home when a severe thunder
storm broke. Father and son sough:
shelter under a treo, which wae hit
by a bolt fro mthe sicies, and in fall
Ing one body fell across the other. A
fecond son and the other men witness
ed the Gagedy from the opposite sidé
of the creek. a
a
It 14 remarkable how many persons,
some of whom may lay claim to edu-
cation and famillarity with Japan, per:
aist In misspelling the name of Japan's
capital. Of course Sf government off
clals and western diplomats in Japan
Ansist on spelling It ‘To-LL-0, westorn
people, Ignorant of the Japanese tan-
guage, cannot be blamed for pronoune-
ing It In threo aylnbles (Lo-kKeo-yo),
much to the amused disgust of the Jap:
anese. The Japanese ideographs aro
only two and aro beat represented by
the two romajl syllables ‘To-kyo, pro-
nounced with a very slight emphasls
on the first syliable.—Japen Marasine.
SS
BLACK JEW HERE NEXT MONDAY,
MPT SREET CHURCH
Mr. Lzala Percettl, of Jorusatem,
in Palestine will lecture at the Pitt
Street Baptist Church, Monday night
July 22, auspices the BLY. PR. U.
Mr. Percettt hax had a varted oxper-
fence, havin: served im the ‘Turkish
navy and fs now a divinity: student
at the Virginfa Seminary.
HAVE YOUR HARNESS REPAIRED
ar
17 £2 NORTH 18th St,
Phone, Mad, 3935,
We make and repir anything in
Harness ine, Suiteases, Leather Bags.
Automobile Cushions, ete, We carry:
4 full Hine of Harness, Whips, Robes,
Hits, Pads, Brushes, Combs, Harness
Dressing, Salyes, Nets, Oils, Halters,
Saddles, Hardware, ete. We make a
Epecialty of Hand-made Harness. Our
motto Is lo SATISFY YOU. Your
patronage will be appreciated. Stop in
and et us serve you. Ail worl
guaranteed
You Should Save Surplus
Fruits and Vegetables
‘AKDP your ground work for you
Moira iota tae ground
waste, ‘This {gs no time for
veaste or Ileus
You can raise somo vegetables for
your fivhly, no mutter tw aml a
Dleto of grocad you lave.
All idle ground utilized in the pro-
diction of veyetabtes meuns more food
for thase who have no ground at ale
Tf your garden at ny tn produces
ore tli pou can waa tincgesintely
do not allow tus surpia to pole
anh aurpios betwee peasy cor dome
toon, Dect spinnch payin aed
Douins for enter use
Can or weseeva “abpled penelieg
pears, Shevties stucrs, ‘verte aed
Stor cultivated an etd fui
Every can of vexetables or fruit and
sens das ob premirved food mene int
Sou inva waved foal marae that
‘ouul lave stnerwise been wate,
Can‘or store root crops, cabbage and
other vegetables properly so that they:
Weill "Kecp Well anal suply Sea Wit
Fond when the gurson ‘eeuses to Deo
ace.
‘The United States depantment of ag-
riculture, Washington, oe, sour state
nevieuiseal solless ce cotnty aeent
Wit xlve you expllelt directions for
Talsing vegetables nail wil Te you of
shuple methods for canning vexetables
and fruit at home with ordinary home
tinastie
HOW TO CATCH FLIES.
Tho Bost Fly Trap and the Best Poi-
ae ee
‘Tho best fy Wap Is x wire screen cyl
inder with a‘cone of the same material
inside of Its lower part, the pointed
end up, Beneath the coue ts placed the
bait fn any convenient shallow recep:
tacle. ‘The ily, seeting Ught ales ap
and out of the small end of the eone,
thereby enterinz the eyliuder, tron:
which It ean find no exeape,
One ean tnd such raps anywhere
for sale. But Itty easy to make them,
and when homemade they are Just as
Rood, while costing only a fraction of
tho price,
Such (aps, of course, shoukt be set
where the flies most do congresate—us,
for tustance, on the sunny side of a
butlding ont of the wind. A butcher
Shop Is n great place for a fly trap; It
will cateh quarts of them In a day,
When the fy trap ts full the insecta
are easily kited by tmmersing tho trap
in hot water,
Fly paper of the stleky kind t9
4 first class fly catcher. One does not
need to buy it. ‘ake two pounds of
rosin and a pint of castor ofl. Mix
them and heat until the stuff looks ike
molaases, Smear it while hot with an
ordinary patit brush on old newspa-
pers. A dozen sheets of it will cost a
cont.
‘The best potson batt for Mes, says
the United State burenu of entomology,
4s made by putting (wo tablespoonfuts
of formalin (obtnined at any drug
store) Into a pint of milk and water,
half nnd half of tho two. Put tho stutt
in saucers In places frequented by ties,
A Ite brend tn It helps, But take
care that children and animals do not
drink tt, for t ty deadly polson, Keep
all other Hqulds out of reach of the
files. ‘They are thirsty all the Ume, and.
the stuff Will kill them of by whole-
ake
| WHY CORNS HURT.
Usually Rosult From Wearing Shoes
‘Too Small For tho Feet.
er era ee
And late hours, are a menace to one's
brreet dias ion
Corns are hard growths which occur
‘on the toes or some other part of the
fect. ‘They are generally the result of
Wearlng & shoe too small for the foot.
hoy ave iitesscigge ot Ge. coe
layer of the skin, in the center of
which fs a nail-like peg, which projects
downward and hurts when pressed
fpoe: “Raft Corus toni Rete ae
tos find ars ony aferene fos ethers
in that they are soaked with perspira-
tion athe, time, he corn ieee tp
Composed of lum af the cutee hart
of the skin, which Is caused by the
Pressure of (he, Mid ae EE aoe
However, the corn would not result
unless the pressure were taken off at
titorvels, Ad this, of course ts does
when you (ike the shoo off. It stands
to tester Alae He tho, pradaure ee
continuously applied to this apot the
akin, instead of overgrowing at that
preciso point, would waste away. The
overgrowth of the skin Is duo to the
Irritation produced by the pressure,
THE PETER
FIVE FRIDAYS
(Continued from Page Three.)
beach." Kent pointed in the direction of the dock.
"No; I am sure it was inland," argued Bopp.
At heart I was inclined to agree with my rival, but rather than appear to do so I started for the water front.
Around a bank of bushes I came in full sight of the lake. There was a comparatively quiet cove where the dock was, but just beyond a headland which sheltered the cove the waves were pilling over themselves in boiling torrents where a sharp toothed reef was hidden a couple of feet below the surface.
The explanation of the revolver shots was obvious. A small steam-boat was jammed hard and fast on the rocks and was pounding herself with a violence which prophesied a short life for her hull. Just as I appeared a man forward of the plothouse fired a revolver in the air. As soon as he saw me he began to wave his arms violently and pointed to three other figures crouched on the deck.
By this time the rest of our party had caught up with me.
"He seems to be signaling," Bopp interpreted sagely. "Wonder what he wants."
"What would you want if you were in a boat aground in the lake with every chance of going to pieces in ten minutes?" I yelled so as to be heard above the sea. "I suppose you would be wishing for some poached plover's eggs on a strip of toast."
"They can't expect us to come out there and get them," he decided. "No boat could live in that sea. It would be suicide to attempt to reach them." "We must do something." Lucio decided, with ready sympathy. "I'm very fond of the captain. He's been bringing our supplies for ten years."
"Is that the supply boat?" Bopp demanded.
"Why, yes; certainly."
"We must do something at once." Bopp began to run around in busy circles in the sand. "We must attempt to reach the poor devils. Kent, where is that boat of yours?" "I drew it up on the shore here, right alongside the dock. Why, where is it?" "Gone, eh?" Bopp shook his head knowingly. "Probably the heavy sea washed it off." "Yes, but no sea ever untied the knot I had in her painter around this post here." Kent would have seen a mystery in Utopia. His mind insisted upon being pitted against the unknown. "Well, what are we going to do?" Bopp helped helplessly. "Those poor devils out there are counting on us. Think of being on a vessel loaded with bread, butter, eggs, vegetables and meat and having it break up under your feet. What shall we do?"
"I'm afraid we won't have time to do anything," I decided. "Her back is broken. It's only a question of seconds now."
The people on board realized it too. They hastily launched a life raft over the side and scrambled on to it as the decks crumpled beneath them and became a twisted mass of timbers that writted for a moment and fell back into the waves to become driftwood.
The raft fortunately had cleared the wreck in plenty of time and was now drifting past our cove toward the mainland. The men on board seemed busy arranging a sort of mast and sail made out of an car and a couple of ollskins. When they got that rigged up two of them hold it up while a third attempted to steer with a second oar.
"They're going to try to land on the other point of the cove," Lucile said. "We must be there to help them when they come ashore. There are rocks about a hundred yards out where the raft will strike if it isn't driven past." She led off on a dog trot which took the last tuck out of me when I attempted to follow. I got there some way, however, but minus the power of speech. "Don't land here!" shouted Lucile into the teeth of the gale. "Dangerous rocks!"
They discovered the rocks for themselves almost immediately and slid off from the raft in a compact group. Under the direction of Kent, who had read a book about it somewhere, we formed ourselves into a life line by holding on to one another's hands and wading out into the surf.
One by one the shipwrecked victims struggled to us and were passed on up to the shore. Three were landed in this way, but the fourth failed to make it. I could see a fourth bobbing up and down a hundred feet away, but in a moment the head disappeared altogether.
"That man can't swim. He's drowning!" Lucile shouted. "Won't somebody save him?"
"I'll get him," I immediately volunteered briefly.
"You'll be drowned yourself," Lucile protested.
"No, he won't," Bopp assured her. "Monty can swim like a turtle. I've often seen him in the tank at the Athletic club. Besides, from fasting he's as full of air as a life preserver."
I disengaged my hand from Kent, who was next to me in the line, and struck out for the spot where I had last seen the head just before it had disappeared.
By a freak of luck I was in time. The body rose to the surface just In SUBSCRIBE TO THE PLANET
G. D. ROBERTS
I Almost Dropped Her When I Happened to Glance Down.
front of me, and I grabbed it before it could slik again. It was a woman, and I towed her easily by her hair. Soon I was again in shallower water, where I was able to stand. I turned and picked her up. She was still insensible.
It was not until I had almost reached shore that I noticed anything peculiar about the young woman. I almost dropped her when I happened to glance down and discovered that she was clad in the silk tights, doublet and boots of Rosalind in "As You Like It."
TO BE CONTINUED.
A RECORD CORN CROP
Yield 3,124,000,000 Bushels—Wheat
38,000,000 Abroad
38,000,000 Ahead of Last Year.
A three billion bushel prospective crop of corn this year is the answer; returned by the farmers of the United States to President Wilson's call for food for America's allies in the war. Never before has such a crop been grown.
In its first forecast of corn production this year the department of agriculture announced that July 1 conditions forecast a crop of 3,124,000,000 bushels. Sixteen million more acres this year were planted to corn than last year.
The wheat crop, responding to better weather conditions during June shows an increase of about 22,000,000 bushels in prospect, with a total of 678,000,000 bushels, or 38,000,000 darger than last year's crop.
A record crop of white potatoes also
is forecast with a production of 452,
000,000 bushels. That would exceed
the previous largest crop, grown in
1912, by 32,000,000 bushels.
Prospects of the rye crop show a
slight decrease from the June forecast,
but the production will be a record
one, with a total of 56,160,000 bushels.
Estimates or other important crops
compared with last year's yield fol-
low:
Oats, 1,453,000,000 bushels; last year
1,252,000,000.
Barley, 214,000,000 bushels; 181,000,
000.
Sweet potatoes, $2,200,000 bushels;
71,000,000.
Tobacco, 1,215,000,000 pounds; 1,
151,000,000.
Rico, 34,400,000 bushels; 40,700,000
Hay, 103,000,000 tons; 117,000,000
Apples, 200,000,000 bushels; 202,
000,000.
Peaches, 43,500,000 bushels; 36,900,
000.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Flat Foot.
Declaring that proper footwear will cure most cases of flat foot, a well known New York physician says: "Boots or shoes must be the shape of the foot, but it is not necessary to wear boots of an ugly shape to secure this primary essential. To insure that the big toe is not pushed out against the other toes the inner side of the boot where it lies is kept straight. The soles should be a sixth to a fourth of an inch thick and the heel broad, an inch or less in height. If the degree of flat foot be anything more than the merest trace mechanical means are utilized to throw the weight of the body, distributed down the leg, slightly outside the center of the ankle joint. To effect this the sole and heel of each boot must be thickened along its inner side by a quarter, one-third or half an inch, the amount depending upon the severity of the case. The worse the case the greater the thickening."
---
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Give Your Stomach a Rest. Give your stomach a good rest by eating plain salads or fruits or fresh green stuff, cutting out tea and coffee, soda water and other destroyers, and drink all the water you can pour down and watch the effect. After this internal cleansing you can eat what nature intended you to eat—meats, vegetables, fish, eggs and whatever you really crave. Men cannot make rules that go contrary to nature. Fads are symptoms of diseased stomachs or the outgrowth of some individual idiosyncrasy. There are no brain foods, no muscle building tablets, no nerve strengtheners, that can be made to take the place of a varied diet. Every bit of food contains elements which are taken up by the blood and distributed to the body.
```markdown
```
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
THE KAISER MAY WARON NEUTRALS
```markdown
```
IT IS OUR LOSS AND YOUR GAIN!
MENACED WITH MAILED FIST
The Exports From America of War Necessities to Cease After Saturday.
WE ARE GIVING AWAY COUPONS FOR EVERY CENT PAID IN MONEY IN THE PLANET OFFICE, ON EITHER JOB WORK OR ON SUBSCRIPTIONS. THESE COUPONS WILL BRING A TALKING MACHINE, AN UMBRELLA OR A COPY OF PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR'S WORKS, JUST AS YOU SELECT.
President Wilson's embargo of food stuffs and other necessities in war may have the effect of pulling other nations into the conflict. The embargo is to go into effect on July 15. The conference to which the kaiser has called the neutral ambassadors and ministers in Germany is believed in Washington to be closely related to this latest move by the government. The conference is announced in London despatches. A disturbance has been cause among neutral representatives in the capital over the coupled announcements of the embargo and the conference. It is believed representatives already have been made to the state department by some nations that thus far have kept out of the struggle.
It is regarded as possible that the kaiser's conference may have to do with peace proposals which the Berlin government is understood to be about to make. A more general belief among officials is that the German ruler purposes to threaten drastic action to neutrals on North Europe if they yield to the United States and refuse to continue supplying Germany with food and raw materials.
FOR $100 WORTH OF COUPONS. WE WILL SEND YOU A LARGE SIZE TALKING MACHINE FOR $75 WORTH. WE WILL SEND YOU A SMALLER SIZE TALKING MACHINE
The United States is in position to make such a demand because the neutrals, affected must have articles of food and material which they now obtain nowhere except from America Yielding, it is believed, would be regarded by the Berlin government as an act of hostility.
FOR 30 WORTH, WE WILL SEND YOU A DETACHABLE UMBRELLA. YOU CAN TAKE IT APART AND PUT IT INTO YOUR TRUNK OR SUIT CASE WHEN TRAVELING.
President Wilson's embargo will affect commerce with every nation in the world. Under the terms of the proclamation announcing it, the government reserves the right to issue licenses on all shipments of a long list of specified commodities to neutral countries. It will act through the department of commerce.
FOR $30 WORTH, WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY OF PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR'S WORKS WE WILL ALLOW YOU A CASH DISCOUNT ON ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS THAT YOU MAY SEND US. THE PLANET SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOME. IT IS NEWSY AND READABLE
The list of commodities include all munitions, foodstuffs and fertilizers. America's needs will receive first consideration. The allies will be next and then neutral nations, according to a statement issued by the president. Every effort will be made to prevent supplies reaching the central powers. The fact that foodstuffs are included in the proclamation is believed to amount to a partial substantiation or reports that a complete embargo for sixty days on all food shipments is under consideration. This period would afford opportunity to ascertain the nation's supplier and let the allies and neutrals prepare a full program of their requirements. The embargo provides, in effect:
We Do All Kinds of Job Work
That on and after July 15 the shipment of all leading commodities from the United States shall be prohibited unless when released by license.
That the United States will put an immediate end to the traffic of Ameri can products whereby the Scandinavia vian countries and Holland have as sisted in supporting the German mill tary machine and in feeding the German civilian population.
WE HAVE TWO LINOTYPES, ONE IS OF THE LATEST PATENT. THE COST PRICE OF THE FIRST ONE WAS $3,375, EXCLUSIVE OF THE EXTRA PARTS. THE COST OF THE LATEST WAS $3,700, EXCLUSIVE OF THE EXTRA PARTS. ADD TO THESE AMOUNTS $1,000 AND YOU HAVE THE EXPENSE OF BRINGING THEM FROM THE MERGENTHALER FACTORY AT BROOKLYN, N. Y. AND SETTING THEM UP IN OUR OFFICE AT RICHMOND.
That American food speculators will not be able to boost prices upon the plea that the demand of foreign countries, created by war conditions, has caused an automatic jump in costs. Through control of coal and fuels the government intends to take a flurry grasp on shipping. An arrangement under negotiation will give the American and British governments a control of not only all allied tonnage, but of neutral vessels as well. Ships now on runs not regarded as necessary to a successful conduct of the war will be forced into trades considered more essential. Vessels now held in port through fear of submarine attack will be required to go into service.
Control of iron and steel was made necessary by war demands on these industries. A shortage of steel in this country is threatened because of the large amount diverted to munitions manufacture and the construction of the government's merchant fleet.
Our Press Room is also well equipped. The outlay for machinery alone exceeds $4000 Call and see our plant. We make this statement in order that you may know and understand that we are well prepared to take care of your orders and deliver to you your work on time. Address
Specific regulations governing foot exports and shipments of other commodities named in the list are expected to be issued by the president within a few days.
Boy Blinded by "Flower Pot."
As the result of a "flower pot" bursting in his hands while celebrating the Fourth, William four-year-old son of Frank Walsh, Frackville, near Mahanoy City, Pa., has lost the sight of both eyes. This was the only sortous Fourth of July accident in Schuylkill county.
Spinner In His Foot Kills.
Edward Carroll, aged six years, of Mt. Carmel, Pa., died at the State hospital from lockjaw. The little boy ran a splinter into his foot a week ago and tetanus developed.
THE RICHMOND PLANET.
Frances, six-year-old twin daughter of Rev. M. Howard Ake, rector of Christ Episcopal church, of Berwick Pa., strangled to death on a button which she swallowed.
JOHN MITCHELL JR., PUBLISHER AND PRINTER, 311 N. Fourth Street Long Distance Telephone, Randolph 2213 Richmond, Virginia
The French liner Caledonian was sunk by a mine or torpedo in the Mediterranean on June 30, according to an announcement issued by the ministry of marine. Fifty-one persons were lost and 880 were saved.
SIX
THE PLANET
FIVE FRIDAYS
beach." Kent pointed in the direction of the dock.
"No; I am sure it was inland," argued Bopp.
At heart I was inclined to agree with my rival, but rather than appear to do so I started for the water front.
Around a bank of bushes I came in full sight of the lake. There was a comparatively quiet cove where the dock was, but just beyond a headland which sheltered the cove the waves were piling over themselves in boiling torrents where a sharp boated reef was hidden a couple of feet below the surface.
The explanation of the revolver shots was obvious. A small steam-bout was jammed hard and fast on the rocks and was pounding herself with a violence which prophesied a short life for her hull. Just as I appeared a man forward of the plothehouse fired a revolver in the air. As soon as he saw me he began to wave his arms violently and pointed to three other figures crouched on the deck.
By this time the rest of our party had caught up with me.
"He seems to be signaling," Bopp interpreted sagely. "Wonder what he wants."
"What would you want if you were in a boat aground in the lake with every chance of going to pieces in ten minutes?" I yelled so as to be heard above the sea. "I suppose you would be wishing for some poached plover's eggs on a strip of toast."
"They can't expect us to come out there and get them," he decided. "No boat could live in that sea. It would be suicide to attempt to reach them." "We must do something." Lucio decided, with ready sympathy. "I'm very fond of the captain. He's been bringing our supplies for ten years." "Is that the supply boat?" Bopp demanded. "Why, yes; certainly."
"We must do something at once." Bopp began to run around in busy circles in the sand. "We must attempt to reach the poor devils. Kent, where is that boat of yours?" "I drew it up on the shore here, right alongside the dock. Why, where is it?" "Gone, eh?" Bopp shook his head knowingly. "Probably the heavy sea washed it off." "Yes, but no sea ever untied the knot I had in her painter around this post here." Keint would have seen a mystery in Utopia. His mind insisted upon being pitted against the unknown. "Well, what are we going to do?" Bopp said helplessly. "Those poor devils out there are counting on us. Think of being on a vessel loaded with bread, butter, eggs, vegetables and meat and having it break up under your feet. What shall we do?"
"I'm afraid we won't have time to do anything," I decided. "Her back is broken. It's only a question of seconds now."
The people on board realized it too. They hastily launched a life raft over the side and scrambled on to it as the decks crumpled beneath them and became a twisted mass of timbers that writhed for a moment and fell back into the waves to become driftwood.
The raft fortunately had cleared the wreck in plenty of time and was now drifting past our cove toward the mainland. The men on board seemed busy arranging a sort of mast and sail made out of an oar and a couple of olskins. When they got that rigged up two of them held it up while a third attempted to steer with a second oar.
"They're going to try to land on the other point of the cove," Luciol said. "We must be there to help them when they come ashore. There are rocks about a hundred yards out where the raft will strike if it isn't driven past." She led off on a dog trot which took the last tuck out of me when I attempted to follow. I got there some way, however, but minus the power of speech. "Don't land here!" shouted Luciol into the teeth of the gale. "Dangerous rocks!"
They discovered the rocks for themselves almost immediately and slid off from the raft in a compact group. Under the direction of Kent, who had read a book about it somewhere, we formed ourselves into a life line by holding on to one another's hands and wading out into the surf.
One by one the shipwrecked victims struggled to us and were passed up on to the shore. Three were landed in this way, but the fourth failed to make it. I could see a head bobbing up and down a hundred feet away, but in a moment the head disappeared altogether.
"That man can't swim. He's drowning!" Lucile shouted. "Won't somebody save him?"
"I'll get him," I immediately volunteered briefly.
"You'll be drowned yourself," Lucile protested.
"No, he won't," Bopp assured her. "Monty can swim like a turtle. I've often seen him in the tank at the Athletic club. Besides, from fasting he's as full of air as a life preserver."
I disengaged my hand from Kent, who was next to me in the line, and struck out for the spot where I had last seen the head just before it had disappeared.
By a freak of luck I was in time. The body rose to the surface just In SUBSCRIBE TO THE PLANET
G. D.
I Almost Dropped Hor When I Happened to Glance Down.
front of me, and I grabbed it before it could sink again. It was a woman, and I towed her easily by her hair, Soon I was again in shallower water, where I was able to stand. I turned and picked her up. She was still insensible.
It was not until I had almost reached shore that I noticed anything peculiar about the young woman. I almost dropped her when I happened to glance down and discovered that she was clad in the silk tights, doublet and boots of Rosalind in "As You Like It."
TO BE CONTINUED.
A RECORD CORN CROP
Yield 3,124,000,000 Bushels—Wheat
38,000,000 Ahead of Last Year
36,000,000 Ahead of Last Year.
A three billion bushel prospective crop of corn this year is the answer returned by the farmers of the United States to President Wilson's call for food for America's allies in the war. Never before has such a crop been grown.
In its first forecast of corn production this year the department of agriculture announced that July 1 conditions forecast a crop of 3,124,000,000 bushels. Sixteen million more acres this year were planted to corn than last year.
The wheat crop, responding to better weather conditions during June shows an increase of about 22,000,000 bushels in prospect, with a total of 678,000,000 bushels, or 38,000,000 darger than last year's crop.
A record crop of white potatoes also is forecast with a production of 452,000,000 bushels. That would exceed the previous largest crop, grown in 1912, by 32,000,000 bushels.
Prospects of the rye crop show a slight decrease from the June forecast, but the production will be a record one with a total of 56,100,000 bushels.
one, with a total of 36,160,000 bushels
Estimates or other important crops
compared with last year's yield fol
low:
Oats, 1,453,000,000 bushels; last year
1,252,000,000.
Barloy, 214,000,000 bushels; 181,000,
000.
Sweet potatoes, 82,200,000 bushels;
71,000,000.
Tobacco, 1,215,000,000 pounds; 1,
351,000,000.
Rice, 34,400,000 bushels; 40,700,000
Hay, 103,000,000 tons; 110,000,000
Apples, 200,000,000 bushels; 202.
000,000.
Peaches, 43,500,000 bushels; 36,900,
000.
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Flat Foot.
Declaring that proper footwear will cure most cases of that foot, a well known New York physician says: "Boots or shoes must be the anugly shape of the foot, but it is not necessary to wear boots of an ugly shape to secure this primary essential. To insure that the big toe is not pushed out against the other toes the inner side of the boot where it lies is kept straight. The soles should be a sixth to a fourth of an inch thick and the heel broad, an inch or less in height. If the degree of that foot be anything more than the merest trace mechanical means are utilized to throw the weight of the body, distributed down the leg, slightly outside the center of the ankle joint. To effect this the sole and heel of each boot must be thickened along its inner side by a quarter, one-third or half an inch, the amount depending upon the severity of the case. The worse the case the greater the thickening."
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```
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Give Your Stomach a Rest.
Give your stomach a good rest by eating plain salads or fruits or fresh green stuff, cutting out tea and coffee, soda water and other destroyers, and drink all the water you can pour down and watch the effect. After this internal cleansing you can eat what nature intended you to eat—meats, vegetables, fish, eggs and whatever you really crave. Men cannot make rules that go contrary to nature. Fads are symptoms of discensed stomachs or the outgrowth of some individual idiosyncrasy. There are no brain foods, no muscle building tablets, no nerve strengthers, that can be made to take the place of a varied diet. Every bit of food contains elements which are taken up by the blood and distributed to the body.
---
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
THE KAISER MAY WAR ON NEUTRALS
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```
IT IS OUR LOSS AND YOUR GAIN!
Threatens Those Yielding to U. S. Embargo.
MENACED WITH MAILED FIST
The Exports From America of War Necessities to Cease After Saturday.
WE ARE GIVING AWAY COUPONS FOR EVERY CENT PAID IN MONEY IN THE PLANET OFFICE, ON EITHER JOB WORK OR ON SUBSCRIPTIONS. THESE COUPONS WILL BRING A TALKING MACHINE, AN UMBRELLA OR A COPY OF PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR'S WORKS, JUST AS YOU SELECT.
President Wilson's embargo of food stuffs and other necessities in war may have the effect of pulling other nations into the conflict. The embargo is to go into effect on July 15.
The conference to which the kaiser has called the neutral ambassadors and ministers in Germany is believed in Washington to be closely related to this latest move by the government. The conference is announced in London despatches.
A disturbance has been cause among neutral representatives in the capital over the coupled announcements of the embargo and the conference. It is believed representatives already have been made to the state department by some nations that thus far have kept out of the struggle.
It is regarded as possible that the kaiser's conference may have to do with peace proposals which the Berlin government is understood to be about to make.
A more general belief among officials is that the German ruler purposes to threaten drastic action to neutrals of North Europe if they yield to the United States and refuse to continue supplying Germany with food and raw materials.
FOR $100 WORTH OF COUPONS. WE WILL SEND YOU A LARGE SIZE TALKING MACHINE FOR $75 WORTH. WE WILL SEND YOU A SMALLER SIZE TALKING MACHINE FOR 30 WORTH. WE WILL SEND YOU A DETACHABLE UMBRELLA. YOU CAN TAKE IT
The United States is in position to make such a demand because the neutrals, affected must have articles of food and material which they now can obtain nowhere except from America Yielding. It is believed, would be regarded by the Berlin government as an act of hostility.
President Wilson's embargo will affect commerce with every nation in the world. Under the terms of the proclamation announcing it, the government reserves the right to issue licenses on all shipments of a long list of specified commodities to neutral countries. It will act through the department of commerce.
FOR $30 WORTH, WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY OF PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR'S WORKS WE WILL ALLOW YOU A CASH DISCOUNT ON ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS THAT YOU MAY SEND US. THE PLANET SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOME. IT IS NEWSY AND READABLE.
The list of commodities include all munitions, foodstuffs and fertilizers. America's needs will receive first consideration. The allies will be next and then neutral nations, according to a statement issued by the president. Every effort will be made to prevent supplies reaching the central powers. The fact that foodstuffs are included in the proclamation is believed to amount to a partial substitution of reports that a complete embargo for sixty days on all food shipments is under consideration.
This period would afford opportunity to ascertain the nation's supplier and let the allies and neutrals prepare a full program of their requirements. The embargo provides in effect:
We Do All Kinds of Job Work
That on and after July 15 the shipment of all leading commodities from the United States shall be prohibited unless when released by license.
That the United States will put an immediate end to the traffic of Ameri can products whereby the Scandinavian countries and Holland have as sisted in supporting the German mili tary machine and in feeding the German civilian population.
WE HAVE TWO LINOTYPES, ONE IS OF THE LATEST PATENT. THE COST PRICE OF THE FIRST ONE WAS $3,375, EXCLUSIVE OF THE EXTRA PARTS. THE COST OF THE LATEST WAS $3,700, EXCLUSIVE OF THE EXTRA PARTS. ADD TO THESE AMOUNTS $1,000 AND YOU HAVE THE EXPENSE OF BRINGING THEM FROM THE MERGENTHALER FACTORY AT BROOKLYN, N. Y. AND SETTING THEM UP IN OUR OFFICE AT RICHMOND.
That American food speculators will not be able to boost prices upon the plea that the demand of foreign countries, created by war conditions, has caused an automatic jump in costs. Through control of coal and fuels the government intends to take a firm grasp on shipping. An arrangement under negotiation will give the American and British governments a control of not only all allied tonnage, but of neutral vessels as well. Ships now on runs not regarded as necessary to a successful conduct of the war will be forced into trades considered more essential. Vessels now held in port through fear of submarine attack will be required to go into service.
Control of iron and steel was made necessary by war demands on these industries. A shortage of steel in this country is threatened because of the large amount diverted to munitions manufacture and the construction of the government's merchant fleet.
Our Press Room is also well equipped. The outlay for machinery alone exceeds $4000 Call and see our plant. We make this statement in order that you may know and understand that we are well prepared to take care of your orders and deliver to you your work on time. Address
Specific regulations governing foot exports and shipments of other commodities named in the list are expected to be issued by the president within a few days.
Boy Blinded by "Flower Pot."
As the result of a "flower pot" bursting in his hands while celebrating the Fourth, William four-year-old son of Frank Walsh, Frackville, near Mahanoy City, Pa., has lost the sight of both eyes. This was the only serious Fourth of July accident in Schuylkill county.
Splinter in His Foot Kills.
Edward Carroll, aged six years, of Mt. Carmel, Pa., died at the State hospital from lockjaw. The little boy ran a splinter into his foot a week ago and tetanus developed.
THE RICHMOND PLANET.
Button Kills One of Twins. Frances, six-year-old twin daughter of Rev. M. Howard Ake, rector of Christ Episcopal church, of Borwick Pa., strangled to death on a buttess which she swallowed.
JOHN MITCHELL JR., PUBLISHER AND PRINTER, 311 N. Fourth Street Long Distance Telephone, Randolph 2213 Richmond, Virginia
The French liner Caledonian was sunk by a mine or torpedo in the Mediterranean on June 30, according to an announcement issued by the ministry of marine. Fifty-one persons were lost and 380 were saved.
HEY JEREMY
STATE BOARDS OF EXEMPTION
Appointed by Brumbaugh to Pass on Appeals.
PALMER IN THE LIST
All Walks of Life Are Represented on The Courts of Appeal—List Sent to Washington.
Governor Brumbaugh has recommended forty-fifty prominent men as members of the nine boards which will pass upon army exemption appeals in this state.
The governor announced that he had forwarded these names to Washington as requested by Provost Marshal General Crowder.
There are three boards for each of the three federal judicial districts in Pennsylvania. There are two boards for Philadelphia alone, and one board for adjacent counties.
The work of these bodies is distinct from that of the district boards. The district boards decide whether a man is exempt. If the decision is not satisfactory, the man goes before the appeal board. As a last resort, he may appeal to the president.
The medical profession, the business world, labor and other walks of life are represented on these appeal boards.
One of those selected by the governor for appointment is former Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer. Palmer and Dr. Brumbaugh have been bitterly at odds as the result of the former congressman's charge that the governor was swayed by politics in naming the district registration boards.
Another appointment suggested by Governor Brumbaugh is that of Vance C. McCormick, Democratic national chairman. There are to be five members for each box. The war department is expe- ratify the govern- ers' recommendations—and make the appointments final.
Those named for No. 1 board, Philadelphia are: John Caddalwader, Dr Charles H. Willits, Samuel T. Bodine, Julius Lamore.
No. 2 board, Philadelphia—Walter Willard, Dr. Frank C. Hammond, James J. Ryan, J. C. McDonald, Ellis A. Glimbel.
No. 3 (including Borks, Bucks, Lehigh, Northampton and Schuylkill counties)—John Hartman, Mohnton; Henry T. Moon, Morrisville; A. W. Hagenbach, Allentown; Dr. V. S. Messinger, Easton, and George M. Kalser, Pottsville.
No. 5 (including Bradford, Cameron Carbon, Clinton, Lackawanna, Luzerne Lycoming, Monroe, Plke, Potter, Sublivan, Susquehanna, Tloga, Wayne and Wyoming counties)—George E. Stevenson, Scranton; Thomas Davis, Nantlook; Dr. A. F. Hardt, Williamsport; A. Mitchell Palmer, Stroudsburg, and Frederick A. Osborn Harford.
No. 6 (Including Adams, Centre, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Junlata, Lebanon, Mifflin, Montour, Northumberland Perry, Snyder, Union and York—George H. Stuart, Jr., Shippensburg; Vance C. McCormick, Harrisburg; Howard E. Butz, Huntingdon; Henry Y. Snyder, Lebanon, and Dr. John A Shower, York.
No. 7 (Allegheny county)—T. J. Keenan, Pittsburgh; Taylor Alderslice Pittsburgh; D. J. Berry, Pittsburgh; Dr. S. Woodburn, Pittsburgh; T. C. Jonas, McKeesport.
No. 8 (Including Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Clerton, Clearfield, Crawford Elk, Erle, Forest, Indiana, Jefferson Lawrence, McKean, Mercor, Venange and Warren)—C. D. Gilbert, Beaver; Peter A. Gearhart, Clearfield; Joseph McCormick, Erle; Charles A. Martin
Charley Looks For a Job on the Farm
YOU WANT A JOB ON MY FARM DO YOU WALL YOU GOT TO BE EDUCATED TO WORK ON MY FARM
SURE EZRA WE KNOW ALL ABOUT THE FARM-IN FACT WE WERE RAISED IN A REFORM
WE LOVE THE COWS AN' CHICKS WE DO
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
Ellwood City; Dr. Frederick W. Brown Franklin.
No. 9 (Including Bedford, Blair, Cambrla, Fayette, Green, Somerset, Washington and Westmoreland counties)—Dr. Albert S. Oburn, Alcona; H. M. Gooderham, Lytton; George E. Gay Unentown; John O'Leary, Roncoe; Paul H. Galtier, Greensburg.
PHYSICAL TESTS SEVERE
Men For Conscriptive Army to Get Rigid Examination.
Regulations outlining physical requirements for the new national army issued by the war department set up rigid standards.
In general these are the requirements:
Height, 5 feet 1 inch to 6 feet 6 inches.
Weight, between 118 and 211 pounds.
These standards are not absolute Men under 5 feet 4 inches must be of exceptionally good physique. Variations in weight above 211 pounds are not disqualifying unless sufficient to constitute obesity.
The mental test is designed only to develop whether the man is of sound understanding.
Examinations of the eyes and ears are made by charts and whispering tests.
Almost any disease of the lungs or heart is disqualifying.
The men must have at least four serviceable molars—two above and two below opposed.
Before the heart and lung test the conscripted man is required to jump straight up, kick the heels up behind hop around the room, first on one foot and then on the other and then make several standing jumps. After this exercise the examination is started.
The chest measurement should be between 31 and 38 1/4 inches.
The pulse and respiration must be nearly normal and the skin in good condition.
Chronic rheumatism, old dislocation and badly united fractures tend to disqualification.
Chronic disease of any kind will disqualify the drafted man.
The feet should be in fair condition. Pronounced that feet disqualify. Plans to sift out and exempt from fighting service workingmen vitally needed in feeding, clothing, supplying and equipping the armies in the field are being perfected. A corps of experts are at work listing such industries as would be of aid in maintaining the armies. From official sources it is learned the list probably will name farmers as a general class, miners, men engaged in shipbuilding, uniform workers of all classes and every branch of industry that aids directly or indirectly in maintaining the military forces.
1,500,000 Germans Killed
The total number of Germane killed from the beginning of the war to March, 1917, is not less than 1,500,000, according to an estimate reached by French general headquarters. From April 15 to June 30, the Franco British troops on the western front captured 63,222 prisoners, including 1278 officers, says an official summary of the operations. The war material taken included 509 guns, 508 trench mortars and 1318 machine guns,
How their mother made them prisoners in a secluded room of her house for ten years to shield them from the public gaze, was revealed in Pittsburgh, Pa., when John Shrenserk, feeble-minded, and his brother, Joe, were discovered following the parent's death.
Both boys were in short dresses, John could walk and imitate animals, Joe could neither walk nor speak.
Horse Meat O K For Food.
Horse meat K or Food.
The only food bill designed as a war measure that passed the legislature was ignored by Governor Brumbaugh.
The bill legalizes the sale of mule, horse and goat meat for food purposes.
Another war measure, also signed, permits Pennsylvania corporations to continue on full pay employees who enter the military service of the country, while the other makes it legal for persons to invest their suplus in war bonds.
Irish Convention on 25th.
David Lloyd George, the premier, announced in the house of commons in London that the Irish convention would meet on July 25 to deal with preliminary business, including the appointment of a chairman. Lloyd George said the government had suggested that Henry E. Duke,
WALL ILL GIVE YOU A TRIAL. GO DOWN TO THE BARN,AN' GET THE BASKET FULL O'HEN EGGS
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
He May Preside Over Joint Irish Convention.
PETER H.
Photo by American Press Association.
Mr. Duke, who is chief secretary for Ireland, may preside over the gathering which will meet July 25 to discuss a settlement of the Irish situation. He is the choice of Premier Lloyd George who, however, said the choice would be left to the convention.
chief secretary for Ireland, act as provisional or temporary chairman.
The issuance of a special Red Cross stamp and one cont postage for letters relating exclusively to Red Cross business when mailed by chapters or auxiliaries at postoffice was proposed in a bill by Mr. Moon, chairman of the house postoffice committee. The Red Cross asked that its mall be franked.
Union Opens Flour Market
Mine Workers' Local No. 1500 in Mahanoy City, Pa., bogan the sale of flour to its members at $6.75 a barrel, a drop of $2 from the price demanded by grocers.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELI,PHIA--FLOUR -- Flem
$10.75@11.26; cilm ylt;s; $12
@12.40.
RYE FLOUR-Quiet; per barrel,
$10@11
HYBAT-Nominal.
ORN-Quiet. No. 2 yellow, $1.91%
@1.92.
OATS—Qulet; No. 2 white, 78@
78%c.
POULTRY—Live steady; henn, 22@
28c; old roosters, 17@ 18c; Dressed,
steady; choloo fowls, 25c; old roosters,
19c.
BUTTER — Firm; fancy creamy
42c per lb.
EGGS — Firm; selected, 42@43c;
nearby, 36c; western, 36c.
Live Stock Quotations.
CHICAGO,-HOGS — Slow 15@20c
lower. Mixed and butchers, $14.40@
15.75; good heavy, $14.35@15.80; rough
heavy, $14.35@14.55; slight, $14.25@
15.50; pligs, $10.75@14; bulk, $14.70@
15.55.
CATTLE—Steady Beeves, $8.40@
18.99; cows and heifers, $5.40@11.99;
stockers and feeders, $6.30@9.50;
stockers and western, $10.45@11.99;
SHEEP—Steady to 10c higher, Native
and western, $7.80@11.10; lamba
$10@16.50.
ANARCHISTS GET TWO YEARS
Emma Goldman and Beckman Are Given Maximum Penalty.
Emma Goldman and Alexander Barkman, anarchists, were found guilty of conspiracy to obstruct the operation of the selective draft law by a jury in the federal court in New York.
Judge Mayer impossit the maximum penalty of two years in the federal penitentiary and a fine of $10,000 upon each of the prisoners.
Wine Left University Worries Georgia
The Georgia legislature is confronted with the problem of disposing of 20,000 gallons of wine bequeathed to the University of Georgia by the will of Judson L. Hand Executors of the estate withhold the bequest because its transfer to the university would be in violation of the state prohibition law. A bill is pending to sell the wine outside the state and use the proceeds to establish a scholarship fund.
THESE TALKING MACHINES ARE THE MOST REMARKABLE VALUES THAT HAVE YET BEEN OFFERED TO THE TRADE. IN FINISH AND TONE QUALITY THEY ARE EQUAL TO ANY OF THE $25.00 RETAIL MACHINES ON THE MARKET
No.1.-13x13x6 inches,
No.2.-16x16x7 inches,
CABINETS MAY BE
SPRING MOTOR AND
NO. 2 IS EQUIPPED
ONE WINDING. THE
CHINES. TURN-TA
HIGHLY POLISHED
THE R
311 N. 4
CABINETS MAY BE HAD IN OAK SPRING MOTOR AND WILL P NO. 2 IS EQUIPPED WITH A M ONE WINDING. THIS MACHINE CHINES. TURN-TABLES 10 IN HIGHLY POLISHED.
THE RIC
311 N. 4th S
CABINETS MAY BE HAD IN OAK, MISSION OR MAHOGANY. NO. 1 HAS A POWERFUL SINGLE SPRING MOTOR AND WILL PLAY TWO 10- OR ONE 12-INCH RECORD ON A SINGLE WINDING NO. 2 IS EQUIPPED WITH A MOTOR GUARANTEED TO PLAY FIVE 10-INCH RECORDS ON ONE WINDING. THIS MACHINE HAS NEEDLE CUPS SIMILAR TO THOSE IN EXPENSIVE MACHINES. TURN-TABLES 10 INCH DIAMETER. ALL METAL PARTS NICKEL PLATED AND HIGHLY POLISHED.
THE RICHMOND PLANET 311 N. 4th St., - - Richmond, Va.
---
HETTY GREEN'S SON WEDS
Glives His Bride a Wedding Gift of
$625 000.
Colonel Edward H. R. Green, of New
York and Terrel, Texas, son of the
late Mrs. Hetty Green, and Miss Mahe
E. Harlow, of Highland Park, a subur
of Chicago, were amurred.
Colonel Green gave his bride a wed
ding gift of $625,000. Five hundred
thousand dollars was in the form of
check and the remainder in Liberty
bonds.
Mrs. Green is said to be wealthy in
her own right and has devoted much
time to charities both in Chicago and
New York.
Graphite as a Lubricant. Graphite, says the Scientific American, is not a lubricant, but an aid to keeping a bearing in good working order by filling up the minute irregularities of the shaft and bearing and producing a beautiful polished surface and in this way reduces friction. To get this result only a very small quantity of graphite is necessary, and if too much is applied it simply collects in wads and defends the purpose intended. It follows that the proper way to use graphite successfully is to mix thoroughly a small quantity with the lubricating oil at suitable intervals and not to apply it continuously, for when the above mentioned polished surface is formed it will last quite a long time before requiring renewal.
Comic Cap
omic Capers
HEY WHATCHU DOIN?
SORTING THOSE EGGS
OUT IN TWO PILES
NEST
ST
Woodland Park IS NOW OPEN FOR ENGAGEMENTS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNICS, ETC.
PLENTY OF SHADE-FINE SPRING WATER. THE LAKE WILL BE OPEN TO BOATING.
THESE GROUNDS ARE ADJACENT TO THE MAGNIFICENT WOODLAND CEMETERY GROUNDS, WHERE WIDE DRIVE-WAYS AND CONCRETE WALK-WAYS ARE A FEATURE.
REST ROOMS FOR LADIES. LARGE PORCHES WITH HAMMOCKS, WHERE THE COOL AFTERNOON BREEZES CAN BE ENJOYED.
GOOD ORDER GUARANTEED. TWO BLOCKS FROM THE HIGHLAND PARK STREET-CAR LINE. EASILY ACCESSIBLE FROM CHURCHHILL
John Mitchell, Jr., President D. P. Bragg, Secretary Call up the President at Randolph 2213, or Bragg Brothers & Company, 506 North Second Street.
$75 Worth of Umbrella Coupons
$100 Worth of Umbrella Coupons
The Planet (Richmond, Va.) will be sent to your door for only $1.50 per year in advance. Subscribe now, and get the newsy news.
KINKY
Hair
Grows Long, Soft, Silky
Guestment:
I am sending you my picture to let you see what our EXELENTO QUININE
DROPS
has done for my hair. It has grown to 26 inches long and is very thick, soft and silky and I can now make it hairspray on it. It has hair hair grower in the world.
Don't be fooled all your life by using some fake preparation which claims to straighten kinky hair. You are just fooling yourself by using. Kinky hair cannot be made straight. You must have hair first. Now this EXELENTO QUININE POMADE
Is a Hair Grower which feeds the scalp and cooks of the hair and makes kinky mappy hair grow form. It cleans dandruff and falls Failing Hair at once. Price 25c by mail on receipt of stamps or coin.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
Write for Particulars
EXELENTO MEDICINE CO. ATLANTA, GA.
CONTROLLED
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE!
g Easy Job Difficul
Job Difficult
J. Keeley.
Making Easy Job Difficult
HALF OF THE EGGS WILL HATCH OUT ROOSTERS AND, YOU SAID YOU WANTED HEN EGGS
10
Gramophone
SEVEN
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REAPER
STATE BOARDS OF EXEMPTION
Appointed by Brumbaugh to Pass on Appeals.
PALMER IN THE LIST
All Walks of Life Are Represented on
The Courts of Appeal—List Sent
to Washington.
Governor Brumbaugh has recom-
mended forty-five prominent men as
members of the nine boards which will
pass upon army exemption appa-
sals in this state.
The governor announced that he had
forwarded these names to Washington
as requested by Provost Marshal General Crowder.
There are three boards for each of
the three federal judicial districts in
Pennsylvania. There are two boards
for Philadelphia alone, and one board
for adjacent counties.
The work of these bodies is distinct from that of the district boards. The district boards decide whether a man is exempt. If the decision is not satisfactory, the man goes before the appeal board. As a last resort, he may appeal to the president.
The medical profession, the business world, labor and other walks of life are represented on these appeal boards.
One of those selected by the governor for appointment is former Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer. Palmer and Dr. Brumbaugh have been bitterly at odds as the result of the former congressman's charge that the governor was swayed by politics in naming the district registration boards.
Another appointment suggested by Governor Brumhaugh is that of Vance C. McCormlek, Democratic national chairman. There are to be five members for each box. The war department is expe ratify the governors' recommendations, and make the appointments final.
Those named for No. 1 board, Philadelphia are: John Cadwalader, Dr Charles H. Willis, Samuel T. Bodine, Julius Lamore.
No. 2 board, Philadelphia—Walter Willard, Dr. Frank C. Hammond, James J. Ryan, J. C. McDonald, Ellis A. Gimbel.
No. 3 (including Borks, Ducks, Lehigh, Northampton and Schuylkill counties)—John Hartman, Mohnton; Henry T. Moon, Morrisville; A. W Hagenbach, Allentown; Dr. V. S. Messinger, Easton, and George M. Kalser Pottsville.
No. 5 (Including Bradford, Cameron Carbon, Clinton, Lackawanna Lazerne, Lycoming, Monroe, Pike, Potter, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tlogea, Wayne and Wyoming counties)—George E. Stevenson, Scranton; Thomas Davis, Nantl coke; Dr. A. F. Hardt, Willisport; A. Mitchell Palmer, Stroudsburg, and Frederick A. Osborn, Harford.
No. 6 (Including Adams, Centre, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Junata, Lebanon, Mifflin, Montour, Northumberland Perry, Snyder, Union and York—George H. Stunt, Jr. Shippensburg; Vance C. McCormick, Harrisburg; Howard E. Butz, Huntingdon; Henry Y. Snyder, Lebanon, and Dr. John A SHOWER, York.
No. 7 (Allegheny county)—T. J. Keenan, Pittsburgh; Taylor Alderalea Pittsburgh; D. J. Berry, Pittsburgh; Dr. S. S. Woodburn, Pittsburgh; T. C. Jones, McKepson.
No. 8 (including Armstrong, Beaver Butler, Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford Elk, Erle, Forest, Indiana, Jofferson Lawrence, McKoan, Mercor, Venange and Warren) - C. D. Gilbert, Beaver; Peter A. Gearhart, Clearfield; Joseph McCormick, Erle; Charles A. Martin
Charley Looks For a Job on the Farm
YOU WANT A JOB ON MY FARM DO YOU WALL YOU GOT TO BE EDUCATED TO WORK ON MY FARM
SURE EZRA WE KNOW ALL ABOUT THE FARM-IN FACT WE WERE RAISED IN A REFORM SCHOOL
WE LOVE THE COY'S AN CHICKS WE DO
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
Ellwood Cuy; Dr. Frederick W. Brown Franklin.
No. 9 (Including Bedford. Blur, Cambrla, Fayette. Green, Somerset. Washington and Westmoreland counties)—Dr. Albert S. Oburn, Alcoona; H. M. Gooderham, Litton; Goyen: E. Gay Unentown; John O'Leary, Roncee; Paul H. Galtier, Greensburg.
PHYSICAL TESTS SEVERE
Men For Conscriptive Army to Get Rigid Examination.
Regulations outlining physical requirements for the new national army issued by the war department set up rigid standards.
In general these are the requirements:
Height, 5 feet 1 inch to 6 feet 6 inches.
Weight, between 118 and 211 pounds.
These standards are not absolute Men under 5 feet 4 inches must be of exceptionally good physique. Variations in weight above 211 pounds are not disqualifying unless sufficient to constitute obesity.
The mental test is designed only to develop whether the man is of sound understanding.
Examinations of the eyes and ears are made by charts and whispering tests.
Almost any disease of the lungs or heart is disqualifying.
The men must have at least four serviceable molars—two above and two below opposed.
Before the heart and lung test the conscripted man is required to jump straight up, kick the heels up behind hop around the room, first on one foot and then on the other and then make several standing jumps. After this exercise the examination is started.
The chest measurement should be between 31 and $38\frac{1}{4}$ inches.
The pulse and respiration must be nearly normal and the skin in good condition.
Chronic rheumatism, old dislocations and badly united fractures tend to disqualification.
Chronic disease of any kind will disqualify the drafted man.
The feet should be in fair condition. Pronounced flat feet disqualify.
Plans to sift out and exempt from fighting service workingmen vitally needed in feeding, clothing, supplying and equipping the armies in the field are being perfected. A corps of experts are at work listing such industries as would be of aid in maintaining the armies.
From official sources it is learned the list probably will name farmers as a general class, miners, men engaged in shipbuilding, uniform workers of all classes and every branch of industry that aids directly or indirectly in maintaining the military forces.
1,500,000 Germans Killed
The total number of Germans killed from the beginning of the war to March, 1917, is not less than 1,500,000, according to an estimate reached by French general headquarters. From April 15 to June 30, the Franco British troops on the western front captured 63,222 prisoners, including 1278 officers, says an official summary of the operations. The war material taken included 500 guns, 509 trench mortars and 1318 machine guns.
How their mother made them prisoners in a secluded room of her house for ten years to shield them from the public gaze, was revealed in Pittsburgh, Pa., when John Sherenski feeble-minded, and his brother, Joe, were discovered following the parent's death.
Both boys were in short dresses, John could walk and imitate animals, Joe could neither walk nor speak.
Horse Meat O K For Food.
The only food bill designed as a war measure that passed the legislature was ignored by Governor Brumbaugh. The bill legalizes the sale of mule, horse and goat meat for food purposes. Another war measure, also signed, permits Pennsylvania corporations to continue on full pay employees who enter the military service of the country, while the other makes it legal for persons to invest their suplus in war bonds.
```markdown
```
Irish Convention on 25th.
David Lloyd George, the premier, announced in the house of commons in London that the Irish convention would meet on July 25 to deal with preliminary business, including the appointment of a chairman. Lloyd George said the government had suggested that Henry E. Duke,
Charley
WALL ILL GIVE YOU A TR
GO DOWN TO THE BARN,
GET THE BASKET FULL
O'HEN EGGS
WE'LL GET
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
PETER H.
Photo by American Press Association.
Mr. Duke, who is chief secretary for Ireland, may preside over the gathering which will meet July 25 to discuss a settlement of the Irish question. It is the choice of Premier Lloyd George who, however, said the choice would be left to the convention.
chief secretary for Ireland, act as provisional or temporary chairman.
Fed Cross Rate Proposed
The issuance of a special Red Cross stamp and one post postage for letters relating exclusively to Red Cross business when mailed by chapters or auxiliaries at postoffice was proposed in a bill by Mr. Moon, chairman of the house postoffice committee. The Red Cross asked that its mall be franked.
Union Opens Flour Market
Mine Workers' Local No. 1500 in Mahanoy City, Pa., began the sale of flour to its members at $6.75 a barrel, a drop of $2 from the price demanded by grocers.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA—FLOUR — Firm
Straight, $10.75@11.25; city mills; $12
@12.40.
RYE FLOUR—Quetet; per barrel,
$10@11
WHITE—Nominal.
CORN—Quetet; No. 2 yellow, $1.91½
@1.92.
OATS—Quiet; No. 2 white, 78@ 78%c.
POULTRY—Liv stendy; hens, 22@
28c; old roosters, 17@18c; Dressed,
steady; choice fowls, 25c; old roosters,
19c.
BUTTER — Firm; fancy creame.y
42c per lb.
EGGS — Firm; selected, 42@43c;
nearby, 36c; western, 36c.
Live Stock Quotations
CHICAGO--HOGS--Slow. 15@20
lower. Mixed and butchers. $14.40@
15.75. good heavy. $14.35@15.80; rough
heavy. $14.35@14.55; Might. $14.25@
15.50; plgs. $10.75@14; bulk. $14.70@
16.55.
CATTLE--Steady Beeves. $8.40@
cows and heifers. $5.40@11.90;
stockers and heifers. $6.30@9.50;
calves. $10@14.75.
SHEEP--Steady to 10c higher. Nativo and western. $7.80@11.10; lamba
$10@16.50.
ANARCHISTS GET TWO YEARS
Emma Goldman and Beckman Are Given an Maximum Penalty.
Emma Goldman and Alexander Barkman, unarchists, were found guilty of conspiracy to obstruct the operation of the selective draft law by a jury in the federal court in New York.
Judge Mayer imposed the maximum penalty of two years in the federal penitentiary and a fine of $10,000 upon each of the prisoners.
Wine Left University Worries Georgia
The Georgia legislature is confronted with the problem of disposing of 20,000 gallons of wine bequeathed to the University of Georgia by the will of Judson L. Hand.
Executors of the estate withheld the bequest because its transfer to the university would be in violation of the state prohibition law. A bill is pending to sell the wine outside the state and use the proceeds to establish a scholarship fund.
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THE RICHMOND PLANET 311 N. 4th St., - - Richmond, Va.
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Glives His Bride a Wedding Gift of $625 000.
Colonel Edward H. R. Green, of New York and Terrel, Texas, son of the late Mrs. Hefty Green, and Miss Mabe E. Harlow, of Highland Park, a suburb of Chicago, were amurried.
Colonel Green gave his bride a wedding gift of $625,000. Five thousand dollars was in the form of a cheek and the remainder in Liberty bonds.
Mrs. Green is said to be wealthy in her own right and has devoted much time to charities both in Chicago and New York.
Graphite as a Lubricant
Graphite as a lubricant
Graphite, says the Scientific American, is not a lubricant, but an aid to keeping a bearing in good working order by filling up the minute irregularities of the shaft and bearing and producing a beautiful polished surface and in this way reduces friction. To get this result only a very small quantity of graphite is necessary, and if too much is applied it simply collects in wads and defeats the purpose in intended. It follows that the proper way to use graphite successfully is to mix thoroughly a small quantity with the lubricating oil at suitable intervals and not to apply it continuously, for when the above mentioned polished surface is formed it will last quite a long time before requiring renewal.
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Woodland Park IS NOW OPEN FOR ENGAGEMENTS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNICS, ETC.
PLENTY OF SHADE-FINE SPRING WATER. THE LAKE WILL BE OPEN TO BOATING.
THESE GROUNDS ARE ADJACENT TO THE MAGNIFICENT WOODLAND CEMETERY GROUNDS, WHERE WIDE DRIVE-WAYS AND CONCRETE WALK-WAYS ARE A FEATURE.
REST ROOMS FOR LADIES. LARGE PORCHES WITH HAMMOCKS, WHERE THE COOL AFTERNOON BREEZES CAN BE ENJOYED.
GOOD ORDER GUARANTEED. TWO BLOCKS FROM THE HIGHLAND PARK STREET-CAR LINE. EASILY ACCESSIBLE FROM CHURCHHILL
John Mitchell, Jr., President D. P. Bragg, Secretary
Call up the President at Randolph 2213, or Bragg Brothers & Company, 506 North Second Street.
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SATURDAY
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ROANOKE NOTES
ROANOKE, VA, July 16—Mr. and Mrs. George M. Richardson, of Eaton Ohio, have been in the city some time visiting Mrs. J. H. Brown of 307 Ninth avenue, N. W. where they spent a very delightful three weeks stay, making new acquaintances and meeting old ones of eighteen years ago. Mrs. J. H. Brown, Miss Cuniff is the younger writer Brown. She left the city eighteen years ago and returned with her husband.
There was an excursion in the city from Norfolk and also one from Richmond, bringing many a tidewater to the city up in the beautiful mountains of Virginia.
Brother Thomas Kinsey who has been quite sick at his home on Fifth Street, N. W. is reported somewhat improved. Mr. Kinsey is the oldest carpenter in the city and a finished contractor.
Monday evening, July 16th at S:30 o'clock the Rev. George R. Jones, P. E. of the Roanoke District called to order the third quarterly conference of the A. M. E. Church. The business of the conference was dispatched with in a very wise manner, the P. E. of the Rev. George R. Jones with the discipline and polity of the A. M. E. Church. The reports from the various departments were highly endorsed. There were two conferences held at the same time, M. Tzion and Ebenezer, the last named being the mission on Norfolk avenue and Tenth street. Rev. George C. Teylor D. D. of M. Tzion A. M. E. Church preached to the people at Ebenezer while Rev. P. E. George R. Jones took special care of Mt. Zion. Rev. Dr. Jones preached to the delight and benefit of all.
Mrs. Sophia Powell, of Norfolk, with a party of her friends are in the city visiting her sister Miss Maggie Hawen, of Seventh avenue, N. W. They will be here until Friday evening.
Messrs. James and John Dillard and wife and Little adopted daughter, of Mullins, W. Va. were called to the city Sunday to the bedside of their mother, who has been sick for a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Campbell. The mother, Mrs. Eliza Lyons was found very much improved. Messrs. Dillard were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Madison Stunton and Mrs. Madison Stunton at which time they left for their old home at Martinsville, Va. to visit their brother. The Rev. W. W. Brown, D. D. was in the city last Sunday and preached. He had been in Lynchburg attending the Jubilee Convention at Lynchburg Seminary, and availed himself of the opportunity of coming up and giving a word of cheer and sunshine to the brothem and bid ding them Godspeed in the noble city of the city with quiet a high day in the city with pastors, Dr. W. R. Brown and Dr. W. W. Brown of the High Street Church for many years.
Mrs. Cassandra Wright of Lucea avenue is somewhat improved at this writing.
Mrs. Lizzle Wright of Seventh avenue, N. W, who has been quite indoposed is reported much better at this writing.
Mrs. E. A. Stanford of 153 Wells Alley, N. W, left for Cincinnati, O. last Tuesday morning to spend the week end with old friends, Mr. and Mrs. Green of 106 E Court street and will return the following Saturday.
Mrs. Gillele Ferguson, 225 Fifth avenue, N. W left for Freedman's Hospital last Tuesday, at which institution she will undergo an operation. Let all pray for her recovery.
Mrs. Lillian Bartee, 226 Fifth avenue, who was reported sick, last week ending on Saturday.
Mrs. Holen Ferguson of Vinton, who has been critically ill has greatly improved.
A meeting was called last Thursday evening to inform the members of Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church of a project growing out of the Layman's Missionary Movement to systematize finance. Mr. J. L. Reed was master of ceremonies and introduced the subject of the occasion. He was ably assisted by Messrs. Green Penn and James Trayman and others. Mr. E. D. Rhea D. O. the First Baptist Church returned from the Lynchburg Jubilee Convention, having realized a grand time at Lynchburg, Va. The Roverond left the convention for a visit to Richmond. Mrs. Mary Woolford, of 716 Gainsboro avenue is spending a few days in Bedford City and Goodes, visiting her brother and niece, Phillip Robinson and Mrs. Rebecca Walden. Mrs. Hattie B. Dugger is visiting her uncle, Mr. Ellis Jones, of Chatham Va. after attending the Jubilee of Virginia Theological Seminary and College. Mrs. Mamie Anderson Goodson, of Columbus, O. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Poindexter, on Gilmer avenue, N. W.
Mr. George Nosbitt, of Fourth avenue, N. W. is in Fairmount, W. Va. where he has a contract lasting about thirty days. He is one of Roanoko's progressive plasterers.
Mrs. G. P. Miller, Mrs. Georgie Holland, Miss Graciel Muster, Master Hoyle Miller loft for Philadelphia, Pa where they will visit Mrs. Clara Muster Moyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Miller.
Let Joe Dugger, or M. Stanfield leave the Journal and Guide at your home.
Miss Naomi Walker, of Winston-Salem, N. C. is visiting her grandmother at Boons Mill, Va.
Prof. C. G. O'Kelly was in the city last week in interest of education. He was the guest of Mr. G. O. Holland, a graduate of Kittrell College.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gibson, of
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Mrs. A. E. Higgins, returned from Staunton, Saturday where she spent three weeks visiting her mother and other relatives, also she attended the Grandson of K. of P. and Grand Court of Calantho. She reports a grand time.
Miss Horietta Fields will leave this week for West Virginia and points east, she will be gone for some time.
The Lee Street Baptist Sunday School held its Children's Day exercises Sunday, July the 8th in the afternoon and night. The exercises were grand and were well attended at both services. Great credit was due W. H. R. E. Clay, Supt. Prof. Wm. H. R. Assistant Supt. and Miss Bessie A. Smith. Miss Simm is the planist, Prof. Hill was the director. A neat sum was raised for the Sunday School two prizes were given (to the ones raising the largest amount of money in boxes. Dr. C. H. Johnson, pastor.
Death has again visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Martin, and claimed his beloved son Willeen Martin who had been sick for two months. He bore his pain with much patience and would tell his wife Mrs. Geraldine Martin not to grieve after him because he was only waiting to stretch out in terms of Jesus. He leaves to mourn their loss a loving father, a devoted mother to two sisters and a brother, and loving wife, one son and a host of relatives and friends. He was a member of the Lee Street Baptist church.
The A. M. E. Zion church holds its Children's Day, exercises Sunday, July 8, in the afternoon and night which was a grand success. Dr. E. P. Mayo, pastor.
Mrs. Dolle Carter continues quite ill at her home on Alabama Street. We hope for her a speedy recovery.
Cleveland, Ohio were in the city this week. After a visit to his mother at Wythville, Va. they left for Richmond, Norfolk and Old Point, visiting friends. While here they were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Hendrick, on Gilmor avenue.
Mrs. Carrie Saunders of New York City is visiting her mother, Mrs. Peggy Saunders, 533 Eleventh avenue.
Mrs. L. D. Fullen, of Lebanon, Va. is spending a few weeks with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Andrews.
Miss Georgiana Hairston who has been in Lynchburg the past week, returned to the city Saturday. She was visiting one of her classmates, Miss Arnethia Wilson, of 1109 Seventh street. The girl gave her quite an enjoyable time in the Hill City.
Mrs. Alice Robinson and child, were visiting Thursday, July 12th from Columbus, Ohio where she visited her two daughters and sister. She had a very pleasant time.
Mr. Harold W. Jones returned to his post of duty Tuesday morning, after spending a week with his father and relatives in Norfolk, Va. Mr. Harold and his Society will have their next meeting at the home of Mrs. Cornelia Dickerson, Tenth avenue, N. E. All members are requested to be present and bring with them a new member if possible. Sister Georgia Hairston, President.
Mrs. Zetta Henderson is at home again Sixth avenue, N. E., after two weeks stay in Burrell Memorial Hospital.
The Magic City Medical Society will have their regular monthly meeting on Monday, July 23rd at eight o'clock P. M. in Bedford City. Va. Dr. G. L. A. Pogue will entertain the Society with a sumptuous menu after the regular program and after which the members will be taken to see the sun rise on the "Peaks of Otter." The students will make the trip to Belford City. Will H. S. Claytor, J. H. Roberts, H. J. Moseley, H. S. Schwech, L. C. Downing, H. S. Schwech, L. C. Downing, H. S. Dudley, E. D. Downing, J. S. Cooper, R. J. Boland, C. F. Gaylord and W. R. Brown. Dr. H. S. Schwech will fill the program number with the paper of the evening.
Two small boys with Otis McJimsey the chauffeur, were injured Monday afternoon when Norfolk and Western train number 18 ran into a Pitzer car truck on a grade crossing at Vinton. The injuries were not serious.
Boss Smith, sentenced to be electrocuted October 5 for the murder of an infant, James Boston Mitchell, committed suicide in his cell here yesterday morning. The condemned man ended his life by hanging him with a bad sheet which he wrapped into a knot and tied to his cell.
URBANNA ITEMS.
The 49th Anniversary of the First Baptist church Amburg and the 5th Anniversary of the pastor (Rev. J. A. Martin, B. D.) was observed on the first Sunday, Rev. R. N. Lawson pastor of the 1st Baptist church King and Queen preached the sermons which were stirring and helpful.
On the Fifth Sunday revival services will begin at the 1st Baptist church Amburg.
Revival services will begin at the Grafton Baptist church on the 4th Sunday.
Rev. H. T. Harris gave a lecture at the Union Grove Sunday School last Sunday, Subject: "Better Sunday School," which was very helpful.
The farmers have been quite busy this month with their corn crop and wheat. Many have brought the price of flour down as far as they were concerned.
Messrs V. L. Thornton, Jr., and J. F Major were visiting around Harmony Village last Sunday.
Mesdames Lolla Green and Elsie Carter are on the sick list at this writing.
Mr. N. F. Thornton who has traveled extensively in the West has found a nearer route to the Rocky Mountains viz: by way of the old Cherry tree on the hill side) he left last Sunday evening for the West.
The Pine Grove Glee Club is yet working faithfully at its meeting. The recollection of officers held Their meetings have been changed from the 1st and 3rd Thursday evenings to the 2nd and 4th.
The Richmond Planet will hereafter be on sale at Thornton's at the foot of Urbana bridge, opposite Webb Hotel, Call for it and read what your brothers are doing. Get who
THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COLORED TEACHERS
New Orleans, Louisiana, July 9, 1917.
The teachers and citizens of New Orleans have made large plans for the entertainment of the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, July 25 to 29. First of all, as an indication of their professional interest, over ONE HUNDRED of the city teachers under the leadership of Miss Hattie V. Feger have paid their enrollment fee to the National Association in advance.
Each local committee has already chartered the boat for the Saturday outing on gulf. There are more than fifty pages of the churches of the city have chosen asked for visiting educators as speakers in their various churches on Sunday. The morning, July 29, and all have arranged to take their entire congregation to the Fair Grounds auditorium for the final address of the week by Doctor R. R. Moton, Principal of Tuskegee Institute. Indications are that Doctor Moton will speak to Ten Thousand people on this afternoon.
THE RICHMOND PLANET
BRISTOL VA-TENN. NOTES
Mrs. Julia A. Brooks departed this life the 14th inst., Saturday A. M., at her beautiful home on State St, Bristol, Tennessee. She had been a sufferer for a few years, and she bore her illness with that Christian zeal, so it was a pleasure to visit her sick room, and hear her tell you how the Lord was taking care of her. Mrs. Julia Brooks was a strong Christian. She was a member of the Leo St. Baptist Church of this city. She was a long-time race and also loved by them. She always ried a smile for every one. She leaves to mourn her death, 6 children and several grand children, all are residents of this city, also a sister living at Bedford City, Va.
IN MEMORIAM
BROOKS—Sacred, but in loving remembrance of our dear smother, Julia Brooks who died Sat., July 1917. In the graveyard we'll soon lay her Where flowers gently wave, Will lie there, one we loved so dearly In the silent, lonely grave. When you ask us do we miss her, Yes, it fills our hearts with pain. But her "spirit gently whispers, Have courage, loved ones."
Have courage, loved ones, we'll meet again
Children.
Mrs. Will Lindsey and three children returned home last week, from Springfield, Ohio where she had spent three weeks very pleasantly with her sister. They report a fine time, Mrs. Hattie Fuller.
Mrs. Rebecca Barber, Mrs. Ethel Barber, Virginia Might and little Junius Barber all spent the day very pleasantly with Mrs. C. B. Banks live at 937 E. State St. They report a pleasant time.
The Negro Business League Glee Club sang at River Bond church Tenn., weekday night to a large audience and all pleased with the program Hon. R. E. Clay gave no earlily-sourting lecture which was heartily received. Mrs. Annie M. Smith, the famous Dunbar reader delighted her hearers with one of Dunbar's selections. She is the best reader in this part of E. Tennessee. Dr. R. B. McArthur, Mrs. R. E. Clay are the musical directors.
Mr. Edward West and little daughter, Clara Edna, left on the afternoon train for Abingdon, Va., to spend a few days.
Mr. W, M, H. Brown and party spent the day Tuesday of this week at Benhams, Va.
Mrs. Gertrude Johnson, returned home from Washington, D. C., last week. She visited her son Mr. Gordon Johnson and other relatives.
If you want the Richmond Planet, see Mrs. C. B. Banks.
Mrs. C. B. Banks, agent for the Richmond Planet has been very ill, suffering from Ptolemaeus poison. She is some better at this writing.
Mr. Sam Banker made a flying trip to Blacksburg, Va., July 8th on his wheel looking after business
Mrs. Maggie Franklin, No. 947 Lillio St., is very ill her friends hope for her an early recovery.
Mrs. Cora Kampbell is on the sck list this week, but is some better at this writing
See Mrs. C. B. Banks if you want the Richmond Planet only 5c a copy.
Mrs. Madison and daughter from Sugar (Grove, Va., are visiting relatives in the city.
Mr. Lee Thomas spent the day with his brother in Bristol, Tenn., Sunday. Report a pleasant time.
Mrs. Margie Whitten one of Bristol's progressive and energetic ladies has opened up a first class electric laundry and she is making good. She is the first woman in Bristol to open up any business in Bristol all by herself. It is all done by electricity. The building is fitted up with all of the best material. We wish
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GREAT RALLY IN BALTIMORE
Baltimore, July 18.—The whole city is talking about the big financial rally pulled off at Bethel A. M. E. Church Monday night, in which over $4,300 was reported, with the prospect of the sum of $5,000 being reached when additional reports are made this Sunday.
The rally was planned by the pastor of the church, the Rev. Dr. W. Pampion Brooks, who raised over $7,600 one rally pastoring at St. Paul A. M. E. Church, St. Louis. The reputation of Dr. Brooks as a money raiser caused a big crowd to assemble at the church Monday night, many of them remained until early Tuesday morning, when the last of the reports were made.
For the purpose of the rally the workers had been divided into groups called of which were called the bishop, "Bishop" John Willingham of Thousand dollar Conference, secured the highest amount, reporting over $600
the other "bishops" wore: Theodore White, A. M. Peck, Edward F. Barnett, Daniel W. Leo, William B. Hamer, Robert Sorrell, George Palmer, Jacob Heath and Thaddeus Copeland. Dr. Brooks has been pastor at the church since the latter part of April, when he left a charge at Kansas City. Kan Since coming here the attendance and collections have increased, and the general belief is the big debt on the church will be materially reduced during his regime. F. F. Johnson.
In Interest of Red Cross
In her great desire to help the Red Cross work, Mrs. Rosa Woods has had printed on post cards some very beautiful pictures taken of the Big Red Cross parade. Those of the Colored Band are especially good, and with other views will be sold at ten cents. All proceeds will go to help the Colored Red Cross Chapter. They can be held at the Colored Woman's Exchange, Broad Street, or from Mrs. Chas, V. Carrington, 832 Park Ave., City.
The new scientific remedy for corns bunions and calluses. It does the work. We will refund the price if it falls. Order a package today. Price 35 cents postpaid. Worth a whole lot more. WALTR S. LINDSAY AND BROTHER, Manufacturing Pharmacists, Emporia, Va. 2t.
Seriously Stabbed.
Mr. James Cunningham, the older son of Mr./ James Cunningham, Jr. was very seriously cut last Sunday night at 20th and Hull streets, South side, by a man named Booker. Had it not been for the timely arrival of the officers the crowd would have dealt with Booker very roughly. Cunningham was taken to the Virginia Hospital. Booker is at rest in jail, wafting the developments of the wounded young man.
FLORENCE NEWS.
FLORENCE, S. C., July 17. —Rov W. C. Reese passed through the city recently returning from his work at Cades, S. C.
The Presiding Elders Council of the North East Conference of the A. M. E. Church convened here Tuesday, July 17th. Those present, Rev. Heyward of the Dillon District; Rev. Lomax, of the Manning District; Rev. Pendorgrass, of the Sumter District; Rev. Deas of the Marton District and Rev. Turpin, of the Florence District They met at Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church this city, Rev. J. B. Jackson pastor.
Mrs. Rebecca Dykes visited Mayesville in attendance upon a wedding recently.
Miss Bessie Richardson of Columbia passed through here enroute to Wilmington, N. C.
Mr. Rachar Robinson has gone to Wilmington, N. C.
The deacon board of Trinity Church it was unanimously decided to hold revival meetings at the church beginning Sunday, August 5, and that the sum of $25 per week be paid for an assistant to the pastor, Rev. C. T. Taylor.
Mrs. Daley Smalls, who died in Brooklyn, July 5, was buried here on Sunday, July 15. Funeral services of the Trinity Baptist Church of which she was a member. Mrs. Frances Harper, her sister, arranged for the removal of the body here.
Mrs. Edith Gatewood buried her mother in Darlington, S. C., recently and has returned to Sparrows Point, Maryland.
Misses Lucy M. Smith and Janie B. Friar of the city graded school of Columbia, S. C. visited Miss Lona The Vobster in North Florence on Monday.
Mr. G. G. Lowery, of Wadesboro, N. C., visited his sister, Mrs. Barnum Johnson.
ABINGDON NEWS
Ablingdon, Va.
From the Valley St., Baptist Church Rev. W. H. Grey, pastor we are glad to say that our church on the upward march. The pastor's inspiring and full instruction. The Sunday School with Deacon Goodo as Supt. is growing in numbers with a fine corps of teachers. He has very bright prospects before him. The B. Y. P. U. Mrs. R. Cunningham as President is growing in attendance and interest.
The Wednesday evening prayer meetings which meet at 8 p.m., the pastor and Deacons are trying to the members more interested by appointing two from time to time to lead the meetings. The Ladies Church Aid Mrs. Lizzie Taylor President is doing a good work.
The Praying Missionary Bend Mrs. Ann Jefferson President is meeting in prayer for the conversion of souls and giving financial aid where and we need. "Woe to those who minister to the spirit of case in Zion," saith the scripture and so we are working and praying that we may not come under this woe.
Now we are glad to say to Editor Mitchell through the Planet that the neglected city of the dead or a wilderness as he was pleased to call our cemetery when here however we had agree with him. Therefore the tomb was made.
On Thursday, July 12th Mr R. B. Goodo (possibly not the first time) marched forth with an army of men (Willing Workers) having issued the call previously to the 12th they pitched battle about 7 a. m., against their enemy the grass and other under busch in the cemetery. They slayed right and left. We noticed among the earnest workers the honored pastor Rev. Ward of the M. E. Church and the pastor of course which lead us to the soldiers they were leaders indeed about 1:30 p. m., a feast was spread by the ladies and Mr. Goodo and his army were called to partake of the delicacies of the house which they die with as much careness and perhaps with more relish battling with the weeds. After thankening the ladies for the grand feast and remarking as to where so much came from (these hard times) they marched back to the cemetery again only to be defeated by the rain which came down in such copious showers they had to seek shelter by going out. The ladies contended that the men over another days work for their dinner. We are sure the men will do what's right after all the pleasure of serving these men will not soon be forgotten. The Planet is read with a great deal of interest by the members and friends.
Following names of those who sent baskets:
Mrs. Rachel | Washington, Mrs.
Rachel Debose, Mrs. Hattie Hines,
Mrs. Eliza Highly, Mrs. Bessie Cooley,
Mrs. Violet Cooley, Mrs. Hattie Fraction,
Mrs. Pollo Pannell, Mrs. Eliza Hale,
Mrs. Pollo Wiley, Mrs. Joanna McGainham, Mrs. Harriet Nowlin,
Mrs. Mary Smith, Mrs. Joanne Dickerson, Mrs. Ellis Curtis, Mrs. Lizzie Leggons, Mrs. Norr Poster, Emma Perry 50 cents, Mrs. Maria, Clark, Mrs. Sue Anderson, Mrs. Lula Campbell, Mrs. Lucy Ellison, L. E. M.
WINCHESTER NEWS NOTES
Miss Daisy Boverly of Baltimore, Md. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cooke.
Misses Ruth Fletcher, Irene Brown and S. May Harmon spent Thursday in Martinburg, W. Va. with Miss Lillian Carter,
Mrs. Agnes Wi. Scott and son are visiting her sister, Miss Carrie Walker. Pro Gibson and M. M. B. Cooke spent time last wint Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Bray in Paris. Mr. Madison Brisco and Mr. Simley Young of Carlyle, Pa. are the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mayhew B Cooke.
Miss Irene Brown's music class is progressing nicely.
The Brotherhood of John Mann Church gave a fine entertainment on Friday night. Brother Ashby was chairman.
The musical at Mt. Carmel was an excellent affair, Committee, Mrs. P. W. Gibson, Mrs. M. Nickens, Mrs. P. M. Finley, Mrs. S. Emma Parks, Miss Rosa Harmon, Miss Irene Brown Planist.
The yard party on Bond street on the Fourth was a success. Mrs. Amanda Jordan and Mr. Thomas Nickens were in charge.
ELMIRA NOTES
The Rev. Jas. D. Wilson formerly pastor of the Monumental Baptist Church and now pastoring the Bethany Baptist Church of Syracuse, N. Y., on his way to the anniversary reception of Rev. Nash of Buffalo stopped off to visit a few of his many friends.
The marriage of Miss Lottie Royal to Jas. Clark took place on Wednesday at the parsonage of the A. M. E. Zion Church Rev. L. L. Woods officiating. They were unattended, Mr. & Mrs. Clark will reside on Dickinson St., this city.
Mrs. Frederick Brown of High St., has been on the sick list the past week.
Jas. Adams of Dickinson St., had a bad attack of Neuralgia the past week.
Rev. Jas. D. Wilson of Syracuse, N. Y., was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Carter, Thursday noon at luncheon at their home on Partridge St.
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RICHMOND Virginia
SATURDAY
July --21
REPETENT
ROANOKE NOTES
ROANOKE NOTES
ROANOKE, VA., July 16.—Mr. and Mrs. George M. Richardson, of Eaton Ohio, have been in the city some time visiting Mrs. J. H. Brown of 307 Ninth avenue, N. W. where they spent a very delightful three weeks stay, making new acquaintances and meet ing old ones of eighteen years ago. They left today for home. Miss Cun diff is the younger sister of Mrs. Brown. She left the city eighteen years ago and returned with her husband.
There was an excursion in the city from Norfolk and also one from Richmond, bringing many a tidewater to the city up in the beautiful mountains of Virginia.
Brother Thomas Kinsey who has been quite sick at his home on Fifth avenue, N. W. is reported somewhat improved. Mr. Kinsey is the oldest carpenter in the city and a finished contractor.
Monday evening, July 16th at 8:30 o'clock the Rev. George R. Jones, P. E. of the Roanoke District called to order the third quarterly conference of the A. M. E. Church. The business of the conference was dispatched with in a very wise manner. The P. E. is certainly conversant with the discipline and polity of the A. M. E. Church. The reports from the various departments were highly endorsed. There were two conferences held at the same time, Mt. Zion and Ebenezer. the last named being the mission on Norfolk avenue and Tenth street. At night, Rev. George C. Taylor D. D. of Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church preached to the people at Ebenezer while Rev. P. E. George R. Jones took special care of Mt. Zion. Rev. Dr. Jones preached to the delight and benefit of all.
Mrs. Sophia Powell, of Norfolk, with a party of her friends are in the city visiting her sister Miss Maggle Dehaven, of Seventh avenue, N. W. They will be here until Friday evening.
Messrs. James and John Dillard and wife and little adopted daughter, of Mullins, W. Va. were called to the city Sunday to the bedside of their mother, who has been sick for a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Campbell. The mother, Mrs. Eliza Lyons was found very much improved. Messrs. Dillard were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Madison Stanfield from Monday until Tuesday evening at which time they left for their old home at Martinsville, Va. to visit their brother.
The Rev. W. W. Brown, D. P., was in the city last Sunday and preached. He had been in Lynchburg attending the Jubilee Convention at Lynchburg Seminary, and availed himself of the opportunity of coming up and giving a word of cheer and sunshine to the prechren and bid ding them Godspeed in the noble work for God and humanity. Quite a high day in the city with two expostors, Dr. W. R. Brown and Dr. W. W. Brown of the High Street Church for many years.
Mrs. Cassandra Wright of Luck avenue is somewhat improved at this writing.
Mrs. Lizzle Wright of Seventh avenue, N. W, who has been quite indisposed is reported much better at this writing
Mr. E. A. Stanfield, of 153 Wells Alley, N. W. left for Cincinnati, O. last Tuesday morning to spend the week end with old friends, Mr. and Mrs. Green of 106 E Court street and will return the following Saturday. Mrs. Gillie Ferguson, 225 Fifth avenue, N. W. left for Freedmen's Hospital last Tuesday, at which institution she will undergo an operation. Let all pray for her recovery. Mrs. Lillian Bartee, 226 Fifth avenue, who was reported sick, last week is convalescing. Mrs. Helen Ferguson of Vinton, who has been critically ill has greatly improved. A meeting was called last Thursday evening to inform the members of Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church of a project growing out of the Laymen's Missionary Movement to systematize finance. Mr. J. L. Reed was master of ceremonies and introduced the subject of the occasion. He was ably assisted by Messrs. Green Penn and James W. Traynham and others.
Rev. E. E. Ricks, D. D., of the First Baptist Church returned from the Lynchburg Jubilee Convention, having realized a grand time at Lynchburg, Va. The Roverond left the convention for a visit to Richmond.
Mrs. Mary Woolfork, of 710 Gainsboro avenue is spending a few days in Bedford City and Goodes, visiting her brother and niece, Phillip Robinson and Mrs. Rebecca Waldon.
Mrs. Hattle B. Dugger is visiting her uncle, Mr. Ellis Jones, of Chatham, Va. after attending the Jubilee at the Virginia Theological Seminary and College.
Mrs. Mamie Anderson Goodson, of Columbus, O. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Poindexter, on Gilmer avenue, N. W.
Mr. George Nesbit, of Fourth avenue, N. W. is in Fairmount, W. Va, where he has a contract lasting about thirty days. He is one of Roanoke's progressive plasterers.
Mrs. G. P. Miller, Mrs. George
Holland, Miss Grace Miller, Master
Hoyle Miller left for Philadelphia, Pa
where they will visit Mrs. Chara Miller
Brinkley, a daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. G. P. Miller.
Let Joe Dugger, or M. Stanfield
leave the Journal and Guide at your
home.
Miss Naomi Walker, of Winston-
Salem, N. C. is visiting her grand-
mother at Boons Mill, Va.
Prof. C. G. O'Kelly was in the city
last week in interest of education.
He was the guest of Mr. C. O. Holland,
a graduate of Kittrell College.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gibson, of
---
Mrs. A. E. Higgins, returned from Staunton, Saturday where she spent three weeks visiting her mother and other relatives, also she attended the Grand session of K. of P. and Grand Court of Calanthe. She reports a grand time.
Mrs. C. B. Banks, agent for the Richmond Planet has been very ill, suffering from Ptomaine poison. She is some better at this writing.
Miss Henrietta Fields will leave this week for West Virginia and points east, she will be gone for some time.
The Lee Street Baptist Sunday School held its Children's Day exercises Sunday, July the 8th in the afternoon and night. The exercises were grand and were well attended at both services. Great credit was due to Hon. R. E. Clay, Supt. Prof. Wm. W. Hill Assistant Supt. and Miss Bessie A Smith. Miss Smith is the pianist, Prof. Hill musical director. A neat sum was raised for the Sunday School two prizes were given to the ones raising the largest amount of money in boxes. Dr. C. H. Johnson, pastor.
Death has again visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Martin, and claimed his beloved son Willenet Martin who had been sick for two months. He bore his pain with much patience and would tell his wife Mrs. Geraldine Martin not to grieve after him that he was only waiting to stretch out in the arms of Jesus. He leaves to mourn their loss a loving father, a devoted mother, two sisters and a brother, and loving kind wife, one son and a host of relatives and friends. He was a member of the Lee Street Baptist church.
Mr. Sam Banker made a flying trip to Blacksburg, Va., July 8th on his wheel looking after business.
The A. M. E. Zion church hold its Children's Day exercises Sunday, July 8, in the afternoon and night which was a grand success. Dr. E. P. Mayo, pastor.
Mrs. Belle Carter continues quite ill at her home on Alabama Street. We hope for her a speedy recovery.
Mrs. Maggie Franklin, No. 947 Lillie St., is very ill her friends hope for her an early recovery.
Mrs. Cora Kampbell is on the sick list this week, but is some better at this writing
Mrs. Madison and daughter from Sugar Grove, Va., are visiting relatives in the city.
Mr. Lee Thomas spent the day with his brother in Bristol, Tenn., Sunday. Report a pleasant time.
Mrs. Margie Whitten one of Bristol's progressive and energetic ladies has opened up a first class electric laundry and she is making good. She is the first woman in Bristol to open up any business of this kind all by herself. It is all done by electricity. The building is fitted up with all of the best material. We wish
Cleveland, Ohio' wore in the city tails wook. After a visit to his mother at Wytheville, Va. they left for Richmond, Norfolk and Old Point, visiting friends. While here they were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Hendrick, on Gilmer avenue.
Mrs. Carrie Saunders of New York City is visiting her mother, Mrs. Peggy Saunders, 533 Eleventh avenue, N. W.
Mrs. L. D. Fullen, of Lebanon, Va. is spending a few weeks with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Andrews.
Miss Georgiana Hairston who has been in Lynchburg the past week, returned to the city Saturday. She was visiting one of her classmates, Miss Arnethia Wilson, of 1109 Seventh street. The girl gave her quite an enjoyable time in the Hill City.
Mrs. Alice Robinson and children, who left the city June 18th, returned Thursday, July 12th, from Columbus, Ohio where she visited her two daughters and sister. She had a very pleasant time.
Mr. Harold W. Jones returned to his post of duty Tuesday morning, after spending a week with his father and relatives in Norfolk, Va.
The Helping Hand Home Society will have their next meeting at the home of Mrs. Cornelia Dickerson, Tenth avenue, N. E. All members are requested to be present and bring with them a new member if possible. Sister Georgia Hairston, President.
Mrs. Zetta Henderson is at home again Sixth avenue, N. E. after two weeks stay in Burroll Memorial Hos pitial.
The Magic City Medical Society will have their regular monthly meeting on Monday, July 23rd at eight o'clock P. M. in Bedford City, Va. Dr. G. L. A. Pogue will entertain the Society with a sumptuous menu after the regular program and after which the members will be taken to see the sun rise on the "Peaks of Otter." The following will make the trip to Bedford, Doctors S. F. Williman, J. B. Claytor, J. H. Roberts, H. J. Moseley, H. S. Schwelch, L. C. Downing, E. R. Dudley, E. D. Downing, J. S. Cooper, R. J. Boland, C. F. Gaylord and W. R. Brown. Dr. H. S. Schwelch will fill the program number with the paper of the evening.
Two small boys with Otis McJimsey the chauffeur, were injured Monday afternoon when Norfolk and Western train number 18 ran into a Pitzer Transfer truck on a grade crossing at Vinton. The injuries were not serious.
Boss Smith, sentenced to be electrocuted October 5 for the murder of an infant, James Boston Mitchell, committed suicide in his cell here yesterday morning. The condemned man ended his life by hanging himself with a bed sheet which he wrapped into a knot and tied to his cell.
URBANNA ITEMS
The 49th Anniversary of the First Baptist church Amburg and the 5th Anniversary of the pastor (Rev. J. A. Martin, B. D.,) was observed on the first Sunday, Rev. R. N. Lawson pastor of the 1st Baptist church King and Queen preached the sermons which were stirring and helpful.
On the Fifth Sunday revival services will begin at the 1st Baptist church Amburg.
Revival services will begin at the Grafton Baptist church on the 4th Sunday.
Rev. H. T. Harris gave a lecture at the Union Grove Sunday School last Sunday, Subject: "Better Sunday School," which was very helpful.
The farmers have been quite busy this month with their corn crop and wheat. Many have brought the price of flour down as far as they were concerned.
Messrs V. L. Thornton, Jr., and J. J.F Major were visiting around Harmony Village last Sunday.
Mesdames Lolia Green and Elsie Carter are on the sick list at this writing.
Mr. N. F. Thornton who has traveled extensively in the West has found a nearer route to the Rocky Mountains viz: by way of the old Cherry tree on the hill side) he left last Sunday evening for the West.
The Pine Grove Glee Club is yet working faithfully at its meeting. The recollection of officers held Their meetings have been changed from the 1st and 3rd Thursday evenings to the 2nd and 4th.
The Richmond Planet will hereafter be on sale at Thornton's at the foot of Urbanna bridge, opposite Webb Hotel. Call for it and read what your brothers are doing. Get wise.
THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COLORED TEACHERS
New Orleans, Louisiana, July 9, 1977 The teachers and citizens of New Orleans have made large plans for the entertainment of the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, July 25 to 29. First of all, as an indication of their professional interest, over ONE HUNDRED of the city teachers under the leadership of Miss Hattie V. Feger have paid their enrollment fee to the National Association in advance.
The local committee has already chartered the boat for the Saturday outing on the gulf. There are more than fifty pastors of the churches of the city have already asked for visiting educators as speakers in their various churches on Sunday morning, July 29, and all have arranged to take their entire congregation to the Fair Grounds auditorium for the final address of the week by Doctor R. R. Moton, Principal of Tuskegee Institute. Indications are that Doctor Moton will speak to Ten Thousand people on this afternoon.
THE RICHMOND PLANET
BRISTOL VA-TENN. NOTES
Mrs. Julia A. Brooks departed this life the 14th inst., Saturday A. M., at her beautiful home on State St. Bristol, Tennessee. She had been a sufferer for a few years, and she hore her illness with that Christian zeal, so it was a pleasure to visit her sick room, and hear her tell you how the Lord was taking care of her. Mrs. Julia Brooks was a strong Christian. She was a member of the Lee St. Baptist Church of this city. She was well known here by both races and also loved by them. She always carried a smile for every one. She leaves to mourn her death, 6 children and several grand children, all are residents of this city, also a sister living at Bedford City, Va.
IN MEMORIAM
BROOKS—Sacred, but in loving remembrance of our dear smother, Julia Brooks who died Sat., July 14th 1917.
In the graveyard we'll soon lay her
Where flowers gently wave,
Will lie there, one we loved so dearly
In the silent, lonely grave.
When you ask us do we miss her,
Yes, it fills our hearts with pain,
But her spirit gently whispers,
Have courage, loved ones, we'll meet again.
—Children.
Mrs. Will Lindsey and three children returned home last week, from Springfield, Ohio where she had spent three weeks very pleasantly with her sister. They report a fine time, Mrs. Hattie Fuller.
Mrs. Rebecca Barber, Mrs. Ethel Barber, Virginia Might and little Junius Barber all spent the day very pleasantly with Mrs. C. B. Banks living at 937 E. State St. They report a pleasant time.
The Negro Business League Glee Club sang at River Bend church Tenn. Wednesday night to a large audience and all was well pleased with the program Hon. R. E. Clay, gave no of his soul-s stirring lectures which was heartily received. Mrs. Annie M. Smith, the famous Dunbar reader delighted her hearers with one of Dunbar's selections. She is the best reader in this part of E. Tennessee. Dr. R. B. McArthur, Mrs. R. E. Clay are the musical directors.
Mr. Edward West and little daughter, Clara Edna, left on the afternoon train for Abingdon, Va., to spend a few days.
Mr. W, M. H. Brown and party spent the day Tuesday of this week at Benhams, Va.
Mrs. Gertrude Johnson, returned home from Washington, D. C., last week. She visited her son Mr. Gordon Johnson and other relatives.
If you want the Richmond Planet, see Mrs. C. B. Banks.
See Mrs. C. B. Banks if you want the Richmond Planet only 5c a copy.
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GREAT RALLY IN BALTIMORE
Baltimore, July 18.—The whole city is talking about the big financial rally pulled off at Bethel A. M. E. Church Monday night, in which over $4,300 was reported, with the prospect of the sum of $5,000 being reached when additional reports are made this Sunday.
The rally was planned by the pastor of the church, the Rev. Dr. W. Sampon Brooks, who raised over $7,500 in one rally while pastoring at St. Paul A. M. E. Church, St. Louis. The reputation of Dr. Brooks as a money raiser caused a big crowd to assemble at the church Monday night, many of them remained until early Tuesday morning, when the last of the reports were made.
For the purpose of the rally the workers had been divided into groups called annual conferences, the leader of each of which was called a bishop, "Bishop" John Williams, of Thousand dollar Conference, secured the highest amount, reporting over $600.
The other "bishops" were: Theodore White, A. M. Peck, Edward F. Barnett, Daniel W. Lee, William B. Hamer, Robert Sorrell, George Palmer, Jacob Heath and Thaddeus Copeland. Dr. Brooks has been pastor at the church since the lattre part of April, when he left a charge at Kansas City, Kan Since coming here the attendance and collections have increased, and the general belief is the big debt on the church will be materially reduced during his regime. F. F. Johnson.
In Interest of Red Cross
In her great desire to help the Red Cross work, Mrs. Rosa Woods has had printed on post cards some very beautiful pictures taken of the Big Red Cross parade. Those of the Colored Band are especially good, and with other views will be sold at ten cents a piece. All proceeds will go to help the Colored Red Cross Chapter. They can be bought at the Colored Woman's Exchange, on West Brend Street, or from Mrs. Chas. V. Carrington, 932 Park Ave. City.
"U-NEED-IT"
The new scientific remedy for corona bungee and calluses. It does the work. We will refund the price if it fails. Order a package today. Price 35 cents postpaid. Worth a whole lot more. WALTER S. LINDSAY AND BROTHER, Manufacturing Pharmacists, Emporia, Va. 2t.
Seriously Stabbed
Mr. James Cunningham, the older son of Mr. James Cunningham, Jr. was very seriously cut last Sunday night at 20th and Hull streets, South side, by a man named Booker. Had it not been for the timely arrival of the officers the crowd would have dealt with Booker very roughly. Cunningham was taken to the Virginia Hospital. Booker is at rest in jail, wafting the developments of the wounded young man.
FLORENCE NEWS
FLORENCE, S. C., July 17.—Rev W. C. Recese passed through the city recently returning from his work at Cades, S. C.
The Presiding Elders Council of the North East Conference of the A. M. E. Church convened here Tuesday, July 17th. Those present, Rev Heyward of the Dillon District; Rev Lomax, of the Manning District; Rev Pendergrass, of the Sumter District; Rev Deas of the Marlon District and Rev Turpin, of the Florence District They met at Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church this city, Rev. J. B. Jackson pastor.
Mrs. Rebecca Dykes visited Mayesville in attendance upon a wedding recently.
Miss Bessie Richardson of Columbia passed through here enroute to Wilmington, N. C.
Mr. Rachar Robinson has gone to Wilmington, N. C.
The deacon board of Trinity Baptist Church it was unanimously decided to hold revival meetings at the church beginning Sunday, August 5, and that the sum of $25 per week be paid for an assistant to the pastor, Rev. C. T. Taylor.
Mrs. Daisy Smalls, who died in Brooklyn, July 5, was buried here on Sunday, July 15. Funeral services were held at Trinity Baptist Church of which she was a member. Mrs. Frances Harper, her sister, arranged for the removal of the body here.
Mrs. Edith Gatewood buried her mother in Darlington, S. C., recently and has returned to Sparrows Point, Maryland.
Misses Lucy M. Smith and Janie B. Friar of the city graded school of Columbia, S. C. visited Miss Lona Mae Webster in North Florence on Monday last.
Mr. G. G. Lowery, of Wadsboro,
N. C. visited his sister, Mrs. Barnum
Johnson.
E. B. WEBSTER
ABINGDON NEWS
Abingdon, Va
Abingdon, Va.
From the Valley St., Baptist Church
Rev. W. H. Grey, pastor we are glad
to say that our church is on the up-
ward march. The pastor's sermons are
inspiring and full of instruction. The
Sunday School with Deacon Goode with
Supt. is growing in numbers with a
fine corps of teachers. He has very
bright prospects before him. The B.
Y. P. U. Mrs. R. Cunningham as
President is growing in attendance
and interest.
The Wednesday evening prayer
meetings which meet at 8 p.m., the
pastor and Deacons are trying to get
the members more interested by
appointing two from time to time to lead
the meetings. The Ladies Church Aid
Mrs. Lizzie Taylor President is doing
a good work.
The Praying Missionary Band Mrs. Anna Jefferson President is meeting in homes praying for the conversion of souls and giving financial aid where and we needed. "Woe to those who minister to the spirit of ease in Zion," saith the scripture and so we are working and praying that we may not come under this wee. Now we are glad to say to Editor Mitchell through the Planet that the neglected city of the dead or a wilderness as he was pleased to call our cemetery when here however we had to agree with him. Therefore the comment was taken good.
On Thursday, July 12th Mr R. B. Beoode (possibly not the first time) marched forth with an army of men (Willing Workers) having issued the call previously to the 12th they pitched battle about 7 a. m., against their enemy the grass and other under bush in the cemetery. They slayed right and left. We noticed among the earnest workers the honored pastor Rev. Ward of the M. E. Church and our pastor of course which lead us to believe that they were leaders indeed about 1:30 p. m., a feast was spread by the ladies and Mr. Beoode and his army were called to partake of the delicacies of the season which they die with as much earnestness and perhaps with more relish than battling iwth the weeds. After thanking the ladies for the grand feast and remarking as to where so much came from (these hard times) they marched back to the cemetery again only to be defeated by the rain which came down in such copious showers they had to seek shelter by going home. The ladies contended that the men we another days work for their dinner. We are sure the men will do what's right after all the pleasure of serving these noble men will not soon be forgotten. The Planet is read with a great deal of interest by the members and friends.
Following names of those who sent baskets:
Mrs. Rachel Washington, Mrs. Rachel Debose, Mrs. Hattie Hines, Mrs. Eliza Highly, Mrs. Bessie Cooley, Mrs. Violet Cooley, Mrs. Hattie Fraction, Mrs. Pollie Pannell, Mrs. Eliza Hale, Mrs. Mary Wiley, Mrs. Joanna McClanham, Mrs. Harriet Nowlin, Mrs. Mary Smith, Mrs. Jennie Dickerson, Mrs. Eilec Curtis, Mrs. Lizzie Leggons, Mrs. Norr Foster, Mrs. Emma Perry 50 cents, Mrs. Maria, Clark, Mrs. Sue Anderson, Mrs. Lula Campbell, Mrs. Lacy Ellison, L. E. M.
WINCHESTER NEWS NOTES
Miss Daisy Beverly of Baltimore, Md. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cooke.
Misses Ruth Fletcher, Irene Bown and S. May Harmon spent Thursday in Martinsburg, W. Va. with Miss Lillian Carter.
Mrs. Agnes W. Scott and son are visiting her sister, Miss Carrie Walker. Prof. Gibson and Mr. M. B. Cooke spent Saturday last whit Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Berry in Paris.
Mr. Madison Brisco and Mr. Stanley Young of Carlyle, Pa. are the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mayhew B Cooke.
Miss Irene Brown's music class is progressing nicely.
The Brotherhood of John Mann Church gave a fine entertainment on Friday night. Brother Ashby was chairman.
The musical at Mt. Carmel was an excellent affair. Committee, Mrs. P. W. Gibson, Mrs. M. Nickens, Mrs. M. Finley, Miss S. Emma Parks, Miss Rosa Harmon, Miss Irene Brown Planist.
The yard party on Bond street on the Fourth was a success. Mrs. Amanda Jordan and Mr. Thomas Nickens were in charge.
ELMIRA NOTES
The Rev. Jas. D. Wilson formerly pastor of the Monumental Baptist Church and now pastoring the Bethany Baptist Church of Syracuse, N. Y., on his way to the anniversary reception of Rev. Nash of Buffalo stopped off to visit a few of his many friends.
The marriage of Miss Lottie Royal to Jas. Clark took place on Wednesday at the parsonage of the A. M. E. Zion Church Rev. L. L. Woods officiating. They were unattended. Mr. & Mrs. Clark will reside on Dickinson St., this city.
Mrs. Frederick Brown of High St., has been on the sick list the past week.
Jas. Adams of Dickinson St., had a bad attack of Neuralgia the past week.
Rev. Jas. D. Wilson of Syracuse, N. Y., was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Carter, Thursday noon at luncheon at their home on Partridge St.
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John Mitchell, Jr., President
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SEVENTEENTH Annual Session
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YREAE- IMEI
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XXXIV, NO, 36 ——— SS CARRERE a me ie
meatal —<—<—== a OO “OO i
fee AS He RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUL Soe Co.
us » SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1917 ee ee Sah :
PRICE. FI C
THE BAPTIST JUBILEE
| TREMENODS
SESS
Lynchburg, Va., Juno 15.—Tho
Jargost religious conveation over holt
in this olty was In sosston hero all
of last weok. It vas the colobration
of the Fittioth Anniversary of the
orgdniration of tho Virginia Baptist
State Convention and In honor of the
educational work done by tho Bap-
Usts of Virginia, “which work was
planted by tho fathers shortly after
coming out of slavery. ‘This work
Topresonts what the raco 1 doing for
{tsolf. Four state bodies woro In
session, thereby ropresonting ‘every
phase of work boing dono in tho
Btato.
Tuosday morning, July 10, was the
‘opening anil the four bodies met to-
gothor, ‘Tho Virginia Baptist State
Convention, Rev. A. A. Galvin. D.
D. of Danville, prostdont; ‘The Wo-
mon 8 Edueational Convention, Mrs.
B. F. ox, Salom, prosidont; ‘Tho
Btato Sunday School Convention, Prot
J. 8, Lee, Nowport Nows, prosidont;
State R. XY. P. U. Convention, Ros:
00 ©, Mitcholi, proaident. A chorus
of one hundred ‘voices turntahod mu-
sole during tha entira wok.
=) The oponing was indeed Impressive
Br. Galvin catlod the Joint conven
itlohs toxathon and) attor ‘dovortonals
Mii tantinaieandsa Mark and: oe
Pu atavoow AU prevented DF "
‘Woods, prosidont of tho Virginia The
oiogical Seminary and College, who
presided during tho delivery of the
woleome addresses and Introduced to
tho convention, Mayor Royster Jostor
Jr., a8 the mayor of all the poople.
‘As the mayor arono to deliver his ad-
ross. lod by Dr. W. F. Graham, of
Philadelphia 1,600 people sang
“Amerlea.”” ‘The address was indoad
practical and tho Mayor ‘was loud in
Is pralsos of the raco. Other nd-
Arossoa of woleome wore delivered by
Roy. GH. Curry, of the Mothodist
plscopal Church; Rev. G. G. Cabell
Fopresenting tho colored Baptists; Dr
A. B. Conrad; roprosenting the white
Baptists; Mrs. Antoinatto A. Mason
representing the local Woman's Bdu-
cational Cirele,
‘The addresses wore responded to
by Dr. J.C. Austin, of Pittsburgh,
for the B. ¥. P. U.; ‘Mra. Christian:
na Phiipot of the Woman's Conven-
tlon; Prof. W. A. Gillam, for the
Sunday School’ Convention and Dr.
Aloxaniler Gordon, of Philadelphia.
Jn the afternoon. Dr. A. 'A. Gal-
vin delivered his ‘annual: address to
the convention,» which was full of
thought ‘and thsplration. We was
elected for anothor yenr.\ Prof. J.
8. Leo was elected prosident of the
Sunday School Convention; Roscoe C
Mitchel, prosident of the B. Y., P.
VU. Convention and Mrs, B. F.," Fox
of the Women's Conyention.
Bach session was full of imspjration
‘The somi-centonnial sormon. was
Dreached by the Rov, W. F. Graham
D. D., of Philadelphia, trom toxt,
“ne Lord, hath Mono great things
for us Whoreot wo aro glad.” ‘This
vas fhdeed a practical sormon, and
svas followed with tho presontation of
$900’ tor tho religious and educational
work.
Atong tho speakers from out of
the state wore Rev, @. IH. Sims, Now
York; W. MH. Jornagin, D. D., Wast
Angton, D. ©. RC, Juans, D. D.
TordoyiClty, NT CON, Harris, W
Va.; G. B. Howard, Pittsburgh. Pa;
W. W._ Brown, D.'D., Now York;
W. R. Brown, D, D., Pittsburgh,
and others...”
On Wednesday. night Hon. John
Mitchell, Jr.’ of Richmond, ‘thrilled
his auilionco with his powerfal oration
on “Tho War and Its, Lessons.”
Thursday night’ Miss Nannto” H.
Burroughs, of Washington, D. ©.
Wollverod a superb and loquent ad
dross on “THO Currency of the King.
dom.” A unique and powerful mis
slonary sermon was preached by Dr.
W. W. Brown, of Now York.” ‘The
sermon covered tho main revolution
ary ovonts of now world conditions
and made a profound improssion.
‘The great fublied 1a now passed inte
AMstory and tho centennial 1s alrendy
on its way. ‘Tho Colored Baptists o
Virginia never experienced such 4
great colobratton as took placo on Col
Jogo HIN, LynchWfurg July 10th-15th
Whito it’ was tho colebration of the
Soml-Contennlal of the Virginia Bap
Hist Stato Convention, the eclobration
was very widely repfosontative. Dele
gates and visitors wore thoro from Vir
ginia, North Carolina, South Carolina
Georgia, Tonnosses, ‘West. Virginia
“Maryland, Pennsylvania, Now Jersey
Now York, Connectlont,’ Mhode Yelane
‘and other states. Tho. quartetts of
conventions sang the Nlatorie ote 0
“fifty years achlovomonts with a har
mony sublime and every heart pres-
ont caught fire with the split of Jubk
Teetrom. the moment ‘Proaident “Gal
vin by the first fall of his gavel sig-
naled the opening of the greatest con-
Vontion over hold among colored. Bap.
Usts in the state sof Va., until the final
benediction, every heart beeat with
divinest gratitude and every yoico
rang with the music of joy. Never
before have the white friends shown
such a kindly spirit, such open heart-
edness and ‘such rendiness to help.
‘Pho City Auditoriun wat opened to we
froe for any or every night during the
ontire sousion, Ohalra to eat © the
tents were supplied by tho various
While ‘churches of the city” and the
Mayor, Honorable Royster Jester,
Judge Christian and Mr, Ryland not
only made great speeches such as aro
not commonly made by white gentle-
men to colored bodies but offered their
services and any ald the city of
Lynchburg could onder to:make ont
stay comfortable and our cofvention
‘success, ‘THO nowspapers: favo. une
tinted space to the publleation of
the doings of the sconvention, mucli
of which was front page pace.
Thore Is no doubt about it, the dig-
nity of the session throughout was
such as would do honor to kings and
prineos, "One of the “Dally. Hewane
Dor men in ‘commonting. remarked T
have never met a more intelligent set
ait dologates nor eat. In & convention
of higher dignity than is thig one,
‘There was no bickering, no strife Dut
working, exulting ovor’ worl alton
done and praising and thanking God.
Thoero were sixty-five addresses,
twolvo sormons, “nlno lectures, two
original pooms and all well seasoned
with good music, and ably delivered,
It was a school of education and In-
spiration calculated to break down
the prejudices of the most prejudiced,
soften the shell of the tightest hide-
bounds and prepare every one for
Heber servico, As I sit at my desk,
X eon ins tho, volees of tho, eighty,
<oolton a Ihoy once Fe
ee iain Tubiteed
ubtloe!! Jubflee! ! és I seo them as
they spread the drapery of golden
glory about the deeeds done, and the
miracles wrought by our fathers in
tho namo of olit dod; tame of whom
had fallen in the fray and others
Diessed to see the travail of their souls
while yet in tho flesh, holp ‘the sons
recount the deois golden and mir
acles divine and lead the chorus of a
Ghovsand and more valees singing, tho
songs of jublieo,
Dr. Wesley FP. Graham nover Te-
coived moro Jaudations from the loyal
songs who dolight to do him honor, It
was he who set the Jubilee pace, clos-
ing the jubilee sermon by placing inté
the hands of President Woods threo
hundred dollars In gold; at this point
a. shout "went up trom “the camp,
‘Thon followed that matehtons proach:
er from Pittsburg, Dr. J. C. Austin,
gathering about him that large ‘and
splendid delegation, placed upon ‘the
tablo threo inmdrod “doltare in gol
and threo hundred and twenty-five in
paper. Here comes Danville; Dr. S.
A, Moses reports tho Inighost’ amount
‘of money per member and took away
tho banner and” gold Mmedal. as. the
prize; but wait, behold there’ comes
Pifth St., Richmond, Pastor T. J. King
gathers mbout him a large and fine look-
ing delegation and places on the table
seven hundred and twenty:three dol-
lars in cash; thus. taking away the
Danner’ and gold’ medal given che
chureh and pastor bringing up the
largest amount of money in bulk.
Dr. Austin and Bhbenezer received
A special banner off, sthe largest
amount from outside of the state,
Total amount of money raised tn cash
oa the convention tablo was $13698.-
1,
‘There aro some characters who fig-
ured so prominently im and contributed
80 largely to the success of this mam-
moth colobration Wo must_make ape
clal mention of a tow of them." dare
Say evory delegate and: visitor was
justly proud of our able, cultured and
faithful President Dr. A. A. Galvin.
The peole of today while they greatly
Admire and appreciate tho ability of
this great charactor, have not fully
awakened to his supreme worth. ‘The
Major part of the credit for the high
class dignity and commondadle order
of this body,, as well as the promp*
Way in which they scarry out the pro-
gram of work, is duo to the masterly
ability of President Galvin. He ts a
cool ‘headed, self possessed, Prince
among Prosidents.
The second character is that other
Roman, that prince among educators,
Prof, W. C. Woods M.A. “f dant need
to, relate the story oxcopt for those
‘Wil aro uninformed as to how he has
brdught this groat school to the yoars
of M88 glory, hon tho sorld is freed
to admjt {ta’glory, whon the world 1s
forced t admit its greatness, ‘Hie re-
Port on the work and. that mastorly
addréss ‘on: ‘education, just swept the
audience from their fect and in Joy the
multitude cried, “What hath God
wrought?” Prosldont Wood is at
onee an orator,’ logician, a teacher
and business ‘manager. Ho with his
staft of teachers ontertained this con-
vention in a way that highly pleased
vention ‘in a way
ing Secretary, Dr. ‘T. 1, White are due
great praise and rare encomiums for
the great work done In bringing about
auteh an unprecedented success. ‘Thirty
four ow churches joined the con-
vention. We shall say more furth-
or on about the great part played. by
our brethren out of the state.
—T. J. Kng. !
EDITOR POR 18 averentousn
INJURED. .
Te ee Rates TR ATT eR nn
Euitor James W. Poo of the Re
former was found Saturday afternoon
in tho toilet of the ‘True Reformer
Building unconsetous, sufforing from
blows on Iiis head, all of which som:
ed to havo: been made with a wooden
malett of vthe kind used in. printer's
Mices. Tt was thought that he had taken
ether Internally and the report was
clreulated that ho had attempted sut
elde, due to worry and other troubles,
He was removed to tho Richmond
Hospital. Ho ropudiated tho idea of
his having beon attacked by some ono
and professed an absolute ignorance
a8 to how he was injured,
‘Tho detectives working on tho case
Teached tho conclusion that ho in.
Micted the Injuries upon himself, dur.
ing @ period of mental abboration, Be
‘that as it may, ho maintains silence
upon the aubject and at prosont his
mind ‘appears: to bo normal. His
friends were of tho opinion that he
had beon tho victim of foul play as
the letters and communteations tha
he has beeen writing have teon con:
demned in somo quarters Ho. 4s
steadily Improving and tho indica:
Hons aro that he will soon bo able
to bo walking about again
EN
\ A PLEASANT suRPRISH
‘Thero was a vory pleasant aurprise
Soolal tendered tho children of. the
Frionds Orphan. Asylum on Friday
afternoon from five to elght by a num.
hor of lads and tassios Numerous
ames and athletic sports wero in:
aulged in after which refreshments
wore served on the pleturesque lawn,
All seemed very happy and oxprassed
desire to- have another. ‘The unique
affair was originated by Mastors Cole.
tidgo D. Davis; W. Huga Jackson and
Emmett M. Burke who’ aro yery
srateful to ‘all who rendered them
any assistance, :
Mesdames Lizzie 1. Davis, Anna B,
Jackson and A.B. Burke chaperoned
tho party with Misses Jeanetto Jack:
son and Lottie Davis,
sy
Tn Toviig Memory.
WILLTAMS—Sacrod to tho memo-
ry of my devoted mother, Mrs. Olive
Williams, who fol aslecp one year
ago, July 17th, 1916,
Hor beautiful soul, like a ray of lght
Has gone to the realms above,
Where never again comes sorrow ant
pain,
In the land of colestial love.
By her son,
ELUAH B. WILLIAMS
1
Leigh St. Memorial M. EB. Church.
Rev. C. O. Gil, B. D. fs haying
marked sucess in his new field of
work, both spiritually and financially
Ho was at his best Sunday, pronohitrig
morning and evening two of the bost
sermons we have over ilstoned,to.
Sunday, July 22nd, the Disirict
Superintentlont, Rey. B. J. Ruedeck,
B. D. will proach at 11:80 A, M.
‘and the pastor at 8:30 P. M.A big
day in Zion. “All are yeleome. Came
praying that a showor of blessing may
bo bestowed upon us.
Doctors Hold Annual Meoting.
‘The Old Dominion Medical Sootety
held its annual meoting at Bay Shore
Hotel, Buckroo Beach, July 11th and
12th 1917. Quite a Iarge number of
Phystelans from all parts of the state
wore present
Medical and surgteal clintes wore
held at Whitaker Momorlal Hospital,
Nowport Nows. Mary sclentife pa-
Pors wero road.
‘The Society will mect next July at
Buckroo Beach. ‘Tho following ofeers
Wore clected for tho ensuing .torm:
Prosident, J. B. Darden, M. D., Potrs-
burg; 1st Vico Prosident, FR. Trigg,
M.\D,, Norfolk; 2nd Vico Prosldont,
J. H. Roberts, M. D., Roanoke; Seere:
tary, J. H. Blackwell, Jr., M. D., Rich-
mond’ (re-olocted); Recording 'Secre-
tary, R. A. Deane, M. D., Victoria (re-
olected); ‘Treasurer, A B, Greeno, M.
D,. Norfolk; Executive Committeo:—
D. W. Byrd, M. D., Norfolk, Chair-
man; ©. J. Bowen, M. D., Norfolk; @,
W. Franels, M.D, Norfolk; R.’ W.
Jones, M.D, Richmond; A.’ A, ‘Ton-
nant, M. D., Richmond,
PYTHIANS ENTER CTY POINT
Grand Chancellor Orenchios Lodge
Thero With Bright, Prospects
4 Gity Point, Va., July.16, 1917.
<A lodge of Knights of Pythias was
organized here last Saturday night by
Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr.
Ho motored down here fron teh
mond, with Robinson Davis at the
Wheel, With him wore Col, ‘Thomas
-M. Crump, Grand Keopor of Records
‘anid “Soal,'Dr. A. A. ‘Tonnant, Grand
Medical Register, Dr. E.R. Jefferson,
Supreme Representative. They arriy:
ed before dark and then returned to
Hewowolt, Where ‘they wero serva
luncheon ‘eat Byrd's Hotel. A violent
electrical storm came ap white they
Horo, there, bug thoy soon returned to
tho Masonte Hall, where. the candl-
dates had assembled
Lator, Sir W 'T, Stokes, ‘Grand In-
ner {Guard and Depuly Grand Chan.
fellor end Sir J. 2, WAvfamson and
Rov. L. J. Morris atriyed, ‘Phe initia:
font was spirited and interesting. Later
Sir Albert V. Norrell, Jr, and Sir M,
Alphoso Norrell, both of: whom had
also motored to this placo. with
Claronce Smith at the wheel arrived
telling of thelr terrible experiences,
having been caught in tho worst of
the storm, betweon Richmond and
Petersburg. ‘They had a puncture, but
this was quickly repaired.
It took them two hours ond a halt
(o make the trip. ‘They had to stop
on tho roadside to watt until the
worst part of the ston. sitbstded.
Alter the Inftation, tho’ following. of
Neors were Installed, Chanesilor Com
mander, R, lL. Wooks; "Mast ot of
Work, Hugene Jackson; Vico Chancel-
lor Robert H. Rpps; 'Prolate 1, J.
HMM; Master of Finaned W,.'H. Jones;
Maator of Exchequer W, H. Harrison;
Master at Arms H. UL, Stoptoo; Inner
Guard, Wiliam Shqrts; Outer Guard S.
Maballons Reus onira Qulok, Ni
etanotond nie
“BHO “now Hody wilfso Known as
James River Lodgo No; 212,
‘Tho visitors present wore A. V! Nor-
roll, Jr, M. Alphonzo Norrei, Gd, W.
Gilliam, John ‘Thos. Cook, ‘District
Deputy’ B. W. Wood.
‘Tho club was organized thragh the
offorts of Sir W. 'T. Stokes and Sir
J.B, Willlamson.” Tt was shortly atter
1 o'clock when the ‘visitors loft. for
Petersburg, Va. ‘Tho rain was falling
and tho car In which tho Grand
Chaneolior was traveling was poorly
Mighted owing to tho rain having put
the clectricdl equipment out of com
misaton,
Grand Chancellor Mitchell pratsea
Sir Stoked and Williamsom highly
48 he had been endeavoring to secure
@ lodge here for many years. Ho
was surprised to Mid Mr, Charloy
Campbell engaged in the" tonsorial
business here.
Mr. and Mrs. William Dandridgo of
New York City: .aro spending somo
{ime here the ‘guest of their nieco
Mrs, Mary Smith 1013 st, Jol St,
Mr. ‘Thomas Tinsley of Baltimore,
Md, ‘an’ old resident ‘of Richmond
spent some time in the'etty this weok.
» Mr. Wm. R. Knight of Forest Hill
‘Was called to Tarboro, N. C., July 11h
oft account of the death of his step-
father Jno. M. Houston. He returned
Saturday, July 14, 1917.
Mr. Jolin 1, Rogors, cousin of Mr.
John W. Moss is In the city, Ro ro-
sides at Mt Clair, N.J,
Dr. J. H. Blackwell, Jn., of South
Richmond, attended tho anhual meot-
ing of tho Old Dominio Medical
Soclety at Buckroe Beach; Va., July
11th and 12th.
Miss Gertrude Leo underwent sn
operation at, the Memorial, Hospital
Monday, July 16th, upon her throat,
which ‘she Has beon having trouble
for somo time. She is Improving
very nicely under Dr. Blackwoll.
Her father, of Suthoriand, Va. ie at
hor bed side. Sho is desfrous of hor
frlonds calling to soo \hor during her
ines at hor residence, 1401, West
Lolgh street. , ‘
(
MEMORIAL SERVIORS IN HONOR
OF DR. W. T. ANTHONY.
A Momortal Servico to the memory
of the late Pastor of Zion Baptlat
Church, Dr. W. T. Anthony. waa
held in Zion Baptist, Church, South
Richinond, Sunday, July 8, 1917, at
3:30 P. M. ‘The following program
was ronderod:
Hymn, lined by Rov. J. 8. Clat-
borno, D. D.; Scripture lesson, Rov.
Gi. W. Carrington; prayor, Dr.oR:
C. Williams; Solo, Rev.’ W. iN.
James, Jr.; reading rosolutions, Prot
Ji, Blaekwvell;: Momorial, Sermon,
Rov. T. J. King, D. D.; golo, Bro.
Richard Boyerly; short’ addresses,
Rev. M. H. Payne, Rev. L. A.
Groen, Rov. W. H. James, Dr. R. 6,
Williams, Roy. J. J. Woodson, Roy,
A. Kent, Rev. @.. W. Carsihgton;
Deacon Daniel Glenn; ottarite, Rey.
J. B. Braxton. L. C, Gatland, D:
D. wad mastor of coromonies, |”
A SHOCKING TRAGEDY.
| Something in the nature of a sen.
sation was cattsed when It was report
ed that a double tragedy had takon
place at the fashionable Odeon mov.
Ing pleture theatre on Sixth St, be.
tweeen Broad and Graco Sts Monday
afternoon. Mrs. Adel Btosh of the
Syrian colony was the central figure.
She was found in the theatre with
Albert Kalecl another married man,
Htosh Is alleged to have ordered him to
keep away from his wife. Kaleo! in
the struggle fred and seriously wound-
ed Btosh. After an examination by
the surgeons, Little hope was enter-
tained for his recovery,
Kaleo! started out of the theatre
hurriedly when he was ‘ntercopted. by
Detective Police Officer J. 1. Ridgo-
way, who fired at the man twiee, Ho
dropped dead. Later developments are
alleged to show that Kaleel also shot
himgelf. ‘The Coroner's Jury, how:
ever loft this matter open. 'The officer
Is under arrest, but ont on bond,
charged with murder. ‘The body. of
tho man was shipped to Goldsboro,
N.C. At this writing Btosh Was still
allve Mut hovering about death's
door,
AN APPEAL FOR AFRICA
My Dear Brother Wattor:—
‘The case against Brother Payno
aud wife In South Afriea is very acute,
and as T write you ho may be already,
adrift In tho ocean somewhere. ‘The:
luck of suflclent moneys to take care
of your work {8 one of the greatest
handicaps ‘with which we are per-|
plexed. ‘There should hayo beon a
thousand dollars placed at Brather
Bast's disposal two mauths ago, to
tako care of this Payno matter; but
Suis ceuleuneh ss upplled eohusake
thevmiondyye Pr
Pe Rn ee astnene on
Juno 16th, sonding the data in hand,
touching the matter of not allowing
our mtssionarles to land in South
Afriea, and recelved a lettor under
date of Juno 20th from tho Secretary
of Stato, In which he sald:
‘In reply you ‘re advised that tho
Amerlean Consul General at Capo
‘Town has beon Instructed by cable to
investigate the matter and to render
such assistance as may, bo proper in
tho promises.”
We aro calling upon ovory Baptist
ehureh hy sympathy! with "Ikingdom
building tn all parts of tho world ta
hold some kind of missionary: service
on tho Fifth Sunday in July, the 29th
take an offering and sond it to the
hoard Our books close with July, and
such an offering would. furnish. great
rollef for our workers and enable us
to £0 to the convention at Muskogee
nearer out of debt than Inst year. It
would be a beautiful sight Indeed to
seo ten thousand pastors of our church:
es preaching on "Tho Great. Commais.
sion” on that day and taking an of
foring from thelr flocks for the cause
to which our Lord gavo ils very life.
Surely, all heaven would look on such
A scone with great Joy.. *
‘Though T spent nearly four months
from the office visiting Africa, yet I
am glad to say the average giving of
churehes this year, $n somo cages, hus
been higher than over before. ' One
of our largo churches in this elty dur.
Ing this year has give §404.. Ono of
our smatior churchos has given $44.26.
A small chureh In_yestern Penney!
vania has givon $32.50, A middle
sized chureh in Now Orléans has con
tributed $35, ‘This has beon done on
tho plan of monthly giving. One
layman in South Carolina hias’ given
monthly aniounting to $11,
This matter of ovangeliaing the
world is laying hold of our: pastors
and churches as never bofore in all
tho years gond by,
Brother Pastor busy as you are as
many\noeds as confront ‘you, yous
board most enmestly requests and tn
the most brotherly” way Insists tha
you hear us for ‘this cause on that
day. Not for us, but for His sake, we
urge tt,
«Yours in’ His service,
L. @. JORDAN,
Dr. Gray Visite Us
Dr. Junius Gray pastor of the
Psalmist Boptist church and Managor
of the Maryland Votco, toured from
Baltimore, to Richmond in his. gos-
pol car, “Monday, July. i8, 1917 in
twelve shours, finding the ‘roads. ex-
tremoly bad for twonty miles He was
accompanied by his wife Mrs. Fannic
Gray, Rov W. H. Jackson and Miss
Ida Jones, the “secrotary of the
Psalmist Church Sunday School. Dr.
Gray visited his sick mothor | Mrs.
Sarah Gray in South Fourth St. Dr.
Gray is an “old Manchoster Boy” and
tho neoplo here welcomed him and his
guests with open arms. Whilo here
tho ontire party paid a flying viait to
Tho Planet office,
Mt! F. M. Brice, of Charloteo, N.
©. 1s now employed on tho Planet's
linotype battery.
ee
TROOPS IN REVIEW FOR LOCAL,
VISTLORS.
Col. Ballou Entertains Members of
the Chamber of Commerce. |
(Des Moines Register, July 11, 1917.)
Des Moines formally visited the Ne-
Bro officers’ training camp at Fort
Des Moines yesterday afternoon, was
entertained by the officers and their
wives and witnessed the ceremony of
retreat and a regimental review of
the thirteen companies.
Forty-five automobiies, carrying
membors of the Chamber of Commereo,
thelr wives and familtes, started from
the Shops building at 4:15 for the:
fort, whore they were Joined by ae
many mere who had driven out
separatoly,
‘Tho visitors, headed by directors
and members of the military affairs:
committes of the Chamber af Com-
meree, paraded around. the grounds|
of the fort, inspecting bulldings and
thon wero ‘recotved at Clayton hall
by tho omcers and thelr wives.|
Light refreshments were sorved. ”
SEP MRTHODS OF TRAINING, |
‘They were also given an oppor-
tunity ta soe methods employed in
the training of the candidates for
commissions In the oxeeution of drill
maneuvors and tho manual of arms bo-
foro the entire thirteen companies
wore marched into the formation for
retreat,
Promptly at 5:60 o'clock the gun
was fired, and the colors lowered as
tho Wrst regiment band played the
“Star Spangled Banner.’ ‘The rovlow
following, the, coremony. wad a, rovola:
Lion. tamany, of: tho ‘visitors \Wwho you:
terday ‘buy, ithe: Negro: solderayin pao,
ton for the second thio! 1:
In tho few seeks of training dhoy
have mado extraordinary progross
and as they marched by Colonol
Ballou in calumn of compantes
yesterday there wero straight Mnos,
uniform steps, well poised arms and
erect bearing throughout,
‘Tho visitors stood behind the re-
viowIng officer on the north sido of
tho parade grounds where they. wore
“able themsolves to review the soldiers
fas they passed him,
COLONPL BALLOU PLEASED.
Colonel Ballon expressed himself as
pleased with the courtesy of thé Oham-
bor of Commerce and other visitors
and as being espectally gratified at the
excellont showing made by the men,
Only 250 af the men now candi
dates for commisssion havo had_pre-
vious military “expertenee. ‘These
were gelecved from’ the most oMetont
nonednimhissioned officors of the four
existing colored -rogimonts of the-rog-
wlar army'and ‘ire asststing material:
ly In the training of the raw reerults,
Most of them taken from the ranks
Of professtonal mon, school teachers,
college professors, lawyers and bust
ness men, ,
RESOLUTION.
Adopted by the .U. 8. W. V..
July 4th, 1917,
‘Wo tho members of the Department
of The Potomac, U. 8. W. V. In con.
vention assembled on the 4th, day of
July 1917, in: tho elty of Petorsburg,
Va., desire to express our corifidence
In the ability and wisdom of our com-
rade
It, COL. CHARLES YOUNG, U.S. A.
His unblemished character as a gen:
tleman and a soldier, his valuable
service to his country’ and nation, at
homo and abroad, his devotion to duty,
when put upon him, has marked him
a8 a fit and suitable officer for a larger
and a more extensive field of opera:
ton,
‘Therefore be it,
Resolved, ‘That we doubt not, that
he ts worthy of the confidence of tho
COMMANDER-IN-CHIBF of the ARMY
and NAVY. of the United States of
America, ‘and that he be glyen an op:
portunity to do further gorvieo for his
country, THIS WH RESPECTFULLY
W. H. ANDERSON.
Rev. Dr. Goodall Weds.
Rev. Dr. L, B. Goodall, tho brilliant
pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church at
Waynesboro, Va., was mariled to the
accomplished Miss Bortha Louse
Werly at Harrisonburg, Va., Thursday
night, June 2ist. Rev. J."A. Jordan,
D. DB. the bride's: pastor porformed
the ceremony. A Wayneshoro special
committes conveyed the happy couple
to the parsonage. . A fine program was
rondered. at the church, Mr. Wm,
Hobson was master of coremonies.
Rov. Dr. Goodall ts much holoved by
the devoted csigregation.
{
INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS OW
LOCAL PYTHIAN AND COURT
ORGANIZATIONS
Notwithstanding the threatening
storm and occasional showors of rai,
thoro was a largo gathering present
at the Fitth Strect Baptist Church,
Tuosday night, July 17, 1917, to witt
ness the Installation Exereises of tho
officers of the courts and lodges of
the eity of Richmond. The exereises
ovened with the congregation singing
“God Bless Our Knightly Band.” The
names of the offcors of the lodges
and courts, as filed in the omeo of tho
Grand Chancellor wore read by Col,
‘Roscoo C. Mitchell.
Music for the occasion was furn-
ished by Prof. Joseph Matthews, who
with hls usual graco and enchantment
sang to the dollght of all present.
Mrs. Mary Satterfleld presided at tho
organ and rendered excellent services.
‘The roll of Grand Lodge and Grand
Court omeors residing in Tlekmond
was called and absontées noted. ‘Tho
omicers were Installed by the Grand
Chancellor and Grand Worthy Coun-
sellor, John Mitchell, Jr. assisted by
D. D. G, ©. L. J. Morris; D. D.
@. W. G., Mrs. Ley Cross, State
Deputy Mrs. Anna Toylor and G. M.
atA., Col. W. M1. Willis,
The Grand Chaneol'or gave a brick
report of the Supreme Lodge case
and of tho Grand Session just closed
at Staunton, Va. Rev. T. J. Mor-
rls, Distriet Deputy Grand Chancellor
prayed the opening and closing pray-
er. ‘The committee of arrangements
Miss’ M. L. Chiles, chairman, had
Doautifully Wocoratod the chireh In
the colors of the Order and a profus-
fon of cut flowers.
LAWYBR WARNS ‘TH CHICAGO
NEGROES TO) ARM, SELVES.
Se Weert RANE emote bees
Chicago, MH, July 6—The following
$s an oxtract “of an article which ap:
peared fh the Chleago Dally ‘Tribune,
fasuo July 4.
“Arm. yourselves now with guns and
pistols," sald Ferdinand 1. Barnett, 0
former jassistant state's attorney, ‘in
speaking to 100 Negro men at a mass
meeting, held last night to protest
against the riots and bloodshed in Kast
St. Louis, 'Tho meeting took place
at 3005 South State Street.
“Don’t buy an arsonal,” continued
Barnett, “but get enough guns to pro-
tect yourselves. You may be vietins
in Chicago within a fortnight of such
murders and outrages as havo taken
place in Bast St. Louls. And when
trouble starts let tis not hesitate to call
Upon our Negro militiamen to defend
a
: ‘
CONDEMNS STATE OFFICIALS
Barnett and.A. H, Roberts, another
speaker, “sponsored resolutions con-
domning Goy. Lowden and other pub-
Ue offiglals' “laxness of duty" because
the riots took place, and demanding
punishment of the participants in the
riots,
“Tho fact that the governor let this
mob run {ts course 1s forever a black
spot_on the execntive record of tho
sjate,” sald Mr, Barnett. “The of-
fleer ‘who told the militia not to shoot
should be court martiaied and brand-
eda traitor and murdered, 1 don't
Know who fs to, blame, but a mob is a
mob, and ought to’ be dispersed or
kitlea. 4
“Wo. are going’ to reetity this In
some way. The 10,000,000 of our race
will not stand for this massacre,
‘Bohind an army go the guerrilias—
looters, cowards and thieves. Behind
this rlot Is the pubite defense council,
whose culminations are written with:
out consulting a single Negro. ‘Thoy
breathe the same spirit as the mob of
Fast St. Louts did.
| HOLD ON TO YOUR GUNS.
“Get guns and put them in your
homos. ‘Protect yourselves. And lot
no black man permit a policeman to
come in and get those guns.”
Roberts told his andionce that ho
hoped “Gol would domand 100,000
white lives In the war for each Ne-
gro slaughtered in. Bast St. Louls.”
"I Tove my race better’ than my.
country,’ he shouted. “This country,
under Woodrow Wilson is asking us+to
carry the flag of democracy to. Bu-
Tope, God forbid that we take across
the Atlantic any of the democracy of
Fast St. Louis”
TELLS NEGROES TO ORGANIZE
/
1. W. Washington, dnothor speaker
told the Negroes to organize.
“Tho the governor that every No-
gro in Chicago and Tiiinols ts behind
theso resolutions,” he said, “and if wo
don't get justice from him, then send
to tho President of the nation.”
John Dotiglasson told the aiidionce
to preparo for similar rlots in Chicago,
‘Tho applause was loud while the
speeches wore heing made, A ploa
waa made for contributions to ‘pay
travoling expenses of Mrs, Ida Wella
Barnet t Springfleld to present roso-
lutions to Gov, Lowden.
HOW EAST SAINT LOI
WAS TURNED INTO
“A SMMGLES
B papshennie he Nic aa AAC a” fan drtcie PI
thirty black people by rietous whites
in Bast St. Louis, IIL, on Monday,
July 2. Tt was the most” wanton
erhne of which a community was
ever guilty, and it cannot be denied
that It Was the erime of the com-
munity, since had right actian been
taken, prompted by consideration for
the responsibilities of eltizonship, the
conmiunity could have prevented the
Victows outbreak, having had ample
warntug,
Comménly spoken of as mob work,
it was not Hke any mob — violence
with which In thirty years of news:
paper work I have ever come in con-
fact. ‘The killers of the blacks were
not moved by any spirit of frenzy.
‘Phere was vengeance in It, but not
the vengeance excited by an hnme-
diate precipitating cause, Lynchivgs
are as a rule passionate expressions
of viclousness. Mobs {hat execute the
Jaw of Judge Lynch are usually
formed suddenly and act with haste,
Always there must be a lester, and
always passion must be inflamed. 1u
Bast SL. Lauis the rioting was not
suddenly started. The uction was not
that of maddened men and women.
There docs not seem to have been
any one particular leader. very
man and woman—yes, there were
Women In the very midst of the
bidody carnival—was his own cap-
tain, and there was but a single
fdea: “Cop a coon." 1 uso the ex-
pression tial was heard thousands
of times while the skiughtor was In
progress.
Never have I witnessed anything
Just Ike the: tragedy that converted
practically the entire elty of Hast
St. Lou's, IL, a elty with a popule
Ucn of a) proximately 60,000, one of
the largost industrial contres of the
Mississipp! Valley, into a shambles.
‘Tho destruction’ of property was
not so great as \t would haye voon
“Md uot chery UE AeMOFation in
the work of tho burners, prompting
rom to confine the fires to tho spo-
clally selected centros of Negro pop:
ulation, Probably 326 houses, small
amd large, were burned, Far the
larger number of these were shaeks'
aud shanties of Wo or three rooms,
‘The rost, with the exception of the
Broadway ‘Theatre, afatrly preten-
{lous structure, were old two story
frames, formerly the dwelling places
Of white people, but long ago aban-
doned to the Mess and the horde
of undesirable female harples that
Nave from Ume immemorial infested
Kast St. Louis. The actual property,
lass will approximate $600,000, in-
oluding a number of freight’ cars
loaded with merchandise. |
s, Bast St. Louls, of perhaps itis
faiver to say a certain part of the
poputlation of Bast St. Louis, several
months agd determined to get rid of
tthe Negroes. Wirst it was thought to,
Aiscourage the incoming blacks, but.
efforts wero useless In this direction,
Labor was needed and the black 1a.
Hor of ‘the South was especially
wanted because of the decreasing
danger of labor troubles due to tho
well known indisposition of the blacks
fo "unlontze,” '
Labor agents honeycombed the
South and shipped in the Negroes.
‘This is denied by some of the re-
sponsible heads gt the industries in,
Enat St. Louis, but it is tuo. Right
here is where one of the vilest and
most iniquitous features of the af-
dair comes dn, I have it from sev-
eral persons who are well posted
that one of the argumonts put forth
by men hiring black labor for Bast
Sl Louis was that in coming to the
State of Abe Lincoln the Nogro was
Bure vastly to benefit himself, ‘That
"Slate of Lincoln” phrase was played
for all that could be got out of it.
Something near 10,000 blacks havo
een brought from different sections
of the South to Hast St. Louis, Some
employers put the number atl 8,600.
Labor Jeadors say that many stuck in
Bast St. Louis, but many others re-
turned South or went elsewhere, not
taking Kindly to the heavy labcr in
{he steel mills, foundries and other
Jron manufacturing concorns. ‘Twenty
soven hundred are said to have
found employment. For each of
these four iependents, wamen and
children, are reckoned. ‘There were
many among them who wore far
from desirable as residents, reyard-
less of employment considerations.
Organized labor repudiates all re.
sponsibility far anything — connected
with the butehery, yet it is a fact
that several labor ‘leaders’ have como
owt with long and strong explana.
tons of how the Negroes were
brought in as strike breakers and
tok the places of white men in the
great industries.
‘Whon the Negroes came in despite
the efforts to discourage them from
invading the Eapt St, Louis territory
attempts were made to drive them
out by Inthaldation of one kind and
another. It eannot be denied that
there was a marked Increase of
erimos of a vicious charactor as the
influx of Negroes grew. ‘The streets
and low rescrls were filled with tale
and more or less vielous blacks;
holdups and robbories wore frequent,
end there. ware Many becthel’ cna
ee:
‘This dad situaticn, considerably
exaggerated by those’ interested in
placing the Negroes In the worst pos-
sible repute, culminated in an espo-
clally viclous holdup and shooting,
occuring on May 28. A mob demau-
stration was made against the Ne-
groe, and many families were run
out of town after two or three were
slain,
Tho blacks wero not wise enough
to stay away, but drifted back in
pairs and by ‘families and in small
Kroups until the sections in whieh
‘hey made their homes were again
{iekly populated. ‘They seem to
have been emboldened or made des:
perate by thelr experience, and it is
known that there was @ pretty woll
planned schome for crgantzation for
defense, if not for offense, A police
sergeant, Coffedge, an especially eft
clout and brave man, was shot to
death white riding in ‘an automobile
with three other perscns. It was
known that Negroes fired on the auto
party, thinking the oflicers were about
to “rald their miserable abiding
places—which was not the caso.
‘That killing of Police Sergeant Coit:
edge might be sald to have beon the
match that fired the powder, only,
a8 1 have expiained, there was noth:
ing Uke a suden explosion indicating
the presence of either match cr pow
der, watt, choose what words we may,
the slaying of tat police officer was
the act that brought on the whole:
sale butchery of blacks.
‘The blacks resisted when an at.
tempt was made to arrest some of
thelr number for Ikilling and for
other ethnes. ‘Then eame the men
& “the women with firearms, ropes
and bludgeons, ‘The work may be
sald to have heen gone about with
method, yet there was no: organtza-
lon In the sense of there being a
leader or oboyiug directions. "Get a
Migger” sudaenly became the order
of the day fur Monday, July 2, and
that order held good for almost
twelve hours before the Ilinois Na-
Honal Guard, fourteen campantes of
which were rushed to the scene from
all over the State, could get the up-
per hand of the Killers and burners.
Tam not doing violence to the plain
truth when I say. there was prac:
Lically no effort on the part of elther
polico or militiamen to protect the
blacks. It is not even pretended that
these eonservers of the peace weve
not In sympathy with those who
were nig and burning and aan
hunting black people, As tor the
police, they were clearly willing that
the ittmost vengeance should ‘ve
mted out to as many blacks as pos-
sible because of the killing of Ser-
geant Coffedge. Whether these ex-
planations dol or do not meet the sit-
uation, it is a fact, and I repeat it
deliborately, that little effort was
mado olther to save the blacks, pro-
vont the Kings and burnings ‘ss
capture and punish the white buteh-
crs, Many arrests were made, it 1s
true, but not one among those ar-
rested took the matter seriously. In
fact,"It was one of the most horrible
features of tho whole terrible affalr
that while the slaying and the maim
ing and the burning wore proceeding
thdso engaged in them sesmed — to
take tho matter as a foke, Strange
as It may sound, I do not believe one
man In ten—not one In a hundred—
showed any ovidenco of fll tempor.
Nobwdy, vory fow at least, scemed
unBTY. ‘
Tt Was different, though, with the
women who took a’hand Inthe bloody
business. ‘They made black women
and girls Uholr especial victims. It
js not of récord that any women
actually killed a negress, but thelr
brutality stopped Just short of that,
One weMman Was armed with a butch:
er's cleaver, another with the brass,
faucet of ‘a beor barrel, Mostly,
hough, tho women earried clubs and
stones, and those Mey used merel-
lessly. :
‘The affair as a whole piled up a
heavy ‘ill of cost for East St, Louls,
livery Isurance policy on property
nurned especially excepted.such do-
struction, East St. Louis ean be
sued for nogiecting to give adequate
protection. More than that, there 1s
ground for suit on the part of every
maimed vielim and on tho part of)
the families of every man killed.
Not only did Bast St. Louls, St. Clair,
county and the State of Tlifnola fall
to give proper protection to fe and
property, but many public offteers
were open in their sympathy avith
those who did this thing to rolteve
East St. Louis of its black popula-
Uion, !
ccc ae '
ELMIRA NOTES,
Eimira, N Y.—The Social given at
the Momimental Baptist chureh for
the honefit of Pastor Cufi’s going away
for two weeks was a grand success,
for which ho and his “wife wish to
thank the members and friends.
Misa Allene Waters of Ithaca ts
eponding the Summer with her aunt
Mrs. Nollie B. Thompson of High St.
| Mrs, Mary Aldrich spent Sunday in
‘Penn Yan, N Y., going there to bring
Miss Hope who’ has been sponding
seme time there,
| Seven more walters for the hotel
Longwell arrived in this city from
Reading, Pa., Saturday.
Mrs. H. B, Parker of Washington,
D.C, and Miss Elnora Burns of Troy,
Pa, stopped over Sunday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Taylor on thoft
way to Saratoga Springs,
| ‘he Revs C. B. Cuff and R. M. Per.
rin loft, Monday for tho Tntordenom!
national Ministorial Association — at
| Montrose, Pa,
| Mrs. Tizelo Richardson of New
| York is visiting her aunt Mrs. CD.
| Chaney.
‘Theo. Brent had the misfortune te
blow off a joint of his index finger on
the 4th of July and burned his eye
quite badly.
} Mr. and Mrs, W. R. Taylor spent. the
4th of July at ‘the home ot the latter's
paronts in Mansfield, Pa.
Mrs, © B, Cuff will’ spend two weeks
pi er“ mother in Wost Pitser
"a.
Read tho Planet if one you wil
want it always a papor for the Negro’
welfare North, and South,
‘Agent Novie\S. Chaney.
THE RICHMOND PLANEL, RIUHRCOND, VIRGINIA
MYS1ERIOUS LETDER PUBLISHED
BY REQUBS.
Newspapers throughout the United
States aro printing what is alleged
to be a letter written by Christ.
In: this letter was an Injunction
that It’ should be" published 10. the
world by whoever found it, together
with a statomeut that misfortune and
pad Iuck would follow tho person
having possession of It in the’ event
that It Was not glven publlelty.
Thero was likewise a promise that
whoever may have n copy of thls tn
his or her possession will” prosper
and be followed by good fortuve
According to the histery of the lot
ter It was written by Christ just
ater His Cruchiaiun, stgned by. the
angel Gabriet nluety-nine years after
the Savier’s birth” and” prosumably
deposited by lama under a stone. a
the foot of the cress.
On ile stone appeared the follow.
Ing: “BLESSED IS HE WHO SHALL
TURN MB OVER”
No eno know what the Inseription
meant, or seemed to have sumetont
curiosity to hnveatigate, until the
etone was turned over by a Ute
child and the letter whieh follows
was discovered:
“Whosoever works on the Sabbath
day shall be cursed, T command you
to go lo church and Keep holy. the
Tord’s day, without. any. manner of
work, You shall not. idle or mis:
spond your time In. bedecking. your:
solf In suporiluities of costly apparel
and vain dressing for T have ofered
+s a day of rest. L will have that day
Kept itoly that your sins may be fore
given yaa.
“You will not breale my command.
ments, Init observe them and. keep
(hom, thoy belng written, by my hand
and ‘spoken from my. mouth. You
shall not only go to chureh yourself,
but also your man servant and matd
servant. Observe | my words and
earn my commandments,
“You shall finish your work every
Saturday at six o'etosk In the after.
oon at whieh hour the preparation
for the Sabbath beklus. Lndvise you
to fast vo days inthe year, best.
ning on geod Friday and veontiuuing
tho “five “days foliowing In remente
brance of the five bloody wounds. T
recelved for you and mankind,
“You shall love one another and
cause them that are not baptized to
come to church and recelve the Holy
Sacrament, that {s to say Baptism,
and then the supper of the Lord, and
be mace a member theroot, in so do-
ing Twit give you long Ife. and
many blessings. Your land. shall. be
replenfshed and bring forth in abun.
dance, and C will comfort you in the
greatest temptation, and ‘surely ‘he
that dooth to the contrary shall be
cursed.
“I will also send hardness of heart
on them, and especially on hardened
and unpenttont wnbellovers, Ie. that
hath ‘given to the poor shall find It
broftable, Remember. the Sabbath
day, for’ the seventh ‘day I" have
taken a a rosting day unto; mysole
“And ho that hath a copy of this
lottor written by my own. hand. and
spoken by my awn mouth and. keep:
tb It without publistiing: # to others
shail net prompor, but ho. that pub.
Ushoth It to others shall bo blossed
by mo and if thelr sins bo ns many
as stars by might, and if they (uly
believe they shall be pardoned. and
they that bellove not this writing
and my commandments will havo my
plagites “upon you nud you Wilt bo
consumed with your children, goods
and cattle and all-othor worldly. on.
Joymonts that Ihave given you, Do
but once think of what T hive suffered
for you, If you do It will be well for
you in ‘this world and inthe world
which Is {0 como. :
“Whosoever shall have a copy of
this letter and keep it In tholr houso,
nothing shall hurt thom, neither: pes.
Ulenco thunder nor Hghtning, and it
® woman bo in birth and. put. her
trust In me sho shall ‘bo delivered
@f hor child. You shall hoar no more
nows of me except through the Toly
Scriptures, until the day of Judie
ment. Ail goodness and’ prosperity
shall be in he house wherever a copy
4 this letter” shall bo found,
Finished.” '
‘Tho story Koos that the ttle child
Who found it passed it to one who
became convert to. the Christian
faith. Ho falled ta have tho letter
published, Ie kept tt, howover, as
& sacred memento of Christ and it
passed down to different generations
of his family for more than one thou.
sand years.
During tls period the family sue
fored repeated misfortunes, moved to
Gifferont’ countries until finally one
cf them came to. Amertea, bringing
the lotter with them, ‘They sottled
in Virginia, then moved farther
south, sulll followed ‘by mtstortune,
when’ finally the last- member,
daughter, approached hor death ‘bed
and called « nolghbor, Mra, ‘Thomp-
son, giving her the letter and relating
its history for more than a thousand
years, ‘The ‘Thompson woman began
the attempt to havo It published and
It rst appoared in the Rome, Git,
‘Tribime on October Bist, i801. It
then appeared In the Dalton, Ga,
Citizen’ and “Mra, Wortman, now lv:
Sect a eee Wewemane DOW, Live
FOR RENT.
3 Room Fiat on St. Pant St,
3 Room Flat on Preston St.
3 Room Wat on Fourth St,
5 Room Wat on Fifth St.
6 Room House on Duval St.
4 Room House on Cabell St.
Store on St John St,
Store or office on 2nd. St.
Stores or offices in Millor’s Hotol
Wood yard at Adam & Loigh Sts,
Apply to,
3B. A. CRPHAS,
535 1-2 N, Second St.
BOVES OF WAR NOW
Carrlee Pigeons Will Ald U. 8.
‘ Forces In France,
beccnccreccccooces
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Pi ae Sealab ea
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Photo by American Press Association,
| The United States signal corps 1s
not overlosking anecihine! BER es
wiroleane Rene eieiMones wee
Hraphe nd Star genes fet ge
Communication ie pecueet deed
carrier piecone. Fees ne Bette
tiny Be Perwarea wneleastns' mitercse
Shel, but the wiptane ansehen
picture with thelr trainer are depend
Bho nee ant hee Fell
Hollweg Tells Reichstag Seven
; Will Retire,
MUST FIGHT AND CONQUER
German Chancellor Declares Oppoel.
tion to Plan to End the War wes
eas
| Gorman Imporfal Chancellor von
Bothmann-Hollweg, according to. a
despatch from Amsterdam quoting
the Koelnischo Volkszoltung, prom:
feed tho. vetdhateys. that ho: would
consent to tho resignation from the
cabinet of Foreign Minister Zimmer
mann and Dr. Karl Heliforich, soore-
ary of the Interior and vlo9 chancel
lor, é a
fn addition, five membors of the
Prusstan cabinet will be asked to re-
sign.
| Tt Is belleved this doctaton reflects
the emperor's decision to stand by the
chancellor tn the crisis,
| According to. Rerlin newapapers
reaching Berno, Switzerland, the chan:
‘collor told the reichstag that “th for
mula of pence without annoxations ts
unacceptable to us, We cannot de-
clare our terms of peace. Wo must
‘fight and conquer."
| Phe chancellor made a strong at:
tack on Mathias Srbzerger, loader of
‘the Catholle center, who assalled the
-pan-Germans fn hls address hetore the
main committee Inst week and advo-
cated peace -without annexations or
indemnitles, Dr. von Rethmann-Hotl
weg sald Herr Brbzergor’s. attitude
was wnpatrtotie,
|, A Rerlin despatch to the Cologne
Gazette, as cabled from Amsterdam
says that after tho chancellor made his
address, Mathing Rrbzerger, the cen:
trist lender. declared that the debate
had strengthened his conviction that
tho whole situation required energottc
ction by the relchstng. He combat
ted violently the claims of the Pan:
Gormans and other annextontats.
‘To this the chancellor, according te
tho summary of his speech published
tn the Lokal Anzelger, of Borlin,
sata:
“Wo must continue the war with out
whote energlos T do not dony that
wo have great difficultios to overeome
Dut so have our enemies, Wo shall
seo whethor thelr differences or our:
aro grenter. Tam suro we oan win
it wo hold out.
“Nothing was further from my in’ o”
ton than to cling tb my post, but now
it 1s a question of protecting the Fath
erland from injury, and for this reasor
T consider st necessary to retain m3
Post.”
‘The crown counell called by Wmper
or Willlam was uold in Rerlin, accord
ing to an Fxchange Telegraph des
patch from Amaterdam, but no an
nouncement as to what took place a
the gathering has beon mado, althoug!
It Is believed suffrage reform was de
elded on.
It ts helfoved, says the despatch
that one of the results of the counct
will be the Introduction of a franchts
Dill for Prussia eranting wilvorsal, al
rent suffrage and the secret ballot.
A wiroless despateh sent. from Ber
Un says that the situation fs unchang
ed, ‘Tho tension, If anything. ts mor
Intenso. ‘The sessison of the relct
tag was rather a perfunctory affalr.
TWO DIE IN THE CHAIR
Double Execution Brings State's Tota
Up to Twenty-Two.
A double olectrocution took place
at tho Rockview penitentlary a
Bollofonte, Pa., whon John Nolson
of Wyoming county, was put to death
for the murder of a man named Sigle:
in Octobot, 1915, and Patrick Callery
‘of Northampton. county, went to the
oath ouatr for the murder of his sls
ter, Mrs. George Grube, in April, 1916
Nelson was pronounced tend by
Robert J. Campbell, as was Callery,
‘The two clectrocutions mako twenty
two sluce the taw of electrocution wen!
{nto offect In Pennsylvania,
Nelson steadily refused to rovea
anything ahont his past,
WEDNESDAY.
‘Tho soldtors of revolutionary Rus
ofa maintained thotr attempts to brouk
through the Austro-German lines In
eastern Galicia, Cheered by tho re-
sults of the Aghting during the fret
threo days of July, Genoral Brussiloft's
men continue their efforts, especially
fn tho region of Brzozany, and are
throwing fresh forcos agalnst tho Teu-
ton positions. °
In the Champagne on tho western
front the German crown prince has
mado another desporate and fruttless
effort to break the Fronch Ines north
west of the Rhelms. Attacking in force
atong an oleven-milo front, the Ger
mans made especially strong offorte
around Corny wna Alllles and against
the Californie plateau, ‘Tho French
repulsed all attacks with losses,
THURSDAY. |
wn eastern Galicia the Austro-Ger
man forces are evidently in an uncom
fortable position at somo points a
the result of the Russian advance
whero thoy have been reported hom
med in on three sides. An attack was
Ieunched upon the Russians, but th
Russtans promptly broke it up by gun
fire.
Notable activity ts developing {i
Bolgtum. Germany senses the tren
of thinge there, and extraordinary v1
fo:cs by her airmen to find out wha
4s golng on behind the British Mnes
aro reflected In the official atatements
Genoral Petain, on the French front
i bending his efforts toward retaining
Intact all the commanding position:
his troops now occupy. ‘The Intes
German attempt to wrest control o
an {mportant sector on the Aisne fron
him not only came to naught witl:
heavy German losses, Paris says, but
tho French in their ‘reretion took 1
saltent near Cerny from the Germans
RIDAY.
Intense artillery activity by the Ru
stans and Teutons {s reported enst «
Lemberg where General Brustloft ear
this week began a push toward th
Galician capital, with Zlocholl on th
‘Tarnopol-Krasne railway, as his tram:
Alate objective.
Noar Narayvula, to the southenst +
Lemborg the Austro-German guns ar
busy bombarding the Russians cast «
LApntendoina,
Having failed In thelr effort to arty
the French from thetr commendln
positions on the Chomin-des-Damoe, ¢
the Aisne front, the Germans aro ti
Ang attention to the Champnene. A
Lacks were made by the erown priiae
troops wost of Mont Carnil'ot a-
southeast of Takure. Paris says the
were easily repulsed.
o BATURDAY. —,
General Brussiloff seoms to hav
boon arranging a surprise, Judein;
from tho reports from Petrograd 0
violont fighting tn progross, In th
Plnsk atatrict,
‘Thero had been no moztion of an
of tho officint statements recently 0
any espectal activity anywhore aloni
the Russfan Ine except In Gallein an
tho sectors Immediately adjacent. ‘Th
Foport from Pinsk, 150 miles north o
the Gallelan border therefore has in
the clement of surprise for the world
§€ not for the Germans,
On the Franco-Relxtan front the Bri
{sh have made another forward thrust
slightly advancing thelr Ine west 9
Wytsehacte in the Rolgian distric
whore General Plumer blew the Gei
mans out of an extended salient eas
‘of Moseines rdge last month,
SUNDAY.
North of the Aisne tho French agait
have checked the German crow!
prince in an effort to rogatn the line o
the Chemin-les-Dames. Attnckine 01
four sectors along a front of seven ani
a half miles from north of the Laffan:
mill to the irofdmont farm, the Ger
mans wore met by detormined ress!
ance on the part of the French and
sustaining henvy losses, wore repulse
completely except on the eastern on
of the ino between Rovettes an
Froldmont farm,
‘Tho artillery and Infantry Aghtin:
in eastern Gaifcia {6 spreading, ‘Th
Rusatan attacking front now ha
lengthened to thi-ty miles and th
fighting {s in progress around Halte:
the key to Lemberg, capital of Galtcis
German efforts to dislodge the Ru:
stans from the positions galned a
Godoy and Kontuchy a weok ago hav
been repulsed by Goneral Brusstloft
men,
‘On tho British front in France ther
have been several smatl rafds, but n
infantry engagements of importance.
E MONDAY.
New and powerful blows are being
struck by the Russians In Galicia, Ap
parently they have broken the Austro
German Ine west of Stanistan, soutt
of Hallez, The official from’ Petro
grad not only reports Important gatn:
fn the Stanislaw aroa, but declare
Russian cavalry is pursuing the enemy
‘This pursuit already has reached th
Lukva river.
‘Phe renewed onslaught brought with
it not only additional territory bu
7000 prisonors and forty-otght guns, in
eluding a dozen large callbor pleces
Pho total Russian captures of men fi
tho present remarkable offensivo 1s 1
‘excess of 25,000,
‘Thoro {6 dittle but local Aghting
along the British front In northor
®rance, but further down the Iino th
Germans are giving tho French Jittl
rest. Attack after attack Is bein
launched by the crown prince in. at
tempts to shake tho French from the!
positions along the Chemin-des-Dame:
OOLORED PROPLEA HAI”
Natural rout Part—Oorere Kare teed
att dice of role Wie, Plate
‘Transformations, “Pui,” Straighten!
Sey Soh, Bas
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WANTHD—25 Men and Women to
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on commiosion. Apply Mochantes
Bank Bldg., Room 204—2nd fioor.
00D PROPOSITION—SEND $1.00
for Big $1.75 Packago of Sallino
Pain Cure and become a rogular
agont, Easy Seller. Saline Mtg.
Co., 912 N. ist, Richmond, Va.
Peso eo ego eee eee tsetse the ete ho ete ay
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Goop FOR FIVE vorrs
ee an
(Chureh-hill)
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sa ‘Tottor Salvo & Meilleated Shampoo $00
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(Cam! tomploe, of long standing, per box, 760.
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Office, Room 405, Mechanics Bank Bldg. Phone, Ran. 2637
Residence, 619 N. First St.—Shop in Rear. Phone, Randolph 2166
Specina Attention Pald to the Taking of Contracts for Building
of Any Kind of Architecture. Job Work A Specialty,
ince instr aes 2
:
ROBERT C. SCOTT, Funeral Director
FIRST CLASS LIVERY. OFFICE 2220 E. MAIN ST.
TELEPHONE, RANDOLPH 2073. ALL NIGHT
AND SUNDAY, CALL RANDOLPH 2703.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
| & IT REALLY HAPPENED!
A DESPERATE BLOODLESS FIGHT wife secured a clut
Husband and wife had occupied was knocked cold.
all of the forenoon, emphasizing the tory threw the wi
fact that each could beat the other she decided tok!
to a pulp and was ready and willing killg was good.
utes, upon the slightest provocation. began to carve hi
‘There was no working in the neigh- tho blade across h
borhood that morning, every house- stabbed him a cou
keeper was on tho Job enjoying tho breast, right wher
fuss and praying for a fight. Tho be and thon plung
neighborhood hadn't had a row for ach (which used t
for news material. The wordy bat- panie-stricken and
Ue aueed Ne wiih the tine Tae
two contending parties. Finally the from her—THS B
WANTED
FEMALE
EMBALMER
MADAME LUCIE CHRISTIAN
SCOTT is associated in business
with her husband, Mr. Alpheus
Scott. Madame Scott claims the
honor of being the only Negro wo-
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Embalming, 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 or-
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Your patronage and influence
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Orricr
3006 P Street, Phone, Mad. 2337
Resioxnce
1015 St. James St., Madison 6619
VIRGINIA—In the Law and Equity
Court of tho City of Richmond, the
42th day of Juno, 1017,
WILLIAM HICKS,........Platutitt
vs.
MINNIW HICKS........ + Dofondant
‘The object of tho above styled suit
is to obtain a divores from the bond
of matrimony, by tho plaintiff from
the defondant on tho grounds of
abaniionment and adultery.
And an affidavit having been maile
and filed that the dofendant Minnie
Hicks is a non-resident of tho State
of Virginia, it is ordored that she
appear here within fifteon days after
due publication of this order and Yo
whatover is necessary to protect her
interests herein.
A Copy—toste:
LUTHER LIBBY, Clerk.
IR. POLLARD, pq.
————————
S.C. Waldron
PAPER HANGING
WALL PAINTING AND
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WARPROOM
§ WAST Woburn ‘SERMAGR”
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Gloss & Tomrle Food, each 860 per bor.
‘Tottor Salvo & Meilleated Shampoo $00
each por box. Bxcelstor Special ‘Temple
Food tor aggravated casos of baldness of
tomples, of long standing, por box, 750.
Onco tried, theso proparations are always
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your earning capacity, and handle our
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PREPARATIONS are mado only by—
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265 8. Bland Bt., Bluefield, W. Va.
wife secured a club and whacked tho
husband on the head. ‘Tho old boy
was knocked cold. ‘This partial vic-
tory threw the wife in a rage, and
she decided to kill him while the
Killing was good. Grabbing a knife
sho straddled the prostrate form and.
began to carve him up. She drew
tho blade aeross hts throat and then
stabbed him a couple of times in the
byeast, right where the heart should
be and thon plunged ft into his stom-
ach (which used to bo a whiskey ro-
eoptacle.) Tho nolghbors became
pantestricken and rushed to prevent
the murder. A man grabbed tho trate
wife and the neighbors took away
from her—DH8 BUTTER KNIFB!
THE PLANET
HOW EAST SAINT LOUIS WAS TURNED INTO A SHAMBLES
(New York Sun—July 10.)
There is absolutely no possible justification for the slaughter of thirty black people by riotous whites in East St. Louis, Ill., on Monday, July 2. It was the most wonton crime of which a community was ever guilty, and it cannot be denied that it was the crime of the community, since had right action been taken, prompted by consideration for the responsibilities of citizenship, the community could have prevented the vicious outbreak, having had ample warning.
Commonly spoken of as mob work it was not like any mob violence with which in thirty years of news paper work I have ever come in contact. The killers of the blacks were not moved by any spirit of frenzy. There was vengeance in it, but not the vengeance excited by an immediate precipitating cause. Lynchings are as a rule passionate expressions of viciousness. Mobs that execute the law of Judge Lynch are usually formed suddenly and act with haste. Always there must be a leader, and always passion must be inflamed. In East St. Louis the rioting was not suddenly started. The action was not that of maddened men and women. There does not seem to have been any one particular leader. Every man and woman—yes, there were women in the very midst of the bloody carnival—was his own captain, and there was but a single idea: "Cop a coon." I use the expression that was heard thousands of times while the slaughter was in progress.
Never have I witnessed anything just like the tragedy that converted practically the entire city of East St. Louis, Ill., a city with a population of a proximately 60,000, one of the largest industrial centres of the Mississippi Valley, into a shambles.
The destruction of property was not so great as it would have been had not there been demolition in the work of the burners, prompting them to confine the fires to the specially selected centres of Negro population. Probably 325 houses, small and large, were burned. Far the larger number of these were shacks and shanties of two or three rooms. The rost, with the exception of the Broadway Theatre, affairly pretentious structure, were old two story frames, formerly the dwelling places of white people, but long ago abandoned to the blanks and the horde of undesirable female harpies that have from time immemorial infested East St. Louis. The actual property loss will approximate $500,000, including a number of freight cars loaded with merchandise.
East St. Louis, or perhaps it is fairer to say a certain part of the population of East St. Louis, several months ago determine to get rid of the Negroes. First it was thought to discourage the incoming blacks, but efforts were useless in this direction. Labor was needed and the black labor of the South was especially wanted because of the decreasing danger of labor troubles due to the well known indisposition of the blacks to "unionize."
Labor agents honeycombed the South and shipped in the Negroes. This is denied by some of the responsible heads of the industries in East St. Louis, but it is true. Right here is where one of the vilest and most iniquitous features of the affair comes in. I have it from several persons who are well posted that one of the arguments put forth by men hiring black labor for East St. Louis was that in coming to the State of Abe Lincoln the Negro was sure vastly to benefit himself. That "State of Lincoln" phrase was played for all that could be got out of it.
Something near 10,000 blacks have been brought from different sections of the South to East St. Louis. Some employers put the number at 3,500. Labor leaders say that many stuck in East St. Louis, but many others returned South or went elsewhere, not taking kindly to the heavy labor in the steel mills, foundries and other iron manufacturing concerns. Twenty seven hundred are said to have found employment. For each of these four dependents, women and children, are reckoned. There were many among them who were far from desirable as residents, regardless of employment considerations. Organized labor repudiates all responsibility for anything connected with the butchery, yet it is a fact that several labor leaders have come out with long and strong explanations of how the Negroes were brought in as strike breakers and took the places of white men in the great industries.
When the Negroes came in despite the efforts to discourage them from invading the East St. Louis territory attempts were made to drive them out by intimidation of one kind and another. It cannot be denied that there was a marked increase of crimes of a vicious character as the influx of Negroes grew. The streets and low resorts were filled with idle and more or less vicious blacks; holdups and robberies were frequent, and there were many brothel and
barrel house broils, with an occasional killing. This bad situation, considerably exaggerated by those interested in placing the Negroes in the worst possible repute, culminated in an especially vicious holdup and shooting, occurring on May 28. A mob demonstration was made against the Negroe, and many families were run out of town after two or three were slain.
The blacks were not wise enough to stay away, but drifted back in pairs and by families and in small groups until the sections in which they made their homes were again thickly populated. They seem to have been emboldened or made desperate by their experience, and it is known that there was a pretty well planned scheme for organization for defense, if not for offense. A police sergeant, Coffedge, an especially efficient and brave man, was shot to death while riding in an automobile with three other persons. It was known that Negroes fired on the auto party, thinking the officers were about to raid their miserable abiding places—which was not the case. That killing of Police Sergeant Coffedge might be said to have been the match that fired the powder, only, as I have explained, there was nothing like a sudden explosion indicating the presence of either match or powder. . .at, choose what words we may, the slaying of that police officer was the act that brought on the wholesale butchery of blacks.
The blacks resisted when an attempt was made to arrest some of their number for killing and for other crimes. Then came the men a. the women with firearms, ropes and bludgeons. The work may be said to have been gone about with method, yet there was no organization in the sense of there being a leader or obeying directions. "Get a nigger" suddenly became the order of the day for Monday, July 2. and that order held good for almost twelve hours before the Illinois National Guard, fourteen companies of which were rushed to the scene from all over the State, could get the upper hand of the killers and burners.
I am not doing violence to the plain truth when I say there was practically no effort on the part of either police or militiamen to protect the blacks. It is not even pretended that these conservers of the peace were not in sympathy with those who were ing and burning and man hunting black people. As for the police, they were clearly willing that the utmost vengeance should be imputed out to as many blacks as possible because of the killing of Sergeant Coffedge. Whether these explanations do or do not meet the situation, it is a fact, and I repeat it deliberately, that little effort was made either to save the blacks, prevent the killings and burnings.
capture and punish the white butchers. Many arrests were made, it is true, but not one among those arrested took the matter seriously. In fact, it was one of the most horrible features of the whole terrible affair that while the slaying and the maiming and the burning were proceeding those engaged in them seemed to take the matter as a joke. Strange as it may sound, I do not believe one man in ten—not one in a hundred—showed any evidence of ill temper. Nobody, very fow at least, seemed angry.
It was different, though, with the women who took a hand in the bloody business. They made black women and girls their especial victims. It is not of record that any women actually killed a negress, but their brutality stopped just short of that. One woman was armed with a butcher's cleaver, another with the brass faucet of a beer barrel. Mostly, though, the women carried clubs and stones, and these they used mercilessly.
The affair as a whole plied up a heavy bill of cost for East St. Louis. Every insurance policy on property burned especially excepted such destruction. East St. Louis can be sued for neglecting to give adequate protection. More than that, there is ground for suit on the part of every maimed victim and on the part of the families of every man killed. Not only did East St. Louis, St. Clair county and the State of Illinois fall to give proper protection to life and property, but many public officers were open in their sympathy with those who did this thing to relieve East St. Louis of its black population.
ELMIRA NOTES.
Elimira, N. Y.—The Social given at the Monumental Baptist church for the benefit of Pastor Cuff's going away for two weeks was a grand success, for which he and his wife wish to thank the members and friends.
Miss Aliene Waters of Ithaca is spending the Summer with her aunt Mrs. Nellie E. Thompson of High St.
Mrs. Mary Aldrich spent Sunday in Penn Yan, N. Y., going there to bring Miss Hope who has been spending some time there.
Seven more waiters for the hotel Longwell arrived in this city from Reading, Pa., Saturday.
Mrs. H. B. Parker of Washington, D. C., and Miss Elnora Burns of Troy, Pa., stopped over Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Taylor on their way to Saratoga Springs.
The Rev. C. E. Cuff and R. M. Perrin left Monday for the Interdenominational Ministerial Association at Montrose, Pa.
Mrs. Lizzie Richardson of New York is visiting her aunt Mrs. C D. Chaney.
Theo. Brent had the misfortune to blow off a joint of his index finger on the 4th of July and burned his eye quite badly.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Taylor spent the 4th of July at the home of the latter's parents in Mansfield, Pa.
Mrs. C E. Cuff will spend two weeks with her mother in West Pitsen Pa.
Read the Planet if once you will want it always a paper for the Negro's welfare North and South.
Agent Novie S. Chaney.
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
MYSTERIOUS LETTER PUBLISHED
BY RIQUES.
Newspapers throughout the United States are printing what is alleged to be a letter written by Christ.
In this letter was an injunction that it should be published to the world by whoever found it, together with a statement that misfortune and bad luck would follow the person having possession of it in the event that it was not given publicity.
There was likewise a promise that whoever may have a copy of this in his or her possession will prosper and be followed by good fortune.
According to the history of the letter it was written by Christ just after His Crucifixion, signed by the angel Gabriel ninety-nine years after the Savior's birth and presumably deposited by him under a stone at the foot of the cress.
On this stone appeared the following: "BLESSED IS HE WHO SHALL TURN ME OVER."
No one knew what the inscription meant, or seemed to have sufficient curiosity to investigate, until the stone was turned over by a little child and the letter which follows was discovered:
"Whosoever works on the Sabbath day shall be cursed. I command you to go to church and keep holy the Lord's day, without any manner of work. You shall not idle or misspend your time in beddecking yourself in superfluities of costly apparel and vain dressing for I have ordered a day of rest. I will have that day kept holy that your sins may be forgiven you.
"You will not break my commandments, but observe them and keep them, they being written by my hand and spoken from my mouth. You shall not only go to church yourself, but also your man servant and maid servant. Observe my words and learn my commandments."
"You shall finish your work every Saturday at six o'clock in the afternoon at which hour the preparation for the Sabbath begins. I advise you to fast five days in the year, beginning on good Friday and continuing the five days following in remembrance of the five bloody wounds I received for you and mankind.
"You shall love one another and cause them that are not baptized to come to church and receive the Holy Sacrament, that is to say Baptism, and then the supper of the Lord, and be made a member thereof, in so doing I will give you long life and many blessings. Your land shall be replenished and bring forth in abundance, and I will comfort you in the greatest temptation, and surely he that death to the contrary shall be cursed.
"I will also send hardness of heart on them, and especially on hardened and unpenitent unbelievers. He that hath given to the poor shall find it profitable. Remember the Sabbath day, for the seventh day I have taken as a resting day unto myself, "And he that hath a copy of this letter written by my own hand and spoken by my own mouth and keepeth it without publishing it to others shall not prosper, but he that publisheth it to others shall be blessed by me and if their shins be as many as stars by night, and if they truly believe they shall be pardoned and they that believe not this writing and my commandments will have my plagues upon you and you will be consumed with your children, goods and cattle and all other worldly enjoyments that I have given you. Do but once think of what I have suffered for you, if you do it will be well for you in this world and in the world which is to come.
"Whosoever shall have a copy of this letter and keep it in their house, nothing shall hurt them, neither pestilence thunder nor lightning, and if a woman be in birth and put her trust in me she shall be delivered of her child. You shall hear no more news of me except through the Holy Scriptures, until the day of judgment. All goodness and prosperity shall be in the house wherever a copy of this letter shall be found. Finished."
The story goes that the little child who found it passed it to one who became a convert to the Christian faith. He failed to have the letter published. He kept it, however, as a sacred memento of Christ and it passed down to different generations of his family for more than one thousand years.
During this period the family suffered repeated misfortunes, moved to different countries until finail, one of them came to America, bringing the letter with them. They settled in Virginia, then moved farther south, still followed by misfortune, when finally the last member, a daughter, approached her death bed and called a neighbor, Mrs. Thompson, giving her the letter and relating its history for more than a thousand years. The Thompson woman began the attempt to have it published and it first appeared in the Rome, Ga., Tribune on October 31st, 1891. It then appeared in the Dalton, Ga., Citizen and Mrs. Wortman, now living in Marion, Ind., clipped it and kept it in her possession for many years without an effort to have it published. She was followed by misfortune which she attributed to neglect in trying to have the letter published.
Mrs. Ruby Crutchfield, of Trezavant, Tenn., is also said to have had a copy and failed to make an effort to have it published for three years, and was followed by a varied lot of misfortunes which she attributed to the fact of her neglect in this respect.
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DOVES OF WAR NOW
Carrier Pigeon Will Aid U. 8.
Forces in France.
C
Photo by American Press Associations.
The United States signal corps not overlooking anything. Drones, wireless, field telephones and utility graphs and other modern devices in communication it retains the re- carrier pigeons. The other device pigeons are used by mail bullet shell, but the pigeons shown in the picture with their trainer are depend able when all else falls.
these signal corps is anything. Despite modern devices s or retains the relic. The other devices useless by bullet or move in the trafner are depend falls.
CONSENTS TO CABINET CHANGES
Hollweg Tells Relchstag Seven Will Retire.
MUST FIGHT AND CONQUER
German Chancellor Declares Opposition to Plan to End the War Without Annexations.
German Imperial Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg, according to a dispatch from Amsterdam quoting the Koelnische Volkszeitung, promised the reshuffle that he would consent to the resignation from the cabinet of Foreign Minister Zimmermann and Dr. Karl Helfferich, secretary of the interior and vico chancellor.
In addition, five members of the Prussian cabinet will be asked to resign.
It is believed this decision reflects the emperor's decision to stand by the chancellor in the crisis.
According to Berlin newspapers reaching Berne, Switzerland, the chancellor told the rechstag that "the formula of peace without annexations is unacceptable to us. We cannot declare our terms of peace. We must fight and conquer." The chancellor made a strong attack on Matthias Erbzerger, leader of the Catholic center, who assailed the pan-Germans in his address before the main committee last week and advocated peace without annexations or indemnities. Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg said Herr Erbzerger's attitude was unpatriotic.
A Berlin despatch to the Cologne Gazette, as cabled from Amsterdam, says that after the chancellor made his address, Mathias Erbzberger, the centrist leader, declared that the debate had strengthened his conviction that the whole situation required energetic action by the rechstag. He combatd violently the claims of the Pan-Germans and other annexionists. To this the chancellor, according to the summary of his speech published in the Lokal Anzeiger, of Berlin, said:
"We must continue the war with our whole energies. I do not deny that we have great difficulties to overcome, but so have our enemies. We shall see whether their differences or ours are greater. I am sure we can win if we hold out.
"Nothing was further from my intention than to ciling it my post, but now it is a question of protecting the Fatherland from injury, and for this reason I consider it necessary to retain my post."
The crown council called by Emperor William was held in Berlin, according to an Exchange Telegraph despatch from Amsterdam, but no anouncement as to what took place at the gathering has been made, although it is believed suffrage reform was decided on.
It is believed, says the despatch that one of the results of the council will be the introduction of a franchise bill for Prussia granting universal, direct suffrage and the secret ballot.
A wireless despatch sent from Berlin says that the situation is unchanged. The tension, if anything, is more intense. The session of the rebellstag was rather a perfunctory affair.
TWO DIE IN THE CHAIR
Double Execution Brings State's Total Up to Twenty-Two.
A double electrocution took place at the Rockview penitentiary at Bellefonte, Pa., when John Nelson of Wyoming county, was put to death for the murder of a man named Sigler; in October 1915, and Patrick Callery of Northampton county, went to the
death chair for the murder of his sister, Mrs. George Grube, in April, 1916. Nelson was pronounced dead by Robert J. Campbell, as was Callery. The two electrocutions make twenty two since the law of electrocution went into effect in Pennsylvania. Nelson steadily refused to reveal anything about his past.
A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR
WEDNESDAY.
The soldiers of revolutionary Russia maintained their attempts to break through the Austro-German lines in eastern Galleria. Cheered by the results of the fighting during the first three days of July, General Brusselloff's men continue their efforts, especially in the region of Brzezany, and are throwing fresh forces against the Teuton positions.
In the Champagne on the western front the German crown prince has made another desperate and fruitless effort to break the French lines northwest of the Rheims. Attacking in force along an eleven-mile front, the Germans made especially strong efforts around Corny and Allies and against the Californie plateau. The French repulsed all attacks with losses.
THURSDAY.
In eastern Galicia the Austro-German forces are evidently in an uncomfortable position at some points as the result of the Russian advances where they have been reported hemmed in on three sides. An attack was launched upon the Russians, but the Russians promptly broke it up by gunfire.
Notable activity is developing in Belgium. Germany senses the trend of things there, and extraordinary efforts by her airmen to find out what is going on behind the British lines are reflected in the official statements. General Petain, on the French front, is bending his efforts toward retaining intact all the commanding positions his troops now occupy. The latest German attempt to wrest control of an important sector on the Alsace from him not only came to naught with heavy German losses, Paris says, but the French in their reaction took a salient near Cerny from the Germans.
FRIDAY
Intense artillery activity by the Russians and Teutons is reported east of Lemberg where General Brusloff early this week began a push toward the Galician capital, with Ziocholl on the Tarnopol-Krasne railway, as his immediate objective.
Near Narayuuka, to the southeast of Lemberg the Austro-German guns are busy bombarding the Russians east of Llpulcadolna.
Having failed in their effort to drive the French from their commanding positions on the Chouin-des-Dames, on the Alse front, the Germans are turning attention to the Champagne. Attacks were made by the crown prince, troops west of Mont Carnièt at southeast of Tahure. Paris says they were easily repulsed.
SATURDAY
General Brusselloff seems to have been arranging a surprise, judging from the reports from Petrograd violent fighting in progress in the Plnsk district.
There had been no mention of any of the official statements recently of any special activity anywhere along the Russian line except in Galicia and the sectors immediately adjacent. The report from Plnsk, 150 miles north of the Galician border therefore has in it the element of surprise for the world if not for the Germans.
On the Franco-Belgian front the British have made another forward thrust slightly advancing their line west of Wyschachete in the Belgian district where General Plumer blew the Germans out of an extended salient case of Mesnetes ridge last month.
SUNDAY.
North of the Alsace the French again have checked the German crown prince in an effort to regain the line on the Chemin-des-Dames. Attacking on four sectors along a front of seven and a half miles from north of the Laffont mill to the Froldmont farm, the Germans were met by determined resistance on the part of the French and sustaining heavy losses, were repulsed completely except on the eastern end of the line between Bovottes and Froldmont farm.
The artillery and infantry fighting in eastern Galicia is spreading. The Russian attacking front now has lengthened to thirty miles and the fighting is in progress around Halicz the key to Lemberg, capital of Galicia. German efforts to dislodge the Russians from the positions gained at Godov and Kunluchy a week ago have been repulsed by General Brussilloff's men.
On the British front in France there have been several small raids, but no infantry engagements of importance.
MONDAY.
New and powerful blows are being struck by the Russians in Galicia. Apparently they have broken the Austro-German line west of Stanislau, south of Haliez. The official from Petrograd not only reports important gains in the Stanislau area, but declares Russian cavalry is pursuing the enemy. This pursuit already has reached the Lukva river.
The renewed onslaught brought with it not only additional territory but 7000 prisoners and forty-eight guns, including a dozen large caliber pieces. The total Russian captures of men in the present remarkable offensive is in excess of 25,000.
There is little but local fighting along the British front in northern France, but further down the line the Germans are giving the French little rest. Attack after attack is being launched by the crown prince in attempts to shake the French from their positions along the Chemin-des-Dames
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LY HAPPENED!
wife secured a club and whacked the husband on the head. The old boy was knocked cold. This partial victory threw the wife in a rage, and she decided to kill him while the killing was good. Grabbing a knife she straddled the prostrate form and began to carve him up. She drew the blade across his throat and then stabbed him a couple of times in the breast, right where the heart should be and then plunged it into his stomach (which used to be a whiskey receptacle.) The neighbors became panic-stricken and rushed to prevent the murder. A man grabbed the frate wife and the neighbors took away from her—THE BUTTER KNIFE!
FIVE FRIDAYS
By FRANK R. ADAMS
Copyright, by Frank A. Munsey Company
SYNOPSIS.
Lucile Green, charming, but with fads is visited at the Greens' summer island home by Monty Blainey. She proposes a wrestling match. All food is banished.
Frank Hopkinson rival sailor, appears unexpectedly. Too much himself be attempts the mainland by motorboat.
CHAPTER V
CROUCHED behind the stove again in time to see a dim figure enter the kitchen. The lightning revealed Lacile in a dressing gown with her hair over her shoulders. In the single flash of light she appeared to be the most beautiful thing that I had ever seen.
She turned the flashlight on the wall and finally rested its ray on the box of dog biscuit! She went over to it, picked up one of the biscuit, pressed it to her cheek and was about to bite it when she hastily dropped it back into the box, put out the light and stood perfectly still, listening.
There was another sound on the stairs!
When I looked to see what Lucile was doing she had disappeared. Probably she, too, was hiding somewhere near, I reasoned.
This time there was less delay. Whoever was coming downstairs was carelessly assured and was scratching matches on the wall as he went along to guide his progress. He entered the kitchen. It was Bopp, clad in the sort of pajamas I thought he wore. He was laughing to himself as he came in and went straight to the box of biscuit. He took one out of the box.
And he ate it!
Before that I may have disliked the man, but now— A smile of enjoyment spread over his features, plainly discernible when the lightning flashed. Evidently the dog biscuit were delicious. At last he finished and started to leave. I was about to breathe a sigh of relief when I happened to glance toward the shelf where the biscuit were kept.
The box was gone. The flend was taking them with him. Without a thought for poor Tootles, who would no less starve to death, he was going to eat all her food.
With one bound I was upon him.
The thought of that poor dog steered
my heart. I grabbed him by the throat.
Garlock
and we swamped back and forth in a rough and tumble fox trot movement to the tune of the rolling thunder. Hopp did not know as I did that Lucille was watching somewhere there in the darkness, and on that account he was able to use more forcible language than I, but I had superior weight, and I was slowly bearing him back when all at once he dropped the box of dog biscuit and with his free hand landed a wallop in my stomach. It would have been a foul under any circumstances, but with my inner workings resembling those of a vacuum cleaner it was positively inhuman. Maddened by that blow, I growled between my clinched teeth, "If you hit me below the belt again I'll tear your pajamas!" He growled back, "Let 'er rip," and swung on me twice more in the same place.
With mad fury I picked him up and hurled him from me. There was a terrific crash of glass, and then, save for the disturbance outside, all was still.
I lilt the light—acetylene gas.
The wreckage of that kitchen was beyond the descriptive powers of a mer dramatic critic. Boppe lay sprawled on the kitchen floor near, table where he had struck when I threw him. The table itself had overturned on to the week's supply of water in glass bottles and had apparently broken most of them. Lucile was standing, pale and disheveled, but still
Beautiful, in the doorway of the pantry where she had been hiding.
After an interval Bopp laboriously picked himself up and waded toward the stairway through the torrent of distilled water which was streaming across the floor.
"There's your dog biscuit," he sneered, pointing to Tootles, who had discovered the box and was gulping down the contents as fast as she could.
"Fasting for a week! Ha-ha!" Then he disappeared upstairs.
I turned to Lucille. She had dropped into a chair and had buried her face in her hands. She was crying.
"What's the matter, Lucille?" I asked tenderly.
"I don't know," she sobbed; "just nerves, I guess."
"You ought not to be about at this time of night," I said sternly.
"I know, she replied. "I just came down to—to feed Tootles."
I would have believed her if I had not seen the biscuit in her mouth. But what man would not forgive a small fib on the part of the woman he loves?
"Listen to me, Lucille, dear," I said authoritatively, taking her hand. "We are not going to fast any more. If your father were here he would call a halt. Here your mother is sick, he are hysterical, and hardly any of us is making terms with the others. Besides, he has got to stop. Our water supply is gone."
Lucille looked up. "Then it won't really be our fault, will it?" she asked hopefully. "If we haven't pure water we can't go on fasting. Lipton S. Clair says so."
"And that's the best thing he over said, too." I agreed heartily.
So it was decided that the next day we'd have a new stock of groceries come on the supply back and telephone this cook to come back. I think the prospect cheered us wonderfully. I know I felt better immediately, and I persuaded Lucille to go back to bed and get some rest before daylight. She went in to see how her mother was before retiring. There was a cry from Mrs. Green's room, and I rushed in.
MRS. GREEN HAD DISAPPEARED1
You have guessed correctly that this is where the element of mystery enters the story. You doubtless wonder, as we did, If Kent, the wire taper, had made away with Mrs. Green or if Bopp, balked of his dog biscuit, had become a villain of the deepest dye.
We did not come to any such conclusions at first, of course. That was after he had looked all over the house, up in the attic and down in the cellar. Then I went to Keint's room. He was snoring peacefully. I mistrusted that he might be shamming and poured a pitcher of water on him to see how he would react to the shock. I should say that his reactions were perfectly normal, albeit somewhat picturesquely abusive.
Next we hated Ropp from his room. He was inclined to be suspicious at first until we told him about Mrs. Green's disappearance; then he was all sympathy and joined our lightly clad searching party in the hallway.
Naturally, Lucile feared the worst, while the rest of us with masculine optimism discounted any danger which might befall the old lady.
"But she wasn't herself," wailed Lucile. "She's been acting funny all the evening."
"Never mind about her," comforted Kent. "A man with a jug can fall off the roof and never hurt himself a bit. A bit of a bun makes anybody lucky." "Suppose she is out in all this rain?" "A little water, more or less, won't make any difference to her after the last two days." I observed gloomily. "Let's not stand here any longer," said Bopp in businesslike fashion. "It won't do much good to try to guess where she is. Let's begin a systematic hunt." "Let's get, on some regular clothes first." I suggested.
"All right," in chorus.
Lucile dressed faster than she ever had before or has since, and we men with the usual celerity of the bifurcated sex, were ready as soon as she was. As soon as we had assembled In the living room once more Bopp, by reason of his superior nerve, elected himself commander of the expedition.
Monty," he directed, "you take Jessie with you and explore the north half of the island. Lucile and I will search the southern coast soon as either party discovers Mrs. Green come back to the house and fire off this revolver." He held a large caliber six shooter on the table.
I might have disputed his arrangement and calm appropriation of Lucile's society, but I judged that it would be a poor time to argue about anything so purely social. Besides, I figured out that the man who was with Lucile was going to have no ench reassuring her that her mother had not met with some terrible taking off. So they went one way, and we departed the other, everybody sloshing internally and externally on account of the large amount of distilled water and rain.
"How are we going to hunt this skirt anyway?" demanded Kent after we had trudged northward for a few moments.
"Just hunt," I replied vaguely, too busy with my thoughts to consider the question seriously.
"This isn't regular," objected Kent, slacking up his pace. "We ought to trail the old dame by her footprints. Did you notice any footprints around the house?"
"No. I didn't think to look."
"Well, let's go back and have a peek."
As that coincided with the methods of reasoning adopted by the detectives in the best sellers, I agreed, and we retraced our footsteps to the house.
"You seem to know a good deal about detective methods," I said, with mock admiration.
"Yeh," he responded seriously; "I ought to. I've been chased by some of the best detectives in New York." Then he added proudly, "I had Burns after me once."
"Under her window is the first place to look," said Kent, alive with inter-
est now in the scheme. "Where did she sleep?"
I picked out the window of Mrs. Green's room, and we carefully searched the wet ground underneath by lighting matches.
"Isn't it more probable that she would come out by the door?" I suggested. "She could never climb from that second story window."
"Sure she could," he asserted. "See that raid pipe here! It goes alongside her window. A lady like her could shin up and down that like a mouse."
Someway the picture of my future mother-in-law (I hoped) frisking up and down a narrow water pipe was beyond my imagination.
"Look here!" exclaimed my companion, pointing to the ground in front of blm. "Is that or is it not the print of a lady's shoe?"
I looked. There was certainly a footprint there, and it was small and narrow.
"It's fresh too. You can tell by the mud that it's been made since the footprints would have been washed out before. This was sure enough reasoning.
Kent started to walk in the direction that the footprints led, and I followed. All at once Kent stopped and lit several matches all in one place. "I think I've solved the mystery," he said, bending over the mud. "But it looks bad for the doll. There's a guy following her. Look at these marks." With a shudder I verified his statement. Larger footprints were in the mud with the small ones. The owner of the larger shoes had evidently followed the lady, because in many cases the small footprints were partially obliterated by the larger ones.
"Look! She dropped this."
Kent echoed my own thought. "Gee,
I wish we had brought the gun
with us."
"Let's hurry on before it's too late."
I urged.
We pressed forward at a killing pace, only stopping once in awhile to assure ourselves that we were on the right track. At one place the ground was trampled over a considerable area. "He caught up with her here," Kent interpreted. "They struggled. Look, she dropped this." He picked up a handkerchief. By the light of a match I discovered that it was marked "G." There could be no doubt; we were on the right track. "She got away from him, though," exulted Kent. "See here, just beyond her footsteps are ahead again."
A QUICK spurt of fame ahead halted us in our search for Mrs. Green. We heard an indistinct murmur of voices, the sound of twigs being broken, then absolute silence. "Shi!" Kent whispered. "As we are not armed, we must creep up as close as we can, when the son of a gun pipes us off we can spring on him before he can wig us. Do you get me?" I admitted that his plan was good. "Then on your knees and be careful," he commanded. We crept through mud puddles without noticing them. Then I heard the sound of a safety match being scratched unsuccessfully against a box. When it finally lighted what would be revealed? A jagged circle of yellow light flickered a moment while I crouched ready to spring, then burned dimmer and went out. The silence was unbroken until the light disappeared, then Bopp's laugh rang out loud and clear, followed a moment later by a historical giggle which I recognized as Lucile's.
While I scuttled away as hastily as possible in order to be out of range before he could light another match, I heard him say in a childish falsetto, "One-two-three for Monty!" I did not hear what else he had to offer because I got out of carshot as soon as possible. A few hundred yards on the trail back to the house
Kent joined me. We proceeded Indian fashion silently for awhile.
Finally he runnated: "It's sure queer how I forgot about her and him being on the island. If it hadn't been for them we was doing fine. I suppose we'll have to go back to the house and begin all over again."
"No more footprints," I insisted hastily. "We'll just hunt as plain amateur hunters and cut out the detective stuff."
Kent was visibly crestfallen.
Suddenly the muffled report of a gun reached our ears.
"They've found her," said Kent without enthusiasm. "Let's go back." I hesitated. I hated to face Lucille after the ridiculous scene of a short time before. Finally I assented. When we reached the house no one was in sight. "Probably upstairs putting the old dame to bed," Kent said.
"Nobody there," I announced to Kent.
Just at that moment there was a sound outside, and I looked out to see Lucelle and Bopp arriving.
"Well," sighed Lucelle, "where's mother?
"Where did you put her?" I countered.
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"If" exclaimed Lucile. "I haven't seen her."
"Haven't seen her?" Kent interjected. "Then who fired the revolver?" "Didn't you?" interposed Bopp. "No."
"Who did, then?" with sudden apprehension.
Kent picked up the gun from the table and broke it. Six loaded cartridges dropped out.
"This cannot aln't been fired," he said, sniffing the barrel.
We looked at one another with frightened eyes. What unseen force was playing pranks on us? First the disappearance of Mrs. Green, then the revolver shot coming out of the aln't seemed too much to account for by natural means.
When the telephone bell rang, our nerves, all on paper edge, gave one united leap. I answered the summons. "Hello!" I said.
"This is the telegraph operator at Fair View," said a masculine voice. "Have you got a party at your place named N. Blainley or something like that?"
"Yes; I am Mr. Blainley." "Probably it's for you, then. We got a rush message for N. Blainley which we can't deliver to you on account of the storm. Are you expecting anything?"
"Yes," I assented; "I am always getting telegraphs. Read it to me over the telephone."
"I can't do that. I don't know you. You'll have to get Mr. Green or one of his family to take the message for you."
"Very well. Hold the wire." I requested, putting my hand over the mouthpiece. "Lance, will you take this telegraph? It's for me, but they
-
May they'll have to read it to some member of the family because they don't know me."
Lucie took the receiver, picked up a pencil hanging by a string to the telephone and wrote down the telegram on a scratch pad on the wall as the operator read it over the wire. When it was done, without comment she handed it to me.
It read as follows:
N. Blanoy—Coming to you at last. Arrive today. Have marriage license ready.
"Walt." I exclaimed; "this can't be for me. Call up that operator again."
"Don't try to explain," said Lucille coldly. "I suppose you don't even know who Vida Dunnmore is?" I debated a moment us to whether I should lie or not, but what was the use? I did know a Vida Dunnmore, an actress. In fact, I had seen and criticised her work only the week before.
"Yes," I said slowly. "I know her, or I know a girl by that name, but we are not friends. This telegram is a mistake."
I saw that she did not believe me, but I had no chance to explain, because in an instant we had all jumped to our feet and were straining our overwrought nerves to catch a sound which punctuated the roar of the storm.
Somewhere near a revolver shot had been fired.
We all hastened out of doors.
"Do you suppose one is shoot ing at mother?" Lucile worried.
I tried to reassure her, but my offorts were politely repulsed. Apparently the matter of the telegram had erected a wall of ice between us. "It sounded as if it came from the (Continued on Sixth Page.)
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FOR LYNOHURB AND THE WEST "-*8:18
M. FOR LYNOHURB "-*8:18 M. FOR LYNOHURB "-*8:18 P. M. "-*9:25 P. M.
TO allow to recv
Arrive Richmond from Norfolk "-*11:40 A. M.
*9:35 P. M. "9:00 P. M. "11:30 P. M. Froes
*9:35 P. M. "9:00 P. M. "11:30 P. M. "11:30 P. M.
*11:40 P. M. "11:40 P. M. "11:40 P. M.
*Daily "Daily except Sunday "Sunday only
W. B. BEVILL, W. O. BAUNDERS,
B. H. BROOKLE, W. O. ROANKS
G. H. HOSLKEY, G. P. A. RICHARD
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
THE STANDARD RAILROAD ON THE SOUTH
EJECTIVE 8, January 18, 1923
Train load, 12,000 tons.
For Florida and South: 8115 A. M. 8100 8100
P. A. 8125 P. M. 8120 A. M.
For Norfolk: 8115 A. M. 8100 A. M., 8100
P. M. M. 8100 A. M.
For N. & W. Ry. West: 8115 A. M. 8100 A. M.
M. 8:00 P. M. 8:25 P. M.
For Petersburg: 12:50 A. M. 8115 A. M.
8:15 A. M. 8100 8100 8100 8100 8100
*4:00 P. M. *4:10 P. M. 8:100 P. M.
M. 8:25 P. M. 11:54 F. M.
For and Fayetteville: *4:00 P. M.
For Hopewell: *11:15 P. M. *8100
P. M. 8:15 P. M.
Trains arrive Richmond daily: 4:10 A. M.
7:00 A. M. 8:10 A. M. 6:17 A. M.
7:10 A. M. 8:10 A. M. **1:14 A. M. 8:11 A. M.
M., 6:86 P. M. 7:45 P. M. 9:18 P. M. 8:18
P. M. Accept Sunday. **Sunday Only.
Time of arrival and departure and con-
tributions not guaranteed.
THE SOUTHERN
SR
SERVES THE SOUTH
(N. B.—Following schedule figures published on
information and not guaranteed).
5:08 A. M.—Daily—Local for Danville,
10:08 A. M.—Daily—Limited—For all postals
in Danville, and parlor car.
8:00 P. M.—Except Dunville for Ghane
City, Buffalo Junct. and intermediate stations.
6:00 P. M.—Daily—For Danville, Atlanta and
Birmingham with Fullman observation sleeping
car.
11:16 P. M.-Daily-Limited-For all points
South. Pullman read 8:00 P. M.
YORK RIVER LINE
4:15 P. M. —Daily—Local to West Point.
6:10 P. M. —Steamer train, daily except Sunday
8:10 P. M. —Daily—Local toimore. No stop.
7:85 A. M. —Daily—Local to West Point.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND
From the Bouth: 7:00 A. M. ; 8:10 A. M.,
8:50 P. M. ; 8:80 P. M. ; daily; 8:10 A. M.
except Sunday
From West Point: r140 A. M., 6:15 P. M.
From East Point: train from Baltimore,
daily except Monday.
MAGRUDER DENT, D. P. A.
907 East Madison
28 North Seventh Street
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO.
Cinnatimal, Louville & West, *28 p.* *7 p.* *11 p.*
Main Line Local, **8:25 a.* *11:55 p.*
Main Line Ling, **8:30 a.* *11:55 p.*
Newport News, Norfolk and Oi Park, *8:80 a.* *12 m.* *4 p.*
Newport News Local, **8:7 a.* *8 p.*
Trawler, Norfolk, **8:15 a.* *11:55 p.*
*8:30 p.* Newport News, *8:55 a.* *11:55 p.*
From West, *8:10 a.* *8:55 p.* *8:55 a.*
7:10 p. Daily from Charlotteville,
except Sunday, *Thursday, *8:40 p.*
Janes River, *8:25 a.* *8:40 p.*
*Daily.* *8:20p Sunday*
SEABOARD AIR LINE
THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY ON THE BOUNDARY
of Jacksonville: A. M., local to Northville; 11:30
sleepsers and coaches to Jacksonville, Atlanta;
sleepsers and coaches to Jacksonville; coaches
and sleepsers to Jacksonville; 11:30
Limited; 13:45 A. M., sleepsers to Atlanta; B.
sleepsers to Jacksonville, Tampa and coaches
to Jacksonville.
Northbound trains scheduled to arrive
at Jacksonville; A. M., local to Northville; B.
sleepsers to Jacksonville, Tampa and coaches
to Jacksonville.
THREE
#
---
FIVE FRIDAYS
$By$ FRANK R. ADAMS
Copyright. by Frank A. Munsey Company
SYNOPSIS.
Lucello Green, charming, but with fads is visited at the Greens' summer island home by Monty Blainey. She proposes a meal. All food is banished.
Frank Roberts loyal suitor, appears unexpectedly. To get around he attempts the matriparty by motorbike.
CHAPTER V.
A Mystory.
CROUCHED behind the stove again in time to see a dim figure enter the kitchen. The lighting revealed Lucie in a dressing gown with her hair over her shoulders. In the single flash of light she appeared to be the most beautiful thing that I had ever seen.
She turned the flashlight on the wall and finally rested its ray on the box of dog biscuit! She went over to it, picked up one of the biscuit, pressed it to her cheek and was about to bite it when she hastily dropped it back into the box, put out the light and stood perfectly still, listening.
There was another sound on the stairs!
When I looked to see what Lucie was doing she had disappeared. Probably she, too, was hiding somewhere near, I reasoned.
This time there was less delay. Whoever was coming downstairs was carelessly assured and was scratching matches on the wall as he went along to guide his progress. He entered the kitchen. It was Bopp, clad in the sort of pajamas I thought he wore. He was laughing to himself as he came in and went straight to the box of biscuit. He took one out of the box.
And he ate it!
Before that I may have disliked the man, but now— A smile of enjoyment spread over his features, plausibly discernible when the lighting flashed. Evidently the dog biscuit were delicious. At last he finished and started to leave. I was about to breathe a sigh of relief when I happened to glance toward the shelf where the biscuit were kept.
The box was gone. The flend was taking them with him. Without a thought for poor Tootles, who would doptless starve, to death, he was going to eat all her food. With one bound I was upon him. The thought of that poor dog steeded my heart. I grabbed him by the throat.
G. W. WOODLE
We Swayed Back and Forth in a Rough and Tumble Fox Trot.
and we swayed back and forth in a rough and tumble fox trot movement to the time of the rolling thunder. Bopp did not know as I did that Lucile was watching somewhere there in the darkness, and on that account he was able to use more forcible language than I, but I had superior weight, and I was slowly bearing him back when all at once he dropped the box of dog biscuit and with his free hand landed a wallop in my stomach. It would have been a foul under any circumstances but with my inner workings resembling those of a vacuum cleaner it was positively inhuman.
Maddened by that blow, I growled between my clenched teeth, "If you hit me below the belt again I'll tear your pajamas!"
He growled back, "Let 'er up," and
swing on me twice more in the same place.
With mad fury I picked him up and hurled him from me. There was a terrific crash of glass, and then, save for the disturbance outside, all was still.
I lit the light—acetylene gas.
The wreckage of that kitchen was beyond the descriptive powers of a mer dramatic critic. Bopp lay sprawled on the kitchen floor near the table where he had struck when I threw him. The table itself had overturned on to the week's supply of water in glass bottles and had apparently broken most of them. Lucille was standing, pale and disheveled, but still
Beautiful, in the doorway of the pautry where she had been hiding.
After an interval Bopp laboriously picked himself up and waded toward the stairway through the torrent of distilled water which was streaming across the floor.
"There's your dog biscuit," he sneered, pointing to Tootles, who had discovered the box and was gulping down the contents as fast as she could.
"Fasting for a week! Ha-ha!"
Then he disappeared upstairs.
I turned to Lucille. She had dropped into a chair and had buried her face in her hands. She was crying.
"What's the matter, Lucille?" I asked tenderly.
"I don't know," she sobbed; "Just nerves, I guess."
"You ought not to be about at this time of night," I said sternly.
"I know," she replied. "I just came down to—to feed Tootles."
I would have believed her if I had not seen the biscuit in her mouth. But what man would not forgive a small fb on the part of the woman he loves?
"Listen to me, Luelle, dear," I said authoritatively, taking her hand. "We are not going to fast any more. If your father were here he would call a halt. Here your mother is sick, you are hysterical, and hardly any of us is on speaking terms with the others. Besides, we have got to stop. Our water supply is gone."
Luello looked up. "Then it won't really be our fault, will it?" she asked hopefully. "If we haven't pure water we can't go on fasting. Lipton S. Clair says so."
"And that's the best thing be ever said, too." I agreed heartily.
So it was decided that the next day we'd have a new stock of groceries come on the supply boat and telephone this cook to come back. I think the prospect cheered us wonderfully. I know I felt better immediately, and I persuaded Luille to go back to bed and get some rest before daylight.
She went in to see how her mother was before retiring. There was a cry from Mrs. Green's room, and I rushed in.
MRS. GREEN HAD DISAPPEARED!
You have guessed correctly that this is where the element of mystery enters the story. You doubtless wonder, as we did, if Kent, the wire tapper, had made away with Mrs. Green or if Bopp, balked of his dog biscuit, had become a villain of the deepest dye.
We did not come to any such conclusions at first, of course. That was after we had looked all over the house, up in the attic and down in the cellar. Then I went to Keit's room. He was snoring peacefully. I mistrusted that he might be shamming and poured a pitcher of water on him to see how he would react to the shock. I should say that his reactions were perfectly normal, albeit somewhat picturesque abusive.
Next we hated Ropp from his room. He was included to be suspicious at first until we told him about Mrs. Green's disappearance; then he was all sympathy and joined our lightly chad searching party in the hallway. Naturally, Lucille feared the worst, while the rest of us with masculine optimism discounted any danger which might befall the old lady.
"But she wasn't horserit," walled Lucille. "She's been acting funny all the evening."
"Never mind about her," comforted Kent. "A man with a jag can fall off the roof and never hurt himself a bit. A bit of a bun makes anybody lucky." "Suppose she is out in all this rain?" "A little water, more or less, won't make any difference to her after the last two days," I observed gloomily. "Let's not stand here any longer," said Bopp in businesslike fashion. "It won't do much good to try to guess where she is. Let's begin a systematic hunt." "Let's get on some regular clothes first," I suggested. "All right," in chorus.
Luclie dressed faster than she ever had before or has since, and we men with the usual celerity of the bifurcated sex, were ready as soon as she was. As soon as we had assembled In the living room once more Bopp, by reason of his superior nerve, elected himself commander of the expedition.
"Monty," he directed, "you take Jesse James with you and explore the north half of the island. Luclie and I will search the southern portion. As soon as either party discovers Mrs. Green come back to the house and fire off this revolver." He held a large caliber six shooter on the table.
I might have disputed his arrangement and calm appropriation of Lucio's society, but I judged that it would be a poor time to argue about anything so purely social. Besides, I figured out that the man who was with Lucile was going to have no chch reassuring her that her mother had not met with some terrible taking off. So they went one way, and we departed the other, everybody sloshing internally and externally on account of the large amount of distilled water and rain.
"How are we going to hunt this skirt anyway?" demanded Kent after we had trudged northward for a few moments.
"Just hunt," I replied vaguely, too busy with my thoughts to consider the question seriously.
"This ain't regular," objected Kent, slacking up his pace. "We ought to trail the old dame by her footprints. Did you notice any footprints around the house?"
"No. I didn't think to look."
"Well, let's go back and have a peek."
As that coincided with the methods of reasoning adopted by the detectives in the best sellers, I agreed, and we retraced our footsteps to the house.
"You seem to know a good deal about detective methods," I said, with mock admiration.
"Yeah," he responded seriously; "I ought to. I've been chased by some of the best detectives in New York."
Then he added proudly, "I had Burns after me once."
"Under her window is the first place to look," said Kent, alive with inter-
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
est now in the scheme. "Where did she sleep?"
I picked out the window of Mrs. Green's room, and we carefully searched the wet ground underneath by lightning matches.
"Isn't it more probable that she would come out by the door?" I suggested. "She could never climb from that second story window."
"Sure she could," he asserted. "See that rafa pipe here? It goes alongside her window. A lady like her could shin up and down that like a mouse."
Someway the picture of my future mother-in-law (I hoped) frisking up and down a narrow water pipe was beyond my imagination.
"Look here!" exclaimed my companion, pointing to the ground in front of him. "Is that or is it not the print of a lady's shoe?"
I looked. There was certainly a footprint there, and it was small and narrow.
"It's fresh too. You can tell by the mud that it's been made since the heavy rain. Old footprints would have been washed out anyhow." This was sure enough reasoning.
Kent started to walk in the direction that the footprints led, and I followed. All at once Kent stopped and lt several matches all in one place. "I think I've solved the mystery," he said, bending over the mud. "But it looks bad for the doll. There's a guy following her. Look at these marks." With a shudder I verified his statement. Larger footprints were in the mud with the small ones. The owner of the larger shoes had evidently followed the lady, because in many cases the small footprints were partially obliterated by the larger ones.
"Look! She dropped this."
Kent echoed my own thought. "Gee, I wish we had brought the gun with us."
"Let's hurry on before it's too late."
I urged.
We pressed forward at a killing pace, only stopping once in awhile to assure ourselves that we were on the right track. At one place the ground was trampled over a considerable area. "He caught up with her here," Kent interpreted. "They struggled. Look, she dropped this." He picked up a handkerchief. By the light of a match I discovered that it was marked "G." There could be no doubt; we were on the right track. "She got away from him, though," exulted Kent. "See here, just beyond her footsteps are ahead again."
A QUICK spurt of us flame shone halted us in our search for Mrs. Green. We heard an indistinct murmur of voices, the sound of twigs being broken, then absolute silence. "Sh!' Kent whispered. "As we are not armed, we must creep up as close as we can, then when the son of a gun pipes us off we can sping on him before he can wing us. Do you get me?" I admitted that his plan was good. "Then on your knees and be careful," he commanded. We creep through mud puddles without noticing them. Then I heard the sound of a safety match being scratched unsuccessfully against a box. When it finally lighted what would be revealed?
A jagged circle of yellow light flickered a moment while I crouched ready to spring, then burned dimmer and went out. The silence was unbroken until the light disappeared, then Bopp's laugh rang out loud and clear, followed a moment later by a hysterical giggle which I recognized as Lucie's.
While I scuttled away as hastily as possible in order to be out of range before he could light another match, I heard him say in a childish falsetto, "One-two-three for Monty."
I did not hear what else he had to offer because I got out of earshot as soon as possible. A few hundred yards on the trail back to the house
Kent joined me. We proceeded Indian fashion silently for awhile.
Finally he rummated: "It's sure quieter how I forgot about her and him being on the island. If it hadn't been for them we was doing fine. I suppose we'll have to go back to the house and begin all over again."
"No more footprints," I insisted hastily. "We'll just hunt as plain amateur hunters and cut out the detective stuff."
Kent was visibly crestfallen. Suddenly the muffled report of a gun reached our ears.
"They've found her," said Kent without enthusiasm. "Let's go back."
I hesitated. I hated to face Lucile after the ridiculous scene of a short time before. Finally I assented. When we reached the house no one was in sight.
"Probably upstairs putting the old dame to bed," Kent said.
I went up, rapped on Mrs. Green's door and entered. There was no sign of her. Puzzled, I went downstairs.
"Nobody there," I announced to Kent.
Just at that moment there was a sound outside, and I looked out to see Lucelle and Bopp arriving.
"Well," sighed Lucelle, "wheres mother?"
"Where did you put her?" I countered.
L. J. HAYDEN Manufacturer of Pure Herb Medicines
NO CURE ALL DISEASES OR NO CHARGE
220 W. Broad. Richmond
If so, call and see L. J. HAYDEN, Manufacturer of Pure Herb Medicines, 220 W. Broad Street. My Medicines will cure you, or no charge, no matter what your disease, sickness or affliction may be, and restore you to perfect health. Hundreds of people, the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe, have testified that I am one of the most wonderful healers of all complaints in the world. I use nothing but herbs, roots, barks, gum, balsams, leaves, seed, berries, flowers and plants in my medicines. They have cured thousands that the most skillful and best hospital physicians in America and Europe have given up to die and said there was no cure for them. My Medicines cure the following diseases: Heart Disease Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Stricture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinny, Sore Threat, Dyspoplia, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Palms and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Skin Diseases, all Iching Sensations, Female Complaints, LaGrippie, Pneumonia, Ulcer, Carbuncles, Bolls, Cancer in its worst form without the use of knife or instrument, Eczema, Pimples on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys, Bright's Disease of Kidneys. My Medicines cure any disease, no matter what nature, or your money refunded. Medicines sent anywhere. For full particulars, send or call on L. J. HAYDEN, 220 West Broad Street
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FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Spacious Rooms for Meetings and Entertainments. Office and Warerooms 700 N. 17TH STREET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Thos. D. Rodgers, Pros.; W. A. Price, Troas.; Nathaniel Roy, Manager
BROWN & ROBINSON
Our Motto: THE GOLDEN RULE.
Do You Own Any of the Earth? or Anything Thereon?
You Could! You Should! "Let's Talk It Over."
A. D. PRICE. 212 EAST LEIGH STREET.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN All orders promptly filled at short notice by telegraph or telephone. Halls rented for meetings and nice entertainments. Plenty of room with all necessary conveniences. Large Picnic or Band Wagons for hire at reasonable rates and nothing but first-class Carriages, Buggies, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine funeral supplies. Open All Day and Night—Man on Duty All Night. PHONE, MAD. 577 RICHMOND, Va. (Residence next door)
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---
"I?" exclaimed Lucile. "I haven't seen her."
"Haven't seen her?" Kent interjected. "Then who fired the revolver?"
"Didn't you?" interposed Bopp.
"No."
"Who did, then?" with sudden apprehension.
Kent picked up the gun from the table and broke it. Six loaded cartridges dropped out.
"This cannon didn't been fired," he said, sniffing the barrel.
We looked at one another with frightened eyes. What unseen force was playing pranks on us? First the disappearance of Mrs. Green, then the revolver shot coming out of the air—it seemed too much to account for by natural means.
When the telephone bell rang, our nerves, all on paper edge, gave one united leap. I answered the summons.
"Hello!" I said.
"This is the telegraph operator at Fair View," said a masculine voice. "Have you got a party at your place named N. Blainey or something like that?"
"Yes; I am Mr. Blainey."
"Probably it's for you, then. We got a rush message for N. Blainey which we can't deliver to you on account of the storm. Are you expecting anything?"
"Yes," I assented; "I am always getting telegraphs. Read it to me over the telephone."
"I can't do that. I don't know you. You'll have to get Mr. Green or one of his family to take the message for you."
"Very well. Hold the wire," I requested, putting my hand over the mouthpiece. "Luncle, will you take his telegram? It's for me, but they
J. B. H.
say they'll have to read it to some member of the family because they don't know me."
Lucille took the receiver, picked up a pencil hung by a string to the telephone and wrote down the telegram on a scratch pad on the wall as the operator read it over the wire. When it was done, without comment she handed it to me.
It read as follows:
N. Blaney-Coming to you at last. Arrive today. Have marriage license ready.
"Walt," I exclaimed; "this can't be for me. Call up that operator again."
"Don't try to explain," said Lucie coldly. "I suppose you don't even know who Vida Dummore is?"
I debated a moment as to whether I should lie or not, but what was the use? I did know a Vida Dummore, an actress. In fact, I had seen and criticised her work only the week before.
"Yes," I said slowly; "I know her, or I know a girl by that name, but we are not friends. This telegram is a mistake."
I saw that she did not believe me, but I had no chance to explain, because in an instant we had all jumped to our feet and were straining our overwrought nerves to catch a sound which punctuated the roar of the storm.
Somewhere near a revolver shot had been fired.
We all hastened out of doors.
"Do you suppose some one is shooting at mother?" Lucille worried.
I tried to reassure her, but my efforts were politely repulsed. Apparently the matter of the telegram had erected a wall of ice between us.
"It sounded as if it came from the (Continued on Sixth Page.)
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facturer of Pure Herb
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PHONE RANDOLPH 3027
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203 SOUTH SECOND STREET
RICHMOND, VA.
DEALER IN FANCY GROCERIES
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ESTABLISHED 1880 ADAMS AND BROAD
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O O O
WRITE OR
NORTHWEST
WALTER T.
VISIT US AT
CORNER.
DAVIS CENTER
RAILROADS
NORFOLK & WESTERN.
NORFOLK & WESTERN.
ONLY ALL-RAIL LIN.. TO NORFOLK
Leave byrd Street Station, Richmond FOR
NORFOLK, "*0.15 A. M.," "9:00 A. M.," "8:80 P.
M.," "4:00 P. M.
FOR LYNCHBURG AND THE WEST ..*$^12$I
M. To LYNCHBURG, M. "0:25 P. M.
LOCAT to Crewe, "0:38 P. M.
Arrive Richmond from Norfolk~*11:40 A. M.
"0:35 P. M, "0:00 P. M, "1:30 P. M, M. From
M. "0:35 P. M, "1:30 P. M, "1:30 P. M,
"1:40 P. M, "1:40 P. M, "1:40 P. M,
"Daily" Daily except Sunday, "Sunday only
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ATLANTIC COAST LINE.
THE STANDARD RAILROAD ON THE SOUTH
Effective January 8, 1910
Train leave New York to:
For Florida and South: 8:15 A. M. and 8:16
P. M., 11:35 P. M., 12:15 P. M.
For Michigan: 8:15 A. M., 9:00 A. M., 11:35
P. M., 4:00 P. M., 6:15 A. M.
For N. & W. Ry., West: 8:15 A. M., 8:16
P. M., 8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
For N. & W. Ry., West: 8:15 A. M., 8:16
P. M., 8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
For N. & W. Ry., West: 8:15 A. M., 8:16
P. M., 8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
For N. & W. Ry., West: 8:15 A. M., 8:16
P. M., 8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
For Hopewell: 8:15 A. M., "11:35 P. M."
For Hopewell: 8:15 A. M., "11:35 P. M."
Trains arrive Richmond daily: 4:19 A. M., 7:00 A. M., 8:18 A. M., 6:18 A. M., 0:87 A. M., 11:40 A. M., 2:10 P. M., *11:40 P. M., 0:87 P. M., 0:88 P. M., 7:45 P. M., 0:80 P. M., 0:85 P. M.
*Except Sunday. *Sunday Gap.
Time of arrival and departures and exequations not guaranteed.
THE SOUTHERN
SERVES THE SOUTH
TRAINS LEAVE RICHMOND-MAIN ST. STATION
(N. B.—Following schedule figures published information and not guaranteed).
5:50 A. M.—Daily—Local for Danville.
1:15 P. M.-Daily-Limited-For all points
South. Pullman read: 9:00 P. M.
YORK RIVER LINE
4:15 P. M. —Daily—Local to West Point.
6:10 P. M. —Beamer train, daily except Sunday
for 11:00 A.M. —Stop at 10:30 P.
7:38 A. M. —Daily—Local to West Point.
TRAINS ARRIVE RICHMOND
From the South 7:00 A. M. 8:10 A. M.
3:50 P. M. and 8:10 P. M. daily; 8:10 A. M.,
except Sunday.
From West Point: r140 A. M., 6:15 P. M.
Date: September 1, 2014. Trainer train from Baltimore, daily except Monday.
MAGRUDER DENT, D. P. A.
907 East Main, Madison Madison 878
North Sovereign Seventh
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO.
Cinnatnall, Louville & West, *2 p.*, *7 p.*, *11 p.*
Main Line Local, *7:25 n.*, *5:15 p.*
James River Line, *10:00 n.*, *5:15 p.*
Newport News, Norfolk and Old Point,
*Daily
*Except Sunday
SEABOARD AIR LINE
THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY ON THE SOUTH
Southbound trains scheduled to leave Richmond
daily: 9:26 A. M., local to Norlina; 1:28 P. M.
shuttle; 1:30 P. M. to Jacksonville, Atlanta;
Birmingham; 6:55 P. M. to Jacksonville; 6:50 P. M.
shuttle to Jacksonville; 11:20 P. M. to Florida;
Limited; 12:00 P. M. a. sleeper to Atlanta, Birmingham;
Jacksonville, Tampa and soothe to Northbound trains scheduled to arrive
Richmond daily: 4:28 A. M., 7:28 A. M., erase
A. M., local; 9:26 A. M., 1:27 P. M.
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Published every saturday by John
Mitchell, Jr., at S11 N, 4th Street,
Richmond, Virginia,
JOBN MITCHELL, JR., EDITOR
All communications intended for pubd-
lication should be sent so as to
reach us by Wednesday.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond
Virginia, as secord-class matter.
SATURDAY..........JULY 21, 1917.
RESPONSIBLLITY FOR MURDER,
colored poople of the Southland
would sooner or later find thelr
rights to fe, Uberty and property
pafe-guarded and defended by south:
ern white people who had always
deon classed to be their bitterest
enemies. We seo or tink we see a
ray of light, so to speak intimating
that a realization of this prediction
js at hand, ‘The Jacksonville, Fa,
‘Times-Union, In its issue of the 9th
inst., says:
Of course, the presence of a bull in
a china shop would be advertised
when the same bull in a pasture could
crop the succulent grasses unmolest.
ed; a bull that desired advertisement
would, therefore, rush out of the pas:
ture Into the shop. Probably {t was
the same reason that when Col. Roose:
velt was asked to speak at a meeting
called to welcome the representative
of the latest republic, he should find it
necessary to accuse organtaed labor
of wholesale murder to” put his aw
ience in good humor with {he world.
No proof was shown and no reason
given for pitching such a bombsholl
into a gathering of friends; Roosevelt
did it, and the act needs no explana.
tion.
A proverb easily appreelated in
Mlorida declares: “If you give a calf
rope he will hang himself.” Roose:
velt offered the rope, and Gompers
made a caif of himself without delay!
For, rising to deny an imputation
which had nothing for support but the
word of Roosevelt, the president of
the Amdrican Federation of Labor
provided the proof needed by his ad
versary when he read a telegram from
the president of the Federation of
Labor of Mlmois_ asserting — that
employers who entleed Negroes
from the South to break the back of
fabor In the North and West were
veaily qesponsible for wholesale mur.
vers in’ Wast St Louls in tho state
of Illinois!
No need for more words Roose-
velt drow his bow at a venture, and
the flying arrrow plerced ‘tho armor
of organized labor, because Gompors
opened tho joints of his harness; it
organized labor did not massacre and
burn in East St. Louts, the world has
heard the confesssion of moral respon:
sibility, and this evidence 1s moro
vital tlian would be the legal proof
that a number of laborers in a
moment of excitement had become a
niurderous mob. ‘The prosident — of
the national federation and tho prost-
dent of a stato organization lave now
made themselves responsible for the
opinion that {fan employer hires Ia-
borers In the South to do work in
Ulinois, then that omployer is respon.
sible when organized labor shoots,
burns and hangs such laborers, kilis
their women and children aya’ burn
their houses. If this does not constt-
tute a serious chargo.against federat-
ed labor and call for its outlawry
under the laws, then the prosecutions
of trusts are mere acts of tyranny.
The situation could not bo moro
ailmirably stated by this master mind
in the editorial office of the Times:
Unton.Ho went further and he sald
much moro, Here it is:
But tho published facts in the case
Justify other charges. For some days
agitation and threats predicted the
coming of disorder but no steps were
taken to protect order ‘and. decency;
the lives and property of American
citizens were loudly threatened, and
nothing was dono by way of rebuke
to the agitators nor toward the pro:
tection of a city threatened with
murder and arson
When Cleveland was president of
the United States and Altgold was
governor of Illinois, another city of
the same state underlay Ike threats,
Then as now, the governor of thé
stato took no steps to protect the
interests of the public, and the prosi-
dent of the United States sent troops
to Chicago against the excited pro-
tests of the governor of the state,
It has been said that it was morely a
pretext to assert that federsl prop:
erly was endangored; it may be that
President Cleveland ‘was wrong and
President Wilson is right, but can wo
say a risk may not be ‘taken whon
Ufo is at stake at home by a_presi-
dent who risks so much to defend
Belgium and France across the seas?
Are German sympathizers to be pun-
ished, even if a proclamation of mar.
tial law be necessary, while corganiz.
ed labor may slay at’ wilt?
This question will ring and ro-
Yerberato from one section of this
country to the other. Colored peo-
ple have always been averse to strik-
ing and to causing trouble by labor
disputes, They have stood by their
white omploying friends In this section
of the country, risking life and limb
In an effort to carry out thelr promis-
es to the white mon, who pledged to
stand by them. The flremen’s strike
on southern railroads has been
settled only when the black, loyal
employees had been retained in the
service. Now, the ‘Times-Union wants
to know why federal aid cannot be
Mhyoked to protect these humble peo-
‘plo fram a sunny climo. It affords a
situation fraught with future hope for
both tho “brother in black and the
“brother {u white.’
The conclusion is as follows:
The Times-Union has wuaeictontly
and faithfully denounced and condomn-
ed disorder and mob-law in the South.
‘But in the South enmity is always
excited against @ supposed criminal;
the Souttern mob secks to punish
guilt, In other sections onmity is
aroused not against guilt, supposed or
assumed, but against the Negro raco;
the crime alleged is that of secking
to earn an honest lving by donest
work. According to the plea urged
by Mr, Gompers, the Negro must not
venture to earn wages desired yor re-
fused by organized labor; he must
not_go from the Séuth to’ seek work
In other sections.
President Gompers says ho knows
Roosevelt, who, is only a bluffer; lot
us agreo with him. Now if Col Roose-
Velt bo more than a secker after easy
notoriety, let him go further in this
matter, und we will go with him heart
and soul. Let him lead public opin-
fon to show that Gompors is werse
than a bluffer In that he has ventured
too far,
Woe feol like oxclaiming, (Praise
God from Whom all blessings flow.”
When a southern newspaper takes
tis high ground and champions the
cause of the colored people while
at the same time explaining the dif.
ference in the exercise of lawlessness
agaiust this raco in te South and
tho kind visited upon this same race
in the North, it 1s an omon that the
leaven is working and that a realiza-
tion of our hope, the unification com.
plete In every detail of the better
class Gf white people and the better
class, of colored people from the Ma-
son and Dixon Line to the Gulf of
Mexico and the bounaaries of the
Southern Republic, is at hand,
THE PENDULUM OF JUSTICE.
You cannot persistently deny to one
class of American citizens their rights
and privileges without. ultimately
taking away from another class of
American Gltizens thelr rights and
privileges. ‘You eannot confiscate the
[vraperty of colored people without
ultimately confiscating the proper:y
of white people. You cannot deny to
colored men their rights aud priv
loges without ultimataly denying
rights and privileges to white mep.
} the pehdulum of right and justice will
swing backward as far in one direc:
tion as it has in another,
Not many years ago the railroads
His pactioular aud corporating in gen-
eral controlled not only the legislative
branch of government at Washington,
but also in the States. ‘The ordinary
citizen found it diMeuit to secure sus:
Uco even in the courts of law, when
arrayed against ary one of theso
Agencies. Equally powerful wero the
Whiskey and the Beer Trusts. ‘These
powerful futerests were so entrenched
fia power that any effort madg to
dislodgo them seemed Ike child's
play, ‘Then*¢amo'the awakening With
Hon, William J, Brydn‘as the’ spokes-
man,
Ho has been ‘lost in me crowd,”
80 to speak, but the principles that
ho advocated have beeen marching on-
ward, Now we see the same methods
pursued in dealing with the helpless
colored man being used in doaling
with tho struggling white man, who
bowalls his fate, while the poor
colored men look on with sometimes
@ pathetic interest. It was a dark
day for a dark people a few years
agd, It 8 a darker day for white
poople In this year of our Lord,
nineteen hundred and seventeon.
‘These people tabooed and overlooked
and disregarded the Constitution of
the United States in dealing with col-
ored folks. They are doing the same
thing in dealing with the white peo-
ple. In discussing the situation the
New York Sun, one of the ablest
edited newspapers in the country, in
ts Issue of the 13th inst says:
‘Tho Government of the United
States undowbtedly has both the right
and the power to fix the prices which
it will pay for any commodity needed
for its operations either in time of
war or in time of peace
If the seller declines to part with
hs goods at the price fixed by tho
Government, the Government undoubt-
edly possesses the right and the pow-
or to take what it needs for war
purposes, the compensation to bo de-
termined judicially in the regular way
by tho ulbunal established for that
purpose.
‘This solzure of property for war
needs is akin to the well known proc-
ess of condemnation for publie uso in
time of peace. It is, in fact, con-
domnation for public use, It does not
become confiscation until there 1s a
denial” to the owner of the right
guaranteed to him by the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution; that
1s, tho guarantee that his _ property
shall not be taken without just com-
pensation. “Jus” compensation {s
compensation fixed by judicial process
not arbitrarily fixed by the Govern-
ment acquiring the property.
‘This is a statement thoroughly
consonant with the principles of con-
stitutional law. He says further, |
Weide Resea,. Axgeiesins ccccaee
_THE RIOHMOND PLANET, RIOHMOND, VIRGINIA.
a Eee Ve HAAN
IN LITERATURE - KINGS- ARTS
SOLDIERY- METAL AND GLASS
i WORK- t was First, Reao oF
GH fre
aes “THE LAST SHML BE THE FIRST
any LAS THE FIST Sum BE THE
RUINS 0 Gees '
LAO DStEERS IE
CIVIL Za cl :
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SHALE He |
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Hay
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Se. Vi ~<em
See ‘
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petite : aq Pen nl. ——|
SHY - ——
———_ SSS
AMES PESMCHPIG, LIS GICAL MUSOMULO PIBUL
of every citizen to have his property
Protected against confiscatory use, has
had within a few days-signal illustra.
tion in tho United States Senate in
the skedadile team the Snioot
amendment to the food control bill as
soon as the significance of that meas-
ure of confiscation was generally
recognized.
In tho faco of this general recog:
nition of an eternal and {inalienable
principle of American right, the Pres-
ident's proclamation to his fellow
countrymen now declares that “we
must make the prices to the public
the same as the prices to the Govern-
ment.” This can be interpreted only
as a fervid appeal to the patriotism
of business mon and not as the for-
mulation of a protected policy of
Government.
‘The editcr of the Sun is a diplomat
of the “first water.” He knows ‘hat
President Wilson placed the pricee
,to the public (private individua!) and
to the government upon exactly the
| camo basis, He diplomatically not
fled the President, without actually
| saying so that he has goné beyond
jthe Constitution and nullified one of
j'ts main provisions. Ho proceeds to
argue the question, Here it is:
For if it is in the power of the Fed-
‘oral Government in either its Execu-
tive or its Logislative department to
x the prices at which private own-
ers of property must sell to private
‘buyers, and if the prices thus fixed
{for the private transaction are below
jthose which would obtain under the
operation of the natural law of sup-
‘ply and demand, then there ‘Is to that
‘extent confiscation. There {s con-
demnation of private property not for
public but for private use, and with-
out provision even for. the “just” com-
pensation for the property. taken
which the Constitution guarantees to
every citizen,
| Wo have examined closely all the
sontonces In the President's appeal to
business men to be unselfish and to
refrain from extortion in the prices
they ask during the war. We aro
| glad to say we find no phrase or word
proving to our satisfaction that whon
he declares that “we must make the
prices to the public the same as the
pricos to the Government” he has In
his mind any idea beyond a moral
and sentimental appeal to the patri-
otism and conscience of those he is
addressing. Mr. Wilson has avolded
| any expression ‘on the subject of prico
fixing which commits him to an on-
terprise so vast and so clearly un.
constitutional as would be the attempt
to regulate by law the prices at which
Private property owners must dis-
pose of their property to private pur-
chasers,
' “Indeed, the President goes so far
as to say distinctly that “the law
must command these things,” and no
man knows better than he does that
the supreme law which commends
these things is the Constitution of
the United States,
It looks to us very much as though
tho Sun and {ts supporters are whist-
Ung to keop up thelr courage. 'Thoy
know that whon President Wilson
says that the public should enjoy the
same reduction in prices as the gov-
ernment, ho will find some way tq
Uiring about, jthe reatization of his
hopes. ‘The Constitution of the United
States fy dj discard those: days and
to uppeal to it outside of the august
tribunals créated to construe It is an
absurdity, Certainly, ttle hope re-
mains of securing a favorable consid-
eration there, when the able jurists
now occupying the clevated positions
of Justices and who enjoy a life ten-
ure in omeb'Aow seem to be as sus-
coptible and as fearful of public
critieism as’ are the representatives
from the various congressional dis-
triets In this country.
If the Constitution of the United
States has not been able to protect
the colored people of the United States
in thelr right to Iffo, Iberty and pur-
sult of happiness, how can tho hunt-
ed corporations who observed at the
time with equanimity the predica-
ment of our Reoplo, expect any better
treatment at ‘the hands of their one-
mies? It was the black man’s turn a
fow years ago, It is the white man's
turn now. ‘This is the logical re-
sult of condoning ovil that good may
come, .
18 ROOSEVELT COMING BACK?
Wo have noted with interest the
attitude of Col. Theodore Roosevelt re-
cently with refererice to the astound:
ing massacre at East St. Louls, Il
nois. Wliat dées it all mean? What
does this truly remarkable statesman
intend to do in the future? Is it pos:
sible that the great influence ‘possess-
ed by him is to be thrown into the
balances in support of one of tho
humblest races of people on the face
o€ the globe and that the time fs ap-
Proaching when the prayers of the
colored folks sent up to “Daniel's God”
for aid, succor and comfort are about
to be answered?
Wo were stirred by theso emotions
whon we noted tnat at Carnegic Hall,
New York Friday, July 6, 1917, in the
Presened of the Russian War Mission,
ho administered a rebuke to Mr. Sam-
uel Gompers, which is reverberating
around the world. Organized labor
in the vicinity of Bast St. Louls has
taken a stand antagonistic to the col-
ored people who migrated there and
the distinguished labor 1 ader has as-
sumed an apologetic attitude towards
the affair. Mr.. Gompers is quoted as
saying:
“I-should ke ‘to pxplain about
East St. Louts,” he sald, attor prats-
ing everything else tho Colonel had
sald.- “I wish T had with me a tele-
gram I received tonight from the sec-
retary of the Illinois Foderation of
Labor. It explains the whole situa:
tion, Not only labor men, but the
Chamber of Commeree warned those
who were luring colored men from
the South to undermine the workers
of Bast, St. Louis, Hundreds.of thou-
sands were. brought in_ and there
was no placo for thori to Iny thoir
heads. Luring them there was no
more than a working of the samo
brutal, tyramnteal forces that existed
in old Russia. ‘hero is altogether
tool muvh injustice prevailing in free
America, (Groans and hisses), but
there Is a larger percentage of free-
,dom and justice than in,any other
country.”
' Just what the warning of the
‘American Federation of Labor and
the Chamber of Contmbkdevof Mast
St. Louis had to do with justifying
pee massacring and cremating * of
men, women and children wili always
“bo a mystery. It would seem that
tho real murderers were the mem-
bers of the American Federation of
Labor and the East St. Louis Cham-
ber of Commerce or that both bodies
connived at and encouraged the
slaughter of the Innocents.. Certain:
ly, no act of barbarity could have
served the purposo better of com:
promising the great Roosevelt and his
supporters and to make ridiculous
their condemnation of the treatment
of tho Belgians by the Germans than
the one committed In this Illinois city.
Hon, Theodore Roosevelt understood
that quickly and he lost no time
4n condemning and disavowing any
sympathy with this crowning out-
rage at the Century. His words will
encircle the globe. He {s quoted as
follows:
“May I say another word,” he sald,
waving a programme in his right
hand and obviously boiling with sup-
pressed feeling.
“I am_ not willing,” he went on,
biting off each word as if it were
a sift nosed bullet, “that a meeting
cated to commemorate the birth of
f@ democracy In Russia shall even
seem to have giyen any approval or
accepted any apology for the brutal
infamy {mposed on Negroes or col-
ored men,”
| Most of the audience sprang to its
fect, yelling for the Colonel.
“Justice,” he continued, “is not
merely words. It is to be translated
into living acts, and how can wo
praiso the people of Russia if wo by
explanation, silence or evasion apol-
ogize for murdering the helpless.
(Cheers.) In the past I have listen-
ed to the same form of excuse from
the Russian autocracy for the pro:
grams inflicted on the Jews. Shall wo
by silenée acquiesce in this amazing
apology for the murder of men, wom.
en and children In our own country 2”
sre ain as follows:
‘Thoro was noise all over the hall,
but it was all in the Colonel's favor.
Hitting the speaker's table with his
fist after every word, he sald:
“Vil do everything for the labor-
Ing man except that which is wrong,
Jand that Twill not do for any man
or cause. I care not a snap of my
finger”—here. the Colonel walked
dyor to Mr, Gompers and shook
fist within a foot of tho Gompors
nose—"for a telegram from tho head
of the strongest Invor’ unfon in Ill
nols, ‘This thing took place in a
Northern State, where the whites
cytnumber the Negroes twenty to
one, and if in that elty white mon
cannet protect theit rights by thelr
votes against an inolgnifeant minor.
ity and have to murder women and
children, then the State that sont
Abraham Lincoln to the Prostdency
must bow its head in shame,”
Is It possible that the great me
velt Is returning ta his “first love”?
Is he again standing upon the broad
platform of a beneficent humanity,
without regard to raco, color or pro-
vious condition of sorvitude? Let us
hope so. ‘This truly romarkablo states-
man has been thought to be many-sided
He is a man of many moods, but no
act of his and no declarations that he
may have made during tho last dec-
ade will enshrine his name in the
hearts of the justice laving poople of
this country, irrespective of color
more firmly than thosg vehemently
uttered from the platform of Carnegie
Hall in New York, July 6, 1917. Some
way and somehow, the good God is
raising up new friends in quarters
from which they are least expected.
All we want is for statesmen to advo-
cate the right principles and enun-
| clate fundamental truths. We do not
need any special support as a race,
We wish a fair deal and no favors.
Chief SamveL Gamrens leaned too
far backward in his support of organ-
ized labor. Ho fell out of the
arena of fair play to the adamant
floor of oternal justice below and the
pains ho is now experiencing may at
sometime and somewhere cause him
j to reverse himself before ho is called
} to go and tako his place In the “silent
halls of death.” May God help ‘Theo:
[date Roosevelt and v:sy God confound
| Samuen Gomrens.
| But ‘Truth will conquer at the last
i As round and round we run
And ever the Right comes uppermost
| And over is Justice done.
MIEUTENANT YOUNG'S PATRIOTIC
LETTDR,
The following Interesting letter from
Lieutenant Colonel Chas. Young «wil
prove‘to be interesting reading. We
have been somewhat tn a quandary as
to whether wo should publish it or not,
but after reading it over carefully we
fail to find ofther any complaint or
criticism of gither the surgeons or the
Examining Board that has reported
to rotire him. On tie contrary, he
asks that there bo no agitation of the
case, placing tho matter upon the high
ground that we should ceaso all
bickerings at this timo of tho crists
In tho htatorys of (ho “Amereun” Re:
public, “Race must out no figure
now” *
We agree with him and we hope
{hat the public will read this remark.
able contribution to current literature
with pleasure and profit, But here is
the letter:
Lottermen General Hospital,
‘The Presidio of San Francisco, Call,
July 3, 1917,
My Rew Mr. Mitehell:—
‘“Lelter from you did more good than
any meiioine which the doctors could
give for the “high blood-pressure"
which they claim to have found as
wnfitting me for active service with
troops, "I needed tho letter but do
not need, nor have I had any medi.
cine, for I am not now nor have I
been sick, not even ailing. I told
the Examining Board so and have told
the surgeons so here,
I firmly belfevo tho finding of the
surgeons to be correct as to blood:
pressure; but I believe it to spring
from a surplus of energy which has
beon necessary to carry me over the
dimeult places in my career and al-
low me to do good work for the
Government and still keep well.
I wish to play this thing in a
sportemanlike way and if according
to the rules of tho game I am out
I shall submit without a whine, al-
though I shall bo sorry for the oppor.
tunity wo miss as a raco and of the
loss to the Government after having
trlaning me for this event.
Bellevo mo thot I'vo no kick com.
ing against the Government nor tho
Administration, I belleve every ot.
ficer of the Line and all of the enlisted
men that know mo aro sorry for my
easo; and if they had a yote would
east it for the powers that be to
walvo this finding of the surgoons and
let mo continue on active duty,
Let there be no agitation in my ease
for T want all af our people be
moralized to tho highest possible
point and enter into this war as
Americans,
Raco must cut no figure now. 1
feel confident that the Secretary of
War and the President ecould and
would act favorable in this mattor
{f they could find time, but it 1s a
one man matter and they are busy,
too busy indeed to bother about me
perhaps, *
‘Thank you for your kind invitation
and especially for your letter of sym.
pathy,
Fraternally and cordially yours,
Chas, Young.
HOTTENTOT
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athens aul
‘The Planct will be sent to any
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STEPHEN M, NEWMAN, A M,, D: D:
President
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[ee
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SITUATION WANTED-—POSITION
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STYLE BOOK
--- HAIR...
To Golored Women|
Maa 58% the nest
RE Soloren Womens
ARTA Sai Siero
NGC OS |
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San BP Every colored wo:
aD fa ee ae
Ba Sb eld fae ove hate and
eee iin iin
ni: a
colldpensssrtaiittt
ENING combs, with extea eats Dari autty
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manufacturers" prices Send eroscent Mane
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All having bills against Wlizabeth
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Published every waturday by John
Mitchell, Jr, at S11 N. 4th Street,
Richmond, Virginia,
JOHN MITCHELL, JR. EDITOR
All communications intended for pub-
lication should be sent so as to
reach us by Wednesday.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond
Virginia, as second-class matter.
SATURDAY..........JULY 21, 1917.
RESPONSIBLLITY FOR MURDER,
colored people of the Southland |
would sooner or later find their
rights to life, Iberty and property
safeguarded and defended by south
orn white people who had always
been classed to be thelr bitterest
enemies. We see or think we see a
ray of light, so to speak intimating
that a realization of this prediction
ix at hand. The Jacksonville, Fla.,
Times-Union, in its issue of the 9th
inst, says: |
OF course, the presence of a bull in
a china shop would be advertised
when the same bull in a pasture could
crop the succulent grasses unmolest-
ed; a bull that desired advertisement
would, therefore, rush out of the pas-
ture nto the shop. Probably it was
the same reason that when Col. Roose:
velt was asked to speak at a meeting
called to welcome th representative:
of the latest republic, he should find tt
necessary to accuse’ organized Tabor
of wholésale murder to” put his av
Gience Mm good hamor with the world.
No proof was shown and no reason
given for pitehing such a bombshell
into a gathering of friends; Roosevelt
did iL, and the act needs no explana:
tion,
A proverb casily appreciated in
Florida declares: “It you give a calf
rope he will hang himself.” Roose:
yelt offered the rope, and Gempers
made a eaif of himself without delay!
For, rising to deny an imputation
which had nothing for support but the
Word of Roosevelt, the president of
the American” Federation of | Labor
provided the proof needed by tis ad:
versary when he read a telegram from
the president of the Federation of
Labor of Tiltnols asserting that
employers who enticed Negroes
from the South to breale the hack of
labor in the North and West were
Veaily tesponsible for wholesale mur-
Gers it Bast St Louis in tho state
of ilinois!
No need for more words Roose-
velt drow his baw at a venture, and
the flying arrrow pierced the armor!
of organized labor, because Gompers
opened the joints of his harness; it
organized labor did not massacre ant
burn in Bast St. Louis, the world has
heard the confesssian of moral respon-
sibility, and this evidence is more
Mital {han would be the legal proot
that a number of laborers in a
moment of excitement had become a
murderous mob. ‘The president of
the national federation and the prosi-
dent of a state organization have now.
made themselves responsible for the
opinion that if an employer hires la-
borers in the South to do work in
Minofs, then that employer {s respon-
sible when organized labor shoots,
burns and hangs such laborers, Kills
their women and children ayd’ burn
their houses. "If this does not consti-
tute a serious chargo.against federat-
ed labor and call for Its outlawry
under the laws, then the prosecutions
of trusts are mere acts of veneer
‘Tho situation could not be moro
ailmirably stated by this master mind
in tho editorial office of the ‘Times-
Union.He went further and ho said
much more. Here it is:
But the published facts in the caso
Justify other charges. For some days
agitation and threats predicted tho
coming of disorder but no steps were
taken to protect order sand decency |
tho lives and property ‘of “American
citizens were loudly threatened, and
nothing was done by way of rebuko|
to the agitators nor toward the pro-
tection of a city threatened with
murder and arson
When Cleveland was president of
the United States and Altgeld was
governor of Tilinois, another city of
the same state underlay like treats,
‘Then as now, the governor of thé
state look no steps to protect the.
interests of the public, and the presi:
dent of the United States sent troops
to Chicago against the excited pro-
tests of the “governor of the state.
It has been said that it was merely
pretext to assert that federal prop:
erty was endangered; it may be that
President Cleveland ‘was wrong and,
President Wilson is right, but can wo
say a risk may not be ‘taken when’
life is at stake at home by a_presi-
dent who risks so much to dofend
Belgium and France across the seas?
Are German sympathizers to be pun-
ished, even if a proclamation of mar.
lial law he necessary, while corganiz.
ed labor may slay at’ will?
‘This question will ring and ro-
verberate from one section of this
country to the other. Colored peo-
ple have always beon averse to strik-
ing and to causing trouble by labor
Aisputes. They have stood by their
white employing friends in this section
of the country, risking life and limb
In an effort to carry out their promis-
€s to the white mon, who pledged to
stand by them. The flremen’s strike
on southern railroads has been
settled only when the black, loyal
employees had been retained in. the
service, Now, the Times-Union yants
to know why federal aid cannot be
favoked to protect these humble peo-
ple fram % sunny elime, It affords a
situation fraught with future hope for
both the “brother In black and the
“brother in white.”
‘The conclusion is as flows:
The Times-Union has consistently
and faithiully denounced and condemi-
cd disorder and mob-law in the South
But in the South enmity is always
excited against a supposed erhninal;
the Southern mob seeks to punish
KuilK In other sections enmity is
aroused not against guilt, supposed or
assumed, but against the Negro race;
the crime alleged Is that of seeking
to carn an honest living by honest
work. According to the plea urged
by Mr. Gompers, the Negro must not
venture to earn wages desired sor re-
fused by organized labor; he must
not go from the South to seck work
in other sections.
President Gompers says ho knows
Roosevelt, who. is only a bluffer; let
‘us agree with him, Now If Col Roose-
velt be more than a seeker after easy
notoriety, let him go further in this
matter, and we will go with him heart
and soul. Let him lead public opin.
fon to show that Gompers is werse
than a bluffer in that he hay ventured
too far,
| We feel like exclaiming, Praise
God from Whom all blessings flow.”
When a southern newspaper takes
this high ground and champions the
causo of the colcred people while
at the same time explaining the dif.
ferenco in the exercise of lawlessness
against this race In the South and
tho Kind visited upon this same race
in the North, it $s an omen that the
Heaven is working and that a realiza.
tion of our hepe, the unification com:
plete In every detail of the better
class of white people and the better
ass, of colored people from the Ma-
son and Dixon Line to the Guil of
Mexico and the boundaries of the
Southern Republic, is at hand.
THE PENDULUM OF JUSTICE,
You cannot persistently deny to one
| class of American citizens their rights
and privileges without ultimately
taking away from another class of
} American ltizens their rights and
‘privileges. You cannot contiseate the
| praperty of colored people without
[ultimately contiseating the proper:y
of white people, You cannot deny to
colored men their rights and privé
leges without ultimately denying
rights and privileges to white men.
|The pehdulum of right and Justice will
I swing backward as far in one divee:
‘tion as it has im another.
| Not many years ago the railroads
in partioutae and eorporatias in Ken-
eral controlied not only the legislative
branch of government at Washington,
but also in the States. ‘The ordinary
eltizen found it dificult to secure jus:
fic even in the courts of law, when
arrayed against any one of these
agencies. Equally powerful were the
Whiskey and the Beer ‘Trusts, ‘These
powerful interests wore so entrenched
[im power that any effort madg to
dislodge them seemed like child's
play. ‘Then came the awakening with
Hon. William J. Bryan as the spokes-
man,
He has been ‘ost in mo crowd,”
80 to speak, but the principles that
he advocated have becen marehing on-
ward, Now we see the same methods
pursued in dealing with the helpless
colored man bolng used in dealing
with tho struggling white man, who
Hpewalls Ils fate, while the” poor
colored men look on with sometimes
& pathetic interest. It was a dark
day for a dark people a few years
agd, It is a darker day for white
people In this year of our Lord,
nineteen hundred and sevonteon.
These people tabooed and overlooked
and disregarded the Constitution of
the United States in dealing with col-
ored folks. ‘They are doing the samo
thing in dealing with the white peo-
ple. In discussing the situation the
New York Sun, dno of the ablest
edited newspapers in the country, in
2 issue of the 13th inst says:
The Government of the United
States undowbtedly has both the right
and the power to fix the prices which
it will pay far any commodity needed
for its operations cither in time of
war or in time of peace
If the seller declines to part with
5 goods at the price fixed by tho
Government, the Government undoabt.
edly passesses the right and the pow.
er to take what it needs for war
purposes, the compensation to be de-
termined judicially in the regular way
by the uribunal established for that
purpose,
This seizure of property for war
needs is akin to the well known proc-
€88 of condemnation for public use in
time of peace. It is, in fact, con:
Gemnation for public use. Tt dees not
become confiscation until there is a
denial to the owner of the right
guaranteed to him by the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution; that
Is, the guaranteo that his property
shall not be taken without Just com.
pensation. “Just” compensation 1s
compensation fixed by judicial process
not arbitrarily fixed by the Govern-
ment acquiring the property,
This is a statement thoroughly
consonant with the prineiples of con-
stitutional law. He says further,
'
This ‘broad, fundamental, unaltér-
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RIGHMOND, VIRGINIA _
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wie pranciple, this great absolute right
of every citizen to haye his property
‘Protected against confseatory use, bas
had within a few days’ signal illustra-
tion in the United States Senate in
the sksdadile frou the Smoot
emendment to the rood control bill as
soon as the significance of that meas:
ure of confiscation was generally
recognized.
In the face of this general recog-
nition of an eternal and inalienable
principle of American right, the Pres-
ident's proclamation to” his fellow
countrymen now declares that "we
must make the prices to the public
the same as the prices to the Govern-
ment.” ‘This can be interpreted only
as a fervid appeal to the — patriotism
of business men and not as the for-
mulation of a protected policy of
Government,
‘The editor of the Sun is a diplomat
of the “first water.” He knows that
President Wilson placed the prices
to the public (private individual) and
to the government upon exactly the
game basis. He diplomatically noti-
fied the President, without actually
saying so that he has goné beyond
the Constitution and nullified one of
its main provisions, He proceeds to
argue the question, Here it is:
For if it is in the power of the Fed-
oral Government in either its Execu-
tive or its Legislative department to
fix the prices at which private own-
ers of property must soll to private
buyers, and if the prices thus fixed
for tho private transaction are below
those which would obtain under the
operation of the natural law of sup-
ply and demand, then there {s to that
extent confiscation. There is con-
demnation of private property not for
public but for private use, and with-
out provision even for. the “just” com-
pensation for the property taken
which the Constitution guarantees to
every citizen,
Wo have examined closely all the
sentonces in the Prosident’s appeal to
business men to be unselfish and to
refrain from extortion in the prices
they ask during the war. We are
glad to say we find no phrase or word
proving to our satisfaction that when
he declares that “we must make the
prices lo the pudlic the same as the
prices to the Government” he has in
his mind any idea beyond a moral
and sentimental appeal to the patri-
otism and conscience of those he is
addressing. Mr, Wilson has avoided
any expression ‘on the subject of price
fixing which commits him to an en-
terprise so vast and so clearly un-
constitutional as would be the attempt
to regulate by law the prices at which
Private property owners must dis-
Pose of their property to private pur-
chasers.
Indeed, the President goes so tar
as to say distinetly that “the law
must command these things,” and no
man knows better than he does that
the supreme law which commands
these things is the Constitution of
the United States,
It loaks to us very much as though
the Sun and its supporters are whist-
ling to keep up their courage, They
Know that when President Wilson
says that the public should enjoy the
same reduction in prices as the gov-
ernment, he will find some way to
dring about whe reatization of his
hopes. ‘The Constitution of the United
States fy diy diseard these days and
to appeal to it outside of the august
tribunals creaied to construe it is an
absurdity. Certainly, little hope re-
mains of securing a favorable consid-
eration there, when the able jurists
now occupying the elevated positions
of Justices and who enjoy a life ten-
ure in oMeéhow seem to bo as sus:
coptible and as fearful of public
critieism as are the representatives
from tho various congressional dis-
triets in this country,
If the Constitution of the United
States has not been able to protect
the colored people of the United States
in their right to life, liberty and pur-
suit of happiness, how can the hunt-
ed corporations who observed at the
time with equanimity the predica-
ment of our people, expect any better
treatment at ‘the hands of their ene-
mies? It was the black man’s turn a
fow years ago. It is the white man’s
turn now. This is the logical re-
sult of condoning evil that good may
come,
IS ROOSEVELT COMING BACK?
We have noted with interest the
attitude of Col. Theodore Roosevelt re-
cently with reference to the astound-
ing massacre at East St. Louis, It
nois, Wliat does it all mean? What
does this truly remarkable statesman
intend to do in the future? Is it pos:
sible that the great influence possess-
ed by him is to be thrown into the
balances in support of one of tho
humblest races of people on the face
ef the globe and that the time fs ap-
Proaching when the prayers of the
colored folks sent up to “Daniel's God”
for aid, succor and comfort are about
to be answered?
We were stirred by these emotions
when we noted that at Carnegie Hall,
New York Friday, July 6, 1917, in tho
Presence of tho Russian War Mission,
ho administered a rebuke to Mr. Sam-
uel Gompers, which is reverberating
around the world. Organized labor
in tho vicinity of Hast St. Louis has
taken a stand antagonistic to the col-
ored peaple who migrated there and
the distinguished labor 1 ader has as-
sumed an apologetic attitude towards
the affair, Mr.. Gompers is quoted as
saying:
“T-should like tto pxplain about.
East St. Louls,” he said, after prais-
ing everything elso the Colonel had
said. “I wish I had with mo a tele-
gram T received tonight from the sec-
retary of the Illinois Federation of
Labor. It explains the whole situa-
tion. Not only labor men, but tho
Siamber of Commerce warned those
who were Juring colored men from
the South to undermine the workers
of Bast. St. Louis. Hundreds of thou-
sands were brought In and — there
was no place for then to lay cei
heads. Luring them there was no
more ‘than a working of the samo
brutal, tyrannical forces that existed
in old Russia. ‘There is altogether
too much Injustive prevailing in free
America. (Groans and” hisses), but
there is a larger percentage of free.
dom and justice than in,any other
| country.”
Just what the warning of the
‘American Federation of Labor and
the Chamber of Conmibéde: of Bast
St, Louis had to do with justifying
the massacring and cremating ot
men, women and children will always
be a mystery. It would seem that
tho real murderers were the mem-
bers of the American Federation of
Labor and the Mast St. Louis Cham-
ber of Commerce or that. both bodies
connived at and encouraged the
slaughter of the innocents.. Certain-
ly, no act of barbarity could have
served the purpose better of com-
promising the great Roosevelt and his
supporters and to make ridiculots
their condemnation of the treatment
of the Belgians by the Germans than
the one committed in this Illtnois city.
| Hon. Theodore Rooseyelt understood
‘that quickly and he lost no time
in condemning and disayowing any
sympathy with this crowning out-
rage af the Century. His words will
encircle the globe. He is quoted as
follows:
“May I say another word,” he sald,
waving a programme in his right
hand and obviously boiling with sup-
pressed fecling.
“I am not willing,” he went on,
biting of each word as if it were
a sift nosed bullet, “that a meeting
called to commemorate the birth of
fa democracy tn Russia shall even
seem to have given any approval or
aceepted any apology for the brutal
infamy imposed on Negroes or col-
ored men,”
Most cf the audience sprang to its
feet, yelling for the Colonel.
“Justice,” he continued, “is not
merely words, It is to be translated
into living acts, and how can wo
praise the people of Russia it we by
explanation, silence or evasion apol-
oize for ‘murdering the helpless.
(Cheers.) In the past T have listen:
ed to the same form of excuse from
the Russian autocraey for the pro:
grams inflicted on the Jews. Shall wo
by silence aequiesce in this amazing
apology for the murder of men, wom-
en and children in our own country 2”
He concluded as follows:
‘Thero was noise all over the hall,
but it was all in the Colonel's favor,
Hitting the speaker's table with his
fist after every word, he said:
“Tl do overything for the labor-
ing man excopt that which is wrong,
and that T will not do for any man
or cause. I care not a snap of my
finger"—here the Colonel walked
«ver to Mr, Gompors and shook i
fist. within a foot of the Gompers
hose—"for a telegram from the head
of the strongest labor’ union in TI
nots, ‘his thing took placo in a
Northern State, where the whites
© tiumber the’ Negroes twenty to
one, and if in that city white mon
cannat protect their rights by. thelr
yotos against an insignificant 2
ity and have to murder women and
children, then the State that sent
Abraham Lincoln to tho Presideney
must bow its head In shame.” |
Is It possible that the great Roose-
velt is returning ta his “first love"?
Is he again standing upon the broad
platform of a beneficent humanity,
without regard to race, color or pre-
vious condition of servitude? Let us
hope so. ‘This truly remarkablo states-
man has been thought to be many-sided
Me Is a man of many moods, but no
act of his and no declarations that he
may have made during the last dec-
ade will enshrine his name in the
hearts of the Justice loving people of
this country, irrespective of color
more firmly than those vehemently
uttered from the platform of Carnegie
Nall in New York, July 6, 1917. Some
way and somehow, the good God is
raising up new friends In quarters
‘from which they are least expected.
jan We want Is for statesmen to advo:
leate the right principles and enun.
[ciate fundamental truths. We do not
;Meed any special support as a race.
We wish a fair doal and no favors.
| far backward in his support of organ:
ized labor. Me fell out of the
arena of fair play to. the adamant
floor of eternal justice below and the
pains he is now experiencing may at
; sometime and somewhere cause him
to reverse himself before he is called
j fo go and take his place in the “silent
{halls of death.” May God help ‘Theo
{dore Roosevelt and may God confound
j Seems Gowrens.
_ But ‘Truth will conquer at tho last
i As round and round we run
And ever the Right comes uppermost
| And ever is Justice done,
LIEUTENANT YOUNG'S PATRIOTIC
LETTER,
The following interesting letter from
Lieutonant Cotonel Chas, Young will
prove to be interesting reading. We
have been somewhat in a quandary as
to whether we should publish it or not,
but atter reading it over carefully we
fail to find ether any complaint ot
criticism of either the surgeons or the
Examining Board that has reported
{o retire him. On the contrary, ho
asks that there be no agitation of the
case, placing the matter upon the high
ground that we should corso all
bickerings at this time of the crisis
fy the history of (uy Amerteui” Re:
public, “Race must eut no figure
now” *
We agree with him and we hope
that the public will read this remark.
able contribution to current Literature
Wilh pleasure and profit, But here is
the letter:
Lettermen General Hospital,
‘The Presidio of San Francisco, Calif,
July 3, 1917.
My Dear Mr. Mitchell:—
Lelter from you did more good than
any medicine whieh the doctors could
give for the “high blood-pressure”
which they claim ‘to have found as
unfitting me for aetive service with
troops. “I needed the letter but do
not need, nor have I had any medi.
cine, fer Tam not now nor have I
been ‘sick, not even ailing. I told
the Examining Board so and have told
(he surgeons so here.
I firmly believe tho finding of the
surgeons to be correct as to blood
pressure; but I believe it to spring
from a surplus of energy which has
beon necessary to carry me over the
aiMeult places In my career and al-
low me to do good work for the
Government and still keep well.
I wish to play this thing in a
sportsmantike way and sf according
to the rules of the game I am out
1 shall submit without a whine, al
though I shall be sorry for the oppor.
tunity we miss as a race and of the
loss to the Government after having
trianing me for this ovent,
Believe me that I've no kik com.
ing against tho Government nor tho
Administration, I belleve every ot.
ficer of the Line and all of the enlisted
men that know me are sorry: for my
case; and if they had a vote would
cast it for the powers that be to
walve this finding of the surgeons and
let me continue on active duty.
Let there be no agitation in my case
for I want all af our people be
moralized to the highest — possible
point and enter into this war as
Amerteans,
Race must ent no figure now. 1
feel confident that the Secretary of
War and the President ecould and
would act favorable in this matter
ft they could find time, but it is a
one man matter and they aro busy,
too busy indeed to bother about me
perhaps,
‘Thank you for your kind invitation
and especially for your letter of sym-
pathy.
Fraternally and cordially yours,
Chas. Young.
HOTTENTOT
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STEPHEN M, NEWMAN, 4 M,, D: D:
President
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HEY LAND
SATURDAY.....JULY 21, 1917.
RADICALS CLAIM NEW CHANCELLOR
ROW OVER FOREIGN OFFICE
Relchtag Majority to Demand That Michaella Accept Their Statement of Peace Terms.
The new chancellor, Dr. Michaella, is described in special despatches from Bouln as working night and day on his program speech and the selection of new material for the Prussian imperial administration.
The Lokal Anzelger says the changes have been completed and the Chancellor will appear in the relchstag accompanied by all his new colleagues.
The Tageblatt says Herr Michaella is reticent on his policy.
The relchstag is expected to adjourn on Friday until September, first voting the war credits almost unanimously.
(Despatches said Dr. Michaella would make his maiden speech on Thursday.)
A depatch from Berlin says the majority "bloc" plans to present peace terms in a resolution to the rechastak on Thursday and to demand from Dr. Michaela a statement that he accept it in principle, otherwise co-operation is impossible. Meanwhile the execution of this plan depends upon the extent to which the "bloc" holds together.
A late edition of the Lokal Anzelger asserts that the new chancellor is for the foreign policy and peace terms expounded by Field Marshal von Hindenburg and the pan-German camp. It quotes conservative and national liberal members of the rechastak who attended a conference with von Hindenburg, General von Ludendorff, first Quartermaster General, and Dr. Michaela as being most favorably impressed with the results.
The Local Anzueler asserts of its own knowledge that Dr. Michaels already has established relations of absolute unanimity and cooperation with these military-political chieftains. The newspaper strongly recommends to Dr. Michaels and parliament the postponement until the end of the war of the settlement of all contentious internal questions, including, naturally, Prusian suffrage reform, the theory properly rebuilding what it terms impertinent interference from enemy countries in the internal German affairs and demonstrating the harmonious unity of the country.
The selection of a successor to the foreign secretary, Dr. Alfred Zimmermann, is still unsettled. Pressure is being brought from two directions to block the proposed nomination of Count Brockdorf-Rantzau, the German minister at Copenhagen, and to substitute Admiral von Hintze, minister to Norway, or count von Bernstorf, former ambassador to Washington.
The present minister to Christiana is greatly desired by pan-Germans and advocates of a super-vigorous policy not only on account of his high diplomatic qualifications, but chiefly on account of his antecedents.
Apparently it is felt that a former naval officer, particularly one who played such a prominent role at Manila in the events of 1898, will offer the necessary guarantee; that the German foreign policy in regard to peace negotiations will be afterwards conducted along desired energetic lines. The emperor is said to favor von Hintze.
The Tageblatt, the Mittags Zeitung and the Socialist organ Vorwaerts unite in declaring that the candidacy of Admiral V hintze for foreign minister is a move of the super-annexationists.
The Tageblatt and Vorwärts warn Dr. Michaells that he cannot accept von Hintze without compromising the administration with a pan-German taint. The Deutsche Tages Zeltung (Reventlow' s paper) supports von Hintze's candidacy.
ORDERS SUPPLIES FOR ARMY
Requalitions Percentage of Output
NATIONS' Percentage of Output
From Every Canner in Country.
To be able to insure an adequate supply of canned goods for the army and navy, the defense councell's supply committee asked all the country's canners to reserve the following portion of their output:
Twelve per cent of each canner's back of peas, 12 per cent of corn, 18 per cent of tomatoes and 6 per cent of salmon.
The canners already have agreed to accept a fair price to be established by the government.
Railroads to Ald Hoover.
Herbert C. Hoover has received resolutions adopted by the American Railway association's war board pleiding the board and its individual members to put into effect the rules for the conservation of food on dining cars. The plan was worked out between Mr. Hoover and representatives of the commissary departments of the railroads.
1914
Photo by American Press Association.
Reports by Petrograd indicate that War Minister Kerensky's life is sought by assassins and he is now heavily guarded for life to prevent since his return from the Galician front, where he inspired the troops to their new offensive.
SUFF PICKETS GO TO JAIL
Sentenced to Sixty Days and Refuse to Pay Fine.
The sixteen members of the wo man's party arrested on Saturday in an attempt to "picket" the White House in Washington, were sentenced to pay a fine of $25 or serve sixty days in the District of Columbia workhouse at Occoquan, Va.
They decided to take the sixty-day sentence. An appeal will be taken Heretofore the militant suffragists have gotten off with three-day jail sentences.
Dudley Field Malone, collector of the port of New York, who saw the arrest of the Saturday, and was a witness in behalf of the women, will act as their counsel.
It was reported that Mr. Malone would resign his post at New York to take charge of the work. Mr. Malone would not discuss this.
The woman sentenced were: Miss Mary Ingham, Philadelphia; Mrs Florence Bayard Hiles, Wilmington Del; Miss Minnie Abbott, Atlantic City; Mrs Eunice Dana Brannan, New York; Mrs Jenette Fotheringham Buffalo; Miss Eleanor Angela Calamman, Meuben; Mass.; Miss Anna Marie knead, Mt. View, Cal.; Mrs Amelia Hines Wailers, Bittimore; Miss Julia Wailers, Morristown; Miss Betty Graves Morristown, Del; Mrs Turnbull Hopkins, Morristown, N. J. Mrs. Matilda Gardner, Washington; Miss Doris Stevens, Omaha; Miss Louisa Parker Mayo, Farmingham Mass.; Miss Elizabeth Selden Rogers New York.
VOTE PORTO RICO DRY
Prohibition Majority Big-Unionists
Candidate For Commissioner Whirl
Porto Rico voted for prohibition by a big majority at the election.
With four unimportant towns missing the returns show 99,775 votes for prohibition and 61,295 against.
Fifty-one municipalities voted for the prohibition measure, twenty-one opposed it. San Juan's vote was Bill for, and 2255 against. All the other large cities were strongly on the dry side.
Folix Cordova Deavilla, Unionist, was chosen resident commissioner at Washington. The Unionist carried five out of seven senatorial districts. The Unionists will have a majority in the low er house. The Socialist gains that were scored were chiefly at Republican expense.
Santigano Iglesias, the Socialist canidate for senator-at-large, although falling of election, polled 23487 votes this showing comparing with the party's vote of 4300 in 1914. The Unionists polled 88,750 vote and the Republicans 57,529.
Irish Convention Plans.
The national convention will assemble on July 25 in Regent house of Trinity college, in Dublin, according to official announcement. The chief secretary for Ireland, H. E. Duke will preside until the convention chooses its own chairman. It is expected the proceedings will be private, but probably an official record will be made.
Crown Prince Lauds U-Boats.
A copy of the Illustrite Zeitung of Leipzig, received in Copenhagen contains autographed commen-taries upon the exploits of U-boats by German naval and military leaderz. The crown prince lauds the ruthless U-boat war against shipping as the "last argument of kings."
While being tried for theft before a magistrate at Millisboro, Del. Raymond Wost pulled a revolver and shot his way through a crowd, seriously wounding Lorenzo Britlingham. He escaped in an auto mobile.
U-Boat Sunk by Canadian Freighter. The Canadian freight steamship Meaford sank a submarine in the Mediterranean on June 12. The official information comes from the marine department in London, conveyed to the Fartar Transportation company, Ltd., of Toronto, owners of the Meaford.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
RIOT AND CABINET ROW STIR RUSSIA
Tour Ministers Resign
Ukraine Controversy
Several Are Killed in Anti-Government Demonstrations in Petrograd—Mobs Fired on Each Other.
Three members of the Russian cabinet have resigned. A special session of the council of ministers has been convoked in an effort to avert a crisis. Two demonstrations against the government resulted in the firing of shots in the Newsky Prospekt at midnight Sunday. A number of persons were killed or wounded.
The firing apparently was the result of stray shots which bequeathed on a panic, in which the demonstrators turned rifles and machine guns on each other. Quiet was restored after a few minutes.
The demonstrations were organized by the Bolshovikl, the majority factor of the Social-Democratic party.
The men resigning are A. I. Shingaroff, minister of finance; Professor Manuloff, minister of education, and Prince Shakovsky, head of the department of public aid.
(A later despatch reports that M. Stepanoff, acting minister of commerce, also has resigned.)
The resignations of these ousted ministers followed a sharp disagreement over questions involving the Ukraine an extensive region in Russia, embracing part of the territories of the old kingdom of Poland.
Prince Lloyd, the premier, has requested the ministers to meet at his private residence when the cause of the dispute will be considered. It is known he will attempt to prevail on them to withdraw their resignations.
The split in the ministry occurred at a conference called to consider a report submitted by M. Tereschtenko, minister of foreign affairs, and M. Teseletell, minister of posts and telegraphs, as a result of their negotiations concerning the Ukrainians.
The cadet ministers took exception to the form of a declaration drawn up by Mm. Tereschtaniko and Tserdeliell. They asserted that these ministers, without authorization, took it on themselves to commit the government to a definite policy regarding the Ukraine. They also criticized the text of the Ukraine declaration, first, because it abolished all power of the temporary government in the Ukraine; second, because it did not specify of what territories the Ukraine consists or make clear how it shall be governed. In order to maintain the combative unity of the army, the government will not countenance measures which might injure the military organization and command, although it does not object to the creation of army units composed exclusively of Ukrainians, subject to the approval of the war ministry. In order to permit settlement of this problem, special Ukrainian delegates may be attached to the war cabinet, the general staff and the staff of the commander-in-chief.
RUSSIANS LOSE KALUSZ
Forced to Quit Recently Captured Teuton headquarters in Gallica. The Russian forces which recently captured the Gallican town of Kalusk, the headquarters of the Austro-German army, evacuated that town, according to the official statement issued by the German headquarters staff. Riksholand regimenta, it is said, captured the woodlands to the north of Kalusz. As the Germans were ap proaching from the west the Russians retreated to the southern bank of the river Lomnica. The Petrograd war office announces that Russian troops have abandoned Kalusz, in eastern Gallica, but have secured the crossing of the Lomnica river. The Russians drove the enemy from the village of Novica.
DISTILLERS MAKE POTASH
Utilize Waste In Getting Alcohol From Molasses.
Announcement was made by the Jefferson Distilling and Denaturing company, in New Orleans, that it has evolved a process for the utilization of former waste in distilling alcohol from molasses, by which its plant now produces twenty tons of potash a day.
Prior to the war potash which was obtained almost exclusively from Germany, was worth $8 a ton in this country, and now it sells at $400 a ton.
New Air Rald on Essen.
The German industrial town of Bassen, where the Krupp gun works are located, was again raided by allied air men. This information was contained in a despatch from the frontier. The telegram added that the bombardment was followed by a series of tremendous explosions.
Vork, Pa., Man Wounded In France. The Canadian casualty list contains the following names of Americans: Wounded, F. C. Freeman, Minneapolis; Acting Captain Cowan, Providence; J. S. Potts, Fail Bluff, N. C.; H. W. Hillhouse, York, Pa.; P. Pink, Detroit. Shell shock, J. Bolton, Detroit.
Harrisburg Mayor Dios
Charles A. Miller, elected mayor of Harrisburg, Pa., less than two months ago, to fill the unexpired term of Dr. Ezra S. Meals, who died April 18, died at his home. Mayor Miller was for more than twenty-five years city clerk and had a reputation as an authority on municipal law.
GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES
NELVAIS
20 DORIGENT
END OF AN ERA
Photo by American Press Anselm Mills
The first three of these medals were
purchased in France and taken to France by
Miss Anne Moore and presented
presented to Marshal Joffre, President
Pollcare and former Premier Viviani
Copies are being sold here and abroad,
the money going to war relief. :
Gas Masks For U. S. Men:
Army orders disclose the fact that the government and civilian experts are hard at work on the production of an effective gas mask for American troops.
Major L. P. Williamson, of the medical corps, has been ordered to Pittsburgh, Baltimore and New Haven to inspect laboratory work being done there.
Every American destroyer or other naval vessel which sails for the war zone carries a full equipment of gas masks.
Gas shells have been used by the German naval gunners and it was deemed necessary to equip American boats against such defenses when the first were dispatched.
U. S. Shlp Kaansan Sunk.
The American steamship Kansan
came on August 16, 1865, and
agreed, approximately 20 miles
from the English coast.
A cablegram to this effect was received by the France and Canada Stateship company, which chartered the vessel. The fate of those on board is not known. The Kansan was valued at $3,000,000. She carried a cargo of flour and other foodstuffs, together with 4000 tons of steel. This, valued at $2,000,000, was consigned to the French government. A majority of her crew was Americans. State department despatches, nouncing the destruction of the Kansan by a German submarine said four members of the crew are missing. All of the armed naval guard are safe.
Woman Must Die on Gallows
Mrs. Amy E. Archer-Gillingham was found guilty of murder in the first degree in the superior court at Hartford, Conn. She was convicted of the murder by poison of Franklin R. Andrews, May 30, 1914. Andrews was an inmate of her home for elderly people at Windsor. She was sentenced to be hanged November 6, 1917.
Chamberlain Quita Cabinet
Austen Chamberlain, secretary for India, has resigned. Mr. Chamberlain's resignation is apparently due to the Kut-el-Amara scandal. His connection with the faso has been regarded as technical, the plans and conduct of the expedition having been in the hands of military commanders of the India service and Lord Hardinge, the viceroy.
$1,000,000 Elks' War Fund.
A fund of $1,000,000 for war relief work was appropriated by the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks at Boston.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILA,ADDEL,PHIA,-FLOUR — Mrm,
8.12@10.75.16@12.16; city
milla,
8.12@10.75.16@12.16
RYE FLOUR—Qulet; per barrel, $10
@11.
WHEAT—Nominal.
CORN—Qulet; No. 2 yellow, $2.02@
2.08.
OATS—Qulet; No. 2 white, 81@
81½c.
POULTRY—Live steady; hens, 20@
21c; old roosters, 16@17c; Dressed,
steady; choice fowls, 25c; old roosters,
19c.
BUTTER — Firm; fancy cromeray,
42c per lb.
EGGS — Firm; selected, 42@43c;
nearby, 36c; western, 36c.
Live Stock Quotations.
CHICAGO—HOGS — Slow, steady.
Mixed and butchers, $14.45@15.80;
grapes, $12.45@15.80; heavy
$24.55@15.25; light, $14.45@15.55;
plugs, $15.15@15.35; bulk, $14.45@15.55.
CATTLE--Steady to 15c lower.
Beeves, $2.25@13.90; cows and heifers,
shocks; shocks; feathers,
$2.55@19.10; Texas, $10.25@12; calves,
$6.50@14.50.
SHIPE--Steady to 35c lower. Nath-
ern, $7.75@10.80; lambs,
$6.50@14.00.
Artesian Wells.
For over 1,000 years the Chinese have obtained water through means of artisan wells. One of the most famous wells in existence is that at Grenelle on the outskirts of Paris, where the water is brought from a depth of 1,75 feet. A well in Pesth was sunk to the depth of 3,100 feet in the seventies.
A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR
WEDNESDAY.
Just as the Russians have torn a big gap in the Austro-German lines in Galicia, capturing Haloz and pressing on town Lemberg the Germans' jaw secured it meeting offensive and the Belgian coast.
The Germans succeeded in their initial push by leveling the defenses through an intensive bombardment for twenty-four hours and then attacking over the devastated ground. The bridges across the Yser were destroyed by the heavy fire and the sending of reinforcements was found impossible.
In the French front in northern France an attack was made by the Germans in the Woevre district, near Filley. They were elected from a portion of the trench in which they temporar-gained a footing.
THURSDAY
General Brusselloff's offensive in Gallia is developing into a drive with little let up, at least so far as the Korniloff armies are concerned. News of the capture of Hallez was followed by the announcement that General Korniloff's troops had pushed on beyond Losluvka, southwest of Stanislau, and reached and occupied Kaluzs, seven miles to the west of the Stoka river. The Austro-German headquarters in this sector was situated here. The German attack on Monday on the Belgian coast coasted with the capture of the small sector east of the Yser, which they had devastated with their intensive gunfire. On the Verdun front the German crown office made a number of attacks on both banks of the Flaves. All these assaults delivered in the vicinity of Hill 304 on the side of the stream and north of the Hardament works on the other, were repulsed by the French, as were attacks on the Alsace front south of Juivincourt.
FRIDAY.
Korniloff's aggressive Russian armies, which already have driven a wedge into the Teutonic lines in eastern Galicia, appear to be at the crucial point of their campaign for Lemberg.
Having crossed the river Lemnica, behind which the Austro-German forces planted themselves in their retreat from the Halaz region, the Russians have opened up the possibility of turning the whole Teutonic line northward along the Zhota-Lipa.
The statement from Petrograd shows that in Wednesday's fighting, which resulted in the capture of Kaluzs, the Russians took 960 pisoners, chief: Gorgad and five heavy rams
SATURDAY
Germany's internal cross overseeing ows military operations in the news Reports from Berlin show that the rechlingst has gone on "strike" against the crown and the military party, an paranity in the interest of a parliamentary system of government. There is even a rumor, little credited, that Emperor William has abdicated in favor of Prince Joachim. The Russian revolutionary aunt are still sweeping forward. Apparently there is little to stop them nourish through the breach in the lines in eastern Galicia opened by Korneloff. They are pushing north of the Dnieister aunt of the Lomnica. On the Franco-Belgian front a welling policy is being pursued by General Sir Douglas Haig and General Petrin There has been only local fighting by either group.
SUNDAY.
With somewhat a slackening of the Russian offensive in Gallica, owing to bad weather, the French and the Germans along the Chemin des Dames and in Champagne have come together in a mighty struggle, in which the antique rested mainly with the forces of General Petain.
In Champagne, to the north of Mont Haut and northeast of the Teton, the French in a violent attack captured powerfully-organized German trench elements on a front of more than 800 yards, and to a depth of more than 300 yards, and held and consolidated the positions, notwithstanding heavy counter attacks, in which the Germans suffered heavy casualties and lost in addition 360 men made prisoners.
In Flanders at various points the British and Germans continue to carry out intensive artillery duels and the British to make successful raids on German positions.
MONDAY
Although Kornilloff's big offensive in Eastern Galicia is being hampered by bad weather, the cossacks apparently have been able to keep up their dashing tactics. This is indicated by a report from Petrograd through Rome that Dolina has been occupied by Russian forces. If this announcement is confirmed it means an advance of more than thirty miles for the Russians since the opening of the drive south of Dnister a week ago. The official reports have placed them nearly two-thirds of this distance from their starting point, at Kaluzs, taken last week, is twenty miles from Stanislau, which virtually was the place of departure. Hard fighting that marked the last few days along the French front in north France continues. The Germans made an attempt to regain the important observation posts they lost on Saturday nights in the vicinity of Moni Haut and the Teton in the Champagne. On the British front only raiding operations and artillery and airplane so twilies are reported.
Harper Heads the Elka.
Fred C. Harper, a lawyer of Lynchburg, Va., was elected grand exalted ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks in Boston. At lantic City was unanimously named as the next convention city. Harper received 1203 votes against 305 for John W. Stevenson, of Tulson, N. Y.
MAN, WIFE, SON SLAIN ON TRI
Declares Masked Bandits Shot Them and Posses Search Woods For Traces of Highwymmen.
Edward Humphries, Mrs. Carri Humphries, his wife, and their son Edward, Jr., aged fifteen, were shot to death on the Ebensburg Carrollow road near Johnstown, Pa., while on their way to Cresson and Philadelphia in the Humphries automobile wife George K. Tompkins, Jr. of 6043 Racet street, Philadelphia, who says masked highwaymen did the killing.
After a hearing before a coroner's jury, Tompkins was locked up in the Ebensburg jail until his story can be further investigated.
The killing occurred on a main road
The party had left Carrolltown, where
Humphries and Tompkins were inter-
ested in a coal company organized six
weeks ago by John K. Newborn, Dr.
E. F. Arble, Humphries and Tompkins,
with Tompkins as treasurer. Tompkins
returned to Carrolltown with the bod-
les of Mrs. Humphries and the boy,
the woman having been shot through
the head and boy the boy through the face
at close range, powder burns showing
Tompkins said three masked men
stopped suddenly from a grain
field and shot resolutely. Mrs. Hum-
phries stepped out of the screamed.
One of the masked men shot.
Then the older Humphries, who
had been delving with his wife on
the front seat, ran, while Tompkins crouched
in the torneau.
The masked men ceased their attack and Humphries came back and helped place his wife in the car. Then the masked men returned and opened fire again. Tompkins ran and fell. When he arose and looked about he saw. Humphries running with a man following him. All of the shots were fired from in front of the car. Tompkins insists, at a distance of about seventy feet.
A general alarm was given from Car rallown and searching parties started in the district. The body of the older Humphries was found and a fold several hundred yards from the car. He was shot three times, and bullet passing through his shoulder from the back. Near him was a steel spring and a clip from an automatic revolver.
Miners passing that way reported that they heard, shouts and that they saw one man pursuing another. They also said the car had been run off the road in a cornhole. A little way down belonging to the Humphries family was plicked up by them, badly frightened and covered with blood. They saw the woman and the boy, dead, in the car and hurried to Ebensburg to get help. They saw no signs of any bandits.
Sheriff W. E. Mulhollen and County Detective Roscoe Custer gave up the search for highwaymen after the convicting statements of Tompkins had been investigated. Several hundred armed men were searching the woods and guarding roads and railroads, also returned to their homes.
Soldiers Deport Itallans.
Over thirty Italian laborers, who tried to chase a group of negro work men from Camp Mende, the national army encampment at Admiral, Md, were themselves ousted by a detachment of regulars on guard there, and put on board a Baltimore and Ohio train for Baltimore, Md., and told that if they ever came back they would be severely dealt with.
The deportation was supervised by Major Ralph F. Proctor, U. S. A., who has charge of building the cantonment. So quickly was the coup carried out the Italians did not have a chance to remonstrate. They looked at the soldiers and at the guns and boarded a train.
Major Proctor learned that the Italians, who were helping to lay tracks for the Baltimore and Ohio, had banded together and told the colored work men that they would have to get out of the camp. The Italians, it was said, feared the colored men would work for less money.
Lightning Kills Fathe
Lightning Kills Father and Son.
John King, seventy-five, and his son
Lloyd King, twenty-seven years of age
both of West York, Pa., were struck by
lightning and instantly killed while
fishing along the Big Conewago, near
Creager's Mill, ten miles from Hanover.
There were six men in the party who drove from York in an automobile for a day's outing. They were preparing to go home when a severe thunder storm broke. Father and son sought shelter under a tree, which was hit by a bolt from the mike skies, and in falling one body fell across the other. A second son and the other men witnessed the tragedy from the opposite side of the creek.
To-kyo.
It is remarkable how many persons, some of whom may lay claim to education and familiarity with Japan, persist in misspelling the name of Japan's capital. Of course if government officials and western diplomats in Japan insist on spelling it To-ki-o, western people, ignorant of the Japanese language, cannot be blamed for pronouncing it in three syllables (To-keo-yo), much to the anused disgust of the Japanese. The Japanese ideographs are only two and are best represented by the two romaji syllables To-kyo, pronounced with a very slight emphasis on the first syllable.-Japan Magazine.
FIVE
BLACK JEW HERE NEXT MONDAY
FIFTH SHEET CHURCH
Mr. Ezala Percetti, of Jerusalem,
in Palestine will lecture at the Fifth
Baptist Church, Monday night
July 22, auspices the B. Y. P. U.
R. Percetti has had a varied exper-
ience, having served in the Turkish
navy and is now a divinity student
at the Virginia Seminary.
HAVE YOUR HARNESS REPAIRED
AT
Roane and Holmes Harness Company
17 12 NORTH 18th St.
Phone, Mad. 3935.
We make and repair anything in Harness line, Suit-cases, Leather Bags Automobile Cushions, etc. We carry a full line of Harness, Whips, Robes, Bits, Pads, Brushes, Combs, Harness Dressing, Helmets, Nets, Oils, Halters, Saddles, Hardware, etc. We make a Specialty of Hand-made Harness Our motto is to SATISFY YOU. Your patronage will be appreciated Stop in and let us srsve you. All work guaranteed.
MAKE your ground work for you and the nation. Idio ground is waste. This is no time for waste or idleness.
You can raise some vegetables for your family, no matter how small a piece of ground you have.
All Idio ground utilized in the production of vegetables means more food for those who have no ground at all.
If your garden at any time produces more than you can use immediately do not allow the surplus to spoil.
Can surplus beans, peas, corn, tomatoes, beets, spinach, pumpkin and squash for winter use.
Can or preserve apples, peaches, pears, cherries, quinces, berries and other cultivated and wild fruits.
Every can of vegetables or fruit and every jar of preserved food means that you have saved food materials that would have otherwise been wasted.
Can'r store root crops, cabbage and other vegetables properly so that they will keep well and supply you with food when the garden ceases to produce.
The United States department of agriculture, Washington, or your state agricultural college or county agent raises vegetables with expert directions for raising vegetables to meet your simple methods for canning vegetables and fruit at home with ordinary home utensils.
HOW TO CATCH FLIES.
The Best Fly Trap and the Best Poison Bait.
The best fly trap is a wire screen cylinder with a cone of the same material inside of its lower part, the pointed end up. Beneath the cone is placed the bait in any convenient shallow receptacle. The fly, seeking light, files up and out of the small end of the cone, thereby entering the cylinder, from which it can find no escape.
One can find such traps anywhere for sale. But it is easy to make them, and when homemade they are just as good, while costing only a fraction of the price.
Such traps, of course, should be set where the files most do congregate—as, for instance, on the sunny side of a building out of the wind. A butcher shop is a great place for a fly trap; it will catch quarts of them in a day.
When the fly trap is full the insects are easily killed by immersing the trap in hot water.
Fly paper of the sticky kind is a first class fly catcher. One does not need to buy it. Take two pounds of rosin and a plint of castor oil. Mix them and heat until the stuff looks like molasses. Smear it while hot with an ordinary paint brush on old newspapers. A dozen sheets of it will cost a cent.
The best poison bait for files, says the United State bureau of entomology, is made by putting two tablespoonfuls of formalin (obtained at any drug store) into a plint of milk and water, half and half of the two. Put the stuff in saucers in places frequented by flies. A little bread in it helps. But take care that children and animals do not drink it, for it is deadly poison. Keep all other liquids out of reach of the files. They are thirsty all the time, and the stuff will kill them off by wholesale.
WHY CORNS HURT.
Usually Result From Wearing Shoes Too Small For the Feet.
Corns, like corsets, boarding houses and late hours, are a menace to one's sweet disposition.
Corns are hard growths which occur on the toes or some other part of the feet. They are generally the result of wearing a shoe too small for the foot.
They are thickenings of the outer layer of the skin, in the center of which is a nail-like peg, which projects downward and hurts when pressed upon. Soft corns form between the toes and are only different from others in that they are soaked with perspiration all the time. The corn itself is composed of a lump of the outer part of the skin, which is caused by the pressure of the shoe at that spot. However, the corn would not result unless the pressure were taken off at intervals, and this, of course, is done when you take the shoe off. It stands to reason that if the pressure were continuously applied to this spot the skin, instead of overgrowing at that precise point, would waste away. The overgrowth of the skin is due to the irritation produced by the pressure.