Richmond Planet
Saturday, September 8, 1917
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
VOLUME XXXIV. NO. 43
LOTT CAREY CONVEN
TION VIET HERE
BAPTISTS HOLD GREAT FOREIGN MISSIONARY CONVENTION
Fine Session in Ebenezer Baptist Church—Many Able Ministers Attend
The Lett Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention of the United States met Wednesday morning, August 17 2917 at the Ebenezer Baptist Church Rev, W. H. Stokes, D. D. pastor, S. one of the leading Baptist d vine of the country were present Rev, Dr. C. S. Brown of Winton, N. C., is president and he presided with his unally ability.
"The welcome addresses were delivered by Dr. Z. D. Lewis, E. Payne and W. H. Stokes representing respectively the Baptists of the State, City and church, Dr. C. S. Brown, of Winton, N. C., is president and Dr. A. W. Pennes is recording secretary, of Raleigh, N. C., Dr. D. W. Alexander of Baltimore, is corresponding secretary. The responses were delivered by Drs. C. C. Somerville, of Portsmouth, Va., O. S. Simus, of Pittsburg, Pa., and E. E. Ricks of Reanoke Va.
A LARGE DELEGATION.
The delegation to this convention is the largest in the history of the convention. Many distinguished visitors were introduced and spoke to the convention. Among these were Colonel Young, of Raleigh, N. C., F. D. Lee, attorney at law, Washington, D. C., Rev. Abraham Tyler, who has spent thirty-seven years as a missionary, in Liberia, West Africa and others.
The afternoon session was given over by the president, Dr. C. S. Lown, and Dr. W. M. Alexander, corresponding secretary.
PRESIDENT BROWN'S REMARKS
President Brown, in discussing the present world conditions as a challenge to the church, made this declaration: "Distressed as we are with a war, which, in point of cruelty, brutality and destructiveness was never equaled, involving more or less, all the civilized nations of the world, and which may mean the melting together of all the races of men; jinked, tied and belted together by telegraph, telephone, railroad and various other means of communication, the world was never better prepared to receive Christianity than now."
ARMY SMALL
In referring to the missionary workers he said that the army on the frontier is lamentably small and their equipment exceedingly poor. He brought the large delegation to a very high pitch of enthusiasm when he mentioned the frontier force, viz. Hayes, Thomas, Gale, Boone and Mrs. Thomas, in Liberia, West Africa, and the eight workers in the republic of Haiti. He made a strong plea that these mission workers be given more adequate support in their operations.
LIBERIA'S CENTENNIAL
Dr. Brown called the delegates attention to the fact that Liberia will celebrate her centennial in 1921 and raise upon our convention because of the fact that the society bears the name of one of the founders of this republic that it begin now to plan to take a leading part as a convention in this movement.
He then called attention to the excellent opportunity which is afforded in Hawaii and poise of the wonderful resources of this land and the dire need of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
DR. ALEXANDER'S REPORT
Dr. W. M. Alexander, in his very comprehensive report, reviewed the year's work and made one of the best reports which he has ever made to the convention, setting forth its activities as being in very excellent condition. He distributed his report to the delegates in ] mphlet form.
This convention is devoting its efforts to the work of foreign missions and spends a very large proportion of its funds to the support of the missionaries.
The Rev. J. C. Taulton, of Domora, Pa., preached the sermon Wednesday night to a very large and appreciative audience.
THE WOMEN'S MEETING
Mrs. J. H. Randolph president of Washington, D. C., held its morning and afternoon sessions at the sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Dr. R. V. Peyton pastor.
At Eheneze Colonel James H. Young of Rareleigh, discussed the "Lavman's Place. In Missionary Work" and Rev. R. J. Lanson, of orfolk discussed the "Local churches to Foreign Mission." At one afternoon service the consideration of
the Press and Foraging Mission "Dr. W. R. H. Stokes, editor of the Scott Carey Herald took place, Dr. A. R. Vincent, editor of the Searchlight and Dr. C. C. Somerville editor of the Field, and others, spoke.
DR PEYTON'S WELCOME
At the Sixth Mt. Zion church the women were welcomed by Dr. R. V. Weston, pastor of the church, and Mrs U. A. Hope, Responses were by Mrs M. M. Walbron, Washington, D. C.; Mrs T. S. Eaton, Henderson, N. C.; and Mrs P. L. Anderson, of Pennsylvania.
Mrs. Randolph delivered her annual address in the afternoon Mrs A. L. McGuinn, corresponding secretary, and Mrs J. H. Blackwell, treasurer, made their addresses. The principal address was delivered by Mrs L. M. Melane, of High Point, N. C. The sermon to the women was preached Wednesday night at the Ebenezer baptist church by Dr. W. M. Alexander, of Baltimore.
DISHONORABLY DISCHARGED.
Six Colored Soldiers in Recent Clash at Waco, All Sentenced to the Federal Penitentiary.
San Antonio, Tex. September 3.—Six Negro soldiers of the Twenty-fourth infantry, who clashed with the civil police and the troops sent to subdue them at Waco on the night of July 29, were found guilty of violation of the ninety third article of war before the general court-martial held recently at Camp McArthur, Waco, 5 of the men were sentenced to five years of hard labor in the United States confinement at Leavenworth, Kans. The sixth man received ten years All were sentenced to be dishonorably discharged from the service and to forfeit all pay and allowances due or to become due while in confinement under the sentence.
The findings of the court-martial which were gave out on the been forwarded to the War Department at Washington
HANDLING THE NEGRO TROOPS
People will wonder why the regular Negro troops have not already been sent to France. Negro troops are among the best fighters in the world, but everybody knows they have to be handled very carefully in ordinary times to prevent their clashing with white people. These usually have quite insignificant beginnings, and for that reason no preparation is made for them; and we must do the Negro the justice to say that it is not always his fault. There is no use in our trying to conceal the fact, that some white people go out of their way to do a Negro an ill turn; Negroes have to bear a great deal of this sort of thing. It is not always an easy matter to get at the real merits of a case of this kind. But the Negro ought to be treated justly, even if he has a black skin. There is no reason why Negroes should not be put in the army and permitted to fight for their country. It is not right that the whites should make all the sacrifices in order to effect this. Negroes must, of course, be trained as soldiers, and have guns and ammunition in their keeping.
Knowing the danger of race clashes, however our officials should be exceedingly careful in the selection of the men who are to command the Negro troops and should pick men who have had careful training along this line, and who are known to be alert officers, and just but rigid disciplinarians. As we have aid before as a rule, we haveers, could be assigned to this work. Southern men who have commanded Negroes, prefer to command them, declaring, if treated justly but firmly, they are as docile as children, and quick to respond to command. Those of us who have been in close contact with Negroes all our lives know this to be true of them.
The War Department seems not altogether blameless in this last matter. Secretary Baker, was warned that trouble might be expected, and he might have laid emphasis on taking the utmost care in handling the Negro troops at this crisis and have cautioned those in command not to leave any opening for trouble. No evidence has appeared so far that the War Department gave the matter any special attention, engrossed as it was with seemingly more important things.
Send the Negro regulars at once to France and give them something to do that will employ them and we shall hear no more of such occurrences. They are superb fighters and they would make record against the Germans.
(Staunten, Va., Leader, Aug. 28, 1917.)
Mrs. P. M. B. Hodges has returned to her home in Darville, Va. after attending the Sunday School Convention at Frederickburg, Va., and the Lott Carey Convention at Richmond Va. Her many friends regret that her stay was so short.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1917
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1917
BISHOP DEFENDS THE COLORED SOLDIERS
SUSPEND VERDICT ON HOUSTON
RIOT IS PLEA.
Bishop Smith of A, M, E, Church Say
Snap Judgment Not Warranted
( C Detroit Free Press, Aug. 27, 1917 )
To the Editor: The drastic tone of your editorial in Saturday's Free Press, ment the recent disturbance in Houston, Texas, was a painful surprise to me being quite in contrast with the usual temperate character of your utterances.
There are so many currents and counter currents of a disturbing nature in evidence that this is no time for hasty utterances. Public judgment should be suspended until all the material facts in the unfortunate and regrettable occurrence have been fully investigated and the result made known by the war department.
The stories enamoring from Houston are onesided and reflect the prejudices of the dominant element in Houston instead of the facts in the case A Negro in military uniform is as exasperating to the average Texan as is the face of an enraged bull.
When the Titanic disaster was reported, it was said Mr. Andrew Carmichello inexplicably inquired: "What was she doing up there anyway?" having reference to the extreme northern course the ship had taken. It is equally pertinent to inquire, why were the Negro troops sent to Texas anyway particularly those of the regular army? Has the remembrance of the Brownville affair entirely faded from public memory? Is it so soon forgotten that but a few days ago publicity was given to the report that Negro troops were in the clash with the authorities of Waco Texas? ... is a close imminent threat? During the Spanish American war are still from in my memory—the threat to dynamite a train load of Negro regals by the dominant element of Texarkana, Ark., and the carelessness asault made on a train load of Negro volunteers at Nashville, Tenn., while en route from Chattanooga to Cincinnati.
SUSPEND JUDGMENT IS PLEA
Hon. Joe H. Eagle, M. C., for the Houston district, in a dispatch to the secretary of war said: "Without stating who is to blame, it is clearly a race riot and is a tragedy sufficient to compel the statement that it is a frantic blunder to send the Negro troops 15 southern camps."
Who is to blame for this tragic blunder? The Negro troops went to Houston in obedience to the orders of their superiors whose right it is to direct their movement. A race riot? Yes, and that statement coming from a Congressman on the ground, and the chosen representatives of the dominant element of Houston, ought to be sufficient to induce the public to suspend judgment for the time being.
President Wilson made a trenchant statement in a speech in Philadelphia to the effect that "A man may be too proud to fight." With equal force it may be said that a man may be too manly to continually submit to extreme brutal treatment. Even the patient ox may be gouged to desperation.
The fact is the white race by pre-capitulating a world-war has turned man's earthly abode into a veritable hell, and there is no telling when the fires of damnation will be extinguished or what elements will be consumed while they are raging. If pliar speaking is in order let both sides be here!
Nothing that I have written is to be construed as indicating the least desire on my part to condone any infliction of discipline by the Negro troops in question. Let no guilty man escape.
With a sad heart
MARRIAGE RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Williams and announce the marriage reception of their daughter Miss Josephine and Mr. Jessie Deabough. Thursday evening Sept. 13, 1917., from S20 to 11:00 o'clock at the residence, 1411 Rosa St. Friends are invited. No cards.
DAVIS—HARRIS
Mrs. Williana Harris Coleman announces the marriage reception of her daughter, Mabel Virginia Harris, and Mr. Walter T. Davis, on Monday evening, September seventeenth, nineteen hundred and seventeen, from 8:30 to 11:30, at 16 East Leigh street, Richmond, Va. Friends are invited.
Let Cephas do your Renting. Office
525 1-2 North Second street. Telephone, Randolph 588
PERSONALS AND BRIEFS.
Mrs. Reneeqa Joyce Spyher is dangerously ill at this writing.
Mrs. Amelia Jones, of 299 West Twenty first street, South Richmond, is indisposed.
Dr. J. H. Blackwell, Jr., has returned from his extended Northern trip.
Rev. M. Jones, of Pamplico, S. C. was ordained and called to the Spring Branch Baptist Church, Florence Co., noe Parpat, S. C., June 28, 1917.
Miss Manie Coleman, of South Richmond returned recently from a trip to Boston, Mass., where she spent her vacation.
Mrs. Susie Robinson, of South Richmond, has returned to the city after a pleasant stay of two weeks, visiting friends in Pradericksburg and Appomattox.
Mr. John H. Jones left the city Tuesday for Powhatan county, Va., where he will spend ten days visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Jones.
Miss Ruth Brooks has returned to her home in South Richmond after spending a month visiting friends and relatives in New Jersey.
Major James H. Ammons, Jr. and Mr. Willie (Slim) Moore are spending their vacation visiting Northern cities. They will visit New York.
Miss Marietta L. Cailes has returned to the city after having visited Berryville, Va. Philadelphia, Atlantic City, Newark, N. J., and New York.
Miss Goldie Debress and Mrs. Edna Coles have returned to the city after having visited Philadelphia, Atlantic City and New York Mrs. Miles C. Debress is now visiting relatives in New York.
Dr. Miles B. Jones and his Madame took a party of friends on a touring trip to Washington, Philadelphia and Atlantic City and New York in Dr. M. B. Jones' care.
Dr. J. Mercer G. Ramsey toured to Philadelphia and Atlantic City in his Overland car.
Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Farnar and their daughter, Miss Leah have returned from Cleveland, where they spent a pleasant time.
Mr. Robinson Davis returned last week from Brooklyn, N. Y. where he completed a course of instruction in the Mergenthaler Linotype Factory. He made a fine record.
Mrs. S. G. Denny, who has been indisposed has recovered and has been visiting her former home in Tennille Ga.
Mrs. Bessie Laughorne Carr, accompanied by her three children, is the guest of her borer, Mr. Montgentery Laughorne at Reanoke, Va.
Rev W. J. Lucas, pastor of the Mr. Olivet Baptist Church, Newport, R. I. attended the session of the Lott Carey Convention that convened in this city last week. Before his return to Newport, he will visit his mother in Louisa, Va.
Mr. Armist ad Washington and his wife Mrs. Gertrude A. Washington left last Sunday Sept. 2, for an extensive trip through the West. Their plans are to visit Cincinnati, Cleveland Ohio and other large cities of the West. They will not return home until they shall have gone to the great Convention which meets in the city of Muskegee Oklahoma. We wish for them a joyful trip and that they may return home at right. We feel that we are expressing the hearts wish of hundreds of people, who expressed their love and friendship during the recent marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Washington.
Miss Ruth Robinson has returned from a ten days visit to Keysville, Va.
Mr. Robert Alexander has just returned from a trip to Lexington.
Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Brown are visiting their son in Boston, Mass. They report having a pleasant time.
Mrs. J. Andrew Bowler and her daughters. Misses Elynn and Antoinette were in Dr. M. B. Jones' party visiting Washington, Philadelphia, Atlantic City and New York.
WANTED At once, Colored Stew-
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phone, Randolph 588.
BARRETT CASE BEFORE THE PUBLIC
CONFLICTING CLAIMS MADE IN BARRETT CASE.
Hundley Says Newspapers are Trying to Undermine Authority of the Courts.
Seventeenth-century Old Negro, Without counsel or Jury, Sentenced to Death for Coming to Father's Rescue Says Attorney Lancaster.
Unless, a stay is obtained from the Virginia Supreme Court or a further appeal for executive clemency is made, Albert Barrett, the Negro enforced with the murder of W. T. Roach, a Charlotte County farmer, will be executed tomorrow morning at the State Penitentiary. Governor Stuart said last night that counsel for the Negro had had no further contender with him, and that as the case stood, the man would pay with his life the penalty for the crime of which he was convicted Unlike his son, he had a jury trial, and was represented by counsel, and the Governor has expressed an unwillingness to question the facts as passed upon by the jury.
In order that he might inquire at length into the facts of the case, the Governor has granted a thirty-day respite to the younger Negro, Abbrey Barrett, and his execution has been postponed from to-morrow morning until September 28. In granting the respite however, Governor Stuart made it plain that he had not looked into the merits of the case, but had granted the stay of execution that he might have sufficient time in which to conduct an inquiry into the various assertions made by interested parties.
APPEAL MADE TO SUPREME
COURT FOR ELDER RABBETT
Counsel for the elder Barrett are making an effort to secure an appeal from the Supreme Court on the ground that no premeditation was shown in the case, such as is necessary for a legal conviction of murder in the first degree. They point to the fact that the prosecution admits that Roch attacked the elder Barrett, and that the son came to the aid of his father with a heavy stick. The circumstances are said to preclude the possibility of the killing having been premeditated. It is also asserted that the jury fixed no penalty, but merely found the elder Barrett guilty whereupon he was sentenced to death by Judge Handley.
There is no record of the court proceedings, but the testimony has been assembled from memory and has been written out. Judge F. W Sims, of the Supreme Court, was petitioned for a writ of error, but refused, and the case was then presented to Judge M. P. Burks. Upon his refusal efforts were being made late last night to reach Judge R. R. Prentis, William H. Laneaster, of Farmville, counsel for the elder Barrett at his trial was in Richmond yesterday in the interest of the appeal. Associated with him in the last minute efforts to save the lives of the father and son I. Harry M. Smith, Jr., of this city
Directly conflicting statements were issued yesterday in the case of Aubrey Barrett. Barrett whose exaction has been stayed 30 days by Governor Stuart, admits part in the killing, but says he came to the rescue of his father. The older Negro had counsel and was tried by jury. Appeal has been made to the Governor for investigation of the boy's case on the ground that he did not have a jury trial, was not represented by counsel, and has now no means of noting an appeal to the Supreme Court.
Judge George J. Hundley, who presided at the trial in a signed statement issued yesterday, defen the court procedure, denounces the accused, and attacks the newspapers as trying to "undermine and discredit the authority of the courts." He refers to State Senator Walter E. Addison, of Lynchburg, and others who have laid the facts in the boy's case before Governor Stuart as "official inter-meddlers," and says that "any ignorance or crank can at his will be mischief the reputation of any judge, and have the newspapers spread his slander: broadcast over the State."
Judge Hundley now in his eighteenth year, is recorded as one of the most distinguished men on the bench in Virginia He served in the Confederate army and later in the State Senate, and was elected to the bench in 1898.
WATKING AND LANCASTER
DISAGREE. AS TO FACTS
Judge A. D. Watking of Farmville, who was acting Commonwealth's attorney, in a signed statement requests positively that the law Abroh
(Continued on Fifth Page)
KNIGHTS OF PYTHAS
A New Lodge at Berryville, Va.
Berryville, Va. August 30
Grand
Chandler尔. Mitchell, Jr., incom
panied by Dr. E. R. Jefferson, Rev
L. J. Morris and Col. R. C. Mitchell
arrived here last evening via N. & W
W. R., coming through Washingt06
Miss M. L. Chiles, G. W. R. of Deed
of the Grand Court, Order of Calan
the was also with them.
OFFICERS INSTALLED
A lodge of Knights of Pythias was instituted with the following officers: Chancellor, Commander, Stephen Green, Vice Chancellor, J. W. Edwards, Master of Work Paul Williams; Predate, Rev. S. S. Springs; Keeper of Records and Seal, H. C. Dixon; Master of Finance, J. L. Davis; Master of Ekehquer, Rev. J. W. Thomas; Master at Arms, C. H. Hill; Interior Guard, David Dolman; Outer Guard, Randall Page; Trustees, D. P. Layton, John Edwards, Christopher Laws.
The initiation was a success in every particular. The work was done on schedule time, much to the delight of the visitors. A large delegation came from Strasburg by automobile, which is over thirty-five miles away and others came from Winchester, just ten miles away.
MANY VISITING KNIGHTS
The following visitors were present: From Strasburg, Sirs T. H. Byrd, E. H. Robenson, C. E. Nickens, B. W. Willis, Kennie Mitchell, Tim Lee, J. E. Thompson, Heywood Fletcher, J. L. Nickens, G. W. Hollis, Richard Cary, J. F. Boyd, H. J. Lee, J. F. Smith, H. L. Baltimore, L. L. Cyrus, Omar Thompson. From Winchester came, Sirs Mayhew B. Cooke, D. R. Jennings, William H. Lewis, C. W. Hall, D. C. Colbert R. V. Cooley, J. H. Cooke, Perry Cattley, J. W. Trippett, Charles N. Myers, R. L. Grey C. Thomas, Ergone Walker, R. F. Rowrus, Carl Evans, M. D. Brown James Man. Gold, William G. Armstead, Daniel Long, H. E. Ransome, H. W. Bartlett, William E. Laws
BANQUET SERVED
A magnificent request was served at the conclusion of the ceremonies, Grand Chancellor Mitchell complimented Deputy T. H. Ryyd, of Strasburg upon his work here. Under the instruction of Miss Chiles the ladies have gone to work organizing a club for the Court. While here the visitors were served elegant meals at the home of Sir Paul Williams, under the splendid management of his Madam, Mrs. Mary P. Williams, asly assisted by their daughters, Misses Meurete and Blanche E. The party left this morning.
Visitors To Our Office
Mrs. H. L. Jones, New York City;
Mrs. Lavinia Henry, Cleveland; Clerk in Afro-
American Office, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs.
L. E. Higbittin, Mrs. Jennie
Fields, Mrs. Mattie Mullon, Lynch
burs. Va. Mrs. Mary J. D. Grass,
Washington, D. C., Mrs. Ellen R.
Randolph, Richmond, Va. Mrs. Susie Morton
and Mrs. Lana Peek, Reneeverte, W. Va.
Mrs. F. R. Middleton Washington, D.
C. Miss M. E. Beamon, Hampton Va.
Misses Erma L. and Erfe L. Cacke,
Richmond, Va., Mr. J. R. W. Perry,
Nortok, Va. Mr. C. W. Jordan, Suf-
folk, Va. Mrs. Octavia Parker, Balti-
ne re. Md., Rev. H. Cary, Washington,
D. C, Rev. J. C. Taulton, Donora,
Pa. Rev. W. A. Mason, Mononga-
gale City Pa., Rev. J. R. Sanders,
McKeenport, Pa., Rev. R. B. Cobb, Fair
mont W. Va., Rev. H. Chas. Pope,
Woodby, N. J., Rev. R. D. Epps, Con-
nellville, Pa., Mr. Anil Chambers,
Vanderbilt, Pa., Rev. J. E. Rodgers,
Norfolk, Va. Rex, Alexander Gordn.
Philadelphia, Va. Rev. Nelson Jordan
armor, Va. Rev. W. H. Gray, Abu-
don, Va. Rev. R. G. Adams, Ports
Va. Mrs. Rowena White, Lynchburg,
Va. Mrs. Lizzie B. Green, Newport
News, Va.
FOR SALE!
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Splendid Jackson Ward bargain,
on ligh street, always rented for
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Jason Ward store more than
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WANTED—A Good Barber at once!
60 cents on a dollar. Apply to
JESSE M. TURNER, 83 N. Main
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PRICE, FIVE CENTS
ELKS HAVE GREAT TIME IN CLEVELAND
THE CAPITAL CITY LODGE AGAIN
WINS HONORS.
Virginians Jubilant—Order Is In A
Prosperous Condition.
Capital City Lodge, No. 11 marched
up Broad St., from the Bryd St. St.
station last Sunday afternoon led by the
Municipal Band and a crowd of ad-
mitters to the Eile Home on North
Second St. It brought with it the thea-
dren dollar prize from the annual
convocation at Cleveland and every
today was happy. It also captured the
position of Leading Esteemed Knight,
the second highest position in the
Order and Andrew J. Brown, the one
successful contestant were a satisfied
smile with the rest of his associates
who had secured that honor for him
James T. Carter of Williams Lodge
No. 11, who was respected Grand Treas
urer was also happy. He had made a
fine record and no one had the heart
to oppose him.
GRAND EXALTED RULER
SCOTT PRESIDES
The annual meeting was held in Cleveland, O. August 28, 1917. Grand Exalted Ruler Armand W. Scott presided. At the opening ceremonies he was assisted by Past Grand Exalted Ruler T. Gillis Nutter of West Virginia. Religious excuses were conducted, after which committees on credentials and the Order of the Day were appointed. Nearly 300 delegates were present from all parts of the country. After recess, when the body reconvened, other committee appointments were completed. A smoker was given to the visitors on the evening of the 29th at the Gray's Armory On Monday night the format open to place at one of the largest who-churches on Enuelid Ave. Here the cal citizens met and greeted the delegates.
GRAND PARADE TOO
One of the largest parades in the history of the Order took place on the afternoon of the first day. It was then ascertained that Capital City Lodge, No. 11 had the largest number of men in line from the farthest place. It accordingly was awarded the prize $100,000. The picture of the Lodge in line with their umbrellas appeared in one of the daily papers. The Elk's Hall was given at Dreamland Hall, one of the prettiest halls in the country. One thousand persons were present. The reporters showed that the total membership of the Order approximated 13,000 and the cash in the treasury amounted to $9,000,000. A few years ago the Order was unable to pay its current expenses.
UNANIMOUSLY REFLECTED
Armand W. Scott, Esq. was unanimously reelected Grand Exalted Kuler and George Bates of New Jersey. Grand Secretary.
BANDS OF CALANTHE AT MT
CARMEL SUNDAY, THE 9TH
The Annual Thanksgiving Exercises of the Bands of Calanthe will be held at the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, North First Street, Sunday evening, September 9, 1917, at 3:30 o'clock. Rev. E. D. Coffee, the pastor will address them. A fine program will be rendered by the children. The members of the Bands will meet in the basement of the church. Members of the Order of Knights of Pythias and the Courts of Calanthe are cordially invited to be present. The Pythian Cadets will be out as an escort of honor.
Thessalonian Class Installs Officers
The officers of Thessalonian Class, of the Fifth Street Baptist Sunday School were installed Friday night, August 31, at the residence of the teacher Roscee C Mitchell. The installation address was made by Miss Lillie Grey.Many interesting numbers were rendered, among them a complementary recitation by Mr. John R Cochill.
The following are the officees for 1917-18: President, Miss Lillian Crump; Vice President, Miss Sarah Henderson; Secretary, Miss Mary Clark; Assistant, Miss Beulah Warden; Treasurer, Miss Frances Soay; Pianist, Miss Ruth Pollard. After a short address by Superintendent R. H. Pounderoy, a collation was served by Miss Rebecca T. Mitchell and others.
Birdnest Sta. Va., Aug 26, 1917—Rev. F. B. Mitchell and wife of 46 Warren street Byrn Mawr, Pa., visited Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wilkins, last week. Leaving on Friday morning for Riflehond. We wish them a pleasant (rjp)
THE PLANET
SATURDAY..SEPTEMBER 8. 1917
SLAVS AND GUNS CAPTURED AT RIGA
CITY AFIRE AT MANY POINTS
Prince Leopold's Troops Break Through Foe's Line in the Great Jacel District.
Several thousands of Russiang were taken prisoners by the Germans in their drive in the Riga region, culminating in the capture of that strong hold.
In addition more than 150 guns were taken by the German forces in the Great Jacel river district. This in formation was contained in an official announcement from Berlin, which also said that the city was on fire at many points.
The Russian war office said the Russian retirement was being continued along the coast in a northeasterly direction and that hostile warships are shelling the Riga coast. the Uskull district, the statement adds, the Rus slans are retiring northward, having been dislodged by the Germans in the Great Angel river region.
The Russian war office announcement follows:
"In the direction of Riga, on Monday our troops evacuated the town of Riga and blew up behind them the fortifications at the mouth of the Dyina and bridges across the Dyina. The retirement is being continued along the coast in a northeasterly direction. The villages of Kabli, about twenty-seven miles south of Pernai (100 miles north of Riga), Malnashtu Kosoul and Pidge, on the Gulf of Riga coast, are being shelled by enemy ships.
"In the direction of Uskull on Monday the Germans continued to develop their success in a northerly direction toward the Valenrode-Eskloff road and in a northcasterly direction. Towards evening the enemy dislodged our troops in the Great Javeleg region, penetrating our positions on a front of thirteen verses (about nine miles) in the region of Valenrode and occupying it. Our troops are retiring northward following the enemy's penetration measures were taken for the readjustment of our front.
"Runnandian front: In the direction of Czernowitz, in the region south of the village of Slobodzela, enemy attacks were repulsed with heavy enemy losses. There were fusillades on the remainder of the front."
The German army headquarters and noncement follows:
"Army group of Prince Leopold: After two days of fighting the army under the leadership of Infantry General von Hutler took from the west and southeast the city of Riga, which was ablaze at many points. Our experienced fighters everywhere broke down the Russian resistance and in an impetuous forward thrust overcame every obstacle presented by the woods and marshes. The Russians very hurriedly evacuated their extensive bridgehead west of the Dvina and Riga, and our divisions now stand be fore the mouth of the Dvina.
"Dense masses of troops are crowding along the roads from Riga in a northeasterly direction in both day and night marches.
"South of the great road and on both sides of the Great Javelg strong Russian forces were thrown against our troops in desperate and sanguinary attacks to cover the withdrawal of the defeated twelfth army. In a bitter struggle they were overcome by our assaults and the Great Road has been reached at several points by our divisions. Some thousands of Russians were made prisoner and more than 150 guns and countless war materials were captured. The battle near Riga is another glorious page in the history of the German army."
ARREST WHITE HOUSE PICKETS
Suffragists Taken For Demonstration During Parade.
Militants of the National Woman's party made the procession in honor of men selected for the national army the occasion for more picketing of the White House.
Pickets began appearing at the White House gates and as the police arrested them others took their places. The women announced they would keep up the battle as long as the supply of pickets held out.
The supply of pickets kept steadily coming to the White House gates as fast as the police made the arrests. An hour before the procession started thirteen had been taken in. After that the picketing stopped.
Ggand Duke Michael Arrested.
Grand Duke Michael Alexandro
vitch, brother of the former emperor
and his wife, have been placed under
arrest in Petroggad in connection
with the counter revolutionary plot re-
cently unearthed. According to the
Den, Duke Dmitrii-Paulovitch also
has been arrested
[Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit].
AIRMEN RAID POLA
Great Fires Started in Austrian Naval Base by Italian Aviators.
Thirty Italian airplanes dropped nine tons of bombs on the Austrian naval base at Pola, causing destruction and large conflagrations. It is announced officially in Rome.
Flying under favorable atmospheric conditions, the raiders bombarded the military works and the enemy fleet at anchor in the harbor and in the Pasqua canal.
The Italian machines, although attacked by seaplanes and shelled by antifluffraft batteries, returned safely to their bases.
Austrian Chief of Staff at Front. Uline, Sept. 5 — Field Marshal von Arz, chief of staff of the Austrian army, is reported to be inspecting the Italian front for the purpose of rear guarding his troops, demoralized by many recent defeats.
Meanwhile the Italians continue their steady advance and are spreading over a larged tract of the country especially through the Brestovizza valley and over the Italianizza plateau capturing trench after trench. In some cases they are finding contingents of Austrian troops. Literally exhausted and suffering from thirst and hunger, their means of communication having been cut off by the well directed Italian fire.
Monte San Gabriolo still is making desperate efforts at resistance. Italian pockets are gradually creeping up the slopes, making its fall only a matter of time, when, as officers laughingly say, "the Austrians execute an other strategic retreat."
U. S. BUYS $220 WHEAT
Through a Misunderstanding a Little
is Sold Above That Price
Is Sold Above That Price.
There was just one buyer in the Chicago wheat market, and he didn't even visit the board of trade.
He was Uncle Sam and he had an office in the Otis building, two blocks from the board.
There was one basic price, $2.20 fixed by President Wilson. The method pursued was very simple. The man who received the wheat had it placed in an elevator, obtained a receipt from the elevator, took his receipt to the Otis building and got his money.
Through a misunderstanding a little spot wheat sold at slightly above the government basis, but the local representative of the food administrator issued a warning that there must be no repetition of the offense.
UPHOLD GOVERNOR
Chicago Council Condemns Mayor For Allowing Pacifists to Meet.
Moving Pleas to Meet
The Chicago city council, in special session, after three hours' discussion, adopted a resolution commending Governor Lowden for his stand against permitting pacifist agitation in Illinois. The resolution requires the state executive to prevent the holding of any meeting in the future which may be inimical to public safety or disloyal or treasonable to the United States. The resolution was adopted by a vote of 42 to 6.
(The resolution, by implication, condemns the action of Mayor Thompson. He permitted a meeting of the People's Council for Democracy and Peace in defiance of the governor's order.)
Campana Captain a Captive
Captain Oliver, of the American bank or Campana, and 4 naval gunners, Denaney, Roop, Kline and Jacobs, who were taken prisoners when their ship was sunk recently by a German submarine, are in a prison camp at Brandenburg, Prussia. This news came by cable to the American Red Cross from Geneva.
Kills Woman. Shoots Wife
Albert Fitzpatrick shot and killed Mrs. Catharine Frick in a King street lodging house in Winstonburgh, Del. kept by her. He also shot and seriously wounded his wife. Jealon y is said to have been the incentive Fitzpatrick was arrested. His wife was sent to a hospital.
$100,000 Fire in Wiltshire
$100,000 Fire in Wilmington.
Fire in Wilmington, Del., caused $100,000 damage to the F. Blomental morocco leather factory, one of the largest in the world. Four fire men were injured by a collapsing ladder, three seriously.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
(Continued from First Page.)
Barrett was represented by counsel, in the person of W. L. Lancaster, of Farmville, while Mr. Lancaster, in a signed statement, reiterates his assertion that Mr. Watkins is under an egregious mistake, and that he had declined to advise Aubrey Barrett, in view of the ruling of Judge Hundley on the intrusions in the trial of the father.
Mr. Lancaster's statement and from the evidence of those present at the trial, the Negro boy was tried without counsel, without a jury, was induced to change his plea from not guilty to guilty was too ignorant of the forma of law to note an exception or enter a protest on which his case be given a too hold in the Supreme Court, and practically on his own admission of the killing of W. T. Roach in defense of his father, when Roach had come to the Barrett place without a warrant or due authority of arrest, and had there started a fight with the elder Barrett, was sentenced to execution, Governor Stuart's action in granting a respite of thirty days offered the only way of examining into the conflicting claim, and insuring that justice was being done.
JUDGE HUNDLEY ISSUES
SIGNED STATEMENT
The stateent of Judge Hundley follows:
To the Editor of the TimesDispatch: Sir: -My attention has been called to a statement from Mr. Lancaster in this morning's paper, to which I make a brief reply. I shall not enter into a contest of memory with him, nor shall I say an unkind word about him. I feel no unkindness toward him. He knows that I have had occasion to show him that more than once. I attach hereto a statement from Judge A. D. Watkins, who acted for the Commonwealth in the harrert cases, which sustains every statement of fact made by me in my previous article and with a few words more as to Mr. Lam caster's statement. I shall avail my self of the opportunity to say something of the tendency of such a proceeding as this to undermine and discredit the authority of the courts, and to create distrust in the minds of ignorant and unthinking people.
I repeat here with emphasis that not only did Lancaster act as counsel for both of the Barretts, but that after the father's conviction he came up to me on the bench and stated to me privately that the boy would change his plea of "not guilty," "to guilty," and asked me if I would send him to a reformatory, and I told him that I would make no promises, but would hear the whole case and then decide and afterwards he spoke of withdrawing from the case, but I saw him consulting with both prisoners, and when I spoke to him and asked him what he would do about it, he said in open court that the boy would change his as stated, I thought, and had the right to think, from all that passed, that whilst he had decided to make no defense for the boy, that he was still speaking as the lawyer to whom he had been committed the defense of both father and son.
SAYS BOY'S CONFESSION
LEFT HIM NO DEFENSE
Mr. Lancaster does not assert, nor would any one believe, that he was only employed to defend the father. I concluded that as they had used the boy as a witness for his father and know that the boy's confession had left him no defense, he intended to make none for him. When I said in my former statement that "I said in my former statement that "I cannot believe Mr. Lancaster is base enough to desert one of his clients, and then not even intimate to the judge that his client had a defense." I was simply trying to relieve him from the pittable position that officious adders had put Lm in. Unfortunately, though Mr. Lancaster has put himself into a worse position. He says now this boy had a good defense, but I having refused an instruction he offered in the father's case (to which refusal he knows, and will not deny, he expected at the time he determined not to make defense for the boy. He knows, or ought to know, that he could have had a jury and offer that same instruction in the case of the boy, and when refused he could have had a suspension of the execution of sentence, and taken both cases to the court of Appeals. Why did he not do this? Can he explain such a gross dereliction of duty? He says that I threatened to fine him when he attempted to argue to the jury in the father's case the law stated by him in the instruction offered by him which I had refused. Of course, I could not allow him to argue against the law that I had given, but he had his remedy, and if I was wrong, the Court of Appeals could have convected the error.
But enough of this; I go now to a few observations on the evil that is done by such attacks on the courts as fittingly illustrated by this case. Here two counties were so stirred to the deaths by the horror of this murder where a good and peaceable citizen was murdered by two thieves whom he discovered had stolen his property. They admitted in court that they had stolen his property, and they not only murdered him, but robbed him of his watch and money, shockingly mutilated the dead body and lid it in the woods. Five hundred good people were about to lynch the murderers, when a vigilant Governor called the courts to his aid, and the people quietly submitted and trusted the courts to do their duty. When the court had acted, what do we see? Outsiders far from the scene, rush into print and spread false and slanderous charges, and insinuations against the judge who presided at the trial. And then the attorney em plowed (and paid, I presume) to defend these thieves and murderers rushes int) print to sustain, as far as he can, these slanders, and confesses his own derelection in the duty of an attorney. What is the effect of such things as this? "By their fruits you shall know them." It is bitter fruit indeed. From such seeds sprung the tree that bore the Album fruit in Carroll, where brave and
gallant Judge Massie died on the bench an his sherif and others died in the discharge of their duties, for daring to enforce the law against such a band of outlaws as never before disgraced on Virginia. And then we had the scandalous spectacle of good people forgetting that these officers of the law died to preserve their liberty and their property, going to the extent of raising even a greater stand ard in their effort to have one of these outlaws pardoned, simply because he was young and handsome and because he was only alding his father to shoot up a court of justice. Of course 'his boy should have his sentence commuted or be pardoned because he was only alding his father to murder a man whose property he had stolen.
SRED T..AT BRINGS
FORTH LYNCHINGS
This is the seed that brings forth the better fruit of lynchings, of which we have had an illustration recently. I have never had a lynching in my circuit, though " have tried men for all the crimes in the catalogue, and why? Am I claiming too much if I say that it is because my people know that I enforce all the laws? Now it seems I am reaping the rich reward of having my name brought before the public through falsehood and slander by the apologists of murder and theft. As a judge who is capable of utterly ignoring the rights of an ignorant and frightened Negro boy, and inducing him to plead guilty in order that I might sentence him to death, has it come to this—that any ignorants or crank can at his will besmirch the reputation of any judge, and have the newspapers spread his slanders broadcast over the State? But I do not complain for my self, for the press for good or evil, and judges and courts are amenable to fair criticism by people who have the character and standing - notting them to be heard, but should not use the press very careful it to others? If my long life and character cannot withstand unjust aspersions, then I have jived in vain, but it is for the fair name of our courts of justice that I speak, for that is assailed in my person. The reien of law and the integrity of the courts are the chief safeguards of our free institutions. Do we "discern the signs of the times?" Do we realize that this old world and its civilization are rocking and trembling in the titanic struggle between the forces of good and evil - between anarchy and chaos and law and order. Do we realize that one great nation in grasping at freedom has sunk into the bottomless pit of socialism, anarchy and other lawlessness. Look abroad in our own land, and note the increase in crime, rape, arson, murder and theft. Note the teachings and the acts of the I. W. W. Note that treason and disregard of all law is openly advocated in the streets of our cities, and let us tremble for the fate of our institutions.
(Signed) GEORGE HUNDLEY.
Farmville, Va., August 28, 1917.
ACTING PROSECUTOR
ALSO ISSUES' STATEMENT
The statement of former Judge A. D. Watkins, who was acting Commonwealth's Attorney in the Barrett cases, follows:
To The Editor of The Times-Dispatch:
Sir: A brief statement of my recollection of the evidence in and conduct of the trial of the Barretts for the murder of William T. Roach, of Charlotte County follows:
It was disclosed in the evidence that on July 10, 1917, Roach, together with Collins, went to Barrett's farm, suspecting that wheat had been stolen from his field. The Barretts, after being convinced of the fact that Roach had the proof of the larceny, admitted it. Roach sent Collins for a warrant of arrest. The elder Barrett tried to make a settlement with Roach to avoid arrest and trial. This Roach would not agree to. When Collins was away the elder Barret attempted to run away. Roach ran after him and caught him. Both fell to the ground, the elder Barrett admitted that Roach held him by the coat, and claimed that he though Roach was trying to choke him; that he called to his boy, who was some distance off; to come and get Roach off; that the boy did come, and, having picked up a chestnut stick, dealt Roach a blow on the back of the head; that the father with a large Rock finished him that the body was then carried to the place where found; that after the killing a small sum of money and a watch the property of the deceased, was tak en by the boy; that no rock or stick was found near the scene or claimed to be the instruments used; that both prisoners voluntarily confessed to the killing, each giving substantially the facts a above narrated.
Dr. Walker, who made the examination of the dead body of Roach, testified that he found a wound on the back of the head, the skull broken in and the brains oozing out; that the wound had bled considerably; that this wound was sufficient to produce death; that on the front of the head was a wound in and across the face in and near the eyes; that this wound was inflicted by some instrument which cleaved the skull just above the eye, and that this wound was sufficient to cause death, and that it was inflicted after the wound on the back of the head, as was indicated by the small amount of bleeding there from; that three other wounds were found upon the top of the head, each made by some instrument which cleaved the skull, all of which did not bleed, the wounds penetrating the brain.
That upon the trial of the older Barrett, and after the evidence was in Mr. Lancaster, counsel for the accused, offered an instruction in plea of justification based upon the ground of arresting, imprisoning and detaining the prisoner without a warrant of arrest was necessary. This warrant of arrest was necessary. This instruction the court refused and counsel for prisoner excepted to the ruling of the court; that counsel for prisoner did undertake to argue upon the facts he claimed to be grounds for the instruction rejected and refused by the court; that the court did call counsel's attention to the fact of the refusal of the instruction and reminded him that he must not again undertake to argue (I recall no threat of a flue) upon a question of law which
the court had refused to give as the law of this case.
SAYS LANCASTER CONSULTED BOY IN OPEN COURT
That upon the trial of the boy, who had, through counsel, Mr. Lancaster, therefore, plead "not guilty," and elected to be tried separately, when again brought to the bar and after his counsel had intimated that he counsel for the boy, was considering the advisability of withdrawing the plea of "not guilty" and pleading "guilty," submitting all the questions of law and fact to the court, counsel for the boy, after apparently consulting with the boy and advising him in open court, stated that he had done all he could and further, that he would no longer represent the prisoner, and, therefore, the court advised the boy of his rights, and fully explained to him that he could be tried by a jury on his plea of "not guilty," but that the court could not try him on such a plea, and that he (the prisoner) had the right to plead in the way he devised; the boy then, in the presence of his former counsel, and his father, formally withdrew his plea of "not guilty" and plead "gullity" to the charge in the indictment, that then the court caused evidence to be taken, which was as to the killing, in substance, what has been stated above and in addition, evidence was taken upon the question of the age of the prisoner, and it was shown that he was between sixteen and seventeen years of age. One witness, who claim to have known the prisoner all his life, stated that the boy might be a little more than seventeen or a little less.
Acting Prosecuting Attorney, Farmville, Va., August 28, 1917.
LANCASTER DENTES THAT HE REPRESENTED BOY
W. L. Lancaster, of Farmville, who appeared as counsel for the elder Barrett, issued the following signed statement, denying that he had represented the boy, or had advised him privately or publicly:
To The Editor of The Times-Dispatch; Sir—Ex-Judge A. D. Watkins gives his version of the Barrett cases—whether at the request of Judge Hundley or not, who enres
A. D. Watkins, my friend (and, I am glad to say, distant relation.) is under an egregious mistake. If he had read what I wrote, i.e. that I refused to plea or advise Abney Barrett what plea to enter, saying I would not assume the responsibility. I know he would not deny the same unless, in his goodness of heart or his weakness of mind, he would allow truth to slumber for the sake of pleasing a friend or protecting himself. Asa says when Albert Barrett, failing to compromise, attempted to escape, Mr. Roach "laid hold on him, and in holding him they both fell to the ground," and in the same breath he says; "Testimony was that the older Barrett called for his son to come and take Roach off. The younger Jarrett took up a large stick and struck Roach on the back of the head, Roach was stunned, and partially fell to the ground."
Now, if Roach was on the ground in the first instance, could he be fell ed to the ground, either by a stick or a large stick?
If ex-Judge Watkins is so fair, why did he not say that the testimony was that Roach pursued Albert 150 yards, Albert fell over a brush pile, and was down, being choked, when Aubrey Barrett struck the fatal blow with the chestnut stick, by request or command of his father?
I have stated that the words attributed to Albert, "I have finished him," were not used. Should I have failed to hear this, I cannot fail to know, and no truthful man in the courtroom at Charlotte who could hear but knows, that I withdrew from Aubrey's case, did not advise or plead for him, and he had no counsel, either in myself or another, and that I did not waive the jury for him.
Judge Watkins says that I intimated to him that I would plead guilty for the boy, or had advised the boy to plead guilty. This statement can be accounted for only as follows: When the petit jury was in its room considering its verdict in the Albert Barrett case, I asked Judge Watkins, in the presence of Mr. Light and Tom Watkins, considering the boy's age, could he not, upon the plea of guilt be confined in the penitentiary or sent to the public roads or even to the reformatory. Theroupon Judge Watkins suggested that I talk to Judge Hundley, and I went to him while upon the bench and asked him if the boy, Aubrey pleaded guilty could he not, under law, considering the boy's age, send him to the reformatory or put him upon the public roads. To this question Judge Hundley made no satisfactory answer. I then asked him if, upon the plea of guilty, he could not fix some punishment less than the death penalty. He replied: "I will make no promises" or "I will make you no promises."
I repeat that I neither advised the boy, privately nor publicly, what plea to enter.
Take the statement of Judge A. D. Watkins in full and add nothing of mine or any one else thereto, that Roach restrained and held Albert with out a warrant, and I vouch for it that no lawyer will say that the homicide was murder, let alone a "horrible murder" in the first degree. The mob was promised a speedy trial if they would give up their prisoners and I also preamble they were promised a conviction and the death penalty attached thereto. Thus far the promise has been outfilled.
Respectfully,
(Signed) W. L. LANCASTER.
Farmville, Va., August 28, 1917
ACCOMAC NEWS.
Mr. and Mrs. Leven Ayres, of Machipongo, were the guest of Mrs. William Heath, near Belle Haven.
Mrs. George Richardson left for Baltimore, September 3rd.
Mrs. Sarah B. Smith, after a few months work at Frikintown, has now returned to her home with her sister.
Mrs. William Heath, near Belle Haven.
Master G. T. Smith is learning to use his old pipe right good now.
Sunday, at home, while his father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Smith attended church.
A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR
WEDNESDAY.
The Russian armies continue to show perilous weakness at critical points. In the Pokhshani region on the Rumanian front a Russian division abandoned its positions and fled in disorder. A Geneva report says Teutonic forces have invaded the Russian province of Ressarabia.
Stormy weather apparently is hampering military activities on the Franco-Belgian front. The British, after completing a successful operation near Langemark, contented themselves with clearing out a German advance position in front of the new British line.
Apparently there also is a halt in major activities on the French front in the Verdun region, and the campaign which General Cadarona is waging on the Isonzo front against the Austrians.
THURSDAY
Military operations on the France-Belgium front continue to be of a minor nature. The official report from Paris shows the situation along the French lines to be one of temporary-deadlocks. Two German attacks in the Champagne region east of Teton were repulsed, as were German attempts to push back French posts in the Verden region north of Vajules Palemaux. There was active artillery fighting in the Verden region and in the Alsace sector. Rome reports the remorse of Austrian counter attacks in the Isonza region. The Hailans held all positions firmly and even gained ground at points. They took 550 prisoners. Petrobras reports further quittings of Russian soldiers before the cheux near Fiskanen, on the Rumanian front. It is stated that measures are to be ceded by the Teton advance.
FRIDAY
None of the three big campaigns now in progress on western fronts seems again to have got into full swing. General Caderna, on the Austro Italian front, apparently is in the midst of one of the pazies characteristic of virtually all drives against strongly factified positions in this war.
General Heng reports the repulse of a German rifle on the British five miles southeast of Lens, in France. London war office intimations are that an artillery battle is being carried up in virtually continuous form in preparation for the new forward thrust.
General Petain's report indicates a possible speedy renewal of the infantry battle at Verdun. French artillery on both sides of the Menle is bombarding the German Bines. The Germans have shown some activity in Alsace-making an attack near Hartmanns weller-Kopt, which the French repulsed.
SATURDAY
Turning to the aggressive on the Alsne front, the French have struck a sharp and heavy blow at the Germar crown prince's lines. In a swift thrust General Petain's forces bounded for ward more than 300 yards on a front of more than three quarters of a mile in the Hurteibse region on the Chemin-des-Dames, between Craonne and Corny.
This stroke seems to have giver Petain a firm hold on the ground. The repulse of three counter attacks is reported. The attack followed a week of almost total inactivity on the French front. There are signs in the increase of artillery fire on the Flanders front that a renewal of more active operations by the British may not be far distant.
Advices from the Italian front show General Cadorna again is hammering at the Austrian lines. He is improving his positions to the south, in the direction of Trieste and on the northern front east of Gora.
SUNDAY
The Germans are knocking virtually at the gates of Riga, and with the Russians apparently unable to withstand their advance.
On the Italian front General Cadora's forces have extended their gains on the Bristovizza plateau, on the slopes of Miege San Gabriele and east of Gorizia, and have taken additional prisoners and war stores from the Austrians. Five Italian airplanes have flown from the Italian front over Vienna and dropped pamphlets telling the Austrian people of the victory of the Italians from Tolmino to the sea.
In Belgium the British big guns are continuing to bombard violently the German positions, evidently preparing the way for another smash at Crown Prince Rupprecht's front. The infantry activity here and also to the south in France is mainly in the nature of raiding operations.
MONDAY
Riga, Russia's principal Baltic port has been abandoned to the Germans under the threat of an offensive by land and sea. Its fate virtually was sealed when German troops forced a crossing of the Dvina southeast of the city and began to push northward. Menaced also by an advance from Miatan, southwest of Riga, and by German naval forces recently reported hovering near the Gulf of Riga, the Russian military authorities evidently considered the city no longer tenable. The success of the Italians are reported by the war office. South of Gozz, Cadorna's forces have advanced in the Brestovizza valley, repelling an Austrian counter attack. Fresh German attacks on the Alsn were beaten off by the French. Heavy artillery actions are reported on the Verdun front.
---
Flour $10.75 to $11 Barrel
The best grades of flour will probably sell for from $10.75 to $11 a barrel as the result of fixing $2.20 as the price of wheat. This is according to statements by local flour manufacturers. Fancy patents are now quoted as $12.25 a barrel.
FIVE
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KNICKERBOCKER TAILORING CO.
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GERMANY MAY BID FOR PEACE New Offer May Come Before Christmas.
MAY YIELD TO MAJORITY
Amsterdam Hears Berlin Government
Hopes to Start Negotiations—Wants
Conference to Meet at The Hague.
According to the most reliable
authority in Amsterdam the next
session of the German reichstag will
be devoted to the questions of peace.
The majority has decided to chal-
lege the statement of the government
regarding its minimum peace program.
It is said the government will yield,
with a view to peace negotiations be-
fore Christmas.
The German government, according
to this authority, favors the plenom-
tarians meeting either at The Hague
or at Bene or at Copenhagen, but pre-
ferably The Hague.
Heed Wilson's Note, Vorwaerts Says
The Berlin Vorwaerts, the Sozial-
organ, in commenting on President
Wilson's reply to the none, says:
"The American note is a cautious and clever document. It is a passionate indictment to amend the system of government obtaining in Germany, to which it attributes all the world's atrocities. Against the German people the note sets forth that America does not want to retaliate, inasmuch as it has in the course of this war, which it did not want, suffered much.
"That is undoubtedly a very correct observation that the German people did not want this war, and in its course has suffered much. Fear that yet worse might come, keeps it awake in defense.
"The American government repeatedly declared It does not harbor quantity against the German people, but proof of this assertion has not been furnished. It can only be established in a demonstration of America's will that the German people are not to be robbed and made to pay tribute to its enemies.
"The note cautiously omits reference to this point, which is of decisive importance to the German people. It does not support the indemnity and territorial demands of America's allies, nor does it reinhold them.
"It will be said in France, however that the note does not mention these things. Only the word satisfaction permits a wide interpretation with Germany so long as the present government system obtains. It demands that the will of the people back up government transactions.
"A section of the German press will hasten to say that it would be undignified for the German people to give such surety. On the contrary, we be lievo it would be undignified to refuse.
"The German people are fighting this most terrible of battles not for the rights of a single family, or a certain form of government, but for its own existence."
"In this sense and in no other, the German Social Democracy entered into the defense of the nation. Social Democracy in its endeavor to obtain adhered constitutional conditions refuses to employ methods calculated to weaken the nation's defenses.
"Shall it be said of us Germans that negotiations with the United States are impossible because we as a nation of helbots are incapable of asserting our own will? Do we deserve this after years of fighting and suffering after achievements and sacrifices with out measure and numbers?"
---
Girl Shot by Playmate
Elizabeth Mayer, tea years of age daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mayer, of Dover, Del, is near death from a bullet wound in her abdomen. The child and her sister were playing at the home of James M. Saterfield, deputy attorney general, on Dover Green when a revolver in the hands of James M. Satterfield, Jr., was accidentally dls charged. The bullet struck the girl Doctors say there is little hope of her recovery.
$60,000 Fire at Boyertown
Hoyertown, Pa., was visited by a $60,000 fire. Elvin Reinhardt's bvery stable was burned with four horses and many quail bills. The building was owned by the Land Brewing company, of Reading, and the loss is estimated at $20,000. The Central House was rented to the extent of $25,000. Of nearby buildings were also damaged.
Thousands Lost in Fire.
Several thousands persons are reported to have been killed and injured in a fire which swept the city of Kazan, on the Kazanka river, 430 miles cost of Moscow, early last week. The fire burned for thirty six hours, driving most of the population outside the city.
SIX
THE PLANET
(Continued from Page Three.)
attempt at sewing she would have felt vastly more at case in this rude logging camp, knowing that she could leave it if she desired.
So far as she could see things she looked at them with measurable clearness, without any vain illusions concerning her ability to march triumphant over unknown fields of endeavor. Along practical lines she had everything to learn. Culture furnishes an excellent pair of wings wherewith to soar in skies of abstraction, but is a poor vehicle to carry one over rough roads. She might have remained in Philadelphia, a guest among friends. Pride forbade that. Incidentally, such an arrangement would have enabled her to stalk a husband, a moneyed husband, which did not occur to her at all. There remained only to Join Charlie. If his fortunes mended, well and good. Perhaps she could even help in minor ways.
But it was all so radically different—brother and all—from what she had pictured that she was filled with dismay and not a little foreboding of the future. Suicident, however, unto the day was the evil thereof, she told herself at last, and tried to make that assurance work a change of heart. She was very lonely and depressed and full of a futile wish that she were a mum.
Over across the bay some one was playing an accordion, and to its strains a stout lunged lumberjack was roaring out a song, with all his fellows joining strong in the chorus:
Oh, the Sashaww Kid was a cook in a camp way up on the Occon-to-o-o.
And the cook in a camp in them old days had been a little shy. Had a — hard row to hoe.
There was a fine, rollicking air to it. The careless note in their voices, the joyful lilt of their song made her envious. They at least had their destiny, limited as it might be and cast along rude ways, largely under their own control.
Her wandering gaze at length came to rest on a tent top showing in the brush northward from the camp. She
A. H. H.
He Was No Beauty, She Decided.
saw two canoes drawn up on the beach above the lash of the waves, two small figures playing on the gravel and sunny dogs prowling alongshore. Smoke went eddying away in the wind. An Indian camp, Miss Benton supposed.
She had an impulse to skirt the bay and view the Indian camp at closer range, a notion born of curiosity. She debated this casually, and just as she was about to rise her movement was arrested by a faint crackle in the woods behind. She looked away through the deepening shadow among the trees and saw nothing at first. But the sound was repeated at odd intervals. She sat still. Thoughts of forest animals slipped into her mind without making her afraid. At last she caught sight of a man striding through the timber, soundlessly on the thick moss, coming almost straight toward her.
He was scarcely fifty yards away. Across his shoulder he bore a reddish gray burden, and in his right hand was a gun. She did not move. Bowed slightly under the weight, the man passed within twenty feet of her, so close that she could see the sweat beads glisten on that side of his face, and saw also that the load he carried was the carcass of a deer.
Gaining the beach and laying the animal across a bowder he straightened himself up and drew a long breath. Then he wiped the sweat off his face. A sturdily built man about thirty, of Saxon fairness, with a tinge of red in his hair and a liberal display of freckles across nose and cheek bones. He was no beauty, she decided, albeit he displayed a frank and pleasing countenance. That he was a remarkably strong and active man she had seen for herself, and if the firm round of his jaw counted for anything an individual of considerable determination besides. Miss Benton conceived herself to be possessed of considerable skill at character analysis.
He put away his handkerchief, took up his rifle, scuffed his hat and strode
off toward the camp. Her attention now diverted from the Siwashes, she watched him, saw him go to her brother's quarters, stand in the door a minute, then go back to the beach accompanied by Charlie.
In a minute or so he came rowing across in a skiff, threw his deer aboard and pulled away north along the shore.
She watched him lift and fall among the waves until he turned a point, rowing with strong, even strokes. Then she walked home. Benton was poring over some figures, but he pushed aside his pencil and paper when she entered.
"You had a visitor, I see," she remarked.
"Yes, Jack Fyfe. He picked up a deer on the ridge behind here and bortowed a boat to get home."
"I saw hm come out of the woods," she said. "His camp can't be far from here, is it? He only left the springs as you came in. Does he hunt deer for sport?"
"Hardly. Oh, well, I suppose it's sport for Jack, in a way. He's always pliking around in the woods with a gun or a fishing rod," Benton returned. "But we kill 'em to eat most. It's good meat and cheap. I get one myself now and then. However, you want to keep that under your hat—about us fellows hunting—or we'll have game wardens nosing around here."
"Are you not allowed to hunt them?" she asked.
"Not in close season. Hunting season's from September to December."
"If it's unlawful, why break the law?" she ventured hesitatingly. "Isn't that rather—cr"— "Oh, bosh!" Charlie derided. "A man in the woods is cuttled to venson, if he's hunter enough to get it. The woods are full of deer, and a few more or less don't matter. We can't run forty miles to town and back and pay famine prices for beef every two or three days when we can get it at home in the woods."
Stella digested this in silence, but it occurred to her that this mild sample of lawlessness was quite in keeping with the men and the environment. There was no policeman on the corner, no mechanism of law and order visible anywhere. The characteristic attitude of these woodmen was of intolerance for restraint, of complete self sufficiency. It had colored her brother's point of view. She perceived that whereas all her instinct was to know the rules of the game and abide by them, he taking his cue from his environment, inclined to break rules that proved inconvenient, even to formulate new ones to apply.
"And suppose," said she, "that a game warden should catch you or Mr. Jack Fyfe killing deer out of season?"
"Wed he hauled up and fined a hundred dollars or so," he told her. "But they don't catch us."
He shrugged his shoulders and, smiling tolerantly upon her, proceeded to smoke.
Dusk was falling now, the long twilight of the northern seasons gradually deepening, as they sat in silence. Along the creek here those the evening chorus of the frogs. The air, now hushed and still, was riven every few minutes by the whir of wings as ducks in evening flight swept by above. All the boisterous laughter and talk in the bunkhouse had died. The woods ranged gloomy and impenetrable, save only in the northwest, where a patch of sky lighted by diffused pink and gray revealed one mountain higher than its fellows standing bald against the horizon.
"Well, I guess it's time to turn in," Benton mulled a yawn. "Pleasant dreams, sis. Oh, here's your purse. I used part of the bankroll. You won't have much use for money up here, anyway."
He flipped the purse across to her and sauntered into his bedroom. Stella sat gazing thoughtfully at the vast bulk of Mount Douglas a few minutes longer. Then she, too, went into the boxlike room, the bare discomfort of which chilled her merely to behold.
With a curious uncertainty, *n* feeling of reluctance for the proceeding almost, she examined the contents of her purse. For a little time she stood gazing into it, a queer curl to her full red lips. Then she flung it contemptuously on the bed and began to take down her hair.
“‘A rich, rough, tough country, where it doesn’t do to be finicky about anything,’” she murmured, quoting a line from one of Charlie Benton’s letters.
“It would appear to be rather unpleasantly true. Particularly the last clause.”
In her purse, which had contained $110, there now reposed in solitary state a twenty dollar bill.
CHAPTER IV.
BY such imperceptible degrees that she was scarce aware of it, Stella took her place as a cog in her brother's logging machine, a unit in the human mechanism which he operated skillfully and relentlessly at top speed to achieve his desired end $ \rightarrow 1, 0 0 0 $ 000 feet of timber in boomsticks by Sept. 1.
From the evening that she stepped into the breach created by a drunken cook the kitchen burden settled steadily upon her shoulders. For a week Benton daily expected and spoke of the arrival of a new cook. Fyfe had wired a Vancouver employment agency to send one the day he took Jim Renfrew down. But either cooks were scarce or the order went astray, for no rough and ready kitchen mechanic arrived. Benton in the meantime ceased to look for one. He worked like a horse, unsparing of himself, unsparing of others. He rose at half past 4, lighted the kitchen fire, roused Stella and helped her prepare breakfast, preliminary to his day in the woods. Later he impressed Katy John, a half breed Siwash girl, into service to wait on the table and wash dishes. He labored patiently to teach Stella certain simple tricks of cooking that she did not know.
Quick of perception, as thorough as her brother in whatsoever she set her hand to do, Stella was soon equal to the job. And as the days passed and no camp cook came to their relief Ben-
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
ton left the job to her as a matter of course.
"You can handle that kitchen with Katy as well as a man," he said to her at last. "And it will give you something to occupy your time. I'd have to pay a cook $70 a month. Katy draws $25. You can credit yourself with the balance and I'll pay off when the contract money comes in. We might as well keep the coin in the family. I'll
---
IT IS OUR LOSS AND YOUR GAIN!
feel easier, because you won't get drunk and jump the job in a pinch. What do you say?"
She said the only possible thing to say under the circumstances. But she did not say it with pleasure nor with any feeling of gratitude. It was hard work, and she and hard work were utter strangers. Her feet ached from continual standing on them. The heat and the smell of stewing meat and vegetables skidened her. Her hands were growing rough and red from dabbling in water, punching bread dough, handling the varied articles of food that go to make up a meal. Upon hands and forearms there stung continually certain small cuts and burns that lack of experience over a hot range inevitably inflicted upon her. Whereens time had promised to hang heavy on her hands, now an hour of leness in the day became a precious boon.
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.
Yet in her own way she was as full of determination as her brother. She saw plainly enough that she must leave the drone stage behind. She perceived that to be fed and clothed and housed and to have her wishes readily gratified was not an inherent right; that some one must foot the bill; that now for all she received she must return equitable value. At home she had never thought of it in that light; in fact, she had never thought of it at all. Now that she was beginning to get a glimming of her true economic relation to the world at large she had no wish to emulate the clinging vine, even if thereby she could have secured a continuance of that silk lined existence which had been her fortunate lot. Her pride revolted against parasitism. It was therefore a certain personal satisfaction to have achieved soft support at a stroke, in so far as that in the sweat of her brow—all too literally—she opened her bread and a compensation besides. But there were times when that solace seemed scarcely to weigh against her growing detest for the endless routine of her task, the exasperating physical weariness and irritations that it brought upon her.
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
APART AND PUT IT INTO YOUR TRUNK OR SUIT CASE WHEN TRAVELING. 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. AN EXPERIENCE OF MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ENABLES US TO CATER TO THE READING PUBLIC. YOU WILL LIKE THE PLANET IF YOU WILL READ IT
For to prepare three times daily food for a dozen hungry men is no mean undertaking. One cannot have in a logging camp the convenience of a hotel kitchen. The water must be carried in buckets from the creek near by and wood brought in armfuls from the pile of sawn blocks outside. The low roofed kitchen shanty was always like an oven. The flies swarmed in their tents of thousands. As the men sweated with ax and saw in the woods, so she sweated in the kitchen. And her work began two hours before their day's labor and continued two hours after they were done. She slept like one exhausted and rose full of sleep heaviness, full of bodily soreness and spiritual protest when the alarm clock raised its din in the cool morning.
For a week thereafter Benton developed moods of sourness, periods of scowling thought. He tried to speed up his gang, and, having all spring driven them at top speed, the added straw broke the back of their patience, and Stella heard some sharp interchanges of words. He quelled one incipient mutiny through sheer dominance, but it left him more short of temper, more crabbedly moody than ever. Eventually his ill mature broke out against Stella over some trifle, and she, being herself an aggrieved party to his transactions, surprised her own sense of the fitness of things by retaliating in kind.
We Do All Kinds of Job Work
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.
"I'm slaving away in your old camp from daylight till dark at work I despise, and you can't even speak decently to me," she fared up. "You act like a perfect brute lately. What's the matter with you?" Benton guawed at a finger nail in silence.
"Hang it, I guess you're right," he admitted at last. "But I can't help having a grouch. I'm going to fall behind on this contract, the best I can do."
"Well," she replied tartly, "I'm not to blame for that. I'm not responsible for your failure. Why take it out on me?"
"I don't particularly," he answered. "Only—can't you sabe? A man gets on edge when he works and sweats for months and sees it all about to come to nothing."
"So does a woman," she made pointed retort.
Benton chose to ignore the inference. He sat a minute or two longer, again preoccupied with his problems.
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
"Well," he said at last, "I've got to get action somehow. If I could get about thirty men and another donkey for three weeks I'd make it."
He went outside. Up in the near woods the whine of the saws and the sounds of chopping kept measured beat. It was late in the forenoon, and Stella was hard about her dinner preparations. Contract or no contract, money or no money, men must eat. That fact loomed biggest on her daily schedule, left her no room to think overlong of other things. Her huff over, she felt rather sorry for Charlie, a feeling accentuated by sight of him humped on a log in the sun, too engrossed in his perplexities to be where he normally was at that hour, in the thick of the logging, working harder than any of his men.
A little later she saw him put off from the float in the Chickamau's dinghy. When the crew came to dinner he had not returned. Nor was he back when they went out again at 1. Near midafternoon, however, he strode into the kitchen, wearing the look of a conqueror.
JOHN MITCHELL JR., PUBLISHER AND PRINTER, 311 N. Fourth Street Long Distance Telephone, Randolph 2213 Richmond, Virginia
"I've got it fixed," he announced. Stella looked up from a frothy mass of yellow stuff that she was stirring in a pan.
"Got what fixed?" she asked.
What fixed? she asked.
"Why, this leg business," he said.
Continued on Page Seven.
8IX
THE PLANET
BIG TIMBER (Continued from Page Three)
attempt at sowing she would have felt vastly more at ease in this rude logging camp, knowing that she could leave it if she desired.
So far as she could see things she looked at them with measurable clearness, without any vain illusions concerning her ability to march trumpphant over unknown fields of endearment. Along practical lines she had everything to learn. Culture furnishes an exedent pair of wings wherewith to soar in skies of abstraction, but is a poor vehicle to carry one over rough roads. She might have remained in Philadelphia, a guest among friends. Pride forbade that. Incidentally, such an arrangement would have enabled her to stalk a husband, a moneyed husband, which did not occur to her at all. There remained only to Join Charlie. If his fortunes mended, well and good. Perhaps she could even help in minor ways.
But it was all so radically different—brother and all—from what she had pictured that she was filled with dismay and not a little foreboding of the future. Suitable, however, unto the day was the evil thereof, she told herself at last, and tried to make that assurance work a change of heart. She was very loudy and depressed and full of a futile wish that she were a man.
Over across the bay some one was playing an accordion, and to its strains a stout bunged lumberjack was roaring out a song, with all his fellows joining strong in the chorus:
Oh, the Sacrina Kid was a cook in a camp way up on the Ocean-to-oo.
And the cook in a camp in them old days
There was a fine, rollicking air to it. The careless note in their voices, the joyful lilt of their song made her envious. They at least had their destiny, limited as it might and cast along rude ways, largely under their own control.
Her wandering gaze at length came to rest on a tent top showing in the brush northward from the canopy. She
O. B. WOOLL
He Was No Beauty, She Decided.
saw two canoes drawn up on the beach above the hash of the waves, two small figures playing on the gravel and sundry dogs prowling along smoke. Smoke went eddying away in the wind. An Indian camp, Miss Benton supposed.
She had an impulse to skirt the bay and view the Indian camp at closer range, a notion born of curiosity. She debated this casually, and just as she was about to rise her movement was arrested by a faint crackle in the woods behuld. She looked away through the deepening shadow among the trees and saw nothing at first. But the sound was repeated at odd intervals. She sat still. Thoughts of forest animals slipped into her mind without making her afraid. At last she caught sight of a man striding through the timber, soundlessly on the thick moss, coming almost straight toward her.
He was scarcely fifty yards away. Across his shoulder he bore a reddish gray barden, and in his right hand was a gun. She did not move. Bowed slightly under the weight, the man passed within twenty feet of her, so close that she could see the sweat beads glisten on that side of his face, and saw also that the load he carried was the carcass of a deer.
Gaining the beach and laying the animal across a bowler he straightened himself up and drew a long breath. Then he wiped the sweat off his face. A sturdy built man about thirty, of Saxon fairness, with a tinge of red in his hair and a liberal display of freckles across nose and cheek bones. He was no beauty, she decided, nibbit he displayed a frank and plensing countenance. That he was a remarkably strong and active man she had seen for herself, and if the firm round of his jaw counted for anything an individual of considerable determination besides. Miss Benton conceived herself to be possessed of considerable skill at character analysis. He put away his handkerchief, took up his rifle, settled his hat and strode
off toward the camp. Her attention now diverted from the Sliwashes, she watched him, saw him go to her brother's quarters, stand in the door a minute, then go back to the beach accompanied by Charlie.
In a minute or so he came rowing across in a skiff, threw his deer aboard and pulled away north along the shore. She watched him lift and fall among the waves until he turned a point, rowing with strong, even strokes. Then she walked home. Benton was poring over some figures, but he pushed aside his penclay and paper when she entered.
"You had a visitor, I see," she remarked.
"Yes, Jack Fyfe. He picked up a deer on the ridge behind here and bortowed a boat to get home."
"I saw him come out of the woods," she said. "His camp can't be far from here, is it? He only left the springs us you came in. Does he hunt deer for sport?"
"Hardly, Oh, well, I suppose it's sport for Jack, in a way. He's always piking around in the woods with a gun or a fishing rod." Benton returned, "But we kill 'em to eat mostly. It's good meat and cheap. I get one myself now and then. However, you want to keep that under your hat—about us fellows hunting—or we'll have game wardens nosing around here."
"Are you not allowed to hunt them?" she asked.
"Not in close season. Hunting season's from September to December."
"Oh, bosh!" Charlie derided. "A man in the woods is entitled to venison. If he's hunter enough to get it. The woods are full of deer, and a few more or less don't matter. We can't run forty miles to town and back and pay famine prices for beef every two or three days when we can get it at home in the woods."
Stella digested this in silence, but it occurred to her that this mild sample of lawlessness was quite in keeping with the men and the environment. There was no policeman on the corner, no mechanism of law and order visible anywhere. The characteristic attitude of these woodsmen was of intolerance for restraint, of complete self sufficiency. It had colored her brother's point of view. She perceived that whereas all her instinct was to know the rules of the game and abide by them, he taking his cue from his environment, included to break rules that proved inconvenient, even to formulate new ones to apply.
"And suppose," said she, "that a game warden should catch you or Mr. Jack Fyfe killing deer out of season."
"We'd be hounded up and fined a hundred dollars or so," he told her, "But they don't catch us."
He shrugged his shoulders and, smiling tolerantly upon her, proceeded to smoke.
Dusk was falling now, the long twilight of the northern seasons gradually deepening, as they sat in silence. Along the creek Arces The evening chorus of the frogs. The air, now hushed and still, was riven every few minutes by the whir of wings as ducks in evening flight swept by above. All the boisterous laughter and talk in the bunkhouse had died. The woods ranged gloomy and impenetrable, save only in the northwest, where a patch of sky lighted by diffused pink and gray revealed one mountain higher than its fellows standing bald against the horizon.
"Well, I guess it's time to turn in." Benton mutilated a yawn. "Pleasant dreams, sis. Oh, here's your purse. I used part of the bankroll. You won't have much use for money up here, anyway."
He flipped the purse across to her and sauntered into his bedroom. Stella sat gazing thoughtfully at the vast bulk of Mount Douglas a few minutes longer. Then she, too, went into the boxlike room, the bare discomfort of which chilled her merely to behold.
With a curious uncertainty, a feeling of reluctance for the proceeding almost, she examined the contents of her purse. For a little time she stood gazing into it, a queer curl to her full red lips. Then she flung it contemptually on the bed and began to take down her hair.
"A rich, rough, tough country, where it doesn't do to be finicky about anything," she murmured, quoting a line from one of Charlie Benton's letters. "It would appear to be rather unpleasantly true. Particularly the last clause." In her purse, which had contained $110, there now reposed in solitary state a twenty dollar bill.
CHAPTER IV
The Dignity (2) of Toil:
B Y such imperceptible degrees that she was source aware of it. Stella
B she was scarce aware of it, Stella took her place as a cog in her brother's logging machine, a unit in the human mechanism which he operated skillfully and rebelliously at top speed to achieve his desired end $ \rightarrow 1, 000, $ 000 feet of timber in boomsticks by Sept. 1.
From the evening that she stepped into the brench created by a drunken cook the kitchen burden settled steadily upon her shoulders. For a week Benton daily expected and spoke of the arrival of a new cook. Fyfe had wired a Vancouver employment agency to send one the day he took Jim Renfrew down. But either cooks were scarce or the order went astray, for no rough and ready kitchen machine arrived. Benton in the meantime ceased to look for one. He worked like a horse, unsurprising of himself, unsparing of others. He rose at half past 4, lighted the kitchen on fire, roasted Stella and helped her prepare breakfast, preliminary to his day in the woods. Later he impressed Katy John, a half breed Siwash girl, into service to wait on the table and wash dishes. He labored patiently to teach Stella certain simple tricks of cooking that she did not know.
Quick of perception, as thorough as her brother in whatsoever she set her hand to do, Stella was soon equal to the job. And as the days passed and no camp cook gave to their relief Ben-
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
ton left the job to her as a matter of course.
"You can handle that kitchen with Katy as well as a man," he said to her at last. "And it will give you something to occupy your time. I'd have to pay a cook $70 a month. Katy draws $25. You can credit yourself with the balance and I'll pay off when the contract money comes in. We might as well keep the coin in the family. I'll
```markdown
```
IT IS OUR LOSS AND YOUR GAIN!
feel easier, because you won't get drunk and jump the job in a pinch. What do you say?"
She said the only possible thing to say under the circumstances. But she did not say it with pleasure nor with any feeling of gratitude. It was hard work, and she and hard work were utter strangers. Her feet ached from continual standing on them. The heat and the smell of stewing meat and vegetables sickened her. Her hands were growing rough and red from dabbing in water, punching bread dough, handling the varied articles of food that go to make up a meal. Upon hands and forearms there stung continually certain small cuts and burns that lack of experience over a hot range inevitably inflicted upon her. Whereas time had promised to hang heavy on her hands, now an hour of idleness in the day became a precious boon.
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.
Yet in her own way she was as full of determination as her brother. She saw plainly enough that she must leave the drone stage behind. She perceived that to be fed and clothed and housed and to have her wishes readily gratified was not an inherent right; that some one must foot the bll; that now for all she received she must return equitable value. At home she had never thought of it in that light; in fact, she had never thought of it at all. Now that she was beginning to get a glimmering of her true economic relation to the world at large she had no wish to emulate the clinging vine, even if thereby she could have secured a continuance of that silk lined existence which had been her fortunate lot. Her pride revolted against parasitism. It was therefore a certain personal satisfaction to have achieved self support at a stroke, in so far as that in the sweat of her brow — all too literally—she opened her bread and a compensation besides. But there were times when that sense seemed scarce to weigh against her growing detest for the endless routine of her task, the exasperating physical weakness and irritations that it brought upon her.
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.
For to prepare three times daily food for a dozen hungry men is no mean undertaking. One cannot have in a logging camp the conveniences of a hotel kitchen. The water must be carried in buckets from the creek near by and wood brought in armfuls from the pile of sawn blocks outside. The low roofed kitchen shanty was always like an oven "the flies swarmed in their tents of thousands." As the men sweated with ax and saw in the wools, so she sweated in the kitchen. And her work began two hours before their day's labor and continued two hours after they were done. She shouted like one exhuberated and rose full of sleep heaviness, full of bodily soreness and spiritual protest when the alarm clock raised its din in the cool morning.
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. AN EXPERIENCE OF MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ENABLES US TO CATER TO THE READING PUBLIC. YOU WILL LIKE THE PLANET IF YOU WILL READ IT
For a week thereafter Beuton developed moods of sorrowness, periods of sowling thought. He tried to speed up his singing, and, having all spring driven them at top speed, the added straw broke the back of their patience, and Stella heard some sharp interchanges of words. He quelled one incipient unintention through sheer dominance, but it left him more short of temper, more crabbled moody than ever. Eventually his ill mature broke out against Stella over some trilure, and she, being herself an aggrieved party to his transactions, surprised her own sense of the fitness of things by retaliating in kind.
We Do All Kinds of Job Work
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.
"I'm slaving away in your old camp from daylight till dark at work I despise, and you can't even speak decently to me," she shared up. "You act like a perfect brute lately. What's the matter with you?"
Benton guwned at a finger nail in silence.
"Hang it, I guess you're right," he admitted at last. "But I can't help having a grouch. I'm going to fall behind on this contract, the best I can do."
"Well," she replied tartly, "I'm not to blame for that. I'm not responsible for your failure. Why take it out on me?"
"I don't particularly," he answered.
"Only—can't you sabe? A man gets on edge when he works and sweats for months and sees it all about to come to nothing."
"So does a woman," she made pointed retort.
Benton chose to ignore the inference. He sat a minute or two longer, again preoccupied with his problems.
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
"Well," he said at last, "I've got to get action somehow. If I could get about thirty men and another donkey for three weeks I'd make it."
He went outside. Up in the near woods the whine of the saws and the sounds of chopping kept measured beat. It was late in the forecoun, and Stella was hard about her dinner preparations. Contract or no contract, money or no money, men must eat. That fact loomed biggest on her daily schedule, left her no room to think overlong of other things. Her huff over, she felt rather sorry for Charlie, a feeling accentuated by sight of him humped on a log in the sun, too engrossed in his perplexities to be where he normally was at that hour, in the thick of the logging, working harder than any of his men.
THE RICHMOND PLANET.
A little later she saw him put off from the float in the Chickamau's dinghy. When the crew came to dinner he had not returned. Nor was he back when they went out again at 1. Near midafternoon, however, he strode into the kitchen, wearing the look of a conqueror.
JOHN MITCHELL JR., PUBLISHER AND PRINTER, 311 N. Fourth Street Long Distance Telephone, Randolph 2213 Richmond, Virginia
"I've got it fixed." he announced. Stella looked up from a frothy mass of yellow stuff that she was stirring in a pan.
"Got what fixed?" she asked.
"Why, this bike has spilled."
"this log business," he said.
Continued on Page Seven.
---
HEY SUNET
DANVILLE NOTES.
Last week was a busy week here with the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows Monday evening delegates from all parts of the state found their way to the city on the Dan, to meet their brothers in the Seventh Biennial Session of District Grand Lodge No. 15. The public exercises were held in the High Street Baptist Church, Many helpful and enthusiastic speeches were made. Mayor Harry Woodig in his usual manner welcomed the delegates to the city, W. B. F. Crowell responded in a most pleasing way. Referring to the present war, Mr. Crowell said "This is our war, our country, and president Wilson is ours and we will stand by him till a change comes."
Those of the local talent who took part in the public exercise were Rev. M. F. Hughes, Mr. W. D. Ivy, Mrs. Julia Clark, Mrs. A. E. Buford, Miss E. J Ivy, Mr. J. M. Clark and Dr. S. A. Moses.
The session was a record breaker as to interest and time. Business was completed in two days instead of four. The session closed Wednesday night with a banquet.
Rev. P. H. Kirby one of the oldest citizens of Pittsburgh Co., died at his home in north Danville last Tuesday. Funeral services were held at the Camp Grove Baptist Church. Many of the leading ministers of the city and county were present and spoke highly of the work done by Rev. Kirby.
Mrs. Hattie Wood, the sister of Mrs. A. H. Lee, 401 So. Main St., departed this life at her home in Roselle N. J., Aug. 28. Her death was a shock to the family and her many friends.
Mr. James Miles, who under went an operation in the General Hospital died Monday evening. His remains were taken to Leesburg, N. C., for interment.
Mrs. Millie Wilson and Little Ruby of W. Broad St., are spending the week in Clarksville, Va., with relatives.
Mrs. N. G. Russell of W. Broad St., is spending some time in the country.
Mrs. Vivian deLombody of Mountain Hill, Va., was in the city the first of the week. Monday afternoon she was the guards of Mrs. E. R. Wilson of So. Main St. She spent the night with Mrs. W. R. Carr of Holbrook Street.
Miss Maude Wilson of Holbrook street left the city Saturday for a brief stay in the country.
Drs. S. A. Moses, A. A. Galvin, and Rev. M. C. Allen, will attend the National Baptist Convention, which meets in Atlanta, Ga., this week.
Rev. J. R. Cooper pastor of Trinity Baptist Church, leaves the city Thursday on his vacation. He plans to spend most of his stay in N. J.
Mrs. Amanda West of Stokes street returned to the city last week after a three weeks stay at her old home, Hampdue-Sidney. She is almost persuaded to go back to remain.
Trinity Baptist Church had its Baptizing Sunday afternoon. A very large crowd was present.
Rev. Geo. Coats has held two success ful revivals recently, many professions were made. This week Rev. Coats is celebrating his second anniversary as pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist Church.
Mrs. Jennie Brewer, who resides on the lower end of Broad street sustain ed a very severe injury from a fall last week. She is under the skillful treatment of Dr Winslow.
Dr. S. R. Wilson and Mr. W. P. Pancey were defeated by Mr. H. Gunn and Mr J. Cooper in the tennis contest Labor Day. The score was, the first game 6 to 3, second game 6 to 0 Misses Ophilia and Lottie Coleman left Saturday for Greensboro, N. C., to visit friends and relatives.
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Charley and Luke Playing
In Luck
WANT YOU BOYS SIT DOWN
HERE AND HAVE SOME
PANCAKES WHILE THEY'RE
HOT
SURE
YEA
SURE
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
Continued from Sixth Page.
"Jack Fyfe is going to put in a crew and a donkey, and we're going to over lastingly up the innards out of these woods. I'll make delivery after all."
"That's good," she remarked, but noticeably without enthusiasm. The heat of that low roofed shanty had taken all possible enthusiasm for anything out of her for the time being. Always toward the close of each day she was gripped by that feeling of deadly fatigue, in the face of which nothing much mattered but to get through the last hours somehow and drag herself wearily to bed.
Noon of the next day brought the Panther cougling into the bay, flanked on the port side by a scow upon which rested a twin to the iron monster that jerked logs into her brother's chute. To starboard was maude fast a like scow. That was housed over, a smoking stovepipe stuck through the roof, and a capped and aproned cook rested his arms on the window sill as they floated in. Men to the number of twenty or more clustered about both scows and the Panther's deck, busy with pipe and cigarette and rude jest. The clatter of their voices uprose through the noon mead. But when the donkey scow thrust its blunt nose against the beach the chaff and laughter died into silent, capable action.
"A Seattle yarder properly handled can do anything but climb a tree" Charlie had once boasted to her in reference to his own machine.
It seemed quite possible to Stella, watching Jack Fyfe's crew at work. Steam was up in the donkey. They carried a line from its drum through a snatch block ashore and jerked half a dozen logs crosswise before the scow in a matter of minutes. Then the same cable was made fast to a sturdy fir, the engineer stood by, and the ponderous machine slid forward on its own skids, like an up ended barrel on a sled, down off the scow, up the bank, smashing brush, branches, dead roots, all that stood in its path, drawing steadily up to the anchor tree as the cable spooled up on the drum.
A dozen men tailed on to the inch and a quarter cable and bore the loose end away up the path. Presently one stood clear, waving a signal. Again the donkey began to puff and quiver, the line began to roll up on the drum, and the big yarder walked up the slope under its own power, a locomotive unneeded of rails, making its own right of way. Upon the platform built over the skids were piled the tools of the crew, sawed blocks for the box, axes, saws, grindstones, all that was necessary in their task. At 1 o'clock they made their first move. At 2 the donkey had vanished into that region where the clute head lay, and the great firs stood waiting the slaughter. By midafternoon Stella noticed an acceleration of numbers in the logs that came hurtling lakeward. Now at shorter intervals arose the grinding sound of their arrival, the ponderous splash as each leaped to the water. It
C. B. BURKE
was a good thing, she surmised, for Charlie Benton. She could not see where it made much difference to her whether ten logs a day or a hundred came down to the boomsticks.
A shadow darkened the door, and Stella looked around to see Jack Fyfe. "How d' do," he greeted.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
He had seemed a short man. Now, standing within four feet of her, she perceived that this was an illusion created by the proportion and thickness of his body. He was, in fact, half a head taller than she, and Stella stood five feet five. His gray eyes met hers squarely, with a cool, impersonal quality of gaze. There was neither smirk nor embarrassment in his straightforward glance. He was, in effect, "sizing her up" just as he would have looked casually over a logger asking him for a job. Stella sensed that and, resenting it momentarily, failed to match his manner. She flushed. Fyfe smiled, a broad, friendly grin, in which a wide mouth opened to show strong, even teeth.
"Say," he asked easily, "how do you like life in a logging camp by this time? This is sure one hot job you've got."
"Literally or slaughter?" she asked in a flippant tone. Fyfe's reputation, rather vividly colored, had reached her from various sources. She was not quite sure whether she cared to countenance him or not. There was a disturbing quality in his glance, a subtle suggestion of force about him that she felt without being able to define in understandable terms. In any case she felt more than equal to the task of quelching any effort at familiarity, even if Jack Fyfe were, in a sense, the convenient god in her brother's machine. Fyfe chuckled at her answer. "Both," he replied shortly, and went out. Lying in her bed that night, in the short interval that came between undressing and weared sleep, she found herself wondering with a good deal more interest about Jack Fyfe than she had ever bestowed upon—well, Paul Abbey, for instance.
She was quite positive that she was going to dislike Jack Fyfe if he were thrown much in her way. There was something about him that she resented. The difference between him and the rest of the rude crew among which she must, perforce, live was a question of degree, not of kind. There was certainly some compelling magnetism about the man. But along with it went what she considered an almost brutal directness of speech and action. Part of this conclusion came from hearsay, part from observation, limited though her opportunities had been for the latter. Miss Stella Benton, for all her poise, was not above jumping at conclusions. There was something about Jack Fyfe that she resented. She irritably dismissed it as a foolish impression, but the fact remained that the mere physical nearness of him seemed to put her on the defensive as if he were in reality a hunter and she the hunted.
Fyfe Joined Charlie Benton about the time she finished work. The three of them sat on the grass before Benton's quarters, and every time Jack Fyfe's eyes rested on her she steered herself to resist—what, she did not know. Something intangible, something that disturbed her. She had never experienced anything like that before; it tainted her, roused her curiosity. There was nothing occult about the man. He was nowise fascinating, either in face or manner. He made no bid for her attention. Yet during the half hour he sat there Stella's mind revolved constantly about him. She recalled all that she had heard of him, much of it, from her point of view, highly discretable. Inevitably she fell to comparing him with other men she knew.
She had, in a way, unconsciously been prepared for just such a measure of concentration upon Jack Fyfe. For he was a power on Roaring Lake and power—physical, intellectual or financial—exacts its own tribute of consideration. He was a fighter, a dominant, hard bitted woodman, so the tale run. He had gathered about him the toughest crew on the lake, himself, upon occasion, the most turbulent of all. He controlled many square miles of big timber, and he had got it all by his own effort in the eight years since he came to Roaring lake as a hand logger. He was slow of speech, chain lightning in action, respected generally, feared a lot. All these things her brother and Katy John had sketched for Stella with much verbal embellishment.
There was no ignoring such a man. Brought into close contact with the man himself, Stella felt the radiating force of his personality. There it was, a thing to be reckoned with. She felt that whenever Jack Fyfe's gray eyes rested impersonally on her. His pleasant, freckled face hovered before her until she fell asleep, and in her sleep she dreamed of him.
(TO BE CONTINUED)
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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
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.
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PLENTY OF SHADE-FINE SPRING WATER. THE LAKE WILL BE OPEN TO BOATING.
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
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JANE RAND and MARGARET BERRY wrote us
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IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE!
HEY PLANET
DANVILLE NOTES.
Last week was a busy week here with the Grand United Order of Old Fellows Monday evening delegates from all parts of the state found their way to the city on the Dan. to meet their brothers in the Seventh Biennial Session of District Grand Lodge No. 15. The public exercises were held in the High Street Baptist Church. Many helpful and enthusiastic speeches were made. Mayor Harry Wood in his usual manner welcomed the delegates to the city, W. B. F. Crowell responded in a most pleasing way. Referring to the present war, Mr. Crowell said "This is our war, our country, and president Wilson is ours and we will stand by him till a change comes."
Those of the local talent who took part in the public exercise were Rev M. F. Hughes, Mr. W. D. Ivy, Mrs Julia Clark, Mrs. A. E. Ruford, Miss E. J Ivy, Mr. J. M. Clark and Dr. S. A. Moses.
The session was a record breaker as to interest and time. Business was completed in two days instead of four. The session closed Wednesday night with a banquet.
Rev. P. H. Kirby one of the oldest citizens of Pittsburgh Co., died at his home in north Danville last Tuesday. Funeral services were held at the Camp Grove Baptist Church. Many of the leading ministers of the city and county were present and spoke highly of the work done by Rev. Kirby.
Mrs. Hattie Wood, the sister of Mrs. A. H. Lee, 401 So, Main St., departed this life at her home in Roselle N. J., Aug. 28. Her death was a shock to the family and her many friends.
Mr. James Miles, who under went an operation in the General Hospital died Monday evening. His remains were taken to Leesburg, N. C., for in terment.
Mrs. Millie Wilson and Little Ruby of W. Broad St., are spending the week in Clarksville, Va., with relatives.
Mrs. N. G. Russell of W. Broad St., is spending some time in the country. Mrs. Vivian defombody of Mountain Hill, Va., was in the city the first of the week. Monday afternoon she was the guee of Mrs. E. R. Wilson of So. Main St. She spent the night with Mrs. W. N. Carr of Holbrook Street.
Miss Maude Wilson of Holbrook street left the city Saturday for a brief stay in the country.
Drs. S. A. Moses, A. A. Galvin, and Rev. M. C. Allen, will attend the Nationa Baptist Convention, which meets in Atlanta, Ga., this week.
Rev. J. R. Cooper pastor of Trinity Baptist Church leaves the city Thursday on his vacation. He plans to spend most of his stay in N. J.
Mrs. Amanda West of Stokes street returned to the city last week after a three weeks stay at her old home, Hampdne-Sidney. She is almost persuaded to go back to remain.
Trinity Baptist Church had its Baptizing Sunday afternoon. A very large crowd was present.
Rev. Geo. Coats has held two success ful revivals recently, many professions were made. This week Rev. Coats is celebrating his second anniversary as pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist Church.
Mrs. Jennet Brewer, who resides on the lower end of broad street sustain ed a very severe injury from a fall last week. She is under the skillful treatment of Dr Winslow.
Dr. S. R. R. Wilson and Mr. W. P. P. Yancey were defeated by Mr. H. Gunn and Mr. J. Cooper in the tennis contest Labor Day. The score was, the first game 6 to 3, second game 6 to 0 Misses Ophelia and Lottie Coleman left Saturday for Greensboro, N. C., to visit friends and relatives.
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Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
BIG TIMBER
Continued from Sixth Page.
"Jack Fyfe is going to in a crew and a donkey, and we're going to ever lastingly up the inwards out of these woods. I'll make delivery after all."
"That's good," she remarked, but noticeably without enthusiasm. The heat of that low roofed shanty had taken all possible enthusiasm for anything out of her for the time being. Always toward the close of each day she was gripped by that feeling of deadly fatigue, in the face of which nothing much mattered but to get through the last hours somehow and drag herself wearily to bed.
Noon of the next day brought the Panther counting into the bay, flanked on the port side by a scow upon which rested a twin to the iron monster that jerked loss into her brother's clute. To starboard was made fast a like scow. That was housed over, a smoking stovepipe stuck through the roof, and a capped and uprooked cook rested his arms on the window sill as they floated in. Men to the number of twenty or more clustered about both scows and the Panther's deck, busy with pipe and cigarette and rude jest. The clatter of their voices uproarse through the noon meal. But when the donkey sow thrust its blunt nose against the beach the chaff and laughter died into silent, capable action.
"A Seattle yarder properly handled can do anything but climb a tree" Charlie had once boasted to her in reference to his own machine.
It seemed quite possible to Stella, watching Jack Fyfe's crew at work. Steam was up in the donkey. They carried a line from its drum through a snatch block ashore and jerked half a dozen logs crosswise before the scoop in a matter of minutes. Then the same cable was made fast to a sturdy fire, the engineer stood by, and the ponderous machine slid forward on its own skids, like an up ended barrel on a sled, down off the scoop, up the bank, smashing brush, branches, dead roots, all that stood in its path, drawing steadily up to the anchor tree as the cable spooled up on the drum.
A dozen men tailed on to the inch and a quarter cable and bore the loose end away up the path. Presently one stood clear, waving a signal. Again the donkey began to puff and quiver, the line began to roll up on the drum, and the big yarder walked up the slope under its own power, a locomotive unmiceful of rails, making its own right of way. Upon the platform built over the skids were piled the tools of the crew, sawed blocks for the fire box, axes, saws, grindstones, all that was necessary in their task. At 1 o'clock they made their first move. At 2 the donkey had vanished into that region where the chute head lay, and the great fires stood waiting the shaughter. By midafternoon Stella noticed an acceleration of numbers in the logs that came hurting lakeward. Now at shorter intervals arose the grindling sound of their arrival, the ponderous splash as each leaped to the water. It
C. B. B.
Stella Looked Around to See Jack Fyfe.
was a good thing, she surmised, for
Charlie Benton. She could not see
where it made much difference to her
whether ten logs a day or a hundred
came down to the boomsticks.
A shadow darkened the door, and
Stella looked around to see Jack Fyfe.
"How d' do" he greeted.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
He had seemed a short man. Now, standing within four feet of her, she perceived that this was an illusion created by the proportion and thickness of his body. He was, in fact, half a head taller than she, and Stella stood five feet five. His gray eyes met hers squerely, with a cool, impersonal quality of gaze. There was neither snarl nor embarrassment in his straight-forward glance. He was, in effect, "slizing her up" just as he would have looked casually over a logger asking him for a job. Stella sensed that and, resenting it momentarily, failed to match his manner. She flushed. Fyfe smiled, a broad, friendly grin, in which a wide mouth opened to show strong, even teeth.
"Say," he asked easily, "how do you like life in a logging camp by this time? This is sure one hot job you've got."
"Literally or slangily?" she asked in a flipppant tone. Fyfe's reputation, rather vividly colored, had reached her from various sources. She was not quite sure whether she cared to countenance her of not. There was a disturbing quality in his glance, a subtle suggestion of force about him that she felt without being able to define in understandable terms. In any case she felt more than equal to the task of quelling any effort at familiarity, even if Jack Fyfe were, in a sense, the convenient god in her brother's machine. Fyfe chuckled at her answer. "Both," he replied shortly, and went out.
Lying in her bed that night, in the short interval that came between undressing and weared sleep, she found herself wondering with a good deed more interest about Jack Fyfe than she had ever bestowed upon—well, Paul Abbey, for instance.
She was quite positive that she was going to dislike Jack Fyfe if he were thrown much in her way. There was something about him that she resented. The difference between him and the rest of the rule crew among which she must, perforce, live was a question of degree, not of kind. There was certainly some compelling magnetism about the man. But along with it went what she considered an almost brutal directness of speech and action. Part of this conclusion came from hearsay, part from observation, limited though her opportunities had been for the latter. Miss Stella Benton, for all her polise, was not above jumping at conclusions. There was something about Jack Fyfe that she resented. She irritably dismissed it as a foolish impression, but the fact remained that the mere physical nearness of him seemed to put her on the defensive as if he were in reality a hunter and she the hunted.
Fyfe Joined Charlie Benton about the time she finished work. The three of them sat on the grass before Benton's quarters, and every time Jack Fyfe's eyes rested on her she steered herself to resist—what, she did not know, Something intangible, something that disturbed her. She had never experienced anything like that before; it tantalized her, roused her curiosity. There was nothing occult about the man. He was nowise fascinating, either in face or manner. He made no big bid for her attention. Yet during the half hour he sat there Stella's mind revolved constantly about him. She recalled all that she had heard of him, much of it, from her point of view, highly discertable. Inevitably she fell to comparing him with other men she knew.
She had, in a way, unconsciously been prepared for just such a measure of concentration upon Jack Fyfe. For he was a power on Roaring Lake and power-physical, intellectual or financial—exacts its own tribute of consideration. He was a fighter, a dominant, hard bitten woodman, so the tale ran. He had gathered about him the toughest crew on the lake, himself, upon occasion, the most turbulent of all. He controlled many square miles of big timber, and he had got it all by his own effort in the eight years since he came to Roaring lake as a band logger. He was slow of speech, chain lightning in action, respected generally, feared a lot. All these things her brother and Katy John had sketched for Stella with much verbal embellishment.
There was no ignoring such a man,
Brought into close contact with the
man himself, Stella felt the radiating
force of his personality. There it was,
a thing to be reckoned with. She felt
that whenever Jack Fyfe's gray eyes
rested impersonally on her. His pleasant,
freckled face hovered before her
until she fell asleep, and in her sleep
she dreamed of him.
(TO BE CONTINUED)
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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
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.
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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.
SEVEN
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XELENTO
Quinine Pomade
Copyrighted
JANE RAND and MARGARET BERRY wrote us
that it had hardly any hair, but office using
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Kinks Hair cannot be made straight.
You have to have hair before it can be
straightened. Now this
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EXELENTO MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga.
WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH YOUR NEW FLUVER, EZRA?
MAYBE THERE IS A FLY ON THE CAR BURETTER
DAGGONIT SHE WONT START
LE'S SEE NOW. THE SPARK JUMPS FROM THE MAGNETO TO THE WATER JACKET THEN THROUGH THE EXHAUST TO THE LEFT HIND AXEL. CAUSING THE EXPLOSION IN THE STEARING GEAR
IT ARE MADE TO RUN BUT IT DONT
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THAT'S JUST THE REASON I WANT TO GET HER STARTED SO I CAN GO TO TOWN AND GET SOME
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SATURDAY
Sept. -- 8
HE PLANET
ROANOKE NEWS NOTES
ROANOKE, VA. September 4.—Mr. R. W. Chiles, 230 Fifth avenue, who sometime ago took the civil service examination has been notified that he was successful. He is now in the railway service and declined to accept. Mr. James Ferguson, of High street died Monday and the funeral took place from the home this afternoon at three o'clock. Mrs. W. A. Roberson, 411 Ninth avenue, N. W. left for Pittsburg, where she will make her home for awhile with her husband, Mr. J. W. Roberson.
In memory of my loving sister, Mary Mary Elizabeth Clark, who died one year ago, September 6th. Though twelve months have passed, our mind is still fresh from the wound and sore that death, the monster of the soul, has made and the only consolation that comes to us is that if we trust and obey, some day we shall meet over the way, where parting will be no more and good-bye will not be heard, when we shall pass over the river and rest in the shade. Her sister, Mrs. W. A. Roberson, 411 Ninth avenue, N. W.
Mr. Robert N. Burrell, 626 Eleventh avenue has been visiting in Chicago for the past two weeks.
Mrs. Sarah C. Shorts, 1110 Tyler street, Richmond, Va. is in the city and will spend the week with her friend, Mr. Avey Clark of Gilmer avenue. The many friends of Mrs. Shorts were glad to learn of her being in the city after a short absence but a favorable and successful change.
Mr. W. R. Simms, of the general passenger agent's office, made a flying trip to Cincinnati, O. He had a pleasant stay and returned to his post feeling much refreshed by the change of scenery.
Little Gladys Stanfield, the daughter of Mr. W. O. and Mrs. Gertrude Stanfield, left the city Saturday for Columbus, O., where she will enter school, September 4th.
Miss Mary Farley and Mrs. Jemilna V. Brown and her two children are in the city from an extended trip to Columbus, O., visiting their aunt, Mrs. Anna Harris, of Halifax, near Cluster Springs. On their return they visited their life-long friends, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Poindexter, of Glimer avenue, N. W. They dined with Mr. M. and Mrs. Catherine Stanfield, 154 Weis Alley, N. W.
Rev. T. J. King, D. D., of Richmond preached Sunday morning and night, at the High Street Baptist Church to an overwhelming audience at each service. His text at eleven o'clock was, "Blessed are those servants whom the Lord when He cometh shall find watching. Subject, A Wonderful Redemption.
The sermon at night was most inspiring and edifying to all who listened to this wonderful prelate. The people seemed to take on new vigor for the work that awaits them. A prayer meeting committee was appointed to conduct two meetings per week for the next two weeks, after which a battle would be pitched against the forces of sin and Satan. The Deacons of the church very readily fell in line with Rev. King to put on a revival in the church for the saving of souls for the Master. This is the noblest and highest aim of the church in the world.
The Minute Men's Club was successful in raising $152, for which Dr. King highly complimented them. Several joined the church Sunday, two in the morning and five or six at night, which was encouraging.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Patterson left last Sunday morning for Columbus, O. where they will spend the week visiting friends.
The funeral of Brother George Smith, of Fourth avenue, took place Friday evening at three o'clock at the First Baptist Church, of which he was a faithful member. He was an Odd Fellow of high rank and was also captain of the Patriarchic, No. 110, L. O. O. F.
Rev. E. P. Ricks, officiating minister made a very beautiful discourse on the life and character of the deceased victor and hero, as he had
Charley Chaplin's Comic Capers
lived a true soldier and died at his post. Rev. L. L. Downing, of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church made a splendid talk by way of instruction to the Odd Fellows in attendance, for which it is hoped may have a lasting impression on their minds, of the necessity of preparing for the change of worlds.
Rev. George C. Taylor, D. D. preached Sunday morning and night, administering the Holy Sacrament at morning service. He spoke at night from the prophecies of the Prophet Isaiah, from which he made a very strong discourse.
Rev. Haynes filled the pulpit with credit to the occasion last Sunday morning at Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Rev. Hicks is out of the city assisting in a great revival in Tidewater.
Mr. William E. Tucker, of Norfolk avenue was shot Sunday night by a man named William Scott. He was taken to Romoke Hospital, where he died from effect of the wounds.
Mr. Judge Golddie has returned from Kingsport, Tenn., where he spent two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Penn have returned from Bedford, where they spent the week visiting.
WANTED—A good man to fill the place as janitor for the Oriole Apartment. Strictly reliable, $25 per month. Apply at 22 Seventh avenue, S. W., Dr. B. C. Keister.
The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rosee Banks on Upper Harrison and left a fine bouncing girl Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Dugger left Monday for Halifax County, where they will spend their vacation visiting relatives and friends.
Leave your order for the colored papers with Dugan's stand.
Mrs. George Noe, of Knoxville, Tenn., who has been visiting her husband in the city, returned to home Monday, where she will resume her work as matron at the Deaf and Dumb Institute.
Mrs. Hattie Hickman left this week for Now Castle, Pa., where she will visit Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis and Mr. J. A. Hickman.
Mr. James Hughes, of Harrison avenue returned from Chicago, Ill
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. White returned from a two weeks stay in Boydton and North Carolina.
where he spent two weeks visiting. Mrs. Edna Penn, of 128 Patton ave nue. N. W. has returned from Winston-Salem, N. C., after a two weeks visit. Mr. Chris. H. Leftwich, better known as "Barney Oldfield" left for Mercersburg, Pa. Tuesday on a pleasure trip with his car. He will return Monday. Miss Sarah Gurthie, of Bluefield, W. Va. spent three days in the city enroute home from the St. Luke convention at Richmond.
Dr. H. J. Moseley, one of our Magic City pharmacists, was in attendance at the National Medical Association last week in Philadelphia and reports a large and enthusiastic convention. Dr. S. F. Williman and Dr. L. C. Downing, two of our prominent physicians were also in attendance. Drs. Williman and Downing also visited Atlantic City, N. J., while Dr. Moseley visited New York. We gladly welcome the boys home. Dr Moseley was elected chairman of the Pharmaceutical Section, we were informed.
Mr. Jim Cuff was married to Mrs. Lucy Anderson on Sunday last. Mrs. Casey is still confined to her bed.
Miss Leo Craggget, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Craggget died August 31st and was buried at Vinton Cemetery on September 1st.
Mr. Joe Banks left on yesterday, for Washington, D. C. to visit his parents.
The Helping Hand Home Society held its regular meeting at the home of their president, Sister Georgia Hairston. There were thirty members present. After having a most excellent business meeting, the prizes were awarded to the members bringing the highest number of members. The prize winners were Sister Octavia Guthrie, who brought in ten new members and Sister Lucy Day, who brought in seven new members. The club has received about twenty-five new members in all. They are looking forward to their annual sermon which will be preached at the Hill Street Baptist Church next Sunday afternoon at three o'clock. After the meeting they were served to luncheon, which was enjoyed by all.
The Helping Hand Home Society will have their annual sermon preached at the Hill Street Baptist Church by their pastor, Rev. Powell, Sunday, September 9, 1917. All are asked to be present to know something of the work of the club. If you have not heard of this club before be sure to come so that you will know something about it. President, Georgia Hairston, Secretary, Mary A. Robinson.
Sunday, September 2nd was a
THE RICHMOND PLANET
splendid day at the Hill Street Baptist Church. The pastor, Rev. D. R. Powell preached two excellent sermons during the day. Sunday School and B. Y. P. U. were largely attended. Rev. Powell reports a very pleasant trip. During his stay of ten days he visited Baltimore, Washington and King George, at which place he attended the Association. On Monday, September 3rd, the picnic of the Hill Street, Sweet Union and the Jerusalem Baptist Sunday Schools was quite a success. It was largely attended. Everything passed off peacefully. Everyone reported as having had an enjoyable day in Stewartsville, Va.
LITTLE WILLIE'S LETTER
Little Willie On the Road.—Leaving Roanoke Monday, August 27th at noon, for the Grand Lodge of Virginia Odd Fellows, which met in Danville were R. F. Tate, W. F. (Ding 10) Hughes, representing the two lodges of the city; Mrs. R. E. Harth, representing the Household of Ruth and Little Willie, the Deputy District Grand Master of Virginia.
Arriving at Lynchburg, it was only a few minutes wait before we boarded a Southern railway train and were on our way to the City by the Dan. On board the Southern we found many delegates from Northern Virginia on their way to the same meeting. As we journeyed toward Danville we passed several sections of soldier trains on their way from Southern training camps.
Arriving in Danville, at 5:20 P.M. we found a committee waiting with autos to rush the delegates to Odd Fellows Hall where homes were assigned. Little Willie had been assigned with the other grand officers to the home of I. M. Clark, Esq., chairman of the local committee of arrangements. I found on arrival at my home for the session, Hon. A. T. Shirley, District Grand Secretary; T. S. Bagnall, Grand Treasurer; Rev. Binford, Grand Director and Ex-Grand Master J. W. Barnes, already there awaiting my arrival.
Our home with Brother Clark was one of the most handsome we have had the pleasure of calling ours at a garnd lodge session for sometimes. His family is a lovely one, kind and obliging, and two beautiful daughters (single) that attracted most of my attention while not at business meetings.
The Grand Lodge opened Tuesday morning at ten o'clock, in the High Street Baptist Church. The Household of Ruth had their session in that church while the Odd Fellows met in Odd Fellows' Hall, just across the street. Public opening program was as follows:
Call to order by District Grand Master, acting as master of ceremonies: devotional exercises; welcome address on behalf of the citizens of Danville by His Honor, Harry Wooding. Sr., Mayor of the City; response by Major W. B. F. Crowwell, D. D. G. M.; welcome address on behalf of the Old Fellows of the city by P. N. F., W. D. Ivy; response by P. N. F., Prof. B. T. Parsons; welcome address on behalf of the Households of Ruth by P. M. N. G., Mrs. Julia Clark; response by Mrs. Maria B. Hennings, D. M. N. G.; presentation of keys to District Grand Master, by P. N. F., D. H. Hardy, accepted by Rev. J. H. Binford, D. G. D.; presentation of keys to District Grand Most Noble Governor by Mrs. A. E. Buford, P. M. N. G.; accepted by Mrs. Hannah L. Johnson, D. G. W. T.; presentation of gavel to District Grand Master by P. N. F., M. Clark; accepted by T. S. Bagnall, D. G. T.; presentation of gavel to District Grand Most Noble Governor by Miss E. J. Ivy; accepted by Mrs. A. Lavton, D. G. D.
The welcome of His Honor, the Major was among the bes heard at one of our meetings. After the public meeting the Grand Lodge was called to order in Odd Fellows' Hall and we got down to business, breaking all former records in the state by finishing all business in two days and adjourned by 6:30 o'clock on banquet Wednesday night. Our old friend, George W. Rison served the banquet, which was voted the best ever, as only George can do.
The reports of the Grand Officers showing large increase in both membership and finance, larger than any previous year, the body was so well pleased that the entire board of officers was re-elected as follows:
Grand Master, Col. R. T. Stewart, Newport News; Deputy Grand Master, Maj. J. W. B. P. Crowell, Roanoke; Grand Secretary, A. T. Shirley, Herndon; Grand Treasurer, T. S. Bagnall, Norfolk; Grand Director, Rev. J. H. Hinford, Richmond; Grand Auditor, Frank D. Banks, Hampton,
Newport News was selected as next place of meeting. There never was a more peaceful meeting of any grand lodge, everybody was happy and only good-will prevailed at all times. Many returns of such good fellowship and harmony among the brothers in Friendship, Love and Truth.
On our arrival home, we learned with much regret of the death of Cap-
tain George W. Smith, of Roanoke Patriarchie, No. 110. His funeral was held from First Baptist Church Friday, at 2:30 P. M., conducted by the Odd Fellows. Dr. Ricks, pastor of the church delivered a powerful sermon, full of consolation for the living and bringing tears for the dead. The Patriarchie in full dress conducted the service at the grave. Captain Smith was a Christian genius, loved by all who knew him; a hard worker for his church and order. He will be missed by both, but forgotten by neither. For his bones, rest; for his soul, peace, perfect peace.
On last Tuesday, Lord Buick, (Dr. C. F. Gaylord.) Dr. Oscar Davis, of Charleston, W. Va., Buddie Smith, of Roper, N. C., (wherever that is) and Little Willie, in Lord Buick's big touring car with ample supply of cigars, cigarettes and mountain soda, started on a long drive. Leaving the Gaylord Drug Store at four P. M. we drove out by Kingstown and out to Hollins by Williamson Road and on to Cloverdale to Troutsville, then to Cloverdale, back by way of Amsterdam and to Salem by old Rock Road, where we stopped for more refreshments, then to Roanoke by Raleigh Court road and to the Cafe of George Simpson, where we had lunch and I forgot to say in our party was Chief Bales, who weighs only 305 pounds. The girl who served us said if Chief Bales had been present when the multitude was fed with five loaves and three fishes, there would not have been twelve baskets full left; any child could have carried the leavings away in his pocket, for Chief says, "There ain't gwine to be no leavings."
After lunch we loaded up in the car again and drove to Strackey, Va. and back, then out to Blue Ridge Springs and pulled up at starting point at 11:15 P. M., dusty but happy over such a pleasant trip, covering in all, 168 miles, destroying over 10 gallons of gasoline, about 2 quarts of oil, about same amount of mountain soda with no way to keep tab on cigars, cigarettes, or amount of chicken put away by Budie Smith and Chief Bales. We left Dr. Davis singing, "Dear Old Girl From Cascade Mountain??"
Progressive Whist was the game at the home of Mrs. Crawford, 37 Gilmer avenue, N. W., Monday September 3, from 3 to 7 o'clock P. M., in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Grattan Shorts, of Richmond, Misses Pearl Kyles and Willette C. Smith, of Richmond, and Mrs. Mable Burton, New York City.
Those present aside from guest of honor mentioned above were, Mrs. Alice Dent, Mrs. Avey O. Clark, Mrs. L. Alirell, Miss Sarah Foster, Miss Bessie M. Crawford and Miss Pearl Edwards'. Gents, Charles Thompson, W. O. Hiekman, Edward Allen, Daniel Webb, Harold Jones, William Buffet, John W. Ewell and W. B. F. Crowell.
A delightful ice course was served at 7 o'clock. Mrs. Avey O. Clark won the ladies' prize and Little Willie the gents' prize and the person making the lowest score was handed a lemon; this fell to the lot of Mr. J. W Ewell, who never got higher than the second table, but spent most of his time in the corner at table No. 3, taking to his partner like a card shark in a game of seven-up. But our friend Ewell was game. He took his lemon as presented by Miss Smith of Richmond, in a neal speech and said he would add five more to that one and invite the party to call at the office of the American Beneficial and have a cold lemonade on him. Little Willie has promised to see that Mr. Ewell makes good and he (Little Willie) will see that Miss
one of the Richmond girls, will get her part. This lady is trying to make Little Willie believe that there is nothing to the saying of Fatty Arbuckle, "Nobody loves a fat man." I hope she is right. I'm ready to be convinced. Look out next week, some straight talk coming. Yours, LITTLE WILLIE.
—Miss Mabel C. Bailey of 210 First street N. W., is home again after spending a month's vacation. While away she visited relatives and friends in Lynchburg, Danville, Boydton, Lawrenceville, Elwood, Suffolk, Va.
—Miss Floria E. Davies of 912 Monroe St., Lynchburg Va., and Miss Marie T. Moorman of 435 W. Thomas St., Danville, Va., are the guests of Miss Mabel C. Bailey. We hope for them a pleasant stay while in our city.
— Mrs. Katie L. Carpner, has returned from a very pleasant trip to Baltimore, Washington and Philadelphia.
Madam Johnson's "SYSTEM." Your name on a Postal Card will bring these High Grade Preparations to your door steps. VIOLA DUDLEY, 107 E. Federal Street.
Comic Ca
GOLDING!! I WISH I COULD
GET HER STARTED
INTEREST IN ANNUAL MEETING.
Delegates From Massachusetts to California.
Hillburn, N. Y.
Aug. 27, 1917.
Dear Editor:—
Many of the letters coming to my desk daily from various places in the south contain sad and pathetic stories relative to the oppressive conditions under which many of our people have to live. In quoting from some of them, I shall not mention name lest by so doing, I might bring added persecution on our already evasive oppressed people.
A well known clergyman in _____
time to get together?
A. B. Cosey, Esq., of Brooklyn, N.
Y., writes:
"Received your very elegantly composed 'Call' for the Convention. Indeed it is very timely called, and at a very suitable place. If I can serve you in any way, advise me. If I can find the Convention, representing a part of Brooklyn."
Mr. Wm. H. Scott of Woburn, Mass., writes:
"Send me a number of copies of the Call which you sent, calling the Race Congress to New York City next month. I want to use them in getting Woburn together. We are living in critical times * * * Thank God the colored people are waking up.
Your call is magnificent! It should be the means of stirring up the Race as never before and the Congress should do great good."
Mr. ——, of ——, Texas says in a pitiful letter:
Another prominent minister writes from —, S. C., saying:
"I would say that I am planning to be in the tenth annual meeting of the National Equal Rights League on the 18th, 19th, and 20th of September. Please therefore send me at your earliest convenience the special Ry rates and any other matter of detail, and the like, that you think would be necessary for me to have."
In a lengthy and illuminating communication from Santa Barbara, Cal, the Rev. r. D. Pettigrew says: "I have just read your splendid call to Colored Americans all over the country, to meet in a National Congress. I am glad to tell you that I most heartily endorse both the manner and spirit in which it is made. The time has fully come when we must come together and council and organize. I shall be glad to be with you at the Congress. And lastly but not cast. Editor Trotter, of the Boston Guardian, writes: "Your work is great. Send me 500 copies of the Call."
I was in N. Y. City yesterday and found interest in the coming League and Congress meetings 'increasing with much enthusiasm among all classes of Colored Americans. Yours for Free m, B. GUNNER
Y. M. O. A. NOTES.
Last Sunday was special day for the soldiers with the Y. M. C. A.
The Sunrise Prayer Meeting at 6 o'clock sharp at the Y. N. C. A., found the men on time and it was an hour that will go down in history. Every man was happy.
9:30 A. M. the workers met at the Y. M. C. A. and held a meeting that was well attended.
Committeeman C. B. Gaston, gave the boys an address that will not be forgotten very soon. Mothers we thank you. Y. M. C. A. 4 P. M.
3:30 P. M., the last call was made in interest of the soldiers who are to be off to the camp. Rev J. C. Stephenson made the call at the Hood A. M. E. Church next' to the Armstrong High School. It was a very strong message. Women and men were present. Others made some very timely remarks. The music by the choir of the church went to the heart of every body. We call upon all to remember the soldiers.
Men be on time Sunday ready for hard work and the other man.
Come out to the meeting for the workers 9:30 A. M. at the Y. M. C. A.
Committeeman B L. Allen will address the boys 4 P. M. at the Y. M. C. A. Mothers you are invited to send your boys.
All men are inled to the open meeting 5:30 P. M., at the Y. M. C. A. Subject: For The People Had a Mind to Work. Come and bring the other man. On time. Live music. Watch for the place and date when Season for the work will be launched. The Y. M. C. A. needs the prayers of every home so do not forget her.
A. H.
Rev. W. E. Pettus' Vision of the Holy Bible.
God Almighty wants me to preach the Gospel because the world cannot be saved by preaching law. Jesus Christ, God's Only Son, fulfilled the law and the prophets together with the historical and poetical books and gave us the New Testament in His own blood to redeem man from the power of the law and said whosoever believe in me shall not perish but have everlasting life, to live and nev-
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BOX 453 AGENTS WANTED
BOX 453 AGENTS WANTED—WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
Professor Kelly Miller has written a remarkable open letter to President Wilson.—N. Y. Evening Post. A constructive proposal for suppression of lynching and race riots.—The Springfield Republican. A very fair, temperate and strong letter on a most important matter.—Senator J. Wesley Jones. The best argument I have ever read on universal democracy.—Bishop W. D. Chappelle.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. TEN CENTS THE COPY
We are charged to preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the world will be saved I am an independent Gospel minister, ordained by Jesus Christ to preach the everlasting Gospel of peace wherever man is found. General office, 1700 Second Street Road, Richmond, Va. Hours of prayer, 7 to 9 daily. Bible class Thursday evening. Preaching Sunday evening. Subject for September 9th "The Church A. Thousand Years Behind the Time." Come and hear
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PRESIDENT WILSON BY
RICHMOND
Virginia
THE RICHMOND PLANET
VOLUME XXXIV. NO. 43
LOTT CAREY CONVEN
TION MET HERE
BAPTISTS HOLD GREAT FOREIGN MISSIONARY CONVENTION
Fine Session in Ebenezer Baptist Church—Many Able Ministers Attend
The Lott-Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention of the United States met Wednesday morning, August 29 1917 at the Ebenezer Baptist Church Rev. W. H. Stokes, D. D. pastor. Some of the leading Baptist divines of the country were present. Rev. Dr. C. S Brown of Winton, N. C., is President and he presided with his usually ability
The welcome addresses were delivered by Drs. Z. D. Lewis, E. Payne and W. H. Stokes representing respectively the Baptists of the State, city and church, Dr. C. S. Brown, of Winton, N. C., is president and Dr. A. W. Pogues is recording secretary, of Raleigh, N. C. Dr. W. M. Alexander of Baltimore, is corresponding secretary. The responses were delivered by Drs. C. C. Somerville, of Portsmouth, Va., O. S. Simus, of Pittsburg, Pa., and E. E. Ricks of Roanoke Va.
A LARGE DELEGATION.
The delegation to this convention is the largest in the history of the convention. Many distinguished visitors were introduced and spoke to the convention. Among these were Colonel Young, of Raleigh, N. C., F. D. Lee, attorney at law, Washington, D. C., Roy Abraham Tyler, who has spent thirty-seven years as a missionary, in Liberia, West Africa and others.
The afternoon session was given over the rosses of the president, Dr. C. S. Brown, and Dr. W. M. Alexander, corresponding secretary.
PRESIDENT BROWN'S REMARKS
President Brown, in discussing the present world conditions as a challenge to the church, made this declaration: "Distressed as we are with a war, which, in point of cruelty, brutality and destructiveness was never equaled, involving more or less all the civilized nations of the world, and which may mean the melting together of all the races of men; jinked, tied and belted together by telegraph, telephone, railroad and various other means of communication, the world was never better prepared to receive Christianity than now."
ARMY SMALL
In referring to the missionary workers he said that the army on the frontier is lamentably small and their equipment exceedingly poor. He brought the large delegation to a very high pitch of enthusiasm when he mentioned the frontier force, viz: Hayes, Thomas, Gale, Boone and Mrs. Thomas, in Liberia, West Africa, and the eight workers in the republic of Haiti. He made a strong plea that these mission workers be given more adequate support in their operations.
LIBERIA'S CENTENNIAL
Dr. Brown called the delegates attention to the fact that Liberia will celebrate her centennial in 1931 and urge upon our convention because of the fact that the society bears the name of one of the founders of this republic that it begin now to plan to take a leading part as a convention in this movement.
He then called attention to the excellent opportunity which is afforded in Haiti and spoke of the wonderful resources of this island and the dire need of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
DR. ALEXANDER'S REPORT
Dr. W. M. Alexander, in his very comprehensive report, reviewed the year's work and made one of the best reports which he has ever made to the convention, setting forth its activities as being in very excellent condition. Ho distributed his report to the delegates in j mphilte form. This convention is devoting its efforts to the work of foreign missions and spends a very large proportion of its funds to the support of the missionaries. The Rev. J. C. Taulton, of Donora, Pa., preached the sermon Wednesday night to a very large and appreciative audience.
THE WOMEN'S MEETING
Mrs. J. H. Randolph president of Washington, D. C., held its morning and afternoon sessions at the Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Dr. R. V. Peyton pastor. At Elenezie Colonel James H. Young of Rarleigh, discussed the "Layman's Place" in Missionary Work" and Rev. R. J. Lanson, of orkfoll discussed the "Local churches to Foreign Missional." At one afternoon service the consideration of
"The Press and Foreign Mission's"
"Dr. D. W. H. Stokes, editor of the
Lott-Carey Herald took place, Dr. A.
B. Vincent, editor of the Scarcehlight
and Dr. C. C. Somerville editor of the
vigil, and others spoke."
DR PEYTON'S WELCOME
At the Sixth Mt. Zion church the women were welcomed by Dr. R. V. Peyton, pastor of the church, and Mrs I. A. Hope, Responses were by Mrs M. M. Waldron, Washington, D. C.; Mrs T. S. Eaton, Henderson, N. C.; and Mrs P. I. Anderson, of Pennsylvania
Mrs. Randolph delivered her annual address in the afternoon. Mrs A. L. McGuinn, corresponding secretary, and Mrs J. H. Blackwell, treasurer, made their addresses. The principal address was delivered by Mrs L. M. Mehane, of High Point, N. C., The sermon to the women was preached Wednesday night at the Ebenezer baptist church by Dr. W. M. Alexander, of Baltimore.
DISHONORABLY DISCHARGED.
Six Colored Soldiers in Recent Clash at Waco, All Sentenced to the Federal Penitentiary,
San Antonio, Tex. September 3.— Six Negro soldiers of the Twenty-fourth infantry, who clashed with the civil police and the troops sent to subdue them at Waco on the night of July 29, were found guilty of violation of the ninety-third article of war before the genera clourt-martial held recently at Camp McArthur, Waco. 5 of the men were sentenced to five years of hard labor in the United States Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kans. The sixth man received ten years All were sentenced to be dishonorably discharged from the service and to forfeit all pay and, allowances due or to become due while in confinement under the sentence.
The findings of the court-martial which were given out, have been forwarded to the War Department at Washington.
HANDLING THE NEGRO TROOPS.
People will wonder why the regular Negro troops have not already been sent to France. Negro troops are among the best fighters in the world, but everybody knows they have to be handled very carefully in ordinary times to prevent their clashing with white people. These usually have quite insignificant beginnings, and for that reason no preparation is made for them; and we must do the Negro the justice to say that it is not always his fault. There is no use in our trying to conceal the fact that some white people go out of their way to do a Negro an ill turn; Negroes have to hear a great deal of this sort of thing. It is not always an easy matter to get at the real merits of a case of this kind But the Negro ought to be treated justly, even if he has a black skin.
It is not right that the whites should make all the sacrifices. In order to effect this, Negroes must, of course, be trained as soldiers, and have guns and ammunition in their keeping. Knowing the danger of race clashes, however, our officials should be exceedingly careful in the selection of the men who are to command the Negro troops and pick men who have had careful training along this line, and who are known to be alert officers, and just last rigid disciplinarians. As we have laid before as a rule outherners; could we be assigned to this work. Southern men who have commanded Negroes, prefer to command them, declaring, if treated justly but firmly, they are as doleful as children, and quick to respond to command. Those of us who have been in close contact with Negroes all our lives know this to be true.
The War Department seems not altogether blameless in this last matter. Secretary Baker, was warned that trouble might be expected, and he might have laid emphasis on taking the utmost care in handling the Negro troops at this crisis and have cautioned those in command not to leave any opening for trouble. No evidence has appeared so far that the War Department gave the matter any special attention, engrossed as it was with seemingly more important things.
Send the Negro regulars at once to France, and give them something to do that will employ them and we shall hear no more of such occurrences. They are superb fighters and they would make record against the Germans.
(Staunton, Va., Leader, Aug. 28, 1917.)
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—Mrs. P. M. B. Hodge has returned to her home in Danville, Va., after attending the Sunday School Convention at Fredericksburg, Va., and the Lott Carey Convention at Richmond, Va. Her many friends regret that her stay was so short.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1917.
BISHOP DEFENDS THE COLORED SOLDIERS
SUSPEND VERDICT ON HOUSTON RIOT, IS PLEA.
Bishop Smith of A. M.E. Church Says Snap Judgment Not Warranted.
( Detroit Free Press, Aug. 27, 1917.) To the Editor: The drastic tone of your editorial in Saturday's Free Press, ucent the recent disturbance in Houston, Texas, was a painful surprise to me, being quite in contrast with the usual temperate character of your utterances.
There are so many currents and counter-currents of a disturbing nature in evidence that this is no time for hasty utterances. Public judgment should be suspended until all the material facts in the unfortunate and regrettable occurrence have been fully investigated and the result made known by the war department.
The stories emanating from Houston are one-sided and reflect the prejudices of the dominant element in Houston instead of the facts in the case. A Negro 1.. military uniform is as exasperating to the average Texan as is the face of an enraged bull.
When the Titanic disaster was reported, it was said Mr. Andrew Carnegie lacemically inquired; "What was she doing up there anyway?" having reference to the extreme northern course the ship had taken. It is equally pertinent to inquire, why were the Negro troops sent to Texas anyway particularly those of the regular army? Has the remembrance of the Brownsville affair entirely faded from public memory? Is it so soon forgotten that but a few days ago publicity was given to the report that Negro troops were in the chase with the authorities of Waco Texas, ... did they include that event during the Spanish American war are still fresh in my memory—the threat to dynamite a train load of Negro regulars by the dominant element of Texarkana, Ark., and the merciless assault made on a train load of Negro volunteers at Nashville, Tenn., while en route from Chattanooga to Cincinnati.
SUSPEND JUDGMENT IS PLEA
Hon. Joe H. Eagle, M. C., for the Houston district, in a dispatch to the secretary of war said; "Without stating who it is to blame, it is clearly a race riot and is a tragedy sufficient to compel the statement that it is a tragic blunder to send the Negro troops 15 southern camps."
Who is to blame for this tragic blunder? The Negro troops went to Houston in obedience to the orders of their superiors whose right it is to direct their movement. A race riot? Yes, and that statement coming from a Congressman on the ground and the chosen representatives of the dominant element of Houston, ought to be sufficient to induce the public to suspend judgment for the time being. President Wilson made a trenchal statement in a speech in Philadelphia to the effect that "A man may be too proud to fight." With equal force it may be said that a man may be too manly to continually submit to extreme brutal treatment. Even the patient ox may be goaded to desperation.
The fact is the white race by precipitating a world-war has turned man's earthly abode into a vortable hell, and there is no telling when the fires of damnation will be extinguished or what elements will be consumed while they are raging. If plain speaking is in order let both sides be heard.
Nothing that I have written is to be construed as indicating the least desire on my part to condone any infraction of discipline by the Negro troops in question. Let no guilty man escape.
With a sad heart
MARRIAGE RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Williams announce the marriage reception of their daughter, Miss Josephine and Mr. Jesse Labough. Thursday evening Sept. 13, 1917, from 8:30 to 11:00 o'clock at the residence, 1411 Ross St. Friends are invited, 1411 cards.
DAVIS—HARRIS
Mrs. Williana Harris Coleman announces the marriage reception of her daughter, Mabel Virginia Harris and Mr. Walter T. Davis, on Monday evening, September seventeen, nineteen hundred and seventeen, from 8:30 to 11:30; at 16 East Leigh street, Richmond, Va.
Friends are invited.
Let Cephas do your Renting. Office
535 1-2 North Second street. Tele-
phone. Randolph 588
PERSONALS AND BRIEFES
Mrs. Rebecca Doyle Spiller is dangerously ill at this writing.
Mrs. Amelia Jones, of 200 West Twenty-first street, South Richmond, is indisposed.
Dr. J. H. Blackwell, Jr., has returned from his extended Northern trip.
Rev. M. Jones of Pamplico, S. C., was ordained and called to the Spring Branch Baptist Church, Florence Co., near Parapat, S. C., June 28, 1917.
Miss Mamie Coleman, of South Richmond returned recently from a trip to Boston, Mass., where she spent her vacation.
Mrs. Susie Robinson, of South Richmond, has returned to the city after a pleasant stay of two weeks, visiting friends in Fredericksburg and Appomattox.
Mr. John H. Jones left the city Tuesday for Powhatan county, Va., where he will spend ten days visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Jones.
Miss Ruth Brooks has returned to her home in South Richmond after spending a month visiting friends and relatives in New Jersey.
Major James H. Ammons, Jr. and Mr. Willie (Slim) Moore are spending their vacation visiting Northern cities. They will visit New York.
—Miss Marietta L. Cailles has returned to the city after having visited Berryville, Va. Philadelphia, Atlantic City, Newark, N. J., and New York.
—Miss Goldie Debbress and Mrs. Edna Coles have returned to the city after having visited Philadelphia, Atlantic City and New York. Mrs. Miles C. Debbress is now visiting relatives in New York.
—Dr. Miles B. Jones and his Madame took a party of friends on a touring trip to Washington, Philadelphia and Atlantic City and New York in Dr. M. B. Jones' care.
—Dr. J. Mercer G. Ramsey toured to Philadelphia and Atlantic City in his Overland car.
—Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Farrar and their daughter, Miss Leah have returned from Cleveland, where they spent a pleasant time.
—Mr. Robinson Davis returned last week from Brooklyn, N. Y. where he completed a course of instruction in the Mergenthaler Linotype Factory. He made a fine record.
—Mrs. S. G. Denny, who has been indisposed has recovered and has been visiting her former home in Tennille, Ga.
-Mrs. Bessie Langhorne Carr, accompanied by her three children, is the guest of her borer Mr. Montgomery Langhorne at Roanoke, Va.
Rev. W. J. Lucas, pastor of the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, Newport, R. I. attended the session of the Lott Carey Convention that convened in this city last week. Before his return to Newport, he will visit his mother in Louisa, Va.
Mr. Armistad Washington and his wife Mrs. Gor-rude A. Washington left last Sunday Sept. 2, for an extensive trip through the West. Their plans are to visit Cincinnati, Cleveland Ohio and other large cities of the West. They will not return home until they shall have gone to the great Convention which meets in the city of Muskogee Oklahoma. We wish for them a joyful trip and that they may return home al right. We feel that we are expressing the hearts wish of hundreds of people, who expressed their love and friendship during the recent marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Washington.
Miss Ruth Robinson has returned from a ten days visit to Keysville, Va.
Mr. Robert Alexander has just returned from a trip to Loxington, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Brown are visiting their son in Boston. Mass. They report having a pleasant time.
Mrs. J. Andrew Bowler and her daughters, Misses Elyn and Antoinette were in Dr. M. B. Jones' party visiting Washington, Philadelphia, Atlantic City and New York.
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BARRETT CASE BEFORE THE PUBLIC
CONFLICTING CLAIMS MADE IN BARRETT CASE.
Hundley Says Newspapers are Trying to Undermine Authority of the Courts.
SeventeenYear-Old Negro, Without Counsel or Jury, Sentenced to Death for Coming to Father's Rescue Says Attorney Lancaster.
Unless a stay is obtained from the Virginia Supreme Court or a further appeal for executive clemency is made, Albert Barrett, the Negro coarged with the murder of W. T. Ronch, a Charlotte County farmer, will he executed to-morrow morning at the State Penitentiary. Governor Stuart said last night that counsel for the Negro had had no further conference with him, and that as the case stood, the man would pay with his life the penalty for the crime of which he was convicted. Unlike his son, he had a jury trial, and was represented by counsel, and the Governor has expressed an unwillingness to question the facts as passed upon by the jury.
In order that he might inquire at length into the facts of the case, the Governor has granted a thirty-day respite to the younger Negro, Aubrey Barrett, and his execution has been postponed from to-morrow morning until September 28. In granting the respite, however, Governor Stuart made it plain that he had not looked into the merits of the case, but had granted the stay of execution that he might have sufficient time in which to conduct an inquiry into the various assertions made by interested parties.
APPEAL MADE TO SUPREME COURT FOR ELDER BARRETT
Counsel for the elder Barrett are making an effort to secure an appeal from the Supreme Court on the ground that no premeditation was shown in the case, such as is necessary for a legal conviction of murder in the first degree. They point to the fact that the prosecution admits that Roach attacked the elder Barrett, and that the son came to the aid of his father with a heavy stick. The circumstances are said to preclude the possibility of the killing having been premeditated. It is also asserted that the jury fixed no penalty, but merely found the elder Barrett guilty whereupon he was sentenced to death by Judge Houldley.
There is no record of the court proceedings, but the testimony has been assembled from memory and has been written out. Judge F. W. Sims, of the Supreme Court, was petitioned for a writ of error, but refused, and the case was then presented to Judge M. P. Burks. Upon his refusal efforts were being made late last night to reach Judge R. R. Prentis, William H. Lancaster, of Farmville, counsel for the elder Barrett at his trial was in Richmond yesterday in the interest of the appeal. Associated with him in the last-minute efforts to save the lives of the father and son 1 Harry M. Smith, Jr., of this city.
Directly conflicting statements were issued yesterday in the case of Aubrey Barrett. Barrett whose exaction has been stayed 20 days by Governor Stuart, admits part in the killing, but says he came to the rescue of his father. The older Negro had counsel and was tried by jury. Appeal has been made to the Governor for investigation of the boy's case on the ground that he did not have a jury trial, was not represented by counsel, and has now no means of noting an appeal to the Supreme Court.
Judge George J. Hundley, who presided at the trial, in a signed statement issued yesterday, defen the court procedure, denounces the accused, and attacks the newspapers as trying to "undermine and discredit the authority of the courts." He refers to State Senator Walter E. Adison, of Lynchburg, and others who have laid the facts in the boy's case before Governor Stuart as "officious intermediers," and says that "any ignoramus or crank can at his will besmirch the reputation of any judge, and have the newspapers spread his slanders broadcast over the State." Judge Hundley now in his eightieth year, is regarded as one of the most distinguished men on the bench in Virginia. He served in the Confederate army and later in the State Senate, and was elected to the bench in 1898.
WATKINS AND LANCASTER
DISAGREE AS TO FACTS
Judge A. D. Watkins. of Farmville, who was acting Commonwealth's attorney, in a signed statement asserts positively that the boy Aubrey (Continued on Fifth Page.)
(Continued on Fifth Page.)
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
A New Lodge at Berryville, Va.
Berryville, Va., August 30.—Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., accompanied by Dr. E. R. Jefferson, Rev. L. J. Morris and Col. R. C. Mitchell, arrived here last evening via N. & W. R. R., coming through Washington. Miss M. L. Chiles, G. W. R. of Deeds of the Grand Court, Order of Calanthe was also with them.
OFFICERS INSTALLED
A lodge of Knights of Pythias was instituted with the following officers: Chancellor Commander, Stephen Green; Vice Chancellor, J. W. Edwards; Master of Work, Paul Williams; Prelate, Rev. S. S. Spriggs; Keeper of Records and Seal, H. C. Dixon; Master of Finance, J. L. Davis; Master of Exchequer, Rev. J. W. Thomas; Master-at-Arms, C. H. Hill; Inner Guard, David Dolman; Outer Guard, Randall Page; Trustees, D. P. Layton, John Edwards, Christopher Laws.
The initiation was a success in every particular. The work was done on schedule time, much to the delight of the visitors. A large delegation came over from Strasburg by automobile, which is over thirty-five miles away and others came from Winchester, just ten miles away.
MANY VISITING KNIGHTS
The following visitors were present: From Strasburg—Sirra T. H, Byrd, E. H Robenson, C. E. Nickens, B. W. Willis, Kennie Mitchell, Tim Lee, E. J. Thompson, Heywood Fletcher, J. L. Nickens, G. W. Hollis, Richard Cary, J. F. Boyd, H. J. Lee, J. F. Smith, H. B. Baltimore, L. L. Cyrus, Omar Thompson. From Winchester came Sirs Mayhow B. Cooke, D. J. Dennings, William H. Lowls, C. W. Hall, D. C. Colbert R. V. Cooley, H. Cooke, Perry Catlett, J. W. Tullett, Charles N. Myors, R. L. Grey, Charles N. Myors, R. Walker, B. Trawkins, Earl Byans, James Maufield, William G. Armstead, Daniel Long, H. E. Ransome, H. W. Bartlett, William E. Laws.
BANQUET SERVED
A magnificent repast was served at the conclusion of the ceremonies. Grand Chancellor Mitchell complimented Deputy T. H. Byrd, of Strasburg upon his work here. Under the instruction of Miss Chiles the ladies have gone to work organizing a club for the Court. While here the visitors were served elegant meals at the home of Sir Paul Williams, under the splendid management of his Madam, Mrs. Mary P. Williams, ably assisted by their daughters, Misses Meurete and Blanche E. The party left this morning.
Visitors To Our Office
Mrs. H. L. Jones, New York City; Mrs. Lavinia Henry, Clerk in Afro-American Office, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs. L. E. Higginbotham, Mrs. Jennie Fields, Mrs. Mattle Mullon, Lynchburg, Va., Mrs. Mary J. D.augass, Washon, D. C., Mrs. Ellen B, Randolph, Richmond, Va., Mrs. Susie Morton and Mrs. Lula Peek, Roneevere, W. Va., Miss P. R. Middleton Washington, D. C., Miss M. Beamon, Hampton Va., Missos Erma L. and Effie L. Caskie, Richmond, Va., Mr. J. R. W. Perry, Norfolk, Va., Mr. C. W. Jordan, Suffolk, Va., Mrs Octavia Parker, Baltimore, Md. Rev. H. C. Cary, Washington, D. C., Rev. J. C. Taulton, Donora, Pa., Rev. W. A. Mason, Monongahela City Pa., Rev. J. R. Saunders, McKeesport, Pa., Rev. R. B. Cobb, Fairmont W. Va., Rev. H. Chas. Pope, Woodby, N. J., Rev. R. E. Deps, Connellville, Pa., Mr. Amail Chambers, Vanderbilt, Pa., Rev J. E. Rodgers, Norfolk, Va., Rev. Alexander Gordon, Philadelphia, Pa., Rev. Nelson Jordan farmville Va., Rev. W. H. Gray, Abingdon, Va, Rev. R. G. Adams, Ports-Va., Mrs. Rowenaea Lynchburg, Va., Mrs. Lizzie B. Green, Newport News, Va.
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ELKS HAVE GREAT TIME IN CLEVELAND
THE CAPITAL CITY LODGE AGAIN
WINS HONORS.
Virginians Jubilant—Order Is In A Prosperous Condition.
Capital City Lodge, No. 11 marched up Broad St., from the Byrd St., Station last Sunday afternoon led by the Municipal Band and a crowd of admirers to the Eliza Home on North Second St. It brought with it the hundred Jollar prize from the annual convocation at Cleveland and every body was happy. It also captured the position of Leading Esteemed Knight, the second highest position in the Order and Andrew J. Brown, the successful contestant wore a satisfied smile with the rest of his associates who had secured that honor for him. James T. Carter of Williams Lodge No. 11, who was re-elected Grand Treasurer was also happy. He had made a fine record and no one had the heart to oppose him
GRAND EXALTED RULER
SCOTT PRESIDES
The annual meeting was held in Cleveland, O. August 28, 1917. Grand Exalted Ruler Armond W. Scott presided. At the opening exercises he was assisted by Past Grand Exalted Ruler T. Gillis Nutter of West Virginia. Religious exercises were conducted, after which committees on credentials and the Order of the Day were appointed. Nearly 300 delegates were present from all parts of the county. After recess, when the body re-convened, other committee appointments were completed. A smoker was given to the visitors on the evening of the 29th at the Gray's Armory. On Monday night the format open. In place at one of the largest white churches on Euclid Ave. Here the local citizens met and greeted the delegates.
GRAND PARADE TOO
One of the largest parades in the history of the Order took place on the afternoon of the first day. It was then ascertained that Capital City Lodge, No. 11 had the largest number of men in line from the farthest place. It accordingly was awarded the prize $100.00. The picture of the Lodge in line with their umbrellas appeared in one of the daily papers. The Elk's Ball was given at Dreamland Hall, one of the prettiest halls in the country. One thousand persons were present. The reporters showed that the total membership of the Order approximated 13,000 and the cash in the treasury amounted to $9,000.00. A few years ago the Order was unable to pay its current expenses.
UNANIMOUSLY RE-ELECTED
Armond W. Scott, Esq., was unanimously re-elected Grand Exalted Kuler and George Bates of New Jersey, Grand Secretary.
BANDS OF CALANTHE AT MT
CARMEL SUNDAY, THE 9TH.
The Annual Thanksgiving Exercises of the Bands of Calanthe will be held at the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, North First Street, Sunday evening, September 9, 1917, at 3:30 o'clock. Rev. B. D. Caffe, the pastor will address them. A fine program will be rendered by the children. The members of the Bands will meet in the basement of the church. Members of the Order of Knights of Pythias and the Courts of Calanthe are cordially invited to be present. The Pythian Cadets will be out as an escort of honor.
Thessalonian Class Installs Officers
The officers of Thessalonian Class, of the Fifth Street Baptist Sunday School were installed Friday night, August 31, at the residence of the teacher, Roscoe C. Mitchell. The installation address was made by Miss Lillie Grey.Many interesting numbers were rendered, among them a complimentary recitation by Mr. John R. Coghill.
The following are the officers for 1917-18: President, Miss Lillian Crump; Vice President, Miss Sarah Henderson; Secretary, Miss Mary Clark; Assistant, Miss Beulah Warden; Treasurer, Miss Frances Seay; Pianist, Miss Ruth Pollard. After a short address by Superintendent R. H. Fauntleroy, a collation was served by Miss Robecca T. Mitchell and others.
Birdnesten Sta. Va., Aug. 28, 1917.—Rov. F. B. Mitchell and wife of 46 Warren street Byrne Mawr, Pa., visited Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wilkins, last week. Leaving on Friday morning for Riedham. We wish them a pleasant trip
TWO
THE SPLIT
COLORED MAN REMOVED TO PREVENT LYNCHING.
William H. Burgess Is Charged With Attempted Assault on Two Women in Fairfax County.
William H. Burgess, thirty-two years old, of Halls Hill, Fairfax County, a Negro towering over six feet and having rather a vicious face, breathed a deep sigh of evident relief last night when the heavy doors of the Henrico County Jail shut him in from the out side world. The prisoner's left hand was heavily banded, and he was suffering from a shot through the palm, inflicted by officers from Sheriff Allison's office in Fairfax County before they affected his arrest on Saturday. Burgess is said to have confessed to an attempt to attack Mrs. Mildred Miller and Miss Mary Davis in Alexandria County on Friday. Burgess was brought to Richmond for safekeeping on the order of Governor Stuart, when the Governor was told over the long-distance wires by Sheriff Allison of Fairfax and Sheriff Fields, of Alexandria County that there was danger of the Negro being lynched.
"There will be no lynching in Virginia in this instance," said the Governor, and ordered the prison 3 sent to Richmond at once. Sheriff Allison arrived with him on the 9:50 train last night.
It was admitted by the officer who escorted the Negro to Richmond that the people of Fairfax and Alexandria Counties were greatly wrought up by the alleged attempts of the prisoner, and so intent was Sherif Allison in carrying out the strict provisions of Governor Stant's demands to safeguard the prisoner, that the Negro was escorted to the train between a squad of fifty soldiers.
Richmond citizens had not been apprised of the grave crimes attempted by the Negro, and no excitement was caused at Elba Station, when Sherif Sydnor and Chief of Police T. Wilson Seay, of Henrico County, met the Fairfax Sheriff and the prisoner there and transferred the Negro to the Henrico County Sheriff's automobile. Heavily handeuffed, the Negro was soon at the jail. When asked several questions by a reporter for The Times Dispatch, the prisoner made no reply and stared at the floor, Sherif Sydnor explained that he had been told not to talk by the officers.
BURGESS TO BE INSANE
It was learned that many people in Alexandria County, and in Fairfax County consider Burgess insane. It was stated that he recently had been released from jail after waiting several weeks for trial on a charge of committing a statutory crime, Sheriff Allison while declaring that he wished to alay all danger of a lynching in Virginia, admitted that Burgess had confessed to him his attempt to attack both of the women. The confession was said to have been made by the Negro while the Sheriff was taking him from Clifton, where he was caught to Fort Myer Heights.
It was sided that the alleged attack of the Negro occurred at the home of Mrs. Miller in Alexandria County, Friday afternoon. She was alone and she fought valiantly. Wrenching herself free from the Negro, she called for help, and he is said to have fled precipitately when he saw a vehicle approaching. The search for Burgess began immediately. Blood-hounds were brought from Oceocean workhouse. They picked up the Negro's trail and followed it to his hiding place. When he was driven from cover he ran, and was shot in the hand.
It appears, the sheriff said, that the attempted attack on Miss Davis was made by the Negro while he was run running away from the Miller home. Mrs. Miller was struck in the mouth by the Negro when she fought him, and two of her teeth were knocked out. Her lip was lacerated by the blow. Miss Davis was not struck, it seems, but the Sheriff said she was still unconscious from the shock of the attack
BROUGHT HERE BY DIRECTION
OF GOVERNOR STIANTI
Burgess has a wife and two children at Halls Hill. He is said to have gone to work for the Southern Railway near Fairfax on last Wednesday. He stayed just two days and left with out asking for his pay. The attack on Mrs. Miller is said to have occurred soon after he had left his job.
Governor Stuart took charge of the case early yesterday, so far as directions went, and in every instance the Governor told the law officers that there was to be no lynching
"I have saved the lives of several men and guaranteed to them the constitutional privilege of trial by jury," said the Governor last night, and added. "I have told sheriff Sydnor and his assistants that they must take care of the prisoner intrusted to their care and the sheriff will have the entire aid of the Governor in the premises."
The death of William Page, who was lynched at Lillian Va., near Heathsville, on August 15, was the first case of lynching in Virginia in eighteen years. The last lynching prior to the Page case was during the administration of Governor J. Hoge Tyler, when a Negro was lynched near the town of Emporia.
(Times-Dispatch, Aug. 27, 1917.)
THE COURTS DISCRETION. "It was murder in the first degree
and I so declared it. The punishment under the law followed automatically. The judge has not the discretion which a jury has in such cases of giving a life sentence."
This paragraph is from Judge Hundley's first statement regarding the sentence of the 17-year old Negro boy, Aubrey Barrett, to the electric chair. It is a very important paragraph. Upon it hangs much of the argument in this distressing case. When the Negro boy pleaded guilty, without counsel it was to the indictment, which indictment charged murder. The court then declared the murder to be of the first degree, whereas if the boy had not pleaded guilty, the commonwealth would have been forced to prove the crime murder rather than manslaughter. When the boy surrendered the presumptions in his favor, "the punishment under the law followed automatically." So says the court. And to make the point perfectly plain, Judge Hundley explains that the court could not do as a jury might have done—substitute imprisonment for death as a punishment. Nothing could be plainer, more positive and less subject to contradiction than this statement from the judge who presided at the trial. The court had absolutely no alternative to sending the boy to the electric chair—that is the definite and unequivocal statement of a verteran jurist who had presided over criminal cases for more than twenty years.
in the face of these words from Judge Hundley and with all deference to his superior knowledge of the law. The News Leader wishes to state that Judge Hundley did have discretion in this case, that he has unintentionally mistaken his powers, and that he could have imposed a sentence more in keeping with the age and ignorance of the prisoner.
We trust we have made this statement as unequivocal as was that of Judge Hundley, and we are prepared to prove our contention to the satisfaction of any man:
In the first place how old is Aubrey Barrett? Admittedly between 16 and 17 years of age. Even if the date of his birth cannot be fixed with precision, the Negro is conceded by all to be under 18.
Being under 18, the boy comes with in the provisions of the act of 1914 (chapter 350, p. 696.) which act was passed primarily to protect persons of immature years from the extreme penalties of law.
According to this act, "a child under 18 years of age who violates a law of this state" is classified as "delinquent." Under the same act, "every court of record of general criminal jurisdiction or the judge thereof in vacation" (as well as the police and justice courts) is "authorized and empowered" in its discretion to "commit to the care and custody of the state board of charities and corrections, or of any society, association or reformatory approved by the state board of charities and corrections any child who shall be proven to be delinquent.
And to make assurance double sure, the law further provides that when a child has been sent on to the grand jury, "the court to which the child is so sent shall, after the trial is had in conformity with the requirements of law, have, if the child is guilty of crime, the power to act under the provisions of this statute as to the disposition of the child."
in other words, its plaintive judge can define a proceeding at law by statutes of this commonwealth say to when a child is tried and found guilty of crime, the court can commit that child to the state board of charities to a reformatory—at its discretion. The very discretion which Judge Hundley insists he did not have is specifically vested in him by statute.
Nor can it be claimed for an instant that this statute does not apply to cases of murder. Here in Richmond and elsewhere in the commonwealth the records of our courts will show that boys—Negro boys at that—have been tried for murder under this act, and instead of being sentenced to the electric chair, have been sent to the reformatory which the state maintains for deliquid boys. We venture the assertion that the admission books of the Negro reformatory will show at least half dozen boys now in that institution who were duly convicted of murder but were sent there, rather than to the electric chair.
This law is not mandatory. A justice can still send a child under 18 to the grand jury, which, in turn, can indict. A court of record may try, a jury may convict and a court may sentence to imprisonment in the penitentiary or to legal execution, provided only that the child is over 12 years of age. But we are not discussing mandatory laws. We are discussing a discretion which Judge Handley states he did not possess—but a court which, in actual fact, is less open to dispute than the right of a court to sentence a prisoner to death without a jury trial.
We do not charge Judge Hundley with any intentional misstatement of his powers. On the contrary, we are certain that he either had forgotten the law we have cited or else had never had his attention directed to it. And this is not at all unlikely or necessarily discreditable when we remember that the act is recent and bears a lengthy title which, at a glance, would not indicate that it works a very important reform in judicial procedure. But the fact remains that the court had the discretion, could have used it and consequently can no longer take the position that the sentence of this Negro boy to death was unavoidable. (Richmond Va. News Leader, Aug 31, 2017.)
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WHY THE PRESS INTERVENED
With the greatest respect for Judge Hundley's integrity both in his private and public capacity, his knowledge of the law and his fairness in its interpretation, we still think he is in error in protesting against the appeal from his decision in the Aubrey Barrett case.
Granted that he had no recourse but to pronounce sentence, after the boy had entered a plea of guilty, neither the law nor his court is in the least danger of contempt because of the thirty-day respite accorded by Governor Stuart to permit investigation of the facts involving the young Negro in the Roach murder. The press, which he seems to think is misusing its power, has only one desire: to see justice done. In view of the controversies which have arisen, to have remained silent while the boy went to his death would have been an exhibition of moral turpitude of unforgivable proportions. Considering the rasped state of mind, collectively, of the colored race, due to recent deplorable proceedings in the north and in the south, too, alas, it would have been most impolite; to say the least to have ignored the testimony tending to show mitigating circumstances attaching to the younger Negro's allegation share in the crime. But it was not a question of racial policy that swayed the press of Virginia to urge the governor to take official cognizance of the affair; it was solely because it was realised that the judicial atmosphere might have been unconsciously affected by the high feeling engendered locally, to the detriment of the younger prisoner. Virginia's good name might have been impugned had the boy's sentence be carried out without heed to the charges so earnestly affected and the differences of opinion known to be held, even at the scene of the crime, in regard to the lad's measure of guilt. As it is the governor, impartially, wholly removed from local prejudices, can go over the evidence and determine whether in his opinion, the young Negro's sentence shall be imposed or be commuted. That is not only his prerogative, but his sworn duty; and, even if his decision should be contrary to the verdict of the court, it is inowise to construed as a reflection on the trial judge. If that view were taken every time a higher court reversed the opinion of a lower tribunal the judiciary would be in a continual turnover. Possibly, it would have been better if a change of venue had been allowed in the trial of the Barretts. Feeling was strong, naturally, in Charlotte county, and when a community is justly incensed over a great wrong the desire for vengeance is prone to transcend the awarding of strict justice.
(Richmond, Va. Evening Journal,
Aug. 30, 1917.)
MILITARY RULE IN HOUSTON COMES TO AN END.
Proclamation Declaring Martial Law Off Issued Sunday Night by General Hulen, on Orders From Major General Bell—Will Be No Further Trouble—Local Investigation Completed
The restrictions on open saloons and places of business where arms, ammunition and explosives are sold are withdrawn. All business houses, saloons and pool halls closed by request the early morning of August 24, are at liberty to open for their usual business at the usual or legal hour Monday, August 27, 1917.
The exercise of martial law in Harris County will cease at 10 o'clock A. M., August 27, 1917.
By direction of Major General Bell,
JOHN A. HULEN, Brigadier Gen.
After having been under martial law for almost four days as a result of the uprising of Negro soldiers
Thursday night Harris county will be released from military rule Monday morning at 100'clock. All United States soldiers which have been stationed over the city as guards since the night of the trouble will be with drawn and civil authorities will again assume control.
The last of the Negro rioters was captured Sunday by a Negro civilian and turned over to the police.
"There will be no further trouble. These were the words of Major George Bell, Jr., in command of the Thirty-third division of the United States army, when interviewed Sunday night, "The people of Houston are in no more danger now than they are every day of their lives," he said. "The fact that a company of Negroes members of the Illinois National Guard, are stationed at Camp Logan should not worry anybody. They will cause no trouble. In the first place they have no ammunition and can not obtain any, and in the second place I will see to it that they are kept under control."
WILL MAKE NO RECOMMENDATIONS
General Bell stated that after reaching here Saturday and finding the conditions that existed as a result of the riot he had thought of recommending to the war department that the Eighth Illinois infantry all Negro troops, he not sent here.
"But I have decided to make no recommendations," he continued. If I should recommend that they be sent elsewhere, the impression would be given that I was afraid I could not control. I do not want to leave that impression with officials at Washington, for I can control them and if the war department wants them trained at Camp Logan that's where they will be trained—and there will be no trouble.'
General Bell explained that usually a regiment of Negro troops is stationed in a training camp, along with a complete division of white troops, which makes a preponderance of whites about six or seven to one. "There is really no reason why Negro troops should not be trained in the South, he said.
"They must do their proportionate part in the war with Germany, the same as any of the rest of us. and, of course, will have to be trained. If the government wants them trained in the South there is no reason why they should not be trained here with out a particle of trouble. There are scores of Negroes employed here to
Houston in almost every line of work, and no trouble is experienced wilt them. I am not prepared to say what caused the trouble Thursday night, but I do know that if Negroes are properly handled they can be used anywhere. "It is abanduce to believe that just be cause a bunch of lawless Negroes took things into their own hands for a few minutes that all Negroes who might be brought here would cause trouble. If a murder should occur on a certain street that would be no justification for the street being closed permanently to prevent further murders, and the same principle is involved in regard to the Negro troops."
WILL HAVE FULL AUTHORITY.
When asked whether, in case of future trouble he would have the authority to declare Houston under martial law, General Bell said significantly: "Martial law or no martial law I will have full authority to quelc any trouble, and the people may rest assured that I will not mince matters if anything is started."
General Bell said that he found the construction of Camp Logan a great deal further advanced than he had expected it to be, and that as far as he has seen it is a very good site for a training camp. He is especially pleased with the great number of shade trees which have been left among the mess halls and on the sites for the company quarters.
"There is plenty of ground without trees for drill purposes," he said, "and the trees which have been left where the men will pitch their tents will be gratifying to them, especially during this warm weather."
Work is in progress on the division headquarters and as soon as things are in order General Bell and his staff will move to the camp permanently. He said Sunday afternoon that he expects to be in his new quarters not later than Tuesday or Wednesday. Investigation of the causes of the riot were completed Sunday by Colonel George O. Cress, inspector of the Southern department, who arrived in Houston Saturday. He left Sunday night for San Antonio, where he will report the result of his findings to the Southern department commander after which he said he expected to be ordered at once to Columbus, N. M., to take the testimony of the Negro troopers who were involved in the afair.
Colonel Cress was assisted in the work Sunday by United States District Attorney John E. Green, Jr., in that the latter furnished witnesses in his investigations had showed were elites at the seat of the trouble when it was in progress or had information on different phases of the affair.
ALBERT BARRETT PAYS DEATH
PENALTY.
Final Efforts to Stay Execution of Charlotte County Man Without Avail.
Judge Hundley Willing to Trust Case to Governor Stuart, and Indicates That He will Not Oppose Exercise of Executive Clemency.
Albert Barrett, sentenced to death for the murder of W. T. Roach, a Charlotte County farmer, will pay the death penalty for his crime at the State Penitentiary this morning at 7 o'clock. Governor Stuart although he granted a respite to the son, Aubrey Barrett also under sentence of death for complicity in the crime, refused to take any action in the case of the elder Barrett. The Governor gave as his reason that the father had the services of an attorney, and was tried by a jury in the lower court, and if any steps were to be taken, the proper means would be by way of a petition to the Supreme Court.
Four of the five members of the Supreme court have refused to grant a writ of error in the case and all efforts to save Albert Barrett or to stay his execution seem to have failed.
It is understood that even the attorneys for the defense have given up hope, and have begun to concentrate their attention upon the case of the younger Barrett. Judge Prentis is the only Supreme Court judge who could now grant a writ of error that would stay the execution of Albert Barrett. Four of his colleagues have already refused to grant an appeal and by their action have indicated their belief that the elder Barrett had a fair trial.
The contention of the attorneys for the defense was that the prosecution had failed to show that there had been any premeditation in the murder of Roach, and, therefore, that Barrett did not merit the extreme penalty.
When Governor Stuart granted a respite of thirty days to the boy it did not mean that he thought the boy was innocent of any crime. The boy was ignorant, without counsel, and was not tried by a jury. The Governor's action postpones the execution until he has had time to give the case a thorough examination.
Judge George J. Hundley, of the Circuit Court of Charlotte County, issued yesterday what he describes as his "last say" in regard to the Barrett case. His signed statement follows: Sir.-In regard to the Barrett case this will be my last say on that matter. Some people seem determined to try that case over again in the news papers. Let that trial proceed. I never try cases in newspapers. The court trial with its records, is behind me. For the integrity of my action I am responsible only to God. For its wisdom, I abide by the judgment of the people whom I serve. The Governor whom I respect and admire, knows that I asked him to keep troops in readiness for my call, to protect that very boy from mob violence, in case, after I heard the evidence, I should think he ought not to be sentenced to death. He knows I told him I would not be dictated to by any mob.
I have never failed to appoint counsel to defend persons where the death penalty was involved, but I never have done so, and never expect to do so, where prisoners appear by counsel of their own choosing, employed by or for them, as in this boy's case. I have no power to prevent any one from pleading, guilty and when he does so, the guilt is acknowledged.
and no defense an be made. Nothing romains but for the court to ascertain the degree of guilt.
As for State Senator Addison, let me say that he needs no defense as your hands. I did not allude to him. I knew his people well in Richmond, and I know his reputation as an able and honorable man.
WILLING TO TRUST CASE
TO GOVERNOR STUART
The snows of eighty winters have not cooled that quality in my blood which rises in 'resout, ent at unfair treatment, nor has it assuaged my intense aversion to ad sham and retense—to a mushy and morbid sentimentality, that in order to accomplish its ends is willing to assal the court and their officers without the slightest justification.
Now I want to unite with Judge狄kins in saying that I hope the wise action of certain persons in seeking to have this boy's sentence commuted by an assault upon the action of the court will in no wise hurt the boy's case.
We can all trust such a man as Governor Stuart. The law has properly provided for extending executive clemency, and if the Governor thinks it wise to exercise his power I have no word to say against it.
(Signed) GEORGE J. HUNDLLEY, Farmville, Va., August 30, 1917.
(Richmond Times-Dispatch, Aug. 31, 1917.)
GENERAL JONES' HOPES
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Her friends began to wonder over the activities of this sister and the conclusion was reached that she was preparing for that rest that remained for the "Daughters of Zion." I e.g., getting ready to take that last long journey to the land from which none ever return. But the friends were "way off" in their conclusions. If they had noticed things a little closer they would have observed that a good old widowed deacon brother was also smiling unduly. Anyway one of her friends said to her this week, "Child we thought you were getting ready to meet the Lord." She replied, "Oh no, I WAS ONLY FIXING UP FOR ONE OF HIS DISCIPLES."
TWO
THE PLANET
COLORED MAN REMOVED TO PREVENT LYNCHING.
William H. Burgess Is Charged With Attempted Assault on Two Women in Fairfax County.
William H. Burgess, thirty-two years old, of Halls Hill, Fairfax County, a Negro towering over six feet and having rather a vicious face, breathed a deep sigh of evident relief last night when the heavy doors of the Henrico County Jail shut him in from the out side world. The prisoner's left hand was heavily burgunded, and he was suffering from a shot through the palm, inflicted by officers from Sheriff Allison's office in Fairfax County before they affected his arrest on Saturday. Burgess is said to have confessed to an attempt to attack Mrs. Mildred Miller and Miss Mary Davis in Alexandria County on Friday. Burgess was brought to Richmond for safekeeping on the order of Governor Stuart, when the Governor was told over the long-distance wires by Sheriff Allison of Fairfax and Sheriff Fields, of Alexandria County that there was danger of the Negro being lynched.
"There will be no lynching in Virginia in this instance," said the Governor, and ordered the prison's sent to Richmond at once. Sheriff Allison arrived with him on the 9:50 train last night.
ESCORTED TO TRAIN BY
GUARD OF FIFTY SOLDIERS
It was admitted by the officer who escorted the Negro to Richmond that the people of Fairfax and Alexandria Counties were greatly wrought up by the alleged attempts of the prisoner, and so intent was Sherif Allison in carrying out the stricter provisions of Governor Stuart's demands to safeguard the prisoner, that the Negro was escorted to the train between a squad of fifty soldiers.
Richmond citizens had not been apprised of the grave crimes attempted by the Negro, and no excitement was caused at Elba Station, when Sherif Sydnor and Chief of Police T. Wilson Seary, of Henrico County, met the Fairfax Sheriff and the prisoner there and transferred the Negro to the Henrico County Sheriff's automobile, heavily handeffected, the Negro was soon at the jail. When asked several questions by a reporter for The Times Dispatch, the prisoner made no reply and stared at the floor, Sherif Sydnor explained that he had been told not to talk by the officers.
BURGESS TO BE INSANE
It was jaunned that many people in Alexandria County, and in Fairfax County consider Burgess insane. It was stated that he recently had been released from jail after waiting several weeks for trial on a charge of committing a statutory crime, Sheriff Alabama while declaring that he wished to atlay all danger of a lynching in Virginia, admitted that Burgess had confessed to him his attempt to attack both of the women. The confession was said to have been made by the Negro while the Sheriff was taking him from Clifton, where he was caught to Fort Myer Heights.
It was said that the first alleged attack of the Negro occurred at the home of Mrs. Miller in Alexandria County, Friday afternoon. She was alone and she fought valiantly. Wrenching herself free from the Negro, she called for help, and he is said to have fled precipitately when he saw a vehicle approaching. The search for Burgess began immediately. Blood-hounds were brought from Ocoquan workhouse. They picked up the Negro's trail and followed it to his hiding place. When he was driven from cover he ran, and was shot in the band.
It appears, the sheriff said, that the attempted attack on Miss Davis was made by the Negro while he was running away from the Miller home. Mrs. Miller was struck in the mouth, by the Negro when she fought him, and two of her teeth were knocked out. Her lip was lacerated by the blow. Miss Davis was not struck, it seems, but the Sheriff said she was still unconscious from the shock of the attack.
BROUGHT HERE BY DIRECTION
OF GOVERNOR STATUE
Burress has a wife and two children at Halls Hill. He is said to have gone to work for the Southern Hall way near Fairfax on last Wednesday. He stayed just two days and left with out asking for his pay. The attack on Mrs. Miller is said to have occurred soon after he had left his job. Governor Smart took charge of the case early yesterday, so far as directions went, and in every instance the Governor told the law officers that there was to be no loaching.
"I have saved the lives of several men and guaranteed to them the constitutional privilege of trial by jury," said the Governor last night, and added "I have told scriiff Sydnor and his assistants that they must take care of the prisoner intrusted to their care and the scriiff will have the entire aid of the Governor in the premises."
The death of William Page, who was lynched at Lillian Va., near Heathsville, on August 15, was the first case of lynching in Virginia in eighteen years. The last lynching prior to the Page case was during the administration of Governor J. Hoge Tyler, when a Negro was lynched near the town of Emporia.
(Times-Dispatch, Aug. 27, 1917.)
THE COURT'S DISCRETION
"It was murder in the first degree
and I so declared it. The punishment under the law followed automatically. The judge has not the discretion which a jury has in such cases of giving a life sentence."
This paragraph is from Judge Hundley's first statement regarding the sentence of the 17-year Negro boy, Aubrey Barrett, to the electric chair. It is a very important paragraph. Upon it hangs much of the argument. In this distressing case. When the Negro boy pleaded guilty, without counsel it was to the indictment, which indictment charged murder. The court then declared the murder to be of the first degree, whereas if the boy had not pleaded guilty, the commonwealth would have been forced to prove the crime murder rather than manslaughter. When the boy surrendered the presumptions in his favor, "the punishment under the law followed automatically." So says the court. And to make the point perfectly plain, Judge Hundley explains that the court could not do as a jury might have done—substitute imprisonment for death as a punishment. Nothing could be plainer, more positive and less subject to contradiction than this statement from the judge who presided at the trial. The court had absolutely no alternative to sending the boy to the electric chair—that is the definite and unequivocal statement of a verteran jurist who had presided over criminal cases for more than twenty years. In the face of these words from Judge Hundley and with all deference to his superior knowledge of the law, The News Leader wishes to state that Judge Hundley did have discretion in this case, that he has unintentionally mistaken his powers, and that he could have imposed a sentence more in keeping with the age and ignorance of the prisoner.
We trust we have made this statement as unequivocal as was that of Judge Humdley, and we are prepared to prove our contention to the satisfaction of any man:
In the first place how old is Aubrey Barrett? Admittedly between 16 and 17 years of age. Even if the date of his birth cannot be fixed with precision, the Negro is conceded by all to be under 18.
Being under 18, the boy comes with in the provisions of the act of 1914 (chapter 350, p. 696.) which act was passed primarily to protect persons of immature years from the extreme penalties of law.
According to this act, "a child under 18 years of age who violates a law of this state" is classified as "delinquent."
Under the same act, "every court of record of general criminal jurisdiction or the judge thereof in vacation" (as well as the police and justice courts) is "authorized and empowered" in its discretion to "commit to the care and custody of the state board of charities and corrections, or of any society, association or reformatory approved by the state board of charities and corrections any child who shall be proven to be delinquent.
And to make assurance double sure, the law further provides that when a child has been sent on to the grand jury, "the court to which the child is so sent shall, after the trial is had in conformity with the requirements of law, have, if the child is guilty of crime, the power to act under the provisions of this statute as to the disposition of the child."
other words we please. Justice can define a proceeding at law, the duties of this commonwealth say that when a child is tried and found guilty of crime, the court can commit that child to the state board of charities or to a reformatory—at its discretion. To a very discretion which Judge Hundley insists he did not have is specifically vested in him by statute.
Nor can it be claimed for an instance that this statute does not apply to cases of murder. Here in Richmond and elsewhere in the commonwealth the records of our courts will show that boy—Nerro boys at that—have been tried for murder under this act, and instead of being sentenced to the electric chair, have been sent to the reformatory which the state maintains for deliquent boys. We venture the assertion that the admission books of the Negro reformatory will show at least half dozen boys now in that institution who were duly convicted of murder but were there, rather than to the electric chair.
This law is not mandatory. A justice can still send a child under 18 to the grand jury, which, in turn, can indict. A court of record may try a jury may connect and a court may sentence to imprisonment in the penitentiary or to legal execution provided only that the child is over 18 years of age. But we are not discussing mandatory laws. We are discussing a discretion which Judge Handley states he didnot possess, but a discretion which, in actual fact, is less open to dispute than the right of a court to sentence a prisoner to death without a jury trial.
We do not charge judge Handley with any intent misstatement of his powers. On the contrary, we are certain that he either had forgotten the law we have cited or else had never had his attention directed to it. And this is not at all unlikely or necessarily discreditable when we remember that the act is recent and bears a lengthy title which at a place, would not indicate that it works a very important reform in judicial procedure but the fact remains that the court had the discretion, could have used it and consequently can no longer take the position that the sentence of this Negro boy to death was unavoidable (Richmond Va. News leader, Aug 31, 1977).
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WHY THE PRESS INTERVENED
With the greatest respect for Judge Hundley's integrity both in his private and public capacity, his knowledge of the law and his fairness in its interpretation, we still think he is in error in protesting against the appeal from his decision in the Aubrey Burrell case.
Granted that he had no recourse but to pronounce sentence, after the boy had entered a plea of guilty, neither the law nor his court is in the least danger of contempt because of the thirty-day resupee accorded by Governor Stuart to permit investigation of the facts involving the young Negro in the Roch murder. The press, which he seems to think is misusing its power, has only one desire: to see justice done. In view of the controversies which have arisen, to have remained silent while the boy went to his death would have been an exhibition of moral turpitude of unforgivable proportions. Considering the rasped state of mind, collectively, of the colored race, due to recent deplorable proceedings in the north and in the south, too, alas, it would have been most impolite; to say the least to have ignored the apparent testimony tending to show mitigating circumstances attached to the younger Negro's allegation share in the crime. But it was not a question of racial policy that swayed the press of Virginia to urge the governor to take action because of the affair; it was solely because it was realized that the judicial atmosphere might have been unconsciously affected by the detriment of the younger prisoner. Virginia's good name might have been impugned had the boy's sentence been carried out without heed to the charges so earnestly faced and the differences of opinion known to be held, even at the scene of the crime, in regard to the lad's measure of guilt. As it is the governor, impartially, wholly removed from local prejudices, can go over the evidence and determine whether in his opinion, the young Negro's sentence shall be imposed or be committed. That is not only his prerogative, but his sworn duty; and, even if his decision should be contrary to the verdict of the court, it is inowise to construed as a reflection on the trial judge. If that view were taken every time a higher court reversed the opinion of a lower tribunal the judiciary would be in a continual turnover. Possibly, it would have been better if a change of venue had been allowed in the trial of the Barretts. Feeling was strong, naturally, in Charlotte county, and when a community is justly incensed over a great wrong the desire for vengeance is prone to transcend the awarding of strict justice.
(Richmond, Va. Evening Journal, Aug. 30, 1917.)
MILITARY RULE IN HOUSTON
COMES TO AN END.
Proclamation Declaring Martial Law Off Issued Sunday Night by General Hulen, on Orders From Major General Bell—Will Be No Further Trouble—Local Investigation Completed.
The restrictions on open saloons and places of business where arms, ammunition and explosives are sold are withdrawn. All business houses, saloons and pool halls closed by request the early morning of August 24, are at liberty to open for their usual business at the usual or legal hour Monday, August 27, 1917.
The exercise of martial law in Harris County will cease at 10 o'clock A. M., August 27, 1917. By direction of Major General Bell, JOHN A. HULEN, Brigadier Gen. After having been under martial law for almost four days as a result of the uprising of Negro soldiers Thursday night Harris county will be released from military rule Monday morning at 100'clock. All United States soldiers which have been stationed over the city as guards since the night of the trouble will be with drawn and civil authorities will again a same control. The last of the Negro rioters was captured Sunday by a Negro civilian and turned over to the police.
"There will be no further trouble. There were the words of Major George Bell, Jr. in command of the Thirty-third division of the United States army, when interviewed Sunday night. "The people of Houston are in no more danger now than they are every day of their lives," he said. "The fact that a company of Negro members of the Illinois National Guard, are stationed at Camp Logan should not worry anybody. They will cause no trouble. In the first place they have no gunmobility and can not obtain any, and in the second place I will see to it that they are kept under control."
WILL MAKE NO
RECOMMENDATIONS
General Bell stated that after reaching here Saturday and finding the conditions that existed as a result of the rid he had thought of recommending to the war department that the Eighth Illinois infantry all Negro troops be no sent here.
"But I have decided to make no recommendation," he continued. If I should recommend that they be sent elsewhere, the impression would be given that I was afraid I could not control. I do not want to leave that impression with officials at Washington, for I can control them and if the war department wants them trained at Camp Logan that's where they will be trained—and there will be no trouble."
General Bell explained that usually a regiment of Negro troops is stationed in a training camp, along with a complete division of white troops, which makes a preponderance of whites about six or seven to one.
"There is really no reason why Negro troops should not be trained in the South, he said.
"They must do their proportionate part in the war with Germany, the same as any of the rest of us and, of course, will have to be trained. If the government wants them trained in the South there is no reason why they should not be trained here with out a particle of trouble. There are scores of Negroes employed here in
Houston in almost every line of work, and no trouble is experienced witt them. I am not prepared to say what caused the trouble Thursday night, but I do know that if Negroes are properly handled they can be used anywhere. "It is absurd to believe that just be cause a bunch of tawle's Negroes took things into their own hands for a few minutes that all Negroes who might be brought here would cause trouble. If a murder should occur on a certain street that would be no justification for the street being closed permanently to prevent further murders, and the same principle is involved in regard to the Negro troops."
WILL HAVE FULL AUTHORITY.
When asked whether, in case of future trouble he would have the authority to declare Houston under martial law, General Bell said significantly: "Martial law or no martial law I will have full authority to queer any trouble, and the people may rest assured that I will not mince matters if anything is started."
General Bell said that he found the construction of Camp Logan a great deal further advanced than he had expected it to be, and that as far as he has seen it is a very good site for a training camp. He is especially pleased with the great number of shade trees which have been left among the mess halls and on the sites for the company quarters.
"There is plenty of ground without trees for drill purposes," he said, "and the trees which have been left where the men will pitch their tents will be gratifying to them, especially during this warm weather."
Work is in progress on the division headquarters and as soon as things are in order General Bell and his staff will move to the camp permanently. He said Sunday afternoon that he expects to be in his new quarters not later than Tuesday or Wednesday. Investigation of the causes of the riot were completed Sunday by Colonel George O. Cress, inspector of the Southern department, who arrived in Houston Saturday. He left Sunday night for San Antonio, where he will report the result of his findings to the Southern department commander after which he said he expected to be ordered at once to Columbus, N. M., to take the testimony of the Negro troopers who were involved in the afair.
Colonel Cress was assisted in the work Sunday by United States District Attorney John E. Green, Jr., in that the latter furnished witnesses whom his investigations had showed were either at the seat of the trouble when it was in progress or had information on different phases of the affair.
ALBERT BARRETT PAYS DEATH
PENALTY.
Final Efforts to Stay Execution of Charlotte County Man Without Avail.
Judge Hundley Willing to Trust Case to Governor Stuart, and Indicates That He will Not Oppose Exercise of Executive Clemency.
Albert Barrett, sentenced to death for the murder of W. T. Roach, a Charlotte County farmer, will pay the death penalty for his crime at the State Penitentiary this morning at 7 o'clock. Governor Stuart although he granted a respite to the son, Aubrey Barrett also under sentence of death for complicity in the crime, refused to take any action in the case of the elder Barrett. The Governor gave as his reason that the father had the services of an attorney, and was tried by a jury in the lower court, and if any steps were to be taken, the proper means would be by way of a petition to the Supreme Court.
Four of the five members of the Supreme court have refused to grant a writ of error in the case and all efforts to save Albert Barrett or to stay his execution seem to have failed.
It is understood that even the attorneys for the defense have given up hope, and have begun to concentrate their attention upon the case of the younger Barrett. Judge Prentis is the only Supreme Court Judge who could now grant a writ of error that would stay the execution of Albert Barrett. Four of his colleagues have already refused to grant an appeal and by their action have indicated their belief that the elder Barrett had a fair trial.
The contention of the attorneys for the defense was that the prosecution had failed to show that there had been any premeditation in the murder of Roach, and, therefore, that Barrett did not merit the extreme penalty.
When Governor Stuart granted a respite of thirty days to the boy, it did not mean that he thought the boy was innocent of any crime. The boy was ignorant, without counsel, and was not tried by a jury. The Governor's action postpones the execution until he has had time to give the case a thorough examination.
Judge George J. Hundley, of the Circuit Court of Charlotte County, is issued yesterday what he describes as his "that say" in regard to the Barrett case. His signed statement follows: Shr. In regard to the Barrett case, this will be my last say on that matter. Some people seem determined to try that case over again in the news papers. Let that trial proceed. I never try cases in newspapers. The court trial with its records, is behind me. For the integrity of my action I am responsible only to God. For its wisdom. I abide by the judgment of the people whom I serve. The Governor whom I respect and admire, knows that I asked him to keep troops in readiness for my call, to protect that very boy from mob violence, in case, after I heard the evidence, I should think he ought not to be sentenced to death. He knows I told him: I would not be dictated to by any mob.
I have never failed to appoint counsel to defend persons where the death penalty was involved, but I never have done so, and never expect to do so, where prisoners appear by counsel of their own choosing, employed by or for them, as in this boy's case. I have no power to prevent any one from plead'm, guilty and when he does so, the guilt is acknowledged.
and no defense an be made. Nothing remains but for the court to ascertain the degree of guilt.
As for State Senator Addison, let me say that he needs no defense as your hands. I did not allude to him. I knew his people well in Richmond, and I know his reputation as an able and honorable man.
WILLING TO TRUST CASE
TO GOVERNOR STUART
The snows of eighty winters have not cooled that quality in my blood which rices in "essent, ext at unfair treatment, nor has it assugged my intense aversion to ad sham and pretense to a mushy and morbid sentimentality, that in order to accomplish its ends is willing to assail the court and their officers without the slightest justification.
Now I want to unite with Judge atkins in saying that I hope the we wise action of certain persons in seeking to have this boy's sentence commuted by an assault upon the action of the court will in no wise hurt the boy's case.
We can all trust such a man as Governor Stuart. The law has properly provided for extending executive clementy, and if the Governor thinks it wise to exercise his power I have no word to say against it.
(Signed) GEORGE J. HUNDLEY, Farmville, Va., August 30, 1917.
(Richmond TimesDispatch, Aug. 31, 1917.)
GENERAL JONES' HOPES
(Cincinnati Ohio, Fraternal Monitor.) Supreme Chancellor S. W. Green and Grand Chancellor John Mitchell, Jr., met at dinner in New Rochelle, N.Y., recently and are both alive and happy. The greetings between the two were so cordial no one could discern they were the great opposing generals in the big Pythian fight. This is as it ought to be. May they meet oftener.
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One of the "Daughters of Zion" hereabouts has been getting things in shape for the past few months and her friends thought that she was preparing for the Kingdom. She was unduly solicitous as to her general appearance and the "straps" were being drawn a little tighter so as to give a very neat and trim effect to her contour. Her face was washed exceptionally clean and her hair was improving as the days went by. She has always possessed a very smiling sort of a smile, but these days she is working it overtime, scattering sunshine and gladness prominently.
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Her friends began to wonder over the activities of this sister and the conclusion was reached that she was preparing for that rest that remains for the "Daughters of Zion." I c. getting ready to take that last long journeys to the land from which none ever return. But the friends were "way off" in their conclusions. If they had noticed things a little closer they would have observed that a good old widowed deacon brother was also smiling unduly. Anyway one of her friends said to her this week, "Child we thought you were getting ready to meet the Lord." She replied, "Ohno, I WAS ONLY FIXING UP FOR ONE OF HIS DISCIPLES."
BIG TIMBER
BERTRAND W.
SINCLAIR
Estella Benton, left a penniless orphan, goes to join her brother Charlie, who is logging lumber in British Columbia.
Charlie tells Stella of his prospects and describes his primitive manner of living. He introduces a neighbor, Paul Abbey.
The St. Allwoods' car was rolling out to Hoppyard when they came back. By the time Benton had turned the canoe over to the bathhouse man and reached the wharf the horn of the returning machine sounded down the road. They waited. The car came to a stop at the abutting wharf. The driver handed two suit cases off the burdened hood of his machine. From out the tonneau clambered a large, smooth faced young man. He wore an expensive smile in addition to a blue serge suit, white panama and polished tan oxfords, and he bestowed a hearty greeting upon Charlie Benton. But his smile suffered eclipse and a faint flush rose in his round cheeks when his eyes fell upon Benton's sister.
Miss Benton's cool, impersonal manner seemed rather to heighten the young man's embarrassment. Benton, apparently observing nothing amiss, introduced them in an offhand fashion, "Mr. Abbey, my sister."
Mr. Abbey bowed and murmured something that passed for acknowledgment. The three turned up the wharf toward where Sam Davis had once more got up steam. As they walked Mr. Abbey's habitual assurance returned, and he directed part of his genial flow of conversation to Miss Benton. To Stella's inner amusement, however, he did not make any reference to their having been fellow travelers for a day and a half.
Presently they were embarked and under way. Charlie fixed a seat for her on the afterdeck and went forward to steer, whither he was straightway joined by Paul Abbey. Miss Benton was as well pleased to be alone. She was not sure she should approve of young men who made such crude efforts to scrape acquaintance with women on
After about four's run, with the south wind becoming to whip the crests of the short seas into white foam, the boat bore in to a landing behind a low point. Here Abbey disembarked after taking the trouble to come aft and shake hands with polite farewell. Standing on the float, hat in hand, he bowed his sleek blond head to Stella.
"I hope you'll like Roaring lake, Miss Benton," he said as Benton jingled the go ahead bell. "I tried to persuade Charlie to stop over awhile, so you could meet my mother and sister, but he's in too big a hurry. Hope to have the pleasure of meeting you again soon."
Miss Benton parried courteously, little at a loss to fathom his bland friendliness, and presently the widening space cut off their talk. As the bont drew offshore she saw two women in white come down toward the flont, meet Abbey and turn back. And a little farther out through an opening in the woods she saw a white and green bungalow, low and rambling, wide veraudaled, set on a hillock 300 yards back from shore. There was an encircling area of smooth lawn, a place restfully inviting.
Far ahead loomed a ridge running down to the lake shore and cutting off in a bold promontory. That was Halfway Point, Charlie had told her, and under its shadow lay his camp. Without any previous knowledge of camps, she was approaching this one with less eager anticipation than when she began her long journey. She began to fear that it might be totally unlike anything she had been able to imagine, disagreeably so. In due course the Chickamauk bore in under Halfway Point, opened out a sheltered bight where the watery commotion outside raised but a faint ripple, and drew in alongside a float.
The girl swept lake shore, bay and sloping forest with a quickening eye. Here was no trim painted cottage and no velvet lawn. In the waters beside and lining the beach floated innumerable logs, confined by boom sticks; hundreds of trunks of fir, forty and sixty feet long, four and six feet across the butt, timber enough, when it had passed through the sawmills, to build four such towns as Hopyard. Just back from the shore, amid stumps and littered branches, rose the roofs of divers buildings. One was long and low. Hard by it stood another of like type, but of lesser dimension. Two or three mere shanties lifted level with great stumps — crude, unpainted buildings. Smoke issued from the pipe of the larger, and a white aproned man stood in the doorway.
Somewhere in the screen of woods a whistle shrilled. Benton looked at his watch.
"We made good time in spite of the little roll," said he. "That's the donkey blowing quitting time, 6 o'clock. Well, come on up to the snack, sls. Sam, you get a wheelbarrow and run those trunks up after supper, will you?" Away in the banked timber beyond the maples and alder, which Stella now saw masked the bank of a small stream
flowing by the cabins, a faint call rose long drawn:
"Tim-ber-r-r-r"
They moved along a path beaten through fern and clawing blackberry vine toward the camp. Benton carrying the two grips. A loud, sharp crack split the stillness; then a mild swishing sound arose. Hard on the heels of that followed a rending, tearing crash, a thud that sent tremors through the solid earth under their feet. The girl started.
"Falling gang dropped a big dir." Charlie laughed. "You'll get used to that. You'll hear it a good many times a day here."
"Good heavens, it sounded like the end of the world!" she said.
"Well, you can't fell a stick of timber 200 feet high and six or eight feet through without making a pretty considerable noise." her brother remarked complacently. "I like that sound myself. Every big tree that goes down means a bunch of money."
He led the way past the mess house, from the doorway of which the aproned cook eyed her with frank curiosity, hating his employer with nonchalant air, a cigarette resting in one corner of his mouth. Benton opened the door of the second building. Stella followed him in.
It had the saving grace of cleanliness, according to logging camp standards, but the bareness of it appalled her. There was a rusty box heater, littered with cigar and cigarette stubs; a desk fabricated of undressed boards, a homemade chair or two, sunny boxes standing about. The sole concession to comfort was a rug of cheap Axminster covering half the floor. The walls were decorated chiefly with miscellaneous clothing suspended from nails, a few maps and blueprints tacked up askew. Straight across from the entering door another stood ujar, and she could see further vistas of bare board wall, small, dusty window panes and a bed where gray blankets were tumbled as they fell when a waking sleeper cast them aside.
Benton crossed the room and threw open another door.
"Here's a nook I fixed up for you, Stella," he said briskly. "It isn't very fancy, but it's the best I could do just now."
She followed him in silently. He set her two bags on the floor and turned to go. Then some impulse moved him to turn back, and he put both hands on her shoulders and kissed her gently.
"You're home, anyway," he said.
"That's something, if it isn't what you're used to. Try to overlook the crudities. We'll have supper as soon as you feel like it."
He went out, closing the door behind him.
Miss Estella Benton stood in the middle of the room fighting against a swift heart shaking, a terrible depression that strove to master her.
"Good Lord in heaven," she muttered at last, "what a place to be ruined in! 'it's- it's simply impossible."
Her gaze roved about the room. A square box, neither more nor less, 14 by 14 feet of bare board wall, unpainted and unpapered. There was an iron bed, a willow rocker and a rude closet for clothes in one corner. A duplicate of the department store bargain rug in the other room lay on the floor. On an upturned box stood an enamel pitcher and a tin washbasin. That was all.
She sat down on the bed and viewed it forlornly. A wave of sickening rebellion against everything swept over her. To herself she seemed as irrevocably alone as if she had been lost in the depths of the dark timber that rose on every hand. And, sitting there, she heard at length the voices of men. Looking out through a window curtained with cheesecloth, she saw her brother's logging gang swing past, stout woodsmen all, big men, tall men, short bodied men with thick necks and shoulders, sunburned, all grimy with the sweat of their labors, carrying themselves with a free and reckless swing, the doubles in type of that roistering crew she had seen embark on Jack Yfe's boat.
All about that cook house doorkard spread a confusion of empty tins can, gaudily labeled, containers of corn and peas and tomatoes. Dishwater and refuse, chips, scraps, all the refuse of the camp was scattered there in unlovely array.
But that made no more than a passing impression upon her. She was thinking as she removed her hat and gloves of what queer angles come now and then to the human mind. She wondered why she should be sufficiently interested in her brother's hired men to drive off a compelling attack of the blues in consideration of them as men. Nevertheless she found herself unable to view them as she had viewed, say, the clerks in her father's office.
She began to brush her hair and to wonder what sort of food would be served for supper.
CHAPTER III.
A Forestale of Things to Come.
HALF an hour later she sat down with her brother at one end of a table that was but a long
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
A man and a woman are standing in a room with a wooden door. The man is wearing a suit and holding a hat, while the woman is wearing a dress with a belt and holding a handbag. There are two suitcases on the floor.
"You're home, anyway," he said. "That's something."
bench covered with oilcloth. Chairs there were none. A narrow movable bench on each side of the fixed table furnished seating capacity for twenty men, provided none objected to an occasional mudging from his neighbor's elbow. The dishes, different from any she had ever eaten from, were of enormously thick porcelain, dead white, variously chipped and cracked with fine seams. But the food, if plain, was of excellent quality, tasty cooked. She discovered herself with an appetite wholly independent of silver and cut glass and linen. The tin spoons and steel knives and forks harrowed her aesthetic sense without impairing her ability to satisfy hunger.
They had the dining room to themselves. Through a single shiphap partition rose a rumble of masculine talk, where the logging crew leafed in their bunkhouse. The cook served them without any ceremony, putting everything on the table at once—soup, ment, vegetables, a bread pudding for dessert, coffee in a tail tin pot. Benton introduced him to his sister. He withdrew hustily to the kitchen, and they saw no more of him.
"Charlie," the girl said plaintively, when the man had closed the door behind him, "I don't quite fathom your social customs out here. Is one supposed to know everybody that one encounters?"
"Just about," he grimmed. "Loggers, Swishes and the natives in general. Can't very well help it, sis. There's so few people in this neck of the woods that nobody can afford to be exclusive—at least, nobody who lives here any length of time. You can't tell when you may have to call on your neighbor or the fellow working for you in a matter of life and death almost. A man couldn't possibly maintain the same attitude toward a bunch of loggers working under him that would be considered proper back where we came from. Take me, for instance, and my case is no different from any man operating on a moderate scale out here. I'd get the reputation of being swell headed and they'd put me in the hole at every turn. They wouldn't care what they did or how it was done. Ten to one I couldn't keep a capable working crew three weeks on end. On the other hand, take a bunch of loggers on a payroll working for a man that meets them on an equal footing—why, they'll go to h—and back again for him. They're as loyal as soldiers to the fing. They're a mighty self sufficient, independent lot, these humberjacks, and that goes for most everybody knocking about in this country—loggers, prospectors, miners, settlers and all. If you're what they term 'all right' you can do anything and they'll back you up. If you go to putting on airs and trying to assert yourself as a superior being they'll go out of their way to hand you packages of trouble."
"I see," she observed thoughtfully. "One's compelled by circumstances to practice democracy."
"Something like that," he responded carelessly and went on eating his supper.
"I should have been a man," Miss Estella Benton sensitively remarked. "Then I could put on overalls and make myself useful instead of being a drone. There doesn't seem to be anything here I can do. I could keep house—only you haven't any house to keep, therefore no need of a housekeeper."
"Say, Stell, can you cook?" asked her brother.
"A little," Stella rejoined guardedly. "Why do you ask?"
"Why, your wall about being a man and putting on overalls and digging in reminded me that if you liked you may have a chance to get on your apron and show us what you can do," he laughed, "Matt's about due to go on a tear. He's been on the water wagon now about his limit. The first man that comes along with a bottle of whisky Matt will get it and quit and head for town. I was wondering if you could keep the gang from starving to death if that happened. The last time I had to get in and cook for two weeks myself. And I can't run a logging crew from the cook shanty very well."
"I dare say I could manage," Stella returned dubiously. "This seems to be a terrible place for drinking. Is it the accepted thing to get drunk at all times and in public?"
"It's about the only excitement there is." Benton smiled tolerantly. "I guess there is no more drinking out here than any other part of this North American continent. Only a man here gets drunk openly and riotously without any effort to hide it and without it being considered anything but a natural lapse. That's one thing you'll have to get used to out here, Stell—I mean that what vices men have are all on the surface. We don't get drunk secretly at the club and sneak home in a taxi. Oh, well.
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well cross the bridge when we come to it. Matt may not break out for weeks." He yawned openly.
"Sleepy?" Stella inquired.
"I get up every morning between 4 and 5," he replied, "and I can go to sleep any time after supper."
"I think I'll take a walk along the beach," she said abruptly.
"All right. Don't hike into the woods and get lost, though."
She circled the segment of bay, climbed a low, rocky point and found herself a seat on a fallen tree. Outside the lake heaved uneasily, still dotted with whitecaps whipped up by the southerly gate. At her feet surge after surge hammered the gravelly shore. Far through the woods behind her the wind whistled and hummed among swaying tops of giant fir and cedar. There was a heady freshness in that rollicking wind, an odor reshous and pungent mingled with that elusive smell of green growing stuff along the shore. Beginning where she sat, tree trunks rose in immense brown pillars, running back in great forest naves, shadowy always, floored with green moss laid in a rich, soft carpet, for the wood sprites' feet. Far beyond the long gradual lower slope lifted a range of saw backed mountains, the sanctuary of wild goat and bear, and across the rolling lake lifted other mountains she from the water's edge, peaks rising above timber line in majestic contour, their pinnacle crests grazing the clouds that snuck before the south wind.
Beauty? Yes. A wild, imposing grandeur that stirred some responsive chord in her. If one only could live amid such surrounding with a contented mind, she thought, the wilderness would have compensations of its own. She had an uneasy feeling that isola-
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from everything that had played an important part in her life might be
"Say, Stell, can you cook?" asked her brother.
the least depressing factor in this new existence. She could not view the rough and ready standards of the woods with much equanimity—not as she had that day seen them set forth. These things were bound to be a part of her daily life, and all the brief span of her years had gone to forming habits of speech and thought and manner diametrically opposed to what she had so far encountered.
It was too late to mourn over lost opportunities now, but she did wish there was some one thing she could do and do well, some service of value that would guarantee self support. If she could only pound a typewriter or keep a set of books or even make a passable
(Continued on Sixth Page.)
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ONLY ALL-RAIL LIN. TO NORFOLK
Leave Bryd Street Station, Richmond FOR
NORFOLK*11:15 A. M. *9:00 A. M. *8:00 P. M.
*8:00 P. M.
FOR LYNCHBURG AND THE WEST*11:18
A. M. *9:00 A. M. *8:00 P. M. *9:25 P. M.
Local to Crewe, *0:35 P. M.
Drive Richmond from Norfolk*11:14 A. M. *0:35
A. M. *8:74 P. M.
From the West*11:15 A. M. *8:74 A. M.
*8:74 P. M.
***14:10 P. M. *6:17 P. M. *9:00 P. M.
Daily *Daily except Sunday *Sunday only
P. T. M. W. W. O. BAUNDER,
P. T. M. Roanoke
O. H. HOSLEY, D. P. A. Richmond
ATLANTIC COAST LINE.
THE STANDARD RAILROAD THE BRIDGE
(Effective January 8, 1910)
Trail length
Ridgmond Daily:
For Florida 6:15 A. M., and 8:15
P. M., 11:15 P. M., 12:10 P. M.
For Norfolk: 6:15 A. M., 8:09 A. M., 8:15
P. M., "4:00 P. M., "4:10 P. M.
For N. & W. Ry., West: 6:15 A. M., 8:15 &
8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
Trains arrive Richmond daily: 4:00 A.M., 7:00 A.M., 8:18 A.M., 6:18 A.M., 6:17 A.M., 11:00 A.M., 8:30 P.M., 8:46 P.M., 8:38 P.M., 7:45 P.M., 9:09 P.M., 18:18 P.M.
*Except Sunday. *Sunday Only.
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11:15 P. M.—Bally-Limited—For all points
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YORK RIVER LINE
4:15 P. M. ---Daily--- Local to West Point.
4:15 P. M. ---Daily--- daily except Sunday
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7:36 A. M. ---Daily--- Local to West Point.
RAINING ARRIVE RICHMOND
From the A. M. to West Point.
8:50 P. M. and 8:50 P. M. daily; 8:40 A. M.,
except Sunday
routinely: 7:40 A. M.; 8:15 P. M.
daily and 8:45 A. M. Stauner train from Baltimore, daily except Monday.
MACGURDRE DUNTY, D. P. A.
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28 North Sewaterville
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO
Chaonnat, Louville & West, *8* "p," *7* "p," *11*
Main Lane Local, *7* "75" "a," *18* "18"
Main Lane Local, Nerlok and Old Point, *8* "18"
Newport Nowa, Norfolk and Old Point, *8* "38" "a," *18* "m," *4*
Newport News Local, Norfolk, *7* "a," *5* "a"
Treasure Bay Local, Norfolk, *11* "a," *15* "p," *8* "39"
Newport Nowa, *8* "38" "a," *18* "s," *15*
From West, *8* "18" "a," *18* "p," *0* "85"
From West, *8* "18" "a," *18* "p," *0* "85"
From West, *7:10* "p," daily from Charlestonville,
except from Nowa, from Taurus, from Biret, *8* "48" "p"
*Daily* *8* "48" "p" *0* "85* *Except Sunday*
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY ON THE COUNTY
Borough bound trains scheduled to leave Michigam-
die: 9:08 A. M., local to Madison; 1:38 P. M.,
dockyard and canals to Madison; 1:52 P. M.,
Brockleigh; 9:08 P. M., Europoach coach
dockyard to Jacksonville; 11:20 P. M., Friarlea
Lancaster; 12:05 A. M., sleeper to Atlanta; 12:30
A. M., Jacksonville, Tampa and coogam b.
Jacksonville
Borough bound trains scheduled to arrive
Bickerdale Daily: 4:00 A. M., 7:38 A. M., or
A. M., local; 9:08 A. M., 8:37 P. M.
BIG TIMBER
BERTRAND W.
SINCLAIR
Copyright, 1916, by Little, Brown & Co.
Eastella Benton, left a peniless orphan, goes to join her brother Charlie, who is logging lumber in British Columbia.
Charlie tells Stella of his prospects and describes his primitive manner of living. He introduces a neighbor, Paul Abbey.
The St. Allwoods' car was rolling out to Hepyard when they came back. By the time Benton had turned the canoe over to the bathhouse man and reached the wharf the hour of the returning machine sounded down the road. They waited. The car came to a stop at the abutting wharf. The driver handed two suit cases off the burdened hood of his machines. From out the toename clambered a large, smooth faced young man. He wore an expansive smile in addition to a blue serge suit, white pumama and polished tan oxford, and he bestowed a hearty greeting upon Charlie Benton. But his smile suffered eclipse and a faint flush rose in his round checks when his eyes fell upon Benton's sister.
Miss Benton's cool, impersonal manner seemed rather to heighten the young man's embarrassment. Benton, apparently observing nothing amiss, introduced them in an on-hand fashion, "Mt. Abbey, my sister."
Mr. Abbey bowed and murmured something that passed for acknowledgment. The three turned up the wharf toward where Sam Davis had once more got up steam. As they walked Mr. Abbey's habitual assurance returned, and he directed part of his genial flow of conversation to Miss Benton. To Stella's inner amusement, however, he did not make any reference to their having been fellow travelers for a day and a half.
Presently they were embarked and under way. Charlie fixed a seat for her on the afterdeck and went forward to steer, whither he was straightway joined by Paul Abbey. Miss Benton was as well pleased to be alone, She was not sure she should approve of young men who made such crude efforts to scrape acquaintance with women on
After about a hour's run, with the south wind beating to whip the crests of the short seas into white foam, the boat bore in to a landing behind a low point. Here Abbey disembarked after taking the trouble to come aft and shake hands with polite farewell. Standing on the float, but in hand, he bowed his sleek blond head to Stella.
"I hope you'll like Reading lake, Miss Benton," he said as Benton jingled the go ahead bell. "I tried to persuade Charlie to stop over awhile, so you could meet my mother and sister, but he's in too big a hurry. Hope to have the pleasure of meeting you again soon."
Miss Benton parried courteously, little at a loss to fathom his bland friendliness, and presently the widening space cut off their talk. As the boat drew offshore she saw two women in white come down toward the float, meet Abbey and turn back. And a little farther out through an opening in the woods she saw a white and green bungeau, tow and rambling, wide veranaded, set on a billock 300 yards back from shore. There was an encircling area of smooth lawn, a place restfully inviting.
Far ahead loomed a ridge running down to the lake shore and cutting off in a bold promontory. That was Halfway Point, Charlie had told her, and under its shadow lay his camp. Without any previous knowledge of camps, she was approaching this one with less eager and delicateness than when she began her long journey. She began to fear that it might be totally unlike anything she had been able to imagine, disagreeably so. In due course the Chickamau bore in under Halfway Point, opened out a sheltered bight where the watery commotion outside raised but a faint ripple, and drew in alongside a float.
The girl swept lake shore, bay and sloping forest with a quickening eye. Here was no trim painted cottage and no velvet lawn. In the waters beside and lining the beach floated innumerable logs, confined by boom sticks; hundreds of trunks of fir, forty and sixty feet long, four and six feet across the butt, timber enough, when it had passed through the sawmills, to build four such towns as Hopyard. Just back from the shore, amid stumps and littered branches, rose the roofs of divers buildings. One was long and low. Hard by it stood another of like type, but of lesser dimension. Two or three mere shanties lifted level with great stumps — crude, unpainted buildings. Smoke issued from the pipe of the larger, and a white apron man stood in the doorway.
Somewhere in the screen of woods a whistle shrilled. Benton looked at his watch.
"We made good time in spite of the little roll," said he. "That's the donkey blowing quitting time, 6 o'clock. Well, come on up to the shack, sls. Sam, you get a wheelbarrow and run those trunks up after supper, will you?" Away in the banked timber beyond the maples and alder, which Stella now saw masked the bank of a small stream
flowing by the cabins, a faint call rose, long drawn by:
"Timber-r-r-r"
They moved along a path heaten through ferns and clawing blackberry vine toward the camp. Benton carrying the two grips. A loud, sharp crack split the stillness; then a mild swishing sound arose. Hard on the heels of that followed a rending, tearing crush, a thud that sent tremors through the solid earth under their feet. The girl started.
"Falling gang dropped a big dir." Charlie laughed. "You'll get used to that. You'll hear it a good many times a day here."
"Good heavens! it sounded like the end of the world!" she said.
"Well, you can't tell a stick of timber 200 feet high and six or eight feet through without making a pretty considerable noise." her brother remarked complacently. "I like that sound myself. Every big tree that goes down means a bunch of money."
He led the way past the mess house, from the doorway of which the aproposed cook eyed her with frank curiosity, hailing his employer with nonchalant air, a cigarette resting in one corner of his mouth. Benton opened the door of the second building. Stella followed him in.
It had the saving grace of cleanliness, according to legging camp standards, but the bareness of it appalled her. There was a rusty box heater, littered with cigar and cigarette stubs; a desk fabricated of undressed boards, a homemade chair or two, sandy boxes standing about. The sole concession to comfort was a rug of cheap Axminster covering half the door. The walls were decorated chiefly with miscellaneous clothing suspended from nails, a few maps and blueprints tacked up askew. Straight access from the entering door another stood ajar, and she could see further vistas of bare board wall, small, dusty window panes and a bed whereon gray blankets were tumbled as they fell when a waking sleeper cast them aside.
Benton crossed the room and threw open another door.
"Here's a book I fixed up for you, Stella," he said briskly. "It isn't very fancy, but it's the best I could do just now."
She followed him in silently. He set her two bags on the floor and turned to go. Then some impulse moved him to turn back, and he put both hands on her shoulders and kissed her gently.
"You're home, anyway," he said.
"That's something, if it isn't what you're used to. Try to overlook the crudities. We'll have supper as soon as you feel like it."
He went out, closing the door behind him.
Miss Estella Beuton stood in the middle of the room fighting against a swift heart sinking, a terrible depression that strove to master her.
"Good Lord in heaven," she muttered at last, "what a place to be marooned in! It's—it's simply impossible."
Her gaze roved about the room. A square box, neither more nor less, 14 by 14 feet of bare board wall, unpainted and unpapered. There was an iron bed, a willow rocker and a rude closet for clothes in one corner. A duplicate of the department store bargain rug in the other room lay on the door. On an upturned box stood an enamel pitcher and a tin washbasin. That was all.
She sat down on the bed and viewed it forlornly. A wave of sickening rebellion against everything swept over her. To herself she seemed as irrevocably alone as if she had been lost in the depths of the dark timber that rose on every hand. And, sitting there, she heard at length the voices of men. Looking out through a window curtained with cheesecloth, she saw her brother's logging gang swing past, stout woodsmen all, big men, tall men, short bodied men with thick necks and shoulders, sunburned, all grimy with the sweat of their labors, carrying themselves with a free and reckless swing, the doubles in type of that roistering crew she had seen embark on Jack Fey's boat.
All about that cook house doorkard spread a confusion of empty tin cans, gaudily inbaked, containers of corn and peas and tomatoes. Dishwater and refuse, chips, scraps, all the refuse of the camp was scattered there in unlovely array.
But that made no more than a passing Impression upon her. She was thinking as she removed her hat and gloves of what queer angles come now and then to the human mind. She wondered why she should be sufficiently interested in her brother's hired men to drive off a compelling attack of the blues in consideration of them as men. Nevertheless she found herself unable to view them as she had viewed, say, the clerks in her father's office.
She began to brush her hair and to wonder what sort of food would be served for supper.
CHAPTER III.
A precaution of things to Come
HALF an hour later she sat down with her brother at one end of a table that, was but a long
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
A man is helping a woman get into a house. The woman is holding a basket and wearing a dress. There are suitcases on the floor.
"You're home, anyway," he said. "That's something."
bench covered with oilcloth. Chalfs there were none. A narrow movable bench on each side of the fixed table furnished seating capacity for twenty men, provided none objected to an occasional mudging from his neighbor's elbow. The dishes, different from any she had ever eaten from, were of enormously thick porcelain, dead white, variously chipped and cracked with fine scams. But the food, if plain, was of excellent quality, tastily cooked. She discovered herself with an appetite wholly independent of silver and cut glass and then. The tin spoons and steel knives and forks harrowed her aesthetic sense without impairing her ability to satisfy hunger.
They had the dining room to themselves. Through a single shipap partition rose a rumble of masculine talks where the logging crew boafed in their bunkhouse. The cook served them without any ceremony, putting everything on the table at once—soap, meat, vegetables, a bread pudding for dessert, coffee in a tail tint pot. Benton introduced him to his sister. He withdrew hastily to the kitchen, and they saw no more of him.
"Charlie," the girl said plaintively, when the man had closest the door behind him. "I don't quite fathom your social customs out here. I is one supposed to know everybody that one encounters?"
"Just about," he grimmed. "Loggers, Siwashes and the natives in general. Can't very well help it, sis. There's so few people in this neck of the woods that nobody can afford to be exclusive—at least, nobody who lives here any length of time. You can't tell when you may have to call on your neighbor or the fellow working for you in a matter of life and death abask. A man couldn't possibly maintain the same attitude toward a bunch of loggers working under him that would be considered proper back where we came from. Take me, for instance, and my case is no different from any man operating on a moderate scale out here. I'd get the reputation of being swell headed and they'd put me in the hole at every turn. They wouldn't care what they did or how it was done. Ten to one I couldn't keep a capable working crew three weeks on end. On the other hand, take a bunch of loggers on a payroll working for a man that meets them on an equal footing—why, they'll go to b—and back again for him. They're as loyal as soldiers to the flag. They're a mighty self sufficient, independent lot, these lumberjacks, and that goes for most everybody knocking about in this country—loggers, prospectors, miners, settlers and all. If you're what they term 'all right' you can do anything and they'll back you up. If you go to putting on airs and trying to assert yourself as a superior being they'll go out of their way to hand you packages of trouble."
"I see," she observed thoughtfully. "One's compelled by circumstances to practice democracy."
"Something like that," he responded carelessly and went on eating his supper.
"I should have been a man," Miss Estella Benton sensitively remarked. "Then I could put on overalls and make myself useful instead of being a drone. There doesn't seem to be anything here I can do. I could keep house—only you haven't any house to keep, therefore no need of a housekeeper."
"Say, Stell, can you cook?" asked her brother.
"A little," Stella rejoined guardedly. "Why do you ask?"
"Why, your wail about being a man and putting on overalls and digging in reminded me that if you liked you may have a chance to get on your apron and show us what you can do," he hugged. "Matt's about due to go on a tear. He's been on the water wagon now about his limit. The first man that comes along with a bottle of whisky Matt will get it and quit and head for town. I was wondering if you could keep the gang from starving to death if that happened. The last time I had to get in and cook for two weeks myself. And I can't run a logging crew from the cook shanty very well."
"I dare say I could manage," Stella returned dubiously. "This seems to be a terrible place for drinking. Is it the accepted thing to get drunk at all times and in public?"
"It's about the only excitement there 14." Benton smiled tolerantly. "I guess there is no more drinking out here than any other part of this North American continent. Only a man here gets drunk openly and riotously without any effort to hide it and without it being considered anything but a natural lapse. That's one thing you'll have to get used to out here, Stell—I mean that what vices men have are all on the surface. We don't get drunk secretly at the club and sneak home in a taxi. Oh, well,
we'll cross the bridge when we come to it. Matt may not break out for weeks."
He yawned openly.
"Sleepy?" Stella hqnired.
"I get up every morning between 4 and 5," he replied, "and I can go to sleep any time after supper."
"I think I'll take a walk along the beach," she said abruptly.
"All right. Don't hike into the woods and get lost, though."
and get lost, though.
She circled the segment of bay, ellimb ed a low, rocky point and found herself a seat on a fallen tree. Outside the lake heaved unceans, still dotted with whitecaps whipped up by the southerly gate. At her feet surge after surge hammered the gravelly shore. Far through the woods behind her the wind whistled and hummed among swaying tops of giant fir and cedar. There was a heady freshness in that rollicking wind, an odor resinous and pungent mingled with that elusive smell of green growing stuff along the shore. Beginning where she sat, tree trunks rose in immense brown pillars, running back in great forest naves, shadowy always, floored with green moss held in a rich, soft carpet for the wood sprites' feet. Far beyond the long gradual lower slope lifted a range of saw backed mountains, the sanctuary of wild goat and bear, and across the rolling lake lifted other mountains sheer from the water's edge, peaks rising above timber line in majestic contour, their pinnacle crests grazing the clouds that snuck before the south wind.
Beauty? Yes. A wild, imposing grandeur that stirred some responsive chord in her. If one only could live amid such surromanding with a content-et mind, she thought, the wilderness would have compensations of its own. She had no energy feeling that isola-
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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)
PHOTOS—We Offer you the Latest More Moderate Figure than you Attention Paid to Children to Quote You Prices e View ENLARGING AND COPYING FROM GEORGE O. BRO
you the Latest and Most
more than you can Obtain B
to Children. We will A
you Prices on Exterior and
View Work.
COPYING FROM OLD PHOTO
. BROWN, P
---
PHOTOS—We Offer you the Latest and Most Artistic Photos at a More Moderate Figure than you can Obtain Elsewhere. Special Attention Paid to Children. We will Also be Pleased to Quote You Prices on Exterior and Interior View Work.
BNLARGING AND COPYING FROM OLD PHOTOS A SPECIALTY
GEORGE O. BROWN, Photographer
602 NORTH SECOND STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
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"Sleepy?" Stella Inquired.
JOHN H. BURKE
ton from everything that had played an important part in her life might be
"Say, Stoll, can you cook?" asked her brother.
the least depressing factor in this new existence. She could not view the rough and ready standards of the woods with much equanimity—not as she had that day seen them set forth. These things were bound to be a part of her daily life, and all the brief span of her years had gone to forming habits of speech and thought and manner diametrically opposed to what she had so far encountered.
It was too late to mourn over lost opportunities now, but she did wish there was some one thing she could do and do well, some service of value that would guarantee self support. If she could only pound a typewriter or keep a set of books or even make a passable
(continued on Sixth Page.)
L. J. HAYDEN
Fracturer of Pure Herb
Medicines
ALL DISEASES OR NO CHARGE.
W. Broad, Richmond
PHONE RANDOLPH 3027
DO YOU LOVE HEALTH?
I and see L. J. HAYDEN, Manufacturer of Herb Medicines, 220 W. Broad Street,
nines will cure you, or no charge, no
at your disease, sickness or affliction
and restore you to perfect health. Hun-
couple, the best and leading ones in the
field that I am one of the most won-
world. I use nothing but herbs, roots,
vines, flowers and plants in my medi-
at the most skillful and best hospital
we give up to die and said there was
the following diseases: Heart Disease
in any form, Vertigo, Quinny, Sore
stipation, Rheumatism in any form,
Rhonchial Troubles, Skin Diseases, all
is, LaGrippo, Pneumonia, Ulcer, Car-
om without the use of knife or instru-
body, Diabetes of Kidneys, Bright's
sure any disease, no matter what na-
clines sent anywhere. For full par-
EN, 220 West Broad Street
NIGHT PHONE, MADISON, 515-W
MAL COMPANY
ERS AND EMBALMERS
settings and Entertainments.
Warerooms
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
e, Treas.; Nathaniel Roy, Manager
FOR MUSICIANS
MUSICIANS WANTED FOR
ANTRY BAND, OF NEW
STATE, LIEUT. JAS. REESE
ARY ARMORY, 2217-7TH
NEW YORK, N. Y.
2 EAST LEIGH STREET.
OR, EMBALMER AND
MAN
short notice by telegraph or tel-
setings and nice entertainments.
lary conveniences. Large Picnic
reasonable rates and nothing but
etc. Keep constantly on handi-
cal supplies.
—Man on Duty All Night.
RICHMOND, Va.
Most and Most Artistic Photos at a
Can Obtain Elsewhere. Special
We will Also be Pleased
in Exterior and Interior
Work.
FROM OLD PHOTOS A SPECIALTY
WN, Photographer
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
BANK
STATISTICS show that the country today is prosperous. Bank deposits have increased. Statisticians agree, however, that a period of depression is possible after the European war. Wise people are preparing by adding to their bank balances. Are you? If you haven't a bank account, open one today. If you have a bank balance, make up your mind to add to it. See us about your banking.
THE MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK
S READY TO SERVE YOU.
THIRD AND CLAY STS.
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Mr Edward Dandridge, 11 W. Duval Street, agent for the Planet, handles all kinds of newspapers.
EDW. STEWART
203 SOUTH SECOND STREET
RICHMOND, VA.
DEALER IN FANCY GROCERIES
FRESH MEATS, VEGETABLES
FISH AND OYSTERS.
'PHONE—MADISON 1037.
BOARD AND LODGING
MRS. BOOKER T. LEFTWICH
816 N. Second Street, Richmond, Va.
SAVE COUPONS
WORK AND SAVE UP PLANET
JOUPONS AND GET AN UMBRELLA
OR A PHONOGRAPH—BOTH ARE
GOOD. SEE ADVERTISEMENTS
IN THIS ISSUE AND START TO
WORK IMMEDIATELY.
A. HAYES' SONS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
727 N. SECOND ST.
Residence, 725 N. 2nd St.
FIRST-CLASS AUTOMOBILE
AND HACKS. CASKETS OF
ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
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All of Our Patrons.
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OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
OTHER PEOPLE JUDGE
YOU BY YOUR FURNITURE NOW!
When you can get Furniture and Rugs from an Old Established house like JURGEMS—that's known to sell the best quality goods, just as reasonable as elsewhere—why not give your friends a good impression. It will give us the greatest pleasure to show you our wonderful stock of home making comfort giving Furniture and Rugs and—don't fall to ask our salesmen about our banking plan which gives you 5, 10 or 15 months in which to pay for any purchase.
CNAS. G. JURGENS SON
JUSTABLISHED 1880
ADAMS AND BROAD
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RAILROADS
Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac R. R.
To and from Washington and beyond. Daily.
Lv. Richd $ 6.55 AM Ar. Richd $ 7.50 AM
* 5.27 AM 7.50 AM *12.50 AM
* 7.57 AM 8.40 AM *6.25 PM 6.40 PM
* 12.01 PM 2.50 PM 8.50 PM *9.35 PM
* 5.30 PM 8.20 PM *12.83 Nt. 12.40 Nt.
Richmond-Washington Local, Lv. $ 1.50 PM
week days! 1.15 PM, Sundays! Ar. $ 1.25 AM,
daily, Fredericksburg Accom, week days, Lv.
15 PM, A. 50 PM, Ashland Accom, week
days, Lv. 2.25 AM, 6.30 PM, A. 6.30 PM
Ela ticket and baggage offices not open
for this train.
* Main St. Sta.
* Byrd St. Sta. (stopping at Ela). * Ela Sta.
NORFOLK & WESTERN
NORFOLK & WESTERN
ONLY ALL-RAIL LIN. TO NORFOLK
Lease Byrd Street Station, Richmond FOR
NORFOLK. "0:15 A. M., "0:90 A. M., "8:00 P.
M., "1:00 P.
FOR LYNCHBURG AND THE WEST "-"0:18
A. M., "0:40 A. M., "8:00 P. M., "0:26 P. M.
Come to Crewe, "0:35 P. M.
Arrive Richmond from Norfolk "-"11:40 A. M.
"11:30 P., "11:30 M.
From the West "-"0:15 A. M., "8:00 P. M., "8:00 P.
"11:40 P. M., "0:17 P. M., "9:00 P. M.
"daily" Daily except Sunday. "Sunday only"
W. B. BEVILL, W. B. O. BAUNDERH,
R. H. ROHNKE, G. P. A., Rohnke
O. H. ROHNKE, D. P. A.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
THE STANDARD BALLOON BOAT
(Effective January 8, 1810)
Train fleet and South: 812 A. M. and 8118
P. M., 11:35 P. M., 12:50 A. M.
P. M., Norfolk: 615 A. M., 9:00 A. M., 8108
P. M., 10:45 P. M., 11:00 A. M.
For N. & W. R. West: 812 A. M., 8:50 A.
M., 8:00 P. M., 9:25 P. M.
P. M., 9:25 P. M., 12:50 A. M., 8:15 A. M.
8:15 A. M., August: 8:50 A. M., 8:15 P. M.
*4:00 P. M., **4:10 P. M., 8:50 P. M., 8:150
P. M., 9:25 P. M., 11:55 P. M.
Fayetteville: *4:00 P. M.
For Hopewell: 512 A. M., *11:15 P. M., 8:150
P. M., 9:15 P. M.
Trains arrive Richmond daily: 4:59 A. M.
7:00 A. M. 8:15 A. M. 8:19 A. M.
11:40 A. M. 12:10 P. M. 12:46 P. M. 13:09
M., 8:35 P. M., 7:45 P. M., 8:59 P. M., 8:99 P. M.
P. M. "Except Sunday." "Sunday Only."
Time of arrival and departures and con-
sultations not guaranteed.
THE SOUTHERN
SERVES THE SOUTH
(N. B.--Following schedule figures published
information and not guaranteed).
5:50 A. M.--Daily--Local for Daville.
10:50 A. M.--Daily--Limited--For all potsha
South. Fullnain builer parcel car.
3:00 P. M. — Except Sunday—Local for Chase
City, Buffalo Junct. and intermediate stations.
6:00 P. M. — Daily—For Daville, Adaption and
Birmingham with Pullman observation sleep-
ing car.
11:15 P. M. — Bally—Limited—For all points
South. Pullman ready 9:00 P. M.
YORK RIVER LINE
4:15 P. M. ---Daily---Local to West Point.
6:10 P. W. ---Bearam train, daily except Sunday
for weekdays. ---Daily---Local to West Point.
7:36 A. M. ---Daily---Local to West Point.
**TRAINS ARBIVED RIOMMOND**
7:36 A. M. ---Daily---Local to West Point.
8:36 P. M. and 8:50 P. M., daily; 8:50 A. M., except Sunday
West Palatim: r:40 A. M., c:15 P. M.
dailymail, daily except Monday.
Baltimore, daily except Monday.
MAGRIDR DBNT, D. P. A.
907 East Malvern, North Madison 278
28 North Seventh Street
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO.
Chinchinatt, Loule & West, *2 p.*, *7 p.*, *11 p.*
Lain Main Line, *7:25 a.*, *8:18 p.*
James River Line, *10:00 a.*, *8:18 p.*
Newport News, Norfolk] and Old Point, *8:38 a.*, *18 m.*, *4 p.*
Newport News Local, *8:38 a.*, *18 m.*, *4 p.*
Trains arrive from Norfolk, *911 a.*, *115 a.*, *8:38 p.*
Newport News, *9:58 a.*, *8:38 p.*
From West, *8:18 a.*, *8:58 p.*, *8:58 p.*
From Lake, *8:18 p.*, *8:58 p.*, Charlottesville
except Sunday from Tornadoes
Jazzie Bates, *8:26 a.*, *8:58 p.*
SEABOARD AIR LINE.
THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY OF THE DOUGLAS
Boutound railway scheduled to leave Birmingham
daily: 9:18 A.M. M., local to Hunting; 1:29 P.M.
Jacksonville; 1:48 P.M. Jacksonville, Atlanta,
Birmingham; 6:38 P.M. M., local to Birmingham,
slagers to Jacksonville; 11:18 P.M. M., Florida
Limited; 12:45 A.M. M., sleeper to Atlanta,
Birmingham; Jacksonville, Tampa and coossee
& Jacksonville.
The progressive trains scheduled to arrive
Birmingham daily: 4:28 P.M. M., local to
Birmingham, local to Hunting; 4:58 P.M.
SN ee
ee a
eas Redness
eee Ne ee
div Eat pe
SALMAN em ACU
SENN VEL N STN
BAN St NNR
Baa oN) ‘
0 TERR ea 27
' 1 oaneteone are
Published every aturday by John
Mitchell, Jr, at Sil N, 4th Street,
Richmond, Virginia,
JOHN MITOHELL, JR, EDITOR
AM communications intended for pud-
Heation should be sent so as to
reach ue by Wednesday.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond
Virginia, as second-class matter.
SATURDAY. .@&O8PTEMBER 8, 1917
BISHOP SMITH IS) EMPHATIC,
We have expressed the opinion time
and again that ultimately we would
find the white people of the South-
land speaking in our defense and the
white people of the North assailing us.
‘The day is rapidly approaching when
Unis anomalous situation will take
place and we see or think we see that
the time is at hand. In discussing the
affair at Houston, Texas, where a
clash between the local police force
ant members of the United States
Army took place, the white press of
this ofty and in the Southland was
unusually consorvative in dealing
with tis matter,
Hyen newspapers im Texas were
much more consorvative than had
been generally supposed. In Detroit,
Michigan, however the vary able
Bishop C. 8. Smith of the African
Methodist Episcopal Church found it
Neoessary to take issue With the De-
(roit Pres. aml .@ criticise soverely
the drastic tane of an editorial ap-
pearing in the issue, of that
Journal of August 25, 1917. Bishop
Smit, in his concluding remarks
saps:
‘The fact is tho white race by pre-
cipitating a world-war has turned
man's carthly abode into a veritable
hell, and there is no telling when the
fires of damnation will be extinguish-
ed or what elemonts will be consum-
ed while they are raging. If plain
speaking is in order, let both sides be
heard.
This is a tolling rebuke to a north-
orn Negro-hater,
t 1
Whétosa0n of che North raroly evel
deal with tho colored folks’ question
without making a worso. moss of it.
AS to the southern white folks, there
are two classes of them; une being.
against us and the other for us and
both sides appearing to the northern
observer as being against us, i‘
EPIPOR TROPTER'S CALL,
Kditor William Monroe Trotter is
advocating another meeting of lead-
ing colored citizens and this time, he
wants tham to meet in tho city of
Now York September 18 to 20, 1917 at
Mother Zion Church, where the ses-
sions of the real National Race Con-
ress and Bqual Rights League will
be held. President Byron Gunner will
be in chargo. Colored citizens are
urged to send delegates to this mect-
ing.
Mr. Trotter's plea is a strong one
And conditions now, so far as we are
‘concerned are chaotic. The recent ar-
Test and indictment of thirty-four
colored soldiers, who were on guard
duty at Camp Logen at Houston,
“Texas and the prospect of their sum-
mary, trial by a drum-head court-mar-
‘tial \ Potumnas, New Moxico, where
thoy rlay bé taken out at any mo-
Ment and shot before sun-riso, accen-
tuates the situation,
Tho holding of this inoeting will
rosult In muth good, if it is conduct-
‘ed along conservative lines and if the
management will sce to it that no
step is taken in conflict with law or
Yn violation of any of the multitud!-
nous orders now being sent out by the
Vepartment of Justice at Washington.
‘Woe are having a hard time of it now
and this country is on the verge of
Sroat internal events. We hope that
Editor Trotter and his friends may
succeed with the meeting and should
we be able to so arrange our affairs
shall take pleasuro in being on the
ground to assist in making tho af
fair a great success. We need to pray
and confer with each other and t
confer with each other and pray. »
THAT SIXTKEN YPAR OLD ROY.
They electrocuted Atbert Barrett
at the Virginia Penitentiary, Friday
morning, August 31, 1917 and thus
rang down tho curtain on one of tho
individuals implicated in the killing
of W. %. Roach, tho white farmer.
‘This was done as much to appeaso pub-
He sentiment in the county fron which
ho hatled as anything else. Barrett was
an industrious’ citizon. Io had pur.
chasell a farm mutes and ho had a de.
voted wife and a sixteen year old boy,
who ts now behind the bars. In the
sumo institution, Barrett had a good
reputation and If he had ever before
taken his neighbor's goods, the court:
house record do not show it.
Roach charged him with taking a
load of his wheat from his farm and
ho alleged that he tracked the wagon
wheels (o Barrett's premises. Barrett
returned to Roach the quantity of
wheat alleged to have been taken
and it is in the testimony that ho
offered to pay him. Roach insisted
upon turning hin over to the county
authorities and proceeded to arrest
Barrett upon his own premises with
out the authority of law. He sent a
Mr. Collins to secure a warrant for
Barrett and in the meantime stood
guard over this colored man on the
colored man's own premises.
Barrett ran away from Roach and
Koach pursued him, Barrett stumb-
Ing over a pile of brush fell and
Keoach got on him and was choking
him, when Warrett called on his sfx.
teen year old son, Aubroy for belp.
Aubrey came to his father's ald with
a stick and he dealt Roach a terrible
blow, which fractured Uhe skull, ‘the
two hid the body in anter to give
them Lime to leave the neighborhood
and they made their eseape, being ar
rested near Lynchburg. Attorney W.
1, Laneaster of Farmville represent
cd the prisoners, He protested against
tha ruling of the Court and upon
seeiig that the case was hopeless
withdrew from the boy's defense,
Teaving him without counsel.
Helpless and atone, Judge Hundiey
over hig own signature admits that
ho tried (js boy, who was without
counsel and that ho sentenced him to
be electrocuted. Attorney — Laneaster
Rave as his reason for not represent
ing the boy, that he felt that he could
not eocure for him that justlee to
Which he was entitled, It has been
shown, despite His Honor, Judge
Hundiey’s atatament to the coutrary
that he was without any diseretion
in the matter, that le could Inve sent
this boy to a reformatory he being
under the age limit, eighteen. years
Being the number et sears speeitied
in the Virginia statute.
‘The only redeeming feature about
the whole matter is the fet that Vir-
Kinians came to the reseue of this
helpless, sobbing, frightened black ur-
chin, who had in’ a time of dire dis
tress rallied to the ald of his father.
Yqn may say what you will, but to our
mind, he needs no reformatien, Let
Us spose that the color of the par-
ties in this controversy could he re-
Vorsed, What if Roach had heen a
colored man and Barrett a white one?
Would not Aubrey Barrett have been
hailed as a hero, instead of now he-
70x witha tho ghaesw 9° the elocteie
chair, where Wis wuortunate tacher
has already paid the penalty for his
hinsty action?
It is a sad story, Tt has aroused
{no latent feeling of sympathy in the
White men of this commonwealth.
Numbers of white citizens have sign-
ed a petition to the Governor for the
Zommutation of the sentence of death.
We would to God that they had gono
a step further and released from
confinement one 1 the most remark-
ble children ot paternal fealty ever
in the history of any eommon-
wealth. IL may be that his Bxeellen-
cy, IL. C. Stuart, Goverucr of Virginia
may see iin Uhis light, Certain IU is
that he has been deeply moved by this
tragic happening and in the turmoil
of passing events may exercise his
vowers to the end that life imprison-
sent shall not be the portion of a do-
voted son, who went just a little too
far in executing Uke command of a
loving sather,
SUPERINTENDENT CHANDLER'S
REPORT,
‘We havo received a copy of the for:
ty-seventh annual report of the Su-
perintondent of the Richmond Public
Schools, Dr..J. A. G. Chandler. It is one
of the most exhaustive and accurate
reports o1 the kind that we have seen
any vhere in the United States, ‘There
is no feature of the sghool-work that
iy not statiqtically deserihed. ‘The
total enrollment of colored pupils for
the session 1915—16 was 7,843 in tho
Gay schools and 2,068 in the night
schools ‘The percent of school popu-
lation enrolled was 90.8 white and 83.6
colored. ‘The per cent. of daily atten-
ance in the colored schools was 94.3
and in the white sehools, 92.8. While
tne colored pupils stood higher in
attendance in the day schools, they
stood lower in the night schools. ‘Tho
ver cent. of attendance in the white
night schools was 91.7 and in the col-
ered 78.5.
The total amount paid white mates
Hin the aystom for one yenr, 191616
was ($102,417.72) one hundred and
two thousand, four hundred and sov
‘enteon dollars and seventy-two cents,
‘colored males ($12,420.28) — twelve
thousand, four hundred and thirty dot
lars and thrity-three cents, The tot
amount pald white females was ($321
644.44) three bundred and twenty-one
thousand, six hundred and forty-fous
dollars and forty-four cents; colored
tomalos ($74,126.32) soventy-four
thousand, one hundord and. twenty
tivo dollars and thirty-two conts, I
will be seen that colored teachers tr
{is elly recoive annually ($86,666.65)
ehty-six thousand, five hundred and
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
fifty-five dollars and sixty-five cents,
‘This amount Lan average Mont.
ly salary Of ($7,212, 97) seven thous.
and, two hundred and twelve dears
and ninety-cevon cents. If this amount
could be controtled/or segregated for
Just ene week in each month, the
vatue or the business that it would
sustain and nourish would be astonish-
ing. Superintendent Chandler in speak
ing of the compulsory education law
declares it to be in effectiveness ag to
enforcement, “a ropo of sand.” It
served though to increase the atten-
aance in the day schools to an unpre-
eedented extent. The humorous fea-
ture of the law is not set forth in
That the school facilities of Richmond
are Inadequate t oaccommodate the pu-
bils already cnrolled much less the
additional number that has been seck
{ig admission asa result of this com:
puisory law.
We congratulate Dr. Chandler and
his corp of workers upon the truly re
markable degree of efficiency as dis
ctosed by this. report,
WIXCILBSTUR NEWS NO'PES.
Winchester, Va., Sept, 2,—Mrs. J.
Jackson has returned from attending
the Missionary Baptist Association at
Kapneysvite, W.Va.
(Mr. MB. Cooke has been visiting
relatives and friends in Bethel and
Millwood.” Mr, Cooke lived in Mill
wood many yours and fs always stad
when an opportunity. prosents itself
for him to spend somo time there.
The people of Clarke are mostly
farmers and have fine. erops and
most of the best farms which are not
owned are managed by colored folks.
Mr. and Mrs. William Burrell, of
Nethel gave a birthday dinner’ on
Sunday last in honor of their daugh-
ter, Lillian.
On Monday evening, a german was
given at the Odd Wellows Hall in
Millwood, under the auspices of the
building committee and a nico time
was the order of tha day.
| Little Miss Willie Colston has. re-
turned (o Mt. Airy. She had been
the guest of Roy. and Mrs. B. Thomas
for some time,
Whilo in Clarke, Mr. Cooke visited
many pices of Interest. Among them,
Carter Hall, the home of the Bur!
rell’s; Red Gate, Page Brook, Sara-
toxa, Montana Hall, Spout Rui, Clay
Hil, Powhatan, Glenville, Mt. Airy
and found all of these large estates
principally worked and managed by
Alael. people.
A xood number of colored men in
that Seetfon have been drafted: for
the army and are making prepara-
tion to go.
On Sunday night an eloquent ser-
anon was preached by Elder Walker
Carter, of Winchester, in. the old
Gilleld Church, ‘This is one of the
oldest churehes for colored people in
the country and ts pastored by Rev.
Allen Williams,
‘he GU. O. of Odd Fellows has
a large membershtp, also the Houso-
hold of Ruth.
Miss Nan Fletchor is visiting in
Revryville,
Mrs, Estollo Han-of Baltimary ©
visiting: Miss Bottto Jackson on Souca
Market street.
‘The Watermelon Social given by
the Young Ladies of John Mann
Chureh, was quite a sieeess. It was
for the benefit of the stewards, Miss
Hild Jackson was chairman,
Rey. and Mrs, Read have returned
from Hall HHL accompanied by their
sister,
Mrs. James Strange, of Connells
ville, Pa. is visiting Mrs. Joseph’
Fleteler, on Main street.
Mrs. Mahugh Cooke spont. the week
ond with her brather and sister-in-law
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Robinson, on
the Valloy Pike,
Miss Bertha Hargrove has returyed
to New York from visiting Mr. and
Mra. Henry Potter, in Millwood. Miss
Hargrove is’ a sister of Mrs, Potter. |
WLORENOE NOTES.
Morence, 8. C., Sept. 2—Mr. Sam
Johnson, inspector for Kendell Lum.
bor Co,, of Donora, 8. C. has returned
to the inill with. mumber of laborers.
Rey. 1B. J. Frierson, pastor of
Goodville Baptist Church at Cades,
closed a successful revival recently.
Mr. and Mrs, Perry Garland, o!
Wilmington, N. C. havo just returned
from a pleasure trip North, visiting
Richmond, Va. Washington, D. ©.
and other points. Mr, @kriand is
porter on the Wilmington-Columbia
run.
Mrs, Bell Richard, of Tampa, Fla
has gone to St. Paul, Minn:
B. B. WEBSTER,
AMBURG NEWS.
Amburg, Va., August 31,—The Mt.
Bethel Association held its forty-first
session at Little Ark on August 28,
29 and 80, and had a very interesting
session. Among the great speakers
were Prof, Winston, of” Baltimore,
Md, and the great. ovangelist, Roy.
W." A. Banks of Washington, D. C.
‘Tho Ladies’ Missionary was highly
represented and had many interesting
roports.
My. S. N. Giles, of Winchoster, Va.
arrived home Tuesday morning after
spending fourteen hours on the boat,
He enjoyed his ride very much, On
‘Tuesday evening ho was the guost of
his sister, Mrs. John Burnett. On
Wednesday he took a morning walk
through his father's corn field and
found it one of tae largest crops on
the Potomac River and in the evening
‘he attended the association and lis.
toned to the fine educational sermon
preached dy Prof. Winston,
Mrs. Cora Bumbray has returned
from Washington, whoro sho has beon
spending some time visiting trionds
. The four Missos Honry spont. the
wook ond with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Archio Menry.
| Mrs. Hattie Lindsey, of Nowark,
‘N. J. spent the week of the 20th with
hor parents, Rey. and Mra. J.B. Giles
| Mr, and Mrs. James Myers have
roturhed to their home in Steclton
Pa,
Mr. Jool Giles has gone to Wash.
ington to spend somo timo with hi
brother, Wilsoh Giles,
Mr. James Smith has returned t¢
his home in Reading, Pa. after visit
[ine his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Smith
Crabbing and fishing aro vory fin
at Somerset Reach.
108 KILLED BY
GERMAN RAIDERS
Alrmen Bomberd.itish Naval
Base in Kent. *
BARRACKS “HIT BY BOMB
Saunton Composed of Six Planes
Dock Yard is ‘Undarhaged.
1a tho alr ratd 108 porson's were Kil
€d_and ninety-two wounded at Chat
ham, it is announced oMfelallg in Lon
don, :
All but one of the men killed were
fn the naval service, as were atl the
wounded except six.
Six alrplangs took part in the ratd
A despatel to the Star says that par
of the ‘naval bskracks was struck hy
& bomb, this causing the serfous los
of life,
The dock yard escaped damage. *
Phe official ammouncement. says:
“Lord French (commander of th
home forecs) reports that the air rel
was carried ont by about six cnem
airplanes, which proceeded up the
south bank of tho ‘Thames estuary t
Chatham, 5
“Rombs were dropped in the Isto o
Thanet and in the SheernessChethon
area betwen 1040 PLM. and 11.8
PLA. ‘Thero were no army essa tts
“Clviliaw casualties repartodyat pros
ent are: sikilletl, one: injured, six,
material damage was slfgkt? ou
machines wont up and” anthatreraf
guns came {nto action, but withon
Tesult.
“Tho seevotary of the adihfratty 1°
ports that tn the course of the al
rald the following casualties wor
caused to naval ratings: Killed, 107:
wounded, 86."
Chatham fs on the east bank of ti
Medway, thirty miles southeast 0!
Tondon. It is te seat of immense
military and naval establishments, jn
ebulng avast dock: yard, an arsenal
and extensive barracks,
The term naval ratings gpplies te
the grade of men on hoard ship, ust
aly those before the mast.
WELCOMES DRAFT MEN
Thosd Entering W. S. Service.
‘The soldiers of the — national
army were weleomed into the
nation’s Service by President Wélson
WIL A mossaxe of affectionate cont
dence and a prayer to God to keep and
gulde them.
The first soldiers for tho army raised
under tho draft law start from thelt
homos for the uriining eantonments on
wT “yg mening follows:
“The Who souse, Washington.
“You are undertaking a great duty
‘Tho heart of the whole country is with
you. Hyorything that you do will be
watched with the deepest Interest and
With tho Weopest solte}iute, not onl
by those who are near dnd dear to you
dnt by the whole nation besides. “For
this great war draws us all together
makes us all comrades ahd brothers
as all true Americans felt themselves
to bo when we first made good our na
Hional Independence. ‘The eyes of ali
the world will be upon you, deeause
you are in some special sense the sot
Giers of freedom. Tet it bo your pride,
therefore, to show all men overywhore
not only what good soldiers you are
but also what good men you are, keop
Ing yourselves fit und straight in every.
thing and pure and clean through and
through, *
“Let us set for ourselves a standard
so high that it will be a glory to live
np to It and add a new laurel to the
crown of America. My affectionate
confidence goes with you In evory bat:
tle and every test. God keep and
guide you!
ag a
SONG BOOKS FOR SOLDIERS
U. 8. Will Distribute Standard Military
Music.
As a means of stimulating mili
tary music rather than censoring
it, a standard song book to be
used th all branches of the service
wilt hossssued October 1, according to
announcement by the executive com:
mittee for the supervision of muste in
the army and navy.
Tho new book will contain songs
sultable for singing In camp and al
the front and will fit into the pockets
of a Khaki blouse,
It fs planned in all of the tratnine
camps to have mass,singing conducted
undor the Instruction of leaders. of
recognized ability. Orleinal songs are
to be encouraged and there will be
/biank space In the song books for new
airs,
John Alden Carpontor, the Chieacc
composer, wi!l devdte his time to the
standardizing tho music of the arm}
and navy bands,
British Casualtios 15:614 Far Week.
‘Tho British casualties — reporteg
in the ast weolt are 15 614
They are divided ag follows: Killed a1
died of wounds: OMicers, 364; mon
4880, ‘Wounded or missing: Omtcers
846; men, 10,524,
1000 Sheep Perish In Elre.
One, thousand sheep perished in a
forest fire Which cut them off in. the
mountains at the head of Rock Crock
Mont., according to reports received a!
headquarters of the United States for
est service,
British August Loss 59,811.
‘The total British casualties or
all the fronts reported in Aug
ust I 59,81, divided as fol
lows: Killed or dled of wounds—om
cers, 1278; men, 10,942, Wounded ov
‘misaing—oMeors, 4122; men, 48,469.
URBANNA YTEMS,
Urtanna, Sept. 3,—Walle cranking
the ongine of his gasoline boat, Mr.
Virginus ‘Thornton, Jr, had ils
arm badly damaged, he is much im-
proved at this writing, \
Mr. John Smith was seriously hurt
while working a saw mill last week.
Mr. and Mrs. W. 12. Green, — Miss
Fannie Perry and “Mr. Ghariie Bur-
rell_ dined with Mr. and Mrs, H.N.
Lockley last Sunday.
Mr. Sawood Burrell took a party of
young forks out for a straw ride last
Wednesday evening. ‘Those in the
party werg Messrs Charlie Burrell,
Roye Holmes, and Misses Fannie and
Lizzie Perry, Edith Miller and Coret-
ta Burrell. :
Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Carter are all
smiles. Mother and daughter doing
well.
Mr. Jeff Braxton is yet on the sick
list.
VISITORS ‘ro "TOWN.
A party of folks of Contre Cross,
¥ssex County, while on a pleasure trip
on the Rappahannock — last” Friday,
stepped in our town. ‘Those in the
party were Mdmoes, | Nettle Corbin,
Mattio Wheeler, Misses Lula Corbin’
Helen Corbin.” Clemic “Hilt, Rosa
Wheeler, Prucitla — Wheeler, and
Messrs Walter and Richard ‘Smith,
Logan Brown, ‘Thomas Corbin Joc
Watkins and ‘Aubrey Jones, after
Sewing the town and enjoying them
selves with those things the town
afford they left again for Centre Cross
by way of Bowlers Wht. They came
down on Mr, Wheeler's gasotine tayych
the "Mattio C."
BATCHELOR.
WANTS 'TO FIND TIM.
Tam very anxious to find the where
abouts, if he be still alive, or to tind
the address of his relatives, if ho is
dead, of William Seott, who till some
time in June of this year lived at 2495
1 Bist St. Cloveland, O.. with a Mrs
Fletcher. Sickness caused him to re
(urn to his home near Richmond and
he has not been heard from since.
P. 0" CONNELL,
BARA SEtk SH
Cleveland, 0.,
RONCEVERTE NEWS.
| Ronceverte, W. Va_, Sept. 2.—Rev.
LiL. Carpenter preached two able
sermons Sunday ‘
Misses Helen Woodby and Viviana
Burger spent Sunday in Alderson,
W. Va.
Mrs. T.. B. Johnson was a business
visitor in Hinton, W, Va
Rev. G. 1. Carter spent a few days
in Chartottesyillo, Va.
Rev. and Mre, 1. A, Carpenter, Mrs.
Mary ‘Brown, Mrs, Blancho Burks,
Miss Mary P."Johuson and Me. Marry
Lacy have returned from Charleston,
W.Va,
Mrs. Lizaio Brown, Mrs, Tala
Moore and son, Mrs, Henry Morton,
Mrs. Lula Peek and Miss Orlean
Sweoney have returned from Rieh-
mond, Va.
Mr, Clarence Miridge hag returned
from “AUantie City, N. J,
Mrs. Clarence Aiton is spending a
Cow alays With hor Mather... ceng.
ee ;
Let Cephas do your Renting: Omeo
585 1-2 North Second stroct. Telo:
phone, Randolph 688,
A CORRESPONDENCR counsR
PRUE OF ALL CHARGE
For Sunday School ‘Teachers and Of-
ficers Conducted by Rev, 8. N. Vass,
D. D. Box 444, Raleigh, N. ©.
The Sunday School that has not
trained teachers ts bohind the times.
Rev. S, N. Vass, D, D., is the only
man in the Negro race’ whose expe-
rience fits him to do this teacher
training work thoroughly, having hed
a quarter of a century experience on
tho field, and the American Baptist
Publication Society has kept him on
the fleld all these Years, and has now
turned over entirely to his supervi-
sion the work of training the teach-
ots of a whole raco by his travels and
oflice work. Write to him at Box 441
Raleigh, N. C., for further informa-
tion.
VIRGINIA—In the Clerk's Office of
tho Taw and Equity Court of tho
City of Richmond, the 28th day of
August, WIT 0 eee cece
IN VACATION.
CHARLES NELSON, ......Plaintift
against In Chancery
ANNIE NELSON, .......Dofendant
‘The object of this suit is to obtain
an absolute divorce from the bond of
matrimony by the plaintif’ from the
defondant on tho ground of desertion.
And an affidavit having beon mado
and filed that the defendant, Annto
Nelson is not a resident of the Stato
of Virginia; it is ordered that sho
appear hero within fifteen days after
the due publication of this ordor and
do what may bo necessary to protect
her interest horein.
Teste: LUTHER LIBBY, Clork.
A Copy,
Testo: LUTHER LIBBY, Clork,
J, HENRY CRUTCHFIELD, 'p. a.
VIFIGINIA—In the Clerk's Office of
the Law and Equity Court of the
City of Richmond, tho 5th day of
September, 1917.
IN VACATION.
MARYLAND BARBER,.... Plaintiff
against In Chancery
SYBELIA BARBER. .....Detendant
‘ThE object of this sult ts to obtain
an absolute divorce from the bond of
matrimony by the plaintiff from tho
defondant, on the ground of deser-
tion.
And an affidavit having been made
and filed that the dofendant, Sybella
Barber is not a resident of the State
of Virginia, it is ordered that sho ap-
pear here within fifteen days after
tho due publication of this order and
do what may bo necessary to protect
her Interest herein.
Teste: LYTHDER LIBBY, Clerk.
A Copy,
| Teste: LUTHER LIBBY, Clerk.
J. HENRY CRUPCIFIBLD,{p, q.
‘ HOUSES FOR SALE
Private Papers Kept in Round Door Burglar Proof
Vaults. begal ‘apers Acknowledged Before
Notary Public. Savings Accounts Solicited
SAFETY: DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. APPLY
MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK
NORTHWEST CORNER THIRD AND CLAY STS.
John Mitchell, Jr., President >
BALTIMORE BY BOAT.
The most delightful Water Trip in America.
YORK RIVER LINE
. New Steamers.
Fares Between Richmond and Baltimore:
$3.00 2.25 5.00
First-class Second-class Fi-st-class
One Way One Way Round-Trip.
STATEROOMS, with Two Berths, $1.25
Leave Richmond 5:10 P. M. Arrive Baltimore 7 A, M.
For Information and Tickets, Apply to
MAGRUDER DENT, Division Passenger Agent,
907 E. Main St, Richmond, Va. Phone, Madison 272
MAKING OUR BLOOD BOIL
oe
Belgian Girls Forced to Work In
Mines Operated by Germans,
eer i Tee]
Sc
en tak
wee OY
BR. CORN ahs deal
Ba 00 AES Say
RARE, SO ARRAY CAP SY
Heese MR RR Al
Beas oN eg
By) UR Gates ees
Sect Lp Red
BSG ie Tey
Bae Aone ee sprouy
RAO aR 0)
Pace tel Khaini
Se a aah.
ROR Toc eer ee tS
ae Se Mes
we wee me BOR |
FOR Rag PS
| eae aa
ARE PEO |
a eg a % se
ae nao «pane
ee
PO ia
Photo by American Press Assoclation,
This is one reason why Americar
Belgian gine: vaptarod iy the. enemy
are Toreed to work in coal nlines, Wha
other tortures they have suffered prob
ably will never be known,
Buried Alive 12 Hours,
Canght in a rush of coal while
starting batteries at the Suffolk
mino at Mahanoy City, Pa., Frank Roo-
noy, twenty-three, was carried 100 feet
down a chute and held prisoner twelve
hours. Alarge rock hold back the
mass from erushing him.
CORK te Manin. Bae Menee
Six thousand engineers and 4000 Ia
borers are soon to leave for France.
‘This was learned ofeially. A greater
number will follow: shortly.
| GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA—FLOUR — Pirm,
Steaent, $10G10.905 chty mills, $18.2
| RYE. FLOUR—Quiet; per barrel,
$9.25@10,
Wita‘tT—Nominal,
9, CONN—Qniet; No.2 yellow, $1.95@
“OATS—Quiet; No. 2 white, 72@73¢
POULPHY Live alcady: Nhens 2344
2Te; old roosters, 18@ 1c. “Dressed
steady: choice fowls, 28e; old roosters,
ic.
BUTTER — Firm; faney ercamery,
46e per ib.
TGS — Firm: selected, s0@z!ai
nearby, 42c; western, 42c,
ggg TO seh RY
1917 SEPYEMBER 1917
[SUN Jet0N] TUE |W:2b|7HU] FRISAT]
Pre Tit
2 bey 4 516 Le
9 LOMAS 1415
| IGN718 19202122
01241252027 282!
R. E. Sturdivant's
RELIABLE LODGING HOUSES,
ASHO-A PARAS & 49, POPLAR ST,
PHLLADELHIA, PA,
Boll 'Phone Poplar 6215
Madame Sturdivants
OFFICE OF EMPLOYMENT.
Select. Holy Furnished—Wo Furnish
Employment to All Classes—
Colored and White.
ee EEG
The Negro Agricul-
itural ® | ‘hnical
College of North
Carolina
(Formerly the Agricultural and
Mechanical College for the
Colored Race)
¥ GREENSBORO, N. CAROLINA
SUMMER SCHOOL
For Progressive Teachers
SEVENTEENTH Annuat Session
JUNE 26—JULY 20, 1916
Rasy terms, practical courvs,
4 pleasant surroundings, For
terms or catalog, address Dr,
8. B. Jones, Director, Sead 1
and secure lodging in advance,
JAS. B. DUDLEY, President
Greensboro, N. 0,
When our collector calls on you
don’t fail to, pay him. Your sub:
seription is duo, pay it now.
The East India
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y If you are bothered
swith Falling Hair, Dan-
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of Kast Inia Halt Grower. ‘The
remedy contains medical proper.
ties that go to tho roots of the
Hair, stimulate tho skin, helping
Nature to do jts work. Leaves the
Hair Soft and Silky. Perfumed
with a balm of a thousand flowerg.
Tho best known remedy fot heavy
and beautiful Black eyebrows, also
Restores Gray Hair to its Natural
Color Can bo used with Hot
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Price Sent by Mail, 860
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FOUR
REC PLANET
Published every atuday by John Mitchell, Jr., at 311 N. 4th Street, Richmond, Virginia.
All communications intended for publication should be sent so as to reach us by Wednesday.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond Virginia, as second-class matter.
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1917
BISHOP SMITH IS EMPHATIC.
We have expressed the opinion time and again that ultimately we would find the white people of the Southland speaking in our defense and the white people of the North assailing us. The day is rapidly approaching when this anomalous situation will take place and we see or think we see that the time is at hand. In discussing the affair at Houston, Texas, where a clash between the local police force and members of the United States Army took place, the white press of this city and in the Southland was unusually conservative in dealing with this matter.
Even newspapers in Texas were much more conservative than had been generally supposed. In Detroit, Michigan, however the very able Bishop C. S. Smith of the African Methodist Episcopal Church found it necessary to take issue with the Detroit Pros and to criticise severely the drastic tone of an editorial appearing in the issue of that journal of August 25, 1917. Bishop Smith, in his concluding remarks says:
The fact is the white race by precipitating a world-war has turned man's earthly abode into a veritable hell, and there is no telling when the fires of damnation will be extinguished or what elements will be consumed while they are raging. If plain speaking is in order, let both sides be heard.
This is a telling rebuke to a northern Negro-hater.
WHERE man of the North rarely ever deal with the colored folks' question without making a worse mess of it. As to the southern white folks, there are two classes of them; one being against us and the other for us and both sides appearing to the northern observer as being against us
EDITOR TROTTER'S CALL
Editor William Monroe Trotter is advocating another meeting of leading colored citizens and this time, he wants them to meet in the city of New York September 18 to 20, 1917 at Mother Zion Church, where the sessions of the real National Race Congress and Equal Rights League will be held. President Byron Gunner will be in charge. Colored citizens are urged to send delegates to this meeting.
Mr. Trotter's plea is a strong one and conditions now, so far as we are concerned are chaotic. The recent arrest and indictment of thirty-four colored soldiers, who were on guard duty at Camp Logan at Houston, Texas and the prospect of their summary trial by a drum-head court-martial at Columbus, New Mexico, where they may be taken out at any moment and shot before sun-rise, accentuates the situation.
The holding of this meeting will result in much good, if it is conducted along conservative lines and if the management will see to it that no step is taken in conflict with law or in violation of any of the multitudinous orders now being sent out by the Department of Justice at Washington. We are having a hard time of it now and this country is on the verge of great internal events. We hope that Editor Trotter and his friends may succeed with the meeting and should we be able to so arrange our affairs shall take pleasure in being on the ground to assist in making the affair a great success. We need to pray and confer with each other and to confer with each other and pray.
THAT SIXTEEN YEAR OLD BOY.
They electrocuted Albert Barrett at the Virginia Penitentiary, Friday morning, August 31, 1917 and thus rang down the curtain on one of the individuals implicated in the killing of W. T. Roach, the white farmer. This was done as much to appease public sentiment in the county from which he hailed as anything else. Barrett was an industrious citizen. He had purchased a farm mules and he had a de-
voted wife and a sixteen year old boy, who is now behind the bars in the same institution. Barrett had a good reputation and if he had ever before taken his neighbor's goods, the court-house records do not show it. Roach charged him with taking a load of his wheat from his farm and he alleged that he tracked the wagon wheels to Barrett's premises. Barrett returned to Roach the quantity of wheat alleged to have been taken and it is in the testimony that he offered to pay him. Roach insisted upon turning him over to the county authorities and proceeded to arrest Barrett upon his own premises with out the authority of law. He sent a Mr. Collins to secure a warrant for Barrett and in the meantime stood guard over this colored man on the colored man's own premises.
Barrett ran away from Roach and Roach pursued him. Barrett stumbling over a pile of brush fall and Roach got on him and was choking him, when Barrett called on his sixteen year old son, Aubrey for help. Aubrey came to his father's aid with a stick and he dealt Roach a terrible blow, which fractured the skull. The two hid the body in order to give them time to leave the neighborhood and they made their escape, being arrested near Lynchburg. Attorney W. L. Lancaster of Farmville represented the prisoners. He protested against the ruling of the Court and upon seeing that the case was hopeless withdrew from the boy's defense, leaving him without counsel.
Helpless and alone, Judge Hundley over his own signature admits that he tried thjs boy, who was without counsel and that he sentenced him to be electrocuted. Attorney Lancaster gave as his reason for not representing the boy, that he felt that he could not accure for him that justice to which he was entitled. It has been shown, despite His Honor, Judge Hundley's statement to the courtrion that he was without any discretion in the matter, that he could have sent this boy to a reformatory he being under the age limit, eighteen years being the number of years specified in the Virginia statute.
The only redeeming feature about the whole matter is the fact that Virginia came to the rescue of this helpless, sobbing, frightened black urchin, who had in a time of dire distress rallied to the add of his father. You may say what you will, but to our mind, he needs no reformation. Let us suppose that the color of the parties in this controversy could be reversed. What if Roach had been a colored man and Barrett a white one? Would not Aubrey Barrett have been hailed as a hero, instead of now heling within the shadow of the electric chair, where his unfortunate father has already paid the penalty for his histic action?
It is a sad story. It has aroused the latent feeling of sympathy in the white men of this commonwealth. Numbers of white citizens have signed a petition to the Governor for the summutation of the sentence of death. We would to God that they had gone a step further and released from confinement one if the most remarkable children of paternal fealty ever in the history of any commonwealth. It may be that his Excellency, H. C. Stint, Governor of Virginia may see it in this light. Certain it is that he has been deeply moved by this tragic happening and in the turmoil of passing events may exercise his powers to the end that life imprisonment shall not be the portion of a devoted son, who went just a little too far in executing the command of a loving father.
SUPERINTENDENT CHANDLER'S REPORT
We have received a copy of the forty-seventh annual report of the Superintendent of the Richmond Public Schools, Dr. J. A. C. Chandler. It is one of the most exhaustive and accurate reports of the kind that we have seen any where in the United States. There is no feature of the school-work that is not statistically described. The total enrollment of colored pupils for the session 1915—16 was 7,843 in the day schools and 2,068 in the night schools. The percent of school population enrolled was 90.8 white and 83.6 colored. The per cent. of daily attendance in the colored schools was 94.3 and in the white schools, 92.8. While the colored pupils stood higher in attendance in the day schools, they stood lower in the night schools. The per cent. of attendance in the white night schools was 91.7 and in the colored 78.5.
The total amount paid white males
in the system for one year, 1915-16,
was ($102,417.72) one hundred and
two thousand, four hundred and seventeen dollars and seventy-two cents,
colored males ($12,430.33) twelve
thousand, four hundred and thirty-dollars and thirty-three cents. The total
amount paid white females was ($321,
644.44) three hundred and twenty-one
thousand, six hundred and forty-four
dollars and forty-four cents; colored
females ($74,125.32) seventy-four
thousand, one hundred and twenty-
five dollars and thirty-two cents. It
will be seen that colored teachers in
this city receive annually ($86,555.65).
Eighty-six thousand, five hundred and
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
fifty-five dollars and sixty-five cents. This amount I an average monthly salary of (7,212.97) seven thousand, two hundred and twelve dollars and ninety-seven cents. If this amount could be controlled or segregated for just one week in each month, the value of the business that it would sustain and nourish would be astonishing. Superintendent Chandler in speaking of the compulsory education law declares it to be in effectiveness as to enforcement, "a rope of sand." It served though to increase the attendance in the day schools to an unprecedented extent. The humorous feature of the law is not set forth in that the school facilities of Richmond are inadequate t accommodate the pupils already enrolled much less the additional number that has been seeking admission as a result of this compulsory law.
We congratulate Dr. Chandler and his corp of workers upon the truly remarkable degree of efficiency as disclosed by this report.
WINCHESTER NEWS NOTES.
Winchester, Va., Sept. 2.—Mrs. J. Jackson has returned from attending the Missionary Baptist Association at Kernesville, W. Va.
Mr. M. B. Cooke has been visiting relatives and friends in Bethel and Millwood. Mr. Cooke lived in Millwood many years and is always glad when an opportunity presents itself for him to spend some time there.
The people of Clarke are mostly farmers and have fine crops and most of the best farms which are not owned are managed by colored folks. Mr. and Mrs. William Burrell, of Bethel gave a birthday dinner on Sunday last in honor of their daughter, Lillian.
On Monday evening, a german was given at the Odd Fellows Hall in Millwood, under the auspices of the building committee and a nice time was the order of the day.
Little Miss Willie Colston has returned to Mt. Airy. She had been the guest of Rev. and Mrs. B. Thomas for some time.
While in Clarke, Mr. Cook visited many places of interest. Among them, Carter Hall, the home of the Burrell's; Red Gate, Page Brook, Sarnatoga, Montana Hall, Spout Run, Clay Hill, Powhatan, Glennville, Mt. Airy and found all of these large estates principally worked and managed by black people.
A good number of colored men in that section have been drafted for the army and are making preparation to go.
On Sunday night an eloquent sermon was preached by Elder Walker Carter, or Winchester, in the old Giffield Church. This is one of the oldest churches for colored people in the country and is pastored by Rev. Allen Williams.
The G. U. O. of Odd Fellows has a large membership, also the Household of Ruth.
Miss Nan Fletcher is visiting in Berryville.
Mrs Estelle Hall of Baltimore, is visiting Miss Bettie Jackson on South Market street.
The Watermelon Social given by the Young Ladies of John Mann Church, was quite a success. It was for the benefit of the stewards. Miss Hild Jackson was chairman. Rev, and Mrs Read have returned from Hall Hill accompanied by their sister. Mrs. James Strange, of Connellsville, Pa. is visiting Mrs. Joseph Fletcher, on Main street. Mrs. Mahhung Cooke spent the week end with her brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Howard Robinson, on the Valley Pike. Miss Bertha Hargrove has returned to New York from visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Potter, in Millwood. Miss Hargrove is a sister of Mrs Potter.
FLORENCE NOTES.
Florence, S. C., Sept. 2.—Mr. Sam Johnson, inspector for Kendall Lumber Co., of Donora, S. C. has returned to the mill with a number of laborers. Rev. B. J. Frierson, pastor of Goodville Baptist Church at Cades, closed a successful revival recently. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Garland, of Wilmington, N. C. have just returned from a pleasure trip North, visiting Richmond, Va. Washington, D. C. and other points. Mr. Carland is porter on the Wilmington-Columbia run. Mrs. Bell Richard, of Tampa, Fla. has gone to St. Paul, Minn.
AMBURG NEWS.
Amburg, Va., August 31.—The Mt. Bethel Association held its forty-first session at Little Ark on August 28, 29 and 30, and had a very interesting session. Among the great speakers were Prof. Winston, of Baltimore, Md, and the great evangelist, Rev. W. A. Banks of Washington, D. C.
The Ladies' Missionary was highly represented and had many interesting reports.
Mr. S. N. Giles, of Winchester, Va. arrived home Tuesday morning after spending fourteen hours on the boat, he enjoyed his ride very much. On Tuesday evening he was the guest of his sister, Mrs. John Burnett. On Wednesday he took a morning walk through his father's corn field and found it one of the largest crops on the Potomac River and in the evening he attended the association and listened to the fine educational sermon preached by Prof. Winston.
Mrs. Cora Bumbray has returned from Washington, where she has been spending some time visiting friends.
The four Misses Henry spent the week end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Henry.
Mrs. Hattie Lindsey, of Newark, N. J. spent the week of the 20th with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. E. Giles. Mr. and Mrs. James Myers have returned to their home in Steclton, Pa.
Mr. Jool Giles has gone to Washington to spend some time with his brother, Wilson Giles. Mr. James Smith has returned to his home in Reading, Pa. after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Crabbing and fishing are vory fine at Somerset Beach.
108 KILLED BY GERMAN RAIDERS
BARRACKS HIT BY BOMB
108 Naval Men Were Victims of Air Squadron Composed of Six Planes Dock Yard is Undamaged.
In the air raid 108 persons were killed and ninety-two wounded at Chatham, it is announced officially in London.
All but one of the men killed were in the naval service, as were all the wounded except six.
Six airplanes took part in the raid. A despatch to the Star says that part of the naval barracks was struck by a bomb, this causing the serious loss of life.
The dock air escaped damage.
The official announcement says:
"Lord French (commander of the home force) reports that the air raid was carried out by about six enemy airplanes, which proceeded up the south bank of the Thames estuary to Chatham.
"Bombs were dropped in the Isle of Thanet and in the Sheerness Christina area between 10.40 P. M. and 11.20 P. M. There were no army casualties." "Civilian casualties reported at present are: Killed, one injured, six. The material damage was slight." Our machines went up and anti-aircraft guns came into action, but without result.
"The secretary of the admiralty reports that in the course of the air raid the following casualties were caused to naval ratings: Killed, 107; wounded, 86."
Chatham is on the east bank of the Medway, thirty miles southeast of London. It is the seat of immense military and naval establishments, including a vast dock yard, an arsenal and extensive barracks.
The term naval ratings applies to the grade of men on board ship, usually those before the mast.
WELCOMES DRAFT MEN
President Wjson, With Prayer, Greete
Those Entering U. S. Service.
Those Entering O. S. Service.
The soldiers of the national army were welcomed into the nation's service by President Wilson with a message of affectionate confidence and a prayer to God to keep and guide them.
The first soldiers for the army raised under the draft law start from their homes for the training cantonments or Welfare message follows:
The We Trust, Washington.
"You are undertaking a great duty. The heart of the whole country is with you. Everything that you do will be watched with the deepest interest and with the deepest solicitude, not only by those who are near and dear to you but by the whole nation besides. For this great war draws us all together, makes us all comrades and brothers as all true Americans felt themselves to be when we first made good our national independence. The eyes of all the world will be upon you, because you are in some special sense the soldiers of freedom. Let it be your pride therefore, to show all men everywhere not only what good soldiers you are but also what good men you are, keeping yourselves fit and straight in everything and pure and clean through and through.
"Let us set for ourselves a standard so high that it will be a glory to live up to it and add a new laurel to the crown of America. My affectionate confidence goes with you in every battle and every test. God keep and guide you!
"WOODROW WILSON"
SONG BOOKS FOR SOLDIERS
U. S. Will Distribute Standard Military
Music.
As a means of stimulating military music rather than censoring it, a standard song book to be used in all branches of the service will be issued October 1, according to announcement by the executive committee for the supervision of music in the army and navy.
The new book will contain songs suitable for singing in camp and at the front and will fit into the pockets of a khaki blouse.
It is planned in all of the training camps to have mass singing conducted under the instruction of leaders of recognized ability. Original songs are to be encouraged and there will be blank space in the song books for new airs.
John Alden Carpontor, the Chicago composer, will deviate his time to the standardizing the music of the army and navy bands.
British Casualties 15:614 For Week.
The British casualties reported
in the last week are 15 614
They are divided as follows: Killed or
died of wounds: Officers, 364; men
3880. Wounded or missing: Officers
846; men, 10,524.
1000 Sheep Perish In Fire
One, thousand sheep perished in a forest fire which cut them off in the mountains at the head of Rock Creek Mont., according to reports received as headquarters of the United States for est service.
British August Loss 59,811.
The total british casualties on all the fronts reported in August is 59,811, divided as follows: Killed or died of wounds—officers, 1278; men, 10,942. Wounded or missing—officers, 4122; men, 48,469.
URBANNA ITEMS.
Uttanna, Sept. 3.—Wille cranking the engine of his gasoline beat, Mr. Virginus Thornton, Jr., had his arm badly damaged, he is much improved at this writing.
Mr. John Smith was seriously hurt while working a saw mill last week.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Green, Miss Fannie Perry and Mr. Charlie Burrell dined with Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Lockley last Sunday.
Mr. Sawood Burrell took a party of young folks out for a straw ride last Wednesday evening. Those in the party were Messrs Charlie Burrell, Roye Holmes, and Misses Fannie and Lizzie Perry, Edith Miller and Coretta Burrell.
Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Carter are all smiles. Mother and daughter doing well.
Mr. Jeff Braxton is yet on the sick list.
A party of folks of Centre Cross, Essex County, while on a pleasure trip on the Rappahannock last Friday, stopped in our town. Those in the party were Mdunes, Nettle Corbin, Mattie Wheeler, Misses Lula Corbin, Helen Corbin, Clemie Hill, Rosa Wheeler, Druncella Wheeler, and Messrs Walter and Richard Smith, Logan Brown, Thomas Corbin Joe Watkins and Aubrey Jones, after viewing the town and enjoying them selves with those things the town afford they left again for Centre Cross by way of Bowlers Whf. They came down on Mr. Wheeler's gasoline launch the "Mattie C."
BATCHELOR
WANTS TO FIND HIM
I am very anxious to find the where
abouts, if he he still alive, or to find
the address of his relatives, if he is
dead, of William Scott, who till some
time in June of this year lived at 2195
E. 31st St. Cleveland, O., with a Mrs.
Mletcher. Sickness caused him to
return to his home near Richmond and
he has not been heard from since.
P. O' CONNELL.
2334 E. 855 A. F.
Cleveland, O.
RONCEVERTE NEWS.
Ronceverte, W. Va, Sept. 2.—Rev. L. H. Carpenter preached two able sermons Sunday.
Misses Helen Woodby and Viviana Burger spent Sunday in Alderson, W. Va.
Mrs. L. B. Johnson was a business visitor in Hinton, W. Va.
Rev. G. H. Carter spent a few days in Charlottesville, Va.
in Charlottesville, Va.
Rev. and Mrs. L. A. Carpenter, Mrs.
Mary Brown, Mrs. Blanche Burks,
Miss Mary E. Johnson and Mr. Harry
Lacey have returned from Charleston,
W. Va.
Mrs. Lizzie Brown, Mrs. Lula
Moore and son, Mrs. Henry Morton,
Mrs. Lula Peck and Miss Orlean
Sweeney have returned from Rich-
mond, Va.
Mr. Clarence Elridge has returned
from Atlantic City, N. J.
Mrs. Clarence Allen is spending a
day with her mother
Let Cephas do your Renting: Office
535 1-2 North Second street. Tele-
phone. Randolph 588
A CORRESPONDENCE COURSE
FREE OF ALL CHARGE
For Sunday School Teachers and Officers Conducted by Rev. S. N. Vass, D. D. Box 441, Raleigh, N. C.
The Sunday School that has not trained teachers is behind the times. Rev. S. N. Vass, D. D., is the only man in the Negro race whose experience fits him to do this teacher training work thoroughly, having had a quarter of a century experience on the field, and the American Baptist Publication Society has kept him on the field all these years, and has now turned over entirely to his supervision the work of training the teachers of a whole race by his travels and office work. Write to him at Box 441 Raleigh, N. C., for further information.
VIRGINIA—In the Clerk's Office of the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond, the 5th day of September, 1917.
IN VACATION.
MARYLAND BARBER....Plaintiff against
In Chancery
SYBELIA BARBER....Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain an absolute divorce from the bond of matrimony by the plaintiff from the defendant, on the ground of desertion.
And an affidavit having been made and filed that the defendant, Sybela Barber is not a resident of the State of Virginia, it is ordered that she appear here within fifteen days after the due publication of this order and do what may be necessary to protect her interest herein.
Teste: LUTHER LIBBY, Clerk.
A Copy:
Teste: LUTHER LIBBY, Clerk.
J. HENRY CRUPCFIELD, p. q.
MONEY LOANED ON REAL ESTATE
Private Papers Kept in Round Door Burglar Proof Vaults. Legal Papers Acknowledged Before Notary Public. Savings Accounts Solicited
John Mitchell, Jr., President
BALTIMORE BY BOAT.
The most delightful W
YORK RIVER
New S
Fares Between Rich
$3.00 2.
The most delightful Water Trip in America YORK RIVER LINE New Steamers.
STATEROOMS, wi
Leave Richmond 5:10 P. M.
For Information and Tickets
MAGRUDER DENT, D
907 E. Main St. Richmond
MAKING OUR BLOOD BOIL
STATEROOMS, with Two Berths, $1.25
Leave Richmond 5:10 P. M. Arrive Baltimore 7 A. M.
For Information and Tickets, Apply to
MAGRUDER DENT, Division Passenger Agent.
907 E. Main St., Richmond, Va. Phone: Madison 272
Belgian Girls Forced to Work in Mines Operated by Germans.
1
Photo by American Press Association.
This is one reason why American troops are fighting in France. These British troops, captured by the enemy, are forced to retreat. What other tortures they have suffered probably will never be known.
Buried Alive 12 Hours
Caught in a rush of coal while starling batteries at the Suffolk mine at Mahanoy City, Pa., Frank Rooney, twenty-three, was carried 100 feet down a chute and held prisoner twelve hours. Alarge rock held back the mass from crushing him.
Six thousand engineers and 4000 laborers are soon to leave for France. This was learned officially. A greater number will follow shortly.
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA,-- FLOUR -- Firm,
Straight, $10@10.50; city mills, $13.25
@13.50;
RYE FLOUR—Quiet; per barrel,
$2.5@10.
WHEAT—Nominal.
CORN—Quiet; No. 2 yellow, $1.95@
2.
OATS—Quiet; No. 2 white, 72@73@
POULTRY—Live steady; hens 25@
27@ old roosters, 18@19@ Dressed
steady; cowl owls, 28c; old roosters,
26c.
BUTTER — Firm; fancy creamery,
46c per lb.
EGGS — Firm; selected, 50@$1c;
nearby, 42c; western, 42c.
CHICAGO — HOGS — Week. Buik
$17.40@ 18.45; Light. $16.75@ 18.50;
miked. $16.70@ 18.60; heavy. $16.60@
18.55; rough. $16.60@ 16.90.
CATTLE. Generally 25c to 50c low
or high last week.
SHERI. Steady to 25c lower. Cat
the top. 16.75; sheep. $11.40; lambs.
$17.15.
1917 SEPTEMBER 1917
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1
2 5 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 30 24 25 26 27 28 29
First-class One Way
Water Trip in America.
VER LINE
reamers.
Amond and Baltimore:
.25 5.00
Second-class
First-class
E Way
Round-Trip.
Both Two Berths, $1.25
Arrive Baltimore 7 A. M.
Apply to
Division Passenger Agent.
Va. Phone, Madison 272
R. E. Sturdivant's
RELIABLE LODGING HOUSES.
1310-41-42-43 & 49, POPLAR ST.
PHILADELIHA, PA.
Bell Phone Poplar 6245
Madame Sturdivants
OFFICE OF EMPLOYMENT.
Select Help Furnished—We Furnish
Employment to All Classes—
Colored and White.
The Negro Agricultural & Technical College of North Carolina
(Formerly the Agricultural and Mechanical College for the Colored Race)
GREENSBORO, N. CAROLINA
SUMMER SCHOOL
For Progressive Teachers
SEVENTEENTH Annual Session
JUNE 20—JULY 20, 1916
Easy terms, practical courses, pleasant surroundings. For terms or catalog, address Dr. S. B. Jones, Director. Send $1 and secure lodging in advance.
JAS. B. DUDLEY, President
Greensboro, N. C.
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oN
SLAVS AND GUNS
CAPTURED AT RIGA
German Warships Rain Shes
on Fleeing Russians,
GITY AFIRE AT MANY POINTS
Prince Leopolt’s Troops —_Breal
Through Foe's Line in the Grea
Jaegel District,
See. ee |
Several thousands of Russians were
takon prisoners by the Germans it
thelr drive in the Rigi wogion, culmin
ating in the capture of thet strong
hold. |
In addition more than 150 guns were
taken by Ure German forces in the
Great Jaegel river district. This in
formation was contained in an officts
Announcement from Berlin, whleh alse
sald that the city was on fire at many
points,
‘Tho Russhan war office sald the Rus
stan retiroment was belng continue
along the coast in a northoasterly al
roction anit that hostil@ ‘warships are
shelling the Riga coast. & the Uskull
istrict, the statemeny adds, the Rus.
slans aro retiring northward, having
deen dislodged by the Germans in the
Great Jaegel river region.
The Russian war oflice announce
mont follows:
“In the direction of Riga .on Mon
Aay our troops evacuated the town ot
Riga and blew up behind them the
fortifications at the mouth af. the
Dvina and bridges across the Dvina
The rotirement ts hetng continned
along the coast in a northeasterly di
roctian. ‘Phe villages of Kalli, about
twenty-seven miles south of Pernas
(100 miles north of Riza), Matnashtn
Koshoul and Pidzo, on the Gulf of Riga
coust, are being shelled by enemy
ships,
“In tho direction of Uxkull on Mon
day the Germans continued to doveloy
thelr success in a northerly direction
toward the Valenrode-Rakft.rond and
fn a northeasterly “direction, ‘Towards
evening the enemy dislodged owt
troops in the Great Jackel region, pon:
etrating our positions on a front of
thirteen versts (about nine mites) In
tho roglon of Valonrode and occupying
{t. Our troops are rettring northward
following tho enemy's — ponetration
measures were taken for tho readjust
mont of our front.
“Rumanian front: Ir the direction
of Czernowllz, in the region south of
tho village of Slobedzola, enemy at
tacks wero repulsed with Heavy otemy
doses. ‘There were fusillades on the
romalnder of tho front.”
The German army headquarters an
nouncement follows:
“Army group of Prince T.eopold:
After two days of Aghting the army
under the leadership of Infantry Gon
eral yon Hutler took frem the west
and southeast the city of Riga, which
was ablaze at many points, Our ex
perlenced fighters everywhere broke
down the Russian resistaneo and tp
an Impotuous forward thrust overcame
every obstacle presented by the woods
and marshes. ‘The Russians very
hurriedly evacuated thelr _oxtensive
bridgehead west of the Dvina and
Riga, and our divisions now stand be
fore the mouth of the Dvina,
{Dense masses of troops are crowd
ing along the roads from Riga in a
northeasterly direction in both day
‘and night marehes. *
“South of the great road and on
both sides of the Great IJnogel strone
Russian forcos wore thrown against
‘our troops In desperate and sanguinary
attacks to cover the withdrawal of the
dofeated twelfth army. In a_ bitter
struggle they were overcome by out
aasanits and tho Great Road has been
Teached at several points by our di
visions, Some thousands of Russians
wero made prisoner and more than 15¢
guns and countless war materials wore
captured. ‘The battle near Riga is
another glorious pago in the history,
of the German army.”
ARREST WHITE HOUSE PICKETS
Suifragists Taken For Demonstration
During Parade.
Militants of the Natlonal Woman's
party mado the procession in honor of
men selected for the national army
the occasion for more picketing of the
‘Whito House.
Pickets began appearing at the
White House gates and as the police
arrested them others took their places
The women anrouneed they — would
keep up the battle as long as the sup.
ply of plekers held out.
‘The supply of pickets kept steadily
coming to the White House gates as
fast as the police made the arrests
An hour before the procession started
thirteen had been token In. After that
the picketing stopped.
Grand Duko Michael Arrested,
Grand Duke Mlchacl Alexandro
viteh, brother of the farmer emporor
and his wife, have been placed undor
arrost in Petrogead In connection
with the cbunter revolutlonary plot re.
contix unearthe?. According to the
Den, Duke Dmitri-Pamtovitch atso hae
Deon arrested f
ADMIRAL KNIGHT |
5
Naval Officer Honored by Citizens |
of Yokohama,
PPO OO PSCC OCOES
MO S ee a.
Po oe
fs OO ae
Be
Se.
eit “Cok A
ie ea
Oe Sak aS NS)
CO aie om ry
ee ne
\. ae ao
(SRR SS Eras
oo & yore E co
. oe mt
Wa ae oy
a Ey A
Photo by American Mess Axsociattom,
AIRMEN RAID ROLA
Great Fires Started in Austrian Naval
Buss by ftallan Aviators:
Thirty Hain airy nes dropped ning
fonsfot bombs on the Austrian nave
base at Pol, causing destruction en
largo contlazrations, 1018 announced
offlctally tn Rome,
Flying andor favorable atmospherk
conditions, the raiders bombarded. the
military works and the eyemy tiect af
anchor in the harbor and In the Masa
na canal,
‘The Ttallan machines, although at
tacked hy seaplines und shelled by
antlalreratt batteries, returned safely
to their bases,
‘Auistrian Chief ef Statr-at Erant.
Uline, Sept. 5.—tield Marshal yoo
Arz, chicl of staff of the Austrian ar
my. fs reported to be inspecting the
Malian front for the purpose of reo
Rantaing his treops, demoralized bs
many recent defeats,
Meanwhile the Italians continue
their steady advance and are sproading
over a larged tract of the country
especially through the Rrestovizzs
valley and over the Mainsizen plateau
capturing trench after trench, Th
some cases they are finding contin
gonts of Avstrian troops, Hterally ex
hausted and sufforing from thirst ang
Inhger, their means of communication
having bon cut off by the well direct
ed Ttalinn fire.
Monte. San Gabrioia sttil:ts, mating
desperate offorts at resistance. Tall
an pickets are rradually ereoping wy
the slopes, making ffs fall only a mat
ter of time, when, as ofeers Inugh
{ngly say, “te Austrians execute an
other stratogical retreat.”
U. S. BUYS $2 20 WHEAT
Through a Misunderstanding a Lite
is Sold Above That Price,
There was just one buyer Inthe
Chieago wheat market, and he didn't
even visit the board of trade,
THe was Unele Sam and he had an
office In the Otis building, two blocks
from the board,
‘Thore” was one haste price, $2.20
fixed by President Wilson, ‘Tho meth
od pursued was yery simple. ‘The man
who reveived the wheat had it placed
fn an clovator, obtained a receipt from
tho elevator, fook his receipt to the
Otis building and got his money,
‘Through a misunderstanding a ttle
spot wheat sold at slightly above the
government basis, but the local rapre
sentative of the food administrator
issned a warning that there must be
No repetition of the offense,
UPHOLD GOVERNOR
Allowing Pacifists to Meet.
‘The Chicago city council, in speclal
session, after three hours’ diseusston,
adopted a resolution commending
Governor Lowden for his stand against
permitting pacifist agitation In TMlinots
‘Tho resolution requires the state ex
ecutive to prevont the holding of ans
meeting fn the future whieh may he
Inimical to public safety or disloyal
or troasonnble to the United States,
The resolution was adopted by a
vote of 42 to 6,
(The resolution, by“Implication, con.
domns tho action of Mayor Thompson,
To permitted a meeting of the Pooples’
Council for Democracy and Penco in
deflance of the govornor's order.)
Campana Captain a Captive, |
Coptain Oliver, of the American tant
or Campana, and 4 naval gunners, De
Janey, Roop, Kine and Jacobs, ‘whe
were taken prisoners when thelr ship
was sunk receutly hy a German sub:
marino, are ina prison camp at Bran
denburg, Prussia, ‘This news came
by cable to the American Red Cross
from Geneva:
Kills Woman, Shoots Wite.
Albert ¥fenatefek shot afid kit
ed Mrs, Catharine Frick ina King
street lodging house in Wtnington
Del., kept by her. fe also shot and
serfously wounded his wife, Jevlouy
is sald to have been the Incentive
Fitzpatrick was arrested. Tis wife
‘was sent to a hospital,
$100,000 Fire in Wilmington,
Fire in Wilmington, Del, cans
ed $100,000 damage to the iF, Blo.
menthal morocco leather factory, one
of the Jargest in the world. Four fire
men were Injure'l by a collapsing Iad-
der, three sertously,
THE RIOHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
THE BARRETT CASE
Bae Bee aga ace i mage ee ta lea
in the person of W. L, Lancaster, of
Farmville, white Mr. Lancaster, ina
signed statement, reiterates his asser-
Gon that Mr. Watkins is under an
egregios mistake, and that he had
deveined to ady'se’ Aubrey Barrett, in
view of the ruling of Judge Hundley
on the intructions in the trial of the
father.
Mr, Laneaster’s statement and from
the evidence of those present at the
trial, the Negro boy was tried without
counsel, without a Jury, was Induced
to change his plea from not guilty to
guilly Was too ignorant of the forms
oY law lo note an exception or entor
a protest on which his ease be given a
foochold in the Supreme Court, and
practically on his own admission ot
the killing of W. 'T. Roach: in defense
of his father, when Roach had cotne
to the Barrett place without a war-
rant or due authority of arrest, and
had there started a fight with’ the
eliler Barrett, was sentenced to exe:
cution, Governor Stuart’s sation in
‘granting « respite of nitty days offer:
ed the only way of examining into
tho conticting claim and insaring
that Justice was being done.
jupan HUNDLEY IssuEs
| SIGNED STATEMENT
| ‘rho stater ent of Judge Mundley
follows:
‘To the Bditor of the 'Times-Dispateh:
—Sir:—My attention has heen call:
ed (oa statement from Mr, Lancaster
in this morning's paper, to whieh T
make a brief reply. I shall not enter
into a contest of memory with him,
hor shall Tsay an unkind word about
him. T feel no unkindness toward him
He knows that T have had occasion to
show him that more than once. T at:
fach hereto a statement from. Judge
A.D, Watkins, who acted for the Com-
monwealth in the Barrett cases, which
austains every statement of fart made
by me in my previous article and
with a few words more as to Mr. Lan
castor’s statement, T shall avatl my
self of tho opportunity to say gome:
(hing oF the tondeney of such a pro:
ceeding as this to undermine and dix.
credit the authority of the courts,
and to ercato distrust in the minds
of ignorant and unthinking people,
T repeat here with emphasis that
not only did Lancaster act as counsel
for both of the Barretts, but that af:
ter the father's conviction he camo
up to me on the henek-and stated to
ine privately that te bof would change
his plea of “not guilty,” “to guilty,"
and asked me if T would send him to
a reformatory, and T told him that 1
Would make no promises, but would
hear the whole ease and ‘then decide
and afterwards he spoke of withdraw
ing from the ease, but T saw him con.
suiting with both prisoners, and when
T spoke to him and asked’ him what
he would do about it, ho said in open
court that the boy would change his
‘as stated, I thought, and had the
right to think, from all that passed,
that whilst he vad decided to mate
no defense for the boy, that he was
ALI spanking ag the lewyer to whom
had"been committed the defense o}
both father and son,
SAYS NOY'S CONFESSION
. LEFT TMT NO DEFENSE
| Mr. Laneaster does not assert, not
would any one believe, that he’ wa:
only employed to defend the father. 1
concluded that as they had wsed the
hoy as a witness for his father anc
Know that the boy's confession had
left him no defense, he intended t
make none for him. When 1 said it
my former statement that “canna
believe Mr. Lancaster is hase enough
fo desert one of his clients, and ther
not even Intimate to the Judgo tha
his Kent had a defense." Twas sim
ply trying to relieve him from th
piliable position that officious Inter
sddlers had put kim in, Unfortunat
ly, though. Mr. Lancaster has put him
Self into a worse position. He say:
now this boy had a good dofengo, bu
T having rofused an instruction ho of
fered in the father's ease (to whiel
refusal he knows, and will not deny
he expected et the time he determines
not to make defense for the hoy, 11
knows, cr ought to know, that he coul
have had a jury and offer that sam
instruction in the ease of the boy, anc
when refused he contd have had 1
Suspension of the execution of sen
tence, and taken both cases to th
court of Appeals. Why did he not d
, this? Can he explain such a’ gros:
dereliction of duty? He says that
threatened to fine him when ho at
tempted to argue to the jury in th
father's ease the law stated by hin
in the instruction offered by hin
which T had refused. Of course, T conk
not allow him to argue against. th
law that Thad given, but ho had hi
remedy, and if T was wrong, the Cour
of Appeals could have coreected thi
error.
BVM, OF MAKING *
| ATTACKS ON COURTS
But enough of this; T go now to ¢
few observations on the ovil that fs
done by such attacks on the courts as
fittingly Mustrated by this case. Hor
{tivo counties were so stirred to th
dontha Ge tha: arth At this coke
But enough of this; ¥ go now to a
fow observations on the ovil that ts
done by such attacks on the courts as
fittingly Mustrated by this case, Here
two counties were so stirred to the
denths by the horror of this murder
where a good and peaceable eltizen
was murdered by two thieves whom
he discovered had stolen his proper:
ty. They admitted in court that they
had stolen his pronerty, and they not
only murdered him, but robbed him.
of his watch and money, shockingly
mutilated the dead body ‘and Mid it
In the woods. Five hundred good peo-
ple were about to lynch tho murder-
ers, when a vigilant Governor called
the courts to his afd, and the peonte
Quietly siffmitted and trusted tho
courts to do their duty. When the
court haw acted, what do we seo?
Outsiders far from the scene, rush
into print and spread false and slan-
derous charges and Insimuations,
against the judeo who prestded at
the trial. And then the attorney em
ploved (and paid. T presume) to de-
fend these thieves and — murderers
rushes inty print to sustain, as far
as ho can, these standers, and con-
fosses his own dereliction’ {n the du-
ty of an attorney. What is the effect
of sue things as this? “Dy their
fruits you shall know thom.” It fa
bitter fruft indood. From snch seeds
aprung the tree that bote the Allin
fruit In (vrroll, where tmavo and
in the discharge of their duties, for
daring to enforce the Jaw against such
4 vand ot outlaws as never before dis
graced old Virginia. And then we had
the scandalous spectacle of good peo-
ple forgetting that these otticers of
the law died to preserve their liber:
ty and their property, going to the
extent of raising even a greater stand
ard in tneir effort to have ono of
these outlaws pardoned, simply — be-
cause he was young and handsome
and because he was only aiding his
father to shoot up a court of Justice.
Of course ‘Mis boy should have his
sentonce commuted or be pardoned
because ne was only alding his father
to murder a man whose property he
had stolen, |
Seed TAT BRINGS
PORTH LYNCHINGS,
‘This is the soed that brings forth
the vitier fruit of Iynchings, of which
we have had an illustration recently.
I have never had a lynching in my
cirenit, thuogh * have tried men for
all the erlmes fn the catalogue, and
why? Am I claiming too muoh If 1
say that it is because my people
Know tnat 1 enforce atthe laws?
Now It seems Tam reaping the rich
reward of having my name brought
before the public through falschood
and slander by the apologists of mur:
der and theft, As a judge who is
capable of utterly ignoring the rights
of an ignorant and frightened Negro
boy, and inducing him to plead gull:
ty in order that T might sentence hin
to death, has it come to this—that
any Ignoramys or erank can at tls
will hesmirch the reputation of any
Judge, and have the newspapers spread
his” slanders roadcast over the
State? But T do not complain for my
self, great as is the ‘power of the
press for good or evil, and judges and
courts are amenable to fait criticism
by people who have the character and
standing -ntitling thom to be heard,
but should not the pross be very care
fal how tt uses that power or lends
it to others? Tf my long tite and
character cannot withstand unjust as
persions, then T have lived in. vain,
but it is for the fair name of our
courts of justice that T speak, for
that is assailed in my person. ‘The
rolen of law and the integrity of the
courts are the ehier safeguards of our
free Institutions, Do we “discern the
signs of the times?" Do we realize
that this old world and its elviliaa-
{ion are rocking and trembling in the
Utanie struggle between the forces of
Kood and evil—between anarchy and
chaos and taw and order. Do we
realize that one great nation’ in grasp
ing at freedom has sunk into the bol-
tomless plt of socialism, anarchy and
omer lawlessness? Look abroad — in
ovFown land, and note the increase
in crime, rape, arson, murder and
theft, Note the teachings and the
acts of the TW. W. Noto that treas-
on and disregard of all aw is openly
advorated in tho streets of our cities,
and Jet us tremble for the fate of our
institutions. |
(Signed) GEORGE MUNDLEY.
Farmville, Va., August 23, 1917, |
ACTING PROSECUTOR
ALSO ISSUES” STATEMENT
1
The statement of former Judge A.
D. Watkins, who was acting Common:
wealth’s Attorney in the Barrett eas:
cs, follows:
‘Vo ‘The Faitor of The Times-Dispateh:
Sir:—A brie? statement of my recol-
lection of the evidence in and con-
uct of lie (rial of the Barretts for
the inueder of Willlam ‘T, Roach, of
Charlotte County follows:
Tt was disclosed in the evidence
that on July 10, 1917, Roach, toseth
er with Collins, went to Barrett's
farm, suspecting that wheat had been
stolen from his. field. ‘The Rarretts,
after being convinced of the fact that
Roach had the proof of the larceny,
‘admitted it, Roach sent Collins for a
warrant of arrest. ‘The elder Barrett
tried to make a settlemont with Roach
to avoid arrest and trial. ‘This Roach
would not agree to. When Collins
was away the elder Barret attempted
to run away. Roach ran after him
and caught him, Both fell to _ the
ground, the elder Barrett ndmitted
that Roach held him by the coat, and
claimed that he though Roach’ was
trying to choko him; that he called
to his boy, who was some distance off;
{0 come and get Roach off; that the
hoy did come, and, having ‘picked up
a chestnut stick, dealt Roach a blow
on the back of the head; that the
father with a large Rock finished him
that the body was then carried to the
place where found; that after the Kill
ing a small sum of money and a watch
the property of the deceased, was tak
en by the boy; that no rock or stick
was found near the scene or claimed
to be the instruments used; that both
prisoners voluntarily confessed to tho
killing, each giving substantially the
facts a above narrated.
Dr. Walker, who mado the examina
tion of the dead hody of Roach, test-
jfied that he-found a wound on the
back of the head, the siull broken in
and the brains oozing out; that. the
wound had bled considerably; that
this wound was sufficient to produce
death; that on the front of the head
was a wound in and across the face
in and near the eyes; that this wound
was inflicted by some instrument
which cleaved the skull just above
the eye, and that this wound was suf
law of this caso,
SAYS LANCASTER CONSULTED
BOY IN OPBN COURT
‘That upon the trial of the boy, who
had, through counsel, Mr. Lancaster,
therefore, plead “not guilty,” and
clected to be tried soparately, when
again brought to the bar and atter
his counsel had intimated that he
counsel for the boy, was considering
the advisability of | withdrawing tho
plea of “not guilty” and pleading
“guilty,” submitting all the questions
of law and fact to the court, counsel
for the boy, after apparently’ consult:
ing with the boy and advising him
in open court, stated that he had done
aul he could and further, that he would
no longer reprasent the prisoner, and,
thorefore, the court advise tho boy
of hiv rights, and fully explained to
him that he ‘could be irled by a jury
on hip plea of “not guilty,” but that
the wourt could not try him on such
& plea, and that he (the prisoner) had
the right to plead in the way he de
sired; tho boy then, in (ho. presence
of hin former counsel, and his father,
formally withdrew his plea of "not
guilty” and plead “gulls to the
charge in the indiegment, that then
the court caused evidence to bo tak-
en, whick was as to tho killing, In
substanco, what has been stated above
and in addition, evidenco was taken
upon the question of the age of tho
prisoner, and it was shown’ that he
Was between sixteen and seventecn
years of age. One witness, who claim
cu to have known the prisoner all his
life, stated that the boy might bo @
little more Gian govenieen or a Mitte
less,
Slammed) A.D. Watkins.
Acting Prosecuting. Attornoy.
Farmville, Va., August 28, 1917
LANCASTER DRNIBS ‘TAT *
HE REPRESENTED Boy
\
W. I, Lancaster, of — Farmyvilto,
who appeared as counsel for the older
Barrett, issued tho following signed
statement, denying that he had ropre-
sented the boy, or had advised fim
privately or publicty:
To ‘The Hdltor of ‘The Tintes-Dispateh:
Sir:—Ex-Judgo A.D. Watkins give
ca his verston of the Rarrett ensex—
whethei at the request of Judge Hund-
ley or not, who eares
A.D. Watling, my friend (and, 1
am gla to gay, disiant relation.) is
under an egregious mistake. Tf ho had
read what T wrote, i, ¢, that T refused
lo plea or advise Aubrey Narrett what
plea to enter, saying T would not. as:
sume the responsibility, T know he
would not deny the same untess, tn
Nfs goodness of heart or his weakness
of mind, he would allow truth to
slumber’ for the sake of pleasing a
frignd or protecting himself. Asa
says when Albert Barrett, failing. to
compromive, attempted to ‘escape, Mr,
Roaeh “aid hold on him, aud in hold
ing him they hoth fell to the ground,
aud in the same breath he says: “Tes:
timony was that the older Barrett
called for iis son to come and take
Roach off. The younger Jarrett took
UD A Jarge stick and struck Roach on
the back of the head. Roach was
stunned, and partially "fell to the
ground,’
Now, it Roach was on the ground
in the first Instance, could ho bo fell
ed to the ground; either by a stick or
a large stick?
If ex-Judge Watkins is so fair, why
Aid he not say that the testimony was
that Roach pursued Albert 150 yards,
Albert fell over a brush pile, and was
down, being choked, when’ Aubrey
Barrett struck the fatal blow. with
the chestnut stick, by request or
command of his father?
T have stated that the words at.
tributed to Albert, “T have finished
him," were not uced. Should [have
failed to hear this, T eannot fail to
know, and no truthful man in the
courtroom at Charlotte who could
hear but knows, that T withdrew from
Aubrey’s case, did not advise ot plead
Tor him, and he had no counsel, either
in myselt or another. and that T did
not waive the jury for him,
Juces Watkins says that T intimat-
€A to him that T would plead. guilty
for the Woy, or had advised the boy
to plead guilty. ‘This statoment can
bo accounted for only as follows:
|When the petit Jury was inte room
considering its verdict in the Albert
Marrett ease, T asked Judgo Watkins,
in the presence of Mr, Light and ‘Tom
Watkins, considering the boy's ago,
‘could he not, upon tho plea of guilty
‘he confined ‘in the penitentiary oF
jsent to the publie roads or even to the
Teformatory, heroupon Judge Wat-
kins suggested that T talk to Judgo
Hundley, and T went to him while up-
on the bench and asked him ff the
boy, Aubrey pleaded guilty could ho
not, under law, considering the boy's
age, send him ‘to the reformatory or
put him upon the public roads, To
this question Judge Hundiey made no
satisfactory answer. T then asked him
it, upon the plea of guilty, he could
‘not fix some punishment ‘less than
the death penalty, He replied: "I
will make no promises” or "I will
make you no promises.’ .
| T repeat that T neither advised the
boy, privately nor publicly, what plea
to onter,
| Take the statement of Judge A, D.
Watkine t,t ene Of Judge A, D.
ACCOMAO NEWS.
Mr. and Mrs, Loven Ayres, of
Machinongo, wero the guest of Mrs,
Willian Heath, near Belle Haven.
Mrs, Georgo Richardson l6ft for
Baltimore, September 3rd.
Mrs. Sarah B. Smith, after a few
months work at Frinktown, has now
returned to het home with her sister,
Mrs. Willlam Hoath, near Bello Ha
ven,
Master G. Ty Smith ts loarning to
use his old pipo right good now.
Sunday, at home, while his fathor
and mother, Mr. and Mrs, J. H.
Smith attended church.
4 GENERAL SURVEY OF
WEDNESDAY.
The Russian armfos continue to
show perilous weakness at critical
polnts, In the Fokshant region on the
Rimanian front a Russtan diviston
avandoned Sts positions and fled in
disorder. A Geneva report says ‘Tew
tonic forces have tnvaded the Russian
province of Nessarabia,
Stormy weather apparently ts ham:
pering military activittes on the Fran.
coBelsiin front. ‘The Bellish, after
completing a successful operation nowt
Langemarek, contented themselves
with clearing out a Gezman advance!
position in front of tho new British
Hine,
Apparently ther atso ts a halt in
major activities on the French front
in the Verdun zexton, and: the of:
patgn which Genéral Cadorna ts =
Ins on the Isonz0 front against the
Austrians,
——
THURSDAY.
AINitary operations on the Franco
Helgign front continue to be of a mtno
nature, ‘The oftictal report from Purl
shows tho sthiation along the French
Tinos tp be one of temporary-deadiock
Two German attacks In the Cham
pagno region cast of Teton were re
pulsed, as were German attempts
push back French posts in the Verdon
rexion north of Vagisles Patsmoss
‘There was active artileny fehtine th
the Verdun region and In the Atsne
svetor,
Rome reports the repntse of Austrtar
vounter atlacks in the Tsonzo region
‘The Halians held all posittons firmly,
and oven gvinel ground at points
‘They took 540 prisoners:
Potroerad report further quittin:
of Russian soldian€ hefdre the enoms
near Foksbam, on the Rumantan front
Te fs stated tht measures azo tobe
ened by the Tevton advance,
FRIDAY.
None of the three big etmpaigns now
In progress on western fronts seems
again to have jot into fall swiss Gen
eral Cadorna, on the. Austro-Talian
front, apparently fs in the midst of one
of the paysés charneteristie of virtw
ally all drives agatust strongly fort
Ned positions In this war,
Goerers! Hig reports the repulse o!
A German rekon the British five mites
sontheast of Lens, in Franee, London
war office intinations ave that an arti
levy battle te bein carried an in vir
fustly eoutimous form in préparation
for the next forward trust.
Genoral Petain's report indteates: 2
possible speety renewal ef the ‘nant
ty battle at Verdun, French asters
fon both sides of the Meuse fs bombard
ing the German Maes. ‘The German:
have shown some activity In Alsves
making an attack near THartnymns
weller-Ikopt, whieh the French repuls
ed.
SATURDAY.
‘Turning to the aggressive on the
Aisne front, the French havo atruch
a sharp and heavy blow at the Germatr
crown prince's nes. Tn a swift thrust
General Petain's forees bounded for
ward more than 300 yards on a front
of more thay threequarters of a mil
in the Hurteblse region on the Chemin
des-Dames, between Craonne and Cor
ny.
This. stroke seems to have giver
Petain a firm hold on the ground. The
repulse of three counter attacks is ro
Ported. The attack followed a week
of almost total inactivity on the Frenct
front. ‘Thero are signs in tho increas:
of artillery fire on the Planders front
that a renewal of more active opera
tions by the British may not be fa:
distant,
Advices from the Ttalian front show
Genevat Cadorna again is hammorins
at the Austrian lines. He is improving
his positions to the south, in the direc
ton of Trieste and on the northert
front cast of Gora,
SUNDAY.
The Germans are knocking virtuall
at the gates of Riga, and with th
Russians apparently unable to with
stand their ndvance.
On the Traitan front General Cador
na's forces have extended their gain:
on the Br8stovizza plateau, on th
slopes of Mcgte San Gabriele and cas
of Gorlzia, and have taken additiona
nrisoners and war stores from the Aus
trans. Plve Italian atrplanes hav
flown from the Italian front over Vien
ha and dropped pamphlets tolling th
Austrlan people of the vietory of th
Itallans from ‘Tolmino to the sea,
In Belgium the British big guns are
continuing 10 bombard violently the
Gorman positions, evidently. preparing
the way for another smash at Crows
Prince Rupprecht’'s front. ‘The infant
ry activity here and also to the soutl
in France is mainly in the nature y!
ralding operations,
MONDAY.
| Riga, Russia's principal Baltte port
has been abandoned to the German:
under the threat of an offensive bj
land and sea. Its fate virtuslly wa:
sealed when German troops forced «
crossing of {ho Dvina southoast of the
city and began to push northward
Menaced also by an advance from Mi
tau, southwest of Riga, and by Gor
man naval forees recently reported
hovering noar the Gulf of Riga, the
Russian military authorities evident
considered the city no longer tenablo
Tho success of the Talians aro re
ported by the war office. South o!
Gozz, Cadorna’s forces havo advancad
in the Rrestovizza valley, ropelling ar
Austrian counter attack,
Bresh German attacks on the Atsn
wore heaton off by the French, Heavy
artillery actions are geported on the
Verdun front,
Flour $10.75 to $11 Bartel,
| The best grades of flour wil
probably sell for from $40.75 te
$11. a barrel as the result of fixing
$2.20 as the price of wheat. ‘This {
According to statements by local flow
manufacturers, Fancy patents aro now
quoted as $12.25 « barrel,
__FIVE
re
$00 PANTS merse
AGE 4S, Ol grey eon mc
Nosauasharae for tency eral ae, om
Gira uaeieaig
Sane gat gar saginen at ace GENS
sets eae te cece eee, HT
Tllepen arenes henanererzman iA
siczomaiceer ates HA
pe gilettor or wontal and aay” Sond WH AM
ahedeue Hae tree Ore ct ts nor A
Snfnoentma charger Wate todas AY AY
on GVICKERBOCKER TAILORING ch
Dept, 718 Chicago, Tl.
Or
GERMANY MAY
i
: | '
BID FOR PEACE
New Cffer May Come Before
Christmas,
Amsterdam Hears Berlin Government
Hopes to Start Negotiations—Wante
Conference to Mect at The Hague,
According to the most relinble
authority in Amsterdam the next
session of the German reieustag will
Bo devoted to the questions of peace,
‘Tho majority has decided to chat
lenge the statement of the goverament
regarding its minimum peace progritm
It is said tw government will yfeld,
with a view to peace negotiations be
fore Citristmas,
The German government, according
to this authority, favors the plenipo
tentlarios mecting either at The Hague
oF at Berne or at Copenhagen, but pre:
ferably Tho Hague,
ope eels Note, Vorwaerts Says
‘The Verlin Vorwaerts, the Sooke tst
organ, in commenting on President
Wilson's reply to the pope, says:
“he American note ts’ a canttous
and clever document, tt is a passion
ate Indictment to amend the systent of
Fovernment obtatning In Germany, te
which It attributes all the world's atro
eltlos, Against the German people the
note sets forth that Ameriea docs not
want to retaliate, inasmuch as tt has
in the course of this war, whieh tt did
not want, suffored much,
“That is undoubtedly a very corzcet
observation that tye German people
aid not want tis wan, and In Ite
course has snffered’ much, Rear that
yet worso might come, keeps ft awake
in defonse.
“The Amertean government repeat
edly declared it doos not harbor onmt
sty against “the German. people, but
proof of this assertion has not been
furnished. Tt ean only ho establishos
in a@ demonstrationn of America's wil
that tho German people are not to be
robbed and made to pay tribute to its
enemies,
“The note cautiously omits refer
once to thts point, which Is of decisive
Importance to the German people. TL
does not support the intemnity and
territorial demands of Amertea's alles
nor does it relinquish them,
“Tt will be sald in France, however
that the nate docs not mention these
things. Only the word satisfaetion per
mits a wide interpretation with Ger
many so long as the prosont govern
ment system obtains. Tt demands tha
the will of the people back up govern
ment transactions.
“A section of the German press wit
hasten to say that It would be uniigni
fled for the German people to give
such surety. On the contrary, we ba
Hevo ft wonld be undignified to re
fuse,
“The Gorman people are fighting thir
most terrible of battles not for the
rights of a single famfly, or a cortair
form of government, ‘but for its owr
existence.
; “In this sonse and tn no other, the
German Social Domooracy entered inte
the defense of the nation. Social Do
moeracy in {ts endeavor to obtain at
tered constftutlonal conditions refuse
to employ methods calculated to weak
on tho nation's defenses.
“Shall {t be sald of us Germans that
Negotiations with the United Stator
are impossible because we as a nation
| of helots are incapable of asserting
our own will? Do we deserve this
after years of fighting and suffering
after achievements and sncriflees with
‘out measure and numbers?”
Girl Shot by Playmate,
Miizabeth Mayer, ten years of age
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Harry May
er, of Dover, Del, 1s nave deatit frome
a bullet wound tn ber abtomen, ‘The
ehild and her sister were playing al
tho home of James M. Saterfeld, dept
ty attorney general, on Dover Greon
when a revolver in the hends of James
M, Satterfield, Jr., was accidentally dts
charged. ‘The Willet struck the girl
Doctors say there Is Httle hope of her
recovery,
{860,000 Fire at Boyertown.
Boyertown. Pa, was visited py
a $60,000 fire. | twin Reitnan's
livery ‘stable wos barre! with fou
horses and many gwom-biles, ‘The
building was owned by the Lancs
Brewing company, of Rea‘ne, ane
the loss is estimate! at g2h,o09
The Central Mouse was en'ted to the
extont gf $25,000. Oter newby bufld
ings were also damaged,
Thousands Lost in Fire,
Several thousands persons are
Feportgd | to ave boon “kita! ane
injured inn fire which swept ike
city Af Kazan, on abe Kazanke
river, 420 miles east cf Meseow, early
Inst week. ‘The fre burned for thirty
six hours, wlrising most of the popula
tion oufside the city.