Richmond Planet
Saturday, December 7, 1929
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
RACE CHIEFTAIN SHEDS ARMOR.
THE PLANET'S EDITOR SUCCUMBS AFTER HALF CENTURY IN JOURNALISTIC FIELD.
Dr. W. T. Johnson Delivers Great Eulogy.-Pythian Grand Chancellor Thomas H. Reid Pays Glowing Tribute.
By B. P. Vandervail
The funeral of John Mitchell, Jr., who entered into rest Tuesday, December 3, 1929, at 6 A. M., just as the sun was peeping over the horizon, letting the world know that another day had dawned the soul of this warrior, chieftain and race defender, leaped from this tenement of clay and he passed into that great battle where no battles were fought. Fifth St. Baptist Church Thursday December 5, 1929. The news quickly flashed over the city and the public was dumb-founded, because very few knew of his illness. While he has not been in the best of health for some time, still it was only on Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 1929, that he gave up and had to be carried from his newspaper office, "The Richmond Planet", to his home, 515 N. Third Street. Medical skill and the tender nursing of loved ones and friends could not ward off this blow. His remains laid in state until Thursday, 1:30 P. M., and was viewed by many thousands, after which the cortege in charge of Funeral Director A. D. Price, Jr., was formed and escorted by the Imperial Order of King David, Old Dominion Court I. O. O. Calanthe, Venus Lodge K. of P., Sir Carlington, C. C., and Friendship Lodge, A. F. and A. M., No. 19, Mrs. Charles Wesley, Master, wened its way to the Fifth Street Baptist Church, of which the deceased has been a member for a number of years. At the church this immense edifice was crowded with friends, Colored business men, professional men and women touched elbows with their less fortunate brother and sister and all came to pay the last sad tribute of respect to one who had stood out and fought for the rights of his race. The services were called by the McKayalary Montague, of McKayalary Baptist Church, lining the hymn, "Abide With Me Fast Falls the Evening Tide." The chair under the leadership of Prof. Matthew, leader of the Sabbath Gate Club, led the singing and the congregation joined in. Reading of the scriptures by Rev. S. C. Burrell General Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. 116 Psalm, "I love the Lord". A very fervent prayer was offered by Rev. O. B. Simms, of the Rising Mt Zion Baptist Church. A very touching solo was then rendered by Prof. Joseph Matthews, entitled "I Am Weary of Bearing My Burdens", and it moved many to tears. The following resolutions and telegrams were read by Prof. J. H. Blackwell: Old Dominion Court I. O. O. Calanthe, No. 114, from Mr. W. C. Brown and Mr. C. A. Brown, of Brownton, Va., Mr. James M. Frayser, of Richmond,甲e-Governor Montague, Virginia Baptist Sunday Williams, Jr. (Missionary); Mrs. Fannie Ash, Newport News, Va. A personal letter was
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sent to the family by Judge Edmund Waddill, senior judge of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. Solo, "We Shall Meet Beyond the River," was sung by Prof. W. B. Smith
M. B.
The family letter expressing their sorrow and his tender care of them was read by Rev. A. A. Hector, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Rev. W. T. Johnson, pastor of the First Baptist Church, was selected to preach the funeral, as the Fifth Street Church was at present without a pastor. He called attention of the display in the Lawntown Shoe window, by Mr. W. H. Walton, manager, to let the city know that a great man had fallen. He continued his remarks by saying that he was a citizen of no mean ability, a political leader, business man, the champion of human rights, who frequently appeared in our conferences and churches has fallen. The best way to consider him was as a Christian warrior. He took his text from 1 Samuel, 20 chapter, 3 verse: "There is but a step between me and death." First—Our nearness to death. Second—The necessity of our reliance on God, we must meet death. Third—To submit to His will. Like David, he discovered his inability to escape death and he saw the necessity of relying upon God and at the close he calmly submitted to the power of His Heavenly Father. He was bold, loyal to his God, as was the servant David, and in his representative way, represented our brother as a warrior, battling for what he conceived to be the rights of his race and broad enough to battle for the human rights of all the people.
Man is a frail, mortal and is a sinful creature. Man is to consider three things: Mortality, he has a few days to live, a long side of eternity. Sixty-eight years was a short time compared to eternity. Suffering: We are born in sin, and we must consider suffering. That man born of a woman was full of trouble. Unrest is the natural man daily feeling, not satisfied with the accomplishments of a few years ago. He pushes on. The names of the external troubles of man are legion. He quoted the familiar hymn, "Blessed Are the Dead Who Die In the Lord". Man as a flower. Origin of the flower is the earth, it is delicate, its frailty, its end. Man as a shadow. Time was measured by the shadow on a dial, it never stands still, so is man journeying and ever going onward. True estimate of the enjoyment of time and eternity. He can see that time will pass away. We learn to improve the spiritual opportunities as our stay here is getting short. If you are walking with your hands in God's hand when death comes, you will walk with Him forever. He liked to do things. He was self-willed, fought in the open, and
of dauntless courage, and believed that eventually the race would come into its own. He was bold and a great warrior, but religion would soften his heart and he believed in the old fashion religion.
To the family, he said: Call upon me in the day of your trouble and I will deliver you. This finished a most masterful delivery, and he introduced the Rev. W. H. Stokes, Ph.D., pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church, who said: What was John Mitchell, Jr.'s contribution to his people. I remember years ago he snatched some of our race from impending death, he made a contribution for law and order. He did not purposely plan to deceive any man. He played his part in the City Council. A noble man has fallen and it will be a long time before Richmond will produce another John Mitchell, Jr.
John Mitchell, Jr., died with his boots on. Why should one fuss because a door is open for a fuller life. He has fought a good fight, he had his opposition and he had foes. Rev. A. S. Thomas, former pastor of the Sharon Baptist Church, recited the 23rd Psalm. The choir sang very sweetly one one of "I Am a Strange-Hero; Heaven is My Home" Rev. Junius L. Taylor,ector of the St. Phillips P. E. Church, said that in the States he had traveled, John Mitchell, Jr., had given the people in the rural districts great inspiration. The greatest monument to him is in the hearts of the men and women he has led. Only when you know how sides of a man's life are in position to criticize, then only spiritually. He has walked to W. Brown, D. George by Rev. W. Brown, D. George of the Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church: That he was his personal friend and deserved a front rank place in any audience and was a practical Christian.
My friend is not dead, but is living on: Dr. Gordon B. Hancock, pastor of the Moore Street Baptist Church, said. We met here to pay our respect to our defender, our chieftain, not only for Richmond, Va., but for the nation. John Mitchell, Jr., returning from the battle of life with his shield dented, sword bent, his sandals slit and his armor pierce both front and back, by friends and foes, but like John Brown of old, his spirit will go marching on. Rev. J. T. Hill, D. D., pastor of the Second Baptist Church, said: I knew so many grand and glorious things of the fallen hero and hope the eulogy delivered would bring us to that conception of his great worth. Hon. Thomas H. Reid, Grand Cancellor of the K. of P.
had made the trip here to pay this tribute to his father's friend for forty years. Order for forty years together. The chair softly chanted as the procession
PRICE FIVE OENTS
AFTER FIELD.
moved out of the church, the familiar hymn, "Shall We Gather At the River."
He was buried in the family section in Evergreen Cemetery beside his mother. He was buried under Masonic rites, performed by Past Master L. C. Corbett.
The honorary pall bearers were: Dr. A. A. Tenant, Messra. A. W. Holmes, B. P. Vandervall, A. L. Morton, Edward F. Johnson, James Barrett, R. W. Whiting, B. L. Jordan, D. P. Bragg, Miles B. Debriss, W. Henry Walton, J. A. Beard, Thomas H. Reid, Henry Mallory, Dr. J. M. G. Ramsay.
The active pall bearers were: C. L. Drew, E. L. Williams, E. C. Smith, Julius Creech, R. W. Evans, John Winston.
Among the out-of-town visitors that attended the funeral and followed the remains to the cemetery was Hon. T. C. Walker.
Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, Grand Secretary and Treasurer of the St. Luke, on account of her inability to attend the services at the church, drove to the cemetery and witnessed the last sad rites.
DR. JOHN H. HOLMES DIES SUD-
DENLY IN WINCHESTER KY.
News reached the city Monday of the sudden death of Dr. John H. Holmes in Winchester, Ky. Dr. Holmes was a former Richmender and made annual visits to this city. He was the son of the late Dr. James H. Holmes, who for many years pasted at First Baptist Church, and brother of Mrs. Julia Holmes Dayson, of this city, and Mrs. Mabel McCree, of Harrisburg, Pa. They left for Winchester Tuesday night to attend the funeral.
FULTON NOTES
The pastor delivered a very instructive sermon at Mt. Calvary last Sunday morning. Subject: "Anger and Revenge." The Golden Anniversary of the church and the tenth anniversary of the pastor, Rev. C. A. Cobbs will begin Sunday and continue through the week. The Missbon will sell refreshernments in the basement. Communion at Zion at 3:36.
CUBAN BASCISTS MURDER
NEGRO WORKER
Havana, Dec. 2.—The body of the negro working-class leader, Sanjugee Brooks, was found in a district of the port of Tarafa, riddled by revolver bullets. Local working-class organizations accuse the Cuban dictator, President Machada, of instigating the assisination of Brooks because of the latter's militant opposition to the bloody reign of terror inflicted by the dictator upon the Cuban working-class.
S. J. WILLIAMS
MOUNTAINS OF PEANUTS
This year, it is the semi-centennial of the peanut. Barely mentioned in the American 1860 census, and with a yield of only 3,300,000 pounds in 1899, the 1929 production will be close to 2,000,000,000 pounds, three-fourths of which will be used at home. Baseball fans and circus elephants alike go in for the two-time morsels, native to South Carolina's great money-makers.
An Italian immigrant, supporter of his family of 7, is a multi-millionaire his fortune made from peanuts. Coming to the United States when he was 11, Andresco Oblico soon was working as a peanut stand in Wilmington, Pa. Within a year or two it owned it. Not long afterward he was buying peanuts by the car, and in 1906 he formed the concern known today as the Planters Nut Chocolate Company. He has far throughout North America, is a tor in banks, organizations and cations and owns a 300-acre near Suffolk, Va. Last year his reach nearly $15,000,000 and 15 and 10-centure peanut products.
"We are more than ordinarily that of our oil-buried companies to the comfort of a man has been successful in the de of millions," commented Williams, of Bloomington, Ill. east of the Williams Oil-Heating Corporation. "The where it is installed is a sharp test to the business workers where the importer is Oderzo. It has matched that many of the businesses unabroad share the wellbeing the Oblico obtained for himself."
GREAT DEMAND
SHIPPING
GREAT DEMAND FOR RAW FURS SHIPPING COSTS REFUNDED
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So great is the demand for American loan funds and so poor are the opportunities for American trappers that Montgomery Ward & Co. has added new stimulus to the raw fur usages by announcing that it will refund all postage express or freight charges on pelts sent to any of its eight large raw fur deputs Ward & Co., whose activities in behalf of trappers have greatly increased the demand for fur products. This country promises the biggest prices for pelts in addition to refunding all shipping charges the refunding of shipping costs is made possible by the fact that because of the Ward receiving deputs throughout the country being within relatively easy range of the fur-producing sections, fur buyers are willing to dispense with agents sent for their catches, thus e
Ward & Co.'s receiving are located in Portland, Ore. Colo. Fort Worth Tex., Kansas City Mo. Chicago, Ill., Albany N. Y. St. Paul, Minn., and Baltimore, Md. The demand for raw furs is so keen that trappers are urged to make their shirts of any of these cities as soon as possible. "Expert and honest grading services are offered by all our large depots." E. L. McCarthy, in charge of the Ward & Co. fur receiving deputes.
JOE Bartlett's wife, over Wilson Cove, was braced to come in when the other night and got up to look. She saw a woman's leg sticking out from under the bed. It turned out to Joe's leg. He'd heard the noise, too.
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CW2
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known today as the Planters Nut and Chocolate Company. He has factories throughout North America, is a director in banks, organizations and associations and owns a 300-acre estate near Suffolk, Va. Last year his business reached nearly $15,000,000, all in 5 and 10-cent peanut products. "We are more than ordinarily glad that one of our oil-burners helps contribute to the comfort of a man who has been so successful in the deletion of millions," commented O'Brien, of Bloomington, President of the Winn-Dixie Oil-Oil-Burning Company. "The house where it is installed is a sharp contrast to it. "less woman's humility than woman's birth in Olerode. It is a sheltered, too, that many companies here and abroad share the wellbeing that Mr. Oblet obtained for himself."
FOR RAW FURS;
COSTS REFUNDED
declared. "Those who send their pelts to any of our eight depots are assured the highest market prices, the quickest service, a refund of shipping charges and gratis grading. From our depots, following grading, the furs are dispatched to the furriers by direct shipments. Thousands of trappers and hunters of the continent are awaiting themselves of Ward & Co.'s service and a greater volume of business is probable as a result of the important concession made through the refunding of all shipping costs." All kinds of pelts are in demand this year according to furriers—everything from the common rabbit to the most desired fox and mink Estimates vary as to the total catch needed to meet the demand of traurers in 1830, but it is any that hundreds of mille
"Green furs," said Mr. never should be shipped well-dried furs are dispatched diately, deterioration in value avoided. Furs should be packed that one skin upon another so that the fur sides touch. Creasing raw fur is to be avoided, and it is highly important that the greasy surfaces do not come in contact with the furry sides of the pelts. Observation of these instructions and warnings will do much to keep up the value of the shipments."
SAY DAD - I'M WRITING A JINGLE! WILL YOU HELP ME FINISH IT?
YES
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Way of Life
BRUCE BARTON
N the autobiography of Benjamin Haydon, the painter who was the friend of Wordsworth and Scott and Lamb, I found this entry:
At the bottom of the page, in small type, the editor of the volume had added a tragic footnote:
What a world of pathos is in those two quotations. The joyous thrill of the father at the arrival of his first-born son! The dreams of both parents for the future; their willing sacrifice of their own comfort and pleasure that this new young life might have a better start. The years of manhood. And at the end of it all, the wreck!
A friend of mine sat one day in a foreign hotel beside a man whom he recognized from newspaper photographs as one of America's great manufacturers. He introduced himself.
"You must pardon me, sir, for addressing you, but every American feels a personal pride in your success," he said.
"What a satisfaction it must be to have made your name stand for quality and square dealing not only in your own country but throughout the world! Surely few men have so much reason to be congratulated."
The famous man made no reply for several minutes. Finally he turned, with a haggard look.
"Your words are very kind," he answered. "Under other circumstances I should probably feel exactly as you suggest. But what does it all amount to when your son is a fool?
It is a disheartening thing that with all our increase in knowledge we have learned so little about the reasons for success or failure in the molding of human lives. Shall we ever penetrate deeper into this most baffling of all Nature's secrets?
Shall we some day understand why it was that the son of shiftless Thomas Lincoln became the greatest American, while the son of the powerful Napoleon was of no account? Why two good parents produce a Washington, and two others, seemingly also good, a Benedict Arnold?
Surely no area of human life is more important or less explored. Who will found a laboratory to discover what parents can do for their children without doing too much?
Who will win the undying gratitude of the race by teaching us how to raise sons?
:SOME CHEESE!:
What is considered to be the largest cheese ever made, is this one from which Lucien Lucien is endeavoring to take a bite. It weighs 650 pounds and is now on exhibition at the Fourteenth National Hotel Show which is being held at the Grand Central Palace, in New York. (Herbert Photos:)
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
December 12th, 1822—at half-past eleven in the forenoon was born Frank Haydon, whom I pray God to make a better man than his father. God bless him! and grant him life, and virtue, and dauntless energy and health, and above all, genius!
Frank Haydon became an official at the Public Record Office. He died by his own hand, October 11th, 1887.
ALL RIGHT I'LL READ IT -
MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB,
SHE LAID IT ON A SHELF
-BUREAU CHIEF:-
Major General William Graham Everson, whose nomination to succeed General Creed C. Hammond as Chied of the Militia Bureau of the War Department has been sent to the Senate, took up his new duties recently. Gen. Everson formerly commanded the 76th Brigade, 38th Div. He is an ordained minister and since 1921 has been the pastor of the First Church Nuncla, Indiana. (Herbert, N. Y.)
Winter Sports Enthusiasts to Frolic at Banff Carnival
QUEEN GWEN
SMALLPIECE
SKI GIRL AT
BANFF
A WINTER QUEEN
OF SKIS
YOUNG
BANFF
"MUSHER"
We're All Counting On You
ANOTHER BIG TAX REDUCTION
TAX PAYER
HO BOY!
DON'T MISS
HIM.
Albert T. Reid
AUTOCASTS
- AND EVERY TIME IT WAGGED IT TAIL
IT SPANKED IT LITTLE SELF!
YOU -
SEND A JINGLE
TO PINKY DINKY
% THIS NEWSPAPER
- AND PERHAPS
HE WILL PRINT
IT FOR YOU
TROY GINNON
Whitehorse, Alberta, the capital of Rocky Mountain National Park is an internationally famous surrealist city so rapidly gaining prominence as a winter rendezvous site for hard-core skiers which find fascination with young and old skiers. Early during February she surfed in Winter Carnival, a site of the sun and frolic, with mile high mountains as a setting. The Winter Carnival which is to be presided over by Mrs. Gwen Smallpiece of orgy will be held Feb 1-8 in love. It comes to be eager and after that it becomes a planning to attend Smallpiece who was crowned 1868 Queen, Queen at the conclusion of
last years all you can expert snowboarder, either as a player as well or a midfielder swimmer and hornhunter, and should therefore feel at home as Queen of the Snowboarders. During the Carnival Banff offers a comprehensive program of sports including tobogganing on its famous mountain slide, skating skiing, snowboarding and all the other thrilling winter pastimes. The ski-jump at Banff is one of the finest in the world during the Carnival, competitions are used for professionals, amateurs and boys. To watch down the steep inline skates the spectator's breath way Hockey, the world's fastest game, is another attraction, and
necessity contested matches played by both men's and women's teams never fail to attract an enthusiastic crowd Staring on the Bow River by moonlight is another pleasure in store for the Campfire. The bright colors in pets are silhouettes against a clear, starlit sky and the keen air vibrates with laughter greetful forms glide over glistening figures. Figure and speed skating competitions afford opportunities for enthusiasts to demonstrate their skill Old-fashioned sleigh-rides behind a team of prancing horses; masquerade parties, danced in goggles, girded race, and swirling in the Cave and Basin, a hot sulphur pool on the side of Sun Mountain, complete the program.
HO BOY!
DON'T
MISS
HIM.
BASILISM
Pinky, Dinky
JINGLES
yum - yum!
SEND OVER A JUNGLE - THIS ONE IS
FROM THE FLAIM WOULD HARDEN WIN
TEACHER SAID THAT BEINGS
WOULD BAT
CANDLES BY THE
NOW THAT THING
I GUESS -
THEY GUILT ELECTRICITY
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CHURCH GUIDES PLAYTIME ACTIVITIES OF U. S. YOUTH
160
The stile of the pilgrim as a boiling
glove through an asterisk and
another through an asterisk and another
The worship onl. ide. slow in starting. leaders realizing. not if the church be able to meet the natural human de- ders to become diversion —amuse- entertainment, and recreation —it will be able to keep America boys and girls spiritually interested.
"While Church and Sunday School have their important part in forming
BOYS AN
Try your hand
win an Origin
Try your hand at a jingle and win an Original Comic Strip.
ROSES ARE RED.
VIOLETS ARE BLUE!
MARY HAD A LITTLE
LAMB —
NO! THAT WON'T DO
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PHYSICIANS DIRECTORY.
Samuel D. Calloway 529 N. Second Street.
James A. Chiles 300 A. Clay Street.
A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School
Herbert A. Allen, 412 E. Clay Street
Edwin E. Bassett, 1719 A. E. Main Street
O. B. H. Rowser, 313 N. Adams Street
J. H. Blackwell Jr., 1243 Hull Street
L. D. Blaney, I. E. Clay Street
Fred D. Brown, 179 N. Fifth Street
Walter Waller, 901 N. 27th Street.
C. C. Cook, 1408 1-2 W. Leigh Street
D. W. Davis, 221 E. Clay Street
James O. Dawson, 1215 Denny Street
Nathaniel Dillard, 1719 A. E. Malo Street
William H. Dixon, 900 State Street
Joseph B. Early, 114 W. Baker Street
Miss Z. G. Gilpin, 102 W. Leigh Street
R. J. Griffin, 700 N. 28th Street
Vernon J. Harris, 1105 N. 29th Street
William H. Hughes, 508 St. James Street.
A. A. Jackson, 1729 A. E. Leigh Street
R. E. Jefferson, 708 N. First Street
Mrs. Marie J. Jones, 908 N. Third Street
Miles B. Jones, 908 N. Third Street
Motua M. Lewis, 412 E. Leigh Street
Thomas W. Nelson, 1407 Hull Street
J. M. Newman, 820 N. Second Street
S. R. Soneau, 319 E. Clay Street
Albert A. Tennant, 316 E. Clay Street
W. H. Tyler, 1000 Everett Street
George W. White, 221 E. Clay Street
DENTISTS.
Edward E. Basett, 1719-A E. Main Street.
THREE
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA THREE
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Choose the Present Desired. Send in Coupon and You May Select Your Choice.
LADIES WILL BE DELIGHTED.
character, the number of hours per week in which they touch the individual's life is a pitiful small percentage of the whole" Rev Charles W. Tedrath, pastor of St Peter's Lutheran Church in Chicago, and a strong advocate of recreation development, believes "It can be observed that the recreational hours are especially if they involve counters, competition and pitfalls are most present in attendance.
SEE THE 4-PIECE BUFFET SET. Now on Exhibition at THE PLANET OFFICE 311 North Fourth Street.
Some week-booking aliques are
salted butter, oil and financial
cookery. For some British
aliques are to take
one an ale. Most the
surviving cooks their dear
friends' friendships rapidly.
Strangers are brought into the churon
and made interested men.
What To Do.
Send Two Hundred and Fifty Coupons clipped from The Planet and you may select any one of the Presents Offered.
Job Work brought in to the amount of $25.00 and paid for when completed will entitle you to any one of the Presents Offered.
I'm going to accept the best jingles sent in by boys and girls and print them in "Pinky Dinky Jingles" with the names of the lucky contributors
Five Annual Subscriptions to The Planet will entitle you to any one of the Presents Offered
Get your name in the paper, and besides—
Each and every successful jingle writer gets the original of the comic strip in which the jingle is printed with the compliments of the artist. Terry Gilkison and myself. ..
Addres me care of The Planet.
Poetically yours.
PINKY DINKY.
IN VERY ATTRACTIVE PATTERN. It consists of a SCARF, 50 by 15 inches and a three piece VANITY SET to match. These Sets are made on Ecrue, Linere Cloth, elaborately embroidered in silk to be had in Rose or Basket Design and finished with a fine quality, heavy lace. Each Set is packed in an attractive gift box 15x25 inches.
DR. KELLY MILLER'S AUTHENTIC HISTORY OF THE NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR, bound in cloth and gold. Fully Illustrated. Over Six Hundred Pages. Published by the Austin Jenkins Company, of Washington, D. C.
Samuel D. Calloway 529 N. Second Street.
James A. Chiles, 300 A. W. Clay Street.
David A. Ferguson, 302 N. First Street.
J. E. Powlkes, 2 E. 19th Street.
W. J. Pettie, 201 A. Clay Street.
J. M. G. Ramsey, 527-A N. Second Street.
Leon A. Reed, 1727-A E. Main Street.
R. B. Taylor, Jr. 529 N. Second Street.
Jesse M. Tinsley, 402 1-2 A. N. Second Street
O. P. Williams, 110 W. Baker Street.
WEBSTERS' COLLEGE, HOME AND OFFICE DICTIONARY. A valuable aid in the home. Each family will find it invaluable for the children attending school and for the student at College.
WHERE TO BUY THE PLANET
THIS COUPON is good for use in the GIFT CONTEST mentioned in THE PLANET, Richmond, Va.
Sam Thomas' News-stand, 613 North Second St.
Dandridge's News-stand, S. E. Corner Clark and Duval St.; opposite 6th Mt. Zlon Bapt. Church
Dandridge's News-stand, Broad St., North side Broad St. opposite Foushee St.
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THE PLANET
Published River Saturday by John Miskelow
at El Mill North Fourth Street Blindman. On
All communications intended for publication should be sent to read us by Wednesday.
Enclosed at the Post Office at Richmond
Virginia, as second class matter
June Year ..... 8.18
Mix Months ..... 8.18
Three Months ..... 8.18
Foreign Subscriptions ..... 8.50
SATURDAY . DECEMBER 7 1929
A
Memorial
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.
EDITOR
Lald Down His Pen, December 3, 1929
Requiescat in Peace.
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.
Life's great adventure is over. It rained and the winds blew as the spirit of the strong man which had weathered innumerable storms "drifted out into that dark and unknown sea which rolls around all the world." His great intellect, his indomitable will, his unconquerable spirit and matchless courage rest at last with the ashes of this restless man. The story of the adventurous career of the man who lived a life peculiarly his own reads like a tale told by Oscar Wilde.
Lay the lone warrior away. Let there be no lamentations, no tears, no attempts at eulogy. The man's career suffices. Neither let there be any criticisms or what might beens. None among his contemporaries are qualified to sit in judgment. The man was simply
Yet there must be same formalities,
so let the priests chant their chants.
Let the fraternities perform their rites. Sing the songs of love and hope and cover his bier with winter blossoms. Yea, toll the bells, for John Mitchell, Jr., is dead. Childe Harold's pilgrimage is ended.
"Tis Richmond, but living Richmond no more.
M. A. NORRELL.
AN INTERESTING PREDICTION
C. R. F. Smith, agricultural engineer of Iowa State College, makes an interesting prediction. In fifty years from now, he says, the American farmer will sit in an office before an electric switchboard and control automatic plows, cultivators and harvesters which will produce his crops for him without the aid of a single field laborer.
"The great revolution in agricultural methods of the last fifty years," says Mr. Smith, "will prove small in comparison with the revolution that will take place in the next fifty years.
"Automatic farm machinery which runs without constant human supervision will be widely used . . . the machines will be able to run night and day if necessary . . . the greatest aid to super-farming in the future, and one whose realization is near at hand, will be a soil-tilling machine, which will move over the field, mixing and pulverizing soil, organic material and plant food in a single operation."
The forerunner of these new machines, it may be pointed out to the scraptical, is already in operation and proving successful. It is a manless plow used at Iowa State College, which, after being steered across the field to make the first furrow, guides itself automatically by a guide-wheel, which follows the last furrow plowed until the field is completed.
HUNTING POPULAR
For the season 1927-28 in the United States, including Alaska, more than 6,450,000 hunting licenses were issued and brought revenues amounting to $9,300,000 to the States. The fees differ widely. For
THE
SCRAP BOOK
A CHILD'S LAUGHTER
By Algernon Charles Swinburne
All the bells of heaven may ring,
All the birds of heaven may sing,
All the wells on earth may spring,
All the winds on earth may bring
All sweet sounds together:
Sweeter far than all things heard,
Hand of harper, tone of bird,
Sounds of woods at sundawn threw,
Welling water's winsome word,
Wind in warm, wan weather.
One thing yet there is, that none,
Hearing ere its chime be done,
Knows not well the sweetest one
Heard of man beneath the sun.
Hoped in heaven hereafter;
Soft and strong and light,
Very sound of very light,
Heart from storms his easiest height,
When he is on all deight,
This a child's clear laughter.
Golden bells of welcome rolled
Never forth each note, not told
Hours on blithe in tones so bold,
As the radiant month of gold
Here that rings forth heaven.
If the golden crown were
Were a nighttime—why—
Something open and bound of open
Might be half a month when
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for $699,873, by Pennsylvania collected $1,006,159 for 517,729 licenses.
Each year the number of hunters' licenses, and consequently the revenue from them, has increased. In 1924-25 there were 4,904,740 hunters, paying $6,190,863; in 1925-26 hunting licenses to the number of 5,168,353 were issued, bringing a revenue of $6,872,812 to the States; and in 1926-27 there were 5,987,505 licenses issued for $8,155,535.
In 1927-28, Delaware stood at the bottom of the list in total number of licenses issued, with 1,970 to residents and 344 to non-residents. Kentucky licensed 108,202 of its citizens to shoot, but gave permission to only 79 non-residents. Kansas had 115,165 home-grown hunters with only 92 companions from other States. New York welcomed 5,339 visitors, many of whom had combined fishing and sporting licenses.
It seems as though the art of hunting holds greater and greater lure as time goes on.
TRIBUTE TO MOOREFIELD
STOREY SYNDICATED IN
WHITE PRESS
New York, Nov. 29.—The following editorial tribute to the late Moorfield Storey, is being syndicated in white newspapers throughout the country, appearing in places as widely distant as Dayton, Ohio, and Miami, Florida:
"Men like Moorfield Storey, who has lately died, are a good deal of a nuisance. This Massachusetts lawyer was forever pestering a practical world with his moral scruples. He was forever bothering us, for instance, with the record of our despoilings of our Indian wards.
"When the United States was unctuously taking up the white man's burden in the Philippines, Storey was pestering his party with his protests against the new American imperialism. When most of us wanted to be restfully forgetful of the negro and his problems, Moorfield Storey was pushing along his National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
"If some fellow that Storey thought as getting the worst of it from the law was unable to finance his own case through the courts, it would be just like Moorfield Storey to plod uncompensated clean through to the Supreme Court to see that justice was done.
"Such men disturb our pleasant complacency. They make trouble and cause pain, like the dentist who tortures us free of an infected tooth."
GRAVEL HILL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. W. L. Tuck, Pastor
At 11:30 the Age Rally, given by the Sunday School, was a success.
At 8 P. M., the songs and recitations were real enjoyable.
Don't forget prayer service on Wednesday night.
On Thanksgiving Day, Deacon S. D. Prentice motored to Washington, accompanied by his madam and others.
Our sick are slowly improving.
THIS RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VILGIRL
POLICE TRIAL CONTINUES OF OFFICER WHO SHOT LINCOLN
UNIVERSITY STUDENT
New York, Nov. 29.—The third session of the New York Police Department's trial, of which sessions were held November 18 and 27, in Brooklyn Headquarters, of Patronian Walter Lowe, who shot Ralph Baker, Lincoln University students, while technically "off duty" and in civilian clothes, will be continued at 3 o'clock on Monday, December 2, in Brooklyn Police Headquarters, 485 Igeren Street.
William T. Andrews, Special Legal Assistant of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who represented Ralph Baker and his companion, William Fontine, at the hearings and will be at the next session, reports:
"Ralph Baker and William Fontaine testified. Both young men made good impressions by their unevasive straight-forward answers."
The defense introduced the testimony of Luther Jolly, motorman on the elevated train, who testified he saw the patrolman chasing Baker and calling to him to stop, that he was under arrest. Patrolman Lowe's companion, Mrs. Louise Croker, also identified the two boys as those with whom Lowe had had trouble on the car.
Salisbury, N. C., Nov. 18.—Several mornings ago, President Trent made public an announcement that he had received from the American Medical Association relative to Livingstone College's standing in the list of pre-medical eligibles. There were three groupings of negro schools and Livingstone was rated in the first group meaning that the pre-medical work at Livingstone will be accepted at any medical school in the country. When this announcement was made there was consideration among the student body and faculty. This is another step in the meteoric rise of Livingstone College from a "C" class college in 1925 to an "A" rank college in 1928 and a medical "A" in 1929.
NEGRO RESIDENTS OF JAMAICA
L. I., STANDS GROUND
AGAINST MOB
New York, Nov. 29.—Mob attacks upon the house of T. S. Edwards, newly married, who has just moved into a new home at 102-02 Remington Street, Jamaica, Long Island, have not changed his determination to stay where he is. He has appealed to the Jamaica branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, whose secretary, Frank M. Turner, is on the staff of the National Office.
The N. A. A. C. P. has sent the following telegram to Grover Whalem, Police Commissioner of New York.
"Mob threatens to destroy home of T. S. Edwards, colored resident of Jamaica, Long Island, at 102-02 Romington Street, and in repeated attacks windows of this house have been smashed by rocks and colored watchman driven away. Mob has warned Mr. Edwards that they do not intend he should continue living there and that they would tear down his home if he persisted. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People urges that full police protection be extended Mr. Edwards and that perpetrators of mob outrages be arrested and prosecuted."
Mr. Edwards bought the property from a white agent and moved his furniture in last Monday. The agent of the property engaged a colored watchman and placed him on guard. Wednesday night Mr. Edwards found a crowd of whites on the corner who told him that they had chased the watchman away and that they would not permit him to live in the house, that they would break it down first.
The local police station sent a police officer at Mr. Edwards' request, but the police officer ddi not stay. After his repatriation the crowd returned and smashed those windows which had not already been broken. The Jamaica branch of the N. A. A. C. P. to whom Mr. Edwards appealed for assistance, found that 18 panes of glass had been broken and that stones were lying about inside the house. The mob-segregationists have sent out a notice phrased as follows:
Monster
Protest Meeting
of the Residents of
Remington Street Van Wyck Blvd.
Blanco Place Lloyd Road
Protesting Against the Negroes
Settling In Our Section
Protect Your Home and Your
Property
By Attending This Meeting Which
Will Be Held At the
Namecki Tammany Club, Inc.
106-03 Van Wyck Blvd., Jamaica
Monday Evening
December 2nd
At 8:30 P. M. Sharp.
JEWS TO THE RESCUE AS CHRIS TIANS DRAW COLOR LINE
(Crusader News Service)
Bayonne, N. J., Nov. 29.—The bubble of Christian love and brotherhood was punctured once more by the white hypocrites who preach, but do not practice it, when Miss Doretta Cole Noramn, a colored high school student, was barred from use of the swimming pool in the W. W. C. A. of this city.
Miss Norman, who is a pupil at the Staten Island High School, appeared at the Y. W. two weeks ago with her class, which consists mostly of white girls, for a swimming lesson. She was told not to return. Her mother, Mrs. Dora Cole Norman, a teacher in P. S. 21, Elmo Park, S. I., protested, and as a result the Jewish Center at Stapleton invited Miss Norman its facilities. Miss Norman accepted and with her keen interest, class consisting
A MESSAGE TO UNDERWEIGHT MEN AND WOMEN
The one supremely good health building tonic that is also the one great weight producer known to modern science the country over is McCoy's Tablets.
Take them for a few weeks and the hollows in your cheeks, your neck and chest should soon fill out and whether you be man or woman you may have an attractive figure and plenty of "get there" energy in just a short time.
Many time the incree in weight is astonishing—one exceedingly fifth woman gained 10 pounds in 22 days McCoy takes all the risk—Read this ironic guarantee. If after taking 4 sixty-cent boxes of McCoy's Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any thin, underweight man or woman doesn't gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satisfied with the marked improvement in health—your money will be returned.
Just ask for McCoy's Tablets at any drug store in America.
AGENTS WANTED
To sell the Down South Hair Preparation, Pressing Oil and Grower, Write Mine, J. F. McDonald, Excelsior Springs, Mo.
RELATIVES OF JAMES HAWKINS
WANTED
The police department has been asked to locate the relatives of James Hawkins, aged about 44 years, who died from pulmonary tuberculosis on November 17, 1929, at the Baltimore City Hospital. It is reported that he has relatives living in Richmond, Va. It will be well to communicate with Chief Inspector George G. Henry, Baltimore, Md.
WANTS TO FIND THEM
Mrs. J. E. Matthews, of Bluefield, W. Va. wants to locate a family by the name of H. R. Haulston. A sister named Carolina lives in Bluefield and is anxious to get in touch with some of her people.
JIM CROW RESTAURANT. FINED
Cleveland, Nov.—In a test case, recognition of the right of colored workers to eat in Cleveland restaurants without discrimination, has been forced upon Cleveland restaurants. Frank Crosswash, Talbert White, and Frank J. Manning were forced to eat at a corner of the Mills restaurant and charged $1 extra for service. A negro bus boy was assigned to wait on them. Manager Ernest Taylor was found guilty of violating the civil rights statute and fined $50.
UNION BAPTIST CHURCH,
SOUTH RICHMOND.
Dr. L. C. Gerland, pastor
dence, 1811 Evergreen Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
and 8:00 P. M. Communion first
Sunday 3:30 P. M. Sunday School
10:00 A. M.
VIRGINIA:
In the Circum Court of the City
of Richmond.
Tuesday, December 3, 1929.
Samuel M. Thompson.....Plaintiff
against
Annette B. Washington.....Defendant
The object of this suit is to obtain
a divorce from bed and board by
the plaintiff from the defendant on
the ground of willful desertion and
abandonment and at the expiration
of the time as provided by law to
have the same merged into a divorce
from the bond of matrimony, and
an affidavit having been made and
filed that the defendant, Annette B.
Washington, is not a resident of the
State of Virginia and that her last
known post-office address was 32 W.
Duval Street, Philadelphia, Pa. It is
hereby ordered that she appear here
within ten days after due publication
of this order and do what is
necessary to protect her interest in
this suit.
A Copy-Teste:
GARLAND B. TAYLOR,
D. C.
C. A. MKENZIE, d. g.
GETS $400 A WEEK
This little girl, Dorothea Dux, is the eight-year-old daughter of a former burgomaster of Budapest, whose acting in a comparatively unimportant film attracted the eye of a German impressario, who witnessed it by chance in Berlin, with the result that he went to Budapest to gifted Dorothea to star in child parts at the record figure of $400 per week. (Herbert, N.Y.)
TODAY AND TOMORROW BY FRANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE
TODAY AND
TOMORROW
FRANK PARKER
STOCKBRIDGE
SPEED
REPORTS from England are that
Flight Ladder A.H. Offour, who
flow 368 m/s as hour for the
Sterile Cup has achieved a speed
at 500 miles an hour in a private
truck. At that rate a man could start
wedge around the world in the lat-
itude of London and never get out
from under the sun.
All human progress has arisen from the effort to expand time and compa-
space. Think that over With flats of 160 miles an hour possible, space will mean nothing; time every-
thing. More who read this will live to see airports running regularly on some such time-schedule.
TIME
TIME is Money," said Poor Rich-
ard. "For understand just what this means.
The new lacquer process of painting motor cars takes one day in the paint shop instead of a month. Paint-shop floor-space is saved. Money tied-up in
DO YOU KNOW HIM?
I desire to know the whereabouts of my son, William Warren, who left Biehmoad about four weeks ago. He was sick in Washington. He has a cousin, J. Robinson, in New York. Any information concerning him will be thankfully received by his mother, 67 Glencar Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. This inquiry was sent to Chief B. B. Jordan.
FURNITURE
you can get FURNITURE and
BIGS frogs an Old Established House
you can see it in impression. It will
use the greatest pleasure to show
wonderful homes in home
FURNITURE and BIGS and don't fail to ask our
Suggestion about our BANKING PLAN
which gives you 5, 10 or 15 months
u can pay for any purchase.
CHASE C. HURGENS SON
ESTABLISHED 1880.
ADAMS, AND BROAD
CDW. EWART
32 S. WIND STREET
NC. CRIES, FRESH
VEGETABLES,
FISHERS.
Richmond Va. PHONE MAD. 1687
-BUREAU CHIEF:-
Major General William Graham Everson, whose nomination to succeed General Creed C. Hammond as Chied of the Militia, Bureau of the War Department has been sent to the Senate, took up his new duties recently. Gen. Everson formerly commanded the 76th Brigade, 83th Div. He is an ordained minister and since 1921 has been the pastor of the First Church Nuncia, Indiana. (Herbert, N. Y.)
L. J. HAYDEN MANUFACTURER OF PURE HERB MEDICINES OFFICE: 224 WEST BROAD ST. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
TRY A. BOTTLE OF MY MEDICINE AND BE CONVINCED
If so, Call and See L. J. HAYDEN, Manufacturer Pure Herb Medicines, 224 W Broad St., Richmond, Virginia.
My Medicines have permanently relieved thousands of people in the U. S. and Europe when others failed to do so. I use herbs, roots, leaves, seeds, berries, flowers, and plants in my medicines
MY MEDICINES RELIEVE THE FOLLOWING DISEASES:
Blood, Kidnay, Bladder, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Sore Cream, Dyspsia, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Palms and Achces of any kind, Colds, Bronchial Troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, All Itching Sensations, Female Complaints, Ulcers, Carbuncles, Boils without the use of knife or instrument, Eczema, Pimples on face or body.
For full particulars, send, write or call in person on
224 WEST BROAD STREET RICHMOND VA.
delivered cars is released thirty days earlier, and capital is turned over faster, result, cheaper cars.
A young railway clerk asked a Cleveland bank to let him prove he could save them $25,000 a year by reprinting their mail exchanges with other banks. The first year the savings amounted to nearly $100,000 interest on uncollected items in transit. Railroads run fast freight trains today on passenger schedules. Merchants can get goods in a week that need to take a month in transit. They do not have to carry large stocks, hence have less capital tied up, lower interest charges and can sell cheaper. Every invention which moves men or merchandise faster down the cost of living in this complex machine are.
TEACHERS
PELICLE education will never be as good as it ought to be as long as most selfless teachers never get out of their home countries, says Edward A. Filene. Boston merchant and philanthropist. Teachers cannot present a true view on the world to their pupils unless they know something about the world out of their own experience.
That is true for others besides teachers. The only really educated persons are those who have seen other countries besides their own. It is getting easier and easier to do that. A trip to Europe with a week in London and another week in Paris can be had for $250 from New York. Mr. Filene is working on a plan to recreate this to $350 for teachers and the new step, the thinks, will be to have such trips.
L.J.H.
MANUFACT
OFFICE: 2
RICH
TRY A. BO
AND
Do You Lov
If so, Call and See L. J.
Pure Herb Medicin
Richmond
My Medicine
make compulsory for every teacher
above the primary grades
WHEAT
THE most important news that has come out of Russia is the reported discovery by Russian botanists of a new hybrid grain, a cross between wheat and rye. It is said to combine the food qualities of wheat with the cold resistance of rye and to yield three times as many bushels to the mere as ordinary wheat.
Not all the news that comes out of Russia can be credited, and this may be exaggerated. It must be remembered, however, that Russia gave the world new grains before the war. Durum wheat originated in that country as well as other valuable varieties. If this latest report is true, discovery may have revolutionary consequences for the whole world.
MEN'S clothes are becoming more colorful. Plus given a new shoes are the latest. Why not mix a world of color why should me go parcel strike the only solution to it? Our ancestors dressed as guilty purses permitted. When George Washington went courting in a red coat, to wear plain clothes meant at the wearer was a Quaker or the too poor to buy gay garments. Anyone who doubts that men like to wear bright colors need only to sit a fashionable country club. Women subdue their color schemes for sport men get more porous. With everything else becoming more colorful, men's wear will follow a time.
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& Or? of Gburcbes, 1h l& Se Jame eugene eee ae ee (802 Wallace
Rev. Junius L. Taylor, rector; Fourth saptist C.u x
FIR: AMMST CHURCH & EBENE: APTIST CHURCH
a (le Streets)
(Sr a Reema:
Rev. § ‘h. D., pastor:
Rev. astor: redilence Road
resiten: Servte 1A Band
Servi AL M. 8 P. BL ol 9 A. ML
aud 8 9:29 The pe
ALM.
Alta FINTH 8! IST CHURC!
(Pig Streets)
Pulpi ne officers.
FinsT UTH Visitin ay.
Servi. 1:30 A.M
rad 8 & ol, 9:20 A.
(Corn a tur M.; B. M.; Prayer
All a
Rev. . pase as
tor; par treet. FIFY CHURCH
Servi A.M aa y Street)
and 8 ! 9:30
AM. 1 Rev. RB. a, pastor.
‘All ar Service 1380 A. M, and
8PM; hol, 9:30 A. M.
j Allare |
SECO cH | MOOR Obr, BAPTIST
(Byrd and i (140s Leigh Street)
1 Rev. Go 3. Hancock, A. M.,
Rev. J pastor; pastor; ree, Virginia_ Union|
residenge sanue. | University. |
Servic M, and) Services. Sanday, 11:30 A. M.
3PM. 20 A. Mldnd 8 P. 1) Sunday Sehool, 10 A.
All are iM
"AML are w come. |
SECO vuRCH | MT. OLIV!’? BAPTIST CHURCH
mond) (Twenty-fir-h and “S” Streets) |
Rev. J. Andrew Bowler, D, Dy pas-|
Service y. 11:30 A, M,}tor. Residence, 112 E. Leigh Street,
and 8 P vilay School, 9:86] Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and’
A. M.; B 6:30 P.M. 8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
All are » ome AT are welcome. '
Services: Sunday, 11 to 12 A. M.,
night, 8 wo 9 P. af.; Wednesday eve-
ning Services, 8 to 9 P. M.
‘The public is welcome at all ser-
vices.
LEIGH STREET M. E| CHURCH
(N. E. Cor. Fifth ani Leigh Streets)
Rey. R. M, Williams, pastor; res
cence, 616 N. Fifth Street.
Services: Sun‘ay, 11 A, M, and
8 P. M.; Sun ol 9:80 A. M.
‘The public is invited.
WILLIAMS | MULE C, M. EB.
CHURCH
(The Home-ike Church)
(S. E. Cor. 19» and Everett Sts.)
Rev. W. Davi. \\ 00d, pastor.
9:30 A. M., Sunday School; 11 A.
M., preaching; 5:30 P. M., Epworth
League; 7:55 P. M, preaching.
SIXTH MT. ZION BAPTIST
CHURCH
(St. John and Duval Streets)
Rey. A. W. Brown, pastor; parson-
age, 809 St. James Street,
‘Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
gnd 8 P. Mz Sunday School, 9:80
“AM! are welcome.
SHARON BAPTIST CHURCH
(Corner First and Leigh Streets)
Fourth saptist Cia
Twenty-eighth anc |
W. Williems, pastor
,9:30 A. M. Morin
ALM. Night servic:
to 9 P.M. A sincere
‘you.
| Parsonage, 601
IStieet,
Phone Randolph
For Field Secrets).
920-W.
RISING MT. Zi0
' CHURC:
(800 Denny Stic
Rey. 0. B, Simms, «
Residence, 728 Denay
Services: Sunday, 1.
Ig P.M; Sunday Scho:
| All are welcome.
Mr. CALVARY BAPT..
| (717 Orleans Street.
| Rey. C. A. Cobbs, paste:
age, 803 Louisiana Street
‘Services: Sunday, 11:30
8 P.M. Sunday School, 9
‘The public is invited.
UNION LEVEL BAPTIST Cv. ««
(Corner State and Gilliam » «
Rev, B. J. Ruffin, pastor
dence, 708 State Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A Man
8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30. M
Communion services every third Sun
day, 3:30 P. M.
‘The public is welcome.
_ RIVERVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
| Gacquelin and Lombardy Streets:
ee
Rev. E. D. Lewis, pastor Res:
dence, 316 8, Lombardy Street
Services: “Sanday, 11 A, M. ani
8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M
JIN
%
yi
re
i
fs
g\
fin
.
TK
‘
nN
ev, M. H. Payne, pastor. Resi
dence, 1900, Wallace’ Street.
vires: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. an
<.M.; Sunday School, 9:80 A. M
il are welcome.
?, MORIAH BAPTIST CHURCE
(N First. Street, Between Bake
‘and Charity Streets)
v RV, Peyton, pastor. Resi
nce, 101 Cheatwood Ave., Wast
= Park,
wrvices:” Sunday, 11:80 A. S
3 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:3
M.
are welcome.
TABOR BAPTIST CBURCI!
North 22nd Street, Woodville)
W. H. Skipwith, D. D.. 1
Residence LIS We Marche
treet. -
“rvices: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. an
M. Sunday School, 9:30 A M
Ail are welcome,
T. CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH!
(1303 N. First Street)
tev. F. W. Black, pastor. Resi
1802 N. First Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. an
M.; Sunday School, 9:30
All are welcome.
IME OF SERVICES IN TH:
CHAPEL AT CITY HOM:
overy Sunday from 2 to 4 Fo &
Moore St, Baptist Church
| Wet Leith Sue betwen Kinney and Bowe Ste.
p Ne a ES
Dr. Gordon B. Hancock,
= PASTOR sy
; Sunday, Dee. 8, 1929 $
@, 11:30 A. M. “RESTORING LIFES RUINS.”
: YOU ARE WELCOME. z
Q|OLM MMM ALLA AID ODEO OOED
Ree bat de lS ta a aN the a el all
; Second Baptist Church
Byrd Street between First and Second Streets
Rev. Joseph T. Hill, D. D., 5
PASTOR
SUNDAY, DEC. 8, 1929
11:09 A, M. “GLORYING IN THE CROSS.”
3:30 P. M. HOLY COMMUNION,
%:00 P, M, REV. GEORGE B. JOHNSON, FORMBR SEVENTH
DAY ADVBNTIST PASTOR, WILL PREACH,
Sr, ee eee aS) oe eo ND
|. Pubernatonad Suiideg Seltvel Katsia for December 13
THE CHRISTIAN spinrr mi IDuSTRY 4
ft Deut, 2:idat$; Bphetong 0:39 1. Timotiy 627-02 |
"Ben Semmuel D, Pring D. D.
Religion thet does not impeors dally Bring fe far from practical;
By thie test the opiccual power of the Bible le above that of the sscred.
took of every other foom of religios, Right relstionship berween all
dusoes in society see indicated n both the Old and New Testaments
Prom the very begining Jeboveh hee been teaching mankind bow 12.
Tire with coe another. Industry hee stways been divided into twa
oe eregnrt reel "The best results for both can be
‘caly 20 the explickt dlvectioas of Scriptare are applied. Both the
deoocy la vociety are indicated in both the Old and New Testaments,
Sak i cones tngertsmdnbie cooperation Inderal and soil rie
Coles sce fared ia al ports of the Die, The chowen portions
Fee inn Se horse Mepis 1 2 i
Qro-17; Mutteew Wl; Mark 12:19 Lake 3:14. A gem
cal summary is the Golden Text: “As ye would thet men
$2 yon, do 76 also to them Bbewioe.* "
Vv "Ceadiions were awfel in Bible tines Sirery, wae ie
Fenty met na facets clwaye oe tho se
Pe le ears iy 5
copresed urea bad come, oot. Rayon beady end thas
pat Have boce = pied ome TO pecs ad werdy” Netter mast
Berets bai th ct roves ih ie re
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rome can
py 8S are 1 Bat et oie 8 poe
’ eamployer has rights Peal called for full service troat
"tices who bal duties to perform. ‘They were cheered meanwhile by
erememt tet wile thy, might _ servants “according to the
hy could wined to tock Gaties “as. unto Christ” =
7g wes wating ny Sm ne tat God was aby bt
tr throes, Jack of at galleys service” They ad entre
‘s contract sod anct deliver full in the difference whether
Be cre oe att dame wn tm De
eee
toeditions that are afforded labor today. Stata suromdiog a
Ree partes concerned, %G stodying the problems of the other.
ray Sr seognishg tha roponsbiy iat gcc wth thers
Seana nd ace iron eh sown fo he eek
ess makes the ee. ‘and more resultful.
fades are proving that, Coritenhy 2%, Trius, peobloas that we
only, wi
Peers the oy wort hes novec besa fully tzied, a
Ne Yas ease boa tae
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bharag
THE CITY OF WEST BURTON
Dwight W. Morrow
Hugh Gibson
J. F. Robinson
Senator from Arkansas, selected by the Democratic leaders as delegate to the London naval conference.
Miami On Threshold Stall App
COUNTRY'S FINEST ST
Over 1,000 Horses Being Shipped for Opening.
MIAMI, FLA.—For the first time in the four years of its existence, the Miami Jockey Club, popular haunt of winter racing, will open its 45-day meeting with its stable capacity taxed to the limit. Mindful of the uncertainty of last year's opening after the defeat of the racing measure in the Florida Legislature horsemen restrained it to Miami until the season was underway. Among the Jockey Club are the situation this season with a great deal of satisfaction.
More than two months before the bugle calls post time to the initial field. John I. Doy, general manager of the Club, announced that applications on hand totaled reservations for 1,300 stalls or more than 300 over the actual capacity of the jockey club.
To quarter even 1,000 horses in the stables, Mr. Day said, is to curtail the
David I. Reed
Senator from Pennsylvania, representing the Republicans in the Senate at the Disarmament Conference.
Charles F. Adams
Secretary of the Navy, delegate to the International Naval Conference.
Success
"A resounding smell as would a sensation Howard, national Pet
hold of Record Racing Stages Applications Exceed Joo
space usually allocated to horsemen for equipment and other necessities. The Miami Jockey Club is giving preference to those owners who have reeved at Miami in past seasons, though there will be many prominent names not heretofore identified with the sport in Miami.
In being compelled to descriminate the Jockey Club will have the opportunity to select the finest horses in the cost known American stables. Among the colors chosen will flash before the fashionable colors at Miami this winter will be the Greentree stables, Harry Schlair's Ranchoes stables, John D Hertz stable and many others whose two year old made track history during the Spring and Summer meetings in the north.
Non-Parlmutuels
Incidentally Miami will inaugurate its second season of non-perimutual racing this year and its fourth since the beautiful plant was built. Mr.
Henry L. Stimson
Charles G. Dawes
Such a Pretty Pet!
A rose by any other name would well as sweet," said Shakespeare. Soild a skunk, if it were deodor- as "Mike" was. Mike made a station when his owner, Miss Ida award, exhibited him at the Na- pal Pet Show in New York.
G Season;
Jockey Club Capacity
(INSET) BACCLAY HARBURTON
Doy has announced the club will offer more than $300,000 in pursues during the 45 days topped by the $100,000 Florida Derby taken last year by the Belle Isle Stable's dept. Uptown Lad. There will be other feature races including the Miami Derby, the Inaugural Handicap and the Miami Beach handicap.
There will be a daily card of races at $1,000 each, with the races puncturing the meeting intervals.
In reopening for the winter season the Jockey Club offers horsemen the ideal occasion for winter training in a climate that owners regard as nearly perfect as possible. The track and club house are among the most beautiful in America and be meeting the offers a striking contrast. The popular haunts of the horses are Mont. Saratoga, Lincoln Plain and the Maryland Plain.
The race meet opens on a rainy day and continues through to
Mr. March &
VICTORIA GOLF CLUB
E.W. BEATTY CHALLENGE TROPHY
COLWOOD GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB
Champion "Aggie"
Carlton Patton, seventen, was acclaimed by Secretary of Agriculture Hyde as the leader of 77,000 agricultural college students in farming, earnings and investments, ability to work with others, leadership and scholarship. He won a $1,000 prize.
Victoria's Golf Tournament
Three Great Attractions
VICTORIA
GOLF
CLUB
COLWOOD
Victoria capital of British Columbia, whose golfers enjoy their game the year round, owing to the ameliorating influence of the Japan current, will hold its second annual Mid-Winter Golf Tournament under the auspices of the Empress Hotel Feb. 17-23, 1930. This tournament is an amateur handicap open to both men and women competing in their own sections. The principal trophy is the E. W. Beatty Challenge Cup at present held by T. L. Swan and Mrs. Hew Paterson of Victoria, although a large list of other prizes is being
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DOW N. UPTOWN STATION, PITTSBURGH, PA
"Be Careful, Dick"
Mrs. Ricard Edward Byrd, mother of Commander Richard Byrd, the explorer, who is now near the South Park, talked to her son over the mountain. Richard Byrd, Va., where another son, Harry Byrd, is Governor, "Be careful, Dick" she warned the daring aviator.
ment and Music Festival
Attractions for Early Win
E.W. BEATTY
CHALLENGE TROPHY
GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB
posted. The tournament will be played over the Colwood Golf and Country Club's course, which wins through a vast forest of Douglas fires of them 25 feet in circumference, and ancient gnarled oaks and cedars dating from the time when Vancouver Island was sighted by Capt. George Vancouver. If the entire list becomes too formidable the Victoria Golf Club will be held in reserve for the overflow. All visitor to Victoria are eligible for this tournament.
Other special attractions planned into the for visitors to Victoria are a Yuletide cifc.
Youngest President
Festivals
by Winter Visitors
Music Festival Dec 20-30 and a Sea
Music Festival featuring maritime
music of all nations Jan 15-18 at
the Museum Hotel.
Victoria, often called the "Evergreen City" is on the Southern tip of Vancouver island and is one of the most picturesque and interesting cities in Canada It is the gateway, via the Maishat Drive, to the center of an island paradise with vast trees, sites full of trout, big game and imposing mountains. There is splendid salmon fishing in streams which flow into the Gulf of Georgia and the Pacific.
DEVIL-MAY-CARE
by ARTHUR SOMERS ROCHE
ILLUSTRATED BY DONALD RILEY
Seventh Instalment
Lucy goes to Stevens to help him, but he refuses to take money from a woman to whom he is not married. Lucy is the man she has, the base, and promptly runs away from him, going to her staircase friend Dr. Fergus Fauce to tell what she has done. Lucy searches of Lucy, Meanwhile, Dr. Fauce and Lucy launch a new boat. A hurricane wrecks them on their first trip. Lucy is saved, and finds what happened to Dr. Fauce. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
She felt her threat constrict and was conscious of an almost mastering desire to scream. If Fergus had not been saved, if he, her mad companion in her mad adventure, had been lost, then life would have no savor, not even a reason for continuance. If she, insulted by motives which even to herself were obscure, had dragged Fauce to his death, then she be guilty of that death.
She cried out at sight of him, and he leaped from the chair. She leaned against the outer wall of the cabin and I held. He was so ridiculous in these clothes, obviously borrowed from his supply, then I sprayed he weep he advanced upon him, tears as he advanced upon him, field out her hands to him.
Ith, Fergus, said brokenly, "dear," he said "I can't help it. It is to me that it's always been so sad always will be so. But I'm not going to bother you with it, Lucy den. I didn't mean you to read it in my eyes. But you have, and I am glad, because it ever you need any one to bother you, but I'd die for you, Lucy. "The Fergus, don't speak of death!" she shaded. "We've been so close ..." "Her voice ceased; the hat rested beneath Faunce's muff unscessibly, and then the fingers clamped. Faunce looked up. Stevens he emerged from the pilot-house forwards and was now approaching them, mullingly Faunce admitted the great chair of the man. His big body moved cat-like, smoothly, gracefully. He had the knack of wearing cloak well, and his blue jacket came him. The double-breasted jacket could not entirely hide the burls curls, and the tan of his face but inside his teeth the whiter as they inside a smile.
"Hater, dear wife of mine?" he inquired.
She felt a taint in the inquiry and her cheeks blazed.
"I suppose I owe you my life?" she queried.
He shrugged his wide shoulders.
"No need for protestations of gratitude, my dear. The hurricane hit the Minerva and we were scurrying for the lee of Barracuda Island when we crafted waterpoles, we did waterpoles in your boat, but we did the obvious thing. We managed to save you. Rather a shock to pick one's bride out of the ocean, capped in another man's arms, but as one gets older one understands that life is a lurid melodrama when it isn't a savage farce. Sleep well, my dear?
"Say, Faunce, would you mind letting me have a word alone with my wife?"
Flaunce flushed at the bruseness of the request. He glanced at Lucy. "I'm not a bit afraid of him, Fergus." said.
Reluctantly the doctor arose and walked forward. Stevens leaned toward his wife.
"Where were you going with Famous?" he demanded. "I don't at all mind telling you," she replied. "I will go to spend last night on Barracuda Island. Then we were going to some Bahama key and stay there." "Sorry?" he sneered.
"Still we became tired of it. Until I'd had time to think."
"Well you're going to do just that thing," he said. "Only you're going
OPW
BILT
"Upon my word of dishonor, then, I'll kill him here and now unless you agree."
with me, not Faunce."
"Don't be absurd!" she advised.
"Absurd? My God! you talk to me of absurdity! Listen, my dear Lucy. you left me, to run away with Faunce. Do you think any jury in the world would convict me of murder if I killed him out of hand?"
"You wouldn't dare," she breathed.
"And why not? You knew better. You know that my hands are itching now to toss him overboard. So help me, God, upon my word of honor—"
"Your word of honor?" she jeered.
"Upon my word of dishonor, the you agree."
"Upon my word of dishonor, then, I will kill him here and now unless you agree, without further word, to go with me to Barracuda Island, to share the tent I will erect there, to be mine!" Faintly, far away, her voice sounded as her decision. "I'll go to barracuda Island with you," she said.
Stevens clapped his hands; a Filipino steward came running.
"Please tell Dr. Faunce I wish to speak to him," said Stevens.
Faune came at once, no fear, but anxiety upon his face; worry, Lucy knew, for her.
"My wife and I," said Btevens
easily, "have composted our differences
also, so, Doctor, I am going to send you
to Miami in the Minerva, while she
and I continue in a motor-boat, the
voyage that you and she began. I
leave it to your own decision what
explanation you may make, if any. I
would, of course, sound plausible if
you stated that your motor-boat had
been lost in the storm, and that you
had been picked up by Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Steimens, honeymonning on their
cruising house-boat, and continuing
the honeymon with a camping-trip
d'aux on Barracuda Island. Any
unwitting injury you may have
intended doing a man who had never
injured you will be balanced by such
a man. I think"
He rose abruptly and went forward; they
saw him enter the pilot-house
where Modane the skipper steered the
Minerva. Faune looked at the girl.
"You . . . want this?" he asked.
She nodded, avoiding his eyes.
"Because, my child, if you don't-" he began.
She cut him short: "Fergus, he's my husband, and . . . I'm coming to my senses." She rose and walked away; already, in obedience to orders given by Stevens, the Minerva was losing way. Members of the crew were swinging outward the davits where was slung a motor-boat; stewards were placing supplies in the boat. She entered the pilot-house when the Minerva stood by the hand. The Minerva had been, "I want to thank you, Captain, for saving me," she said.
Modane glanced at Stevens. "Why, una'am, Mrs. Stevens, ma'am—" Stevens slapped him on the back. "Attaboy, Modane! Modest as any sailor, my tarry salt of fiction. Well, Mrs. Stevens is eternally grateful to you for leaping into the water after her, and so am I. I'd be a widower but for you, Modane, instead of a bridegroom starting upon his honey-
★★★★
It was a busy afternoon that followed luncheon. Stevens had no suggestions to make to her, but he accepted her aid. He chopped wood; he erected the tent, first clearing a space for it back from the beach. He found the spring which trickled in a tiny stream to the sea, and cleaned it out, and sunk in it aluminum containers which held butter and cheese. She washed the dishes, put them in order, stacked the stores beneath a tarpaulin which Stevens stretched between poles which he chopped and sunk deeply in the sand. ...long do you expect to remain here?" she inquired. To save herself, she could not keep anxious timidity from her tones.
He shrugged caselessly.
"Oh, I told Modane to drop by in a week or so. If we weren't here I told him to cruise over to the Bahamas
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THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Magazine Page
and get trace of us there. When "Oh, I just wondered," she said, "But why wonder?" he insisted, "What do you care where we go so long, my dear, as you're with me." Since they had landed his manner and words had been impersonal. Now she felt the jeer behind them. And this was the man who professed to love her, this man who took joy in her spiritual agony. Well, she would not give him the satisfaction of knowing her fear, her horror of him. Instead, she would show her apt
en, I'll kill him here and now unless
"Quite right," she said. "Inasmuch as Paradise itself would be hell if you were present, what difference can it make what we do or where we are?" "That's more like Devil-May-Care, the high-spirited maiden whom I wooed and won," he mocked her. "Well, let's have some supper." Once again his manner became impersonal, light-hearted, even gay, and she was angrily humiliated that she took her tone from him. Why should he have any power over her relationship, power to her smile or frown? "Enjoy," he broke a long silence, "do you hate me!"
"And despise you." she said.
"Ah, despise you," she said.
"Why did you marry me?" he asked.
"I don't know just why," she honestly replied.
"I do," he told her.
"Then why?" she irrepudiated.
"Because, as my wife, you could hurt me more than in any other way. And you did. To run away, to humiliate me . . . Well, despite everything, you are my wife, and I've caught you, and I have you. You can't get away from that, my dear."
"No," she said flatly.
He reclined upon the sand, propping his head up with one hand, his elbow digging into the sand, and stared at her.
"You've never guessed how desirable you are, have you, Lucy?" "Men have asked me to marry them," she retorted.
"But you didn't; you married me. Do you know why?" "You've just told me why," she said.
"Oh, that! That was the immediate motivating impulse. But behind that, wasn't it fate, Lucy?"
"Perhaps," she admitted.
"And fate, when it brings a man and a woman together, means love, doesn't it, Lucy?" he persisted. She looked at him coldly. "Don't be a cad," she said. "Don't try to justify yourself by persuading yourself that, in spite of everything, I'm really in love with you but haven't found it out. Be man enough to do what you intend without excuse. Love you? I think you're the most contemptible thing that breathes. Are you satisfied?" "Plenty," he said. "And now, my dear wife, will you please go to the tent and . . . wait for me!" Well, she had proposed the game, made the rules, interpreted them. And she had given her word, to save Fergus Faumce from the dreadful anger that could possess this man. She rose obediently, walked to the tent, entered it, and the flap fell behind her. "Lucy," he called. Her voice came back to him, clear, unafraid, tinged with contempt.
"I wanted to tell you: you needn't be afraid of me. I don't want you, and never will want you. So far as I can, you go to hell and be damned forever."
CHAPTER V
She understood now exactly why she had married Stevens. She had intended to revenge herself upon him by making him a byword for the mean-hearted public to laugh at. She had not comprehended her own motives, but he had made them clear to her in that conversation on Barracuda Island.
Continued Next Week
"WASH.DAY INITALY"
Outcast Holiday Left-Overs Take Place at Head of Table
W
Glorifying the great American bird is the holiday sport of the housewife from Thanksgiving to New Year's!
The Thanksgiving feast of whole roast turkey should be just the beginning of a succession of succulent dishes from turkey timbales to turkey soup.
The savory tang of the proper cheese in these holiday dishes is a secret which should be learned from recipes tested by Marie Dahnke in the kitchen-laboratory of the Kraft-Panini Cheese Corporation will prove an inspiration through the holiday months.
Fry turkey meat in olive oil. Add onion and garlic and fry for five minutes. Add celery, mushrooms and sauce. Cover and simmer for ten minutes. Place rice on platter. Four over turkey mixture and serve hot. Garnish with grated cheese.
**Turkey Tetrazzini**
2 cups cooked shredded turkey
½ cup cooked spaghetti
1 small green pepper, shredded
½ red pimento
2 tablespoons butter
½ cup grated American cheese
2 cups top milk
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon paprika
2 mushrooms, sliced fine
Smother green pepper and mushrooms slightly in butter, then add turkey and paprika and smother together two or three minutes longer. Add spaghetti, milk and salt and boil about four minutes. Mix yolks of eggs with two tablespoons of cream and stir into mixture until it thickens. Serve on triangles of toast and topped with grated American cheese.
**Squash au Gratin**
Squash that indispensable accompaniment to turkey dinner may be attractively prepared in the following manner:
2 cups mashed squash
2 tablespoons melted butter
Salt and pepper
2 eggs
1-3 cup grated cheese
Buttered crumbs
To the squash add the melted butter and season to taste with salt and pepper. Add beaten eggs and milk thoroughly. If squash is very dry, a little cream may be added. Put in small skimmers, sprinkle with grated cheese and cream with a thin layer of very fine buttered crumbs. Bake in a moderately warm oven until crumbs are browned.
SEND US YOUR ORDER FOR
Wedding and Visiting Cards
The Planet, 311 N. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
A giant "waterpot," called la conca is the Italian women's washing machine. And it takes two days to complete the tasks done in the American household in a few hours.
The clothes are washed with cold water and soap on slanting stone washboards. Without rinsing, they are put in la conca, with the better articles sandwiched into the center. A piece of canvas at the top holds six inches of wood ashes. Tepid water poured in is caught as it seeps through to an outlet. It is reheated in the press is re-encanted for several hours, finally with boiling water poured in the conca is plunged. The stain is overnight. And it still remains they van.
lash with a little rubbing. The clothes are soapaged after, rinsed and dried Silk and woolen things, and those without fast color, are done separately, at home.
"But numerous families are abandoning the centuries-old method," said Silas H. Altorfer, president of the company making ABC washers at Peoria, Ill. "More and more we find Italian housewives, like those in this country, prefer the speedier, easier cleaner washing machine way. Spinner washing machines swish the family wash clean in their porcelain tubes saus se quintu among our appliances do in Rome N Y. And do the clothes in the centrifuge connector is much faster, easier than any old wringing method."
Holiday Left-Overs
Take Place at Head o
In the great American bird is the holiday sport of
giving to New Year's!
Reserving feast of whole roast turkey should be a
session of succulent dishes from turkey timbales,
tang of the proper cheese in these holiday me-
be learned by every clever hostess.
Using recipes tested by Marye Dahnke in the kite
Benkix Cheese Corporation will prove an inspiration.
Rice with Turkey and Mushrooms
rice, bot
turkey, sliced
rye, sliced fine
sliced fine
American cheese
meat in olive oil Add onion and garlic and fry
ery mushrooms and sauce. Cover and simmer for
flipper. Pour over turkey mixture and serve hot.
Turkey Tetrazzini
shredded turkey
spaghetti
copper, shredded
butter
american cheese
green pepper and mushrooms slightly in butter, t
and smother together two or three minutes longer
milk and salt and boil about four minutes. Mi-
spoons of cream and stir into mixture until it
toast and topped with grated American cheese
Squash au Gratin
that indispensable accompaniment to turkey can
be prepared in the following manner:
squash
melted butter
2 eggs
1-3 cup grated cheese
Buttered crumbs
squash add the melted butter and season to taste
scatter eggs and mix thoroughly. If squash is w
added, Put in small ramekins, sprinkle with gr
thin layer of very fine buttered crumbs. Bake
crumbs are browned.
IS YOUR ORDER
and Visiting
111 N. 4th St., Ri
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EXPERIENCES
operating-room of
patient on the table
beast. The surgeon
issues on his way
and closed the wound
not malignant," he
on her trouble—did
stiff—it was on her
and so on.
some ten days, when
with the same identity
and told her those
ink?
"let it alone and
month for awhile,
a letter. I asked her
had disappeared—had
noval of the breast
proves.
ago, a young wife
armed, she employ
the entire breast, and
enlarged—a capital
y, she went to the
one of the most c
y. He told the wom-
—incurable—and th
had caused it! In
y, had the breast be
now, more than
ignosing of lumps to
thoness, capable for
his heart. And th
be dangerous, but
I once visited the operating-room of a very noted hospital in Baltimore. The patient on the table had a small tumor or "lump" in her left breast. The surgeon talked softly as he divided the delicate tissues on his way to the offender, which he finally removed, and closed the wound.
"These things are not malignant," he murmured, "and this would never have given her trouble—did not need surgery, but she had read a lot of stuff—it was on her nerves; just had to have it out or go crazy"—and so on.
I had not been home ten days, when a young woman patron came into my office, with the same identical condition—a lump in her breast; somebody had told her those things were always cancerous—what did I think?
"Mary," I advised, "let it alone and quit being anxious; just you come in once a month for awhile, and I'll tell you what to do." She obeyed to the letter. I asked her ten days ago about the matter; the offender had disappeared—had not been felt for two years. Hasty removal of the breast might have been disastrous, as the next case proves.
Over twenty years ago, a young wife discovered such a tumor in her breast. Much alarmed, she employed a "hit and run" surgeon, who removed the entire breast, and all the glands above it, though they were not enlarged—a capital operation.
Fifteen years later, she went to the most noted surgeon in our western country; one of the most capable and conservative operators in the country. He told the woman she was a permanent invalid, skin and bone—incurable—and that the hasty and unwise removal of her breast had caused it! In other words, she might be well and happy today, had the breast been let alone.
She has been dead now, more than a year. My wife is don't do your own diagnosing of lumps that may appear in your breast. Consult your honest, capable family physician, who loves your every interest in his heart. And this means in tumors of your breast; they may be dangerous, but happily not always.
M. M.
Hints for Motorsists
If you go into second gear soon enough, you will seldom have to resort to low to make a steep hill.
If the starter on your car is not reliable, try to park on a grade. You can then start the car by letting it roll in high.
If your engine is laboring on a hill, it doesn't do any good to pull out the choke. Shift to a lower gear.
When you buy valve caps, get the kind that fit your valve. Some wheels require bent valves and some use the straight ones. There are caps to fit both.
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IMPROVE YOUR EVERYDAY ENGLISH BY JOINING THE
One hour per week will accomplish good results in a short time. Many have been benefitted by our method. Lack of schooling is no bar. We can help you. On the other hand, high school graduates and school teachers can be helped in the perfecting of a smooth use of English and a useful vocabulary.
a.
See R.
Visitors Are
Welcome.
See R. C. Mitchell, 515 N. Third St.
SEVEN